Bamm Hollow GOP plans push to oust Pallone from the ...

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LIVING 1986 was a year of - peace and of turmoil, of riches and poverty, the best of which we hope to savor and the worst to forget. PagelC WORLD MARCH FOW DEMOCRACY Student* march for democracy and challenge the Communist government in China to live up to certain constitutional guarantees. Page IB The Sunday Regi VOL 109 NO. 110 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S NEWSPAPER ... SINCE 1878 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1986 50 CENTS.; Bamm Hollow It's county's move in fight for golf course By USA R. KRUSE The Register The county's planned purchase of the Bamm Hollow Country Club may have fallen into a legal sandtrap, but that doesn't mean the developers are out of the rough. On Tuesday, Superior Court Judge Marshall Selikoff threw out the county's attempt to purchase the 276-acre golf course, saying that county officials failed to follow proper negotia- tion procedures. The developers — Whispering Woods at Bamm Hollow Inc. — and their attorney say that Selikof f s decision means they can now go ahead with their $100 million plan to develop the golf • The Bamm Hollow issue has had its share of twists and turns. For a chronology of events, see page 4A. But that assumes that the county Board of Freeholders is no longer interested in Bamm . Hollow. And as William Dowd, special county counsel, says, "my sense is that the freeholders are determined to acquire the land." The next step is up to the county. Dowd says the county has five options, which include: appeal Selikoff's decision, file new condemna- tion papers, get new appraisals for just a portion of the property, a combination of the above, or lastly, give up and let the developers build. The compromise option would allow the county to condemn just a portion of the property, such as the golf course, and might allow the developers to build homes on the remaining property. » But the final decision on which of the five options the county will take is up to the freeholders. Freeholder Director Harry Larrisbn Jr. has said he doesn't believe the freeholders will sit down and discuss the options until the Jan. 2 reorganization, when newly elected Freeholder John Villapiano of Ocean takes his seat. Freeholder John D'Amico said Friday that he considered it his "duty" to continue to fight for acquisition of Bamm Hollow. "But we need to sit down and look at all the options," said D'Amico. "We need more infor- mation before we can make the proper choice." The decision by Selikoff is just the latest in a series of ongoing legal twists and turns in the county's attempt to acquire Bamm Hollow, which is located near the Garden State Parkway and Middletown-Lincroft Road in Middletown. Bamm Hollow is a 27-hole golf'course and country club, which borders Nut Swamp Brook in Lincroft. The fight over the property began in January 1985, when developer William Montanaro announced plans to place 425 homes on Bamm Hollow and preserve an 18-hole golf course. That caused an uproar, and letters began See BAMM HOLLOW, Page 4A Lottery The winning number drawn last night in New Jersey's Pick-It Lottery was 034. A straight bet pays $268.50, box pays $44.50, and pairs pay $26.50. The Pick 4 number was 3379. A straight bet pays $3,169.50 and box pays $264 Ann Landers 4C Business 7B Classified 4E Commentary 9A Crossword 8C Entertainment 8C Horoscope 8C Jumble 8C Living 1C Make A Date 6C Mike Royko 9A Nation 2B New Jersey 6A Obituaries 10A Opinion : 8A People. 2A Perspective 1B Sports..:.'. 1D Weather 2A Your Town 6C i " " " " 1 V f. 1 | H Fi m f I V'" rx \ ^^1P *•*"**!$ I F i mam.4ftf/ A ' ^U > jfia^, ! A 1 aa f \ m 5 ' i V f - . 4r** Til I HO flSH FROM BRld ISO FIN I i Morning jog THE REGISTER/BILL DENVER Sam Pierce of Rumson burns off some calories yesterday morning as he runs across the Oceanic Bridge. Pierce can expect plenty of company after the New Year, as runners will attempt to work off the excesses of the holidays. GOP plans push to oust Pallone from the Senate No shortage of Republican hopefuls By STEPHEN MCCARTHY The Register A fierce fight is anticipated by - members of both political parties as reports circulate about which Re- publican contender will get the chance to try and wrest the critical 11th state Senate District from the grasp of the Democrats. Though the campaign won't of- ficially begin for several months, state Assemblyman Joseph Palaia, R-Monmouth, is considered by Democrats to be the GOP pick to challenge Sen. Frank Pallone, D- Monmouth. Because Palaia com- mands large voter blocks in Ocean and Neptune townships, among the larger communities in the 1 lth Dis- trict, Democratic pundits speculate that he may be the GOP choice for the Senate nomination. • See related story, page 5A. The opening salvo of the 1987 campaign was perhaps fired when Palaia, not known for his blistering attacks, lambasted Pallone in a Register letter to the editor Dec. 21 for allegedly stealing legislation drafted for volunteer firefighters and first aid organizations. Palaia said he's considering the Senate post. But so is Assemblyman Anthony "Doc" Villane, R-Mon- mouth, a 12-year veteran of the state Legislature. If both decide against challenging Pallone, there's "a deep well of Republican talent" to choose from in the 11th District, said county GOP Chairman William F. Dowd. Dowd said "it's by no means certain" that both Palaia and Villane will seek the nomination for the Senate seat since both occupy im- portant positions in the Assembly: Villane is chairman of the Ap- Pallone: "I'll beat any" GOP can- didate propriations Committee while Palaia heads the Education Committee. Dowd Mid either would have "first crack"" at the nomination. However, if both choose to run, he'd ask them to resolve It between themselves, "with a toss of a coin or whatever." Palaia said he would "rely heavi- ly" on Villane's decision about the Senate race because of Villane's seniority and "I think he's the best legislator in Trenton." Villane could . not be reached for comment. Other prospective candidates for the 1 lth District seat, Dowd said, are Phil 11 nlin, the mayor of Long Branch; Claire French, former Wall Township mayor; Dick Doyle, a.Wall Township councilman; and Donald Beekman, a Neptune Township councilman. See PALLONE, Page 4A Garden State. 1986 N. J. mirrors the pride, problems of a nation By BARBARA MOLOTSKY Associated Press In New Jersey, 1986 mirrored the nation's pride and its problems as the state stood at the forefront of the tribute to the Statue of Liberty, tackled the questions of surrogate motherhood and the right to die and tried to overcome the plague of drugs. The year also was unique in New Jersey: Revolutionaries went on trial for a state trooper's slaying, its governor and senior senator grew in national prominence and its chief justice won tenure after a battle over whether he lived in New York. The struggles of People Express were prominent in the reshaping of the U.S. airline industry, a Lawrence Township estate figured in the turmoil in the Philippines and a cyanide-tainted soup mix killed a southern New Jersey man. • New Jersey's alleged organized crime boss was arrested, the casinos were hit by a violent strike, radioactive radon contamination surfaced across northern New Jersey and the state continued to grapple with a variety of environmental concerns. In sports, the (year began with the New York Giants January 21-0 defeat at the hands of the eventual Super Bowl champion Chicago Bears in the NFC championship game. But the Giants came back to post a 14-2 record and win the NFC Eastern Division, championship. The title marked the Giants' first championship of any kind since 1963, when they won the NFL Eastern Division. It was a trouble-plagued year for former New Jersey Nets star Micheal Ray Richardson, who on Feb. 25 became the first active NBA player to be permanently banned for drug abuse after testing positive for cocaine use for the third time in two years. In November, a Somers Point bar- tender found a century-old stanza by Ralph Waldo Emerson in a suitcase full of old newspapers and correspondence he had amassed after about six months of trash picking. Gary Duffy said he had no plans to give the stanza to an Alabama professor who reported a similar manuscript stolen from him last summer. In January, a former beauty queen's campaign strategy for a Hoboken Board of Education seat included running a newspaper advertisement depicting her peeking coyly over a bare shoulder in a sleeveless evening gown. Evelyn Arroyo lost her bid. During Liberty Weekend, the cel- ebration honoring the 100-year-old Statue of Liberty, the nation focused itself on events in New Jersey and New York. Topping off the July 3-6 weekend was the $6 million, star-studded grand finale complete with chorus line kids and teen-age baton twirlers at Giants Stadium. An unprecedented custody battle for a girl born under surrogate contract began after Mary Beth Whitehead of Brick Township changed her mind about agreeing to accept $10,000 to bear the child using the artificially inseminated sperm of a Tenafly man. When the baby was born March 27, Mrs. Whitehead turned down the money and fled with the child to Florida. Authorities later caught up with her and returned the infant to the temporary ?: 5* n a w4 ASSOCIATED PRESS SURROGATE MOM — Surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead of Brick Township, accompanied by her family, carries presents on a Christmas visit to her daughter, Baby M. The saga of the surrogate mother garnered statewide attention in 1986., custody of William and Elizabeth Stern of Tenafly. The custody trial is to begin Jan. 5 in Hackensack. Amid increasing concern nationwide over narcotics abuse, private and public agencies have turned to testing em- ployees for drug use, and over the year the courts and state agencies attempted' to define how the tests should be carried out while protecting workers' W rights. See GARDEN STATE. Page 7A OLD LOCK STOCK New Years Eve. 6pm. & 9pm. $29.95, reservations. 530-6500 CLAM HUT OPEN New Years Eve. & Day. Regular menue. 872-0909 Little Kraut open N.Y.'s Eve. Full menue 1st come 1st served.Open from 5 til ? Monmouth Venetian Blinds Levclors, mini blinds 40% off verticals 50% off. 842-0650. Olde Union House Restaurant Dining & Dancing 10-2. Cham pagne Toast-Party favors New Years Eve, 842-7576

Transcript of Bamm Hollow GOP plans push to oust Pallone from the ...

LIVING

1986 was a year of -peace and of turmoil, ofriches and poverty, thebest of which we hope tosavor and the worst toforget.

PagelC

WORLDMARCHFOW DEMOCRACY

Student* march fordemocracy and challengethe Communist governmentin China to live up tocertain constitutionalguarantees.

Page IB

The Sunday RegiVOL 109 NO. 110 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S NEWSPAPER ... SINCE 1878 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1986 50 CENTS.;

BammHollowIt's county'smove in fightfor golf course

By USA R. KRUSE

The Register

The county's planned purchase of the BammHollow Country Club may have fallen into alegal sandtrap, but that doesn't mean thedevelopers are out of the rough.

On Tuesday, Superior Court Judge MarshallSelikoff threw out the county's attempt topurchase the 276-acre golf course, saying thatcounty officials failed to follow proper negotia-tion procedures.

The developers — Whispering Woods atBamm Hollow Inc. — and their attorney say thatSelikof f s decision means they can now go aheadwith their $100 million plan to develop the golf

• The Bamm Hollow issue has had itsshare of twists and turns. For a chronologyof events, see page 4A.

But that assumes that the county Board ofFreeholders is no longer interested in Bamm

. Hollow.And as William Dowd, special county counsel,

says, "my sense is that the freeholders aredetermined to acquire the land."

The next step is up to the county. Dowd saysthe county has five options, which include:appeal Selikoff's decision, file new condemna-tion papers, get new appraisals for just a portionof the property, a combination of the above, orlastly, give up and let the developers build.

The compromise option would allow thecounty to condemn just a portion of theproperty, such as the golf course, and mightallow the developers to build homes on theremaining property. » •

But the final decision on which of the fiveoptions the county will take is up to thefreeholders. Freeholder Director Harry LarrisbnJr. has said he doesn't believe the freeholderswill sit down and discuss the options until theJan. 2 reorganization, when newly electedFreeholder John Villapiano of Ocean takes hisseat.

Freeholder John D'Amico said Friday that heconsidered it his "duty" to continue to fight foracquisition of Bamm Hollow.

"But we need to sit down and look at all theoptions," said D'Amico. "We need more infor-mation before we can make the proper choice."

The decision by Selikoff is just the latest in aseries of ongoing legal twists and turns in thecounty's attempt to acquire Bamm Hollow,which is located near the Garden State Parkwayand Middletown-Lincroft Road in Middletown.

Bamm Hollow is a 27-hole golf'course andcountry club, which borders Nut Swamp Brookin Lincroft. The fight over the property beganin January 1985, when developer WilliamMontanaro announced plans to place 425 homeson Bamm Hollow and preserve an 18-hole golfcourse. That caused an uproar, and letters began

See BAMM HOLLOW, Page 4A

Lottery

The winning number drawn last night inNew Jersey's Pick-It Lottery was 034. Astraight bet pays $268.50, box pays $44.50,and pairs pay $26.50. The Pick 4 numberwas 3379. A straight bet pays $3,169.50 andbox pays $264

Ann Landers 4CBusiness 7BClassified 4ECommentary 9ACrossword 8CEntertainment 8CHoroscope 8CJumble 8CLiving 1CMake A Date 6CMike Royko 9ANation 2BNew Jersey 6AObituaries 10AOpinion : 8APeople. 2APerspective 1BSports..:.'. 1DWeather 2AYour Town 6C

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Morning jogTHE REGISTER/BILL DENVER

Sam Pierce of Rumson burns off some calories yesterday morning as he runsacross the Oceanic Bridge. Pierce can expect plenty of company after the NewYear, as runners will attempt to work off the excesses of the holidays.

GOP plans pushto oust Pallonefrom the SenateNo shortage of Republican hopefulsBy STEPHEN MCCARTHY

The Register

A fierce fight is anticipated by- members of both political parties asreports circulate about which Re-publican contender will get thechance to try and wrest the critical11th state Senate District from thegrasp of the Democrats.

Though the campaign won't of-ficially begin for several months,state Assemblyman Joseph Palaia,R-Monmouth, is considered byDemocrats to be the GOP pick tochallenge Sen. Frank Pallone, D-Monmouth. Because Palaia com-mands large voter blocks in Oceanand Neptune townships, among thelarger communities in the 1 lth Dis-trict, Democratic pundits speculatethat he may be the GOP choice forthe Senate nomination.

• See related story, page 5A.

The opening salvo of the 1987campaign was perhaps fired whenPalaia, not known for his blisteringattacks, lambasted Pallone in aRegister letter to the editor Dec. 21for allegedly stealing legislationdrafted for volunteer firefightersand first aid organizations.

Palaia said he's considering theSenate post. But so is AssemblymanAnthony "Doc" Villane, R-Mon-mouth, a 12-year veteran of thestate Legislature.

If both decide against challengingPallone, there's "a deep well ofRepublican talent" to choose from inthe 11th District, said county GOPChairman William F. Dowd.

Dowd said "it's by no meanscertain" that both Palaia and Villanewill seek the nomination for theSenate seat since both occupy im-portant positions in the Assembly:Villane is chairman of the Ap-

Pallone: "I'll beat any" GOP can-didate

propriations Committee while Palaiaheads the Education Committee.Dowd Mid either would have "firstcrack"" at the nomination. However,if both choose to run, he'd ask themto resolve It between themselves,"with a toss of a coin or whatever."

Palaia said he would "rely heavi-ly" on Villane's decision about theSenate race because of Villane'sseniority and "I think he's the bestlegislator in Trenton." Villane could .not be reached for comment.

Other prospective candidates forthe 1 lth District seat, Dowd said, arePhil 11 nlin, the mayor of LongBranch; Claire French, former WallTownship mayor; Dick Doyle, a.WallTownship councilman; and DonaldBeekman, a Neptune Townshipcouncilman.

See PALLONE, Page 4A

Garden State. 1986N. J. mirrors the pride, problems of a nation

By BARBARA MOLOTSKY

Associated Press

In New Jersey, 1986 mirrored thenation's pride and its problems as thestate stood at the forefront of thetribute to the Statue of Liberty, tackledthe questions of surrogate motherhoodand the right to die and tried toovercome the plague of drugs.

The year also was unique in NewJersey: Revolutionaries went on trial fora state trooper's slaying, its governorand senior senator grew in nationalprominence and its chief justice wontenure after a battle over whether helived in New York.

The struggles of People Express wereprominent in the reshaping of the U.S.airline industry, a Lawrence Townshipestate figured in the turmoil in thePhilippines and a cyanide-tainted soupmix killed a southern New Jersey man.• New Jersey's alleged organized crimeboss was arrested, the casinos were hitby a violent strike, radioactive radoncontamination surfaced across northernNew Jersey and the state continued tograpple with a variety of environmentalconcerns.

In sports, the (year began with theNew York Giants January 21-0 defeatat the hands of the eventual Super Bowlchampion Chicago Bears in the NFCchampionship game.

But the Giants came back to post a14-2 record and win the NFC EasternDivision, championship. The titlemarked the Giants' first championshipof any kind since 1963, when they wonthe NFL Eastern Division.

It was a trouble-plagued year forformer New Jersey Nets star Micheal

Ray Richardson, who on Feb. 25 becamethe first active NBA player to bepermanently banned for drug abuseafter testing positive for cocaine use forthe third time in two years.

In November, a Somers Point bar-tender found a century-old stanza byRalph Waldo Emerson in a suitcase fullof old newspapers and correspondencehe had amassed after about six monthsof trash picking. Gary Duffy said he hadno plans to give the stanza to anAlabama professor who reported asimilar manuscript stolen from him lastsummer.

In January, a former beauty queen'scampaign strategy for a Hoboken Boardof Education seat included running anewspaper advertisement depicting herpeeking coyly over a bare shoulder in asleeveless evening gown. Evelyn Arroyolost her bid.

During Liberty Weekend, the cel-ebration honoring the 100-year-oldStatue of Liberty, the nation focuseditself on events in New Jersey and NewYork.

Topping off the July 3-6 weekendwas the $6 million, star-studded grandfinale complete with chorus line kidsand teen-age baton twirlers at GiantsStadium.

An unprecedented custody battle fora girl born under surrogate contractbegan after Mary Beth Whitehead ofBrick Township changed her mind aboutagreeing to accept $10,000 to bear thechild using the artificially inseminatedsperm of a Tenafly man.

When the baby was born March 27,Mrs. Whitehead turned down the moneyand fled with the child to Florida.Authorities later caught up with her andreturned the infant to the temporary

?: 5* n a

w4

ASSOCIATED PRESSSURROGATE MOM — Surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead of BrickTownship, accompanied by her family, carries presents on a Christmas visit toher daughter, Baby M. The saga of the surrogate mother garnered statewideattention in 1986.,

custody of William and Elizabeth Sternof Tenafly.

The custody trial is to begin Jan. 5 inHackensack.

Amid increasing concern nationwideover narcotics abuse, private and publicagencies have turned to testing em-

ployees for drug use, and over the yearthe courts and state agencies attempted'to define how the tests should be carriedout while protecting workers' Wrights.

See GARDEN STATE. Page 7 A

OLD LOCK STOCKNew Years Eve. 6pm. & 9pm.

$29.95, reservations. 530-6500

CLAM HUT OPENNew Years Eve. & Day.

Regular menue. 872-0909

Little Kraut open N.Y.'s Eve.Full menue 1st come

1st served.Open from 5 til ?

Monmouth Venetian BlindsLevclors, mini blinds 40% offverticals 50% off. 842-0650.

Olde Union House RestaurantDining & Dancing 10-2. Cham

pagne Toast-Party favorsNew Years Eve, 842-7576

2A The Sunday Register^8UNDAY. DECEMBER 28,1986

PEOPLEAllman reunion

MACON, Ga. (AP) — Fans whoexpected to see two members ofthe Allman Brother* Band at aconcert may get a treat; a reunionof fell the surviving members of the1070s group.

Today's concert is part of anational tour featuring Gregg Al-lman and Dickey Belts. But key-board player Chuck LeaveU anddrummers Batch Truck* and JaiJohnny "Jalmoe" Johnao con-firmed they also will be on hand,the Macon Telegraph and Newsreported Friday.

"It's fun to reunite for specialoccasions," Betts said. "We don'tdo it for the money; we do it forthe fun."

The band that popularizedSouthern rock 'n' roll was formedin 1968 with Duane Allman, John-son and Berrie Oakley. Betts,Trucks and Gregg Allman weresoon added, and the group movedto Macon in 1969 as the nucleus of

Phil Walden's Capricorn Recordsempire. LeaveU and bassist LamarWilliams joined later.

Duane Allman died in a 1971motorcycle crash, and Oakley waskilled in a motorcyle accident ayear later. Williams died in 1983.

The group has played togetheronly twice since disbanding in1982.No need for surgery

VALHALLA, N.Y. (AP) — JeanHarris, imprisoned for killingScarsdale Diet Dr. HermanTarnower, has decided not tohave open-heart surgery, a hospi-tal official said.

Mrs. Harris and cardiologistRichard Kay made the decision atthe Westchester County MedicalCenter, where Mrs. Harris wastreated for a 1984 heart attack,hospital spokesman James Patricksaid Friday.

Mrs. Harris, who has said shesuffered a second heart attack,has been diagnosed as having a

blood supply problem in threevessels of the heart.

The condition "may be painfuland may be discomforting, but itmay not be life-threatening,"Patrick said. .

The decision came three days'after Mrs. Harris, 64, was deniedearly clemency review and theresulting possibility of earlyparole by Gov. Mario Cuomo.

Mrs. Harris is serving a 16-year-to-life sentence in BedfordHills Prison for fatally shootingthe 69-year-old Tarnower in1980. Prosecutors alleged shekilled him because he was leavingher for another woman. Mrs.Harris said she intended to killherself but accidentally shotTarnower.Distant divorce

LOS ANGELES (AP) — JoanCollins' estranged husband can-not use her bank account and muststay at least 100 yards away fromher during the divorce proceed-

ASSOCIATED PRESSHENPEOQED FOR THE HOLIDAYS — This bantam hen is all a flutter as it hovers over seven chicksrecently hatched at suburban Chester Hill in Sydney, Australia. These tiny stocking stuffers camewrapped in time for the holidays.

ings, her lawyer said.Miss Collins and Peter Holm

agreed to the terms of a temporaryrestraining order obtained Dec. 8,her lawyer, Marvin Mitchelson,said Friday from New York.

Mitchelson^ said the orderprohibited Holm from harassingMiss Collins, 63, who plays thescheming Alexis Carrington Colbyon ABC-TV's prime—time soap,"Dynasty."

Holm also must stay 100 yardsaway from her Beverly Hills homeand the "Dynasty" set.

Holm, 39, had served as MissCollins' manager since their mar-riage in November 1986.

Telephone calls to the office ofH o l m ' s l a w y e r , FrankSteinschriber, went unansweredFriday.

Railroad storiesFORT MADISON, Iowa (AP) —

Railroad books collected by thegrandfather of "Family Ties" starMichael Gross are going into aspecial collection at the FortMadison public library.

Gross, who plays the father,Steven Keaton, on the popularseries, took on the task of gather-ing the books after his grand-father, Chester S. Gross, died lastsummer at the age-of 90.

[The elder Gross worked for theSanta Fe Railroad in Fort Madisonmost of his life and collected booksabout railroading.

Acting librarian Ethel Richmansaid the actor, a native of Chicago,was close to his grandfather andcame to visit Fort Madison quiteoften.

He'll be bi;K tomorrow to dedi-cate the "Chester S. Gross Collec-tion" in memory of his grand-father. The small collection in-cludes several rare books,

"I think it was something he hadin mind for quite some time andwas just waiting for the rightopportunity, because he knew ex-actly what he wanted to do," saidRichman.

Merry Christmas guys!HONOLULU (AP) — Actor Tom

Selleck had Christmas gifts thisyear for his friends at work, all300 of them.

Members of the cast and crew of ,"Magnum P.I."each received aBulova watch with the "Magnum"logo on it and the inscription:"Thanks, Tom Selleck."

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WHATTA TOUCH — Ron Reagan Jr. shows off his dexterity to"Family Ties" star Justine Bateman during rehearsals for"Whatta Year... 1986,'! an ABC-TV special airing tomorrow. Thetwo co-host the show which features special appearances byQuincy Jones, Joel Siegel, Joan Lunden and Joe Namath asexpert commentators on events in their respective fields.

For their turn, the cast and crewpresented Selleck with an EbelMoon Phase watch, which retailsfor about $15,000.

Selleck plays a Honolulu-basedprivate eye in the series, which isin its seventh season.

Solemn HanukkahNEW YORK (AP) - - Soviet

emigrant David Goldfarb saysthat celebrating his first Hanuk-kah in more than 60 years re-minded him of friends in Moscowwho are still hoping to leave theSoviet Union as he did in October.

"During this service, 1 thoughtabout them and prayed in myheart for them and hope that theyfeel that they will receivepermission (to emigrate)," the 68-year-old Goldfarb said from hishospital bed after attending ser-

vices Friday at a Manhattan syn-agogue.

He was granted permission tocome to the United States inOctober for treatment of diabetesand a heart condition. It was laterdiscovered that he also has lungcancer.

At sundown Friday, Jews begancelebrating the eight-day Hanuk-kah holiday with the lighting ofthe first candle on thecandelabrum that symbolizes theFestival of Lights. Goldfarb saidhis memories of Hanukkah as asmall child in the Ukraine includedcandles, singing and gifts ofmoney and apples.

COMPILED BYEllen Cancellieri

THE WEATHER i

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in the mid 40s. Light winds.

Tonight, clear. Lows around 30.

tomorrow, sunny. Highs in theupper 40s.

Ocean water temperatures arein the low to mid 40s.

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ASSOCIATED PRESSEASTERN CLOUD COVER — Yesterday's weather satellite photoshows low level clouds covering the eastern half of the nation. Clouds,associated with a weather front, are producing showers over southernFlorida. Fair to partly cloudy skies extend in a band from Delmarvato western Florida and- much of the central plains and southwest.Clouds over the northwest are producing some widely scatteredshowers, mostly snow over the highest levels of the Rockies, and rainelsewhere.

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The RegisterDEPARTMENT HEADS

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SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28,1986 3A

GOP battle rages .Faction keeps control if meeting is delayed•y JOHN DOYLEThe Register

MIDDLETOWN — The annualreorganization meeting tra-,ditionally conducted on Jan. 1 waspostponed to Jan. 7 during aspecial meeting of the TownshipCommittee yesterday, but the dateis likely to change again.

Committeeman Richard D.McKean called for the postpone-ment of the meeting until Jan. 7after Township Attorney ThomasWarshaw confirmed that the com-mittee has the right to set themeeting date, provided it is heldduring the first week in January.

The postponement was the mostrecent action in an ongoing andof(en bitter battle between twofactions of the Township Commit-tee for control of the all-Re-publican body.

The postponement will allowenough time for an ordinancepassed last Monday to becomelaw. The ordinance requires theapproval of two-thirds of thecommittee, or four votes, whenelecting the mayor rather than asimple majority or three votes.

This change will prevent Com-mitteeman James F. Maher from

This change will prevent CommitteemanJames F. Maher from taking control ofthe mayor's office, a position he probablywould have been elected to by thecommittee under the old rules. As a result,Mayor Olga Boekel will remain in chargeuntil someone is approved by a two-thirdsvote.

taking control of the mayor'soffice, a position he probablywould have been elected to by thecommittee under the old simplemajority rule. As a result, incum-bent Mayor Olga Boekel will re-main in charge until someone isapproved by a two-thirds vote.

Boekel, Committeman CharlesV. Carroll and outgoing commit-teeman McKean support thepostponement and the new or-dinance. Maher and Commit-teemen-elect Raymond O'Gradyand Noel "Britt" Raynor all op-pose both the postponement andthe new ordinance.

It is likely, however, that the

reorganization committee willagain be scheduled sometimebafore Jan. 7 after O'Grady andRaynor are sworn in on Jan. 1.

"The ordinance says that threeor more committeemen can call ameeting," said Warshaw. WhenCarroll asked if they couldreschedule the meeting, Warshawsaid, "Very frankly, I think theycould."

During the meeting, O'Gradyand Raynor handed out copies of aletter written to Township Clerk

. Larry Cella which indicated that areorganization meeting would beheld on Jan. 1 at 2 p.m. It was

signed by O'Grady, Raynor andMaher. In response to the letter,Cella scheduled the meeting forJan. 1.

John Fagliarone of Belford re-acted loudly to the letter. "Cellashould not have entertained it," hesaid. "No political bosses shouldbe stepping in," before Jan. 1.

"I went ahead and did it as it'salways been done," Cella said. "Iwould have scheduled it anyway.It's always been the custom."

O'Grady and Raynor sat quietlyuntil near the end of the meetingwhen, speaking "as a member ofthe public," Raynor said: "ComeJan. 1, Ray O'Grady and I takeoffice. This meeting, I believe, isan attempt to circumvent therules. The power that you have istemporary, and trying to changethe rules after the ballgame is overis unfair to the people of Mid-dletown."

After the meeting, Raynor saidthe two factions of the Republicanparty will reunite, "once theyunderstand that they've lost theelection."

Speaking of the list of ap-pointees to various boards andcommittees presented to the herby O'Grady and Raynor, Boekelsaid, "I could cry for this."

Cooperation between school districtspaves way for gifted student programBy STEPHANIE GLUCKMANThe Register

Seven local school districts arefinding that by joining together,they can accomplish things theynever could apart.

'• . . . " s i • , ~\ h a

The Shore .Consortium, for theGifted and Talented, formed sevenyear* ago to organize specialacademic programs, is growingstronger every year and becominga model for outside districts, sayschool officials in the consortium.

By banding together, the dis-tricts — Atlantic Highlands, FairHaven, Rumson, Red Hank, LittleSilver, Shrewsbury and Oceanport— are able to sponsor elaborateprograms for their gifted andtalented students, says JoanneBrendel, a teacher of the gifted inthe Little Silver school district.

She says three projects arealready planned for 1987, includ-

ing symposiums on architecture,the arts, and creative writing. Inall three, youngsters will be giventhe opportunity to try their handsat various skills, and exhibit theproducts of their efforts.

Brendel and other members ofthe shore consortium were recent-ly asked by the office of MiltonHughes, county superintendent ofschools, to lecture on the con-sortium before a group ofeducators from districts through-out the county. Brendel says thelecture aimed to encourage otherdistricts to band together and-form consortiums. She notes that anumber of southern Monmouthdistricts had • already formedanother coalition within the pastyear, based on the shore con-sortium.

The symposium on architecture,scheduled for Jan. 7 and 8, is oneof the most' ambitious projects theconsortium has undertaken in itsseven year history, according to

Brendel. Some 125 fourth, fifthand sixth grade students are tomeet at Brookdale Comunity Col-lege for the two-day affair, whichwill be staffed by professionalarchitects from the greater RedBank area, drafting and architec-ture teachers, a city planner and amuseum director.

The students will be givenclasses in various aspects ofarchitecture, and assigned anarchitectural project to complete.Their work will be exhibited at theend of the symposium, with thehelp of Monmouth Museum Direc-tor Dorothy Mooreshouse.

Students from-different schooldistricts, many of whom willeventually attend the same highschools, will be given the op-portunity to work together, ac-cording to Brendel.

A second program, focusing oncreative writing, will be held. Jan.

12 and 13. The program, entitled'"Young Author's Conference,"will be held at Monmouth College.Local authors and writingteachers will instruct students andassist them with individual writ-ing projects to be printed in aspecial publication at the end ofthe year.

A symposium on the arts, also atMonmouth College, is scheduledfor March. Artists from the areaand from New York City will giveworkshops. Students will thenproduce their own performancesin dance, music and mime, or doprojects in visual art and creativewriting.

Virtually all the professionalswho are scheduled to assist in theprograms are volunteering theirtime. However, districts pay feesto liavi- their gifted and talentedstudents participate. The fee forthe architecture program — about$25 or $30 per pupil — coversstaff time, materials and transpor-tation, according to Brendel.

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVERSlippin'and slidin'Lee Wasser, 5, of Little Silver, enjoys a ride on the slide atMarkim Place park in Little Silver.

Police discover suicidenote following shooting

KEYPORT — A suicide notewas found at the home of theman who shot and criticallywounded his ex-girlfriend andthen killed himself Friday eve-ning, according to police.

Sandra DeTorro, 19, of 256First St., is still listed in criticalcondition at Bayshore Com-munity Hospital, Holmdel,after being shot in the head andchest by Edward Jones, 23, of12 Walnut St. with a .25-caliber handgun.

On autopsy, Jones was foundto have a gunshot wound in hishead, said Ptl. Richard Ely.

Ely said Jones apparentlyshot himself immediatelybefore the car he was drivingcrashed into a bulkhead at theend of Walnut Street and land-ed in Raritan Bay.

DeTorro's family membersand neighbors declined to com-ment on the tragedy, yesterdayafternoon.

Police said Jones was ap-parently despondent after heand DeTorro, whose maidenname is Temple, broke up lastsummer. DeTorro was recentlymarried.

WEEK IN REVIEWBrookdale faculty talks break down

MIDDLETOWN — After 15hours of negotiations, whichbegan Dec. 19, contract

tfllks between faculty membersand the administration atBrookdale Community Collegebroke down last Sunday, Dec. 21.

In spite of intensive negotia-tions, the two sides failed to reachagreement on what have becomethe major sticking points in- thecontract talks: salary and workschedules.

"The differences between thetwo sides are major enough tobring the thing to a halt, which wedidn't expect," said GaryLavorgna, co-chairman of thefaculty negotiating team.

What happens next depends onthe the faculty association's ac-tion committee, he said.

Lavorgna claims the adminis-tration's position did not change

through the entire negotiatingsession.

But Thomas Auch, vice presi-dent of Brookdale, denied theboard was inflexible.

"They refuse to agree' to anykind of a faculty schedule at all,"Auch said. "And each time theycome back to the negotiating table,they up their ante."

Auch said when negotiationsbegan Dec. 19, the college hadcompromised about as far as itcould from a financial standpoint.

Auch said the threat of a facultystrike puts no added pressure onthe administration to settle.

The two sides are scheduled tomeet again before the wintersemester, but Lavorgna said un-less some movement is shown bythe administration before themeeting, the faculty may not showup.

Clammers return to work for holiday

H IGHLANDS — Christmascame earlier than expectedfor local clammers, who were

allowed to return to work Tuesdaydespite pollution problems on theShrewsbury River that will re-main for another few weeks.

The state Department of En-vironmental Protection placed aban on shellfishing Dec 5 follow-ing a sewer line break on theShrewsbury River betweenRumson and Sea Bright. A separ-ate order was issued when theDEP found that a two-year-oldsewer break alongside Shore Drivewas polluting waters near threeHighlands depuration plants.

Jay son Harvey, owner of JerseyShore Shellfish, Co. in Highlands,devised a plan to truck water tohis depuration plant from areasunaffected by the Highlandssewer break. He worked with stateSen. Frank Fallout- Jr., D-Mon-

mouth, to get approval of the planfrom state health officials.- Assisting the clammers was Bill

Schweizer, owner of Add-OnPools, who agreed to supply atruck at a discounted rate. Harveysaid he is splitting the added costof trucking in the water with theclammers, and will be operating"at about break even" until thecurrent crisis is over.

Harvey, who also owns SandyHook Seafood which distributeshis clams from here to Maine, saidhe will pass on a portion of theadded costs to his consumers.

He said most of the clammerswho showed up for work normallymarket their catch to JerseyShore, but that clammers whowork for Shrewsbury River ClamCo. and Highlands Shellfish arealso welcome to work for JerseyShore until the other two plantsreopen.

Quote of the Week

**It was really exciting. Everyone wasin great spirits. It was great havingeveryone back. We couldn't be happier.

Jayson HarveyOwner of Jersey Shore Shellfish Co., upon the return of his employeeswho put out of work for most the holiday season after a sewer line break

contaminated water near Harvey's Highlands clam depuration plant.

Talks begin on purchase of Belford land

County's Bamm Hollow suit tossed out

M IDDLETOWN — DeveloperWalter W. Mihm and theBelford Seafood Cooperat-

ive began negotiations last weekon the 80-acre co-op propertyalong Compton's Creek.

Joel N. Kreizman, a Red Banklawyer who represents Mihm, con-firmed that negotiations havestarted between the two sides.Mihm has sought to buy the landfor at least three months as a homeport for the ferries of his firm,Direct Line Commuter'Sefvice.

Mihm had sued the co-op earlier ,over a dispute on a possible dealand now could help buy the land,removing a financial burden fromthe co-op.

Co-op members bought the landfor $3.5 million several months

f REEHOLD — A SuperiorCourt judge Tuesday struckdown the county's effort to

acquire Bamm Hollow CountryClub, throwing the case out ofcourt for the county's failure toproperly follow condemnationprocedures.

The victory for the tract'swould-be developers may be ap-pealed, however, and officials saidthe legal fight over the 276-acretract in Middletown may not beover.

"My sense is that the (Board of)Freeholders are determined to ac-quire the land," Special CountyCounsel William F. Dowd saidafter the ruling by Judge MarshallSelikoff.

But Dowd's view wasn't sharedby attorney Peter H. Wegener,who represented tract ownersHarry Kantor, Victor Losquadro,and Frank Dimisa during the two-

day proceeding here beforeSelikoff.

Wegener speculated outside thecourtroom that Selikoff s ruling,coupled with Middletown's ap-proval of development plans forthe tract, would lead Freeholdersto abandon purchase attempts.

"I'd be surprised if they con-tinued," Wegener said of the Free-holders' year-old effort topurchase the land.

Freeholders reached yesterdaydeclined immediate comment onthe ruling.

"All I know is that it didn't govery well in court today," saidFreehold Director Harry LarrisonJr.

The ruling caps an effort topurchase the land that begannearly a year ago when the countywas asked by Middletown officialsto buy the tract and preserve it as,open space.

ago from Seacoast Properties Inc.knowing that they could not af-.ford the payments. Members madea $50,000 down payment but no"other payment.

When the co-op faced its firstmortgage payment for $350,000Dec. 23 and with no deal settled,Seacoast officials extended thedeadline to Jan. 15.

The group is looking for a buyarOwho would return some of the land*'— possibly 8 to 10 acres — to theco-op and build a fishmeal andsurimi plant.

But talks apparently stalled afew weeks ago between the co-opand the Port Authority of NewYork and New Jersey. The

.authority, a bi-state group, had •the inside track to the land.

Sea Bright beach access plan approved

SEA BRIGHT — Borough of-ficials received a specialpresent on Christmas eve,

-when the state issued final ap-proval for Sea Bright's beachaccess plan.

The approval, issued by JohnWeingart, assistant state en-vironmental commissioner, makesthe borough eligible for stateshore protection money and is anecessary step toward federalshore protection funding.

The borough had been barredfrom obtaining shore protectionfunds pending approval of a beachaccess plan. While there has been

no significant shore protection1

funding, available in any case, amulti-million dollar beach resto-ration program is scheduled tobegin fn 1991. Without the ap-proval, the borough would nothave been able to participate.

Since the project is sponsored bythe federal government, the beachaccess plan must be approved bythe Army Corps of Engineers, but

Weingart has consistently main-tained that if he approves theplan, the corps surely will. He hassaid that DEP's standards are astough if not tougher than that ofthe Army Corps.

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Bamm HollowContinued from Page 1Aflowing into county offices

asking the freeholders to condemnthe property.

The county didn't make thatdecision until March 1986, when itvoted to reserve $8.2 million toacquire the property, and de-posited the money in SuperiorCourt. But prior to that, Mon-tanaro sold his development rightsto the Whispering Woods de-velopers — Harry Kantor, FrankDiMisa and Victor Losquandro —for $16.3 million, providing thedevelopment is built..

*'Based on myconversations withall five freeholdersduring the last fewweeks, I believethere is still astrong interest inacquiring all or aportion of Bamm .Hollow, ft

William Dowdspecial county counsel

The developers say their planwould preserve 87 percent of theproperty's open space. It calls for220 single-family, two-to-fourbedroom "clustered" homes. Italso calls for an 18-hole golfcourse to be designed by renownedgolf course architect Robert TrentJones.

But the freeholders — who havemade the aggressive acquisition ofland to preserve open space acounty trademark in the last fewyears — have felt that proposal isnot goud enough.

And Dowd, who served as thecounty's attorney because CountyCounsel Richard T. O'Connor wasa witness in the litigation, said hesaw no reason to believe that haschanged.

"Based on my conversationswith all five freeholders duringthe last few weeks, I believe thereis still a strong interest in. acquir-ing all or a portion of BammHollow," said Dowd. "Of course,there is the fiscal consideration ...But I believe there are amplegrounds to appeal, because I be-lieve Selikoff was seriously mis-taken."

Dowd said' Selikoff based hisdecision on two beliefs: thatO'Connor did not engage in "goodfaith" negotiations with the de-velopers, and the failure ofO'Connor to forward a copy of theappraisal with the complaint.

The county had offered thedevelopers $8.2 million for theproperty — just weeks after theypurchased the land from de-veloper Montanaro for $16.3million.i In trial testimony, Kantor calledthe county offer "laughable," cit-ing his own purchase price of$16.3 million, and the figure citedby a private appraiser that had setthe value of the property at $30million.

And Dowd said that wasevidence that O'Connor didnegotiate, but that the two partieswere so far apart on price thatfurther discussions were point-less. Dowd called that the"clearest error" by the trial court.And he said that everyone ad-mitted in court that the appraisalpapers were sent to the developersa week late.

But Dowd emphasized that hecould not speak for the free-holders, who must now decidewhether to go forward with thecondemnation — perhaps at ahigher price tag, or if they wintheir appeal, the same.

But county could choose to getan appraisal of a smaller portion

ChronologyThe Bamm Hollow story, in

brief, developed as follows:• January 1986: Developer

William Montanaro unveilsplans to place a 426-unitdevelopment and 18-hole golfcourse on the 276-acre BammHoUow site.

• Dec. 12: The MiddletownTownship Committee holds apublic hearing on an or-dinance to rezone the land,but takes no action.

• Feb. 3, 1986: Montanarosells the development rightsto The Whispering Woods atBamm Hollow developers —Frank DiMisa, Harry Kantorand Victor Losquandro — for$16.3 million, providing thedevelopment is built.

• Feb. 20: The countyBoard of Freeholders an-nounces its intention topurchase Bamm Hollow.

• Feb. 28: DiMisa, Kantorand Losquandro announceplans to place 216 single-family, luxury homes and an18-hole golf course on thesite. This requires no xoningordinances from Middletown.

• March 6: The freeholdersunanimously vote to amend a1984 appropriation, adding<8.2 million for the BammHollow purchase.

• March 20: The lonenegotiation session betweenthe county and the developersends with both sides far apartas to price.

• March 27: County Coun-sel Richard T. O'Connor isauthorized to begin condem-nation proceedings againstBamm Hollow.

• March 31: The countyfiles a declaration of takingand deposits 18.2 million inSuperior Court, condemningthe property.

• April 7: AssemblymanJoseph Azzolina files suit tostop the condemnation of thecounty.

• July 16: The PlanningBoard unanimously agrees toreview the revised Whisper-ing Woods plans for BammHollow on Aug. 20.

• Aug. 20: Superior CourtJudge Patrick J. McGann barsMiddletown Planning BoardChairwoman Judith Stanleyfrom hearing the BammHollow application, sayingher dedication to open spacewas a "conflict of Interest."

• Sept. 17: The MiddletownPlanning Board approves theBamm Hollow development.

• Dec. 22: Pretrial motionsbegin in the condemnationproceedings before SuperiorCourt Judge MarshallSelikoff.

• Dec. 23: Selikoff throwsthe condemnation out ofcourt, saying the county fail-ed to follow proper negotia-tion procedures.

of the property and condemn it, topreserve that for open space, as asort of compromise between itselfand the developers.

But whatever the countychooses to do, it seems certain thatunless it gives up its claim toBamm Hollow, it will likely meanadditional court battles.

Several lawsuits have sproutedfrom the county's pursuit of theproperty, including one filed bystate i Assemblyman Joseph Az-zolina, R-Monmputh, against thepurchase, as well as anotherwhich had Middletown PlanningBoard Chairwoman Judith Stanleybarred from hearing BammHollow, because of an' allegedconflict of interest!

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PalloneContinued from Page 1A

"I don't care who the Re-publicans put up because I'll beatany of them," said Pallone.

Yet since New Jersey Democratscontrol the Senate with a tenuous23-17 lead, Republicans need toswing only four seats to gain themajority. The 11th District, withan even voter mix of Republicansand Democrats, is an attractivetarget for the state GOP, Palaiasaid, predicting that an intensiveand costly Republican effort couldtopple Pallone.

No matter who runs against theincumbent, Palaia estimates thechallenger will spend more than$150,000 to defeat Pallone. "It'sgoing to be a tough and expensivecampaign," Palaia said.

Since the New Jersey Legis-lature is one of few nationwide tobe elected during an odd-numbered year, Pallone fears thatnot only state money, but nationalRepublican committee funds willbe available to his challenger aswell.

"There's no question the districthas been targeted," the senatorsaid.

Whether the Republican can-didate is Palaia, Villane, or one of

many others, the 1987 race will becostly and perhaps quite negative,Pallone said.

Pallone said a voters' poll wasrecently conducted in the 11 thDistrict by a group other than theDemocrats which focused mainlyon "negative stuff and mentionedthe names of five political figures:Pallone, Villane, Palaia, Dewd andMayor Huhn of Long Branch.

Pallone, who said he was toldabout the poll by several people,declined to describe the questionsit posed to voters, except to saythey centered on "negative"aspects about himself, Palaia andVillane.

Palaia said he was aware of thepoll, but didn't know who con-ducted it. He said neither he,Villane nor the Monmouth Re-publican Committee were in-volved with the poll, but that astatewide political organizationmay have been responsible.

Chairman Dowd contends theSenate campaign will focus, inpart, on Pallone's reputation as analleged bill pilferer, even thoughthe senator denies the charges.

Assemblyman Villane, state Sen.S. Thomas Gagliano, R-Mon-mouth, and most recently Palaiahave individually charged that

Pallone has stolen credit in theSenate for legislation they con-ceived and developed.

Palaia , contended in hispublished letter that after eightmonths of work to draft a billestablishing a pension program forvolunteer fire companies and firstaid squads, Pallone introduced anidentical measure in the Senateand issued press releases assign-ing the credit to himself.

"The fact that you have alegislator who routinely purloinsthe work product, not just of otherlegislators, but of volunteer fire-fighters and first aid squads,speaks volumes about that can-didate," said Chairman Dowd.

Charges of bill stealing againstPallone have recently been utteredby Democrats as well, he claimed.

"It raises a legitimate questionas to how effective a legislator canbe with that kind of reputation,"said Dowd.

But Pallone, who described thefirefighters' bills as a bipartisan,collaborative effort betweenhimself and Palaia, said he wassurprised by the attack.

"The bottom line is Joe has beenso cooperative with me. We'veworked together on that bill and

others. He at no time indicated hewas unhappy with the help I'dgiven him," Pallone said. Pallonesaid the bill In question was theproduct of a compromise betweenmeasures drafted by a Republicantask force and a Senate legislativecommittee.

"The only reason they use thisploy is because I'm successful andI get things done," Pallone said,adding he expects the Republicansto mount a campaign of "personalattacks and character assasina-tlon."

Pallone said the 1986 con-gressional campaign of RepublicanBrian Kennedy against incumbentU.S. Rep. James Howard, D-N.J.,took on similar negative tones.Pallone said this approach failedagainst the dynastic Howard be-cause voters were offended byattacks on the 11-term incum-bent's character.

"That's what they did to How-ard and I think that's what's goingto happen to me, they'll try tomake me out as a bad person,"Pallone said. "I think it's a terribleway to run a campaign, a way theythink they can defeat an incum-bent without having to com-municate on an issues level."

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28,1986 The Sunday Register 5A

Huhn: considers higher office

Long Branchmayor looksat state raceBy STEPHANIE GLUCKMAN

The Register

LONG BRANCH — In a game ofmusical chairs the Republicansmay play to win state Legislatureseats in November, Mayor Philipli. Huhn could end up with anAssembly or Senate seat, accord-ing to GOP officials.

According to county GOP Chair-man William F. Dowd, Republicanleaders are eyeing Huhn as apossible candidate for state office,and Huhn said he is considering anattempt to pursue political aspira-tions at the state level.

The Republican Party considersHuhn an effective politician, whoas mayor has befriended businessinterests to attract ratubles to theniy, Dowd said. He added thatOOP circles credit Huhn withinitiating redevelopment of theblighted beachfront and SouthBroadway area.

Huhn said he is consideringentering the Assembly race, andthat his decision would be basedon many factors — first amongthem whether the two 11th Dis-trict GOP Assembly memberschoose to run for re-election.Huhn said he may run if either ofthe GOP assemblymen. Anthony"Doc" Villane Jr. or Joseph Palaia,decide to abandon the Assembly torun against the district's Demo-cratic Senate incumbent, FrankPallone Jr.. But Dowd claimed that Huhnmay end up in the race againstPallone, and join the GOP effort totake control of the Democrat-controlled Senate. He said thatVillane and Palaia have first dibson the Senate candidacy 'becauseof their seniority, but that Huhnwould be a likely possibility ifneither assemblyman decides torun agair.st Pallone.

"it certainly has crossed thecollective GOP leadership's mindthat if Doc or Joe run againstPallone, Phil Huhn would certain-ly be a leading contender for thespot vacated by Doc or Joe," Dowdsaid. "But that's all a littlepremature now, since we don'tknow yet who's running againstPalione. It might be up to PhilHuhn to do that."

Huhn is also biding his time."I'm just waiting to see whathappens after ihe'firstjbf the year.Doc Villane or Joe Palaia willprobably be running for higheroffice. I'm keeping my optionsopen. Let's put it that way," hesaid.

Huhn added that hisresponsibilities as mayor may af-fect his decision. He said he doesnot believe any politician can holdtwo offices on a continuing basis,and "do justice" to either. How-ever, he said he would "absolute-ly" he able to hold two offices forthe two years that would remainof his term as mayor after January1988 — when he would enter thestate Legislature if he is elected inNovember. "I think I could finishout my term as mayor. Absolute-ly," he said.

Dowd remarked that both Palaiaand Villane are thinking aboutrunning for the Senate, but thatneither has made a final decision"We have to await events," hesaid.

Hazlet womandies in crash. HAZLET — A Hazlet woman

was killed in a two-car collisionearly yesterday morning

Police said that RosemarieSpitalctto, 22, West RichardStreet, was killed around 3:15 a.m.when her car and a car driven byJill Smith, 22, collided at Route 30and Poole Avenue.• Police said the accident remainsunder investigation. Police did saySpitaletto's car caught fire afterthe collision.

Neither Thomas Vena, of UnionBeach, who was a passenger inSpitaletto's car, nor John Neilsen,of Martinsville, who was apassenger in Smith's car, wereseriously injured, police said.Neither man was hospitalized,police said.

Smith, of Atlantic Highlands,was taken to the Bayshore Com-munity Hospital in Holmdel andwas listed in satisfactory con-dition yesterday, a. hospitalspokesman said.

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Guard unitstands readyfor prisonemergencies

TRENTON (AP) — For a group of speciallytrained state prison guards who periodicallydon black fatigues and train for prisonemergencies, the trial of two revolutionariescharged with killing a state trooper has beena debut at extended active duty.

The unit, called the Special OperationsGroup — or SOG — is less than a year old and125 strong.

Cadres of the officers are stationed in everystate prison, ready to quell riots, rappel walls,negotiate hostage situations, dismantle bombs,or evacuate a prison that sits in the path of anatural disaster.

In recent weeks, more than a dozen SOGofficers have been handling the high security,daily transport of avowed revolutionariesRichard C. Williams and Thomas W. Manningfrom Trenton State Prison to a courtroom inSomerville.

The men are on trial on charges of shootingTrooper Philip Lamonaco Dec. 21, 1981, afterhe stopped them for a traffic violation. FourSOG members surround the defendants at alltimes in court.

Most days, SOG members look like otherprison guards and perform similar duties.

But if a crisis arises, SOG units are designedto be deployed rapidly and to be prepared for

Jersey gunmakercontends weaponat mercy of feds

Gunmen lead copson four-city chaseafter truck heist

ASSOCIATED PRESSWATCHFUL EYES — Members of the New Jersey State Corrections Department SpecialOperations Group stand guard over Thomas Manning, (right), and Richard Williams, bothavowed revolutionaries who are standing trial in Somerset County for allegedly gunning downa state trooper.

the worst, Assistant Corrections CommissionerGary J. Hilton said in a recent interview.

Hilton said the development of the SOG overthe past year has brought emergency responsecapabilities at state prisons into the 1980s.

He said that in addition to handling dis-turbances, one SOG team is trained to rappeldown walls and to break through nearly any

kind of wall, and a four-man sniper teamtrains with weapons every 30 days.

Another group of 20, which Includes depart-ment psychiatrists, is trained In the delicateart of hostage negotiations. Others are trainedin ordnance disposal, ready to respond to thefrequent bombs scares that plague stateprisons.

NORTH BERGEN (AP) — Twomen were arrested at a roadblockSaturday after they hijacked anarmored car carrying at least$400,000, took the drivers hostageand led police on a 20-minutechase punctuated by gunfire,authorities said.

"With all the shots being fired,thank God nobody was hurt," saidNorth Bergen deputy police chiefWilliam Sybel.

North Bergen police DetectiveMartin Deacutis said the armoredcar contained between $400,000and $600,000.

"The truck was full of moneybecause of the holidays," he said.

North Bergen police DetectiveSgt. Timothy Kelley identified thesuspects as Thomas Dlschler, 40,of Jersey City, and Raymond Met-calf, 44, of Little Ferry.

Police had reported earlier thatfour men were arrested but latersaid only two were arrested.

Diachler and Metcalf were beingheld without bail at the NorthBergen Police Department,authorities said. They werecharged with aggiavated assault

on police, possession of weaponsfor unlawful purposes, eludingpolice*, armed robbery and kid-napping.

Kelley said the two suspectsseized the armored car at gunpointat a Consumers Distributors Inc., adiscount store in West New York,which is across the Hudson Riverfrom New York City.

The suspects led officers fromstate, county and city police agen-cies on a chase through West NewYork, North Bergen, Secaucus andEast Rutherford in northern NewJersey, Kelley said.

He said the suspects fired aboutnine shots at police as they drovealong Route 3, a major route in andout of New York City through theLincoln Tunnel, near Secaucus andthat one police car was hit in afront tire.

The two men were arrested at aroadblock on the northbound lanesof busy Route 17 in EastRutherford, said Bergen Countypolice Sgt. Charles Knoll.

"They were stopped by all theheavy traffic from the roadblock,"Knoll said.

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — In 1980, anaggressive New Jersey busi-nessman had an idea that seemedlike a sure-fire moneymaker. Butto federal authorities, the man'spotential customers were crimi-nals and his product was a killermachine gun.

The idea came to machinistDominick Spadea when a group ofinvestors convinced him to retoolhis Westmont, N.J., shop to makeguns.

The plan was to offer an im-proved version of the MAC-10semiautomatic, a pistol-likeweapon of military design, in thestyle known . to "Rambo" and"Miami Vice" fans.

"In our time, no civilian pistolexisted to defend American soil...until now," boasts a gun publica-tion advertisement for Spadea'sproduct, the Partisan Avenger.

The ad is decorated with a skyof paratroopers and an Americaneagle perched on the menacinglooking gun.

Although semiautomatics likeSpadea's fire only one shot at atime — no different from six-shooters of the old West — theweapons are increasingly popularwith gun buffs who like the waythey look.

But the federal Bureau of Al-cohol, Tobacco and Firearms saysthe guns also are popular withdrug dealers and terrorists, andhas strictly regulated gunmakerssuch as Spadea, whose productsthe bureau deems prime for mis-use.

"The weapons that we go afterare the ones that are used incrimes. There is a public danger tothese weapons," says ATFspokesman Jack Killoran.

However, Spadea complainsabout a six-year struggle withwhat he calls "the Bureau ofArbitrary Technical Findings." Hesays his rights have been trampledsimply because he decided to makethe wrong product.

A nationwide pro-gun groupagrees, saying the ATF hastargeted Spadea in an ongoing,back-door campaign to eliminate

all semiautomatic weapons fromgeneral ownership.

Semiautomatics, hybrids offirearms technology, are as legalas the valued revolvers millions ofAmericans keep in their homes.

Like fully automatic guns, theyuse the power of a previous shot toreload themselves. But, auto-matics — also known as machineguns— go one step further, firingrepeatedly with a single pull of thetrigger.

The difference can be deadly:,the automatic version of Spadea'seasily concealable Avenger canspray up to 1,000 rounds a minute.Any of its .45-caliber slugs wouldbe enough to blow a person off hisfeet.

A new federal law banned civ-ilian sales of any fully automaticgun as of May. Federal control ofmachine guns dates to 1934, whenCongress first out lawed"gangster-type" weapons.

Today, ATF agents say, crimi-nals still want the intimidatingfirepower so they obtain semi-automatics and easily convertthem to machine guns.

Spadea says that when he andhis ' partners formed the smallJersey Arms Works, they had nointention of making anything but alegitimate, legal semiautomatic.

. "I had really no experience inthe gun business at all," he re-called recently in a telephoneinterview.

In 1981, Jersey Arms Worksadvertised its product and Spadeasaid he received more than 10,000orders for the gun, then known asthe S-7 Avenger.

But in 1982, before a single gunhad been shipped, the ATF issueda surprising ruling that Spadeasays destroyed his infant busi-ness.

The bureau reclassified thesemiautomatic MAC-10, the Geor-gia-made gun that inspiredSpadea's product, as a machinegun. Legal up to then, the MAC-10— and the Avenger along with it— suddenly became illegal.

ATF experts acknowledge theychanged their minds about theguns' operation. But, agents say,more and more MAC-10s beganshowing up in the wrong hands.

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26,1966 The Sunday Register 7A

Garden StateContinued from Ptgt 1A

In September, U.S. DUtrlctJudge H. Lee SaroMn ruled thatrandom drug testing of police andfirefighters in Plainfield violatedconstitutional rights to dueprocess and infringed on protec-tion* against unreasonablesearches.

A month later, In a case arisingfrom a random urine sampling ofNewark narcotics detectives, astate appeals court was asked towrite a standard to allow drugtesting of police officers onlywhen there is a reasonable suspi-cion and probable cause to suspectdrug use.

At the same time, the stateAttorney General's office an-nounced a policy for subjectingrecruits to tests for illegal druguse.

And in Paterson, Mayor FrankGraves got the top city officials tosubmit to drug tests in September.

In October, avowed revolution-aries Richard C. Williams and

' Thomas W. Manning went on trialfor the Dec. 21, 1981, shootingdeath of Trooper PhilipLamonaco. The trial is to continuethrough the new year.

Gov. Thomas H. Kcan saw hisnational reputation rise during1086. Boosted by a record-break-ing 1985 re-election, Kean wasInvited to speak at Republicanaffairs coast to coast and becamea frequent visitor to Washington.

The governor's high profilesparked talk of a 1088 bid forhigher office, which Kean stead-fastly denied. In December, hebecame chairman of the Re-publican Governors Association.

Tax reform became federal lawin October, and its sweepingchanges were largely credited toNew Jersey Democratic Sen. BillBradley.

When New Jersey SupremeCourt Chief Justice Robert Wilentztold a Senate committee during hisAugust reappointment hearingsthat he spent most of his free timein his Manhattan apartment be-cause ' his wife has cancer, heincurred the wrath of many law-makers, including some who urgedagainst confirming him.

- Despite the dispute, he receivedtenure until the mandatory retire-ment age of 70, but his residencyquestion generated numerous billsthat would require top state of-ficials to live in New Jersey.

Ir was a year of big changes forNewark-based People • ExpressInc.

On Oct. 24, the U.S. Transpor-tation Department approved thepurchase of the airline by TexasAir Corp. The OK of the $298million deal, which includes assetsof Frontier Airlines, cleared theway for Texas Air to become byfin-the country's largest airlinecompany. ••

Frontier, a People ' Expresssubsidiary, stopped service Aug.24 and four days later filed -forChapter 11 reorganization in U.S.Bankruptcy Court in Denver, leav-ing 4,700 employees without jobs.

United Airlines had agreed tobuy Frontier, but pulled out of the$96 million deal, saying it couldnot work out agreements with the

Traffic deathtoll at eighton N.J. roadsThe Associated Press

At least eight people have diedin Christmas holiday traffic acci-dents in New Jersey, including a17-year-old Penns Grove youthwho was killed when' the car hewas riding in veered off anOldmans Township road and hit autility pole. ,

Barry Roots died just aftermidnight Friday when the car hewas riding in swerved off a north-bound lane of U.S. 130 and hit thepole, said Trooper Donald Nemethof the state police.

In Haworth, a 19-year-old NewMilford man died when his carswerved off a road and hit a treeat 8:57 a.m. Friday, authoritiessaid. Haworth police Chief RobertAckerman identified the victim asMichael V. Cianfrone and said theaccident occurred on Valley Roadin the Bergen County community.

In Dover Township, 22-year-old William Sweerus Jr. of TomsRiver died Friday night when helost control of the car he wasdriving over the Mathis Bridgeand collided with four cars, two ofwhich were parked on the three-lane bridge in the Morris Countycommunity.

In Hamilton Township, AtlanticCounty, police said 30-year-oldLinda Caudill of Vineland diedThursday night when her carcrossed into the westbound laneand collided with a NJ Transit buson Route 40 at 11 p.m.

In Camden early Thursday, twowomen were killed on the WaltWhitman Bridge when their carcollided head-on with another car,said Angelo Venere, a DelawareRiver Port Authority police of-ficer.

Police identified the victims asArsenia Pasco, 36, of Sewell inGloucester County, the driver, andEmely Marquez, 26 , ofPhiladelpla. The accident oc-curred at 12:35 a.m., authoritiessaid.

Kenneth Gibsonairline's unions.

Also during the year, PeopleExpress announced programs thatdeparted from Its no-frills April1081 beginning, including offeringfree snacks, beverages and bag-gage check-in.

In August, authorities said apre-Revolutionary War mansionbelieved to be owned by deposed iPhilippine President Ferdinand E.Marcos was suspiciously emptiedof most of its furnishings. The13.5-acre Lawrence Township es-tate was reportedly occupied byMarcos' daughter when she at-tended Princeton University.

In March, Superior Court JudgePaul G. Levy issued an orderprohibiting the mansion's saleuntil he could determine whetherit was purchased with moneyMarcos allegedly stole from hiscountry.

