Fire guts library, center - DigiFind-It

115
The i l l NEWS RECORD Phone: (201) 8284646 Thursday, April 19,1979 Vol. 27, No. 16 Three sections, 68 pages Second class postage paid at Manvffle, NJ 08835 USPS 573-800 $6 a year/20 cents a copy Route 27 PUD changes OK'd Field threatens massive housing development by Dorothy Maurp ,..• Staff Writer •i -' . •A three-hour volatile and verbal second Planned Unit Development (PUD). density ordinance public hearing was the prelude to Franklin Township Council's passage, 6-3, Thursday of the amending ordinance which reduces PUD density along Route 27 from 7 to 3.5 units per acre while increasing the minimum acreage requirement from 100 to 300. In the wake of the decision lies the uncertain fate of Jack Field's "preferred plan" for a 668-acre Route 27 Planned Community Development (PUD) which could be reduced in half •by the new ordinance. _ Before the vote, Jack Cullen - who was joined in turning thumbs down to the law by Dorothy Maklary and Nancy Henry -- introduced an amendment to exclude PUD ap- plications - like Mr. Field's Franklin Fields that are presently before the • Planning Board - from the ordinance restrictions. The motion was defeated "THE TOWNSHIP is the loser," said visibly upset Mr. Field after the I meeting. "Their actions are like a ; chiropractor performing open heart .surgery." Although he refused to comment about possible legal action, he said he will continue to go forward with his PCD application currently before the planning board. If his plans are rejected, Mr. Field said he will consider the possibility of subdividing and selling off his 2,000- acre holdings to smaller builders. Other landowners along Route 27 have also approached him about selling their land to him, he said. It is possible for him to buy the land and put up garden apartments everywhere, he said. "People in Griggstown won't be happy unless the land is a park," he ; concluded. ••-.-.<••••-••••; •• "There is not doubt in our minds the j ordinance is aimed at stopping Jack "S^Field," Chris Baker, Mr. Field's at- torney told council. BEFORE THE meeting, council was presented with a 700-name petition supporting the ordinance. "We have to be careful with what we are passing here tonight," Coun- cilwoman Maklary said during the meeting. | . "We don't live in a fantasy land. If a man owns the land he's going to develop it. The question is how is he going to do it," she said. "It is in the ' best interest of the township to work with a developer." There is a need for compromise since the outcome of litigation is un- certain, she said.i • • "The fear of litigation should not influence our votes," said Joseph Martino, who has supported reduced Route 27 PUD density for several years. j "Developers have to get in line to sue us in Franklin," he said. THOMAS JAMIESON, attorney representing Franklin Citizens for Orderly Planning, suggested the governing body adopt the measure as a interim ordinance, allowable be state law, in order to give council breathing room until the review of the township master plan which is currently taking! place is complete. - "Citizens have grave concerns for the availability of water and the en- vironmental impact with extra traffic and sewage disposal," he said. The Queale and Lynch report has recommended reducing density to one to three units per acre along Route 27, he said. "In this light, the ordinance is a wise and prudent thing to do," he said. His remarks were met by a round of applause from the 125 spectators who crowded the council chambers. "The Queale !& Lynch report was nothing but a flop since it is a spot type of report," said Councilman Philip Beachem, as he cast his positive vote. "The Planning Board doesn't know what it's doing! and never did," he said. "It is in our best interest to put this density question to rest once and fOF-all." • • i AFTER THE meeting, Mayor Charles Durance reiterated Mrs. Maklary's remarks. . "The Situation is complicated at this: point. "Die land will be developed," he said- "The, public, has to learn the art of compromise." Mayor Durand had supported Mr. Field's "preferred plan" which would have reduced the PUD to the con- forming 3.5 units per acre by adding an additional 200 acres to his PUD application. The planning board defeated on April 11 a zone boundary change that would have facilitated the preferred plan. .'•''. Council's action brings the PUD density into conformance with the northern end of the township which currently has a PUD density of 3.5 units per acre. . In similar action council unanimously approved an ordinance which eliminates garden apartments and townhouses from areas, designated as Highway Development Commercial Zone along Route 270. COUNCIL ALSO unanimously adopted the tax abatement ordinance which will aUow owners of houses 20 years or older to delay for five years ; paying taxes on major home im- provements. "This is a very positive measure for • our township," said Mr. Beachem, who championed the ordinance. The first five of. 14 new police of- ficers allocated in the new municipal budget were sworn in Thursday before the council business began by Police Chief James Brown, j . The new officers ?are Carl J. Lizzano, Raymond Petro, Richard Recine, Alan Cipolla , and Robert Lenart. , SCAPgoes to court to recover records by Steve Goodman Managing Editor Somerset Community Action Program has filed a motion for return of seized property in US District Court following an alleged break-in at its 9 Pershing Ave., Somerset headquar- ters by FBI and Franklin police representatives at or about 8:30 p.m. on Good Friday. Naming the United States of America as defendant in the legal action, SCAP calls the break-in through a street-level plate glass window "contempt by the federal ' government," according to Executive Director Mamie Moore. "We view it as a facially motivated thrust to harass and intimidate Qur people, and to further place obstacles in the way of our efforts to provide quality services to needy people in the community," she said. The SCAP trustee board recently reaffirmed the agency's three-fold thrust of advocacy, child-care and family, services, and. economic development, ' "Community-based institutions — Flowers brighten holldayweekehd. . ^ . % George Luck III, of Kingston, peer through the'pjwalsof[carnations for sale Saturday at the Kingston, VolunteerJ^r r Department firehouse. ' , «.•""• **- i, ' ' * : 'X^ -~^s§V " . tRich Pipefirig offering the community a voice and control over their own lives — are the last vestige of hope for breaking the cycle of poverty," explained board President Margaret Ellis. While its 11-year-old child-care program will continue to be built and strengthened, the rest of the? organization's efforts will be in ad-'' vocacy, according to Ms. Moore. "Such seizure actions have always been an attempt to stop this institution' from carrying out its rightful .mission j. per the 1964 OEO (Office of Economic \ Opportunity) Act: Advocacy in the interest of the rights and needs of the poor," Ms. Moore said. GOOD FRIDAY'S alleged break-in and seizure of records is not the first time the U.S. Attorney General's Office has confiscated SCAP records, , according to the director. ; The government has made three' seizures and holds records dating from 1968 ,to 197C, she said. ' However, this most recent seizure was accompanied by a search warrant issued by US Magistrate Robert E. Cowen on "misleading" information provided by the US Attorney's office, according to the SCAP court brief. "Once it became known to the US Attorney's office that we are challenging this search, they deter- mined to attempt to seal this affidavit post facto so that its false implications and insufficiency cannot be challenged in court," said SCAP at- torney Leora Mosston in her affidavit in support of the motion for return of seized property. APRIL; 13 events unfold when an . FBI agent identified as John S'vearinger telephoned Mrs. Ellis at 7:30 p.m. requesting admission to the building with a search warrant. The board president had no key for the door and indicated she would arrange to provide entrance and at the same time call SCAP's legal counsel. Arriving at 9 Pershing Ave. 15 minutes later, Mrs. Ellis said she: found "they were just merely rum- ' maging through the building coming out with files" through the broken-out store front .window. "Mr. Swearinger and unknown persons repeatedly asked Mrs. Ellis . and me where the records they sought were housed," Ms. Mosston wrote. "We're wondering why the urency was so necessary when they again ', served us (on Monday) for the same information they wanted," Mrs. Ellis said. "There was no heed for them to break in when we said we'd come." SCAP'S WINTERIZATION program which has received sub- stantial criticism during recent months lurched to a stop with the Good . Friday seizure. ; "The weatherization office was stripped," Ms. Moore said. "As a result, our program is at a halt with no records to work with." - Attempting to clear up some of the \ fog. surrounding the alleged poor administration of the weatherization . work, SCAP Assistant Director TheodoreTay lor said the program has completed about 60 of the targeted 100 homejL|-. SCtte employed Somerset County CETj£ workers following a federal mandate ',' stipulating the * weajflerization -manpower be drawn fr$m the on-the-jftb training program, according to Mr, Taylor. -f^'SCAP encountered from CETAno Willingness to *>e; .cooperative and ;e the .program work," he said. "The situation has been and still is ' obvious that CE^A^Jocalry and nation- • wide,' has no intention^if fulfilling the president's .commitment' of having CETA*%ork with.- local' community action agencies to provide the much 1 A VOLUNTEER fireman can only watch the flames erupting from the window of the 55 Fuller St., Somerset, struc- ture that was headquarters for the Hamilton Park Youth Development Program and the Frederick Douglass Liberation branch of the Franklin municipal library. Members of the Community and East Franklin departments fought tie 10:22 p.m. alarm on April 18 for abouttwo hours. (Steve Goodman photo) Fire guts library, center ••• by Steve Goodman Managing Editor A 10:22 p.m. fire on April 11 com- pletely gutted the 55 Fuller St., Somerset/building which served as home for the Hamilton Park Youth Development Project (HPYDP) and the Frederick Douglass Liberation Library. Volunteers from the Community and East Franklin fire companies finally left the scene ^^out 1 a.m. after quenching the blfze that started near a window, near a wooden filing cabinet in the cellar section underneath the gymnasium floor, according to township Fire Inspector Martin McLaughlin. Samples of debris taken from the building have been sent for detailed laboratory analysis. Somerset County arson specialists have been assisting the Franklin police investigate the blaze which is "of suspicious origin," Mr. McLaughlin said. Both institutions suspended operations following the fire. HPYDP anticipates resuming its after school programming for about 100 neigh- Council nips $ 1 from school budget by Steve Goodman Managing Editor Township Council cut the Board of Education's capital outlay budget by. more than 50 percent. Monday when it adopted a resolution fixing the school portion of the annual tax bill at $3.01 per $100 assessed value. A mere quorum of council unanimously approved the $125,000 slice from the voter rekected current expense and capital budgets. Council 'prefaced its action by urging the 'school board tti refrain from closing Middlebush. School and to fund, the l&OjOWall-weather track planned at the tajgb-SChdol. - ';'iThe'board unanimously agreed to cut 1)25,000 out of the capital outlay at the budget," school board t Sandra Sulam told council. ^WerwSl take into consideration your tnongh&ori those areas (Middlebush School aijd v the track)." While council's resolution certifies the amount of the cut, the school! decision-makers' are under, no obligation' to. adhere to council's" recommendations about .specific items. , . ," - ~»" *• Among the items included in the original $231,050 capital outlay ac- count are $119,950 in improvements to Franklin High School, $35,000 for roof repairs to district schools, $20,700 for updating fire detection 1 systems in Coherly Road and MacAfee Road schools and $20,250 for. radio equip- ment for special education bus •drivers. • ; "They will have to try to find money, in the current expense portion to get things done," admitted board business manager Ray Ganim after the meeting. ' , •WHILE THE $127,000 to be saved by closing Middlebush School remains unallocated in the $10,540,299 current expense portion to be raised by taxation, the school board meets tonight and' again on April 23 to. reconsider-its decision to shut, the school down in June. - - If the school remains closed and funds are "channelled''- through the maintenar*ce"a'ccount to facilitate the rejected capital outlay proposals, the Franklin boarrfwill operate from a -. -i</SeeNIP, page 17-A borhood youngsters within two weeks, according to activity center director Marvin Norman. Municipal library director Patricia Nivison said the main facility at 935 Hamilton St. — only "two blocks from the Fuller Street structure — will provide the specialty library services to the best of its ability. Mrs. Nivison indicated the library board of trustees will meet on April 25 and discuss a policy directive for her to implement to handle the situation. BOTH THE black studies library and the* youth/development project had plans to move to new homes in the near future. / While the fire consumed the two- story, stone community center < originally built by a group of neigh-- borhood residents, HPYDP officials were meeting with Franklij^HouEing Authority representatives"^ Tiiscuss plans for a new one. ' *-, . Funding for,HPYDP is a matching fund proposition. involving the township, United Way, state and federal matching funds. Monies, for the building fund are raised the same way,* according to Mr. Norman, but the initial $22,000 seed has to come from private contributions. "The $22,000 plus $78,000 from the township should give us enough money, to draw down the-federal dollars and we should go out for bids im- mediately," he said.. ' . ' See FIRE, page 8- A and inside..: cloverjcorrespondence ...."....16-K Aes by newspaper .... 15-A fetters to the editor' ..... , 5-A -dbitnaries .$-A police blotter '.- 2-A sport* •. I HA, 12-A, 13-A town fomm ~ 4-A - . 4 '••'. *>J -

Transcript of Fire guts library, center - DigiFind-It

The i l l NEWS RECORDPhone: (201) 8284646 Thursday, April 19,1979

Vol. 27, No. 16 Three sections, 68 pages Second class postage paid at Manvffle, NJ 08835 USPS 573-800 $6 a year/20 cents a copy

Route 27 PUD changes OK'dField threatens massive housing development

by Dorothy Maurp,..• Staff Writer

• i • - ' • .

•A three-hour volatile and verbalsecond Planned Unit Development(PUD). density ordinance publichearing was the prelude to FranklinTownship Council's passage, 6-3,Thursday of the amending ordinancewhich reduces PUD density alongRoute 27 from 7 to 3.5 units per acrewhile increasing the minimumacreage requirement from 100 to 300.

In the wake of the decision lies theuncertain fate of Jack Field's"preferred plan" for a 668-acre Route27 Planned Community Development(PUD) which could be reduced in half

•by the new ordinance. _Before the vote, Jack Cullen - who

was joined in turning thumbs down tothe law by Dorothy Maklary andNancy Henry -- introduced anamendment to exclude PUD ap-plications - like Mr. Field's FranklinFields that are presently before the

• Planning Board - from the ordinancerestrictions. The motion was defeated

"THE TOWNSHIP is the loser,"said visibly upset Mr. Field after the

I meeting. "Their actions are like a; chiropractor performing open heart

.surgery."Although he refused to comment

about possible legal action, he said hewill continue to go forward with hisPCD application currently before theplanning board.

If his plans are rejected, Mr. Fieldsaid he will consider the possibility ofsubdividing and selling off his 2,000-

• acre holdings to smaller builders.Other landowners along Route 27

have also approached him aboutselling their land to him, he said. It ispossible for him to buy the land andput up garden apartmentseverywhere, he said.

"People in Griggstown won't behappy unless the land is a park," he

; c o n c l u d e d . ••-.-.<••••-••••; ••"There is not doubt in our minds the

j ordinance is aimed at stopping Jack"S^Field," Chris Baker, Mr. Field's at-

torney told council.

BEFORE THE meeting, councilwas presented with a 700-name

petition supporting the ordinance."We have to be careful with what we

are passing here tonight," Coun-cilwoman Maklary said during themeeting. | .

"We don't live in a fantasy land. If aman owns the land he's going todevelop it. The question is how is hegoing to do it," she said. "It is in the

' best interest of the township to workwith a developer."

There is a need for compromisesince the outcome of litigation is un-certain, she said.i • •

"The fear of litigation should notinfluence our votes," said JosephMartino, who has supported reducedRoute 27 PUD density for severalyears. j

"Developers have to get in line tosue us in Franklin," he said.

THOMAS JAMIESON, attorneyrepresenting Franklin Citizens forOrderly Planning, suggested thegoverning body adopt the measure asa interim ordinance, allowable bestate law, in order to give councilbreathing room until the review of thetownship master plan which iscurrently taking! place is complete. -

"Citizens have grave concerns forthe availability of water and the en-vironmental impact with extra trafficand sewage disposal," he said.

The Queale and Lynch report hasrecommended reducing density to oneto three units per acre along Route 27,he said.

"In this light, the ordinance is a wiseand prudent thing to do," he said.

His remarks were met by a round ofapplause from the 125 spectators whocrowded the council chambers.

"The Queale !& Lynch report wasnothing but a flop since it is a spot typeof report," said Councilman PhilipBeachem, as he cast his positive vote.

"The Planning Board doesn't knowwhat it's doing! and never did," hesaid. "It is in our best interest to putthis density question to rest once andf O F - a l l . " • • i

AFTER THE meeting, MayorCharles Durance reiterated Mrs.Maklary's remarks. .

"The Situation is complicated at this:point. "Die land will be developed," hesaid- "The, public, has to learn the art

of compromise."Mayor Durand had supported Mr.

Field's "preferred plan" which wouldhave reduced the PUD to the con-forming 3.5 units per acre by addingan additional 200 acres to his PUDapplication. The planning boarddefeated on April 11 a zone boundarychange that would have facilitated thepreferred plan. .'•''.

Council's action brings the PUDdensity into conformance with thenorthern end of the township whichcurrently has a PUD density of 3.5units per acre. .

In similar action councilunanimously approved an ordinancewhich eliminates garden apartmentsand townhouses from areas ,designated as Highway Development

Commercial Zone along Route 270.

COUNCIL ALSO unanimouslyadopted the tax abatement ordinancewhich will aUow owners of houses 20years or older to delay for five years ;paying taxes on major home im-provements.

"This is a very positive measure for •our township," said Mr. Beachem,who championed the ordinance.

The first five of. 14 new police of-ficers allocated in the new municipalbudget were sworn in Thursday beforethe council business began by PoliceChief James Brown, j .

The new officers ?are Carl J.Lizzano, Raymond Petro, RichardRecine, Alan Cipolla , and RobertLenart. ,

SCAP goes to courtto recover records

by Steve GoodmanManaging Editor

Somerset Community ActionProgram has filed a motion for returnof seized property in US District Courtfollowing an alleged break-in at its 9Pershing Ave., Somerset headquar-ters by FBI and Franklin policerepresentatives at or about 8:30 p.m.on Good Friday.

Naming the United States ofAmerica as defendant in the legalaction, SCAP calls the break-inthrough a street-level plate glasswindow "contempt by the federal

' government," according to ExecutiveDirector Mamie Moore.

"We view it as a facially motivatedthrust to harass and intimidate Qurpeople, and to further place obstaclesin the way of our efforts to providequality services to needy people in thecommunity," she said.

The SCAP trustee board recentlyreaffirmed the agency's three-foldthrust of advocacy, child-care andfamily, services , and. economicdevelopment, • • '

"Community-based institutions —

Flowers brighten holldayweekehd. . ^ . %George Luck III, of Kingston, peer through the'pjwalsof[carnations for sale Saturday at the Kingston, VolunteerJ^r r

Department firehouse. ' , «.•""• **- i, • ' ' * : ' X ^ -~^s§V". tRich Pipefirig

offering the community a voice andcontrol over their own lives — are thelast vestige of hope for breaking thecycle of poverty," explained boardPresident Margaret Ellis.

While its 11-year-old child-careprogram will continue to be built andstrengthened, the rest of the?organization's efforts will be in ad-''vocacy, according to Ms. Moore.

"Such seizure actions have alwaysbeen an attempt to stop this institution'from carrying out its rightful .mission j.per the 1964 OEO (Office of Economic\Opportunity) Act: Advocacy in theinterest of the rights and needs of thepoor," Ms. Moore said.

GOOD FRIDAY'S alleged break-inand seizure of records is not the firsttime the U.S. Attorney General'sOffice has confiscated SCAP records, ,according to the director. ;

The government has made three'seizures and holds records datingfrom 1968 ,to 197C, she said.' However, this most recent seizurewas accompanied by a search warrantissued by US Magistrate Robert E.Cowen on "misleading" informationprovided by the US Attorney's office,according to the SCAP court brief.

"Once it became known to the USAttorney's office that we arechallenging this search, they deter-mined to attempt to seal this affidavitpost facto so that its false implicationsand insufficiency cannot bechallenged in court," said SCAP at-torney Leora Mosston in her affidavitin support of the motion for return ofseized property.

APRIL; 13 events unfold when an .FBI agent identified as JohnS'vearinger telephoned Mrs. Ellis at7:30 p.m. requesting admission to thebuilding with a search warrant.

The board president had no key forthe door and indicated she wouldarrange to provide entrance and at thesame time call SCAP's legal counsel.

Arriving at 9 Pershing Ave. 15minutes later, Mrs. Ellis said she:found "they were just merely rum- 'maging through the building comingout with files" through the broken-outstore front .window.

"Mr. Swearinger and unknownpersons repeatedly asked Mrs. Ellis .and me where the records they soughtwere housed," Ms. Mosston wrote.

"We're wondering why the urencywas so necessary when they again ',served us (on Monday) for the sameinformation they wanted," Mrs. Ellissaid. "There was no heed for them tobreak in when we said we'd come."

SCAP'S WINTERIZATIONprogram which has received sub-stantial criticism during recentmonths lurched to a stop with the Good .Friday seizure. ;

"The weatherization office wasstripped," Ms. Moore said. "As aresult, our program is at a halt with norecords to work with." -

Attempting to clear up some of the \fog. surrounding the alleged pooradministration of the weatherization .work, SCAP Assistant DirectorTheodoreTay lor said the program hascompleted about 60 of the targeted 100homejL|-.

SCtte employed Somerset CountyCETj£ workers following a federalmandate ',' stipulating the *weajflerization -manpower be drawnfr$m the on-the-jftb training program,according to Mr, Taylor.

-f^'SCAP encountered from CETAnoWillingness to *>e; .cooperative and

;e the .program work," he said."The situation has been and still is 'obvious that CE^A^Jocalry and nation- •wide,' has no intention^if fulfilling thepresident's .commitment' of havingCETA*%ork with.- local' communityaction agencies to provide the much

1

A VOLUNTEER fireman can only watch the flames erupting from the window of the 55 Fuller St., Somerset, struc-ture that was headquarters for the Hamilton Park Youth Development Program and the Frederick DouglassLiberation branch of the Franklin municipal library. Members of the Community and East Franklin departmentsfought t ie 10:22 p.m. alarm on April 18 for abouttwo hours.

(Steve Goodman photo)

Fire guts library,center •••

by Steve GoodmanManaging Editor

A 10:22 p.m. fire on April 11 com-pletely gutted the 55 Fuller St.,Somerset/building which served ashome for the Hamilton Park YouthDevelopment Project (HPYDP) andthe Frederick Douglass LiberationLibrary.

Volunteers from the Community andEast Franklin fire companies finallyleft the scene ^^out 1 a.m. afterquenching the blfze that started neara window, near a wooden filing cabinet

in the cellar section underneath thegymnasium floor, according totownship Fire Inspector MartinMcLaughlin.

Samples of debris taken from thebuilding have been sent for detailedlaboratory analysis. Somerset Countyarson specialists have been assistingthe Franklin police investigate theblaze which is "of suspicious origin,"Mr. McLaughlin said.

Both institutions suspendedoperations following the fire. HPYDPanticipates resuming its after schoolprogramming for about 100 neigh-

Council nips $ 1from school budget

by Steve GoodmanManaging Editor

Township Council cut the Board ofEducation's capital outlay budget by.more than 50 percent. Monday when itadopted a resolution fixing the schoolportion of the annual tax bill at $3.01per $100 assessed value.

A mere quorum of councilunanimously approved the $125,000slice from the voter rekected currentexpense and capital budgets. Council

'prefaced its action by urging the'school board tti refrain from closingMiddlebush. School and to fund, thel&OjOWall-weather track planned atthe tajgb-SChdol.

- ';'iThe'board unanimously agreed tocut 1)25,000 out of the capital outlay

at the budget," school boardt Sandra Sulam told council.

^WerwSl take into consideration yourtnongh&ori those areas (MiddlebushSchool aijdvthe track)."

While council's resolution certifiesthe amount of the cut, the school!decision-makers' are under, noobligation' to . adhere to council's"recommendations about .specificitems. , . ," - ~»" *•

Among the items included in theoriginal $231,050 capital outlay ac-count are $119,950 in improvements toFranklin High School, $35,000 for roofrepairs to district schools, $20,700 forupdating fire detection1 systems inCoherly Road and MacAfee Roadschools and $20,250 for. radio equip-ment for special education bus•drivers. • ;

"They will have to try to find money,in the current expense portion to getthings done," admitted board businessmanager Ray Ganim after themeeting. ' ,

•WHILE THE $127,000 to be saved byclosing Middlebush School remainsunallocated in the $10,540,299 currentexpense portion to be raised bytaxation, the school board meetstonight and' again on April 23 to.reconsider-its decision to shut, theschool down in June. - -

If the school remains closed andfunds are "channelled''- through themaintenar*ce"a'ccount to facilitate therejected capital outlay proposals, theFranklin boarrfwill operate from a

-. - i < / S e e N I P , page 17-A

borhood youngsters within two weeks,according to activity center directorMarvin Norman.

Municipal library director PatriciaNivison said the main facility at 935Hamilton St. — only "two blocks fromthe Fuller Street structure — willprovide the specialty library servicesto the best of its ability.

Mrs. Nivison indicated the libraryboard of trustees will meet on April 25and discuss a policy directive for herto implement to handle the situation.

BOTH THE black studies libraryand the* youth/development projecthad plans to move to new homes in thenear future. /

While the fire consumed the two-story, stone community center <originally built by a group of neigh--borhood residents, HPYDP officialswere meeting with Franklij^HouEingAuthority representatives"^ Tiiscussplans for a new one. ' *-, .

Funding for,HPYDP is a matchingfund proposition. involving thetownship, United Way, state andfederal matching funds. Monies, forthe building fund are raised the sameway,* according to Mr. Norman, butthe initial $22,000 seed has to comefrom private contributions.

"The $22,000 plus $78,000 from thetownship should give us enough money,to draw down the-federal dollars andwe should go out for bids im-mediately," he said.. ' . '

See FIRE, page 8- A

and inside..:

cloverjcorrespondence ...."....16-KAes by newspaper . . . . 15-A

fetters to the editor' . . . . . , 5-A-dbitnaries .$-Apolice blotter '.- 2-Asport* •. I HA, 12-A, 13-Atown fomm ~ 4-A

• - . • 4 ' • • ' .

*>J -

Thursday, April 19,1979 I he Franklin NEWS RECORD •2-A.

H a ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ a * ^^^Sa^"^^^aV ^^^fia^P^^^aV . ^BOB^P^^^BV H ^ ^ • • • ^ ' ^ ^ ^ • * ^^••N^^^^^R* ^^Rio^^^^R** . ^ ^ ^ " y^^*^*^ ^—'

Spooky Brook KerbarvGARDEN AND PRODUCE CENTER

HerbsPine BarkGrass Seed

Lime & FertilizerVegetable & Flower Seeds

Tree & Shrub '

I 10 a.m. -6 p.m.Tues. - Sun.

• - " , • • - • • - . • - • 1

Mmk AmwBit Road (Rt. 514)873-2460. East Millstone

police blotter

Our New

Come in and let usTell You About

9.50%Per Year

26 W M k i Savings Cartfftcates In Unit* of $10,000

(Substantial penalty for early withdrawal)

and receive aFree Gift.

MANVILLE SAVINGS &LOANS ASSOC.

An unknown driver eludedFranklin police on FranklinBoulevard on April 6 as hemade off with a car belongingto Ann M. Williams of 212Phillips Road at 1:30 a.m.,according to this week's policereport. :,

Ptl. Frank Alonso laterdiscovered the stolen 1974Ford with no one in it. Policeare investigating.

A $150 radio was stolen froma Chevrolet garaged at SicoraMotors on Route 27 between 10a.m.-3 p.m. on April 9, policesaid.

* • •Henrietta Crawford of 48

School Ave., Somerset, toldpolice someone broke into herhome through the bathroomwindow on April 15 and stole$17.50 in Kennedy half dollars.

The missing coins werepilferred between 9 a.m.-6:30p.m., police said.

A $6,000, 1973 Winabagocamper was stolen from BobLani of 35 Lafayette St.,Somerset, on April 13, policesaid.

Authorities were notified ofthe missing vehicle at 11 p.m.and are investigating itsdisappearance.

A 36-year-old Piscataway

woman was arrested on April.14 for shoplifting at the Shop-rite supermarket on EastonAvenue, police said.

Eleanor Mahaley of 225Westfield Ave. was ap-prehended at 8:30 p.m. withtwo tubes of Nair, worth $3.18,in her possession.

A juvenile was picked up by *police at 3:47 p.m. at the Route27 Quick Chek in FranklinPark on April 14 after he at-tempted to walk out of thestore without paying for candyworth $1.70.

The youth arrested by policeis 14 years old, according toreports.

Chamber to honor threeas outstanding citizens

League plans forum

At-large candidatesto meet voters Tuesday

313 S. Main St., Manville722-2776

Hi-

l tIhi

For the benefit of the un-decided voter in the May 8election to fill four at-largeseats on Township Council, theLeague of Women Voters ofFranklin Township willsponsor a. Candidates Night1

program Tuesday, April 24, at8 p.m. at Sampson G. Smith

; Intermediate School,' AmwelljRoad, Middlebush.

Concerned about the apathyand low voter turnout in therecent Board of Educationelection, the league urges allresidents to come and heartheir candidates speakTuesday and then to cast theirballots on election day. Theleague is a nonpartisanorganization dedicated toinformed and responsiblecitizenship.

At the Candidates Nightj program all eight candidates

will make brief presentationson their qualifications and/orstands on issues. They willthen meet the public in smallgroups in a round-robinfashion, with one candidatefrom each of the two opposingslates paired alphabetically.

After the formal groups.adjourn, refreshments will beserved, and ' residents maycontinue their discussions withthe candidates on an informalbasis.

Although the "deadline for

registering to vote in thecouncil election has passed,the league would like toremind voters that May 1 isthe deadline for the receipt ofapplications to vote by ab-sentee ballot.

The last day to register or tofile a change of address formin order to vote in the Juneprimary is May 7.

For further information onvoting procedures or on theCandidates Night, call 545-2999. ,

Farkas arrestedfor shooting wife

Steve Farkas, 46, of 11 ByronPlace, Somerset, shot his wifeto death on Tuesday and then

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called police at 1:49. a.m.report the incident.

Pauline Manfre Farkas wasfound dead from a shotgunwound by Franklin Ptl.George Cirullo and DaveFehervari. The pair arrestedMr. Farkas at' the, scene,police said.

Married late in 1977, thecouple had lived in the secondfloor apartment at the ByronPlace address for less thanthree months, according topolice. Mrs.! Farkas was foundlying at the foot of the steps onground leve'. Some bruiseswere also found on her hotly,according to authorities.

Mrs. Farkas was the ownerof the Franklin TownshipTaki, 403 Somerset St. Herhusband is an unemployedsheet rock installer and theirlife toge*her was described byone authority as "turbulent, tosay the least."

Police were unable to locateMrs. Farkas 12-year-old sonfrom a previous marriage —Anthony — until more than 12hours after his mother hadbeen shot.

Franklin police led by Lt.Joseph Juzwiak and SomersetCounty Prosecutor's office irepresentatives coordinatedby. Deputy Chief PatrickMcColgan obtained a searchwarrant from Superior CourtJudge Michael R. Imbriani toinvestigate the apartmentfollowing the shooting tadseize evidence^

Mr. Farkas was arraignedbefore acting municipalmagistrate Robert Hendricksof South Bound Brook, .whoremanded him to SomersetCounty Jail.

Bail for the indictable of-fense was set at $100,000 bySuperior Court Judge ArthurS. Meredith, according tocounty authorities.

Medical examiners atSomerse* Medical Center inSomerville performed anautopsy Tuesday and deter-minded Mrs. Farkas died frominternal bleeding caused bythe gunshot wound.

BA2AAR SET MAY 19

The Immaculata SpartanClub will hold its annualbazaar and flea market May19 on the high school grounds,corner of Mountain Avenueand Route 22 in Somerville.For space and table reser-vations, you may call 722-0200

The Franklin Township'Chamber of Commerce willhold its 19th annual in-stallation dinner dance thisSaturday, April 21 at theSomerset Marriott.

Cocktails will be at 7 p.m.with dinner at 8 p.m. anddancing until 1 a.m. withmusic provided by the BruceGassman Orchestra.

Congresswoman MillicentFenwick will be honored asCitizen of the Year.

Rep. Millicent Fenwick (R.,5th Dist.) was born in NewYork City. She attendedFoxcroft School in , Mid-dleburg, Va. and ColumbiaUniversity. She also hasstudied at the New School forSocial Research.

She was an associate editorfor Cpnde Nast Publicationsfrom 1938 until 1952. Mrs.Fenwick served on the Boardof Education in Bernardsvilleand as chairman of theRecreat ion Commission.From 1958 until 1964, she was aftiember of the BernardsvilleBorough Council.

She was also vice-chairmanof the New Jersey Committeefor the U.S. Commission onCivil Rights, a formerchairman of the SomersetCounty Legal Aid and BlueRibbon Committee to StudyDrug Abuse, and formerchairman of the Governor'sCommittee on Equal Em-ployment Opportunity.

In 1969, she was elected toher first term in the NewJersey Assembly, where shechampioned the cause of,consumer and civil rights, ofprison reform and con-

'servation. She was re-electedin 1971. One year later, sheresigned from the legislatureto accept appointment asdirector of New Jersey'sDivision of Consumer Affairs.

Mrs. Fenwick serves as amember of the House Com-mittee on Banking, Financeand Urban Affairs, the SmallBusiness Committee and theCommittee on Standards ofOfficial Conduct.

The congresswoman hasbeen .active in school andphilanthropic work for manyyears. She is a trustee ofStevens Institute ofTechnology, the New JerseyHistorical Society, the NewJersey Symphony Orchestra,Newark Museum, theSomerset Hills YMCA andSomerset County Legal Ser-vices.'

HARRY GERKEN will bereceiving the ChamberMember of the Year award.

This award is given to achamber member who hasmade outstanding con-tributions to the improvementof Franklin Township duringthe past year.

Franklin's manager sinceAugust 1975, Mr. Gerken hasbeen involved in severalorganizations, always ready to-offer his time and service toothers.

A partial list of his activitiesinclude membership in theMunicipal ManagementAssociation, in which he leadsthe committee onprofessionalism; the NewJersey League ofMunicipalities; the In-ternational City ManagementAssociation; the Franklin

Township Chamber of Com-merce; the Board of Trusteeof The Meadows and the Boardof Trustees of the FranklinArts Council.

In addition to those formalorganizations, Mr. Gerkenhas, in his capacity as town-ship manager, spoken tovarious clubs andorganizations, including theCedar Wood Woman's Club,the League of Women Votersand the Lions Club.

He has also volunteered histime to speak on municipalmanagement at Rutgers,Sampson G. Smith In-termediate School, Pine GroveManor School and adult*education programs onlearning about the township.

As township manager, Mr.Gerken always has theresidents interests in mind,whether it means driving asnowplow for 16 hours straightor meeting at night with an adhoc group of citizens who donot understand a change inzoning. He is on call 24 hours aday, ready to explain theimplication of a revaluation orto answer a complaint aboutdrainage problems,

"Mr. Gerken's enthusiasmand professionalism, alongwith his availability to the

press and to the public, hashelped improve FrariklinTownship's image as a niceplace to live," said thechamber selection committee.

MARY SARTORETTO willbe receiving the Humanitarianof the Year award. ' . . . "

This award is given to that .individual who has contributedto the town through workingwith those in need on avolunteering basis.

Mrs. Sartoretto, was in theearly 60's, an active worker inthe Christian KamilyMovement in New York. Shewas working with' indigentfamilies in Harlem and theSouth Bronx. She mobilizedgroups of women to work withhospitals, nursing homes andcancer patients.

, Upon her move to NewJersey 11 years ago, she im-mediately plunged herself intosimilar programs.

She is a frequent visitor tothe nursing homes and activemember of Meals on Wheels,treasurer of St. Peter'sHospital Auxiliary, and anactive and interested par-ticipant in the civic functionsof Franklin Township.

Tickets for the dinner/danceare sold out.

Millicent Fenwick Harry Gerken Mary Sartoretto

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Thursday, April 19,1979 I he Franklin NEWS RECORD 3-A

GOP back revitalizationof Hamilton retail strip

The continued improvementof the Hamilton Street shop-ping district should be a highpriority for the TownshipCouncil, according .toRepublican candidates RobertMettler, Andrew Schnatter,Richard Jensen and Fred

. Flagg. The trend on HamiltonStreet is good, and continuedefforts now will ensure anattractive and prosperousshopping area, the hopefuls

.maintain."We do not want to see

Hamilton Street suffer thesame type of neglect that ledto the virtual abandonment ofdowntown New Brunswick,"said incumbent councilmanRobert Mettler. "While high-way shopping centers havetheir place, local residentsalso look to neighborhood

Lstores for convenient location,friendlier service, and theircontribution as concernedmembers of the community.At the same time, thesebusinesses provide jobs landpay their fair share of localtaxes." • , |

According to An^v

Schnatter, who has been anactive member of the Franklin

' Chamber of Commerce,! theimproved street lighting was agood start. |

"Bringing in Flair Chevroletto the long vacant GrandUnion Shopping Centerdemonstrated the viability ofthe area, and will draw moretrade to Hamilton Street^" hesaid. "The next step should bea program to re-align and.improve sidewalks r andprovide additional off-street

parking in small lots."Candidate Fred Flagg has

suggested the possibility of a'police sub-station in the areato provide better protection forstores, ' shoppers, andsurrounding residential areas.

"By having some existingpolice patrols work out of aHamilton Street location,better service could beprovided at a reasonablecost," Mr. Flagg said.

"We are highly positiveabout Franklin," said DickJensen. "We see Franklin as avital, growing total com-munity, and Hamilton Street isone i area where the op-portunity for progress is ex-cellent. I strongly supportcooperating with local .mer-chants and residents to helpHamilton Street grow."

Democrats can properlyorient township's priorities

"The first step in therevilalization of Franklin'sgovernment will be thedevelopment _.of communityoriented priorities" accordingto the 4 Franklin's FutureCouncil candidates FriedaWarner, Bob Rosenwasser,Steve Bonsall and John Clyde.

"The cornerstone of ourprogram will be to safeguardthe taxpayer's money.Democratic council members,Phfl Beachem, Nancy Henryand Frieda Warner, havemade substantial ac-complishments in the area oftax relief and equity," thecandidates said.

F r a n k l i n T o w n s h i pDemocrats led the fight forpassage of. the tax abatementprogram for homes 20 yearsand older. This ordinance willallow home owners to makeadditions or improvements ontheir homes without beingtaxed for these improvementsfor five years.

"This is progressive1

legislation which will promotemore attractive neigh-borhoods and provide muchneeded tax relief. We will fightto make this: an ongoingprogram," the 4 Franklin'sFuture slate stated.

"Franklin's Democrats ledthe struggle for properly taxrecord cards, once againovercoming the Republicanaccusations that they weremerely being political. Theserecord .cards. enabledhomeowners to learn ofserious errors in the town-ship's reassessment program.

"It was the questioning byDemocratic council memberswhich led loan investigation ofthe entire revaluationprogram," Warner, Rjose'n-'wasser, Bonsall and Clydeadded.

"We will continue to fight forsubstantial accomplishmentsto ensure the efficientmanagement of our citizen'stax dollar," CouncilwomanWarner said. j -' •

Bob Rosenwasser stressedthat the 4 Franklin's Futurecandidates have been activelyinvolved in efforts to "put thebreaks on runaway residentialgrowth in order to provide astable tax base for the future."

John Clyde advocated theestablishment of a BudgetAdvisory-jCommitteej com-posed of concerned citizenswith expertise in finance^accounting, economics andplanning., "The function of thiscommittee will be to providequalified citizen's input intothe council and manager'sefforts to ensure efficientgovernment and stable tax

rales," the hopeful said.Steve Bonsall pointed out

. that a fair mechanism must befound for selecting, residentialstreets for repavement.

"Franklin Democratssponsored the first TownshipCommittee on the Han-dicapped to investigate theavailability of grant funds tohelp meet • the needs ofFranklin's Handicapped.Franklin Democrats havefought to bring in more than$360,000.00 in federal and slategrants for NeighborhoodPreservation Programs; forGreen Thumb Senior Citizen'sworkers with the MeadowsFoundation and for the han-dicapped

"We will continue to fight forthese grants and to ensure thatfederal and .slate funds areproperly utilized. In thisregard, we wholeheartedlysupport Nancy Henry's en-deavors in fighting for properadministration of theSomerset Community ActionProgram," said Warner,Rosenwasser, Bonsall andClyde.

Sweet Adelines to singdt Home for the Aged

Somerset Valley Chapter ofSweet Adelines, Inc. will be onhand to perform Sunday, April22 at 2 p.m. for the CentralJersey Home for the Aged, 380DeMott Lane, Somerset.

Under the direction ofDonald Kalbach ofi Bound

Brook, Somerset Valleyrehearse every Tuesday at 8p.m. — except holidays — atthe Good Shepherd LutheranChurch, 300 Union Ave.,Somerville.

All women are . cordiallyinvited.

ROBERTMETTLER

ANDYSCHNATTER

RICHARDJENSEN

FREDFLAGG

FranklinTownship Council

MAY 8, 1979

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town forum4 - A The Franklin News-Record Thursday, April 19,1979

editorial

Higher minimum wagea good wind blowing ill

To paraphrase the adage: "It's a good wind that blowsno one ill.

The minimum wage in New Jersey rose 35 cents an hourrecently — certainly a good wind for those on the bottom ofthe state's pay scale. Now the state has announced it hassliced 100 jobs from the state-operated summer em-ployment program. That certainly is a good wind blowingill.

It seems to be axiomatic in welfare, employment and ur-ban legislation in the last decade that well-intentioned lawswill result in less than half of the good intended. Some of itcan be laid to the failure of legislators and social reformersto look beyond the immediate problem.

The state summer employment program is a good exam-ple, but private industry is discovering the same problem.Certainly every worker should receive an honest wage foran honest job. But what is an honest wage?

Is an honest wage one that keeps pace with inflation butignores declines in productivity? Is an honest wage onewhich gives a worker a bigger take home pay — no doubtlargely deserved — but at the expense of a job for anotherperson?

Many state industries — especially smaller ones — willfindit cheaper not to add to their work force even whensuch an addition might bring about an element of growth.If the wage structure is too high in an already marginalfirm, growth can be too expensive.

The minimum wage was not created to discourage em-ployment. It was intended, with good reason, to wipe outsweat shops and other forms of exploitation of labor. Suchlaws were necessary at their inception and no doubt stillare.

But when the minimum wage stifles employment, addsto the jobless rolls and in general does nothing to furtherprosperity, it is time to do a little re-examination.

Perhaps one possibility offers immediate attention.Teenagers could be exempted from the stipulatedminimum wage for a number of jobs —-those in which theteenagers poStrio real threat to the adult work force.

One of oar^greatest problems in our cities is unemployedblack youths. Yet few employers are going to hire un-trained youths at $2.90 an hour for such jobs. A lower levelfor such employment certainly merits some serious con-sideration.

And when it comes time to consider raising theminimum wage again— let's ponder all the ramifications.

guest opinion

SWORD IN THE S7OA/E

A ride in a dream car

.Crump's,

o3

by Stuart Crump Jr.The Packet Group

"I'd sure like to gel one of those," Isaid as I held up a newspaper storyheadlined "Cars that get 84 miles pergallon may hit highways this year."

"Don't hold your polluted breath," aguy across the table scoffed.

"It says here the EPA tested the carand vertified the claim. They couldn'tprint it in the paper if it weren't true,"I replied.

"You want a car that gets 80 mpg?My uncle invented one 40 years ago.Got filthy rich doing it too."

"So how come I can't buy one?" Iasked.

"There ain't no such animal," theguy muttered.

"But you said..."

"UNCLE HARRY never made anyeffort to sell the thing. He took hisinvention to a couple of hot-shotnewspaper reporters. Two days afterthe story hit the papers a guy from abig auto company snowed up at UncleHarry's door offering to buy him out." •

"He sold out to Detroit and Detroitburied the invention, right?"

"Nope. Uncle Harry insisted hewouldn't sell because he was planningto market the thing himself and he wasin the process of raising capital. Whilehe. was talking the doorbell rang and aguy from another auto company ap-peared at the door."

"So what did he do? Throw themboth out?"

Nope, he invited them both in butadamantly refused to sell. They kept

Rutgers China-Watcher still optimisticSince Chinese Deputy Premier Teng

Hsaio-ping's nine-day visit to theUnited States earlier this year,American political scientists havecarefully watched the reactions ofSoviet officials to the growing frien-dliness between East and West.

Few people are monitoringdevelopments more closely than

Democrats planning double talkcovers hodge podge approach

by Dorothy Maklary

The four Democratic candidates, orsomeone on their behalf, have

. dreamed up some astounding andridiculous charges for their pressrelease, last week. I am obliged torespond.• Their release, if it can be takenseriously, is contradictory to theactions taken by; Phil Beachem andFrieda Warner.

They plainly stated that thecharacter of the community can onlybe_ protected by a comprehensivemaster plan review. They have openlyadmitted that no such review hasbegun and that any changed or-dinance, under these circumstances,would never survive a majorchallenge in courtr

Yet, they voted to change an or-dinance inconsistent with the presentplan and secured the vulnerability ofFranklin's future. • • •

Is this proper planning? Don't theybelieve what they say themselves?

WHAT IS MORE puzzling is that it• was their predecessors — currently-active in the community — who

promulgated the inadequate planningreferred to in their release.

The Democrat-controlled counciland unanimous Democrat-appointedplanning board foisted the PUD zoningordinance on us in 1972. Only twomonths ago, former Democrat-appointed township attorney StanleyCutler objected to the Queale andLynch study at a public hearing.

He pointed to serious inconsistenciesin the findings. Mr. Cutler remindedall those present of the intent of theordinance.

The criteria of job availability, theeconomic boost, the broader tax base,the greater recreational and publicservice activity were all part of thatintent, along with the prevention ofpiecemeal and disorderly develop-ment

If the Democratic candidatesbothered to familiarize themselveswith the ordinance they passed, they

'would know, they were in strict op-position to themselves. Are they now

publicly renouncing the DemocraticParty for their planning policies, or isthe Democratic Party renouncing thecandidates for their views?

I AGREE THAT objectivity is veryhard to maintain when you live inGriggstown, as I have, for six years.

Everything that will happen at thisend of town will effect me and myfamily personally. I certainly can'tremove .that from my thinking,anymore than I can offer the people a'false hope.

Griggstown and Franklin Park aredeveloping everyday and there will bemore on a larger scale — and soon.

I won't be used as a scapegoat forthe Democrats.

They are solely responsible for thezoning problem that exists today. Thedevelopment is here and the issue thatmust be addressed is qualitydevelopment. I want whatever is nearme to be as good as I can get it to be.

While I was by no stretch of theimagination aggressive in my concernfor all the landowners in the area, Icertainly felt I was reasonable andopenmjnded in trying to deal withthem — all of them!

= I know the courts could not be assensitive to the issue.

Through my research and con-versations, I concluded that a direct

approach would have yielded a betterFranklin in the long run and I still do.Frieda Warner's approach will onlygive us more hodge podge develop-ment sooner with less to say about it.

Her political double talk andfoolishness may have temporarilysatisfied a few Griggstown people whoprobably won't vote for heV anyway,but what is she going to tell her con-stituency and the rest of the town.

I WOULD ALSO like to remove theconfusion that prevails in the minds ofthe Democrat candidates.

I am not running for re-election.Your remarks were unnecessary andunfounded.

I suggest you keep me out of yourtonge twisting campaign and seek outthe Republicans who are running. Ifthe new Democratic candidates intendto follow Frieda Warner and PhilBeachem's lead in solving planningproblems, their election would ensurethat Franklin's future is grim.

It is clear that their decisions will bemade by putting their heads in thesand and letting the rest sway in thebreeze.

Mrs. Maklary is an at-largeTownship Council member who alsosits on the Planning Board for 1978-79.She lives at 45 Crescent Drive.

Professor George Ginsburgs of theRutgers University School of Law,Camden campus. One of twospecialists in Soviet law at the StateUniversity, Dr. Ginsburgs' own life isdeeply rooted in both Chinese andSoviet cultures.

His Russian mother and Latvianfather left the Soviet Union for China,in 1917 because of the revolution. Prof.Ginsburgs. was born in 1932 inShanghai, and 20 years later he and hisparents and brother were forced toleave. - \

"We couldn't survive financially inChina after the 1949 communisttakeover," he explains. His familyrelocated in the United States.

WITH THIS BACKGROUND, hissubsequent undergraduate and ad-vanced education at the university ofCalifornia at Los Angeles, and con-tinued research, Prof. Ginsburgs iseminently qualified to survey theChina-Soviet Union-U.S.A. scene. Atthe moment, he is watching for anegative response to Teng's visit.

The relationship between the SovietUnion and the United States "mayvery easily turn nasty if the Sovietsdecide we're going overboard with theChinese," he warns.

The gray-bearded Prof. Ginsburgs,wearing a patched-elbow sweater andfaded blue jeans during an informalmoment, looks more like folksingerTheodore Bikel than a law professor.

And, like a folk singer, he doesn'tsing only of doom. He is heartened bythe fact that even though the Sovietsview the Chinese with "extravagantbitterness,'' they "reacted withcaution to China" when that countryattacked Vietnam.

"The Soviet Union didn't rush inmadly and take wild chances," Prof:

V

Ginsburgs observed. "If therelationship between China and theSoviet Union is explosive, it is alsocontrolled and there is a desire on bothsides for it to be controlled."

Furthermore, there is less paranoiatoday between the superpowers, Prof.Ginsburgs thinks. "People are ap-proaching the game with more ex-perience, and it is a much morereasonable game with many morelimitations."

One of the superpowers — the SovietUnion — has drawn up a revisedconstitution to reflect the changingattitude in its own country.

PROF. GINSBURGS and Prof.Stanislaw Pomorski, the otherRutgers Soviet law scholar, are co-authoring a book in which they are"assessing the latest Soviet con-stitution, adopted in 1977.

To be entitled "ConstitutionalFoundations of Soviet Statehood," thebook is an outgrowth of a three-yearstudy of recent developments incommunist law.

The new constitution, .according toProf. Ginsburgs, includJes "to someextent, human and civil rights. It ismore responsive to people and to theregime. The Soviet Union is trying tobecome a modernized state. Leadersthere realize that the primitiverepression of a police state won't workanymore."

The human and civil rights, Prof.Ginsburgs notes, include the freedomto seek- redress regarding unlawfulacts by the administration. "The needto institute such rights apparentlyindicates the need to check thebureaucracy — the civil service," hesays. "The bureaucracy has gotten outof hand. One of the solutions, and it is

tricky, is to get citizens to police thebureaucracy.

"One wonders whether the elitists ofthe Soviet governing body can controlthe forces they're unleashing withthese new rights," Prof. Ginsburgsmuses.

The new constitution (the previousones were adopted in 1918, 1924 and1936) also makes a definite attempt torestructure the Soviet economy and tomake it more rational and lessbureaucratized, Prof. Ginsburgsnoted. "It is not a democratization,"he explains, "but a relaxation ofcontrols to tap the initiative of themasses."

He will. continue his research inlibraries and with Soviet scholarswhen he travels to Moscow fortwo weeks in June. Currently on leavefrom Rutgers because of the book, healso will spend the months of May andJuneteaching and doing research withthe assistance of his wife, Herta, anative Austrian, at the University ofGraz in Austria.

." HIS LECTURES, which he also willdeliver occasionally at the Univer-sities of Vienna and Salzburg, willfocus on the effects of the EasternEuropean economic and political blocon east-west trade.

Finally, in August and September —that last month of his tour which isbeing financed by a foundation grantfrom the Rutgers Research Council —Prof. Ginsburgs will attend theFourteenth International Conferenceon Problems of the Pacific to be heldin Khabarovsk at the Sino-Sovietborder.

"You can stand there and see theChinese side," he points out. "I'll bevery close to my birthplace again."

clergy comments

this land of adventure

Year of the Child

In celebration of The InternationalYear of the Child, Mobilization ofResources, Somerset County Collegeis sponsoring an Early ChildhoodEducation Conference-geared towardparents and educators in the field ofchild . care and early childhooddevelopment. The one-day conferencewill be held at Somerset CountyCollege on Saturday, April 28.

Noted early childhood educator andauthor, former president of Bank'Street College, and chairman of theDay Care and Child Development

V

28Council of America, Dr. JohnNeimeyer, will be the speaker.

Workshops covering such topics asHow Children Learn, Parent Ef-fectiveness Training, LearningDisabilities, Discipline Techniques,Reading Readiness, CreativeMovement, Arts and Crafts, Scienceand Math, and Effective Storytelling,will be held throughout the day led byexperts in each field.

Those interested in attending theconference should contact JannMeyerson at Mobilization ofResources, 38 Grove St., Somerville.

Editor's Note: Members of the localministerial association will, from timeto time, contribute articles' on moral,ethical, and emotional problems,especially as they apply to thiscommunity. . •

' by the Rev. ;David D. Hengerer . ; .

Hillsborongh Presbyterian: Church

W.H. Auden in a Christmas Oratorioonce wrote:

"He is the way!Follow him into the land ofunlikenessand you will see rare beastsand have many adventures."

In a lime when people are beginningto have a new vision of one another,when stereotypic views are breaking

away, when recognition of one-billionpeople becomes a reality to us and tothe Republic of China, this oratoriotakes on greater meaning. It is anexciting time to live, for manyunlikely things are happening all thetime. .

In a township that is growing rapidlyit seems essential to me that we keepthese words in mind. To realize thatwe are not sardines packed away in'bouses, condominiums and apart-ments, but rather human beings whogrow and thrive-when our relation-ships with other people are nurtured.When a township grows in order tomeet the needs of an expandingpopulation, our-immediate awarenessis focused upon schools, local-government, road systems and neigh-borhoods. Those are real concerns forus all which need to be looked atcarefully so that we do not excludeparts of our population.

I propose that we need to look to theland of unlikeness for a moment. It is aland in which a neighbor is truly aneighbor and not just some otherperson who has moved into the housenext door. Where schools andmunicipal government becomeconcerns that are reflected in howoften and for whom we vote.

I propose that we begin to look intohousing for the older members of ourpopulation, that our society haslabeled "Senior Citizens." With thegrowing numbers of people within thatage group present in our populationand with the waiting lists at manysuch facilities it might be time for usto be concerned locally.

The land of unlikeness offers rarebeasts and many adventures. It soundsrather interesting to me. I would liketo hear some response to the proposalof at least looking into such an ad-venture here in Hillsborough!

4

raising their bids, but Uncle Harrywas an old Yankee trader and refusedto budge. He held out a long time butwhen the price got up into six figureshe finally said the heck with it and soldout."

"And that's how he got rich?""Remember, this was the midst of

the depression. He used the funds tostart a business of his own. Today he's -chairman of the board of one of theFortune 500."

"AND WHAT HAPPENED to hisinvention? I assume the auto companybottled it up, right? You hear thosestories all the time."

"Well, this is the part Hike the best.You see, I'm sure the company hadplanned to buy the patent and thenshelve it. But Uncle never told themhow sloppy he was in his recordkeeping. What he had invented was adevice that gave at best maybe two orthree extra miles per gallon by mixingthe air a bit richer and pinching thefuel line. He came up with that 80 mpgfigure by starling his test at the top ofa mountain and coasting a lot."

"Still," I said, "two or three extra-miles per gallon would help."

"Forget it. Uncle Harry took me ona trip once with his device hooked'up, •II cut the car's performance so badlyit was worse than useless. That's whatthe guys from Detroit probably found 1out if they ever got around to testingthe thing." • •• ' "

"You mean they didn't test it beforethey bought it?" \

"He wouldn't let them. Said hecouldn't let out his secret."

"THE SECRET being that thegadget didn't work?" I said. "Now I(know why they suppressed it. Theywere too embarrassed to admit they'd-been taken for a ride."

"You guessed it. That's why everytime Lread in the paper that some guyhas invented a new battery which willgo 150 miles between charges or aturbine car that's going to win the Indy500 or a steam car which won't polluteor a car that runs on chicken manureor a diesel that doesn't smell, I figureit's just another episode in the con-tinuing saga of the incrediblevulnerability of the human animal."

"But your uncle did get rich, didn'the?".

"As a matter of fact, he did. By theway, you're a reporter, aren't you?How'd you like to write a story on thisnew type of engine I've invented whichruns on ordinary tap water? I mighteven sell you some stock in thecompany if you act quickly."

I said I'd get back to him.

letter policyAll readers are encouraged towrite letters to the* editor.Letters must be signed andinclude the writer's address. Itis our policy to print the nameand address of the signer, but •names may be withheld fromprint in certain circumstancesupon request of the writer andapproval by the \ editor. Wereserve the right to edit lettersfor length; 250 words is thepreferred maximum. Everyletter in good taste concerninga locally pertinent matter willl>e published.

The Franklin NEWS RECORDPublication No. USPS 573400 i.Serving Franklin Townthlp

Published every Thursday atMOWltherspoonSt.Princeton. N J . 0*540

by The Princeton Packet, Inc.

Local office: M3 Hamilton St.. Somerset,NJ.OM73.Telephone: (201) t2*~O4»

Steve Goodman Managing EditorLee Scfimittberger . . . Advertising ManagerAlice Lech Office Manager

Subscription rates: One year $4 ($IQ out ofstate); Two years S»; Three yean $12.Newsstand price 20 cents per copy.

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• I t

Thursday, April 19,1979 I t * Franklin NEWS RECORD 5-A

letters to the editorLeague urgesvoters to meetat-large hopefuls

Editor, the News-Record:

Franklin Township recentlyhad an election and almostnobody came!

With this in mind the Leagueof Women Voters of FranklinTownship is launching its own

. campaign to motivate votersto participate in the May 8Township Council election.

The league invites all of youto attend its Candidates' Nighton Aprif 24, 8 p.m. at SGSSchool.. Many people havenever been to a Candidates'Night and, therefore, are notaware of the informative andenjoyable evening that itreally is.

Candidates' Night servesseveral purposes. It is

1 primarily for the voter to learnabout the candidates — to seehow they react to variousissues — to ask questions thatare of concern to the voter, toget beyond the usual cam-paign rhetoric.

In addition Candidates'Night also makes the can-

. dictates aware of the needs of

. the community.Franklin is a growing,

vibrant and complex town-ship. But is it growing the waywe want it to?

. What are your feelings aboutPUDs? Should Hamilton.Street be further developed?Are there enough recreationalfacilities in town?.

All these questions and morecan be asked at Candidates'Night — but only if you arethere to ask them.~ So attend Candidates' Night,ask questions,' read the

•newspapers and then go andvote for the people who youthink will best represent yourpoint of view. •

By doing all of this you willbe able to influence themanagement of our township.

People have said that theyhave no control over govern-

, ment, but in a town of our size"every vote does count.

As our world becomes morecomplicated, unfortunately,state and federal governmentbecomes more removed fromthe average citizen. However,you still have a chance tomake yourself heard on thelocal scene.

Don't lose that, chance —' attend Candidates' Night on

April 24 and vote on May 8.

Leona R. DavidsonPresident, League of WomenVoters of Franklin Township

Editorial aidsJob Servicecreate inroadsEditor, the News-Recori>rck

. We wish to express ourthanks for the excellenteditorial appearing in yourpaper helping us to publicize:"National Employ the OlderWorker Week."

Through the cooperation ofyourself and the FranklinNews-Record in printing thisarticle, we feel that we havealerted many employers inyour area to consider theemployment problems of theolder worker and in so doing,make some inroads in helping

us with our applicants in thisparticular category.

Again our thanks.

Janice E.McCamley,Manager

New Brunswick Job Service

Campbellcampaignkudos to youEditor, the News-Record:

Many thanks to the won-derful people who helped thePine Grove Manor School PTAsave Campbell's soup,Campbell's beans and Franco-American labels.

Because of your support,Franklinites, we were able tosave 4,900 labels. Those, alongwith some leftovers from lastyear, were used to obtain aportable listening center,consisting of head sets, jacksand- indivudual monitoringdevices, and also twoillustrated Charlie Browndictionaries.

Some of us have startedsaving those labels for nextyear's campaign.

How about you?

SueTriscari~ PTA Presidenti Pine Grove Manor School

JFK Boulevardissue is anuntimely one

Editor, the News-Record:

Getting one's opinion's,viewpoints or ideas aired in,"Letters to the Editor," ishealthy and worthwhile. Being __interested and concerned is a 'good quality.

It sure beats beingapathetic.

It is not always expected ornecessary to agree with thewriter of his or her's letter,and that is why after readingJoan-Marie Finucane's letter,I have my own viewpoint.

I can't see where the land-scaping of JFK Boulevardwould be such a potent issue inthe coming election. When andif JFK Boulevard ever getswidened, then that would bethe proper time to see thatlandscaping is included andproperly done.

I don't feel when studiesoccur, followed by delays orexcuses that that is adetriment.

Proper pk ining requiresstudies, and when reasonabledelays occur, that is healthy.Getting everything in the rightperspective with the bestresults is far better thanhindsight.

Traffic on JFK Boulevard isquite heavy currently. Asmore and more developmentsbecome a reality, and. moreindustries situate here, the'

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traffic flow could become aproblem if procrastinizationsets in.

The trucking industryhappens to be the lifeline inour daily lives. Their traffic issomething we have also haveto live with.

A two-lane road that bearstruck traffic is not the way tostand up to progress.

An |800,000 figure that waspresented in a prior lettercould double and triple in thebuilding of a wider road if it isever decided to improve JFKBoulevard.

Morris LevineSomerset

Dems willcreate serviceoriented councilEditor, the News-Record:

John Clyde, Frieda Warner,Steve Bonsall and BobRosenwasser are excellentchoices for Franklin TownshipCouncil.

If you look at thebackground of these can-didates, it is evident that onthe basis of their experience incommunity, that John, Frieda,Steve and Bob will bring abouta service oriented council.

I have known John andFrieda for many years and Ihave great respect for theirconcern, their qualifications,and their integrity. I urge youto vote for Frieda Warner, BobRosenwasser, Steve Bonsalland John Clyde.

Adele Rojack13 Austin Avenue

Parentingcourse makesmom gratefulEditor, the News-Record:

I wanted to take the op-portunity to express my ex-treme delight with theparenting course currentlyunderway through theAdult/Community EducationProgram.

The . instructor, Ms. R.Schlemovitz, is a most com-petent ' and credentialedspeech therapist and hasprovided an array of materialsand sources for pursuingfurther information regardingthe stimulation of infants andhow to teach your baby.

Thus far we have had visitsfrom individuals in the field ofcreative dramatics, haveutilized our -scraps to in-corporate some toys and havebeen advised on some easyand frequently overlookedtechniques to enable our tots tobe stimulated to their fullestpotential.. '

I would highly recommendthis course to anyone desiringto extend their horizons anddiscover some enjoyablegames, toys and activitieswhich can be performed withnewborns up through kin-dergarteners on those rainydays and just to let you andyour baby enjoy each othermore, while knowing that youare teaching your baby somenecessary tools for future use.

SueSabel22NewkirkRoad

Mettler isdedicated tothe new libraryEditor, the News-Record:

One thing I know mostpeople in Franklin are an-ticipating is the day when ournew library will be built. It issomething we have wantedand needed for years.

As the liaison between thecouncil and the old libraryboard, Bob Mettler along withthe new library director, PatNivison, worked to bring' thetwo groups together in com-mon purpose.

A sub-committee was for-med from members of bothbodies.

After many meetings aunaminous conclusion wasreached to recommend to thevoters that a municipal librarybe created.

This was apprcved by thevoters in referendum and hasallowed for greater library

service at less cost. At thesame time the council agreedto bond for a new librarybuilding.

Bob Mettler is proud of thework done by the library boardand of the help, he was able togive them toward reachingthis goal.

We are very fortunate tohave a councilman like BobMettler who really cares. Letskeep a good thing going.

Adelaide SlocumRD#l,Box60

Somerset

Dems' planningideas protectopen spaceEditor, the News-Record:

Proper planning is one of themost important issues facing -Franklin Township.

John Clyde, fSteve Bonsall,• Bob Rosenwasser and Frieda •Warner have emphasized thenecessity of comprehensiveplanning to protect open spaceand maintain the character ofthe community.

They have won our vote andthey deserve yours..

TheGieses86A Elizabeth Avenue

GOP strengthis in willingnessto work togetherEditor, the News-Record:

I must admit that I amsurprised at the level ofcontroversy raised recentlyconcern ing one- t imedisagreements between FredFlagg and Andy Schnatter.

If the Democrats wish topursue this as a major themein their campaign, it onlydemonstrates their lack ofsubstantive issues in thecurrent campaign forTownship Council.

A real strength of the .Republican Party in Franklinis that we are willing to bringpeople together to worktogether for a better com-

munity. We are not running anexclusive club or politicalmachine.

This is an interesting con-trast to Democratic politics inMiddlesex County, whereincumbent AssemblymanDavid Schwartz has beendumped in favor of anothercandidate. :

My personal opinion is thatthe Republican candidates forFranklin Township Council,Robert Mettler, AndySchnatter, Richard Jensenand Fred Flagg, are; fourhonest and capable individualswho will work together toserve our community.

James W.BogartElizabeth Avenue

'Blatant'lieis only anhonest errorEditor; the News-Record:

This is to correct an error in•the Republican candidates'press release which appearedin the' April 5 issue.

We referred to an article onFranklin which appeared inthe March 4 issue of The NewYork Times which stated:

"Last year, the amount raisedby taxes dropped $36 for thetheoretical average houseassessed at $40,000."

The information in The NewYork Times article was in-correct, and I admit we shouldhave double checked the in-formation before using it inour release. Absolutely no"deception" was intended andI apologise for any confusionour error may have caused.

To set the record straight,the $36 reduction referred toactually occured in 1977, not in1978. Municipal tax rates inrecent years have been asfollows: 1975 — $.71, 1976 —$.66, 1977 — $.57 and 1978 —$.64, and while the municipaltax rate did go- up in 1978, theoverall trend for several yearshas been toward lowermunicipal taxes.

The 1978 rate is lower than. the 1975 and 1976 rates, despiteinflation and township pickingup library costs as a result ofour withdrawal from thecounty library system.

Incidentally, in his letter,Mr. Berliner refers to a taxrate of $.63 per $100 of assessedvaluation for 1978, which isincorrect, and also incorrectlyattributes a statement toCouncilman Bob Mettler. Iassume that these were

merely mistakes on Mr.Berliner's part, and not at-tempts at liess, "blatant" orotherwise.

Patricia P. BogartMedia Coordinator,Franklin Township

RepublicanCampaign Committee.

TRAINING SCHEDULED \

Asserliveness training, acourse in building self-confidence and interpersonalskills will be offered byFamily Counseling Service ofSomerset County. The serieswill run for seven Wednesdaymornings. May 9 - June 20,9:45 to 11:30 a.m., at theFamily Counseling ServicesBound Brook office, 339 W.Second St. Fee for the courseis $30. Interested personsshould, register by callingFamily Counseling Service at356-1082.

Local seniorsfall in lovewith Opal'

On April 9, 28 senior citizensfrom Franklin Township wentto a dinner/theatre productionof "Everybody Loves Opal."

The play, put on by theSummit Suburban Hotel inSummit, is a comedy by JohnPatrick.

Opal, is a woman whorefuses to • believe thatmankind is anything but evil,while her so-called "friends"try to murder her for hermoney.

The participants also en-joyed a luncheon meal of beastof capon or pot roast, withpotatoand vegetable, rolls andbutter, dessert, coffee or tea.

RECYCLETHIS

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6-A I he Franklin NEWS RECORD Thursday, April 19,1979

SIX-MONTHCERTIFICATE

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Despite recent federal regulations' that no longer permit compounding intereston six-mbnth savings certificates, ourT-Plus six-month non-negotiable savings

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8.008.170'/o annual yield on

6 to 8 years (72-95 mos.) $ 1,000. min.

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7.90 annual yield on

4 to 6 years (48-71 mos.) $1,000. min.7.50°

7.08 0'/o annual yield on

234 to 4 years (30-47 mos.) $500, min.6.75^

6.810 0 annual yield on 6.501 to 21/2 years (12-29 mos.) $500. min.

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Regulations require forfeiture ot all interest on T-Ptus Savings Certificates lor withdrawal prior to maturity Interest is paid at maturityarid is stated as an effective anhuaf yield However it is Subiecno change at renewal •Federal regulations require that a penalty bemyoked if funds (excluding interest rare withdrawn or transferred from a Savings Certificate prior to maturity Interest must remainon deposit tor a full year to get elective annual yields stated • A balance of S5O must remam in a statement account to earn interest

Church lofts floating celebrationMembers of the Middlebush Reformed Church, led by the Rev. Ronald Vanderbeek -- as he stands on the ladder to theleft - release helium-filled balloons on Easter Sunday morning in the playground area behind the Middlebush School.

(Gordon I. Cowan photo)

obituaries

Bresticker joinsPhi Eta SigmaatBucknellU.

LEWISBURG, Pa. — DavidH. Bresticker, son of Dr. andMrs. Stanley'Bresticker, 1465Easton Ave., Somerset, willjjeinitiated - into Biicknell

•University's chapter of PhiEta Sigma, at the honorsociety's annual banquet heretonight! • , . ,• : .

The 1978 • graduate ofFraaklin High 'School i^ohe of61 students who will receivethe honor at the banquet,'

Students 'must "• haveachieved a 3.5 — out of apossible 4.0 —.. grade ayerage 'for the first semester of theirfreshman year or •?& .3.5 .cumulative average for- theentire year to be eligible for .-membership in Phi E t a , (Sigma, one of several national :>scholastic honor societies. .at. _•Buckenll. . . '<•"./.

Guest speaker^ .at --the .banquet will be Dr4 John C. ,rWriston, Jr., professor 'of- .chemistry at the University gfDelaware. A graduate of theUniversity of Vermont andrecipient of .a'PhD degree inbiochemistry from ColumbiaUniversity, Professor Wristonhas been on (he faculty atDelaware since 1955.

JohnAAelnykJohn J. Melnyk, 69, of 54

Peshing' Ave., Somerset, diedat Middlesex GeneralHospital, New Brunswick,after an illness of severalmonths.

Born in New Brunswick, hehad lived in that city beforemoving to Somerset 33 yearsago. •

Mr. Melnyk was the ownerand operator of the MelnykCoal and Fuel Co., Somerset.

He' was a member of theCommunity Volunteer FireDepartment.

Surviving are his wife,Barbara Ann Thoma Melnyk;three daughters, KatherineDavison of South Brunswick,Gail Dmuchowski of Mon-tgomery and Barbara M.Devlin of Jamesburg, fourgrandchildren and a great-grandson. .

Services were held Wed-nesday at the Boylan FuneralHome, 188 Easton Ave., NewBrunswick. A Mass ofChristian Burial followed atSt. Joseph's R.C. Church, NewBrunswick.

Burial was in ResurrectionCemetery, Piscataway.

Julia BrennanJulia A. Brennan, 89, of 1471

Hamilton St., Somerset, died

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April 10 at St. Peter's MedicalCenter, New Brunswick.

Born in Ireland, .she hadlived in Bayonne for most ofher life before moving toSomerset 21 years ago.

Mrs. Brennan was a com-municant of St. Matthias R.C.Church.

Surviivng are her husband,John J. Sr.; five sons, John J.Jr. Thomas P. and Eugene T.,all of Bayonne, Richard J. ofSomerset and Leo J. ofLakewood; two daughters,Marie A. Worden of BonitaSprings, Fla., and Madeline T.Fennell of Piscataway; abrother, Thomas Byrne ofSouth Plainfield, 25 grand-children and 17 great-grandchildren.

Services were held lastThursday at the GleasonFuneral Home, 1360 HamiltonSt., Somerset, and werefollowed by a blessing at St.Matthias Church.

Burial was in ResurrectionCemetery, Piscataway.

Imro FranekNAUGATUCK. Conn. —

Imro J. Franek, 93, of 53Conrad St. died Sunday at theNew Horizon's ConvalescentHome, Waterbury.

Born in Czechoslovakia, hewas a former resident ofClifton^ and moved( toNaugatuck-23 years ago.

Mr. Franek was a retired: employee of Botany Mill and aWorld War I Army veteran.

Surviving are his wife,Helena Matusik Franek; ason, John G. Franek ofNaugatuck; three daughters,Helen Ilnicki of the Daytonsection of South Brunswick,and Margaret Cobbol andMary Ann Brich ofNaugatuck; two brothers,Michael 6f Clifton and Paul ofFranklin; two sisters, Sophie

. Zidek and Paulina Hlavaka ofFranklin, 10 grandchildren-and several nieces andnephews.

Private services were heldTuesday at the AldersonFuneral Home, 201 MeadowSt., Naugatuck. Burial was inGrove Cemetery, Naugatuck.

Michael Gall

Michael Gall, 66, of 77Douglas Ave., Somerset, diedApril 10 at St. Peter's Medical

THE DISCOUNT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

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Dozens of dazzling styivsto choosa from - on* ofth* areas largest selections

You won't believe ourprices! Gowns seen indepartment storesfor up to $57.00 arediscount priced from

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Man, Tim. 1MMnML,Thunk,FrL1MS s t i M ; Sun. 12-5

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25M3W

Center, New Brunswick.Born in Joliet, 111., he had

lived in New York City beforemoving to Somerset 30 yearsago.

Mr. Gall retired Vfc yearsago as a machine operator forContainer Corporation ofAmerica, New Brunswick.

An Army veteran of WorldWar II, he was a member ofthe Magyar Reformed Church,•New Brunswick, and served aspresident of its Men's Club.

He was a member ofAmerican Legion Post 478.

Surviving are his wife,Margaret Szalonti Gall; ason, Michael L. of Franklinpark; a daughter, JoniMarano of Somerset; a sister,Mary Dudas of Ontario,Canada, and a grandson.

Services were held lastThursday at the GowenFuneral Home, 233 SomersetSt., New Brunswick. Ad-ditional services followed atthe Magyar Reformed Church.The Rev. Imre Bertalan of-ficiated.

Burial was in FranklinMemorial" Park, North Brun-swick. .

Contributions may be madeto the Magyar ReformedChurch Memorial Fund.

HiiisboroughBaptist Church

New Amwell Er Auten RoadsSomerville, New Jersey 08876

Rev. Robert L. Haslam, Pastor)Phone 359-4602

SERVICES:Sunday— 9:45 A.M.

11:00 A.M.7:00P.M.

Thursday — 7:45 P.M.

FIRST UNITEDMETHODIST

CHURCH48 West High St.

Spmerville.Henry J. McKinnon^ Minister

9:30 A.M. - Sunday School11:00 A.M. - Worship S.rvlc.

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NORWOOD MANORREST HOME

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Thursday, April 19,1979 The Franklin NEWS RECORD •7-A

Easter Sunday weddingunites area couple

FRED YOCKERS entertaining students at the Play andGrow Nursery School.

Clown entertainsat open house here

Play and Grew NurserySchool, located al the Six MileRun Reformed Church ohRoute 27 in Franklin Park,held its annual Open House forchildren and parents.; Those who attended wereentertained by Fred Yockers

'••— a professional clown whotrained with some of theworld's biggest circuses, in-cluding Ringlihg Brothers.

Play and Grow, DirectorsLois Altschul and Myrna

Garbow are currently ac-cepting applications forenrollment of 2>A to 5-year-olds. .

Openings are still availablefor the September term inmorning and afternoonclasses, the earliest applicantshave the best chance ofenrollment as the spaces arelimited in number.

For additional information,interested parents may callthe school al 821-9616.

. Barbara Borromeo ofKendall Park, was marriedEaster Sunday, to the Rev.Charles. L. Higgins of Kin-nelon. '

Smith Collegealumnae plansocial event

WESTFIELD - ThePlainfield-Westfield SmithCollege Club has extended aninvitation to alumnae fromSomerset County to join themfor their annual cocktail buffetparty at the home of Mrs. JohnBrady, 6 Wellington Downs,Scotch Plains, on Sunday,April 29 from 6 - 8 pjn.

All Smith College alumnae,husbands and friends of thecollege are welcome.

Reservations for the buffet,al a cost of $5. per person,should be made with Mrs.George Bierwirth al 838-0806before April 23.

Single adultsopen houseset SundayPISCATAWAY - The Single

Adults Fellowship, anecumenical group of singlepersons in the 25 to 45 agerange, will hold an open-housemeeting Sunday, April 22, at 4p.m. at the Christ UnitedMethodist Church, 485 HoesLane.

The program will feature agroup discussion on handlingproblems of being single in acouples' society.

RECYCLETHIS

NEWSPAPER

Franklin Jaycee-etteswin regional awardThe Franklin Township

Jaycee-ettes recently attendedthe final regional meeting inSomerville where regionalyear-end awards werepresented.

' The chapter, represented byPresident Miriam Blinne and °eight members, earned firstplace for the group's Pass theBank Program' which waspresented in January at theVan Wickle House on EgstonAvenue.

The chapter's annual Easteregg hunt for children ofmembers was held on the VanWickle House grounds on April8. Twenty-five children en-joyed searching the area anddeparted with candy and eggsthey found.

On April 26, the Jaycee-ettesannual dinner meeting will beheld at the Somerset

Presbyterian Church at 7:30p.m.

Elections for next year'sboard will be held. Anyonebetween the ages of 18-35 in-terested in learning moreabout the Jaycee-ettes iswelcome to attend.

For further information, callMiriam Blinne at 545-3590 orJoy Baptist, membershipchairwoman, at 249-0918.

' PROGRAM ON IRAN

The Mary Jacobs Library inRocky Hill will present"Report on Iran" on Monday,April 23 al 7:30 pjn. EvaCockroft, who was in Iran in1978, will discuss the currentcultural and political sceneand present a slide show. Thisprogram is free, and open tothe public.

NEW VENTUREBusiness DevelopmentManager of major New YorkCorporation seeks opportunitywith small firm located in Cen-tral New Jersey or Eastern Pen-nsylvania.

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The 11:30 a.m. ceremonywas performed by the Rev.Thomas De Vries at theReformed Church, Kinnelon.

Gladys Baldwin of Mt.Tabor, was matron of honor.Also in attendance were thebride's daughters, Bonnie Liaand Lori Beth.

Serving as best man wasFred Kinkle of Kinnelon.

Following the ceremony wasa reception in the fellowshiphall of the church.

The bride is a graduate ofNew Brunswick High Schooland Douglass College, NewBrunswick.

Her husband was graduatedfrom Franklin High School,Rutgers University and theNew Brunswick TheologicalSeminary. He is now theminister of The ReformedChurch in Kinnelon.

The couple will reside at theparsonage.

Dinner honorsMother's Day

Lodge 2265 B.P.O.E.Franklin Park will host aMother's Day dinner at thelodge on New Road in KendallPark.

Dinnerchoiceswill be turkey,steak, and ham, and achildren's dinner is available.Because the dinner is usuallywell-attended, tickets must beordered in advance. No ticketswill be sold at the door.

For tickets contact GeorgeMiller, 297-9323 or Jim Minish,297-9425, or call the lodge after7 p.m. on Fridays or after lp.m. on Saturdays.

JACKSON & PERKINS ROSES

The Rev. and Mrs. Charles Higgins

PS FILM SCHEDULED

New Jersey, Our AbundantHeritage, courtesy of PublicService Electric & Gas Co.,will be shown at the Somer-ville Public Library, 35 WestEnd Ave., Saturday, April 21al .10:30 a m .

THIS WEEK: $4.95 eo./3 for $12.95

LARGE FORSYTHIA • WEIGELIA • RED QUINCE»»». M.95

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Rustic Mall Kingston Mall,Rt. 27

•" f

8-A I ho Franklin NEWS RECORD Thursday, April 19,1979 , A

SMOKE AND FLAMES billow from the windows of the FrederickDouglass Liberation Library on April 1$. The black studies specialty bran-

ch of the municipal library had scheduled Helen Jackson Lee, author of"Nigger in the Window," to speak at its open house on April 27.

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serving Central & Northern N.J.most insurances for covered services incl. Medicade

By appointment

91 Claremont Rd.. Franklin Park, NJ7 Clinton Ave.. Anderson, NJ

201-297-2363

G. ThomasDirector

FIRE(Continued from Page One)

Prior to the fire'sdevastation, the HousingAuthority had been planning toinitiate the bid-seekingprocess last Thursday.HPYDP's new facility will becontiguous with the housingauthority structure onParkside Street.

THE LIBRARY, which hademployed four full-time staffmembers, had not been in-cluded in recent drawings forthe new HPYDP facility.

Bids submitted for the $1.25million bond project to con-struct a new library at themunicipal-complex on DeMottLane will be opened Thursday.Once the library leaves 'itsHamilton Street location, thelibrary board has urged

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Rt. 34. two miles south of theRt. 9 intersection. 201-583-1506

PRINCETOH: At the junction of Rt. 27 and 518.5 miles north of Prinpeton 201-297-6000

HOURS: Mon.. Tues. Wed., and Sat 10 to 6Thurs. and Fri. 10 to 9:30H,U; fc JQ . ^ Mar|ton Cjrcleand Rt 295 • 609-424-4808

HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 10 to 9:30-• Sat. 10 to 6 • Sun. 11 to 5.

MASTEBCHABGE-VBA. . _,

Township Council to providefunding for a branch facility inthe Hamilton Street area.

"We hope to expand theFrederick Douglass Libraryinto a real branch library inthe Hamilton Street area whenthe new library opens," saidMrs. Nivison.

The rejuvenation of theblack studies specialty facilitywill be a start-frorh-scratchproposition following the fire'stotal destruction of books ai:dother information material.

Donations of replacementsfor the collection are presentlybeing accepted by the Friendsof the Library and may behanded in at the 935 HamiltonSt. facility.

"We have some materials,"the library director said aboutblack studies information onmain branch shelves. "Wedon't have enough. We'regoing to try to increase it in thenext year."

WHILE HPYDP awaitsresponses to its fundingrequests, the program willdecentralize and operate atfacilities borrowed from theFirst Baptist Church, RutgersUniversity Gym, ChildDevelopment P i o g r a m ,Neighborhood House and thehousing authority, accordingto Mr. Norman.

H i s . a d m i n i s t r a t i v eheadquarters is temporarilylocated at 55 Millstone Road,Somerset.

"Community response hasbeen fantastic," he said, in-dicating post-fire donationshave included arts and craftssupplies, books, office sup-plies, furniture and more than$200.

SILHOUETTED BY their own light, firemen trailing hose lines into the burned remains of the hamilton Park YouthDevelopment Program gymnasiCim, fight flames consuming the second story of the structure.

Franklin tapsHUD fund source

Western Jeans Meet Eastern Silks

Franklin Towaship recentlyreceived notification itssecond grant pre-applicationto the Department of Housingand Urban Development(HUD) may reap $200,000 forimprovements in the ChurchillAvenue neighborhood.' HUD informed Franklin itcan submit a iormal ap-plication for a one yearprogram distribution of$143,600 for storm drainageand related street work,$41,400 for housingrehabilitation and $15,000 foradministration:

The township previouslyreceived a $300,000 communityblock grant that allowedcouncil to solicit bids forCoddington Avenue drainageand roadwork. Award of thecontract is anticipated withintwo months.

Allocation of the housingrehabilitation monies takes

\wo routes, according toMayor Charles Durand. In-dividual homeowners mayreceive outright $3,500 grantsto fund improvements to theirstructures or landlords mayborrow funds at a 6 percentinterest rate, he said.

Franklin's total communityblock grant funding to the tuneof $500,000 is coordinated by a

. grant consultant firm hired bycouncil at $1,200 yearly.

HUD's recent notificationindicates Franklin qualifiesfor 1979 Small CitiesMetropolitan Single Purposefunding and the township mustformally apply for the $200,000by July 2.

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RECYCLETHIS

NEWSPAPER

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U.S. HWY. 206 SOUTH - SOMERVILLELAROC1T UlCCTION Of MUMKRT * JUVCNILC FUKNlTUXI IN • J

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Swedish

CLOGSThe Thing This Spring!

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«*^

. Thursday, April 19,1979 I he Franklin NFWS RECORD 9-A

FRANKLIN-SOMERSET First Aid Squad Captain Pat Daniel cools a hot and sweaty Community Volunteer fireman DougDoerrhoefer after he came out of the fire battle with his Scott pack exhausted.

RIDING THE bucket, Community firemen John Sabulsky arid Herman Calvo use pikepoles to knock holes in the second floor windows creating a ventilation pattern to assistthe men combat the flames.

CENTRAL JERSEY RUN2 Mil* and 10,000 Mater Road Racei

Sponsored by: WEST WINDSOR-PLAINSBORO HIGH SCHOOL

DATE: May 6, 1979

T I M E : 2 M i l e Fun Run 10700a.m.

, 10.000 Meter Run 11:00 a.m. •

ENTRIES & FEE:

$2.00 Fun Run ,$4.00 Pre-Entry fee received /by Apr i l 20, 1979 .$5.00 Post entry .Send fee and entry form to: West Windsor-Plainsboro H igh School

346 Clarksvi l le Rd.• . Brinceton Jet., N.J. 08550

Check payable to: West Windsor-Plainsboro High School Act iv i ty Fund

A W A R D S : • ' ' - , - .

T-Shirts for the first 200 registered applicants (10,000 Meter Run) ,Trophies to top two males and top two females • •>

NOTE: ' • i

Stephen E. Hel ler , M D a member of the Amer ican College of Sports Medic ine wi l l supervise the ;pre-race exam and be available to answer questions.

Parking and bathroom facil i t ies available at H igh School.

West Windsor-Plainsboro High School start ing point of both races..;

In cooperation: wi th West Windsor Health Department. West Windsor Board of Education andTwin W FirstAicf Squad.

Direct ions: From Rt. 1 - Take the Washington Road exit (Rt. 571 East) 3 miles to H igh School onClarksvi l le Road • ;From Turnpike -Take 33 to Pr inceton-Hightstown Rd. (Rt. 571 West)Approximately 6 miles tp Clarksvi l le Road - H igh School on left.

ENTRY FORM2 Mile Fun Run 10.000 Meter Run

(n cbnsiderauon ot tnis entry being accepted. 1 hereby (or myself, heirs, executors andadministrators, remise, release and lor ever discharge West Windsor-Plainsboro High School. WestWindsor Board ot Education. Wesl Windsot Health Department. Mercer County and West WindsorTownship from any and all claim that I may.have as a result ot injuries suffered by me in this event. Ialso give permission 'or the use of my name and for picture in any newspaper, broadcast, telecast orother account of this event. I certify that I am in physical condition for this event.

Name: Sex: Phone:

Address: State: Zip:

- T-SHIRT SIZE: S M L XL

I will participate in the pre-race exam.

Photosby

SteveGoodman

ORT chapter plansspring fashion show

The Somerset Chapter ofWomen's American ORT willsponsor a spring fashion showon April 25 at 7 p.m. at theSomerville Inn on Route 22 inSpmerville.

Vogel's of Somerville wiliprovide an array of the latestand. most-sought-afterfashions. A $10 donation in-cludes a full course dinnerwith a selection of fish, veal or"Beef a la Hunter."

All proceeds** from theproject are earmarked for themaintenance of ORT schoolsthroughout, the world. Thefunds will cover the costs oftextbooks, equipment,teachers' salaries, as well asgeneral building maintenanceand whatever budgetarynecessities are inclusive forthe survival of the schools.

For reservation ' in-formation, call Nancy ,Kivor.chairwoman, at 297-9673.

Candlelight concertplanned for Friday

MORRISTOWN — OnFriday, April 20, MorristownNational Historical Park willhost a candlelight concert atWashington's Headquartersfrom 7:30 - 9:30 p.m.

Music will be provided byCordiality Consort, a recordergroup from Florham, Park.They will be playing a numberof 17th and 18th Cenfurychamber music selections on

recorder, harpsichord, andoboe.

Candlelight tours of themansion will be) conductedduring breaks throughout theevening. No reservation^ arerequired, parking is in theMuseum lot on WashingtonPlace, and, as always, ad-mission is Free.

For further information, call539-2085.

PLEXIGLASS WINDOWS of the HYPDP gymnasium melted from the intense heat of theflames. An East Franklin volunteer firemen attempts to chop an opening in the wood wallbelow the window-while hose crews pour water into the building to quench the flames.

• ORIENTAL FOOD

V

252 Nassau St., Princeton^609-924-6653 J,Open Daily 10 to 7

Conerly Club dancesto Friday night feverIf you were not one of the 60

students to make the grandopening of the Club ConerlyDisco on April 6, be sure not toforget that the club will also beopen this Friday, April 20 andApril 27.

Township sixth and seventhgrade students are invited toattend from ;7:30 - 9:30 p.m. toenjoy dancing and listening tothe popular disco sound oftoday. Dance contests are

being held each week withprizes awardetfon April 27.

The program is free to sixthand seventh grade residents ofFranklirJ* and is held atConerly Road School. ClubConerly is sponsored andsupervised by the FranklinTownship Parks andRecreation Department.

For furthei information, call297-7330.

Bees, demonstrationset April 26 at SGS

The Sampson G. SmithIntermediate School PTSO issponsoring a program ofactivities culminating workdone by seventh and eighthgraders throughout the yearon Thursday, April 26 from7:30 - 10:30 p.m.

Ten finalists in seventhgrade and 10 in eighth gradeEnglish classes will par-ticipate in the 11th annualSpelling Bee.

The math department willhold a Math Bee competition,Five seventh grade and fiveeighth graders will be com-peting in the final round.

The bee began with studentscompeting within their classon April 4. The winners fromeach class then competedagainst the winners from fiveother classes at assemblyprograms on April 9 and 10.

The winners from each ofthese groups are the finalistswho will compete on April 26.

Displays of student work inEnglish and mathematics willbe on exhibit in the lobby.

Another 75 students will

HemOnstrate various aspectsof the gymnastic, dance, andvolleyball programs allstressing the goals and ob-jectives of the curriculum. Aslide show explaining a specialphysical education programcalled Project ACTIVE willalso be presented.

The math and spelling beeswill follow one another whilethe physical educationprogram runs concurrently,allowing all interestedresidents the opportunity tosee each of the students in theprogram.

ALUMNI ARTISTS INVITED

Somerset County Collegeurges all of it's artist alumni toenter their work in thecollege's May 5. celebration ofit's tenth commencement.Entrants are urged to bringtheir work to the SomersetCounty College's Art Gallerybetween 12 noon and 2 p.m. onSaturday, April 14. For furtherinformation call 526-1200, Ext.226 or 469-3588.

VEGETABLE PLANTSPotted Tomato Plants

F-l HybridsJetsfar Ramapo Red PaleBig Boy Supersonic MainPakCherry Tomato-Pixie Patio-Yellow

BAKER'S DOZEN PACKSCabbage, Lettuce, Broccoli, Sweet Peppers,Tomatoes

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Peat Mess - 6 cu. ft. bale

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Hanging Baskets

large Selection of Geraniums

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Shown: Just a sampling of the better alternative's beautiful ideas for Spring;Left: "Status Designer", Forties-Look, V-neck, button front blouse. Regularly $38.00...

At Cogito $18.95. 100% cotton, antique heart print skirt with Fiorucci style belt. Regularly$24.00... At Cogito $17.95.

Right: Polyester Crepe de Chine, short sleeve camp shirt. Regularly $38.00. „ At Cogito$17.95. Softly feminine skirt withtwo side slits, easy pockets andbraided rope belt. Regularly $26.00. . .At Cogito $15.95.

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I

10-A fhr Franklin NEWS RECORD Thursday, April 19,1979J

CWWC sponsorson relaxation techniques

Upcoming events scheduledfor Cedar Wood Woman's Clubdepartments will include theApril 19 meeting and workshopof the Art Department at theHome of Barbara Wyall at 8

p.m. with Anne Welby as co-hostesses.

The guest artist will beClaire Albrechl who willdemonstrate and instruct onPennsylvania Dutch Tole

BRAIMDEISUSED BOOK SALEQUAKER BRIDGE MALL

APRIL 26-2910:00 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.SUNDAY -12:00 to 5:00

PREVIEW EVENING SALEWEDNESDAY, APRIL 25 • 7:30 P.M. TO 9:30 P.M.

SPONSORED BY...MERCER COUNTY CHAPTERBRANDEIS UNIVERSITY NATIONAL WOMENS COMMITTEEFftOCBDSUNfHT... -

. MANOtBUMVOyrYUMtAtY

painting.Glycerinizing branches will

be presented by MarilynHerrmann, hostess and GerrySlenersen, co-hostess of theSeedlings on Friday, April 20at io am.

Healthful Living will meeton Monday, April 23 at 8 pjn.at the home of D.J. Israels. Dr.Charles Englehart will speakon relaxation techniques andany. community member isinvited to attend.

For information call 246-4678.

Preparing a luncheon menuwill be the program forGourmet du Jour on Tuesday,April 24 at 10 a.m. ai the homeof Barbara G lea son. MarilynHerrmann will be assistingMrs. Gleason.

Arline Pagliaro willdemonstrate a "free-form"arrangement at the GardenDepartment meeting atMaureen Mount's home onWednesday, April 25 at 8:30p.m.

HALINA RUSAK

Joint effort sponsorsApril 28 crafts show

A spirit of revitalization hashit the Hamilton Streetbusiness community.

To encourage and supportthe crafts as well as tostimulate local trade, the 1979Franklin Arts Council and theHamilton Street BusinessMerchants' Association haveplanned a Crafts Show forSaturday, April 28,10 a.m. - 4p.m.

At least 20 area merchantswill be participating in thisfirst-of-a-kind show to be held

on Hamilton Street in front ofthe participating stores.

Miscellaneous crafts, in-cluding batik and macrame,as well as a mini-booksalesponsored by the Friends ofthe Franklin Township libraryare just a few of the offerings.Each participating merchantwill donate $30 of merchandiseof services to be awarded byMayor Charles Durand at 3p.m. at The Medicine Shoppe,631 Hamilton St., in the A&Pshopping center.

The Medicine Shoppe,Somerset's prescription-oriented pharmacy, hassomething special in store.

Pharmacist Stan Bialickwill offer free hearing testsperformed by a hearingspecialist from 10 a.m.1- 4 p.m.His aim is to createawareness and to identifylocal citizens with impairedhearing.

For further information onthe crafts show, call MaxineBell at 828-51189.

et womanSoho exhibit

818 York Rd,, Hightstown, N J 08520(609) 448-0436

You can find all of your gardening and landscaping needs atVILLAGE NURSERIES. Browse through our fully stockedplant display area, Garden Center and Greenhouse. Our ex-perienced staff can assist you in choosing just the right plant

or product for your situation.

NEW YORK - HalinaRusak, of 40 Deerfield Road,Somerset, opens a show at the •Soho 20 gallery, 99 Spring St.on Saturday, April 21.

The exhibit, which runsthrough May 16, will be openfor viewing from noon-6 p.m.on Tuesdays through Satur-days.

Ms. Rusak's paintingsreflect the ancient folktradition of her childhoodByelorussia. , •

The work expresses atribute to the women whoestablished this traditionthrough centuries of creativeinterpretation of .the en-vironment by means of thework of their hands. Over a

Tall Tails clubto visit library

The Franklin TownshipPublic Library will present the4-H Tall Tails Club on April 21,

>at ll^a.m. t-Members of the club will

bring a variety of dogs and.discuss how to take care ofthem. The Tall Tails Club islocated in Franklin. It hasbeen in existence for fiveyears and presently has sevenmembers.

The club is primarily con-cerned with training,obediance and handling ofdogs.

For further information, callthe library at 545-8032.

Hilbert beginsArmy MP duty

FORT BENNING, Ga. —Pvt. Clint J. Hilbert, son of Mr.and Mrs. James H. Hilbert, 32Bawldin St., South BoundBrook, recently was assigned

? s a S S f S S S

geometr ic backgroundresonant of folk textiles shesuperimposes a motif oforganic forms, or humanfigures.

"In their clarity anddirectness, in the freshness oftheir color,' these worksresemble folk textiles andembroidery, but they go

beyond these basic crafts inthe artist's total commitmentto her art," said Lynn Miller,curator of Women ArtistsSeries at the Douglass Collegein New Brunswick.

In 1977, Ms. Rusak hung aone-person exhibit in the NewJersey State Museumgalleries in Trenton. .

Westminster Collegechoir to sing SundayPISCATAWAY — The

Piscataway Cultural ArfsCommission and the Friendsof the Arts, in cooperation withthe Middlesex County Neigh-borhood Aits Consortium willsponsor a concert by theWestminster College Choir onSunday, April 22 at 8 n.m. inthe high school gymnasium.

The choir, which wasorganized' in 1920' by John

fFinley Williamson, is made upof the top piofessional musicstudents at Westminster ChoirCollege of Princeton. It hastoured professionally since itsbeginnings, making a round-the-world tour in 1951 andEuropean tours as far back as1929.

Its sound and technical

facility has been praised bycritics and audiences foralmost six decades.

With Joseph Flummerfelt asconductor, the choir willperform works of Bach,Palestrina and StephenFoster.

Tickets will be $2 for adultsand $1 for students and seniorcitizens. Tickets will beavailable at the door.

For more information, callJane Kucharski at 463-1633 orJeane Swaynos at 968-3288.

1 •>

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Do you have to correct your checkbookbalance, every month because of anextra itepn on your bank statement?

Whether it shows, up as merely theinitials S.C. or other variations such asSER. CH; SVC CH; SERV CHRG(makes you wonder if the computer canspell, doesn't it?) they all mean the.same thing—a few dollars-less in theaccount than you thought you had be-cause you paid a SERVICE CHARGE.

When Montgomery National Bank saysFREE PERSONAL CHECKING, itmeans just that. Not free personalchecking if you maintain a minimumbalance. Not free personal checking anda "small" charge for your name imprintedon the checks. Not free personal check-ing but with other "hidden" charges!There's no ifs ands or buts about Mont-gomery National Bank's FREE PER-SONAL CHECKING. PERIOD. Call,and ask for Henry, he's our President;hell be glad to tell you about FREEPERSONAL CHECKING and all ourother services.

Call about Montgomery National Bank's 'full bank services:Free Personal Checking • Saturday Hours • Safe Deposit Boxes • ThreeDrive-In Windows • Bank- By-Mail • 24-hour Depository • U.S. SavingsBonds • Securities Bought and Sold • Money Orders • Travelers Checks •Treasurers Checks • Foreign Remittances • Wire Transfers • Federal TaxDepository • Savings Plans • Loan Plans • Commercial Services

Lobby Hours:Monday-Friday—9:00 A.M. -5:00 P.M.Thursday'-9:00 A.M. -7:00 P.M.Saturday-9:00 A.M. -12:00 P.M.

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Thursday, April 19,1979 The Franklin NEWS RECORD 11-A

$3,650• 1.3-LITRE SOHC ENGINE• 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION• FRONT WHEEL DRIVE• RACK & PINION STEERING• POWER FRONT DISC BRAKES

REGULAR GAS

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201-247-8769• Price based on 1979 manolactuer's suggested retail prjee.

Titles, local taxes and optional equipment not included.

Thinclads open sepson with strong showingsby Robin Pastorio

Staff Writer

Opening the season with twovictories, the Franklin HighSchool boys track teamdessimated New Brunswick100-31 in a scrimmage anddefeated Ewing 78-53.

Warrior Mike Hendersonbroke a school record andeasily won the long jump withhis leap of 23'1" on his bornetrack on March 30. CarlosRoberts sailed to second placewith a 21'11" mark, whileDonald Small flew to victory inthe 120-yard high hurdles in16.9 seconds.

Roberts (10.1) and PhilBrown (10.6) took first andsecond in the 100-yard dash.Danny Fisher (4:42) and BobOliva (4:43) stole top spots inthe tight mile run.

Roberts easily grabbed a53.6 second victory asFranklin swept the 440, withAlbie Grimes next (56.0) andRobert Berry trailing (58.0).

Small sprinted through the 330intermediate hurdles to winwith a 43.0 time, followed byWarner Singleton in third spotat 44:0.

Ken Danielsen strided tosecond in the 880 in 2:10.2,tailed by Barry King at 2:12.Brown tagged the line for. atriumphant 220-yard dash in23.1, with Woody McNabbplacing third at 24.1. DennisFisher and Andy Pearsonpicked lead spots in the two-mile run, with 10:34 and 10:49.

The Warrior mile relayteam of Roberts (53.5),Grimes (53.5), Ronny Hankins(61.0), and Brown (52) pulledout a combined 3:42 victorytime. ' ~~

Jim Gaido vaulted the bar at9'3", while Eugene Fowler and.Steve Fisher captured secondand third at 8' each in the polevault. Brown and Hendersoncatapulted to second and thirdhonors in the high jump at 5'6"and5'4."

In the weight events, Dave

Bullek was sole Franklinplaceholder, with the silverspot at 58'4." Bullek trium-phed over his nearest com-petition in the discus with a136' throw as Ken Wilsonfollowed' at 119' and EricDarby placed third with107'9." " • ' •iWilson took the javelin by a

toss of 172' and John Pakohoisted the metal to 161.'

THE SQUAD officiallybegan its year with a homemeet against Ewing on March5.

1 Henderson and Robertsdominated the long jumpingwith leaps x>f 22* and 20'4."Warrior Mike Hemighaus

pushed to a third place in the120 high hurdles. Roberts wonthe 100 in 10.6 and Brown tailedhim in 10.8.

Danny Fisher again gainedthe mile victory and improvedhis clocking to 4:51, whileOliva's 4:55 second was in hotpursuit. Henderson beateveryone, to the line in thequarter mile with his 52.1count.

Small toted second spot over,the 330 intermediate hurdles in44.6. Danielsen repeated hissilver'finish with a 2:10.2 time.Roberts shone in the 220,whipping everyone off thetrack in 23.6.

Dennis Fisher, first, andPearson, third, each bested his

previous time, with the leaderrunning a 10:22.5 and thelatter, 10:47. The mile relayteam struck again, sinceHenderson (54.1), Grimes(55.7), Roberts (53.6), andBrown (52.6) had no com-petition.

Gaido posted a third place inthe pole vault with a 8'6"swing. Henderson tied aEwing man in the high jump at5'8" and Brown held at 5'6" forbronze honors.

Bullek hurled the shot53'9Vfe" to win easily. Darbychucked third best, 43'5."Bullek again led the discusfield with his 148*8" flight andWilson backed him at 114'6."

Wilson also repeated his

victorious performance with a181'8" javelin heave and Pakocasted 159'6."

The team was scheduled to.compete at the HolmdelRelays, but didn't because,according to Coach Tom Volz,"We were locked out of thebuilding. We couldn't get in."

We give you a 100%.guarantee on 100°o of our work.

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Golf-boys

Monday, April 23, 3 p.m.North Brunswick at NorthBrunswick. -

Tuesday, April 24, 3 p.m.Somerville at Spooky Brook:

Track - boys

'Saturday, April 21, 11 a.m.SCIAA relays.

Tuesday, April 24, 3:45 p.m.Somerville at Somerville

Baseball - vanity and jvTuesday, April 24, 3:45 p.m.

Somerville at FHS.

Baseball-freshmen

Wednesday, April 25, 3:30p.m. St. Joseph at St. Joseph

Thursday, April 26, 3:45p.m. Immaculata at FHS.

Track-girls\

Saturday, April 21, 9 a.m.Highland Park relays.

Thursday, April 26, 3:45p.m. Princeton at FHS..

Tennis - boys

Monday, April 23, 3:30 p.m.Highland Park at FHS.

Tuesday, April 24, 3:45 p.m.Somerville at FHS

Thursday, April 26, 3:45p.m. St. Joseph at St. Joseph.

Softball-girls

Monday, April 23, 3:45 p.m.South Brunswick at FHS.

Tuesday, April 24, 3:45 p.m.Somerville at Somerville.

Candlelight ceremonyinitiates 18 FHS pupils

Your independentEngoga-A-CarBroker

R.N.DAVIDSON « CO.3110 Highway 27 Kendall Park . N. J'. 08824

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The Franklin High Schoolchapter of the National HonorSociety recently inducted 18FHS students.

Joining the society during acandle lighting ceremony heldMarch 19 are Robert Aaron-son, Safa Atatimur, FrankChang, Paul Chen, MitchellCohn, Sean Cryan, Steven

Fink, Andrea Hadzimichalisand Scott Helgesen.

Laurie Holmes, PaulaKimball, Mark Kolb, DanielLee, Henry Miller,, VeraMohyla, Greg Phillips, MaryToland and Jane Zielinski.

Advisor of the FHS chapteris Nicholas Buro.

IntroducingIn-Store

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The Tennis Shop atr Mine Mtn. Sports is proud toannounce the installation of our new ball machine

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suits your form and style.Try out the best! We've got new Rossignol

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: You'll also find a wide selection of thefinest in tennis apparel: FILA, Head, Fred Perry, Izod,

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TheTennisShop.

mineRte. 1 at Baker's Basin Rd., Lawrenceville. NJ.

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3 DAY BATTERY SALE!'Deluxe GT- High Performance Battery

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Use any of these 7 other ways to buy:Our Own Customer Credit Plan* MasterCharge • Visa • American Express Card• Carte Blanche • Diners Club • Cash

Lube & Oil Change

»68 8 Includes up to five quartsmajor brand 10/30 oil.Oil filter eitra if needed.

Helps protect moving parts

• Chassis lubrication and oil change • In-cludes light trucks • Please call for ap-pointment

Front-End Alignmentand rKCC tire rotation

Parts and additionalservices extra if needed.

Front wheel drive and 'Chevettes excluded.

HELPS PROTECT TIRES AND VEHICLE PERFORMANCE• Inspect and rotate all spect suspension andfour tires • Set caster, steering systems • Mostcamber, and toe-in to U.S. cars, some importsproper alignment • In-

Engine Tune-Up

$4688Includes listedparts and labor -no extra chargefor air conditionedcars. $4 less forelectronic ignition.

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HELPS INSURE QUICK STARTS• Electronic engine, charging,and starting systems analysis •Install new points, plugs, con-denser, rotor • Set dwell andtiming • Adjust- carburetor • In-cludes Datsun, Toyota, VW. andlight trucks

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12-A Ihe franklin NEWS RECORD Thursday, April 19,1979

IIII111111111111111111

1111

seeeooeeeee•ti^i^mrmm IHBBOBBI

John E. CzapigaGeneral Building Contractor

ADDITIONS • PATIOSFIREPLACES

. R.D. 2,Cranbury, N.J.609-6554029

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TIRES! TIRES! TIRES!FOR PRICES YOUCANT REFUSE

ON TIRESCALL 609-9244177

check with us firstFeaturing: B.F. GOODRICH • DUNLOP • MICHELIN

JOSEPH J. NEMES & SONS, Inc.HIGHWAY 206, PRINCETON

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VOTED NAT I REMODCIEHS CONTRACTOR OF THE YEAR 1979

Route 206. Be.ieMeod. New Jersey 08502Phone (201) 359-3000

flLL WORKS

SPECIRL

RAIDER CATCHER Tracey Moore blocks the plate as she awaits the peg to put out Franklin's Dawn Rubin.

i Computerizedi Uafcer Test'ino

onlStt,.5%oa. Slo Tabs

Mom

SAVE$75.00 OFFRegular priceOf any slatePool Table

Exp. May 5,1979ADDITIONS - HEMODELERS - POOL TABLES - SKI EQUIPMENT

NANCY EASTON releases her pitch during the Warriors' contest against Hillsborough onMonday. The Raiders handed Franklin a 3-1 loss with a late sixth inning rally.

...with a solid tag that the Warrior tries to push away in her frustated effort to score.(Rich Pipeling photos)

STRENUOUS HIKE SET

On Saturday, April 21, the' Somerset . County ParkCommission hiking group willhike 10 miles in the Wyanokiemountains. This will be astrenuous hike. Meet at 7:30a.m. at the BernardsvilleShopping Plaza. Leader: BobMesserschmidl, 757-2953. Forfurther information contactMrs. Betty Wainio, FreePublic Library, 35 West EndAve., Somerville, or call 725-1336.

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SNAPPER walk-behind mowers can broadcast orvacuum, and with inex-pensive optional attachments you can mulch cuttings for lawn foodand won't have to rake or shred leaves so the catcher will hold overtwice as many. SNAPPER extra "High Vacuum" riders can broadcast,bag and vacuum cuttings, leaves and other light litter, even durinchigh moisture conditions. .

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Thursday, April 19,1979 I he Franklin NEWS RECORD 13-A

sports

SLIDING INTO third base on .her stomach. Warrior Robin Powell races the ball to thesac... ' . • . :

...and gleefully eyes the sprrese as it lies in the dirt while Hillsborough defender Lindahouak applies an empty gtowed^ag.

(Rich Pipeling photos)

Mif fightWghGos

Priest OMIRtsort Traffic?

VACATIONAT HOMEwith the FAMILY

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WANT TO SEE HOW WE DO IT?Take a trip through our Trenton Plant at 3303 Brunswick Pike (Rt 1) oppositeQuakerbridte Matt any daj 9 to 8 or 10 to 5 weekends. Well be happy to show youand the family around.

Prices possible only because you're baying direct from the manufacturer, the one

who makes, excantes and installs the entire job. M o needs middlemen, why pay

their proMs-BUY DIRECT AND SAVE. L ie #42650.

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CUPTHIS COUPON AMD MAIL TODAY

DREAM POOLS» ) BRUNSWICK PIKE, ROUTE 1. TRENTON. NJ. 08S4SI want More NcnObfigation Information

SS 4/18/79 CONSUMERBUREAU

[OO»JtEGtSTtttl)

NAME. .PHONE.

ADDRESS.

CITY .STATE -ZIP

Diamond season opens with a win, two lossesby Carter Berkeley '

Sports Writer

Despite a 16 strike-outperformance by Mark Ciardi,second-ranked Piscatawaywent down to a 2-1 defeat at thehands of Franklin on April 11.

The game was a closedefensive battle tied at one runapiece at the end of theregulation seven innings.

At the top of the ninth,Franklin's Rick Lazicky ledoff with a solid two-bagger toleft field. Bob Lindemannfollowed with a walk.

Doug Braun's single pastthird loaded the bases forFranklin.

Ciardi bore down and gotahead of Steve Lubiak withtwo quick strikes. However,the next pitch got away fromCiardi and struck, the batterforcing in what proved to be,:the winning tally.

Franklin's winning hurlerTony "The Tiger" Umar setthe home side down in orderfinishing with a strike out.

Piscataway outhit Franklin10-5 playing errorless ball toFranklin's one miscue.

Franklin's infield exhibitedmid-season form turning overtwo double plays, one in thefirst inning, Lazicky to Braun,and the other coming in thesixth inning, Lazicky to Lin-demann to Braun.

THE VARSITY baseballteam played its second gameagainst Steinert on Mondayand lost 6-5.

Franklin took the lead 1-0 inthe second inning when TonyUmar walked and PhilJohnston doubled him in.

Franklin increased its leadto 4-0 in the third when Kleineled off with a walk followed byanother walk by Rick Lazicky.Bob Lindemann slammed a

triple knocking in two runs.Tony Umar singled home thefourth Franklin run.

Steinert scored three runs inthe fifth inning to narrowFranklin's lead. Ridge ofSteinert led off with a tripleand John Capone singled himin. Steinert's shortstop Piharohit a homerun for the secondand third Steinert runs.

Steinert scored a single runin the sixth to tie. Firstbaseman Marant reachedbase on an error by RickLazicky. Sam Tola's singlescored Marant.

Franklin regained the leadin the seventh when RickLazicky walked and DougBraun tripled home Lazickyfor the go ahead run.

Franklin's lead didn't lastlong as Steinert struck backwith a single tally in their halfof' the, seventh. Bob Lin-demann relieved Tony Umarand was welcomed by Ridgewith a triple. Paul Capone andMoran both walked loading thebases. Lindemann walkedMarant to force in the tyingrun.

In the eighth inning RickMoorehouse tripled forFranklin but was left strandedas DeBronzo, Steinert's pit-cher, struckout the next threebatters.

Steinert won the game in theeighth when Robert Tolasingled, John Capone walkedand Paul Capone singled Tolain for the 6-5 victory.

FRANKLIN PLAYED itsfirst home game againstBridgewater-Raritan East onTuesday and lost 5-3 in Uinnings.

Franklin starter DougBraun was relieved by RickMoorehouse in the first inningafter Braun walked Trwigno,Massari and Adams, the first

three East batters. Tauolacciknocked in all three runs witha long single.

