Council probes schools for fat - DigiFind-It

62
Active lifestyles j Seniors head outdoors for fun and exercise 8M Seniority pag*s A-10-12 Net gain Westfield tennis team coasts to UCT crown S«e Sports, pag« B-1 s date! Where does your school stand in our prom survey? W«a)k«ndPlus The^festfield Record Vol.5. No. 19 Thursday Mav19 1QQ4 rtrKflg NflWtDSQflf 50 | Briefs Arts for kids The Kids 'n' Arts afternoon program for preschoolers be- gins today. Sponsored by the N.J. Workshop for the Arts, the program is offered 12:30-2:30 p.m. Thursdays, 152 E. Broad S t Call 789-9696. NOW meets The Union County Chapter of the National Organization for Women will meet 7 p.m. tonight at the Westfield *Y\ Call Ingrid D'Amanda at 233-6881. Family trees Mrs. Helen Wolf will demon- strate "How to Use the Com- puter in Tracing Your Geneal- ogy," 1-3 p.m. today at the li- brary. Call 276-5157. Rummage Sale The Episcopal Church Women of St. Paul's will hold their annual Spring Rummage Sale 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. tomorrow and 9:30-11:30am. Saturday. Walk for Youth The Westfield Y will host the Walk for Youth to benefit its financial assistance programs, 2:30 p.m. Saturday. Call 233- 2700. Postal food drive The National Association of Letter Carriers, the U.S. Postal Service and the AFL-CIO will collect non-perishable food items Saturday to go to local needy families. Items will be picked up from residential mailboxes. Menopause support A menopause support group will meet 7:30 p.m. Monday, Temple Emanu-El. Free and open to all area women. Call 654-4737. School board meet The Westfield Board of Edu- cation will meets 8 p.m. Tues- day for its May public business meeting, 302 Elm St. Call 789- 4402 starting tomorrow for agenda information. Toddler time Registration will begin Tues- day at the library for a Toddler Time Story Hour set for 1:30 p.m. May 24. Children must be 2V4 years old, be registered in person and be library members. Teen programs The V will hold teen regis- tration 4-7 p.m. Wednesday for its summer programs, including CIT leadership training, Teen Express trip program, Action & Adventure program, and Envi- ronment Science Group. Call Carl at 233-2700. Holiday parade Any group or individual wish- ing to take purt in the Memorial Day parade should notify the Parade Committee 1 , American Legion, Post No. 3, 1003 North Ave., Westfield, NJ, 07090. Many bunds tire n<*Hled and floats mt Dollars off The traditional IJollnrH OfJ' couponR h»ve been mulled to reHklentM to tie lined through May 211. tU)ujx>n» can H)HO be picked up til the Chitm- lier of Commerce office. Summer nttnutions 'Hie WewtMeld Iteoretitlon ('omrnlrmlim in Mt>lli»f£ the (til) wihK dlncoimtetl fulnitafilon tlcketn to iiren theme pnrkn: <Jretif. Adventure, Dtirriey fiirk/ Wlldwuter Kingdom. Hesnme Pltice, llernhpy I'tirk. Cull 7fl» 40H0. Council probes schools for fat •y mcotg A. OAVINO TOE RECORD Town Council members questioned areas of the defeated school budget Thursday in an attempt to find potential items to be cut In a meeting with members of the school board's finance committee, new staff posi- tions, administrative positions and capital items were all examined Councilwoman Margaret Sur suggested cutting newly proposed positions, including four new elementally teachers, a library aide and two elementary guidance counselors. The new positions account for $273,000 of the proposed budget Superintendent of Schools Mark C. Smith said, "Should we look at new additions to the budget? Yes, that is clearly a place that needs to be re-examined." However, Dr. Smith also said that the el- ementary teachers will help address in- creasing enrollment. Mayor Garland 'Bud' Boothe asked if the schools could find a seat for all students with any additional staff. Dr. Smith said that they could, by either in- creasing class sizes to about 27-28 students per class or by saving teaching positions through cluster classes. Ms. Sur and Councilman Anthony LAPOT- ta both said that the number one concern they have heard from constituents has been the number of administrative positions. "We repeatedly show that we spend less in administration than other districts," Dr. Smith said. He said the average is for schools to spend about 4 percent of their budget on administration, whereas Westfield spends about 2.9 percent Councilman Norman Greco suggested that the position of department heads be changed so that they spend more time in the classroom. Right now, department chairs teach three classes, two less than the normal load. They spend the other time supervising GEORGE PACCIELLO/THE RECORD Rooaavatt Intermediate School students peer at migratory songbirds during their visit to Brighlwood Park to discover birds and the value of natural habitat al both anda of the birds' migratory path. Looking, listening, learning in park •y HtCOiE A. QAVTNO THE RECORD The Full-bellied Parkthrashers hit the dirt paths last Thursday in search of birds in flight As a sur- rogate team of the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, mem- bers of the Roosevelt Environmen- tal Club took part in the World Se- ries of Binding Saturday to raise funds to protect migratory birds. Led by Dr. Emile DeVito from the foundation and Club Advisor Cinny MacGonagle, the group set out in Brightwood Park to identify different species by sight and sound. The group's adventure began with a flash of orange over- head. "We will identify them both by looking and listening," said Dr. De- Vito before asking the children what they saw. The orange and black bird was easily identified as a Northern Oriole. As they spoke an- other oriole followed. "Those are two males fighting for territory right there in that tree," Dr. DeVito explained. "One month ago every one of them was in Panama or New Mexico. They were thousands of miles away." Indeed, Mrs. MacGonagle ex- plained that.many of the birds at Brightwood Park this time of year are only passing through. "New Jersey is the state for birds, they all come through here," she said. 'You can see more kinds of birds in New Jersey in one day than anywhere else." Many of the migratory songbirds travel from their winter grounds in the tropics to breed here in the Northeastern forests. Mrs. MacGo- nagle emphasized the importance of preserving both natural habitats. She offered the event to give the students an opportunity to explore the local habitats and discover the sights and sounds of these migra- tory songbirds. While taking part in the World Series of Binding, the Full-bellied Parkthrashers also raised funds to go to the foundation. The funds will help protect the migratory songbirds by going towards efforts to preserve forested land in New Jersey and foundation's "Songbird Connection" educational project. teachers and ensuring curriculum. Dr. Smith! added that six department chairpersons; have been eliminated in the past five years. Councilman Michael Panagos asked if any: of the capital in the budget were discretion-; ary. The school board gave the council a list of seven items which they believe can't be changed, because they're state-mandated. . Other items which the board said would be candidates for reduction are the Jefferson! School Field renovation and a locker update; and repair for the high school. - The Town Council will meet again 9 a.mJ Saturday to discuss line items and. dollar amounts. Many high! on ALPS, I not brass i By NKXHE A. OAVINO : THE RECORD About 150 citizens came out to Tuesday's Town Council meeting to askthat no defeated school bud* get cuts be made that would rectly affect Westfield students. ; Although most of the citizens spoke in favor of approving the de* feated budget as-is, they agreed* with resident Dave Hewitt, "If cuts have to be made, there are a lot of areas that can be cut that don't directly affect the kids. We're ill here to do what's best for the chit dren." That sentiment was repeated by parents, taxpayers, teachers and students. They told the council how they and their children have benefited from Westfield's "top- notch quality education." "Nearly everyone in this room enjoys the fruits of a quality educa- tion," said resident Nancy Reha- sauras. "There is no magic — s good education costs money. The single most important thing any community does is educate the next generation. I say we should not chip away at what we've al- ready built." (Please turn to page A-3) Judge chucks charter and Democrats are on ballot •y NKOi£ A. OAVINO THE RECORD Superior Court Judge Edward W. Beglin Jr. has ruled a two-year residency requirement in Westfield's Town Charter unconstitutional. Last week, Judge Beglin ruled in favor of Westfleld Democrats Bill Brennan and Jack Walsh, placing their names back on the June primary ballot. Both Democrats filed petitions to run for council seats but were challenged by Westfield's town clerk based on a two-year residency requirement. Westfield's provision differed from most other towns who go by the state's requirement of one year. The Westfield town charter was approved by the state legislature, the governor and the Westfield voters back in the 1960s. "It was a fairly unique situation, there were no previous reported cases with a town charter," said Bruce Bergen, counsel for the Democrats. "There are only three towns in NewJersey with a town charter residency requirement. All other towns have the state's one-year requirement." The other towns besides Westfield that still have greater residency requirements are Plainfield and Hackettstown. There are mixed opinions on whether Westfield is left with no residency requirement or if Westfield falls back on the state one-year requirement. "The two-year provision Is no longer enforceable," Mr. Bergen said. "The judge ruled it unconstitutional. I amnot sure what happens to Westfield now." Westfield Mayor Garland 'Bud' Boothe said that he (Please turn to page A-3) Schools trim staff under cloud of budget cuts; 10 are ousted By NICOLE A. OAVINO Although the Wi-stfteld T<wn Council will not make it (Ifi'i.'iinn on mt.4 in the defeated school budget until 'l\u«!ulii.y, the whool lxw»rd hud to make stuffing deci- sions by May lf> Without knowing wlmt iTvnmmendntiotm will come from the Town Council, the We.Mttteld Ikmnl of Ktlucn- lion approved the appointment of 052 ftill-timp iind part, time whiMil (lUtff memliei-N for next year. Ten RUI(T tiH'inlK'rs WIT*' not offered contracts tint* to re- duction in foivr. 'I1M'H«« Include one tenured Uwchcr, four rum tenured teachers and Hv«« flprdnl nervlces Bluff rrnnnlKMH. According to school Ixmnl President Hiwun I'ppper, HIT l>a»t>d on prole*'!* 1 *! studi'iits needs (this includes the number of elementary stu- dents and the number of courses selected by second- ary students), on flnnnclal resources, on staff evalua- tions und on ntijte lnws governing tenure and seniori- ty." 'Ilif fivt 1 speclnl Horvices staff members were din- mirmed due to n reduction in the number of students, The tenured toucher WHH let go because an elemen- tary computer teacher wns pi need back In the class- room. The four nontenure teachers were cut duo to either font' reductions or staff evaluations. WeBlfifld Education Afmociatlon (WEA) President Michael Seller Raid thin In not an unumial cut, but he anticipates more cuts when the budget recommenda- tions come through. "Whenever cuts nre made, there's Always n cut In (I'lousn turn to page A-3) Nice sheep Westfleld Cooperative Nuraary School pupils ptt • during school's 26th annlvaraary "pratant", to tha ehlWran. Ths celebration culminates 2-4 Sunday on aohool grounds with faca painting, a clown and slng*alonga for atudonts and alumni.

Transcript of Council probes schools for fat - DigiFind-It

Active lifestyles jSeniors head outdoors

for fun and exercise8 M Seniority pag*s A-10-12

Net gainWestfield tennis teamcoasts to UCT crown

S«e Sports, pag« B-1

s date!Where does your schoolstand in our prom survey?

W«a)k«ndPlus

The^festfield RecordVol.5. No. 19 Thursday Mav19 1QQ4 rtrKflg NflWtDSQflf 50

| BriefsArts for kids

The Kids 'n' Arts afternoonprogram for preschoolers be-gins today. Sponsored by theN.J. Workshop for the Arts, theprogram is offered 12:30-2:30p.m. Thursdays, 152 E. BroadS t Call 789-9696.

NOW meetsThe Union County Chapter of

the National Organization forWomen will meet 7 p.m. tonightat the Westfield *Y\ Call IngridD'Amanda at 233-6881.

Family treesMrs. Helen Wolf will demon-

strate "How to Use the Com-puter in Tracing Your Geneal-ogy," 1-3 p.m. today at the li-brary. Call 276-5157.

Rummage SaleThe Episcopal Church

Women of St. Paul's will holdtheir annual Spring RummageSale 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. tomorrowand 9:30-11:30am. Saturday.

Walk for YouthThe Westfield Y will host the

Walk for Youth to benefit itsfinancial assistance programs,2:30 p.m. Saturday. Call 233-2700.

Postal food driveThe National Association of

Letter Carriers, the U.S. PostalService and the AFL-CIO willcollect non-perishable fooditems Saturday to go to localneedy families. Items will bepicked up from residentialmailboxes.

Menopause supportA menopause support group

will meet 7:30 p.m. Monday,Temple Emanu-El. Free andopen to all area women. Call654-4737.

School board meetThe Westfield Board of Edu-

cation will meets 8 p.m. Tues-day for its May public businessmeeting, 302 Elm St. Call 789-4402 starting tomorrow foragenda information.

Toddler timeRegistration will begin Tues-

day at the library for a ToddlerTime Story Hour set for 1:30p.m. May 24. Children must be2V4 years old, be registered inperson and be library members.

Teen programsThe V will hold teen regis-

tration 4-7 p.m. Wednesday forits summer programs, includingCIT leadership training, TeenExpress trip program, Action &Adventure program, and Envi-ronment Science Group. CallCarl at 233-2700.

Holiday paradeAny group or individual wish-

ing to take purt in the MemorialDay parade should notify theParade Committee1, AmericanLegion, Post No. 3, 1003 NorthAve., Westfield, NJ, 07090.Many bunds tire n<*Hled andfloats mt

Dollars offThe traditional

IJollnrH OfJ' couponR h»ve beenmulled to reHklentM to tie linedthrough May 211. tU)ujx>n» canH)HO be picked up til the Chitm-lier of Commerce office.

Summer nttnutions'Hie WewtMeld Iteoretitlon

('omrnlrmlim in Mt>lli»f£ the (til)wihK dlncoimtetl fulnitafilontlcketn to iiren theme pnrkn:< Jretif. Adventure, Dtirriey fiirk/Wlldwuter Kingdom. HesnmePltice, llernhpy I'tirk. Cull 7fl»40H0.

Council probes schools for fat•y mcotg A. OAVINOTOE RECORD

Town Council members questioned areasof the defeated school budget Thursday inan attempt to find potential items to be cutIn a meeting with members of the schoolboard's finance committee, new staff posi-tions, administrative positions and capitalitems were all examined

Councilwoman Margaret Sur suggestedcutting newly proposed positions, includingfour new elementally teachers, a library aideand two elementary guidance counselors.The new positions account for $273,000 of

the proposed budgetSuperintendent of Schools Mark C. Smith

said, "Should we look at new additions tothe budget? Yes, that is clearly a place thatneeds to be re-examined."

However, Dr. Smith also said that the el-ementary teachers will help address in-creasing enrollment. Mayor Garland 'Bud'Boothe asked if the schools could find a seatfor all students with any additional staff. Dr.Smith said that they could, by either in-creasing class sizes to about 27-28 studentsper class or by saving teaching positionsthrough cluster classes.

Ms. Sur and Councilman Anthony LAPOT-

ta both said that the number one concernthey have heard from constituents has beenthe number of administrative positions.

"We repeatedly show that we spend less inadministration than other districts," Dr.Smith said. He said the average is forschools to spend about 4 percent of theirbudget on administration, whereas Westfieldspends about 2.9 percent

Councilman Norman Greco suggested thatthe position of department heads bechanged so that they spend more time inthe classroom. Right now, department chairsteach three classes, two less than the normalload. They spend the other time supervising

GEORGE PACCIELLO/THE RECORDRooaavatt Intermediate School students peer at migratory songbirds during their visit to Brighlwood Park to discover birds andthe value of natural habitat al both anda of the birds' migratory path.

Looking, listening, learning in park• y HtCOiE A. QAVTNOTHE RECORD

The Full-bellied Parkthrashershit the dirt paths last Thursday insearch of birds in flight As a sur-rogate team of the New JerseyConservation Foundation, mem-bers of the Roosevelt Environmen-tal Club took part in the World Se-ries of Binding Saturday to raisefunds to protect migratory birds.

Led by Dr. Emile DeVito fromthe foundation and Club AdvisorCinny MacGonagle, the group setout in Brightwood Park to identifydifferent species by sight and

sound. The group's adventurebegan with a flash of orange over-head.

"We will identify them both bylooking and listening," said Dr. De-Vito before asking the childrenwhat they saw. The orange andblack bird was easily identified as aNorthern Oriole. As they spoke an-other oriole followed.

"Those are two males fightingfor territory right there in thattree," Dr. DeVito explained. "Onemonth ago every one of them wasin Panama or New Mexico. Theywere thousands of miles away."

Indeed, Mrs. MacGonagle ex-

plained that.many of the birds atBrightwood Park this time of yearare only passing through. "NewJersey is the state for birds, theyall come through here," she said.'You can see more kinds of birdsin New Jersey in one day thananywhere else."

Many of the migratory songbirdstravel from their winter grounds inthe tropics to breed here in theNortheastern forests. Mrs. MacGo-nagle emphasized the importanceof preserving both natural habitats.She offered the event to give thestudents an opportunity to explore

the local habitats and discover thesights and sounds of these migra-tory songbirds.

While taking part in the WorldSeries of Binding, the Full-belliedParkthrashers also raised funds togo to the foundation. The fundswill help protect the migratorysongbirds by going towards effortsto preserve forested land in NewJersey and foundation's "SongbirdConnection" educational project.

teachers and ensuring curriculum. Dr. Smith!added that six department chairpersons;have been eliminated in the past five years.

Councilman Michael Panagos asked if any:of the capital in the budget were discretion-;ary. The school board gave the council a listof seven items which they believe can't bechanged, because they're state-mandated. .

Other items which the board said wouldbe candidates for reduction are the Jefferson!School Field renovation and a locker update;and repair for the high school. -

The Town Council will meet again 9 a.mJSaturday to discuss line items and. dollaramounts.

Many high!on ALPS, Inot brass iBy NKXHE A. OAVINO :

THE RECORD •

About 150 citizens came out toTuesday's Town Council meetingto ask that no defeated school bud*get cuts be made that would d£rectly affect Westfield students. ;

Although most of the citizensspoke in favor of approving the de*feated budget as-is, they agreed*with resident Dave Hewitt, "If cutshave to be made, there are a lot ofareas that can be cut that don'tdirectly affect the kids. We're illhere to do what's best for the chitdren."

That sentiment was repeated byparents, taxpayers, teachers andstudents. They told the councilhow they and their children havebenefited from Westfield's "top-notch quality education."

"Nearly everyone in this roomenjoys the fruits of a quality educa-tion," said resident Nancy Reha-sauras. "There is no magic — sgood education costs money. Thesingle most important thing anycommunity does is educate thenext generation. I say we shouldnot chip away at what we've al-ready built."

(Please turn to page A-3)

Judge chucks charter andDemocrats are on ballot• y NKOi£ A. OAVINOTHE RECORD

Superior Court Judge Edward W. Beglin Jr. hasruled a two-year residency requirement in Westfield'sTown Charter unconstitutional.

Last week, Judge Beglin ruled in favor of WestfleldDemocrats Bill Brennan and Jack Walsh, placingtheir names back on the June primary ballot. BothDemocrats filed petitions to run for council seats butwere challenged by Westfield's town clerk based on atwo-year residency requirement.

Westfield's provision differed from most othertowns who go by the state's requirement of one year.The Westfield town charter was approved by the statelegislature, the governor and the Westfield votersback in the 1960s.

"It was a fairly unique situation, there were noprevious reported cases with a town charter," saidBruce Bergen, counsel for the Democrats. "There areonly three towns in New Jersey with a town charterresidency requirement. All other towns have thestate's one-year requirement."

The other towns besides Westfield that still havegreater residency requirements are Plainfield andHackettstown.

There are mixed opinions on whether Westfield isleft with no residency requirement or if Westfield fallsback on the state one-year requirement.

"The two-year provision Is no longer enforceable,"Mr. Bergen said. "The judge ruled it unconstitutional.I am not sure what happens to Westfield now."

Westfield Mayor Garland 'Bud' Boothe said that he(Please turn to page A-3)

Schools trim staff under cloudof budget cuts; 10 are oustedBy NICOLE A. OAVINO

Although the Wi-stfteld T<wn Council will not makeit (Ifi'i.'iinn on mt.4 in the defeated school budget until'l\u«!ulii.y, the whool lxw»rd hud to make stuffing deci-sions by May lf>

Without knowing wlmt iTvnmmendntiotm will comefrom the Town Council, the We.Mttteld Ikmnl of Ktlucn-lion approved the appointment of 052 ftill-timp iindpart, time whiMil (lUtff memliei-N for next year. TenRUI(T tiH'inlK'rs WIT*' not offered contracts tint* to re-duction in foivr. 'I1M'H«« Include one tenured Uwchcr,four rum tenured teachers and Hv«« flprdnl nervlcesBluff rrnnnlKMH.

According to school Ixmnl President Hiwun I'ppper,HIT l>a»t>d on prole*'!*1*! studi'iits

needs (this includes the number of elementary stu-dents and the number of courses selected by second-ary students), on flnnnclal resources, on staff evalua-tions und on ntijte lnws governing tenure and seniori-ty."

'Ilif fivt1 speclnl Horvices staff members were din-mirmed due to n reduction in the number of students,The tenured toucher WHH let go because an elemen-tary computer teacher wns pi need back In the class-room. The four nontenure teachers were cut duo toeither font' reductions or staff evaluations.

WeBlfifld Education Afmociatlon (WEA) PresidentMichael Seller Raid thin In not an unumial cut, but heanticipates more cuts when the budget recommenda-tions come through.

"Whenever cuts nre made, there's Always n cut In(I'lousn turn to page A-3)

Nice sheepWestfleld Cooperative Nuraary School pupils ptt •during school's 26th annlvaraary "pratant", to tha ehlWran.Ths celebration culminates 2-4 Sunday on aohool groundswith faca painting, a clown and slng*alonga for atudonts andalumni.

A-2 Westftold Record May 12, 1994-

qgn of timesUCVTHE RECORDOCOnOE PACCCUCVE CO

Ratldanta neighboring Clark Park complain that thla baekatop uaad by tha laerossa taam it a"graffiti magnet." Tha school board gava tha taam parmiaaion to aract tha woodan wall Iaatsummer.

Court ruling will bring iwindfall to town treasuryBy NtCOU A. QAVINO ^THE RECORD

Westfield will receive $167,675.33as a result of a recent fraud settle-ment between the county and Au-tomated Modular Systems (AMS)trash transfer station in Linden.

Hie station's parent companyLin-River Associates, was chargedby the Union County Prosecutor'sOffice for receiving kickbacks fromEnvironmental Management Alter*natives and Consulting in Pennsyl-vania in return for giving that com-pany business. Lin-River failed toreport that additional income andin doing so, was allowed to chargehigher rates at the transfer station.

Records noting the amount of

garbage towns in Union Countysent to the transfer station 1988-91were used to portion out the settle-ment. Westfield is receiving one ofthe larger reimbursements.

"The prosecutor could have keptthe money if he wanted to." MayorGarland 'Bud' Boothe said grate-fully. "But he felt this ought to goback to the people who got rippedoff."

The prosecutor's office said thatthe payment is not due until May25, but they wanted to notify mu-

nicipalities so that theyelude the money in their budget^:

However, Town AdministratorEd Gottko said, "We can't react toany of this until there is an acSualcheck here. Then we'll move ffconrthere." /-"•

'if

Mayor Boothe said this money;will not be included in the )t#4town budget. The town has already,introduced their budget andC'hesaid according to state law, theycannot change it. $\j\

Teen, man in parkin a shoving match

; A 16-year-old Westfield male re-ported being assaulted while in

; Mindowaskin Park Friday.; At about 7 p.m., the teen and two• of his friends said they were walk-'. ing through the park, on the side-walk near the Presbyterian

• Church. A 56-year-old male suspect' allegedly drove up the church'sdriveway, got out of his car, andconfronted the youths.

; The 16-year-old claims the sus-; pect approached him and began; pushing him and repeatedly asking; him if he was "looking for trouble."; The victim was not harmed and he; believes that the incident was the' result of a prior dispute between. the youths and the suspect's son; earlier at the library down the: street

ASSAULTA 16-year-old Westfield girl re-

' ported being assaulted by a 15-; year-old male while standing onWindsor Avenue. She claimed the

. suspect slapped her in the face. Po-; lice said the victim showed obvious- signs of redness on the left side of\ her face.

BURGLARY: A Rahway Avenue resident re-; ported a burglary May 2. Entry was• made through an open basement! door. Nothing was taken.

•••On May 2, a Fourth Avenue resi-

'. dent reported that someone broke; into her car and removed a camera

and roller blades.•••

An Everson Place resident re-, ported his home burglarized May 8.'Police believe that entry was made; through the first floor window. Sil-;verware was missing.

;THEFT; An art gallery on North Avenue'•reported the theft of a paintingJ May 2. The painting was titled; "Midnight Race on the Missis-"sippi," and is valued at $760.

; A Boynton Avenue resident re-' ports the theft of numerous gold'and diamond pieces of jewelry;from her bedroom May 2. There.was no sign of forced entry to herresidence.

*•*A West North Avenue resident

reported the theft of his I.D. at thenorth-side train station. Heclaimed he lost his wallet andwhen he recovered it, his social se-curity card and federal work I.D.card were missing.

•••An employee of a East Broad

Street bank reported the theft of awallet May 4. The wallet was lo-cated on her desk and contained$70 and numerous credit cards.

•••On May 4, a Sussex Street resi-

dent reported a theft from his car.Someone smashed the driver's sidevent window and removed a tem-porary NJ. registration from thecar's rear window.

••*An East Broad Street resident re-

Arts workshopopening revised

The opening of summer classesat the Westfield Workshop for theArts has born moved from Mon-day, June 27 to Thursday, June 30,Raid Dr. Theodore K. Schlosberg,dint-tor of the New Jersey Work-shop for the Arts, which operatesthe summer program. The shift In

(ink? WIIS necessary to at-iilp chimfira In the Wesl-

MPIII l*i.ihlic School culendnr result-ing from nnow days.

Th»« worknhop'n hours will be ex-U<ri«l«Ml to rimkc* up time lost due tothe l«tt*r opening d«te

For more Information, call 78»-

ported the theft of two lawn orna-ments May 7.

•••A Boulevard resident reported

the theft of $20 from his car May 8.•••

Another Boulevard resident re-ported the theft of $10 in Parkwaytokens from his car May 8.CRIMINAL MISCHIEF

Edison school reported thatsomeone broke a window May 7.

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May 12,1994 W#stftald Itocord A-3

Fire department lists callsThe WestAeld Fire Department

responded to the following callslast week:May 3:

900 block of South Avenue —brush fire.

200 block of Wychwood Road -system malfunction.

$06 block of Cumberland Street'-* smoke condition.•i.200 block of Baker Avenue —•moke scare.May 4:, 100 block of Ferris Place -steam condition.

bOO block of Carleton Road -system malfunction.'.,400 block of Roanoke Road —

alarm malfunction.May 5:

100 block of East Broad Street -accidental alarm.

300 block of First Street - carfire.

100 block of Windsor Avenue —electrical short.May 6:

500 block of East Broad Street -smoke condition.

100 block of St Paul's Street -tree and wires down.

200 block of Bayberry Lane —tree and wires down.

900 block of Grandview Avenue— telephone wire down.

500 block of First Street -

dumpster (ire.200 block of First Street - haz-

ardous condition.400 block of Edgewood Avenue

— car fire.Corner of Summit Avenue and

Park Street - refuse fire.May 7:

1100 block of Central Avenue —auto accident.May 8:

200 block of Cacciola Place —water condition.

700 block of Lenape Trail —water condition.

100 block of Cacciola Place —house lock out.

Many are high on ALPS, but not brass*(Continued from page A-l)KMany residents came in re-

to two topics discussed atThursday's council meetingthe school board — school

and the ALPS program. Al-though council members onlybriefly discussed the two and nodirect suggestions to cut wereifiade, most came to plea for thetwo areas.k After several citizens urged the

cjpuncil not to eliminate any schoolnurses for the safety of the chil-dren, Mr. Panagos said that thetopic was not being considered byany members.jjThe Town Council will meet

•in for discussion 9 a.nt Sat-in town hall. They will vote

a recommendation to the

school board at next Tuesday'smeeting.

The many residents who spokein favor of the ALPS program citedits importance to keeping girledchildren interested. in educationand learning.

'The experience I've had andthe things I've learned are things Iwouldn't have learned anywhereelse," said Tamaques ALPS stu-dent Conner Mulvey. "It would bea shame if students next yearwould not have that opportunity."

Although residents pleaded forno cuts in programs or numbers ofteaching staff directly involvedwith the children, several sug-gested that cuts be made in otherareas such as administration.

Residents like Mary Jane Shea

questioned the need for the highsalaries of top administrators suchas the superintendent, the two as-sistant superintendents and dis-trict-wide supervisors. "I feel thatsome of the numbers are gettingout of hand," she said. She andothers said that teachers salariesshould be under more control.

Resident Ann Shapiro said,"You should be looking to down-size and make the school systemmeaner and leaner before raisingclassroom sizes or eliminating aca-demic programs."

One suggestion put forth by herand other residents is to eliminatesome of the secretarial positions inthe schools, on the basis thattoday's technology allows for lessneed.

{School staff^/(Continued from page A-l)INfting staff," he said. "That'sMjjit happens when a budget gets

JMr. Seller and the WEA sup-the original school budget

' came in with a great budgetB'S no alternative to the cost

oCquality education," he said, add-ing that budget changes are forth-cetning not because the schools

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"Seventeen percent took the fu-ture of the students and tossed it,"he said. "We have excellent educa-tors who can't work with our chil-dren anymore. The system is goingto be compromised but we'll dothe best we can under the circum-stances. We're here for the chil-dren and we'll always survive butpeople will be hurt in the shuffle."

Included in the appointments ofnext year's faculty were: 252 class-room teachers, 36 elementary spe-cialists (art, music and physicaleducation), 10 guidance counsel-ors, 11 librarians, 12 school nurses,'61 special education staff mem-bers, two student assistance coun-selors and a high school athletictrainer and intern Of the 386teaching appointments, 320 werefor tenured staff members and 66were for staff members who do nothave tenure.

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Democrats(Continued from page A-l)

believes Westfield now has a one-year provision as set by the state.However, Town Attorney CharlesBrandt believes that there is now avoid. 'The judge essentially abol-ished that two-year requirement sowe basically have no residency re-quirement at ,11," he said.

ir the town chose, it could try toamend the town charter to add an-other residency requirement Todo this, the amendment wouldagain have to be approved by bothhouses or legislature, signed by thegovernor and placed on the ballotin Westfield as a referendumquestion. For the amount of timeand effort this would take, Mr.Brandt said he would not recom-mend it

"From a practical viewpoint, it'snot too common for people to run

who havent lived in town for afew years," he said. "The task maybe more difficult than it justifies.My opinion is that it isn't worththe trouble."

Some citizens have expressedconcern over the fact that the townhad to spend taxpayers money inthis lawsuit.

"I don't think it was a wastedeffort," Mr. Brandt said. "I believethat the town did the right thing indefending the charter that was inPlace."

Mr. Brandt said that he felt thejudge did a thorough job and hewill not recommend an appeal.

Mr. Brennan said that althoughhe is glad that the voters will nowhave a choice when they go to thepolls, he is still upset that the townused taxpayers money.

"I practically went and beggedthem to look at the law and notspend the money," Mr. Brennan

said."It was foolish to Tight it to begin

with. They [the council] shouldhave done their homework," Dem-ocratic Councilman AnthonyLaPorta said. "It was the old-boynetwork that turned this aroundand said 'we're going to deny theDemocrats their constitutionalrights and spend taxpayersmoney.' That's shameful."

Mr. LaPorta believes that it was"a case of pure partisan politics"and said that he plans on askingthe mayor and the RepublicanParty to reimburse the town forthe lawsuit

However, both Mr. LaPorta andMr. Brennan agreed that the im-portant thing is that the voters nowhave a choice when they go to thepolls. "Now we're going to have anelection," Mr. LaPorta said. "Thecandidates will not be hand-picked. We will not simply have acoronation."

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A-4

Commentary1994^

• ! !

Cop costsIn per capita terms, smallest towns paybiggest prices for 'their own' departmentsThese days, there's no substitute for an alert, 99.2 percent to warrant the attention of munici*

well-trained and disciplined local police depart- pal elected and police officials. The police de-ment. In addition to responding to every caliber partment in each of the six towns that gra-of emergency, the police play an educational ciously cooperated with this survey is the largestand a preventive role in fostering community element in the town operating budget,safety.

But there's another dimension to all that — Police & populationsthese days. That is the financial investment(a.k.a. taxes) necessary to sustain this sort of POPULATION COP COST/CAP.home town-owned and managed security force. 1-Westfield 28,870 6-WestQeld $125

In Forbes Newspapers' special report on home 2-Cranford 22,633 5-Scotch PI 130town police costs in the six-community subur- 3-Scotch PI.... 21,125 4-Cranford 141ban Union area it serves, police department bud- 4-Kinilworth.... 7,574 3-Fanwood 169gets, work loads, population covered and crime 5-Fanwood 7,115 2-Kenilworth 189data are tabulated for readers to analyze. 6-Garwood 4,225 1-Garwood 249

The table does not show the average experi-ence level of officers or complicating community The time may well have arrived for a police-factors such as proximity to high-crime urban municipal-civilian committee to begin exploringareas and major arteries often used by criminals ways to bring this span of spending rates closerto rob-and-run in the suburbs. Here is one slice to a U v a b l e average cost per citizen. Maybe shar-from the table of information comparing per- ^ Q ^ strengths of individual departments with

towns with more populace and presumably moredemand for police services pay less per person

I for the service than the smallest towns. Not rev-elatory in itself, of course, but the span of percapita police costs ($125-$249) seems sufficient at

tf n o t ***** reducin« «•*••«!«> are the potential savings in joint purchas-

i"«. «roup insurance plans, training, and ex-panded mutual aid or the least likely, flat outconsolidation of departments.

Letters to the editor

Schools need soul searching, not just cut in dollars; To The Record:; It is certainly dear that the vot-ers have spoken. What is not soclear, is understanding just whatthe voters have said. In their sin-cere and diligent discussions of theschool budget defeat, members ofthe school board and Town Councilseem to be searching for a magicreduction figure that will placate

the community. We feel that thisview is shortsighted and underesti-mates the sophistication of theWestflekt electorate.

We can understand the frustra-tions felt by school administratorsas they struggle to cope with di-minished and uncertain financialresources. We have had to squarelyface the same in our personal bud-

gets, job insecurity, salary cuts orreductions, escalating taxes andhealth care costs. Realizing that ex-isting expenses can only be cut sofar, we have had to fundamentallyand aggressively re-evaluate ourpriorities and expectations in orderto preserve fiscal health and qual-ity of life. We feel the message ofthe budget vote is that it is time for

Grim telegrams, pilot's scrapewith death filled May '44 news

This column is based on news re-ports in the Cmvford Citizen AChronicle of May 11, 1944. It ispart of Forbes Newspapers' saluteto those who endured the war here

, at home and on the front lines over-seas.

• y CHERYL HEHLFORBES NEWSPAPERS

As the world waited for news of afull scale Allied invasion of Nazi-held Europe, those on the homefront fought their own battles.

During one particular 24-hourperiod in May, the reality of warwould hit home to several familiesin The Citizen and Chronicle circu-lation area. And afterward, thelives of those involved would neverbe the same.

It had been several weeks sinceU.S. Army Cpl. Robert Swarts' wifehad been notified that her husbandwas missing in action. But on awarm spring day, a telegram fromthe War Department would put anend to the waiting and wondering.'I "he young wife would hear shewas a widow, and a 17-month oldson would grow up without his fa-ther. He would eventually read the

telegram that said his father hadperished along with 497 other menweeks before. But on that day, thebaby would play as family mem-bers gathered to comfort eachother.

Meanwhile, in that same 24-hourperiod, the families of three menlisted as missing in action woulddiscover via telegrams that theirloved ones were prisoners of war inGermany.

Tech. Sgt. Alfred D'Alessandris,Lt. Neal Gundersen, and Staff Sgt.Paul Rackmyer joined five other

The Westfield RecordForbes Newspapers, A Division of Forbes Inc.

Edward P. CarrollExecutive Editor

Kip KudukSports Editor

Malcolm S. Forbes Jr,EdItor-ln-Chlef

Lou BarsonyPublisher

Nloot* QavlnoReporter

Chary I FenskeChief Copy Editor-

Special Sections EditorWilliam WssthovenWeekendPlus Editor

Richard MoCombAdvertising Manager

Qtorga GannonCirculation Director

Alan M. ChurchillGeneral Manager

Heather WymanAdvertising Representative

Blllle M DavisController

Doug BaumClassified Advertising

ManagerKelly Zullo

Classified TelephoneSnles Mnnngm

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Cranford fighting men imprisonedin the Axis nations.

In the interval, a young Cranfordpilot shot down over the Anziobeachhead by German artilleryfire, told his story of making sixmore missions, despite his injuries,bringing his total to 100 before re-turning home.

The pilot was 1st Lt. George RBolte, Jr., son of Mr. & Mrs.George Bolte of Manor Avenue,who also found romance in Italy.He related his story at AtlanticOverseas Air Service Command atNewark Army Air Field while look-ing over the pilot's P-40, "Stinke-roo," returned from overseas as a"war weary" ship for salvage.

"I was leading a flight of eightships," he said, "It was the Ides ofMarch and we were on patrol overthe Anzio beachhead, flying from2,500-3,500 feet because of overcastskies. The Germans and Britishwere exchanging artillery firebelow us and 1 thought we werehigh enough above it. The sky keptclosing in and I was about to orderthe flight back to base when therewas a terrific explosion. I thoughtfirst the engine of my ship hadblown up, but I discovered that theGermans had shot off my leftwing."

"The ship went into a spin. Itried to open the canopy but it wasjammed. Finally by using bothhands I got it open. I released mysafety belt and fell out at about1,000 feet. Once I was clear of theplane I pulled the cord, but mychute didn't open until I was 300feet from the ground. 1 landed onmy back in a level field which 1knew was no man's land. My rightarm was paralyzed and my shoul-der was in bad shape.

Then I snw about 18 men run-ning toward me. When they gotcloser I recognized their helmets nsthose of British Tommies. Theyunfastened the chute and carriedme into the woods nnd then to nroad. Eventuully n jeep cume alonnnntl they put me in it."

lit. Bolte spent (Ivo days at Anziohospital, and they were pleasantindeed, even though he WHS In-jured For the tiny nurse in the offleer's wrird wns Second Lt. MaryJennette Hnlcombt* of South Ciiro-llnn, whom ho planned to mnrry HHnoon an they returned nUitealde.Trie two hiwl l>eeM Intrcxluccd toeitch other In the foil of '4!) byCiipt, Itobert Angus, another resi-dent of Oimlbrd, who nlno was InItaly.

our schools to do the same soulsearching.

Because they consume such alarge part of the tax dollar, theissue of staff salaries has domi-nated the budget discussions. Flewwould deny that our school staffdeserves professional compensa-tion, however there is a feeling inthe public that salary inequities ofthe past have been rectified andthat benefit packages are overlygenerous.

We do not believe, however, thatwe have to settle for wholesale pro-gram cuts in order to balance thebottom line. We believe thatbreadth of curriculum is the singlegreatest strength of the Westfieldpublic schools. We believe that it isonly through a wide variety of of-ferings and approaches that we can

Jefferson PTO says'thanks' to helpersTo The Record:

We wish to express our thanks toall those who helped make the Jef-ferson School PTO Dinner andFashion Show a successfulevening. Our sincere appreciationis extended to Sealfon's for gra-ciously providing the spring fash-ions and to Maggie Burke who co-ordinated and narrated the event.

Special thanks also goes to Unit-ed Jersey Bank, Salon Lenore,Betsy Fraser and the numerouslocal merchants and businessmenwho provided gifts and services forour raffle and door prizes.

Last but not least, we wish tothank all the committee members,models and those who attendedthis event for their hard work andcontinued support.

hope to meet the needs of all ourstudents.

Just as corporate America hashad to do in order to remain glob-ally competive, our schools mustbe willing to make structuralchanges. We need to aggressivelypursue strategies such as subcon-tracting of services, recruitment oftuition students, regionalization,class clustering, and merging withmunicipal services. We must con-tinue to work at the state level toreduce non-funded state mandatesand regulations. We need to learnfrom other districts who have suc-cessfully met financial challenges.How have they addressed lunch-

-addressed issues such as class sizeand year round operation? Wfcneed to learn cost containmenjttechniques from the private sectotsuch as zero-based budgeting andbottom-up management i

One final thought The schoolbudget is the only one that voterihave a chance to vote on directly.We hope that as our Town Councfadvises the school board on fiscalrestraint and our county freehold-ers observe the process, bottgroups will be noting strategiesthat they will use at budget time;.Since voters can only express theftdismay with the town and countybudgets at election time, these o*

room, classroom, and library aides, flcehoklers ignore the full meaningsubstitute secretaries, field mainte- of these proceedings at their peril.}nance, office expenses, or continu- T M WAV FAMILYing staff education? How have they Westflety

Armory garage succeeded —thanks to all who contributed

MAftY H O M SHWRYChairwomen

To The Record:The Westfield Day Care Center

wishes to thank the many peoplewho contributed to the great suc-cess of its garage sale at the West-field Armory. The generous dona-tions throughout the year fromarea residents, contributions offood and baked goods from localshops, supplies and services frombusinesses, helpful support fromArmory personnel, excellent pub-licity from The Record and the en-thusiasm and energy of the WDCparents, spouses and friends whoworked with us [made] the salehighly successful.

A Newark church outreach pro-gram associated with the missionwork of Ellie and Jim Kullman ofWestfield was able at the end ofthe sale to take furniture, babyequipment and toys back to New-ark to benefit the people who havefound a living place and need fur-nishings.

Firefighters, unsung heroesTo The Record:

During this hard winter, whenice jamming caused problemsthroughout the town of Westfleld,we experienced damage to thethird floor of our building. As aresult, water seeped through over50 dwelling units, in some in-stances causing ceilings to collapse,Needless to say, it was a devastat-ing experience.

Now that our repairs are almostcompleted, and spring Is upon us,we'd like to take thin opportunityto thnnk the Wwrtfleld firefighters(the unsung heroes of this inci-

dent) who moved in with theirequipment and worked diligentlyat breaking up the Ice in the gut-ters, thus enabling the flow of therunoff to resume Its appropriatepath.

I know I speak for the seniorcitizens in our building, the bonrdof trustees nnd the staff of West-fleld Senior Citizens Housing Cor-poration when I extend our henrt-felt thanks nnd appreciation fortheir devottKl service.

ROTH ». SMITHExecutive Director

WcntflHtl Senior CltlMim; C'«rp.

Cappuccino and cake, here I comeTt> The Itcvurtl:

I moved to Westfield nine yearnngo prfclKoly because of I Li aim OR t"Buropenri" feel nice town shop-ping iircn, a train station, K<XKIKCIKKJIB, wife Btreelft for H<rolling,etc. I mn originally from Europennd I have often nched (or nn out-door cnfol Flnnlly, they itre comlriK

U) Westfield. I npplnud the Wentfield Town Council for their efforts.1 look 1'orwiird to lln^erinu over ncappuccino tind n cwrmt etike Inthe npiinK Hurmhlne nrut on wnimHummer nl^hta, not liecnuse It Is"in" but because! it is BO civilized.

RACHM. COHIN-HKLTMAN

The proceeds from this annuafevent help support the Center, ftnon-profit, non sectarian, inter!racial school and infant centerserving families of all economiclevels from the area. (

Thank you all.LVNHMLMfN

WestfleM Day Can AuxiliaryOarage Sale Chairperson*

Too bad thattown resisted2-party courseTo The Record: •

By now, your readers maylearned that Superior Court JuBeglin ruled May 4 in favor oftwo Democratic challengersWestfleld's Town Council races,*attended the last public TovfnCouncil meeting as well as the cohtference session at which this lssu<»caused heated discussions. It's tfx»bad that the town felt compelledJto

in Westfield. Besides being futile! i[seems to me it was wrong arufjitwaste of our taxpayer's money. r4Ljirry Goldmnn painted out ot tfi<|public meeting, the town's specialcharter restrictions on residencyclearly contrndict both state nndfederal constitutions; the Un^ncould have joined on the Bide |i)fdemocracy lnsteud of clefondiijrtoutdated exclusionary voting pro-cedures. LonKtirra* BIHI new leijhdents (dike would welcome itchange (him the name old Kini iWe noffl more <|unllfletl nincll<lnU'!|with better Wens, not n om* pitrtymonotx'ly whose InterpRta don't vihincklt' with the cotiununlty'H. (Soot Iluck to Me*wrn. llrenimn ittul WnlsltIn the full election.

CONNII JO D I C K i m d t f

More M U T B on /V-8

May 12,1994 Westfield Record A-5

Special report

Pondering the priceof police protectionSmaller towns paying more per capita;is $200 per call too expensive anywhere?

GEORGE PACCIELLO/FORBES NEWSPAPERSScotch Plains Detective Andrew Glaydura checks fingerprints lifted from scene of a recentbreak-in.

FORBES NEWSPAPERS

Town officials across UnionCounty are adopting their 1994municipal budgets, in all of whichpolice expenses are the largest de-partmental component. In thisspecial report, Forbes Newspapersoffers data with which taxpayerscan take a comparative look at thespending and services of different towns' policecosts. Each police department worked closely withForbes Newspapers to ensure that the data are assimilar as possible across the table on this page.

Examining the towns' total budgets on the upperhalf or the chart on a per capita basis, there is avariation of $369, with Scotch Plains being the mosteconomical and Garwood being the most expensive.However, these two towns also have a difference inpopulation of nearly 17,000. It has been argued byofficials in the smaller towns of Garwood, Fanwood,and Kenilworth that their services are more ex-pensive per capita simply because of their size.

Fanwood Police Chief Anthony J. Parenti said thathe feels that a comparison only between these threesmaller towns is more appropriate. He said that larg-er towns are able to be economical because they savein things like bulk buying, and are able to have lessemployees per capita.

SPECIAL REPORT

In fact, this comparison betweenmunicipal police departments-shows just that kind of difference.For instance, Kenilworth has one-sworn police officer for every 315residents, whereas Westfield has'one sworn police officer for every497 residents. This may 03111811/explain why the six towns differ incost per capita by $124.

The budgets for all police depart-ments include salaries for uniformed officers, secre-tarial workers, school crossing guards, and police dis-patchers. Additional services include parking en-,forcement and auxiliary police in Westfield and Cran-ford, and traffic maintenance ir> Scotch Plains, Cran-ford and Garwood.

Total calls only include calls for service, except forGarwood which includes all calls.

Total arrests includes criminal arrests for both'adults and juveniles. Criminal incident totals comefrom the national Uniform Crime Report and onlyinclude class I crimes — murder, rape, robbery, as-'sault, burglary, theft, auto theft, and arson.

It should also be noted that the police department-does create some revenue for the town. For example,the Westfield Municipal Court received $400,000 in.revenue last year. However, Westfield Town Admin-istrator Ed Gottko said it is impossible to tell howmuch of this sum was generated by police work.

Criminal justiceexpert explains

lice analysis' There are many mesurernents"of a police department's efficiencyland continuing research and data.collecting and reporting give-scholars and administrators many^perspectives on the complex topic,

i, In an interview Monday, Dr. Joe\ Plenski of Seton Hall University'said a deeper look into the calls'teceived by each police depart--ment is key to analyzing ef-ficiency. Dr. Plenski is chairmano( the Criminal Justice Depart-

iment of the Graduate Department•of Public Administration.^ "We're looking at the concept ofa law enforcement communityand all the money we spend tofeel safe," he said. "The questionis whether there is a more respon-sible way for the cops to make itmore efficient," Dr. Plenski said.

The Seton Hall departmentchairman said that to get a good

"look at the efficiency of each de-partment, one should look at the

1 trends, especially in calls. For ex-"•Simple, town X received 10,000'calls last year, but only made 400arrests and only had 200 crime in-cidents on the Uniform Crime Re-

**port (UCR). The question, Dr.iJPlenski asks, is what is the nature"of these calls and have they been'growing over the years.

"Eighty to ninety percent of po-lice work has nothing to do withcrime, but has to do with what'scalled social order," he said. Socialorder work would include suchservices as handling noise tlistur-

O l O I U i F P A C C I t I I I !Westflold Officer Bill Samp-son directs traffic at EastBroad and Prospect StreetsThursday.

bances and disorderly conduct"This probably counts as work butthe Uniform Crime Report (UCR)shows that, in fact, they don'twork on crime."

Dr. Plenski contends that thenumber of calls for this kind ofsocial order service is growing andis partially responsible for ex-pensive costs.

"They have a monolopy on ser-vice — there's nowhere else peo-ple can call," he said. "If you lookat the trends over the years, theamount of calls and the characterof those calls, you can get a betterview of what direction the policeare heading."

"You're getting more peoplewith more complex problems whobegin to look at police work as aresource," he added. In Dr. Plen-ski's opinion, demographic andsocietal changes are the cause ofthese trends. Cultural changes inattitudes towards violence and so-cialization changes with the ad-vent of 24-hour television bringabout more social order needs."Where it used to be importantand efficient, it's now somethingthat's important and expensive."

Dr. Plenski said that the kindsof public information programs of-fered by police as potentials forbetter efficiency also should befactored. Towns may have goodprograms such as anti-burglary fo-rums where the public learns howto protect themselves and preventburglary, or police may offer apublic information program onhow to report a crime. There alsoart? important programs such asanti-drug DARE and the burglarypreventive Neighborhood Watch.

But, Dr. Plenski said, if munici-palities have been taking part in(host1 programs, effects should beseen over time in the number nndnature of c;»lls that come into thedepartment.

Overall, Dr. Plenski felt thnt the;costs per call in tho six (owns inthe Forbes Newspu|X:rs suiveywere expensive. However, he saidthat they are not unlike the nil-tioii.il .stmidiml.

Police chiefs told Forbes News-piipeiH that the actual number ofrails they ntleve is double thoseon Hie elmrt which are strictlythose to which a sqiiml air wlu-nlly dispatched. Tho other callslire for direct ions ami other inlbr-niiitinn.'il inquiries nol inquiring,II i uflicer to respond In I he .scene.

Ilr. Pli'iifiki, siM'culiillni! on thenull einerfteney enlist, till id, "Wlwil(In you )•.«•! (or your money? It.'.sthe cdll :iiul reiijMiiiw IIKMIH and itl",f\r, y< HI (list t h a i , " h e si i lH. "Kol:(.','!I!) n ("ill, v o n w o u l d H u n k p o l i c eW<MIIC| *;.'iy m e r e H u m , " I f i i i i y t h i n j 'h;i | i |H'n:; r a i l u s h n c k . " II':; ( l i ey i -nr :MHK) IIIHI Hull's; w h y p e o p l edon't want l<> fiive u\> their |>t ins.'"

I'leiiskl In MM C X N I W York|»ollce ol'llcer now living in

O H I nly.- N I C O U C (1/VVINO

How much your town spent per capita in '93Town

Population

1993Budget

Cost perCapita

Cranford

22,633

$17,263,959

$763

Fanwood

7,115

$4,894,376

$688

Garwood

4,225

$4,131,530

$978

Kenilworth

7,574

$6,842,146

$903

ScotchPlains

21,125

$12,856,882

$609

Westfield

28,870

$23,599,124

$817

Your police costs and activity in '93Town

PoliceDept. 1993

Budget

Cost perCapita

Total Calls

TotalArrests

TotalCriminalIncidents

Full TimeSwornofficers

Cranford

$3,186,320

S141

40,364

960

747

49

Fanwood

$1,201,444

$169

22,536

469

122

21

Garwood

51,053,595

$249

17,579

128

56

16

Kenilworth

$1,431,686

$189

8,756

306

264

24

ScotchPlains

$2,762,625

$130

15,316

531

629

43

Westfield

$3,621,600

$125

17,611

739

768

58

Dr{."itv

Cranford Officer Robert Peters calibrate* the radar unit In hit patrol cnr before retumtng a lour of tho township.

A-6 Westftold Record

Community lifeMay 12, 1994

Sharing

This column highlights theaccomplishments and gener-osity of suburban Union vol-unteers and the services of Ihecharitable organizations theysupport.

Breast cancerscreeningsthis month

ELIZABETH — Four pro-grams for women older than40 to learn about breast can-cer detection are scheduledfor various sites in the countythis month.

Institutions participating inthe American Cancer Societyprogram this year are:* Elizabeth Medical Center,May 22v Overlook Hospital, May 14v St. Elizabeth Hospital,May 14 and 16** Rahway Hospital, May 14

Hie awareness program'sgoal is to provide the op-portunity for low-cost mam-mograms for women olderthan 40 who have never hada mammogram or haven'thad one within two years.

Schering-Ploughcaptures award

KEN1LWORTH - TheUnited Cerebral Palsy As-sociation of New Jersey pre-sented its Corporate AwardThursday to Schering-PloughCorporation. The firm wascited for its commitment toworkforce diversity and em-ployment opportunities forindividuals with disabilities.

Healthy Livingis fair's theme

ELIZABETH — St. Eliza-beth Hospital will hold itsfirst Healthy Living Fair 10-3,Saturday, May 14 in the newparking garage. It will featuredemonstrations, participatoryactivities and competitions.

Among the scheduledevents are t'ai chi demonstra-tion, police tac team show,aerobics, story teller, skateboard demonstration andcompetition and a physicalfitness triathlon.

All events are free, as isparking. The fair will be heldrain or shine. The hospital isat 225 Williamson St.

Senior health isfocus May 17

LINDEN — Railway andOverlook Hospitals are spon-soring a Senior Health Fairfrom 11-3, Tuesday, May 17at Delaire Nursing and G>n-valescent Center, 400 W.Stimpson Ave.

Nearly 20 booths will oilereducational information ontopics such as advance direc-tives, women's health, Medi-care, stroke prevention.

Registered nurses and doc-tors will perform free preven-tive health screenings, Aiso,blood pressure will hochecked and there will be astroke screening booth. Visi-tors also can have cholesteroland glucose levels measuredand have their feot, luii(»:;and hearing checked.

For more information, call499-6137 or 522-!).'M3.

The Pru offersto aid squads

NEWARK Applicationsare still being accepted (Vomvolunteer first nid squints forThe Prudential HelpingHearts Program.

The recently launched planwil l donate matchinc-fundgrants to sqvimls throuKhotdNew Jersey to purchase portable eanlii'ic dcfibi illationunits. Specially twined ernerjjency medical teHiniriiuisuse th«'K<* to revive victim.'! of(.'(inline Hirest before they metratm|>orW'd to hospitals Thisimproves pjilicnlii ' chance",for Hiirvivjil.

1'indent ml will i lonalr upto half the i-<i:tl of ;i unit (upto $2,ri(IU) In elijnhlf <:(|iiii(l.'i,The fompmi.v hfiN committed$ I r>fl,(MK» a yenr lor fhieeyearn to l\ind Hi*- (in w a i n .

.'•iqnndu w«'ldri|( proj>ramInfo emi t-iill 201 W)2 HUH I.

Galore & More fairis set for Saturdayat Westfield High

Squires Club is stop on tourof Westfield homes May 21

The large, white Federal Re-vival house on the Boulevard inWestfield was known to manyWestfielders until recently as"The Squires Club," and will beshown as part of the Woman'sClub of Westfiekl's HistoricHouses Tour and Brunch 10a.rn.-3 p.m. Saturday, May 21.

The house was built circa 1890but was nearly destroyed by afire about 10 years later. CharlesN. Codding, a prominent at-torney, an Assemblyman, andpopular Republican leader, madethe house a social center of thetown. Among the many impor-tant guests were Theodore Roos-evelt, Robert Benchley, andAmelia Earhart. It was Mr. Cod-ding who argued the case for thepassage of the bill of incorpora-tion which resulted in the desig-

nation of Westfield as a Town inMarch 1903.

The present owners purchasedthe property in December, 1992,enclosed the spacious grounds ina graceful iron fence, and beganthe task of restoring the house toits original magnificance as afamily home.

A distinctive feature of the ex-terior is the entrance portico sup-ported by lull-length Doric col-umns. The Federal style doorwaywith leaded side lights and pilas-ters framing the windows, leadsinto a large central entrance hall.A screen of columns frames theentrances to the rooms left andright of the haU. A delicate Fed-eral-style semi-spiral staircasecreates a balcony effect.

The living room contains anexcellent example of a New Jer-

sey Federal style mantel withcarved sunbursts, seeding anddentils. The library, which sur-vived the devastating fire, is inthe English baronial style, withmullioned windows, dark wallpanelling, and Medieval stylefireplace. The room, in fact, wasdismantled from an EnglishAbbey, brought to this countryand rebuilt in this lovely home.

The cost of tickets for theHouse Tour and Brunch is $18and may be purchased at Lan-caster, Ltd, the Music Staff, Ror-den Realty, The Town BookStore and at the Clubhouse, 318S. Euclid Avenue, all in West-field. No tickets will be availableon the day of the tour. Brunchmay be taken at the Clubhouse,10 a.m.-3 p.m. For further infor-mation, call 233-7160 or 654-3946.

The second annual Galore &More Spring Market and Fair willbe held 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday atWestfield High School. The eventis sponsored by Project People, anorganization of parents, studentsand teachers in the Project '79 pro-gram at the school, to benefit theentire student body and faculty.

Funds raised from last year'sevent allowed Project People toprovide college scholarships to four

uating students, purchase edu-mal software, and make dona-

to various departments in theschool, including the student news-paper, the marching band and thetelevision studio.

The indoor craft show will fea-ture a wide range of items to ap-peal to all ages — personalizedchildren's items, hand-paintedbirdhouses, toys, needlepoint pil-lows, hand-painted children'sclothing, baby care items, decora-tive home accessories, a display ofcustom painted children's furnitureand wall treatments, and more.

Items for the Chinese auctionwill be on display all day for peopleto purchase tickets with drawingsbeginning 2 p.m. Winners need notbe present, but ticket holders willbe welcome to stay for the draw-ings and relax with dessert andbeverages in the food court. Thegoods and services donated bylocal merchants and businesses in-clude artwork, tuitions for summersoccer camps, dinner and theater

packages, decorator pillows, andgift certificates from many stores.Theme baskets have been as-sembled which include "Morrtmyand Me," "On The Road," "A Ro-mantic Getaway," "A Fresh Start,""Confucius Say," "Nine to Fi<-e,""The Executive," "Keep Cool,""Pretty Kitty "Pampered Pup,""Sweet Tooth," "Kitchen Gour-met," "College Bound," and"Cook's Corner."

Raffle tickets will be sold in ad-vance as well as the day of theevent for a first prize of a dinnercruise for four around Manhattanon World Yacht, a second prize of aSony CD cassette player, and athird prize of a Sunday brunchcruise for two on VIP Yachts.

Fair-goers can have their picturetaken in period costume hats atthe Victorian booth provided byBurgdorff Realtors.

The food court will serve bagelsand doughnuts starting 10 a m ,lunch foods including lasagna witha tossed salad, pizza, and sub slices11 a.m.-2 p.m., and dessert andbeverages throughout the day.

"With a craft show, Chinese auc-tion with fabulous prizes, ponyrides, entertainment, games andcrafts for children, bake sale, whiteelephant sale, and a food court,'allunder one roof, the Spring Marketand Fair has something for every-one," said chairwoman RonnieFrankel.

For information/raffle tickets, callMrs. Frankel at 232-5641.

McGovern named to services boardMonica Topal McGovern, certi-

fied social worker, board certifieddiplomat in clinical social work,has been elected to the Board ofDirectors of Community Servicesof New Jersey.

CSNJ is a non-profit organizationheadquartered in Summit whichprovides employment, cooperativeliving, and group home services for

people with developmental dis-abilities in Union, Essex and Passaic counties.

Ms. Topal McGovern served asthe director of Support Services atthe Center for Family Life inBrooklyn for 11 years. She alsoworked as an adjunct professor atColumbia University during thattime.

Chalk talk

Last Night PlaceThe final "Night Place" of the

schuol year is set for 7:30-9:30 p.m.tomorrow at Edison IntermediateSchool. Night Place is open to allresidents in grades 6-8 and is spon-sored by the Westfield RecreationCommission and the PTC.

Night Place features dancing,music, volleyball, basketball, ping-pong, board games, movies and re-freshments. Tomorrow's theme is"Mardi Gras." Call 789-4080 formore in format ion.

Symphony at CarnegieThe New Jersey Youth Sym-

phony will celebrate its 15th an-niversary season with a perform-ance 2 p.m. May 29, Carnegie Hall.Symphony inprnlwrs include West-field students Paul Bhasin, MarkHobbie, Yih Huang, Ghia Jacobs,Mnrynnn In1 , FIdward O'Donneland Brady Schuck. For informa-tion, call l.inda Abrarns at 771-

WHS lurid-raiserSpiinj ; IVlnrket Fair "Galore &

Moir" will feature an indoor craftshow, chirie.se* nuction, children'sactivities, pony rides, bake sale,

book sale and refreshments. Thefair is 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday

Honor rollArea residents Maria Genoni and

Jenny Meyers were named to thefirst honor roll at Oak Knoll Schoolofthe Holy Child.

Lively artsWHS will present choral concerts

8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday inthe auditorium. Performing groupsinclude the Freshman Chorus,Mixed Chorus, Concert Choir, Cho-rale, Choraleers and Madrigal Sing-ers.

School newcomersKindergarten registration and

orientation will be held tomorrowat Tamaques school, May 19 at Jef-ferson school and June 7 at Frank-lin School,

Young PatriotsFranklin School will celebrate

the Westfield bicentennial with twoconcerts. Students in grades 1-3will perform 7:15 p.m. Wednesday.Grades 4-5 will perform 7:30 p.m.May 24. The auditorium will bedecorated with patriotic motifs.

GEORGE PACCIELLO/THE RECORD

This black sheep has no problem finding friends at last week's big Franklin School Fair wherestudents visited many different stations to learn and enjoy animals and exhibits of many sorts.

Men just lack vision when it comes to home decorHOUR- ;iw*'f'l, home 'Hie place where you

can hide back, put your foot up and relnx.Well ... maybe someday.

[ h w e to ndmit that I'm to blame. If i tvviis up lt» my IK'IOVPII, we would nevermove ii piece of furniture or change any-thing. ' fe'.is perfectly happy with the statusi|iio [, <in tln> other hand, am alwnys think-iiif.; of ways we <™m make things better,l>i|^',ri, liiiwillcr, brighter, darker, longer,\l ini i n , <II ; i different color.

We have ';|>erit Ihe Inul three yojirti Kimd-iri|f, pciOini', Kcrapiiii!, [mint inn mid redem-mli i i l i «'Mcl» mom in our little ('n|x> CixJliuii",!' null) i! look;; like n country dollhouse I'Miin II ic j'Jramini; unk (loom In thedelii-ale ctii uili y blue woodwork unil rr i ' i tmvviill'i, I mi l honestly say tlmt I'm ... semili;i|>| >y '., ilh Hie luiti!;e.

Okay. '•" I'm not leally happy yet. Ill itI'm f'.ni! i i; l< p t«*

I d.'tve i theory 11Kit siprlni'.irifj newIs• r.11 r |•. mi UM<•''; liii'il>;itn) jij ritil IKIVIKIIIIIIV'. I I , inili.'illv I j ' i ' i t '".ij'lp.- Men hiile WIIIMI w r:;i|;h They <lnn'l know whul it meniin mid<uiif mm MI is liomelhinj' men bate.

ShenanigansBy Cheryl Hohl

Which brings us to the reeent retlecorntinK <>f the bedroom. Now I realize- tln-rewns nothing wrong with the Ix-dimmi. 11jiiHt didn't " look" rlfihl to rue My In-loved,on the other hiind, looked at tlie bedroommill Kiiif.1, " I t lookfl fine In me." Hill everything Inokn ("me to him. However, I'm in<*h«rf>e of (lemiiiUiif* unit it didn't look fineto me.

A few weekn Inter we hail found !h<> (inriUute of our dleiium, hauled luiiiit ' 'lit (lit'ferent Mlimplcd of while paint, on l ' -ml i\Ixuder [Hint, piirrluiHtfl n down eontfuitei.mulching i>ed wltitl, plllinv <sliJtmr.. new cuttJiilllt ami whiU' Idle Minnie;:

My Ipcloved worked foi Ihree dnya midl b He lirvpft to piihil, wt I IH. him lie.

In the end, with the exception of the bor-der print which kept foiling down ns weput it up, tho room turned out wen tx>tterthnn 1 imnKined. It wfis Ix-tter thnn bounti-ful, it wiia perfect.

The paint was barely thy on thi' wallswhi?n 1 was oil" on another project. "Now,lion," I begun sweetly one* night, "picturethis. Wo knock the dining room l«u;k wallout, |)iit up French doors thill O)M'i) onU) adeck, ('iin't you JiiHt nee it?" My bitslwirulhnii u KIU/IHI kxik on \UH fact'.

"What if it'H a weight U'liririK wi i l l , " heKiild Herlously, tapping on the wall as be!i)Kiki<. "And what about the lnviU'r t>ri thatwall? Wlint do von intend to di> witbTHAT?"

Why iloe.'i he nlwnyji luive 1o ruin I bemoment wil l i those Irivinl thinj'.iiV <'an't besee the hij; pictoie? The fruit.1! of our Inborn? 'I'be .MillMf.'K'llon of lniiiKini! Uie I'.reat(nildiMiiii lulu our home? Kxtriidinj'. nur livirs){ wpiice? Think of the [irwullilllUfn. Any-one run live in n boune. Home owners have(o have n nplrlt of adventure.

So while be |Hindered wr»lMht-lx*iirlriH

walls, I began soliciting c-ontrnctors for esti-mates. Unfortunately, ench one hud u dif-ferent perspective on how the job shouldbo done. BiR, small. Ion;;, tall, attached, notntuiched, redwtKxl, pressurtvtreated, naile<J,boltetl, dunl levels, no levels, split rails, norails, seats nnd no st.uits. Tho project wasbecoming a project.

What we needed wi.is a fju.V who saw thevision and could rn i ry i t out. A ;;uy who,when I said, "Now Iwj int to knock out tlii;iwall nnd put in French d<xmi," wouldn'tlook at me like 1 nskwi h im to din theLincoln tunnel. One tbiii. would smile findway "rin problem" WIKMI he heait) Ihe planA man with a spirit of adventure.

1 thought I'd never- find him, hut I did.In furl, IIC'K more excited (him wi' i ire. AM ilshould Iw. |j«'t, the riMiovnlion coiiifiicncc.And it wil l , in alxuit two or (hi ce weftks.

Meantime I've IMMTI Ihinkin/; IIIMIIII theidU'hcn. Since we are UnncUint', out onevvnll, it seeriiH loffienl to knock mi l the wallt»etwee11 (he kilcbt'ti and /;H that. rlotu>.What do you think? My twloved lias takento his be<i of wix\ 1 need i\ necond opinion.

May 12,1994 Westfield Record A-7

| Religion news

Churches will offer.vacation Bible camp

The Presbyterian Church in-^Vestfield, in conjunction with St.

Paul's Episcopal Church, will holda Vacation Bible Camp during theweek of June 20, at the Presbyte-rian Church, with the theme"God's Faithful Friends."