The judge also issued injunc-tions blocking the sale of a CherryHill property allegedly used byMarcos' son when he attended theUniversity of Pennsylvania.

On Sept. 1, a Runnemede mancollapsed and died after eatingcyanide-laced packaged chicken-noodle soup. Louis Denber, 27, fellinto a coma and died three hoursafter sipping the soup in his home.

The Camden County prosecutor,the FBI and the U.S. Food andDrug Administration are continu-ing the investigation.

Nlcodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo,the reputed leader of organizedcrime in southern New Jersey andPhiladelphia, was arrested Nov. 3oh charges including conspiracy tocommit racketeering. Seventeenothers were arrested on similarcharges, including Scarfo'snephew, Philip "Crazy Phil"Leonetti.

On Sept. 16, 13,000 casinoworkers walked off their Jobs inAtlantic City. Within the next 24hours, pickets were joined byrowdy out-of-towners and resi-dents who blocked and disabledvehicles, pelted gamblers witheggs and threw rocks and bottlesthrough casino windows.

In November, officials said anexperiment to reduce the amountof radon gas in 10 Clinton homes

was successful. But they saiddangerously high levels of thecolorless and odorless gas that hasbeen linked to cancer still exist Inat least 95 homes in the communi-ty-

In a pilot project, the stateDepartment of EnvironmentalProtection and the U.S. En-vironmental Protection Agencyreduced levels of the gas by 98percent.

In a similar situation, the stateannounced In June that It wouldship radium-contaminated soilfrom three Essex County com-munities to an abandoned quarryin Vernon Township. Oppositionfrom residents of Sussex Countyand nearby Orange County, N.Y.,later led the DEP to reconsider.

Superfund, the federal toxic-waste cleanup treasury, was re-stored by Congress and signed Intolaw by President Reagan in Oc-tober.

New Jersey Rep. James Florio,who authored the original $1.6billion fund in 1080, played a keyrole in Its reauthoiizatlon.

New Jersey has more siteseligible for Superfund money thanany other state.

As troubling as how to clean upthe Superfund sites is how todispose of the waste, and the stateannounced a plan in 1086 to buildtwo hazardous waste Incineratorsand an above-ground enclosedlandfill. It named 11 prospectivesites, but residents and businessesnear them filed suit and formedhuman blockades to clog progress.The commission charged withfinding a site said it will make adecision in the spring.

In Trenton, the Legislaturebegan the year under the controlof different parties for the firsttime in more than a decade. In thepast, Democrats had the run of theLegislature, but the GOP gainedcontrol of the lower house on thecoattails of Kean's historic 1985win over Essex County ExecutivePeter Shapiro.

, Bad times continued for Shapiroin 1086 when he lost his executiveseat to former Democrat NicholasAmato.

Another long-time Essex Coun-ty politician, Newark Mayor Ken-neth Gibson, also lost his job.Gibson was defeated by city Coun-cilman Sharpe James.

Disaster also struck the state in1986.

On July 1, an experimental,343-foot-Iong airship made froma blimp and parts of four helicop-ters — the Hell-Stat — caughtfire and crashed while on a testflight at the Naval station inLakehurst, killing one of five crewmembers aboard.' The crash oc-curred at the same site where- theHindenburg exploded in flames 49years ago.

On Oct. 9, an early morning tourbus carrying Austrian sightseersswerved after hitting a car andcollided head-on with a commuterbus headed for the Lincoln Tunnel,killing a Belleville resident andinjuring at least 25 people.

On May 26, two people werekilled in a blast that rippedthrough a Kearny aluminumbaseball bat plant. The explosion

DIGESTDeer plunges into house, runs amok

EAST BRUNSWICK (AP) —A 120-pound deer crashedthrough a double-pane

glass window of a home hereand ran through two rooms —startling a woman and twochildren in the kitchen —before it collapsed and laterdied, authorities said.

"It's one of those freak actsof nature," Sgt. Donald Bennetof the East Brunswick policesaid Friday after the deer ranthrough the home of Peter andDawn Pizzo.

The couple was away at thetime, but Mrs. Pizzo's sister,Leslie Granowsky, wasbabysitting the couple's twochildren when the doe leapedthrough their dining room win-dow at 11:15 a.m., splattering

blood and kicking the walls,police said.

"They ran outside. They. didn't even see what it was,"

Mrs. Pizzo said of her sister andchildren. "My sister thoughtsomebody shot out the win-dow."

Victor Romatowski, deputyconservation officer for thestate Division of Fish andGame; said the 2W-year-olddoe apparently saw the reflec-tion of the trees in the windowand thought it was running toa safe area.

He said the deer collapsedfrom shock and loss of blood.The animal died In the back of.Romatowski's truck on theway to a veterinarian's office.

DEP office plagued by noxious fumes

TRENTON (AP) — The stateDepartment of En-vironmental Protection,

charged with overseeing NewJersey's toxic waste problem,has an environmental problemin its own office, a spokesmansaid Saturday.

Shelves in the department'sfirst-floor file room apparent-ly are emitting a noxious odor,and employees who enter theroom have been complaining ofsore and irritated eyes, saidspokesman James Staples.

He said the problem hasprompted the department toissue a directive telling em-ployees to spend no more than10 minutes in the room. No oneworks full time in the room, hesaid.

Air tests conducted in theroom by the state Health De-partment found that the levelsof formaldehyde didn't exceedfederal Occupational Safetyand Health Administrationstandards, he said.

Holiday safety programs unveiled

ELWOOD — According toCharles E. Owens, Opera-tions Manager of the New

Jersey Expressway Authority,"Operation Look-Out", apositive enforcement programdesigned to provide additionalpolice protection on the road-way during this holiday driv-

ing season, began last weekand will continue New Year's.

As part of "Operation Look-Out" the Expressway willprovide free coffee tomotorists starting at 9 p.m. onNew Yedr's Eve until 9 a.m.New Year's Day at its fast-food restaurant located at theFrank S. Farley Plaza.

aov.ThomaiH.Kean •

and fire at American ModernMetals sent plastic-filled batsrocketing into the sky and damag-ed much of an Industrial complexhousing more than a dozen busi-nesses.

In Atlantic City, the casinostrike was not the only news-maker in 1986.

Construction of Showboat's$230 million casino hotel nearedcompletion with a target openingdate of February. The gaming hallwould be the island resort's 12th.

In June, a state Senate commit-tee tabled a bill that would haveallowed 24-hour gambling incasinos, despite strong lobbyingefforts from the gaming halls.

And a Newark judge ruled inJune that real estate developerDonald Trump could not renamehis Boardwalk casino Trump'sPalace because gamblers wouldconfuse it with Caesars Palace inLas Vegas, Nev.

Resorts International Inc.Chairman James Crosby diedApril 10. His death touched offWall Street speculation that thecompany was ripe for takeover.

In other business news, Johnson& Johnson decided to no longerproduce over - the -countermedication in capsules because itcould not guarantee their safety.The decision came nine days aftera New York woman was killed bycyanide-laced Tylenol capsulesand 3V4 years after seven people inIllinois suffered the same fate. *

General 'Motors Corp. toldbankrupt Hyatt-Clark Industriesin November that it would severIts relationship with the Clarkfirm at the end of the 1087 modelyear. ,

Three principals of failed gov-ernment securities dealer BevillBresler & Schulman Inc. pleadedguilty Nov. 5 to a complex fraudauthorities say cost customersmore than $100 million.

And on Dec. 23, First JerseySecurities Inc. announced that itwill sell its nationwide network ofretail stock offices to a New Yorkinvestment firm specializing inover-the-counter securities, theSherwood Capital Group.

Harrison Williams

In the courts, Victoria Sellers,the 23-year-old daughter of thelate actor Peter Sellers, was ac-cused In March of participating inan alleged violent .internationalcocaine operation. Ms. Sellers,charged with conspiracy, ad-mitted a peripheral role in thedrug ring in May and agreed totestify for the government in thecase.

Controversy continued to sur-round right-to-die cases as thecourts tried to further define theissue.

Two victims of Lou Gehrig sdisease involved in court battlesover whether they should be forcefed died during the year. And astate judge in April granted arequest that a brain-damagedwoman be disconnected from afeeding tube. Officials at the con-valescent center where the womanis in a persistent vegetative statehave appealed the decision andrefused to remove the tube.

A person's right to die withdignity first was established bythe high court in its landmark1976 decision in the case of KarenAnn Quintan.

Alleged Genovese crime familyleader John DiGilio was acquittedDec. 12 of being a convicted felonin possession of a shotgun. InNovember, however, he was in-dicted on federal charges of con-spiring to take payoffs from astevedore company on the Bayon-ne waterfront.

Three friends of fugitive formerstate Sen. David Friedland, allpast officials of a Teamsterspension fund, were convicted Dec.23 of accepting kickbacks from theex-legislator as part of a scam todefraud millions of dollars fromthe fund.

•In June, a Hackehsack juryconvicted two millionaire brothersof arranging the murder of onedefendant's ex-wife. The men re-ceived life sentences.

In other court action, jury poolselection began in November in thetrial of 22 alleged members of theLucchese organized crime family.

And six more convicted killerswere sent to death row at TrentonState Prison, bringing the total to23.

Among those sentenced were!Robert O. Marshall and JacmtoKoger "Joey" Hightower. '•'.

A state Jury convicted 47-year-old Marshall of murder for hir«/'T*.and conspiracy on March 6 in the * »death of his wife. Hightower hadasked to be sentenced to deathafter being convicted in November •of the 1986 slaying of a youngmother.

Meanwhile, the New Jersey Su-preme Court continued to consider 'whether the state's capitalpunishment law is constitutional.

On Nov. 20, a Cherry Hill doctor -admitted to injecting his ter-minally ill mother-in-law withdrugs and killing her.

Among those seeing another ,side of the Judicial system in 1986— being released from prison —were former U.S. Sen. HarrisonWilliams Jr. and former CamdenMayor Angelo J. Errichetti.

Williams, who became the firstU.S. senator to be jailed in 80years when he was sentenced forhis Abscam conviction, wasparoled from a Newark halfwayhouse Jan. 31.

Convicted in 1981 of nine countsof bribery and conspiracy, Wil-liams entered a minimum-securityprison Jan. 19, 1084, and servednearly two years of a three-yearterm.

Errichetti, 57, also convicted inthe FBI's Abscam probe, served 32months of a six-year sentence andwas paroled March 5.

Also tasting freedom in 1986was Elizabeth resident NathanielWalker, who was released fromprison in November after servingeight years of a life-plus-53-yearsentence for a 1974 sexual assaulthe did not commit.

A state judge dismissed the caseafter prosecutors agreed that testson a forgotten sperm sample keptrefrigerated in the Elizabethpolice property room proved the44-year-old man could not havocommitted the crime.

In October, U.S. AttorneyThomas W. Greelish announced he .would resign to enter private lawpractice.

New Jersey was under the spot-light in June when Reagan came toGlassboro High School to deliver acommencement address to 130graduating seniors.

And death came to two statelegislators in 1986.

Sen. Walter Foran, R-Hunt-erdon, 67, died Dec. 8 at age 67 oflung cancer. John Caufield, a 67-year-old Essex County Democrat,died Aug. 24, also of cancer.

In sports, the New York Jetsjoined the Giants in making theirrespective conferences' playoffs.

The New Jersey Nets, in theirfirst season under new head CoachDave Wohl, finished fourth in theNBA Atlantic Division beforebeing swept in three games by theMilwaukee Bucks in the playoffs'first round.

In the NHL, the New JerseyDevils completed their secondseason under Coach DougCarpenter, finishing last in thePatrick Division.

And financially troubled GardenState Park in Cherry Hill ended its1986 harness racing season earlyand dropped plans for a 1987season.

Handicapped lawyer attains judgeshipNEWARK, N.J. (AP) — When

Bruce Gaeta was a municipal judge. in Wyckoff, a motorist came into

his courtroom to plead innocent toparking in a space reserved for thehandicapped.

The motorist did not take long tochange his plea to guilty when.Gaeta took the bench. Gaeta is aquadriplegic.

The 44-year-old Wyckoff resi-dent was sworn in two weeks agoas a Superior Court judge inBergen County, which marked justanother step in a legal career thatstarted eight years after he wasparalyzed in a car accident.

"Each step is a new challenge,"Gaeta said recently. "We're justgoing to do the best we can."

Gaeta will hear small claims

cases, traffic cases, housing dis-putes and zoning board appeals asa judge in the special civil part ofSuperior Court.

So far, "I've been handling itwell," Gaeta said in modest tones.

That doesn't surprise one law-yer who has appeared beforeGaeta in municipal court. .

"To me, it's a good appoint-ment," said Clifton attorney MilesFeinstein. "This guy's going to bea good judge.

"He was'always right down themiddle and very considerate withthe lawyers," said.Feinstein, whosuffered from polio as a child.

• After graduating from RamapoRegional High School, Gaeta wentto the University of Tampa. At age20, he was in a car accident that

left him, with compressed ver-tebrae.

Gaeta was paralyzed from thpwaist down and had only partialuse of his arms. After a year of,rehabilitation, he finished collegeat Seton Hall University and wasgraduated from New York LawSchool in 1970. ,

Private law practice in Mahwahfollowed, and Gaeta later becamea zoning board attorney there andprosecutor in South Hackensaik.

Gaeta said he has been able toaccomplish what he has throughthe support of friends and family

"There were people whothought it would be difficult 1didn't. It was no harder than(anything) else," he said in atelephone interview.

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By John H. Cook and Henry ClayPublished by the Red Bank Register

A Trice Communications Corporation Newspaper

CLIFF SCHECHTMAN, Editor

JANE FODERARO, Associate EditorANN H. KELLETT, Nevis EditorDAMIEN ROOHR, City Editor

GARRETT STASSE, Sports EditorPAMELA ABOUZEID, features EditorCARL D. FORINO, ChiefPhotographer

C1986 Tn* R«J Bulk RagwMr. Ml Right! RaMivad

I

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28,1986

No more deja vuFar be it from us to sound like

nattering nabobs of negativism.But, if the mess in Washington

isn't cleaned up post haste, 1987 maynot be a vintage year for the UnitedStates.

Despite cheery words to the con-trary from the White House, Ameri-cans now are closing out a year thatclearly was a disaster. We just have tohear the buzz words — Grarrtm-Rudman, space shuttle, Hasenfus, dis-information, Rekayavik, trade deficit,shredded documents, specialprosecutor and — oh yes, as icing'—a cake for the Ayatollah.

But, even so, President Reagandoesn't see it that way at all. Yester-day, as he headed for a Palm Springsvacation, he characterized the year of1986 by referring to his friend FrankSinatra and a song made popular iVythe old crooner which compareswomen to wine. "It was a very goddyear," pronounced Reagan.

Now, if you think about it, maybethat everything-is-hunky-doryoutlook is part of the overall problem.Let's face it — this administrationconsistently has told the Americanpeople things were terrific when theyweren't.

In fact, when the Iran-contra deba-cle first came to light, the White I lousechief of staff, Donald Regan, publiclyboasted how the president's men have,been able to use "a shovel afterparade*." He made it perfectly clearthey take pride in using public rela-tions — though some would call itdeceit — in order to transform theirdefeats into victories.

The irony is thai everything was OKin the Oval Office while the adminis-tration was able to successfullymanipulate the press with its shovel.But, now that the technique isn'tworking so well (perhaps the shovel'stoo small), President Reagan hastaken to blaming all his woes on themedia.

In his radio message yesterday, heattacked the news media for focusingon the secret arms sales to Iran anddiversion of profits to Nicaraguan

rebels. He talked about a book by theconservative commentator Ben Watt-enberg entitled, "The Good News Isthe Bad News Is Wrong," And ourpresident praised the author for writ-ing "that daily news reports in recentyears have focused on negative eventsand predictions of gloom and doom."

Now, does that sound familiar?Remember Spiro Agnew? You know,he' was the alliterative vice presidentwho nattered about negatavism in thepress — and then was indicted. Buthis demise was diminished by theunfolding drama of dirty tricks knownas Watergate ...

Unfortunately, there's reason tobelieve the mentality that dreamed upAgnew's brand of oratory is onceagain ensconced in the White House,grinding out the Same kind of virulentverbiage. And it's the kind of deja vuthe country simply doesn't need.

What it needs, rather, is the plaintruth. No more PR. No more mis-speak and double-speak, no morenon--summits and non-swaps. Justthe facts — as cold and difficult asthey may be.

The tragic part of all of this — ofthe administration's inability or un-willingness, or both, to be straightwith the American people — is thatthe Republican Party once more is onthe ropes. It's really unbelievable thatthe party leadership can be in such ashambles the second time around.Republican voters deserve better.They, after all, twice supported thisadministration with the belief thathard work pays off and there's no freelunch. Now they're learning aboutmoney hidden in Swiss bank accounts.

The president flew off yesterday tospend the New Year's holiday at the

' Palm Springs estate of publisherWalter Annenberg (who, incidentally,also played host to Nixon and Agnew).Let's hope that, as he greets the NewYear, President Reagan can sort outsome of the problems that beset hisadministration — starting with theway in which Americans are keptinformed.

Drive for false savingsAmericans owe Uncle Sam some

$250 billion under various Federalloan programs. Selling those loans

to private investors is one of Washing-Ion's new tricks for reducing the! budget deficit. The Government getscash quickly and painlessly; the in-vestor gets a discounted loan thatshould eventually pay off at face

•' value and pays interest in the mean-• time. While there is some merit to this| undertaking, it is poor deficit-reduc-; tion strategy.

•} A loan sales experiment proposed; by President Reagan this year was; enthusiastically embraced and ex-) panded by Congress in its search for; savings, and will be expanded again in; Mr. Reagan's next budget.t

! The dollar amounts involved aren't' great, not compared with the deficit or'• with total outstanding loans. The'• President proposed selling loans with' a face value of $4.4 billion, estimating' they would fetch about $2 billion.' Congress raised the ante to $7 billion,

estimating a yield of $4 billion. Thatwas' wishful thinking, loan experts

Big or small, loan sales are decep-tive budgeting. The purpose of deficit

' reduction is to reduce the total volumeof borrowing, thereby easing pressureon credit markets. Selling a Federalloan only moves it from the Govern-ment's books onto someone else's.Moreover, loan sales add to futuredeficits — by eliminating the future

- revenues that the Government would

normally receive from interest andrepayment of principal.

The Administration points out that,deception or no, selling loans results inbetter management of loan programs.If the Government makes a $1,000loan and can get only $900 for it froma private investor, the $100 discountreveals a hidden subsidy. Exposingthe subsidy gives lending agencies andCongress a yardstick for the quality ofFederal loans. But this usefulness islimited. Huge amounts of so-calledloans won't sell at any price — likefarm subsidy loans and overseascredits for military hardware.

The loans being offered for sale thisyear are old loans in which deepdiscbunts exaggerate the subsidy. ThePresident's budget director, JamesMiller, wants now to start selling loansas soon as they are made; quick salesto private investors would make thesubsidy factor clearer. He would alsoexpose the invisible value of Federalloan,guarantees, by requiring privateinsurance backing to be budgeted andpaid for by the Government.

Th6se are worthy goals. It would benice jf the Administration were aseager to expose all hidden subsides,including those still concealed in thetax code. That the passion for moreopen financing doesn't extend beyondlimited loan sales suggests the real,and irresponsible, force that drivesthis exercise: a desire for phonysavings.

New York Times

SURGEON GENERALS WARNING:Passive Smoking May Be

Hazardous To Your Health

VIEWPOINTBusiness leaders must face new realityJIM WRIGHT

Here's a New Year cheer for theCommittee for Economic Development:That national group of business andeducation leaders recently faced apainful political truth that bears direct-ly on this country's economic health.This action, painful though it may be, isa good start on the lessons of Reality101, a course that all of us who work fora living will have to take soon.

In a new report on change In the labormarket, CED acknowledges that:

1. American industries MUST be ableto make changes much more quickly inorder to survive in an increasinglytough world market.

' Businessmen have been noddingagreement over that for some time. It'sstandard convention speech stuff. Butthere is a second, and critically import-ant, truth in the mix: t

2. American workers have a lot morevotes than corporations do. So, if theseproposed lightning changes producewhole regiments of casualties from thework force — laid off, unemployed,technologically obsolete, aging, under-educated, whatever — then politicalmeans are going to be found by thesewalking wounded to block the changesand cripple our ability to compete evenmore completely.

The delusion that economic problemscan be solved by passing a law againstthem is not limited to protectionism, theidea that we can beat the foreigncompetition by banning it. This kind ofsmoke-and-mirrors promise has greatpolitical appeal where workers arehurting.

But the same sort of reasoning can be.used closer to home: in, for awfulexample, the plant-closing laws thatsome cities have tried to use in recentyears to stop companies from closinglocal plants that can no longer earn aprofit. This is roughly equivalent totrying to prevent death by passing acity ordinance forbidding heart failure.

Businessmen never have been verysuccessful in persuading others,workers or politicians, to recognize thata bankrupt business provides littleemployment and even less Job security.A city government, driven by the fearsof workers and other local voters, maybe able to prevent a plant from closing;it cannot prevent the owner of the plantfrom going broke when his productscan't draw customers in themarketplace.

One thing CED wants to see ac-complished is general recognition of thefact that profit is a necessity foreconomic survival in business.

Some of the agenda goals worked outby CED are obvious, such as involvingworkers directly in productivity im-provements and notifying workers ofchanges affecting their jobs as far inadvance as possible. Though the overallgoal of getting the workers into the acthas been around for a long time, notmany companies reach it.

The CED also calls for an update ofgovernment's approach, changing, forinstance, the unemployment insurancesystem to bridge workers'pay whenthey shift types of jobs. The old jobmarket, in which many workers couldexpect to spend their entire workinglives as loyal members of one companyteam, is giving way to a world in whichworkers can expect to have several jobs— even several different CAREERS.

Which brings up a CED proposal thatis truly startling. Already most en-lightened businesses are acting on theknowledge that each must train,educate and upgrade its work force todo a better, smarter job for the firm,making it more competitive and betterable to earn a profit. More t han $200 'billion a year is spent on such training.What CED says business must do in thefuture is go beyond that: train workersto do a better Job for their NEXTemployer, fold the costs of such train-ing into the price of their own product.

Now that may raise eyebrows andvoices in the board room. It may sound

like the nitwit liberal notion that abusiness is a social agency, but it isn't.The idea of "qualifying workers foremployment outside the firm," to useCED's dull prose, is strictly bottom line:The best way to allay the fear of changeis to make the change as painless aspossible for all concerned, includingworkers who have to shift jobs becauseof it.

Therefore, It is in the grand traditionof enlightened self-interest that hard-nosed businessmen see "the fact thatemployment security may rest more onthe development of transferable skillsthan on long-term service in one com-pany."

As CED suggests, the ability of ourhighly developed economy to move fastand shift quickly is vital to theprosperity of employers and employeesalike in the long run. But most em-ployees realize that midst all this granddesign stuff, they and their familieshave to keep the mortgage paid and thegroceries bought in the short run.Sonorous chamber-of-commercespeeches about'competitiveness are oflittle comfort to a 60-year-old steel-worker who is about to be laid off fromhis life's work with no training orprospects for a fresh start.

The broad aim of the CED is simplyto get all Americans working togethereffectively to increase our productivi-ty, our competitiveness and, therefore,our ability to prosper together. That iseasier to say than to do. It meansrebuilding some measure of trust, re-placing some of the conflict betweenbusiness and labor with cooperation formutual benefit.

The first and most important step inthat direction must be taken within theranks of business itself. Corporationsmust find managers who are leaders.The kind of business firm that trains itsworkers for their next employer re-quires a chief who can see beyond nextyear's balance sheet.

Jim Wright is senior columnist of TheDallas Morning News.

Talk about being soft on CommunismLARS ERIK NELSON

WASHINGTON —On Dec. 16,Mikhail Gorbachev telephoned theGorki apartment of exiled physicistAndrei Sakharov and told him he wasfree to return to Moscow after sevenyears of isolation from friends andwork.

It was long overdue. Sakharov is aman of courage and conviction — apatriot too, if only his governmentcould recognize what true patriotism is.

Releasing him was thus a good deed,and good deeds should be applauded.Instead, the American response toGorbachev's action has been un-generous and grudging. Sure, the Re-agan administration says, Sakharov isfree, but he shouldn't have been exiledin the first place. And what about thethousands of innocents in the Gulag?What about Anatoly Marchenko, thebrilliant author of "My Testimony,"who died in the labor camps just beforeSakharov was released?

Private organizations give Gorbachev

BLOOM COUNTY

even less credit. When Sakharov andhis wife, Yelena Bonner, returned toMoscow, Pamela Cohen of the Union ofCouncils for Soviet Jews rejoiced intheir release, but added: "The return ofthis couple from exile is a cynicalgesture on the part of the Soviets when

• we recall that thousands of Sovietcitizens, including hundreds of SovietJews, are half-starved, de-humanizedand bereft of hope in the dreadedprisons of the Siberian Gulag."

I do not dispute these assessments ofthe evil nature of the Soviet system. Butthey are irrelevant. It's the deeds thatcount, and throughout the Reaganyears, the psychology of the Americanresponse to Soviet deeds has beencompletely screwy: Criminal behaviorgoes unpunished and the occasionaleffort at civilized conduct is dismissedas mischievous Kremlin propaganda.

In September 1983, the Soviets shotdown a Korean airliner, killing a U.S.congressman. They suffered no U.S.penalty to fit the crime. The Reaganadministration didn't even stop grainsales. In March 1986, a Soviet soldier in

East Germany shot U.S. Army Maj.Arthur Nicholson in cold blood and lethim bleed to death. Again, there was noU.S. penalty. Just propaganda.

When the Russians have behaved .barbarously or, as at the Reykjavik

- summit, mischievously, Americanshave contented themselves with naiveand profitless name-calling. After thecollapse of Reykjavik, White HouseChief of Staff Donald Regan com-plained: "The Soviets are the ones thatrefused to make the deal. It shows themup for what they are. The Sovietsfinally showed their hand." Surprise.

Yet, when the Soviets have behavedseriously and responsibly, they havebeen treated to the same kind of abuse.When they returned to nuclear-armsnegotiations, we boasted that we"forced" them there by our defensebuildup. When they offered a unilateralhalt to nuclear tests, we called it apropaganda trick.

Is Gorbachev granting more democ-racy to his people? It must be a sign ofhis weakness and desperation.

Lars Erik Nelson writes for the NewYork Daily News.

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SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28,1988The

COMMENTARY

Northern bigotsachieve parity

Mayor Ed Koch of N«w York haatouched off a stimulating debate.Are Southerners worse bigots thanthose of us In the North?

He raised the question whilebemoaning an ugly racial incidentin his city.

. A mob of white teen-agers at-tacked three black men whose carbroke down In their neighborhood.One of the blacks is dead and threeof the white teen-agers are up totheir empty heads in legal trouble.

Expressing amazement that thiscould happen In the Big Apple,Koch said: "I'd expect this type ofthing to happen in the DeepSouth."

This offended several Southernmayors who have demanded thatKoch apologize for suggesting thattheir bigots are worse than hisbigots.

I don't blame them for beingoffended. Koch's remarks of-fended me, too.

I've always believed thatNorthern bigots are just as mean,nasty and numerous as those inthe South. But they've never re-ceived the recognition they've de-served.

Through the years, wheneverHollywood has needed an easystereotype of a bigot, what wereIts choices?!

Often it was a burly Southernsheriff, eyes hidden behind reflec-tor sun glasses, telling an innocentblack: "Boy, yaw in big tubbte."

Or another familiar scene. Asleepy little Southern town. Ablack has done something to of-fend the locals. He Is now boldlyriding a mule down Main St.

Staring menacingly from Infront of the general store are theoverall-clad rednecks, Billy Bob,Bubba, and Junior, spittingtobacco, hefting their ax handlesand muttering what they're goingto do to that uppity nigra.

Another favorite. Night hascome and a black sharecropperfamily peers through the windowof their rickety home. Suddenlythe cars and trucks roar up thedusty road, and out leap thewhite-robed Klansmen, bearingtorches and weapons.

Of course, it wasn't all fiction. Inthe pre-civil rights days, blackswere frequently found hangingfrom Southern tree limbs. True,their life was hard, but theycouldn't have all been suiddes.• And during the days of MartinLuther King Jr., we saw beady-eyed Southern deputies ridehorses into peaceful marches,Southern politicians vow "never,"and vigilantes bury the bodies ofcivil rights workers in pig pens.

As a result of all this attentiongiven the South, Northern'bigotswere denied credit for their ef-forts.

In cities such as Chicago andNew York, we had just as manycops who took glee In cracking theskulls of minority members. Forawhile, Koch's cops seemed to beconstantly explaining why it wasnecessary to shoot fat blackwomen.

And it's always been dangerous— sometimes fatal — for blacks tohave flat tires in blue-collarneighborhoods such as the one inQueens or In Chicago's MarquettePark or Bridgeport.

(Of course, it's equally danger-ous for whites to wander into NewYork's Harlem or Chicago's Lawn-dale. Modern life is a series oftradeoffs, I guess.)

Many of us remember how Dr.King was treated in the South, themany times he was jailed, spatupon, cursed.

But don't forget it was Chicagowhere a brick bounced off King'shead when he went walking in thebungalow belt.' Although I've lived in Chicagomost of my life, I've also spent alot of time in the South. It wouldprobably add up to a couple ofyears or more. There's no doubt inmy mind that words such as"nigger," "coon," "shine" and"boogie," are as much a part of theChicago vocabulary as the •South'!

And when that mob chased theblack men in Queens, I'm sure theyweren't yelling: "Let's catch thoseAmericans of African ancestry."

So Koch should give creditwhere It is due. Maybe 60 or 100years ago, the South had the edge.But we've achieved parity.

However, those indignantSouthern mayors shouldn't get toopuffed up In their claim that a newsense of fellowship exists in theirneck of the woods.

As Mayor W.W. Goodbond, ofBrookhaven, Miss., said of Koch:

. "I believe that Jews like him. that get in this office don't knowwhat they are talking about."

Nothing like brotherhood.Mike Royko is a syndicated

columnist.

Our federal officials:What are they worth?

WASHINGTON — Is a memberof Congress "worth" 1135,000 ayear? Is a Cabinet secretary"worth" (160,000 a year? Earlierthis month the President's Com-mission on Executive, Legislativeand Judicial Salaries recom-mended such salaries. The recom-mendations call for someprayerful thought.

In fixing pay scales, whether inthe public or private sector, twoconsiderations play a significantrole. One is economic: What com-pensation must be offered in orderto obtain the level of competencerequired by the job? The second ismoral: What is fair?

We know how these things workin private employment. This pastseason the Boston Red Sox paidoutfielder Jim Rice almost $2million. George Brett of the Kan-sas City Royals commandedSi,471,000. Twenty-one otherplayers drew salaries of $ 1 millionor more. At the other extreme,thousands of domestic servantsworked for the minimum wage of13.66 an hour. What pay wasrequired? What pay was Just?

In the private sector, the econ-omic question tends to answeritself. The chief executive officerof a multibillion-dollar corpor-ation earns his pay or he doesn't.The directors and shareholdersfind their answer in the bottomline. The question of "fairness"becomes a matter of conscience.

In public employment the sameconsiderations apply, but theyapply differently. It is impossibleto say what salaries are necessaryto prompt talented men andwomen to run for Congress, toseek places on the federal bench orto accept top positions in ex-ecutive agencies. There is no de-monstrable way to establish the"worth" of a senator. Reporterswho cover Capitol Hill could namea dozen senators who in theirjudgment are worth twice thepresent'base pay of $77,400 (as ofJan. 1): and they could name adozen who aren't worth half thatamount.

The question of fairness inpublic employment, especially atthe top levels that were the com-mission's sole concern, is equallytough. Most members of Congresswork hard at their responsiblejobs; almost all of them mustmaintain fwo homes; many of

T

them have sons and daughters ofcollege age. Despite periodicraises, they now receive much lessin purchasing power than theyreceived 20 years ago. Is this fair?

There is another side. The basepay of a senator or representativeis only part of the story. In 1985senators picked up $2.4 million inspeaking fees. They gave $723,000to charity and kept the rest forthemselves; 65 senators made atleast $20,000 in this fashion.Nearly 100 members of the Houseearned the limit of $22,530 on thelecture trail. The House puts amodest ceiling on outside Incomefrom other sources; the Senate,which next year will permitmembers to earn up to 40 percentof their base pay in speakingengagements, puts no limits onother forms of income.

In my own view, for whatever itmay be worth, the commission'srecommendation of a 74 percentincrease in congressional pay Isunwarranted. A base salary in theneighborhood of $90,000, coupledwith a strict limitation on outsideincome, seems more reasonable tome.

Members of the judiciary enjoyno such perquisites. Able men andwomen always will aspire to theprestige of the federal bench. Avacancy has only to developbefore a dozen candidates maketheir ambitions known. But inrecent years federal courts havelost some exceedingly talentedjudges for economic reasons. Thetypical federal Judge now earnsless than the salary paid to amiddle-level corporate lawyer.This isn't fair. The recommendedsalaries of $130,000 for districtjudges and $135,000 for circuitjudges may be a bit of excessive,but they are not wildly un-reasonable.

James J. Kilpatrick is a syndi-cated columnist.

A FAIRLY MAJop. ASSAULTSECRET WAP., CPNTeWTOF ON6RES5, ABUSE OF

L f N f OFFUNK,THE

STUFF.

Racism alive and well in land of the freeWASHINGTON — Some ugly

and ominous chickens are cominghome to racist roosts in Americathese days.

A mob of nine to 12 whiteyouths In New York's borough ofQueens chases three black men,beating them with baseball batsand tree trunks as the mob shouts"Niggers, you don't belong here!"One of the black men, whose"crime" was eating a pizza in the"white neighborhood," is killed bya car while fleeing the teen-age"posse."

Several suspects are arrestedand the FBI enters what Mayor EdKoch calls the "most horrendousincident" in his nine years in CityHall.

In Louisiana's Jefferson Parish,Sheriff Harry Lee announces that

- his officers will stop and questionany black people seen in whiteneighborhoods (after, maids andyardmen go home, of course).After an uproar, Lee rescinds hisorder — then announces thatwhite residents support him ov-erwhelmingly.

Philadelphia has a black mayor,but a white problem, with somewhites using violence arid dtherforms of harassment and intimida-tion to keep blacks from movinginto "white neighborhoods."

In a Washington suburb,Gaithersburg, Md., the dentist-volunteer fire chief tells a publicmeeting, "I never knew a niggerwho wouldn't steal from me." TheNAACP demands that he beousted. His superiors give him "areprimand."

The FBI investigates charges ofpolice brutality and the possiblecriminal violation of civil rights inthe case of New York Mets pitcherDwight Gooden and four otheryoung black men in Tampa, Fla.,who were beaten with billy clubsand flashlights by some nine whitepolicemen. The police say Goodenand his friends were driving er-ratically and were beaten onlywhen they resisted arrest. Gooden' isuggests that the cops picked on

Carl T.Rowan

him because he is famous, rich andwas driving a fancy car. Witnessessay the cops hurled racial epithetsas they arrested and beat Goodenand the others. The police feed themedia medical records that theydo not legally possess indicatingthat Gooden had a trifle morealcohol in his blood than Floridalaw allows.

Whatever the truth in theGooden case, it is a harsh realitythat a lot of young blacks are beingstopped, harassed, beaten bywhite cops these days. But there isno national awareness, no mediauproar, because these beaten-reg-ularly blacks are not' baseballstrikeout kings, or football heroes.

Naked, violent racism is on theupsurge in America. I reportedrecently about successful Ku KluxKlan recruitments within theAmerican military, and about"paramilitary" groups stockpilingweapons stolen from U.S.armories and military bases.

What, and why, is thisphenomenon where in New Yorkwhites who allegedly were half-drunk chased three innocent blackmen "like animals," to use thewords of New York Mayor EdwardKoch? How do we getPhiladelphia, Pa., of 1986 acting

like Philadelphia, Miss., in 1964,where civil rights workers MichaelSchwerner, Andrew Goodman andJames E. Chaney were murderedand their bodies covered'up witha bulldozer?

It all has to do with the nationalclimate set by people, at the verytop of federal and local govern-

It all has to do with the national climateset by people at the very top offederal and local governments, and thoseleading business and industry. Thesocial climate in America today says thatracism is tolerable again, and evenfashionable in some neighborhoods.

ments, and those leading businessand industry. The social climate inAmerica today says that racism istolerable 'again, and evenf a s h i o n a b l e in s o m eneighborhoods.

Till the 1960s, racist maulersand murderers had little fear ofthe FBI. They considered J. EdgarHoover a soul brother. No bigothas reason today to think that FBIDirector William Webster and hiscolleagues are in any way sym-pathetic to their violent outrages.In fact, I'll wager that in Tampa,Queens and a lot of other placesthe FBI is going to make somepeople pay dearly for their crimes.

But the lynchers in Queens, copsin Louisiana and Florida, home-owners in Philadelphia, a firechief in Maryland all have beeninfluenced by the anti-civil rights,anti-affirmative action posturetaken by the Reagan adminis-tration. They think that AttorneyGeneral Edwin Meese and Assis-tant Attorney General WilliamBradford Reynolds will protectthem from Webster and the FBI.They don't fear the NAACP any-more, knowing that the WhiteHouse is hostile to this mostprominent .of black groups andthat President Reagan won't evengrant its leader an audience.

When the Klan leader endorsedMr. Reagan in 1980, and Mr.Reagan said, "No, thanks," theKlan leader said the rejectiondidn't bother him because the

Republican platform was "Klanterritory."

The truth, which by honor Imust write, is that over the last sixyears the racists have been em-boldened; whites struggling forracial equality have become dis-pirited; blacks have drifted fromconfusion to apathy, and nowfear.

A politically beleaguered,-medically troubled President Re-agan may not be able to decidenow that resurgent racism ispotentially one of the greatestblights on his reputation in historyas a leader of this nation. He andwe will be lucky if the FBI andlawyers in the Justice Departmentwho are still dedicated to theConstitution and the Bill of Rightstake the steps to say to the nation:"We aren't going to tolerate any'pass laws' or other trappings ofapartheid under which one racecan say that members of, anotherrace may not safely be in theirneighborhood 'after sundown'; wearen't going to tolerate any morelynch mobs, in Queens or thePhiladelphias, or anyplace else,but we are going to jail cops wholet bigotry provoke them intoviolating the rights of citizens."

President Reagan could putsome potential luster on his placein history if, even now, he movedboldly to halt America's lapseback into murderous racism.

Carl Rowan is a syndicatedcolumnist.

The Sunday Begiater SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26,1986

24 volunteers sworn infor county court programs

... OlympliHutted, Marjorls ChildJ O M S , Edward J.Lwchetler, EUaMilone, DumasSauer, JohnSpltaletto. RotemarleWedekind. Florence E.

Marjorie Child Husted

Marjorie Child Husted,'original Betty Crocker

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Mar-joric Child Husted, an advertisingexecutive who oversaw the crea-tion of Betty Crocker and was thefictional homemaker's voice pnradio, has died at age 94.

« She also oversaw the develop-ment of the "Betty Crocker Pic-

"ture Cookbook," which waspublished in I960.' Husted, who died Tuesday,began her career with the Wash-.burn-Crosby Co. in 1924, fouryears before the company became.'a part of General Mills, a con-glomerate that still uses BettyCrocker as the symbol of itsproducts.' On the radio program that beganin 1927, Husted portrayed BettyCrocker and interviewed such Hol-lywood stars Joan Crawford, Rob-ert Young, Claudette Colbert, JeanHarlow, Helen Hayes, Delores DelRio and Clark Gable.

The program included cookinghints, information on newproducts, music and dramatiza-tions of listeners' letters.

Born in Minneapolis, Hustedwas named Advertising Woman ofthe Year in 1949 by the Advertis-ing Federation of America and waspresented the Woman of the YearAward in 1948 by the Women'sNational Press Club in Washing-ton.

Husted has no immediate

Edward J. Jones

KEYPORT — Edward JosephJones, 23, died Friday in BayshoreCommunity Hospital, Holmdel.

Born in Long Branch, Mr. Joneswas a lifelong resident of Keyport.

He had been a repairman for theSemcor Equipment and Manufac-turing Co. Keyport.

He was a member of CalvaryMethodist Church, Keyport.

He was a 1981 graduate ofKeyport High School.

Surviving are his parents, Ed-ward F. and Laura Bailey Jones,with whom he lived; two brothers,Pvt. Daniel John Jones of the U.S.Army, Fort Knox, and RobertMichael Jones, at home; and hismaternal' grandmother, DorothyGuerin of Keyport.

The Bedle Funeral Home, Key-port, is in charge of arrangements.

Florence E. WedekindMIDDLETOWN — Florence E.

Wedekind, 100, died yesterday inRiverview Medical Center, RedBank.

Born in New York City, Mrs.Wedekind had liyed'in Jersey Citybefore moving to Middletown 10years ago.

She was a former secretary.She was a member of the Trinity

United Methodist Church, JerseyCity, and the Women's Society ofChristian Service.

Her husband, GustaveWedekind, died in 1958.

Surviving are a grandson, Rob-ert Luhrs; and a granddaughter,Barbara Lombardi, with whom shelived; and six great-grand-children.

The John F. Pfleger FuneralHome, Middletown, is in charge ofarrangements.

254A Death Notice

A N D R I S A N I — JoMph on Saturday. Me. 27.1986 ol Secaucul, N.J.. formerty ol Jersey City.Beloved husband of Elizabeth (nee Pontetto) Devotedfattier of Maria Motougtmey. Dolores Jawidzik.Donald A., and Joseph A. Dear brother of NicholasAndriaanl and Lucy Varnucd. Also survived by 11orandchidren and two great-grandchildren. FuneralRom ttw Trmka-Faustini Funeral Home. 439Maywood An.. Maywood. N.J . on Tuesday Dec 30.at 9:30 a.m. Funeral Mass at Our Lady ol MountCarmel R.C. Church. 99 Broadway. Jersey Crty, at1030 a.m. Errtoumbment George WashingtonMemorial Park. Paramua. Visitation Sunday andMonday. 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.

S A U E R — John. BS. of Rrnr Plan, on Dae. 2S.1986 Husband of the late Elizabeth (nee Eisenhauar).Father ol Rrta 5. Bush Brother of Elizabeth Metzlerand Matilda Schwlnd. Visitation Sunday 2-4 and 7-9p.m. at the John E Day Funeral Home. 85 RiversideAve., Red Bank. Funeral service Monday 9:30 a.m. atthe luneral home

Elsa Lanchester, actress

LOS ANGELES (AP) — ElsaLanchester, the actress mostfamous for eccentric and comicroles such as the monster's wife in"The Bride of Frankenstein," diedFriday. She was 84.

Miss Lanchester, widow of thelate actor Charles Laughton, diedof bronchiopneumonia at the Mo-tion Picture and Television Coun-try House and Hospital in Wood-land Hills, said hospitalspokeswoman Jean Ferris.

Incapacitated by heart problemssince suffering a stroke in 1984,Miss Lanchester was admitted tothe hospital Dec. 17, Ms. Ferrissaid.

She had no living close relativesand lived in the Los Angeles area,Ms. Ferris said. The actress hadasked that no funeral service beheld and that no information bereleased about the disposition ofher remains, according to thespokeswoman.

Among Miss Lanchester's filmcredits were "The Bride of Frank-enstein," a 1935 horror classisthat gently mocked the genre.Among the others were "DavidCopperfield" (1935); "The SpiralStaircase" (1945); "Witness forthe Prosecution" (1957); "MaryPoppins" (1964); "Murder ByDeath" (1976); and many others.

Born Elizabeth Sullivan in Lew-isham, England, on Oct. 28, 1902,Miss Lanchester began her life inshow business at age 16 in chil-dren's theater in London's Sohodistrict, and danced with IsadoraDuncan's troupe in Paris. Her firstfilm appearance was in 1927, inthe British movie "One of theBest."

She married Luiiglitmi in 1929and went with him to Hollywoodin 1934. Laughton died in 1962.

Miss Lanchester played a widerange of character roles, and.critics said she was at her best ineccentric or comic parts, such asthe monster's bride in "Bride ofFrankenstein."

She played Anne of Cleves op-posite Laughton in "Henry VIII," afilm for which her husband wonan Academy Award, and in "Rem-brandt."

Miss Lanchester was nominatedfor Oscars for her roles in the 1949film "Come to the Stable" and inthe 1958 movie "Witness for theProsecution."

Her memoir, "Charles and I,"was published in 1939.

Dumas If alone,Pulitzer Prize winner

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP)— Dumas Malone, who won aPulizer Prize in 1975 for his multi-volume biography of Thomas Jef-ferson, died yesterday at homeafter a brief illness, a Universityof Virginia spokesman said. Hewas 94.

Malone was the Thomas Jef-ferson Memorial Foundation bio-grapher-ln-residence and aprofessor emeritus of history atthe university, said spokesmanChip German.

Malone began work on his prize-winning biography, "Jeffersonand His Time," in 1943. In 1981,almost totally blind at age 89, hecompleted the sixth and finalvolume.

All of Malone's work was basedon extensive use of Jefferson'smanuscripts and publishedpapers, as well as other officialcollections related to Jefferson.

Malone joined the University ofVirginia in 1923 as an associateprofessor of history. In 1929 hebecame editor of "The Dictionaryof American Biography," the firstpublished project of the AmericanCouncil of Learned Societies. Heled the production of 17 of theoriginal 20 volumes of that stan-dard reference tool.

From 1936-1942, Malone waseditor-in-chief of Harvard Uni-versity Press.

He returned to Charlottesville in1943, accepted a professorship atColumbia University in 1945, thenreturned to Charlottesville againin 1959 and retired in 1962.

Survivors include his wifeElisabeth, a son, a daughter and agranddaughter.

John SauerMIDDLETOWN — John Sauer,

88, died Friday in RiverviewMedical Center, Red Bank. ,

Born in Germany, Mr. Sauerlived in Edison before moving toRiver Plaza.

He retired 23 years ago as achemcial still operator for HaydenChemical Co., Fords, after 40years of service..

His wife, Elizabeth EisenhauerSauer, died in 1957.

Surviving are a daughter, Rita S.Bush, with whom he lived; twosisters, Elizabeth Metzler ofLakewood, and Matilda- Schwindof Heidelberg, West Germany;three grandchildren and threegreat-grandchildren.

The John E. Day Funeral Home,Red Bank, is in charge of arrange-ments.

Rosemarie SpitalettoHAZLET —. Rosemarie Spitalet-

to, 22, died yesterday in BayshoreCommunity Hospital, Holmdel.

Born in Jersey City, MissSpitaletto lived In Hazlet for thepast 15 years.

She was employed by Super-markets General of Edison as adata entry operator for the pasttwo years.

She was a communicant of HolyFamily Roman Catholic Church,Union Beach.

Surviving are her parents,Theodore H. and Irene SpitalettoSr., with whom she lived; and onebrother, Theodore H. Spitaletto Jr.

The John W. Mehlenbeck Fu-neral Home, Hazlet, is in charge ofarrangements.

Olympia Dulkoff

FREEHOLD — OlympiaDulkoff, 90, died yesterday in theFreehold Area Hospital, FreeholdTownship.

Born in Odessa, Russia, Mrs.Dulkoff had lived in New YorkCity before moving here 53 yearsago.

Her husband, Eugene Dulkoff,died in 1962.

Surviving are three nephews,George Komaridis of Mankato,Minn.; Nick and Alex Komaridis,both Auburn, N 11.; and severalgreat-nieces and nephews.

The Freeman Funeral Home,Freehold, is in charge of arrange-ments.

Louis Brophy, journalistNEW ROCHELLE, NY. (AP) —

Louis Brophy, who during his 40-year career with The AssociatedPress was a reporter and newseditor before he retired in 1961,has died after a short illness. Hewas 90.

Brophy died Thursday at theNew Rochelle Hospital MedicalCenter, where he had been ad-mitted earlier in the week.

The newsman started his APcareer in 1920 as a reporter at theColumbus, Ohio, bureau. He alsoworked in Chicago and Washing-ton, D.C., then returned to Chicagoas news editor.

He was cited for his coverage ofthe 1933 World's Fair in Chicago.

Brophy later came to New York,where he was a general newseditor, news editor of the WorldDesk and general business editor.

Prior to the AP, Brophy workedin Ohio for the Columbus DailyMonitor, the Canton Daily Newsand The Ohio State Journal.

Brophy is survived by twodaughters.

WEST LONG BRANCH — Ajoint swearing-in ceremony ofVolunteers in Probation and Juv-enile Conference Committeemembers was heljLrecentlv at theCommunity Room of ShadowLawn Savings and Loan Associa-tion, West Long Branch.

Alvin Y. Milberg, MonmouthCounty assignment judge andpresiding judge of the FamilyDivision, administered the oath ofoffice and presented thecertificates of appointment. Six-teen J.C.C. Members and eightV.I.P.s were sworn In.

William Spengeman, MonmouthCounty vicinage chief probationofficer, addressed the new volun-teers. He explained MonmouthCounty courts are seeking indi-viduals interested in serving asvolunteers. There are five CourtVolunteer groups: Volunteers inProbation, Juvenile ConferenceCommittee, Child Placement Re-view Board, Supervised Visitationand Project c.A.H.K.

Anyone interested in servingshould call 431-7886.

Donna Dunn, training officer,congratulated the volunteers onthe completion of their trainingprograms. Their training consistedof six sessions. Four of thesessions were held jointly. These

Included training on <he courtsystem, communication and inter-viewing techniques, identifyingproblems of adolescence, andsubstance abuse. Each group hadone session on procedures of their

programs and one on role playingthe techniques they had learned.

Listed are J.C.C. members whowere sworn in and the committeesthey will serve on:

The Rev. Scott D. Brown, ColtsNeck; Marjorie Burdge, NeptuneCity; Barbara Costanza, UnionBeach; Daniel W. Porn Jr., LittleSilver; Barbara A. Desiato, Mid-dletown; Dorothy Duffy, Mid-dletown; John W. Groth, UnionBeach; Regina Allison Hen-drickson, Neptune Township;Daisy Houli, Howell; PatriciaMclsaac, Union Beach; John J.Rugo, Middletown; Willilam Slat-ter, Rumson; Gayle Taliaferro,Allentown; and Laura JaneWlkoff, Little Silver.

Volunteers in Probation alsosworn in were: Barbara Desiatoand Dorothy Duffy, and John J.Rugo, all of Middletown; John W.Groth, Union Beach; Linda Ingrassi, Spring Lake Heights; DawnKoffman, Matawan; PatriciaMclsaac, Union Beach andAlphonso Perry, Red Bank.

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China todayStudent demonstrationsunderscore impatienceat pace of democracyBy MICHAEL BHOWNINGKnight-Rldder News Service

All day Tuesday and Wednesday, gar-deners with picks and spades werereplanting the central median of the

Bund, Shanghai's famous, scenic water-front promenade. Piles of dead and up-rooted oleanders bore witness to the furyof tens of thousands of students whomarched for democracy last weekend anddidn't particularly care where they step-ped.

The events in Shanghai since last Fridayconvulsed China, deeply disturbed the localand national government and shocked theI'olly anna Chinese press out of its smilingcomplacency.

Suddenly, 40,000 to 60,000 students werechallenging the Communist government to live up toconstitutional guarantees that exist more on paperthan in practice: democracy, human rights and a freepress.

Even more amazing, the government appeared tobe listening.

Urgent calls for "stability and unity" werebroadcast at the top of the 7 p.m. national televisionnews Tuesday and Wednesday. Far from taking amailed-fist approach, Communist authorities haveshown a restrained, almost conciliatory approachtoward the disgruntled students.

NOT SINCE THE chaotic days of the 1066-76Cultural Revolution have the limits and liabilities of.democracy been discussed so openly here. Thestudents have not won overnight the democracy andhuman rights for which they were struggling, butthey did get the government to sit up and payattention.

One clear victory emerged this week: The Chinesemedia, which did not mention a word about thedemonstrations until last weekend, has lifted itsblackout and splashed the issue over the front pageof the most powerful newspaper in the country, ThePeople's Daily.

In a lengthy editorial, the paper even admittedthat some of the students' demands were just,although it said their ideas about democracy were"fuzzy,"

"All the criticisms and the Suggestions offered bythe masses on this subject are welcomed by thegovernment," said the editorial, which was readover national television Tuesday night for thebenefit of Chinese who are illiterate.

Even more significantly, a spokesman for theChinese State Education Commission said Sundaythat, "according to our country's constitution,Chinese students have the right to hold demon- .stratum*."

A Western observer in Shanghai calledthe episode a significant moral victoryfor thi' st uilenlH.

"They have achieved at least part ofall their initial aims. They have.gotten adialogue with the city leadership. Theyhave gotten a good bit of attention in theChinese press — biased reporting, to besure — but still reporting. They havegotten an acknowledgement by the gov-ernment that their motives, their goals,are good ones."

EQUALLY NOTEWORTHY: The hob-nailed Chinese Public Security Bureauhas exercised extraordinary restraint indealing with the disturbances. Not asingle person was killed in the near- 'melees throughout Shanghai this pastweek..

Doubtlessly acting on orders fromPeking, the hard-bitten, well-armedpolice largely have limited themselves tocrowd control, dispersing and displacingpotential mobs with quiet, lock-stepechelon formations.

There was some violence, and a hand-ful of thugs took advantage of theconfusion to molest women and robpassers-by (a Western photographer hadhis camera stolen in People's Square onSunday evening). Two cars were bat-tered and overturned along the Bund.

Perhaps as many as 500 students andbystanders were rounded up by policeand detained — technically they werenot under arrest; Chinese law makes adistinction between arrest and detention-

Police periodically cleared streets,cordoned off squares and parks andrestricted access to universities such asJiatong and Fudan, where the unrestbegan.

BUT EXACTLY HOW AND WHY theShanghai demonstrations started re-mains confused. One version, whichsounds outlandish enough but was

repeated by dozens of students, was that there wasa violent outburst at a Dec. 2 concert in Shanghai by.Jan and Dean, California singers of the 1960s ("SurfCity" and "Ride the Wild Surf").

According to students' reports, the duo invited theaudience to "stand up and boogie" toward the endof the concert. When several did, they were escortedout of the auditorium and allegedly were roughed upby ushers.

"That apparently was the spark," the Westernobserver said, "but I think the students who led thisthing very astutely took a whole lot of minorgrievances — poor food, inflation, substandardliving conditions in college dormitories — and fusedthem into something completely different: a call forhuman rights, participatory democracy and freedomof the press. It was a very shrewd move on theirpart."

Nonetheless, one area where the students failedsignally was in enlisting outside support among the •gongren, the workers who form the backbone of theurban economy. Day after day the youngstersshouted; and day after day the workers watched,impassive.

Some workers were sarcastic. Others seemedinterested, but not enough to join up.

"This is a lot of fun for the students," complained -one worker outside the police-patrolled gates ofJiatong University, "but the rest of us have to go outand work. For us, it's not easy, all this disruption."

He pulled out his worn wallet, to demonstrate. Itwas full of tissuey-paper receipts and ration cards:no cash. Others in the crowd laughed sym-pathetically.

"You hear workers complain sometimes," said theWestern observer, "but at the same time there is nodenying all this fascinates them.

"They'll say: 'Damnit, I was two hours late towork today because of those those damned stu-dents!' But others find it exciting. I see a real splitin attitudes here," the observer said.

BY NOW, EIGHT CHINESE universities in vari-ous cities have held marches and demonstrations,some for democracy, some simply for lower tuition.None has mustered the extraordinary fire or thehuge numbers of the Shanghai incident.

At Peking University Tuesday there was a smallmarch accompanied by a few manifestos; it was a farcry from the extraordinary tumult in Shanghai.

As the Shanghai students returned to campuses tocram for year-end exams, hundreds of thousands of-people scrambled to buy newspapers that actuallywere carrying news for a change.

But that wasn't all there was to read. Sternlyworded posters were pasted up all over Shanghai,warning of stiff punishment if the disturbances gotout of hand. The message was simple: Enough isenough.

"It is strictly forbidden for any citizen tu disruptby any means the railway station, the port, theairport, the parks, the squares, the cinemas, thetheaters, the shops or other public places," the

Tens of thousands of students marched in demonstrations calling for democracy all over Chinathis past week. History may yet record that the '60s singers Jan and Dean were the Thomas Paine'sof China.

posters said.But the very fact that the government was using

broadsheets, not bullets, to bring the people to heelwas a surprising turnabout. Communist authoritieswere discussing, not dictating. It was remarkable,and the most remarkable thing was that it wasreasonable.

BUT THI8 NEW TOLERANCE may be short lived.By week's end, practically every newspaper in Chinahad fired of f a furious barrage of anti-democracyeditorials.

With the students apparently quiescent, all-but-confined to their campuses, the Chinese press haslaunched a gigantic counterattack, sharply criti-cizing the youngsters as hotheads who, if theypersist in agitating for democracy and human rights,"will ultimately eat their own bitter fruit."

The press said the students' marches, which havetaken place in eight Chinese cities over the past twoweeks, recalled the darkest days of the 1966-76Cultural Revolution, when hordes of young peopleran amok, ransacked homes, smashed cultural relicsand even murdered.

What the newspapers failed to mention was thatthe Cultural Revolution was a Communist Party

affair, whipped up at the highest echelons of theCommunist leadership/and personally launched byChairman Mao Tse-tung. The newspaper edi-torialists danced around this, preferring to dwell onthe crimes, but not the perpetrators, of what Chinesecall "the 10 Years of Upheaval."

"This so called'Great Democracy'is not democ-racy in any sense," a widely reprinted editorial inThe People's Daily said Thursday. "It can only leadto anarchy.

"The majority will have their rights infringedupon and the social order will be seriously disturbed.The workers cannot work. The farmers cannot farm.The office workers cannot perform their tasks. Thestudents cannot study."

The blistering editorial, entitled "Political ReformCan Only Be Conducted Under the Leadership of theParty," appeared in The People's Daily, GuangmingDaily, Worker's Daily, Peking Daily, Peking EveningNews, Liberation Daily, Wen Hui Bao, China YouthNews, Tianjin Daily, Economic Daily, Peasant Daily,Yancheng Evening News, Xinming Evening Newsand the tri-weekly Chinese Legal Affairs, all duringa two-day period Thursday and Friday.

IT WAS BLACK-AND-WHITE proofof how quickly and thoroughly theCommunist Party can marshal the mediawhen it wishes to do so. Freedom of the

. press was one of the rallying cries duringthe recent Shanghai demonstrations.Thursday and Friday of a last week, in avery real way, the students got theiranswer.

But the extraordinary newspaper.bar-rage also indicated the high anxiety that.the student demonstrations have causedin official circles. Earlier editorials hadtaken a softer line, saying the studentsmeant well and had the good of thenation at heart.

No more. By Friday the official pressstopped just short of calling the studentsirresponsible rabble-rousers who hankerfor a return to the chaos of the CulturalRevolution.

"Attacks aimed at getting rid of theparty's leadership... will not only notlead to the development of democracy.They can only bring disorder and bring asetback to our socialist cause," theeditorial declared.

Deriding the students'"beautifuldreams... stirring declarations, thrillingslogans (and) convoluted reasoning," thecommentators said democracy in Chinawill come, but not "tomorrow morning."

POLITICAL FREEDOM must march instep with economic and social develop-ment. In an odd way, the commentatorsalmost seemed to be saying that theaverage Chinese was too poor and toostupid to have the right to vote. Theeditorial declared:

"China is a big country with a popula-tion of over one billion, the majority of itpeasants. Production is rather backward.Cultural and scientific development isvery low. We have lots of people whocannot read. We also have heavy burdensleft over by several thousand years offeudalism •"

NATION WORLD?R SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28.1B86

Iran counselor says he has free handBy ROBERT J. WIELAMDAssociated Press

BRUSSELS, Belgium — David M. Abshire saidyesterday that President Reagan has given him afree hand as special counselor in coordinating WhiteHouse responses to congressional and other probesinto the Iran-Contras affair.

Abshire, who is the U.S. ambassador to NATOhere, indicated he planned to be special counselor tothe president for "several months." He was ap-pointed by Reagan on Friday.

Before accepting the job, Abshire said, he had "acouple of conversations with (White House Chief ofStaff) Donald Regan and I told Don that I wanted acharter . . . to spell out my mandate."

Asked during an interview with The AssociatedPress at his residence if this guaranteed him freedomof action, he said, "Totally . . . I report to thepresident and I've got all the freedom of action Ineed." *

Abshire, 60, said he told both Regan and thepresident he opposed a special White House probeinto the sale of U.S. arms to Iran and the reporteddiversion of some of the profits to Contra rebelsfighting the Nicaraguan government.

"There was no rationale . . . to start a whole newinvestigation on a separate track," he said.

He said the NATO allies had "rallied around theUnited States" in its time of political turmoil "andI am sure that sent a message to the Kremlin." Buthe added, "I think the,concern is that the Iranianissue might well become a distraction interfering

with effective decision-making."For that reason, he said, he welcomed the

president's decision to seek a special counselor fromoutside the White House.

"This very decisive decision the president hastaken is in the interests of the United Statesdomestically and is in the interests of the UnitedStates and its allies Internationally," he said. "Itseparates out these two functions so that they do notget scrambled together."

He described his new job as "a short-termassignment."

"I won't put a number of days on it," Abshire said."But I do have other commitments to go back to.Those things are still on my agenda . . . I think wecan do a lot in the next several months.

"That does not mean that every '1' will be dottedand V crossed but we will be over, in my Judgment,the situation that we are in now."

He said he planned to do policy studies for theCenter for Strategic and International Studies whichhe helped found in 1962 and to write a book.

He said his mandate as special counselor withCabinet rank included "the coordination, the pulling

" together, the analysis, the effective communication"of White House responses to-congressional and otherinvestigations of the arms sale controversy. Hestarts his new job Jan. 6.