Franklin tied the game inthe sixth when Rick Lazicky

led off with a walk. Bob Lin-demann moved him to second Phil Johnston each knocked inwith a single and Tony Umar a run with their singles.walked to load the bases.

Braun sacrificed to knock in

a run. Mike Bresticker and reached base on an error andBowden walked. Paul Biondosingled in a run and Bob

East won the game in the Brown singled in a run:l l th ' inning when Eckner The winning pitcher for East

was Mark Hawkins.

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COM rses by newspaper-IX

Pi to world of lowEditor's Note: this is the ninthof 16 articles in the series,"Moral Choices in Con-temporary Society." In thisarticle, Ernest van Hen Haag,psychoanalyst and I professorof social philosophy, discussesthe relationship between thecertainty and severity ofpunishment and its ef-fectiveness in deterring crime.These articles, which' explorethe controversial moraldilemmas that perplexAmericans today, werewritten for Courses bynewspaper, a programdeveloped by UniversityExtension, University ofCalifornia, San Diego, andfunded by a grant from theNational Endowment for theHumanities, i r i s presentedlocally by the N.J.Educational Consortituim,Mercer County College and thePrinceton Packet, Inc.

by Ernest Van Den Haag

Some acts, although harm-ful to any society that wishesto secure the life and liberty ofits members, may yet seem-advantageous to individuals.

Therefore, criminal lawsmust proclaim, these acts to bewrong and threaten punish-ment to those who commit

' them.Courts distribute the

threatened penalties to per-sons they find guilty of havingcommitted the acts the law

• forbids.. If the laws prohibiting actssuch as murder are morallyjustified, so is the punishmentof those who break them —provided that the punishmentis effective in reducinglawbreaking.

The temptation to do what isforbidden by law has alwaysbeen with us: We were ex-pelled from paradise becausewe succumbed to it. '

IN TOLSTOY'S WORDS., "the seeds of every crime arein each of us." The threats ofthe law are needed to preventthem from flowering, tocontrol crime, to enforce the,rules indispensable to moral,and- to social life.

We may be tempted to defynatural laws too, but the law of

BEFORE* THE TEMPORARY - -a t least -- embargo on capital punishment, 24 men occupied Death Row in the Louisiana State Prison at Angola.

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REGISTEREDFor up-to-date Register • in-formation or for free assistancewith any local consumertransaction, call 6C9-" S-,-S700-and Consumer Bureau's StaffMediator will respond.

152 Alexander St , PrincetonEstaolished 1967

gravity enforces itself bydefeating us if we defy it.However, unless we arepunished, we can defy humanlaws and profit from ourdefiance. Therefore, threats ofpunishment must be attachedto legal prohibitions. Likepromises, these threatsremain ccedible. only.=if theyare carried out. And unlessthey are credible, they cannotoe effective.

The punishment oflawbreakers may gratify the

rlrindictiveness of victims andperhaps of those who, althoughtempted; restrained them-selves from breaking the law.

Indeed, legal punishmentmay serve to prevent themfrom seeking revenge on theirown- But, above all, punish-ment is indispensable to makethe threats of the law credibleand thereby to deter othersfrom violating the law as thepunished lawbreaker did.

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Chapin School admits students of any race, color, national andethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and ac-tivities generally accorded or made available to students at theschool It does n o t discriminate on the basis of race, color,national and ethnic origin in administration of its educationalpolicies, admissions policies, scholarship and Joan'programs,and athletic and ottos school-administered programs.

' '}>:

Without actual punishmentlegal threats would amount tobluffs, and crime would pay.

ONE REASON the crimerate is currently rising is thatso few offenders are punished— less than one percent of allcrimes lead to prison terms —

' that crime does pay for manypeople. However, legalthreats, if they remaincredible by being carried outas promised, deter mostpeople, most of the time, fromdoing what the law prohibits.

It is possible that additionalpeople might be deterred bystill harsher or more certainpunishment, but we prefertolerating mor-CLbjjrglaries tocutting off the hand of a thirdtime burglar, as is done insome countries such asYemen, Saudi Arabia andLibya. • •..

Most of us do not seriouslyentertain the criminal op-portunities offered by life, letalone deliberately weigh the

> threats of the law against thepossible advantages of crime.We have absorbed the laws'prohibitions and the moralnorms on which they restthrough the socializationprocess that is part of normalgrowing up. We don't considercommitting crimes becausewe have learned to feel thatthey are morally wrong.

The long-standing and ef-fective threat of punishmentcontributed torejection ofportunities

: unacceptable."Some men," the English

Judge J. F. Stephen wrote,"probably abstain frommurder because they fear ...

,: that they would be hanged.11 Hundreds of thousands abstain; from it because they regard itwith horror. One reason theyregard it with horror is thatmurderers are hanged."

They are not hanged anylonger, whether because we

: regard the life of the victim astoo cheap to make the mur-derer pay with his, or that pfthe murderer as too precious

; to forfeit. The murder rate —; about 18,000 annually in the

United States — certainly •seems high.

Lately some very per-suasive statistical evidence onthe deterrent effect of capitalpunishment . has beenpresented.

For. example, University ofChicago Professor IsaacEhrlich,- after an elaboratestatistical analysis, concludedthat one more execution peryear during the period 1933 to1969 would have probably

. deterred an average of sevenor eight murders per year. Itseems that by failing toexecute a convicted murder,we may risk failing to preventother murders that might havebeen prevented by theexecution. The risk stronglyargues in favor of. the deathpenalty.

THE SIZE of the threatenedpunishment and theprobability of suffering it areonly two among many in-fluences that deter us fromcrime.

The effect of legal threatsdiffers depending on per-sonality and social situation;thus the perception of the"threat and the intensity of thedesire for doing what the lawproclaims to be wrong willdiffer from person to person.

Even the strongest threat

About the authorERNEST VAN DEN HAAG isadjunct professor of social

- philosophy at New YorkUniversity and lecturer insociology • and psychology at •the New School for SocialResearch. He is also apsychoanalyst in privatepractice in New York. Hisdozens of articles, on subjectsas diverse as art and cultureand political theory, haveappeared in anthologies andscholarly and popularperiodicals. He is also theauthor of several major books,including "The, JewishMyst ique," "Pol i t ica lViolence and CivilD i s o b e d i e n c e , " and"Punishing Criminals:Concerning a Very Old andPainful Question," whichoffers a full discussion of the ,issues raised in this article.

will not deter some persons;therefore the threat of punish-ment, while it controls crime,cannot eliminate it. Offendersalready guilty of crimes ob-viously have not beendeterred. Among them, theproportion of people who

cannot be deterred at all maybe high.

However, most people aredeferrable.i Society could not function atall if the law did not directlyand indirectly deter themfrom doing what it prohibits,

our automaticcriminal op-as morally

Sypek calls training successfulMercer County's special

employment and trainingprogram for young people hasbeen most successful, ac-cording to County ExecutiveArthur Sypek.

"I am very pleased with the1978 results of the In-SchoolComponent of the YouthEmployment and TrainingProgram administered by theCounty Office of Training andEmployment Services," saidMr. Sypek.

The county executive notedthat of the 54 students who

.satisfactorily completedtraining in vocational school,45 returned to school, threewent for post secondarytraining, three obtained un-

subsidized employment andthree were placed into CETAprograms:

The purpose of this programis to increase the careerprospects for youth throughthe "learn and earn" ap-proach. • ' , • -

The program Was ad- ,minis tered for a 31-weekperiod, four days per week,.from 4-6 p.m. at the SypekVocational School.

"I am proud of the youngpeople who participated in thisprogram and who have shownsuch determinat ion _ inpreparing themselves' forpermanent employment in thecommuni.ty," said Mr. Sypek."I am hopeful that the success

of this program will enable usto expand our efforts. in theway of special "learn andearn" activities.

; "It is far more desirable togive our youth the opportunityto explore different types ofcareer possibilities so that| they can make informeddecisions as to their futurethan to have them become anunemployment statistic afterleaving high school," he said.

whether it be somethinguniversally regarded as evil—e.g., murder — or somethingprohibited to secure somepractical good, such as ex-ceeding the speed limit, orpracticing medicine without alicense.

The evidence, statistical andexperimental, shows clearly

• that a higher probability ofsevere punishment effectivelyreduces crime rates. In oneexperiment of note, for

. example, the experimentersfound that a credible threat ofpunishment reduced cheatingamong college students bytwo-thirds, but moralexhortation was ineffective.

WHETHER THE criminalpotential that more or lessstrongly inheres in all of us isactivated depends on externalas well as internal factors.Some people would becomecriminals under nearly anycircumstances; they are in-ternally driven to defy socialrules.

Others might not havebecome offenders had theylived under more favorableconditions. The wife murderermay not have become one had'he married someone else. Thepoverty-stricken slumdwellermight have been law-abidinghad he been less poor; thedead-end kid might have beenlaw-abiding had he not beenborn into a disintegratingfamily. y

The threat of punishment isthus only one of many factorsinfluencing crime rates. Butthreats can be more easilycontrolled than, say, familydisintegration, which con-tributes importantly to highcrime rates.

Some of the social changesfrom which improvement hadbeen expected have had nodiscernible effects on crimerates. Poverty and ignoranceoften have.been blamed forcrime. However, only 11percent of all families now fallbelow the poverty line com-pared to SO percent in 1920. Yetthe crime rate has risen.Education, too, has greatlyincreased, as has psychiatriccare, but the crime rate hasrisen even more.

ON THE OTHER hand,rates of punishment have,decreased. Between 1960 and1970 the crime rate (per100,000 people) rose 144 per-cent; the arrest rate did notkeep pace: it rose only 31percent. And while 117 personswere in prison per 100,000inhabitants in 1960, only 96were in 1970. In other words,while crime rates went up,punishment rates went down.

The decline in punishmentoccurred in the face of ac-cumulating scientific evidence(by Isaac Ehrlich and others)which shows (contrary to whathad been believed amongcriminologists until about 10years ago) that swift, certainand reasonably severe punish-ment can significantly reducecrime rates.

WHY, DESPITE risingcrime rates, are convictionshard to obtain? Why are courtslenient, despite the fact that 50percent of all violent crimesare committed by persons outon probation, parole or bail?One reason is that we navelong accepted the generousidea that offenders are• misguided or sick and could —and, therefore, should — berehabilitated rather than

' punished.But no effective ways of

rehabilitating offenders havebeen discovered, either in thiscountry or any other.Whatever the merit of varioushumanitarian programs, nonehas led to lower recidivism

rates than occur in their ab-sence.

Further, the evidence showsthat the proportion of of-fenders who. suffer frompsychic impairment is nohigher than that of non-offenders in the same socio-economic group.

The conclusion isinescapable that by makingpunishment as uncertain, rareand mild as we have, we havelicensed crime. '

NEXT WEEK: John P.Sisk, professor of Englishliterature at GonzagaUniversity, discusses theissues of pornography a dobscenity in a free society.

to CollegesSARAH McGEE DID!

Sarah returned to college after 30 years. A well known NewJersey artist. Sarah teaches art therapy to children of migrantworkers. She transferred credit from various colleges and thentook college proficiency exeminations. Through the assessment;of demonstrated college level learning, she earned additionalcredits to complete work for her B.A. degree'.

YOU CAN TOO!

AEROBIC DANCINGby Jacki Sorensen

A whisper of exercisers SHOUT OF FUN!The figure and health benefits ofjogging through simple vigorous dances.

Demonstration arid registration onFriday, April 27th, 9:30 a.m.

Trinity Church, Mercer St., PrincetonP.S. Bring your sneakers along!

No matter what your age, educationalbackground, or job responsibilities,

. Thomas A. Edison College may be ablel o help Y O U . , ,: ; ,•

For more information, call or write:Thomas A. Edison College

Box, BP, Forrestal RoadPrinceton. NJ 08540 (609) 452-2977:

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Center for Intellectual Achievementheld at the Unitarian Church of PrincetonFor Brochure and Info, call 609-441-0975

ROGAPEKIJDAY CAMP

Opening for the 41 styear on June 19for boys & girls ages 4 through 12

swimming instruction • crafts • sportsovernight canoeing • special events

Men & Women Counselors

For Information ca/f: 609-921-8297Ruth Cortelyou, Director

The M.I.T. Club of Princeton announces a symposium:

ENERGY: CENTURY TWENTY-ONE

Participants:Dr. Robert Seamans, formerly director of the U.S.Energy Research and Development Administration,now Dean of Engineering at M.I.T.

Dr. Melvin Gottlieb, Director of the PrincetonPlasma Physics Laboratory

Ms. Marianna Slocum, a Scientific Advisor in theU.S. Department of Energy

Dr. Brown Williams, Director of the EnergySystems Research Laboratory of RCA

Doto: Friday. April 27,1979Placo: Prospoct Houso, Princoton University

The symposium will be preceded by a reception at6:00 p.m. and dinner at 7:00

For information please call Marie H. Johnson 609-924-1133, or A.A. Corona 609-737-3000, ext. 2461.Tickets are $15 per person.

camp HighlanderHORSE SHOE, NORTH CAROLINA

In the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Asheville.

A resident camp for boys and girls ages 7-16 of-fering a wide selection of activities and times to fitevery vacation plan with 3-6-9 week sessionsbeginning June 17 and a special wildernessprogram for boys ages 16-17 starting July 8.

Program Offerings:

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BirlingHiking

Gymnastics £ DancoTennis

Land Sport*Rhror Rafting

Horsoback RidingCaving

Archery ft Rif lorySwimming

CraftsLimited •nroUmcntfor off stsslont•arfy appfJcaffons or* encouraged.

For further Information Contact: Donna HarrisHolly Howe—Apt. U. Princeton. N J . OeMO

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Talk on menopausescheduled at hospital/"The Facts About

Menopause" is the subject ofthe next talk in the CommunityMedical Series at SomersetMedical Center, Tuesday,April 24 at 8 p.m. The speakerwill be obstetrician andgynecologist Dr. Albert M.

Doswald. .The Community Medical

Series is a community healtheducation , effort of theSomerset County MedicalSociety and the SomersetMedical Center Auxiliary.Admission to the talk is free.

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County 4-H Agents

< [All .meetings held at 4-HCenter unless otherwisenoted]

COMING EVENTS

• Thursday, April 19 -Friends of Special Ed, 4-HCenter, 7:30 pjn.

• Thursday, April 19 -Livestock Council, 7:30 p.m.

• Friday, April 20 - HorseAnimal Clinic, All Invited, 7:30- 8:30 pjn.

• Friday, April 20 - ModelAirplane Quiz Bowl, 7 - 9 p.m.

• Friday, Saturday, April20-21 - Rock-A-Thon, 8 p.m. till8 a.m.

• Saturday, April 21 - CampRally, 10:30 a.m. - noon.

• Sunday, April 22 - 4-HHorse Leaders' AssociationOpen Show, North BranchPark, 8 a.m.

• Monday, April 23 - DressRevue Planning Committee,7:30 p.m.:: • Monday, April 23 - TeenLounge, 7:30 p.m.

• Monday, April 23 -Tractor Meeting, Covert'sNeshanic Station, 7:30 p.m.

• Tuesday, April 24 -Sunnymead School Programto Promote 4-H, Hillsborough.

• Wednesday, April 25 -Camp Counsellor Course B,North Plainfield 4-HHomestead, 7:30 p.m.

All high school students

interested in working withhandicapped youth are invitedto attend the April 19 meetingof Friends of Special Ed. Plansare in the process for a three-day, Iwo-nighl campingprogram. We need moremembers, so please join us7:30 p.m. at the 4-H Center.

- This month's Animal Clinicon Friday, April 20 at the 4-HCenter will feature horses. 4-Hmembers will be present withtheir horses to give 'demon-strations and answer yourquestions. Everyone is invitedlo attend this 7:30-8:30 p.m.presentation that will allow ahands-on opportunity for thosethat slop by.

Fifty-two youngsters flewkites in the 4-H Kite ContestSaturday, April 7 in the NorthBranch County Park acrossfrom the 4-H Center.

Rosettes were awarded bythe judges George Dickinsonand Laura Terhune lo thefollowing: Sean Senna, longestflying; David Kopsco andDavid Scrugs, highest flying;Scott Anderson, Indian kiteand Wayne Sudol, bestdecorated.

Participants were: LesterSara, David Grodt, JohnVoloudakis, David & SonnyFass, Trina Bersler, AdrianneGibson, John Krom, EricKahler, Zamban Slemphen,Jim Ubry, Scott- Anderson,Greg , Schatzel, Kristen

Schatzel, Sean Senna, MarkSlutzman, Malhew McGill,Stephin . Gearey, TomSchaefer, L. Rascio, F.Simmons, Wayne Sudol, KellyKreutler, Chris Irey, Debbieand Tommy Caldwell, StacieSpycholski, Eugene Liebman,Eric Brath, Amy Petruska,Jenny Moahn, Keller Sahwna,Dee Langenbach, Robby Hess,Kim Nagy, Jennifer Kritzer,Anthony McLellen, ChrisReid, George Hahuck, StevenRichardson, Matthew Mitro,Joe Torsillo, Marie Torpey,T h o m a s B l a z k i e w i e z ,Maureen Swayne, JohnGlazkiewez, David Kopsco,David Scrugs, Tom Jones,Eren Slomivitch, Scott Morris,Sharon McCarthy and JasonBell. ,

If you've never been to amodel airplane quiz bowl andbuilding contest, here is yourchance.. Abner Mathews,leader of the Broken Props 4-Hclub invites everyone in-terested on Friday, April 20, 7-9 p.m. lo come to the 4-HCenter for an interestingevening.

The Hillsborough Hillbillies4-H Prep Club gave apresentation at McDonald'slast Tuesday. Eight membersshowed crafts made in theirclub. Next Tuesday theHillsborough Twirling Angelswill demonstrate. This is anew community involvement

, program initiated by

Hillsborough McDonald's.They welcome 4-H everyTuesday so that the com-munity may become aware ofour programs. If you are in-terested in having your childjoin 4-H or in forming a club ofyour own, here is a chance tosee a club in action and talk totheir leader. 4-H will be atMcDonald's every Tuesdaybetween 5:30 and 7:30 p.m.

Friday, April 20 at 8 p.m.will be the start of a 12 hourRock-A-Thon in rockingchairs, rocking horses or onteeter totters by members ofthe 4-H Exchange associationin the gym at the 4-H Center.)

Lisa Oppelt, Judy Heflich,Laura Tulin, Mary Clarke,Brenda Gibb, Sue Smith,Beth Swan, Jocelyn Kinchi,Car en H o c k e n b u r y ,Patti Cunningham, Lindaand Donna Fey, Eric Deuchar,Henry Valone, Jim Blum,Tony DEVergillo, Jody Karl,Ruth Karbon, Georgia Kuhle,Debbie DeAngelo and JennySwan and others plan to rockas long as they can.

Come cheer them on and bea supporter by backing one ormore rocker. Maybe yourrocker will make it til 8 a.m.doing 12 hours.

Would you like to share yourhome and life with a Japanese .friend from July 23 to Aug. 20?

Hillsborough High Schoolrecently found this to be awonderful experience.

The New Jersey In-ternational 4-H Exchange issponsoring an exchange withJapan this summer and 40teenagers and 4 adultchaperones will spend thesummer in New Jersey.

4-H families with a highschool age youngster who isinterested in this exchangemay be host families. Oneweek in August the Japaneseyoungsters will spend awayfrom their host families at the4-H camp but the rest of thetime they would be yourbrother or sister. Host familiesare asked to treat them as amember of the family and do

things as usual.Application forms are

available at the 4-H office andcompleted forms are due April23.

Next year New Jersey 4-H'ers will return the visit toJapan with host familymembers given preference.

THE Basking Ridge dogclub has chosen a new nameProud Paws and has electedthe following officers:President, Ken Pokryska;Vice-President, Ken Billin,Treasurer, Jeffrey Pokryska;Secretary, Cathy An-derson and newsReporter, Stacy Warner. Club

leader is Mrs. Sandra Wasilerand teen leader BarbaraHosteller. This club meets the2nd and 4th Wednesday atWilliam Annin Jr. high schoolin Basking Ridge. Anyoneinterested in joining pleasecall the 4-H office 526-6644.

The Effects of Beddingwas the topic that PatriciaThievon of the Warren TrailBlail Blazers 4-H horse clubchose lo present at a recentclub meeting. Others givingpresentations were1 LeeWallers, TheTarpan Pony andTracy Denlon, HorsesEyesight.

Medical Center to opennew psychiatric unit

PITTSBURGH PAINTS

State, county and municipalofficials and friends ofSomerset Medical Center havebeen invited to openingceremonies for a 30-bed, in-patient psychiatric unit atSomerset Medical Center,Sunday, April, 22, at 2 p.m.

The establishment of thepsychiatric unit marks animportant advance in theconcept of community-basedpsychiatric care — treatmentclose to friends and family —and was made possible by aunique, combined effort by theNew Jersey Department ofHuman Services, the SomersetCounty Board of ChosenFreeholders and SomersetMedical Center. A $300,000grant was provided by theDepartment of Human Ser-vices toward the approximate$700,000 cost of renovating themedical -center's fifth floor,where the unit is located.

Until several years ago,Somerset County residentswere served by the NewJersey Neuro-PsychiatricInstitute (NPI) in Skillman,which provided both short and

long term psychiatric care.However, NPI has since beenconverted to a school for thementally retarded.

According to Dr. Robert A.Lowenstein, Somerset MedicalCenter's director ofpsychiatry, the unit will offershort term, intensive, in-patient therapy to voluntarilyadmitted patients referred bythe Somerset County Com-munity Mental Health Centerand by private psychiatristson the staff of the medicalcenter. Trenton PsychiatricHospital and other institutionscontinue to serve the needs ofpatients requiring long termcare.

There will be three separatesections in the unit atSomerset: living quarters,treatment areas andrecreational facilities. Thereis a library, common diningroom and occupationaltherapy room, recreationaltherapy room, laundry andkitchen. Rooms are semi-private, have their ownbathrooms with showers, andare decorated and furnished to

look as home-like as possible.The atmosphere on the unit ismore like that of a motel ordormjitory than of a hospital.

The psychiatric unit is thelast component necessary toprovide the Somerset Countyarea with a program ofcomprehensive communitymental health services.

Naturalists holddiamond lecture

The Somerset Naturalistswill sponsor "Gems ofRomance," a lecture and slidepresentation by Mrs. MaryWilliams of New Jersey Bell.The program will take placeprior to the" group's businessmeeting at the Hillside SchoolLibrary on Brown Road in'Bridgewater at 8:00 p.m.,April 24.

The lecture will tell thestories of some of the world'smost famous diamonds. Therewill also be a display ofreplicas of some of the gems.The public is invited to theprogram.

A PORTABLE TV

WIN A PORTABLE B&WTV SET!In Celebration of our Grand Opening we are giving away a black & white portabletelevision set. Winner will be determined by random entry blank drawing on

i May 3rd. Come in today and fill out your entry blank.

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plus8 hours of service by

^ ^

Y«», you moy win > gallons of Pittsburgh Paint* and professional painting help (or a full 8-hourday** — stop In and register. Grand Prix* Drawing will b» hald on May 3rd.You must b*> 18 years of ag* or older.**Mr. Rainier! and a representative of Strand Paint Company will survey winner's home todetermine areas to be painted during this 8-hour period.

GRAND OPENING SPECIALS.* Every can: comes with* an expert.

• Oar aaaJKy palat aa* ai-ptri aaVrica tavat thaw.traaM* Mai taaaay.

• W«'lt laaw | M tha rif atpalatial autkaal • * * taalatorn.

a NM4 prapar MwaaUaa Mpiraparlaf aarfacat? Oar 'pjrafastlaaal aafrka aaal - .

. PHtika-rfk falali C Mhelp yaa.

• Oar calara aaal calar a*aar>tlia ar* itcaatf <• aaaa.Ckaau fraat 7*t"aaw"calara la aar aacMJafD«»i§aaCalar™ SyKaa.

DerfgnqColofSystem

MakesColorPkkin'Easy

colon orranftd *n fomitiri to yew can •atilylocal* !*»• color you have in (ntnd.

PlTTSBURGH'PAINTS

WOOD STAINS

90 • SaUUhr I t i Mata* ailiaiiia IW

norm »m mqt. mi »n»

Reg. $13.99 w «wot trim

NOW

ONLY

PITTSBURGH PAINTS

LATEX FLAT WALL PAINT NOW

ONLY

99 :Reg. $11.06WMttatal

• Hell flat shtcn

• Cotonrtsist- 98Per Gallon

Reg. $15.45

SALE ENDS APRIL 24,1979

COUPON

FREE BRUSHI '/I GOLD STRIP BRUSH WITHTHIS COUPON THRU S- I 5-79 PJ».

.f.

Village Paint & WallpaperThe Village Shopper—Rte. 206

Rocky Hill, N J . • 609-921 -7120Mon.-Sat. 7:30 a.m.-5:3O p.m.

Visa ft. Mattei-charge Accepted

/ *

this Saturday, April 21 st(Rain Date — April 28)

C

from 10-5 at the

PRINCETONSHOPPING CENTER

Harrison Street

Come one, Come allto the largest garage sale

ever to take place!

Over 150 tables oftreasures, collectibles and

authentic junque!

ALSOThe merchants of

Princeton Shopping Centerare offering their own

fantastic sales on tablesright in front of the stores.

Lots of Free Parking

Thursday, April 19,1979 I he Kdnklin NEWS RECORD 1T-A

Planners hearPCD utility, traffic plans

i by Sandi LowichStaff Writer

Engineer Neil Van Cleef outlinedwater, sanitary sewer and utilitiesproposed for Jack Field's 396-acrePlanned Community Development(PCD) during the third hearing on theapplication.• Mr. Van Cleef explained there arethree alternative methods of handling

' sewage for the 2,664 towrihouses andgarden apartments:

• Joining South Brunswick inconnecting with the Middlesex CountySewerage Authority,: • Providing a secondary leveltreatment facility along SuydamRoad,'or

• Building a treatment plant whichwill provide direct discharge into theMillstone River or Six Mile RunReservoir.' Next to the separate. treatmentfacility will, be a spray irrigationstation. Sewage will be treatedbeforehand, according to Mr/ VanCleef, and will then be sprayed over acover crop-area. '

TOM JAMIESON, an attorneyrepresenting a coalition of about 100area homeowners called FranklinCitizens for Orderly. Planning, ob-jected to a sewer treatment facilitysaying "property owners wouldn'teven know a spray irrigation stationwould be right across the road" byreading Mr. Field's application.

Mr. Jamieson then asked planningboard members not to proceed untilproperty owners w4thin 200 feet of theproposed spray irrigation station begiven notice.

However, John Sheridan,representing Mr. Field, emphasized"Ihis is one of three alternatives -something we might do. At this time;

we're looking for site plan approval."Water for the development will be

supplied by North Brunswick, whichhas a million-gallon per day contractwith Franklin Township, Mr. VanCleef said. There will be a water toweron the site. .

The storm water managementprogram will include four retentionponds throughout the site, which willbe maintained by Somerset County.

Mr. Van Cleef also indicated gas andelectric facilities are available to thesite, and electric and telephone lineswill be underground.

Garbage collection will be providedby private contractors.

ALSO AT the hearing, Henry J. Ney,traffic engineer for Mr. Field, testifiedon the impact of traffic generated by

' the PCD on the existing road system.Mr. Ney projected, at the

development's completion in 1987, 21percent of the traffic will be going tothe New Brunswick-Edison area, 18

percent to the Princeton area, 15percent to the North Jersey-New Yorkarea, 15 percent to the Trenton-SouthJersey area, 10 percent to the 1-287-Somerville area, and 1 percent toCanal Road. 19 percent will utilizemass transportation facilities, Mr.Ney estimated.

Some road improvements will berequired, the traffic expect indicated.Route 27 is presently at 80 percent ofits maximum capacity, he said, andwidening of the highway at severalplaces will be necessary.

Mr. Ney concluded the PCD willcause no excessive capacity restraintsor safety hazards on the existing roadsystem.

The next hearing on Field's ap-plication will be on Wednesday, April25. At that time, planner JamesRossant is expected to present adetailed description of the PCD'stownhouses and garden apartments.

July 4 fun may havenew twist this year

NIP

Wednesday is an awfully in-covenient day to schedule a nationalholiday.

Few people these days receive — orcan afford to take — an extended five-day weekend to mark the celebrationof our nation's birth.

So, to prevent the excitement of theday to fizzle due to lack of travel plans,Franklin Township is investigating thepossibility of hosting a one-day car-nival to compliment the traditionalevening fireworks display.; Township Manager Harry Gerkeninvited a bakers dozen of civicorganization representatives to meetwith him last night to determine if thelocal groups are interested in par-ticipating by operating various en-

tertainment booths and concessionstands at the event.

The day-long carnival is proposed tobe held at the municipal complex onDeMott Lane.

"We're exploring the possibility ofan old fashion July 4 celebration," Mr.Gerken said. "If there is interest in thecivic groups we'll do it. If not we'll gowith just the fireworks."

Township Council has appropriated$3,000 in its 1979 budget to contribute tothe light show. The SomersetVolunteer Fire Company donates therest of the necessary monies.

"July 4 is on a Wednesday and thepossibility of providing more than afireworks display is good this year,"the manager said.

(Continued from Page One)budget $71,000 below its 5 percentspending cap. In March the boardreceived $54,000 of a $633,393 capwaiver appeal.

At $3.01 per $100 assessed valuation,the school tax levy is up 13 cents fromthe $2.88 figure in 1978. Council's$125,000 cut saves an owner of a $40,000assessed value home $4; with theschool levy to increase $48 over lastyear or a 4.5 percent jump.

SCAP(Continued from Page One)

KECOKDS AT the recently, fire-gutted Hamilton Park YouthDevelopment Project at 55 Fuller St.,Somerset, were also subpoenaed,according to Executive DirectorMarvin Norman. --.

"We never winterized a thing in ourlife," he said. "You can't put a priceon the stigma put on the organizationonce your records are attached." \

Mrs. Ellis is urging the SCAPExecutive Committee charter a factfinding commission to "examine fullyand fairly whether or not the SomersetCommunity Action Program hasengaged in any criminal acts and whatthe record is in providing services. \&.the community."

Poverty community, business,religious, education and legalrepresentatives are to be selected toreview SCAP and are to report fin-dings within 30 days, according toboard president.

Franklin Tax ComparisonsFranklin Township's 1979 tax

picture took firm dimensionsMonday when Township Councilsliced the rejected Board of

t Education budget by $125,000,"certifying"the amount to be raised

by tax levy at $10,734,451.05.Tax; revenues earmarked for

municipal use amount to $2,292,695,

while Somerset County coffers get$2,748,245.98 from Franklin tax-payers. The 1979 estimated rate —excluding fire district tax — is $4.42per $100 assessed valuation.

The figure represents a 16 centrise above last year or a 3:76 percentincrease. Comparisons between 1978and 1979 follow.

budgetary body

School boardFranklin Twp.Somerset Cty.Totals

1978Amount to baraised bytax levy

$9,873,256.232,180,328.342,544,485.76

•14,598,070.33

Taxrate

2,87647900.63530620.74180124.2535884

1979Amount to baraised bytax levy

$10,734,451.052,292,685.002,748,295.98

$15,775,432.03

Tax

3.000850.640930.77374441562

Special vespers at KingstonRandy Manges and a group

of students from the West-minster Choir School willrender the Vesper Service atthe Kingston United MethodistChurch on Sunday, April 22.

The service will begin at 5p.m. The public is cordiallyinvited to attend.

Refreshments will be servedfollowing the. service,.

Wild wood,Amish tripssign-up due

NORTH BRUNSWICK —The North BrunswickDemocratic Club is sponsoringtwo trips this spring to theAmish country and to Wild-wood.

The Amish country tripincludes a round trip,lavatory-equipped bus withstops planned at the Kitchenkettle, the Weavertown one-room schoolhouse, the AmishHouse and farm, a tour of theback country and an all-you-can eat feast at Miller'sSmorgasbord.

Price of the trip is $16.25 perperson, all costs included. Busleaves at 8:30 a.m. onSaturday, May 5 from theLinwood School off HermannRoad. Return is slated forabout 8:30 p.m.

The Wildwood weekend isset for Friday, June 1 throughSunday, June 3. Cost is $69.95per couple and includes twonights and two days at theSans Souci Motel. Located juststeps from the beach, thefacility includes double bedaccommodations and heatedswimming pool. Surpriseextras are planned for par-ticipants.

Bus leaves Linwood Schoolat 6:45 p.m. on June 1 andreturns on June 3 at about 8:30p.m.

For reservation in-formation, call 828-0217.Deadline is April 24.

Workshopon wills set

The Franklin Adult/-Community Educat ionProgram is offering a three-hour seminar on Tuesday,April 24 from 7 - 10 p.m. inRoom 209 of the Franklin HighSchool on "Everyone Needs aWill."

The seminar will explore theproper way to provide yourfamily with what you intendfor their best interest andfuture. Learn about the besttype of will to have written andwhat to include in it."Lecturer is Stephen E\

Klausner, an attorney and costis $4 per family.

For information andregistration, call 545-4229.

Self worthworkshop isopen to all

The Conerly Road SchoolTitle I Parent AwarenessCouncil will sponsor Donald J.Noone in a discussion of "SelfWorth: The Foundation forGrowth' on Wednesday, April25 at 7:30 p.m.

Dr, Noone, executivedirector of the FamilyLearning Institute, will speakon how to raise your own andyour children's sense of selfworth.

The public is invited to at-tend. For further information,call 828-2919.

k/C

TO HEAD STATE GROUP

Betty Fialka of Somerville,a former president ofSomerset Medical Center'sAuxiliary, has been appointedlo a two-year term as chair-man of the New JerseyHospital Assoc ia t ion ' s(NJHA) Council on

Auxiliaries.'The Council onAuxiliaries is one of sixcreated by the NJHA Board ofTrustees. It is charged withhelping 120 NJHA memberh o s p i t a l s d e v e l o pknowledgeable auxilians, whocan assume a variety of roleson the hospital team.

TRAILER LOADS ARRIVING DAILY, PLUS LEFT-OVER" 1979 MODELS FROM LAST YEARS INVEN-TORY AND HUNDREDS OF LEFTOVERS FROMJAN FEB., & MARCH BEFORE PRICE; N-CREASE. WHEELING UISCOUNTS OFF SUG-GESTED MANUFACTURERS LIST PRICE OROVERALLOWANCE UNDER OUR OVERAL-LOWANCE PROGRAM, PLUS HUNDREDS OF

V USED CARS AND TRUCKS. •1600 NEW CHEVROLETS, CAPRICES, IMPAIRS,

MONTE CARLOS, MALIBUS, MONZAS. CAMA-ROS. NOVAS, CHEVETTES, PICKUPS. VANS.SPORT VANS. SUBURBANS. BLAZERS, ETC.CHRYSLERS. NEW YORKERS. NEWPORTS, COR-DOBAS. LEBARONS. PLYMOUTHS. VOLAREf.HORIZONS. NEW JAGUARS. TRIUMPHS, MG'S.NEW JAPANESE IMPORTS - 2 DRS. HATCH-BACKS. GTS, PICKUPS. REEDMAN LEASINGNON FRANCHISED , MAKES SUCH AS NEWCADILLAC COUPE OEVILCES. NEW SEDAN

DEVILLES, NEWSEVILLES, NEW ELDORADO.

IF A CERTAIN NEW 19KMO0EU COLOR OR EO«'£" I,§N.TJ!,?!ST

IN STOCK WE WILL TRY TO FILL YOUR ORDER AS SHIPMENTSARRIVE OR HAVE IT BUILT.FOR YOU.

Sales Department HoursMonday thrm Friday, 9 AM to 10 PM,

Saturday* AM to 7 PM. Closed Sunday

The finestHandcrofted

Furniture

LIMITEDOfflER

SALE ENDS4/22

Come H t our beautiful QMIMUM hand-traited furniture A «Hls ol teafc-wead and rosewood. All mado ia the a*« old tradition-of patience andavalttv.

• KDtOOmS-DrrflNG IOOMS • POtCEUUN• OmOCMMEIS- DESKS •GMNDfATHEt CLOCKS

OCaSK>NALMECES • U M T S * GffTSrMIKHMORE!

Oriental825 Rt. 33 Hamilton Sq.

587-5050Store Hears: M M * T « t i , Wed. 104

Sat. 1W. Swn. ia-4

WINDOWSHADES

ALL CUSTOM WINDOWDECOR

• Shades. Lovolor. Blinds. • Vortical Blinds, Woven

Woods, Laminates

Save up to 30%

Shop-at-home

201-874-6333

MR. SHADES of N J .

MEN'S WEAR& UNIFORMS

Dave's Men's &Boys Shop41 S. Main St.

Manville

Formal WearFor Hire

• Policemen• Mailmen

725-9027

FUEL OIL

A.BESSENYEI

&SonOil Burners Installed

586 Hamilton St.New Brunswick

KI5-6453

JEWELRY

SHERMAN £rSONS

JEWELERSKeepsake Diamond RingsWide Selection of Wedding BandsFREE Eof Piercing with

Purchase of Earrings

Somerset Shopping Centerj Bridgewater

526-0111

BUSINESS GUIDET CALENDAR OF EVENTS BI

LIQUORS

BORO-LIQUORSl & l l

Open Sunday 12-5 P.M.Beer Er Soda

78 W. Somerset(rwrrtoQuick Chekt

Roriton 725-0246

THURSDAY, APNI.1t

Franklin Board of Adjustment • 8 p.m. Municipal Bldg.Manville Health Screening Clinic - 6 to 8 p.m. Board of Health

office, 109 So. Main St."Night Hike" - Stony Brook-Millstone Watersheds Reserve,

Pennington. 7:30 to 9 p.m. Info. 609-737-3735.Franklin Library - 2 p.m. Children 8 to 12 years, Terrarium

Workshop - Info. 545-8032.925 Hamilton St., Somerset.

FRIDAY, APRIL 20

Casting Call - Circle Players production of "Kingdom of theTiger," Circle Playhouse, 416 Victoria Ave., Piscataway. Tryouts 8p.m., also Sat. 2 p.m. for June performances. Info. 968-7555.

Candlelight Concert Er tours of mansion - Washington'sHeadquarters, Morristown. Recorder group playing 17th & 18thcentury chamber music selections. Info. 539-2085.

SATURDAY, APRIL 21

Hillsborough Library - Goat Program by the Blackberry Patch 4-HGoat Club. 10:30 a.m. Kids available for petting in front of Library.

Franklin Township Chamber of Commerce - Dinner Dance atSomerset Marriott, 7 p.m.-1 A.M.

4-H Tall Tailsr Club program. "How to Take Care of Dogs," 11a.m.. Franklin Township Public Library.

Annual Spring Horse Show - Gill/St. Bernard's School, GladstoneCampus. Starting 8:30 a.m.

Childrens' program - film "N.J. Our Abundant Heritage" courtesyP.S.E & G. 10:30 a.m. Somerset Public Library, West End Ave.

SUNDAY, APRIL 22

"Rowers, Fjords & Icebergs" - illustrated lecture by explorer-photographer Erwin Streinsinger. 3 p.m., Somerset Co. ParkCommission's Environmental Education Center, 190 Lord StirlingRd., Basking Ridge.

Buffet Supper & Dance Social - Somerset-Hunterdon Chapter ofWidows or Widowers 7 to 11 p.m.. Holiday Inn, Route 22,Somerville.

Wine & Cheese Party, Van Wickle Dames. "The Meadows,"Easton Ave., Somerset. Benefit restoration of house.

Senior Citizens Dance 1 to 3 p.m., Somerset Co. Senior Center,500 Warrenville Rd., Warren. Free Admission. Info. 753-9440.

St. Peter's Hospital Nursing School Open House - High Schoolstudents. 2 p.m. Info. 745-8586.

LANDSCAPING

725-9596

'RAILROAD TIES> LAWN MAINTENANCE• SNOW PLOWING> PATIOS> ROTOTIU.ING•TREE CUTTING• FIREWOOD WHEN AVAILABLE

MONDAY, APRIL 23

Franklin Fire District No. 1 Commissioners meeting. 8 p.m.Somerset Rre House.

American History Film Series. "Domesticating a Wilderness" &"Money On the Land". 7:30 p.m. Rm. C-205, Somerset Co. CollegeCenter.

Manville Council - 8 p.m.. Municipal Bldg.Franklin Department of Social Services, 8 p.m. Municipal Bldg.Raritan Valley Mothers of Twins & Triplets Club - 8 p.m..St.

John's Episcopal Church, High St. Grandmother's Night.Franklin Board of Education - Special public meeting. 8 p.m.

Sampson G. Smith School. Closing Middlebush School & othermatters.

Hillsborough Board of Education - 8 p.m. H.S. Library.- Report on Iran by Eva Cockraft - 7:30 p.m. Mary Jacobs Library,RockyHill. ,

Rt. 202 ft Somerville Ore l *tnexr to Channel)

Raritan 725-2645

FUNERALHOMES

FUCILLO&

WARRENFuneral Home, Inc.J.G. Henry, Mgr.

725-1763

205 So. Main St., ManvilleAdam Fucillo, Founder

LANDSCAPING

TUESDAY, APRIL 24

Overeaters Anonymous meeting 7:30 to 9 p.m. HillsboroughPresbyterian Church, Rt. 206 and Amwell Rds. Info. Miriam 359-0920 or Ginny 874-4633.. Hillsborough Township Committee - 8 p.m. Municipal Bldg.

Professional Wrestling - sponsors Christ the King Men's Club. 8p.m. Christ the King School, No. 13th Ave.

Somerset Naturalists - 8 p.m. Hillside School Library, Brown Rd.,, Bridgewater. Program - Mary Williams of N.J. Bell, illustratedlecture on "Gems of Romance."

League of Women Voters-Franklin Township - 8 p.m. SampsonG. Smith School, Candidates Night. Township Council, at-iargecandidates.

Hillsborough Industrial Commission - 8 p.m. Ragtown Annex.Penny Sale - Ladies Auxiliary Hndeme Fire. Co. 7:30 p.m. Hrehouse.672 East Main St. -

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25

N.J. Committee for the Humanities - lecture 8- discussion:"Mothers and Daughters: New Light on Old Problems" by Anne

Donchin, Philosophy Dept., Bloomfield College 8 p.m.. EastBrunswick Public library, 2 Jean Waning Civic Center. Info. 254-1220.

Franklin Township Chamber of Commerce - celebrate NationalSecretary's Day with special luncheon at O'Connors ColonialFarms, Amwell Rd., noon. .

Demonstration - Saving ways for coping with inflationary cost ofclothing. Somerset County Extension Service Office, Milltown Rd.,North Branch 1-2:30 p.m. Reservations & info. 725-4700, ext. 263.

Conerly Road School Title I Parents Awareness Council presentsDr. Donald J. Noone on the topic "Self Worth: the Foundation forGrowth" Public invHed 7:30 p.m. Info. 828-2919.

Somerset Chapter Women's American. ORT Spring FashionShow. 7 p.m. Somerville Inn,. Rte. 22, Somerville. $10 includesdinner. Reservations Nancy Kivor 297-9673.

BICYCLES

FRANKLIN BICYCLECENTER

• RALEIGH • SCHWINN• PEUGEOT • ROSS

Repairs • Parts • Accessories

153 HAMITLON STREET10 a.m. -6 p.m.

OPEN SATURDAYSClosed Wed. A Sundoyt

249-4544

HOME & FARM

HORSE FEED t SUPPLIES. PETFOODS. WILD BIRD SEED.ANIMAL FEED. WE ALSOCARRY WATER SOFTENERSALTS; LAWN t GARDENSUPPLIES. SHOES. SOOTS.JACKETS t CLOVES.

BELLE M E A DFARMERS' CO-OP

LINE ROADBELLE MEAD

COPYINGSERVICE

XEROX COPIES

KJiiu'ntily

/V/,v>•ttiiilulilrl

TOWNSHIPPHARMACY

'1'2 Hamilton St. . Somerset\ < > T \ m I'l HI.IC

MOVING &STORAGE

SOPKOAgents for

Wheaton Van Lines, Inc.MOVING Er

STORAGE, INC. •

Permit H5

Local & Long Distance35 No. 17th Ave.

Manville201-725-7758

HEATING &Air-Conditioning

• Heating• Air Conditioning .• Sheet Metal• Humidifier*• Air Cleaners

Safes & Service

BRIDGEWATERREFRIGERATION

AND SOLAR COMFORT201-725-4208

LUMBER

BELLE MEADLUMBER CO., INC.

Reading Blvd., Belle1 Mead3594121

A Complete tine ofBUILDING MATERIALS

• Cook I Dunn Point* • Comb. DOOM 1Window* • Andorton Wlndowt • Cvltngi• Polio Moiorioll • Corooting • Vir\yl Ttlo• Silco ftatomoni Ooon • Railroad 1i»» *Hardwbro • Oocorator Ponolt • RoofingMolarioli • limitation • Clou ••oiwlling • Plfwood • trick t MoionryMotar;ali.

LANDSCAPING

DLM LANDSCAPING722-17*2

e Complete Lawn Car*• Landscapinge Patiose Decks• Sode Railroad Tie Walls

PLUMBING HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING PLUMBING

PARKPLUMBING & HEATING

Installation & Repairof all your plumping needs

FREE ESTIMATESlk. tS44S

Kendall Pork. NJ .

(201)297-7538

ER. CLEWORTH & SONHEATING • AIR CONDITIONING • ELECTRICAL

SHEET METAL FABRICATIONWARM AIR REPLACEMENT FURNACES

HUMIDIFIERS • ELECTRONIC AIR CLEANERSCall for Free Estimate - Financing Available

' Lie. #3*44e

297-4841So. Brunswick

Ifliltsales 6 service

3S8-4748Edison

BASIL KUUCKPLUMBING* HEATING

ELECTRIC SEMER CLEANINGJOBBING ft ALTERATIONS

RESIDENTIAL. INDUSTRIAL, COMMERCIAL

(20D725-93M NJ.I IC.»S445

FREE ESTIMATES • WORK GUARANTEED

1019 HUFF AVE.MANVILLE. N.J,

A K T

Y

..fe

THE PRINCETON PACKET

THE CENTRAL POSTWINDSOR-HIGHTS HER/fLD

WILLSBOROUGHThe Manville News

The Franklin NEWS RECORD

Ctanbncrj flrcss

singEight For Central Jersey

Week of April 18 - 20, 1979

BusinessOpportunities

EXCELLENT BUSINESSFOR SALE — All naturalyogurt, dietary ice cream,fruits, foods, etc. Principalsonly. 609-924-2013.

PART TIME — We helpcouples build a wholesale Fretail business from theirhome. This establishesfinancial security within in-dependence. Your only in-vestment is yourself. Call 609-466-0812 eves, after 6 p.m. forinterview.

TRACTOR & GARDENEQUIPMENT DEALERSHIP— experiencing rapid growth.Sales $1.5 million, ownerretiring. Price $220,000 terms.The Co. Store, 215-968-6726.

INVEST — in fastest growingsegment of economy. Stockavailable now in- our MOTIF;RESTAURANT. Moneyneeded for necessary ex-pansion. $10,000 minimum.Reply Box #02294 c/o Prin-ceton Packet.

DAIRY BAR / RESTAURANT— rural. 6 days. Grossing$330,000 & growing. Can ex-pand. Excellent equip. Price$250,000, 29% down. The Co.Store, 215-968-6726.

SUBURBAN HAMILTONTWP. — Family businessdoing 2 million plus annualgross sales. Excellent returnon investment $300.00. Call fordetails: Central JerseyRealty, Rt. 526, AUentownHd;609-259-7820.

INCREASE YOUR INCOME— Active and progressiveoffices In Belle Mead andFranklin Park seeking full andpart time sales agents, ex-perience pre fe r red ,motivation and ability to dealwith people a must. We aremembers of Middlesex andSomerset Multiple ListingSystems. And members ofMultiple RelocationOrganizations. We also offeran interesting bonus plan asincentive. For confidentialinterview ask for Len Cooper,MID—JERSEY REALTY201-359-3444.

Business BusinessOpportunities Opportunities

VENTURE CAPITAL THERE IS NO MONEY - inVbNTUKt C A P I T A L . — «Bet rich schemes." Learn fobusiness loans for new xfniLD a orofitable businessbusiness, or expansion. If *V.. i n t e ) ; r i t y and sound609-799-4791, Richajrijlarrner, 609-924J349;

CAREER IN SALES — andmanagement with majorcompany, due to expansion.Sales experience helpful, butnot essential. Substantialstarting salary with incentiveincreases as earned. After atraining period in sales, anopportunity for career inmanagement is available. Forparticulars, call Mr. Ford, 609-896-9740. An Equal Op-portunity Employer.

HOT DOG TRUCK — 1974 &ATTRACTIVE, FULLYEQUIPPED. 609-448-6463.

HERE IS OPPORTUNITYFOR INDEPENDENCE —business never stops growing.Existing major lawn carefranchise location available,Mercer County NJ. Immediatetakeover. Some cash required.Exc. terms. Step into im-mediate income. Call now!609-896-9555.

HOT DOG TRUCK - ChevyStep Van, fully equipped, allstainless, exc. $750. 201-446-7224.

PLUMBING BUSINESS — 2man operation trucks, in-

vventory, good will, etc. Conieswith 3 bedroom Cape withroom for expansion. Largebarn and garage in SomersetCounty. Call for details$129,000. Frank R. KinneyRealtors, Oldwick N.J, 201-439-2102. Eves. 201-832-7587 or 782-6091.

NEW HOPE — Establishedover 5 years. Great location.This is your opportunity to.enter the business world. Only$25,000. NEW HOPE REALTY— 215-862-2058.

SALES REPS — looking foradditional products to offer:We have them,, up to 50%comm. 201-874-5990.

UNLIMITED INCOME — ifyou have a sales background,this is sizzling and brand new.Call Chris Davis at 609-799-4791.

SMALL LOUNGE &NIGHTCLUB 8 in Cham-bersburg section of Trenton.Capacity 50. All fixtures &equipment plus 3 BR apt. &parking lot. Growingbusiness. $80,900. 609-393-4150.

BASK1N ROBBINS FRAN-CHISE available. Please seeour display ad in this issue ofthe Princeton Packet &Lawrence Ledger.

FORMER NORTHERNDEVELOPER — now inFlorida for 8 years, Co-ownerof 208 acre island with 1- milebeautiful beach and within 1/2mile another 500+ acres allwaterfront property includinganother 40 acre Island with aroad to Island and a 4500 ft.airstrip for small planes. Nowin process of obtaining zoning& other approvals Tor 2-i2story &. penthouse con-dominiums, Exclusive home:subdivision & exclusiyeMobileHome Park, all waterfront'lots. I am seeking contact with',a financial investment group.This area is the fastestgrowing in the U.S. in S.W.Florida opposite reknownedSanibel Island across San.Carlos Bay. Write P.O. Box#02173 c/o. Princeton Packet.

"GYPSY SCHOLARS" TheWall Street Journal refers toyou as the "Gypsy Scholars" •*the untenured, short-term-contract educators. To cope,why not diversify/supplementyour income by starting yourown business - one that hastremendous potential and can"migrate"? where you do?! Nogimmicks. No obligations.Take an hour of your time -,over coffee or tea - to learnabout this excellent op-portunity. Foci' an ap-pointment, call 609-924-6766.(P;S. This offer does not ex-clude the other, uh, scholars.)

BusinessOpportunities

JAPANESE CONNECTIONS?Outstandingly successful U.S.Company entering Japanesemarket. If you are from, or'have contacts in Japan, this isan exceptional opportunity.Call or write NystromAssociates, Skillman, N.J.08558, 201-874-5990.

NBC & ABC EVENING NEWS—are telling the advantages ofour business opportunities. Doyou need a second income?Build a personal or familybusiness from your own home.Immediate profit. No in-vestment. Excellent incomepotential. Call 609-924-3359 forappointment.

DOES YOUR JOB give youreal financial and personalsatisfaction? Our businesscould and we are expanding.We're looking for positive, selfmotivating success orientedpeople who want more out oflife. Phone for informativeinterview appointment. 609-799-0076.

Help Wanted

SALESPERSON WANTED —we have the ultimate conceptin our sales marketing plan foryou. Part time or full time.Nothing you could ever do willcome close to the money,freedom, travel & security wehave offered for the last 20years. Don't wait call me now,Mr. Greulich, 201-526-0299.

RESTAURANT " H E L P -,Excellent Benefits. Full time.Apply in person. Mr. Bian-cella, Hilton Inn, Exit 8, NJTpk. No phone calls.

TEACHER — certified inearly childhood educationdesired for cooperative nur-sery school in Princeton, 3mornings a week, beginningSept. 1979. Reply Box #02369c/o Princeton Packet.

MOTHERS HELPER -Available Full Time duringsummer. Will travel with yourfamily. 17 yr. old H.S. Senior,License. Excellent references.609-882-1726 eves. 924-3100days.

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

Th« Princeton Packtt Newspapers300 Wlthtnpoon St.. P.O. Box350

Princeton. N.J. 08540(609)9244350

South Somerset Nmwtpapmn; P.O. Box 146\ . Somerv/l/e, N.J.

(201) 725-3300

cA D V E

8 — W A YL A S S I F I E DR T I S I N G F O R M

(on* squac* for eoch latter, number, *pac* or punctuation)

4LINES-1 INSERTION.... . . . . . .$4.003 INSERTIONS, no changes, paid before billing . . . . . $6.00

If billed add 50« billing charge

NAME

ADDRESS

CITY. .STATE. -ZIP.

CLASSIFICATION .INSERTIONS MJNTPAID

Alt Classified ads appear automatically in all 8Packet newspapers: The Princeton Packet, TheLawrence Ledger, The Central Post, Windsor-Hkjhts Herald. The Cranbury Press, The ManvilleNews, The' Franklin News-Record and theHirtsborough Beacon. Ads may be mailed orphoned in. The deadSne for new ads is 4 pan.Monday if they are to be property classified.Cancellations cannot be accepted after 4 p m onMonday. 'Too Late to Classify" ads will be ac-cepted until noon Tuesday.

IATES: A Classified Ad costs $4.00 for up to 4Snes for or» insertion, cc.rforigtriaay ordered, (nochanges). S2.00 additional for 2 consecutiveweeks or issues, the 3rd consecutive insertion is

with origin rder.Calfor

information oh the small charge for additionallineage. Ads may be displayed with white spacemargins and/or additional capital tetters at $4.50per inch. A special discount rate is available toadvertisers running; the same displayed classifiedad. for a mWmum of 13 consecutive weeks ordifferent displayed classified ads totaling 30 ormore inches per month with arrangements formonthly bafing. Box numbers are $1.00 extra perorder or per month.

TERMS: There is a SO* biffing charge if ad is notpaid' in advance. Personals, Situations Wanted,HousesrtrJng, Apartment Sublets, Wanted to Rentor Share and aft, out of area and moving ads arepayable with order. This newspaper is notresponsible for errors not corrected by the ad-

-immedjaterv following the first

TECHNICAL EDITORneeded until Dec. .1979 ontemporary assignment. Ex-perience in the use ofengineering terms is required.Call and come in immediately.Top rate no fee

J&J TEMPORARIES2936 Rt.l

Lawrenceville, N.J.609-883-5572

SECRETARY

EXECUTIVESECRETARY

invutnttflts &Planning Dept

We are looking for an individualwho has excellent typing andshorthand skills and good ap-titude in accounting. Respon-sibilities will includetelephonecommunications, co-rrespondence and. statisticaltyping and working with finan-cial reports. Previous financialexperience preferred.

We offer excellent benefits andcompetitive salary. Call or applyto:

NEW JERSEYNATIONAL BANK(MWhrtehaadRoad

Lawrmnvilte.NJ.0M4S(M9)M9-5771

Eqml Opportunity Employ*

LEGAL $10,600 CHORAL DIRECTOR —SECRETARY wanted to assume leadership

of East Windsor-HightstownCONGENIAL chorale. Conducting ex-

TOWN nerience & .training required.Applicants please call MarthaNelson, 609-655-3629 or CharlesGuenzel, 609-448-6603.

CLAIMS EXAMINER 12K

EAST BRUNSWICKTOWN

Are you a nitpicker? Largeinsurance company is in needof inside Claims Examiner.Only two years experience ininside claims and a desire toadvance will land the winningcandidate this spot. The rightperson will be thorough,detailed and able to followthrough. Is this you?

SRTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrest*) Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N J . 08540

(600)452-1122

MECHANIC WANTED —excellent pay & benefits. Alsoservice attendant wantedbetween 4 & 7 p.m. Apply inperson at Griggs CornerAmoco. 66 Witherspoon St.,Princeton 609-924-7892.

SUMMER PLAYGROUNDSTAFF — Arts & Crafts In-structors: $4.50 per hr.Counselors: $2.90 - $3.25 perhr. Send resume by May 10 to:East Windsor TWD. DeDt.Recreation & Parks, Ward St.,Hightstown, NJ 08520.

WAREHOUSE MANAGERMinimum 5 years experience.Background: supervising,traffic systems, nationaldistribution. Warehousingrugs and Broadloom.Couristan's new warehouse inCranbury, N.J. Full benefits.Salary open. Call Walter Westat 212-371-4200.

ToPlac«aClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

DRAFTSPERSONMECHANICAL

DESIGNERSmall Princeton processequipment supplier seekstalented individual for draftingposition. Candidate must haveextensive background inmechanical drafting with ex-perience in Process Vessels andASME Section 8 or API 620Codes most helpful.

Competitive salary withgenerous company paid fringebenefits. Respond:

PERSONNELP.O. BOX 2325

PRINCETON, N.J. 08540An Equd Opportunity Emptoy» WF

Princeton law firm wants asecretary with excellenttyping and steno skills to jointheir congenial staff. Legalexperience would be a plus toget you started in this position.This spot is yours, if you canhandle the hectic and diver-sified activities of this busyoffice.

Call TOWN today, andremember, never a fee to theapplicant at TOWN.

TownPersonnel

AgencyPrineeton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(6Q») 452-1122

ACCOUNTANT — ex-perienced senior with min.exp. of 3 yrs. for small cer-tified firm in Trenton area. Notravel, continuing educationand other benefits. Pleasesend resume to Box #12414 c/oThe Princeton Packet.

SECRETARY PART TIME —for busy office dealing withdiversified public in matters ofalumni & career services &church relations. Positionrequires excellent clerical &typing skills, inter-personalskills & working knowledge ofthe IBM Mag II equipment.For interview, call StevenSharp at Westminster ChoirCollege, 609-921-3201. Af-firmative Action Equal Op-portunity Employer.

EARN A GOOD INCOME —While you train for aprofessional career in Sales.Call Mr. Cohen, 609-298-5852.E.O.E. m/f.

TEMPS

Openings for all office skills.Excellent rates. No charge toyou.

BANNERBUSINESS ASSOC.228 Alexander St.

Princeton, N.J. 08540609-924-4194

SECRETARY - Princeton lawfirm has immediate openingfor a Secretary. Legal ex-perience preferable but notnecessary. Steno & typingrequired. Good benefits &pleasant working conditions.Call 609-924-0046.

GENERAL OFFICE WORK —full time. Pleasant workingconditions. In small but activeoffice. Person who is ex-perienced in general officeroutine, light typing, filing,telephone & bookkeeping. Adiversified job offering whichby no means would be boring.Salary negotiable. Apply inperson only, ask for Mrs.Godley, VoLk Tire Corp, 1010Spruce St., Trenton.

WANTED — experiencedwoman who can babysit our 2boys, 5 yrs. & 1%, 2 full daysper week. Our home. 201-359-2718.

RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST

Front desk position with busy ar-chitectural/engineering .firm. Must be capable ofhandling busy switchboard along with heavy typingload. Excellent typing skills a must

CUH2A45 State Road Princeton, N J .

609-921-6065

PLANT ENGINEERC a n d y P l a n t

Plant, engineer experience in total plant main-tenance: high pressure boners, refrigeration,electrical, ^air conditioning and production

. . Supervisory experience essential.Salary convnensurate with ability and experience.

Smd resume in confidence to: Box 02399,Princeton Pocket, 300 WHhenpoon St., Prtn-eeton; N.J. 01540.

GROUNDSMAN7W

Temporary full time positionopen now through the late fallto assist in grounds - land-scaping, maintenance and otherrelated duties. Greenhouse andnursery experience helpful.

' Apply Personnel Dept.(201)874-4000

CARRIER FOUNDATIONB£lNfrAra9)Oflr N*J« '

Equtf Opportunity Employ* M/F

WANTED — Males /. femaleswho have purchased a new carwithin the past 6 months toparticipate in a groupdiscussion. Will pay $15 foryour participation. For detailscall 609-921-3340 bet. 9 & 5, or466-0620 after 6 p.m., ask forMarsha.

ROOSEVELT P.T.A. —Summer Program in Arts &Crafts. Specialist needed.Send resumes to Box 242,Roosevelt, N.J. 08555.

SURROGATE MOTHER — tocare for children ofprofessional couple in BelleMead area. Housekeeping,live in preferred. Must drive,salary negotiable, paidholidays. Call 201-874-4608after 6 p.m.

PARTTIME CASHIER -10:30-2:30 weekdays only. Anattractive business cafeteriain Princeton Junction. Somehelp with the sandwichmaking before lunch hour.Call Mr. Goldenson at 609-799-2500.

DO YOU HAVEPOTENTIAL?

We're seeking a person withdemonstrated leadership abilityto function as first lineSupervisor. Duties would in-volve organization and workass ignmen ts , qua l i t yevaluation, coordinating ac-tivities and personal leadership.Specific related work ex-perience is secondary topersonal qualities and skillsobtained in volunteer as well aspaid work could be useful.College education preferred.Thisls^aVrull time position,occupying evening hours fronv,5 p.m. Salary and benefits areexcellent. Advancement planincludes understudying presentSupervisor for one year, thenmoving into Supervisorposition. Apply to Box 02419.

EqudOppe«n«ihy&i!ptov«r .

HELP WANTED — reliablemechanic wanted. Full-time.Weekly pay plus commission'and excellent benefits! Pleasephone 609-921-8510. Goodyear.

CLERK TYPIST — MunicipalCourt - Violations Bureau —position requires accuracy intyping, ability to deal withpeople a must; liberal fringe,benefits, 35 hour work week,position available im-mediately; salary depends onexperience.

For application contract:Office of the Administrator.Borough Hall, MonumentDrive, Princeton, or phone 609-924-3119.

BOROUGH OF PRINCETONAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

EMPLOYER

ACCOUNTANT - retailenvironment - full accountingknowledge necessary. EDPexperience helpful. Excellentemployee benefits, pleasesend resume to PrincetonUniversity Store, PO Box 31Princeton, NJ. 08540.

SALES — Experiencedequipment sales person to sellthe complete line of Fordindustrial utility tractors andequipment. Must be a hardworker, consciencious, andable to meet the public. Ex-cellent opportunity for growthwithin our company. Goodcompany benefits, salary pluscommission, car allowance andmore. Call 609-883-7360 9 a.m. -4 p.m. After 6 p.m. call 215-943-9505. Trenton Ford Tractor,Inc., US #1, Lawrenceville,N.J. .

CLERK/TYPIST — Princetonarea company . modernfacility, has an opening in theaccount dept. for a good typistwith an aptitude for figures.Good benefits including dentalinsurance and tuitionassistance. Please call Mrs.Pascale, 609-452-1300.

CLERKSTYPISTSSECRETARIESTRANSCRIBERS

We have immediateassignments in yourarea. Just call andregister with us. Toppay, Top Companies forTop-Notch Temporaries.Never a Fee.

REGISTER T O D A Y -WORK TOMORROW

SWIFT TEMPS609-882-0030609-586-5898

Interview hours: 9:30 -3:30

Wotch for our new officean equal opportunity employer

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR —with 5 yrs. administrativeexperience in health or socialservices with skills in proposalwriting & knowledge ofgovernment funding. Salarynegotiable. Send resume toMrs. Janet Stoltzfus, PlannedParenthood Association, 437E. State St., Trenton, N.J08608. No phone calls please.

CHILD CARE NEEDED — forpre-schooler half day & 6 yr.old after school. Sept. thruJune !79, '80. Must be in BelleMead or Skillman area,Montgomery Twp. your houseor mine. Call 201-874-3311.

MATURE — "responsibleenthusiastic person needed forpart time Summer job withPrinceton Street Theatre.Write 71 Fairfield Ave.,Lawrenceville, N.J. 08648 orcall 609-882-0646. If no answerkeep trying.

R E T I R E D ? S E M I -RETIRED? Live in anapartment? A condominium?Enjoy a 4O'x6O' plot in EastWindsor for your gardeninguse in exchange for othergardening services. Write fordetails and application. Send$5 to P.O. Box 165, Cranbury,N.J. 08512.

SECRETARY 11.5K

CLASSICALTOWN

If you are a detail orientedperson who enjoys working inan elegant atmosphere, TOWNhas the position for you. Goodtyping necessary, steno a plus.This company is noted for itsrapid advancement. Fullbenefits plus dental. ~ Don'twait -. register today. Yournew career can starttomorrow.

KSTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N J . 08540

(609) 452-1122

HOUSEKEEPER / COOK —mature person preferred.Live-in or out, must drive,have excellent references,enjoy children, good pay. 201-359-5000.

CAREER, JOB SEARCH 4 .EDUCATIONAL COUN-SELING — Testing & Resumeincluded. Dr. Michael L.Rosenthal. 609-737-2236.

EDITORIALEncyclopedia Projects

Princeton Publishing firm hasthe following positions im-mediately available for careeroriented individuals:

COPY EDITORSRequires 1-2 years previousrelated copy editing exp.

CAPTION WRITERSCandidates should have writingexp. plus subject knowledge offine arts or science.

All positions 'require someexposure or background withtrade, reference or textbooks.Both positions offer salary of$10,000 to $14,000 dependingon experience, and excellentbenefits.

Send resume to: Ms. DettreARETE PUBLISHING CO.

101 M h » fart tot

sn etjuil opportunity oinploysf

MAINTENANCE HELP WANTEDPart Time

DRIVER WANTEDPart Time

COULD BE ONE FULL TIME POSITION

The Princeton Packet is looking for one or twopeople to do daily light cleaning and weekly heavyoffice cleaning any time except weekdays between8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Approximately 20 hours a

Also needed is a driver for approximately 15 hours aweek to pick up mail and make small deliveries toour offices in neighboring communities.

If you are interested in either position or both pleasecall Jim Kilgore at 609-924-3244.

BEFORE YOU BUY

your new home, let theoerienced. licensed professionalengineers, at

PRINCETON HOME INSPECTIONSERVICE, INC.

evaluate the condition of yourprospective property from the

foundation to the attic.• Comprehensive written reports •

including cost estimatesfor major repairs.Call for our brochure.

609-921-3775105 GrMnway T«rrac* Princeton, NJ

Week of April 18-20,1979ClassifiedJtdoertising

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

FULL TIME — positionavailable this Summer withPrinceton Street Theatre.Must be 18 yrs. or older, write71 Fairfiefd Ave., Lawren-ceville, N.J. 08648 or call 609-882-0646, if no answer keeptrying. x

MIXOLOGIST — Full or partPl l at The

So.,

MIXOLOGISTtime. Please applyJolly Ox, Rt. 206H i l l b hJolly Ox,Hillsborough.

COOK — Full time position,experience necessary. Pleaseapply at The Jolly Ox, Rt. 206So., Hillsborough.

MECHANIC — experienced indiesel engine repair with abackground in hyarolics-Mustbe a good trouble shooter andable to make decisions. Musthave own hand tools. Exc.opportunity for a hard workerwho wants to advance. Goodcompany benefits, top wages,call 609-883-1660 9a.m. - 4p.m.After 6 p.m. call 215-943-9505.Trenton Ford Tractor, Inc.U.S. 1., Lawrenceville, N.J.

MACHINE DESIGNENGINEER

DESIGN TOWN

25K

Fire Subcode Official and FireInspector, Part-time, WestWindsor Township; $6.00/hr.,15 hours per week. RequiresNew Jersey certification as H-2. Includes review of buildingplans; fire prevention, in-spections and issuance ofvarious permits. Send resumeto Administrators office, P.O.Box 38, Princeton Jet., N.J.08550. E.O.E.

WAITER / WAITRESS —Must be 18, full or part timepositions available. No phonecalls, please. Apply at TheJolly Ox, Rt. 206 So.,Hillsborough.

LANDSCAPER LOOKING —for reliable person withdrivers license and somerelated experience. Diver-sified work. Good opportunityto move up. 609-924-8758, leavemessage- 443-6713 eves.

LIMOUSINE DRIVER — fulltime position, primarily af-ternoon & evening hoursavailable. Neat appearance &clean driving record. Must be21 yrs. or older. Full companybenefits. Must be familiarwith NYC & MetropolitanAirports. Call 609-924-0070 forappt.. .

SALES HELP — Like to workwith fine gourmet foods? Weneed experienced sales help. 5day week. Permanent work.No part time. Bon Appetit.609-924-7755.

INSURANCE RATER —personal & commercialautomobile lines, typingrequired, good benefits. CallMrs. Handell at 609-924-0250.

PART TIME FILING — assistour busy & dedicated file roompersonnel by filing after hoursfrom 4 to 8 p.m. Mon. - Fri.Benefits are avail. For info &appt. please call BarbaraGrant, 609-896-1921.

CLERK TYPISTS

WHERE ARE YOU?..

Our Blue Chip companies arelooking for temporary workersto do a variety of jobs.Register now. Pick up yourcheck the first week of work.Call Renee Dale, 609-452-1400.

SELECTIVETEMPORARIESMercer Mall, US1(nexttoK-Mart)Princeton, N.J.

CHEMICALENGINEER

20-23K

CHEM TOWN

Fortune 500 subsidiary issearching for a machine.design engineer with three tofive years experience withhigh speed machine ex-perience. Web handling wouldbe a plus. MechanicalEngineeirng Degree required.Remember, never a fee-withTOWN.

SRTownPersonnel,

Agency -Princeton ForresUl Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, NJ . 08540

(600)452-1112

WSI — for 7 week day campprogram. 609-924-9713".

NURSE — or experiencedattendant heeded by 24 yearold female quadraplegic formorning care, Mon-Fri from6am-7:30am or for. eveningcareSunday-Thurs. from 8pm-^10 or 10:30pm. Rocky Hill-Griggstownarea. 201-297-5902.

SALES

likere

If you are interested in thechallenge of retailing but don'tlike working long hours, we

re the job for youlDAY PART TIME

We are how seeking sales min-ded individuals for permanentday part time positions on thefollowing schedules:11 am - 5 pm 1:45 am - 5:45 pm

9:45 am - 5.00 pmMon.-Sat. (day off during theweek).

PART TIMEEVES./WEEKENDS

'Permanent evening , salespositions are available on thefollowing schedule: . 'Tues.-Thurs. 5:45 p.m. - 9:45 pm

Sat. 1:45 -9:45pmSun. 11:00 am-5:15 pm

These are excellent • positionsthat provide a source of add-d'rtional income for those in-dividuals interested in working •eves, and weekends. ,

We offer a good starting salary,liberal benefits and generousstore-wide discounts.

APPLY BERSONNEL

QUAKER BRIDGE MALLLawrenceville, NJ

Equal Opportunity Employee MJF

BUSPERSONS NEEDED —with experience for luncheonsat Lahieres Restaurant fromllam - 3pm. Call for interview'appointment, 609-921-2798.

EDITORIAL - Copy editor.Medical publications. Exp.preferred. Good knowledge ofgrammar, style & type specs.Int'l publishers in science &medicine. Full benefits. Exc.growth potential. Pleasantenvironment. Intellectualambience. Send resume &salary requirements to:Editor, PO Box 251, Princeton,NJ 08540.

POOL DIRECTOR — WSI.For 7 week day campprogram. 609-924-9713.

I N D U S T R I A L A R T STEACHER — must be cer-tified. For 7 week day campprogram. 609-924-9713.

DANCE INSTRUCTOR —must be certified. For 7 weekday camp program. 609-924-9713.

-SECRETARY — for N.J.doctor's office. 215-752-5619preferably after 6 pm.

GARDENING HELP WAN-TED — for clean-up & somemaintenance. No tools needed.609-921-2706 eves, wknds.

TYPISTCall or come in and comparenumbers with KELLY. Chancesare, we can increase your in-come and your job satisfactionthrough temporary assign-ments. Many of this area's topcompanies count on KELLY.You can too. Let's talk today. . -

Warren Plaza WestRte.l30,Bldg.B

Hightstown8904080

3131 Princeton PikeLtwreflcwille

896-1010

KELLY GIRL

Equal Opportunity Employw.M/F

'Motehing people with homes...ol over America'

ofNJ .REAL ESTATE MARKETING DIVISION

—LIKE THE MARINES, we're looking for a few goodmen to recruitbrokers.

if you're already a successful recruiter for anotherReal Estate Franchise, so much the better.

;: We've j o t the best brokeroriented progiams.' '•=.-If you ike being on a winning teamwhere^your .

talentsvvitlberecognizedgiveusacalk.. ; zf fiV'("

" V•^OUUMWCHHtFOUir

-1710,-/

Leading central New Jerseymanufacturer of chemical andmineral products is activelyseeking a chemical engineer.Successful candidate will havea BSEE with three fo fiveyears experience as achemical project engineer anda strong desire to advance.

SRTownPersonnel

Agency

WORD PROCESSOR — aposition for an experienced(2-3 yrs) typist who is lookingfor a more diversified iob, isavailable in our marketingdept. Typing skills of 60-65wpm are essential. Ex-perience with MT/ST or othersimilar word processingequipment would be helpful. Inaddition applicant should havean above average workingvocabulary. Excellent com-pany benefits. 35 hr. workweek in the Hightstown area.If you feel you are capable offilling these requirements:write to: Personnel Dept. P:O.Box71, Hightstown, N.J. 08520.An Equal Opportunity Em-ployer M/F.

TEACHER — MontessoriCertified. Experienced,creative, inovative. Salaryopen. Full and part time. 609-585-2080 or 609-882-8792.

DENTAL ASSISTANT —Private Secretary for multi-dentisfs practice. Must haveprofessional office skills,bookkeeping a plus. Call 609-392-5793.

WIRE PERSON, part time,hrs. flexible, prefer NASAcertification. 201-329-6000.

THE FIRST BAPTISTCHURCH OF HIGHTSTOWNis searching to hire a musicInstructor to • work withchildren and youth. Pleasesend your resume to Box 122,Hightstown, NJ 08520. If youhave questions call 609-448-0104.

Princeton Forrestal Center101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 06540

(609)452-1122

RN'S OR QUALIFIED LPN'S- part time; 3:30 pm -11 pm &11 pm - 7 am shifts. For in-terview contact Ad-ministrator, 609-395-0641Sunnyfield Nursing Home, 61Maplewood Ave, Cranbury,NJ 08512.

EXPERIENCEDSECRETARY - needed foroutstanding Real Estate firmserving -Princeton area.Typing & filing experiencerequired. Minimal stenohelpful. Please call 609-921-1700.

MAINTENANCE PERSON -for nursing facility. Must beexperienced in plumbing,electrical & carpentry. Goodcompany benefits. Onlyreliable person n e d l

py yreliable person need apply.Applegarth Care Center,Hightstown. 609-448-7036.

PBX OPERATOR

Busy console. Light typing. To$8000. Fee paid

BANNERBUSINESS ASSOC.228 Alexander St.

Princeton, N.J. 08540609-924-1194

BANKINGOFFICERS f$$

BANKINGTOWN

Several bright opportunitiesrecently available in ourexpanding banking depart-ment include:

V.P. Commercial Lending:Billion dollar background "incommercial lending - 30's plusCar.

Branch Manager: Operationalmanagement experience -high 20's low 30's

Trust Officer: Experienced,employee benefits a plus - low20's plus BONUS.

Business Development: Salesoriented - to low 20's

Money Room Supervisor:Growth position, no degreenecessary, bank experienceand a supervisory ability cando. Low 20's

Bank Accountant: Cash andcredit background - to 20K

Lead Teller: Supervisory,training ability - to 10K

These and others can be yoursat TOWN PERSONNEL,and remember, never a feeto the applicant at TOWN.

MAINTENANCE HELP — forPrinceton building. Ideal, forhusband and wife team. Somelight, some heavy work.Complete cleaning, includingrug and tile floors. Hours veryflexible but cannot be 9 to 5.Ideal for Weekend work. Fullcompany benefits (Blue Cross,Blue Shield, major medical,life insurance). Write Box02400, c/o The PrincetonPacket, with references.Please state salary needs.This is a full time job.

AMBULANCE DRIVERATTENDANT — Qualifiedonly. Full time, days, also parttime, 6-11 pm. Invalid CoachService. Call 609-392-2064 bet.9am & 3pm, Mon thru Fri. .

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT -Asst. pool Man. Ideal for Phy.Ed. teacher, recreationdirector, etc. A.L.S. desiredbut not necessary. Call 201-297-1255.

DENTAL ASSISTANT wantedfor full time position inModern East Windsor office.Experience preferred. SendResume to #0936 WHH, Box146, Hightstown, N.J. 08520.

WORK NOW FORTHAT SUMMER

VACATION!!

Secretaries, typists, clerks andindustrial for long and shortterm periods. Start workingright away.

MANPOWER INC.20 Nassau St.

MM21

ACCOUNTANTGENERAL

Must have knowledge of GIL.consolidations, SEC reporting,,corporate, state & federal taxes,and financial statements.Degree in accounting 8- 2 yearsexperience are required.

We offer an excellent startingsalary, full company benefits,and an opportunity to advance.

Send resume including salaryhistory to W J , Boyle, Per-sonnet'Mgr.

MSCMICROWAVE

SEMICONDUCTOR COW100 School Hows* Rood

SomsfMt,NiOM73An aqual opportunity «npioy«

COMMUNITYHEALTH

EDUCATORPart time position person ex-perienced in organizing and im-plementing preventive healtheducation program. Degree innursing or health educationrequired.

Apply Personnel Oept.1:30 to 4 p.m.

HUNTERDONMEDICAL CENTER

Rt. 31, Flamington, N. J.Equal Opportunity Emptoysr

Spoiled.Olsten Services has temporaryjobs that will spoil you.Top pay. -work when, where, you want.Benefits. No fee.^

olstenIndustrial Sarvicts

-OUTH BRUNSWICK: Rte.1(OppoataOtMrJonatl

Daily 103 pm, dosed Friday

NEW JERSEY JOB SERVICEM M * of Jobs

ROMMSVaURte.130&WobdsHeRd.K&6BM034 or 609-448-1063tVGtflSlWrn131 & Main St

HAMILTON 1¥VF.169VWrredAve.

609-3E&-8078

296EgBt>CroaeingRri."60MB333B9.

WONDER FEKSON — Ad-vertising Agency in Princetonarea requires top-notchsecretary to handle all ad-ministrative and accountingfunctions of a small' and at-tractive office. If you can workindependently, are reliable,flexible, capable, experienceddedicated and enthusiastic -we have a ground-floor op-portunity for you paying topdollar. The responsibilities arehigh, the pace-can be hectic,the quality of work deman-ding, soif you're looking for justa job, this position isn't foryou. If however, your lookingfor an exciting opporutnity,send your resume & salaryrequirements to P.O. Box 3137 *Princeton, N.J. 08540.

SECRETARY CLERKSTYPIST CLERK TYPISTSBOOKKEEPERS KPO'S

FRIENDLYTOWN

We know who we are

But we don't know

Whoyouare!

Why not -come in and getacquainted with Sue inPrinceton and Irene inP i s c a t a w a y . We have thenicest working relationshipswith our TEMPS. Our clientsrely on our judgement tosupply them with the best. Wecould not achieve this withoutYOU. So help us by coming inas soon as possible.

We can be so friendly...

SRTownTemps

SRTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609)452-1122

LICENSED REAL ESTATESALES ASSOCIATES — (andyou who want to becomelicensed) — We offer extrahigh commissions - up to 35%on listings & 25% on sales. Wealso offer a continuingprogram of in-office &classroom training plusnumerous other uniquemarketing aides to assure youa high income. For a con-fidential, personal interviewwith Mario J. Lombardo, call609-882-7269, or if no answer,609-882-3347.

INTERVIEWERS NEEDED -for central telephone facility.Part time day or eveninghours available. We will train.Call Total Research Corp., 609-921-8100.

PART TIME HELP WANTEDTO PERFORM officecleaning in East Windsor area.Late afternoons, eveningsMonday thru Friday. Call 201-846-9600 8 am to 5 pm. M-F.

Princeton Forreatal Carter101 Colkge Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(0») 453-1122

PART TIME SUPERVISOR —for East Millstone area, 3 - 4hrs. nightly. Call 201-526-7000,ask for Donna Ambrose.

RECEPTIONIST — desiredfor Real Estate — Insuranceoffice located in Princeton.Must be pleasant as jobrequires much public contact.Good typing skills a must. CallMiss Higgins, at 60932£040l.

WANTED - enterprisingpersons to run a potentiallylucrative swim club, snackbar, located in Bridgewaterarea. Persons must be able totake charge, order foodsupplies & supervise help. Thissituation can be on a Summerlease basis. Experiencedpersons only. Phone 201-725-2231 week of April 23rd.

LEASING AGENT - Full time.Light typing & pleasant phonemanner required. Congenialatmosphere. Please call 609-799-1611.

O P P O R T U N I T Y FORRELIABLE WOMAN -1 am apart ia l ly handicappedworking young woman. I willprovide a warm, loving homein Kendall Park, your ownroom, no expenses, modestsalary, weekends off. Call 609-924-3800, ext. 47 during regularworking hours. References.

RN's AND LPN's - Fulltime/ part time. 11-7:30 m/ fContact: Mrs. P. DeRisi,RN/ DNS 609-448-7036.

ALUMINUM SIDING AP-PLICATORS — Hightstownarea. Experienced only. Call201-928-3137.

Looking for a job?Try the Classified pages.

L O R Personnel Agency1101-B State Roitf, Princeton

609/921-4

OFFSET PRESS. Operator 9KMARKETING DIRECTOR . . 12KSECRETARY 12KADVERTISING MANAGER 13KINDUSTRIAL RELATIONS 13KDATA COMMUNICATIONS 1SKSECRETARY LEGAL . 1SKEE,Pro|ect 18KACCOUNTANT. Con 18KPROGRAMMER, Bnic 18KMARKETING. Tatoconununieation* » KSALES/Caning - 20KPLANT MANAGER. PipaOns 25KENGMEER,PVCMoMf)B 28KPROCESS ENGINEER. P i n * * 30KSOFTWARE. CM PI mining 36K

CARPENTERSTemporary Carpenters neededfor renovation of manufac-turing building. Good carpentryskills plus basic plumbing skillsrequired. Dependabilityessential. Referencesrequested.

J. Thomas Boyer

REFACELECTRONICS CORP.

OPTEL DIVISIONP.O. Box 2215

Princeton, N.J. 08540609452-9250

An Equal Opportunity Emptoyar

SECRETARYCUSTOMER SERVICEBe a good right handand be well rewardedYouil be wry w iMe in this bus; spot on the Customer Service staff of ourSales office in Pucatway. Handle and compose routine correspondence,answer phones, assist in taking orders fioni customers and answering theirquestions. You will also arrange appointments, meetings and travell o a w t i o w for Sales Manager and Sates personnel. You need good typingand steno skHts, poise, and prenous office experience.

We praide attnetne salary and fine benefits include life, tosprtaliation,major medical insurance, dental plan, pension plan, U holidays and lowcost cafeteria. For interriew, call

Kathnm Smith (201) 685-2363

AMERICAN HOECHST CORPORATION

PART TIMEHOUSEKEEPING — joir ourstaff of mature dedicatedpersonnel who clean & makeour insurance office ready forthe next day. Hrs: 4 to 8 p.m.Monday thru Friday. Benefitsare available. For information& appt. please call BarbaraGrant, at 609-896-1921.

Clerk Typist $135

A GREAT START

ACCOUNTANT Teens

TEACHERS: for September1979 - Instrumental MusicTeacher, Grs. 4-12, Specialistin strings, competence in otherinstruments desirable .Requirements: N.J. cer-tification as Teacher of Music.Teacher of the Handicapped.Grs. 7-12. To teach in ResourceRoom. Requirements: N.J.certification as Teacher ofHandicapped, experiencedesirable. CIE Coordinator,Grs. 11-12. Requirements:Must be eligible for or holdN.J. certification as CIETeacher/ Coordinator. Allpositions - coaching ex-perience desirable. For Ap-tlication: Dr. Malcolm D.

Ivans, Superintendent,M o n t g o m e r y T o w n s h i pSchools, Box 147B, Skillman,N.J. 08558 Phone: (201) 874-5200. An Equal OpportunityEmployer - (M/ F).

To Place aClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

SUPERVISORY TOWN

Looking for that first super-visory spot on your ladder tosuccess? Tremendous ad-vancement potential for arecent accounting or financegrad with an understanding ofgeneral accounting controlsand financial estimatingprocedures. This position mustbe filled and you could be theone. Call TOWN PERSONNELtoday and remember never afee to the applicant at TOWN.

SRTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609) 492-1122

CHURCH CHOIR .DIRECTOR— Must be familiar with anduse Modern as well asTraditional Church music,play Guitar or other suchinstrument, lead theCongregation's singingweekly. (Sept - June) sendresume to 1st PresbyterianChurch, 320 N. Main St.,Hightstown, NJ. Att. WorshipComm.

SEEKING LIVE-IN com-panion for elderly womanartist - writer in good health atOld Princeton House withhousekeeper - cook.Miscellaneous secretarialskills desired. 609-924-1985.

Growth potential for goodtyping skills (45 wpm). This isa lovely spot. Top benefits:Never a fee. Call 609-452-1400.

SELECTIVEPERSONNEL

Mercer Mall, US #1(nexttoK-Mart)Princeton, N.J.

PART TIME PROOFREADER - Needed for qualitycontrol on psychologicalevaluation reports. CallCaroline Hingher before 1 pm.609424-3800.

CHEMICAL OPERATOR -night shift, plant in SouthBrunswick, full company paidbenefits. Call 201-329-4037.

WANTED — a live-inhousekeeper, May 15 to Sept.15. Two elderly people. Refs.Drivers license. 609-737-1209.

SALESPERSON WANTED -in the interesting field of RealEstate/Experience preferredbut not essential. STULTSREALTY Co., 37 N. Main St.,Cranbury 609-359-0444.

SALES PERSON WANTED -full time, part time, evenings.Childrens speciality store.Good salary. Immediateopenings. ({09-438-2670.

SECRETARY FULL TIME &Good benefits & workingconditions. 35 hr. week. Exc.typing skills required. Stenopreferred. Apply in writingwith work experience to Mr.Bruce D. Newman, RutgersUniversity Foundation, 191College Ave., New " unswick,NJ 08903.

SECRETARIAL/ CLERICAL- Entry level position forconsulting firm. Competitivesalary, exc. fringe benefits.Call Caroline Hingner before 1pm. 609-924-3800.

MEN & WOMEN - earn moneyfor your opinions. Call TotalResearch Corp. 609-921-9534,921-9507 or 921-9550.

SYSTEM SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENTAT A D R . . .

System software development at ADR is not system programming. You won't apply endless F.IFs,move data sets around, write exit routines or the sixteenth version of the charge-back report.

If you are tired of being a caretaker and want the challenge of being a software developer, we want totalk to you. :

ADR is the »1 software products company in the world. We are large enough to be stable and re-spected, small enough to be informal—with room for personal recognition and professional advance-ment. Our attractive Princeton, N.J., location offers a quiet run) environment within easy reach ofboth New York City and Philadelphia.

We arc currently embarking on several new projects to develop the software systems of the 1980s.The result is an immediate need for a variety of talented data processing professionals from supportspecialists to senior system analysts. Call us collect in Princeton at 609/921-8550 if you have e x p erience in any of the following areas:

• Assembly language and OSWork on ROSCOE, our online program development system for OS. Work is in progress or plan-ned in 1) secure operating environments; 2) problem-solving, interactive languages; 3) enhancedman/machine interface; 4) distributed processing. Requires several years of Assembly languageexperience. Call Alan Polk.

• DOS/VS software developmentAssist in the design and implementation of performance measurement tools for DOS/VS. RequiresAssembly language and knowledge of DOS/VS internals. Familiarity with performance measure-ment helpful. Minimum two year's experience and/or college degree preferred. Call Philip J. Berg.

• Online systems and display terminalsAssist in the design and implementation of an'online program development/generation system.Requires familiarity with commercial applications, data base concepts and language processors(compilers, interpreters, and query languages). Programming experience with display terminalsand/or a CS degree preferred. Call Adam Rin.

• Assembly language, MVS and VSAMAssist in the design and implementation of a source management system for online and batchaccess. Requires several years of Assembly language experience and familiarity with VSAM andMVS internals. Knowledge of data base concepts and/or a CS degree preferred. Call Ralph V. J.Lanni.

SUPPORT POSITIONS ALSO AVAILABLE

We are also looking for talented people to fill a variety of support and documentation positions.Please call Ed Smith, Personnel Director, for more information on any of these openings.

Technical Support Specialists to work on:• MetaCOBOL

Train new customers in the use of our generalized pre-compUer for COBOL applications develop-ment and maintenance. Provide telephone and on-site technical support. Requires experience withCOBOL programming and commercial business applications. Experience with structured program-ming methods, data base applications and Assembly language preferred. Good communicationskills essential. Traveling required.

• The LIBRARIANAssist customers in the use of our source program management system. With the developmentstaff, take part in the analysis and solution of reported problems. Requires experience .withDOS/VS Assembly language and knowledge of DOS/VS JCL and POWER/VS JECL.

• LOOK• Aid customers and ADR field representatives in the use of our performance measurement product

line. Good communication skills essential. Some familiarity with OS and/or DOS internals highlydesirable. Light travel.

Product Specialist for MetaCOBOLPresent the MetaCOBOL Product Group to new prospects. Requires COBOL programming andcommercial applications experience. Good communication skills essential. Traveling required.

Technical WritersWe have openings at all levels for writers and editors to research and write both internal and end-user documentation. Requires English or Journalism degree and/or previous technical writing ordata processing experience. COBOL programming experience preferred.

Call ADR collect at 609/921-8650 or sand your mu im to:Director, Software Products Division

•;: i

APPLIED DATA RESEARCHRoutB 206 Ctntmv CN-8

Princeton, New Jtrsty 06540

An equal opportunity employer m/T/hAr

Classified AdvertisingWeek of April 18 - 20,1979

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

ACCOUNTINGCLERK

OPPORTUNITY TOWN

I f '• '

If Mr. Rabbit has passed youby, don't let Mr. Opportunitydo the same. Golden op-portunity to join a new com-pany in their AccountingDepartment. Will be trained tohandle various accountingfunctions, process some keyentry, ana general posting.Minimum one year ex-perience, any college a plus.Come to TOWN for your ex-clusive interview.

TownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609)452-1122

DESIGNER TRAINEE —needed for gourmethousewares retail shop. Carrequired. 609-452-2400.

NURSING — RN, 11-7 shift,part time. 3-4 nights per week.No Sundays: Exc. salary &good working conditions. CallPrinceton Nursing Home,Director of nursing, 609-924-9000 Weekdays, 9-4. '

AUTO PARTS — counterperson, experience with Fordor Lincoln - " Mercurypreferred. Valid driver'slicense a must. Call PartsMgr.,' for appt. HamiltonLincoln-Mercury, 609-587-2100.

MOTHER'S HELPER — 2-8pm. must drive, 4 youngchildren, must be pleasant.Morning-drive child to school7:45am. 609-921-0199.

COOK — full time, year roundemployment. Good workingconditions & salary. Call Mr.Smith. 609-466-3000.

SECURITY SPECIALISTS

Full time and Part timepositions available with ahexpanding young firm. Goodcharacter and backgroundnecessary to qualify. Thosewho show dedication and in-terest will enter the in-vestigative field. Benefitsavailable. Contact: Con-tinental Independent Security609-443-5451 for interview.

. I9-I9.5K PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR..— for machining andassembly operations. Maketools set-ups and smallquantity prototypes. Day shift.Company paid benefits. A. M.Gatti, Inc., 524 Tindall Ave.,Trenton, NJ 08610. 609-396-1577.

LAB TECHNICIAN MT/MLP— Full and part, time, tem-porary • and permanentpositions available in activeautomated lab of 375 bedteaching hospital. Competitivesalary program. PersonnelDept., Helene Fuld MedicalCenter 750 Brunswick Ave.,Trenton, N.J. i 609-396-6391.Equal Opportunity Employer.

DISHWASHER & SANDWICHPERSON — all day work, noweekends. Good startingsalary, fringe benefits. Call609-452-2000, ext. 220.

JANITORIAL PART TIME —evening help wanted to per-form office cleaning & spraybuffing. Manville area. Call201-846-9600 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.Mon. thru Fri.

GAL/GUY FRIDAY —Division of Fortune 500company seeking individualwhose duties are to includekeypunching, general ac-counting (cash receipts,disbursements, bank rec's,filing). Hrs. 8:30 to 5. Com-petitive salary, liberalbenefits. Call Howard. 609-799-1140.

DENTAL1 ASSISTANT —Princeton. Experienced. Forchairside assistance, X-Rayand some laboratory duties.Excellent hours, salary open.Send resume toBox# 02410c/ oPrinceton Packet.

SECRETARIES

With or without steno. Severalopenings. To $185. Fee paid.

BANNERBUSINESS ASSOC.228 Alexander St.

Princeton, N.J. 08540609-924-4194'

NEW RESTAURANT — needshelp. Waiters, waitresses,bartenders, kitchen help. Fulltime only. Only experiencedpersons need apply. Callweekdays, 9-12, 609-466-1700.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT -Swim team coach. 8 wks. Areaswim club. 201-297-1255.

OPERATOR — Forproduction & assembly ofsmall instrument parts. Fulltime day shift, dean plant.Hamilton Twp. Company paidbenefits. Write work ex-perience Box #02411, c/oPrinceton Packet.

PART TIME CLERK TYPIST-r- Diversified duties in busysales office. Pjeasantsurroundings in Princetonarea. Hours: 10-3. Call 609-452-1500.

HOUSEKEEPER — 1 day aweek. Reliable, own tran-sportation. 609-448-0191.

SECRETARY / TYPIST —Intelligent self starter for busysales office. Diversifiedduties. Pleasant surroundingsin Princeton area. Call 609-452-1500.

DRAFTING CLERK

Entry level position. Dutiesinclude post- records, fileengineering drawings and"reproduce drawings on BlueRay machines. Some typingrequired.

W e offer educat ionalassistance, paid hospitalization.Major Medical, retirementprogram. Life insurance, regularreviews and more. Call BarbaraScarano (609) 452-21.11.

PARCPRINCETON APPLIED RESEARCH

Equal Opportunity Employer NUF

Applied Data R*i*arch, Inc.(ADR), t h * world's old«it andlargest Independent softwarefirm Is continuing to expandIts headquarter staff and Isseeking to fill a number ofnew positions.

All full time employees areeligible to participate in thecompany's somprghei.sivebenefits which include medicalsurgical, life insurance, dental,long term disability, educationalassitai ce, retirement plan,vacati in, holidays and paid sickleave. • ,

The following opportunitY isavailable to qualified ind<v.dual.

SENIOR CLERK TYPIST - Prepareforeign notices to represen-tatives - initiate letters tocustomers - good typist, 60wpm or more - prefer someonewith business experience.

Apply" toJPersonnel Director."Rt. 206 4 miles outside of Prin-ceton 921-8550.

ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANT

J13.5K

PRESIDENT TOWN

Exclusively yours at TOWNPERSONNEL. Every once ina while the request for a trulyadministrative and privatesecretary rolled into one isneeded. This is it!

The successful candidate musthave a minimum of five yearsexperience in Corporate level.Marvelous skills 70/100. Anycollege a plus. Ability toassume lots of responsibility.Come to TOWN for yourpersonal interview.

RKTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N J . 06540

(600)432-1122

HOUSEKEEPER — Parttime, weekendsi 7-3:30. Noexperience necessary. Willtrain for nursing home inHightstown. Call Mon. thruFn., 9-3; 609-448-7036.

MEN & WOMEN FULL TIME— exrjanding company nowhas several openings in itsset-up display & managementtrainee department. Earningsto $6/per hr. No experiencenecessary. Car required. Forappt. & interview call 609-921-0404.

MATURE PERSON — to dominor repairs & somedetailing of used cars. Neatappearance & mechanicalability a must. Workingdirectly for Sales Manager.Hours 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. Mpn-Fri. For appt. call 609-587-2100,ask for K. Irwin or L. Mc-Chesney. Hamilton Lincoln -Mercury.

CLERICAL OPENINGS — wehave 2 immediateavailable in the followingfields:

SECRETAftY — 1 to 2 yearsexperience, typing accuratelyat 60 wpm & shorthand at 80wpm.

CLERK — distributing mail,xeroxing, & relieving swit-chboard operator.

Please call or send resume inconfidence to: PersonnelDept. 609421-9103.

INGERSOLLRANDRESEARCHP.O. Box 301

Princeton, N.J. 08540An Equal Opportunity

Employer M/F

SERVICE ADVISOR — im-port automobile dealership inPrinceton has an immediateopening for a service advisor.Salary commensurate withability, liberal benefits. Forinterview, call Z & W En-terprises, Princeton, 609-924-9330. V

WANTED — experiencedbackhoe operator, preferablyFord or International. Callafter 6 p.m. 609-466-3258 or 466-3677.

OFFICE MGR. -SEC-forsmall, but growing - nationalreal estate marketing firm'spleasant office in the village ofRocky Hill. Must have goodtyping skills, pleasanttelephone voice and be able towork with minimum super-vision. Steno a plus, but notessential. Salary com-mensurate with experience.Call Horse Farms of America,Inc. 609421-1100.

Sr. Programmer

BASIC

I20K+ REC./TYP1ST $160

v Men-WomenWe have a choice ofNew options and Armyopportunities. Find butabout it today. U. S. Ar-my Reserve, SergeantJacobsen and U. S. Ar-my Sergeant Davis. Seeus: 610 Hamilton St.,Somerset. Phone 247-2262 or 722-0660.

TELLERSVisit the bank that ended

"BANKER'S HOURS"OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, April 21,1979Join Franklin State Bank where experienced tellers can enjoy a flexible work schedulethat permits varied days and hours.

We have immediate opportunities for tellers in:

SOMERSET AREAKINGSTON AREAHIGHLAND PARK AREABOUND BROOK AREA

If you have previous teller or cashier experience, you can start with an excellent salary(starting salaries. $146-$185) phis outstanding benefits and advancement potentialinto other bank areas.

Can us today to tot us know you'll be joining us for coffee and donuisand to discussyour career on April 21.1979at201-74&6141 or 201-74&6144. If you cannot meetwith us at our Open House on April 21 , can our Personnel Department any weekdayto arrange an appointment

(FRANKLINSI

re.*ySIAEB

COfp.

Soownat, N J . OM73

Bookkeeper $10,800

GROWTHOPPORTUNITY

Two years bookkeepingassistant or equivalent ex-perience plus desire to growwith company. AH benefits,plus more. Never a fee. Call609-452-1400.

SELECTIVEPERSONNEL

Mercer Mall, US #1(nexttoK-Mart)Princeton, N.J.

PROGRAMMMER —. Projectmanagers needed for CentralNew Jersey firm. Large scaledesign and implementation.Start $26,000. Fee Paid. CallPat Carrol, SWIFT PER-SONNEL, 690 Whitehead Rd.,609-989-7200.

DEPENDABLE YOUNGMAN - to ride 'bike aroundtown & deliver food. Bike issupplied. $2.50 per hr. plustips. 11:30 - 4:30, 5 days perweek. Apply in person.Hudibras Restaurant, 138Nassau St. Princeton.

CLERK TYPIST — Time for achange? If so, this low keyed,low pressure spot may be justwhat you're looking for. Start$140 wk. Fee Paid. Call JackieSmith, SWIFT PERSONNEL,690 Whitehead Rd., 609-989-7200.

WANTEDSTRAIGHT TRUCK

DRIVERS

Thorough knowledge of NewJersey a must. Able to peddle10 to 20 steps a day. Call Mr.Frankfort at 609-443-5500between 9 and 5. ,

P.O. Box 81720 NASSAU ST., SUITE 207

PRINCETON609-924-8064

CALL LINDA

ANALYST — Measurementstudies. F/P To 14KBOOKKEEPER — F/C, Part-time, Hryl 4.00BOOKKEEPER — F/C Ac-counting bkgnd a + , F/P To«4K •BOOKKEEPER—2^ears exp.F/P to 9KCLERK-TYPIST — 50-60WPM, F / P To 8.5KCOMPUTER OPERATOR —IBM DOS/VS or Burroughs,F/P9.5KSECRETARY — Steno reg.,F/PTO9.6K

CALL LOU:

DRAFTPERSON/ DESIGN-ER— machine design, F/P To18KELECTRICAL/ TESTERS —tech school or service, F/P To12KENGINEER/DESIGN — EE,F/P To 17KENGINEER/ PROJECT —BSEE Machine modification,F/P To 18KENGINEER/ PROJECT —BSEE Dust Control a+, F/PTo25KSALES/COMPUTOR —Medicial or time sharing, F/PTo 20KSALES/OUTSIDE — Tech orbusiness bckgnd, From 14KSALES/ OUTSIDE — Collegea + , OPEN

SECERTARY

No shorthand, good typing,excellent organizational skills.People oriented. Busy office.Self-starter, salary com-mensurate with experience.Front office at: BANNERBUSINESS ASSOCIATES 228Alexander St., Princeton,08540.609-924-4194.

SECRETARY — needed forour Lawrenceville facility.Good typing & steno skills arerequired. 1-2 years relatedexperience in purchasing.Knowledge of chemical ter-minology a plus. We offer anexcellent starting salary & agood benefits package. Forfurther information contact:Carol Morgan, E. R. Squibb &Sons, Inc. Princeton, NJ.08540. Phone 609-921-4400. AnEqual Opportunity Employer.M/F.

ACCOUNTANT — Greatbenefits and advancementpotential for generalist in alocal manufacturing firm.Start $12,000. Fee Paid. CallPat Carrol, SWIFT PER-SONNEL, 690 Whitehead Rd.,609-989-7200.

To Place aClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

DEC equipment experience,RSX-ll preferred. Businessapplications! Minimum twoyears experience. Excitingcompany with unlimitedgrowth potential. All benefits.Never a fee. Call in con-fidence. 609-452-1400.

SELECTIVEPERSONNEL

Mercer Mall, US #1(nexttoK-Mart)Princeton, N.J.

GENERAL MAINTENANCE— any past experience ingeneral maintenance orground maintenance a plus.Ideal spot for semi-retiredindividual. 40 hour week, 7a.m. to 3:30 p.m. all companyb e n e f i t s . HOUGHTON-MIFFLIN, 609-466-1950. EqualOpportunity Employer.

SECRETARY PART TIME —Hightstown - Jamesburg area.Company desires individualfor general office work, 3 daysper week. Days & hoursflexible. Contact Mrs. Dyer,9am-4phl. 609-655-2121.

NEEDED—Part time help, 8-12. To clean horse stalls,groom & other stable duties.Must like horses. 609-466-1383.

EXPERIENCED GROOMWANTED — for top Sad-dlebred Show stable. Ex-cellent facilities. Goodbenefits. Call Glenburn ValleyFarm, Princeton, N.J. 201-359-8356 after 8 p.m.

SWITCHBOARD OPERA-TOR, permanent, part/full time. Days, even-ings, .small Nassau St.office. 609-921-0400.

SALES CLERK — for photobooth in Kingston. 'M W F 3-8p.m. And Montgomery Tues,Th, & Sat. 2:30 - 7 p.m. 609-924-3492.

DENTAL HYGIENIST - parttime, in a prevention oriented

'office. 609-448-6300.

FOR GENERAL HAN-DYWORK - maintenance ofcommercial properties, snxiwremoval, painting and basiccarpentry. Guaranteed moneyand work Weekly. Hours areflexible — perfect for personwith free time-blocks. Call JoAnn at Rendall-Cook &Company, 609-924-0322.References are required.

SECRETARY—Are you readyfor advancement? Top areacorporation has immediateopening. Fantastic benefits.Start $180 wk. Fee Paid. CallJackie Smith, SWIFT PER-SONNEL, 690 Whitehead Rd.,609-989-7200.

LOCALTOWN

MEDICALTECHNOLOGISTS

PART TIME

Every other weekend. Prefersomeone with ASCP. Excellentworking conditions. Fringebenefits available.

Apply Personnel Dept(201)8744000

CARRIER FOUNDATIONMI*MMd,NJ.

Equd Opportunity Employ. M/F

HOME SALESNo Investment

Wholesale electronics firmlooking for husband and wifeteam to sell from own home.Excellent opportunity tosupplement your income. Noinvestment required. Toarrange a confidential interviewin your area, please call Mr.Hoaglandat:

201-469-1122

MECHANICTo maintain small fleet ofvehicles as well as lawnmowing and related equipmentand other duties as required.Full benefits package includinggroup health and life insurance,pension plan, vacation and sicktime.

Call Personnel Dept(201)874-4000

CARRIER FOUNDATION

-Fqn«l Of | MUtunHy temloyir

Just a short ride down U.S. lwill take you to your job. Aworking knowledge of officeprocedures and good typingskills will make you thewinning candidate. Thisgrowing company offers fullBenefits and a very pleasantenvironment. Don't hesitate,take that ride to TOWN today.

PI* TownPersonnel

Marjorie M. Halliday

PRINCETONEMPLOYMENT

AGENCYSpecializing in

Temporary HelpPermanent Placements in

Secretarial, ClericalExecutive, EDP and

Technical352 Nassau St., Princeton

(60?) 924-9134

RESEARCH TECHNICIANEntry L«v«l Position with

Growing Social ft Mark«t Research Co.Need reliable and concientious personwith good verbal and quantitative skills forwide variety of clerical and research ac-tivities. Good opportunity to learn basics ofsurvey research. Applicants must have atleast two years of college. Please writeimmediately describing your educationand work experience to:

Ms. Charlotte SlidbrRESPONSE ANALYSIS CORP.

P.O. Box 158 Princeton, NJ 08540

-t, . . i

NURSESProgressive, central N.J.psychiatric hospital pleasantrysituated in campus-fike settinghas the following nursingpositions available:

UN'SFUUTIME

a t o l l IPART TIME

7-3 end 3-11 end 11-7Wa orTar cornpetftfve salaries,excellent fringe benefits andpleasant working conditions.

CaiParaonnelDept(201)8744000

CARRIER FOUNDATION

BABYSITTER — maturewoman to care for infant, myhome, 8:30 - 5:30 p.m. Mon-Fri. Must have own trans. &refs. 609-924-4500, 9am-5pm.

PART TIME BOOKKEEPER— Princeton. Full charge thrutrial balance, 1-2 days perweek. 609-924-4500.

PART TIME CLERK TYPIST— Princeton. 2-5 pm daily.Good typing required. 609-924-4500.

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

[ 101 College Road EastPrinceton, N J . 08540

(609) 432-1122

tCH ASSISTANT — APrinceton firm has a positionfor a person with research anddata processing skills. Jobincludes preparation andtabulation of data, statisticalanalysis J and generalresearch tasks. Individualshould have the ability to workwith numbers, ability toorganize own time and bewilling to accept projectresponsibilites. Excellentworking conditions, salarycommensurate with ex-perience, send resume andsalary requirements^to Box02409 c/o The PrincetonPacket.

PROOFREADER — parttime, experienced, medicalterms, knowledge of typespecs helpful. Call 609-924-6628&5pm

HOUSEKEEPER — ,cooking, serving, cleaninghouse, doing laundry, cook &serve at parties & socialgatherings. Sal. $133.40 perweek plus free room & board,1 yr. exp. req'd. Call 609-921-1468.

PROGRAMMERS — Groundfloor opportunity. Excellentadvancement posibilities andbenefits. COBXHL or PL/1.Start $i7,000. Fee Paid. CallPat Carrol, SWIFT PER-SONNEL, 690 Whitehead Rd.,609-989-7200.

6 » 1 Opportune CiiMu>«

KEYPUNCHOPERATOR

FUUTIME

Must have minimum 6 mos.exp. using IBM System 3-5496.Excellent benefits.

Apply Personnel Dept(201)874-4000

CARRIER FOUNDATIONMkNUod.NJ

Equal Opportunity Employ* M/W

SECRETARIES

KELLYHAS THE

ASSIGNMENTSidSc rieehaveaExperie

wide range of temporaryassignment^ available. Sup-plement your income andmaintain your business sWBs.

OUR EMPLOYEESGETTOPPAY

Mum PU& WntRte.l30,HdtB

890-S08Q

3131 Priacttoa PfeLnmocsww

196-1010

KELLY GIRLleffaftj!

EqwtOpponunkyEmplotw.l

SUMMER INTERN — U.S.Tennis AssociationEducation & ResearchCenter has opening forresearch writer. Experienceon college newspaper orsimilar work important.

.Should have strongbackground in tennis as wellas writing ability. Possibilityof permanent position in Fallfor qualified person. Sendresume to U.S.T.A. Education& Research Center. 729Alexander Rd., Princeton, N.J.08540. Or call 609-452-2580.

EXPERIENCED truck bodymounting person. Must knowhydrolics and welding. Callbetween 9-4. 201-297-1101.

ADVERTISING ACCOUNTEXECUTIVES & COPYCONTACTS — Prominent fullservice ads / PR agency inPrinceton N.J. needsprofessionals with industrialexperience. Portfolio should

1 exhibit creativity & ex-perience with ads, mailers,public relations & collateral.We are a 15 million dollar shopin business for 20 years. Weneed people to manage ourclients & provide copy contactservices. Our staff has beendeveloped from the best adagencies in N.Y. Princeton isone of Americas top 10 towns.Jog to work. Play tennisduring lunch hours. Get homein 5 minutes. Excellentfinancial arrangements plusincentive. Resume and salariesto Mort Barish, Mort BarishAssociates, 1101 State Rd.,Bldg. E. Princeton, NJ. 08540.

AVO'N."BE YOUR OWN BOSS! ~

•Run your own successfulbusiness as an AVONrepresentative. Sell during thehours you want. The more yousell, the more money you earn.Sound good? Call 609-443-5764,609-499-1729, 609-737-2922 or,201-359-1535.

FIELD SERVICE and in-stallation. Expanding worldwide business has createdopenings for people withelectrical-mechanical ap-titude. Good personality anddesire to travel. Compensationand benefit package will bediscussed at interviews. CallJim Harris at 609-737-1400.Otto Niederer Son Inc.,Pennington, N.J. AutomationEngineers for the egg handlingindustry.

PERSON NEEDED — to actas companion/assistant toperson around 30 undergoingmedical - surgical proceduresover the next few months.Nursing skills not needed. Jobis mainly to assist duringafternoons with cookingmeals, light housekeeping,errands and occasionaltransportation. Location 1bdrm apt. near Quaker BridgeMall/Mercer College. Prefersomeone around 30 if possible.Age, etc. not as important asfinding adequate person assoon as possible. Call 609-924-3727 ext. A-31 or 890-8997.

£ ' '_CLERK TYPIST - Ex-panding Company in EastWindsor Area seeks ex-perienced clerk typist, ex-cellent benefits, call Mr. Giel609-443-6817 for appointment.

LADIES-EARN CASH —make house parties forchildrens wear. 609-448-2189.

MOTHER'S HELPER — live-in or out. Must drive, 4 youngchildren, must be pleasant.Wanted immediately. 609-921-0199.

ATTENDANT — men's lockerroom, full time, year roundemployment. Experiencepreferred. Call Mr. Smith at609-466-3000..