The camp is 4-6:30 p.m. and in-cludes songs, crafts, dinner, and acamp fire. All children enteringkindergarten through sixth gradein the Tall are welcome to attend.

The cost is $8 per child. For•more information please call thePresbyterian Church at 233-0301 orSt. Paul's at 232-8506.'Incognito Christ*is sermon topic

.'•.. The Rev. David Harwood, senior.minister, will preach the sermon. "The Incognito Christ" during the

: worship service 10:45 a.m. Sundayat First United Methodist Church,

. 1 E. Broad St.•.••.. Each Sunday there is church

school for all ages 9:15 a.m. Con-. Uniting education classes for adultsare Disciple Bible Study, 8:30 a.m.,and "Whole and Forgiven," 9:15

: am.Fellowship time in the fellowship

• room, an informal gathering of the•. community and visitors, begins

10:15 a.m.The schedule for next week is:

• Sunday — "Spring in the Air". luncheon following worship ser-

vice; confirmation class, 6 p.m.;Youth Fellowship, 6 p.m.; BookDiscussion Group, 7:30 p.m.

Monday — Wesley Singers, 7:30p.m.

Tuesday — Crafty Ladies, 9:30• ,.a.m.; Disciple Class, 12:30 p.m.; Fife

•St Drum, 7 p.m.; Council on Minis-''.tries, 8 p.m.

Wednesday — Youth Choir, 6p.m.; Handbell Choir, 7:30 p.m..

•.. Thursday — Sanctuary Choir,7:30 p.m.

Friday — Senior Fellowship,noon.Bible backgroundcourse on Wednesdays

The First Baptist Church ofWestfield, 170 Elm St., will host aBible background course ir. "Actsand Ear]y Church History" for 7-9p.m. for six Wednesday nights, be-ginning May 18. The course will beled by Dr. Dee Dee Turlington,minister of Christian Education &Evangelism at First Baptist, whohas a doctorate in Biblical Studiesfrom Columbia University/UnionTheological Seminary.

•Among issues addressed will behow Christianity evolved from«iich humble beginnings to be thedominant force in the Roman Em-pire and how the portrayals of keyleaders such as Peter and Paul inthe book of Acts compare withthose suggested in their letters.

The course is open to the public.For more information, call 233-2278.America for ChristOffering this Sunday

The First Baptist Church ofWestfield joins other churches in

. the denomination Sunday in sup-\ port of the America for Christ Of-

fering. The gifts to this special of-fering help provide ministries ofevangelism, education, and stew-ardship across the country in morethan 34 regions. Members of thecongregation working in the nurs-

• ery will be recognized for theirtime and effort devoted to theyoungest children of the congrega-tion.

The Rev. Dr. Robert L. Harveywill preach nt the 10:30 a.in. wor-ship service, at which time the con-gregation will support the denomi-nation's Amwicii For Christ Of-fering.

Church schcx>1 for all ages beginsat f) a.m. Adult education includesthe pastor's CIJISS on "Case Studies6n Biomediciil Ethics," the Jour-neys Class oti th<* Gospel of Luke,and the Adult Forum on ABCUSAStatements ol'Conci'ni.

The nurst-ry is staffed 9-11:30a.m., and includes stories, songsand visual aides jiLioi.it God's cre-ation. A full religious curriculum ofactivities in offered children ages 2-5.

Rounding out the church's activeschedule, the weekly Pot UickDinner 0:H() p.m. Tiirsdiiy will Ix-followed by Outreach and Chrislinn F.(lncnt.iiiu committee meetings.

Council will meet 7 HI) p.m.Wediu'sdny.

Religious rij»lil isprofessor's topic

Professor .l.niirs Mnrchend willIH> (yfuest leetili ill)', mi "The Rise ofthe lleliijioiu; Iticht" Smidiiy 'it7:,'l() p.m. in I'niton Hull al Hie Firstt'oiiffrenatiitnal ( ' lunch nl Westfield. i'mlessni Mntehe;i(l willplitee lh<> religion;: rich! in hi'ilnrie;il |x.'i\'i|KT!ive niul descrilie HieeiUI.'ieH o f its c i>nl i i i i |Hi i ;n y r i : c

Knr MOIV I ICJH I i1: :i Mi i rv

movements, and presbyterian his-tory. Contact the First Congrega-tional Church for more infor-mation. All are welcome to attend.

Child care will be provided.

Choirs to celebratePentecost Sunday

The Cherub and Chorister Choirsof the First Baptist Church ofWestfield, 170 Elm St, will providemusic for the 10:30 am. worshipservice Sunday, May 22, when thechurch celebrates Pentecost.

Pentecost, in the church's under-standing, is the time when the firstdisciples of Jesus were moved bythe Spirit of God to proclaim topeople of all nationalities thatJesus is Lord. It traditionally fo-cuses on the power of the HolySpirit for individual and corporaterenewal. At First Baptist, a praise-filled worship service will be fol-lowed by a "Pentecost Party."

Singing in the cherub choir arepreschoolers: Allison Barton, AmyRose Bryson and Jesse Page; Kin-dergarteners: Deirdre Clark, CeciDelia Peruti, Kinsey Grey, AnniePeterson and Donnie Turlington;first graders: Mary Beth Bryson,Jeff Greenlaw and Erin Klein.

The Choristers are second-graders Ferris Moniz, Katie Peterson and Chris Rennie; third-graders are Tashera Perry and Jen-nifer Rainey; fourth-graders ErinBiggio, Jennie Hansen and KevinManion; fifth-graders are Tim

Greenlaw and Scott I indKnights of Columbuswelcome Bishop

The Monsignor Henry J. Watter-son Council Knights of Columbuswas recently honored by a visit byHis Excellency Bishop Federico O.Escaler, S.J. from Mindaneo in thePhilippines Islands.

The Bishop, Father GerardBrown, S.J. and Father WilliamMorris the Council Chaplain, con-celebrated a Memorial Mass inhonor of all the deceased membersof the council, and especially anyBrother Knight who died duringthe past year.

Westfield Council has donated aMissionary Mass Kit to the JesuitMissionary Society as a memorialfor their deceased members for thepast 17 years. Many of these masskits were sent to Bishop Escaler'sDiocese at Ipil, Zamboanga DelSur. Mindanao, Philippines. BishopEscaler came to Westfield to ex-press his appreciation to the coun-cil and to encourage the continuedsupport of the missions.

lciin (Ihi irrh Ihsloty fil I'miUtllvet»ll,V 'I'licriluitirld . l^'mi

nitry. I fc IIMH written on i i i n r l r rn tht t ' i i tury cluitcli hisliMv. I I " 1 ' ( > l f > "•tTli«luii in the f 'ivil Wai, niill '-iifiii i l

ClassicLaura Igarteburu of West*field model* 1912 weddinggown belonging to MarianHlckeraon, once worn byMa. Hickerson'a mother,during a recent fashionahow and banquet hostedby the American BaptistWomen of the First BaptistChurch. More than a dozengowns were displayed.

Ex-mayor Mulreany to be citedat hospital's June Rainbow Gala

Former Westfield mayor and cur-rent Summit resident Robert H.Mulreany will be honored at Over-look Hospital's upcoming "Overthe Rainbow" gala for his role inhelping the hospital attain its re-spected position within the com-munity and region.

He will receive the CommunityService Award at the black-tieevent, which will be held 6:30 p.m.Saturday, June 18 at on the hospi-tal campus. Gov. Christine ToddWhitman will serve as honorarychairperson of the gala,

Mr. Mulreany, who served asWestfield's mayor 1965-68, is cred-ited as a force behind the creationof the Overlook Hospital Founda-tion, the resource arm of Overlook,and was trustee and chairman ofthe boards of Overlook Hospitaland the foundation 1968-84. He re-turned to the foundation board in1993.

During his tenure with the hos-pital, Mr. Mulreany initiated sev-eral programs that earned the hos-pital national recognition, such as

ROBERT H. MULREANY

its extensive commitment to pro-

fessional education and training.

Overlook's status as a teaching

hospital is due largely to the affili-ation Mr. Mulreany established be-tween Overlook and Columbia Uni-versity College of Physicians andSurgeons.

In 1993, Overlook named itscampus library in honor of Mr.Mulreany. The Robert H. MulreanyHealth Sciences Library includes aConsumer Health Information Li-brary, which provides communitymembers with free access to im-portant health and medical infor-mation. The consumer library in-cludes more than 2,500 textbooks,brochures and videos.

Mr. Mulreany is a retired seniorpartner of the DeForest & Duerlaw firm in New York City. Ac-tively involved in community ser-vice, Mr. Mulreany served as mem-ber and president of the WestfieldBoard of Education and has beenhonored by the Westfield Rotaryfor his private and public supportof many community organizationsand projects.

Mr. Mulreany and his wife, Dor-othy, have two daughters.

Gardenaires meet Wednesday at Scotch HillsThe Gardenaires will meet noon Wednesday at the

Scotch Hills Country Club on Jerusalem Road, ScotchPlains. Member Mary Haddad will give a lecture onunusual perennials. She will also discuss native plantsand herbs which can be grown for decoration andmedicinal uses.

Mrs. Haddad earned her master's degree as a voca-

tional rehabilitation counselor; her master's thesis wason horticultural therapy. She was in charge of agreenhouse and garden for the psychiatric institutionlocated in East Orange. She is also a docent for theNew York Botanical Gardens and leads tours aroundthe native perennial garden during the summer.

For more information, call 889-0859.

Art Exhibition & Art Auctionto be held at

All Saints1 Episcopal Church - Lea Hall559 Park Avenue

Scotch Plains, New Jersey

Friday, May 20,1994Preview: 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Auction: 8:30 p.m.Wine & Cheese-Coffee & Dessert-Champagne Punch

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A-8 Westfield Record May 12,1994

Letters to the editor

Flast asks council to considersurplus, administrative costs

fObi

To The Record:I am writing to you as a fellow

taxpayer and parent in Westfield,not as a representative of theBoard of Education. Thursdaynight, I sat in the audience of theTown Council meeting empathiz-ing with you and your colleagues.As interim board members, PeterGould and I went through a similarfrustrating process in the weeksbefore the election. It is difficult tomake sense of this $45 millionbudget. It has a state-determinedstructure that does not facilitatethe identification of costs associ-ated with "need to have" programsand "nice to have" programs.While we voted to support the pro-posed budget, we vowed that wewould not allow ourselves to betrapped in this llth-hour scrambleagain next year. We recognizedthat significant change in the edu-cational system and its cost struc-ture is best accomplished over aperiod of time and must be basedon quality input from all parties,including students, parents, tax-payers, teachers and adminis-trators.

Now that the budget is in your.hands, I would like to make a fewsuggestions that may simplify thechallenge for you. Given the lackof quality input, both in terms ofthe budget documentation and thepublic interest, you might want tofocus on three straightforwardareas of opportunity. The first isthe surplus of free balance fund.Based on my limited understand-ing, the amount of surplus appearsto be more than we need And morethan we thought. During the

Board's budget deliberations, thesurplus was ackowledged to be toohigh, and some but not all of the"excess" was used to help mini-mize the proposed tax increase.The amount of surplus left ex-ceeded the 2-3 percent that wewere told represents good and pru-dent budgeting, but not by much.Since those discussions, additionalmoneys have been added to thefree balance account that com-bined with the previous remainingexcess might eliminate most if notall the proposed tax increase. I can-not think of a better and easierplace for you and the council tocontribute than by cutting the ex-cess surplus or free balance.

If the excess surplus does notprovide adequate reductions, thena straightforward reduction in theadministration category would bemy next recommendation. All re-structuring efforts, both in the pub-lic and private sector, have initiallyand successfully targeted adminis-trative layers. While our statistics

are comparatively attractive com-pared to other districts and to thestate, my sense of our situation isthat it is like being the least over-weight person in a Weight Watch-ers class! If you cut administrationby 30-50 percent, or 1-5 percent ofour per-pupil costs, the system willadjust to the new reality. We havepreached the virtues of site-basedmanagement. We are pursuing ameasured effort in restructuring atthe High School. Such an eco-nomic stimulus would accelerateour efforts to empower teachersand the remaining administrators.

Finally, there was some discus-sion of "breakage" at the meetinglast night While I cannot imaginewhere that term came from, theconcept is a simple one. Whenfaced with this opportunity, manyorganizations attempt to accelerateretirements by using some portionof the expected savings to motivatepotential retirees. I have not been aparty to, not am I aware of, anydiscussions of such a strategy.

However, if such a plan was fea-sible and desirable to all parties,we should move quickly to imple-ment it

I hope that you take the abovesuggestions in the spirit that theyare being offered. They representnew thinking stimulated by thediscussions last night, not oldthinking that was easier to avoidlast month in the hopes that thebudget would be approved. Person-ally, and as I have stated before, Ibelieve that the Board's challengein the future will be to do morewith less, not less with less. Ourjob is to set the policies in motionthat guide the Superintendent andthe administration in achievingthis simply stated but hard to ac-complish challenge in the yearsahead. I hope that the Council willhelp make this job as do-able aspossible by keeping your recom-mendations simple but significant

H0MIIT H. FLASTWestfleld

F. Wallace Maclver, 77Exxon retiree; once of Westfield

F. Wallace Maclver, 77, whoonce headed the photographydepartment at the Florham Parkoffices of what is now ExxonCorp., died May 5, 1994 at hishome in Clark.

Mr. Maclver lived in Roselle,Westfield, and Rahway beforemoving to Clark in 1957. He wasborn in Fanwood.

He retired in 19B1 after 38years with Exxon and its prede-cessor, the Standard Oil Co. of

New Jersey. Mr. Maclver sein the Army during World WII and was a member of C)Post 328, American Legion.

He also belonged to a Masoniclodge in Clark. " <

Surviving are a son, GregoryMaclver, and a daughter, LynnMaclver, both of Clark.

Graveside services were heldTuesday at Woodbridge Memo-rial Gardens. Arrangementswere by the Gray FuneralHome.

How about reviewing instruction?To The Record:

Prompted by what I knew aboutthe Westfield school's program inmy own field of expertise, I tookthe liberty several years ago of sug-gesting in print that the Board ofEducation might do well to put inplace independent ad hoc commit-tees to evaluate instruction in allthe disciplines. Although any num-ber of townspeople communicatedto me their agreement with such acommon-sense mechanism, myproposal was summarily dismissed

by our reactionary school board.Now, Not unexpectedly, the

school budget has been rejected bythe voters and it must be intel-ligently reconstituted in a matter ofdays. An impossible task, in asmuch as the Town Council is hard-ly competent in such matters. Hadthe town's curricula been compe-tently reviewed by professionals inthe preceding year or years, thetrimming now mandated couldhave been done without negativeimpact on our children's education.

But we can still consider such anapproach for the future. A systemof review need not be expensive:there is an ample pool of talent inour community from which volun-teers could be drawn.

Ad hoc committees annually re-view the departments at Harvardand other leading universities. It isdifficult to believe the Westfieldschools could not profit from suchscrutiny as well.

PCMNNAND GAJEWSKI, PH.D.

Donald R. Dickson. 43A retired inspector with Lockheed

Donald R. Dickson, 43, an in- associate's degree in electronic^spector at a now-closed electronics technology in 1972 from what tyfactory, died May 3, 1994 at his now Union County College. Jn o m e Surviving are a sister, Barbara

He was bom in Plainfield and SUMH°DiS^boffetovS tSSSlived in Westfield for most of his fiv^nieces and Jephews. L W

Ml• _ , _ t. _ . Graveside services were held Fri-Mr. Dickson was with the Lock- d a y a t Hillside Cemetery,

heed Corp. for 10 years at its pja^s. Arrangements wereformer Watchung plant and the Gray Funeral Home.H.P. Preis Engraving Co. of Hill- Contributions may be made toside before then. He received an the Westfield Rescue Squad. ' ^

Roland DeCasseres, 92Owned a printing shop in the area

Roland W. DeCasseres, 92. whoowned a Plainfield printing shopunder his surname from 1936 untilhis retirement in 1986, died May 5, His wife, Mattie1994 at Rahway Hospital. Casseres, died in 1974. , r

Mr. DeCasseres was born in Surviving are several nieces apdBrooklyn and had lived in West- nephews. A, .,field since 1929. He was a parish- Private services were held at-.theioner of St. Paul's Episcopal Gray Funeral Home. ,.„>;

Church on East Broadbelonged to the Shady Rest Coun-try Club in Scotch Plains. ' ''

Green

Council must spare school programsTo The Record:

I am a person who regulaily at-tends the Board of Educationmeetings, and have been attendingthe last four years. I have watchedand been able to participate in themany discussions that take placeregarding the job of educatingWestfield's children. A processtakes place before the board enactsany policies; that is, there is a dia-logue between Board of Educationmembers, Dr. Smith, and the pub-lic at large. This is standard proce-dure for our Board of Education.This happens with regard to theschool calendar, any changes or ad-ditions to school curriculum, anytextbook purchases, changes inclassroom numbers, repairs toschools, donations, as well as theschool budget!

Parent input is vital to the suc-cess of our children's education.Parent input was the reason thatthe ALPs fifth-grade program wasextended to a full year; it was alsothe reason that the foreign lan-guage immersion program was notimplemented. With regard to thisyear's budget, there were threepublic meetings dedicated to lineitem discussions; I can tell you thatat these meetings there were onlya handful of people attending. Ican tell you that one paper in town

did not even send a reporter tocover one of these meetings.

Now the Town Council has theominous job of cutting the de-feated budget. While I understandand agree that property taxes aretoo high, I am concerned that es-sential programs will suffer. I hopethe council will strive to have thesensitivity necessary to insure that

all children continue to be offeredan appropriate education. I urgepeople who plan to attend thesemeetings come with copies of theproposed budget, available at theBoard of Education, and with spe-cific suggestions.

I hope, too, that the Town Coun-cil takes note that public outcry re-garding the school's budget reflects

a frustration to rising propertytaxes in general. It would be inter-esting to see if Westfield residentswould defeat a town budget if al-lowed this opportunity!

I will continue to attend Board ofEducation meetings; I hope tnorvparents do the same.

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May 12, 1994 W#stfteM Rocord A-9

Executive Ms. Keefe is mother and mentor...

MARY PATRICIA KEEFE

THE RECORD

As a mother of two and a mentorfor women in business, residentMary Patricia Keefe was honoredfor her two favorite jobs in the pastfew weeks.

The group vice president andgeneral counsel for ElizabethtownGas was in the spotlight of the Ex-ecutive Women of NJ at its bi-ennial "Salute to the Policymak-ers" dinner last month.

Executive Women of NJ pro-motes advancement and supportfor women at the highest levels oftheir corporations and professions.Ms. Keefe was honored for herleadership position.

Ms. Keefe joined ElizabethtownGas in 1980 as a general attorney

and advanced to vice president andgeneral counsel in 1985. She nowoversees the company's legal,rates, accounting, real estate, riskmanagement and area develop-ment functions.

Executive Women of NJ servesto help provide role models andmentoring for young women. Ms.Keefe herself has worked "to giveyoung women the opportunitiesand to be able to help them." Sheherself has acted as a mentor,wherein a young women can spend

the day shadowing her work."It helps to put them in touch

with different areas of the busi-ness, from different viewpoints,"she said. She compared the expe-rience to 'Take Our Daughters toWork Day," but on a higher level.

Speaking of which, she takes herown daughters to work whenevershe can. She said the most difficultpart of her job is "juggling my fam-ily with a career." She and her hus-band, John Tirone, have twodaughters — 15-year-old Meghan

and 11-year-old Melissa.Last Sunday, Ms. Keefe was hon-

ored for her other profession,motherhood.

"I've been working since the be-ginning — before the family, dur-ing and still," Ms. Keefe said. "I'vebeen very fortunate. My husbandhas been very supportive and therebeen a lot of pitching in from fam-

ily members."Despite the difficulty of being

two places at once and being twopeople at once, Ms. Keefe wouldn'tchange it for the world. "Never,"she said. "I don't regret a thing."

Whenever Ms. Keefe has freetime, which is infrequently, shelikes to read "anything I can getmy hands on."

TelAmeriCard opens officeto aid groups9 fundraising

Rainville named Fellowof plastic engineer group

Dewey Rainville of Westfield hasbeen elected fellow of the Societyof Plastics Engineers (SPE) in rec-ognition of his outstanding contri-butions to the plastics industry.1&\. Rainville was one of 14 SPEsenior members to receive thishonor at the society's 52nd AnnualTechnical Conference (ANTEO inSan Francisco. Since 1984, only 109o'f' the current 38,000 membershave achieved this status.

An SPE member since 1980, Mr.Rainville has been a pioneer in in-jection blow molding, holding ISpatents for revolutionary equip-jnent he has developed. While rep-tiesenting Foremost, a manufac-turer of plastics grinders, he builtthe first auger feeder blender andthe first auger additive feeder.VTith Ball & Jewell, he developed ayjto mouth grinder and the first

friendly safe grinder. In 1970,

Mr. Rainville began designing,building and selling Rainville in-jection blow molding machines, ef-fectively putting the IBM processon the map for bottle productionand transforming it into a billion-dollar industry.

He is also respected for his plas-tics business acumen. His com-pany, Universal Dynamics Cor-poration, developed and was thefirst to use dehumidified air in anoven to dry plastics resin, pro-viding a quality step for companiesworldwide. Under his leadership.Universal Dynamics' sales havegrown from $3 million to $15 mil-lion sales annual. Mr. Rainville wasprincipal stockholder in Rainco,which later became Conair Inc.,one of the country's largest moldtemperature control suppliers.

He and his wife, Nancy, havefive children.

TelAmeriCard Corporation ofDurham, N.C., has opened a mar-keting office in Westfield concen-trating on non-profit and local or-ganizations and under the direc-tion of Philip Richardson.

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A-10

4WestfieM Record May 12,1994*

The great outdoors beckonsThere's plenty to do as the weather warms up to springBy AMYGAJtVEYSPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

It's finally official — springhas sprung.

March 21 may have been theseason's owning day but theweather has at last convincedjthe rest of us that winter is in-deed over. May's breezy, sunny

• days are the best start to a sea-son outdoors, and the ways to.enjoy them are endless.

Seniors eager for some freshair after a brutal winter needonly a pair of sneakers. Walk-ing is the easiest way to get theblood pumping again, and itdoesn't have to be a solitary ac-tivity. Take a friend for a strollafter dinner, or organize agroup for brisk morning jaunts... perhaps ending up at a localdiner for coffee and conversa-tion.

Spring is traditionally a timefor cleaning up and cleaningout, and local papers are full ofnotices for garage sales and fleamarkets. Nostalgia items andforgotten favorites, like old-fashioned waffle irons or manu-al sewing machines calling outfor a handyman can usually bepicked up with the budget'sleftovers. Making money is anoption, too; one day spendcombing through the attic orthe basement might mean an-other day in the sunshine sell-ing your own wares.

Used bikes can usually behad for a song, and cycling isanother way to enjoy the fineweather while exercising limbsthat got a little lazy during thewinter. Busy streets aren't's al-ways the most pleasant placesfor a bike ride, however; a roofrack for the car, or a hatchback,could get a cycle to one of thearea's parks. Contact the Divi-sion of Parks and Forestry at(609) 292-2797 for informationabout trails as well as stocked

fishing spots.Of course, not every outdoor

activity has to be active. Manyof New Jersey's parks are alsohome to a variety of featheredfriends; the Great Swamp Wild-life Refuge in Basking Ridge,the Scherman-Hoffman Sanc-tuary in Bemardsville, andTrailside Nature and ScienceCenter in Mountainside are afew places to start a bird-watching hobby. The Divisionof Parks and Forestry can alsooffer information about otherparks rife with winged crea-tures.

Another way to soak up sunand fresh air without heavy ex-ertion is to get out some sturdygloves and start digging ... inthe garden, that is. Now is thetime to clean up winter's dam-age, raking, cleaning away oldleaves and branches and fertil-izing the lawn. To make sum-mer menus more appealing,think about planting a veg-etable garden full of tomatoes,

It's safetyfirst behindthe wheelYour years of driving

experience and more ma-ture judgment help you tobe a safer driver. Knowinghow to avoid dangeroussituations, being morecautious and deliberateare almost second natureto most older drivers.

Age can bring not onlymore wisdom but also lessvisual acuity and otherphysical changes thatmean older drivers mayneed to pay more at-tention to the skills need-ed for safety. These hintsare compiled by experts atthe AARP Auto andHomeowners InsuranceProgram, provided by ITTHartford Insurance Group:

" Always uso your snfo-ty belt.

" Exercise, good nutri-tion and regular checkupskeep minds and bodies intop shape.

• Stay alert.» Avoid romlH whero

traffic IK heavy.• Exercise particular

caution at night. Kighly-live1 percent of tho Infor-mation ncfdcd for nnl'vdrivinj; cornf'j through the*ryrfi, .'mil older vycy. art"

often mote wnsiil.tv*1 lo

j'Jf'i'f', such nu from on-

coming lic• Novcr mix akohol/

mcdirnUnrif) and driving.

green beans, and corn. Forcolor, plant annuals such asdaisies and geraniums, or pan-sies.

Kids everywhere axe itchy tobe outside, loo, and weary par-ents busy with their own springchores would be thankful ifGrandma and Grandpa tookthe children out for a day. Theyoungsters would love the zooor an amusement park, espe-cially before the crowds typicalat the height of summer. A na-ture hike or an afternoon offishing might be more condu-cive to intergenerational bond-ing, however.

Festivals are a fun way tosample a little bit of everything,and music, food and crafts areusually predominant. At leastthree major festivals — as wellas numerous local events —will be held during MemorialDay weekend, the traditionalprecursor to summer fun, giv-ing attendees a chance tostretch their legs while seeing

the sights and tasting thetreats. Seniors eager to cel-ebrate the season might checkout the Memorial Day LivingHistory Celebration '94 to beheld in Edgewater Park, theAmerican Indian Arts Festivalto be held at the Rankokus In-dian Reservation in Westhamp-ton, or the New Jersey Renais-sance Festival, kicking off Me-morial Day weekend for a fullmonth, in Somerset. Call (800)JERSEY-7, ext. 70, for more in-formation.

Children may spend the daydreaming about the few after-school hours they have to baskin the sun, but many seniorshave earned the luxury of sparetime. When time goes so quick-ly, and winter seems like itcould rear its ugly head beforeyou know it, why not spendspring's golden days out ofdoors? The memories of an af-ternoon's walk or a morningspent watching for that elusivebird might be the best thing tosave for a rainy winter day.

' 13

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Seniors: don't let yourselves be exploited by con artistsBy MUMS MOUNT ' y that much at once, she talked me into giving her a check for sistant said they had never seen a slip like it, but that iSPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

/I was sitting at my desk trying to figure out whether I had the

best possible coverage with my three health insurance policieswhen I remembered an ad I had seen in the paper by a "Medi-care specialist." Lake many senior citizens, I find insurance pol-icies confltsing, so I answered the ad and made an appointmentfor the person to come to my home Jan. 7.

When she arrived, she asked me what health insurance I had. Ireplied that I had heard horror tales about widows like myselfhaving to go to nursing homes and losing every penny they hadbecause that kind of care was so expensive, so I had signed upfor long-term insurance with the AARP.

Ms. H. immediately started explaining that AARP didn't payanything for the first several months. She repeated this many,many times as she pressured me to sign up for long-term insur-ance with her company instead. Their insurance cost slightlymore than twice what I was paying AARP, but she insisted itwould start paying sooner when/if I entered a nursing home.(Later, when I looked it up, I found her company only paid fortwo years and AARP paid for three, but she didn't mention that.)

She also said I had to be in good health to sign up for hers andshe took down the name and phone number of my doctor. Shesaid it would take about a month until the paper work was doneand that during that time I could cancel at any time. She addedthat when my health record was approved, I would receive pa-pers detailing their health insurance coverage which I could lookit over to decide whether or not to keep it. At that point, I couldget my money back if I decided not to.

She asked me to give her a check right then for the first sixmonths of the long-term care ($819). When I said I couldn't afford

$282.36, which she called a deposit for the first two months. Shereally was a slick salesperson, because two months cost me only$150 with AARP. I still can't understand why I gave it to her.

Next, she started trying to sell me a tax-deferred annuity. Itpromised 15.02 percent interest plus 105 percent interest on myfirst deposit! I was sorely tempted by that high interest rate, but Ihad vague memories of someone saying annuities were not agood idea for seniors. I told her I would think it over. She gaveme her phone number and told me to call her.

After she left, I started thinking over all she had said, and Isuddenly realized she had never once mentioned Medicare,which was what I thought our meeting was going to be about!Gradually I began to realize that maybe she had put somethingover on me. I decided to wait and see what I received.

Seven weeks later, I received a letter congratulating me thatmy application for long-term care had been approved and that Ishould receive my "certificate" within two weeks ... nothing aboutlooking it over to see if I wanted to definitely sign up with them.

I tried to call Ms. H. several times, but got only her answeringmachine. She did not return my calls. Soon, I received my bankstatement and canceled check. She had deposited it promptly.

On my next bank statement there was a deduction of $126 thatdid not match any of my checks and I couldn't figure out what itwas for. So I took the statement to my bank and showed it to themanager and her assistant. They were as puzzled as I was andsuggested I put a stop payment on the account, which we did.

About that time I received in the mail a slip of paper with myaccount number in the amount of $126.1 took it to my bankmanager who said it was a withdrawal slip by the NationalAssociation of Senior Americans. I had never heard of that as-sociation and neither had they. Both the manager and her as-

that it lookedlegal so the bank had paid it.

(About a month later I received in the mail a large envelopecontaining a lot of discount papers for travel, eyeglasses, carrentals, etc., and on it was the name National Association of ,Senior Americans. I still didn't know who they were or wherethey got my bank account number but they were taking moneyout of my account without my permission!)

I immediately examined the papers I had saved from themeeting with Ms. H. to make sure I had not signed any suchpermission. I had not. The bank said the only way to protectmyself was to change my account number. This proved to be aterrible nuisance because it temporarily canceled my MAC card, Ihad to notify Social Security (my monthly check was due) as wellas everyone else I did business with and change all my records toa new check book.

It turned out the National Association of Senior Americans wasassociated with Ms. H.'s insurance company, and my friends atthe bank said they probably got my account number from thecheck I had given Ms. H.

I called her several more times, leaving messages on her an-swering machine, but sTie didn't call right back. So I called againto say I was a newspaper person (Thich is true. I have written fornewspapers for 40 years.) and I was going to give her and hercompany some unpleasant publicity if they didn't cancel theinsurance and pay me back all my money.

I sent a similar letter to the company. Within a few days, Ireceived a check for 408.64! This repaid me for both the check Thad given her plus the $126 they had taken out of my account.

The bank officer said that during a course she took once oninsurance, the class was told you should never pay for an insur-ance policy until you have it in your hand. And even then, youdon't have to pay for it for 10 days. I wish I knew that then.

Preventivetreasures andearly warningsof heart disease

Heart disease is an equal op-portunity problem. Women de-velop coronary heart disease atthe same rate as men; however,in! women it occurs about 10years later in life, starting inthe early 60s. Cardiovasculardisease becomes the numberone killer of women in their60s.

As a rule women have manymore warning chest pains thanmen prior to having a full-blown heart attack. These pre-cursor pains should serve aswarning signs. According to theAmerican Heart Association,the following signs could meanthat a heart attack is imminentand immediate medical helpshould be sought:

[> Uncomfortable to intensepressure, fullness, squeezingfueling or pain coming from thecenter of the chest and lastingfor two minutes or longer

Pain radiating to the shoul-k, arms, jaw or back

Severe pain, lightheaded-ness, faintness, sweating, nau-aja or shortness of breath.

i Women must begin to takehfeart health seriously.

]In addition, the effects ofstress have an impact on heartdisease in women. Researchhas shown that the "pink-c >Uar" jobs of women {filec ierks, waitresses, factory work-efs, etc.) put these women att iree times the risk of heartc jsease of "white-collar" work-e rs. High demand/low control istlie contributing factor, result-i kg in the chronic activation oft le "fight-or-flight" response tosiress which can damage theheart.

Being overweight is a worrymost women. However,

vfomen should recognize that if

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Jiey tend to carry extra weightbdthe waist/abdomen area

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I wirt disoiHf kills more woment inn nil tin* ciitn't-ra combined,

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10% OFF ALL PRESCRIPTIONS -For Club Memcbcrs Only! Not valid wiihPAAD and other prescription card plans. Sorry,stute law limits this to age 62 and over.

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A-12 R#cofd May 12,

Traveling this summer? Pack these tips iVacations are supposed to be fun,

exciting and relaxing. To avoid spend-ing time in the emergency depart-ment, the American College of Emer-gency Physicians offers these safetyand prevention tips before you travel:

•Refill any prescriptions and carrythem with you in the original markedcontainer. Avoid packing medicationsin luggage; if lost; they may be dif-

ficult to replace.•Carry important medical informa-

tion with you. Be sure to have thenames and phone numbers of yourdoctor and pharmacist, your insuranceID cards, and up-to-date medical in-formation on each family member.

•Pack a first aid kit to deal withminor problems like sunburn, insectbites, and cuts and scrapes. Include a

first aid guide, nonprescription painrelievers, and antihistamines, elasticwraps, bandages and tape, antibioticointment, and rubber gloves.

Once you arrive at your destination,learn how to call for help during anemergency. Do you know the addresswhere you are staying? Does the areahave 911 service? If not, what is theemergency number?

If you are headed to a foreigncountry, check with your doctor re-garding immunization requirementsfor that area. Dr. Kelly Hails, a spe-cialist in emergency medicine atWentworth Douglas Hospital in NewHampshire, suggests asking about thesafety of the water supply.

"About 50 percent of visitors to de-veloping countries get diarrhea," she

said. "If the water supply is question-able, drink only bottled water. Avoi^fresh fruits and vegetables except !Sjthose with a peel which can be re- I*moved before eating. If you do de- »•velop diarrhea, drink clear liquids fpV12-24 hours to avoid dehydration." ?•

Take a few simple steps to preveijtillness or injury and ensure that yoj$rvacation is smooth sailing. Bon voy'age! I',

For yourinformationCall the Union CountyDepartment of HumanServices, Division onAging. 527-4800, for ad-ditional information.

CONSUMERS

County Office of Con-

sumer Affairs — 654-9840

FOOD

Jewish Community Cen-

ter, Scotch Plains —

889-8800

Kenttworth Senior Citi-

zens Center — 272-7743

Mobile Meals of Westfield

- 233-6146

St. John's Baptist

Church, Scotch Plains —

233-4720

Westfield Community

Center - 232-4759

GENERAL

Legal Services Corp. —

354-4340

Senior Citizens Council of

Union County — 964-7555

Union County Division of

Social Services —

351-1112

HEALTH

Jewish Family Service —

352-8375

Muhlenberg Regional

Medical Center —

668-2253

Overlook Hospital —

522-8000

Senior Health Insurance

Program — 351-0070.

Visiting Home Care —

709-0530

Visiting Homemaker Ser-

vice - 233-3113

Visiting Nurse «nd

Health Services —

352-5694

TRANSPORTATION

American Red Cross —

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Ctitholir Community Ser-

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Need a doctor?Call 722-7445.

If you're looking for thebest doctor for you, call thePhysician Referral Service atSomerset Medical Center.

We have information onover 350 doctors on our staff,who practice in more than 34specialties. We can tell youabout their experience, areasof specialty, office locations,educational backgrounds, andeven the insurance plans theyaccept. And, if you'd like, wecan schedule an appointmentfor you with the doctor youchoose. We were the firsthospital in Central New Jersey

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At Somerset MedicalCenter, over 96 percent of ourdoctors are board-certified.That's one of the highestpercentages in the state.

So if you need a physician,be sure to experience the best.Call Somerset MedicalCenter's Phvsician ReferralService, at (908) 722-7445.

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lift

May 12, 1994 WestfMd RecordYou said it:'During a one-minute rally you have to be com-pletely focused and then start all over again whenthe rally ends.'

Humthw Kmntmty, Wmstflnld High votfeybaff coaefi

B-1

Baseball FeverThe Westfiekt Baseball

League will conduct the try-

outs for the summer traveling

teams tor the 10-. 11- and

12- year-old teams beginning

Friday at 6 p.m. at Gumbert

Field. The next tryout will be

Sunday at 4. Also, the 13-16-

year-old team tryouts are Sat-

urday at 4 at Tamaques Field

No. 2. For more information,

contact Bill Meyer at 233-

6139.

Anzelone starsWestfield's Jenee Anze-

lone, a junior at the Uni-

versity of

Pennsyl-

vania, fin-

ished sec-

ond in the

800-meter

run in the

Heptagonal

Champion-

ships held

last week-

end at Co-

lumbia University. Her time of

2:11.7 qualifies her to com-

pete in the East Coast Ath-

letic Conference Champion-

ships to be held May 21 at

George Mason University.

Qualifiers from this event will

be eligible to participate in

the national collegiate cham-

pionships.

Anzelone has also been

selected to represent the Ivy

League In a quadrennial

meet to be held during the

month of June in Great Brit-

ain. She'll compete in the

800 against athletes from Ox-

lord, Cambridge and Edin-

burgh universities.

Golf benefitThe American Cancer Soci-

ety. Union County Unit will

hold its 11th annual Golf

Tournament Monday, May 23

at the Echo Lake Country

Club in Westfield. This year's

special guest will be none

other than Westfietd's own

Dave Brown, the New York

Giants' reserve quarterback.

Don't miss the chance to

meet Dave while enjoying a

day of fun, sun and golf.

The Union County tourney

will qualify at least three

teams to go to the state finals

Sept. 19 at Forsgate Country

Club. Golfers can participate

by playing for an entry fee of

$250 which includes 18 hole-

event, green fees and cart,

open bar, all meals, alt gratu-

ities. You can sponsor a tee

or green for $150.

Companies are also en-

couraged to participate. Con-

tact the Unit office at (908)

354-7373 for a registration

brochure. All funds raised at

the Golf Tournament support

valuable programs In cancer

research, education, and pa-

tient services.

Inside

• Youlh sporti B-2

G Scornboarcl..... B-Z

Got a score to report?I:,,// Nit 1; Diliiiin ,it )?(>f,OOQ or

/in In: 2?ftfi2iO. Our m/t/rcii ft.

' 101 W.ilnul Avr., Cnmfiml. N.I.0/0 If,

Winningbecominga habitfor DevilsTOE RECORD

Talk is cheap when it comes tosports, where "Put up or shut up"is the accepted norm.

A few weeks ago. Bob Brewstermentioned his team would go on awinning streak and the WestfieldHigh head baseball coach has livedup to his declaration. The BlueDevils dumped Cranford 3-0 Mon-day for their seventh success in arow.

Ron Nobile, the Blue Devils' co-captain, went 2 for 3 and drove inall of Westfield's runs as it scoredone in the third inning and two inthe fifth.

Brian Cieminiecki also had a bigday at the plate, going 2 for 3 andscoring two runs.

"Cranford came into the gamewith a 14-3 record and we knew itwas going to be a tough battle,"said Brewster, who's three gamesaway from his 200th win. "Theplayers are starting to play betteras a team and the important thingis that they're becoming more con-fident, which is showing in theirplay."

Steve Cheek pitched a solidgame for the Devils with threestrikeouts, six hits and two walksas the pitching seems to be hold-ing up as one of the most substan-tial parts of the Westfield attack.

The Devils (13-5) are also comingoff perhaps their biggest win of theseason, a 10-4 shellacking ofRoselle Park in the opening roundof the Union County Tournamentin Westfield Saturday.

Ryu Saito proved to be the biggun for Westfield as he went 3 for3 with four runs scored. He alsostole five bases and really gotthings going in Westfield's favor.

"Ryu did a great job and was abig factor in the win for us," saidBrewster, who's searching for histhird county championship. "He'sa great base-stealer and he's get-ting close to breaking the school

Devils dominatein county tennisWestfield goes 4 for 5 in finals•w MICK BHOBMB 2 in the semifinals.

AUGUST0 F. MENEZES/THE RECORDKris Williams struck out 14 batters Saturday while pitching theWettfleld High baseball team to a 10-4 victory over Roselle ParkIn the Union County Tournament.

record."Chris Vogel, the other Westfield

captain, was 2 for 3 with two RBIand Nobile was 2 for 2 including akey single in the fourth inningwhen the Devils broke the gameopen with four runs.

On the mound, Kris Williamshad 14 strikeouts, gave up sevenhits and walked three but it's beenmore than solid hitting and superbpitching that's pushed Westfield toits seven-game rendezvous.

"One of the major problems wewere having in the beginning ofthe season was our defense," saidBrewster. "If our pitchers didn'tstrike out IS batters we were hav-ing a lot of trouble, but in the lastseven games we've had only four

errors, which is a credit to the play-ers for improving and gaining con-fidence while doing so."

Against Cranford, the Blue Dev-ils played errorless baseball anddid something they haven't done,which is make the double plays.

On Friday, the Devils squeakedout a 2-1 triumph over Summit asVogel allowed four hits while strik-ing out nine and walking one. Healso hit a solo homer and DaveFela, Jorge Arnorin and Cheek hitconsecutive singles in the secondto push Westfield to a 2-0 leadwhich was enough for the victory.

In the second round of the UCTWestfield will face Union, whichdefeated Plainfield 19-0, eithertoday, tomorrow or Saturday.

GEORGE PACCIELLCVTHE RECORD

Dave Schaller of Westfield High tries to maneuver around a Brldgewaler-Rarltan opponentSaturday. The Blue Devils nipped B-R 5-4 and also topped Montclair 11-7 Monday.

Jeremiah, Watner lead Devilsto another league golf crown

The Westflcld High School golfteam calmly walked onto the EchoLake Country Club course? like ithas ao many times in the pantMonday and after a couple ofhours, earned its 24th consecutiveWntchung Conference Tournamentchampionship with a loininantotal of Ml),

Team captain Rich Jeremiahnnhbed mitinlist honors in n pinyoff with teammate tfre.Kg Watncrafter both can led IIDK over the lithole round. Jeremiah purred thrfirst extra hole to win.

Mark HoMiie uhot tin ltd nnilRyan Stotler had a DO. IMIII'IIIMIJ;second in the tournament, wasSummit with HVB mid ScotchI'IHIIIH WHS next with 'M\'l.

WoHtflclcl («•'») IH mmltitf ofTu bin

week, with an11-7 victoryover Montclniron Monday anda crucial 5-4 de-cision overUridKewaterItaritmi on Saturday.

I'ttiil Italy enmr up bin annualMrnitcltilr as the Mine Devils' se-nior captain Hcoml three ^oata anddinned off live imnlMbi and Kd JofTr,who';; been plnylnj', well an of latt\pill In two jjoaln for Wcstfield.

A couple clnyfi emller, WeatfleldI raveled to Hrldwwiiler and facedIK't'hapH iiM toiiMlient opponent ofthe Ri'iiMoti nnd look the him homewith a fiivorahlo victory.

Alter seeing a 3 .'I deadlock athnllllme, the Blue Devlin Rot n cou-

ple of big scores from Jo He andGary Gndck and the second-halfsurge wns |{ood enough for n closevictory.

VOIJ.EYHALLTlic I4«ly Devils IXHIIUYHI back

nicely with n 2-i victory overUnion l'Yiday after iijnniiu! intotrouble against Cranford In a 2-1IOHR,

In tlte Union triumph, Wratfleld(1) 4) wim able lr» ftvi el^ht pointson -serve from livxi Tnurtelottemid fix |Joinl,i on nerve IromHarm IUwK*n IIH it won the JlrntKnnip 15-2. lost the second 15-1 andtook thp decisive third content 15II.

"We did Borne filer1 tliin^Ragainst, Union but 1 was dlsap

(I'lt'HNe turn to prt«n H2)

• » MICKDHOmOTHE RECORD

Winning the Union County Tour-nament would call for a celebrationin most schools but as far as theWestfield High boys tennis team isconcerned, it was just business asusual on the courts Monday.

The Blue Devils, who are 12-3 inregular-season action, took theirthird consecutive county champi-onship at Hub Stine Field in Plain-field, scoring 96 of a possible 100points while capturing four of thefive flights.

"I can't be any prouder of theplayers because they won the tour-nament and did it with a lot ofclass," said Westfield Head CoachGeorge Kapner. "The team seemsto be playing the best they'veplayed ail season-long and a lot ofit has to do with the improvementthat's been made since the begin-ning of the season."

Dan Matro, who's been brilliantso far this season, was able to gainsecond place in the first singlesbracket after losing to ScotchPlains-Fanwood's ArjunViswamthan, who's ranked amongthe top 50 players in his age groupin the nation. Matro played wellbut fell short, 64,6-4

"Dan played an excellent matchand most of the games could havegone either way," said Kapner. "Hehad a number of break points andsince he's a freshman I think hedid a heck of a job against one ofthe top players in the country."

Brad Jankowski, who dominatedsecond singles from the very be-ginning, took a 6-3, 6-0 decisionfrom Kevin Squires of ScotchPlains in the finals after beatingRyan Greenwood of Cranford 6-1,6-0 in the semifinals. In the firsttwo rounds the sophomore lost atotal of two games.

At third singles, the Blue Devils'Steve Lehman won easily 6-0, S4in the finals after advancing 6-0, 6-

Westfieldteams takefourths incountyrelay meet•y IWCHAWMATZTHE RECORD

Westfield High's track and fieldteams traveled to Elizabeth Fridaynight to compete in the UnionCounty Relays and came homewith a pair of fourth-places.

The girls team claimed threecounty titles, set two school recordsand earned a total of 50.5 points.Plainfield was first with 66, fol-lowed by Linden (57) and Elizabeth(55).

The 4xl60O-meter relay team ofKaren McGuire, Bridget Keegan,Xanda Martins and Catherine En-gell finished second in 24:02, beat-ing the school record of 24:29 setlast year by Martins, Keegan,Megan O'Brien and Kellie Gon-calves.

Sharon Gambino, Kara Flem-ming, Goncalves and Suzy Kozubcaptured the county title in the dis-tance medley when they crossedthe finish line first in 13:36.8.

Earlier this season, the 4x800team of Terry MilancHc, Gambino,McGuire nnd Kozub set a schoolrecord. Friday night, the foursomeproved they were not only the fast-est crew ever at West field, but alsodemonstrated they wore the fastestin the county, placing first in10:15.3.

Shi-Kia Carter nnd Itelx-eiiiStavenick garnered first place Inthe diseuH, thrciwinft a total nf'(2()2B).

"We nil RU'pnwl up nnd did thebest wt* could unfortunately, wefell a little short of (Irst place," snldCarter.

"We're it team to lie reckonedwith," said nnBifitnnt conch TomItornish, whose tt*am dofentwlMalnnHd last Tuesday Tor the firsttime since 1D7B, "This team tinsthe BtrnnKth, thp talent, the depthand the spirit."

The bny» Kfllnrd n total of B5imlntfl. New Providence placed first.(80), Sr-otch PlnlnB-Fmtwood wa»gpcond (70) nnd ICIlMtbeth third

2 in the semifinals."I was very pleased with the sin-

gles players becasause they playedwith a lot of confidence," said Kap-ner. "I felt we could win the tour-nament with the team we have butit really was a nice suprise to win itin this kind of fashion."

At first doubles, Westfield playedremarkably well as the ironhandedteam of Chris O'Connell and MarcSpim defeated Governor Liv-ingston (Berkeley Heights) 6-1,6-3in the finals. The co-captains oust-ed Union 6-0, 6-4 in the semifinals.

Hie second doubles match,which featured a top-notch West-field team in Chris Camuto andKen Diamond, had one of the bet-ter finishes on the day in a toughbattle over Oratory Prep 7-6, 7-2, 7-6, 7-1. In the semifinals the BlueDevil team defeated Governor Liv-ingston 7-5, 6-2.

"I think the victory this year wasa little different than last year be-cause we were more relaxed andwe came in and dominated fromthe start," said Lehman. "I also feelthat as a team we knew we couldwin it which helped us to play bet-ter overall."

And Coach Kapner agreed."This was just a great time and

the players deserve everythingthey earned in the tournamnt,"said Kapner. "But now we have tolook ahead to the states a little bitand the players will do well if theycontinue to work hard."

The Blue Devils, who suffered atough loss early in the year to Liv-ingston, will probably have to facethe Lancers at some point and fig-ure they're one of the better teamsthey'll face in the state tourna-ment.

"We play in one of the better sec-tions in the state but I think we'reprimed and as confident as we canbe at this point," said Kapner."Livingston is the team to beat butwer'e not concentrating on oneteam because it's a little early forthat."

AUQUSTO F. MENE2E9/THE RECORDThe Blue Devils1 Ted Kilcom-mons heads for the finish lineduring recent relay compe-tition.

(09),First-plnce finishes Included: the

4x1000 relny (Geoff North, AballahSimaika, Don Cambria and RyanStefiuk), 19:18.6; the distance med-ley (John O'Brien, Erwyn Light,Irfiwrcncr Ho and Mntt Elmucclo),10:54.5; nnd the \yo\c vault (AmitMitKdieli nnd Paul Hayes), 21-0.

Monday night, the Blue Devilstied Matawnn (IH points) at theMinutemnn Claim's in WilliamsKic-ld, EUtttbeth Trenton was firstwith 20 points.

Among thc< highlights of theevening wan Klmucclo's new fresh-man state record in the 15(K)~metermet? (4:0<I.B),

"It wan a gmxl showing," said tis-Kislnnt conch Bonnie llHgennan."II wns n good meet and we didreal well."

Itoth teams will Iw heading toWaU'hunn tomorrow ni«ht, wherethey'll each compete lor tho confer-ence title,

B-2 WMtftoM ftoeord May 12, 1

YOUTH SPORTS

99»

SOCCER

Wtfllivld Trawling SoccwWvitfktM Crwgtrs 1, Maptowood t -

The Chargeis stayed undefeated through tneweekend wilh ine In against a strong Maple-wocxJSouth Orange Cougar Thundering Herdloam

The game was played on a sloppy Saturdaybecause of the heavy rainfall II was kept closethanks to the superb delense of Rich Rowe.Brendtian Maher, Selh Fischer and the stronggoal lending of Paul Johnson Al the half theChargers were down 1 -0 and it would remainthat way until a goal by Kieran Miller with sec-onds left tnat secured the lie.

Charger* 9, NMIIburn 3 — In their secondgame of ttie weekend Ine Chargers rompedpast Millburn In ttie first half, Kevin Doyle andTim Carroll ol Weslfield opened the scoringonly to be tied by Ihe Marlins at the half

The second hall was a different story. TheChargers exploded on goals by David SeMman,Jack Kane. Ted Brown. John Henry Flood, andCarroll got two more tor the hat trick. The fieldwas opened up lor Ihese goals because of theTine passing ol Ryan Mogan. Matt Simorte andBrian Boltini.

DMatonSW * i « U I U n l M 1 , W M t Windsor 1 -

United waa Ihe only town In flight to d a f t * theVipers last fall and continues to play excellentsoccer.

WestfiekJs trademark physical style ol playwas highlighted by Anthony Tomasw's stellardefense and slkto tackles which consistentlystopped tl-te Vipers fast strikers,

Duffy La*i blasted several long kicks from hissweeper position to keep the pressure on,while Rob Larsen and Andrew Odachowskiconsistently won free balls. Early in the firsthalf. Condi Thiam broke into the box usingdeceptive footwork to elude two defenders andIrten blast a goal in lite second half. Gerritt III,Josh Ludrrier and Mike Debrossy hooked upseveral nice passing plays but the Vipers' goal-It was up to the task with nice saves. Unitedgoalie Mike Nahaczewski made several beauti-ful sa»es to help preserve \hc t«.

SOFTBALL

Softball LtagutNew Norrit Midlns 18, Dodger* 4 — The

girls Softball season is off to a rollicking startlor the Marlins. Mho ripped the Dodgers intheir second game ol the year Tuesday.

After one inning the Marlins lod 3-0 on hitsfrom Lindsay Guornero, Nicole DiFabio, DanaGrau, Amy Early, and Alexis Anzelone Aidedby walks lo Casey Benson. Guernoro. andKathy Czapp, the Marlins broke iho gameopen in tno third inning, scoring sevon runsand gettirtg key hits in Ihe inning were LaurenColtera, Bethany Dresely. Erica Ccnci anaEmily Yudkovitz.

Marlins T, Valley Distributor Pirates 7 -With a seesaw game lhat saw three leadchanges Thursday, the Marlins rallied with tourruns IO Ihe top of the sixth to take a 7-6 lead

Leading tho hit parade were. Anzelono.Guernaro, Collera DiFnrjio, Benson. KathrynDobson and Yucfkovitz. Czapp's double in thesixth ciiove mn key fun during Ihe rally KristonOstieqa also hit a single ant) played gooddefense for the Mailns

Trailing 7G aftoi Iho visitors' sixth, the Pi-mles icpliod with n iun in their hall of ilioinning lo eventually tie the score. With thowinning run at third, Benson caught a pop-upal fust base and turned it into ,i game-endingdouble play.

Tricia Jakub*. Eilyn Harness, Michollo Pow-ers and Beth Otiosen played a solid game torthe Pirates.

Marlins 10, Paino Webber Padraa 9 — Sat

urday, the Mtirlitis bvyani very sluggishlyIhrough Ihe liisl tout innings and nailed 5 2 inIhe fifth until livo singles and n walk by EricaCenci. Coltrera and Guerriero, in between alofce-out, were followed by booming basesclearing home run by Fabio to lie the score at5-5.

In the top ol Ihe siith the Padres scored lourlimes lo take a 9 5 lead In the last ol the sixthGrau singled lor the Murlins and then Oiesleyhit a screaming line-drive home run into ihegap in left-center field, and Ihe rally was on.Ciapp Conci and Gucmero singled, Anzelonostrokec a double and Ned the score a 9 9 Thefinal run was driven in by DiFabio wilh a cleansingle to riQhl lield lor Ihe victory

Scoring runs and playing good defensewere Early. Ostrega, Benson and Ccltrera.

Eatl DivisionChevrolet Marlins 3-0-1

Regal Restoration Cubs 2-0Pel Sitting Service Mels 1 -1Arena Sports Cardinals 1 -2

Valley Distributor Piralei 0-2-1Paksnhani Home Improvements Philles 0-3

Weil DtvlilonStonehilt Braves 2-0Roosters' Reds 2-0

Goldsmith t Hertner Planning Rockies 2-1Moyt i Smith Aftyt Astros 1-1

CJHTOCC* Chiropractic Canter Giants 1 -1Palm-W«bber Padre* 1 -2

Loughtint' Dodgers 0-3

LACROSSE

I t h Gr id* LeagueThe Westfwld Recreation Department's 8th

grade lacrosse team split a pair of games thefirst week of May, losing to Summit wilh asmall squad on Tuesday and then bouncingback with a convincing win at Chester on Sat-urday.

With only 11 players available for the Summitgame, the Blu* D#vil» ran out of gas late inthe contest alter taking an early 2-0 lead ongoals by attack man Brian Gates and SieveKassakian. Summit cut WestfieWs lead by half-lime and then pumped in four unansweredgoals against substitute keeper Paul KasluskyMike Baly got one back for the valiant fewbefore time expired while Rob O'Brien had anassist.

The Blue Devils returned to form on Sat-urday, winning 11-1 with a full squad in Ches-ter. They wasted no time as Baly won theopening face-off and raced down field to feedKevin Mansfield, who tired in the first tally withlust 10 seconds expired. The pattern was re-pealed twice more in ine opening mmuic withAndrew Cambria and Scott Mann scoring with-m |usl n lew seconds o! each other.

Goal:R Chris Owens was put to work in thosecond stanza as ho turned away six shots mkeepiny the Devils i;p 5-0 at the hni: Aftergiving up a goal 2.30 into Hit third period.Weslfield erupted with a tour-goal Hurry in thefinal two minutes oMhe session highlighted oyDan Aquila's first goal of tho season off a passtrom Selh Mankowski and attacker Evan Rich sunassisted blast fiom a sharp angle thiouqhI'affic

With coach Dave Potloi shuffling ass,c]ninjnts in the loiter stages of thp contest. R'on(ian Hickey. moved liom crolense to midli.jktl;illied with an unassisted cannonade from |ustinside Ihe box. completing Hie rout ElevenDevils collected penile in the uonlesi wilFi DrainGates leading Ihe way with two goals and Iwo.issists,

Westfiolcl hss three games m the cominc)woek The Oevils ate away foi Iwo more coniosls. al Climon on Tuesday and FranklinLakes on Friday, betoro returning lo hostMountain Lakes Sunday Their record nowstands al 4 -1 .

Golf team wins another title(Continued from page B-l)

pointed in the substitutes notstepping up," said WestfieldHead Coach Heather Kennedy."We have a lot of players thatgive a lot of support from thesidelines but the importantthing is what you do on thecourt and unfortunately, someof the role players that got achance to play didn't comethrough."

In the toss to Cranford, theDevils got six points on servefrom captain Gloria Ko and sixon serve from Tourtelotte as thegame scores were 15-9, 13-15and 5-15.

"We were ahead in the second

fjame but we let them comeback after a series of timeoutsby myself and the Cranfordcoach," said Kennedy. "I thinkvolleyball is one of the mostpsychological sports there is be-cause during a one-minute rallyyou have to be completely fo-cused and start all over againwhen the rally ends."

Westfield earned a fourth seedfor the Union County Tourna-ment behind Cranford, Eliza-beth and Summit. The LadyDevils will face Plainfield todayat Westfield High and if theywin will face the winner of theUnion Catholic-Dayton Regional(Springfield) confrontation.

Devils work OT for softball victoryBy NICK MMIMOTill-: HKCOUO

The Westlield High sollbalisquad isn't really u believer in thatold saying. "Time isn't anyone'sfriend."

The Lady Devils earned theirfourth straight victory Mondayniglit with a 7-(> extra-innings deci-sion over Cranford.

LJz Ko/ub came up big for West-field, going 2 for 4 with a doubleand three runs baited in. and DanaFizzell drove in two big runs in theninth as Westfield was able tosquirm out with the win.

"The players are really startingto come around and they're staringto believe in themselves," saidHead Coach Maggie McFadden."This is a tough way to win a soft-ball game but it shows we can bat-tle back and score the big runs,

which is something wedoing earlier in the season.1'

On the mound, Lauren Calaropitched well despite a sore arm. al-lowing one walk and eight hitswhile giving up six runs.

Westfield (10-5) was able to scorethree runs in the top of the ninthand the Lady Cougars showedsome spunk as they scored two inthe home hall' but fell just short asthe tying run was left stranded althird with two out.

'"The kids on my team wilt neverdie — they played with so muchheart," said Cranford Head CoachTen-y Biunno. "I'm talking bloodand guts."

The Lady Devils are becomingvery accustomed to close games asthey put together a compellingupset Saturday against UnionCatholic, another extra inninggame Westfield won 11-10 in eight

RUNNING

HAMILTON PARK S-KFlorlum P * * . Miy 5

Phil Gibbons. 33, of Westfield finished In thetop ten In the Hamilton Park 5K Hun Thursday,May 5. Gibbon's lime was 16:34. placing himeighth in the 3. i -mile race.

HAMILTON PARK SKFlortum Park, Miy S

Local Finisher!Place Runntr Name, Town, Age, Time8. Phil Gibbons, Westlield, 33, 00:16:34; 63.Chuck Dashiell. Westfield, 99, 00:20:11; 181.Ann Skudlark, Westfield, 38, 00:25:12; 306.Doreen McHugn. Westiiold. 27. 00:40:05

RUN FOR FREEDOM S MILESunday, May BLocal Flniiher»

Place Runner Name, Town, Age, Time106 Robert Corrado, Weslfield, 45, 00:38:21

RUN FOR FREEDOM 1-MILESunday. May BLocal Finisher*

Place Runner Name. Town. Age. Time83 Ranald Jacooson. Wcsttield. 56. 00:07 57

USATF MAY CALENDARSunday. May 15 — Midland Run 5K anti

15K. Far Hills. 15K USATF-NJ Open-Masters.Men'sWoman's Championship, 15K at 9 am.5K al 11 am, Box 5026, Readington Rd. NorthBranch INJ 08876, 908-722-7903 (MRGP-15K

800 pis 5KBOO pts) No post entries

Wednesday. May 18 — American HomoCioclucls Run For Pnde 5X, Giraldn Farms.Madison 6 p-n Stie.iker Faclory. Box 150Millburn. N.ID7011, 20:^76-0231

Sunday, May 22 — Spnnglield I0K i Mtl.jal 9 30 art. 1OK al 10 am. USATF NJ Men'sOpen CMamp-onship I0K P O Dox 909.Spnngliofd. NJ 07O81 20 1-376-0231 .(MRGP-70O pts)

Sunday, May 22 — Run (or R O B I N 10K.Old Bridge. 9 am, 9O8 583 3990. The RacquelPI, 163 HI 34, Old Bridge. 07747,(MRGP-400pts)

Sunday, May 22 — Point Pleasanl Beach 5-Mile Run, Poml Pleasant Beach, 1 Mile al aam. 5 Mile (race walk division) 8:30 am, 90B-364-2B2B

Wednesday, May 25 - Healthy Hoart Run5K Morrislown. 7 pm, 1300-447-3337, 95 Madi-son Ave Mortistown, 07962, (MHGP-500 pts)

Saturday, May 2 8 - Spring Lake 5-Mile.8 3O am. Don 534. Spring Lake. NJ 07762.908-223-0319

Sunday, May 29 — Stepping Out For Edu-cation SK. Piscolaway, 10 am, 908-885-1528,Ext. 142

Monday, May 3O — Ridgcwood Run I OKand SK, 10K at 8 45 am, Box 56, RidgewoodNJ 0745O 201-447 9750, (MRGP-500 Pis.)

SPORTS BRIEFS

Clark Wildcat TryoutaSwim Clinic

The Westfield Y swim team hosts the 1994pre-soason swim clinic with tour-two-week ses-sions beginning on May 3 and the last sessionbeginning on June 14 so gel a head start onyour summer swrmming-stroke instruction,starts and turns.

It will be open lor Tuesday, Thursday, Sat-urday and Sunday classes and is available forages B-1 7 with swirn team members paying$2O and non-team members paying $30. Inter-ested people can register at the Westlield YIronl desk on 220 Clark Street the number tocall is 233 270O

•**

fiTHLETE OF THE WEEK

STEVE LEHMANWESTFIELD

The junior third singles ptuyer won tho UnionCounty Tournament tennis championship at hisposition Monday with a 6-0, 6-4 victory In thefinal round, and holpcd tho Blue Devils wontheir third straight tonm tltlo. The lop-seedodLehman won 24 of 30 games In tho tournoy.

"Aaohotin by ForbM Ntwapipert' Sports D»pt,"

NGERVOUR SPORTINO GOODS COMPLEX

513 W, UNION AVE.. (irr, 28) BOUND BROOK. NEW JERSEY/9O8-356-06O4Mon., Tuftl., Thuri., Fil. 8:30 AM to 9 PM/Wod, * Sat. 0:30 AM to 630 PM

innings.Calaro pitched a noteworthy

game us she had eight strikeouts,two walks while giving up 14 hits.At bat. Westtield got a bi« day fromFizzell ;>s she went 2 for 3 andKo/.ub contributed a crucial RBI inthe eighth.

Abby Bomba and Natal ir Ur-ciouli tiirae up big as the LadyDevils jumped out to an 11-8 leadalter having to come from behindfour times to tie the score over thefirst seven innings.

"I thought we could win theUnion Catholic game because theyhadn't played a lot of the betterteams in the conference," said Mc-Fadden. "I had a feeling they werea hard team to put a gauge on andbecause of that I felt we had astrong chance to win."

Union Catholic, seeded second inthe tournament, got bumped out

Suby tho sevenlh-sc'i;ik.'d Devil.-nisthe Westlielcl defense hold Sun-throughout Hit- contest. !

'Our delense did an pHjob iind the kids didn't quit." sflidMcFitddon. "I think Ihis vv;i=J nboost Cor the team anil we hnvJlocontinue to play the way wcjvcbeen playing and if w;> do tfialthings will continue to go well.'"-!

On Friday. Wcsttield took caitjot'Summit 5-0 as Jodi BertelJonthrew a two-hitter and Kozub wasable to conk a solo homer as JhcDevils climbed out to an early l adin Westfield. j

Fizzell contributed to the hitllngwith a single and double as ]heLady Devils took the easy victor <.

Westfield will play Cranford Sat-urday at 5:30 p.m. at MemorialField in Linden in the secondround of the UCT. J

SCOREBOARD

Mwnoflal Pool registration underwayTbt WesttieW Recreation Commission has

begun accepting membership registration forthe 1994 Memorial Pool season. TUB 1994 sea-son will begin on Saturday, June 11 ant runthrough Labor Day,

Swi lessons are available for children 5 yearsol aga and up with the registration being ac-cepted on a first come, tirst serve basis. Swimteams are available lor Both beginner and ad-vanced swimmers.

The fees are as lollows: family (S195 forresidents, $370 lor non-residents), lamity withfull-time child care ($245 res., $490 non-res.),husband and wife without children (Si 55 res.,$310 non-res.), individual (S11S res., $220non-res.), senior citizen ($55 res., $100 non-res,), For more information, contact the pooloffice at 789 4085 or stop by Ihe second doorof the Municipal Building.

*•*Union County Seniors ar« back

The Union County Senior Softball League ispreparing to begin its fifth year. After beingfounded By Ray Mayer, he advertised tor play-ers fifty years and older to participate in a newslow pitch league. The response attractedages lilty to age eighty-four

Thg ladQue nas grown each year in tr\e num-ber of players and tho cnlibci compolition TMeleaguo has since oxpandsd to include aleague loi sixty plus players.

Al iho urrj of each season ihe league holdsan awards banqncl and presents awards lo theleague regular season and playofl champions.A highlight is a presentation of awards to allsponsors and the league is affiliated witn tt-eNew Jersey Senior Softball Association Ttiearc only Iwo requirements to participate in tholeague which are; minimum age of 50 andUnion County residency

Players Irom other cottntien can oe relerrecilo the l«nuue director in the county m whichthey reside Mosl counlios in New Jersey haveSenior Softball leagues

Interested former or present ballplayers owerlilty car. join r>y calling Ray Mayor at 90B-353-4430

Shea StrivesSenior firs! baseman and co-captain Mall

Shoa is off to a fast start this season for Mu-hlenberg College as he had back-to back mul-tiple hit games. He was 2-for-5 witti Iwo RBI vs.Albright College and went 2-for-4 with twowalks against Allentown

The Westfield resident is hitting .234 on ttioyear with a .977 fielding percentage

TENNIS

* * *Tannit Membartrtipa

The Westfietd Recrealion Commission Masbegun salo ol 1994 tennis memberships Allthose who plan to utilize the tennis courts atTamaques Park. Memorial Park or Elm Streetmust first purchase a tennis membership. At-tendants Mill be monitoring Iho courts and en-forcing this rule.

The cost of the tennis membership is asfollows: Family ($35 resident, 70-non-resident),Aduil (25-resldent, 50-non-resident), Junior($7 resident. $14-non-resident), 12 & under($5 resident, 10-non-resident), Senior Citizen(5-resident, 10-non-resident) and Guest Fee(SS-resident, 10-non-resident).