"I'll keep some NATO duties during that nextmonth while my successor is being confirmed" bythe Senate, said Abshire.' Alton Keel, acting national security adviser, has

been nominated to succeed Abshire as ambassadorto the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

Aquino is Time' Woman of Year'Associated Press

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WHO ARE YOU POINTING AT? — Two people argue in front of people marched to protest the racially connected death of aof a pizzeria in Howard Beach, NY., yesterday where thousands black man last week.

Thousands protest race killingBy VIRGINIA BYRNEAssociated Press

NEW YORK — Black and white clergyand civil rights leaders linked armsyesterday and led thousands of marchersinto the neighborhood where a black manwas chased to his death by a gang ofwhite teen-agers a week ago.

The estimated 5,000 marchers wereheckled by about 100 counter-demon-strators as they marched through thepredominantly white Howard Beach dis-trict.

Hundreds of police officers lined theroute, police helicopters hovered ov-erhead, and the. march remainedpeaceful.

The marchers paused to pray in frontof the New Park Pizzeria, where lastweek's racial incident began.

"Racial hatred is stupid, mindless,heedless," said Benjamin Hooks, ex-ecutive director of the National Associa-tion for the Advancement of ColoredPeople at a rally. "Racism is alive andwell in America."

Police said Michael Griffith, 23, andtwo friends, all black, were chased andbeaten early Dec. 20 by a gang of youthswielding bats and sticks. Griffith was hitby a car and killed as he tried to escapeby running across the Belt Parkway.Three white teen-agers have beencharged with murder in the case.

Three days later, a group of blackyouths beat up a white teen-ager waitingfor a bus in Jamaica, Queens. Police

called that an apparent retaliation forthe Howard Beach attack.

State Asemblyman Edward Abramsonof Howard Beach welcomed yesterday'scrowd before the march and blasted "thewolf packs" that chased Griffith.

But not everyone along the route wasas glad to see the marchers. "HowardBeach is not racist. The march is adisgrace. We don't need the march. If wemarched through their neighborhood, wewouldn't be going home," said JosephCumin, who said he has lived in HowardBeach for 23 years.

Sylvia Tiano and her husband,Armand, watched the march proceedthrough the community of single-familyhomes and said, "It's kind of scary."

Philippine President Corazon Aquino,named yesterday as Time Magazine's"Woman of the Year" for 1986, said hermost important achievment to late hasbeen restoring her people's belief in theirgovernment.

But she added, "I don't want to saythat this is my achievement. It is theFilipino people together who were able tobelieve in themselves because of whatthey were able to do in the election andthen in the revolution.

"Because of this belief in each otherthey were now also able to look up totheir leaders and follow their leaders,"she said.

While her country has not yet achievedunity, she said, "I am confident we areworking toward that end with the comingplebiscite on the constitution."

Aquino, who suceeded ' FerdinandMarcos as president in February, is thethird woman to occupy the cover alone asperson of the year. The others wereQueen Elizabeth in 1952 and in 1936,Wallis Simpson, the late Americandivorcee whom King Edward marriedafter abdicating his throne.

Marcos' 20-year rule ended Feb. 26when he fled the country after a popularuprising in which hundreds of thousandsof Filipinos surrounded rebel militarybases in support of Aquino, who hadbeen officially defeated by Marcos in anelection marked by widespread fraud.

Aquino was chosen, the magazine said,because she "managed to lead a revoltand rule a republic without ever relin-quishing her buoyant calm or her gift formaking politics and humanity compa-nionable," the magazine said.

Her revolution "with a human face wasno less a triumph for women the worldover" and It "held up a candle of hope insome of the world's darker corners," itsaid. .

During an hour-long interview,Aquino's eyes filled with tears when shespoke about her obligations to her coun-try andaher memories of her husband,slain opposition leader Ninny Aquino,the magazine reported,

It was during her Husband's incarcera-tion that she really began to want to helpothers, she recalled.

"All of a sudden, with my husband inprison, he was suffering, I was suffering.Yet we knew that others were worse off.We didn't have to worry about where ournext meal was coming from or whetherour children could go to school," she said."So then, I guess, I started to worryabout other people. I guess I identifiedmyself with the victims of Marcos'injustice."

When asked if she would run again insix years, Aquino laughingly said, "Ithink I was needed just for the transition,when people had to find somebody theycould believe in, someone not out of thetraditional political mold."

In six years, she added, "there will bemany qualified people, and I will haveearned a well-deserved rest."

Time said that other people it con-sidered for the cover of its year-endissue included Marine Lt. Col. OliverNorth because of his role in the Iranianarms deal, and Soviet leader^ MikhailGorbachev, as the one likely to lead hiscountry into the next millennium.

Aviator Charles Lindbergh was Time'sfirst Man of the Year 58 years ago, butthe award has gone to a couple, a group,a Machine of the Year (the computer, in1982), and an entire generation in 1966.' The selection has not always been anaccolade. Hitler was named Man of the

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PEOPLE POWER — Philippine Presi-dent Corazon Aquino will grace thecover of- this week's Time. She is the58th person of the year for the magazine.

Year in 1938, Joseph Stalin was chosenin 1939, and the Ayatollah Khomeini wasnamed in 1980.

In Manila, the National Cease-fireCommittee ruled yesterday that Com-munist rebels violated the nationwidetruce one day after it went into effect bycarrying arms In a rally, but Indicated itsforgiveness.

It was the first violation confirmed bythe committee, which is comprised ofrepresentatives from the left and themilitary and civilians chosen by eachside. The military has filed 29 othercomplaints alleging truce violations. Theleftists claim they are working on a listof violations by soldiers.

At issue was a march 25 miles west ofManila on Dec. 11 by 80 fully armedguerrillas of the Communist New Peo-ple's Army. They were escorting theircease-fire negotiators from the town ofSamal to San Juan for a peaceful rallycelebrating the truce.

Defense Minister Rafel Ileto lodged acomplaint with the cease-fire monitoringcommittee, saying the rebels had agreednot to carry, weapons in "populationcenters." The rebels said it was not aviolation because they were free to movearound in places they controlled, such asSan Juan.

The two sides differ in their inter-pretation of the cease-fire language oncarrying arms in populated areas.

The five-member committee said itcould not recommend sanctions becauseno guidelines existed on this, but said thepresence of armed guerrillas at the rallywas "detrimental" to the cease-fire'ssuccess.

It added, however: "Members"!., con-sider the euphoria accompanying thetaking effect of the cease-fire agreementand the fact that no untoward incidentshappened as mitigating factors in theSamal incident."

Francisco Pascual, representative ofthe Communist-led National DemocraticFront, the political alliance whichnegotiated the truce for the guerrillas,dissented. He said the rally was a rebelshow of support for the truce, not aviolation of it. Other committee membersare Bishop Antonio Fortich, Maj. Gen.Renato de Villa, chief of the PhilippineConstabulary paramilitary forces, andtwo civilians mutually designated bygovernment and rebel peace negotiators.

s. guerrilla kills 2 guardsJOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — A

captured black guerrilla broke loose from twopolice guards, grabbed a gun and killed bothofficers, police said yesterday. The guerrillaescaped.

The man was among a group of fivesuspected African National Congress guer-rillas who crossed into South Africa onChristmas Eve, apparently planning to layland mines on rural roads, the Defense Forcesaid.

A farmer out hunting came upon the groupFriday on his farm in the Weipe district innorthern Transvaal Province, near the Zim-babwe border, the Defense Force said. Thefarmer fired at them, but they escaped and thefarmer alerted the military.

In follow-up operations, security forceskilled four of the guerrillas, captured the fifth

and confiscated land mines.The captured man was being taken to the

regional center of Messina, near the border, atabout 9 p.m. Friday but "managed to freehimself, grab a loaded firearm and shoot thetwo (police force) members," police head-quarters said in a statement.

The victims, both white, were WarrantOfficer T.J. Gerber, 44, and Sgt. J.M. Nel, 43.

Patrols were hunting for the escaped guer-rilla.

The ANC has claimed responsibility forseveral land mine blasts on white farms nearthe borders with' Zimbabwe, Botswana,Mozambique and Swaziland over the past year.Several people have been killed and scoreswounded in the explosions.

The government says the attacks demon-strate the ANC no longer makes any pretense

of avoiding civilian casualties in its 25-year-old sporadic guerrilla campaign to overthrowthe white-led government and its system ofapartheid.

The ANC says white farmers near theborders are legitimate targets because they arepart of the nation's paramilitary and militarycommando network.

A state of emergency has been in effect sinceJune 12, and censorship rules imposed underthe. decree ban or restrict reporting aboutunrest,, security force actions, treatment ofdetainees, most forms of peaceful protest anda broad range of statements the governmentconsiders subversive.

By Taw, apartheid establishes a raciallysegregated society in which the 24-milllonblack majority has no vote in national affairs.

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THE NATIONA. -

3 Inmates missing from women's prisonaLDERSON, W.Va. (AP) —O Three tscapees from the Fed-fTleral Prison for Women re-mained at large yesterday butauthorities said they were notbelieved to be armed or dangerous.

"We've searched all around thefence and couldn't find anythingthat might tell us how they es-caped," Associate Warden ColletteAnderson said yesterday. "We arestill investigating."

About 26 people began search-ing for the three after they werereported missing late Friday fromthe only federal correctional in-stitution solely for women.

Anderson said the women werenot considered armed or danger-ous and officials believed theywere on foot and travelingtogether.

Anderson identified the escape-

es as Mary Farmer, 30, ofOklahoma City, Okla., who wasserving 7 years on' a charge ofmanufacturing amphetamines;Rebecca Stewart, 30, of Rogers,Texas, serving 12 years formanufacturing and possessingamphetamines; and Jody Fallon,29 of Weston, Neb., serving 10years for violating federal fire-arms regulations.. Fallon came to Alderson on July1; Farmer began serving hersentence on Sept. 17; and Stewartwas incarcerated Oct. 9, Andersonsaid.

Another prisoner, Eugenia Am-paro Osorio-Santiago, escapedDec. 21 and is still missing. Os-orio-Santiago of Queens, N.Y.,was serving 18 years on a cocainecharge, officials said.

Dessiso was buying a soft drinkat about 4:30 a.m. at a vendingmachine at the firehouse where hewas stationed when he looked out'the window and saw two menbreaking into his car.

He yelled to a colleague to callpolice, grabbed a stick and ran

outside to do battle with thethieves. One, standing outside thecar, fled immediately. Dessisoturned his attention to the otherman, who was inside the car, andclubbed him a couple of timesbefore the thief got away, accord-ing to police.

Restaurant is open and topless again

Nashville prefers rock on radio

Fate helps bring thief to justiceKnight-Ridder News Service

MkHILADELPHIA — RobertkJDessiso, 33, figured there wasI little chance of catching thethieves who had broken into hiscar early Friday, but he tooksolace in the fact that he hadlanded a few stout blows on atleast one of the two men who hadsmashed his car window andstolen a sleeping bag.

A couple of hours later, fatebrought them face to face again.

Dessiso, a paramedic on ov-

Pranksadmiredat MITBy ARUNE LEVINSONAssociated Press

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Studentson the way to classes at MIT inearly September could, if theylooked skyward, see a small housecomplete with mailbox and wel-come mat that had been erectedovernight on top of the univer-sity's Great Dome.

Dubbed "The Home on theDome" by the pranksters whobuilt it, the house was only themost recent major display of stu-dent ingenuity in a MassachusettsInstitute of Technology sport thatgoes back decades.

"It's a very snotty thing to say,but we're all some of the smarterpeople in the world." said aSophomore from Toms River, whowas among 28 people involved inthe home-on-the-dome prank. Heasked to be identified only as Jack.

"It's always that nice littlethrill. It's 4 in the morning and noone knows it," Jack said. "Whenwe finally got done (with thehome), . . . it was very exhilar-ating, very adrenaline-flowing.Wecheered for about lOminutes."

"If you ever let an intelligentmind sit for five minutes, you haveto come up with somethingstrange," he said.

Writer Alexander Theroux, whospent three years at MIT as artist-in-residence, said in a telephoneinterview .from his' WestBarnstable home, "Pranks at MITare social life for overworkedstudents. In a way, pranks havereplaced romance."

The first entry in the prankarchives at the MIT Museum is aphotograph taken in 1926. It de-picts two students perching anautomobile at the edge of adormitory roof.

Other pranks listed in thearchives include a cow that foundits way to a campus rooftop, atrolley welded to the tracks, gianticicles grown from dormitorybathrooms, and students'bedrooms reconstructed on thefrozen Charles River.

But aficionados still are waitingfor someone to outdo thepranksters who planted a weatherballoon under the turf at HarvardStadium and caused it to swell upout of the ground during the 1982Harvard-Yale football game.

At MIT, pranks are called"hacks," probably a derivationfrom the campus vernacular thatcalled any technical gimmick a"hack" and the pioneering.com-puter amateurs of the 1970s"hackers."

The number of practicingpranksters at MIT is hard tomeasure, since hacking is apurposely anonymous activity.But It is generally estimated thatamong MIT's 10,000 students,several hundred hack regularly.

Pranksters flourish in part be-cause the administration indulgesthem.

While denying hackers' claimsthat he is lenient, MIT PresidentPaul Gray openly admires them.

Gray, who will not discuss hisown hacking activities as an MITstudent during the 1950s, said:"The students at MIT who areinclined to be creative about hackshave been careful that what theydo is safe for them and safe forothers."

ernight duty, responded to a rou-tine emergency call about 6:40a.m., found an elderly womansuffering shortness of breath, andrushed her to Temple UniversityHospital.

And there in the emergencyroom, being treated for cuts andbruises, was the very man Dessisosaid he had accosted a few hoursearlier in his car, police said.

Pi-ssisci called police, and theman was arrested and chargedwith theft, receiving stolenproperty and conspiracy, saidpolice I.i. Gerald Baker.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) —This city is known as thecountry music capital of the

world and the home of the GrandOle Opry, but its radio listenersprefer rock 'n' roll to the twang ofa steel guitar, according to theratings.

"We respect country music andknow that's what the town wasbuilt on," said Diane Rankin, ex-ecutive administrator of theNashville Entertainment Associa-tion. "But sometimes, you feel likeyou're banging your head againstthe wall to get people in the rest ofthe nation to realize that we dowear shoes, and that not all of usdrive pickup trucks."

Rock station WKDF-FM, whichbills itself as "one of America'slegendary rock 'n' roll stations,"

pushed country station WSM-FMout of the No. 1 spot in the latestArbitron ratings, released in Oc-tober.

Industry officials say they'renot surprised, particularly sincerock dominated the city's radioscene before 1983, when WSMchanged its format to country.

"Until 1983, a country stationhad never been No. 1 inNashville," said Bob Meyer, sta-tion manager of WSM. "When youtell people that outside ofNashville, they can't believe it."

Since 1983, the two stationshave been slugging it out in thishighly competitive radio market,with adult contemporary and easylistening stations close on theirheels.

DEERFIELD, Fla. (AP) — Fivewaitresses at a topless res-taurant doffed their lace see-

through blouses after a circuitjudge lifted an injunction againstDawn's De-Lite, the owner saidyesterday.

The on-again, off-again legalbattle to close the restaurant hereisn't over, despite Broward CircuitJudge Leonard Fleet's ruling lastweek.

A remaining issue is if thebusiness violated its lease byhaving topless waitresses, and aneviction hearing is scheduled forJan. 13, said Paul Nielander,marketing director at theRivertowne Square shoppingcenter.

"We were defrauded ,"Nielander said. "The question iswhether we will be able to proveit in the court system."

Norman Handler, owner ofDawn's De-lite, celebrated by

popping open bottles of non-alcoholic sparkling cider. Largeblue and white signs on the res-taurant's windows proclaimed:"We're open. We won. We're top-less."

The restaurant, which serves noliquor but offers breakfast, lunchand dinner, was packed yesterdaymorning, Handler said.

Dawn's opened in June and inJuly was sued by Helmsley-SpearNational Realty Corp., the firmthat operates Rivertowne Square.A court induction five months agoforced waitresses to don the laceshirts.

Helmsley-Spear's suit claimedHandler had misrepresented thetype of restaurant he wanted toopen in the $10 million shoppingcenter, and that his store wouldharm adjoining businesses.

Handler's lawyer, Alex Siegel,said the injunction was liftedbecause that couldn't be proven.

Plane crash in San Francisco Bay kills 6

MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) —A twin-engine private planecrashed into San Francisco

Bay shortly after takeoff and sankearly yesterday, killing all sixpeople on board, authorities said.

Coast Guard Lt. MichaelSullivan said a night plan filed at

Palo Alto Airport listed theplane's destination as Tijuana,Mexico, a few miles south of SanDiego.'

The six-place Beechcraft Baroncrashed about a half-mile of-fshore of East Palo Alto.

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SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1986

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6B The Sundau Register 8IUWAY. DECEMBER

THE STATEIranian bodies litter battlefield

BASRA, Iraq (AP) — Iraqitroops fortified positionseast of Basra yesterday on

a battlefield strewn with thebodies of Iranian soldiers. Iraqsays tens of thousands of theenemy died in an unsuccessfuloffensive.

Reporters taken to Umm-al-Rassas Island in the Shatt-al-Arab waterway saw dozens ofIranian bodies and lightweapons abandoned by theattackers among the palmgroves.

Iraqi troops brought in sup-plies using a 200-yard rampacross the waterway to thewestern bank, built by Iraqwhen it established abridgehead to retake theisland.

The soldiers dug trenchesand fortified their defenses on

the island, about 25 milessoutheast of Basra, Iraq's sec-ond-largest city. The islandwas the site of fierce fightingduring an offensive launchedby Iran Wednesday night.

The official Iraqi NewsAgency, monitored in Nicosia,Cyprus, said 32,344 Iranianswere killed as Iraqi troops beatback the attack. Iraqi officialsearlier had put the Iranian tollat 10.000.

Iran claimed its forces killed3,000 Iraqis in what it called a"limited surgical strike,"mounted in retaliation to re-cent air attacks on its cities.

There was no way to verifyindependently the figuresprovided by the two countries,which have been at war sinceSeptember 1980.

Chinese executed for 'profiteering'

PEKING (AP) — A 54-year-old man from Fujianprovince was executed

yesterday after being foundguilty of profiteering, smuggl-ing and bribery in one of thelargest economic crimes re-ported in China under com-munism.

National television said DuGuozhen illegally sold goodsworth more than 100 millionyuan.($27 million) before hewas arrested 18 months ago.

The official Xinhua NewsAgency said Du, aided by hisson, set up a company bydeceiving local officials inFuzhou, capital of the southerncoastal province of Fujian,about his "important connec-tions" in Taiwan and HongKong.

Between June 1984 and Feb-

ruary 1985, in violation ofstate regulations, he boughtand sold 171 automobiles, 200motorcycles, 5,200 color TVsets, 120,000 picture tubes,435,000 imported watches and300 tons of polyester fiber,according to the reports.

He also obtained two loanstotaling 11 million yuan ($2.97'million) from local banks withthe help of a government of-ficial, who also has beenpunished, Xinhua said.

In late 1984, he smuggled$1.62 million worth of cannedmushrooms to Hong Kong. Healso was charged with smuggl-ing into Hong Kong $ 108,000 inU.S. currency and $79,000worth of Hong Kong currencywith the help of a Hong Kongbusinessman.

150 Afghans, Soviets said killed

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP)— About 150 Afghan andSoviet troops were killed

during weeklong fighting in amountainous region of Af-ghanistan near the Pakistaniborder, Afghan resistancesources said yesterday.

The fighting between theYunis Khalis guerrilla groupand Soviet and Afghan forcesstarted Dec. 21 and "was stillgoing on . . . late Saturday,"resistance sources based in thePakistani border city ofPeshawar said.

The fighting occurred about20 miles south of Jalalabad inthe Tora Bora mountain rangeof Ningarhar province, nearthe Pakistani border.

Soviet and Afghan troops,who moved into the area with600 tanks and military ve-hicles, lost 27 tanks and other

military vehicles, the guer-I rillas said.

Two guerrilla fighters werekilled and three wounded dur-ing the combat, said thesources, speaking on condition.of anonymity.

In a separate report,' j&rsistance sources said guerrillasattacked Jalalabad airportThursday and destroyed twohelicopters and one other air-craft. They said 25 Afghan andSoviet soldiers were killed orinjured. .

No independent confirma-tion was available. Westernjournalists have been bannedfrom traveling in Afghanistansince the Soviet military inter-vention began seven years ago.An estimated 115,000 Soviettroops support Afghanistan'sMarxist government in its fight

'against Moslem rebels.

10 killed in Punjab terror attacks

AMRITSAR, India (AP) —Terrorists thought to beSikh extremists killed 10

people, including a family offour, over a 24-hour span inPunjab and police imposed acurfew yesterday in Amritsarto prevent backlash violenceby Hindus.

State police said last nightthe 10 victims killed during theprevious 24 hours included twoofficials of Prime MinisterRajiv Gandhi's governing Con-gress Party.

About 700 people, mostlyHindus and moderate Sikhs,have died in Punjab state thisyear in Sikh terrorism andrelated sectarian-clashes.

Police did not immediatelyidentify the victims. But theUnited News of India saidSudesh Kumar, president of aCongress Party neighborhoodcouncil, was shot to death bythree men as he worked in hisshop in this Sikh holy city.

There was no immediateidentification of the other

party official police reportedkilled.

In Hoshiarpur district.to theeast, a Hindu doctor was killedlate Friday night as he rodehome from his clinic on ascooter, according to UNI.

The agency said the as-sailants in this killing and theKumar shooting were thoughtto be Sikh militants and in both

' incidents escape was by motorscooter.

Three gunmen killed a familyof four in the Kapurthala dis-trict late Friday, according toUNI. The attack occurred in avillage near the town ofSultanpur Lodhi, 36 milessouthwest Amritsar.

Sikh extremists have beenwaging a four-year guerrillaand terrorist campaign for anindependent homeland in thePunjab, where Sikhs form amajority.

The sect makes up about 2percent of India's 780 millionpopulation.

Mass at airport marks massacres

ROME (AP) — Nearly 200people took part in amemorial Mass at Rome's

Leonardo da Vinci Airport forvictims of a Palestinian ter-rorist attack one year agoyesterday that killed 16 peopleand wounded 70.

The service took place at theairport chapel, on the samedeparture lounge where fourterrorists hurled handgrenades and sprayed sub-machine-gun fire Dec. 27,1986.

A simultaneous attack atVienna's airport killed fourpeople.

Among those killed in theRome attack were three ter-rorists. Palestinian MohammedSarham, 22, accused of beingthe fourth terrorist, was in-jured and is awaiting trial. Notrial date has been set.

"Life goes on . . . but we'll.never forget what happened ayear ago," the Rev. Franco

Serfustini, the airportchaplain, said in his homily.

Among those attending wereairport officials, securityguards and airline employees.

At City Hall, Mayor NicolaSignorello honored AlessandraBami, an Italian ballet dancerwho was wounded in the legs inthe Vienna attack.

In a commentary yesterday,the Vatican newspaperL'Osservatore Romano said ofthe Rome attack: "Twominutes of crossfire deeplymark the Christmas period."

It noted that the hijacking-crash Thursday of an Iraqiairliner killed 62 people, say-Ing, "the skies were torn apartby terrorist violence by theCains and Herods of this end ofthe century, fiercely alliedagainst man, against life,against peace, against history.

"They have torn apart theskies, spilling the blood ofinnocents." •

v

if.Afghans protest Soviet invasio:

By MOHAMMED AFTAB

Associated Press

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Morethan 10,000 Afghans chanted"Death to Gorbachev!" in a protestdemonstration in Islamabad yes-terday on the seventh anniversaryof the Soviet Union's huge militaryintervention in their homeland.

"Kill the Russians!" shouted thedemonstrators, who includedrefugees and Pakistan-basedanti-communist guerrillas fight-ing the Kremlin-installed Afghanregime. It was the largest of theannual protests staged inIslamabad since Soviet forces roll-ed across the border into Afghani-stan on Dec. 27, 1979.

Other demonstrations andstatements from leaders aroundthe world denounced the con-tinued presence of an estimated115,000 Soviet troops in the Cen-tral Asian nation.

Afghans living in Islamabad andneighboring Rawalpindi werejoined in the protest by com-patriots from Peshawar, a centerof guerrilla activity close to theAfghan border.

They burned an effigy of Sovietleader Mikhail S. Gorbachev,dressed in red and bearing ahammer and sickle. They chantedthe Moslem refrain "God is great!"and "Kill the Russians and throwthem out from Afghanistanthrough Holy War!"

Speakers called on individualgovernments, the United Nationsand other international organiza-tions to cut political and com-mercial ties with what they calledthe "puppet government" inKabul, the Afghan capital.

There was no report of violence,and the demonstrators dispersedafter two hours of marches andspeeches.

BURNING MAD — Thousands of Afghan refugeesin Islambad, Pakistan, demonstrate against Sovietleader Mikhail Gorbachev and burned him in effigy

ASSOCIATED PRESSyesterday to mark the seventh anniversary of theSoviet invasion in Afghanistan. The Soviets have115,000 troops in Afghanistan.

Hundreds of riot police keptbanner-waving protesters from

i marching to the Soviet Embassy inthis capital city. Hundreds morepolice and secret service agentsguarded the Soviet mission, whosehuge iron gates were padlocked.

The United Nations has beenseeking a negotiated settlement tothe conflict since 1982. Pakistanand the United States are'the mainsupporters of the Islamic, .anti-Marxist guerrillas.

Indirect ta lks between

Saudis probejet hijacking,crash in secret

DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia (AP)— The Saudi government pursuedits investigation of the disastroushijacking-crash of an Iraqi jetlinerin secrecy yesterday, but officialsources said all those hospitalizednow were back in Iraq and Jordan;

The piracy and crash killed 62people and injured 32 on Thurs-day.

Three days later, the SaudiMinistry of Defense and Aviationstill would not release photo-graphs of the crash site, in theremote northern desert region ofArar near the Jordanian border,

In Amman, Jordanian Infor-mation Minister MohammedKluitil) told The Associated Presshe believed two of the injiWdlater died of their wounds.

It was history's worst outcomeof a hijacking. On Nov. 24, 1985,Egyptian forces stormed a hi-jacked Egypt Air jetliner on Maltaand 58 people were killed.

The Iraqi Airways Boeing 737was bound from Baghdad toAmman when, according tosurvivors' accounts, gunmenstormed the cockpit and set offgrenades. The plane crashed andburned.

The circumstances of the crashremained unclear. Iraq, which in-itially claimed through its state-controlled news media that twopro-Iranian gunmen carried outthe hijack, issued no furtherstatements. Iraq has been at warwith Iran since September 1980.

Survivors'said four sky pirates

were involved.Some who gave accounts of the

hijack attempt, the subsequentairborne Shootout with securityguards and the crash said twogunmen were killed, ' one waswounded and the fourth survived.

The official sources, who spokeon condition that they not beidentified, said the outcome of theSaudi investigation and a surveyof the wreckage would be sharedwith Iraq and Jordan.

"As far as the kingdom is con-cerned, this will soon be a closedcase," said an official in Riyadh,the capital.

A Saudi government statementsaid the plane was attempting anemergency landing at Arar duringthe hijacking, missed the runway,by about a half-mile, and burned.

In Beirut, a group calling itselfthe Islamic Revolutionary Move-ment claimed Saudi' warplanesforced the jetliner down and Sauditroops stormed it at Arar, where itexploded.

The official Saudi Press Agencyquoted a government official, notidentified, as dismissing this al-legation as "ridiculous."

"How could it occur to any saneperson that Saudi authoritieswould storm a plane that crashedand burned?" the agency quotedhim as saying.

Aviation sources, who de-manded anonymity, said Saudijets may have scrambled when itbecame known the jetliner was introuble.

Gas explosionkills 6 in hotelG A R M I S C I I -

PARTENKIRCHEN, West Ger-many (AP) — A gas explosionyesterday at an alpine ski resorthotel favored by U.S. servicemenand their families killed at leastsix people and injured more than20, police said.

The casualties were not im-mediately identified by name ornationality.

Police spokesman Max Koeglsaid a faulty natural gas pipelinein the Riessersee Hotel in thisBavarian town exploded at 4:07p.m. and ignited a blaze thatfirefighters brought under controlafter nightfall.

Another police spokesman,Georg Wolf, said the northernwing of the hotel housing itsrecreation center was ''literallyblown into the air." ;

The Riessersee was fully bookedwith 300 guests, mostly people onChristmas ski vacations, WestGerman television reported lastnight.

Garmisch-Partenkirchen wasthe site of the 1936 Winter Olym-pics.

Koegl told The Associated Pressin a teleDhone interview that

rescue workers had found thebodies of six guests in the rubbleOf the luxury hotel's recreationwing by 10 p.m.

Scores of rescue workers con-tinued to search the rubble intothe late evening.

Wolf said 16 seriously injuredhotel guests were admitted to localhospitals.

"In addition, many people withmoderate and light injuries havebeen taken to hospitals," he said,but officials had no definite countby late last night.

The blast devastated theRiessersee's pool area and fitnesscenter and caused serious damageto other sections of the hotel,Koegl said.

He said earlier reports thatother parts of the complex es-caped the explosion largely un-scathed were incorrect.

Garmisch-Partenkirchen is oneof West Germany's best-knownski and recreation resorts. Thetown of 27,500 people is 59 milessouthwest of Munich and close tothe 9,777-foot Zugspitze, the na-tion's highest mountain.

It has a large U.S. military skiingand recreation facility,

Islamabad and Kabul bogged downlast August over a timetable forwithdrawal of Soviet troops.

Gorbachev has said he wants towithdraw the Red Army fromAfghanistan, but not until West-ern support of the rebels ends.

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ESSiY, DECEMBER 28,1986 The Sunday Register T%\

U.S. edge in high technology erodingB»PFTCRCOYAssociited Press

SANTA CLARA, Calif — The UnitedStates begins 1987 with a towering 1200billion foreign debt and a fresh worry:for the first time it is running a tradedeficit in high technology, the verysector supposed to power the nation intothe 21st century.

Sometime In February the CommerceDepartment will likely report a 1986trade deficit of more than $2 billion in itsbroad category of high technology, whichincludes things from drugs, guided mis-siles and clocks to synthetic rubber,computers and airplanes.

With high tech suddenly contributingto the red ink, the nation's overallmerchandise trade deficit is expected tohit a record 1170 billion for 1986,exacerbating the United States' newstanding as the world's biggest debtor.

Things may be getting worse: In SantaClara, software expert James Solomonsays Japanese companies are moreInterested than American ones in hiscomputer programs that automate thedesign of integrated circuits for elec-tronic products.

"They buy it like crazy. In the end, theJapanese are taking advantage of whatwe have to offer better than U.S.companies are," the chief executive ofSDA Systems Inc. said in an interview.

The troubles in high tech are especiallyworrisome because technology is theengine that drives all parts of theeconomy, from superior strains of wheatin Kansas to better cars in Detroit.

Unless American products of all kindshave an edge in quality and innovation,the United States will be forced into aprice war it cannot hope to win againstrapidly emerging, low-wage nationssuch as Brazil and South Korea, let aloneJapan, economists say.

Inexorably, the prosperity of the Unit-ed States would be forced down to paritywith the rest of the world. Such a processis already evident in Britain, whosestandard of living has sunk to among thelower ranks of Europe.

The overvalued dollar is a big reasonfor the crisis in competitiveness. Bigfederal budget deficits have' beenfinanced with heavy borrowing fromforeign investors, which propped up thevalue of the dollar In relation to othercurrencies . „ ., . .

The high dollar makes imports cheaper

LOW AND HIGH TECH — Mike Kneeland, president of DataBank Computer Inc., left, looks over the shoulder of one of hisemployees, Trin Trian, jn Fremont, Calif. Kneeland says he uses

ASSOCIATED PRESSa low-tech strategy of buying personal computer parts from theFar East and then hiring people to assemble them with ordinaryscrewdrivers.

and exports more expensive, wideningthe trade gap. And although the dollarhas fallen since early 1986, foreign goodsgained a permanent foothold in the U.S.

market and some foreign markets werelost to Americans for good.

"The overvalued dollar pushed many.of these (U.S.) industries into a position

where they were playing with one handtied behind their backs for many years,"said Robert Chandross, chief economistin the North American office of Britain's

Lloyds Bank.Technology Is not the only ingredient

in competitiveness, but most observersagree it is a critical one.

"We have to remain a world leader intechnology if we want to remain a worldleader. It's just absolutely key to theUnited States' future success," saidWilliam Spencer, vice president for corvporate research at Xerox Corp.

Americans played down the foreignchallenge for decades: "The Japanesedon't make the things we want," Sec-retary of State John Foster Dulles said in1954.

Lately leaders of business, governmentand academia seem to, be getting serious,or are at least talking seriously, about aproblem that has erupted into view afterfestering for decades.

The Democratic Leadership Councilrecently chose the nation's decliningcompetitiveness as a point of attackagainst the Republicans, and PresidentReagan is expected to make it a majortheme in his State of the Union messagein January.

Protectionist sentiment remainsstrong, but more lawmakers and businessexecutives are saying America's tradeproblems begin here and are not simplythe result of foreign cheating.

"In the last two or three months,literally, the forces have finally gelledfor competitiveness to rise to the surfaceas a major national issue," said MichaelPorter, a professor at Harvard BusinessSchool.

Unfortunately,' Porter said, so farthere has been more talk than action. "Idon't see any fundamental shift in thetrends," he said. "I still see more erodingU.S. industries than I see rebounding orrecovering U.S. industries."

The challenge in high technology hasmany facets, economists say. Amongthem:

— Although the United States remainsNo. 1 in many areas of basic research,knowledge crosses borders easily. Othernations can get all the benefit of Ameri-can discoveries while paying a fractionof the cost or nothing at all.

— Technology in American factories isnot advanced enough to compensate forthe higher wages that American factoryworkers receive, so production movesoffshore, costing American jobs andmanufacturing knowhow.

See TECHNOLOGY, Page SB

ecovery shouldlast through'87,economists sayBy MARTIN CRUTSINQERAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — The U.S.economic recovery, already thethird longest in the postwarperiod, should last through 1987,although it may be a bit tottery atthe beginning of the year, manyeconomists believe.

These analysts are looking formoderate economic growth nextyear very similar to that of thepast two years;

Other elements of the consensusoutlook: '

— Growth will be enough topush the unemployment rate downslightly with interest rates,already at the lowest levels of thisdecade, also continuing to fall, atleast through the first half of theyear.

— Inflation, which hit a two-decade low this year as a result offalling oil prices, will pick up in1987, rising back to levels in effectbefore the oil price decline.

One of the big question marksnext year will be the impact of thesweeping overhaul of the taxsystem. While the new tax law,which takes effect Jan. 1, willlower individual taxes, economistsare fearful that these beneficialeffects will be outweighed initiallyby a loss of business tax breaks.

Some economists believe that asharp cutback In business capitalspending will give the economyenough of a Jolt that economicgrowth will dip Into negativenumbers during the first threemonths of 1987, something thathasn't occurred since the end ofthe 1981-82 recession.

However, most analysts believethat the slump will be short-livedand will thus not qualify as a full-fledged recession, which is de-fined as two consecutive quartersof decline in the gross nationalproduct.

Their faith that the economycan recover from a faltering startis based on a belief that thecountry's huge trade deficits willshow substantial improvementnext year.

"We think that tax reform isgoing to hit the first part of theyear pretty hard and it will onlybe an improvement in trade whichwill keep us out of a recession,"said David Wyss, an economistwith Data Resources Inc., one of

the country's largest • economicforetasting firms.

Michael Evans, head of a Wash-ington consulting firm, said heexpected GNP to be a negative 1percent in the January-Marchquarter but he said growth shouldpick up considerably after that... The Reagan administration isforecasting that the country'strade deficit, which is expected tohit a record $170 billion this year,will shrink by between $30 billionand $40 billion next year, enoughto lift economic growth to a rate of3.2. percent for the year. Theeconomy is expected to growabout 2.6 percent this year, veryclose to the 2.7 percent growthturned in for 1985.

The 3.2 percent administrationestimate is a substantial revisionfrom an August forecast, in whichthe administration predicted theeconpmy would race ahead at a 4.2percent pace in 1987. But it is stillabove the consensus forecast ofprivate economists.

Fifty private economistssurveyed by Blue Chip EconomicIndicators, a financial newsletter,predicted growth next year wouldaverage 2.5 percent, down a fullpercentage point from the Juneconsensus of 3.5.percent growthfor 1987.

The estimates ranged from arobust 4.3 percent by the mostoptimistic forecaster to negativegrowth and a recession forecastfrom two of the economistssurveyed.

One analyst who is calling for adownturn is S. Jay Levy, head ofLevy Economic Forecasters ofChappaqua, N.Y.

He put the probability of arecession next year at two-to-oneand speculated that it could be alengthy one given the currentslack in industrial production andwidespread overbuilding in of- .fices, apartments and hotels.

Levy said the downturn couldpush the unemployment rate,which has shown little improve-ment over the past two years, upby 2 percentage points. It current-ly is at 7 percent, an exceptionallyhigh level for this stage of aneconomic recovery..

Many other analysts believethat the Federal Reserve Boardwill step in early next year toavert a recession with another cut

See RECOVERY, Page SB

For over 60 years, Shadow Lawn Savings and Loanhas been helping its customers attain their dreams. . . for happiness, prosperity, and a better life. Inthis most joyous season and in the coming year,Shadow Lawn Savings wishes you and your lovedones more of the same.

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4 • • — •

8B The Sunday Register SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28.1966

High-Tech Trade BalanceBalanMOfU.8.•xpottt and Importsol MohlMdnotogygood* (good* raquirIng•ponding lo dovolop•ndpraduoOlnbillon* of dollar*

Leather cutter's talents obsolete

1M0 1M1 1

Sourc*:Mrtlcoi

By PETER COY

Associated Press

NEW YORK — Three days before Christmas,Carmelo Serrano took off a shoe and lookedinside. "Made In Brazil," it said. He got mad.

Imported Brazilian shoes are the reason Ser-rano is barely scraping by this holiday season. Hewas laid off two years ago as a leather cutter fora shoe company in the Bronx because ofinexpensive imports from Brazil, Taiwan andelsewhere.

Serrano said he didn't know when he bought hisvinyl shoes a few months ago they were fromBrazil. All he knew is they were f 10 a pair.

"Economically speaking, you don't have achoice," Serrano said in frustration. "You have tojust buy whatever you can afford."

« (Economically speaking, you don't havea choice. You have to just buy whateveryou can afford. I won't be able to affordmy $840 apartment in a few more months,believe me. Really, really, it's justdestroying the country from top tobottom. »t

Carmelo SerranoIlk) oft laattwr cutttr on the itfact ol ln.xp.ntlv. Import*

It is a national pattern: People choose importsbecause they are less expensive or better thanAmerican products or because American productsare simply not available.

What is good for the customer is bad for theproducer, although, a dilemma that explains the

nation's sky-high consumer debt and stalledindustrial production, among other things.

For Christmas, all Serrano could afford was 110for a poncho for his mother and 12.06 forpostcards to wish his friends and family a FelizNavldad.

The 39-year-old native of Puerto Rico is tryingto support his unemployed wife and daughter onthe $6.60 an hour he gets from the AmalgamatedClothing and Textile Workers union to find andcounsel other 1 aid-off shoe workers. The job runsout May 1 and the rent on his one-bedroomapartment is going up soon to 1340 a month.

"I won't be able to afford it in a few moremonths, believe me," Serrano said. He sym-pathizes with the Brazilian workers but wants thegovernment to slow down the imports.

"Really, really, it's just destroying the countryfrom top to bottom," he said.

TechnologyContinued from Page 7B

— While the Japanese are eagerstudents of American technology,a "not-invented-here" syndromedeters many U.S. companies fromemploying the best ideas availableoutside their own walls.

— An overemphasis on short-term profitability keeps com-panies from making the hugeinvestments in research and de-velopment that are necessary forlong-term growth.

— A large chunk of the nation'sresearch effort is devoted tomilitary work that has relativelylittle commercial spin-off. Na-

' tions under America's defenseumbrella such as Japan can devote

fall their research to commercialproducts.

— The government lacks a na-tional strategy of industrial com-petitiveness. For example, somepeople say government is spend-ing too little on education andtraining at all levels, resulting in a

. work force that is ill-equipped forhigh-technology jobs.

Of course, high technology is notthe only ingredient in com-petitiveness. General Motors Corp.has lost market share even whilepouring $40 billion into capitalimprovements under the chair-,manship of Roger Smith, notesformer board member H. RossPerot.

"It's not robots, it's not tech-nology, it's how we treat ourpeople," Perot said in one recentinterview.

Others add that the UnitedStates has pulled its punches ininternational trade policy. As theleader of the Western world, thisnation has put geopolitical con-siderations first and opened itsown market for the most partwhile allowing other nations topractice forms of economic dis-crimination.

Ironically, the United Statesfreely sold to Japan the tech-nology that allowed Japan to floodthe U.S. markets with goods rang-ing from steel to videocassetterecorders. With its profits, Japanhas been able to leapfrog Ameri-can technology in certain areas.

"Ten or 15 years ago I remembernot taking the Japanese seriouslyat all. It was just laughable howcrude they were," said SDA'sSolomon. Now the Japanese havealmost forced American com-panies out of the memory chipbusiness and are pushing intoother markets as well.

"You get almost a rush of fearwhen you see how much hasalready slipped away and willcontinue to slip away," Solomonsaid. i

Peter Coy reports on technologyand trade.

Recovery —'Continued from Page 7B

in the discount rate, the interest it-charges to make bank loans. TheFed cut this key interest rate fourtimes in 1986 in an effort to revivethe sluggish economy. It nowstands at 6.5 percent, its lowestlevel since 1977.

The Fed's easy money policieshelped push a variety of interestrates to their lowest levels of thedecade. Fixed-rate mortgages arecurrently averaging 9.3 percentnationally, with analysts fore-casting they will fall below 9percent in early 1987 as a result ofFed actions.

Other predictions for next year:— Inflation, which this year is

expected to rise just 1.3 percent,the lowest annual rate in 22 years,will pick up next year to close to

.4 percent, roughly the pace thatprevailed before the plunge in

•world oil prices.

I — Unemployment, which has'Jbeen stuck at 7 percent for the•past three months, will rise inearly 1987 before edging down

. ^modestly to.6.9 percent by the endof next year as the economy picksup steam.

— The budget deficit, which hitrecord $220.7 billion this, year,' decline only slightly to around

billion for 1987. This esti-contained in a recent survey

National Association ofEconomists, is.substan-

above the administration's..ition of a $170 billion defi-

ir the fiscal year which endsSeptember.

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•ran. Prices iHKtm Sun, Dtc. 2S thru SH. Jm. 3, «87.FOOD CORPORATION 1987.

MILESTONE 2 ADVICE 4 YOUR TOWN.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28.196»

Somethingsmade us laugh;others made uscry. It was a yearmany never wishto repeat whileothers will re-member it with afond sigh.

The Tall Ships drew tall praise July 4th

THE GHOUL THAT I MARRYFormer Neptune resident Maureen Albrecht, now

a mortician in Arcadia, California, tied the knot Oct.31 in a "llallowedding" at which bride, groomRichard Johnson and guests came as their favoritehorror movie characters, ghosts and goblins.

Albrecht, dressed as the bride of Frankenstein,proceeded down an aisle lined with simulatedtombstones to the strains of horror movie music asthe groom, dressed as Frankenstein, waited with aPresbyterian minister in front of the backdropfeaturing Frankenstein's castle under a full moon.

After the ceremony, wedding-goers dug in to afeast laid out in authentic, form-fitting Europeanstyle caskets complete with shovels, proving onceagain that marriage is indeed a grave matter.

MM g VUU THINK THAT'S MOIHTMW.

Prompted by recurring problems with monstersunder her children's beds, Middletown residentElizabeth Rumsey began marketing an anti-demonand monster spray. One whiff of the apple-scentedspray (sold elsewhere as air freshener) is guaran-teed to give even the mast pesky monster a terriblebellyache.

J

So maybe it wasn't the great' march

GETTING CAHY'D AWAYll was standing room only at the Count Basie

Theater May 15th when Cary Grant spent a few brief •hours showing clips of his films, answering qucs-tlons and charming in person the fans lie hadcharmed via the big screen for decades. Theconversation the Red Bank audience had with thebeloved screen star was to be one of'his last publicperformances. On Saturday, Nov. 29th, Grant died inIowa while preparing for another such evening withhis fans.

The Dam Site Restaurant (briefly known as theMill Dam) in Tlnton'Falls closed unexpectedly inAugust, leaving the dinner theater Kathy Reed hadoperated there for 12 years without a home.

Happily, Reed was able to relocate her dinnertheater at the Homestead Restaurant in Spring LakeHeights. A new restaurant, Escondidovopened in the300-year-old mill building in Tlnton Falls, and thedinner theater there re-opened under the directionof local actor/playwrights Billy Van Zandt and JaneMilmore.

HE AMD IUUO DOWN BY THE SCHOOLYARDThere was hardly room to swoon at the Garden

State Arts Center last July when Spanish heart throbJulio Iglesias came to croon his love songs and flashthose Spanish eyes. Iglesias sold out fourperformances, proving that some emotions need notranslation...

AND NOW, FROM THE PEOPLE WHO GAVEYOU SILLY STRING: THE NEW, IMPROVED

EATONTOWN TRAFFIC CHICLEElation over the wcll-ahead-of-schedule opening

of the intersection replacing the Eatontown trafficcircle soon turned to dismay as motorists foundthemselves jockeying for position amid its un-familiar loops and ribbons of road further confusedby new traffic signals and misleading road signs. Inthe first 10 days after, it opened, there were five ,accidents. The more things change, the more theystay the same.

SHOW AMD TILL ISM'S STYLEDuring hearings on a proposed tampon applicator

ban in the state Assembly in September, Cindy Zipf,president of the Sea Bright-based environmentalgroup Clean Ocean Action, displayed a jar containing158 plastic tampon applicators she said she collectedat Sandy .Hook beach in only one hour.

Thirty two years after Brown Vs. the Board ofEducation outlawed school segregation, the LongBranch Board of Education began planning action tointegrate the city's six schools.

YOU KNOW HOW IT IS 1LIVING FRO M PAYCHECK TO PAYCHECK

Red Bank developers Ted and Elaine Sourlis paid$81,279 in back taxes just hours before the 27properties on which their taxes were in arrearswould have been eligible for tax sale.

THE ONLY' I WAS PRINCE

In May, the Mental Health Association sponsoredthe first polo match to be held in Monmouth Countyin more than 35 years. The benefit match featuredtwo professional polo teams and offered MonmouthCounty residents yet another opportunity to dine offthe family china in the great outdoors in support ofa worthy cause while the thunder of horse's hoovesrumbled in the distance.

WHAT? NO BABY ON BOARD? THEN ILL

1986 saw the rapid profusion of "Baby on Board"signs in the rear windows of cars where a few yearsback people were putting those silly waving handson springs. Though its creator said he invented thesigns as a child safety measure, soon, racks andracks of "on board" signs were for sale coveringvirtually every person place or thing someone mightcarry in a car. And for those who travel light, therewas even a sign that read "stupid little sign onboard",

t(ANDMEN)Once again, Monmouth County elite gathered at

Woodland Farm in Middletown last October to watchthe horsemen in hunting pinks chase over hill anddale. When it began, in the early years of thiscentury, the Hunt was a way to thank local farmersfor allowing the gentry to fox hunt across theirlands. These days, the Hunt is fox-free — horsemenchase instead after charity dollars through ticketsales to area blue-bloods and those who enjoy

' playing the role of landed gentry for a day. The 1986Hunt was expected to fill area charity coffers to thetune of $500,000. Tally ho!

By Eileen Moon

Sunny skies, hot dogs and corn on the cob were all it took to draw smiles from the foreign boatcrew in town for the Liberty Weekend celebration

AIN'T NOTHING BUT AWHOSAYSA

Using spoons, shovels and even an ice creamscoop, Fort Monmouth firefighters Darren Elliot andJack White dug for three tense hours last April torescue 22-month-old Chris Chambers, who hadfallen down a 20-foot shaft made for taking; soilsamples in his Colts Neck yard.

A BIB HAND FOR THE GARDEN STATEIn May, millions of Americans from coast to coast

donated at least $10 and joined hands in a visualdemonstration of their support in the fight againsthunger. Although the official line didn't traverseMonmouth County, hundreds of local families droveto western parts of the state to link up with the chainwhile others formed their own local chains insupport of the event. New Jersey ranked second indonations among the 50 states with pledges of morethan three million dollars — a hand-some showingindeed.

Tongues wagged behind the potted palms in theupper crust enclaves of moneyed Rumsonians whenTown and Country magazine chose some familiarfaces to illustrate how the good life is led along thePeninsula. Just who was and who was not selectedfor inclusion in the glossy pages of Town andCountry was juicy beach club and cocktail partyconversation for at least a week. Not one to miss atrend, North Shore's Brian George began marketing"I was not in Town and Country Magazine" T shirtsat .his River Road emporium.

What's a hunt without a well-heeled mascot?

In Long Branch, the Kids World beach closed July18 and the Morris Avenue beach closed in Augustbecause of fecal contamination in the water whosesource remains a mystery despite efforts by teamsof divers and infrared photographs aimed at tracingthe source of the pollution. The continuing con-tamination is now under investigation by countyofficials.

A SIGHT TO BEHOLDThousands of Monmouth County residents

crowded the shores of Atlantic Highlands and SandyHook to behold the beauty of the tall ships as theybobbed in Sandy Hook Bay awaiting the start of theirFourth of July procession into New York harbor.Yacht clubs in the area hosted young sailors far fromhome, treating them to Ail-American hot dogs,hamburgers and corn of the cob while speaking the

1 international language of hospitality.

WHO SAYS MAX'S DOESN'T DELIVER?In January, New York City disc jockey Jim

Monaghan bet Chicago jock Terry Hemmet that theNational Football League Giants would defeat theChicago Bears in the playoffs. If the Giants won,Hemmet would pay off with with a shipment ofChicago deep dish pizza pie. If the Bears won,Monaghan pledged to pay up with a like shipment ofthe famous Max's hot dogs from Long Branch.Fortunately for a few select Chicagoans, Monaghanbet wrong. Employees at WXRT-FM radio in Chicagowere treated to a victory lunch of Max's hot dogs,delivered complete with buns, jars of both red andgreen relish, mustard and rolls all the way from LongBranch via United Parcel Service. And though theGiants lost, Max's hot dogs won the admiration ofHemmet, who reportedly conceded that Chicago'shot dogs can't cut the mustard when compared toone from Max's.

An idea whose time has come and passed

OKAY, 80 MAYBE "GREAT PUCE I

Holmdel native Daniel Gibson walked from LosAngeles, Ca. to Washington, DC. this year as amember of the Great Peace March for NuclearDisarmament, an organization formed after theoriginal sponsoring organization, People ReachingOut for Peace, ran out of. funds, leaving 1200marchers stranded in the California desert. Sore butunbowed, the remaining marchers kept walkingarriving in Washington in October. So what if itwasn't great? At least it was a GOOD peace march.

AT THE PHOOSE, ALL THE STEAKS

In October, The Peninsula House, a century-oldlandmark that had survived several hurricanes andmost recently earned acclaim as the perfect place to

1 wile away an evening dining, dancing or sippingcocktails in the piano bar succumbed to an earlymorning fire that officials concluded was the workof an arsonist. While recent plans of developers callfor construction of a hotel on the site, its longtimeadmirers hope a "P House" replica will somehow risefrom the ashes.

2C Tike Sunday KegUtrr tUMDAY. DECEMBER 28,1986

MILESTONES

Crosby-McCarthyEAST KEANSBURG — The wedding of Diane

Kathleen McCarthy and James William Crosbytook place on September 13 at St. Catherine'sRoman Catholic Church. Rev. John B. Cookcelebrated the Nuptial Mass. The Lakeside Manor,Hazlet, was the setting for the reception.

Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. CharlesMcCarthy, Alberta Avenue, here. The groom isthe son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crosby, MainStreet, Port Monmouth.

Matron of honor was Elaine Heath. Bridesmaidswere Debi Bissett, Suzanne Gallagher and Mary JoCrosby. Keri Ann Moran was the flower girl andConor McCarthy was the ring bearer. The bestman was Raymond Crosby and ushers were JohnMarcincak, Brian Manning and Paul Crosby.

The bride is a graduate of Mater Dei HighSchool, New Monmouth. She is employed withAT&T Information Systems, Middletown. Herhusband is a graduate of Middletown High SchoolNorth. He is employed with E. J. CrosbyConstruction Company.

After a wedding trip to Paradise Island,Bahamas, the couple settled in Highlands.

Prentice-KleisslerDEAL — Diane Elise Kleissler became the bride

of William Main Prentice Jr. on November 15 atSt. Mary's Roman Catholic Church. MonsignorThomas A. Kleissler celebrated the Nuptial Mass.A reception followed at Spring Lake Golf Club,Spring Lake:

Parents of the bride are Edwin A. and GertrudeMarie Kleissler Jr., Washington Avenue, Avon.The groom is the son of William Main and FrancisPrentice Sr., Brookside Avenue, West Deal.

Joanne Kleissler was her sister's maid of honor.Bridesmaids were Carrie O'Neil, Brooke Frankel,Eileen O'Hern, Mary Prentice and Janet Prentice.Flower girl was Catherine Anne Anderson. Bestman was Michael McGann. Ushers were GregorySchweers, Thomas Kleissler, Paul Morris, WilliamO'Brien and Bruce Werner. James McKeown wasthe ringbearer.

The bride is a graduate of Red Bank CatholicHigh School and Georgetown University. Herhusband is a graduate of Red Bank Catholic HighSchool and George Washington University. Theyare both employed with Congressman James J.Howard, House of Representatives, WashingtonD.C.

The couple settled in Falls Church, Va.

Mayer-CollinsRED BANK — Roxanne Marie Collins became

the bride of James Robert Mayer on October 4 atSt. James Roman Catholic Church. Rev. John P.Magdziak celebrated the Nuptial Mass. A recep-tion followed at Squire's Pub, West Long Branch.

Parents of the bride areCol. and Mrs. John W.Collins, Copperfield Court, Eatontown. Thegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George T. Mayer,Elsworth Court, here.

Matron of honor was Santa Habeck.Bridesmaids were Maureen Collins, LauraCatalano, Maureen McNamara and Peggy Law-soi.. Maureen Lawson and Mary Mayer wereflower girls. Best man was Michael Mayer. Ushers..were John Collins Jr., Larry and George Mayerand Charles Marvin.

The bride is a graduate of Red Bank CatholicHigh School and Monmouth College, West LongBranch. She is employed with The LinproCompany, Princeton. Her husband is a graduateof Red Bank Catholic High School and EastStroudsburg State University, Pennsylvania. Heis employed with Colgate Palmolive Company,New York City.

After a Carribean cruise, the couple settled inBricktown.

Cooper-ThomasHAZLET — The wedding of Kathryn Marie

Thomas and Edgar Thomas Cooper Jr. took placeon October 11 at St. John's Methodist Church.Rev. Norman Riley officiated. The Roman Inn,here, was the setting for the reception.

The parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs.Richard Petro, Thousand Oaks Drive, AtlanticHighlands. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Schollenberger, Holmdel Road, Holmdel.

Matron of honor was Mrs. Brian Butterworth,sister of the bride: Bridesmaids were NicoleConover, Denise Thomas, Diane Borgia and Janice •Soltis. Sarah Jo Jones was the flower girl. Thebest man was Michael Chahbandour and usherswere Larry Melito, Robert Lichowid, RichardJones and Joseph Zullo. Joey Zullo was theringbearer.

The bride is a graduate of Middletown HighSchool South. Her husband is a graduate ofHomldel High School. He is a Private first Classwith the United States Army in Fort Carson,Colorado.

The couple settled in Colorado Springs, Colo-rado.

Welch-SiwakowskiRED BANK — The wedding of Joan Annette

Siwakoswki and Thomas F. Welch IV took placeon October 18 at St. James Roman CatholicChurch. Monsignor Frederick Valentino cel-ebrated the Nuptial Mass. The VFW Post 2179,Port Monmouth, was the setting for the reception.

Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. BenjaminFranklin Sr., Bay Avenue, Highlands. The groomis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Welch III,Lincoln Street, here.

Maid of honor was Margaret Franklin, sister ofthe bride. Bridesmaids were Julie Adams, LisaFigliola, and Donna Jankowitz. Junior bridesmaidwas Jennifer Welch. Diana Horniacek was theflower girl. The best man was Edward Saundersand ushers were Jeff Wy ant, Louis Figliola, andMike Franklin. Junior usher was Brian Welch.Billy O'Mara was the ring bearer.

The bride attended Glassboro State College,Trenton State College and is a graduate ofBrookdale Community College and Henry HudsonRegional School. She is a secretary/wordprocessor with the law firm of Giordano, Halleran& Ciesla, P.C. Her husband attended GlassboroState College and Monmouth College, attendingLocal 9 Plumbers and Pipefitters Trade School. Heis a graduate Middletown South High School. Heis employed with Local 9 Plumbers and Pipefit-ters, Tinton Falls.

After a wedding trip to Antigua, West Indies,the couple settled in Monmouth Beach.

Chirico-WillisMIDLAND, Texas — The wedding of Janet Ann

Willis and John PhillpChirico Jr. took place onNovember 28 at Saint Ann's Catholic Church: TheRev. Fred Nawarskas officiated.

Parents of the bride are John and MildredWillis, here. The groom is the son of John and IdaChirico, Middletown. N.J.

Matron of honor was Jocelyn Lopez.Bridesmaids were Kathie King and Laurie Green.Bridesmatron were Candy Lyle and Ann Willis.Tiffany Willis was the flower girl. The best manwas David Chirico and ushers were Brian Bell andKyle large. Groomsmen were George Hartman,Steve Olah, Anthony Chirico and Jerry Johnson.

The couple settled in Middletown, N.J.

Copp-McCallRED BANK — The wedding of Lesa Marie

McCall and Gary Stephen Copp took place onSeptember 19 at the First Baptist Church. Rev.Richard L. Shaw officiated. The Colts Neck Inn,Colts Neck, was the setting for the reception.

Parents of the bride are Charles J. andJosephine McCall, Highland Avenue, Highlands.The groom is the son of Marvin and Ann Copp,Staten Island, N.Y.

Maid of honor was Kathryn Cavallo. Thebridesmaids were Catherine Egan and JaniceCopp. The best man was Victor Magnottl, andushers were Patrick McCall and Philip Harts-grove.

The bride is a graduate of Mater Dei HighSchool and Kean College, and is attending KeanCollege for a Masters degree. She is employedwith Kean College as a graduate assistant. Herhusband is a graduate of Tottenville High School.He is employed as a conductor with the PortAuthority Trans Hudson Corporation, JournalSquare.

After a wedding trip to Dominican Republic, thecouple settled in Matawan.

Tucker-GuenthnerLURAY, Va. — The wedding of Sharon Lynn

Guenthner and John Randolph Tucker took placeon August 16 at Main Street Baptist Church. Rev.Durham J. Pock officiated. A candlelight recep-tion dinner was held at the Minslyn Inn, here.

The parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. RudyA. Guenthner, Lee Street, here. The groom is theson of John R. and Susan Coe Tucker Sr,Lexington, Va.

Maid of honor was Debbie Mager. Bridesmaidswere Nancy Harris, Alexander Tucker and LoriLeiman. Leah Rogers was the flower girl. The bestman was Steve Moran and ushers were Paul

. Burkholder, Mike Chipley, and Wilson Tucker.Danny Guenthner was the rinfl bearer.

The bride is a graduate of Mt. Carmel ChristianAcademy and Sweet Briar College and is attend-ing JMU Graduate School. Her husband is agraduate of V.M.I., Lexington, Va. He is employedwith Haley, Chisholm and Morris', Charlottesville.

After a wedding trip to the Poconos, the couplewill settle in Stanardsville, Va.

BIRTHDAYS

Matthew Tomo III, ton of Matty and SueTomo, Ocean Township, celebrated Misixth birthday December 21

Laurie Anne Qeiger, daughter of Dianeand Tom Gekjer, West Keaniburg,celebrated her third birthday December19

Amanda Leigh Cuddy, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Cuddy, Matawan,celebrated her first birthday December13

m

•V v"A. S

iat 1

1Christopher John S t Peter, ton of Mr.and Mrs. John S i Peter, Oceanport,celebrated his sixth birthday November

Louise and Bobby Palagano, EastKean»burg. Louise celebrated her fifth

birthday on December 16 and Bobbyturned two on December 1

Jill Haithcoc*, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.uonfliu nfliurCOCKf union Dotcn,celebrated her fifth birthday December17

SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28.1986 The Sunday Register 3ft.

STYLE3 .iJHtJtWfcflfr -

it's Mardi Gias!Monmouth Day Care Center brings a Latin touch to January festivities

A Winter Carnival, reminiscentor a Rio de Janeiro Mardl Gnu iswhat the Monmouth Day CareCenter is planning for Saturdaynight, Jan. 31.

The party will be held at theDay Care Center itself which islocated at 9 West Bergen Place inKed Dank.

Dolly Rose of Kumson (shebeing the mastermind behind thisidea) and Net a Thompson of SeaBright are the two co-chair-women. Tim McLoone and hisAtlantic Coast Band have beenhired to play all night, so theparty's bound to be a lively event.

Pain Glrard of Middletown hashad the food donated from BeatFood Forward of New York andLittle Silver, whose young chefsare Nell Malloy and Carrie Roth. Beat Food Forward is known forits American regional cooking.Dinner will be served fromCarnival booths and will featureMexican, Italian, Chinese and

Southern cooking. The committeehas promised to bake all thedesserts.

Polll Schlldge, Kumson, an artmajor in college, and herenthusiastic committee, areguaranteed to turn the Center intoa wonderful Carnival setting forthe evening.