CREDIT — Step up to in-dustrial level. One to twoyears D & B reportbackground. Start $11,000. FeePaid. Call Pat Carrol. SWIFTPERSONNEL, 690 WhiteheadRd., 609-989-7200.

SECRETARY — Exceptionalopportunity for good Jr.Secretary to advance toexecutive level. National firm.Top benefits including dentalprogram.Start$9620. Fee Paid.Call Jackie Smith, SWIFTPERSONNEL, 690 WhiteheadRd., 609-989-7200.

LABORERS, PIPELAYERSand helpers • for sewer in-stallations. Must have driverslicense. Steady work. Call:(201) 922-3232. ,

SECRETARY — N.J. JusticeComplex, Trenton area. Stenotyping, filing and generaloffice duties. Call 609-392-1515.Terminal construction Cor-poration. Equal Opportunityemployer.

EXECUTIVESECRETARY 14K

EXECUTIVETOWN

Are you an executivesecretary. with at least fiveyears executive level ex-perience? The winning can-didate will have excellenttyping and shorthand skills, aprofessional manner andability to work-on her own. Ifyou have these qualificationsplus an assertive, adaptablepersonality you can land thistop notch position.

TownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forreaial Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N J . 08540

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PROGRAMMERS — Becomepart of a growingorganization! Top salary andbenefits plus bonus. OS system360/370. In-house trainingAssembler language. Start$20,000. Fee Paid. Call PatCarrol, SWIFT PERSONNEL,690 Whitehead Rd., 609-989-7200.

TYPIST/RECEPTIONIST

For small busy medicalmanufacturing office, 60 wpmrequired, dictation capability aplus, good phone personality anecessity. Need dependableworker interested in a careerposition. Business schoolgraduate or one-year offfice ex-perience required. Call between10 am and 3 pm for interviewappointment. 609-655-2500,ask for Mrs. Taylor.

COBELABORATORIES, INC.

Cranburf, HI .

SECRETARYexpanding educationalpublisher in Princeton, N.J.seeking secretary to assistexecutive assistant Dutiesinclude assistance in handlingof travel arrangements, ex-pense account maintenance,correspondence and filing.Good typing required. Salarycommensurate with ability andexperience. Please call 609-896-1411.

LIBRARY ASSISTANTPART TIME

Provides clerical assistance, including light typing in a specialcollection section of the library. AFTERNOONS. MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY.

APPLY PERSONNEL SERVICESCUO HALL OR CALL

FOR AN APPLICATION

(609)452-6130 ,

Princeton UniversityS' PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY O8S4O

BILINGUALSECRETARYCapitalize on your 2 lanfuafw-German and English

Mate German and English pay off handsomely with setf-satjsfjctjon plus financial rewards when you work with this

.outstanding corporation - a research-minded leader inPharmaceuticals.

Responsibilities pow as your ability does, «*en you take onand handle the translation of technical and feneralcorrespondence. You can orpnize jour own work, take theinitiathe-and you"H get promoted when you're ready.

Duties call for excellent typing and steno skills, plus somepreriqus bilinfital experience.

Attnctiw salary plus life, hospital and major medical i«-swanee,. dental and pension plans - eten t low cost

j cafeteria, for inteniew, callKattryn Smith (201) 685-23W

AMERICAKHOECHESTCORP.

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01

TIME OFF APRIL 18-24,1979

KALEIDOSCOPELecture to highlight 'mystery gems'

PRINCETON — A circlet of uncut stones,enamels and gold which has been controversialboth politically and artistically will be thesubject of an illustrated lecture at PrincetonUniversity on Tuesday, April 24. Patrick J.Kelleher, former director of the PrincetonUniversity Art Museum, will discuss "The HolyCrown of Hungary: Enduring Symbol of aPeople" at 4:30 p.m. in McCorinick 101. Thelecture,-sponsored by the University Chapel, isopen to the public and free of charge.

Although it had rarely been seen by the publicfor a century, "St. Stephen's crown" appearedon newspapers' front pages in January 1978.After holding the crown, Hungary's nationalsymbol, for safekeeping in Fort Knox for 30years, the United States government returned itthen to the homeland amid protests fromHungarian-Americans who oppose the currentcommunist regime.. Mr. Kelleher, who was in charge of saving theart treasures which had been relocated toGreater Hesse, Germany, after World War II,

not only salvaged the crown: he photographed itfor study. Later, when he returned to Princetonto complete his Ph.D. (he had earned an M.F.A.in 1942), he wrote his dissertation about it. Itwas Mr. Kelleher who was called to Fort Knoxto inspect the crown before it was returned toHungary, which made him at that point the onlyperson to have studied the crown twice since thewar.

Tradition has it that the crown was sent toStephen, first king of Hungary, by PopeSylvester II in the year 1000. Scholars havebelieved for some time that the lower portion ofthe crown is Greek, probably the gift of aByzantine emperor to Geza, an 11th-centuryHungarian king. The upper part of the crown —a cross and bowed gold arches bearing enamellikenesses of eight apostles — is the sectionusually said to be Sylvester's gift to Stephen.Mr. Kelleher, however, thinks it more likelythat it is a relic of Stephen, with the archeshaving been fashioned from one of his bookcovers and added to the crown a century later.

Sculpture garden to growPRINCETON — On Saturday, April 21, New

Jersey Designer Craftsmen is sponsoring an out-door, handbuilding clay workshop taught by NewYork potter and artist Anna Siok. Ms. Siok, whoteaches at Greenwich House Pottery in NewYork and has just had a show at the GlassGallery, plans for participants in the workshopto work large and make a temporary sculpture

garden. Clay will be provided, but pieces willnot be fired. •

This event will take place in Princeton from10-4 on Saturday, April 21, with a raindate onApril 28. The workshop fee is $10, and it is opento any potter with some experience. For thelocation or more information, please call LucyScanlon at 609-924-7695.

Ancient trains highlight showDOVER — The largest railroad mem6rabilia

show in the country will be held at the DoverSenior High School, Grace St. were on Sunday,April 22 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Over a quarter mile of railroad memorabiliawill be offered for sale as well as free shows andplenty of free parking. A special feature will be

a "white elephant" table where anyone maybring one to ten items to sell through thesociety.

Tickets are $1.50 for adults, 75 cents forchildren. A map and further information areavailable from Tri-State Chapter, NRHS, P.O.Box 255; Dover N.J. 07801.

Get your Italian art- first hand'.• SOMERVILLE — Somerset County College,

In cooperation with Travel Host, Inc.,' Pluckemen, will sponsor an arts and history

tour of Italy May 25th to June 9th.

The tour will spend a full week in Florence,five days in Rome arid three days in Venice,with comprehensive sightseeing by private'motor coach and on foot. A private motor coachwill also take participants from Rome, viaAssisi and Perugia, to Florence and, viaRavenna, and the coast of the Adriatic andPadua, to Venice. There are additional visits

planned to Bologna and Siena. The tourprovides for ample time for independent ex-ploration with a minimum of regimentation.

The tour package features a pre-tour seminara t Somerset County College for those interested,as well as in-depth lectures on the day of eachsightseeing tour to permit full appreciation ofthe history and artistic development ofrenaissance Italy.

Space is limited and early reservations will benecessary to insure participation. For in-formation, call Travel-Host, Inc., 201-658^747.

Philatelists, numismatists-take note:EAST BRUNSWICK — The East Brunswick

Stamp & Coin Exchange will hold a Stamp andCoin Show on Sunday, April 22, at the RamadaInn, Route 18 at N.J. Turnpike Exit 9. The showwill run from 10 a.m. to4:30 p.m. Admission willbe free and there is ample free parking.

• A group of dealers, including members of theAmerican Stamp Dealers Association, will offer

a wide range of United States and worldwidestamps, coins and covers for sale at specialprices.

The participating dealers will also beprepared to purchase any material needed fortheir stock, so the public is urged to bring inanything they may have for sale. Further in-formation can be obtained by calling 201-238-5636.

Volcanoes erupt in NewarkNEWARK — Volcanic eruptions, ancient and

..modern, are the subjects of a new exhibition inthe Newark Museum Science department onview through September. 'Volcanoes' features aspecial section on the destruction of Pompeii1900 years ago, as well as an explanation of the

, geology of eruptions and a close view look atvolcanoes in the West Indies.

the exhibition includes engravings from an1830 volume on Pompeii which illustrate thisearly interest in the site. Tableware and

> bronzes from the Museum's collection evoke theeveryday life of the ancient Pompeians.

'Volcanoes' is a joint project organized by Dr.Alice Blount, Kenneth L. Gosnor, and Dr. SusanH.. Auth. Photography is the work of Mr.Gosnor,

In conjunction with the exhibition there willbe a series of three lectures. These will be givenat 10 a.m. on consecutive Wednesday mornings,April 25, May 2 and May 9. Dr. Michael J. Carrwill discuss volcanic geology JJ- V"ne 25th, Dr.

Anna Marguerotte will describe "The Ar-chaelogy of Pompeii" on the 2nd, and AmandaClaridge will conclude the talks on the 9th with alecture on the "Art of Pompeii."

Registration for the series may be made bycontacting the program department at 201-733-6600.

Newark Museum is located at 49 WashingtonStreet. The museum is open daily from noon to 5p.m.

Another 'gathering'HOPEWELL - On Friday, April 20 from 8

p.m. lo 2 a.m., there will be a "gathering" forpersons involved in art, music, and drama,dance, film, and photography. The fourthgathering of its kind, participants will be in-volved in discussion, support and stimulation ofthe arts. For information call Lori at 609-466-3811.

"Figure Study for the Battle of Cascina" (1504)is one of 41 drawings by Michelangelo included inan exhibit which will open at the Pierpont MorganLibrary, E. 36th St., New York, on April 26. Itwill run through July 28.

"Michelangelo and His World" is on loan fromthe British Museum and includes relatedRenaissance materials such as letters anddocuments in Michelangelo's hand, poetry andcorrespondence relating to him, and masterdrawings by Raphael, Vasari, Andrea del Sarto,Titian and Cellini.

Hours will be Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday andSaturday from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m.

ON THE COVER:About to enjoy the fruits of their labor, members ofTehmina Alphonse's authentic Indian cooking classdisplay the results of an evening's work. Standingbehind Mrs. Alphonse and her husband, Jerry, are,from left, Matthew Young, Valerie Cunningham,Ann Hovanec and John Hovanec^ A story on Mrs.Alphonse's craft, as well as an expert French chef,appear on pages 10 and 11.

FEATURES:

Art: Rita Fischer's oil paintings are on view at theNew Jersey National Bank of Princeton, and theSquibb Gallery has opened a multi-media exhibitdevoted to the dance. Page 8.

Drama: Middlesex County College has set up aspecial clearing house for high school dramaticsdesigned to avoid the problem of three productionsof "Mame" within a five mile radius. Page 9.

Music: Two area concerts will feature the"mysterious" instruments of early music. Page 14.

Film: 'Voices' is the first feature film in many yearsto be filmed entirely in New Jersey. Page 22.

COLUMNS:Growing ReasonSketchesSew What'* New

IN PRINTON STAGEON VIEWCALENDARIN CONCERTONSCREEN

18

24

49,15,19,21

6,7,812,13

14,16,1722,23

EDITOR: Ellen Kolton-WotonADVERTISING COORDINATOR: Tee-Ann Doughty

APRIL 18-24,1979 TIME OFF

by PATRICIA CELLEY GROTH

Princeton University, in its 200 plusyears, has been visited by most of theliterary luminaries in any decade. Theloveliest of actresses have appeared oncampus, and athletes by the scorehave attracted a student following.But a few days ago Princeton wasgraced by the appearance of oneperson who has it all —. MaxineKumin.

Ms. Kumin, poet, novelist, andeducator, winner of the 1973 PulitzerPrize in poetry, is not only one ofAmerica's most outstanding literaryfigures, she is also beautiful — lovely,mobile face; and slim, with amuscular vitality which reveals herchampionship swimming backgroundand her daily workout training herhorses.

Over a hundred people had alreadycrammed into a room which seatedsixty when Ms. Kumin appeared forthe )ast in a series of readings spon-sored by the Princeton UniversityCreative Writing Program. Simplydressed in blue silk blouse and grayskirt, she looked like the teacher sheis, and her clear, warm voice soundedlike the performing poet she also is.

For an hour she read from her ownwork giving an overview whichcovered selections from her earliestbooks right through to the latestpoems written this winter while shehas been a visiting lecturer at Prin-ceton. Her voice would be the envy ofany actress — clear, pitched in themiddle register, every syllable givenexactly the right inflection — Ms.Kumin knows how to read a poem.Twice she interrupted her reading totry and make room for the unfortunatelate arrivals who were crushed in thedoorway and standing out in the hall.The enthralled audience, crowded and.cramped though it was, stirred only tointerrupt her with appreciative ap-plause.

Reg Gibbons, who arranged theSpring Reading Series, introduced hersaying, "Maxine Kumin writes with aspecial humaneness — she latches onto ordinary things, grasps the worldlovingly."

She began: with the title poem fromher latest book, The Retrieval System,an engaging poem where certainanimals bring back the memories ofpeople she has known. " — my dogwho all his long life/ carried about...the brown eyes of my father," shesays, and a goat "blats in the tinyvoice of my former piano teacher/whose bones beat time in my dreamsand whose terrible breath/ soured'Country Gardens,' 'Humoresque,'and unplayable Bach." Ponies nod likeelderly aunts and a colt brings back alost love. People fade, the poemclaims, and animals help retrievethem. Surely no one present at thereading will ever again look at abrown-eyed dog withoug thinking ofDaddy, or hear a child play "CountryGardens" without hearing the blat of agoat.

. DREAMS APPEAR often in Ms.Kumin's work and she. talked aboutmaking the connections betweendreams and poetry. She especiallyrecalled a week spent alone in a drabFayetteville, Ark. motel which wasresponsible for a whole fistful ofhorrendous dreams. In "Longing ToBe Saved" she tells of a barn fire andof going into the flames again andagain to rescue children and animals.In the end, after all are safe, she says,"There's no holding back./ Go in to getmy turn."

Readers of Ms. Kumin's earlierpoetry are familiar with the Hermitcycle ("The Hermit Wakes to BirdSounds," "The Hermit Prays," etc)where the poet speaks in the malevoice of the hermit. "That," says Ms.Kumin, "was before my consciousnesswas raised." Now she has a verypoignant cycle of poems about HenryManley, a fictitious elderly bachelor.In| these poems the poet is observerspeaking in her own voice. Henry, inthe poem she read, keeps "sun-downing," that is, as the dayprogresses he steadily forgets thenames for things and people he hasalways known. In the morning hecarefully names them one by one.

Ms. Kumin is not the alienated,: disaffected woman poet of the sixties.

In Up Country she writes in warm andloving tones about a wide variety of

Maxine KuminGrasping the world- lovinglyimmediate subjects, including smallwild creatures (" ... shrew's children,twenty to a teaspoon"), folklore (" ...wife in the pantry/ man in bed"),water bugs ( ... backswimmers all/trim as college shells"), birds (" ... Itis indecent of this bird/ to sing at nightand/ leave no shadow."), dogs (" ..:Dog/ who lived a fool to please hisking."), and even stones ("Themoving of stones/ ... takes place atnight underground, shoulders first.")— an apt image for anyone who hasever tried to farm in the path of theglacier.

A FORMER SERIOUS, amateurswimmer, and now an accomplishedhorsewoman, Ms. Kumin owns fourhorses back home pn the farm in NewHampshire, and has even brought one"Jenny" to. a Princeton stable whereshe not only rides daily, but is con-ditioning Jenny for distance rides.Swimming, therefore, (" ... I was thewell/ That fed the lake that met mysea/ In which I sang 'Abide WithMe',") and horses ("Amanda DreamsShe Has Died and Gone to the ElysianFields," "Amanda Is Shod," etc.) arethe themes of many poems.

She writes of grief and parting too,grief for uncles dead in the war ("Dan,Dan, Dan, apple of my girlhood/

leaving behind... a sweet worm in myheart."), and grief for her best friend,Anne Sexton ("The middle age youwouldn't wait for/ now falls on me.").

Humor finds a place in Ms. Kumin's.work also. She writes of one particularcampaign during the Crusades whenthe Franks rode only stallions and theTurks rode only mares — with thepredictable result ("Both sides stoodby unhorsed/ while nature took itscourse.").

Grandmothers, aunts, uncles,mother, father, brothers, cousins, allpeople Ms. Kumin's work, sometimeswith doubt or misunderstanding, butnever with the sheer animositydisplayed in the work of hercolleagues. Ms. Kumin has no "I HateMy Daddy" poems in her collections,nor does she vent her frustrations onhusband and children. "I'm not," sheadmits, "a shrill feminist, although Iam a feminist and I do belong' toNOW."

BORN AND BROUGHT up inPhiladelphia, Ms. Kumin went toRadcliffe where she earned an A.B. in1946. "I went to Radcliffe," she says,"because I wanted to have theresources of Harvard available to me.Unfortunately, Harvard did not feelthe same way. At that time if a

Radcliffe girl wanted to use theHarvard Library, she was put in asmall room and had to ask for thebooks she wanted to be brought to her.If she didn't know what those bookswere, there was no browsing for her —she might distract the Harvard boysfrom their 'serious' studies. Seemsincredible now, doesn't it?"

Upon graduation she married VictorKumin and returned to Radcliffe for aMaster's degree. "My daughter andmy degree came together. I wasfortunate that I hadjthe degrees beforemy three children were born. Whenmy son, Dan, was three I was able tostart teaching, although that wasn'treally acceptable then and I didstruggle with some guilt feelings. Itwas an advantage, career-wise, to bevery poor. We needed the money Icould earn and because I was teachingon a college level I stayed in contactwith my field.

"It was a big boost to be designateda Radcliffe Scholar in 1961. It seemedlike a huge amount of money to methen." Since then Kumin has beenawarded a National Council on theArts fellowship, the Tietjens MemorialPrize from Poetry Magazine, thePulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1973 (for UpCountry), the Borestone MountainAward, two Honorary doctorates, andmost recently, the Radcliffe CollegeAlumnae Recognition Award. Withsuch a harvest of awards, a poet couldbe forgiven for becoming a little blase,even about a Pulitzer Prize, but, "no,"says Ms. Kumin, "I felt fabulous,marvelous — oh, any adjective youcan think of that describes joy andsurprise!"

In this era of rampant divorce andseriaj marriages, Ms. Kumin's 33-yearmarriage to Victor Kumin, a con-sulting engineer, is an anomaly — anda comfort. "I'm still very muchmarried," she emphasizes cheerfully."We both travel a lot in differentdirections, but we have' the farm tocome home to, and the farm is ourcenter. Besides, Victor would be boredto tears with anyone else."

IT IS AMUSING to see that anauthor who has in print five books ofpoetry (The Retrieval System; House,Bridge, Fountain, Gate; Up Country;The Nightmare Factory; ThePrivilege; Halfway) four novels (TheDesignated Heir; The Abduction; ThePassions of Uxport; Through Doomsof 1-ove), and who has had poemspublished in a roster of magazines thatreads like a "Who's Who" of theliterary market place, should wait forthe mailman as anxiously as any

. beginning writer. "Darn," she mut-. ters, "nothing good today."

A facet of Ms. Kumin's life notapparent in her poetry is her role aseducator. In addition to Princeton, shehas taught at such prestigious in-stitutions as Randolph-Macon,Washington University, Brandeis,Columbia, Amherst and the Mid-dlebury Bread Loaf Writers' Con-ference.

One student says about herteaching, "When you bring your poemto class it's like laying your baby on analtar for a priest's approval. Someprofessors kill it — and you. But shedoesn't. No matter how bad it even-tually turns out to be, she never saysit's bad. She always says things like, 'Ilike that phrase in the third line,' or'How well you describe the kitchendoor.' When she's done, you get yourbaby back and you can take hersuggestions and make it better."

Many of Ms. Kumin's students madetime to attend her last reading — asilent note of approval on the ef-fectiveness of her teaching and thepower of her poetry.

Maxine Kumin will give anotherreading on Thursday evening, April19, 8 p.m., staff lounge, FirestoneLibrary, Princeton University,sponsored by Delaware Valley Poets.James. F. King, Chairman of DVP,says, "We welcome any and all poetrylovers who wish to share this eveningwith us. It isn't often we get a chanceto have a poet of this calibre addressone of our meetings. I would suggest,however, you come early to findparking and' seating room." A $2donation will be taken at the door.Students are admitted free.

Patricia Celley Groth is a freelance writer,poet and fiction tenter who lives in Pen-nington.

TIME OFF APRIL 18-24,1979

wfromefoctonRUB-IN

MAY5&6

Come in and make your own brass rubbingsfrom our authentic reproductions of rrtedievalmonumental tomtys from the British Isles.

As always, your work is guaranteed!

Drop by soon, to view the framed rubbings andto choose the brass you'd like to rub.

The Bollingen Series continues

Captivating book studies

C.G. Jung's life and workOpen Mon., Tues.. Wed. & Sat.10-6»Ttiurs.&Fri. 1(W 'Sunday 11-4

MSI'

MERCER MALLRoute 1 & Quakerbridge Rd.

(Across from Quakerbridge Mall)

Lawrencevile (609)452-1091,

Letters to the Editoralways make good reading.

1O TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW

PRINCETON GARDEN STATESMEN

WELCOME TO

FRI-APRI L 27-8:15 $3guest quartet AFTERGLOWS

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STEINERT H S -Klockner RoadHAMILTON TOWNSHIP N-J-ticket info 609 587- 3649

C.G. JUNG: Word and Image. Edited by AnielaJaffe. 238 pages. Princeton University Press/-Bollingen Series XCVII - 2. $25.

by NANCY BREWER ELLIS

Spring is the time when our fancies turn tothoughts of love. Even the introverts getprimordial urges. What most of us don't realizeis that it was C.G. Jung, the founder ofanalytical psychology, who first identified thesenow familiar types and contributed to the waywe think about ourselves.

C. C. Jung: World and Image is a snappypictorial book. It grew out of an exhibition ofmemorabilia, pictures, and documentsmounted in Zurich in 1975 to honor the cen-tenary of Jung's birth. It provides a picture ofJung's life and work in a captivating, althoughnot necessarily simple, way.

The illustrations are an important element inpresenting this picture. Some are Jung's owndrawings, in color, and many date back to hisearly experiments. When Jung was 20, forexample, he experimented with the occult andconducted seances with a young cousin. Thecousin, in a trance, uttered speeches of"imaginery characters" and dictated symbolsfor a round pattern. Jung drew this pattern andvariations of it many times. He later called it a"mandala," a symbol for the self. Those in-terested in pictorial representation will find theart work, sometimes reminiscent of WilliamBlake's, fascinating. The same is true for thedrawings done by men arid-women in the courseof psychotherapeufcework with Jungiananalysts. These have brief, explanatory cap-tions.

This record of Jung's career covers hiscelebrated dissent from Freud's theories.Freud never forgave Jung for this, but perhapsit was inevitable. Jung recalled their firstmeeting: "What he said about his sexual theoryimpressed me. Nevertheless his words could notremove my hesitations and doubts. I tried toadvance these reservations ... but each time hewould attribute them to my lack of experience."Then, in 1909, he wrote to his wife "Freud is asclever as ever and extremely touchy; he does

not like other sorts of ideas to come up..." Theirfriendship ended in 1913, after Jung's book onthe libido had been published, when Freudwrote Jung a letter which ended, "I thereforesay, take your full freedom and spare me yoursupposed 'tokens of friendship.'"

Jung's travels took him far afield, and thisvolume's careful integration of word and imageallows us to see people and places the way hesaw them. His encounters away from homewere part of the evolution of his thinking, andthey are presented with a variety ofillustrations: the Pueblo Indian in Taos, theyoung Masai in Africa, the desert, an Oasislandscape, the gigantic beatific statues inCeylon, the playful figures" of nymphs andlovers that decorate temples. All were part ofJung's explorations. Revealing, too, are thescenes of home and family and the scenes atBollingen, the lakeside retreat in Switzerlandwhere Jung found solitude, where he built astone tower, and where he carved strange,primitive designs on the stones.

C. G. Jung: Word and Image is one of theimpeccable volumes in the Bollingen Series,inaugurated in 1941 with a slice of Mellonmoney. Paul Mellon and his first wife had spentsome time in Switzerland in the 1930's. Theymet Jung and became enthusiastic supporters.To assure a wider audience for his writings theyestablished the Bollingen Foundation, namedafter Jung's country retreat.

The Bollingen Series came under the over-sight of the Princeton University Press in thelate 1960's, and they are proud to have it. It willbe completed, with over 250 volumes, in a fewyears. Jung's works form the core of the series,although art and aesthetics, ethnology,literature, philosophy, and other scholarlyworks are included.

People are often skittish of scholarly worksand prefer watered-down versions of originalthought. One might be skittish with more jus-tification aboput paying $25 for a book, but thisvolume should have a wider than scholarlyaudience. It is a visual treat and a thoughtfulintroduction to the life's work of a man whosestudies influence us all, consciously or un-consciously.

Y O U ' L L J E A T I T U P !i • '•• i • ' ' •

3 O ! ; J V • :: •;•• V • ; ^ . m

J | l NVTS«fi

90th TRIANGLE SHOW

May 3 and 6 at 7:30 p.m.May 4 and 5 at 8:30 p.m.

^ • •

w—wJ^—*\

i •• •>» .•

Tickets AvailablaNow - 609-921 -8700 • McCarter Theatre

32nd Annual

Antiques Show-SaleApril 24th & 25th

First CongregationalChurch

125 Elmer StreetWestf ield, New Jersey

Tuesday 10 to 10Wednesday 10 to 9

Luncheon served both days.

Beautiful Days

Balmy Nights

Family Fun

at

LENAPE SWIM CLUBLimited Membership

For information andapplication mite8oi27,RockjHai,II.J.0S553or call 609-921-2439

APRIL 18-24,1979 TIME OFF

On Saturday, May 26, at 8 p.m., mime artists Moni Yakim (above) andMina Yakim and four features members of their New York PantomimeTheatre - Marlyn Galfin, Tiny Lopresti, Lindanell Rivera and JosephZwerling, will present "Tales of the Goat Man."

"Tales of the Goat M&i*," a contemporary adult entertainment renderedin classical style, is a chronicle, as told in poetry and song by the Goat Manhimself, deals with those moments in the development of the theater whichhave had the greatest influence on the evolution of the art formcaUed mime.

Mail orders, telephone reservations, and telecharge orders for "Tales ofthe Goat Man " are now being accepted at the McCarter Theatre box officefrom 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 609-921-8700.

McCarter Theatre CompanyMichael Kahn, Producing Director

presents

PennsylvaniaBallet.

Three Performances Only at

McCARTER THEATRE • THURS.thru SAT. MAY 10-12 at 8:00 pm

THURS. & FRI. MAY 10-11: Divertimento No. 15 (Balanchine-Mozart); Bakins' View (Griffin-Ives); Under the Sun (Sappington-Kamen); SAT. MAY 12: Madrigalesco (Harkarvy-Vivaldi); Poemsof Love &the Seasons (Harkarvy-Nocella); L'Ardeur (LaFontsee-Corigliano); Pas de Dix (Petipa-Glazounov)

Tickets: tiO.OO, 9.00. 8.50, 6.60. Students: HaH-prica forThursday, May 10 psrformanc*PHONE ORDERS WELCOME: McCartar/921-8700

The Performing Arts Department Presents

cTVlontclairChamber1

lusic

Society"Friday. April 27. 8 p.m.

.Kelsey Theatre. West Windsor CampusMercer County Community College

Admission $3 for adultsMCCC students & alumni with valid ID S1

Reservations 609-586-4695

The GreatT VAuction

BID ON ITEMS FROM PRINCETON MERCHANTS

I •

MondayApril23at9:00pm

D N JPTVJERSEY PUBLIC TELEVISION L M A N N t L

McCarter Theatre CompanyMichael Kahn, Producing Director

presents

A Play ByGEORGE BERNARD SHAW

• . Directed byVIVIAN MATALON

NOW THROUGH APRIL 22

For information and reservations, pleasecall the Box Office (609) 921-8700

TIME OFF APRIL 18-24,1979

Princeton Opera Association

AUDITIONSfor

SOUTH PACIFICDaniel Berkowitz, Director

Performed at Washington CrossingState Park - Open Air Theatre

Two weekends, opening July 19th

AUDITIONSSATURDAY , APRIL 21st

Princeton United Methodist ChurchNassau Street <S Vandeventer Ave.

12 Noon until 4 PM or by appointmentCall 890-2269 evenings

CHECKTHE PACKET 8-WAY CLASSIFIEDS

A BENEFITFOR McCARTER THEATRE

LIONELHAMPTON

AND HIS BIG BAND

MONDAY, APRIL 23 AT 830 P.M.

"Vibes better than ever In crisp! • • 'Hampton show" '

John Wilson

New York Times

Tickets $7.00 to $10.00including tax deductible contribution

For reservations, please call (609) 921-8700

Photographs of Albert Einsteinand various Princeton scenes takenby Elizabeth G. C. Menzies will beexhibited^ the First National Bankof Princeton, 90 Nassau Street,through May 9. The Princetonphotographer is the recipient of theNew Jersey Tercentenary medal forone of her Einstein photos, and shehas received a citation from theAmerican Association for State andLocal History.'

Rider offers fiberLAWRENCEVILLE — "Interactions," an

exhibition of 40 fiber and woven sculptures byTrenton artist Sharon Safran, will go on viewApril 23 at Rider College.

The showing, to continue through May 11 inthe Student Center Art Gallery, is being,sponsored by Rider's Office of CulturalPrograms. The public is invited to meet theartist at a special gallery preview April 21 from7 to 9 p.m.

A native of Lowell, Mass., Mrs. Safran holds aB.S. degree in art education from BostonUniversity and is currently working towards anM.A. degree in art education at Rhode IslandSchool of Design.

Gallery hours for the exhibit are 1-5 and 7-11p.m., Monday through Friday.' Admission isfree.

Soho is trip destinationPRINCETON — The 12 square-block area

"south of Houston Street" (Soho) in Manhattan,with its dozens of trend-setting art galleries andeclectic choices in art, shopping, andrestaurants, will be the destination of thePrinceton Art Association's day trip on Wed-nesday, April 25.

The group will leave by chartered bus fromthe Princeton Shopping Center at 9 a.m. for 420West Broadway, site of major Soho galleries.Pick-up will be at 4 p.m. at the same location.

Tour guide Ruth Roufberg, author andteacher, will distribute maps and lists ofcurrent exhibits as well as restaurants andshops in this colorful area.

Cost of the one-day trip is $12 for membersand $14 for non-members. Reservations can bemade by phone to the Princeton Art Associationat 609-921-9173.

Ukioyo-e printsat Newark Museum

NEWARK — "John Cotton Dana: Con-. noisseur of the Japanese Print" is on viewthrough Sept. 30. Mr. Dana, who founded theNewark Museum in 1909, was Director of theNewark Public Library. He was an earlycollector of the Japanese Ukioyo-e stylewoodblock print.

A joint project of the museum and the library,the exhibition will feature Japanese prints andbooks either owned personally by Mr. Dana orcollected under his aegis at the two institutions.

Ukiyo-e prints flourished in 18th and 19thcentry Japan, as a form of art that was ac-cessible to the middle class. Used to illustrategreeting cards, posters and books, theydepicted popular actors and courtesans of theperiod, familiar stories and scenic spots. Inaddition to books and single sheet prints of bothposter and card size, the exhibit will feature aselection of original printing blocks and tools.Work by the famous Japanese landscapedesigner, Hiroshige ((1797-1858), will also befeatured.

The Newark- Museum is located at 49Washington St., here. The museum is open dailyfrom noon to 5 p.m. Admission is free.

Beginners' crochet classes

SOUTH BRUNSWICK — A crochet workshopseries for beginners will be given at the SouthBrunswick Public Library on three consecutiveTuesdays from April 24 through May 8 at 8 p.m.Participants must supply their own yarn and Jor K crochet hook. Mrs. Arlene Wolfe of EastBrunswick will be the instructor.

This course is free and open to the public.Preregistration is necessary. For further in-formation please call the library at 201-821-8224.

The Princeton University Opera Theatrepresents

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's

THE MARRIAGEOF FIGARO

performed in English

Thursday, Saturday and Sunday ,

April 19,21 and 22

7:30 p.m. Alexander Hall

Tickets: $7.00, $5.00, $3.00 at Theatre Intimebox office, weekdays, 1-6 p.m. (452-8181);

by mail Concert Office, Woolworth Center; or at the door

JAZZ 'N D>INCIN' •Sundays at the Nassau Inn, •

from 4 pm to 8 pm

The Stan RubinOrchestra

featuring

Warren Vachethat horn players' horn

player and extraordinaryjazz musician.

Come! Listen! Dance!

s SJIU IJSTMPalmer Square, Princeton, New Jersey

(609) 921-7500 //, / / •

APRIL 18-24,1979

.i Sivy« • • * , -

Lobbying for the artsis seminar s

NORTH BRUNSWICK — "Lobbying for theArts and Humanities in New Jersey," a two-dayworkshop will be held at the Eagleton Instituteof Politics at Rutgers University on April 20 and21.

Co-sponsored by Eagleton's Center for theAmerican Woman and Politics, and theCoalition for the Arts and Humanities in NewJersey, the workshop will be keynoted by 17thDistrict Assemblyman David Schwartz. Thelawmaker will provide an overview of NewJersey politics, highlighting the role that in-terest groups play. . ' j

Nancy H. Becker, president of Nancy ,H.Becker Associates, will conduct a session on thetools and techniques of lobbying the first day ofthe workshop. This session will describe how toidentify objectives, devise advocacy plans andtimetables, build coalitions, and developstrategies for action.

During the two-day workshop, lobbying forthe arts Will be explored and analyzed from twoperspectives. A panel of federal and state of-ficials will tell how, they initiate advocacycampaigns at their level of government and atthe same time are lobbied themselves. Includedon this panel scheduled for April 20 are JosephP. Merlino, Senate President, Robert Smartt,Deputy Director of the New Jersey GeneralAssembly, U.S. Congressman Andrew Maguire,and Franklin Fischer, a former local ' of-ficeholder from Dover Township and a memberof the New Jersey Council on the Arts..

A special panel, "Government and the Arts,"will present the role of county, state and federalgovernment concerning the arts andhumanities. The panel will be moderated! byJacque Rubel, Vice President of the Coalitionfor the Arts and Humanities in New Jersey.

Saturday's session will use a case studyformat using bills dealing with the arts,humanities, preservation, and education,' toallow workshop participants to form their own

Art club showswares at mall

LAWRENCEVILLE — The Art ClubiMercer County Community College will exffipaintings, prints, sculpture, ceramics,photography and textiles April 20, 21, and 22 inthe Lower Level of the Quaker Bridge Mall inLawrenceville. Visual arts students will alsopresent displays and demonstrations in avariety of media. j

Morristown AntiquesFair opens

'!MORRISTOWN — The Morristown Antiques

Fair will open Thursday, April 19,1 at theNational Guard Armory on Western Avenuehere; A semi-annual event, the fair will includea variety of collectibles from five cents to fivefigures. ! "

This spring, the Nuttall Bostick-Wendymanagement has gathered more than 100dealers from nine states for the four-day show.The "something for everyone" fair features18th and 19th century furniture, rugs, glass,hearthware, kitchenware, paintings, j pewter,samplers, weathervanes, quilts, porcelain,pottery, majolica, clocks, tinware, spongeware,redware, Tiffany and Shaker. j. A special presentation and discussion,"Antiques: Tips and Trends," conducted byDavid Good is planned for Friday, April 20, at 3p.m. Admission is included with the ticket to thefair. I i

The Antiques Fair will be at the jArmprythrough Sunday, April 22. Hours are 1 to 10 p.m.daily; 1 to 6 p.m. on Sunday. There is freeparking available along with food i service.Admission is $2.

Godfrey displays batikPENNINGTON — Wendy Godfrey,! a local

artist, is now showing her works in batik at theD and D Gallery at Pennytown, Route 31, here.The hours of the gallery are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,Tuesday through Saturday.

Ms. Godfrey was born in London and, learnedher techniques in Switzerland and Belgium. Shenow lives in Princeton with her family.

lobbying plan after a day of skill-buildingsessions. Professional lobbyists will critique theworkshop participants' efforts at . building'

J coalitions, organizing a grass roots network,and devising a media plan.

A special workshop on when and how to usethe media in planning and carrying out an ef-fective lobbying campaign is scheduled for.April 21, prior to the small group practicum.Ruth Ann Burns, CAWP Program Associate andInstructor in journalism and urban com-munications at Rutgers University, will conduct'that session.

Registration is required. Forms may beobtained by calling Eagleton Institute, EdithSaks or Ruth Ann Burns, at 201-032-9384; orJacqueline E. Rubel at 201-745-2788.

Prospectus available

for state showTRENTON — The prospectus for the' 'Second

Biennial New Jersey Artists" exhibitionscheduled for the New Jersey State Museumthis fall is now available.

Organized jointly by the State Museum andThe Newark Museum, the juried Biennial willbe open to all professional artists currentlyliving or working in New Jersey. It will includepaintings, sculpture, watercolors, drawings,prints and photographs but not crafts and video.Jurors will be William Bailey of the Yale Schoolof Art and Janet Kardon, directorvnf the In-stitute of Contemporary Art at the University ofPennsylvania.

The time schedule calls for delivery of entriesto the Museum the week of Sept. 10 through 15,jurying on Sept. 19 and the exhibition itself fromOct. 20 through Dec. 2.: Prospectuses are being distributed by bothsponsoring museums. They may also berequested by phoning 609-292-5420 or writing toBureau of Art, N.J. State Museum, P.O. Box1868, Trenton, N.J. 08625.

Japanese togglestopic of lecture

NEWARK — A seminar on "StylisticDevelopment in Japanese Netsuke" from the17th through 20th centuries will be conducted byBarbra Okada at the Newark Museum, from 2to 4 p.m. on Tuesday, April 24. Netsuke aredecorative toggles that were worn by Japanesemen as part of the string assembly thatsuspended objects from the kimono sash.

Seminar participants will be able to handleand discuss 35 netsuke from the Museum'sHerman and Paul Jaehne Collection. Thesession will be followed by tea and informaldiscussions with Mrs. Okada, who is a con-sultant on netsuke to the Metropolitan Museumof Art and the Yale University Art Gallery, aswell as to the Newark Museum.

Adyance registration is necessary and maybe made by contacting Valrae Reynolds,curator of the Oriental Collection at the NewarkMuseum, 201-733-6600. Participants will beasked to wear no jewelry on their hands or

, necks, and privately owned netsuke will not beallowed at the seminar. Fee is $10 for theprogram.

Art history gradstalk of printmakerNEW BRUNSWICK — Selected works by

Dutch printmaker Cornells Ploos Van Amsteland his school will be discussed by Rutgersgraduate students of art history at 2 p.m.Sunday, April 22, at the Rutgers University Art

i Gallery.

The public is invited to attend the free talksbeing held in conjunction with the gallery'scurrent exhibition, "Cornells Ploos Van Amstel(1726-98): Color Etchings after 17th CenturyDutch and Flemish Master Drawings." ]

For further information or to schedule toursof the exhibition, call Stephanie Grunberg, thegallery's administrative assistant .foreducation, at 201-932-7096 or 932-7237.

The gallery is in Voorhees Hall on HamiltonStreet near George Street here.

auction,silent service auction

plants, gourmet foodart gallery

books, flea marketmidway games

crafts

Saturday, april 2B10a.rn.to <4pm.

unitiapian church of phncetonroute 2QB & cherry hill road

For

S.R.O.advertise

in TIME OFF

THE LEWIS CLINIC

FEATURING OILS, ENAMELS, LITHOGRAPHS AND SCULPTUREFROM THE FINE ARTS GALLERY OF ARDMORE, PA.

SATURDAY, MAY 5 T H

TRINITY CHURCH(SOUTHEAST CORNER OF MERCER AND NASSAU STREETS)33 MERCER STREET, PRINCETON. N. J .

8 TIME OFF APRIL 18-24.1979

J*

Paintings with a rhythmic flowbyANNWOOLFOLK

The work of Rita Fischer is nowhanging at the New Jersey NationalBank in Princeton. They are anunusually polished small group of oils.The problems that Ms. Fischer isdealing with as an artist are like thoseBen Nicholson dealt with in his con-struction of the collage.

The spacial divisions Nicholsondefined by using cut .shapes aresuggested in various ways by Ms.Fischer in her oil paintings. When Ms.Fischer wishes to suggest forms inrelief she may indicate a shadow, ormake an abrupt change in tone andcolor or imitate a deeply-incised line. \Some of the lines are enlivened with abrilliant touch of pastel. This has thesame wake-up effect to the painting asa whistling train would make comingdown an empty track. j

Ms. Fischer centers the interest ofher painting on the interplays ofverticals and horizontals. Like a |harbor full of swaying masts her ipaintings have a rhythmic flow whichkeep the viewer involved. Her color is jsubdued and well-controlled within a ;

narrow range. What has been done \here is rather, remarkable since it hasbeen done in a four year period. \

IN 1975 Ms. Fischer decided to go iback to school to learn how to paint. Itwasn't her first approach to art but !

since her children were now older she •determined to- get involved moreideeply. "I had a horror of the image of',the housewife painter," she said then. ;•She was accepted at Trenton Statewhere her work began to come under jthe influence of her teachers HiroshiMurata and Bruce Rigby. i

Far.' from conforming with any jhousewife painter role her intelligence \and grasp of the principles of spacialand color interplay won her early ipraise. Since graduation she has jshown her work at Mercer County,Community College and won honors in |the series of shows held at the Me-

Carter Theatre by the Princeton ArtAssociation. {

MS. FISCHER WORKS during theweek at her studio in the Princeton ArtAssociation. It is colorful andcrowded, overflowing with images ofher own work and work which shelikes of other painters. Some of herfavorites are Nicholson, Holbein,Turner, and Hopper, but it is youngerpainters, those who have had recentexhibitions in New York, whose post-cards and programs are tacked up onher wall. Some of the intensity of herown sketches, which are done inpastel, suggest a developing interestin a more vivid palette. She does notwant to stop expanding.

"I feel this-is just the beginning. I .want to go deeper and deeper in myexploration of the ranges of colors andtones that would make my work moremature." She laments the lack ofgreat support from her days atTrenton State when her teacher,Hiroshi Murata; was always there topush and encourage and support."Now I have to keep myself motivatedand it is not always easy. The en-couragement at Trenton State wasfantastic and I miss it seriously. With

|the expense in time and money,sometimes I feel I have acquired the

i most extravagant hobby on earth."The bank is showing one of the best

beginning one person shows possibleand it is very attractively hung.Certain of her paintings scintillatewith an early poetry like these earlydays of April during which they areshown. ''Landscape with Moon," and"Barriers-Study" are both small andexquisite works. "Reservations I" andLandscape Blue and Green" are alsowell done.

There are problems in some areaswhere the suggestion of threedimensions gets a little imprecisebecause of the heaviness of the oil,but other than that the show istechnically on a high level. It isscheduled to nin until the end of April.

MaifcCzajkowski photo

"BARRIERS IN ORANGE AND RED," by Rita Fischer, currently on viewat the New Jersey National Bank of Princeton, 194 Nassau St., Prin-ceton.

Tribute to the Dance' at Squibbby ANNE WOOLFOLK

"A Tribute to the Dance," nowshowing at Squibb Gallery, is full ofwonderful views of that art form.Sculpture, collage, drawing,photography and painting are all used

' *" to depict the dance. The most effectivework as a whole seems to me to be thesculpture and the next best, thephotography.

The sculpture finds ways ofsuggesting both humanity and thesense of motion, over and over again.The photographs focus on the sameconcepts in very direct w a y s . :Although taken from the dance itself,the bodies in the photographs seemmore abstract than some of the ab-stractions. The forms of dancers areno doubt more perfect than those ofmost. For whatever reason, thephotographs in this show revealessential forces and movements of thebody that are very powerful. Thepaintings which try to suggest theessence of "movement with just a fewlines fall short in doing so, !

REVIEWOne of the few exceptions to the

"less makes more" principle whichbackfires so badly in the paintings is; alittle drawing by John Hartell calledDance XIII. Where the' symbolschosen to represent motion are veryapt, in this case circular lines torepresent the movement of. the legs,then: the abstractions outclass therealism. Nature itself is hard to beatfor force and style and only the most

intrepid, witty and elegant pieces inthis show have succeeded in beatingthe camera.

Fortunately, the brilliant con-ceptions on the dance that existalongside the photography are richand rewarding when they do succeed.To begin with, arriving at the show is agreat pleasure, passing the beautifulindoor fountains surrounded byhydrangeas, tulips, ferns and trees. Itis a nice way to start feeling in touchwith nature. s, • '

One of the first pieces one sees is acollage by Eleanor Hubbard called "22Dancers." In this piece, 22 ladiesfashioned of newsprint, tissue, coloredconstruction paper and cardboard dotheir dancing thing on. a stretchedcord. It is a beautifully comic piece, agood companion to a nearby sculpturecalled "Dance," by William Kind."Dance" is reminicent of couples seenat high-school proms. It presents tworangy adolescents (only the heads aresculpted in the round) gazing into eachother's eyes.

Other pieces worth mentioning are"Back Stage," by Paul Cadmus and"Study for Gospel Singers" by RobertGwathmey. A nice etching by NonHershey breaks up the image of thedancer with mirrors. This samedevice used in a sculpture splits theimage of the dance into severalreflections. ("Reflections," LucilleSpiro-Smith)

Among the sculptures is one called"Tap Dancer," by Louise Kruger. Thepiece is jointed at the elbow, hip,ankle, etc. The joints are emphasizedby an outside screw. It is a very cleverway of emphasizing the jbintedness of.the body, and the figure of the tap •dancer is cool, witty and delightful.

Another soft sculptured piece whichprovided for amusement is one called"Dance Troup Exercising" by CynthiaNixon. This is made up of stuffed dollspainted with ink and acrylic on fabric.

There is not time to mentioneverything worth seeing. Fans ofDorothea Greenbaum will be pleasedwith her graceful sculpture, there isan abundance of good drawing, and

again, many magnificentphotographs, the best of which areblack and white but including some ofIndian dancing in color from NewMexico out of the Squibb collection.The different kinds of dancing, moodsof dancing, and symbolic associationsof dancing that are gone into here arewell worth the visit.

The show will be open at Squibb untilApril 29.

Hospital given Indian printsPRINCETON — A series of North

Indian prints, rendered by BoleslawCybis, were recently presented to theMedical Center here by Cybis Por-celain Studio of Trenton.

The nine prints are part of a limitededition of 1,000 and are individuallyhand-numbered and authenticated.Mr. Cybis sketched the characterportraits more than 40 years ago of theHopi, Comanche, Apache, Shoshone,Mohave, Yuma, and Taos tribes.

His paintings were first exhibited inthe United States in the 1930's at theBrooklyn Museum of Art, the Chicago

Art Institute, and the Dayton Museumin Ohio. After completing two muralsfor the Hall of Fame at the 1939World's Fair, he turned to the South-west where he concentrated on theAmerican Indians.

Before his death in 1957, he returnedto Trenton to establish the CybisPorcelain Studio.

Plans are being made to have thenine prints and their individualhistories framed and hung. The cost offraming is the gift of Mr. Sam Kind,owner of LaVakes jewelry store inPrinceton.

Needlework show seeks entriesPHILADELPHIA — The First

Philadelphia Needlework Show, heldat 1629 Locust St., will offerneedlework displays, settings by in-terior decorators, and floral

decorations. The show will be open tothe public April 25 through May 7,rWa.m. to 4 p.m. (Sundays l p.m. to 5p.m.).

Entries to the show will be receivedat 1629 Locust Street through April 21,from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Entries musthave been executed by a living person.No entry will be judged in more thanone class. An individual may enter asmany articles as he chooses, payingan entry fee of $3.50 per article.Judging will take place on SundayApril 22, beginning at 10 a.m.

APRIL 18-24,19791 TIME OFF

. * 1 "

i . . ,

College foYms theater clearing houseby COLLEEN ZIRNITE

Three Mame's in one neighborhood?It happened. Only a year ago three,,high schools within a five-mile radiusall staged Maine. It won't happenagain. Not in Middlesex County.Middlesex County College has madesure of that. . ; .'

The College's Division of Com-munity Services has made itself aclearing house and has set up acommunal calendar that would makeoften* colliding regional, and com-munity theater turn green. This is onlyone of the ways the college aids highschool theater.

When J.P. Steven High School inEdison decided recently to. mountPippin, thanks to Middlesex CountyCollege, it didn't have to stretch itsbudget to buy props and scenery. EastBrunswick High School sent over awhole station wagonful of the ones ithad used in an earlier production.

The sharing of props and costumesis all part of an exchange that includesinformation, ideas, problems andsolutions between the county's highschool drama directors who wereunited just a year ago by the College'sDivision of Community Services. Theynamed themselves the DramaDirectors' Communication Networkand met at the college periodically —maybe half a dozen times during the |year — with the Community Services Ipersonnel and faculty members of the iPerforming Arts Department who Ioffered their expertise. j

SUCCESS of their forum was |hailed with a triumphant com-memoration called Celebration ofAchievement Showcase '79 held at thecollege's Performing Arts Center onApril 4. The high schools were invitedto perform one-act pieces in the four- Jyear old, $2,000,000 theater. j

The cooperative achievement ap-1parently prompted other county;colleges to consider the program as a |model for possible projects in theirown communities. Their represen-tatives mingled in the showcase!audience with busloads of high school j'students, college students, scouts from;

' neighborhood theaters and interested;public. J

All were invited backstage behind;the 450-seat theater where Tom Dunn,!the college's theatrical technicaldirector led a tour of the mammoth1

shop where scenery is built and'wheeled on stage, and of the colorful \illusion closets, the costume shops. He jpointed out the full rigging, modernlighting, sound systems, and this'professional theater's thrust stage andflexible proscenium. I

Highlighting the celebration was theguest appearance of Clive Barnes, therenowned drama and dance critic o|EThe New York Post, formerly — for 1}years — of The New York Times. Itwas a day-long appearance that beganwith breakfast coffee and buns in theoffice of Anita E. Voorhees, Com •munity Services director.

Although Mr. Barnes confessed tobeing a night person who is never athis best before four in the afternoonand usually wakes up in time forlunch, he went promptly to work at 9a.m. viewing each of the nine playsand offering a critique after everythird in a program that continued tothe final closing curtain at five. 1

After dinner Mr. Barnes was guestof honor at a wine and cheese partyand an informal reception in the.college's Corral Restaurant by theatercritics, entertainment editors, localdrama directors, and college ad-ministrators. He ended the day givin *a lecture on "The Place of Theater inAmerica Today," for which tickeiswere sold to the public.

"This has been a baptism in hignschool theater for me," Mr. Barnfetold the students. "I was extremelyimpressed with the total thing and Ifelt the amount of work going on w^most interesting."

Noting that high school theater "hasgot to be a participants' sport ratherthan ah on-lookers' sport," he com-mended its role in building audiencesand interest in theater. Professingextreme reluctance to encourageanyone to go into theater as a careerbecause it is "very difficult and verychancey" and "offers no benefits, nosafeguards," Mr, Barnes laudedseveral of the productions and per-formers indicating that they mightmake it.

A PARTICULARLY HEARTY patfell on the back of Steve Reisberg ofPiscataway High School for his "verystrong characterization" as the lead inTerrence McNally's^comedy, Next.Emphatic pats also fell on EastBrunswick High School performersand their drama director, ElliottTaubenslag, who wrote an original''extremely ambitious" musical basedon Pearl Buck's novel The GoodEarth.I Mr. Barnes admired the "Chinesetinkling tones of the music by MichaelPlotz, a former student of Mr.Taubenslag's, the lyrics which "wentwell," the "fairly strong" charac-terizations, "the considerablestrength" of the acting, and "thegloss" on the whole thing.I Students and directors took heed asMr. Barnes offered insights as to whysome offerings were more successful

than others, namely because of theirvarying suitability. Some plays aredifficult for high school students, henoted, because they require accents(Ten Little Indians), because it isdifficult for young actors to play oldparts, or because a play that was "apiece of its time, a time that is gone"has no real meaning now (No Exit.)

The acting in an original play aboutstudents by a student, David DePinnoof South River High School, he noted,was "spontaneous" because thepeople were really playing themselvesand moved very naturally and talkedvery naturally.

Although he lamented "the terriblemawkish mentality" of ThorntonWilder's Our Town that "gets gooieras it goes on," Mr. Barnes applaudedthe Perth Amboy High Schoolproduction for its "attempt at in-tegration." At the same time hechided the group for limiting thecasting of blacks to the roles of anewsman and a milkman.

"It would have been better," hesaid, "if one of the family could havebeen black. You only have to do a littleMarcel Marceau to make peoplebelieve in it."

"I grew a lot today," Mr. Barnesconfided to his dinner partners afterthe program.

Obviously everyone involved feltthat same way about themselves. TheDrama Directors Communication

Network is planning to continue thatgrowth with the help of MiddlesexCounty College. The college is ex-tending its services to community andother theater groups throughout thestate. '

SERIOUS THEATER students, highschool drama directors, communitytheater members, all theater-mindedpeople, young and old, are invited toattend a series of five summerworkshops one night a week for four tosix weeks for a fee of $25. Mr. Dunnwill conduct classes on set con-struction, lighting and sound. JimMorgan will teach set design, theoryand application to the limited budget.

The Drama Directors' Com-munication Network and theworkshops were the direct result of thecollege's exploration of ways to helpthe community in what Ms. Voorheescalls its "informal outreachprogram." Gwen Bond, a white-haireddynamo, part-time employee of theDivision of Community Services,personally called on each of thecounty's 33 high schools to see how.thecollege could help and invited thedirectors to attend those first after-school meetings at Middlesex CountyCollege. The next step is "a formaloutreach coordinating theaterdivision," and Mrs; Bond and Ms.Voorhees are now talking about amonthly newsletter.

CLIVE BARNES, right, confers with Olga Zaretsky of ] Middlesex High School and Mike Piccurio of Spotswood HighSchool. Mr. Barnes, drama critic for the New York Post, critiqued dozens of short high school productions during theall-day workshop. ' ' • ' • ' c ' .

[South Pacific' auditions setPRINCETON — The Princeton

Opera Association has announced thatit will present Rodgers and Ham-

! merstein's Pulitzer Prize winning| Sooth Pacific at the Open Air Theatre

at Washington Crossing State Park forI two weekends opening July 19. The

production will be directed by DanielF. Berkowitz with Igor Chichagov asmusical director.

Auditions will be held this comingi Saturday, April 21, at the Princeton; Methodist Church at the corner of

Nassau Street and VandeventerAvenue. Auditions for children will befrom 11 a.m. until noon, with auditionsfor adults from noon until 4 p.m.

Auditioners should come preparedto sing a "show" type song. Everyonewill also be asked to read from the

script or present a prepared auditionpiece if they prefer.

South Pacific has a cast of 40 andincludes such musical hits as "ThereIs Nothing: Like A Dame," "BaliHa'l," "Younger Than Springtime,"and "Some Enchanted Evening."However, the director would like toemphasize that there are a number ofimportant non-singing roles; and that

actors should not hesitate to come tothe auditions even if they do not sing.The play also calls for two children,one boy and one girl, roughly in the 8-13 age range.

If anyone would like to try but but isunable to come to the Saturdayauditions, they should call 609-890-2269after 6 p.m. to set up an audition ap-pointment.

Casting call for King & I'TRENTON — Artists Showcase

Theatre, 1150 Indiana Avenue, willrepeat their production of The Kingand I on April 20,21,27,28 at 8:30 p.m.,April 22 at 7[p.m. and April 29 at 3 p.m.

The cast Is lead by Mary Elizabeth

Kitzpa trick in the role of AnnaLeonowens, with Robert. Parrish andJeff Byrum alternating the role of theKing of Siam.

Reservations may be made bycalling trie theater at 609-392-2433.

10 TIME OFF APRIL 18-24,1979

by EDNA LEBJERFINGER

And so Craig Claiborne called Teh-mina Alphonse and invited himself fordinner.

It all happened in Hopewell just overa year ago. A native of India, Mrs.Alphonse had written to Claibornesuggesting that he try some of herauthentic family recipes when ex-perimenting with Indian cuisine. Sheeven suggested that he could come toher house to try them. And so, one coldday last January, Claiborne drove outto the Alphonse's home in ruralHopewell for dinner.

According to Mrs. Alphonse,Claiborne arrived about 10 a.m. andstayed the whole day. "I was excitedbut very, very nervous," she ad-mitted. Claiborne was warm andfriendly, she said, and put her at easeimmediately. "We talked abouteverything — food, India, cookingmethods, even his trips." >

Recalling that day, Mrs. Alphonsevividly ' remembers Claiborn'samazement over her small kitchen."He couldn't believe the size of theroom or the lack of culinary equip-ment." •

Tehmina Alphonse undoubtedly:' needs neither a large kitchen nor a full

line of utensils to prove her expertisein cooking, even to such adistinguished and knowledgeableguest as Craig Claiborne.

At the present time, Mrs. Alphonsebakes the bread for "Soup du Jour"and "The Appeteaser's" in Hopewelland for "Plentiful Acres" on Route 27outside of Princeton. She bakes thebread regularly —12 loaves at a time.

TEHMINA ALPHONSE and herhusband, Gerard, entertain at homequite often and their three children arealways bringing neighborhood friendsin for dinner. In her somewhat limitedspare time, Mrs. Alphonse is writing acookbook to introduce authentic In-dian cooking to American kitchens.She is 31 years old, has two masters

degrees, and will also do somecatering on occasion.

In addition to these activities, Mrs.Alphonse just started her own schoolof creative Indian cooking, "Curries•n' Spice." Classes are held in Mrs.Alphonse's kitchen on Friday eveningsfrom 7 to 9 p.m. and the cost is $125 fora five week course.1 "My friends urged me to, start myclasses," Mrs. Alphonse explained."My husband and I entertain quite abit and I've given out so many recipesalready that a cooking school seemedlike, a good idea."J Surprisingly, Mrs. Alphonse onlybegan cooking when she came to theUnited States nine years ago. At homein India, she was often in the kitchenbut never cooked. It wasn't until shewas in this country for a time that shegrew homesick for Indian cooking! She^rote home to her mother and aunt inBombay requesting recipes and spicesand she has been cooking since then.I Although her family is now inBombay, Mrs. Alphonse herself is aZoroastrian or Parsi, a directdescendent of the original Parsis whofled their native country of Persia(Iran) during the 7th century seekingreligious freedom. Settling in India,they retained their distinctiveheritage and culture while adaptingsome Indian customs and foods.Today, the Parsis haute cuisine is arich blend of exotic Persian and Indiancooking.

India's cuisine is as varied as itspeople and geography. In the north,Mrs. Alphonse explained, the food isirobust and very dry; not much gravyor sauce is used. Wheat is used inplace of rice, especially in making flatbread or chappati. In the south, ricewith various gravies is part of thebasic diet. Chillies are eaten quite'extensively and much use is made ofjwet spices ground with lime juice orvinegar and coconut milk.

PEOPLE IN the western area ofIndia are basically vegetarian. Mrs.

Pauline Lubens photos

TEHMINA ALPHONSE uses Cuisinart to prepare sauce for one of her Indiandishes. • '.Alphonse said that western food is"uncharacteristically mild," not thehot, spicy food most Americansassociate with Indian food. In the east,,seafood is used as a staple and is eaten,in quantity.

In deference to her exoticbackground, Mrs. Alphonse's kitchenis bereft of intriguing devices orforeign tools. The only Indian utensilshe uses regularly is a tawa, a heavycast iron flat griddle used to makeIndian bread and to do slow frying.She also has a karahi, a kind of wok,which is occasionally used for deepfrying. ,

"However," Mrs. Alphonse in-terrupted, "I want to stress that anyutensil can be substituted for another.A stainless steel frying pan will workin place of a karahi. This goes for food,also. Meat and vegetables can be

interchanged in many Indian dishes:Varieties of'spices can be used, too."

For example, Mrs. Alphonsesuggests using fresh lemon juice whencooking, but a frozen concentrate canbe substituted. Uncle Ben's rice caneven be substituted for Indian basmatirice if this is not available.

Mrs. Alphonse is very emphaticabout her spices.- Tasty, mouthwatering condiments (masala) suchas chillies, coriander leaves, curryleaves (pata), ginger, and garlic arekept in recycled peanut butter andmayonnaise jars on the shelves of hervery full,- very aromatic spice cabinet.

Although Mrs. Alphonse usesvarious fresh spices sent from home,many of her spices are bought in NewYork City on Lexington Avenue bet-ween 26th and 29th Streets. Sherecommends Kaluston,. a store in thisarea.

"Ginger and garlic is the basis forall Indian cooking," she continued.But Mrs. Alphonse warned againstusing ginger in preparing seafooddishes. "Ginger causes a chemicaldecomposition in seafood which isoften undesirable to the eye."

AS FOR MEAT, Mrs. Alphonseexplained that it is a very expensivecommodity in India and is very hard toobtain. For this reason, it is used insmall quantities and, as Mrs.Ajphonse suggested, "meat is moreelegant eaten in small pieces."Although she now uses some beef,Mrs. Alphonse said that most of themeat .used in her native country islamb. . ,

The most universal staple in India isghee, or boiled butter, which is verymuch like clarified butter but has anutty flavor. In her refrigerator, Mrs.Alphonse keeps fresh supplies of gheeat all times.

Another important ingredient ofIndian cooking is vagar, or friedonions, very carefully sliced andslowly browned. Other standardcommodities are coconuts, coconutmilk, and dahi, or yogurt, which Mrs.Alphonse recommends buying fresh.

Although wine is not served withdinner in India, Mrs. Alphonsesuggests that beer could be offered toneutralize the taste buds betweendishes. Indian cooking is not eaten incourses but is served in various waysdepending upon the area.

One of Mrs. Alphonse's favoriterecipes is Parsi Kheemo, or ParsiGround Meat. It is an excellent in-troduction to Indian cooking for thebeginner. (Recipes serve 6-8)

PARSI KHEEMO

1 lb. ground lamb or beef2 onions, chopped

(Continued on next page)

APRIL 18-24,1979 TIME OFF 1 1 '

Nelson Dimas: Quest for perfectionby ROBERT LORENZI

People are afraid to invite NelsonDimas to dinner. .

How does one deal with a food ex-pert? Mr. Dimas once wrote "GuideMicheline" to tell them that Maxim's,the world famous Parisian restaurant,did not deserve its three-star ratingbecause the food, in his estimation,was overrated and overpriced. "Theytold me that Maxim's was an in-stitution," he said, throwing his armsup in a futile gesture.

How does one deal with a student ofLe Cordon. Bleu,' France's renownedcooking school? "Well, if you inviteme to dinner, serve Chinese food," hesuggested. "I don't profess to be anexpert on that."

Or, one might add, sign up for theFrench cooking course that Mr, Dimasoffers. At 117 Washington Road, Mr.Dimas and his associate DonahueDaniel, a wine connoisseur, acceptstudents for the Classical FrenchCooking course. One problem is thatthey accept only four at a time.. "We believe in direct application,"said Mr. Dimas. "I like my studentsto get their hands dirty. About tenpercent of the course is theory; ninetypercent is practice.''

SEVEN YEARS AGO Mr. Dimasbecame interested in finding a recipeof veal scallopini marsala that heenjoyed in a restaurant. Searchingthrough French cookbooks, he beganto try out some of trie recipes. Sud-denly, he was- hooked on Frenchcooking.- His obsession has broughthim to France every summer since.

"I've been throughout France '—from top to bottom," he said. Hemakes a regular practice of visitingthe esteemed restaurants. "If I feelthey are overrated, I write letters toCraig Claiborne and Julia Child. Andeveryone else who I think would beinterested."

Though his cooking school is "notinexpensive," Mr. Dimas said, "Werun the cooking school for fun." Mr.Daniel is a computer programmer forthe United States Department ofCommerce for the last 12 years. Mr.Dimas, a native of Puerto Rico, is theacting director of the BilingualMigrant Teacher Corps Program at

Rutgers University, where he is also aPh.D. candidate. He has degrees fromAmerican University and GeorgetownUniversity and has attended HarvardUniversity, Stockholm University, andTrenton State College. He is fluent inEnglish, Spanish, and French, and hehas a reading knowledge of numerousother languages.

His philosophy of cooking isdemanding. "No shorts Cuts," he said."But simplicity is the key. The bestingredients, the best material to workwith — these are the so-called secretsto cooking."

The attitude that only the best isgood enough was instilled in Mr.Dimas not only by Le Cordon Bleu butalso by his instructors at LeNotrepastry school in Plaisir, a suburb ofParis, and the Culinary Institute inNew Hyde Park, N.Y. He has a longlist of farms and stores in the Prin-ceton area where he is able to obtainthe freshest foods. He believes inbuying foods when they are in season,and he makes it a point to go directlyto farms to buy eggs and other dairyproducts.

THIS QUEST FOR perfectionmeans that the cooking and eatingutensils must also be the proper ones.'Mr. Dimas proudly shows his copperpots, which, he said, he doesn't botherscrubbing to make them shine becausethey are in constant use. The tablemust be set with the finest china andcrystal. There is a proper glass fordifferent kinds of wine.

And, of course, the atmosphere mustbe completed with the proper dinnermusic. In other words, when Mr.Dimas, Mr. Daniel, and their guestsdine, the entire process is an or-chestration. Maybe that's why Mr.Dimas said he eats only one' meal aday. Mr. Daniel, however, admittedthat he "needs a sandwich for lunch."

Living with Mr. Dimas is a nativePeruvian, Jose Bruno Roman Gon-calez, who six years ago was in anautomobile accident that has confinedhim to a wheelchair ever since. Mr.Dimas came across Mr. Roman'sdifficulties through an article in theNew York Times.

When Mr. Dimas read the article, hemade arrangements to have Mr.Roman enrolled in an intensive

Maria DeNic* photo

NELSON. DIMAS pours wine for his dinner guests. He stresses the importanceof a properly set table in the enjoyment of a meal.

English training program at RutgersUniversity. He also arranged for Mr.Roman to move to Princeton Junction.

But Mr. Dimas refuses to accept. praise for his humanitarianism. "I amfortunate to have Bruno living withme," he said. "The experience willhelp me growl"

Knowing this kind aspect of Mr.Dimas' personality, one should nolonger have the fear of .inviting him todinner. "Eating can be as much of asocial event as anything," he said."Maybe this is why the best disheshave a humble origin. We need notcompete with each other in cooking oranything else."

Gurry (Continued from preceding page)

2 tsp. turmeric powder1 tblsp. Worchestershire saucel,2 tsp. paprika1 tsp. cummin seedsVs tsp. ginger powder2 green chillies (or Jalepenopeppers)

• 2 tomatoesVj> cup coriander leaveslemon juice to tastesalt and pepper to taste

Brown the ground meat. Add theonions while browning so that they frya little. Add all the spices and cookuntil the meat is tender. Add a little•water if necessary. Cook until themeat is tender and juicy, but not dry.

Serve with rice or chappati.To this recipe one can add one cup

green peas, one cup chick peas, onecup diped and fried potatoes, Vfe cupraisins, or anything that one thinkswill taste good with the meat.

Kachumbar is a raw onion andtomato salad that is served in thenorthern and central areas of India. Itis very good served with a meat dish.

KACHUMBAR

2 onions, sliced2 tomatoes, sliced'A cup coriander leaves, finelychopped1 green chilli, seeded andchopped>2 tsp. paprika2 tblsp. vinegarsalt to taste .

Mix all ingredients. Add vinegar so

as to coat all the ingredients; salt totaste.

In India, kachumbar is served as anaccompaniment with almost allvarieties of curries.

Carrot Halva is a very sweet dishwhich can be served as a dessert.

CARROT HALVA

v/z to 21/! cups grated carrots1 to 2 cans condensed milk3 cups water6 tblsp. buttersugar to taste, if desiredVS- cup slivered almondsVt cup raisins2 tblsp. rose water1 cup whipped cream

Mix carrots, condensed milk, andwater and cook until the mixture isalmost dry. Stir continuously. Addbutter and sugar, if- needed, andcontinue to cook until the mixture is ahealthy reddish brown. Add sliveredalmonds and raisins. Cook untilmixture leaves the sides of the pan.Add the rose water and taste again forsugar content. Add more if desired.Cook 5 minutes longer. . . "

Serve hot or cold with fresh whippedcream on top. .

As a note of caution to beginningcooks, Mrs. Alphonse related theexperience of her first dinner partywhere she served authentic, spicy hotIndian dishes. By the end of the meal,'all of her guests were sweatingprofusely. She concluded with a fewwords of advice. "Tone down the hotspices until you are acquainted withthem!"

VALERIE CUNNINGHAM studies directions while John Hovaner listens to MrsAlphonse's instructions during one of the cooking classes.

12 TIME OFF APRIL 18 24. IS

BERDARDSVILLE

Drawings and paintings by BiH Davies and Watercolora and drawings byJoyca Thompson, Somtn*) Art Association,' Inc.. 18 Cloremont Rd., throughApril 29, Tues.-Sat. noon-4 p.m.; Sun. 2-5 p.m.

CUNTON23rd National Print Exhibition, Hunterdon Art Canter. 7 Center St.. throughApril 29, Mon.-Frl. 1 : 4 p.rn.; Sat. ft Sun. 1 -5 p.m.

LAMBERTVILLEWatercolors by Joan McKkiney, Lambartvllla House. 32 Brldga St.. throughApril 30,11 a.m. -10 p.m. daily, noon • 8 p.m. Sun.

IAWRENCEVILLEExhAhs by the Art Club of Mercar County Community College, Lowar Laval.Quokerbridge Mall. April 20-22.

Inunctions, fiber and woven sculptures by Sharon Safran, Student CanterGallery, Rider College, from April 23. Won. - Frl. 1 -5 p.m. ft 7-11 p.m.

The Dance, a tribute to the Princeton Ballet Society, Squibb Gallery Rte. 206,through April 29. Mon. - Frl. 9 a.m.- 4:30 p.m., Thurs. until 9 p.m.. Sun. 1-5 p.m.

MONMOUTH JUNCTION 'Photography exhibit of the works of Kan Kapibwhz, South Brunswick PublicLibrary, through April 29..

NEWARKThree centuries of treasures from the American Painting Collection, throughJune; Japanese prints and books, through Sept. 30. the Newark Museum, 49Washington St., noon - 5 p.m. dally.

NEW BRUNSWICKMusic in America, 1640-1886, New Jersey Room, Alexander Library, RutgersCollege, through April 20, Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Works by Nancy Wail and Bruce Tovmky, Walters Hall, Douglass College,through April 20, Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. -4 p.m.

Paintings by Watanabe Kazan and.Color Etchings after 17th Century Dutchand Flemish Master Drawings, University Art Gallery, Voorhees Hall, throughApril 22, Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. -4:30 p.m.; Sat.; ft Sun. noon • 5 p.m.

NORTH BRANCH

Annual Somerset County College Student Art Show, April 21 through May 12.Mon. - Sat. 1-4 p.m. - '

PIPERSVILLE, PA.

A Salute to Spring, 18th Century English Watercolore, Stuart Gallery , Rte*.413 ft 611, through April 29.

PENNINGTON

Batik works by Wendy Godfrey, D and D Gallery, Pennytown , Rte. 3.1, Tues. -Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

PHILADELPHIAPhiladelphia Needlework Show, 1629 Locust St., April 25 - May 7. 10 a.m. • 4p.m. dally. Sun. 1-5 p.m.

• PRINCETON

Chinese Bird and Flower Paintings, continuing; Contemporary AmericanPrints; through April 22, Rembrandt Prims, through April 29; Van Dycfc as -ReHglous Artist. April 8 through May 20; Quality in Italian Drawings, throughMay 6, Princeton University Art Museum, Tues. - Sot. 10 o.m. • 4 p.m. ; Sun. 1-5p.m. •

Paintings and watarcolors of Jean Lareusa, Gallery 100. 100 Nassau St..through April 20.

An exhibition of the works of WNBam Asman, Princeton Gallery of Fine Art.162 Nassau St. through April 21.

PahiUiigs by Anne Packard, Anne Reid Gallery. Princeton Day School, throughApril 13, Mon.-Frl. 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

Acrylic paintings by A.R.through April 30.

•, New Jersey Notional Bank, 194 Nassau St..

Paintings by Leks Grobben.Tha Eye for Art. 6 Spring St., through April 30. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. •

Watarcolors of Patricia TtndasL Princeton University League. 171 Broadmead.through May 1. ' •

Photographs of - AHiert Einstein and various Princeton scenes, ElizabethMererJes, First National Bank of Princeton, April 18 through May 9.

gitmelon Art Association 3rd Annual Juried Photography Exhibition . Mc-Carter Theatre, through May 14.

Paintings of Ruth Val.Tha Medical Center at Princeton, through June 3.On tha MkJdto East, CoBages by Irene Waring.The Loh Gallery, 306 AlexanderSt. Tues.-Sat. 10-5ROCKY HILLTake 2, an exhibit by Eva Kaplan, First Bank of Central Jersey, through April 30.

TRENTONAmerican A n of the 1930s, through April 22: WBdBfe Vignettes, through May13; Scouting Through the Eyes of Norman Rockwefl, through May 20,Matin's Maine, through June 3; Ceramics by TosMkO Takaezu/Weavings byLenore Tawney, April 28 through June 17. New Jersey State Museum.

FROM APRIL 19-25

Lionel Hampton will bring his bandand vocalists to McCarter Theatrefor a benefit concert on Monday,April 23, at 8:30 p.m. Long one ofthe most versatile performers Injazz, Mr. Hampton will play thedrums, the vibraphone and thepiano, as well as sing a little, dan-ce a little, and maybe even collecttickets. Admission is $7 to $10, aportion tax deductible. Call the boxoffice at 609-921-8700.

PRINCETON

Nassau Inn, Palmer Square: Tony Vandenbergh and His Trio. Wed. 8:30 p.m. -12:30 a.m.; Kathy Tarrant, piano and songs, Thurs. 8:30 p.m. • 12:30 a.m. StanRubin Orchestra; Fri. 8:30 p.m. - 12:30 a.m. Sat. 8:30 p.m. - 1 a.m.; Jazz'n Dan-cin' with Stan Rubin, Sun. 4-8 p.m.

SOMERSET

Somerset Marriott Hotel, Davidson Ave. ft Rte. 27: Private Stock, Mon.-Scrt..8:30 p.m. 1:30 a.m.

NEW HOPE .John Gr Peter's Place, 96 Main St.: Steve Brown tt Wanamaker Lewis,Thurs,; °Rockbottom, Frl. ft Sat.; Boomer, Sun.; Blue River, Mon.; Johnny's DanceBand.Tues. ft Wed. 215-862-9951.

PHILADELPHIAStars, 626 S. 2nd St.: Sam ft Dave, Thurs.; The Karats, FrU; FM Mon. 215-627-8034. i • '. !

BLOOMF1ELDJacques Brei to Alive and Well and Living in Paris, Actor's Cafe Theatre, West-minster Theatre.'Bloomfield College, through April 28, Thurs., Fri. Sat. 8:30 p.m.201-429-7662

CRANFORD

Bad News, New Jersey Public Theatre, 118 South Ave. E.. through April 28. 201-272-5704.

NEW BRUNSWICK -

Dream on Monkey, Mountain, Crossroads, 320 Memorial Parkway, April 19through May 13.8 p.m. Wed.-Sun. 201-249-5560.

NEW BRUNSWICK

A Don's House, Little Theater, Douglass College. April 20-29. 8 p.m. also at 2:30p.m. April 29.

NEWHOPE

Oh,To Be Understood,Phillips Mill. River Rd.. April 20-21,27-28.8:30 p.m. 215-862-5880 or 215-862-5745.

NEWHOPE

Lynne Carter ft Co., comedy and musical impressions, Bucks CountyPlayhouse, April 20,8:30 p.m. ° Apr" 21, 5 ft 9 p.m.; April 22, 6 p.m. 215-862-2041.

PISCATAWAY -

The Connection; Livingston College Theater. April 18 - 29,8 p.m. 201 -932-7084.

PRINCETON

Woyzeck,The Acting Ensemble. 185 Nassau St.. April 19-22, 8 p.m. 609-452-3676.

Heartbreak House,McCarter Theatre, through April 22, Tues - Thurs. 7:30 p.m.;Frl. ft Sat. 8:30 p.m.; Sun. 2:30 ft 7:30 p.m. 609-921-8700.

The King and I, Artists Showcase Theatre. 1150 Indiana Ave.. April 20-21, 27-28,8:30 p.m.; April 22,7 p.m.; April 29, 3 p.m. 609-392-2433.

SUMMIT

Streamers, The Craig Theatre, through April 21. Fri. ft Sat. 8:40 p.m. 201-273-6233

EDISON 'Chinasa instrumental music by the Chinese Music Ensemble of New York,College Center, Middlesex County College, April 25, noon. free.

EWING

Tranton State Coftege Wind Ensemble with the TSC Concert Choir, KendallTheatre, April 22,4 p.m. Free.

Dizzy GWespie in Concert, Kendall Theatre, Trenton State College, April 24, 8p.m. ' , .

HIQHTSTOWN - .

Yates Famfly Concert, Hlghlstown High School. April 22,3 p.m.

LAMBERTIVILLE >

An Evening Whh Barbara Trent, South Hunterdon Regional High School, April25,8 p.m. 609-397-2060. '

LAWRENCEVILLE •

The Early Music Consort, Fine Arts Theatre, Rider Collge, April 21, 8:05 p.m.609-896-0800.

NEW BRUNSWICK

Sigmund Weissmann, pianist, Voorhees Chapel. Douglass Collge. April 18, 8p.m.

The Voorhees Choir, Voorhees Chapel. Oeuglass.College. April 22.4 p.m.

The Minnesota Orchestra, director Stanislaw Skrowaczewski RutgersUniversity Concert Series. Center ot the Creative and Performing Arts, 358George St., April 25,8 p.m. 201-932-7591

NORTH BRANCHElaine Comparone, harpsichordisV-eianetarium Theater, Somerset CountyCollege,April20.8p.m.201-526-1200.. • .

PISCATAWAY I iElectronic Music Concert, Plaza. Livingston College. April 18.3:30p.m.Livingston Liberated Gospel Choir, Livingston College Gym. April 22.4 p.m.

PLAINHELD •Festival of French Music, PtabifieM Symphony whh Guest Conductor GaryNair, Plaintleld High School Auditorium. April 22.3 p.m. 201 -757-0820

PRINCETONThe Marriage of Figaro, Princeton University Opera Theatre. Alexander Hall,April 19,21,22,7:30 p.m. 609-924-0453.Irish fok musicians Mick Mokmey and Eugene O'Donnefl, All Saints' Church,April 20,8 p.m. 609-292-1596 .Dorothy Osbom and Naomi Eheman, pianists. Friends of Music concert,Woohvorth Center, April 20,8:30 p.m.Jeff Gator, recorder whh his Julliard friends, Princeton Inn College Lounge,April 22,'1:30 p.m. Free.Vocal and Instrumental music of the Middle Ages & Renaissance, AlexanderHall, April 22, 3 p.m. 609-924-0453Washington and Jefferson College Wind Ensemble, Saks Auditorium. HunSchool, April 22,4p.m.Lionel Hampton and his ]azz band, McCarter Theatre, April 23. 8:30 p.m. 609-921-8700.Chapel Choir Concert,Bristol Chapel, Westminster Choir Collge. April 24.7 p.m.Organ recital by Harold Pysher,Trinity Episcopal Church, April 24.8:30 p.m.Harriet McCleary, soprano, Princeton Inn College Lounge, April 25, 8:30 p.m.F r e e : .' . . • • !

I • •

TRENTON IImpressionist Compositions of Charles Tomllnson, ptenbrt David Reaves,New Jersey State Museum April 22,2 ft 3 p.m. Free.

MORRISTOWN

Monistown Antiques Fair, National Guard Armory, Western Ave.,through Sunday, 1 • 10 p.m. daily 1-6 p.m. Sun.NEW BRUNSWICKAi: Poetry Reading, Kilmer.House Poetry Center. 8:30 p.m.

PISCATAWAYWorshop In Bulgarian Folk Singing.Tlllett Hall Lounge, Noon.

PRINCETON

Folk Dancing, Wllcox Hall, 8 -11 p.m. 201-821-8919. Free."

m m • " ' • .BRIDGEWATER

Adutt Singles: Discussion and refreshments every Friday. BridgewaterUnited Methodist Church, Country Club Rd., 7:30 -11 p.m.

HOPEWELLA gathering for discussion, support and stimulation of the arts, 8 p.m. - 2a.m. 609-466-3811. .

PRINCETON

Museum Break Talk: Passion and Ressurection, Princeton UniversityArt Museum, 12:30* 1:30 p.m. Free. -World Fofcdanca Cooperative, Co rwln Hall. 7:30 p.m.

TRENTON ,Rain-or-Shine Stargazing, New Jersey State Museum Planetarium, 8 p.m.

NEWBRUNSWICK

Sun Day exhibits, lectures, demonstrations, George St.. 9:40 a.m.

PRINCETON • ,New Jersey Designer Craftsmen Clay workshop, 10-4 p.m. RolndoteApril28.609-924-7695. "

' Junior Museum Talk: Heaven and Earth: Landscape Prineeton UniversityArt Museum, 11 a.m. Free.

Scottish Country Dancing. Murray Dodge Hall 7:30 p.m.

TRENTON .Planetarium Shows at New Jersey State Museum: Mysteries ofVenus, a and 4 p.m.; Spring Skies of New Jersey, 3 p.m. Free.

TOUT \EWING

Billy Jacks, Club Flicks. Trenton State College Education Building 134.Same time Tues.

NORTH BRANCH

Domesticating a Wilderness and Money on the Land, A. Personal. History of the United States movies seriesJ'College Center, Somerset Coyn-

ty College. 7:30 p.m. Free. '

PRINCETON

Odyssey Him, Soldier's Home sponsored by Wesley-Westminster Foun-dations at Princeton and the United Methodist Church o» Princeton, Prin-ceton UnltedMethodtst Church, 8 p.m Free.

TORTMONMOUTH JUNCTION .

Crochet Workshop, South Brunswick Public Library, Tuesdays, April 24through May 8,8 p.m. Pre-registration necessary. 201-821-8244.

PRINCETON

That Obscure Object of Desire, Movles-from-McCarter, KresgeAuditorium, 7 ft 8:45 p.m. Same time and place Wed.

Illustrated lecture. The Holy Crown of Hungary: Enduring Symbol of aPoopto.McCormlck Hall 101,4:30 p.m. Free

Theater Workshop, Society for the Performing Arts, Trinity Cathedral,801 W. State St., 7 p.m. Call 609-392-3805 for Information.

WTOMONMOUTH JUNCTION

Crochet Workshop Series, South Brunswick Public Library, 8 p.m. Con-tinuing for 2 more Tues.

PRINCETON.

Junior Museum Talk: Heaven and Earth Landscape, Princeton Univer-sity Art Museum, 2p.m. Free, i '

SUtlDflTDOVER _ 'RaBroad Memorabilia Show, Dover High School. Grace St., 10 a.m. • 5p.m. - ;EAST BRUNSWICKStamp and Coin Show, Rome-do Inn, Rte. 18,10 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 201-238-5636.LAWRENCEVILLEThe Enforcer, films ot Rider College Student Center Theatre, 9 p.m. Sametime Mon. ft Tues. . . .PRINCETONMuseum Talk: Passion and Ressurection, Princeton University Art

Museum, 3 p.m. Free.Israeli Fofc Dancing, Wllcox Hall, 8 p.m.International Dancing,Princeton Inn College, 8:30 p.m.TRENTONPaddington Marches On, movies for kids. New Jersey State Museum. 1p.m. Free.12th International Tournoe of Animation, 24 short animated films. NewJersey State Museum, 3 p.m. Free. ;The Monmental Performers, Recorded Jaa Listening Session, New Jer-sey State Museum, 5 p.m. |

14 TIME OFF APRIL 1824.1979

n

THE EARLY MUSIC CONSORT, will perform works by a variety of Renaissance English, French, German and Italian composers beginning at 8:05 Saturday inthe Fine Arts Theatre of Rider College, Lawrenceville.

The mysterious world of early musicby JOHN BURKHALTER III

The evocative world of' earlymusical instruments is a mystery toeven the most ardent music lover. Theinstruments come in curious shapesand sizes. Until recent years onlyscholars specializing in the field ofMedieval and Renaissance music anda few enlightened performers,possessed a keen knowledge of suchlong forgotten instruments as theschawm, sackbut, krummhorn,rackett and viol. In these singularlyretrospective times, however, as moreand more early music groups emerge,the unique sounds of antique in-

, struments and the music written forthem are once again attracting theattention and delight of audiences.

This weekend two distinguishedensembles, the Early Music Consortand the New York Consort of Viols willenable listeners to embark on afascinating journey back into time,conjuring up the sounds of an age thatmany of us know only through thevisual arts. The Early Music Consortwill appear at the Rider College FineArts Theatre on Saturday, April 21, at8:05 p.m. The next day, Sunday, theNew York Consort of Viols will per-form at 3 p.m. in Princeton Univer-sity's Alexander Hall.

Formed in 1973, the Early MusicConsort under the direction of BenBechtel has appeared before many

- collegiate audiences throughout theeast. As part of the. famed New YorkPro Musica, the New York Consort ofViols was formed in 1967 in order toperform the musical literature eitherwritten expressly for viols orespecially suited for them.

VIRTUALLY ALL the instrumentsplayed by both ensembles are in someways related or ancestors of in-struments we are more familiar withtoday. Although they may lack thepower and range and even perhaps themechanical or technical precision ofpresent day instruments, each one hasa very special tonal characteristicwhich composers employed in a

variety of combinations to producsonorities that are impossible toconvey using their modern coun-terparts.

Research by such performer-musicologists as the late DavidMurirow has revealed that "the peopleof the Middle Ages and Renaissanceliked gorgeous colors in.their clothes,sharp contrasts in their paintings, andhighly spiced dishes at their table.Their musical instruments wereequally individual and un-compromising." .• It would be a difficult task indeed todetail all of the "spicey sones" thatwill be heard at Rider College andPrinceton University, so a fewexamples must suffice. The shawm isthe double-reed ancestor of today'soboe and English horn. Sackbuts areearly trombones, and of all the in-struments played by the Early MusicConsort, they have changed the leastin the course of time. Essentially thesame as the modern orchestraltrombone, they have a smaller belland much narrower bore and producea less "brassy." tone.

A soft capped double reed, thekrummhorn derives its name from itscurved body. The cap has an apertureat the top through which the playerblows, activating the reed. In spite ofits impressionistic name, the rackettproduces a soft, buzzing tone. Therackett, one of the most imaginativeacoustical achievements of theRenaissance, possesses a double-backbore having ten vertical drillingswhich extend the bore ten times itsexterior length. The viola da gamba or['leg viol" judging from written{evidence was ' clearly one of thefavored bowed stringed instruments ofthe Renaissance.

I FROM SUCH AN extraordinary'palette of sound, composers couldcreate an infinite variety of courtlyentertainments. The majority of

jMedieval ' and particularlyj Renaissance instruments were con-i structed in different sizes according to! the model of the ranges of the human; voice, soprano, alto, tenor and bass.

The voice was the true king* of in-struments and accordingly some ofthe most profound musical statementswere made in this medium. In-struments accompanied singers,provided a pleasant diversion for thedance, or added a measure of

brilliance and grandeur to occasionsof ceremony. The Early Music Consortand the New York Consort of Violshave chosen to concentrate on consortrepertory, and both endeavor to bringto life the sublime and elegant richesof early music.

Irish musicians play fiddle, banjoPRINCETON — Irish folk

musicians Mick Moloney and Eugene -O'Donnell will appear in concert onFriday, April 20 at 8 p.m. at All Saints'Church, Terhune and All Saints'Roads. The performance is sponsoredby the Princeton Folk Music Society.

Since they first teamed up togetherin 1973, Mr. Moloney and Mr.O'Donnell have been in the forefront ofthe revival of Irish music in the UnitedStates and Canada.

Mr. Moloney provides the vocalportion of the arrangements and alsoplays the banjo, guitar and mandolin.Mr. O'Donnell will accompany him onthe fiddle.

Admission to the concert is $3 foradults, $2.50 for students and seniorcitizens, $2 for society members and $1for children. Memberships may alsobe purchased at the door at $5 perindividual and $8 per family. Thereare no advance sales.

Chinese trio offers both classics, popEDISON — The Middlesex County

College presents a concert of Chinesesinstrumental music by the ChineseMusic Ensemble of New York.

The concert will be held on Wed-nesday, April 25, at noon in BunkerLounge of the College Center atMCC. • • • • . . ;

Excavations of ancient tombs ofmore than two thousand years oldhave unearthed string and wind in-struments and a host of percussion

instruments, many of which are still inplaying condition. The Chinese triowill play a repertoire that lies betweenthe refined classical idioms andpopular sounds, featuring the music ofthe Chinese violin, flute, and butterflyharp.

The public is invited to listen to themusic, talk with the musicians, andtake a closer look at some of the in-struments. For further informationcall the Office of Student Activities at201-548-6000, ext. 327.

Wind ensemble to perform at HunPRINCETON — The Washington

and Jefferson College Wind Ensemblewill give a concert at 4 p.m. on SundayApril 22 at the Saks Auditorium of theHun School of Princeton, EdgerstoneRoad. ;

The ensemble's 40 wind, brass andpercussion • players will performqriginal works for the band, as well as

transcriptions from the keyboard andorchestral compositions. Selections tobe played include works by Vaughan.Williams, Persichetti, Bach, Bennett,Mozart, Chance, FiHmore andNestico. In addition, the jazz ensemblewill perform "Sing Sing Sing," "TakeFive,'1 and "I'd Really Love to SeeYou Tonight."

APRIL 18-24.1979

A 35-piece orchestra composed of live musicians - the first live orchestrato accompany a dance performance at McCarter Theatre in many years —will be in the pit when the Pennsylvania Ballet comes to McCarter for threeperformances beginning Thursday, May 10, through Saturday, May 12, allat 8 p.m. ' •

In the course of the company's three performances, the musicians, underthe baton of Maurice Kaplow, will perform music ranging from Mozart andVivaldi, to Charles Ives, Glazounov and two commissioned scores byMichael Kamen and Peter Nocella.

The Pennsylvania Ballet, founded in 1963 by Barbara Weisberger, andcurrently under the artistic direction of Benjamin Harkarvy, will offer tivodifferent programs during its McCarter residency. On Thursday and Friday,May10 and 11, the program will include Balanchine's "Divertimento No.IS," Margaret Sappington's "Under the Sun,", and Rodney Griffin's"E'akins' View," which is set to music from Charles Ives' Symphony No. 3.

On Saturday, May 7 2, for its concluding program, the Pennsylvania com-pany of 30 dancers, will perform works choreographed by its artistic direc-tor, its Ballet Master Dane LaFontsee, and will conclude with 'Pas de Dix"from Petipa s "Raymonda" to music of Glazounov. The Harkarvy ballets in-clude his "Madrigalesco," his "poems of Love and the Seasons, "premieredonly this past February, and are set to a commissioned score by PeterNocella.

Mail orders, telephone reservations and telecharge orders are now beingaccepted at the McCarter Theatre box office. A special discount of 50 per-cent on all seats is available to area college and high school students for theThursday night performance only. For information, call 609-921-8700.

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MIND OVER PLATTER

Roxy Music: Together againby TOM CARROLL

Manifesto - Roxy MusicAtCO-SD 38-114

Together again in a group format forthe first time in three years, RoxyMusic is more popular than ever, evenamong new wavers. This suggests thatnot only was Roxy ahead of its time,but that it also predestined the currentmusical trend, at least to an extent.

Manifesto sees the return to the foldof the band's nucleus: Leader,songwriter and vocalist Bryan Ferry,guitarist Phil Manzanera, oboe andsaxophonist Andy Mackay, anddrummer Paul Thompson. Withsynthesizer and violinist Eddie Jobsoninvolved with his band U.K. andoriginal "sound" man Brian Eno'spersistant disinclination to groupmembership and live performing, andthe fact that Roxy has never had apermanent bass player, the in-troduction of "new" musicians wasunavoidable.

Filling the bass spot, and probablypermanently, is Gary Tibbs, formerly

• of the Vibrators. A member of a"punk" group is a curious choice for aRoxy replacement; the band hasnever been an advocate ofminimalism. But according to PhilManzanera, Gary is "the best youngbass player in England." Also alongon the album are former Ace vocalist,and keyboardist Paul Carrack onkeyboards and super-sessionistbassist Alan Spenner (with credits likeSpooky Tooth and Joe Cocker's GreaseBand) helping out here and there.Neither Carrack nor Spenner seem tobe taking up permanent Roxyresidence as they are both absent fromthe band's current tour. DavidSkinner,, who worked on Ferry's firstand Manzanera's last solo albums,

. manned the keyboards for the tour butit appears that in this incarnation,Roxy Music will have a revolvingkeyboardist slot. •

The band has basically p.icked upwhere it left off in 1975 with the Sirenlp, although Ferry's self-infatuation atthat time has thankfully worked itselfout in his subsequent solo recordsduring the group's hiatus and is not sooverbearing here. Indeed, even at thegroup's recent appearance inPhiladelphia, the equality of band ••members seemed to be stressed.Equality and input are stressed on thealbum also with half of the tunes beingcollaborations.

Divided into East and West sides,Manifesto separately presents bothmusical forces ' whose conflict mayhave been responsible for the group'sschism. The East side is the moreEuropean, closer to the artrock thatRoxy has always been known for. TheWest is the more American, the funkand almost disco tinged songs alongthe lines of "Love Is The Drug" fromSiren, which proved Roxy's mostsuccessful tune in the States. In-terestingly enough, "Trash," a catchylittle poke at the new wave ("Heavymetal trick or treat/ On the levelTrash is neat") from the East side isthe band's British single, while theAmerican radio stations are payingspecial attention to "Cry, Cry, Cry"(the funkiest thing Roxy's done since"Love Is The Drug"), which appearson side West.

Predictably, almost all of the Westside was penned by Ferry but it mustbe conceded that "Stronger ThroughThe Years," Ferry's lone solo-composed song on the East side is oneof the "artsier" tunes on the lp, secondonly to the title track which featuresan outstanding (especially for a RoxyMusic album) bass solo opening fromTibbs arid some indisputably Frippishguitarwork from Manzanera.

Roxy's Manifesto is a publicdeclaration that the band intends toswing both ways, musically speaking.

Outlandos d'Amour - The PoliceA&M-SP4753

Britain's Police may very well be

the next big thing in this country. Thisnew wave (or "no wave" as the A&Msampler of the same name, whichincluded the Police, declares) triohave already achieved what bothdomestic and imported bands havebeen attempting for a few years now -to break into the American AM radiomarket and to reach a lucrativeposition on the nation's Singles charts!

"Roxanne" is their smash singlehere currently and the even better "ICan't Stand Losing You" is waiting inthe wings as the quintessential follow-up. The two songs were released inthat order in England last year andscored high on the British charts. Sofar, it looks like a stateside repeat.

Both tunes are delightfully sim-plistic, yet incredibly infectious, popmelodies that assimilate theJamaican reggae-rhythm so well thatit doesn't even sound like a foreigninfluence. It is undeniably refreshingto hear some of the "new I rock"receiving mass airplay withoutcatering to commercial compromise.Blondie's "Heart of Glass" is doingalmost as well in the same market,and deservedly so, but there is morethan just a nod to disco involved there.

Outlandos d'Amour contains both ofthe aforementioned future-classics aswell as eight more tunes that areanything but filler. "NextTo You" and"Peanuts" (the British B-side to"Roxanne") rock fast and hard,acknowledging the group's affinity tothe power pop school. "So Lonely"(yet another reggae-tinged song) and"Truth Hits Everybody" entrap thelistener with their contagious vocalrefrains. The only disappointmentsare "Sally," the sappily stupid littlerhyme about an inflatable girlfriend(indeed, what could be said on thatsubject after Roxy's "In Every jDreamHome A Heartache" and Neil Innes'"Randy Raquel" of a few| yearsback?) that divides .the otherwiseexcellent' 'Be My Girl," and the failureto include "Dead End Job" (availableonly as the B-side of the domestic"Roxanne" single), by far thepunkiest tune the band indulges in.

The Police include songwriter,bassist and vocalist extraordinaireSting (no last name), guitarist AndySummers, and drummer StewartCopeland who occasionally performsunder the secretive nom de plume ofKlark Kent (see the No Wave sam-pler).

The Police are arresting. Getbusted.

I, - I,ol Creme and Kevin Godley, Polydor-PD-1-6177

This second project from therenegade experimentalists formerlywith lOcc is much more accessiblemusically than their first, the triple lpConsequences, but unfortunately itwill probably remain just as un-successful.

I, is not set up as a showcase for theduo's instrumental invention, theGizmo, as its predecessor was, butremains nonetheless experimental. Inan interview in Trouser Press, KevinGodley said, "We recorded more orless by instinct, 'cause it's toopredictable if you know how the song'sgoing to turn out. Sometimes we justwrote around a sound."

The composing technique is evidentthroughout the lp; bits and' pieces ofseemingly unrelated songs andmelodies are strung together invarious degrees of effectiveness. Theproblem lies in the fact that while the"pieces" make for pleasant listening,virtually nothing sticks in the mind ofthe listener once it's all over. Thebombardment of fragments becomesan overload.

The vocals are saturated with thecharacteristic high warblings and lowgrumblings that became a trademarkof the early lOcc (and are nowostensibly absent from that band'scurrent material), and the productionis as effectively overdone as usual.Even the lyric . puns prevail still

("Does getting into Zappa meangetting out of Zen?").

And speaking of getting into Zappa,the surprisingly most memorable songon 1. is the decidedly Zappa-esqueinstrumental, "Foreign Accents"featuring an obstreperous yet in-tricate rhythm pattern (Kev on drumsand tonal percussion, Lol on guitarsand keyboards) which showcasessome superb saxophoning from gueststar Andy Mackay of Roxy Musicfame. Mackay has more room to movehere than he does on the entire newRoxy lp.

But back to the problem at hand:While Godley and Creme maintain alikeness to the vocals, lyrics andproduction of the old lOcc, their ex-

perimental ventures don't utilize theseassets the way simple pop tuneswould; tunes that the continuing lOccare still producing (and not so suc-cessfully minus Godley- and Creme).r*'M.O.R. is good, M.O.R. is safe,"Kev and Lol sarcastically warble inf'Business Is Business," a back-handed slap at the industry thatpushed them into recording L. If onlythey'd realize that the old lOcc was not[just commercial, they were the best. A•compromising on both fronts wouldallow for one of the most significantreunions in pop music. C'mon, guys.

Tom Carroll is a freelance critic who has aparticular interest in new wave music.

Music-at-McCarter will conclude its season on Monday, May 14, at 8 p.m.,when the Tokyo String Quartet (pictured above) makes its first series ap-pearance with guest pianist Ruth Laredo. The Tokyo Quartet—KoichiroHarada and Kikuei Ikeda, violins; Kazuhide Isomura, viola; and SadaoHarada, cello-trained at the^Tohd Music Academy in Tokyo and pursuedtheir studies at the JuilUard School At their McCarter recital, the programwill include works by Mozart ana Berg, and they will be joined by pianistRuth Laredo in the Dvorak Piano Quintet, Op. 81. Reservations can bemade through the McCarter box office at 609*921-8700.

Wind Ensemble , choir to performTRENTON — The Trenton State

College Wind Ensemble in conjunctionwith the TSC Concert Choir willpresent a free spring concert onSunday, April'22. Sponsored by themusic department, the program willbe held in Kendall Theatre com-mencing at 4 p.m.

The choir (singing a cappella) willperform a potpourri of spring tunesand melodies to celebrate the springseason. Arrangements by RobertSchumann, Richard de Castre, andGiovanni Gastoldi along with poptunes such as "Don't Blame Me" and"Sentimental Journey" (done in abarber shop quartet style) are amongthe many pieces selected by the 43-:

member choir for the concert, ui.Ruthanne Harrison will conduct thegroup.

The wind ensemble will open itsprogram with "Fetes" by ClaudeDebussy. Other selections on theprogram will feature principleclarinetist Drew Weirzbowski per-forming "The Fantasia and Rondo"by CM. von Weber. He will be ac-companied by the ensemble. BruceHulej will play the famous "Virgin DeLa Macarena" as a trumpet solo.Under the direction of Dr. AnthonyIsch, the ensemble will also performtwo Alfred Reed compositions; "TheRussian Christmas Music" and"Armenian Dances," part II.

fwifc'jMrii^V;-*

APRIL 18-24.1979 TIME OFF

inBarbara Trent slates Lambertville concert

LAMBERTVILLE — "An EveningWith Barbara Trent" will bepresented by the South HunterdonChapter of the National Honor Societyon Wednesday, April 25, at 8 p.m., inthe South Hunterdon Regional HighSchool all purpose-room. Donation is$2.50, and all proceeds will go to theSouth Hunterdon Regional EducationAssociation scholarship fund.

Ms. Trent's show includes arepertoire ranging from gospel torock, including pop and jazz. Assistingher will be her two sons, Guy Robert,age 9, and Scott, age 11, doing theirown style of interpretation.

Tickets may be reserved by calling609-397-2060. The school is located atthe corner of Mt. Airy-Harbourton andRocktown roads here.

Dizzy to appear at Trenton State. TRENTON — Dizzy Gillespie willappear in concert at Trenton StateCollege on Tuesday, April 24. Theperformance will begin at 8 p.m. inthe Kendall Theatre.

Admission to the concert is $6 foradults and $3 for senior citizens andchildren under 12. Tickets may bepurchased at the Student Center in-formation booth, Monday-Fridaybetween the hours of 12-2 and 6-8.

Massy-Amos offers recitalHIGHTSTOWN — Lynn Massy-

Amos, soprano soloist at Meadowlakes,will present .a public recital at FirstPresbyterian Church, 318 North Main,at 3 p.m. Sunday, April 22.

She will be .accompanied on thepiano by Marie Cooper, a graduate ofDouglass, who is organist at thechurch. Mrs. Amos is a graduate of

Westminster Choir College and iscurrently completing work on herM.A. in Music at Trinity University,San Antonio, Texas.

The recital will include "FrauenLiebe und Leben" by RobertSchumann as well as sections ofEnglish, Irish, American (Ap-palacian) and Viennese Songs.

Barber shop concert plannedPRINCETON - The Society for the

Preservation and Encouragement ofthe Barber Shop Quartet Singing inAmerica will perform Friday, April 27and Saturday, April 28 at the SteinertHigh School on Klockner Road inHamilton Township.

The chorus will feature songs about

Dixie. On Friday the group will bejoined by the After Glows, andSaturday the Pros and Cons will ap-pear. • ' . ' • . •

Curtain time will be 8:15 p.m. eachnight. Tickets are $3 on Friday and$4.50 on Saturday and may be orderedby calling 609-587;3649,

Harpsichordist sets recital

NORTH BRANCH — ElaineComparone, harpsichordist, willperform a solo recital at SomersetCounty College on Friday, April 20, at8 p.m. in the colleges' PlanetariumTheater.

General admission tickets are $4.50,

students with ID $2. For ticketreservations call the CommunityServices Department, 526-1200, Ext.312, or write the Fine Arts Program,Somerset County College, P.O. Box3300, Somerville, N.J. 08876.

Country singing family due

HIGHTSTOWN — The Yates Familywill be appearing at the HightstownHigh School on Sunday April 22 at 3p.m.

Joanne Cash Yates, sister to Johnny. Cash, and her husband, Harry, bothgot their start at the Grand Ole Opry in

Nashville. They will be accompaniedon the piano by their daughterRhonda.

Tickets are $3 and will be sold at thedoor. Children under 10 are admittedfree.

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Cacti offer Easter parade

by DORIS HIRSCH

Growing reason is ... knowing growing things —special things, now things ... ALL importantthings palatable for nature. The "Green tips"included in this weekly column are meant tokeep you abreast, with timely tid-bits and/orclue you with clever plant culture ->- the latestand labor-saving. PLEASE, if your experiencecan provide a "green tip" beneficial to gar-deners, address your information to TheGrowing Reason, TIME OFF, c/o' PrincetonPacket, Box 350, Princeton, N.J. 08540. We askthat this gardener's aid tip-off should not behearsay but from your personal experience.

... WITH GREEN sprouting out all over theplant world like four-Iear clovers on St. Patty'sday, 'tis surely the best of times to be taking theyoung emerald shoots for propagation pur-poses; but don't just nip and snip for futureplants, rather pretty-up the parent plant bypruning it to shape ... To check-out a cutting'sroot establishment, give it an ever-so-gentletug. Resistance means it is sufficiently rooted;therefore, it is safe to remove the plasticprotector ... Prune winter-kill on rose bushes —back to live wood ... When pruning MotherNature's trees and shrubs use sharp tools;avoid stripping bark, fuzzy-splintered ends andrnakeyclean cuts to avoid potentially damagingslowjfhealing surgery.

NATURE'S EASTER PARADE

April is truly a succulent period of vitality andfreshness. Mother Nature celebrates theholiday with her very own Easter parade. Palegreens of nature become almost brash in theirrush to bolder hues with each succeeding warmsunray and nourishing rain-drop.

Nature's time clock, pre-set to this season,has buds flaring into colorful comely blossomsboth.outdoofs and indoors. The orchid cactus, acommon name for the three holiday cactusspecies, Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter isa succulent with large showy flowers timed tobloom on their respective holidays. Obviously,your indoor Easter genus, Rhipsalidopisgaertneri (rip-suh-lih-dop-sis gert-nerr-eye) isstrutting its brilliant red array in celebration.

A second species of the Easter cactus is R.rosea, smaller than its sister, R. gaertneri, anddisplaying more aromatic rose-pink, blooms.The gracefully arching, pendulous charac-teristics of these plants are most appreciatedwhen displayed in hanging containers. Theirsucculent branches consist of a series of small,cushiony yet flattened stem sections. Flowerproduction forms at the tip of each branch.Each bloom lasts but a week; yet, there is aperfusion of festive flowers adorning an interiorsite for a month or two. .

A consensus of opinion seems to indicate thatthe common label, orchid cactus, does notoriginate from the likeness of flower form to an

orchid; rather, this distinction relates to thenatural habitat of the genus — the jungle. Allthe holiday cacti have their family roots inBrazil. They are next door neighbors of orchidsand bromeliads, and all three families exist on adiet supplied from rain, air, dust and organicmaterials from decaying plants.

Easter cacti, tropically oriented, will developfaded foliage if left too long in strong sunlight. Itwon't cause demise, but this bleached colorsurely won't do much for its ego — or yours.Bright light or filtered sunlight sites favor theirtime clock setting. Grown under fluorescentlights place plants 12" below the tubes. Don'tknock Mother Nature; provide the proper lightsite and she will reward you with manymagnificent flowers.

[This genus likes damp feet but never soggysoil. A moderately watered and evenly moist -condition is the rule. Apply water to the point ofdrainage through pot's hole; allow soil topartially dry between waterings. When thiscactus begins a.slower or dormant-type periodafter flowering, reduce watering but not to thepoint of shriveled foliage.

Nor do you feed during a resting period. Whenactive growth is renewed fertilize every twoweeks with a mild liquid material, preferablylow in nitrogen and high in potassium. Theholiday species are happy with above normalhumidity, so please mist them — but around theplant not the bulls-eye approach. Setting the potonto a pebbled-water saucer is the besthumidity provider. It is imperative to have aporous soil for good drainage; it is just so im-portant for the mix to have enough solidity toprovide support for growing plants. A recom-mended blend consists of two parts standardpotting mix, one part sharp sand or perlite, onepart peat moss.

The Easter cactus prefers: to be pot bound —VERY —rather than repot or pot-on, top-dress;temperatures of day: 65-75 degrees F, night: 55-65 degrees F; not to be disturbed — not to bemoved outside for summer vacation and nochanging inside sites. When allowed to vegetatein their "tried and true" environment thiscactus species will perform in lady-like fashion,setting buds as predicted and producing en-chanting blooming color just .in time to com-pliment your Easter bonnet. Mess around withthis lady and she will show her ill-will byskipping the flowering cycle and/or droppingbuds.

An orchid cactus does not attract pests; attimes a stray mealy bug loses his head, but hejust can't seem to ake head-way with this lady.pabbedwithanalchohol-dippedQ-tip, the enemyis Eradicated. The greatest insult to the holidaycactus is that man constantly confuses the threegenera when they are not in bloom. The Eastercactus, R. gaertneri and R. rosea have foliagewith smooth leaf edges. The Christmas cacti,Schumbergera bridgesii, have scalloped,rounded leaf edges. The Thanksgiving cactihave sawtoothed, jagged leaf edges.

APRIL 18-24:1979 T!ME_OFF 19

SKETCHES

Confessions of p public dieferby MARILYN GILROY

Here's the scene:A group of friends of colleagues are

gathered for a lunch or a festivedinner—an occasion for hearty eatingand drinking. Orders for appetizer,entrees, drinks, etc. are taken roundthe table. One person defers to therest, orders last and says very clearly,"just a salad, please." Behold, thepublic, dieter! Heads turn quizzicallybut the initial annoyance melts intoguilt for all as the person calmly ex-plains that he/she is dieting (probablya permanent state of being.)

I know this character well, havingplayed the part many times. We areeverywhere, those of us working outour compulsion to punish ourselvesthrough blatant and painful self-denialand to fool friends and ourselves intothinking we have willpower and aregoing about the task of serious dieting.

Consider the rewards of suchbehavior. As stated, this Has probablybeen going on a long time and it'snoticed that the person doesn't seem tobe losing weight. Of course not!Therefore, reward number 1 isSYMPATHY. Anyone who depriveshim/herself so nobly with no results isobviously a candidate for attentionand concern. Reward number 2 isADMIRATION. How diligently theindividual pursues the goal andcarries on this ritual in the face ofthose who are fortunate enough to eatnormally with no weight problem.

And what of those who would eatnormally? What effect does all of thispublic dieting have on friendships andlove relationships? I have been ac-cused of being anti-social, not a totallyinvalid argument since eating is usedas a premise for getting together withfriends or lovers. To deny the pleasureof food seems like a slap in the face to

those who suggested the occasion. Ihave personally cast a damper onmany dinner parties where my host orhostess has labored long and lovinglyto present the meil, only to have meturn my nose away and seek mytraditional salad o: • on a splurge, a cupof soup. I have yet to have been shownthe door or end up with soup on myhead, but it has been close. .

And love relatioi ships. Well, I date aman who eats a pint of chocolate icecream in front of me while I drool. Isuspect we are into some sort of sado-masochistic thing s ;o much in vogue. Inaddition? I was cjuite up-staged byanother date who, after I proudlyordered a sliver of quiche and a glassof wine (no appetiser, no side dishes),promptly ordered a salad with nodressing. I felt like a pig.

Even more seriously, I knew awoman who married a public dieter.He used to look at her in disgust as shehad the nerve to sit down to a regular,substantial breakfast. How could she?Divorce was inevitable. However, thiswife used to find that half of thedoughnuts which! she had boughtmysteriously disappeared.

Which brings us to the point. Thepublic dieter is a fraud. Yes, they aresneaking info refrigerators, pantriesand cupboards Whenever possible,gulping down caroohydrates and fatswhile no one (they hope) notices. Afterall, jf no one sees the crime, they getoff scot free! Not so, for the hips andthighs never lie.

And, there are sneakier ways ofcheating. The public dieter NEVERorders dessert but tastes everyoneelses. If there ar^ five other people inthe dinner party, that equals thecalorie intake of a whole dessert. At aparty, it is easy! to absolutely stuffoneself with appetizers while con-spicuously declining the main dish.

$2.50 seems like a stiff priceto pay Le Petit Village for a

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The diet martyr finds many differentoccasions to show off a self-sacrificingnature.

