given full credit - DigiFind-It

64
'nwCtflUai Po»i (USPS 557-660) S«cood d « u postage Sacood d « u postage pa<d at Daylon. N J. OSSfo o The Pi1nc9ton Packet, tne. 1M 8 AM f U s ^ Peaerved Thursday, December 29, 1988 Vol.32. Np. 52 ^ ' f W 50<n Recycling center , closes for holidays The South Brunswick Recycling Center wiir.be closed Saturday, Dec. 31 .and Monday, Jah. 2 for the New Year's holidays. Recycling pickup is cancelled for Momlay, Jan. 2. There will be no residet^ti^ garbage pickup, but residential garbage will tw picked, up Saturday, bee, 31. School Board will, consider budget ' The South Brunswick Board of Ediu^ion will .vote Monday, Jan.' 9 bn whether to adopt the 1989/1990 "school budget: rec- onpitended by the Budget Com- mitte*; The Budget Comniittce will present its reconunendations to U»'frill school board on Titts- day, Jan, 3. TI m Board will also conduct-its regular official business, including appointments, resignations, grant applications and approval of ex- penditures. The >public is invited to ask questions and express opinions about any item on the Board’s agenda or about any other matter p|^uM ippaji,^t{^.$t,-Thc .meet- Board of Education office, 4 Executive Drive in Monmouth Junction. Remember early holiday deadlines vThe South Brunswick Central Post reminds everyone of early holiday deadlines for the coming week. Because Monday, Jan. 2 is a legal holiday, the Post deadline for publication Thursday, Jan. $ is Triday, Dec.' 30 before S' p.m. Public Library closes for holidays The South Brunswick Public Library will be closed on Friday, Saturday and S u i^ y , Dec. 30,31 and Jan. I for the holidays ai}d will reopen on Monday, Jah. 2 at 3 p.m. The library is located bn Kingston Lane in Monmouth Junc- tion. The- library recently an- nounced that it is again open to the public with regular hours. The library is open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday; 10 a.rn. to 5 .p.m. on Saturday.'and from I to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Radon test kits^ : are now available South.'’ Brunswick residents :can nowitiave their homcs'tested for r a ^ gas for $10 through a prpjlltain recently put in place by the Soudi Brunswick He^th De- partmeitt.' The tee includes jhe purchase of one test kit, the cost of having it a n a ly ^ and of mailfog to an area l<iboratory. It i8|.ap|Hox- inutely:$S5 cheaper tlian pack- ages offered by area testing firms. ,A natural byprodi^ of the decay oruranium found in'soil. atkt -'rdck deposits, .'bdon has to lung caricer by the NW'Icnaley Dcpartiiient of En- Vi^'ipental Protection, as well aa bt&a federal and’state agen- Colorless am^odoriess^ it i’itbberaliy enterf the home vdie basemen.t and. is. iy^tUngerdus over;|t^g^^ dds of time, state offoiaU By Pete Donohue StaH Writer, Aji off-duty South Brunswick police officer, attempting,to brealcllp a br^i^l at the Kendall Park Roller Rink Christmas Eve night received four stitches in the head and multiple bruises across hisTxxiy, South Bruns- wick police said. Tw o other men were treated for minor injuries at the Medical Center at Princeton, and a 11-year-old juven- ille was arrested and charged with disbrderly conduct in connection with the melee, authorities said. Still under investigation, details of the event remain sketchy. But police said .at least 11 persons, were in- volved, adding that they expect to. make arrests soon. Approximately 300 people were in the ^pular rink on Route 27, around 9:30 p.m. when the fight broke out, police ^ i d . "ItTooked like it was 10 to one,” Patrolman RonSid Horinko, the in- jured officer, said Tuesday. Bruised and moving slowly, the officer said . he attempt^ to stop thc-kltcncation, but in the process of doing so he was kicked in the head,.back, shoulders and neck. Th^ patrolman identified himself as: a police officer, said Patrolman Hugh McNeil, the investigating officer. At -9:37 p.m.. township officers ' were, dispatched to The scene, where they were, joined by Frankiin Towh- ship police. By the time the officers arrived, however, most of Ihosc in- volved had fled, leaving police with an unclear picture of what happened. Exactly how many people were in- volved and how it all started is ^ill being investigated, Patrolriian McNeil said. for the past^20 years, said police were called because two people were being Uisorderly, adding that "we don’t permit any. of that here, W e n in oiie of the safest rinks around. In the past 10 .years we haven't had to sign a single complaint against someone for being disorderly.” ' t I w juvenile, V New Brunswick resident; was armted ahd charged --with-vcrbally-ihterfcring— with.^thc- investigating officers on the scene, police said. He was released 1o his parents. WOMAN SAVED Gifford Nazaro. owner of the rink ‘The Nutcracker’ played by cast of 160 students Atout 160 students at Monmouth Junction School performed “The Nutcracker" for family and friends last week. Pictured left Is Bonnie Massinger, a tea girl from The Tea Land, China. Below Aflsh^ Pateli left, and Bruce FOx are cooking up a holiday dessert. Photos By Caroline Bednarezyk given full credit By Pete Donohue Staff Writer A smoke detector is being credited with saving the life of a Monmouth Mobile Home Eadc resident, whose trailer was destroyed by fire early Tuesday m o r n i n g - ' Sputh'Brunswick fire inVestigators said the blaze was sparked, by im - properly installed electrical tape that was wrapped around the unit's water pipes. Mobile home ownen wrap water pipes to keep them from freez- ing. While Susan Keklak was sleeping in her Kc4tl .Street trailer Monday morning, flames were apparently eat- ing away at its base. Arbund 7:20 a,m;, the fire alarm 'in the hallway "sounded. :By"then, boweSTer, smoke' was klepjfig.„tiirough the walls.. And the walls themselves were-extremely hot, the 39-ycar-old paramedic said. After whisking her two dogs to safety, she c a ll^ the police — but “ within five minutes it was a fire half,” she recalled during a telephone interview from the home of some friends in North Brunswick who were putting her up. Although the Kendall Park Volun^ tcer Fire Deptutment was on the scene within six minutes orheing notified, her home, her v^ty first, was gutted. Firemen Were able to keep the blaze from posing a danger to the surrounding units, but all of her possessions werc-lost, including a lOO-year-oid, first edition copy of "B iK k Beauty” that was given to her as a gift. "Fbilunitteiy 1 was able to get the pets out, but unfortunately, afin six months of moving iiito my first h ( ^ , I’ve lost it ... I wasn’t able to saW: miyj|iing;^^ > But if it weren’t for that detector, much ntore could’ve been lost, she added. “ It saved my life, you can write See RRE, Page 3A Holiday is marred by 18 accidents By Pete Donohue Staff Writer South Brunswick police and rescue squad workers had a hectic holiday, as more than a dozen motorists were injured in accidents on township roads, including an 8-year-oId Deans boy' who rettuiined in critical con- dition as of Wednesday. Between Thursday, Dec. 22, and Monday, Dec. 26, there, were 18 accidents in South Brunswick,' three of which involved drunken ^ve rs . "It was an unusually busy week- end,’.’ said Patrolman Michael Kushwara of the South Brunswick Police Department. The most serious mishap occurred See WRECKS, Page 3A Ordinance mandates businesses By Stephanie Staff Writer on Giristmas Eve at the intersection of Fresh Ponds Road and Rhode Hall Road where a collision between (wo vehicles sent five people to the hospi- tal. Around 4:27 p.m., a 1983 Buick Regal, driven Peter M . Malouf Jr., 48, of Milltown crashed into a 1985 Plymduth Voyager driven by Randy L^ew ski of Oak Tree Road, Deans, who was traveling with his^wife and two young children. Jason, 8, is in the intensive care'* unit of the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Bruns- wick'and. his condition was critical, as of Wednesday, a hospital Crash claims local man By Elaine Rose Post Correspondent SOUTH BRUNSWICK— An act of brotherly love turned into trageidy for a local family, as a man returning home to visit his critically'ill'sister was one of 259 people killed iix the Wediiesday, Dec. 21, crash of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, Steven Butler, S6, was working with the Peace Corps in Africa when he received word that .his sister was in a conu in s Philadelphia hospital. He flew immediately to Frankfurt, .West Germany, where he boarded the ill-fated aircraft after being bumped from an earlier flight. Described.by his father as a person .‘Jn f no .piat;e .Bnd. everywhere,.'! Steven Bililer Wended South Bnms- wick High School before beginning his travels at the'aM of 11 "H e saw mote than, 1 think. Half the population of the world,’.’ said Vic Butler, who has owned Butler’s General Store in Monmouth Junction since 1961. “ The only place he’s never been is the Antarctic.” Mr. Butler said that Steven’s eix- periences included a bicycle tour of 'Europe, viewing India riding on the top of railroad car, and being robbed of his passport while sleeping on a train in Italy. -. When he was in-his 20s, Steven returned to^the United States to study geo^phy at the Univenity of South. Roiida before resuming his wander- ings, - He'earned his passage by wcuklng odd jobs in the countries he visited. Arncmg odier things, be.taught Eng- lish while living in Japiah and was a foreman cigaiette factoiy -in “ He would work in a country for six months, until he had enough money, and then he would move on to the next country,” M r. Butler, said. He had a nice nature, his father said, and made friends wherever he went. A stranger could approach him . in tlw street, and he would engage in a five-hour conversation if he had nowhere else to go. Although he had girlfriends all over the world, Steven never formed 'any permanent relWonships, his' father said. He kept in touch with his family through postcards and oc-' cational visits home. Despite the distant and scarcity of reunions, M r. kisd that Steven remained very close to his brother and sister. - Steven enrol|.ed in the Peace Cotps earlier'this fall, and served in. a - CRASH, Page’ 3A Local businesses in South Bruns- wick must rnake arrangements to dispose of their recyclable trash and report progress to the township bian- nually or be fined, according to a new ordiiianrx that went into effect Wednesday, Dec. 7. : The South Brunswick Township Oimmittce, in compliance with state mandated recycling laws, now re- quires local businesses to recycle at least 15 percent of their garbage. In 1989, the stole will raise the require- ment to 25 percent, according to Nancy Pacquette, South Brunswick recycling coordinator. "This Is all very new to us, and wc lire doing oiir best to help the . busi- nesses,” M rs. Pacquette said. Sire has assigned an inspector, J ^ k D ye , to go out to local businesses and explain the ordinance to them. Fines could range anywhere from $50 to $1,000, according to Mr. Dye. but no fines will be imposed until after the townstilp has appointed a recycling inspector.' The~inspector,:: expected to be appointed Jan. 1, w ill visit i p ^ ctmiimies and make sure they are in compliance with the ordinance. : The ordinance states that busi- nesses found in,, violation will first receive two waimings. IP still in violation, the recycling inspector would issue a suiiunons with a man-, datory court appearwee and the com- |Mny faces a fine. . , The fines could be as high as $l,00P for repeat offendeto, Mrs. Pacqiette said.“ It’s a .btglineV even for a large company, and I can’t see paying that much money for not reveling.” T te ordinance g o n on to'’stote that fwk» a year all businesses must produce <K>cUn»ntotion of their cycling — oiKe before Jani 31 and agsin befrne July 31. Bill Hester, a reprcsentotive of IBM on Oemges Road, said Mr. Dye has already visitnl IBM , atul die township“ can be sure that IB M w ill be in complete compliance.” M r.' Hester could not give specific recycl- ’ “ ng procedures, however. A number of other local businesses Chicopee ahd Russ .Betrie little for commenti- RECYCUNGk Page 3A V 'a'

Transcript of given full credit - DigiFind-It

'nwCtflUai Po»i (USPS 557-660) S«cood d « u postageSacood d «u postage pa<d at Daylon. N J. OSSfo

o The Pi1nc9ton Packet, tne. 1M 8 AM f U s ^ Peaerved

Thursday, December 29, 1988 Vol.32. Np. 52 ^ ' f W 50<n

Recycling center , closes for holidays

Th e South Brunswick Recycling Center w iir.b e closed Saturday, Dec. 31 .and M onday, Jah. 2 for the N ew Year's holidays.

Recycling pickup is cancelled for M om lay, Jan. 2. There w ill be no residet^ti^ garbage pickup, but residential garbage w ill tw picked, up Saturday, bee, 31.

School Board will, consider budget

' Th e South Brunswick Board of E d iu ^ io n w ill .vote M onday, Jan.' 9 bn whether to adopt the 1989/1990 "school budget: rec- onpitended by the Budget C o m - mitte*; Th e Budget Comniittce w ill present its reconunendations to U » 'f r il l school board on T itts - day, Jan, 3.

T I m Board w ill also conduct-its regular official business, including appointments, resignations, grant applications and approval of ex­penditures.

T h e > public is invited to ask questions and express opinions about any item on the Board’s agenda or about any other matter p | ^ u M ip p a ji,^ t {^ .$ t ,-T h c .meet-

Board ofEducation office, 4 Executive Drive in Monmouth Junction.

Remember early holiday deadlines

vThe South Brunswick Central Post reminds everyone o f early holiday deadlines for the coming week. Because M onday, Jan. 2 is a legal holiday, the Post deadline for publication Thursday, Jan. $ is Trid a y, Dec.' 30 before S' p.m .

Public Library closes for holidays

Th e South Brunswick Public Library w ill be closed on Friday, Saturday and S u i ^ y , Dec. 30,31 and Jan. I for the holidays ai}d will reopen on M onday, Jah. 2 at 3 p.m . The library is located bn Kingston Lane in Monmouth Junc­tion. Th e - library recently an­nounced that it is again open to the public with regular hours. The library is open from 10 a.m . to 9 p.m . Monday through Friday; 10 a.rn. to 5 .p.m . on Saturday.'and from I to 5 p.m . on Sunday.

Radon test kits^ : are now available

South.'’ Brunswick residents :can nowitiave their homcs'tested for r a ^ gas for $10 through a prpjlltain recently put in place by the Soudi Brunswick H e ^ th D e- partmeitt.'

Th e tee includes jhe purchase o f one test kit, the cost of having it a n a l y ^ and of mailfog to an area l<iboratory. It i8|.ap|Hox- inutely:$S5 cheaper tlian pack­ages offered by area testing firms.

,A natural b y p ro d i^ o f the decay o ruranium found in 's o il. atkt -'rdck deposits, .'bdon has

to lung caricer b y the N W 'Ic n a le y Dcpartiiient of E n - V i^ 'ip e n ta l Protection, as well aa bt& a federal and’ state agen-

Colorless am^odoriess^ it i’itb b e ra liy e n t e r f the h o m e

vdie basemen.t and. is. iy^tUngerdus over;|t^g^^

dds o f time, state o ffoiaU

By Pete DonohueStaH Writer,

A ji o ff -d u ty S outh B ru n sw ick police officer, attempting,to brealcllp a br^i^l at the Kendall Park Roller Rink Christmas Eve night received four stitches in the head and multiple bruises across hisTxxiy, South Bruns­wick police said. ‘

T w o other men were treated for minor injuries at the Medical Center at Princeton, and a 11-year-old juven- ille was arrested and charged with disbrderly conduct in connection with the melee, authorities said.

Still under investigation, details of the event remain sketchy. But police said .at least 11 persons, were in­volved, adding that they expect to. make arrests soon.

’ Approximately 300 people were in the ^ p u la r rink on Route 27, around 9:30 p.m . when the fight broke out, police ^ i d .

"ItTooked like it was 10 to one,” Patrolman RonSid Horinko, the in­jured officer, said Tuesday. Bruised and moving slowly, the officer said

. he attem pt^ to stop thc-kltcncation, but in the process of doing so he was kicked in the head,.back, shoulders

and neck.T h ^ patrolman identified himself as:

a police officer, said Patrolman Hugh M cNeil, the investigating officer.

A t -9:37 p .m .. township officers ' were, dispatched to The scene, where

they were, joined by Frankiin To w h - ship police. By the time the officers arrived, however, most of Ihosc in­volved had fled, leaving police with an unclear picture o f what happened. Exactly how many people were in­volved and how it all started is ^ i l l b e in g in v e s t ig a te d , Patro lriia n M cNeil said.

for the past^20 years, said police were called because two people were being Uisorderly, adding that " w e don’t permit any. o f that here, W e n in oiie of the safest rinks around. In the past 10 .years we haven't had to sign a single complaint against someone for

being disorderly.” '• t Iw juvenile, V N ew Brunswick

resident; was arm ted ahd charged --w ith -vcrbally -ihterfcring— with.^thc-

investigating officers on the scene, police said. He was released 1o his parents.

WOMAN SAVED

G iffo rd Nazaro. owner of the rink

‘The Nutcracker’ played by cast of 160 students

Atout 160 students at Monmouth Junction School performed “The Nutcracker" for family and friends last week. Pictured left Is Bonnie Massinger, a tea girl from Th e Te a Land, China. Below Aflsh^ Pateli left, and Bruce FOx are cooking up a holiday dessert.

Photos By

CarolineBednarezyk

given full creditBy Pete Donohue

Staff WriterA smoke detector is being credited

with saving the life of a Monmouth Mobile Home Eadc resident, whosetrailer was destroyed b y fire early Tuesday m o r n i n g - '

Sputh'Brunswick fire inVestigators said the blaze was sparked, by im ­properly installed electrical tape that was wrapped around the unit's water pipes. Mobile home o w nen wrap water pipes to keep them from freez­ing.

While Susan Keklak was sleeping in her Kc4tl .Street trailer M onday morning, flames were apparently eat­ing away at its base. Arbund 7:20 a ,m ;, the fire alarm 'in the hallway

"sounded. :By"then, boweSTer, smoke' was klepjfig.„tiirough the walls.. A n d the walls themselves were-extremely hot, the 39-ycar-old paramedic said.

After whisking her two dogs to safety, she c a l l^ the police — but “ within five minutes it was a fire

half,” she recalled during a telephone interview from the home of some friends in North Brunswick who were putting her up.

Although the Kendall Park Volun^ tcer Fire Deptutment was on the scene within six minutes o rh e in g notified, her home, her v^ty first, was gutted. Firemen Were able to keep the blaze from posing a danger to the surrounding units, but all of her possessions werc-lost, including a lOO-year-oid, first edition copy of " B iK k Beauty” that was given to her as a gift.

"Fbilunitteiy 1 was able to get the pets out, but unfortunately, a fin six months o f moving iiito my first h ( ^ , I ’ve lost i t . . . I wasn’t able to saW: miyj|iing;^^ >

But if it weren’t for that detector, much ntore could’ve been lost, she added.

“ It saved my life, you can write

See R R E , Page 3A

Holiday is marred by 18 accidents

By Pete DonohueStaff Writer

South Brunswick police and rescue squad workers had a hectic holiday, as more than a dozen motorists were injured in accidents on township roads, including an 8-year-oId Deans boy' who rettuiined in critical con­dition as o f Wednesday.

Between Thursday, D ec. 22, and Monday, Dec. 26, there, were 18 accidents in South Brunswick,' three o f which involved drunken ^ v e r s .

" It was an unusually busy week­e n d ,’.’ sa id P a tro lm a n M ic h a e l Kushwara o f the South Brunswick Police Department.

The most serious mishap occurred See WRECKS, Page 3A

Ordinance mandates businesses

By StephanieStaff Writer

on Giristmas Eve at the intersection of Fresh Ponds Road and Rhode Hall Road where a collision between (wo vehicles sent five people to the hospi­tal.

Around 4:27 p .m ., a 1983 Buick Regal, d rive n Peter M . Malouf J r . , 48, of M illtow n crashed into a 1985 Plymduth Voyager driven by Randy L ^ e w s k i of Oak Tree Road, Deans, who was traveling with his^wife and two young children.

Jason, 8 , is in the intensive care'* unit of the Robert W ood Johnson University Hospital in New Bruns­wick'and. his condition was critical, as o f W e d n e s d a y , a h o s p ita l

Crash claims local manBy Elaine Rose

Post CorrespondentS O U T H B R U N S W IC K — A n act

of brotherly love turned into trageidy for a local family, as a man returning home to visit his critically'ill'sister was one of 259 people killed iix the Wediiesday, Dec. 21, crash of Pan A m Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland,

Steven Butler, S6, was working with the Peace Corps in Africa when he received word that .his sister was in a co n u in s Philadelphia hospital. He flew immediately to Frankfurt, .West Germany, where he boarded the ill-fated aircraft after being bumped from an earlier flight.

Described.by his father as a person .‘J n f no .piat;e .Bnd. everywhere,.'! Steven Bililer Wended South B n m s-wick H igh School before beginning his travels at the'aM o f 11

" H e saw mote than, 1 think. Half the population of the w o rld ,’.’ said V ic Butler, who has owned Butler’s General Store in Monmouth Junction since 1961. “ The only place he’s never been is the Antarctic.”

M r. Butler said that Steven’s eix- periences included a bicycle tour of 'Europe, viewing India riding on the top of railroad car, and being robbed of his passport while sleeping on a train in Italy. - .

When he was in-his 20s, Steven returned to^the United States to study g e o ^ p h y at the U n ive n ity o f South. Roiida before resuming his wander­ings, ■ -

He'earned his passage by wcuklng odd jobs in the countries he visited. Arncmg odier things, be.taught Eng­lish while living in Japiah and was a foreman cigaiette factoiy - i n

“ He would work in a country for six months, until he had enough money, and then he would move on to the next country,” M r. Butler, said.

He had a nice nature, his father said, and made friends wherever he went. A stranger could approach him

. in tlw street, and he would engage in a five-hour conversation if he had nowhere else to go.

Although he had girlfriends all over the world, Steven never formed

'any permanent relWonships, his' father said. He kept in touch with his family through postcards and o c - ' cational visits home. Despite the d ista n t and scarcity o f reunions, M r.

kisd that Steven remained very close to his brother and sister. -

Steven enrol|.ed in the Peace Cotps earlier'this fall, and served in. a -

CRASH, Page’ 3A

Local businesses in South Bruns­wick must rnake arrangements to dispose o f their recyclable trash and report progress to the township bian- nually or be fined, according to a new ordiiianrx that went into effect Wednesday, Dec. 7. :

The South Brunswick Township Oim mittce, in compliance with state mandated recycling laws, now re­quires local businesses to recycle at least 15 percent of their garbage. In 1989, the stole w ill raise the require­ment to 25 percent, according to Nancy Pacquette, South Brunswick recycling coordinator.

"Th is Is all very new to us, and w c lire doing oiir best to help the . busi­nesses,” M rs. Pacquette said. Sire has assigned an inspector, J ^ k D y e , to go out to local businesses and explain the ordinance to them.

Fines could range anywhere from $50 to $1,000, according to M r. D y e . but no fines w ill be imposed until after the townstilp has appointed a recycling inspector.' The~inspector,:: expected to be appointed Jan. 1, w ill visit i p ^ ctm iim ies and make sure

they are in compliance with the ordinance. :

The ordinance states that busi­nesses found in,, violation will first receive two waimings. IP still in violation, the recycling inspector would issue a suiiunons with a m an-, datory court appearwee and the co m - |Mny faces a fine. ■ . ,

The fines could be as high as $l,00P for repeat offendeto, M rs. Pacqiette said.“ It’s a .btglineV even for a large company, and I can’t see paying that much money for not re v e lin g .”

T t e ordinance g o n on to'’stote that fw k » a year all businesses must produce <K>cUn»ntotion of their cycling — oiKe before Jani 31 and agsin befrne July 31.

Bill Hester, a reprcsentotive o f IB M on Oemges Road, said M r. D ye has already visitnl IB M , atul die township“ can be sure that IB M w ill be in complete compliance.” M r.' Hester could not give specific recycl- ’

“ ng procedures, however.A number of other local businesses

Chicopee ahd Russ .Betrie little for commenti-

RECYCUNGk Page 3A

V 'a'

2A December.29, 1Sl88 ' The Central Poet

HIGHLIGHTS

fun foe everyoneBy Mwy Ann Horenstein

Evetyone lUccs holiday festivity., A t 3outh Bfunswick H igh -S cho o l both th^ faculty and the student body enjoy the d^orations and the ' at­mosphere >nf fun. But perhaps the most enthusiastic holiday participants are the 4-year-olds in the playschool prpgram who come ip the school two mornings each week.

The playschool,, now in its eighth year, is an institution that brings together South B ru n s w ic k H ig h School students and pre-school chil­dren. It Tills many-nbeds. Th e school, se W s as a .Ja to rito ry for Linda Fekete's studentsTiilhe classes called

■’ Kids, Kids, Kids, More Kids. They; learn about c h ild d e ve lo p m e n t, parenting, discipline, health and safe­ty and many other topics during class-

three days a week. O n the two u s i n g s when the youngsters come. to sdiobi,. they put their theory into

, practice at the playschool, untter the . supervision o f M s.'Fekete. A n d for. the 4 -y e »-o ld s ,. the two , sessions (which aire free) offer a chance to have a group experience away from home and parents with - excellent supervision and exciting activities.

THE CENTRAL POST 350 C««r(cs Rd.

Daytoa. N J . eoaiO , ' 201-329-9214

. The CcMnI lUSPS 557-460) i, publithcO evttynaavkjr by 77k PiinccKM PacUt. Inc. Sccnad clui' pMUft nt)d « Diyua, N J . OUlO. I5>um>ucr. wnd

cbangci to 77k Ccnln) Pm). P.O. Boa 3)A. Diyion. N J. OMIO

M*B Sabacr liM iUUf....... ' f.M-or<ouAiy ■aail-' One year. 515. 7am It*.4c 0* IMBCH.All adytnbhii pubtuked in 77k Ccnual PM ii

lo dK acelicabk flic card, copica or Kbkb act available fraim nc advotitint deputincni. 77k PdiI moves dK fi|bl no) lo acttpl an advcftifo's odo.0 ^ pubIkKkK of an advcntaCfiKM shall consiiniic

I acceptance.

Ordinarily, the youngsters discuss the weather, have arts and crafts, story time,'activities to develop large and small motor skills, and a variety o f science experiments such os plant­ing and working .yiith magnets.

- Btit holidays provide special ex­periences. A t Hannukah, the children .lit candles, heard the Hannukah story, made dreidels, and played the dreidel game with M & M s.

For (Thristmas, they had a number of activities. They, sang traditional

. » n g s , decoratedi the trra before the h o lid a y ‘tea lo o k p la c e , m ade Christmas stockings and presents for their p a r^ts, created a gingerbread house and even had a visit from Santa Claus.

The youngsters enjoy the activities .built around all the holdiays Val-, entine’s D ay. I^ id e n t 's birthdays and Mother's D ay. They even make grouiid ho^s for Ground H o g . Day.

The program has grown in size and scope, since its inception eight years

Lisa DiTuro sits in front of the play school Christmas tree admiring the gingerbread house she made.

rII

C H U ’S K ITCH ENORDERS T O TAKE O UT

HUNAN, SZECHUAN & CANTONESE CUISINEFranklin Park N .J. (Park Plaza)I 3191 Route 27 South

110% OFF■ anv nnehaaa of S10.00 or loorawW7 any purchase of $10.00 or mora I with this coupon

1 ^ one pw laipHy. Coupon expires l/il/89.! 821^>3d03 7 8 2 1 ^ 3 0 0 4 1:30 a.m.-S-Tp p.m, Ffl.’s Sal.’lo tlOO p.m. J j

1IIIIIII

ago. There were once six or seven youngsters, while now there are 16. There was formerly a-srnall class of of high school students. There are now 45 students from three classes, including one advance More Kids course, where students study topics such as child abuse and how our society deals with children. And Ms.

D o y o u su ffe r f r o m a n y of t h e s e p r o b l e m s ?

Photo PlaceCelebrate o u r H rat Anniversary,

w ith e a v ln ^ o r the H olida y Season. ,

3151-E Route 27 • Franklin i W , N J Next to the A&P Future Store

821-9^'Tour picturea never leave our silo"

Q uality prim e, last service personal attention

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Palittso‘ St/tittre, JMneetpn, N J (609} 9Mi0300

Time to Itefidet,A Tune to Give Thanks

All of us at Hamilton Jewelers want to thank our customers for making 1988 the most successful year in our 76-year history.A s has been our custom at this time, of year, we wish to honor our friends and customers. We haVe therefore donated in your behalf a Cardiac Arrhythmia Simulator to be used in the Intensive Care Unit at the Mercer Medical Center. We can think of :no better way to say “Thank you” for all your good will.A Happy and Healthy New Year,..

Martin R. Siegel H ai^ B. Siegel President Vic^Pr^ident

By Pete DonohueStaH Writer

Fckctc envisions further growth for the program. She hopes'that cvciitu- ally some of the high school students w ill spend junior year in her Kids class and then seniors be eligible for a home economics co-op program where they, would have supentsed after school jobs at day care centers or cleihentaiy sbhodls.

' Billed as an effort to move forward o n e potentially benendal project, the First formal hearing on the controversial Friendship Road project h u M nt some township planners back to the books.

A t stake is the amount o f units the developer. H om e Te c h In c ., w ill be allowed to build on its 324-acre tract o ff Friendship Road. Hom e T e c h is proposing 569 residential units, a 200-bed congjpcgate care faciljty and a 2 4 ,SOO-squarc-fbot shopping center in the roral area.

Questioned during.Tuesday night’s Planning Board meeting is whether, the amount o f critical areas, environmentally sensitive laiids such as wetlands and aquifer recharge areas, on the tract should further restrict the densities allowed there. . .

Fifty percent o f the tract is d e e m ^ criticai and could signiFicandy alter the developer’ s plans if used when equating the permitted densities there. Tow nship Assistant Planner A n n Jones said. A critical areas adjustment factor is applied in ail zones-in the township, but Tho m as Farino, Hom e Te c h attorney, ^ u e d that the To w n s h ip Com mittee never intended to apply'lhat;(m teria. to his client’s tract.

T h e To w n ship Com mittee recently, rezoned 900 acres, including Hom e T ^ h ’s hoidihgs, to allb’w such mixed-use developments arid densities in the area. H om e T e c h ’s plans call for 2,3-units an acre w l^ re o n ^ u n it per every two o r three acres was previodsly permitted. C i t in g ’ ’ legislative intent,” M r . Farino said the rezoning ordinance was meant to exempt Hom e Te ch . . • /

M ayor Waiircn M onroe agreed after the meeting, adding " th e y ’re giving iis all that property.” T h e miayor was refering to Hom e T e c h ’s plan to dedicate m ore than 200 acres o f open space to the township.- N one o f the critical a r ^ would be built o n , M r . Farino said.

But To w n ship Planner A n n Jones said the matter warranted some additional review and'Planning B o ^ Attorney H ow ard W eber said he plans to check the zoning legislation.

’ ’A re the critical adjustment factors relevant? — I don’t k n o w ,” M r.' W eber said. “ I ’ ll know on the Jan. 2 4 .”

Hom e Te c h is scheduled to be back before the board on that date.A lai^ suit filed b y Friendship Road property qw ner W alter Jinotti is still

active, according to James N ichols, N e w Brunsw ick attorney repre^nting M r . Jinotti. A lthough aimed at stopping the development as planned, the attorney said he aiiticipates Hom e T e c h ’s plans w ill be approved.

Noting the lengthy process o f getting all the required approvals before ground can be broken, however, leaves “ plenty o f tim e to try to stop

•them.’.’ ' •M r . Farino agreed that“ theoreticaily i f the ordinance is knocked down

the developer doesn’t have a right to proceed, but w e strongly feel the ordinance w ill be upheld.”

Princeton, N .j., 92 Nassau Street, 609i-683^200\ k*>yr*neev|lje,_NJ., A lL Rte 1 &JTexas Aye

Palm Beach and Palm Beach Gardens, FIF.

Weichert has successful toy driveWeichert’s South Brunswick office

is busy "wrapping" u p " their, very successful toy drive.

Office co^hairs Kokila Paraikh and Connie Prybolsky are happy to announce the collection of over 130 toys which w ill be distributed among, n ^ y children associated with Some­rset County*^ocial Services and South Brunswick Social Se.rvices.

“ W e’d like to thank General Foods in Cnuibury. for their donation of close tq SO items and anyone else

who came in with toys, to aid pur . cause,” M s. Prybolsky said., .

“ W e’re 'very |»oud o f this com­munity and the associates in our. office,” M s ; Paraikh sSid. " T h e y really pulled together to make this a su.^r holiday for some children in this area.”

Pictured above are Gerry Fucsko of South Brunswick Social' Services, Kokila Paraikh office chairperson and Shelia Peny of Somerset County Social Services.

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The Centra Post Decen4>er 29,1988 3A

Cr8sh I C E O N I C ECkm tinued fro m .P a g e 1 A

remote |6wn in Africa.'His sister. Michell Ricelii of E w -

ihg. was d ia g n o ^ with a rare bipod disorder after entering a coma follow­ing the birth of her third child on Wednesday, Dec. 14. She is being treated at Hahnemann Hospital^ in Philadelji^a. ‘

B r ia n B u U e r , S te v e n ’s p id c r brother, co iitact^ the Peace Corps with a m«tsa|e that Michell was “ on deadi's bed.'’*' and that the doctors didn't know; ho % much time she had

.left to live.Steven called his brother from

Friuikfur^ to say that he had failed to get on an earlier plane and would

'arrive in N e w York on F l i ^ t 103. Unlike, the relatives o f some other passepgers, the Butler family holds no hope that he was not on board the downed'^teraft.. “ He was on that plane," V ic Butler said.“ There is no doubt,"

According to wire Ireports, B ri- tian's Department of Transport arN nounced Wednesday that it had con-, cludnl a bomb blew, up causing the plane explodc.___,

Investi^tors' found “ conclusive evidence o f a detonating high ex- pltBive.*’ in the wreckage recovered

r from -the- Schottish countryside-,- the wire„ service reported. “ The cx- pidsive’if residues recovered from the debris have been positively idcritiflcd

. and an^-c(gi^StMt with the u ^ of a h ig h -p cK i^m a n » ptetie explo«Ve, ’ '

Th e Boeing 747 was' cruising at 31,000 feet ana had just crossed the Scottish border when the explosion occurred.

Ministry of Defense scientists have exairrined a numbpr of items of

. wreckage, passengk baggage and p m of the frantetvotk of a m e ta j luggage pallet, the report states.

, More items have been c o lle ct^ by !. A ir Atteidents Investigation Branch ' Investigators from the accident area

and each w ill be subjected to lengthy chemical and metallurgical forensic tests. '

Investigators have determined that two parts o f the metal lu g g a g e '^ le t framework’show conclusive evidence of a detonating high explosive, ac­cording to the. wire services. T h e , explosive's residues recovered from the debris have'bccn positively ident-' ified and are consistent'with the use of a high performance plastic ex-, plosive. -

Michell, who has not yet been informed of her brother’s death, ctaie out o f her coma on Friday Although sjie faces a long pnxicss of treatment ^ rehabilitation, M r. Butler said

-that she has been given a 60 percent- chance of rbeovery.

Still coping .with the grief of Steven's death, M r. Butler and his:

wife drive to Philadelphia every day to be at M ichell’s side.

,"W e have a lot o f hope. 'We sec different signs^each day,” he said.

M r. Butler Oxpressed rancem over reports that the United States govem- paent had prior knowledge that a terrorist attack w3s. jibout to take place, but did riot institute increased safety rneasures. . .

“ They didn’t hayc any real 'secur­ity, o r that, never would have hap­pened,’ ’ M r. Butler said. ' \

He said he was to ld b f an Anteiican diplomat who. had been scheluled to travel on Flight 103, but had removed himself, before takeoff. M r- Butler plans to investigate this story a t.a . later date.

“ I think t(ur country is lying to the public," he said.“ It’s m y belief that they 'kitew about , that bomb before (the plane) left the ground.".

The li .S . State Department has pledged a “ vigorous investigation'.’ will be carried out by the F B I and other U .S . government agencies,

Meanwhile, the customers at But­ler’s General Store take a moment to express their, condolences, offer as­sistance, arid ask for an update on Michell’s condition.

“ You always hear it’s the other guyiariotherfaiiuly,^Vjc:Butler.tdld. one well-wisher;“ A n d when it hap­pens to you. you can't believe it's true."

I \(Jo n tin u e d from P a g e 1 A • makes their i^oncy by selling the

•n. paper to mills around the ebuntry.

p m y of M onm outh Junction, acceptst e l la b le trash and also provides a j?®"' many tons of paper it picks up P u p service for companies, with,large enough volumes, according to office manager Carol Pinclla.

Once a local business has ac­cumulated 15 o r more computer-sized boxes of recyclable paper. Reliable Computer Company w ill send a truck out to pick it up, free of charge, Ms. Pihella said. -

'Reliable Computer w ill pay local businesses anywhere from $30 to $"75 per ton for recyclable paper. The more the paper'is separated, the higher tlie price, M s. PiiKlIa'said. If the paper has not been separated. Reliable w ill still pick-it-up, but will not. pay the business for it. "because we have to separate it ourselves, which takes a lot of tim e ," Ms. Piiie||ji|^„p;jj{^. ;,R e li^ Ie : Computer

to w n s h ip upon request. It also provides receipts to the businesses for each pickup.

According to Ms. Pinclla, Reliable Coniputcr has received quite a few calls inquiring about its services since the onJinance w.cnt into effect.

' ‘ ’W c ’ ie trying to help them out as much as possible," .she said.

T h e Middlesex (parting C o . o f New Brunswick, sellst separate dumpsters for businesses to discard their re- cyclables and provides a pickup service as ti^ceded, according to Vice President Fred Kozo. M r. K o zo de­clined to disclose the fee for the service. -

" W e have containters available in different ^izes, depending on the

needs of the business," M r. Kozo said. " W e also offer pickup services as needed for each container, depend­ing upon their needs.” , ,

. Even though each dumpster is c ie v iy marked, M r. Kozo said work­ers still have to go through each one arid check for trash that fs not re­cyclable.

“ There is a certain percentage of contaminants in there that we have to take o u t," M r. K o zo aaidi " I t isn't from the businesses, but from loc^l people throwing cans and things in there,” ■ ‘' After' the contaminants arc re­moved, the recyclables.are sent to a m ill, he added.

- According to M r. Kozo, a number o f local businesses a rc calling for recycling service.

" f think a lot of them are slowly coming around to recycling because of the new laws,” M r. Kozo said.

B F l, another local hauler, was unav|ujab)c,for comment. . .

(^ n t ln u e d ifrom P a g e 1 A4 V

that," she* said. “ Maybe wmeone who reiads that will piit in a smoke alarrh."

According to South Brunswick flic offlcials, tlte practice of wrapping water pipes with improperly instiled elKtrical tape nearly caused a Are in the same p ^ last w e e k ..

T o avert another tragedy, they are distrilHitihg safety; tips abput.thc Je^ gal, but potentialy dahgerouis. man­euver;- '

Bob D a v i ^ n , township T ire of- - fleial and chief of the South B ru n ^

wick.Inre Prevention Bureau, said the heat tape, which esrentially wdirks like an eliectric blanket, overheated and caught fire. Wrapped/around the exposed water pipes leaving the main beneath, the ground and running into the; unit,: the tape was applied to o . tightly, he' said. In addition, the ' ei^cess tape was bundled into a ball n w w h m ' the pipe entered the home’s floor, he said, adding it was apparently installed by the home's previous owner.

improperly installed tape at another park home tegan to smoke lost week, the.fln^offlcial ^ i d , noting that a Arc was averted because rireflghters were able to get there before it burst into

-■■flaines.---:---.-----.---..----:--':-:---- - :■ T o avoid, .overhcatjhg,. the tape

should be applied to the-, pipes in single strips that do not overlap, he said. It shdiuld be pliigged into the power source in the home flrst and , . then ruin outward so. the excess tape can be applied to the ground,.^nd the device should be checked every cou­ple of weeki during the winter months. ' .

In addition to being commonly applied, to pipes servicing mobile homes, the tape is often Used on water lines run'to agricultural build­ings imthe township where pipes arc also prone to freezing because of |iheir exposure tq the cold. M r. Davidson said.

" it 's commonly used and it's com­monly installed w r o n g ," . Arthur Roiedel, owner of the.Monmouth Park said.

Always a danger |f incorrectly applied, tlte tape is even more so in the' relaitively small mobile hdmes ' that are'cohstiucted of aluminum'aiid wood, and; Which can be consumed by flames.in a short amount of time. M r. Davidson said. '

“ Mobile homes bum quite rapidly because of the nature of their con­struction — : so it's impciptive that- some preventative steps arc taken."

CALENDAR WrecksF R I D A Y , D E G . 30

■ Senior C a r d P a rty , 6 :30 p .m . at the municipal building.

M O N D A Y , J A N . 2

■ S outh B ru n s w ic k M u n ic ip a l of­fices dosed no residential g a r­bage p id ru p .

T U E S D A Y , J A N . 3

■ S o u th B r u n s w ic k T o w n s h ip C o n u n ittce , meets at 8 p .m . at the m u nicip^ building.

■ V

W E D N E S D A Y , J A N . 4

■ So uth B ru n s w ic k In d u s tria l C o m m ission meets at 7:30 p .m . in the inunicipal building.

S o u t h B r u n s w i c k Z o n i n g B o a rd o f A d lu stm e n ts meets at 8 p .m . in the municipal building.

T H U R S D A Y , J A N . 5

■ S outh B ru n sw ick E n v iro n m e n ­tal C om m ission meets at 7 p .m . in the municipal building.

■ South B ru n sw ick A ITo rd a b le H ousing A gency meets at 7:30 p .m . in the municipal building.

Weblos have camp out fun. Weblo Pack 10, Den 2 . under the leadership o f Sue. and To n y Snn- towasso, experience a real camp out in the Santowase^^s back . yard. C a m p e rs 'Jo s h F e ld m a n , Steven

Firshing, Steven Jeffries. Steve M er­ritt} J p i ^ Murdock, Ricky Romero

and Brett SantowasM braved the night temperatures in sleeping bags arid a tent. Th e boys hiked ip the

Muous, built u luc lu cook meals and' ' roasted marshmallows before retiring

for tire night.. Adding to tire scout sdvemure was a deer landing on the Santowasso’s front, lawn in the middle of the night, awakening campers and embarking them on an exciting lesson in deer removal.

A fun time was had by all,'’Special thanks to Scouters Zack.'Stout and

-Jacinto Romero for assisting. -

C o n tin u e d fro m P a g e 1 A

spokeswoman said. His sister, Tara, 5. and mother. Karen. 35. were in s a t is f a c t o r y c o n d i t i o n . M r . Loniewski and M r. Malouf were discharged on Dec. 26.

'Iherc |s a stop sign on Fresh Ponds R o kl -and police arc trying te de­termine if M r. M alouf stopped at the .intepection. Investigators from the M io t Icscx- C ounty Prosecutor's O f­fice are also looking into the acci­dent. That office routinely probes accidents that result in serious in­juries or deaths, the patrolman said.

"B o th automobiles were totaled and after impact they ended up on the from lawn of a home on the com er," Patrolman K u s h w m said.

Before coming to rest, however, M r. M aloufs auto hit a tree, a stop sign, and some wooden stanchions. Th e Voyager also crashed into some

■ . M

trees in the area, the patrolman said.There's no indication that alcohol

was involved in the accident, to- which the Monmouth Junction V o l­unteer First Aid Squad and para­medics from RW J responded.

A l s b on C h r is t m a s E v e , a JamesbWg man was charged with . driving vrit^lc intoxicated, wrcckless driving and other violations for,his involvement in a two-caf crash on Cranbury Road near the H oly Cross Cemetery.

Three people were taken to area hospitals for injuries suffered in (he accident. They were released two days later.

David Fyfgc, 32. Jamesburg. turn­ed his 1969 M G across the opposite lane o f travel and collided with a 1983 Ford T-b ird driven by M ax L . A kins,-29, of Yardvillc,_p0 licc said. Karen Akins, 31, his wife, was also in the vehicle, police said.

TH E D O O R S O F

PR IN C ETO N D A Y SCH O O L

ARE O PEN

SA T U R D A Y , JA N U A R Y 710:00 a .m .-1 2:00 n o o n

T h e G re a t R o a d •Princeton, N e w Jersey ,

609-924-6700

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’ School, Kidn UfldMSvttn-roar, Middle School, gndet S-8; Unw School, ff^.9 -12.— I M w M noUoa, ptnee call ifaeAdmiulaB omce. (609) 92M70D,-: _ ------------- ,—

F O O T SPECIALISTDr. Joel Kates - Podiatrist

•|»LT Y O V H F E E T IN O Utt H A N D S -W E CARE-^'

B u n i o n s

H a m m e r t o e s I

C o r n s / C a l l u s e s

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• H e e l P a i n

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• X - r a y s i f n e e d e d

OFFICE AND HOSPITAL SLRCERY

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A fter Christm as Sales

d C ' ' C learance

O P E N T H I S W E E K T u e s .-F r i . 9 :0 0 -5 :3 0 . . T h u r s . lo 8:30

S aturday (N e w Y e a r ’s E v e ) 9 :0 0 -3 i0 0

36 University Pli . 921-85(K)

Ffce Ptrking in our'own lot .

Open your own U-Store tccount ■and charge instandy, or use V IS A , MaitetCard,' or AmEx

t . , -•

. L - .

December 29, 1988 Tbe Central Post

winnersrevealed

Th e second annual ^Spirit of the Season" contest caiiie to a close with judges from the South Brunswick Garden Club making difficult dcci-

"Silent Night." the home of Mr. and Mrs, Karkenny. 48 Eastern Avenue in South Brunswick.

stons.••There w ere d c fin a tcly m ore

homes decorated this year," said contest chairwoman Charlciic Austin.. ••A lot of residents phoned us to put their, homes in the contest, so we spent a lot of hours jud ging."

Th e contest was open to all South Brunswick residents.

••We covered the township very wdl,,'^ Mrs. Austin said.. Th e winners this year arc:1. O ve ra ll,— George Isagan. 108 New Road/with I^Joy to the World.•'^ 2 ..M r. and M rs. Perkins. 391 Dayton Jamesburg Road, .with ‘ •A Christmas C a ro l." . . .3. M r. Carlo Cancstri, 16 Vincent, with ••Winter Wonderland."4. M r, and M rs. Karkenny. 48 East­ern, with ••Sijent N igh t."5. M r. Robert Schrer, 27 Eastern, cntranccway, ••Deck the H alls ."

The winning displays arc shown here.

"Joy to the World," the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isagam. 108 New Road in South Brunswick won best overall in the annual Seasonal lighting contest.

Photos B y CarolineBednarezyk “A Christinas Carol," the home of Mr. and Mrs. Perkins. 391

Jamesburg Road in Dayton. . . ^

"Deck the Halls," the home of Mr. and Mrs. Schrer. 2 7 Eastern Avenue in South Brunswick. A Winter Wonderland," the hom e of Carlos Canestrl, 16 Vincent Road in. South Brunswick.

C IV IL IA N A B S E N T E E B A L L O T A P P L IC A T IO N You must apply lor an Absentee Ballot lor each Election. I here-

a apply tor an absentee ballot tor the (C h e e k one)Primary ' Q General Q 'M u n lc ip a l ri* S p e cla i

-------------School----------------

f i Local

C ther_

Q Rqglonal

B n Dictilcl , T o be held on _ 9 5 ! [ i E X 4 ® d ? 9 -SPECtFr

C H E C K A N D C O M P L E T EI live in the C ity J Q Tow n [H Tow nship Q Borough

RreDiatrici#. South Brunawtefc Twp.