Use of the courts at Tamaquea Park and ElmStreet is restricted to Weslfield residents only.Use of trie courts at Memorial Park is open loall badge holders.

Tennis memberships may be purchased attne Recreation Department in the MunicipalBuilding. For More information call 789-4080.

• • •Tannit Ladders

The follwing are lists ol the 1993 final stand-ings ol those teams that have entered the 1994mined doubles ladder: t.Valla/Pizzi 2 Boyle/Kapp 3-Ouglo,'Dugla 4.Goren/Robins 5 Hay/Hay 6.Shineman/Shineman 7 Goldberg/Darma-nin B.lnman/lnman 9Allen/Rainville 10.Bern-stein/Bernstein 11Hickey/Hickey 12.Morgan/Lawson 13Evans/Evans H.VIach/Vlach1 S.Drinle/Drittle.

Additional listed alphabetically without rank-ing nnd are new teams for this year. They are.Attanasio Artanasio. Corbert/Corbeti. DarnelMoore. Gibilaro/Gibilaro. Leiz/Leiz. Lombard/Lombard, OstrowsWRusso, PanagosPanagosand Smilh/Smith

Senior Singles LadderThe WgstfielU Tennis Association ladder soa-

son begins on May 1 The senior singles lad-der starts play with IB players listed, including12 of the 13 who played last year They arelisted below in their 1993 order followed bynew players in positions 13 through 18 Duringthe initial part of the season, players may chal-lenge anyone on the ladder.

Please report scores and comments lo IrwinBernstein at 233-0058

I.John Dalton, 2.Bill Ritlor 3.Irwin Borstoin.4 Dewey Rainville. 5 Bruce Long. OChmiusCarl, 7.Saul Drittet, 6Jim DiClonco, 9 Ed Pink-man, 10.Ted Moss. 11 Dick Haesler, 12 LDwell

Doak, IS.Charles Gibilaro, 14.John Tirjne.15.Mlchael Sananman, 16 Bill Hay, 17.0o«aldDohm and Dan Hickey {1B). '

Women*Doubles LadderBelow are the 1993 women's doubles stfnd

ings. All Westfield women residents are incitedlo join WTA and play on Ihe doubles laddlr. Ifyou need a partner or more information cal(PatVlach at 654B207. «

I.Joan Powor/Lee Perry, 2 Carole Smlllie/Irene Lombriser, 3 Oeb&o Galesy/Marcia jTal-bot, 4 Lillian Louie/Kathy Ostrowski, 5.TudyKlingelfiofer/Carol Thompson, 6.Evelyn Matno/Charlotte Clovenger. 7Joan Oreyer/ft^ssyHome, S.Beverly Drittel/Paula Long, IPalPage/Pat Vlach, 10. Liela Bernstein/Y»tteGoldblatt 11.Andrea MacRitchie/Eileen Michel12.Leslie Chananie/Gail Erlich. 13MaryanneHickey/Paddy Mollard. 14.Gen Cotien/*ineLatartara. '

Others are; Susan Shusman/Liela Bernalein,Beth Kronche/Gail Charelle. Joan Dreyer/LVdiaMaslerson. Genny Shineman/Cindy Kraft. JaneKarpinski/Pal Page, Kathy Ostroiski/RosoritaryLombard. Carole Smillie (need partner). WndaAttanasio/Allyno Zom. Pal VlactVCharlotte Oov-onoei Maiyanne Hcney'Evelyn Malino. ]^ev-city Dntlol.'Carnl Kotor1 lione Lombriser/^llianLouio. Dodi Corbcll.Lc'1 Smith. Felicia DomosJoan Mnnc Korn. Mm in J.ickson Barbara Gola-beg nnd Kilty ftemcri (needs pjrlner)

Men's Doubles LadderThu lollowmg lists are :ne 1993 final st|nd-

mcjs ol those teams who hove also enlcredithe1994 men's doubles ladder Also listed in Iandom order are nevw loama for this year. j

Regular season maich»r. are played Mayitstthrourjh Labor Day. All scores should belreported promply to Mel Blncklium at 233-64^8.

Thn list looks like. 1 Moore/Power, 2.B*nsLauinf.'. 3 Harris/Hay. Weiss/Zack, Grarjde,-Hosenthnl. Wiorz/Moss Chiesa/Gerkins,Evan;; (noeds pnrtner) anfl Tnone (needsjprt-ner) ,

BLUE DFVIL CALENDARAll limes p.m. unless otherwise noted

FRIDAV, MAY 13Tennii

Koamy al Westfield, 4Volleyball

Elizabeth at Westlield, 4Lacrosse

Westlield at Pingry. 4

SATURDAY, MAY 14Boys Trick

Watchung Conference, TBAQirlt Track

Union County Championshipe, TBA

TUESDAY, May 16Gotf

NJSIAA, TBA

TennioEast Side at Westfield, A

VotieybatlClark al Westlield. 4

BaseballWosifiekl al Rahway, A

LacrosseWestdeld al North Hunteirton. 4

WEDNESDAY. May 17Goll

Union at Westiiold. 3 30Boys Track

Westfield at Elizabeth. 4Girls Track

Elizabeth at Westfield, 4Softball

Rahway at Westfield, 4

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MAINEThe Wiy Life ShouldBe.

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May 12,1994 W#stfl#M Record B-3

Forbes

(908)

(908) 231-9638

INTRODUCTIONSCentral New Jersey's best choice for meeting some-

one close to home. See Weekend Plus

IN-COLUMN RAOne Insertion $1B.00/W«ek4 Unas, $2.00 each additional lineFive Insertions $14.40/Wsek4 lines, $1.60 each additional line per weekMerchandise Special $25.004 lines, runs 2 weeks. $2.00 each additional line.Non-CommercialAutomotive Special $25.004 lines, runs 2 weeks. $2.00 each additional line.Non-CommercialGarage Sale $15.005 lines. $1.25 each additional line.Free AdsLost & Found, Free To A Good Home, Adoptable Pets

ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR SALE SERVICES

1020-1060EMPLOYMENT

2O1O*3100AUTOMOTIVE

4010*4230REAL ESTATE

5010-5100 8010-8710 9010-8840

GENERAL POLICIES & SERVICES/ advertising placed In Forbes Newspapers is subject

to final approval by the Publisher. We reserve the right to correctly edit orclassify copy, to reject or cancel any advertisement at any time.SasVtlmMHODML Axcepted up to 2p.m. Monday prior to publication. Youraale* representative will Issue you a number at the time of the cancellation ofa clastlfitd ad. This la your record of cancellation.AfHllilBftlttSi Please check your ad lor errors the FIRST WEEK it appears.Forbes Newspaper* will NOT be responsible tor Incorrect ads after the tintweek. Forbeiastumesnotinancialresponsibilityforerrorsorforiheomisslonof copy. Error liability shall not exceed the cost of that portion of spaceoccupied by such error. Major adjustment claims must be made within 30day* of Invoice, otherwise such claims will not be considered.P a w i — I |n /\dV>Mt.i Garage Sales, Employment Wanted, Wanted to Rent,House/Apartments to Share, ads when moving and ads to addresses outsideof New Jersey.

• Blind Ad* • $15.00 for 30 days box rental and mailing charge.

• Ml capital or bold letters SOc par line, per week

mnmnev Intormathm: Classified rates an commissionaire to recognized

agencies at 15%. _

CLASSIFIED HOURSMonday, Tuesday, Wednesday

8:30anv5:00pmThursday & Friday8:30am-8:00pm

Closed Saturday & Sunday

CUSTOMER SERVICEIn-Column Advertisers

1-8O0-559-9495Outside New Jersey

1 -908-722-3000Legal Advertisers

1-908-722-3000x6203

AD DEADLINES

MONDAY 2:00pmIn-Column ClassifiedsTHURSDAY 5:00PM

Real Estate Tab

FRIDAY 5:00PMAuto/Classified Display

MONDAY 5:00PMCamera Ready Ads

BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORIES

Appears every week in ClassifiedTo Place An Ad Call

1-800-559-9495Outside New Jersey Call

1-908-722-3000

wooPCHSONAi.

iooo

1020 • tlngM* Organ-isation* MM) KtlvltlBS

Lott * foundt M Q P a n M a t10M • Coming tv*ntt1M0 • Announcements

1030

ALLOW ME TO GIVEVOU the gift of a lastingrelationship. Personal-ized, 19 yrs. experienceCall Judy Yorlo's Com-patible* tW-TOT-WMe.

iaao

BMQHT...and 8INQLB?A low-cost dat ingnetwork lor Intellectual,inventive, accomplishedpeople. Large # olparticipant*; mainly NJ/NYC/LI. For information,w r i t e : A c a d e m i cCompanions, P.O. Box346, Clinton. NY 13323.

M A T C H M A K E RINTERNATIONAL- Thelargest A most selectivept i tont l Introductionservice In the nation. Forlre» Info, 908-21B-909O

1O30Lot 4\ found

BfUNCHBURO— MaleBlk. Lab., Mlllstone-BIK. female Cocker Poo-d le mix. SomersetHuman Society. PI 22North Branch, NJ 08876.908-526-3330

M U L T I - C O L O R E DA0ULT CAT- lound inRosalie area, housetrained. 298-0652

1030Lott * Found

* $500 *• REWARD *

LOST CATVery shy, black withorange splashes on face& body, orange lip olend of tall. Please checky our g a r a g e s a n dsheds!

•Please call-(908) 815-1633

1040Panonal*

A WONDERFUL FAMILYEXPERIENCE- Scandi-navian, European. SouthAmerican, JapaneseHigh School ExchangeStudenis arriving AugusiBecome a Host Family/AISE Call Kathleen 90S-369-3346 or 1-8O0-SIBLING

DO YOU BELIEVE? Yourlife is ruled by the stars?Horoscope updateddaily. 1-900-622-9893.S2.5O/min. 18+ Touchphone required. JJG, 80Jane Street, New York,NY 10014.

104OPwnonal*

A D O P T I O N — Lovingcouple wishes to adoptinfant. Jay, our 4 yr oldson. would love a brolheror s i s t e r to p a i n tseashells with. Momplays guitar, Dart playsCandyland Legal conl

Call Cheryl 4 Jot1-800-301-1994

A P P R O V E D C o u p l eseeks adoption ol newborn. Teacher Morn.Prof. Dad to love yourChild. 800-813-2445.

TAROT CARDREADINGS

SISTER SUZANLove? Success? Heallh?Difficult decisions, lookinto your futureSPECIAL 1/2 PRICEPSYCHIC READINGS.CALL FOR ONE FREEQUESTION. 30 yrs inCranlord.908-272-9791

PSYCHICREADINGSBy Dorothy

Love, Health. BusinessSPECIAL:Tarot readings$5 w/ad. For appt.call

Bound Brk 356-4004

Glfltd P8VCHIC SELINAPalm and Tarot cardreading. Help on love,Business or marriage orhelp on any problem oflife. I) you are contused,consult this gifted lady.Special reading S5. Callfor appt. 572-3142

• * * • •PERSONAL PSYCHIC

• MRS. "D' +Help and guidance inlove, health and financialproblems II confused inany mailer of life, onevisit will help to bring youtrue contentment. 35 yrse x p e r i e n c e . " F R E E *PSYCHIC READING withany type of other reacting.

* Call B0S-789-3043 *

PSYCHIC READINGS• * BY * *

• * S E L I N A * *Palm and Tarot cardreadings. Advice on allproblems of lite. Con-sult this gifted l»dytoday tor help and ad-vice, call now, 908-S72-3142. With this adclal reading! $10 off.

SPRING CLEANINGWi 'v i GOT A B I O DIAL von

YOUR LITTLI T N I N G I

GlMMAL MlRCHANDIfl SPICIAL"2 linos x 3 weoks

Use ihis coupon for:(Please check one)

Your adcost is:

• If the item you are selling is $50 or under.. $FREE$• if the item you are selling is over $50 but not more than $100.'.$2,00|• If you are giving away the item...$FREE$

— FIRST LINI - -

I 1 i I I 1 I 1 I I 1 I I I I I I I— SlCOND LlNI —

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1Name-

Address _

Phone # .

Instructions:1. Print one (1) leHer in each space. Allow one (1)

space between words and one (I) space forappropriate punctuation.

2. All ads for items priced $51 - $100 must beprepaid, please enclose S2.00 payment.

3. All ads must include price and phona number.4. Individuals only qualify for Ihis rtito; no businesses.5. No cane nlkitions oi rotunds(t. Porbes reserves the ric|lil to limit quantity of FREE

(iris.

Mail to: Forbes Newspapers,"Spring Cleaning",

P.O. Box 699, Somerville, NJ 08876

• SV OO inn I I Kl I rid1, will (in <II < iipli'd liy ( O U ( K I I I only.

No phon I IMIS, |]|MI••,<!.

• ( <>II|HIII iirn M I M I iivinlnlilfi ill thiiCldvidintl Dopt. of

I dibit', Nnw'.|iri(il'is

REACH FOR THE STARSWhat's in your future?Love? Succass? a. luckyf/s. Dally Horoscope 1-900-267-7700 M l . 3241.2.99/mln. Must b» 18 yrs.old. Pro Call Co., 1516 E.Bell Rd. Pho. AZ.

602-954-7420

YOUR CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEY NEWS'PAPERS WITH ONEEASY PHONE CALL ANDFOR ONE LOW PRICE.FOR ONLY S219.00YOUR AD WILL REACHOVER 1.2 MILLIONHOMES THROUGHOUTTHE STATE. CALLFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1 •800-559-9495, ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILSABOUT SCAN-STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDAD NETWORK.

1050Commg Events

• BASEBALL CARD «* * COMIC B O O K * *COLLECTIBLE SHOW

Sat. May u . I0-7:30pmU,S.#1 Flea Market, NewBrunswick. Info 90B-23B-4231 . (Quest: Dolnk,3-5pm, autograph $5)

• FREE ADMISSION*

2000FOR SALE

\nW2010-3100

201020202030204020S020602070208020852090

Antique*Appllancet

tpp

ArtAuction*ClothingCollecllbltsComputersFarm & GardenFirewoodFlea Markets.

Sale* and Bazaars2100 • Frae to Good

Home2110 • Furniture2120 - Garage Sales2125 - Merchandise

under StOO2130 • General March2140 - Office Furniture

and Supplies2150 • Software2160 • Wanted to Buy

2010Antiques

M A I N ST ANTIQUECENTER- 156 Mnin SI .Flomington, goa-7BB-6767 2 fir.s. 6000 S(1. It,85 dealers opun daily10-5 pm.

SOMERVILLE CENTERANTIQUES t7 DivisionSI Opon 7 dnys, CenlrnlN J . s bargain spot, <10daaloin. Furniluto, toy9,laweliy. Porcelnln, glass,Military & political, 90B-52G-3<I46

AOVtrtfM m the CUifWfd'

2020

APPLIANCE SALERetg. SBS, washer/dryerS7S. Fully guar'd.alsoservice S19.9S. 908-754-7209 or 231-1047

WASHER- $75. Dryer,S6S. Stove. $75. Refrig-erator, $170. Can deliver.Color console TV $100.Pis call 722-6329.

2040Auctions

OUTSTANDINGON-SIOHT AUCTIONFormerly Jay August

RestaurantThis sale contains one-of-a-kind Interior & exte-rior advertisements witha local New Brunswickhistory. Historical pieces:Buster Brown sign; 12Brunswick neon sign:Ige. Sosln's clock erect-ed in 1925; Ige. Vaude-ville backdrop-1920's. Artwork: 191h C. oil paint-ing. Lge. selection of20th C. oil paintings &prints. Lge. selection ofDecorative Structuralpieces: nice selection o(cut glass & other inter-esting things. For direc-tions & other info call:

9M-231-0609

2125MeWClMMdVMunder$100

AIR C N D T N R - 11500BTU 115V. S75 755-2537.

B E D - headboard, king,bookcase, $100 722-0509

B I K E - 2 6 " c o a s t e rbrakes, 530. 276-1146.

BMX B I K E - good cond.550/others, 755-2670.

BOOKCASE-I2SPlease call 722-6052

BUREAUS 5 & 3 drawersboth for $45 561-1932

CAR BOOKS- 1960-8880 tor $40 752-7105

CARDBOARD BOXES-40 LG New S40. 560-3202

CHEVY TRUNK GAS-K E T - new $35 654-B01O

CHINA SERVICE- tor 6.S3Q. 805-3070.

DESK-$10Please call 722-8052

FLOURESCENT LIQHT-llxtures (8) $45 563-9701

FP PORTA CRIB/PEN —like new, S3S, 526-2350HIQHRISER B 6 O - Goodcond, $100. 54B-07OB

LAWNMOWERB (2)$50ea 722-6052

POOL T A B L E - S100you move, 908-725-71M _

RECLINER - brown %2b,cnll ?0B-2<19-B3fiO

ROWING EXERCISER-$50, linnl |irlco 9(ifl-3049

SLEEPING BAGS (2)StOon. 00B-7P2-B0!.?

T B L - drp II. <1H Dnncn

TV— 19" color $50. mi-crowave $10, 563-0009

WOMEN'S SUITSI n g ) S / »/ i

1 O n n 7 2 2 -fl 0 !i( S p rs 1 o i

TOWNSHIP OP PISCATAWAYNOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION

The township of Piscataway willconduct an auction of bicyclesand other various items onSATURDAY, MAY 21, 1994 at10:00 a.m. in the parking lot behindthe Public Safety Building Garageon Hoes Lane.

2130General

Menhmndlte

L I F E C Y C L E 1/2PRICE!" 2 yrs. old. S700.908-757-6002

4 JETZON T IRES- sizeP185/B0R13. Litile used,low mileage. $125. Ofi 86Grand Am. 908-271-8009

40'>3«'x1B' HIOH 0UON-SET STYLE BUILDING-ONE OPEN E N D - WasS6.965 , v/ill sell lor53.965. Still In crate. 1-800-292-0111.

AUTHENTIC ITALIANRECIPES— by Italianmom. S7.00. SASE, M.Sena, P.O. Sox 2471,Edison, NJ, 08816

BAHAMA CRUISE5 days/4 nights. Under-booked! Must sell! Lim-ited tickets. S279'couple.(407)767-8100, EM. 684

Mon.-Sat. 9AM-10PM

CARRIER AIR C O N D -S100; Maytag WasherS100: Kenmore Dryer$150 like new; 32 alum,ladder $65:752-3591

CORDOVOX- (Accord-lan) professional, exccond. Case & book in-cluded. S625, 722-7130

DANCE WEAR S A L E -Sat. & Sun. 5/14 & 15.iO-6pm. Stock-up ondance plus summer ac-tivewear at 10-60% oftGym Bin, at Jo-ann'sDance Studio, 4475 SoClinton Ave. So. Plld,

DID VOUKNOW . . .

that an ad in this localpaper also goes into 22other local papers?Reach over 360 ,000matters with one call!

1 800-559-9495

DR S E T - 40"rnd walnuttbl w/1 leaf & 4 chrsS175. Oval mirror w/goldframe & shelf 575 Lamps,S25-S35. 658-4029

DR SET— 6 ft mahoganyDR table. Circa 1930, 4chairs, very good cond .$350 908-5180131

ENCORE QUALITY CON-SIGNMENTS- Clothing,lewelry. furs, antiques,collectibles, homo fur-nishings. 123 ClnremonlRoad, Bemardsville, T-F10-6, Thurs. 8, Sal 10-590B-766-7760

MEN'S GOLF CLUBS ABAO— Rigrit-handed.No.W5trn Woods/MaxflyIrons 757-0515.aller 5

Men'i Silk Draft TIESBuy Direct & Save

Shop at Home Service$5 Each 4/$1B

90B-S26-7577 After 6PM

NATURALBEEF

f'uro Illnck Angus IHHTIfrom local frttm ALL nnl-uinl. in) steroicJa, tioi-ntnMO*;. ut f int ibujtusI mi rim A rtr I I C U H I SSi! ail Hi No Iml i l i 'ncharges Cul. wmppnttA Intx'lpcl loi yi mi fr c<vur This l<5 NOT ,! Iri"fi/('Pplnrt CJIODVIOW I .wiTi.90B- I I 3X -2 I ? ? l o n v i 'MfifTlB fli 1 Ol #

SHEDS, GAZEBOS,PLAY8ETS, l.nwn 1'uriiA MOID SundnyWnrron Flan 996.3183.

SOFA--$7'., O

t9f), lovntnnlline Ihl i:io,l A $t't K (ilhi.r

T I 1 U M P F T I « i>lli>i

l i m i t % 1 i " . . . | l i « > i l 1 i l l i - i. ' / l i U ' . l ' l

• » USt 11 . >OFKICK H IHNIU I I l f

I'II;1 '\7?\, IWI.U nv; M I ' . /

UTILITY<\/*ti, uctoi'i lot "iliiinun.olllco. or woik. n/<)tiuck crmin. 3 Ion. RockuiBtni Induililnl :l phimngilndor UOBniO n?J6

2130

WEDDING DRESS- Bro-cade top, scoop neck,fishtail train, can be wornsummer or spring. Size16 (can be altered). Wornonly once. $75/BO. 908-276-335B after 6,

W O L F F T A N N I N GB E O S - New C o m -mercial-Home Units From5199.00. Lamps-lotions-Accesssones. Monthlypayments low as $16.00.Call loday FREE NEWColor Catalog. 1-800-462-9197.

VOUR CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEV NEWS-P A P E R S WITH ONEEASY PHONE CALL ANDFOR ONE LOW PRICE.FOR ONLY $ 2 1 9 . 0 0YOUR AD WILL REACHOVER 1.2 M I L L I O NHOMES THROUGHOUTTHE S T A T E . C A L LFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1800 -559 -9495 . ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILSA B O U T S C A N -STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDAD NETWORK.

2160Wanted to Buy

$AAA AUTO BUYING*INSTANT CASH DEAL

paid on the spot. Inter-ested in buying your car/truck. Foreign/domesticSpecializing in high mi. &damaged cars. For pick-up call 609-888-5012

3O30Dog*

BICHON FHISE PUP-PIES— 7 weaks, raisedwith children, registered.S495. Call 9O6-6B5-231O

MINI POODLES- Privshow kennel has M/F,very happy, outgoingtempermonts, champion-s h i p b l o o d l i n e sWormed, shots, 4 mon.s.S500 908-362-5759

PUPPIES- N.J.'s Larg-est Selection from $50All types. Open May14,15, & 16 Hrs 10-4MC/Visa. J.P. O.NeilKennels US Highway 1,Princeton. NJ acrossfrom Hyatt Motel.

YORKSHIRE TERRIER-Male, 5 lbs, 2 yrs. old,floor length silk coal903-469-8025

ALL L I O N E L , I V E S ,A M E R I C A N F L Y E R -and other toy trains Col-lector pays highest pric-es Call 1-BO0-464-467 1or 201-635-2058

AMERICAN FLYER A LI-ONEL TRAINS ft OLDTOYS- PIS call 90B-755-0346, leave message orcall after 6pm

COINS WANTED- Paycash, top prices! Papermoney, foreign, stamps.scrap gold, old jowclry &sterling Estates and Col-lections 908-702-O84Ofiaab Com, 4 BlooinlteldAve., Fleminglon

$1000-S10,000- P.rdlot Antique Oriental rugsJames Proctor (201)27B-O2BO, 800-358-7847.

FORTUNE T E L L E H S -Jukeboxes & Pinball.Slot, Coko, baseballmachines. 609-5B7-7BI9

G U N S , S W O R D S ,KNIVES, MILITARIA-NJ& Fed. lie Top cnahpnld. House calls mncfo.Bfjrt 82

HIGH PRICES P A I D - lorpostcard's, slipcl music,old toys, ti.!snt)nH items.c:nmorns. militmy. rv'sWo (Ids f ni r, l(uin til i n(Kins r.nii ?;?-wnt

HOUSE CONTENTSWANTED

Pnrli.il oi AllCilll 90H-S26 2913

3OOOPETS AND

LIVESTOCK

3010302030303040305030003070JUDO3090

Bird*Cut*DogsFlTMor»e»UvaatockOther PoUAiloptnhln pptuRoRrdlny,

Training A Oroomlrm310!) Mlnrrnllnnooo*

A Rnrvlrfiti

3030Dog*

ADOPTION DAY Sun'i- l'i I I <l|ini I'ftl h" "iumnl J'iMI Mnulit . ' /!ii<\ lliili.n Nt,.l t<> o l(ICB Mn» D o m cnls'rnhbits BonfltlciH liirtiM.it B

YOUR CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEV NEWS-P A P E f l S W I T H ONEEASY PHONE CALL ANDFOR ONE LOW PRICE.FOR ONLY S 21 9. 00YOUR AD WILL BEACHO V E R 1 . 2 M I l L I O NHOMES THROUGHOUTT H E S T A T E . CALLFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1 -B0O-559-9495, ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILSA B O U T S C A N -STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDAD NETWORK.

3O80Adoptable Pets

CATS FOR ADOPTION: Iam remarrying and rr,ynow family is nMergic toanimals. I must find goodhomes lor my four wonderful cats:Maine coon cat. mate, I,yrs.. black with silverpoints, beautiful anowonderful dispositionOrange tlgger cat, Male8 yrs.. wonderful com-panion Calico female, Gyrs. vory loving Whltofemale, 6 yrs genlle anda wonderful house pelPloasp call evenings 903-233-9569

DELIGHTFUL KITTENSNEED A HOME! Pleaircnll 7S7-073B

G I V E S O M E O N E AS M I L E - Somerset Recjional Animal Shotlei has,puppios, kiltons. do;is,duel cals Adoption reasonnble, Mis9lng n pot"Call r2D-03Oe,

3100rVT/sceHflfteous

Supplies A Sen/fees

VETERINARYHOUSECALLS

HniiUhi;IIP fni yiuir;i1 Imitm . MiilthPw.iieil.i. DVM IUMI I I l y

4000SERVICES

i n n - Adult liny Cure

Cmpvnti VChild V.ntv

UnttdtiiHfin clynt i*n

It Clfinn n|lHi.nllllC.iri>

4I0O • Hnm*

4108 - Incorrti T a4110

£-4 May 12, 1994

2130Garage Sale*

NOTICE: All GARAGESALES advertisementsare PAYABLE IN AD-VANCE by cash,check, VISA or MasterCard. For a quote oncost, pltace call1-800-559-9495.

(0 FAMILY SALE- Mid-di*s*x, Walnut St.; S M ,9-4. Kid's items, lum.HH. luggage, AC's. ma-ternity. Rain Sal.5/21APT. CONTENTS-Springfield. 5/13, 9-5 5.'14 9-1. Roselle Park-.Voodside Gardens, aptB2. Michigan Ave & Ken.ilworth to 1 blk past Tex-aco Sta lo rt on Collax,make Ifi at BeachwoodLR turn. Dinette set, GE<efrig., old mahogany BRset, more,90B-Z45-4506BAVBERRV OR. NEIGH-BORHOOD SALE— 16lamilies. Sat- 5/14, 9-3Park on New Brunswickfid Something for all!

BELLE MEAD- 6 ArleneCt.; off Hlllsborough Rcf.Sal 5/14. 9-1. HH & babyterns•ERNARDSVILLE- 123Claramont Road; AlmostFiew- Clothing. Jewelry,Furs, Accessories. Fine'luahly home furnishings,antiques, collectibles.from consignments & se-lect dealers,S3.00 OFF purchase atS2S or more!

ENCORE QUALITYCONSIGNMENTS

Dealer co-op space avail.Tue-F 10-6, Thurs. til 8Sat. 10-5.

908-7*6.7760ORANCHBURG- 716Old Yorfc Rd.; 5/14. Sat.9-5. Antiques, mission &lamp tables, glassware,crafts, turn, & lots more!BRIDOEWATER- 19Hayward SI. (Corner ofCathy Ct.) 5/14, 8:30-4 p m . No oarly b i rds .Tre»surt» (rom 4 (am.

2120Oarage Salee

BRIOQEWATER- 264Woodsid* Ln.i 5/14. 9-4PM, Furn., tools, books,Ciothas, H/H items. &electronic drumsBRIOOEWATER- 565Hwy 2*; (West ol Circle,I mi.) Sal 5/14 & Sun5/15. 9-4pm Lets oftools, 24pc socket sel,30K BTU healer, H/H, PUlool Box, Bean Poles.Fence Panels. TomaioCages, and much more!!BRIDOEWATER- 565Mendow Rd.: Fri 5/13,Sal 5/14, 8-4pm 4 fam-I1 y HH items, lum ,clothes, misc. items.BRIDGEWATER- 64Pearl St (finderne area)Sat. & Sun. 5/14 & 15. 9-3pm. Very big charitysale.BRIDGEWATER-DelawareOr., Sun,. 5/15;9-3. Multi Family. Chil-dren's; household: lurni-ture. lots more!BRIDQEWATER- Hug*Vard Sal*! Sat. 5/14,9am-3pm. Over 20 ven-dors! Hamilton Elemen-tary School. Take Ri.2O2-Z06 to WashingtonValley Rd. to Frohlin Or,

* 2-FAMILY SALEI *•• CRANFORD ••38 Clirk Street

Saturday & SundayMay 14th t 15th. 9-4pm

COMMUNITY WIDEGARAGE SALE!Saturday May 14.

9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.Kensington Gardens,

US#1 and FordsAve., Iseltn

OUNELLEN- 619 NorthAve. Eittnslon ; Sal.Sun 5/14, 15. 9-4. Holi-day items. Tree, toddlerclothes, toys, carriage,crib, rower, HH. lots olgood stud! Rain 5/21.22

MIDDLESEX- 116ValUybrook Ct. (OffWarrenvllle.) Sat & Sun,5/14,15 9-3 pm H/H.clothes, toys, books, etc

1120

HILLSBOROUGH- 9Warner Dr 206 So righton Valley Rd 1 blk. toWarnei Or. make nglht)5'13 raindate 5/14, 9am-5pm. Misc. itemsMIDDLESEX- 292 Har-n» Ave.; 5/14, 15, 9-4HH Items, swing set.some furn, window AC sRaindate 5/21.22.MIODLESEX— 325 Sen-•ca Ave Sun. 5/15 andSun. 5/22, 8-4pm. Col-lectibles. n«w B8Q grill.stereo, child BR set.daybed. TV stand, touchlamps etcM I D D L E S E X - 91Oraenbroek fttf. Sat. 5/14, 9-5pm. Baby clothes.baby items, Misc. items.

MOVING SALE- SOSWillow Ave., Piseat-away; Sal, 5/14. 9am-3pm. Everything mustgo. Furn. toys, books.

MURRAY H I L L - • •Hansell Read (off SouthSt.) Sat. 5/14. 9-4pm. Un-sual furniture IncludingJapanese Curio Cabinet& old fold top desk, se-lect clothing includingleather & shearling coats,Olympus 35MM camera,zoom lens & flash, manyunused accessories IromJapan, China and Thai-land including Laqueritems and eel skin purses.Exercise mat, rowingmaching and golf bag.Framed lithograph andrecords including Elvis45s, H/H linens. No earlybirds, cash only.

NO. PLAINFIELO- 70Manning Ave.j 5/13. 14,10-4. 5/15, 1-4 Some-thing tor everyone. Cloth-ing. HH items. TV, VCR.

PISCATAWAY77 Jackson Ave

Sat. May U9 AM-5 PM

PISCATAWAY- Annualblock • • ! • Brandywlnedr.; 5/14-15. 9-4PM. Be-hind Ouibbletown School

MULTI-FAMILVIPISCATAWAY- Sat. 5/14. 9-4pm. ElliabetfcAvenue.5 blocks. Anti-ques, tools. Hummels.toys. HH. turn, clothing.(Oft River Road)

PISCATAWAY- 3« LakePark Dr.; (off Metlar sLn) Sat. 5/14, 10-3. Ramdate Sun 5/15. Greatbargains! More itemsthan we can list. Some-thing for everyone 1 dayonly, don't miss it!

SO PLAINFIELD- 245E. Falrvlew Ave.; 5/14.15. 9-4, Over 1,000 items.SO. BOUND BROOK-222 Batngate Ave.; oftEdgewood Terr. 5/14, 9on. 3 fam.1960's stereo,HH, clothes. & lots more.SO. PLAINFIELD- USRahway Ave.; 5/13. 14.15. 9-4, 4-family, manyitems, rain or shineSO. PLAINFIELD- 1321Maple Ave (off Daniel S<)Sat. 5/14, 9-4pm. Rain-date 5/21. New ladies &children apparel.SO. PLAINFIELD- 251SLinden Awe. 5/14, 9-3PM,Rain or Shine. 4 tarn.Household items, baritems, toys. Craft salealso: dolls, wreaths,wood toys, Christmas or-naments, bridal showergift and more somethingfor everyone.SO. PLAINFIELD- 3237Revere Rd.; 5/14, 15. 9-4 F u r n . H H I t ems ,moped, car.

SO. PLAINFIELD- 436Hancock St.; 5/13, 14.Early birds & late catswelcome Rain 27, 2S.3rd annual multMamllysale! Antiques, clothes,furn. appliances, toys.You don't want to missthis one.SOMERVILLE- 190 W.Summit St. 5/14, rain-date 5/21. 8-3pm, Multifamily, baby dott ier,t oys , an t iques andhousehold items. Pro-ceeds to benefit theM.E.D. foundation.

S TIME FOR A.

Place Your $15 Garage Sale Ad & Receive• FREE Signs• FREE Inventory Sheet• How To Run A Successful Garage Sale

• Rain Date Guarantee

Fill in 1 character per box, allowing for spaces and punctuation as necessary.Additional lines ad $1 each, use separate sheet of paper if necessary.

Name

Address.

Phone

City .State. _Zip_

VISA/MC# EXP. DATE

Mail With Check or Money Order To:Classifieds - Forbes Newspapers P.O. Box 699 Somerville, NJ 08876

OFFER EXPIRES 12/31/94

OR CALL 1-800-559-9495Forbes Newspapers

Business& Professional DIRECTORY

Serving: Westfield, Scotch Plains, Fan wood, Cranford, Garwood, Kenilworth

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4OOOSfHV/CES

• 41» -Inauranc*•41M •llMOrlOrJ DacoratlnaJ4117 -Kitchens

• 4140-loMltervlcts:<41MUMlt lF ln inu

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M M t b t . * l a d i n g>4aiOProA«l•*4»0-HoofingC4»S-S««Mfia'« Mrvleaa

4000

'J *AE*COftTSM/F*'<• P*nthou«« playmate*.," Collage students. Role? p lay ing . 39 6-31 0 0.

>MAZA CINCE- Mock-,« ads, cuttom wood, jerrlth.'and chain link, all types'J ol tenor Fully inturad.', Fr«t ••llmala cheerfully' liven. Call Pete at 908-

2281>YOUR CLASSIFIED AD>CAN M PUBLISHED IN\* *t NEW JEMEY NEWS-^ PAPERS WITH ONE•* EASY PHONE CALL AND'.FOR ONE LOW PRICE.'«FOR ONLY $219.00VYOUR AD WILL REACH;«OVER 1.2 MILLION/ HOMES THROUGHOUT. !THE STATE, CALL•; FORBES CLASSIFIED AT' , 1 4 0 0 - 5 5 9 - 9 4 9 5, ASK'. FOR JOYCE OR KRISTIN>FOR ALL THE DETAILS. ' A B O U T S C A N -.* STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDJ AD NETWORK.

.« * APPLIANCE REPAIR*•' All major kitchen 8 laun-•: dry applianca*. Sr cltzn, d l id Call 572-1733

•; 4040> OMMCm

.* A TIME TO LEARN- a• , lima to play, tlma to sing,•"time lor joy.Daily childVcare In my home.3:30|»brt.Any wkands.Child.vftiutt be 3 yrs.up.Many,*}e('» avail.563-4142

•IMmV m KM ClniMM.

AFFORDABLE. I AM..."ACAOEMV, Piscataway.Summer camp, ages 5-12, ll*ld trips, swimming,esteem building activi-ties. Now avail., 2 l/tslots ages 2-5.699-1562

AU PAIR/NANNIES-Ltva-in European childcare, legal for 12 mos.Average S175MK. Call908-272-7873.

CHILD CANE- in myBrltfgawatar noma. Rea-sonable ra ta l . 908-7224762CHILOCARC I N - my No.Plalnfleld Home, NearWast End School, Days/Ht.a, lien., 908755-2766CHILDCARE— In myhome near Edison Train,Exp. Mothar In safa, lov-ing environment, Mails •activities, Ann BO8-2B7-1396

CPR « STATE CERrOMOTHER— will care foryr child in my Ptsctwyhorn*. La yd. Reason.rates.Rets avl.8990673.

DOMESTIC WORK- de-sired In Cranford, Mon.Tuss. Wad. A someSat.s, Exc. raf.s from 3Cranford Families, 201-598-O620

UPCfJIENCEO MOMWill provide loving at-mosphere (or your childin my No. Edison home.Flax hrs. Deval. activities.Snack provided. Call

•0I-4M-37M

IN HOME CHILD CARELive In/Live Out

Part Time/Full TimeAlso Summers

Call 908-754-9090 or201-593-9090

IN MY SECURE- So.Pifd, home, 7 yrs. exp.low rates. Will babysit in-fants, toddlers & schoolage. Sue 754-0416

MOM OP 2 G I R L l -wants to provide sale,fun child cars for yourtoddler or school agekids. FT/PT In Brldgewa-ter. M5-7S69.MONDAY MORNING INCINFANTS & TODDLERSINSURED, INSPECTED

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PRIVATE HOMEDAY CARE

FOR INFANTS &PRESCHOOL

Educational » Develop-mental Program in ahome environment. N.J.licensed * Insured. Callnow for free registrationat the QUALITY CAREDAY CARE CENTER. Lo-cated in Piscataway.

•OS'MS-1327

4050ingtm

ANDREA'S CLEANINGsve— Excellent reputa-tion, affordable, reliable,references, 908-359-6971APARTMENTS, HOUSES• OFFICES— will becleaned at your conv.Good rels. Please call429-9487

ART OF CLEANINGBiweekly, weekly, homes& small offices. Let memeet your Individualneeds. Diana

A + HOUSE APT. ft OF-FICE CLEANING- Veryreasonable prices, alyour convert 7 days/wk.pie«se cm 908-429-9156A+CLEANINO SER-VICE— Free eat. Trainedprof. Good ref's. Somer-set Cly. please call

908-424-1408CLEANING DONE

WITH CANE- by honestreliable woman, call:

MM-S48-S179CLEANING

Good rets, trained pro-fessionals will do yourcleaning, Somerset Cty.7 dsys/wk at your con-vsn. Call 908-429-9346

CLEANING SERVICE-Houses ft otfices, big orsmall |obs. Refi avail.Reasonable price*. Katia358-9668CLEANING— Do youneed someone to cleanyour home. Apt., or of-fice? Call us today. Wewill clean weekly, bi-weekly or just 1 lime, 6days/wk. Quality serviceguaranteed. Free est.725-0704

CLEANING- Profes-sional, with a personaltouch. Reliable, reler-ences, Free estimates.Commercial a residen-tial. 10% on first clean-ing. Call The PolishedLook 806-7554HOME CLEANIN0 CANEFor people on the go.Superviaed-lnsursd. Sat-urdays TO0I 245-1945

HOUSE CLEANING9 yr. exp., Raf.a/Bonded,

1 time cleaning avail.Attics/bsmnt.s 756-2151HOUSE/OFFICE CLEAN-ING— Quality service ataffordable prices. Fieeest. Over 12 yrs. exp.

908-752-3301HOUSEKEEPER- PT.Location nol a problem.Ref's avail. 908-560-7134Will start immedUtelyl

POLISH GIRL— w/refs.win clean house 4 apts.Satisfaction granted201 -777-8232 Joanna.

4110fmtwctfoii/

•MOTIVATION PLUS*Personal EmpowermentWkshp ,ln$tr:M.Parlesi"Procrastination andDestructive Humanemotlons"-Wod . eveMay IB, 7pm-9:30pm.FEE: S15/wkshp. To rag:Send fee along w/name,phone* to 16 HamiltonSt.. Bound Brk. NJ08605-no later than 3days prior to wkshp.

PIANO INSTRUCTIONDiane Olsen Galvacky,available for teaching9&m-2 30pm. Mon-Frl SSat. Call 699-0836

Advrtfm In thm

4110fflStfUCtMNl/

PIANO LESSONSPrivate, Beginners. Kids/Adults. Call now.

MM-1S1-0102PIANO LESSONS- Inyour home. Branchburg,Whitehse Sta. Hilisbor-ough.Call W-4037.P R I V A T E T E N N I SINSTRUCTION— (or allages. Adidas trainedprof 12 yrs exp. Veryreasonable rates. Pleasecall 908-873-1892PVT. SINOINO LES-SONS— beginners to ad-vanced, develop range,power 906-429-0288TUTORING: Reading,math In yr. home. 10 yrspublic school e«p.Cert.K-8 a H.S. MattvMAdegree. Call 272-5315.

4140UfafS»rvfc«*

A T T O R N E Y H O U S ECALLS: Wills, LivingTrusts, Powers of Atty,Living Wills. Call fore x a c t f e e s ; o t h e rservices. J . DeMartlno,Esq. toe-«74-sea«.ESTATE SETTLEMENTS35 Years 548-3122

Moss A Inglese, AttysMeluchen Prof. Bidg

406 Main St. Metuchen

4180Loans • Ftnmnc*

ANY CREDIT OK!Real Estate RoFmances

Only. 7 Days. 9am-9pm.Fast Serv. 908-525-3907

VISA/MASTERCARD —Guaranteed approval!Rates as low as 8.5%.Bad credit, no credit, noproblem! For brochurewrite AGS Credit, Box5435, Albany NY 12205.

4180• r ir lMCt

NEED A CARTCANT GET A LOAN?Baa) credit, ne credit

(tOe) 722-1123

4170JMtaCSjfflrNNNfS

CUSTOM SLIPCOVERSDraperies, Rsupholstery.Formerly al Steinbachs A

Hahne a. 45 years exp.Senior discount. FreeShop at home service.

W. Canter, 908-757-6655LAKES ft PONDS- Newponds, designed, con-structed. Existing pondscleaned, reshaped.Dams repaired. Owner/operator. 30 yra. experi-ence. Anywhere in NJ.Ralph McQillan Excavat-ing 609-655-2261.

* • PSYCHIC • *For a reading by phone,call 727-9205 or send aself-addressed stampedenvelope 1 S5, with daleof birth, color of eyes 4hair to: 1830 Hwy. 35,Sayervills c/o Nina's Psy-chic Studio. For best re-sults in Tarot card read-Ing a psychic aura a spir-ituals.

PALMIERIMOVERS

9O8-356-24S4•1 Piece Items eApts.

•Pianos •Offices•Homes-7 rms. or lessInsured Uc/tQOMO

THE PLANT SHAPERHave your shrubs andsmall trees prof, shapeda n d m u l c h e d t h i ss e a s o n .

Anthony E. Kroposky908-728-4476

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4170

TRANSPORTATIONFor anyone in need loemployment, babysitter,etc. Call M. Johnson

(»O8>M1-1147

41*0

Cflf#JiaWlrfNNft

BIRTHDAY PARTIES-Magic show & balloonanimals. Call Constan-tine. 606-7743.

I CAN DRAWANVTMINGI Portraitscharacter sketches torpart ies. Reasonablerates. 908-546-0548.

PONIES FOR PARTIESGreat fun, reasonablerates! Call now for avail.in your area. 879-6370

PONY PARTIES- Spe-cialize in children's B-d a y s F u l l y i n s ' d .fleas rates 908-673-6502

* PUDDINS *My-Tee-Flne Clownln

Reputation speaks 1oritself ad occasionscomedy magic and more.

Please call 681-0747

4210

DRESS MAKING- Cus-tom lor prom, brides-maid, any occasion CallTara 707-4643

LOOKING FOR A PHO-TOGRAPHER? For doingyour Wedding or FamilyGroup Photos. CallCharles Moore III.

906-234-12351-800-371-5793

WORD PROCESSING-Off-site, fast & accuratew/reasonable rates. A Zil-lion WPM.201-347-5033.

Advertisein the Classified!

Have YOURead TheClassified

This Week?

Forbes NewspapersBusiness

& Professional DIRECTORYServing: Westfield, Scotch Plains, Fanwood, Cranford, Garwood, Kenilworth

HOME IMPROVEMENT PHARMACY PAINTING LANDSCAPING POWERW ASHING

PROFESSIONALCARPENTERS, INC,

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Residential - CommercialInterior - Exterior

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Spring Clean-UpFall CleanupMulching

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276-132036 NORTH AVE. E

CRANFORD

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SALES & REPAIRS(30 Years In Business)

CENTER TV907 Wood Ave. • Roselle

276-2331

Call (908) 722-3000Ext. 6256 TodayAsk For Russell

PAINTERS PLUMBER TREE/LAWN SERVICE WINDOWS BATHTUB RESURFACING

BEAT CONTRACTOR'S PRICES'• Inlcrinr, Ixtcrior & Wallpapering• IB yrs, experienre• Guaranteed• Pressure Washing• Fri'c Intimates• Fully Insurrd

WESTFIELD

(908) 789-9533

LENNY'S PLUMBINGHEATING

• Heating SewerCleaning

• Plumbing & HealingRepairs

• Hot Water Heaters• Sump Pumps

Free Eat. • State License #6240Lenny Qrieco

574-0480

PREDATORTREE• 70 FT. Bucket Tnuck• TnlMMixtq & REMOVAI• STUMP CnimdlNq .• Tnti PUwiiwq g• CoMplrri LA*IM Vj

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I

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U A

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CompletoPlumbing

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State Lie. #4205

276-86777 Rnl«lgh Avo. • Crnnford

WOODSTACKTREE SERVICE

INSURED

Low, Low RatesSenior CHUfln Dlseownto

. FREE ESTIMATES

276-5752

Contractingi m HUM

272-18O81st Quality VinylReplacementWindows '* 4 J A Pm Window!

1 * f 9 Inntnllnd ' U

Thurinitl pnnn ulnns up tn 10t U I '

For Loss I'M.in !$<>0 I X Tweek voin" Ad coiiul

;i|)|)c<n in <»\t'i I H"».(H)Opapers eai h u<'t'k.

( i a l l t O ( l , l \ l ( ) U l - M ' l " V f

pSpmcd \if I united!

(908) 722-3000cxt. 6256

Ask I'm Russell

B-6 W#Stfl#M n#COfCI May 12,1994

MAKE YOUR HOUSE A HOMEA Guide To Local Professionals

Servicing Your Needs For:4030 — Carpanky -4 I60 — M a w m4070 — EtwMcal • 41»0 — Painting40B0 - Handyman SwvtCM • 4M0 - Plumbing.4100 —Ham* Improvamanl HaaMng • Coding4130 — larefccapno* • 4220 — Roafino

£JSSS4000SERVICES

>U4. ASPECTS- InUrior,,'Exterior Horn* Repair,-*Qulter«, Siding, Doors,

Windows, Kltch'jns, etc.In*. Dan 906-966-0876.

4070Efctrtcal

2Ut CENTURY' ELCCTHICAL INC.Ins & Bonded UC 12599

24 his. Middlaiex area(908)6037803 619-4819ACCURATE ELECTRIC

For an your electricalneeds! Lic# 12678

908-725-6809A.LK ELECTRIC- resid ,comm. & indust . avail.days, wesktnds. nights.FREE EST! Fully ins.,reasonable rates, Lie.9732, MM-75S-4030ASPEN ELECTRIC- Allresidential needs: housetans, smoke detectors,lighting, telephones, etcQuick response. Lie.#7534. Call 356-3041:873-0137.

ELECTRICAL WORKSecurity & recessedlights, heaters, tans,phones, 240 volt servicechanges, etc. Problemssolved, quick response.Lie. #10262. Free esis

Please call David at321-6«SSor4S9-eai4

ELECTRICAL WORK-Commerclal. residentialand industrial. Licensed,No. 9141, and InsuredFree estimates. CallVince Santonastaso Elec-tric 968-1609.

4079Gutfn

CUTTERS REPAIREDand installed. Guttercleaning and screening.All roofing repairs. CallJohn at 985-5785.

NED STEVENSGUTTERS

T h o r o u g h l y c l e a n e d& flushed S35 - $75

• S c r e e n i n g ( R e p a i r s•New Gutters*Hool3

1-800-542-0267Free est.eOpen 7 daysFully ins.»Est.d 1965

Handyt Ices

AL'S HANDYMANSERVICE

Gen. Homo repairsDecks stained & sealed.

Free >Sll call 725-9290APPLIANCE REPAIR

All major brands, allmajor appliances Rea-sonable, experienced, re-liable. Same day service.

Jefi (909) 369-4075HANDYMAN

Electrical, Painting,Plumbing. Carpentry.EIC. Dave 908-769-1655HELPFUL HANDYMANinside-Outside-Odd jobs.Fences-Sealed drives-MasonryPainting-No JobToo Big or Too Little. Youname it We do it. CALLCHRIS • 549-2699

ODD JOBS « GENERALREPAIRS— Lt. hauling,brush cleared & re-moved. Expert mt/exl.carpentry, painting, re-placement windows &decks Tree work, logsplitting, gutters cleanedNo |Ob too small. Whybreak your back? It youdon't see it, ask. Call ustoday lor a FREE esti-rtiale. Our 21st year

926-5939

ACrVtrtfia In tf>* CtmtntC!

• • • PAINTING •••INTERIOR A EXTERIORDeck and Fence Blaach-in g , Sta in ing a ndWaterproofing. Drivewaysea l ing . Odd job*•Reasonable & Reliable-» Cell P»le, W « 7 t »

TINKERINO TOMHOME MAINTENANCE •REPAIRS. No job toosmall. 908-356-0920

4099CfMNtUjt

AFFORDABLEJUNK REMOVALHesonibie rate*.Free Eatlmater(X») W - 7 M 3

BB RUBBISH REMOVALQuick, honett, reliable.We fill dumpsters. Weserve all of NJ. Pleasecall BB at 201-674-4973Beeper # 201-312-3201Eddi* 201-669-8493

CLEAN U P - Rick'sGar s allies bsmnts 1015, 20, 25, 30 yarddumpsters/rent 757-2677CLEANUP A LIGHTHAULING- of all type*.Free estimate!. Insured.Low rate*. We workweekends. Call Tony

90S-7S1-04O0# JUNK REMOVAL *ATTICS • BASEMENTS

BACKYARDSCALL JOE AT2S7-12S1

WLLA S CLEANINO «CARTING SERVICE

Attics, basements, ga-rages, |unk removal Of allkinds. 908-754-8875

4100knwommm

$10 DCCKS t10SHED/DECK EXPERTS

Decks only S10 sq.ft.Freeest. 819-0702.

ABRACADABRAHOME IMPROVEMENTSADDITIONS 1 CARPEN-TRY— Roofing, flormeri,kit. design, Sheetrock,design help. Good pric-es, Ins., Ed 908-757-8911

AFFORDABLEHOME REMOOBUNQ

Bath, basement, decks,custom tile installation,wallpapering and int. &ext. painting. Free Est.Call Tom 90B-755-6S41or 1-800-300-6541

ADDITIONS& ALTERATIONS• Kitchens •Bathrooms•Basements •Decks•Ceramic Tile B)ETC

Competitive pricesFully ins'd • Free est.sFOR DEPENDABLE,

HIGH QUALITY WORK,•RAY LAEYT-627-H33-

AL'S CARPET SERVICEspecializing in repairing,antique, oriental & hookrugs. Removal of Wrin-kles. bucMes. Stretching& reinstallation of new Iused Carpet. Since 1950.

908-369-8970

FENCEALL COUNTY

FENCE CO.All types Wood & Chain-link Fence, Free est.Year round Installation.Call: 90S-«S4-1ta> Or

90B-232-1727

FENCEARTIE'S CARPET

Sales-ServiceInstallation

No Job Too SmallFree Est. Fully Ins.

Call after 5pm90a-4U-1S18

•AWL CONTflACTINaKit. Bathe, ••tement*.Deck*, lor all home im-provement. Fully Int.,free eit. 908-232-2997BATHTUB * TILE RE-SURFACING- 5 yearwarranty, free estimate*.Call 908-756-5351CARPENTRY * ROOF-•NO- repair. Ceiling Ifloor porches, slept,paint. Call 3M-9020CARPENTRY BY OUEUCONSTRUCTION CO. -Welded vinyl replacemem window* * ateeldoor*. Custom deck*,addition*, •dormer*.kitchen & bath remodel-ing, c-aiemem*, drywall& taping. NO JOB TOOSMALL! Fully Injured,free est. 7O4-OH1.

CERAMIC TILE •MARBLE CONTRACTOR11 yr*. experience, longlasting quality work. Fullyin*., free estmat**, ret'*.

John OeNloela, Jr.909-232-73S3

CERAMIC TIL*Remodeling, Installationand repair. Free esti-mates, 908-236-7935

DECKS DECKSSPECIAL SPRINGPRICM. Limited time.Build now and save SSS.Fully insured. Unlimitedreference*. Color portfo-lio. CALL 908-928-0009DECKS- Offering CedarA CCA at tuper price*.Your design or our*.Fully In*. Timberlin* Con-struction 753-5761.

DOORSDOORS DOORS DOORSInstall & repair all type*.Int/Ext Call 908-707-1S78

DRIVEWAYS * FENCINGBY CATENA

Driveway*, Curbing, Alltype* of fencing. FreeEstimate*. WIH beet any

DRIVEWAYS- Parkinglot*. Black topped,stoned, sealed. Also top•oil delivered. 722-1882

DRYWALLINSTALLATION

* FINISHINGSpecializing In Addition*,Renovation* a Base-ments. Free Estimate*.

9OS4IS4SSSEXCAVATING

Trucking, concrete work,demolition, Low rates,FREE EST. •0B-97t-BM7

General ContractingNo job to small

We do it allWe beat all ••t.tfinanclngInsured with 20 yrs. exp.

908447-1042

HOMEAlterations

and Addition*Prompt and Courteou*

Service*Quality at its Beit"

WALLACECONSTRUCTION

7253845• J.F.K. •

CONSTRUCTION• Ret. / Comm. •

• 908-276-1012 •MILLER'S PAVINO-teal coating on drive-way*, commercially u**dproduct. Dries within 60mins. Paving & gravel,residential & commercial.All work guaranteed. 10%discount with this ad. fi-nanclng avail. 891-6232

* * MR. DO-RIGHT * *Selling? Renting?

Moving? Call me Tor allyour work, exp. palmer,spackuler, Tile, porch ftscreen repair, Storm dr.*installed," Master of thesmall |ob" 908-968-7S40

OUAUTV CARPCNTRVSpecializing In renova-tions. Residential. Bath-rooms, Custom kitchens,decks, S finished ba»e-menta. No job too email.Free set, Work guaran-teed. 17 yra. e«p. CallMike 6W-9147

SIDEWALK BALERemove and ReplaceSB aq ft under 100 so ftMaqttover 100 *q« .90S-3S6-0404 RE: Phillips

STEVE BUHLSRCONSTRUCTION

Re*ld*ntal/CommerclalQuality work at competi-tive raias. We do it ALLfrom basement to roof,Office Interior*. Fully in-sured. References avail-able. 90S-9M-7042

WINOOWS SV DOSQuality craflmanehlp

for 26 yearsPuttying

broken glass repairCaulking 4 washingwindow replacementFree Eat. & Fully In*.

Statamen * DewaMerSSS'lMi

413$

CUSTOM REUPHOL-STBRV- Excel, crafts-manship, reeaonableprices, shop at home«rvc. Cleary Interiors,906-27M011

4127

* KITCHEN SAVER*Total remodellng/refac-ing: formica, Coflsn, Ahardwood cabinet*. CallButch 469-5661

4130

• • A-SCAPE * *All phases of land t lawncare. Maintenance, land-scape design, installa-tion, construction. Top-soil, mutch, (tone, Ire*work. Reliable, profes-sional service. FullyInsured. Free est. 90e>tts-im/sos-ws-rm.ABSOLUTELY THE BESTLawn maintenance, land-scaping, mulch, fertititer,thatching, clean-upa,Commercial/residential.Insured. Call Vtskma el

•SS-413S

PINE LANDSCAPING* LAWN MAINT.

Ail phases of landscap-ing and lawn maiot., FreeEst.s, Owner operated,Satisfaction guaranteed,THEE SERVICE ALSOAVAIL., 908-966-5670

ALL AROUND GROUND-K E E P E R S - S.C U -W.L.M.-AM kind* of treat-ment*. Designing aPlanting, masonry, fawnaprinkler* A Etc. Freeest. Call HUBBARDS'S561-6244

A R B O R I S TTREE EXPERTS

Removal, Trimming,Stump Grinding.

Cabling, Fertilizing,Refs 1 Fully In*.

JOHNSON'S TREESERVICE

SemervWe Area Call:9M-6M.MM

Morrletewn Area Call:S0S-TSS-MM

4130

ftmmCmrm

LANDSCAPINGLawn maintenance ser-vice. Slump grinding, in-terlocking brick paver,patloa A walkway*, back-hoe digging, grading ayork raking, rototllMng,retaining walls, lawns in-stalled, sod/aeed. CallJoe, 885-5323.

I I O LAWN SERVICECleanups, Thatching,Fertilizing, etc. Nowbooking lor '94 Seaeon.

Metucnen/Edlson AreaSOS B4S S30<

M O O K M M FARMLANDSCAPING

Lawn Care, Mulching,De*lgn, Backhoe rental.Quality work 4 reasonable prices! Free est,fully Ins.

CLEAN UPSLANDSCAPINGLAWN MOWING

Prompt, professionalservice at down toearth prices, call:

S0S-TSS-4SS3O.J. LAWN SERVICE 4ROTOTILUNO— Lawn*cut and trimmed, gar-den* rototllled. For freeest. call 964-4821

DAN'S TREE SERVICE10% discount to newcustomers. 908-228-0738. Piaintieid area.

E 4 M LAWN MAINT.C l e a n u p * , l awnmaintenance, Free Est.,

908-561-1061EXECUTIVE IING- Cutting, seeding,thatching, fertilizing.Comm/realdential. Dis-count rates. 442-9377.

FULL LAWN SERVICESodding, seeding, topsoil. Lawn renovations.

Dependable.201-377-2585

O. MURPHY TREE SRVC23 yrs. exp. All tree care4 atump removal. Qualitywork at low rate*! FullyInsured 4 free e*limate*.463TREE/245-6423.

HUNTER LAWN CAREFree e»t., loweet price*,Lawn malm., Shrub care,Farting, 9O8-753-6I62

JUST STUMPSINC

Tree 4 Stump Removal

Fre* Est. Fully Ins.Senior Cltten Dt*c.

CBH Mhra. SOS-SM-1318LANDSCAPING Lawn*mowed tor a* little a*S20. Thatching, seeding,•hrub trimming, Installa-tions. Call J*« 753-6742

SERVICEQ m i c u t t i n g , ex-perienced. 876-9779

LANDSCAPING- awardwinning designs lo fittodays Tifsatyle, completeprofessional Installationand maintenance, call forno obligation, FREEC O N S U L T A T I O N !

NORTH RIDGELANDSCAPING

141SLANDSCAPING- We doit all! Malm., clean-up*and related service*, call908-353-6345

LAWN CUTTINddone by owner/operatorTim. Free est. Very rea-sonable rates. 572-7029.

LAWN MAINTENANCESpring clean-ups, shrubtrimming, mulch, andlawn renovations.Joe's Landscape Service

M-iooaLAWN MAINTENANCE

Clean up, lawn cutting,thatching, good pricea.755-8429

LAWN SERVICEPrompt, Reliable, Ins.

Spring Clean-upFertilization program*Serving Somerset Cty.

For Over 5 yrs.ICall Clem:

90S-389-1418LAWN SERVICE- Qual-ity work, affordable pric-es. 10 yr*. experience.Call Guy 905-9251

LAWNS CUTReasonable '

Call 908-276-5220 4 asklor Jim or leave messge

LUSARDILANDSCAPING 4

LAWN MAINTENANCEWe also remove trees,trim shrub* and hedge*.Senior citizen discount.We travel anywhere. 908-469-7682.

MIKE'S TREE SERVICETree removal, pruning,brush chipping, log split-ting. (908) 722^3235NetureUced Landscape*Selective prunnlng. Gar-den Ponds. Design 4plant selection. Snadegardens. 572-4640PERENNIAL DESIGN 4GARDEN MAINT.- De-greed horticulturist. Getyr* of low main, beautyfrom flowering plant*. Ex-pert care for existing gar-dens. Call Kim 689-4119.

PLAZA LAWN CARE-Complste lawn mainte-nance, paiios A walk-ways, railroad t ie* ,apring clean-up. CallPeter at 908-464-2089

ROSE GARDENLANDSCAPING

Special* on SpringCleanup 4 Monthly lawnmaintenance. Land-scaping design*, sod,seed, HR tie walls. FullyInsured. Frs* estimates.

(9OS> TM-7883

oftROTOTtLLJNO**(Troybllta.) Established.Garden* as low as S25IFree esta. Call 725-3228.

ROTOTILUNOStarting at S1S and up.No JobTa too difficult ortoo small) 908-654-9220.ROTOTILLING- Oar-dan* expertly tilled withTroy-Built, Est. gardens•60/*q. yard., 534-2674

SPRING CLEAN-UPS-Lewn cutting and tallclean-upa. Call Stuart at725-5806

SPRING CLEANUPSThatching, Fertilizing,

Mulch, Topsoll.90B-7SS-1621

T 4 T TREE EXPERTSA Complete Tree

and Shrub Service10% Dlacaunt to all

Sr. Citizens 4 new Cust.7S3-aSS4 or 369-7727

Fully In* Fre* Est.TIMBER TREEEXPERTS INC

Tree removal. Trimming,topping 4 (tump grind-ing. Free est. Fully In-sured. Call 9O8-819-7S31

TreeRemoval

VCNIS BROS.Tree Experts

3SS-S1SOFULLY INSURED

**GOLD SEAL* *MAINT. ENTERPRISE

Maintenance 4 landscap-Ing. 908-769-7821

BILL WILKINS PAVINGAND EXCAVATING

Asphalt and concreterepair. 754-8683

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41«0

DEAN KOEP 4 SONMASON CONTRACTORSSpecializing m:*1ep*.tidewalks, patios, allBrick and block, Freeeat. Fully Ins., Samelocation 27 yr.t exp.

9O6-7S7-7421AA TAURUS MASONRYStep*, tidewalks, patio*,all types ol brick A block.Foundations & interlock-ing paver*. 756-7962

C A R P E N T R Y / M A -SONRY- Steps, walls,decks, Addition*. 232-3057 or 679-4108 John

JP MASONRY REPAIRRepair* On All Masonry.No Job Too Small I FreeEst./Rel. (908)704-8213

MASONCONTRACTORS

Specializing in all typesof masonry: Brick work,block work, concrete,etc. Fully Insured. Freeetilrnates.

NO JOBTOO SMALL908-526-3500

MASONRYSteps, Sidewalks. Allconcrete 4 brick work,

#08-783-9038

MASONRY— All types:S i d e w a l k s , s t e p s .Concrete work, brick Ablocks. 35 years exp.

Call John at 526-1244

PETER OINIZOMaspn Contractor

All maionry work. Freeestimate. 90S-SSS-S771.WE DO IT ALL- Side-walk*, patios, chimneys.Anything you need, we'lldoit, 215-759-0233.

41MOPainting

ANTHONY'S PAINTINGInterior/exterior. Roofing,

Putters cleaned/Installed,reeest. 782-6441.ATTENTIVE-CAREFUL

Interior PaintingWallpapering908-234-0417

PAINTING BY BOBQuality service lor 25 yis.

Interior 4 exteriorFree est. A Fully Ins.

Paperhanging also availStelnman 4 Daughter

908-828-3382CAPITOL

RESTORATIONSInterior & exterior paint-ing A staining. Power-washing, alum, siding re-finishing. 908-249-0911.Fully ins. Free est.

AoVartfia Jfl m ClMlMfetfi1

CARNEVALEPAINTING35th Year

Interior/ExteriorCustom WorkReasonableReferences

Fully Insured

966-0467CUSTOM PAINTING andWALLPAPERING- Int. aext. Remodeling o< bathsand kitchens Decks in-stalled. FREE ESTI-MATES. Call Tom, 755-6541.800-300-0541.J 4 J PAINTING- Int./ext. Free est. 10 yrs exp.Rel's avail Fully Ina.

8O8-7S7-9S2Z

JKSWALLCOVERINGINSTALLATION 'and Interior

PaintingQuality \

WorkmanshipCall:

Joe Klingebiel ;322-19S6 .

Free Eatlmates

NINA KALLAS- Painting4 Papsrhanging, Re-pairs. Plaster/Sheetrock.27 yrs. exp. 322-4030

• PAINTING*ROOFING

SIDING20yrs exp. Very highquality. Very neat &dependable. Lowestprices. Super refs.

Get in touch beforeyou pay too much!

Call Spencer McLeish» 908-231-B2»4»

PAINTING 4 WALLPA-PERINO- Exterior/ Inte-rior, custom work, Com-m sr clal/resi dentlal.FULLY INSURED. Nick658-9235

.PAINTING BY JOHNPersonalized, meticu-lous, quality painting &repair work. 10% disc, onall jobs. Free Estimates.

. 908-781-9415PAINTING- Interior-exterior. 25 years exp.The best price in town!Ca» Jerry, 908-221-1595.

P A I N T I N G - Lei awoman do your painting.Neat, clean quality workInsured. Free estimatesCall Maryann S60-923S.

P A I N T I N O -iging,

Int/Ext.

Paper

Will beet anyestimate! Call 704-0038.PAINTING- sheetrockyardwork, other srvesManny'* Helping HandsService 412-9462, pager201-806-5333PAUL A. MILLAR PAINT.ING— Meticulous Int/ExtSvc*. 12 yrs exper. Fullyins. Free *st. Excellentrefs. Cell Paul 848-7186

PROFESSIONALPAINTING

Free etlimates(201)525-6030

R. A N D R E C r t l C K -Painting & paper hang-Ing. 30 yrs. quality expe-rience, 494-5836.

TOM HANSONPAINTERS

Interior • ExteriorWallpapering

Free Estimate*. PleaseCall Tom, 908-469-5992

WHY PAY MORE? Paint-ing tor apt*., condos,homes S70/rm; Wallpa-per S20/roll; speckling.Neat a Clean! 707-9S72.

43300BUiauklataf eUa&eBs

•"'lUfnOlfaWr BrVMn

COPPERHEADPlumbing & Healing Inc•New Constructionesoller Installations•Drain Cleaning•Water Heater*Expert. Neat, FriendlyService. Lie. 8917. Call

7S2-S808/S47-9331

EMERGENCYSERVICE

Sewer 4 drain cleaning,water heater*, Gaa Boil-ers, Bathroom*. Allplumbing repairs.

Truppl PlumbingWilliam Truppi

Plumbing Uc. Number8707 Call 9O8-7M-37S0.