I am sure that you can catch the

public dieter in your circle withhis/her guard down and, armed with"this knowledge, you can smile andsmile and ... eat and eat.

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The Hopewell Museum: A town's diarybv RUTH WOODWARD

Staff Writer

HOPEWELL — Most of the Vic-torian houses lining Hopewell's mainstreet were built about a hundredyears ago by prosperous farmers whowanted homes in town for theirretirement years. The well preservedbrownstone at 28 East Broad Streetwas built 101 years ago by Randolphand Carrie Stout for their retirement.You are cordially invited into theirparlors on Monday, Wednesday andSaturday afternoons, between 2 and 5p.m., because their former home ishow the home of the HopewellMuseum.

The twin parlors, with their iden-tical projecting bays were probably ajoy to a farmwife moving into town.Here she could watch all of the ac-tivities of the main street. One parloris now furnished as a colonial parlor,with a charcoal sketch of John Hart,Hopewell's signer of the Declarationof Independence, hanging over thefireplace. The second is furnished as aVictorian parlor, much as it wouldhave been at the time the house wasbuilt.

The special fascination of theHopewell Museum is the picture itpresents of life in this particularcommunity from its beginnings incolonial days. The furniture is all fromlocal homes. The toys and tools andartifacts of the past were used bypeople who lived in Hopewell or onfarms in the surrounding countryside.The clothing on display was worn atthe special events of the community.The families of most long-timeHopewell residents are represented inthe collections.

Some stories say that an Englishship "The Hopewell" carried someearly settlers to Boston. When some ofthese voyagers later settled in NewJersey they gave the name of theirship to the Hopewell Valley. The firstknown permanent settler in HopewellTownship was Roger Parke, whofarmed on the banks of Stoney Brook.Jonathon Stout, who came in 1706, wasthe first to settle in what is nowHopewell Borough, though the townwas called Columbia in its earliestdays. Both men still have descendentsliving in Hopewell.

JOHN HART is the most famous ofHopewell's citizens. A prosperousfarmer and keen patriot, he served asa member of the New JerseyAssembly and of the state'sProvisional Congresses. WhenGovernor Franklin was arrested and

TH E HOPEWELL MUSEUM was built as a retirement home for a prosperous farmer over 100 years ago.

removed from office as RoyalGovernor, John Hart was the Speaker

the New Jersey Assembly and thusame acting head of the state. As

ie battles flared over central Jersey,_ British destroyed his home and hebbcame a fugitive, dying before theeid of the Revolution.

Through the years Hopewell hasbeen a prosperous farming com-munity, and the museum presents agood picture of how the. people lived,vorked and played. The kitchenutensils, the spinning wheel, the old&d irons and the collection of quilts allshow how the women kept busy. Thefanning, implements and the buildingtools,' as well as the antique guns,represent the labor of the .men. Butmere was also time for fun. Strap-onkates were used for skating on localmds and brooks. One room of theuseum displays an early piano, armonium, an early 19th century

organ, and a lovely Swiss music box.There is a small room full of dolls,

from simple homemade to fragilejiorcelain. Two of the dolls are notreally children's toys, but

A HOPEWELL LADY of the Victorian era would have received her callersin a parlor such as this.

dressmakers' mannequins, used toshow the ladies the latest styles in anera when there were no pattern books.Similarly, the miniature stove in thekitchen wa.s once used by a travellingsalesman to display the latest inkitchen ranges to housewives.

The kitchen in the Stout house was inthe basement, with food taken up tothe dining room by a dumbwaiter. Youcan see the table in the kitchen set fora cosy family meal. Upstairs thedining room table is ready for a moreformal meal, set with dishes in theFlowing Blue pattern so popular incolonial times and treasured by an-tique hunters today.

The museum has a very goodcostume collection, with the exceptionof working clothes. These were usuallytoo well worn to be worth saving. Themodels with the. tiny waistlines,welcoming you in some of the roomsare all wearing wedding dresses. Theywere usually not white. They wereelegant dresses, lavish with hand-

Second in a

series on

small museums

work, but made to \>e worn again, forentertaining or for church' meetings.

• Standing together in one room are ayoung lady wearing a dress that wasworn at Lincoln's second inaugural,and a young man wearing the Civil-War uniform of Lt. Henry Stout, killedin service.

THE ONLY NON-LOCAL exhibit isthe collection of Indian relics andartifacts housed in the addition thathas been added at the rear of thebuilding. This collection representsboth New Jersey and southwesternIndians..

Another rule is broken in this room.All of the museum's exhibits are atleast 100 years old, with the exceptionof the magnificent Bicentennial Quiltdepicting Hopewell history, stitchedby 44 local women/Events of the pastinclude John Hart's signing of theDeclaration of Independence and anIndian Attack on Penelope Stout. Themuseum itself is on one square, andmany old Hopewell homes andchurches are represented. We comeup to date with some of the presentHopewell stores, events such as aHalloween parade, and even theQuarry Swimming Club. A squareshowing her grandfather deliveringmilk to Hopewell homes was stitchedby Sharon Lynne Carkhuff, who was 16at the time the quilt was put together,the youngest of the artists. The quiltreceived honorable mention in a GoodHousekeeping contest in the fall of 1978and has only recently been returned tothe museum, where it will be onpermanent display.

Admission to the museum is freeand you will find gracious hostessesready to answer all of your questions.School groups are particularlywelcome, but the hostesses would likeadvance notice. They advise planningfor about 45 minutes in the museumfor young people. For a $15 fee themuseum can be opened on extra daysfor an organization wanting a tour forits membership.

During January the ChangingExhibits Room featured a display ofsamplers stitched by local women, theoldest done in 1776. One sampler wasstitched by John Hart's great grand-daughter when she was 14 years old.Women's apparel was featured inFebruary. •

The current exhibit featuresfashions in black and white, from 1700to 1900. With so much black and whitefeatured in current fashions, it is in-teresting to see that no trend is reallynew. The exhibit concentrates onaccessories — jackets, shawls,parasols, and gloves. There is also a.collection of hand-painted fans, a verypractical fashion accessory in pre-airconditioning days.

Talk to the curator about thecollection of deeds, maps, books andmanuscripts if you are interested ingenealogical or historical research.

APRIL 18-24,1979

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$1.50 DONATION. Men and women of all ages welcome.MEETINGS HELD AT UNITARIAN CHURCH. THURSr S P.M

April 19: Cabaret With Pink DebbyApril 21: Broadway Theatre Trip to "Gemini".April 26: Motorcycle Scene

For information call: N.J. Gay Switchboard (609) 92 -2565

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qtSTflOEMusical drama due at Phillips hAill

NEW HOPE — A musical-drama Oh, to beUnderstood will be presented at Phillips Mill,River Road, New Hope, Pa., on April 20, 21, 27and 28, at 8:30 p.m. Seating capacity is limitedin the small theater, so reservations should bemade through Jan Cherry, New Hope TownHall, or by calling 215-862-5880 during the dayand 215-862-5745 evenings. Admission on Fridaynights $3., Saturdays, $3.50.

A diplomat, a wife, a mistress, United Nation

delegates, secretaries, and a chorus line are onstage with songs and dialogue created by Mrs.David Clarke, Morrisville, and Mrs. JohnStetson, New Hope.

The Phillips Mill Community Association iscelebrating its 50th anniversary with specialemphasis on the arts including a RetrospectiveArt Show which will open to the public on May25. I

'Troilus' will be Intime's finalePRINCETON — The 1978-79 Theater Intime

season will close, as it opened, withShakespeare. Intime's presentation of Troilusand Cressida combines many elements of theseason's other productions. The setting is an-cient Troy; the genre is comedy, and the authoris Shakespeare.

Director Tad Kepper has modernized this ageold epic. He gained his acting knowledge of

Shakespeare playing the roles of Claudius inHamlet and Antony in Julius Ceasar. He mostrecently appeared on the Intime stage as thesolicitor in the company's highly successfulproduction of Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience.

The show opens Thursday, Apcontinues the following weekend,is 8:30.

|il 26 andirtain time

Dance company offers free showsEDISON — The recently formed Park Dance

Co., sponsored by the Middlesex CountyDepartment of Parks & Recreation, will beintroduced to the public in four free per-formances April 26,27, and April 28 (matinee &evening) in the enclosed stage space of theRoosevelt Park Amphitheater, here.

A limited number of free tickets are availableto the public. Anyone interested in obtainingthem should send his or her request to Plays-in-

the-Park, P.O. Box 661, New Brunswick, N.J.08903, stating the performance desired (andalternate) with a self-addressed, stampedenvelope. These will be distributed on a firstcome, first serve basis with a limit of twotickets per request.

Unused seats will be given to anyone presentat the theater 15 minutes before the per-formance. Evening performances begin 8:30,the Saturday matinee at 3 p.m. .

Impersonator to perform in New Hope

BUCKS COUNTY — Lynne Carter, the firstimpersonator to do a full concert at CarnegieHall, will be at the Bucks County Playhouse inNew Hope for four performances, April 20, 21and 22. The performance will benefit the NewHope Chamber of Commerce Tourist In-formation Center.

Mr. Lynne Carter & Co.'s show of comedy andmusical impressions of Tallulah Bankhead,Mae West, Marlene Dietrich and others has

been at Jordan Hall in Boston and the Academyof Music in Philadelphia, as well as night clubsthroughout the country such as the Bon Soir inNew York and the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas.

Performances are Friday, April 20 at 8:30p.m., Saturday, April 21 at 5 p.m. and 9 p.m.;Sunday, April 22 at 6 p.m. Admission is $6.30 forFriday and Sunday performances; and $7.35 forboth Saturday shows. For ticket reservationscall the Playhouse Box Office at 215-862-2041.

GodspeW opens season at Bucks PlayhouseNEW HOPE, Pa. — The Bucks County

Playhouse will reopen for its 40th season on May2 with the musical Godspell to be followed by sixadditional musicals through September 9.Pippin, which played last year, will return May9 through May 26, followed by MeredithWillson's The Music Man, from May 29 throughJune 10. -*

Then follow four long time favorite musicals.Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma andtheir King and I, Lerner and Loewe'sBrigadoon, and the final offering of the season,

My Fair Lady.For subscribers, a choice of four to seven

shows are offered during the 19 week season.This will be the fourth season that the Bucks

County Playhouse, the State Theater of Penn-sylvania, will be under the direction of Ram IIILtd., the three man producing team of BertDaikelcr, Mitch Graff, and Ralph Miller. Mostof last year's playhouse staff and personnel willreturn this season.

For information regarding season sub-scriptions and theater party groups discountstelephone 215-862-2041.

Doll House' opens at DouglassNEW BRUNSWICK — A Doll House, Henrik

Ibsen's drama of a woman's struggle to assertherself, opens Friday, April 20 for nine per-formances at Douglass College.

Rich. characterizations and intricate plotsurround Ibsen's story of Nora's struggle tobreak free of the traditional roles of wife andmother.

The play is directed by William Esper with

the major roles played by graduate students atI he Mason Gross School of the Arts.

A Doll House will run April 20-22 and April 2>29 at the Little Theater on Nichol Avenue, withperformances at 8 p.m. each evening and amatinee April 29 at 2:30 p.m.

Tickets are $2.50 for students and $4 for thegeneral public. For tickets or additional in-formation call 201-932-9892.

'How to Succeed' auditions planned

PENNINGTON — Auditions for the Pen-nington Players' production of the Pulitzerprize winning musical How to Succeed inBusiness Without Really Trying will be held inHeritage Hall of the Pennington PresbyterianChurch on Sunday, April 22 from 2 to 5 p.m. andon Monday, April 23 from 7 to 10 p.m. These areopen auditions for all company members(principals, chorus, dancers, and musicians).

Participants should be prepared to sing a song

of their choosing. A limited amount of music isavailable but music from songs not from thisshow should be brought. Auditioners should beavailable for possible callback the evening ofTuesday, April 24.

"How to Succeed ." will be presented in theOpen Air Theatre at Washington Crossing StatePark on July 5, 6, 7, 12, 13 and 14. For moreinformation, call 609-921-6226.

TIME OFF 22 APRIL 18-24,1979

'Voices': Made in New jersey

•Ej

Amy Irving[portrays a prettjy deaf girl who desires to be a dancer in"Voices," filmed in New Jersey by United Artists.

by SUSAN SANTANGELO

Against a backdrop of New!Jerseybrownstdnes, waterfront vistas, andseamy nightclubs, two young would-belovers try to bring their lives together.

He is a young musician struggling tomake it big in the world of rock music.She is a teacher of young deafchildren, herself deaf to the world ofmusic, sound and voices that forms hisentire life. ' j

, ' >Voices is the latest in a current

string of boy-meets-girl "LovejStory"type films to hit the movie houses inrecent months. A love story withoutwords, as its promoters call it,(Voicesis also the first movie in decades to befilmed entirely in New Jersey!

IT STARS TWO rising young per-formers, Amy Irving and KlichaelOntkean, as the lovers from two dif-ferent worlds, and it also boasts astrong supporting cast. Miss Irving isthe film's biggest asset. Her soft,innocent look and convincing por-trayal of a sheltered young womanwho communicates almost exclusivelyin sign language are captivating. AsRosemarie Lemon she moves at firsthesitantly out of the safe deaf -worldher mother, well portrayed by veteranactress Viveca Lindfors, has createdfor her, to the independent point ofauditioning as a professional dancer.

Encouraged and supported by DrewRothman, the musician played by Mr.Ontkean, she auditions by feeling thevibrations rather than by hearing thesound of the music. Her triumph is one.the audience shares in fully. |

The warm, if sometimes-melodramatic story is the work ofNew Jersey author John Herzfeld ofWest Orange, who set his s^ory en-tirely in New Jersey locales

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deliberately, so that the movie wouldhave to be filmed here.

WITH THE HELP of the New JerseyMotion Picture and Television >Development Commission, the filmwas shot primarily in the HudsonCounty waterfront, communities ofHoboken and Jersey1 City. A majorscene was also filmed with actual deafchildren al the Bruce Street School forthe Deaf in Newark. The other sup-porting actors include Alex Rocco asDrew's compulsive gambler-father,and renowned drama coach HerbertBerghof as Drew's wise grandfather,Nathan. Drew's wise-crackingyounger brother is played by BarryMiller, who was "featured as the misfitin Saturday Night Fever.

Mr. Ontkean, wno adds Voices to agrowing list of credits, plays Drew asa determined yet impulsive youngman who races after Rosemariethrough the Hoboken railroad ter-'minal after glimpsing her for the firsttime. In later scenes, he patientlycoaxes her into the world of sound andencourages her to venture into his lifeof music by seeking work as a dancer.Not since Marlon Brando took on thedock bosses in the 1950's film On TheWaterfront has New Jersey beenfeatured so prominently in a film.

Voices is hardly an accurate por-trayal of life in New Jersey, but it isthe first in what the state film com-mission hopes will be a string ofmovies to be filmed here. The yet-to-be released Amityville Horror, shotlast summer in Toms River is thenext, and Joseph Friedman, executivedirector for the commission, saysothers are in the works.

Susan Santangelo is a freelance writer whofrequently contributes articles to the Packet-group's supplements. She works for the NewJersey State Council on the Arts.

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APRIL 18-24,1979

i:*teVr*J/rf- •

EAST WINDSOR

NOW PLAYING •••••••••••••••••a*••••••••••••

1,3,5,7,9.

The Cinema I: THE LORD OF THE RINGS, 8 dai y except Sat., Sat. 7 & 9:30. MAN VILIE

The Cinema II: CALIFORNIA SUITE, 7:30 & 9:30 daily. Sat. & Sun, matinee The Cinema: SUPERMAN, 7:30 & 10 daily.at2.

HILLSBOROUGH, Center Theatre: SWEPT AWAY, Mon. - Thurs. 7:15; Fri. - Sat. 7; Sun. 7:15.-

Hillsboro Cinema: BUCK ROGERS, Wed. &"hurs. 2, 7:30, 9:10. BLAZING AUTUMN SONATA, Mon. -Fri. 9:15, Fri. -Sat. 9; Sun. 5:30,9:15.SADDLES, Mon. - Sat. 7:15,9; Sun. 5:30,7:15,

LAWRENCE

Eric I: HAIR, Mon. - Thurs. 7:25, 9:40; Wed.

MONTGOMERY

9.PRINCETON

Garden Theatre: NORMA RAE, Mon. - Thurs. 7:25, 9:40; Wed. 1; Fri. 6:10,I; Fri. & Sat. 1, 5:30, 7:45, 10; 8:10,10:10; Sat. 1,6:10,8:10,10:10; Sun. 2:10,4:10,6:10,8:10,10:10.

Sun. 1:30,3:40,5:50,8,10:10.Movies-at-McCarter: THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE, Kresge

Eric II: THE CHINA SYNDROME, Mon. - Thuds. 7:30, 9:45; Wed. 1:10; Fri. & Auditorium Tues. & Wed. 7 &8:45.Sat. 1:10,5:45,8,10:20; Sun. 2:30,5,7:30.9:5(0.

WEST WINDSORMercer Mall Cinema I: THE CHAMP, 1,3:10,5&0,7:40,10 daily.

I Prince I: DEER HUNTER, Mon. -Thurs. 8; Fri. 6, 9:15; Sat. 1,6, 9:15; Sun. 2,AISE.1:30,TMercer Mall Cinema II: THE PROMISE, 1:30,3: JO, 5:30,7:30,9:30 daily.

Mercer Mall Cinema III: AUTUMN SONATA.

Quaker Bridge Mall Cinema I: PHANTASM, Fr5,7,9.

Quaker Bridge Mall Cinema II: COMING HOME, Fri. & Sat. 2, 5:15, 7:45,10:10; Sun. 1,3:30,6,8:30.

Quaker Bridge Mall Cinema III: HURRICANE,Sun. 1,3:30,6,8:30.

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:15,3:15,5:15,7:15,9:15 daily. Prince II: SUPERMAN, Mon. - Thurs. 7, 9:30; Fri. 5:30, 8, 10:30; Sat. 1, 5:30,

. 2:30,5,7,9; Sat. & Sun. 1,3,8,10:30; Sun. 2,4:30,7,9:30.

Prince III: LOVE AT FIRST BITE, Mon. - Thurs. 6:45, 8:25, 10:05; Fri. 5:30,7:05,8:45,10:25; Sat. 1,5:30,7:05,8:50,10:30; Sun. 2,3:55,5:50,7:45,9:40.

SOMERSET

Fri. & Sat. 2,5:15,7:45,10:15: Rutgers Plaza Cinema I: THE CHINA SYNDROME, Mon. - Fri. 7:30,9:45; Sat.-Sun. 2:15,4:40,7:30,9:45. -

Quaker Bridge Mall Cinema IV: BUCK ROGERS, Fri. 2:30,5,7,9; Sat. & Sun. Rutgers Plaza Cinema II: OLD BOY FRIENDS, 4,6,8,10 daily.

8QBOS DnSSanrana nrannnBnoEn

Auction includes Tut mask replicaDBS Z5QB1D HUBS HaCHD

raraHaaHEinnanHEinnanQarararaannasnran annaa nans

naran BOH nman

nag crass rasaa sumaaaa BSH BOOH annHCJHra HPHiacj tanaa nnDnnQiinnasantt n H n n

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THE

ANDROMEDA STRA

AT PRINCETON UNIVERSI""Y

SATURDAY NITE - APRIL : i

7:30,10:00,12J15Frick Hall — Kresge A|uditorium

Students $1.25

ROLLER SKATING

SCHEDULEKENDALL PARK ROLLER R

• ! '

Tues., Wed. & Thurs. 7:30-10:30 pm—$Fri. & Sat. 7:30-11 pm—$1.7J5Sun. 7:30-11 pm "SouC'-Disco Nite—$Sat. "Kids Funtime" 10-12 noon—$1.0(Sat. & Sun. Matinee 1:00-4 pm—$1.25

• . -; r

Private Rental Available for Parties & Gi

KENDALL PARK ROLLER RINK3550 Rt. 27, SO. BRUNSWICK, N. J. 297-3003

N

. TRENTON — The Boehm Studioshave donated a porcelain recreation ofthe Mask of King Tutankhamun to beauctioned off in the New Jersey PublicTelevision's "Great T.V. Auction."The auction will be aired each nightbeginning April 21.

The original mask was reminiscentof an Egyptian sun god, with hair oflapis lazuli, and body of gold. Inrecreating this masterpiece, the Boeh-m artists have striven for authen-ticity. • .

EAST WINDSOR

Sfarts FridayShow* 7:15 ft 9:00

Bargain ShowSunday at 5:30

SPECIALLIMITED ENGAGEMENT

tAEL BROOKS'

NK

00

75

ups

QUAKER BRIDGE 4ADULTS $3.00 STUDENTS * S R . CITIZENS WITH AMC CARD

TWIUTE SHOW S1.S0 CHILDREN tl .50-SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS

If This One' Doesn't Score You

You're Alreody Dead I

p "Phantasm"Fri. 1JO.{TLS-5:OO) • 7:00 • f 40 • 1140Sot. 1:00-3:00 (115)5:00)-7:00-»:00-1IKWSan. 1*0-3KH)-(TlSS:O0)-7KI0.»fl0

lobortbMlo

Porrow

JF/VRRTCANEIhereisonh/onesa/epiace... •

meachother'sarm&Fri. 1:00 (TIS 5:15) -7:15-10:15 O

. Sot. 2:00 (US S:1S)7:«; 10:15[ 1 9 Sun. 1:00-3:30 (TIS t:00)-8:30

• BRILLIANTLY ACTED.

Pat Harper, auction manager, notedthat interested bidders may mail inbids in advance. Envelopes should bemarked "Boehm Mask Bid." All bidswill be acknowledged and verified andthe highest bidder will be notified afterthe on-air bidding is completed.

For further information, contactMs. Harper at NJPTV, 609-882-5252.

'Obscure Object'

at McCarter

PRINCETON — That ObscureObject of Desire the 34th feature filmby the Spanish director Luis Bunuel,will be the next presentation in the"Movies-from-McCarter" series, withscreenings scheduled at KresgeAuditorium on the PrincetonUniversity campus on Tuesday andWednesday, April 24 and 25, at 7 and8:45 each evening.

Bunuel's protagonist is Mathieu(Fernando Rey), a fiftyish widowerwho goes about his business com-pletely unruffled in our modern,violent world, until he falls hopelesslyin love with a young women, Conchita.Mathieu pursues her relentlessly fromParis to Seville, and his pursuitbecomes an odyssey of sexualfrustration as she continually offers,and then withdraws, her virginity.

Tickets for this film are $2 and maybe purchased at the door one hourbefore the screening.

Fri. 2:00 (TIS-4:15) -7:«5- 10:15Sol. 2:00 (US-5:15) 7:45-10:15

tjg Sun. 1:00-3:iO (TIS-t:00)t:ao

The originalspace man

S IN THE 2StlFri. 2:30 - (US 5:00) - 7:00 - «:00Sot. 1:00-3:00 (TLS-5:00) 7:00-*:00Sun. 1:00 • 3:00 (TLS- 5:00) - 7:00 - 7:00

REDUCED ADULT S STU0EN7 PRICES FOR TLS TICKETS. LIMITED TO SEATING

For

S.R.O.advertise

in TIME OFF

24 TIME OFF APRIL 18-24,1979

SEW WHATS NEW

Some ahswers to readers' questionsbyAUDAMACOR I; pillow. In anyjcase, add 5 1/2" to the you've selected a pattern that is too

Width fQrSeaming and hems, and 3" tO lnroe Mnnv npnnlo ninV a nattorn tnby ALIDA MACOR

• What's New?Dritz-Clinton is marketing, "snap-a-

plier" ($4.50), a new tool that easily--attaches "Mighty Snaps."

A . safe way to mark fabric,needlepoint, etc. has been developedby W.H. Collins, Inc. "WonderMarker" ($1.50), can easily beremoved with a few drops of plainwater.

"BoSew Accents," is selling asimilar water erasable pen ($1.60);also good on paper, wood, etc.

• Readers' Questions.Q. Would you please explain how to

measure and make a bedspread?. A. I'll tell you a secret: I check theSear's catalog whenever I needstandard bedspread measurementsand, they are as follows: twin,80"xll0"; full, 94"xllO"; queen,102"xl20"; king, 120"xl20". If youhave a custom bed or spread, just laya tape measure along the length andwidth of the bed and add the drop atboth sides; then add the drop at thebottom and 15" more to tuck the

In any [case, add 5 1/2" to theor seaming and hems, and 3" to

the length for top and bottom hems..The Standard assembly procedure

for a plain spread is to use a full widthof fabric along the center length of thespread, and piece the extra neededamount at the: sides. The piecing willlook like a design feature if you pipethe seams, or add a trim on top of thejoining. The two bottom corners areusually rounded for a better drape.

As to the fabric required, you'llneed: J6 i/4 yds. of 45" fabric for atwin; 61/4 yds. of 54" for a full; 7 yds.of 54'f for a] queen (54" is moreeconomical for full and queen); and 101/4 yds. of 45" for king. I'll coverbedspreads more fully in future ar-ticles.1, A

Q. StXhe of the blouse patterns aretoo big for me across the shoulders.What is the correct alteration for this?Mrs. M.N. '

A. You simply trim off an equalamount on the front and back pat-terns, as shown by the dotted line inFig. A. j-

It's quite possible, however, that

Off Crossword PuzzleEdited by Margaret Farm aid Janes C. BoMt

By William 50 Crazed 100 la 15 The classic 63 FullyLutwlniak 51 "Hyperion" i vista workby. reasonedACROSS author 101 Work by 22 41 Down: 64 Holding

1 Blemish 55 Postpone i Across Phrase device5 Expenses 56 Stretch 104 Mink's 16 Caen's river 65 One of the

10 Fairway out cousin 17 Have on mediaobstacle 59 "Grapes of 105 Seed 21 Detective 67 Yearns

14 Cleave the Wrath" | covering 23 Doomed 68 Egresssurface character 106 Small | 24Beo f 69 Progeny

18 Winnie — 60 Hale i anchor (incline) 71 FormerPu 61 State 107 Body of 29 Chafes queen of

19 Dido 62Soundsof knowledge 31 Well- Italy20 Bullish sorrow 108 Swinging groomed 72 Brass hats

time 63 Tracking j barrier 32 Beside . 73 Have21 Support device 109 Newcastle's 33 Fletcher's residence22 Great name 64 Cower [ river product 76 Singing

fn English 66 Put up 110 Direct ; 35 Circe's groupliterature drapes 111 Learning subjects 78 Music and

25MissDoone 67 Bakery I org. 36 Kulanapan dance26 Yangtze output Indian 80 Musical

feeder 70 Adds liquor ! 37S,MandL ineptitude27 in——• to „ 38 Put forth 81 Letter

(in trouble) 71 Work by 51 ' energy 82 Hussar's28 Nebraska's Across .39 Identical weapon

largest city 74 Chemical •. | 40 Asia's se- 83 Opens29 Antenna prefix j DOWN cond largest 84 Fleer30 Site of 1776 75 Stirs 1 Spectacle ' s e a 86 Be unstable

surprise 76 152 A.D. 2 Popular 41 16th cent. 88 PGA greatattack 77 Individuals j weather Italian poet 90 the

32 Drop 78 A Alfa i word 43 Land of street(write) 79 Actress 3 Unaided theCymry 91 Falsify

33 Antilles isle Farrow 4 Ump's . 46 Candied 92 Raptorial34 Scottish 80 Work by I relative 47 Repetition feature

dusk 42 Across 5 Kind 49 Preclude 93 Between35 Bias 84 Goshen of arc 52 Ah eye Tinker and36 Sham events 6 one ——eye Chance39 Waldorf, for 85 Shares \ coverage 53 - — out 94 Adjust again

example 87 Throes 7 Charon's (stretching) 95 Booted42 1843 poet 88 Just right beat 54 Belgian 96 "TheCen-

laureate 89 Ancient Asia 8 Twitch province sor"ofold44 Ten, in Minor 9 Bookish 55 Common Rome

Toulons district ! type : ; .parental 97 One of the45 in - — 90 Chop fine 10 Hookey edict Grants

(stagnating) 91 Upset ° j players 57 Eighth day 98 Unmannerly46 Cheshire 95 Sea duck 111 Nouveau before the 101 " Bal-

cafsex- ' 97 Portland's j ides lou"pression bay 12 Cruising 58 Light 102"—— aMil-

48 Outfielder 98 Horse color 13 • carriages lion" Gates"Otis 99 Harriman, [ annum 60 Floribundas 103 Actress

49 Nap to friends 14 Flycatcher 62 Preside over • MacGraw

you've selected a pattern that is toolarge. Many people pick a pattern tofit their bust area (which is easilyaltered) instead of the neck area(which is not as easily altered). Voguehas a brand new fitting pattern (02098-$4.50) which contains four, up-to-the-minute, fashions to make and com-plete instructions for a perfect fit.

It is extremely important to choosethe correct size for this pattern andVogue offers the following advice.First measure your "high bust" (Fig.B) then your actual bust, and com-pare. If the difference is<LESS than 21/2", then select the jSattern size byyour actual bust measurement. If thismeasurement falls between two sizes,select the smaller size. Ex. If yourbust measures 33 1/2", select size 10,not size 12. If the difference is MOREthan 2 1/2", select the pattern size byyour "high bust" measurement in-'stead. Hope this helps!

If you have a sewing problem, or ahint to share, please write to me at,"Sew What's New," Time Off, c /djhePrinceton Packet, Box 350, Princeton,N.J. 08540.

PIG. A FIG.B

• Timely Tips:From Mrs. M.N. — If the right and

wrong sides of a fabric are similar,insert a pin on the wrong side of eachpattern piece. (You could also use apiece of masking tape).

Inexpensive placemats can be madeby weaving yarn through cotton disHcloths. Buy the ones with holes(12"xl4") and lea ve 2" of yarn on eachend as fringe.

LAST WEEK'S ANSWERS ON PAGE 23

LETS DO IT TOGETHERby DOROTHY RUBIN

The goal of today's game is to state the one word that fits eaoh set ofmultiple meanings. Intermediate-grade level children and up can play.

1. a tool for writing; an enclosure for animals. -2: an admirer; a device for cooling the person.3. a female domestic animal; a barrier preventing the flow of water. •4. a small missile; a quick movement; a stitched tapering fold in a garment.

5. a male animal; to direct the course of.6. a device for gripping an object; a hold; a device for changing gears. -7. to smile with joy; heavy timber used in construction. —:—

8. the young of an animal; to think gloomily. - — -9. a firm woven cloth usually made of wool and cotton; touched.10. equal in standing to another; gaze; a nobleman. ——'

Answers:

WV6 V°°1({'2 iuuaq*l ipjnp-o. .reais-c, i-rep--j, urep-g irej-g uad-T

FUN WITH WORDS

See how many of the word puzzles you can solve.1. I mean "to go upward with continuous progress"; take away one of myletters, and youll have something that makes me go upward. ——, .2. I'm a wild animal of the dog family; take away one of my letters, and Ibecome a domestic work animal. , - .3. I'm usually a mischievous child; add one letter to me, and you'll make mespiritless or exhausted. —;—, .4.1'm.a four letter word meaning "girl"; add a letter to me, and I become a-member of high social rank.——, -.

Answers: esep-ssBr-j, durt{-duir£ xo-xoyz qmfl-qumo'1

r.The Packet Magazine

Ring-around-t he-Racing occupies the time of the more experienced sailors on Lake Carnegie.

ALL-SPORTS CAIt's COURTWORKS 1 for SUMMER FUN fromJULY 2 through AUGUST 24. Boys and girlsfrom 7 to 16 years old can enjoy a 2-weeksession or the entire summer (8 weeks) foronly $35 per week. They'll be closely super-vised by a qualified, professional staff from 9am to 3 pm, Monday through Friday.COURTWORKS 1 is featuring: introduction toRACQUET BALL * SOCCER * VOLLEYBALL•*f BADMINTON • SOFTBALL * HIKING •JOGGING * and MORE. For all ability levels—COURTWORKS 1 for SUMMER FUN. Reser-vations still open. CALL TODAY! 609-452-1950,

<:OMM\VOI?KS

The Packet Magazine

. . ' ! ' • • - . • . - • • * • •

Sailing club belies land-locked environmentLasers, sunfish race weekly on Lake Carnegie

There are few Princeton arearesidents who have not driven up Route27 from Princeton to Kingston in thespring and not seen a multitude ofSailboats on Lake Carnegie. ]

More often than not, if the time is aSunday afternoon, those sailboats werepart of the Carnegie Sailing Club fleet.

Tjne Carnegie Sailing Club was startedire 1955, and originally its membershipwas limited to Princeton residents only.Now, however, its membership hasexpanded to include residents ofSYrrouhding towns as well. ["r The club was founded to encouragesmall boat sailing arid racing, and tocooperate with Princeton University inimproving conditions on Lake Carnegie.

. BO1 It OF TliKSE,objectives are stillthe club's main goals. As a matter ofact, the dock at the north end of the lakewas built by the club, and once a yearbefore the official spring sailing seasonstarts, club members spend a dayrepairing it, a sort of.work-party day.

• Members at first sailedj Penguinsailboats, which are two-man boats,needing a captain and one crewmember.

But interestingly enough, | said DanMazzarella, former commodore of the •club and now its secretary, ['we foundthat two-man boats for racing] just didn'twork out. We had conceived the two-man boat idea as a way to encourageparticipation as a family, and Penguinswere usually manned by a father-son orfather-daughter team. But competitionin the racing got so keen after a whilethat it led to hard feelings.

"For example, one cre\y memberwould blame the other if things didn't goright. Now, our races are limited to one-man boats, so if you lose, there's no oneelse to blame. Two-man boats in com-petition can often provoke the same sortof feeling as teaching a member of yourown family to drive a car."

Two types of sailboats are currently

popular among members of the Car-negie Sailing Club, lasers and sunfish.Almost everyone knows what a sunfishlooks like; they're easily recognizableby the brightly colored sail with thesunfish emblem. Because of theirmoderate price (prices generally rangearound $800), they are quite popular allover the country.

Lasers have a slightly bigger sail thana sunfish, and also have more rigging,so they are more of a challenge to sail.'(they are made in Canada.) Laser sailsare generally white with numericalmarkings on them. Prices for theseboats are up to about $1,200 now.

1 HE CARNEGIE SAILING Club runsraces on Lake Carnegie every Sundayafternoon, beginning this year thesecond Sunday in April, from 1:30 (2when daylight savings time comes) to4:30. The spring season goes into June,and the fall season begins after LaborDay and can go into December. Racesare held rain or shine.

Generally, two fleets race at a time;first lasers, and then immediately afterIhem the sunfish. According to Mr.Mazzarella, 10 or 12 sunfish and six orseven lasers can race on the lake at thesame time. '

Anyone who has a sailboat is invited tojoin the club. "We'll be happy to teachnew members the rules of sailing andracing," said Mr. Mazzarella, "and

eventually they can just join right inwith the rest of us."• Although sailors are welcome at theCarnegie Sailing Club no matter whatkind of boat they may own, to race you

. must have either a laser or a sunfish.Annual dues for the club are only $15

(for two boats, $20), with a $10 ad-ditional initiation fee for new members.

The club also sponsors a picnic in thespring and fall after a Sunday race formembers and their families and friends.

SOMETIMES sailors are put off bythe idea of competing in a race," saidMr. Mazzarella. "But if you've beensailing for a while, just recreationalsailing can become boring. Thechallenge is gone. So racing is thelogical next step.

"And the beauty of sailing on LakeCarnegie is, of course, that it's so closefor all of us. I just put my sunfish on mytrailer, drive to the lake, and launch it.The whole process, including the driveover from my home, takes no more than15 minutes,"

Anyone interested in further in-formation about the club can contactDan Mazzarella, secretary, at 924-2097(after 5 p.m.) or the club commodore,Walt Gibson, at 921-8976 (also after 5).

Or just come to Lake Carnegie somesunny spring Sunday and watch theaction first-hand.

April signals move

to outdoor leisureApril can only mean an end to cooped-up indoor living an d the

opportunity to move outdoors and away from stuffy houses.

This edition of The Packet Magazine is intended to offer

some suggestions on how to best enjoy the liberation from indoors

and the freedom of the great out-of-doors. The suggestions will

range from a trip to a nearby county park to an all-inclusive

two weeks in Bermuda; from digging in your own back yard

to having a contractor dig out the foundation for your new patio

or deck..

Or perhaps your idea of fun in the outdoors is passing

through the outdoors to another indoor place such as the new

elegant restaurant at The Meadowlands which makes watching the

ponies run an entirely new experience.. Or if that isn't your bag

perhaps collecting things is. If so, have you considered beer cans -

or butterflies, although the! two are not necessarily compatible..

At any rate herein are some ideas on how best to greet the

spring and summer. , The stories are by Susan Santangelo, a fre-j

quent writer in The Packet Magazine. Most of the photos, in-

cluding the cover shot of sailing on Lake Carnegie, are by Mark

Czajkowski, Packet -photographer.

Scooting alongInland Central Jersey is not noted as sailor's paradise, but owners ofsmall boats find Carnegie Lake in Princeton a fun site.

The Packet Magazine

Tara Greens" : * ! . \Golf Center

i # 9 Hole Regulation Course3,139 yards, water hazard, sand traps

Use every club in the bagGreens Fee: Weekdays—$4.00, Weekends—$5.50

* 9 Hole Pitch n' Putt Course550 yar;ds, perfect your short game

Lighted for night play—We'provide clubs & ballsGreens Fee: Weekdays & Weekends $2.75

Driving RangeCovered Tees and turf practice area —

Lighted for night time practiceBuckets of Bolls — $ 1.00, $ 1.50, $2.00

* Miniature Course18 Holes—New obstacles

— More challenging than ever.Fee at all times— $1.50

* PGA Pro gives private lessons andsemi private lessons

* Business Mens' Special 11:30-1 pmPitch'n Putt $2.00!

* Ladies' Day - Monday 9-3 Greens Fee $3.50* Club Rentais-Carts-JBags ,* Refreshments -Plenty of Parking* Church groups and Business organizations welcomed* Birthday Parties arranged on Miniature.

y 15thHOURS: IDaylight hoursAfter May 15Weekdays - 8 am -Weekends • 7am

1111 SOMERSET STREET {RT&Tat HOW LANE)

SOMERSET, N.jlO8873« 247-8284

Dinner timeThe large kitchen staff at Pegasus swings into action as the dinner crushbegins at the Meadowlands.

Pegasus makesevening at racesan eating delight

It's off and running at TheMeadowlands.

No, it's not a horse, although thatguess was close.

It's Pegasus, the new restaurant highatop the grandstand at TheMeadowlands Racetrack in East,Rutherford.

Named for the winged horse ofmythology, Pegasus is a dream cometrue for the New Jersey Sports andExposition Authority, which runs theSports Complex. Its officials feel thatthis restaurant is the finest in anyathletic facility in the country, and theymay may well be right.

ON A TOTAL cost-for-constructionbasis, Pegasus is, in a class with Win-dows on the World in the World TradeCenter, which cost the Port Authority ofNew York and New Jersey some $10.5million to build, and The Four Seasons,which would probably require $12million to reproduce today. It was builtfor about $4 million two decades ago.

The decor of Pegasus can only bedescribed as posh. Forest green andbeige are the predominating colorsused, and three of the dining rooms havea sweeping panaroma of the track belowso diners can watch the races.

If perchance you are not seated closeto one of the windows, color televisionmonitors are placed at strategic spotsaround the dining rooms for race-watching. There are also convenientbetting windows so diners can place betson the races without actually descen-ding to the track area.

Those in the know say the restaurant'scurved beige and green leather chairscost $200 each, suede-top dining tables$85 apiece, and each dinner plate offorest green with a gold Pegasusmedallion cost $50. .

Before you even take the glass-enclosed elevator to the fourth floorwhere the restaurant is located, youmust pay a $4 admission charge, for.which you are issued a Pegasuspassbook (which looks like a gqvern-

ment passport j .The restaurant seats 1,000 people.In Pegasus West there is an a la carte

menu that includes swordfish for $9.50,steak tartare for $14, a Mrounce sirloinsteak for $15, and two double lamb chopsfor $13.25. In Pegasus East, a buffetfeaturing international delicacies isserved at $19.50 a person.

THE SALOON, which is a com-bination lounge and bar, features a hugeshrimp cocktail for $6 and a thick roastbeef or corned beef sandwich for $5. InPegasus South, diners can partake of arib roast buffet at $14 a person.Pegausus South is mainly limited togroups of 100 or more, however.

Harry M. Stevens Inc., a Manhattan-based company which serves food and1

beverages throughout the metropolitanarea, is operating Pegasus.

Although the restaurant officiallyopened to the public on Wednesday,March 7, the Sports Authority held aspecial preview for invited guests onMarch 4, a Sunday evening.

The drinks flowed, and the bandplayed, as -guests jostled elbows with'such dignitaries as Gov. and Mrs. Byrneand members of his staff and cabinetand officials of the Sports Authority.

On this occasion, the special menufeatured a fruit cup served in ahollowed-out cantelope, green saladwith house dressing, and a main courseof mouth-watering Chateaubriand weretopped by a dessert of strawberriesfloating in champagne.

All the women went away happy asthey were each treated-to a yellow long-stemmed rose compliments of therestaurant.

The ever-present waitresses, busboys,and maitre d's go out of their way tooffer extra-special service. If they cankeep up this pace, diners are guaranteeda pleasant evening.

AM) IIIEKE'S ONE more reason

Continued on Page 25

f s—•• —

The Packet Magazine

Disco croze sweeps

Jersey with end

nowhere in sight"It's absolutely incredible," said Judy

Murray, proprietor of Dance Spec-trums, a dance studio which operates inboth Lawrence Township and DutchNeck. :

"And I don't think it's even peakedyet." '

• The.craze that Judy, and almost.everybody else who is into dancing these :days, is talking about is obviously the jdisco craze. . .

"The Hustle really started the wave afew years ago," said Judy. "That wasthe .first time in a long time that twopeople really did a fast dance as acouple.

"Before that, we had years of danceswhere couples faced each other andmoved, but not as a team: There was noset routine, and it certainly wasn't;graceful."

And with the success of John Travoltaand the movie "Saturday Night Fever,"what began as a fad became an ac-cepted way to dance among both thevery young, more middle-aged couples,and even the senior set.

DISCO CLASSES are springing upeverywhere. Most adult schools offerjcourses in this type of dancing, and Judyl

often travels to elementary schools toteach steps to small fry.

Although there are a lot of clubs in theTrenton-Princeton area that offer livemusic, if you go to one of these places donot expect to see disco dancing as such.

"Generally speaking, a small liveband cannot reproduce the sound that abig band with a lot of brass can do on arecording," said Judy. "People whofrequent these places are into more ofwhat I caMree style, which is basicallythe same old story of two people facingeach other and moving around to musicbut not as a couple, and certainly notwith any set routine."

To find a true disco and the true discosound, which places a heavy emphasison a steady beat which is not extremelyfast but not extremely slow either, Judysuggests going somewhere like TheYellow Brick Toad in Lambertville orJenny's in Lahaska, Pa.

At places such as these, records areused as opposed to a small live band.And frequently lessons are part of theevening's entertainment.

"You know," Judy said, "a lot ofpeople watch shows on television like

Continued on Page 10

Follow the leaderDance Spectrums instructress Judy Murray puts Glen Olsen through hissteps. .. | " • "

SUMMER AT THEHUN SCHOOL OF PRINCETON

COEDUCATIONAL 1979 SUMMER SESSION

Enrichment and Refresher CoursesJUNE 25 - JULY 27

5-Week Summer Session Grades 6-12 Day and Boarding

• reading skills• expository writing• SAT previews

• computer sicence„• Middle School math

. • Upper School math

. • science• foreign language• typing

Marine Ecology Field Program* New Jersey Shore -Pine Barrens (day and boarding)

1st session June 25 -July 62nd session July 16 • July 27

• Cape Cod Intercession (boarding only) July 8-13

Day CampJune 25-July 27

2 to 5-Week Sessions Ages 6-12 Weekdays 9-3

• archery •gymnastics • tennis• ceramics • overnight camping • swimming• ecology • photography , • crafts

Tk« Hun School aooa nol rfltcrlmlnato ooofcut opplfcanfl ond ifud«nh ontho batlt orrw€m. rolJgJon. *•>, color, national or wihnk oriate.

For Further Information Call:(609)921-7600

P. Terence Beach, Director of Admissions

EdgerstouneThe Hun School of Princeton

Princeton, N. J. 08540

The Packet Magazine

CKAMAUGA^TANOOGA

Touring the battlegroundsOne of Glenn Cowan's chief joys is touring Civil War battlefields. On each trip he picks up all available literature about the battle.

Civil WarLambertville manto battlefield tours

Civil War relicsIn his huge collection of Civil War relics, Glenn Cowan of Lambertville in-cludes this sidearm and a map tracing the Gettysburg campaign.

While most people spend a spring orsummer vacation at the beach or in themountains, Glenn Cowan of Lam-bertville tours battlefields.

And not just any old battlefields.Civil War battlefields.Glenn's idea of a good trip is like the

one he recently took with his father toexplore battlefields and histo'ric sites inVirginia such as Appomattox, Peter-sburg1, and Richmond.

Why?"Because the Civil War really

. fascinates me," explained Glenn. "AndI am obviously not the only one. Morebooks have been written about this warthan'ahout any other war in history,over 100,000 volumes."

(il.KNN HAS ALWAYS been a historybuff. Although he majored in politicalscience in college, military history wasalways a preoccupation. But then hewas concentrating more on modernwars, World War I and on.

"About three years ago I read a novelcalled "The Killer Angels" by MichaelShaara. The book, about the Battle ofGettysburg, won the Pulitzer Prize.

"Even though it was a fictionalizedaccount of the Civil War, it was verywell documented historically.

"I absolutely loved the book. In fact,I've read it so many times my paper-back copy is dog-eared. From that book,I went on to a nonfiction volume called'Death of a Nation' by Clifford Dowdy.And the more I read, the more I wantedto read."

Glenn's collection of Civil War bookshow numbers more than 100, but whenyou consider that 100,000 books havebeen published on the subject. "1 knowI've just begun to study.

"1 really became intrigued with all thebattles, the reasons for the war, etc.Half of the books in my collection arereprints of. books written between 1861and 1875. The rest are modern historiesof the war. They're not at all dry readinglo me," he said.

Glenn also subscribes to a magazinecalled "Civil War Times Illustrated,"which comes put ten times a year. Themagazine is published by HistoricalTimes, Inc., of Gettysburg, Pa.

"And, you know, every time themagazine comes out there are at leastfour or five hew books reviewed on theCivil War. So interest in it is definitelynot on the wane."

(INK OF <;i.KNN'S recentacquisitions is a collection of five printsof Civil War generals: Ulysses Grant,Stonewall Jackson, Joseph E. Johnston,Ambrose Burnside, and George Mc-Clellan. The prints are handsomelyframed and displayed in a place of honorin his dining room.

He also has two copies of "Harper'sWeekly" magazine from 1861, and ahand-painted glass slide depicting theBattle of Gettysburg.

"I made a conscious decision when Igot interested in studying the Civil Warthat I would not invest in items just for

Continued on Page 9

The Packet Magazine/

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To make lifeeasier around the pool and.patio, visit a Sylvan PoolsSupply Center today. We'rethe headquarters for poolgames and toys, inflatablerafts & boats, electronic bugkillers, hammocks, picnic:tables and more!

To celebrate our spring opening, every SylvanPools Supply Center is having a sweepstakes draw-ing with the Arneson Pool Sweep as first prize!Come on in and register this weekend . . . Just fillout this coupon and bring it into your nearestSylvan Pools Supply Center. You could be a winner!

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IIIIII#

Reviewing

the subject

Glenn Cowan reviews a segment

of the Civil War in one of the many

books on the subject he possesses.

Trinceton pallet SocietyAudree iZstey, Director

announces

AN INTENSIVE

EIGHT-WEEK SUMMER COURSEStarting June 4, Mondays through Thursdays

PRINCETON STUDIO, 262 Alexander Street

CRANBURY STUDIO, The Old School

BALLETKindergarten through Professional • Special Adult Classes

(For advanced students, daily.classes in pointe, variation, adagio)

MODERN DANCEBeginner through Professional • Special Adult Classes

JAZZ ^Beginner through Professional • Special Adult Classes

For information and brochure, call 609-921-7758 (10 a.m.-12 noon; 2 p.m.-5 p.m.)or write Princeton Ballet Society, 262 Alexander St., Princeton, N. J. 08540

The Packet Magazine

Civil War hovelset Glen Cowan

off to being a buffContinued from Page 6 ,

antiquity's sake. I only buy things that Ican learn something from," Glennexplained.: Other items in his collection are two

replicas of handguns used during theCivil.War.

Eventually, Glenn plans to get hisdoctorate and teach Civil War history.

"The number of battlegrounds for theCivil War in the eastern United States isphenomenal. I like to visit them to get anotion of what it must have been likewhen a battle was being fought there,"said Glenn.

"You are pot allowed to use metaldetectors to find any hidden,treasures,like bullets, at such facilities," he wenton. "If you should happen to find a relic,you'are supposed to turn it in to the

battleground officials. They frown onsouvenir hunters." |

MANY PEOPLE around the UnitedStates share Glenn's interest in the War.In fact, there ar^ many Civil Warroundtables in existence, which are

s associations composed of people who gettogether to talk about the Civil War.

In addition, there is an organization inexistence; called the Sons of-UnionVeterans of the Civil War. The group iscomposed of male descencants of thewar, not less than 14 years of age, and isdevoted to keeping alive the traditions ofthe Civil War.

The organization began in 1881, andhas been chartered by an Act ofCongress.

Membership information is availablefrom Fred H. Combs Jr., P. 0 . Box 6193.

The town where Mr. Combs lives andorganizes his group?

Mercer County's own, Lawrenceville,N.J. 08648.

' •

Gen. Jackson '. •A print of a battlefield photo of Gen. Stonewall Jackson is a prize in theCowan collection.

SUMMER LEARNING PROGRAMThe Lewis Clinic for Educational Therapy will hold a summerlearning program for students kindergarten age through highschool. .

Classes will be held from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. for 4 % weeks fromJuly 2 through August 1.

The program is especially geared to help children who areexperiencing difficulty with reading, comprehension, hand-writing, spelling, written expression and/or study skills.

Speech therapy and math are available during morning .tutorials for students requiring intensive work in these areas.

Students sessions are individually planned for a one-to-one ora structured, small group setting. The teacher student ratio isone to six.

Auditory, visual and visuo-motor training is given in groups ofeight to ten children as soon as basic skills have stabilized .and the student shows that he can cope with expectationssimilar to those of his regular classroom. .

For information and appointments, please call thesecretary at (609) 799-0190.

621 ALEXANDER RD-, PRINCETON, N. J . 08540

10 The Packet Magazine

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At LeSporfsac, we realize that your leisure'time is too scarce. Andthat's one of the reasons we designed good-looking lightweighttravel bags that can; outlast and outperform that hard luggageyou've been doing battle with. But don't believe us, see for your-self. Whether you're boating, flying or just skipping across town,LeSportsac/Princeton has a bag that's perfect for you.

at 26 Witherspoon Street. I Princeton

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Match your Skills with Tomorrows Jobs

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LET THE MERCER COUNTY VOCATIONALTECHNICAL ADULT SCHOOLS BE YOUR

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RETRAIN AND MATCH UP TO TOMORROW

Square dance?It looks like a square dance, but actually Claire Kennedy and Gary Ehrlickare rehearsing their latest disco steps. .

Big brass band

needed to produce

the necessary beatContinued from Page 5

'Hot City Disco,' and they see youngpeople whirling around to the music anddoing all sorts of complicated dips andlifts.

"And sometimes area discos actuallyhire people who are great dancers tocome and demonstrate.

"Butinstead of inspiring people to getup on the dance floor and try, watchingterrific dancers can sometimes have theopposite effect. Most people feel theycan never dance like that, so instead oftrying, they stand around and watch.

"WHAT DISCO OWNERS fail to telltheir patrons is that these couplespractice for several hours a day toperfect their routines. Most of the time,when these demonstrators started, theyhad some trouble learning, too. Butmost of the spectators never see thempracticing, only the finished routine."

Anyone can learn to disco dance,according to Judy. Murray. This type ofdancing has no age barriers.

"Most of it is based on the six-beathustle step, out and back with one foot,out and back with the other, and then atwo-step break.

"All the dances and routines arevariations on this six-step dance? After

all, there are only so many things youcan do with your feet and arms. Onceyou get the basic step, the rest is prettyeasy."

If you're giving a party sometime inthe near future, why not consider addingsomething a little extra to it? Judy willcome and, for $30 ah hour or $50 for twohours, will teach disco to your guests.You can reach her for more informationat the Dutch Neck studio (799-7165) or inLawrenceville (771-0449). N.

IF YOU WANT to take lessonsyourself, Dance Spectrums offersspecial evening classes several times aweek- including a new one just started atthe Lawrence studio on Wednesdaynights at 9 p.m. Fee is $15 per person fora six-week course.

"What I really like about- teachingdisco is watching the men lose theirinhibitions about dancing," said Judy."In most couples, it's the wife whooriginally wanted to take lessons; butafter only a few times on the floor themen begin to gain confidence."

Just like everything else, clothes arebeginning to reflect this new dancecraze. Designers are coming out with

Continued.on Page 15

The Packet Magazine 11

Princeton Meadows Country ClubPlainsboro, New Jersey

Located on Plainsboro Road 3 milesEast of Route # 1 and 4 milesWest of Route #130Country Club

Bob Intrieri, P.G.A. ProfessionalPro Shop 799-4000

Semi-Private Golf Course:• Most Reasonable Rates in Princeton Area• Memberships available • Outings welcomed• Special Rates -

• Weekdays after 4P.M.

• Senior Citizens - Monday, Wednesday, Friday-| • • Ladies - Tuesday, Thursday. I • . • • • •

Golf Instruction:• Lessons — individual & group

male, female, junior —• inquire about our golf academies• Video Tape Replay available

Pro Shop: (Golf & Tennis)• Completely stocked and "DISCOUNTED"

Professional Repair Shop:• We fix both golf clubs & tennis racquets• Custom wood club made to your specif ications• Racquets restrung• "Special Offer' — Re-grip your golf clubs $2.00 ea .

(Offer expires May 25,1979)

New Brunswick New Brunswicktraffic circle • - #95

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Trenton

One and two andGreg Olsen and Noreen Kennedyare in the forefront of a discodance class at the Dance Spec-trums in Lawrence.

Thinking about your child's summer?

PROGRAMSFORTHEBRIGHT Sometimes

summer needs morethan just sun...

Register for the

Center forIntellectual Achievement

•*•

A SPECIAL SUMMER EXPERIENCEIN PRINCETON

• 4 separate 2-week sessions• morning and/or afternoon programs• designed for children and teenagers with

academic abilities and talents• held at the Unitarian Church of Princeton

For Brochure and Information Call:(609)448-0975

Welcome to l

The A & B's new courtyard.

Soon we'll be opening for another season of outdoordining and cocktails. In addition to our usual services,we'll be offering our regular menu, daily specials, andSunday Brunch in Princeton's warm spring air.Welcome spring with another seasonal tradition., 'diningout' at the Alchemist & Barrister.

(609) 924-555528-30 Witherspoon St., Princeton

;

The Packet Magazine 13

Perfecting the stepsKen and Elaine Schmidt have mastered the solo steps and moved intopartner disco dancing at Dance Spiectrums.

All language service* available.

a coop of native teachers and translators

Sntall classes in an infermalatmosphere/orchildren and cutults

921-3063924-2652

GREAT WALL OF CHINA

Kuller Travel has added Chinato the long list of countries visited.

^ Call or come see us for anyinformation or reservations. _

Air

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•Rail*

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Steamship ** Hotels • Resorts

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FARM SUPPLIES• Wire Fencing • Animal F*«ds• Farm Hardware A Tools• Pasture ft Meadow Seed• Electric Fence Controller

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Different Mulches•Pin* Bark• Rite Dress• Redwood Bark

ROSED ALE MILLSPrinceton: 274 Alexander Road 924-0134

Pennington: Rt. 31 * W. Delaware 737-20M

The Packet Magazine 15

Hardwood Director Chair,White Varnish, Black

Chair fabrics come in a rainbowof colors — 18 heavyweight canvas

TRI-STATE AIRWAYSPRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL

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CALL (201) 526-2822 For Information

Even museums

catching on to discoContinued from Page 10

dresses to show off the body, especiallythe front-slitted skirts which look verypretty when you're dancing," said Judy."Disco clothes are becoming veryfashionable. And people who frequentdiscos really do dress up. No jeans here.The men usually wear a suit and shirtbut no tie, or perhaps a vest and slacks."

An offshoot of the disco dance craze isdisco roller skating, a hot item in NewYork which is gradually creeping intoNew Jersey. "But most of the people Iknow are not ready for that one yet,"

laughed Judy.

EVEN THE MUSEUMS are catchingon to disco. For example, the eminentlyrespectable State Museum in Trentonrecently sponsored an HeirloomDiscovery Day where appraisers fromSotheby Parke-Bernet in New Yorkwould appraise your furniture, rugs etc.for $5 per item. And the night before, tokick off the Heirloom Day, the museumheld a Disco Evening in the"Warehouse" for $20 a person.

The fee included one appraisal, discodancing, a cash bar, and light snacks.

. Proper disco attire was required.

Let Treadway set the happy scenefor your joyous event.

PARTIES,WEDDINGS...

Our special events plans include allof the friendly, fine facilities we're noted for.We will plan your rehearsal, reception anddinner with you, and accommodate your

out-of-town guests withspecial arrangements,all to fit your budget.

Call on us.Youl) like the

Treadway spirit.

"Headway InnUS. Route 1 • Princeton. N.J. • 609-452-2500

16 The Packet Magazine i

Goes with 1he hobbyWhen Mark Harmon began to collect beer cans his father, Pete, of Lawren- the extent of the hobby,ceville had no idea how far it would go. His license plate gives some idea of

A loaf of bread,ajugofivine,

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DR. PAM SARETT, DIRECTOR

Lawrence Wife boy

amasses400-plusemptied beer cans

The Packet Magazine 17

For an evening to remember... THREE STAR RATING INTHE NEW YORK TIMES

Some children collect toy cars. Othersare into trading cards, whose varietyseems to be endless these days. Stillothers are into' the more sedate hobbiesof coins and stamps.

And then there are those, the despairof their mothers, who collect anythingthey find on the street and leave themlittered all over their rooms to collectstill another thing— dust.

"But 10-year-old Mark Harmon ofLawrenceville has a most1 unusualcollection.

MARK IIAKMON- collects beer cans.Before you scoff, you should know that

beer-can collecting is one of the hottestthings to hit the United States in the pastfew years. It has grown so respectable,in fact, that there is now an organizationcalled Beer Can Collectors of America,founded in St. Louis, Mo., in 1970, whichclaims a membership roster of over•10,000 people.

And there have been several bookswritten on the subject, including "TheInternational Book of Beer CanCollecting" by Richard ^Dolphin, and"Beer Can Collecting" by Lew Cady.

So there is definitely something to thishobby.

Mark Harmon began his collection.("It was my dad's idea, really") abouttwo years ago, and he now has morethan 400 cans.

"I like beer," said Pete Harmon,Mark's father, who is a LawrenceTownship policeman. "One of myfriends had started a collection, and itsounded like a good idea to me."

Where elegant dining has become a tradition. Enjoy gourmet,continental cuisine, along with excellence in service and at- /mosphere. Recommended for weddings, bar mitzvah, anniversary,celebrations, family or school reunions, and holiday get-togethers!Ideal for political affairs, business meetings, and bowling banquets-

Live entertainment in cocktaillounge for your dancing pleasure

Tuesday through Saturday

- You can tell the Harmons are reallyinto beer cans. The license on Pete'spickup truck reads "Can Man."

The father and son work the collectionas a team, attending beer can shows(yes, there are such things) to pick upnew finds, as well as scouring local fleamarkets.

When attending one of these shows,the Harmons usually bring along

Continued on Page 19

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Have a beer-can fhat isMark Harmon of"Lawrenceville strikes a drinking-man's pose with one ofthe hundreds of cans in his collection, Mark saves empties only as hedoesn't empty them.

You cantrust the

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The Packet Magazine

RIDING DAY CAMP— just minutes from home!

BEGINNERS — learn riding and horse care from professional instructors

RIDERS — increase riding & jumping skills with our expert instructor andsuper facilities (Outdoor & Indoor)

HORSE OWNERS — bring your own horse and learn together, stabling available

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The Packet Magazine 19

10,000 persons join in latest collecting fadContinued from Page 17

"traders," duplicate cans which theymight be able to trade to some othercollector for an item they want them-selves. And, of course, sometimes theypay for them too; , .

"THK SHOP K11K liquor store inPennington often has unusual types ofbeer," said Pete. "When you buy a canwhich still has the beer in it, you have tobe sure to open the can from the bottomso as not lo destroy it.

"I have to say that in the past fewyears I've tasted more kinds of beerthan most people do, and some of it wasreally terrible!"

Just like most other collectibles, theolder the beer can is, and the rarer, the

more it is worth. The most expensiveone listed in the beer can books is aBudweiser Bock Beer can, with colors ofred, white, gold and green, which isvalued at an unbelievable $300. A can ofOrtlieb's Lager Beer (fromPhiladelphia) with colors of red, andwhite, black and yellow is valued at$125.

There are international beers, too.Some in the Harman's collection areFoster's from Australia ;(Mark'sgrandfather found that can while on avacation in Maine), and Golden Fasanfrom Czechoslovakia, which a friend ofthe family's contributed.

In fact, just about anyplace a friend ofthe family's goes these days, they lookfor unusual beer cans. And some of themare'really quite beautiful.

ANOTHER PKIZE of the Harmoncollection is a six-pack of cans from

World War II which a friend found whilecleaning out an old attic.

Mark's personal favorites i are thecone top cans, which were made about30 years ago. He has one in the collectionmade by Schmidt's, but would love toadd more.

One of the funniest-sets of cans Markand Pete have is by Old Frothingslosh,an American beer made in Pittsburgh,which has a series of rather overweightwomen prominently featured.

Also, did you know that every yearwhen Princeton University has areunion, Budweiser marks the occasionwith a limited edition of cups shaped likebeer £ans? The Harmons happen to

have a friend who works at theuniversity, and every year he givesthem a new can for the collection.

What dothe Harmon father-son teamhave to say about beer-can collecting?"I think it's fun," said Mark. "When myfather first suggested the idea, I thoughtit was kind of funny, but now I really likeit."

And despite the fact that he had tobuild several extra shelves in his hometo, accommodate the collection, PeteHarmon said, "I think it's great. Andone of the best things about it is thatbeer-can collecting is something Markand I can do together."

OUR RUNNING SHOES CAN TELL YOU A LOT ABOUT OUR TENNIS

If you know anything about runningalready know a lot about the superior desiconstruction of Nike tennis shoes.

And the same thing that made us famous inrunning is making us successful in tennis.

Word of foot advertising. People see the proswearing Nike shoes and try mem.

And when they find out how well Nike tennisshoes perform, the word gets around fast

People talk about how comfortable they are.About the support they give you. The extra traction.And how they outwear almost any other major brandyou can buy. , '

At Hulits, your athletic footwear headquartersin Princeton, you'll find a complete selectionof Nike Shoes.

ING.140 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON. NEW JERSEY 08540

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5:39, Sat. 9-5We accept major credit cards

20 The Packet Magazine

The NewSchool forMusic StudyA NON-PRQFIT EDUCATIONAL. INSTITUTION.

1979

The country's only research center. devoted exclusively to mu$ic

education at the piano

;

1r

8-WEEK SUMMER TERM:JUNE 18-AUGUST 10

• • • . i

MUSIC PLAYSHOPFOR CHILDREN AGES 4-5-6

Here, in an atmosphere of creativity and play, young childrenlearn the fundamentals of music: singing, listening, motion tomusic, playing basic rhythm and melody instruments.No piano or home practice required.

PRE-P1ANO CLASSESFOR CHILDREN AGES 7-8-9

These classes provide an ideal introduction for beginnerswho are considering lessons in September. Rhythm, ear-training, sight-singing, improvising, reading-readiness, basictechnic and practice skills prepare for smooth sailing whenformal lesson begin.

PIANO LESSONSFOR STUDENTS OF ALL AGES

Private lessons coupled with repertoire classes are availablefor elementary, intermediate and advanced students whowant to put the summer months to good use.

In addition, there's an innovative program for adult beginners,designed at the New School, where we believe it's never toolate to begin!

For full details, wrife or call:

P. O. BOX 407 PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08540TELEPHONE (609) 921-2900

Bruce presentssomething nicer thanwall-to-wall carpeting.

Bruce Village Plank ""

Hardwood flooring that glues to concrete, vinyl or wood.Genuine Bruce Hardwood Floors in patterns you can glue right tomost subfloors. Choice of planks and mosaic parquets. Bruce glue-downs turn a tired floor into an eye-catcher. All floors are factorystained and waxed, some in beautiful antique surface And they rethe right thicknessesto butt uptoyour carpeting All you do is spreadan adhesive and press the floors in place. Installation available ordo-it-yourself.

as little as

$1.59sq.ft.

VILLAGE BUILDINGP. O. BOX 257, RIDGE ROAD

MONMOUTH JUNCTION, NJ 08852— (201) 3 29-6 266

Patios and decksno longer considered

luxuries for housesPatios and decks are becoming an

integral part of homes these days. Fewnew houses are built without one, andmany people who have older homes thatwere built before these types of ad-ditions became so fashionable haveusually either added one on themselvesor paid a contractor to do it for them. .

The best patios and decks are builtwith sun exposure in mind. A southernexposure is the warmest, drying fasterafter a rain and warming the fastest onwinter days. i

A western exposure offers greatercontrast: coolness in the morning andwamth in the afternoon.

For this part of the country, these two

exposures are generally recommendedby architects, since northern or easternexposures invite coolness and may in.fact never get direct sun.

OF COURSE, when planning to buildon either a patio or deck, prime con-sideration must be given to the trafficpattern out of the house. Since manypeople use them as a place for a picniclable for outdoor eating, easy access tothe kitchen is frequently a determiningfactor. And don't forget privacy,especially if you are planning to use thearea to sunbathe.

Continued on Page 22

Save 20%by the group

Meadbwcraft Wrought IronAll Weather Patio Furniture

48-in. table and 4 chairsRegularly, as shown, $465.

NOW $369antique green, yellow, or white

We also feature Tropitone, Brown Jordandirectors' chairs and folding aluminum outdoor furniture

r l assauMontgonwry Shoppng Csntsf

Rocky HI . NJ.321-6696

162 NassauPrinceton. N J .

924-2561

The Packet Magazine 21

Factory outlets offer some rare bargainsSavings of up to 50 percent available -— if you hunt

Just about everybody loves a goodbargain, and in these inflation-riddenlimes, just about everyone is alwayslooking for one.

Did you know that there are manyfactory outlet and bargain stores withineasy reach of the Princeton area?

Let's be sure we all know what we'retalking about. A factory outlet is a placewhere consumers can buy directly fromthe manufacturer at prices lower thanretail. A cash-only policy -generally,applies here. . • . •

A distributor's or wholesaler's outletis a store, operated by wholesalers whodistribute goods' for several manufac-turers, again on a cash-only basis. Youcan generally save-50 percent of theretail .price by shopping at awholesaler's outlet.

MANUFACTURERS outlets arefreestanding retail stores offeringmerchandise at discounts from regularretail prices. These generally acceptcredit cards in addition to cash. Butsince the store must pay the credit cardcompany 5 to 10 percent of the salesprice, the average markup on mer-chandise is increased to make up thedifference.

Other terms which apply here arediscount, which is a reduction madefrom the regular list price; markup,which is the amount added to theoriginal cost to determine the sellingprice; and first quality, which means nodefects. Generally speaking, in mostoutlets items are marked if there aredefects.

Be sure to carefully check over eachitem you buy before you make thepurchase, since many stores of this typehave a no-returns policy.

Also, although there are manywholesale and factory outlets in Penn-sylvania1 and New York, remember thaton clothing, for example, there you mustpay state sales tax. Therefore, shoppingin New Jersey will be smarter since thisstate has no tax on clothing.

Resist the urge of impulse buyingwherever possible. Qnly buy things youreally need, no matter now reduced theitem may be. If you don't need it, it isn'ta bargain, is it?

The fact that a label is cut from apiece may not necessarily mean that itwas high-priced in the beginning, suchas designer piece of clothing.

Expect limited service. Stores of thistype are low-overhead, and the help willnot provide the service you would get. ina regular retail store.

BEFORE VISITING any of the stores,call. Outlets have a reputation forchanging hours, moving, or closingwithout notice. And don't take moremoney with you-than you can afford tospend.

Know your brands in advance, and asfar as clothing outlets are concerned, beprepared for anything' regardingdressing rooms. Some outlets havecommunity dressing rooms, others mayhave closets or even restrooms used forthis purpose. In the case of no tryonroom, know your size and bring a tapemeasure to check size of the garments.

Also, when shopping for clothing, tryeverything on if you can, even if it is not

. in your regular size. Many of the moreexpensive manufacturers are moregenerous with fabric, so if you take asize ten in a moderately priced dress,try on smaller sizes as well. And don'tbuy a garment that doesn't fit properlywith the promise- you will fix it later,because most-of the time the promisewill go unkept.

Avoid high fashion garments, sincethese go out of style quickly and are notreally a bargain.

Shopping at the end of a fashionseason is wise because the selection isstill good and prices are usually markeddown even'more since stores want tomove in the next season's merchandise.

WITH ALL THESE thoughts in mind,here are some of the good places to shopin this area. . ,

Continued on Page 31

Nature .r,has a aft

Your Most BeautifulSpring Ever.

It Beams Riaiit Now AtDoerler

Landscapes 9 Inc.

It begins now when youcall us for a landscaping planto include plants which willgive a continuing array ofcolor to your world fromearly spring to late summer.

All it takes is a bit ofplanning and we can help!

Call one of our landscapearchitects today.

DOERLER LANDSCAPES, INC9 Gordon Aye., Lawrenceville • (609) 924-1221

^ ; * ^ & ' - i

22 The Packet Magazine

. STONY BROOK GOLFSwim and tennis

Our Beautiful 18-Hole Golf CourseIs Open to the Public

Green Fee Rates$5 Week Days

$6 Sat, Sun. & Holidays

TENNIS3 Hartrue Tennis Courts

Open to the PublicSingles $3 per person /1 hr

Doubles $5 per person/1 Vz hr.

PRO SHOP(609)466-2215

MAIN OFFICE(6Q9) 466-2220

STONY BROOK ROAD, HOPEWELL, N. J.

Good planning key

to building patioto really live on

Continued from Page 20

. Generally speaking, the traffic pat-tern is controlled by three factors: thelocation of entrieSj important centerssuch as cooking, conversation, or play,and furniture.

If possible, keep cooking centers awayfrom the central areas, and route trafficaround activities and conversationareas. A child's play area should beremoved from the main patio.

Privacy can be created with gratings,screens, fences, and even bushes. Windcan be protected against by the use ofpaneled fences.

The best patios and decks are in scalewith the lot, house, and the recreationsfor which they are intended. It is saidthat there is one rule for the size of these-additions: they should be larger than thelargest room of your house.

If only a small size is possible, plan toreduce the amount of furniture used andthe number of activities the space is tooffer.

NO MATTER WHAT the size, theseadditions must be perfectly level. If theground for the site is uneven, either

' excavate the high areas, fill in low ones,or consider building part of a patio as adeck.

If the space for a patio is only a fewfeet lower than the house, you can breakthe descent by generous platforms at thedoor. Connecting steps should have

extra wide treads.Shapes of patios and decks are limited

today only by one's imagination. Youcan't go wrong with a rectangulardesign, but free-form shapes arebecoming popular because they are bothflexible and adaptable. One trick usedwhen planning an unconventional shapeis to begin with a rectangle, then softenthe edges and proportions. Often acircular shape is used within a rec-tangle, the paving changing in texture.

When choosing a surface for a patio,this is not the time to cut corners sinceyou want it to last. Choose long-termmaterials, such as concrete, brick,pacing block, flagstone, or wood.

The best decks are those so. placed inrelation to the house as.to invite a freeflow of traffic. However, detached decksmay be preferred in special situations,such as when a certain location offers afine view or unusual privacy.

Even though decks are built above the1 ground, the ground itself should be

cleared of vegetation and graded orprovided with drainage.

Decks • can be made of variousmaterials, such as wood, steel or con-crete. Wood is the common choicebecause it is relatively inexpensive andeasy to work with.

Whichever structure you are in-terested in building, a deck or a patio,there are several good books on themarket today which offer excellent

Continued on Page 30

- Take Out Service -

The BEST Chinese FOODIn The Princeton Area

rincetonChinese-American Restaurant

COCKTAIL LOUNGEOPEN 7 DAYS

A WEEK

36 Witherspoon St.Princeton, N. J.(609)924-2145

During or after your funfilled day of warm-weather

activities, nothing tastesquite as good as the crisp

fresh goodness of authenticChinese cuisine, po stop in

and see for yourself.

'Jinn.201-782-4900

ROUTE 202-31FLEMINGTON, N. J .

V4 mile south of circle

AREA'S OLDEST A N D LARGEST'^ & SN geieratioi of

FENCE GRAFTERSSkilled, Licensed & Insured Manufacturers of Hne Fences & Decks

• Residential• Commercial

• Industrial

WHOLESALE RETAIL

High SecurityChain Link Fences

Wood UtilityHouses

• ESTIMATES• INSTALLATIONS

•TERMSVisit Our Shopl

Over 100 Styles &20 Brand Names

Tool Rental • Garden SuppliesFireplace Equipment

Pool Accessories • Log Cabins

Manufacturer of'ONGUARD PORTABLE"

Dog Kennels

SUBURBANFENCE CO.

Charter Member: N.J. Fence AssociationMember: International Fence Industry Assn.

U.S. HWY. ff.1, PRINCETON(Between Trenton ft Princeton)

s 452-2630 m

The Packet Magazine

The cat is extraA well-designed patio can offer living space for the greater part of the year. An example is this Princeton area patio but the cat in the door is an extra touch.

CARIBBEAN

ASK ABOUT SITMAR'S EXCITINGCARIBBEAN CRUISES. WE KNOW.

Sail in incomparable luxury aboard Sitmar's Liberian-registered T.S.S.Fairwind, one of the largest and most spacious ships cruising. You'll visitthe Caribbean's most exotic ports, be spoiled by Italian service, and en-joy superb continental cuisine. Sitmar has 7,10,11 and 14-day Caribbeancruises. The 10 and 11-day cruises even reach South America. And the14-day cruise includes an excursion into the Panama Canal, a fascinatingstop at the remote San Bias Islands, and free roundtrip air fare. Ask usabout Sitmar's Caribbean cruises and their money-saving Air/Sea Program.It will be the most luxurious, most memorable vacation of your life!

ESTABLISHED 1922

REVERETRflVEL

. 29 Palmer Square, Princeton, N.J. 08540609-921-9311

1891 N. Olden Ave., Trenton, N.J. 08638609-882-0072

Sunday, & Daily 10 AM to 6 PM

PRE-SEASON SALMESH FURNITURE GROUPING

130SAVE

42" mesh table & chairs48" mesh table & 6 chairs

The most complete patio furniture selection in Central Jersey• Arlington House 1 • Grosf illex _ • Monterey Bay• Bright Industries \ • Keller . •Trojan

All Furniture Veady for Immediate delivery -

The PaLb and Gift Shop at

>

DeHwy. 27, North Brunswick

297-1244One Mile North of Franklin Park

MASTER CHARGE e FREE DELIVERY • BANKAMERICARD

24 The Packet Magazine

A night erf the trackPegasus, the new restaurant at the Meadowlands, has transformed the concept of an evening at the races.

HASTY ACRESRIDING CLUB

Instructions in Hunter Seat & JumpingBeginners thru Advanced

Adults and ChildrenEvening Classes for Adults

Horses Bought & Sold

Indoor Riding Facilities

One week stable and horsemanagement courses will be

offered during our summer sessionJune 18 to August 24

Call 609-921-8470

121 Laurel AvenueKingston, N. J.

No Horses for HireLOO»Ittoantm

PROJECT USE(Urban-Suburban Environments)

WILDERNESS EXPERIENCESYOUTHS 12-18 YRS. OLD, COLLEGE STUDENTS & ADULTS

ACTIVITIES INCLUDE:Backpacking, Mountaineering, Rock-Climbing, Rappelling, Caving,Ecology, Exploring the Pine Barrens, White Water Canoeing,Orienteering, Safety, Environmental Issues, Rafting, First-Aid,Sailing, Survival Skills and Community Service.

For more information call: 201 /870-6650A PROGRAM OF FAMILY AND CHILDREN'S SERVICE OF MONMOUTH COUNTY

The Packet Magazine 25

Pegasus' costof $10.5 million

is at top of listContinued from Pige 4

why you should plan to visit Pegasus inthe near future. The rest rooms are veryopulent, especially the one done all inpeach featuring ultrasuede benches atthe makeup mirrors and fourteen-karat-gold faucets (according to the at-tendant) in the sinks. And live flower

arrangements everywhere. tPegasus will provide you with an

evening on the town you'll not soonforget. Yes, it is expensive, but saveyour pennies and go: The atmosphere iswell worth the added price for diningout.

A rare sliceChef Jean-Marie Boistard slices a prime rib roast in the kitchen ofPegasus at the Meadowlahds.

hREPAIR & RESTORATION

OF OLD JEWELRYSILVER & GOLD PLATINGDISCREET DISPOSAL OF

FAMILY TREASURES n«>OROTHY H. OPPEMHEIiff,f

DEALER(Fine Jewelry & Antiques)

43 Main Street, Kingston, N. J. 08528(609) 924-0332 SHOP(609)924-3923 RES.

1Antiques for Pleasure and Investment"

For your home we invite you to see

The Largest Stock of Fine Antiques in N J.

They are "one of a kind" and of lasting value.They lend character and beauty

to even the most contemporary homeand "belong" in the traditional ones.

We are now located a t :

49 State Road (Route 206)

Princeton, N. J.

Open Mondays through Saturdays -10 A

Members: Art&A ntique Dealers League of A

-5P

i ' . j . - 4 ; » . : . - •-.,•„.._.,,- .—.•—„

The Packet Magazine

A who/e room fu//Andrew Bushell displays two of his largest examples of the butterfly family in his hopewell room crowded with exhibits.

TenaGbttaCeramic Tiles, Pottery, Baskets, Blown Glass, Custom Framing

• v

Things for Spring I

1. Bamboo Lawn Torch2. Bamboo Lantern3. Soleri Bells4. Italian and Mexican

Terra Cotta Planters

$8.00$5.25

$7.00-$60.00

$1.50-$50.00

at the Tomato Factory, Hamilton Avenue, HopewellHours: Mon-Sat. 10-5 • Sun. 11-5 Free Parking

M229

MERCER COUNTYPUBLIC GOLF COURSES

18 Hole Championship Courses

Open All Year RoundDaily Greens Fees

MOUNTAIN VIEWGOLF CLUB

• Pull Carts• Power Carts• PGA Golf Pro• Golf Lessons• Lockers• Snack Bar

PRINCETONCOUNTRY CLUB

• Golf Outings• Pull Carts• Power Carts• PGA Golf Pro•Golf Lessons•Lockers•Picnic andBanquet Facilities•Snack Bar

Mountain ViewBear Tavern Road

West Trenton, N.J.(609)882-4093

Emmons DriveoffRt.1

Princeton, N.J.(609)452-9382

MAINTAINED AND OPERATED BYMERCER COUNTY PARK COMMISSION

The Packet Magazine

Old hobby new

again; butterflies

occupy youngsterLike most youngsters his age (11 on

April 9), Andrew Bushhell of Hopewelllikes sports, does not like to go to bed at9 p.m. on school nights, and. spendsmuch of his time after school playingwith his friends.

But he has one interest that sets himapart from other ll-year-olds.. Andrew Bushell collects butterflies.

••MY FATHER collected them whenhe was younger," explained Andrew."And he originally came up with, theidea of my collecting them. I startedwhen I was 5 years old."

After six years on his hobby, Andrew'scollection of butterflies and moths

("You can tell the difference betweenbutterflies and moths because mothsusually have thicker antennae and afatter body," he explained) is quite animpressive one. •

As of this writing,. 346 variedspecimens are carefully mounted anddisplayed on specially built shelves inhis bedroom.

"Do you remember the first time youever touched a butterfly?" his motherasked him. "You were about 3 years oldat the time. Your father found one on arosebush and put it into your hand. Youweren't the least bit squeamish about iteven then." • .

Not like this writer, I might add, who,when Andrew insisted on putting abutterfly into her hand during the in-terview, closed her eyes and said"Yuk."

Andrew laughed, and said I was justlike his mother, who still won't touchany of his specimens.

Andrew is constantly adding to hiscollection. Sometimes friends bring himnew specimens. Andrew also orderssome from The Butterfly Company inRockaway, N.Y.

"I buy some specimens because thereare some types you just cannot findaround here," he said.

And when one of his aunts wastravelling through the Far East, shebrought him two rare types to add to hiscollection. •. And some Andrew catches himself.

Continued on Page 28

Just For You

Kale'sGarden Center

With Convenient parking and a new sates center,shopping at Kale's Nursery will be your pleasure. Inaddition to a complete selection of nursery stock.Kale's is now offering quality garden supplies,tools, and of course, plenty of helpful advice basedon over 20 years of landscaping. Plan to visit usnow.

ClosedEaster

Sunday

^ > 7Mon.-Sat. 9:00 - 5:30Sun. 10:00-4:00 LE-S NURSERY & LANDSCAPE SERVICE

CARTER ROAD • PRINCETON • NJ 08540

The "House Of Hi Fl" presentsLOUDSPEAKERS FORACCURATE MUSICREPRODUCTION

The ADS L620 is the incredible integration ofaccurate, deep bass, crystal clear highs, and amind-bogging dynamic range. It establishes a newstate of the art for accuracy and playing level intwo-way speaker technology. All this makes theADS L620 a very serious candidate to become thecountry's most popular loudspeaker in its pricerange (under $200 each).

We offer the L810 as a no-compromise speaker forthe discerning listener who is seriously interested infaithful reproduction of music. Less than $360.00ea.The ADS L810 speaker is a studio-quality, four-driver, three-way system. It features exceptionallywide dispersion, smooth full-range frequency andpower response.

The ADS L910/II, at approximately$660, is not afraid to be compared to$6600 speaker systems. In fact, it isprobably far more practical and certainlymuch more affordable for those whodemand the ultimate in flawless musicreproduction.

Daily 9:30 to 5:30Friday 9:30 to 9 p.m.Sat. Till 5 p.m.

"We ServiceWhat We Sell"

House of* Hi-Fi *

SOUND

1819 No. Olden Ave883-3004

Our Elegant Facilities Enable Us ToCater To Your Special Occasions

Groups of 50 to 500

Coutjtry^Clubi Caterers

"We shall be pleased to consult with you andoffer our vast expertise to cover every

minute detail of your special occasion."

Superb Food • Outstanding ServiceTasteful Atmosphere

Off Premises Catering A Iso Available(609)452-2620

If no answer (609) 392-7979One Wheeler Way, Princeton, N. J.

28 The Packet Magazine

MOTOR HO MERENTALS

Do yourtravelingthis year

in aMIDAS® RV

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DIAMOND POOLS.VOU'D HAVE TO DIG PRETTY DEEP

TO FIND BETTER QUALITYIN-GROUND POOLS.

NOW AT LOW PRE-SEASON SALE PRICES.Quite simply, Diamond Pools is the most reliable name in thepool business. We've been selling and servicing our pools forover 22 years. Our reputation was made and kept by takingthe utmost care in the construction of all Diamond pools. Callus collect at 721 -5628. We'll be happy to answer any of yourquestions. And now you can choose from many differentstyles and shapes at the lowest prices ever. Think about i t .Your bock yard wpuld make a perfect setting for a Diamond.

toolsBANK FINANCING

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Garden State Parkway364-8383

CALL COLLECT: 721-56283 FULL SERVICE POOL STORES

Butterfly collecting

riot a good hobby

for the squeamishContinued from Page 27

"It's not ai ail unusual during thesummer to see Andrew scurryingthrough the fields around our house witha butterfly net after some newspecimen," commented his mother.

IN ADDITION, Andrew has found awoman in Parsippany who has a but-terfly farm. Sometimes he buysspecimens from her. On other oc-casions, he may trade some of his own toget a new specimen.

The warm-weather months are- the -best for finding new specimens, saidAndrew. "The best time to start acollection is early April."

Some of the moths and butterflies inAndrew's collection, like the Giant-.Tailed Comet Moth, can cost up to $25fpr a pair of male and femalespecimens.

How do you tell a male from a female?The male is usually smaller and morebrightly colored.

The rarest butterfly in Andrew'scollection is the Ornithpptera Victoria,

1 which is becoming an endangeredspecies. This butterfly hails fromAustralia.

Some specimens in the collection areover 50 years old. "I got thesespecimens from Miss Fine's School inPrinceton," said Andrew, "You can tellthey are quite old because the colors onthe wings tend to fade with age."

Andrew is now into actually raisingbutterflies from cocoons and watchingI hem grow. He has several cocoons hechecks carefully through their variousstages.

"When a butterfly or moth first jomesout-of a coccoon," said Mrs. Bushnell,"they are really ugly and very wet. Butit's fascinating to watch them, becauseafter only about five minutes they beginto dry and really become quitebeautiful."

"Do you want to know how I killthem?" asked Andrew. Something thathand't really occurred to me. I had to'admit.

"I either use a drop of chloroform orcarbon tetrachloride* and that usuallydoes the job. Another technique Isometimes use is pinching thespecimen's thorax. It's quite quick andpainless."

His is definitely not a hobby for thesqueamish.

"I USED TO PUT my specimens inthe freezer, but my mom won't let me dothat any more," he added.

Once the butterfly is dead, Andrewputs the specimen on a specialspreading board and either pins thewings down or uses pieces of glass tohold the wings put. The next step, oncethe wings are at -full expansion, is to

Continued on Page 41

Canoe Sales and Rental

Sunfish Sailboats for SaleStarcraft Fishing Boats

Grumman Canoes & Boats

Evinrude sales and service

Canoe Trips Planned • Transportation AvailableRent for a Day, a Weekend, or a Week

Call for Reservations 737-3446

ABBOTT'SMARINE CENTERRiver Road (Rt. 29)

Titusville, N.J.

The Packet Magazine 29

r

LepidopteraAndrew Bushell of hopewell hasa number of recreational outlets,not the least of which is his ex-tensive butterfly collection.

FASHIONSNew looks.new shapes...new lengths, new exciting springcollections fortall-sizes8-22!

SHOES10-T3 AAAAto W-l-D-E

dressy.casualsandals, ciogs

slippers &everything.

Thurs. to 9 p.m. Daily to 6

Towne other stores: Newark,

Fashions& Shoes

Paramus, W. OrangePhiladelphia.

415 Rte. 18 • E. Brunswick • 254-5050Village Green • between2 Guys & Bamberger's

COATS • SPORTSWEAR • LINGERIE • SHOES

0s.

Formal and Candid Weddings in Natural ColorPortraits - Family Portraits

at home or in the studio

Associate Fellowof Photography

P H O T O G R A P H E R S217 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON. NEW JERSEY 08540

(609) 924-1620

30 The Packet Magazine

Trapuntois special

Just one of our many exquisite,

colorful Shetland wool sweaters.

You will find many unusual and: exciting gifts that reflect quality and taste

for the bride, the home or a different weekend present.

Looking forward to seeing you soon!

Town Shop67 Palmer Square Princeton, New Jersey

Eskil's high heel clogs takeyour feet to new heights.

Now you can wear Eskil's Clogs in more places than everbefore. Thanks to.our fashionable new high heel styles.Our clogs can be customized to match your individual

taste With strap orna-ments, toe shields, ini-tials or whatever you

choose. And theycome in a widevariety of sizes

and colors.

Widest Variety of Styles and Colorsfor Men, Women & Children

$18.00 to $29.00

195 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J .Telephone (609) 9244)512

Patio excellent spot

to place house plantsContinued from Page 22

designs and advice for the novicecraftsman, such as "Better Homes andGardens Deck and Patio Projects YouCan Build" which retails for only $3.95.

A PATIO OK "DECK can be an excel-lent place to decorate with house plants,which many people like to put outsideduring the warm weather to stimulatenew growth. The use of large houseplants can certainly add to a deck's orpatio's appeal, particularly when theplanting of in-ground vegetation has notyet been done.

As far as furnishing the area is con-cerned, many decks easily lendthemselves to built-in seating.

But if this is too much of a project foryou to tackle, local outdoor furniturestores offer a wealth of items to choosefrom.

Extension Patio Shop at the corners' ofOlden Avenue Extension and PrincetonAvenue in Trenton has one of the bestselections in the area.

This store averages prices of 20percent below the regular retail price ofsuch items as chaises, tables and chairs,umbrellas, and wicker galore.Replacement cushion sets are alsoavailable here in a wide variety offlorals and solids, some with welting.

Remember when shopping for outdoorfurniture that common sense shouldprevail. Comparison shop if possible,and ask questions about wear andwhether the fabrics involved aremildew-proof?

DO THEY REQUIHE any extra care?What is the average life span? Do thecushions have to be brought in when itrains? Will metal rust, and paint peel orcrack? -: And above all, know in advance what

you are looking for before you enter astore. Make a floor plan of the area ifyou can, and know what dimensions youare looking for in furnishings to avoid acluttered look.

Never buy on impulse. You mayregret it later.

SHADEFOR RENT!!

RENTAL \

Tents, Tents, Tents to Rent!All Kinds, All Sizes, All Shapes!

To shade Whatever You're Doing —Engagement Parties, Wedding Receptions, Showers, etc.

LOCATED IN

PRINCETONTO SERVE YOU BETTER

775 Rt. 206

609-924-8080

OTHER PARTY & BANQUET SUPPLIESYOU CAN RENT FROM US:

Champagne fountains • Dishes — Silverware •Glasses, all types • Chafing dishes • Silver services —Trays • Coffeemakers • Punch bowls — Cups • Chairs,several types • Portable dance floors • Tables, manytypes • Table linen • Portable bars • Garment racks •Outdoor lights — Torches • Speaker's lectern w/sound •Party tents — Canopies • Ice cream freezers.

FREEUSE OF PUNCH BOWL WITHTH/SAO

DELIVERY & SET-UP SERVICE AVAILABLE

in'iii"'! II —r»i _ii' i|i ii ii i 1n' rirn—mr -—i-rn-n f r •r-Tir'in*-"

The Packet Magazine 31

Outlet markets require sharp shopping eyeGo at end of a season to make the largest savings

Continued from Page 21

ATLANTIC PRODUCTS COR-PORATION, i Johnson Aye., Trenton(609-587-8989) sells golf bags, tennisbags, luggage, and garment bags undertheir own name. First and secondquality. Also a complete line of men'sand women's clothing at 50 percent off.Open Monday-Saturday 9-5:30; cashonly.

THE BACK YARD. Alternate RouteOne, Lawrence Township (609-883-0700)

• has carpets by Einstein Moomjy at lowremnant prices. First quality only. 33 to50 percent below retail prices. They willfringe, bind, and install.

BAXTER MEN'S CLOTHINGOUTLET, 1 Breunig Ave.,Trenton (609-393-6580) has double knit suits, jackets,and slacks right from the factory.Savings from 25 to 40 percent. Sizes 34 to54. Exchanges possible here.

BLOCK'S SHOES, 2781 BrunswickPike (Alternate Route One), Lawren-ceville (609-882-1022), features men'sand women's handbags and shoes. Manyfamous brands; savings from 20 to 50percent.

BURLINGTON COAT AND AP-PAREL FACTORY OUTLET, Route130, Burlington (609-386-1717), carriesmen's, women's, and children's coatsand apparel of various name brands.First quality; savings from 2C to 60percent. Open September to June 1Monday-Friday 10-9, Saturday andSunday 10-5. Eight dressing rooms;checks accepted; no exchanges orrefunds.

BURLINGTON MART OUTLETSTORES, Route 130 and Salem Road,Burlington (609-386-9731), is a malloperation featuring outlet stores. TheVillage Factory is a women's store withdiscount prices. There is a men's storeas well. Open Monday-Friday 10-9,Saturday 10-6, Sunday 11-5. Credit cardsand cash. . •

CLOVER SHOE RETAIL OUTLET,also on Route 130 in Burlington (609-386-1144), sells women's better shoes undera variety of labels including Latinas. 20to 50 percent off. Also good-qualityhandbags at bargain prices. OpenMonday - Sunday 10-5, Thursday andFriday to 9. Checks and credit cardsaccepted; no refunds.

CONTINENTAL LEATHER COATCOMPANY, 217 Somerset St., NewBrunswick (201-249-5313), is amanufacturer of leather clothing whichalso has a retail store in the factory.Men's, women's, and children's ap-parel. Free alterations on any garment.Open Monday-Saturday 10-5:30. Closedduring the month of July. Cash only.

THE DANSK FACTORY OUTLET atthe junction of Routes 202 and 31 inFleniington (201-782-7077) has fine first-quality and seconds in stoneware anddishes. Open Jan. 1 - Memorial Day,Monday-Sunday 10 6; Memorial Day -Dec. 31, Monday-Saturday 9-9, Sunday10-6. Checks accepted. |

THE FLEMINGTON CUT GLASSFACTORY, as almost everyone in thisarea knows, is at 156 Main St. I inFlemington (201-782-3017). Famousbrands of china and. crystal. Open

Monday-Sunday 9:30-5:30; closed majorholidays. Credit cards, checks accepted.

IMAGINE, on Route 130 in EastWindsor (609-443-3600) has first-qualityjunior and misses clothing at savings offrom 20 to 80 percent. Open Monday-Friday 10-9; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 11-5.Credit cards, dressing rooms, cashrefunds. '

LOEHMAN'S, 233 Route 18, EastBrunswick (201-249-4104) has women'sclothing from 20-50 percent off in a widerange of sizes. Community dressingrooms. Open Monday-Saturday 10-5:30,Wednesday till 9:30. Checks withidentification; no returns.

LORAIN MANUFACTURINGCOMPANY, 95 Main St., Flemington(201-782-8688) has misses and juniorclothing at about 20 percent off. OpenMonday-Saturday 10-5:30; Thursdayand Friday till 9; Sunday 12-5. .

PEERLESS MANUFACTURING-COMPANY FACTORY STORE, 600Jacksonville Rd., Burlington (609-386-1579) has first-quality women's clothingfrom 30 to 50 percent off. No.brandnames. Open Monday-Sunday 10-5.Credit cards; checks with identification.

PETCARE INDUSTRIES. 576 HighSt., Burlington (609-387-4399), has allsorts of items for pets including rawhidebones, leashes, collars, at a 30 percentdiscount. Open Monday-Thursday 10-12and 1:30-5; Friday 10-12 and 1:30-9;Saturday 10-3. Checks and credit cards.

THE SLEEP . FACTORY. 217Somerset St., New Brunswick (201-828-

1120) has mattress and convertible sleep-sofas custom made to your order. OpenMonday-Friday 8-5, Saturday 9-4. Creditcards and checks.

STANGL POTTERY FACTORYOUTLET. Mine St., Flemington (201-782-2918) has gifts and dinnerware at-bargain prices of 50 percent off andmore. Open Monday-Sunday 10-5:30.November and December, Friday till 9.

SYMS, Route 9 and King George Rd.,Woodbridge (201-826-4400) is primarilyfor men's clothing but has clothing forwomen too. Open Monday-Friday 10-9:30, Saturday. 9-6. Checks; no creditcards: Small dressing rooms.

TRENTON COAT FACTORY, 1514Chestnut Ave., Trenton (609-394-8107),has women's sportswear and coats onthe third floor of the factory. Also men'souterwear, and suits. Savings of about 40percent. Open Monday-Saturday 10-5,Sunday 10-3:30. -

THE UNION PANTS COMPANY at1476 Prospect St. in Trenton (609-883-3660) is a factory outlet for all types ofpants and jeans. Sizes 24 to 42. OpenMonday-Friday 1-4, Saturday 9-2. Cashonly.

THE WIZARD OF OZ, Route 18Shopping Center, East Brunswick (201-257-0222) is great for children's clothingat savings of 20-50 percent. First-qualitymerchandise at 25 percent off in thefront; seconds in a special section atgreater savings, in the back. OpenMonday-Saturday 10-6, Wednesday andFriday till 9. Credit cards accepted.

COOR

Alt's Gymnastics Schools develop coordination,poise, agility and self-confidence in the youngest ofstudents.

Art's offers one of the most comprehensive programsin the nation for pre-schoolers, aged 2-5, and growingyoung children.

RecertHstudies indicate that introduction to gymna-stics at ar* early age can have a positive affect on theoverall future physical and mental development of thechild. . * . "

Emphasis in pre-school classes is on movement, coor-dination, and a study of the basic motor skills. Studentsare also introduced to all gymnastic apparatus.

All classes are in small groups under the close per-,sonal attention of our experienced, highly qualified in-structors. .

You. are welcome to observe classes at any time.For the complete gymnastics program—from Pre-

schooler to Adult, it's Alt's.

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University Park Plaza745 Alexander Road -Princeton, N.'J. 08540(609)452-8430

Gymnastics Schools

AGES 8 TO 16JULY 9 THRU AUG.

31CHOOSE: 24-6-8WEEK SESSIONS

Y

Camp will be conducted at:St. Thomas Aquinas H.S.

Edison, New Jerseyfinest facilities and staff in the

state1

'LIMITED ENROLLMENT

JEFF TORBORG

Jeff Torborg, manager of the Cleveland Indians, and a lifelong area resident invites your child to attend his allstar baseball day camp this summer. Your child will be instructed by a staff of the finest baseball coaches in thearea, each instructor has been hand picked by Jeff Torborg himself. Each week these instructors will be joined by

, professional players from the Yankees and Mets, such as: Willie Randolph, Roy White, Mickey Rivers, Paul Blair,Chris Chambliss, Jim Spencer, Fran Healy, Elston Howard Catfish Hunter. Elliott Maddoi, Ed Kranepool, Tom Hen-derson and many others.

FEATURES OF THE CAMPU H of pitching machines,athletic trainer lei teach

- conditioning, classroominstruction and films,

comprehensive indoor program,accident/medical insurance,transportation provided at

no additional cost, milk andfruit juke provided for lunch

and breaks, daily instructionalbaseball games

Areas of instruction:Batting, pitching, throwing,infield play, outfield play,

conditioning, base running,stealing, leading, sliding,

cutoffs, relays, .offensive anddefensive strategy, run downs,double plays and much, muchmore . . . individual instruction

will be, given as part of thedaily curriculum

fPICIALFIATURI:MK0I1W MKGS, foiwr PhWe tad B u m star has bwa appointed camp doctor. Johnai vS be at th« campM t i ^ 5 4 ^ a to p m o ^ tetrad jaw ^

For further information write or coll: ' 'Jeff Torborg All Star. Baseball Day Camp, P.O. Box 276, Bogota,

New Jersey 07603, Phone 201-692-1586-7 days a week - 24 hewn a day

32 The Packet Magazine

i !

I

Fun in f he parkThe county park systems offerquiet relaxation year round, hereJerry Imordino and his daughter,Karen, try their fishing gear atRosedale Park in Mercer County.

No matterwhat your sport,^Jt^A your athletic footwearheadquarters, has the right shoes for you.

ING.140 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON. NEW JERSEY 08540

Hours;;Mon.-Fri. 9-5:39, Sat. 9-5,Wet accept major credit cards

AT HOVE&-THEGILLERY

homewares, basketsimports, gift items andcards

Hangingsfrom Mexico in THE QltLERY

24 Witherspoon St., Princeton 924-4326Entrance through IRIS or off Chambers' Walk

Tho Packet Magazine 33

Gasoline shortage

makes county parks

even more attractive

a fresh look for your patio furniture.

With the very real possibility ofgasoline reaching unbelievable pricesthis summer, planning trips closer tohome may be one solution to the energycrunch. -

Do you know about the excellentrecreational facilities offered in nearbycounty park systems?

For example, Roosevelt Park in-Edison (Middlesex County) has aconcrete stadium for athletic events,picnic facilities, lighted tennis courts,shuffleboard courts, all sorts of ballfields and courts, and a playground forchildren. Plays are frequently staged inthe amphitheater during warm-weathermonths. • - -

Johnson Park (Piscataway, Mid-dlesex County) has a half-mile trackused for training standard-bred trottinghorses, as well as horse stables. Also ananimal shelter, a blacksmith shop, aband shell where free concerts arepresented during the summer, picnicand sports facilities, a horse show anddog show area, and a wildflower andbird sanctuary.

THOMPSON PARK (Monroe, Mid-dlesex County) includes the 40-acreManalapan Lake, which has a protectedswimming area, sandy beach,lifeguards and a first aid building. Alsopicnic facilities, sports facilities, modelairplane field, model boat area, and twoBoy Scout camping areas.

Merrill Park (Woodbridge, MiddlesexCounty) presents free concerts duringthe summer, and is a popular game

haven and wildlife preserve. Picnic andsporting facilities here too.

Donaldson Park (Highland Park,Middlesex County) is widely known forramp and docking; facilities for laun-ching small boats into the RaritanRiver. Picnic and other sports areas too,including a special badminton court.

Tennis court reservations may bemade by calling the particular park onthe same day between 9 a.m. and noon.Courts are reserved Monday-Fridayfrom 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Specific areas of apark may also be reserved. Parks areclosed at dusk except for the lightedtennis courts.

For detailed information aboutevents, tournaments, and shows for thissummer, contact the Department ofParks and Recreation, MiddlesexCounty, P.O. Box 661; New Brunswick,N.J. 08901, or call (201) 24&-6900 from8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

THE SOMERSET COUNTY ParkCommission also has many facilitieswithin its jurisdiction which arerelatively easy to get to from this area.

For example, Duke Island Park offerspicnic areas, a modern boat pavillionwith a luncheonette, canoe androwboating in the canal, and fishing.There are two fully equipped children'splaygrounds, and a regular summerconcert series is held there. Also acomplete softball field, available forleague play and special bookings.

Continued on Page 36

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We can provide you with the professionalservices, personal attention, and pertinentsuggestions that will-leave you free toconcentrate on business or pleasure.

• FREE TICKET DELIVERYWe will deliver your tickets to you free ofcharge. When you prefer to visit us, weare conveniently located at 54 PrincetonHightstown Road (across from West Win-dsor State Bank) in Princeton Junction.Free parking is available at our door.

• PRINCETON TRAVEL CENTER

is open weekdays from 9:30 to 5:30, andSaturdays from 10 to 2*. We are ready toserve you. Please visit us or call,•and every evening ;by appointment

54 Pr/ncefon-HJghfsf o wn RoadPrinceton Junction, N. J. 08550 609-799-4666

nr.-z

The Packet Magazine

• • •

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Lawns get first

p rio rity as i nte rests

turn to out-of-doorsIn the spring most homeowners'

fancies turn to thoughts outside theirhouses. Immediately outside — such aslawns, shrubbery, gardens.

Indoor chores, such as painting orwallpapering, are pushed aside in favorof reseeding and planting.

And most area nurserymen agree thatthis is the time of year when theirbusiness really begins to pick up afterthe long slack-off winter period.

April is the time for repairing andfertilizing lawns. On alkaline soils, it issuggested by people in the know that anapplication of ammonium sulfate beused to kill weeds and feed grass; onacid soil, use lime. Seed bare spots whenthe soil is not soggy.

Feed all plants soon to bloom.

THIS IS ALSO the time to set outearly-blooming annuals and beddingplants, including such vegetable garden :

items as broccoli, cabbage, andcauliflower — as soon as the groundwarms up enough: Sow seeds of annualsand vegetables as soon as the ground iswarm, too.

Prune shrubs after bloom, and alsohedges.

New roses should be planted as soonas the ground is workable, and bushroses should be pruned before growthactually starts.

Do not mow the lawn until the grass isabout two inches high. It is now when theroots are renewed, and grass must haveenough opportunity to reach a heavy top

Continued on Page 35

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ThaPackt Magazine

IN MERCER COUNTY ,WE MAKE THINGS HAPPEN

THRU

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

SERVING ALL OF MERCER COUNTY

- MERCER COUNTYV O C A T I O N A D

Summer flowering

bulbs should go in

before other plantsContinued from Page 34

growth.Plant summer-flowering bulbs.After May 15, seeds of beans, corn,

'squash, cucumbers, and other tendervegetables may be sown. Now is also thetime to set out plants of tomatoes,"eggplants, peppers, and sweet potatoes.

Spray fruit trees and rose bushesregularly to avoid insects. Sod new lawnareas with plugs of such grass as theBermuda variety, available' at areanurseries.

Stake tall-growing early perennials toprevent breakage.

IN JUNE, remove matured yellowfoliage of tulips, or dig and store bulbsfor replanting in-autumn. Keep foliageof other spring-flowering bulbs growingby giving good waterings.

In vegetable gardens, begin tyingsupports on plants and thin out lettuce,carrots, beets, and other hardyvegetables.

Mow your lawn regularly, feed andwater it and treat for any weeds whichmay be occurring.

Water roses about every s€ven to 10days; prune back lightly after summerbloom. . I

Summer mulch should be applied toall parts of gardens Jo conservemoisture and discourage-weeds.

Keep fruit trees well watered whilethe fruit is developing.

For azaleas and rhododendrons,

prune and remove dead flowers andwater frequently. June is also a goodlime to set out young chrysanthemumplants, which must be fed and wateredregularly.

In the late spring, move house plantsoutside. But don't ignore them oncethey're there. •

House plants need the same care asany other plants in your garden, soprune them . regularly and provideregular spraying to prevent, insectdamage; water in the absence of suf-ficient rainfall.

Any location that receives protectionfrom heavy winds and hard rain can bedecorated with, container plants. At-tractive spots are near entranceways,and on steps, terraces, patios, porches,and sundecks.

MANY HOUSE PLANTS thrive in thesummer under large trees, and some dowell in hanging baskets, window boxes,and large planters.

Plants that usually do well in sunnylocations indoors will.do well in sunnyplaces or partially shaded places out-doors.

Do not begin moving house plantsoutdoors until you are sure that the lastfrost has occurred in your area.

Before actually setting them outdoors,it's a good idea to place house plants in acool spot indoors for a few days to givethem time to harden or stiffen stems,and to firm up foliage.

Be smart; do not move choice orirreplaceable plants outdoors unless youhave insurance in the form of rootedcuttings or seedlings. •

START YOUR CAREER AT OUR TWO VOCATIONAL HIGH SCHOOLS.

MAKE YOUR CHOICEAdvanced Business Mach.Air Cond/RefrigefationAppliance & T.V. RepairAuto Body RepairAuto Mechanics ,Commercial ArtCosmetologyDesign Drafting

WeldingEmployment Orientation Programs

Diesel MechanicsElectrical Const.

ElectronicsGeneral Bldg. Const.

Graphic ArtsHealth OccupationsMedical Office Asst.

Plumbing/Heating

The way we see it. you can't force people to be successful, but our pastresults are impressive and read like this:

76% of our 78 grads are employed full time intheir trade and 6% a<e continuing in full time

education.

WE CAN MAKE THINGS HAPPEN FOR YOUCALL OUR TWO CENTERS

Atwinplnk Center586-5144

Sypek Center883-8012

A GARDENERS PARADISE

PETERSON'SComplete Nursery and Garden Market

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WHAT ARE YOUR NEEDS?Organic Gardens, Vegetables,

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-, • ;".; .'•• 9 2 1 - 8 8 4 4 ; . , : : * , : ..- 7

Hiking, picnics,

whatever you want

is at county parksContinued from Page 33

Green Knoll Golf Course, offGarretson Road, Bridgewater Town-ship, has a regulation championshiplayout where many tournaments areheld. Complete pro shop; luncheonetteon premises. Also a nine-hole pitch andputt course for' the novice.

Green Knoll Tennis Center, adjacentto the golf course, has a 10-court centerfor public use. Lessons for children andadults. Five of the all-weather courtsare lighted for night playing.

North Branch Park, on Milltown Roadbetween Routes 202 and 22, has a,mile offrontage along the north branch of theRaritan River. A gbod spot for fishing.Also a picnic area near the river, soft-ha,ll-baseball fields,' and countyfairgrounds which are used for frequentexhibits and shows.• Colonial Park (in Franklin Townshipon Mettlers Road) has frontage on theDelaware and Raritan Canal and theMillstone River. Picnic sites,playgrounds, ponds for fishing. Also aself-guided nature walk and an animaldisplay. Paddle boat rentals availableduring summer months; also a canoelaunching ramp on the canal, and a 1.4-mile paved bike path. Colonial Park alsohas a large formal rose garden, con-taining more than 4,000 individualplants.

Somerset County has two other golfcourses in its parks system, SpookyBrook Golf Course at Colonial Park, andWarrenbrook Golf Club in Warren.

Lord Stirling Park in the BaskingRidge section of Bernards Township liasa large portion within the westerlyboundary of the Great Swamp basin,and abounds with wildlife. There is alsoan Environmental Education Center, aneducational building which uses solarenergy for heating and cooling isavailable for visitors' information.

FOR AN INTERESTING nature hike,it's hard to beat the Sourland MountainPreserve, in Hillsborough and Mon-tgomery Townships, featuring a naturalwildlife area.

By the way, the EnvironmentalEducation Center at Lord Stirling Parkis currently offering a spring selectionof courses in such subjects as kiteconstruction, a canoe clinic, an Indiandig, and spring wildflowers, as well as aseries of Saturday canoe trips.Registration rates are quite reasonable.

For further information and a com-plete brochure, write The En-vironmental Education Center, 190 LordStirling Road, Basking Ridge, N.J.07920. Or call (201) 766-2489.

MERCER COUNTY also has severalexcellent parks within its system.

Belle Mountain in Hopewell, well-known to skiers in winter months, has afamily picnic area open to the public inwarmer weather. Another picnic area,also in Hopewell, is the Valley RoadGroup Picnic Area on Valley Road. Thisis geared to groups of 50 or more, andreservations are required. (609) 989-6530.- The, Mountain View Golf Course at

Bear Tavern and Nursery Roads in WestTrenton, has an 18-hole course. Snackbar; lessons available.

The Herrontown Woods Arboretum inPrinceton Township on Sndwden Lanenear the junction of Herrontown Roadhas self-guided nature trails, althoughguided tours by a naturalist may beobtained by calling (609) 989-6530.

John Roebling Park in HamiltonTownship, entered via either SchillerAvenue or Park Avenue over WestcottAvenue, contains a fresh-water marshand an 18-acre lake. Fishing and birdwatching good here. Small picnic area.The Historic Watson House is located inthis park, at 151 Westcott Ave.

Mercer County has a public boatlaunching site on Lamberton Road justbelow the Trenton Marine Terminal.

The Princeton Country Club, also acounty facility, is on Emmons Drive offRoute 1, Princeton. Golf course.'snackbar, banquet facilities, lessons. Also apicnic area.

The Mercer County Public IndoorTennis Center off Bear Tavern Road,West Trenton, is open from Octoberthrough April, from 9 a.m. to midnightdaily. Reservations; open court fees;lessons. '

ROSED ALE PARK, off Federal CityRoad, near the junction of BlackwellRoad, has a 38-acre lake stocked withbass and trout. Family picnic area.Nature walks; boating and canoeing onlake; no motorboats.

Mercer County Park, at Old TrentonRoad, Hughes Drive, and Village RoadWest, has a large sports complex, picnicsites, and nature tours.

The Mercer County Park Commissionsponsors many events throughout thesummer months. A children's fishingcontest has already been scheduled forthe third Saturday in June. Entrants willbe limited to Mercer County childrenunder age 14.