My legal residence address including Street Number and/or R .D . Number and Box Number is as follows:

9TRECT ADDRESS

NiCIPAi.IT V Z I P co o c

Mail my ballot to the following-address:

9TPCCT AODPGSS

MUNICIP AUIT V

i

C H E C K R E A S O N FOR B A L L O T■I am unablo'io vote at my .regular polling, place on election day because:r i 1 expect to be absent Irom the State of New Jersey on'elec­

tion day. --------------- ■ D ATE OF OEPAR'rURel01 Illness or physical disabU ity Including blindness or preg­nancy I w ill be unable to vote at my polling place on election day. . y ,

Q I am permanently pnd totally disabled.

X

0State r^a^on

Observanoa of a religious holiday bn election day.Resident attendance at a.school, college or University on election day.

0 Of natutarand hours ol’jny employment .on election day. Under penalty of Law. I cerlily that, the foregoing statements made-by me are true and correct.

SION.'YOUR NAME AS IT APPEARS IN REOISTRV OOOK

PRINT OR TVPE'VOUR NAME

t If sick or confined a voter ihay apply io r an absentee ballot ? ? by authorized rhessenger, x

I designate'.authorized rnessenger. (NAME OF MESSCNOERI

,to bo my

IIIONATLIRC OF VOTER! ‘Authorized messenger must sign application only In.presence, of county clerk or county clerk designee.

SIONATURE 6 f MESSENOER

STREET'asOCREtS

MUNICIPALITY Z IP C O D E j R E V . S -IZ 'S

School Board to meet TuesdayThe next meeting of the South

Brunswick Board of Education will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 3.. The meeting w ill be held on Tuesday because of the New Yearns holiday on Monday.

On Jan. 3 the Board's Budget Committee will present the tentative 1989/1990 school budget to the full Board for discussion and consider­ation. The full Board w ill vote on whether to adopt the tentative budget at a business meeting on Monday.

Jan. 9.The Board w ill also review other

matters on which it will take official action at the business mepling.

There will be several opportunities during the meeting for public input about the agendized items or any other matters of educational interest that members of the community wish toltring to the Board's attention. The meeting will be held at the B o ^ of Education office. 4 Executive Drive. Monmouth Junction.

NO TICE TO M ILITA R Y SER V IC E VO TER S A N D TH EIR

RELA TIVES A N D FR IEN D SIf you aro in the military service or the spouse or dependent of a person in military service or are a patient in a veterans' h o ^ ita l or a civilian attached to or serving with the Armed Forces of the United Stated outside the State of New Jersey, or the spouse or dependent of and accompanying or resid-

. Ing with a civilian attached to or serving witp the Armed Forces of the United States, and desire to vote, or if you are a relative or friend of any such person who, you believe, will desire to vote in the FHre District Election for Districts 1 ,2 and 3 in South Brunswick Township, Middlesex Coufity to beheld on February 18 ,1989 , kindly write to the undersigned at

" ation for a military service ballot to beonce making application voted in said election to be forwarded to you, stating your name, age, serial number if you are in military service, home address and the address at which you are stationed or can be found, or If you desire the military service ballot for a relative or friend then make an application under oath for a military service ballot to be forwarded to him, stating in your application that he is over 18 y eap and stating his name, serial number H he is In military service, home address and the address at which he Is stationed or can be found.

(NOTE: M ILITARY SERVICE VOTER CLAIMING MILITARY STATION AS HOME ADDRESS FOR VOTING PURPOSES M AY NOT USE MILITARY ABSENTEE BALLOT iiN L E S S REGISTERED TO VOTE IN THE MUNICIPALITY W HERE SUCH STATION IS LOCATED.) .Forms of application can be obtained from the undersigned.

b a t ^ :December 2 1 ,1 9 8 8 .

RANIERO M . TRAVISANO MIDDLESEX CO UNTY CLERK COUNTY COURTHOUSE P O B O X 1 1 10 ^ •NEW .BRUNSW ICK.-NJ-08903-

t ‘

r

Ih e Ceittni Post Decen^ber29 1988 5A

STUDENTVOLUNTEERS

a■teacherscomes

' By Mary Ann Horenatein“ M ost young people who plan to ■■ become teachers learn about the field Cas college seniors when they have .^placements as student teachers. ' Michele Kleinman hopes to become a

■'teacher. But as a junior at South ^'Brunswick High School, she has the

chance to try out that occupation by volunteering as a teacher aid through the GIPED,(Gom m unity Involvement

' Personal Educational Development) ProghuD;

Michele helps A n n e Borbely in her 5th grade classroom at .Cambridge

" Schpol each Wednesday; Her day is • varied. In the morning there arc V reading groups, and Michele worics

w ith one group.each week, while M s. I Borbley is busy with another;. Before » class begins, she finds our how , far ’ they’ve progressed in a. week and

then she continues with them, super- ; vising their work and making the ' assignment for the following day.’ Sometines thestudents do ihdepen- ■ dent reading. Michele discusses their

books with them and often suggests . ' books that she enjoyed when she was

younger. In spelling class, she helps to check their spelling words.

Michele Kleinman helps Kristin Paezkowski w ith a math problem.

*‘ l have the opportunity to get involved," M ic h e le said. ” 1 have real responsibilities."

i n the aftempoh, Michele helps, with math. She has a younger group o f thrice ypungsters.who all use the same math book, and she works with them each week.

A t lunch time Michele cats w ith the ^youngstersind then goes out On the playground to be with them. ,

* iti the classroom you sometimes haVe to be the bad guy anti enforce discipline," she said. "But outside we have fun. I'get to know them and

they get to k n o w m e." •When I visited the classroom right

before winter vacation, Michele had brought in a small gift for each member of the class. She received Ipts of "thardc yo u 's" and a big cheer as well. V

Michele has always wanted to be a teacher, and she hopes to teach upper elementary grades, the same age students she works with n ow . Her

''interest fits in well with that o f her family. Her grandmother is a colicge teacher anc| her mother is a teacher and a librarian.

^ One of her other interests is music.

: Entertainment books are on sale now

.marching and concert bands; She will have a unique qpportunity this sum-

. mcr because of her musid. T h e Vouth o f America is sponsoring a two-week trip to Europe, for high scHbol musi­cians, with five concerts and time for sightseeing. Mark Kraft, the director of the South Brunswick H igh School band, has been choset) to lead the band, and Michele is one o f several South Brunswick High School* stu­dents who have opted to go. The g ro u p ' w i l l v is i t S w it z e r la n d , Germany, Austria'and Northern Italy. “ I'm really looking foward to it." Michele said. What a wonderful op­portunity for the students.

An official chapter!Joe Monahan, president:of the South Brunswick Chapter of Society for the Preservation and Epcouragernent ol Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America, and Vic Lido, president of the Montclair Chapter, cosign the license application which officially makes the Deans of Harmony New Jersey’s newest chapter. The signing ceremony was attended by 22 members.

^ B ’ riai B ’rith. Wornen. Shulamit > Chapter, of North and South Bruns- ; w ick , will once again be selling • Entertainment '89 books. The books ' arc good for two for one dinners,

shows, travel, motels and hot^cls. car' rental, etc.

T o order an Enicrtainmcnl '89. book, call Phyllis Rosen al 329-0100 The books arc S35 each.

D.W.I.D on 't P le a d " G u t l lv " U ntil You T a lk lo 'U s

F ree C o n s u lta t io nHARRIS 8c ZIELINSKI,' P .A .'A N D ASSOCIATES

^ I c p l i cn ^ ^ ie l it ie lt i

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•. Check Wipn Blado• Check .Air Filler I• Check Breather Element• Check PCV Valve• Check Bells and HiMet

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• ChanM Oil with • Qualiljr Motor Oil

• Install Ne* Oil Filter• Lubfkate the'Chassis '• Check and Fill Brake Fluid• Check and Fill Pnwer

Siettinj Fluid• Cheek and Fill Batlety-

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NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY (201) 297-0884

and Fill Windshield Washer Fluid

•|Check and Fill Trans­mission . ‘ ,Fluid '

; • Check Tire Pressure and Innate Propcilv

fmalChristmas

FIREPLACES of America44 Main Slrecl. l;nt:livhU)»n

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n Where 'sensLms cofne a live" iUmiled quantlllet

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. Lawrenceville. NJ(605) 987-8550• In NJ call 1-800-648-0109, Of oultldeNJ call (201) 529-1771, Mon.-FrI. 9-5.

Regular store houti Mon.-FrI. 10am-9pm (P »a m u i 9;%pm), Sal. 10am-6pm. Sun. 11am-Spm (except ParainutJ.FbrSupar Savings visit ourDeasure Island Clearance Cenlat: 380 Franklin Tpk., Mahwah, NJ (201) 529-1771. Mon.-Thuts. 10-5, FrI. 10-9,.Sal. 10-6, Sun, 11<5.

w e Are C lo se d Ja n u a ry 1st and':2nd

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6A December 29, 1988 The C entral Post

POLICE BLOTTERThe South Brunswick Police Depart­ment gave the following report for the wqek ending Tuesday. Dec. 27.

Frank G . Mollica. 23. of Union Beach wai charged on Friday. Dec 23, with driving while intoxicated, police said.

Patrolman Tliomas Glapion stop­ped M r. Mollica. driving a 1981 Chevrolet Citation, at 1:45 p .m . on Route 130 in the yicinity of Georges Road. , > *

■ Following'the results of a bteath-

9iyzer test, M r. Mollica was charged a n d re le a s e d on h is o w n r e ­cognizance.

Louis D . Laurcti. 31. of Trenton was charged on Saturday. Dee 24. with driving while intoxicated, police said.

■Patrolman Johji McNamara stop­ped M r. Laurcti* driving a, 1978 Dodge p ip lo m a t,-a t 1:27 a .m . oh Route 130. .

Following the results of a breath- his vehicle while parked in the park- alyzer test. M r. Laurcti was charged ing lot betweenS a.m . and I p.m.- on and re le a s e d on h is o w n re - Wednesday, Dec. 2 1 . police said, cognizance. , . * , , '

LOVE ITOoyounoedaspocialfnend'’ AsniaHwfioglr • ' puppy w a cudeiy.Mteh? Meet your match in ttw classified section’' Cwofy'day classified introduces people to furry pals that need warmth, care and aifeciion. Whether you are looking for companionship of this special Mnd or heating to find a good home for a cuddly creature, make the classified connection and tove it!

A cairto any one of these oHices can get a classified ad in all the Packet publicalions

The Princeton Packet- The Lawrence Ledger Windsor-Highls Herald • The Cranbury Press. Hillsborough Beacon >The Manville News The Franklin News-Record The. Central. Post.North Brunswick Post The Hamilton Observer Hopewell Valley N ev/s,

609-924-J32$0609-896-9100609-448-3005*609-395-0730 \201-359-0850201-725-3300201-469-9040201-329-9214201-821r0550609-587-1012609-466-1190

Clarence Moscly, 63, of Major Road was charged with driving while intoxicated on Thursday, Dec. 22. police said. . . ' '

.. Patrolman Scott Bcvensce, stopped M n M osicyi driving a 1985 Mercury, on Georgei Road in the,vicinity of Stancly Avenue.-"" ■

Following, the results of a breath­alyzer test, he was.' charged and. released on his own recognizance.

Gregory J. MciQtiillan,“35, of Spot- swood was charged on Wednesday. Dec. 2 1 , 'with driving while intox-

“icated, police said.M r. M cQuillah, -driving a 1977

Ford, was stopped by Sgt. Albert Sahtowasso a t '8:10 p.m . oh Route 130 in the vicinity of Dey Road.’ Following the results of a breath­alyzer test, he was charged and released on his own recognizance. .

An employee of the Channel store on R o o tc T re p o rte d som co.nc smashed the driver’s side window of

A Cambridge Road resident re­ported someone smashed the drivcr'.s side window of the rcsdidcnts vehicle between 7 p.m. Tuesday. 'Dec. 20. ami 7 a.m. W e d m ^ a y , Dec. 21. Daihage was valued at $200. Th e vehicle was parked in.Tront of the residence, police said.

A Pennsylvania man was charged • with possession of under .50 grams of marijuana after police stopped to investigate'a Hst fight his two compa­nions were having along the shoulder of Route I north on Tuesday. Dec. 20. police'Said. ' - • Th e altercation caught the eye of Patroirnan Edward George as he drove up thp highway at .11:25 a.m. His 'presence put a damper on the Tight and during a search of the three men for weapons, he discovered a clear, plastic bag ,of a substance be­lieved to be marijuana in the pocket of Thomas Baker, 20. o f Huntington Valley, Pa. ‘ . '

After p6stine$150 bail. M r.-Baker w a s re le a s e d o n 'h i s 'o w n r e ­cognizance.

New in the area"^For your p la c e .of- worship,

'See this new spaper's, Church ‘Directory. ■

N O W O P E N !TW O NEW STORESHAZLETt I S. PLAINFIELD:BAVSHORE THE H AD LEY CEh IER

SHOPPING PLAZA 4985 STELTON RD.

( ^ S T O R E S, O P E NN E W Y E A R ’S

DAY!W E C K YOUR

l o c a l S TO R E F O R E X A C T TIM P

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N IK EMen’s and Women’s A ir W alker Plus

4 4 't99*M .tt 3 5 k«l44*.M 4 ^ .

CO N VER SE Men’s C S V orN IK E M e liio u rn e for m en & w om en

R U N N I N G

Comfiuters are fun!Michael Silverstein, volunteer parent in Eileen W ullscheger’6

-Ihrld grade class at Brunswick Acres School is guiding students in using computers. Pictured from left arEi Nicholas Pietrefesa, Krish'ria Sircar, Donovan Alexander and Richard Silverstein..

ORDNANCE NO. zaaa AN o r d i n a n c e a m e n d in g AND SUPPUEMENTINO THE CODE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH BHUNSWtCK. CHAPTER 76 POLICE OEPARIMENT

TAKE NOTICE |h«| «n » - dnuio* o< wtiicN the abov* H llw : WN. WAS imroducAd snd pusod ontnl itading tt a iFACia)Ing ol IM Townsh^ ComnvttM ol 6w Township ol South BnmswKlt, MiddNsax Counly. N*w Jsrsoy hold on Docambw 6. 1668 and wid poasad on second leadeig and ^ 'adoption si e leguiar maelirig ol the T o w n ^ Commd- Itt ol the Township ol South Bnnswidi hakf on Decamber 20. 1668. at the Muradpal Buldno. MonnouOi Junction. New Jenav

KatMMn A Thom. RMOCMC Township Clefh

C.P 12 29 88 It ■TEE »7 13

Motunouth JuitclNsn. Now Jersey. KoltilMn A Thon». RMC CMC

Toonsiiip OfuV•tli- 12-26 B8 It rep. 68 69 >

AN ORDMANCE AMENDffKi AN

STALLATtoN OF SYSTEM AND wmiESEsra SOU. LOGS

The above OnPnanee was «■ Ooduced arid passed on Nsltead- Ing at a regi4w meeling ol the Board ol Health ol the TownShrp ot South Brunswick held on Novotn bar 21. 1988. and w<8 be con- sidated on second reading and tnal passage at a ragUar meeting ol the Board otHesIth ol the Town­ship ol South Brunswick 10 be hak) at PM Municipal Building. Mon- rnoidh Junction. New J«say at 8:15 PKion DacanXiar 16.1668. al Ktacti dme and plaoa any paraon iniaiasled thorak) wd be an oppoilunity lo'ba heard

Robatla BoaUioul.Secretary

Board ol Health South Brunswick Township

C P.; 12-29 88 It FEE W 37

NOTICEThe AssassmanI list Idr die year

1989 may be tnspaded at my ol- Pea In Die Munlopal Buikkng on' Monmouth Junction .Road. Mon- moulh Juncton. NJ on Friday. De­cember 30. 1688 horn 10.00 a m. k> 3.00 p m. lor the purpose ol enabAng aach taspayar lo ascer- lakvwhat assasittiant has bean

, made againsi him or his property and lo confer Inloimsiiy wUh- the Assessor to the end dial any ertocs may be conecled batore Mmg o l. the assassruent HI snd dupheale RS 54438

Ei Sertonga, CTA Assessor

SouOr Brrsiiwifli .owr.sh'p C P 12 29 B« II FEE J5 69

ORDWANCE NO. 71-88.AN ORDINANCE AMENDING AND SUPPLEMENTINQ THE LANOUSE MAP OF THE TOWN-, SHIP OF SOUTH BRUNSWICK

TAKE NOTICE that m O t-i dnsnea ol which dw above Is (ha. We; was kdtoduced and ( on tfst reading al a i mg ol the Township commliue ol the Townshnol Soudi BrurawidA, Mddtosai County.' New Jersey held on November 28. 1988 and ' was piosed on second reading and (nal adopbon al a regular meehng ol die Township Cotmill- lee ol die Tdwnship ol Sotdh Bnmswlck held on Dacambar 20;, 1988. 'at die Munidpat Buklng, Monmoudi Junction, Naw Jartay.i wsh the Idlowing minor diangi In , the second paragraph! '

. -ihal hareby be kickidad m Ihs R3 Single Family Ckistar Zona Otsirtd.'

A Thogra. RA4CCMCTOWT

CP 12-29 88 It FEE 58 3/

Township Cler>

ORDINANCE NO. 7008AN ORDINANCE AMENDING AND SUPPLEMENTING THE CODE OF THE TOWNSHIP Of SOUTH BRUNSWICK. SPECIFI QALLV CHAPTER 46. E N VIRONMENTAL COMMISSION

TAKE NOTICE lh« an or- deiance ol wl«ch dis above is the Hla. was Mioducsd and passed on hitl raaikng al a uaciN meal' mg oMha Township ComnunM ol Iha Township ^ South Bruns*«k. Mddaiiss County.' Naw Jersey held on Novembai 28. 1968 and was passed on second r eading and anal adopbon ai a regulai maalitig ol dw Township Commit let ol die Township ol South Bnmswrdi hak) on December 20. 1968.' al the M u n i^ Budding. Monmouth Junction, New Jeraey.

Koddaen A Thorn, FMOCaiC Towrjsldp Claik,

C.P.: I2-29-88 I I ' ' '*^ E *7.44' ! "4-

ORDMANCE NO. 8988AN ORDINANCE AMENDINO**’ AND SUPPLEMENTING T « CODE OF THE TOWNSkW W SOUTH BRUNSWICK. SPEOFt CALLV C H A P T E R 3 . Atfe m in is t r a t io n o f OOVERIfr WENT __

TAKE n o t ic e thtf «1 # dnaiica ol which die i We, was muoduoad i on Ntl laadng al a i ing ol Iha Township L— fw.TPwnihipol South 1 MddMsan Counly. Naheld on Novambac 28.---------------was passed on second ragdirg ■nd Enidadoplioo at a w f ihmealing ol dw Townthip Cpmn#v lee ol die TownsNp ol S o ^ Bnjnswick haU on Dacambai 1968. « die khmlcWMxnMh Ju n d ^ Nm .

C.P.: 12-2988 II ' . i FEE $7 75

- ORD94ANCENO. 7288 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING AND SUPPLEMENTING THE CODE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH BRUNSWICK, CHAPTER 175, LAND USE. SEC TIO N 175892

TAKE NOTICE Ihal an or dmanca ol which the above a dw Mia, was mroducad snd passed on brsl lajWmg al a lagUar meal ng ol dw Tovrnshp Comminaa ol dw Township South Brunswick. Mddasai -County. New Jersey held « i Oecenbar 8, 1988 and was passed on ideond leatkng Mid anal adoption at a laguiai maotlng ol dw Township Commd- Ue ol the Township ol South Bnmswlck held on December 20. 1988, at dw M uN c^ Budding. Morvnoulh Junctioa New Jeraey

Kathleen A Thome. RMCCMC Tovmshp Clerk

CP 12-29 88 II FEE t7 75

1ORDfMNCE NO. 87-88-

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING AND SUPPLEMENTING TH E RE­VISED GENERAL ORDINANCES OF TTffi TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH BRUNSWICK 1975, CHAPTER IX. t r a f f ic , SCHEOIAE VII SF*EED UMITS

TAKE NOTICE Ihal en or dnonca ol which dw above rs die ude.'was introduced and passed on Ikst reading al a wwcial meet­ing d the Township Committee ol dw Township ol SoiAh Brunswick. WddMsas Counly, Naw Jersey hald-on Novaniiat 28. 1988 and was passed on second readmg and anal adoplidn 'al a raguiai maating d dw Township Cornmit: lea d dw Township d South- Bnmswich held on December 20, 1988, at dw Muniopal Bu4dmg. Moninoudi Juncton, New. Jersey

Kaihleao A Pio™. RMCCMC Townslwp Clerk

CP 12 29-88 11 FEE *7 75

ORDMANCE NO. 8888AN ORDINANCE ACCEPTINO A' DEED O F EASEM EN T A ^ < RKJHT-OF-WAV ACROSS ICff* 506 IN a.OCK 29.01 FROHi MAU. MOTORS. INC. '*

TAKE NOTICE Ihal an oTi. dmanca d which dw above is |ida. was kboduoad and | on (ksl reading at a r - - - ng d dw Township C - the Township d South I Mdifasaa County. Na.. — hak) on November 28. 1088 i was petaad orl aaognd laat ... and Lwl adoption al ajaguiyj nwaling d dw Township Comn*. hw d -dw Township d SouDF Brunswick hak) on December jw- 1968. at dw Municipal B Moranouth Jimetion. N M J

Ktdilaan A Thome Toe

C P 12-2988 tt FEE *7 13

ORDMANCE NO. 7488 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING AND SUPPLEMENTING SOUTH BRUNSWICK TOWteHIP OR­DINANCE NO. 2088. AN OR­DINANCE AUTNOflIZINQ POSI­TIONS AND PflOVIOlNQ FOR A PAY PLAN FOR EMPLOYEES AND OFFICIALS OF THE TOWN- SHIP OF SOOTH BRUNSVYICK. C O U N TY O F M IDD LESEX. STATE O F NEW JERSEY

TAKE NOTICE dwi an . or- . dnanoa ol whidi dw Miove It dw Mla,-wga kwoducad and passed' on M leASkig al a a p o ^ meal- kig d the Towwip CommUtea d dw Townthip d South Bniiswick. MkkjMtex Caudy, Naw Jaraay hak) on Dacambei.8, 1688 and was passed on aacond readmg and Ipal . adoption al • lagdar iiwiMng ol the Township Commd- tat d dw Township d South BnmtwkA Iwk) on Decarnber 2o. 1968. at dw Mpnldpal Budding.

ORDMANCE NO. 68-88 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING AND SUPPLEMENTING THE CODE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH BRUNSWICK BY THE ADDITION Of CHAPTER 248

-VEHICLES AND TRAFFICTAKE . NOTICE dwI an or-

dm«ioa d which the Mx»e it dw hda, was Mroducad and passed on Brat reading al a Kwdai meal­ing d dw Tovfnahlp Ccxnmnea d dw Tpwnthip ol Soudi Brunswrick, MkldWtaa Counly, Naw Jersey held on Novenbet 28. 1988 and was pasted on ieoond reading and Inal adopbon al a regular rrwating d the Township Commil-

. lae d dw Township ol Scxidi Bnmtwick hak) on December 20. 1988. at dw M u n i^ Buidmg.' Monmoudi Junction, New Jersey.

KatNaan a : Iho w .JU -^C M C Towhship CkHk

C.P.; 12 2988 II FEE:»7.44

LEGAL NOTICE TAKE NOTICE THAT, al b lag--

ulai maaUng. hak) . on I - 21,19e8.dw2oiil— luttnwni look dw MOO •

' Mkwles1988. Adoption d

Casa «SB-M-Wiira#86

____ Wiirawskl,13-Jaakow aki.

Cas9,- C a tt! C a tK CitW i C tiU Cat

BOARD OF FIRE CWAMISSIONEnS Fks District « a

So. Brunswick Tovmsliip - P O Boi 78. Kingston, NJ 06526

PUnJCNOTICE 1989 Budoat .

The dMa d dw pubic hearing lot IMtlxidgat IS Tuesday, January 11, 1969 tt dw Kkioian Fka Home on HaMhenia Hoadki Kmgjton al 7:30 PM, C o ^ o( M bud^ are avalabla at the Clerk a home, 24 Acaderny SMaL luiXNlori I ^1 and at dw Chakmsn't home at 33 Main SIraaL Kingstonlor anyorw who wishot k> asunina this budget piloi lo dw hearing n>diL

Two, 3 year M Uma posldont lot Fee'Comirostionaii wdba votacion kiFabiuidy.Appdctfont ate avMablaMdw Clerk's home at 24 Acac)amy ' Sda^ Khigtlan and the Chakinan't home at 33 Main Sbaal. Kingston. These naisl be lahimed obmpMad to dw Commissionats on or belora dwkiegiArmeaMon J«ioaiy25,1689. ^

FME D lS n ^ # 3 BUDQET FOR THE YEAR 1989 OPERATMG APPROPRUTWNS.

A.Ckwrabaiw , __ ■1. Codracl widi Fka Company lor Fks Piolaclioii loi 1969 S'30,000.002. Miac: Fk* Fighikig Sopjshes 1.500 OO3. Training and E d u t ^ 1.000004. Insurance:

«8 B -1 S -H t a t , «B 8 .I8 -K tu p lritk l # 8 8 -1 7 .H u rw iU . # 8 8 -2 2 -L a a . #8 B -0 9 -C a n n o n , # e B -2 3 -8 la ln lc k , #.8B.24-R'ugalero # 8 B -3 4 -K a rn lk ,#6884A-Bdions Gate — ------ ^lion. Case #88.33A.Saytilniri Case #88 -1 8 Flagg, Cts»-. #67-47-$and HH AdomMe C4i; Wash, Caaa #88-21 Qold'a'

. QynvFdneaa Canltr JAapan Aa-' tot.) S.O. #B52A.RSI Inyaitf! mania. AppOcation tpprovad tgyl Ctta # ^f-45 .Lo u lt8 Stndr#^ DuocL FTiat SdteL Btadu 145 Lolti' 1-4, lor b i* varitnea rtM from; front yard sedwek radukanwnU Hi* coiWlrucs an'acfriaiari 10 an asMinB iinglo lan#y dslacliad d w a l^ * Continuad lo 1/16/89, Caaa! #88-10, Jtlla iay Rauch Ciu* Wtth; Block as. I d 6. Roma 10A Zona, appgeatloo lor a o r wash

.ahd atm rapM la d H y .lo ^ HeaM ki . dw Omce-Rasattt& Zona. • ■ .

Jarwl C. Lkhwa, Sacralay Zoning Board ol Ailuilmtia

C .P . ; I2 -2 « 1 I FEE: $12.40 ’

al AcMdacd and HaaMi: b| Package Pokey; e.{ ComptahantHra Oanatd UabiMy

23.000.00 hours

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Iht8rni8dl8t8 markdowns may have'been taken.

NEW YORK CITY

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NOTICE OF ELECTION < HoOew It IwriMiy glyan Is Iha

i t ^ vowia ol Fka o m a -#), Soudi Branawlck ■ Townthip, in. MiddMaaa Counly that Bw anmial titcflon.iall ba h M on Saturdar,

18, 1889, batwatnlna 200 PM and 900 PM.

Tlw poNng placa wll ba al Iha Kandali Paik Firahoiitt, Naw Road, Kandal n ik . Naw '

AlJaraay.w9.bt

a(aetad 'lwo '(2) mambars ol tia Board nl CorntMlaiwn, Ffra Dla- frkl #1, 8ou8t Brutwwkk Towa- iNp, fri Mkk8aiaa Cowdy, NaW

bodi frir a lannor Krta (3) ytata. Nomfrwdng paddant am, avalabit froth lAdraal Rkhmondl Board Adomay. SUM 2. 3951 Roma 822, M y l ^ Ml 0M1K m i ) 329-2299 or al dw Kandiyf Park Flrahoutt. Padbona muM bwiManad lo Woodrow Rood, Kendal Park. 0dS24 on or batata January 1966.,

Tlw todowlng quetdon thti bt tubmlMd to the volara al

VISIT OUR NEW STORES IN; •HAZLET. N.J, aSOUTH PLAINFIELD, N.J. •47lh S (ia 6 th A v e ..N .Y , sMIODLETOWN. N.Y. aWATERBURY. CT. ■-

WMWPtaiht; rtwriaawM Nanual:Neiu'iU.e pougrikaepata: rk«t»-i5i»n»»ti‘r-u.i ‘ ItonkaraiCnvwCwevsivevvr«H:,v*r. ■ llk)aielown:xr,ra yitreu

K ^ jU i r a C h t a . VflhlclB

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_ 4. Amoud to ba ndtad by Taxaa .: Boiidi BtuntwIckTwp, O U M # 3 ~ TOTAL REVENUE

. C.P.; 12-2988 11 ■ ^ :t3 8 .4 4

$ 1,14380 $ 20000.00 $ 5000000 $289293.80

1,038.8198293.00

4.792.50 . 220000

Stwl dWiapproptlMlon to be ralaad ttuBoii tar 8w aifwntta ol dw Fws OMId ba appiovtdT 7.

Tha Board ol FIra ComV nMalorwti raaanwa dw ilM kf changa dw quaadon c HoomiilywHidwraii

onldwtaciufrinwnlao

---------$182068.49$28929X80

Norman H. l u ^ Clarit

. By Ordar ol 8w Board ol ( ritattonari ol FIrt DMdld # .. . . South BrunawlPk'Townahlpi MUdtaatx Counly, Naw Jam ’ PO ihn 88, Kantai Park 08824 '

Pairtda Maltr, <CP. 12-2988 It FEE: $1428

Hie Centnri Post December 29, 1988 7AT —r

papket Inc. abandons Ridge Road location

By Doug Sachs• T h e Packet G roup

r The Princeton Packet Inc. last week released the coifflanj^’s option to . lluy an 11-acre parcel o f land on Ridge Road in South ^ n s w l c k . citing a stalemate over pollution cleanup as the primary rcaso^. '

N ew w aper offtcial^had hoped to locate T h e Packet’^o rp o ra te offices , ^nd priptihg'equipment- on the' South B run sw ick sitci publisher James j k i l g t ^ said. Packct officcs and printiiilg fheilities, as.well as news and j Advertising .departments, are' now located on W illyrspoon Street fn |

j'Th e Packet purchased the^roperty for S I ;6 m illio n p Decem ber 198b, j M r, k iig o te said, but retained an option to return the tarcel to its original ’ owner. . |

‘ Environmental tests o f the property revealediunsafe levels o f ; trichloroethylene in the groundwater, the publisher flid. T C E , a toxic, colorless Jiqu id , was w idely used in the 1960s and l^ O s as a solvent for | fats, oils and waxes. TTic property’ s owner; a chemist a p p a re n ^flu sh e d ,f t|te T C E into the .soil through a septic s y ^ c m , M r , ^ Ig o rc saidT• Clcanup.qf the property would cost an estimated S ^ .O Q O to S700.000,

lu co rd in g to M r. K ilgo re , and one environmental exmrt placed the cost at more than $1 m illion. . J '.‘ M r. K ilg o re said the property’s previous ow ner, y r . Hartwell Calcote, , \ {i responsible for cleaning up'the-pollution. Hbuever, after a year o f Inegotiation. Packet o f f ic ia ls ^ c c id ^ to'pull out ofjhe deal.! "B a sica lly , we couldn’ t come to an agreement w ih him to clean it u p ."

, M r. K ilgore Said. V I .i‘ . Since the sale o f the property in 1 9 8 6 ,-O n CalCotc’s_ company,^ AeroChem , has rented the South Brunswick p re p a y from T h e Princeton Packet. D r . Calcote said his coippany has no obligation to conduct

. full-scale cleanup. I“ It’s not clear thete’s a problem, on the profOrty.” P f- Calcote said.

‘ ‘O ur position irth e rc ’ s hcrrearcvidcnce therc’ a problcmr’ 'Dr. Calcote, whose company conducts cciynic:^ research, also said

Packet officials failed to use proper scientific pethods when conducting their groundwater tests and denied his com paw the right to recheck the

,nisults%'-'\ ' ■' ''• '(louseholds and d ry cleaners used T C E asp solvent during the 1960s I

arid 1970s, D r. Calcote said, t h e state Di^artnicnt o f Envirorimcntal ftotection and the federal Environmental P^tection Agency have since classified T C E as a potential carcinogen, he said..

;.The property contains a 10,000 square fo|it research laboratory, which the newspaper ho{x:d to"expand to 100,000 sqaarc feet; M r..K ilg o re said, j fh e companx;this‘w cck announced plans to sdicit altcriiative property for j the newspaper's expansion, he sai’d! '

" W e w ill be ioncentrating. in South Brunswick. We.st W indsor. Plainsboit) and La w re n ce ." M r. Kilgore sanl.

■ The advertising and news departments will remain in'ihe Witherspoon Street building after the company nu)^/e^ the newspaper's executive offices and printing facilities, he said.

Dr. Calcote said his company w ill continul using the South Brunswick site and has no immediate plans to sell the koperty.

Highest honor .George Bolster, Esq., receitly received the Howard baton Award, the highest honor awarded to any American Heart Association volunteer ih 'N tw Jersey. Mr. Bolster, the former mayor of South Brunswick was honored, for his 18 years of oiitstaridtng leadership, at the New Jersey Affiliatels annual delegate assemble In Nivember. Among h is m o s t noted aocomplishments, he servid as chairman of the board In N ew . Jersey, leading the state through a major reorganization. He ^ rv e d dn state and local hind raising committees, worked with the High Blood Pressure Control program and on. the Affiliate board. He was elected to,act as the next chairman of the AHA tipper Atlantic Regional Heart Committee, which consists of -slx states.

AROUND TOWN

Military MattersN a v y Seaman Recuit Richard D. Caporora, son o f Antonia

Adamiak o f Gamb<cz. in M onm outh Junction, has completed recniit training at R d niit T ra in in g C o m m and, Great Lakes, III.

.H e is a 1988 graduab o f South.Brunsw ick High School, '

Around Town wjits to showcase any. good news ftom South Bnwswick resident — from births to milestones to scholastic accomplishments. Vc would love to publish your achievements.^ Jeaie send them toA m und to w n — The Central Posr,:P.P- B o ^ -

?, Dayton, N.J.pSSW.

H e r m a n *WORLD OF SPORTING GOODS

we are sports

; The latest In Ski Tuning Technoiogy

S T # JE GRINDINGAVAILABLBDNLY A TO U R QUAKERBRIDGE STORE

orig. prices

EVERY SKIPACKAGEINSTOCK!ROSSIGNOL• K 2•DYNASTAR AND HEAD!Packages include: skis, bindings, poles, mounting and function check

V V OFF^;;.EVERYC R O S S -C O U N tR SKI PACKAGE• All packagos include skis, booIAiinding syslom. polos and mounting

SKIW EAR

EVERYSKIBOOT!NORDICA, SALOMON & RAIGHLE!M en’s and women's m odels for all levels of skiing ability.

20^35 » /oOFF

EVERY BINDINGS A L O M O N • T Y R O L IA A N D M A R K E R !

24 HOUR Mounting avaUabte on all ski packages (upon request)!

SAVE

2 0

3 0

SUPER SAVINGS!

9/0TO

9/6OFF

WHITE STAG, GERRY, SLALOM, PROFILE & HERMAN’S Bib PantsM en’s and vw m en’s waist or pender styles

orIg. prices‘ Selected Men’s & Women's

PARKASG ER R Y, W H ITE S TA G , S L A L O M , A L P IN E D E S IG N S , P R O F ILE and H E R M A N ’S! -

7 9 "«1 9 9 "o r lf l .1 0 9 .M lo 2 4 S .iB 9

SKI S U ITSP R O FILE 2 -P ie ce Ski Suits for m en and w om en

• Poly filled jacket w ith coordinating pants

SAVE «40

Intarmadlatv markdownt may h tva b M n takan,

9 9o rig .

169.99

Not ratponalbia for ty p o g ra p h ic arrora. N EW JE R S E Y

Sala now lhr(H/gh DOc. 31.

NEW YORK C ITYItonhallan: A** etSiuSta OSW 42nd ', 1 •»W>4ihSr

' • a ItONJtU^iSt• 4nt>St A6ihA«9Brooklyn: K<rg%yut»OUMOtt Pii/4

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LONG ISLANDVgboy Btrtami are«fl Acrtt uat Gardtn CHy: aMMMpoqoa: m«iLtvttlown: Cjmc* pwb Sty Short: Swuih Ampm msn Huntingtori: Aw ttoinfBfYrsBtfVMiiienWifiFOrig C«f«9rtSmHMown: tminHiMeUii

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Brtmtwicfc: Rouw T<e4tsne ' Htfltl: 8hap(W)« CenH*

M ETR O

WoodbGdfft!Union: r*u/e ct* Ht .PrirMCtOn; Oua»*<t¥«Sge {ihrij -»l Ckttnbrookr Co»un*ai Shhpcww) i‘i*i*-* Ettonlown: McnmoUihMril Tom* Rlytr: Caidw ShoppekflCenw* i. Pftlnfitki: »«edey.VK;«ongCe«ev<

n .y ;

C O N N E C TIC U T;W t f t lp o r l : C o tg u A# WttfffordrCryUJiW- ^SUmtord: fUamlord Lw»nCrrM,-< TrumbuHrHtrlford; weUf4"mMM iariM/.*' Milford: ConnscMad POM Mai Htmdtn: E>a»«eAre'' <WtItftMJry: l «te«<)ud A Wairret

VISIT OUR NEW s t o r e s IN: •HAZLET. N .J.•SOUTH PLAINFIELD; N .J. •47lh St. a 6lh Ave.. N.Y. •MIDDLETOWN, N.Y. •WATEFtBilRY, CT.

WMWPUlnrthtOwa Mioort! tttMt k Ybniitrt; C m c «««r

PotnMwrpd*: HiMen iw jMMdlrlown: i: W iK 7<l t«u

.• :x

8A The CenteSlI Post Ctocefnber29, 1988 i

EDITORIAL

Tips on hpiiday

could save lifeHolidays mean celebrating with family and

friends, sharing gifts, enjoying parties — and more people driving while drunk.

There is a rise in the total number of auto fatalities, including those that are al­cohol-related, during the holiday season, according to'the New Jersey Office of Highway Safety . In November and Decem­ber of 1987 alone, 35 deaths were caused by drunken drivers. This is not surprising, because alcoholic beverages are a generally accepted, and traditional, pkrt o f holiday celebrations. Nationally, almost 55 percent of fatal crashes thpughout the yeaf involve a driver or pedestrian who has been drinking.., A person with a blood alcohol content o f . 10 percent or higher, is considered legally drunk. New Jersey law states that anyone found guilty of driving while under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs will be served a mandatory penalty, including fines and imprisonment. A typical 150-pound person imbibing the equivalent of three drinks in the space of one hour would have a blood alcohol content beyond the legal limit. However, a person who has far less alcohol than the legal limit will still have impaired driving ability.

Alcohol is a drug that depresses the central nervous system, slowing the activity of the brain and spinal cord. Judgment Und restraint are lessened and reflexes are slowed. Walk­ing, speech and hand'movements become clumsy. All are characteristic of a dangerous

. driver. 'How can a social drinker enjoy this year's

holiday celebratiorts? As always, moderation is the key. ^

• Never drink on an empty stomach.• Designate a “ non-drinking” driver who

will be responsible for transportation at the end of the evening.

• Set a limit for yourself, or switch to a nonalcoholic beverage an hour or two before you plan to drive home, to allow your blood alcohol content to drop to a safer level.

.• Finally, allow someone else to drive _ home if you are too drunk to drive.

If you arc the host, plan your celebration with the'driving guest in mind.

• Offer a variety of nonalcoholic alter­natives such as an exotic fruit punch,“ Virgin Marys, “ or sparkling water with a twist. -

• Allow your guests to pace Aemselves by not forcing drinks or rushing to refill their glasses.

•. Close the bar about an hour before the party ends and encourage your guests to linger awhile.

Remember: exercise, fresh air, black cof­fee or a cold shower will not make your sober. Although you may teijiporarily feel more alert, only.time will make you a truly sober, safe driver.

Award winnersSouth Brunswick American Legion .Hall Post Commander Paul R, Zadora explains different medal on his hat to award winnei;s Jonathan Wieners. Boys State (left) and Eagle Scout Glenn Pilato. The American Legion

Stalf Ptioto*Brian J . Barman

presented the awards to the twoyoung men for having made a differenoe In the quality of life in South BrutSwick.

Looking back over a year in KingstonI read a tot pf technical journals in my

other life: vice-president of technical services for a prosperous coiiiputer soft- wan: company

Every year, at tfic end of December, each high-tcchnology magazine publishes its year-in-reviewIssue, complete with an index of the articles appearing the previous 12 months

'■ Broken Crackers." although it is technically not a technical journal, has always suffered. I feel, from the lack of a comprchcnsiyc listing of topics that have been covered in the prior year. In case ahy of you m i i^ d any of the 34 columns that have appeared during 1988 in the Central Post or Franklin News-Record I have prepared an annotated listing for my readers. Below arc some highlights from the list. Unfortunately, space docs not permit the entire review here.

If you would like to receive yoiyr free copy of the 1988 edition of "Broken C ra c k e rs in R e v ie w " ju s t send a self-addressed, stumped envelope to ‘,'Brbkcn Crackers" Box (4 7 ; Kingston. N.J. 08528-0147; ,| will send you this comptchehsivc; chronulogical list right away.

Meanwhile, here are some highlights:."Everything is downhill from here" —

day skiing in New Jersey with the family for fun arid poverty.

“ Good Morning, Kingston E n Ja y !" —

BROKENCRACKERS

Gerry Jurrens

Konman Adenoid guest spots in a hip . parody sponsored by Global Townhouscs. an Equal Opportunity Developer.

“ Th e Great Kingston Coverup is e x ­posed" — It's time to redecorate at the Jurrens household — the true reason some people prefer homelessness,

“ Watching the Hyper Bowl" — an insightful review of the m adc-for-TV ' movia "Stones for Ib a rra ." .or why Giants fans avoided this year's Super Bowl.

"F ra n z Kafka is alive, well Kingston" — a literary Interpretation of "D u e llin g T a x B ills ," or w h y I refuse to write any more satirical articles about the local T a x Collector.

" A n Open Letter to Reagan 'a n d Gorbachev" — the reasons why Kingston should not be targeted for nuclear an­nihilation.

" A modest trash disposal proposal’ .V—

why Ftanklin Township must constcer siting a landfill project behind ex-mayir Thomas Barrows' estate in Griggstown

"Kingston Secedes; annexed by Souh Brunswick" — uncovers the 'ncfaridlK scheme by Franklin’s ncighbore to anpex Kingston by posting "W elcom e to South Bmnswick" signs all around the village

“ Guess who's coming to Kingston'*' — my folks arrive from New- Mexico without their passports or visas, n

" C ounty park proposed for Canal Road" — why Somerset County must consider siting a pedes^an mall and park adjacent to the propored iandfill behind ex-mayor Thomas Barrows' estate in Griggstown

"Tc4t savvy with Kingston Trivia Q uiz'' — the controversial column which nearly ended my career with the Packet Group.

" A s Earth’s caretakers, let’s clean up our act" — Gerry beats Tim e magazine to the punch with his vote for “ Gaia as planet of the year."

“ Death of the Bonsai Tree, Part I I " - a shameful story o f houscpiant abuse inKingston. . ■ -/__ '

"M oaning and groaning in and aroUnd Kingston" — why Hemingway shot himself.,

“ Setyice? — I wouldn’t bank on it!’ — also' known as “ Y ou can't bank on a friendly place for high finance’; — how I

used the power of the third estate to bully the bank,'into straightening out my sons' baitk accounts.

" N o v . 8 Election Endorsements^ — (never published) — ' the famous column that never was, (must hayc gotten, lost in the Packet's Rosemary Woods Memorial computer files)

"Ssshhh.. the vacuum may hear" — that famous "Broken (Trackers" column which got published £iy the Princeton Packet.

“ Stealth: new meaning.to the term 'get lost’ ” — an hysterically funny view of |tcaith technology.' “ A light shines in Kingston" — ; how me man m'adc a difference in the lives of oahy in the village

"Looking back over a year in King- Son” — if you are reading this, then you dready have this one.

This is also the time of the year when tc maic our Nc\V Year’s Resolutions. I (TOipire to continue working on m y Great

rican Novel.. I resolve to work tire- •ssly for T r u t h , Ju s tic e , and. the

Ancncan W ay. I w ill strive to restore Kngston to its rightful place as Center of th< Known Universe.

G en Jumns wishes everyone a healthy anipms^rous New Year, from his castle in iingston^ ^

Recalling pieces of fabric from good i(nemories

THE CENTML POST’ FMnd6d in 1IIS8

Stntng Souffi Bnjnswk* Tpwrahip

Ann Ktvw AJkn, Msiilgleig EtMor K<r Odanlte. AAwti>iny A<«n«0»r

Dm Dmtky, Offie* Mtntgtr

397 Monmouth M i . nd.. P.O. Box 3090*^. NhJ. oeato

201.339.9314

A P«ck«t .Publication

Mary Loulw K/igort B«lman, Board CAannan. Jamat B;K9gat«. nrMxitrit

Roilyn iJtnan), Otrmnt Utnagtr ncn«it.Waw«r. £"iMar ';

- ndwO Farianit, Ometor o7 OparaUwM • _L_^'i»»9rd M. Ka«tY. arcumm Oncto/' ■; P.IC Padmamtihin, Bumma Uanigtr

Bartiara L Parfit, AAwtMv DimSor

Most people arc very iptercsting if you give them a chaned to talk. Unfortunately, giving somcqnc else a chance to talk is against human nature, and a lot of interest­ing people go unnoticed. T h e world is a duller place for it! '

There are exceptions to every rule. 1' knew a Government inspector who was great at his job of making sure contractors were doing, what the taxpayers paid for.

Bill w ould walk over to the location he' wanted to inspect and Just stand there, saying no more than one or two words of greeting — then absolute silence on his

'part!Invariably, as jf someone "pressed an<

invisible button, people would begin to. talk;-and talk, iuid talk. Th e inspector got all the information he needed without hardly saying a word.' Just by letting the other person tdk.!

That gu y made a lasting impression on me; Since then 1 have become a listener, and observer. From time to time in these articles, I would like to share with you my recollections of the interesting-people ! have m e t over the years. It would be a shame if they disappeared forever, un­noticed. Th e y are the fabric of what good memories are made'of.

Max was in his early'60s . when 1 first met him'. T o pronounce^ his long eastern Eurt^>ean name correctly te qu in ^ an inn

"jtallon ' o f ' Bela Lu go si-p laying - Gount- Draciila. I tvas the hip m e e t in g ad- mihistrator, and he was to be m y engineer- Ing-support.

PURELY

COINCIDENTALS y Dansky

V

M ax w u like a cannon, you always leard him before you saw him. And what 'ou heard was what made him so unique! le had.a Polish/Russian/German/Yiddishj

accent that was so thick, it jnade Jackie Mason sound like David Niven.

H e was short, about five foot tw o ,' without an ounce o f fat. He had an

immense head o f hair that qrowned a - distinguished looking face. When I w o rk ­

ed with him he was a heavy smokefr, always cupping his hands around a freshly lit cigarette, even, when there was no

~vvind. ' ,W ith his hair, his loud voice and thick

accent, it was- easy to perceive him as a caricature, and many people erroneously tended to dismiss him-before they really got to know him .