Besides all the good eating,drinking and dancing, they'veplanned a live auction, which will

BEST FOOD FORWARD — Neil Malloy, left, of Best Food Forwardin New York and Little Silver, makes catering plans with partyorganizer Sheri Henderson and chef Carrie Roth.

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include a catered dinner for six byBeat Food Forward; a weekend inNew York; a moonlight sail for sixon the Shrewsbury River Includingdinner; a day of beauty at CoteRouge, Red Bank; a gorgeous skioutfit donatd by Sport Spot ofShrewsbury; and a hand-paintedpicnic basket by stenciling artist,Dottle Johnaen of Shrewsbury.

Need to know more? Well, theyalso have jewelry donated byA.K.II. Fischer Jewelers in RedBank, a Nikon movie camera, anda weekend in Cape Cod.

An organizational meeting forthe Carnival was held at the homeof Roseanne Kenint in Kumson. .Those in attendance included PatSullivan, Sherrl Henderson, De-nlae Santora, Jane Babeanf,Beatrice Block, Elinor Chevalier, Sue Dennis, Linda Friedman allfrom Kumson; Eileen Farrell, SeaBright; Jane Zerrer from Mid-dletown; Susan Crooks fromShrewsbury; Bernadette Eulnerand Carol Herndon from Little

Silver and Tina Blvona, Jill Fleetand Johann and Francis Tyler allfrom Red Bank.

But wait! All fundraising is notover for the Day Care Center atthe close of the Carnival. In May,they're planning their annualWinner* All 1100 raffle nightcocktail party, which will takeplace at the home of Ron and CeclShlftan in Rumson.

This exclusive raffle, whereeveryone goes home with some-thing, features outstanding jew-elry from Tiffany's. Last year'stop winner went home with adiamond bracelet.

Linda Friedman is also workingon this party along with HollyDreman and Jane Bassett ofRumson and Carol Dobson fromRed Bank.

The Monmouth Day CareCenter was started sixteen yearsago by a coalition of four differentgroups: the Junior League, theNational Council of JewishWomen, the United Church

Women (an affiliated group ofProtestant women), and the Unit-ed Negro Bualnesa andProfessional Womens Club, Inc.

It was started to provide qualityday care for Red Bank area chil-dren regardless of the parents'ability to pay. Their first homewas in the basement of theMethodist Church on Broad Streetin Red Bank. Their first classincluded 25 children and now theycare for 150 children in a buildingthey purchased and renovatedabout ten years ago.

Many scholarships are providedfor some children and they'recurrently looking to expand andbuy another building for an ad-ditional 100 kids. Fundraising, asyour can see, is an integral part oftheir existence!

So, get rid of those winter blahsand come on down and join theCarnival.

Susan Minford 's column, bring-ing you the inside view o/Mon-nututh County's social scene, ap-pears every Sunday and Tuesdayin the Living section of The Regis-ter.

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PLANNING MAY PARTY — Organizers of the Day Care Center'sspring bash are left to right, Linda Friedman, Rumson; HollyDreman, Rumson; Carol Dobson, Red Bank; and Jane Bassett,Rumson.

Happy New YearParty PlannerParty Platters

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blue laws. Copyright WAKEFERN FOOD CORPORATION 1987.

4C The Sunday Register SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28,1986

ADVICE

Heed the warningDear Ann Landers: Please let

me use your column to get anImportant message over tomillions of people. What I haveto say is a matter of life or deathand 1 want as many people to seeit as possible.

Think about this the next timeyou are at a singles bar (Itdoesn't have to be a gay bar, any"meat market" will do) and yousee an attractive man and hewants to buy you a drink, or sheaccepts your offer for a cocktailand friendly conversation fol-lows, and the question comes upabout getting to know oneanother better. You know theline, "I've run into nothing butcreeps lately. You're the firstreally interesting person I'vemet in ages." Then he or shecomes on to you after you've hada third drink and you get tothinking, "Why not?" And thenext question is, "Your place ormine?"

Ask yourself one more ques-tion: "Is this roll In the sackworth dying for?" I'm talkingabout AIDS. That might be theprice. You don't have to beinvolved with a gay or a bisexualto get it. We now know that theAIDS virus can be picked upwhile engaging in heterosexualintercourse. And the person youget it from doesn't have to havethe disease. He (or she) can be acarrier who would test positive,but .have no symptoms.

Scary? You'd better believe itbecause it's a different worldout there and the old rules don'tapply any more. Sign me — NOCASSANDRA, JUST FACTUALIN SANTA BARBARA

DEAR FACTUAL: So, how can aperson be safe? According toHarold W. Jaffe, M.D., chief,Epidemiology Branch, AIDS Pro-gram, Centers for Disease Controlin Atlanta, "Failing totalabstinence, the best alternative isa monogamous relationship with aperson who is completely faithful.

"If this is not • feasible, thecondom is a must. There must beno exchange of semen, blood orneedles."

Dear Ann Landers: I - havefollowed your column faithfullyover the years and find your

Party dudsBy TAMMY THEISDallas Morning News

It's happened to everyone atleast once. You receive an in-nocuous-looking party invitationthat suggests a simple holidayget-together. But when you arrivein your casual trousers and -sweater, you're horrified to findeveryone in festive party dresses.

All of a sudden, your favoritered cashmere sweater looksdowdy amid all the glitter.

Choosing what to wear to aholiday party can present morethan a few fashion problems. Thetype of party matters, but so doesthe guest list. Who will you bemingling with once you arrive?There's a definite difference be-tween what you'd wear to theannual office get-together andwhat you'd wear taa casual sit-by-the-fire with friends.

Though you may be inclined to -reach for your trusty little black •dress, you'll get into thaholidayspirit more if you resist thattemptation and use a little moreimagination.

Here are a few suggestions onwhat to wear, and what not towear:

OFFICE PARTY: Anything toosexy (decollete blouses, thigh-high skirts, too-tight dresses) ortoo casual (anything you'd wearon the weekend) is not a goodchoice for celebrating the holidaybonus with your co-workers.

What falls in between? Try aluxe silk charmeuse two-piecedress. The bonus: It goes farbeyond the strictly holiday cat-egory.

LOW KEY: For sipping eggnogaround the fire with friends,choose something casual, but witha bit of holiday sparkle. Though ,your first inclination may be toslip into your denims, you'll feelmore like celebrating in a silverycardigan and silver star-studdedvelour leggings. They're still com-fortable, but have enough shinefor the season.

FANTASY DATE: When yourmain objective is charming thatone special man, you can dare-to-bare with something sizzling andsexy. If you've got the figure for it,go for a strapless dance dress witha swingy, leg-baring petticoatskirt, a suitable foil for flirtation.

Just as important to holidaydressing is your choice of ac-cessories. This season, go for pret- •ty hair bows in velvet, brocade ortulle, vintage-looking charmbracelets or watch-fob pins andtassulcd cartings.

advice very sound. I neverthought I would be writing toyou, but I really need some help.

My two grown sons (In their30s) fight so much It has becomeImpossible to have them to fam-ily parties. I can't Invite one andnot the other, so I don't Inviteeither one. The boys don't getalong with their sister. She bare-ly speaks to them. It would taketoo long to go Into why they feeland act the way they do, butbelieve me when I say It's notworth all the hate that has beengenerated.

Each one Is convinced thathe/ahe Is right and will notbudge an inch to make amends.Is there anything I can do to getthem together? I have alreadyshown them clippings from yourcolumn on this subject, but to noavail. As a grandmother, I amvery unhappy that I am nolonger able to have my familyover for holidays and familyget-togethers. Any suggestions?— BELEAGUERED IN BALTI-MORE

DEAR II.: These stubborn foolswill probably stay mad untilthere's a death in the family. Thenthey will kick themselves forhaving wasted so many yearsbeing hateful and mean-spirited.

Since you've shown them someof my columns on this subject (tono avail), it won't hurt to showthem one more. Good luck. Andplease let me know if it helped.That would make my day.

Dear Ann: A word to the guywho suggested that men be al-lowed to move a mistress In withthe wife to alleviate the manshortage: I say it's a great Idea,two women sharing a home andexpenses and enjoying oneanother's company. My questionIs, Why bother with the man?

Don't flunk your chemistry test.Love is more than one set of glandscalling to another. If you navetrouble making a distinction youneed Ann's booklet, "Love or Sexand How to Tell the Difference."Send a long, self-addressed,stamped envelope with your re-quest and 50 cents to Aim Land-ers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago,Illinois 60611.

Vacation wishesfor school break

It is vacation time and I wishthat my parents would let medo some of the things that Iwant to do rather than planningeverything for me.

My wish list is long and nowthere is time and I don't have tosit still in school.

Maybe parents should askkids what they want to do forvacation. No one has yet askedme, but I'm going to tell any-way. What I wish most is thatI had free time to do nothing.Well, nothing that looks likesomething to an adult. Mynothing means that I think upmy own activities. When you donothing you go outside andminute to minute invent whatcomes next. You might needsome mud, a few sticks, sometrees to climb and a friend to dothe stuff with. It's lots of fundoing nothing.

Another thing on my wish listis, I wish I could go to theairport. I'd just sit in front ofthose big windows and watchthe planes take off and land. Imight even get to see a pilotwith wings on his cap. Maybethis vacation I could also take atrip on a bus — to anywhere!You know, just get on the busand pay your fare, take a tripand come back, sort of a roundtrip adventure.

That reminds me, I've neverbeen on a train... that would befun too. And while we're on thesubject there might be a boatride, that I could take, theStaten Island Ferry would befine.

Someone told me aboutmuseums, they sound like fun.There are some that have play-grounds for children. One evenhas big dinosaur bones. I'd likethat too.

My wish list isn't finished yet

so don't go away. It would befun to iceskate with my parentsthis vacation. Maybe they couldfind a rink or if we're real luckythe outside water will freeze.I'd even like being pulled on asled. And if it snows, boy wouldthat be best. I'd like to gooutside and play and play andplay.

Another thing that is funduring a vacation is visiting theplace where my Mom and Dadwork. Maybe the sitter coulddrive me there for a fewminutes. I'd behave, really.

Then there is the fun that youcan have with blocks inventingwhat .you want to build andchanging it every time that youhave a new thought. First I'dbuild a city and have lots ofroads that my friend and Icould push our cars on. Then I'dbuild what 1 saw at the airportor on my bus ride. I could evenbuild a museum, if, I first sawone.

Well, by now you have theidea, there is no way that I'mgoing to be bored on this va-cation, I just have too much todo. That is, if they'll let methink up my own stuff insteadof them planning every minute.

T.V.?Well, at our house we don't

watch much T.V., only whenthere are special programs.And you know what, with ailthe things I want to do thereisn't much left over time forthat. That's how it goes whenyou get to think up your ownvacation activities. I sure dowish they'd let me do them,that would be fun.

Ara Nugent is the director ofLearning Associates in FairHaven. Her column appearsevery Sunday in the Livingsection of The Register.

FORSGATE SWINGS.The evening will be filled with music as you dance the

night away.. .at least until you hear the first strains of "AuldLang Syne"

FORSGATE IS BUBBLYComplimentary champagne will be flowing to add even

more sparkle to the dinner.

FORSGATE SHINES,Decorations and special favors will embellish the festivities

for welcoming in the new year.

FORSGATE IS DELICIOU&An elegant menu offering a magnificent array of appetizers,

entrees, desserts and light snacks for gracious holiday dining.

FORSGATEFOR NEW YEARS/

The perfect setting to welcome 1987. For reservations, pleasecall (201) 521-0070. $49 per person.

PQRSGWEForsgate Drive at Exit 8A, NJ Turnpike, Jameshurg, NJ

Heloise

Vacuum lost lensDEAR HELOISE:

I recently had the horror ofdropping my contact lens downthe bathroom sink drain. This is arather common accident. My drainwould not come apart easily, so Ihad no idea of what to do.

Then it hit me and I got out ourshop vacuum cleaner (wet or dryvacuum) and put a piece of nylonhose over the opening of the end ofthe hose. After removing the drainstopper, I positioned the hose overthe drain and turned on thevacuum (make sure the shopvacuum is approved for vacuum-ing up water, since there will mostlikely be some in the pipe of adrain).

In a matter of seconds, the waterand the contact lens had beensuckedltKttnd the lens was stop-ped from going into the vacuum bythe nylon hose. This also works toremove earrings and other smallitems that fall down the drain,especially when you don't want topay costly plumbing bills to havethe pipes taken apart. — LindaBran am

Yes it will work but, as youcautioned, be sure It is a wetdryvacuum. Next time close thedrain! — Heloise

Speed up checkoutDear Heloise: With these new-

fangled scan cash registers at allour area's grocery stores, I havefound a way to make my checkoutfaster than ever;.

I always put my items on thecounter with the bar code (elec-tronic price code) facing thecheckout clerks. This way they areable to grab each item andmethodically run it over the scan-ner rather than having to searchfor the code while retrieving each

item from a grocery basket. —Kate Cochran

I'm rare the checker ap-preciate* this! — Heloise

Diaper boxesDear Heloise: Diaper boxes (48

count or more) can be used formany things. I use them for storingthe kids' toys. Decorated with thefunny papers or anything, theymake a nice inexpensive toy box.

Another great use I have foundis for the storage of children'sclothes from season to season.— Lynn Grandmaison

Waxed windowsDear Heloise: This past summer

I thought I would be smart. Ratherthan take the step stool out towash my sliding glass door, Idecided to use my mop instead.

The next day I discovered thatthere had been wax on the mopand my sliding glass door wasstreaked with wax. I have triedeverything that I can think of butto no avail. Can you suggestanything? — Mrs. John A. Hall

You might try washing yoursliding door glass with a solu-tion of one cup of ammonia, Wcup of powdered laundry de-tergent (that does not containbleach) and a half gallon of coolwater. Rinse with cool water andshine with a lint-free cloth.Before washing your windows orsliding glass door with a mop inthe future, purchase a new mophead or mop and label It "ForWindows Only." Then, after thewindow washing is completed,you can store it away until thenext time

— Heloise

New YearsDining5:00 P.M.-10:00 P.M.

Outrageous Dinner Specials• Lobsters •Steaks• Veal

Be our guest for 2 days nowthrough December 30THE COMMUNITY YMCA

Available to you right now absolutely FREE.

• RACQUETBALL • HEATED SWIMMING POOL• INDOOR JOGGING TRACK AND GYM

• UNIVERSAL & OLYMPIC WEIGHT ROOMS• CAM II. FITNESS CENTER

• SAUNA, STEAM ROOMS, & WHIRLPOOL SPAS

Because there is such a variety of healthyalternatives at the YMCA, you'll never be bored.

Look good, feel great for the holidays.(Must be over 18 yrs. old)

CALL TODAY 741-2504The Community YMCA166 Maple Avenue, Red Bank, N.J.

Bring in this coupon for ourFREE INTRODUCTORY OFFER

NAME_

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pncti affective Dec. ]B, 1986 ttirough Jan. 5,1987 in ttw following countim: Btrgwi. M m . Hudnn. MMOMMK. Monmoutn, Morrtt, PataK, somerMt, suss««. union counties. And tntM communities: wxnington ana Point pmsantiMone loldto omtr reaihn or wtwm*l«n. ouantttv rtgno rwerved). Not mpomlble for typographical erron.

6C The Sunday Register SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28,1986

YOUR TOWNThey're roaring with the best of them!

HowellLeeJr.

PORT RICHEY, Fla. — Aformer Red Bank couple hasbeen cited with highest award

Vilma Lee

be bestowed inthat canLionism.

Howell Lee Jr. and Vilma Lee

have been honored with theMelvin Jones Fellow Award,the highest honor conferred bythe Lion Clubs International.

Earning this award re-cognizes the recipients' deepcommitment to Lionism alongwith their concern for theirfellow man. The recipients arerecognized as leaders inLionism.

The plaques were presentedby the Lions Internationalpresident at the annual world-wide Lions night in St.Petersburg, PI.

Both Lees are currently ser-ving as presidents of New PortRichey Lions and LionessClubs and have been re-elected and installed presi-

dents for the 1986-87 year.The New Port Richey Lion's

Club operates a glycomascreening clinic, and alsoprovides eye glasses for schoolchildren and senior citizens.

The club also supports anddonates to Florida Camp forthe multiply handicapped,leader dogs for blind, hearingdogs, youth exchange, dia-betes, drug abuse and more.

Lion Howell has been a Lionfor five years and LionessVilma, four years. Both havehad perfect attendance andhave received many otherawards and certificates at bothclub and district levels.

Task force announces woman of the yearRED BANK — Anna Cook, director of the Center of Love in

Asbury Park, is the recipient of the New Jersey Task Force onWomen and Alcohol's "Woman of the Year" award. The awardwas presented at the Task Force's 1 lth Annuat Conference heldrecently at the Flanders Hotel in Ocean City.

"The 'Woman of the Year' award has been presented for sevenyears," said Sharon Thomas, NCA Minority Project coordinatorand conference chairperson, "This however, is the first yearthat a minority woman has been the recipient."

The criterion for the award is based on the woman'sdedication to helping people afflicted with the disease ofalcoholism.

"Although many women meet that criterion, only a select fewhave devoted personal time and interest to working withalcoholics," said Mary Anne Ruane, president of the Task Force,"it's more than just a job."

A pioneer in the field, Anna Cook has dedicated most of herlife to helping alcoholics. A native of Neptune City, Anna Cookworked as a salesperson, cashier and then store manager inAsbury Park. It was during this time that she became involvedwith the public and aware of the plight of the poor, alcoholics,drug addicts and the less fortunate. She became so inspired

through attending a church conference (addressing the needs ofthe poor) given by the St. Vincent de Paul Society, she knew shecould no longer wait to make her dream come true of openinga center for the less fortunate.

Through much prayer and persuasion the Center of Love wasborn. The Center of Love is located on Lake Avenue in AsburyPark. The center offers hot meals, counseling and supportiveservices for indigent alcoholics, and has been providing theseservices since 1979.

Other awards received by Anna Cook are the "NationalAssociation of Negro Business & Professional Woman's Clubs"award and the "Humanitarian Service Award" by the Center ofLove.

"It brings great pride to us at the National Council onAlcoholism of Monmouth County," said Sharon Thomas. "Andto those people who have worked closely with Anna Cook overthe years in Monmouth County, to see a woman so deserving ofsuch an award become the actual recipient of one."

This year's conference theme was "A Spectrum of Aware-ness." It was designed to focus on a diverse spectrum of womenaffected by the disease of alcoholism and other drugs, and toaddress issues concerning disabled women, Black and Latinowomen, AIDS treatment and cocaine and crack to name a few.

Temple Beth Ahm students help hearing impairedABERDEEN — The students of the Temple Beth Ahm Hebrew

School have successfully completed a project to aid hearing-impaired individuals to more fully participate in services.

Through the students' weekly contributions of charity, sixheadsets and amplifier were purchased, and installed in thesanctuary this fall.

The principle and importance of sharing have always been anintegral part of the Hebrew School curriculum. A studentcommittee representing all grades, determines the allocation ofthe money contributed by the students throughout the year.Over the years allocations have "been made to meet local andworld needs.

The students learned, of the availability of this aid for the

hearing-impaired from the school priancipal, Judy Soicher.Soicher had seen the headsets at a Temple in' Teaneck. In

conversation with.people who had used the headsets during theservices she was made aware of the pleasure felt by those whohad used the headsets. After discussion of the benefits of theseheadsets and the needs of the congregation the students votedto undertake the project of providing headsets for the temple.

The students achieved their goal and the headsets wereavailable to participants during High Holy Days services inSeptember. The students have earned the gratitude of those whohave benefited from the use of the headsets.

Further information regarding this project may be obtainedby calling Temple Beth Ahm at 583-1700.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED — Pictured at aluncheon meeting held recently at the Hilton inTinton Falls to mark the completion of a six monthAdult Intervention Project by the MonmouthCounty Board of Social Services are Kathy Knight(front row left), a nurse with MCOSS NursingServices; Jeanne Perchik (front row right), asocial work specialist at the Monmouth CountyBoard of Social Services; Gladys Tarantino(second row left), administrative coordinator ofProtective Services for the Elderly, a program of

Family and Children's Services of Long brancn;and Carla Mangieri (second row right) social workspecialist at the Monmouth County Board ofSocial Services. The board received a grant forthe project from the Division of Public Welfareand MCOSS Nursing Service and ProtectiveServices for the Elderly cooperated in presentingworkshops at senior centers and nutrition sitesthroughout the county to teach staff how torecognize and refer problems of self neglect.

Into history?MIDDLETOWN — The Yan-

kee Volunteers of Poricy Park,Oak Hill Road, are a group ofspecial individuals who sharetheir love of colonial historyby giving programs for chil-dren and adults in the 18thCentury Murray Farmhouse.

Spinning, open hearth cook-ing, candle dipping and sten-ciling are just some of theprograms offered in additionto tpurs of the farmhouse andbarn that was once owned byJoseph murray.

Anyone interested in joiningthis elite group, call KathyWhitney, 842-5966 for infor-mation about volunteering andattending the training sessionsto be held on Jan. 15 and 16.

Volunteersin Action

The Volunteer Center ofMonmouth County recruitsvolunteers for over 160non-profit health, cultural,human service, civic andeducational organizations.The center's goal is to matchthe volunteer's talents withthe needs of the community.In order to do this, werequest prospective volun-teers to visit our office be-tween the hours of 9 and 6any day Monday throughFriday to complete a briefregistration form and dis-cuss various possibilitieswithin the framework of thevolunteer's availability andinterests.

Below are some of ourcurrent volunteer openings.

The Volunteer Center wel-comes your request forfurther information con-cerning, these or any of theapproximately 300 volun-teer openings we have. Youmay call us at 741-3330.

Aerobics instructor;graphic artist; public rela-tions; board member; green-house gardener; hospitalaide; carpenter; librarian;newsletter editor; clericalassistant; museum tourguide; soil conservation;computer programmer;nursing home visitor; sec-retary; driver; parent aide;tax asslstor; entertainer;pastoral care; teen counsel-or; fund raiser; pet therapy;and Spanish interpreter.

Doctors attend conventionRED BANK — Two local

chiropractors, Drs. DorisLazur-Ugarte and Luis H.Ugarte, recently attendedthe three day Annual Con-vention of the Federation ofStraight Chiropractors heldat the Marriott MarquisHotel in New York City.

Straight Chiropractic is avitalistic philosophy of lifeand health based upon therecognition that livingthings have an inborn striv-ing to maintain health, andis the art and science ofcorrec t ing v e r t e b r a lsubluxation in accordance

with that philosophy.The weekend program in-

cluded a continuing educa-tion portion for licensuferenewal as well as manydynamic speakers onphilosophy, marketing andpracticing building.

Two world renownchiropractic speakers wereDr. Russell Erhardt, founderof Erhardt X-ray Seminarsand Dr. Clay Thompson,chiropractic innovator andfounder and developer ofthe Thompson Adjustingtechnique.

Drs. Doris Lazur-Ugarte and Luis H. Ugarte

Be part of Your TownIs your group planning a benefit? Does

your organization have a meeting scheduled?Do you have some news for the people ofMonmouth County? Let us hear about it andbecome part of Your Town.

All information must be typed or neatlywritten and be received at least two weeksprior to the event. All press releases shouldinclude the time, date and place of .the event

as well as any admission charges. Releasesmust also include a phone number forreaders to call for more information. Pictureideas are welcomed.

If the event has already happened, send usthe information as soon as possible.

Send all releases to Karen Spiewak, YourTown editor, 1 Register Plaza, Shrewsbury,07701.

Make A DateA paid directory of coming events. Rates $3.75 for three lines for one day ($1.50 each additional line), $5.00 lorthree lines for two days ($1.50 each additional line), $6.50 for three lines for three days ($2.00 each additionalline), $7.50 for three lines for four or five days ($2.25 each additional line), $9.00 for three lines for six to eightdays ($2.50 each additional line). $10.50 for three lines for nine to ten days ($3.00 each additional line). $13.50for three lines for eleven days. Each additional day $1.00, each additional line $3.00. Deadline 11:00 a.m. twodays before publication. Call The Daily Register, 542-4000, ask for The Date Secretary.

EVERY SUNDAYS.O.S. (Slutting Over Singles)Dance, free buffet, door prizes.Shore Point Inn, 2nd floor, Ilazlet,(Every Sunday) 8pin. Admission$5.

DECEMBER 31—WEDNESDAYNew Years Eve dance sponsoredby The Jersey Shore Scots' Ameri-can Club. Music by the Martin

Flynn Shore Hand. 9am-lam. $25per person. M.Y.O.H. Call 870-01125.

JANUARY 4—SUNDAYSunday llreakfast from 8-12noon.Menu, eggs any style, Frenchtoast,, pancakes, bacon, sausage,home fries. Juice, coffee, cake.Adults $:).!)(), senior citizens$2.60. IJreakfast first Sunday

eucli month.

JANUARY 24—SATURDAYIll'W New Orleans-Caribbean 7day cruise. Air & Cruise $880.Call Freddy 741-5012.

OCTOBER 17,19877 days, 7 islands, Caribbeancruise. Deposit required by Jan. 1.Contact Kay Lockwood 291-1653alter (ipm.

WEBUIITAER0UD

NEWFEELING

Please Check StoreWindow Signs For

Holiday Week Hours

The supermarket with warehouse prices.

From all of us at A&P

3-LB. KRAKUS IMPORTED

CANNED HAMWhen you buy any of these

stainless steel itemsat 17.99 each...compare at 24.99

• 20" Oval Meat Platter I I• 3 Piece Carving Set• 6 Pc. Steak Knife Set

Offer expires Jan. 3rd., 1987, orwhile supplies of merchandise last.

GROCERY

STAR'KIST

Solid White Tuna

PLUS DEPOSIT IN N.Y...REGULAR OR _ *»^«

C&C Diet Cola 6 '£5 99«REG. 8 ENVS. OR WITH MARSHMALLOWS

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Nescafe Instant Coffee j . * 3 . 9 9ASSORTED FLAVORS...67.5-OZ. PKG. _

Capri Sun Fruit Drinks 17* 1 . 99ASSORTED FLAVORS . _ _

Veryf ine Fruit Drinks 4 fit 1 . 00A&P CRAN-APPLE, RASP. OR REG. « . _ _

Cranberry Juice Drink ST1.29

A&P Ginger Ale 3 W I T 1 . 0 0HBA&GEN. MDSE.

CONTROL TOP '3.29 OR REGULAR

L'eggs Winter Colors g% 9 9Parity Hose Z3 IN PKG...EACH PKG. . _ _ _

Polaroid Video Cassette Tapes 1 3 . 9 9••AAMW>K.2.59"CVD"OR"AAA"

Duracel Batteries9-OZ. SIZE

Comet Plastic Tumblers•AA"M>K.2.59OR-C".-O"OR"AAA'

Eveready Energizers Pk9.1.99AFTER MFRS MAIL IN DEBATE ON i GALLON PURCHASE

Prestone ll Anti Freeze

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ft 3.49jug

FROZENBREAKFAST BEVERAGE

Trees weet ^ A f cOrange Plus ^ f %JFRENCH BREAD...CHEESE 7.1-OZ. PKG.

Pillsbury Microwave Pizza 1.100% PURE...160Z. CAN

Tropicana Orange Juice 1 .ASSORTED COCKTAIL - -

Bacardi Drink Mixes can b y *BUTTER, CHEESE OR PETITE BUTTER

Sara Lee CroissantsANY VARIETY...16-0Z. CONTAINER

Aunt Jemima Pancake Batter 9 9 C

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Perdue Oven Stutters is. 9 9C

GREAT FOR A PARTY!

Perdue Chicken Wings m.VIRGINIA BRAND , . _ .

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Brown 'N Serve SausageGROCERY

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4C Bread CrumbsFROM CONCENTRATE • , s . — _

Realemon Lemon JuiGe b«. I. d. yFAMILY PACK-ASSORTED

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Marcal Sof pac Tissue

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Citrus HillOrange JuiceREGULAR...8-0Z. CUP

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Tropicana Grapefruit Juice 1 . 8 9REGULAR QUARTERS

Parkay Margarine100% PURE...32OZ. CARTON

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Minute Maid Ades ^ 9 9 °

MEAT

CUT FROM YOUNG PORKERS

Fresh Hams

SHANK PORTION...WATER ADDED...BUTT PORTION 1.39 LB.

Special Trim 4 19Smoked Hams u>. ISWIFT LIGHT...4 CENTER CUT, 4 LOIN END _

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Boneless Rump RoastFROZEN...10TO14OR18TO22LBS.

Grade "A' Young TurkeysFIRST CUT BRISKET

Freirich Corned BeefU.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED CHUCK C j S

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Boneless Fresh Hams ib.o.oy

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SEAFOOD41 TO S0...IN 2 LB. BOX

ImportedPink Shrimp »>16 TO 20 PER POUND

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549

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Prices effective Sun, Dec. 28th thru Sat. Jan 3rd 1987, in A&P Stores in New Jersey & Rockland County ONLY. Some items may not be available in Frenchtown A&P.In order to assure a sufficient quantity of sale items for all our customers, we reserve the right to limit sales to 3 packages of any item unless otherwise noted. Not responsible for typographical errors..

8C The Sunday Register SUMOAY, DECEMBER 28.1966

ENTERTAINMENT

)ne year short of 50, she proves her dramatic range is as flexible as her aerobic routinesBfBIUCOSFOHD

ight-Ridder

NEW YORK — Jane Fonda is back, really back,iiftri I don't mind telling you I think this is great news.

I didn't mind telling her, either. Critics aren'tsdpposod to gush — it's not seemly in the first place,aid rarely called for in the second — so I kept itdfsrrert. and left it until the end of a recentinterview, staged to promote Fonda's latest film,"The Morning After." But I did say that it was goodtn have her on the screen again. Call me ir-responsible, call me a pushover. Call me a Com-munist . St ill: Fonda brings something to movie actingthat Meryl Streep and Jessica Lange and SissySb.uek and Kathleen Turner and the rest of a ratherremarkable generation of actresses now working donot If I knew exactly what it was, I'd write out theformula. It has something to do with strength andvulnerability mixed, but that's a cliche and there'snoi hint; hackneyed about Fonda's work. She's aformidable presence on screen. That's the best I can

>'«' I, She isV'very bit as formidable in real life, but thatis more to do with the way she looks than the waye acts. Jane Fonda turns 49 Thursday. On the day,<it a good look at her in her hotel suite, she looked

I rhapt 30. And she refused to let a photographert ke her picture for The Herald, because she wasn'tr adv. she said, and didn't look the way she wanted

, which presumably is 16. Obviously, this workoutfa isiness works, at least for Fonda.

Nonetheless, the workout business sidetracked•r from t he movie business for four years, whichthe kind of thing generally regarded asofessional suicide. Between "Rollover" (1981), ai IIMI drama about romance and high finance, and\J:MI'S of God" last year. Fonda made lots of videosid personal appearances, but performed only in aevision drama, "The Dollmaker." And though

inda thinks that performance, as an Appalachianf rm wife of the 1940s, was the best thing she hasef er done, she has come to understand that

evision isn't film. It's into the living rooms and outi e window, and nobody really takes it seriously. Soi r all intents and purposes, Jane Fonda was a non-ajitress for nearly five years.> Her return in "Agnes of God," playing her age but

lit it looking it, was glossy but hardly a star turn;nne Bancroft stole the movie, and Meg Tilly, in thele role, was the film's focus. In "The Morningter." Fonda plays a former actress who is washed

up and boozed out, and who wakes up one morningto find that she's in bed with a murder victim, withno immediate assurance that she isn't the murderer.Fonda's character is a 50-ish alcoholic, and for someremarkable moments in the film, that's just whatFonda seems to be: wasted, a human ruin. The movie,though directed by Sidney Lumet, is not great. Theperformance is.

In brief interviews — one in the morning, one inthe afternoon — Fonda talked about playing a loser,and about why she stopped making movies and whyshe started again, about working with Sidney Lumet,the New York-based filmmaker who directed herfather in "Twelve Angry Men" and has a reputationfor working hard and fast, and about pushing 50 inHollywood, a town that loathes age. She would nottalk about her politics, but only for the mostHollywood of reasons. "I think it deflects from themovie. If I'm doing a lifestyle or a personalinterview, yes..."

She's good at talking about her craft, however.Candid, too: "The Morning After" is not a perfectfilm, and she knows it and knows why. But for her,it was the right part at the right time.

"When you've been in the business about 27 years,it's real hard to find a part you've never playedbefore. And 1 wanted to do something that wastotally different, that people wouldn't expect, thatkind of played against type. I've done only one othersuspense-thriller, and that was "Klute," and thatwas in 1970.1 was real scared at the idea of playinga drunk. It's very hard to do; I've never been ableto do it well, and I just sort of wanted that challenge.I thought, 'Boy, that would really scare me, I guessI better do it.' I wanted to wake up as an actress andget scared again."

Fonda's exhaustive field preparation for her partsis one of her trademarks. She walked the MinnesotaStrip in Manhattan for "Klute," in which she playeda prostitute. For "Comes a Horseman," in which sheplayed a rancher, "I learned how to lasso, I learnedhow to rope, I learned to castrate. (Co-star) JimmyCaan wouldn't do it, and I did it." She laughs. "Ididn't enjoy it, either."

"For 'The Dollmaker' I went to Arkansas and Ilived with a family. I chopped their wood and Imilked their cows and I churned their butter and Icooked their possum."

And for "The Morning After?""All the things that you'd expect — I went to AA

meetings, I went to Al - Anon meetings and I talkedto drunks and I talked'to sober alcoholics and I reada lot of books, hung out in a lot of bars. I watchedall the movies — which is another thing that

impressed on me how hard it is to do it well. But thething that helped me the most was that the man whowrote the original script, who created the character,was James Hicks, who himself is a sober alcoholic,and he said that the thing that inspired him to createthe character was Gail Russell (a now-forgottenromantic lead of the 1940s who died of alcoholismat the age of 36). I vaguely remembered the name,but I didn't really know. So I went back and I got allher films.

"She was very, very pretty, very talented, veryvulnerable — there was a real unusual talent, andyou could see her growing and getting better partsand growing as a talent. And then somethinghappened. And she wasn't making so many movies.Her last movie (actually, she made two more) wascalled 'The Tattered Dress,' where she had this little .role that she just appeared in in the end, and youcould see the face that was beginning to bedevastated by alcohol.

"Her bar was a bar near where I live in SantaMonica, and I sort of began to feel her. And then Iread Frances Fanner's autobiography, which 1 hadread before but I had never read it thinking ofalcoholism. This time around when I read it, it wasso clear to me that that was her problem. That morethan anything made me feel empathy for thecharacter. Those two women in particular werevery, very gifted. But the alcohol destroyed them."

Fonda's political activism has not overshadowedher work as an actress, but it has built her areputation as the star of "socially conscious"movies, which "The Morning After" is not; it's astraight-up melodrama. Some in Fonda's followingwant her in predictable roles, doing Fonda - ishthings — she got mail after "Agnes of God"complaining that she allowed her character to smoke(she insisted on a foul-tasting vegetable substitutefor tobacco). Today she finds herself in rebellion .against her own image.

"I said, 'Hey, wait a minute — I'm an actress.' Whowants to play themselves? I have no interest inplaying what people perceive me as being. What adrag, you know what I mean? I wanted to say, 'I'man actress and I can play someone who is out ofcontrol and a loser and all the other things.'"

"And it's kind of fun to be in a movie where yougo into the t heater ami see people react the way theyreact to it — just jumping out of their seats and thenlaughing because they've been taken by surprise."

"But it's also — you know, there are some verydemanding scenes. It's one thing when you're doinga movie and you've rehearsed the scene and you

prepare, and you know what's required, and youwork up and you get into the thing and you do It. Butif you're running through it, and I was on stage thewhole time, there's no time to prepare for any onescene. So it was very challenging to rehearse thatway for a film."

Perhaps the production schedule was partly toblame, but when Fonda needs to look bad in "TheMorning Arter," she does look truly bad — worn out,beat up, a blowsy old blond. Nothing at all like theworkout gal.

"I thought I looked perfect. I looked exactly theway I wanted to look, I was very happy. I lookedright.... You could believe that this woman had beenalmost a star. There was the kind of somewhat-usedsatin bathrobe that she was wearing, the (rinsed)blond hair. There was the slight edge of wornglamour, and when she tried to pull herself togethershe could. But when she was out of it she was outof it. I was exactly the way I wanted to look. I'm veryproud about that."

Fonda herself, though hardly worn out, is now ayear away from 60, a very long way from sex-kittenstatus. And she's going to be 60 in Hollywood, whichis not exactly crying out for "mature" actresses.Fortunately, Fonda has an edge; she has power.

"I would feel a lot more vulnerable if I weren't aproducer, if I was totally dependent on the powersthat be out there to bring me the roles. But ever since1972, I've been producing my own films (most withher partner in Fonda Films, Bruce Gilbert), with theexception of "Agnes of God." Not that everything isgoing to work, and that every film I have beingdeveloped is going to see the light of day — it doesn'thappen that way — but I feel pretty confident thatI'll be able to satisfy my need to act and also my loveof producing.

"Once I got the workout on solid footing, I hadformed Fonda Films, I had a new partner and 'Agnesof God' came along. (I took the role) partly becauseI was interested in the project but also because Iwanted to work. And then this — again, 1 reallywanted to work, and it was such a different kind ofpart, and it's NOT a fitness, health thing (shelaughs). It's totally different from the kind ofperception that was beginning to take me over.

"I wanted to say, 'Hey, I'm back.' It just seemedright-

Jane Fonda is back — back from the abyss of flat-tummy video and leotard hawking and hran-in -t heinornin' — back to starring in movies. It does seemright.

I THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME) • by Heroi Arnold and Bob Lee

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morning After9 allows Fonda fun with her roleBy DIANE HMTHMAN

Knight-Ridder '

In some ways, "The MorningAfter" is a preposterous bit ofwork — a murder mystery thatsurvives on cheap scares, goofystereotypical characters and aflabby, predictable love story.It spends as much time rompingthrough Los Angeles' high-techloft studios and pinky-peachbeauty salons as it does onsolving the case. The credits list"Special Thanks to the Vidal

Sassoon Academy" — it's justthat kind of movie.

Still, watching "The Morning

After" is really fun — as muchfun as, say, romping throughhigh-tech loft studios anddropping in on Vidal Sassoon.An all-star cast, glossy visuals,first-rate production valuesand the occasional wittythrowaway line lend a touch ofclass to a movie that is reallynot a whole lot more compelling(though much bloodier) thanthe mystery of who shot J.R.Ewing.

Jane Fonda, bleached blondand teased beyond repair, playsAlex Sternbergen, an over-the-hill actress best known by herprecious stage name," Viveca."Married to, but separated from,a hairdresser (Raul Julia) who

is the darling of all Bel Air,Alex has dwindled into a lone-ly, pill-popping alcoholic,whose pathetic refrigeratorcontains little more than staleolives and six jars of mayon-'naise ("I'm always afraid I'mrunning out").

She's sharp-tongued, loose-living and ultra-fashionable;she also suffers from occasionalblackouts. And she's just thekind of woman one wouldn't betoo surprised to find waking upnext to a corpse one morningwith no recollection of how shegot there.

Fonda breathes new life intothe tired idea of a vain, middle-

aged minor star trying to provethat her career was bigger than

, it was and can still be biggerj than it will ever be. Clearly' enjoying boththe theatricalityand the humor involved In this • <

f chance to play her own updatedj version of Nora Desmond,Fonda's Alex is a masterpieceof brittle bitterness.

She never lets her lot in lifeinterfere with her natural prac-ticality, however — herthorough attempt to clean upafter the murder (she matter-of-factly yanks the knife out ofthe victim's back with an un-pleasant thud and scrubs theplace down with soapy water)

• is black comedy at its best.

CrosswordNow arrange the circled letters toform the surprise answer, as sug-gested by the above cartoon.

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

""TTlII XHTXXTTXTNow back in clock, Jumbtt took No l i l t malUMa tor U K from Jumbli,Co Ihlt MwaptfMr, P.O. toi 41M, Orlando, ¥1 32M1-4MC Includ* yourn*ma, »ddr*is and tip coda and i u t i your chock p*>yabb» to Mtw*p*p«rbook|.

Your HoroscopeB) Stella Wilder

8UNDAY, DEC. 28Born today, you are a sharp-witted,

intelligent, versatile individual with alust for everything new and1 untried.You are the first to volunteer for themost difficult job. simply because youlook upon the opportunity to tackle itas another welcome challenge. Suc-cess or failure is secondary to you; theattempt is paramount. You will find,however, that there are those timeswhen success is a much-needed re-ward for a good attempt: it.should,now and then, be actively sought after.

You are attracted to all the arts,though you will most likely immerseyourself in performance of some kindIt is likvly that you will be a ground-breaker; the theater is. indeed, oneplace in which you can shine1 as anoriginal, regardless of the receptionyour work receives at the outset

Also born on this data ar t Wood-row Wilson, U.S. preaident; MaggieSmith, actress.

To see what is in store for you to-morrow, find your birthday arid read

.ne corresponding paragraphl Letyour birthday star be your daily guide

MONDAY; DEC. 29CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I f ) --

Your own stubbornness may get inyour way today - and cause discom-fort to many others. Give in - andproceed

AQLARIIS (Jan. iO-Feb. 18) -Give another a valuable suggestion,and you may find you have given your-self a good idea. Give things a trytoday.

PISCES (Feb. 19-Mirch 20): --Benefits of :he day defy the appiica-

- if you playfollow your

tion of a dollar value •your cards right andinstincts.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -• Whatyou had thought was not meant to bemay become a welcome reality today-- and you the subject of considerableenvy.

TAURUS (April ZOMay 20) - Fi-nancial picture may not be as brightas you had been led to believe. Stepstaken today may remedy this quickly

GEMINI (May 21-June ZO) •• Youcan do much to improve relations be-tween yourself and a family member -- though difference of opinionremains.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Youhave much to offer a younger familymember today - and will benefit fromthe instruction yourself.

LEO (July 23-Aug. U) •• Followinga trend may be instantly rewarding ona small scale today, but in the end youcan only benefit from originality.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Theemphasis is on responsibility and obli-gation today Aries. Gemini nativesnave unusual influence.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. It) - Thecompany you keep today may actuallymake or break a number of your ownopportunities. Do your own business.

SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21) - Quickdecisions are called for today, as is-sues at home reach the boiling point.You play decisive role.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. t l ) ~Your involvement in the affairs offamily and friends carries' moreweight than you had previouslythought todav

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ENTERTAINMENTHarry isher ownwomanlyANNKOUOHKmght-Ridder

NEW YORK — She is some-how fixed in time: DebbieHarry, now 41, glamour queenof late- 70s rock, still with herchampagne blond hair and darkroots, her Christmas bow of amouth, her carved cheekbones.

The face is a broad canvas.Beautiful, beguilingly blank.The eyes are an ever-changingblue, shot with currents ofgreen.

Here on the 42nd floor, highabove Manhattan, a dazzlingafternoon sun burns throughthe windows of her lawyer-manager's office. In the midstof this hothouse blooms Harry,all in yellow, like some exoticflower.

Harry, remember, was theblonde in the rock group Blon-dic. One of the most successfulnew-wave bands, between1978 and 1982 Blondie soldmore than 10 million records.The music was bouncy and hadplenty of hooks, and Harry'smetallic voice floated high, de-tached, above it all.

Wearing miniskirts and spikeheels, Harry played the bomb-shell, acting out her trashystarlet visions on stage — sexyand untouchable all at once.

"Then- should be a femaleavailable for people to havesome sort of dream about as aperformer," the singer toldRolling Stone in 1978, just asshe was becoming a mediadarling. "Maybe I'll just be themysterious figure that'll neverhv able to.be truly defined."

Reality intruded when, in1082, Chris Stein, her longtimelover and a co-founder of Blon-die, collapsed while on tour. Hehad pemphigus, a rare andpotentially fatal skin disorder.

At that time, Blondie wasalready in its death throes. Theband broke up. Harry spentnights on a cot in Stein's hospi-tal room, then cared for him athome during his long recovery.For four years she nearly van-ished.

Today, Harry has a new soloalbum, "Rockbird," and theselines from her song "Free toFall" seem best to describe herjourney of the last four years:

"First you're sailing thenyou're swimming

"then you're sinking in thesea of love

"Still you sparkle and yousizzle

"cause a live wire alwaysdoes"

But now that Harry is easingback into the limelight, she'shaving a hard time taking thequest for fame as seriously asshe did in the past.

" I just keep laughing atthings.... It strikes me as beingso funny," Harry says. "I mean,there was a time when I wasmuch more serious about all ofthis, truthfully.

"I want to succeed. I'm a verycompetitive kind of aggressiveperson, and I like to do what Ido. And, obviously, I'm willingto throw myself into the fray ofthe music business.... But it'ssort of funny, I mean, this issupposed to be entertainment."

Although she was missingfrom the magazines and gossipcolumns that fueled her cel-ebrity status, Harry has notbeen in complete hibernation.

She surfaced once in 1983 asco- writer and singer on thesong "Rush Rush" for themovie "Scarface" and onceagain late last year with asingle, "Feel the Spin," for therap movie "Krush Groove."

There were also attempts toestablish an acting career. In19R3, Harry made her Broad-way debut as a wrestler in aBritish musical comedy,"Teaneck Tanzi: The VenusFlytrap," which quickly closed.She won good notices in DavidCronenberg's 1983 movie"Videodrome" and last summertook the title role in an as-yet-unreleased film, "ForeverLulu," starring acclaimed Ger-man actress Hannah Schygulla.

Vet her hiatus provided relieffrom being the wild, pouty,Debbie Harry 24 hours a day."Being in character for seven oreight years is a long time.... Imean, it gets on your nervesafter awhile and, not only that,people start treating you likethat."

Some people assumed thebleached blonde was a bimbo,and Stein — witty, sarcastic,often pugnacious — herbackroom Svengali. But, Harryexplains, "Blondie was a part,she was a character, like a partof me I embellished, and actedout, in a way."

Native SonThe movie falls a bit on the dull side• y KATHLEEN CARROLLNew Ywk Daily News

Richard Wright, the acclaimedblack writer, stirred the heartsand minds of both black and whiteAmericans with his 1940 novel"Native Son." The book, whichreads more like a sociologicaltreatise, explored the Impact ofpoverty and racism on a Chicagoghetto teenager who is, in effect,destroyed by his hostile socialenvironment.

In Hollywood's first treatmentof the novel .white characterswere substituted for black ones.Wright made his own movie of"Native Son" in Argentina, whichhad a very limited release. Now anindependent producer, Diane Sil-ver, has filmed the novel, using anappropriate cast.

Alas, for all its sincerity, Sil-ver's movie suffers from the sameflaws as the novel. It is painfullystilted and it also seems terriblydated. What's more, thesledgehammer editing is soatrocious that important se-quences, such as the hero's brutalkilling of his girl friend Bessie(Akosua Busia), have been com-pletely eliminated.

The early scenes are reasonablyconvincing as Victor I uve, in therole of 11)-year-old Bigger

Thomas, reacts with under-standable shock to his new jobsituation. The teenager, whoshares a rat-infested room withhis mama (Oprah Winfrey) andbrother and sister, takes a job asa live-in chauffeur to a wealthyHyde Park couple, the Daltons.Here, he has the unbelievableluxury of his own room andbathroom.

His first passenger is theDaltons' daughter, Mary (Eliza-beth McGovern), a politicallynaive young woman who's datingan equally shallow young Com-munist. Matt Dillon makes anearnest attempt to flesh out thisone-note character, whose con-tinued sympathy for Bigger issimply baffling under the circum-stances.

The young couple try to estab-lish an intimacy with Bigger byinsisting that he take them to hisfavorite restaurant, but theirgood-natured curiosity only fuelsBigger's contempt.

That very evening he makes hisfatal mistake. Mary passes outfrom too much liquor and hecarries her to her bedroom where,overcume.with the fear of beingdiscovered in a white woman'sroom, he accidentally kills her. Hisfumbling efforts to cover up thecrime are inevitably futile.

The acting is just as uneven asthe editing. As the family house-keeper, Geraldine Page isoutrageously hammy. Oprah Win-frey is effective in the openingscene, but her embarrassingcourthouse scene looks like aconscious plea for an Oscarnomination instead of an emo-tional plea for Bigger's life. Love isonly slightly more credible as theinarticulate Bigger.

"Native Son" is, sad to say, justa stiff melodrama with no real lifeto it.

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- RUMSON BREAD & BOTTLE44 RIVER ROAD RUMSON 630-0302- •a tM0aM. -M0pn.Sim.M0am-1*0 p*CLOSED CHRISTMAS ft NEW VEAItt DAY

PurNew Years DayBrunch Overflowswith Holiday Spirits.The Oyster Point Announces...Our First Annual Champagne

<S Bloody Mary New Years Brunch.Kick off the New Year with a stylish celebration that's afeast for all the senses.Our New Years Day Brunch in the Grand Ballroom is aglorious combihalion of fine foods, panoramic river viewsand magnificent surroundings. Indulge in a sumptuousarray of holiday favorites from a buffet table laden with de-licious and imaginative appetizers, entrees and desserts.Space is limited, so please call early to make reservationsfor this very special event, (201) 530-8200, ext. 172.Brunch is being served from 11:30 to 3:30. $19.95 foradults, $ 10.95 for children. Seatings for New YearsDinner are also available at La Rive from 6 to 9 I'M.

So start 1987 with spirit and join us January 1st for agreat new beginning to a great new year!

STER POINT146 Bodnun PlaceRed Bank, NJ • (201) 530-8200

H ii l l I

pence IN 87

Tavern and

N. Shrewsbury Ave. and Herbert StRed Bank

747-1586.

I II I •

On New Year's EveWe'd like to surprise you.

Join Us At the New Appleton Inn, Tinton Fallsand Experience a Truly Memorable Evening

in Exquisite Surroundings

This Special Package Includes:0 An elegant Dinner for Two from our menu

offering fine American/International Cuisine

• A restful evening in a beautifully appointed

Queen Bedded Guest Room

• A fine Bottle of Champagne placed in your room

• A leisurely Continental Breakfast the next morningfeaturing a fresh Baker}' Assortment

• All Gratuities and Tax

The surprise is...This very Special New Year's Eve is affordably

priced at 8149* per- couple .* Dots Not Include Alcohol

APPLETON INN'600 Hope Road

(Elll 1*9 Oirtrn Sucr Parkway)Tinton Falls, New Jersey 07724

(201)389-2100

[ere's one giftyou'll want to open

This year celebrate a sparkling holidayseason with friends and family atThe Oyster Point Hote|.

When you're shopping in downtownRed Bank, take a relaxing break at ourWaterlot restaurant. Open everydayfrom 11:30 AM, the Waterlot offerscasual, comfortable dining. Plus, ifyou'stop by any Thursday. Friday orSaturday evening, you get the addedpleasure of listening to the livelymusic of Barbara King.

Christmas Eve give yourself andloved ones a wonderful present—din-ner at La Rive, our elegant restaurantoverlooking the Navesink River. Wewill be serving 5:30 PM to 11:00 PMwith a sumptuous holiday menu of ,meat, game and fish.

Christmas Day our staff will be hereto greet you for lunch and dinner from12:00 noon to 7:00 PM. Roast Christ-mas goose. Harrington ham. Black-ened salmon. Appetizers, salads,entrees and desserts—all speciallyprepared for this very special day.

New Year's Eve start celebrating withan elegant early dinner at La Rive, oneseating at 6:00 PM

At 9:00 PM, the first party at TheOyster Point starts with dinner at LaRive and dancing in our magnificentAtrium Lounge from 10:00 PM until2:00 AM

Upstairs, in the Navesink Ballroom,join the best gala in town with the mu-sic ofTim McClune and The AtlanticCoast Band, a gourmet dinner buffetfrom 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM partyfavors, champagne and a continentalbreakfast buffet at 1:30 AM Ticketsand dinner reservations are required,so please call early.

Then wake up New Year's Day tobrunch at The Oyster Point—a spec-tacular buffet of your holiday favoritesfrom 11:30 AM to 3:30 PM Again.reservations are required.

And while you're here with us for theholidays, don't forget to ask about ournew Oyster Point Winter Get-AwayWeekends. They're a great gift forsomeone special—and a great ideafor you.

146 Bodmin Place. Red Bank. New Jersey(201)530-8200.1-800-345-3484

STER POINT(

if .

HAPPYNEW YEAR!Well help you celebratewith a 2 liter bottle of. Happy New Year!

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SCOREBOARD 7 BOWUNG 8 DSUNDAY. DECEMBER 28.1986

Red Bank slaps Middletown NorthFolk

Ringingouttheyear insportsIn just three more days, we will

say so long to 1986, a year thathad its ups and downs in sports

as well as every other facet of life.For fans of the New York Mets,

it was a great year. Any time ateam wins a World Series, it'sChristmas and New Yearswrapped up in one.

Fans of the New York Giantscouldn't be happier either. Theirmuch-maligned darlings are stillalive in the National FootballLeague playoffs and the favoriteto win the Super Bowl. That, initself, made 1986 a strange year.

Those poor folk who rooted forthe Yankees, Rangers, Islanders,Devils, Nets, Knicks and Jets mayhave to wait' for a better yearalthough the Jets are still breath-ing. Most experts think those Jetswon't be breathing too muchlonger though.

Even those who prayed for theprofessional also-rans may nothave had it as difficult as the loyal

' sons of Rutgers. The ScarletKnights are still having a toughtime becoming Middlesex County'steam, let alone New Jersey's.

Cheer up, old Scarlet Knights.Better days are coming as long asDick Anderson stays on the Banksof the Old Raritan.

It wasn't a good year forPrincetonians either. Old Nassaustill hasn't regained the grid fameit once had. But then, doesPrinceton really have to proveanything to anybody? Not as longas it is still one of the finestschools in the world and competesin sports the way all collegesshould — honestly.

Locally, the year was routine.There are so many schools and somany championships in the ShoreConference that is hard to re-member all the youngsters andschools that provided excitementto so many.

Even if we, the public, forget,those young people whoparticipated will have memoriesfor the rest of their lives. Some-day, their little gold footballs orbaseballs or whatever will decor-ate their wives' charm bracelets,too. They will be able to tell theirchildren about 1986, a great yearfor some people.

And aren't memories one of thetruly great benefits of scholasticsports?

It would be nice to say that 1986left the sporting world a betterplace than it found it. However,that wouldn't be true.

As we enter 1987, there are stillbig problems facing the world ofathletics on professional andamateur levels — problems thattoo many people seem to be afraidto confront.

The disclosure that someplayers have been suspended frombowl games because of substanceabuse, steroids mostly, againemphasizes what everybodyknows. If something isn't done

, about the drug problems of theworldrwe are headed for hell on arocket.

Television commercials won't doit. Stricter laws and supervisionmight . Drug dea l e r s a remurderers. They should be treatedas such.

The National Collegiate AthleticAssociation advanced an inchtoward solving its academicproblems-by instituting Proposi-tion 48. Now, it should try to moveanother couple of inches becauseschools have already found a wayaround those minimum academicrequirements.

The loophole was obvious. Sendan unqualified athlete to a Juniorcollege for a year and then bringhim back to the campus and getthree years of play from him.

Most of us have no argumentwith a youngster getting a chanceto go to college, but a betteranswer would be to ban allfreshmen from participating invarsity sports, including prac-tices. The kid would then be ableto adjust better to a four-yearcollege program and the life thatgoes with it.

There are still miles to go beforethe NCAA- solves the recruitingmess it has. How does one tell a17-year-old not to accept a newcar or money when it is offered tohim? Why should he report theoffer? The truth is that most of thekids (and their parents) are just as

See FALK. Page 8D

By JIM HINTELMANNThe Register

THIS ONE'S MINE — Jeff Daiker (15) of MaterDei pulls down a rebound, despite the efforts ofRumson-Fair Haven's Steve Heimock (30) and

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVERPete Jones (42). Daiker had 16 points in MaterDeis 48-29 Buc Classic victory yesterday.

LITTLE SILVER — Top-seededRed Bank Regional easily defeatedMiddletown North, 73-37, in theopening round of the Buc HolidayClassic last night.

Red Bank (3-0) will battle ShoreRegional in one semifinal tomor-row night at 6:30 while MonmouthRegional battles Mater Dei at 8.Shore trimmed Ocean Township,72-63, in the other first roundgame last night.

In afternoon action, MonmouthRegional stopped Brick Memorial,81-67 and Mater Dei downedRumson-Fair Haven Regional,48-29.

Red Bank-Middletown NorthIt was a big day for the Lewit

brothers as Billy tossed in ISpoints and his brother Greg added12, but that didn't suprise Buccoach Nick Pizzulli.

"Both of them are goodshooters," Pizzulli said. "Bill hit10 of 14 opening night. He'saveraging 19.5 points a game andGreg has 12.6 per game.

"We were a little flat mentallytonight," he said. "We'll have to bemore into it against Shore Re-gional.

"We were just quicker than theywere," he said. "We came out andwanted to play some good mandefense and keep the tempo up."

Red Bank never trailed and itwas tied only once at 2-2 beforethe Bucs scored nine points in arow. They led, 15-6 after onequarter and 33-16 at the half.They kept building (he lead in thesecond half.

Bill Lewit and Dave Holden bothscored 15 points for the Bucs.Middletown North's Jeff Bird had17 as the Lions dropped to 1-3.

Shore-Ocean TownshipShore Regional blew a big lead

but came back strong to defeatOcean Township.

The Blue Devils shot 12 of 19from the floor in the openingperiod to take a 25-16 lead. Oceanhad its last lead at 8-7 on two foulshots by John Mertikas but JoeCentanni, who scored 13 points inthe quarter, dropped in a pair ofjumpers get Shore going.

Ocean Township began a come-

BucClassicback in the third quarter on somegood shooting by Mertikas andfinally tied up the game at 37 ontwo foul shots by Mertikas.

Shore regrouped and scored sixpoints in a row on a jumper byLarry Kennedy and two basketsby Centanni. The Blue Devilspulled away slowly thereafter.

"I wasn't surprised that Oceancame back," Shore coach JoeNappo said. "They're a good teamand I knew that we would haveour hands full in the second half.

"We've been hot and cold thisyear and we're missing a starter(Chris Brignota) because ofmono."

"Shore is experienced and wellcoached," Ocean Towmship coachDon Guilford said. "The ball felltheir way.. We lacked experiencebut; we nave a few people whohave been out only a couple ofweeks because of football and I'mpleased with the kids. We'll beokay after a while."

Centanni scored 25 points forShore including a slam dunk whileGreg Jacobson added 13.

Mertikas, a brother of All-County tailback Tim Mertikas, had22 points for Ocean.Mater Del-Rumson-FH Re-

gionalMater Dei pulled away from

stubborn Rumson-Fair Haven inthe final minutes to win its second,game of the season.

Both teams played tight defenseand Rumson managed to staywithin striking distance until thefinal six minutes when Jeff Daikerand John Ferrara led a later MateDei spurt. •

"I wasn't surprised Rumsonstayed with us," Mater Dei coachKeith Glass. "They are very pa-tient, disciplined and well-coached. They are hard to playagainst.

"Ferrara was great," Glass said."He had 16 rebounds and 11points. Daiker played well also.We made some mistakes but you

See BUC, Page 20

Crottp named tournament MVP

CBA takes Holiday Jubilee,By MIKE SULLIVANThe Register

WEST LONG BRANCH — What may beshocking to most area basketball fans isthat the Christian Brothers Academy is nota one-man show.

True, John Crotty was named the MostValuable Player of the 1986 HolidayJubilee Tournament for the second straightyear, after the Colts overwhelmed Neptunein last night's final, 80-51, at MonmouthCollege. True, the CBA point guard alsocollected a game-high 26 points. But, therewere plenty of Colts in the stable waitingfor the Scarlet Fliers.

"It feels great to win it again," Crottysaid, after the Colts captured a recordfourth straight Jubilee title. "I try not toconcentrate on it. I just got into the flow ofthe game and things happened for me."

"They score from anywhere," Neptunehead coach Larry Hennessey said. "Theycan score from inside, outside. Their secretis that they take good shots."

When CBA takes good shots, it finds thebasket some how. The Colts gained control .early, jumping out to a seven-point leadbefore two minutes had clasped in thegame.

Crotty's layup and foul shot gave CBA a3-0 advantage. Marc Dowdell hit a jumperand Steve I'aterno's left baseline jumper

pushed the Colts to a 7-0 lead.Neptune's Leonard Jones' two layups cut

the CBA lead to 7-4. But, CBA facing a1-3-1 trap had little trouble attacking itoffensively. First, a Charlie Hart leftbaseline jumper and another three-pointplay by Crotty gave the Colts a 16-4 lead.

"The problem we had with our. trap isthat we didn't create any turnovers off ofit," Hennessey said. "They didn't go to thebasket off it, but we didn't create anyturnovers."

Neptune did close to 19—16 at the e'nd ofthe first quarter. CBA then expanded itslead in the second quarter to 31-21 on aDowdell follow shot. At the half, CBA helda 35-25 advantage. The second half would

Neptuneget no better for Neptune.

"Everybody got involved with our of-fense," said Crotty. "It was great thateveryone participated in the victory."

Paterno scored 20 points while DaveAlt haver and Dowdell added 14 and 16respectively. Maurice Revels had 17 for theScarlet Fliers.

Besides Crotty named to the All-Tour-nament team, Paterno, Dowdell, AsburyParkas Anthony Wright and Revels wereselected. Lakewood's Ricky Ferguson washonored with the sportsmanship award.

. In the consolation games held yesterday, 'Asbury Park defeated Lakewood, 62-57;Long.Branch held off Freehold Boro, 57-55;and St. Rose beat RBC, 54-48. •

Chiefs,Jets openplayoffsBy FIG JANKOWSKIThe Register

EAST RUTHERFORD — TheNational Football Leagueplayoffs are also referred to as"the second season."

That may be the best news yetfor the New York Jets. Enteringtoday's wild card playoff gamewith Kansas City at Giants'Stadium, the Jets have lost fivestraight games and have beenoutscored in that time, 183-61.