P.M.C. PLUMBING ANDHEATING- Don't beafraid to call a plumberagain. No |ob too small.Sewer and drain cleaninga speciality. Ftee Esti-mates. Fully Insured. Lie.#9466.

908-808-9274

PLUMBING 4 HEATINGLow rate*. Good service.Drain cleaning. Free esti-mates. License #6461.Call John 9*8-8634

4220rtooffcwj

AFFORDABLE ROOFING4 PAINTING- Reliable,dependable. No job toosmall! FREE ett. Ask lorBill 873-3758.

MILLER'S ROOPING-residential 4 commercial.Alum, and rubberizedcoating. All types of root-ing. All work guaranteed?0XPO-$99 with this ad.

908-691-6232HOOFINQ-ALL TYPES

P. Dannucd, Fully Ins.,20 +- yri.eip. Free Est!

9M-BM44S2

4230

A BEAUTIFUL JOBby Feminine Hangups.Ntat, professional, freeestimate*. Call Joan

908-528-0251

WALLPAPERING BYFEMININE TOUCH

ftta s o n i b l i r a t e * .Prompt service. Free es-timates. No job toosmall. Call 906-231-0382

423S

REPLACEMENT* * WINDOWS**

BTORM DOORS4 WINOOWS

Save energy-Jo* price*757-3733; 475-5670

Ad* In CMssffMdon't cost —

They pay!

A SummerSwim Club FocitltyLocmtt* ot> 14 Bt4*HfltlAcnt eat TmtumM M ,

WcekM* BtiimiaiMemorial Day.

Open Daily hint 2JSept 4• Noon - 1 p.m.

•Olympic Silt 'Socialtool Function*

•KMdk Pool <No BondDivini Ana •Tcnni* Couna

•Snack Area •Playground*•Full Time Pool

F o t APPLICATION, CALL

725-7748 OR 7254994

KID5' ACTIVITYJDI

smrc or T( K: ORTSKOfMTTC INSTITOTf:

95'n • raarEJVin^j

6 WeeksFREE Uniform

Call For More Information908-572-0023

1629 Stelton Rd., Piscataway(Across from Fairway Golf Center)

FUNNY BONZEntertainment for all occassions

• I'inrar llvrci • Aljtaklln

• 4il• F

Cwwf

• Hcmi)aM Tw« I'artyw

Illrl • ClownA H I M I l*ar<vn* Croft Parllts* *

MBirthday parlies, School Programs 4 Corporate Picnics

908-647-4200CAMP HOOVER

Sleep Away Campfor Girls Entering Grades 2-12

Swimming, Sailing, Creative Studios,Horseback Riding, Hiking,

Gymnastics, Performing ArtsFor complete brochure,

call 908-232-3236Washington Rock Girl Scout Council

**Non-Girl Scouts Welcomed**

Miinnicr ( ,,ni|r In ThisI )ii (t tor •> ;iiid Kr;ich ( herIKO,000 homes (hrou^hoiil

( t i i l r ; i l N e w . I t r s i v

Pony Rides • Carousels

Hayrides • Petting ZooFULLY INSURED

CLOVERLAND • ( 9 0 8 ) 996-31 4 0 or 2984

A Division of C Bar 6 Ranch, Inc.

Cill(90t) 586-HI7

•MEN •• WOMEN •

•CHILDREN*SHAOLINKUNG-FU

TEACHES—•SELFD€FENSE

Apportions. Pow« bluing• SELF-HEALING: liverMiiJ

Fitness, Htatth (Mind, BodyK Spirit)

• SELF-DISCOVERYMadilalion. Focus. Balint*iConHol

TflLflMINlPreSchool Camp

Day CampGrades 1-6

Hrldgcwnlcr

al908-722-3000 EXT. 6256

ask for Russell

Richard Shcllo, Cnnip Director

OPEN HOUSESundny, May 22 I:(K)4:0(lpm

Prtscnlution 1:30pmh K d Hld

14 lli'iiiitlfiil iitri's, Olvnipir Jk kiddle pools,Non-di'iMimliintliiiiMl

Si'sshin 1 Jmu' 27-,|uly22Session II July 25-AIIKIIII IV

Kiirly/I •»«•«' Sluy Opllims____ 725-774H or 1l$W4

PINGRY DAY CAMPSThe Pin-pry School, Miiiiinsvilk" Ciimptis July 5 - August 12

CAMP PROdRAM INi I.IHHS.T w o S w l l i l f t I ' i ' i l i n y W o o d M I H I C I f r i i i i i i i r 1 . i t ( t i i l l

S h o p s • ( ' ( i l M | i l l l C I A ( I d l i l f K I H I I I I A c l i v M i e s l u l lKnn^i' Ol OIIIIIDIII S|iml (linn - .V (i.nni",

DrpciKlinj; nn A|;rSwim Mrrh A I'k'UI Dnyi Aic Si hrduliil

For Alt f'iiiM|iri'<

9:30 AM - 3:(H) I'M, } or 0 Week SessionsCall Por Inrormiitlun 908-647-5555

Nuist'iy < iiniji (A)ir>. * -II•,'Iliirnnr ( iini|t (Apcv H .' 'i I .']Si'iiioi ( jinip !A)'r. l< I .M I)(p|i>ii|ird hv ( PI,nli

I i.i!i-.|i"ii,iii'ni Avmliilili'. I urn h lin IIHI.MI (HIAll ( tHII|H'tV Alillll'IIIK I "l 11 pi I i 1111 Avilllllllk'

I l i u m ( IIIII|> ( A p e s ( ' I V

May 12,1994 w#stHwcl Itocord B.7

Employment GuideOPPORTUNITY ISKNOCKING!T a U contfol of your c a i w , your

lift and your future. Find our

why hundreds of Wttidet

sales associates wouldn't

consider doing anything else.

CometoWeidel

Career DayFind out what a career in real estate can mean

to you, and how you can moke it happen.

Saturday, May 14from 10am-lpmcall for reservations

or I DELcall for a confidentialinterview

BHDOEMMTBI672 flouH 206 N o *

HUSMROUQHTMONTQOMERTAREA

HOKWBi4SWHlBmdSkMt

, W 08525

CUffON1QBRWII173C M N I N J O M B

FLEMMOTON406 Rot* 202

• MnfoNJOMg(9W»7IMttO

GOT A CAR TO SELL?NEED NEW WHEELS?

Forbes NewspapersAutomotive Guide is all you need!

a If you have an [fern

you can no longer

use and want to give

it to someone for free, use

the "Free to Good Home"

category.

If you have a pet

that you can no lon-

ger keep and warn

to give to someone lor

free, use the "Adoptablc

Pets" category.

Forbes Newspapers Classifieds

help you recycle!

Free to Good Home(2100)

n Adoptable Pets|(3080)

Nairm

Phono-

Addtott

t

Crly.

Fill in 1 character perbox, allowing for spac-o i And punctuation a inocossary. Romofttborto Indudo phono num-ber. 4 lino limit.

Slalu

To run the ad (or Ireo,this coupon must bou&od. No phono at-dors. For ony quoa-lions call:1-B00-559-9495

Send to: Forbes Frccbles

Forbes Newspapers*

Classifieds

P.O. Box 699,

Somervllle, N J . 00876

FREEREALESTATE SCHOOL

Tuition & Booksto Qualified ApplicantsInterview with us, and we will pay your realestate school tuition and book net

Call Today for Details.

WeichertSydney FischRegional Director trfRecruiting

(908)874-3815Offer ExfebM July 1.1M4

TO ADVERTISECALL OUR

CLASSIFIED HOTLINE

TOLL FREE

1-800-559-9495

r>OO(l[Mf'tOYMFNT

5010-5100

M10 • Car««r Trainingt S l

S020 • Child Car*Wanted

SOU • AgencleaS040 • Domestic

M M • HeaMh CareM70 • ManagerialM M • Part-TimeM M • Bwpleyifienl

vrameQSIM • Career

soioCmmeTrmlNng

BAR-TENMNOTRAINING

Modern tropical barsetting, 1 on 1 training.Job • • •« . avail. 424-1403

M20

A I U M M I H JOBOPPTV- Looking for en-ergetic, readable parson.Hs age or older who en-joys Babysitting, lor chil-dren ages 6 4 12. PT.8:1S-2:30pm. M-ThursRel's & own transp. amust.Effective 6/27 tillLabor Day.90B-27fl-2373

CHILD CABB PROVIDERNEEDED- for 3 CtiildrenIn Wes i l le ld . Non-smoker. FT. CPU certifi-cation needed. Call 054-7314 after ftpm.

CHILOCAM- Live in/out. Scotch Plain* for 3yr.old & 1 yr.old. Callafter 7 pm, 808-757-5806

NANNV- Our 6 mo. oldtwins need an experi-enced, caring nanny.Live-out, non-smoking,M-F. 8am-6pm. Englishspeaking, It hskping.Ref's req'd. 908-232-0558

VOUfl CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEY NEWS-P A P E R S WITH ONEEASY PHONE CALL ANDFOR ONE LOW PRICE,FOR ONLY S 2 1 9 . 0 0YOUR AD WILL REACHOVER 1.2 M I L L I O NHOMES THROUGHOUTTHE S T A T E . C A L LFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1-800-559-9495, ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILSA B O U T S C A N -STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDAD NETWORK.

5O4O£fnp#oynwn«-

Domewtrc

N A N N I E S - Spend aynar or more with a finefamily in New Jersey as alive-in nanny SalnryS175-S400 por week de-pending on axpsntincG1 -800-762-1 7RZ Amorl-cn'g Nannies

5080Employment-

Gwwntf

$200*900 WEEKLVIAssornhlo products nthomo Cnsyl No stillingYiiiiin pnld dlrnct rullyll.iili nnltinil No napnncnsfiniy I-O1B-Ut):i-noi'D I-KI. ill eon i<\ tun

• BOO 8ION ON BONUSO T M Orivors Onmlpay horiolltn, n

|mertl, Undnr now rnnn-fKjninnnl fj T.S. Lnuranq,

Mi In Clt9»UI*ddon't coil —

Thty pay!

A D M I N I S T R A T I V EASST./SECRETARY-must be able to work in afeet paced office enviro-ment, be skilled all phas-es of office procedure.Qood phone manner &follow up, Salary comm.w/experlence. Sand re-aume to Suzanne De-twiler, Oynatech, 314 USHwy 22 W, Green Brook,NJ 08812, NO AGENCIESPLEASE

AIR CONDITIONING IN.•TALLER- Quality ori-ented company Is cur-rently Making year roundmechanic with a mini-mum of 1 or more yearsexperience. Excellent payand benefit package forqualified individual.Fres Air Contracting,Manviiie, NJ 908-526-115SAeeletaMs FT/PT

COLLEGE STUDENTSLocal office of nationalCorp. will fill positions lorSummer work program.SiO.SO/stari. Scholar-ships. Credits, All ma-jors. Full Co. training.

M*7O4-US5

Airto

AUTO TECHS

Busy repair shops, Un-limited eamingtl Lookingfor top producers. Salaryplus commiaslons. O f ,available. Co, paid me-chanic education. Excel-lent work environmentOppt'y for growth in mgt.Full fringe benefits too!.

SUBURBAN TIRE CO.Green Brook

Somervllle, MetuchenCall (MS) S2S-4303

Auto

AUTO TECHS* * * * *

Busy repair shops Un-limited earnings! Lookingtor top producers. Salaryplus commissions. O favailable. Co. paid me-chanic education. Excel-lent work environmentOppt'y lor growth in mgt.Full fringe benelits too!.

SUBURBAN TIRE CO.Green Brook

Somervllle, MeluehenCall (MS) S2»-4303

AUTO MECHANICExperienced. Must haveloafs. Must know com-puterized system Call908-424-0666. ask forAlex

BOOKKEEPERLarge, growing dealerhas two new permanentpositions In very busy of-fice. Interesting work Infriendly atmosphere. Expprate rred. Cal l MrsKrumpfer between 11a •5p at (908) 752-7373LICCARDI MOTORSRt 22W, Qreen Brook

BOOKKEEPERFull lime, various dutiesto Include typing, tiling,AR/AP background amust. Located in Spring-Held, Call for more Inror-mnllon at 201-564-5005

C H I L O C A H B — t a i nmoney providing qualitychlldcare (or 1 or morochildren In your ownMomu. MONOAY MORN-ING INC. oflors 'ron In-surnnco roferrnls. oquifimant, back-un ft moro.Union County 900-6R0-4804; Somerant Counly

CLEANING r f R S O N -nninll motpl noncJs a rnll-nl>ln pnrnnri pulltnH no in • nn Ini y l igh twork, niiio wmKiriy cunil

.TtCuuplns OK Pr. (KHI-

ClKniCAL I f. hnnvyphnrm wink, \inheiinl nl-tii;u ilutlnH H'l M '1 M fFJlnn<i() cnll I iruln ImIwnn'i 10 i1 I<111,n111 ii

COLLEOFWp hnvu rlliMi'ill K lluiu'i-Irlnl tf>rTtpornry Joh*t Wniiond your nklll.o CHII UI

Cl, Inc.

SJBHSffBw

•CUBTOMRH BBRVICE*Rapidly growing catalogco. aeeka bright, friendlyA motivated person.Salary to 1BK+attractivebenefit*. We'll train.

• <tos> soi-oaoo »DAY CAMP H E L P -Muslc A Nature Spe-cillistt, Senior t Juniorcounselors needed forHighland Park V. Call Im-mediately 248-2221

DID YOUKNOW...

This little ad can be readby more than 380,000readers in 17 publica-tions throughout Somer-set, Middlesex and UnionCounties? It caught yourattention, didn't it?Call YOUR ad in today!

1-*00-9(*-t4tfWe Get Results!

DRIVERS AOISPATCHERS/Te*l-FT, PT. Clean record.Must know Plsc.ySomer-set. S4S-S0S0; fMI-tOOO.

DRIVERSExperienced driversneedtd for #1 Limo Co.FT/PT position! aveil.Knowledge of Tri Statearea a must. Professionaldrivers need only apply

Mon.-Thurs.9am-12noon.

GARDEN STATE LIMOSt RMge Hd.

NO* AfftflfltOAi NJ.<»1) M7.73Mert.S2i,Tony

DRIVERSStraight & tractor, F/T forlocal work. Dispatchedfrom Raritan Center.Clean CDL req d. 2 yrs.exp, In Metro area.

(•OS) 2a$-S4SS

DRIVERS/OWNER OPE R A T O R S - For localpick-up A delivery, if youare already an owner op-erator or interested inbuying your own tractorand going into businesslor yourself, we have animmediate opening foryou. COL. Hazmat andtractor-trailer experiencerequired. Compensationpackage Includes pay forall stops ft miles plusperformance incentives.Low cost insurance andbenelils package avail-able. Earnings guaran-teed to start. Year roundoperation. Home everyn i g h t . O p p o r t u n i t yknocks. Call 800-262-3628 Now. Equal Op-portunity Employer.

DRIVERS- Get on boardwith the rising Star! OTFVShorthaul opportunities.Home weekly (short-haul). No slip sealing.Excellent pay/benefits.BURLINGTON MOTOHCARRIERS 1-800-JOIN-BMC. EOE.

DRIVERS- It your lookI n g to c h a n g ejobs...We're looking foryou. J.B Hunt, one ofAmerica's largest andmost successful transportatlon companies, islooking lor people Inter-ested in learning lo drivea truck. After completingIhe required training, youcan look lorward to earn-ng up to S26.0O0

$30,000 your first year,plus comprehensive benofits. Call: 1-000-8452197 Experienced driv-ers call: 1-80O-368-853BEOE/SubJect to drugscreen

DRIVER- To make localdeliveries with van andwarehouse work CallSteve nt Pelican Pools.

908-534-2400

EARN $SOO OH MOREPER W E E K - Homoworkers needed. As-sembly product nt homoExcellent pay nocordot)messape gives (Uil.nla

P T O »700-- No oxpnn

enco Own hours Pnrllime or lull llmo I'focosnmortgage relunds. 1-000-

ENGINE INSTALLER-HWD/IWD, Exporinncnl i t t C O S S H r y , C f i r s - T r i i t - k a ,l oo l i riocnusnry, «:nll

900-3SB 6H0t)

FENCE PBOPLR Rnlnn,iMAlnllorn, Sithconlintliif* Cxp. nnly Wnll oil(Jo IHinnntu GAGLFFCNCFJ •0fl-B>fl.B77B

FRIE'NDLV HOMP PAKTIBB- now h m oiinnriyn (or dumoil'ilr.IIDMINo i'n*U Irtvnqltiunil I'nitIIIMH hcnlli with (nil limpfmy Iwi! ( illilUiun/(III 'H l

with (nil limpllilUiun liviuCrill I mil}

OMOOM - lull timii Im|irivnln fmrri Miltl IWIVMl'«|i with lltMiim unitfur (it (Hiulpmmit Hnualriunvnii CHII Hiin-J;it rufs".nllnr nprn

Business DevelopmentRepresentativesPert Tim* OpfwrtunltlM

Potential to earn $15,000-120,000 (bote salary,cornmiiiion 4 quarterly bonus) working in the fait-poccd letamarktling deportment of this copier dealer.To qVMlify, you must be aggretsive, mofivaled and•oJet-orienMd as you will be responsible for setting upappointments for our outside sales reps. This is anideal opportunity for those free lo work morning* orafternoon* in our Springfield headquarters.

For appointment, call Vinca at:201-376-0055, ext. 380

Garden Slote Business Machinesfqwel Opponunity Employer M/F

Bs^rJpjlP^^flWfPaTfl •

HAIR SALON A SPANOW HIRINOJ- rn & P/T, hair stylists, Estheli-citn, receptionist, nailtechnician, massagetherapist, Must have 2yeara of experience, ex-cellent salary + benefits.Must apply In person,908-725-6666HAM STYLISTS/MANICURISTS- FT/PT,competitive pay. Exp. &fol lowing a plus.Dunellsn area. Days 908-W-4S77; eves. 908-752-2827, ask for James.

HAIR SVLIST «SHAMPOO ASSISTANT

Needed. Call for inter-view 908-752-2110

MASON LABORERSTiansportation. Experi-ence pref. Will train. Callafter 7pm. S0S-S74.M8S.

MECHANIC WANTED-Auto, light truck exp.req'd. Apply within, Bark-er Bus Co., 1400 Rt. 22E., Brldgewater, or can302-0500 ext. 115.

OST EXPRESS- A com-pany That Cares Aboutits Driversl e Experi-enced drivers lo 32'/;cents • Home Frequentlye assigned Trucks. •Haz-Mat • No west coast.Call 800-925-6667 - TonyRob bins

POOL SALESMAN- Fulltime/Part time. Experi-ence with Pools helpful.Call Steve Pelican Pool*

, 9-SproPOSTAL JOBS

$12.26/hr. to start t ben-efits. Postal carriers,sorters, clerks, mainte-nance. For an applicationand exam Informationcall 1-2 19-738-4715exl.P2817 9am-9pm, 7days

POSTAL JOBSStart $11.41/hr. For exam& application inlo. call219-769-8301 ext. NJS89.99pm Sun-Frl.

PRESSER- Exclusivebridal salon. PT, flexiblehours, convenient loca-tion. Jetre Bridals. Call968-7733, ask for Jefre.

REAL ESTATE SALESExperienced preferred,but will train. Excellenttraining program, greatincome potential, com-pany bonuses, no Iran-chise fees. Take themost Important step foryour career, calj now to[earn how to Increaseyour income and earnwhat you are worth! CallAdele Zletlnskl, Mgr. far aconfidential intervieweves:BEOMINSTER OFFICE

•Ot-781-1000WEICHERT REALTORS

RECENT J-4YR AC-COUNTING G R A D -to fill Jr Accountant/Admin starting pos. w/Cranford CPA firm. Com-puter, Lotus WP profi-cient. Send resume:Forbes Newspapers,Box215,P.O.Box 899, Somer-vllle, NJ, 08876.

RECEPTIONISTBusy professional healthclub Is looking lor ener-getic, upbeal, outgoingFrom Desk Manager. Theright person will be neatand organized, have theability to handle numer-ous tasks at one time,and have a good phonemanner. If this Is you callLane at: 908-356-3333

RESTAURANTFull/part lime. CounterPerson. Experience pre-ferred bul not necessary.Will Irain. ApplyIn person:

60 Mountain Blvd.Warran

Call908-7 J6 3S42

RESTAURANTNOW HIRING for lunch &daytime positions Flox-ible scheduling, advancemonl o p p o r t u n i t i e s .Excel lor homomakorsor students. Wendy's,1010 Slelton Bd., Placa-tiway, (tOBf <81-0040.

8ALES A ENTRY LEVELMANAGEMENT- KnrlnsKurtalns, RT. 22, GroonBrook Coll Dorolhy nl008-960-9220.

SALEBPIOPLEMALE/FEMALE

S39K-I60K ANNUALLYS1OO0 PAID TRAINING

You iTHial he |)0O|)leorlentttd; HRVB n cjpontn11itud11, llfivo i\ tiirB B rnnrty I n s l i w tImmoiilnloly 10 yr oldMfg »t floflitloMllnl nnHC o (THTI or c ifll Kvnirriproducts, AAA 1 rnlmlFilling <1 position!) - SnlnsF'inft nr l>erjlnnnm rimynpply f / f Mn*tlly nvnMcan jiihn: miu-7!io-fl:im)

SALES*lrtn our nl) unilor

I'AIII IIMIQBTTINO TOKNOW YOU

KPCUKTAHIFS W/W l<H If.] r I I 'owni 11> nip -inrir*Hi (.}ii|>i>tnhit>lr> Uunilflr>fI Tpnipiiiiiiv I mi'liiyfl(|tl 1(> I M |ni) l^ill'l <i llMll1)1 If (iHHil CM|M|inl'H»'J ('I

HIGH rowrntOfl F«»1 Union Avn

Noitml dronk, NJ<IOfl 0 S

/ttfvert/n In ffii

SALES- Full Time,enthusiastic, peopleperson wanted fordiverse career inFinancial services with amajor company, FullBenefits, Experienceh e l p f u l but notnecessary, call 754-7576

SECRETARYTemp lo Perm. Pitcat-away location, phones,type correspondence +reports. Computer exp.needed. ConnectionsPersonnel, 322-5200

SECRETARY/SALES SUPPORT-Qrowlng Consulting Co.seeks highly organized,self-motivated personwith good communica-tion skills, good typingskills, WordPerfect exp.Salary plus benefits.

Cail9O8-S2C-8346

SECURITYOpportunity Knocks...

IF VOU CAN OFFERHonesty & DedicationDally Phone Access

A Verifiable BackgroundAnd are Drug Free

w/ReliableTransportation

WE CAN OFFERCompetitive Pay Rates

Prompt AssignmentAdvancementOpportunity

Bonus/Incentives

Corporate & SimilarOFFICER POSITIONSBedminster/Somerset

Someryille

Knock onOur Door A CallProfessional

Security BureauEast Brunswick. NJ

908-257-2724SEEKING MATURE- assertive individual for FTposition in busy Optomelrlc office. Knowledgeof computer req'd Previ-ous exp w/ insurancereimbursement Is a defi-nite plus. Position avail.Immediately. Call 908-272-11331,'ask for Jean,

S E R V E R S - dishwash-ers, Hosts/hostesses,Now hiring, apply inperson, O'Connors Beef& Ale, 708 MountainBlvd., Watchung. NJ

SOCIAL SERVICESYouth counselor for resi-dential facility workingwith emotionally dis-turbed adolescents Ex-perience required. Parttime weekends. Send resume:P.O. Box 6871, Bridgewater, NJ 08807. Adention: Human Resource

SOMERVILLEINSURANCE AGENCY

Seeks experienced CSRto join our personal linesteam. Good typing skills.License a plus. For ap-pointment call Gloria at

906-725-9400

TEACHER TO SERVE-as athletic director torBedminster's SummerRecrea t ion morningp r o g r a m : Ju ly 5 t hthrough August 5th Calllor application. RandyGrauiTholz . 908-B50-9442

TELEMARKETING•No Sailing Involved!*

We have immediate panlime openings lor ambi-tious individuals in ourSales Support Depart-ment. Working ovonings& weekends in our Cen-tral New Jersey nrca ol-fico, you simply call froma provided list to sol upresidential appointmentstor our Salos Representa-tives

We oflor S7 00 plus in-centives If you aro alleast 17 years old withgood phono skills nnd anaggressive bul porson-able slylo, call foclny foran appointment

TruOraan CtwmLiwnSouth Plalnfleld, NJ

908-755-2795eoe m/f/tl/v

TELEMARKETINGUplionl rind onnrgntlr in-dividuals noodod lor fulllima (iinf pwt limn pasitimiB in our ClnssilimlDopt Somi'ivlliri loca-tion Fxcnllniit plionnninnntir «tnil custommf l f ' l VI Cf» O f t | H M i / it l l O I H l4killn im^inrmj ^ninoi: (>rnp ui i»r i1 uper urn < cliolpflil I'lnni" conlfirlDoiJCI Illinm, .11 (!l(l(l|r?v-MMn. P»I rii"cJ i

ForbesN 1! W S P A V \l K S

rmicK onivr.nTi\ etiIVI* 'r'\ ft hox IMM ^l-Mu^l hjivn i Innn nu n<0Cull tmtwni'ii I K, '1 I'M..nl v / M l / I IS' , . M.itl

or

wii.m i.ions

I i , i n , f i \wr i r i |,M !', •]>•[ u ' i l yII1IM M I PI t n IK ( V I 1 I I Nil*t H j i up, M n w Inn n{|Cull / IM /«*-<)0H> p»|HUH 4AM IIIPM, I (Jays

DA.

automotive salosExpsfbno* helpful but not neotssaiy.

Will train the right person.Cuf^nwr-oonscious organizations. ,Excetlent oompensation package.

Great product lines.Call Kevin Hotahan at 809/683-0722. '

servicetechnicians

Experience preferred.Excellent working conditions, benefits.Curstotner-consdous organizations.

Call Dick Bittle at 609/683-0840.

80*0tonpktymiti-

HOME HEALTH AIDESNeeded for long andshort term private dutycases. Full time/part timepositions available inSomervllle area im-mediately. Mult be certi-fied with current certifi-cate and physical. Call9a-5p, Mon-f ri.

908-722-7770Dependable Hearth Care

MEDICAL ASSISTANTFor busy 6 Doctor Ortho-pedic Practice in Bridge-water. Position open to acertified Medical Asst, aCast Technician or X-rayTechnician with Ortho-pedic Medical Ass t expIndividual must have ex-cellent communicationskills, enjoy a busy workenvironment and thor-oughly like what he/shedoes. Bilingual a plusFor more informationand/or Interview, callDiane 722-0822

Nursing

CERTIFIED HOMEHEALTH AIDES

Immediate work.Interim* Healthcare isrecruiting CertifiedHome Health Aides tojoin its professionalnursing team. We offer:• Excellent Pay• Desirable Work•Flexibility of hours• Convenient locations• Optional health planCar and telephone amust.

(908) 549-2210(908) 725-1820(609) 443-1711

9

H E A I T H C A I I2» So. Main St.

Edison. NJ 0*837Equal Opp<y Employer

SOWPwt-Time

Employment

ADMIN. ASST.- Familyowned and operated in-surance agency lookingfor exp. P/T personWordPerfect for windowskills a must. Very flex-ible hrs & days. Pleaselax or mail resume.

Fax (908) 276-1971Aim. K. JonesP.O Box 660

Cranlord NJ 07016

B O O K K E E P I N GCLERK— as needed inBridgewBter Home office.lor data entry. Computerexp & flex, a must! call9OB-7O7-.1042 Iv msg

DENTAL ASSISTANT-Mature person, exp prel.but will Irain. 20-25 hrswk. Send Hesume toDental Assl., 125 Living-slon Ave, Edison. NJ0BB20 9QB-549-4974

D E N T A L A S S T -B-45am-3pm. 4-5 dayswk , some Sat.s, Somor-villo. 900-725-2105

FASHION ADVISORWear & show ladies jow-elry 2 owes. S125 No in-voBtmonl. 909-756-306B

MACHINE OPERATOR-With mechanical ability.lor grinding and polish-ing optical lonscs. call908-35C-146I _

MANICURIST- o«p inall phrisos of N.nl cnio.some following. BONUS.Fanwooci nraa, 9OU-7526553

MEDICAL BILLINQ/COL-LECTIONfi ASSIS forbusy stirgicnl prni.-licc inSo Hlninnold Exponontoi t t q i i i r u t ) Cni l K f i f tn n!'JOU-SG 1-1)7 10

MODELS— Now l.ui!;TV-l'iml-fiir.hinn A<|o« IIA up nt Dnnmm fruslMortnls Mniltnon NJ Culllor Appi i'0t-J//.|7Jll)

PHONET I V E S I* "I f I

o 11 It ii ii I N n I i (i I I ,i I(• o r |) en ,l ti nn I 11'«thlesi hi»( lull' AMI'MwiMtlmiii/wiiiikil.tyi . i v 1111.11 > I r'f KICIUMII nhlriifH| ^.il.iry

I n i n n I i v o «. % '!•lrfuni>ili;llli i ipnultHI'- ''.' '•11-11

I'MONFI I P C A L L S li> M i"i•"•<|i •, M I . ( I I I H I M ' '• 1 v -i- (• S

u f i ;»i1lti l l ln I rlay•: in ' twt ' I .' :tl) 1 Ml • • . t l . i ry| i h | ! , , I I I I»n1 ivn

I . i l l i | i | / | . ' | r i i | l i lKiH

(• f coufctons •I MI .ii I• • 'ii nlMWnv ( "i I*'«111 tv iln^'K v*1 In '<Itiiintinj inovldnd Hutmllti '.,i'(i« IHHHIIO'in Alill

90S0Part-Tim*

PTCUST SVC HEP AD#134PT positions available inNew Brunswick area hos-pitals with the TV RentalCo. Musi be responsibleand have a neat appear-ance. Extensive walking,collections, and recordkeeping. Flex days. 9am-3pm or 4pm-8pm. mcl iwkend day, $6.5O/ru IOStan, paid holidays andvacation For a local in-t e r v i e w .call wkdays 201-353-2316. exi 1.

PT MEDICALASBIS/RECEPTIONIST

Union olf lce. flexiblehours, experience pref dCall 908-964-6929

PT RECEPTIONIST— Inranimal clinic, Mon., TuesThurs Fri. & SaiurdnvExperience dealing w.'i!lrio public and ons,.computer skills pio-lerreci Call Aflene oi>tween 1 lam & 1pm 5729166

R A I L I N G F A B R I C ATOR— must bo ablr HJlayoul and weld, callSteve at 908-752-1398

RETAIL SALESWe're looking to> acheerful, mature personwho enjoys people tojoin us al Cynlhia s Ha':-mark located al The Vil-lage at Bedminsler. Mustbe willing to pitch inwherever necessary. C.iiCindy at 234-2426.

SALES

PART TIMEFULL TIMECAREER

OPPORTUNITY• Potential earnings

S20K- S50K• Flexible daytime hour;,• No Experience

Necessary• Professional Training

Provided• BenelitsII you ato a self-slarteienthusiastic, money mon-v.ilod and have an intoiest in a career with hin^income potential, pleasoconsider this Opportunityto join our national aovciUsing company. Open-ings in Somofsei nnoHuntordon countiesPlease call Mrs Sack:, :i:1-800-345-1 !23

GETTING TQKNOW YOU

S A L E S / I N V E N T O R VCLERK— Busy Lib,uo<store looking for ovV &wknd help. Cash regis-H"expenonco a • 1. Must lilth e a v y l o a d s 2,1Non-smoker Garwominip a 9 08-789-C 5jM.

SCHOOL BUS DRIVERWith CDL he. PT AM 2 1•1 hrs PM. 21/2 hrs -plusaddod time cleaningbuses plus nlriletids ^local trips. Conscien|iou",person, start unmedEdison area. Call

908-5490120

SECRETARY P /T - alternoon for social sotvit *agency Good inlojpt"sonnl. clerical, iprcpurnskill:; & PC exp ui"Sondf.ix resump IO:M,- I I IConwny. P O Box • t 7,tScolrti Plains NJ <,i

SUMMER W O R K - li.if: * pef lOncpci Part l i n nG i mtncl s pe r son M.ivN'w C u n t . u i w , i i 11"luATiship Ftnrircl of I• nI l - i aiirlinq Hiiiut. W;ii c> 11 N J 1) ' 0 :> <aim IM i u1 it

T E L E M A H K E T E nl fn i | i thiu JUMP tn v.; • r-Kon r.ppc i.il 1 ufid fl,^':ii(]I'Vi'Ml in Mif l tSl fsf l i KUnion i nitntip1, f: xcQHi'ntlihnno skills. Ar igrni i iv i 1

'. innnninirrtlor lh,i l t .usninlivnti" nthi'f.. .'0 h.wi'Mk i ,lll '1 Spin H)n.'lid ;'.i \:\

5100Crtreer Invmstmottt*/

Opportunltlv*

" • ! ' •

A L A S K A J O t t H ! I Ml) i n .11, •-, \t i [ i n n , i 'YI ' I ' I M i l ' * I r . t l I 'St I I ITK inA I M ' I I I I M i t M l * I l t ' l I ( M i lM i n n " . ••• l i n l i h : f i l u at n . u c i ' I -•' n i i M i i i i . n i n i t . ' iIn -; * . I I I 1 EifP4 ti-Mi 4 ' , '( > i v : ! . • ; • ( I I I J

1 1 1 • f > I ' < : < 1 1 - 1 1 > I "••:

AVUN HAIFS ;All nrpno ,

f in niioiirinliiin i nil

B-8 May 12,

Automotivesooo

AUTOMOUILLh8010 • Und»r f 10008020 - Under 125008030 • AutomobMee8040 • Antiques and

Classic Automobile*8050 • Lu»ury

aoao • Bportacars•070 - Family Venaaoao • 4K4'«, Sport and

UajM Trucks8090 • Trucks and Van*•100 • Financing• 110 • Parts, Acces-sorial

and Services

•120 • AutomotiveRepair

•130 • MiscellaneousAutomotive

In ttn C/ata/ffed/

ACUR

Savings

Selection

Service

46,000 Off!And UnbelievableLow Lease Payments!

200 In Stock!Many Hard-To-Find Modelsover

FREEi • Delivery of your car to

your home• Service Loaner CarsPLUS:Parts 2 Service DiscountsExtended Service HoursSaturday Service

»aftiF*wnMORRISTOWN

SOMERVILLE

•TV IwPflt rtOtftFLEMINGTON

S3Wn.Fmm'PRINCETON

MUm.rwmUNION

1S Wit FromWOODBfMDQE

$1000

aaaaaaaaaaaaaa• HOW TO BOY •• A UBID CAR •EXPERIENCEDINFORMATION.

• 1-t00.7«7-2441 •S2.aS/MrNUTK.

(APPROXIMATELY 4MINUTES.)

THE • UNER•22 N. WASHINQTON

AVENUEOUNELLEN, NJ

MUST BE 1« OR OLDER.

CADILLAC- 78 Oevllle.Baige, fully loaded,excel, cond. 1 owner.SfiOO. Call 586-2M8.

* • * • • • •CHEVY- 77 Impale

Sedan, 3S0 eng., R&H,AC. automatic, low mi.,showroom cond. BO.

908-699-0051

CHEVY— 77 PICK Up,$1000 B/O. needs work,908-23 L9421

F O R D - 79 Mustang.Yellow. Good shape &runt wall. Asking $1000

Cell (»W) W - 0 4 M .

FORBES NEWSPAPERS

AUTO BIOGRAPHY

F O R D - 84 Tempo.Look* good but needsmotor work. Bast Offer.8QB-463-0370.HONDA- 82 Civic sta-tion wagon. 90k. 5 spd.,e«c running cand.. S850B/O. 908-722-3251HONDA- 83 Prelude.Needs starter & bodywork. Best Oiler. 908-581-1840.NISSAN- 81 200 SX, 5spd.. PB, PS. P-wirt.,Fab. inspec new am/fm/cats, runs good, *S650B/O Quick sale? 685-1310

NISSAN- 82 Stanza.118K. Ssp manual, AC,runs great, S900/BO.548-3469/632-4672OLDS— '81 Omega 4DR,many new parts. Reliabletransportation. S900.909-469-2232 days.

AeVeftiae an) I M CtoCwMd,

O L D S - 81 Cutlaaawagon, V8, all pwr. AM/FM Cass. flood trantp.S1000/BO. W8-463-9171OLDS- 64 Ciera. Needsmotor work. Best Otter.Call alter 5. 526-3535.

PLYMOUTH- 77 GrandFury, SI000 B/O, Int.clean, runs good, 908-968-3757

PONTIAC- 78 TransAm. T-lops. new tires &rims, Like Smokey * theBandit, has blown en-gine. $500, 287-5213

witJsr $2900

CHRYSLER— 87 LeBaron, 4dr, 4cyl. 2.SL alloptions, 98K, orlg.owner,exc.cond.S1995.356-8832

ACURAof sqmerville

New Jersey's Volume Acura DealerRoute22 West, Bridgewater ""7f\ A A A A iMonday Friday 9arS 9pm < 9 0 8 ) ^ ( J 4 " U v 3 U 'Sail 19am - 6c

CLAYTON AMERMANDODGE

"74 Years ol Sales and Service*Main Street, Peapack

(908)234-0143CADILLAC

KEMPER CADILLAC6 mUes Irom Bridgewater Commons

Rout* 22 E M I at Route 287 OverpassBadgewatar

(908) 469-4500TTV

ROYAL CHEVROLET/QEORout* 28

Just East ol Rt. 23 4 Rt. 287 IntersectionBound Brook

(908) 356-2460I 3BCHRYSLEKyPBfM0UTH

BELLE MEAD GARAGERoute 206Beta Mead

(908)359-8131

CLAYTON AMERMAN DODGE"74 Year* ol Sites and Service-

Main Street. Peapack(908) 234-0143

KEMPER PONTIAC5 miles from Bridgewater Commons

Rt, 22 East at Rt 287 OverpaasBridgewater

(908)469-4500

MIRCURY- 05 TopazOS. 5sp, fully loaded,m e c h a n i c a l l y newbumper to bumper. Oreatcar, fun to drive. 968-4510 after 6pm.NISSAN- 83 Stanza. 4cyl., 4 spa., ac, am/tm/cass.. 92k, runs good,$900 B/0, 906.359-5006PONTIAC- 83 GrandPrix Brougham. Excelcond. Ponliic rally whls.•5K 12500 9O4-561-1840.

PONTIAC- IS. 6000-4Ofl, auto, air, clean,runt excel. High miles.•137S. B0B-722-7946.SUIAKU- SS Wagon, 5spd., beige, very goodcond.. S1M0 B/O, 201-267-1372

fri the C/sssJfNMfI

WE PRICED IT SO YOU CAN HANDU IT

fiBWING INTCftHEQEV

GREAT DEALS AREBLOOMIN ALL OVER

NIW I f f 4 DODOI ORAND CARAVAN3 0 Ufr# V-6, 4 5p«d automatic, formly volu* package 261 include A/C dyoi herni, meldingbodyvd*. undar»»a< iloiog* drawer, power liftgaia} releace, map & cargo lighfi. olio reai defioilei.luggage rack AM/FM Ca«»'l«, full ipa>». tuntc/een glon, i«ar heat A A/C ipasd conital, A Miifeenng ST» U 1 -*4VrN #*WI 6327/M 5 R.P.1J 1,854 00 Rebate nllo-ronce & oqu.pmenl »a<ing»ii J96300AlioS4DOcollegegfod^bor#inclgd#dinl3000r:asht»d for 36,OO0miletpuc* W 1,846 EiKludet Tortt, plan* A M V h ^ k fl

$18^330l3000r:as

USED CAR INVENTORY1 9 t t MAZDA

•2s) OLX4 Di 4-ryI, nulo P/S. P/B, P/wind,P/lo< k s. A/C. Tml Gltiis, Rr. Dolfoil.AM/FM Cal l . , M<mn Roof, Atlo»»h(H.|s, 1 o~n , , S1I, * T 4 I 1 I 3 A77 J VtN#J 1506031J i l milm VtN#J 1506031

54,995I f ts ) HYUNDAI

iXCIL OLS4 Of A ryt, 'j-\fK\, I'/S. P'B, A/C.t.nl Glci^i. AM/fM f ins , Allny*lmi]li I IIV»MBI l,i Hi', mildtVlrl«GU(l/IIM7

4 •Dr.,4-cyl.,5 . p d . P/S, P/B, A/C, P/Locks/Wifrorj/Winclow^.Ciuisu.Tilt. RDslto^l, Clolh Inl. Coniolo, Buckels.

• AM/FM Cnj i , Never (ilted. fe^iainderof new car guaianlae. MSRP $2) ,297LotushBn* I 500mi VINNT7J414O

$12,990I f f a DODOI

DAYTONAJ Dt, i cyl, ciiylr,, P/5, C/B, A/C. RiDfilinsl. AM/FM, Wintjnw Louvnis,Stk * m / - I 5A I'J OCK) miles

i t f O ORANDPRIX

If tO* ' *

..•Ml1 D> Aulo. P/S, P/B, A/C, Cassette P/ '""> P'l°ik«. A/C AM/FM Can Till WhlWindows V.ft, CfuiSS Conlrol VIN - C'"»° Cnl'l . ft,r Sun Hoof .Spoil -f—'•KF22O383, 5145V Mllos i i ^Bm ' Si" *

. VIN#LAI 45<<78

'I

l l u a t d anfry tyilmN4 81A, <???! mil.i

i f it OMC1500 PICKUP

V-Oi, VB, ciulo, P/S, P/B, A/C, AM/fM, E» Coivl , i.nwiiBr. B»<( OipSlop Bumper, Slk #T44 1BA 70,500

l , VIN#KE'iI591?

1992 VWPASSAT OL

i Di, 4 cyl aulu

A/C AM/rwcoIk.ik.ii Pwi r

M.™ I , « . . i1.1

P/lpclil,i i inww.cniutci, i"i

Ro..' Alloy wha.li, L,k«M • 141 v;« 1O8S5

$2,995 $7,995 $7,489 $11,495

DEMOS • DEMOS • DEMOS1 #93 COLT 4 DR 1993 STIALTH IS 1993 SPIRIT I I 4 DR 1993 HIAITH RTwi. — i FII i/ / . i . - . . . . I . A .,..< ....... i..ii . . . . . . . '•' l""1^ i 'N- i " " h ' * v v " M P I • »r»««/ >i,,

. i l l . I n * t , i , k^l- L , , ..1,1 - . , (

$9,989 I.KlMrII l.j'lnry $20,399 I.-. ll, I.,

nil l.icli

W'.-in ^ 0l MFN V fS 4 »fi«»d ^iuto I, Af^S

• I W y l ' S S I ' l AWOt,< | , r t< | ] ( .a l

$13,989

.ltr,T whitplf ip l l

">i»r>^ ' " i | l-tjt f i fin letrlliei li<r<Vel ten

p r l l l | l ) ) i,,,,,!, , dUrjM, -I IW//t, AM/I M '. f

VIN fvcn/M«i | it) in*.

|ri«Hinlf All

GET THE BESTFOBUff' Where The CustomerComes First!!

itotner

908-548-350085 Central Avenue

at Route 27 * Metuchen

From Garden State Parkway:I xit 131 North/South JKonto nt. 27 Suutn at /in r #*»"";ttyht, turn on to Ctwtml Avo j Q b f

From Routt 297 North: (PWKWAV)Motuchnn Itoutn '// I xlt,Ml at ;inl llqht, right atrtnxt light to vrwtrnl Avo

from Rautm 297 South:Motuchnn Now DurhamRoad twit, /off at light,left at next light to ventral Avo.

Routs (

287

1 9 9 4 B M W 3 2 5 i A4 - D O O R A U T O M A T I C

mo

tr fc. OMM, fee, tot. ana e m

*ol*eisbra*ees*«e«!*tom.*mmmu p

O / APR Financing• tiitnM Stnki Hours * CmpUmntvy Cowtttf Tnntpvrttiioo• Sitortby Servict ind ?tt\% Horn • Ttit M M ! CoiftptriffM Ptktt, Atmyt!

731 Route #I.Edtion,Ni

C H I W - 84 Camaro Z-28, White, V-a, US, P-wln., PB, PS, l-tops, eic.cond., 13000 828-8144

MO YOUKNOW.. .

mat an ad In this localpaper also goes into 22other local papers?Reach over 380,000readara with one call!

1-SOO-SBS'MMDOOOe— 93 GrandCaravan. Auto, standpkg. 7 passgr, 10K. As-surne lo leas* 769-4388

POHD- ea Mustang LX.PS, PB, AC. body ere.cond. Ashing S4000/BO.0, 469-2124/lv,356-0203F O N D - 89 TaurusWagon, 6 cyl. Ps, PB,Auto, new tires, 72K ml.Great cond. Trailer hitch.S7000/BO. 287-5213HYUNDAI- 91. SonataQL8. Whit* w/nevy rag-top,4dr,auto,a!l pwr,35K.asking MS00.7S8-6963J E I P - • • WranglerLarado, 6 cyl.. manual,hard/soft lop, 59k, S7800B/O. e«C. contf.,752-5154

MADZA- 90 Prtge LX,Loaded, Am/FM Cess.AC, Auto, PS, PB, PL.Wa aunroof. Eac. cond.ST500 nefl. Bob 627-0367MAZDA- 63 RX7 GSL.Gold, leather Int., Ssp,eunrf, AC, rotary eng.$3000/80. 722-0509.MAZDA- 93 RX-7, Mon-tega blue, with tan leath-er, garaged. 9K ml.524,900. 908-683-2123

M M C U H V - 88 Marquis,50k ml.. PW. AM/FMcass, AC, new tires,S4000. 906-685-1069MERCURY- 89 SableLS, black, auto, loaded,good cond. 66K mi.S8500. 685-2315M I T S U B I S H I - 93Eclipse Sports coupe,candy apple red, reclin-ing front bucket seats,am/fm/caes, w/6 speak-ers, clock, re/defog w/timer, re/wiper/washer,p/mirrors, rear spoiler,graphic eccents. ps, allseason tires, full wheelcovers, need to sell orlaaae by end ol June.Moving, to buy $15497 orlease J29B.20'mort, 908-925-0361NISSAN- 86 300ZX, redw/grey Int. T-tops, auto,loaded, 97K mi. $5500.908-231-9225NISSAN— 87 Pulsar.Sip, AC, stereo system,t-top, dealer serviced,S3900/BO. 429-1741.

NISSAN- 67 Senlra, 4cyl., auto, ac, gpod int. 4dr.. rune a ic . 13200 B/O,908-761-1960NISSAN- 92 Stanza XE.Ssp, am/im cass., PS,PB, PW, Gold warranty,31K, t10,000. 719-2328T O Y O T A - . 87 TercelCoupe. AC, 5 spd. 92Kml. orlg. owner. "GreatShape. I2B2S. 699-9146TOYOTA- 69 Camry OX.4dr, auto, PW, PL, 65K,•neel cond. 87900. 90S-722-7664.V O L V O - 84 2 4 5 ,Wagon, beige, 75k, verygood cond., AC, S2700B/O, 201-267-1372

K M O - 54 Pick up, F-100, A clssiic In fire-engine redt orig. *ng. re-cently re-built, Wish myBody looked this good at401 84200 B/O. 908-603-7355

ton

OOOOC- 83 ConversionVan. Good condition.High-top. Capt's chra,$3200. 966-7466• M D - 87 Aeroster, 8paasenger, AC, S spd.well malnt. axe. cond.good tires plus snows.Asking 83800. 7B1-0882

4K4B,UgM

FORD- 84 Bronco II.4sp w/OD, e«cel. cond.$3500 firm. SOt-469-4821RANOI R O V I R - 92,red/tan tea, moonroof,dog guard, 2BK mi,$27,500. 719-8437

Twekmi Vans

CHIVY- 75 C45, 23 ftbed w/rolloll A winch,427 V8, Auto, S6000 orBO. 1-800-664-3681 askfor Tony.

FORO- 87, F250, 4x4,76k ml., asking $5000.Call Jim 908-719-9636.

OID YOUKNOW.. .

thai an ad In this localpaper also goea into 22other locel papers?Reach over 380.000readers with one call!

Adtorffe* In the

Sttet.ipactfnimt

AJjiutabtt Muring column

AMITM MM radio

H-incb Atti-Mltitaiial tirt.i

Hahgen heaMamp,'u-ilh vtiritint) chimt

For $lft32S 3 ou get alot of things you di

CttV:iffuril\fnur MT Ub Rt,ir.<tat btttt

iwlUt.<Full-ltiijjtb cmttr ri'ii.'olf

with •ilorat/t c/iiltr

ca^plusafon

When you saw the number $10,325, you were probably expectingto see some stripped-down shell of a car.\bu see, at Saturn, we hadthe remarkable opportunity of starting from scratch. By designingour cars from the tires up, we were able to build well-thought-outcars that people can actually afford. (As you can see fromthe handy diagram, we didn't skimp on technology either.)Of course, if all this still seems just a little too good to be true, thenyou're welcome to stop by and check out one feature that's alsostandard with every Saturn, our no-hassle, no-fuss sales experience.

SATURN OF UNIONY O U R N E I G H B O R H O O D S A T U R N RETAILER

2675 ROUTE 22 WEST, UNION 1-908-686-2810A D i r n i O N t K I N I I o f C O M P A N Y . A D I M I K I N I K I N D of C A R .

M,,V,rV,/!ofihr IWSI, w $10, >'!l imlitihmi rttmltrprtptimtuw 1IH11 tmni'iu'ildhini. 7i'i,v, lu(il,>r, tlii<>iflh'il,' itikkhoiliii Ifptt'il tiki h< Ittiiin'awn ithmt Sitluru itm1 imr (iw ,'Mifl.i, toupf.i, nm> iriiyiwi,', pitiu<t mil w any Itmr til I W- V2 HW, C) IW Sitturn (W

IWYiro

J I \ —

JEEPS EAGLES CHEVY'S GEO'S HYUNDAI MITSUBISHI ISUZUS

Eagle

•TSTl1• O la*

CHEVROLETISU2U

icrr;

SPECIAL WEEK-LONG SELL-OFF!

4-WH. DRIVE BLAZER SALE!

Urn-

ALLMs ON SALESELL-OFF PRICES ON ALL

I SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES IN STOCK!

•MONTEROSI •RODEOS^TRACKERS

GR.CHEROKETS •SUBURB* MS

CUSTOM VAN & TRUCK SALE

SAVEruop AFULLMOeOOO!

OR M » 1MB WmtLjmjm e>. ft.of raw A ye»« Vnt and Trucks!For_-ggr lor -SHOW ter"WOWTorTlAYP

•rMoel

•C»foVaM*SpertVsM

1994 CHEVY "BLAZER"AIR COND. 4 FM STEREO!New MarM S-10. 4JL EH V * Eng. Auto Tram. Pm Strp 4 M l .Air, AaVFM S i n n Can. r * r / t4«* Radrtng BudMM. 2-Of. MaM-lie PiM. M Saaaan T m . Faking Rr Saai. i c . d r . n l d i CanV

1 Environ Pkg Kid. HM CaKoma Graphic Ht-TachI Alarm. RuiBoan*. Custom

PinttnpM. Undercoat ftRUB. «e. Rabah)(i> i any.Kagnrtk)dlr.3-rr/je,<»0Ml Warranty Sal VINt

| R011«R0/SftM4477

"Total List:•21,415!

1994 CHEVROLETCONVERSION VAN!Na» » w | AMD Common Van. W Ertg. 4-Saa Ijmwalr TrarmWOO, Par Staring 4 M M . Air Cond. AWFM CaaaHa. P*ry»>ju»mnlii*a>iiiii,Tm.Ciuaa,fn)ntiHaBrCoin tafitwn.Mrt r P W I U * . Capl f*air«. SoMai, tear CMtoflM tt. Ful

d a n Package. * H M I ,VMMB210M5. SalaPnea j

|*W COBBBI Grad Akw-ancefl Quaffed.

tToUIUsh

SAME DAY AUTO FINANCING! HUNDREDS OF VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM WITH

'94 ISUZU TROOPER 4X4 I l i n i i rAIR COND. & AM;FM CASS! I I i L W

•NO PRIOR CREDIT • RECENT GRAD•MVORCEP -RETIRED -NEW JOB•NEW TO AREA •OTHER PROBLEM?

If you're 18 and a US Cttnn. ham a Job and a

reasonable down payment, thi* wMk Global

Guarantees to arranga auto financing tor you and

issue temporary plates for same-day delivery!

CALL (906) 757-4000 or simply APPLY IN PERSON!

Na» 4-0r "S", 24-VaM VIS Eng. 5-SpO Wan- a, 4WD. «UFM C«« w» Sakrt. Air. P

T*. Cruiaa. tnr IMpm. Ar WipainAatliartDataggar. Alum AtoyWhU. Cargo Cw. ftactrMig Front- " HVW»R7911»«»va»Hi3

LCarpatl

ECLIPSE WITH AIR COND, AUTO?POWER STEERINO ft ANVFM CASSIBrand Naa W »Or Spori C o * * . 1JL SOHC 4Cyi EflgaAe1! FuaiH|. Auto Tram. PVPB.Ait Card. M M , AWFUr M m , FIJI MM CmT* Strg Column. Duat

AX-Saaaon Hatfeak. F i * m-•IrunMntation, t MoralS*MWS7. VINineO47|ZB.

k MSBP t14.$92.

'94 MITSUBISHI GALANTWITH DUAL AIR BAGS!

j«1 N w - T 4Or Satan. Z.4L SOKC 16-Va*« «Cyl Enq uMPIFual Inj, 5-Sod Man Trana w/OO. P*r Sftg t BraaM 9ual M Bap.Owl ««raM Saawaa M m . S-Way AdjuMvM* Onwr't Saal. 1

» MSRP: IH0B0

TOA FULL

HUNDREDS OF 1983-1993 IMPORTED & DOMESTICVEHICLES INCLUDED - NOT ONE HELD BACK!

FOR EX4WPLE:

'84 FORDFOfl EXAMPLE: CADILLACS VOLKSWAGENSGorr«,«te.

Tempo a 4-0r. ^ gAuto Itar.s, P«r Slrg &Brafcas. Hr Oehost, Aif, T/Glass. & MOTS' StktP27Q1VINIEB208436/57156 MlMADA Hetait $1600. 800!'87 NISSAN !Senna 4-f> 4-Cy! Eng. 5-Spd Mar, Trans, Man Strg.Pwr Brakes. AUTW Stereo.Res' Defrost, Air Cond. T/Glass. & More' S»*P2719 t 1

VIN*HU50611&116513 Ml *NADA Retail: S3700

Colt 2-Dr, 4-Cyl Eng. 5-Spmd Man Trans, ManStrft Pwr Brakes AJ*FMCassene, Raar Defros!, &Monti Stk»33S87A. VIN*RU02107S«1790MI

'87 FORD1920!

1650!!'87 TOYOTA S

Aerosiar Cargo Van 2-Dr.6-Cyi Eng, Auto Trans.Power Steering 4 Brakes.& More' Stk§R593A. VIN*HZA39692/S6920MI

more!

1 C H R Y S L E R S A M M M S and mor«!

"2890!!Ten* 2-Dr 4-Cyi Eng. 4-SpflMan Trans. Man Strg. P«r

Typical Braites AM/FM Sieteo Riin Stock DeJrrjsl i More SHOH277A

'92 PLYMOUTHSundance 4Dr. 4 Cyl Eng.Automatic Trans. Po*erSlMnng & Brakes. AM/FMStereo. Rear Defrost. AirCond. T/Glass. & More'Slk«33292ANN181659/*8450 Ml

AriM,Raa<>ir and moral

•PONTIACS

• T O Y O T A S C Ky,. T«^ ^

-NISSANS Z T P ^ ^ V ^ '

•HONDAS•HYUNDAIS•JEEPS

ALL USED 4-WHEEL DRIVES INCLUDED!

• A C U R A S ^ v 1 ^ * ^ ; EXPL0KRS

vrUnUOEKort>,TwinwVandmort( | ^ n H |

ISUZUSo^^%V£ST!| mim*

RAMCHARGERS

TRACKERSBRONCOS

•BLAZERSTROOPERS .TROOPERS

'.EXPLORERS••VRUNNERS•PICK-UPS

WRANGLERS andmon!

GLOBAL MTtO DISTRIBUTION DEPOT TTSSESSK^PLAI

SPECIAL SALE HOURS: CALL FOR: Directions from AirportsOpen Daily 9 AM to 10 PM, Open Or Free Shuttle Bus Schedule FromSat, to 8 PM, Sun. for Browsers Major Cities in the Tri-State Area.

••ZJS&.TUX

' 'ZHk E « S F F F 5 1 0 > * £ Saeja.995 taJ500MFSReDale& $500 Co^ege Grad Allow It Quai ± MSRP- H7.tf40. Com Phg S2.49B "MSRP $18,940, Dtr iost options a S2 475 fPnces confuted for 60-mo. fExcet & Elantia), 48-mo (Eclipse) 42-ra (Giant) A 30-mo (Trooper) closed-end iease&S2S0OcapcostRrJuction.1-nio r t a j * l e s f f [ ! / p . t S t n a | p l ! t o ^

D

B-10 W«stfl»M Record May 12,1994

SPECIFICATIONSBASE PRICE: $16,508PKICE AS TESTED: $21,136ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter

DOHC 14 w/EFIENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/

1762 ccHORSEPOWER: 110ft 56O0

rpmTORQUE (ft/1 bsj: 115 (a

28O0 rpm

TEST DRIVE

YVHEELBASE: 99.9768. 9"TRANSMISSION: Five-

speed manualCURB WEIGHT: 2415 lbsFUEL CAPACITY: 15.9 gals.TIRES: P185/70R14BRAKES (F/R): Front disc,

rear drum, both/ABSDRIVE TRAIN: Front

engine/front-wheel driveVEHICLE TYPE: Four

passenger/two-doorPERFORMANCE:

EPA Economy, mpg,city/highway/average:27/34/31

0-60 MPH: 9.9 secondsSTOPPING TIME:

1/4 mile in 17.4 seconds at 79mph

TOWING CAPACITY: 2000pounds

Toyota's Celica shows the most evldsnce of its redesign up front.

Celica's new look ismore than skin deepWeight-saving materials, rack-and-pinionsteering mean better gas mileage, handlingBy TOMHAOIN

FORBES NEWSPAPERS

For Toyota Celica historians, 1994 mightbe condised with 1973. That was the yearToyota added a Celica GT model to compli-ment the entry-level ST version. Twenty-one years later, for 1994, Toyota hasdropped the GTS model, trimming theCelica line to only an ST and GT. A sportspackage, optional on the GT liftback, re-places the GT-S version. It's supposed tomake things easier.

Introduced in 1970 as a '71 model, theCelica has undergone six body transforma-tions. In 1976, a hatchback was addedalongside the notchback, while the Supramodel, which began life as a Celica, is nowan exotic sports machine and still uses itsoriginal inline six-cylinder powerplant. Cel-ica is now offered with either a base 1.8-liter or more powerful 2.2-liter engine. Un-fortunately for those enthusiasts who de-mand the most performance, the 200-horseAll-Trac turbo with all-wheel drive hasbeen discontinued in the U.S.

EXTERIORThe complete restyle is most noticeable

in front. Four small headlight lenses peerat those ahead and usually provoke a love-it or hate-it response.- A massive intakethroat is located under the Toyota emblem,while aerodynamics are addressed by elim-inating all square corners, and using asleek roof line which rolls gracefully to ashortened rear deck. Both ST and GTcome with standard five-spoke hubcaps, orcan be ordered with optional alloy wheels.Our model's rear spoiler added a touch ofsporting flair to what was otherwise a basemodel car.

INTERIORThe dash is dominated by a central

speedometer which intrudes slightly intothe space occupied by the tachometer, fueland temperature gauges. The stereo andhuating/cooling controls have been slantedtoward the driver for easier operation.Front bucket seats move fore and aft, andare also adjustable for seat cushion lengthand height. So, too, are the headrestheights, A full center console comes asstandard fare, while the AM/FM cassettestereo uses four speakers and has morethan adequate performance, Headroomand k'ftrnom are plentiful up front, but rearseating may become somewhat cramped.

ENGINEERINGToyota's concentration on weight-saving I

materials has produced a new car that'slighter as well as stronger than previous |generation Celica models. By using alumi-num pieces under its skin, Celica is not Ionly 10 percent lighter, which increasesfuel mileage, but suffer by 20 percent. The |Celica's new rack-and-pinion steering ismore precise, its tires give good grip andthe suspension offers minimal understeer— all of which make for predictable, fun,sports-level driving. Front and rear sub-frames isolate those inside from road noisewithout sacrificing road feel, and electroni-cally controlled two-way shocks controljounce and rebound. Anti-roll bars arefound on both the front and rear suspen-sions.

HANDLINGThe base model Celica ST has been fit-

ted with a 1.8-liter twin-cam in-line four-cylinder engine. Upgraded from last year's1.6-liter, 103-horsepower version, the *94Celica is good for 110 horses and 115 foot-pounds of torque. Twin cams and fourvalves per cylinder provide optimum en-gine breathing, while a new short-throwshifter make slipping through the five for-ward gears a pleasure, especially on twistyroads. Adequately grippy 185/70R14 rubbercomes standard on Celica ST. Past experi-ence has deemed Celica as having legend-ary reliability as there have been several inour family over the years. Many had bro-ken past the 100,000-mile threshold andperformed faithful service well beyond, Myniece Shannon drives a '79 hatchbackmodel with over 100,000 miles and plansmany more before she's done.

SAFETYCelica features dual airbags up front,

while anti-lock brakes (ABS) and automaticlocking retractor safety belts are providedfor all three passenger locations.

SUGGESTIONSOur model was loaded with optional

equipment which included power windowsand locks ($510), cruise control system($265) and air conditioning ($975). Otheroptions include floor mats ($73) and a rearintermittent wiper ($155), I strongly sug-gest the ABS ($825) and the power tilt/slidemoonrooft$740).

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Vol. 3, No. 38 May 11-13,1994

'\fl .f \ ' '

$K*

A Forbes Newspapers guide to your quality time

We'veTonight

second annualWeekend PI usProm Sime\

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Choral ArtsSocietycelebratesspring

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Weekend

Cover photo bySHARON WILSON

Corsage courtesyPetal Peddlers,Somerville;tuxedo courtesyDtmte Tuxedos,Somerville

Cover story i iaiii i i ia•••••§••••ti••!••• 4• •^• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •a X v

E W l 11© i • • • •••••• • • • • • • I • • • • • • • * • • • • •« i O

Introductions 21Kid Stuff 5

6IflUOlw

• • • • • • • • • • « • • • • • • • • • • • • « • • • • • • • • • • • • •

• • • • • • • • • i i t a t i • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I

DIKK lORHS

AuditionsClub Mix.Curtain Calls.DanceFilm capsulesGalleries.Happenings.In concertKid StuffMuseums.

131513136

145

105

14• ! • • • V

e> • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • « i t • • • • • • • • • • • • • • i %#

WEEKENDPLUS is a feature of Forbes Newspapers, a Division of Forbes Inc.,and appears in the Hills-Bedminster Press, Somerset Messenger-Gazette, FranklinFocus, Bound Brook Chronicle, Middlesex Chronicle, (New Brunswick) Focus,Metuchen-Edison Review, Piscataway Review, South Rainfield Reporter, HighlandPart* Herald, Warren-Watchung Journal, Green Brook-North Plainfleld Journal,WestflekJ Record, Scotch Plains Fanwood Press and Cranford Chronicle. Letters tothe editor, press releases, photographs and announcements of upcoming eventsshould be sent to: William Westtiovon, WeekendPlus Editor, 44 Veterans MemorialDrive, P.O. Box 699, Somorville, NJ. 08876. The fan number is (908) 526-2509.To subscribe to your local hjrlHis Newspaper, call 1-800-300-9321.

• ^ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • M

••••••••••••••••••••••••I

^••••••••••••••••••••MVMItl

(•••••••••••••••••••••••••II

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I

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••(•••••••••••••••••••••••••t

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• ••i •••••••••••••••••••••••••§••

Malcolm S. Forbes, Jr.WMTOIUM Mil!

Louis S, BarsonyI ' U M I I S I I I - K

William Westhoven\VI I KI N D I M US M ) l [ t ^ K

Rich McCombADVERTISING DIRI-CTOR

Next Week in Weekend Plus:* MUSIC.Forinfir Blondic diva Deborah Harry talks about her upcoming

concert appearance at the Stone Pony* MUSIC.-.Thc Knack stage a comeback at Tradewinds* OUTDOORS...Prcviowlng Gront Adventure's new "Right Stuff" exhibit

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iiy 11-13,1994 F-brbfis Newspapers Weekend Plus 3

Weetond

Spring is in the air, and dressmakers, tuxedo renters, limo driversand banquet halls are working overtime.

It must be prom season.And so, it must be time for the second annual WeektmdPhis

prom survey, which has been expanded this year to include virtuallyevery high school in the Forbes Newspapers area.

What the survey will tell you is the when, where and how much,along with the theme of each school's senior prom (in some cases,junior and senior proms arc combined, while other junior proms wereignored completely; sony, juniors, your time will come next year), whichin most cases is a song title. 'Hold on to the Night," "We've GotTonight," and "In Your Eyes" were chosen by two schools each, but thebig winner, curiously, was Bob Dylan's relatively unromantic "ForeverYoung," which was chosen by three schools - Immaculata (Somerville),Johnson Regional (Clark) and Watchung Hills (Warren).

Immaculata and Johnson, coincidentally, also check in with the earli-est prom dates: last Friday, the same as Hillsborough. The latest promwas scheduled for .June 13 by Rutgers Prep in Somerset.

Some schools, like J.P. Stevens, decided not to have a theme, while at

least one - Pingry - is keeping the theme secret until it is revealed atthe prom. Far be it from us to ruin the surprise.

Cranford High seniors will have the longest ride to the prom as thestudent body will travel north to the Westmount Country Club inPaterson. Immaculata and Somerville have the shortest drive, a merefive-minute commute to the Bridgewater Manor. Rutgers Prep also hasa short trip to the Hyatt Regency in New Brunswick.

The most expensive prom is Pingry's, which will cost $128 per couplefor a night at the luxurious Hilton at Short Hills, followed closely byJohnson, whose couples will pay $125 for their prom at the BirchwoodManor in Whippany. the lowest bid was $60 for the Rutgers Prep promat the Hyatt.

Bid prices, though, arc affected greatly by how much the senior classhas raised to offset the cost of their special night. Some classes havedone little or nothing in the area of fund-raising; others, like the seniorclass at Metuchen high School, have been building up a class nest eggsince the eighth grade.

Fund-raisers ran the gamut from the simple, like collecting proceeds

from the school store or staging car washes and candy sales unusualevents like donkey basketball, Jell-0 and pudding wrestling and "Gong"shows. Watchung Hills went so far as to stage a "Rent a Senior Day."