M ax was a survivor of Russian concen­tration V camps in Siberia during W o rld W a r n .-^H e never told m e w h y the Russtans-sent-

h im there.' Someone who knew him then, told me this storyl M a x was a Polish Jew . T h e Poles were setting up a -G o v e rn -

mcnt-In-Exilc, and everyone who chose the Polish Arm y was considered a traitor. Max was then shipped off to Siberia,' this time without a choice.

He told me that in Siberia it was the \ery young, w d the single person who did not survive.' Married couples tended to survive because of the support they were able to give (0 each other.

Max told me,it was the cigarettes his wife obtained foV him that saved his life. The warmth the cigarettes generated help­ed him endure the cold. I how understand that today the cupping o f his hand ajound a freshly lit cigarette was • more a ceremony than a heed;

In time most people' began to realize lhatyou had to j » y attention to Max. He wasn’t a caricature,, he was a good engineer. A bit strange, but more often th u not his engineering judgment was correct, and he b ^ m c an important asset to our group.' I 'l l never forget the .time we went to Boston (0 visit a customer. I had a theoiy that the best way to impress a custonier having a technical problem was for the marketing man to bring an engineer who had a beard. If you couldn't find one with a beard, the next bert thing was to bring an engineer with an accent. M ax tqorc- than fit the bill!

Whenever we had the occasion to meet -w ith Gerniancustotneis, M ax,lirom put o f

no where . would give a s h (^ bow and click his.heels, a la Eric V o n Stroheim. 'Once when we met a large group. M ax.

so u rtie d H k c th e f i r i n g o f a semi-^tomatic rifle.

Aftethe meeting vve were sitting at the Logah'Aitport bar, packed like Sardines with oner businessmen waiting for. the next shinle. Max in his matter of fact loud voice to say to me, “ Ven I yas.in Siberia n 1942.;." Just like they did in the o ld E .F . Hutton T V commercials, every^m^th stopped speaking, and ievery head tu n ^ to hear M a x ’s next word. He

' never finihed.-I panicked, threw a tip on the table,grabbed him , and ran for the' plane! .

I 'll nevd forget that guy. He stayed on the job tillne was 70. .

After he jad to retire, he'came to'visit US'occasiortily and I made it a point to say hcllp. \ always wished him well. Under my, teath I also Wished that 1 ' would be iirgy enough to get to .be his age, and be h the g o ^ shape he was!The name M x is a pseudonym; hut the pdrson. is re£and very much alive and well. Sy canstill hear his voice at the oddest times,

c o r r Ie c t io n■; . -• . . . .

The NewarJ Boys Chorus w i l r be performing at 3p.m . on Sunday; Feb. 26 at the SouthJarunswick H i ^ School Auditorium. T ie next meeting of the

'Oiltura! A rts. Cbnxnission is scheduled • for T u e s d a y ,'!^ .10. "

Th e C e n t ^ m t regrets any* inconvS:- niences this m a y ^ v e caused; ;

X

The Central Post December 29. 1988 9A

SIDEWALK SURVEY_ - ft

By Ffank PaulQuestion: W hat’s your number one fesolution for the new year?Asked at the Daytcih Plaza

* Lou Lovy'itt: Dayton* * ,►

:• "Be a better person.’

Patricia Vkicenzi New York“F in d a h u s b a n d .’

Angela Janice Maryland■’G e t m y c a r fixe d .’’

Howard Saks Deans"Get in better shap^!"

Rob Donovan Dayton" T o b e .-ha p p y a n d get g o o d

g ra d e s .'” - - >

WHAT’S FOR LUNDH?Week of Jan. 2 ^

BtfttJNSWtCX ACRES, --------------------CON-

G H ^BROOK

MONDAY

L U N O jE O N W ia N O T . . K SERVED TO D A Y

TUESDAY

HamlMiraer on bun, Pj^etoes. vegetable

. Second > Peanut but­ter and iaiy sandwich'

W EDNESDAY

Batter (%>ped f l ^ sub on btm, shredded lettuce; c h U JiAm and f r u i t - '

Second - Hwn sm d- wteh

THURSDAY

Chlcke'n-huggets, bread and b u tte r, m ashed p o ta to ea r vegetabie atKl fruit. , V. Second - American cheese and tomato sandwich.

F R II> ftY

P b ^ carrot coins, fruttandcooWe.

Secortd • Podc rol sandwich

*SPECIAL ^ f R P f l^ - Each student purcfOaJng hmch on Tuesday v »l recehro a free “SCRATCH N SNIFF STICKER."

CR O SSR O A D SS C H O O L

NO SCHOOL

1 • Bta BURGER - Himblirs*'. ehaii*.Mttuca, tomila, plcU«, on b (^ - poUlMS or fniH.

2 • BatUr dppod n»b ■ub on bun and taita.

wkh.3 • Eos aaUd ■*<'<1'

w(i^3/3 will contain

ch'Pica • of tw o: pouloaa, vegalabla'or pull. - . .

'^ M .Y SPEdALS: Large MM.piatter with bread and butter, homemade sOup, kidh/idual salads «td desserts and pre-antrotmced specists.

1 - C h ic k e n pemieaan on bun.

2 • Frankfiater on rd .3 - SNemi sandwich. Each of the above

luncheons wB contain choice of tw o : gobitoee, veget^tle or

1 - SpaglMltl wtth meal aauea, bread and butlar, lo isad lalad w/draaetng and freih InA.

2 ■ Hot loutharn baked pock rol on bun.

C h o ica ol tw o ; potatoes, tossed, salad w ldreislng or trash fnilt.

3 • Cold submsitne ssndwteh with.lettue# snd fruH.

. I • P U xa . R srior. C h o o s a y o u r 'q w n pizta: plain, ssusSoe, papparonl, or ptppers and onions.

2 • Hot corned beet Mndwrfch.

3 ■'Paararl butter snd|e j a xiwtch.

the above lucKheotw we contain your choica of two; car­rot cokrs, vtgebdjla or Inilt.

S O U T H BRUNSW ICK HIGH SCH O O L

NO SCHOOL

. 1 - Frerridurter on rol. - 2 -Not meatbal sand­wich.

3 - Ham and cheese sandwich.

Each of the above luncheons wB contdi your choice of, two: ------------- vegetmle orpotatoes,huK.

1 - Minute steak on steak rol.

2 - Kalwi sausage petty on bun.\ 3 - C M submartae sandwich with lettuce andfruK.

1/2 will contain cho ice of tw o :

vegetable orgototoes,

1 - T a c o s w ith shredded lettuce, stowned rice and fndt.

2 - GrBed c teeae sandwich.

3 - Salami sandwich; 2/3 will contain

choice of French fries, cole slaw or fruH.

students purchasing a hot kmch may sale<rt mlk or orwigeJuice as beverage. StoSeM JM M bm ^nch from honie may also purchase n ik or tyange juice.

1 - Pizza.Chol.ce of two:

Td a a a d salad w/dreaaing, chilled juice or fruK.' 2 • Frankfurter on rol.C h o ic e of two:

pMtoes, tossed salad w/ckesakig, or chBed juice.

3 - Cold alced turkey hoagia with lettuce, andmiit. <

Lunches may contain a half pint of whole or skim nflk. Menu subject to cl^ange. ^

Th is month finds Carblicr Lanes of North Brunswick and other New Jersey bowling centers offering a unique sholarship program that will benefit all involved.

Called the Grand Prix Scholarship Program; and sporting the motto, "everyone is a winner,” it is de­signed to reward all youths participat­ing in Bowling on the ba?is of participation', rather than skill. In doing so it re w a j^ all, not only the better bowler or the most scholarly. Except for the $2 registratioij fee per youth — whicl^ Carolicr Lancs and other centers w ill pay — there is no additional'cost to the youngster other than weekly jwwling costs.

Youth bowlers once enrolled will have the Opportunity to accumulate scholarship credits until they graduate high school. Credits, then convertible , to scholarship dollars, can be used to furthc? theip education at most any institute of higher learning. A c­cumulation of credits is accomplished merely by bowling every week. The more games bowled in organized youth aclivilies, Ihe more credifs earned — without regard to sex. size skill, or athletic ability The age

group for this program is 7 to 18. arid the younger the youth is when they start, the more credits they will accumulate before they graduate high school.

A n example would be a youngster bowling in a Saturday morning youth league for a 15 week season with throe games bowled per wCck earning 45 credits. All centers have additional point-cartiing activities in whicfi more credits can be c ^ e d such as adult/chlld leagues, seasonal leagues like Carolicr Lanes Short Season League', which runs from Jan. 7 to May 6 , and local tournaments.

Funding for the program takes pjacc through corhmcrcial and Cor­porate donors, profits from special purchasc/rcsalc of such items as can­dy. T-shirts, bumper slickers, etc. and through raffles, where allowable, and other programs undertaken by

each center.A ll funds raised will be returned

100 p e rc e n t i n - t h e fo rm o f scholarschips. W ith the cost of higher education going nowhere but up. the benefits that can be realized by youth bowlers (and their families) in a program such as this, where even the n o t -s o -s c h o l a r l y and the not-so-fortunatc can cam advanced cducatioifdollars makes this program truly one where, ‘ ■everyone is a winner."

Th is fine program was adopted from a similar program developed by Texas and in operation for three years. New Jersey was first among 14 other slates to adopt this highly acclait)}cd program. A ll stales com­ing inlo'thc plan w ill allow transfer of earned credits should a participating youth move out of state It is ex­pected that Within a few years this

program will be national in scope, a program boasting a‘ scholarship pro gram worth well into the millions just for bowling Not how well, but just for participating

The Grand Prix Scholarship pro gram will be administered through the office of the Bowling Proprietors Association'of N .J .. Inc. and via a specially created New Jersey corpor­ation. the Foundation of The Bowling Proprietors Association of N .J. Inc The BPA of N .J . is a non-profit membership association of bowling establishments throughout NeW Jer scy ^rfo rm in g a variety of promo tional, managemenf, and technical services for its members.

For more information about the Grand Prix Program or to obtain the name of the nearest participatihg ce n te r, ca ll C a r o l ic r Lo jics ai

.8 4 6 -2 4 2 4 .'

Frank Tysiak Piainsboro"To be more patient and fdr- glylng of my fellow man."

For com pe fiT ive m o rtg a g e rates m

your a rea , checK the fin a n c ia l ch a rt in this p a p e r s

Business Journa l

_____

Your filew Yeort ffesp/ijtffpri J5|ie

mum.,. Plan F d r^ 9The w ielght Loss Progfarn sp^ciffcaify dDsigpeej forjpereonspepdipg 1 ppuncJs: This Unique i2-W eel< W eight Lois Progrpni 0oBsn‘f;re q u ln ^ a tl|(:^uldyie}& ^ ' 1 1 teaU h ypu lio w to lose th e M p h t you 've b a e a iw o n ll ig ip lo ie ,.^ . a rid viou'll leiprh.|iov|r tb jk e a p it pff. j | ‘

......

; - P IO N EER S INI V ^ ld H T c o n t r o l ! - - I

^ 2 Y E A R S E X p f e -7-

f P erm anent w e lg h i lots nUIrlHon so jv lo e — i* Cotnprehentlve hospital, based progrdm j* C o rn p te le ly Supervised b y o u l tedrn of b o O fd e o rlille dI physIcICFts aj betjav'idral c o u w e lo j* j ^ j | '

— r r

FREE ONE HOUR LECTUREMONDAY. JANUARY 9fh

CALL (609) 452-1330 TO MAKE YOUR RESERVERVATIONS TODAY

U p t o

SO^offduring our

W in t e r S a le- L

S tarts M o n d a y , Jan u ary 2 n d

HOURS

• M o n ., Jan. 2 — 9:00 a .m . to 8:30 p.m .• t^ e s . A W ed., Jan. 3 & 4 — 9:00 a.m . to 6:00 p .m .

• Th u r. & Fri. Ja n . 5 & 6 — 9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p .m .

• Sat., Jan. 7 — 9:00 a.m . lo 5:30 p.m.

• ^M on.-Thur., Ja n . 9-12 — 9:00 a.m . to 6:00.p.m .• FrI., Jan. 13 — 9:00 a.m. lo 8:30 p.m.• Sat., Jan. 14 — 9:00 a.m . to 5:30 p.m .

Sale continues thru January during regular store hours.

I ALL SALE ITEMS CASH, CHECK, VISA OR MASTERCARD

ALL SALES FINAL .

WE VALIDATE GARAGE PARKING

^ W ife ?Engli0ij32 N a uau Strtel • P rin n lo n

- T \ 609-924.7100

WE VALIDATE g a r a g e PARKING

s •.

10A December 29, 1988 The Central Poet

.Want a better way to get theS O U TH BRUNSW ICK '

CENTML PO Sn

Fnt out the coupoh and tnai today or call

YES! I would like a'mail aubscriplioh Id the South Brunswick Centra! Post

□ One year *23 □ Six months *15i Paymeni is enclosed [ i Bill me [ i Chaige to ' Visa : j MasterCard

Matt to; Packet Publications, P .O . Box A F, Princeton, N .J. 0 8 ^ 2

Nam e____ .......... _____________ _

Town^^.._

_____ Phorie— _____

— _ ! . ^ County ■|TwpiBoro___

I I Card Number

329-9214 Exp Dale Month ' . YearB«nh NumtMH iMasterCe^d cnty)

j Authorized Signature-, . - j.------------- -----;-------— -|. , ' Otter good tor Central N.J. residents only and expires 12/31/86 CP

OBITUARIESWilliam Barry. W illiam E . B a ^ , 85, of Franklin, the father of Brian.Barry of North Brunswick and Kerry Barry of Day-

L U

ABE YOU TIRED OF FILING MEDICAL INSURANCE FORMS?

C allusMedical Benefits

M anagem entP.O. Box 5055 -

Kendal Park, N«1

201-422-8777

LDH Printing Unlimited, Inc .Research Park, 417 Wall Street

Princeton, New jersey 08540(Houle 206 across from . ■

Princetpn Airport) ’

COMPLETEPRINTING

s e r v ic e s I

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E V E R Y CHOSS COUNTRYAll packages include skis, SKI PACKAG Ebindings and poles. I N S T O C K

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TH E BEST F ITTIN G BOOTS 10,000 pairs In stock333W E TAKE TRADE-INSn

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Pelican Has Burton Clothing, Stickers,

Posters,TVavel Bags, Boots.In ttoekl

Factory Direct Outlet! SHOP HERE 8 SAVEPSUCAN H .N tw JerMy'* Largert SnowlMard Oealeti..

VWt atto carry Kemper. C N U and Btacii Snowboard! (tailing at 179.

1989 SKI W E A R

Choose from;

• nOSSIG N OL • K2 • H E A D • FISCHER • D Y N A S TA R

• M EAD • r>RE • O LIN• KA STLE • b u z z a r d • D Y N A M IC • H A ir r

• KNEISSEL • A TO M IC

OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF SKI SWEATERS, BIBPANTS A N D . STRETCH PANTS

Choose from down blends and other warm tills Assorted fabrics andihe newest fashion colors.for men and women

Choate trarm .RAVIN•iPORTAUM

4 .

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• loitwiiit• OtYMRIANCI• CIRRUTI> tWINO W in •POWMRNORN

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P I U S M a n y M o r e -ABSourrcLV tmb aaar tcuiCTiOM AKYWHOta

S K I S H O P S .Wlntar, Spring. Summtr, Fall ' Ptllcan Hai It All

• Satisfaction Cuarantaad * - >

WHintHOtlSBlit.'22 fi aaMi MM «toouwmmu mm:s ifJssa -----------

EWiNQ r MORRIS PLAINS1761 OMan Avt. 111. 10 n mim wm «,I aiwk (M V Ri. It ftnmomr >mm

' 6 0 9 - 7 7 M M 4 2 6 . 7 - 0 9 6 4 - ------- - .A U STORSS OPBN 7 OAVS MON-FRI 1041 SAT 104 SUN 10-5

UNION■ at. 22 FI Hitt

• MM MM M WttkmnSPOTSWOOD491 Manalapan Rd.

IR. Ft. t i p t t tisreff m. i|_

IS M O O O : V ~

BAST BRUNSWICKm .M . .NMlWMaMin

aiM 9oo:'

ton, died Thursday, Dice. 15, at St, Peter’s Medical Gcntcr, New Bruns­wick,

Bom in St. Edward of Frampton, Quebec, Canada, he moved to ti\c U .S . in 1931 and had lived in Frank­lin since 1949.

He retired in 1978 from Cleary Corp., Franklin, where he was a plant foreman for 34 years.

M r Barry was a communicant o f. St. Peter’s R .G . Church, N ew Bruns-, wick. • -

Shifra Silverman Gendelman

His son, John, died in 1942 , , ■ Surviving arc his wife, Cecelia

O ’Shaughnessey B a n y; six sons,' Peter of Lanc^ter. N .C . , Brian' of North Brunswick' Shaun, of Some­rset .K e v in of East Brunswick, Kelly of Freehold, and Kerry of. Dayton; a sisterr* Sally, B a n y of Manchester,

, N .H ., and 15 grandchildren,Services were heIttM onday, IDc c .

19, from the Gleason Funeral HoW c, Somerset. A fdass o f Christian Burial followed at St. Peter’s R .C . Church. New Brunswick.

Burial was at St. Peter's Cemetery. New BturiswickJ

Shifra Silverman Gendelman, 89, of Philadelphia) Pa., the mother of Elena Stolzer of Kendall Park, died Monday, Dec. 26. at her home.

Mrs. GendeUnan was bom in Russia.

'. She’ was the wife, of the Jatc Irvin Gendelman. .

Suitvivihg. are a son,}' Samuel of Philadelphia, a d a u ^ te r, Elena Stolzer, o f Kendall Park; three sister, Esther Karasow, Ethel Sklover and Dorothy S c h w a ^ : fiye grandchildren and thnre great-grandchildren.. -

Funeral services were held Tucs-. day,. Dice., 27, Trom Goldsteins’ Funeral Directors, Inc., 6410 North Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa'.

Burial was at Montcfiorc C em ­etery, Fox Chase, Pa.

Pamela Lynn Reynolds

MargaretRueshoff

F u n e r a l s e r v ic e s w e re h e ld Wednesday, Dec. 28. for Margaret Rueshoff, ,86. of Georges Road. Monmouth Junction.- Mrs. . Rueshoff died Sunday, Dee.

25. at St. Peter’s Medical Center, New Brunswick.

B o rn in P re s s a th , B a v a r ia . Germany, she came' to the United States in 1922 and ..live d 'in North Bmnswick before moving to South Bmnswick 30 years ago. •

Shd. was married/ to, thC' late Gerhard Rueshoff. .

Surviving arc two sons. John G . of Holmdcl and Richard C . Rueshoff of Monmouth Junction; four daughters, Mary D . Rueshoff and Elizabeth Lovuolo, both of Monmouth Junc­tion, Sister Agnds Vincent S .C . of Convent Station, and Ann McQuitlin oif Franklin, Mass,; eight grand­children and 16 nieces and .nephews.

Funeral services were held from the M .J . M urphy Funeral Home, Monmiouth Junction.

A Mass of Christian Burial follow­ed at St.' Cecelia’s "R.G. Church, Monhioulh Junction. Interment was at Holy Cross Burial Park. South Brunswick.

,In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in thc,mcmory of Mrs. Rueshoff to St. Cecelia Chuiph Bgilding Fund, Ridge Road, M op- mouth Junction. N .J . 08852.

Family services were held Thurs­day, D e c. 22, for Pamela* Lynn Reynolds, 24, of Monmouth Junc­tio n ,' '

Ms. Reynolds died Monday, Dec. t9, at The Mcdicttl Center at W n c c - lon. , '

She was bom in Princeton and lived in4*lainsboro before moving to Monmouth Junction.

She was a 1982 graduate o f South Brunswick ' High School and was employed, as a computer operator with the Marriott Corporation in South Brnnswick.

Ms. Reynolds was a member of the Six M ile Run Reformed Chureh in Franklin Park.

Surviving are her mother, Barbara Ann Norton Reynolds‘of Monmouth Junction; a sister, Janet Susan Re­ynolds Nemeth of Green Brook; her maternal .grandmother, Bertha M . Norton of Franklin Park; her paternal grandparents. W ill and Rpth Re­ynolds of Tunkhannock, Pa.; and a nephew, Jasen Christopher Nemeth.

Family services were’ held at the A .S . Cole Funeral Home, Granbury, with the Rev, David Rissceuw of the Six M ile Run Reformed Church of­ficiating.

Burial was at Franklin Memorial Park, North Bmnswick.

,Memorial contributions may be made to the Lupus Foundation. P . o r Box. 320, Elm w 6<^ Park, N ,J . 07407. •' ’

W INTERIZE NOW!Battery Check • Tune-Up

• Anti-FreezeWe'll keep your car on the road all winter/

IN DAYTONEDISON GENERATOR

COMPUTERIZEDENGINE.ANALYZER

Tire and Auto ServiceRt. 130 - Across

From Dayton Ford (201)329-6300

N EW Y E A R ’S

A U C T I O NConsisting of several estates, and private entries, and also Included Is an interesting selection of fineana also included is an interesting selection of fine decorative oriental art, a rug cleaning com pany dis­posing of unclaimed rugs, deliduent accounts andclosing dow n of their rug department, as well as other consignors.

Hundreds o f items, too num erous to list.

AUCTION WIUMHEID AT: "RAM ADA HOTEL-PRINCETON

On Rout© 1 a RWgo Road, PrincetonDKecnON5;Jlt0HoMk locate on Houte l.no(fttofJct.6?l aS26

SUNDAY, JANUARY 1st at 2 pm. VIEW ING FROM 1 PM

PARTIAL USTINQAritlquo,Old arid Reoent,TrtbalatxlTraditio(ial such as Hefz,Kashati, Birfier, Tabriz.

Nafci.jOum and many 18m_»_9Xh omtuiy eSf^U t h o g r ^ s . cut Crystal-Oorman,Frencta,Poll«h:ya888. stemware, MeissenCiysfel, Colored Crystd and otfiers, E u ro p e ^ and Oriental RoroeWn, 19lh & 20lh

Vases, Imari, KutanI, Sateurna, Cachpots, Bowls and ottwr 1020s LustenNare Sets, Nortdee, N^ipon, Austrian Chfaia, Drezden, Umoge and

.more. S e i o ^ Bronzes - Eurpoean, WeMem end Orientd Motif alier Moreau, Romlnoton, Mens, Ckxfiai, B a m and others. - Japa iese A Chinese carvings, Ivonr l^ u f M , Ivory Netsukas. LoutoXV ISM eltjdd iM m O rthiu ,C reidenza,C i^C a biiK ^ n m ShapeTabto, Side & End T a U ^ Sheraton S t ^ DW ng Tablo wttti 6 Chairs. 4 ,6 4 a P ^ l C f i i ^ Screens. Coromandel. Hards&xiee, Ivory, Rosewood After T a ^ Taboretts, China Cabbiets, Marble Pedestal. Serpenrine, ameitmt, hunan jade flgures, Incense bimiers, vases, a id others.

API’O IN iriD ADM INtSTHATOft F ID t U r Y A U C n O tJ ? L U 7 n t! ?? t H U M S : CASH . CH i:CK. VISA, MC. Af.irx KV IMJYf MS PHCiMIUM

Trying to keep ahead in business'? Don t miss the Business C a le n d a r '

. ir) this paper's Business Joumai.

-r,-

Post DecemjMr 29,1988 11A

r ['

. R jr Mike Klepper and P. Hail skateboarding Is a serious matter. The pair get to test their sk is to the Bmit at the K endri Park RoBer Rink’s . skateboard night on Wednesdays. • ~

Rink lets skateboarders fly in peaceBy Baine Rose

Special Writer

P. Hal takes to the dr.

P h o t o s b y C r s i g D e M a r t i n o

They may not fn the image of the typical All-American boy. but neither arc they the punks and roughnecks that popular conception haVc made them out to be.

They gather every Wednesday night at the Kendall Park Roller Rink in their uiiofficial uniform of colorful T-shirts, usually worn un,tucked, and high-fop '.sneakers, n icir skateboards are painted with loud psychedelic designs ieminiscent of the'1960s. before most of them were bom. Several cars in the parking lot sport b u m p e r s l ic k e r s r e a d i n g . ■’Skateboarding is not a crim e ."

Inside, rock 'n ' roll music blares from the speakers, and there is the continuous thump of wheels knock­ing against the liardwtKHl floor, as skaters fly off the wooden tamps set up at one end of the room. At (he other end. smaller groups of boys gather to polish stunts such as riding or spinning on the two front wheels. Th e video arcade, located behind the spectator area, is virtually ignored.

" I think a lot of people have the wrong idea about skateboarding kids, that they’re a rough group of k ids." said Tcrric Gomel of R.isl Brunswick, whose 13-year-old son. Jason, has been skating for two years. " I believe they're a very decent group of kids that help one another. "

Indeed, a closer inspection of the k c n c at the roller rink reveals an atmosphere o f co n g e n ia lity arid cooperation. T lic Imys. ranging in age from about 8 to 18. wait patiently in line for their turn to build up .speed for the approach to one of three ramps, and a chancc.lo show off tlicir

■ stuff. Those who bsitch their tricks show few signs of frustration; they

just get back in line and try again..'And among,the horde of adolescent

males, there is nary a profanity to be' heard.

"Y o u rarely see skateboarders figh,t. They all try to help each other. It’s a brotherly type of sport," said Eric Monroe. 17. of Somerset. Eric organized a Nov. 30 fundraiser that drew 225 skaters to Kendall Park to help pay the medical expenses of Owen Levy, a Somerset resident who recently underwent a heart transplant.

Cliff Nazzaro, owner of the Kcn- ;dall Park Roller Rink, opened his doors to skateboards in October. He had heard of other,rinks, mostly op the W e s t ( ’ b a s t . ’ c o n d u c t in g skaicborad nights. •

•.'Wednesday nights were relatively slow, so we were looking for some­thing else to try.” he said.

And the move has been translated into a success story. Nearly 100 skaters, from all over central New Jersey, show- up on an average Wednesday night. M r Nazzaro said. They bring their own homemade ramps, and pay S4 for two hours of indoor skating.

Although it is considered by some to be a dangerous sport. M r. Nazzaro said that, so far. there have been no injuries on the premises. If acci- dentsdo occur, however, participants arc responsible for their own medical bills.

"Th e y all seem to be accomplished skateboarders. There arc no begin-, nets coming in here,” he said. "Th e y don’t seem to need too much super­vision. They all watch out for each other.’ ’ - ,

And the skaters themselves ate grateful for a place to come, sheltered fjuth the elements as winter ap­proaches. J

"W hen it gets cold, you can rust

the board." .said Ja.son Gom el of Ea.st Brunswick. " T h is is the txist idea. I hope they keep it."

" I t ’s a good place to skate. ” said Mark Jarrow. 1 3, of Kendall Park, who has been skating for, one year. "Th e re are a lot of people here, a lot of good kids."

Some of the youths said that they had visited specially-built outdwr skateboard parks in other states, but that none arc available in central New Jersey.

S k a te b o a r d in g is c lc i^ r ly a male-dominated sport, but there is a dennite female presence at the Kcn- (falj xPpA Rqllcr R in k .'A b o u t two dozen girls sit on the benches at the sidelines, watching the action and mingling with their friends. And nut all of them come for the obvious reasons.

Stationed at the foot of the steepest ramp, braving flying skateboards from maneuvers gone aw ry. Sherry Brkal sat poiijcd with a camera, eager to capture the movements of the skaters in mid-air. The 14-ycar-old Monmouth Junction resident said that

• she comes to the rink every week to watch the gtiys and to take their pictures.

Many of tho.se present reported having been harassed by the police while playing their sport in the streets, school yards and parking lots of their hometowns. Ofneers threat­ened to fine the skaters and confiscate their boards and ramps, sometimes in response to residents' complaints a ^ u t teen-age boys congregating in their neighborhoods, ■

. Skateboarding got its bad. reputa­tion in the early 1960s, when narrow boards and eJay wheels resulted in high injury rates, according to J ;T . M urphy, "2 8 , the director o f the Northern N ew Jersey district of the Eastern Skateboarding Association. A research biologist by trade, M r. Murphy lives in Roselle and com-

v petes as art amateur on the natiun.’il level.

By 1965. numerous ordinances were passed banning the use of skateboards, ordinances which are still on the books in many munici­palities.

The use of polyurethane in con­struction o f the wheels since the mid-1970s and the increasing width and curvature of the decks has re­duced the physical risk a s^ia te d with the sport.

"T h e skateboard today is’no longer the same instrument, it’s like compafr ing the W right Brothers’ flying ma­chine to commcrcialrairlincrs,’ ’ said M r. M urphy, who came to Kendall Park for the Owen Levy Heart Fund benefit;

AMdc frorn its efforts to legitimize skateboarding and to improve the sport's public image, the Eastern Skateboarding A ssociation holds competitions, sets consistent judging standards, and assists skaters in ob­taining sponsorships. ’ • -

. A n estimated.20 m illion Am'ericans ride the rolling iroards, according to a June article in Tim e magazine. The

' sale o f equipment and the r^uisitc hip clothing has blossomed into an industry netting half a billion dollars annually. . .

C o u n t e r i n g the m y t h tha t skateboardirig is largely a Califoinia

cast ol the Mississippi River, And as the largest district- in the Eastern Skateboarding Association, the G ar­den State is a hotbed of activity.

Asked why he remains involved in skateboarding at an age when most young men have allowed their w h « I s to nisi in damp basements. M r. Murphy replied. " It 's worth being immersed in. it's that rewarding."

' " I t ’s like a society. -The y have iljcir clothing, their sneakers. the|r own language," said Mary Danza, who runs the. A B F S^ate Shop in. North Brunswick. A n enthusiast sin­ce childhood. Ms.' Danza still'has the aluminum skateborad that a, family friend brought her from California in the late 1960s. Her 9-year-old daugh­ter Gabricllc is one'of the few fem^e skaters to be found at the roller rink.

’ ’They slay off drugs and they're into a clean sport." she said of her customers "W e meet a lot of interesting kids

To learn new stunts some of the youths buy video tapes of the pros and play them in slow motion, but nidstly. they teach each other.

" I skate with all my friends." said Chris Marshall. 13, of Monmouth Junction "W e teach each other. If you skate with people who are better than you. they teach you."

" I just watched people and how they did it." said Karl Durante, 13, of Pnneeton, a 4-year veteran of skateboarding. " I try and imitate them-as best I can ."

‘ T watch sonic of my friends ruid I watch the pros.” said-Mark Geiger, 14. of South Brunswick. "1 tr^ fthc tricks) and I leam.”

Asked, how his parents feel about his participation in the sport, M ^ .said. "Th e y influence me to come here because I don't do anything around the house."

craze, J . T . Murphy said that 50

Erie Monroe runs things from ttw D.J. boothpenxnt_pf_al[j^uipment in this-countiy is hei^ed for deslinaiidtis

Far from voicing objections to their ' .sons’ prewcupation with stunts on

wheels, must of the patents present expressed their support.

Bob Colontino brought his son and four friends' to Kendall Park. Bobby, 13, has been skating for two years, since the- family moved to East Brunswick from Brooklyn, where tte sport is not as prevalent as it is in New Jersey. He is all iii favor of the weekly skateboard night in Kendall' Park. " T h ’cy need a jilace (to skate). Th e y keep getting c^se d out of every placc.’ |-he said.

C h r i s D c W .itt sa id th a t h e r ' T 3-year-old son Erie had diftlculties

adjusting to the family’s move from Syracuse, N . Y ; to East W indsor until he became involved in skateboarding.

■ '“ It changed his.life around,’ ’ she said. " H e has friends, c a m a r ^ r ie . , It’s ready a bWssing in disguise.’ ’

M s. DeWitt said that she is “ absolutely n o t" w i^ e d about her son getting injured in the sport.

“ Th e majority o f children here will not skate beyond their ability. Th e y ’d try a little bit, and when thdy have the confidence, they’ ll go a Utile bit farther," she said.

M s. DeWitt also views skateboard­ing as a constructive use o f time that keeps youngstersput of trouble. She pointed to a group of boys, speeding towards the ramps, still going strong

. after three hours of pounding die floorboards.

" Y o u caniiot do drugs and have this kind of energy;’ ’ she s a id r—

'I .

12A ^ I^cember 29, 1988 The Central Poei

CATCH IN G UP IN SO U TH BRUNSW ICK COM M UNITYCALENDAR

By A ^orje VemoiaSocial Correspondent

The last time I spoke with Carman Caneras, with her characteristic mod­esty, she said she doubted whether there was anyone left here in South Brunswick, aside from her family, of course, who remembered her.

Nothing could be further from the ' truth. A l l of us who knew Carman

felt> d im in is h ^ 'b y her death alf the While ’knowing our lives have been enriched by knowing this riiie lady.

.This is the season for family get-togethen, and you can be sure the family o f Louise Josephine. Gaissert of Kehdali Park will be doirtg. just that. M rs. Gaisstert's family is a large

, Slid loving one, who get together for- holidays, birthdays, anniversaries,

and any other.excuse they cart think- of, so you just know there Will be lots .of family fun for the Gaissert d a n in the next couple'of weeks.

In these ^ y s , not noted fo r ex­tended f m i ly tics, why do members of this farhily seem to positively bask in the glow o f each other’s company? I have a hunch it has something to do with the rhatriarchV Louise Gaissert.

M rs; Gaissert was bom Louise Josephine Frey on April 26. 1893 in M anhatten ;to Freiich im m ig ra n t parents. Tim es were hard, and o f the five Frey Children, only Louise arfd her b r o t h e r , H a r r y , s u r v iv e d adulthood.

Living in a neighborhood made up mostly o f other immigrant families. Louise spoke only French and G cr-

. man until she started school in New York where, the classes were given in English, but she was a quick learner.

. While Louise was still a girl, parents bought an old hotel on Staten

' Island, and the family left “ the c ity ." Louise remembers that they used only

lanterns to light the rooms, but that ' an weekends they held large get togethers, entertaining friends and relatives with music, which was a very important part of Fhiy family Ufe.

Louise learned to sing and- p la y . both the piano and the violin from her fither, w)to devoted almost as much time and effort to his musical avoca- > tkms u to his jo b as a chef. Louise , stems to have jnhprited. both his tdlents. Her fajiiily tells me that she is

. ah excellent cook, at)d that she still sjngs ,aind plays the piaiio almost cVery day.

I A fte r^ d u a tin g f ^ high school, Louise attended H u h W C o lle g c Busiv iwss-Schodl. and went on to b ^ o m e a siipcrvimr in a large medical/health sfrvices office.

; Later on she married Herman Gaissert, a naval 'archittet. M r. G a ^ r t was busy designing ships, " cVeA during the Depression, while, ' for a while at least, most of Louise's creative efforts were tentercd around the couple’s two sons. Alfred and Carl:

In 1950, Hetman Gaissert ’ died While A l f r ^ and Carl were still in their, teehs. T h e newly widowed Louise re-entered the work force to e ^ enough money to support Her family and g u a ^ t c e her sons a good education.

I In 1963, Louise sold her Staten Island home and moved to Kendall Piirk, where she invested in local real estate, buyin^thrte houses which she ' rdnted out fo rm a n y years,

j She quickly put down roots and became', involved in the life of the

THURSDAY, DEC. 29■ FamOite Amonymous, a parents support group of arid for parents, concerned w ith use o f drugs srod. alcohol, meets at 8 p .m . at St. Barnabas ^ is c o p a l Church, Sand H ill Road, Monmouth Junction. For more infomtation, call Caro! at (201) 2 9 7 -8 2 5 6 o r A r le n e at (2 0 1 )359-7171.

AY, DEGi 31■ New Y e a r’s Hve P a rty s^'nsored by St. AugiistinO’s K n i^ t s -o f Gol_- umbus to be held in'St. Augustine's Auditorium on Henderson Road in Kendall Parle frotnh 8 p .m . to 1 a.m . Fo r more information, call (201) 821-0326.

MONDAY, JAN. 2■ -G a m b le r s A n o n y m o u s , m eets - from 7:45 to 9:15 p.m. in B lakbH all at the Carrier Foundation, located off Route 206 in Belle M ead. For more, information, call (201). 874-^4000, exterisipn 4591.

■ M unicipal offices a re c ) o ^ — no residential garbage pickup.

Shown on the bacH row, from left, are Alfred B. Graissert Jr., Stephen Gaissert, Alfred B. Graissert, Gail L. Schmitt, Robert Schmitt and Kenneth Gaissert. Seated on the front row, from ieft,"are Carl Gaissert, Gregory Gaissert, Virginia Gaissert, Louise J. Gaissert and Virginia Lynn Gaissert.

TUESDAY, JAN. 3

new community. A s a matter of fact, she is a'charter member-of the SouthBrunswick Golden Agp Club.

Louise has always been a vital, active person, and retirement, didn’tslow her down a bit. Grandehildrch,

H A G E R T Y ’ S 1F L O R I S T & G R E E N H O U S E S

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Plants Make Excdllenl Christmas Gifts!

a40

S O U T H M A IN S T . , (3 R A N B U R Y

W E W ELCO M E VISA'- M A S TE R C A R D • AM ERICAN EX P R ES S C A R D S

lions for the holidays, but she is also looking foward to ncx t spring and her 96th birthday. You can bet there w ill be a gathering of the clan for that one!

Youngsters in 'th is end \ of town were out in force last Sunday aftcr- npon; waiting for Santa, who was making early rounds^ aboaril one o f the Monmouth Junction Volunteer Fire Departrneni’s trucks.

, Some of you have reminded me that last year year 1 neglected to mention here just how this custom started, and with the number of newcomers in town since i liist told the story in print in 1986, who might not be aware ofjils origins, perhaps 1 should recap briefly this year. Here goes!

As I have stated before. I cannot vouch for (he abrolutc veracity of every single detail o f the followihg. the laie being shrouded, as all legends in the mists of time, and affePled by the permautations thereof; however, this is the story as I have heard it.

Once, long ago, and it still gives me shudders even to think of such an event, Santa’s sleigh caught fire-. A careless clf. perhaps? No matter, whatever the cause, thc yoluntcers of the Moninouth Junction^ Volunteer Fire Department look the call, and

Alfred and G a il, have many fond memories, including those o f the pn<f vi|eek each summer w h e n . grandma Louise would give their parenfs a vacation by packing up the grandkids ^ d taking them down to the shore. Tnosc weeks spent with ■, gnmdma Louise at Ocean Grove seem to have left a lasting impression.

: G ra n d d a u g h te r G a i l ;a l s p rcf nrembers how retired grandma Louisp jumped i.n and saved her from drown- iiig in a swimming pool back home in Kendall Park, when Gail was about 4-ycars-old.

Louise Gaissert still enjoys oil painting iind is a very capable pianist, as those present at the Gaissert fami­ly's Thanksgiviiig get-together, can well attest.

1988 has been an e s p e c ia lly memorable one for M rs. Gaisscr for two reasons - in April she attci)ded the wedding, of her granddaughter, Gail, to Rjobert Schmitt, and on Aug. 23, she became a greatrgrandmpthcr for the first time. Benjamin Dean Frey was bom to grandson Alfred B. Gaisscrt Jr. and Barbara Patterson.

Needless to say this w ill be a very special Christmas for Louise Gaissert and all her family. M rs. Gaissert is happily bp to her elbows in prcpara-

Outpatient Care

. he first step in helping someone fight alcohol or drug addiction begins with family and friends.

The person suffering often denies there’s a problem. And may do almost anything to hide from the facts.

That^whyitlsuptoyou..

If someone you care about is dependent on alco­hol or drugs, don’t wait. Call the Carrier Founda-. tion today. _

When you call Carrier, you’re helping someone you love take the first step toward freedom from addiction.

And it’s possible to take this step and receive treatment w ithout leaving home or work.

Carrier outpatients receive a complete medical evaluation and attend three or more sessions a week of individual, group and family therapy..

And all this is provided in the strictest confidence.

So if someone you know needs help in overcoming de­pendency on alcohol and driigs, call Carrier today at 1-800-223-0207. Outside New Jersey call 1-201-874-4000.

Areyouworriedaboutsomeoneyoulove?

Carrier FoundationBelle Mead, New Jersey 0B502 ■

W e ’r e P u h i n g L iv e s B a c k T o g e t h e r

> . Ti. " CerrlOf i<a private;noh-prollihospllat andKcepts alt ma|oT.torm» ol Insuranco.-^ ' - - . ■ '— 1- . — _

• )

were (here, so they say, in the blink— or should I say twinkling — of an eye, put out (he fire before it could do any lasting damage to the sleigh or its contents, and before returning home, they, gave Santa's elves a thorough couisc in safety and fire prevention. They must have dqnc a good job, because I ’vcv never hcarf of any more fires on the sleigh, and the rate, o f on-the-job .injuries at the North Pole worieshop h i« beep virtually, nil since then.

W ell, from that time on, once a year, usually on the Sunday before Giristmas, in remembrance of that time, and os a sign of the true affection, as well as the spirit of cooperation,, existing between the fotlu, big and little,' at the North Pole and the voluntters of the Monmoutfi Junction Fire Company, Santa Claus hi(nself has mede an early trip down fiprtt the North Pole — right in the middle o f his busy s e a ^n , mind you— and been chauffered all around their bailiwick by the justifiably proud metribers of the aforesaid fire cbmmunity.

Happy holidays, everyone! And if you want to tell m e a.nd your nei^ibors. about your holidays, give me a call at 329-6512.

■ T h e D e a n s , o f H a r m o n y Barbershop C h o ru s , meets at 7:30 p.m . at the First Presbyterian Church on Georges Road in Dayton, For additional inform ation., call Jo e Monahan at (201) 369-76'76.

■ T l i e S outh Brunsw ick Board of Education meets at 8 p .m . in the board officesi atf4 Executive Drive, Monmouth junction, for a study session. ,

■ W om an’s C lu b of S outh B run s­wick, meets at 7:30 p .m . for the monthly meeting at First Presbyterian Churcli b f Dayton on Geotges Rpad.

■ Th e S e n io r Citizens C lu b of South Brun sw ick meets at I p.m . in the Community Center on West N ew Road.*

W E D N E S D A Y , J A N . 4

■ Golden A ge C lu b of South Brunswick meets at I p .m . in the Cohununity Presbyterian Church of the Sand H i l K on C u yle r Road in Kendall Park.

T H U R S D A Y , J A N . 5

Eniertiainment ’89 books available

■ Families A nonym ous, a parents siipporf group o f and for parents concerned with use. o f drugs and alcohbl, meets at 8 p ,m . at St. Barnabas'^isco pal Church, Sand H ill Road, MoniUoiUb Jupetion. Fo r more jnfojnuitibrif call C aro l at (201) 297— 8 ? 5 6 o r A r lp n e at (2 0 1 ) 359-7171. ' ' ' '

The Friends of South Brunswick Public Library is pleased to announce that a limited number o f Entertain­ment '89 books arc available for p u rch a se . A n y o n e w is h in g to purchase an Entertainment '89 book can call cither Susan Edelman at

329-6688 or Evelyn Catoc (evenings) at 297-5062.

■ Deborah Heart and L u n g meets at 8 p.m. in the Com munity Room of CTuirleston Place on Route 27 in Kendall Park.

Books will be sold on a first-comc, first-served basis. The proceeds from the sale go toward enhancing the library, its programs and services.

Seniors head for Trum p Castle

■ South Brunsw ick Athletic A s ­sociation meets at 8:30 p.m. for a general membership meeting in St. (Cecilia's Church Hall on Ridge Road in Monmouth Junction; .

The regular monthly tnp to an Atlantic C ity casino — sponsored by the Senior Citizens C lu b of South Brunswick — will be to the Trum p Castle on M onday,-Jan. 9.

The bus w ill leave from the Com ­munity Center on New Road at 8:30

a.m. and will return about 6:30 p.m . The cost of the trip is $12. O n arrival each person will receive an $18 coin voucher and a $5 return visit voucher.

F o r reservations contact Jean Sember at 297-6763 or Evelyn Jensen at 297-3810.

Training session volunteers needed

NOTICE TO PERSONS DESIRING ABSENTEE BALLOTS

If you are a qualified and registered voter of the State who expects to be absent outside the State on Seturday, Febru­ary 16, 1989, or a qualified and ro is te red voter who will be within the State on Saturday, February 16, 1989, but be­cause of penhanent and total disability, or b ^ u s e of illness or temporary physical disability, or because of the ob­servance of a religious holiday, pursuant to the tenants of ypur religion, or because of resident attendance at a school, ’ college or university, or, because of the nature and hours of emc'nployment, will be unable to cast your ballot at the polling place in your district on said date, and you desire to vote In the Fire District election of District 1, 2 or 3 in SouthBrunswick Township, Middlesex County to be held on Satur­day, F^m iary 16 ,1989 , kindly complete the application form and send to the undersigned, or write or apply in person to the undersigned a t once requesting that a dvilian absentee ballot be forwarded to you. Such request must state your home address, and the address to. which said ballot should be sent and must be signed with your signature, and state the reason why you will not be able to vote at your usual

. polling place. No civilian absentee ballot will be furnished or foiwarded to any applicant unless request therefore is received not less than 7. days prior to the election, and contains the foregoing information.VOTERS W HO ARE PERMANENTLY AND TOTALLY DIS­ABLED SHALL, AFTER THEIR INITIAL REQUEST AND W ITHO UT FURTHER ACTIO N O N TH EIR PART, BE FOR­W ARDED AN ABSENTEE B A a O T APPLICATION BY THE COUNTY (2LERK FOR A U FUTURE ELECTIONS IN W HICH THEY ARE ELIGIBLE TO VOTE. APPLICATION FORMS MAY BE OBTAINED BY APPLYING TO THE UNDERSIGNED EITHER IN W RITING OR BY TELE-: PHONE, OR TH E APPLICATION FORM PROVIDED BELOW MAY BE COMPLETED AND FORW ARDED TO THE UNDERSIGNED.

Date: December 21,1988 . RANIERO M. TRAVISANO ' Middlesex County Clerk ebtimty Courthouse PO Box 1110 New Bruriswtdc, NJ 08903 (201)745-3194

The American Cancer Society. Middlesex County U n it, is seeking cancer survivors to participate in a three week training sessiqn called CanSurmbunt. This training session will enable volunteers to help newly diagnosed patients .through a time of crisis. . '. For more information,: cal! the American Cancer at 98S-9S66.

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HuiTgry?. For fine dining check

J. Guide"the-^Dining Guide --in "Time Of -

. !■

Post December 29, 1988 13A

S E U G IO U SB U N K E R .H n X L U T H E R A N

B R E T H R E N C H U R C H R D 1, Bunkier H U l Road

- G r ig ^ A w n C h u ck Ew a n , P ^ o r

S U N D A Y; I I a .m . - M o rn in g W o rs h ip

Service - Pastor Ewan

^ C A L V A R X . G p S P E L C H U R C H O f the C h ristia n and

M issiontuy A lliance 423. D n n h a m 's C o r a c f Road

)• South Brunsw ick To w n ship

F R I D A Y .' 7:30 p.m . - Adult Bible Study and

Prayer Meeting ■7:30 p .m . - Pioneer G irls Meeting 7:30 p .m . - Christian Service

Brigade for Boys Meeting S U N D A Y

...- '9 :4 5 a.m;— * -B ible— Study— w ith -classes for all a g ^ i adult through niirsery.^

I I I a.m. - Family W orship Service . with-nursery and children's cHtirch

available. Rev. Stephen Bishop of- Ticiating.