Getting finished with that"first" season, one in which theJets finished 10-6 and a gamebehind New England in the AFCEast, has to be good news forNew York coach Joe Walton. Histeam really hasn't HAD to winany games lately, the only silverlining in a very ominous cloud.

Today, things are different.Should the Jets win, they play inCleveland next Saturday.Should they lose, Kansas Citytravels to Ohio and the Jets canstart hanging out at the mall.

"We've been reeling for sometime now," Walton said, matter-of-factly. "But, a large majorityof our football team Is fightingvery hard to get things righted.We're trying to work our waythrough it."

See JETS, Page 6D

THE REGISTER/GREGG ELLMANPAT'S SHOW TODAY — Backup quarterback Pat Ryan will starttoday's AFC wild-card' playoff game against Kansas City,subbing for the struggling Ken O'Brien.

Holmdel's Lawsereyes '88 OlympicsBy JONNI FALKThe Register,

HOLMDEL — For Susan Law-ser, the road to Seoul, SouthKorea, and the 1988 Olympicshopefully runs through An-napolis.

It has run across a lot of othercities and bodies of water, too, forthe Holmdel High School seniorwho hopes to be one of the firstwomen to ever represent the Unit-ed States in Olympic sailing.

Lawser, who was 18 ChristmasDay, has teamed up with Lt. MaryBrigden, a 1981 graduate of theU.S. Naval Academy, for the as-sault on 1988. Brigden is a full-time flight officer specializing innavigation and communications atthe Naval Academy.

Lawser and Brigden, who wonfour varsity sailing letters andAU-American honors at An-napolis, are shooting for the singleberth available to women in the470 dinghy class, a new eventforfemales in the 1988 SummerOlympics.

The pair have been friends sincethey first met in the InternationalYacht Racing Union Women'sWorld Championships in Van-couver last summer.

"Susan and I hit it off greatwhen I first met her," Brigdensaid. "I knew that she was anexcellent dinghy sailor when sheplaced fifth in the Women'sChampionships and was the topAmerican finisher in the single-handed division. I knew whe wasgoing to be great, and I needed a

SUE LAWSERSeoul-bound?

crewmate."Before basketball practice at

Holmdel High interfered, Lawserwas going to Annapolis eachweekend to practice with Brigden,who is originally from Wisconsin.They plan to compete in a series ofnational and international regat-tas between now and the end of1987. Each race counts towardoverall ranking for the spot on theU.S. Olympic Yacht Racing Team.

When basketball season ends forLawser, a veteran center for theHornets, the two will again be ableto get on the water more often.However, even basketball won'tprevent the two from gettingtogether for practice.

"We'll be in Long Beach, Cal.,for four days over New Years topractice," Lawser said. "That's agreat place for sailing at this timeof the year. After I graduate nextJune, we'll get on the water as

See LAWSER, Page 8D

20 The Siutdag Btglatmr SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28.19M

Middletown North among semifinal quartetMIDDLETOWN — Top-seeded Mid-

dletown North, Red Bank Regional,Rumson-Fair Haven Regional and Mon-mouth Regional gained the semifinalsofthe Buccaneer Holiday Girls BasketballTournament yesterday.

Middletown North routed BrickMemorial, 63-25; Red Bank trouncedOcean Township, 64-27; Rumson downedShore Regional, 49-41, and MonmouthRegional got past Mater Del, 41-37.

Middletown North plays Monmouthand Red Bank takes on Rumson insemifinal games tomorrow at MiddletownNorth High School. Both games begin at11 am

Middletown North-Brick MemorialLisa Stiffler scored all eight of her

points in the first quarter as Northgrabbed a 19-6 lead and never lookedback.

Sheryl Guerriero was outstanding for

the Lions with 16 points, nine reboundsand five steals. Nancy Deaney added 10rebounds. r.

Red Bank Ref.-OeeanSecond-seeded Red Bank Regional

(3-0) scored the first 16 points of thegame in Its rout of Ocean Township. TheBucs had a 36-5 halftime lead and usedreserves most of the second half/

Julie Lieb led Red Bank with 11 pointswhile sophomore Kerri Lunx added 10points and 10 rebounds. .

Monmonth Regional-Hater DelLinda Hayes broke a 34-34 tie with a

basket and two foul shots In the finalminutes as Monmouth defeated defend-ing champion Mater Dei.

Mater Dei, trailing by as many as ninepoints, rallied in the final quarter andtied the game at 34-34 on Barb Delepine'sbasket, but Hayes came back with herwinning points.

Hayes finished with 17 and BeyshaBerry added 10 for Monmouth. JerriHaugh scored 11 and Jen Hutter 10 forthe Seraphs.

Rumson-Fair Haven Regionaloutscored Shore Regional In everyquarter by small margins In its victory.The Bulldogs had a 24-20 halftime leadand Shore never caught up.

Rumson's Mary Beth Tulds led all ofthe scorers with 26 points while DotSourlis tossed in 13. Emile Bahrs tallied18 and Kara O'Brien 11 for Shore.FREEHOLD REGIONAL TOUR-

NAMENTFREEHOLD — Revenge was on the

mind of Freehold Township players ye s - 'terday as they avenged last year's loss toMarlboro in the Freehold Regional Hol-iday Tournament with a 67-46 win over

the Mustangs. The win allows thePatriots to face Manalapan on Tuesdayfor the championship.

"The key word here was revenge,"Freehold Township coach John Sdarap-pa said. "They beat us hut year in thefinals of this tournament and then wewon 19 in a row. Although many of theplayers from last year's team are nolonger on the team, the girls still wantedrevenge."

Donna HeUer led the Patriots by scor-ing 23 points. The hero of last year'sgame, Mary Szura, led Marlboro with 25points.

Freehold Township's defense held theMustangs to nine points in each of thefirst three quarters, before Marlborocame up with 19 fourth quarter points toclose the gap to 11.

The Patriots are now 4-0. Marlboro is

1-3.Kim Kellogg's basket late in the fourth

quarter snapped a 36-36 tie uManalapan edged Cedar Ridge, 40-36, toreach the finals.

Adrianna Rowe scored 17 points forthe unbeaten Braves (4-0) who will faceFreehold Township in the title gameTuesday at Freehold High School. Gametime will be 6 p.m.

In other girls basketball tournamentaction yesterday, Red Bank Catholiccould muster Just eight points in thesecond half, falling 40-32 to Wildwood inthe Georgian Court tournament.

The Caseys held a 24-21 halftimeadvantage, but could not maintain theedge. Peggy Vaccarelli scored eightpoints in a losing cause for RBC. KateCarusa had 17 and Ellen McBride added11 for Wildwood.

Henry Hudson and Raritangain title game in BayshoreBy JIM SCANLONThe Register

HOLMDEL — The Admirals ofHenry Hudson and the RaritanRockets will face each other in thefinals of the Bayshore BoysChristmas Tournament Tuesdayat 8:00 p.m. Both teams won theirsemifinal games, Raritan defeat-ing Middletown South 62-41, andHenry Hudson shutting down Wall42-33.

"We're real happy to be in thefinals, Raritan has never won abasketball championship so we

want it bad," the Rockets headcoach Rich Sherman said. TheRockets won their contest behindthe play of sophomore standoutTom Seeger and senior Doug Shaw."Shaw has had two outstandinggames for us, and Seeger does agreat job around the perimeter tocontrol the tempo," Shermanadded.

The eighth seated Rockets ledthe game from the start as Shawconverted a break away lay upinto a three point play. After a onepoint deficit at the second quartermark, Raritan expanded its lead tosix at the half. The game was

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVER

BASKETBALL BALLET — Brick Memorial's Joe Ferreri (45)blocks the shot of Monmouth Regional's Steve Frankel (33)during yesterday's action of the Buc Classic at MonmouthRegional.

BucContinued from Page 1D

have to contribute some of that toRumson."

Rumson never led in the gameand fell behind 17-6 in the secondquarter. The Bulldogs closed thelead to 18-12 late in the half onsome good shooting form MikeBrown, but couldn't get any closer.

"We didn't play to keep thescore close," Rumson coach BobHummel said. "We switched toman-to-man in the. final fourminutes down nine points andMater Dei went to its man-to-manoffense and pulled away."

Rumson played without the ser-vices of its top rebounder, 6-6 BillDooley, who is sidelined with anankle injury.

"Hopefully he'll be back soon,"Hummel said. "We need morescoring punch but it could havebeen worse. It's day-to-day.Maybe Monday against Brick."

Kevin Bott scored 14 points forMater Dei while Brown toppedRumson with 12.

Monmouth-Brick MemorialMonmouth Regional (2-1) blew

a 16-point second quarter lead butrecovered in time to defeat BrickMemorial.

Monmouth built up a 36-19 leadwith two minutes remaining in thehalfand still led, 37-26 at half-time.

Trailing 43-29, Brick Memorialused the scoring of John Kingmanand finally went in front, 49-47,oh a 10-point streak. A layup byDave Consewski gave BrickMemorial the lead, but Dave How-ard scored five straight points togive Monmouth the lead for good.

"We tried a full court press inthe third quarter to see if it wouldwork and it didn't," Monmouthcoach Jay Fitzpatrick said.

"Luckily we got some goodgames from people who hadn'tplayed much in our first twogames," Fitzpatrick said. "JermelHarris and Wade Thomas playedexceptional games.

"This was the best we shot thisyear," he said.

Howard finished with 24 pointswhile Harris scored 13. Kingmanscored 28 for Brick Memorial.

South takes wrestling titleMIDDETOWN — Middletown

High School South had four cham-pions as it won the annual Mid-dletown South Wrestling Tour-nament yesterday with 119points.

Defending champion Toms RiverEast was second while Mid-dletown North was third with74W.

Winninbg for South were JohnFagan (121), Scott V.'alters (128),Doug Card (167) and Ode Pritzlaff(169). Card had the only pin.' Middletown North had threesecond place finishers. Brian Cop-man (114) was upset by Neptune'sTrevor Reed. Copman had beatenReed three times last year. ShawnJackson (187) and heavyweightBill Parulis were the other North

wrestlers who "placed second.Holmdel Wrestling Tournament

HOLMDEL — Holmdel HighSchool had three individual cham-pions and went on to capture theannual Holmdel Wrestling Tour-nament yesterday with 101 Vipoints. St. John Vianney was sec-ond followed by Rumsori-FairHaven Regional with 86.

Winners for Holmdel were TomSerluco (16) with a pin of St.John's Brian Coderio, Tom Dexterwho pinned Jay Graun of Key portand heavyweight Tom Dexter witha pin over Keyport's Gerald Jef-fcoat.

St. John had two winners withSteve McGuiness (121) and RustyBaldwin (114).

decided at 3:52 of the fourthquarter when the Eagles were outscored 12-2. Doug Shaw scoredseven of the points to clinch thevictory and a chance to give theRockets their first championship.

"Henry Hudson will give ustrouble underneath bee. use oftheir size, so we will have todepend on our outside shot to openup the inside. Our defense willhave to play well also to shutdown their big men", Shermansaid.

Henry Hudson utilized the con-sistent Inside play of senior BillTriplett who scored 29 of histeam's 42 points to secure the win.The Admirals led throughout thecontest, never letting Wall getcloser than three points.

The big guns for Wall werestopped by an excellent defensiveperformance by the Hudsonsquad. "We planned to shut downScott and Desarno. We definitelydid not want them to beat us,"Admiral head coach Jim Mahoneysaid. "I was very happy with theoverall team play, we don't giveup many second shots so we wereable to control the tempo."

The consolation matchups sawKeansburg defeat Keyport 51-43,and Saint John Vianney beat theHolmdel Hornets 68-51. Highscorer for Keansburg was seniorJames Markulin with 17 pointsand Saint Johns balanced scoringattack consisted of Mike Nolan(13), John Mattone (12), and LarryColeman (10).

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVER

MAT ACTION — Albie Esposito of Shore during 100-pound competition yesterday at theRegional works the legs of and eventually takes Holmdel Wrestling Tournament. Story below,down Steve Federako of Monmouth Regional related photo page 8D.

Holmdel girls, Freehold Township gain finalsKEYPORT — Holmdel reached

the finals of the Bayshore Classicwith a 41-32 victory over HenryHudson last night.

Kirsten Brendel led the way forthe winners with 13 points, as-sisted by Susan Lawser's 13. Law-ser added 13 rebounds.

Ingrid Fuller posted 11 pointsfor Henry Hudson, matched byKaren Maslo.

Holmdel led 18-12 at inter-

mission.Holmdel will play the winner of

last night's Middletown South-Raritan matchup for the tour-nament championship Tuesday atKeyport.

FREEHOLD HOLIDAYFREEHOLD — John Robinson

scored 27 points to lead Howell toa 79-56 win over Marlboro in the

.Freehold Regional Holiday Tour-nament.

The Rebels outscored theMustangs by 18 points in secondhalf to turn a five-point halftimelead into a romp.

Tom DeMarks added 19 pointsfor the Rebels and Paul Brookenshad 16. Keith Goldstein ledMarlboro with 18 points.

In a later game, Freehold Town-ship defeated Matawan, 64-51.Freehold Township will playManalapan Tuesday for the tour-nament title.

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SIMMY. DECEMBER 28,1986 The Sunday Register 3D

Knicks end three-year drought, topple BucksByKUBAHNABD

*AP Basketball Writer

NEW YORK — Bill Cartwrightscored 10 of his season-high 26points during a 17-5 second-halfstreak that carried the New YorkKnicks to their first NBA victoryover the Milwaukee Bucks in threeyears, a 114-100 decision lastnight.

The Knicks had lost 15 straightgames to the Bucks since lastbeating them on Dec. 17,1983. Thevictory was the third straight forNew York and snapped a five-game winning streak forMilwaukee.

New York led 76-73 late in thethird quarter before Cartwrightscored eight straight points in1:04, giving the Knicks an 84-75advantage. After the Knicks tookan 84-77 lead into the fourthquarter, they outscored the Bucks0-1 to start the period and didn'tlead by less than 12 the rest of theway.

Gerald Wilkins added 23 pointsand Patrick Ewing 22 for NewYork. Ewing left the game early inthe fourth quarter with a sprainedright ankle, but the injury was notserious.

Terry Cummings led Milwaukeewith 17 points, while Paul Presseyand Kicky Pierce added 16 each.All-Star guard Sidney Moncriefreturned to the lineup after a 13-game absence with a knee injuryand scored nine points.

Nets 120, Cavaliers 111EAST RUTHERFORD — James

Bailey came off the bench to scorea career-high 35 points and team-jmate Orlando Woolridge added 24,sparking the New Jersey Nets to atriumph ' over the ClevelandCavaliers last night.

The Nets, who dropped a121-112 decision Friday night toCleveland in Richfield, Ohio, havenow won three of their last fourgames.

New Jersey, 7-20, trailedthroughout most of the firstperiod and was behind 29-21before scoring eight of the last 11points to pull within 32-29 at theend of the quarter. Bailey, w.hohad 26 points in the first half,scored four during the run.

Trailing 42-35 midway throughthe second quarter, the Nets re-eled off 15 straight points, includ-

NBA rounduping six by Mike Gminski, to takethe lead for good at 50-42.

A 12-3 burst midway throughthe third period that included fourpoints by Woolridge enabled NewJersey to take an 80-64 advan-tage.

The Nets led by as many as 25points in the fourth quarter beforethe Cavaliers put together a latecharge.

Led by John Bagley, who scored12 of his 23 points in the quarter,Cleveland pulled within fivepoints in the game's final minute.

Bailey, who scored his previousNBA high of 34 points againstPhoenix while with the HoustonRockets on Feb. 24, 1983, alsograbbed 10 rebounds. He hit 14 of19 shots from the field and sevenof eight from the foul line.

Tony Brown added 21 points forthe Nets.

Ron Harper led Cleveland,12-16, with 25 points, whileteammate John "Hot Rod" Wil-liams had 21.

Bailey, acquired by the Nets inthe off-season as a free agentfrom the New York Knicks, playedonly 30 minutes but also had threeassists, two steals and two blockedshots.

"I felt good early, and my shotswere falling," he said. "The teamkept going tonight, and it was niceI was able to finish it for them.Most games are won inside, and wehad that part of our game goingpretty well tonight."

Nets Coach Dave Wohl said ofBailey, "I think James is veryconfident right now. He's takingeverything to the hoop. I don'texpect 36 from him every night,but with Darryl (Dawkins) out, hehas given us the backup center wedidn't have."

The Cavaliers were also missingtheir regular starting center.

Pistons 107, Ballets 106I.ANDOVKK, Md. — Isiali

Thomas hit a 23-foot jump shot atthe buzzer to give the DetroitPistons a victory over the Wash-ington Bullets last night.

Thomas scored 11 of his 26points in the final period, as thePistons came from behind to earntheir second straight victory. The

Bird Count seriesunderway in area

L

Now under way Is that annualseries of exercises that com-plicate the already busy

schedules of this season but alsoenrich the holiday for some 30,000victims of the addiction we callbirding: the Christmas Bird

• Counts., . Two of them were done in our

area last weekend.On Saturday, 25 observers com-

bed the county's northern coastalarea in the 12th annual SandyHook count. George Wenzelburgerof Freehold Township, leader ofthat venture, reports they scored98 species. That's two more thanlast year's tally, but well short ofthe Sandy Hook record of 106species.

The number may go to 99 speci-es. A bird suspected to be a Pacificloon was sighted but not definitelyidentified. Photos were taken andif they show the diagnostic field

' marks, it will be added to the list.(You're not likely to find Pacific

loon in your field guide. Look forArctic loon. What had been con-sidered two races of a singlespecies were recognized recentlyby the taxanomists as separatespecies, now labeled Arctic andPacific loons. The Pacific is theone that has been seen, but veryrarely, on the east coast.)

The count day weather was mildbut heavy cloud cover hampered -visibility somewhat. The moreinteresting finds included both ofthe "white-winged'' gulls,glaucous and Iceland, red-neckedgrebe, lesser black-backed gull,orange-crowned warbler andshort-eared owl:

Balancing out the good list of' rarities were more than the usual

number of "misses" — the morecommon species which were notfound. They included surf scoter,ruddy duck and several otherwaterfowl.

The western Monmouth count,the Assunpink, was done lastSunday, that one, too, drawing 25participants. Jack Peachey ofManalapan, who took over thisyear as compiler, reports 69 speci-es found on a bright, mild day.

That's only one more than lastyear's score — which was thelowest ever for the inland census— but included some interestingspecies. Heading the list wereshort-eared owl, black vulture,hooded merganser and ruddyduck, none of which had been seenbefore on the Assunpink count.

As is always to be expected,there were misses, probably themost glaring of them the hermitthrush.

One Ocean County count, theLakehurst, also was done lastweekend. Don Sutherland of RedBank, the compiler, has a list of103 species for that one, threefewer than last year. But therewere a lot of good ones, including

BillSandford

black-headed gull, Eurasian wig-eon, common yellowthroat, greategret, orange-crowned warbler,,short-eared owl and Cooper'shawk. '

We note that the short-earedowl seems to be doing well locally,having shown up for all three ofthe nearby counts that have beendone to date. An interesting side-light on that: Peachey found thebird for Wenzelburger's SandyHook count and, the followingday, Wenzelburger returned thefavor by finding one for Peachey'sAssunpink project.

Also done last weekend was theLower Hudson count, which con-sistently produces long specieslists. The center of its circle is in,the middle of the river" offManhattan, so that half the coufntarea is in New Jersey, half in NewYork. •

Richard Ryan of Livingston, itscompiler, reports this year's tallywas 135 species. Last year, 136species were found but one wasomitted from the list in an ov-ersight by the observers, so therewere only 135 on the publishedreport.

Standouts this year includedbald eagle, semipalmated sand-piper, scores of redpolls and threesnowy owls — equaling, Ryannotes, the aggregate count ofsnowies for the cofunt's previous65 years.

(This seems to be a good flightyear for redpolls. A count done inRockland County, N.Y., last weekalso turned up record numbers ofthem.)

Ryan will be sailing out of SharkRiver Wednesday to do a pelagiccount off the county shore. Thelast of the Monmouth counts, theLong Branch, comes up next Sat-urday, and we're hoping for west-erly winds to hold down the tides.

As noted here three weeks back,we're now entering a period ofunusually strong tidal forces be-cause of a rare combination ofcelestial phenomena. The moonwill be new and also at perigee(closest to Earth) on Wednesdayand the sun will be at perihelion,(closest to Earth) on Friday.

Strong easterly winds any timebetween now and next Sundaycould produce record high tides —and put our coastal coufnt partyout of business for a good part ofthe day.

Pistons, have now won sewn oftheir last eight and 13 of 16 toimprove their record to 16-9.

Washington, which led throughmost of the game, went cold in theclosing minutes. The Bullets failedto score for 2:20 after MosesMalone's three-point play gaveWashington a 100-98 lead with2:37 remaining.

Washington led by 13 early inthe game, after scoring 15 un-answered points. But the Pistonsworked their way back into it, andtrailed 53-52, at halftime. TheBullets extended the lead to asmany seven in the second half, the

last time at 91-84, before hittingtheir scoring drought.

The loss dropped Washington'srecord to 13-14. It was the fourthtime this season the Bullets havefailed to win a game which wouldhave put them over .500.

M alone led all scorers with 32points. Jeff Malone added 25 forthe Bullets. The Pistons were ledby Adrian Dantley with 27 andThomas' 26.

Hawk* 119, Warriors 108ATLANTA — Three free throws

by Doc Rivers keyed a fourth-quarter surge that helped theAtlanta Hawks hold off the stub-

born Golden State Warriors lastnight and win their 20th NBAgame of the season.

Golden State got within fourpoints for the second time in thefinal period when' the Hawksstaged an 11-2 rally to put thegame away.

The spurt began when Riverswas fouled by Eric Floyd and sanktwo free throws. He immediatelymade another when Floyd wascalled for a technical foul.

Cliff Levingston added threepoints during the r.treak as Atlan-ta pulled to 116-101 with 1:53 leftin the game.

The victory was Atlanta's 11thin 12 home dates.

Rivers led the Hawks with 21points, while Randy Wittman had20. Dominique Wilkins and KevinWillis each added 16 points, MikeMcGee had 13 and Tree Rollins andLevingston had 11 each.

Floyd led all scorers with 24points, while'Greg Ballard con-tributed 20, J.B. Carroll had 18and Rod Higgins had 13 for GoldenState.

Willis paced Atlanta with 13rebounds, while Larry Smith ofGolden State had a game-high 14rebounds.

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8UN0AY, DECEMBER 28,1986

Cotton Bowl

Ohio State first Big 10 team in Dallas classicDALLAS (AP) — The 61st Cotton Bowl

on New Year's Day may not be a nationalchampionship matchup, but the clashbetween Ohio State and Texas A4M isintriguing.

The Buckeyes, 9-3, will become thefirst Big Ten team to play in the CottonBowl. Ohio State's 21st bowl game alsomeans the school became* the first BigTen team to play in the Cotton, Rose,Orange and Sugar bowls.

In the last 11 years, Ohio State has goneto nine different bowl games. The Buck-eyes are 10-10 in the post-seasonclashes.

The co-champions of the Big Ten lostto Alabama and Washington to start theseason, won nine straight and then fell toMichigan in-the finale.

Texas A4M, the Southwest Conferencechampion, was 9-2 overall and theAggies are 9-6 in bowl games, includinglast year's Cotton Bowl victory overAuburn. It's the first time since1941-1942 that the Aggies have ap-peared in consecutive Cotton Bowls.

Ohio State defeated A4M the two othertimes the teams met. The Buckeyes won17-0 in 1963 and 66-13 in 1970. Bothgames were played in Columbus. OhioState also is 16-2-2 against SWC teams.

This game has become one of thehottest tickets in Cotton Bowl history.

"I believe it's our toughest ticket sinceArkansas-Nebraska in 1966," said Cot-ton Bowl Executive Vice President JimBrock. "Both schools have taken theirallotments and asked for some more. We

were sold out to the public a long timeago.

"There's a lot of excitement about thisgame. You have two great schools withtwo great traditions. You've got the BigTen Conference in here for the firsttime."

Capacity of the Cotton Bowl is 72,032but could be exceeded with the install-ment of temporary seats. The recordCotton Bowl crowd of 77,600 in 1976 forthe Arkansas-Georgia game could be in

The Cotton Bowl figures to have one ofits highest television ratings on CBS inyears. Klckoff is 12:30 p.m., while therival Sugar Bowl doesn't start until theCotton Bowl is in its second half.

The Fiesta Bowl, with its national title

showdown between Penn State andMiami, has moved to Jan. 2, Friday night.It originally had been scheduled at thesame time as the Cotton Bowl.

Texas A&M began workouts Friday inthe Cotton Bowl, while Ohio State startedits preparations Saturday in TexasStadium.

Coach Earle Bruce is in his eighth yearwith the Buckeyes and haa a 4-3 bowlrecord.

The Aggies' Jackie Sherrill is in hisfilth year, and A&M has won 21 of its last26 games. His only bowl appearance waslast year.

"This is another chance for A&M toprove it's a power football name like OhioState has been," said Aggies' noseguardSammy O'Brient.

The Buckeyes boast two AP first teamAil-American, wide receiver Crla Varterand linebacker Chris Spielman.

Texas A4M'» tight end Rod Bernatlnewas a second team AP All-American, andquarterback Kevin Murray and insidelinebacker Johnny Holland were namedto the third team.

This year's Cotton Bowl rivals willreceive more than $2.1 million each.

A&M earned 1733,669 last year fromthe Cotton Bowl, while each SWC schoolgot a check for 1240,000 in the deal,which calls for sharing the take amongconference schools.

In the first Cotton Bowl game in 1937,Texas Christian got 110,000 and Mar-quette received 16,000.

Gator Bowl

Half time leadbarely heldby Clemson

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Clemsonquarterback Rodney Williams and Coach DannyFord agreed the Tigers learned a lot after escapingwith a 27-21 Gator Bowl victory over 20th-rankedStanford yesterday.

"We got a little complacent out there with a 27-point lead and they (Stanford) made some adjust-ments to the option," said Williams, who sparked theAthletic Coast Conference champion Tigers to a 27-0halftime advantage.

Ford, who coached his first collegiate game hereeight years ago in a celebrated 17-16 victory overOhio State in Woody Hayes' final game, said he washappy the team may have learned an importantlesson without having to lose.

"They came close to making us believers," Fordsaid. "We need to learn how to put people away."

Clemson's 27-0 halftime lead and complete domi-nation of the first 30 minutes had observers thinkingNorth Carolina's 36-0 rout of Air Force in 1963might be endangered as the most one-sided game inthe 42-year history of the Gator Bowl.

Clemson, whiih finished 8-2-2, rolled up 291yards on offense and 16 first downs in the first halfwhile Stanford could manage just 67 yards and threefirst downs.

Clemson built a 24-0 lead by the time Stanfordmanaged its initial first down midway through thesecond period.

"It was a quiet halftime lockerroom," saidStanford's Brad Muster, who scored all threeCardinal touchdowns in the final half. "Once thingsgot started, we finally realized where we were at andplayed a little with pride."

Muster, who shared Most Outstanding Playerhonors with Williams, got the Cardinal on theScoreboard with a 1-yard TD run midway throughthe third period and he caught a pair of scoringpasses from Greg Ennis, covering 13 and 36 yards,in the fourth quarter.

"We didn't roll over and die," said Ennis, who hiton 20 of 40 attempts for 168 yards in his firstcollegiate start.

A 20-point second quarter shot Clemson into itscomfortable halftime cushion.

Williams, Chris Lancaster and Ray Williams ranfor touchdowns and David Treadwell added threeextra points kicks and a pair of field goals to accountfor the Clemson scoring.

"They just couldn't stop our option in the firsthalf," said Williams, who passed for 101 yards in thefirst half.

Two other Stanford scoring drives died in the final

Of ango Bowl

SACKED — Stanford linebacker Barry McKeever(86) sacks Clemson quarterback Rodney Wil-liams during the second quarter of yesterday's

period when Ennis was intercepted on one occasionand underthrew a receiver on fourth down onStanford's final drive with just over a minute left inthe game.

Stanford, which finished 8-4, was without regularquarterback John Paye, who underwent surgery fora shoulder injury Monday, and starting linemenTony Lelker and John Zentner who didn't make thetrip after testing positive for steroids in a NCAAdrug test.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gator Bowl gam£ in Jacksonville, Fla. Williamsand the Tigers, who at one point led 27-0, heldon for a 27-21 victory.

Muster rushed for 70 yards in 17 carries andcaught four passes for 63 yards.

Terrence Flagler gained 82 yards in a dozen carriesfor Clemson, which finished with 244 yards rushing.

The victory gave Clemson a 7-6 record in bowlcompetition and a 3-2 Gator Bowl mark.

Stanford, 7-6-1 in bowl games, lost for the firsttime in 34 years in postseason play after fourstraight bowl victories.

Aloha Bowl

Initial bowlwin notchedby Arizona

HONOLULU (AP) — Alfred Jenkins threw for 187yards and a touchdown as ltith-ranked Arizonabuilt a 30-0 lead then held off a late North Carolinarally to beat the Tar Heels 30-21 yesterday in theAloha Bowl.

It was the first Bowl victory ever for the Wildcats,who had a 0-4-1 postseason record, dating back to1921, going into the game.

North Carolina, stunned by five lost fumbles andshut out for most of the first three quarters, roaredback from a 30-0 deficit with a three-touchdownrally that started late in the third period.

Arizona, which finished its season at 9-3, took a13-0 first-half lead on field goals of 31 and 38 yardsby Gary Coston, and David Adams' 1-yard touch-down run.

The Wildcats, of the Pacific-10, extended theiradvantage to 30-0 in the third quarter on a 62-yardfield goal by Jeff Valder, Jenkins' 13-yard scoringpass to Jon Morton, and a 6-yard touchdown run byArt Greathouse with 3:19 left in the third quarter.

Jenkins finished the game with 12 completions in22 attempts.

Reserve tailback Torin Dora started the NorthCarolina comeback when he scored on a 68-yard runwith 2:14 left in the third quarter.

A 6-yard pass from Mark Maye to Randy Marriott,capping a 78-yard march on their next possession,cut the deficit to 30-14 with 13:07 left to play.

Just four minutes later, Maye ran one yard foranother touchdown after Norris Davis blocked anArizona punt to give the Tar Heels the ball at theWildcats' 18-yard line.

But Arizona's defense was able to hold the TarHeels in check for the final nine minutes of the gameto preserve the victory.

North Carolina finished its season with a 7-4-1record.

The Tar Heels played the game without theirregular tailback, Derrick Fenner. The Atlantic CoastConference's leading rusher this season, Fenner didnot make the trip because of academic problems.

The game was the first football meeting betweenArizona and North Carolina, which now has an all-time bowl record of 7-9.

A crowd of just 26,743, smallest in the five-yearhistory of the game, watched the nationally tele-vised contest at 60,000-seat Aloha Stadium.

Adams, who led the Pac-10 in rushing this season,gained 84 yards on 23 carries against the Tar Heels,and also caught three passes for 77 yards.

Maye, the ACC's top-rated passer this year,completed 17 of 34 throws for 171 yards.

Arkansas playing 'best ball' as 10-1 Oklahoma Sooners loomMIAMI (AP) — After three

years of bowl season supremacy,the Orange Bowl only can offer arepeat of one of its mostmemorable games in recent yearswhen underdog Arkansas takes onhighly regarded Oklahoma NewYear's night.

The last three Orange Bowlseither decided the national cham-pion (Miami over Nebraska 31-30afte,r the 1983 season andOklahoma over Penn State 26-10.after the 1986 searfbn) or pittedthe two teams many consideredthe best in the land (Washingtonover Oklahoma 28-17 in 1986).

Brigham Young won the na-

tional championship after the1984 season despite playing whatmany considered a weak schedule.The Cougars beat Michigan In thepre-New Year's Holiday Bowl.

All of the other collegepostseason contests will take aback seat this time around to theJan. 2 Fiesta Bowl clash betweenNo. 1 Miami and No. 2 Penn State,the only two unbeaten major col-lege teams. But the Orange Bowlhas an interesting appetizer to theFiesta feast.

Oklahoma, 10-1, has lost only totop-ranked Miami and has rolledup impressive numbers against.the rest of their opponents. Ar-

kansas, 9-2, was shocked byTexas Tech 17-7 early in theseason and later lost at Baylor29-14. The Razorbacks reboundedfrom the Baylor loss to beat TexasA&M 14-10 and rout SouthernMethodist 41-0.

"We were.playing our best ballat the end of the season," saidCoach Ken Hatfield.

Hatfield is in his third seasonwith at Arkansas, so he wasn't apart of the Razorbacks' surprising31-6 victory oyer Oklahoma in theteam's only other Orange Bowlappearance in 1978.

"We owe them one," said Switz-er, who has talked with his team

about how the Razorbacks keptthe Sooners from winning a na-tional title eight years ago.

Similar to this year, Arkansasentered that game a decidedunderdog. Oklahoma was rankedNo.2 going into the game and couluhave moved up to No.l with avictory, but the Razorbacks ov-ercame the loss of three startersfor disciplinary reasons to romppast the Sooners.

"Eight years later, people arestill talking about it," Hatfieldsaid. ' • • ' ' • :

The question is, can theRazorbacks repeat that effort.Hatfield thinks they can.

"It think it will be a much moreexciting game than people who aregroing to look at it from theoutside believe," Hatfield said.

Oklahoma's defense has allowedonly 169.6 yards per game, whilethe offense has rolled up 473.6yards per game. Arkansas hasgiven up 293.7 per outing whilegaining 368.9.

Both teams run the offense andrevolve around their quickquarterbacks. Oklahoma's JamelleHolieway is the better, runner,with 811 yards compared to 461 •

for Arkansas' Greg Thomas. ButThomas has better passingstatistics, 67-of-109 for 1,032with six touchdowns and onlyonly one interception. Holieway is30-for-63 for 641 yards with fourtouchdowns and six interceptions.

Oklahoma has four players withmore than 600 yards rushing,Lydell Carr with 648, Earl John-son with 637 and Spencer Tillxnanwith, 619 and Holieway. GregThomas is the Razorbacks' toprunner, just edging halfback Der-rick Thomas, who has 466 yards.

Baylor wary of Coloradomark in Bluebonnet Bowl

HOUSTON (AP) — Baylor, withits 8-3 record and No. 14 nationalranking, won't be scoffing at the6-6 record Colorado will bringinto the 28th Bluebonnet Bowl atRice Stadium New Year's Eve.

The Buffaloes lost their firstfour games of the season but thenfinished 6-1 the rest of the seasonfor a second-place finish in theBig Eight.

Colorado's charge included a20-10 victory over Nebraska, theBuffs' first victory over the Corn-huskers in 19 years, and a 13-10loss to Cotton Bowl-bound OhioState.

"We could easily be looking at a9-2 team because they lost threegames they could have won,"Baylor Coach Grant Teaff said."We lost three close games too, butthat doesn't lessen the kind offootball team you are.

"They've played some greatfootball this year in the BigEight."- The Buffaloes were stunned intho season opener by' ColoradoState, 23-7. They lost the next[three games by a total eightpoints, 32, 30 to Oregon, 13-10 to

Ohio State and 24-21 to Arizona."After four games we didn't

think we'd be going anywhere thisyear so we're happy to be in a bowlgame," said Buff tight end JonEmbree, who has started 34straight games, the longest cur-rent streak on the team.

"But we knew we were betterthan 0-4."

Colorado Coach Bill McCartneyhas the Buffaloes winning againwith a wishbone attack that fea-tures three runners with 600-plusyards.

O.C. Oliver, a freshman fromHouston, leads Colorado runnerswith 668 yards, fullback AnthonyWeatherspoon has 681 yards andquarterback Mark Hatcher hasgained 662 yards.

The Buffaloes finished theseason as the No. 10-ranked totaldefensive unit In the nation.

Linebacker Darin Schubeck wasvoted the team's most valuableplayer, and .was third in totaltackles.. "Nebraska ran to his side eightor nine times for minus yards,"Colorado Athletic Director BillMarolt said.

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ASSOCIATED PRESSGETTING STARTED — Penn State quarterback John Shaffer goesthrough his first practice yesterday after arriving in Phoenix for theFiesta Bowl Jan. 2. The team began practice just over an hour afterarriving at the airport.

Rose Bowl losseshaunt Michigan

TEMPE, Arlx. (AP) — Isn't it Ironic that thebowls themselves, so united in their oppositionto > college football national championshipplayoff, may have come up with a solution. •

"If the bowl system can allow for Number 1and Number 2 to meet most years, thenperhaps there will not be any more playofftalk," says Bruce Skinner, executive directorof the Fiesta Bowl

The Fiesta is shelling out almost f 6 million— f 2.4 million to each team — for the firstsuch national championship showdown everheld somewhere besides the Rose, Sugar,Orange or Cotton bowls.

It will be No. 1 Miami or Florida, 11-0,against No. 2 Penn State, 11-0, on Friday nightin 70,021-seat Sun Devil Stadium on thecampus of Arizona State University (NBC-TV,8 p.m., EST).

It will be another round of the good guysagainst the bad guys (see Penn State vs.Oklahoma, Jan. 1, 1986).

In the white hats — and the generic blue andwhite uniforms — is Penn State, located smackin the middle of nowhere, alias the NittanyMountains of central Pennsylvania. Its coach,Joe Paterno, left the streets of Brooklyn, N.Y.,to find happiness in a quiet little college town,the Mr. Perfect of college football who isreferred to by numerous writers as St. Joe andwho recently was named Sportsman of theYear by Sports Illustrated.

In the black hats — and the orange, greenand white getup — is Miami, also known asMiami Vice because of a number of brusheswith the law and the NCAA. But it also hasHeisman Trophy-winning quarterback VinnyTestaverde, so wholesome he almost makesPaterno look like a hardened criminal. Itscoach is Jimmy Johnson, of Port Arthur,

Texas, who left his first head coaching Job atOklahoma State for the bright lights, the warmsun and the sandy beaches of south Florida. Inthe vernacular of the Southwest, Johnson issometimes referred to as a wild hone rider.

"Miami wears those real flashy uniforms,orange and green, and It makes them lookquick," says East Carolina Coach Art Baker,whose team was trounced by both Miami andPenn State. "Penn State wears drab uniforms,plain white and blue, and your first impressionis that they're a slow bunch of guys. They'reanything but that."

But uniforms don't decide national cham-pionships, and this, Paterno says, is "alegitimate national championship game. I don'tthink anybody can dispute that. The twoundefeated teams are going to play each otherand we're going to do it in a setting and at atime that's unique for college football."

The 16-year-old Fiesta Bowl has been a NewYear's Day game for the last five years and hasnever featured this kind of attraction. In amasterful move, one which helped sway Miamiand Penn State to bring their show to suburbanPhoenix rather than the Citrus or Gator Bowlsin Florida, the Fiesta Bowl talked NBC-TV intoa prime-time telecast on Jan. 2, one day afterthe New Year's bowls.

And read into this what you will, but whilein Arizona, Penn State will work out at ArizonaState University. Miami has been assigned theUSFL Arizona Outlaws' practice facility. .

Among the Miami players who have beeninvolved in off-the-field escapades arelinebacker George Mira Jr., defensive endDaniel Stubbs, wide receiver Michael Irvin andhalfback Melvin Bratton.

In addition, fullback Alonzo Highsmith,defensive tackle Jerome Brown, linebacker

Winston Moss and reserve running backCleveland Gary were named in • schoolinvestigation about cars leased in possibleviolation of an NCAA rule. MOM wassuspended for the season opener, the otherswere cleared.

"I think the media has unfortunately labeledus as the bad guys," says Johnson, whosetemper has grown short at times because of oneincriminating headline after another. "I thinkit's a false perception of what ws really haveon our football team. From articles I hsve read,Penn State could very well be labeled the badguys."

After a series of brawls against Pitt, Paternosaid he had "four or five kids who are readyto fight if you give them a dirty look."

"We're in a metropolitan area, a verycompetitive media market, we're in the homeof the popular TV program 'Miami Vice,' anda lot of it has to do with where we are, thepublicity about the crime rate, etc.," Johnsonsays.

"People just associate those things with ourprogram and, unfortunately, we've taken thebrunt of some of those little Jokes around thecountry.

"It's been overblown to the point that I'mtired of talking about it, and I'm not going totalk about it any more.

"But we have some outstanding young menwho are here to get an education and they'vedone an outstanding Job on the field."

The Fiesta Bowl matches two teams whichhave been among the nation's best in the1980s. Penn State won its only nationalchampionship in 1982 and Miami won it thefollowing year. Penn State has won 22 con-secutive regular-season games, Miami 21.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Theexchange was light-hearted andbrief, but it captured an under-lying frustration that Big TenConference coaches must be feel-ing towards the Rose Bowl.

Arizona State Coach JohnCooper, who will be coaching inhis first Rose Bowl Jan. 1, turnedand said to Michigan State CoachBo Schembechler, "I need all thehelp I can get, Bo."

A smiling Schembechler replied:"In light of my record here, I'm notgoing to be giving out any advice."

Schembechler is 1-6 in RoseBowl games, which is actually abetter percentage than Big Tenteams have posted over the past17 years on New Year's Day inPasadena, Calif. They have wontwice.

''I recognize that the Big Ten hasnot done well here," Schembechlersaid. "I don't know why. We'regoing to do everything we can towin this game. I think every teamthat comes out here does."

The fourth-ranked MichiganWolverines, 11-1, will meet Ari-zona State, 9-1-1 and rankedseventh, in the 73rd Rose Bowl.

This New Year's Day footballgame, which pegs itself as the"Granddaddy of AH Bowl Games,"has been making old mei> out ofthe coaches from the Big Ten, whohave yet to unlock the key behind

. the Pac-10's recent reign over theRose Bowl.

Since Ohio State defeatedSouthern Cal 27-16 in the 1969

Rose Bowl, the Pac-10 representa-tive has been virtually unbeatable.

"There's no doubt they havebeen dominant," Schembechlersaid. "Maybe it wouldn't look sobad if the scores haven't been sohigh."

The Pac-10's last five victorieshave included victories by UCLAover Illinois, 45-9 in 1984, andIowa, 45-28, last year, and Wash-ington's 28-0 victory over Iowa in1981.

Southern Cal has led thePac-10's 17-year parade, winningseven times in eight appearancessince 1970, and UCLA is perfect infour Rose Bowl appearances overthe past 11 years.

"When you play UCLA and list:,you're playing the home team,"Schembechler said.

UCLA. plays its home gamesduring the regular season at theRose Bowl, and Southern Cal playsnot too far down the road at theMemorial Coliseum.

Playing without a "home field"advantage, Stanford won con-secutive Rose Bowls in 1971-72and Washington has gone 2-for-3since 1978.

Ohio State .ml Michigan haveborn th- brunt of the Pac-Uisdomination, each losing a!" ::mesduring the Big Ten's skid, withIowa losing twir-p ;•.'••< Illinois once.

"We've a!".. '."S 'ocm close, butwe've seldom won," Schombechlersaid of Michigan. "That's notright. It's our Job to do >="- Pthlngabout that."

Liberty BowlTennessee, Minnesotawait out festivities

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) —While the primary action for theLiberty Bowl will take place onthe playing field tomorrownight, the parties and dinnersfocused on the game will belively too.

"It's the biggest demand we'veever had for the social events.Every*one of them is bursting attlii- seams," said Bill McElroy,vice president of the LibertyBowl Festival Association.

This year's bowl pits the Uni-versity of Tennessee against theUniversity of Minnesota. Or-ganizers expect a sellout for the60,100-seat Liberty BowlMemorial Stadium.

About half of the spectatorsattending the game will be fromout of town, McElroy said.

Liberty Bowl festivities in-clude a black-tie dinner partytonight at the Hyatt RegencyHotel, a luncheon Sunday at TheRacquet Club of Memphis and abuffet at the Mid-South Col-iseum Just before the game.

The dinner party will draw acapacity crowd 675 people at$135 a couple, McElroy said.

"ore than 2,100 tickets at $26each have been sold for theluncheon and 4,500 tickets at$16 each have been sold for therr-Bame buffet, he said.

Members of the competing

football; teams will attendparties and dinners on BealeStreet and at the Overtoil Squareentertainment district in mid-town Memphis.

And of course, they'll be takenon tours! of Graceland, the for-mer residence of singer ElvisPresley.I

The teams got to townChristmas Day and attendedtheir first group gathering Fri-day, a luncheon sponsored bythe mayors of Memphis andShelby County.

A Liberty Bowl sellout will beespecially sweet for game or-ganizers since last year's contestbetween Louisiana State Uni-versity and Baylor was an econ-omic disappointment, drawing acrowd estimated at 38,000 eventhough both teams were Top 20.

Liberty Bowl directors havemade no secret that theyselected schools for this year'sgame based on the number offans the teams would likelybring to town.

Tennessee and Minnesota bothfinished the regular season at6-5, and that has drawn a fewsnorts from critics who say bowlgames should be reserved for topteams.

Nebraska awaitsLSU test in Sugar

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Hisplayers have the resilience ofyouth, Nebraska football coachTom Osborne says. He has theresilience of age.

Sixth-ranked Nebraska meetsNo. 5 Louisiana State in the SugarBowl on New Year's Day. Osbornesaid the Huskers have conqueredthe feeling that they're playing ina consolation game after losing theseason finale to Oklahoma, 20-17.

"When you're 18 and 19 yearsold, you bounce back," Osbornesaid. "When you're 49 and you'vebeen doing it for a long time, youstill bounce back."

Nebraska lost to Oklahoma on afield goal with 11 seconds left. Itnot only cost Nebraska the BigEight title but any chance tocontend for the national cham-pionship. That title will be decideda day later in the Jan. 2 FiestaBowl pairing of top-ranked Miamiagainst No. 2 Penn .State.

"To some degree, that's good,"Osborne said. "It's a day later, andthat's not a bad idea. It puts someof the emphasis back on the otherbowls.

"I know they did it for unselfishreasons," he deadpanned.

Both Nebraska and LSU hadoff-field distractions leading upto the Sugar Bowl.

Eight Nebraska players and twograduate assistants were arrestedduring the week for disturbing thepeace in the French Quarter. New

- Orleans police said those arrested

were shouting obscenities, slap-ping parked cars and climbing ironcolumns on the sidewalk. Thecharges were all denied.

The Tigers, beaten early in theseason by Miami of Ohio andMississippi, .had more than anormal share of off-field distrac-tions, including conducting SugarBowl workouts under two headcoaches — outgoing BillArnsparger and hand-picked heirMike Archer.

Arnsparger's resignation afterthe season-ending defeat ofTulane is effective after the SugarBowl, and he'll take over theathletic director's Job at Florida inJanuary. Archer, 33, Arnsparger'sdefensive coordinator, officiallybecame LSU's 26th head coach onTuesday.

It's happened before at theSugar Bowl. Johnny Majors hadalready announced his resignationfrom Pittsburgh, and JackieSherill had been hired as hisreplacement when the Panthersbeat Georgia 27-3 to win lock upthe national championship on Jan.1, 1977.

Dan Devine announced he wasretiring at Notre Dame after the1981 game. A year later, Sherillwas unofficially leaving Pitt andFoge Fazio was unofficially re-placing him as the team wentthrough Sugar Bowl drills.

Majors and Sherill won as lame-duck coaches. Devine lost.

Georgia Tech bounces Rutgersfrom ECAC Holiday Festival

NEW YORK (AP) — No. 19 Georgia Tech, led byDuane Ferrell's 22 points, dealt Rutgers its sixthstraight loss 79-61 yesterday and gained thechampionship game of the 35th ECAC HolidayFestival tournament.

Ferrell, a 6-foot-7 junior, scored 16 of his points,including eight-for-eight, from the foul line, in thefirst half when the Yellow Jackets led 41-34.

A three-point play by Antoine Ford gave Tech a49-36 les-d with 16:09 remaining before Eric Rigginsrallied the Scarlet Knights.

Rutgers cut the deficit to 56-50 and 57-51 butcouldn't get closer despite several key Tech playersbeing in foul trouble.

Over the last 5:04, Tech made 12-of-19 freethrows, while Riggins, who scored a game-high 26points, fouled out with 2:20 to go.

•Guard Craig Neai added 14 points for Tech, 10 inthe first half, as the Engineers raised their record to6-2 and dropped Rutgers to 2-6.

Tech lost Ford, its starting center, on fouls with:13 remaining and Ferrell with 5:32 to go.Guards Myles Dixson and Rick Dadika each added

12 points for Rutgers, which recently lost startersAnthony Duckett and Ed Zucker to injuries.

St. John's 64, Virginia 58NEW YORK — Mark Jackson led lBth-ranked St.

John's on a 16-0 run early in the second half and theunbeaten Redmen withstood a Virginia rally for atriumph in the 35th ECAC Holiday Festival tour-nament.

The victory put the Redmen, 8-0, in tomorrownight's championship game against No. 19 GeorgiaTech.

Jackson, a 6-foot-3 senior point guard, scored 15of his 17 points in the second half and seven pointsduring the 16-0 spree which overcame a 34-27Redmen deficit.

Reserve Matt Brust's three-point play capped therun for a 43-34 lead before the Cavaliers went on13-4 run, led by Andrew Kennedy, John Johnsonand Mel Kennedy to tie it at 47.

The score was tied again at.49 and at 51. Then St.John's scored seven straight points for a 58-51advantage as Brust scored three points and SheltonJones four.

Brust, a transfer from North Carolina, had 12points and Jones 10, including six points over thelast 3:24.

The loss snapped Virginia's five-game winningstreak and left its record at 6-2. The Cavaliers ledby as many as 10 points in the first half and 28-25at halftime.

Mel Kennedy topped the'Cavaliers with 18 pointsand Andre'v Kennedy had 14.

College BasketballKentucky 85, Louisville 51

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Freshman guard Rex Chap-man scored 26 points as No. 18 Kentucky dominatedintrastate rival Louisville in posting a victoryyesterday in a nationally-televised game.

It was the worst home loss suffered by Louisvillein Denny Crum's 16 years as head coach.

Kentucky, 6-1, hit 11 of 17 three-point shots,with Chapman making five of eight. The Wildcatsshot 64.2 percent on 32 of 59 shots, while Louisvillemanaged 21 of 58 field goals for 36.2 percent.

Louisville fell to 4-6 as leading scorer PervisEllison was held to four points and the Cardinals'inside game never surfaced.

The smaller Kentucky squad outrebounded thedefending national champions 41-33. RichardMadison led the Wildcats with 17 rebounds.

Leading 38-28 at halftime, the Wildcats turnedthe game into a. rout by scoring 10 unansweredpoints to start the second half for a 48-28 advantagewith 15:25 left. Kentucky increased the lead to60-32 when James Blackmon stole the ball and hita shot with 11:34 left.

Tony Kimbro and reserve center Felton Spencereach scored 10 points for Louisville. Ed Davenderadded 16 points for Kentucky.

Kentucky took a 14-point lead in the first periodbehind Chapman's 7-for-10 shooting, which in-cluded three three pointers. Seven of his 18 pointscame in the last six minutes.

Kentucky hit seven of 10 three pointers in the firsthalf while Louisville missed its two attempts.

Duquesne 94, Ions 71NEW ROCIIELLE, N.Y. — Emmett Sellers scored

28 points and Brian Shanahan added 23 to paceDuquesne to victory over Iona College.

The Dukes, 5-3, never trailed in snapping a three-game losing streak. They used a 10-2 spurt to takea 33-21 lead late in the first half. Five differentplayers scored during the run.

Duquesne led 42-33 at the half.The Dukes were never threatened in the second

half and turned the game into a rout with an 11-3 Isurge. Sellers scored the last seven points of thespurt, which he capped with a driving bank shot that imade it 76-56 with 7:15 to play.

The Dukes won the game at the foul line, making I24 of 35 while Iona was 21 of 42.

Richie Simmonds and Jeff Wilder led Iona, 4-6, •with 21 points and 14 points, respectively.

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60 The Sunday BegiaUr tUWDAY. DECEMBER 28.1QS6

Ram players vividly rec.—Redskin pasting in playoffBy DAVtD GINSBURGAP Sports Writer

KEY WEAPON — Eric Dickerson of the LosAngeles Rams gains yardage against the NewYork Jets last month. Dickerson, the NFL's

ASSOCIATED PRESS

leading rusher, will heed to continue that kind ofwork today against the Washington Redskins inthe NFC wild-card playoff game.

WASHINGTON — John Robinson yividly re-members the final game of his initial season as ahead coach in the NFL.

After guiding his Los Angeles Rams to a surprisetrip to the playoffs in 1983, Robinson watchedhelplessly as the Washington Redskins took a 38-7halftime lead en route to a 61-7 rout.

Robinson said his team will not use the memory ofthat game as a motivational tool today when theRams visit RFK Stadium to face the Redskins in theNFC wild-card game.

"Our motivation is to win and stay alive in theplayoffs," Robinson said. "That 51-7 game wasyears ago."

Maybe so, but not all the Rams have forgottenwhat was the NFL's biggest playoff rout since 1967.

"More than anything I remember the low feeling,the fact that we didn't belong on the same field withthem," recalled Los Angeles tackle Jackie Slater.

Rams rookie quarterback Jim Everett still was Incollege when that game took place, but he saysseveral of his teammates have let him know what hemissed.

"The veteran players have reminded everyone ofwhat happened," Everett said. When asked if theveterans thought that the Redskins might haveintentionally poured it on, Everett replied, "I'm sureit has something to do with that."

Los Angeles, 10-6, enters Sunday's 4 p.m. ESTclash having lost two straight and four of its lastseven games. Against Washington, 12-4, the Ramswill be looking to return to the form that enabledthem to open the season by winning seven of theirfirst nine.

That means it is likely that running back EricDickerson, who amassed an NFL-best 1,821 rushingyards, will be carrying the ball at least until theRedskins prove they can stop him.

"We're going back to the basics," said Robinson.

CTC wild-card'*5"""We got off the track a little bit (toward: the end ofthe regular season) and it was my fault.".

Washington Coach Joe Gibbs has nothing butrespect for Dickerson, who has accounted for threeof the best 10 rushing seasons in NFL history.

"He's the best running back in the league," Gibbsclaimed. "And he's running behind one of the bestoffensive lines in football."

Although Everett played his worst game of theseason in the Rams' 24-14 loss to San Francisco lastweek, Los Angeles is confident it can turn to thepassing game If Dickerson gets bottled up.

"Before, when we didn't have a quarterback noone took us seriously," Robinson said. "It's likeplaying poker all night with a pair of 10s. You canwin, but it isn't easy."

Washington, meanwhile, hopes quarterback JaySchroeder, who has thrown 11 interceptions in hislast three games, will show the form he displayed inguiding the Redskins to 21 fourth-quarter points inlast Sunday's 21-14 victory over Philadelphia.

"Jay was very bad for three quarters," said Gibbs."But he peaked in the fourth quarter, and hopefullythat will continue."

Schroeder, whose 4,109 passing yards is the bestin team history, knows he can't afford to get off toa rocky start against the Rams. "If I play against LosAngeles the way I did in the first three quartersagainst the Eagles, we'll lose," he said. "It's assimple as that."

While Washington has a better record than theRams, both Robinson and Gibbs say pastperformances mean nothing once the playoffs getunderway.

"The past means zip," Gibbs said."All 10 teams in the playoffs are 0-0," claimed

Robinson. "The homefield Is the only advantage."

JetsContinued from Page ID

One has to wonder what the"small minority" of Jets is doingabout turning around the situ-ation.

In any case, Kansas City is thekind of team the Jets do not needto see right now — one that takesadvantage of opponents' mistakesas well as anybody.

The Chiefs led the AmericanFootball Conference in takeaways,posting 31 interceptions and re-covering 18 fumbles. In the lastfive weeks, Jets' quarterback KenO'Brien has thrown 12 inter-ceptions, doubtless a big reasonfor Walton's decision to benchO'Brien in favor of Pat Ryan.

"I'm sure that Joe is looking forPat to -give us a lift," tight endRocky Klever stated. "He saysthat Kenny is our quarterback ofthe future and I'm sure he meansit. He just wants us to win thisgame."

The Chiefs have a host of de-fensive standouts, exactly whatthe team needs considering itsoffensive shortcomings.

Defensive end Art Still led theChiefs with 10W sacks in theregular season, and may be re-called for his long touchdownreturn in a recent Pro Bowl. Nosetackle Bill Maas is big and quick,which will give Jet center JoeFields a thing or two to worryabout.

Deron Cherry led the AFC ininterceptions from his free safetyposition, and corner backs AlbertLewis and Kevin Ross are noslouches. Ross, at 5'9, should havehis hands full with 6'4 Al Toon ofNew York, a possible edge for theJets.

Lloyd Burruss mans the strongsafety position, and linebackersDino Hackett and Gary Spanianchor the middle of the KansasCity defense.

"They have an outstanding de-fense," Walton said. "They put alot of pressure on the quarterbackand their secondary; in particular,is very talented. Their team makesa lot of takeaways ' and theirsecondary makes a lot of inter-ceptions."

Last week, the Chiefs defeatedPittsburgh, 24-19. In that contest,the Chiefs got all their points fromspecial teams play, and wereoutgai.ied 615-171. The Jets haveenjoyed good special teams playall season, including kickoff re-turn touchdowns the last twoweeks, and will need more of thesame today.

The Jets will be boosted by thereturn of Mark Gastineau, whowill team with Tom Baldwin andMarty Lyons on the defensive line.Rusty Guilbeau is expected toreturn at linebacker after missinglast week's game, and will joinKyle Clifton, Bob Crable andKevin McArthur.

; The Jet secondary, which gaveup 425 passing yards to Cincinnati

. last week, may have an easier timeagainst Todd Blackledge, subbingfor Bill Kenney at quarterback,nnd his banged-up receivinguorps.

I "We know we have to makesome big plays," defensive backRussell Carter stated. "We've gotto get some pressure the wayKansas City does. We can't expectthe offense to carry us. We have toget back to how we played early in0\e year."

The contest will be televised byWNBC-Channel 4 and radiocast>y WABC 770. Kickoff time is12:30-

OUDAYTRAFFIC

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6:30 a.m.7:40 a.m.8:30 a.m.

10:00 a.m.

7:25 a.m.8:35 MIL9:25 a.m.

10:55 am.

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Depart New York City Arrive Highlands

3:30 p.m.4:30 p.m.5:30 p.m.6:30 p m

Depart Highlands

4:25 p.m.5:25p.m.6:25 p m.7:25 pro.• •

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10:00 a.m.12:<H) noon

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SIMMY. DECEMBER 28.1986 The Sunday Mealier

SCOREBOARDBASKETBALL

Boys Girls

Jt . taMtO4.VUura1t4.HuMri o ». Oman • 0 i l . Cameron i o ». Thomas 3 0L H a i m l i 11. Sareon>212. MorgsnOOO. Morris0 0 0. TOTALS M 11 01

ISP,KngmniOIM.WIckatt 24. GorujewakMOt.Muraa * * t. N t » > 4 10. Hmrl 2 0 4. O'NM 2

" B17W0 4. TOTALS IS 17Matte* . ii ta« IT — ii

. IIIIH1I-I7rMMM

17 2 I I . WMama 1 0 2, Bow e 2 14. Aim 00 0. F n n 4 111, Yemen 1 1 3. dewier 1 0 2.TOTAL* 20040

k Use. 141)L Have* jST.S Hayes216, Kruse011. lumon

4 0 0. Barn 4 2 10. TOTALS 111 41Malar DM (17)

Conway 0 0 0. Oalaplna 10 0. Haah 2 0 4. HaoWtl044. Fora 10 2.MUMC4 2 10. HaughO II TOTALS14 017

. a 10 I I 7 — 41111411-17

M a n 1 02 . Kiay 217.Gabrlde 3 0 0. Corty 0 11. R O M 4 7 IS. Roberto 10 2. Ketsgg 217 . Tout13 14 40Cedar HMO* <*•>

Kamara 0 012. RotMaon 7 2 I I . But 2 0 4. Shea1 0 2. Webb 1 0 2. Totals 17 2 Mfcbnalii 12 0 1 — 40Cedar R 10 12 12 2 - M

Brawn 1012 . Snow 1 0 2, Bkia 0 0 0. RaHly 2 04. Cokman 1 0 2. Hammark 2 S I TOTALS 12 5 2>•Mat O* 1111 I I I — 41nm 41 • i - nI4aa Braae* (IT)

Danlels72-2U.,aaslun3a-1l 14. CIUituHo52-4^Pterce4 0-0l . Celderonoi 1-41; Brown 2 0-04: TOTALS 22 11-21 17.