Tournaments, clinics, and boat racesare on the agenda for this year, butexact dates have not yet been set. Formore information, call (609) 989-6540.

The Packet Magazine 37

Fihcf a spofThe first day of trout season always bring a large turnout to Rosedale Park in Mercer County and water-edge space is at a premium.

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Large selection ofPueh and Motobecane

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S^tiGYCLE

THE MOPED STOREFull Service Shop-Including Parts & Accessories

249 Nassau Street, Princeton, N.J. •609-824-7233

\\

38 the Packet Magazine

• i . . • • • . ' . . •

Travel bargains greatest in spring, summer: It's the'off season1 in many of the major resort areas

If you had neither the time nor themoney for a glamorous get-awayvacation this past winter, don't despair.Spring and early summer are often thetimes of year when there are greatbargains oh trips to faraway places.

. For example, it's almost impossible toopen up a magazine or turn on atelevision set these days withouthaving some exotic-looking couplesaying ~niar-"Itrs better in^lhe"Bahamas." Advertising copy not-withstanding, the Bahamas are ad-vertising low-cost seven-night tripsfrom only $93 a week forNassau/Paradise Island. Four-daypackages begin at only $43. Of course,plane fare is extra, and luxury ac-commodations can up the ante con-siderably.- . .

Bargain prices are in effect throughApril 28. For further information, call(toll-free) 800-327-0787.

IF YOU'RE LOOKING for lazyrelaxation and fantastic service, it'shard to beat a cruise vacation. TheMarconi .(Italian Line Cruises) sailsfrom New York for places like San Juan,Antigua, St. Thomas, and Martinique,on April 24 and May 4 for ten days each,trip. Prices range from $650 to $1,260.Call 800-223-2220.

Costa Cruises, which advertises, itselfas "an Italian Festival," has a com-bination package including a round-tripflight from New York to. Miami, and a10-11 day cruise of the Caribbean,Mexico, South America, and thePanama Canal. $820-$l,430. Dates areMay 28-June 18 and Sept. 24 - Dec. 7 forthese prices. (212-682-3505.)

Bermuda beckons in the late spring;before that the weather is too chilly formuch sunbathing and swimming. The

Continued on Page 39.

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ring With Quality Materials

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PHOTOGRAPHERS

cordially invite you

to w i t our officeon the second floor of Gallery 100

100 Hassan Street, Trinctlonto nett our bridal consultant

and visit our display.

Sngagenent ^Portraits*BniaL "Portraits

Candid XSiAAxnt) TrWojjrap/u/Consulting Service

family PortraitsExecutive Vottrails

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The Packet Magazine 39

Bermuda, Nassaueven Pennsylvanialuring the traveler

Continued from Page 38

SS Doric is featuring a seven-day"Linger Longer" cruise from New Yorkevery Saturday beginning in April.Prices begin at $520 per person. (212-432-1414.)

When booking - travel ac-commodations, most particularly acruise, it is always wiser to .bookthrough a travel agent. They can answersuch questions for you as how to select acabin, is it necessary to pay extra for anoutside cabin, do the least expensiveaccommodations mean inferior service,are there hidden costs involved, and isthe first or' second sitting at dinnerpreferable?. If you are seriously considering a

cruise, it might be wise to send for the.free booklet "Is Cruising Really forMe?", available from the Cruise LinesInternational Association, 17 BatteryPlace, New York, N.Y. .10004.

ON THE EUROPEAN scene, AirFrance is offering a Monte Carlopackage from $379 for seven days and .six nights, including round-trip airfare,,hotel, car for a day, and much more.Guests will stay at Loews Monte-Carlo,which features the Riviera's only in-hotel casino. Bargain rates only in effectthrough May 13. . .

For $749 you can spend a springtimeweek in the Soviet Union, through May20.. The trip includes roundtrip airfarevia Pan Am, accommodations inMoscow, Leningrad and Kalinin, threemeals, sightseeing, and many moreextras. This trip is available throughGeneral Tours (212-751-1440).

If you've always wanted to visit theOrient, Korean Air Lines is offering a 14-day package tour from both New Yorkand Philadelphia to Hong Kong from$799. Departures begin May 1. See yourlocal travel agent for more details.

Four Winds Travel in New York Cityis featuring a series of Americana Rail

Cruises from June through October tosuch places as the Canadian Rockiesand the Pacific Northwest, NewEngland, California, and FrenchCanada. Hotel accommodations' areincluded in the reasonable price, as wellas meals, special parties, sightseeing,and first-class sleeping ac-commodations aboard Amtrak trains.Call 212 777-0260 for free brochure.

Starr Tours in Trenton has lots ofinteresting places to visit by bus, suchas the Florida Gulf Coast, Disneyworld,Las Vegas, Mystic Seaport (Conn.), andthe Norfolk (Va.) Azalea Festival. Starrhas recently published a 1979 vacationcatalog, available free from the com-pany by calling 771-1220.

CLOSER TO HOME, Host Farms inLancaster, Pa., has special packages forthree days, two nights, from $104 perperson weekends, $92 midweek. Theprice includes two gourmet meals daily,as well as all the facilities that havemade Host Farms famous, such asnightclubs, swimming, tennis, hikingand biking, even indoor miniature golf.Call toll free, 800-233-0121. Rates arethrough June 14, excluding holidayperiods.

Don't ignore the attraction of nearbyNew York City for an exciting getawayweekend. Many New York hotels, likethe Barbizon Plaza at 106 Central ParkSouth, offer bargain weekend ac-commodations. The Barbizon Plaza hasa special for $27.95, which includes thehotel's famed Sunday brunch and acomplimentary cocktail. And there is nocharge for up to two children under 14sharing a room with their parents. Call800-223-5493.

New Jersey hotels are getting into theswing of bargain weekends, too. Forexample, the Somerset Marriott has amost reasonable package. Call 201-560-0500 for particulars.

Don't you deserve to get away?

1 0 GOODREASONS TOPLAN YOUR

SUMMER OFFUN AT THE

QUARRYSWIMMING

CLUBHOPEWELL

1. Economical - Membership - Full Summer2 Adults > 2 Children $180.

2. Economical - Daily Public Admission -$2.00 weekdays, $3.00 weekends.

3. Economical - Bring your own food •Charcoal cooking • Picnic tables

4. Economical - Save gas, traffic frustration, time, energy5. Safe - 2 acre spring fad lake fully guarded and supervised6. Sofa - Olympic childrens pool - fully guarded and supervised7. Interesting • 3 big floats on lake, 4 diving boards up to 25' high8. Stimulating • For all - chess tournaments musical events,

water, contests, sports events, games, family nights.9. Beautiful - 9 acres of shade trees, grass, cool spring water,

sun, peace and quiet in natural setting.10. You can't lose • coma and see me - spend the day free of

charge with family or friends - then decide if you want to bepart of our Quarry family.

QUARRY SWIMMING CLUBRoute 518 Spur fr Crusher Road, Hopewell, N. J.

(across from Charley's Brother)

*For a personal free four of facilities before season starts - CallBill James days 585-7750, 585 9729 nltes. We look forward toseeing you soon.

Day: 609-585-7750 •E»»nfngs W»«k«nd: 609-585-9729 - '

_LA quality restaurant that's practical about prices.

SPRING DININGNOW ACCEPTING

RESERVATIONS

FOR LUNCH11:30-2:30

Monday thru Friday

FOR DINNER5:30-10:00

Monday thru ThursdayFri. & Sat. 5-11:00

Sunday 4-9

••. D E L IMon. thru Fri. 11:30-3:00

Fri. & Sat. evenings 4:30 -12:30

378 Alexander St.Princeton, New Jersey

921-3276

Visa, Master Chargo, American Express

i a

,•3V

40 The Packet Magaztiw

v

ri'i

Riding Instruction:Beginner to Advanced

- Private or GroupOur horses are quiet and well trainedLessons are given byHighly Qualified Instructors

"Our Policy is Safety First"

Horses Boarded:

Box Stalls, Sliding Door, Board FencesTack and Trailer Storage Available

Our Staff is Well Educated in Horse Care

(609)448-5469101 Windsor Road, West Windsor

Ownad and Managad by Tad and Branda Clark

:r

Good quality plays

can be enjoyed

right here in stateAs has been the case for many years

now, it's not necessary to.go into NewYork City or Philadelphia to find goodquality theater these days.

A good case in point is The New JerseyShakespeare Festival, which will openits 1979 season on Tuesday, June 26. Theseason will run nightly for 20 weeks atthe Festival's theater on the DrewUniversity campus in Madison, endingon Nov. 11.

Six major productions will be offeredby the Shakespeare Festival this year.The opening play will be Shakespeare'stragedy "King Lear," to be.followed bythe popular comedy "A MidsummerNight's Dream."

The third play of the Drew season willbe "A Streetcar Named Desire" byTennessee Williams. Next will be Oscar

• Wilde's comedy "The Importance ofBeing Earnest," and Tom Stoppard's"Travesties." These two plays will beperformed on alternating nights withthe same cast for each.

The final production of theShakespeare Festival's 1979 season willbe William Gibson's drama "Two ForThe Seesaw." .

Complete performance schedules andticket order forms may. be obtained bycalling the box office (201) 377-4487, or

by writing to: Shakespeare, Madison,New Jersey 07940.

McCARTER THEATRE in Princetonhas a full schedule for the upcomingspring.

In the Movies-At-McCarter series,"That Obscure Object of Desire,"directed by Luis Bunuel, is the featurefor April 24 and 25; "The Duellists,"directed by Ridley Scott, can be seen onMay 2 and 3. All these presentations willbe shown in the Kresge Auditorium onthe University campus.

"Black and White In Color," directedby Jean-Jacques Annaud, will have twoperformances on May 8 at 7:30 and 9:15p.m. "Citizens Band," directed byJonathan Demme, will be shown on May16 at 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. The film serieswill conclude with "Equus," directed bySidney Lumet, on May 23. These threemovies' will be shown at McCarten

In addition, McCarter will hold anevening of independent experimental,and avante-garde cinema on May 7 at 8p.m. Tickets are $2.50 each. No oneunder 18 will be admitted.

Single admission to the Movies-At-McCarter events is $2 a ticket.

Continued on Page 44

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The Packet Magazine 41

'/ almost went offacliff

chasing after a butterfly'Continued from Page 28

mount them on cotton in a sjpecial framewith a small sprinkling of mothballsbehind the cotton. The mothballs are todiscourage clothes moths from eatingthe specimens.

"I got a real surprise one day when Iwas showing my collection to mycousin," said Andrew. "One of theCynthia moths started to move in theframe. My cousin sure was surprised."

Both of Andrew's parents encourage

his butterfly hobby. His father isespecially involved.

"I remember one time when I washorseback riding in Wyoming," said Mr.Bushnell, "and I caught sight of a greatspecimen. I got so excited I startedchasing it on horseback, and one of themen I was with began screaming at meto stop. .

"I reined in my horse just in time. Ialmost went off a cliff chasing that•butterfly."

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42 The Packet Magazine

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Car rallies offer money-making luresThe Parent-Teacher Organization of

Ben Franklin School- in LawrenceTownship is always on the lookout fornew ways to make some money for theschool. |

And they've come up with a reallyinnovative idea this time, one that, witha few minor variations, can be adaptedto a private party as well.

On Saturday, May 5, come rain orshine, the Ben Franklin. PTO willsponsor a car rally.

The car rally is the brainstorm ofFrank Casey and Bill Sabo, both ofwhom work at the Squibb complex onRoute 206, and who also happen to beclose neighbors and have children in thethird grade at the school.

"Frank and I got the idea of using acar rally as a money-maker for BenFranklin after we both participated inone held at Squibb by the EmployeesAssociation," said Bill. "Even thoughthe one we were in was quite complex,and we didn't win, we really enjoyedourselves. . .

"And because the idea is a novelty inLawrence, we're hoping for a big tur-nout of. entrants^" . '

THE ENTRY FEE will only be a fewdollars, and families are being urged toparticipate as a group. The minimumnumber of people in a car at this roadrally is two: one to drive and one tonavigate. But children can come along,too.

"The children in the car will be used toanswer a specific set of questions aboutthe route," said Bill. "For example, wemay ask a question concerning a sign

along the road, and the informationmust be ^copied exactly, including;punctuation." ,

Distance will be a factor in this roadrally, as well as the questions. Bill andFrank will also get into periodicallychecking the mileage each car logs, as isdone in some other more sophisticatedcar rallies. ^

The main idea is to keep to the routewhich has been mapped out. Obviously,jf anyone deviates from the route, someof (he questions cannot be answered andthe mileage will not be exact.

There will be no trick questions. Allthe clues will be plainly visible, and itwon't be necessary to turn around tospot an answer.

Participants will be asked to gather atthe school on Princeton Pike a half hourbefore starting time, at 9 a.m., forFrank and Bill, who are co-rallymasters, to explain how to read thevarious symbols on the route.

MOST SYMBO1.S in road rallies arestandard. A circle is always thebeginning of the route and arrows point

, to the direction in which you are to start.SS means' stop sign, TL means trafficlight, and so on.

You must follow directions exactly,and only public streets will be used —although they may be unpaved in spots.You should turn onto an unpaved road ifall the Conditions of the diagram aresatisfied at that particular intersection.A dot oniyie map represents the positionof a clfl

When/mapping out a route for a carrally, you really can make it asjlong asyou like. The Ben Franklin rall^will be

about one hour out and one hour back., Each car in the rally will be assigneda number, .and. cars will go out on the'average of every 30 seconds. Therallymasters estimate that this will beenough time for each, car to get intotraffic, as they want to avoid having onecar following right behind another. Thatway, everyone else would follow the leadcar albng the route and there would beno challenge involved.

The Ben Franklin car rally will begeared to people who have never donethis kind of thing.before. The main ideabehind it is to get the whole family in-volved, and to have a good time.

The car rally idea could, with a littleplanning, be applied to a summertimeparty. Because the days are so long, youmight consider having guests arrive atyour home about 4:30 p.m., give them aset of instructions, questions, and aroute map, and send them on a nice tourof the surrounding countryside. You canmake it as short as a half-hour out and ahalf-hour back.

AWARD PRIZES for the person whoanswers the most questions correctlywhen they return to the party, whichshould be both the starting and lastpoint.

Then serve your guests outdoors ontables that have been decorated in aracing decor, perhaps using pennants orbanners for centerpieces, and black andwhite checkered tablecloths (like theflags used to start races).

It's a pretty sure bet that your friendswill be talking about that party for along time to come.

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The Packet Magazine 43

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44 The Packet Magazine

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CORNER OF DABKAH LA. & ALT. ROUTE 1LAWRENCE [N. OF TRENTON] N J . 609/883-3600ENTER FROM DARRAH LA.MON-FR1 9 AM to 9 PM. SAT 10 to 5 PMTHE TRIANGLE CENTER FORART & INSTANT REPROS

Jersey playhousesoffer full gamutin stage programsContinued from Page 40

McCarter's 1978-79 drama season willend with a presentation of GeorgeBernard Shaw's "Heartbreak House,"directed by Vivan Matalon. The show.will run through April 22.

The Pennsylvania Ballet will be atMcCarter on May 10,11, and 12 at 8 p.m.Tickets range from $6.50 to $10.

On May 14 at 8 p.m., the Tokyo StringQuartet will appear in concert at Mc-Carter. Tickets range from $4.50 to $7.

Ticket information for any of theseevents may be obtained by calling thetheater box office at (609) 921-8700.

THE GEORGE STREET Playhousein New Brunswick will finish its 1978-79season with an unusual production ofShakespeare's comedy "TwelfthNight." The show will receive a uniquetreatment by director Bob Hall, formerartistic director at the Playhouse and acreator of the long-running off-Broadway production of "The Passionof Dracula." Under Mr. Hall's direction,"Twelfth Night" will be created in afuturistic setting on a strange planet.

"Twelfth Night" will open at theGeorge Street Playhouse on April 27 andrun through May 26. For ticket in-formation, call (201) 246-7717.

THE NEWEST VENTURE of theGeorge Street Playhouse is itsCrossroads Theatre Company. Located

at 320 Memorial Parkway in NewBrunswick on the second floor, thistheater only holds eighty persons.

Many innovative things are going onat Crossroads, such as "Dream onMonkey Mountain" by Derek Walcott, aplay which captures black experiencesin the West Indies. The presentations at

'Crossroads are free, but reservationsare required. Call (201) 560-8826."Dream on Monkey Mountain" opensApril 18 and will be presented Wed-nesdays through Sundays until May 13.

MOVING UP NORTH to EssexCounty, The Paper Mill Playhouse inMillburn is currently offering popularBroadway star John Raitt in aproduction of "Shenandoah" throughApril 22. (201) 376-4343.

The Paper Mill's children's theaterwill feature "Jack and the Beanstalk"on April 28; "Little Red Riding Hood"and "The Three Little Pigs" on May 12;"Peter Pan" on May 19; "Cinderella"on June 2; and "Mary Poppins" on June16. Show times are 10:30 a.m. and 1:30p.m. :

SUMMER FESTIVAL, presentationsof dance, theater, music and mimewhich are sponsored by the New JerseyState Council on the Arts, will begin a

Continued on Page 45

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Urken Supply Company27 Wltherspoon St. Free Delivery 924-3076

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TREES & SHRUBBERYBirch Clumps from$ 15.99 . 'Forsythia - 3-4' - 2 for $11.00 ($5.99 ma.)Azaleas - from 3 for $10.00Rhododendron - Z - $11.99Hemlock - 3 H ' - 2for $24.00 ($12.99 «o.)Sycamore-6'$14.99

Spreading Yews - 2 >4'-$ 12.99Arborvitae- 5' - $24.99Purple Leaf Plum - 5'- $18.99Dogwood - from $19.99Crimson King Maples - 8-10- - $39.99French Hybrid Lilacs - $14.99

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The Packet Magazine

McCarter Theatreplans spring tour

throughout the stateContinued from Page 44

little early'this year with a specialstatewide tour by McCarter Theatre.

The McCarter tour will occur betweenMay 1 and 27, and will featureShakespeare's popular "Comedy ofErrors" in a production especiallydesigned for touring. Dates for the tourin this area are May? at Princeton HighSchool; May 13 at the State Museum inTrenton; May 15 at the Princeton DaySchool; and May 22 at East BrunswickHigh School.

THE OPEN AIR THEATRE atWashington Crossing State Park inTitusyiUe will open its 16th summerseason June 14 with Shakespeare's"Henry IV, Part I." This show will runthrough June 16.

The rest of the Washington Crossingschedule includes: "Shenandoah," June21-23, 28-30; "How To Succeed InBusiness Without Really Trying," July5-7, 12-14; "South Pacific," July 19-21,26-28; "Oklahoma," Aug. 2-4, 9-11;"West Side Story," Aug. 16-18, 23-25;and lJIhe Three Penny Opera," Aug. 30-31, Sept: 1-3.

THE ARTISTS SHOWCASE Theatreon Indiana Avenue in Trenton willfeature the rock musical "The MeNobody Knows" on the first threeweekends in May. Call (609) 392-2433 forticket information.

BUCKS COUNTY PLAYHOUSE inNew Hope will begin its new season with"Godspell" May 2-5. May 9-12,14-19, and24-26 Bucks will feature "Pippin."

"The Music Man" will be at BucksMay 29-June 10, followed by"Oklahoma". June 12-24. Then comes"Brigadoon"June26-July8; "The Kingand I" July 10-22; and "My Fair Lady"July 24-Aug. 5.

"Oklahoma" will again be presentedat Bucks County Playhouse Aug. 7-12;"Brigadoon" Aug. 14-19; "The King andI" Aug. 21-26; and "My Fair Lady" Aug.28-Sept. 9. "" •""'•'

For ticket information, call (215) 862-2041.

THE VILLAGERS, the vintageproduction company in Middlebush in

- Franklin Township, will have a cur-tailed program this summer. The barnwhich has served as its theater for anumber of years must be moved 500 feetfrom its present site.

Therefore only two productions are onthe schedule. "Showboat,1! directed byTony Adase with Brent Miller asmusical director, will open June 29 andrun through July 28 at the Sampson G.Smith School auditorium on AmwellRoad in Middlebush.

The second production, "Fantastiks"probably will follow immediately on theheels of "Showboat,1* also at the school.It will be directed by Bill Jameison.

WE PIONEERED A PROFESSION IN 1959

BEFORE AFTER

In 1967 we used these photographs to advertiseus as the first "men's hairstyling salon" in NewJersey.

Three years later we became the first New Jerseysalon to introduce "UNISEX HAIRSTYLING."

We've been endorsed as "unique" in the Prin-ceton Historical Book. Our clientele includesmany prominent names of industry, governmentand public life, as well as everyone who believesthat looking smartly groomed is an advantage.

Why not give some thought to who you are andhow you look. We do!

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for festive arid elegant entertaining this spring

Children's Fashions

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Monday through Saturday10:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.

48 The Packet Magazine

Haunted castleopens at

G reat Ad ventu reJACKSON — TTiis Frankenstein character is one of the

hosts of the haunted castle, a new attraction at Sbi^FlagsGreat Adventure.Park. The park underwent a S10 millionexpansion program,of new. rides over the winter. The newattractions include a $5 million dollar coaster ride (openingin June), an Australian addition to the drive through safariand a multi-media laser show for evening viewing. Thepark is now open for the season through Sept. 16. Ad-mission prices are $9.95 for the amusement area, S4.95 forthe safari, and a combination ticket for both areas for$11.95. The park is located offexit 7A on the NJ. Turn-pike. .

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U.S. Hwy. 1, N#xt to Flniwgcm's LamSouth Brunswick(201)297-3049

The Packet Magazine 47

GRANDPENINC

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Now you have the answer.Vasque Walking Shoes.Vibram® lug traction.Walking flexibility. Cushioninsole comfort. Steel shanksupport. Breathable, water-repellent leather. And a naturally-shaped oblique toe to fit walkingfeet. In two styles: he Walk-Aboutand Chukka.

The Walk-AboutComfort-plus in a heavy-duty walking shoe. T h e ChukltGFrom the Vibram® lug sole to the full-grainleader uppers, the Walk-About shouts More ankle support and protectionperformance. Try em today. with the 6-inch chukka style. Same

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THEPRINCETON, NJ

354 NASSAU ST.Hours: Mon.. Thurs. ft Fri. 10-9 Tue«., Wed. ft Sot. 10-6

For more Information, call The Nickel at{609)924-3001.

Week of April 18 - 20,1979Classified Advertising

l-B

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

PAINTERS — Young, honest,SECRETARY — Day care—4 dependable. Some experiencehr. day, $3,25/hr. Call Betty- necessary. Call evenings after- - uvUCllUA l/lv • uv***** v-**J*^» »»»*»w^1

HI. w ; , f o . u / . u . u u . Betty, necessary-Call evenings afterWitherspoon, 609-448-6226. 6pm. 609-799-8238.

MATURE RESPONSIBLE —person to care for our two sons2 days/week. Own trans, refs.,Call 609-443-5507.

WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP— recording secretary forenvironmental commissionPart time at home workrequires attendance at tworegularly scheduled meetingsper month and preparation ofminutes of meetings. $3.50 perhr. for hours worked, averageof l5T20hrs/mo. Call ad-ministrative assistant 609-799-2400 if interested. EOE.

CLERK TYPIST f — providetyping and general clericalassistance including lightfiling. Minimum typing of 60wpm and is essential. Neat-ness and accuracy, a must.Applicant will be tested, 1-2years exp. helpful. Salarybased on experience andability. 35 hour work week,liberal benefits. Call Per-sonnel at 609-448-3000, 9 a.m.-4p.m. individuals only. Equalopportunity employer, m/f.

PROG/ANALYST to24K

BANKING TOWN

We are searcing for the in-dividual who has previousexperience with bankingapplications. Your languageshould be COBOL orAssembler for IBM 360 hard-ware. Experience in aDOS/MVT environment is abig- plus.x Good benefits,growth opportunity. CallMarianne today.

SSTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609)452-1122

LEGAL SECRETARY -steno, typing, fringe benefits.Princeton Jet. area 609-443-6706.

SECURITY GUARDS —Uniforms & equipment sup-plied. Full or part time. Workin Central Jersey area. Forappointment call weekdays, 9-4. 201-329-4541. An E.O.E.

ADMINISTRATION/ SALES— Small office requirestelephone sales person withknowledge of bookkeeping,some typing, general officework. Send resume or letterdescribing qualifications toBox #02415, c/o PrincetonPacket.

PROGRAMMER ANALYST— Join the staff of one of NewJersey's leading manufac-turing firms. COBAL 370/158.Full benefits plus more! Start$18,000. Fee Paid. Call PatCarrol. SWIFT PERSONNEL,690 Whitehead Rd., 609-989-7200.

PROOF READER — Must befast, literate, error-free andhave 2 yrs. professionalpublishing experience. Timedtest required. Send resume toPeterson's Guides, 228Alexander St., Princeton, NJ08540.

SECRETARY — Executivelevel position. Right hand toprincipal owner of expandinginvestment firm. Exceptionalopportunity to advance plustop benefits. Start $180 wk.plus. Fee Paid. Call JackieSmith, SWIFT PERSONNEL,690 Whitehead Rd., 609-989-7200.

CONSTRUCTION" SUPERIN-TENDENT — local buil-der seeks experiencedconstruction superintendentfor custom homes. Princetonarea. 609-921-3551.

DENTAL ASSISTANT — Parttime. Some experiencenecessary. Call 609-448-0278.

APPLICATIONS NOW —being accepted for girls soccer& field hockey coachesassistant level. ContactPrinceton Day School, 609-924-6700. ,

CLERK

SALES SUPPORTREPRESENTATIVES

CONSTRUCTION ,Operators, grader, paver,roller. Experience &references required. Equalopportunity & AffirmativeAction. Princeton area. 201-295-3000.

WAITRESSES — waiterswanted. Full and part time.Call for appointment. 609-448-5090.

Secretary To $200

GROWTH!

Here's your chance to get intothis glamorous co. Excellenttyping, steno a plus. Superposition for bright individual.Tremendous growth potential!Terrific Bens. Never a fee!Call 609-452-1400.

SELECTIVEPERSONNEL

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REAL ESTATEFull or Part Time

Exceptional opportunity to jointhis very busy office and tohave an exclusive territory. Youowe it to yourself to find out—about this very interesting

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14811ask for Mr. Steels

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We seek a bright,dynamic individualwith some college to co-ordinate conventions &sales meetings. He orshe will be responsiblefor monitoring expensereports & cararrangements foroutside sales force.Excellent benefitsincluding tuitionrefund.

Call or apply in personPersonnel Dept.

201-722-8000, ext. 247THE BAKER & TAYLOR

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An Equal OpportunityEmployer

EXECUTIVESECRETARY

Needed with excellent shor-thand in downtown Trenton fora two week assignment. En-closed parking with securityprovided free. Call or come inimmediately.Top rate no fee

J&J TEMPORARIES2936 Rt. 1

Lawrenceville, N.J. .609-883-5572

WOMAN NEEDED to care forchildren in Twin Rivers home.609-443-5520.

HOUSECLEANER. — 2mornings a week. Willingworker only. References.Hightstown area. Call mor-nings. 609-448-2376.

MOTHER'S HELPER — Need3 separate people or possibly 1can fill all 3 needs: Dafterschool, 5 days 3:30 'til 6 and 1/2day on Tuesdays to fondly carefor a sweet 7 yr old girl & helpout with light chores; 2) 8:15-8:40 am before school (EthelMcKnight area); 3)availablefor school holidays and oc-casional sick days. Call 609-448-7973 after 6pm or 443-6426to leave a message.

HANDYMAN (M/F) —Wantedto do odd jobs on farm. Mustbe good with tools, haveknowledge of carpentry. Makeown hours. Good salary. Idealfor retired person. Call eves.201-821-6022.

ENERGETIC STUDENT —self-starter, to do lawn andnurse ry ma in t enance 'weekends in spring and fall.Full time during summer.Must have own transportation- traveling necessary. Hor-ticultural background helpful.Call 609-443-1551, 8r6pm week-days.

MAIL CLERKneeded in the West Trentonarea until the end of the yearon a four hour day. Experiencein a company mail room orpost office is preferred. Areyou retired? And want to workpart time? Here is the spot foryou!Top rate no fee

J&J TEMPORARIES2936 Rt.l

Lawrenceville, N.J.609-883-5572

BABYSITTER — for infant &.toddler, occasional weekday

PART TIME TYPIST — 6 hrs.a wk., times flexible.

eveijn^r t r S ^ X d £ r Hills"borough"FresbyteV"ianweek. My home only 609-448- c h u r c h 201-359.3768 in A.M.1422.

SECRETARY TO PARTNER— general law practice,suburban Trenton. Legalexperience, shorthand &dictaphone required. Salaryopen. 609-883-7810.

TELLER—Lovely bank,excellent benefits, opportunityto advance. Will train. Start$120. wk. Fee Paid. Call JackieSmith, SWIFT PERSONNEL,690 Whitehead Rd., 609-989-7200.

CERTIFIED, DEGREEDTEACHER — for grades 5-6/7-8 departmental. Please callbet. 9am & 3pm. Mon thru Fri.609-921-8574.

To Place aClassified Ad

• ••••In Princeton call609-924-3250

PROG/ANALYST 22/24K

BURROUGHS TOWN

We need your expertise incommercial applications.Growing 'company has animmediate opening for aprogrammer analyst withthree to five years experience.A strong command of COBOLis required arid a degree incomputer science would be aplus. Call Marianne today.

SRTownPersonnel

Agency

SUMMER OPENINGSSomerset County is presently recruiting for the following summerpositions in our S.C.ET.A. Office:FISCAL COORDINATOR • Knowledge of financial and payrollprocedureTEAM LEADERS - Experience working with youth in a communitybased program. * ..PROJECT COORDINATORS • Education counseling experiencepreferable. Administrative/supervisory.S.P.E.D.Y. COUNSELORS • Provides career counseling servies to(high school aged) youths.S.P.E.D.Y. COORDINATOR - Familiarity with federal fundingprograms and projects. Administrative/supervisory experiencepreferred.

If interested in applying for any of these positions, please call theSomerset County Personnel Office at 201-7254700, Ext. 351 for anappointment or send resume to Somerset County Personnel Office;County Administration Building, Somerville, N.J. 08876,

Equ.1 Opportunity Employer M/F ] '

ROGERS & KING PERSONNEL. INC

.ELECTRONIC POSITIONSCAU JANE ROGERS FOR THESE FEE PAID POSITIONS.

Technician • $16,500 - Troubleshoot digital equipment FCClicense a plus.

Technician - $15,000 - 1st and2nd shift. Digital/analog work.Top s tate-of - the-ar ts .Microprocessing.

- $30,000 and up.Project level. Exp. in logic anddigital circuitry.. New productdevelopment. Supervisoryposition.

$13,000 - Nrte &day spot open. Build, calibrate& test equipment Ute exp.

Technician - $16,000 -Troubleshootprototype. Simplecircuit design. Project design,work with engineers. Workleads to Jr. Engineer spot

Technician - $10,400 - Newgrads this is a terrific careerspot Analog instrumentation.Cafibrate & troubtoshoot Co.doubling in sae.

• $20,000 and up.Mostly analog. Heavy designwork. "Shirt-sleeve" type. Nodegree necessary.

-$17,000 -Troubteshoot minicomputer forworld renowned co.

- $28,000 - digitallogic design. B.S.EE Projectposition. Design Er devetop-ment of electromechanical andservo control systems.

- $28,000 - Projectposition. Strong analog exp.B.S.EE. Design work.

Engineer * $25,000 * .Digitalcommunicatjons exp. Majorelectronics Co. B.&E.E

• $25,000 and up.B.S.E.E. & rnJcroprocessH >flexp. Telephony work. Com-puter controlled telephonesupport systems. Productdevelopment. Digital com-munications.

Coll or send resumes to:

ROGERS t KING KIBONNa, INC.

2500 Route 1, Lawrenceville (609)771-6900

BUYER/EXPEDITER

We are looking for an individualto assist in the purchase ofmaterials, components, andsupplies for our highly technicaloperation. Requires 3-5 yearsexperience in the electronicsfield (preferably Microwave).

We offer excellent salaries &full company benefits, as wellas outstanding opportunities forpersonal & professional growthin a stimulating environment.

Please send resume,.includingsalary requirement to:

W.J. BOYLE, DEPT. 0-9Personnel Manager

AASCMICROWAVE .

SEMICONDUCTOR CORP.100 School House RoadSomerset. N.J. 0M73

An Equrt Opportunity Employ*

COMPUTEROPERATOR

Mobil. has an immediateopening for an operator at theNortheast Computer Centerlocated near Princeton, N.J.Mobil operates an IBM 370/168and IBM 3033 under MVS. Italso supports IMS, and TSO onan extensive telecom-munications network.

This position offers growthopportunities, extensive em-ployee benefits and a com-petitive salary commensuratewith experience and abilities. Ifyou have experience as aComputer Operator in a largescale IBM Computer Center andare seeking a challenging newposition, please send yourresume, including work ex-perience and current salary toDee Loveless.

MobilOIL CORPORATION

P.O. Bex 1025Princeton, NJ.M540Equd Opportunity Emplo

DATA PROCESSINGMgr. Sys. SoftwareDir/Applicattons Devel.Sys. Design Eng.Sr. Sys. Software Anal.Sys. Support Eng.Team Project LeaderTerminal Product

Specialist

J30KJ33KJ28KJ28KJ28KJ25K

J25K

Mini computer professional -fees paid. Call for information:Bette Kantor (201 > 24&3307.

E.T.LYONS1050G«rftSt

Interesting work witha pharmaceutical/chemical leader

A major researctwjriented pharmaceutical/chemicalcorporation offers qualified applicants excellentsalaries and attract™* benefits which include dentalplan, major medical, hospital and life insurance, 11paid holidays and company cafeteria. Currentopenings are:

LIBRARY CLERKlogging in and circulating journals to staff per-sonnel, sheWng and inrJeung material, assisting thestaff in finding material - i t all calls for personableways and a bright mind, light typing, light officeexperience, required. Should be able to work in-dependently under pressure.

SECRETARIESGood typing and stem stalls, pleasant Weptooemanner. Previous experience required, lor in-teresting and dnersified duties.

For immediate mtanfcw. call:

Kithryn Smith (201)685-2363

AMERrCAMHOECHSTCORP.•jetsZOMKIarft

DATA PROCESSING

COMPUTEROPERATOR

(POP-10)

Operator needed starting onSecond Shift in the DataAcquisition Services ComputerCenter. Opportunity exists touse and develop programmingand/or hardware skills. Positionrequires 2 years experience on

>Dec PDP-10 and/or 11's asCompu te r Opera to r .Associate's Degree in computeroperations, large scale com-puter operator or computerhardware technician ex-periences wiH be considered.

Please send resume and salaryrequirements to:

MANAGER OF PERSONNEL

PLASMA PHYSICSLABORATORY

POST OfflCS BOX 451

PRINCETONUNIVERSITY

PrJKa»M,RJ.«544

An B M < Opportunity/A H J I I — I H HLeuHtimii|M MrF

GETTYTEMPS

Industrial Temps

Spring Fever?NeedXtra$$?Where to go?Where Else

Come to Getty Temps. Ex-cellent openings available ifyou are a...

WarehouserAssembler

Fork Lift OperatorGeneral Laborer

Earn high rates'-*- Bonuses +vacation pay. Never a fee.

609-896-2323609-448-6500Route 130

Hightstown, N.J.

PART TIME - fountain help.No phone calls. Apply at DairyQueen; Princeton ShoppingCenter, Princeton.

SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS —needed for day care center inHightstown. Center open 7:30-5:30 daily. Hrs. & days avail,can be varied. Gall Pat Smith,609-448-6226 bet 8 & 3pm AnE.O.E.

DATA PROCESSING 24-26K

DATA TOWN

Our blue- chip client hasopened two positions on theirvery progressive dataprocessing staff. Languageused is ANSrCOBOL and ex-perience with IDMS, OS. JCLneeded. This position will dealwith the design and im-plementation of. sub-systemsfor IDMS data base. Degreenecessary. Any backgroundwith CICS or time-sharing aplus. Call Marianne today!

e •

SSTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609) 452-1122

BOOKKEEPER — $175 perweek, exc. benefits. Minimum ,2 years experience. Growth,opportunity with. dataprocessing firm. Info. Med,South Brunswick,'201-329-4527.Equal Opportunity Employer.

MOTOR ROUTE DRIVERS -needed to deliver existingmotor routes in our circulationareas. Wash. Cross/T.itusville,Princeton, New Hope, Pa.Good running automobilerequired. Ideal forhousewives, retired persons orcollege students. $360 to $640per month depending onRoute. If interested call 609-396-3232 ext. 257 between 9 to 7or write: circulation- rngr,Trenton Times, 500 Perry St.,Trenton, N.J. 08605.

DENTAL HYGIENIST -wanted for Saturday morningin Hightstown Dental office.609-448-0013 (9-5 except Wed.)

BOOKKEEPER - part time,Princeton advertising agencyneeds an experienced ac-counting assistant 10-15hours/ week. Call Sandy at609-924-7500.

Princeton Forrestal Center101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609) 452-1122

NURSE — RN-LPN, parttime, 3-11 ;30. M/F. Contact:Mrs. P. DeRisi, Rtf/DN§, 609-448-7036.

MATURE, EXPERIENCED— Secretary' sought for lawoffice, Legal experiencepreferred, but not required.Salary commensurate withability. Albert C. Barclay, Jr.609-924-5500.

SECRETARY — legal ex-perience preferred, but notessential, for small Princetonlaw office. Salary com-mensurate with' experience.Call weekdays, 609-921-2155.

BABYSITTER - our 6 monthold daughter, our West Wind-sor home. 8:30 to 6:15, 5 days.Own transportation. Salarynegotiable. 609-799-9400.

SHOE SALES - fine ladies shoestore seeks pleasant per-sonable individual for salesposition. Retail experiencepreferred, but will train. Call609-799-8580 bet. 1 & 6 p.m.

JOB INTERVIEW skilldevelopment workshop /groups. Attend one sessionSr more. Reasonablerates. Dr. Michael L.Rosenthal (609)737-2236.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE— Train at $200 weekly withover 100 yr. old highlyrespected life insurancecompany. Phone Mr. William-J. Abell 609-599-3035. .

NURSE — RN. Evening"Supervisor, full time, M/F.Contact: Mrs. P. DeRisi,RN/DNS, 609-448-7036.

TELEPHONE INTERVIEW-ERS — Part time, 18 yrs. + .Market research for GallupOrganization. 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.& weekends from our office.Will train. Phone 609-924-9649,3 p.m. to 10 p.m.

CHEMISTRY OR BIOLOGYmajor with chemistrybackground, to run chemicalanalysis. Send resume to box02403 c/o The PrincetonPacket.

And stay out of hock.If you can type, file, handleother office jobs, Olsten Serv-ices has a temporary job foryou. No tee. Work when, where,you want. Free brush ups.

SOUTH BRUNSWICK: Rte. 1(OppotitB Dow Jonas)

201-329-2040Daily 10-3 pm, Posed Friday

SALES

OPPORTUNITIESAT

BAMBERGER'SPRINCETON

DQ you enjoy meeting people?Enjoy working in a friendly at-mosphere? If you do, why not

• join us? We have the followingpart time positions.

SALESMONDAYTHRU FRIDAY

10am-2pm12 noon -5 pm

APPLY PERSONNEL

PRINCETONan equal oportunity employer MJF

BANKINGAPPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED MONDAY THRU FRIDAYFROM 9 AM To 3 PM OR BY APPOINTMENT.

TELLERS Full And Part TimeWe are seeking experienced Tellers or personable individuals tobe trained as Tellers. Applicants should be reliable, accuratewith figures and enjoy working with people. You must also beavailable for a 3 week training program in Hightstown, N.J.beginning April 23rd, 1979.

FULLTIMEACCOUNTING CLERICALS

If you can type 30 or more wpm, enjoy filing and have lightbookkeeping or accounting background and courteous phonemanner, we have several positions available at various locations.

PAYROLL CLERKWe have an opening in our Main Office for the person whoenjoys heavy phone contact, working with figures (conversionof fractions to decimals) and computer reports. Must have ten-key adding machine experience.

EXECUTIVE SECRETARYInvestments & Planning Dept.

We are looking for an individual who have excellent typing andshorthand skills and good aptitude in accounting. Respon-sibilities wilt include telephone communications, correspon-dence and statistical typing and working with financial reports.Previous financial experience preferred.

We Offer Excellent Benefitsand Competitive Salaries

NEW JERSEYNATIONAL BANK

684 WWtehead RoadLawrencevaie, NJ . 06648

AnEqutf OpporturitrEmptoyw M/F

WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP— recording secretary forshade tree commissioncommittee. Part time at homework requires attendance atone regularly scheduledmeeting per month andpreparation of minutes ofmeetings. $3.50 for hoursworked, average 10-15 hour-s/mo. Call administrativeassistant 609-799-2400 if in-terested. EOE

CLERK TYPIST — $180. wk.Fee Paid. Great opportunityfor career-minded individualto grow in , a major cor-poration. Good skills will getyou great benefits. Call JackieSmith, SWIFT PERSONNEL,690 Whitehead Rd., 609-989-7200.

EXPERIENCEDBABYSITTER- needed 1 nightover the weekend, for 14 mos.old. 609-799-2411.

SPEECH THERAPIST — parttime. C.C:C. or ClinicalFellowship year required. Call609-882-1503 after 5 pm.

RN - full time charge positionis available on the 3-11:30 pmshift at our Lawrencevillebased skilled nursing facility.Duties include supervision ofthe nursing staff & thedevelopment of patient careprograms. Starting salarybased on experience along •with an excellent benefitprogram. For further details,call 609-394-5181 or 896-0016.

DEMONSTRATORS-GOODmoney, exclusive imports,commis b C l lcommissions, bonuses.NOW 201-721-6258.

orts.Call

CREW HELP WANTED

WENDY'SOLD FASHIONEDHAMBURGERS

1730 North Olden Avenue. Ewing Township

Hours: Between

10 a.m. and 2 p.m.,

5 p.m. and 8 p.m.

Ask for JimApply 2:30 - 4:30 p.m.

Monday through Friday

HOUSEKEEPERProfessional couple seeking full-time Housekeeper to maintain 2small apartments in Lawren- 'ceville and Manhattan. Jobinvolves complete responsibilityfor domestic needs includingcleaning, shopping, laundry(some ironing and minormending). A car will beprovided, but applicants needto be able to drive. Good salary. 'Please call our office for in-terview:

609-896-1411

MEDICALSECRETARY

Experience necessary. Goodtyping and dictaphone skillsrequired. Part-time. Apply:

609-921-6040

Lab TechniciansTrainees

Secretaries Typists

Clerks Keypunches

WHERE f HE JOBS ARE!As one of New Jersey's largest personnel agencies we can offeryou a tremendous selection of top paying positions, bothpermanent or temporary close to home. No one else can matchour benefits which include paid vacations, bonuses, profitsharing and above average weekly salaries.

Never a Fee

PER5DnriEL201-240-7100

300Hwy.27Highland Park

201-526-82801081Hwy.22Bridgewater §

ROGERS & KING PERSONNEL, INC.

DATAPROCESSING

CALL CAROL KING FOR THESE FEE PAID POSITIONS

Programmer/Analyst$22,000 - Progressive centralNew Jersey corp. has a needfor 6 PL1 programmers. IBMVM/370/CMs. State^f-trKwrtenvironment.Project Manager • $25,000 -IBM VM/370/CMS. 2 or moreyrs. exp. PL1. "Sr. Programmer/Analyst -$25,000 - COBOL IBM 370OS/VS . Mus t havemanufacturing experience.Technical Support • $20,000 -2 yrs. COBOL on IBM main-frame hardware. Workingknowledge of OS/JCL and IBMutilities.

Technical Writer, Jr. • $13,500- AA or BA in English or jour-nalism. Basic understanding ofcomputer fundamentalsdesirable.

Piogrammer • $25,000 - DECPDP11/70. BASIC PLUS orFORTRAN. Business ap-plications or any other largescale time sharing system.Programmer Analyst •$25,000 - IBM 370, OS/VS. IMSData Base. Financial ap-plications.Programmer Analyst -$23,000 - PDP 8-s and or 11's.FORTRAN and ASSEMBLY.Business appScations.

Systama Programmer •$30,000 - Maintenance .andmodification of SVS orMVT/HASP. Proficient in ALC,TSO and System/JOB A bendanalysis.

Systems Programmer -$28,000 - Installation of majorpackages. Maintenance andtrouble-shooting. Experiencewith VM Internals.

Programmer Analyst •$29,000 - On-line programmingexperience. Assembly.Commercial applications, database management systems,language process ingtechniques.Tech. Support-$16,000-1 yr.programming exp. COBOL orBAL Must know OS/JCL andbe familiar with IBM/OSutilities.

Project Leader/8r.Programmer - $23,000 - IBM370, OS, IMS, AccountingApplications. Local Company.Sr. Systems Ptog./Analyst •$30,000 phis incentive. HeavyIBM 380/370. Assemblylanguage. OS internals.

Santa Pwgr,360/370.

•$20,000.IBM 360/370. Assemblylanguage. Knowledge of MVSInternals. Local.

Call or sand ntuff l i i to:ROGERS* KINO PERSONNEL, INC.

2500 Route 1J Lawrenceville (609)771-6900

1 :&

2-BClassified Advertising

Week of April 18 - 20,1979

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Resumes Jobs Wanted Announcements Announcements

TYPISTS-RECEPTIONISTS

MAG CARD OPERATORSBOOKKEEPERS

ACCOUNTING CLERKSKEYPUNCH OPERATORS

STATISTICAL TYPISTSGENERAL OFFICE

WORKERSSECRETARIES )WITHOR WITHOUT STENO)

It's time to leave the "WinterBluesv' behind and "Spring"back into action. Temporarywork is just what you need.Don't worry about being rusty.Your skills are there, all youhave to do is use them. CallRenee Dale, 609-452-1400.

SELECTIVETEMPORARIESMercer Mall. US 1(next to K-Mart)Princeton. N.J.

EXTRA BEDROOM?

MAKE THAT EXTRA ROOMWORK FOll YOU WHILEYOU HELP ANOTHERPERSON GAIN DIGNITYAND INDEPENDENCE;BECOME A SKILLDEVELOPMENT SPONSORFOR THE N.J. DIVISION OFMENTAL REGARDATION.WE WILL TRAIN YOU TOUSE YOUR UNIQUEABILITIES AND MATCHYOU WITH A RETARDEDPERSON WHO NEEDSTRAINING IN LIFE SKILLSAND SOCIAL AWARENESS.WHICH ONLY YOU CANPROVIDE! ROOM & BOARDPAID TO YOU AT A MON-THLY RATE: ADDITIONALSTIPENDS BASED ONHOURS OF TRAINING YOUPROVIDE TO THERESIDENT. CALL: (609) 29a-5981 WEEKDAYS FORPERSONAL ATTENTION.

A "PROGRAM OF THE N.J.DEPARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES

WANTED - part time FieldMaintenance person. Contact:Alan Taback at 609-924-6700ext. 31.

CAREER POSITION - with agrowing 78 year old insurancecompany. Service establishedpolicy holders. Averageearnings from $12,500 -$15,000; higher earningscommensurate with ability.Group hospital and majormedical. Free group life,pension plan, profit sharingand many other benefits. Noexperience necessary, wetrain. Call Mr. McKee days,8:30-4:30, 609-695-5477, Eves. 7-9 pm, 609-799-3290.

REAL ESTATE SALES —Now interviewing for WeichertCompany R e a l t o r s ,Hillsborough office. Pleasephone Jim Longo for con-fidential interview, 201-874-8100. '

CLERICAL POSITION inlocal trucking company toprocess owner / operatorpaperwork. Some experiencedesired. Aptitude for figures amust. Call American TransFreight 201-874-3700.

WOMAN WANTED TO HELP— with elderly lady 4 hours aday. Private home. 609-924-4438.

ARCHITECTS' FIRM withdiversified' practice seekingexperienced architects indesign, production and con-struction administrationareas. 609-452 8555.

DENTAL ASSISTANT forsmall suburban office, EwingTownship. Chairside & frontdesk duties. Call 609-883-0606.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE— Guaranteed local territory.

-Semi-industrial product line.Outside sales experience adefinite plus. Start $10,400salary plus commission plusexpenses plus Fee Paid. CallPat Carrol, SWIFT PER-SONNEL, 690 Whitehead Rd.,609-989-7200.

TEACHER AIDE - Someknowledge of secondary mathhelpful. Request applicationifrom Personnel Office.Hopewell Valley RegionalSchool, 2 Academy St., Peri-nington, N.J. 08534 or call 609-737-1511. ; An equal op-portunity /affirmative actionemployer.

FRONT COUNTER PERSONWANTED — llam-2pm, week-days only. Summer off ifdesired. Rocky Hill location.Call Mr. Lynch, 609-924-5659.

HOUSEKEEPER — Mature.woman needed in my home for'working mother. Mon thru Fri.Children aged 4 & 11. Lighthousekeeping. Must have

.transportation. Call after 6pm.609-443-3870.

SALES/PERSONNEL

ARE YOU AN EAGLE?

Eagles fly alone - not inflocks. The American Eaglestands for all that is goodabout individualism inAmerica -^ Proud, unafraid,courageous and forthright.Our "Eagles" are articulateachievers, professionals withstrong ideals, high businessethics and successful business

. experience who had at oneJime decided to free them-selves of the restrictions of thecorporate environment. Weare in the "People business ...Interviewing, Evaluation,Recruitiment and Marketingexecutive, caliber individuals.The type of person we hire has

. a- successful sales,m a n u f a c t u r i n g , o rmanagement track record,and is seeking a -greaterchallenge. He/she © com-'petitive, self-motivated, andcan interface with Key Cor-porate executives. As amember of our wellestablished growth cor-poration, you will receivecomprehensive training, fullbenefits and the opportunity tojoin one of the best in the in-dustry! Compensation is 15-25K the first year with sub-sequent years open ended. CallFlorence Wright at 609-452-1122.

KRTownPersonnel

AgencyPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road EastPrinceton, N.J. 08540

(609)452-1122

RED CROSS INSTRUCTOR-to leach small group of 5 yr.olds swimming & organizeoutdoor activities, 3 days perweek.insummer. We have pool& 10 acres of backyard. 609-655-3135.

HOUSEKEEPER - cleaning &laundry. 7 hrs. $30. EveryFriday. Twin Rivers location.609-443-6791.

SERVICE STATION at-tendant - full time, respon-sible, minor .service, ex-perience pref. 201-359-5617.

DAY CAMP DIRECTOR, 6wks., ADV^LS, first aid cert,req. for swim club. 201-297-6274.

W O R L D B . O O K E N -CYCLOPEDIA — opening forfull or part time represen-tative, Princeton - Hightstowriarea. Excellent earnings. CallSales Manager, 201-431-0090,L98.

BILLING CLERK - tem-porary position for 3. months.Good typist and willing tolearn all office procedures.Agfa-Gevaert Rex Inc, 46Colonial Dr., Piscataway N.J.08854. 201-981-1151.

WAITRESSES/WAITERS -choose your own hours. Days,nights, part time or full time.Apply in person. Buxton'sRestaurant, Rt. 206, RockyHill, N.J.

BARTENDER WANTED —with or without experience.Friendly, happy atmosphere,salary & hours open. For in-formation, call 609-448-4800.Hightstown.

LIVE-IN COMPANION — foran elderly lady in good health.Refs. required. Call 609-799-1319 or 799^74 after 5pm. .

PART TIME CLERK — forDeli. Sat & Sun work. Over 16.Floyds Deli, 4 Old CranburyRd., 609-448-7050.

PART TIME — help wanted inLandscaping work. Driver'sLicense required. 609-448-1962after 6.

SUBSTITUTE TEACHERSNEEDED: All areas;especially Phys. Ed.; 60credits required. $28.00 perday. Contact: Mrs. Conover,Montgomery TownshipSchools, Box 147B, Skillman,N.J. 08558. Phone (201) 874-5200.

SUCCESS ORIENTED — butunsatisfied with your presentincome or employmentsituation? If you will committen (or more) hours per weekto our business you will soonsurpass your present income,and in an enjoyable businessa tmosphe re . NystromAssociates, Skillman, N.J.08558 or call 201-874-5990.

DRIVER WANTED - NJlicense. Must be neat, con-scientious and able to acceptresponsibility. Dulies includedelivery, stockroom & in-ventory control. This is apermanent position. Apply inperson only. 118 Main StHightstown, NJ No phone callsaccepted!

PART TIME CLERK — forHightstown newspaper &tobacco store. Sat & Sun work,over 18. 609-448-1685.

FOOD SERVICEASST. MANAGER &

RELIEF COOKAggressive,, ambitious personto assume assistants positionin a cafeteria setting. Musthavefood background & desireto learn management.' Exc.oppty. to join a fast growingcompany. Also relief1 cook,responsible for 2 a.m. & 2 p.m.shifts, as well as assisting inprepration of baked items. 4day week plus vacation fill in.For appt. call 609-924-6300.

BEAUTICIANS —(2) full time& part time. Excel, workingcondit ions. . ' Immed ia t eopenings. Call Mr. George.Diane's Beauty Salon 201-725-1126.

HOUSEKEEPERS & in-terested in steady work formotel. Must be reliabletrustworthy. Own tran-sportation. References. Goodsalary, paid vacations allbenefitsTApply in person TownHouse Motel, Rt, 33 Hight-stown between 11 & 3. Ask forMrs. Richardson.

FLORAL DESIGNER -.position available im-mediately. Experiencenecessary. Qualified in allareas of design. Call 609-924-5770 for appt. .

HANDYPERSON NEEDED— for inside and outside workaround house and yard. CallMr. Henry, 609-924-4095.

SECRETARIESTYPISTSCLERKS

Are you signed up with anagency that doesn't keep youbusy? Register with us. Wehave open assignments now.Top Rate no fee

J&J TEMPORARIES2936 Rt. 1

Lawrenceville, N.J.608-883-5572

A L U M I N U M S I D I N GMECHANICS — and/or crewneeded immediately forsiding work. Experiencedapplicants only need apply.For steady work withreputable company call 609-448-2753.

P U R C H A S I N G O P -PORTUNITY for someonew/2-3 yrs. exp. in purchasingdept;, to assist manager.

Sping essen., knowledge ofemicals helpful. Exc. pd.

benefits, 37% hr. wk. Call 201-329-2333 for appt.

SECRETARY - part, time, forbusy office dealing withdiversified public in matters ofalumni and career services &church relations. Positionrequires excellent clerical &typing skills, interpersonalskills & working knowledge ofIBM MAG Card equipment.For an interview call SteveSharp at Westminster ChoirCollege, 609-921-3201. An Af-firmative Action, Equal Op-portunity Employer.

TYPIST, ADVERTISING - wehave a full time opening in ourclassified dept. for a personwith excellent typing, pleasantphone manner- & ability towork with the public. 37V-2 hr.week, excellent company paidbenefits including paidhospitalization. Outstandingsalary" with incentive bonusprogram. For interview callMrs. Geiger, The TrentonTimes' Newspapers, 609-396-3232 ext. 234. Equal Op-portunity Employer, M/F.

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY—for publisher's office inPrinceton. Must have formaltraining in shorthand, typing,office practice (KatherineGibbs or equivalent).Grammatical proficiency,pleasant telephone manneralso required. Non-smoker.Good salary to right person.Apply: 221 Nassau St.,Princeton, N.J. 609-924-7555.

FLOPPY DISC OPERATOR— Experienced, with groupleader abilities. Afternoonshift. Salary negotiable.Benefits. Call Rita. 201-725-8254.

GENERAL CLEANING fortownhouse in Hillsborough.201-359-0776 or 874-4224.

DATA PROCESSING - op-portunity to developscheduling & evaluationsystems for administrativejudicial program. ' Highresponsibility level inorganization of system IBM158. Start to $23,000. Need 3years experience. Full or partlime employment available.Can do significant portion ofwork at home. Send resumeto: M. Csapo, CN049, Trenton,N.J. 08625. Affirmative ActionEqual Opportunity Employer.

SECRETARY — Challenging12 mos. position in vital area ofindependent school. Exc.typing, shorthand, pleasingtelephone manner required.Forward resume, refs,minimum salary to Box0 02397, c / ,o PrincetonPacket.

MOTEL MANAGEMENT —Couple to manage 32rm. motelat Seashore. Living quarterssupplied. Reply: Box 177,Central Post, Kend. Pk.

GETTYTEMPS

Office Temps

Spring Fever?NeedXtra$$?Where to go?Where else?

Come to Getty Temps. Ex-cellent openings available ifyou are a...

Secretary*• Typist

StenographerBookkeeperKeypuncner

Earn high rates + Bonuses +vacation pay. Never a fee.Come in for your com-plimentary tote bag.

609-896-2323609-448-6500Route 130

Hightstown, N.J.

FACTORY WORK

Applications being acceptedfor general factory work.Steady shifts, steady work,excellent benefits. Apply atonce.

KENTILE FLOORSKentileRd.

South Plainfield, N.J. 07080

Equal Opportunity Employer

POLISH SPEAKING — live-inhousekeeper. Call between 4 &7 p.m. 201-245-7682.

WANTED —CLOSERS! M/F.National firm with TV supportlocally. All leads provided.Present sales people closing,60-70%! Opportunity parttime, $200 per week. Call LawnDoctor of Princeton, 609-737-0044.

BABYSITTER .- maturewoman to care for my 1 yearold child in my home, Mon-Frifrom 8:30pm - 5:30 pm. Musthave own transportation &refs. Please call 609-443-1038after 6 pm. . '

INTERIOR DESIGNER -talented person with trainingin interior design w/ability tosell. Residential interiors & oroffice furniture. Submitresume with salary history to:Leonard LaPlaca, NassauInteriors, 162 Nassau St.Princeton, N.J. 08540.

ELECTRICIANS — Ex-perienced in industrial orcommercial wiring. Full &part time positions open formechanics & helpers. 201-249-1359.

PART TIME PHONESOLICITORS - from your ownhome, Princeton area,evenings $3.25 per hour pluscommission. Call Lawn Doctorof Princeton, 609-737-0044.

CONSTRUCTION HAN-DYMAN needed for singlefamily housing development inH'boro. Experience and toolsnecessary. Call 201-359-6630days, 325-3554 eves.

CONSTRUCTION LABORERneeded immediately for sinelefamily housing developmentin H'boro. Call 201-359-6630days, 325-3554 eves.

PART TIME DELIVERY and• egg room work. Call 201-356-, 5208.

REAL ESTATE SALES

Licensed Real EstateSalespersons wanted for avery busy new CENTURY 21office on Highway 27, SouthBrunswick/Franklin Park.

Inexperienced sales personnelwelcomed. Will train you for asuccessful & profitable career.

Call Phil Barrood, Realtor,201-297-7900 for an interview.

PART TIME SECRETARY -for South Brunswick PlanningBoard & Board of Ad-justments. Work includes: 4eves, per month for approx. 4hours per evening. Goodtyping skills & elementaryshorthand required. Mustsupply own typewriter, $120

Sir month. Apply to Peter I.echenbleikner. Director of

Planning & Development.South Brunswick MunicipalBldg. Monmouth Jet. N.J.08852.

ARTS & CRAFTS DIREC-TOR, 6 wks., day camp, local.201-297-6274.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT -Care for three almost grownchildren, 8:30 a jn . to 5 p.m.daily. Must be careful driver.Possible live-in. June 25 - midAugust. Lawrenceville. Call609-883-7854.

CAREER, JOB SEARCH &EDUCATIONAL COUN-SELLING — Testing &Resume included; Dr. MichaelL. RosenthiL, 609-737-2236.

RYAN RESUME SERVICE —Dayton, N.J. Evening ap-pointments available. - Call

taf ter 4 p.m. 201-329-243L

KESUMES UNLIMITED —Your complete one stopresume service featuringresumes professionallywritten to highlight yourqualifications, expertly typed& offset printed. For personal,confidential service callRESUMES UNLIMITED a t609-448-0701. '

GETTY PERSONNELCall Arlene

Bookkeeper/FC To$l3kStatistical Typist $220Legal Secretary $10k+Mag Card Typist $175+Keypunch $165Receptionist $165Clerk Typist $165Bank Teller To $150

Call Mrs. GoldM.E. or Ch.E.

(Maintenance Supervisor)To$22k

M.E. (Rotating Machines)$20k+

I.E. (Nodegree) $16kLab Tech To$l5kProduction Machinist $7/hr.R&D Chemist OpenTool & Die Maker Top rates

Call Mrs. KantorProgrammer Analyst

1 (Manufacturing Enf.) To$30kE.'E. (R&D Back-ground) To$30kSales/Timesharing $25k+Programrrier Analyst/

Mini's TO $25kTax Accountant To$25kTech Support Rep

(D.P. Background) OpenM.B.A./Systemswork OpenTech Writer To$23kAssistant Controller $18kProgrammer To $18kI.E. /Time study- OpenAccountant/Finance To $17kProduction Supervisor To$l4kSales/Steel . OpenLab Tech $10k+

609-896-2323609-448-6500Route 130

Uightstown, N.J.

ResumesPRINCETON WRITINGASSOCIATES — is availableto work on any job wherewriting is important: reports,b rochures , promotionalmaterial, manuscripts, etc.201-359-5948.

THE PLAIN TRUTH ABOUTRESUMES — Did you knowthat prices for resumes rangeas high as $3000? And as low as$15? In today's confusingmarketplace with its shiftingstandards and tastes, how can

•you judge? For example:What is a good resume? Isthere S correct, form? Shouldyou go to a professional, orwrite your own? Are youassured of getting a goodresume just because someoneclaims to be a professional?How much should you pay? Isthere a real difference bet-ween the $15 and $500 resume?Is it worth the substantialamount of money it is going to

; cost? Do you need a resume at' all? This is where I come in. Ina field where there is an in-credible range of quality, myresumes a re consistentlygood. Clients bring backreports that prospectiveemployers were impressedenough to comment favorablyabout the quality of resumemy clients snowed them. I willgive you straight answers toDie list of most frequentlyasked questions above andmany more. If you call me. Iwill sit down with you andtake time to answer all yourquestions with no obligation onyour part. If I do a resume foryou, I will be glad to adviseyou about updating it for aperiod of 2 years after, free ofcharge. Call me to find outm o r e . P R I N C E T O NWRITING ASSOCIATES. 201-359-5948

WEARY OK LIGHTING —your own written language &losing? My long writing &editing experience can helpyou. For less than you canhave a page typed, I willcorrect & improve it in sound,style & sense. You mustsample my service to knowhow much I can better yourreport or other manuscript inthe humanities; socialsciences, or sciences. Same-,week service guaranteed. Call609-737-0531 after 6 p.m.

Jobs Wanted

ADMINISTRATIVE ASST. —Bright, articulate with topskills, highly recommendedqua l i f i ca t ions , des i r e sposition. 609-452-1567 after 7p.m.

MOTHER/TEACHER - willcare for your children, herhome, while you work or play.201-821-8422.

MOTHER O F F E R SCHILDCARE — forpreschoolers (2-5 ;-yrs).Playroom, crafts, snacks,crib, TLC. Twin Rivers, 609-443-3343.

GOING ON A TRIP? Whybother hiring a babysitter,when you can leave your schoolaged child in a family at-mosphere in our Lawren-ceville home; We'll providelots of TLC, meals, tran-sportation. For more info,please call Marcia, 609-883-7863. :

W I N D S O R H I G H T SJANITORIAL SERVICE —Announces Spring WindowCleaning Service Residen-tial/ Commercial, Hight-stown, East Windsor, Cran-bury. 609-448-4337.

WOMAN WISHES —housekeep..ig job by the day.Will do plain cooking reliefFri. nite dinner, Sun. earlydinner, for retired couple orsick people. Princeton.References . 609-394-0477between 5:30 - 7 pm.

NEED LETTERS — papers,manuscripts typed? LetPatricia do it. $5/ hour.Prompt professional work.Call 609-924-2991 eves,weekends.

EXPERIENCED MOTHER,licensed teaeher, formerassistant director of TRToddler program withes tabl ished Babysitt ing.

; business "nas openings.Finished playroom, yard,nearby playground, daily

-outings, meals & snacksprovided. McKnight SchoolDistrict. Call 609-448-0406.

YOUNG WOMAN — wishesdomestic work, by the day.$25.00 per day. Call 609-393-2765.

CHILD.CARE — days only.Private home. Large yard.609-448-0526.

EXPERIENCED LPN — willcare for sick or elderly part-time, eves., call aft. 3:30, 201-329-2431.

WILLING TO BABYSIT - inmy home for workingmothers. 609-924-7698.

CHILD CARE in my home forworking mothers. Ex-perienced. References. TwinRivers area. 609-448-4593.

HANDYMAN, lawn care,painting, window cleaning,etc. Call 201-297-7287.

BABYSITTER - ex-perienced.. Available evenings& weekends. 609-924-8244.

EXPERIENCED CLEANINGlady would like to clean yourhouse or apt. Mornings; now e e k e n d s . C r a n b u r y -Hightstown area. Needtransportation. Info: 443-4524anytime.

MAINTENANCE HAN-DYMAN FOR SMALL JOBS.Call 609-466-2327.

WOMAN DESIRES — parttime work caring for elderly orconvalescent. Own trans. 609-448-8727.

PARTS PERSON — Ex-perienced in automotive, truckor tractor parts for counterwork. Must be hard worker,able to meet the public, andwilling to grow with ourcompany. Good companybenefits, salary plus incentiveplan, excellent opportunity forthe right person. Call 609-883-73609 a.m.-4 p.m. After 6 p.m.call 215-948-9505. Trenton FordTractor, Inc., US #1,Lawrenceville, N.J.

Learn WAYSASSERTIVE:

1NQ, SELR .-..IMAGEBUILDING & RELAXATIONEXERCISES plus other

[behavior modif icat iontechniques for personal ' &professional growth. Open &closed groups & privatetraining conducted in Prin-ceton area. Contact Theresa', Tomarchio at 609-4664636, 466-0o44

LOOK, LOOK, LOOK. There isparking at Princeton Station.Rates 50 cents per day. $1.00!for overnight, by the week$3.00, by the month $8. The(Only overnight parking inPrinceton. 609-924-0976.

OVEREATERS ANONY-MOUS meets Wednes-day eves. Princeton,Thursday eves. Hightstown.Call for information: Prin-ceton 921-2040 or 924-6892;Hightstown, 448-2481 or 443-1060.

WE ARE SEEKING ACHALLENGE. Sure, we doeverything from building newhomes to panelling dens. Butthe real satisfaction comeswhen we meet the challengethat an older house offers -retaining the integrity of thedwelling without sacrificingcomfort and beauty - solvingproblems with innovation andexperience - using the ex-pertise and craftsmanshipthat has made WILLIAMSBUILDER known in the

•Princeton area for years. Call609-587-8500.

DAYS WORK BY EX-PERIENCED LADY — nearbusline. Call 609-298-9351.

WILL DO BABYSITTING —16 yr. old girl, anytime afterschool or weekends, yourhome if transportationprovided. Mother will babysitin my home anytime, mealsprovided. Manville area. 201-658-0581, call anytime.

CHILD CARE —* experiencedmother will care for your childweekly. 609-448-5873.

CHILD CARE — in my home,full or part time. Experienced.609-448-2755.

EXPERIENCED PROFES-SIONAL WOMAN — de-sires free lance secretarial/editing work w/authors,writers, grad students /manuscripts / top typing

i speed & accuracy. Dependableflexible hrs. 609-799-2797 eves.

iWoman, honest, reliable &dependable desires work ashousekeeper; CAN LIVE IN.Excellent references. 609-893-3082.

CHILD & FAMILYHOME COUNSELING

At their own home, child &familv learn how to cope withproblems arising fromemotional, physical ordevelopmental handicaps.Priscilla Maren, 609-466-2039.

CAROL'S PLACE — Per-sonalized stationery, in-vitations and gift items at

•discount prices. Call 609-443-3141.

DAY CAMP-'Rambling Pinesnow enrolling for summerprogram. Call 609-924-9713 forinformation.

THE FOURTH WAY is'method of self-development,introduced into America by'Mr. Gurdjieff. AKHALDANNII is a school in the Fourth

' Way led by an experiencedt teacher. 609-443-1898,.

' .PRESCHOOL S u m m e ri Program at Nassau Co-opNursery School, 50 WalnutLane, Princeton. Eighthseason of a camp program foryoung children with certifiedteachers in a nursery, schoolenvironment. 9-12 daily fromJune 11 to August 10. Weeklyor season registrations. Call921-7787 or 896-0260 for furtherinformation. . ..

. CRAFTSPEOPLE — Vendors,Exhibitioners, Booth spaceavailable for Scotish Fair, tobe held May 19th, Trentonarea. Contact TrinityCathedral, 609-392-3805,'9 a.m.to 5 p.m.

MONTESSORI DAYCARE &Pre-School Kindergarten. Half& full days. 8a.m. - 5p.m.Convenient location. Sensitive,warm, caring teachers. N.J.approved - A.M.S. Certified.Register now. Some openingsavailable. Call 201-297-6066 or297-9144.

STUART COUNTRY DAYPRE-SCHOOL — is accepting'applications for 1979-80. Awarm, personal atmospherefor girls & boys, ages 3, 4 & 5,focusing on individual in-tellectual, emotional & socialgrowth: Morning and/ orafternoon sessions. Call:Admissions office, Mrs.Valentine, W9-921-2330.

CAMP GALIL in nearbyBucks County. Modeled on anIsraeli kibbutz. Coed, ages 9 to16. Four & eight weeks.Moderate rates. Character-building through shared-workexperiences. Call 609-883-0420after 5 p.m.

TRANSPORTATION SER-VICE — Bus or van for rent byday or by week. Reasonablerates, driver available. Non-profit corp. 201-646-8894.

CLASS OF 1955 - PrincetonHigh School Alumni needed tohelp plan 25th reunion. Call609-448-7124 after .5 pm.

P A R E N T S W I T H O U TPARTNERS JOIN US — onthe 4th Tuesday of the month, 8p.m., Unitarian Church, of•Princeton, for program "andsocial hour. For information,call evenings (609) 924-2872 or•799-0458.

COMMUTERS WANTED —to form carpool to Newark.Call 609-448-3643.

WELL KNOWN & ReliableMother wishes to babysit dailyor weekly located across thest. from McKnight School. 609-448-5338.

I would like to watch yourchild in my home anytimebetween 6:30 am & 7 pm M-F.Reasonable rates, lunch incl,lg yard. Near Dutch Neck &Mickory Cr. 609-443-4889.

WOMEN'S SOFTBALL TEAM— sponsored by CommunityLiquors. Any interestedwomen 18 yrs. & over. Pleasecontact Sheryl Jones, 609-921-0329 day or evening for moreinformation.

ARTS & CRAFTS PERSONS— do you have a product tosell? We specialize inmarketing handcrafts. Wehave helped many others tosuccess, perhaps we can helpyou too. It costs you nothing tofind out. Phone or write HunterCorbett Agency, 37 No. MainSt. Cranbury, NJ 08512, 609-655-4010.

ftHow's your English? If itmatters then test yourself.

- i ' You could be mistaking lay forA n n o u n c e m e n t s lie, I for me, who for whom. If

you cannot afford making such

WHY WEIGHT ANYLONGER? - You get $1.00credit on every lb. you losewhen you start on the Shaklee •Way Slimming Plan within thenext 30 days. Call NaturesBest, 609-771-0384 for details.I n d e p e n d e n t S h a k l e eDistributor.

PRINCETON YWCA &PLANNED PARENTHOOD -will have counselor on duty atthe YWCA Bldg. Every Wed. 2pm - 6 pm. 609-924-4825(YWCA), 609-599-4881(Planned Parenthood).

C A R P E N T E R S A P -PRENTICE APPLICATIONS— will be accepted forPrinceton carpenters unionH 781 from 7:30 - 9:30 am and3:30 - 4:30 pm, Mon. thru Fri,Apr. 23 to Apr. 27. at 454Terhune Rd., Princeton. AnE.O.E. . •

JOGGERS - J6in the WestWindsor MINI-MARATHONbenefit, May 5, 9 am atMaurice Hawk school,Princeton Jet. 10 & 5 kilometerraces. Prizes. Call 609-799-2250.

WINDOW FASHIONS:VERTICALS, WOVENWOODS, LEVOLOR BLINDSALL AT 25% OFF!Professionally measured andinstalled. You don't pay myoverhead because I have none.Call Nikki Harris, RegisteredInterior Designer, for pricequote, 609-443-6791.

EXPERIENCES IN LIVING^LEARNING - Learn to identifyand fulfill personal needs,increase self esteem andimprove i n t e r p e r s o n a lcommunications. Thesethemes and others will beexplored in a supportivesetting through group in-teraction.* Certified groupleader. Offices in Princeton'and Kendall Park.Contact B.Blank, 201-297-956?. •

POSTSCRIPTS — Invitations.Personalized stat ionery.Substantial discounts. Call forappt. 609-924-8167, 921-3854.

THE SPORTSMEN'S INN —Hunting at its best for Bear &Deer — Fishing-motel withdouble occupancy rooms &family style meals. Guidesprovided for Bear season with,guaranteed ihot. Write toabove in Eagle Lake, Maine04739 or calT207-444-5130 forinformation.

J ^ # ^ t T_IT.« • • r T v w * * * ^v& ^ ^ » m • ^—»» — »^B H r •~— -~

mistakes or teaching them toyour children, write for ourcopyrighted simplified key toavoiding a baker s dozen of theerrors in everyday Englishmade commonly by even the'well educated. Satisfactionguaranteed or a promptrefund. Send $1.50 plus 50 4 forhandling and postage to WordBox 2332, Princeton, N.J.08540.

READ ALL ABOUT ISLAM inthe new publication (AL-AZHAR member Al-Islam).12 issues for $6 yearly. PO Box2589. Trenton, N.J. 08690.

CAREER GUIDANCE — Areyou isolated from the jobscene? Experiencedvocational counselor providesassistance in career decision -making, pre-employmentpreparation, search andsurvival methods, careercluster information, ex-ploration series into 22clusters most applicable tocollege graduates. By ap-pointment, 609-883-7888 (8:30-9:30 p.m.)

FOR WOMAN AT HOMEWITH YOUNG CHILD.WORKSHOP to address issuesof loneliness, stress, etc. .Leader is certifiedPsychotherapist and motherof two. $20 fee for 4 sessionseries beginning late April.609-883-7888 or 883-7876.

ANNUAL SMORGASBORDSUPPER — Trinity Church,Rocky Hill, N.J. Sat., April 28,4:30-7:30 p.m. Adults $4.75,children undej 12, .$2.50. Fortickets call Mrs. Mellinger 609-924-0292.

WANTED — Inflationfighters. Let me show you howto economise on some of yournecessities without sacrificingquality. Find out. Absolutelyno obligation. 609-799-3046.

MOTORCYCLISTS! You areinvited to a meeting, road runand barbecue on Sunday .April29 as guests of the PrincetonMotorcycle Club. Come andmeet some nice people frontall over the Princeton-Trenton- Hopewell - Plainsboro area.Call Roy at <8Q9-921-7406 formore information;'

CORRECTION — The time forrcrur open house on April 26th isIrom 3:00 - 4:00 p.m:

MONTESSORI DAYCARE,PRE-SCHOOL, and KIN-DERGARTEN. Half and fulldays 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. N J . &A.M.S. approved. Sensitive,wary, caring teachers:Register now. Call 201-297-6066or 297-9144. f 1it

RIDDERtNG DAY NUR-fSERY SCHOOL has severalopenings for children 2% to 5yrs. old.- Half or all day,'flexible hours for workingmothers. Hwy. 27 b e t 'Kingston & Kendall Park.-State licensed. Call 201-297-1956. : , . . . :

To Ploc* aClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

!

Week of April 18 - 20,1979if ted Advertising

3-B. . . , • • . ! f • |

Announcements Personals Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart

P R I N C E T O N C O -OPERATIVE NURSERYSCHOOL multi age openclassroom, relaxed andstimulating atmosphere. 3, 4,and 5 day programs. A few.non-coop positions for workingparents available. Call nowabout fall openings. Debbi Witt

609-466-3112 or ElinorWilliams 609-921-6585.

PARENT — CHILD COUN-SELING — short termprofessional therapy &'evaluation. Call 609-924-8105.

PersonalsNEED A "BAND? Weddings,are our specialty! Gooddanceable music for all ages -reasonable prices & we aredependable. 201-359-1830.

COLLEGE SELECTION &APPLICATION COUN-SELLING - individuals &small groups. Dr. Michael LVRosenthal, 609-737-2236.

HIGHTSTOWN PLANNEDPARENTHOOD CLINIC —.Monday evenings. Call 609-448-3439.

GAY SWITCHBOARD in-formation center. Call 609-921-2565. Best hours 7-10 p.m. Mon.thru Thurs.

PROF MAN - 40's, wishesto meet interesting, attractiveyoung lady for anenlightening, enjoyablerelationship. Please reply toBox # 02377 c/ o PrincetonPacket.

KAY'S INTRODUCTIONSERVICE — all ages. Meet apartner for a friendship ormarriage. 201-534-2726.

WIDOWER — Young at heart,seeks female companion, 30-45. Enjoys travel, good .music,restaurants. Have nice apt., 2cars. Interested parties sendall particulars, recent photo &phone H to Box #-02373, c/ othe Princeton Packet.

ELEGANT MAN — 36, seeksequality relationship with awoman. Mind verbal skills,physical condition, all ex-cellent. Write Box « 02394 c/ oPrinceton Packet.

PROF. EDUCATED MALE —35, seeks female to mid 30's foroccasional dates and more.Please send revealing photo,likes and dislikes, phone H to P.O. Box 50233 Kendall Park,N.J. 08824.

SINGLE MEN & WOMEN —formerly married & nevermarried, are finding a specialgroup that speaks to theirneeds & interests - a groupunlike any other singles groupin this area. They invite you towrite for further information."Singles", 61 Nassau St.,Princeton. N.J. 08540.

PROFESSIONAL MAN -40's, seeks quiet easy goingfemale companion in Prin-ceton area. Reply to Box# 02396, c/ o PrincetonPacket.

SINGLE ADULTS — (singleor formerly married) areinvited to participate in TheSingles Fellowship Aprilactivities. The 14lh-tour ofLongwood gardens, 18th-coffee & conversation supportgroup, 21st-Flea Markets allday; evening meeting 2nd ofthe month, the 22nd-Matinee of"Heartbreak House", 25th-Readings & Rappings bookdiscussion group & the 29th-covered disn • supper,especially for single parentfamilies. For further in-formation, write "Singles", 61Nassau St., Princeton, NJ.08540.

SLIM, ATTRACTIVE —vibrant redhead, divorced;seeks sincere, sensitive,unattached man (35-45) forcompanionship, dancing &lively conversation. Photodesired. Reply Box #02398, c/oPrinceton Packet.

ATTRACTIVE WOMAN — 515'6-Vfe", shore area, would like •to meet a mature, intelligentman. I enjoy outdoor sports,bridge, dancing and an activesocial life. My children aregrown. I am an educationalsecretary, I have a good senseof humor and I do enjoy life.Reply Box #. 02393, c/ oPrinceotn Packet.

T E N N I S P A R T N E R SWANTED — Beginner toadvanced beginner, male orfemale. Call Mike, 609-452-2330days or 771-0718 nights andweekends.

SOAPSTONE — Green, White,soft stone, easy to carve.White, pink, translucentAlabaster, Carrara Marble,African Wonder-Stone, powertools and accessories,Sculpture House Inc., OpenMon-Sat. Skillman, N.J. 609-466-2986.

HAY FOR SAliE — severalkinds & grades^choose from,also straw, mulch. Willdeliver. »£ ton minimum,reasonable distance. Calleves. 609-466-3596.

REGISTERED OR NOT -I will buy your guns legally.I am licensed and will pay agood price. Call Bert 609-924-3800 days.

ALMOST NEW - complete"beauty salon equipment in-cluding 6 cherry red barberchairs. Must be seen to beappreciated. Sacrifice $5400 orbest Offer. 609-924-4875 or 924-3794 eves.

POOL TABLES - New - used-trade in - mostly slate. -{Repairs - free estimates.Moves, installations & sup-plies. Special: slate tables,regular $599. special $430. Willsell any of 10 disDlav models.All Work Co., Rt. 206, BelleMead, N.J. 201-359-3000.

FOR SALE - large selectionreconditioned refrigerators,freezers, washers, dryers.Guaranteed. Can deliver anddo electrical or gas hook-up.201-369-3718.

HUMOROUS, ATTRACTIVESUCCESSFUL FEMALE, 45,seeks single male equal, writeBox # 02402 c/ o PrincetonPacket.

IF YOU ARE MALE — 31 to55 & can dance, female needs

Partner (ballroom, hustle,isco) socially or

professionally for legtimate,lucrative oppty. Eves: 201-249-8573 or details: E.B..P. O. Box4170, Warren, N.J.

NICK (Somerville) — I wantyou for my dancing partner.Lost your number. URGENT!201-249-8573.

ATTENTION LADIES — 30year old professional manwould like to meet friendlycompassionate woman (ageunimportant) who enjoys thesimple life who likes themovies and outdoor activities,quiet times and good con-versation. Doesn't like bars,clubs or discos, is un-derstanding and sincere. Ifthese qualities describe you,send note and photo to C.J.P.Box 403, Dayton, N.J. 08810.

ATTRACTIVE —professionalfemale 35, 5'9", seeks singlemale equal for serioussharing. Photo appreciated.Reply Box # 02413 c / oPrinceton Packet.

FOR WOMAN AT HOMEWITH YOUNG CHILD.WORKSHOP to address issuesof loneliness, stress, etc.Leader is certified"Psychotherapist and motherof two. $20 tee for 4 sessionseries beginning late April:609-883-7888 or 883-7876.

WANTED: HOUSEMATESingle male, 44 and 13 year-olddaughter seek housemate toshare all the comforts andsome of the expenses of a largehouse in the country nearPrinceton. Single parent withor without kids preferred.Ideally we are looking forsomeone who can relate tokids and who is willing toshare some single, parentresponsibilities. Reply Box# 02395, c / o PrincetonPacket.

ATTENTION SINGLEPEOPLE! Come hear TheReverend Daphne Hawkesspeak on "THE CRISIS OFMIDDLE AGE" on Friday,April 20th at 8:30 pm at TheFirst Presbyterian Church,320 North Main in Hightstown.No reservations necessary.

Bargain Mart

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUSHELP AND INFORMATIONCALL 609-924-7592..

ATTENTION

BIRDWATCHERS

Bird photographer wishes to

locate nests of ground nesting

birds especially Killdeer,

Spotted Sandpiper, Upland

Sandpiper, Willet, also

Woodcock, B o b w h i t e s ,

Grouse, Marsh Hawk & others.

Should you see a nest please

ca 11 Ted Cross collec t,

evenings a t 609-921-3661,

daytimes, 212-977-7412:

lTPEWRITERS — Electric,manual, portable, officemodels. New - reconditioned.ADDERS,1 CALCULATORS:Name Brands. . Rentals.Repairs, Trade-ins, CENTERBUSINESS MACHINES, 104Nassau St. 609-924-2243.

DISCOUNT LIGHTING - TheRoosters Coup. Lightingfixtures, lamps, shades, parts

. and repairs. Clocks, gift items& fireplace equipment. Hugeassortment of brand names atdiscount prices. THEROOSTER'S COUP, on Rt. 29,Lambertville, N.J. OPEN 7DAYS, 609-397-0027.

NEEDLEPOINT CANVASES- 20% to 50% off entire stock.D.M.C. and Persian yarns ateveryday low prices. Call TheNovel Needle 609-448-8013.

ToPlaetaClassified Ad

In Prineaten call609-924-3250

3 ROOMS — brand new fur-niture, including 3. piecebedroom, Herculon sofa bed, 2chairs, 5 piece dining room.Immediate delivery, $429.Alpine Furniture'Co. 166 W.Main St , Somerville. 201-526-8882.

THE RESALE SHOP — 901Camplain Rd., Manville.Buying and selling - Youname it! Antiques, furniture,tools and useable items. 201-526-3761.

COMPLETE SHARPENINGSERVICE —' Circular saws,chain saws., hand saws,shears, knives, scissors. Alsolawnmower and small enginerepairs. Ward St, Hightstown.609-448-1792.

BARN BEAMS FOR SALE —old oak beams, hand hewnedor sawed, 6-28'. 201-247-2810.

SPRING MEADOW FARMfreezer beef, naturally raised,No steroids. Also nitrate-nitrite free ham bacon,sausage & corned beef. 609-466-2937, after 6 and weekends.

FREEZEK BEEF

Home grown naturally fedsteers. Cut to your ownspecification, wrapped andfrozen. Kaufman Farm. 609-466-0773, Master Chg. avail.

"WOOD - Freeform slabs forfurniture, clocks & crafts 25species - walnut, cherry,redwood. Finished furnitureby local craftsmen. 2000 pcs. inshowroom at WuliardBrothers Saw Mill & Kilm, 300Basin Road, Trenton. 609-890-1990.

HOT TUBS - have a hot tubparty at your house & get oneat cost. For more details. Call201-359-0260.

POTTERS — Clay, kilns,wheels,- tools and chemicals.STANDARD CLAY MINES.Open Mon-Sat. Skillman, N.J.609-466-2986.

WOOD STOVES - AuthorizedDealer. Jotul, Morso Efel,etc. Harr Bros. Wood. Heat,1605 N. Olden Ave., Trenton,609-393-7550.

ANTIQUES -COINS - GUNS -Antiques, antique guns, silvercoins bought & sold. Forcurrent price quote call 201-359-6402.

GUNSTn5Shotguns & rifles

$10 overwholesaleAmmo discounted :

10% off most hand gunsReloading supplies discounted

Buy Sell & TradeMurphy's Sportsmen's Den3152 Rt, 27,. Kenda U Part*

Off Season Hrs.: .Tues.-Wed. 12pm-6pm.

Than. • Fri. 12pm. -9pm.Sat. 19-6 p.m.

Sun. & Mon.-closed291-W7-3357

BABY FURNITURE —lullaby furn. crib &' jnatt.w/canopy, dresser, dressingtable, coach carriage. $300.609-799-2207.

FIREWOOD — all oak hmaple. Split & seasoned, $55 acord, $35 a "half. 609-448-4363.

CASH - for your old...j§wejry,diamonds & estates. . Mac-Donald Jewelers, Yardville,N.J. 609-585^1716.

3 WOODEN DOORWAYARCHES - 4ft. x 6ft. 8in. withtrim. 609-448-2339 after 6 pm.

UNIQUE ANTIQUE ChineseJewelry - Reasonable. Forappointment 609-443-3126.

SWIMMING POOL - 24'Muskin Aluma - Steel withcover, used 2-% seasons. 10year frame/deck warranty,aluminum safety gate, picketfence, deck & ladders. Preflexfilter, self-priming Vfehp.pump. New liner, in factorybox, 15 yr. warranty. Bestoffer. 201-359-8487.

M's STAINED GLASSSTUDIO - Custom hand-crafted Tiffany lampshades,unique designs. Stained glasswindows. Restorations. 32 yrs.experience. Retail outlet,Packard's Market, Wed. &Fri. 12-9:30 p.m. —Studio, 103Rt. 206 So., Hillsborough,Thurs. 12-9, Sat. 10 - 5,201-722-2591 anytime.

STAINED GLASS SUPPLIES— Distributors & Discounters.Custom designs. Repair &restoration. Lamps, mirrors,planters, etc. PrincetonStained Glass, 38 Spring St.,609-921-1311.

FREE ROCKS &• BOULDERS— You must haul away, 609-466-2483.

LAMINATINGBusiness and Personal.Presentation mater ia ls ,posters, prints, ctfs, bookjackets, photos, drawings,c l i p p i n g s , m a p s ,geneaological records. 18 W -to 250'

CCC 609/448-9345

LEVOLOR RIVIERABLINDS

VERTICAL BLINDS30% off list delivered

Elenby ProductsCall for quote

201-828-0776 or~ 609-396-5501 ~

A DIFFERENT KIND OFFURNITURE STORE — nowopen at 2000 Turk Road,Doylestown, across fromEdison Furniture. Used fur-niture, decorator items,hanging baskets, etc. Stop inand ask for Alice 10-5 daily,closed Sunday.

TYPEWRITER — RoyalElectric Office, exc. cond.,orig. cost $495, sacrifice, $185,201-782-7281.

PLYWOOD SHEATffiNG-ext.new 4x8 - 3/8" $7.48, l/2'v

$8.88, 5/8" $11.68, 3/4" $14.18Kiln dried lumber 1x3x8, 48cents; 2x3x8 $1.20,2x4x8 $1.60;"Andersen windows 27% offTex. 1-11 plywood siding 4XB ,$12.88; R.R. tie, newly"creosoted 8' $9.25. Can deliver..215-674-0205, eves. 887-2313.

FOAM-CUTANY SIZE—ANY SHAPE

WHILE-U-WAIT

Soft, lumpy, powdering oldcushions made like new beforeyour eyes. Bring your oldcushions and we will replacewith new FOAM on the spot.

AVERAGE SOFA CUSHION23"x23"x4" - $5.98

ALL NEW CUSHIONS MADENew Cushions including newFOAM, FABRIC, ZIPPER &labor. Large selection ofluxurious upholstery fabric.

23"x24*x4"-$18.9023"x36"x4"-$20.9023"x72"x4"-$31.9030"x72"x4"—$36.90

RUBBER STAMPSSchool or College address.Home, business, zip code.Rubber stamps of all kindsand sizes made to your orderat: .

HINKSON'S82 Nassau St.

DINETTE SET: walnutformica, table, 4 chairs &china closet $150; elec. meatslicer $30; ceramic canisterset $10; red velvet vanity chair$10; playpen $8; all exc. cond.201-874-6029.

POOL TABLE — 8* slate bed,excellent cond. with ac-cessories, $595. Call 609-799-0835.

FIVE 4'x8'x26' STEELBEAMS - like new, $50 each.609-924-2494.

SHRUBS FOR SALE — atRiver Hill Farm. Dig-your-own March 24 - May 13. Someof the prices are: ZW whitepine $5.50; 6' white dogwood6.00; 6' pink crabapple 6.00;12" dwarf mugho pine 5.50;24" pyramidal yew 3.75. OpenSaturdays and Sundays 9-6.From route 22; 5 miles southon 202. Left at South Branchsign. Go 1000 feet. Take rightturn. Straight for 1-Vi miles.369-4624.

BUILT RITE - coachcarriage: carriage/stroller;Built Rite; baby carseat;swing; full crib; porta-crib;rocking horse, like new. Bestoffer. 201-297-0631.

SOFABED — orange & white,$20, platform bed - 3 drawers,$25, Dlack Naugahyde couch,$20, painted chest of drawers,$10, sewing machine - wroughtiron base. $10. 609-921-9454,Mrs. Lambert.

20" 12 YR. OLD — coir. TV,$50. Pingpong table, $40. Fishtank, olive rug. 201-297-9145.

SOFA BED — $135; RCA colorTV, $150; 2 air conditioners;Hoover portable avocadowasher & dryer, $125 set;narvest gold all refrigerator,$175; dresser, $30. Or makeoffer. 201-369-3419.

ENJOY GOOD HEALTH Buyour Jacuzzi delux whirlpoolbath. Use portable or in tub.Brand new. Selling at sacrifice$225. Call 609-448-0380.

RECORD SALE - Buy, sell,trade. Top cash for yourrecord albums. Rock, Jazz,Classics, Broadway shows,soundtracks, folk disco,comedy, oldies, etc. We havethem all. We need them all. Nocollection too large or toosmall to purchase. Remembera good time to sell is when vouhave a willing buyer. Prin-ceton University Store.Beginning at noon, April 9, 9-5:30, thereafter until April 21.

DINING ROOM SET —Jacobean revival, sideboard,server, china closet, table.Hepplewhite style cornercupboard. Queen Anne revivalsedrver. Large Shearton dropleaf table. Mirror, revival.Mahogany empire shiffarobe,chairs. Antique fireplacefender, circa 1830. andirons.Antique English prints.Drapes. Tiffany type lamp.Revival Jacobean open armchairs. Brass bed. Brassmusic stand. 609-799-0190hetween 9-5 pm.

SMALL WOODSTOVE, used,$60. Franklin Stove, used, $90.Almost new. 609-896-0485.

TREES FOR LANDSCAPING- White pine, Austrian pine &spruce. Dig your own, anySize, $5.00 201-782-7281 or 782-2295

IBMBOYS' "PIERRE CARDIN" TYPEWRITER - mmsuit, sz. 14; Levis, shorts etc Selectric, like new, orig. cost.12 & 14; girls' Isoids 5-7* 201- *85°- Sacrifice $425. 201-782-297-1769. ' 7281.

GRANDMOTHER CLOCK,solid mahog., 6 ft., nicelyfinished, brass movement,dial, weights; Westminsterchimes, $450. 201-297-9215.

CONTEMPORARY BED-ROOM SET - 609-448-7037.

DINING ROOM TABLE — 6chairs, Hepplewhite style,$200, Maytag washer; $100,Sears dryer, $30, Amanarefrigerator, $200. Call after 4pm, 609-737-1549.

STANDING TIFFANY LAMP— signed. Call for ap-pointment, 609-921-1611.

Carpet Padding-$1.50Sq. Yd.Price Gladly given overphone.

THE FOAM FIRMPEAPACK 201-234-1622

Peapack is a right turn off Rt.206, 23 minutes north ofPrinceton. . •. ,.

INTERESTED IN YOURBODY WEIGHT? — Weightloss study in Princeton willgive free electro-cardiogramsand free blood tests in adoctors office for volunteersover 30 yrs. old and over-weight who participate in aclinical test of a drugstoreproduct for weight reduction.Call 609-924-2079 bet 9:30 am &4 pm.

1953 CHEV. $250;: 1967 Chev.truck, $800 firm; wall safe,$50; two 5000 &28000 BTU A/C,$100each; pine Med. cab., $50;Black & Decker L mower, $50;drum table $30; mahoganylamp stands, $40 pair; cedarwardrobe, $50: spinning wheelonly $35; display barrell, $20;two C.1870 handguns, $250;C.1845 Allen & Thuber pep-perbox, 5 shot, $300; farmplow, $40; Copper kettle, $30;brass mortar • & pestal,Russian C.1870, $125; 5' oxenyoke, $200; brass planter, $65;Rayo lamp, $90; crock jugs,$25; redwing jug, $35; Currier& Ives "An Early Start," $790;Man's 14K ring, two .333 Cdiamonds, $400; 1805 morningpost, $85; boat motor, trailer,$250; as is, trail bike, $10; 1966Chrysler Newport, $25; ap*pliance truck, $80; metaldetector, $200. Call 201-359-6402.

ABOVE-GROUND POOL —12' diameter, exc. cond., in-cludes cover, filter unit. $225.609-921-2404 after 5 pm:

BABY STROLLER - infantbath tub, car bed, infant seat,walnut changer table. Medit:candle wall sconce. Medit.lamp. AH reasonable. 609-448-6933.

GREEN & GOLDMediterranean sectional andaccessories. Excellent con-dition. 609448-6249.

90" GOLD CASTRO - likenew. Best offer. 609-799-3919.

TRIO TAG SALES, INC. - "Wedo all the work." Profitablesale of entire or partial con-tents of your home.Professionally conducted atyour convenience. 609-883-3535, 215-493-6858, or 609-882-2131.

CUSTOM PAINTED Raleigh3-speed bicycle, like new, $40.201-359-2836.

ft. padded T>ar. 201

ART — Private collection.Approx. 80 pcs. Oils, water

WINDOW FASHIONS:VERTICALS, WOVENWOODS, LEVOLOR BLINDSALL AT 25% OFF!Professionally measured andinstalled. You don't pay myoverhead because I have none.

> Call Nikki Harris, RegisteredInterior Designer, for pricequote, 609-443-6791.

USED STEKEO EQUIP-i t d i

,,,™™. — K.— ~-~. ••-— USED STEKEO EQUIPcolors, acrylics, Mr. & Mrs MENT — anyone interested inOwner are architects and sening their stereo equipmentinterior designers. 609-737- o n consignment please contact3887. J i m 609-921-3191.

WOOD SHUTTER PANELS -assorted sizes, A-l shape. $6per small panel, $10 per longpanel. 609-921-2924 eves.

SEEBURG JUKEBOX —depression glass, hand crankmimeograph. 609-737-9249.

PHILCO WINDOW AIRCONDITIONER - 6,800 BTU.In good condition. $100. 609-896-1095.

I N S U L A T E D L I N E NDRAPES-shades of green withDrown & beige. Perfect forTwin Rivers 3-4BR home.Excellent condition. 609-448-7294 or 443-6908.

INSULATION FOR SALE -fiberglass rolls, 15" wide,great bargain. Eligible for taxcredit. Call 201-359-4631,anytime.

35 MM. CAMERAS FOR SALE- Canon AEl SLR w/50mmFl.4 lens. $250 or best offer.Also; Canonet G3 QL17 rangefinder w/40mm Fl.7 lens &Canolite D auto flash. $90 orbest offer. Also; new SYSTEMBAG, $60. Call 201-359-4631anytime.

SKI SALE - new Olin MarkIV's, 180cm, $140; new FischerC4's, 185cm, $80. Used OlinMark IV's, 180cm w/Solomonbindings, $200. AIRC L E A N E R , p o r t a b l eHoneywell electronic aircleaner, removes pollen fromair, $200 new. Best offer. 609-924-6300.

72 x 42 CONTEMPORARYTEAK - dining table, 2-18"leaves, 5 chairs, exc. cond. 609-771-1286.

JOHN DEERE — Model 110lawn & garden tractor with 38"rotary mower and model 80dump cart, excellent cond.$1450. Call 609-737-3212.

SUMMER BULBS ARE IN -Begonias, Gladiolus, Dahlias& others. Princeton Hard-ware, Princeton ShoppingCenter. 609^924-5155.

SAVE GAS & CASH

Big savings on major ap-pliances! Factory direct toyou! Call this number withModel # & Brand for price info.609-8904717.

OLD '78 RECORDS — for sale.After 3:30 p.m. 609-394-5033.

COMPTOGRAPH addingmachine — Royal manualtypewriter with stand. 609-924-

6-8 pm.

SWIMMING POOL SUP-PLIES — Deal with wholesaledistributor -Low prices - FreeEstimates. 201-359-0260.

MATCHING 90" & 65" sofas,bronze / blk / rust-loosepillow, $200/ bo 609-443-4899.

10 REFRIGERATORS - 3Gibson all refrigerators; 3electric dryers; 3 gas dryers;3 washers; 3 air conditioners;Hoover apt. size washer &dryer, $125. Guaranteed andcan deliver. 201-369-3718.

TABLE PADS

Custom made to fit your diningroom table. Vinyl top, feltbottom. All colors. Free lockswith this ad. Ready made padsVz price. 201-985-6063 or 201-494-7684.

STEREO SYSTEM - Heathkit -AR-14 receiver and GarrardSLX turn-table $80,40 ChannelCB $60.201-359-3057 after 6 pm.

COLONIAL PINE dinette set,deacons bench, two hitchcockchairs, formica top. $150. 609-799-2207.

DINETTE SET — Danishmodern, solid birch, satinblack finish. China closet,table w/leaf & four chairs."Also black-finish tble chan-delier. 609-896-0727.

G.E. REFRIGERATOR —roughly 15 years old, goodcond. Asking $50 or best offer.

•609-737-9137.

RUG 8 x 10 — oriental design,cream background, bluepattern. Pure wool deep pile.Used 6 mos. Call after 7 p.m1.609-921-2305. '

SOFA AND CHAIR -traditional style, brand newcustom made slipcovers, verysturdy, $350. 609-924-0838.

OCCULT CEREMONIALROBES — tools, objects,jewelry, herbs, incenses,books. Call eves. 609-737-3898.

FOUR SEATER COUCH-slip-covered very good condition,S100. Yellow kitchen table & 3chairs. Sears rider lawnmower, needs repair, bestoffer. 201-359-0425.

CAMERA - Chinon CS 35mm,w/35mm, 55mm & 135mmlenses. Electronic flash, case,carry-all case. Everythingbrand new in orig. boxes -never used. All warranties.$225. Andy, 609-771-9133. Eves.215-297-5319.

yearsGood

LOWREY ORGAN - 7old. Virtuoso ModeLcondition. $450 firm. 609-448-7121.

VINYL CHAIN LINK FENCE- 50' corner posts - gate 6' high.Call eves. 609-921-0246.

PHOTOSTAT DRY COPIER -3M, excellent condition withsupplies, $225. Canoe 18'.Oldtown frame covered withfiberglass, $290 or best offer.609-395-1258. "

BOOKCASES —• finished &unfinished, assorted sizes. 609-924-1881.

SOFA — 84" foam cushions,excellent quality and con-d i l i o n C o i l springy ao\& p r j n l

original cost $700. Sale price$375. 609-924-0838.

BROWN VELVET SOFA - likenew $250; orange velvetchairs, also like new, $75 each.609-443-3415. I

SWIMMING POOL - 27' x.41

alum. Hub pool w/ Hay wardPerflex filter system, used 2seasons. New Lanyard cover,ladder, vacuum system,skimmer & other accessories.All for $575. 609-882-2372before 9 p.m.

SPRING BARGAIN TIME —at the Consolata VillageRUMMAGE SALE, Rt. 27,Somerset. Every Sat. 10-3,Family clothing, housewares,linen, collectibles, furniturebooks, stamps. Clothingbonanza! $1.00 a bagful.

TENNIS RACKET — DavisClassic, 4M, Hardly used, $25.609-466-0649.

FASHION FINESSESportive pants & jackets...basic shirts & skirts... late day& evening dresses... children'sessentials... beautifully lowprices... Outgrown Shop, 234Nassau Street, Princeton.Tues-Fri. 10-5, Sat. 10-3.

COUCH, 4 SEATS, Colonial,brown/cream print, movingmust sell, $125, very goodcond,; Camera, "Yashica"TL, 35mm, 3 lenses: 50mm,135mm, 28mm, filters, verygood cond. $150. Call 609-443-4668.

TABLE PADS

New, closeouts, low prices.Any size or shape, all colors.Call anytime, 201-257-4949. (ifno answer, just call again)

ITALIAN PROVINCIAL -dining rm set, white & gold'with miitvYood top. $425. 215-493-6848. .-.

CASTRO SOFA - queen brownvelvet, 84", $150. 609-448-6416after 6'pm. •

SOFA & CHAIR — gold & rustcontemporary. Must sell, bestoffer. 201-521-1088.

fWEDDING GOWN & VEIL -brand new, • size 5-6,reasonable. 609-896-0639 after 5pm.

HAY FOR S & E — 600 balesprime Timothy. Call 6091-466-1136.

BARRELS — 52 gal., oak, $15each. Oak planters, 25" wide,14V high, $11.50 ea. 609-896-1916.

GENERAL ELECTRICportable dishwasher $6.5.Carrier Window air con-ditioner, 6000 BTU, $75. Childstroller $15. Miscellaneoustoys and books. 201-297-7446after 6 p.m.

HEAVY DUTY COSCO CARDTABLE -with 4 folding chairs,$35, Fostoria "Oslony"'glassware, 46 items, $100.Chromatic concertina, $200.Italian floral design chan-delier, $60. Regina flporpolisher. $40, dehumidifier,$50. Sunbeam waffle iron, $10.609-448-2541. ^

VHF MARINE RADIOTELEPHONE - Elac -depthrecorder, new cond. 201-821-8119 after 6 pm.

POOL TABLES - Slate,Warehouse Clearance Sale.10% to 50% off. 8 ft. table, reg.$700. Now $299 - $499. 9' table,reg. $1000. Now $699. Slatebumper pool, reg. $400. Now$245. Shuffle board, reg. $500,now $299. Call:PELICAN POOL & SKI SHOP

Rt. 22, Whitehouse, N.J.3 Miles west of Somerville Cir.

201-534-2534

GIRLS 3 SPD. BIKE -European, red, 18" frame. Suitgirl 8-12. Lights & Dynamo.609-924-2031.

H O O V E R C A N I S T E RVacuum Cleaner - asking $25;Oster 10-speed blender, asking$15. 609-448-8963.

STATE OF THE ART Stereointegrated amp-pre-amp, LuxL-100. Three years old, im-maculate condition, needsvery minor repair rightchannel; will sell for $500, lessthan half current retail price.Contact Prof. Daniel Seltzer,office: 452-3676; home: 921-6639.

BELGIAN BLOCKS - approx250, 75c each. 609-737-1992.

SMALL FUJI 10SPD BIKE - 2years old. Like new, 24"wheels, 18" frame, $85. 609-

i924-5480.

CREATIVE LEARNINGCRIBS — like new white ornatural. Play* tables alsoavailable. 609-448-8507.

MATERNITY CLOTHING -Spring & summer, sizes 14 &16. Call 609-448-5912.

SPANISH LIVING RM SET -red & black with blackslatelops. 609-259-3073.

1

KITCHEN SET — ChromeCraft pedestal table & 6upholstered chairs. Excelcond., $150. ,'609-799-2068 after»6pm.

HOUSE SALE — by ap-poiritment only. 609-924-8161.Desks, bookcases, plants,chairs, Royal furniture system(teak)' beds, electrictypewriter, 3M Copier uprightpiano, hand carved Mexicanchest, dehumidifier, airconditioner, workbench,tables, African art, ladiesRaleigh bicycles, many otheritems. <^

PHONES - used, exc. cond., allITT rotary, make great ex-tensions. Call bet. 6 & 8 p.m.609-466-1658.

RIDING LAWN MOWER — 5hp, 24" Cut. 201-821-9246.

AIR LINE PILOT — beingtransferred must sell 6 roomsof furniture. Hot Point refrig,Sylvania color TV. Call after 4pm, 609-799-1609, .

FURNITURE - 2 Fr. Prov.Ladies chairs (ecru em-broidered on white fabric withwhite antique frame) alsomatching 2 pc. sectional sofa(avocado embroidery). 609-448-8360 after 5 pm.

LARGE ROCKING — horse;maple childs rocking chair-Creative Playthings woodsink; wicker bassinette-porta-crib & marble shell

shaped sink. 609-443-4617.

DIAMOND ENGAGEMENTRING —1/2 carat, pear shape,exc. quality. Value $1800. Mustsell, $800. 201-297-5167.

48" ROUND KITCHENTABLE — 4 wrought ironswivel chairs, $105. A realbuy. Mediterranean sofa, 84",wood frame, green material,excel, cond. $275. 609-799-2107after 5 pm.

MOVING —Must sell all homefurnishings. 609448-2180.

BARGAIN MART ISA BARGAIN MART INCLASSIFIED PAGES

2 GIRLS BICYCLES—3 spd,24', good cond. $45 ea. In-terested parties call 609-443-1013 after 5pm.

DIG YOUR OWN - Black Jap& Aust. Pine. 3-4 ft. $6.00. 201-W-7809 eves.

CARRIAGE, STROLLER,junior high chair, dressingtable. 609-655-3808.

DINING ROOM SET —avacado with fruitwood top. 4cane back chairs, with goldseats, matching hutch $500.609-448-6028.

VIDEO CASSETTE BETATAPES — Scotch L-500 (2 hrs)limited supply, $13.50 each.609-448-4171 after 6 p.m.

SOFA — traditional, $75;French marble top table $125;drapery 144x84" cardinal red,lined $40; redwood table, 2benches, 2 arm chairsw/cushions $65; artificial treewith urn $25: maple rockingchair $35. Call after 6 p.m. 609-443-3502.

Classified.AdvertisingWeek of April 18-20, 1979

Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart

POOL — 24 ft., above-ground,with all accessories includingdeck. In exc. con. $150.609-883-9251 after 5 p.m.

HORSE MANURE — for yourgarden. All natural, nopreservatives. $5. per load.609^66-1383.

SOFA — red plaid. Colonial;good condition; $75. 609-396-9653.

25" ZENITH COLOR TV - incabinet. Needs some repair.$25. 201-359-3524.

FR. PROV. BEDRM - ivoryw/gold trim, triple dresserw/mirror, chest, vanity, $50.each. G.E. refrig. $150. 609-452-1 9 9 3 . • • . . ' • • -

MOVING SALE — piano,custom baf* olive armchairnew tricycle, ladies bikes &boots, refrigerator. 609 143-1247.* .

CUSTOM MADE JEWELRYto order. Gold or silver. Phone609-771:0920 between 6-10 p.m.

FOR SALE — Wooden tennisracquets. Jack Kramer andStan Smith Wilson. Strungwith gut, 4 5/8 med. Call 609-737-9212 after 5 p.m.

FREEZER — 18 cu. ft. Gibsonupright. 25 yrs. old but never arepair. Asking $50., you moveit. 609-924-2795.

MORANTZ 30 — wattreceiver, 2. Scott S177 three-way speakers & l Accutrac +6 remote control turntable.Call 609-448-5966, keep trying.

9 PC. DINING SET — maple,1Thomasville. Call 5 to 7 p.m.609-924-5214. ,

3 RUGS — 11x16, 9x12, 6x9,exc. cond. Very reasonable.Call 609-655-0380.

PINE MIRRORED — hutchbedroom dresser; 14x48 woodshutters; mahogany extensiontable; patio table. 609-448-9215.

HOTPOINT double ovens —Beautiful yellow, top cond. Areal bargain for remodeling akitchen. 609-924-4438.

RIDING LAWN MOWER —Craftsman, 7 hp, twin blade,$350; Admiral upright freezer,15.5 cu. ft. exc. cond., $200.609-448-4142.

BEIGE VELVET SOFA — $95,breakfront $400, lamps, $25each, oval commode tables.$75 each, mirrors, sconces. Allexcept sofa are ivory & goldflorehtine-imported fromItaly. Price is cheap but firm.Cash only. 201-874-8620.

FOR SALE — Tappan undercounter dishwasher $100.Black angus electric rotisseriebroiler oven $50. Call after 6:30p.m. 609-921-2277.

MOVING MUST SELL —metal floor shelving, icecream kitchen table with2/chairs, books, lamp; cardtable, children's desk, kidsbike etc. Very reasonable. 609-443-5127 after 6pm.

GARDEN PLOT for rent,20x50', ready to plant. $45 fprthe season. ,CaU 609-466-08^.

COORDINATED F U R -NITURE — 7' Herculon sofa;Herculon (full) sleep sofa;extending modern chromefloor, lamp; white formicabookcase, 6'3" x 30"; modernhigh back tilting swivel chairw/ottoman, brown vinyl; 1rosewood formica and chrome

• end table; dinette set, 41"round pedestal table & 6 ped.chairs, white w/brown vinylupholstery; t.v, (b/w) Philcohandyman special. Call 609-799-8337.

WHIRLPOOL FROST - FREE•— refrigerator, 21 cu. ft.,white, «xcel . cond., $225;Hamilton gas dryer, $60; lg.comfortable white vinyl

• rocker. $20; twin bed. w/frame, $8. 609-924-8842.

WASHINGTON CROSSING —1.23 acres, ready to build, wellincluded. 609-737-3882 after 6pm.

DELI EQUIPMENT —complete set up reasonable.609-737-3882 after 6 p.m.

, PORTABLE 4-CYCLE dish-: washer, brown, $200; 3 mos.< old, almost new. Brand new

trumpet, $200. 21 cu. ft.freezer, $300. Call 201-821-6146.

A ROSE BYANY OTHER NAME

WILLSELLFOR MORE MONEY

. In 1956 I was a striplingpeddler on the road workingout of Buffalo as a Sales Rep ofone of our very largest cor-porations hustling their line ofHome Appliances to thehayseed Retail Dealers in suchthrilling places as Medina.Ellicottvlle, Batavia andClarence. The AutomaticWasher was fast becoming anaccepted fixture (ana ofgreater gravity: a necessarystatus symbol) in theAmerican Home and was thebiggest single item in Sales.Alas, the biggest "seijer" onthe market was the RCAWhirlpool Imperial Washerwhich had somehow swept thecountry with the housewives'acceptance of a ' mindless,useless.little feature called the"Suds Saver."