6 p.m. - Evening Service with nurseiy available.

7:15 p.m . - Light and Life youth fellowship X

> C O M M U N I T Y P R E S B Y T E R IA N ' C H U R C H O F T H E S A N D H I L L S

8 C u yle r R o a d - . Kendall P a rk

T H U R S D A Y ,. • 7:15 p .m . Children choir rc -

. hearsal8 p.m. - Adult Choir R c h c ^ a l

. 9 p.m. - Alcoholics AnonymousS U N D A Y

' 9:30 a.m . -• Worship service (nur­sery available), JRev. Paul Walker,

•’ pastor. , V ‘ '10:30 a.m . - Fcllqwship and re-

■ fireshments. ; ,1L a.m. - Church School for all

ages (nursery available). T U E S D A Y8 p.m. — "H eavenly Bodies”

aerobicsW E D N E S D A Y

9:30 a.m . - Women's Study Group, at 18 Aldrich Road, children wel-

; come.

C O N G R E G A T I O N B ’ N A I T I K V A H

J E W IS H C O M M U N I T Y C E N T E R O F N O R T H A N D

S O ^ H B R U N S W IC K , 1001 Finnegans Lane

N m ^ B run sw ick

T H U R S D A Y.7 a.m; - Tallit and Tcfilia Minyan

F R ID A Y' 8 p.m . - Kabbalat Shabbat Service

S A T U ^ A Y9:30 ,a.m. Shabbat Morning

Service

E M A N U E L E V A N G E L I C A L L U T H E R A N C H U R C H

C o m e r o f New and K irk p a trick S trw ts

N ew Bransw ickTh e Rev. D r . Jeffrey C . Eaton,

Pastor(201) 54S-2673

S U N D A Y9 a.m - Church School10:30 a.m . - W orship. Nursery

provided.

F IR S T B A P f l S T C H U R C H O F L I N C O L N G A R D E N S

771 Somerset St.Somerset

S A 'T U R D A Y' noon - Prayer Service S U N D A Y

8 a.m. - Eariy M orning Worehip 9:30 a.m . - Church School 10:45 a .m . - Morning Worship

i I a.m. - Junior Church 'W E D N E S D A Y

.7 p.m . - Prayer Service

F I R S T P R E S B Y T E R I A N C H U R C H

362 Georges Road Dayton

S U N D A Y•' I I a.m. - New Year's Day W orship Service with- M r . Joseph Gray im aching bn "N o t Even In Israel.” No Sunday School or Adult Study today. . ' • .

T U E S D A Y7:30 p.m . - Missions Cpmmittce 8 'p .m . - Finance Committee

" W E D N E S D A Y , 7:30 p.m . - Christian Education

Committee8 p .m .. - Buildihg and Grounds

Committee,“ 8 plfiiT - C h o ir rehearsal " "

G E O R G E S R O A D B A P T I S T C H U R C H

, O ld G e o i ^ Road and C h u rc h Laneorth Brunsw ick

S U N D A Y9:45 a.m. - Church School 11 a.m . - Worship Service ■

, W E D N E S D A Y 9:3o a.m. and 7:30 p .m . -, Bible

Study and Prayer

G R I G G S T O W N R E F O R M E D C H U R C H

1261 Canal Road '' Franklin Township

(201) 359-3604

SUNDAY9:30 a.m. - Sunday School and

Adult Bible Study l i a.m. - Worship Scrvicc;(nurscty

p ro v id e d ). Serm on: "C h ris tm a s U F O ' s " b y .R e v . D e n n is L . I^rguson.

noon to 4 p.ip . - Open-House at the Manse/Social and Carol singing at the piano with the Fergusons.

W E D N E S D A Y 7:|5 p.m. - Carillon C hoir 8 p.m . - Sanctuary Choir

T H U R S D A Y7:30 p.m . - Intercessory Prayer

Group

H O L Y T R I N I T Y L U T H E R A N C H U R C H

1640 Am well ^ o a dSomerset

201-873-2888

S U N D A Y10:30 a.m. - Worship

I Nursery w ill be provided during the worship service.

K E N D A L L P A R K b a p t i s t C H U R C H Route 27 Box 5086

Kendall Park (201) 297-4644

S U N D A Y9:45 a.m. - Sunday School for the

whole family. Gasses for all ages, including adults. Nursery provided.

11 a.m. - Morning Worship with the Rev. Daniel R. Brown preaching.

6:30 p.m . - Evening W orship, with Rev. Daniel R .. Brown preaching.

W E D N E S D A Y7 p.m . - Prayer Meeting. A time o f

Bible study and i^ y e r .Kendall Park Baptist Church is w

independent fundamental church in association with the General Associa­tion of Regular Baptist Cliurches (G A R B C .) Th e public is warmly invited to all services.

T H U R S D A Y3 p.m . - Visitation and ministry at

Franklin Coiivalescent Celiter.

K I N G S T O N P R E S B Y T E R I A N C H U R C H

Kingston 921-8895

T H U R S D A Y9 a.m. - Women’s Bible Study

Fellowship4:30 p.m . - G irl Scouts 8 p.m. - Adult Choir Rehearsal

S U N D A Y. 9:30 a.m. -C h u rc h School

10:40 a .m . '- Fellowship T im e ,11 a.m. - Worship

12:15 p .m . -B e l l Choir ..2:30 p.m . - Taiwanese Church '

T U E S D A Y 4:30 p.m . - Brownies

K I N G S T O N U N I T E D M E T H O D I S T C H U R C H

C h u rch St.Kingston

... . . .

10 a.m. ■- Morning Worship '’'1 0 a.m., - Sunday School

The Rev; Byron D. Leasurc. M in i­ster, will be officiating.

M I D D L E B U S H R E F O R M E D C H U R C H

South M iddlebush.rgnd Am w ell Roads

Middlebush

S U N D A Y.9:30 a.m . - Church School11 a.ni. - Worship ServiceThe Rey. Taylo r Holbrook w ill be

preachings Nursery care is provided.

m i l l e r M E M O R I A L . P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H

(com er o f Ridge and N ew roads) M onm outh function

iS A T U R D A Y8 p.m. - Watchnight Party at Miller

Memorial CTturchS U N D A Y .

9:30 a.m . - Sunday School classes 11 a.m. - Communion W orship

ServiceNoon - Fellowship hour

W E D N E S D A Y7:30 p.m. - Special Open Session meeting

T H U R S D A Y7:30 p .m . - Choir Rcliearsal

N E W H O P E C H R I S T I A N C E N T E R

S U N D A Y S E R V IC E S North Brun sw ick To w n sh ip High

SchoolRopte 13() and R a id e r Road

N o rth Brunswick

j ■I ... •

I f s o m e o n e y o u l o v e \ is d o i n g : d r u g s

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Call us todgy.T h ere is H O PE . .734-4642Princeton Housea unit of Th e M edical C c n ic ra t PrinceUm 905 Herrontown Roaci

- Princeton ------------------------------i-'..—

9:30 a.m. - Morning Intercessory Prayer.10:30 a.m. - Morning worship schfice. . ^11 a.ni. - School of the Bible.11 a.m. • Children's Church.3 p.m . - Communion (First Sunday). 3 p.m . - N H C C Fellowship (Second Sunday).

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S U N D A YI I a.m.; - New. Y ear’s Day

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meeting- ^ - - W E D N E S D A Y7 p.m . - Choir, rehearsal

R E L IG IO U S S C I E N C E C H U R C H O F P R IN C E T O N Center for Creative L iv in g

Masemte Center'R ive r Road

Rev. G w e n Gillespie

S U N D A Y11 a.m. ♦ Worship Service with

Rev. Given Gillespie speaking on “ Listen For A ctio n ." - -

C T . a u g I j s t i n eO F C A N T E R B U R Y C H U R C H

Henderson Road . E ra n k lin Park

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S U N D A Y ,8 a.m ., 9:30 a .m .. 11 a .m .. 12:30

p.m .

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P .O .B o x 1773 Sand H ill Road

R .D , N o. I M onm outh Junctiop

T h e Rev. Francis A . H u b b a rd , V icar

T H U R S D A Y8 p.m . - Families Anoriym ous

(support group for parents concerned about abuse o f alcohol and Other drugs), meets in the church hall, low er level.

H O L Y N A M E D A Y J A N . I , 1989

8 a.m. - H oly Eucharist. Rite I

10:15 .a.m. - Child care (Sunday School for Pre^hool to 9th grade w ill resume Jan. 8)

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11:45 a.m. - Fellowship arid Re­freshments

T U E S D A Y3:45 p.rn. - Kindermusik class

(downstairs at the church)7:30 p.m . - Adult Bible Study:

<ukc.(at the vicarage) * f^ ^8:30 p.m . -.Alcoholics Anonymous . [(chutcli hall, ait theilower Icyicl),'

W E D N E S D A Y 7 p .m . - Alcphblics Anpnymous

• 8:30 p.m . - Alcoholics Anonymous

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S A T U R D A Y -6 p .m . - Mass

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S T . J O S E P H ’S C H U R C H . L ivingrion Ave.

East-M illstone

S T : J O S E P H ’S P A R IS H C E N T E R 34 Ybrktow n Road

’ Somerville .

D A I L Y M A I ^8:30 a.m. - Church (N o Mass bn

.M onday)'S A T U R D A Y

5 arid 7 p ;m .'-C h u rc h ' ■S U N D A Y

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Route 27 F ra n k lfn Park

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S O L ID R O C K M IN IS T R I E S O F S O U T H B R U N S W IC K , I N C .

Crossroads School 1 Georges Road

M onm outh Junction ,D r . Stephen E . Hollander, Pastor ■

S U N D A Y10 a.m. - Worship Service, nursery,

and ch ild re n ’s church p rovided.

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Aniw ell Roqd , Somerset

Rabbi M a rtin Schussel

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7:30 a m.; Holy Cuchinst. Rita I B OO a n , Hrily [ucnirill. Rita II II.IS am, Holf Eucliantl. Rile I r^nday lliiu rnday and Holy Oays

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Ctosuoidt School, Giorfis Road MoRinouth id

Sunday-................................. 10.00 a.m.Children's Church and Nursery Available

Rn. Or. Stiphifl L HolliRdir, . Pastor

PRESBrTERIAN CHURCHla Natl Bruanrlck, W

.100 Ihlagston Avinui ' Srmday School • 9.00 a n. Worship Servlca ■ 10.10 a m.

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14A Post Deceml^r 1988 4. A N

Vikings thwart Zebras 55-48 to win tourneyDefensive effort |<ey to X^nnas classic final

■4By Bruce GoMman

Sports. EditorEven though a sterling offensive

performance from Donnell .Lumpkin gave the Vikings their second s t^ g ln South Brunswick Christmas' T o u r­nament title, it -was the play of the d e fe n se th a t h a d c o a c h T o m Carperitcr beaming afterward.

‘ T n five'games, only two teams have scored 50 d r more points on u s ," said Carpenter, whose troops improved to 5 -0 after a 55-48 victory over New Brunswick Tuesday. " W e have an quick, a^ressive defense, and it's very tough to score on us. W e really im p r o v ^ 'o u r defensive re­bounding. W c ’re-not ffiving teams a

"Second chance at the basket."

Lumpkiti gaiyc his usual all-around performance. He scored 32 points, including I I in the-fourth quarter when he sank 3-or-4 foul shots after the Zebras (2 -3 ) were assessed two technicals. 'n ic 6-foot-7 senior also led. the way , in rebounding and blocked shots.

Donnell Lumpkin (23) puts up a shot against Ambassador AcademyPhotos * Caroine Bednarezyk

in the tourney opener.

In the consolation garne, Some­rville pasted Ambassador Academy of Glassbpro tSO-29.

The championship game was an evenly-fought battle. Although South ' Brunswick built a 2 0 -i0 lead early in the second quarter, the Zebras sliced the advantage to 29-23 at. the half. Three straight baskets at the end of the third quarter brought New Bruns­wick to within one point at 37-36. It was still a one-point margin at 45-44 with 3:45 to play after the 2^bras'

18-footer.But the Vikings went oti a

Tive-pbint streak, which was keyed by Chds Henderson. Henderson.weiit to the line for two shots, made the first, and alertly scooped up the ball up when he m i s ^ the second. .He maneuvered, the ball to Lum pkin, who zipped a perfect pass inside to Rich; Altamura for a layup. H a lf a minut^ later;. Lumpkin resoundingly blocked a ‘sh o t; by Roosevelt Jef­ferson, then_ftuind Tro y McCracken under the basket for two more poiiits and a ’50-44 lead.

TTie Zebras, still very much in the game after Jefictson scored to cut the lead to four with L 0 5 to go, suffered a double knockout 19 seconds later when Tyte ll Brown,-who led t l « team with 13 .poiqts, was a s s e s ^ a techical foul. He was''in the midst of calling a timeout, buf instead he was called for traveling. New'Brunswick c o ^ h (M ie Paige rose off the bench onto thb court, and was instantly hit with a technical himself.

' ; Watching helplessly while Lum p­kin converted thiw! of his four op­portunities from the foul line, the Zebras w ere ' effectively denied a >

Briart Hendrickson eyes the basket against Ambassador Academy.

chance to pull even" W d thought we had a titneout,"

said Paige, “ t couldn't understand the call...W hen he (Browri) got the technical. h^ had thrown the ball out of frustration (to the ca ll)."

Other than the etrding, Paige said he w u satisfied with his troops' effort, adding the shots didn't fall in when they needed them. H e also

an See V IK f f ^ , Page 16A

BLUE RIBBON CLASSIC

toBy Bruce Gokftnan

, Sports EditorM E T O C H E N — The scoring g c rim lly

provided by a junior was exchanged for the rebounding o f a freshman, but tjic trade-off fell a little short for the Lady Raiders of North Brunswick Tuesday.

The Raiders (3 -1 ) were unable to hold onto garnc-long lead, as Metuchen (4 -0 ). led by Marie Watson’s 19-point pciformance, rallied for a 33-28 win in the first round of the Blue Ribbon Classic girls' high ^ h o o l basketball tournament.

- The Bulldogs will fact Edison, a 51‘H 3 winner over Highland Park, in today's. Uiursday's final following the consolation contest at noon between the Raiders and the Owls. Those games will be played at Edison High. *

North B ru n s w ic k had to" play without Junio r forwafd„Claudia Eayres, who had been-cxcusco-Recausc of so c ia l circum­stances. Her abtence removed one,, of the team's quiside scoring threats. Coach Lynn DcNicola started freshman Sue Rowinski_ in her place. -

Th e younger player fortified the Raiders' defend as she grabbed at least eight re­bounds and became a ^ 1 force inside. Her defensive effort enabled N B T H S to remain in contention, despite an off night offensive­ly

"Sometimes.you can pick a freshman out. But you couldn’t pick her o u t," DcNicola ^ i d about Rowinski, who was a starter this year on the Raider soccer team. "S h e had a tremendous number of rebounds. ”

Senior guard. Sue Libro. the team's leading scoter, hit ^ o f -9 from the foul line .but connected oh just three ^ t s frpnv the floor

,to finish with 12 jo in ts . Junior Kerry Hudson, the squad's irisidc touch, added eight points and J.J . Strasser contributed 'six as the Raiders were held to their lowest total of the season.

• Libro turned in a spectacular defensive play at u critical juncture with S'Am inutes left in the-fourth quarter and the Raiders leading 24-22. The 5-4 senior lost the ball by the Raider basket, then sprung up and surprised the Metuchen ball-handler by div- ing-f|;om behind and stealing the ball. As she fell to the court, Libro shoveled the ball up (6 Hudson, who drew, a foul a s ^ c drove into the lane.

28-23, when she converted a pair of foul shots with 3:26 to. play. ^

l l ic Raiders appeared to run out o f steaih after that, as the Bulldogs ran Off the last 10 points of the game. Kristina l^m bdiri shook off her defenders, missed one attempt under­neath and stuffed her own rebound.back in to put Metuchen ahead 29-28 with I ;14 remain­ing. Watson followed with a ba.skct and two free throws to put the game on ice.

point):) continued to show improvenKnt for the Raiders.

■^The.Raiders led 8-5 after a lluggish first Iftinquarter and 17-12 at halftim cirTwice l l « y ,

incrch^d. their lead tq seven poirils ,in the ' third stanza on a pair of Hudson buckets. B u t, the Bulldogs remained within hunting dis- - lance on layups by Watson and L yn ch , the latter coming after a rifle pass frorn guard Monique Ranee.

"Wc played hard end-to-end,” said Dc­Nicola. "Th e y just came out on top of us."

Unfortunately for the. Raiders, Rowinski's solid play in her first start was not enough.

Hudson missed both free 'throws, but Libro gave the Raiders a fiye-point edge.

The Bulldogs were aided by Eithnc Lyqch (seven points) and Emma Bascorn (four). The latter, a.frcshman, exhibited, a natural outside touch and could help make Metuchen a coritending power in the (Jrcatcr Middlesex Conference for several years.

Strasser and Barb Zimmerman (two

Following the Blue Ribbon Classic, North . Brunswick will host St. Mary’s of South Am boy at 3:45 p.m . Monday. Th e biggest challenge of the season should come t l i ^ ' days later when HofTman, also o f South Am boy, visits N B T H S for an afternoon tussle. '

F R E E T H R O W S — Th e Raiders won the Blue Ribbon Classic last year.

Pacers 9-1 after 44-29 victory over St. Rose; Irwin scores 16

The Pacers, South Brunswick's 6-7-8 grade traveling girls' basketball team, invaded Freehold Dec. 22 and' rode home on the wings; o f a 44-2? drama'tic comc-from-bchind victory over St. Rose of Lima.. Coach Frank Shingle couldn't say e n o u gh g o o d th in g s a b o u t his charges.. "These kids are just tremendous," he enthused, " t h e y really have heart."

The Pacers (9 -1 ) were slow to catch fire and could muster biit four points on a basket by Denise Ifwin and two. foul shots by Tara Shingle in a sluggish first quarter that saw them fall behind their hustling Monmouth County opponents 8-4. But they nar­rowed the margin to one at halftime b y outscoring St. Rose 8 -S in the second peribd on a field goal by Regina-GaraCc, a foul, shot by Jen Rei^uud, and five points from Tara on a bucket and three more free throws. '

Coach Shingle picked up oil a St. Rose oRensive weakness and modi­fied his defense in the second half to take advantage of it.

"These kids were passers, not drivers," he pointed out. " T h e y had

ho really suong dribblers-. O ur sink- ing% an-to-m an defense is geared to cutting off the driver and stopping the layup.^'

But St. Rose was m oving the ball around and dropping in the short one-handerl

S h in g le d e c id e d to ris k the one-on-one situation and play his Freehold opponents tight. (Combined with his team’s raw courage and determination to win, the strategy paid off.

The Packers locked up the St. Rose girls' passing game in the third period, and South Brunswick moved out to a 28-23 uivantage as the result of numerous pass interceptions and some fine shooting by- Denise, who led the way in this stanza, with six points. T a ra and Larissa Richardson followed closely behind' with two baskets apiece, and Avani Patel threw in anothin just at the right time.

T lw Pacers executed' their tight man-to-man , half court press to full advantage in the last quarter, outscor­ing St. Rose 16-6 and making the game strictly “ no-contest," Denise shifted into high gear in this period,. p o s t in g e ig h t m o r e o f h e r game-leading 16 points on three field

goals and 2Tfor-2 from the line. Larissa, Tara. Regina and Jen each added ,a basket to round out the dramatic fourth-quarter surgeT

Denise at shooting guard was the Pacers' sparkplugi coming through in the second hiidf when her efforts were most needed. Although Lartssa, who was once again operating masterfully, under the boards, fouled out midway through the final period. Jen and ■Regina rose to the challenge beaut­ifully, keeping the St. Rose re- bouhders in check and preventing offensive follows. Tara at point, who is averaging better than 14 points per game, came up with several timely assists and accounted for 13 iharkcrs o f her own. Larissa had six, Regina finished with four and Jen had three.

Since the Pacers' loss to Im ­maculate Conception of Somerville on N o v. I I . they haven't tasted defeat s in c e .Th e y have posted vic­tories over a variety o f central and northern N ew Jersey public, private u id parochial schools in the process.

Th e girls w ill scrimmage over the ^toliday vacation in ^ p a ra t lo n for upcoming-January games with South Am boy Junior H igh School and Perth > Am boy’s Shull Middle School.

North Brunswick frosh runners-upWhile their elders were participat-.

ing in the Cranford Tournament, the''. freshman boys’ basketball team at

North Brunswick Township High ' School finished second in Uieir own' Riuder Freshman Tournament Tues­day. .

H i e ; N B T H S frosh lost to St. Joseph's o f Metucheh.64-45 in the" champitftiship game. It Was the first

: lim e “ W d w ^ w y e a r - o l d o v e n t ^ t ^ ^ the Raiden bad reached the finii].

titcy gave an all-out e ffo rt," said

North Brunswick coach Sven Sepp. " I t came down to the foul line."

. St. Joe’s shot 18;-of-26 from the free throw stripe, while the Raiders converted Just e i ^ t o f 2 0 rutempts.

victory over South Brunswick. Rob M cK ra n . was the high scorer for N B T H S with 11 points. ■

"Otherwise, we matched up pretty w e ll," said Sepp. " W e just didn't hit on our foul shots.”

In the consolation game. Highland Park edged South Brunswick 50-39. T h e O w ls were .beaten by. St. Joreph’s in the first round 64-45.

NB boys rip Cranford for first victory

ByT(^ 1

Terence Rousseaurts Correspondent

. " tf

. i .-

: Mark Cickowski and John Siele led N6rth“'B iu n s w lc k .''w ith ~ T l“ polnts' apieM. C ick o w ik iK o re ^ 10 points in the opening-rouiid' g a ^ i a 39-28

Photo • Caroine BednarezykT h e Raider frOsh. who are idle . ,until a Jan. 4 game at Metuchen, are . . _ ' . j u . i .2-2;-They-lort^o-Monroe and de- -WafCEvan8,.ehownhej;eeaj1ier|ntheseMori,coiilributed 13points fea^ Joto F. Kenney of iJelin In m'Tue8day*8 66-53 victory over Cranford th the first round of the their'first two games. ’ ' Cougar Classic.

The North Brunswick Township High boys' basketball team {Hilled o u t ) o f a tIuM-game losing streak Tuesday ' night, beating a winless Cranford - team 66-53 in the first round^of tlw ; Cougar Classic .Tasoh V em lkoff iisd ) the Raiders (1 -3 ) w ith a seaspn-hfgh 28 points and also pulled down 10 ! rebounds. . . >. " W c knew it would be a good ballgame," said North Brunswick ■ coach Pete C la ik . ' T m {iretty good | friends with the coach at Cranfeid, t but we knew we nented this one t o - gel back on the winning scan."

The Raiders were schi^uled to play ' Highland Padc in the championship - game Wednesday. Th e O w ls beat | Jonathon Dayton of Springfield 5 7 -2 2 1 to re u h the final.

North Brunswick appeared to be ■ struggling early on but led Cranford | 30-28 at halftime. .

"1 th o u ^t. they had a very good | defense, but w e've got a couple o f , kids back from the injured list that | mrnody knew about, so it inade us a .

Tittle more competitive," said G a rk , J whose entirely healthy squad doubled i its average total points in this game a s' . opposed to the previous three. |

"B u t we won, I think, because we I shut down this Idd, Corey Robinsbn,! their one basically real g ( ^ player." | added Clark. “ He had 20 ^ in tq in| the first half; we held him to,six In the.: second.” .1

The Raider coach .said a strong' effort from the bench helped nail I down the victory. •

. " W e got a good effort not only ; from our first five but also from four ! or five kids coming off the bench,” jsidd Clark. " I t w u a nice overallteam victoiy, Ithought. W e needed a team efioit because we~goi io~ foul ~ trdUble early in the game.*'

I

Post December 29, 1988 ISA

in arm for Tihant

JoAnn Unant...hits crucial free throws

By Bruce OckbitmSports Editor

Maybe two points is nothing to nuke a fuss about, but the timing couldn’t have been better for JoAnn Tinant.

With three seconds to play, the senior forward arced a pair of free throws through the ..net., in South Bninswick’s opener against John F . Kennedy Dec. 16. Th e fottlvshpis tied the. scored at 30>a||, and the Lady Vikings went on for a 34-32 victory

their f in t win in three seasons.Tinant downplayed her historic

shots.

*T was really surprised 1 made tlw m ." said Tinant. *T just, didn’t vyarit to let anyoiie down. W hat it did

VIKING OF THE WEEKfor me is give me a boost of con­fidence. Going into the season. I had zero confidence in my shooting.

“ People are congratulating me for winning the gam c.'flut I don’ t think that at .all. 1 just feel I gave us the chance to get t h e ^ in ." :

The imporwnce of those free throws •— .ironically her only points of the game — have earned T i n ^ t Viking of the Week honors.

When the 5-foot-4 forward hasn’t been m oving around a basketball Court, she’s been m oving — literally..

Her father, Joe, is an accountant with a construction firm, a position that requires hiih to accompany whatever projects the company takes oti. So f ar. the family has moved nine times. Fortunately for JoAnn. the firm ’s current project, the A T & T towers in Ea stB ru n sw ick , have taken four years and are expected to last until the spring; thus. JoAnn has been able to attend high, school without inter­ruption, ■ ^ ^

Rather- than ruing her . frequent ^locations. Tinant has actually w el­comed the opportunities they prewnt.

. "Y o u get a chance to meet all different kinds of people.” said the senior, who has lived in seven stales and Q u e ^ c . "1 can adjust well to different people and situations.”

Right n o w she is trying to make some adjustments on the basketball court. In the Vikings first three games. T in a n t has scored, all her points from the foul line (5-for-6). She wants to balance her offense.

"1 still d o n ’t have the confidence 1 need to shoot outside." said Tinant "Against N orth Bninswick 1 only shot from the outside twice and both times hit the rim. Toda^ (Tuesday) I stayed after an Hour to practice my shots. / - ' ■;

•T have to improv my. posting up,, getting the hall, tumirig, ' making better passes to the wings — doing cvetylhing faster."

A. member of the National Honor and French Honor societies at S B H S , Tinant woric ethic hasn’t been lost op

coach Rich Hague.' " I don’t think anybody works harder than JoAnn does," sgid Hague. "S h e ’s very conscientious. She’s , into the game heart and soul 110 percent of the tim e ." ^

Tinant first came out for basketball during her freshman year, moved up to the varsity the next season and earned a starling role her junior year, in addition to basketball, she has played center field and third base for the V iking softball teams for three y e a rs .T h is spring she' intends to. forego softbaU and work so she can stash some money, away for college.

Right now. college could mean the University,of M iam i, the University of Tam pa, Seton Hall or West V ir­ginia.

e x p o g e a r e d t o w a r d f i s h e r m e n ,

The Sixth Annual Garden State Outdoor Sportsmen’s Show, held' at Rutgers University’s .Gym .and Anrtex on College Avenue in New Brunswick, is just around the comer. The show, which will run from Friday tHrough Sunday, Jan. 6 , 7, and 8, has the entire family in mind,

This show is once again spon­sored by the Rutgirs University Departrhent. of Leisure Science. Now .irr it’s sixth yeay.^^U is the largnt sportmen’s shqw In N ew Jersey. Special events and features have maile this show a favorite with fishinmen and huntcis in the tri-state area.

Show 'directors Jack Kerr and Fred K itch e n e r, have brought together an expansive selection of fishing and hunting exhibits and displays. Product demonstrations, u well as a terrific line-up o f seminars and guest speakers, ate s u re to m a k e , t h is s h o w a menkrrable’ one.

YcHi can team the art of fishing from its basics to the more ad­v a n c e d m e t h o d s o f u s in g artificials,, trolling and fly fishing and eyeh leam how tp fish for b ig game such as tuna. Both' fresh

' water atidisdlt w a t^ Inshore is well.as'offshore big game rishtqg Will be.'topics of Seminars. Lake Ontario f i^ it ig w ill be coveted by experienced guides and charter captains.'

Hunters are invited to attend setninan on rattling horns and using grant calls for deer hunting. Turkey calling is always a favorite and show goers w ill be treated to demonstrations o f turkey calling and hunting m eth o ds.Tbe Fifth A ruiud Garden State Open Turkey Calling Contest gets underway at 2 p.m . Saturday. ,

: Youngsters as well as beginning

fishermen won’t wartf to miss the exclusive. "Basics of Fishing Fo r K ir f s ;” T h e s e s e m in a rs arc. directed toward youngsters and beginning fishennen. T h e entire spectrum, from.getting started to the more advanced methods of fishing, w ill be covered. These seminars w ill be given by Frank Santagata and the Yankee Bait Pro T e a m : R ic h D a v is s o n , SteVe Wisnieski, Bill Tice arid John Bink!

j . B.; Kasper will be on hand to give seminars on Bass and Shad fishing on the Delaware River. He will share npt only his vast knowl­edge of the river but his own personaP insight on the where’s and how to’s. Joe has put together a very informatjve map that is a must for anyone who wants to fish the Delaware. This map features

' some o f the hottest fishing spots along with the usual depths and structure features.

The a lii pro seminar speakers include the following:

f ; Captain Pete Barrett; Tuna Fishing. '

• Captain Rich Barrett; Blue- fishing.'

' • Captain "Jim Splley; Party boat fishing and wiakfishing the

, Delaware Bay.(•'Captain Bill ^o zie lic ; Lake

Ontario and the Salmon River.• Russ Wilson; Bottom fishing.• G ary Edwaids; Drift .boat

fishing the Salmon River.• Captain Matt M uzslay; Shark

fishing.• Captain Larry Rather. Fish­

ing Lake Ontario with down- riggers.

• Jim Robba; Turkey Calling and hunting secrets.

• Toh/G ua rin o ; Calling white- tail deer with rattling-horns and grunt calls.

Change in fornri liftsBy Bruce Goldman

Sports EditorA wrestler caii’l alway gauge his

improvement by hisj won-loss record. Take Carlo Soclo, North, Bruns wick .Township H ig h ’s' 189-po'undcr.' Socio, a 5-foot-11 senior, had lost three times over a two-year period to Mike Wallsten of Monroe. In his sophomore year he was.pirined twice by Wallsten, " who was then a (reshman. Last year Socio stayed off ,his back but still lost.

Later in the year, the North Bruns­w ick g ra p p le r received another chance when the .two schools col­lided. This time Socio was better, prepared. '

"Before the Monroe match. 1 changed m y takedown -technique from a double-teg takedown to start­ing with a single and then a double,' and that improved my takedowns a lot.”

The result was a 5-4 decision in Socio's fSvor. which enabled the Raiders to post their first win in a long time over the Falcons. , i

“ 1 w(as more aggressive. 1 worked the single to the double. That was the first match I tried it. That gave me confidence and .helped me dait. 1 wanted also to get back at him for

RAIDER OF THE WEEK

beating me three times. It was nothing! to brag about.” ,

Socio finished the 1987-88 season with an 11-13 record, including u third-place finish in the District X X Tournament and a second-round ap­pearance in t h e Greater Middlesex Conference' tourney.

ib is year the senior is o ff to a 3t0 - 1 start going into Wednesday’s Monroe Tournament.

For his strong beginning. Socio is the Raider o f the' Week.- ' In a d d it io n to c h a n g in g h is

technique. Socio atlribuics|-his ini- proycmcnti the pa,st two ’years to becoming physically and mentally tougher. H e also credits the coaching staff with becoming more aggressiv9 ort his feet, working more moves and refining his pinning combinations

One problem many of hiS'^lcam- mates have but docs not seem to afflidt Socio is controlling one's weight. He generally weighs in at 185 pounds, and he says his weight rarely

level

St. Augustine girls defeiat St. Joseph’s to even log

St. Augustine of Canterbury girls’ basketball team scored an impressive victory over St . Joseph’s in the sec­ond game,of the season. T h e victory even^ their record at 1 - 1.

The backcourt combination of Ker­ry Cristofbletti (22.points) and Carol Scanlon (18 points) led the offensive attack. The pair’s game was marked by accurate shooting and strong driv­ing to the basket. St. Augustine’ s blew the game open in.,^thc first quarter with a 14-2 run.

St. Augustine’s changed its de­fensive strategy this game and em ­ployed full court pressure with a trapping defense to take advantage ofitsVpttd and defense. ' U a n . 8 at 1:15 p.m. at St Matthews in

Leiselle Blunte, Christy Stover and Edison

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fluctuates. >A four-year wrestler. Socio took

aim at w inning, the. Monroe To ur­

nament, where he was seeded sec­ond. He would love to placc.in the top. three in the G M C meet and win the districts.

When he’s not wrestling, the N B T H S senior keeps busy, with sev- cn^.c!ub affiliations at the school. A member of the Italian Club and the Ita lia ii H o n o r S o c ie ty , he also belongs lb th c -K cy Club and is.a

Hiomcroom representative in the .stu­dent government.

During the summer, he. likes to follow the New York Yankees, soak up the sun on the beach, and earn money helping his father, who is a\ mason, Lhst summer he pocketed his- spending dollars- by working in a warehouse in East Brahswick.'

After graduation, Socio plans to attend college, with Rider. Rutgers a n d S e t o n H a l ! a m o n g the possibilities. He said he isn’t .sure about whether he’ ll be continuing his wrestling career

Kathy Jo hnsqn contributed w ith strong rebounding and finding the outlet pass. Maiybeth Banficid and Jodi Messzarps played r i t h great intensity on the trapping zone de­fense.

As a result of the strong per­formance, the reserves were able to gain some valuable playing time and experience. Bridget Mate and Megan Schmitt handled the ball with Margie McGann and Monica Peryra. Erin McCarron and' Kathryn Mullen play­ed the w ing and forward position. "This game was a confidence builder for the team. ■

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16A December 29, 1988. A

Post

wasBy Gary Cretan

Sports WriterLong after most teachers and in-

smictors were gone for (he day, Franklin H igh 's Lcn Rivers would be in his ofTicc. concerned with more than just lesson pidns and playbooks.

Len Rivers, 54, who recently ended a nine-year coaching career at Franktin, went beyond teaching and coaching. /

Rivers, bom and r a is ^ in Prince­ton, $picnt many long hours with players and'^other students, trying to help them work out their personal problems.

The problems either would relate to school or family matters. A number of his players came fro m ' either broken homes or from families with financial problems.' They would come to him with

questions that sometimes he did not have the answer for, but he would listen nonetheless. Sometimes ail they needed. wps an car and they knew they could come to him,

“ M y door has.always been open, and kids.have conie to me long after, thcyi graduated Franklin. Thcy~'are part o f m y fa m ily ," said Rivers, whb has never been married but has been like .a. father to his students and players.

He opened the d c »r to team man­ager Tracy Stokes-Welcome when she. needed assistance with her col­lege application.

"H e sat down with me and went over every point that needed to be gone over,” said Stokes-Welcome. “ Afterwards, he took me out to dinner and to a Nets gartic."

Another time the doof opened for Daikiel Shorts, a running back whose grandmother passed 'away during the football season. The senior Ic a n ^ on Rivers' broad shoulders during his time of grief. '

His football family bade him farewell with the 14-6 loss to Matawan D^c. 3 in the Central Jersey Group III title game. The rest of the school w ill see him off at the end of January, when he w ill resign his position as a physical education teacher to head the speakers bureau of the New Jersey Nets.

Rivers said he is proud of his accomplishments in his nine years at Franklin H igh, but hot because of the

more than football

Photo • B a n e Coleman

Len R ive rs re vie w s the Franklin H igh football troops after their loss to M a ta w a n in th e Central Je rs e y G ro u p III title g a m e earlier this m o n th .

CJ Group III football titles in 1984 and 1987 or his record of 59-29.

“ I am more proud o f my work to gel these students into college and set for that tough world out there.

“ if I could rebuild Franklin. I would get rid of the sports trophy cases and pul up the achievement

awards that our students have earned oyer the years."

He said that Franklin has too often been associated only with its cham­pionship teams and occasional out­breaks of student unrest.

“ The only tiihc you read about Franklin H igh is cither when we have

won a game or when we have had a fight ir, the school. I would like to read more about the positive signs at Franklin.

" W e have a good debating team, a gifted math team. W e have put a lot of kids in good colleges.''

Rivers himself comes from a gifted

Cagers get thrill of playing at MeadowlandsBy Fnmk J. Mmtro

S po rts Correspondent

E A S T R U T H E R F O R D — W hen North Brunswick and South Bpins- wick renewed their rivalry last week, it was more than ju.st another basket­ball game.

That's because the high school game was played at the Meadowlands Arena as U preliminary to a National Basketball Association contest be­tween the New Jersey Nets and the Dallas Mavericks.

The matchup was originally sched­uled as a North Brunswick home g,.. until Raider head coach Pete

Clark irfstigated'(he shift in venue.“ W e played up. here wher^ I was

with Cranford." said Clark. "A n d iast'year we played Sayrcvilic at the Meadowlands.

“ I talked to Lou Tcrm incllo (the Nets' director of sales) and told him we'd like to come back. I stayed on top of him and he gave me a couple of dales.to chooses;from. '

"1 picked our game with South Brunswick. I called coach (To m ) Carpenter and he said. T in e .' ". Both teams weie provided with ihc amenities of the Arena, including locker room facilities, and a prime ticket to the main event of the eve­

ning. ' '"W e'd like to get more scl^ools

involved," said Tcnpincllo. " W e o ffe r b o t h p r e l i m i n a r y a n d posl-liminary gam es."

The Vikings of South Brunswick were nrstTtime visitors to the Arena. They were looking to take a "just another gam e" attitude, according to senior guard Rich Altamura.

"W e weren't intimidated at all by playing up .here," said Altamura. "But once we looked up and around the place, we were a little awed.

“ At home it's all crowded and here it's spread out. But once the game started, we played a lot more relaxed

HOW T H E Y S TA N D

South Brunswick High School

Boyi*. BtskettwII................... S 0 0Cirli' BtslietbiU..,.................... I 2 0WreMlint...'.............................. I t 0

'Boyt'WiMcr Track............... 0- 0 0Girit’ Wiirier Track............... 0 0 0

ResultsW ^ E S D A Y ,'D E C . 21

Boya' Bw krttiallSouth Brutuwick 70........... ,Nonh Bnmawick 34

THURSDAY, DEC. t l Wrotlli^.

t.F. KemeUy 42............. .'...South Bniiuwtck 32

MONDAY. DEC. 26 Boya’ Baskatbal) -

Soirtb Bmnawlcfc Holiday ToumaiiKnl FInt Roand

South Bnirawlck tl.... Ambasuidur Academy It TU ES D A Y, DEC. 27 Boya’ BaikHbiU SoMh BnmiWkk Holiday Tountaiiinil

FtaalSouth Bnutawick 55............. Ne» Bmnswick 48

Schedule.TUESDAY, JAN. 3

Boys' BaaliHbaUMonroe...-....;........ at South Broniwick. 7 p.m.

CIrla' BasketbaUSouth Bnimwick................ . at Monroe. 7 p.m.

WEDNESDAY. JAN. 4.Wnaaifii

Bbhop Aht........at South Broniwick. 7:30 p.m.Wlaler Track

South maintkld.. si South BroniwKk. 3:43 p.m.

Boyi'.BaiketbJIl... V / ...... 0 3 0Cttli’ Baiketball..rw........... 3 I - 0Wttilllni...........^ ............ I 2 0Boyi" Winter ...... 0 0 0Ciili'Winter Track.............. 0 0 0Boyi’ Swimming................ I I 0 .Citii' Swimming................. i 1 0Co<d Swimming................. 2 1 0

ResultsWEDNESDAY, DEC. 21

Bays' BasketballSouth Brunswick 70...,-------.North Brunswick 34

f -____________

NORTH BRUNSWICK LITTLE LEAGUE

Reigistration will be Januaiv 7, 1989 10:D0am to 3:00dm Little League office

15 Unwood PI.(next to Senior Citizens Building Upstairs)

if you have not registered yet, it would be: to your chllds’ advantage to do so at this time.

Don’N isk the chance of your chlld)not playing this year

1- BOARD OF DIRECTORS-n ' ‘

!

TH U R S D A Y, DEC. 22 Wreaking

North Brunswick 49....... ...Monroe Township 18Co-ed Ssrimmlag

North Brunswick 124...,..-............. Sayreviile 48TUESDAY, DEC. 27

Bdyt* B^ctball C ollar Ctaask. '

at Cranford H.S.F ln l Rottod

North Brunswick M ......V.............Cranford 53’ GMa* Bastutball •

BIm Rftboa Toaraaroent It Metnchen H.8.

First .RotitidMctuchen 33..............Nbith Broniwick -28

S c h e d u l eTHURSDAY, DEC. 29

GIrb' Basketball Blue Rthben Taanumeot

al M eradm II.S.. Conaotarton Came

North Bramwick.....;va, Highland Park, 12 p.m. MONDAY, JAN. 2

Soya' - BoaketbaONorth .Brunswick...... ..■,.al St. Mary's, 3:45 p.m.

GIrla* BraketbaOSi . Maty's.i........ at North Bitinswkk. 3:45 p.m.

, WEDNESDAY. JAN. 4Boya* BaaketbaO

Metueheo............ ...at North Brunswick, 7 p.m.. Wresdh^

Nonh Branswldi........at South Plainfield, 6.p.m.WInIcr'Track

N. Brtma./Metuchen..... at Bishop Ahr, 3:43

V ik in g s _ _ _Continued from Piage 14Abelieved the defense ’ was able to thw art Lum pkin in the third quarter,

. w h ic h enabled the Zebras to i ^ I y .“ W e .sIo w m I h im down w ith a

bpx-and-one,'t. said Paige. “ H e ’s..a . g o o d player, th o u g h, and good p la y ­

ers w ill have th e ir nights."Carpenter, w h o said the. w in w as as

'satisfying as the 51-48 trium ph over ' Carteret two years ago, was ^ a m a n t

that the V ik in g s were more t h w a one -m an squad. . . ' f

“ T h is was a most gratifying w in because they stayed togethw,” said. Carpenter. “ W e ’ re not a one-m an te a m , and it show ed tonight.”

H e cited the improved play o f his g u a ^ — A lta m u ra and M cC ra c k e n , w b o s c < ^ “ s i x ' and to u r “ p b in tsr re s p e c t iv e ly — , the “ e m o t io n a l

family. His brother. Robert Jr. is a cardiologist, his sister Nancy is an Monomist in Washington D .C . , and his sister Eve lyiT i^ a elementary school teacher'in Highstown. T h e ir parents, Robert Sr. and Hazel, have lived in the same house on Green Street in Princeton for SS years.

A ll the children attended Princeton H igh School, and it was in this historical town that R o n a ld C . R iv ­ers went o n to teach ^ coach at the . Ivy League uniyenily o rP rii^eton.. .

R ive rs ^h o .h W lived in Plainsboio since 1973 when he came to-Work at Princetoh, said he is not only con-_ cemed about the troubled students at'' .Frahklini he is worried about the gifted opes as well.

" It doesn't matter whether a kid is a good student or not; the . world is tough and I fear for when they graduate and go but there. It is pur jo b to prepare them for reality."

As a football coach, he taughtythat reality demanded hard, conscientious work, but also that perserverimee did not go unrewarded, th e . 1984 team

'w a s a prime example. When the Warriors anived batk in Franklin after beating MataWan in the title game, they were treated to lan un­forgettable reception— it was R iv ­ers' most memorable nyiment at Franklin. .-

" W c had an ambulance escort into the schoo) and there were thousands o f students and Franklins residents waiting for us for a big celebration. It was real sense o f community out there Ihft I never w ill forget.".

When Rivers, who also taught and coached at the University of C o n ­necticut and at Stamford Catholic High School, lost his. finai game as cdach he had some s°pecial thoughts.

" I just hoped that the-loss did not diminish what we accomplished dur­ing the season. We won 21 in a row until that loss and we had nothing to be ashamed of. "

Rivers had no sports heroes while he was growing' up but he was a big fan of a man who left an impression on him at a very young age.

\ ■■ ■ V'u"Irw in Weiss, one o f my physical

education instnictors at Princetoh High^ showed nre how to get p a s ^ the X ’s and O ’s and care about a student's well-being. H e was always

kind to me and. ipy fam ily and I was deeply saddened at his passing-this '■year." '

As a tribute to Weiss, a moment of silence was Held at Franklin’s Held prior to the Warriors’ C J Group HI' playoff game against Ew in g .

How fitting that the Ew ing coach would be there to see the moment. Bruce M artz g r ^ up w ith Rivers and went to.high.school'with him. ..

’’ ix n is a wohderfiil mail e d We in high school sports w ill miss'him,*’

■said Martz. . ■. '; \

Matawan coach Joe Martucci/who played defense at U C onti when R iv- . ers was an offensive line coach there in the late. 1970s, also had high praise for Rivers.

“ He is not only a great coach, he is a great' human being with a big heart."' = During his own coilcge days at Springfield (M ass.) College; Rivers was a two-tim e A A U “ hcavyvyeight wrestling champion,^ H e ' finished fourth in the 1956 O lym pic Trials; his junior year.

Now. Rivers will be leaving behind 31 years o f coaching to wrestle with a ' new career.

\ ’ ’M y jo b will be to bring the c e n tr a l J c 'r s e y ' a r e a to t h e -

; Meadowlands to see the Nets, but more importantly, it w ill have players . from the. team coming to the scbools to speak about career choices and drug prevention." ^

He has already assumed his new duties and runs from Franklin to the , Meadowlands when the Nets are home. . '

" I w ilt be wdridng about two days ' a week in an office and the other lime 1 will be on the road, going to the schools in central Je rse y;". Since tnany schools iii. . the are a . know Rivers, he can be a vitaMiaisort between the team aqd the area.

In the meantime he will be in­volved in the transition from one coaching regime to another at Frank­lin. Rivers said he hopes one of his

.d istant coaches is selected to suc­ceed him.

\A l Heding, AJ Ray ,and Stevc

Foster have expressed interest in the head coaching job to Rivers.

■'They arc equally qualified imd J hope no one from the outside gets it ;" said Rivers.

than usual."' The .Vikings won the game 70r34

but more was involved than wihning or losing.

“ It's a great .- experience for the kids,” said Clark. "Th e y cap say they played at the Meadowlands. and they get to sec an N B A game to boot."

" A n d . most impi^rtuntly. all the kids got to play."

Clark also hopes (hat lust week's game can become the start of a hew tradition!