Shutter I 0-0 I k Dloro 1 0-0 2; Ham 11-2 17;Btueg 2 0-0 4: Moor* S 0-0 10: Rauactl 3 0-1 I:Mayer 0 0-1 0. TOTALS 27 1-4 SO

LB 11 22 12 10 — 57• I112 14 11 - H

me (4t)O Cornea 2 4-81: Qray 11-2 13: Waadon 11-4

13: Cnwlord 03-41: CoravMy 31-3 7. Condon 0 0-00. KJam 2 0-04: Sweeney 0 0-0 0. Totals 1110-21

_ ml*-l24:0a«ngaria-S9:BamM20-i4; Cengaj 1 0-fl 2; team 00-1 O. Coday S 2-2 12;Cowran 11-2 3, C m m 0 0-0 0. Toms 20 14-20

BBC » 12 IS 12 - «SRI2O17I-M

I (40)Marti 1 0 2, Krty 2 3 7. OMxida 3 0 0. Corn 0 1

1. flowa 4 7 1S. Rooano 1 0 ?. Katogo 2 3 7 TOTALS13 14 40Cedar mda* |M)

KarMttt012.RoMuon 72 I t Bum 2 04, Shat1 0 2. Wet* 1 0 2 TOTALS 17 2 31

l m l l l , 11 12 1 1 — 40„ „, to 12 12 2 — 34

Hewed (79)CaytuoM 4 2-2 10; Rotwieon 10 7-10 27:

OaMarka 13-3 l». F«noK> 0 0-2 0. Brookens 7 1-215; Waiaflte 10-0 2: MoOaa 0 0 0. HowaH 0 0 0: Look2 0 4: Moral 0 0 0. Flick 1 0 2: Richardson 0 0 0;TOTALS 3113-19 7t

Menaere(M)Famolar) 10-4 12: OoruMi 0 0 0; O/a*n 1 0-1 2;

McAMtaf 1 0-3 2; Ralnar 0 4-4 4; Wadfcsr 4 0-5 I :Goldstein 7 4-4 I I ; Oranu 1 1-2 3. CMa I 0-2 2;Jaasna 1 0-0 2 Vogel 1 1-3 3: Oohrman 0 0 0;TOTALS 23 10-21 M

II10 II 21 71

SOUTHS 13"i3.'Ferdolander 4 1 1 . Scarrona 1 3 S.Tukla 11 0 22. Scultnorpe 2 0 4 TOTALS 21 7 49Mian (41)

O Brian 3 5 11. Ryan 1 0 2. Bams 12 I I . OnacMa0 0 0. White 0 0 0. Schnsppauf 4 2 10. Plerson 0 00 TOTALS 10 9 41BjPH .... 11 It I I I I — 49•Kara. 1119 10 11 — 41

Red Bank Ree, (M)Nkxtottj 3 0 1 . Bowie 4 1 9, Wnght 4 0 S. L»D 5

111. Lull S 0 10. Slmi 2 21. Alekaeiwlci 1 0 2. MuRerOOO.Holseyi 02 DixonOOO. Phillip! 000 TOTALS2S4S4team Twp. (271

Bost|enclc 3 1 7. IppoUto 2 0 4. Murtha 0 1 1.Mannawt 10 2. Melstrlch 4 0 1 . Mavas 113. Hirvay1 0 2 TOTALS 12 3 27

„ „ _ 17 I110 I — M„„ | 2 I 11 — 27

MUdmawn Norm ( I I )Roizo 4 0 1. Mamma 3 1 7. KatMrar 1 0 2,

Guerrlsro t 0 It . Slilflar 4 0 I . Lee 0 0 0. Moklar 10 2. DMrwy 3 01 . Cuno 1 0 2. Qwrnian 0 0 0. BlUay0 0 0. Holdan 1 0 I . TOTAL 21 1 S3Brick Memorial (21)

K. Baytia 1 0 2. Vomees 3 1 7. Washed 0 0 0.Undttran 1 0 2. P. BayXa 3 1 7. Eackstem 1 0 2.Panrod 2 1 S. TOTALS 11 3 25

. I111 It 10 - II.1479-24

MNRY HUDSON (M)Ingrid FaDer 4-3-11; Karan Mask) 4-3-11; Piiga

Ouati 3-0-a. Miry Elian Wuran 2-0-4. Totals13-0-32HOLMOCL(41|

Haathar Chrtstman 0-4-4; Knl in Brendei 5-3-13.Susan Lawser 3-4-10; Lynn Smith 2-0-4: JiHSaamin 3-1-7: Carol Han 0-' , -1; Chris Ksnnedy1-0-2 ToUla 14-13-41Henry Hudson I 1 1 1 7 - 32Halmdal 1 1 1 4 I — 41

Hoimoal 4-0; Hanry Hudson 3-1

NOW)Van Euoem 2-2-0; Murphy 0-0-0; MaHan 2-4-0;

SmaU 1-0-2: Vaccarelti 4-0-8: Traino 2-0-4. Taylor2-0-4, Kannady 0-0-0 Total! 13-0-32WHdwood (40)Caruu 7-3-17: McBrlda 3-5-11; Bloom 3-0-6;Harmin 2-0-4; Oaugherty 1-0-2 Total! 10-1-40

14 10 2 I — 3212 9 11 I — 40

i o n l l I ; bonohue 1 1 1: Staad 2 5 I;Raardon S 3 13; CoHna 1 0 2: Totala ~ 13 9-21 I t

Aeoco 3 01; Lanay 5 010; Hubnar 1 5 7; Klrpatrk*0 11: Tomaeeao 1 0 2, Totala 10 0-22 20.

SJV — I I 4 14 6 — 36K.y - 6 15 2 3 - 2 6

NBAw««i At~Mv Valaa

NEW YORK |AP) — fleaults through Dae. 23 In Ianvoting lor Wsstam Confaranca stemqg positions Inin. 37th Annual National Basketball Association As-Slar Qsma. to be pla,sd Fab. I at Via Klngdome InSeattle:

t. Akaam oiiiuwon, Houston. 241.941. 2, MarkEston, uun. 131,474.3. Kareom Abdul-Jabber, LA.Lakars. 111.000. 4. Ann OUmore. San Antonio.00,104.6. Banorl Benjamin. LA. Clippeia, 56.277 6.Sam Bow*. Portend, 42.630 7, laSaae Thampaon,Sacramento. 31.964.1." Joe Barry Carrot. OokMnSlats. 2U12. Wayne Cooper. 0s *WMHwn Btdfcvda Phoenix, 7,961.

PtaakoU TownaMp (17)Hallar 10 3 23. Locascio 6 113: Guadagno 2 1 5;

Eddmgton t 0 2: Bentley 0 1 t; Qraar 4 1 9,Zimmerman 2 0 4 Ehrel 0 0 0: Shatler 0 00. TOTALS— 25 7-17 57

10. Rlggins 10-201-11 2t. Peterson0-1 2-2 2. DarMs 4-0 0-2 12. Di>son 6-9 0-1 12.Wsro 0-0 0-10. Watson 0-5 5-6 5. Brown 1-4 1-23. EversonO-01-2 1, Lettiei.O-l 0-0 0 Totals21 -5115-27 01.OtOROIA TiCH | r i |

FerreH 7-1S 0-1 22. Hammonds 3-5 2-3 I . Ford4-5 1-1 9. Oslrymple 3-7 3-6 9. Neal 0-10 2-2 14.Other 2-3 4-71. Sherrod 1 -5 0-0 2, Muntyn 1 -5 5-07. Martraon 0-0 0-0 0 Totala 27-56 25 35 7|.

Hamima-aeorgia Tech 41. Rutgers 34. Three-pom goals- Rutgers 4-111Dsdau 4-7. Watson 0-2.Brown 0-21. Georgia Tech 0-0 Fouled out—Rlgglns,Ward. Watson. Ferret. Ford. Rebounds-Rulgers 32<Dtd*t 0). Georgia Tech 41 (Oakymple luT As-sists— Rutgers terwataon 6) Georgia Tech.1S(Neal6| Total toutt-Ruigera, 30, Georgia Tech 20TechnceM-None. A - Noi evastHa.

B«dii 2 0 4; Lakadald 3 5 11. Bsaucnamp 0 0 0:Slurs 7 11 25. Brsaascn 10 2. Sperling 00 0. Uurrsy2 0 4; TOTALS - 15 16-20 46 F t

_ i ] i t iar i i —17«•„ - 1 1 9 19 - 41

Pan* Anboy (41)Rodrlguaz 8 1-317; W*mczyk 4 0-0 6, Ruddock

3 0-c 6; Bachlnskl 2 2-4 6. Colaman 3 0-16 Toms20 3-0.43

Whalan 2 0-0 4; O Kasls 3 3-4 12; Palmar 3 0-10. OuatW 3 0-0 6; FoMy 1 0-0 2 Totala 12 3-6 27Pan* » 1 12 9 9 11 — 41Ifaana •, . . 1 1 2 1 4 — 27

IC-0-3PA - 1-3

r, 11 ISM. IO.

1. Ralph Sampson. Houston. 225,921. 2, RodnsyMcCrly. Houston. 140.127 3. Ksrl Makxa, Ulsri,138.915 4. Kelly Trlpucks. Waft, 120.404 5. JamasWorlny. LA Lakars. 114.177. 0. Tnun BaHay. Utah.66,264 7. Mark Agurra. Dallas, 77.602. I , Eddk)Johnson, Sscrsmanto. 04.513. >. Ksvlsr McOanW.Saaltls. 63.111 10. Sam Parkins. Osaas. 03.139.

Ouarda1. EIITOI Magic Johnson. LA. Lakers. 234.350

2. Darren Or.llim. uuh. 154,169 3, Robert Raid.Houston. 143.062 4. Marquas Johnson. LA Cup-pars. 125.213. 5. Ahin Robartson. San Antonio.84.935 6. Derak Harper. Dallas, 01.863 7. JohnnyMoore. San Antonio. 74,841 I , Rolando BUckmsn.Dallas. 67.165 9. Rega* Tneus. Sacrimanlo.02.435 10. Larry Draw. LA. Clippers. 57,383,

Eaat A»-8Ur, VMMNEW YORK (AP) — Tolili in Isn voting lor Eastern

Conference starting positions m the 37th AnnualNational Basketball Association Al-Stsr Qama, to beplayed Fab 0 at the Kingdoms in Seattle

Centers1. Mows Makma. Washington, 133.365 2. Robert

Parish. Boston. 100.616 3. B* Lalmbaar, Detroit.M 797 4. Patrick Ewng. Naw York. 72.673 5. JackSikma. Miteaukea. 71,605 8. Mike Ommiki. NewJersey. 40.673 7. Jan Rulsnd. Philadelphia, 36.426It. Manute BO. Washington 30.572.9. Brad Daughar-ly. Cleveland. 27.109 10. Melvm Turpln. Cleveland.22.710

1. Dommiqua WUMns. Atlanta. 216,266 2, LarryBird. Boston. 204.407 3. Adrian Dsntley. Detroit,119.106 4, Chinas Berkley. PMadsapNa. 114,277 5.Kevin McHsle. Boston. 100.315. 6, Kevin Willis.Atlsnta. 65.918. 7. Wsyman Tisdala. Imkana. 47.467.8. Tarry Cummngi. Milwaukee. 47.082. 9. PaulPreisey. Mirweukee. 44.971. 10, Orlando WookKkje.Naw Jersey, 39.501

1. Michael Jordan. Chicago. 228.074 2. JuauaErving, Philadelphia, 182,410 3. Isujh Thorns*.Detroit. 150.595 4. Spud WsbD. Atlanta. 97.727 5.Sidney Moncnal. Milwaukee. 74.324.1. Glenn Rivers.Atlanta. 70.150. 7. Damns Johnson. Boston. 69,761.8. Vmma Johnson. Detroit, .67,079. 9. Maunc*Cheeki, Philadelphia. 55.654. 10. Danny Amga.Boston. 52.948

HOCKEY Freehold ResultsWML « j atsr Voena. Rineiai

MONTREAL (AP) — Results of Ian beading for theNational Hockey League As-Star game aa olTuesday. Dec 23

1. Cant Mslsrchuk. Quabac Nordiquet. 65.IM 2.Patrick Roy. Montreal Canadians. 70.621. 3. MikeVemon. Calgary Flamss. 58.606. 4. M*e Liul.Harttord WMIeri. 49.023. 5. Bob Froese. New YorkRangers. 48.535

1. Mam Howe, Philadelphia Flyara. 133.050 2. PaulConey. Edmonton oners. 126.968 3. Ray Bourque.Boston Bruins. 94.424 4. Doug Bodger, PittsburghP 2 5 Larry Robinson, Montreal,eg80.171.

8 O

uns. .61.412 5. Larry

0 . 1 18. Oaiy Sutar. Calgary. 87.109 7. Rod Langway.

Washington Capruis. 53.553 8. Brad McCrlmmon.Philadelphia. 50.191 9. Moa Mantha. Pittsburgh.4808010 D u P t N York Ilsndsrs 47599Philadelphia. 50.191 9. Moa M a t g48,080.10. Dsrut Potvin. Naw York Islsndsrs, 47.599.

11. Chru ChelioB Montreal. 44,751 12. Al Macln-nn. Calgary, 43.853. 13. Scott Stevens. Washington.30.773 14. Kevin Lowe. Edmonton. 27.819 15.Randy Cartyte. Winnipeg Jeti, 27.491.

1. Mano Lamaw. pnsburgh. 171.523 2. WavneOretiky. Edmonton, 116.817 3. Paler Stastny.Quebec 62343 4. Bryan Trottler. Naw YorkIslandara, 37.070. 5. Ron Francis. Hsrttord. 31.656

8. Oiua Hiwarchuk. Wimpag. 26.317 7. MarcelDionne, Los AngeMi Kmgs, 17.943. 8. SteveViermin. DMrolt Had Wings. 17.573. 9. DamsSavard. Chicago Blsckhiwkt. 11.119, 10. MarkMessier. Edmonton, 10.363.

Left Wing1. MKMt Ooulet. Quebec. 106.955.2. John Tone*.

Calgary. 17.111. 3. Mats Nsskmd. Montreal. 84.5634. Brian Propp. Philadelphia. 60.129. 5, GlennAnderson. Edmonton, 37.238

6. WantM Clark. Toronto Maple Laals. 34,452 7.Peter Kama, Detroit, 24,071.8. Brian Suttar. SI Louis.23 214.9. Svtvam Turgeon. Hartlord. 22.649.10. KimMuHer, Naw Jersey Devils. 22.558.

Right Wing1. Mike Bossy. Naw York Islanders. 143.729.2. Tim

Kerr, Philadelphia. 66,719

FraanoW RaauHatatutday, Dsc. 27

1st P a » J2.200 2.036 Direct Aim (J Stafford) 17 80 8 00 4 405 Acquisitive |A Robanrd) 560 3 607 We Do BQ (J Hundarpttund) 5.60

Also: Una Patrta Peu, An Artists Dream. Tricky A,PTOua

1 Scr Done OlditIXACTA 1-5 173.40

2nd: Pace 11,900 2:02.13 Cmsiruer (H Kelly) 14 00 6.00 3 405 Salsty Be |J SUtlord) 5 00 3 600 Skip to Knight (L Fernero) 4.80

Also: BncktOffn. Mircia Q, Colonial Script, For-tunale Feus. Generosity

DAILY DOUBLE 1-3 HOMOEXACTA 3-1 153.00

3rd: Pace 12.500 2:01.27 Waverlys Plsyttoy (D Cold) 560 3 00 3 202 Hustt N Hugh (J Moisayev) 280 2401 Watbro Byrd N (H KeHy) 3,80

Also: Gun Deck. Xsnsdu. Bret Boy Osborne. BugioEXACTA 7-2 11.20

4th: Pace 11.900 2:036 Request (A Starlord) 4 80 2.60 2207 Pap Rally |M Maker) 2.40 2 201 J M Oanca (J Molsayav) .2.40

Also: Antes. Mutnocowsy Victpry, Fresh Breais.Jolly Ace. Dasquatar

EXACTA 1-7 W.005th: Pace 13,700 2:01

1 Himayair (S DeCample) 5.80 2.60 2.404 Hoot Hanover (M L a n c a s t e r )

: : 2.60 280 DEAO HEAT5 Jauras (C ManzO 2.40 2.80 DEAO HEAT

Also: Pammys Skipper, Kssh To All, Ina G. MyOne And Only, Paleface Lord

TRIFECTA 1-4-1110.40TRIFECTA 1-1-4 N7.S06th: Pace J4.600 2:01.1

4 Sunro Hanover (M Vavourakia)75.40 12.80 5.20

6 Decoy Rockaway (J Ingratsla). 5 80 4 803 Followrrw Holly in Ingrassia). 3.00. Also: Ala Ray. Sir Scarlet. Elanas Fens. Justanut.Jatfries Bye Bye

EXACTA 4-6 H U H7th: P a n M.5O0 1:69.1 *

6 HF Furie (D Dancer) 4.60 3.40 3004 Quirterbick (J Moisayav) 7.00 4.208 Brsd Mitch (C Smith) 4.20

Also Armbro BOKsr. Raging Bui A. SaHsonRegent. Abba Flight

Scr: La Rave PassaEXACTA 1-4 132.00

•th; Pan 12.200 2:02 44 Jets Volcano (J Porter) 7.60 3.80 4 008 Ethereal Star IJ Stafford) 6.20 6 805 Scent Ot Roses (R DalCimpol 7.00

Also: Playful Misty. Andys Super Ace. MimaDirect. Porchla

Scr Green Wave JammaTRIFECTA 4-4-5 MM.90»th: Pace H M O 2B0.1

7, ValoraH (J Schwmd) 2500 6.40 4.202 Bunnys With {J Stafford) 2.60 2201 Out Put Control |S DeCample) 2.00

Also: Precious Rhat. Keystona Frlu, Key Isle.FrsddM Roman

EXACTA 7-2 M2.4010th: P a n 111.000 1:61.1

8 Meadow Ro Mar (J Scorsons) 4.20 300 3203 OralU (0 Dancer) : 420 3 601 Hats Falcon (J Schvnnd) 3.80

Also: Caramora. Lues Bay. Hurricane Reel. BebaVsMnta N. American Playboy

EXACTA 1-3 123,6011th: Pace M.600 2.00.4

4 Jordeche (J Shaahan) 53.00 29.40 18.402 Over sun (W Bresnanan) 10.40 4 601 Marco Jan |H Karty) ; 4.80

Also: Tix Advisor. SHant Target. Harry Houdmi N.Our Hero. Wavi Wonder

. EXACTA 4-2 M7JJM12th: P a n 13,000 2.01

1 Happy Georgia (J Mouayev) 7.80 3 60 3.005 Mount Carmel (M Lancastar) 3 40 3 008 Mickey Babbit (J Schwmd) 5.40

Also: Departure. Buffalo Bob, Qokttn Skipper GB.Marnan Rose. Brettrask Osboma

TRIFECTA 1-1-11281.10ATTENDANCE 3.696

HANOLt 8740.350 SIM HANDLE 171,713

FOOTBALL•

DSM.lt

Tarnateee. t-5.

•JkanaBaiAt Hl.Tann.

6-5. vs. Mmnaaota. 6-5. I

UCLA, 7-3-1. vs Brigham Young, 8-4. I pm

San Diego SI. 1-1. vs lows. 6-3. I p m (ESPN)BM.fi

North Csfokna St. 6-2-1, vs Virginia Tech. 6-2-1.1 p m (USA-Mlltoul

Colorado. 6-5. vs Baylor, 8-3. 3 P m (Raycom)

Indiana. 6-5, vs. Florida Si ,6 -4 -1 .1 p.m. (TBS)

AlOnanda.Psi.SsutnamCaHomia. 7-4. vs Auburn. 9-2.12pm.

(ABC)

I m i AIM. 9-2 vi OMo Slals. 9-1. 1:30 p.m.ICBSI

Sugar atowl

Lomnans St.. 9-2. vs. Nebraska. 9-2. 3 30 pm.(ABC)

AIPasa«asia,Ca»).Alluna St. 1-1-1. vs. Michigan. 11-1. S pm

< N B C )

Oklahoma. 10-1. vs Arkansas 9-2. 8:30 pm.(NBC)

At Tampa, Art..Miami. Fla.. 11-0. vs. Perm State, 11-0.115 pm

(NBC)Jan 10

Caal-Weal Hntne ClaeslcAl San Francisco

East VS. Wast, 4 p m (MUlou)Hula Bowl

East vs. Waal. 4 pm (NBC)Japan Bawl

At Yo*arum., Japan10 p m (ESPN)

Jan. 17

AIMoUU.AIa.North vs. South. 1 pm (USA-MUlou)

Top 20 FaredHow the Associatad Preis Top Twenty collage

lootball tesms fared in bowl games:No. 1 Miami. Fla. 111-0-0) Jan 2 vs No 2 Perm

Slate at Fiesta BowlNo. 2 Psnn Slate I11-0-0) Jan. 2 vs No. 1 Miami

at Fiesta Bowl.No. 3 Oklahoma (10-1 -0) Jan. 1 va. No. I Arkansas

at Orange Bowl.No. 4 Michigan (11-1-0) Jan. 1 vs. No. 7 Arizona

Stata at Ross Bowl.No. S Louisiana Slate (9-2-0) Jan. 1 vs. No. 0

Nabrasks at Sugar Bowl.No. 0 Nebraska (9-2-0) Jan. 1 va. No. 5 Louisiana

Stata al Sugar Bowl.NO. 7 Ainona Slats (9-1-1) Jan. 1 vs. No. 4

Michigan at Rosa BowlNo. S Te«ss AIM (9-2-0) Jan 1 vs. No 11 Ohio

Stata at Cotton BowlNo. 9 Arkansas (9-2-0) Jan. 1 va. No. 3 Oklahoma

in Orange BowlNo. 10 Auburn (9-2-0) Jan. 1 va Southern

California at Citrus BowlNo. 11 Ohio Slats (9-3-0) Jan. 1 vs No. I Tanas

AIM al Cotton Bowl.No. 12 Washington (6-3-11 lost to No 13 AlaSWna

28-8 m Sun BowlNo. 11 Alabama (10-3-0) best No. 12 Wssnmgton

26-6 in Sun BowlNo. 14 Baylor (6-3-0) Dec 31 vs Colorado at

Bkiebonnat Bowl.No. IS UCLA (7-3-1) Dae. 30 va. Brigham Young

at Freedom Bowl.No 18 Arizona (9-3-0) best North Carolina 30-21

ai Aloha BowlNO. 17 Georgia (8-4-0) losi to Boston College

27-24 m Hall ol Fame Bowl.No. 18 North Carolina Slat* (8-2-1) Dec. 31 vs.

Virginia Tech at Peach BowlNo 19 Iowa (8-3-0) Dae 30 va San Diego Stata

at Holiday Bowl.No. 20 Stanford (8-4-0) lost to Clemson 27-21 at

Gator Bowl.

Saturday's Coaege ScoresCAST

Ouquesna 94. Ions 71Providence 113. Maine 67

SOUTHSouthern Csl 81. Tennessee 70. OTKentucky 65. Louisville 51

MIDWESTButter 95. Indiana SI 92, 4OTHatedsla 85. Aquinas 12Loyola, ill. 83. minors 82Minnesota 92. Tannassa Tech 69North Dakota 77. N Colorado 64SI Cloud SI S3. S. Dakota St. 77

FAR WESTWichita St 65. Fresno Pacific 54

TOURNAMENTSColonial City Classic

First RoundBemanvr w.va. 95. Onto Dominican 89

ECAC :to«dey FeeOvelFlrslRound

Georgia Tech 79. Rutgers 81St. John a 84. Virginia S6_

TWidPtacaPrinceton 71. Fresno St. 57

Kenyon Colonial City

Kanyon 71. O M 43

La Sane 102. Northeastern 85Saonad Heart HoMaV C

Fint RoundPace 63. New Haven 62

Satan State Cknaanaa TourhamerK

SrunOV•mat runfTi

SI7 M

O s m - F 0 Traadwel 21Clem—Rey WSJ 14 run (TiOem-FG Treedwes 4tStan liauesar 1 run (Swsana, MCI.)Stan Muasar H peas tnun trans IS.eensi Mat)Stan Muesli M pate mm Ems IS»eene< ktek)A-M.104. I

First downsRushes-yards

RaturnYardsComp-AW-HPuntsFumbtea-LostPanamas-YardsTime ol Possession

IS29-114

II57-230

IM IW52 11

20-40-1 12-19-19-41 S-M

New York Jaa or Kansas Cay at C1a»elano. 1210pm

Waetwigton or San Franoaco al CMcago. 4 pm'SsM«.«BV4,taW

LosAngataaorSanFranoscoatNawYomOianls.12:10 pm

Naw England al Derrvar 4 pmmm—i. JS» i i . issT

AFC and NFC Chemplonarni gamesH i l l * 21.1917

Super Bowl at Paaarlana. CaH , S p m

143-2128:01 3359

E Connecticut 84. WetttWd St 81

First RoundSt Pster s 83. Lafayette 61

BaBrVsMAL STATSJTICSRUSHINO—Stanford. Muster 17-70. DWard 1-13,

B.Morris 3-12. Enra* 5-11. Scon 1-8 Clemson.• Flagler 12-82. Flowers 14-87 Lancaster 7-11.Johnson 7-2S. Rod WHams 16-16 Ray WMma1-14.

PASSINQ-SUnlord, Enms 20-40-1-1M.Clemson. Rod Wtaatns 12-19-1-1SS.

TarwTBA

NPL M s * • . . .NEW YORK (AP) — The Keeonal Frxxoal Laagua

naxy report lor todays wad card pUyoHs asprovided by Ina league

KANSAS CITY Af NEW YORK JETS - KansasCity 08 B* Ksnney (rigrrl tnumb-tmger) is doubtful.CB Damn Cnarry (id) and I B Mam AracUa (tki). 08Sherman CosroR (sr*ie). LB 0M> Hackan |ham«r-malRBMrksPrum (kneel are questionable

Jonnfs pro picksH BFig's pro picksTODAYlawn In CAPS)

JETS 27,..'.. ~« Ksneae City 24:This is «oam»m«t will b« lost rathar than

woo. Cntrti v * laal m tru tMgu* in OITSXIMbut akjhrh in dalanse Jaa have juppao to11th In ottant* and ara t*<) lor Mth Ind*f*nH. All bod thing* hava to end,including Jets' losing streakWASHINQTOM 20, LA. Rama 17:

The Rams a n too ona-dimanatonal Iooutwit sly RedsHlna. L.A. is tilth In defense;Washington la tilth in otlense May Dondown to battle between Rams' ErieDickerson and Redskins George Rogers

Laat weak: 10-4 (Never can la« who ha a

UnaT regular elsaaon: 1SS-U-2 (.714).

saam m CAPS)TODAY

in • ,; ;. ;,, Chiefs 17Chiefs hava no ottanaa to speak ol... win

on special teams, a Jet strength Pat RyanIt not long-tarm answer, but can spark NowYorkers.. If Jets turn ban over three ormore times, may win lota.Rama 21 REDSKIN* M

Skint lost confidence in Giant gama.haven't regained.. Dtckerson will have ao-t o day, but Everett will surprise... Ramoalanta fa surprisingly suspect lately, butwill hava enough today... If Scnroadarcompletes 20 pastes. Skins will romp.Last wee*: 11-3. Final regular season1S4-SC-2.

1987 NFL ScheduleBy The Associated Frees

The home and away matchups for the 1907National Football Laagua season according to meleague a ecnedme formula mawutao lor the 1978season. The dales lor the games are announced mthe Spring:AMMICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

EAST

Home: Naw York Jets. Naw England. Miami.Indianspolii, Houston. Denver. NY. Giants. Washing-ton.

Away: Naw England. New York Jets. Miami.Indianapolis, Cleveland. Los Angelas Haiders, Dalai.Philadelphia

Home: New York Jeii. New England. Miami.Buffalo, Cincinnati. Houston, San Diego. Tampa Bay.

Away: Naw York Jets. New England. Miami.Buffalo, Cleveland. Pittsburgh, San Diego. SI. Lours

Home: New York Jets. New England. Buffalo.Indianapolis. Pittsburgh. Kansas City, New YorkGiants. Washington.

Away: New York Jets, New England. Buffalo.Indianapolis. Cincinnati. Seattle. Dasai, PNIadalpnle.

Haw EnglandHome: New York Jets. Miami. Butlelo. In-

dianapolis, Cleveland. Los Angeles Raiders. Dalas,PltiladalpNa.

Away: Naw York Jets. Miami. BuHak). Indianapoks.Houston. Denver, New York Giants. Washington

Mass Vent M eHome: New England. Miami. Buffalo, mrjanapolls.

Cincinnati, Seattle. Daaae. PhiiadespOa.Away: New England. Miami, Buffalo. Indianapolis.

Pittsburgh. Kansas City. H Y Giants. Washington

Ctumml.Home: Cleveland. Pittsburgh. Houston. Miami.

Kansas City. San Diego. New Orleans. San Fran-daoo.

Away: Cleveland. Pittsburgh. Houston. New YorkJets. Seattle. Indianapolis. Atlanta. Los Angelas

Home: Cmcmnau. Pittsburgh, Houston, Buffalo.Denver. Indasnepoea, Atlanta, Los Angeles Rama.

Away: OnCMiaal. Prttsburgh. I Huston. Naw Eng-land, Los Angeles Haiders. San O»go. New Orleans.San Francisco

Home: Cleveland. Cincinnati. Pittsburgh, NawEngland. Los Angeles Raiders. San Diego. Atlanta,Los Angelas Rama.

Away: Cleveland. Cincinnati. Pittsburgh. Buffalo.Denver, mdianapoks. New Orleans. San Francisco

Home: Cleveland. Cincinnati. Houston, Naw YorkJets. Saama, Indianapolis. New Orteana. San Fran-cisco

Away: Cleveland. Cincinnati. Houston. Miam.Kansas City, San Diego, Atlanta, Loa Angelas Rams

Home: Kansas City. Seattle. Los Angelas Raiders.Ssn Diego. New England, Houiion. Chicago. Detroit

Away: Kansas City. Seattle. Loa Angeles Raiders.San Diego, Buffalo. Cleveland. Green Bay. M«-nesota.

KansaaCltyV Home Denver. Saama. Los Angeles Raiders. SanDiego. Naw York Jets, Prttsburgh, Green Bay.Minnesota,

Away: Denver. Seattle. Los Angeles Raiders. SanDiego. Miam. Cincinnati, Chicago, Dstron.

U s Anailss RaidersHome: Denver, Kansas City. Seattle. San Diego.

Buffalo. Cleveland. Chicago. Detroit.Away: Denver. Kansas City. Seattle. San Diego.

Naw England, Houston. Green Bay. MinnesotaSan Diego

Home: Denver, Kansas City, Seattle. Los AngelesRsidsrs. Cleveland. Pittsburgh, nrjanapoaa, St.Lours.

Awsy. Denver. Kansas City. Seattle. Los AngelesRaiders. Cincinnati. Houston. Indianapolis. Tampa-Bay.

Home: Denver, Kansas City, Los Angeles Ratftre.San Diego. Miami. Cincinnati. Green Bay. Minnesota.

Away: Denver, Kansas City. Los Angeles Raiders

San Diego. New York Jets, Pittsburgh, Chicago.Detroit

NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCEEAST

Home: Naw York Gianis Washington. Philadelphia.St. Louis, Minnesota. Atlanta, Buffalo. Miami .

Away: Naw York Giants. Washington. Philadelphia.SI Lous. Dstron. Los Angelas Rams. Naw England.Naw York Jets.

Naw Yore. OsamaHome: Washington. Dallas. Philadelphia. St Louis.

Green Bay. San Francisco. New England. Naw YorkJets.

Away: Washington. Dallas. Philadelphia. St. LouisChicago. New Orteans Buffalo. Miami

Home: Newlvork Giants. Wasnmgion. Dallas, StLouis. Chicago. New Orleans. Butlsio. Miami

Away: New York Giants, Washington. Dallas. SiLouis, Green Bay, San Francisco. Naw England. NewYork Jets

SI LoutsHome: New York Giants. Washington, Dasas.

Pnnadelpriia, Los Angeles Rams, Naw Orleans,Tampa Bay. Indianapolis

Away: Naw York Giants. Washington. Dallas,Philadelphia. San Francisco. Atlanta. Tampa Bay.San Diego

Home: New York Giants. Dasas. Philadelphia. StLouis. Detroit. Los Angelas Rams. Naw England.Naw York Jets.

Away: New York Giants. Dallas. Philadelphia. StLouis. Minnesota. Atlanta. Buffalo. Miam.

CENTRAL

Home: Minnesota. Detroit. Green Bay. Tampa Bay.Naw York Giants. New Orleans. Kansas City. Seattle

Away: Minnesota. Detroit. Green Bay. Tampa Bay.Philadelphia. San Franoaco. Denver. Los AngelesRaiders

Home: Chicago. Minnesota, Green Bay TampaBay. Dates. Los Angeles Rama. Kansas City. Seats*.

Away: Chicago. Minnesota. Green Bay. TampaBay. Washington. Atlanta. Denver. Los AngelesBay. WeRaiders

Q»en BayHome: Chicago, Minnesota. Detroit. Tampa Bay.

Ptttdslphta. San Francisco. Denver. Los AngelesRaiders

Away. Chicago, Minnesota. Detroit, Tampa Bey.Naw York Giants. N«w Orleans. Kansas City. Seattle

Home: Chicago. Detroit. Green Bay. Tampa Bay.Washington, Atlanta. Denver. Los Angeles Haiders

Away. Chicago. Detroit. Green Bay. Tampa Bay.Dallas. Loa Angeles Rams. Kansas City. Seattle

Tampa BayHome: Chicago. Minnesota, Detroit. Green Bay

San Francisco. Atlanta. St. Louis. San DiegoAway: Chicago. Minnesota. Detroit. Green Bay.

Los Angeles Rams. Naw Orleans, St Louis. In-dianapolis

WEST

Home: San Franctsoo. Los Angeles Rams NewOrieens. Washington. Detroit. St. Louis. Cincinnati.Pittsburgh.

Away San Francisco, Los Angeles Rams NewOrleans. Dallas. Minnesota. Tampa Bay, Cleveland.

Lee Anjslaa Rama' Home: San Francisco. Atlsnta. Naw Orleans.Dasas. Minnesota. Tampa Bay, Cincinnati. Pit-tsburgh. '

Away: San Francisco. Atlanta Naw Orleans,wssnmgton. Detroit. St. Lours. Cleveland. Houston.

New Orteana- Home. San Francisco. Los Angeles Hams. AtJsnta.New York Giants. Green Bay. Tampa Bay. Cleveland.Houston.

Away San Francisco. Los Angeles Rams. Atlanta.Philadelphia, Chicago, St. Lous. Cincinnati. Prt-tsburgh

San FranciscoHome: Los Angelas Rams. Atlanta. New Orleans

Philadelphia. Chicago. St. Lours. Cleveland. HoustonAvray Los Angelas Rams. Atlanta. Naw Orleans

New York Giants. Green Bay. Tampa Bay. CincinnatiPittsburgh.

E_L_W

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WE OFFER MORE...BECAUSE WE HAVE MORE TO OFFER!

f D The Sunday Register SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28,1986

Deadline set for Hall of Fame nominationsJVlarasco Women's Tournament nearsI There's a deadline manybowlers are not officially made•ware of. It has to do with certainpeople who may be entitled to aspecial type of recognition —some for outstanding contribu-tions or service to the game ofbowling, and others for superiorperformance on the lanes in re-cognition af their skill and abilityover the years.

I make reference to the Mon-mouth County Bowling Hall ofFame that has opened the doorsfor several men and women whohave been given that special typeof recognition.

The important point I want toget across is that the deadline isJanuary of each year for thesubmission of nominees to beconsidered. That time period is notvery well advertised, but it is sowritten in the MCBH/F bylaws.The Monmouth County BowlingAssociation adopted a set ofbylaws back in 1962.

These same bylaws were re-quested by the Monmouth CountyWomen's Bowling Association in1978 and adopted a year later sothat special recognition could beaccorded to those women whohave served or bowled their way

creditable prominence.to

LukeForrest

These bylaws are what gives theHall of Fame Board the guidelinesto review the credits of eachindividual as to the worthiness oftheir contributions and ac-complishments related to theiractivities in Monmouth Countyonly. Other credits outside thisarea, including those in State andNational, are not by themselvesathe primary considerations, butare considered as supporting fac-tors.

Anyone can submit a candidatefor nomination to the MCBH/F.Male candidates should bedirected to William Heggie, whilefemale candidates should bedirected to Gloria Scott. These twopeople are the chairpersons of theHall of Fame Board for theirrespective organizations. These

committees act as screening com-mittees and will weigh the creditsof each individual and check thedetails for proper verification ofthe facts submitted. Those withsubstantial credits will be broughtbefore the entire board for elec-tion where 76 percent of thedirectors present and voting,providing a quorum exists, isnecessary for election to the Hallof Fame.

The final induction ceremoniesare held at a place to be an-nounced. Usually the first Fridayin August is the date set for thisvery special bowling event.

Not all local board members areas familiar with the Hall of Famebylaws and procedure policies asperhaps they should be. However,it would be proper to contact anylocal bowling association officer ifanyone has knowledge of a can-didate believed to be worthy ofconsideration. Help can be sup-plied in preparing a resume.

Hall of Fame status is somethingspecial and should not be grantedunless the high standards are met.Perhaps the time will come whenno candidates meet the qualifica-tions required. That shouldn'tmean the standards should belowered to accommodate someone

who is popular and well-liked bythe committee members but lacksthe required credits. In thosecases, no-one should be inducted.

It was in 1964 that the first Hallof Fame ceremonies were held. Atthat time 20 were inducted ascharter members and they were:James Acerra, Millard Aumack,Nordy Aschettino, Edward J.Bahr, Sr., Ellsworth Barker,Raymond A. Broeder, Lester Clay-ton, Harold Denegar, Dan Dillione,Lewis Hendricks, J. StanleyHerbert, Joseph Menzzopane, Sr.,Fred Morris, George Moser, Rich-ard Neu, James Perri, Reek To-maino, Joseph Tomaino, EdmundThompson, Rudolph Zipper.

Since then the number hasgrown to a total of 52 for eithermeritorious service or bowlingachievement.

Rightfully, that number lists 33for superior performance and 19for meritorious service.

Those added over the years are:Sid Baum, Fiore Corcione, KennethDaniels, Dave Egbert, Sr., DanteFederici, Frank Frederici, Jr., SamFiore, George Haydick, WilliamHeggie, Edwin Karlbon, DominicLafayette, Edward Matuszewski,Nicholas J. Merli, John J. Paris,

Thomas Paris, Joseph Huffini,Walter Salmon, Gino Straniero,Tex Tomaino, William Walker, Sr.,Dan Whitehurst.

Also Paul A. Albrecht, Sr.,Charles H. Bryde, John Caliendo,George F. Dillon, JosephEmanuele, Luke Forrest, JohnGiles, Harold Lubitz, ErnestLudwig, Anthony B. Mattice andJoseph Simeone.

In 1979 Amy Van Vliet was thefirst woman inducted into theMCBH/F. In the following yearsothers have been honored, such as:Lina Wood, Edna Morson, MaeSasse, Mary Stout, Jean Allen, AnnTighe, Dorothy Kenner, DorothyVan Der Hoef and Gladys J.Wright.

If there is anyone out there inour local area who wants tosubmit a name believed to beworthy of consideration for suchan honor make contact with one ofthe association officials or makecontact with this writer and I willgive uou an assist.

Resumes for this coming yearmust be submitted by January.

ROSE MARASCO MemorialTournament will hold its 8th an-nual event this year again at

Harmony Bowl. The entry closingdate Is Jan. 18.

The late Rose Marasco startedthis tournament in 1980 and itproved to be- a very popularbowling event for four-playerwomen's teams. Each year it hasgrown and offers the bowlers oneof the best prize lists in com-parison to other local events.Entry fee is $12 per player with$7.15 going toward prizes.

Entry forms are now availableat all local establishments. How-ever, a call to Harmony Bowl671-2100 will secure a reser-vation spot. The tournament runsSaturdays Jan 31 and Feb7.Squadtimes are 1 p.m. or 4 p.m.

A new rule this year permitsplayers to enter on more than oneteam and cash on both providingthe team has at least two differentplayers on the four-player team.

The 100 percent handicap al-lows all bowlers to take a shot atthe championship.

Handicaps are based on a 700team scratch figure.

For reservations or help, contacttournament manager BettyWollentin at 7875008 or PatHouseholder at 938-5822 or Har-mony Bowl.

BOWLING SUMMARIESMONDAY NITE BUSINESSMEN'S LEAGUE

MIDOIETOWN LANES1 Randy Jacques . .2 Pat Weuel3 Bill Walhef Jr4 Dom Farro5 Jonn 1 D'k6 Mika Cnevalier7 Rick Oppenti*m8 Tom Gowen9 Jim Foicnem10 Chuck Hoherijiem11 Chuck K,.,',»,12 Tony Cogliano13 Walt Mawai Jr14 Jonn catio«15 Jack Long16 John Poyner1

17 Fted Leone18 Al van vie!IS Bill Taylor20 Art Qarvey21 Gene Hohensiem22 Ira Romano .23 Jeff Romano24 Pele Nedostupt i Jell Kluck26 Mark Fior.llo . . .27 Jim UcConnell28 Ron Wayne

279-243-206180-236-290207-258-223259-201-203194-247-217235-202-221191-23J-233189-245-221218-205-232161-233-234

[.. 228-226-194258-149-234224-215-196249-198-166212-213-207195-239-194177-215-230223-201-195230-225-161200-201-214197-162-236157-232-225186-234-191202-212-193211-201-191246-159-195175-231-196193-181-246

FRIDAY NITE MISFITSMI0DLET0WN LANES

1 Dan Trezta Sr2 Dan Trezza Jr3 Chuck Honenalein..;...;.4 EMI Walker Jr5 Patricia Poyner

216-213-196199-200-203

.... 174-244-163194-195-211212-169-172

RED BANK FIREMEN'S LOOPRED BANK LAMES

1 Jell ward2 John Woods3 Frank Reedy Jr.4 Ducky Moore .5 Charles Van Curen6 BJI Brandow

. .., 203 188-1BI158-210-189182-199-174157-220-177211-194-149166-197-160

-- 72B~ 706- 6 8 8- -663- 658- 6 5 8— 657— 655- 6 5 5- - 646— 646-^641- 6 3 7- -63S-632

- 626- 622- 619— 616— 615— 615— 614- 6 1 3— 607— 603- 6 0 2- 6 0 2- 6 0 0

- 6 2 7- 6 0 2- 6 0 1— 600- 5 7 3

- 5 7 2- 5 5 7- 5 5 7- 5 5 4- S 5 4- 5 4 5

7 Kant Slevemon 161-176-169 — 5268 Mike Wright 167-168-189 — 5249 Mike Paone 146-204-171 — 52110 John Swegtr 157-157-199 — 51311 Doc Sab.a 146-199-147 — 51212 Bob Tanaey 177-162-171 - 51013 Rich Annumi 172-145-187 — 50414 Larry Farley 155-190-159 — 50415 John Parcels 210-156-136 — 502

SHEETS COtENTINO CLASSICASauRY LANES

1 Randy Jacques..2 Dom Farro3 Dennis Robertson4 Sonny Orechio5 Ralph Ayles6 John McCeuslin7 Pete Osmulaki8 Dean While9 Allen Kinsley10 Bob Yager11 John Frontera12 Cheriie Dukes.13 Fiore Corcione .14 Mike Ribecca .15 Bob Jones

264-244-220 - 728191-279-236 - 706234-182-248 — 664263-217-169 — 649219-216-203 - 640194-237-205-636238199-197 — 634202-225-201 - 626176-205-240-621200-225-167 — 612203-184-216 — 603168-217-194 — 599204-162-229 - 595191-205-197 — 593187-170-234 — 591

Paul AlbreCht Jr (224) — Ralph Cintron (221) —JeH Villee (2211 — Rick Polnemut (214) — DickLubrich (221) - - Armand Federici Jr. (210-207) —Rich Merritt (231) — Ron Masella (210) — Bill Tanko1206-200) — Joe Ribecca (211).

COSENTINO CLASSIC AVERAGE LEADERS1 Steve Emanuele '. 2132 Ralph Aytas 2083 Bill Seward 2074 Diim Farro 2045 Ray Vogal . 2026 Jen Mead 2017 Randy Jacques 200

MIKE DECESAHE CLASSICMONMOUTH LANES

1 Phi PalumDO 221-253-211 — 6652 Sorry Orechio 245-214-179 — 6383 Fore Corcione 209-236-193-6364 Gene DeFalco 235-166-213 — 636

5 Eo Hennelly6 Mike Ribecca .7 Gene Dillon Sr6 John stewan ...9 Jim Moore10 Jim Poland .11 Bill Cooke12 Mark Mihaly13 Joa Ribecca14 Ralph Cintron .15 Jo* Mazza

115-237-170 — 8221204-223-194-821

.. 188 200-227 — 815174-225-213 - - 812187-179-238 — 804190-182-229 - 801201-188-211 — 600202-213-189 — 599

..... 216-171-208-595223-179-192 - 594205-168-217 — 590

Orleo D Amb.ni 12101 - - Bob Jasperson (221) —Don Pritscn (248) — Len Todd ( 201-201) — HankLach 12281 - Jim Lepley (225) - Bob Yeger |228)— Emil Tvrdik (212-204) — Dick Pieper (233-202) -- Jim Paustian 1210)

DECESARE CLASSIC AVERAGE LEADERS1 Armand Federici Jr ... 1932 Sonny Orechio 1933 Tom Ctushotm 1924 Ralph Cintron 1925 Gene Dillon Sr 191

RED BANK BUSINESSMEN'S LEAOUERED SANK LANES

1 Len Morgan 246-190-249 - 6652 J,m Conaray 213-188-235 - 6363 Jo* Prunyi 213-190-223 — 6264 Ken While 243-188-191 — 6225 Jack Connors 241-169-191 — 6216 Many Kadan 257-180-175 — 6127 Phil Vales* Jr 222-180-201 — 8038 Rich Byerj 197-230-173 - 600

1 John Chtmenti2 Ken McLeod3 BOO Clark4 Mike Pasano5 Guy Simpson6 Mark Derasmo

226-244-232 — 702173-224-254 - 651166-213-237 - 636192-175-246-613

166-218-218 — 604225-161-194—600

Don Corcione (204) — Kevin Harrington (235) - -Tom McLaren (214) — BHt Sencfc (212) — Day*Gordon (220) - - Andy Tesauro (211) — Bob Smith(204) — Moe Qaskins (205-201) — Bob Orujs (211)— Jo* ParoenM (2121 — Pet* Pflsnr (2151 — Cal

Ddoatch (209-208) - - Tom Graham (200) — LouPerry 1203) — Tom Dove I 210) — Tim J*nks (211)— Fred Reiser (202) - - Roy Conegano(201) — GlenCorregano (225) - - John Desideno (300) — TomMuessig (214) — Bob Milttr Jr. | 201-200) - - JohnNielsen (204) - - E d Scmndler (224) — Larry Rousell1206) -Jo* Kelly (205)

RUMSON BUSINESSMEN'SMIOOLETOWN LAMES

1 BrxxJys 882 Balland Electric 673 Hoist Bearing .' 654 Eatontown TV 605 Middletown Bikes 586 Hellrich S Son Bus Co 557 Vail Tavern 528 Rumson Buy-Rit* 499 Antonio s Food : 4410 Keansburg Moos* Lodge 35

RUMSON BUSINESSMEN'S AVERAGE LEAOERS1 Rich Mak) 1962 Rich Balland 1893 Gene Hohenitem 1864 Robert Johnson 1665JohnColson 1616 Rsy H*rg*nrotn*r 160

7 Bob Balland 1608 John Lombard! 160

< MikeDKtZ .'2 Joe Tyler3 Netli Naiano4 Larry Miranda „5 Brian MOSS6 Bob Bernardo :7 Drew Poyner8 Don Miwischauer9 Bryan Baccaro10 Bill Hingston11 Tom fleck12 J*rry MaUy :...13 John Dzikowicj14 Bob Ciecierski15 Mike Merritt16 Paul Vonspreckeisen..

George Gugliemelli 1205)

187-212-222227-214-175203-216-190192-207-185176-168-195182-196-194151-189-205180-195-166193-194-155180-137-225181-166-191159-178-202

. 163-164 190182-162-171163-156-191162-205-164

- - 6 2 I- 6 1 6- 6 0 9- -584— 659- 5 5 4- 5 4 5— 543— 542- 5 4 2- - 540— 539- 5 3 7- 5 3 5— 532- 5 3 1

MONMOUTH COUNTY WOMEN'S MAJORHARMONY BOWL

1 Flo Kangos 207-164-178 — 5692 Sue Brenneman 160-201-196 — 5573MaryN*bus 211-162-155 — 5464 Ailene EMS 163 177 186 — 5265 Lil VanDeWalker 150-166-183 — 5196 Emily Reirwcke 170-163-162 — SIS7 Donna P*rotti 172-169-166 — 509BGenDailey 165-161-162-5069 Marion Moor* 160-181-166 — 50710 Terry Grom 165-148-168 — 501

M MIXED — STRATHMORE LNSRUMSON BUSINESSMEN'S WEEKS TOP SCORES1 Gene Hohenstem . .2 Al Colson3 Rich Mak)4 Paul Castles5 John Colson6 Carl Hairncri7 Robert Johnson..8 GUnn HendrickB9 Don Knapp10 PWer Hendricks11 Jay Colson12 Jim Heddan i

216-196-173 -186-217-174 -162-177-194 -174-159-219-220-152-168 -193-164-157 -199-145-163-191-175-157 -137-149-231 -163-179-160 -166-162-157 -133-186-187 -

- 585-577- 553- 552-540-534- 527- 523-517-512-507- 506

MONMOUTH COUNTY CATHOLIC LEAOUEHARMONY BOWL

1 BudBoyd2 Mike Maltzman3 Dal* Baldwin4 Pat* Francesconi5 Sieve Schumacher6 Harry Laighton7 Bob Smith8 KarcJ DavH '9 Jan LaidlONnlNappi11 Mane Straniero12 Tom S*bor13 Dusty Baldwin14 Dennis Kolun15 Sue Carlson16 Angelo DsLaCruz

150-190-276 -145-244-204 -173-212-202 —204-181-193 —151-223-197 -214-174-1)1 - -161-163-205-173-174-221 —166-191-181 —143-224-191 —163-167;2O2 - -234-138-176 -ISO 180-188 .-166-179-202 - -195-160-172-162-209-174 —

61859358757657156956956S560556652546548547547545

178-164-201 -219-138-180 -196-165-166-179-169-177 -

543- 537

529- 525

160-155 18? - 53190-177-152 -153-190-172 -160-188-167 -157-162-176 -182-179-150-170-159-174 -190-158-152 -

519- 615- 515

515- 511- 502- 500

17 Lisa Barbolini18 Evan VanderDHI19 Oa»e Sharkey Jr20 Bryan Silvefman21 Joe Delgandio22 Victor Complioo23 Linda Schumacher24 Nick Bumbico.25 Paul Presn26 Aureo DeLaCruz27 Bob Crow*28 Willie James

• 10 SCRATCH — HWY 36 LNS1 Gene Yotke Sr 175-279-175— 6292 Gil Davis 160 225-214 — 6193 John Spotlke 162 194-227 - 603

LIBERATED LADIES — HWY 35 LNS1 Evelyn Haelner 187 213-166 - 566

HWY IS ALLEY CATS1 Joyc* Scisco 193-168-184 - 565

35 PLUS 5 - HWY 16 LNS1 Maureen Spisak 155-199-202 - 5562 Rose Noms 158-190-201 - 5493 Dane Haines 185-180-166 - 5334 Rulh Meisenbacher 169-190-170 — 529

SUNDAY MIXED LATE — HWY 36 LNS1 FloAromando 111-201-244 — 626

SOUAN MIXED — HWY 36 LNS1 Rick Potwmus 200-193-214 — 6072 Rose Lach 155-186-169 — 512

35 MONDAY MIXED — HWY IS INS1 Nancy FWcher 200-177-199 - 5762 Carol Blanc 171-211-164 — 5463 Nancy Burke 189-177-160 — 526

BRIELLE PONTIAC — HWY 36 LNS1 Dona B>own 162-172-162 - 536

NITENOALES — HWY 36 LNS1 FloAromando 157-159-242 - 5(62 Claudia DressUr 147-234-161 - 5 4 23 Grace Krumtfi 1S2-I6B 190 - 540

SHORE BUILDERS - HWY U LNtt Tom Bun) . , 242-199-190 - 636

MASELLA CONSTRUCTION CLASSIC1 SUM Emanuel* 227-113-205-211 - - 6562 Bill Bordner 201-192-222-194 - 6093 Vine* Detmaeitro 227 210 225-138 — 600

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVER

PINNING HIM DOWN — St. John Vianney wrestler John Emery attempts to pin Rumson-FairHaven's Craig Cannon during 128-pound competition in the Holmdel Christmas WrestlingTournament yesterday.

Lawser

Falk,Continued from Page 1D

guilty as the shady recruiters.They are looking for all they canget.

Maybe the kid should initiatethe recruiting process instead ofthe colleges. That's what all otherstudents have to do, isn't it? Thereis nothing more ridiculous than

the sight of a supposedly matureadult on his knees begging a 17 or18-year-old to take his athletictalents to deal old Tech.

So we say goodbye to a 1986which left us with pretty much thesame problems we had when itentered. Another year has goneby, and now we have to face the

labor and television problemswhich will surface in 1987, too.

But it has been fun, hasn't it?For the good things, we can bethankful.

TO ALL, A PEACEFUL 1987.May your team wear the crownnext year.

Czyz sets up light heavyweight 'want' listWEST ORANGE, N.J. (AP) — Bobby Czyz has been

the International Boxing Federation light heavy-weight champion for less than four months and he's

Iready put together an "I want you list."•Headlining it are World Boxing Association cham-

• Marvin Johnson, World Boxing Council cham-Dennis Andries and the newest and probably

biggest name in the 176-pound class, Tommylit Man" Hearns."I want to be a fighting champion," said the 24-

year-old Czyz on Friday night after retaining his IBFtitle with a first-round knockout of David Sears. "Iwant to litjiit everybody on the top 10. I want to

unify the title."

Czyz's first title defense lasted 61 seconds. Adevastating right to the head 30 seconds into theround started Sears on the road to the canvas.

Promoter Carlo Dee has lined up a second defensefor Czyz, a Feb. 21 fight with North AmericanSlm n g , , J

F e d e r a t i o n " g h t heavyweight championWillie Edwards."Edwards is a good fighter," said Czyz. "A lot of

people just haven't given him the chance."Czyz, of Wanaque, N.J., didn't give Sears, of New

York, much of a chance.

Continued from Page. 1Dmuch as possible. Mary teaches allweek and I have school, so it'sgoing to be tough on both of us fora while. The potential reward ismore than worth it. How manychances does one get to try out forthe Olympics? If we're successful,as we think we will In-, we couldpossibly bring home a goldmedal."

Lawser has been sailing sincewhe was 8. Her entire family,mother Sarah, father John andsister Amy, sails Albacores, but ithas been in the Laser that she hasmade her reputation. In just thepast year, she took first in the U.S.Yacht Racing Association single-handeds at Seattle, fifth in theWorld Championships at Van-couver, and 10th in the Single-handed Open at San Franciscoalthough she was the only womanracing against an all-male field.

Also, she was the crew for sisterAmy, 16, when they won theNorth American Albacore Cham-pionships at Cambridge, Md. Law-ser usually sails out of MonmouthBoat Club when she isn't on theroad.

"The Olympics are a goal now,"

she explained, "but it didn't reallystart as a dream. It's just a bigregatta, like all the other regattas,like the Worlds. It's harder to getto the Olympics though because ofthe limitations.' This will be thefirst year for a separate divisionfor women, and that's why it's sobig."

As far as Lawser knows, nowoman has ever sailed' for theUnited States in the Olympics. Yet,there have been women on crewsfrom other nations. She thinksthat the 470 is the ideal boat forwomen to sail in that kind ofcompetition.

"Women really can't sail againstmen in singlehanded competition,"she said, recalling her own ex-periences in San Francisco. "We'rejust not strong enough. The Finn isthe only singlehanded boat in thegames, and you have to be about180 pounds to sail them rightbecause they have a bigger sail."

Lawser and Brigden are current-ly practicing in an old boat buthope to obtain a new boat and aslightly-used boat next year.Their plans call for trips to com-petitions in Florida, California,Canada and Germany, and if allgoes right, the pre-Olympic Regat-ta in Pusan, where the sailing

events in the 1988 games will bestaged.

Obviously, trying to make it asan Olympic sailor is expensive.Lawser estimates that it may costthe pair close to $100,000 beyondany funding they will receive fromthe U.S. Olympic committee. Theequipment is expensive, and so isthe transportation for the boatsand crew to the major regattas.

Therefore, local organizationsand individuals can help send thetwo ladies on their way to SouthKorea with tax free donations.Those who are interested in seeingMonmouth County represented inthe trials and, hopefully, theOlympics can send checks madeout to the U.S. Navy SailingFoundation to Susan Lawser at 7Stevens Drive, Holmdel, N.J.,07733.

The county has pitched in. tohelp other local athletes in thepast but perhaps none of those hasever faced the huge budget de-manded of Lawser and Brigden.

"We're talking about a lot ofmoney, just to get to the final cutnext. December," Lawser said.

Only two women will representthe U.S. in those 470 races. Itwould be nice if one were fromMonmouth County.

Late goal ties Penguins, IslesPITTSBURGH (AP) — Dan

Quinn scored with 28 seconds leftin regulation time to give thePittsburgh Penguins, playing theirfourth consecutive overtime game,a 3-3 NHL tie with the New YorkIslanders last night.

The Penguins pulled goalie Rob-erto Romano in the final minute ofthe third period and forced afaceoff in the Islanders zone.Quinn, unchecked at the rightcorner of the net, banged in CraigSimpson's rebound.

The Islanders took a 3-1 leadwith three second-period goals,but Pittsburgh's Willy Lindstromtrimmed the lead with a score at3:31 of the final period. Lindstromcarried the puck out of the leftcorner and swept a 16-footbackhander past goalie KellyHrudey.

Pittsburgh is 0-4-3 in its lastseven games and 2-8-6 in its last16 games.

Mike Bossy opened the NewYork scoring at 8:48 of the firstperiod, powering a slapshot pastRomano from the top of the rightfaceoff circle. Bossy took a pass

NHLfrom Denis Potvin at center ice,broke down the right side andbanked a shot off the left post forhis 23rd goal and a 1-1 tie.

Duane Sutter put the Islandersahead at 10:16, pushing in arebound of a Pat LaFonta'ine shotthat Romano had stopped.

Ken Morrow scored his first goalin 106 games at 18:43, blasting aslapshot from the left point asBrent Sutter created a screen infront of the net. It was Morrow'sfirst goal since March 16, 1986.

Randy Hillier scored his first ofthe year for Pittsburgh at 11:26 ofthe opening period.

Devils 2, Nordiqueg 2QUEBEC — Michel Goulet's goal

with just over two minutes left inthe third period lifted the QuebecNordiques to a tie with the NewJersey Devils in NHL play lastnight.

Goulet took a pass from rookie

Jason Lafreniere and beat NewJersey goalie Alain Chevrier witha low shot at 17:68.

Aaron Broten and Mark Johnsonhad scored third-period goals 66seconds apart to put the Devilsahead 2-1 with just 13 minutesremaining In the period.

New Jersey trailed 1-0 whenBroten deflected a pass fromteammate John MacLean pastgoalie Clint Malarchuk at 6:03 ofthe third session. Johnson gavethe Devils the lead at 6:68 when heskated in from the left faceoffcircle and snapped a 16-foot wristshot past Malarchuk.

Brent Ashton scored Quebec'sother goal at 10:46 of the secondperiod. Ashton carried the puckover the Devils' blue line, faked adrop pass and fired a 20-footslapshot past Chevrier for his 21stgoal of the season.

Malarchuk robbed MacLean inovertime with a diving save topreserve the tie, which left NewJersey winless in Its last six roadgames.

Chevrier made 38 saves for theDevils.

I

REAL ESTATE ESUNDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1986

Real Estate News

Sales associates attend conventionSHREWSBURY — Judy

Martinelly, Lydia Gradone andPatricia Duffle, owners of Bro-kers 3 Realtors, recently at-tended the New Jersey As-sociation of Realtors 70th An-nual Convention in AtlanticCity.

Among the many well-known names in real estate-circles was Danielle Kennedy,San Clemente, Calif., a $6-million-producer who spoke on"Listing and Selling as Past asYou Can." A New Jerseyan,Ellie Nice, Fair Lawn, con-ducted a workshop on "IsManagement For You?" and

Steve Brown, Atlanta, Ga., ac-centuated the importance ofself-confidence In his talk ti-tled, "Successful SellingStrategies."

Broker 3 Realtors is a local,full-service real estate firmwith offices in Shrewsbury andRumson. Complete marketingprograms, a relocation depart-ment and new homes divisionare a few examples of thespecial services Brokers 3 of-fers to their clients and cus-tomers transacting business inresidential, commercial and In-dustrial real estate in Mon-mouth County.

Brower joins Southern Mortgage staffEATONTOWN — Curt P.

Brower has been added to thegrowing staff of SouthernMortgage Associates.

Brower will serve as a resi-dential loan officer/accountexecutive.

Brower will be responsiblefor solicitation of builders,brokers and realtors, origina-tion of mortgage loan appli-cations and their overall out-come. The Beachwood residentis a graduate' of Toms River

High School and was a market-ing major at Ocean CountyCollege in Toms River.

Southern Mortgage As-s o c i a t e s is a majormetropolitan area financial in-stitution with a current annualvolume of around $200 million,with projected growth to $400million by the end of next year.The firm operates five branchoffices in Long Island andupstate New York in additionto its Eatontown headquarters.

Moss becomes Brokers 3 associateSHREWSBURY — Tina

Dente Moss has joined Brokers3 Realtors as a full-time salesassociate in the firm's officehere.

Moss is a member of theMonmouth County Board ofRealtors and the Multiple List-ing Service. An experiencedprofessional in MonmouthCounty real estate, Mossspecializes in single-familyresidential home sales and

marketing.A former customer service

representative, Moss attendedthe University of Miami andBrookdale Community College.She has also received educa-tion from the Burrard InletBible Institute in British Col-umbia, Canada.

Moss lives in Long1 Branchwith her husband, Jim, andtheir daughter, Leigh.

Nilson part of panel discussionSHREWSBURY — Gloria

Nilson, president of GloriaNilson Realtors, recently ad-dressed area women interestedin starting their own busi-nesses as part of a paneldiscussion titled, "Have YouEver Dreamed of Owning YourOwn. Business?"

The discussion, which fea-tured four successful areabusinesswomen, was held Nov.24 and was sponsored by theMonmouth County EasternBranch Library.

Nilson described thechallenges of businessownership as exhilarating,stimulating and exciting, butstressed the enormous com-mitment involved. "A newbusiness needs your attentionat all hours of the day andnight," Nilson explained. ".Beprepared to make your busi-ness your life's work instead o fjust work."