This "Suds Saver" was nomore than a mechanism whichallowed her to retain the soapywash water from the first loadin a stand-by tub, then laterpump it back into the washer(chilled & dirty) to be. reusedfor a second wash! I know it'sbaffling beyond belief but ahousewife could be "pitched"to accept that she d saveenough money on soap to payfor the washer. (I have hun-dreds of tales of hundreds ofsuch useless features that arestill hustled today. Try and sella man a car without thespeedometer displaying hisroaring raging potential of 120mj).h.) '

Our Head. Office Boys keptannouncing at every SalesMeeting that our ResearchBoys were hard at work to lickthis thing and we were almostready to "kick off" a newmodel that would set the wholewasher world oh its cockeyedear. Finally, they did come outwith a New Model, which metthe problem the way I was tofind out Corporations love tomeet problems and gave me achilling insight into my fellowcreatures. On the Backsplash(that's the raised appendagewith all the dials and buttonsthe girls get euphoric over)they simply affixed a chromeplate with the embossed wordsproclaiming "Suds Saver."That's it! Nothing else! Theyput on the words '"Suds Saverand no one questioned, con-tradicted, quarreled orcomplained. Sales soared.

Now here today in ourmodern madcap world ofmattresses, we are having ourown convulsions in creativenomenclature. Why spendmoney on material andengineering when WORDS areso cheap. Now when you walkinto Caveat Emptor Fur-niture, Inc., you will noticethat there is no such thing as a"soft" mattress. Or even a"medium" mattress. The"Suds Saver" of the BeddingIndustry is the word "FIRM.Everything has beenrechnstened and graduatedto: Supreme Super FIRM tothe Supreme Ultra OrthotonicFIRM to the Supreme Em-porial Everlasting FIRM, tothe Supreme Eternal InfinityEcstatic FIRM. The yuks loveit. . .

Were I my brother's keeper,I wouldn't let him out.

To a healthy, alert men-tality, which has not beenmesmerized and enslaved todigest the undocumentedquality of so-called "BrandNames" merely on the min-dless rote of their redundantAdvertising, we can demon-strate. Drove andGUARANTEE for 10 YEARSthat our Mattress isSUPERIOR! There is ab-solutely NOTHING BETTERMADE, ANYWHERE—ANYTIME—at ANY PRICE.

We are not just anotherRetail Store with a"PHONEY" claim of being a"Factory Outlet" or"Warehouse" or "OverrunEarthquake End of the WorldLiquidations" or other insultsto the intelligence.

This Is The FACTORY!MATTRESS

MONGER

Visit our Dank, Dark, Dingy,Dismal , Wretchea,Repugnant- Rathole.

MATTRESS FACTORY >SEE THEM MADE

RIGHT on the PREMISESWe personally manufacture,

with our own grubby, sweatylittle hands, everything we selland we- can demonstrate,prove and GUARANTEE for10 YEARS that our mattress isSUPERIOR! There is ab-solutely NOTHING BETTERM A D E , A N Y W H E R EANYTIME, ANY PRICE.

In our eleven years we havemanufactured and sold over17,630 Mattress units to 17,630of the most suspicious,sagacious, cynical,- sapient,sophisticated, sarcast ic ,spnerebreaker buyers in N.J.

ONE PRICE ONLY1

This Is The FACTORY!We do not give Discounts Off

of Fictitious Retail Prices(which not even the idiots pay)and we do not run SALES, 365days a year.

Crib Sin $20.00Bank B e d . . . . . . . . $36.90Twin 39x75x6 $59.90Doable 54x75x6 $69.90Queen 60x80x6 $89.90Khti78x80x6 . . . . . $110.00DelnxeFnnm $13.00

Box spring same PRICE

King Set with Box Springs& Frame $242.00

Queen Set & Frame$190.00

CUSTOM SIZES MADEAT NO EXTRA CHARGE.

' NaExcuses, No Alibies,No Double-Talk, We

guarantee our MattressTEN FULL YEARS

Our Mattresses are SIXSolid Inches of cool-breathing,Allergy-Free, PolymericCrystalliferous Foam. Ourfoam will positively never,ever, mildew, powder,crumble, oxidize or decom-pose. We have five weightdensities for you to try out andchoose from, with no pricedifference. Our #2041 Foamwill support a 900 lb. coupleunder ANY conditions. Ourcovers are 12 ounces of heavypoplin with zippers, and areremovable for washing.

Unconditionally 30 dayRefund if unsatisfiedTHE FOAM FIRMOUR NEW STORE

157 Main St.Peapack

Peapack is a right turn off Rt.206, 18 minutes north ofPrinceton and worth thedrive!

. 11 A.M. to 4P.M.& 6 P.M. to 8 P.M.Saturday -10 to 4

THE FOAM FIRM201-234-1622

COLONIAL SOFA & CHAIR -console, stereo/Med. lamp &table, chandelier, baby items& clothes up to size 6. Allreasonable. 609-448-6764.

THE SELECTIVE EYEBridge & Main StreetsNew Hope, Pa. 18938

Furniture Special — 4 styles in10 fabrics: Sofa - $630 Now

$429.95Love Seat-$552 Now $383.952 pc. corner sec. - $1260 Now

$859.95.Hours Mon to Sat 10 to 6. SunNoon to 3, 215/862-2982. We payall parking & fines with $25purchase. Free delivery in-cluded.

LAST CHANCE — end ofseason clearance - M.T.D."Snow Flite" snow blowers.Were $219.99 - now $179.99 yousave $40.! Call Goodyear 609-921-8510!

DIAMOND — 3/4 carat ovalwh. gold setting, appraised$1200. Sacrifice $900. 609-883-1065, 392-7884.

RUMMAGE SALE —Harlingen Reformed Church.Rl. 206, Belle Mead, NJ. May4, 9am-7:30pm, May 5, gam-noon.

WANTED: Contributions forchild abuse program servinginfants and pre-schoolers inTrenton. 1) washing machine;2) dryer, 3) sofa, small couch;4) chairs. 609-989-7333.

CATCH THE BASEBALLSEASON — in all its ex-citement on a.general electriccolor console. Models reducedto 20%. Call Goodyear 609-921-8510.

COLONIAL SOFA andloveseat, naugahyde, darkbrown. Exc. condition. $300.(201)446-4959. i

2 LOVESEATS & A SIMMONSHIDE-A-BED. Good condition.609-448-1548 after 6 pm.

PINK PROM GOWN - andfull length coat, size 11/12. Call609-448-5311 after 5 p.m.

WALL TO WALL CAR-PETING — 2 rooms avail., 11x 13, 13 x 14. Yellow - goldcolor. $30 each, includespadding. 609-443-6111.

SPINET ORGAN — 52 keyswith bench, $295; Maple kit-chen set $100. 609-448-8872.

FISHER 400 - tuner/amplifier,Gerard turntable, 2 speakers& walnut cabinets, good cond.,$90. 609-448-9592 after 8 p.m.

AUTO MAINTENANCE, andminor repairs oil and lube,shocks, mufflers, CB andstereo installations qualitywash & wax. Pick up &delivery available, veryreasonable. 201-874-4236.

FOR SALE — golf clubs &hand card, seldom used, $100;18" electric lawn mower &catcher bag, 2 yrs. old. $50.609-448-1685.

LIVING ROOM, Dining room,bedroom kitchen sets, endtables,' marble top coffeetable, stereo, lamps, misc.Excellent cond. 609-448-6822.

USED BOOKS FOR SALEfrom 3 pm to 7 pm on Sunday,April 22nd at The FirstPresbyterian Church, 320North Main Street, Hight-stown, NJ Paperbacks - 25cents, Hardbacks - 50 cents.

MerchandiseWanted

MusicalInstruments

Garage Sales Garage Sales Antiques

CASH FOR YOUR ANTIQUEFURNITURE — we are a BALDWIN ACROSONIC -large dealer specializing in Console piano, exc. cond. $850.Oak. Willing to buy 1 piece to 609-883-6598.entire contents. 201-329-2062.

ALL LIONEL TRAINS - HOME CHURCH ORGAN -Highest prices paid. Have Hammond B-3 with Hammondcash, will travel. 201-531-492$ speaker. Exc. cond. 609-924-afterSp.m. 3853.

GARAGE SALE — Indoors,Sat & Sun, Apr 21 & 22.ft0-4:30.55 E. Prospect St., HopewellNJ.

MULTI FAMILY YARDSALE — April 21 10-3 pm,Crestfield Acres, Rt. .130(across from Potter-HillmanFord). Rain Date April 22.

TROY BILT — Rototiller N E W GIBSON - Les PaulCaU a*"298"3693 ask fiffffff ^ S S &7678.

AAAAA FACTORY LAMPS -Factory outlet — STIFFEL-TIFFANY WEDDING AN-NOUNEMENT. Gorgeoushand cut glass, hand leadedMiss G. Oglethorpe Tiffany toMr. Stiffel. Toast the happymating of lamp and shade withchampagne (please bringbottle) 40% OFF ON SALEAPRIL 16th to APRIL 30th.FURLONG LAMP FACTORYOUTLET largest for a 99 mileradius. 5 miles south ofLahaska's Peddler's Villageon Rt 263, Furlong, Pa. OPEN7 DAYS. Weekdays 8-8, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 11-6. Micro Dot Pricing(215) 794-7444-5-6. "BenjaminRoom" (same as above).

KODAK EK6 INSTANTPRINT CAMERA and fittedcase. Good as new. Phone 609-448-1484.

PORTABLE — Necchi sewingmachine, auto embroidery andstraight stitching. Very goodcond. $100 609-452-8285, daysonly. Ask for Gerry.

ANTIQUE POOL TABLE —9', 1904 slate table. New cloth& cushions. Belgium balls &installed. Was $1295, Sale price895. 201-359-0260.

GIRL'S COLUMBIA BIKE -26" wheels, coaster brakes.609-448-7282.

SMALL FUJU 10 SPD. BIKE— 2 years old. Like new, 24"wheels, 18" frame, $85. 609-924-5480.

SCREENS FOR KENDALLPK. — 4' patio sliding doors.$15 ea. Bobby Mac car seat$15. 201-297-5657.

B E A U T I F U L M E N ' SLEATHER JACKET - Size36/38. New, never worn. Finedesigner stitching. Retailed$190 sell for $90. 609-924-7549.

POOL TABLE — 4%'x8\ 1"thick Slatene, exc. cond.,including deluxe balls, cuesticks, xack, $275. 609-799-9445.

GEORGE WASHINGTONdesk - top grain leather swivelchair, silk wing chair, pinecanterbury, antique pullscreen, bedwarmers, pr.bronze candelabra, wratchetreading table, Kenmoreupright vac, typewriter andsteel table, much more. 201-821-6059.

24' x 4' SWIMMING POOL —complete w. all accessories.Best offer. Call after 5pm. 609-448-1854.

APPLE II — Home computer,Color graphics, 16K memory.New $1400. Sacrifice $1150.609-397-8087.

STAINLESS CUTLERY - Lifetime - Oyster Bay pattern. Call609-799-1248.

WANTED — 4-harness floorloom. Call 609-298-1837.

USED BOOKS NEEDED —for Brandeis University. Werecycle your old books. Lookfor our Spring Book Sale atQuaker Bridge Mall. Taxd e d u c t i b l e . R e c e i p t savailable. Will pick up usedbooks. Forfurther informationcall 609-443-6344, 448-6374 or448-1969.

FINE ART - We are alwaysinterested in the purchase orsale of quality works of fineart. Expert AppraisalsPnnceton Gallery otFine Art162 Nassau St., Princeton, 609-921-8123.

WANTED — juxebox, 78rpmtype, any condition. 201-828-6567, or 254-4988.

CASH FOR GUNS. SWORDSmilitary items, coins.Licensed Collector/Dealer willpay more. Bert, 609-924-3800days.

ORIENTAL RUGS - we paycash for antique & semi-antique oriental rugs. One ormany. 609-392-7337.

PLAYER PIANO — Exc.cond., needs tuning. 100 pianorolls. $1800. Call Nancy Am-mermuller, 201-329-2184.

ZUCKERMANN VIRGINAL— painted bue grey, leavingcountry must sell. $1100. CanRichard 609-921-0476.

GARAGE SALE — 14 ScottAvenue., Princeton Jet. April21 & 22, rain or shine. Dishes,furniture, clothing, sewingmachine, washer, dryer,electric stove, freezer, tools,lawn mower, antique toys andmuch more. 8am _on.Everything must go:'

WURLITZER CONSOLEPIANO'— pecan wood, exc.cond. Asking $1200. Call after 4pm, 201-469-2785.

HAMMOND C3 ORGAN —with 122 Leslie. Fender supertwin, must sell, moving. 609-292-2256 8-4:30 pm, or 888-0703after 5 pm, ask for Bill.

Flea Markets &Rummage Sales

GARAGE SALE — Dayton, 30Hiway 130 April 21,10 a.m. - ?Many small calico cottageitems- and a lot of other' in-teresting household items.Rain date April 28.

DO - IT - YOURSELFER'SGARAGE SALE — Doors,windows, screens, tools, snowfence, hardware, insulation,handsaw, penguin sailboat,etc. Saturday, April 21 form 9to 5, 546 Riverside, East,Princeton.

GARAGE SALE —Sat., April21., 9 to 4 p.m. Encyclopedia,bathroom sink, Shelf maker,material drapes, games,stepstool. 29 Maple StreamRd., off Dutch Neck Rd.

MOVING SALE — clothing,kitchen & furniture. Sat. 21,10-5pm. 36 Valley Rd. Princeton,609-921-6488.

MOVING SALE — sofa,chairs, tables, pictures,bureau, desk, misc. old & new.Sat. & Sun, Apr. 21 & 22. Phone609-466-0065, Woodsville.

COME TO OUR communityYard Sale! Join us on April 21from 9 a.m. to 4 D.m. atCentury 21, Grad Real Estate(corner Lake Dr. & Rt. #1,Lawrenceville). Buys of theCentury.

GARAGE SALE — weekends,9 am, household & misc items.Windsor - Perrineville Rd.Follow signs. 609-448-6822.

NEIGHBORHOOD SALE:Sat., Apr. 21 (rain date Apr.28) 10-4; corner of Williams St.fc.Rt. 27, Kend. Pk. Sellingwicker furn., sewing machine,small stove & refrig., an-tiques, baby furn. & much,much more.

COME ONE, COME ALL - tothe fantastic Garage Sale /Flea Market on the Mall atthe PRINCETON SHOPPINGCENTER; No. Harrison St.,Princeton. This Sat. Apr. 21st,from 19 to 5. Over 150 tables ofcollectibles & great values.Rain date Apr. 28th.

RUMMAGE . SALE . - SAT., APRIL 21 ONLY 9-4, 16Blawenburg_ Reformed w iniams St., Kend. Park.Church, Rte 518, Fri. April 27 Antique furn., winepress, air9am-7pm,$labagstartingat4 c o n d , wicker & many items,pm.

WANTED TO BUY — Scrapmetal, light iron, steel, bat-teries, radiators, copper,brass, aluminum and usedmachinery. Currently payingthe highest prices in the area.Payment at time of delivery.Receiving hours 12-5 p.m.Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 5 onSaturday. No quantity toolarge or too small. Gale In-dustrial Scrap Iron and MetalCo., North Valley, Road,Roosevelt. For info, call 609-448-2679.

WE BUY — good used & an-tique furniture. One piece toentire estates. Call 609-393-6513.

WANTED TO' BUY,: Scrapcopper, brass, .lead,aluminum, stainless steel,sterling silver, etc., solids &turnings,.Industrial, businessor private. • Correct market

Brice.** cash paid. S. Klein[etals Co., Inc, 2156 Camplain

Rd., -Sbprerville, N.J. 08876.Phone 201-722-2288.

WANTED — electrical potterswheel. Call after 5:30pm, 609-585-8084.

RUMMAGE SALE —Lionesses of Princeton atUnited Methodist Church ofPrinceton, Nassau & Van-deventer streets. Friday April20lh. 9am-4pm after 3 pmeverything $1 per bag, call 609-452-2566.

H.E.A. FLEA MARKET &FAIR - May 19th 9am to 3pm,Rain Date May 20th. KrepsSchool Grounds, Kent Ln, EW.Space rentals $5. Spacesavailable. For more in-formation call: 609-448-2709 or448-4405, between 6 & 11 pm.

RUMMAGE SALE —Presbyterian .Church R™=tfandLouellenslreets.HopewellN.J., Thursday, April 26th,9:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Friday,April 27th, 9:30 am to 1:00 pm.

RUMMAGE & BAKE SALE —at the Mormon Church onAlexander Road, Princeton,Fri. April 27, from 4pm - 9pmand Sat. April 28, from 9am - 5pm.

RUMMAGE SALE — Fri.April 27, 9am-4pm, Sat. April28, 10am-2pm. MontgomeryUnited Methodist Church.Appliances, clothes, toys,plants, books, etc; SunsetRoad, Belle Mead (offRt.206).

GRIGGSTOWN REFORMEDCHURCH — Fri. Apr. 27th, 9a.m. to 8 p.m. Canal Rd.,Griggstown.

. TV — 25" Console, color, willaccept any reasonable offer.609-448-4211.

MerchandiseWanted

CAMPER — 4-sleeper pop-uptent, rent or sale, 4th wk~. o'fJune and 1st 2 wks. July.Reasonable. After 6 p.m. "201-545-8916.

ALL GOOD PIANOS - Call Mr.Stan. 609-695-7456.

WA*NTED TO BUY — Trentonfulper pottery, Fulper lamps,attractive Stangl vases.Frederic Leighton paintiiearly Lalique and outstandart Nouveau. 609-924-2841.

To Plac* aClassifi*d Ad

lii Princeton call609-924-3250

WANTED 8" TABLE SAWw/tilting arbor. 6-9 - 448-9350.

ORIENTAL RUGSWANTED

Before you sell any Chinese orPersian rugs let us make you acash offer. Sell direct to theEuropean buyers. Reap-praisals free. We goanywhere, anytime, anyplace.

609-345-8400

BASEBALL — & other non-

ST. PAUL'S PTA FLEAMARKET — May 5. RaindateMay 12. Space $5, table withspace $10. 609r799-2486.

FLEA MARKET: BenFranklin P.T.O., Lawrence. $5per space. Sat., May 5,10 to 3.609-771-1464.

Garage Sales

MULTI-FAMILY GARAGESALE — Lawn mower, leafmulcher, hi-riser set bikes,

GARAGE SALE — Sat. April21, 10-3, 299 Edgerstone.Bedsteads, chests. Tamps, pooltable, picture frames, leather-top game table, folding barcabinet, day-bed, slip covers,24 cu. ft. refrig., metal clothescloset.

MOVING SALE — Sat. Apr.21. 10-4, at large white far-mhouse on Plainsboro Rd, 2mi. from Deercreek apts.toward Cranbury. Fridge, $50,couch, $20, dining table, $15,100 feet of garden fencing &

Eoles, $40, bar garden hose,ooks, old Frieden

t e l e t y p e w r i t e r , $30,washer/dryer combo (needsrepair), $30, Look for signs &red mailbox w. the address,RD n. Box 151.

THREE-FAMILY GARAGESALE. NO JUNK. FUR-NITURE: Good pine sofa &chairs, new 5-piece cushionedyellow wrought-iron patio set;KITCHEN & HOUSEHOLDITEMS: crepe-maker, pewtersugar & creamer, dishes,g l a s s w a r e . Samson i t eluggage, exerciser, prints,pictures, frames, linens,drapes, bedspreads; Babyclothes, toys, changing table,tricycle; children's toys and.'games; quality adult and)children's clothing.COLLECTIBLES: bottles,costume jewelry, some an-tiques. Fabrics, yarn, craftkits, books. Saturday. April21; 9-4 pm; RAIN OR SHINE.Skillman Road, Montgomery.3rd house in from Burnt Hill.

GARAGE SALE — Sat. Apr.21st, 10:30 to 3:30 in Hopewell,Refrig., brass fireplace setchairs, dresser, & many smallitems. Directions: from 518 gonorth on Provinceline orAmwell Rd. 2 miles. Greenhouse on left w/sign.

APRIL 20-21.9-4. Eleven yearaccumulation. 42" pine table,fruitwood hi-fi cabinet forother uses, wing chair, lamps,ski boots size 13/14, games,linens, household goods, men'sbicycle furniture. No earlybirds. 11 Sherbrooke Dr.,Princeton Jnc. (l block fromacme).

GARAGE SALE — 4 EvansDrive, Cranbury. Some an-tiques and household goods.April 21, 22.

GARAGE SALE — moving -hide-a-bed, lamps misc:household items. April 21 & 2210a.m. - 6p.m. Look for signs inPrinceton June, on theHightstown Rd. Cleaning outthe children's rooms.

sports card collections (1800- TV's, toys, household goods,1972) top price paid. 201-536- children & adults apparel. Fri,3368 Sal. Sun. Apr. 27,28, 29, 9 a.m.

- 4 pjn. Dorchester Dr., bet.— — _ . rjutch Neck & Hickory Corner

Roads, E. Windsor. .

MusicalInstruments

PIANO RENTALS — by theday, week, month or year.Chopin Piano & Organ Co.,1001 No. Olden Ave., Trenton,609-695^7456.

CHOPINPIANO & ORGAN CO.

Steinway, BechsteinBaldwin, Yamaha

Story & Clark, Sohmer

NEW-USED-REBUILT1001N. Olden Ave.

Trenton 609-695-7456Daily 9-9 Sat. 9-5

CELLAR SALE — Misc.household items. 10 ajn. - 6p.m. No early birds, each daytil items are gone. Corner So.5th Ave. & Camplain' Rd.,Manville.

YARD SALE — Attic"treasures!" furniture, books,toys, glass, etc. Antique radio,brass bucket, iron stove, fruitjars, French clock. Apr. 20 &21, Fri. 9-3, Sat. 9-12. No earlybirds. Stults, 9 E. Broad,Hopewell.

YARD SALE — 10 a m . Apr.21st. Rain date Apr. 22. 10Hope Valley Dr., Cranbury.Furniture, bike, TV, smallappliances & more.

NOOPY'S NO-DIP — flowover furniture stripping. Non-flammable & bio-degradable.Does not hurt veneers, inlays,glue joints OR raise the grain.Are you triedof having yourfurniture ruined in diptanks...of it coming out gray &uzzy...of having to do lots ofianding? Then try NOOPY'SNO-DIP. You've tried the rest,now try the best. 1 gal. $8., 5gal., $27., 16 gal. $75., 55 gal.$225. Exclusive distributor:Nannies Pretties Antiques, 55Monmouth Jet. Rd., Dayton,NJ.08810. 201-329-2062.

IMPORTED — Dutch Schrankfrom the Mercer Estatescollection from Doylestown.Handhewn, dated late 1800's.Excellent cond. Can be seen atStudio 12, MontgomeryShopping Center, 609-924-9400.

TWO' ANTIQUE BRASS BEDS- Twin size, headboard,footboard - and side rail. $150each. 201-359-2612 after 3 pm.

LARGE SIDE BOARD - black-carved columns and womensfaces, $500. Call eves. 609-921-0246.

ANTIQUE 54" — round oaktable with glass top; octagonalcoffee table! Danish couch &chairs, other items. 609-737-3347.

THE'TOMATO FACTORYHamilton Avenue

Hopewell, N.J.(turn at Sunoco Station)

21 ANTIQUE SHOPS

Open Daily ia-5Sunday! 1-5

609-466-9833609-466-2990

GARAGE SALE — Sat. April VICTORIAN FENCING -21. 10a.m. - 5 p.m. 555-559 double gate, single gate &Dutch Neck Rd, E. Windsor, straight fencing. 201-727-5126.Toys, furniture, clothes.

GARAGE SALE.— Huge! 3Families! Rt. 130 to HalseyReed Rd. at Cranbury Station.4/20, 21, & 22. All day!

CHILDRENS BIKES Gamesclothes, desk & chair, otherodds & ends. All week & Sat &Sunday. 558 Dutch Neck Rd.,East Windsor.

GARAGE SALE — April 21, 9a.m. moving — excess itemsare for sale. 10 Wallingford Dr.Princeton Junction 9 a.m.u n t i l . . . S h e l v e s , r u g s ,household items. Early birdswelcome.

GARAGE SALE — Threefamily garage sale. 9 to 4 April21. Raindate Apr'1 22.Vacuum. Stereo equip, dishes,other household goods.

TWO FAMILY GARAGESALE — sailboat, kids bikes,furniture, small appliances,skiis, toys, & more. Sat. Apr.21st 9 to 3. Rain date Sun. Apr.22nd. 168 S. Harrison St.,Princeton. /

MULTI-FAMILY garage sale- April 21 & 22, 10am. Specialitems, great selection. 4Fairway Dr. West Windsor.Princeton-Hightstown Rd.(571). Turn south at Texaco onto southfield Rd, right on toFairway.

APRIL 20 — 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.No early birds, please. 179ATownship Line Rd., BelleMead. Vfc mile east of PikeBrook Country Club. Oldgarden tools,, children'smagazines, clothing, smallelectrical appliances, costumejewelry, drapes, curtains, oldbooks, miscellaneous.

Antiques

OWENS ANTIQUES

China GlassFurniture Jewelry

Closed on Monday

77 Main St. Kingston, N.J.609-921-7164

HANKINS ANTIQUES, 169Mercer St., Hightst6wn,AN.J.we buy & sell furniture, china,glass, jewelry, lovely things.Come in and browse. Open 11to4:30Tues to Sat. 609^43-4102or 448-6772.

BELL POST ANTIQUESCollectibles, Furniture &

Oil LampsMany interesting items

201-359-6730

OPEN DAILY

Just west of 206, Dutchtown -Harlingen Rd., Belle Mead,N.J.

WOttLD WAR I - Mahoganypropellers. Orig. seal. 8'4"long. Brass tips. Best offer.609-654-5749.

DINING ROOM SET — An-tique yellow w/6 brown velvetchairs, server & 3 leaves. 201-44&4490.

SHOP AVAILABLE — at theLahaska Antique Court on Rt.202, Lahaska. Pa. Rent.$225/mo. Utils. included.Please call 215-297-5287 after5pm.

10 PC. CARVED — Solid oakdining room set. Banquettable, 6 chairs, buffet, server,and china closet. $1200. or bestoffer. 201-238-0427.

UNUSUAL ANTIQUE brassbed, double size, $450. 609-924-4236.

Auctions

AUCTION — AntiquesCollectibles, Choice HouseholdItems, Car. Saturday, April 21,Pennington School, W.Delaware Ave., Pennington.Silent Auction at 7 P.M.,Regular Auction at 8 P.M.Donation of $2,50 includesfood. Warren Dunlap, Auc-tioneer.

TAG SALES BY TRIO — Sat,Apr. 21st, 12 to 3. Mint con-dition Yardley household orig.-oils, enamels, watercolors &Japanese water colors.Collector's items. Juvenile,dining room, bedroom sets,custom upholstered furniture.Loads wicker, lamps, Venetianglass, TVs, bicycle, luggage,clothes, loads books (manyold) frostfree freezer, plants,cameras, records, truftks,custom bedspreads, fine linenclothes, loads of brie brae.Cash only. Directions: from I-95, Yardley exit go 2 lights,turn right (Edgewood Road),continue to Carriage Hill, turnright & then first right to 688Briarwood. Trio Tag Sales,Inc. 609-883-3535, 215-493-6858,609-882-2131.

PUBLIC AUCTION

APRIL 22,1979-from 1PMRAIN OR SHINE

Arabian horse - 5 lbs. frozenshrimp - moosehsad - antiquecar - signed Rockwell print'"The Runaway" - PeddieLenox 100th Anniversary plate- Fireplace screen - LesterStevens Watercolor - 4 StefanMartin woodcuts - Eliz.Prestopino painting asst.children's equip, -oak chair -/Royal Dux figurine - 1964Thunderbird - mint. cond. 1896Gay (N.A.) original - EthanAllen lamps - Robert Muellercollage - asst. hand-knitteditems - 2 Gregorio Prestopinolithographs - Stallion studservice - shade tree fromKalen's Nursery - silver-platecaddy with sherry glasses -Falcon print-limited edition- 2antique sewing machines incabinets - gold leaf candelabra- many more unusuals.

PEDDIE PARENTS.ASSOCIATION

PEDDIE ATHLETICCENTER

ETRAROADHIGHTSTOWN, N.J.

FREE PARKINGREFRESHMENTS

GARAGE SALES RATESPECIAL LISTING INCLASSIFIED PAGES

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Week of April 18-20,1979Classified Advertising

Auctions. Pets & Animals Pets & Animals Pets & Animals Autds Wanted Autos For Sale Autos For Sale Autos For Sale Autos For Sale

TAG SALES BY TRIO — E.Windsor, Sun. Apr. 22nd. 12 to3. Complete household offurniture, fnutwood & marbletables bedroom, sets, stereoconsole & T.V., bar, kitchenset, mirrored bookcase, IBMelec. typewriter, refrigerator,elec. bar signs, toys, bric-a-bracr something for everyone.Cash only. Directions: Rt. 130past the Jamesway ShoppingCenter, left on Old CranburyRd., (Exxon Station), 1st leftto Holland' then first right onOak Branch, 1st lett, Green-brook Dr., 3rd right to 113Marilyn Dr., Trio Tag Sales,Inc:, 609-883-3535,215-493-6858,609-882-2131.

PUBLIC SALEHOUSEHOLD GOODS

ANTIQUES

SAT. APR. 21,1979

10:00A.M.

Rear of 149 South MainStreet, Hightstown, N.J.

Contents of two MeadowLakes apartments, old farmhouse. and various con-signments. Oak furnitureincluding dressers, chairs,clothes trees, washstand, bed,and tables, pine kitchencabinet, 6 Bentwood chairs, 6~Hitchcock-type chairs^ 4 wingchairs, 4 drop leaf tables,Queen Anne style loveseat,Ogee mirror, antique side

^chair, 4 day beds, card table,portable radio, iron catdoorstop, 3' x 5' oriental rug,antique wood vise, antiqueyard swing, crystal chan-delier, binocular & opera

1 glasses, portable color TVwith stand, black and whiteTV's, 6-board dovetailedchest, postcards, mink stole, 2marble mantles.

China including RoyalCopenhagen rooster andchicken. Coalport cups andsaucers, Royal Staffordshire,Shelby and Aynsley. Glass -cut_ arid pressed. Sterlingpieces including tea strainerand 9" Paul Revere bowl; 3-piece silverplate tea service,copper tea' kettle,miscellaneous copper, brass,iron, pottery items, 8" hen on.nest.

Table and floor lamps, brasshall fixture, miscellaneoustables and chairs, wickerbaskets and hampers, jugsand crocks, trays, step stool,aluminum ladders 2' & 4',

' costume jewelry, 20" x 40"mirror with gold frame, misc.pictures and frames including3 ovals, canes, old phonograph.

"records, typewriter stand,books and bookends, jigsawpuzzles, antique corn sheller,heavy duty mortise machine,heavy duty doweling machine,yard furniture, bird feedersand houses, luggage, elec. fan,misc. boxes.

Honda 350 tobe sold at 12:30.Terms: CASH

Richard D.Lanning,Auctioneer

LUNCH COUNTER

Pets & Animals

1975 KINGSTON — trailer, 4horse tag-along w. dressingroom. Exc. cond. Hauled lessthan 2,000 mi., REasonablypriced. 609-448-4291.

DOG FOOD — Frozen meat:beef chicken, tripe & kidney. 2& 5 lb. packages. Also nan-'dlers of WAYNE Jim DandyScience diet dog food. CallKauffman Kennels 609-448-3114 Rt. 130, So. of Hightstown.

FORMER INSTRUCTOR atthe world-famous Seeing Eyeis now conducting infividualdog obedience training in thePrinceton area. Off leash -voice control of your dog, theresult of years of research atthe Seeing Eye, can now beachieved in the comfort andrelaxed atmosphere of yourown home. In addition, therewill be classes specializing inteaching children howto trainand properly care for theirdogs. Contact Jeffrey Loy at201-889-9125 or leave yourname and phone no. at 609-896-2004.

HORSE BOARDING -HARBOURTON - Mare & foalcare - 24 hour supervision -box stalls - indoor exercisetrack-outdoor ring-race tracklay ups-daily turnouts | -rehabilitations. 609-737-2099'or737-2074.

2 REGISTERED MORGANMares -14 years $900, 6 years$1200. One reg. quarter horsemare, 16 years $800. 2 paintponies, 3 yr. old stallion $300. 7yr. old mare $400. One gradehorse mare, 10 yrs. $500. 201-359-8385 after 5 p.m.

HORSE SHOEING — forexpert protection of yourhorses hoofs, call Dan Smith,graduate of OklahomaFarriers College. Hot, coldand corrective shoeing. Alsospecial shoes for racing. Fastcourteous' service.. 609-737-9455.

HORSES BOARDED - Tur-nouts, box stalls, $85/mo.Manure loaded on your pick-up, $6/load. Monmouth Jet.,201-329-6259.

J-BAR-W RANCH INC —Horse blanket and halterrepair, industrial selling, nc~job too small. 609-466-2229.

HORSE BOARDING &training at Molli G Ranch inBelle Mead. Large airy boxstalls, training ring, manymiles of open country trails.Leather & blanket repair workdone. (201) 359-2316.

TERRIERS ONLY - doggrooming, fine quality,plucking & stripping hair.Princeton 609421-0630 day orevenings.

ALL BREED - dog grooming.Your pet will ask to come backafter a visit to the PoochParlour. Free pick-up anddelivery in the Princeton-Hightstown area and north.For aa appointment call 201-821-9664.

HIDEAWAY FARM - offersthe very finest for boarding ortraining your horse; Super,sized indoor and outdoor rings,heated lounge. Stalls cleaneddaily. 24 hour supervision, topquality care. Lindberg Road,HopeweU. 608-466-3426. •

REG. % ARAB GELD — 15.2,12 yrs, western & English.Been shown. Jumps. Sound.Comfortable gaits. $800. 201-359-8909.

FREE TO GOOD HOME -mixed breed Labrador -Shepherd, exc. health &disposition. 609-396-0988.

LABRADOR PUPS - 2 blackmales. AKC reg. champ stock,dam hunts, shots, wormed.609-896-1423.

POODLES — AKC, smallminiature, white-, cream,black, apricot. 201-359-5427.

BOSTON TERRIER PUP-PIES - AKC, adorable &reasonable, all shots. 201-359-1075. .

HORSES BOARDED — $80.per month. Excellent care.Turnouts. 201-446-9414.

REGISTERED PERSIANKITTENS — shaded & silverchinchilla, all shots,housebroken, 12 wks, will holdfor Easter. $175 ea. 201-782-3506.

FRIENDLY PUPPIES —looking for home. Will be med.size, long hair dogs. Outdoorcoats. Loved by children. 201-359-0448.

CAT - you;spayed989-8944.

BOX STALLS — Available inMontgomery Twp. Schoolingring, posture & trails. 201-359-4207.

FOR SALE — 10 yr. oldAppaloosa gelding. 15.3,-gentle& sound. 201-359-4207.

STUDENT — Experienced instable work. Will clean, feed,groom, exercise. Availableweekdays after noon,weekends. 201-297-9534.

AT STUD — Billy Bar QueA Q.H.A. and world champion.Breed your Q.H., Paint orAppaloosa mares for sense,ability and conformation.Hideaway Farm, 609-466-3426.

HORSESHOER — YES!Dependable 24 hour service 7days a week. All types ofshoeing. Specializing incorrective standing andtraveling programs. YES! willcome out for 1 horse. Callanytime, Del Omdal (201) 369-4967 or (201) 782-5775.

LITTLE VALLEY — CanalRd. Princeton. 1 mile fromRocky Hill. Box stalls, lightedring, turnout. Unlimited trailriding. Adjacent tow path ofD&R canal. 609-924-7012.

Feeds and Grainsfor all animals at

ROSEDALE MILLS274 Alexander St.

Princeton609-924-0134

USED ENGLISH SADDLE —approx. 17". $75. Call after6pm. 609-466-2953.

BLACK POODLE / TERRIER- affectionate, 1 yr. old, loveschildren, non shedding, shots.609-443-3134.

WE BUY AND SELLLIVESTOCK — KaufmanFarms, Skillman, NJ. 609-468-0773.

J-BAR-W RANCH INC - Horsetransportation, enclosedoversized trailer. Safe,dependable service. 609-466-2229.

SADDLES — 15" Cutting $17514" Roping $100. Call 201-247-4347.

BASSET HOUNDS — pups &young adult, championparents. Call 201-359-1372eves. & wknds. or 201-694-3978anytime.

FOR SALE — AKC Reg.English Bulldog, 9 mos., goodblood line, after 5 p.m. 609-924-0283.

HORSE TRAILER &TRAILER HITCH — Hart-man, double, thoroughbredsize, brown w. gold stripe.Horse trailer in exc. cond.$1550. Trailer hitch for pick uptruck avail, separately. 609-921-6612.

NUBIAN FOR SALE - 5 weekold weather. Was to be com-panion for horse, but would-beowner has to move. $30.. Call201-359-4054 between 4-7:30pm. or all day weekends.

AQHA BAY GELDING — sonof Pocco Triyio by PoccoBueno. 7 vrs. old. 14.3 H. hasbeen shown, excel, youthactivity prospect. $1750. Call609-924-7757 or 695-0231.

AKC COCKER SPANIELPUPS—ilk. & tan color, male& female. Ch. sire, goodtemperment, $200 & up. 609-771-9358.

APPALOOSA GELDING —Coming 3, 15.2 plus, Safe,sound, $500 as is. Can be greenbroken; 17" saddle, Barnsbycopy of Passier, $200. 609-924-7012 eves.

DOBERMAN PUPS - AKC,Damasyn line, red male, 3'mos. Cropped, docked, shots,lovely disposition. Good withchildren. 609-259-3301.

GERMAN S H E P H E R DPUPPIES, AKC —Some solidblacks. Easter orders beingtaken. For spring clearance;older puppies & young adultsavailable at reduced prices.ALL BREED outdoor groupobedience classes, Thurs. orFri. eves, starting mid-April

• for 10 weeks. Pre-registrationsbeing taken. Grooming ser-vices available. SouthBrunswick Kennels. 201-329-2117.

lovely, lively,good home. 609-

LABRADOR RETRIEVERPUPPIES - 7 wks. old; AKC,field champion breeding, exc.hunting & family dog. Eves:609-655-4232.

Princeton• Small Animal Rescue Le-^ue

BORZOI — Beautiful pups,champion lines, bred forelegance, soundness & tem-perament. Call Phyllis, days,201-469-6100, eves. , 201-534-9219.

HORSE BOARDING —private 3 box stall barn.Personal attention & friendlyatmosphere. Outdoor exercisearea & trails. Instructionnearby. 3 miles from Prin-ceton center. 609-921-1567.

AKC LABRADORS — FIELD& FIELD CHAMPIONpedigree. Blonds & Blacks.Ready at the end of April.Dew claws removed, all shots,wormed, & guaranteed. 609-448-0445 (day) 443-6318(evenings).

BAY TB MARE — 15.1, 7 yrs.,nice mover, willing jumper.609-466-9184.

7 YEAR OLD - grey gelding,has been shown successfully.100% sound. Would makeexcellent 4-H horse.Reasonable. 609-448-4291.

Kiverview StablesRiver Road,

Belle Mead, N.J.

Complete training for thehorse & rider

Boarding• Large box stalls in newlyrestored 3 story barn.• Unlimited trails & easy,access to towpath of D&RCanal• Indoor ring 60' x 180'

Instruction• Beginners to advanced —basic English & jumping.• Children and adult classes• Small groups or private• Dressage thru 3rd level• Classes forming on a regularbasis i[201] 874-5484 or [201] 359-5090

AKC GERMAN SHEPHARD -quality puppies. Championsired, pointed dam both x-rayed. Show or pet 609-259-3271 eves, or wkends.

AAAAA JUNK CARS - Class 24 3. $35, if driven in to our yard.$10 - $30 if we pick up. Call 201-469-6131.

ALL JUNK CARS and truckswanted. Free towing $15 andup. Scarpati Auto wrecking,609-396-7040.

JUNK CARS WANTED

ANY CONDITION

609-448-6434

JUNK CARS — bought andsold. Towing. 609-259-9604.

AutoTire/Supplies

'SAV'Ej.Mosquito Time is Here Again.Take your dog to your "Vet"and get preyentative heartworm medicine now.

Male & female mixed breedpups, all colors.Male Collie - Shepherd dog.Youpg female Beagle dog.Male black & white Spanieltype dog.Male pure bred 1 yr. oldGordon Setter.Male 4 yr/old pure bredAlaskan Malamute.Female honey colored 6 yr. oldPomeranian.Female 2->/2 yr. old pure bredSt. Bernard, housebroken,excellent with children. ,Male pure bred 18 mo. oldIrish Setter.Female Shepherd - ShetlandSheep type pup.2 male pure bred Beagles, 5yrs. old.Male 3 yr. old Cock-A-Pob,Male 4 yr. old pure bred whiteAfghan, prefers adults androom to exercise.Female spayed SiberianHusky, 1 brown eye, 1 blue.

Call us about our femalespayed, and altered male andalso kittens.To claim or adopt a pet pleasecall Mrs. Graves for an ap-pointment. 609-921-6122. Hours8-4 p.m. Sat. 10-12. Report lostand found pets within 24 hr.period and call the police ifyou find an injured pet.

FREE TO LOVING HOME —.2 yr. old male Irish Setter,needs room to run. Loveschildren. Good in health, call924-3800, 9 .to 5 weekdays. 609-883-3865 6 to 9 p.m. & wkends.

HUNTER / JUMPER — TB— QH mare, 15.1 h, shownsuccessfully, evented andhunted. 100% sound. Priced tosell. 609-586-2452.

QUALITY DOBERMANPINSCHER —• puppiesavailable. Superior breeding,AKC Reg., seen by appt. 609-466-0117 after 5:30.

1977 APPALOOSA Filly,gentle sorrel with blanket. 609-259-7501.

BMW RIMS & SPARE — (2)14" alloy sport mags; (1) 14"-Michelin XAS radial, mountedon std. rim. Craig, 609-599-9751.

SNOW TIRES — 2-CooperMaster Premium H78-15. 609-448-0036.

1972 CHEVROLET stationwagon — Reasonable. 201-297-3843.

1968 VOLVO SEDAN — auto.,new transmission guaranteed.Call 609-921-2161 eves.

'74 DATSUN 260Z - loadednew tires, brakes, water-pump. Runs good, must sell.$4200. 215-493-9157.

'75 AUDI FOX 8 2-dr., maroon,auto., AC, P.B, MS, AMradio, 61,000 mi. Well main-tained. $2600. 201-887-5255days. 609-655-1616 after 5 p.m.& wkends.

'78 THUNDERBIRD, P/S,P/B, A/C AM/FM 8 track,int./ext. decor group, 15,000mi., $5,500 or best offer. 201-297-4219 or 297-0385.

1968 CAPRICE — Auto, air,p/s, p/b 62000 orig. miles.Extremely dependable.-$825609-921-6122, 8am-4pm week-days.

'77 FIAT X19 - gold, 32mpg, 4-spd/trans. AM/FM stereo,A/C, conv/hardtop. $3850. 609-393-0515 after 7 pm.

CHEVETTE '78 - 4-dr, 4-spa/c, many extras. $3400. «586-4123.

'75 OLDS CUTLASS — 2-dr.Hd. tp, auto., PS, small 8,radio, vinyl roof, 32,000 mi.$2900. 609-586-0666.

'68 OLDSMOBILE, good run.cond. $250; moped, cash $425.sell $310; Evinrude outboardmotor, 15 hp, $150. 201-821-9233.

1973 IMP ALA — excel, cond,mech. sound, a/c, p/s, p/b, lowmileage, 4-dr. $2395. 609-448-0258 or 466-1594, Faye.

'69 AUTOMATIC VW BUG —excellent rebuilt engine, gasheater, body only for parts.Good for transplant into newbody. $250. Call Jeanne 609-921-3288.

CHEVY CAPRICE, CLASSIC— '73, 2-dr coupe, vinyl roof,V8, auto., PS, PB, radiow/rear speaker, air, 2 new

' mounted snows, 64,250 mi.: $1600. 609-466-1188.

68 VOLVO — will sell whole or

M o " B C S t ° f f e n C a " 2 0 1 ' 77 LINCOLN TOWN CAR fully^-•ai0- loaded. 609-448-7116.

Auto Repairs

TRANSMISSION SERVICE -Fluid changes & adjustments,$15. Most cars. 201-359-2103after 6 pm.

MGB REPAIRS - have toolswill travel - 609-921-3442 forappt. Keep trying. I care aboutyour MG.

JAG"UAR & MG REPAIRS -.reasonable prices, quality•workmanship. Call Joe, 609-585-0134.

Autos For Sale

1976 DELTA ROYALE - ps/pb,a/c, pwr. windows & doorlocks, am/fm radio, deluxeint. 609-443-3775.

NO MONEY???NEED A CAR???

Many makes and modelsavailable. Also trucks andvans. We need Customers whocan qualify to just makepayments on our inventory.Call dealer at 201-725-5804 forinformation.

JAGUAR LAND ROVER —Authorized dealer. T&TMotors, 210 Woodbridge Ave.,Highland Park, N.J. 201-572-2577.

1970 COUPE DE VILLE —Cadillac convertible. Forinformation call 609-924-2350.Souths Garage.

HAY — Timothy - clover mix,$1.25/ bale at barn. Mulch hay$1/ bale. 609-737-3768.

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS— AKC reg. 3 females, 1 male,7-8 wks. old. 3 sable, 1 black.$150 each. 201-534-2263.

3 YR. OLD — registered PintoGelding. Rides Western orEnglish. Best offer. 609-585-8941. .

AKC SHELT'IE PUPS — (minicollie) for pet and show, health

-guaranteed. Call 609-443-6171eves, or weekends.

MOVING?BEING TRANSFERRED?MUST SELL YOUR CAR?

We buy cars outright. CallVISTA MOTORS for details.201-725-5800.

'75 DUSTER - blue, 2 dr. a/c,auto p/s, am, very clean$2685. Call 609-799-4249 after 6pm arifl weekends.

1977 LTD Landau — 2 drcream, Pwr pack, am/fmstereo, mint condition, $4500.609-655-1179 or 448-4958.

FREE TOY COLLIE andShepherd, 6 yrs. old. Housebroken. Lovely pet. Call 609-771-1477.

IRISH SETTERS — dualchampion bloodlines, readyfor Easter. 201-782-2060, 782-2526.

Autos Wanted

JUNK CARS WANTED - $20-$100. 201-548-6582.

A-l JUNK CARS$30

IF DRIVEN INClass 2 &3201-5264906

BUYING A NEW CAR LT.TRUCK or VAN? >• Before youdo, call 201-246-7452 after 6pmweekdays. It coukjsave you upto $750 or more. Franklin Autoand Truck Broker.

PORSCHE 1972 911T coupe — 5spd, Alloy wheels, AM/FMstereo, good cond., $6200. 201-297-4488.

1975 BUICK ELECTRA 225 - *•dr., 40,000 mi. AC, PS, PB,PW, P. seats, beautiful shape.$3995. 609-466-1993, 466-4831.

'74 PLYMOUTH SatelliteWagon - P/BA P/S. 318 V-8.Auto. A/C. Green, 9~-passengef. Hoof rack. AM/F-M. One owner. Exc. cond.Must sell. $1,375. Call 609-883-5958, evenings.

1978 COUGAR - dark blue withbeige interior, A/C, am/fmstereo, power seats, Turbinewheels, 14,600 miles. Call 609-896-1677, ask for John.

MERCEDES 1971 - model 250,a/c, p/b, p/s, call after 6 pm,609-883-1476. '

1967 TRIUMPH GT 6 - Ex-cellent condition. $1000. 609-737-1668.

77 CHEV MALIBU - 4 dr, smV8, a/c, w/w radials, auto,'rear defog, orig. owner, 21,000mi, dk blue, 3/79 inspection.$4150. 609-443-5381.

'73 TORINO - 2 dr. auto, p/ s,p/ b, air, white! body, browntop & int. good cond. 56,000miles. $1595. 609-924-4347.

'77 MONTE CARLO — Lan-dau, 2-dr., 25,000 mi. V8, auto.,PS, PB, PW, P/seats, AC,AM/FM stereo, exc. cond.$4750.Privatesale, 609-896-9185-after 6 p.m. or wkends.

'74 AUDI FOX - frt. wheel dr.,auto, 4 dr., 84,000 mi., exc.cond., $1500. 201-874-5690.

"78 CAPRICE CLASSIC - auto4 dr am/fm, a/c, ps/pb. Exc'cond. $4500. 201-874-5690.

1977 FORD LTD WAGON —46,000 mi. Exc. cond. P/B,P/S. AM/FM stereo. Roofrack. Wood-grain sides. $4,500or best offer. Call after 6 p.m.,609-896-1265.

'72 CHEVY NOVA — V8, goodcond., ps/pb, a/c, radials,am/fm, 90,000 mi:, asking$1,000. 609-921-2149.

'73 MUSTANG conv. & 45,000mi, new top. Asking $3500. 609-883-0637.

'74 FIAT STATIONWAGON,exc. cond. 60,000 mi., FMstereo, mounted snows. $1200neg. 201-297-5819.

MERCEDES 1966 250 SE —• 4dr, red sedan, exc. cond., newtires, needs muffler. To settleestate. $2500. 609-466-0888

1972 FOKD WAGON — auto,p/s, p/b, a/c, other options.New battery exc. rubber plussnows, needs muffler, veryclean, 68,000 miles, best offerover$800. Call after 6pm, 609-448-9221.

1973 CHEVY Impala - a/ c,p/ s, p/ b p/ locks, am/ fmradio, radial tires. 609-443-4491.

'77 OLDS wagon - fully loadedin and out, low miles, excel,cond, $5500. 609-466-9166.

1977 MERCURY Marquis - 2dr. hardtop, 22,000 orig. miles.A/C, p/s, p/b, rear windowdefogger, AM/FM stereoexcellent condition. $4350 firm.Call 609-466-0245.

1966 LINCOLN CONT - 4 doorconvertible $5000 or best offer.609-M8-6207 or 448-9711.

.1

'J74 CHEVY VAN - 50,000 mi.Rebuilt engine, fully insulated& panelled, $2000. '68 FORDFAIRLANE - rebuilt engine &starter, new tires & batterym a i n t e n a n c e r e c e i p t savailable. $750. 609-924-6300.

CORDOBA 1976 - a/c, am/fm.pwr w&s, all leather, vinylroof, 18 mpg, reg. gas. 609-443-5520 after 6 pm. $3500* NoDealers.

1976 CHEVY VEGA Hat-chback - auto, a/c, am radio,cassette deck, snows, 35,000mi. asking $1000. 609-448-8963.

'77 GRANADA - gas saver, 2door, 6 cyl. with manuel 4speed, am/fm/8 track, p/s, 4new radial tires, show roomcondition. Call 609-448-5977.

1977 DODGE MONACO -Brougham, 318 eng., a/c,ps/pb, am/fm stereo, 2 dr.hardtop, radials. 29,000 mi.609-443-1010.

72 CHEVY VEGA - RUNNINGCONDITION $150. 609-443-6493.

1966 CORVETTE- - Hardtopconvertible, 2 tops: Excellentcondition. 609-448-1967.

1977 FORD LTD. II-p/s, p/b,air, tinted glass, am/fmstereo, split vinyl roof, newsnows mounted, 302 engine.Ca« after 6 pm, 609-883-0747.

'73 LASABRE, auto., A/C,P/S, P/B, 4 dr., tape deck, lowmileage. 201-297-1780.

'74 CAMARRO 350 V-8. P/S,P/B, A/C, Reg. gas. AM/FM.Tape. Exc. cond; $3,000". 609-882-6624.

1976 CHRYSLER NEWYORKER — 29,000 miles, air,leather, cruise control, p/s,p/b, auto, am/fm stereo 8 trk,need cash, $4000. Call 201-257-4896 after 6pm.

'61 CADILLAC — 4-dr., 6window, PB, PS. PW, newtires, runs well. 609-466-1294.

FIREBIRD ESPIRT, 1973,55,000 mi., good condition,$1,895. Call 201-359-8409.

'76 PACER — silver, vinylroof, DL package, am/ fmstereo, P / s, $2,875. Call 609-924-3263.

BUICK Electra Limited — 2door, 1977. Blue with whiteLandau, matching custominterior. P/S, P/B. P/seats,P/door locks, am/fm stereo,cruise control, a/c. One owner,immaculate, Like new, lowmileage. ,609-924-3931.

CHEVROLET 1976 MALIBU— Classic, AC, auto., PS, PB,AM/FM. Asking $2700 or bestoffer. 201-297-6193.

65 OLDS -4 dr, good conditionps/pb, r/h, ww/snows. $500'Call 609-448-2918. ^^'

,1963 CHEVIE NOVA — 6cylinder, 4 door, green. Bestoffer. 201-526-5989.

1974 PONTIAC LEMANS — 4door sedean. One owner, ACAM/FM radio, rear speaker'snow tires mounted on wheels'94,000 miles highway driving'in excellent condition. $18W /Phone 609-655-2473 after 5 p.n ,j'

FORD LTD WAGQN — '69 opass PS, PB, AC, reg. gf J 8 7wheels. 110,000 mi. Good eno$500. 609-924-2745 eves. K"

'71 CHEVY VAN — 6 cyl., 3speed, am/fm stereo, newwheels & tires, brakes, battery& more. Ask for John 201-359-5617.

'70 FORD COBRA - Bestoffer. 201-526-1382.

MERCEDES BENZ 1970 —280SEL, exc. cond. with ex-

.tras. Call 609-883-1538.

FORD VAN 350 - 1975 A/C,AM/FM, heavy duty, $4000 orbest offer. Mileage, 36,000.201-968-6853. .

'75 CHRYSLER Cordoba —excel, cond., full power, sandloaded with extras. 609-397-0259 or 397-0214.

1977 DODGE Aspen — Sporty.2 dr. loaded. Perfect cond.26,000 miles. $3250. 609-883-9146.

1973 AUDI 100 - 4 dr, gd cond.Must-sell by Apr. 25. $1200 orbest offer. 201-782-5977 after 6pm.

'67 MUSTANG - 289 auto., newbattery, fuel pump, brakes.Good rubber. Runs well. $750.201-359-3756 eves.

AUDI 100LS - Superb cond.Air, am/fm stereo cassette,automatic. Only 40,000 mi$4200. 609-443-3427 after 7 pm.

'76 LINCOLN MARK IV -Cartier edition, loaded, 26,000mis. Garaged, showroom.$6995. 201-725-1107 after 5 pm.

1975 BMW 530 I - manual, newtires & stocks, stereo, 60,000mi., £7200. 609-924-8117.

1975 PONTIAC CATALINA -air, 72,000 miles, mint cond.,$2400. 201-874-3360.

1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON- a/c, ps/pb/pw/pl/ps, am/fmStereo, rear defrost. $2600.609-448-1638.

'75 MALIBU CLASSIC, V8,grn. p/s, p/b, a/c, new stl.bltd. radials. Excel, cond. 201-359-2283 after 4 pm.

VAN 1976 - Plymouth Voyager(Maxi-van) 15 pass., air, auto,AM/FM, PS, loaded, lowmiles. $5500 or best offer. 609-921-1198 or after 8 pm. 609-397-3533.

, 1971 FORD SUPER VAN — w.windows. 6 cyl. eng., Goodyearradials, high mileage but runsgreat. $850. 201-874-4926.

'69 PLYMOUTH — 6 r;yl 4.dr., $225. 609-737-2126.

78 GRAND LEMANS — 4-dr.,auto., AC, 6 cyl., PWY. drs., PSPB, rear defogger, AM/FM

.stereo 8 track, white w/redcrushed velvet seats,, many

I extras. 11,400 mi. $5500. Call609-924-6474.

VOLVO 1800 ES 1973 sportswagon — auto, good lookingand versitile. 25mpg, greatinvestment 9am-5pm. 201-782-0303 ext. 259, eves. 215-862-9782. '

'72 BUICK SKYLARK - p/sp/b, p/w, air. very goodcondition. $1,200. 201-874-6161eves and weekends.

'69 CHEVY VAN — newmotor, clutch, very • reliable.Need interior work. $1000. 609-924-3274.

'77 LESABRE — custom 4-dr,dark, green, a / c , a m / f m ,excel cond., low mileage.After 6pm, 609-448-1827.

'67 CHRYSLER - p/s radio,a/c, motor excel, cond., snowtires incl, 120,000 mi, asking$975. Call Ron 609-921-1184.

1976 BUICK - 2-dr Centurycustom. Auto, trans, p / sp/b, a/c, am/fm. $3200. 609-737-9564.

1974 TVR Sports Car -Fiberglass body, 4-spd. transsunroof. Excel, cond. 609-882-0987 or 215-943-9442.

'77 DODGE CHARGER SE -A/c, P / s + B . am/fm/cb,radials and snows. Call 609-924-9656.

1977 TR - AM/FM 8 track, air,5 spd. Under 20,000 miles.Must sell. $4700. 609-799-4314.

1970 CHEVY WAGON -dependable transportation,$225. After 6 pm, 609-452-1994.

1976 VOLARE. STATION-WAGON - 39,000 miles, exccond. $2500. 609-737-2230.

'73 OLDS - 98 Luxury sedan-loaded; 67,000 mi: Die Hardbattery; new brakes; snowsw/rims; asking $1700; 609-448-4592 after 6:30; 609-338-5220weekdays.

'76 ALFA ROMEO - sedan,blue, bought new 8/77, lowmiles, sunroof, alarm,Blaupunkt stereo cassette, 5Michelins, plus 2 mountedsnows. Asking $4600. After 7pm weekdays & wkends. 609-799-0894.

1976 CHRYSLER CORDOBA— auto, trans, p/s, p/b, powerreclining seats, am/fm stereo,vinyl top, power windows, tiltsteering wheel, power doorlocks, 55,000 miles, exc. cond.$4000. Call after 6pm, 609-466-2953.

'72 KARMAN GHIA - goodcond., 4 spd., new brakes,AM/FM, good mpg. 609-448-5626 eves & wkends.

'74 DATSUN B210 - Roodmileage, uses regular gas,asking $1950. 609-799-1080.

1973 NOVA 2 dr. hatchback—8cyl with a/c. Call 201-297-5900between 6-8 p.m.

'68 BUICK SKYLARK —e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n ,mechanically reconditioned,many new parts (sales slipsavailable)', snow tires,AM/ FM, uses regular gas.Leaving country, must sell,$800. 609-799-8543 (if no an-swer, 609-452-8608).

CLASSIC MERCEDES 1953-300 C, 4 door convertible,needs engine work. Garaged,asking $5000. Call Linda 609-448-0226 days or- 655-4229evenings. "

1967 DODGE CHARGER -vinyl top - 1 of a kind! Bestoffer over $850. Firm. 609-448-5314.

'68 PLYMOUTH STA.WAGON - parts, tires, seatsfor sale. Call 609-448-7796 after7 pm.

FORD GRANADA'76 - 2-dr 6cyl., auto, PB, PS, AM/FM,AC, new tires, $3600. Call 201-446-9373 after 6 pm.

ALFA ROMEO SPIDER - '74hdtp & soft tp., low mileage.Exc. cond. 609-466-3248.

'62 FORD WINDOW VAN -$400. A good buy. 201-874-3347.

1976 CORVETTE — fullpower, red, blk. lea. int., 37,000mi. $7900. 609-443-4427.

'76 MERCURY MARQUIS — 4dr. p/s, p/b, a/c, 35,000 miles.$3400. 201-359-6207.

'74 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE — Yellow/tan roof,excel, cond. 62,000 mis.Loaded, new belted tires. 1owner $3500 or best offer. 201-534-2263.

'78 FIREBIRD Esprit - p/s,p/b, auto, a/c, am/fm 8 track,r/w defrost, factory serv, lowmileage, many extras, $6,000.201-874-4494 after 6 p.m.

DODGE DART — 1963,good running condition,needs front end work.Call 609-921-7886 from 5:30 to 7p.m. anyday.

6-BClassifiedJktuertising

Week of April 18-20,1979

Autos For Sale Autos For Sale Autos For Sale Motorcycles Trucks Boats

PLYMOUTH CRICKET 1971 '68 FORD GALAXY — 302, V8— for parts & runs, $100. auto, 58,000 mi., very goodCricket motor, 28,000 miles, running cond., body needs$50. 609-448-8649. some work. 609-448-9291.

'74 VOLVO WAGON — AC,AM/ FM radio, 8 track, auto.WW, must sell. 609-448-8507.

1975 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA— Excellent condi. Lowmileage, small V8 $3,<XX). Call609-737-3998 after 6 p.m.

JAGUAR 1957 — 3.4 literengine & 4 spd. OD tran-smission, $300. Call 609-890-0371 after 7 p.m. & Sats.

'72 OPEL 1900 — 2 dr. sedanauto, low mileage, goodcondition. Must sell. $475. 609-924-2905.

"71 BLUE VW — Squareback,good cond., asking $850. Call

»S08-896-0619.

•71 FORD VAN — Very goodcon dition. Call 201-369-8331aftei' 6 p.m.

1 9 6 9 P L Y M O U T HBELVEDERE — runningcondition. Best: offer. 609-924-9453.

1972 CUTLASS — gas saving260 ci V8, PS, PB, AM/FM,stereo. Call after 7 p.m. 609-799-9442.

CORVETTE 1978 — silveranniversary edition, L48,auto , fully loaded, 9,500 mi.Like new, $13,400. 201-874-2146,weekdays, 9-5.

1977 MONTE CARLO -Landau, V8 auto t ps/pb, a/c,am/ fm stereo. 10,700 mi.,exc. cond. Best offer 609-466-0082 after 6 pm.

1966 MUSTANG — Std. trans.Exc. cond. $995. 609-799-0852.

1974 OLDSMOBILE VISTACRUISER WAGON - 9passenger, 90,000 mi. $1,750.609-148-4389.

GMC '71 VAN — carpets, extraseats, V8, automatic, 8 trackstereo, good tires, best offer.609-448-8509 after 7 p.m.

1978 HONDA CVCC — 5 spd.stereo cassette, 1 owner, $4000firm. 609-924-7429.

1967 CORVETTE — showroomcondition, maroon, radials,factory side exhausts, 2 tops,garage kept. 609-799-0341 askfor Greg or Al.

1972 BUICK, CENTURION—loaded, 1 owner; exc. cond.609-883-0649, $1695.

76 FJAT 128 - 2D sedan, 37,000mi. blue, good cond. book at$2000 asking $1,900:, 609-397-8100 days ask for Mary.

MERCEDES BENZ — 1959 -.219.4 dr. Completely restored,kept in garage, except on Sun.1,000mi. 609-585-7279 9 a.m.-7p.m.

'76 FIREBIRD — Formula,•blk. w. honeycomb wheels, V8,4 spd, air, ps/ pb, am/ fmcassette, 51,000 mi., exc. cond.$3995. 609-921-0644, days, 737-0197 eves.

1960 OLDSMOBILE 98 — Fullpower, 37,000 orig. mi. verygood cond. in storage. Norestoration needed, call 609-924-5023 anytime.

'72 CAPRI — V6, very clean,decor group, p/b, a/c, stereotape. New Dr, exhaust, alter,batt. Excel cond. 609-921-0244.

76 OLDS OMEGA — 2-dr.sedan, auto trans, a/c, excelcond. 20,000 mi, $3500. Calleves, 609-799-9349.

1967 CHEVROLET — Std.trans. New clutch, brakes.1000,000 mi. Call 609-921-8462after 6pm or weekends.

'71 PONTIAC LEMANSSPORT — ps/pb/ac, am/fm/8track, good, cond, veryreasonable. Must sell! 609-443-3659.

MOPED FOR SALE — 1971 GMC PICKUP - 3/4 ton,BATAVUS. EXCELLENT v e r v g°°d c o n d - 66,000 orig.CONDITION. Call 609-924- miles. Asking $1800. 609-397-6112. 1865.

1977 OLDS CUSTOM — 1 9 6 6 VALIANT — good stationCruiser Station Wagon, loaded car $100. 201-359-8909 afterwith extras, good gas mileage, j ^14.000 mi. $5495. 609-924-34417

1978 DELTA ROYALE — 4 dr,12,000 mi., ac, 19 mpg, V8stero, ex cond. 609-443-4184.

1973 VW SUPER BEETLE -sun roof; radio $1,500. 609-924-5593 after 6 p.m.

'73 MG MIDGET — new painttop and rugs. Wire wheels^$1,700. 609-396-3318. !

'72 MGB — 55,000 mi goodcondition. Call weekends 609-924-6526.

'66 FORD VAN CAMPER — 3speed carpel , cabinets,electric hookup, am/ fmstereo cassette. 93\000 mi.,runs good, burns oil. $600 Mike.609-924-5234.

1974 PLYMOUTH SATELITE— 3 seat stationwagon. p / s,p / b.auto, a/ c, luggage rack,radio. 609-921-8718, 8717evenings.

1975 LINCOLN MARK IV —Immaculate, $4945 or bestoffer. 609-443-3207 evenings,weekends.

1977 AMC JEEP CJ5-4" whl.drive, 21,000 miles, exc. cond.asking $5500. Call days, 609-394-8121, after 6 pm, 609-888-1732.

1977 TOYOTA COROLLALIFTBACK - a/ c, roofrack.am/ fm, rear wiper, 4 spd.man trans, met. silver, exc.cond. $3950. Call days, 609-448-9100,-6X1'. 252, hights, 201-747-6573.

CITROEN 1969 1D19 4 door,standard, 1 owner, goodrunning cond. Best offer. 609-921-3223, 6223.

1974 OLDSMOBILE - DeltaRoyal, 4 door, a / c, tape deck,must sell $1,250 or best offer.201-297-1975.

PLYMOUTH—'75 Gran Furv.p/s , p/b, a /c , needs morerepair, $1300. 201-521-3240.

1977 FIAT SPIDER con-vertible in mint condition.Only 13,000 mi. Moving, forcedto sell. $4,950. 215-493-5403.

RECYCLETHIS

NEWSPAPER

1966 VOLKSWAGEN — $450.609-397-8087.

1975 MERCURY MARQUIS —a/c, ps/pb, exc. cond. Callafter 5pm, 609-448-1854.

'77 VOLARE — 4 dr, metalicblue, radio, manual trans, w.overdrive, p / s, clean, 19,000mi., $3000 or best offer. 609-397-8564 or 201-782-8417.

$2150. O L D S M O B I L ECUTLAS — 4 door, 1973. 39,000mi., superb cond. Bucketseats, console shift, 4 one yr.old tires. 2 brand new snowtires. White exterior, blackinterior, alarm guard. Sellingdue to cross country move. Tosee call 9-5pm, days only thruFr i . 609-452-8285 Ask forGerry.

1978 BMW 320i - 4 spd.,AM/ FM stereo, AC, reg. gas,5500 mi. new & beautiful.Asking $9500. Call 609-799-0005days, 586-5260 nights ask forVince.

1975 MONTE CARLO — 50,000mi., very good cond., p/s, p/b,air, auto trans, swivel buckets$3500. 609-448-4973.

1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA— gd. run. cond., fullyequipped $500. 201-247-5722.

1977 VOLARE — premierwagon - 20 mo. old.. 25,000 mi.,exc. cond. V8,18 mi/ gal, darkgreen with wood. Air, am/ fm,rack,snows. 60/ 40 seat. $3,800or best offer. 609-466-1536.

1970 VW — 4 spd., R & H, runsgood, $495. 609-466-1019.

1968 VW FASTBACK — partsor whole. Best offer. Apply atCommunity liquors, 23Witherspoon St., Princeton.

1953 MERCURY — 2 dr.hardtop, flalhead, V8, runsgood. $525. 201-846-9846.

71 MERCEDES 250 - C - 2dr.air, elec. win. am/ fm/ -stereo, very clean, $4,550. 215-736-0104.

1973 CAMARO LTD - 70,000miles, am/ fm, mint cond,auto trans, chocolate brown /beige lop, $3800. Call 609-737-9261 after 6 pm.

1976 YAMAHA 125CC - exc.beginners bike. Call before 5pm, 609-448-3630.

67 VW BUS — rare sunroofmodel, good body, runs great,economical and reliable. $850firm. 609-737-9453. 69 VOLVO144. Good condition, strongand reliable, first $750.

HONDA XL 70 — 1976. Bestoffer. Call 201-369-3561.

74 HARLEY DAVIDSONSUPERGLIDE — FXE 1200.Custom paint and chrome,looks and runs great. $2,600.609-737-9453.

68 OLDSMOBILE — runsexcellent, new tires, newpaint, $400. 609^143-5635.

PLYMOUTH VOLARE —Preimer Wagon 1977,. excel,cond, 15,000 mi., fully loaded,automatic, $4000. 609-443-3941.

72 MGB with hardtop and allcovers. Exc. cond. Alwaysgaraged. 23,200 miles, orig.owner, $2550. 609-443-6988.

MGB GT — 1970, 46,000 mi.,new paint, top mechanicalshape, $2,350. 609-397-3016.

1971 FORD wagon — p/s, p/b,a/c, uses regular gas, 60,000mi, snows, iuggage rack, $600.609-448-7410.

'69 MALIBU — ps/pb, a/c,good cond., $600." 609-799-2386after 6pm.

PLYMOUTH '75 Sport Fury,p/s, p/b, a/c, radials, am/fmw/8 track, good miles/gal., topcondition. Original owner: 201-359-5355.

Motorcycles

YAMAHA — Hair Brothers —Motorcycle Sales & Service.Parts. 1605 N. Olden Ave.,Trenton. 609-393-7550.

Used Cycles Are ScarceWe Have the Answer

A LEFT OVERHONDA HAWK II

WE BUY USEDMOTORCYCLES

All makes & models!^ V CYCLE

RANCH

Mon-Ffi, 10-8, Sat 9-3Rt.#33 Hamilton Square

•i 609-587-6354

'76 HONDA 400, 4 cyl. 2100mile, stock & hi-rise han-dlebars. 609-443-3300 ext. 245.

1976 HONDA CR 125. Ex-cellentfcondition. $400. 201-369-4092.

BMW MOTORCYCLE —R75/5, low miles, great shape,new exhaust, and other newparts. $1395. 609-799-3785.

YAMAHA 175, 1974 — customparts, street legal. Good cond.$400. 201-359-4283 after 5 p.m.

1976 SUZUKI RM 250 — mintcondition never raced, asking$695. 609-443-1381.

1972 YAMAHA GT60 - exccond. asking $225. 609-397-1865.

LARRY'S CYCLE SERVICE— lune-ups, minor repairs.Japanese, European. British.Gel set for Spring. 609-921-0966.

1972 HARLEY XLH - ex-cellent all arourar condition.Must sell. $1795. 609-771-0732.

TWO HONDAS CB360, goodshape, $600. CL175, goodshape, $250. 609-655-0002.

SWAP LARGE FREEZER &large refrigerator, like new,cost of both, $750. Exchangefor motorcycle 1975 or latermodel - 350 or 400. Will addextra monies if necessary. 201-359-5365.

KAWASAKI — dirt bike.KDlOO. 1 year old, exc. cond.,moving, must sell. $425. 609-448-7747.

DIRT BIKE — Triumph 2501971, excellent cond; Four-stroke British classic. Mustsee. $325. 609-921-0966.

1971 TRIUMPH 250 cc $350 orbest offer'. 609-989-9646.

HONDA CT70 — good con-dition, best offer. Call 201-297-9071.

MOTORCYCLISTS! You areinvited to a meeting, road runand barbecue on Sunday April29 as guests of the PrincetonMotorcycle Club. Come andmeet some nice people fromall over the Princeton-Trenton- Hopewell - Plainsboro area.Call Roy at 609-921-7406 formore information.

Trucks

'73 CHEVY PICKUP, 4 wheeldrive, 3/4 ton V8, 4 speed, air,p/s, p/b, buckets, dual tanks,insulated cap, extra tires,$3200. 609-466-0037.

1975 DODGE VAN — Longwheel base, 6 cyl, 35,000 mi.,am/fm cassette, paneled,insulated, green. $3500. 609-882-0398.

DUMP - Stake body, 14 feet,1973 Ford F-500, never worked,less than 12,000 easy miles.Asking $6900. 609-924-0746.

'71 FORD PICKUP — 4 wheeldrive, HD suspension, positiverears, $1800 or best offer. Callafter 5 p.m. 609-586-7466.

"71 FORD PICKUP — 6 stick,with cap, clean, $1850. After 5pm, 201-359-5206.

1975 CHEYENNE pick up,excellent cond., 350 engine,auto. $3800. 201-526-6042.

RecreationalVehicles

1974 APACHE CAMPER -Solid sides. Heater, sink, icebox, stove. Sleeps 7. Used onesummer. Call 609-896-2076. Canbe seen at Smith & Van Dyke

71 FROLIC 10% pickupcamper. Fully self contained.(609) 395-1006 after 6 p.m.

1978 CUSTOMIZED FORDVAN — fully carpeted andinsulated. Great sound systemand wheels. Immaculatecondition, low mileage. Call201-780-0486 ask for Rick orLaura.

20' TRAVEL TRAILER —excellent condition. Possibledelivery to location. 201-359-2514 after 6 p.m.

ARGOSY BY AIRSTREAM —1977 26', loaded, excellentcondition. Very reasonableafter 6 p.m. 609-443-3514.

SAILBOAT — Discoverer 18'1975 w/trailer, main & jib, 3.6Sears & extras. Exc. cond.$2800. 609-466-2834, . 466-1112.

1977 NEWPORT 17 - 2 sails,sleeps 4. 7% hp. motor, gastank, & trailer. $4300. 201-359-3339.

FOR SALE —Sunfish, green &white, exc. cond. $500. 215-295-0369.

15' RENtfEN FIBREGLASSRunabout - 45 hp Chrysler OB,anchor, skis, tow rope, lifejackets, trailer. Great shape.609-448-8229.

16' SLOOP — M-16. rigged forracing, new sails, trailer,$1200. Sunfish racing sails, gd.cond., $400. 609-924-3011.

SAILBOAT — 27 ft. Newport.3 sails, winches, atomic 4inboard, Edson wheel, VHF,exc. cond. 201-846-2725.

•76 CRUISE CRAFT - 19'fiberglass, 77' Long trailer, 85HP Merc, motor. Full canvas,18 gal. tank, walk thru wind-shield, marine head. Manyextras, low hrs. For fishing,skiing or pleasure use. 201-722-6373.

JET 14 SAILBOAT — 14',fiberglass sloop, spinaker,trailer, good condition, extras.609-799-4152 after 6 p.m.

BOAT -14' aluminum rowboatwith I4hp Eska motor, Hardlyused, $600. 609-883-5377.

12' FIBERGLASS CHECK-MATE — with 50hp Mercuryengine & trailer. Call 609-882-6854 after 6pm.

GRUMMAN Sport canoe - 15',excellent cond, oars, lifejackets, roof rack, $395. 609-799-3564.

26' CABIN CRUISER — SeaFoxx, will sell cheap to get offproperty. $1200. 609-466-0852,494-8484.

1977 GMC crew cab 3+3 - 3/4ton, many extras, ideal forcontractor or camper. 609-921-1720.

1975 JEEP PICKUP BOX — 8ft., complete excellent con-dition. Best offer. 609-448-9390after 5 pm.

14' TAG-A-LONG trailer.Sleeps 3, refrig, stove, manyextras. 201-369-4649 after 6p.m.

1971 26TRAILER -dition, towed less than 100 mi.twin beds, twin gauchos, sidebath. $3750. Call 609-448-0467.

1970 4 wd GMC 3/4T, pickup CAMPER - Viking pop-up,with camper top. $1,500. 609- sleeps 6-7, stove, ice box,683-2690 days, 924-2768 eves h e £ T r - s ink> cabinets, excel.

j , «-I*IUU v.»». c o n d 201-359-0467 after Fri.

'73 BRONCO — 4 whl. drive,exc. cond. Many extras. Mustsell. $3,200. 201-359-6650.

'73 CHEVY PICKUP —p/s,/p/b, auto, delux interior,4 good tires, $1,600. 201-782-1011.

'67 CHEVY PICKUP — forparts, 8' fleet side bed. stepbumper, white spoked wheels.2-1100 x 15 and 2-1200 x 15 tires.Brown bucket seats, loadleveler shocks, 2-H78 x 15tires. 201-874-3336.

'76 PICKUP W/ CAP,"L.U.V." auto. P / B, slidingrear wind. & more. 201-821-9269 or 297-5551.

•72 DATSUN pick up, 55,000miles. $500. Call weekendsonly, 609-443-5122.

76 CHEVY: C-20 Pickup, Blue,292, 6 cyl. CED eng.; 4 spd;pwr. steer.,jgauges: Hvy dutyElec./Cooling' systems; Fr.Stab. Bar; 12,800 mi; $4195firm. 609-443-4680 6-9 pm.

TOYOTA - '76 Longbed, Hilux.Auto. Radio, 27,500 mi. $2900.Cap. 201-369-4271.

FORD '74 —3/4 ton pickup, 8cyl., auto., Power bks ksteering. R&H, dual gas tanks,overload springs, 39,000 miwith or w/o Del-Ray camper.Exc. cond, 609-448-0637.

74 CHEVY SUBURBAN-454CID, air, auto., radio, PB, PS,HD cooling, shocks & springs,3/4 ton, stabilizer bar. 3rd feet& towing package. 609-799-2276after 5:30.

TRAILER — 16 x 8' withlights, good condition, mustsell. $1000. 201-526-0299.

23' COACHMEN LEP-RECHAN MINI - MOTORHOME - fully equipped, 13mos. old. 609-587-8589.

MOTOR HOME FOR SALE —22', low mileage, sleeps 6, veryreasonable. Call 609-882-6854after 6pm.

'72 APACHE ROAMER -Sol.sta., pop-up, Sl.6, refrig., gd.cond. $1195.201-297-6517 after 6pm.

1971 DODGE VAN —. Bubbletop, p^s, a/c, dual batteries,stereo tape, fully self-contained, no rust, exc. cond.$4500. 609-924-3471.

Machinery &Equipment

TROY BILf ROTOTILLERS— Immediate deliveryavailable! For authorizedsales, parts and service, callMercer Garden Equipment inTrenton at 609-890-0371, after 7pm and Saturdays.

Instruction

THE GREEN OAKS atPrinceton. English. Fren-ch* Spanish* German* Italianand other languages. Smallclasses and private in-struction. Tutoring. P.O. Box1137. Princeton. Call 924-45389-4:30 Mon. & Wed. to 8.

BOATERS — DON'T GETLOST. Evening course in coastpiloting/navigation nowforming. Prof, instruction byUSCG licensed operator. Feeincludes all materials.Beginners welcome. Call (609)921-0365 evenings for details.

WEAVING CLASSES — frameloom and floor loom. Eveningsand Sat. now; summer, dayand evening. Beginnerswelcome. For informationcall 609-466-1306 after 4 p.m.

FRENCH , LESSONSBeginner, Intermediate,Advanced. Conversation &/orGrammar. 609-448-2908.

MATH TUTORING — by Ph.-D. High School & College.Preparation for SAT Examsalso available. 609-448-3690.

PIANO TEACHER - Con-servatory Graduate. 201-297-2322.

SCHOLAPRINCETON PRIVATEINSTRUCTION SERVICES-remedial help, support,enrichment

-all school subjects as well aswriting, study skills, editing-English as • a SecondLanguage'-Young people & adults.Call 609-924-2457 or 921-7338.

PIANO - European Con-servatory Teacher is nowaccepting serious students inthe Princeton area. 609-921-0778.

TUTORING

Individualized help available

All Subjects-All Ages

N.J. Education ConsortiumA non-profit educational Corp.609-921-2021.

Instruction Photography

COLUMBIA 32' FIN KEELSLOOP - Used 2 seasons:Documented; sleeps 6; fullhead room; enclosed headoven; teak interior; pedestalsteering; Hard sails; Barientwinches; Palmer engine:electronics; jiffy reefing; steelcradle. $30,000. 609-924-7904.

FORMULA 77 23.3', lowhours, OMC 235 hp, like new,asking $11,500. 609-921-6831evenings.

BOAT & CANOECLEARANCE SALE

Reg Sale12'Jon boat $259 $22912'Canoe 195 14515'Canoe 275 18917' Canoe 320 22912'V Hull 498 37914'V Hull 549 399SAIL BOATS 20% TO 50%OFF (SNARK & LOCKLEY)SOME SCRATCHED ANDDENTED MODELS

PELICAN BOAT SHOPRT22

WHITEHOUSE, N.J.201-534-2534

BOATERS — DON'T GETLOST. Evening course in coastpiloting/navigation nowforming. Prof, instruction byUSCG licensed operator. Feeincludes all materials .Beginners welcome. Call (609)921-0365 evenings for details.

1974 SEA RAY — 20', 188 HPMercruiser I/O, Cox trailerwith electric winch, manyextras. 201-738-1898 or 201-968-6295.

BASS BOAT -17 ft 3 in with 2fighting chairs, 2 live wells,driving console, withspeedometer, compass &many extras. Trailer included.Valued at over $5000. Will sellfor much less. Call 201-521-2195.

AirplanesDELTA — variable speed jig-saw, motor and stand, ukenew, half price. 609-882-1872.

FORD TRACTOR — 8 endw/pull blade & York rake. 609-259-9604. ,. :

To PlaneClassHtedAd

In Princeton call609-924-3250

ELEC BASS — experienced &well schooled (Berklee Collegeof Music) Elec Bass playerwill be accepting a limitednumber of students. Rock &Blues Jazz Theory &arranging. Beginners or ad-vanced. 609-259-3182.

How's your English? If itmatters then test yourself.You could be mistaking lay forlie, I for me, who for whom. Ifyou cannot afford making suchmistakes or teaching them toyour children, write for ourcopyrighted simplified key toavoiding a baker s dozen of theerrors in everyday Englishmade commonly by even thewell educated. Satisfactionguaranteed or a promptrefund. Send $1.50 plus 50 & forhandling and postage to WordBox 2332, Princeton, N.J.08540.'

DRAKE BUSINESSCOLLEGE

17 Livingston Ave.New Brunswick, N.J.

Complete Secretarial andAccounting Courses

Day and Night CoursesTelephone: 201-249-0347

TUTORINGREADING ENGLISH

STUDY SKILLSWRITTEN AND ORAL

COMMUNICATIONAdults & ChildrenTHE LEARNING

EXCHANGE157 S. Main St. Hightstown

609-4434113.

GUITAR LESSONS — 6/12string. Contemporary methodinclades tape analysis in mystudio. Bob Korman 609-921-3669.

GUITAR AND BASSLESSONS - teacher Withmusic college experience,reasonable rates. 609-799-0132.

PIANO, FLUTE LESSONS —Exper ienced , cer t i f iedteacher. All ages, all levels.Hillsborough. 201-874-4709.

FLYING CLUB — l/6th share$995. Pasley, PO Box 152,Titusville, NJ 08560.

Mobile Homes

MOBILE HOME— kit, Ivnndrrm, fmrm, 2 BR. washer

Ser, a/c, dishwasher fully. 609-448-4746.

SUMMER REMEDIALPROGRAM — LearningConsultant and SpecialEducation teacher are of-fering individualized smallgroup instruction forelementary children. July 16-Aug. 24, Mon.-Fri. Call 609-924-0022.

EFFECTIVE

MATH: TUTOR

Thru High School, S.A.T.Licensed Math Teacher

201-329-4523

A UNIQUE APPROACH tolanguage learning. 25languages. Native teachersand translators. Instructionfor children and adults. Alllevels. Brush-up, con-versational . and literaryclasses. Intensive courses fortravelers and'business people.Tutoring. Call 609-921-3063 or924-9335.

NATURAL COLOR - Por-traits, Bar Mitzvahs, Wed-dings, social events from $125!Remarque Studio* 609-448-7938.

NEED A PICTURE? —Anything from Products... toPortraits . . . to Par t i e s :

Ehotographed on location. CallANGEET SINGH, 609-799-

8238.

PORTRAITS - Bar MitzvahsWeddings. Very economical

Prices by ex-London Societyhotographer. Ian< Mitchell

609-896-2524.

BARMITZVAH or weddingspecials package. $75 incld. 30proofs, 15 enlargements allcolor. Call Ian Mitchell 609-896-2524.

SPANISH LESSONS - bycollege teacher. Nativespeaking. All levels forbusiness & travelers. Forforeigners - English as secondlanguage. Call after 4pm, 201-297-3471.

TUTORING — Your home ormine. Reasonable, licensed,all subjects. 609-443-5346 or448-0620.

PIANO INSTRUCTION —Recording artist will teachRock 'n Roll to intermediarystudents & will also teachTheory & Scales to beginners.609-443-4117.

CONVERSATIONAL FRE-NCH — private and / orsemi-private. Beginners.Intermediate - advanced.Please call 609-921-0492 forinformation.

ART COURSES - Painting (allmedia) Sculpture, drawing,photography etc. S.tartingApril 23. Phone ArtistsWorkshop,-609-448-8967 or 448-8721.

TUTORING - certified N.J.reading teacher. Instruction inlanguage arts & reading. Yourhome or mine. 609-921-1567.

PRINCETON Ph.D - tutorsjunior & senior high schoolEnglish & French. Bi-Lingual.Experienced. References. 609-921-1868.

Entertainment

IT'S MAGIC

From spectacular stage showsto intimate close up magic.Children's birthday parties,,banquets, any event. Eachshow personally planned toyour needs by a professionalmagician. Reasonable rates.Call after 6 p.m. 201-359-2847.Ask for Ed.

Catering

CONTINENTAL CUISINECATERERS - Hors D'Oeuvretrays to grand buffets, wed-dings, banquets showers,house parties. Call Mike. 609-882-3214,"Frank. 883-7530, John882-7571.

WE CATER ANYTHING -Picnics to banquets. 5 to 500.Special dietary plattersavailable. Some Ciicken Inc.Montgomery Shopping Center.609-924-5659.

HOLIDAY & BIRTHDAYCAKES •— beautifullydecorated. Childrens cartoon& characters a specialty. Mustorder 10 days in advance.Orders being taken for Easter.Phone 609-443-4308 if no an-swer keep trying.

Piano Tuning

PIANO TUNING

Regulating RepairingROBERT H.HALLIEZ •

RegisteredMember Piano Technicians

Guild, Inc.609-921-7242

A and Z PIANO TUNING ANDREPAIR. Call 609-799-2477.

Fencing

ALL TYPES OF FENCING -installed at low prices. Freeestimates .Quality work. 201-494-1951.

FurnitureRestoration

MUSIC ON THE MOVE - DeeJay Ed Klein brings yourorganization a sure fire way tohave fun & profit, from a Discodance to a 50's show or anytype music event. 201-821-9664.

HARPIST — lends elegance toyour party, dinner or recep-tion. Beautiful continuousmusic! Naomi Markus Alter.609-924-1899.

MAGICIAN — shows forschool, cub scouts, parties,clubs &. more. Audienceparticipation & balloonanimals. Low price! Call Ted,609-921-1549.

MAGIC SHOWS — performedfor children's birthday parties& adult dinner parties. Haveperformed in Princeton &surrounding areas. Call Buck,or Jimmy at 609-924-4109.

DISC JOCKEY FOR HIRE -Weddings, Parties, Dances,Liye Band Sound. For lowcost, any type music - Disco,50's, Pop, Elvis, etc. BarryDavison, 609-587-1355.

JONJIETHEMAJICCLOWN

Magic comedy & balloonanimals. Available for schoolshows, birthday parties, grandopenings and fund raisings.For further information call201-254-6374.

Photography

EXCEPTIONALLY CREA-TIVE, yet highly economicalapproach to weddings &portra i ture . ZurichPhotography, 609-883-0226.

SAVE A BUNDLE...RECYCLE NEWSPAPERS

B.M. RIDER FURNITURE -repaired & refinished. Antiquerestoration. Caning &Rushing. Hand stripping. Pickup & delivery service. Ouronly location rear of 75 MainSt., Kingston. Open Mon - Sat.9-5, 609-924-0147.

BIX FURNITURE STRIP-PING - "there is none better"in the Lace Works Building,Lambertville, NJ. 609-397-8498,safe for antiques.

FURNITURE REFINISHING& REPAIR - custom built tospecifications. THE YAR-DLEY CABINET MAKER,215-493-2654.

FURNITURE REFINISHING& REPAIR - custom built tospecifications. THE YAR-DLEY CABINET MAKER,215-493-2654.

CANED & RUSHED — Makean old chair better. Give it anew seat. Expertly done. 609-395-0342.

CHAIRS — CANED-RUSHED- reglued, tightened. Furniturerefinished. Years of ex-perience. Free pick-up anddelivery. 609-896-0057.

EXPANDING: DIP'N STRIP— is now a complete' servicecenter for anything made ofwood or metal that you have inyour home, found in your attic,bought at the flea markets &auctions. We do hand strip-ping, all types of repairing,refinishing, caning & rushing,also, furniture bought & sold.Try us. you won't be sorry.DIP 'rf STRIP, 49 Main St.,Kingston, N.J. 609-924-5868.Open Mon.-Sat. 9-5. •

j

Week of April 18 - 20,1979Classified Jtdoertising

7-B

Business Special Services Home Services Home Services Home RepairsServices

PROFESSIONAL TYPINGSERVICE - Carduner'sShopping Center, Rte. 130 &PrincetonTHightstown Rd ,Hightstown, NJ. 609-448-6707:Your complete secretarialservice featuring ERRORFREE AUTOMATIC TYPING-. every page an original. Also,letters, resumes, theses, termpapers, dissertations, newsletters, addressing £ mailing,information . storage &retrieval, Xerox copies.Equipment: IBM CorrectingSelectric II and an IBMMemory typewriter.

TYPIST -wishes to work athome. Accurate work atreasonable prices. Ringoes -Hopewell area. 609-466-2615.

TRUCK £ WINDOW LET-TERING — show cards, papersigns. Herbert C. Rodgers, 201-297-1648.

RESUMES UNLIMITEDYour complete one-stopresume service featuringresumes professionallywritten to highlight your

,i qualifications, expertly typed£ offset printed. For personal,confidential service callRESUMES UNLIMITED at609-448-0701.

GARAGE DOOR — hard^oopen? Call for all points check,springs, cables, pulleys. Freeestimates. Steve Hover,Central vacuum, Burglar,Fire Alarms, Garage DoorOpeners £ Repairs. 201-297-1816.

BALESTRIERISECRETARIAL SERVICE

609-921-3398Dayorevening

Resumes, Letters, Theses,Dissertations, Manuscripts.Statistical £ TechnicalTyping, cassette tran-scription, etc. Equipment:Selectric II & an AutomaticMag Card II Typewriter.

Princeton Packet Inc.*has some

Press Time AvailableWebDffset Press

Let us print your newspaper orin-house organ. Camera readymechanicals or negativesrequired. We print regularstandard pages or tabloids.

Your paper can be printed onregular 30# newspnnt of 50#white offset stock. There is a -nominal extra charge for a

i second spot color, u you so •desire.

Our capacity for your needs is24 pages standard and' 48pages Tor your tabloids.

•Call Mr. Hutchinson or Mr.. Burke . at (609) 924-3244 forparticulars on your printingneeds.

•(We have won state £national press awards forquality press work.)

KITCHEN CABINETS — Wall;

•units-finequality, individually;styled £ craned "of" walnut/oak, cherry, .butternut ormaple. Also refinishing orresurfacing existing cabinets.PARK LANE CABINETS 201-j«74-4I51.

PROPER CARE — of yourtrees should not be a guessinggame. If your trees areshowing signs of trouble or if

-you are - considering apreventive maintenanceprogram, call a company withan ">wner of over 15 years-experience in the field. TreeCare, Inc., 201-297-9300.

. PAINTINGS RESTOREDART & ESTATEAPPRAISALS

KALENS FINE ARTSPALMER SQUARE

JEBINCETON

D R E S S M A K I N G ANDALTERATIONS — JaniceWolfe. Call 609-448-2125.

THE 'PROFESSIONALMASSAGE CENTER — forrelief of muscle strain &

.general stress. New Hope, Pa.215-862-9147. We offer giftcertificates.

.Will Custom Make:'drapes, bedspreads,pillows Specializing in^building & covering cornices,lambrequins & headboards.Your fabric. Call 609-448-4642.

ALTERATIONS - customtailoring, drapes & cushioncovers. Done professionally inmy home. 609-443-4323.

DRIVEWAYS — and smalllots plowed. Cellars & atticscleaned. Light hauling. TomO'Brien, 609-586-3640.

PLATING - Silver brass,copper, nickel, gold. Metalpolishing, mirror resilvering.215-193-5483. s

HOW CAN A MEMORY BEPRESERVED? — No betterway than in.. wood.; Nothingmatches for character beautyand utility. If you have or areabout to nave a favorite treedepart for tree heaven, keepits memory complete with achair, table,, or hutch, byKuster. Milled, drawn anddried through the completedwork, many months later.Robert Kuster Woodworkerswants to be the first calledwhen your favorite tree- isabout to become a memory.609-924-2047.

TYPING SERVICES - Allwork done on IBM correctingSelectric.

• addressing and mailing•cassette transcriptions• correspondence• manuscripts• reports• resumes

Also experienced with legalprofession. vPick up anddeliveries. Call Susan 609-890-0826.

TYPIST — offers services inhome. 10 yrs. experience. IBMExec. 609-924-9011.-

WINDOW REPAIRS - Brokenwindows fixed, old puttyreplaced, Hans Klein, 609-734-7198.

TYPING OR TRAN-SCRIPTION by Medical /Legal Secretary. Low rates.Call 201-297-6298 aft. &L30 p.m.

ATTORNEYS - Ease theoverflow typing at your office.PLEADINGS BRIEFS, etc.609-799-1713 after 6:30 p.m.

P A P E R S ! P A P E R S !PAPERS! Got deadlines tomeet! Accurate typist inPrinceton will type yourpapers in her home in IBMSelectric. Call 609-452-1831.Reasonable rates.

COMPLETE MAILINGSERVICES -r Mailing costssky high? Call S;H. & MMailers for down to earth

•prices. 609-924-6694 9 a.m. - 1p.m.

FinancialServices

BUSINESS & PERSONAL —- Taxes prepared by full time"year round Tax Consultant609-448-7171 (day) 8933 eves.

PRINCETON INDUSTRIALDESIGNER — 25 years ex-perience, will help? you putyour new product idea or otherconcepts into picture or modelform. Economically in con-fidence. 609-452-8611 or 452-8606.

COLLEGE SELECTION £

APPLICATION eeiw-SELLING - individuals £small groups. Dr. Michael L.Rosenthal, 609-737-2236.

Too much to do, too little time... LET MITZI DO IT (anerrand service) shopping,party ' planning, tran-sportation, conducting sales,etc. 215-968-2964.

CAR WAXING — Vans,trucks, boats. Free pickupservice. 609-448-5528.

FLOOR SANDING — hard-wood floors sanded andfinished. Phone 609-585-8235.

TILLING £ SOILPREPARATION — for your,vegetable or flower garden.Reasonable. 201-249-4938.

ALTERATIONS - Will dorepairs £ sewing in my home.609-799-3628.

HARRIS JANITORIALSERVICES - Home or office.Weekly or monthly rates. 609-882-2251. Fully insured.

LAWNCUTTING — call 609-799-0315 for free estimate. Askfor Blair.

D R E S S M A K I N G —Alterations, designing,wedding apparel. 201-469-9013.

ALTERATIONS— women £children's wear by Me.Marcel le. For made to order £by hand service. 609-443-3277.

HOUSEKEEPERS, Com-panions, health aides tem-porary parents live in. full orpart tune. We meet your everyneed. Call Helping Hand 201-842-8788.

INSULATION — save money& fuel. Old £ new homes. Nojob too small. AU types FYPPest f*Io obligation. Insured.J £ S Foam Insulation"Co. 201-'521-1249.

SPRING IS THE TIME - tospray your trees to rid them ofover wintering pests beforethey do their damage. Call thespray specialist, Tree Care,Inc. 201-297-9300 local fromPrinceton.

CESSPOOLSAND

SEPTIC TANKSCLEANED

7 Trucks - No Waiting

, RUSSELL REID CO.

20 Years Experience201-873-2534 201-356-5800

LAMP SHADES — Lampmounting and repairs. NassauInteriors, 162 Nassau St.,Princeton.

CUSTOM WOOD WORK byexpert, experienced craft-sman. Wood articles made tosuit your needs. Lumber cut tosize for your projects. Woodturning and shaping. Smallprojects preferred. 609-882-5835after 6 "p.m.

NEED HELP WITH YOURREMODELING IDEAS?Custom Carpentry. CallSANGEET SINGH, 609-799-8238..

CARPET CLEANING - steam& shampoo. Quality wOrk atbest prices! Phone estimates.Paulmar Floor Care, 609-890-0518.

DRIVEWAYS REGRADEDAND STONED. Asphalt drivesinstalled. Top soil £ stonedelivered. 201-297-9301. Localfrom Princeton.

ROGERS UPHOLSTERY;DOES MORE — In addition to,our fine custom upholstery, wealso sell £ install vertical &,horizontal blinds, wovenwoods, draperies £ slipcovers JCall us too for decoratorpillows, and decorating ad-vice. Free shop at homeservice. 609-799-2807.

C A R P E T ' CLEANING1

SPECIAL — Any size roomsteam cleaned by experts.$19.95. New Dawn. 201-446-4313.

CARPENTER — experiencedin home and farm im-provements, additions,renovations. Quality work,free estimates. Call 201-526-6572 after 5 p.m.

AVAMIANAppliance

. Repair & ServiceAir Conditioning" WashersRefrigeration DryersHeating DishwashersRanges, etc. Reasonable!!!!

All work Guaranteed_609-443-6904 or 609443-6989

TREE WORK — ALL TYPESPruning, Topping, Feeding,Removal, Storm Damage,Land Clearing £ ChipperService. Firewood £ woodchips available. Competentwork at a fair price. Fullyinsured. Free estimates.Consumer bureau registered.609-737-3126.

PRATICO'S CLEANINGSERVICE — experthousecleaning. Call 609-396-8735.

CUSTOMMADESLIPCOVERS

-BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME1

°YEAR ROUND - Your fabric-Labor only. Call for yardage

•needed. References onrequest. BOB'S SLIPCOVERS609-655-1573.

RELIABLE — help in house oroffice cleaning, gardening,you name it. Reasonablerates. 201-249-4938.

WINDOW REPAIRS - Brokenwindows fixed, old puttyreplaced, Hans Klein, 609-734-7198.

Home Repairs

MASdN -i- Plastered orsheetrock walls, ceilings,holes, cracks repaired. Moatall masonry repairs.Sheetrock taping, spackling,finishing done. Call Edward,Gudat (609) 466-3437.

CUSTOM HOME REPAIR -carpentry, dry wall. We caterto; all kinds of home repair.609-924-1760.

CARPENTRY

ADDITIONS REMQI __KITCHENS "R^STORATIOIi

CUSTOM BARNS

CHIMNEY SWEEPfireplace, wood/coal burningstoves. Clean, efficientvacuum system. A dirtvchimney is a fire hazzard. CallRobert Ackers HOMECOMFORT 609^66-3011.

609-259-7940 Peter Wikoff

Painting &Paperhanging

PROFESSIONAL PAPERHANGING £ PAINTING - CallManuel 609-799-4160.

CUSTOM PAINTING SER-.!• v « "• .--------=r- - - - - VICE — Residential, com-PROVEMENTS — Carpentry, mercial. Interior, exterior. Allroofing, siding, int. £ ext. work guaranteed. Call now forpainting, insulation £ Special Spring >ates. 10 yearsscreening. 609:466 )926. ; _. experience. 609-924-1760.

CARPENTRY ALTERA-' TIONS, ADDITIONS. No jobtoo large or too small. DougRenk Builders, MonmouthJunction. 201-821-6080t 329-

. 2489.

MASONRY £ CARPENTRYWORK — Fireplaces, ad-ditions* remodeling, kitchens£ home improvements. Freeestimates. W.A. Wortelman.

.£09-448-0165.

<&RAMTCTTIJ£ REFXnCJtile installed permanently withnew cement Doard. Bathroomremodeling, lowest prices.Tile for do-it-yourselfers..DELAWARE VALLEY TILE,;29 years of experience. 609-888-•1067.

CARPENTRY — Expertcraf t smanship withreasonable rates. All phases ofconstruction: We will help youdesign your ideas. Over 20 yrs.experience. 201-297-7080.

SMALL HOME REPAIRS -my specialty. Charles H. VanNote, Carpenter, 10 LakeviewAve., Kingston, N.J. 08528.'Please call 609-921-8663 after5:30 p.m.

D £ F HANDxMEN — alltypes of home improvements,courteous service - estimates.201-251-4469.

CARPENTER — CABINETMAKER — wants moonlightwork, good quality, reasonablerates. Small jobs welcome.609-466-0782.

PROFESSIONAL — floorstripping and waxing.Reasonable, rates. BestCleaning Co. 201-462-3377.

REPAIR PARTS — for all,'major appliances. Vacuum'cleaner bags, belts £ repairs,Bunce Appliance Parts, 255No Main St., Manville. 201-722-2922. .

ALL TYPES ROOFING*.CONCRETE AND CAR-PENTRY WORK. 201-521-2790.

G £ R BUILDERS - Generalcontractors. Additions £alterations. Brickwork £fireplaces, patios, aluminumsiding. Free estimates. 609-799-0753, 799-1779.

FASTER SERVICE - 7 days,24 hours service torrefrigerator, air conditioner,electrical heater and elec-trical trouble. Licensed withreasonable rates; 609-921-9495.

HOME REPAIRS — gutters,roofs, garages, porches,fences, hauling, landscaping,pruning, painting, minorplumbing, insulation, masonrypatching, basements, stairs,glazing, etc. References. 609-921-1135.

EXPERT HANDYPERSON -No job too small. Efficient andreliable. Call Eric, 609-924-5792.

MASTER CRAFTS — Qualityhome improvements £ repairsdone with old fashioned pride.Reasonable rates. 201-297-0080.

BuildingServices

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

New homes, additions,garages, drivewaySj roofing,custom masonry, fireplaces,swimming pools and patios.Full line of aluminumproducts.

WM. FISHER BUILDER'SINC.

Serving Princeton area for 30years. Financing arranged.

609-799-3818

CARPENTER — desiresweekend £ evening work. 609-397-0991. , ,

TOP SOIL - fill dirt; sand,driveway. stone, firewood,junk hauled away. 609-394-5921anytime.

PRINCETONDISPOSAL SERVICERt. 130 £ Half Acre Rd.

Cranbury, N.J.609-395-1389

Home and IndustryGarbage, Trash, Rubbish

RemovedHauling of all Types

HOMESTEAD CHIMNEYSWEEP ^-'Full-tune year-round, Reliable Service.Inspections. Repairs. Capsinstalled. Member ChimneySweep Guild. Fully Insured.References. 201-735-7708. Seead in Yellow Pages.

INTERIOR £ EXTERIORPAINTING — free estimates,:reasonable rates, clean workw

'.Call T. Laski_609-799-1462. .

TAINTING paper hanging -Paper removal wall resur-:facing exc. references, 16Vrates quality work. Call 609-921-0690.

NANAK'S SERVICESProfessional Painters

Interior & ExteriorCustom Paper Hanging

Longstanding ReputationLocal References

Fully Insured609-799-8238

RESfDgNTIALCOMMERCIAL

PETER FIUMENERO, JR.PAINTING

. &PAPERHANGINGSPRAY PAINTING

609-799-3657 eves.

BROTHERS II - Home im-provements maintfinam?Aservice. No j o b top big, no jobtoo "small, Estimates. 609-448-6183.

ROOFING CONTRACTORS,specializing in Kendall Parkhomes. For estimate, call alt.6 p.m., 201-821-8439.

IF YOU NEED Painting,Panelling, Gen'l Carpentry £Reiat«r Skilled Work to bedone, call Jim. 201-297-6792.

CARPENTRY £ PAINTING -int. £ ext. remodelling,roofing, drywall taping, smallmasonry jobs, handymanwork, rets. Call Tony anytime,609-466-3078.

PAPER HANGINGSCRAPING

Prompt personal service. Alltypes of wall covering.

Free estimatesDan Rudenstine

609-585-9376

PAINTING—Interior, ex-terior, wallpapering, lightcarpentry. Quality work. CallJohn: 609-655-1598/655-2015.

INTERIOR HOUSE PAIN-TING '— with quality work-manship and an eagerness toplease. 201-874-3347.

PAINTING £ :PAPERHANGING —-FrankJanda, 292 Dutch Neck Rd.Call(609) 448-3578.

LYONS PAINTING, INC. —specializing in quality custominterior £ exterior painting.Over 25 years trade exp.residential £ commercial. Nojob too small to receiveprofessional attention. Freeestimates £ refs. available.609-397-2992.HILLSIDE BUILDERS, INC

General Contractors

All types masonry £ ceramic HOUSEPAINTING BY DON"-tile work. New construction as exterior & interior. Freewell as repair work.. 609-921- estimate. Call 609-448-5782.9099. .

FOR EVERYTHING underthe sun call John W. Hoff andAssoc. Backhoe services,driveway stone, septics, ad-ditions, alterations and more!609-466-3730 eves.

FRANK J. CLEARY - con-tractor. All types of concretework. Free estimates. 609-466-

12776.

PAINTING — Int. £ Ext. Goodreferences. Reasonable rates.Call between 6 £ 7 p.m. 609-921-6369 or 924-4734.

Painting &Paperhanging

DARBEE BROS.Interior £ exterior painting £home repairs. Fully insured.Free estimates. 609-882-0891 cr924-7726.

MIKEN QUALITY PAINrTING£PANELLlNG-callKenor Mike after 6pm, 609-443-6632.

CHRIS "WORAM £ CREW —Interior, Exterior painting.Experienced £ insured. 201-674-3347 (local call).

BOLLETIN PAINTINGQuality Workmanship

Reasonable PricesInsured-Free estimates

609-921-1192, 924-3308

ARTiSAN PAINTING £HOME REPAIR - low rates,free estimates. Call anytime.609-737-2227. .

DONIMICK PINTINALLI JR.— Painting Contractor - In-terior £ exterior. Residential£ commercial. Freeestimates. Call any time, 609-882-1631.

PAINTING £PAPERHANGING — Airlessspraying. All work guaran-teed. G. Dafgard, 201-968-0322.

PROFESSIONAL PAINTING— Int. £ Ext. Plaster, dry wall£ masonry repairs. Call Bobor Tom, 609-921-6173.

ElectriciansELECTRICIAN

Residential, Commercial,Industrial Wiring

Free estimates609443-523?

EXPERT " ELECTRICALWORK—Free est., old houses,welcome. No job too smaL.Diamond Electric, 201-722-5176.

N.W. MAUL £ SONU.S. Hwy. 130 £ Griggs Drive-

201-329-4656

' Repair ServiceElecfrical Power £

Lighting InstallationsIndustrialMaintenance

WM. S. NEIGHAN — Service& Insulation. License #5703.609-587-4330 after 7 p.m.

ELECTRICAL WORK — nowaiting, reasonable. LicenseNo. 3143. Call 201-356-7373before ,9 a.m. or after 6 p.m.

ALL T'/PES OF ELEC-TRICAL V.'ORK. Call 201-3i%3387.

WANT THE JOB DONERIGHT? Call a professional.Painting, dry wall, masonry.Free estimates, reasonableprices. W.F.P. CONTRAC-TORS, 609-924-6300.

RoofingG. J. DEGREE - Roofing.Gutters, masonary, GeneralContracting, Repairs. Smalljobs welcome as well as majorconstruction. 609-448-1395.

ROOFING - repairs £remodeling. Quality work-manship. Call John's Roofing£ Repair. 201-329-6309 or 297-7812.

BAUER ROOFING KendallPark homes. Free estimates.201-297-2388.

CHRISTENSEN ROOFINGAsphalt Shingling

withCraftsmanship

atUnbeatable Prices

Guaranteed, , . InsuredConsumer Bureau Registered184 Carter Rd. Princeton609-921-1277 609-924-7737

Moving &Hauling

MOVING YOURSELF - in arented truck, but need anotherenergetic person? I'll helpload, unload, £ drive thickanywhere for vou. $6 . Bfirhour. Bob, 201-545-8524.

BEE LINE EXPRESS —H o u s e h o l d m o v e r s .Reasonable rate. Freeestimates. 201-526-0646.

FURNITURE, bedding, ap-pliances and household goods,moving and deliveries. Ourprice may be less than doing ityourself. 201-356-8288 or 201-356-6871.

WILL HAUL IT—Cellars,,attics and garages cleaned.Call 609-799-1680. ConsumerBureau Registered.

HAULING — ANYTHING,ANYPLACE, ANYTIME. 609-882-0891, 609-924-7726.

ALTERATIONS £ AD- CUSTOM I N T E R I O RD I T I O N S , s k y l i g h t s , PAINTING - no job too small,greenhouses, basements, free estimates, reasonableTeennouses, Dasemeiiis, »»<=«= » i u u a i » , icaauuauic . , ,, i.._w:—*•leeks, windows, etc. Free est'. prices. Willis Paine, 609-924- /epair of all your pUimbmg, j _ _ ! ««, «'n n « Rinn needs. Lie #5648. 201-297-7538.£ design. 201-238-5538.

NELSON GLASS £ALUMINUM

45 SPRING ST.PRINCETON609-924-2880MIRRORS

AUTO GLASSPLATE £ WINDOW GLASS

MASON — Concrete, brick,block, repairs £ other types ofwork. Free est. John. 609-882-1696.

6300.

PAINTING— Int. £ ext., guar.work - low rates. Call after 6p.m. 201-469-4836.

PAINTING—HOME IM-'PROVEMENTS - Roofs £gutters. Free estimates. 201-249-9028.

CAPITOL PAINTING — in-terior £ exterior, reasonablerates, fully insured. 609-883-1537. • •

J.A. CONSTRUCTION —Patios, sidewalks, asphalt andstone driveways. ;Good,.,reliable work at low price.Free estimates. Call 201-369-3128.

ALL .TYPES of excavating:land clearing; septic systems,drains; drivewaySt'ihstalled:cut out, stoned o r w e d ; call;Al Padgett (201) 359-3735 after.5 p.m.

CUSTOM {CARPENTRYremodelling; restorations, >

•additions, General carpentry.Quality work only. Please callScott Demme before 7am orafter 6pm, 6094244469.

CHRISTENSEN PAINTINGWe do the complete jobwith special attention to

•Recurring problems•Correct Preparation•Choice of materials

Invest with a Professional184 Carter Rd. Princeton609-921-1277 609-924-7737Free Troubleshooting Advice

Gardening &Landscaping

CHAMPION LAWN SERVICE—complete lawn care, weeklymaintenance, fertilizationplans, landscaping, rauroaalies installed, sodding, andmore. Call now for your freeestimate. 201-846-6184.

SCENIC CREATIONS, INC..Designing and planting, lawnmaintenance , sodding.Commercial and residential.Free estimates. Call 609-890-9086.

PAINTING. For the best ratesaround, call Paul, 201-821-7886aft. 6.

PAINTING — Int. £ Ext. Freeestimates. Low rates. Qualitywork £ satisfaction guaran-

• teed. 201-297-4266.

LANDSCAPING

Free estimates, inquire early.B £ S Nursery 201-356-2627.

BLACKMAN LANDSCAPING

Creative designQuality plants .