" W e ’d like to do this every year. 1 think it adds to the rivalry between North and South Brunswick." -

Surveying the fieldPhoto • CaroSne Badnanacyk

Freshman Sue Rowinski glances around for an open teammate iii Tuesday's gam e against Metuchen. North Brunswi.ck lost the first-round Blue Ribbon Classic contest 33-28.

blood and guts" effort of forward Henderson (seven points), the per­formance of Korey Jones (six points) and the rebounding power o f Rich Grant, who came o ff the beiKh in the 'second half to take some o f the burden off Lumpkin.,

“ Th e y started screening against our zone from the wings too m u ch ," said Carpenter. “ The y were really banging the boards. 1 brought-Richie

' in to bang the'boiuds, and Richie was able to chose their guante to the outside.” '

Besides Hagood and B ro w n , the Zebras scoring came from Keith .Gar­dner (to points, inclu(i|ng two 3-|wintets). B o U ^ Spells and Jef- fem m (six a p im ) , and Justin John-

■ son (fo u r points);- - - ^ ---------------------------' In thesopening round of the tour-

nament; the' V ikings cnished A m - b a s ^ o r . 81-18. Lumpkin led the

■ team; w ith 21 points,: followed 'b y Brian Hendrickron (13), Ivui W heel- e r (8 ), Jiih Gravegard (8 ), Wes T y lk a (7 ), M att Dekok (6 ) , Altamura (4 ) , C hns Hendrickson (4 ), Nelson (4 ) , G ra n t ( 2 ) , - M c C ra c k e n (2 ) a n d Nichols (2 ).

Johnson (15), Hagood and Spells (14 each) and-Jefferson (13^ and Brow n (1 2 ) led N e w Bnmswick to an 84-70 first-round win over Som e­rville.

T h e V ik in g s w i l l sc rim m a g e Dunellen at noon at -home F r id a y before resuming their regular-season. schedule- next week. They w ill host M onroe Ttiesday and South Plainfield. Jan. 5 (both 7 p .m .) before a m ajor engagetnenLwith .Woodbridge away, on Jan. 7. • ■'

Section B-f

B u s liie ^ People, Page 3 B R n a n d ^ Rates, P ^ 2 B Classifieds start on Page 5B

W e ^ of D e ce n ^r 28, 1988

I t ’ s a w r a p f o r M a i l B o x e s E t c .

staff photo • Maik Cnjkowskl^ Bill and Betty Lockarci opened their first frandhise in South Brunswick two weeks ago, just in time to (»sh in on last iTilnute holiday gift shippers. > , '

Holiday season provides boost to franchise s a le s :

By Donna LawderStaff Writer

Counting on an active holiday g i f t - s h i p p i n g s e a s o n a n d a y e a r -ro u n d p o p u la c e o f b u s y , two-income families w ho are w ill­ing to pay, for service, tw o M a il Boxes E tc ., . U S A franchises-have recently opened in the greater Princeton area.

B ill .khd Betty Lockard opened their first franchise in South Bruns­wick tw o weeks ago, just in time, |4r. Lockard sai<|, to cash in on last minute holiday gift shippers.

A rthur and Barbara Ledetiman opened their. East Brunsw ick store Sept. I . M r. Lederman said the store' has had to extend its hdurs to kcom m odate the barage o‘f^ be­tween 90 and 110 packages that come through each day.

Hoping to find a special niche in the Christmas rush,: M a il . Boxes Etc. offere a shipping service de­signed to appeal to the last-minute shopper. A customer can bring in a shirt, still hanging on a hanger, have it boxed, gift wrapped, .pro- fessiotially packed and shipped.

W ith a variety o f carriers and guaranteed overnight delivery, the company is boasting that packages sent as late as Dec. 23 w ill reach their holiday destinations in time.

The packaging itself runs around $2. M r.Lockard said. Shipping charges arc the standard fees for services like United Parcel Service (U P S ). "

• A n d when the holiday rush is over, the franchise owners agreed. M ail Boxes’ other services should find a pti^ket in the area’s busi­ness-laden com m unity.

M ail ' Boxes Etc. is the first franchised business endeavor for the L o c k e s . '

**We did not wish to, flip ham­burgers^ and we're no\ mechanically

, ,See BOXES, Page 4B

Phone lines reveal new informationBy.Deldre Sheehan

Staff W riter

T h e telephone has always been a tool used to gather information, from business pieople reaching con­tacts to n e ig h b ^ collecting gossip.

B u t advance in communications te ch n o lo g y h a v e increased the sources of information available and created a w hole new industry in which the voice at the other end of the line is likely to be a recording.

" O f course, vo ice information is as o ld , or even older thaii the telephone,’ ’ said John F . Kelsey 3d, managing director o f Th e Audiotex G roup, a consortium of six consulting firm s from N ew Y o r k , . New Je rse y, and P’enn- sylvania.

H ow ever, the industry know n as “ voice information s e rv ie w ," M r. Kelsey said, can be dated from the tinte the Information Industry A s ­sociation created a Voice Infor­mation Services Division^ about tw o years ago... • .

T ire term, v o ic e -. informatioii s e rv ic e s , enco^ip a sse s; se ve ra l potential uses fo r the technology.

Th e re is voice messaging, where a computer acting as an answering machine can h o ld individual “ mail boxes*', for every employee in a b u i l d i n g , r e c o r d i n c o n i i n g messages simultaneously, b r place a single message in all the m ail- b p xesatonce. -

T h e r e are a l4 o tra n sa c tio n a l' services, the tclejrfioiie version o f honre shopping o n television.

B.ut what in t e r e ^ I^n ce to n resi­dent M r. K e lse y most' is infor­mation yretrieval, which m ay take t h e f o r m o f 9 0 0 n u m b e r s , D o w l ^ n e n e w s service o r the T a lk in g Yellow pages.

These services are what M r. Kelsey refers to as "narrowcast- i n g i ” in c o n tr a s t to " b r o a d - c a ^ g . ” U n lik e radio and tele- .yisiofi where the listener sits passive e ly and cannot choose which pieces o f the news he o r she waifts to hear, infocmation accessed by telephone

. can be narrowed dow n to specific, subjects,by pressing the buttons on the phone.

M r . Kelrey. originally a product nianager f w Johnson & Johnson C o q ) . , became in vo lvq l in elec- tib d ic m edia m a district tnanager fo r A T & T . H is ipecid^^ in information'. retrieval came about

Staff photo • CXalkowakl

JohnP. Kelsey 3d Is managing director of The Audiotex Group, a Princetpn-based consortium of six consulting firm s from New. York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.

Bells’ entry into the market w ill not have an adverse effect.” 1 don’t think (the competitors i w ill be stam ped'out," M r . Kelsey, said. " T h e y ’ ll adjust like anyone else.'"'

T h e Bell companies can already offer the services b y selling the pages to a third company who then M ils the advertising, just as long^as their own sales force is not in ­volved, M r. Kelsey s a id . '

B u tr 'w ith ’ all the potential the Ta lk in g Y e llo w Pages industry con­tains, M r . Kejsey is itching to see a new M gm eht o f voice infoimatjon serviires take o ff; the 900 numbers.

when he jo in e d D o w Jones & .C o . !.and led the marketing developm ent team for audiotex services and was the national marketing manager fo r D o .w P h o n e , D o w J o n e s . News/Rctrieval and D o w ' Jones Cable Services. -

O n leaving I ^ w Jo nes. three years ago Iw set up his o w n co m ­pany, Paget Properties, an invest­ment .and marketing consulting firm that specializes in voice information services and a member o f the con­s o r t iu m t h a t m a k e s u p T h e Audiotex G ro u p .

Th e Audiotex G roup’s involve­ment 'w ith the Ta lk in g Y e llo w Pages' extends beyond the conr ferences.to the consultation it has offered both io the Donnelley D irtc lo ry o n the inception o f Its talking pages, and the overview o f the inoustiy it has provided to

'com panies like Pacific B e ll, Bell Atlantic and Am critech C p rp .

T h e implementation o f the pages in the D o n n e lly Directory has'been

- ; V

very successful, according.to M r. Kelsey.

Th e numbers arc free to the caller and paid for b y an, ad that plays

• before .the recorded message. Th e Ta lk in g Y e llo w Pages-industry has canted $89 m illion in advertising revenues in 1988, according to an Audiotex study.'

Th e Bell operating companies are p r o h ib it e d b y la w f r o m f u l l

^^pmicipation in these services b e -- cause, as M r . Kelsey explained the rationale behind the decision,, "they control the delivery system, there­fore it was thought that they should not aliro control content.”

But deregulation w ill ease some­time in the future, M r . Kelsey sajd, although nobody know s' exactly when that w ill come about.

A n d despite the protests of news­papers, w ho fear the erosionx)f their advertising revenues from such c o m p e t it io n , and s m a ll c o m ­p e tito rs -,su ch a s -th e — Donnelly Directory, M r . Kelsey feels the

. . These w ould be numbers that could provide "in te ra ctive " infor­mation, not merely a recording that cidlers access and listen to, but service that they could direct to answer specific questions b y the buttons on a touebtone phone.

* T ’m trying to do something that -is -e x c itin g .a n d -h a s value.’- M r

Kelsey said.

n a n p i H m i m i p

Already an owner of a Steve’s Ice creani franchise In the Princeton Marl^etfair shopping center in W est Windsbr, Brad Honigfeld convinced'both the Marriot Corp."^^and Steve's franchisors that combining it with his Roy Rogers franchise rriarfe good, business s e n s e . ; - ; - '

IGe cream connection helps Roy’s beat odds at an, unusual location

By Deidre SheehanStaff W riter

Brad Honigfeld and partner Brian Stolar found that becoming a Roy Rogers franchise holder was not as easy as it looked.

M anjott G o tp -. which grants the R o y Rogers franchise, turned the pair down,several times, before finally granting a franchise for a rcstaurant'in the Pathmark Shopping Center in North Bruns­

wick." W e were denied because it wasn't a typical Roy Rogers

location, a free-standing building out on the h ig h w a y." M r

Honigfeld said.Th e location — at the end of shopping mall structure - turned

out to be both a blessing and a curse.It was a blessing, M r. Honigfeld explained, because all the

incoming traffic must pass by the restaurant. A n d a curse because a drive-thru w indow was prohibited because of zoning laws.

A drive-through w indow provides a substantial amount of revenues for a fast-food business, according to M r. Honigfeld, He fell the restaurant needed a special attraction to make up for the

loss.Already an owner of a Steve's icc cream franchise in the

Pnnccton Marketfair shopping center in West W indsor. M r Honigfeld convinced both the M arriot Corp. and Steve's franchisors that com bining the two made good business sense

■nic Steve’s ice cream counter operates from a com er of the Roy Rogers’ , partitioned by glass walls and run by one employee.It is open only half a day on weekdays and all day on weekends.

" T h e most you can m ^ e from ah ice cream.store is $10,OCX) or $ 2 0 ,0 0 0 ," M r . Honigfeld explainwl. In this case, the overheads and initial investment were kept to a m inim um and the revenues, increased by an overflow o f customers from R o y ’s, were better able to keep ahead o f the bottom line.

A n d the two franchises arc mutually beneficial, M r . Honigfeld pointed out.

‘ ’Certain people go into Steyr’s w ho w ould never go into R o y ’s and certain people go to R o y ’s who w ould neVer go into Steve’s ,” he said. " T h e n ’what we do is coupon them.back and fo rth ."

A playground, aKff'Sieiparated by glass walls from the rest of the restaurant, is a feature that makes a “ substantial difference to the revenues,” M r. Honigfeld said.

“ M cDonalds has been doing it for ye a rs ," he added. " Y o u just have to vycigh 'the loss o f scats (because of the added features) against the volum e o f sales (they generate)."

T h e iNorth Brunsw ick location o f the R o y Roger? was particularly attractive to M r . Honigfied. Th e restaurant would be the only fast food outlet on the west side of Route .1 tetween M enlo Patk and Princeton, and "th is is condominium city ;’ ’ according to M r . Honigfied.

There arc'hbusing developments on both sides o f the $hopping cehtcr, M r . Honigfeld said, but gll the development has also meant that real estate prices in the area are steep.

“ Because real estate is so expensive we knew we had to dp w e ll,” M r. Honigfeld said.

T h e average R o y Rogers takes in at least a m illion dollars in irevenue a year, M r . Honigfeld said, and when competing for market share with Burger Kang and M cDonalds, R o y ’s usually makes 75 to 80 percent o f what those fast food g i^ t s do.

“ Th e y are doing about twice that amount ($ I m illion) in this a re a ," M r . Honigfeld smiled. " S o w e ’re happy with the revenues w e’re m a k in g ."

M r . Honigfeld has wbrkcd with M arriott C o rp . since he was .19 years old and involved in the catering division in what w m then the Marriott Th e m e Parks in CTticago.

V M r. Honigfeld grew, up in N e w Jersey, and although he worked all over the country iii catering for M ariiott C o rp , he decided to return to the state to fulfill his desire o f ow ning his ow n business..

H e has a firm philosophy of what makes a successful fast food business, and one component of that is cleanliness.- . r. ;

' ‘Y o u can tell the quality of an operation b y the condition of its

See ROY’S, Page 4B

2B Week of Pecei|fibef 28,1988 A Packet PuMcation- r - ' — i

R a te sMortgage Rates

Note: Current as of Qeoenber 2 2 , 1 ^ .

LENDER NAME

Coans

AUTO

Anchor Mwtgage Services Inc.Princeton — 1*800-548-2251

Bank of IWcklersey 9 Merceryllle — (609) 298-5500 <Bertefid Mortgage Corp.] Mariton — (609) S96-5S00f'Cardinal Rnandal Co.

■; Trovdsei Pa. — (215) 953-1500Carrie^ Bank ’’

Princetoii — (609) 520-0601Carteret Savings BatA

Princeton — 1-800-225-0165Ceniar ;

Princeton — 1-800-223-6527 :CenTrust Mortgage

Moont Laurel---1-800-288-5328 Chase Home Mort^me Corp.

EcBsoh — (201) 417-0400 _Chase Manhattan of New Jersey

Princeton— 180d-367-0148City Federal S&L

Princeton — (609) 987-2626C.M. Brown '& Co. Inc.

Manalapan — (201) 577-8400 Colonial Saykigs Baidt

. Onion — (201)851-9393 CdmNet Mortage Service.■ Princeton— 1800-648-0390

Crestmont Federial Savbigs Collingswood— (609) 854-5511

First Atlantic S&L. ' South PlainOeld-^ 1-800-223-0946 First Fidetty Baidc, Princeton

South Brun&Nkk — (609) 452-7760 First National Bwtk of Central Jersey

Bridgawatier - - - (1^1) 685-8443 First PerfOrmsKe Mortage Corp.

fhinceton— (609) 921-3921 First Provident Home Mortgage

New Providence — (201) 464-2344Fortune Mortgage

Mooreslown — (609) 722-1199 ^Freedom Mortgage Services, Iric.

Somerset — (201) 2718200GMAC Mortgage Corp.

Princeton 18008248114Greentree Mortgage Corp.

Mariton — (609), 596-1890 HcHnhphere Mortgage Corp.

Enqiishtown — (201) 446-111P

The Howard SavliH)* BankHamIHon— 1800-446-9273

fkmterdon National Bank Cllrllcm-^(^ir730-7300 -

Irving FkUHKlal Centers Morristown — (201)6824120

Jersey Pacific Mor^pge Co,, fnc.Old Bridge — (201)583-2121

Margaretten & Co kic.Mount Laurel — 1-800-3228631

Mercer S&LMercerville (609/ 58/-7400

Meritor Rtortga^ Corp. ' fAariton — (609) 983-0880

Mdiantic Home Mortgage Freehold — (201) 577-8800

Nassau S&LPrinceton — (609) 924-4498

Natk>nal State BankTrenton — (609) 396-4030

New Brunswick SavktgsNew Brunswick — (201) 247-1100

NewEraBank Somerset — (201)937-5000

New Jersey NailMial Bank Princeton — (609) 921-6000

New ■wsey Savings Bank Somerville — (201) 7212-0600

PaineWabber Princetcm — (609) 497-2X06

Prktceton Bank (Horizon)Princeton — (609) 924-5400

Princeton Mortgage Co.Pennington — (609) 921-9497

Provident Savings Bank Jersey City — (201) 525-2868

Royd Mortgage ,Princeton — (609) ^ 2 - i 160

Somerset S&L Bridgewater (^ 1 ) 5604800

StwpointeLawrmK6 — (609) 452-2633

The Travelera Mortgage ServicesPrinceton — (&)9} 452-0350

The Trust Company of Princeton Princeton-^ (609) 683-7314

Unked Jefaey'Banit, NJLPrincetai — . (&)9) 987-3200

UnItedS&LLawrerice — (609) 8968000

% D o w n InterestRate

Pointa T e r mV ia .

T y p e3yr

n o w4 y r 3yr

U s e d4 y r

10 8.50 3 1 ’ A R M - . . . . . . . . . . . . .

10 10,50 3 30 C O N 11 11.25 12.75 13

. ■ .5 - ■ 10.25 . 3.5. 30 C O N — . .■ — . ■.

10 10.38; . s ^ , 7 5 : : ‘ 30 C O Net

■ 'J . '™ ■; . .. —

25 10.75 ■ 0 1 A R M • -i2 \,: 12.75 14>

- 5 10.375 2.5 30 C O N 10.9 I T S 12.5 13.5

5 10.?75 2.75 - 30 C O N 10.75 I T 12.25 —

■ 5 „ 7-75 3.25 1 ■ H TO M . — ■*“ . — ' " —

10 ; 8.50 3 1 A R M — — „ ■

20 9.125 . 2 1 A R M ... — __

Certificates c of Deposit

EQUITY 6 MONTHS 121MNTH8 HOfile YELO YELO

5 10.875 2 :5 30

10 8.2759■ 3 1

10 7.675 . 3 1

5 . 10.375 3 30

5 11 '0 30

10 7.875 3 1

20 «• 9.875 2.5 3

2 0 .' 7.75. 3 . \ 1

20 7.75 1.75 ■ 1

10 8 3 1

10 8.125 2.25■ V

1

5 . 7.75 21875 1

10 10 125 2 5 30

10 10.5 3 30

10 0.25 3 1

1 0 , 11 2.5 30

20 8.625 2 1

20 10.275 3 30

■fo 7.25 3 11

10 11.125 2.75 301

.5 10.875 . 1 30

5 10.5 2.75 30

10 9.5 0 1

5 10.875 2.5 30

2CL 6 1.75 1

20 10.50 0 1

10 ' 10.375 3 30

10 7.75 2.5 1

5 10.5 2.5 30

10 10.675 2.5 30

10 9.875 2.5 3

10 8 1 1

10 10.5 3 30

10 10.125 3 30

10 ; 9,75 2.5 3

to 10.625 2.75 30

20 . 8.25 1.5 1

10 7.876 2.5 1

5 10.S 2 30

C O N

A R M

11.5 11.75

A R M -

C O N -^ - -

C O N -

A R M

A R M 10.5

A R M . —

A R M

A R M ~

11

11.5 8.55 8.65

12,50 8;65

12i40 8.4

12 8.8

i p s -

12.25

8.65

8.5

8.65

12.75 13 12 8.50

12.5 i2 ;s o

j

12 8.68 . 8.60

A R M . . . V ' - - - • V

A R M . . . . . . V — —,

C O N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

C O N . . .

y

. . . . . . . . . — . . .

ARM . . . . . . . . . . . . — . . .

C O N 11.5 12 13.5 13.5 12.4 8 .5 0 ' B.60

12 13 15 . ™ 12.5 8.5 6.68

A R M — — _ — ' , 1

C O N ~ “ — ■ —

A R M , . . .

C O N . . . — . . . . . . . . . 8.54 8.83\

C O N . . . « — — . . . .

C O N . . . . . . . . . . . . — y

ARM 11 11 13.25 . . . 10.5 8 .75 8.85

C O N 12.5 12.5 13.5 14.5 12.25 8.65 8.50

A R M — 12.15 12.95 12.15 12.15 .8.599 0.871

A R M . 12 12.50 14.26 12 8.86 a o s

C O N 11.99 1 Z 2 4 13.05 13.05 11.99 8.03 8 2 5

A R M l O i S ' 1 0 .7 5 15 ~ 12.5 6.36 8.86

C O N — “ ~ 9.37 8.90

C O N 11.25 11.25 13 12.50 11.5 8.5 8.6

A R M . . . . . . — . . .

ARM . . . 10.5 12 . . . 12.5 8.27 8.49

C O N — *:* . . . — . . .

C O N . 13.5 13.5 14.5 . . . 12.4 8.37 8.83

A R M . 10.9 10.9- 13.5 . 15 1 2 2 5 - 0.50 8.75

C O N . — 10.75

A 9 M r i p i T s , 11 • J 13.25■ t : ■

t t 9 .5 6m • 8.50

a r m 10.90 10 :9 0 1225*

12.75 8.68 8.70

C O N 10 11.50 11.75 11.75 10.5 8.38 .8.52

ARM Adjustable Rate Mtg.M ORTGAGE TY P E C O U M NC O N - Cmiventional (Fixed)

t Beneficia) mortgage loans also available at (201) 5 4 5 ^ 1 2 . t t Special promotion

. Equity • line of credit

Itennigaii’s ^ n s first in Commerce Center

Bennigan’s restaurant was the 'first tenant to open for business at the $ I(X ) m illion K . Hovnanian Commerce Center, North B n m s- wicki

Launched by Dallas-based 'S & A Restaurant C o rp . ih 1976, Ben- . nigan's now boasts more than 200 restaurants in 3 i states. It presently has 12 facilities in N e w Jersey, m <»t located in the northern portion o f the state. ;

T h e Cptnriierce Center location is " ’ the Jestaurarit’s secqnd facility' in

the North B n m sw ick arM .'C o m m e r c e .. C e n t e r , ' th e

m iliibn-squaie-foot development, is presently under construction on a lOC^acie site fronting on Route 1. B e n n i g a n ’ s is h o u s e d in a 7 ,1 6 0 -s q u a re rfo o t free standing building, located among th c rd c - ve lo p m e n t's 5 0 ,0 0 0 rs q u a rc -fo d t single story retail center, know n as , Commerce Place.

A host o f local merchants, includ­ing a bank, d ry cleaners,; weight control center, Italiafi restaurant, pharmacy and jeweler have signed leases and' are expected to open early next year.

' A mlxcd-tisc com m unity, the K . Hovnanian Com m erce Center w ill blend offices, high-tech and retail' f a c i l i t i e s w i t h a 'm a j o r ho.- t e l/ c o n f e r e n c c c e n t e f a n d built-to-suit buildings. It w ill be i surrounded b y I . C ^ nHovnanian townhomes.

A lO O K B A C K ...

... AT BUSINESS ' ,

.50 Years Ago December 1938

■ N ew Blood in the Com m erce Department and W orks Progress Administration portend a major re­alignment o f the executive arm of the government aimed at “ doing something” for business men.

■ A new foreign, policy for the United States is emerging in W ash­ington, showing signs o f a stiffen­ing attitude toward G e m ia n y, Japan a id Latin A n w rica .

■ T h e W o r k s P ro g re s s A d ­ministration is now supplying jobs to 3 m illion individuals ct a cost of nearly $200,000,(X)0 a month and is about to run out o f m oney. . I t urgently needs more "p u m p prim ­in g ."

■ G o v e rn m e n t re la tio n s w ith business in (He fmancial field, qnce a chronic sore spot in national affairs, now sets an example of cooperation.

25 Years Ago December 1963

■ Studebaker Corp. made its first “ horseless b u g g y " in 1902. Th e last car built in the United States rolls off the assembly line this month.

■ N ew Y o rk C ity changes the name o f its principal airport from Idlewitd to J .F . Kennedy.

■ President Johnson orders a sharp cut in the use of chauffeured limousines .and other “ status cars" by federal officials.

A coin shortage in this country has worsened and is now acute in many areas. Some banks offer b o n u s ^ for opening p iggy banks.

10 Years Ago December 1978

■ R e c o r d ' s p e n d i n g , t h is Christmas season is a sign that consumers w ill give the econom y a welcome push as it enters the new

'ye a r. • .

■ Fanners aie caught in a vicious economy squeeze. .M any ate on the brink o f bankruptcy. F a rm jn c o m e , discounting inflation, is at its lo w ­est level in mote than 40 years.

■ Higher ^ i a l security tax means less take-home pay w ith next year's-fii$t pay checks.

STOCK WATCH' " ------ ■ WBJNESDAY FRTOAY 124NONTH

'12/21/88 12/iam8BID ASK BID HKIH LOW

Amwlcan Relmce kiauranca....... 7% ev* TV« 10V4 6%AtlM................... ........................... 27% 28% 2B<A 29 42>A « 27%B i i i To ii...................................... 4% 6 4% 8 6% 4%Ctwonar................. ....................... 8% 8% 8% , e% ioy4 4%Church • DMgW.................. i i% n % ii% n % i4 ii%Cytogan..................................... . 3 3% 3% 3% 9% 3D a m m ..................... ................... 6% 7 6% 7% 8V4 V 5%kno DeiavM.......:...... .................... 19% 20% 19% 20 23 14%

....... . m 2% 2% 2% 4% 1%................... ............... ,1% 1% T% 4 1% 3% . %

NktalOe..................... .................. 37% 38% 37% 38% 45Vt 33%Phblon......... ........... 1........ ............. . 2% 2-8/16 2% 2-8/16 3 1%Squfcb................. ............... ....... ;.. . 67 ffi'% 86% 66%’’ 70% 65%ToM Raaoatch;.......^.......'........M.. 1% 1% 1% 1% 1% %Unitfd Ja rw y......... ..... . 20% 20% 21 21% 23% 19

BONDSM4I.> 8.94%

Piloea provided by Fahnestock & Co.,. Inc. The above prices are approximations and are --------- — ;— Ip change---------- r ----------

On Sept. 2 1986, the Business Journal made h^thetical investments of approximately $1,000 each fri five Prince- ton-area com­panies. This ,,

K e ^ U ^ o ft)K>se invest- nfwntsasof Wednesday. December 21.. Information

Provided by ahnestockiSi

Co. "

A ^e tP u M ca tio n Week of Docember iB, 198d 3B

Week’s BestFrom tho offices of Revere :Thnfel.

FaresNote; Current as of December i 6 , 1988.

Discount Regular Discount RegularFare Round Fare Round

(round trip) Trip (round trip) TripTo From Philadelphia Carrier From NY/Newark

1Carrier

Atianla $218 $550 EADLUAMN..HW.ML $674 . ■ OL.PI,UAAL.AA.EA''Boston . $128 $294 PI.C0.PA.TW • '-$118 $198 , ■C0.PI •CHbagO"' $168 $452 uamal : . $218 . ■ $590 UA.COALMEA.PI ,

Cincinnati $198 $464 AL.PI.0t;NW $196 $534 Al.PI.DLCieveiand $138 $294 CO.UA.0LNWAL.PI $158 $450 CO.UA.AL,DL.PIDalas $278 $816 C0.EA.MLALNWAA $278 $876 C0.DL.EA.ua,AL.1W.PI

Denver $298 $930 Cq.NW.EAMlMALPI $268 $830 CO.UA.H.EA.TWAADWOR $198 $480 CO.NW.PIALUAiw " ~ $196 $470 co.ua;olpial .Houston $278 $804 CO.PUlL,EA.NWMUWW $278 $924 C0.EMA.0L

Kansas City $258 ■ $726 Dl.UA.MLBN.NWAL $168 $598 ALAA,EA.UA,PL.C0Las Vegaar $338 . $820 CO.UA.TW.DL.AL;AA.EA.Ml $336 $648 co.al.ea.aa.tw.uaLos Angeles $358 $1,080 EA.1W.C0,UAAA,BN>I.PA $358 $934 C0.AA.0L,A

■ ---■.MMTl $216 $522 . EA.COALUA.NW,PIAA,OL. $238 $522 £A.Cd,UAAl.OLAi(Orlando $228 $522 EA,CO,UA.PI,DLAA.NWAL $238 $522 ea.co.olaa.pi.u a /Ptwenix $228 $550 C0AL1W.PI.NWMDLEA $298

1$516- alco,dl,aa,pi.ua

PfttstMjrgh $178 $470 AL.C0.UA.ML $158 $294 co.al.uaSt. Louis $238 $672 EA,UA.TW,AL.NW.OL.PI,AA $238 $672 TW.UA.C0Sait Lake City $318 $988 EA.C0.UA.0L.TW.AA $318 $988 • CO.UA,EA,AA,OL.TW

j

San Francisco $358' *v •

$1,172 EA,CO.UAMDL.PI,BN,TW $358 $i,ioo CO.PI.Al.DLUASm BIo ! $358 ; $900 co,bn,dlea.nw,ua V $358 $740 CO:OL.fW,PIAl.EAAATsmpa ^ $238 $512 ea.co.olpiaa,nwal $238 $522 ea.co,ua.pi,aa.dlal

INTERNATIONAL . V\ V

Bermuda $289 ' $334 EA.PA,AA.Dl» $266 $334 £A,PA,pL.AAFrankfurt. $562 $707 PA.LHAA $562 $787 PA,AA,LH,1WLondon $508 $826 PA.BA.IW $508 $826 PA,VS.TW.CO,BA

Mexico CRy $365 $616 C0MMX.PA $430 $556 MX.C0AAI W $646 $1,554 1W.PAAA $604 $r,47b TW.PAAFAA 'Brussels $478 $880 1W.SN ' $418 $789 PA.TW.SN

San Juan $244 ' $410 TW,EA,AA $244 $432 EA.AATokyo $1,398 $2,168 UAJL.NW $1,329 $2,168' NW.UAJLZurich $664 $894 PA.fW.SR $573 $803 TW.PA.SR

on...Harold Seidler

Squibb’s SantaUpon meeting Point Pleasant

resident (iarold Seidler, one would not immediately as­sociate him w ith the jo lly old man in red. H e is relatively slim , with a handsome yo u n g ^ face boaidered by a close-cropped gray beard. Yet,- his eyes glow w ith St. N ic k 's . characteristic sparkle, especial-, ly when he talks about kids and Christmas. .

T h e 14-year Squibb veteran retired from his {wsition as security manager in 1986. H e 's been Squibb’s Santa ever sin­ce.

"W h e n yo u 're a security manager, you generally handle complaints and solve problems all day. I promised m yself that when 1 retired, I 'd do some­thing fun, something that maker ^ o p le h a p p y," ex­plained M r. Seidler.

Falling into the S w la role ^was easy, for M r . Seidler, H is

n had bought him a Santa suit in 1983 so he could'enter- taiii his fam ily and grand- cliildreh.' ““ W henthe people at Squibb heard fiow m uch I enjoyed playing St. N ic k , they asked me to do it for the com pany’s Christmas parties,": he ex­plained. ^

H e ’s a.w ell-rehfesed Santa, paying attention to the sm alleh detail, even m em orizing the names'ofSanta’ s eight re in - ; d M r, just in case someone challenges h im .

What M r. Seidler enjoys most about his portrayal of Santa is the children.

"Especially the young o n ­e s ." he said. " T h e y come to

Retired security manager Harold Seidler donned Santa's suit for the estimated 630 children of Squibb employees^who gathered at North Brunswick Township High School

me dressed in iheirbest holiday clothes, their eyes wide and sparkling. Som e careu m y. beard in a lender and loving way. Th e y truly believe I ’m S anta ." Then he added w ith a smile, ’ ^After seeing five to six hundred kids in one afternoon, I usually'go home believing I ’m Santa, to o ."

T h is year at Squibb’S|40th annual children’s ebristmas party, M r^ Seidler donned his suit'for the 630 children o f ■ Squibb employees who gathered at N orth Brunswick Tow nship H igh School. A d d i­tional entertainment was provided by the Bond Street Players, a musical and acro­batic troupe.

' Before talking individually with the children and distribut­ing gifts to each one, M r. S eidler^dresscd the group as a whole with a Very special message o f love: "Christmastime is a happy

' time when families g e t ' together and share presents, but m uch more than that,’ ’.he- reminded, "Christm as is a

' time for sharing lo v e ."He asked ihe ch ild re n to turn

to their parentSi to s a y ’ ’1 love y o u ," arid to g ive thern a hug and kiss. i

"W h e n I sec all those parents and children embrac­in g ." M r. Seidler said,|"l know there is nothing I d rather do than be their Santa. ’ ‘

BUSINESS PEOPLE

Ahtoe Code*:Fares are subject to ayailabiiity. may change without notice, may not

apply to ail seats on all flights and are subject to restrictions!"

AA — American . J L J a p a n Airlines (JA L )' S K — SA S ,AF--AlrFraJifce LH — Lufthansa S N ^ SabenaAL — U&Aif M L — Midway SR — SwissairBA — British Ainways MX — Mexicana TW — T r^ W o rtdC O — Continental NW — .Northwest UA — UnitedDL — Delta PA — Pan Am VS — Virgin AtlanticEA — Eastern PI — Piedmont

Mdttter Group acquires toidea'Bcaie Corp.Th e M ettler G ro u p , Highfstown,

with headquarters' in Switzerland, a n d R e l ia n c e E l e c t r i c C o . . C le vcla n d r-O h io . have reached an agreem enm n the sale of alt shares of Toledo Scale C o rp .. W orth­

ington, O hio to Mettler.T h e agreement is conditional on

the approval o f certain governmen­tal authorities.

M eUler. a leading manufacturer of precision weighing equipment

and analytical instruments, regards the.acquisition as a supplement to its existing product range for weighing applications. T h e number of persons employed by Mettler worldwide is 2,900.

InsurancePeter F . T o y

h a s b e e npromoted to vice president, facul-. t a t i v c b r a n c h casualty, manjager o f A m e r i c a n R e - I p s u r a n e e C o ’ s H a r t f o r d

k B l branch and major accounts manager

for the New England m ajor ac­counts region.

He is responsible for branch ad­ministration, production and under­writing in the Hartford branch ter: ritory and for marketing casualty major accounts in the New England region.

M r. T o y joined Am erican Re in 1977 as a facultative casualty underwriter

M r. To y received u bachelor of

arts degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel H i l l . He received the chartered property and casualty underwriter designation from the A m e rica n , Institute in 1981.

M i;. T o y w ill be ijclocating to the H ^ q rr l-a rc a ^ y r ith ji? wife, J.emnc T lio n ia s s o n , atro hjs c h i ld r e n . Caroline and Geoffrdy, ' '

A m e ric a n R c -ln s u f a n c c C o ., provides multiple Ime reinsurance through branches in Atlanta, Bos­ton,. Chicago. Colum bus, Dallas. Hartford, Kansas C ity. L o s A n ­geles, Minneapolis. N ew Y o rk . Philadelphia. San Francisco; offices in Australia. Canada. Co lo m bia , Egypt, Japan. Singapore; and af­filiates in C h ile and the United Kingdom .

R o bert W a tlin gto n , a registered representative with N Y L I F E Se­curities Inc. and an agent w ith New Y o rk Life Insurance C o in L a w ­rence ville, was one of 35 agents

selected from m o re than 10,000 New L ife agents to attend an educa­tional sem inar o n the future o f Ihe oil and gas in d u stry. -

Th e seminar held in San A ntonio, Texas, was sponsored by an o il and gas management subsidiary o f N ew York Life. I ,

R u e In s u ra n c e , a in s u ra n c e brokerage firm headquartered iti H a m ilt o n T o w n s h i p , has a n ­nounced the appointment of Jo h n C la u se r to its sales department.

M r. Clauser, a 1978 graduate of Rider College, is now employed as a commercial lines insurance agent at Rue.

M r. Clauser resides in Borden- lown w ith his w ife . Lisa, and their daughter.

Send items for Business'People lo Vikki Bovoso, Business ^ i t o r . The Packer G ro u p B u s in e s s Journal, P.O. Box 350, Princeton, N.J. 08542.

J. * f t 1

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.'■.Nr/

Commercial & Investment Properties

NOW LEASING10b THANET aR CLE100*101 Thanet RoadPriheafon, N J Q8540 2 Three Story Buildings

^ 15 Acres— 110,000 Sq. R .

PRINCETON PIKE OFFICE PARK3131 Princeton PikeLawrenceville, N J 08648 .

6 Two Story Buildings 28 Acres — 266.000 Sq. Ft. :

MOUNTAIN VIEW OFFICE PARK850 Bear Tavern Road W. Trenton, N J 08628

5. Three Store Buildings 21 Acres — 275,000 Sq, Pt.

JINGOLI ORGANIZATIONR>R INFORMATWN CAU MANAGEMENT OFFICES

(609) 896-3111 or (609) 896-2047BROKERS ARlE PROTECTED,

We provide design service to custom-tailor the Inferior space to tenant specifications.

.Ci-.-V

t i'-, ‘ 'X T--- .;<■

4B Week of December 28, 1988 A Packet PiMcatkHi

MONEY MANAGEMENT

Now’s the time to begin digging out from the avalanche of charge cards

I f you h a v e been c h a r g in g . through the holiday season like a

child in a candy shop, it's tim e to .put down y o u r credit cards ' and check your finances! . Like a child

. w h o has pyeiindulged, y o u may nnd'.ydurseif feeling a jiltje queasy;- T h e average American dw O s ap- pibxim atcly SI,606 in unpaid re­volving debt. But even that amount can be too much of a financial burden. According to the N e w Jer­sey Society o f Gcrtificd P u b lic A c ­countants (C P A s ), most people can­not afford to owe more than 20 percent of their monthly take-home pay. :

However, for someone w ith an annual gross, income of $2 0 ,0 0 0 or less, even o w in g 15 percent can be a hardship. Remember, if y o u arc

. single, $ 20,000 in. annual gross ■ income can. quickly dim inish to

about $14,500 after taxes. Social Security ■ and other ftayroll deduc­tions,

-H o w much debt can you h a ndle?T o determine how much debt you

can carry, yOu need to calculate h o w much m oney you actually have available each month, .S ta rt by dividing a piece of paper in to two

■ coli)mns. In' one column, list any fo rm . of m onthly income y o ii re­ceive. In the next column, write d o w n all o f yo u r fixed expenses, including rent - or. mortgage pay­ments, utilily bills, car o r tuition lo a n p a y m e n ts .,a n d in su ra n c e premiums. T h e difference between yo u r net m onthly income and your fixed expenses is the amount ol

money you havP available fo r pay­ing credit card bills and other monthly expenses — such- as your basic food and transportation cosif.

N o ty you have a reaUatiC and ' perhaps unsettling idea .o f hoisy

muc.h you can afford to send to each o f yo u r creditors on a. m onthly basis. If you cannot afford to send more than the minimum, o r to pay all o f your creditors on tim e , you arc probably over you head in debt. A nd you m a y be headed fo r even more credit trouble if y o u can answer " y e s " to some o C jh e fol­low ing questions;

• D o you borrow money o r take cash advances on credit cards to meet current bills?• Does the thought of adding up all your bills make you panic'.’ .• D o you ignore.your credit limits?• D o you collect cash from friends in restaurants and then use your credit card to pay for a d iiin e r out?• D o you go on credit spending sprees even jh o u g h you k n o w you might noi Bb able lo m ake the monthly paymcnls'.’

• D o you occasionally receive overdue or dclinqitbncy notices?• D o you postdate checks so that your payments won't bounce?• D o you have trouble im agining life without credit cards?

'• Is your savings acc.ount slowly disappearing?

T h e m o re,.‘ ‘ye s" answers you have, the more you need to stop and review your spending habits and debt load If you arc already having trouble paying your bills cacti month, you probably need to take

NEW BUSINESSESM I D D L E S E X C O U N T Y

K u sto m Ko ntractors P .O . Box 153 SpotswoodK e n n e t h K o t a c s k a . J e r z yKrezeminskiContractingN o rth b o ro Associates 825 Evergreen Court N orth Brunswick Nicholas N ico la , Philip B u lfin ch Dry wall, metal stufl framing, ceil­ing and specialized carpentry

W e Antique’ inWest Main Street HopewellNancy G orelick. Stephen Maephee Second hand furniture and related products

j e j B Associates13 Springdale A vc.South Brunswick Jos-nh’ Batiito Computer Service

M J M anagem ent60 N. Main Si.CranburyMartin J. Co ffe y Jr Construction

O ’ B r ie n P ro fe s s io n a l P a p e r - hanging24 Barbara South Bnins'Wick -Joseph P 'B r ie h Wallpaper hanging

J i m K o h ih e p p 's Repairs and Service87 Washington Avc;M iiltow n :James W . KohiheppAuto and truck repairs and service

T h e Busitaess Catalyst 27 Wgshington M U llow n .Albert J . L o u n e zC o n s u lt in g and p ro m o tio n a l servicesB eyond Fa sh io n Plaza In c .979 U .S . Route One South N orth Bninsw ick D a vid R . H ow ard Retailing

P a rty It U p100 Sum m erhill RoadSpotswoodLaura FragapaneGift and party supply store

Educational G uidance C e n te r 10 Isaac D r.South BrunswickBrenda M . FendersonMatches students to financial aidsources for college and to assist incollege and career selection an(hcsipreparation.

D B K P rin tin g C o .10 Isaac Dr South BrunswickBrenda M . Fenderson and Donald FendersonPrinting, design and lettering on t-shirts, hats etc.

C h ick e n n ’ R ibs1626 Route 130 North Branswick Michael P Lupo Food service

B ru c e ’s W o o d w o rk ShopBox 493, R D 4 , Route 27 PrincetonBruce R . Schipmann Woodworking, home improvement

. " M E R C E R C O U N T Y

G ia jtg ra sso '^u ild e rs In c .74 C a rr A v e .Lawrenceviile Joseph GiangrassO'General Constructioii . ,P r o -T u r f Irr ig a tio n Go.4 Philrich D r.M ercervilleA nthony M . PascussiAll aspects o f irrigation installationand service

.MMland Management Group 379 Prihceton-Hlghtstown East Windsor .Louis M , DeRosa, Tcena B . De­RosaExecutive recruitingAli|)ort Tra n sp o rta tio n S e ir ic e S 2'H eirontow n Lane

Boxes

some lessons in debt management

M a n a g in g debtUndoubtedly, we are a nation of

debtors. According to the. Federal Reserve, Amcricains c a iry more than $6(X) billioti in consum er debt'. I f y o u ’ve been doing y o u r ^atie to add to that statistic, y o u have to rem em ber t^at old habits die hard. But w ith a lot of will pow er and some com m oq sense, y o u can free yourself from the credit crunch.

First o f all! hide y6'uf credit cards from yourself. Forget the y cxirt. If your mail brings you a tempting a p p lic a tio n for a p re -a p p ro vd d credit card with a limit q f S5,(XX) — tear it up. D on’t a.sWme that the lender knows your finaricial rilu- ation belter than you do ; I f you arc already drowning in cre d it, another card w ill only,drag you deeper into;! debt. T h e same generally holds true • for hom e equity ■ or personal loanji used td consolidate debt. The chances are simply loo good that such loans will lull you in to believ­ing that you have paid yo u r debtsand can now resume charging.

\N e xt, draw up an austerity budget

to .see if you can squeeze more cash free to pay your obligations; T ry to pay o ff more than the minimum ow ed on each of your credit cards. Rem em ber, the only w a y to reduce your- balance is by p a y in g off any new charges'in full, plus the inicrest and a least a portion o f the previous m onth's balance.

If you simply cannot find the money to meet your b ills , you will probably need help fro m a credit

counselor. There are 356 nopjSroftt c o n s u m e r -c r e d i t c o u i p e l i n g services that belong to the National Foundation for* C o n s u m e Credit and . can .help you' wptk- out a

;paym ent plan with yo u r •creditors. ■ T h e nonprofit coimselprs , charge o n ly a homihal fee", o r.' in some cases, no fee. For,a directory, write io the N F C C at 8'?0|. Georgia A v c . , Suite 507, Silver Spring, M D 20910.

T h e credit counselor w ill help yo u come up with a budget arid negotiate repayriient terms with your'creditors . Because they often w o rk closely with the creditors, they can usually work out a belter repayment plafi than yo u ' could. W h e n the plari is accepted, y o u ' w rite one check to the counselor each month who teen, parcels it out to the creditors..

A s ti last resort, you m ay want to contact your creditors directly to sec if you can work out an agreef . m ent, such as paying onlyjnterest for a few months. W h ile this rn a y' seem an -intim idating task, re­mem ber that your creditors want their mocny-can may be w illing to w ait - r if you convince them you w ant to pay.

. But before things get that bad.’ C P A s advise you to lake a cip'se look at your.credit levels, If your debt loan is approaching 20 percent o f your take-home pay. it may be tim e to cut bacic on your credit purchases.

Moircy Management is a column on personal finance distributed by the New Jcrsc} Society of Certified Public .Accountants

PrincetonFrederick K . HagiUs Arranging and/or providing trans­portation of people and/or goods to airports

R & D Com m unication s P O Bo x 7082 PrincetonR obert M eola , J r .. D e b o ra h R.

DennisCommunications consultants

H olsington En g in e e rin g 134 Nassau Street ,PrincetonRichard W . Hoisington Structural and site engineering con­sultation

TtJtal Research Corp. predicts more £|rowth

Executives at ..Total Research C o rp . told shareholders at the com­pany’s second annual meeting that the company is anticipating con­tinued growth

To ta l Research was awarded 33 new contracts in fiscal 1988, am- m ounting to 37 percent of the com pany's revenues.

In fiscal 1988. the com pany re­ported revenues of $ 6 ,973,000, an

increase of 37 percent over the previous year, and nef income o f $ 2 2 1 ,5 3 8 as c o m p a r e d w it h $18,463 in the previous year.

For the first quarter ended Sept. 30, Total Research’s revenues rose 22 percent to $1.83 m illion and net income increased 11 percent to $ 8 0 ,6 5 6 c o m p a re d w it h $ 1 . 5 m illion and $72,637 respectively a year earlier.

Roy’sC o n tin u e d (rom P a g e 1B '

restroom s," M r. Honigfcid said, showing off a cleaner than average restroom.

" I challenge anyone to come in here and find it d irty ." .But the most important facet, o f ntriirig it successful fast food

enterprise in M r. Honigfeld!s book is trrating your employees w e jl. T h e quality o f wryice provided influences the amount of repeat custom, and having contented employees also cuts down on the rapid turnover^ the business is notorious for.

“ W e try to pay th e m well and treat them w e ll,’ ! M r. Honigfcid said. "G o o d communication between workers and management is important-, too,”

T h e approximately 70 Roy Rogers employees are paid between $4 and $7.50 an h o u r and attend meetings to discuss cm ploy- ee/management relations.

M r . Honigfeld a lso intends to institute a plan whereby the general manager, after working fo r a specified amount o f time,

"^eams the right to b u y into the operation;" T h a t way it is m orethan ju s t a jo b f o r t h e m ," M r. Honigfeld

said. " T h e y w ill h a v e a commitment and w ill stay for longer.”M r . Hbnigfcld’ s _Roy Rogcis has only Ixten open since,

September but he is already thinking of opening. additional locations in the area and adding a D unkin Donuts to his current operations.

"M a rrio tt taught rne w cll,’3 M r . Honigfcid said, “ I always put the.profits back in to the business.”

Continued from Pag^ IBinclined!” M r . Lockard jo k e d of' hiiTtseif and his wife. W ith M ac- D o n iJd ’s and Jiffy Lube ru le d out, the choice to go with M a il Boxes E tc . was. logical, he said. After having w orked in t h c ;C o ^ r a t e w o rld “ for m ost of ojir liv e s .’ ’ the Lockards counted communications, w o rd piocessirig,. and o th e r of­f ic e -re la te d sk ills a m o n g their strenghts ail n e c c s s ^ sk ills for t h e s m a l l -b u s in e s s o r i e n t e d '

franchise.'; -. ' A d d to that the'growth o f service industnes. c ^ n h g ; t o ' - ^ busy.

tw o-incom e families, and Mail ' Boxes . Etc. sepmed like a good

investment to the new franchisees.

In addition to the traditional copy and : facsimile machine services, some M ail boxes. EtC; outlets sell Stationery items and office supplies.