Nilson credited her own suc-cess to. hard work, a willing-ness to accept challenge ariastrong support. "It's extremelyimportant to surround yourselfwith the best team possible —and you should start right athome," she advised. "If yourfamily isn't on your side, you'llhave two battles to fight — oneat home and one on the job."

Nilson added that advicefrom experts could be helpful,but urged prospective businessowners to rely- on their ex-perience and common sense inmaking final judgements.Stressing the importance ofgood planning, Nilson cau-tioned her audience to beprepared for the unexpected:"Everything costs more, takes

Gloria Nilson

longer and is more complicatedthan you could possibly im-agine."

Nilson also counseledlisteners to 'avoid the temp-tation of delegating too muchresponsibility as a businessgrows. "The only constant in asuccessful business is change;"Nilson said. "So you have tostay personally involved withthe details."

The panel discussion was'organized by Lorie Sadwith,Eastern Branch reference li-brarian. Other panel speakersincluded Madeline Forman ofMadeline's Slim Cuisine,Shrewsbury; Arlene Minder ofThe Green House, Deal; andMarie Raccioppi of M.N.R.-Computer, Linden.

Surrey Downs displays holiday cheerFREEHOLD — Nearly three

miles of white holiday lightsdecorating 14 specimen mapletrees in the center island of thelovely Surrey Downs entranceroadway are brightening thefestive atmosphere at this newIlovbilt communitv.

And nursery-fresh pointset-tias were delivered to each oft In1 more than 100 homeownerswho have moved into the adultcommunity, compliments ofIlovbilt.

Vahak S. Hovnanian, Hovbiltpresident, noted that closingson new homes in Surrey Downsare occurring nearly every day,as construction on the 443-home community moves alongat a rapid pace.

According to Shant S. Hov-nanian, Hovbilt executive vicepresident, the holiday lightshave been donated to the Sur-rey Downs Condominium As-sociation, which can use them

each year as part of the holidaycelebration.

Senior vice president GeraldF. Murphy noted that distribu-tion of the pointsettias to resi-dents was Hovbilt's way ofsaying "thanks" to new home-owners.

"Our buyers really like theircnew Surrey Downs homes,"

Murphy said, "but with con-struction ongoing in new sec-tions, these folks who moved inearly are subjecld to more dustand noise than normal. Weappreciate their forbearance."

Located off Route 9 at theFreehold/Howell border, Sur-rey Downs is comprised ofsingle-family detached homes,clustered four to a Court. Re-stricted to adults, 48 and older,the community features aclubhouse, Vswimming pool,tennis courts, private cabletelevision and security-con-trolled entrance traffic.

House of the week

CLASSIC RANCH — The diamond-paned windows enhance the clean lines of this well-thought out ranch.

Dressing up a ranch adds appealBy PAT LUKAS

Tlie simple lines of this modest-sized ranch hide features commonto homes of much larger propor-tions.

Design C-13, by architectsHerman York and RaymondSchenke, has a convenient coveredentry that leads into a graciouscentral foyer. The foyer is thepivot point to the living area,bedroom area and cellar. A coatcloset is adjacent to the foyer.From the foyer, visitors aretreated to a view of your finestfurniture, exhibited in the livingand dining rooms.

The formal dining room featuresa large bow window with diamondwindow panes and window seat,all contributing to the charm ofthis room.

Adjacent to the dining room andlocated to the rear of the house isthe living room, strategicallyplaced to take advantage of therear garden view. The architectsincorporated the living room withthe family room with the use ofdecorative bifold doors. This de-sign feature not only addsdimensionally to these areas, buthelps when there is an overflowgathering. The two areas meldbeautifully together.

The combined areas of familyroom and kitchen, or family

C-13 StatisticsDesign 13 has a living room,

dining room, family room, kitchen,three bedrooms, two baths, lava-tory and foyer for 1,497 squarefeet of habitable area. There Is atwo-car garage laundry room anda basement. The overalldimensions of 60' by 56' includethe garage.

kitchen, has become very popularin today's home designs. Thisconcept works well with allarchitectural styles. Kitchens oftoday offer cabinets and ap-pliances that are very attractive,and in face enhance the overalldecor of aqny home. The combinedareas allow for an atmosphere ofinformality, where the cook canparticipate in family activitieswhile working in the kitchen.

It should be noted that thecounter area, appliances andbroom closet total over 26 linearfeet, a very generous size.

The family room's located be-tween the kitchen and rear yardmakes for practical entertainingboth indoors and outdoors. Therewill be many memorable hoursspent with family and friends inthe dinette area watching the fireglow in the sturdy brick fireplace.

A service entrance into thelaundry will be appreciated when

THE HOUSE OF THE WEEK

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CITY AND STATE

@ $2.00 «ich of D«i |n C -13 . . . .

EncloMtf it $2.00 let MUCH HOMES booktet .

EncloMd n S2.00 Iw YOUR HOME bookltt . . .

Enclowd it $2.00 (of PRACTICAL HOME REPAIRS

Encloud it $2.00 Iw VACATION HOMES bookltt

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you enter the house with wet,muddy shoes, a closet for rain gearis also'provided. The lavatory willbe especially convenient for chil-dren, eliminating their need to runthrough the house. An oversizetwo-car garage with storage isdirectly off the laundry area.

Three bedrooms are located in aseparate winge, ensuring privacyand quiet. The two smallerbedrooms have large windows forexcellent light and ventilation.Adequate wall space was con-

sidered for furniture placement. Ahall bath serves the two bedrooms.The master bedroom offers aprivate tile bath, walk-in closet,dressing alcove and plenty of wallspace. An additional closet islocated over the cellar stair.

A gable and hip roof system,combined with diamond lite case-ment windows, reflects a style ofarchitecture reminiscent ofAmerican tradition and Europeanelegance. Formality and infor-mality are both in evidence.

Rumson Realty designs holiday roomRUMSON — Houses are their

business at Rumson Realty. Sowhen the Junior League of Mon-mouth County issued an invitationto provide an exhibit for its annualFestival of Trees, the River Roadfirm came up with' a miniatureroom — fully furnished and dec-orated for Christmas.

In the 1/12 scale model, authen-tic, reproduction 18th-centuryfurniture on a background of pinkmoire wallpapaer and anAuhusson carpet are the settingfor a diminutive Christmas treereplete with tiny ornaments andwrapped, ribbon-tied boxes.Furnishings include a wing chair,table, mirror, nesting tables andfireplace.

Project coordinator Carol Kirbywas assisted by several of hercolleagues in laying floors, miter-ing moldings, building furnitureand selecting accessories.

Miniature rooms are an art formthat has intrigued Kirby for manyyears. She has been inspired, shesaid, by reading about the world-famous Thome miniature rooms atthe Art Institute of Chicago and byQueen Mary's dollhouse in Eng-land.

Rumson Realty has participatedin the Festival of Trees for severalyears, in the past providingexhibits of antiques and a toy sledladen with holiday packages.

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1HOLIDAY HOUSE — Posing with Rumson Realty's contribution to the Monmouth County Junior LeaguesFestival of Trees are from left, Sue Dennis, co-owner of Rumson Realty, and sales associates MargeBramley and Carol Kirby. The miniature room is built to scale with authentic reproduction furniture andChristmas decorations.

Everybody on the bus!Surrey Downs to begin luxury transportation

FREEHOLD — Residents atSurrey Downs, Hovbilt's newcommunity for adults 48 andover, will soon be enjoying theuse of their own luxury bus fortrips of all types.

Distinctively decorated withgreen, white and gold letteringduplicating the community'slogo, the 28-passenger Cham-pion vehicle will operate at theconvenience of the residents.

Bob Lawson, manager of theSurrey Downs CondominiumAssociation, is circulatingquestionnaires to each home-

owner, in order to developcustomized transportation ser-vices to meet most needs.

Located off Route 9 in Mon-mouth County at the Free-hold/Howell border, SurreyDowns is comprised of 443single-family detached homesbuilt on courtyards, with fourhomes to a court.

Vahak S. Hovnanian, Chair-man and President of Hovbilt,said that "we selected aparticularly fine vehicle forthe residents of SurreyDowns."

"Many adult communities,"he said, "use vehicles that arereally designed as, and looklike, school buses. For SurreyDowns, we chose a vehicle thatis very modern, very stylish,has air-conditioning, stereosound throughout, Individualseat lighting and many otherfeatures. We know residentswill be pleased with it."

Shant S. Hovnanian, Ex-ecutive Vice President, said thekey to the purchase was com-fort and reliability. "This ve-

hicle," he said, "will serveequally well for shopping tripsas it will for a recreationalventure to Atlantic City,should homeowners, decide tovisit that resort."

Senior Vice President GeraldF. Murphy expressed beliefthat the bus would be usedmornings and evenings to con-nect With Route 9 commuterbuses, since a high percentageof Surrey Downs residentstravel to and from their jobseach day.

2E The Sunday Begiater MHOAY. DECEMBER 2a, 1*6.

ProgressAtlantic City waterfront gets a facelift

»1 JOYCE A. VENEZU

Associated Press

ATLANTIC CITY — SouthStreet Seaport in New York Citydid it. So did Mystic Seaport inConnecticut and Harborplace inBaltimore. Now Atlantic City'sGardner's Basin wants to Join theranks of dilapidated seaports re-juvenated into yuppie meccas.

It just might take a little longerfor Atlantic City to recognizeGardner's Basin's potential. Sinceelaborate plans were announced10 years ago to turn the rundowninlet area into a maritime park,little has happened to drawthrongs of tourists away from thecasinos.

In 1976, Atlantic City attorneyJames Cooper led a non-profitmovement that envisioned^ ashowcase for a clipper ship* areplica of the Santa Maria, aColumbus flagship; an old sloopused for clamming; a formerlightship; and maybe even aminisubmarine.

Eventually, they wanted to ex-pand and build an aquarium,maritime museum, art andsculpture displays and boat-build-ing- facilities, all housed in anattractively landscaped, fenced-in area.

"It'll happen," Cooper said in arecent interview. "It's just goingmuch slower than we thought. Westill believe that the waterfront isimportant as a tourist alterna-tive."

Jack Keith, the current directorof Gardner's Basin, still hasdreams of creating an alternativetourist attraction in the East Coast -gaming city.

"It's a struggling, local opera-

Chapman & Bibermaking changes

SUMMIT — Chapman & Biber,AIA, Architects, Planners and In-terior Designers have promotedTheodore B. Kapuscinski, AIA,and Kenneth C. Hysczcak, AIA, toassociate partnerships with thefirm.

Since joining Chapman & Biberin 1978, Mr. Kapuscinski, AIA, hasmoved successively through theranks, most recently serving as aproject architect. He is a graduateof the New York Institute ofTechnology and a member of theAIA and The New Jersey Societyof Architects. He currently residesin Morristown.

Founded in 1968,Chapman & Biber,AIA, Architects,Planners andInterior Designersis a Summit-based,award-winning, .full-service firm •

tion now." he said. "It's strugglingto make tt in an economic situationthat worsened Immediately afterthe fuel crisis and federal cut-backs."

"The money that built this placewas cut off before we starteddigging," Keith said. "It was astruggle from day one to make thedream come true."

Keith, Cooper and the severalhundred members of the Gar-dner's Basin Foundation have notstopped dreaming.

Today, enough funds have beenmustered to get the Young Ameri-ca, once a shining clipper ship thattook cruises around the bay upuntil two years ago, back into drydock for much-needed repairs.There's hope for the wooden boatsdonated by big-band leader GuyLombardo's estate, their strippedhulls now in desperate need ofcare.

Several old homes moved to theeight-acre site sit waiting for thesame thing — enough money to fixthem up. Some sculptures alreadydress up the former ballpark anda concrete restroom facilityhouses a small aquarium.

In warmer weather, schoolgroups attend marine science pro-grams at Gardner's Basin. Thispast summer, Keith held severalsmall jazz festivals, promotinglocal talent, to gauge turnout forfuture events.

"They established that, on aless-than-grand-scale, peoplewill come here and have a nicetime," he said.

The problem, at least for now, isthe neighborhood that visitorsmust drive through to get toGardner's Basin, Cooper and Keithsaid. Shuttered buildings sur-round the park for blocks aroundand drug deals on adjoining streets

are an everyday occurrence.Still, the inlet-area property

apparently is an undiscoveredgold mine to some.

—"I was born and raised there,and all of us who grew up thererealize its potential," Cooper said."Every city that has a waterfrontshould capitalize on it."

Over the years, some developershave approached Gardner's Basin"with ideas to make a fortune,"Keith said.

"But they came here with avariety of proposals for differentcommercial operations that didn'tseem appropriate for what we'reat," he said. "They would havebeen as relevant to what we aredoing here as putting in a K mart."

Keith said the most importantthing that Gardner's Basin needsfor the moment is not necessarilymoney, but patience.

"People will come back to thewaterfront when there's'more de-velopment here," he said. "Then Ithink we'll have a better op-portunity to build up."

The city has some plans thatactually may confront the run-down reality. A new master planfor Atlantic City has proposedrezoning the inlet area to excludecasinos and concentrate on familydwellings. It's a dramatic changefrom the days when inlet residentsthought their patches of propertymight be worth millions.

After the decision was made tolegalize gambling in the seasideresort, Keith said, "Everybodythought things would build up allover Atlantic City. But a lot of usmissed the boat."

"Everyday we have to work andstruggle and build things up here,"he said. "Brick by brick, we'remaking progress."

ASSOCIATED PRESSFUTURE ATTRACTION — Jack Keith, director of Gardner's Basin, works on the deck of ihe clipper ship"Young America." Keith dreams of turning the dilapitated seaport into a tourist attraction.

Building a dream home is easierwith Schlott's home buying guide

For many people, buildingtheir own 'dream home' is avery exciting and individualexperience. At the same time,building a custom home re-quires many decisions andcreates many questions.

Purchasing a new homeenables the buyer to in-corporate, individual style andtaste into that special home.Special features, variations andcolors can be carefully plannedas construction progresses.Planning the new home allowsowners to alter floorplans orinclude skylights, bay windowsor cathedral ceilings. They maywant to add a sunny breakfastnook, center island in thekitchen or upgrade kitchen ap-pliances or bathroom features.The choices are endless and

making these choices requiresthe understanding of a wholenew language of constructionterms and techniques. '

For this very reason, SchlottRealtors' New Home SalesDivision has created the Guideto New Home Buying. The guidehas-been designed to serve asan indispensable tool to thenew-home buyer.

The Guide to New HomeBuying provides helpful hintsto ease those decisions, andanswers the questions mostasked by today's new-homebuyers. The Schlott guideoutlines what features shouldbe looked for in anew home andincludes a buyer's guide to newhousing terms. Schlott's guidealso provides a preview of

townhomes, condominiums andsingle-family residences avail-able on the market.

The guide enables buyers tocomparison shop for homes ac-cording to price, and includesfactual information on each ofthe many counties whereSchlott's new-home projectsara located.

Whether the reader isinterested in an eleganttownhome in the suburbs, or astately single-family homeamid rolling hills and farmland,the Guide to New Home Buyingwill help each buyer to findtheir own very special place tocall 'home.'

To recieve a free copy ofSchlott Realtors' Guide to NewHome Buying, call your nearestSchlott sales office.

Color adds life to exterior

Ceramic tile is fashionable and versatile

Kenneth Hysczak, AIA, joinedChapman & Biber, AIA in 1982,and most recently served as pro-ject architect. He holds a Bachelorof Architecture from the NewJersey Institute of Technology andis a member of the AIA, The NewJersey Society of Architects andNational Trust for HistoricPreservation. Mr. Hysczak residesin Bedminister. N.J.

Betsy Bean, AIA, has beennamed a partner in Chapman &Biber.

A registered architect with over20 years experience in the designfield, Mrs. Bean, AIA, is respon-sible for managing and directingthe firm's Interior design Group.Since its founding in 1982, theGroup has been responsible forover two million square feet ofcorporate interiors work as well asinterior design services for other 'Chapman & Biber projects.

Mrs. Bean, AIA, holds aBachelor of Fine Arts degree fromthe Rhode Island School of Designand a Masters in Fine Arts fromMontclair State College. She is amember of the American Instituteof Architects', she resides in StatenIsland with her husband and threechildren.

And Ridgewood resident PaulaGifford has joined Chapman &Biber as Marketing Coordinator.

In her new position, Ms. Giffordwill supervise and coordinate allmarketing and public relationsfunctions for the firm. A recentgraduate, Mrs. Gifford holds abachelor of science degree in in-ternational management fromGeorgetown University, Washing-ton, D.C.

Founded in 1968, Chapman &Biber, AIA, Architects, Plannersand Interior Designers is a Sum-mit; N.J. based, award-winning,full-service firm that has com-pleted projects for private, cor-porate and public clients through-out the New Jersey region and thesoutheast. The company alsomaintains offices in FortLauderdale, Fla. The firm esti-mates design and completion ofover three million square feet in1986.

New manufacturing and glazing .techniques have made ceramic tileone of the most fashionable andversatile materials around. And,following the lead of designers,homeownmers are finding manynew uses for American-madeceramic tile when remodeling,says the Tile Council of AmericaInc. Among them are:

• Kitchen backsplashes whichbecome as colorful as they arefunctional when covered inceramic tile.

X • Window sills where favorite'plants are displayed. Ceramic tile

forms a colorful, waterproof,durable window sill.

• Patio or garden tables andoutdoor benches become weather-proof as well as attractive withceramic tile.

• Ordinary planters or windowboxes become extraordinary withhandsome ceramic mosaics.

• The hard to maintain areaunder the sink that becomes easyto care for once ceramic tile isinstalled.

• A dull sideboard or table getsa facelift with eye-appealingceramic tile.

• A window or door beautifullyframed with a border of decorat-ive tile.

These are but some of the wayshomeowners can acquaint them-selves with the decorative uses ofceramic tile.

For additonal help in setting tile,send 25 cents and a stamped, self-addressed, business-size envelopefor a copy of "How to Tile itYourself" to the Tile Councif ofAmerica Inc., Dept. HP, P.O. Box2222, Princeton, N.J. 08543.

About the only thing worse thanan overdecorated house is anunderdecorated one ... especiallythe exterior.

That's because every home has,or should have, a personality andindividuality that sets it apartfrom other houses in theneighborhood. It should establishits presence boldly, but with styleand taste, not with gaudy colors ordecorative frills. On the otherhand, it should avoid excessivelyneutral colors that could cause itto fade into the background ofneighborhood homes.

Color can be a creative, econ-omical and practical way to both.individualize and beautify a homij.But, exterior color decoration re-quires planning as well as goodtaste.

Begin on TopStart with the roof, advises the

'Asphalt Roofing ManufacturersAssociation, because it's usuallythe largest visual expanses of ahome. Since a roof lasts a goodmany years, its color should bechosen with care. Choose a colordesigned to blend easily with themore-frequently changed sidingand trim.

The landscaping, grounds andsurroundings should also be part

of the color choosing process.' Multi-layered asphalt shingles in

attractive earthtone shades ofbrowns and beiges, for instance,can be used to blend or contrastwith other exterior color elementsin a home.

These shingles with either afiber glass or organic base aredesigned to last up to 25 years ormore and are as economical andeasy to care for as they areattractive. Three-dimensionalasphalt shingles also create deep,ipggttt shadow lines to give a roofa dramatic and district appear-

i a n c e . •'. . •Limit Color Choices

. Experts also suggest that theexterior of a home be limited tothree basic colors; one for the roof,a second for the siding and thethird for the trim. Gutters anddownspouts, for example, shouldbe the same color as the sidingwhile the remaining color is usedfor shutters, doors and other trim.

For additional information onthe role of roofing in the art ofexterior decorating, send 60 centsfor a copy fo "A Homeowner'sGuide to Quality Roofing" toARMA, Box .3248, Grand CentralStation, N.w York, NJ 10163.

Mortgage delinquencies down,foreclosures upAccording to a survey by the Mortgage Bankers Association, the mortgage delinquency rate ol 5.42 percent lorIhe third quarter ol 1986 was Ihe lowest since early 1984. The survey showed that the percentage ol loansentering foreclosure had climbed to a record 0.27 percent, up Irom the high ol 0.25 percent in the previousquarter.

MORTGAGE DELINQUENCIES AND FORECLOSURESIn percent ol Ihe 10 million home mortgage loans surveyed:

FORECLOSURES

DELINQUENCIES

5.71

5.42

Note: A loan Is considered delinquent when 30 or more days lateSOURCE: Martgifa ••Man AuoclaUwi C> Ne*> Amatici Syndic.!., 1

Time to matea big noise

* :-k%

Into the life of every company comes the need to make some noise. About anew product, a line extension or a corporate position.In newspapers you can command attention in a news environment with largespace—a page, a double truck, a special section. Newspaper flexibility and .short lead time lets you get into the paper before the news value of yourmessage sputters out.Remember us when you want to sound off.

The RegisterNewspapers. Our time has come.For more on being heard in the marketplace, contact Mac Morris, v.p., National Sales,Newspaper Advertising Bureau, 1180 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10036.(212) 7Q4-4503.

4E The S**4a*Megli*trtUHDAV. DECEMBER 26.1966

CLASSIFIED ACTION LINE 542-1700

Public Notices(Lsgals) \

Special NoticesLost ind Found 008Special NoMH 009TrivM-TrintportMion 012Instruction 01S

Situation Wanted Fem«ki 055Situation Wantad Mala 056Situation Wanted M/F 057ChUdCaVt/Nurtary Sch 058

Swap or E»• 056 ncycaM/MM BlkfM| 057 Sports Equtomant-h 056 Swtrnmina Pools—

FinancialButinaM Oppty..

MorwyTo Loan_

CB's. Elsctronfcav.

Business Service).Arts a Craft*

.021022

EmploymentHelp Wantad M/F 051Pan Time 052Babysming/ChiWcara 053Domestic Halp 054

MonayWamad-

MerchandiseMerchandise For SaM-Oaraoa/Yard Seie_Machinery For Sale _Rental Service-Firm EquipmenL-Aucbon Sales.Pels 4 Livestock.Aircraft

061062.063064

.071072073074075076077076

.079060061062

.063Mercnand.se Wanted. 064Price Butter 065

Real Estate RentalsCondoa 100Apartment* 101Houses for Rant 102Rental* to Share 103Winter Renter* 104Summer Rental* - 106

107106106

110

Real Estate For SaleOpanHouaaa 130H O U M * tor Sale 131Condoe/Town Hcuaai 132Income Property 133Farm Property 134Commercial Property 136Induatrlal Property 136L o t . * Acreage 137Mobile Home* 136Cemetery Lot* 136Real Eatate Wanted 140

AutomotiveWarned Automotive 200Construction Equipment. 205Auto Financing— 210Auto Inaurance 216Auto Rent/Lea** 220

Service/Part*AutoMot cycteiMoped*.Van»_Trucks &TnAutos lor Sale.

225230235240245250

Nur*ing/RetiramantHome

Commercial Rental*.

RecreationalCamping EquipmantRecreeflonalVerHcle*

1S2153154

READ YOUR AOTHE FIRST DAY

IT APPEARSI

The Dairy Register will not be re-aponalMe tor more than one in-correct insertion of any

advertisement and onlv when Itmaterally affect* the value of theed if it contain* an error candaaaWad AJ ad* are fs fWe* *to their proper cia»»it<caiion andaeirT«S Vegu* Dairy RegMeratyte of typrWgM it reserved toedit or reject eny copy or ad

TO PLACEYOUR

CLASSIFIEDAO

CALL THEACTION-LINE

542-1700MONDAY-FRIDAY

6:30 A.M.-4:50 P.M.

PUBLIC NOTICESchedule for publication

PUBLISHED

SATURDAYSUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAY,THURSDAYFRIDAY

CLOSING

Thursday 12 noonThursday 12 noonFriday 12 noonFriday 12 noonMonday 12 noonTuasday 12 noonWadnesday 12 noon

Send or deliver PUBLIC NOTICE with voucher to:

Legal ClerkThe RegisterOne Register PlazaShrewsbury, NJ 07701

001U Middletown

nonceMkjdkrtown TowneMp aria

hold It e Annual ReorganizationDay « • Special Meeting to Mheld on Thursday. January I .IS*7 at 2 00 p.m. at Town Haa.Appolntmantt to variousBoards. Agencies and Professlonal Positions win ba mada.OaMd: Daoambar 24. 1888Daoambar2a $3.88

•ueucHonccThe Middletown Township

Committee haa scheduled aspade! maa«ng lor Saturday,Daoembar 27. 1888 at 11 a.m. alTown Hal for the purpoaa ofO*SCUSS4OQ appoifttments to viavarious boardi and to sat a timeand data tor tha annual Reorge-mialon Day.Oe»d: December 24. 19880*camt>ar2a (4 32

001X Red BankPUBLIC NOTICE

An Ordinance entitled: "AnOrdinance Amending Chapter 4.appointive offloara kand amptoy-aaa. erode 1. oompanaatlon,s*<oon 1. annual salaries andcompensation waa praaamadfor introduction and nnjt reedingon December 10. 19BS and onOaoambar 22. I M S was finelyadopted and approved.ATTE8T:Ruth M Eachaeacndart

Michael J. AmoneMayor

Oaoambar 2 * $0.12

NOTICIPiaaaa take node* that on Jan.S. 1M7 at 7:30PM. Joaaph aStaoay Skxrinakl o) 765 TlntonAvanua. Tenon Faas war appaarbefore tha Tlnton Faaa Board ofAdjustment at tha Tlnton FansMunicipal Bunding. 686 TlntonAvanua. Tlnton Falls. NJ to re-quaat a waiver of tha ragulationfora site plan In connection wnfitha varianoa granted by maBoard on November 13. I M Spanimung a Duemeae uaa m aresidential tona for Lots 10 »11. Block <M. commonly knownaa 756 Tlnton Avanua, TlntonFaaa. NJ.

A copy ol this applicationand a l papers tatatad to thavariance application have beenMad in tha office of Ina secre-tary hava baan Mad In tna officaof ma Secretary and may bainspected by ma pubac betweenma hours of 8AM-4 30PM at thaMunicipal BuKUng, at SM TMonAvanua, Tlnton Fate. NJ.

. 21 $10.44

002H State ofNew Jersey

rustic NOTICSAn Ordinance antwadt "AN

ORDINANCE AMENDING THEADMINISTRATIVE CODE OfTHE BOROUGH OF RED BANK,ARTICLE IV. SECTION' 2. SUB-SECTION PARAGRAPH 7 waspratantad lor Introduction andfirst reading on December 10.19ee-and on Dacamoar 22. 1966was finally adopted and ap-provadAtta.lRuth M Eachefeechdark

Michael J. AmonaMayor

Dec. 2* 16.48

001Z Sea BrightPUBLIC NOTICE

Piaasa take nonce that thaR#ofQanl2ation Me#ong ofMayor and Council ol tha Bo-rough of Saa Bright. New Jerseywin ba held at 2:00 P.M. onJanuary 1. 1087 In Ina CouncilChambars. 1088 East OceanAvanua. Saa Bright. New Jaraay. This Maatlng Is opemo tnapubac.

MARY LARSONBorough Clark

Dacamoar 2* 15.04

002C Tinton Fall*NOTICE OF HEARING

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that thaEmanusl Baptist Church, tha undarslgnad has appealed to InaBoard ol Adjustment of tha Bo-rough of Tlnton Fads, for a UaaVariance, Preliminary and Final

e Site Plan Approval and BulkVariances as specified below:

The following variance an-d/or waivers ara being sought:

' 1. Uaa variance as tha proparty Is locate*) In an R-3.5 zonewherein a church la a conditio-nal uaa pursuant to Article VISection 6S-83D(7) ol tha Devel-opment Regulations Ordinanceand

2. Bulk variances are beingrequeeted for lot area: lot depthlot width: tide, rear and frontyard setbacks: and lot coveragepursuant to Article VI. Section6o-83H(3) of tha DevelopmentReooletiona Ordinance together

. with any additional variancesend/or waivers that may badeemed necessary; and

3. Preliminary a Final SitePlan approval pursuant to Ar«-cte IV. Section 85-32 of thaDevelopment Regulations Ordt-

The applicant does herebypropose to:

Constrict an addition toEmanual Baptist Church, anexisting church structure to con-sist of extension of basementand flret floor on premises lo-cated 01A Cherry Street. TlntonFaas. New Jersey and alsoknown ss Block 12-B, Lot 43. ontha Borough of Tlnton Faaa TaxMap.

Any person or parson af-fected by this application mayhava an opportunity to be heardat tha meeting to ba held onThursday evening at 7:30 p.m.the M l day of January. 1M7, Inthe Municipal Bunding at 550Tlnton Avenue. Tlnton Fans.New Jersey.

A copy of the application rtaabean Mad In tha office of tnaSecretary of tha Board of Ad-kietment. and may be mapactadby the Public between the hoursol BOO a.m. and 4:30 p m at theMundpal Bunding, 558 TlntonAvenue, Tlnton Faas. New Jer-sey

Please be advised that theabove information waa takenfrom the Borough Engineer sreport dated October 22. 1880.and that this office Is not re-sponsible for any Informationwhich may hava been kipdver-tanOy left out

002C Tlnton Falls 009 Special Notteea

Charles Hubbaid.Chairman. Buttling Committee

ApplicantStafford W. ThompsonAttorney tor Applicant

Dae 28(27.38

NOTICEn tha Matter of tha Application

of Kerry Lynn Nunzlato andChristina Jean Nunziato, an In-fant, by her mother and naturaljuerdJan. Kerry Lynn Nurulato.or leave to assume the names

Kerry Lynn Clark and ChristineJean Feoer respectively

Superior Court of New JeraeyMonmouth County

LAW DIVISIONDocket No. L-084864-66

CIVIL ACTION

"LOVE'S GOINGTO GET YOU.

LOVE'S GOINGTO FIND YOU.LOVE'S RIGHTBEHIND YOU.

LOVE'SGOT A

LINE ONYOU"

WithPictures

On Friday. February 13. the daybefore VALENTINE'S Day. we <punkah another new "LoveJnee" section for you. your

sweetheart, friends and tamKy to»n|oy. Be My Vsliinnsl HappyMrthdayl Happy AmhrenMfyi

KERRY LYNN NUNZIATOand CHRISTINA JEAN NUNZIA-TO. an infant, by her mother and natural guardian, KERRYLYNN NUNZIATO, having madaapplication to this Court by dulyverified Complaint for a Judgement authorizing them to as-sume the names KERRY LYNNCLARK and CHRISTINA JEANFEUER. respectively, end It ep-peartng to the Court that theyhava complied with aa of theprovisions of N.J.SA 2A52-1.at aeq . and tha Hulas of Court,and the Court being satisfiedttisrsof as-nd that tnscs is noreasonable objection thereto:

IT IS on the 18th day ofDecember tges.

ADJUDGED that KERRYLYNN NUNZIATO be and aha Ishereby authorized to aaeumethe name KERRY LYNN CLARK,and C H R I S T I N A JEAN NUNZIA-TO ba and is hereby authorizedto assume the name CHRISTI-NA JEAN PEUER. aa from andafter Jan. 20. 1987

FURTHER ORDERED thatwithin 20 days after tha datahereof said Plaintiffs causa acopy of mis Judgement to bepubaehed In the Deny Register,and that within 45 days after thearmy of this Judgement they Mathis Judgement and Affidavit olPublication thereof with theClerk of tha Superior Court, anda certified copy of of thle Judge-ment with tna Secretary of Stelapursuant to tna provisions of theStatute end Rules of Court insuch case mada and providedDates of birth: Kerry Lynn0/5/57Christine Jean 10/9/76

waaem T. Wtcnmann. j .s .cDecember 28 $23.04

006 Loat and Found

Aa a service to our communityThe RegMar la offering e FREE4-line FOUND ad for 4 daysunder the classification Loat 'Found.The Register appreciates yourhonesty A win do Its pert Infinding me original owner

I us at 542-1700.

FOUND — Black male sMzudog, m Middletown area on12/23 Caa 787-68*2.

FOUND CAT — 8 yrs. old. Grayt Mack Uger stripe, female

ccttr A SPCAdear fleap

r At SPCAFOUND — Ma Hum size youngfemale dog, haa ten coaer. whitet black Shepherd * Husky mb>Red Bank Caa 741-1817.

FOUND RABBIT — Brown flop-py eared. Christmas morning566 Thompson Ava. For info caaafter 5pm. 741-384*.

LOST — Dog, come, saver awhite. 3-4 yrs ok), vicinity ofAtlantic Highlands a Leonardo872-0405

LOST — Female dog. About 2yrs. ok). Tan a white, mediumsized. Has ten ooaer on. Key-port. Aberdeen area Contact738-2457 or 284-1487. Freeway.

LOST GOLD WATCH — Inscrip-tion on beak. Leather bend onAcademy Sue from New York toKeanaburg. Dee. 17th. RewardCaa 787^531.

LOST — Large, long-heir huskyahep mix. Red collar. traWdly'Woe-. REWARD! 8BtM»17.

Say something cute, clever, fun-ny or romantic, to your aweet-leart, frienda or family.Paraphrase your favorite songUnas No matter what you sayyour meanlnglul thoughts wta bea wonderful surprise, which wUbe shared and remembered lora long, long time.Photographs with Love UnasNow your photo together withyour love ana w * ba publishedto enhance your love line masaage. We prater a black * whitewaaet size picture. No polartodpictures. Your photo wW appearno greater than ivt inches deepby I * inches wide. It may benecessary tor us to reduce andcrop your photo to nt. Therefora, aa photographs becomthe property of The Registerand • » not be.retumed.Tha coat for pubtiahlng yourpicture Is (10.00 In addition totha Una coat of your Love Una

.75* per Una. Minimum 4 Unas28 characters' and spaoea aquaeach Una Additional 11 00 forrow of Hearts at top of yourLOVE LIME

Man or bring ua yourLOVEUNC

together with your payment.Make Valentine's day very apa-dal this year. Do H right-now.

The RegisterLove Line Department

One Register PlataShrewsbury, NJ 07701

CAR POOLHwy 36 (E.J. Roberts) toRed Bank or Shrewsburymornings. Return eve-nings, Red Bank orShrewsbury to Hwy. 36(E.J. Roberts). I need aride — Kim 542-17008:30 am to 5 pm Mondaythru Friday.I'm the parent of Thomas MMoore. Kevport AUeen and thalate Jamea M. Moore.

MRS. SYLVIAPSYCHIC READERAdvisor on aa problems of UfaTarot Cards, Astrology a Palm

2104 Kings Hwy., Oakhurat(behind Denny's)

4»»-0e»a/775-eo72

051 Hip Wanted

ADVERTISING

Ml

HOST/HOSTESS — Wert-ara/waHrassss Mane d Apply

a co-op ed»er*amg oo-atdHatorfor a growing daily/Sundaynewspaper Previous advertisingaiperiance Important, and thaaunty to work with many pro-acta at the a erne tana. Goodsalary plus DenefNa. For an intanrtew caa Aahar Mmtz. Adver-•aing Director, 542-4000 e»t230 The Regular. 1 RegisterPlaza. Shrewsbury. NJ 07701.AnEoAialOwwrtunttyEmplover

A N OHIO OIL CO. — often highIncome, pkis cash bonuses.BenefR* to mature pereon in theShrewsbury Avenue area Re-ganteaa of experience, writeSAW. Reed. American LubrtcanteCo. Box 428, Dayton. Ohio45401

HOUSEWIVES. STUDENTS. FIE-riRED Now taking appkcaUonaor part time openings Inour

Maaroom. Two shifts available1:00 am to 8:00 am. one to tourdays weekly, or 7:00 am to 3:00pm. one to two days weekly.Apply in person at Tha Register.Route 35, Shrewsbury Nophone cats. Plea set

ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER —Knowledge of bank reconcilia-tions, general ledger and pay-roa, typing skins also helpfulSend resume to Shore DataProcessing I t Ridge Rd. WeatLong Branch, N J. 07784.

BOOKEEPER — Experienced,lurl time. 5 days Caa Hao Steinar for appointment, 741-88*2,807 Broad Street. Shrewsbury

BOOKEEPCft —Pl/fl. Maturepereon for cash recp. and dis-bursements, payroll, bUHng,bank reconcile', and coeectJone.Red Bank Ore' offica. All Intoconfidential. 747-8100.

BURNER SERVICE — Contrac-tor. Experienced In heating, airconditioning a pkis Excellentopportunity with establishedMonmouth County fuel on deal-er C M Mr. Mcgrath at 2*1-3200.BUS DRIVERS — Immediateopenings. Wai Bain. Apply inpereon Mon-Fri, Ranney School,230 Hope Rd.. Tlnton Faaa.

CAB DRIVER — F/T Sam-4pm.Must know Red Bank. Mon-mouth County area. 486-3811.CARPENTER — Experienced,wantad. Caa after 8 or leavemessage. 741-1144

C L E A N I N G — Omces/houeee,daya/nighta. Flexible hours Caa741-3245. leave message.

CLEANING PERSON — Apply mperson 9am 8pm Shore PointMotel, 3380 Hwy. 38. Hazlet.

CLERKS, DELIVERYF/T: deliver, operate A/V equip-ment, maintain records: ability toread, write, follow instructions avalid NJ drivers license req'd;use of own vehicle Is necessary;houra 7.30AM 4PM. Mon-Fri;send reeume/applicatton by1/13/87 to: BROOKDALE COM-MUNITY COLLEGE. PersonnelDept DC 12/28. Uncrott, NJ07738. EEO/AA^

L.P.N /NURSE AID — Positionsavailable, aa shifts. Excaaantbenefits. Hazlet Manor, call 2645800.

COOK/CHEF HELPER — Someexp. necessary. vnU train. ApplyIn person Shore Point Inn. Hwy35. Hazlet.COUNTER PEKtON — For euto

Caa Budget Rent a Car. CaaS42 aeoo eekler Mr. Regan orMr. We*.

CUSTODIANS — Full time forlocal school district. Black seel•cense preferred, but will tram.Excellent benefits. Salary basedon experience. Send resume to:Board ' Secretary, EatontownBoard ol Education. 215 BroadSt., Eatontown. NJ. 07724.

OCU a L I Q U O R — Store haaeparenge for fua or part ttme.

paw vacation tame. C a l 2S4-4ra8ee«ora11amoraf>»r 1pm.

DENTAL ASSISTANT TRAINEEF/T/p/T. Red Bank Orthodonticoffica needs an alert, depend-able person Wta train. All Info,confidential. 747-8100.

DENTAL ASSISTANT — Qualitypereon tor progressive offica InRad Bank area. Xray licenserequired. Houra, salary snd ben-efits nag. Caa 747-3813. Sundays and eves caa 842-1215.

EDITOR/PUBLISHER — Worldslargest aquarium magazine.Knowledge of aquariums plusexperience In publishing. Salary*2t-50M. Apply by latter only:president T.F.H. Publications.Box 427, Neptune NJ. 07753.

FULL TIME — Babysitter In myE. Keanaburg home for 2 smallchadren. 8-5, Monday — Friday,non-smoker and rats, preferred.salary, call Port, 787-7540.

GENERAL CONTRACTOR —Seeks help In aa aspects ofhouse renovations Days cal530-4228. after 5PM 530-5406

GOVERNMENT JOBS• 18.040 - *6>.230/yr. Now hir-ing. Caa 805-087-0000 Ext. R8247 lor currant federal list.

White Male • 35. sincere, classyprofessional, seeks female tormeaningful relationship. Box532. Staten Island. NY. 10314.

HAIRDRESSER — Wanted. 1 f/ta 1 pA for busy shop m WastLong Branch. Please caa 222-4505 days or eves.

012 Travel/Tranaportatkm

KEANSBURG RESIDENTNeeds ride for 12 midnight shift.Route 1. Linden area. Wta pay

495-3343

RIDE SHARER — From Trentonnear HamiHon to CECOM Bund-ing. 7:30-4 p.m. Caa4948 between 8-t p.m.

021 Business ServiceRUBBISH REMOVAL — Attic,cellars, yards cleared out Anytype of garbage removed. Can787 5040.

051 H i p Wanted M/FADULT CARRIER - - ForShrewsbury. Tlnton Faaa. Eaton-town * Long Branch. Mileagereimbursement pkie mcenttvee.Cal Frandne 542-5880.

AIRLINES NOW HIRINGFlight Attendants. Agents, Me-chanics, Customer Sarvtoe. Sal-aries to tSOK. Entry levelpositions Cat 808-887-8000Ext A-8247 lor current aatinga.

051 Help Wanted

neeteuranL Hwy 34, Matawen.

HUNDREDS WEEKLYI — Homemalkhg program) Information?Send S.A.S.E to L.M. Luther.192 Wharfakta Condoa. Mon-mouth Beach, NJ 07750.

DRIVERS NEEDED — Tkxlbusiness doing waa, addingmore cars. Need t fua-tanedays. 1 f/t afternoons * 2 P/Tevenings Apply In person. Mid-dletown Yellow Cab, 55 Long-wood Ava . Middletown.

081 Hip Wanted

RECEIVING CLERK - For man-ufacturer. Days onry. paM he*.days, end other employesbenefits Apply In pereon aha.CMamee. Monday to Friday. * • rS. FrieoUnd a Brothers. Locuet IStreet, industrial Park, Keyport.

051 Help Wanted

DISHWASHER — F/T 14.71/hr.Apply In pereon Sheraton Inn,Hwy 36. Hark*

051 Help Wanted

ITALIAN RESTAURANT — AHpoawona avail Can 872-1251aftsrtpm.

051 Halp Wanted

LEGAL SECRETARY — txperience required Caa 871-8100.

RESTAURANT HELP - Bun N -Burger has Immediate openingslor pert/ fu* time- Wanar/wal-tresses. cooks, dishwashers acashiers. We offer very flexibleschedules. (As short aa 3 hre.)Good pay a vacations tor p/temployees. No exp necessary.perfect for students, home mak-ers a retired people. Dey hrea raa. Apply m pereon BrunswickSquare Man. Rt. 18 Eaat Bruns-wick or Monmouth M i l

NURSING/HEALTHCAREPOSITIONS AVAILABLE

DAYS • EVENINGS • NIGHTS • FULL TIME • PART TIME

RN'S — 11 to 7 ahift. Fua orpert time Fua fringes Compati-ble salary. Call Mra. Smith. 9-3.871-01*9.

051 Help Wanted

Due to expansionCamera needed m the following

RED BANK •RIVER PLAZAEATONTOWN

LONG BRANCHMARLBOROLINCROFT

COLTS NECKUNION BEACHKEANSBURGLEONARDO

HAZLET

Call 1-800-648-0352to apply

The RegisterAn Equal Oppt'y Employer M/f

JANITORIAL — Local contractCleaning Co. looking for F/Thelp m Hoimdet. Cal 1-800-392-

JANITORIAL — Local contractcleaning company looking torfull-time help In Ned Bank. Can1-800-392-8048

MECHANICAL ASSEMBLER —Manufacturer of medical equipt-mant requires en experiencedtechnician for small pert assem-bly. Basic understanding of elec-trical wiring and schematics aplus Must ba thorough and de-tail oriented. Excellent workingconditions and benefits. ContactSummit HHI Laboratories st 201-291-3800 for Interview or sendresume to P.O. Box 535 Nave-sink NJ 07752.

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST —Experience praf. Busy doctorsoffice. Fringe benefits. 9:30-5:30PM Caa 741-3803

MEDICAL RECORDS LIBRARI-AN — Busy doctors office.Competitive salary. Fringe bene-fits. WW train highly competentpereon. Caa 74I-3O03. «-8PM.

MODELS/MOVIE EXTRASALL AGES 4 TYPES

Noaxp nee S15-S125 per hourN J . State Licensed

UNIVERSAL CASTING 865-2900Parkway Towers. Woodbridge* * * * * * *

MOTOR ROUTEDRIVER WANTED

IN FREEHOLO AREAAM. DELIVERY iMILEAGE REIMBURSMENTPROFITS * TIPS

Call Jotf Cadyor

Chris Smollon542-8880

* * * * * * *

NURSESRN'S & LPN'S M/F

NURSES AIDES S5.25/HRHOUSEKEEPERS 15-8 HOUR

LIVE INS-1313 WEEKLocal Caaaa, no tees Incentiveand referral bonuses Call forInterview at People Care, 244Broad St. Hed Bank, 630 I B M800 Union Ave., Rt. 71. Brlalle.528.9432, Freehold. 150 Hkjh-way 0.431-1888.

NURSES/RN — Full time/on callavailable. No inns *10.11/hr.Flax, scheduling. Hazlet ManorCare Center. Caa 204-5800

GIL BURNER — Mechanic. Ex-perienced only. Company bene-fits. Excellent salary. Airconditioning experience helpful.Call 291-3200. ask for Ed

PRODUCTIONII you are handy with tools »take pride In doing e good job.you hava a future In our growingplastica fabrication plant. Mustbe able to learn quickly « handleresponsibilities. Overtime avail-able. Company benefit!. M.Iawan. 566-3800

Our telephone linesare open and readyto help you sell a

house, a car, a boat,a puppy, a couch, asaw, a lawn mower,a fur coat, a bird, achair, an antique

rocker.. .

The RegisterClassified542-1700

BRINGING A MENTALLYRETARDED PERSONINTO YOUR HOME

TAKES PATIENCE-BUTTHE REWARDS ARE

MANY

Sponsor a mentallyretarded individual In yourhome and provide themwith a caring familyenvironment. Earn anincome while you help builda Ufa for someone else.• Free training• Monthly income ol $433

-KJ80' No experience

necessary' Work at homeFor more Information, callthe Ocean CountyAssociation for RetardedCitizens. Respite CareProgram at

(201) 920-B333.

'RtspitelIntervention

RN'S • GN's •LPN'S • GPN's • AIDESExplore the opportunities. Contact the participating recruiters in thisDIRECTORY and please mention The Register.

NURSES AIDESHOLMDEL CONVALESCENT

CENTER188 Hwy 34

Hormdel. NJ 0773312011946-4200

Mrs BarrowsPersonnel Recruiter

RIVERVIEWMEDICAL CENTER

35 Union StreetRed Bank. N J 07701(2011530-220/2222

Work 4 nights andget paid tor S

on the 11 10 7 shift

Day Csre Canter navailable toremployees

children

Free Parking

HOME HEALTH AIOESMrs Cittadino

FAMILV rl CHILDREN S SERVICE191 Bain Avenue

Long Branch N J 0774012011222-9100

PEOPLE CAREOF SOJTH JERSEV. INC

244 Broad SI IP O Boa D625Red Sank NJ 07701

(2011530-1888

Work YourOwn Hours — DaysHighest Pay Rales

HLALTH FORCE157 Broad Street3 West — Suite 3

Red Bank. NJ 077011201)530-1161

(The ProfessionalHealth Care Service!

Personnel DeptALL HEALTH CARE

SERVICE5 INCPenelope Lane

Middlelown. N J 07746(201)671-8400

Aides/HousekeepersWAYSIDE RESIDENCERETIREMENT CENTER

1211 West Park AweWayside N J 07712

1201)493 3096

Personnel Depl•Vetapiei Moml Services ol

MCOSS NURSING SERVICES151 Bodman Place

Red Dank. NJ 077011201)530 6666

Information on placing an adin this DIRECTORY

please call542-4000 ext. 252

Business DirectoryA DAILY GUIDE TO BUSINESS SERVICES

160E AccountingGARY MAYBURY

Accounting—BookkeepingAnd Tax Service

Caa 38S-W14

160M Air ConditioningCNC Refrigeration 8. Heating

Air conditioning, refrigeration,attic tana. Sale & Service. Resi-dential 8 Commercial. 222-8737.

163A BartendingPARTY HELPERS

Bartender and/or Waitressfor your party. You relax.

M do the work Call 291 -6032

1631 BathroomALL TILE AREAS

Expert professional repalra& belt) remodeling since 1955

Bob Aklus. 280-0387.

164A CarpetCleaning

A-1 EXPERT Carpet CleaningUPHOLSTERY CLEANING

MORRIS HOFFMAN747-0208 or 842-7405

1641 Counter Top*D4FE COUNTERTOPS

Complete line of quality madeformica & corlan countertopsCan lor free ast. 201-7584177.

164M CarpetInstallation

JIM'S CARPET INSTALLATIONSales, cleaning, re-lays, re-stretches 6. repairs.

264-8177

CERAMIC TILE CONTRACTINGKitchens. Floors. Walla 1 BathsFree Estimates Prompt Service.

CaU 285-3185

Hew Ceramic TUe » RepairsHegroutmg. replacing fixtures.DeeaoMMe prices. FHEE eatj-

890-7114. .

163U CarpentryCARPENTER — Repairs, smallor large robs. New additions orremodeling at reasonableprices 30 yesrs exp. 747-5023.CARPENTRY - Retired carpent-er. Small, medium size |obs.Decks Free estimates. Call 741-5787 or 774-0600.

FULL UNEHOME IMPROVEMENTS

NO JOB TOO SMALLFREE EST. CALL 738-8807

HOME CRAFTSMAN — Carpantry, woodwork, lobs donawith precision. Job too big foryou? Too small tor others? KenSodertund 688-2871 after 5pm.

JO-JO WOODWORK'SAdd-ons. Additions. Paneling.Painting, Decks. Patios. Let'atalk. Can joe Untott (16 yrs.exp) 767-2838.

NEW HOMES. ADDITIONS.Alterations, kitchens, decks, alltypes remodeling. All work guar-

rJ. Ca» Chris 281-8884.

FIT BUILDERS — Dormers.doors and floors. 20 years axp.Siding, roofing and more. FreeEsts. Call 767-0871 anytime.

S. GAQUANO — All types ofcarpentry, roofing and siding.2284888. or 228-1868.

164J CanvasProduct*JEAN'S CANVAS

Wave Got The Coast Covered.Winter Covers • Bltwnl Tops

Repalra -Interiors • Cushions.WWT1H RATH) P01) 767-0070.

1640 CateringWERE COOKING. INC

Catering for all occasions, milcuisine, personalized service,customized menus. 671-2070.

164Y Ceramic TilesLIVING SPACE ASSOC

Cersmlc Me Insult. Floors, wans,countertops Repairs. Expertservice Free est. Call 530-1580.

SecretarialService

165R ComputerizedCOMPUTERIZED BUSINESSSERVICE — Word Processing.Dsu Entry by axp. secretaryusing IBM software. 281-8176.

1681 ElectricalServiceBEST ELECTRIC

Lie. No. 8273. Fast dependableservice. Reasonable rates. Freesaturates Call 671 0121

B M T OM YOUR VCR REPAIRGuaranteed computer: C-64 and

PC systema & telephoneQuality work. Call 758-6873

licensed, reliable, reasonable.Servicing all your

electrical needs. Call 583-7317.

170U GeneralContracting

DJ. WHCLAN — General Con-tractor. Additions, renovatione.custom work. 24 hr. answeringservice, free ast. 787-6650.

170Y GutterCleaning

RELIABLE OUTTCH CLEANINGPkis Screening. Repairs avail.

Can 671-438I leave message.

171E Handy Man

OOD JOB SPECIALIST/Ptumbrng. Electrical. Carpentry,and other repairs. Rurnton. CanFrank. 530-8880.

171Q Heating Service/Repair

KIROSENE HEATERSAll makea serviced at $10.95 pi.parts. Most parts 1 wicks Instock. 738-0888 or 888-5081.

171UHomeImprovement

BASEMENTS — Expert pamt-mg. sheet rocking, decks/cus-tom, doors, windows. CompleteRenovation. Dave 671-9210

BASEMENT* FIHMHCOINTERIOR REMODELING

GARDEN STATE HOME IMP8714080.

INTERIOR DESIGNS — Customkitchens, baths, ceramic tile, pa-per hanging, pamtlng.free esti-mates. Can 787-4117.

Total Renovation ConstructionInc. — Vinyl siding, windows,decks, additions No fob looemail. 738-2856

173Y Landscape/Lawn Care

A shrub to complete landscapedeeign A construction Totallawn service. Caa Sandy ofOMO 741-5138.

174M Light HaulingAAA HAUL AWAY

Clean up construction debrisAttica, yards, cellars, gutters.You don't hava to look at itanymore. Free eat. 485-1887.

CLEAN YARDSCellars, attics A garages

Free estimates741-2149

176A Moving/Storage

TEACHERS MOVING INC. • Bigor small. Licensed 1 InsuredFree estimates. Fair Haven. 530-1333. NJ License No. 57.

1761 Odd JobsABOUT ANYTHING — Yardscleaned, gutters, painting. Nghl

many email robe, etci. Danny. 741-2056.

A-1 OOD JOB SERVICEExpert home repalra.

FuHy Insured.Cat 530-8515.

WE CLEAN - Gutters, windows.and do gutter end roofing re-palra. We also resurface drive-ways. Small painting andcarpentry (obs No fob loo email.Free estimates. 741-1517.

176M Painting/Plastering

ALL AROUND PAIffTINQNeat, dean A reasonable.Speckling «. patching. Quick »expert service. For Free esti-mate ca« Eddie at 871-4403.

LIN » GRADY PAINTINGInterior 1 exterior painting, plas-tering, sheatrock, and tapingFuay Insured. Can 530-1841.

ROBERT CARONEProfessional painting

Interior A ExteriorSheatrock or Plaster Patching

Neat. Clean. Quality WorkFor Free Estimate Call 281-8021

176M Painting/Plastering

A-1 OUALtTY PAINTINGTop quality work done w/prtdeExc local raf. 10 yrs. exp. For

caa Rich. 758-8738

176Q Painting/Paperhanglng

* ABSOLUTE PERFECTION*DENNIS a SONS

duality work assuredFree quota. Can 672-2626

AFFORDABLE PAINTINGOne room to whole house, Inte-rior, exterior, insured, lowestprices. Free estimates. Senior*CMzene discount 264-2520.

JUST WALLSFine PalntJng-Paperhangtng

Waa Glazmg-TaxturesMamallzlng-222-4156

MASTER PAINTERS a DEC.European experience m

' paoerhengMg * panting etcNoel Middletown 671-8385

MS PAPERHANGERFeminine touch

Decorating consultant aCat! 741-5650

PAINT AND .PAPER — Special-izing In kitchens A baths Oualttywork - Reaeonabie rates Freeeattmatea. Can 530-4228.

PAINTING • WALLPAPERINGReasonable, dependable, deanA very neal work. WW beat anyprice around Insured. 871-8806.

WE PAINTING CO. — Can Willie228-6016. The Happy Painter.Free est. FuHy Insured. 20 yrs.axp. Ree or comm.

178R Roofing

BROS. ROOFING CO.RESIDENTIAL-COMMERCIALSPECIALIZING IN SHINGLES

HOT ASPHALT ROOFSSLATE REPAIRSROOF REPAIRS

ONE PLY SYSTEMGUTTERS-LEADERS

10% OFF FORSENIOR CITIZENSFREE ESTIMATES

495-9151FULLY INSURED BONDEDRICKS ROOFING — Commer-cial residential A Induatrlal. Hottar. rubber A shingles. 18 yrs,exp. Free estimates, ret. 495-4784.

178Z SheetrockA A S D R Y W A U .

Sheetrock. taping A finishing.reeeonabty priced, futy Insured.teal service Ce» Gary 776-2348.

179E Snow Plowing•NOWPLOWINO

1801 Tree ServiceWOOOY'S THEE SERVICE

Tree trimming A removal, stumpgrinding. Futy Insured. Free ea-omatee. Cal 630-1812.

4 LINES - 30 DAYSFOR ONLY $49.00 542-1700

SUNDAY. DECEMBER 28.1966 The! !£101 AoeMtmfiU

SuburbanLivingwithCityConveniences

064 Pom—tte Help

houaa 4 wee* a o « m . Mon.Wad. * Frl momtnga a-12noon. M/hr M4-I714.

at Monmouth

$450.00Mri.lopwMoa.-Fri. 9-5 p<n«Wiekti* 10-5 pm» 493-2331

Ntw Jmrttf

*Ifipusand

WageWhat a Place toCome Home to!

E<ira site rooms (Some wiin famfly rooms), aitcondiiioning. lots ol closet space, balconies,oak Coring and ceramic Hied Dams There isample parking, beauiifui landscaped grounds.on site tennis courts, and a children's play are*

SPACIOUS 1,2, A 3 BR. Apt*.Starting From $570 frr Montfl

052 Part Tim*BUS DRIVER — 20 hra/wk. Af-ternoon run. Mult have bus drtv-•r Noenee or wMHng to get on*.

(42 -MMeCan ror sppt (42-

EDUCATION

LEARNING ASSTP/T. JO hrs per wk, Hr». 0-10pm Mon-Thurs. Sat 8em-1pm.Manage lab. tutor atudanta anddreMng/daeign, computer eldeddrafting, malarial + electricalengineering. Bachelors In appro-Pflata aubiact araa « I i "buiinaaa or Induatrlal aiip. nac.«i>cni Induatrlal axp. In draftingand/or computer aUad daalgndaairab4a. Sand raauma by 1/1310 BROOKDALE COMMUNITYCOLLEGE, Personnel Oapt LAO12/28. Uncrott. NJ 0773S.EEO/AA.

EXTRA EARNIWU — K Mpeople wte)i epens lane. l a m upto »rs t ioo w . 'gram. M4-M44.

RENT STARTINGAT $570.

HANDY MAN — Basic knowl-adga of carpentry t electricityCall S42-S33O.

(201)291-4050Directions: Qtrdtn State Parkway to Exit 117. T«k« IRouts 36 approximatsty 10V* miitt to Thousand IOaks on the left

JANITORIAL — tOCSl contractclMnlng company looking forpadtima avanktg halp (n Hazfctt.Cam 600-392-0948

NURSES AID — P/T 3-11pm. &11-7am ahlfis avail. ApplyBeMchvtow ICF. 32 U u n l Aw..Kaantburg.

051 Help Wanted

SALES a ADMINISTRATIVE —•Atilaiant (of Mtddlatown Int.ofltca. Should ba highly orga-mzad with good paopl*) skillsSalary + bonus. Call 957-0932from 10 am. to 2 pm. (ClosedFfWay). •_

SALES -— Futl and/or part timeSata* parson for chiidranawaarshop. Apply In parson. Immedi-ate opaning Stds Bootary. 7410078.SALES PEOPLE — Immadlataopening* tor 3. will train, callMon.-Frt, 0-5 Call 571-3200

SECRETARY/BOOKEEPEfl —i%% Vary dtwrsitwd, must knowpayroll, ptaaaant phona voice,organized, and able to workunder pressure M/F 9 5 CallTammy. 741-1222.

SECRETARY — For insuranceotftoa. wilhdo bookkeeping andtrain for the insurance businessto become licensed Must basharp and have 2-3 yrs. oHiceaxp. Gardiner MaroK Agency,Atlantic Highlands 291-0477.

SECURITY GUARD — Days sndevaa. avail.. 0 hr. shifts. ColtsNeck area Call 948 4244SENIOR PLANNER — Bachelor's dagraa in planning or relatad talk) and minimum ol 1year experience In zoning andland development revatw. Com-puter artd graphics experiencedeslreable. Must satisfy civilservice requirements Salary$18,000—22.000 commensuratewith education and experienceSubmit resume to: Faith Matin, 1Kings, Highway Middletown. NJ07748

SERVICE STATION — Atten-dant. Full and part time open-ings, benefits, apply In person.Niche Sunoco, 217 Rt. 34. Holm-delSERVICE STATION ATTEN-DANT — Responsible person,salary neg. based on exp . ben-efits Apply Monmouth StreetChevron, Red Bank.

SHEET METAL TRAINEEImmediate openings for busyheating & a/c company. Goodbenefits, no exp necessary. Call561-0302 for application Bam -430pm.

SUPERINTENDANT/MAINTE-NANCE — Freehold Township.Large 2 slory condo sue. llva onposition. 1 bdrm. unit Matureindividual w/heavy exp. In car-pentry, boiler repair & generalmaintenance. Must have owntools. Call Mon-Frl, 10-4 p.m.,577-0642.

SUPERVISOR/TRAINEE — Fastgrowing plastics asaembty/fabri-cation company looking for fastlearner to supervise and workalong side other workers. Musthave good memory a desire toproduce quality custom prod-ucts. Company benefits. $7-M/hr to start Steady raisesbased on performance. Mat-•wan 560-3600.

SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR —S M I ehlft. P/T or P/T. E»p.

W2 Mortgages

051 Help WantedTEACHER — Girls Health andPhysical Education. Must haveNJ. Certification. Position avail.January 15. 1987. Send resumeand certificate to: Superinten-dent of School, Locust Avenue,West Long Branch, NJ. 07764(An equal oppty employer)

TEACHER — Social StudiesFull-time. Must hold N X Certifi-cation or letter of eligibility Abili-ty to coach or advise studentclub activities desirable. Salarybased on scale a experience.Position available Feb. 2, 1987,Send reiume immediately to: Dr.Alfred J. Campanella, Superin-tendent, Shore Regional HighSchool, Monmouth Park Hwy.W Long Branch, NJ. 07764.EOE.

THE BOROUGH OF RUM5ON— Is seeking an Electrical In-spector. Subcode license amust. Work load approx. 25permits, per month issued. Sala-ry neg. per year. Hours flexible.Secretary to assist with paperwork. Call, write or stop in. JimTanner Construction Official,Borough Hall. Rumaon, N.J.07760. Call B42-3O22. Positionavail January 1967.

VOLUNTEERS — Needed tohelp pattern brain injured child.No experience nac. 542-6839.

WAITRESSES/WAITERSS & N Restaurant, exp. Call 747-0307.

WAREHOUSE/PACKAGINGRapidly growing health ' careproducts manufacturer needsindividual for light packaging &warehouse support Full-timeposition w/excellent benefits.Applicant must have stable workhistory w/some experience inwarehouse work desirable. CallChris at 542-7766

052 Part TimeACTIVITY AID — P/T Includesdays, eves & weekends. Apply9-12pm Beachvtew ICF, 32 Lau-rel Ave., Kaansburg

BOOKEEPER — Experienced.Little Silver area, for contractorsoffice. Call 741-1222.