Naturally, if the day after the prom is a school day, seniors are oftenexcused, while others won't be expected to show up, which brings us toanother prom tradition - the Day After. Many classes seeking toextend their special time have special events, or at least destinations,planned for the next day. Union Catholic seniors will return to theschool for a 1:30 a m breakfast, complete with DJ and dancing. Follow-ing the Piscataway prom, seniors will board a bus for the AtlanticHighlands, whore they will embark on a cruise around New York thatends at 5 a.m. Several others, naturally, will head for the shore,

And at least one school - Franklin High - stages w special pre-promevent: the third annual promenade around the school, al which timecouples can have their pictures taken in the senior courtyard and aprom king and queen are announced. Parents are invited In view thisparade, which gives them a chance to see all the kids at their formalbest without crashing the prom itself.

But no matter when or where the prom take.s place, here's hopingthat these young men and women, as they celebrate one of the greatrites of passage into adulthood, will act like adults and stay sober,

K 'ktte

Hljh School

Bishop AhrEdison

Bound Brook

Bridgewater-Raritan

Cranford

7 PM-Midnight

7PM-Midnight

7:30PM-12:30AM

Ouneilen

Edison

Franklin

Gill St. Bernards(Gladstone)

7PM-12:30AM

MondayMay 23

FridayJune 3

FridayMay 13

8PM-Midnight

7PMMidnight

ThursdayMay 26

FridayMay 20

Garden ManorAberdeen

Basking RidgeCountry Club

CostPtrCouple

$60

$75

Hyatt RegencyNew Brunswick

Westmount CCPaterson

7:30PM12:30AM

7PM-11:30PM

Hillsborough

Immaculata(Somerville)

J.P. Stevens(Edison)

Johnson Regional(Clark)

7PMMidnight

7PM-Midnight

7PM-Midnight

FridayMay 27

ThursdayMay 26

Bridgewater Manor

ExcelsiorManalapan

SaturdayMay 7

FridayMay 6

FridayMay 6

Bridgewater Manor

$95

"One Moment in Time*

"So Hard to Say Goodbye"

$68

$75

$88

"WeVe Got Tonight"

"We've Got Tonight

'These are the Times toRemember"

"Hold on to the Night11

Fox HollowCountry Club

$88

$80

Hyatt RegencyPrinceton

Jonathan DaytonRegional

(Springfield)

Manville

Metuchen

Middlesex

7PM-Midnight

FridayMay 27

FridayMay 6

7PM-Midnight

7PM-Midnight

8PM-1AM

North Plainfield

Pingry(Martmsville)

Piscataway

Rutgers Prep

St. Joseph'sMetuchen

7PM-Midnight

7PM-Midnight

FridayMay 27

Bridgewater Manor

Brunswick HiltonEast Brunswick

Birchwood ManorWhippany

$90

$100

$75

$125

Parsippany Hilton

FridayMay 20

ThursdayMay 26

Victorian ManorEdison

Farrinqton ManorEast Brunswick

FridayMay 20

7:30PM.Midnight

7PM-Midnight

FridayMay 13

FridayMay 27

7:30PM-12:30AM

ScotchPlains-Farwood

7:30PM-Midnight

Somerville

South Plainfield

Union Catholic(Scotch Plains)

Wardlaw-Hartridge(Edison)

8PM-1AM

7:30PM-12:30PM

FridayMay 27

Somerset Marriott

$90

$75

$65

$80

Bridgewater Manor

The Hilton at ShortHills

MondayJune 13

ThursdayMay 26

FridayJune 3

7PM-Midnight

BPM-1AM

Watchung Hills(Warren)

Westfield

7PM-11PM

FridayMay 20

Wood bridgeSheraton

Hyatt RegencyNew Brunswick

$65

$128

$85

$60

Radisson HotelSomerset

Pines ManorEdison

FridayMay 6

ThursdayMay 26

7PM-Midnight

8PM-1AM

ThursdayJune 9

FridayJune 3

Bridgewater Manor

Brunswick HiltonEast Brunswick

Berkeley PlazaBerkeley Heights

$90

$60

$90

$94

Grand MarquisOld Bridge

Friday,May13

The Hiltonat Short Hills

WoodbridgeSheraton

$90

N/A

$62

"Never Forget You"

N/A

N/A

"Forever Young"

No Theme

forever Young"

"Almost Paradise"

"In Your Eyes"

"Here and Now"

"Somebody Like You"

"Hold on to the Night11

N/A

"Together Forever"

"All I Want is You"

"Sunshine Daydreams"

"Wonderful Tonight"

"Time to Remember"

"In Your Eyes"

"Always and Forever"

"Take My Breath Away"

"Forever Young"

"Now and Forever"

Weekend Plus Forbes Newspapers May 11-13,1994

S T U F FGiant puppets enliven'Ugly Duckling' at RVCCFairy tale favorite presented live on stage

When you make a list of your favorite fairy tales, Tlie UglyOucMIng may not come to mind. But is there a more timelessstory than this Hans Christian Anderson classic, which teach-es children that it's OK to be different?

Hopefully, then, parents will not overlook the opportunity to bringtheir children to a live-action stage version of The Ugly Duckling, whichwill be presented at 1,3:30 and 6 p.m. at Raritan Valley CommunityCollege in North Branch.

This updated adaption, presented by the Bits N1 Pieces Puppet The-atre, features a new character - Pinky Flamingo - a perky Floridaflamingo hatched by "proper penguin parents." At first, Pinky doesn'tknow he is a flamingo, and struggles to be accepted by the otherpenguins. It all ends, as you might expect, on a happy note, but notbefore the story reveals a few surprises along the way.

Pinky will be played by actress Holli Rubin, while other characterswill be represented by a variety of giant puppets, some as large as ninefeet tall, operated by the Bits N' Pieces puppet team of Darrell Winsteadand Brint Crutehfmld.

The production, part of RVCC's Sunday Sampler Children's TheatreSeries, also features bright costumes, deco-style seats and "lively origi-nal music."

Giant Puppets join "Pinky Flamingo" for an updated live stageTHE UGLY DUCKUNG l, 3:30 and 6 p.m, Sunday, May 15. Tickets $6 (reserva- adaption of Hans Christian Anderson's fable The Ugly ducklingtons available). (908)725-3420.

HappeningsSunday at Raritan VaNty Community College in North Branch.

Mark yourcalendar

Girl Scouts''Kaleidoscope'

More than 500 Girt Scouts areregistered for the WashingtonRock Girl Scout Council "Kalei-doscope '94" workshop Sundayat the Student Center of UnionCounty Co"3getnCranfofd.

The day-long event will featuremore than 50 exhibitors offeringinteractive workshops on safety,nutrition, beauty, television andmuch more. Workshop sponsorsinclude Suburban Cablevision,the Teddy Bear Clinic (which willexamine and repair your favoritestuffed animals), the Mom's Mu-seum (which will bring hands-onexhibits from 30 countries), MaryKay Cosmetics, the Newark StarLtd&r, Cranford Florist, theUnion County Safety council, theN.J. State Aquarium, RahwayHospital, Muhlenberg Hospital,the Union County Commissionfor the Status of Women andthe Cranford First Aid Squad.

At press time, registration wasopen; for more information, call(908) 232-3236.

AKTEXHIIinOttAND AUCTION

All Saints Episcopal Cliurch559 Park Ave., Scotch Plains(908} 322-8047•With proceeds to benefit thechurch, 8:30 p.m. May 20.Preview at 7:30 p.m. Admission110 per person, $15 per cou-ple.

ART IN SUMMITOn the GreenBroad St., Summit(908) 273-9121•Art show and craft sale. 10a.m.-4 p.m, May 21 Pain loca-tion: Summit Middle SchoolFree admission.

ARTS AND CRAFTS SHOWForrestol VillageRoute 1, Platnsboro(908) 3G2-500G•Craft show with dealer fmmfour states, 10 n.m.-6 p MI.May 14,15. Free admission

CLARK STAMP, COIN,AND BASEBALL CARD SHOW

Howard Johnson Motor LodgeGarden Slate Parkwaybit 135, Clark(908) 247-1093•Monthly show and sale for col-lectors, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. May15. Free admission.

COLLECTORS SHOWCASEU.S. 1 Flea Market

'Route 1, New BruiKwii k(908) 238-4231•Comic book, baseball card.and collectible show, in am.-7:30 p.m. May M. Fice admis-sion.

COMIC BOOK ANDCOMIC ART CONVENTION

Sheraton hotelRoute 1, Iselm(908) 828-5955• t o l l y what it says, 10 am.-4 p.m. May 15. Admission $3,

COUNTRY FOLK ARTSHOW AND SALE

Mennen Arena, 161 hastHanover Ave.,MM) 326-7050

Historic Biackwells Mills Canal House, on Biackwells Mills Roadalong the Delaware and Raritan Canal in Somerset, will host Itsannual Market Day Saturday,

•lextiles, paintings, and ether

craft from rural America, 5-9p.m. M.iy 20; 10 a.m.-5 p,mM.:iy 21. 22. Admission SCFncl.iy, $5 Saturday and Sunday.

FAMILY CARNIVALMrmidair Art Museum3 South Mountain Ave,Montcliiir(201) 7-16-5555•Fun stuff for Kids of all iij^b,noon-5 p.m. May 14.S3, adults $2.

FINE ART AND CRAFTS

Vermin KirkValley Way. Vfron.i

•Juried show with dealers from

Vermont to Florida, 11 a.m.-5

|),m, Wiiy 21, 22, Free admis-

sion.

ITALIAN WINE TASTINGSomerset Hill Hotel

1-78 but 33, Waned

(908) M7-G7OO

•With food from tho Italian sub-

continent, 7:30-10:30 p.m.

May 19. Admission $25.

LIONS CLUB FLEA MARKETRtHito 2OG, Chester

(008) H79-440H

"With proceeds to benefit ih«

town's hnn'iUub, 9 ii.Ni-5

Ot| )O

Free admission.MARKET DAY ON THE CANAL

Canal House, BlackwcllsMills 111, Somerset(908)359 3607,297-2041•Flea market, plant salt1, andbake sale by the Delaware andRaritan Canal, 10 am. 4 pmMay 14. Free admission.

MUSIC COLLECTORS EXPOHyatt Hotel

2 Albany Si., Now Brunswick(908)351 M W•With plenty of vinyl Ll'&br(how who need them, 10a.m.-5|) rn, May

MUSICIAN'S FLEA MARKETNorth Stelton firehouse70 Haines Ave., Piscataway(908) 359-0124•Vintage guitars and other in-struments to sell or trade, 10a.m,-4 p.m. May 22. Admission$3 with an instrument, $4 with-out.

PENNY SALE

St. Francis Episcopal Church400 New Market Rd., Dunellen1908) 9C8-G781• Held every year to benefit (hechurch, starting 7 p.m. May 13.Admission S3.

RUMMAGE SALEFmdeme Rescue Squad476 Union Ave., Bridgewater(908) 707-9559•Sponsored by the rescuebquiid's auxiliary, 9 ii.m.-'l p.m.

May 13, 9 am.-2 p.m. May14. Free admission.

THE SEEDS OF PEACEMatirawo farms

Route 519, Celvtdero

(908) 475-3872

•Native American pow-wovv and

Cfiltl show, 10 a m -8 p rn

May 2 0 , 1 1 a.m.-8 p.m. May

21, noon-7 p.m, May 22. Ad-

mission 15 Friday, $6 other

days; discounts available.

SPORTS CARD, COMIC BOOK,

AND NON-SPORTS CARD SHOW

Christ Church

220 Mam SI.. Smith Amboy

(908) 583 7915

• Exactly what it wys. 10 a.m •

A p.m. May 14, Arlulls < ?, chil-

dren under b free.

SPORTS CARD, MEMORABILIA,

AND COMIC BOOK SHOW

Clarion Hutel

Route 21, td iwn

•l.tiictly what il says, 10 a.m.-

4 p.m. May 22. Admission $2.

SPRING FLOWER FAIR

sale, and tours of the frmiM's.10 a.m.-4 p.m. May U, 15.Free admission.

SPRING IS BLOOMINGFour Sisters WineryRoute 519, Belvidere(908)475-3671•Wine festival during winch ,cu

can stomp on grapes, noon-5

p.m. May 14, 15. A0miS5ifv»

410 for those 21-oldrT. SP (or

those under 21STAMP, P0S1CAR0, AND BASE-BALL CARD COLLECTORS OPtNHOUSE

Ryder Liiim. last

show, pi,ml

3ft North Ujir; St. M l ' M ^ .

(908) 247 -100 i

•For collators, 10 ,i in '1 D ni

May 22. Free admission.

SUGARLOAF CRAFTS FESTIVAL

Garden Sl.iU/ hfniiit Center

200Atriu-i' Dr S I V M V - I

(800) 210-H900• C i . j t t 1 . ' J i n . - , ' . ' . i t i ' ^ I ' M ' C I S *!•<•:•

all 50 steitus 10 .I 'M -h\)in

May 1 3 - 1 ^ AcUN i b , c:i'il:lii:n

under 12 free,

UNION CENTERSTREET FAIR

StuyvcsaiHAvC, Union(908) 996-3036•Held olonj; j main street i'>

the Union County township.

noon-6 p m May 15 tom rUnu

Way 22

Kid StuH'BEAUTY AND THE BEAST/PEIER PAN'S ADVENTURES

6 pm. May 14, 15St. Lukus Episcopal U i . >'

Runtf1 27. Mctut'i'i'n

(3081 ;J21-1494•Iwo Shu,:s [X.'iloimtHl hy <i

tluviti'i troupe of i.hild"'" r> I

Admisston $7.50.

CtNDtRELU2 pm. May 14, l!i, 7inull UcncH o u t c V ) . L . - t - , r r \ iUf"

•Gr.mn i s \iw-f l i . <j, pciluriiL'f:

by the Calliope Storybook The-ii'ie Company. Adnnssioi) W.group rates mwlable.

DINOSAURS, PUPPHS,AND PICASSO

11 a.m. May 14. 15

i ; ,n ;v ' ' Mi'l I ' 1 ! . ' i"..Sf

[3'ooksKle Dr Mi

spiit to-

M-p'i i 7 i i ;

THE JUNGLE BOOK

11 am M J / 2 1 . 71

l\l[ll>r Mill Pl.VlOIIM!

iil l- M ,H)|' Jl , Mlllll till

•A u:t|i'£t liom llml',ut(l

l\:|/••'!', b 'j'.orn.-s v.'i'h Soii't-

• >, 1 ••• ••, r . H ' * i . r > * < } ( " • { • A n i t » , i r s

,Vl:;,i-,-.11(11 ^7. -Sli

THE Uf.lY DUCKUNG

1. I i\) - i i n - i Mly l r)i i • , i ; . - 1 , . ' t '

HiH.I i • , ii'r, Cij'iirrU<i',.!/

Lollf•('.;• Nudh Hi.vitii

1908) 725 3-1203 p m S'.'HLIV. May 22: UmO'i

(908) '199-8226«T!ie Hans Christian Andersenslwy Admission S6.

MACHEIS WIND7 30 |)i"i 5«itjniiiy. May ] ' l

So-rcry-l Hills VMCA

l.|f)Mn.nt Any i'-l.

UiV.l-i \\U I fV

ilL1 I1 4,1! I " 1

SI,,-LMIS

PAT KANE

'} |) m S i t ' i d i t , ' 1 i y J r )

Cinnth of the Messiah

Nnuli- 2-1. O-',|(/r

Tim,

-1-1<ir naluro

May 11-13,1994 FortxiR Ncwsfwpcrs Weekend Plus S

0 V I E S

A Hectorof a movieRobin Williams takesa dramatic stretchin 'Being Human'

By JEFFREY COHENWeekends Film Critic

Anyone coming to BeingHuman the ww Bill Foi-syth movie, expecting Mi's.Doubtjhv 2 is in lor some-

thing of a shock. Yes. Robin Wil-liams is in this film, ami ,vc s. he'svirtually every scene, but this isabout as far from Good Morning.Vietnam as Williams can get with-out actually playing Othello.

Being Humnu announces itself,in all-too-precious voice-over pro-

•vided by Theresa Russell (so that'swhat she's been doing), as "thestory of a story." It consists of fivevignettes, fninied by a contempo-rary tale, that range from u primaltalc ofa Bronze Age man (Icouldn't possibly make this up)losing his family to invaders to arefined version of his characterfrom Hook, tied to his cellularphones and trying to reconnectwith his estranged children.

The idea is supposed to ho thatall five men he plays (all of whomappear to be named Hector) areconnected by similar circum-stances - societal turmoil, thedanger of tying yourself to thewrong business partner, the searchfor comfortable shoes ••- and the

Robin Williams plays five different characters - all namedHector - from five different eras in history in Betotf Human, anew film by Local Nero director Bill Forsyth.

intertwined thoughts mesh up to a point.Rut Williams, m mostly dramatic roles here, is as restrained as he's

ever been on the screen, and restrained for Robin Williams is simplyloss effective. II this movie, which was completed in 1992 but releasednow (no doubt with an eye towards Williams' resurgent box-office ap-peal), was meant as a screen test for the comedian to play a wider rangeof roles, it is right on target. As a movie, it's a little less than cohesive.

The structure dictates that the movie will be uneven. The cavemansegment, which conies first, is hardest to take, with Williams speaking astrange version of imagined English ("Dada is hunting; go home") and

outfitted with, yes, even more hairon his face and body than he nor-mally has.

This segment, embarrassingthough it sounds, is made touch-ing by Williams' heartfelt perform-ance: his eyes tell you all you needto know as his woman and hischildren are taken away. In fact,with very few exceptions, BeingHuman presents Robin Williamsin his wide-eyed innocent mode,even when he's being a pain in thebutt, like his Portuguese explorer-shipwreck segment.

The best sections concern Hec-tor as a prisoner of one sort oranother. In the Roman Empire vi-gnette, he's literally a slave, ownedoutright by a twit (John Turturro,in one of the film's many cameos)who gets himself into trouble andthen expects Hector to kill himselfas his master does, all in the nameof loyalty.

Williams also plays a Crusade-era Irish traveler (with a convinc-ing brogue), the aforementionedPortuguese pest and the divorcedDad-of-the-'90s, whose wise-beyond-her-years daughter teacheshim the meaning of family in anicely-played, if somewhat forced,conclusion.

Nobody enjoys a good shaggydog story like Forsyth, whose pre-vious sheepdogs have includedBreaking /n, Housekeeping, Gre-gory's Girl and the shaggy dogstory to end all shaggy dog stories,Local Hem. Here, he actually at-tempts to impose some structureover his usual meanderings, andthe results are mixed.

The voice-over narration, whichdoes supply us with some usefulinformation (era, setup, etc.) is oth-

erwise so precious you want to run into the looping studio and smackTheresa Russell in the mouth, And providing us with 118 minutes ofRobin Williams, but absolutely none of his anarchic wit, is a tease; youask us to come to a movie based on star-power, then keep the star fromdelivering what we pay to see him do.

Still, the film looks nice (it manages to belie its bargain-basementbudget with period costumes and a little slight-of-hand}, Williams isnothing if not a convincing actor, and Forsyth is a writer-director whoprovides a point of view different from just about everybody else's. On arainy spring afternoon, it's hard to ask for more than that.

Film capsulesCapsule reviews

by WwkendPlus staffGuide:

• - Recommended- Strongly recommended

OPENING THISWEEK

CROOKLYN•Spike Lee's first film Mntn M/tf-colm X is a return to tries greets 01Brooklyn lor a comedy ciwiiii ^IKUIa family in the 1970s. lo-witKruii.siblings Jote and Cintiw Ut\ %\tring Alfre Woofarti (PG-Bi

THE CROW•Ihe late Brandon Lee i;o<\ nlDruce Lee Story), who m; M"daccidentally during Mining. unr<, m(his adaption of the popular conmbook about a murdered iui.k si.irwho comes back to lile n <\ MHII-Ihero. (R)

CURRENT FILMS

BACKBEAT

• Iiie Berlin club scene is the back-cirop for tins engaging look at theprefab early days of the Beatles,with an emphasis on the relation-shin between John Lennonand ofifi-ir.ai nassist Slu Sutcliff (who loft theunno ana Kiter Quid before tiu.-Beatles made it bigj. (R)

BAD GIRLS

•Madeline Slowii. Miry StiwitMasterscn, Andie MacDowell andOrfiw Barrymore Mar us womenforced to b'Tomt; ^imfi^htas in theOld west. (If)

BEING HUMAN•Unbin Williams is the star of fivesiuries, each representing differentperiods of history, dealing withman's search (or love and purpose.Unfitted by (Ml Forsyth (LocalHeto). (I'd 13)

BRAINSCAN

•Computer effects are the star ofthis sct-fi thriller about a teenager{Edward Furlong of T2 who commitsa series of murders while playing avirtual reality game. With Frank Lan-fieila. {Rl

CLEAN SLATE

•Dana Crrvey comedy finds him asprivate eye who suffers from amne-siii, With Valeria Golmo, James EarlJones, Kevin Pollack, Michael Mur-phy IPG-13)

CLIFFORD

•Mnrtin Shan stars as a prococtous10-year-old who drives his guardianuntil1 (tiarned Charles Grodm) crazy,With Mary Steenburgen, DabneyColcman. (PG)

COPS AND ROBBERSONS•A suburbanite (Chevy Chase) andins family ploy host to a crusty cop(Jack Palance) staking out a neigh-boring criminal, (PG)

D2: THE MIGHTY DUCKS•Emilio Esteve* stars in the sequelto the popular corned/ about a mis-fit youth hockey team. (PG)

THE FAVOR•Elizabeth McGovern and HarleyJane Ko?ak star are best friendswhose relationship changes whenone asks the other to seduce herold boyfriend HVisoguy stnr HenWahl, back from sull-imposed re-tirement). (Hi

rOUR WEDDINGSAND A FUNERAL

• Appealing romantic comedy statsAndre MacDowell {Groundhog Day)and Hugh Grant as a couple whocarry on an intermittent affair aftermeeting at the funeral of n friend,

HOUSE OF SPIRITS•A blue-chip cost, led by JeremyIrons, Glenn Close, Meryl Streep,

Vanessa Redgrave and Winona

Ryder adapt Isabelle Allende's novel

about the tragic path of a prominent

Latin American family over the

course of 50 years. (R)

MAJOR LEAGUE 2

•Charlie Sheen, Corbm Bernsen and

Tom Berenger return lor another

comic episode about a fictitious

group of misfit Cleveland Indians.

(PG)

MONKEY TROUBLE

•Comedy about a nno-yeor-old girt

(Thora Birch) adopts a pet monkey,

unaware that it works as a pick-

pocket lor a con man (Harvey Kei-

tei). (PG)

NAKED GUN 33 Vb;THE FINAL INSULT

•Leslio Nielsen and the gang return

for the third installment of this po-

tico-spoof series (R)

(Please turn to page 7}

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W**trx» Pkit Fott>os Newspapers May 1 1 4 3 , 1 9 9 4 -

WeekendMini capsules

{Continued from page 6)NOEICAK

•Ray Uotta (Unlawful Entry) stirsin this futuristic action yarn about* Marine captain who escapesfrom a prison colony in the year2022. <R>

THE* Director Ron Howard's look atthe day in the life of a fictionalNew York City tabloid trying toavoid bankruptcy and break a bigstory. Standout cast includesMichael Keaton, Glenn Close,Robert Duvall, Maiisa Tomei,Randy Quai l (R)

KM•A group of lively eccentricssnake up the "PoliticallyCorrect" campus of Port ChesterUniversity. (PG-13)

PHIUMIPHIA•Tom Hanks turns in an Oscar-winning performance as a laywerwho sues his employers, who firehim when they discover he hasAIDS, Oenzel Washington is thereluctant, homophobic lawyerwho takes his case to court. Di-rected by Jonathan Demme (51-fence of the Lambs). (PG-13)

KHtNDUAtUtTSteven Spielberg's Oscar tri-

umph: a black-and-white dramaabout Oskar Schindler (UamNeeson), a Nazi sympathizer andwar profiteer who later spent hisfortune and risked his own lifesaving the lives of more than athousand Polish Jews during

3rd SATURDAY OF EACH MONTHby SHIRLEY ANN

astrologers • palmists * tsrot cards • psychics • clairvoyants• auras * numerologists • metaphysical books

f 1 A M . to * P.M., SATUHDAY, MAY l i s t

Q U A L I T Y I N N FOR INFORMATION (201)316-9511IS)SO IASTON AVI., SOMIRSIT, IXIT « I-2SJ7

Buys & SellsQuality Pre-Owncd

MATERNITY & INFANT CLOTHING• Best Quality • Late Hours

• New Items Daily

26 Diamond Spring Dr.Denville, Nj

201-625-0012

184 Mt. Bethel Rd.Warren Two., Nj201-647-9009

Hours:

V. 10:10-6IX)

SIM 10.3:00

World War II. A grueling three-hour epic that takes a psycho-logical toll on the viewer, butpays off with an uplifting ending.

mSERIAL MOM

•Offbeat director John Waters{Halnpny, Pink Flamingos) goesrelatively mainstream once againwith this comedy starring Kath-leen Turner as a "perfect" house-wife who goes to murderous ex-tremes to keep her family happy.With Same Water son, Ricki Lake.

SIRENSf A controversial artist and hisnymph-like models draw a youngcleric and his wife into their sen-sual inner circle. (R)

SURVIVING THI GAME•A group of hunters get morethan they bargain for while stalk-ing human prey. Starring RutgerHauer and F. Murray Abraham.(R)

THREE NINJASKICK BACK

•Sequel to 1992 hit comedyabout a trio of juvenile martialarts experts, this time showingtheir moves in Japan. (PG)

THREESOME•Lara Flynn Boyle, Stephen Bald-win and Josh Charles star in acomedy about the confusing rela-tionship that develops betweenthree hormonal college roomates.

THUMBfUNA

•Animated musical version of the

popular Hans Christian Anderson

fairy tale, directed by Don Bluth

(An American Tad. Voices include

Carol Channing, Charo and Gil-

bert Gottfried. Songs by Barry

Mam low. (G)

WHEN A MAN

LOVES A WOMAN

•Dramatic love story starring

Andy Garcia and Meg Ryan os a

loving couple whose idyllic Me is

threatened by a hidden secret

that explodes into crisis, iHj

WHITE FANG II;

MYTH OF THE WHITE WOLF

•Disney adventure aboul a young

prospector whose titular half-dog.

half-wolf companion is seen Uy

Alaskan Indians as the embodi-

ment of an old legend. (PG)

WITH HONORS

•A homeless man (Joe Pesci)

bonds with a group of Harvard

students after a chance meeting.

(PG-13)

RUTGERS CO-OPFILM FESTIVALS

THE KILLER(1990; Chinese subtitles)POLICE STORY I(1985; Chinese subtitles)

•Action films are big in the Far

East, and here's two recent faw-

ites from China's top genre film-

makers. Killer is from director

John Woo, who made his Ameri-

can directing debut last year with

Jean-Claude Van Damme's HardTai'jfci. comhirtos American ac-

tion techniques with those of the

famed Italian "spaghetti west-

erns" while telling the slory of a

in;m;in who beconv's i

with a ivoman sinp,ur vj'iom

sdootout, I'oiite Slory /, ,m j

romp liberally lycutl witn coniCdy,

is Irani slunlmon/actor/direitor

Jackie Chin), tdu uiiuispjlc-d

I'.miJ (if 'lip lyjjr offn.o in AI;I;I 7

p.m. Sunday, May 15, nt the

State Theatre, 15 Livingston

Ave., New Brunswick. Part of

"Flashlights" summer 1994

film program sponsored by the

Rutgers Film Co-op. Admission

$7 ($5 Co-op members). (908)

932-8482.

LUNG TA; THE

FORGOTTEN TIBET (1991)

* Dah Lima tiiscip'u Ricitni'l

Gere narrate1; tins raw ;mci ucon-

tiMty photop/nrierj look tit l i!) '1,

a mysterious and beouliM coun-

try, and the horrors inflicted on

the country during 40 years of

Chinese oruuiwtion. 7 p.m. Fri-

day, May 13, at Mllledoler Halt

Room 100 (College Avenue

campus, near corner of George

Street and Seminary Place),

Rutgers University, New Brun-

swick, Part of "Fireflies" sum-

mer 1994 film program spon-

sored fjy the Rutgers Film Co-

op. Admission 14 ($3 Co-op

members), (908) 932-8482.

Meg Ryan and Andy Garcia play a couple whose loving rela-tionship and family are shattered by a dark secret In t h t newhit film When a Man Loves a Woman, Union Center

STREET FAIR

MAY*15™SUNDAY 1-6 PM

arts * crafts* great food *entertainment

Along Stuyvesant Ave.Downtown Union, N.J.

GSP - EX(T140 * ^ * 78E to EXIT 49A

FREE Admission

Parking;: 5/22/94)

CO-ED SNORKELand

SCUBA CLASSES

FREEFIRST NIGH:

SOMERSETVALLEY YMCASomerville PoolWod ,May 11th

7 pm

<•/•

Sponsored By:Union Township

Chamber of Commerce& Union TownshipS.I.D.

Fa Ho and

SOMERSETHILLS YMCA

BornardrwiHo PoolTues., May 24

7 pm

Call for more information

534-4090Whitehouse

Aquatic Center]424 Rl. 22 W

Whitehouse Station(Across from Bishop's Thrlltway)

May 11-13,1994 fo r te Newspapers WeekefldPHn

Woctond

Craft showheads northSugarloaf CraftFestival to make itsdebut in New Jersey

Just when you think there's noroom for any more craftshows in New Jersey, alongcomes a new one that eveiy

rrafter and collector simply /ios tocheck out.

For the last 20 years, the Sugar-loaf Craft Festival has built a repu-tation as one of the finest juriedshows on the cast coast, attractingthousands to its events in Mary-land and Virginia, This weekend,following a media blitz that wouldmake Hollywood proud, the Sugar-loaf Craft Festival is aljout to makeits New Jersey debut at the Gar-den State Exhibit Center in Som-erset. Another festival is plannedby Sugarloaf for the fall.

So popular arc these SugarloafMountain, Inc., events that it hasi., ^ived more than 10.000 applica-tions from artists wishing to enterits highly competitive jury process,which accepts only about one outof five entries. And those who areaccepted arc required to resubmittheir applications every year.

The selection process insures ashow brimming with quality worksas about 300 accomplished artistsand crafters offering everythingfrom pottery, glass and woodworks to sculpture and clothing.

Entertainment will include craftdemonstrations, a children's the-ater, a semmar on 'Buying To-morrow's Heirlooms Today" (1p.m. Sunday) by Frank Vitale.marketing director of Conntnj/•/owe Magazine, and. of course,plenty of food and drink, Therewill also be free shopping bags foradults and hourly gift certificategiveaways.

Hours for the festival are 10a.m.-6 p.m. Friday-Sunday. Admis-sion is $6 (free for children under12), with plenty of free parkingavailable, For more information,call (800) 638-1638.

Voodworklngi by Lloyd and Jean Sumner (left) and intricatetmrrarlumt (ibovt) by Ron Gladowiki are just a few of thehundreds of attractions at the Sugarloaf Craft Festival thisweekend at the Garden State Exhbitl Center in Somerset.

GR«KF<STIVALSt. George Greek Orthodox Church1101 River Road, Piscataway, N.J.

Phone 463-1642 or 699-9894FAX 699-9309

(sci' Reverse Side for Directions)

3 B I G D A Y S - riin outlineNAY 13 th - 14th • 15th, 1994

Friday & Saturday - 11 am -11 pnSunday - 1 2 noon • ft pm

In Our Pastries • Wines• OuzoAir-ConditionedAHEPA HALL

Souvlakia • GyroLive Music & Entertainment • Bouzoukia

Plus Greek Folk Dancing • Singing

PRESENTS JERRY STERNER'SAWARD WINNING DRAMA.,.

also.ln our COMMUNITY CENTERGIFT & NOVELTY SHOP • PASTRY SHOP

• NEW GROCERY STORE (Bakaliko) • ARTS & CRAFTS SHOPRELIGIOUS TOURS • TAKE OUT ORDER BOOTH

Free Admission • Friday, May 13th Only] I a m - 4 pm Donation • $100

I Expanded Facilities Children under 12Free]

GET OUT TOWN!DONT GO IT ALONE

Newark JFK

PEOPL

APRIL 29-MAY22Directed by Produced by

JOHN HICKSON IRIS GREEN

TICKETS $15Student & Senior Discounts available Fridays and

Sundays only, One Hour before CurtainFri. it Sat at 8:30pm.,. Sun. at 3:00pm

I ni K l M l \

1 -800-468-6696from area codes 201 and 908

\ ,111(1 SI'

Villagers Theatre

PRINCETON . \ . | I I S K 7 5 - M 7 5

S WNkfMl dm Forbes Newspapers , May U-13,1994• I .

Bands onthe runRockers to liven up17th Midland Run

By now, the Midland Run iswidely recognized as one ofthe biggest flmd-raisingevents in New Jersey.

Held noon-4:3O p.m. on the sce-nic campus of AT&T's MoorlandFarms in Far Hills, the locationalone is enough to attract thou-sands of fun-seekers, sun-seekers.not to mention the thousands ofrunners v/ho turn out tor the cen-terpiece races of this nth annualMidland School benefit.

Off the race course, there's chil-dren's games, the ever-popular dogFrisbee exhibition and a celebritytent which will host appearancesby dozens of pro athletes (includ-ing Bridgewater's Favorite Son,Eric Murdoch) and many others.

Another busy area will bearound the band shell, which willrock harder than usual this yearwith the return of Bums in thePark, a busy local club band with asound that leans toward the alter-native, country rockers New Fron-tier, known to many from their ap-pearances at the Yellow Rose inManville, and Ziad, another alter-native band that has opened forExtreme, Faith No More and manyother top national bands and fea-tures a hrieup of five brothers.

Admission is $5. with childrenunder 10 admitted free. For moreinformation, call (!)l)8) 722-7903.

II SCUBA| C l a i m Hart| at tht• following

locations:

HiywM rMfc YMHAM M I W N EVMIHQ

JUf»1S

JUMi

•MrtiichtftEdisonYMCA

May 11

YMCATunlTiwrtEwnlngJuiwl

•MMdtoti County Coiteft

Juwl

OCEAN EXPLORERSAQUATIC CENTER

i 871 Rt. I,, Edison PlaceEdison 2872822

Singles

ADVANCED DCOftEESAttDDff l t tMENEUIt l

(201) 267-5616•Brunch and discussion atMarriott hotel, Princeton, andBasking Ridp Country Club,11:30 a,m. Sunday.

AUDOIN DANCE MR1Y(201) 797-7777•Ballroom dance (jacket re-

Popular J tn ty club band Burnt In tht Park rtturni for thtfourth straight ytar to tht bandthtll at tht Midland Run Sundayat AT&T's Moorland Farms In Far Hills. Country rocktri NewFrontier and alternative rockers Ziad will also perform.

Rutgers Preparatory School• Summer School — Advanced

Credit, Enrichment & Review(for grades 2-12)

• Ultimate Recreation-Sports, Games, Arts & Adventure

(for ages 6-U)• Summer Fun — A loving & caring

place for your little ones(for children who have completed

Pre-K or Kindergarten)• Extended Day—8:00 to 5:30

for ages 4 to 14

Call the Summer Programs Office at(908) 545-5600 for more information

or write to Rutgers Preparatory School,1345 Easton Avenue, Somerset, NJ 08873

I lir lii si indi'|u inlt n!

tin lust pi II

iii \ c u Jrrsn s

tni ;i;;t's 1 In IS

illcrs

bus hall, Rahway, 7:30 p.m.Sunday. Cost $5.•Ballroom dance (jacket re-quired) at Town i CountryInn, Keyport, 7:30 p.m.Tuesday. Cost $5.•Ballroom and line dance(jacket required) at DonQuixote Inn, Matawan, 7:30p.m. Thursday, Cost $5.

BUCKT1E PROFESSIONALSNNlES(AnwtCM-Aii in.

(908)247-1053Jacket required for men; nojeans or sneakers. Must re-serve in advance,•Brunch at Marriott Hotel,Somerset, noon May 15.Cost $20.

(908) 287-8734•Group for sln^e women(40s snd 50s) In Edison. 2p.m. May 15.

MANDI I DANCE THEATRE(908) 753-2300•Ballroom and Latin dance atRicochet Health and RacquetOub. South Plaknn«ld> 9p.m. Friday. Cost $5.

CENTRAUMKYT M l FRIENDS CLUB(womtn 510" and tadtr,i M f i r 2 " M d U l l t r ; a i -oMtr)

(908) 521-9158•Beach party dance (casual

attire required) at HolidayInn, Tinton Falls, 9 p.m. May14. Members ( 7 , non-members $9.•Brunch meeting at QualityInn, Somerset, 11 a.m. May15.

CONICIOUS CONNECTIONS(201) 267-8552•Social at Governor MornsHotel.Morristown.8p.in.Saturday.•flrunch and discussion aiBasking Ridge Country Club,11:30 a.m. Sunday,

CROSSROADS(ttparital and divorced)

(908) 722-6863.754-0317•Self-help group at Cente-nary United MethodistChurch. Metuchen. 7:30p.m. Tuesday.

JERSEY JEWISH SINGLES(40-oMtr)

•Dinnerat Georges Chateau,East Brunswick, 7 p.m.Wednesday. (908) 2573851.

JERSEY SINGLESACTIVITIES CLUB

(908)253-9815•Country dance lessons atClinton Community Center.7:30 p.m. Friday throughMay 27. Cost $8.

(•••anted md dlvorctd)(908) 249-6459•Discussion group at FirstBaptist Church of New Mar-ket, Piscataway, 7:15 p.m.Monday. Cost $3

SINGLEFACES(908) 462-2406•Dance and buffet at Scanticon-Princeton, 9 p.m. Sat-urday. Cost $10."Dance (jacket required) dtHilton hotel, Short Hills. B

p.m. Sunday, Cost $12.•Dance at Charades, Radis-son hotel, Somerset, 9 p.m.May 13, Cost $10,•Dance at The Tow§is,Mountainside, 9 p.m. May14. Cost $10,

SINGLES CONNECTION(908) 528O40OCost $5 before 9 p.m.•Dance at The Castle, Lato-wood. 0|).m. May !3

SOLO SINGLES(908) 766-1839 (7-9 p.m.;•Bodge ot Central Presbyte-(tin) Omrch. Si'Hiiinl. 6:30p.m. Sunday and 7.15 p.m.Miiy 19. COM S3.

SOMERSET HILLSSINGLE HIKERS

(908) 77467r)O•Hiku Lit Wiitcnunp, RcbCW'

tion, Mountainside, 11:30a.m. May 15. Meet in lotacross from Willieslaverne,Qedmmster Cost S-1

TOWN & COUNTRYSINGLES CLUB

(908) 766-4962•Social at Old Mill icsiaurant, Bemardsville, 8:30p.m. Wednesday. Cost S8

YOUNG SINGLECATHOLIC ADULTS CLUB(ages 21-39)

(908) 412-9475. 486-3130•Spring dance at ImmaculateHeart of Marv Church,Scotch Plams. 8 p.m. May14. Cost $8.

YOUNG SINGLES'SOCIAL CLUB(professionals, 26-45)

1908)2211182•Brunch at Basking RidguCountiyClul), i

22. Cost $20; mu!)/ the (i,i

mmm WAY

HAVE YOU EVER HEARD THEROAR OF MAN MADE THUNDER?

SATURDAY * * MAY 14™ * * 6:00PMNASCAR MOD I Fl EDS plus...FLEMINGTON MODIFIEDS plus...DAYTON A LATE MODELS plus...GREAT AMERICAN STREET STOCKS

Winston RwngStm

Remington Speedway1 mile North of Rt. 31 Circle

(908)782-2413May 11-13, 1994 Forbes Newspapers Weekend Plus 9

Weekend

Choral Art Society to celebrate spring in Westfieldvm

TIPWE

By WIU1AM WESTHOVENWeetendPtus Ed/tor

jstfield is justifiablyproud of its WestfieldSymphony Orchestra,but there's another clas-

sical institution in town that playsan even larger role in the town'simpressive musical heritage,

While the Westfield Symphonycelebrated its 10th anniversary lastyear, the Choral Ait Society, whichwill offer its annual spring concertSaturday at the PresbyterianChurch in Westfield. has beengoing strong for more than threedecades. And according tofounder-director Evelyn Biakc. thegroup's membership is far morerepresentative of the surroundingarea than the Westfield Sym-phony, which recruits many of itsmembers and rehearses in NewYork City.

"We have members representingabout 27 communities, from West-Held to Peapack to North Jersey,"said Blake, a Westfield residentwho founded the group 31 yearsago and still conducts the 90-member chorus and orchestra, which includes several

said publicist Ann DoCump, who isalso a member of the chorus1 altosection. ''The Brahms is on agrund scale, and we'll IK? using alarger orchestra than usual. TheHaydn is much lighter, which con-trasts quite well with the

The Choral Art Society, led by founder Evelyn Bleeke (standing, right), warme up before aperformance at the Presbyterian Church In WettfleW.

Although the society cannot af-ford to pay a musical director afull-time salary (Blake receives amodest stipend), and, according toBlake, "choral music doesn't havethe muss appeal of symphonicmusic," the Choral Ait Societydoes draw crowds upward of Ml ormore for its pcriotniiiiiees. Makewishes filtendnnce was a little bet-ter, but is grateful lor the supporther group receives I'mm the com-munity.

"When we first started, we wouldperform in Cranfoixl, Fanwood andother places around the area, butwe soon realized we did better inWestricld" she said. "There'ssomething about this area thatthey really support the classics.11

As a result, the Choral Ail Soci-ety, like the Westfield Symphony,

fature concert at the Union County Arts Center in Rahway.

Cranford, Blake claims the list of classical works the society has called the Presbyterian Church home for the last de-members who have been with the group since or soon after has performed over the years "fills five typewritten pages." cade, although it is looking into the possibility i >f staying nit began, during its spring and winter concerts, "We are Saturday, Brahms1 A German Requiem and Haydn's Tevciy community-based." Deum will be added to the list as the chorus will be joined

A former musical instructor in the Union Township by a 34-member orchestra and two soloists, soprano Renaschool system and at Kean College who currently serves as Panush and baritone Elem Eley.minister of music for the First Presbyterian Church in

CHORAL ART SOCIETY SPRING CONCERT 8 p.m. Saturday, May14, at the Presbyterian Church, Mountain Avenue and Broad Street,

We try to do at least one major piece in each concert," Westfield. Tickets $12, $9 senioiVstuclcnts. (908} 322-7240.

In concertABBEY ORCHESTRA

8 p.m. Saturday. May 1-1Dei barton School, 270Mendham Rd,, Mornstown1201) 538-3231•The overture to ColasBret ignore by Kovalevsity, aFanfare by Delbarton siuclc.nlPhilip Kim; Brahms' SymphonyNo. 4, Free admission.

JOHN ARRUCCI3 p.m. Sunday, May 15Taplm Auditorium,Princeton University(609) 258-5000•Percussionist performs hisown works with a quartet. Freeadmission,

JONATHAN QUINN BERRYMAN/

OOOOLOE WHITE

8 p.m. Monday, May 16Taplm Auditorium,Princeton University(609( 258-5000•Tenor and baritone wg worksby Handel, Mo;art, anrl othercomposers. Free admission.

ORENTANO STRING QUARTET

7:30 p.m. Saturday. Vkw 14PrallsvillQ MillsRoute 29, StocktonI90SIP13-1100•Chamber music ciisuninic pwforms works by Mozart.lieelhoven, and KurMf'. A.d<jitr,$12, senior ctttrcns and ',ui-denls $9.

BROADWAY MAGIC8r».m May l.'l, 14United Methndist O.^uiLincoln Ave. F.;r..t. (i\<&.(908) 953-90f).^•Show tunes sunii. i), t>

j<)\

voices of tnoCHenmiun \,\u.\

ers. Adults $10. -.i-mrm ifi J.--1

and students $8,CATHY CAMP8ELUBOB RODRIGUEZ

3 p.m. Sunday. May 15Tewfcsbury area1908)832-9770•Pianists perform in a living-room setting (location given attime of purchase), Adults $12.senior citizens and students$9

JEREMY C M A W M U AOUVEIRA/JENWFER TAO

8 p.m. Saturday, May 14taplm Auditorium,Princeton University(609) 258-50O0'•Violinist, guitarist, and pianistperform works by Mozart.Franck, Paganini, Molino, andWiemawski. Free admission.

CENTRAL JERSEY

SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

6 p.m. Saturday, May 14Edward Nash TheatreRantan Valley CommunityCollege, North Branch(908) 725-3420•Performing works by J.S. Bachand Stravinsky with the MasterOoralt! Adults S9. wmor citi-zens and students S(V

ANWELL CHANG/BONNIE GIBBSB p.m. Wednesday, May 18Taplm Auditorium,Princeton UniversityifiOO) 258-5000•l-'iiioistri pwlnrm wrnkr, hy

S'Mfl.ittl. RlJCtlUM'lI

Li'..'t. .Hid f r.Hu k K«.'ii iidi

CHORAL ART SOCIETYOF NEW JERSEY

H |) m. S(jlurt1;iy. Miiy 14

Music director Garyth Nair will lead theSummit Chorale during a concert Saturdayat St, John's Lutheran Church in Summit.

140 Muuntiiin Ave., WestftelrJ

(008! •(22-7240

•A Gvunan liequi&n l>y (Jr;ihrTis

<inil ft; O'tifii by Hflyiln, Adult 1

%\2, s(?nior citi^t'i", ;ind stu-

COMPOSERS' ENSEMBLE

AT PRINCETON

R p.m. Ihiisttoy, Mny 10

lii|ihn Auditorium,

hmci'ton University

(009) 258-5000

• I'nrfofiiiin}; wnrk'j hy St;m

Link, Michael Oesterle. Christo-

pher Penrose, Christopher Mow-

land, C. Bryan Rulon, and Matl

Wuolle. Free admission.COURTHOUSE GREEN

East Main St., Somerville(908) 704-1010Outdoor concerts at 7 p.m. Fri-day (weather permitting). Freeadmission.

•Raritan Valley SymphonicBand, May 13.•Jazz bands from two Sorrier-viile schools, May 20.

A DASH Of DIVA8 p.m. May 20. 21Crossroads Theatre Company7 Livingston Ave.New Brunswick(908) 249-5560•One-woman show starring, ofSarah Dash, who sang in thegroup LaUelle ("Lady Marma-lade"). Admission S15.

DEUARTON WIND ENSEMBLE4SCH0UCANTORUM

7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 15Oelbarton School, 270Mendham Rd,, Worristown(201) 538-3231•A Beatles medley; the "RootBeer Rap," by the pop singerBilly Joel; woik<; by Milhaucl.Goldman, and Philip Kim. Freeadmission

JEROME MINES8 p.m. Saturday, May 21First Presbyterian Church111 West Fifth Ave, Rosetle008)245-1611,245-7459

for Si Clare's Home (fur rhil-(licn with AIDS). Admission $r>

HUNTERDON PIANO TRIO7:30 p.m. Sunday, Miiy l r jStantonltefuimedClmrtliRoule 029. Stanlon(908) 7B2-3981

•Performing works by Men-delssohrt and Shostakovich.Adults $12, senior citizens amistudents $7.

KINO DAVID

7 p.m. Sunday, May 22Presbyterian Church

140 Mountain Ave.. Westfickl(908) 2330301•Arthur Honegger's oratorio ofthe Old Testamont figure, peiformed by the church's choirsand ensembles, Donation.

DANE L0WME8 p.m. Saturday, May 14Abundant Ufe Christian Center2195 Woodbridge Ave., Edison(908)985-6717,442-4106•Christian singer performs in acoffeehouse setting. Admission$5.

LULU NOIRE7 p.m. Sunday, May 22Crossroads Theatre Company7 Livingston Ave,New Brunswick

(908) 249-5560•Jii/z opera set in tho bebopera {right aftoi World W<ir (I)Admission $15

MIRIAM LYNN NELSON/VLADIMIR ZAITSEV

7:30 p.m. Sunday, M,iy 77

Van Wnkie Hoic-ie12H9 hdston Ate, Somerset

(908)828 1812,240-0770• l l u t r - l (HKl j)i.if)i(;t [ i M f n i r nWIIH'I hy f^nAiit, Cdill.ilMl, L• rIII

(llhl'F I Oi'lpd',!1!1", Aflllli'.Mfill

V>

NEW JERSEY CHAMBERMUSIC SOCIETY

8:30 p.m. HiiKiy, Miiy l \

Union Coiii'.rfJH'itidniil Cluni.h

170 Cooper Ave

Uppur Montclinr

(20)1 7-1C-G0CH

•World prcmiLTL* til liinodiy

[iroocc's Son/js Witlioid IVon/s;

iilyi works Ity Jod't FriiiitciM

;l'ul ['rri',1 von Oo^rictnyi AdiJt^

SI8, students $0.

N.J, SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

8 p.m. fnrjiiy, Mi'ty '20

Crpfifciit Tcitipk1, lirmion

ii p.m. Siitunuy, Vliy 2\

Sttite TlWiitrc, New Urunswitk

1 pni. Siifuti'iy. Miiy 22

Symphony Hnll, Newark

'800) ALILGKO

•New Jersey premiere ol S<'i

by HdU'Ho Sitrr.i: dibO

hy Ucc'thfAC'i; iiml HicM-

iird StMuss. AcliiiissitHi S'1.3-

513, (Wo*JiHs iv.'tiil(il)lr.v

ORUNOO'S LUXURY

8 p.m. Siiturdrly. M.iy H

Si Johnr, Lullif.-r.i:l O M I K I I

5H7 SpniicfiL'ki Avo , Suniiiiit

(?f] l) 7r>2-R4B6

•Works hy Oriamlo (li Liisso,

peifofnu't! hy the Summit Chn-

riilc (in Stir 400th ,jnniv('ri«ny

tif til1, (IfMtll Aiji.iltS %\'J. * P* • I !•« 1.1

1111/i-1s ,1'itl shifli'iil1, SK

PRINCETON CLASSICAL

ORCHESTnA

H 11 in l n ;M/ l.Vtj- 1 3

Mir hiiKhno Ai

HI tliiK'Ciyty

•A'l Mn/dit jjin^iitrii \v/!fic

M,lj[/! IliiU' nvCltufl1, Mil1 S'fl

IllHIi'l t.'IIK i'lliilllC II! I". Hill

m,i|iii, (hi' lin/ ^ymphiiny Ho

U.i in C m(i|(ii. iiiHl UK.1 .trill

Clint tm scinch tti U1'?' Acliill1.

turn to [Jii)'/1

10 Weekend Plus Forbes Newspapers May 1113 ,1994

SqueezeboxersMyron Floren tolead Accordion PopsOrchestra at UCAC

The accordion has made acomeback in recent years,thanks mostly to the risingpopularity of zydeco music.

Rut for fans of traditional ac-cordion music, there's been littleto cheer about.

Those who lament the loss ofthe Lauwence Wk Jl/ioimvill sure-ly want to be at tin? Union CountyArts Center in Rahway Sunday af-ternoon, where they can make upfor a lot of lost accordion-appreciation time as the EastBrunswick-based Accordion PopsOrchestra performs in a classicsetting - the historic UCAC, afully-restored I92Os-era vaudevillepalace that still boasts a working"Mighty Wurlitzor" organ.

Celebrated accordionist MyronFloren, who performed with Welkduring the entire 27-year run ofthe late bandleader's TV series,will lead the orchestra, which fea-tures 30 accordion players, througha set of contemporary, classic andBroadway favorites and, accordingto publicist Rosemaric Cavanaugh,ua few surprises."

ACCORDION POPS ORCHESTRA 3:30p.m. Sunday, May 15, at the UnionCounty Arts Center, 1601 living St., Rah-way. Tickets $17. (908) 499-8226 or(908) 257-8198.

ALL CHILDREN'S THEATREEti 1«3

SUMMER PERFORMING ARTSDAY CAMP

Boys/Girts 6-17 Yrs.Register NOW! Our Annual 2 Week

Space Is Limited Musical - Theatre - Arts Program

Singing, Dancing, Scenery Painting The Reformed Church ofMeluchenPublic Pfeffonnince {m) 3 3 5 . 5 3 2 3 Air Condi,ioned

& Fixtures

Myron Flortn, who ptrfornwd for 27 ytart on tht Uwtnc tWeft show, will Itad tht 30-mtmbtr Accordion Popt OrchtttraSunday at tht Union County Art* Ctnttr in Rahway.

(Continued from page 10)MtISM

4 p.m. Sunday, May 15Montclair Art Museum3 South Mountain Ave.Montclair

(201) 746-5555•All-star jazz quintet per-

forms in a gallery setting. Ad-mission $17.50.

RED ONION JAZZ BAND8 p.m. Friday, May 20Watchung Arts Center18 Stirling Rd,,Watchung

(9081753-0190•Jau septet performs in agallery setting. Admission

$10.

IAU.Y ROGERS7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 2 1Clinton Presbyterian Church91 Center St., Clinton(906) 213-1100•Folk singer performs withthe Newman & Oltman guitarduo. Adults $12, senior citi-zens and students $9.

UONRUSieU8 p.m. Sunday, May 15

Scanlicon-PrincetonRoute 1, Plainsbora(609) 452-7800•Singer-songwriter alumnus

of Mad Dogs and Englishmen

tour in solo performance. Ad-

mission $22.50.

RUTGERS CHILDREN'S CHOIR3 p.m. Sunday, May 15

Nicholas Music Center

George St.. New Brunswick

(908) 932-7511

•Spring concert with works

by Ralph Vaughan Williams,Benjamin Britten, and other

composers. Free admission.

JOHN SCHUCKER/ANDRE TARANTILES

12:30 p.m, Wednesday.May 18. Princeton

University Chapel

(609) 258-5000•Organist and harpist per-

form in a pint recital. Free

admission,

SIMON SHARGO/EOUARDKUTOVOY

1 p,m, Wednesday, May 18

Zimmerli Art Museum

Hamilton Si.. New Brunswick

(908)932-7237•Pantomime artist from Rus-

sia and a balalaika player

froiTi Ukraine, Free ad-

mission

SPRING TO SLIMMER

3 n.rrt Sunday, May 22United Methodist Church

George St., New Brunswick

908) 707-9512

•Works by Vivaldi, J.S.Bach.

anrj Brian Kersfiner, per-

formed by Uie New Brun-

sv.ick Ounrix-r Orchestra

Aciulb $10. amor citizen?,

and students S6,

WESTMINSTER COMMUNITY

ORCHESTRA8 p.m. Saturday. May ]0

UniUm.in Church

Route 206, Princeton

(609) 921-7104, bit. 260

•Dvorak's Symphony No. 8;

the Outdoor Overture by Cop

land; Riichrruimnov's Piano

Concerto No 2. Admission

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May 11-13,1994 Forbes Newspapers Weekend Plus 11

T A G ESummer means Shakespeare at Drew'Romeo and Juliet*opens 32nd NJ.Shakespeare Fest

By MICHAEL P. SCASSERRAWeekendPtus Theater Critic

Bonnie Monte, entering herfourth season as artistic di-rector of the New JerseyShakespeare Festival, ex-

emplifies the institution overwhich she presides - like the fes-tival, Monte strives to combine tra-dition with innovation by pre-senting classic theatrical texts,often with a contemixirary flavor.Performing at the Bowne Theatreon the campus of Madison's Drew-University, the Shakespeare Fes-tival is dedicated toward the pre-sentation of the work of the im-mortal Bard as well as other clas-sic dramatists like Shaw. Ibsen.Chekhov and Molierc.

Innovation, both on stage andbehind the scenes, is one ofMonte's primary concerns sinceher arrival at the festival. "We

through June 11. Director JimmyBohr, whose previous festival cred-its include "Much Ado AboutNothing" and "Dark of the Moon,"is at the helm of this productionwhich looks to be one of the sea-son's more traditional productions.The production design, Montemaintains, strives less for a histori-cally accurate picture of the Re-naissance but instead utilizes a setinspired by the working drawingsof Michelangelo. "The set servesas a metaphor for the intellectualexplosion happening during theRenaissance. The style is a Renais-sance silhouette, but with a mod-ern sensibility."

Monte herself is directing twoshows this season, each classic butneither Shakespeare. June 15-July2, Monte tackles Sophocles's Elec-tro and, closing the season with arun August 17-Sept. 4, she directs18th-century Russian playwrightAlexander Ostrovsky's The Diaryof a .Scoundrel.

David Allen Case and ArIJa Barekis rehearse for the New Jer- «i want ^ ^ to sec tne newsey Shakespeare Festival's upcoming production of Romw *nd directions the theater is taking andM e t at Drew University in Madison. this season we're trying to make a

knew that, for the first three years.there would be tremendous changes, and that we wouldn't see the fullresults until the fourth season." Monte said. "Slowly but certainly, we'veseen major drifts." Particularly exciting to Monte, the audience demo-graphics have boon changing; the festival is attracting a greater numberof young audience members, which assures the Madison company (andclassical theater in general) of tlturc public support.

Appealing to a variety of audiences is one of the considerations whichgoes into planning n season fur Monte and her staff. "Of course, we lookat the Shakespearian works which haven't been done here in u while."Monte explained. "Wo also gel suggestions from the audience and. insome cases, take into account the roles certain actors want to play."

The new season opens with Romeo and Julun - last done at theFestival in 1990 - which begins performances on Wednesday and runs

Married to a mobBritish farce is currently brightening the too-often dark Edi-son Valley Playhouse stage, where Run For Your Wife contin-ues with weekend performances through June 4, This hilariouscomedy by farce master Ray Cooney, focuses on the slapstickmisadventures of John (Tom Kaercher, above, with RobynMandalakis and Kathleen SroczynsM), a well-meaning biga-mist who goes to great lengths to prevent his two wives frommeeting. Friday and Saturday performances are at 8:30 p.m.,while a matinee will be offered 3 p.m. Sunday, May 21. Ticketsare $10 ($8 seniors/students). For more information, call(908) 755-4654.

major statement," Monte ex-plained, "We're spanning a 25-year period of world drama."

The Festival, which has a reputation for interestingly transposing thetime and locale of Shakespeare's plays, continues this risk-taking with areconceptualization of Shakespeare's The Mem) Wives of Windsor, Thisproduction, which runs July 27-August 13, moves the action from to themiddle-class milieu of the Catskills during the 1940s. Rounding out thefive-play scries is As You Like It. Shakespeare's pastoral romance,which plays July 6-July 23. In addition to its mainstage offerings, thefestival presents two "Other Stage" productions, productions presentedon a smaller scale and designed to showcase more alternative ap-proaches to Shakespearian and other texts. This summer, the "OtherStage'1 presents Goodnight, DesAemonci, (Good morning, Julief J, Monte

(Please turn to page 15)

Asner heads McCarter benefitStars in concert readingof'Don Juan in Heir

Princeton's McCarter Theatrewill interrupt its world-premiereproduction of Changes of Heart forstar-packed benefit concert read-ing of George Bernard Shaw'sDon Juan In Htll

The performance of this clevercomic fantasy, which is the rarely-performed third act of Shaw's Manand Superman, will benefit the ar-tistic and educational pro-gramming at McCarter.

Edward Asner. best-known asIVs Lou Gnuit, will play the roleof the Commander. Asner will bejoined by Dianne Wiest, star ofsuch films as Hannah and Her Sis-Ian, Edward Scissor/iands and th"current Cops and ftobbe rsons;Reno Auberjonois. currently star-ring as the alien constable Oclo onStar Trek: Deep Space Nine; andpopular character actor HarrisYulin. who also directs.

Benefit tickets are available at$75 ($35 tax deductible) and $50($10 tax deductible). Benefit tickets

ED ASNER

include VTP seating, a champagnereception with the cast followingthe performance and a listing inthe program, Reserved tickets are

For more information, call thebox office at (609)083-8000.

I Do! I Do!'at Forum

the musical / Do.1 / Oof opensWednesday at the Forum The-atre, 314 Main St., Metuchen. Itreplaces the Jerome Kern musi-cal Oh Soy as the final produc-tion of Forum's 1993-94 seasonand will continue through June5.

Tickets are $27-$23. For in-formation, call the box office at(908) 548-0582.

'Superstar'in Watchung

The full cast and orchestra ofthe Playhouse 22 (East Brun-swick) production of Jesus ChristSuperstar will make its way tothe Watchung Arts Center for abenefit performance 7 p.m. Sat-urday.

Tickets for the production,which will be presented in con-cert form, are $10. Proceedsfrom the event will help financea summer production of Side bySWe fly Soncffie/m by the GalleryTheatre Company, the newly-formed professional companynow in residence at the center.

For more information, call

(908) 753-0190.

Workshop tooffer one-acts

The New Jersey PlaywrightsWorkshop and the HighlandPark-based Seehaus PlaywrightsWorkshop will present a night ofone-act play readings by aspiringlocal playwrights 7:30 p.m. Mon-day at the second stage ofGeorge Street Playhouse in NewBrunswick.

The plays scheduled to bepresented include Enough bySusan Tatiner of Highland Parkand The Caw Man by OaenaRaxman of New Brunswick; theDance. Also scheduled are TheDance by Rosalie Kruppa andPursuing Other Interests by JudyReap.

Tickets me $7. For more Infor-mation, call (908) 572-7340,

12 We«**nd Plus Forbes Newspapers May 1113,1994

(inlain calls

NOW PLAYINGACT IV

First Unitarian Society

724 Park Ave., Plainfield

(908) 757-7707

•flt'wors. early Neil Simon

comedy. Through May 1.4,

Adults $10, senior citizens and

students S8.

BUCKS COUNTY PLAYHOUSE70 South Mam St.

New Hope, Pa

(215) 862-2041

•42nd Stmt. the Depression-

era movie musical transtomec!

to the stage. Through Mny 22.

Admission $20-517. discounts

available.

CIRCLE FLAYERS116 Victoria Ave.. PisciV.ri'.vm

•9081 968-7555

• rue Grapes ofwram. jotr

Steinbeck's novel adapted h>

the stage by Frank G !;it>.

Through M3» 21. Aamissic1'

$10. discounts available

CRANFORD DRAMATIC CLUB

78 Winans Ave., OiViforr:

(908) 276-7611

•The Most Happy Fella. Btmvi

musical. Through May 21, An-

mission $12.

EDISON VALLEY PUYHOUSE

2196 Oak Tree Rd.. Edsso»

(908) 7554654

•Run for Your We, &\\W-

comedy about o named, twice

married bigamist. Through Ju'ie

4, Adults $10, senior citizens

and students $8.

GENESIS 1994Crossroad* Thtatre Company

7 Livingston Ave.

New Brunswick

(908) 249-55GO

•My One GoorJ Nerve, one-

woman show by Ruby Doe. S

p.m. May 13.16, Arm

$15.

•MeandCaesari.fr. l\tt

l ev 's m u s i c a l m <.•;<'••(.'• r ->i

been singer tries a 90s come-back. 8 n.m. May 14. Ad-mission S15.

•dread of Heaven, laWin Wilks1

drama about a family growing

up in black America, 3 p.m.

Miiy 15. Admission $15.

GEORGE STREET PLAHOUSE9 Livingston Ave

New Brunswick

(908) 246-7717

•Swinging on a Star. Johnny

Bvirke's songs in a world-

premiere revue. Through May

15. Admission S30-S22.

•SKirtnarne, Dunne Chancier s

story nf a black college student

(HKi his wtnte vo-tech friend.

Noon May 15. Free admission.

GROWING STAGE

Ro'ite 24 Chester

'9081 879-4946

•Aladdin the tale of the Ara

fjia'i riin/irs adapted i;v Perr,<

Artnjr Kroeger. Ihroupji May

22, Admission S10.

MARRIOTT HOTEL

110 Davidson Avo., Somerset

.609' <U3-5598

•Miiroer-mystery dinner tho-

alcr. 7:30 p.m, Mny 14. 20.

Admission $39,95.

McCARTER THEATRE91 University Pi.. Princeton

'609i 683-8000

of Hfifiit. world-

iore adaptation ol TIK

Dot/fj/e i"consrtincv uv Pietn?

Carlet rte Miirivau». TnrouRh

May 22. Admission S3D-S14.

discounts availaole.

•Don Juan m Holt, benefit per-

formance of comic fantasy Ov

Georfti Bernard Rhnw. featunnp,

t d Aw-r. OianncWiGSl. Rone

AulXM|i":'i0is and Harris Yulm. 8

n "• '..^S'lnv. '.V'lv I 7 . Tickets

•57>j ; '? .

NJ. PLAYWRIGHTS WORKSHOP

Second Stage9 Livingston Ave.New Brunswick(908) 572-7340•NJ. Playwrights Workshop andHighland Park-based SeehausPlaywrights Workshop hostnight of four one-acts by aspir-ing writers, May 16. Admission$7.

OLD MIU INNRoute 202. Bernardswlte20H 301-0562

•4 Deadly Brief Case, murdermystery tn a dinner theater set-ting. 8 p.m. Friday and Sat-urday through May 14. Ad-mission $39.

PAPER MILL PLAYHOUSEBrookside Or,, Millburn(2011376-4343•Vjutn Pacific, the Rodgers andHammerstem musical adaptedfrom James Michener's writ-ings. Through May 28. Ad-mission $42-$27.

SHERATON ATWOOOflRIDQE PLACE

Route 1. Iselin'908) 634-3600•Notr Suspicions, murder mys-tery m a dinner theater setting.8 p.m. Saturday. Admission$40,

SOUTH PUINRELOHIGH SCHOOL

200 Lake St., South Plainfield•9081 754-4620•Sfamites, rock musical in.vriich the heroine fights In-terspace. May 13-15. Adults$5. senior Citizens and stu-dents $3.

TECHNIQUES THEATREMiddlesex County Vo-TechSchool, 112 Rues LaneEas! Bf jnswick'908) 521-3156*Deur World, Jerry Her-mans musical version••>i fite Madwoman of

fffftffffffttfft

COUNTRY FOLK ARTSHOW & SALE

MflY 20-21-22 - MENNEN flRENflNORRISTOWN. N]

• 1-287 SOUTH, Exit #36. Right onto *Ridgrial* A M . to first traffic signal. Ltft to I 1 6 1 £ Hanover Ave.

.1*287 NORTH, Exit #36B, f ' I C ' n a n ° V °Follow Ridgcdilt Av«., L»tt at 2nd signal to J

THE LEflDIMQ FOLK flRT SHOW IN THE MrTTIOMFEATURING OVER ISO OF THE BEST

FOLK ffltTIMHS FROM flCROSS THE COUNTRYCountry & painted fumrtur*; piarcad & stancilad lamp shattos; teddy tars;spongawan; salt ojazt stonawart; basktts; Scharanschnitta; Windsor,chairs; samplars; tinwara; blacksmith; dolls'* toys; grainad framas; tolapainbng & standing; rag, braidad & hooked rugs; carvings; country clothing'A textiles; lhaorams; calligraphy; weathervanes; decoys; Shaker boxes; folkart paintings; whirligigs; floorcloths; dummy boards; quilts; fireboards; dn#dftorals; candles; gourmet delights; French Country, Victorian, Southwest &Country-Western items. All Country decorating needs for sale. I * * I M . T * « T

9 Country »Folk Art Shows, Inc.

Box 111,Ortonville,MI40462|(810)634-4151 |

Chaimt. Through May 21. Ad-mission $10, discounts avail-able.