Reasonable rates

609-466-2693

ROTOTILLING — and lawnmowing. Call after 5 pm, 609-924-3362.

. n •

JOHN CIFELLI, ElectricalContractor, residential ,commercial £ industrialwiring. 609-921-3238.

Plumbing

PARK ACRES PLUMBING £HEATING — Installation £

PLUMBING - Lie #4621. Needa plumber, free estimates -alltypes of plumbing. Call Mik«anythne.day or night. Phone609-586-0266.

Roofing & Siding

ROOFINGAU Kinds

Free Estimates

WILLIAMSONCONSTRUCTION CO.

609-921-1184

BELLEMEAD ROOFING—28yrs. in . -business. Freeestimates on all type roofingand tedders and gutters and',chimney flashing. Callanytime, 609-924-2040 or 201-359-5992 (local call froirPrinceton)

ALLIED ROOFING^New andold roofs of all types repaired...Fill and driveway stone'delivered. All work guaran-teed. No job too small. 609-448-.5707. Free estimates.

Need a new car?Check the Classified pages.

Plan ahead for your roofingneeds.NEW ROOFS REPAIRS,

LIGHT MOVING — £Hauling. Good references.Reasonable rates. Call bet. 6 £7 p.m. 609-921-6369 or.924-4734.

ATTICS, . . RAaEMgafages cleaned^ oui.hauling and moving. 201-359-3402.

LIGHT HAULING £ LOCAIiDELIVERY SERVICE — Big-£ small jobs. Call Bob 609 883-2657.

LIGHT HAULING DONE —Day, 609-448-2097 Evenings,'448-7341.

Gardening &Landscaping

YOUR TREES WILL NEEDall the help they "can get thisSpring after the temperatureswe have had this winter. CallTree Care about their hydro-chemical liquid feedingprocess £ its benefits to yourtrees health £ improvedgrowth care. 201-297-9300, localfrom Princeton.

HUBER'S LAWN SERVICECOMPLETE LAWN

MAINTENANCEs

Sod £ reseeding Maintenance£ planting of trees £ shrubs.All work guaranteed. 609-586-4505 after 6 pm.

PROFESSIONAL LAWN —Service £ Landscapingprograms. Lawn £ GardenCare gardens rototilled. Call609-466-2359. 7 :

GARDENS ROTOTILLED -call Walt Barnish after 4 pm,201-359-3524. • ' ,

MACLAURY LANDSCAPINGDoug Maclaury Landscapearchitect specializing inresidential design and land-scape construction. 609-737-2883.

ROTOTILL YOUR GARDEN$15 min., aged & handicapped,free. 609-883-0101'.

' ROTOTILLING - done foryou - My Miller - Reasonableprice. 609-397-2018 or 397-2510.

HORSE MANURE - cars $1or pickups'we will load for $5.609-466-2932.

HANGING Baskets - Manyvarieties.. $4.50. QualityGeraniums. Buy from grower.Tindall's Greenhouses. 609-259-24?l. ,-

UAWN MAINTENANCE -Commercial £ Residential. 7years experience. Call Le RoyDiefenbach 609-448-4757.

ROTOTILLING — Gardens,Flowerbeds. Lawns, etc.Custom work at reasonablerates. Call after 5f:30, 609-448-1318.

DLM LANDSCAPING *-Complete fawn care, land-scaping patios, decks, sod,

Troad tie walls. 201-722-1762.

TREE WORK — ALL TYPESPruning, Topping, Feeding,Removal, Storm Damage,Land Clearing £ ChipperService. Firewood £ wood

' chips available. Competent,work at a fair price. Fullyinsured. Free estimates.Consumer bureau registered.609-737-3126.

rai

818 York Rd., Hightstown,NJ 08520(609) 448-0436

Professional Designsand Installations

We make dreams that grow!

BOB'S LAWN SERVICE —Also cleanup and fertilizer.

1 Call 609-883-8529.

GARDENS TILLED. Call.LeRoy Diefenbach 609-448-4757.

ROTOTILLING — gardens,flower beds,- new lawns, fastservice. 201-297-3196.

Landscape Designingand

Contracting609-924-1221

SEA WEED—Liquified orjgranular. The ideal jplant"vitamin. At Feterjoffi Nur£,sery, Rt. .206 beweeh "Prin-ceton £ Lawrenceville.

. COOPER &SCHAFER63Morah Princeton

609424-2063

LAWN CUTTING WANTED -Reasonable rates. Excellentwork. Call 609-921-9558.

GEORGE'S GREENERY

Landscape Design &Maintenance v

Commercial & ResidentialLawn cutting, spraying,

fertilizing and field tuttingFront end loader rental

609-392-8237

LANDSCAPING £ GAR-DENING WORK —•Residential or Commercial.Lawn mowing, sod, seeding,shrubs, trees, clean-up £hauling. Also sidewalks, patio,

^fencing, driveways con-structed. Back Hoe service,top, soil, railroad ties, etc. 609-924-9555 anytime.

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HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE8-B Week of April 18 - 20,1979

Town <£ Country OUTSTANDING WEIDEL LISTINGSOne of this areas oldest, largest and most active Real Estate Companies.

Specialists Since 1915

SPRING IS HEREwith summer not far behind! Why not enjoy the seasons tothe fullest. Townhouse living affords you the time to swimin the community pool, vacation in far-off places, fish orindulge in whatever your special pleasures are - there are nolawns to cut or landscaping to take care of, in fact, nooutside maintenance of any kind, so just relax and enjoy.Our bright and immaculate 3 bedroom, 2'/2 bathtownhouse located just about 8 miles from Princeton isready to move right into - all the appliances, wall to wallcarpeting, curtains, light fixtures, central air, TV antennaare there. Only $59,900.

LOVELY t O LOOK ATand even more delightful to own is our recently listed 4bedroom, 2>/£ bath bi-level in convenient West Windsor.Priced 'right for early sale, this is too good a buy to stay onthe market for long. Excellent landscaping with maturetrees and a 2-car garage that has been insulated andpanelled are but two of the features that make this propertyespecially attractive at $89,900.

SINGLE? SMALL FAMILY?There's a marvelous 2 bedroom, 2 bath condominiumwaiting for you in nearby East Windsor. Take advantage ofthe merits of home ownership without the maintenanceresponsibilities. Included in the monthly maintenance feesare lawn and landscaping care, exterior painting andrepairs, garbage pick up, snow removal, swim club, privateclubhouse facilities, tennis, assigned parking and more.Shopping and N.Y. commuter bus right there.-Beautifulupgraded carpeting, upgraded appliances, refrigerator,washer/dryer, window treatments and tasteful decoratingmake this one of the best values around today. . . . $34,500.

2421/2 NASSAU ST., PRINCETON609-921-2700

SOME BRIGHT NEW ARRIVALS

OH WOW!Look what we have listed in the beautiful Pennington Boroa gorgeous colonial cape cod with 8 rooms, 3 or 4bedrooms, living room with stone fireplace, finishedbasement game room and its immaculate - don't delay -call737-1500 its only $74,500.

IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE HOUSEHere's a large handsome colonial with a total of 11 rooms,2lA baths that includes a superb 5 room office suitepresently used as a Doctor Residence and office and itsgorgeous for . . ' .'. $94,500.

JUST A MINUTE!That's all it will take for you to realize this immaculate 8room split level is a super investment for $54,900 - call 737-

. 1501 for your inspection. . - •

THE CROWNING TOUCH!We are proud to add this huge colonial cape to our "brightnew arrival list" it offers elegance, charm and qualitythroughout the 7 rooms and 2 tile baths and the setting isabsolutely gorgeous with private garden areas and it'sconvenient to everything for . . . . . . . . $83,500.

ROUTE 31, PENNINGTON, N.J.609-737-1500 609-882-3804

I

DESIGNED WITH MOTHER IN MIND - Carefulbuyers be sure to see the value in this 3 bedroom home. Ithighlights ultra-modern kitchen, panelled family room, fullbasement, and attached garage. The many extras include:central vacuum system, storm windows and doors, screens,humidifier, attic fan and central air conditioning. Allcombine to make living easy and very comfortable. Priceda t . . . $68,500.

V. A. 8]/2 ASSUMPTION to qualified buyer is only one ofthe fine features of this room four bedroom ranch in lovelyHillside Terrace. Large living room with fireplace, ultra-modern eat-in kitchen, spacious dining room with chairrail, side entry, 2 car garage, enormous basement with out-side entrance. Maintenance free brick and aluminum sidingmake this a value packed offering at

: . $81,500.

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NEW SPRING LISTINGS'

PRICE REDUCTION - Georgeous Devonshire splitlocated on a beautifully landscaped lot. Quality is evidenteverywhere - in the no-wax vinyl entry foyer, plush creamcarpeting in the living room and dining room and elegantdecor. There are three bedrooms, 2Vi baths, first levellaundry room, 2 car attached garage and most important -eye appeal inside and out. First time offered at the reducedprice of \ . .$90,000.

ROUTE 130, EAST WINDSORI 609-448-6200

BUILDER'S CUSTOM CONTEMPORARY - Brick and Iframe exterior, large foyer, family room with bar andbookcases, 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2V£ baths, C/A, basement, 1car garage, nice corner lot in Norgate I section ofLawrenceville, and just minutes from Princeton. In the$80's.

J-'<v

IDEAL FOR PROFESSIONALS - Immaculate expandedcolonial split set up as office and residence. Lovely settingon a cul-de-sac in Lawrenceville, huge elegant foyer, familyroom, massive living room, formal dining room, ultramodern kitchen, 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, basement, 1car garage, inter-com and central vac system. . . Mid $80'».

: % • •

UNIVERSITY PARK - Well kept custom split located ina most desirable area of Lawrenceville that is withinwalking distance to Rider College, golf course, bus lines.Floor to ceiling fireplace in living room, new w/w car-peting, panelled family room with bar and refrigerator, 4bedrooms, 2 ^ baths, screened rear porch, oversizedgarage.. .j. $93,500.

2681 MAIN ST. (RT. 206)LAWRENCEVILLE 609-896-1000

11 Offices to Serve You and 6 Multiple Listing Servies to Serve You

VALUflSION WEIDEL REAL ESTATEExterior Color Photos REALTORS — INSURORS

Richard A. Weidei Pres,International Relocation Service

Gardening & Gardening &Landscaping Landscaping

VIC P1RONE — Landscaping& Lawn Maintenance. Com-mercial, Residential & In-dustrial. Irrigation in-stallation. Registered forspaying. 609-448-7285.

FOR ALL KINDS OF LAWNSERVICE including mowing,raking, etc. Please call609-771-1176.

MR. LUPA'S — Tree Trim-ming Service. Now taking onSummer reservations & newaccounts. Eves. 609-883-7446.

V

Thomas Lee FisherComplete Lawn Service

Free Estimates-609-882-6964

TREE SERVICE — Freees t imate s , Pennington,Princeton & Hopewell areas.Fully insured. Eves after 7pm,609-466-2666.

GARDENING & LAND-SCAPING - I f you need gar-dening and-landscaping, lawnmowing for RESIDENTIAL &commercial just call VittorioPirone, 609-924-6489.

LAWN & GARDEN MAIN-TENANCE — pruning &mulching. Also indoor plantcare. 609-448-5031 after 6 p.m.

ECLIPSE MOWER — Reeltype, 30" cut, perfect cond.w/sulky, $125. 2 row cornplanter, $150. 609-799-3785.

ROTOTILLING — 20 c squareyard. 609-883-7553 after 4 p.m.weekdays.

TRIPLE A IiAWN SERVICE.Dependable grass cutting.Free est. Residential &commercial. Serving So.Brans, area. Call 201-329-6354or 201-329-4565.

GARDEN ROTOTILLING —Hopewell , Hil lsborough,Montgomery & Princetonareas, 609-466-3873.

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Gardening &Landscaping

ROTOTILLING — garden &lawn work, dependable. 609-396-0988 or 921-3163, 9am-9pm.

ROTOTILLING LAWNS &GARDENS — 609-443-4354.

HAVE GEORGE MILLER —plow or rototill your garden.609-448-2015.

GARDENS TILLED —LANDSCAPING. Call now!Tom O'Brien, 609-586-3640.

LAWN SERVICE — land-scaping, clean-up, mowing,edging. Seasonal price,reasonable. 609-695-0596, 586-3055.

ROTOTILLING — finestequipment, reasonable rates,expert service. Call 609-924-0714, ask for David.

HIGH VALLEY LAND-SCAPING —Trees and shrubsplanted, also pruning. Call 609-466-1872.

Gardening & Gardening &Landscaping Landscaping

Wanted To Rent Wanted To Rent Wanted To Rent Wanted To Rent

HORIZON LANDSCAPE INC-— Landscape Architects andContractors, MiddlesexCounty, N.J. 201-721-7435. :

I WILL — Rototill your gar-den. Minimum $15. 609-883-0101.

MANURE ,— mixed withstraw, peat moss, or inertshavings: Mulch, aged woodchips. Delivery available. 609-924-7012 eves.

GARDENERS - Large varietyof vegetable & flower plants,Geraniums & HangingBaskets. Also dried flowertype plants (Spatice,Eucalyptus, etc) Buy directfrom grower. Save $$. TindallsGreenhouses, Sharon Rd. 609-259-2431.

TOP SOIL, STONE &' FILXe-Bulidozer work, trenching aa>*Lland clearing. 201-297-9224 or297-3091.

DO YOU NEED — a man to doLawn Service & Garden work,for all occasions. Anytime 609-882-4078.

MANY EVERGREENS —$2.95 each Ten for $27.50. ScottLawn Products large sale. 2-3"Pots 2 C each. Hanging P6ts$1.00. See and Save Leyrer &Smith Garden Center 2020Greenwood Ave., Trenton.Open 7 Days, 609-587-3333.

ROTOTILLING — we use aTroy Bilt rototiller. After 6pm,609^48-4852.

Paving

DRIVEWAYCONSTRUCTION

& MAINTENANCEWe've been serving Central

Jersey for over 12 years.UMBERTO PIRONE

609-452-9182

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTED— with asphalt, crushed stoneor concrete. Back Hoe service,top soil, etc. 609-924-9555anytime.

To Place aClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

PRINCETON — youngprofessional male, seekshouse or apt., furnished orunfurnished. June 1 to aug.31st. or 1 yr. lease. Approx.$600. Days 215-785-5561. Eves:609-924-0359.

RESPONSIBLE COUPlrf —seeks 2/3 bdrm. rentil inPrinceton beginning May orJune. No children, local refs.Call 609-924-5548.

MATURE — refined emblbvedwoman wants clean, guiet, 3rm. apmt. in private home,May 1 or June 1. Good tenantin return for modest rent. 609-452-6535, 587-8874.

WANTED — Unfurnishedhouse for rent. Single adultprofessional male seeks 2 or 3bdrm. house, May l or before.Must have fireplace, garden,privacy, attractive location. Inor around Princeton. To $600.Will take best possible care.Call 609-921-1410 or 737,1297.

WANTED — Unfurnishedhouse for rent. Single adultprofessional male seeks 2 or 3br. house, May 1 or before.Must have fireplace, garden,privacy, attractive location inor around Princeton. To $600.Will take best possible care.Call 609421-1410 or 737-1297.

FORMER EWING TWP. -retired couple now living inFlorida wishes to rent a fur-nished house or apartment forthe months of June throughSept. or part thereol. Nochildren or pets. Best ofreferences;Prefer Ewing&/orLawrence Twps. or Yardleyarea. Write full particulars toJ. A. Turner, 1057 ForestLakes Drive, Naples, fla.33942.

QUIET MALE GRAD —Student, 30 seeks small un-furnished apartment. Generalajea of Princeton. Call 609-924-8018 or 201-249-2879, ask forRon.

ROOM WANTED — Mon-Fri.by male IBM employee, mid-May thru Aug. Box 369Lehigh Univ. Bethlehem, Pa.18015.

BEEN HIBERNATING — allWinter looking for new den.Landscape architect andpianist looking for Juneapartment. 609-921-1054.

TWO RESPONSIBLE —professional women, mid 20'sseeking 2 bedroom apt! inPrinceton-Lawrence area.Call early mornings or lateevenings, 609-771-0965 or eves.452-3733, ask for Nancy..

RUTGERS PROFESSOR &FAMILY - (2 kids, no pets, nosmoking) need to rent homebeginning July 1,1979 for 12 +months. Princeton or RockyHill preferred. Phone 613-542-8936 (collect) or write: Prof.Calvin Martin, Dept. ofHistory, Queen's University,Kingston, Canada, K7L3N6.

RURAL HOUSE, low rent inexchange for upkeep. 201-821-9269 or 201-297-5551.

MATURE MALE — desiressmall house or apt. Lam-bertville - Hopewell area.Reply P.O. Box 7, Ringoes,N.J. 08551.

EFFICIENCY or studioapartment wanted by youngprofessional working atPrinceton University, Prin-ceton, Lawrenceville, orKingston area. 1 year lease orlonger. Need garage space formotorcycle. References. 609-683-2229 days.

QUIET RESPONSIBLECOUPLE — prefers modestunfurnished apt. 1-2 bdrms.Hopewell, Princeton, Kingston& north. Cellar or garage areal plus. 201-295-4620.

PROFESSIONAL WOMANwants 2-3 or 4 room apt.Furnished or unfurnished.Pleasant surroundings inPrinceton or close by 609-924- •5975.

FEMALE REPORTER —seeks room for rent in privatehome for part of week.Princeton, Lawrencevillearea. 609-882-5252, ext. 356(Diana) after 8pm or 201-656-8842, wknds.

WANTED TO RENT — 3 BRunfurn. house for adult couple.Husband P.U. employee.Reply to Box #02390 c/oPrinceton Packet.

RENTAL HOME NEEDED —English family of 4, visitinghere approximately mid Julyto mid August, wish to rentfurnished home in Princetonfor this period. 609-921-6635.

MAGAZINE EDITOR -. seekssmall cottage or efficiencyapt. to rent from, July 1. Calleves. 609-921-1873. -

DOCTOR SEEKS one or.twobedroom apartment or housein or between Princeton andNew Brunswick. 24 answeringservice. Dr. Ellin 201-2464110.

v.y

Week of April 18- 20,1979 9-B

Houses...Of Course IFrom Hopewell (466-2550) From Belle Mead (874-5191) From Princeton (921-2776)

This distinctive and unique Colonial Split situated in a superb location of MontgomeryTownship is a jump ahead of the market. Spacious entrance foyer, living room with bay NEW LISTING - Lawrence Township - immaculate 4 bedroom, 2 bath Ranch. Stone andwindow overlooking quiet street on cul-de-sac, formal dining room, party size family room brick exterior, ideal location for shoppers, schools, commuters $97,000.Reminiscent of an old Edgartown Captains house, but right here on Tree-lined E. Delaware with fireplace afford the best for entertaining;. 4 or 5 generously sized bedrooms, 2V4 baths.

Avenue. Large living room with formal brick fireplace, dining room with, colonial corner In addition to the expected accoutrements there is central air,cupboard, efficient kitchen with separate breakfast room and pantry, bookcase lined study. garage all on a lovely country acre. Impossible to duplicate at this p r i c e . . . . . . . . . $122,900.playroom and laundry room with wet bar and full bath on first. Four bedrooms, solarium.screened porch and 2 full baths complete the second floor.Exquisite and very private rear garden with old shade $125,000.

ENJOY SPRING+AND ALL THE SEASONS in this attractive four bedroom, 2V4 bathcolonial in the Pine Knoll section of Lawrence Township. Entry foyer—step up living room.dining room, panelled family room off kitchen. Screened back porch, central air, two car

— . . . . . • _ . r . • i i i i #__ • / M-. 11_- garage. Lovely lot with mature plantings—perfect neighborhood for growing familyto schools, convenient for commuters and shopping.NEW LISTING IN HOPEWELL BORO

ROCKY HILL BOROUGHOne of those older Victorians - That so many want but seldom come on the market is now On a quiet side road off of Route 518 in a picture-book town of Montgomery, a charming

_ _ ? _ _ . »• <• ' * • » - t . i i i i _ _ * i ; *available. On a quiet street with 1.6 acres overlooking beautiful open countryside. 3 stories Colonial with comfort and contemporary ambience. Entry hall, long sunken living roomwith sun porch, entrance foyer, 2 living rooms, with sliding oak doors, dining room, kitchen. with fireplace, 5th bedroom or. study/office, spectacular eat-in kitchen with customwalk-in pantry and a full bath on the first floor. 5 bedrooms and 2 more full baths on the cabinets, and Jennaire range, a mudroom and utility area. On second floor, a lovely Mastersecond plus a heated room on the third. 2 car garage, garden, and fruit trees in the rear. A Bedroom with bath and closets, 2 baths and 3 large sunny bedrooms. A panelled and car-

find at •' $116,400. peted basement cellar provide both a family room and a carpenter's area. Two car garageMidway between Somerviue, Princeton,

Brunswicks. This very special home — a mini-estate within a neighborhood on a full acre offormal landscaped gardens, shaded by mature trees. Countless extras - custom ceramic tile.wall to wall carpeting, solarian kitchen floor covering, gourmet kitchen make this an extraordinary home. • $128,500

BEAUTIFUL TOWN-SIZED LOT.LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP COLONIAL ONLarge living room with fireplace, formal dining room, brand new kitchen and den on thefirst floor. On the second, three oversized bedrooms and two baths. A fantastic family roomwith wet bar in the basement. Asking . . . • $92,500

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIPNEW LISTING IN PENNINGTON BORO - Attractive older home on a quiet, tree linedIf you're looking for QUALITY CONSTRUCTION with 3 bedrooms, this Ranch could fitstreet in town. This home is in mint condition and boasts four large bedrooms, living room.

dining room, den, kitchen and 1VS baths. Spend your summer evenings on the screened the bill. A very basic house offering living room w/fireplace, spacious dining room, kitchenw/built-in breakfast set, 2 full baths, family room w/fireplace, screened-in porch, 2 carporch and watch your garden grow.garage, 4 zone heat. VERY LOW HEAT COSTS! Picturesque lot with all kinds of fruitCall soon. This won't last long!trees, evergreens and flowers .$85,900.

A LIVING HOME ADJACENT TO PRINCETONIn King3ton area, perfect for the commuter to Brunswick , Newark, N. Y.C.etc. N.Y. busstops at the corner: First owner-owned, custom 3year-old Concord Colonial with mansardroof, 4 large bedrooms, LR.. lovely kitchen with island and breakfast area, panelled familyroom with brick fireplace, sliding doors to rear terrace, full basement. All amenities, centralair, utility area off of kitchen, two car garage on half acre in Kingston Acres, only 7 milesfrom University activities and Lake Carnegie. Owner transferred

Asking $104,000.

A CLASSIC COLONIAL IN KOCKY HILL! The original house with gracious andNEW LISTING - HOPEWELL BOROUGHmatching living room and dining room, each with a working fireplace, was built in the early1800s. Like many houses of the era it has had imaginative additions such as a library, sitting COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENTOlder two story house on quiet tree shaded street within walking distance to town. Large,room, solarium room, kitchen complete with beamed ceiling and bam siding cabinets. 3front porch, formal living room with fireplace, dining room and den. Along with this goes agood sized bedrooms, 2V4 baths, full attic with wide pine floors for future expansion.pleasant kitchen with adjoining eating area, three bedrooms, and a full bathroom on the firstDetached garage. OWNERS ARE ANXIOUS TO SELL! Asking $98,000;floor. Enormous dormitory bedroom and full bath on second. Full basement and detached

OFFICE/APARTMENT BUILDINGS — INVESTMENT PROPERTIESgarage. ' . . . , . . . . . . ; ; • - • .$73,900

1. Service Station-ideal location!2. Cleaners - very active!3. Doctor's quarters - excellent condition!TWO NEW LISTINGS IN MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP4. Apartment Bldg. - 5 units - center of town!

4 bedroom Colonial in the Mill Pond Estates. 3 years young. Available immediately.Just a sampling of our many commercial listings...

•"Financing available on many offerings!A 5 bedroom Colonial near Pike Brook Country Club $118,500

Please call Arlene Scozzaro, Princeton'office 921-2776.3 Acre Building lot in Montgomery Township-Ready to go .$37,500

Nearing completion on 1V4 acres .in exclusive Elm Ridge Southwest a four bedroom,bath Thompson Colonial. Center hall with double closets, front to back fireplaced livingroom, formal dining room, gourmet kitchen with eating area, family, room with fireplace. JOHNTAttached two car garage. Full basement. Central air. $169,900.

MEMBER: MERCER, HUNTERDON and MEMBER: FARM & LAND INSTITUTESOMERSET MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICES INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE FEDERATIONRELO— WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION PRINCETON REAL ESTATE GROUP

REALTORS

BELLE'MEADWINDSORSPRINCETONLAMBERTVTLLERoute 20612 S. Franklin St. 4 Charlton StreetHopewell House Square

Belle Mead, NJ. 08502Princeton Jet., NJ. 08550Lambertville, N J . Princeton, N J . 08540Hopewell, NJ . 08525 (201)874-5191(609)799-4500(609 397-2800 (609 921-2776(609) 466-2550

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* _*-T. — :"r*tr*-« •?-•*.': ii.'*-"j.*" •": • • ' • ; ; " ^ > . " *

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE10-B Week of April 18-20.1979

REAL ESTATE

TWIN RIVERS

Electronic Realty Associates, Inc.

I33

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SUPER BUY • Beautifully maintained 4 bedroom, 2V4 bath home indesirable Devonshire Estates in EAST WINDSOR. This home features aformat living room, dining room, family room, large eat-in ktichen, laundryroom, wall-to-wall carpeting, central air and all quality appliances plusmany other extrass. Warran.ed by the BUYER PROTECTION PLAN

$91,900.

CRANBURY - Lovely old Colonial in this charming village, convenient tomajor roads and train, this home has 4 bedrooms, living room, familyroom, dining room, small study, 1 % baths, front and rear staircase, andmuch more. The kitchen is modern, the roof 3 years old. This fine home isan outstanding value. Call for more details. . ' ; . . . . . . $89,900.

iv

A traditional center hall home which has been lovingly maintained with 4bedrooms, 2'A baths, formal living room and dining room, large kitchenwith built-ins and dining area, central air, family room with fireplace andsun room which is heated and air conditioned. Warranted by theBUYERS PROTECTION PLAN '.... $95,900.

This bright, sunny colonial is set on a very attractive lot on a desirableEast Windsor street. It features 4 bedrooms, 2'A baths, central air con-ditioning, family room and play room for the children. Warranted by theBUYERS PROTECTION PLAN $89,900.

1 & 2 BRD. CONDOS AVAILABLE FROM $26,500.

2 BDR. T.H. IMMACULATE CONDITION. FINISHEDBASEMENT, PLUSH CARPETING, LIKE NEW,TASTEFULLY DECORATED. LOCATED IN AN OPENAREA, NEAR SCHOOL, SHOPPING, SWIMMING,TENNIS. CENTRAL AIR, DISHWASHER, F/FREFRIGERATOR, WASHER, DRYER - PRICED FORQUICK SALE . $43,900.

3 BDR. TOWNHOUSE, WALL TO WALL QUALITYPLUSH CARPETING, S/C OVEN, F/F. REF.,DISHWASHER, WASHER, DRYER, BEAUTIFULLYDECORATED, MOVE-IN CONDITION. ASSUME THEBALANCE OF THE 7Vi% MORTGAGE WITH LOWMONTHLY PAYMENTS.

3 BDR, END UNIT TOWNHOUSE, PRIME LOCATION,WIDE OPEN AREA. HARDWOOD FLOOR, PLUSHBROWN CARPETING, IMMACULATE CONDITION,F/F REF., WASHER, DRYER, DISHWASHER, BRICKPATIO. GAS GRILL, ASSUME BALANCE OF A 7%%MORTGAGE.

FOR RENT:2 BDR. SPLIT LEVEL TOWNHOUSE, ALL APPLIANCES- IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY.

4 BDR. DETACHED HOUSE, NEW PAINTED, IM-MEDIATE OCCUPANCY.

STEELE, ROSLOFF & SMITH

\IB^kjKMTOt*

- >»•**»* ;•»*«<**«•Twin Rivers Shopping Mall a ^ - ^

609-448-8811 • •J\

I I I Wanted To Rent Housesitting

it-

I Our 5 BEDROOM, 3'/» BATH home is located in desirable HICKORYACRES, of EAST WINDSOR and offers a large eat-in kitchen, 1st floorlaundry, formal living room and dining room. This is available for springoccupancy . . . . $89,900.

Large and lovely with a unique floor plan is our 4 bedroom home withcentral air conditioning and walk-in closets. This tastefully decoratedhome has been well cared for throughout. Many other features whichmust be seen. Warranted by the BUYERS PROTECTION PLAN $94,000.

F.

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kWEST WINDSOR - 4 bedroom, 2 full baths,modern kitchen with built-ins, beautiful brickfireplace with glass doors, wide plank floors,beamed ceilings in family room and masterbedroom and only a 3 minute walk to the trainstation. Warranted by the BUYERS PROTECTIONPLAN. . . . . ' \$S6,500.

PRINCETON PROFESSOR —seeks unfurnished 1-2 bdrm.apt. very near campus. Juneoccupancy. 609-921-6532 or 452-3716.

RESPONSIBLE SINGLE —female wishes to rent 1 bdrm.apt., beginning May or Junein Somerville, H boro, orMontgomery area. 201-359-7501after 3 p.m.

PROFESSIONAL WOMANseeking small apt for approx.$175 per/mo in Lawrence,Ewing, West Trenton areas.Refs. No children or pets. 609-883-1737, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 466-1670, eves. & wknds.

Housesitting

| V MARRIED COUPLE — with• * landscaping experience in-

terested in housesitting forsummer season. 609-924-0862.

OPEN HOUSE, SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 1-4 PM - Quad IV 3 bedroom, 254 bath townhouse decorated in earthtones with upgraded carpeting and appliances. Features central air, wood shutters, lovely wallpaper andmatching levelor vertical blinds in family room, immaculate condition - must see to appreciate Warrantedby the BUYERS PROTECTION PLAN. $50,900.

Directions: Rt. 33 east to 2nd light in Twin Rivers. Take jughandle and turn left on Twin Rivers Dr., North,turn right into second parking area. 752 Twin Rivers Drive No.

1979 PRIVATE PROPERTY WEEKAPRIL 15-21

Preservq.lt., .Enjoy It . . .Invest In It

I Srwilo Bramond*JoyCapwallMlllteCogginConni* Darrow

Howard Eldridg*

LoUFoxAllc* HollanderSharon KnightHalKiwhnJaiMtLachap*ll*

Jerry LancasterMaureen LongerArieneMulryKayTtgheWetUmphrey

GRADUATE STUDENTwilling to house sit July "andAugust. Call 201-754-0334 askfor Joao.

MARRIED COUPLE SEEKS— housesitting situation forJune -August (dates flexible).We are graduate students atM.I.T. with summer jobs inarea. Loving care of pets,plants. Local references.Available for interview March28 through April 6. 609-921-8639.

SUMMER HOUSESITTING —by mature graduate student.Refs. 201-745-0233.

EXPERIENCED HOUSE-SITTER — availableto till short or long termposition. Impeccable Prin-ceton references. Call 609-921-6122, 8am-4pm weekdays.

RESPONSIBLE non-smokingmature female graduate atW.C.C. wishes to house sitduring the . summer.Preferably in or near Prin-ceton. Call 609-924-9883 forMillie or leave message.

HOUSESITTING POSITIONDESIRED — June 4 to Aug. 3.Lutheran Pastor, wife & 3children will be attendingsummer school at PrincetonTheological Seminary. Inexchange for a place to livethey'rewillingtocare for house& property. Contact: PastorLuther D. Monson, 715-695-2623or write: Box 98, Strum.Wisconsin, 54770.

Apts./HousesTo Share

FEMALE ROOMMATE —career minded wanted. Sharelittle carriage house in ex-clusive Princeton. 609-452-1567after 7 p.m.

SHARE — in farmhousewanted by female in 20's.South Brunswick, Princeton.Plainsboro area. May oc-cupancy desired. 201-329-8159.

SHARE A COMFORTABLEcountry house with a swinv'ming pool, near Princeton 609-799-1385.

A PLACE IN THE SUNGentleman and daughterwilling to share large house inthe country 5 miles fromNassau St. Pvt. 2 BR & bath-share living room, kitchen &deck. Ldy facilities & storage.Avail. April 15. Reply Boxi

- #02360 c/o Princeton Packet.

Patricias. Bell Ruth W. Bly

Open 7 Days a Week • 799-818150 Princeton-Hightstown Rd., Princeton Junction

MLS

VACATIONING? TAKING ABUSINESS TRIP? - Feelsecure. Your home is properlycared for, your pets paniTpered, even your teenagerswell fed & transported. Fullyexperienced housesitter avail,in Princeton area with ex-cellent refs. phone 609-921-8672.

To Plac* aClassif i*d Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

APT. TO SHARE — BetweenRingoes & Hopewell. $135/ moplus utilities. Non-smoker. 609-466-0938 after 4 pm.

OWN ROOM — in 3 BR house.Convenient to Trenton &Princeton. Large yard. Rent$132.50/mo. + utils. AvailMay 1st. 609-587-3039 after 6pm.

ATTRACTIVE NASSAU ST.— apt., tastefully furnished, 3minute walk to campus.Moderate rent. Professionalwoman preferred. 924-5713eves.

7 W \ « C(H STRY SPECIALISTS

FOR THE BEST IN LISTINGSWEIDEL REAL ESTATE

THE GREAT GATSBYThis unusual property brings to mind another era.Imagine this: Stone & frame Main House, acottage, pond, waterfall with bridges, a gazebo.25x50 heated pool, bath house, tennis courts, horsebarn, woods, pasture and the property is down along lane set on 13 acres. Original Main Housebuilt in 1819 and renovated in 1972. Fourbedrooms. 41/2 baths. 2 fireplaces <& MUCHCHARM. Breathtaking private setting just 70minutes to Center City in the beautiful countrysideof Hunterdon County. Call for complete details. -• • • .-..'. $325.000.:

s

• • - . * • • • $ •

A RARE CLASSIC!Very elegant Victorian in Lambertville so out-standing it has become a landmark and focus ofseveral newspapers and artistic reproductions. Abeautiful natural oak double door entry leads to a50' sweep of parquet floors encompassing theliving room and dining room with Grecian columnsdividing these elegant rooms, an exquisite crystalchandelier creates an aura of elegance. A widenatural oak carpeted stairway leads to 3 largebedrooms <$ den and to add to the beauty of it allare 2 very beautiful separate apartments withexcellent income. This is indeed a "rare find" . . . .

- $129,000.

13.5 ACRE WORKING FARM! ,Set back with excellent views and frontage, this 10room, 2 bath home even provides a separateapartment for inlaws or income. A large 2 storybarn for horses plus farmland assessment. Ex-cellent land and just north of Hopewell Boro

' $139,900.

RUSTIC! YET COMFORTABLY MODERN3 + acres in the rolling hils of East Amwell Twp.. 9unique rooms, 2 full luxurious baths, 2 powderrooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 extraordinary brickfireplaces, central air conditioning, wall to wallcarpeting, large raised deck, it's a" beauty - Comesee it $149,900.DIRECTIONS: Take Rt. 206 south to Carter Rd., turn rightto Hopewell Boro, left on Broad St. to traffic light, turn right goto Wertsville Rd., left turn approx. 2!/? miles to Dutch Lane.

OPEN HOUSE - SUNDAY 2-4IN ITS FINAL DAYS OF COMPLETIONQuality built 10 rooms, 2Vi baths, 4 bedrooms plusa library or den, family room with fireplace,central air conditioning on 1.33 acres withpanoramic views - a great buy $121,000.

DIRECTIONS: From Pennington take Route 31 north toRingoes, take Route 202 north to second traffic light (Rt. 5141,turn right to Cider Mill Road, left turn and our sign.

WEIDEL REAL ESTATE

Route 31Pennington

737-1500 • 882-3804

Week of April 18 - 20,1979 11-B

RELOCATING?YOU NEED A FRIEND

WHO KNOWSTHETERRITORY

Before you move to a strange new place,call CENTURY 21? We have some smart ways tosmooth the transition for you^ Like our exclusivenew Relocation Centers which show you the latestinformation on your new town -with multi-mediapresentation and dynamic area map overlays.Property values, schools, taxes, commute times,transportation, the weather, the works are alleasily explained. The positives as well as thenegatives, so you can make an educated choice.

We'll even get a head start for you down theline. Before you close the door on your old house,we may have already opened the door on thenew one.

WE'RE THE NEIGHBORHOOD PROFESSIONALS™• Licensed Trademark of Century 21 Real Estate Corporation Printed USA.

* 1978 Century 21 Real Estate Corporation,Equal Housing OpportunityU l d d a on«d maiopmt**^

OPEN HOUSE - Saturday. April 21 1:00 to 5:00 pm

This beautiful four bedroom home adjoins the first green on the golfcourse. It features a huge family room with custom white cedar planks/expansive bookcases and cabinets, wet bar and fireplace. Secondfireplace in living room, formal dining room and large eat-in kitchen.Perfect for entertaining I Walking distance to country club and pool.

$87,900.

Directions: Rom Intersection of Rtes: 130 and 33, take Rt. 526, makefirst left to 43 Vahlsing Way.

DAYTON SQUARE TOWNHOUSE • offers you a maintenance freehome. Exceptional 3 bedroom, 2V4 bath townhouse, family room, pl.-sfinished panelled basement playroom. Upgraded carpeting throughoutand in beautiful condition. . • . $62,900.

PRINCETON TOWNSHIP - 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, all brick 2-family home.Walk to schools and shopping. Live in one unit and rent the other.Large unit has three bedrooms, 2 up and 1 down, living room withfireplace, dining room, kitchen, family room and two baths, smaller unit-has living room, kitchen with dining area, 2 bedrooms and bath.Financing may be available to qualified buyer. ' $139,500.

HIGHTSTOWN PHYSICIANS RESIDENCE AND OFFICES • Restoredhistoric, 5 bedroom colonial, good parking, busy location. $119,000.

. Gracious colonial, country kitchen, family room, full brick fireplace andadjacent playroom, library, second fireplace, four bedrooms. Manycustom features, excellent commuting to New Yofjf," . $113,500.

' PRINCETON - RIVERSIDE - Charming Cape Cod on beautiful lot. Familyroom with fireplace, breezeway and covered patio. Perfect home fo thesmaller family. Call for details.

LAND

WEST WINDSOR - On Harrison St., near Route 1,2 lots

PRINCETON TOWNSHIP - Secluded woodedFinancing may be available to qualified buyer.

lot,

$48,000.

2 plus acres.$62,000.

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP • Partially wooded acre lot in exclusive LongAcres Lawrence. Access to Routes 1-95 and 206. $55,000.

KENDALL PARKdetails.

Investment opportunity, 26 condominiums, call for

HOLLOW ROAD, MONTGOMERY - Spectacular wooded lot needsspecial sewer system. Absolutely beautiful. . $22,000.

SERVING MONTGOMERY AND PRINCETON TOWNSHIPS - Severaladjacent^parcels totaling 600 ft. on busy Highway 206. Call for details.1.3 acres'to 7.5 to 8 plus acres.

RENTAL - Princeton, short term, furnished $750.

PRINCETON IVY-5 bedrooms, family room, fireplace. $8J5/mo.

TWIN RIVERS • 3 bedrooms, carpeted townhouse, 2% baths. $490/mo.

Our professional staff to s*rv« you:Mary and John Brockardt . KoyNassBatty Comoroto Jam Patron*Kevin Clark* . Mary Grac* RoyalEllaan Donian Sharren RutzalDot E lgar DlannaSondvlkHilda Elmora RbodoStarnMortFatdnran . DidcTortorlalloPotGralnoar MoryWanxalEtaliMjoncourtz Carol WitchayHilda Maleonlan .

CARNEGIEREALTORS

134 Nassau St., Princeton. Princeton Circle, Rt. 1

609-921-6177 452-2188

Mfe're Here For Ifou. TM

OPEN HOUSESunday, April 22,1 to 4 p.m.

663 Paxson Ave.Hamilton Twp.

BRICK AND CEDAR COVERED ENTRY COLONIAL:UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS I Featuring a front-to-back Irvingroom - plenty of natural light, tremendous eat-in kitchen,family room with brick fireplace/beamed ceiling/glassdoors to a rear yard of natural pines in a park-like setting,formal, dining room/ chair-rail, four spacious bedrooms,many amenities including 17x20 patio/brick planters -bam style 2-story tool shed, central air, partial basementand crawl space and wall-to-wall carpeting throughout.

A SPRING WONDERLAND of matured trees andprofessional landscaping surround this custom SouthBrunswick covered entry Colonial on a full acre, including

, four spacious bedrooms, 17X37 IN-GROUND POOL/brick apron/grill, sunken living room, formal dining room,family room with brick wail fireplace, breezy screenedporch, large modern kitchen and many-many amenitiesincluding parquet flooring/central air/carpeting, e t c . . . . .

$110,000.

CIRA 1832 ... A FANTASTIC EXPERIENCEI Featuring thisexceptional Colonial with an 11X8 reception/sitting roomentrance foyer, antique fireplace in a 15X15 living room,fireplace.in dining room/charming window seat, modemkitchen with breakfast bar/pantry, family room with built-ins, fireplace in master bedroom/built-in safe, three otherwell-arranged bedrooms, 2-car garage - frame barn - ...PROPERTY CAN BE SUB-DIVIDED ... Call us for pricedetails!

A MINI RANCHETTE ESTATE OF YOUR OWN I Adynamic four bedroom custom design featuring: slateentry foyer/wainscotting, field-stone fireplace in livingroom/old-beam mantle/ceiling, brick wall fireplace indining room with double set of sliding glass doors topatio, cherry wood custom cabinetry in kitchen, centralair/vac, Pella Windows, & family room with another field-stone hearth/glass door-way to patio ... $112,900 (AMUST SEE I)

BRICK FRONT: DOUBLE DOOR ENTRY ...Mature treesenhance the front yard of this LAWRENCEVILLE 4bedroom 2-story entry hall Colonial, stone fireplace infamily center, separate dinette, central air, amplecabinets, full basement, library, 2-car garage. A rare findin the village area, priced at $103,000.

KROL, Realtors1000 State Rd., Princeton i

609-924*7575201-874-8700

THERE'S MORETO AGOLD JACKET

THAN MEETSTHE EYE.

GREAT STARTER HOME3 bedrooms, full basement, 1 car garage, maintenancefree. Excellent condition in quiet residential area ofHightstown - Assumable 7% VA mortgage to qualifiedbuyer. . • -, . $42,500.

NEED COUNTRY? iTry this 7 room ranch situated on 2.3 acres nearHightstown. New roof, alum, siding plus many featuresto make a comfortable home. $49,000.

OLD YORKE ESTATESBeautiful 3 bedroom ranch featuring a spacious eat-inkitchen with sliding glass doors to enclosed sun deck;formal dining room, finished family room in basement,central air, wall to wall carpeting. Nicely landscaped lot.

$72,900.

NOW IS THE PERFECT TIME to buy this lovely olderhome. 4 bedrooms, large living room, dining room,country kitchen PLUS modern four room apt. - 2 acres.

Only $78,900.

IT HAS BEEN STRIPPED IN AND OUT, then lovinglyreconditioned, board by board, peg by peg, nail by nail.ft sits on 3+ acres, features random plank flooring,.huge fireplace, hand hewn beams, thermal windows.natural redwood siding...Fabulous . . . . $79,900.

BRANDYWINE RANCH , 'Magnificent new listing features a brick wall fireplace inthe sunken living room. 5 bedrooms, 3% baths, formaldining; room, huge kitchen with dining area, family room;2 car garage with workshop. Beautiful lot in EastWindsor. $97,500.

It's a symbol of achievement. When you seeit you know you're working with a trained realestate professional. That Gold Jacket means thewearer has knowledge in everything from showinghouses to real estaterules and regulations.So. for your real estateneeds, call CENTURY 21? .Our Gold Jacket is a lotmore than just gold,

SCS AGENCYREALTORS

307 N. Main St., Hightstown

609-448-0113 EA 0R

This spacious EXPANDED RANCH on a quiet CUL DE SAC is a drBamhouse. The INGROUND POOL is ready for your summer enjoyment.The private COVERED PATIO with its GAS GRILL will afford you manyhours of outdoor living. Space will not allow listing the many extras inthis lovely, affordable home. Convenient to SHOPPING, MAJORHIGHWAYS and PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION. Ask for Joe. $94,900.

m

•-•>.

im

BRIDCEWATER: Looking for such amenities as playmates for yourchildren, proximity to excellent schools and stores, and neighbors whoare concerned homeowners? Then, this well-kept, 6 room ranch in verygood neighborhood is for you. : $Si.9OO.

\

HILLSBOROUGH: Another nice ranch in a neighborhood of families.with children; six room home with gas hot water heat on a well-landscaped, spacious lot with mature trees. You'll like its residentialaspects yet ready accessibility to shopping, library, schools, etc. Makean offer.

EXECUTIVE CUSTOM home in excellent move-in condition and offeringeight large rooms; 2% baths, four bedrooms, a family room, wall towall carpeting, modern kitchen, deck and screened porch on a large.mountain lot in a prestigious area of Bridgewater. $135,900. Eves. Bob356-5805.

HILLSBOROUGH HOME PLUS INCOME This exceptional incomeproperty you with an income plus excellent living conditions. Consistsof nine rooms, making two excellent apartments, three bedropms in.one apartment, two in the other with separate entrances on 4 plus:acres. Must be seen to be appreciated. Ask.for Bob. Eves. 356-5805.

ENERGY SAVING HOME....two zone gas hot water cast iron heatingsystem will help you save. Three or four bedrooms plus two full baths,separate sewing and laundry rooms, and a large workshop make this avery attractive home at ' $93,900.

COLONIAL HILLSREALTY

409 Route 206, HHlsborbugh

201-874-4700•f-

s

Week of April 18-20,1979

• «

w

I

• *

it

SIX ACRE FARMETTE, with lovely home, storage barns, machineshed and an 18x£0 building for offices or workshop. Home islocated up a short lane; on a high knoll overlooking thecountryside. 254 story house w/9 rooms, 1 % baths, fireplace, oilbaseboard heat. Modem kitchen and laundry area. High landunder cultivation. .$150,000.

2V4 STORY COLONIAL: Located on a 2.1 acre lot in the quietrural village of Windsor, this home offers 9 rooms, 1 bath, plusattic storage. The newly renovated kitchen has ample cabinetspace, exposed beams and fireplace. Reasonable taxes.

:..... $40,100.

EAST WINDOR RANCHER W/FIREPLACE: Living room, diningarea, large country ichchen, 2 bedrooms, bath, finished familyroom in basement, nice breezeway and 2 car garage. Large lotwith 200' frontage ' . . . ' . ; $58,900.

CUSTOM BUILT RANCHER: Located within walking distance ofthe Peddie School, this charming rancher features a living roomwith fireplace and French doors to a screened, flagstone porch;dining room, eat-in kitchen, utility room, 2 bedrooms, tile bathand garage. There are custom, knotty pine cabinets in thekitchen, a cedar closet, and carpeting over oak floors. . $60,000.

DYNAMITE COMMERCIAL SITE: Located on a 1.1 acre com-'mercial lot in South Brunswick Township, this Victorian twostory is currently being used as a two family house with a livingroom, dining area, kitchen, 2 bedrooms on each side. Ownerwill consider holding a mortgage for a qualified buyer.

. . . : ' . . $163,000.

INCOME PROPERTY: first floor: Foyer, living room, twobedrooms, kitchen and bath. Second floor: Living room, kit-chen, four bedrooms and bath. The area is zoned commercialand is located on Route 33 near Hightstown. Large lot. Call for

"more details ~......: $39,W0.

HUGE TWO FAMILY HOUSE: This Hightstown house has twolarge apartments featuring living room, kitchen and 4 bedroomsin each one. They are currently rented for $365. each with the

.' tenants paying the utilities and heat. Separate meters andfurnaces. .' $75,900.

MUST SEE TO. APPRECIATE: This lovely older home with 10rooms, 254 baths, full basement, "2 car" carriage house islocated in Hightstown. Among the many features are 6 marblefireplace mantles, 2 of which have gas burning grates. Roomsinclude living roorn, dining room, music room with ceiling fan,family room, kitchen, laundry room, and 4 bedrooms. Nicecomer lot $89,000.

LAKE HARMONY. PA.: Located in the Pocono Mountains ofPennsylvania, this 15 year old wood frame home has sevenrooms, 2 baths and a game room area in the basement. Thereare 2 fireplaces plus a barbeque pit on the porch for en-tertaining. Sliding glass doors to the porch and rear yard. All ofthis on a half acre, wooded lot only 5 minutes to the lake.

. . .'. $75,000.

REALTOR*

Leonard Van Hise AgencyMEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE

160 Stockton St. Hightstown, NJ.Office: 609*448-4250

After Hours ft Sunday Call:Ernest Tarp 448-2151 Richard Van Hise 448-8042Warren OlsenAnmstaaia Eaal

448-8388758-8193

Jean EachMaurice James, Jr.

448-1178259-2482

Gallery of Homes,inc.—REALTORSAN INTERNATIONAL NETWORK OF INDEPENDENT BROKERS

REALTORS609-921-1550609-737-9550.

246 NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON NEW JERSEY

JUST LISTED!

A Princeton Town House! located in the tree street area with a delightful back garden - floweringtrees including a lovely magnolia. There is a handsome carpeted living room with fireplace, largedining room or library with side entrance to pretty porch, super modern kitchen with bay windowoverlooking the garden, upstairs are three stunning bedrooms - 2 with walk-in closets. SEE ITVERY SOON! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : $119,500.

Jo CHppinger - Beverly Cram - Harriet Eubank - Pant Geiger - NHchele Hochman • Marjorie Jaeger - Ellen KemeyBaanor Uraen -Ginger Lamon r Barit Marshall - Jane B. Schoch w/*37 - Richard Schwartz - Carol Sykes - Judy D. Weiss - Dee WBspn-

Tod Peyton 00-Ted Kopps/'21 "

FULLTIME SERVICE FOR YOUR EVERY REAL ESTATE NEED' Property Pricing Assistance> Trained ProfessionalSales Counselors

1 Full-Time Advertising Coordinator> Corporate Transferee Specialists

• Multiple Listing Systems• Financing Assistance• Land, and Commercial

Real Estate Service• National Marketing System

• Convenient Office Locations• Marketing Analysis Report• 3rd Party Negotiating• Nationwide Relocation Assistance

MATCH YOUR SUCCESS AND YOUR LIFESTYLE with this spacious 4-bedroom, 254-bath DutchColonial in Belle Mead - only 2 years young. Fine fixtures and features throughout. Fully equipped kitchenhas dining area with sliding doors that lead to patio and large yard. Fireplace in family room; central air;smoke detectors 4113,900.

Apts./HousesTo Share

SEEK THIRD P E R S O N - toshare country home in woodedarea near Hopewell. 609-466-3278.

ROOMMATE TO SHARE - 3bedroom apt. 10 min. fromPrinceton. Female preferred.After 6 p.m. 609-466-3498.

WOMAN TO SHARE -beautiful, comfortable housein Princeton suburb. 609-443-3567.

NON-SMOKERS—Share a co-ed house in Ken. Pk. 2 fullbaths, $125 + . 609-921-3435 or201-1297-9110.

To Place a

• Classified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

Apts./HousesTo Share

FEMALE — Mid 20's, seekssame to share apartmentexpenses beginning June l,Princeton area. Call Karen,201-782-0364 early mornings orlate evenings.

ROOMMATE TO SHARE -comfortable 2 bdrm. apt. inhouse in scenic rural area(Skillman) only 10 mins. fromcenter of Princeton. Neat,responsible male preferred.No pets. $175/mo (includesheat & water). Available May1st. Call 609-466-9151 after 5p.m.

Apts./HousesTo Share

VERY LARGE — live-incarpeted attic & small roomavailable to single person in 7room farmhouse. Share kit-chen, living room, etc w/2other occupants. $150/mo.utils incld. Call Alex, days 201-574-4011. Eves: 201-874-8097.

HOUSE WANTED TO SHARE— female, Rutgers student, 23,plus 2 mannerly spayed cats,looking in 20 mm. from R. U.radius. Prefer country setting.Virginia (201) 846-7508 aft. 5.

Apts./HousesTo Share

ROOMMATE WANTED inManville, male or female, non-smoker. Call between 2:30 &3:30 or after 10 p.m. Ask forMark.

HOUSE — with 2 of 4 bdrms.avail. May 1 - Aug. 31. $128 &$116. 609-921-3435.

RESPONSIBLE PERSON —wanted toshare a large 4 BdrmRanch house. House has 2baths, fireplace, 2 car garage& large wooded lot. Call 609-737-1832 after 6 p.m.

SINGLE WOMAN — with 2boys, 7 & 9. is having troublefinding affordable nousingwith a small spot for a gardenand cat. Seeking anotherwoman with children whowould like to find and share aplace to live. Let's put ourheads together. 609-466-1319ask for Judy.

LARGE. LOVELY HOUSE —

to snare in Trenton.Reasonable rent. Call 609-695-3692.

FEMALE TO SHARE — 2 BRfurn. apt. in PrincetonMeadows. Starting June 1.609-799-8164.

28 YEAR OLD college grad

seeking neat, non-smokingmale roommate to sharemellow country setting nearGreat Adventure in May.Costs $140. Call Jonathan, 609-298-6300 (pie extension) during.day. 609-758-3736 eves, andweekends.

EXCITEMENT IN LIVING - Everything you want and need - customwallpaper and floors, carpeting, central air, brick raised hearth fireplace,formal dining room, redwood deck, super kitchen with food cen-ter/breakfast bar. 3 bedrooms, wooded lot. Neshanic. We could go on; butcome see for yourself.'

ROOM FOR HORSES - Custom built French Provincial home" on 3 plus 1acres. 4 bedrooms, spacious gourmet kitchen, family room with fireplace, 'Florida room, deck off living room and master bedroom. Many luxuriousextras including a spectacular view. Hilteborqugh, . #124,900.

EXPECT TO BE ENVIED • That's part of owning a custom home built on3 wooded acres with a view, a winding walk and a garden. Picture win-dows in living room and formal dining room. 4 bedrooms, 254 baths, familyroom with fireplace, central air, 2-zone heat. Spacious roopis, fine fixtures,elegant extras, and a REDUCED PRICE make this home a super buy at

• ' •119,800.

A LITTLE BIT DIFFERENT • Custom Bi-Level in Montgomery offerspractical dual approaches to family room - from foyer and kitchen. 4bedrooms, 254 baths, full-wall raised hearth fireplace, central air, naturalstained woodwork are just a few of the features in this attractive home..

*109,900.

NATUREALLY BEAUTIFUL 2 plus acres, lovely country area, 15-mileview, stable and corral surround this 4-bedroom Bi-Level. Panelled familyroom, eat-in kitchen with skylight ceiling, 2 full baths, garage.Hillsborough.. 981,900.

6.6 ACRES with trees, brook and custom Cape Cod centrally located inHillsborough Two. Enclosed porch, eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, fullbasement and attic. 2nd floor can be finished for more rooms. Also 2outbuildings and 2-car garage with loft Reduced to 486,000.

NEW HOMESQuality construction, custom features, 1 acre, 4 bedroom?, spaciousmodern kitchen, fireplace in family room. Conveniently located inHillsborough just minutes from shopping and major commuting roads butwith a country atmosphere .......

ESCAPE from the crowded city to this new Garrison.Colonial on 1 plusacres in the rolling countryside of East Arnwell. 4 bedrooms, 254 baths,family room, raised hearth fireplace and modern eat-in kitchen. Almostready 4104,000.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITYGold and Silver Craft Jewelry. Business plus stock plus manufacturingequipment. Retail and wholesale trade. Current owner will assist newowner in getting started. Bound Brook. Call for details 356-8121.

. . . . . . . I . . . ! Asking 176,000.

HAVE AND HAVE-NOTS - This older Ranch in Montgomery HAS newroof, wring, insulation, well system, plumbing and furnace. Also a newbath, central air, 3 bedrooms and a detached heated workshop/garage.This house HAS NOT a new kitchen and utility room. . . . Asking 4KL900.

JOIN THE SUCCESS TEAM

We're growing and have openings for full-time licensedsales people in our Hillsborough and Montgomery Galleries.If you are interested in growing also, call us today and learnabout our Associate Support Program: •

INCENTIVE COMMISSION PLAN • UP TO 75%VIDEO SALES AND MOTIVATION TRAININGCORPORATE RELOCATION DEPARTMENTQUALITY HOMES MAGAZINEEQUITY ADVANCE PROGRAMFULL TIME ADVERTISING AND

PUBLIC RELATIONS DEPARTMENTSUCCESS RECOGNITION PROGRAMPROFESSIONAL OFFICE ATMOSPHERE

Don Ricard, ManagerMontgomery

874-4121

Donna Miller, Manager

Hillsborough359-4121

EisENhowERRoute 206, Montgomery

•;! (201)874-4121Route 206, Hillsborough

(201) 359-4121

Bound Brook (201) 356-8121 • Bridgewater (201) 469-1776 • Branchburg (201) 722-9020

Week of April 18-20,1979 13-B

HOWE FOR HOMESREALTORS^ INSURERS • SERVING PEOPLE SINCE 1885

HIGH UP HIGH IN THE MOUNTAINS with one of the best views around sits a beautifully built mintcondition Ranch on over 2 acres of shade trees and dogwood. Two bedrooms, large living room withfieldstone fireplace, ultra modern kitchen, full basement, 2-car garage and outbuilding with electricity. Aone ofa kind gem close to Princeton in Montgomery Twp. Call 924-0095 •115,000.

PRINCETON JUNCTION - NEW LISTING - Benford Estates • Alford built home on oversized wooded lotfeaturing 4-5 bedrooms, 2% baths, kitchen with brick wall and dining area; enlarged dining room, livingroom, family room with fireplace and wood beams, 2-car garage, central air conditioning, and truly ex-ceptional landscaping. Walk to trains and West Windsor schools. Mint condition. Call 799-1100.

: , . . . • $148,500.

iWHEN SPRING UNLOCKS THE FLOWERS unlock the door to a wholenew lifestyle in this small County Estate in Montgomery Twp. featuring anearly American house (Circa 1790) arid a large barn and attached recreationroom, and an in-ground pool. The setting and the outbuildings make thisan ideal property for horse lovers or other hobbies. This house is ideal fortruly relaxed country living and is-nestled beneath full shade. The warmthand the charm of the house is enhanced by the large country kitchen,dining room with large cooking fireplace and beamed ceiling, 3 bedroomsplus a dormitory bedroom, and 2 baths along with a study and large livingroom with log burning fireplace.. Call 924-0095. . . $189,500.

CRANBURV- This four bedroom Split Level with central air and fireplaceis located on a quiet street in a small community. It is an ideal area becauseit-is a good place to raise'children and is within easy reach* of majorshopping centers. Call 799-1100 $84,900.

WEST WINDSOR - Look behind those trees and you will see a 3bedroom, 1 Yi bath-Split Level tucked away behind dogwoods and pines.A well maintained home with central air, wall-to-wall carpeting and a goodlocation for the commuter. Call 799-1100. •82^00.

HAMILTON - Start packing, this house in Hamilton is in move-in con-dition. It has everything a small family could want; 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, full

• basement, living room, dining room, eat-in kitchen, plus a large finishedfamily room on the second floor. There's even a garage and f enced-ih yard.Hurry and make your appointment, it won't last long. Call 799-1100.

WE HAVE THE EXCLUSIVE LISTING ON THIS ONE • This terrific 3bedroom Ranch in a highly desirable Hamilton location offers a formalliving room with fireplace, large dining room, completely equipped kitchen,breakfast nook, 2 baths, full attic and basement, oversized 2-car garage,situated on a beautifully landscaped large lot. Call immediately at 890-8800; it might be sold before you have a chance to see it! $52^900.

POWDER YOUR FACE WITH SUNSHINE and trot on over for an in-spection of this cozy Cape on a an extra large lot with flowering trees andblooming flowers. Four bedrooms, two baths(> sumptous family roomconsisting of beamed ceiling, brick fireplace wall and slate floor. Suitablealso for professional/live-in or in-law arrangement. Call 924-0095.

; : . . Offered for $98,500.

WEST WINDSOR - Something to get excited about, our very attractiveRancher overlooks the park. There is a lovely living room, formal diningroom with window seat and fireplace, ultra modern kitchen, full basement,patio, 3-car garage plus parking and 3 plus acres. Call 799-1100.

. . . $190,000.

A BOUQUET OF SUNSHINE streams through the kitchen of this 150year old Cranbury Colonial home. Equally bright are the dining room, livingroom, family room with fireplace and built-ins, 5 bedrooms and 2V4 baths.A 30' screened-in porch adjoins the kitchen. Basement, Attic and one-cargarage complete this well maintained home. Call 924-0095 . $98,500.

ATTENTION HORSE LOVERSl - Not far from Princeton and just outsideof Hopewell, tucked away on 4 acres is this all brick Ranch with a cozyfamily room (and a fireplace), full basement, 2-car garage and only 6 yearsold. But, best of all is the 4 stall barn, 85x60 post and rail enclosed trainingarena and 2V5 acres of pasture. See this ideal horse arrangement today!Call 737-3301 : $109,900.

EAST WINDSOR - This large 4 bedroom Colonial with a half acre lot is theideal home for a growing family. The children will enjoy picking fruit fromthe trees in the backyard. Call 799-1100 191,900.

WEST WINDSOR FARMSTEAD on 3 plus acres - Featuring charming,renovated, old farmhouse with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths and large countrykitchen. A large barn will house your equipment or horse. Call 799-1100...

;..$150,000.

PRINCETON JUNCTION • Top heavy with value is the best way todescribe this 4 bedroom, 2'A bath Two Story in West Windsor. Large

/ sunken living room with enough space to please any hostess. The extras/ include wall-to-wall carpeting, central air, large lot and convenient location.

Call 799-1100. . $89,900.

PRINCETON JUNCTION - This cozy 4 bedroom. Two Story features alarge living room, formal dining room and eat-in kitchen, plus a family roomwith a fireplace. Located near Princeton Junction train station. Excellentbuy at $82^00. Call 799-1100.

A DOLL HOUSE IN PRINCETON'S WESTERN SECTION -We havejust listed an immaculate one and a half story home just off Mountain Ave.Inside is a cozy living room, separate dining room with built-in cupboard,large sunny kitchen, screened porch, 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, full basementand lots of storage space. Outside, the yard is large enough for a. garden,but not big enough to be a burden. Just Listed! Call 924-0095.

$85,500.

BEAUTIFUL PILLARED COLONIAL in University Heights. One of a kindhome with 4 bedrooms, 2% baths, large slate foyeV, huge kitchen, familyroom with fireplace. Be sure to see this bnel Call 89045800.

$86,900.

HAMILTQN • Consider this a buy! A lovely Colonial with a nice sunnybackyard, panelled family room, sliding doors to the patio. Ready forsummer enjoyment. Call 799-1100. ..." $79,900.

92 ACRES of beautiful land on Harbourton-Rocktown Road ready for sub-division. The land has a pond, rolling meadows and woods. Call 92443095for details.

BETTER THAN NEW - Charming, professionally decorated ThompsonColonial 4 years young with three fireplaces, family room, kitchen com-bination, plus library, living room, dining room, oversized master bedroomand many other unusual features, on a completely wooded more than 2acre lot on a cul-de-sac. Call 924-0095 $290,000.

WEST WINDSOR RANCH - Three bedrooms, two baths, dose toPrinceton; convenient to New York commuting. Rooms include a cornerfireplace, living room with dining area, kitchen, family room, central air anddouble carport. House attractively placed on a large lot with many treesand plantings. August Occupancy! Call 924-0095 . $88,900.

LAWRENCE TWP. - This 4 bedroom, 2V4 bath home offers-real value,with its central air, free standing fireplace in the family room, private patioand fenced yard. This home has been well carecLfor and shows it. Lowmaintenance with its aluminum trim. Call 737-3301 ??V . . . $78,900.

"We ore one of the lorgest insurersof homes in New Jersey. See us for your

HOMEOWNERS POLICYbefore you close on your new home."

Princeton Sale* Staff

MISF. M. ComizzoliCathy GeoghanZelda Laschever

Edith MesnickRuth SklllmanDorothy Zapalac

PRINCETONOne Palmer Square

WAITERB.• • WAITER B.

HOWEserving people since 1885

realtors • insurers

n

(609) 924-0095 PENNINGTON • FLEMINGTON • HAMILTON

WEST WINDSORPrinceton -Mights town Rd.

Princeton Junction

(609)799-1100

West Windsor Sales Staff

Vivian MacPhorsbn Adam MartinBill BaranyayIrma BruschiniKay ConnlkleClaire Cdyley •Nancy Healey 'Edith Jones

' ji

Judy MartlnetxMartie MaxwellCliff MessenheimerBarbara Nixon yDon Perrine SJudy Wiley

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE14-B Week of April 18 - 20,1979

I•'i'l

1

Adlerman, Click & Co.

Est. 1927

For All Area Listings•? Realtors ana Insurers

(609) 924-0401 4-6 Hulfish St., Princeton, N.J. (609) 586-1020Evenings (609) 924-1239

Member: Princeton Real Estate Group, Multiple Listing Service, World Wide Relocation Service

JoanAlpart .Phyllis UvlnDan FacciniKb* Cr*«nb*rgBarbara PlnkhamKaren TranbarhLOISFMJo Ell*n CresimanEsfhar PogrcblnMyrna Ahm*d

Hai.lSHxNoraWIImotSukiUwinDorothy KramarJaiwLambarly 'Natalia V.KotiMariana HorovHxKathlaanFaaEdyca RotanthalaSarah Larach

• : £ • • :

LOOKING FOR A PRINCETON CONTEMPORARY? - We have the• perfect one for you in the perfect location, too. This custom

home includes a most dramatic living room that features a 12 footbrick free-standing fireplace with raised hearth. Included in thismost gracious home is a dining room, four bedrooms, 2 full bathsand a very large family room. Situated on a beautiful lot andavailable for quick occupancy. Priced to sell at $ 165,000.

WORK AT HOME? This one is the answer. 3 bedrooms, bathliving room, dining room, eat-in kitchen and laundry. In addition,there's a separate building (30' x 40') with heat, electricity and

PRINCETON RIVERSIDE COLONIAL • If you are looking for a- roomyhome for an active family, here's the solution to your problems. Inaddition to a gracious entry way, large living room, formal diningroom, family room w/fireplace, kitchen with family eating area, 5upstairs bedrooms and 214 baths, you'll also enjoy the privacy of ehuge screened porch, an open deck, and the additional play spaceafforded by the dry finished basement. Call for appointment today

S1M.000.

bath. Lovely V4 acre lot. Call for details. $44,900

IN PRINCETON ?1- Vi years young, immaculate and spacious 4 B/R,2- J4 bath colonial on 1- 54 acre wooded lot in prime area. L/R, D/R,eatrin kitchen w/deck overlooking woods. Family Room,w/fireplace! 4 extra large B/R's, 2 car side-turned garage, fullbasement and central air. Landscaping by Ambteside Gardens. Amarvelous value ' $179,900.

IN LAWRENCEVILLE - 4 bedroom, 2-54 Bath colonial, fullbasement, 2 car garage, central air, on a quiet street. NOW AT '

$103,000.

HEAVEN CAN WAIT -but this one won't. lfLyou>e been lookingfor a WASHINGTON COLONIAL - in all hs spacious glory - yoursearch is over. BRAND NEW TO THE MARKET, this 5 B/R, 2-54bath beauty is in move-in condition with central air, brick fireplace,professional landscaping and it's only a mile to the train. Priced tosell at $132,500.

TWO FOR ONE — This spacious ranch can be yours, home and alsoyour parents', or your teenage daughter's or son's as it has twoseparate living areas. Large living room, dining area, modern kit-chen,. 3 bedrooms, (2of which are panelled), panelled basementwith another fully equipped kitchen, enclosed sunporch, enclosedbreezeway, and to top'it all of swimming pool and patio with shade.

% Lovely trees and shrubs on a quiet residential street.Asking $67,900.

A MOST ELIGIBLE HOME - waiting for a suitor! It has style -colonial. It is young but experienced - 5 years old. Tall and han-dsome - it has 4 B/R's, 1-54 baths, family room and lovely eat-inkitchen. Entertaining - there's a large bright living room andseparate dining room. Included in the dowry are basement, garageand air conditioning on 54 acre lot in a grand family nieghborhood.Ring us up to see this engaging home at $83,500.

IMAGINE entertaining formally in a cathedral-ceilinged living roomand dining room or country style in your wood-floored kitchen andfamily room. Add 4 bedrooms, 2-54 baths, fireplace and a fenced-in back yard with trees for shade and privacy. See your new homein East Windsor. . $83,500

INVEST I 3 HOUSES ON M ACRE MINI FARM - Nice houses bring asolid income to owner' Large outbuildings provide fabulous spacefor storage, hobbies.' birds of animals. As a kennel, farm or incomeproperty,.you won't find much to compare! $125,000.

3 BEDROOM RANCH on V4 acre tot surrounded by Green Acres.Living room with sliding doors to deck, eat-in kitchen, 1 bath, fullbasement, and central air. $41,000.

LOVELY FIREPLACE IN THIS 4 bedroom ranch on 54 acre lot incountry setting. Living room, dining room, eat-in kitchen, 1 cargarage. • - $39,900.

BETTER LOOK TWICE - appearances are deceiving. It's hard tobelieve there's this much living space in one package. Living room,dining room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 154 baths, brick and woodfamily room, playroom, laundry and office. Lovely 54 acre lot onpretty residential street. Can't believe it's true? Come see foryourself. . ~ $66,900.

JUST LISTED IN THE HEART OF PRINCETON - An estab.nedstained glass studio and distributor of stained glass supplies.Lucrative business opportunity for the creative person. Call fordetails. . $55,000.

MAKE YOUR OWN KIND OF MUSIC - in this lovely Princeton homeA composition of amenities including a new modem kitchen

overlooking a-private garden, living room, dining room, 4 B/R's, 2baths, family room and garage awaits your appreciation. Don't letthis be your unfinished symphony when you and your family canharmonize beautifully in this well cared for property within easywalking distance to schools and shopping. $ 119,500.

NEW IN PRINCETON. The most wanted layout wfth the mostwanted look. This luxurious home is now being built on a heavilywooded lot near Princeton's Herrontown Woods and Bird Sanc-tuary. Large living room, family room with full wad fireplace (opt.),formal dining room, family eating area wtth sliding glass doors to.

, ample deck (opt.). 4 B/R's, 2- 54 baths, 2 car garage. $174,900.,

COUNTRY LIVING • Only 25 minutes from Princeton in a smallcommunity is this 3 bedroom ranch with large modern eat-in kit-chen, living room, full bath, panelled family room which can beused as a 4th bedroom, central air and one car garage. For familyliving, this is ideal. Plenty of room for the children to play on thislovely 54 acre tot. . $37,500.

INVEST IN THIS PROPERTY - 6 + acre lot on Route 1 - strategiclocation. Only . $65,000.

2.55 ACRE LOT in R-1 single family zone. A buy at only $45,000.

"PRINCETON RFC LAND • Build now - hedge against inflation orjust enjoy! Spectacular historical farm land in charming canal area -excellent frontage & depth - woods & interesting terrain - site of oldmines - most unusual offer and unique opportunity - terms 'available) Approximately 120 acres.

LAND • Contiguous to American Cyanarnid, 2 4 4 3 phis acreszoned RO-1, lejuarch and office. Vary short distance to Route 1 ,Quaker Bridge M a i and Mercer Mat . Easy access to Princeton andPrinceton Junction. .

COMMERCIAL BUILDING in Hkjhtstown. $79,900.

49 PLUS ACRES — INDUSTRIAL LAND - Washington Township.Located a short distance from Robbinsville Airport and SharonCountry Club. Good access to both Northern and Southern routes.Cell for details.

Prom$390.00

LUXURYFEATURES

• 1&2 Bedrooms• Individual HAV Heat• Up to 2 V4 Baths• tadiv.A/C.• Private Balcony with

Patio Door• Refrigerator• Dishwasher• Dens with Custom

Bar Sink• Garages Available

(StandardW/Townbouses)

Rt.a.W««OaaMrri» nit. Centime

OFFICE&.M.-6P.MPHONE

609-921-1155

Apts./HousesTo Share

FURNISHED APT - Wantedone working woman to shareapt. in East Windsor withworking woman. References

" required. Call Mon-Fri. after 7pm, 609-448-8193.

TWELVE ACRES plus barn,exc. location in Hopewell Boroarea. Am interested in ex-perienced person to utilizearea for mutual benefits.There is a furnished roomavailable at $115/ mo. Call609-466-3328 to 10 pm.

MALE/ FEMALE grad/ -professional lo share twobedroom Lawrencevilleapartment. Call Aubreythroughout week at 609-896-0753 after 6:15 pjn.

Apts./HousesTo Share

ROOMMATE WANTED - for2 b / r, 2 bath apt. at PrincetonMeadows. Male or female.Call Mike 609-452-2330 days or771-0718 eves. & weekends.

LOOKING FOR 1 femaleroommate to share a house inthe Princeton area.$135/month. Call 609-452-1831during the day.

FEMALE to share large apt,Ewing. Fireplace, own room.$120 per mo. 609-392-6093. .

RESPONSIBLE workingwoman wanted to share twob/ r apt. in Hunters GlenPrinceton Meadows. Im-mediately available. Call Ann201-4994108 days or 609-799-0644 eves. .

Rooms For Rent Rooms For Rent

HILTONREALTY CO. OF PRINCETON^ INC.

ALL THE ROOM YOU NEED - and more. 5 bedroom, 31/2 bathColonial Ranch with large family room as well as a den. Beautiful treedlot with miniature fruit trees. .' .$150,000.

-•X Sk

YOU WILL LOVE THIS 4 bedroom, 2M> bath, centrally air conditionedRanch, located 5 miles north of Princeton. Close to two railroads,shopping just 4 minutes away, and schools 5 minutes by car. Thecountryside is beautiful, and neighbors friendly. This can be your home.Call Hilton $135,000.

NEW TWO STORY COLONIAL under construction. Four bedrooms,foyer, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, modern kitchen,family room with fireplace. Basement, 2 car attached garage on one acretreed lot . . .$129,900.

COMMERCIAL....Prime space for lease on Brunswick Pike inLawrence Twp. 1275 Sq. Ft. to 1675 Sq. Ft. available. Good parkingfacilities. Property can be used for a variety of businesses. Bldg. is also forsale and includes a 7 room apartment, which is presently occupied.

I $135,000.

THIS LARGE COLONIAL can be yours. It has 4 bedrooms, modernkitchen, living room, dining room; family room with fireplace, 2V£ baths,full basement, 2 car garage. Windows are thermopane throughout

. . . . . . $125,000.

BUSINESS FOR SALE - Pizza and Sandwich Shop with all equipment -Princeton location '. . . . $29,5001

Private Property Week

April 15 -April21

Enjoy Your Right to Own Property

MEMBER:Princeton Real Estate GroupMercer & Somerset County MLSAffiliated Independent Brokers(Nationwide Referral Service)

open 7 days till/5 p.m.Evenings and Weekends Call:

Harvey Rude,William Schei issler. 921-8963

201-359-5327

194 Nassau St. 609-921-6060Hilton Bldg., 2nd Floor

Rita Margolis'Allen D'Arcy, 799-0685 'Russ Edmonds, 201-449-9357Jim Ajamian, 466-1592Asa G. Mowery. 395-1671

ROOM & SEMI-EFFICIEN-CIES — at weekly rate.

smoker Rrfs" wMuTred "«»- Princeton Manor Motel,smolcer. Refs. required. 609- Monmoufe Jet. 201-32SM555!

DESIRABLE ROOM FORRENT — near campus. Non-

ROOM FOR RENT INHIGHTSTOWN — Gentlemanpreferred, refs. required. Callbetween 3-6pm, 609448-3810.

3 ROOMS k BATH - 3rd floorof quiet house near campus.No cooking. $300/mo. for 2.

•609424-8146.

ROOMS FOR RENT — large &furnished in nice house in quietwooded area. Washer, dryer,dishwasher. $150 & $200 permontfi. Call Neil or Andre.609-924-3269.

IN LAWRENCEVILLE —furnished Bedroom w/use ofkitchen. 609-883-6858.

FURNISHED MOTEL ••ROOMS-TV, w/w carpet, heat,a/c, maid service available, VERY NICELY FURNISHEDHightstown-Windsor area. ROOM — with refrigerator.From 160 per week. 609-448- Professional man preferred.8637- 'cal l after 4pm, 60M21-6242!

Rooms For RentROOM FOR RENT — femaleonly, non-smoker. Walkingdistance from town &University campus. Call 609-921-2785 after 5 pm.

FURNISHED ROOM — withkitchen priv., Franklin Twp.,mature woman. Call after 6p.m. 201-545-2207.

ROOM IN PRIVATE HOME -for non-smoking professionalgentleman. Light kitchenprivileges. 609-921-7425.

LARGE ROOM - with bath, TV& some kitchen privilegesavail . to semi-retiredprofessional person. $35 perweek. Reply to Box #02401 c/oThe Princeton Packet.

ATTRACTIVE ROOM - forrent. Walking distance tocenter of Princeton. Parkingfacih'ty. Gentleman only. 609-924-0008.

LARGE FURNISHED ROOM— Hamilton Twp. Call 609-586-3692.

To Ploca aClas«lfi«dAd

In Princeton call609-924-3250

TOWN & COUNTRY SPECIALISTS

WEIDEL REAL ESTATE, INC. is expanding its,residential Dept. and has open ings for neWdr ex-'perienced sales associates. Weidel offers an ex-cellent in-house residential training program thatincludes in-depth coverage of the following topip:

1. Real Estate Contracts ..2. Prospecting for Listings ^ . .'3. Planning your Work4. a Financing5. ' Demonstrating a Home

These are only a few topics covered. Instruction in-cludes color video training in all phases of realestate business. If your are interested in a realestate career, join one of the "Oldest, largest andmost active" companies in this area. Call WeidelReal Estate at 882-3804 and ask for RichardWeidel or Earl Sneddon.

leal Estate. I K .and

~i

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDEWeek of April! 8-20,1979

15-B

609-924-2222

)

]

I

}

33]33333)3]3

Over-sized Colonial Raised RanchThis spacious rained ranch was given the largest lot on Bertrand Drive, and includes a fenced-inarea for children or pets. There is a deck, opening from double doors in the dining room, facing thewooded area behind the house. Five bedrooms are offered plus an extra room over the garage withits own entrance. Family room with fireplace, three full baths, in excellent condition....We'd like toshow it to you at the very first opportunity. - $165,000.

Princeton's Riverside SectionAs you will readily see, this Thompson designed five bedroom Colonial has been well maintained.

' The landscaping is superb and the exterior was painted in 1978, giving this home a fresh, neatappearance: Bright and cheery inside, too. . - $157,000.

PUBLIC OPEN HOUSE: SATURDAY. APRIL 21,1-4 p.m.; Directions: Nassau St. north to left turn onHarrison; right on Franklin; right on Tee Ar; house is number 14. .

Adorable Three Bedroom Colonial in Princeton Borough_Come and see for yourself what a lovely home this is! There's a fireplace in the living room, aseparate dining room, a screened in porch in the rear for cool summer nights, and a lovely lot withmature trees and other shrubs. We'll see you this Saturday and show you the rest! Or call us for aprivate viewing sooner. • . ' $94,725.

Weal Estate 609-921-1700REALTORS

Give Your Home the Firestone Advantage...ALL OF THESE PRINCETON HOMEOWNERS HAVE!

Outstanding Colonial in Princeton TownshipLooking for a gracious home in.a superb setting? Brand new to the market is this lovely fivebedroom home in one of Princeton's prettiest areas. The large living room, formal dining room andcomfortable family room with fireplace are PERFECT for entertaining. Warm weather gatheringseasily move outdoors to the new multi-level terrace, professionally landscaped last fall-Words arenot enough -you must see all that this home offers! We'd be delighted to show you this out-standing property at your convenience. $205,000.

Riverside at Lake CarnegieBeautifully decorated home on a spectacular comer property in the most sought after section of .Princeton. Four bedrooms (all upstairs), fireplace in the living room, separate dining room, brightkitchen, and a pretty terrace with a privacy fence off the family room. Meticulously and lovinglymaintained. Call for a private viewing. $155,000.

New Listing on Snowden Lane

Firestone is proud to offer this cozy three bedroom ranch home on desirable Snowdec Lane. Thelarge living room features a fireplace, and there is a delightful jalousied porch off the rear of thehouse for summer evenings. Call now and let us show some of the other marvelous features of thishome! • $W,500.

" — . D i r e c t i o n s : " — « • P*e north to Gallup;

Custom Tudor in Princeton's Western SectionA beautiful, brand new home in one of Princeton's finest neighborhoods! Superbly suited forgracious entertaining, this home offers a craftsman's touch in its many quality' appointments suchas its elegant winding staircase in the foyer. Featured are an extra large living room, family roomwith fireplace and oak parquet floors, versatile first floor bedroom with bath, plus four other up-stairs bedrooms. Enjoy cool summer nights on a very special balcony off the master bedroom suite.Call your Firestone professional for an appointment today. $230,000.

Roomy Split in Stunning SettingThis lovely home in Princeton Township is making it's debut this week. Lots of attention has beengiven to this home: four bedrooms, family room, fireplace, potential 5th bedroom, master bedroomwith full, private bath inside; birch garden and perennial border garden near the terrace plusfreshly painted exterior outside. Call us for appointment and we will show you all of the otherthings that make this a very special property. . $165,000.

PUBLIC OPEN HOUSE: SUNDAY, APRIL 22. 2-5 p.m.: Directions: Nassau St. north past HarrisonSt.; turn right on Wilton: house on corner on Wilton and Pelham

New Listing in Princeton BoroughWe've just listed this charming colonial in Princeton Borough's historic Jugtown area. The front toback foyer, living room, and dining room are all carpeted wall to wall. There are four bedroomsand two full baths. Also possible here is an apartment on the upper floors where an extra kitchenalready exists. Visit us on Sunday right at the house and see for yourself the possiblities that exist inthis great location. . $132,500. - *

n r-i n n r i 1-1 r*i i—1 i r-i i—i r-i I-I n n m rurii—1>

Iccccccccccc

Rooms For Rent Apts. For Rent Apts. For Rent

HOLLYHOLLOW

Contemporary Rancher - We are offering one of the finest homes in the area. This ValleyForge stone front home offers 2800 sq. ft. of home with many of the extras necessary to makethis home as beautiful and desirable as possible. This home was built with one thing in mind--excellent design and comfort. Offering such features as: large living room with marblefireplace, formal dining room, ultra modem kitchen, two full baths, three establishedbedrooms, half finished basement, inground cement swimming pool - 20x40 with all theequipment, all natural slate floors, two car garage. All this and more, situated on 12 acres ofbeautiful land with running creek through property. Privacy is the keyword here, in that thehome is situated well enough off the road frontage - 600 ft. so it cannot be seen. You must seethis extraordinary home to really appreciate its true value $175,000.

Historical Farm House - This home, built in 1767, offers all the charm and grace of theColonial Era with the exception of upgrading the electric and plumbing, this house retainsmany of its original features such as: extra large living room, formal Hining room, countrystyle kitchen, 6 established bedrooms, and attic which can be finished off into a beautifulstudio area, brick and plaster construction, oversized garages, situated on a beautiful 9V4acres, with 430 ft. road frontage. We invite everyone to see this historical gem, with many 'extra features too numberous to describe $139,900.

JOHNT

INC

REALTORS2313 Highway 33

RobblnsvilU, N.J. 08691586-1200

BOARDER — Rooms to rentw. kitchen privs. Rural far-mhouse in Ringoes. 201-782-3768.

ROOM FOR RENT - 2 blocksfrom UniVersity. $145. Call PatKery, 212-888-0559 or eves. 609-921-2306.

ROOM IN Private home inCranbury. Private entrance &bath. $110. Call Linda 609-448-0226 days.

ROOM FOR RENT — inLawrenceville. 609-896-9467.

FURNISHED ROOM — largebedroom w/bath. Call 874-6344after 6 p.m. Mature womanpreferred.

FURNISHED ROOM to rent,share bath. Walking distanceto university. Off streetparking avail. $135/mo. plussecurity. 609-924-6879 after 5p.m.

ROOM FOR RENT — inprivate home near RCALaboratories; gentlemanonly; parking on premises;please phone 609-452-2125.

ROOM FOR RENT, EWINGTOWNSHIP. 609-883-4219.

Apts. For Rent

ONE & TWO BEDROOM"APTS — for immediate oc-.cupancy at Windsor Castle, E.' Windsor Twp. From Princetonlake 571 to Old Trenton Rd.make a right then proceed tothe first left beyond a couplehundred feet from Old TrentonRoad. 609-448-5995.

OLD FASHIONED CITYLIVING — 640 West Apart;ments. 1 BR, decorator'sdelight. 2 BR, 2 bath, alsoavailable to 2 working per-sons. Please callMrs. Kenneyat 609-893-2753, Trenton.

LUXURY APT. —2 bedrooms,wooded area, redwood deck,all modern conveniences, 4min. from downtown Prin-ceton. $475. 609-921-6396.

TWIN RIVERS - moderngarden apts. furnished orunfurnished. Exc. lease (longor short term) 609-448-7792.

TWO BEDROOM RENTAL —May 1st - Sept. 1st. At-tractively furnished livingroom, bath, eat-in kitchen withnew refrigerator & stove.Princeton Boro. Walkingdistance to buses and center oftown. Quiet street. Call 609-924T7491.

DARIEN AT VILLAGE 2 -New Hope, ,Pa. Modern,luxury, 1 bdrm. apts. andTownhouses. All modernconveniences, free swimmingpool, 4 tennis courts, sauna.Immediate occupancy. 215-862-9133.

ALLENTOWN N.J. — 2bdrms, large living rm, eat-inkitchen, Targe bathroom,parking, $300 per month in-cluding most: utilities. Call 609-921-2417 or 2435.

U N F U R N I S H E D NE"WLUXURY. APTS. 1 & ' 2'• bedrooms. $320 and up.Meadow Lane Apts., 5 minutesfrom Princeton Jet. Call 609-452-2104.

N.Y.C. — PRINCETONEXCHANGE — lovely WestSide (Manhattan) gardenapartment. One bedroom,furnished. Available Junethrough August, in exchangefor comparable living space inPrinceton area. Call Robert,212-724-7309.

CENTER OF TOWN - 3rd floorefficiency in private house.Available immediately $225.609-9244794 or 4793.

To PlacaaClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250 .

PRINCETON: — Con-veniently located large in-town unfurnished one bedroomapartment, (first floor ofduplex building). AvailableApril 10 for one yearminimum. Large living room,with fireplace, full diningroom, brand new bath andkitchen w/dishwasher,clothes washer & dryer.Garage, driveway & workspace in basement included.Four minute walk to FirestoneLibrary. Nice neighborhood -corner of Wiggins & No.Tulane Street. $450, plusutilities or $425 withoutgarage. References required.One month security. Call Mr.Wendell, 212-785-3555.

LAMBERTVILLE — 2 bdrm.apt. Quiet, central location.$375./mo includes gas, heat &elec. 609-924-7484 after 7 pm.

3* BDRM APT - in Princeton,minutes from Nassau St.Parking. $350/mo. 609-921-1038after 6 pm.

LAMBERTVILLE —. inresidential area. A spacious 1BR apt. a short walk todowntown shopping. $275 incl.water & heat. Adults. No-pets.609-466-2363.

FOX RUN APTS— availablefor sublease in May. Call 609-924-2392.

EXOTIC 2 BR APT —overlooking New Hope.Gabled LR w/skyligbt,modern kitchen with dish-washer, clothes washer &dryer. 2 baths, carpetingthroughout. Screen porch.Pool, tennis courts, sauna &paddle tennis on premises.$425/mo. Call 609-921-1890after 6 pm.

VERY ATTRACTIVE —completely furnished 3 roomapt. w/efficiency kitchen, 2BR's, 2 baths. Pine panelledwalls, carpeting, privateentrance. 1 block from NassauSt. No pets. Single personpreferred. $450/mo. 609-924-0322.

MOUNTAINVIEW IN EWINGAs yon approach this house, the early American influence is plainly visible—and it carriesthrough to the inside. A spacious home offering three master-sized bedrooms plus 1 lA baths.On the ground floor you'll find a formal living room and dining room, gourmet kitchen and•dinette area. You can also expect the extras, full basement, 2 car garage, wall to wall car-peting, vinyl tile in kitchen and dinette areas, ceramic tile in the baths. What more couldyou ask for? $79,900.

•13

EWING TOWNSHIP

Super colonial cape in Mountain View! Formal living and dining rooms, family room withraised brick hearth fireplace, gourmet kitchen with sunny eat-in area, den or office, masterbedroom and bath on first. Three bedrooms and bath on second. One of a kind recreationroom on lower level open to grade and rock garden patio. Professional landscapinc. '

_ V $109,500. ' '

JOHN 1

^HENDERSON

is; t

]*.]•4

^*^i*a»'*»>qeaiS8gBy6^t<ffi>gi>3S3«^^

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE16-B Week of April 18-20,1979

Lrianne F. BleacherPete CaliawayPatCahillAnne GallagherLinda HoffJudy McCaughan REAL ESTATE

4 NASSAU STRST* PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 085406(»S21-1050

EDGERSTOUNE ROADBuilt in 1927 under the direction of noted architect, Marion Wyeth, every effort wasmade to recreate the style and elegance of an 18th Century English Manor House,many details are authentic antiques. Twenty six rooms plus six baths. Separateapartment. Over three private acres with a pond and pool. $450,000.

HOPEWELL BOROUGHHandsome old Colonial in the "heart of town". Living room with bookshelves, sunnyden, exceptionally large dining room, eat-in kitchen and Tst floor powder room. Threebedrooms, sitting room and bath on the 2nd floor. Attractively landscaped grounds,perennial flower beds. $98,500.

PLAINSBORO

Newly painted 100 year old Colonial, country setting. Front entry, shelved sittingroom, country kitchen with beamed ceiling and pine cabinets, powder room, laun-dry/mud room. Fireplace in living room. Three bedroms and bath on the second floor.Rustic bam, two car garage. Pretty yard backs up to pond. . •78,000.

ROUTE1

A cozy three bedroom ranch situated on a large treed lot. Spacious living room withfireplace, panelled kitchen and den. Dressing room and bath. Large screened porch.Detached garage. Consider the possiblities-it's zoned ROM 3! $125,000.

Charlotte McLaughlinTerry MerrickBill RoeblingWillaStackpoleKatherineG.WertEleanor Young

PROVINCELINE ROAD

We don't know who danced on the floors, or slept in this Pre-Revolutionary far-mhouse, but we do know that one could easily have two parties at the same time andovernight guests pose no problem. 120 acres across from the Beden's Brook C|ub.

$750,000.

PRINCETON

Harrison Street - Investment property - two separate offices presently "zoned formedical usage, semi-finished-ready to adapt to the needs of new owner. Twobedroom apartment on the second floor. Fifteen parking spaces behind building.

•230,000.

r HENDERSON, HOUSES...I I I

s m

OVERLOOKING A STREAM AND INEXCELLENT MOVE-IN CONDITION isthis four bedroom, two and one half bathhome. Large entry foyer, raised formal livingroom, family room that leads to a very privatepicturesque rear yard and garden, central airconditioning, wall to wall carpeting and afantastic modern kitchen. $85,900.OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1-4 — 205 Old Cranbury Road off Rte. 130 inEast Windsor.

NEED BEDROOMS? This handsome EastWindsor home has five plus three and one halfbaths, sunken living room, family room,bright and airy kitchen and fantastic storagespace throughout. Call today. for an ap-pointment.. $91,500.

SUMMERS COMING IN PRINCETONJCT...SPLASH into your1 own 16x32inground pool • be cooled with central air inthis 5 BR colonial. EXTRA 20x20 rumpusroom. You must see this home to drink in itsmany extras $141,500.

QUALITY AND EXTRAS GALORE in thisWashington Model 5 bedroom colonial with2V5 baths. This is a different house inPrinceton Ivy offering an exceptional customkitchen that must be seen to be believed.Beautifully decorated and ready for yourinspection . . $144,000.

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-558 SJayback Drive off South Mill Road, WestWindsor Twp.

GOLDEN CREST PARK ESTATES on anextra Urge lot boasting 4 bedrooms, 2Vi

. baths, beamed family room, patio, formalliving and dining room and an outstanding eatin kitchen, panelled basement and decoratedbeautifully. $91,900.

ATTENTION BUILDERSWe have 36 Building lots ready to be builtupon just off Route 27 with a Princetonaddress. Terms are available for qualifiedbuyers. There are also additional lotsavailable at this same location.

HERE THERE'S ROOM TO SPARE. EastWindsor, available immediately. This four orfive bedroom bouse with panelled F.R.,sliding glass doors, 2V4 baths and a largeyard. Make an appointment to see thisspacious colonial. $79,900.

TERRACE ON THE GREEN BEAUTY -with 4 bedrooms, 2V4 baths, fireplace infamily room and hardwood floors throughout.Property backs to wooded green acres.

187,900.

THIS IS THE BRICK PATIO TO THISE X C E P T I O N A L T W I N RIVERSTOWNHOUSE boasting four bedrooms, 2V4baths, full basement and central air con-ditioning. Upgraded carpeting, new kitchenfloor and ready for your inspection.

$54,900.

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 12-5780 Twin Rivers Drive North of Highway 33

WINDSORSBox 98

Princeton Jet., N J . 08550

(609)799-4500

Member, M*rc*r County Multiple Listing Service

. home of the professionals !

JOHNT

REALTORS

INC PRINCETON4 Chorlton Street

Princeton, N J . 08540(609)921-2776

Firestone EstateWealPUBLIC OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, APRIL 22. 2-5 p.m.; Directions: PrincetonHightstown Rd. to Clarksville; turn right; left on North Post; left on Jacob; Left onMeadow Run Drive.

BEST COMMUTE TO NEW YORK CITY IN NEW JERSEY 111 This contemporary,located just minutes from the NY train, will impress you with its setting: a large lot. withmany tall trees. Inside, the wall of windows and vaulted ceiling combine with the fireplace tomake the living room an inviting place to entertain. There is a formal dining room, too. Thekitchen is perfect for family meals, with breakfast served in the nook overlooking the TVroom. There is a plant room with greenhouse, two game rooms, a master suite with bath andstudy, three other bedrooms including separate guest bedroom with bath, and much morethatjfe will happily show you personally. Call us today for an appointment. • $143,500.

REACTORS 924*2222 r

I

Apts. For Rent Apts. For Rent Apts. For Rent

ALLENTOWN N.J.

1 bdrrn, living rm. dining rm,kitchen, color tile bath, luxuryapartments- $220. Immediateoccupancy. Private entrance,private porch, air con-ditioning, carpeting, ther-mopane, screens, spaciousclosets & cabinets.Refrigerator / freezer,range/oven, washer/dryerfacilities, TV antenna,reserved parking.

CRESTWOODCOLONIAL ARMS

609-259-7540BrezaRd.

[Off Yardville-Allentown R d ]

AlPARTMENT SUBLET -Hunters Glen, $236. Call Ed,609-292-7620 day or 609-799-4284pm.

TWO APARTMENTS - inPrinceton Twp. East. 2bedrooms; 1 bedroom .andstudy. Both new, modern,decorated, with parking,private terraces, private'entrances. $450 each. 609-924-3671.

StUDIO APT - Furnished. InPrinceton Twp. $375.

N.T.CALLAWAYREAL ESTATE

4 Nassau St., Princeton609-921-1050 '

TWIN RIVERS - AvonVillage, Rent $325. 1 BRdeluxe, private entrance,washer/dryer, dishwasher,c/a patio, w/w cpt. Rent incimaint. fee, tennis & swim dub.609-587-2812 between 4 pm & 10pm.

A V A I L A B L E I M -MEDIATELY — 1 room ef-ficiency, $250 per month,walking distance to NassauSt., Heat & water included.609-921-0977.

A V A I L A B L E I M -MEDIATELY - 1 BR apt.Hunters Glen, $285 plus Utfls.Call Pat, 212-239-3618 eves. 609-799-3023.

AVAILABLE May 1 - % house,lr, dr. kit, 2 BR, cellar, yard.NO CHILDREN, NO PETS.No exceptions. $235/month.tenant pays own utilities. Gasheat & electric. Preferworking couple, one monthsecurity, one year lease.Landlord lives next door.

.Absolutely NO REAL'•• ESTATE AGENTS are to call.

609^48-7943 after 6 pm* forappointment.

. ' »• .

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDEWeek of April 18 - 20,1979 17-B

NEIGHBORHOODRBMJYGROUP

We'll help you make the right move.

WEST WINDSOR PLAINSBORO SCHOOL SYSTEM

WHY NOT THE BEST!

Community life is an important factor in choosing theright family home. We are justifiably proud of ourexcellent schools and varied recreational and culturalactivities which have produced a living standard ofexceptional quality. Scenic wooded and ideally suitedproviding on time Amtrak train service to N.Y.C. 45mih.

SPACIOUS COLONIAL -Large 4 bedroom, 2% bathColonial. Formal entrance foyer, large living room withfireplace, panelled family room, eat-in kitchen, formaldining room, % bath and separate laundry room onfirst floor. Upstairs 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths.Located on a fenced 14 acre with 18x36 ingroundpool. Basement and 2 car garage. $126,000.

SHERBROOKE ESTATESCOMMUTERS DELIGHT - Beautiful 4 bedroom, Vhbath two story Colonial. Large eat-in kitchen, livingroom with fireplace. Formal dining room, panelledfamily room, separate laundry room. Basement, 2 cargarage. Central air. Self-clean oven. Patio. Walk totrain, schools. $125,000.

ONE OF A KIND - Custom built 2 year old main-tenance free 9 room colonial, Central air, fireplace, fullbasement, on 1 acre -214 baths.. $149,500.

RAISED RANCH - Better than new 2 year old raisedranch, eat in kitchen, living room, dining room, 3bedrooms and bath. Lower level has family room withfire place, den, 4th bedroom, yA bath and laundryroom, central air, hard wood floors, garage taxes only$755 off ered at $82,500.

HOUSE BEAUTIFUL - Tastefully decorated 4 bedroom2% bath colonial with formal dining room, large livingroom, family room with sliding glass doors leading to apatio is in excellent condition, central air, carpeting,dishwasher, all draperies $89,900.

ONE YEAR NEW - Everything you want and need inthis 4 bedroom 2% bath colonial. 2 car garage centralair, washer, dryer, dishwasher, refrigerator, city waterand sewers. $85,000.

COLONIAL CAPE - QUALITY construction, con-venient to train, comfortable living, 4 bedrooms, livingroom with fire place, eat in kitchen, formal dining roombasement, garage, all located on a large lot with I.mature trees. : $86,500.,

MOVE-IN CONDITION - Four bedroom 1 % bath splitlevel, completely refinished, large living room withcathedral ceiling, formal dining room, kitchen,completely refinished, den with built-in bookshelves(panelled with barn siding) 2-car garage withworkshop. $86,500.

CUSTOM BUILT RANCH - Eat-in kitchen, living room,dining room,' large family room with fireplace, 3bedrooms, 1 % baths, 2 car garage, central air, in-ground pool. Enclosed porch. Full basement. $96,500.

COUNTRY RANCH - 4 bedroom Ranch. Kitchen eat-inarea, formal dining room, large living room with woodburning fireplace, den, full basement, central air,garage. Low, low taxes. ONLY $76,900.

NEW TWO STORY COLONIAL - to be built in WestWindsor - 9 rooms, 4 to 5 bedrooms, full basement,fireplace, hardwood floors,-2 car garage, 2-V6'. baths.

$114,000.

NEW l'/i STORY RANCH - Spring occupancy. Rvebedrooms, 3 full baths, 2V4 baths, 2 fireplaces, manyextras. $168,500.

(609) 799-2058 ANYTIME'The People Pleasers"

PETER LOUVER REALTY, Inc.P*t*r Oliver, Realtor

Princeton Station Office ParkBldg. 6 - 1 4 Washington Road

Princeton Junction :.

REALTORS

609-921-1550

609-737-9550246 NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON NEW JERSEY

SUPER PRINCETON LISTING!

Nestled in almost 3 acres of woods is this delightful brick "Storybook" country cottage. The drivewiding down through the trees brings you past the 2-car brick garage to the front entrance - largepanelled living room with marvelous fireplace and sunny window bay - separate dining room,kitchen, 2 bedrooms, and bath on main floor - Finished 2-room "suite" on second floor, basement- loaded with charm - Come See It. $92£00.

. Jo Clippingw- Beverly Crane - Harris Eubank - Pirn G^gar - Mcheta Hochman - Mar}ori« J a ^ w - Blen Kamay - B««K>r LaraanGinger Lennon - Berit Marshall - Jane B. Schoch w/"37 - Richard Schwartz - Carol Sykes - Judy D. Waiss-Dee Witeon-Tod Peyton'60-

T«dKopps/'21

ESTATE

LIGHT Karl and Pat Light, Brokers

Realtors 247 Nassau St. 609-924-3822

IT'SPRIVATEPROPERTY WEEKSO WHAT?Private Property Week may never be as popularas Thanksgiving and the Fourth of July. Still,it's as significant in its way as the other two.

Thanksgiving celebrates the survival of the firstsettlers. Independence Day commemo'rates thefounding of a free nation. But Private PropertyWeek celebrates the reasons behind theMayflower's voyage and the Declaration ofIndependence—people's needs for land of theirown and the legal right to possess it.

We take our right to own property pretty muchfor granted. We shouldn't. Private Property Weekis a reminder that if we don't.protect our right toeconomic freedom, we could lose our politicalfreedom, too.

This message was brought to you by theNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®,a group of people who believe that land is ourultimate resource, requiring the wisest and bestuse,.and the widest distribution of ownership.

Happy Private Property Week.

250 YEAR OLD RESTORED COLONIAL. 4 hugebedrooms, 2Vz baths, hobby room, TV room,dining room with radiant heated flagstone floor.Fireplaces. So much more it has to be seen. 2bedroom tenant/guest house. Gambrel roofedbarn. 2 room cabana with stone and masonryfireplace. Offered with 30 acres for $335,000. Moreor less land available. Brochure on request.

DON SHUMAN ASSOCIATES

Realtors

130 Main Street Flemington, NJ 08822(201)782-3413

Eves & Weekends: (201) 782-7061 or (201) 782-1212

Apts. For Rent Apts. For Rent

1979 PRIVATE PROPERTY WEEKAPRIL 15-21

Preserve I t . . Enjoy I t . . .Invest In It

Mercer County Board of Realtors-' 1432 Brunswick Am.

P.O. Box 5458, Trenton, N.J. 08638609-392-3666

FOR SALE

QUEENSTON COMMONThree-Bedroom Condominium

Walking Distanceto

Downtown Princeton - Princeton UniversityMany Special Features

Private Garage • Tennis Court • Swimming Pool$129,000

Telephone Owner for Appointment 809421-1882

HOPEWELL BORO —Charming 1 bdrm, fireplace inliving room, eat-in /Kit. w.pantry, l bath. Avial. May 1.Priv. entrance. $295/mo. in-cludes heat. 201-782-5971.

SUBLET — w/ option for fullyr. Avail. June l.Ewing Twp.,call Mike 609-452-2330 days.609-771-0718 eves. & wkends.

UNFURN. EFFICIENCY -Walk to campus, sublet falloption. Avail. May 1. $225./moincludes heat & hot water. 609-921-0859.

NEW HOPE, Pa: — Twoartistic apts. tor financiallyres. prof./bus. tenant, onESTATE in carriage house; 3blks. to town center. Apt. #1pri. ent., liv. rm., mod. Kit, 1bedrm, tile bath (shower .only+ 20' sundeck, $335. Apt. #2,smaller unit w/pri.ent.Liv.rm., mod. kit., 1 bedrm.,tile .bath (shower only) +patio, $285. We require lease,sec., dep., & good ref., fullparticulars in letter, applic.a p p r e c i a t e d ; pos i t ion ,background & how long atpresent address. Reply Box#02416 c/o Princeton Packet.

UNFURNISHED apt.: inHopewell. Living room, kit-chen, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Offstreet parking. Availableimmediately. $360./ mo. +utilities.

Walter B.Howe, Inc.,Realtors

One Palmer Square'Princeton. N.J. 08540

[609] 924-0095

SO.. BRUNS. 1 bdrm apt.fireplace, large area groundfl. $350, util. pd. 201-329-6879.

PRINCETON MEADOWS — 2bedroom, 1 bath apt. forsublet. $324/ mo; 2nd floor, offlot. Starts June 1. 609-799-3153weeknighls . after 7pm,weekends all day.

MANVILLE - 4 rm. apt,second floor. Cent, air cond.,carpeting. No pets. Avail. May1. Security, $240 plus utilities.201-722-3872.

: SUBLET — Hunters Glen, 1bedroom, avail. June 1. Callnights 609-799-4526 or days 201-474-7668.

SUBLET - Hunters Glen, 1bdrm. Upstairs. View of golfcourse $261/mo. Lease thruAug. '79 Call 609-799-0611 after6 pm.

ONE BEDROOM APT - javailable immediately,located in Hillsborough, tennis&. swimming facilitiesavailable, Rent $375 plus utils.Call 9-5 pm, 201-548-3311, after5 pm, 609-448-8974.

4 ROOM APT - located 15Myrtle Ave, Lawrence Twp. 2 'BRt living rm & kitchen, '.$260/month includes heat. 609-883-7841 or 883-9847.

CLASSIFIED ADSREACH 30,000

FAMILIES WEEKLY

STURDILY BUILT IN THE OLD TIME WAYwith slate roof and plaster walls is this in-town duplex on convenientMurray Place. Here is a find! Each side*has living room with cozyfireplace, nice sized dining room, kitchen with breakfast nook, and 3second floor bedrooms. Plus an airy third floor studio or 4th bedroom.Live in one house and gain good rental income from the other!

Brand new on the market at . $139,000.

/"-•£

IN-LAWS or INCOME(LIVE FREELY or LIVE FREE - Almost)

This larger-than-it-looks (app. 2300 sq. ft.) stone and frame ranch houseis an attractive investment either way. The intriguing main house — sixnice rooms highlighted by a superb kitchen -- is comfortably separatedfrom the three room apartment wing for freedom from in-laws or privacyfrom tenants. What's more, the rental income from the handsome and'spacious apartment could nearly cover the yearly costs of the entire house.On top of that, the house is planned to the last detail for easy maintenance

. AND energy conversation. Add to that perfect condition and a lovelywooded Princeton Twp. setting, and you've got a rare find at

REDUCED $164,500.

J

BEAR BROOK FARMHere is a ereat chance for vou back to the earth people! An almost 7 acrefarmette, close to Princeton, with everything to entice your green thumband yearn for animal husbandry. Heated greenhouse and potting shed,permanent gardens - asparagus, rhubarb, currants, berries, grapes as wellas bulbs and flowers - mature fruit trees of all varieties, a 2 stanchion barnand chicken house - all in excellent condition.

The dutch colonial house is neat as a pin, bright and cheery, livingroom with fireplace, family room, separate dining room, pleasant countrykitchen - and 3 plus bedrooms, 1 '/£ baths.

Plus a rustic small apartment for income and around-the-farm help.This is a real find at just $175,000.

'i

1

Constance BrauerJohnCartwrightMarcy CrimmlmCornelia Dlelhenn

SALES ASSOCIATES

Janet MattesonStuart MlntonCarl Pop*Braxton Preston

LawrenceWHe

Marge DwyerGladys Wright

MEMBER: Multiple Listing Service • Princeton Real Estate Group

Now Building

BKOOKMEADin Montgomery Twp.

Win. BucciBuilder, Inc.

• For information call

609-924-0906

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Custom built Cape Ann style, premium boroughlocation % mile to campus. 2 bedrooms, bath,Hying room, dining room, den, fireplace,greenhouse, 2 plus bedrooms on second floor. 2 cargarage, full basement, excellent condition, % acrelot

609-921-7351 or 215-836-5046 W M .

Asking $135,000.

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE18-B Week of April 18-20,1979

HOVGHTON REJiL ESTATE

WANDER TO WEST WINDSOR

A Colonial style home built by a builder for his own family. Later it wasconverted to two separate living areas.Situated on a lovely lot with a location convenient to Princeton and theJunction Railroad Station. ' • •Ideal for a handyman who can visualize the quality structure of thishouse. • • • • $79,000.

NEW TO THE SPRING MARKETMONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP

Trees, privacy and a swimming pool make outdoor entertaining a realpleasure in this gracious colonial set on one and one quarter acres. Thishome has four spacious bedrooms and two and one half baths. First floorhas slate entry, living room with picture window, over-sized dining room,large eat-in kitchen, panelled family room with fireplace, powder room,separate laundry area and music room. There is a two car garage as wellas greenhouse and full finished basement. Call for appointment.

$179,900.

CONVENIENT FOR COMMUTINGThis home is ideal for that bachelor guy or gal who wants to live in thecountry but commutes to work. It is convenient to walk to the trainstations, bus line and shopping areas. Living room, eat-in kitchen, 2bedrooms and bath make this a compact home $57,000.

RENTALSUnfurnished studio apartment - suitable for single person.. $234.00

MEMBER OFMultiple Listing ServiceMercer, Somerset County

Princeton Real.Estate Group

John H. Houghton, Licensed Broker' New Jersey and Pennsylvania

4

8 Palmer Square E., Princeton, N.J. 08540(located at the Nassau Inn building)

609-924-1001FREE PARKING PALMER SQUARE PARK & SHOP

New Benson BuildingWitherspoon and Spring Streets

Princeton, New Jersey

APARTMENTSNOW RENTING

Air conditioned, elevator, balconies,cathedral ceilinged-living rooms.

$600/month plus utilitiesJOHNT

REALTORS4 Chartton Street

Princeton, NJ. 08540(«09)921-2776

If You Are Moving, Up, Province HillMay Be Just What You're Looking For.

Here are magnificent contemporaries custom designed in striking ar-chitectural modes. Featuring large gracious entertainment areas undersoaring cathedral ceilings, foyer galleries, libraries with wet bars,downstairs master bedroom suites with luxurious baths, these beautifulhomes are situated in a country club environment of rolling countrysideand wooded lots on a 50 acre site just south of Princeton.

Province Hill offers all the cultural advantages of living near aprestigious university. Outstanding concerts, dance, drama, films at in-comparable McCarter Theatre and Tiger sports events at PalmerStadium become a way of life.

If it's time for you to consider other alternatives, see Province Hill.

OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN. 1-5Fackler Road, near Route 206

(Just South of Princeton, Lawrence Township (Princeton address)

JdHN I

^HENDERSONREALTORS^*

4 Charlton Stroet, Princeton, New Jersey 08540(609)921-2776

Apts. For Rent Apts. For Rent Apts. For Rent

MANVILLE - 3 room apt. $240.201-526-0685.

MONMOUTH JCT. - Fur-nished eff. apt. $175/mo. 1month security. Gentlemanpreferred. 609-924-8721.

HUNTERS GLEN APT. - exc.location, 2nd fir. 1 BR. Avail,immed. $280. Call 609-799-1607after 5 pm or 924-7500, ask forPat.

4 ROOM FURNISHED APT -no children, no pets. Cornerllth Avenue & Camplain Rd.Manville 201-722-2927.

KINGSTON—available May ismall furnished apt. for lperson only. Parking for 1 car,no pets. One month security609-924-5756.

MAGNIFICENT APT. — inHamilton Twp. located above 2offices occupied during theday. Ultra modern, eat-inkitchen, family room, formaldining room, spacious livingroom, 3 BR's, Vh baths, in-tercom-security s y s t e m ,plenty of closet space, washer& dryer hookup, fully car-peted, central air off-streetparking & fenced in land-scaped back yard with animalpen asking $360 plus utilities.Call «»-883-7134.