BOOKKEEPER — General writsup work, payroll A tax returns, 2or 3 dsys per week. Send re-sume to Box F462 c/o The Reg-ister. One Register Plaza.Shrewsbury, NJ 07701.

CLEANING PERSON WANTED— 30 hrs a week. Large office.Call for appointment Mondaythru Friday 11:00-3:00. Al Zullo.542-4000DELIVERY PEOPLE — Neededto Deliver Telepage TelephoneBook in the Freehold. Manala-oan, Howell a Marlboro areas.Make your own day light hrs.Call Jim. at 349-2292 or 623-3200 between 6 a 2:30.

DRIVER$5/hr 25-30 hrs per week. EarlyAM hours. Valid NJ drivers li-cense a must. Could, lead to fulllime. Call Dave Lucas or TomRobbms 542-4000. An EOE.

062 Mortgages

Part Time

Get Involved

Assist Credit Manager In butydepartment. Plenty of phonework. Cull 642-4000, Ext. 208.

PART TIME — Help wanted,solicitor between 9-4 pm. Week-days Apply In person, Brune-wlck Airport Plaza Lanes, Route36, Hazlet.

PART TIMEMAIL ROOM

Paper handlers needed. Twodays per week, Tue. a Frl. Guaranteed 16 hrs per week. Mustbe able to lift up 50lbe. Twopositions open. Contact TomSpagneli or Kim Walker before1000am. Mon. thru Sat. 542-4000 ext 277or apply in person.The Register. One Register Pla-za, Shrewsbury, NJ 07701. Alsotaking applications for variousothei positions including clerksa Inserters. Early morninghours, 12 midnight to 6am. 2 to4 days par week. Homemakers,retirees, students a military wel-come.

PART TIME — Mgr. trainee.salary plus/bonus. We seek

individual to run tele marketingprogram for well known dairypublication. Muat have excellent

people akWs, to accomplishhiring, training, motivating a

supervising. Eve. hours 5 to9pm. a Set. morn, cell DougReese at 583-5211.

PORTERS — And coctall waitresaes wanted1 to work eveningshift In bowling center Must beavailable between hours of 4 pmand midnight. Apply In person,Brunswick Airport Plaza Lanes.Rt 36. Hazlet.

SERVICE STATION ATTEN-DANT — Willing to train rightperson, salary neg. Apply Mon-mouth Street Chevron, RedBank.

TELEPHONE SALES — Parttime. Earn high commissionsselling the Register in your ownhome during your tree time.

LITTLE SILVERFAIR HAVENRED BANK

MIDDLETOWNEATONTOWN

542-8660WAITRESSES/WAITERS — Ap-ply in person Shamrock Dinar,Hwy 35, Middletown.

053 Babysitting/Chlldcare

KID KARE — Needs responsiblepeople for babysitting a house-keeping, full time or part time747-2297.

131 Houses for Sale 131 Houses for Sale

EXPERIENCED IRONING — La-dy wo do tartngpe* up «delivery. Ca« M f r W a j .

KIO KARE AOENCV — Bpeelet-U r a ki uaHyaWInu, houeeetaan-u g l party serving NJ Hceneerj,

' "ind1747-22*7.

061 BuainmaOpportunityAMERICA'S # 1

COFFEE(TOP NAME IN U.S.AJWHOLESALE ROUTE

Restock From CarWork Own Hour*

Mono investment

X. pleasant, high profit,TE business restocking

(FROM CAR) local outlets wMlbkneet name M coffee industryBO YEAR OLD PHOOUCTMocked by every maior foodstore Enjoys Ufetkne repeatbusiness.

Must aspire up to

INCOME OF$700 WEEK UP

Interviews granted ONLY tostrictly QUALIFIED pre-screenedippBcanls submitting (at time ol

responding to ad) all lha follow-ing:(1) Tkna avalabW «o aamcaaccounts(Daya. Evanmga. Waakanda).(2) MUST INCLUDEDOCUMENTED PROOFOf toquMd $4000 for InventoryNOW IN BANK (AT TIMEOF RESPONDING TO AD).(3) Yaar Car and Phona NumMr.Wrtta Box X427. do Tha Ragis-tar, 1 Register Plata .Shrewsbury. NJ 07701.

DISTRIBUTORSGreat product, larga consumera p p ,t7% to 10% prom margin withguaranteed results Trainingavailable. 1 can expisins an.Phona parson to person corlect.Mr Gsrner. 714 955-1531

062 Mortgage*ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS

Low rate 1 at a 2nd mtgs/reti-nsnclng/credit problems andforadosuraa ok.Kramer Financial 3M-O24O

LOANS TOHOMEOWNERS

For any reasonLow rates. Fast approvals.

Sterling Mortgage LTD

Credit problems understood.

071 MerchandiseFor Sale

APPLE MACINTOSH COMPUT-ER — 12BK w/lmagerlder prlnt-ar. w/aonwara. tiooo Ukabrand new Must sell. 22B4477or 571 4547

ARCADE GAME — Exc. cond.$200 or b/o. Call 747-5112BABY GRAND PIANO — Re-done Can between noun of 10to5:30pm.747-oa»0

BABY GRAND PIANO — Re-done, Can between hour* of toto 530 pm.

BAND SPLIT — Sailing guitars,amps, base, keyboards. P.A.,echo and effects 727-1695BEDROOM SET — King size,triple dresser, triple mirror, er-molre. two night tables. MOO orbest offer. 536-4143

BUTCHER BLOCK TABLE —With chrome legs, good condl-Bon. 175 747-34»2. attar 6.CANTATA — 700 backgroundmusic system, 2. 700 selectiontapes plus 2 wsll and callingspeakers, good for home, office,or small restaurant. Can 500-toM,COLUMBIA ROWING — Ma-chine, Ilka new. $75. 10 vacumdeanera, ad In good condition.MS to M each, all gaurenteed.Ok) school desk. $75. Handtruck, $20. dollies, $15, platformroller, $125. S drop clothes $25.530-5146

DESK — Cherry. $200. IBMtypewriter, $100. Call 671-5114.

DESKS. FILES - - Tables,chairs, storage cabinets, com-puter tables, office equip, etc. atbargain prices. New or used.A.AC. DESK OUTLET. 1709 Rt35. Oakhurst. 531-3990

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE — v> ctring $575. 2/3 tw ct ear studs.$525. » ct. tw ear studs. $400.Can 544-0261.

Fixed RateMortgages

From - | 3 / 4 Points

91/2%... 30 Year 9.70 Apr9V4%...15 Year 9.55 Apr

Ri/ltumct and Purchase Programs Available

(201)342-6504Call on other programs

ARMS Irom m*h (apr 8.92)No Verification programs

Second Mortgages Irom 12.991/.

Chelsea FinancialServices. Inc.

131 Main StreetHackcntack. N.J. 07601

Rates apply to applications taken after December 26.1986 andare subject to change without notice

LONG BRANCHFIVE FAMILY!

All apartments have been totally renovatedand feature new electronic smoke detec-tors, new fire escape, all spacious sizedrooms, ample tenant parking, gas heat &hot water, and within walking distance tobeach & new Ocean Blvd. $349,900741-6600

LITTLE SILVERDUTCH COLONIAL!

Old fashioned charm abounds In this"move in" condition 3 bedroom home offer-ing spacious living room with fireplace, for-mal dining, french doors leading tosunroom, full basement, 2 car detachedgarage, plus beautiful hardwood floors &chestnut woodwork. $187,000 741-7171

COLTS NECKTUDOR COLONIALI

Better than newl Executive country homewith many upgrades featuring center hall, 4bedrooms, 2w baths, magnificent kitchenwith adjoining flreplaced den, full sizedbasement with high celling, 2 car garage,plus 1.31 acres abutting Green Area.$485,000 741-8600 or 741-7171

• 648 Broad St. Shrewsbury 741-8600. ' • 112 E. River Rd. Rumson 741-7171 -

071

NaiVWST.

I 71T-£M

SttLLThe ThingsYou Don't

WantDU you know dare are hun-dreds ol enoppers reading meolaaeWad aKHon or The Reg>e-ler —atyday. tor the beat buyson ueed rnsrcBandMa tor sale.Ho douu Mnge you want to ea*• M sea • ! » you place your adIn Ito deMMed eecaonTo hats you aan your furMure.

M o h or anythingl fpu yg

esse. am'! C M you plenty ofaflvanmng urn. ki The Waujalarl aW t

g jal a very raaaonaWa prtoe1110.90 tor 4 Una ad — your adrune 10 day. )II your* aalng a single Hem Inyour "MarctianrJn tor Sal." ad.and you haven I aoM K In 10daya — you sua hava moreBdMMamg trnta. Caa ua on lha10th day and we'll ba happy torerun your same single Ham"Merchandlae tor Sals1 ad toranother 10 daya « no charge(FKEEI)Need more help to sell yourmarahandlee. Wan put your adin the newspaper ceftad ThaFort Monmouth Messsge. wMohla dHIHButed at Fort Monmouth.Mora than 13.000 mWary andcMUn personnel stationed atme Fort read this weekly news-paper with avid Merest. For anextra 12.40, your ' Merchandisefor Sato" ad runs m me Fwgkttertor up to 10 daya (20 daya forsingle Hem ad II necessary) plus1 week In Tha Fort MonmouthMsssags Of course H your mar-ohandsM la aold. you can cancelyour ad anytime, the price slaysthe same.

Can 542-1700 to place your ador for Information.

DINING ROOM — MedlteranisnTable. « chairs. Lighted breakfront, buffet. & server. Pads Indud. 11700 or b/o. 538-4143.

DRYER — f .cond., MO or best ofler.

ECONOLIFT — Standard reclin-er. Leather. S moe. ok). Waa11200 new. Asking 1800. Per-fect oond. Caa 2*0-177*.

FILL DIRT ANDROAD GRAVEL.ANY QUANTITY,WILL DELIVERANYWHERE.

493-9782FIREWOOO — Over 50 cords Instock, an oak and mixed hard-woods, all split wW. free deHvary. Ca« 544-0949 or 229-4281.

FIREWOOD/STCVEWOOO —Fun cord guaranteed or keep theload tree Every piece measured» split 22 In cord - 750 pieces.S3Vi m.«22ln.Kl6 ft 18 In.c o r d - 1 2 0 0 p i e c e s .4lt.>iem.>24lt. Kety PkmkenSince 1872 B72 9011

FIREWOOD — Stove wood. Hancord. $40. Also any combinationof your choice we can make up.CM 485-0292

FISHING RODS — And reels Inshore and off shore, some cus-

l, some Memanonal. 842.MM.FURNITURE — Moving. 3 pcwan unit with kghts, a drop leafbar, $450. Sofa, lovoeeat amatching Ottoman, saver gray Ina brush valour.. $400. Diningsat. china closet, table with 2leavea.. 4 chairs. Cane backs.$450. Kitchenette table, butch-arStock color, barrel chairs, al-mond color, $200.8714232.

OARAGE DOOR — Wooded. 9ft., like new $125. Can 741-8744.GERMAN GRANDFATHERCLOCK — Mahogany .3 chimes.moon dial, beveled glass. $586Call 544-8281.

IBM TYPEWRITERSRENTAL $25 & up par monthRant-option to buy 747-1881

LARGE COUCH — 2 Cherry-wood End Tallies with drawer*.1 Oval Chanywood Coffee Ta-ble. Antique Satm Drapes withcomic*. 2 stltlls lamps. kjkabOK,plnbail machine, brown leathercoat. 3/4 length, alia small, twincanopy bed. dressers, etc. Mustsea Can 922-9398.

LEAD FOR SALE — 200 pda.for keel of boat. Can John Maranru at 842-2524.

OFFICE DIVIDERS — Soundabsorbent. Free standing wallapanels 3'x 8'., 5'xfl\ rust, yellowa beige Call 201-223-1011.

PIANOUpright. Beautiful playing condi-tion. $350. Can SSS-0455.PROVINCIAL — Bdrm sat. com-plete with mameeees, cheatsextra antique chest $700. 842-1788 or 427-7278.

131 Houses for Sale

071

KITCHEN M T — FunHla laptame. 4 Often Wary good cond$188 Cat 290-177$.

RATTAN — W O W (Ml B M

tt St.>T»o? imttlimmThe Wicker aaekal. HI X Cons

REAL FARM LANDTOPSOIL

ANY QUANITYWILL DELIVER

ANYWHERE493-9782

ROOF LOADER — $400. Cat291-118$.RUG — Texas asserWde eternalcarpet Brown and wWes. Ap-pro. Snl. $400 7(7-0203. (awe

Ma. and S i «d chairs. 2

fmv Cat tor appoint, 741-1H3.BEARS — Waaher, * gaa dryer." « t fI « grate, eurtboard. Moving, muat eat Can•71-84S*SNOW BLOWER — 20 In. path.3Vi horse power. asMng $100 orbeet ofler Cat 741-2058.SOFA — Antique. Victorian,green velvet with mahoganywood tnm. seats 8. Good condi-tion. $795 W 3 B 7 2START YOUR OWN — Printingbuemesa. 11«17 MuHHti presswrlh Cham OeUvsry. 19 InchChallenge paper cutter with ex-tra Made and metal stand. Ughttable, round comer cutter, assorted supples. $1500. Can871-083$.TIFFANY LAMP — Rectangularshape, crystal ohandeear, 2electronic cash registers. Can538-4143.TIRES — 2 new DurHop stealbelted radial snows. 195-80R14.$90 Can 264 33W anytime

071

tree Ds• a la) ISO M CMoneat, $-7 pj«

OKYOEN TANKS - I S D M lm i , t i s E.290-1779

1971 08 slants a. 2 apd traneK M797-a fOOT COUCH — Perfect con-dMon, tiMMl, wMi •Kp cow.Mueteel.eVO 741-2»»»

072Of»g«/Ytcl8.N.

GARAGESALES!8Mtfttwthlng$

you r» longer rated

Start your garaga aasswWianao—rtghthere.4 knes. 3 deys. $3 50

Each addWonal Una .75* extra.ABM. puk-up your FREE garagasale kit which Includes signs sod

Mnga to neap your aaie.Call 542-1700

077 PeU & LivestockADVANCED AND BEGINNERS— Classes January aes-a lona , $ 4 5 . BayehoreCompanion Dog Club, 741-904$.

AKC POODLE PUPPIESBlaok mW. 10 wke old. Champlonstocli. $300. Cal 871-0130.

FEMALE DOQ — 8 moe. ok).Spaniel mix, medium aba. Freeto good home. Oood wWi chil-dren. Housetxoken » a l enols787-2077.

USED CLOTHINO — Principallywoman. Includes mena sportscoats 8 some mena suits Ap-prmc.eOOQSje 201-223-1011

VACUUM CLEANER — NewHeritage II Datum w/aham-pooer, floor wsxer. poKahar.$875. Can 389-2737.VIDEO ARCADE QAME — Frog-

«5.

WASHING MACHINE — Ken-more $100, Wood burning stove$100 or b/o, Holleinsx Cameraw/aoceaaorles $80. 291-9099.

WHEEL. BARROWS — Masons.kke new, $35. 50 gal. drums. $2.ShWglee. $15 a bundle Severalgallons of redwood eismedfencewood, tS/gal. Windowsash walghta. many a l kmdsnremene bear muga. 741-0061.

131 Houses lor Sale

FEMALE ROTTWEILER — $moe., houaa broken, must eeldue to allergies Asking $300.Cs« eves 495^9457.

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIESAKC Registered $300. In timetor Crurstmes. Cal 530-1433I WAS COLD — Neglected andabandoned and almost died ofpneumonia and loneliness. San-ta Clause rescued and sealedma and I'm healthy and ready togive you love and guard yourhouaa and famay In ttme for thehoadaya, I am mala. 2 yrs oldhall Collie, half Shepherd withgreet dlsposlfondness forIadopt ma and I I spend the restof my Me making you glad thatyou did. Cal 842-4039.LABRADOR — Pupa, 7 weeksold. 4 white 4 black. Just m timefor ChrlstmssI $150. 787-2871

131 Houses lor Sale

MTMIVSM IAKC- i

1-TEaf — Pupplea. AKC. 8

TANKS-A-LOT$S«s aVoadSL. Rod Bar*

747-4440

AKC PUPPIES

Hueky. ShaWs, SMrrou. CoMa

old

39vs Broad St. Red Bank747-3440

Animal KingdomHwy 35. Ocean Two 531-1104

VOfMIES — AKCE*c lemperment Parents on

premises Cee2tl-S707

131 Houses lor Sale

0(0 Blcyelee/IHInl

BtCYCLI —

SS'-ff $290 Can 871-

AA ANTIQUES WANTEDAleo amenta of homee. etaca.ueed ium«ure. aes. 2*4-Msa

ALL ELECTRIC TRAINSUorwl. Fryer. Ives, hlgrtsstt paid. Nobody beats myprice 2C4-5075

ALL ELECTRIC TRAINSLionel, fiyer. ivee. otd toys. etc.Htgheet * peal. Nceody beatsmy price 2*4-5075

ALL UONEL TRAINSOr Flyer. Top caah appraisalPrtoe no ob>act 940-2803.

BEFORE YOU HAVE YOURSALE — Cat Second Hand LH.284-0777. AhW 5 284-0815Higheet prlcee paid lor all Hems,antiques, ale. For bergWe. stopat 24 Broad Si KoypnW.

MILITARYUniforms, madafs. swords beyoneta. a* eou»lneera WWI *WWII, etc Cal CM 00*1

131 Houses lor Sale_

Happy New Year

HAZLET 264-9511RUMSON 747-9600KEYPORT 264-9593

SAYREVILLE 721-3500OCEAN TWP. 531-6266

SPINDRIFTREALTORS

SPECIALLY PACKAGED...for easy living in Shrewsbury,here is an imposing carriagehouse designed for the large fam-ily. 6BRs, 6V2B, billiard room, andlibrary, all with plenty of space.Included too — an in-ground pool.$619,000.

IDEAL LOCATIONTrips to market, schools and trainsare within walking distance fromthis Little Silver Cape. Qne-halfacre of land, 3-4 large bedrooms,fireplace & hardwood floor. Asking$210,000.

IB.Why go anywhere else?

842-1894

Rumson Really1 West River Road, Rumson, New Jersey

REALTOR M.LS

Aich in, new

L

FOUR SEASONS, RULTOM

A COZY RANCHStart here in this 2 bedroom newly renovated ranch iKeansburg. Features include new floor, new bath, ne\carpeting, new hot water heater, aluminum siding andneutral decor throughout. Completely fenced yard.

ADMIRALS ROWThis "Newport" Colonial is better than newl On a

Eiinium lot, features include a 16' family room and a•t and airy kitchen, gas heat, 3 bedrooms and 2V2s. In a favorite area of Howell where amenities

include swimming pool, tennis courts, clubhouse andmaintenance $177,900

A CONDOMINIUM ALTERNATIVEOn over an acre of property in Hoimdel this delightful 2bedroom cottage has been totally renovated with acontemporary flair! The 23' living room features 3 sky-lights, track lighting and a floor to ceiling fireplace. Manyamenities $224,900

A MAGNIFICENT SETTINGSurround yourself with breathtaking gardens, specimentrees, brick patio and walks. This gracious 3 bedroom,2'/2 bath ranch in Middletown this spacious rooms in-clude a 25' family room with fireplace, living room,formal dining room. Other features include a full base-ment central air, gas heat and a wounderfui 40' heatedpool. $398,000 . ••

97 E. River Road 12 Kings Highway 59 E. Main StreetRumson . Middletown Hoimdel

530-9600 671-5200 946-3700CALL US FOR A COMPLIMENTARY MARKET ANALYSIS

THESEASONS GREETINGS

ANDBEST WISHES

FORA

HAPPYHEALTHY

ANDPROSPEROUS

1987A SINCERE THANK YOU TO EVERYONEWHO MADE 1986 A BANNER YEAR FORMacKENZIE-MORRIS

MicKanzia-MonitRealtors

Middletown671-1780

MAGNIFICENTmanor house under construction in Shrewsbury onalmost 4 acres. Large entrance lover with circularstaircase. 4 bedrooms with a 26x20 ft. masterbedroom. Huge kitchen, gracious living room anddining room and family room with fireplace Library. 2car garage, plus central air and gas heat. Offered at$395,000 842-6009

EXECUTIVE STYLEperfect for the young executive-family. 4 bedrooms.2'fi baths, refurnished kitchen, family room with tire-place and large ceramic tile foyer. Hardwood floors inliving room and dining room, new carpet in bedrooms.Property professionally cared for with large lovelypatio. Central air. 2 car attached garage and basement.$279,900 642-6009

WATERFRONTNewly renovated 2 bedroom colonial on Clay PitCreek. Privacy and location are special features.Perfect starter or second home with expansionpossibilities. Call today. $189,000 842-6009

EXCLUSIVEMint condition 5 bedroom, 3w bath expanded ranch inquaint Little Silver. Beautiful grounds with lovely plant-ings. Fireplace in family room, generous size livingroom and dining room and wonderful screened inporch. 2 car attatched garage, central air and gas heatCreate your family memories in this lovely home.$379,900 642-6009

GloriaNilsonREALTORS

600 Rt 35, Shrewsbury 842-6009

"Any Size House «Garden Under Tha Sun"

The Sunday Register . DECEMBER 28.19B6

• M O I D — Piaaoc M0d« ears•area 01 J M (Ma. UonM• « . H.O.H

lOOCoodoa— i an «m*>.

. V C . laundry

risKti. mamas to NYC kjrr,*700/mo C M M M ) "an-au-aeoo, S-SPM12/16LONa BRANCH — Sunny kj>w y T n n . w/e\ bmn tanotd yard.2 M l to bch F M aflar rantal.wniiiin n«nm am sao-saoo.

101 ApwtmwiteALL LANDLORDS

MonmouthaCNO COST TO YOU

NoObagatonlWra parsonarty aaoort proapac-t w amaraa 10 your propany.

Cat ma PiatassinnaHIWalehan RantaU me

ZVQ-1100

Uoonoad R U EMMtOroUr

ASBURY PARK — Own 1 a,c/«/c. d/w. M m w/«r crp.1,• U S pi. uWt F M aflar rants!VMtohorl Rarrfalt Bkr. 530 5200

Cdflwooo Boon — O—n 4nrn. 2 br. now me., nmty dac.,MdHpM 0k FM anar rsnlsl.VMtlwt Rama* Bkr. 2MM6S6.

260 Autoi

101

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Ui»

mg M M NY. My MM. Com-

M M CM 2OI-»1-O237

EAST KEANSBUm — 3 bOrn.apt. M5O ) U x i i tasounty No pMS 496-2MI

FAIR HAVEN — Coiy I bdrmcortaga tor rant. Acrow frompond Racaniry ninoawn Q.ago a prtvan, back yard Lovalynatahtxirhood Avai. Fab. I.•US/mo. + uH 530-1590 anar6 p m

GREEN GROVE GARDENS— I• 2 badraom apt*. Eac. locationto OSP Baauoruc spaciousoourtyarda. NUaat rantau mKayport. 264-ISW, »-S. Mon-Frl.KEANSBURO — S small roomf.«450/mo I mo. MCurrty plotuW »1-S265 or «95 95»5

KEANS8URQ — 2 bdrm. apt.tSSO/mo. plus alac. iv» ucurtry.Ca>7S7-eO55

RED BANK AREA — Urga stg* o Fu« knehan. laundry (aou-

(400 768-9122

RED BANK — AttractM 1 bad-room gardan apt., nawly dacor,1650 mo. Indudaa haat. hot wa-tar. codung pat. iv* mo. aac.CM 741- 9115

250 Auto*

101 ApartmwittLONG BRANCH — 3 room oat

raar ooaan. nnapona-napt. nan Prma

MOOERN APARTMENT — NaartrsnarinnakOn Baal Una 10 canbatora noon. 4M-04K.

RED BANK — Luxury Z bdrm•OOTftouta W/W carpal, dtar.»raahar. 4 ptg. $726. 530-7300

RED BANK MANOR — OHSpring St. 1 bdrm. haat. hotwatar. parking, carpatad.$660/mo. 741-TJim

RED BANK — RIVERFRONTNaw 1 bdrm.. I bain ovanooWngma NavasMk. $ H 0 indud. uatRam waft option Can 741-0618

RED BANK — Ultra 5 rm Ou-

md . Uda ok Faa .Walchan Ramata. Bkr 5304200.

..yard.•nar n

RED BANK — 2 bdrma now•van $725 haat ma., can 7415672.

RED BANK — I Bdrm. apt.. 2ndfloor. Mich., tor. rm.. bdrm. bath.UW. Me. Broad St. On bus UnaWaft to station 1 downtownMaximum occupancy, 2 par-sons $575/mo 1 yr laasa. 1mo. sac. Can 741-3460.

RUMSON — 2 bdrm. carpatad.D/W. can 291-5916.

SEA BRIGHT — January to Mayrantal. studio apt. lumiahad. nouW. Call attar 3. 671-6127

SEA BRIGHT — Lovaly 3 roomapt. Haat mcludad 1525 mo.741-0742

250 Autos

101

SEA BRIGHT — Lg. hjrmahad 3rma. naw appl.. walarftont. long-/•hon larm Faa arWaBhart nsmaH. Bar

SEA BRIGHT — 1 bdrm. aal h

tDBOaid. haat CM 747-211*.

102 How—toe BfWFAIR HAVEN — 2 bdrm.. nawaat m Mohan, fnahad baas-m*n(, lovvty ytwd, riaWr sohoOatt,k trans M M pkia uts. HI3313

HAZLET — Lg. I room. 4 bdrm,garaga. Vk aora. kkM/pats ok.Faa aflar rantal. Walchan Rant-als, Bkr 290-9555

KEANSBURQ - Lg 7 room.nraplaos, carpal, yard, naarbaaoh. Wd. ok Fa* anar rantal.Walenan Rantats Bkr. 290-9555.

KEANSBURO — 7 rm. houaa, 3, modem WKti., p

yard Av.« Immad 355-3596

LITTLE SILVER — AvM.Immad. 2 BR caps, larpa aWc Abaaamant, backyard, gaa haat.qulat straat. 530-7560.

MIODLETOWN — SmaN f « u u ,appaancaa, carpal, yard.

kkta/pata ok Faa aflar ranul.Watchart Rantals. Bkr 290-9555

MONMOUTH BEACH — 4 bdrmVictorian wrth iplandld walarviaws Can 291-5916.

OCEANPORT — Luxury 5 rma.s/c. aim. garaoa. w/d. yard, pa-Uo. kids ok . Faa allar rantal,w.icharl Rantakt. Bkr 530-5200.

102 HOIWM terHwW

MaUULITOMan — Fnma •barwaan 36 • as. t bdrm. houaalor rant •aauBM a m i . gashaal Hatt/mo. pkia riS.. Into.aacumy. no pan. CM 4W-3717.

„ — Coiy ootanw. aborm. lum, 4 m a , WlOy

— t bdrm.Won., oamrai air, raoa y r d .to tr«VM.. thoppMiQ, 4 ajoftM75 + US» B4J-33I3

104 Wlntvf RDHIBMSEA BMOHT — a m ooaanfront arfcasnu,. rum Aval.Wmad Cat a42-000a/fao->u47.

106 Furnish** Rooms

Rooms * studios Irom (40 a wkHOME RENTALS. Bkr. 3O-1234

KEANSBURG — Room lor rant.Pkmaa ca» 7*r-«*a* or 7*7-7247.

KEYPORT — FumanM roomrani tor a gsnaaman. C M

2*4-7107.

LONG BRANCH — Ckwn. ojuMIhouaa. Suparlntandant m raal-danca. KMchan prMagaa. Walk10 ocaan. C M 672-1653 ava-

RED BANK — Convaram loca-tion Womana dub or Rad Bank741-1435 or 747-SM1.

250 Autos

RED BANK — FURNISHEDROOM. VERY REASONABLE.QUIET. 8AFE AREA. 630*317.

250 Autos

1MUTTVCBILVCII

J n so, tt°ow MMakaady aoM OJM) 747-7707.

OFFICE- To k*. Naw •

1*00 aq rl S omoaa and raoap-«on ana. CanraMaM R I S Dlocation. Naar parkway.Shrawabury common. 1.0 a aqI t pan uMaaa. CM 741-iaaO.

K /Uiaury otaoa apaoaFor purohaaa oM 630-

a»»aalinc»>-nON400-2000 aq ft H and up

nr f ind . air OUIIC»BJI««. at-

CaTjudy^TMo"*'' P * r t * 8

HED BANK — PlolsSSIonal ol-

AVC.pwMnQ. R U N VWIOS tro*n Mpar aq It Plus uM. C M Mgr.Rocart Oassaway. Sat-«S*8.

RED BANK — 1 am onto. i . UHaal, ac prkl. pa rk * ,

•a 747-fi00

13* sq It. omoa. carpatad adacoraMd S200 par mo., lyr.Waaa. C M Judy 747-76*0.

110 Wanted to R*ntFENCED IN LOT — Or lockabl.MtVAM Q*WQs>. FOf sWidBMMmaoranary. C M D. Pachaco 496-0024.

250 Autos

110 W»tYa»d to Rtrt

LOOKING — To rant 2 or S BM.Fab. t . I aduaa. 1 oMk). rat'a.SM0 » MOO/mo K1-W71 or(72-0*21 anar aaM

131

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDSnmmam tunon m grstii netgnoor-Mod of Aaanac HlgnlandsLarga kragukv ahapad woodadlot. 3 baorooma. 2 b a n . graatMjokaunmnoMiIha pool w«>

ka daoor. a w propsrry*wa ba• n •koalwnt mraatmwii .(1*2.500. FHV-117.

SCHLOTTREALTORS S4a-7S00

HAZLET

WONDERFULFAMILY HOME

SpaMoua HaHat SpM-Laval Ingraal ODndajon. 4 bdrma., 2balna, knotty pkia tamHy room,hardwood floora, garaga w/ta#i,Mnoad raw yard, tuny land-acapad (164.900

TWO RIVERSREALTY

RUMSON REALTOR 530-6650

250 Autos

131 Hou—

EDWARD W. COLLINSAGENCY REALTORS (44V4I44

HOME FOR THEJ ^ O U D A Y S ^

to ba n lha 5 badroom. camarM 2 yaar youns C o W l *

nal ium Mini ig doors to dankand yard. 2 T» bans. Mrgs

* fttajBl ttavatB^BBjBafkJ ••••• r^BTjTalV

olasaraoa Cloaalo Routs*andMS. A M tor oommuanComa M k M most praaa-BjMdanloprnanl (21(400.

SCHLOTTREALTORS-201-«71-1000

houaa la waning tor K16 17 IMn room k

r K Una• km M

ti k16 17 IMng roomplaca lor that romantic coupk)that warm to M In H M o l Mcoiy nraplaoa TLC walthis hou*. parract lor that youngooupk) starting out. EMras kvduds raw akjoMc systam. 3yaar root. 2 zona haat and alao-trlc amoka alarms IM.SOOMIOS-747

SCHLOTTREALTORS 20i-a7i -aaaa250 Auto*

131

IrrarsswsBBO gaa gral Cteaa a>

717. d f a .WO

SCHLOTTIEALTOR* to\-*n-mmKEANSBUM

COZY RANCHOaan wM mawakwd WA> k—Vroom Ranoh looattd on a quM

. M,MtkalaH SB BaM *** * ••aAMat

rkjM In. klaal tor — J a m a bura n . raaraaa. or kKIMOri. Aatnow batora pnoaa start boomlnaupward m Ksanakura, (TSJOtMKM-741.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 2O1-I71-****MARLBOROTN. laonaolak lndat« i laprkw. WH ba raady M* spring,SM oma k) pk* out your eholoanJ aaj-ULT ra-aiaaajtnn aWlMhal (***•>

dan. and skylights mat* M M *lantasac buyte20.000. MKW-74*.

SCHLOTTREALTORS «H-«71-*»»*

250 Auto*

rAIR CONDITIONING

PLUS LARGE DISCOUNTSHURRY! HURRY! LIMITED TIME OFFER

RETAIL DELIVERIES BY DECEMBER 31,1986

• NEW 1986 STE'S #1987 HERO'S #1987 FIREBIRDS #1987 6000 SEDANS

• 1987SUNBIRDS •1987FIEROGTE's #1987TRANSAM's •19876000 WAGONS!

!

i395 Broad Street

RED BANK741-5180

THE PONTIAC PRICE LEADER FOR 57 YEARS

RASSAS PONTIAC

drive the difference

UCEOT87's ARRIVING NOW!

Free 3 year AAA Motor ClubRoad Service included with the

purchase of every new 87 PeugeotCommitted to excellence for over 25 years ,

• excellence in service• large Computerized parts department• Factory trained technicians

Service Problems?-Try Us!

NOTHING ELSE FEELS LIKE IT

Bill Lanzaro'sAsk about our special deals on

1986 Peugeot't

• Free 4 year scheduled maintenance• Financing as low as 6.9% *• Rebatea o( up to $1,000.

Rt. 9 South, Freehold, N.JAt The Freehold Circle

780-9500SALES: OPEN DAILY

Monday-Thursday 9am to 9pmFriday & Saturday 9am to 6pm

'available to qualified buyerstor 38 months

N O W fit YOUR LINCOLN^MERCURY-MERKUR DEALER THE

VEflRSflLES flLERTACT NOW, AND GET* Participating Dealers can arrange 3.9% financingthrough Ford Credit for qualified buyers or cash back.Limit one. Take delivery from Dealer stock by Jan. 4.Dealer contribution may affect customer savings.Other rates available as length of term increases.See Dealer for complete details.

ANNUALPERCENTAGE

RATE FINANCING

OR S300CASH BACK O N LYNX.*

With standard front-wheel drive and 3.9% financing,Lynx amounts to a great year-end value. But hurry!

SAVE HUNDREDS WHEN YOU BUY SPECIAL OPTIONPACKAGE.**1987 MERCURY SABLE.Now is the time to buy a sleek, front-wheel drive Sable, with specialoptions like tilt steering wheel, digital clock, manual air conditioner, powerwindows, tinted glass and more.** Based on Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price of package compared to the traditionalprice of options purchased separately. Ask for Special Option Package 202A.

LOOK INTO A GRAND MARQUIS, AND SEE HOWAFFORDABLE LUXURY

CAN BE.Grand Marquis comes with standard V-8 engine,

power steering, power windows, electronicAM/FM stereo radio with 4 speakers,

tinted glass and much more.

HURRY IN BEFORE DEC. 31 AND TAKE ADVANTAGEOF YEAR-END TAX SAVINGS.

Remember, if you purchase a new car before Dec. 31, you can still deduct 100% of your sales tax.Deduction may apply if you itemize under present tax laws.

HJRRV IN TQ VQUR1INCQLN-MERCIJRY-MERKJR DEflLER TQCflV.RITTENHOUSE-KERRLINCOLN MERCURY900 State Highway 35

Asbury Park, New Jersey 07712

IRWIN LINCOLN-MERCURYSales and Service Co.

Freehold Circle, Routes 9 & 33Freehold. New Jersey 07728

CAUSEWAYFORD AND MERCURY

Route 72Manahawkin, New Jersey 08050

TOWNE& COUNTRYLINCOLN-MERCURY

Route 37 EastToms River, New Jersey 08753

WEISLEDER. INC.575 Burnt Tavern Road

Brick'town, New Jersey 08723

WALL LINCOLN-MERCURYSales and Service, Inc.

Shrewsbury at SycamoreShrewsbury, New Jersey 07701

STRAUBLINCOLN-MERCURY INC.

400 State Highway 35Keyport. New Jersey 07735

The Sunday SegUteSUNDAY, DECEMBER 28.1986

131 Hou—i

DEENH*» "•». o m nttocanng

SiCHLOTT•*ALTOflt 201-671-6661

MIOOLSTOWIN

CONTEMPORARYCOLONIAL

Faatunng larga tol 40 loot Hackfrom wMch to vtaw Rarrtan Bay1 good ailad Dadrooma. 3 Batlvrcoma. 2 ion* g M naal. ln»M M and EuropMn atyiadk»rt»n. AMUng 1178,000 MION-

SCHLOTTWEALTOW8 210471-1000MIDOLETOWN

JUST REDUCEDTrMMonM and ataoam 4 c unwm Cantar Han <So™«i witnprrvala backyard BaautJfui tam,hi room ontn cuatom bookcaaaa•found brick ftraplaca Sun-I.lladcountry kltchan M l no wax«oor. 2 aura larga pwtum withback door 10 ovar-aliad dackfun Daaantant and it»28 gamaroom with awing guts Ooora1341,000 MIDS-722

SCHLOTTREACTORS 201-671-0060MIDOLETOWNOno» you op*n the door you wiMtaR *n tova. Statrwd oia.i win-dow*. Mat* foyer, thyUghti «ndyou h«v*ni «vtn •nt*w*d m*iMno room. This 4 twdroom. 2bath Ranch la parfact for familytun, tha kk)t will anpy th« 20*40toground pool and mom *no dadcan anuggta in front of ona ofyour 3 tkraptacas. Atto faatura*a famHy room, tunroom andUrga ••i-in-kuchan plu» formaldtmng room All of tm« locatedin an axccutiva na^nborhoodwith an aaay to commuta totraini and QarcMn St.it Park-way. $279,000 MIDS-736

SCHLOTTREALTORS I 201-071-0600MIDDLETOWNCuatom built ipactout 3 bad-room. 17 yair ok) Ranch onShadow Laha Formal Ciningroom haa sliding gian doorslaading to r « r yard with magnif-leant viaw of laka. Updating in-cludaa naw vinyl kiicrwn floorand carpating in third bedroomHardwood iioort throughoutEnjoy tea •kiting in lha wtntarand fishing tn tha sum mar$206,000 MIDS-749

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-671-0666MIDDLETOWNSix yaar old 4 bedroom COLO-NIAL tastefully decorated inneutral tones. Extra large bed-rooms, and 22x20 dack.$145,000 MIOS-679

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201 671 oweMIDDLETOWN

SEE FIRST .Mint condition 4 bedroom split,living room with fireplace, formaldining room, family room withfireplace ft built in book cases.Large eat in kitchen, profession-ally landscaped, private rear p«-tio Within walking distance topark and NYC transportation.1105.000 MIDS-07Q.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-671-0600MI00LETOWNLarge 4 bedroom. 2 bath bi -levelset on a lovely perk-like setting.Complete with babbling brookand brtdga Thia home la alldone in neutral tonee andboasts extra-large rooms Qreetfamily neighborhood, and isnear an NYC transportation.shopping and schools. Justmove-in and unpack. MIDS-712.$149,800

SCHLOTTMIDDLETOWN

LIKE NEW3 bedroom. 2Vi bath Cape Colo-nial, stone fireplace m 23x12living room, large eat in kitchenoverlooking patio, stained hard-wood throughout, professionallytandscapted, ' private ' woodedarea behind rear yard affordslots of privacy, wall to wall car-peting and neutral colors. Pricedto sell fast. $192,000 MIDN-304.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-671-1000MIDDLETOWNHistoric Lend Mark Circe 1600Wide pienked floors and 2 fire-places with a formal central hallentrance, leading to a comfort-able kitchen Outside the door, aprivate decked garden area anda working w«n Carriage housewith a hide-away studio. Needsredecorating and TLC. All show-ings through listing agent.$289,000 FHV-114

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-842-7900

MIDDLETOWNPRIME AREA OF MIDDLE-TOWN. DON T MISS THIS' 3badroom, 1 l j bath, fully heatedb-atemeni Ranch It |utt waiting

• to ba dedoratad Pncad to tall.Bring your Invaatora. $149,900FHV-106.

SCHLOTT

131 HouMt

GOVERNMENT HOMES —FromSi (u reper) Dsttnquanlproperty Wippssaasions. Ca*6OS-607-6O0O ext OH-S247 torcurrent repo list ^ ^

RUMSONPREFERRED ADDRESS

Spectoue Rumson Ranch mpfaatifjunrs estate aree is eet onnaarty 2 aoree. True two tamttyhome haa 4 bdrma.. 3 bams. *tuM fvuahed basement Privaterear petto you can sun on anveer long Alot of warmth$450,000

TWO RIVERSREALTY

RUMSON REALTOR UO4&S0

RUMSON — Watar vUw. Sbarm. 3 bam. apw-kwal on IVaacraa m pnrna araa. Mova incond 747-0337. $386,000

132Condot/Townhouse*

ABERDEENLovaly two badroom condo.mova in condition, immaculata.convaniant 10 all tranaponation.graat for tha mvaator. flraplacain ovarana living room, tnad toratra ttortga FHV 107.$123,900

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-842 7800

HIGHLANDSHigh m tha him ot tha Hignlandaovarioofcing tha Shrawabury Rlv-ar. convaniant to all transporta-tion PrlcarJ to aall. A muat toaaa 1102,000 MIDS-740.

SCHLOTT

250 Ajlto*

SELLYOURCAR

Did you know mora proapacttvacar boyar a In mia araa drat raadlha ctastlnaa aacnon of ThaRaganar. lor tha Baal uaad cardaaM No doubt an ad «r» haspyou maka rna baat daal tor yourcar.To halo you aall your car. Wa igrva you planty ot advartlalngana In Tha Raglatar at a varyraatonaMa pnoa ($1060 lor 4Una ad — your ad runs 10 daya(Evaryday 23.000 pace* buyTha Ragiatar I Can ua on thaloth day It you haven i sold youicar and wa'N ba happy to rerunyour auto tor sale ad lor another10 days al no charge (FREEI)Need mora help to sell your carWe II put your auto lor sale ad Inthe nawapapar called Tha FortMonmouth Maaaage, which ladlatrlbutad at Fort MonmouthMora than 13.000 military andcivilian personnel stationed altha Fort raad this waakly nawapaper with avid interest For anantra (2 40. your auto lor salead rune In tha Register lor up to20 days (I necessary, plus 1week in Tha Fort MonmouthMassage 01 course II you aallyour car you can cancel your adanytime Tha price stays thaaama.

Can $42-1700 to place your adprior tplonnatMn.

250 AutOI

250 Autos

CHEVROLET CHEVELLE1970 4 dr. V-«. amo. rune

nsarjawofk AatungCM

CHEVY CAPRICE WAOON197S pa. pb, at. a«c. cond. iownar Oarage kapt 86.000 mi.(2800 Can 957 9024

CHEVY CMEVETTE — IMS.•300 mi automatic, axe condi-Bon. aalung $4780. 630-4887.

CHEVY MAUBU WAOON19*0 Vary good cond Standardtrana . air. pa. am/lm radio, feardatog. kiggaga nek. 99.200 mi$1360 or b/o 071-2110

CHEVY MALIBU — 19*0. $2000or best oltar. Muat aaal Can747-1149

CHEVY — MaWu ( 3 atalloi.wa-gon Mesas a K M body work$1700 Of bast ofar Brand nawwet 204-4292 aftar 4PM.

CHEVY — MaUbu 1900, 4 dr.140.000 mi good tranaporu-Uon. $750 or bast otter Can071-1070 altar 0pm.

CHEVY — Monia SO. Nawtrana. w/warranty. interior axe.cond PS. PB. A/C. AM/FM ste-reo $2000 or b/o. 872-9011

CHEVYNova '77. 6-cyl. auto. end. run-rang cond $850. CaH 466-5026,

CHEVY — Nova 197S. 4 dr. nawam/tm stereo caaa. A tires$8O0 Can 291-4959 batwaan 3-5pm.

CHRYSLER — 1974. NewportCuatom. runa wan. Paal Inapac-tion, ps/pb. 4 dr. a/c $850 orb/o. Can »46-6142 attar 8pm.

CJ7 Jaap — 1979 $1200 or b/o.Call 291 -8520 altar 5pm.

250 Autos

250 Autos

COUGAR — 78. tu*y aquppadLooks 4 runa graat Muat aaa.$1300 or MO. Ca« 741-8190

COUGAR —19S1 8 cyl.. aalung$4500 or b/o 62.400 mi. 1972Plymouth, 78.800 mi., partactoond $4110. Moving 718 6480.

DATSUN B210 OX — 1978. 8spd. a/c. am/tm oaaa. atarao.raar darroat. naw dutch, nawaxhauat. vary good oond $1600or b/o. 871-2041

DATSUN —.aSOZ T7. 81S00 Innaw pana i W > Runa » kx*aa«oaaant. Muat aal Fktt $2800Can 284-830$.

DATSUN 2S0ZX — 1979 8 apd .air. b luet e»var. 30.000 orig imOrig ownar. $7300. Cat! $4$.9708.

DATSUN — 280Z 1978 Nawttarao. 5 apd. $2200 or b/o. Can842-1073.

DATSUN — 1982 Modal 210 2door hatchback, auto., ac. pa,pb. sunroof, very daan. 50.000ml. $2700 or b/o 29CMM72

OOOQE CHAROER — 1977Oood condition $500 Pa. pbam/tm radio Call 842228a

DODGE MONICO — 1978 A/C.power, good tianaponatton. l i t$400 takes It. 291-1407.

DODGE VAN — 78 $450. aa IsCat 291 -0076

• FORDEacort 82 Gray w/rad Int Exclcond. $2000. Call 672-0938.

FORD LTD II — 1978. Needsangina work, over $600 in nawpana, will except reasonableollar 871-7423.

ISO Autos

250 AulO«

f ORO — Eacort L 83 4 cyl 2-doof haanhtiaai. Automatic Pa.

Radio, haatar. am/lm caaa

(1900. Cat 786-1660

FORD MUSTANG — 1*7$. V-6.auto, good tar pans or repair.$680 orbaal otlar. 290-84H

FORO — 68 Eacort PB. aanlordrive, axel. oond. Muat aallAatmg $4600. 390-M14GRANADA — 78 PS. PB.am/tm radio, good oond., $700Call 663-6460

GRAND PRIX — 1980 Blackw/aaddat Manor. CxaHani con-

739-2449.GRENADA — 1677. 62.000 ml.Juat paaaad inspection Exoal-lert condition Aahg $650 Can495-4123

HONDA — 1862 CMC. goodoond.. tuna graat. $4700 Call671-7863 aWer 6pm

HONDA — 1M0 Accord. 2 dr..auto, ttarao. 67.300 ml B/Oovar $2000 Altar 4pm. 6 onwaakanda 264-2214

JEEP — 1667. CJS w/ptowRaOuilt V-6, naw trrat. brakaa.battery Many naw pana. Ooodcond $1500 671-3661.

KITSON CHEVROLET CO.Hwy 38 Eatornown

1 542-1000

LABRIOLA MOTORSNewman Sprtngt Rd Rao Bank

741-2433

LEMANS — Soon. 1970. 2door, hurtt 3 apaad. 380 withaxtra pana. good cond. b/o. Can756-9676. leave massage

250 Autos

250 AutosHONDA — 1662, vary daan60,000 mi.. $3200 Cat 642F406.

MALIBU CLASSIC — 1979 Fullyloaded. 4 at. $1700 or b/o. Can291-4282 aak tor Jim

MAZDA 11X7 OS - 1666.Ocaan Hue. 6 apd. am/tm

' MOOS Muateat.

.. axe. condbuying ten

_ $ 6 6Douaa 5666717.

MAZDA — M r 79. 5-ipd.A/C. AM/FM caaa.. runa graat,$2360 or baat otlar Cat 8422522MERCEDES— 260. 73 A*, au-tomatic. $3600. 1666 260 auto.$600. Soth pa. pt 290-00*2

MERCEDES 260 SL CONVERT-IBLE — 1967. Btua. M M mt.leather, ortg ownar. $10,600261-6646.

MERCURY — Capri, "R8"1676. 60.000 ml.. 6 cyl. pa/pb.a/c amo. am/tm ttarao, latywham, aunrool. axtra tat ttratCat 730-4172MERCURY — Lynx 85 8-apd.A M / F M caaa. $8600 or takeover paymama. Cat 260-O278

MERCURY — Monarch. 1960.taking $750 or bait otter Catavaa. and weekends 491-3206,daya Nancy 644-9169.

MUSTANG — '76. 4 cyl, Ibody good, angina needs «Aalung $400. 86JM021

MUSTANG — 1978 Hatchback.Auto 4 cyl., pa. rebuilt motor,marry naw pana. runt 6 loofcagood. Aaxmg $960. 495-2667.

OLDS CUTLASS — 63. $6,000.Excellent condition 888-8233

250 Autos

250 AutosMERCURY — Lyra 81 wagon,auto. PB. PS. an. good condAaUng $2500 Cat 496-0321

PONTIAC — Grand Prix 79. U .PB. AM/FM atarao. PS. A/C. tutgauget. M l v-6. $1200. Evaa671M333, dayt 766-1380

PONTIAC — La Mans. 1671. 4dr. a/c. p/a. p/b. 6'cyl. 60.000mr. 2nd angina at 70.000 ml.$•00. Daya 646-8016 or avaa.226-7364

PONTIAC LEMANS — 78 Pa,ac. pw, naw Wee and brakaa

a to177.

ac. pw. naw was and brakeOraat angina. SagM damage Ima hood by w line- 741-6571

PONTIAC — 1663 Flretjsrd. V6.p/a, pw. ac. tut whaal. tyVJmcaaa. T-Topa. gaugea, * "CaS after 6pm 563-0270

PONTIAC —1676.Grand Prta. Orig. ownar.

Can 747-6066 6-6pm,SANSONE OLDS-CADILLAC

Nawman Springs Rd, Had Bank741-0910

STRAUB BUICKOPEL I9 ACRES 01 Naw 6 Used Cart

Hwy 36,264-4000 Keyport

TOM'S FORD200 Hwy 36 Keyport

264-1600

TOYOTA CORROLA — 1960.Damage to root by tree limb,can ba Iliad. Great lor pana,maka oDar. 741-5677.

UNDER $2000See our back row for

"AS TRADED"Specials.

RS86S8 PontlacCall 741-5180

Autos

250 Autos

PLYMOUTH — Rauant 1963.auto. 4 dr aadan. nary good

ml., body$600. Can

altar 6pmfk. aaklng468-8226.

VOLVO CLEARANCEM O M mam out pncsa on an latamodal tuck Btg sataction63 a, 84 s 65 s Had Bank

Volvo. Nawmana Sprmga Rd Rt.620 741-566$.VOLVO — 75 Cxotatnl condl-tton.K. ps. Pb. 84000 mi. 8950Cat 741-3762^

VOLVO — '71 144 modal. Ooodrunning oond.. interior a-1.Am/lm caaa. alarao. manualchoka. 4 door, naw anginapana. S680 or b/o, 630-6142

VW BUG — Claaalc Snowcaaacond Sunrool. naw paint.brakes. Int. pomit Runa parlactly M.000 ong mi. B/aarlou-t/O. 946-9423.

VW GTI — 1664. Exc cond.black w/bkia int.. a/c. logt.am/lm ttarao caaa. aunrool.Cat Bit atlar 6 p.m.. 747-5729VW SUPER BEETLE — 73.'Good running cond. heedssome work. Beat oltar over$400 Cat 741-3741.

VW — 1974 Super Beetle, runapraat, body needs work. $425 orbaat otter. CaH 872-1291 altar6pm,

V W. RABBIT — 1661 Diesel. 6apd.. 4 dr.. am/fm caaa., axe.cond.. $900 or best offer Catafter 6 p a . 842-6446.

WE BUY — Uaad care tor ex-port Schwartz ChrytkH-Prym-outn-Maida. 141 Watt Front s t .Rad Bank 747-0767.

250 Autos

REALTORS 201-871

SHADOW LAKE VILLAGESHADY OAKS

CROWELL AGENCY741-4030

EVENINGS 1 WEEKENDSHalga Slawtn 741-6549

135 CommercialProperty

INVESTORS2 office buildings for tale. 1 inRad Bank wiin 7 rooms and anapanmant al $259,000 early oc-cupancy

Tha other In Fair Haven. 7rooms, prime village location lorsaw with lease back $325,000

Century 21 Cozanl. RaaflortIndependently Owned/Operated

613 River Rd.. Fair Haven741-7666

138 Mobile HomesHIGHLANDS — Reconditioned.8x40. 1 badroom. furnishedNicest park in araa. $16,500291-8392

MOBILE HOME — 10x55Wathar. dryer, refridgerator Ex-cellent condition. 767-2409.Laava mettaga

152 Boats AAccessories

SANTA SPECIAL12 WOODEN ROWBOAT

ASKING $300. . 776 8492

SPORTSCRAFT — 18'with motor t trailer $1200

Call 872-9254

215 Auto Insurance

CHECK OUR RATESPhoenix Brokerage, famous forlow-coat auto insurance andfnandry service, now giving freequotes by phone Taka tha op-tions You may aava hundredsRt. 36 Keyport 2843067

Broad SI Shrews 544-1401

225 Auto Service/PartsCUDA — 1973 Parting outHood, lenders, doors, trunk Hd.Keystone classic tnag'a. Atantes 318 V-6. western alotlw/SOt. Call after 6. 871-5636

230 Motorcycles

HONDASTREET BIKE

AND ATCSALE

Save up to $1400 on88. 85. 84 New Street BikatSava on all ATC and TRX'a

FREEHOLD HONDARt 9. FraehoMCall 482-4681

HONDA 500CC — 1975 SilverA brown. 18.000 mi, axe. shape,$450 201-0545.

HONDA — 1973. For pant $50291-1253.

235 Moped*HONDA EXPRESS — 82 Varvgood condition, with helmet, firs!$200 CaH 872-0004

240 VansDODGE — 62 van VB 318 cuIn. PB. PS. good tiras. AM/FMradio, naw paint job, axel, condAsking $3695 Call 739-9228 altar 6PM . .

TOYOTA — 1884. Windowedcargo van $4,600. 787-0661 af-tar 6 pm.

245 Truck & TrailersCHEVY

Pick up $500 as it Call 671-5114. '

CHEVY — 64 3/4 ton dump. 4-whael drive, naw tliaa. $1100.Call 747-9742.

REALTORS

MIDOLETOWN — Delight to thaayaa. Beautifully maintainedlarge 4 bdrma.. 2Vi bath coloni-al Attachad 3 car garage. Prop-any large enough for pool andtannlt count Pncad at$349,900 ERA Advantage Real-ty, 586-7000. For your conve-nience 871-5100.

DODGE — 1979 Ram Charger4x4. 360 auto, naw Ores on 10

201-842-7600 { rims 60 watt Kenwood stereo,frame for snow plow. $3500 orb/o. Call 671-4112 aftar 5pm.

MIDDLETOWN — 2 bdrm.Ranch. Prime araa. gas heat,axe between 35 6 36 $98,500Clll 495-3717.

MONMOUTH BEACHET - EXTRA TERRIFIC

You don't htva to ba from outerspace to recognize tha valueExceptional detail and design inthis 3-4 bedroom, 3 full bathContemporary. Tha many detailsmuat be seen to ba appreciatedincluding both river and ocaanviews Thit It tha quality builthome you have been looking(or. $750,000 FHV-111.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-642-7600

NEPTUNELocated on quiet dead endstreet, thia brand naw Colonialsurrounded by treea, waits forthat special family. 3 bedrooms,2tt bath*, formal dining room,plus attached garage. Priced tosell at $129,500. FHV-116

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-842-7600

RUMSON ESTATESouthern Colonial with 7 bed-rooms, 5vs hatht. dan. solarium,tun porch, club room, mald'tquanera or in-taw apt. Over 6acraa with poeslble subdivisionpotential $1.1000,000.

Century 21 Cozens, RealtorsIndependently Owned/Operated

813 River Road, Fair Havtn741 7fl66

QMC — 64. 7000 series. Pa.pdb. Allison auto. 1020 tires,26.000 gmw. cab axe. condition,49.000 ml Call (716) 494-9769daya. [201) 495-1930 avaa

ISUZU — '66 prck up NADAvalue $5975, aalung $5600Tranafanng over aaaa. Muattell. 4-apd, w/gauges, bedliner,locking tool box. step bumper,AM/FM stereo Call 542-2032 or349-8672 batwaan 6-10PM

TOYOTA PICKUP — '85 4'whaal drive, axtra cab, nawtires, too many axtra'a to list!Asking $11,500 or bait offer.741-0742.

250 Autot lor Sale

AMC CONCORD — '79. 4 dr..air. am/lm. pt. pb, door locks.gray w/rad leather int. Carefullydriven, never in accident. Exc.cond $1600 542-0438

AUDI 5000 — 1976 Naw paintlob. runt wall. $3100 or bat!oltar 842-8661.

BUICK REGAL LIMITED — 79.V-8. 231 ang.. needs motor.Best offer 284-2565.

BUICK SKYLARK — 1965 4 dr..auto. ac. Creampuff. Mutt aallby Christmas No reasonableoffer refuted Call 739-3325.

CADILLAC — 62 Coupe daVilla. Fun power, fully loaded,leather, excl. cond. Wire wheela.Many extras Call 922 8528

CAMARO CONVERTIBLE — '68custom, multi-port, naw. only400 ml. Rad w/white top 6 int.$18,500 291-4625

CAMARO77. Oood condition $1750.

musl sell Call 229-6477.

CHEVY — Blazer. 1965. 10.000mi. $8700 lirm. Fully loadedCall 787-3568 or 264-6156

List price $10,036.00Discount -350.00

SHADOW2 door, fual MJ 4 cyl.. auto . P/S. P/B, A/C. T O . AM/FMstereo, light package, rear del , canter armretl.P/mlrrora. INI wfwal, apaad control. Stock rC-72!» LEASE IT » 4 5 7 *

Setting new standards of performance.

Mmr faf7

ARIES "LE"Fuel Inl. 4 cyl.. auto . P/S. P/B. A/C.I Q , AM/FM alarao. Ught pkg.. r dat.ram. mkron, radiate, oomr spareStock •7206.List Price $10,563.00Discount -700.00Mtg. Rebate -500,00

YOU PAY *9363

LEASE IT

Htm 1Ȥ7

CHARGERNMT flat?

OMNI AMERICA2 Or . 4 cyl. 5 apd man trans . P/SP/B. A/C, T O . AM/FM stereo, dig.lal clock, console, ram mirrorsSlock (C-7257

List Price $7,817.00Discount -150.00

List Price $8,849.00Discount -600.00* L E A S E IT . . .

No Money DownLease prices baaed on

48 month closed end lease withone month't payment and

security deposit Total paymentmultiply weekly payment by 208

YOU PAY *7667LEASE IT f37H/wk.

YOU PAY *8149

LEASE IT.....»42"/wk.1986 LANCER Tun» * «.miauto, P/S. P/B. A/C. T O . AM/

ttereo. ram mirrort. mi wheel, speedcontrol, dlx. w/w. r. w/w. llQht pkg.

f11.06s

1986 DAYTONA TURBO 4 ,,auto. P/S. P/B. A/C. T O . cassette, tn,cruise, C/S handling pkg, sunroof, r.louver. P/W, P/mlrrors. P/lockj. r. delStock HC-6387

•13,192•58"/

Naw 1937

D150 PICKUPNmw 1M7

DAKOTA D50 PICK-UPBBBB* ^ B T ^BW Bl B l ^BP* V ™ ^BBV m

4 wheat drive, 4 cyl., auto transAM/FM stereo. P/S. M/S. radials.Hep bumper Stock «1-7323

Vt Ton Pick Up. V6. 5 spd manIrani , P/S. P/B Slock sT-7224

List Price $8,545.00Discount -300.00Mfg. Rebate..........-500.00

List Price $9,683.00Discount -900.00Mfg. Rebate -500:00

List Price $10,547.00Discount -900 00Mfg. Rebate -500.00

List Price $17.830 00Discount -1.200.00Mtg Rebate -500.00

1986 D150 PICK-UP e«..4 spd man trans, P/S, P/B, gaugepkg.. 6x9 mirrors, r sliding windowSlock (fT-6508

YOU PAY '16,130

LEASE IT •7741/wK.

YOU PAY ' 8 2 8 3

LBASE IT. » 4 2 " / i t .

YOU PAY * 7 7 4 5

LEASE IT...

Lltl: $6404

LEASE IT l«SE.T.»43J7w.

N.w 1987 COITSTILL SOMENEW

& DEMO '86LEFTOVERSAT ROCKBOTTOMPRICES

1915 DODGEDIPLOMAT "SE

lies DODGESPORTSMAN VAN

»SW5 DODGE

CARAVAN VAN6 cyl.. 4 spd. man.M/S, P/B, AM radlo Stock #248644 404 miles.

I Or . VB. suto P/S. P/BA'C. T O . P/W. P/IOCktIllt/CIUISS CSBMttaP'amanna P/iaat. wirscovarl. Stoch 1247}

V8 auto P/S. P/B. A/C. TO . S pass . hl-backcaptains chairs. AM/FMatarao Stock 12325.

4 cyl.. auto . P/SP/B. T.G , A M / F MS t o c k # 2 5 3 235.339 miles YOU PAY *5967

LEAK IT t27**/wl<.

«••» 19*7

COLT "E" 3 DR.4 cyl. Buto M/S. P/B.Lltt Prlca ..Diacouni,..,..Mlg Rabats

1984 CHEVROLET

S10 PICK-UPIMS DODGE

OMNI4 cyl., 4 spd.. M/S.P/B. AM/FM sta-roo Stock #239730.197 miles.

MtU FORDMUSTANG

FINANCINGAVAIL ABU

OH NIW t USIDCARS * TRUCKS

TO QUAllflCDBUYERS

IMS HONDA

ACCORDVISTA WAGON

4 cyl.. 4 spd man,P /S . P/B, AM radlo Stock #251564,594 miles

2 Dr., 4 cyl ..auto , P/S.P/B. A/C. 1.0 ttaraoOUUIM Slock 12438

•737§•34M/wk.

WERNERS VIA!/10,600 MIL!

dodgeDIVISION OF CHRYSLER.MOTORS

"Serving Monmouth County Since 1926

41 Highway 3 6 ' ( Bellord) Midalelown