VILLAGER* THCATRE475 DeMott lane, Somerset

(908) 873-2710

•Other People's Money, Jerry

Slemef's Wall Street comedy

on which the movie was based.

Through May 22. Admission

$15, discounts available.

WATCHUNGAUTI CENTER18 Stirling Road

Watchung

1908) 753-0190

•Jesus Christ Superstar, Play-

house 22 (EasfBrunswck)

concert-setting production of

rock musical, one night only, 7

p.m. Friday, May 15. Admission

$10, discounts available.

WSTFIEU) COMMUNITYPLAYERS

1000 North Ave. West

WesHieW

(908) 232-1221

M St/ng in the lale, mystery-

cum-comedy by Brian Clemens

and Dennis Spooner. Through

May 22. Admission $12 eve-

nings, $10 matinees.

COMING UPFORUM THEATRE

314 Main St., Metuchen

(908) 548-0582

•I Do! I Do! musical in which

"My Cup Runneth Over" with

love. May 18-June 5. Ad-

mission $27-$23, discounts

available.

GENESIS 19MCrotuowh Theatre Comeany

7 Livingston Ave.

New Brunswick

(908) 249-5560

•Cage Rhythm, toa Corthron'sstory of two black women doinglife in prison. 8 p.m. May 17.Admission $15.•Resurrection of the DaughterUliane, adapted from theNtoake Shange novel. 8 p.m.May 18. Admission $15.•Harriet's Return, Karen Jones-Meadows' story of a blackwoman dealing with her ownkind. 8 p.m. May 19. Ad-mission $15.

•What Use Are Flowers? a one-act fable written in 1962 byLorraine Hansberry. 3 p.m May21. Admission $15.

HENDERSON THEATREChristian Brothers AcademyRotue 520, Lincroft1908} 758-1118•Merrily We Ho// Along, or howa community theater companycopes with a mental-hospitalescapee. May 20-28. Ad-mission $17,

McCARTER THEATRE91 University PL, Princeton(609) 683-8000•Don Juan in Hell, George Ber-nard Shaw's play starring Ed-ward Asner and Oianne Wiest,8 p.m. May 17. Admission$75-$25.

NJ. SHAKESPEARE FESTIVALDrew UniversityRoute 124, Madison(201) 408-5600•Romeo andMef. the Bard'smost famous tragedy. May 18-June 11. Admission $30-$ 16,discounts available,

SOMERSET VALLEY PLAYERSRoute 514, Neshamc(908) 369-7469•Prelude lo a Kiss. Craig Lucas'"romantic fantasy" May 20-

June 12. Admission $12 Sat-urday, $10 Friday and Sunday,

STONY HILL PLAYERSOakes Memorial Outreoch Cen-

ter, 120 Morns Ave., Summit

(908)464-7716

•Cheaper by (fie Dozen, or The

Brady Bunch on a larger scale

May 20-June 4. Admission

$10, group rates available.

For Weekend PLUS

Dance and more

I) a net1ANCESTRAL TONGUES

8 p.m. Sunday, May 15

Crossroads Theatre I

9 Livingston Ave.

New Brunswick

(908) 249-5560

•Original songs by Hoiiis

Donaldson with choreography

by Cindy Nicholson, Adtris w

$15.

AuditionsBACKSTAGE PRODUCTIONS

Immaculate High Schoui

240 Mountain Ave,, Somerville

(908) 788-2058

•For summer production of

The Pirates of Penance. Audi-

tions at 7 p.m. May 18. Call for

requirements.

GALLERY THEATRE COMPANY

Watchung Arts Center

18 Stirling Rd., Watchting

(908) 753-0190

•For July production of Side bySide by Bond-heim. AuditionsMay 14 hy ap-pointment only.

I wo v.omei'1. one man needed

w/a strong Sondheim back-

ground; prepare ;i song from

iiny Sontiheim musical.

PREMIER THEATRE COMPANY

Henderson Theatre

R');ite 520, Lmcroft

•908) 758-1118

•For 1994 season of musicals,

Auditions al 7 p.m. May 13,11

n.m. May l'V Adult singers,

(i.inrcrs. antf actors 114-olrJen

iiucciod, prepare a song show-

nig hi-st range.

TRILOGY REPERTORY

COMPANY

Fplmu", H.'iii, Hifl^.'Ojiv Seniiu

O t w s Complex. Manchester

Pi . Bii^'f, Riflf/.1

• W 5H0-94J3

•For July production ol HtSi'ief.

Auditions,it " 30 ; vn Mjty 17

Men and womei of ail ages

(loads 20-<1Oi.Pa>p,-ire a song

profornnly (mm wdi. 1)0re,Kly to itMCi fFo:n script atKl

11.! ,V I}!'.

WESTFIELD YOUNG ARTISTS'

COOPERATIVE THEATRE

Westfield School of Dance

402 Boulevard. Wf?5lfie!d

(908' 789-1154

• For July production of Stage

Dooi. Oancets' additions at

1:15 p.m. May 14; actors'au-

ditions at 3 p.m. May 14, Pre-

pare a 1-mmute monologue.

Kar Washl(iivovoiiiDada

'il l lie'll ivmemlMT.«fo H 5'

Brushless

odak

Friday eve., 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Adm, $6(Early Buying Privileges)

Sal, 4, Sun. 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m. Adm $5Children under 10 Adm, $2

NO STROLLERS PLEASE1

l o r a jireai Father's Day gift, have a portrait taken and like advantageof special savings. It's perfccl for Dads and Grandads, loo! And withthe Promise of Kucclbcc. your portrait is guaranteed for a lifetime:

This special offer ends sum, so call for an appointment loday.

'S« iht (urtK irymp MWIKI rvltm \» tnmpkif ikluK o

pHillsborough Metucnen

(Rt. 206) (Central Ave.)|New Brunswick

(61 Commercial Ave.)Hopelawn Union

(next to (at UnionBrad lees) Market)

WE HONOR ALLCOMPETITORS COUPONS I

Regular price 15.42 plus taxwith this coupon

(908) 968-4060 or 1 -800-794-0937Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10am lo B|>m

Wednesday, hiiiay and Saturday lOamioftpm

Closed Sundays and Mondays.

P H O T O G R A P H *

260-262 North Avenue,

0unellcn(NJ 08812

$ One Brushless *Firfnrior Cm Wnth •Exterior Cor Wash

iOnlyy

$483^ H P'US ta

$OHer expires 5/22/94$

Mny 1113,1994 Fortes Newspapers Weekend Plus 13

WootondMuseums

ALLEN HOUSERoute 35, Shrewsbury(908) 4624466Restored tavern built on thetown's Four Corners before the

Revolutionary War. Open Tues-

day, Thursday, and Sunday

Irom 1-4 p.m.; Saturday from

10 a.m.-4 p.m. Admission $2,

discounts available.

THE AWT MUSEUM

Princtton University

(609) 258-3788

Tuesday through Saturday Irom

10am.-5 p.m., Sunday from

1-5 p.m, Free admission. Tours

of museum highlighis Saturday

at 2 p.m. Western European

paintings, sculpture and deco-

rative art from 19lh and 20th

centuries; also pre-Columbian

art and art of the Americas,

•19th-century photographs by

Henry Peach Robinson anrj

Peter Henry Emerson, through

June 6,

•Photographs from the mu-

seum's collection, through June

6,

BLACKSMITH MUSEUMRiver St., Millstone(908) 873-2803Blacksmith shop that was moperation from the middle ofthe 18th century to the 1960s.Open Sunday from 1:30-4 p.m.through June 26.

CUNTOW

HISTORICAL MUSEUM

56 Main St,, Clinton(908) 735-4101Featuring the Red Mtll andother artifacts of rural America,Open daily (except Monday)from 10 a.m.-4 p.m, Adults S3.senior citizens $1.50, children$1.

COOPER MILL

Routes 24 & 513, Chester(908) 879-5463Restored grist mill with toursshowing how corn and wheatwere pound in the 19th cen-tury. Open Saturday and Sun-day from 10a.m.-5n.m. Do-nation.

MAKE HOUSE MUSEUM602 West Front St.. Piamfietd

(908) 755-5831

Colonial home built in 170G

and chronicling New Jersey his-

tory from before independence

to after the Civil War. Open Sat-

urday from 2-4 p.m. Free ad-

mission for members. Non-

member admission: adults $1 ,

children free.

F05TERFIELDS

Kahdena Rd., Momstown

(201) 326-7645

Living historic form with imple-

ments and customs from the

19th century, Open Wednesday

through Saturday Irom 10

a.m.-5 p.m.. Sunday from 1-5

p.m. Free admission on week-

days; admission $3 (discount')

available) on weekends

•Shearing sheep, May 1 •!

•The work of thrj wheelwright

May 15

GREAT SWAMP OUTDOOR

EDUCATION CENTER

247 Southern BUI., n ^ r m

(201) 6356629

•Hike in the Laurel I M L )••)

p.ni. May 18. HejliMMtH.n n;

quired

•How to tie flies Inr !ly-li-,hniti

10 a.m. May 21. Cu-.t i )

brine, your own rod and n±\

•Orienteering lor (.inlet <H-\1\

nnd parent, 2 p.m. M.iy .>.'

Registration rwiuiri'd.

LIBERTY SCIENCE CENTERN.J. Turnpike tut Mti

Jersey City(201) 20O-1O0U•"Where Science Fui .-. inexhibits that readmit avitouch you. Open evoiy d.ty lum9.30 a.m.-5;30 p.m. Atinuwtj19 for the center, $7 i«.<p,iwi(admission) for iho 0mm He-ater Discounts available•Solar energy, 2 p.m. M.iy |4

Rabbet Galliry In N«w Brumwick optm a 10th annlvtraary txhlbttlon, Rabbet at Ten,Sunday, the eclectic mix of works by both local and internationally known artists continuesthrough June 25.

15.21.22.•Sun prints and ultraviolet rays,2 p.m. May 14 ,15 ,21 . 22.•"Super Heroes: A High-TechAdventure," May 21-Sept. 5.• Invention Adventure," May21-Sept, 11.

MACCUUOCH HALL45 Macculloch Ave.Mornstown(201) 538-2404Historical museum open Thurs-day and Sunday from 1-4 p.m.Group tours by appointment.Admission $3, discounts avail-

•"Flora 94," through May 15.METLAR BOOINE HOUSE

1281 River Rd., Piscataway(908) 463-8363Piscataway Township historicmuseum, with permanent exhi-bition ol life m the towns earlydays. Open Wednesday throughSaturday from noon-5 p.m. Do-nation.

MIDDLESEX COUNTY MUSEUMCornelius Low Houw

1225 River Rd.. Piscatnway(908) 745-4177Daily (except Monday and Sat-urday) from 1-4 p.m. Free ad-mission.

MILUR-CORY HOUSE614 Mountain Ave., Westfield(90B> 232-I77GFarmhouse built in 1740 onthe West Fields of Elizanetn-lown. Open Sunday from 2-5p.m. Adtiltb S I , children 50

cunts

•Wash day in the 18th century,

MONM0UTH COUNTYHISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

70 Court St., Freehold

«X)Hi '102-1'166

luosda/ through Saturday fioni

10 a.m -4 p.m.. Sunday from

!••) o tii. Admission i 2 , (lis-

• 1' (jis of t i i f l r j t f i ; r from

r'dily (.r.ilts and occupation1,

H'i')uj',h July 17

MORRIS MUSEUM11 Normandy HoiiihK Ril

Monday U W I ^ I Saturday from

!0 n.in -5 p.m., Sunday Iron

p.m Free admission for

Non nu.'nibw acinus-f.irin adults $4, qpninr cttuenr.

iin'1 children S2.

•Pi!rmao6ni p,allery inhibits: di-

nosaurs, live animals, mam-mals, model trains, history,North American Indians, Wood-land Indians, rocks and miner-als.

•'Backyard Monsters: TheWorld of Insects," through May15.

MUSEUM OF EARLYTRADES AND CRARS

Route 124, Madison(2C1) 377-2982Exhibits portray the role ofcrafts people in the 18th and19th centuries. Tuesdaythrough Saturday from 10a.m,-4 p.m., Sunday from 2-5p.m. Free admission for mem-bers. Non-member admission:adults $2, children $1 .•Recycling Day, May 14,•Frontier life, May 2 1

N.i. HISTORICAL SOCIETY230 Broadway, Newark(201) 483-3939Wednesday through Friday from

10 a.m.-4 p.m. Adults $3, chil-dren $2.•Urban Oasis: Newark's MountPleasant Cemetery," throughJuly.

NEW JERSEY MUSEUMOF AGRICULTURE

Cook CollegeRoute 1, New Brunswick(908) 249-2077Wednesday throupji Saturdayfrom 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sundayfrom noon-5 p.m. Admission$3, discounts available.•Gardening Day, May 14.•Open-air auction, May 21.

NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM205 West State St., Trenton(609) 292-6461luesdiiy through Saturday from

0 a.m.-4:45 p.m., Sunday from

nnon-5 p.m. Free admission.

•' Ld P<.i'isap,e de Arce-Te/c/V

Ui1. CantiLiuin" by Alabtair

Noble, idmufjh June 12.1 ]hv. Iwveleros Ethnogra-

pher,1 through Junu 29.

•Indian prints l)y Ihomas

l.omme McKcnnoy ami Jamc,

Hall, through June 30

•New Jersey Aih Annual,

through July 10.

OLD BARRACKS MUSEUMBarrack St., Trenton(009)396-1776Showing life in Now Jersey be-fnre and during tho Revolution-ary War. Upon luuylny throupjiSaturday from 11 a,rn,-5|).m,,

Sunday from 1-5 p.m. Admis-sion $2, discounts available.•Children's Day (colonial life fora child), May 22,

0SBORN-CANNONBAU. HOUSEFront St., Scotch Plains(908) 8894137Historic house from c. 1750,Open the first Sunday of eachmonth from 2-4 p.m. Free ad-mission.

REEVES-REED ARBORETUM165 Hobart Ave,, Summit(908) 273-8787Gardens open daily from dawnto dusk. Registration requiredfor programs.

DR. WIU1AM ROMNSONPLANTATION HOUSE

593 Madison Hill Rd., Clark(908) 381-308117th-century farmhouse builton what once was a plantation.Open the first Sunday of eachmonth from 1-4 p.m. Free ad-mission.

SCHERMAN-HOFFMANSANCTUARIES

j l Hardscrabble Rd.Bernardsviile(908) 766-5787Wildlife sanctuary open Tuesdaythrough Saturday from 9 a.m.-5 p,m,, Sunday from noon-5p.m, Nature walks at 8 a.m.Friday and Saturday,•Watercolors by MargaretMeek, through May 29.

TRAILSIDE NATUREAND SCIENCE CENTER

Coles Ave. and New ProvidenceRd., Mountainside(908) 789-3670Open daily from 1-5 p.m, Reg-istration required for programs.•Master gardeners fair andplant sale, May 15,

WALLACE HOUSE AOLD DUTCH PARSONAGE

38 Washington PI., Sornerville1908) 725-1015Georp,e Washington's head-quarters when he was stationedin Somerv.lte in 1778. OpenWednesday through Saturdayfrom 10 a.m.-noon and 1-5p.m., Sunday Irom 1-5 p.m.Freo admission.

THE WILLOWSKahdena Rd,, Mofnstown(201) 326-7645Gothic Revival mansion onceowned by the late Caroline Hos-ier Open Thursday throughSunday from 1-4:30 p.m, Ad-

mission $4 weekends, $3weekdays; discounts available.•Dining at the turn of the cen-tury, through June 5.•Croquet matches, May 22.

JANEVOORHEESZIMMERUART MUSEUMR u t | M UnJvtrtrty

Hamilton St., New Brunswick(908) 932-7237Tuesday through Friday from 10a.m.-4:30 p.m., Saturday andSunday from noon-5 p.m. Freeadmission,

•Animal collage workshops forchildren, 10 a.m. May 19. Reg-istration required,•"The Magnificent Menagerie ofRoger Duvoisin," through July31 ,•Cabaret posters from turnof-the-century Pans, through Jury31 .

GalleriesADOIEEAST

445 Springfield Ave., Summit(90B) 273-8282Fine art of the American South-west. Open Tuesday throughSaturday from 10 a.m>5 p.m.or by appointment.•Hopi show, May 20-June 11.Reception from 7-10 p.m. May20, noon-4p.m. May 2 1 .

B. BEAMESDERFER GALLERY6 North Second Ave.Highland Park(908) 249-6971Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,and Fndny from 10 a.m.-6pin. ; Thursday Irom lOo.rtv-8p.m.; Saturday Irom 10 a.m.-5p.m.

•Paintings and drawings by Fe-licia van Bork, through May 14.

CREATIVE IMAGES29 Station PI., Metuchen(908) 548-3747Tuesday through Friday fromnoon-7 p.m.•Open house and student artshwo, through May 31.

MABEL SMITHDOUGLASS LIBRARYDouglass College

Gcorfje St., Now Brunswick(908) 932-9407Open during library hours.•Prinis by Lynne Allen andsculpture by Harriet Pnppas,through June 6,

EVERHART GALLERY117 South Mapla Ave.

Basking Ridge(908) 221-9007Tuesday through Saturday from11 a,m.-6 p.m, Also open byappointment.

•"Vivid Color" from FernandoBautista and Gladys Heimers,June 17.

FIRST UNITARIAN SOCIETY724 Park Ave., Plainfield(908) 756-0750Monday through Friday from9:30 a.m.-3p.ro; Sunday fromnoon-3p.m.•"Moments in a Mother's l i fe , 'watercolors by Anne Van Blar-com K,. through May 31 .

RENEE FOOSANER GALLERYftptr MHI HiyhouM

Brookside Dr., Millburn(201) 379-3636Friday from noon-3p.m. Ahnopen one hour before theaterperformances and at intermis-sion.

•New Jersey Walercolor Societymembers show, through May30.

GALLERY ATBRISTOL-MYERS SQ'JIBB

Route 206, Princeton(609) 252-6275Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,and Friday from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.:Thursday from 9 a.m.-7 p.m.;Saturday and Sunday from 1-5p.m, Free admission•"Images of Health" fromFrance, through May 30.

HUNTERDON ART CENTER7 Lower Center St., Clinton(908) 735-8415Wednesday through Sundnyfrom 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Admission$2.50, discounts available.•"Michael Lenson: Real andSurreal" paintings, throughJune 26.

LES MALAMUT GALLERYUnion County Library

Route 82, Union(908) 686-0420Open during library houtii•Photographs by Shirley Graythrough May 13,

MORTIMER GALLERYGillSt. Bernard's School

MendhamRd,, Gladstone(908) 234-2345Thursday and Sunday from 2-4p.m. Also open by appoint-ment.

•Somerset Art AssociationmcmOers1 juried show, throughMay 31 .

NABISCO GALLERYRiver Rd., East Hanover(201) 503-3238Daily from noon-4 p.m. freeadmission,•Princeton Artists Alliancememhers' show, May 16-June23.

NEW JERSEY CENTERFOR VISUAL ARTS

68 Elm St., Summit(908) 273-9121Palmer Gallery open Mondaythrough Friday from nonn-4p.m., Saturday and Sundayfrom 2-4 p.m. Members' Gal-lery open from 9:30<i.m -'1p.m. when classes art1 in y jvsion

•"Interiors," works by J LSnj'iTownsond, MemlMs' Gallerythrough May 26. Roe mlmission.

•"House Sweet House," Palmer Gallery through Jure !i heradmission for mombws, nonmember admission %\

N.J. DESIGNER CRAFTSMEN65 Church St., New Bmns.MLk(908)246 4066Monday throup.li Saturday fromnoon-6 p.m.

•New Jersey j'Jass, ihioij^li M:U.

•"New Generations muali,May 21-June 25. Gallciy talkand reception at A run. May21.

PRINTMAKINQ COUNCILOF NEW JERSEY

440 Hiver Rd., North [lianch

(908} 725-2110Tuesday through Friday from 11a,m.-4 p.m., Saturday from 1-4p.m.

•"Ripening" prints by SallyMoriin KuKelmeyer, thrmpjiMay 26.

QUIETUDE GARDEN GALLERY24 Fern HO., East Brunswick(908) 257-4340Wfjimusday. T hursdiiy. Saturcl.'iy. aiid Sundny fioni 11

,1 Hi. ') |) 111

• Si-iiijiiure hy Tom Doyle mid

tkniK; Lorerij, through June 2.RABBET GALLERY

120 Georges Rd.New Brunswick

-•-(908)823-5150' Monday through Fndny from 10

,i w.-h p n i A.so u\i&\ b; an-

DOinlment.• 10lli-a"ni<-'jr^niy sho.v, May15-June 2") t'eceptron from 3-5 p.m. May 15.

RIDER UNIVERSITYStudent Cenlef

Route 206, Lowmnceville(609) 896-5327Open by appointment only.•Student ail show, throughSept. 18.

TOMASULO OAILERVUnion County College

1033 Springfield Ave.Cronford

(908) 709-7155Monday through Thursday from1-4 p.m. orxl 6 9 p.m.; Fridiiyand Saturday from 1-4 p.m,•"intimate Images" in photoftrapiis Dy Susan Puder,throufih May 22

UMDNJ-GEORGE F, SMITHGALLERY OF HEALTH SCIENCES

12tli Ave., Newark

1201) 982-7265Open to the public every day•rfjrn 9o.nv-5 p.in•' Ftif Cuttittji td|;e" in surphpri'il'Kuii'hMdfcli 1995.

WATCHUNG ARTS CENTERl«ISlirlinf>ltcl.1WatChun|',1908) 7530190Daily le*cept Sunday) from 1-4

p.m. Free atimibsioiv•Works "under j'lass" Ijy Ofcif-

dro McGrnil, tiuough Mny 29,Reco|)tion from 7-10 p m, May

U•Gnrtlcn StiiU: Inltriuilioiuil

Piiotofiropliy Salrm, May M-

25, Roccntion Irom 7-10 p.m.

May 14

PiimetariumsNEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM

205 West Sujte St., Tftnton(609) 292-6333•Laser planetanum shows, Fn-day, Saturday, and Sunday

Mny 15. Admission t 6

Vi'iiLihle; uill lot

SlKJWllMK",1 Ounciiii HIL' [)iti|H)n I'HHI tut?

Soliir System' I anil 3 p.m.

Saturday tin(l Sunday llnuiijlli

July 3. AilmissKir, i l

RARITAN VALLEY

COMMUNITY COLLEGEUntile i'H. Mtirtli 3iiinrh

Acinii'-,t,if in $4, p/oup rates

.JVill'illlle•N.ili.1' Anirri(,in shy If ivfif)',

I rind '1 p in S.iUirdiiy (litoii|',li

M-iy ^ l

• I ollmv (lie l)iiiikni(.'(nuii[l.'

I ,'10 |) in. Sdturdriy llHmi[i]i

May 21TRAILSIDE NATUREAND SCIENCE CENTER

Ni.'w huvillcn[.(! Htl. and Culi'i

A1,i1 , Mtiiintitin'jidi1

I'JDH) ?H0- j ( i /0

• Jupitfr, !lu« titiint,1 ? iinrl

i ' i O | ) n t Sunday KIHHII'JI Jtitic

At Adults S2.50. senior ul i -

/i.'ns V.> H): flnlrlmn uiidr.-r G

lint iK

14 WeeketHtflw Forbes Newspapers May 11-13,1994

Club mix

Weekend

• O U M Q N i m K T C A ROM toy HMtMfWrt

61 Church St., New Brunswick(908)2463111•Gumbo Combo, May 1.1

•Sontewit, May IB.•UnyTalbotATlieWollpacit,May 19.

CAPPUCCINO ft VINO34 Division SI,, Someroiie(9081526-3222•Johnny Charles, May I'A.

CATCH A RISING STARHyitt Rtfwcy Hotil

Route 1 , West Windsor(609) 987-8018Headline comedy uvery nifthtexcept Monday.College night, Sundays andTuesdays.Ladies' night, Ihurstlays.•Kevin James, through May 15,

CLUB 8ENERoute 35, SayreviliD(908) 727-3000•America, May 13.•Jorma Kaukonen, May 14.•Peter White, Keiko Matsw.Ooney Jam*s, May 15.•KMFDM, Chemlab, Sister Ma-chine Gun, May IB.

THE CLUBHOUSEU6WatchungAve., Plainfield(908) 769-9267•The Headspms, May 13.•Swingn' Johnsons, M?y 14.•Acoustic Junction, May 18.•New Life Crisis, May 19,25.

COCKTAIU

51 Main St., South River(908) 257-8325•Backstreets, May 13,•Voices, May 14.

CONNIE'S

Route 35, Sayreville(9081721-6223Oldies club.•Inside Out, May 13.•The Party Dolls, May 14,

CORNERSTONE25NewSl.,Metuctien(908) 549-5306Traditional \au,•Joel Heleny Quartet, May 13.•John Bunch & Friends (w/Chuck Wilson), May 14.•Konny Davern. May 18 (trio!.

COURT TAVERN124 Church St.New Brunswick(9O8i 545-7265Hardcore mRtmne (all afles),Sundays,•Destroy All Bands. Broke, TheWives, May 13,

DOWNTOWN CAFE8 West Front S i , Red Bank(908) 741-8844"Cajun" Randy Weirner,Wednesdays.New-artist showcase, Thurs-days.•Ilie Weepers, May 13,•Jazilamic Jihad. May 14,

FAST LANE207 Fourth Ave,, Asbuiy Park(908) 988-3205•Material Issue, Psykidelic OvenMil, The Ren) Thing, May 13.•King Missile. June 4.

FREDDY'S1 Mill St., OernnrrJsville(908) 766-6575•Johnny Charles. May 13.•Blues Jumpers, May 14.

THE GATE HOUSE4OS Prospect Ave.West Orange(201) 669-1114

Dance party, Fridays.•Pat Galo, May 1 7 , 2 4 , 3 1 .•Carmel, May 16.

HCAOqUMffERftCAFE229 William St., PtscatBway(9081 752-1240Live comedy, Saturdays.•Bob Nelson, May 15,

JACK O'CONNOR!1268 Route 22, Bridgewater(908) 725-1500Gladys Richards (piano), brunchSundays.•The Derailers, May 13.•Roadside Louie & The Dusters,May 14.•Lost River Hell Cats, May 15.•Willie Lynch Trto, May 19.

JOHN* PETER'S96 South Main St.New Hope, Pa.(215) 862-5981Free admission for afternoonshows.Open mike, Mondays.•Zen for Primates, May 13.•Cross Cut Saw, afternoon May14,•Phoebe Legere, evening May14.•The Rararbacks, afternoonMay 15.•Garfio, evening May 15.•Liberty Blues Jam, May 17.•Sideshow, May 18.•Me Uamo Jorge, May 19.

KING GEORGE TAVERNKing George Post Rd., Fords(908) 738-9822•Hard Country, May 13.

MAXWELL'S1039 Washington St.Hoboken(201) 798-4064•The 3Ds, Sleepyhead, May

14,MMSTMLCOffEEHOUSC

Environmental Education Cen-ter, 190 Lord Stirling Rd.,Basking R i d *(201) 335-9489•Open stags, May 13.

ORPHAN ANNE'S1255 Valley Rd., Stirling(908)647-0138Open jam, Sundays.Audition night, Wednesdays.•Grand Central, May 13,•Shotgun Alley, May 14.

PHEASANTI LANDINGAmwIIRd,, Belle Mead(908) 359-4700•The Wise Men, May 13,•The Issue, May 14.

RARITAN RIVER CLUB85 Church St., New Brunswick(908) 545-6110•DenaDeRose (vocals), May13 (w/quartet), 14 (w/trio).•Jackie Jones (vocals w/quar-tet), May 19.

RASCALS COMEDY CLUB425 Pleasant Valley WayWest Orange(201) 736-2726•Gary Conrad, May 17.•Carl Banks (from In Uvin$Color), May 19-22,•Bobby Collins, June 3-5.

RtCCI'S IN THE VALLEY459 Valley Rd., Orange(201) 731-0052•landslide, May 13.•Nick Dusty Palmer, May 14.•Jake & Allwood, May 20,

SAM'S BAR AND QUILL464 New Brunswick Ave.Fords(908) 738-9837•Hard Country, May 21 .

ITEVtETI1545 North OWw Ave.Trenton(609) 3938085•Joy Lynn Turner, May 14.

STONE PONY913 Ocean Ave., Asbury Park(908) 775-5700•Extreme, Collective Soul, May14.

•Deborah Harry, May 2 1 .•The Pretenders, May 29.•Live, June 3.•Sass Jordan, Mark Curry, June4.

STRESS FACTORYHyatt Rffgtncy Hotel

2 Albany St., New Brunswick(908) 545-4242Live comedy Thursdays, Fri-days, and Saturdays.•A. Witney Brown, through May14.•Chris Rush, May 19-21.

TURDS CAFE707 Main St., Asbury Park(908) 502-0072•The Urchins, Ex-Vegas, May27.

TEWKSBURYWNMain St., Oldwick(908) 439-2641•Johnny Charles, May 28,

TRADEWINDS1331 Ocean Ave., Sea Bright(908) 842-7300•The Knack, May 20.

U.S, 1 FLEA MARKETRoute 1, New Brunswick(908) 846-0900•Harvest Moon, May 15.•Red Handed, May 22.

TCP I t CDS1. Soundgvftn, Superunfenown2. taw* fetftt, Umgni /n Thcfr Hearts3. M M d M h t t Monks, Ctant4. Counting Crwt, August and

EwytWng After5. Uvi, ffvwtog Copper6. Cofcctlw Soul, Hints, A/e#tton$

and TMrTgs Left UnsaW7. Ace of Base, The Sign8. Batla, The Sweetest Illusion9. Yam), Uve at the Acropof/s10. Candtobox

-Sales figures courtesy of Alwitk Records

I

kfetoft

New JerseyShakespeareFestival

(Continued from page 12)explained, is a comedy about ascatter-brained woman professordetermined lo discover the au-thorship of a "lost Shakespeareplay," In this imaginative1 work,playwright Ann-Marie MacDonaldtransports her contemporary hero-ine into the worlds of both Othelloand Romeo and Juliet, where sheencounters the tragic characters ofeach piece and causes more than afew problems. Additionally, thesecond stage will include directorUlla Neuerburg's version of Man-fred Karge's Mem lo Mew, a con-temporary black comedy fromGermany which was originally pre-sented last year tit New York'sWorkhouse Theatre.

Since arriving at I he Festival,Monte has attracted some majoracting names to Madison, amongthem Elizabeth McGovern. EdwardHerrmann, Uila KnhiiF.. and Car-rie Nye. Although she's not readyto make any InrniJil annoimeements yet, their are mop'casting coups in the works for thissummer's season

ROMEO AND JUUET KU< 1M lunc I I .at (lit! Bowno Iho.itn.1, PHY; HUM r.ily,

Madison Avenur (iiotilc \2-\), fvUiiso'i.

Tickets $3Q-$1(U'<'(vi!'lOMrir.(i0

Annual

Registration at 1:00, Festivities begin at1:30, Spring Lake Park, Gazebo area,South Plainf ie ld Enter your pet in the following contests

$5.00 donation requested per enti

YourPet's AWinnerat PAH

• • • - • • < • . ' . ' I . • :

X

Immediately following contests:

The Wonderful Pet ParadePriies lor the most wonderful pets

[* AH proceeds to benefit the Animal Rescue ForceFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL (908) 755-2428

V CHANCEto Win Contents

vm m n of -fop Notch

Treasure Chest

TOP NOTCH CRAFTS, INC.908-362-5006Kcdpirnt of the ii.tnvn Count \

! >fll lout ism \ututt

May 11-13,1994 I orbrs Newspdpors Weekend Plus 15

* * • • •

I N I N G O U THave ityour wayThe friendly folksat Catari's areeager to please

By NAOMI HOOKERWeetendWus Writer

You don't feel like cooking,and you don't see yourselfspending a week's paycheckfor a nice dinner out. Ca-

tari's in Bound Brook anticipatesthe skeptical diner with relish.

"Our motto is 'Come on in andlet us cook for you. you'll love it,' "said enthusiastic co-owner ThomasMiano.

Cook for you, indeed. Miano,who began Catari's with his part-ner Prank Bozzomo eight yearsago, said if there is something onthe menu that doesn't suit your Bound Brook, just ask.fancy, tell him what you'd like andthe dish will be gladly prepared - sometimes by Tom himself.

However, with a complete list of homemade pastas and Italian spe-cialites, one might bo hard-pressed to want anything other than what'son the menu. "What 1 do here is try to touch all of the bases for goodItalian cooking," said Miano, who sometimes uses his grandmother'srecipes. There are the traditional stuffed shells with ricotta and home-made mozzarclla cheeses, and Miano's grandmother's recipe for braci-ole. Fresh seafood includes calamari, octopus and mussels. Specials,offered seven nights a week, range from chicken breast stuffed withartichoke hearts, avocado served with a black cherry sauce to vealchops, pork shops and steaks.

Lunch specials, such as the Rigatoni Casanova, average $5 and in-clude a salad. "People always take home leftovers," Miano said re-garding Catari's generous portions.

A casual, family restaurant and romantic spot it is - but not withoutcharacter. The rustic dining room has a low beam ceiling, tables withplacemats and lresh flowers. Carnations are given to the ladies Saturday

PAULSKYjWtEKENDPLUSIf you don't i t e what you want on tht mtnu at Catarl's In

...or dine in

Catari'sRigatoni Tomaso

Ingredients (for two)•4 T. olive oil; «3 whole

cloves garlic, sliced thinly; «6marinated artichoke hearts,quartered; t l large tomato,cut into half-inch pieces; •>/;cup pitted black olives,sliced; t'/i white wine; ejfccup chicken broth; «4 patsbutter; el1b. cooked rigatoni,drained; •salt and pepper totaste; •grated cheese (op-tional);

Preparation:Saute garlic in olive oil

until lightly brown. Add arti-chokes, tomato, olives, wineand cook for 2-3 minutes.Add chicken broth and but-ter. Add rigatoni, salt andpepper to taste, stirring con-stantly. Serve with gratedcheese.

nights, an eight-year tradition. For live entertainment, Mr. Bozzomo, anaccomplished Italian tenor, has been known to spontaneously breakinto a gentle aria or sing to a couple on their anniversary upon request.

With a hostess that has been at Catari's since the beginning andwaitresses who have waited on the same customers for seven years,there is a rare sense of family the Catari's staff shares with its cus-tomers. "People that come here know us... it's a very comfortableatmosphere," said Miano.

If you would like wine with dinner, bring your own. Catari's docs nothave a liquor license, but there is a liquor store conveniently locatednext door. And if your do want a table Saturday night, reservations arehighly suggested to avoid the long line which is known to form outside.

O N THE MARK,Restaurant & Deli J

CATARI'S 266 West Unk>n Ave., Bound Brook. (908) 4694552Ihh column is Intended to Worm r«ader» about *nin|oopoftuntt*w in the

area* It It not a ftvltw.

A Great Place For A Casual Meal

FAMILYRESTAURANT

Serving GoodOld-Fashioned American Food

ill

I . A I I N O U I A M <H I

NEW YORK DELI BREAKFASTDelicious Salads Egg Dishes, Belgianand Overstuffed Waffles, Pancakes, French

Sandwiches Toast & more!

U l N < ; « r \ I M I ! S

Save With This Cour With This Coupon J(lunch or dinner) • !

I

67 West Main Street • Somerville7 2 5 - 1 9 1 9 Order by Fax 725-2230

Your Total Check .U»WwpiflkiofJ-rt«0«!cnorJ!Owi!Ktt' EipimMlAM *

Adult Dining Upstairs—Live EntertainmentFridays & Saturdays

Rt. 523 (Main Street) • Whitehouse Station534-4611

Sideorders

• tL mm

cuaaie, dot) 287^00,

• Tlai R i i Oalii locaiad aaV

ITIW> WNH fm www laaclil

(10II 790*2900.

M.oottucfen Ma/

M M H Gal far naaMaMMtamaten, {90D 782-1240.

* " * '*

in wiv

-MM

rwtol *Dh a daicala M M and

Mon.-Thuf», 5:30-10p.m.t FH.-Sal 5:30-11 p.m,Public parking i« acroMitraat (90S) 247-9036,

• *

rant on Amwefl Road in Somw•set will be the s)t« of the TattotsQortd's "Spnng Woe Oinntr" 7p.m. May 17. me event (eHumIVe ^nes paired with a tour-ooune dinner; $36.95 tor GuHdmembera, other* $39.95, Formon mtonnaiton, contact King-ston Wine & liquors at (908)422*2324.

. 4 6 . . . Weekend Hut Forbes Newspflpere M a y l l -

Kings Tavern908-647-O41O

Warren,

Ponderosa • Flemington,9 0 8 -7 8 8 -9 8 6 7 /S o in c r s e t,908-828-9644

****Red Cafe -Brldgewater,908-704.8999

Max's .Raritan, 9(18-725-4553

Newsroom • Somerville,908-231-1919

. CHECKS STHKHOUSE[3ROANMUHI GoLf TOURNAWENT|

QwH Brook QottCoutf, Ntw Brunswick Rd. • Franklin Twp, SI'hCIALS

<) 4!> A M SI AH!

& RESTAURANTRnlnrhteUhdniftdAv Juni22 1994 H i COUPON ,. COUPON "![" COUPON 1

m Z S Z S ) I 10% OFF $5.00 OFF J f t g LmMfffan ****** U\ An, Order of $10.00 WfoOrterofVOM II PSIOSSHML '

' (coupon ptrviM, not pod on H 1 couponpcrwM,notgooclon " . « * r i U V - L I

UREW FEES * U M CMTT I I ' oonbinidwitttnyothifollir 11 combwwXrtMriyafwoWet ||OfBM OOtf T'SMWT 1 1 L EipimiJuntM.tlM j L Eipiftt:Jum30,i£4 J L E M M

( M n K S ;

Wow A CHOW O :L o n e • Cwow « FWHH Ftw

La Catena908-725-9300

Somerville,

Mugs* Raritan, 908-725-6691

OPLNBAR'

LOBSTERFESTTtxrt*y*4^wWHOU MAINE

LOMTCR

LONOUT Of* •Cio«rToPii 'Hou

$095 1 |<^«MwS*«w;0wrG«• MoffLiutToGMU'TicQNft

Jack O'Connors • Bridgewater,908-725-1500

Frog & Peach • NewBrunswick, 908-846-3216

AFF0ROABLELUNCH6B

.WMiinSt.Lebinon,2364992

4M £ MM IT

Redwood Inn • Bridgewater,908-722-2680

* * * > ; <C r y a n ' s • M c t u c h e n ,908-549-2040

tend Dinner Specials

Coach & Paddock • Hampton,908-735-7889

wnivnVn nHurpny

Speciatilncknk: Soup, Salad, Irtm, CoHw/Tga & Dessert

i v

i u

Perryville Inn - Perryville,9O8-73O-9500

Counlrv VA'slcru Night • Tuesdays • 7pm-11 pm

31B William St., Piscataway-752-4474

Bay Street • Mettichen,908-906-1220

Readington's Roadhouse•Whitehouse, 908-534-1504

Chan's Garden • Dunellen.908-968-2432

The Hearth - NorthBrunswick, 908-2971211

Grund Fortune - SouthPlainfleld, 908-754-3311

IIIKI;

SERVING LUNCH & DINNER

China Light - Weslfield,908-654-7170

Martells • Menlo Park,908-549-7922

4 Rooms Available For Banquets For 25-150 People

• Weddings• Bridal Showers• Birthdays

EARLY BIRD SPECIALS

• Anniversaries•Class Reunions• Retirements

FRIDAY & SATURDAY NITES IN MAYJOE ROCCO & LEGACY

* * * > ; =Radicchio • Highland Park,908-247-9636

The Benard Inn • Bernardville,908-766-0002

MUCH S' PUDOGKO 0

Cafe Emilia - Somerville,908-526-4466

First Place - BridgewaterCommons, 908-218-9333

F e r r a r o ' s • S o m e r v i l l e908-7(17-0029

Espo's - Raritan, 908^85-9552

Dinner • cocktails* Weddings * Banqu«ls • Parties For All Occasions^ * 86 Rl 1-73 Hampton; 4

'ff1

Golden Corner - Hound Brook,908-469-3350

U Cucina908-526-4907

Somervi l le

erman BOCK BeerFestival

Saturday, May 21st 7:00-11:30•OOM-PA MUSIC• DANCING• SINGING• CONTESTS• PRIZES• AUTHENTIC GERMAN FOOD

Featuring the Walter Grollcr OrchestraA Gtrmon Bond and donctri will «nterioin. ColoHul coitum«s and oldGerman turns will highlight tht Bovorion atmotph«ra. If you'v« wonderedwhallh* HOFBRAU IN MUNICH it l iki, slop in during our festival lor an

l forget. Call For Information.

\

Im

311

908-725-53 33_Mi

vmfimf.

SPECIALS1010

The Migic Clown

s5:30-8:30

Sunday Thry

KIDSEAT

MondaysIhunday Nights

ALL YOUCAN EAT

EveryTuesday

STEAKNITE$Q95

V: PRICEENTREE

we ain't just ribs

1776 South Washington Avenue, Piscataway 463-1000tx?K:;

O'CONNORSBEEF 'N ALE HOUSE

3fvbi.ntainBlv( l . ' WatcJ'i(908)75S-?56b

BUFFET BRUNCHM ASS SDtS

m Ofrom fresh jomlettes to fresh baked goods, ADULT* I I N I O H S

hot casseroles, fruits, juices, desserts S ^ M CHILDREN (4>ityn.)4 much more! " ~

Join Us For DinnerFeaturing Unlimited Trips To Our Famous

Salad & Bread Bar DallyChUdfans A Seniors Menu Available

/ / / / t

Early Bird SpecialMon-Fri 4:3O«; Sal 46:30

8oz.Primeffib $ 7 9 5I

DTNHETt SKCUU. S »9*

InduJingourFamousSaiad&BmdBa

May 11-13,1994 Fofbes Newspapers WeatandWut 17

Dance to the Soundof our Live Lands

Evtiy Friday NightMay 13th • Chet Varner's Variations

May 20th - Jim Hoffman's Encore

COACHOptnTOtyt

(906)735-7889• lunch • Dtonw«Cod(WK

• Widdingi • BMqmtt • Partn *or M OccMtow66 Rt. 1-73, Himpton(4mi.WH>o«arton)

All '/« Ib. Sandwiches $2.50tax included

a*?w

Meals to GoFor the Week of May 16,1994M A n Chicken Cutlet w/Peanut Sauce (or)Mon# Seafood Di(oni w Stuffed Cabbage (or)IUW* Sherried Scallops

W M I Teryaki Beef (or)wea* Shrimp Curry

Thurs T u r k e .V C u t l e t w/peach Glaze (°r)* Veggie Stroganoff

Veal Marsala (or)Mushroom Strudel

99

Frtsh SaladPimitr- Different Each Day

62 W. Main St., Somerville 722-8782

18 oi.Full CutPrime Rib

includn wlod, bakedpotato, bftod & butter

OFF:YOUR .

DINNIH .C;HF:CK

THE E\CHANGE526-7090648 Rt

Pizza & Pasla • Manville,Middlesex, 908-725-5522,908-271-OOlt)

• * *Spain '92 • Raritan, 90S-7D4-9292

* * +

Ebbets "Crossings" WhitehoustStation, 908-534-4611

Cokesbury Inn • Lebanon,908-236.2992

****Somerset Hills - Warren,908-647-5700

The Ryland Inn - Whitchouse,908-534.4011

Cortlna's • Cranford,908-276*5749

I • 1I • •

VfflOOKB- .WINGS * PIZZA * BARBEOUE

FREE DINNEREvery Monday

| Purchase One Dinner at Regular Frfce and tbeSecond of Equator Leaaer Value is free*

FREE PIZZAEvery Tuesday

Buy One Plna And Receive Hie SeEqual Or Lower Value Free.

M l YOU CAN EATWINGS

Wednesday$7.95

KIDS EATSaturday 4-7pm

H u n a n - G a r w o o d ,908.789-2450

Romanelli's • Scotch Plains,908-322-9595

4 * * *

Sinclaire's Restaurant •Westfield, 908-789-0344

S t e l a n o ' s908-889-7874

Fanwood

* * * •

The Armory • Perth Amboy,9O8-826-6O0O

One Child Per AdultChildren'! Menu

'Does not Apply to OtherPromotions. Must Present Ad.

475 Morih Bridge St. * BridgewstLT, NJ • (908) 526 4340

The Barge • Perth Amboy,9O6-1220

'r T T I

Black River Cufc • Bedminster,908-781-7501

Time Out Sports CulV -Man-ville, 908*253-8880

Under Ground -Bound Brook,908-627-0595

Cedar Restaurant -New Brun-swick, 908-246-7030

Trattor ia Firenzc -GreenBrook, 908-752-5909

OAK TREE FARMFlarm Fresh Country Market

PHONEORDERS GUDtY

ACCEPTED

Hong Kong Cuisine...

•ACCEPT CflEOiCARDS

1 fC PRODUCE

7

Red A Potatoes

$1.003 Ib

Large GreenPeppers

^$1.00Extra LargeTomatoes

490 Ib.

Red DeliciousApples,,- r r Extra

Ib.

C MEATFilet Mlonon

8 Ib or more

Fresh ChickenLegs

49CPork Steaks

$1.49Top Round

London Broil

S2.99 Ib.

DELIYellow or White

American CheeseExtra Large Eggs

.99rHansel & Gret^l

Marvel 98% FatFree Turkey Brtait

omemadeoaitBetl

99

WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF HANGING BASKETS,ANNUALS AND VEGETABLE FLATS

(908)-755-3663OaklYce Road • South Pljinficld

We Reserve T r *Rtghl 1o ttmrt Quantity

DAIRY.

89C dz

Land o LakesWhipped Butter

99C 8oz.Troplcana orMinute MaidOrange Juice

%P I

n i l MI v j i MArr, iMom i nun.I s

Just ,i rV'.v of HinM i y ' j t li i l l 1( I ^ ,i . 1 > ii1 J t ,1 • J { ) { 11 ! I J ^ ) ' 1 - j '

1 j • h

2 Tanks Full ofFresh SeafoodLive DunqenousCrabs • LiveLobster - Live

Shrimp ' LartjoVariety of Frosh

Fish

.Ainufj ill i s K wir.: ;)!.n 1 t ' ( | ( ] r r A A A

ISONCIIOICf SANDM.v h 1.1 Ui'.U

Many fVhciou1.; Honq KCIIKJ Dishesw i l l ' • \ ' 1 ! '• ' ' i\\ ( 11 ( \ (

1 ' S • - , ' ' / ' " ' , - . '

• ' • ' l l " " ; M ! ( . '

We're here tointroduce anew tveo of

ChineseCuisine to the

AmericanPeople

Specializing inHong Kong

Cuisine,Dim Sung

every Sat., Sun. &Holiday Visit us &en|oy the beauti-

ful new decor

DannonLight Yogurt

,Yc : \ \

59 8oz.

•QOODMAY12-MAY151

18 WeiktndWMi • -Fort»j Newspapers - May 1143,1994

r Readlngton Roadhouse 'White-house, 908-534-1504

4**4

The Exchange - Bridgewater,908-526-7090

O'Connors - Watchung,908-755.2565

Scarpellino's - Warren,908-647-1728

S c i l z y ' s . (Westwood)lGarwood, 908-789-0808

***O'Connor's Beef N' Ale -IWatchung, 908-755-2565

Sapporo - New Brunswick,908-838.3888

The Willows - Greenbrook,908-968*2739

Rosina's • Bound Brook,9O8-8O5-3OS4

Snuffy's - Scotch Plains,908*322-7726

2000 Park Ave, • SouthPlainfield, 908-755-6161

B u x i y ' s - P i scataway,908-752-2229

Scampi's - Somerville,908-685-1323

Ryland Inn * Whitehouse,908-534-4011

•*•*Rackley's • Piscataway,908-463-1000

Patullo's - Bound Brook,908-356-2692

Michael Anthonys • SouthPlainfield, 908-7576685

• • * *

What's In The Ice Box •Somerville, 908-722-8782

• • • *Scotty's - Springfield,201-376-3840

Thlrsty's - Branchburg,908-526-0717

****Bucky's - Bridgewater,908-722-4180

• • * *

Spain Inn - Piscataway,908-968-6800

**••

K's Cater ing - SouthPlainfield, 908-756-2564Wang's Kitchen • FranklinPark, 908-297-2882

Aranka's - Franklin Park,908-297-8060

4*4*

McAteers - Somerset ,908-469-2522

Italy Express - Garwood,908-789-9110

Somerset Hills * Warren,908-647-6700

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The Black Horse Innexperience, still thetradition for family

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I

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Experience the combat of a thousand yearsInside our magnificent castle, you'llfeast on a hearty, four-course dinner,Then, brave knights on horseback battlein your honor. Cheer your knight tovictory amidst the clamor of swordsand the lance-shattering actionof the joust.Cunent Military or Veieram' ID required May notbe combined with any other offer Not valid with or

lor gift tertikaies Not valid on Saturdays or forgroups of IS or more Valid only at lyndhurit Castle and e»pireiJune 30, 1994. ©Medieval limes Dinner & Tournament

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I) I N S I; K A T O I R N \ M K N T

149 Polito Avenue, Lyndhurst, NJFree Parking. Route 3 to 17 South. One mile west of Giants Stadium.

A MedievalSalute toVeteransand ActiveMilitary!

/lay 11-13,1994 Fortes Newspapers Weekend Plus 19

•The first time I called to retrieve mymessages from my 'Introductions' ad, I had18 responses! I still haven't retrieved allmy messages and I've had a total of 36 sof W

DMSomerset County

•I sold my car the first night the ad rani Ihad to turn people awayi"

KMNo. Plalnfleld, NJ

*My warmest thanks to Forbes Newspapersfor writing and publishing my ad In theirnewspapers. Short and precise, It surebrought quick results fer the sale of my crib-50 or more responses."

B M c NWestfleM, NJ

"My house rental ad was more valuable Inyour papers than In big city newspapers andat a fraction of the cost My advertisingmoney has never been better spent - valuereceived was enormousl"

DRNeshanlc Station, NJ

"I put my ad in the paper and it workedgreat! I've gotten every Job I've bid onl*

KSCranford, NJ

•A week ago I ran a Help wanted ad In ForbesNewspapers and the response wastremendous. Over 50 people answered thead. Everytlme I advertise with Forbes theresponse seems to get better!"

ELPlscataway, NJ

20 Weekend Phis Forbes Newspapers May 11-13,1994

• — • , " i * - • * * • * * % * • ' • ' ' • • • ' - . ' ' " * - -

Central New Jersey's Best Choice For Meeting Someone Close To Home

Mflto

60plm is part of Forbes Nwtipapert' Introductions, It ifintended for ute by people fouhhtfijor other people withinborn to eiubliw rthiinmbipt. For more informationpltaic call t-SOC-M-9491

ITALIAN M I M I C AN WIDOWI would lovt to m««t Mr. Right, (Agi: 60-wrly 7O'i.) ityou lovt to tocl i l iu , go oui to dinner, visit tnt ihort,

20 on long wilkt and generally KEEP BUSY-1 wouldOVEto mwt vout P l t i i t reply exi 4165.

THIS ADVMTIIER PREKf t f TO RIC-tVE MAILP I M M SEND LETTER ANO PHOTO TO: IMT11O-OUCTtOW IOX 4118, FORKS NEWIPAPf R t , PO•OX ISS, SQMERVILLE, NJ 01176,

LINEAR DIVORCED WHITE F I M A L E -Litt 5O'i, active, employed, seeking slngli divorcedwMte tomtit (llntar only) in Metuch«n or Ediion,but not confined to that area. Interested in titneisi iwdi ing, crafts, flea marketing, day excursions,movies, local theater and general socializing. Pleaiecall Ent. 4300.

LOOKING FOR A TALL HANDSOME SENIOR CITI-ZEN...For companionship only, I am a senior citizen, 5'2",108 lbs, I play a lew instruments, at present I enter-tain at Somerset Manor. I am a retired RN and li-censed in New York and New Jersey. Please replye»t, 4729,

SINGLE, WHITE, WIDOWED FEMALEEarly 60 a, Interested In SWM, middle 60s, who likesold movies, good cooking, bus trips, dancing, longwalks or Just hanging out. Ext. 4S74.THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTO TO: IN-TPtOOUCnONI tOX 4574, FORMS NEWSPAPERS,PO SOX — , SOMEWVIUE, Hi 0H7».W N W F - M i , still working, financially stable, would

• to meet someone preferably in Middlstx County,7 and good looking, Non-smoker, don't drink.

r 9 4 t

ATTENTION: PENTE PLAYERS!Ves,,.lhis is not a misprint. There are so tew of us. Ifyou play Pente or anyone you know of plays Pente-please give me a call. (P.S, Robin Thompson, if youread this, please call!) Please reply em, a 173.

Came Plttyert 6 llnbbyim is part of Forbes NewtpapenIntroducUoHt. It is intended for me by people looking forittbtr people with whom in plav jjiiiur« nr cnjn\ IhwieiFnr more information pltwe aill /-MJO-J W-W0I._ _ _ _ _

Younger Men/Older women, an organization dedi-cated to age difference relationships, looking for men& women for Ball Room dancing, please callext.4766.

BOATLESS-Neophyte boatman with lots of USPS classroom train-ing, but no practical experience will help you main-tain or operate your power boat in return for experi-ence. Please respond to txt. 4B19.

BROTHERS I SISTERSHey now are you missing Jerry. I am, I'm In search offellow heads to exchange tapes and stories. Pleasereply to exi. 4947

HI SWF- 52 taking an early retirement to get out ofthe "THE RAT RACE". I am slim attractive, person-able and easy going- adventurous and affectionate aswell. Want to travel the US with a tun loving anddecent male who has a great desire to do the same.Female responses are welcome-strictly on a friend-ship basis. Please reply to Exi. 4539.THIS ADVERTISER HAS ALSO CHOSEN TO RE-CEIVE MAIL. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4539, FORKS HIW8-PAPERS, PO SOX 6 M , SOMERVILLE, NJ 0 M 7 1

SINGLE WHITE MALE- 34, honest, caring, finan-cially secure, seeking a pretty, petite, slim, single W/hlspanic female 23-30 to travel to Cancun Mexico ona friendship/dating basis. I will pay for all tickets &hotel costs. This advertiser has chosen to receivemall. P lene tend letter I photo to: B u 4948,Forbes Newspapers, P.O. Box 699, Somervllle, NJoweIrtwetin% Companions n ml nf ['win1* Nr*it>apcrs' In-trodtiftious. It is iitlendeit (in «•«• /»v penptv inniciiij' fnrntber people with whom tu travti \u\ miiir informationplweutll l-SOO-W'Jm

1010JMrakicfjoits

.-••CUP ANO SAVETAPE THIS AD TO YOUR COMPUTER

I am a PC expert ready and willing to help you w/your computer problems, I can help decide whichcomputer and software is best lor you! Call today.PLEASE CALL EXT, 4191.

Bininmt Coittrfcfs li it new tiutifii-tUimi and it ptvt o\Fntbei Newipapert' IiHiotliuiimis, It h intended for meIty people looking fur other fnvple with ulmiu to ditcuttImsincu, For more infnplmv iitll 1-SOQ-Si9-Wf.

WHITE M A L E -SMking female partner with experience in cra.fi mar-keting to work with serious artist/wood worker. Mik-ing and selling high end crafts and custom children'sfurniture.THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL, PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTO TO: IN-TRODUCTIONS BOX 4923, FORBES NEWSPAPERS,POBOXSW,SOMERVILLE (NJ0BI76.

Central New Jersey's Best Choice ForMeeting People Close To Home

"Introductions" is a great way to meet that special someone,find a tennis partner, a fourth for bridge or another modeltrain buff. Whatever your interests, you should be able tofind someone to share them

> Voice Extension Only—Your Ad Is Free> To Receive Photos and Letters - Your Ad Will Cost $1.00/

Line Per Week. Add $4 for "This Advertiser" lines.Clip and Mail To: Forbes Classified, P.O. Box 699

Somerville, NJ 08876 Attn: Introductions

Name:.

Address:

Exeniie Partners is jmrl »/ hrbes A'IV/M/WI ' tnttmlnt-tiom, It it intcmletl fnr use /»v people Unking for otherpeople with whom U> txmw m play ipori.:. Fnr mateinformation please mil l-H03-iV)W)

Phone Number:

Please Call 1-800-559-9495 With Any Questions

1M2 MODEL VINTAGE 4DR FAMILY SEDAN-runs on regular tuel only, no additives required. As-sembled overseas, imported Into USA 1984, righthand drive but handles well on local roads. Wellmaintained and In excel, cond., all original equipmentis still Intact except for ashtrays and tip of radiatoroverflow hose. Paintwork worn a bit thin on roof anddouble headlights fitted. Usually parked at sportsclub, restaurants, theaters, movies, dancehalls, mu-seums, around New York City, airport, ski areas &often in own garage in Edison area. Prev. ownershiparrangements terminated due to dispute about garag-ing & operating conditions. It you are in the marketfor a reliable, nigh performance, good quality usedvehicle by a reputable mfr, this fine example seeks acompatible slim 40-45ish nonsmoking Lady ownerwho would like to savor it and is prepared to investsufficient TLC to keep it In tiptop running cond. in aLTR, Please don't reply il you think this ad should bein the used car section, Ext, 4546.

4Wsh SINGLE, WHITE MALE-Reciprocal honesty, sensitivity, inspirational romanticsought. Non-smoker, good heart, warm-not just to thetouch, deeper, alive in the best sense of the word.friends first, later,..could I light a lire with your spark.30-40lih Lady, please write a response,THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL ONLY. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4735, FORBES NEWSPAPERS, PO BOX SM, SOMERVILLE, NJ 0W7S.4SVR.OLDSWF-Non-drinker, non-smoker, but not boring ISO a LTflwith single or divorced white male who enjoys mov-ies, dining, dancing, having fun and sharing new ex-periences. No game players, please, RESPOND TOEXT.4S11,

ANICELADY.SWFBookworm, Qood sense, at 44 would enjoy similargentleman w/yesteryear manners, great conversa-tions, classical quiet times, Requires • a clear con-science and promises kepi. Please call Ext. 4853,A PIRATES LOOKS, A SEERS EYES, A HEALERSHEART, A MAN;Swordsman, singer, writer, poet, builder, comic, Ne>trunner, historian, and artist* with a taste for Gothicelegance seeks a Valkyrie intellectual In her 20's witha goofy streak, who's cynical facade shields a ro-mantic soul. PLEASE REPLY TO EXtttf t t t .

SEE NEXT PAGE

TO PLACE A FREE AD1 -800-559-9495

1 .Take some time to wtte d a w somecharacteristics about yourself, and yourpreferences about the type of person youwould like to meet

2, You can place your FREE Introductions adjust by calling 1-800-559-9495. Ourspecially-trained star! will help you. Anypersonal Information we may request willbe kept strictly confidential

3 Deadline to place your FREE Introductions,ad is Friday by 5 pm. Your ad will run forsix weeks and can be renewed at anytime.

4. To retrieve your messages, call1-900-226-1003 and blow the voice promptsfor advertisers. The cost is $2.00 per minute.

CUSTOMER SERVICE: 1-800-559-9495

TO ANSWER AN AD1 -900-226-1003

$2 FOR THE FIRST MINUTE, $2 FOR EA. ADDTL MINUTE1. Note the extension numbers at the end of the

ads you would Nike to answer.

To respond by phone call V900-226-1003from a Touch-Tone phone and follow thevoice prompts and record your messages.The cost ts $2.00 per minute. You must be18 years or older to use this 900 line.

BOX RENTALFor advertisers who would like the option of receiv-ing mad responses in addition lo voice responses,you can lent a mail box lor $1 per line per wBek withan additional charge ol $4 per week lor This Adver-tiser" lines To respond by mail, look for ads that arespecially marked in BOLD PRINT Mail received foradvertisers who have not requested mail boxes willnot be forwarded

Introductions Is operated by Forbes N w w p * fourthtor bridge, oranother classical musicp e n , 44 Veterans Memortal Or. E., Sonwvftle, lover. Whatever your interests, you should bew06076.FcVtMSr^vv5popers1ntroduc1ion3rsa able to firxl someone to share them. P©raonalwaytomMtpeopltJndatonnlsparirwr.a advwtisements and voioe mail messages may

not oontan language that is ovarUy sexual,suggestive and/or offensive to the generalpublic. The Publisher reserves the right to rejectany ad. This publication assumes no

responsibility or liability for the content or replyof a personal advertisement. You must be 18years or older to use this service.

• _ • _

/lay 11-13, 1994 Forbes Weekend Plus 21

Central New Jersey's Best Choice For Meeting Someone Close To HomeA TOUCH Or CUft , A TOUCH OF BRAf IL .37 yr. old professional SJF. Independent, intelligent,sensual and pretty. Let's cook dinner together., go tothe gym..,or take in a movie. Are you bright, intuitive,adventurous, and have a good sense of humor? I'mlooking for someone who is under 42 and is lookingto build a friendship into a real relationship". Pleasecall call ext.4804

ALEXIS' MOM PLEASE CALL OLIVIA'S O A D -We met In January in T.J. Max's, we lalkod of Mont-ess on and ol Alexis' birthday in August. PLEASERESPOND TO CKT.4S11,ALL AMERICAN S W M -Blond. blue eyes, 5'10, slim, neat, clean & honest. Nodrugs or drinking. Seeking attractive woman between25-30 who believes one on one is the best way to aquality relationship. Also believes in Mom & Dad,pick-up trucks and puppies, apple pie and the 4th ofJuly. Please call ext. 4935

ANGEL WAS A CENTERFOLD- and a Miss AmericaConstant. Ex-ftight attendent who has traveled theworld. Honest, secure, very Independent, exttemelybright, terrific sense of humor and fun, Am seekingan executive or blue collar man 45-58, educated, ofhigh morals, quality, a poet, a dreamer of realdreams, lover of animals, kind, wise and all aroundfantastic. THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO REV-EIVE MAIL ONLY. PLEASE SEND LETTER * PHOTOTO: IOX 4MS, FORKS NEWSPAPERS, PO IOKSH.SOMERViLLE.NJOMTS

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR ONE GOOD SINGLEWHITE FEMALE?-Your search ends here If you are a tall SWM, 30-40years old who enjoys dancing movies and dining out.exl.47OB.ATTRACTIVE SWM, 3 5 -Blond hair, blut-eyes, sexy, well built, good heartand full ol laughs. Seeking attractive female who ishonest, sensitive, caring and affectionate for possibleLTR, Must like luigslli Ext. 4607.

BORN AGAIN S W M -31, attractive, good sense of humor, sincere withmuch to offer to the right woman, looking for attrac-tive SWCF, 24-34, who puts God first. Must be hon-est, affectionate and tikes having fun, Call If you'rethe special lady I'm looking for. P l t a i t call t i l .4106.

BROWN EYED QIRL-26 seeks the same. Blue, Green, speckled eyes alsowelcome. I enjoy sunsets on the beach, Softball, run-ning, football, reading Maupin & King, movies, quietevenings at home A my cat. I'd like to hear from AGWF 25-35 who enjoys this and more. For friendshipor possible relationship. Please call Ext. 463S.

CARING, HONEST S W M -From Nantucket, 26, energetic, seeking WF who en-joys long walks, beaches or just a night out. Pleasereply e»t. 4723.

COLLEGE GRAD25-yr old SJM who enjoys sports, music & movies &the shore seeking SJF, 20-25, wilh similar interests.Please call Extension 4328.

COMMITTED RELATIONSHIPS AT'S WHAT I'MLOOKING FOR-SWM, 41, 6 tall, 175 lbs. Non-smoker, secure, clean-cut, home owner. 1 like travel, cruises, flea-markets,Irnus, hugs & kisses, fine dining, quiel times at home,and more. I am seeking a WF for committed relation-ship. I'm willing to put the time and effort Into II andwill be committed and loyal to the right lady. So.Plainfield area Please reply ext. 4730,

D B M - 38, 6 1 " , medium build, non-smoker, drugtree looking for someone honesl, caring and sincereRace unimportant. Please respond to ant. 4129,

DEAR TALL, SMART, SINGLE AND HANDSOME,I'm a very attractive 37 year old tall, (unloving red-

head • adventurous and full ol lite. I like a man with agreat sense of humor, rugged, down lo earth, andmust be financially secure. Someone who likes any-thing from line dining to getting lost In the woods. IIyou're looking for Cindy Crawlord, keep looking. Ifyou're looking lor a genuinely attractive sincerewoman to have a relationship with please respond loexl 3604. ^ ^

DETERMINED TO FIND ONE NICE GUY-Not looking lor stereo type Bimbo, Me-SWF, wheel-chair, Brn. eyes/hair S-Mom, Intelligent, independent,active, shy, actress. Into RenFest, loves red carna-tions, music, parties, quiet nights, romantic, sensi-tive. ISO S/DWM, age? Similar Interests, honesl, sin-cere, outgoing, patient, non-smoker. No hoad gamesPlaase call Ext. 3607.

D F - 33, 5'9". pretty. Thick I voloupious, ISO B/HSM, 5 l11" and over, Fit & handsome, 30-40, Mustlike kids, dance clubs, party, beach, I am a socialdrinker, you must bB socially A financially secure. IfIhls lounds good to youjjloaao call exl 4785DHWF, BORN AGAIH-37,5'2", 135 lbs, attractive brown hair t» eyos. pro-fessional, no children, sensitive, caring, alleclionnle,ilhletlc, In good physical shapo, committed, henlthconscious, f believe in traditional values and I basi-cally enjoy the simple pleasures ol life seeking 5'/' •8'2 •, while male, 33-41, broad shoiildew,' wotghlac-

cording to height, emotionally stable, financially se-cure, honest, sincere, attractive, considerate, In goodhealth and good physical shape, non-smoker, treealcohol & disease. If you are unhappy or disgruntledand see the negative things in life, no need to re-spond. I like to laugh, life is too short, Are you willingto give 110% to a relationship? Please, call t i t . 4SM.

DIVORCED FEMALEBig blue eyes, blonde, 40-something, pretty, nice,interesting life, hardworker, successful career and agood friend. Looking for an Intelligent, kind, educatedman for companionship and fun and whatever devel-ops, Love black tie, the beach, boats, hikes, explor-ing, adventure, museums and Brigantine. Please callExt. 3049.

DIVORCED WHITE FEMALE43, slim, attractive seeking single/divorced whitemale* 36-48, trim and good looking, who is phsicallyand emotionally free to build a relationship with theright women if he were to lind her., and also havetime for fun, dancing, dining and just being withsomeone special. Please reply ext. 4166.