A n d its 24-hour mail b o x service, gives busy'people access to their mail boxes any hour of the d a y . The com pany feels it has a niche with small hom e-tun businesses b y giv­in g the ow ner a suite n u in tw r in­stead o f a post office box.

~ :This",~coupled~w ith“ typesetllng ’

a n d w o rd p ro ce ssin g services, “ legitim izes” home-run businesses to their clientele, M r . Lederman

.saitd.. T h e box renter can have stationery printed,, listing the suite num ber as his business address, and. customers aren’t even aware that it is a home-iun.business. A n d he can have professional w o rd processing w ithout investing in co stly office machinejiy.

A n th o n y DeSio, M a i l Boxes E tc ., U S A president a n d .C E O , said he hopes the company^ founded in

J 9 8 0 ^ w ill have nearly 800 outlets o p e n ^ a c ib M 'Ih tr U n lf ^ ' States b y '

year’s end. H e said 175 stores opened in 1987 and 200 more came on line this. year.

To ta l start-up costs, depending o h location and! store design, are between $60,000 and $70,000. T h is includes the $19,500 franchise - fee.

A franchisee can elect to build his ow n 'sto re , follow ing M a il Boxes’ specifications, but D eSlo said most purchase the w hole package. H e called the total operation ‘“ v e ry - cost effective” as the company can ■ have the store iassembled in three

" d a y s T ” - ^

BANK CREDIT CARD OBSERVER — DECEMBER 1988 Lowest Interest Rates Natkmwide

Bank Name and Address APR Annual Fee

GraceDays

12 5 0 » $25.00 25 days/pu

I5 7 5 « $18.00 Odays/pu

14.I3% V (M C) $0.00S

25'diiys/po

I4.88%V $24.00 30 days4)

14.90% $20.00 25 daysAi

15%V $25.00 . 25 daysrt)

1. Pcopic'k B ulkCredit Card Plan P.O. Box 637 Bridgepon. C T 06601 (800) 423-3273

2. Empire of America 3171 Sheridan Drive Amherst, N V J4220 (800) 346-5481

■ i ■■■u^A:FW *w i“ ■■.CredU O u d Center P.O. Box 21658 Tulsa, d K 74121 (800) 922-9092

4. First National Bank of Atlanta24(KrPitdmont Rd. N.B.Atlanta, G A 30324 ^(800) 241-7990 '

5. Chevy Chase Savings Bank FSB 6200 Chevy Chase Drive U u rtl, M D 20707 (800) 638-8072

6. Connectktil Bank and T r u s t 'I Constitution Plaza Haitrord, C T 061T5 (203) 244-5000 •

7. Rainin- National Bank VISABox C 3 ^ 1 8 Seattle, W A 98134 .(800)999-8472

8. Republic National Bank of FtorlflaBank Card Center .

_ 2103 Coral WayMiami, FL 33145 (800) 642-VISA

9. .Manufacturers Baidi. WUiiilngJOD 15.10%V(M C) $22_.(X) 25 daysJb. . (bank is amiiate of Manufacturers ' ' ^

National Bank', Detroit, M l), P.O. Box 15147

Wilmington, D E 19885-9650 (302) 366-8478.

10. . Marine MIdiand BankI Marine Midland Center Buffalo. N Y 14240 (800) 624-6600

I5% V

\

SI8.Q0 25 days/pu

15%V $22.00 25dayVb

15.82%V(Visa) $25.00 30 days/pu

3.

6.

Lowest Interest Rates with No Annual Fee

USSA Federal Savings I4 .I3 9 (V ) $0.00Credit Card CenterP.O. Box 21658Tulsa. O K 74121(800) 531-b a n k

Manufacturer’s Bank, WItmington 15 I0%|V| $0 00(bank is an afrdiate of Manufacturers Bank of Detroit. M l)P.O. Box 15147

, Wilmington. DE 19885-9650 (306( 366-8478

. Dauphin Deposit Bank and Trust Co. I7.90%(V) $0.(X)P.O. Box 4J32 Harrisburg. PA 17111 (717) 255;2366 Security Bank and Trust P.O. Box 1156 Southgate. M l 48195 (313) 281-5170 Colonial National Bank P.O. Box 7430 Wilmington, DE 19803 (800) 223-3933 People’s Ftril Thrift More V|sa P.O. Box 38620 Louisville. K Y 40233 1800) 453-2017

25 days/po

0/pu

30 days/b

18 00% (V) $0.00 25 days/po

IU40%(V| $0 00 9 dayvpu

2190% $0 00 25 days/pu

Lowest Interest Rates of New Jersey Bmiks

1. Citizens First National 14 90% $15 00 25 days/bBank of NJ20S.Hanistown Road.

- Glen Rock, N.J. 07452 (201) 445-3400

2. Valtcy Nalkmal BankP.O. Box 406 BogoU, N .J. 07603 (201) 797-3366

16.80% $0.00 25 days/b

- 3. Midlantk National Bank .16.90% $18,00 25 days/bBank Card Center P.O. Box 2758 Paterson. N.J.07509 (20t) 881-3000

4. First National Bank Toms River P.O. Box 788

16.90% sts.oo 25 days/pu

5.

Tc«nt River. N .J. 08754 <26|) 286-3900 UnKcd Jersey Bank 17.40% $13.00 30 days/poP.O. Box 543 Hackensack, N .J. 07602 (201) 646-5072

6. Flrirt Jersey NationalP.O. Box 977 Jersey City, N.J. 07303 (201) 54.7-;700b ■ .

^ 17.80%T $15.00 25 days/b

7. First Fidelity Bank N .A . P.O. Box 15282

I8.80(V)T $ 1 5 ^ 25 days/b

Newark, N .J. 07192 (201) 565-320a

U

8. UorizoaBank 400 Webro Road PartipiMny. N .J. 07054 (201) 285-2000

19.80% $13.00 25 days/b

Abbreviations for Rales and Services Abbreviations for Grace PeriodsV - Variibie rate • pu >■ calculated from date of purchawVISA “ Visa Card only offerite . po ^ calculated from date of po^ng -M C > MastaCaid only offered T - Tiettd

b -■ calculated from day of billing

Bank addrenes aii for credit card opendons, but applications can often be obdtined at any local bnaeh otnee. -

\ \

P a c k e t P u b i i c a t i o n s

\-.Prihbeton Packet#The LgwrenQe L e d g e r P r e s s • the Central Post • North,Brunswick. Post. • • - The Pronklin News-Peo^d •The Nlahville~-News# Hillsboroagh' “660000 •The Hamilroh - Observer •HooeWel I Volley News . •. ■

A Packet Pubfoation W eek o f .Decem ber 28, 1988 S B

The Princeton Packet 609-924r3250The Lawrence Ledger 609-896<9100Wlndtor-Hlghts Herald 609-448-30051The Cranbury Press 609-395-0730Hilisborotigh Beacon 201-359-0850The Manvuie News 201-725-3300The FraniMln News-Record 201-469-9040The Central Post 201-329-9214North Brunswick Post 201-821-0550The Hamilton Observer 609-587-1012Hopewell Valley News 609-466-1190

CLASSIFICATIONSRfCRUnM BIT100 • Help Wanted

it 05 - Resumes 1 1 0 - J ( ^ Wanted

'ANNOUNCBMen•115- Announcements 117.- Camps &: . scjioois '120- P e r ^ a ls .125- Card of Thanks

lOllCHANDIU130- HoBday Mart

135- Merchandse Mart136- Bargain Mart 138 - Computers 140 - Meratapdise

Wanted 145 - Musical

Instruments 150 - Collectibles 155 ■ Anlk^ues 160 ■ Oarage Sales 165 - Rea k ^ e t &

Rurhmage Sales 170 - Ructions

KTS a ANMMS175 - Pets a Animals 180 - Lost & Pound

M lV iC iS186 - instructlcin 191 - Enlerlalnmenl

196 - Catering 201 - Photography 206- Piano Tuning 211 • Furniture

Restoration2 1 6 - Business Services 221 - Finandai Services'

■226- Commercial.Services '

231 - Sipedai Services , 236 - Home Seivices ' 241 • Building Seivices 246 - Home Repairs 251 - PalnUng & .

Papertiimgir^2 5 6 - Electridans 261 - HeaUng &

Air Conditioning 266- Plumbing 271 - Roofmg & Siding 276 - Movirtg & Hauling 281 - SiKWpiowIng

286- Paving 291 - Fendng 296 - Gardeitlng &

Landscadng

AUTOMOnVI/HCMATION301 - Auto Tires/Suppiies 306- Auto Repairs/

Servtees'311 - Autos Wanted 316 • Autos For Sale 321 • Motorcydes 326 - Trucks

331 • Machinery &Equipment '

336 - Recreational Vehides

341 - Mobile Homes 346 - Boats 3 5 1 -Airplanes

RBfTAU355 • Housesitting 3 6 0 - Wanted T o Reht 365 - Apt/House to Share 370 - Rooms For Rent 375 • Apts. For Rent 380 - Houses For Rent 382 - ToWnhouses &

Condos For Rent

REAL ESTATE385 - Resort Properties 390- Business

Properties 395 • Invesimeni

Properties 400 - Business

Opportunities 405 • Real Estate

Wanted,410- GarMe/slorage

For Rent4 1 5 - Land For Rent 420 • Land For Sale 4 2 5 - Cemetery 430 - Real Estate

For Sale435 - Pennsylvania

Properties * •

<00 Help Wanted loo Help Wanted <” Help Wanted <oo Help Wanted <oo Help Wanted <oo Help Wanted

PREPAID CLASSIFICATIONSJobsw W anted W anted T o Rent

rP erson als Hd,usesitlingM oving S a le s ' Apt/House t o S h are

RATESPrivate Party Ads

N E W R E D U C E D R A T E S

B E S T B U Y

4 lines - 15 p a includes Extras i

aers.11.50

4 lines - 1 3 papers - includes Extra s $ 8.50

4 line minim um additional lines $1.00

rates are one time insertion

C om m ercial'Set Solid

4 lines ■ 15 papers • indudes Extras1 week ■ $31.982 weeks • $63.96Each additional week - $16 41

4 lines - 13 papers - indudes Extras1 week • $23.552 weeks - $47.10

. Each additional week ■ $10.95

4 lines • 13 papers1 week - $ ^ .4 02 weeks - $44.80Each additional week • $10 45

4 lines - 11 papers1 week ■ $16.50 '2 weeks - $33.00Each additional week • $7 00

BOX CHARGE$7.00 Held • $ 8 .5 0 M ailed

Per O rder.P er Month (6 :add 'l. words required for blind Bds).

“R eply Box # _ _ _ c/o Princeton Packet

Packet TVB VIDEO CUSSIFIEDSVideo Classified Ad-ons; P H O TO S W ELCO M E

1 w eek-$ 7 .5 02 weeks • $15.403 weeks * S16«S0

Until Further Notice Ad-ons; $20.00 per month

Video Classified TE LE V IS IO N O N LY: PH O TO S W ELC O M E1 week • $20.06 T m o n th -$75.00

To'place a video only iad, Call Packet ext. 157Packet TVS Video Classined are seen in over

4800 cabled homes in Princeton Borough & Township

HOW TO REPLY TO A PACKET BOX NUMBERAddress your reply to the specific box num ber c/o The Princeton P adtet, P .O . Box A .C ., P ilneeton, N j ra 5 4 2 .Replies to a Placket box number should be mailed In a tetter size envelope. Oversize envelopes and packges will be held for pIck-op at the Packet office;

DEADLINESTo Place Ada:

Friday 5 pm to begin Tuesday Packet/Ledger , Friday 5 brti to begin itr the Extras Mondfay 5 pm to begin in W ednesday

To Cancel Ads:Friday 5 pni to cancel Tuesday Packet/Ledger Friday 5 pm to cancel the Extras M onday &T)ni to cancel W ednesday

Please be sure to jo t down your cancellation num ber arid retain for your records.

NOTICE - pleasb check the first insertion .of yc The Packet cannot be responsible for m ore the

your ad. ian one

incorrect ineertion. All ads are restricted to their proper classifications and to the regular Princeton Packet style of t y ^ . Right is reserved to edit or reject any classified advertising copy.

' H O U O A Y D EADLINES

Thursday, December 29, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line to place or cancel yoiir regular. classified ad for Tuesday. January 3,-1 g89.

- • . ‘ IFriday, December 30,

--1988 at 5 p.tfi. Is our dead­line to place or cancel your Tegular classilied .ad for. Wednesday. January . 4.

'1989. '

W E W ILL B E C LO S ED M ON . JA N U A R Y 2. 1989

. N ew Year's Day HoSday

A C C O U N T CLERKS (2) ■ F o r S o m e rs e t C o u n ty Board of Social, Services. Somerville, flouiine. book­keeping tasks requiring ac­curacy and speed. For a p -. pointment call Anne Brad^ ley, 20T-526-8800.

A C C O U N TIN Q C LE R K

' General knowledge & exp­erience in LCIus. 1-2-3 a must. ’Call today lor this'

.Jong term (amp assign- ment. S T A F F BUILDERS;

' 211 College Road East. Princeton. 609-452-0020.

A C C O U N TIN G CLER K

A manufacturing firm lo­cated 15 mins from Rrtnce- ton, needs your accounlira experience & typing skills Will-train (or a variety ol assignments, such as Ac­counts Receivable & A ^ counts Payable-in a eofn- puterized environment.

We otter a good benent program along with a salary commensurate with experience.

Bor appi please call:

K O O LTR O N IC INC 609-466-3400

, A C C O U N TIN G C LER K T O $17K

Very professional company IS seeking an individual with a good figure ap- ptitude. to work In their ac­counting department. Lotus 1-2-3 required. Top bene­fits. 401k. education asst. & a lot more Call for more information.

tn

609-520-1131 3 Independence Way Princeton, N J 08540

Fee Paid

A C C O U N TIN G MANAGER - 3 -5 y rs e x p e rie n c e , through financial state­ments. Send resume to: B o x # 1 1 2 3 8 c/o T h e P/inceton Packet.

A C C O U N TIN GSee our Ad In Today's Paper Under "CLERICAL” G E N E R A L A U TO M O TIV E S P E C U U JTY C O M P A N Y

A C O L G A T E PALM OLIVE C O in Party Plan Sales looking for ambitious Moms to work min 10 nights per nio & earn $1000.

Call 609-737-8350 be­tween ibam & 4pm. P.S, You'll Love This Job1

ADM INISTRATIVE A S S T - For busy E. WIndosr Real Estate Office, Diversified duties,’ flexible hours, leave message, at 609-799-9617

M0R6M HaCDES*

SECRETARYi A- . ’

Lwge Mercer County oontpsny. offers atoiMnft • lOnBlIBnTvOBnSTICB: IQOMRMeendkWatiiMii t p M - v r . l i i . ’ bAOk^

S0l-M7-im

ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK TYPIST

Corhe grow i ^ this small mariulacturlhg company lo­cated near hrificaton, n J, where your talents in gen­eral office procedures & typing skills will be com - psrisateci -for. We offer a very congenial & informal environihonl, atong wtth a ggpcLbeijelrt program.

For more info & diJectioni please Call or send resume to;

K O O LTR Q N IC INCDept AF-3 PO Box 504

Princeton NJ 08540 609-466-3400

- ADM INISTRATIVE A S S T Busy Princeton olfice ] |s seeking a dependable indi­vidual with word process­ing, organizational skills, > and pleasant phone'man­ner. Must have 2 years experience or equivaient. Competitive salary ' and good, benefits. Send re­sume to; Dawn DeMmt, Government Finance As­sociates Inc.. 742 Alex­ander Rd.. 3rd Fir. Prince­ton, NJ 08540___________

i f - r a / n c

av/s

loymenty'\

A L L FEES P ;B Y C U E N T O C ^ A N i E S

• Administrative• Secretaria/• Word P fo ^ s in g• Accounting• Bookkeeping• Customer Service• Receptionists50 N. Main St. Cranbury

609-655-8333

'‘A D M I N I S T R A T I V E ! ASST/Inlormation & Relap

. rat Specialist - tor snfall Princeton Jet office. Must possess strong W P & tele­phone skills. Job offers highi starting salary, good benefits & a pleasant work­ing environment Call Pal or Gerry, al 609-924-5865 to schedle an appointment

ADMINISTRATIVE POSITION

Young, energetic sales or­ganization seeking profes­sional with excellent olficeskills.

• Word Processing - Data Entry & Analysis

• Pleasant Phone Manner, w orks well in d e p e n ­dently

• Sell Starter with excel­lent follow thru, divers­ified duties

Salary commensurate with ability. Sand resume to; PO Box 1528, Princeton, N J . 08542:ADVERTISING A G E N C Y • seeks detail-oriented per- sort for clericar support, cornputer data entry & back-up for receptionist. Knowledge of computers & bookkeeping required. Sal­ary commensurate w/ex- perience. Send resume to; Cathy Walker, Dana Com­munications, 2 E. Broad SI., Hopewell, N J 06525.

A v o n

A FUN W A Y T O E A R N E X TR A $$$

Locally 609-587-44T4 or Toll Free

1-800-662-2292

A N IM A L R O S P I T A L - Seeks p/l Veterinary Assis­tant 4-8;30pm, 2 or 3 week­days, alternate .Sals, 6am- 2;30pm. Dulles IncI thand- ling anim a.is, hospital cleanup, light lab woriq will train person al ease with animals and hard working. Ideal for student. Apply Kingston Animal, hlospllal; RIe 27, Kingston, NJ. 609-524-7415. V

A R C H ITE C TS - Excellent opportunity , lo/ , . qualified, architects . In a mediuni- sized awrd winning' fimt, min. 3 yrs experience. Send resume to Kehn Shatken Sharon; Alch- itects, 337 Witherspoon St, Princeton, N J 08542 dr call 609-9.21-1131 • •

ARE YOU A TEAM . PLAYER LOOKWG

FOR GROWTH?Local olfice ol national or­ganization needs 4 full time career minded individuals yrilling to work hard and be Irairiod, We provide educa- lion, earn while you laam. choice of location. Potential f irs t y e a r e a rn ig s ol $35,000 Call Mr Hill. 609-737-0100 or eves 586- 6985It could change your life!

A TTE N TIO N SENIORS - ^ ' t ptositions 2o hM«k avail

as infomtkUon & referral coordinators for health care organization. Imtolves re­sponding to telephone in­q u irie s from M edicare beneficiaries. Training provided. Ideal tor retired health care prof. For inter­view please call or write: The Peer Organization ol NJ, Brier Hill Ct, East B ru n sw ic k . N J 08816 201-238-5570. 'BABYSITTEFi - Wpnted lor Plalnsboro Church. Sun­day m'ornings 9*30am- 12:30pm. It interosted call 609-799-0855 Ive msg

, BankingH EAD TELLE R

2 yrs commercial exp req'd Good supervisory skills Must have Hoad Teller exp Twin Rivers & Rossmoor otflces

TELLE RCopy Reading. Personable indMduaTw/good math ap- ptitude. Banking exp preTd. Cashier exp req'd. Full time in Rossmoor. E- Windsor, Plalnsboro. So. Brunswick & Twin Rivers Pari lime in Cranbury & Jamesburg

Competitive salaries & out­sta n d in g benefits To schedule an interview in our Cranbury olfice call: 609-3954)602 ext 5021

MIDLANTC BANKEOE

BOOKKEEPER/ADM Asst - Bank, fees, data eniry, doricalr . p/t or An.'. Exp pre lerr^. 201-249-0384 .BOOKKEEPER A S S T - Pit or f/t. small N a s ^ u St of­fice, flex hrs. Call 609- 924-2040.B O O K K E E P E R - Exp necessary, small bsulness, p/t IncI general office duties. Good satsry, com­fortable working cond. Im- med opening. Inquire at 201-329-9003.

BOOKKEEPER - For do- . vetoper in Belle Mead area, to haridle all facets of re­ceipts prtd disbursements, Hoursk 8:30-5. Call Norma at 201-874-8686. ' I

E M P L O Y M E N TO P P O R T U N I T I E S

Rapidly ex|

E w in g area.Pennington/

A S S I S T A N T b 6 0 K K E » E RThis position will be responsible for accounts payable, accounts receivable, and sales audit- ing using a computerized system. Som e famili­arity wHn datsiprocesslng is preferred.

W A R E H O U S E O P E R A T O R S ^Responslbiliiies Include receiving, ticketing and

.ghlpplng out m erchandise., N o , experfence is necessary;'

W e offer a compethive salary and a complete benefits package. Interested candidates should send their resume or apply to: i ■

A N N E K L E I N O U T L E Tn.! id

V/." ; I'.kiUin NJ OHfJifi idOOi / i,' fJiOO

BCXDKKEEPER - Full time. Through general ledger. Small printing business. Call 609-586-9606 '

BOOKKEEPER - Reliable, lull charge thru General L e d g e r. 12-18 hts/wK- Salary $12-$15 per hr, b a sed. upon experience.

.-Flexible -daytime ■ hours. Pjeasanl working environ­ment. Send resume to; P rin ce to n R e c o rd Ex.- change, 20 Tulane • St. Princeton. N J ' 08542 jjr call. 609-921-dsai'.

BOOKKEEPERPart time in Pennington P re te rra b iy m o rn in g s.

' small business. No payroll. 609-737-3333. 'C A FETER IA W O RKERS - ; N e e d e d lo r M o n r o e

' schools. Contact: Nancy at 201-521-3448. CARPENTER/Fram er- Ex­perienced only, steady work, benellls, Princeton area. Call 201 >329-2262.

CERTIFIEDHOME HEALTH AIDES

AND UVE-tNSTrenton Princeton area Patti. STA FF BUILDERS H O M E H E A L T H S E R ­VICES. 211 College Road East Princeton. N J 609- 4 5 2 -0 0 2 0 or 201-246-1687.____________________

C H EM IS T - Entry level. 2 year plus college preferred. Will train fonenvironmenial

• laboratory! Contact Kevin Conaway. Princeton Tes­t in g L a b o r a t o r y , at609-452-9050____________

CHILD CARE - Loving grandma lor baby girl. My home or yours. Spanish speaking a - Libby. 609-292-1770 or 448-3454eves.;_________ __________

CH ILD CAR E Providers - Needed In Princeton. La,w. renceviile. Pennington & surrounding areas. Work at horne-full or part time. Earn S400/wk or more! Great demand lor inlanl. toddler & afterschool care. Join (he committment to quali.'y child care, a growth pro- lession Call The Child Care Connection, a non­profit agency. We offer training, telerrals & slate registration. C a ll. 609-896-2171.__________ ■

C IR C U U T IO N O U TSID E S A LES M A N A G ER

The successful candidate should be familler ^ th all phases ol outside subscrip­tion sales including door- to-door, community group sales, outside contractors, etc. Position offers strong potential tor an aggressive inaividual. Salary, com­mission, and excellent ben­efit package. Please, send resume arid salary risquife- menis to: Can Pitcher. Circulation Sales Manager.

.Th e Princeton Packet , 300^WKherspoon St Princeton, N J 08542

609-924-3244 -

CLEANEHS/OFFICE - Part, time evenings. Must.have car. Dayton area. Good siarting. salary. Cali Kevin 201-225-0662 or 609-452-0366. ___________

CLEANING H ELP - Good rate, must have own car. 6:30am-9;30am & 9;30pm- 6;30am. 609-394-3469. .

CLEAN ERS - Immediate openings. P/t 3-4 hra even­ings. $54tr to start. Prince­ton JunctioryPlalnsboro ar­eas, (New accounts). Must have transportation & be reliable. 609-448J390, 9- 5.

CLERICAL A S S IS TA N T - Answer phones, typing, til­ing,' general office as-. sislance. Requires good nlath skills. $t4K + . Send ■resurrie, including salaiy history to PT-08, PtJ Box 62t.' Princeton, N J 08542.

CLERICAL - Immediate opening tor a dlversitied person.in 's fast growing company. Must relate well

-Jo people & have strong organizational skills. Ex-

;cellent benelils, 5end re­sume to: Bonnie Brandt.' CN5319, Princeton. NJ 08543-5319

ClericalNight/

Part Ttmo

APD, the world's leading' computing services com­pany. has a clerical pos­ition available at its Da^on. NJ facility which is liwaled two blocks oft ol Exit 6A ol the Now Jersey Turnpike

This position requires a well-organized individual who will sort payrolls and keep track ol all extra de­liveries, Hours are; Mon­day. Midnight to 4am;. Tuesday, Midnight to 6am; Wednesday Thursday, Fri- day.' Midnighl to 5am.

For more inlomtation about our competitive salaries and ben efits pro gram please call or apply in per­son Monday-Friday be­tween 8 :3 0 a m -5 p m at Automatic Data Prpcessi- ing. 101 Herrod Blvd. Day- ton. NJ 08810-0799.

609-395-5252

ADP

Art. equal opportunity em­ployer

CLERICAL Part Time • Liberty Mutual Insurance Group seeks individual 5 daysper week, 10:30-4:30 with good phone manner, filing & light typing skills. Call 609-275-8282. ask lor Ruth. E C E ______________

CLERICAL PERSON - Full or part time, position with diversilied duties including reviewing, maintaining & fil­ing ol records, good typing & language skills required, attention to detail essential a flex hrs. Apply: Asst Twp Admin Office, 2261 Rt 206, Belle Mead, NJ 08502. EO E iWF/HA/CLERICAL POSITION - With Princeton firm. Entry lave^ ,Will train on com­puter operation. Typing skills required. Competitive salary & beriefils. Call be­tween 9am a 4pm, ask tor Sandy, 6Q9-4S2-9555. CLER K TY P IS T - 45wpm. Growing Belle Mead manu­facturing company. Op­portunity for advtmceiitent. Call Loretta Santacroce 201-281-8681: “

C LE H K TY P IS T - Good opportunity to polish skill. Twin Rivera area. J & J T E M P O R A R I E S , 600 Alexander Rd, Princeton, N.J. 609-452-2030,

COMPANION - For stroke patienbUVe in. P i e ^ call Gail Gorman Brody for de­tails at 201-244-2798

.CO M PUTER O P ER A TO R - National nutritional com­pany seeks kmtry level computer operator. Must bo aWo to wQric with mini­mum supervisioii In a 24

'hour data processing en­vironment. Jtnowfedgo of HP3000 a* + , ' Annual • salary $17K -j exc benefits.. Send resume to ; PO Box 5000, Dayton. N J 08810;

CO M PU TER S A LES • Es­tablished retail cornputer store in Princeton seeks'i sales' staff. Sales experi­ence dpsirable.knowledge of P C a perii^erals essen­tial. Highly competetive pay structure for molivaied indi­vidual. Cali Pennsyivariia Computer Center for de­tails 609-921-0666 t

C O N S T R U C T I O N - HaiKfypersons, Several pp- p<}rtuniUes ndW available af n w 300 homo prcfjoct. Ex- celleht entry level positions with advancement possi- hle. Call 201-329-8537 C O N S TR U C TIO N Laborer ■ Hillsboro area Good P^T- no experience needed Start immod. Full a part time positions avail. Call Mike or Mark. 201-874-3740.__________________ __C O N TR A C TO R 'S Helper • Lotto! Princeton Contractor looking lor reliable workers.F u ll ' time work. Medical benefits and advancement opportuntles. Valid drivers license required. Call 609- 921-7061.

C O O K SPASTR Y

S ca n lic o n -P rin ce to n is seeking experienced staff to work In.'our high volume production Pastry Shop

PASTRY COOK BAKER

2-4 yrs pastry experience required lor Pastry. 4 -6 V s experience with Danish, Croissant, breads a rolls required lor Baker. Cul­inary schooling preferred Rates range from $7.25'hr to SS.SOiTir with increase after 60 days. Full benefit package etiective after 30 days. Apply; Personnel Dept, ScOTticon-Prince- ton, 100 College Rd East Princeton NJ 06548 EOE

CO PYW R ITER S - See list­ing "Freelance Network". Ghost Graphics. 609-921- 1981____________________

C O U N TER PERSON - Full lime plus Sat AM Whole­sale plumbing a heating supply house. Experience preferred, not necessary. Call Gordon a Wilson Co. 6O9-448-0S07.

CU STO D IAL a M AINTEN- ' A N C E Vacancies - Full

benefits including; State Retirement, Vacation. Paid Health Insurance. Hills­borough Township Board of Education. Call 201- 874-3100. .

.CUSTODIAN • Montgom- ety Tw p Schools, Skillman, N J . . Permanent 12 month position - 3pm to 11pm. All fringe benefits,, paid va­cation. Salary n^otiabla. Potential advancement alt­er probationary period. Cell 201-674-5200 for applica­tion. EOE/AA,'

MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

/IF

ASST. CUSTOMER SERVICE REPS.

M ake the intelligent caieer choice!:

opportunities individuals. College

Ford Motor Credit has exceptional growth immediately available for career oriented indMc degree required; some collection experience, helpful, p r o ^ a top-notch management training program.W e offer an excellent compensation & benefits package: For iinmediate consideration, please ^ n d resume to;

P E R S K M ie . M A N A G E- P.O. Box C7M000, Cranbury, NJ 08512

■ At C f it l * r

Ford Motor Credit Company

6B Week of December 2^ 1988 A Packet PublcatkMi

Heip WanM Help Wanted i«> Help Wanted 109 Hdp Wanted Hejp Wanted m Help Wanted Help Wanted i” Help Wanted i«> Help Wantedf

C U S TO M E R SERVICE - WotK from fwiTie. Ptexiblo hrs. Up to $10O-SSOO/wk; Call 6 0 9 -^ -3 2 6 5 .

C U S TO M E R SERVICE

• Customar Service Rep• Telenuufcetinfl Rep

Conran's the'complete home furnishings retail chain Is currently Inter­viewing lor the at)ove positions at it'aCranbury Distribution Facility. .

ArConrarts you wllleri- Joy a. Iasi Ipaced & friendly environment.

.'These positions require' individuals'Mh.excellent'' communication sklils' & - attention to detail. 6 mos to t yr experience pre- ferrably in Customer Senrice or Telephone Sales is. a plus, but we vrill train a bright begin­ner.

' We offer a competitive _ .salary & benelitO pack­

age. For irrimediate con­sideration call, 609> 655-8S50

Conran's. Distilbution Center

Center Point Industrial Park

4 So Middlesex Ave Cranbu'ry. hIJ

conran'aThe Coniplete Home

(Furnishings Store

__________ EOE

D AN CE .TEACHER'Ballet - ; P/t.i Mercer; County High- . school of Performing Arts.

iPlease call 609-586-2129

D A T A EN TR Y - ^ p e r - iohced only. Input ori IBM

.Mainframe for long term in Cranbury. Sa'di. J f J T E M P O R A R I E S , 600 Alexander Rd. Princeton. N .J. 609-452-2030.

D A TA EN TR Y

Experiertce in Alpha Data Entry needed to \ fill pos­ition. Speed & accuracy im p e ra tiv e . C a li now . S TA F F BUILDERS, 211 College Road East, Prince­ton. 60S- 4S2-0020

DATA ENTRYITypist - Ex­perienced. fast & accurate for market research firm. Reliable & detail oriented. Salary based on exp, Co. paid benefits. Q uaker- bridge area. Contact Mr. Fegley, at 609-4S2-021T '

DELI CO O K - F/T Super- ■'visoiy position. Mon-Fri.

flexible hrs, ex(Mrience in preparing eritree, soup and salads using natural foods. 609-924-7429

D EN TAL ASSISTAN T - Modem; dental office in Princeton area looking lor career-oriented person. X- ray license required and certilica ilon preferred. Salary commensurate with experience. 201-281-7660.

DENTAL BOOKKEEPER - F/1. Triendiy, mature per­son. Dental insurance exp

. noc. Pleasant o f f i ^ no eves. Benefits. Reply!Box 519, c/o C anlr^P osI, PO Box 309, Nd08810.

DEN TAL * A U G u y Friday - P/t altemMhs. Happy & friendly Irort desk person. Greet patients, file, mail­ings, etc. 201.1-?97-6111.

DEN TAL R EO EPTIO NIST - p't, to assist f/\ reception­ist. - No exp pecessary,' Hours 9-1, ■ M on,- Tues, Th u rs,- Fri. Alternating every 2nd Wed and Sat. ■ moms 8:30-1.' 201-359-, 2121.

' IIii.... I -|.....1

D u r in g T h e H o lid a y Season More Than Ever O u r T h o u g h t s T u r n G ratu ity To Those Who M a d e O u r P r o g r e s s Possible.

Thank you & Best Wishes For The New Year

Future Tem ps103 Carnegie Center Frincetbn, NJ 08540

609-734-9108

DESIQNER/Drbftsm an • 'Expanding E Bnrriswick firm has Immediate open­ing lor sell starter, ex­perienced in mer^anlcal design, conveyor design experience a plus! Liberal company benefits. Salary commensurate with ability. Call 201-238-8900 , DEVELOPM ENT DIREC­TO R - Hje Stoney Brook Millstone Watershed As- sodallon is seeking a pro­fessional development dl-

_rectorto plin & manage all aspects q'f organizations.

' annual fund raising pro- grairis; including m ain­taining 4,000 memeber basa, annual membership appeal, comorate cam­paign/-specfargifts, foun­dation grants & special events. Candidate should have a, broad background & strong track record in fund raising pro.-, grams. Must be higjily organized & possess excellent, human relations skills. Ad m in­istrative, corriputer & writ­ing sjdlls essential. Rnah- cial planning experience prefened. Salary & benefits competetive. Send cover letter &,resume to: Todd A. Bryan; Excecutive Director, SBMWA, 263A TitUs Mill Rd, Pennington, N J 08534. 609-737-3735 n .

DISHW ASHER-Fom ights & weekends. Call, The ■ Tigers Tale, 609-924^)262, D R A F T S M A N - H i l ls ­borough Tvrp Engineering Dept is seeking a 1-2 yrs experienced draftsman, ex­citing oppoilunity, good salary + betiefils package, union position. Mon-Fri, 8:30-4:30. Contact Engi­neering Dept 2 0 1 -3 6 9 - 4313. EOE. ■ •

DRIVERrMAlNTENANCE • For a fast growing com­pany. Part'fuii time. Pick up & deliveries. Mechanicar ability a + for light main­tenance. Exc salary, bene­fits & work conds, retirees vielcome 609-448-2298

TOOIMMER•'Automotive production^ <4 facility needs individual Vi Miith A m i n ^ f t m n f fit

BUS DRIVERSStarting rate; $8.54 per hour fekperienced drivers at higher rate) will assist In obtaining bus driver's Icense, 'Benefits include medical, dental, hospftoiizatiorl & prescription plans, pensibn plan.

EAST WINDSOR RE.6. SCHOOL DISTRICT384 Stockton St.

Hightstown, NJ 08520 'lei. (609) 443-7874 EquI Opportunitf Emptoin

$ Excelleni benefits, in- A a eluding medical, dental, k 401K and profit sharing f gplans. ^Jf For an Intenriow, call A ■i JO E HAMMERMAN t ^ (201) 545-7000jOENEMl AOTOMOTiVE ^ SPECIALTY COMPANY f

k' Roultj 1 & 130 SA P.O.Box 3042^ North B ru n s ^ NJ. 08902

j;j OppOrtnAtf Cpplipm Mf ^

H. NEUMAN ASSOCIATES, INCpucnuT/McnumiEiiT speciuists im:

* Banking * Pharmaceutical* Accounling/Finance * Scientific* Office Support * Technical

MEMBERS OF:'National Assn, ol Personnel Consultants• Mid-Atlantic Assn, ol Personnel Consultants* N. J . Assn, of Personnel Consultants ' Americal Medical Writers Assri.• Drug Information Assn.* Chamber ol .Commerce * N J . Business Assn.

. ; OUR STAFF WISHES ITS ’' Clieni compariies,.theif empkwees, and all Job seekers

the hapfriest of holidayat

OUR OFFICES Wia BE' Closed 12/26-1/3/89. All messages left on our answering machine

will receive prompt responses.:

2500.BRUNSWiCK AVI.. SUITE 1 UWRENCEVILLE. NJ 08648

Lo lP D Q Employment Services assist you in starting out the

.New Yoar widi thopor- fect tem poral or porma ncnl positionr-Tako a look at - - Iho opportunities wo have avaiiable;

* WORD PROCESSORS •C LER IC A LS

- ‘ RECEPTIONISTS

CELEBRATE___ THENEW YEAR

WITH PDQ

* SECRETARIES* BOOKKEEPERS* PRODUCTION

PERSONNEL

Mako your first Now Year's resolution to uso PDQ. (bur affiliation with marw local prestigious compahios allows us to oKor T O P S A LA R IE S & B O N U S ES . Remombor, thoro's never a foe to applicants and convenient evening appoint­ments con bo scheduled, CALL

(609)683-4664

PDQ EMPLOYM ENTSERVICES Th e Office Center, at Prineatbn Meadows 666 Plilnsboro Rd., Suite 6SS Plalnsboro, N J /

D R IV ER M ES S EN G ER - $9-$13/hr. Full lime for marketing company. Light pickup a deliveiy. Knowl­edge of New^Jersey a must, Neat appearance, Economy car preferred. Retirees welcome. Call Jim, at 609-5e7-5760. DRIVER - Part time. Local testing company needs responsible Drivers for test placement and pick up. Ideal for retired person. Call 609-921/7061.DRIVERS N EED ED - For, rapidly expanding, estab­lished me&senger/cburier' s e r v ic e . E x p h e lp fu l. Should be familiar with NJ, NY. PA a C T .- Call 609- 448-0644 btwn 9am a 4pm.

EARN UP T O S8 AN H O UR • Part time, flexible .evening hours, telemar­keting. Cail Dan Pilcher, The Princeton Packet, 609- 924-3244,0X1192btwn*1 a 9pm.

EXECUTIVESECRETARY

Mlfanol Inc is (Seeking art Executive Secretary with the following qualifications:

• Strong organizationalskills '■ ' .

• Tyring 80 wpm•. ohotlhand 95 wpm , .• Experience using word

processing '• Telex Operation• Good letter, writing skills

The successful ■ candl- dale will report directly to the President a should have at least 5 yrs expe­rience as a Senlor/Exe- cutivo ■ Secretary.

M ra n o ljh c is an estab­lished rnanufacturer ol prodiictslor the personal care market a otters an attractive satary a full range of benefits includ­ing health a dental insur­ance, 401K a pension plan.

Please send resume to;\MIRANOL INC

PO Box 436 Dayton, N J 08810

Attn: Personnel Dept

EXEC U TIV E S A LES - The Prudential is seeking a bright, rnotiyated individual who has the, InlUativa lo build a 'professional sales career in Insurance a financial planning./, com­prehensive 3 year develop­ment program. College degree or equivalent busi­ness a people contact ex- per prel... Starting income t0'S28,600, excelleni bene­fits. Maureen Amar. 609- 4 5 2 -1 9 0 0 o r 2 0 1 -7 4 5 - .9004. . -

FAJL.'PPERATOR - Also relieve receptionist at lunch break. Busy department for large company in Pen­nington area. J a J TEM­PORARIES, 600 Alexand­er Rd, Princelon, N.J. 609/452-2030.FIELD EN GIN EER • For construcUdn site to 5/1. In Lawrencevllle. 609-895- 1350 days/587-1516 eves

FLO W ER SHOP - Sales exp req'd. VVill train floral duties. F/t Incl Sat. Apply H am ilton Florist, 1215 Hamilton Ave. Trenton.

SUlHa JOB OPPORTUinT/ sw m nitpooiM AM EnHopewen Valley Qoll Chjb has announced an opening for a Swim- nwig Pool Manager.for th e 1 9 8 9 s e a s o n .. Intareslad candidates should send resumes to: The Hopewell Valley Golf Club. RD 1 Box 2 1 4 , H o p e w e ll. N J 08525 c/o Pool Commit­tee.

’>*=»Oa^«srx»=jHora

U nIBHT AUDITOR-I WEEKENDS*

I* HOUSEKEEPER** FRONT DESK*

PSOME POSITIONS OFFER FLQUBLE HOURS, AND, BENEFITS. PARTICIPATE IN WORK INCENTIVE PRO-

PGRAMS.C/Ui

(609)452-2500 THE PALMER INN

PRINCETON

Therapy

ASSOUUTE . THERljPIST

Group hotne for de- veioprnetitally disabled adoliNcents. Excellent training and support ••(vfees provided. Ex- perlenpe preferred, but not necessary. Further develop your , career ■WMs woddng as part of a team. Contad: Kbn

F A C TO R YO PPO R TU N ITIES

M a n u fa c tu r in g p la n t, located 15 mins from Princeton has openings in the following positions:

AS S EM B LER S A/C ASSEM BLER/

B R A ZER S H E E T A ^ A L O P B IA T O R S

P A M TE R S

. d a y s h If tPermanent full tima posi-

• tions, no laypfts. • '•

Modem clean fadlity. •

Good wages & benellts. '-

Trainees accepted.

For drectiohs & appt caB:K O O LTR O N IC INC

609-466-3400

F O O D S E R V I C E - C ashiers, R e ce ivo rs & Cold Prep- Fuir time, days- only. Mon-Fri, no wkends, great benefits. Call, 609- 243-4785.

YO R K - Copywriters, d^Sl^e rs, il­lustrators photographers, production artisti,. pro- ducer/dlreclors. .Prlnce- ton’e "best clienis" are looking (or you. Fufirtime freelancers (o n ly ) call Stuart Carothers, Ghost Graphics, 609-921- 1981.

F R O N T DESK Person - P/1,5-11pm. No experience necessary, will train. Call 609-448-2400 (or appt.

FULL/PART Time. Laborer - heeded (or house f ^ i n g In Princeton. No experi­ence required. Flexible hours, must be depend­able.. $7/hr to start. 201- 846-8100. .

P A R T TIME - General Ol- fice, 8:30-12:30 & 12:30- 4:30. Lawrencevllle /Vea. Please call 609-882-1828

GEN ERA L O F F IC E - P/T 'or F/T, (or Interior design store. Will train. Please call 609-395-8688.

J iO T E L

Busy 300 room hotel re -' quires Individual to perform Night Audit duties including switchboard & reception. Previous hotel experience or accounting background preferred. 11pm-7am shift. Full lime position with good compensation & benefits. Please apply; Personnel Dept, Scandcoft-Ptlnce- ton, too College Rd East, Princeton N J 08540 EOE

u

G EN ER A L W A R ^ U S E

General Word Processor needled lor busy ''fiice job. Accuracy imporiant, as well , as congenial pereonallty, pleasant phone manners & dependability. Call (or your intenriew ioday! S TA F F BUILDERS, 21 h College Road East. Princeton. 6 C ^452/0020.______________GRAPHIC A R TIS TS - See listing "Fre e la n c e Net­work". Ghost Graphics.609- 921-1981.___________HAIR STYLIST/Colorist,- 4 days, exc growth poleritial and' benefits. Call 609- 924-6698. .

HAIR STYLIS T - Following preferred, lii growing salon. Commission * paid va­cations. Call Debbie at Deb-N-Nalls 609-443-5257

HANDYMAN • Part time, all jobs. Call 201-821-7338

H O S T A F O R B G N EXEC U TIV E FR O M

EU R O P E-SO A M ER IC A OR JA P A N !

• Receive about $200/wk in return (or Bed & Breakfast

• Learn about foreign cul- tu re s & m a k e new friends

• Requirements:• Private room a must, pri­vate bath a plus,- Family environment• Walking distance or easy transport to 4/6 Hullflsh St. Princelon, N j 08540, (or willing to provide trans poratation to same).

< (^ 6 0 9 -9 2 1 -0 2 6 0 'H O STESS/H OST • Wilfing to train. Call County Una

■ Inn, 201-369-6300 or 201-. 874-3784.H O ST/H O STESS ■ Days Si soma nights. Call, Th o

•Tigers Tala, 609-924-0262.

; ;C U «C A L ^

♦ GENERAL A U T O M O -, ; ITIVE, a large manufac-1; ; 'hirer ih the automotive . Ikidustiy has the follow-

;ing positions open:

* CLERK: ;For Plant AccountanL;; ^good basic math skills,' >

neat handwriting, able! I to use 10-key calcu­lator.

*Cl£RK-CREOITDEPT.i; Bs^ matheMHa, ftiftn,

, general detlcai. Able u toe calculi a phis.

♦ CREDIT CORRESPONDENT

IndIvkfuBi with prevhxis A/R experienoe and ac­count rsoondliation.

(3ood benefits Including dental and 401K plan. -

For an Intenriow, contact

LYNNE N IC H O L545-7000

: 6ENERJU. AUTOMOTIVE 1 SPECIALTY COMPANY

RAittS 1 & 130 ;P.0. 60x 3042/

NorUi Brunswich. NJ. 08902

(qMlOrP>M|EiSle>llT

- / F IO TE L

■ Harriron Conteronce Ser­vices, of Princeton. offers Irrirriediate opportunities in;

-• Food & Beyerago• Hotel Guest Relations• Housekeeping• Conlordnce Services

For Consideration call■ Personnel 609-282-2676 HotqlR EBIDENCE i n n By Mar- riot, an all suite hotel Is now taking applications for the following positions:

FR O N T D ^ K . p i & f/t3pm -ltpm & 11pm-7am

H O U SEKEEP IN G , p/t A l l Applications taken at the Residence Inn (Rle 1> be­tween. Raymond A Ridge Rd) or call 201-329-9600.

H O U S E C L E A N I N G - ^Housewives earn, extra rtlOnoy while kids are in school. Join a team to do. residential house cleaning. Good pay, fiexible hours, call 201-359-1179.

H O U SEKEEP ER • Re­liable, with drivers license, able to assume all house­hold duties, including driv­ing child to A from school. Excelleni salary A working conditions. (3all Lynne, at 201-906-0770 days, 609- 655-8844 e v e s ^ n d s .

H O U S E K E E P E R S / D a y - workers /Nannies/ Compa­nions - Wanted. Exc posi­tions irtihe Princeton area. Live In/out. F/T or P/T. Reis Req'd. Call Z/Best House­hold Inc. at 609-799-8853 or 201-297- 4947.

H O U SEK EEP ER Wanted- To maintain single fw ily, 1 story home with working couple. Pleasant atmos­phere, good pay A uniform. Call, 609-924-4097

INTERIOR DESIGNER - High End d o ^ n store, specializing, in 16 th century lu r n it u r e , s e e k s e x ­perienced designer' Write to box #11220, c/o Prince-ton Packet. __________

KADIMA Y O U T H Leader •: (Srades 6. 7, A 8. Re­

sponsible- lor plaiiriing A leading programming (or 3rd. largest Kadima group in NJ. Salary neg, start 2/1. Send resume: Attention Youth Position, Temple Beth Shalom, 108 Freehold Rd. Manalapan, N J 07726.

K I T C H E N W O R K E R ■ School lunch program. No nighls, wknds or holidays. Part A full time avail. & p not necessary, will train. Benefits. Call Nancy 609- 443-7731.LA BOR ATO RY TECH N I­CIANS ■ Local Princeton testing company. Job In­cludes tab duties, signifi­cant customer contact A various docum entation procedures. Will train. No agencies. 609-921-7061. LABCRERS - Iri U w - rencevilje area. General construction. Must have drivers license. No exp necessary. 609-89S4)502. LAND SU R V EYER - Look­ing for a sharp, dedicated licensed surveyor w/prov-

. en skills in field surveys, boundary, topo A construe-. lion, to supen/ise field crews A assist owner wilh cllerit relations. Future ow nership possibilities availabls tor the right indi­vidual. Ail replies:, held, in

: strict confidence. Send re­sume and salary, require­ments to; M.R Mastrangelo A Assoc, 445 Whitehorse Ava., Suita 101, Hamilton Tw p., NJ 08610.