APT. IN RURAL SO. BRUNS.1 bdrm no children, pref.handy gentleman. 201-247-5722.

HILLSBOROUGH 3 rooms,kit., bath, heal & water sup-plied. $3457 mo. 201-359-4652after 5pm.

LAMBERTVILLE — Largeefficiency, apt, charming, $250.609-585-5017 eves. only.

MANVILLE — 3 rm. apt. withheat & hot water, $235 per mo.,1 mo security. 201-685-9523after 6:30 p.m.

NEIGHBORHOODREAUYGROUP

USA;YOUR NEIGHBORHOODREALTOR...SUSSMANPRINCETON JUNCTION

TAKE A PAD WITH YOU - soyou won't miss a thing in thisextraordinary Colonial built ofbrick and frame. Excellentm o t h e r / d a u g h t e rresidence/office situation. Notonly is this home elegantlydecorated but offers the finestin luxury and convenience. Forexample: Huge ceramic foyer,

gigantic kitchen, with breakfastarea, family room withmamouth raised hearthfireplace, 2V4 baths, 7bedrooms, wall to wall car-peting, central air, 2 car-garageand 1 plus acre lot. Much more.

$174,900.

HIGHTSTOWNNEIGHBORHOOD

RATED "X" - For ExcellentC o n d i t i o n ; . Inc ludesPROFESSIONAL OFFICE withseparate entrance, 4 bedrooms,154 baths. Colonial Style home,2 car garage. Total 17 roomswith 8 room office suite.,

$89,900.

EAST WINDSORFORMER RESIDENCE OFCLARA BARTON AND JOHNElY^JLoyely, 2 story residence

~(possible professional usage) onalmost 3 acres. Total 14 roomsincluding 2 full baths and 2powder rooms, full basement,fireplace, aluminum siding and2 car garage. $165,000.

NEW CONSTRUCTIONReady for immediate oc-cupancy. Lovely Split Colonialon wooded 14 acre lot featuresbasement and 1 car garage.Custom features. Call fordetails

$67,900.

NEW CONSTRUCTION

Builder is just beginning toconstruct a custom Colonial onchoice % acre wooded lot. Hewill be happy to work with youin completing this house.Available at $69,900.

HOPEWELL BOROUGHBUNGALOW - 414 rooms thathave been completelyremodeled. Also included are arefrigerator and attic fan. Pricedto sell at only $39,500.

Suss manlit 896 9300

BEALtpR

Apts. For Rent

2 BR APT. HOPEWELLBORO — w/dining room,living room & lge. kitchen,$425. Heat & gas included.Single person or couple, nopets. Garage also avail. $20609-924-3493 eves.

LAMBERTVILLE — 4 rooms& bath. Heal paid. June 1st.Ideal for middle aged person.Cat only. Sec. req. 201-996-4151.

• GUEST COTTAGE ONHORSE FARM - 1 BR on thecanal in Griggslown. Livingrm. w/ fireplace, DR. kitchen,full bath, large sunporch. Fullyfurnished. A/ C & utils. incl.$600 per month. Call 201-359-8356 after 8 pm.

2 BDRM APT. — woodedsetting in Princeton. Outdoordeck, a/ c, w/ d. Call Scott609-452-4204, 9-5 or 924-7683after 5 pm.

COUNTRY LIVING —Modern, private studio apt.with firepalce. Avail. June 15.On 10 acres. The AmwellValley. 15 min. to Princeton.$275/mo. plus utils. Callowner. 609-392-4100 or eves,201-788-4831.

CONDO-- E. Windsor, TwinRivers. 5 rooms, 2 baths, w/ wcarpel washer / dryer,balcony. 609-443-3905 after 6pm.

SUBLET - PLAINSBORO -Hunters Glen apts. 2 br, 1 bath2nd floor, overlooks pool, golfcourse. $314/mo avail. July l,1979 contact eves, 609-799-9320.

To Placs aClassified Ad

• ••••In Princeton call609-924-3250

Van Hise Realty• Realtor

Pennington, New JerseyTel.: 609-737-3615 or 609-883-2110

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP

QUIETLY SPECTACULAR - secluded by towering trees andprofessional landscaping. This Contemporary offers ultramodern kitchen with a built-in "Wok", formal dining room,living room with fireplace, family room, study or office, musicroom, 5 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 2 car -garage. Some specialfeatures are Inter-Com System, Burglar Alarm System, CentralVacuum System, Central Air Conditioning. Property has its ownTennis Court for everyone's enjoyment. Three generationscould live in this dwelling with extreme comfort and privacy.Call for showing and price. •

PENNINCTON BOROUGH

HARD TO FIND - is a Town Duplex. Each side containing 7rooms and bath. You have three choices (1) live in one side andrent out the other side. (2) rent both sides for income (3) convertthe property into a single family dwelling. Call us for showingand price.

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP

GET AWAY FROM IT ALL • noise, traffic, small yard, etc. Seethis attractive Rancher in Titusville. Modern kitchen with largeeating area, living room with built-in air conditioner, 3bedrooms, one full modern bath, full basement, 2 car garage,situated on over a half acre of land with privacy, property en-closed with split rail fencing. Call us for showing and price.

PENNINGTON BOROUGH

OLDER HOUSE YOU SAY - how about a Victorian oh a cornerlot. Modern kitchen with eating area, formal dining room, livingroom, study, 3 bedrooms, one full bath, 2 car detached garage.This dwelling has warmth and charm and is perfect setting fora n t i q u e s . Call for showing and price.

• t

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP

INDUSTRIAL BUILDING - Route 31; approximately 4000 squarefeet, 8 acres with 300 feet frontage, rear of property borders onthe Reading Railroad, close to all major highways. Some uses ofproperty are warehousing, auto dealers, wholesale business,restaurants, manufacturing are just a few. Call us for showingand price. ' ' -

BUY LAND: THEY DONT MAKE IT AN Y MORE 'Call us'for more information on th« obova listings. {

23 ACRES - wooded with stream - West Amwell twp. '.• • • • $31,900.

15.8 ACRES • Hopewell Twp. - Residential Zoned.• • • $4,000 par acra.

• . i ,

Mambar Multlpl* Listing Sarvica :

Holidays Call:B«v Wlllavar. 737-0462 Cathy Namath, 737-3051

Tharasa Jarvis, 737-0033 Beverly Glasson, 737-3727

Split-level HomeIn

PRINCETON'S RIVERSIDE SECTION

Four bedrooms, 2!4 baths, living room withfireplace, dining room, all electric kitchen, familyroom, basement, 2-car garage, gas heat, central airconditioning, rear deck, patio, large lot with maturetrees and plantings.

924-1331

HUNTER'S GUIDEWeek of April 18 -20,1979 19-B

NEW COLONIAL WITH CHARMING DETAILS •BUILT WITH THOUGHT AND CARE FOR THEHAPPY LIVING FAMILY. Foyer that welcomes you.Spacious living room and dining room with details.Gourmet kitchen with formica butcher blockpattern counters, pantry closet, dishwasher, doubleself cleaning stove. Panelled family room withfireplace, a favorite room for gatherings. First floorlaundry-mud room. Colored • fixtures in the 2V4ceramic tiled baths. Four private bedrooms in-cluding Master bedroom with basin vanity, unit indressing area, two large closets (one walk-in).. Fullhigh basement (can be game room for the children).NUMEROUS EXTRA ITEMS INCLUDED.COME SEE AND APPRECIATE $91.900.

NEW CONTEMPORARY WITH A FLAIR FORMODERN LIVING - VA ACRES IN PRESTIGIOUSELM RIDGE PARK. Striking cathedral ceiling foyerwith second level -picture window off gallery. Akitchen that delights the family cook and a con-veniently situated laundry-mud room. Spaciousliving room and dining room with front and backviews. First floor bedrooms with many closets,including Master bedroom with dressing area.ENTERTAIN WITH CONFIDENCE ANDPLEASURE.IT'S A DREAM $174,000.

CALL US ABOUT THE OTHERSCALL US ABOUT NEW CONSTRUCTION

ClauJi aCold Soil Road and Woodf fold tan*

Lawrencsville, N.J. 609-896-0005

Princeton Township Custom Contemporarywithin easy walking distance to schools and shop-ping center. 1 yh wooded acres, large living room,family room, 4 bedroom, 3 baths. 50' deckoverlooks brook, pond and patio. Available July 1Sale by owner $195,000.

Call 609-924-9406 day or eveningPrincipals Only

^riarcrestat Ewing Township

theTossibleDream

Modal Is open lor Inspection avaryday (12-5)(closad Thursdays)

FROM $65,990.Limited morrpg65~av»Uable 9K% interest conventional'mortgage with 20% dawn for a ddyear term.. .

Welcome. We are pleased that you havestepped into the possible dream. Come, journeywith us through gcres of a country setting; wit-ness the green elegance that adds just the righttouch of warmth and peace for farnily living.Featuring 3 and 4 bedroom hbmes—ranches,colonials; multi-levels all with 2-caT garages.

Model phone: (609) 883*4490; 4494Exdustva ogant local Realty Co., Inc.. KaaHor (201)54»-*720

DIRECTIONS: (Only 30 rnkwws from New Brunswick) Take Rt.T south to 1-95 south to Exit 7JB (Federal City Rd.) Followthrough to EwingyiHe Rd. Turn left and follow to models onyour right. FROM MBHCfeTON: Take 206 South to 1-95 Southto Exit 71B and follow as mentioned. FROM PA.: 1-95 to Rt. 31South, t i iw left at EwmgviBe Rd. Models on your right.

MUITIPU USTINO snvKt

A NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08540609-921-1050

NEW LISTINGPRINCETON

Spacious Brick Colonial situated on over two quiet acres on Talbot Lane.Sunny foyer with quarry tiled floor opens to a very large living room with fireplace and a screened porch onone side and dining room with chair rail on the opposite side, both rooms have wall to wall carpeting. Thelarge kitchen kitchen has well organized work areas, ample cabinets and a breakfast area. Step-downpanelled family room has a raised hearth corner fireplace and is large enough for disco dancing. Powderroom/laundry.Upstairs are five large bedrooms, a hall bath, large closets and the master bedroom has its' own bath.Full basement with a fireplace. •,Two car garage.

• • , $ 2 1 0 , 0 0 0 .

REAL ESTATE

Electronic Realty *[*»«|y Associates, Inc.

LOVELY BIRCHWOOD ESTATES

The discriminating buyer will recognize the quality built into this home byone of the Princeton area's most respected builders. The flagstone en-trance terrace, designed by a landscape architect, creates the first im-pression. Step into the slate entry foyer, notice the stained woodwork and

. the sqlid six-panel colonial doors. The large country kitchen with spaciouscustom cabinets is truly the "heart" of this home. Four bedrooms, 2Vibaths, ceramic tiled, of course, enclosed breezeway, 2 car garage andcentral air conditioning., Set on a % acre wooded lot, minutes to train,schools, shopping. WARRANTED FOR 1 YR. BY E.R.A.'s BUYERSPROTECTION PLAN $154,000.

Apts. For Rent

Houses For Rent110 ROOM BI-LEVEL on one

acre, well water, can be usedas mother/daughter typehome. $550+ 201-874-6161 evesand weekends anytime.

FOR LEASE — lovely countryhome, 7% - rooms, fullbasement, gazebo, fireplace,quiet country setting locatedapprox. 5 miles from down-town Princeton, avail.5/23/79, $450. 609-924-7757 or655-0231.

3 BEDROOM — bath, nearBrunswick Circle, No.Trenton. Heat incld. No pets.$325/mo. Security &references req'd. Call 609-394-7003.

LAWRENCEVILLE - 4bedroom house. Living room,dining room, kitchen w/dish-washer. Carpeting, baseboardheat, large yard. AvailableMay 1. 609-393-3454 after 5 pm.

HOUSE FOR RENT - un-furnished. 5 BR's & full bathon 2nd floor. Living room,dining room & kitchen on 1stfir. Full bath off kitchen,shower & toilet in basement.Laundry in basementw/washer & dryer, exteriorentrance. Small yard. Off-street parking. Centrallylocated. Avail. Apr. 15th, 1979.Call 609-924-3692 home phoneor 921-3654 office.

LAWRENCEVILLE — TheVillage. New townhouse, 3bdrm, 1 1/2 baths, w/w car-peting, all appliances. Im-mediate occupancy. $525/mo.Security required. 609-896-1371or 393- 2200.

APT FOR SUBLET — Prin-ceton Meadows — HuntersGlen. I bedroom. Call 609-799-4173 or 443-6704.

HOUSE FOR RENT -Plainsboro. near Forrestal.

iMay 1st. Brand new, 4 BR.,"2>/2 bath Colonial. Fam rm,fireplace, 2-car garage,$675/mo. 609-924-2608 after5pm.

I'll

High Visibility Commercial Location [I We have just listed this commercial property. If you are looking -

{or a location with 1,200 square feet of retail or office LI space.we'd like to talk to you! The second floor has the added1 bonus of a three bedroom apartment. Just a few of theI possibilities for this building are a deli or luncheonette, beauty.I parlor, repair shop, or offices for a doctor, lawyer or insurancej agent. Because it is located nearby at least four major corporate'complexes where thousands are employed, we think this is an fI excellent spot. Call Steve Kreinces for farther details at 609- 1,921-1700.

Firestone'Heal Estate

Realtors609-924-2222 609-921-1700

MONMOUTH JUNCTION —Furnished efficiency apt.$135/ mo. utilities $40. 1 mo.security. No smoking, no pets.Phone 609-924-8721.

EFFICIENCY APT — small,2V-. miles South of WashingtonRd. on U.S. 1. Suitable for l or2. 609-924-5792.

APT. FOR RENT - un-furnished, second floor -walking distance to universityand RR station. 2 bedrooms,bathroom with tub morningsun in living room withfireplace. Small kitchenette.Long lease preferred. Ideal forprofessional person or couple.Avail. June 1, rent $350 to$400/mo. Call 609-924-0024 8-9am4-9pm.

APT SUBLET — Hunters Glen- 6-12 mo. avail June 1.2 b/r 2baths, dark br. carpeting, a/c,$324/mo + util. 201-344-3481days, 609-799-4686 eves.

HOUSE FOR RENT —Plainsboro, near Forrestal.May 1st. Brand new, 4 BR, 2%bath Colonial. Fam rm,fireplace, 2-car garage,$675/mo. 609-934-2608 after 5

BUCKS COUNTY — Beautifulhouse along Delaware Riverand canal, 25 miles fromPrinceton. 3 bedrooms, 2-%baths, fireplace, newlvrenovated. Separate shed,shop or garage. Security andreferences required. AvailableMay 1. $550 plus utilities', in-cludes garden. 215-794-7128.

FIVE ROOM CAPE - attachedgarage, newly decorated,yard, $350 plus utils. 212-326-2656.

RECYCLETHIS

NEWSPAPER

246 NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON NEW JERSEY

ASK A BUSY MAN

Tod Peyton may be on the run or on the phonewhen yoa call, but you can talk to any one of ourProfessional Associates for expert advice on any

~of the

LATEST LISTINGS IN THE PRINCETON AREAIn addition to properties for sale we have:

RENTALS:WESTERN. SECTION CARRIAGE HOUSE apartment elegant 2-bedroom, living"room w/fireplace, beautiful private setting.

PRINCETON, WESTERN SECTION, INSTITUTE AREA furnished fourbedroom house, living room with fireplace, study, dining, modern kitchen,basement playroom - 2-car garage. Available June for 15 m o n t h s . . . . . . . .. . . , . . . ' ' . . . ' : . $800/month.

SUMMER RENTAL - House in Riverside area furnished. $1500/summer.

Numerous OTHER possible rentals.

Land and Acreage information on request

We Know ThatProperties, Like People, are Individuals

921-1550737-9550

PRETTY AS A PICTURE....is thia immaculate ranch that hasbeen tenderly cared for by present owners. Three bedrooms, twobaths, family room with fireplace, large laundry room off of eat-inkitchen, oversized garage, air conditioned, fenced yard for childrenor pets. $102,500.

CHENDERSONREALTORS

B«ll« M»odRout* 206. Ball* M*ad. New J*rs*y 08502

(201)874^5191 ,

Huntardon CountyMultlpla Lilting Sarvlc

Somtntt CountyMultiple Lilting Sarvlca

Marcar CountyMultlpla Listing Sarvle

Princeton Raal tttota Croup

Houses For Rent

RENTAL — lease preferred, 2years or more, new bi-levelhouse, new area, Fallsington,Penna. 40 minutes fromPrinceton, big lot, 2-car

tarage, 4 bdrms, living rm,ining rm, recreation room.

Refs. needed. Interestedpersons call 215-638-9898.Henley Berks, Realtor.

HOUSE IN WINDSOR —Modern home, 5 rms. & cellar.Ideal for bus. couple. $410 mo.;5 rm. apt. in Kend. Pk. $385mo. 201-297-1149.

CHANCE OF A LIFETIMEBroad Acres Estates

Owner leaving state and offering this terrific buy ofa CUSTOM FIVE BEDROOM RANCH. Beautifulfamily room, fireplace, barn, large eat-in kitchen,sun deck. Formal dining room, 2% baths, 2-cargarage. Huge bedroom! All this ON OVER ANACRE. Asking In th * $90*s. Unusual opportunity,call quickly!

REALTY

•>, '

• (

•' T,

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE20-B Week of April 18 - 20,1979

^

Donald BartusisLorraine BoiceLarry CollinsSheila CookTed DavidJo Ann DwuletBarbara Ellis

Betsey HardingCharles HurfordMarjorie KerrElizabeth LoJoan QuackenbushCecily RossRalph Snyder

fcCOMTANY

ESTABLISHED 1893

REALTORSP.O. Box 685 • 350 Alexander Street

Princeton, N.J. 08540

6094244322A COMPUTE REAL ESTATE ORGANIZATION

NOW LOCATED AT 350 ALEXANDER STREET

BIKE RIDE TO PRINCETON!

A short drive from Nassau Street is this con-temporary ranch, sheltered from the road bylovely trees. There are 3 bedrooms, a livingroom and dining area, plus an eat-in kitchen —all for $85,000.

ON A BOROUGH STREET

Lovely landscaping and a large back yard aretwo of the special features of this house. Insideare 3 bedrooms, and a fireplace in thegameroom....bring some imagination and you'lllove it! $115,000.

I3

AN EXECUTIVE'S HOUSE

This bright and sunny colonial is freshly paintedand papered — ready for immediate occupancy.The fireplace is in the family room; the masterbedroom has a dressing area and 2 superclosets! $135,900.

;" TfTEr -a sn -

A DUPLEX, RIGHT IN TOWN!

It's a cedar shingle house has almost identicalsides,, each with, a fireplace in the living room, adining room, and a kitchen, 3 or 4 bedroomsand 1 bath. It's perfect as an owner-occupiedinvestment.-for $139,000.

A STONE'S THROW FROM NASSAU STREET

The front door of this house leads to Old Worldcharm and quality of construction. In the livingroom, the bow window is lovely; the squaredining room is beside the eat-in kitchen. Andthe outside world? It's the Borough park!

..$102,000.

THAT "COUNTRY" FEELING

Extra insulation lowers the fuel bills on thisproperty; the family room fireplace is cozy...butsummer may be your favorite time here,- with aredwood deck for barbeques after tennis on yourown court!! $132,500.

A BRICK OF A HOUSE!

Recently remodelled from bottom to top, withmany delightfully-modern features. The livingroom has a fireplace; there is a den on the firstfloor.' Upstairs are 2 or BeSrooms. It's all on avery" quiet street, a stone's threw from NassauS t r e e t . . . . . . . . . : . . . . \ . . . $137,500.

ENTRANCING

The back yard view of this beautiful propertyshows some of the intriguing aspects of thehouse, including the naturalized landscaping.The interior is inviting and delightfullyarranged. .". $180,000.

PSSSSSST.The classifiedpages of the

, 8Packet Newspapers

reach more than32,000 families

PASS IT ON!

1- :

LOCATIONLOCATION LOCATION

Our newest offering in West Windsor is acommuters delight - You can walk to the RRstation - schools arid tennis. This lovely raisedranch features 4 bedrooms, 2)4 baths and asunny kitchen plus much, much more. Hurry - thiswill not last.AH this for $97,500.

A beautiful spacious home in Hopewell Townshipis this 2 story colonial with lots of special featuresthat make it the perfect buy. New kitchen withlarge breakfast area, large panelled living roomwith raised, brick hearth and beamed ceilings.There are three oversize bedrooms. The masterbedroom suite has a dressing room and walk incloset. You must see this prestigious home inlovely Hopewell Township to appreciate it.

Only*136400.

This 2 story colonial in East Windsor is in ex-cellent condition. It features 4 bedrooms, 1V4baths and is situated on one-half acre of land. Ithas a foyer, large living room, formal dining room,eat-in-kitchen, panelled family room and utilityroom. Priced to sail at only *74,500.

WEST WINDSOR - this two bedroom rancher hasa family room and a cozy sun porch that looks outonto mature shade trees. In excellent conditionthis home has a one car detached garage andtwo outbuildings that are perfect for a workshopor starting that small business you're thinkingabout.

Pricad right at only *64,900.

PRINCETON JUNCTION MANY MORE LISTINGS609-799-2022 TO CHOOSE FROM.

54 PRINCETON HIGHTSTOWN ROADPrinceton Junction,

HAMILTON GROUP609-890-3300

WeichertRealtors

Fit A OKAY$37,900

F.HA availability to all qualifiedbuyers makes this half of a 2 familyeasy to buy. Low taxes make it easy tokeep, and convenient location plusnearby pool make it easy to live in.

yjB-179 Call 874-8100

CLOSET SPACE$66,900

This comfortable 4-bedroom split offersamazing storage space with closets it

may take years to fill up. Living space,too, is ample with 22 ft. plus livingroom, beautiful eat-in kitchen andmore.

HB40-9 fall 874410

GRACEFUL GRAPEVINES$63,900

...125 ft. of them...promise tasty treats,jams and jellies, even some homemadewine to owners of this beautifully kept,.3-bedroom ranch. Studio over garage.Extras.

kHB-45-9 fall 8744100 ,

STARTER PLUS$48,500

Traditional Cape, with extra growingroom with 3 bedrooms, huge rec room,pretty half-panelled eat-in kitchen andcovered cement patio in deep, levelfenced yard.

. tJB-31-9 fall 8744100,.

HILLSBOROUGH. 421 Rl 206 South. 874-8100

PRINCETON BUSINESS PARK

NOW RENTING:Located at U.S. Rt 1, West Windsor Twp., N.J.,

OFFICE/RESEARCHMANUFACTURING

WAREHOUSE

Will alter and/or build to suit. Contact:

Princeton Industrial Properties60^921-3150

Houses For Rent Houses For RentHIGHTSTOWN — 3 BR house,$375 per mo. 215-482-1504 or201-262-8900 ext. 383.

2 BR HOUSE — outsideAllentown. Beautiful countrysetting overlooking lake, largeliving room- w/cathedral

.ceilings & carpeting, modernkitchen, 2 complete Baths, lge.rec. room, unfurn. $500/mo. +util. References required. Call609-396-7576, 94.

VILLAGE OF LAWREN-CEVTLLE — new 3 BRTownhouse, LR, DR, moderneat-in kitchen, 2% baths,wall/wall carpetingthroughout, central air, amplestorage, garage, swim &tennis club included.$585/monthly plus utils. Im-med. occup. Call 609-896-1660daily 10 to 5, except Thurs. askfor J. Howley.

PRINCETON - June-Sept. 4bedroom, 2% bath tpwnhouse,Queenston Commons. Un-furnished or partially fur-nished. Use of pool, tenniscourts. References required.$650/mo. 609-924-2608 after 5pm.

E. W. TOWNHOUSE - Close toPrinceton 3 bedrooms, Vkbaths, fully carpeted, C/a,$450/mo incl swimming, tennis

. priviledges, all appliances.609443-6326.

HILLSBORO - 3 BRtownhouse, all appliances incl.dishwasher, w/w carpetingthroughout. Pool and tenniscourts. Outside maintenanceincl. Easy living. June 1 occup.201-359-1524 after 5 p.m.

Houses For RentTWIN RIVERS - 3 BR, 2%bath end unit townhouse. C/A,w/w carpet, all appliances.May or June occupancy. $450per month. 609448-0292.

SUMMER RENTAL —charming house in Hopewell. 3bedrooms, lovely yard, 8 milesto University. $400 monthly.609-466-2590.

TOWNHOUSE: PrincetonBorough — Living room withfireplace, dining room withsitting area, modern kitchen,enclosed rear porch, powderroom, tile bath, three largebedrooms, two finished thirdfloor rooms, full drybasement, flagstone patio,central air conditioning, andoff-street parking. Campusside of Nassau Street.Available mid-July. Askingrental of $635 per month. 609-924-0746.

LAMBERTVILLE — 3 bdrmhouse with 2-car garage, largedeck, 2 acres, call 609-924-7197after 6 pm.

HOUSE FOR RENT INPRINCETON — withinwalking distance to campus.Ideal for students wanting to.share expenses. 609-448-4021.

WEST WINDSOR — 2 storyColonial, slate floored en-trance foyer, eat-in kitchen,liv. rm, and din. rm., w/wcarpets, panelled family roomwith F/P, 4 bdnns, 2% baths,

. finished basement, enclosedporch, central air, 2 cargarage, wooded lot, desirableniegnborhood, minutes fromtrain. Country Heritage RealEstate, Realtors, (609) 799-8181.

CRANBURY AREA

52 South Main Street * NGracious pre-W.W. I era residence; entrance hall,living room, family room with fireplace, formaldining room, modern kitchen, 5 bedrooms, IVibaths, full basement with rec. room & den; bedand sitting room on the 3rd floor, 2 car garage.Choice location. $118,000.

Cranbury Neck Road - 2 Mi. West of Cranbury'Stately County Home on 1.9 acres. Entrance hall,living room, formal dining room, family -room,large modem eat-in kitchen, laundry, mud room, 5bedrooms, 1V£ baths, two stairways to secondfloor, full attic and basement, outbuildings, 3 cargarage, fenced area. $139*900.

28 Station Rd.Lovely old Colonial Magnificent stairway risesfrom stately center hall. Many visible fireplaces,pumpkin pine flooring, living room, formal diningroom, library, dinette, solarium - greenhouse 10' x25', 5 bedrooms, 2 full baths, full basement. Oneacre landscaped lot. $129,900.

Excellent opportunity: 2 family home, 3 baths,Immaculate maintenance free, income property, 2car garage on 1.9 acre country location.

$79,900.

kixlt* (En.37 N.Main St., Cranbury, N.J.

Days: 609-395-0444 Evenings: 609-395-1258

Looking for a job?Try the Classified pages.

Mid-Victorian HomeNESHANIC STATION

Older home located in charming village on 100 x200' lot - near all major highways - minutes fromRCA, J & J , AT&T, ITT, American Hoechst Front& rear enclosed porches, ent hall living room,dining room, kitchen with large pantry, 4bedrooms, 1 bath. Full basement, attic (room for 2bedrooms). 2 car garage, 3 outbuildings. Treed andlandscaped lot Sewer. Well water. New McLain oilfurnace with built-in tankless hot water heater plusnew elec. hot water heater. Taxes $809. $70'«.

Call (201) 36*5031 . after 6 p.m.or on wMMlconds. Principals only.

! • >

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE1 ' • I

Week of April 18-20,1979 21-B

Hunt & Augustine Inc.

QUALITY HOMESSELECT LOCATIONS

BEDENS BROOK, by The Bedens Brook Club.Four imaginative and exciting homes with theCalifornia contemporary flair. Rolling wooded lotswith unparallelled settings and views. Each houseincorporates innovative features and qualityconstruction seldom available in this area. Allutilities underground. 2, 3, 4, and 10-month oc-cupancy. Contact William W. Augustine.

Princeton. New |ersey 08540 • Phone: 609-924-9012

NOW RENTINGPRINCETON ARMS

Luxury Apartments1 and 2 Bedrooms

Starting at $255.per-month

. Features:;i

Wall-to-Wall carpeting overconcrete in 2nd floor apts.

All utilities except ElectricIndividually controlled heat2 air conditionersPrivate entrancesWalk-in closets :•Individual balconiesStorage room within apt.Laundry RoomsSuperintendent on site.

Open Mon.-Fri.12:00-5:00 p.m.

609-448-4801Directions: From Princeton: Prlnceton-Hlghtitown Rd., turnright on Old Trenton Rd.. % mile turn left and follow signs.

atBvirg

MODELS & EXISTING HOMES UNDERCONSTRUCTION NOW AVAILABLE ATTREMENDOUS SAVINGS. RANCH, BI-LEVELS & COLONIALS FROM $54,900.

Ewingville Rd., Ewing TownshipDmECTIONS: Route 1 »onth put th* Qiufcn Bridge Mallto Rl. 95 toath (tlgn uyi to Pinn.ylv.nl.) and continac•oath on Rt, 9S to Route 206 south. South on R«. 20*put RMer Colltat to EsseH Crossing Rd. (at light): turnright to NrttWttw at Ewing.

PHONE(609)883-0080

AGENT(609) 587-2707

OFFICE SPACEPRIME LOCATION - -EXCELLENT VISIBILITY

Several Prestigious Suites Available

Call

MATCHMAKER TUSCHAKREALTY

609-921-1720

OFFICE SPACERESEARCH PARK

1101 State Road, Princeton, N.J.

$3.50per square foot net, netareas up to 30,000 square feet.

427,000 square feet in ParkOccupied by approximately 50 Tenants

Princeton Mailing Addressand Phone Number

CALL: Research Park609-924-6551

SEE OVER 200 HOMESIN ONE DAY

Call or write for the latest issue of our real estate magazine"today" chock full of pictures, prices and description of over200 available homes in Somerset, Mercer, Hunterdon, Mid-dlesex, Monmouth, Ocean, Morris and Warren Counties...TheHeartland of the Garden State.

Sterling Thompson & Assoc., RealtorToll Free: (800) 392-6810, e t f . 243

or locally (201) 297-0200 or (201) 526-8448Call M write for the latest issue of the real estate magazine 'Today"

Choose yournext apartment icarefully...you'll live there .for many years.

Consider the .finest...

East Windsor

In the Princeton-Hightstownarea. Luxury garden apartmentsin quiet, suburban settings. Allhave private balconies and ispacious, well-kept grounds.Wall-to-wall carpeting. Free off-street parking. Swim Club.

1BR from $264 !

2 BR from $296

, WYNBROOK WESTDutch Neck Rd. l

Mr.fr Mrs. White 448-3385

B R O O K W O O D G A R D E N SHickory Corner Rd. '•

Mr. Ptashinski 448-5531

CHESTNUT W I L L O WDorchester Dr. ''

Mrs. Ash 448-6960

Robbinsvlll*

Rural setting with acres ofbreathing space around lovelyapartments. Extra large roomswith wall-to-wall carpetings.Free parking for 2 cars. Con-venient to all highways.

SHARON ARMSSharon Rd. across from TheCountry Club. Just East on Rte.130 at Rte. 33 North of 1-95 atExit 7A, N J . Tpke.

Mr. Sheehan 259-9449

Ewing TownshipLuxury apartments with privatepools. Efficiencies to oversized2 bedrooms. Large rooms.Beautiful landscaping. Con-veniently located. Free off-street parking. For future oc-cupancy, call our ResidentManagers.WOODBROOK HOUSE

865 Lower Ferry Rd.5 story elevator bldg.Mr. Lazzari 883-3335

HICHGATEOlden Ava. at Parkway 5 storyelevator bldg. Mr. & Mrs! VanDeWeghe 883-4626.

EASTGATEParkside Ave.

2 story garden apts. Some withprivate balconies and com-pletely carpeted.

Mr. Johnson 883-7537

VERSAILLE220 Sullivan Way

Opposite Trenton CountryClub. 2 story garden apts.

Mr.Pergola 8834550

KMEGMAN ft SMITH.INC.

Houses For Rent11 ROOM HOUSE — 2garages, zoned commercial onKt. 206. Princeton. 609-924-7906bet. 5 & 6pm.

HIGHTSTOWN — renovatedhouse for family of 3; trees,yard, quiet. $325 + utils.Inquire at 151 Wycoff Ave.,Hightstown.

NEW TOWNHOUSE -Yardley Pa. Buck. Cnty, 3BR's, 2'/2 baths, LR, DR,kitchen, dishwasher, dbl.oven, garbage disposal,firepl., new wall/wall car-peting, garage. Private rearyard. AlT brand new. $550/mo.plus utils. Convenient toschools & shopping. Call 215-493-6576, 12 a.m. to 5 p.m..daily.

HOUSE FOR RENT — 3! bedrooms and large yard. 609-921-1074.

FURNISHED RENTAL —Charming stone, writer's houseon scenic New Hope canal. 7rooms, 2M> baths, 2 fireplaces,patio, deck, garage. GoodPrinceton, N.Y. commute.$600/ mo. Immediate oc-cupancy. ELLIOT REALTY.215-862-5211, 609-771-9133 eves.215-297-5319.

Houses For Rent

FOR RENT

Super new Princeton con-temporary. .4 BR's, ixk. baths,living room, dining room,family room with fireplace,fabulous kitchen, 2-cargarage, centra] air, fullBasement. $875/mo.

609-882-0956

BEAUTIFUL GUEST COT-TAGE ON HORSE FARM —10 min. from Princeton. 1 BRon the canal in Griggstown.Living rm w/ fireplace, UK,kitchen, full bath, largesunporch. Fully furnished.A/ c, & utilities inch &$600/ month. Also facilities forhorse boarding and training.Call 20i-359-8356 after 8 p.m.

3 BEDROOM RANCH — inHopewell. Avail. June 1st.$425.

3 BEDROOM FURNISHEDCAPE — on Ml. Lucas Road.Avail. June 15.

4 BEDROOM CAPE in Prin-ceton Township. AvailableAug. 1, $675.

3 BEDROOM furnishedlownhouses, available May 7 -Sept. 4, 1979. $550/ mo.

REAL ESTATE

4 Nassau St., Princeton609-921-1050

TOP FLOOR TOWNHOUSEAPT. for rent on West StateSt., Trenton. OverlookingCapitol complex, museum,minutes walk from state of-fices, public trans, reasonablerent. Call Mr. Tucker at 609-695-3366 for appointment.

ADULT COMMUNITY:Clearbrook, near Exit 8A, N. J.Turnpike. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,2 year old condo with all ap-,phances. C/A and much more.$550. month.

GREAT LOCATION: % acrewooded lot, central air,fireplace, 4 bedroom splitlevel, 2^ baths, 2 car garage/superior East Windsorloca t ion . $590/month,available April l, 1979, 1 yearlease or more.

RANCH: 3 bedrooms, centralair, carpeting throughout, 2baths, full basement.$525/month, available April/May, 1 or 2 year lease. Vz acreEast Widsor location.

! RICHARDSON REALTORSi 609-448-5000

MANVILLE — 8-room housefor rent. Call after 4 p.m. 201-722-1478.

NEW HOPE — 2 b/ r luxurytownhouse, in Village n. w/ wcarpeting, all appliances, pool& tennis privileges. Brandnew, never occupied.$450/mo. 609-924-7484 after 7p.m.

BRUNS. ACRES RANCH,huge country kit., fm. rm., 3bdrms., 1% oaths, 2 car gar.,central air, wooded back lot,cul-de-6ac, walk to school,tennis court & NY bus line.$525 mo. Avail. May 15. 201-297-6680.

E A S T W I N D S O RTOWNHOUSE — 2 BR, 1%bath lg. kit, all appl, finbsmt,fully cpt & drapes, newlydecorated, C/a, gas grl, tennis& swimming priv. buses toPrinceton & NYC. AvailableMay. $435/mo. 609-448-3368.

PRINCETON- 5bedrooms, 2fireplaces, central air, par-tially furnished, walk toschools and NY bus. $950/ mo.609-921-0622 after 6 p.m.

PLAINSBORO RANCH — 3BR, family rm., eat-in kit., 2car garage, l acre lot, pooloptional. $600/per mo. 609-921-7417.

COLONIAL — 4 bedrooms, 2-xh baths, 2 car garage, locatedin Wynnewooa area, Cran-bury. Rent for much less thanownership. $740.

BRICK RANCH - 4bedrooms, 1-% baths, recroom, eat-in kitchen, livingrm, full basement with bararea. Large rooms, garage,country location. $460.

RANCH — 3 bedrooms, 1-%baths, rec room, modernkitchen, fully carpeted, fullbasement, refrig, washer,dryer, garage. Located inCranbury Manor. $490.

STULTSREALTY COMPANY

Real Estate37 North Main St. Cranbury

NJ. 08512Phone: 609-395-0444

Eves. 395-1258

N.T.GallawayjrjREAL ESTATE^ t i l

Miunru USTINO SUVICI

MLS4 NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08540

609-921-1050

NEW LISTINGSKILLMAN

Imaginative additions by the present architect owner have rendered a delightful house from the once "RowerCottage" at the 1939 Worlds Fair.A brick path leads to the front door where a patio provides a place to enjoy a pretty view. Parquet floor inthe entrance hall, arched doorway to a bright living room with fireplace. Chair rail and pretty paper enhancethe dining room. The sunny kitchen has a breakfast bar and one end opens to a step-down family room wicathedral ceiling, fireplace and sliding glass doors. 'The master bedroom has a walk-in closet and large bath. There's a window seat and double closet in thesecond bedroom and the third bedroom/study is barn sided, has a cathedral ceiling and a sleeping loft. Hallbath and attic storage.A large laundry/workshop opens to the two car garage.Country retreat ten minutesfrom Princeton.

$144,000.

NOW RENTING!

NORTHGATEAPARTMENTS

One Mi l * Roadand Princeton-Hightstown Rd.

(opposite McGraw Hill)East Windsor. N. J.

1 and 2 Bedroomsfrom $255. per month

Features:• SWIMMING POOL• PLAYGROUND FACILITIES• OFF STREET PARKING• AIR CONDITIONERS• KITCHEN WITH DINING AREA• THERMOSTAT CONTROLLED HEAT

(included in rental)• WASHER & DRYER FACILITIES• RESIDENT SUPERINTENDENTe MASTER TV ANTENNA

MODEL APARTMENT OPEN DAILY(609)448-5935

EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP: Three bedroom CapfCod with study, offering a fireplace in livii j room,gas lamp front walk, two car garage, storms andscreens all on a yh acre lot. Priced right at - $74,900.

EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP: Three bedroomcolonial with raised living room - Michaelangelostyle. Complete with two car garage, full brick wallfireplace in family room, fenced yard with fishpond, front porch, full double blasement - all for$94,900. • ' • • ' •

TWIN RIVERS: One bedroom condo with upgradedcarpeting, five major appliances, papered bath andkitchen, brick wall irr living room, central air,community pool, tennis courts and all 'round livingadvantages -$27,500.

OPEN HOUSESunday. April 22nd • 1-5 P.M.

Follows signs:Quad IV-L-15 Twin Rivers Drive North

FOLLOW THE RED CARPET SIGNS

RED CARPETDiDON ATO REALTY CO. INC.

Princeton-Hightstown Rd.E. Windsor/Cranbury, N.J. 609-448-6555

Need a new car?Check the Classified pages.

New unique complex of shopsoh the canal

in Lambertville

Call 11-5 Thursday, - Sunday609-397-2088

THEPORKYARDBox 84

Lambertville, N. J. 08530

Probably THE finest In West Windsor

The rustic atmosphere of this 7 year old architect designedDutch Colonial is enhanced by the old brick, 125 year old ceilingbeams, weathered barn siding and many other antique buildingmaterials included in its custom built construction. Secluded on254 heavily wooded acres, yet conveniently under 10 minutes toConrail commuting; 5 minutes to major shopping mall. 4spacious bedrooms, 354 baths, modem eat-in kitchen, solid pinepanelled and beamed family room with raised-hearth fireplace,formal living and dining rooms, den/study, laundry room, utilityroom, 2 car attached garage, screened porch and attic storageoutlines the bare listing - but the features and extras such as: alarge in-ground pool in wood fenced rear area, separate 2ndfloor living quarters (including second kitchen, living room,study, bath) for live-in relative or maid, zoned gas heating andcentral air, wall-to-wall carpeting, cedar shingle roof, Andersonwindows, custom' cabinetry, alarm systems and much more -but above all the unique charm of this lovely home MUST BESEEN AND FELT!

CollOwn«rat609-799-05«lAsking #189,500. '

• • • * !

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE22-B Week of April 18 - 20,1.979

INVESTMENTS GALOREMORRISVILLE

Great potential in this two large apartmenthome plus a retail shop. Groat opportunity loradditional apartment. Property also have a twocar masonry garage. Owner anxious. . . $69,500.

YARDLEY

4 Unit apartment and commercial location.Located in prime area of Yardley. This propertycurrently being completely renovated. Don'twait on this I $110,000.

YARDLEY

Another fine opportunity in prime Yardleylocation. Large stone house with oversize lot andbrand new 3 unit office building. Furtherdevelopment opportunities unlimited. Great fora bank or professional location. $175,000.

UPPER BUCKS COUNTY

Large stone farm house' presently rented plusover 60 acres great potential priced realistically.

• • • • • • $175,000.

NEW HOPE REALTYPaul Delany, Realtor

New Hope Off ice—215-862-2058Washington Crossing—215-493-3669

' Yardley Office—215-493-3852

• :. t Need a carpenteror a plumber?

Check the Classified ads.

A DISTINCTIVE COMMUNITY OF » X LUXURIOUS ENERGYSAVING CONTEMPORARY HOMES, EACH EXCLUSIVELYDESIGNED FOR THE DISCfUMtNATINa BUYER WHO REQUIRESEXCELLENCE IN DEMON, FUNCTION AND DETAIL

Each horn* will I M bulH by MARCUS TIMES TWO. INC. on a magnKlcamtcountry property (IV, - 4 c a n ) on a cul-oVwc off of Van Kirk Road InLawronco Township, 4 mllos from downtown Princeton.

Lowronc* >choolt and tax—. Princstofl P.O. and fadlrHei ~ THELAWtENCE CROUP IS THC PERFECT CONTEMPORARY ENVIRONMENT.

THE SPIRITED >

ussmanl\ 896 9300

REALTOR

172 Franklin Corner Rd. Lawrencevilte, N.J.

RESIDENTIAL RENTALSA furnished second floor apartment in Princeton Borough,with a kitchenette, 2 bedrooms and 2 baths; wall-to-wallcarpeting and parking are included. Available 4/15 for

, . . . $450 per month.Lovely duplex apartment on a convenient street in Prin-ceton, with a fireplace, an eat-in kitchen, and 3 bedrooms,plus parldng in a garage; available 7/1 for . $575 per month.Terrific, spacious Borough house, available immediately! 3or 4 bedrooms, 2 baths -- all for $700 per month.

A lovely and convenient house in Princeton Borough, with 3bedrooms and 2 baths. Extras are the fireplace, the finishedrecreation room on the ground floor, giving access to thelarge and well-treed yard, perfect for barbeques. There iseven a screened-in porch. Available from 6/15 till 8/31 for .

$700 per month..COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE OF 1250 SQi FT.,available for '. $800 per month.

RtNDAU-

OOKIr COMrANY

P.O. Box 685 • 350 Alexander StreetPrinceton. N.J . 08540

609-924-0322

FOR SALE BY OWNERIn Pine Knoll section, Lawrenceville. Delightful colonialin a beautiful, landscaped wooded lot. Three largebedrooms, master bedroom with 2 walk-in closets.Large eat-in kitchen. Slate foyer. Rreplace. 2% baths.Central air; gas heat. One-car garage. Call forappointment: weekdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., 212-541-5426; weekdays after 7:30 p.m. and weekends, 609-882-5163.

. - • • ".•"' • ' • # 9 0 , 0 0 0 .

3 ACRES OF LAND -zoned for horses plus lovelybrick rancher offering 3 bedrooms, 1 % baths, largeliving room with full brick fireplace, central air - allfor $84,900.

LAWRENCEVILLE VICTORIAN - 1 0 rooms. 6bedrooms, 2 baths, new kitchen. % acre lot.$67,500.

CUSTOM BUILT RANCHER in Hamilton Square -$76,900. 3 bedroom, 2 full bath beauty on "BeverlyPlace."

MEMBERue

^Realtor*WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION

586-6200'figures approximate

Princeton Township Custom Contemporarywithin easy walking distance to schools and shop-ping center. 1 Vz wooded acres, large living room,family room, 4 bedroom, 3 baths. 50' deckoverlooks brook, pond and patio. Available July 1Sale by owner $195,000.

Call 609-924-9406 day or eveningPrincipals Only

PRINCETON Country life in town. Remodeled, solid 3 plusbedroom house with two full baths. View from deck offields and trees, just a few minutes from Lake Carnegie. Rnesouthern exposure with very large shade trees. Small twostoried barn for storage, playspace, or hideaway. Riversideschool district. Ten minute walk to the New York Express,twenty minute walk to Palmer Square or the ShoppingCenter. $104,000. 924-9041 Brokers Protected

Houses For Rent

THREE BEDROOM — livingroom with firepla.ee, diningroom, kitchen with laundryroom, third floor study, garage,within easy walking distanceof campus. $575/mo. 609-924-3966.

A SUPERB - Lambertvillelownhouse made for todayscontemporary people. Centralair, a fireplace. 3 bedrooms,2',<2 baths. Available May 1st.$485. Really World, LaurenceR. May, Inc., 609-466-2444.

E A S T W I N D S O RTOWNHOUSE - 2 bdrm., l>-,bath, lg. kitchen, all ap-pliances, finished basement,fully carpeted & draped,newly decorated, central air,gas grill. Tennis & swimmingprivs. Busses 16 Princeton &N.y. Avail. May $435/ mo.609448-3368.

ResortProperties

STOWE — in Summercomfortable, private condowith firepalce, set in Vt. woodsat base of Mt. Mansfield.Privacy if you want, or easyaccess to shops, restaurants,entertainment. Tennis,swimming, on sight; golf, etc.nearby, l, 2, or 3 bedroomsterms negotiable. 609-799-2721.

CAPE COD - magnificentview overlooking private baycove off Wellfleet Harbor.Extensive beaches, walks,birds, fish, tennis & NationalSeashore. Large deck,'fireplace, nicely equipped,'sleeps 6. Spring/Fall $115-$170per week. Season $225-$240.Photos. Foster's 201-52HB29.

ResortProperties

LONG BEACH ISLAND —Barnegat light. 3 bedroomduplex, ocean view, 2nd frombeach, near tennis. Avail. Aug.$360/week. Call after 3pm', 609-924-9588.

POCONOS — wooded building:lot. Year round resortlocation. 1% acres, $7800. Call.609-799-3046.

VERMONT IN SUMMER -weekly/ monthly rental inSiigarbush Valley. 3 BR, 2baths. K & LR, condo.Alf facilities plus swimming,tennis. Reasonable.' 609-799-0493 evenings.

LONG BEACH ISLAND -Beach .Haven. Ocean frontduplex. Weeks: June thrusept. Heated. 3 bdrms,washer/dryer, fireplace 1st fl.,panoramic view from decks.215-968-3575;

BRANT BEACH — 1st fl. apt,completely furnished, 2.bdrms., »A blk to ocean. Avail.June 15 to Aug4. $250/ weekly.609-799-1575.

POCONOS RQUND HOUSE —3 bdrms. fireplace, deck, TV.Weekends or weekly avail.Call after 6pm, 609-586-4442.

VERMONT LAKEFRONT —cottage avail, for rental byweek', or long weekends.Completely private on 8 milelong lake Bomoseen, west ofRutland. 3 BR, LR & kitchen,deck & family rm, overlookinglake. Exc. swimming, fishing,boat included. $175/ week,$110 for long weekends duringMay, June, Sept, Oct. $210 wk,July, Aug. Call after 6 p in .609448-7439.

ResortProperties

FOR RENT — oceansiaer'3bdrm home and 2 bdrm apt. inBeach Haven Terrace.Summer rentals, $325 & 210.Reasonable off-season rates.609-737-0462.

BARNEGAT LIGHT — BAYFRONT DUPLEX —.Fisherman's dream, 1 block toucean, 3 bedrooms, beautifulview. Available for Winter,Spring and Summer rental..609-921-2585.

POCONOS - Big'Bass Lake,fplce, indoor pool, ski, tennis,wknd/wkly/seasonal rates,609-448-0751.

OCEAN" FRONT — LongBeach Island, beautiful new 3bedroom, _ 1 % . - Jbaihfc.,spectacular view, w/w ca±-

.petfiig," washer/dryer," dishx' washer. Summer rentals. Low.season rates. 201-445-5856 or609-494-6410.

VACATIONHOUSE — In BigBass Lake of Poconos.Weekend rental, off-seasonprice. For details call, 609-799-9140 or 883-4315 eves.

BEACH HAVEN DUPLEX -for summer rental. 3 BR

>feJeeDS 7. 4 BR sleens ft. Nicelv("furnished and clean. $310 &

$400 a week in July & Aug. Offseason half price. Call 609-448-0754.

VIRGIN ISLAND VACATION— At Limestone ReefTerraces. Summer rates from$24 for two in lovelv efficiencyapt. on private island in St.Thomas harbor. For reser-vations, Island Vacations,R.D. H 4, Princeton, 08540. 201-329-6309.

LONG BEACH ISLAND —Harvey Cedars, 1 block toocean, duplex. Each apt. has 3BRs, upstairs deck w/ view ofbay. Dwnstairs, enclosedsunporch, spotless. $265/wk.on season: $175/ wk. June & •Sept. 609-166-0852, or 609-494-8484.

POCONOS — Locust LakeVillage. Beautiful new, 5 BR, 2bath, fully equipped home.Central to all major highwaysand resorts. Walk to beach &playground. Ideal for 2families or group of couples toshare. 215493-6349 or P.O. Box5255, Trenton, N.J. 08638.

FLORIDA KEYS — resort apt.on Gulf. Coral reef divine,sport fishing", Marina, pool,recreational facilities, saunas!Off-season rates. 609-924-5624.

CHINCOTEAGUE ISLAND —VA. — "Home of the WildPonies". 2-te hours south ofDelaware Memorial Bridge.Waterfront house, modern 3BR, 2 baths, living room w/fpl,great beaches. June-Aug.$275/week, offseason ratesavailable. Call eves. 609-654-6503. .

LAWRENCEVILLE — 8 roomhouse, large yard, garage,dishwasher, $450/mo. plusutilities. 609-8824189 after 6pm.

LONG BEACH ISLAND -North Beach, 2 BR Duplex,pvt. beach, 2nd from ocean.Sale $150,000, or rent in-offseason. Also Loveladies - 3 BRcottage for rent. Owner. 609-494-3061.

LONG BEACH ISLAND —Lovely ocean front house 3bedrooms, 1-te baths,available May, June, Sept.$40/day, also low weekly rate.609-799-2235.

MARTHA'S VINEYARD.Cottage for rent. Fullyequipped. Sleeps at least 6.Very private. Small sail boatincluded. Call 609-883-8017after 6 p.m. or weekends.

IN A PERFECT PRINCETON LOCATIONon a cul-de-sac within three blocks of PHS, middle school.Community Park and the shopping center, a deceptively amplehouse awaits your immediate occupancy. A variety of customfeatures including a living room with sunken con-versation/fireplace pit. A ground-level master bedroom with anabundance of built-ins is well buffered from the three otherbedrooms above. Eat-in kitchen and family room adjoin for

v easy interchanges. Dual zone hearing, air conditioning and wallto wall carpets keep the inside comfortable. Outside, a main-tenance-free exterior, professional landscaping and a 50x14deck invite more play than work. Priced firmly and fairly at$137,500. If you like pleasant surprises.

Call for an appointment at 609-924-2572' 159 Hickory Court, Princeton _ _

FOR SALE BY OWNER

A FEW STEPS FROM THEHOPEWELL GOLF AND TENNIS CLUB

IMMACULATE 1 STORY HOME - 4 bedrooms, 3baths - Full dry basement used as play and hobbyroom - central air conditioning - situated on a large,secluded wooded lot professionally landscaped.

$129,500.PRINCIPALS ONLY

(609)466-1865

FOR RENT

NEW 2-STORY COLONIAL TOWNHOUSE CON-DOMINIUM in Montgomery Township near RockyHill; downstairs - LR w/entry area, powder roomw/laundry, family room w/woodburning fireplaceand sliding doors opening onto deck overlookingwooded area and stream; electric kitchen withdining area; upstairs; large master bedroom withwalk-in closet and private bath; 2 additionalbedrooms and full bath; living area fully carpeted;pull-down stairs to attic with very, large storagespace; electric heat pump and central air con-ditioning; attached utility shed; exterior main-tenance included - Call 921 -2720. $650.

Available July 1,1979Call: Lorraine Tarns

921-2720 (Home) 921-1411 (Office)

Resort BusinessProperties Properties

3 BR HOUSE — w/ dock,Loveladies Harbor, LongBeach Isl., $400 a week fromJuly 14th to Aug. 4. Call eves.& wkends. 609-924-2818.

SUMMER RENTAL-— nearMt. Pocono. Swim, lake orpools, tennis, boatingavailable. Centrally located.New 3 BR, IMJ bath, fullyfurnished. For seasonal,monthly or bi-weekly. Call 609-443-3513.

BEACH HAVEN — beautiful 2BR apt. June 30-July 14, Aug18-Sept 8, $200 a week, June &Sept, $100 a week, no pets,adulb preferred. Call 609-492-1927 or 737-1159.

SEASHORE - Seaside Park.Large 10 room ocean fronthouse; 7-bedrooms. Availablefor 5 weeks: July 1 throughAugust 4. $2500 net.References and securityrequired. 609-924-0746.

BAY HEAD — beautifullydecorated 7' bedroom house-fully equipped—across streetfrom ocean —for rent June 25 -Aug. 1. $5000. 609-921-1611.

LONG BEACH ISLAND — 4BR Cape Cod, 3 BR Duplex.Completely furnished. Lowpre-season rates till July 1.609-655-2656, 609-492-8259.

SO. HAMPTON, L.I., N.Y. 2bdrm cottage, Little PeconicBay, pvt. community, walk tobeach, season $3300. 201-297-5694 516-283-3103.

NEW OCEAN FRONT HOME—Long Beach Island., spec-tacular views, avialableSpring & Summer. 609-235-4142or 609-494-0233.

BusinessProperties

AVAIL. FOR RENT — officebide,, 3500 sq. ft. Princetonaddress. 609-921-8672.

OFFICE SPACE - 780 sq. Ft. -Princeton - Hightstown Rd.Ample parking. Write Box#01813 c/o Princeton Packet.

SMALL STORE — or officespace for rent. W. WindsorTwp. Avail. April 15th. Call609-448-9888.

BUSINESS & OFFICE USE —Building 8 years young, 2floors, 2240 sq. ft. on eachfloor. Located near bank, postoffice, etc. and near TurnpikeExit # 8 in Highlstown.LOMBARPO AGENCY INC.609-396-5700.

WANTEDTO* RENT — "23WF3000 sq.ft. light industrialspace for workshop.Reasonable rent. 201-246-8197. _'t

L A W R E N C E T W P .PROFESSIONAL OFFICES— Highly desirable location offUS# 1, accessable to 1-95 and I-295, and East-West Hwy.Completely furnished in-cluding utilities. $150/ moeach (1-3 offices available).Call 609-888-3030, if no answercall 882-0532.

MONT. TWP. — new officespace for rent. 1000 or 2000 sq. -feet. $4 sq. foot. Ready to go.Rt. 206, across from FoodtownShop. Ctr. Call Builder, 201-359-5837.

OFFICE SPACE TO SHARE -4 room suite on State Rd. inPrinceton. Freshly painted.$350. gross monthly rental,cleaning included. 609-924-7757;

- NEW OFFICE BLDG.1000 and"1500 sq. ft. gross areasuites for rent. Separate;electric, HVAC, tel. trunks,parking. 15 Main St., Kingston.609-452-8866 days. 921-7085eves.

DENTAL OFFICE — 890 sq.ft. available Feb. -1, 1980.Professional bldg. excellentparking. Central location.Details call Dr. Notterman609-448-1421.

OFFICE/RESEARCHSPACE FOR LEASE .

2,000 sq. ft. on ground floor.Near Airport. Princeton ad-dress & telephone. 609-924-9038.

NEIGHBORHObDREMJYGROUP

L S.M.

YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD REALTOR...SUSSMAN

YES. VIRGINIA THERE ARE HOUSES IN THE 40'sSUSSMAN REALTY IS PROUD

TO PRESENT THE FOLLOWING PROPERTIES ALL OF WHICHARE ON '/. ACRE LOTS AND ARE SURROUNDED BY GREENACRES.Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 story with modern kitchen, newwoodburning stove, separate garage suitable for workshop.Beautiful treed lot.

$41,900.

Aluminum sided Ranch with central air, large, kitchen and 3 :

lovely bedrooms.-. ' . . - $42,500.

Aluminum sided 2 story with separate 20 x 25 cinderblockbuilding. Modern kitchen and more.

$42,900.

Enjoy your fireplace and 4 bedrooms as well as your quarrytiled dining room. Hurry owners transferred. It won't last longat

$43.900. ' .

Eyedeal Rancher with fantastics kitchen, Deluxe features, 3bedrooms, living room, porch and garage. MUST SEE.

$45,900.

THK SIMR1TH) >

$ussmanIII1 896 9300

'172 Franklin Corner Rd. REALTOR Lawrenceville. N.J.

By OwnerOn Scott Dr. in Hillsborough

3% years young Split Level. 4 bedroorns, 2V4 baths, livingroom, dining rqdm. eat-in kitchen, carpeted family room, har-dwood floors, 2 car garage, basement, patio. Has spaciousmaster bedroom, maintenance free exterior, paved driveway,storms, and screens, IMMACULATELY CLEAN! On % acre(135'wide 260'deep) in Best Neighborhood. $98,500.

Caff for Appointment 201-359-1239

RIVERSIDE AREASplit-level with living room, f ining ar.ea with sliding door topatio and yard, panelled study whir door to front. Kitchen withdishwasher and self-cleaning oven. 3 bedrooms plus children'sdormitory room with skylight, one. full tiled bath, two half-baths. Family room, laundryroom with storage, basement withasphalt tiled floor. Large attic . Plaster walls, hardwood floors'.Central air-conditioning and humidifier. Located on a lovelyhalf acre lot with wooded rear border. Short walk to Riversideschool, bus lines, 1 % miles from University. $133,500.

Principals Only

609-924-2457

KINGSTONFor Sale by Owner

Ranch, 3* bedrooms, 1 bath,, full basement, BenFranklin stove-in living room on a slate hearth withbrick floor to ceiling, detached storage building, on% acre, 3 miles from center of Princeton, withinwalking distance of NYC bus.

Freshly painted, all hardwood floors recentlyrefinished, kitchen and bathroom recentlyrenovated, new stone driveway. ° $68,500.

609-921-1567

BusinessProperties

Q F ^ ^ — for sub-let. 2 privateJoffices, receptionand secretarial area. Approx.500 sq. ft. $350 per month in-cluding all utilities. 609-737-9505.

To Place aClassified Ad

In Princeton call609-924-3250

BusinessProperties

i. — .FOR RENT — 4500 sq. ft.office building near to Exits 8& 8A. This building was built tobe able to accomodate acomputer operation (withextra AC ana floating floors)OF it can be used for general,offices. Maurice H. Hageman,Realtors, 609-448-0600.

OFFICE SPACE — &/orwarehouse space. Approx1800 so. feet. On Nassau SL

^ 1 G d

-_*~ -i uV

fill

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDEWeek of April 18 - 20,1979 23-B

MANVILLE-SOUTH SIDE2 FAMILY

Good investment - two 4-room apartments, fullbath in each. Full basement with all separateutilities. 2 car garage. Call now...rt won't last.

$48,990.

HISTORICAL EAST MILLSTONE VILLAGEThis landmark 2-story colonial brick building is in

, the 'offering. First floor contains central hall foyer, 4huge rooms, kitchen, full bath. Second floor hastwo apartments, 3 rooms and full bath each, largeattic, possible conversion to 3rd apartment, partialbasement, four zone hot water heat, huge parkingarea, fantastic use for doctors, lawyers, engineersand retail store outlets. Call for details.

. , . . . ._ . • . / . $85,000.

HILLSBOROUGH1 acre industrial lot, with sewers, near Somerville.

$41,000.

SERVICE STATIONEight year old colonial brick and stucco 3 baystation with 6 pumps, office and storage rooms and2 rest rooms. Property 167 ft. by 212 ft. Located inhigh volume area. Contact broker for further details.

. ; - . . . . . . . . . $250,000.

Charneski & BongiornoRealtor and Insurance

(201)722-0070Evening Hours on Tues., Thurs. 8 Fri.

Lot* ww . 20.1-:

TWIN RIVERS

QUALITY CONDO: Lovely 3 year old condo featuring securityfoyer, living room, dining, eat-in kitchen, larger master bedroom,full size den, ceramic bath, balcony, upgraded carpeting, central air,all appliances. . $29,900.

LUXURY CONDO: Quality 4 year old condo ready for you. Twobedrooms and two full baths with 18* living room, dining with sliderto balcony, modem kitchen with self-clean oven, and frost freerefrigerator, laundry area, wall to wall, central air. $32,000.

MEMBER

HOUVEESFOR - LIVING

, RICHARDSON

OPEN HOUSETOUR

SUNDAYTwin Riv.nl -5 P.M.

"••ginning at 7J» Twin B».r. Drtv* Nor-th. Quad IV" Follow .lgn». CompM*community. TownhouMS. tmgl* familyhomos and condominhimi. 20*1 .to 70'i.Many modolt collobl.. All Include ton-nis, pools, shopping, commutor busing,control air, carpottng and much.moro.

BRIGHT TOWNHOUSE: Excellent , cheerfull townhouse in lovely' lake location. Carpeted throughout and featuring picture win-dowed living room, formal dining, bright combination kit-chen/family room, 3 large bedrooms. 2 V4 baths, full basement(partially finished), extra large patio area, all appliances and more.

$84,900.CONTEMPORRY 2-STORY: 3 bedrooms, 2'/4 baths located onestablished V4 acre. Formal living, dining, eat-in kitchen whhbreakfast bar, family room, 1 car garage, and full basement.Custom features include central vac, intercom, gas grill, deck and

[more $65,900.

BusinessProperties

BusinessProperties

HAM IT TON SOTIARF — 9fi OFFICE SPACE FOR RENTScJm PrKffta o? r 'SP^TS^S* "Office space. 609-924-0498, 6-8 l*T£e' a v a l L n o w ' - l0W

pm.

CALL FOR YOUR1 HOMES FOR LIVING"

MAGAZINEJ.OCAL AND NATIONAL

LISTINGS

ephone secretarial servicesavailable. 609-924-2040.

FRANKLIN PARKSTORE/OFFICE

500 to 5.<r.0 sq. ft.-, $3.50 net

KOUNTRY COTTAGEKEAI-TY

M A..S. ServicesC.T.C.

National Relocation &Referral Services

Established 3 Decades3231 Lincoln HighwayFranklin Park, N.J.

201-297-2242

STORE FOR RENT - 247 So.Main St., Manville. Avail,.immediately. 201-722-0650.

PRESTIGE OFFICE SPACE—' spacious 15'xl7' woodpaneled -room with full car-peting, air conditioning - Idealfor real estate accountant,attorney, insurance, privateoffice. Preferred Somervillelocation min. from Rt. 22.Phone Mon-Fri, 9 a.m.-5p;m.201-526-0156. ' ,

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE :space — store and storagespace. Close proximity toClear Brook & Rossmoor.,Cranbury, N.J. 609-921-1720.

H'BORO — UNIQUEPROFESSIONAL COMPLEXCountry setting in rapidlyexpanding suburban area offRte. 206. Contemp. suites andoffices avail, for Sept. oc-cupancy. Will furnish to suit.Contact Eileen Schwartz 201-874-3900.

PRIME OFFICE SPACE -for rent. Avail, immediately.3500 sq.ft. building. So.Harrison St., Princeton. 609-921-8672.

NASSAU ST. MERCHANTS

' IF"

You have had enough

PARKING PROBLEMS

Princeton ShoppingCenter is going todivide Kresge store intosmaller stores andboutiques. Call SaraSnyder for information.

609-921-6234

OFFICE SPACE — in Prin-ceton, avail, immed. 609-921-3092.

ONE ROOM OFFICE for rent— at prime Nassau St.location. Parking. $200/mo,with or without furniture. Nolease required. 609-924-1155.

OFFICE — in prime NassauSt. building available May 1for one month or longer. 609-921-6175 eves, keep trying.

Real EstateWanted

HOUSE WANTED TO BUY —in Mercer or Somerset County.Prefer small place with someacreage but will considertownhouse. 609-298-1837.

WANTED — central Jersey" orbordering. Pa. UndiviriVrfacreage or farm land, partwooaeq, view, witn or withoutbu i ld ings . P r i n c i p a l sp re f e r r ed . 609-921-6145eves/wkends.

T W O B E D R O O MTOWNHOUSE IN TWINRIVERS wanted. Call 20M35-1230 between 8 am & 4:30 pm.

OLD DESERTED FAR-MHOUSE — wanted with 1-2ac to rebuild. 8-5. 609-448-3400ext. 3346.

Garages/Storagifor Rent

PROFESSIONAL OFFICESPACE Main St. Flemington,200 sq. ft. to 900 sq. ft., From$125 and up. The Hunt Agency,M.C. Hunt Realtor, R.D., #1,Old York Road, Ringoes N.J.08551, 201-782-2044 or days or782-6956 eves.

HOPEWSLL — 2-car garagestcrage space $60. (M> $30).609-466-2363.

HALF A GAR AGE inMonm.Jet. $25 a mo. 201-247 )075.

STORAGE SPACE FORRENT — HIGHTSTOWNAREA -.609-448-0325.

S T O R A G E S P A C EAVAILABLE . — approx. 5miles from downtown Prin-ceton. 609-924-7757 or 655-0231

Land For Sale

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP —Elm Ridge Rd., 2 lots readyfor building, 2.35 acres, 200'frontage; or 4.00 acres on flaglot, $45,000 each. Terms. 609-921-0594 or your broker.

ACREAGE WANTED — Weare looking to lease propertyfor hunting purposes. .201-249-1359 Franklin Twp. Rod & GunClub. Fully insured. :

FOR SALE MONM. JCT\ 2houses (rented) on 17 acres,1200 foot frontage on 2 roads,will separate houses oracreage, by owner. $175,000.no realtors please. 201-247-0075.

HOPEWELL TWP. —Prestigious Fiddlers CreekRoad 2.64 acres, fully woodedwith stream. By owner, 609-443-6061. '

HIGHTSTOWN — 4, 100 x 150feet lots, $16,000 each. % acrecorner lot, $17,000, or will buildto suit. 609-448-3572.

PRINCETON JCT. — Woodedbuilding lot in excellentlocation, approx 1 acre. $19,500Country _ Heritage RealEstate, Realtors, (609) 799-8181. •

LOTS FOR SALE — Pen-nington Boro. Good in-vestment. For. additionaldetails call 609-882-0532

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP — 4wooded acres, bordered bystream, $44,000. Part ialfinancing available. Phone609-466-2949.

1.4 ACRE BUILDING LOT —nicely wooded, LittlebrookRoad, north behind Lit-tlebrook school. Asking$50,000. Call 609-452-4830.

NORTH HANOVER TWP - inManon Hills, prime >2 acrelots, low taxes, perc approved,recent survey. Owner. 609-298-4559.

MILLSTONE TWP. — 7beautiful ready to go 2V.> acrelots. This -prestigious sub-division is already beingd e v e l o p e d . T R I T O NREALTY, Inc., 201-446-6446,431-1774.

LOT FOR SALE — The"Hideout" in the Poconos.public sewer & water. A wellplanned community golf,tennis, boating, skiing,swimming, fishing. $5500. CallCollect 215-822-8441.

E. WINDSOR - b e a u t i f u lwooded lot on exclusive WoodsRoad. Perced, ready to go. 2 or4 acres, best offer. Call

: Country' Properties, 201-381-0115. —

MONTGOMERY TWP. —Sourland Mts. Beautiful 3 acrewooded lot perced. Call 6pm-9pm, 201-359-6595.

EWING TWP — corner lotavailable, A-l residential,owner will build to suit. Idealfor office and house com-bination. For particulars call609-771-1188..

i PRINCETON AREA — 2estate sized lots in prime area.Beautifully wooded, privateimproved driveway. Soil logs& percs. Priced for immediatesale. 8+ acres, $61,200; 11+acres, $77,400. % Reply withphone number & address toBox #02370 c/o PrincetonPacket.

BUILDING LOT — LawrenceTwp. 84.000 sq. ft., 346 fron-tage, city water - septic,$33,000. Call Broker, W.Brickley, 609-924-7474.

.PRIME EXECUTIVE OF-FICE SPACE — CentralNassau St., location, 470 sq.ft.3 offices and reception area.Call 609-921-1899.

ELM RIDGE PARK — 1%acre with trees. Will finance.$45,000 net Call 609-737-2203.

DEVELOPERS - Mon-teomerv Twp. 50 Acre sub-div.38 Lots. App. Stemmer RealtyBox 706 CUrk, N.J.

E. AMWELL — SourlandMountains. 8+ wooded acres,stream, 600* + frontage.$48,000. $18,000 down, 8 '.;>%.609-799-3536.,

1.15 acre WOODED LOT

Ready to BuildPrinceton Address

$27,500

THOMPSON LAND195 Nassau St. Princeton

609-921-7655Eves &. Wkends MerryKnowlton, 609-924-2795

HOMES FOR LIVING

ADULT COMMUNITY: Clearbrook Condo Resales. Two bedroomapartments to three bedroom single family homes with garage.Security, maintenance, golf, swimming, appliances, clubhousa.Resales starting at ' $35,MC.

i 'VALUE PLUS: Excellent home for small family on mature half acresite in East Windsor. Lovely 5 room home featuring picture win-dowed living room, extra large bedrooms, full basement, patiodeck, appliances, air conditioned and reasonable taxes. $52,500.

DELIGHTFUL RANCH: Bright cheerful ranch home located in quietBrooktree section of East Windsor. Comfortable foyer, brightliving room, and dining room, handsome eat-in kitchen, con-venient laundry room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, fulf basement,garage, wall to wall carpet throughout, central air and more.

$72,900.

IMMACULATE SPLIT: Only 154 years young, this 4 bedroom, 1 Vibath; split-level home is located on a quiet cul-de-sac in East Win-dsor with many large trees. Bright and large living room, formaldining room, eat-in kitchen, family room with stone fireplaceoverlooking lovely rear yard. Custom features include wall, to wallcarpeting, concrete patio and more. $79,900.

LOVELY COLONIAL: Located on a mature 129 x 214 site withestablished quality landscaping and backing onto beautiful, quietorchard and wooded area sets this East Windsor Colonial in a classby itself. Beautiful foyer, picture windowed living room with brickfireplace, formal dining, custom eat-in kitchen, pine panelled familyroom opening to a 14x20 enclosed porch, convenient laundry room,4 large bedrooms, 2J4 baths, full extra deep basement, 2 cargarage, cooling central air, wall to wall throughout and more.

$97,500.

RURAL COLONIAL: Located on lovely approximately one acre sitenear Plainsboro Township. Features include four huge bedrooms,2V4 baths, living room, formal dining, extra large eat-in country.kitchen, family room with brick fireplace, 2 car garage, fullbasement, wall to wall carpeting, and 16x32 inground pool conv

, pletery fenced in. Call today for more details. $104,000.

HOME OF THE WEEK

ttlBL " ^

CUSTOM KITCHEN: Is one of the MANY lovelyfeatures that can be found in this spacious split- •colonial located in East Windsor. There are fourbedrooms, 2'A baths, spacious living room, formaldining room, panelled family room with fireplace,central air, patio with stone barbeque, basement recroom, 2 car garage, lovely landscaping and privacy.

$93,900.

'Ask About Our*TRADE IN/

GUARANTEED SALES PLAN

R/CHARDSONREALTORS

Land For Sale Land For Sale

MLS

REAUO1;*

EAST WINDSOR

448-5000Weekdays 9 to 9 • Sat & Sun till 5:00

.i\Tv AHp S; /RflOi.'M'i.Vfi Aflf 4<i

PRINCETON MANOR COLONIALFeaturing 4 or 5 bedrooms, study, 2 V4 baths, wall to wall carpeting, fireplace and ap-proximately 2800 square feet of living space in very desirable West Windsor Township.

Asking $111,900.

^HENDERSONREALTORS

WINDSORS — Box 98, Princeton Jet., N.J. 08550 • (609) 799-4500

PRIME APPROVED —building lots for sale. HopewellTwp. 2 acres, 200 ft. frontageon nigh hill on quiet road. IV2mi. from. N.Y. train & bus.$35,000 firm. 609-3534 or 466-2334.

Real EstateFor Sale

EWING-PROSPECTVILLAGE — By owner. Up-dated throughout, 4 bdrms. V/ztiled baths, huge ultra-kitchen,living room, dining room &den. New carpetingthroughout, full basement.$49,900. Principals only. 609-883-2097.

Upper Freehold Twp.

MINI-ESTATEQuality construction makesthis 3 bedroom ranch with fullbasement on 21-. acres atremendous buy. Add a 20x40'in-ground pool and fireplaceand you have comfort for allseasons. Asking $85,200. Call201-446-4959.

CENTURY 21Einbinder Realtor

NEW CONTEMPORARY —with master suite, plus 2smaller bedrooms up..Downstairs den could be a 4thbedroom. 2Vfe baths, oak kit-chen, lots of light & openspace. 2 acres in HopewellTownship. $145,000. 90%financing available tosomeone with a large salarybut small down payment.Phone 609-466-2949.

Real EstateFor Sale

EAST WINDSOR SPLIT — 4br 2M> baths, 17x24 panelledfmrm. formica eat-in kitw/pantry, C/a, hmdfr. fullycpt, partially fenced rearyard, washer ,-dryer, new dish-washer, plus other extras.Prof lndscped 3/4 acre par-tially wooded lot. PrincipalsOnly, Mid $80's. 609-448-8612.

TWIN RIVERS — QUAD IV.. 3bdrm. townhouse, end unit,exc. location. Many extras.Principals. 609-448-6581.

Real EstateFor Sale

KENDALL PARK, (Bruns.Heights') Better Than New! 4bdrm. Colonial, lg. kit., fm.rm., 2l/z baths, 2 car gar., V4acre on cul-de-sac, $87,000. 201-297-5311.

-MONM. JCT. 2 HOUSES &garage on 1 acre. Good rentalincome. $65000. by owner. Norealtors please. 201-247-0075.

SPLIT LEVEL - for sale orrent has 3 bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen, rec & laundryroom, l>£ baths. Extras in-clude 2 air conditioners, wall-to-wall carpeting, washer,dryer, refrig. & fenced-inyard. Principals only. $56,000201-526-5390 or 201-874-6818between 5 & 7 p.m. By ap-pointment.

HOME INSPECTION bylicensed engineers. One dax.service. Call for information.-Princeton Home Inspection'609-921-3775.

MONTGOMERY — 2 storycolonial, fireplace in familyroom, 2 1/2 baths, 2 car at-tached garage, 4 bdrms.located on 1.65 acres, niceneighborhood. $120,000.Contact Donald G. lamndin.State Bank of Raritan Valley201-725-1200 No Brokers.

TWIN RIVERS - 2 BRtownhouse, 5 appl. incl.upgraded refrig, washer. Fin.bas. with extra storage space;humidifier. Walking distanceto N.Y. bus, pool & tennis.7>A% assum. mtge. $43,500.609-4434201.

HIGHTSTOWN 2 BR HOME —attic, basement, w/garage, 70x 170 corner lot, many extras.$42,500. 609-443-3403.

LAWRENCEVILLE —Academy Manor, beautifullytreed setting, 4 bedroom, 2%bath colonial. Slate . foyer,country kitchen with eat-inarea, family room with brickfireplace, redwood deck,formal hying and diningrooms, 2-car garage, centralair and vac systems plus manycustom features. Offered byowner — principals only. Callafter 7 pm wkdays/ anytimeweekends. 609-896-0069 -$109,500.

Real EstateFor Sale

Millstone Twp.TUDOR BI-LEVEL

5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 3fireplaces, on over 4 woodedacres are only some of thefeatures of this well designedhome. For privacy andcomfortable living you've gotto see this one. Asking$139,900. Call 201-446-4959.

CENTURY 21Einbinder Realtor

TWIN RIVERS — 2 BRtownhouse in very desireableloc, C.a, upgrd cpt, 5 appl inclff refrig, gas grill, freshlypainted. $42,500. Principalsonly. 609-443-4425.

HOUSE B E A U T I F U LCOLONIAL — 4 BR, IVz bath,pnled fmrm, 17 x 20 screenedporch, eatin kit w/ dw, no waxfl, c/a, hmfr, fenced yard, finbsmt w/bar & work area, w/wcpt, prof lndscped % acre x w/mature trees. Move in cond.$79,500. 609-443-1455. 201-238-2014 wkdays.

E. WINDSOR — 4 BR Tri-Level, 2Vz baths on oversizedwooded lot, private street, 2car garage, central air,wall/wall carpeting, .newlyfinished bsmt. lge. redwood

. deck w/dbL gas grilL walloven, washer/dryer. New 20cu. ft. refrig/freezer, manyextras. $95,900. By owner, calleves or wkends, 609-448-7865.

EST.1939

LAND SPECIALISTS

DIAL 448-0600231 ROGERS AVE., HIGHTSTOWN

CONDOMINUMAll on first floor - 1 bedroom, living room, diningarea, fully equipped kitchen, carpet throughout,central air, patio. Reduced to $25,000.Another 1 bedroom condo - this one with formaldining room - $27,500. End unit.

FOR RENT

4,500 Square Foot Office Building near Exit 8 and8 A. Building set up for general office purposes orfor computer operations, with extra air conditioningand floating floors.

EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP-LAND10 acre rectangular property with 5 room house. 5acres clear - 5 acres wooded. Zoned Industrial/Of-fice . $170,000.

; , . MANVILLE

-j: • t -r " .%Sfo6tn tandi, * 1 n-rr"bai .-»f-6asefnent VMtfcrec room, oil for^ 1 W comer lot. ; . :

»>

f i^; fujt-nut,tr:beat.

iwch^.5 looms', sfunwrtum stdincj,lOOixiOCtoi . .

Real EstateFor Sale

BRAND NEW LISTING! TwinRivers-Quad II, 3 BRtownhouse, end unit, IDEALLOCATION, UPGRADED &EXTRAS GALORE! perfectcondition 609-443-5572.

SO. BRUNSWICK — RuralCape, 1.3 acres. 33' living roomw/fpl., plus 2nd 5 rm. Ranch &more. ACA REALTY, Broker,201-297-1944.

TWIN RIVERS - _ 3 BRtownbouse, lakefront, fin.base. Quad I, patio, gas grin,panelled family rm, no-waxfloor, must see. 609-448-5042.

Real EstateFor Sale

TWIN RIVERS Quad IV-2 BRtwnhse. C/a, upgrd cpt, slfclnoven, ff refrig., patio, manyextras. 609-448-4658.

PRINCETON JCT. - small 2BR house. LR w/fpl., kitchen& den, 2 block walk to station.$41,900. Call Attorney StuartSurick, 609-924-3993.

TWIN RIVERS — Fall Oc-cupancy. 3 BR townhouse.Desirable Quad IV location,decorated inside. & out, extrainsulation, upgrded appl., gas"—ill, many other features,

ill 609448-7955.

t '\

HOME HUNTER'S GUIDE24-B Week of April 18 - 20,1979

Real EstateFor Sale

PRINCETON BOROUGHT O W N H O U S E S : Twotownhouses needing completerenovation. Each has a livingroom, kitchen with diningarea, 2 bedrooms, basementand rear yard. 227 Vfe - 229 VfeJohn Street (between Lytleand Clay Streets). Asking$17,500 each or $33,000 for both.609-924:0746 or 799-2441.

ELM RIDGE PARK - " byowner. New brick 1 storyFrench Provincial on Vk acrelot. 4 BR's, 2M> baths, lg. LR.,fam. rm w/fireplace, redwooddeck, full basement w/walk-oul sliding glass doors to patio.Full insulation, all windowsdouble glazed with screens, airconditioning. $175,000. Prin-cipals only. 609-737-3639.

H'BORO TOWNHOUSE byowner, immediate occupancy,V* yrs. young. Oversized, 2bdrms, lxh baths.-Featuringcentral air, eat-in kitchen,with new 21 cu. ft, refrig., dishwasher and formal dn. rm. 2patios, paneled and carpetedbasement, laundry rm. withnew washer & dryer & toolbench. TV outlet on all 3 floors.Extras too numerous tomention. Maint. fee includespool, cabana, club house &tennis courts. Princ. only.Phone week days 5:30 to 11p.m. Sat. and Sun. any time.201-359-0768, Price $63,990.

TWIN RIVERS - $35,000. 8V4%Assumable Mortgage. 3 BRtwnhse, upgrd cpt, wallpaper,upgrd appl, extra largebackyard concreted redwooddesign, gas frl, nr school & NYbus. 609^43-1585 eves or 212-695-6146.

CREAM RIDGE (nearAllentown) - MINI-HORSEFARM. 5 bedroom Victorianhouse, horse barn with 5 stallsplus carriage house on approx.4 acres. $99,500. Additionalacreage available. GaleRealty Inc., Realtor, 609-758-3300. " .' • •

HAMILTON SQ. — 21 WaltWhitman Way. 5 bedroom Bi-level. Extra large modernkitchen, lg. wood paneled den,carpets throughout, largescreened porch. 2 full bathsucorner lot, walk to schools.Exc. condition $59,500. 609-586-6453.

LAMBERTVILLE — primelocation, 2-family house plus10 garages. Calf 609-882 4380.

TWIN RIVERS — 4 BRUvnhse, 84% assum mtg,lndscped bkyd, many extras.Priced to sell. 609-448-9461.

COLONIAL RANCH—$57,900 -on i... acre. 3BR. 1M> baths,family room, basement,garage & appliances. 609-259-252-1.

-TRENTON — Historic Mill-Hill, 148 Jackson St.. 2'bedrooms, $31,900. C. E.Bugdal, Broker. 609-394-5039".

SOUTH BRUNSWICKWICK BANDITOSTRUCK AGAIN

IN SO. BRUNSWICKTHIS TIME

Immaculate 4 bedroomcustom Bi-L.evel, 3 yrs. young,•j acre wooded lot. Call fordelials. A steal at $72,900.

Call Us To List Your Home

Real EstateFor Sale

HI $80's -All extras. 4 Bdrm,2M> baths, 2 yr. old Colonial,Plainsboro. 609-799-2189.

BY OWNER — Ranch inJSwing Twp. 15 min. todowntown Princeton. 6 yrs.young in immaculate cond.Half acre wooded lot, welllandscaped. Entrance foyer,Hying room w/bay window,

. dining room, paneled fam. rm.w/fireplace and bay window,modern kitchen w/breakfastarea and sliding glass door topatio, 2% baths, 3 largebedrooms, finished basement,

-2 car attached garage withautomatic door opener,central air, w/w carpeting,hard wood floor, centralhumidifier, many extras.$82,900. 609-882-0462.

TWIN RIVERS - Quad IV, 2BR townhouse, a/c, 5 appls.,no-wax kitchen floor & newlypainted throughout. $42,500.609-448-6858.

Millstone Twp.Are Contemporaries For You?If so, look at this brand new 4bedroom model on 6 woodedacres. Island kitchen, centralair conditioning and a sunkenfamily room with fireplace areonly some of the features ofthis modern home. Asking$119,500. Call 201-446-4959.

CENTURY 21Einbinder Realtor

Real EstateFor Sale

. HAMPTON HILLS

A fine suburban community ofwell kept homes & rollinglawns. The home, well built &lovingly cared for, rests on V4an acre. Living room withfireplace & window walloverlooking the garden, a cozyden (or 4th bedroom), a hugefamily room, 3/4 bedrooms,2'& baths. Central air andoversized automatic garage.Included in sale arewasher/dryer, humidifier,water softener,. wall/wallcarpets, and lots of otherextras. $83,000.

NATURE'S WINDOW

5 acres of trees & meadowoverlooking Jacobs Creek,picturesque views upstream &down from the deck & windowwalls. A contemporary indesign, well insulated &adaptable to any lifestyle. 2/4bedrooms, 2 baths,magnificent dining & livingarea with Cathedral ceiling £fireplace. A fully equipped &solar heated greenhouse forthe plant buff. $95,500.

WSBORDEirMember of •

Multiple Listing ServiceRealtor' 609-~883-1900

Real EstateFor Sale

LAWRENCEVILLE RAN-CHER —= Brick & cedar shakeson over an acre of trees, •shrubbery. 4 bdrms, den or 5th,bdrm; 3 baths; "QuakerMaid" kitchen, dining,paneled family room w/brick-fireplace; foyer, lvg rm;laundry, 5 ft. cedar closet; 2-;car garage. Concrete;

; driveway, • walks. Full;! basement w/ 24'x36' party]room & bar. Hot water 4-zoned;baseboard heating. 2-zoned-"York" air cond., electronic'air filters. Raised concretepatio; hardwood floors;"Andersen" thermopane'windows. Many otherfeatures. Near "Lawren-ceville School." Priced at$180,000. For inspection, call609-896-1847.

f

11

REALTORS(20H* 329-3131

Cor. Dayton-Jamesburg^ & Georges Rd.

• Davton, N.J.OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

SOUTH BRUNSWICK

DAYTONSQUARETOWNHOUSES

SOLD SOLD SOLD

Wick did i f again. All 3lownhouses in 3 weeks. Brandnew listing. 2 bedrooms withden in mini condition. Askinglow '50s.

Call Us To List Your Home

201-297-1540

Call Us to ListYour Home

, mi#ifni%KREALTORS

, !

Dayton-Jamesburg Rd.corner Georges Rd.

Dayton, NJ '

open 7 DAYS A WEEK

PLUMSTEAD TWP. —. Daddy's 2 bedroom rancher onwooded lot. Breezeway &garage, low taxes. Broker'sfather in nursing home.$35,000. Central Jersey Realty,Rt. 526, Allentown, N.J, 609-259-7820.

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP — 2BDRM. Rancher. Lg. eat-incountry kitchen w/copperappliances. LR, 1% baths, lullfinished family rm. inbasement, attached garage,central air, w/w carpeting,67x156, nicely landscaped lot.Conv. locaiton. $59,500. Callowner, 609-883-4136.

HISTORIC MILL-HILL

TOWN HOUSE

148 JACKSON ST., TRENTONCOMPLETELYRENOVATFD

$29,900.00C.E. BUGDAL, BROKER

609-394-5039

BRAEBURNE AT CLEAR-BROOK — 3 BR, fire place, allappl, extras, large lawn area.Call after 9 pm. Tues. Wed& Fri. Mornings or weekends,609-655-3067.

TWIN RIVERS - $33,900, l"BR and den condo. - end unit,patio eat-in kitchen, w/wupgraded carpet, upgradedappliances, walk to shopping &NY bus. 609-443-5016.

3 BR - 2 M. bath Townhousebsm'l, Quad IV on Lake. C/ A,gas heat, all appliances. Brickpatio, no wax kit. fir.,wallpapered kit & bathrooms.Freshly painted inside & out.Clean. Close to school.ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE.Call owner after 6 p.m. &weekends. 609-448-8342.

ROSSMOOR — 1 floor 1 levelapt. 5 rooms, 2 baths, car-peted, covered patio,fireplace. $50,000. 5 "i % in-terest rate. Box 02412 c/o ThePrinceton Packet.

TWIN RIVERS — #1 location.Immaculate 3 BR end unit.Quad II Townhouse, 2% baths,c/a. humidifier, c/vac, gasgrill, upgraded appls, manyextras. Cul-de-sac in front, lg.treed open area in back, walkto school, shopping & NY busPrinciples only. 609-443-1856.

- 2001

Ocean County's new and ex-citing "HOMES FOR LIVINGMAGAZINE" in the comfort ofyour living room all homestyles with pictures andprices. Call 201-270-4100 orwrite for a copy of our excitingmagazine, REAL ESTATEPROFESSIONALS, 814Fischer Blvd..TomsRiver, NJ08753. •

CRANBURY VILLAGEHISTORIC HOUSE — BYOWNER MOVE IN CON-DITION — Very private —walking distance . toeverything, 8 rooms, 4bedrooms, 2 baths, park likeyard - beautifully landscapedEnglish gardens - city waterand sewers., garden house,sideporch, patio, 2 car garagewith loft: Many extras.$128,500. Call 609-655,3108.

HILLSBOROUGH

See this magnificant split inCountry Club Estatesw/ foyer, lvg. rm., lg. kit.w/ dining area, fm. rm., 3 or 4bdrms., gar. & over Vi acrelandscaped lot. All cityutilities. Exc. cond: & manyextras. Seeing is believing!$68,900.

MID JERSEY REALTY201-297-4700 201-359-3444

TWIN RIVERS — 3 BR, 2%bath "A" model townhouse,1lh% assumable Mortgage.Prof, fin bsmt, upgrd cpt,pnled fmrm & hall, tiled entry,nr school & bus. Many extras.609-448-6992.

TWIN RIVERS — 3 BR townhouse, Quad II all appl, patio,C/a, many extras. Must beseen!! 609448-0328.

1 OWNER OFFERS THIS —Island Paradise for sale, fullprice 2'/ million dollars. Highground, buildabje property.Unbelievable views, trees,water and fishing. Access isprivate road, 1% miles long, aprivate 4300 ft. long airstrip. Acanal that extends the entirelength of the road and aroundthe island approx. 2% miles.The island is 49 acres, theairstrip and road is approx. 17acres, total 66 acres. Avg.$38,000 per acre. A nearly 12acre island was purchased for1.2. million. Tht property isideal for a re arrch foun-dation, a castl ompound,exclusive priva : dub, in-vestors group to build ex-clusive houses all waterfront.70 miles. Sarasota, 135 milesTampa and 155 miles toMiami, Florida. Avg. yearround temp 72 degrees. Closeto the Intercoastal Waterway.This island is indicated on theNational Geological Survey inS.W. Florida. A rare buy.Write to Box #02293, c/0Princeton Packet.

EXECUTIVE HOME —Hillwood Lakes, Ewing Twsp.Beautiful red brick & whiteshingled 2 story Colonial on 1/3acre. 8 miles from Princeton.Wall to Wall carpets and manyluxury features including:$10,000 custom designed kit-chen, Screened porchoverlooking lake. Large livingroom w/white panelledfireplace. Dining room, built-in cabinets, 4 bedrooms. Cedarrecreation room w/cob-blestone fireplace, finishedshop, lighted seed bed. Ex-clusive college neighborhood.Large lot, surrounded byevergreens. Patio & storage

. barn, plus many refinements.Low Taxes. Must be seen to beappreciated. Principals Only,.Phone 609-882-1872.

SOUTH BRUNSWICK —DAYTON SQUARE - WHYBUY NEW, WHEN YOU CANBUY LOADED FOR LESS?See this! magnificant threeyear young 3 bedroom, 2%bath, 2 story condominium.SET IT NOW. The FLEMINGMC LAUGHLIN GALLERYOF HOMES 511 MILL-TOWNROAD, NORTH BRUNSWICK201-246-0300.

TWIN RIVERS — 3 BR, 2%bath townhouse with lg. openarea in. rear. Walking distanceto shopping, schools & NY bus.Upgraed appl, custom builtpatio w/gas grill, fin bsmt,newly decorated fmrm & kitw/no was fls. Many otherextras. A "MUST^SEE1.1 VAassumable mtg. Principalsonly. 609-448-8633.

$5500 DOWN — 90% MOR-TGAGE — 7 room PrincetonTownship house. Presently 2family dwelling can be con-verted to original singlefamily home (or live in oneapartment and rent the other).Located on John Street nearLeig.i Avenue. Asking $55,000Dwelling Managers, Inc., 609-924-0746.

7 ROOM TOWNHOUSE —Located in Princeton's mostrapidly improving and ap-preciating neighborhood. Theentire structure was recentlyrenovated with new copperplumbing and heating, elec-trical wiring, Camelot kit-chens and tile bathrooms. Thehouse is fully insulated and hasa new roof • the exterior trim iscurrently being scraped andpainted. Presently thebuilding contains two apart-ments each containing threerooms and bath. The housedoes, not provide sufficientincome to be a money-makinginvestment but is ratherideally suited for anowner/ occupant wishing todefray the cost of the mor-tgage, taxes, and insurancewith the rental income from•one of the apartments; eitherunit should rent for aminimum of $275 monthly withthe tenant paying all theutilities. The premises couldalso be converted back to theoriginal spacious seven roomhouse 13 or 4 bedrooms).There is a Woodburningfireplace in the living room, afully dry basement, off-streetparking, and a rear yard. 90%financing should be availableto a qualified owner/ oc-cupant; the requesteddownpayment is ap-proximatley $5,500 and thepresent owner would bewilling lo hold a secondmortgage for part of thedownpayment. Please contactDwelling Managers, Inc. foran appointment. 609-924-0746,

FOUR BEDROOM — 2 bathhouse in excellent conditionfor sale by owner. Goodlocation, 20 mins. fromPrinceton. The many extrasinclude a large sun porchw/fireplace, full basemenf,w/w carpeting, aluminumsiding & a large private yardwith trees. $66,900. Owner canfinance. 609-882-3966 eves. &wknds. No brokers.

P R I N C E T O N J C T .COLONIAL — 7 bedrooms, -Vhbaths on 1+ acres. Includeshuge modern kitchen, familyroom, dining room, livingroom and finished basementwith bar. Master bedroom hasbath, dressing area and walk-in closets. Extras includecentral air, carpeting, patioand others loo numerous tomention. Ideal for largefamily, professional office/home or Mother-Daughter.Realistically priced at$164,900. Call 609-799-3483.

FOR SALE: Split-level homein Princeton s Riversidesection. Four bedrooms, 2M>baths, living room withfireplace, dining room, all-electric kitchen, family room,b a t 2 g

cric kitchen, family room,basement, 2-car garage, gasheal, central air conditioning,rear deck, palio, large lot with

t t d l t i, p , g

mature trees and plantings.For appointment phone 924-1331.

LOVELY 3 BEDROOMHOUSE FOR SALE BYOWNER. $114,000. 609-921-7377.

3 BEDROOM — lMs bathRanch on private beautifullylandscaped acre. Fireplace,central air, wall/ waif car-peting, laundry room, Floridaroom, new kitchen, dish-washer, self-clean oven, largepatio overlooks park-likeproperly with swimming pool.1 mile campus, railroad. 1hour NYC. No brokers. Mid-$90's. 609-452-8413.

TWIN RIVERS — QUAD II —IMMACULATE 3 BDRMSPLIT TOWNHOUSE.FINISHED BASEMENTWITH BUILT IN STEREOSPEAKERS, HUMIDIFIER,GAS GRILL, APPLIANCES,STORM WINDOWS, CUSTOMSHADES & DRAPES, FULLVIEW OF LAKE FROMKITCHEN & MASTERBEDROOM, LIVING ROOM &2 BEDROOMS OVERLOOKFARMLAND; PLUS OWNEDPARKING AND MANYOTHER ^EXTRAS, BYOWNER: PRINCIPALSONLY. 609-448-6432.

Real EstateFor Sale

5 BR COLONIAL — 2% Dams,in E. Windsor; central air &humidifier, panelled familyrm.,* enclosed play yard, %acre lot; storage shed, nogarage; very clean, goodcondition; immed. occup;$75,000; 609-683-3129 days. 448-4238 eves.

HILLSBOROUGH BYOWNER — 3 BR Townhouse,oversized rooms, central aircond., panelled & carpeted recroom, laundry facilities onmain level. No wax kitchen &entrance floors. Immaculatecondition. Swimming pool &tennis courts privileges.Asking $65,500. 201-359-2217.

Pa. Properties

LANGHORNE PENN. —brand new townhouse 3 br, 2%baths, conv. to trans, after 6p.m. 215-752-7419.

NEAR NEW HOPE — Un-furnished small 2 story oldvillage gem. Living room withhuge fireplace, eat-in kitchen,2 bedrooms & bath. Ideal forone or 2 adults. Lovely hillsideyard. $425 plus utilities.ELLIOTT REALTY, 215-862-5211, 609-771-9133. Eves. 215-297-5319.

Too LateTo Classify

APT FOR RENT -Lawrenceville. 3 rooms & bathavail. May 1. $250/mo heatincluded. Call 609-896-1224after 6 p.m.

TAVERN & PACKAGE - NewBruns. Estb. 12 yrs., Ownerretiring, Hi-gross, Business &bldg w/6 rm. apt., asking$135,000, exc. oppty for in-terested buyers. Reply Box#02418 c/o Princeton Packet.

BEDROOM SET, 2 Love seats,artificial fireplace with bookshelves, dinette set, electricdryer, tables & lamps. 609-448-2296 after 3 p.m.

LOST - 2 strand gold beadnecklace. Jefferson-GuyotLane - Moore to NassauSomerset Farms. Reward.Sentimental value. 609-924-4152.

'77 PONTIAC VENTURA - V6-,auto shift, P. brakes, air cond.,26,000 miles. 23 mpg hiway, 18local. Best offer over $3200.Phone 609-896-1593 7-9 am, 5-7pm. (Lawrenceville)

'71 CHEVY £ TON PICKUP -dark olive green, small V8, 3spd. manual, radio, rear stepbumper, gauges, 4 new 6-plytires, new brakes, 1 owner,well maintained, good buy.$2000. 609-799-2760.

KITCHEN C A B I N E TREFINISHING — fine qualityworkmanship also in-dividually styled & craftedcabinets & doors or resur-facing existing cabinets withwood veneer & new doors.PARK LANE CABINETS, 201-874-4151.

EXPERIENCED HEAVYequipment operator forhousing tract workHillsborough area. Salarycommensurate with ex-perience. G.B. Excavating,201-369-3627.

'75 CHEVELLE MalibuClassic - p/s, p/b, auto. Mustsell quickly. $1800. Call after5:30 pm, 609-896-9060.

WANTED - part time kitchenhelper for Princetonrestaurant. Prefer mature(perhaps retired person).Good conditions. Apply inperson between 8 a.m. 1 p.m.College Inn, 173 Nassau St.Princeton.

SECRETARY - attractivePrinceton law office, goodtyping & steno skills required.Legal experience preferred.Salary commensurate withability & experience. Call 609-924-8900 to arrange for in-terview.

COMPLETE OAK bedroomset - with formica top, kingsize bed. Best offer. 201-846-9627.

1972AUDI100LS-tan,$800.609-883-4514 after 6 pm.

VOLVO 1973 -145 Wagon, goodcondition. 215-862-2729 after 6pm.

LARGE DARK PINETRESTLE TABLE — 2 leaves.First$125 takes it! Call after 5.609-799-4096.

Too lateTo Classify

STEREO FM TUNER —Nikko, gamma I almost new.$250. 609424-9207.

MACHINIST - growingmanufacturers of specialproduction machinery steadyovertime, benefits, must beable to read prints. Layout andset up all shop equipment.William A. McGovern Inc. 201-521-0472.

Too LateTo Classify

CHAIRS CANED & RUSHED -call after 5 pm. 609-737-3626.

1975 CAMARO - 35O-V8, verygood condition. Asking $3,200or best offer. 201-329-2295.

LOST - Easter Sunday,vicinity Winant Rd. last seencrossing Stoney Brook,Female golden retriever,Lucy. Reward. 609-921-1381.

SAILBOAT 18' - new trailer,asking $750. 201-873-2921, or201-545-2725.

MOVED TO PRINCETON &am intriqued by the Packet's"Personals." My wish wouldbe to discover new and specialfriend without spending,months exploring, the area. Ivalue warmth, humor andintelligence. I'd like to meet anattractive, excited woman (28-40) who feels good about selfand life. (I'm OK too) Jot me anote at box 02420 c/o ThePrinceton Packet and we'lltalk.

CHENEY 1918 Record player+ old records $100. VictorianPRACTICAL NURSE wantspart time work private duty.Willing to travel with patientor elderly person. Best of refsCall 609-393-0026 after 4 p.m.

GOLD NECKLACE - with coinlost Sat. Apr. 7, probably atQuaker Bridge Mall. Familyheirloom, Generous reward.No questions asked. 609-921-6606.

7 WHITE DOGWOOD - 5-8'. Ifyou dig, $48. 18" EnglishBoxwood, Pieris, DwarfAlberta Spruce. 609-655-0123.

Private schoolsplan conference

MOVJNG SALE — Apr. 20 &21, off Willow Rd.,Hillsborough. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.201-359-5663.

TYPIST - Suburban PrincetonCo. is looking for an accuratetypist to train as acorresponding secretary onvarious IBM machines in ourWord Processing Center. Goodgrammar, punctuation andspelling a must, knowledge ofdictaphone a plus. If in-terested please call DebbyBart, 609-921-2806 ext. 210 forinterview. Equal OpportunityEmployer.

'69 DODGE POLARA - theperfect station car. $450. 201-329-2991.

GANG MOWERS - 30" lawnsweeper, lawn spreader, aircompressor. 201-469-0390.

TRIUMPH 1960 TR3 - classicroadster, good shape. Call 201-329-2867.

PAINTERS - Interior & Ex-terior painting. Hillsborougharea. Some experiencepreferred. 201-359-5944 bet. 5 &7 pm.

AUCTIONSAT. APRIL 2110:00 A.M.for Mrs. Roberta Murray

LawrenceMrs. Barbara Lawrence

TuckerDutchtown Harlingen Rd.

Belle Meade, N.J.Three generations of antiquesincluding: Oak dressers, beds,walnut secretary-desk, 3 dooroak icebox, pine cupboard,Hoosier cupboard, marble-toptable, pair Victorian sidechairs, what-nots, set lad-derback chairs, wicker pieces,cast iron lawn set, earlyblanket chest, early trunk withhand wrought handles, oaksecretary, library table,fainting couch, mirrors, .&more. CHINA & GLASS: setpink hobnail, Roseville,Maiolica, Willow, Buffalo,Carlsbad, Nippon. Noritake,Carnival, & much more —some in sets. Metlach can-dlehoders, copper pieces, oldflute, crocks, quilts, tools, setgas lamps, advertising cards,Art Nouveau lamp, & much,much more. ART & BOOKS:Collier girls, lithographs,water colors & oils inc. earlyoil early Bibles - 1800's, TheFables of LaFontaine-illus.Dore, Lake Scenery ofEngland, Scotland Illus. -1858,Psalms of Davis -1772, LondonIllus. News - 1812, & many,many more old books. Lunchcounter. Owner & auctioneernot responsible in case ofaccident or injury. DIREC-TIONS: North of Princeton offRt. 206, turn left at HarlingenChurch onto Dutchtown-Harlingen Rd. & proceed 1mile to auction.

JOHN HEDGEPETHAuctioneer-AppraiserFarm & Estate Sales

Ringoes, N.J.201-782-8392

Member N.A.A. &N.J.S.S.A.

VERSATILECOMMERCIAL ARTIST

Competent in:Layout, Paste-up, Com-

prehensives, Dummies, TypeSpecing, Pen & InkIllustration, including 4 colorprocess.

74 KAWASAKI - on/off road,250cc 3,200 mi., carrying rack,$575. 201-985-5100 or 846^477.

WANTED PERSON TO DO -gardening & lawn mowing. 1full day per week. 609-896-0237after 5 pm.

1977 CHEVY VAN - V8, auto,air, p/b, p/s, customized in-terior with captains chairs,carpeting, ice box, am/fm 8-track stereo, CB, 17,000 miles.Call 609-259-2632.

NEED VOLKSWAGENCHASSIS - & engine. Willconsider wreck or damage.Call After 5 or wkends. 609-655-4033.

'77 COUGAR — white, HDshocks, special trans., car-burated for speed, 55,000 mi.Call Roger, after 6 p.m. 609-737-3647. After 6 till 9, 201-359-3000.

10 PEOPLE — to work 10 eves,in May and/or June. 3 hours anight. Earn $300 or more. Carnecessary. 201-463-7819.

GAMBLER'S MONTHLYNEWSLETTER — sub-scription $6. 2224 CamplainRd., Somerville, N.J. 08876.

'76 PONTIAC SUNBIRD - exc.cond. less than 10,000 mi.,am/fm radio a/c, $2,000: Calldaytime 201-627-1679.

GIBSON — SG CUSTOM, 3Super Humbuckers. Walnut &Gold. Mint condition. Call Tom609-443-5735.

CLERK TYPIST - full timeposition, typing 50-60 wpm,previous office experiencenecessary, excellent benefits.609-452-8383. EOE.

TUTOR FOR DEAF CHILD —Certified teacher willing tolive in. tutor, and help care fordeaf child during the summerstarting May 20. Call TriciaLough now. 609-758-2151.

RECEPTIONIST $155+PLUSH

Front desk, light/accuratetyping. Excellent chance forpromotion. All benefits., nevera fee. Call 609-452-1400.

TEACHERS ASSISTANT - for4 yr, old group 5 afternoons, 1morning/wk. Some experiencewith pre-school childrenpreferred. For informationwrite Dutchneck Coop Nur-sery, School, PO Box 113,Princeton Junction, N.J. 08550.or call Sandra Lang 609-799-2674.

The New Jersey Associationof Independent Schools willhold its 1979 conference at '•Princeton Day School onFriday, April 27, from 9 a.m.until 2:30 p.m. It will featurediverse lectures, discussionsections, scholarly talks, drop-in workshops, exhibits andcontinuous book displays forteachers, administrators,business managers, librarians

. and athletic directors of the 43member schools.

A number of guest lecturersfrom different disciplines willaddress topics and problemsparticular to independentschools. Among them arelocally, nationally, and in-ternationally known figuresincluding David Brown, In-structional Media Specialistfrom Pennsylvania; JohnDixey, Associate Director ofMiddle States Commission;Harold Furth, AssociateDirector for Research,Princeton Plasma PhysicsLab and Professor of Astro,Physics at PrincetonUniversity and Eric W.Johnson, Educational Con-sultant and author of manybooks on study skills, sexeducation and adolescents.Also to lecture are MichaelKahn, former director of theStratford ShakespeareFestival and McCarterTheater; Beman Lord, authorand professional story teller;and David Purpel, Professorof Education and Chairman ofCurriculum and FoundationDivision of the University ofNorth Carolina. Also, ConradJ. Schmitt, Senior Editor,Foreign Publications Divisionof McGraw-Hill; John Wilson,French teacher at BelmontHill School in Mass, and editor

Responsible for:Contacting, supervising &

following-up typographers,printers & media.

Capable of: ,Operating repro camera,

IBM composer, etc.

Ability to:make a contribution in

concept, headline & copy

Willing to:participate in planning,

organization & scheduling ofsmall, growing, full serviceadvertising agency.

Salary OpenCall 9-3 609424-2333

1965 FORD LTD - 2-dr. hard-top, auto, p/ s, $175. PICK-UPCamper, 8* Sunline, stove,furnace, ice-box sink, $475.F r e e z e r , u p r i g h tWestinghouse, 12 cu. ft. goodcond. $75. 609-448-7506,

of the French Newsletter forTeacher Services of NAIS;and Brian R. Walsh, Head-master of Shore Country DaySchool, Beverly, Mass..

Other workshops will be ledby members of the faculties ofLawrenceville, Princeton DaySchool, Chapin and other NewJersey schools.

The Planning Committeeconsists of Chairwoman CintraRodgers, NJAIS executivesecretary; Jean Loizeaux,Gill/ St. Bernards; LynnBenediktsson, Moritclair-Kimberly; Katherine Webband Jan Baker, . PDS;Elizabeth Robinson,. Chapin;Norman Lemcke, Peck;Theodore Li, Pingry; AlPenner, Newark Academy,and.Dorrie Dillon, Kent Place.

Following registration, andcoffee at 9 a.m., a generalbusiness meeting will be heldt o elect board members for thecoming year. The nominatingcommittee, chaired. •"•; byThomas M. Woodward Jr.,headmaster of the Hun School,has proposed a slate ofnominees including thefollowing from local schools:for president, Douglas O.McClure, headmaster of PDS;r e p r e s e n t i n g ' b u s i n e s smanagers. 6. Bissland Moore,L a w r e n c e v i l l e School ;representing upper schools,Donald Robertson of UKSPennington School; and forathletics, Carrol Florkiewiczof Stuart Country Day School.

At the conclusion :ofJ the,workshop sessions, a specialluncheon will feature LeeHastings Bristol' as keynotespeaker. His topic will concernthe role of the arts in in-

- dependent schools.

• > . . - : ,

Larry Ellis winstwo scholarships

Lawrence T. Ellis, Jr.

BEDROOM with bath inEwing, private entrance,$30/wk. 609-882-9161 eves.

STEINWAY PROFESSIONALUPRIGHT - for rent - excellentinstrument, fine cond.Dielhenn Music School. 609-924-0238.

NIMROD POP UP CAMPER -sleeps 4-6, $475. 201-359-3308.

SNAPPER - ride on mower8hp, 30" cut bagger, Goodcond. $475. 201-983-5100 or 846-6477.

NIKON and Vivitar lenses forsale Nikkor - UD wide angle20mm F 3.5 $200. Nikkor-Htelephoto 300mm F 4.5 $300.Vivitar close focus auto zoom85-205mm F 3.8 with case $185.Call after 7 pm. or weekends609-466-2638.

M O N T G O M E R Y —Lawrence T. Ellis Jr., son ofMr. and Mrs. Lawrence T.Ellis of Burnt Hill Road,Skillman, was recently an-nounced winner of two collegescholarships.

A senior at the Lawren-ceville School, Mr, Ellis won a$1,000 scholarship granted bythe National AchievementScholarship Program forOutstanding Negro Students.His selection was based onPSAT and SAT scores, schooland extra-curricular activitiesand the endorsement andrecommendaions of schoolofficials.

Mr. Ellis' other award is theMorehead Scholarship at theUniversity of North Carolinaat Chapel Hill. The award, afully paid, $3,000 per yeartuition with stipends for room,board and spending moneyplus a fully paid summerprogram spanning five years,is granted to 60 finalists fromNorth Carolina.

In addition, 60 nominees aretaken from independentschools in the Eastern UnitedStates, including Lawren-ceville, Choate and Exeter,and six nominees are chosenfrom the British public schoolsystems.

The awards were founded in1945 by John Motley Moreheadand are patterned after that ofthe Rhodes Scholarships atOxford. Criteria for this awardinclude leadership potential,ambitions, academic abilities,character and physical vigor.

One of the programs in-cluded in the scholarship is afive part summer program.

The. first part, occurringbefore the freshman year, is aIhree to five-week OutwardBound program designed toincrease leadership potential.In the summer before thesophomore year an eight-weekpublic safety program, issponsored in conjunction withthe police department in anymajor city.

Prior lo the junior year aneight - week private enterpriseprogram is held in whichparticipants may work withone of the major U.S. cor-porations. An eight weekprogram before the senioryear allows the participant toengage in a governmentalinternship with the BritishParliament of the -govern-ments of North Carolina orCalifornia.

After graduation, thestudent may design his ownforeign study project. A* UNC,Mr. Ellis will be in the honorsprogram, offered to only 125 ofthe 3,000 students in the fresh-man class.

At The Lawrenceville SchoolLarry Ellis' is treasurer of thestudent government, amember of the varsity crosscountry and varsity trackteams, a member of the gleecltib, the history club and the"Open Door," an honorarysociety of seniors chosen onthe basis of character, per-sonality and achievement torepresent the best qualities ofthe student body. He is alsopresident of the Afro-A m e r i c a n ' c u l t u r a lorganization and a member ofthe library council.

U.