DIVORCED WHITE FEMALE- SS, 5'10, averageweight, Blonde, green eyes, nice looking, smoker.Niwly divorced A lonely. ISO companionship Afriendship lor now. I enjoy raiding, TV, movies,walks, dining out & flta markets. I'm tucctsilul, car-ing ft easy going. Only tall, honest 4 sincere needreply. Ext. 4550.

DIVORCED WHITE FEMALE-40, 5'5, blonda hair, brn. ayes, pleasant to the aye,physically A mentally. I am honest, aicure, Indepen-dent, witty ft outgoing w/a great smile ft santa olhumor. Seeking handsome 5' 10 to 6'2, fit, financiallysecure, S/DWM 4048 who it confident, sensitive, ro-mantic, honest ft abla to build a lasting relationship,Alcoholics, drug users, gambler & headgimers neednot apply, Please reply EH. 4821.

DIVORCED WHITE MALE44, professional, 6', 180 lbs., Catholic, SeekingSWCF, 35-40, 5 2-5 6 good build, for serious rela-tionship & whatever develops. Sense of humor a +,but must be attractive, outgoing & good conversa-tionalist to enjoy movies, dining out & the occasionalrainy day. Please no fanatics or people wilh little timeon their hands. Please reply Ext. 4333.

DIVORCED WHITE M A L E - 46, 5' 10, fil. Enjoys allsports as participant & spectator, Appreciates the"simple things" in life. Believe In values & giving toothers, Strong Catholic but not Holy Roller Type'.Interested In meeting attractive, fit F 35-48 who likesto chat & enjoy wide variety of activities, Please callExt. 4654.

DIVORCED WHITE PROF. FEMALE-Pretty tady-looking for the right man to complimentme. If you like a spirited, Intelligent, Independent ladyvery family oriented, caring-giving, who ran thegamut from wife/Mom to Politician, comfortable Inany setting. S/OWPM 40ish i call me & decide if weare compatible. Exl.4541,

D J F F - 45, youthful, NS, attractive, outgoing, cre-ative, secure. Enjoys music, theatre, travel, outdoorsISO special JM for warm, loving, committed relation-ship. Please call ait. 4807.

It is the fmlin of thn newtpnlter mil to publitl) tittypcnonal advi'tueiufiit thai »u\y w owrf/j' ivxiutl, Hijftfi-live aiuifoT offauive to ibt general pnl>ln\ Thii scrvur ninkniki! tolvly for pcnoiuil ad% far i l h lllikv lo eitttblisb a rdalioinliiDwill) itllivr

to ibt general pnlln\ Thii scrvur ncnoiuil ad% far sin^lvt who wnnltli l i l i l

D W F - in search of SOWM 6', trim, over 55, non-smoker and no drugs w/ a sense of humor, likesdancing and going to the movies. Ext 4646

O W M - 30, fit/handsome, sincere/honest, enjoy exer-cise, music, movies, outdoor museums, etc. ISO S/DF, 40-55, w/similar interests for fun, romance &sharing special times. Please call ext. 4938.

D W M - I am a warm, sincere and gentle man. I amalso friendly, intelligent and financially secure. I am38, 5' tall and an adorable romantic. I've been mar-ried before, 7 yrs, ago, but to the wrong woman. Inow know what my future wife Is; you are feminine,conservative, educated and enjoy tropical travel anddining out, You are between the ages of 25-35 andtake pride in your appearance, Kids O.K. since I lovethem. Plaaae respond to art. 4120.

D W M - tail, slim, active, professional, 40 plus. Caringromantic with many varied interests. Seeking 30-40sensual romantic female, slim to average build wilhor without children. I! you like candles and fireplacesplease respond to ext. 4933. This advertiser has alsooptioned to receive mail Please send letter to: Intro-ductions, Box 4933, Forbes Newspapers, P.O. Box699, Somorville, NJ 08B76

DWPF-50,5*7, Pretty, dk. hair, dk. eyed lady. Financially &emotionally secure, honest, tun loving, good sense olhumor, socially active, enjoys the linor things life hasto olfei Scekj M counterpart tor same Ploaso callEKI .4545 .

EASY GOING MALEHi! 35 yr old whilo rnalo, 5'9, 170 II you're liko mo,I m seeking a lun and fantasy loving femnio, actvon-turor, ago 21-45 who Is attrnctivo and very aggros-sivo. Any companion status is OK. Musi ho open

minded, sensual, sense ol humor and enjoys beingpampered. Must be discreet- like me, No drugs orhead games. Please call ext. 4906. This advertiserhas also chosen to receive mail. Mail to: Introduc-tions, Box 4906, Forbes Newspapers, P.O. Box 699,Somerville, 08876

EDUCATOR- DWM, attentive, sincere, honest, 50s,150lbs., V8", enjoys reading, travel, theatre & diningout., Seeks a Slim, caring, understanding woman, 45-55 yn.old, to share time together & possible LTR.Please call ext.4769

FEMALE-Separated bul available. Average but unique, profes-sional but Intelligent, science oriented but artistic inMarch of mala, similar, prepared bul not scared, 30s10 tit 4O'i ,5 l9"+and p l ta i t write!THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOIEN TO RECEIVEMAIL ONLY. PLEASE SEND LETTER TO: INTRO-DUCTION! IOX 4102, FORIC I NEWSPAPERS, P.O.•OX - t , tOMERVlLU, NJ. 0M7<

FIT, WHITE, PROFESSIONAL M A I E -35, who Ilkei children, coaching football and summervacations; Is sealing a speciaf long-haired white orhlspanic woman, S or D, for a long-term rtallionshlp!Please reply art. 4715,

FROM THE HEART- I writing this ad with the hopethat it may catch the eye of a truly honest, sincere,physically fit, Asian, Hispanic or White female 38 oryounger with no children. I am a warm caring con-panisate divorced white mate, 5'9' 160 lbs withbrown hair and blue eyes. My interest includessports, classic cars, the beach, movies, plays, travel-ing, dining out and enjoying new experiences. I suc-cessfully operate my own business and desifo lomeet someone special to share my live with. At-tributes that appeal to me include sensitivity, com-munication, a good senso of humor and willingnesslo spend quality lime togeiher which can lead losomething long term. Please call exi. 4943. THISADVERTISER HAS CHOSE TO RECEIVE MAILPLEASE RESPOND TO BOX 4943, FORBES NEWSPAPERS, p O, BOX 699, SOMERVILLE, NJ OSB76

GIGOLO 4QISH-Monogamous, verbose, jaded, sell-centered, cruel,egotistical, grotesque, drunk and eclectic- earnedtype A personality- who is at times angered. Impover-ished DWM- artisan, smoker, recluse, secretive, non-supportive, denying-one-irack-mind... who attemptsno Improvement, searching like female counterparl,19-55; no children, alfluenl, obnoxious, financially se-cure, offensive, sensual, erudite, humorous, omnivo-rous* who can be manic, obsessive & seductive.Craving smiles, cuddles, tenderness, therapy, ro-mance, honesty, Intimacy, recipes, Monrt a c«-pucclno. Sequel (will use your credit card) in favorof superficial, long torm contractual relationship.Knock Knee commiimenl Adv. MORE Feces hap-pens, PS... No Lawyerettes, Cardboard professionals.Public servants, New Yorkers, drugs, ASAP. PLEASEREPLY TO BOX 4767,

GOOD LOOKING, COLLEGE DEGREED-DBPM (w/no children), 40. 5 9,165 lbs. seeks a goodwoman to spend time with. I am sincere, honest, &considerate, 8 I look tor Ihal in others. I enjoy skiing,music, Sci-Fi, going to movies, dining out, dancing &good conversation. I also enjoy quiet times at home,watching movies while snuggling on the couch titsomeone special. II you're a S/DF bet. 28-40 who is:fun loving, yet down to oarth; have a healthy sense ofhumor; a nice disposition & appearance; honest, reli-able, & emotionally secure; & believes trial romanceshould begin with good friendship & shared valuesplease give mo a call right now. (NO smokers, drugusers, or heavy drinkers, please.) Race is unimpor-tant. I hope to hear Irom you soon. Please call Exl.4544

HANDSOME, ATHLETIC, SUCCESSFUL S W M -Very good looking, intelligent, physically fit, finan-cially secure, romantic, sincere, active, multi-facetedindividual. Have many interests which include skiing,golf, tennis, outdoors, sportg, music, fine dining,movios, quiet evenings and travel. In search of veryattractive, trim, alhlotic 5 7" or less, NS (emale (30-39) who is alloclionale, caring and enjoys sharing allthat life has to offer, II you are looking lor an LTRbased on friendship, companionship, mutual respectand love with a clean-cut wonderful man, thenPLEASE CALL EXT. 4593.

HANDSOME, FUN LOVING, S J M -38 yrs., 5'8", muscular En|oys traveling, rock con-certs, comedy clubs, indoor/outdoor spoils, andquiet, romantic timos al home. In search of like-minded woman, physically lit, good sense ol humor,w/a spontaneous nature.Please respond lo Ext.4S20.

HANDSOME, WPM, 49Upbeat, successful, trim and hoallhy I'm happy,enjoy life and having tun. ISO WF counterpart forloving but discreet friendship. Please reply exl. 4716.

HONEST, HANDSOME, SINCERE, SHY D W M - 30,desires lo meet woman lor a very LTFt. Vory opon toactivities, life and enjoymBMs Other than an honesldeslro lor a caring man nil I ask Is that you're under30, under 50" find under 140 lbs Please respond toext.4S17.

I AM A YOUNG, ENERGETIC G U Y - 6 2 , 28, lookingfor a partner for a long term relationship. My interestsare dancing, hiking, traveling, movies, dinner parties;I love swimming. If you have the same hobbies,plaaae call ait. i « 4 ,

I AM AN HONEST, TRUSTWORTHY, KIND, CARING,GENEROUS PERSONI am creative, love all kinds of music, song, dance,hike, nature, gourmet cook. Seeking similar values ina divorced or widowed man 44-55 years old. Ext,4172. _IF YOU ARE A SLENDER KOREAN FEMALE-2b to 40 yri, please repond lo this ad. Nice-looking,athletic, 40ish OWM w/patience, passion and ownhome- would like to moet you lor dating, friendshipand maybe more. Please reply ext. 4719,

LOOK NO FURTHER- DWF, 41, t> 4 , I25lbs, N/S,Living Somerset Co., Loves the outdoors, long walks,hiking, movies, dining out & more! Seeking a S/DWM,41-50, N/S, with the same interests, who wants anhonesl and sincere relationship. PLease call exl 4786

LOOKING FOR A COPILOT-I am a divorced, white male, 60 years old. I amprofessional, own my own plane, very active, fit, &financially stable. An average man- no drinking ordrugs, but I smoke. Seeking SINGLE WHITE FEMALEwho is slim, 30-45 years old, who needs a nice emo-tional start in life and who likes to be spoiled andknows how to spoil in return. Must be level headed,like sports and sports cars, traveling, dining out, andquiet evenings. Sonse ol humor a must I Please callexl. 4014.

LOOKING FOR A GOOD-LOOKING FIRST MATE-I'm a DWM, professional boat capt. with additionaltime on my hands. Heavy built, like lo cook, dine outand have intimate times. Looking for an older womanbetween the agas of 35-45 with large frame, also toshare the t ime as I, So, il you like the water, linedining and Victoria's Secret, give this captain a calland let's sat off for a long-term voyage. Plaase re-spond te art. 48?a

LOST IN NEW JERSEY- Recently transferred by aCo, in the Mid-west, SWM, 25, 5'11" blond hair, bluoeyes, slim to medium build, good looking (will ex-change photo). Looking for a female to help lind myway out of this loneliness. I'm a well rounded indi-vidual. I enjoy country music to alternative music,skiing, camping, fishing, the Arts, exploring NYC,Seeking female for definale friendship or possibledating. A person whose personality & character aremore attractive than her looks. Someone who knowshow to cut loose and have (un and knows when to beserious. I appreciate sincerity, romance, kindness,sweetness, but what I respect and am attracted tomost is a woman who is unafraid lo be completelyopen A honost. Please call exl. 4930, This advertiserhas also chosen to receive mail. Please send latterand photo to: Introductions, Box 4930, Forbes Nows-papers, P.O. Box 699, Somerville, NJ.

LOVELY BRUNETTE, SLENDER BUILD-Intelligent, honest, dependable, caring woman. Ienjoy music-all kinds, singing, dance, hikes, andgourmet cooking, I also enjoy listening and do inte-rior design. I would like to meet a man who is honesl,dependable and caring. Please reply exl, 4736.

MAGIC MANis very tired ol being alono, Soeks cute, sexy, petile,classy lady who likes lo cuddle and is MUCH young-er than I. This attractive, saparated, 53 year old JPMhas multiple interests ranging Irom reading a book toBroadway and Vegas Would like lo lind a last love.Someone to be hest (fiend, lover, critic, confidanteSomeone who is lender, affectionate, bright, has agood sense ol humor, Is a non-smoker, light drinker,I am warm, sonsllive, very affectionate, not into 1-night stands or game playing. My philosophy otmaie/lemala relationships is lo treat my partner withrespect, good humor, passion and compassion, andto maintain an opon lino of communications. Youcan'l solve a problem if you don't know what il Is! Ihave 2 children who are grown and gone, but if youhave kids at homo, no problem I know this ad prob-ably sounds like a man who is trying to bring nfaniasy to life, bul I know myself a lot better now thanI did Iho first time around, and I'm trying to avoid thesame mistakos, II you think there is even a remotechance we might have something, pick up Ihal phoneand leave me a detailed message. Please reply ext.4731.THIS ADVERTISER HAS ALSO CHOSEN TO RE-CEIVE MAIL. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4731, FORBES NEWS-PAPERS, PO BOX 699, SOMERVILLE, NJ 08876.

MARRIAGE MINDED?Want a child? I want a wilo: Let's make a deal. H-ardworking SWM, 28, vory fit, fl'-t, Very intelligent,suave looking, Prof, needs mousy Country Girl, Cor-porate Lady, or in-betwoen, 19-29 or so, to sharewalks, movies, dinner, cuddling, beach, love (a busi-ness together?) Sncrificlng for Bountiful life. Ext.3926,

SEE NEXT PAGE

2.2 Weekend plus f orbes Newspapers May. 11 • 1.1.

Central New Jersey's Best Choice For Meeting Someone Close To HomeNEW AQE~ SWM l i l t 3O'i, itrong.hendiome, IntoNew Agt mind, psychic, would like to heir fromwoman w/same Iniertiti. THIS ADVERTISER HAIA I M CHOSEN TO RECIIVI MAIL. PLEASE U N OLITTER I PHOTO TO: INTRODUCTION! BOX 4711,Forb» Newspapers, PO ftoi 6M, Somervllle, NJOWTI.

NEWLV ORAOUATED MEMCALCARKR-Juit graduated as an EKQ technician. I'm a 23 yr.old, SWM, short blond hair, blue eyei, 511,160 Ibi.who dotin't get a chanct to mingle due to school Iwork devotion. Formal Black Belt in Karate Is Insearch of (marriage minded), single white collegeeducated female, 20-26 who enjoys what I do (danc-ing, dining out, horseback riding i working out ingym). Cannot dial the 900 number for menage re-trieval so please let's exchange photos and letters.(Medical career college educated & brunettes wouldbe a plui.) (LETTERS • PHOTO ARE PREFERRED BYADVERTISER.)THIS ADVERTISER HAS ALSO CHOSEN TO RE-CEIVE MAIL. PLEASE SENO LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS IOK 4110, FORBES NtWS-PAPERS, PO IPX I H , SOMERVILU, NJ OSSTS.

NICBOUV3 1 " , 110 las., I tn|oy the t ints* things In Wt; teecream cones, movies, good convtrtatlM, goodboofw, grtai dHtntre, dancing ani f e e * I M J M I I .I IVI a WBMt reepofiswet nofiMlniwef, ntancwfysecure), with a wkketf Mnae of humor. I wtuM Hfceto A M I some one who it cefntertaoie wilt them*self, "p««^fjetn-|ane", M-4lveers e l e , i 7 " *un#er) no) into NMS, end ejUiiDSn M H

coinptiitonate, etwiej* (but not oontlnoifhnej) end

terfeut contender. Lv. phone number I H I cell youback! (Brtdgowater area, phase.) Reply eit, 4170.

HO FALSE ADVERTISING- Very pretty, slim, OJPF,SB", good-hearted, sensitive, cuddly, fun, down-to-earth with traditional valuee seeks male counterpartwith varied intereite for long-term sharing. Pleaseroapond to « t , 4 H t .

ONE AVERAGE POOR BOY- 140 Lbs., 510", Brownhair/eyes, 40's, SWM, who Is working on old mo-torhome to go camping a flihes when his kids comevisil thii lummer. Would like to meet averege, friend-ly, slim, goofy girl, who looks good in a Baseball caplor friendship, Companionship, Bookworm & Tom-girli welcome. Please call ext. 4767

PRETTY DJFS'S" slender intelligent, nurturing & aesthetic. Seek-

ing attractive, cultured, financially secure male, 55-65lor caring, long lasting relationship. Ext. 4955.

ROMANTIC SECURE CAPICORN- WM, 215 lbs., 5'10, brown hair & eyes, healthy, adventourous, withgood looks and personality. Boredl Seeking female,30-45 plus or minus, average hlght and weight, plusor minus, with or without baggage with a plus fordiscreet friendship. Day or evening, day a plus. Mustlike hugs and kisses lor a plus, Please call ext. 4948J

S B F - 29 looking tor tall S6M 30-36 for a seriousrelationship. Loves dancing drawing, crosswood puz-zles and photography. Very affectionate & caring.Please call ext. 4936

SDWF-34, blue eyes, brunette, single mom, financially se-cure. I enjoy camping, dining out, movies, plays Amuseums. I'm looking for a down-to-earth SWM, 34-40 yrs. old- who enjoys the same things as myself. Ifthis sounds good to you, then call ext. 3619.

SEEKING AFFECTIONATE, PLAYFUL WOMAN -Single-parent father, DWCM 47,5 9 ' , stocky but diet-ing. I am looliing for a woman who Is sincere, socialdrinker tor LTR. Please reply axl 4645,

SEEKING ATTRACTIVE S/DW FEMALE-Who is petite, slim, outgoing and 22-30 years old. Iam e SWM 34, 5'B", tfoibs, with brown hair. I amhonest, caring, generous and enjoy the beach, out-doors, travel, comndv clubs, and movies.THIS ADVERTISER' HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL ONLY, PLEASE SENO LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4734, FORBES NEWS-'APEWS, PO BOX f t , SOM1BVILLE, NJ 0 M 7 I .

SEEKING SINCERE, SINGLE W FEMALE-Petite to medium build, 24-30 yean old- for a longterm relationship. No hiad games, please. I em asingle, white mele, 27, 5'B, brown hair & eyes, 145Ibi. I am very sweet, ilncere, & romantic. I lovemovies, dinners, spending time together and cud-tiling, Please reply ext, 4726.

SINGLE BLACK FEMALE LOOKING FOR NO ONE INPARTICULAR- 25, 5 5, Exollc dancer, ISO someonewho ie interesting & likes to go out ft have fun. If thisis you just give me a cell at Ext. 4547.

SINGLE CHINESE FEMALE- 25 yrs. 5'6" attractive,brown eyes, black hair, caring, affectionate, con-scious, also athleltc, in good physical shape. BS de-gree. Seeking 5'9' to 6'2" while male, 27-33 yrs, old,emotionally stable, tinancelly secure, honest, slncore,considerate In good health, good physical shape,

* non-emokor 4 alcholic and disease froo, Americancltlien. Please call ext 4944. THIS ADVIRTISEAHA8 CHOSEN TO RECEIVE MAIL PLEASE SENO

LETTER TO BOX 4144, FORBES NEWSPAPERS,P.O. BOX S H , SOMERVILLE, N J OSSTS

SINGLE FEMALE ASIAN35 years old, 5'3", attractive, sincere, loving, caring,business-minded. Looking for attractive male- 33-40years old* any race, with same Interests for LTR. Nogemes please. Please reply ext, 4733.

SINGLE WHITE FEMALEvery attractive, 30, 110 lbs., 5'5 w/1 child, non-smoker, non-drug user, sincere, honest, organized &neat, secure about myself, Wishing to meet SWM,must be very attractive, 26-36,ST' -ST, in shape, 34Inch waist or small, 0-2 kids ok, non-smoker/druguser, honest, polite, not e slob or lazy, must besecure about yourself yet not self centered, lor ameaningful relationship & possible marriage, if you fitall of the ebove, then please call oxt 4294

SINGLE WHITE FEMALE-25 yrs. old, 5'( Brn. curly hair, Brn. eyes, 110 lbs.Affectionate, honest & outgoing w/good sense ofhumor, I enjoy anything from Comedy Clubs to pic-nics on the beach 1 swing or (ust staying home &renting movies. Looking for SWM, mid 20's-eaily 30 *w/e good heart, old fashion morals & good sense ofhumor. If cocking possible relationship please callExt. 4616.

SINGLE WHITE FEMALE-25 yre. old, $', Bm. curly hair, Brn. eyes, 110 lbs.Affectionate, honest I outgoing w/good sense ofhumor. I en|oy anything from Comedy Clubs to pic-

' nlcs on the beach A skiing or lust staying home &renting movies. Looking for SWM, mid 20's-early 30sw/a good heart, old fashion morals A good sense ofhumor. II seeking possible relationship please callExt. 4525,

SINGLE WHITE MALE, 20«'1", short brown hair, brown eyes. Workout evervday, college student, humoroui-yet romantic, ISO

' pretty, thin-yel shapely, SWF with a good personality,honest, communicates well, 18-33. Please reply ext.4714.SINGLE WHITE M A U M -Thln, dark hair, loyal, honest who loves the outdoorsand quiet romantic nights. Seeking SWF 18-25 who isthin, sexy, loyal, honest lor LTR. No head games.Please reply ert. 4726,

SINGLE WHITE MALE-25, Brn. hair, hazel eyes, slim, athletic, enjoys thelittle things, Sports, Beach, Books especially chil-dren. Seeking SWF w/similar Interests. Please callExt. 4540.

SINGLE WHITE MALE-25,140 lbs, honest a sincere, seeking a SWF, 20-25under 160 lbs. with simillar Interests which are diningout, movies, walking, listening to music, or spendinga quiet evening at nome. Seeking a friendship or along term relationship In Somerset County. Only seri-ous need reply.THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL. PLEASE SEND SHORT NOTE AND PHONENUMBER TO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 3932, FORBESNEWSPAPERS, PO BOX 699, SOMERVILLE, NJ0 M 7 I . ___SINGLE WHITE MALE- 32, 67 ,190 lbs. Good look-Ing, honest w/good sense of humor. I like sports, theoutdoors, movies, etc. ISO woman 26-3B, attractivew/good sense of humor w/slmilar interests. If this isyou. This advertiser has chosen to receive mallalso. Send lettet A/or photo to: EM. 3099 Introduc-tions, Forbes Newepspers, P.O. Box 699, Somer-v l 1 l e , N J , 0 t m

SINGLE, BUCK, JAMAICAN FEMALE-Divorced, 38 years old. I have been single tor over 4years and I am looking tor a Black, single, Christianman. He must be in his 40-50, and love God andkids. I am looking for Mr. Right and I am very lovingand kind. Please reply ext. 4720.

SOMERSET COUNTY BUSINESSMAN- OW, 45 yrsold 6'1, 180 lbs. non smoker, non drinker with flex-ible hours to share with financially secure female.Please call Ext. 4942.

SPECIAL LADY WANTED-Thls 48 DWPM is looking for a special woman. Sheshould be between 35-55 and very open-minded andenjoy living an alternative lifestyle. I like all the regu-lar activities, dining, dancing, etc. and all the activi-ties NYC has to offer. She may be attached or unat-tached. I am disease and drug free in SomersetCounty, Ext. 4600.THIS ADVERTISER HAS ALSO CHOSEN TO RE-CEIVE MAIL. PLEASE SEND LETTER TO: INTRO-DUCTIONS BOX 4600, FORBES NEWSPAPERS,P.O.BOX 699, SOMERVILLE, NJ 06676.

SPOUSE WANTED- White widow in her 70s. Realhome body. If Interested write to: Introductions, Box4934, Forbes Newspapers, P.O. Box 699, Somerville,NJ 08B76

8 W F -39, independent, earlh muffin, turned altopnailve,punketl, equally a home ai clubs or beach Seekinghonest SWM, be something to beliove in or some-body to shove. Lets get closer to the star;. No naga-tive creeps.THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVE

MAIL PLEASE SEND UTTER AND PHOTO (OP-TIONAL) TO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4640, FORBESNEWSPAPERS, PO BOX <99, SOMERVILLE, NJOSSTS.

S W F -40lsh, prof,, petite, auburn hair, w/cultural & artisticinterests, I enjoy going to NYC, also smart men, fastcars & slow hands, seeks a SWM who is financially &emotionally secure, tor living happily ever-after.Please call ext.4762

SWJM- 34,6 2 210 lbs. College educated, Lookingtor unique female for friendship, companionship ormore. Interest Include tennis, exciting Sundaybrunches, music, BBQ. dancing, family gatherings,cooking, watching videos, romance, etc. I am little bitol a recovering Agoraphobic so it will be nice if youhave petiences and a NJ driver's license. Please callext. 4941.

I W M ( 4 4 1 6 l 1 " , 1 7 ! l b l -Non-smoker, social drinker, good-looking. I enjoyoldies, reeding, dining out, sports, flea markets, mov-ies, and just quiet times together; love children. Inter-ested in meeting attractive, S or OWF, 30+ with simi-lar interests for serious LTR, Definitely no drugs!THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL ONLY. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4627, FORBES NIWB-PAPERS, PO BOX 6 H , SOMERVILU, NJ OS676.

SWM, ATTRACTIVE-33-Tall, sensitive, honest, funny likes romantic din-ners, Village, day trips, seeks S/DPF 23-35 cute,sweet, independent, soulmate for a committed sen-sual LTR.THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL ONLY. PLEASE SEND LETTER TO: INTRO-DUCTIONS BOX 4717, FORBES NEWSPAPERS, POBOX S H , SOMERVILLE, NJ OSSTS.

S W M - 27, 57", overweight, sensitive, caring, con-siderate & honest, I like laughuing, talking, rentingmovies, walking, & would try almost anything wioththe right person, I'm looking for a SWF. 16-35, toshare the good & bad times with. Somoone whoshares some of the same qualities I have am is look-ing for a relationship with a really nice guy, Pleasecall ext. 4770

S W M - 35, 6 ft., dark hmr & eyes, good looking &trim, seeks pretty, petite & caring SWF, 21-29, wholoves Harleys lor possible LTR, please call oxt.4773

S W M - 39, ISO black female, age unimportant, wouldlike to meet someone who enjoys fine dining, danc-ing, beach activities, somoone who is just looking toonioy life. If you are this person, please give me acall. Please call ext, 4825.

S W M -41, brown-haired, blued-eyed professional, 6 2 tall Ihave a very dry sense ol humor, I have my Doctorateand am successful. I enjoy the Beach in the summerLooking for a female in the 30-45 yr. lartge for apermanent relationship. Pis call ext. 4b66

S W M - 41, tall, rugged, rascal, athletic, no previousatresls (OK, detention once in H.S.) diverse interests.Seeks attractive, affection female of substance forromance. Share a drink? With chemistry severaldrinks? This advertiser has also chosen to receivemail. Please send letter to Introductions, Box 4927,Forbes Newspapers, P.O. Box 699, Somerville, 08B76

S W M - 43, I'm quiel, senstive. intelligent, physicallyfit & handsome. I'm interested in a physically fit s/DWF, 33-46, 5'8" or less, who enjoys the outdoors,golf tennis, dining out, movies, quiet nights at homeand the simpler things in life. This advertiser haschosen to reclve mail: Introductions Box 4762,Forbes Newspapers, PO BOX 699, Somerville, NJ08B76

S W M -Searching for one of a kind SWF. I am a successful,SWM, 27, who is tired of head-games & what the barscene has to offer. I am goal-oriented and easygoing. My activities range Irom NYC lo the shore...tostaying In and reading a good book, If you are a SWF22-30, who has the similar above qualities & inter-ests. Please call ext. 4772.

SWPM, 335 8", 155 lbs,, brown hair/eyes Financially and emo-tionally secure business owner Enjoy summer,beaches, boating, vacations, lancy hotels spontane-ous travel, sports, sporting events, rock/pop music,romantic evenings, Seeking slim, attractive, passion-ate, SWF, 21-29 who likes to got spoiled and has agood sense of humor Friends lirsl, then possiblymeaningful, honest monogamous LTR Needle in ahaystack • where are you1''THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL ONLY. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTOTO: INTRODUCTIONS BOX 4732, FORBES NEWS*PAPERS, PO BOX 699, SOMERVILLE, NJ 08176.

SWPM- 25, 6 3 , bfownhair, blue hair. Seeks tall, n/s, humorous, SWPF, age 20-30. interested in sports,music i movlos Ext 4629

TIONAL) TO: INTRODUCTIONS, BOX 4143, FORBESNEWSPAPBRS, PO BOX 619, SOMERVILLE, NJOSSTt,THE GREAT AMERICAN DWPF- mid 40s, A#1corp. business woman, guaranteed class, impeccablygroomed, great looks(slightly plumb but wellshaped), N/S, no kids, S & emotionally secure. ISO 1dynamic, high caliber man(preterably over 5'10), whocan kick off his wing tips & balance his life w/laugh*ter & love. Edison area. Possible benefits are deli*nitely worth the risk ol replying! Please call Ext, 4851.

VERY PRETTY SWF- 26, 5 8'. dark blond, blueeyes, gqil-ofienled, ambitious, bubbly, sensitive,down to earth, affectionate, looking lor similar SWM,29-39, Ipr e possible LTR. I am outgoing and havediversified Interests. I like men of Irish descent butam also open-minded Please respond lo ert. 4810.

VERY ROMANTICHandsome, level-headed, sincere & honest SWM 39511" 170 Ib. who always treats a woman with re-spect and Class, In search ol long term relationshipwith SWF } t • 40. who is slim & attractive and enjoysthe theater, movies, dancing, good conversation,comedy clubs and weekend getaways. Pieate replyEni4Biil J_WANTED: NEW PARTNER- 43 yr. old Jewish entre-preneur, salei engineer, street-wise but refined, 6'1",handsome, graying blond hair, blue-gray eyei, whoexercises and •• in excellent mental and physicalhealth li losing lor a new partner, You mutt beassertive, focused end sincere with a eales end busi-ness background and can function well under pres-sure. You should not mind getting messy in the grayareat of business in life. A good sense of humor endthe abstract absurd are required. Good friends endfamily should be considered amongst the finer re-ward! in life. If you are a Jewish woman, 25*34, tall(over 5'5"), athletic, non-smoker, who is looking for-ward to the next venture in life, please reply, I wouldlike to meet you. This edvertleef has chteajt toreceive maH only. Please send tetter to: Box 4St3,Introductions, Forbes Newspaper, P.O. Bei S H ,S o m O f ¥ l l M J t H 7 6

WHITE WIDOWEp MALEWarm, witty A wonderful. I'm 42 yrs. old, 5' 6, 140lbs., in great shape, have a good job & no kids.Interested In meeting a nice lady, should be petite &pretty with a great sense ot humor. I like mijilc,sports, play baseball, enjoy eating dinners at restau-rants & going to movies. I am a smoker. Please callEm. 4330.

WWJM, 96511", 180lbs. Caring, sense of humor. Enjoy travel,Broadway, Dining, Sports, Movies. ISO trim, N/S, JF,40-50, attractive with same interests for LTR. Pleasereply e*1 4713

THE GUY YOUR PARENTS WARNED YOU ABOUT"Not Hill reading? SWM-31 (looks 24-25), 510, med.build (not thin-but not fat either!) Shoulder lengthBrn. hair, green eyes, enjoys lifes simple pleasures.Blue Jeans, Rock & Roll, Comedy clubs, camping,Shore, Down to earth w/great sense of humor. Funloving, Adventurous & a hopeless Romantic seekssame in an altractive WF 21-35 w/same Interests forFun, Romance, Adventure & possible long term rela-tionship. I am a smoker. Please call Ext. 4515.

INTRODUCTIONS

TO PUCE YOUR

AD CALL

1-800-559-9495SWPM- 45, Business owner, typo A personality.Boating enthusiast seoks classy SWPF, 30-40 coun-terpart lor carimj/slwmtj possible ITU Ext 4643.THIS ADVERTISER HAS CHOSEN TO RECEIVEMAIL. PLEASE SEND LETTER AND PHOTO (OP-

Mayh 1113,' 1994 Fortes Nrtwspapers WetMdPius 23

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T h e S ta r L e d g e r (Friday May H1st Place Award For Banquet Catering by NJRA

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QUATTKO $TAGK)NI 150

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COTOLETTA CAMPAGNOLA 15.25m p m r rrwontH ajni vppN wwi ora|M^ roTwm

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24 WuekendPlus Forbes Newspapers May 11-13,1994

Forbes Newspapers

11, 12, 13 1994

Keep yourhouse intip-top shape

5. i i i, .. .*. t. \ 1

New home

Realty notes

Property sales

2-May11.1213.1994 RealEstate A Fortes Newspaper Supplement

Forbes Newspapers

RealEstateC O N T E N T S

Cover house

Cover story

New home

Property sales 10,11-V-

Realty notes 9,12,13

Forbes Newspapers

Cheryl FenskeSpecial Section! Editor-

O « 1 Copy Editor

Naomi KookerRe* Estoie Editor

JanaStiehleStanWHson

Clu t i fM Account Executives

DougluBtumQanifledAdvariitlng Menager

KeHyZuHoClmMied Telephone

Stfet Manager

Connte Mthoney

S ^ M Repmenitfwe

Malcolm S.foitet Jr.EdMof-ln-CMef ol Forbet Majatine end Forbtt Nwnpepen

Louis S.Banony

ftchardA.McCombAdveftMng Manager

George GannonCirculation Director

On the cover:Thisthrettodroomcolonial in PteatawiyIt lasted with Gary HindsotWetchefi Rsiltofsin Edison.

Somerset Messenger-Gazette, Htlls-Bedmlnster Press, Bound Brook Chronicle, The Chronicle, Metuchen-Edison Review Piscataway Review, South PlalnfieldReporter, Franklin Focus, Green Brook-North Ptalnflekl Journal, WanervWaAchung Journal, Highland Park Herald, Focus Cranford Chronicle,

Scotch Plains Fanwood Press, WestHeW Record, Buyers GuideTo Subscribe to Forbes Newspapers call: 1-8OO-30O-9321 • To advertise call: 908-722-3000

• i

5% PriseIncrease Effective

May 16th

OUR DOOR IS OPEN!OPEN HOUSE

SATURDAY 10-3:30

eeeNow make another o n e -

Choae MARIANO I G b N l ' Mw your Real Estite Attorney I

l ,&2BRMotlclsOwner Financing\\pQualified BujtersSlarttfijfAs Low As,$95500$95,500

• Located Close ToDowntown & N.Y.Transportation

• Other Hours ByAppointment

• 3 Acre Estate Grounds

hirckascCondo/Townhouse 5525.00

directions; Westdeld or Nonh Ave. to lighi jusi krorc Pairy Ouccn (Klizabeih Ave.) Qo I Mock pastblinker to Prospect, left onto Prospect, 2 1/4 blocks 10 luiglish Village on fighi.

C O N D O M I N I U M S217 Prospect fee., Cranlord 276-0370

Tel 9O8-20.7MOta 906-214-0131*

< * * \ \ S «t

Newlrunnwkk/Somefiet844 Easton Avenue

t4NJ088732O5OmnlDriv«atRt.

Soft«rvlll#lW.O«76

0'

A Forbes t Supplement May 11,1213,1994-3

Mo' ISTER $875,000NTRY ELEGANCE ft

MOVE-IN CONDITION!!!C BMpiomCMtom BuMHonw.

Luiury Wariw *tfo • ! lh» Knttl ippoftl-m«rt».Approikm»tt(y 4,000 iq.dJwiriQai**.Graal hwna tof anlarttlnfltafl Natllao on 3M r n ol pttfcMit land m E i t m t r u Preptr-ty WHIN* for horNi.BO#3i94

NE« OFFICE W-7S1-K

DIP

For1000

M o '

For1022

Mo.'

SOMERSET $169,900SPACIOUS RANCH

Thfta bMraoflit. 2 Wl fwiwdtW tMth$,thyUoht. nut root, fcimtcti oantnl ilf, 3 cvp n g i I Imctdyftrd. Oommi«i».BO#3W

.BEDWNSTER OFFICE M U M - f l O l

FRANKUNTWP. $260,900SPREAD OUT

AhnoM Brmd ntw 4 Btdroom Colonial, withmany axtrai, tndowd porch, towed yard,f RP.k* ftm How ahriy. BD#34}4.BEOMWSTER OFFICE 9M-7SM000

BRIDGEWATER $69,900BANK SAYS MUST SELL

3 btdroomt, Vft b«tha, 2nd itory condo inBOOdKtiooldWrict BOW-4119

JMNUtlUROOFFICEMtHim

Mo/

SOMERVILLE $112,900PRIME LOCATION!

Immerjiata K C M I to 22. 287, 76, 202, 206Walk to Main Strati. 2 badroom lownhousawith low association NM> B003-4155

.BRANCHBUW OFFICE90e.$26-6444 j

Mo:

BRANCHWWTWP. $234,8072 yf. old colonial Mh 3 badroomt, 2'A bathsConvaniant to 78,287,202 22 a 206 Catha-

dralcaihngt.fireplace Mutt sa*1! 8003-4200

IOFFICE90W26-W44

Mo;

EDISON $97,900SPARKLING FRESH CONDO

You II lova the fresh took A leal o! this 2badroom delight with skylights, walk in closeti 2 Ml baths, Hurry"• #193-4395

EWSONOfFICE 90M944600

If YOU THMK1W LOWMOHMLY NHrMBIIS M

1307Mo.'

• I

MWtWyouthe great homes they buy/

VISIT OUR OPEN HOUSES THIS WEEKEND!•a t awthaaa a^oat up ( • M M a T rrofthty mortgBoo payments (principal+tiierest) quoted hour adsare to c^aMad buyers, baaed ipon a 20% dowipaymenf and a conwrttonalS&yeartowd rate loan al6.125% w * 3 ports, kPM, 61480%. As an«Kample, a $100,000 loan v»oJ(J mean 360moi*rypav-fT^t9^$7^ooft»Mi«^p>uaaliMilJttJ«taimWbuyers based upon a 20% d o w W i e n i and ukxilated at 8.250% with 3 pants on a "Junto" M y w r fixedrate mortgage with an k P M . Of 6 . 6 1 1 % An exarnple of a $500,000 ban would mean 360 monthlypayments ol $3,756.00 figures herein are approwmate and do no! «>du* property taxes, hazard insurance,or homeowners association dues tor a condominium purchase. Interest rates quoted are as ol Apnl 19,1994,and subject to chatqe Not respor^rjeior typographical orns, wMe nlonnation is betottd accurate, werequest that (ho payment be validated wf t a mortgage ponder pnor to purchase.

Raw 0494 0378

mI*

Mo.:

EDISON $129,900LIVE THE GOOD LIFE

Eoclusive Park Gste Pool, Tennis 24hrsecurity 2bedmomhrsifloonjnit. upgradod#193-4460

EDISON OFFICE 90M74-8100.

BRANCHBURG $165,900SPRING HAS SPRUNG AND...Look what just bloomad1 Don't miss thisimmaculate 2 bedroom Townhome with afamily room. basemen) 1 car garage on a cul-de-sac This one is ready to pick1 HB7175

.HILLSBOROUGH OFFICE 909-874-8100,

BuyFor

iii

FRANKLIN $115,000GOLFER'S DREAM HOME!This Icwhome is minutes Irom QuailbrookGolt Course1 Imagine2 bdtms, 2Vv baths -swimming and goll tn the summer and afireplace m the winter This won t last long'Call Today1 H07J33

.HILLSBOflOUGH OFFICE908-874-8100

=RANKLINTY/SP. $91,900AFFORDABLE & LOVELY

Spaciousendunilonlirst floor in SoaetyHillsincludes 2 bedrooms, 2 baihs, many upgrades Located m Somerset, this beautifulunilotffl'Spalto lawn area and primobcaiionMusi see1 HBM2KETUCHEN OFFICE 908-874-811

For918

Mo :

EDISON $154,500YouvwMfaHinlove 2BR, tbaih (ullbasement.e«tin kitchen, Florida room, one car oarage,lovely garden, large property 024-2757

JOTUCHEN OFFICE 908 90M200

1266

EDISON $212,900Cool price hot item Live in popular NorthEdison (or a realistic pnea Two story ft threebdrm 2 5 baths Qurite Pool 024-2613

.METUCHEN OFFICE 90H0M20O

M o :NO. PIAINFIELD $139,000

SI SUNDAY I SPMBeautifully kept home in a quiet communityWonJ last long 096-5457OIR Rle. 22 to flock Ave. Left on Warfield tohouse on RightOLDWCK OFFICE 908439-27"

M413"Mo. '*

MIDDLEBUSH $237,900WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?

3,400 sq ft privacy meticulous landscapingquality construct bldr s home fantastic lamrm. Irplc wet bar C/A C/V? Yes, This is it1

096-5419

LOLOWICK OFFICE 908-439-2777

WARREN $999,000

Magnificent Mitch L traditional e tweuooms.4% baths, all brick Cul-de-uc WA34B6DIR. Mt Horsb to Rockage lo ThislleWAflREN OFFICE 906-757.7780.

For1/4?

M o ;U I N F I E L D $289,900HISTORICAL NEIGHBORHOODI

Drira your wtiili gtavti lo Impacl Itili 7 BR horn* w/S'4 EitM 1 i «wriun9 fKiptKM: fautlar't quvtartM>ri<y Ffl. den, tfling im, mutn mo'tl Cirwgthomi w/r»nov«l»d ktt, LR, * n |<H btdroom. 4ciig«i alt n«tlt«d onapproi 1 Ki t Too much total1

WMMI

WARREN OFFICE 906-757-7780

ui\

1307Mo,'

'•1187 'iMo : 4

BRIDQEWATER $220,LUXURY TOWNHOME

Spacious and gracious maintenance free liv-ing! End unit, custom model decor, centralair. ftmsrwd basement alarm deck, applUrns \ 4 WA1531

wWATCHUNQ OFFICE 906561-541

GREENBROOK $199,900JUST FOR YOU!

Beautiful 4 Bf colonial oHermg slone fireplacein Itvmg room built in cabinets in dining areacentral air and nwch rnorfl1 WC # 1600

WATCHUNQ OFFICE 906-561 M l

METUCHEN $219,900A RARE FIND!!!

Brand new 2.000 sq It. colonial in desirableLjfce Ava Araa Features include Fireplace.Centra! Air, Basement and more Still time tocustomize. Hurty #193-41878

EDtSONOFFICE MMH6800

For647

Mo:

EDISON $108,900DON'T MISS THIS ONE

An extralargeiownhouse withtwo bedrooms,oneandonehaHbaths.waikinclosets #193-4263

EDISON OFFICE 90M94-6800

EDISON $144,900Custom ranch Lovely 2 W 1 bath starterranch with LR/DR combo, EIK. fireplace R

tsasement Mustsee(< 024-2853

METUCHEN OFFICE 908-906-8200

BOUND BROOK $159,900SPACIOUS & RENOVATED COLONIALMam freew/vmyl&brickvenewsiding YouIIlowe Ihe tut w/lols ol cabinets laundry rm,sewng rm;51hbdrm & fenced yrd lor childfento play in 096-5438

.OLDWICK OFFICE 908-439-2777

All OfficesOpen Until 9PM

WeichertRealtors

We Sell MoreBecame We Do More

4 — May 11.12 13,1994 RealEstate A Forbes Newspaper Supplement

Fairway views surround colonial

SHARON WILSON/FORBES NEWSPAPERSThis colonial's country kitchen, sized at 17-by-12, Is fully equipped with dlshwaaer, refrigeratorand gas oven/range. A pantry closet provides extra storage space.

Space is not a problem with this is f * « « p e d **th its own cx". . . . • « * haust fan, a gas range/oven, refrig-

two-story colonial home in Piscat- * b B

erator and dishwasher. A powderaway. In fact this three bedroom . , . . ,home is situated on a large, 110- j e v e jby-150 lot at the end of a dead Three bedrooms arc located on

end road. For thc sccond fl(XJ|. Thc mastcr M

those who <room, sized at 14-by-14, provides a

love to golf, il • i » - i i ' i

.„ walk-in closet with a dressing ai'euthey will • °

4. and its own private, full bathroom.enjoy thc

r Ir There is a second and third bed-view of a golfcourse from room hizC(1 at l2-by'13 cach An'the back ot'1cr ^u" balnroorn is l«-iatcd on

double deck, one of which is en- the second floor. Also on this floorclosed, the other open. is a laundry room, complete with

The home's exterior is com- washer and dryer,prised of vinyl siding with a com- The extras to this house arcposition shingle roof. A two-car many, including an attic for stor-width driveway leads to the over- age, a built-in humidifier on thesized, two-car garage which is at- furnace, electric air filter, back-uptached to the house. generator system, smoke detector

The immaculate, spacious intc- and burglar alarm system. Floorsrior begins on the first level with feature carpeting, ceramic tile andthe foyer, and the living room linoleum in the kitchen.sized at 17-by-12 features a brick Utilities include gas water heat-fireplace. There is a formal dining er, forced air heat and central airroom sized at 12-by-14 and a fam- conditioning.ily room which is 12-by-16. If you This colonial home is listed forlike to cook or entertain, this 17- $249,900 with Gary Hinds ofby-12 eat-in country kitchen may Weichert Realtors' Edison office,suit your needs. There is a pantry Call 404-0800 for further informa-for extra food storage. The kitchen tion or to arrange a tour.

TipsheetAddress: 77Rtverview

Piscataway

: $249,900

Lotibt; ilO-by-150

Deorooins* 3

Bath*; 2V<t

Amenities: fireplace,

washer/diyer

Heattogfcoolinf! gas,

forced air heat/central

air conditioning

T i m $4450The 17-Dy-12 living room features a brick fireplace and wall-to-wall carpeting. SHARON WILSON/FORBES NEWSPAPERS

A Forbes Newspaper Supplement RealEstate May 11,1213,1994-5

Home maintenance attracts potential buyersRealtor's check list helps keep your home in top living, selling shape

Barring any last minute snowstorms, it isprobably safe to say that spring is finallyhere! As potential homebuyers comb thetowns and cities across the Northeast insearch of the home of their choice, home-owners planning to sell soon or in the dis-tant future should take stock of the struc-tural and mechanical condition of theirhomes.

"Homeowners wishing to sell must scruti-nize their homes inside and out with thebuyer in mind," said Joe Mancuso, regionaldirector of Century 21 of the Northeast Inc.for the central and southern New Jerseyregions. "A nicely landscaped lawn that hasbeen freshly mowed and planted and a newcoat of paint on the house really makes adifference in the potential buyer's overallimpression,11 Mr. Mancuso said.

"A spring physical is well worth the timeand effort:1

Mr, Manusco also pointed out that the"best" homes are selling fast - those thatarc in superior condition and have the cor-

rect asking price. "Today's homebuyers arevery savvy," he said, adding "They knowwhat to look for.11

Mr. Mancuso recommended that home-owners set aside a few weekends each yearfor inspection and repair, not just to sell thehome but for the well-being of family andvisitors. Even those homeowners who arenot planning to sell should protect the con-siderable investment in their home througha system of preventative maintenance.

Mr. Mancuso, who knows first-hand theresale value of a well-maintained home, andhome inspection professionals alike, rec-ommended following this abbreviatedchecklist for regular home inspection. Hewarned that the examination of some prob-lem areas in the home, such as the septicsystem, the roof, or the electrical system,are better left to professionals.

The Exterior Examination•Examine all concrete inside and outside ofthe home for cracks and deterioration

•Clean window wells, dry wells and stormdrains•Reinforce wooden fences, porches anddecks if sagging•Check all landscaping, prune trees andshrubs, reseed and fertilize lawn where nec-essary•Be on the alert of termite swarms•Inspect paint and caulking for de-terioration•Monitor the condition of the chimney

The Interior Examination•Inspect all wall and baseboard surfaces forpaint deterioration•Determine if rugs and floor boards need tobe replaced because of wear and tear•Examine all stairs and railings for weak-ness or looseness•Inspect all ceilings for leaks•Check storm and prime windows

•Have cooling system checked by serviceperson•Inspect and install air conditioners•Check condition of hot water heater•Test and start dehumidifier•Thoroughly examine house security, exam-ining condition of all locks and charge on allfire extinguishers•Test smoke/fire alarms•Review family fire prevention and escaperoutes•Inspect caulking around tubs and showersand clean strainers and shower heads•Check galvanized and brass piping forleaks•Look for cracks, breaks or condensation ofbasement wall•Clean and change range fan filters abovekitchen stove and examine other kitchenappliances

RANALD C. BROWN1934 Washington Valley Road, Box 68MARTINSVILLE, NEW JERSEY 08836

SOMERVILLE $249,700ZONED P-2

Beautiful, well-kept colonial residencesuitable tor office use! Generous over-sized rooms! 300' deep lot! All cityutilities. Call for convenient appoint-ment!

I"MASTERFUL EDITION"

$369,700Bridgewater Colonial residence in mintcondition! Wooded hillside setting w/quality features throughout, plasterwalls, etc. 4 bedrooms, Th baths. Atrue nature lovers delight!!

Our Advertisers Say...

WE'REDOING

THINGS RIGHT!

•V\

"MINT" COLONIAL$162,700

North Side Somerville! Pristine!! Cen-tral A / C - 3/4 Bedrooms - F u l l Attic—Formal Dining Room! 3 Car Garage!!First Time Offered.

"CHARMER"$129,700

Choice Piscataway cul-de-sac loca-tion! 3 bedrooms -- city sewers - 2 cargarage -- updated w/central air! Callquick!!

••**

f

Marilyn Kelly, Manager

264 E. Broad StWestfield, NJ 07090

'Our Westfield office is thetop office in Coldwell BankerSchtott Realtors and has beenthe top office among ColdwellBanker Schlott's metropolitanarea offices for sevenconsecutive years. The broadgeographic reach of theForbes Newspapers isparticularly valuable to us, as itbrings buyers from Hunterdon,Middlesex, Somerset andMorris Counties, as well asfrom right here in UnionCounty. It is one of the thingsthat helps to make our officeso successful."

COLDUieil

SCHLOTP IBREALTORS'

BUS. (908) 233-5555FAX (908) 233-8780

6 —May 11,1213,1994 RealEstate A Forbes Newspaper Supplement

Xaureldale' promises new-home luxurySourland Associates Inc. an- with soaking tubs, fireplaces, and

nounces the grand opening of hardwood floors are also a stand-"Laureldale," a new home com- arc] for a "Laureldale" home. Pric-munity in Hillsborough Township. e s for the development range fromOwned and operated by Jeffrey $289,900-344,900.

com-inmunity

oncof

in

the

Stainner and Robert Hcibcll, thiswill be Sourland's fourth and larg-est new homes developments in HHlsbovoughrecent years within the townsliip.Their other successes include"Winding Meadows" of BelleMead, "Dogwood Meadows" and mos l clcsir-"Mill Estates" of Ncshanic Station, able areas of

The newest community, "Lau- the Bellereldalc," will contain 48 homes Mead section. The schools, rec-with lots ranging from l-2Vi acres, reation facilities, local services,many on cul-(lc-s;u:s or backing shopping, houses of worship andgreen acres, lYeL'-lmod streets with community facilities are all topBelgium block curbing und side- nQtch, "Laureldale1'is also minuteswalks will add to the heauty of this froni routes 22 t 78 and 287.community. ^ s a j e s QQn^ for»

"Uureldale" will offer u variety . nmwt* * , , . . . ., ,' is openof four-bedroom colonials, all with , . , . -side entiy garages, 9-foot eeihngs «r appointment Foron the first floor, grand two-story f o r ™ U o n ' cal1 the U u r e l d a l e

foyers, full basements, central air sales office' 281-0160, or Centuryconditioning, Anderson windows 21 Worden & Green at 8744700and city utilities. Custom crafted and ask for sales manager Pattiwood cabinets, ceramic tiled baths Zagunis.

^day-Monday

BRIDGEWAHR AREAImmediate Occupancy

ONE "L" OFA HOMELOCATION +Mm +LIFESTYLE

From2Mto2J0Q$il<fi.

These magnificent colonials give gracious living a whole new meaning.• 4 Bedrooms • Central a/c 4 heat • Jwuni whirlpool tub• M / l b a t a • U a r p r a p 'Ceramictilebiihsfcfoyef1 1 story finer • y ceilings first floor' Master bedroom suite/vaulted ceilingOffend exclusively by

Call800-994-SALE

The Rosecrtit model, among the six custom designs offered at Xaureldale; sits on 1-2 acrelots priced from $289,900. Contact Century 21 Worden & Green, Hillsborough, to arrange a tour.

GREE

(pvninq PRIMROSK WAYPre-Construction Price fr. $ 3 3 9 , 9 0 0

atWarren

Old world craftsmanship synonumous with excellence. Viewthe Waichung Mountains from your custom crafted home.

• 4 N f o o m s•Partial brick fronts

Paved driveAnderson windows

FireplaceDynamic facades

Open Sit Sun 12 to 5; M, Ion 11 to 3 MOM mom: Mt7lM000

WORDEN A GREENRealtors

908-874-4700OdKCTIOMI; ftt 11 to North on Warrenvillo Rd.. to 1st light, turn fight onto Mountain |Blvd. to tett on Appletree, left on Puddingstone, right on Primrose Way.

HOUSE OF THE WEEKMOUNTAINSIDE $324,500

A random width hardwood floor enhances the dine-inkitchen of this 4 bedroom, 2Vt bath split level. The diningroom has sliding doors to a raised deck, with a huge brickpatio beneath it in the fenced yard. The family room hasa bricked corned for the wood-burning stove + an exit tothe patio. Excellent closet space + attic storage, centralair conditioning, 2-zone heat & a new roof. In a quiet areaof comparable homes. Call us today for your tour!

of Landmark Qwvic*

REALTOR 2 3 2 - 8 4 0 04 4 ELM ST. • WEDTFIELD, NJ

Weichert offerscareer seminars

Real estate seminars will be hiMd byWeichert Realtors at the following of-fices, 7 p.m. Thursday May 19:• East Brunswick, Route 18 mid U'kiTAvenue, 254-1700a Metuchen, 640 Middlesex Ave., 906-B200t South Brunswick. 35H0 Highway 27.297-0200t Edison, 182-184 Koult- 27,4SJ4-6800

Seminars will be held by WeichertRealtors at the followinfi offices, 7 p.m.Thursday May 20:• Hamilton, M George Dye Road,(009) 586-U700a Metuchen, G4U Middlesex Ave., 90G-8200a South Brunswick, \&) Highway 27,297-0200

Newly licensed and experienced renlestate salespersons, as well as personsinterested in hemming licensed, areinvited to attend.

For more information, contact any oftho Weichert offices listed above.

A Forbes Newspaper Supplement May 11,1213,1994-7

MMJMA tranquil private sitting lurrounda tnii cus-tom buW ranch torturing 3 bedroom*, 2.5bathe, hug* kitchen, living room, formal din-ing room, den P1u» a* the amenrtiet youwould expect CLK534B

Ut,mCharming & ipackwi cusiom buill colonial,cNm (o school I Uanportetton. F t i t u m 3bedrooms, modern Wtehen w/diahwaeher anddividing island. 2 fun bathi, 2 car detached

CIK5320

nwwmmwu 91W#Vv0Birch cinch in most detireble weitrmniiersection, f ^ f u m a n c e , new CAC, 2 car ga-rage, underground tprinkkw, ftnfshad bete-marrtw/htat4A/C,»nctottdpofch. Call formort detail*. CLKS323

Excitingly different...beautiful contemporarythat It bright ft cheerful. Living room a diningroom hava cathedral celling! I akylightt. TheFR has a firaplac*, 3 M S , 2ft baths, lullfinishad^b^rrgnUfc 2 car gwapa. HILtO

HII7I4H

Invtuw*takenote' Thiswwtlk«pt2famitvgaownarpositivt cash flow. Located on a quiet, deedand ttraai dost to public transportation maka* ttrtan idval rtwrtal property 2 apartments, \ up & 1down Pricadtosall HIUS94

lAMAOWq (tei)l?444H

Th»i mainienanca he* Cap* toturaa a 1fttion with cathedral catling and skylight and a baau-tituHyramodeledkilchan and bath Thraabtdrooms,M l basamant and hardwood floors undw wall to wallcarpatt 75x100 hM with cuttom fancing and adoublawkfthpavad driveway Tasitfutlydoneinsid*and out HI U 652

Charming ranch with full finishtd baitmant, 3badroorra, firtplac*, FDfl, t i t in kitchen, ga-rage, cent aVc. Walk to trains. MET 4501

Expanded 9 room split-Country charmerlSpacioui home in family oriented neighbor-hood with den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms,large) eat in kitchen, FDR and much more.MET 4458

Hurry investors! 4 large apartments, 3-2 cargarages, new roof, new lurnaces, newer hotwater heaters, MET4396

te

mjmImmaculate four bedroom brick home withone lull and two half baths, walking distanceto NY bus, close to major roads. 287, trnpkandpkwy MET4486

This 5 bdrm. horne w/a recent 2 yr additionincludes 3 lull baths, 2 bdrms, w/private bathA « « h having sliders to deck. Handicapaccessible. Oversized rooms, french doors,finished baMmenl. RDT2OO3

Bright & sunny bdrm. condo 1st floor unitAdjacent to tennis courts & pool, 1 mite to Rl22. All appliances included. RDT2027

mjmUniquely private 6 acre French Provincial allbrick country estate in Stanton. 4 bdrms., 3'/ibaths, 5,300 sq. ft. of living space. Largerecreation room w/custom design ingroundpool. j D T 1827

tmmThis beautiful updated 4 bdrm. colonial backsto Fox Hollow Golf Course. The expandedfamily rm. w/brick fireplace opens to 28x12deck. Great neighborhood. Less than 2 milesto Rl. 78. RDT203O

MttHVM WWIMIII/ttWIH

HAINPIILOHeart ot Sleepy Hollow Stalely 5 brm, 3 fullbath & 2 half bath Col Large master brm w/dressing rm. Park like setting. Fullbsmtw/large rec rm,2.5caf attached garage & moreSPL1768

Brick front Colonial Cape featuring 3 bed-rooms, 2 full baths, living room, formal diningroom, family room w/sliders to deck and muchmore. All oversized rooms. SPL1924

eWICHPUNH

%mjmExpanded Cape w/3 brms and 2 full baths ingreat area, huge master brm w/bath. Alsooffers a studio apartment/office with loft, brm &lull bath. Call for details! SPL1922

AMAOfHCI iHtt l tMHI

WHYRENT? Ownthis2brm. Ranch featuring2 yr. old Country kitchen, 1 car detachedgarage, vinyl siding, fenced yard. Call fordetails. SPF1230

MUTAWAY jCOME AND GET IT! 3 bdrm, recently remodeled & updated home w/frplc, cathedral ceiling, hrdwd. flfs. A charm throughout* Ownyour own home NOW! Close to schools.SPF1240

ruenriiiv *l74.f0iYou must see this gracious well-matniainedVictorian Col. with wrap around porch andmaint. free siding. Inside has a brand newfurnace, F/P, huge rooms and its SPOTLESS-LY KEPT! SPF1211

SOtflHtUINNUftAMAOFMI

SOUTH rtMiiiriiMP e i« i 'This home has it alll Unique large 8 rm SplitLevel features 3 br., 2 baths, huge L/R with F/P, dining area w/wet bar area. Built-in poolon 3/4 acres. Too many amenities to list.SPF1236

ww an ruannaw 0119*VVVWELCOME HOME lo this charming 3 BH CapeCod. Act quickly, it's hot. LR fireplace, wallmirrors, dining ruom chandelier, finished base-men! and beautifully landscaped! All this andmore. SPF????

SOUTNHAINniLDIMMACULATE!! No spring cleaning neededfor this incredible home. Features 4 brm, 1.5baths, beautiful hardwood floors, full basement, garage and more. All in prime neighbor-hood. Act now!! SPF 1226

AMAOWICI (HI)44S-HM

Gold Medal Winner' There's no competitionfor this charming Cape Cod. Features 3bdfms., newer kiV.mainl tree exterior, C/A, ingreat family neighborhood Anxiously awaitsnew owners! Call Todav SPF 1196

AMAOmCI

KAINNIID fThis bigger & better East End Cape • offers 3bf, lull bath and formal DR on 50x150 lot withpaved driveway and garage Freshly paintedw/new floors in kit & bath Plumbing in lor 2ndbath! SPF1170

AMA 0W1CI

Clark Area(908)382-3200

Hillsborough/Montgomery Area

(908)874-8421

Scotch Plains Area(908)322-9102

Readington/Branchburg Area(908)534-4085

South PlainfieId Area(908)668-0020

Metuchen/Edison Area

(908)494-7700

COLDWGU.BANK6R •

SCHLOTTREALTORS'

8—May11,1213 t 1994 RealEstate A Forbes Newspaper Supplement

Weidel offers 'red hot' saleB;Ued as the "Red Hot Sale!".

iy&del Realtors' annual innovative

one-day sale Sunday, May 15 will

feature "millions of dollars in sav-

ings and incentives." according to

a news release.

"We had a tremendous response

when we piloted this innovative

concept several years ago." said

Richard A. Weidel Jr., president,

Participating homes spanning

nine counties can be previewed on

the special sale day during open

houses 1-4 p,m. As an added in-

centive, mortgage representativeswill be on call to consult with pro-spectuive buyers to offer custom-ized financing with attractive inter-est rates to increase buyer's pur-chasing power,

For more information, call (800)Weidel-1.

CRAWFORD $205,000CHARMING COL, FPL IN LR, DEN, FORMAL DR,NEWER KIT, NEW FULL BATH, 3 BR'S, LAV OFFKIT. WF-4486

CRANFORD $189,900DUTCH COL CONVENIENT TO ALL TRANS.3/4BRS, LR, FDR, KIT + 1 /2 BATH, LG FENCED YD,WF-4613

CALL90MM7777

LINDEN $174,500LG CUSTOM BRICK S/L, 3 BR, 1.5 BATHS, FAM.RM +FIN BASEMENT W/ KIT, ENCL BACKPORCH. WF-4521

CALL 908-6547777

MOUNTAINSIDE $459,000BPICK& FRAM RANCH ON CUL-DE-SAC, CUS-TOM BLT 2 FPL'S CIRCULAR DRIVEWAY, GREATSEASONAL VIEWS, WF-4578

CALL90MW-7777

>2,367

IWESTFIELD $394,000HANDSOME NEWER NORTHSIDE COLONIALW/ALL AMENITIES. 4 BR, 2.5 BATHS & GOR-

1GEOUS GARDEN RM. MINT COND WF-4648CALL 908-654-7777

WESTFIELD $315,000EXPANDED RANCH, LR W/FPL, 4 BRS & OFFICE,2.5BATHS,2CAR GARAGE, HWDFLRS, ENCLOSEDPORCH OVERLOOKING PRIV. YD. WF 4647.

CALL 908-654-7777

LOOK POt LOW MONIHLY MYNUNTS IN OUR ADS!Hi p t ichm prioM up to 183,197, inonltty mortgage paymotus (principal * interest) quoted In out ads are to quali-tod b u m twed upon a 20*, downpayiTioni »«1 a conventional 30 yety fined tale loan at 81 ?5% with n points,A.P.R. M l ( > % . Aft m OMIT**, a $100,000 tan wnutrt m*\ 360 iwnlhly pnyirwrits of S/43 00 f« p u r d i MD f k « Irani t M I , t t lottAQOO, t t r ninithty payrmnts aif» to (|ualita1 h jyof^ t»a.s«J IHKXI a 20% dowiipavrTtcn!dtt cttaMati af B 250% with 3 pomts on a 'Juinbo' 30 yew lixod rnln nK/iqage wrth an A.P.R. Of 6 .61o% A/)«x*nptB of a $500,000 loai woutdmea^tiOnwnlhiy [siyjnpiitfi ul %\.!ih (XI Fc^fos iwwm aie af KOKHTiate and donot nciicto property taxfts. twarti asijranwt. rx hoftwowidir, avwiaiiou ifcn^ lor n rnrviniivwir purrhnsn Noroslrates qurted aro afi ol Afirt 1(i, 1994, <YK1 WIJJPCI to dvu igt> Not ft^xnisiliii! la typograpliicat aims, whto

, wo regtiost Ittfii i t * iwyttwot tin vnkhuxi writ* a mnUjayu pnwtlnr tiri

Westfiald Office654-7777

Weichert

WtSeBMonHnwtWtDoMort

Real winnerProud Wetttield office manager Jean Massard (center)holds In her hands the highest company units award for athird consecutive year, as presented to her by presidentPeter Burgdorff (right) and chairwoman Jean T. Burgdorff.The Westfield office, 600 North Avenue West, achieved thegreatest number of sales and listings sold out of BurgdorffRealtors' 31 branches in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Lauveldalein prestigious Belle Mead

4 bedroom Colonials * side entry garageI & 2 acre lots • all utilities

Fr$289,900Enjoy gracious living in this

, magnifia-m, csiaiu like selling, secluded ^and private, vet convenient to shopping,

transportation ami all amenities.Open Fit, Sat, Sun.,

Mon. 12-5 or by appointment Phone 908-281-0160Directions; From Somerville Circle. Kt. 206 South tn left on.Unwell Rd..tu right on Wlknv Rd. to Sales center an left. (HilNbomuyh Township!

WORDEN& GREEN

Realtors

Ask/orPatti

Zagunis

Final P h a s e ! NESHANIC STATIONMILL ESTATES

Only 5 liiiiiii-s It II IHI 3 am- Us rnim $2W,»• 4 bedrooms • 21/? txtlhs . 9 H rulings on lirsl floor• Family rooms w/liftiptote . Bathrooms w/ci»amic lilo floors and soaking lub12 cat [jiirayos • TuU tascmnnl

• Antlfjraen Insutotw] windows „OpM Sil,, Sun., 1110 S or hi Apimtntmnl

WORDEN 4 ORFJiN REALTORS

||llKr.CTI'll<S (nun W . n i l l d mk Ri J1nVn1llH1.17hl.1n An«iIIK,I U<k'Vh>ItflM

A Forbes Newspaper Supplement RealEstate May 11,1213,1994-9

NotesBarbara Seif, a real estate pro-

fessional with the E.R.A. GreenBrook office of E.A. Boniakowskihas earned bronze membership ofthe New Jersey State Associationof Realtors Million Dollar Club.

A member of the Million DollarClub since 1990. Ms. Seif hasearned the nationally-recognizedgraduate realtor institute designa-tion.