LAW N SERVjCE/FIrowood • No experience necessary, $6/hr. Call anytime, 609- 396-8534:

LA UN D RY W O R K ER - In Dayton, NJ. M/F for hotel. Must be reliable A have a sense -o l responsibility. Hrs, 7:45am-3;45pm, Mon- Fri. Good salary, exc tenefits, pleasant working environment. Call House' keeper, for appt, Mon-Fri only. 9arh-3pm. 201-329- 2800

R E LICENSED Hostess/ Receptionist * p i. For now home constiilctlon sales of­fice. Call any day, 11-5, ^ ^ 8 9 6 -4 9 4 9 7 „ ;W C H IN E O P E R M O R for light gauge-eheet metal -

manufacturing planu.Must be willing to'work at least 40 hrs/week. W II train interested parties. Apply in person - Gilbert A. Cheiiey, Old Trenton Rd. A South Main 'St., Cranbury, NJ 9am-3pm. $4.50 per Hour.

MACHINE OPERATORS

"t C growing manufacutring c o m p a n y , lo c a te d 20 mlriutos from,Princeton Is lookirig for employees In our light gauge sheet metal shop*. . I

.• Clean, heated/air cond.plant;

• Day shift, no layoffs.

• Good wtiges A benefils.

• Trainees accepted.

For direction's A appt.Call:

kOOLTRONIC INC 60& 466-3400

M A C H I N E O P E R - ATOR/Labofor- Plalnsboro Tw p Public Works Depart­ment is now aertopting ap-. plications lor Machine Op- .erator/Laborer. Duties vrill vary in all aspects of the Public Works Department. S a la ry range $ 1 5 ,9 0 0 - $21,100. Excellent, bene­fits. Contact Personnel Ol- fice 609-799-0909 (or ap: plication A information.E O E M/F __________ ____

M AINTENANCE PERSON - Needed to work for luxury garden apartment com­plex. Must have experience “in plumbing! electrical A carpentry. S a la ry , tree apartment A electric, health benefits, A an opportunity to make extra money. Send resume, to; Box # 11195 c/o Princeton Packet.

M ANAGER Evening shift for busy restaurant, experi­enced, salary A benefits comm'ensurrite with experi- enee. Call 609-921-3257.

M ANAGER - Strong pro­gressive restaurant com­pany looking (or Asst Mgr (or Princeton area location. Some backirond ,required but w ill, train apibitious, hardworking Individual to our needs. Send resumes to Princeton liiri Keejjers. Inc.. P C Box 676, Rocky Hill, NJ 08553

M A S D N 'S -H ELP ER • Ex­perience preferred but not necessary. Call 609-446- 7957._________________ ^

M E D IC A L Receptionist/ Bniing Mgml - P/T, 30 hrs,

. no Saturdays. Very pleas- ’ ant environmeiit. Exp'd, or­

ganized, motivated. Salary . commensurate wilh expert-.

once. Contact Pat. RN. at609-921-7878____________

M E D IC A L Receptionist/ Bookkeeper - Aith coth- puter experience peferred (or a busy cardiology office. Call 609-921-7456. M-F, 9am-5pm. ______________

M EDICAL , Receptionist - Part time day position in busy Lawrencevitle pain

. center. G reet patients, answer phones A file. Call main office.-215-736-2410.

■MEDICAL Receptionist • (or busy family practice of­fice. Must have pleasant personality A like 'working " w/people. Front desk. In­surance forms A billing. Ap­prox 38 hrs/wk. Exp prel. Please call 201-359-8251.

M ODELS/ACTORS - local o ffice of International agency seeks new faces - children to adults. Training available if necessary. Please call 215-752-8600.

SMC Personnel, wishes to extend to you a happy, healthy and Safe Holiday Season.

SMC Personnel Support Princeton Meadows Office Center

Sitite 1130. 666 Plalnsboro Rd

Plalnsboro, NJ 08536 eO B -799 ^636

Looking to rent a nevY apartm eni? C h ^ the Packet "Classifieds:"

M E N TA L H EA LTH . Case Manager - Full time, prefer: rabfy with B A ' in Human Services, transitional hous­ing program seeks quali­fied Individual to provide direct case management services-to clients, leach­ing A supervising activities ol dally living. Must have demonstrated social worl8 A communtoaUon skills. Ex­cellent benefits A paid va­cations. Send resume to; Easter Seal, 179 *Rt 31. Remington,. N J 08622 o r ', call, 201-788-7580

N I G H T .M A N A G E f l Wanted - Part time or full limp, Exp In fast food da-

' sired. Salary o ^ n . AjJply ah Everytihing Yogert In the Princeton MarkelFalr or call 609-987-8060 (or appt.

N U R S E - Part fima. Single doctors olfice, exciting job (or someone who loves medicine A people. Send resume to: Box #11215f c/6 Princelon Padrel.

N U R S E RN - Edison doc­tors olfice, oncology expe­rience preferred, will tr^n. Full/part timo. Send re­sume; to Box #11219, c/o Princeton-Racket. .N U R S E RN - Part lime. Immediate opening. Set your owri hrs.-4% hrs per week. Health Maintenance A Monitoring assessing of 23 bed RHCF.'Located 2 miles from Hopewell Boro. Call Joe D'Agostino at Fe a th e rb e d Lane Rest H o m e , 23 Fe a the rb e d Lane, Hopewell. NJ 08525. 609-466-1450 . '

N U R S E S • Positions avail­able part A full time in g e ria tric facility vyhich speciallz'es In quality; The nursing shortage Is real but we will not compromise our goalsi We want dedicated A caring nurses to set the example. "Maintain your ,' high standards, contact Mrs. Lois Mulcahy, Director of quality at 609-894-1494.

N U R SESHave you over considered a career in real estate? If you are career-minded, willing to work hard and be trained and warit to learn more about this exciting business please call Chris Hill 609:737-0100 or evOs 586-6985. ,It could chaniB* your WeiN U TR ITIO N IS TS Needed- For nutritionally general or­iented medical practice.609-921-1842. __________,

O F F IC E H ELP - Looking (or an Wlerosting part time jtosHlon? Work in Cus- tonter Senrico, learn ti new field. Frferidiy Sbitiersfel In­surance Agency has djien- (ng, .mornings 5 days per week. Will trkln. PItiase call Kale 201:846:6200

O F F IC E M ANAGERThe Franklin News Record J o b entails answ ering phones, taking classified ads, dealing with the pub­lic. assisting editorial as necessary. A varied Inter­esting job Ijiat can be as exciting and involved as the successful candidate chooses it to be. Four day week. Call Jane McGuigan at 609-924-3244 ext 188. Salary commensurate with experience. Good benefits package: ^

Prfncetoii Packet 3 (X ) Witherspoon St Prfaiceton, N J 08540

609-924-3244

R E N T M . O F R C E MGR 264, apartment units In Hamilton Township. Expe­rience In rentals preferred. Strong but pleasant per­sonality required. Salary with experience. Send re­sume to P C Box 770 SO. Orange,' N J 07079. All: Dave.

P A C K A G E R ^A K IN Q Asst • Seeking F/T (^ rs o n tor . our.; natural (qpds bakery. Senior citizens welcome. 609-924-7429

PAR ALEG AL - Growing Somerset C o law firm seeks paralegal (prlts com­mercial real estate dept. Exp in real estate a plus but willing to train. Send re­sume to; Susan Hansel,' N o r r is M c L a u g h lin A Marcus, P C Box 1018, Somenrille, NJ 08876.

P A R T TIM E -/Doctors OF flee. Good typing, billing. Mature. i;30-S:30 M-W-F. 609-448^1022, eves. PART,T1ME - D o you love bookaf PosiUoti, available tomercharidise book .depl. in Rod<y Hjl|,«upermarkel. Flexible hrs. $ 6 ^ r + per­formance bonus A mer­chandise discounts. Send appifeation to Caroline Bayard, Sher DIsl. PO Box 417, Tbtowa. N J 07511- 0417.

P A R T TIM E'- Earn up to $8 an hour. Rexible .evening hours, letemarkeiing. Call O a n ’Pilcher, T h e Princelon Packet, 609-924-3244, exi 192 btwn 1 A 9pm.PAR T TIME - Immediate opening lor clerk ip a busy distribution center. General office work. 609-6S5-4112. PAR T TIME • Office asst,8 - 9 hrs/wk (3 momlrjgs) (or new Eldercare Referral Senrice, Data entry, typing A gen office management. Pleasant worWing environ- mont. Learn to operate

.computer. Growth poten-- tial. Competetive salary. Located at C ir for Health Affairs, Alexander Rd. Call Harriet 609-52()-O906

P A R T T IM EP ASTE-U P PERSO N

Part Urrie Paste-Up person needed. Hours: Monv Tues, Wed, 6pm to 12pm m k k night. E x p e rie n ce pre­ferred. Call 609-924-3244 ext 119 (or interview ap­pointment.

The PrftiMtQn Packet300 W itherspoon St.Prlncaton, N J 08540

PART TIME - Recreation workers to w ork in an after school program w/elemsri- tary age children. Hills-

, boro area, S6-S7/hr. For more info call Joanne, 20t-722-1881.-

PART TIM E - sales cerk,9- 5,i 3 days/wk. No nights or wkends. Apply at Cun­ningham Phairmacy, 100 Main St. Hightstown.

PART TIM E - Secretary. Two evening meetings per month. 4 hrs typing of minutes. C a ll 609*395- 0544, Cranbury Township. PART TIM E Teachers • For evening classes in ;ESL (certilh^tion required), Chi­nese cooking, golf A. sew- ■ ing. $14 per hour. Please call East Windsor ( ^ * munlty Education 609-443- 7855

P A R T -T IM ET Y P IS T

Excellent typing skills, are required. Hours: Mon ihru Fri 9am-3ptn,„Call. e0S- 924-3244 ext-119 for ln(er-

. v W afipolnimpni.

The P rbeeton Packet300 Wfthecepoon StPrinceton, N J 08540

P E R S O t«iE L A S S TPrjnceton area manufac­turing company is seeking an experienced Individual to work with the Personnel Manager in administering employee benefits, saeen- Ing applicants for employ­ment., maintaining records A 'dealing with various per- sprinel related matters.

The successful candidate will possess good vdrbal A written com m unication skills, enjoy working with people, give special alteh- lion to detail, typing is re­quired, some computer ex­perience is helpful.

II you haye these qualtfi- cations, this Is a rewarding opportunity offering a got^ salary A berrafits, .

Please send resumd vrith salary requirements to:

k o o ltr o n k ; INC,Dept M A-3

PO Box 504Princeton N J 08S40

'1?HOTOQRAPHER - For Princeton based labora­tory, Flat art, studio A lo­cation photography, Beno- fita. Reply to: Box #11231,

. c/Q Princeton Packet.

PH O TO GR APH IC U bo r- atory • Seeking Techni­cians, lor film processing, black A while A color print­ing. Benefits. Call, 609-

.799-8880 0x1 15.

The Staff, at Snelling & Snelting would like to extend best wishes for the Holiday Season td all.

■ Snelling ( Snelling842StateR d

Princeton, N J 08542 eiXMISS'dOAO

...- f

i?May The HoBday Seasonli Bring Peace And Joy To:,' AH,- ; ; . .

FfomAnOiUsAI .

d b le d o #Plalnsboro Meadow Offtce'

Plalnsboro Road Plalnsboro, N J 08536 i;

609-924-1O22

A l ^ e t PuMcation Week of December 28, 1988 7B

Jpo Wmited 100 Hdlp W ^ e d loo Help Wanted loo Help Wanted i ^ Help Wanted lOQ Help Wanted iQO Help WantedP H Y S IC IA N S 'N E E D E D - Family pracUca, psychia­trists, etc. For nutritlonalty oriented general, rhedical i^ r a c H c e . C a l l , 6 0 9 - 921-1842.

PI2ZA' PER SO N - part time. Call 609-924-5666 and ask (or Jack.

PIZZA P ER SO N - Wanted at Benny's pizza In thePrinceton MarketFalr. Sal­ary open. Apply In person or call 609-987-8060 tor appt.

P I S S S HELPER

"nio Prtowton Packet ha$ an immediate opening' (or a (ull time press helper-in Its n e w p a p e r p re s s ro o m .

.Some experience helpful, ' but training will be avail­

able. Please call Doris Dragort at 609-924-3244 ext 144 (or Interview ap­pointment. EOE. ' ^

I PRINTING -.Counter help, basic knowledge oi photo­copying & printing helpful. Call 609-588-9600

PROGRAM MER W AN TED \ • Part tlrne with about one

year experience to pro­gram periodic opinion polls on personal computers for nationally recognized sur­vey organization. lOrowl- edge of BASIC and per­sonal (xmpulers is essen­tial, as Is careful attention to detail. Tim e flexibllty im-

' poitanL P’lease contact: Dr. John C : Pollock, PresWent. New W o rld -D e c is io n s , 3086 Route 27, Suits' 6 {Congressional State of the Arts Complex), Kendall

■ , Park, N J 08824. 201- 297-8l0o

P R O J E C T M A N A G E R / Construction Sufirvr - For twnhme & condo project in Mercer Cty. 201-359-6630

P S Y C H O LO G IS T Needed ■ For Dutritiohally oripnted gener^ medical practice. 609-921-1842.

PUBLIC W O RKS Uborers - Work in Various areas of public work, equipment operation experieru^ help­ful, N J Drivers License re­quired. A ^ ly : Asst Twp Admin Office, 2261 Rt 206, Belle Mead, N J 08502. E o m dF nw

PtmUSHmG PiMcatlont'Dept

Entry Level PosidonCandidate should be a de­tail oriented person vyith scriie co m p u te r b a c k ­ground and the ability to work w e ir under pressure. Qood.growth potential, and beqeBtSilloackage. For irrler-

appointtheni please call Susan Lydick Greene, 609-924-3244 ext lOO.

Th e Princdion.Packet

PURCHASING AGENT

Guest room amenities co­mpany seeking Purchasing AgenL prefer 3-4 yrs pack­aging and/or printing expe­rience. College degree pre­ferred, excellent oppor­tunity, full benefits. Please submit resume with salary history to:

GiM St Supply Inc 7 2 0 U S H w y.1

No Brunswick NJ 08902 Att: P. Conary

. .QUALITY C O N TR O L M A N A G E - Our rapidly growing cx>mpany is seek­ing someone anInterest in audio tape production. We have a GREAT offica with FUN

■ people. Don't let this op- ' portunity to grow pass you

by. Cali Alan at Captive . Concepts, 609-883-7733.

REAL E S T A T E Salesper­son Wanted • Experierice preferred but not essential. P le a s e c o n ta c t J o a n Kroesen in Hopewell at Weidel Realtors, 609-466-

■1224.

REM. ESTATECOMUKRCIAU

INVESTMENTImpatiep’t Wijh Your Cur­rent S a le s P ro g re s o ? .

-Three successful, produc­tion oriented businessmen, have Joined forces In the Princeton area tO'Create a new concept In Com- merclal/lnvesjinent Real Estate leasing and sales.

We are seeking, two ag- gressK/o, internally, mo tivated jndividuais to share with and add to our current sucgess. This Is an op­portunity to comeJa.pa the ground floor and earn the benefits of Inaeased com­mission splits, equity op­portunities and profit shar­ing. P ro ve n m arketing tei^niques, qualified leads and the r^arum to use indi­vidual talents have led us to over: $22,000,000 In commissionable. business in the past IS months.

R ESO U R CE D EVELOPER • For, ponprofit child care agericy. To create family day M fe homes, good pub­lic relaUons communica­tions & community organi­zation experience. C ar necessary. Minimum of 20 hr/wk, salary plus tenefits. Somerset & Lawrencdville. offices. Send-resume to :' Child Care Connection, PO Box 6325, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648

S E C R E T A R I A L / P A R T Time • Professional market- Ing/design firm needs ener­getic office assistant with good typing and organiza­tional .skills Vi day, 5 daysfweqk with periodic full time "fill-in" requirements. C a li S tu a rt C a ro th e rs , Ghost Graphics, 609-921- 6964 aft 5pm.

SEC R ETA R Y Part tinie • Art Gallery needs part lime professional Secretary ^ Gallery. AsSt. Hours flex­ible. CaM Princeion Gallery of.Fine Arts, 609-921-6123

R ESTA U R A N T - Dining Room Mariager w a n t^ for elegant Lo Pltimet Royal at The Peacock inn. Excellent salary. Must be well, or­ganized vyith emphasis: on attention to detail. Exp'd prefd. 609-924-2680

SECRETARIESInterested in' changing Jobs now or early 1889? Call Alice Lawrence, for Info on current openirigs,/ From Exec. Secrela{IS8. to Jr.. Secretaries. $1sk-S25K. Calls handled" discreetly. No fee^No contract. 5'20-1717. 4365-U S Rl 1, Princeton N J 08540.

S E C R E T A R Y / P E R S Q N Friday - De)all-oriented. typing, good phone skills, driver's license, It.bkkpg. t person office, right-hand to active owner. Must bo

.non-smoker & self-starter. Serious qualified persons only. South Bruns area. 201-329-6342, tv msg.

,SECflETARY...PLUS

Inlorested? VVrile to PO Box 11183, c/o Princeton Packet. or call 609-924- 1074 to discuss , how W e can ’ share and gVow with bur rnutual interests’ in complete confidence.

RN/CLINIC Supervisor - Must be responsible for daily operations tor reUre- menl village ciinlo.- sched­uling & distributing job as­signments, maintaining ac­curate medical records. All interested persons please contact Ms.. Eure- Wash­ington. M eadow Lakes 609-426-6804

I P R I N C E T O N I

O F F I C E

L P E R S O N N E L ^

SECRETARY $23,000 +NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION

SALES/ADVERTISING

R E A L -E S TA TE - Are you (finding things slow whereyou are? Why not borrsSder a Move to our Success Tearm at INeichert Cbi, Re-- altors. F o r confidential in­terview call Carolyn Sebas- itian, Rrinceton olfice man­ager at 609-921-1900. If you're good, you could be better with WeichertlR EC EP TIO N IST. Full Time - Ewing Twp; For builders sale center. Good typing skills, good appearance, ara telephone manner a must. Must dnve. For appt call Mrs. Burdick, 609- 882-4445 10am-5pm daily.

Princeton Packet Publica­tions seeks, highly mo­tivated individual for ■ its Outside Sales Staff. You Will be based at our Hill­sborough location. Previ-’ ous sales experience re­quired. Posltlori Involves calling on new as . w ell as established accounts. Ap^ plicants should be self­starters who can work well under pressure. Ad copy and layout experience, plus bonus. Opportunity for ad­v a n c e m e n t u n lim ite d . Good benefits. Please call Allison Katz Spiriella, Ati Manager at 201-359-0850.

In 1989, say “Goodbye" to your old job & “Hoto" to an exdUng new career in this Fortune 500 Company. Challenge & growth await you if you have proven organizational ability, motl-

'vatlon & excellent skills. Don't hesitate,, call us to-

■,dayl Fully paid benefits. No fee, evening appts.

609-6834)202

Executive secretarial func­tions including the use df word processor, occasibnal dictaphone, confidential correspondence and re­ports. Self-starte r with good organizational skills needed. Looking for person interested in growirtg with

i company and gejting in­volved W lh personnel and b e n e fits ’ S a la ry c o m ­mensurate with {experi­ence. 'Excellent t^nefits package! Contact Jane M cG uigan at 6 0 9 -9 2 4 - 3244, ext. 188.

The Princeton Packet 30A Witherspoon St Princeton, NJ 08540

^ d Q ^ le s ^ g V if ieplacemeris

S EC R ETA R Y - Prof or­ganization in New B.runs- wick has immed opening. Duties inci assisting exec sec(etary wWp (Wang), typing, copying, collating. Good safary & fringe behe fils. Send resume or call Florence Nathan, NJSBA.

' One Constitution- Square, . New Bunswick, N J 08901.

201-249-5000.65 Montgomery Knoll Skillman, NJ 08558

SECRETARYCorporate

R EC EP TIO N IS T - Full or part time. Light typing. No e x p e rie n ce necessary training will be provided Must be reliable. S6hr Good bbnents. Please con tact Mrs. M at 609-683 1200.

.SALES A S S T - Busy com­puter nrm seeks bright, ag­gressive & well organized college grad to assist with the many facets of com­puter sales & administra­tion. No experience req'd. Fa . Exc trenefits, potential opportunity to enter prot sales force. Call Sam or Robin S. at 609-683-4141 No agencies please.

S E C R E TA R Y - Admliils- trative'oHice. Exc beneni package. Starling salary $15-16,000. Apply South Brunswick Board of Educa­tion, 4 Executive Dr., Mon­mouth Jet, NJ 08852. 20,1-297-7800. EOE. M/F.31,

R EC E P TIO N IS T - Busy Somerville Law firm seeks articulate organized indi­vidual tor its reception desk. Exc benefits, modem surroundings. 201-722- 0700.

R EC E P TIO N IS T - office staff looking tor the 'ideal additioris to our team. Pleasant personality, good telephone manners, and good typing skills are rriusts. Computer experi­ence a (Hus (vkill trairi). S a la ry m id -teen s, call Susari Higham at 669-924- 6974 (or inten/iew.

SALES - College grad with teaching, coa ching , or sales experience. Earn up to $28,500 flrst year salary plus commissioq. O ne of the largest finaricial serv­ices corporation in the US seeking a. bright, h ig l^ motivated individual with executive potential. 3 year training and fringe benefits. Send resume In care of: Maureen Amar, 100 Nas­sau Park Blvd, Suite _102, Princeton, NJ 08540.

SECRETARY-Adm inistra­tion office of adult com­munity seeks mature, ex­perienced Individual able to provide (ull range of office services; steno, typing.

Experienced .Secretary needed with familiarity in

..Lotus .1-2-3 or. Micro- softword, as well as Multi-'; mate. Good with flgures & pleasant phone manners a must. Cali for appt now. STAFF BUILDERS. 211 College Road East, Prince­ton, 609-452-0020.

word p re s s in g , public contact. Congenial atmos­phere. competilive salary and benefits. Please send resutne to : M a n a g e r, C learbrook C lubhouse! Cranbury, N J 08512. Or call, 609-655-2706 tq ar­range for Interview.

R E C E P TIO N IS T/S E C R E - T A R Y - .1 person office. Heavy typingAighI short­hand. Some data entry exp req'd. Good company ben­efits. Salary open. S e n d , resume to R D 1, Box 314A. Jamesburg, NJ 06831.

SALESHave, you over considered a career'.in real estate? If you are career-mlnde^. wilting fo work hard and be trained and want to leam more about this exciting business please call Chris Hill. 609-737-0100 or eves 586-6985.H could change your Mel

S E C R E TA R Y - tor Prince-, ton Law Firm. Legal experi­ence gocessary, W P skills a p lu s . S a la r y c o m ­mensurate with experi­ence. Please send resuihe to; PO Box AA, Princeton. NJ 08542, Alt; Office Mgr.

SECR ETAR Y - Small in­vestment banking firm, lo­c a te d on N a s s a u St. Princeton Is seeking a Sec­retary with word processing experience (Wang). Diver­sified duties include: ty­ping, handling phones, or­dering supplies, making travel arrangement^, etc. Complete benefit package & parking included. Please send' resume lo: P O Box 209, c/o Princeton Posi Of- f ic e -P a lm e r S q u a r e . Princeton, NJ 08542

R E C E P TIO N IS T - Part time tor busy veterinary hospital. 4-8pm, 2 week days psnd altemate Fris. 8:30atw’2;30pm alternate S a t s . A p f t ^ K In g s t o n Animal Hospital, Rte 27. Kingston. 609-924-7415.

R E C E P TIO N IS T/ S w ilc h - board Operator - Oti Line Software Int'l, needs de­pendable person to handle Incoming calls & message center. Front desk position, greet visitors. Interact with all levels of staff, Ctom-! petitive salary, good ben­efits. Please call 609- 799-6300 x6131

S A L E S / M A N A G E M E N T Opportunity - $40,000 to $60,000 1st year. Realistic potential. Must be willing to work hard & make a com­mittment to atmleve- suc­cess! O ur leaders are earn­ing in excess of $200,000/ year. W e offer a substantial salary for 3 years + com­missions; full training pro­gram & benefits. Call Jeff Boyarsky or Rich Campbell 201-549-7872; Equal Op­portunity Employer. M/F

" .SECRETARYFor Real Estate Office. Interesting position w. varied duties. Must have knowledge of Xerox Mem­ory-Writer or other com­puterized typewriter. Must possess good typing skills, a professional manner & exc telephone technique. Work with a friendly & co­operative staff. Good start­ing salary avail for this full time portion. Calf Linda or Aimlta, 609-924-4677.

S E C R E T A R Y - ''T e a m Player" for rapidly expand­ing high) ,tech cornpany. Must be bright, .depen-. dable. experiencecj individ­ual who posesses excellent typing, word processing, and telephone sid.lls. Fam­iliar with IBM PC a big plus. Send resumg vvith salary requlremenls to Personnel Director, Chronar Cdrp. PO Box 177. Princeton, NJ 08542.

SALES, O U TSID E - Hort., landscape or tree back­ground. Develop repeal business clientele. We. leach you how. Full bene­fits. Tamke Tree Experts, 201-647-3537.

S E C R E T A R Y H ig h quality rieal estate office In Pennington requires full time, friendly. -. well or­ganized secretary/re- cep- tionlst with accurate typing and good telephone skills. Leam real estate while you earn a competitivs salary and eventually become^ a licensed salesperson if ydb wish. Call Jeff Mershon, Gloria Nilson Realtors for interview. 609-737-8600!

'SECURITY GUARDS Permanent & part time, uni­forms & equipment sup­plied. Work in the High- tstow n, D a yto n , South Brunswick, South Arhboy & Edison areas.• Paid (omial training• Paid vacation (for lull

time employees)• Life insurance• Overtime availabilityFor appointment call be­tween 9am-4pm, Tues-Fri. 201-329-4541. ______SERVICE S TA TIO N - PA night & day time, week­ends. 609-466-1800.

REAL E S T A T E S A LES S C H L O TT REALTORS..; ...is recruiting new and ex­perienced Real Estate Pro­fessionals.

krtmslve T r a ii^ Completo Package of esant Services

:i60 8 O & 0 TT Offices ‘ -.iBoniis Pkn • to 7S% of Total C o im n is^

' Network ft Cable TV, Radto, Newspapers

ft SCt&OTT Home Book

R E C E P T IO N IS T / B O O K - KEEPER/Office Manager Trainee - for busy vet­erinary hospital. Full time. Alternate Sats to 2:30pm. Light bookkeeping. Experi­ence preferred but will train right person. Good fringe benefits. Apply. Kingston Animal H o ^ la l, Rte 27, Kingston. 609-924-7415.

SALES REAL E S T A T E - Are you finding things slow where you are? W hy not consider a- move to our! Success Team at Welchert Co., Realtors. For a con­fidential interview callLarry Vroom, Princeton office manager at, 609-921- fSOO. If you're good, you could be better with Weichertl

S E C R E TA R Y - Immediate opening tor someone to perform adnjinistrative & support duties tor profes­sional dept. Must have good typirig, secretarial & PC skills. Send resume & salaryu requiremento- to: Personnel, American Ap­praisal Associates. 600- College Rd East, Prince­ton. N J 08540. 609-452- 2330. E O E . No AgenciBsl

SHEET METAL LAYOUT MECHANIC

R ELIA BLE f e m a l e - C are (or disabled woman. Lovely erea, room & board + ^ a r y , Inferviow, 609-737- 1030, 6-8|xn. References.

! To arrange a confidential ; Interview, call Connie Qom- I ish of our Souto Brunswick ; Offica and take the first i step to a suOcassfuI .Real I Estate career., '

scHxnrRMitors 201-297-7171

R E S ID E N T IA L C O U N ­S E L O R - To leach per- STHial skills to chronic chiatric adults In small group home. Bachelors degree required, experi­ence helpful. Send resume to: Dorothy Ambruso, 912E Merrit Drive, Somerville, 08876.

SECRETARIES/General & Legal -. needed'for posi­tions in . law firms. Good typing & office skills. Steno, dictaphone word process­ing, bookkeeping, or legal exp, a + . Exp'd preferred,

, will consider entry level ap- p lic a n ts . C a ll M e rc e r County Bar Assn. Place­ment Senrfeo tor more into, or (or interview, 609-989- 6880. MCBA .Placemerit Sendee Is an E O E employ­ment agency. No fee to applicant.

S E C R E TA R Y - N Y C Man­agement consulting firm, now to Princeton Forrestal Village seeks dynamic,

• nonsmoking WP Secretary/ Adniln. Asst, with Word­Perfect or simliiar experi­ence. Dh/erslfied respon­sibilities. Call Strategic Re­source, 609-520-6688 or send resume to: President, Strategic Retource, 100- 300 Village Blvd, Princeton Forrestal Village, Prince­ton, N J 08540 ‘

Manufacturing facility lo­cated 15 mlris from Prince­ton, In the town of Hopewell Is seeking an experienced Sheet Metal Mechanic.

Mosthava experience vrith shear, ' brake & punch press. Must know develop­ment S bend allowances of light gauge sheet metal for fabrication of new product samples.

Training for C N C Punch Press Progamitig available tor the right person.

This is a (ull time position with a liberal benefit pro­gram S competitive rale.,

Send Resume Or CaB:

KOOLTRCmtC INCDept JU -3 -

PO Box 504 Princeton N J 08540

609-466-3400

-

MAMDETiNfi RESEARCH DIVISIONAL LEADER

You axpeilwiced to settog conswner produrta,tTiMtaanQ tesisarch? Do you b s^ 'o youcoidd •uboeertJly'hMdHV « ■ teafro » -iisicti fton? Are you lo ^ ig to r ,a n -«« l^ op- p o tiu ^ tor career imd K w e iw to shwino to tfto 1 ^ of 1 ^ ^n B ieinsw aretottiosarpjeall^are'Y es.^ttionyou owe it V y « i e ^ ^ send your resume and -------------- “"I history to:oompefwatkxi I

' : ' Human flesourcea DIrertorTOTAL RESEARCH CORPORATION

. ranoeton Corporate Canter.;5 lndsp<Midanoe!Way Princeton, NJ 0 8 ^

An Equal Oppominity Emptoyer

ARTISTSGENIGRAPHIC8 Pro, with design and produc­tion exper to nil over- i ^ ' ienlrKl .ft work w/recent trainees, (kowth position (or ex- par'd production artM w/supervisory asplra- dons. We're l^ s 1 ^ est contouter graphicsproduction bo. ft r^er totsrebttog variety, ad­vancement potential, regular reviews ft cotn- pleta benefits. EOE.Custom Slides Inc.eee Piereboro Rd. #456 •Platosboro,

(609) 799-6081< 20 1)-1442-5000

Come Grow With UsNOW HIRING FOR A U POSITIONS

ALL SHIFTS AVAILABLEApply in Person At Our Hiring Station.FOODTOWN OF PLAINSBORO

Princeton Meadows Shopping Center 660 Ptainsboro Road Dec. 27 thru Dec. 30

1lam-7pmFull and Part Time Positions

\ Will Train YouGood Starting Rate Excellent Benefits

After Dec: 30th Apply at StoreCOME TALK TO US!

----------------------------- -V .

S E C U R IT Y : Weekend se­curity officers. Exemplory personar backgrounds re­quired. Coiiiact Mr. Olsen. Director of Security, The Peddle School, 'B09-426- 0680.

100 Help Wantedworn) PTfOCESSC

T E M P S

S P O R T S EDITOR r (or two Somerset County weekly newspapers. Editor coor­dinates coverage of local high school and recrea­tional sports events; writes and copy edits stories, lays out p a ^ s for both sec­tions. SportSwrtijng experi­ence prejerred. . Contact

• Aridy. Kaye, The Pritketoh Packet, 609-924-3244. ■

Secretaries Typists

Receptionists Word Processors

Data Entry Switchboard

CtericiyLight Industrial

5 experienced Word Pro­cessors needed tor 2 la rg e ' co m p a n ie s , located in Carnegie Center to Law - jrencevilla, Long IL .short term assignments, excel­lent pay rate.

Never a Fee 104 Carnegie Center. Princeton f4j 08540 . 609-799-7000

WesternTemporaiy Servicas

2303 Whllehorsb- Mercervitlo Rd Mercerville NJ

609-588-9680W ORK FRQM Home• part time eves & wkends, tele­phone tofetyeiwing! Flex­ible hours. We will train.

S T A F F W RITER - to cover locail busfiness' community tor the Business Journal.- a Packet publication. Back­ground in business! writing is a plus. Newspaper writ­ing experience preferred. Full or part time, available. ConfachVikkI Botoso! The Princeton Packet. 609-.924- 3244.

T R A IN E E S H ig h -S c h o o l ^ , ^■ dropouts Job waiting.. Earn ^11 J^no Hollander 609,-, '$$$'& while preparirig lor ' 443-0965.free G.E.D. diploma. Leam useful job skills, if you are 16-25 years old & urn employad, call NJ Youth Corps of, Somerset/Hunt- erdon County at 201-782

WP/SECRETARY

Immed opportunities avaii lor individuals with W o rd­Perfect exp. Adia has long& short - term temporary

S W IT C H B O A R D O P E R ­A T O R - Part'lull time days, eves or nights. Nassau St oHice. Call 609-924-2040.

1480 today; Wo leach sue-— A o s itib n s a va h in th e cess. Free transportationprovided. • bie, at 609-799-9300. ~

Switchboard Operator

Busy hotle seeks individual lo operate Switchboard.

W ill consider, fuir or part timevapplicants. Dimension 2000 experience preferred but wilMraln right Individual.. Typing (required. Hrs of work 3pm-lo-fliidnight. Ap­p l y P e r s o n n e l D e p t. Scaiiticon-Princeton. iqp College Rd East. Pri'nceton N J 08540, EOE

TRA VEL . - j-International lours is increasing our staff. H ir in g in s id e / o u ts id e agonfs, part time/full time. Experienced & entry level considered. Friendly at­mosphere. Good behefjis. Coll Jane, at 609-921-6300

TYP IST

TA K IN G A BREAK From College? - Just graduated?, Asst teacher, small school

\lor teaming disabled stu­dents. Assist iri classroom, sports, projects, lunch dUty. S10/hr. Newgrange School. 609-394-2255.

General Typist needed lor this tem p assignm ent.

.Ability .to work indepen­dently & accurately ithpor- tent. Call now! \ S T A F F BUILDERS, 2 iJ College Road East, Prince ton. 608452-0020.

TE A C H E R + For Jewish nursery School. Immed opening ibr 4 yr old pro­gram. Must be exp Sub- stitue teachers tor morning bnd/or afternoons are also needed. Call Dr. Silberman 609-924-0020/921-0100 '

TY P S E TTE R •’ Freelance, Bocks County Medical Pub­lisher will train on MAC Page'Maker. Send res'urrie 10 M.D.P, 9 Pheasant Run Rd, Newtovm, Pa, 18940. All: Production Manager.

V E T E R IN A R Y A S S IS T ­AN T ■ Part time. Belle Mead Animal Hospital.

T E A C H E R • G r o u p Teacher. Full lime lor day care, center in (•rincelon. Requirements: at least'1 yr of college with 1 yr exp. Call 609-921-0521 or send resume: Box 11239 c o Princeton Packet.

Please call 201-874-4447

T E A C H E R ^ AIDE - Pro- school Hillsboro. Somer­ville area. 7;30am-3p'm or 11 :30am -6pm . M on-Fri 201-359-3335. '

V E T E R IN A R Y T E C H N I ­CIAN ■ For new animal emergency clinic. Nights, wkerids, holiday covering Somerville area. Position ayall immed. Good pay, benehls. Call 201-725- 1800 ask for Anne.

t e a c h e r sHave you ever considered a career irf real estate? If you are career^minded. willing to work hard and be trained and want to learn more about this exciting business please call Chris Hill 609-737-0100 or eves 586-6985.It could change your IKel

V E T TECH/Asst ■ 2pm to 10pm. 40 hrs Ind Set am & occasional Sunday. Va­cation & benefits. Exp a plus. Contact Sue 201- 359-3161.

W A jT E R / y V A IT R E S S - Daytimes only. Call, The Tigers Tale. 609-924-0262

W A IT R E S S / W A IT E R S ■ F/time, Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner, excellent pay. Call 609-448-2400 lor appt.

TELEM AR K ETIN G • Earn up $8 an hour, part time, flexible evening hours. Call Dan Pilcher The Princeton Packet, 609-924-3244. ext 192, btwn 1 & 9pm.

W A N T TO E A S E B A C K INTO T H E

W O R K FO R CE

TELEMARKETING REPRESENTATIVE

Part Time, Rexibte HoursThe Princeton Packet. Inc has an opportunity in the Advertising Oopi for a responsible Individual with g o o d co m m unicatio ns skills. Experience In tele­phone sales a plus. May lead to (ull lime employ­ment. Salary plus bonus. Call BArbara Parks at 609-924-3244. ext 177.

We need several praple who are not looking for a

. regular paychjKk but would like to work now and then on a flexible, almost non­existent schedule. You would be called to act as Receptionists, do general office work, etc. We will train, if desired, the position can lead to a more per­manent position. Call Jane McGuigan, 609-924-3244 ext .188.

Th e Princeton Packet 300 Witherspoon St' Princeton, N J 08540

T E L E M A R K E T I N G SUPERVISO R - Exp prel. Excellent pay. Call us at 201-509-0426 after Jan 2.

TELEMARKETINGSee our ad under Cus­tomer Service

WAREHOUSEMEN/W -Experienced fork lift/ctamp truck drivers needed (or (ulf time positions w/Soulh Brunsw ick based com ­pany. Excellent salary, complete benefit pkg.ft ad­vancement opp'ty. Call Gerald al 201-225-1271.

conran's

The Complete Homo Fumishirigs Store

EOE___________

T e l e p h o n e operators •for aiiswering service, f/p time, all shifts avail. Will train. Jario, 201-707-4825

TE.-E P H O N E SALES -' Full time position. Experience preferred, but not neces­sary. Excellent pay. Call at 201-509-0426 after Jari 2

W ORD PR OCESSO R - Needed to Input reports from dictaphone or type written copy on IBM PC. Will train on ouroquipmeht. but person must possess good typing and excellent spelling. This spot in our word processing depart­ment is for growing com­pany located to Prinraton with top notch working con- dllibn. Some flexibility to hours.but no nights. Call Carolino HIngher, at 609- 924-3800.

TAPE DUPLICATION COORDINATORPrtoceloo Theologicai Seminary seeks a qualified tocfividual to monitor tape duplication under th e ,auspices of the listening library. Reporting to the Director of Instructional Media, will be responsiblefor cataiogtog and maintaining listening library re­sources; maintaining magnetic matertab and s u p -, pBes' Invenloiy: billing and collection of (fcipilcatlon charges; and submitting bimonthly de- p o m end financial statements.

to operation ol technical. r computer anr) data base ex-

perkm e, ^ effective communication skills.

We offer a competitive starting salary and benefits« which Include 4 weeks vaciuion after 1 year of.service, a 35-hour work week, and a serene work J environmenL Interested candidates should send < resume o r ca ll th e P e rs o n n e l Olfice at. 609497-7720.

PAINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARYCN 821, Mercer street

Pitooetbn, NJ 08542-0803 We Are An Equal C^^iortin^ Employer

a d

TY P IS T - For (ximniunlcal- ion company. • Pleasant telephone voice, new build­ing, Kendall ^Park. 'Call Gina. 20t-82M 122 .ext 9508. .

Otfica Clr Suite 324

Plalnsboroi NJ 08536

IDS R e s u m e s T

Better, Professional JOB WINNING

RESUME - $9/ft upW e ! wrtle/type/prfril. Low padrege prices;• Lifetinie Updating •

America's OldestLargest Professional Resume Srv.

20 Nassau SI, Sle. 305• 609-924-9470 -

A R ES U L TS -G E TTIN Q - resume and cover letter; offer-producing Interview iskills; empioyer-finding re­search; custorh-built job campaign; goal-oriented career guidance. Individual attention. Fealuredby the Princeton Packet's Busi-- n e s s S e c tio n N ie ls Nielsen, Princeton Man­agement Consultants. Inc «)9-924-241l.

C A R E E R -A N D J O B Search Strategies - Sandra Grundfesi. Ed.D, former M ncolon University career counselor. Day/eve appts. PrihcOfdri Prolessjonal Park, C-1, 609-92}-8401,

R ESU M ES UNLIM ITED ■ Resumes & cover letters professionally written, ex­pertly typed on word pro­cessor, printed on rag bond or linen. Career courisel- ing; Aptitude/interest tes­ting, job. search strategies. Interviewing techniques, employment directories. Established In 1977., 609- 448-0701.

110 J o b s W an tedBABYSITTER - Babysitting , at my home in Hopewell. Ages 2 .& older. Call 609466-3632 anytime CAR PEN TR Y - All types General home repair. Bath­rooms remodeled. Ceraltolc tile (rim,, finished base­ments. rool repairs. Mike.. Hillsboro. 201-281-6074.CHILD CAR E - B y ex­perienced Mom in m y High- Istovm home 609-448- 4610.CHILD CARE • In my home. Full or part lime Experienced. Reierences 609-448-2755.

CHILD CARE ■ Have Open­ing in established day care group in my East Windsor home with experienced mother/teacher. Referen­ces available. 609443 - 5308.

CHILD CARE - to m y home by exp'd mom. Reasonable rales. '609426-0197.

CHILD CARE - Loving mother will care for your Infant or toddler, lull time or part lime In my South Brunswick. home. Exper­ienced with references. Call 201-329-3612, prefer after 5pm

CHILD. CARE - Monday Morning, Ino. has qualified, reliable child care available in insured homes. 609-799- 5588 and 201-5264884. .

CLEANING - II your want your home or office Really Clean, call 215-736-1523. Reliable, dependable, 10 yrs exp. and really clean.

110 Wanted"C O M P LETE HOME & O f-

^(ico Cleaning" ■ Floors, catpefa, windows, daily, weekly; monthly, servirig Princeton area 18 yre. Bonded. 609-588-5206.

GAL FRIDAY • Errands, housecleaning, plant/anl- m a l' care while on va - catioahusiness trip .etc. Please call 201-821-0473

HOLIDAYS' - are coming. Not just dusting, all surface cleaning, weekly, bi-month­ly. ■'Til make it sparkle, reasonable, refs. Cali Deb-' We, 201-281-6074,LPN EXP ER IEN CED -W iU - ing to do] home care & reierences avWlable. Call 609-7994081.

115 A n n o u n c e ­m e n ts . J

BUS T O U R - National G a l­lery. Washington. ‘‘Japan: The Shaping ol Daimyo Culture,” incudes lecture by curator & lunch al'Japan Inn. Jan 11! Reserve now. 609466-2247. Sponsored by Waldorf School.

JOIN T H E PARTY F O R . C U R T A IN C a l l s ' s b ,. PRINCETON'S S t R O U - ING T O W N NEW Y E A R 'S EVE PAR TY. CAN Y O U - J U G G L E . M IM i, D O CARICATURES O B T E L L FO R TU N ES? CALL' U S NOW 609-924-8777 A T TH E A R TS COUNCIL O F ' PRINCETON.

PLAY & GROW Nursery School - Somerset lo­cation.- Register now for new mini class beginning Jan. For more Information call 201-873-2325. Also new sessions lor Mom arxl me.

Clerical

JOIN AN INDOSTRY

LEADERCeramco Inc., the mr

.'dintalmar;

ket leader to dental la­boratory products stoCe 1959, to expaixflng its staff. W e arehighly motivated in ­dividuals for the follow­ing positions: v

TmPWIK UUS REP (I) -This persOT will work ctosely with our outside sales rep to developtog n e w acco u n i s a le s leads and service our erdsting. denial I(dx3{- alories through regular phone contad in'omain- Ing r^riacenienl ordbrs

rend Introducing n e w prodOpfs. This portion has a base salary plus tocqntive.cttsmiai SERVICE r ep o )

These reps will take customer orders, give product and price infor­mation, and serve as back-ups to the tele­phone sales reps. T h e Ideal carxlidales should h a v e a d e g re e o r equivalent to tele-saies or customer service ex­perience. They should possess positive at­titude, ■ • ■jh energy, and the dedre to join a growing organlzadon. RECEPTIORin m - T N s person will greet and direct visitors, provide typing duties for staff, arrd answer and direct tocomtog calls. Strong typing ( & + WPM), ex­c e lle n t verbal c o m ­munication and Usteiv ing skills, and flaxtoiOty to deal with changing work toad are neces­sary.MARRETIRC UCRnUtT (1) - This person wU provide a full range ol socra- tariai support duties-tn-w c lo d in g jj^ n a , s c r e ^ Ing phone cal», arrartg- in g schedules, a n d m&itatoing (lies. W ord processing/computar ex­perience desired with me abiitty to interact with sales force. G ood organizallonai ar>d fof- tovkip skills a.must.

Q ualllled candidates should send re su m e with salary history to:

Personnel Dept.

CEIUMCO,INC.' '2 0 Lake Drive

E . Windsor, NJ 08520 coe nvt

OPEMMQ JANUARY, 1089 . HeucoTech LM.

from Princeton, 6 mincoming . tromTirentoOjS n*t. from Yardtoy).

Opwing In Jatiowy, 1889,, HEUCOTECH LTD. Is kxMhg tor canoxtolM to be trakM silts Newark. New J ------tor

. Newark. New Jtxaey aile In FaBs Township. (Trav^ axpanaee dur-

.wISberWmborsad). •V Jk mrm •MkHrMT— L A B t^ ro f iv TECHNICIANS . '— LABORATORY SUPERVISORS'— EOUIPMENT OPERATORS -i.Salwy Commensurate with ergpwience — CompisUttve Salaiws — Excefleni Benefits — Equsl OppajtonHy Etn-ptoysrTo snsngelnlerview cal;Qerty Msrstts or Chtto MscMuitay at 26l-69»62ia

••I

BB Week of December 28,1988 .A Packet Pidilcatkm

Cafnps& ' Schema -

A B C CHILD Care Infant Canter - State license day

.care facility on.4 acres of land, only vii mile from Princetoo Jet. railroad sate.- tion. Hours of operation 7 to 7. We have openings for infants & toddlers, 6 wks to 4V; yrs of age. full time, part ‘ time & hourly. For further Info call. 609-799- 4162 ask for Joan Wyckoff. 59 Cranbury Rd. PrincetonJet. H j , oasso. ,

120 Personals .. Acceptable Abbreviations

■ ■ for Personal?F fFemaio), W (Male)

S'fSirtgle). D (Divorced)B (Black), W (While)

H (Hispanic)'C (Christian). J (Jewish)

G (Gay), L (Lesbian)..Ail other abbreviations will be reviewed.A D O P T -■ Financially se*. cure, educated, loving cou­ple. wants so much, to adopt a. vrhlle howbotn. Ex­penses paid. Please ans­wer our prayers, call collect 9~t4i59l-8438.