Richard Boyscn, an assistantreal estate professional agent withthe E.RA Green Brook ut'tiee ofE.A. Boniakowski, has earnedbronze membership of the NewJersey State Association of Real-

Boyten

tors Million Dollar Club.A real estate professional for 10

years. Mr, Boysen and his col-leagues' awards were recognizedrecently at a luncheon of the Som-erset County Board of Realtors,

* * *

Joan K Deck . a sales associatewith Coldwell Banker Schlott'sBedminstor office, has achievedthe highest standing for overallproduction and listings sold in1993.

Ms. Deck, a real estate pro-

Deck Ratcio Szablewski Garth

fessional with 20 years experience,is also a member of the New Jer-sey State Association of RealtorsMillion Dollar Club, havingreached silver and gold levels.

Ms. Deck's real estate standinghas earned her membership in theInternational President's Elite Cir-cle, and is a member of the Som-erset and Hunterdon board of real-tors.

* * *Toni Rascio, a sales associate

with Coldwell Banker Schlotfs

Bedminster office, has achievedthe highest standing for sales pro-duction in 1993.

By closing 29 transactions in1993, Ms. Rascio was invited to at-tend Coldwell Banker Schlott In-ternational Business Conference inSan Diego, Calif, She has been amember of the New Jersey StateAssociation of Realtors MillionDollar Sales Club for the past 14years.

• * •

Larry Szablewski, a sales as-

sociate with Century 21 Worden &Green's Hillsborough branch inthe new homes find land depart-ment, has achieved the higheststanding for overall productionand listings sold in 1993.

Mi'. Sziiblewski distinguishedhimself amongst his peers by col-lecting the Centurion award, anaward winch only about 2 percentof the 80.000 Century 21 employ-ees achieve,

Carol Garth, ;i sales associatewith Wc'icheil Realtor's Bernards-villc office, received the office's topproducer award for the most list-ings sold during the month of Feb-ruary.

Ms. Garth, a real estate pro-fessional for nine years, she is amember of the \'c\v .Jersey StateAssociation of Realtors MillionDollar Club since 1985, She hasbeen a member of Weichert's Pres-ident's Club for seven vears.

OLDWELL BANKERS C H L O T T REALTORS

EDISON: Prime North Edison location! Younger EDISON: Mint condition custom ranch featuring3 bedroom 1.5 bath split level featuring brick 22 x 16' living room, FDR, family room, 3 bed-fireplace in family foom partial basement, proles- rooms, 2 baths, full basement, central air andstonally lanscaped. $229,500, MET 4499 garage. $169,000. MET 4463

METUCHEN/EDISON AREA OFFICE40 Middlesex AVP.(%{)) 494-7700 SCHLOTT'

REALTORS*

OWNER SAD TO BE TRANSFERREDNORTH EOISON-One year old. elegant colonial Fourbedrooms, 2\i baths, labulous master bath w/|acuz:iand skylight Enjoy upgraded carpets, deck, familyroom w/lireplace $279,000

BEST VALUE!!METUCHEN-Three bedroom Cape, totally renovated.Cathedral ceiling. Fireplace.Priced to sell S1625O0

OAK HILLS'METUCHEN-lmagine living in presitgious "Oak Hills"!Call today to see this charming 3 Bfl Cape w/central air,full basement, screened porch & 2 full baths$259,000

NORTH EDISON LOCATION!Convenient toNYCtransitand shopping, young colonialwith three bediooms, 1V? baths, family room, attachedgarage and private, treed lot $189,900

Burgdorff Realtors456 Middlesex Avenue

Metuchen, NJ 06840

EDISONMETUCHENCOMMUTER'S DELIGHT PEGASUS ESTATES

Lovely all brick ranch! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 5 bedroom young colonial. New 20 x 20 masterfamily room, linished basement, formal dining bedroom suite w/Pelladesigner window. Sure toroom & eat in kitchen Walk to train' 5209,000 impress!!! Just reduced • $309,900!

i

EDISON EDISON"A HAPPY HOUSE" "LOVELY RANCH"

4 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, C/A. maintenance free Everything is here! Space and location, 3 bed-and all systems updated • Great House. Great rooms, 2 baths, full linished basement w/extravalue in a family neighborhood. $138,800! room and kitchen, 2 cai garage, needs some

TLC $184,900!

ThePrudential kWinhold Realty, Inc.

3 Amboy AvenueMetuchen New Jersey 08840

(908)494-7677H ( ) C k s o l n j m r p r | l f S l . l I t 1

ThePrudential wWinhold Realty, Inc.

^ Colonia Officeft 800 Inman Ave.. Colonia, NJ 0706/

(908) 574-0700

10—May 11t 1213.1994 RealEstate A Forbes Newspaper Supplement

SOMERSET

FRANKLINKevin P . & Nancy E. Averbacher to

Michael A. Tomasula, 31 Chelsea Court,Franklin, $89,900

K. Hovnanian at Somerset VIII to SanjayC, Shah, 151 Columbus Drive, FranklinPark, $79,950

Samuel H. Broughton to Stephanie Grif-

fin, 10 Continental Drive, Franklin,$150,000

Dime Savings Bank to Owen k Cheryl DMcLeod, 26 Dorset Court, Franklin,$174,900

James & Calenda Cole to Kenneth L,Cinque & A. Jetzt, 202 DrlscoU Court, Fran-klin, $132,500

Patricia M. Scarola to Cornelius T. Cal-lahan, 51 Eton Way, Franklin, $76,000

K Hovnanian at Somerset to Thomas J.

! HAVf AWAY TO SHOW YOUR HOUS

THOUSANDS OF POT[NTIA[ BUYf US

FRANKLIN $480,000OUTSTANDING WIIVACVI

INCMDIILI OPPORTUNITY!On 8 acrtt, with an approved sutxjivitton, This countryn t i te h « 4 BR, 3 cir gange, artists ttudio, barn smokehoutt A tons more. Call today lor a privitt tour.

MA AMIMCAN DMAM, MALTOM|IOe) 2S3M0Q

1206,900MmCULOUttY MAIMTAINEO

Bi-Uvti hofM in mini condition and otltn many out-atanding featuring. 1+ acrt property, 14x15 sunroom,bright tunny btths, ovtniitdUm. rnv, larflipantry ineat-inMchtn, SBR's.

MA CLASSIC UVINQ MATLV

SCOTCH PLAINS I 2 M . N 0OPIM HOUSE SUNDAY 1 4»M 8/15

REDUCED FOR QUICK SALI44 CANTERBURY DRIVE

Immaculate 3 BR. ranch, n«wcarefree exterior, central air,HWBBheat, 1st floor den, mbr with lull bath. Newthermowindows. 1 yr. ERA Buyer Protection Plan included.DIR: Route 22 W. to Glenstde Drive near Walchung Mis.

BRA VILLAOB QRIIN REALTORS14004M-3M1

CLARK SI 74,100

flilax in front o1 the Living Room Fireplace in this charm-ing Dutch Colonial. Sat on a 20O loot lot this cozy homefutures all large rooms, updated kitchen, formal diningroom and walK-in closets. Call Peggy now lor a privateshowing.

ERA VILLAGE QRIEN REALTORS, INC.IMS) 311-7477

CRANPORD $224,900Immaculate 4 BR Raised Ranch features newer Eat-inKitchen & appliances. Central airjenced yard, 1.5baths,family fm&DR.carpei'ng&HW Floors t Year ERA BuyerProtection Plan included. Just listed exclusively thru ouroffice!IRA VILUOE QREEN REALTORS, INC,

ERA AMERICAN DREAM REALTORSW Ronle?06

HilKliotouqh.NJ 9HB/6

(908)253-9000

f HAQUrr NCITY REALTYV I \ 1 U . \ V I r i » c H n . i d

SOUTH PUINFIILD t158,00010 Y I APIS YOU HOI!!

Immaculat 3 BH Ranch with huge country kitchen, fullbasment,2tiefdeck,C/A&garagel! If you're looking fora beautiful house in a grsat neighborhood, don't miss outon this great house!I Call Gary or Mary.

BRA QUEIN CITY

ERA CLASSIC LIVING REALTYlift? Uoute n'i St)

Somcrvillc NJOitll/h

(90B) 722 1166

ERAVILLAGF GREEN RE AL TORS

7 4 7 /

jKak-Sates

Jr. k Carey C, Kosman, S Gregory lane,ftanklin Park, $100,788

Bankers Savings to Sanjay Patel, 2S3 Ha-tlitt Way, Franklin, $104,000

Roger R. & Mary Louise Shulas to AdelcPangborn, 20 Heather Drive, Franklin,$176,000

Samuel Blacker & M. Scaftdi to GregoryHisle, 7 Henry St , Franklin, $93,000

K HOvnanian at Somerset to Richard A,Meyer, 22 Hudson Court, Franklin Park,$114,020

Donald J, Stevenson Jr. to Clelia L Buonok C. Buono, 4 Jade Court, $137,500

John M. & Kathleen S. Bartok to RobertE. k Ellen S. Hanas, 5 Kuhn St., Franklin,$173,000

GREEN BROOK

Richard Coury to Anthony M. Fcrrullo Jr.e t u r , 2 Driftway, $333,200

William T. Ewen to l^ynne ElizabethGwen, 33 Abby Lane, $187,200

Arvind A. k Chandrika A. Shah to Chris-topher G. Paul et at., 1 Park Ave., $118,000

Louis & Susan E. Murantc to Louis Wu-rante, 143 W. Rock Road, $63,500

HILLSBOROUGHJames F. k Dorothy Vandervecr to Debo-

rah Conner & C. Schradcr, 35 New AmwellRoad, Somerville, $166,000

Country Classics to John M, & Maria Can-non, 19 Powelson Drive, Belle Mead,$340,000

Jeffrey P. k Teresa M. Strain to KennethJ, & Nancy J. Ccsta, 814 Ten Eyck Court,Nwhanic, $254,000

Steve Ives & Joan Rcsnuk to Wilbert E.Gomez, 1074C Bluebird Drive, $110,500

Sean P. & Donna F, Byrne to Cynthia E.Byrne, 2013 Brooks Blvd., $1B5,000

Holland Dev, Corp. to Gary & Corinne S.Quinn, 27 Bnisler Place, (349,900

Guy & Carol Izzo to Collettc A, Carroll, 12Crestwood Ave., $177,000

Richard J. & Margaret Fiillam lo MindyS. Cohen, 76 Havcrford Court. $100,000

Donna Ux Rogers to Gary Weiss, 3 LoweAve., $205,000

Russell H, Jr. & Kerry Wiilliici1 lo Domin-ick Maino & Lori Hngan. 8f)8-II MerrillDrive, $102,000

Terrancc L. & Susan A, Elliott to AlanDeane k Lynn Merry, (Mi Pcrrine Park,$255,000

John A. Wojcici'howski Jr. el iu\ \o Stan-ley A & Kelly \. Kosinski, 118 TriangleRoad, $164,000

Vanguard 1 to Ann Villa, 5ft Walker Drive,$264,750

Alan L & Joanno Johnson to Christopherk Lisa M. Bennett, 133 AVoods Road,$177,000

MANVILLEGeraldine Max to Matthew Condon, 1107

St John St., $148,000Mark A. k Karen C. Sniscuk to Norman J.

k Sandra J. Scoficld, 200 N. Fourth Avc,$148,000

Richard W, Larisch to Bertha Wysz-kowski,4ti Gladys Avtv, $50,000

MONTGOMERYR&S Colonial Builders Inc. to Clayton P.

& C, Aldcrfcr, 21 Graysnn Drive, BelleMead, $393,000

ThePrudential '7 Rose REALTORS

Watchunc),MJ- (908)753-4450

BRIDQEWATER • Immaculate executive homefeaturing Master Bedroom Suite, Family Roomwith fireplace, formal Living Room & Dining Room.Beautiful custom touches such as crown & dentilmolding and oak hardwood floors. Enjoy thewarm weather on them ulti-level deck with hot tub,surrounded by a lustily landscaped property.FIRST TIME OFFERED $379,000

Rock solid in real estate.8"t 994 The Prudential Real Eaiaie Affiliates, Inc. • Independently Owned and Ocerated.

A Fortes Newspaper Supplement RealEstate May 1 1 , 1 2 1 3 , 1 9 9 4 - 1 1

U N I O N u'k R a>T n o n d Conrad' Partway Village GARWO ODNo, 213, $89,900 Accurate Holding Company to Garwood

Realty Inc., 443 North Ave,, $1,420,000CRANFORD FANWOOD Messercola Bros. Bldg. Co, to Alexander

Agnes Di Michdc to Kristen A. Heyns et Mary A. & Steven Cabot to Gregory Cook, R- Credidio el m\, 358 Hemlock Ave,,al.,NlA Centennial Ave., $90,000 353 TerriU Road, $119,000 $ W 0 0

Nancy & Conrad Rchill to Robert it Lisa Citibank NA to Peter & Theresa Murphy, Frank Rwcci to Grcgorio & Michael Sci-A. Perez,IHemiiw Avc,$232,000 77 Chetwood Terrace, $172,660 ortino,347South Ave,$143,000

David J. Axtt & Harriet Sudia to Robert J. Barbara Kahn to Christopher J. & SusanPells Jr., 9 Myrtle St., $112.000 Abbott, 16 Oak St., $172,200 KENILWORTH

Sales

New Jersey Realty Company to Dorothea Anna K Schumm to Rosomaric Gulla,

295 N. Michigan Ave., $77,500Robert k Vickie Spotlit t« Alicia J. &

Hennossy, (i!>0 Summit

REALTORS

i t iDistinctive

A

WIITPIILD |13t,0O0Charmer! 4 bdrms, natural chestnut trim, parquet firs, frplc,den, sunroom, culinary garden. All this and more In a greatneighborhood. WSF4774

MOUNTAINIIDI $«I5,»OOCommercial bldg. Excellent condition. High visibility.Four 1,200 sq ft suites. High traffic area. Call for details.WSF4760

PUINFIILD $319,0006 apartments in historic Cresent Area. Certified historic"Lovell House", Renovated & immaculate. Corner lot,ample parking, WSF3035

$11l,tM4 bdrm. colonial offering 7 rooms in the quiet Aider section.Formal din rm, enclosed porch, recent updates and conve-nient location to trans, shopping & school. WSF4744

Irl £

CIANIORD l l l t r9O0Quality on a budget and warm and homey too! Thisdelightful 7 rm colonial offers4 bdrms, 1.5 bths, naturaltrim & hardwood floors. Call for details, WSF4723

ROSILLE $123f0QOWalk to school & NYC transportation from thischarming 3 bdrm colonial. Eat-in kit, cozy den.WSF4884

WESTFIELD The Westfield Office is the264 E. Broad St. # 1 COLD WELL BANKER OFFICE

233-5555 NORTH AMERICACl'Wl(itt ikull Ikiknlii'siikiitul Hr,il hl,Hr. Anl.tjiyl[)|>(miltmit>('om|uiiv Sniiu-Dtlnohuk'iviitknilv(Hiii'il.unlIIpouiiHl

COLDUIGLL

SCHLOTT.REALTORS*

Anna K. Schumm to Vincent Papuratto,119 N. 20th St.. $77,500

SCOTCH PLAINSCharles c. & Helen A. Picrson lo John M.

Parizeau & L. Hiivnes, IK!)7 N. (late Road,$195,000

Victoria k John K. Shnwers to Arthur M.& Frieda S. Ziorinu, VM\ Nnv York Avc,$222,000

Heartland Btukling Gixjup Inc. to Cecilia& Nicola CifHli. 7 Villas Park Court,$122,900

Estate of Dorothy M. McCaulcy to DanielR. & Jo-Ann .layson. 5 Wheatlcy Court,$280,000

WESTFIELDDorothy Levy to Michel & Nicole Char-

train, 1213 Blvd., $315,000Dale S. & Leonard E. Hagsrom to Ronald

C. & M. Elaine Bailey, 617 Embrcc Cres-cent, $350,000

Sean T. Fcnton to John & Ann M.Hewlett, 166 Mountain Ave., $180,000

Christopher A. & Jill Sambaeh to Edward1. & B. Goldschmidt, 54G Sherwood Park-way, $298,000

Omcr E. Miller & John Nooney to SMFB 'Realty Corp., 1122 W. South Ave.,'$450,(

MIDDLESEX

DUNELLENThomas Albeit Roma el ux to Michael F.

Jr, & Rcnec Crowlly, 726 Walnut St.,$121,000

EDISONBhavosh B. & Soiuil Putel to IJwyakant &

Jagruti Patel, 93(i Beatrice Parkway,$291,000

Vircnda S. Shah to Ashak k Vidya Patel,40 Brookside Road, $180,000

Norma Yeloncsics to Michael ^ Ana Ben-nett, 121 Buchanan Road. SmiOOO

Woodland Dcvcldpcrs Inc. to PeggyShark-. 53 Chatsworth Court, $189,990

David & Di'iinna Fischer tn Chailcs F,, &

Mnnon Gnindc], 'Mm Cricket Clrckv$n7,noo

R d f i c w o i n l l ' i ! ' | n i ' i i I n c t o I ' a t e l ^Sona l Hhavc- .h . m l -d ismi A v c . SiiHIi.OOO

E d w a r d .1 ^ !>• \<\\\ A ( i m t l i M \u C h a n g.1. k S u n Hi-- V.. •!- IS Kllmyn-r Itojul,$:ii7,soo

.1. iv Ann K W,iic-s In Kubul C.

W i l l i a m \\o\\u In S I I I I M ] ,; t ' ln. i iv M a o C h -ui, l(i N o r m a n SI.. >170.000

D o r o t h y R C l c w - ' i l l : \<< Pai'tsi B u i l d e r sInc . , O x f o r d K o m i . >li',ii.oi!ii

F*dniiKton K n i t r i ' i i - ^ ! i , c to K e n n e t l i J.U Deborah Diimai •, ;i Koherl Court,

Rruci' H. ^ Dim, I ! ' n rdmun to Markok Catherine Sicla. !1 Uooscvcll Blvd.$ir»(i,ri(ifi

Henry Francis in \AWU ua1 & Diane Vnl-entino, 10 Sclmylcr Avc., MlHiJHKi

Joseph k Miclu'llo Mm' rva lo Hichard F,Tcimesnii, HIM U'lMwlh.iM-ii Drive. ^102,0(10

12 — May 11.12 13,1994 RealEstate A Forbes Newspaper Supplement

Caldtr Pelllno O'Arwca Young

Salty Calder, a sales associatewith Coldwell Banker Schlott'sWestfield office, has qualified forthe firm's Ambassador's/Presi-dent's Club, ii select group of salesassociates having a 1993 sales pro-duction of more than $4 million.

Ms. Calder's success has alsoearned her a trip to the ColdwellBanker international business con-ference recently held in San Diego,Calif.

A member of the Westfield andGarden State boards of realtors,she also earned brome level mem-bership of the New Jersey State

Association of Realtors' MillionDollar Club.

* •Diane Pellino, a sales associate

with Coldwell Banker Schlott'sWestfield office, has qualified forbronze level membership of theNew Jersey State Association ofRealtors Million Dollar Club.

Ms. Pellino has achieved thislevel for the past eight years, andwith a 1993 sales production ofmore than $3,000,000, her effortshave also earned her membershipin ColdweU Banker Schlott's Am-bassador's/President's Club.

NotesShe is a member of the West-

field, Somerset, Garden State andMiddlesex County boards of real-tors.

* * *Susan PArccca, a sales associ-

ate with Coldwell Banker Schlott'sWestfield office, has qualified forthe firm's Ambassador's/Presi-dent's Club.

Ms. D'Arecca has also earnedher a trip to the Coldwell Bankerinternational business conferenceheld recently in San Diego, Calif.

A member of the Westfieldboard of realtors, she also earnedbronze level membership of theNew Jersey State Association ofRealtors' million Dollar Club.

Sollacclo DtMarco Luerssen Graham

ified for bronze level of the NewJersey State Association of Real-tors1 Million Dollar Club,

Ms. Sollaccio has been withColdwell Banker Schlott since 19B5and is a past member of the Cold-well Banker President's Club.

She is a member of the West-field, Garden State, Plainfield,Somerset, Summit and Middlesexcounty boards of realtors.

• *

Colonials"

• * *

BRIDGEWATEREast Hill 7 yr young impres-sive tudor col., 2 story foyer,hdwd firs, master BR suite,interior just painted, Corpo-rate property. $314,900

BDM 3577

Vivian Young, a sales associatewith ColdweU Banker Schlott'sWestfield office, has earned bronzelevel membership of the New Jer-sey State Association of Realtors'Million Dollar Club.

Her 1993 sales production levelin excess of $3 million qualifiedher for the firm's President's Club.

Ms. Young, a Scotch Plains resi-dent, is a member of the Wostfield,Garden State and Plainfield boardsof realtors,

• * •

Madeline Sollaccio, a sales as-sociate with Coldwell BankerSchlott's Westfield office, has qual-

John DeMarco, a sales associatewith Coldwell Banker Schlott'sWestfield office, has qualified forthe New Jersey State Associationof Realtors' Million Dollar Club forthe 10th year.

Mr. DeMarco, has reached thesilver level for achieving morethan $5 million for the 1993 year- he has achieved that level ninetimes,

He has also earned the covetedgold level in the past, generatingmore than $65 million in sales andlistings since 1984.

• * *

Remax Realty Center, is pleasedto announce the appointment ofPinky Luerssen as broker/managerof their new Scotch Plains branchoffice.

Owners Kathleen Lund and

Mary Lupini said, "We arc pleasedto have a manager of Pinky's cali-ber. Her 17 years in residentialreal estate in this area will be utremendous asset to our branch of-fice."

Mrs, Lucvssen was president ofthe Wcstlield Board of Realtors in1992 and 1!KM. She has »>ee-n amember ol' the Now Jersey As-sociation of Realtors' Million Dol-lar Club.

: • • . ; : :';.

Bruce Graham, a broker associ-ate with BurgdorIT Realtors' War-ren office, has successfully com-pleted courses to earn the certifiednew home sales professional (CSP)designation.

Mr. Graham holds two otherprofessional designations, the CRS(Certified Residential Specialist)and CRB (Certified ResidentialBrokerage Munsigcr) - the CRB isthe highest designation of the resi-dential real estate industry.

The CSP course trained Mr. Gra-ham in the sales and marketing olnew houses, and how to effectivelyrepresent new homes to prospec-tive buyers.

BRIDGEWATERMove right in! 3 y.o. customcolonial, 4 BR, 2V? baths,3-car garage, fptc, whirlpool,deck and more on wooded loton cul-de-sac. $349,000

BDM 3596

MORTGAGES

BRIDGEWATERLarge center hall 4 BR colo-nial .oversized rms, brick Irplc,cath. ceiling in FR, oflice/BRon1stflr,HDWDflrs/drs/trim(

$349,900BDM 3587

MORTGAGESRefinance

or Purchase ' -0 POINT

i\10KT<;.\<;U1 AIM,IMS

cotouieuBedmlnster/Bridgewater Area

908-658-9000 SCHLOTT®

REALTORS

¥

Avoid UnderwritingQualification Hassles

"ABSOLUTELY NEW JERSEY'SBRIGHTEST MORTGAGE BANKERS"

WORCOFINAHCIALSERVICES

908/561-3836Llmtnnl Mori

/Warren

Dnnkrr - N,l Drp

MORTGAGECO., INC.

Purchasing a Home?or Refinancing

WE HAVE THE BEST SERVICE ANDTHE MOST COMPETITIVE RATES

Call for a FREE Consultation & Credit CheckOver 150 Mortgage Programs to Choose From.

Many with NO POINTS & No Closing Costs

"Get to the Source"(908)231-9100 (800)696-186065 N. Gaston Ave., Somervllle, NJ 06876

Licensed Bantor N.J

• •• »

A Forbes Newspaper Supplement RealEstate May 11,1213,1994-13

DIGian MagUone Pinelli

Jane DIGian, a sales associate with Burgdorff Realtors'Warrsn office, earned six company awards in recognitionof her outstanding production during March.

Ms. DiGian was named company salesperson of themonth for both unit production and dollar volume, havingposted both the highest-number and doaar volume ofsales and listings sold of Burgdorff s 500 associates.

She also earned the company sales awards,with the highust number and dollar volume ofsales in the company and the company market-ing awards, with the highest units and dollarvolume of listings sold.

# • *

Jackie MagUone, a sales associate withWeichert Realtors1 Warren office, has tied for theoffice's top producer award for most sales and

marketed listings sold in February,

MS I MagUone has been a licensed real estate profes-si(mal for n y ( m S h e is a m e m b e r of ^ ^ ^

County and Summit Boards of Realtors.H e r P r e v i o u s salcs a c h i e v e ™ n t s earned her mem-

bership in the New Jersey State Million Dollar Club andWeichert's Million Dollar Sales Club,

Marie Pinelli, a salcs associate with Weidieii, Realtors'Warren office, has received the OH'KT'S Top Pnxluu.-raward for highest dollar volume in February,

A. 15-year veteran to real esiale, Ms. Pinelli is a memberof the Somerset County Board of Realtors. She specializesin new home construction and land mid has a back-ground in commercial real estate.

Joan Vogelsang, a sales associate with Weicherl Real-tors' Warren office, tied the office's lop pnxluccr awardfor most listings, sales and marketed listings sold in Feb-ruary.

Ms. Vogelsang has been a licensed real estate proles- ,sional for 10 years and holds the graduate realtor insti-tute's (GRI) professional designation, indicating adknowledge.

Scholarships availablefor real estate students

Students hoping to pursue a career in the real estate industrycan apply for scholarships from'the New Jersey Association ofRealtors. 1.

Established in 1968, the Educational Foundation offers 10 schol-arships to undergraduate and graduate students - but applicantsmust be New Jersey residents. '

Another two special annual scholarships - the Nancy F, Rey-nolds Award and the C. Armcl Nutter Award - are also available.

Forms can be obtained from Gertrude M. Stefanik, foundationpresident at 793-0812.

Who can't get no satisfaction?The Clark office of Coldwcll Banker Schlott has been awarded a

customer satisfaction award by its parent company after an inde-pendent survey.

The Cotdwcll Banker Schlott 100 Percent Customer SatisfactionAward was based on the results of a customer survey by an inde-pendent research organization for Coldwell Banker Schlott in 1993.

Attainment of a perfect score meant each customer responding tothe survey expressed complete satisfaction with the service theyreceived.

Coldwell Banker Schlott President Robert Becker said, "We con-sider it one of the most important awards that can be earned byone of our offices.

"Manager Debbie Venedam and her sales associates can be veryproud of their collective accomplishment,"

Patricia Ryan & Associates, Inc.Realtor

OPEN SUNDAY MAY 15

73 VANDERVEER AVE., one of SOMERVILLE'S most preferredstreets. Every inch of this customized home is appealing &enticing from the brick style paved drive and patio to the solarDining Rm, inviting f ireplaced Family Rm & spacious sunlit LivingRm - all accessed from a modern Kitchen that is a cook's delight.Walking distance to Somerset Medical Ctr & to VanderveerSchool. $225,500.OWN I-4P.M.Directions: Main St, right on Vanderveer, 2nd house past High/Fairmont St.

658-3911

CENTRAL JERSEY MORTGAGE RATESLender, City, Phone

APPI 30 YR FIXED It 15YH FIXED I OTHERFEE RATE PT8 APR RATE PTS APH RATE PT3 APR

ARCS Mortgage, TotowiBay City Mortgage, HaztetCapital Funding,ParsippanyC Brooke Mortgage,FreeholdCenlar Fed'l Savingt,Princeton

50 0.O0B.S088 0.00 1.88.63 0.00 8.63.38 3.00 8.80

.00 0.00 8.00

.SO 0.00 8.50

.13 0.00 8.13

.00 3.00 8.84

d 7.30 A

50 3.00 7.83 W

38 0.00 8,51 L

25 2.00 8,47 B

63 0.00 8.aSH

,63 0.00 7.63 C

75 3.00 118 B

Accord Mtgt Servicos.Bloomfield 201-740-1200 3751.75 0.00 8.751.25 0.00 8.2s 5.2s 0.00 7.10 AAJA Financial, Middlesex 909-193-4070 295is.751.00 9.00p.25 too s e m i s s.oo 7.31 uAmboy National Bank.Old Bridge 909-501-9700 2001.00100 tsskes 3.00 s.ieksoAmerican Federal Mtge, Union 909-911-6500 t w k i s 3.00 8.45 p.es s.oo e .u

900-229-1139 305|0.00 0.00 9.14||B.75 0.00 8.96909-294-2700 350900-992-6790 0900-793-2299 0900-229-6U7 350

CharterFedlSivings.Randolph 201-399-3900 2oo||e.253.00e.5all7.es0.007.63I7.00 1.007.30EChoice Mortgage, Morris Plains 900-244-2121 ssokoo 0.00 o.oops 2.00 7.58 7.501.50 7.66 0Collective Fed'l Savinge,Edison M9-»49-4i49 ssoh.ee 0.00 eaei.ss 0.00 B.SS p.sa 0.00 7.38 NCountrywide Mortgage.Westfield 909-799-9459 2681.00 2 ee 8.42 p.es 2.63 8.247.75 2.es s.si HCreetmont Fed'l $avings,Clsrk 909-127-0100 3001.38 2.75 e ee 7.75 s.oo 8.25I4.00 3.00 7.52 AEmpire Mortgage Co.,$omervi!le 900-794-2542isokoo 0.00 9.001.75 0.00 6.751.38 0.00 9.38 BFirst Fidelity Bank 900-M 1-1197 3751.25 s.oo e.eo 7.88 s.oo e.41 s.is 0.00 7.45 AFirst Savings Bank SLA, Edison 909-228-4490 3251.50 s.oo e j s p s soo e.si p.25 0.00 7.54 xGenesis Mtge Svcs.E Brunswick 909-217-5700 3751.36 s.oo 8.717.75 3.00 6.25P.50 soo 8.83 8Huntington Mortgage, Chester 900-921-nu o k u 1.00 8.76 p.es 2.00 s.21Ivy Mortgsgt,Belle Mead @ 900-461-9903 01.88 0.00 o.sekse 0.00 essJereey Pacific Mtge.Old Bridge 909-569-21213251.13 2.75 6.42 p.es s.oo s i sKey Corp Mtge,Laurence Harbor 900-539-9979 2501.25 2.75 8.45 p.es 2.75 e.iejk.sa 2.50 7.74 AKing Mortgage Corp., Clifton soo-ses-sooo 3oo||s.25 2.50 8.52I7.75 2.75 8.21114.75 2.13 7.67 AManagement Mtg Corp.Matawan 909-596-0500 0Mane Financial Svcs, Bloomfield 201-741-3231 ssoManor Mtge Corp, Parsippany 201 -994-0040 225Maryland Natl Mtge,Springfield 201 -012-3199 325Metropolitan Mtge Svc .Freehold 909-294-9900 350Monarch Svgs Bank FSB.CIark 900-334-9003 299Morgan Carlton Fin'l, Matawan 900-592-0719 o p s 2 ee 7.95Mortgage Unlimited.Secaucus 900-999-22741951925 s.oo e seNatwest NJ 900- 374 - 4500 3New Century Mtge.E. Brunswick 909-310-4900 375

36 t.00 7.92 A25 3.00 N/P A00 2.50 N/P R

.63 0.00 8.71

.38 3.00 8.89

.25 1.00 8.42

909-722-0900 350

900-742-7950 300

900- ses -229a 395

100-551-5552 395 8.13 3.00 8.45

•OO-806 l«80 325 8.75 0 00 N/P

NJ Savings Bank.SomervilleR & J Mortgage.LedgewoodRoyal Mortgage.E BrunswickRoyal Mortgage, MorristownSource Mortgage, SomervilleSource One Mtge Svcs.Cranford 900-970-4957 300,8 38 3.00 8.79Summit Mortgage .Bridge water 009-420-202s sso s.so a. 00 8.83United National Bank, Plainfiold 909-759-sooo 400 N/P N/P N/PWatchung Hills Bank .Warren 909905-9900 soo 1.1 s 2.50 8.4!Worco Financial Svc, Warren 909-sei~$%u 0)9.00 0.00 9.00(A)t Yr Arm (B)30 Yf Jumbo (C)5/25 (0)7/23 (E)10 Yr Arm (F)10 Yr Flxfd (0)18 Yr BiwMkly (H)15 Yf Jumbo (1)1 Yr Jumbojj)B Yr Balloon (K)6iwt«kly (L)7 Yr Balloon (W)3/25 Balloon (N)9/1 (0)10/1 Arm (P) 10/30 Fixtd (0)7 Yr Arm (R)5/1 Arm(9)20 Yr Fluid (T)FHA (U)No Inc/No Autt Chick (V) 10/30 Jumbo (W)10/t Jumbo (X)5 Yr Arm *-rtfund al doling

@-Olr«t Ltndtr a-$300app(Mlor SOyrflxtd b-rttiguarantM c-walvtd during May & Junt d-1500 flat f i t

APR-Contact ltnd«ifor calcuUtd AnnualPwcintapRatM MINIMUM 4 5 - 6 0 day rat* lockRate art i i ^ p W by tht Itrtdtri and at• prmnlid without guarantM. Ratti and tormi art iub)ad to chanoa. Ltndtri M*HtMl«i dilfilaying htorrmtion ihouM contact CooiitmtVtMoflBaflitnltxmation® (201) 7fl2-M13Fo» mo*trto»rndtofiborrow*ri»houWotll th» Imdm.Conhid l«nd«i for Motmatton onottw mortgagt product! and MrvfcM.Coop«atfeaMortgagt Information auunrnnolUiilltyfatypogTapnicaltrrartoromluioni. natmllitMlw«raiupplwdbyth«land«ion5/4-Ve. N/P--NotPiovidtdby ImtRutlon C Cooptrallvt Mortgagt Informition 1094- All flight! RtMrvad.

.13 0.00 9.21

.75 3.00 9.091.75 1.00 6.66.68 0.00 8.68116.25 0.00 8.25.13 3.00 8.47 7.63 3.00 6.16.25 3.00 e.$e|7.75 3.00 8.25

F.50 2.68 7.79r.75 3.00 8.25

3.00 3.32 IJ7.S8 3.00 7.87.13 3.00 8.49 7.63 3.00 7.93.36 2.25 6.62 7.50 0.00 7.50.25 3.00 8.57 7.75 3.00 8.25.13 3.00 8.45 7.75 3.00 8.25

7 75 3.00 6.25

.36 0.00 N/P

7.M 3.00 6.51

.00 3.00 6.51

.50 3.00 6.00

r.63 2.75 8.11

.63 0.00 8.63

5.88 0.00 5.96 A.50 3.00 6.63 T

7.38 0.00 N/P X7.13 3.00 7.67 V68 3.00 7.66 J.25 3.00 6.13 A88 2 88 4 25 A63 3.00 6.6t A

4.38 2.50 N/P A4,38 3.00 4.86 AN/P N/P N/P1.25 3.00 7.32 A1.75 3.00 7.05 R1.75 3.00 7.05 R8.13 0.00 N/P D7.13 3.00 8.74 J4.86 0.00 7.43 A4.50 2.00 5.48 A3.68 2.00 7.42 A5.13 0.00 N/P A

14 — May 11,1213.1994 RealEstate A Forbes Newspaper Supplement

ESTATE MARKETPLACES I ; K \ I N ( ; S O M ! I < S I : I . M I D D I . I S I \ \ I N I O N ( o i M i l s

P U C E YOUR AD BY FAX;:.-;-:.yW±xr&

fill

..::;:..S;j:,1i*%;;.

.••• • ••-• - --:••..:•;:•

• : • . . . v • - ; . -

CALL LOCALLY:

TO CHARGE YOUR

NS

BSlfiffi

;

9000REAi ESTATE

I

9 0 1 0 - H C I M I Under1190,000

•020 •HOITWI For Si l tM30> FarmsW40-U iuryMM-Mobl l t9080-Wittrlront

Property9070 • Condominium!9010 • Townhouse*9010 • Multi-Family9100 • lots and Acreage9110-Out olAre»9120'Wanted to Buy9130 • Mortgages and

Financing)9140-Mlsc Real Estate

EQUALHOUSING

OPPORTUNITY

All real cstale advertisedin this newspaper is sub-ject to the Federal FairHousing Act of 1968which makes il illegal loadvortiso any preferencelimitation or discrimina-lion based on race,color, religion, sux or na-llonat origin, or an mien-lion to make any suchpreference, lirmialion ordiscrimination.

This newspaper will notknowingly accept any ad-vertising lor real estatewhich is in violation ofthe law. Our readers areInformed that all dwell-ings advertised in thisnewspaper are availableon an equal opportunitybasis.

Complaints of discrimina-tion In housing on thebasis of race, color,creed, ancestry, maritalstatus, sex or handicapshould be made to NewJersey Division on CivilRights, 363 W. State St.,Trenton. NJ 08618.Phone (609)292-4605,

iMlInOPEN HOUSE

SUN. 5/15,1-5 PM1l2UOUARDIAAVe.

4 BRS, 2 FULL BATHS,HUGE M-K, FINISHEDBSMT , DEAD ENDSTREET, 1/4 Ml. TOMETRO PARK RR-- 1/3Ml, TO PKWY. $145,000

METRO REALTY

9010Homti under

$150,000

BOUND BROOK- Im-maculate. 2 Bfl, hall du-plex, new w to w carpet,CAC, recently rodonekitchen, sunken familyrm w/slidors to deck,larrje landscaped yard,vinyl sided, dishwasher,washer, dryer, 5 minuteslo major hwys & schools,Must Seel! 109,888 908-469-1128.

Ads In Classifieddon't cost -

Thy pay!

i*it OTHT!$450

1BEDUOOM \PTS:$550

2 BEDROOM APTS.*Includes^nt&HolWiltr

BROOKSIDEGARDEN APTS.

129Mercer St.,SomcrvilleN,|908-725-2W

•Oni IImo Urn UIJMoi ««0 - I t u a m ,

L $5W lay 9 moi V<3 J765, Jf ra |? Mm) Foi new Jlenanticnly Admu£ll

o'renldappltcion

MANVIILE- By owner.3 BR, finished bsmt.Close to park. Asking$135,900.722-2931,

M I D D L E S E X - Only$124,500. Excel, location,nice 5rm cape. 2-cargar ,,lg 101,909-231-1769

MYSTIC ISLAND- 3 BRdoll house, water frontproperty. Completely ren-ovated. Asking $97,500.Net). (609) 296-4224

UNION- BY OWNER.Convalescent caro forcesimmed. sale of 3 BR, allbr ick c a p e in St.Michaels section, lin.

'bsmnl./atlic, 1 car all.gar., quiel neighborhood,yel close lo Union Cen-1er, GSP, rl.78/22. askingin Iho $140"s, nog., NOREALTORS PLEASE! calldays 908241-0555 oroves. 679-7165

9020Homes for Safe

AFFORDABLE MODU-LAR- Custom HomesERIC Asscc oilers highqual i ty c u i o m i z e dhomes, decks and green-houses thai are Afiord-ahle. Financing avail-able to qualified buyers.

(609)466-1817

BELLE MEAD/HILLS-BOROUGH- Spacious14 yr old 4 BR, 2 1/2 blhcol, LR, OR, FAN! RM, IgEIK, bsmi, 2-car gar5239,900 Owner is NJ lieWtr. 908-359-5622.Openhouse 5/15 Sun 1-5pm.

BY OWHIR- F«nwood,31 Shady Lane, 4BR, 2IIblh, FR, screened patio.$199,000. Open House 5/15,1-4, 908-232-5099,

DID YOUKNOW.. .

that an ad in this localpaper also goes Into 22other local papers?Reach over 380,000readers with one call)

1 'SOOMMItS

HILLSBOROUOHOWN THIS HOME

II what you will want lodo alter seeing this im-maculate 4 yrs. old Cen-ter Hall Colonial. Fea-tures large modern baths& multiple skylights. TheMaster BR comes com-plete with fireplace & sit-ting room, Its cul-de-saclocation makes thishome a real winner.

Offered at 1267,000ERA American Dream

Realtors 906-253-9000

METUCHEN- Charming3 BR, EIK, finished bsmt.walk lo downtown 81trans $169,900.90B-546-4219 By Owner

MIDDLESEX &SOMERSET COUNTIES

1st lime buyer and cur-rent home owner pro-gram available. To sec ifyou qualify ploase call'

Bob WarcholCentury 21

Golden Post Realtors908-469-3900

MONTGOMERY T W P -THE MANORS, Princetonaddress Spac ioustwnhse, 3 BRs, 2Vi ba,certilo, HWIlrs. WWcar-peting, step down qrealrm w/ 8' stone trpl, Igdeck, now upgraded HT/AC sys & 50 gal HW MrMany other upgrades Byowner. $169,000 609-683-9359.

BRIDGEWATER 4BR 2V?ba split ivl acr Irom park,EIK, DR, IH. deck, scrnciporch oil fnm rm Byowner 229.000 B05-3066.

BRIDGEWATIR- Top olml., rambling ranch onmco ) ac lot in excel ng>libtid trg brighl living,areas w/ plenty ol spacelor all your needs 1/6BR, many amonitlos Inclfplc & |ncui2l. $317,000.900-526-6157

NO. EDISON- 4BR 2 1/2 blh, formal DR/LR, IgEIK, FR w/cathedral ceil-ings, skylights & Iptc,den or 5th BR. Lg yd w/deck & pool. $229,900.Appt.only 71B-788-0739days, 908-494-4995 oves

PISCATAWAYBy Owner

COZY RANCHOversized lol.

romodlotl with many m-Iras, quiel neighborhood,Near Ounollon/Piscal-away border, Movo rightin and (jn|oy Iho waWBfilhtir on one ol Ihe 2HECKS! Overlookingnpacious lanciscnpodl vnfd relax inslt)*? n

1 sunny up-dated inte-rior, ALL NEW CAC,HEAT, KIT. & BATH. ThisLOW MAINT. home has 6rooms including OVER*SIZED LR & MBFt 1 FRMWITH skylights »nd sliderto deck, GARAGE ANDFULL BSMNT. Gettingitarttd or retired, thishoutt is A GREAT BUYWITH LOW TAXES! Ask-ing $150,000 Call 908-752-4335 or 782-5349

NORTH 8RANCH-Semi-lurnlihtd, J 14,000or best offer. Must Sell,moving. 908-429-1571

Townbouut

B E D M I N S T E R - spa-ctolus 2 BR, 2Vi bath,FR, formal DR, end unitw/gar overlooks trocs,CAC, palio, tplc. & appt.possiblo owner financ-ing. $183,900. 781-1349

FRANKLINQuallbrookCream Puff- lealurosfireplace, garage w/opon-er, patio, 2 bedroomsand 21/2 baths. Won'tlast! Asking (122,900

Preferred LifestyleRealty 908-707-05BQ

APPOMATTOX, V A -Very private 48 acre lake,surrounded by 218 acreswi th a log h o m e ,$450,000. Tyler & Assoc.Linda Bohlander.

(703) 506-2286BEDFORD, V A - Countryliving, low taxes, con-vienent to Lynchburg andRoanoke. Homes, landand farms. Tyler andAssoc. Linda Bohlandor

703-586-2286

LONG BEACH ISLAND-Under $100,0001 Ocians-Ide condo. Beach HavenTerrace. Totally reno-vated including 1.5baths, skylight,modemkitchen, deck, more!Maintenance tree living,s t e p s to b e a c h .STEVENS REAL ESTATE1-800-494-5315.

9130

9200

VACATION

PROPER TT

1210-Horn**For Bait1120 • Poeows

92M

Financing

Properties1240-WfHfffront92M-L*t /Acr«gtM M • Time Shares9270 • Vacation DentilsSilo Wtrttnd Mntatt

•210

HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDAFully turn, well-keptdouble-wide mobilehome; 2BR, 1'^bath, w/w. W/D, CH/A, Fla.Rm.Car port, util.im. Locatedih lovely retirement parkCtubhso/pool facilities,access adj. golf course.Settling estate, asking$25,000,908-752-0294.

TIMESHARE R B I A U t -Fairtield Harbour

NC, Largo unit for 6!All resort Activities

Nationwide exchangts.Deeded ownersh ipS3.5OO, 908-755-3536

S O M E R S E T - Adultcommunity 48 t condo.Children OK. LR, DR,EIK, 2BR, 2 blh, Mamlfee $60. 908-302-1749/23B-2319. Under 100K.

9090Fam/ly Homes

SOMERVILLE- tax shel-ter, 2 & 4 unit buildings,prime location, all 2 BRapl .s , off st. prkg,$189,000 & $349,000,Prlncplea only, 562-2110

9100

INVESTOR S E E K S -Roal Estate notes K mort-gages. Turn monthly pay-ments you arc receivingmlo CASH you can usenow! Call 215-838-2700lor quote. Cost of callrolunded,

9140MlueMwwous

Real Estate

LONG BEACH ISLAND-An island paradise wilhinan easy drive. For friend-ly, professional service.Call HCH Inc. Realtors609-494-3311. Call lorthe lalost info.

HILLSBOROUOHApproved bldg. lot.

Neshanlc River S145H.4 acres negotiable

906-369-4672

9110

Propwty

WILL YOU SUPERVISECONSTRUCTION? WILLYOU PAINT? Do youwant home equity? YouCAN own your dreamhorrH Call Miles HomesToday, 1-80-343-Z9B4,exl. 1

YOUR CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEY NEWS-PAPERS WITH ONEEASY PHONE CALL ANDFOR ONE LOW PRICEFOR ONLY S219.00YOUR AD WILL REACHOVEn 1,2 MILLIONHOMES THROUGHOUTTHE STATE. CALLFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1-800-559-9495, ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILSA U 0 U T S C A N-STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDAD NETWORK.

LONGBrighton Beach. NowConstruction. Single fam-ily homo. 3 bodroom, 2baths c/a 42X26 It. ga-rage All for 3176,900With 20% down. Roni willcovor mortgage pay-men!. Call 690-492-1102WATERFRONT RANCHLBI (Mainland)- Whatcon y o u buy lor$95,000.00? Completelyrenovated, 3 bedroom,Flordia room. 55' dock.Bring your boa!! Avail-able Immediately! 609-597-6949 • 609-597-2909

9240iVllteiTrOfttProperty*

FLORIDA PROPER.TIES- Waterfront prop-erlles-homesites-cpndos-villas-homes-for informa-tion & brochures callConstance Brown - CBMcFadden & Sprowls cull1-B00-525-1965, ext, 939BT,

9270VlCNM MMwB

BAKERS ACRES CAMP-GROUND- Enjoy nearbyfishing, crabbing, boat-ing and Long Beach is-land. Near Atlantic City,Seaside and Great Ad*venture Taking reserva-tions for daily/seasonal.1-flOO-64B-2227.

L.B.I.— apt., 1 blockbeach, 2 BR, bath, rea-sonable season, month-ly, weekly, 908-356-6216

LAKE PLACID/WHITE-FACE- 3BR. 2Bath, sips10, VCR, stereo, pooltable. Nancy 673-3905

OCEANFflONT Condo-Spectacular v iews,60(dock(sleeps 6. AC,-5419-S609/wk.647-7089

PALM V ILU • DISNEVGRAND OPEING SPE-CIAL & mm. to Malngate.New 2.3,4 bedroom con-dos. Spacious mastersuites, lounge and din-ing, fullkllhcen, balcony,Enjoy pool, Jacuzzi, ten-nis, golf. Starts S79 -sleeps six. Resort room -$29. 1-800-396-Z330.

POCONOS- Sow Creek,3 BRs, Den. Pool, tennis,goll . 5250/weekend.908-757-6849 after 6pm.

•SEASIDE HEIGHTS*A d | a c t n t to O r t l t ybeach. Modern condo;2BR-sleeps 6, 1!Abath,AC, W/D, carport, elova-lor, indoor pool/sauna.^block bench. 4 boachbadge9. S695/week. JuneS Sept, rates avail.Arlone, days;908-38B-

, eves:908-233-3767.

9290Lots and Acrta|e

MONTG, TWP. - Skill-man Road, 1 3 acre ap-proved lot thai is sub di-vidod as 2 1 v acre lots,Elizahethtown WaterAakinti $195,000. Call(609) 4"66-1592

SEASIDE HTS- Oceanblock, cando, sleeps 6,all amentles, S700/wk.,Citll 704-1698 Iv. msg.

so. SEASIDTPARKMidway flonch ocean-front bungalow, sleeps 3.2 siory dock, cable TV,microwave, washer,SB50/wk, Jul & Aug,$425/wk, June & Sep.Call 7M-471J2.

A Forbes Newspaper Supplement RealEstate May 11 ,1213 ,1994-15

IT. M M K T I N - Escapeto our btautilul 2 BR, 2bath beachfront villa allamtnititi, Including maid& car, call Owner for bro-churt 800.756-1088.

9400RFN7AIS

M109430 * MURI*FaiTMiy1430 > Townhouses end

ContfonMumt

1450 < RoomsM70* Apartment* t»

ShareMSO-Homes to Sharet4W-Wanted to Aent•SOO-Mltc Rentals

•410

AAA Ltrgt SturfcrMfteColonial- Ltaao or Buywith Financing. 901481418 Of 204-227 4900

SCOTCH HAINS- Du-pin, 6 rtni. 1 bath, fullbsmt. & attic, enclosedporch, gar, recently dec-oratid on qulat residtrvtat iirnt doit to town.$»50/mo. pkti utila, Re-ipond owner, POB 1155,Mountainside, NJ 07092

Mtf CondOfnMuMt

HILL8IORO- 1BR, Lfl,Kit, W/D, new appl., pool,tinnla, hiat ft hot waterIncf. Avail 5/15. J750/mo,Call Jim 609-466-1592

W f S T F I E L D - TrinityGardens, 1BR, 1st II ,fplc, AC, DW, WftD, gar.Avail 7/1.909-272.3750.

1440

I0UNDMQOKUNUSUAL

AVAILAMUTYIDon't waltl Magnificent 2BR In beautiful gardenlining. Renovatedkitchen & modern corwenlences, close to allmi|or highways.

908-3568185BOUND BROOK- 2ndfir. 5 rooms, 3 BRs, gar.off-street prkg. Avail. 6/1.No PHI, 908-356-4421

BOUND BROOK- 3 rmsft bath, 1st II , Talm-madge Ave, no kids orpets, landlord on premisai. 908*356-5160.

•PtANCHIUftG- 2 tarnnewly renovated 2nd Iapt. 2BR i den w/ bathLarge Kit w/laundryhook-up. LR, deckS750 i util. Adults pref'dno pets. Call Eleanor908-722-6101.

DORCHESTERHOUSE•onwrviite

UguryHigh Rise

Elevator apartments

722-9177Studio

t & 2 Bedrooms

DUNBLUN- 1st II2BRapt w/modern KH & bth,Qai/hol wiler Incl, Onlite pkg. $795. 233-291Bafter 6om

OUNELLEN- 5 roomapt; 2BRs. All now2nd II. Avail 6/1/94$675 t util, 2 month sec

Call 908-271-0933.

FAR HILLS- 2 BR, nowbath, Kit,, paint, DoorsW/D, walk to NYC trainGar. avail, $10iiO/mori.avail. !i/IS, 9OB-70t-1f57G

M R H I L L I - CarriageHome 2 girls looking tora third to thare house.On t i tatt with pond andgeiebo. 3 BR 2 vk baths.M50.781-2563

HfOHUNO PARK- 2rmapt, in 2 family house,1525, incl. all util. Call908-220-8765.

K I N I L W O R T H -i Bedroom apt. $685 futilities. No pets. Avail-able immed. 245-7981.

MANVILU- upstairs 11/2 BR, incld.i refrlg., W/D, heat ft yard, no peti,S625/tnon., avail. 5/15.9O8-236-24I2

•ISCATAWAY-For rent,beautiful 2nd. fir. apt.,couple, util., 1850/mo.

9O6-3M-4241RAHWAV- Studio Apt.with no kit. close to trainnation. Heat/Hot watirinc. No Pets, 1375. 750-1191 or 382-1355

RAPUTAN- 1 BR, LR,EIK, yard, bsmt w/WftOhookups, quiet ttreit,walk to train, shops, etc,no pelt, no smoking,S675/mo plus ulll, sec,refa.908-722-6638.

R M I T A N - 2-3 BR, LR,Kit.Prof pref d.Non smok-er.No pata,S950/mo.Availimmed. 231-0193.

RARITAN- duplex, 2BR, i » baths, kit. DO,LR, deck, AC, plus utiltNo pet. S685. Avail. 7/1.(609) 468-4045

SOMERVlUe- 1BR apt,S700 incl. heat. Call 526-5932. Pis leave message,

I O M E B V I U E - Beautifullocation, lovely 4 roomsw/carpetlng, AC, 1BRnew Kit. w/appls,, Bimt,5750,'mo. + u1ils.908-725-6470.

SOMEftVfLLE- In town,totally renovated, 2 BR, 2full bath, la LR, W/W,EIK, Pvt. deck, oft st.prkg., No pets, $675/mon. Heat incld,, 908-439-3167

D U N I U E N - 2 roomspartly furn. ft bath, AC,retrg. cable, micro al-lowed, tor mature non-smoking woman, rots.Near transp. $400/mo isec. 752-8021

OARWOOD- turn, rm.,Lg. rm. in pvt. home,resid. area, pvt. entrance,near bus/train, prof,, sta-ble, N/S, male, no cook-ing, Long term only, 908654-3558 or 2014602497 or 906-769-3067

•470n m mV M M

RAWTAH- 3 BR APT.,$320/mon. + 1/3 util.1 1/2 mon. l i e ,908-526-2193

NOTICE: All HOMESTO SHARE advertise-ments ire PAYABLE INADVANCE by cash,chtck, VISA or MatterCifd. For a quote oncott, p l ta i i call1-800-559-9495.

BRIDQEWATER/WOOD-ED LOT- Room w/ privblh & onif Female/NS,SSOO.Days, 908-730-1722

AtfifnCfiiifNetfdon't coif -

Tne/piyf

^v flnWw wW IWWH

NOTICE: All WANTEDTO RENT tdvfrtis*mwi i art PAYABLE INADVANCE by caah,chwk, VISA or MatterCard. For a quott oncott, ptoftM callMOO-559.9496.

L O O K I N G FORC O N O O I , A P T . t ,HOOUI, OR ROOMB-for college interns, Furn./Unfurn., for May thruAug., Call 906-233-6837Broker, No fee

SOBER NON-BMOKINOI M - looking for a largettudlo or small 1BR apt.Quiet nice area w/ peta.$350-1400.906-7694683.

NOTICE: AH MISCEL-LANEOUS RENTALSMVfjftiMfMfflt 616PAYABLE IN ADVANCEby cash, chock, VISAor Mastor Card. For aquote on cost, pwaticall 1-600-559-MW,

a CAR OARAGE-Down-town Cranford area. Walkto shopping and trans-portation. $f75.272-1926

96O0COMMERCIAL

•610* Business *r«pef.tlH

M20-Pr«titttefUil

H30-Retail Properties9f40-Wafetwjse

ProfertlesHM-WHceRenUls•640-lndustrtat

HT6- Retail Rental!

•660 •Commtrclal RealEstate Wtntt*

•WO _

foil*

LONG BEACH ISLAND-Widow says Sell!! Marinain Brant Deach. 96 SlipsLarge riparian grant.Ready for 94. Asking$1,400,000. Call LackeyRealty 809-4944511

Qfftef RvftiafS

BRIOOtWATM- OHIce/prof bldg. 2600 sq.lt.near Somerset Med. Ctr,Reasnbl lease,469-8060

CLOSE TO RR STA-T I O N - 324 sq. ft. di-vided into 3 rooms. Call906-548-3122.

EDISON- Office to sub-let In prof suite with com-mon waiting room. Rt. 1location. 906-248-7883.

FAR HILLSSINGLE M I C SUITES

in the Far Hills Center ot-tering shared secretarialservices, Celt PhilipSmith, CB Commercial,906-961-1555.

HILLSIOROUOHPrime location Rt. 206.

(1) 600 sq.ft. W75'monegot. Avail, immed.;(2) 600 tq.ft. $500/mo.906-874-6650.

MANVILLE- 1,500 sq.lt.Excellent cond, Newwood floor. Ground II. ol-fice bldg, 526-5400.

PI5CATAWAY- Officeor Retail. 6,000 sq. ft.Will divide. Also dentistoffice. Rt. 287 ft SfeltonRd. 981-1313.

SOMERVILLE AREA-2600 iq fi, Commercialspace avail. AC-200ampservice, 3 phew $975/mo.TomB08-725'1026.

SOMERVILLE/MID-D L I S I X 4 5 0 s q f t ,downtown on Rt 26. Excloc. Parking. 526-3861

SOMERVILLE- Profes-sional office. $290, allutilities Included. Call725-1776.

HIGHLAND PARK- Ap-prox. 7,000 sq. ft. Lightmanufacturing. 908-214-1240.

HIGHLAND PARK- Ap-pro*. 7,000 sq. ft. Lightmanufacturing. 908-214-1240.

M I T U C H E N - 1250sq.ft., 8 ft. ceiling, heat ftbalhrm., avail, immed.,$600/mon. i util.. 908-494-5346

SOUTH PLAINFIILDOffices and/or ware-house. Office 400 sq.ft. ftup. Warehouse, lightmanufacturing., 1000sq.ft. and up. Mlns. from287. Conveniently lo-cated. Affordable rent.

906-753-0200906-668-5222

9800BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITIES

6610 • Businessesf or Sale

1620-franchiseOpportunities

6630 • licensee for Sale9840 • Investments/

Opportunities

•MOfnVMtflWfnsY

Opportunftto

NEW BOUTIQUE- cloth-ing needed, Rent spaceor consignment in NailSalon, Fanwood area,908-752-6553

RAPIDLY GROWINGN.J. BASED REALESTATE INVESTMENTCO.- leeks entrepre-neurs. Buy real estaterisk free) Use our cash!Split profits! ImmediateIncome and training)Free i n f o . p k g .

4 * 908-204-1448**

Ads in Cfisifflttftfonicoit-

Tnoypayf

SuccessfulBusiness;Ventures

are withinyour

Qrasp withForbes

Classifieds

ITS TIME FOR A.

Place Your $15 Garage Sale Ad & Receive• FREE Signs• FREE Inventory Sheet• How To Run A Successful Garage Sale• Rain Date Guarantee

Fill in 1 character per box, allowing for spaces and punctuation as necessary.Additional lines ad $1 each, use separate sheet of paper If necessary.

•ifAddress.Phone

StateVISA/MC* EXP. DATEMail With Check or Money Order To:Classifieds - Forbes Newspapers P.O. Box 699 Somerville, NJ 08876

IVtO'.lrtCfilf)

I . J

16-May 11,1213,1994I t o n l y h a p p n s f o r o n

A Fortes Newspaper Supplementd o y I

Red Hot Sale!Serious Price Reductions &

Incentives for One Day OnlyOpen House Sunday, May 15,14 pm

Our sellers will make an extra commitment to reduce the selling price of theirhomes and/or offer special incentives to attract serious buyers, To qualify for

the savings, visit and register at one of our many Open Houses throughout CentralNew Jersey or Eastern Pennsylvania. For more information, call or visit anyWCKJCI neighborhood office.

Profile of a ChampionMary Warshefski

A true professional. Mary bringsa unique blend of dedication andcommitment to provide the high-est quality of service lo her cus-tomers and clients. No matterhow large or small their needs,Mary's innate ability to hear andunderstand those needs enableher to provide the best servicepossible. The many friends anilrelatives being referred to Maryby her past customers arc a testi-mony lo that service. Mary re-sides in Hopewell with her hus-band Paul, daughter Julie, son,Paul, and "Rum-Dum" the fami-ly cat. For the linest in servicewhatever your real estate needscontact Mary Warshefski at theWcidel Hopewell Office (609)466-1224

OPEN HOUSE MStep inside and sec tru\ spitcioth J bedroom.I '/> b<i(h natch feiMurins u l;irgr ftimily room,foniuil dining room, alt on a beautiful lot in aprime locution. WICKREDUCTION-SIO.OOODIR: Ri. 22 West lo North Bridie Sired.Right oil DrjMlale LUIK, on Ml. #9CALLWGIKLMIDGEWMft

BRIDGEWATER WW.OttRED HOT SALE- UNBELIEVABLE

DEAU-OFCNM11m cuJonial is in prestigious Seven Oiks. 4BR. 21/: By, center lull w/2 story foyfr. loftovtfkxAuij 2 Miiircim htife kit w/murainfroom, fabulous library/office. 2 Fpks sat, dishand much more! NO-.RUX.Cimi20.000DIR: Wellington Valley Rod toCrim. right011 Running Brook. <*coiid left lo Heath 125CALLWEIKLMIDGEWATER

OPEN HOUSE MBring the family loihisirmoUrd .1 tedroom.2 twin colonial with sun room und hardwooddoors. Hnjoy the clubhouse, swings, sandboxand 2 car garage, taially fenced yw).DIR: Rl. 202 to IM Avr. rtgh on frnwi. MlofQuick.onriilMlbl

RailUDGfcW

BRIDGEWATER $186,500-OPEN HOUSE-

CAILFORAPPOOSTMENThimucluirmenuKtwon'KtisuppDintyou. Myowners lake good cure of me and I am bigenough for .i young family, with .1 bedrooms.2 bmliv full biisenient. new deck, updatedkitchen and preiti locution.

WATCHUNG $264,900• OPEN H O U S E -

SUNDAY MAY I S MUnique restored 5 bedroom, 2'/: bull)colonialwith wrap around porch, deck, rain'd hearthfiKpiace and oversized 2 cur garage.DIR: Wiiichung Ave. north. Stirling Rd, north

A 1 C I W 4 M M CALLWEIDELUtlDCKWATERNMIMlW CAUWtlDRNUDMWATMlflWAMW

BRIIXIKWATKR $269,970CONTEMPORARY BEAUTY -

OPEN HOUSE CALL FOR ANAPPOINTMENT

'lliis tinique 4hednionihonie spurklev Beau-i l l f i l l l l i l d

HILLSBOROUGH $2.12,700RED HOT SALE—OPEN HOUSE M

MORE KOR YOU MONEYSpacious contemporary with colonial Ikr. This 4hditii home offfrs 2.61X) sq. ft. of living space »•.'!'/.•B,i. lull hstimi, 2 car g.ir, F.IK, f<un. mi. leading lowornl ( k c l Well nMinninnJ prufxny in Umilyneijhbortaid. PRUT: REDUCTION Mm Ri. M l u k u Anmdl Rd. riihion BtHnw.njht

k l f l B 7

p gson windows, plus ;i IOIIJ; list of niitenities, nl!in ii pvM local ion I

CALLWEIDELWIWiEWAtER WMK-HJUO CALL MlDttHIUSBOROlWt m»im

REDHOTSALE-OFSN HOUSE 14ANXKNJSOWNER-nUAmtOVED

Be»homeowner in ihK move-in rondiwn condo,TIM door, neutral decor. 2 hntrootm. I (mhs. e n inkitchen witho*k cjbinets. DR. «fMcint» LR w/iriple*'M\ sliden to [Miilikt «tt in | ptfio. Cihlom win-dow iic*tmeniv PRICE RHOUCDON-^.DIR: Kt. 27 lo Siewwi. rigN on Socirly HillBlvd.. right on Crab»ple #49CALL WllKL HILL90R0VGH

FRANKLIN T\M> $132,900RED HOT SALE - OPrN HOUSE M

STOP PAYINd RENTSliiner home toruyutmt; Ijmilv vkiitirwiniogmw,I ) tvdruumv. I' tuihs, sp*ious tjrnily

A ( ' l lsciufiiysysicm. Scllcrollchl2monihHomco»ncr>Wiirnmy. Convenient to wtuwls MA puhlic trans-oontWan, PHICH Rtpi'(TK)N W.DIR ^iiinAu'tuihiimKrjnU^HhJ ii-ldii>nBjii:[rii;hi

i m Hjitt in K^ulum Ptiilhpi.Il V*

CALL WHML IIILLSHOROlKill 9NJSMNI

HILUSBOROUGH'HVP. $284,000SEEING IK BELIEVING

All IIK nnieiiiiies in this custom built FrenchProvinciitl ill HillsboroughTwp, on 3+iicn'sin rural setting. Plenty of spire in/oui forgrowing f;imity. l-'loridit room lending unwo-level deck plus second deck one (light up!

CALL W M L lUMINCTON HUU-OIOO

r

I

RELOCATING?Relax. We can help.And, our service is

free!For moves across thv

country or statewe can find a home

for you,a buyer for your home

and take care of the details

Weidel RelocationCenter

1-800-288-SOLD

BETHLEHEM $249,955 WESTAMWELL $237,405 HOPKWKLL $265,953"YOUR TIME HAS COME" RMHOTSAl.t:OPEN HOLM M RKI) HOT SALE-OPES HOUSK

I.ARGK, BRIGHT, AIRY COLONIAL ON M - BITTIJt 11IAN NKW>mir ^ m J Mrmni O>!oi...il TWOOHMRY ACRES Why wi(,t l'urnrwrniiMniriiiM«hrn>ou(-iui

on t i iiaes hut in kmk-ii with 4HH : HA ulllBt,, 2 * i , , .^« . , n ^ J ( I v m iw have lltis ulmosl new fonner I IKIH IKHIH- ininnu'b.iimii'iiiriiHolorsthindjilKHil ^ii.liiidu'ilini!vlt1.|Vj;j.vdii.illiliv^l,ik-uiuii.lilK. UriinJoiiJamts CiwiK'niKlsfritlltlii'rxlnis

Hiinlwtwl IIIMKS hrick fireplace iiml 2 ra M ...r.myai h» ih.- hus> I.h-M>kv h * «.i n.«n t« , | ( H } m ^ s j n | h u 4 ^f , , , 2,,,U( ,KM]ll, w/

P^;1?'' w ll'w|y pawU drive. JIM mmv V?''Wl T''^ir.^Hi'i« rTH"?V P^"^n''""" ' fullIMIIIII.Midrkkiidnltwiilhmom PKIO-npht m miLiy HM! du imtlunp hui vniiiy • , ' j ^ - J " ^ » ; ™ ^ | ( t a KliDULIION - V*.

ilnniJLVJihNui' f ) l w I'Vderal City Hd lo IX'miw Rd InNiivesiiik #2 (HmiiJoii I'amiM

m.mmnu ( A I Mt"ALLWKIDM.tUNION WH-7.15-5WO (AI.I.WKIDKI.

II AlKEI>H0TSALE~ASI/7JJN(;

MMBKH AT DESIRABLEPRINCETON LASDINi;

Siu;i\liiug lirsi iiiijirvssiun o i liisioltit decoriindnieliculouscure hyorig.owner. Uii/jrlingsiinrilletlC'iiniejiie Mmlcl w/hsiniii. iiiid 2 ciirj!,ii '.Two luigemiister suites. 2 ".'IIA,l:imtrm.w/lloor uu-eiling kick tpl, nversiA'ddeck.I'RICI-: Rl-:iHJt"IK)N 5.14'fDIR. Rt.

LAMRERTVILI.E $279,470RED HOT SALE-OPEN HOUSE

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