ADOPTION - W e-are a happily mefried, financially secure couple whd'wani to

. adopt a baby. We will give ' the baby love, security, lots

of relatives and a com­fortable home. Let us help make this difficult lime easier for you. Legal and. confidential.' all- expenses paid. Call Donna and Ted collect at 2)^-744-7678.

AD O PTIO N - While new- > born would be thd answer

t o ' o' childless couples prayers'. Baby to have se­cure & happy life, alt medical expenses paid.

.Call' Jane' & Rob collect, 201-583-8437.A MAN, - Grown, at peace. 32, seeks a little of every love hSV-i ever known, again, lorevm. For the for-

' esi in winter, the open road in spring & thk summer/ sunset sound of th^Bosto? Symphony. For the) poetry & humor in everyeay life.' For no limits Reply te.^Boj[ 0 11203 C O P rinceton

, Packet. ^

A READER ADVISOR' Mrs. Daniels has helped

people on a|i affairs of fife. Over ^ .y r s '. at same lo­cation. She can help you.

can. ^ 5 8 5 ^ 9 5 9By Appointment

ARTISTICCONNECTIONS

Linking single lovers of the arts: music, art. theater, dance,'literature, film, pho-

I tography. 'Write AC, Box 116. Chatham. NJ 07928. A TTO R N E Y H O U SE Calls

I Wills (fr. $65). Closings (fr. $365), Divorces (Ui

„ $450). Incorporations (fr. $200) Call for exact fees; other services ,James De- Martino. Esq,. 201-874-5636._____________________BIG BEAUTIFUUpates - A dating service. Reply to; Box 1222, Dept PR. Media. Pa 19063. 215-565-1717

C R EA TE HAPPINESS - Learn to conlrol your life and get the .resultis lhal you want. New Metamorphoses ‘ up sta rtin g 'Ja n u a ry iiiM . 7-tOpm. 7 weeks. Take this opportunity to change your life Call Kera Greene M.Ed 609-921 •0306 ,___________________

D ATEFIN DER ■ Singles Personal Ads - Largest List­ing! Free copy, call 201- 52&3004 24 hrs, or write: DateFinder, PO ^ x 1058- A, Piscataway, NJ 08855. .

, D W M - 3 3 . . 5 ‘ 1 0 ” . good-looking professional

;wilh a great sense of bumOr, who's very caring, irnpeccably neat, and is an incurable romantic. Yes. I even like kids. New to (he - area & would like to meet a

-very naturally attractive lady who's sincere, honest, non-smoker, likes the out­doors, & is Interested.in a long monogamous'lifetime together.' Some of' my interests include hiking, bicycling, travel, diving, c o m p u t e r s , s im p le pleasures & quiet times. Photo' appredaled. Reply

. box #11253. c/o Princeton Packet.

FEM ALE - Late 40's, short hair. Brown eyes, dark complexion. 5’4, 123 lbs. No dependents, nonsmo­ker. J )e 8ire long term/pw-

. manent relationship with romantic male 5'8, comple­tely free from past commlt- rnenls, finantdally. secure. Reply to: Box #11227 c/o Princeton Packet. - .

F R E E C O P Y Singles Pub • Write Soda] Ad-Ventures, P O Box 61. So Plainfletd, N J 07080.

HOUDAY DEADLINES

Tbursday, O e c a n ^ i^ ,. 1988 at 5 p.m. Is our dead­line to place or cancel your regular dassified ad for Tuesday, January 3,1989.

Friday, December 30, 1986 at 5 p.m. Is ouedead- Hne to place or cancel your regular dassified ad for Wednesday, January 4, 1989.

WE'WILL BE C L O S ^ IK H f . JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 N e w Year’s Day Holday

120 PersonalsJEW ISH: SINGLES - Meet terrific people. Let Toby B .^ Inc Introduce you.201-329-6759. _________

JU D Y YORIOS'S Com­patibles - Quality personal introductions for discrim­inating singieC Cfall for free interview, Princeton area 609-275-6212.,Central 01- fice. 201-707-9086

R AIN BO W E)(PRESS R A LLO O N COM PANY

Come join u.s tor a unique & magical experience in one . of our hot'"air. balloons. Rides.-- Promotions, Gift

'Certificates.Call 201-359-2600 :

SBM - 3 4 ,. professional, athletic, love "to read & listen to music. Excellent sense of- humor. Qe&Ire single femSe; 28-86, of similar persuasion,' reply with photo to tex #11252, c ’o Princeton Packet..

SINGLE ADULT Travel - Weekend activities & long­er trips. Info on events write to: Helen Gross, 60 Old Nassau Rd, Apt B, James- burg, N J 08831.

S M ^ . - Wo are in touch wjfn thousands of single

en & women in the boom­ing ■Pohcelori Corporate' Community & they're look- ingUor someone 'just' like

. youyfo help show them around. Expand your social r e ^ by using our Singles Cldssilieds. Just $.20 per worn, $3.00 minimum. Call 6 0 9 ^2 :0 0 3 8 .SW F - B i . Recently trans­ferred tA Princeton. Inter­ested in meeting an attract- iy'e, sincwe'& sporitanecus SWM 3 1 ^8 . Please for­ward photo w/profile & business. oard to Box # 11246 cjo P rince ton Packet.

S W FT 31 - Successful, ■'^ucated, sensible, attract­ive blonde who loves to read, explore Now York City and enjoy the ocean, would like to meet a nonsrrioking, professional male, age 30-40 who might also be interested in fitness or dandng. and a hew friend. Please respond lb Box #11251, c'o Princeton Packet. I

I

SW F - 32. Prolesslonal (college grad), intelligent, very attractive, warm, sin­cere, athletic lb seeking SDWM 28-38, profess­ional, nonsmoker with no. dependents' who is wahn. sup[wr|ive & very com­municative tor corhpan- ionship & possible romantic. rela'Uonshifi. Reply with photo (it possible) & infor­mation 7 0 ^ would like to snare about yourself to Box#11225 c/o PrincetonPacket.___________________

SWF. 38 - slim, attractive, enjoys outdoors, music, candelighi dinners, the arts. Interested In SWM/ OWM 34-45 with similar Interests for lasting rela­tionship. reply box-#11254, c/o Princeton Packet.

SWM - 24. good-looking, professional writer, with a sharp sense of - h u m o '.. Interested in art, theater, m u s ic . L o o k in g lo r a woman who likes new ideas, new challenges. Take a chanCe. Reply box # 1 1 2 4 5 . c/o Princeton Packet.__________________ ,

SWM - 29, seeks vivacious SWF. 25-30 lor compa­nionship. Kind personality and terrific sense of humor. Enjoys dining out. travel­ing. parties. I would like to get to know you. if Inter-

. ested send photo and ' phone number. Serious In­

q u ir ie s o n ly . R e p ly #281271 c/o PrincetonPacSBlT— - _____________

SWM • 30's, Doctor, warm, sensitive, good .looking seeks pretty professional SW F.'25-34 who Is family oriented, loves laughter, travel, the beach, children and dogs for .friendship and r o m a n c e . R e p ly B ox # 1 1 2 5 5 , c/o Princeton Packet.

SWM,' 42 • Well educated, youthful In looks & outlook. Interested in art, classical music, theatre, films, danc­ing, sailing & the great out-of-doors, looking for a. female counterpart, .in her % 's , with whom tQ enjoy life. Reply to: Box #11229, c/o Princeton P ^ket,

TOGETHERWe are the nations latest dating servico, wWi 87 of­fices nationally & 6 In NJ. including Princeton. If you ore kxridng for a special person call:

609<83-9700WM .30'S - Wish to date whKd woman 22-28 who Isn't hooked on drugs, cig­arettes or money. Somet one mature with pleasant personality, honest, neat & htiggable. Tm 5’9", aver­age looking, slim, gentle, honest, dependaUe. Single parent of preschooler. Someday wish to marry & have at least 1 more child. Enjoy nature, swimming, baseball, etc. Live near Mdrcerville, NJ. Reply to Box #11250 c/o Princeton Packet.

^30 H o M a y M a rtA F G H A N S • Beautiful, large 52x70, Imjxirted from Europe, in original new zip­per bag, perfect Christmas Gilt,- Sold in stores for $30 > . now only $9 eacf>. Great bargain. Call 609- 448-3658

. 35 Merchandise Mail

HDUDAY DEADUNESThursday, December 29, 1988 at 5. p.m. is our dead­line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Tuesday, January 3,1989.

Friday, December 3b, . 1988 at 5 p!m. is our dead­line to place or carKel your regular classified, ad fo' Wednesday, January 4, 1989. .

WE WILL BE CLOSED MON. JANUARY 2; 1989 New Year’s Day HoBday

••12 in 1 SOFA^^ PILLOW FURNITURE Reg $553. Now $389

IWPLATFORM BEDSm From $163

••STORAGE BEDSm From $258

••WATERBEDSmFrom $199'

CLOUD 9 FURN. MFG. ..Hight^bwn, N.J.

Wed-Sat Itam-7prn 1 •••609-443-4499oee

AIRLINE T IC K E T (Arrler- ican Airlines) - Round trip, NY to Paris, depart 3/20/89 return 3'28'89. $700. 609-ff24-6169-lv msg.________ALL .ST^EEL Buildings - Limited factory, specials. 30x30, 30x40, 40x60 & 50x100. Will erect. Must sell by 12/30. Call Ralph 609-448-5152.

ALL S TE E L Buildings - End , of year I closeouts. 30x40. 40x60, 40x75. 50x100 & 60x100. Some one of a kind. Must sell by 1/15/88. Call Ralph 609-(l48-5152.

ANDERSENW in d o w s & D o o te "& Atrium-doors, new, up to 50So discount. Can deliver

1-800-523-8707 A TTEN TIO N

VINYL SIDING.Show homes wanted lor "N e w Sty le” , 1 0 0 % financing available. Call M. S ilk , 6 0 9 -3 5 4 -7 7 6 8 or 201-542-3030. .BEDROOM FURN ITU R E - Double armpire w/bridge &2 end tables. French Prov, fruitwood. $995/BO., Call

, Barbara D, 6%-799-6066 days,'443-4010.eves.

BIKES (3) -1 0 speed need work. Copper pots 'io pc, brand-r.-new. Navy 'w o o l, cape-med.. never worn. Call ,201-782:5128. . ‘C O U G H .- Italian proWticial. hand carved, wood detail. Gold upholstery. Must see to appreciate. Price nego- tible. Call. 609-448-2007.

DIAMOND Heart Pendents - 1 caral total vh. $550 each. C ^ Bleen, 215- 943-4421.

D I A M O N D T E N N I S Bracelets - 2'/i carats, $1225 each. Call Eileen,215-943-4421. __________

FIREPLACE W O O D - all hardwood - seasoned, split & delivered: $120/cord. Kindling, $20 large buridle. Stove wood 16" avail. 609-259-6418.

FIREW OOD - All hard' wood. Oak. Cherry, Ash.- $120 per cord. Free de­livery. Call 609-758-0497. FIREW OOD - all hard- Wood,. seasoned, split and

. dellvored, fulli; 'A & 'A co/ds.'' Stove wood also avail. 609-443-4401..

FIREW OOD - Cut, split, s e a s o n e d , d e liv e re d , dumped. $85 per load. Please call 609-448-7198FIREW OOD - Hay, Uvo- stock. Ornamentals and all the other produce of NJ farms is at your fingertips through the Farmers Mar­ket Une. 1-800-FARM- M K T ...................................

F IR E W O O D - SpUttIng service at your home. Call609-396-8534-____________F I R E W O O D - w o n seasoned hardwoods, de- llveiy available. Call 609- 259-2609. .

FOAM • Cut to any size. ' Cushions, mattresses, etc.

Free quote. Phone 609- 29B-09i0.'Capital Bedding, US Highway 130, Yardvillo, NJ.

U s e d ^ ' ^ I T U R EFO R S A L E

Assortment of all kinds of furniture for the home.

Sk& nan Furrttiire 212 Alexander S L

PrkKeton, N .J . ro 5 4 0 609-924*1881

Hours: M -F , 9-5 S a t 9*1

GIBRALTER W O O D Bum- ing Stove- almost new, of­fers. Nearly new, portable dishwasher, b u tte r block top, $ 100. Call 609-924- 6956 aft 5.

•HAraOMAOE FU TO N S* ••FOAMRUB^m

Home-Camper-Boat • • M A TF R E S ^ S * *

TVr. $41, FI. $61, On. $72 C LO U D 9 FU R N . M FG .

Hightstown, N J . ’ Wed-Sat 11am-7pm

••*600 443 4400—

135 Merchandise - Mart

HO USE SA LE - Jan 8, 1989. Baby toys, pictures, European rallectibles. Call 609-79911769

KITCHEN - Avocado for­mica, kit base & wall cabinets, inci 6' center Island. Fomnlca butcher block counter tops, 14.7 cu fr-fridge, dshwshr, micro, sink, elec range & hood. $700/B.O. ,609-443-4420 N msg. . ’LARGE: S E LE C TIO N - of rec6ndi.lidhed Slrnplicity

. and Iritemafibnal Harvester 'Priding lawn,mowers and

tractors; 5 to 20hpr'609- 924-4177.

LO V E FO R SALE - Lot mo solve your problems with small antiques & ' other treasures. I'll rejoin them, fabricate missing parts, polish brass, rejoin pottery,, repair je w o lo ry, mount sculpture, repair lamps & more. Bring projects small­er than a breadbox io: Tom Pipecarver. 4 Spring; SI. Princeton. 609-921-0860. M ISCELLANEOUS - furn­iture, some small appli­ances, assorted jewelry & morel 609-883-9514.

M ISCELLANEOUS ITEMS - Solid pine china hutch, dishes, baby furniture & equipment, 10 speed bike, darkroom equipment. Must se1l.?.609-737-2B54 •PHILADELPHIA E S TA TE Liquidators - feOI Fair- mount Avo (7 blocks north of Market S t,o n Sth). 8'

•Queen A n n ,, solid ma­hogany dining room chairs;9 & 10 pc mahogany dining room sets in Chippendale &, many ■ traditional stylas; French ban quet table; Canred French bedroom set w/ vanity; many sejs of chairs, banquet tables & brpaklrprtts. Large solec' tion of quality Iradltiorial turn, a|l sold in perfect, cond, 'i/isit our 5000 sq It showroom. Call 1-215-925- 8690. Hfs dally by appl. anytime on Sat 10-4.PRIVATE COLLECTIONS- Beautiful jewelry must sell % 1 -782-5128, Judy for ap- polntment or Inventory list. Q U A L IT Y USED CLOTHING- a t THECMJT* GROWN SHOP, upstairs at the back of 234 Nassau St, We will be closed-Dec 3 i-Ja n 4. ■

RUBBER STAMPSSchool or College address,. home, business, zip code. Rubber stamps of all kinds and sizes made to' your order at:-.

*H1NKS0N'S. *^ 62'J4aas)MlS1./ . ,

S K I B O O J S , M e n s r Dachstejn V3. s iz e '.11. black 2 red. Great con­dition. Asking $130. 609- 799-1765.SLEIGH -1 horse sleigh, stored Inside. Good con- dition. Call,. 201-545-6859

SNOW T IR E S -2 studded, F78-14 M -S white walls, mounted. 4 ply tread. 2 plies polyester cord, plus 2 plies fiberglass co rd ., 2 plies polyester cord side­wall. 4 ply rating. For Gen­eral Motors cars. 3k ml use, $50/pair. 201-297-3519. Please leave message.

SOFA. CHAIR - Fair con­dition $150. 609-581-3433. Leave message.

TANNING BED • Royal 30. am/frri cass, $1200. Call 609-924-1796.

THOMASVILLE QUALITYSWIVEL, ROCK,

RECUNER & HUGGERS15 colors.'Truck load sale. $589.95, n o w $175 Whig Back Ctialrs, $185

R a d n e rs , $139Custom Made Sofas

Free Delivoryl Coll 609- 585-6766 Credit cards ac-cepted. _______ ■

TR IO T A G Sates, Inc. - "We do all the work," Profitable sale of entire or partial contents: of, your home. Professionally con­ducted at your conven­ience. 609-882-0560; 215- 493-5332.VANITY With Sink - 48" brown with white top, ex­cellent for shore house etc. Best offer 609-393-9577 or 588-7449.

••WATER BEDSmFrom $199

CLOUD 9 FURN. MFG.Hightstowrf, N.J.

Wed-Sat 11 am-7pm

WICKER & RATTAN FUm m fflE REPAIR^

Vl/'a. Also Do C a i ^& R u s l ^

Call 609-890-7908 W O OD A N D Coat Stove - Dining room set, birch show cases w/lights, elec­tric lift, air compressor, 2 comer cabinets, - hospital bed $ potty chair, 550 gal gas tank' w/pump, log burner. Call 201-534-4937.

W O O D S T O V E S - 2 fpl inserts, 1 w/drcuiatlng fan, $200/ea. Please call aft 6, 609-395-0538

Y 3 8 ComputersAPPLE II PLUS - Ex­panded 64K, 80 columi) c a rd ; la n g u a g e ca rd , monitor, single disc drive -I- software & games. $185. 201-369-4312

V*38 (ComputersM ACINTOSH CO M PU TER - w/ printer, external drive, all .software, priced to sell at $1399. 509-896^302 days 275-7134 eves'. M ACIN TO S H S E - vrith20 mb external drive, 2 600K floppies; & Image Writer printer. 8 mo's old, exc cond, $3000 or B/0. Work, 609-882-8400 Or homo 275-3940 ask tor Keith.

N E C P-7 Printer - Wide carriage, .24 pin, NLQ, ex­cellent condition. $4SOSO. Call,'. Paul,' 609-683-4141 days, 799-5129 eves.RADIQ SH A CK TR S 80 -

• DWP210 printer; like now w/tractor feed, operation manual & box greenbar paper. $400'B.O Call 609- 799-3434. ,W O R D P R O C E S S IN G System - Three AB Dick Magna SL (Shared Logic) terminals, 2 printers. 1 with feeder & 1 with acoustical cover, CPU. $3000/B0. Call day8.609-B83-7101

MerchandiseWanted

ALL AMERICAN Flyer & Lionel Trains - & • acces­sories. Top $$$ paid by pvt collector. 609-795-7470

A L L A N T I Q U E S & Furniture - from the 1940'S

back. Dining & bedroom sets. Desks- all kinds. G la s s w a r e , c lo c k s & lamps. Estates purchased w/clean out sbrvice. Cash. 609-586-0777 anytime.

ALL O LD Toy Trains - Lion- et/Amerfcan Flyer trains, a c c e s s o r ie s . H ig h e s t prices paid. 609-482-8598

. ALL T O Y Trains - Any age ' & condition & Old Toys.

Best - prices paid, call 609-737-7730. •C A S H FO R YOUR Antique

: Furniture - we are a largo dealer specializing |n Oak. Willing to buy 1 p le ^ to entire contents. 201-329-2062, ’___________________G O L D - J e w e l r y - Diamonds, highest prices paidi Monroe Twp area.201-521-2187____________

G U N S .& SW ORDS - Mili- taty items. Federal & State licensed as . required for New Jersey transactions. Will make house calls, pay highiasi cash. Call Bert. 201-821-4949.

H IG H E S T PRICES Raid - For Camjsdign Buttons in­cluding Dukakis & Bush Buttons. (^ 1 Alison, 609- 924-9600.N I N T E N D O - T a p e s wanted, used. To buy, sell A ; ‘■(fade. .609-.587-9149,

Hejttrb riiessage.-

O L D - W R IS T VVatchos ’ - From thp 1930's or dddly shaped watches. Please call 201-566-3366

O R I E N T A L R U G S & Tapestries - bought for cash. 201-944-4001.

U.S. C O IN S ' - jeWetery, pocket watches, antiques, any sterling, silver, gold-or scrap. 609-587-7507.

'U S ED FURS .^Wanted!. - Highest prices for fur coats & jackets. Call Friedman Furs 609-395-8158 ' . :

MusicalInstruments

HOUDAY DEADLINES

Thursday, December 29, 1988 at 5 p.m. Is bur dead­line to place or cancel your regular classified ad -for Tuesday, January 3,1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line to place or carx^l your

'regular classified ad for Wednesday, January 4, 1989.

WE WILL^BE CLOSED MON..JANUARY2, 1989 ,

. ' New Year’s l%Ho8dayPIANOS-ORGANS

•New-Used*. GUARENTEED

LOWEST PRICES FINANCING AVAILABLE

All major Credit Cards Purchase Power

M USIC LESSONS 609-599-2700

BaWwki-Hammond >fctslc Center

HAMM OND Organ Grande Console - preset pistons, 16 rhythms. Much more. Traditional design. Bench Included. Model no. 1182. Asking $2000. To inspect . call 609-655-3078, if no answer call 655-1159.,

M ARTIN G U ITA R S -S p e c - . lal discounts. Connie's Mu­sic Center, 22-Davenpbrt SL Somerville. 20T-725; 0737.

PIANO - 1976 6’ Yamaha Consenratory" Grand Plano in shjny ebony finish,' model no. C-38pe, In p e ri feet condition. Excellent for professional or home use. Asking $9900. To Inspect 609-655-3078, if no answer call 655-1159PIANOS ■ New & used. Bought and sold. Connie's Music Center. Somerville.

. 201-7254)737.R O TH VIOLA - 30 yrs old. Im p e c c a b le c o n d , a p ­praised al $2500-$3000.201-689-2159.____________

VIOLIN - Fine Pre War -Germ an Violin. Slradivar-

hJS Cbpy. Call 215-766- 8249.

MusicaiInstruments

YAM AHA E LE C TO N E - MC-660, electronic organ;

' slightly used, MIDI cap- able $4500. 201-359-5821

CoUectibfesB A S E B A a CARDS - O r­iental antiques,. Oriental stamps, coins. Hamilton C o lle c tib le s . 6 0 9 -5 8 7 - 3809.

55 AntiquesH O U D A Y D E A D U N E S

Thursday, Deceiilber 29, ‘1988 at 5 p.m. Is bur dead­line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Tuesday, J a n u ^ 3,' 1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. Is our dead-, line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Wednesday, January 4, 1989.

W E W ILL B E C LO S ED M ON. JA N U A R Y 2, 1989

: N ew Year’s Day H o M ay

HANKINS a n t i q u e s / - Collectibles. Bought/sold/ 'adpralsed. 1 piece to entire household. Tues thru Sat, 11am-4:30.169 Mercer St. Hightstown. NJ. Call 609= 443^102 or 448-6772.

A N T I Q U E W I C K E R - Bought, sold, restored. Dovetail Antiques. By appt. 609-298-5245 C LO C K REPAIR - Jordan Knight, Pennington Circle, Pennington,-NJ. Call 609- 737-0761.'

LO VE FOR SALE - Let m o ’ solve your problems with

> small antiques & other . treasures. I'll rejoin them,

fabricate missing parts, polish brass, rejoin pottery, repair je w e le ry, m ount sculpture, repair lamps & more. Bring projects small­er than a breadbox to; Tom Pipecarver, 4 Spring St.

' Princeton'. 609-921-0860.

P EN N IN G TO N A N TIQ U ES - 21 W Delaware, Pen­nington, NJ.' Open 6 days, Mon-Sat. 10-5:30. 609- 737-9090.

R O B ER T W H ITLEY - Mas- ' ter of antique furniture res­

toration, Repairing,, re - flnishing. Veneer, Inlay and canring work. Old finish p re servation. S ble bury near New Hope. PA: 21 &• 297:8452.

^ 6 0 Garage SalesE S T A T E S A LE

Sun, Jan l e t , -“ 1389, lO am . Contents of 90 y r old N ew E n ^ w td hom e. AntkiueB, fUmlture, art, glass, pottery, antique scates, jewelery, & tons of .old knic-knacs. E ve ry - t h ^ 'p r ic e d to sefi,' 109 H o R ^ o o d Ave, Som e­rset N J off Easton A ve . near Rt 287. C a l 2 0 1 - 846-1368 for (firections.

178 Pets & Animals

75 Pets & Animeds

H O LID A Y D E A D U N E S

Thursday, D e ce n A e r 29, 1988 at 5 p.m. Is our dead­line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Tuesday, January 3.1989.

Friday, Disceihber 30 , 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line to place or cancel your rbgufar claseified ad lor Wednesday, January 4, 1989.

W E W IL L B E C L O s k ) M ON . JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 N ew Year’s Day H o M a y

AM ERICAN ESKIM O Pups - White & fluffy. Bom Nov 22, purebred. M/F. Parents on, premises. $150 ea. 201-821-5176. ,ARAB G E L D IN G -S y r old; ‘ 16-H, Greenbroke, needs

^additional training, good 1st show season. Call 201-359-7436

B E L L E M EA D A N IM A L H O S P ITA L

On Rt 206, 2 rnl So. of ' . Amwell Rd. 1 doctor office,

24 h r . s e r v ic e , f u l ly equipped. .

DR. FR A N Z B O G N E R ; 201-874-4447

. C A TS & Kittens - Cattery reduction, home raised Persiaris, Cornish Rex, Abyssinian, Oriental short halr.^Call 609-466-2607.

DO G f-OOD/SUPPLIES - Many brands In stock, fresh frozen meat, cedar bales, insulated dog h o u se s, chain fink kennels. All at low prices. Kauffman's Pet Lodge. 609-446-3114.,

Feeds and Grains ' For all animals at,

R O S E O A LE M ILLS 274 Alexander St.

Princeton. 609-924-0134

G R O U P RIDING Lessons - L im ite d to 4 p e o p le . $30/hour. Memoori, eve­ning & weekend' classes. "InsthiCtion at its very best." Hunter Farms, The Great Road, Princeton. 609-924-2932. ,________ __

HAPPY PAW S . Obe­d ie n t School. Registra­tion night January 5 & 13,7 to 9pm. Classes start Janu­ary 17. Puppy thru utility. Tues & W e d eves. Current innoculations req'd, C D Police Bldg, Manville. FMl 26^469-1660 or 468-6081

H O R SES, H O R SES. HOrs- es - We have a good selec­tion of quality horses start­ing al $3000. Show, event, dressage, & hunting: Call Andrew H. Phllbridi, Hunt­er Farms, The Great Rd, PrindWon. 609-924-2932 '

H O R SES BOARDED - In- dividual turnout. South Bmnswlck Township. 201- 329-6259.

L O V A B LE . P E T Birds - Very tame baby Cockateils (small PanotS). Grey linale & white female. $125 for the pair. Call 609-921-2892

SIAM ESE KITTEN S - C F A - A C FA reg. Health guaran­teed. Serious inquiries only. Call 201-846-9050

STALLS OR Turnout Board- Available on private farm in AmWell Valley. Exc care, daily turnout, sand arena. 609:466-153#

180 Lost & FoundFOUN D TE R R IE R -S m a ll, brown w/Wack lace. Fe­male. Fourid In the. Pen­nington Area. Call Hope 609-921-8070 days. 215- 493-7938 eves L O S T - On 12/20, small black cat with white chin & b ^ y , no collar, answers to Tommy or M in i'T '. Prince­ton (Community Village/. Princeton Shop^ng Center area: The kids are heart- brokenl Please call after 6pm or leayer message on machine,'w9-683-CI697.

InstructionsB IO LO G Y /C H E M IS TR Y / English Comp - Tutoring at all levels by exp published. prof. Will taker instruction to yoUr needs, flex- hrs. Tom Mahoney 609-799- 4704 eves & wkndsl 452- 0606 ext 231 days

G UITA R & BASS. - Les­sons by La w rence ville school instructor, all styles/ levels Steve &09-921-8259

. G U ITA R - • Lessons all levels, all styles, taught by Berklee College of Music, graduate. Call Ed Cedar

- . 609-443-3010., ’HIGH C H O LES TER O L? -

T h e Healthy Gounnet of­fers' classes on' low-fat,

' tow-cholesterol, & gourrnet cooking. Beginning the end of Jan. Call now for more information, everilfigs 609- 588-8638

M ATHEM ATICS Tutoring - Grade school thm grad­uate school; arithmetic, al­gebra, geometry, calculus; physics; econom etrics. M a rvin B a rs k y , "P h,D . Princeton 609-924-4887, Bordentown 298-4963.

m a t h T U T O R IN G • By : Ph.p., High School 4 Col­lege level, S A T 4 ,all col-

•legb board exams, re­medial enrlchirient pro­grams, custom, individual Instruction. 609-448-3690. M ATH TU TO R IN G - 'Call

- Mercer County .Center lor Educational Studies, 609- 448-6023 or 443-1013.'

MAT>i ' TU TO R IN G - In- dhridualizied instruction. MA Teachers College, Colum­bia Unhr, 609-443-1739.

66 Instructions

PIANO L E S S O N S -in you? home, Hillsboro. 201-369- 4937.

TR A IN T O B E A PROFESSIONAL

• Secretary• Exec Secretary „• W ord Procetwor

Home Study 4 Resident- T ra in in g .-F in a n c ia l A id .. Available, Job P la c ^ e n t Assistance. Nat'l Head­quarters, Pompano Beach,. FL. ' ...

V 1-800G27-7728 T H E H A R T SCH O O L A Dhr of A c t Corp '

T H E . L E A R N I N G E X - - C H A N G E - Tutoring, read­

ing, writing, study skills. 609-443-411’3.

TR A V E L A G E N T . T O U R G UID E ;

Aii|ne Reservationlat-

Start locally, full 4 ' part time. Train on five airline

. computers.; Home study 4 resident' Iralnlrig. FIrt- an- cial aid available. National

' Headquarters, Porrfpano Beach. F.L.

A .C .T . TR A V E L S C H O O L

1-800G27-7728

Accredited Member V N.H.S.C.

Train For Careers In:• AIRLINES• C R UISE LINES• t r a v e l AGENCIES

H o m e S lu d y/R e s id e n t Tra in in g . Financial aid available. Job placement

'assistance. Natl Head­quarters, Pompano Beach, F L : , '

A .C .T . TR A V E L SC H O O L

1-800-327-7728

Whor: .you just ** canlg^teQough

local sporti... clfeck this paper’s

spoils pages. .

People rely on classified.To find just the right h o m e tor raising a fomily. Buyers a n d sellers c o u n t onc la s s if ie d t o e d m e into c o n ta c t with e a c h other, e x c h a n g in g

hom es th a t m a k e life m u c h .m ore enjo ya ble .Classified. Th e resource y o u c a n really rely on.

People rely on classified.To bring th e m to ge th e r with p ets— b o th large a n d small— that a r^ both, friendly a n d fun. Shoppers anci'sellers c o u n t o n classified e ve ry week to c o m e into c o n ta c t w ith e a c h other, e x c h a n g in g all kinds of anim als th a t m a k e life m u c h m o re enjoyable .Classified.-The.resource yo u c a n really rely on,

A call to any one of these offices can get a classified ad In all the Packet publications.

Packet Publication!!

The Princeton Packet The Lawrence Ledger Windsor-Hights Herald The Cranbury Press Hillsborough Beacon

.609-924-3250'^609-896-9100609-448-3005609-395-0730201-359-0850

Hopewell Valley News

i B K H S i

The Manville News .The Franklin News Record The Central Post North Brunswick Post The Hamilton Observer

609-466-1190

201-725-3300201-469-9040201-329-9214201-821-0550609-587-1012

A Packet PiMcation Week of December 28, 1988 9B

Entertainm entCHILDRENS P A R T IE S -a special occasions. .Singing entettainment. Call Pat, at' 609-924w»637.

216 B u e in e ssS e n ^ s •

PR OFESSIONAL TYPING Service •. Complete seC' retarial service: word/data processing on. IBM-PC, ro- petlllve letters, resume

D ISC JO C K EY - Pro,, fesslpnal radio personality(KIX 101V4) ai^lablo lo r^ ^ fe ^ f^ tk iti, photocopying/ your noxj party. rWI types of printing, pralling list rhrmusic. Reasonable rates. Call Steve McKay, 609- 44e-53l3. ■LARK STRINGS • Ad a rrote ol dlstinctkm to any special occasion. 609- 921-7782, 201-297-4267 V

. M AGIC BY Unbeyeva-Blir- BlrOxtays; X -M is parlies, all ages, animal balloons. Call 201-722-55T0 . ■,

N O CTU R N E - - Plays all styles of rhusic (or any oc- casslon. -Steve Hayden.

. 609-92T-82S9 . •P I A N I S T - G e rs h w in , R o g e rs . K e rn , Porter, Streisand, Sinatra, Beatles. Many more. Your piano or mine. Call Bob Lohman,

.609-921-6757.SO UN D W AVES - Now has WKXW-KIX 101W radio personality Paul Cun­ningham, available to DJ your nerd event. Call 609" 44 3 -4 4 6 6 . R easonabU rates.

C a t e r i n g

H O U D A Y D E A O U N @

T h u n r ^ , Decetnber29, 1988at5p.m . iso irr^a d - . tirie to place or caneq/yotir regular classified ^ for Tuesday, January 3/1989.

Friday, becem bv* 30, -1988 at 5 p.t^. is brr dead-

. line to place or catcel yout - . . regular dassified ad lor

Wednesday, Jamary 4, 1989.

W E v in a B E CLOSED M ON , JA N UARY Z 1989 N ew Year’s Dry Holiday

■ P A R TY PED D .ER .- Will cater to all yois homemade palets. Childrens birthday parties, businrss lunches & dinners,' coodail parties, showers, arything... Call Beth at 609683-2991 or Barb at 609-771-9527.

■ PROFESSIONAL BARTE- NDER SetVee r.Spedal- Izing in pvt parties/ spedal occasions. 609-586:1709.

201 P h p t o g n i p H y

TIM E LE S S IM A G ES - Pro- (esskmal photography (or spedal ooiasions, wed­dings, eta Portraits & video avaiidJie. Call 215-953^1609. ' _______________-W EDDING Phdography -

. Over 25 ydars experience. Rea!!s!japrices..(^ll Jules; 609-79^5240 evenirrgs.

206 P i a n o T u n i n g

G U A R A N TEED IN Tune - Have daho tuned &/or repaired by a sensitive, col­lege-trained musidan who . cares. Call day or eves, for appolntmenv 15 yrs. expe­rience. Appraisal services avail. 201-874-6965. '

211 F u r n i t u r e

R e s t o r a t i o n jCAN ED ,4 RUSHED - / Make an old chair better./ Give It a new seaL Expertlyf done, 609-395-0342. /

216 B u s i n e s s

S e r v i c e s

7VCCOUNTINQ 4 FinanW .Planning - For iridiv{du«4 -small businesses by rim .'Dhara, CPA. 609-448-896

E U lN E 'S W O R D P r o r ^ /Ing Center - one slop^ro- •iessional secretarial r* Mrice. Spedalties indu 'sumes, repetitive lit imallinglisw,. i Quality work. Quk /around. Reasonable Instant copying. Plei

,609-446-6479.HAVING TRO UBL

‘stalling your pen puter or havng

-understanding •programs? Call i .609-392-4761 forjr •tion 4 instnjctiori •you .solve your .problems

tenance, spiral binding. E s ^ tabtished in 1976. Rapid s e rv ic e at reasonable rates. 609-448-6707.

PROFESSIONALS 4 STU - D E N TS - Use . our word processing expertise for

, your:, feports, resumes, manuals, repetitive tetters 4 much more. Call A D T

. Assodated; 609-443-3276.

RESUM ES UNLIMITED - Resumes 4 cover Jotters

,prolssslonally written, ex- j » r t )y typed on word pro-' cessor, printed on rag bond or linen.. Established- in.

■ 1 9 ^ . Call 609-448-0701.

VIDEO PRODUCTION• Sales- Prosenlallons .• Documentaries• Employee Orientation• Training» T V Commerdats Packet Produdions will

..produce . a professional, color, video tape (or your company using "stale of the art" Sony cameras and editing equipment in 3/4" or 1/2" V H S format. K^usic, voice-over, graphics avail­able. For more information call \ ■PACKET P R O D U C T'S

6 0 9 ^ 4 -3 2 4 4

M P a c k e t V M e or

W O R D P R O C E S S IN G Sendees - Repetitive let­ters, ...reports, legal work, general cotrespondence. Laser Jet Pririting, IBM^AT com patiblo equipment. Word Ported Soltwaro. Professional services at reasonable rates. Pick up 4 . delivery avail. Call Words Unlimited, 6C9-924-2S05 days, 201-29'-0872 eves.W ORD PROCESSING ■ IBM XTs 4 Nadntosh, with WordPerfer^i Word, laser t typesetting/editing, Lotus and Han/ap graphics, le|e- commOnlfatlons.-^ Manu­scripts. dirrespondence, books, f M g n langUagei and sla^tical typing; re­sumes, fanscriplion. Neay Princetrt University.' Call 609-9211621,

W O R D ^R O C ES S IN G -B y Age i Aquarius. High produmty, low rales. Call Kathy609-395-0895

221

/Servicesip U N T IN G S E R y iC E S

ifOleisionaf business' 4 se rvice s . Business

nputer set ups, financial nning, personal Income

xes. Jay Sincoff, CPA, onroe Tw p. 201-251-

1250. ____________

A c c o u n t i n g 4 t a x ser- /vices - lor businesses and individuals by Andrew L. Gold, Certified Public /Ac­countant, Hillsborough. NJ. 201-874-8514, 218-1113 Raritan. _________

SOLVE Y O U R Credit Prob­lems. Experienced oonsultr ants .to help you remove perm aneritly from your aedil redbrt: bank- ruptcy, tale p a ym e n ts , ju d g e ­ments. 4 etc. Establish good credit. Get loans you need. Confidential. 201- 249-2233 Mon-Sat 9-5.

22VRnaneialServices

C P A • T / ^ . Returns - Tax p la n n in g . Reasonable, Year round bificos in East Windsor on.Route 130 4 in Twin Rivers. Call Norrnan

. Mayberg. 609-448-5566. .

231 Special Services

A IR U N E T IC K E TS

Tired of waiting In line at the Airport? Why not callus at 201-74^773(3: ^

P LA Z A TR A V E L TW O. 1?25 Route 27

Somerset. N J 08873 Oup aervlcea are freeAIRPORT D R IVIN G -N ew - ark/Kennedy/Phlladetphia.

■ Your car or. mine from the Lawrencevllle-Princelon area. Dependable. Rea­sonable rates. Day or night. 609-921-3643.C U S TO M U P H O LS TE R Y - Pillows, accessories. Cus­tomers fabric or my selec- tion. 609-448-7198

C U S TO M W INDOW Treat­ments - Balloon, Roman 4 Austrian shades, swags 4 jabot's. Pillows, cushions \ more decorative acces­sories. . Yoiir fabric.' 'Fast, professional, reasonable.

^609-426-6759. .DRESSMAKING And Alter­ations - Janice Wolfe - Call 609-448-2125. . ■ '■PROFESSIONAL SEAM­S TR E S S - Alterations, tail- ■ oring;.custom made gowns 4 pillows. 609-799-3693.

236 Home Seivices

A D V A N C E D C LE A N IN G Systems V •. Professional home care, regular main­tenance. Windows,- doors 4 carpets. Call 609-690- 8165.

AFFORDABLE HOME 4 Office Cleaning - Complete home 4 office cleaning. Movirig? Have us clean your empty house. Free estimates. Bonded. 609- 924-8925, 924-8446. C A R P E T/ U P H O L S TE R Y Clqaning - Coinpletq carpel 4 upholstery cleaning ser­vice. Kleen 4 Fresh Carpel

- Systems. Call 609-397- 4028. ' •

C A R P E T LE A N IN G - Ex- perienced professional. $i per stair 4 $.16 per sq ft. Call 609-448-6085.

C LE A N UP Senrice - Yards, attics, ba/sements. garages. Also local mov­ing. Fast service 4 low prices. Please, call 609- 448-2453 anytime,

C O M P L E TE HOM E 4 01- fido Cl^anipg" - . Rpors, carpets, windows." daily, weekly; monthly servihg Princeton area 16' yrs. Bonded. 609-588-5206.

.C O U N TR Y CLEANING - Is avilable for new Sched-

. uling. We are a reliable and . experienced rompany. Our

s ta ff is in s u r e d and bonded. Local references. Call 609-397-8882 for goodservice. ____________

Flagstone, Slate & Stone Flopra

Refinished

R o n M Tabnadge

609-588^193 H O M E CLEANING Sycs - R e a s o n a b le re lia b le service. Bonded 4 Rets. Daily, weekly or monthly. All work owner supervised. Serving Princeton 5 yrs. Call 609-586-2615.

236 H o m e

i^rvlcesHANDYMAN - Carpentry, painting, plumbing, etect^ dn bsmts. 8-1 lam, M-F. '609:443-1641.

Z -B E S T Household Inc

• Housekeepers, Nannies. Companions.

• Home 4 Ofdce Cleaning.

609-799-8853201-297-4947

JA N ITO R IAL SERVICE By Irena - Hbusesi apts. re­liable 4 experienced! Call 201-390-0924.

' LAMP SHA D ES - lamp mounting and repairs. Nas­sau Interiors, 162 Nassau St, Princeton.. .

PAUL'S General Cleaning Service - Prompt, courle: ous,. reliable. 7 l^ s experi­ence providing any. clean­ing need from - weekly house cleaning to carpet shampooing. Ffee esti- mates. 609-88a-~0251.

PROFESSIONAL WOMEN '- Enjoy nutritious meals w/d the work.- In just a few hrs. each Week, I'll shop 4 prepare your recipes..Reas ratesi Ifnpeccabjs local rels. Call Pepper. 609- 987-9030

SEW ER AN D Drain clean­ing, plumbing, reasonable rates. 7 days, 201-545- 4269 or 201-525^1760.

. W INDQW CLEANING,. - Window'4 storS window, inside 4 but. S5.00 each. Carpet, upholstery, wall 4 panel, bathroom. Free esti­mate. .Fully insured Mil w ork g u a ra n i'‘ s 0 . C all

' 609-393-2122. W IN D O W TR E A TM EN TS - Limited sale. Save 55% off verticals 4 mini blinds. No . charge for medsuring or installation. For shop at home service call 609- 655-3345.

2 4 | B u i l d i n g

ServicesA B SO LU TELY All Work Guaranteed ■ Alterations, restorations, landlord's re­pairs. windows, doors, tile, locks,, keys, etc. Ucensed, Insured. Gerry Sweeton, 20 yrs. in Montgomery Twp. 609-468-i267;

ADDITIONS - Alterafions, decJts. etc. Alt types of gen­eral coritracting. Looking to have a new energy etderent hqme built? Contact K-Fam B uilders Inc. 20l-4iS9- 5685. __________

ADDITIONS - Alterations, R e m o d e lin g .' C u s to m decks, general repalrb'. Plaririing consultailonsr es­tim a te s fre e . Q u a lity craftsnja'riship at reasori- able rates. Reiarences 4 photographs available. H.C. Consthictiori. Call 609-448-2324 after 6PM.

ADDITIONS -. Alterations, decks, painting, fully in­sured, free estimates. 201- 329-2295 or 613-1786A D D I T I O N S • D e ck s, kitchens, built-ins, bath­rooms. closets. All interior flnish work including doors 4 vyindows, sliding glass

. doors, scrooned-in. Fine •carpentry. Quality work­manship.' 609-921-8320.

241 B u B d i n g

SeryteesA LLSTA R M ASONRY - S p e c ia liz in g in patios, wood decks, pool .dqcks, walkways, sunrooms, slabs and lootings for additions, excavating, R.fl. T ie s De-

sign, - cultured stone/bfidt arid block work. Fully In­sured 4 references, call 609-924-6300.

B AR CELO N A BUILDERS IN C - General contractors, established In, 1970. Cus­tom hom es.^additions, decks, remodeling plus de- sigri service. Licensed 4 Insured. 609-530-0900 or 443-5215;.

B A S EM EN TS , Attics. Addi­tions, Bookshelves, Cus- lonr Carpentry - 17 years experience. 609-448-8872.

CERAM IC TILE : Installa- -.tion-repair. Bath, kitchen,

foyer. Call Mike, 609- 588-9499, . , j ' ,

C H IM N E Y S W E E P Fireplace, wood Stoves, oil burners.- Clean, efficient vacuum systeni. A dirty chirriney Is a fire hazard! Call Robert Ackers.

H O M E C O M FO R T 609-486-3011

. CONCRETE4M ASONRY Mj, W O O D D EC K S

Quality Pallos/Walkways, ■ F la g s to n e , B rick , Pool Decks, Porches,; Founda­tions, additions, repairs.

Warren BuBders Inc . 201-782-2560

609-883-8137

C O N C R E TB W O B K -s id e ­walks,' patios, fireplaoes,. general masonry and re­pairs. Call 609-73716874.C U S TO M PLUS Conlrac-

. tors - Don't move-improve. W e lake care ol all your contracting needs . with 1 phone call. Additions, re: novations, decks., kitchens 4 baths. Certified fully in­sured. Free estimates. Call 609-446-9136. \

D. W ELLS Home Improve­ment - Replacement 4 In­stallation ol wipdows 4 doors, decks, bathrooms, alterations, rooting, ma­sonry, etc. References. Free estimates. Call 609- 882-2503.________________F I N E C A R P E N T R Y r Decks, replacement win­d o w s , fin ishe d bsmts. screened porches, roofing, ceramid tile. Fully insured. Free estimates. 609-443- 4124, Bn/co,

G U T TE R TA LK - Dean gutters, check roof 4 chimney. Standard 1-story, $45; 2-story, $50. Repairs exha. 609-921-1135.

H O M E IM PROVEM ENT

Additions. Decks. Dormers. Windows. Doors, Patios, 'P o rc h e s . Enclosurers , Roofing 4 Siding.-Free Esv timates. Full Insured 4 Refs. Call 201-874-3800 or201-359-1233.'__________^

J.G . Tuccillo - Masonry contractor. Plastering, ag­gregate. stucco Brick, block 4 concrete work. Free estimates. Please call 609-392-1832

R ESID EN TIAL GARAGE Door - Installation 4 repair. Free eslirnates, refs. 24 hrs. 609-443-8624.

- Princeton Pat has' limil

'■ Press Time

H, Inc.

lilable

I Web Offseirress*• . ' I * ■

Let us print yur news- t>aper or in-hose organ. Camera read mechan- icats or negali^ required.

.Standard pagi or tabloids ban be printe on regular 30# newsp/it. or 50# white offset ack. Nominal extra chargepr spot color.

Our capadf is 32 pages etandand di 64 ^pages

'Jablold.

Call Doris Jragert at (609) 924-3244 ^particulars.

P O S TEflf- Signs, murals, c a l l l g r ^ t-shirts, sweat- 'shlrts, ertoons 4 cari­catures. /Call Arbalest's

.G ra p hic^ 609-443-3340.

Rod! "O n Siaoc; iij"Time O n ’

It current tneaifccti prodoctiorts

JAGUAR M O TO R C AR SFor Jaguar Deals Plus Tak­ing Orders On ’89 Jaguars

For Sale Or Lease ’89 Jiaguar XJiS Sdns., Vanden Plas, XJS Cpes; XJS Gonv Sales-Seiyice-Paits Leasing Dealers Inquiries Welcome

iu E E D M ^ N ^ A G U A R SALES-SER VICE-PAR TS Rt. 1 Langhorne, Pa.

-757-4961

GHRYSURU A S K m ilM

THE LEASING PnOFESSIONALS,

WEEKEND

SPECtAL0/7/yRENT ft 1988

D0D8E ftRIES FRIDftY TO

MONDftY

200 FREE MILES!

Rent^Triick Renl.a-Car

O a d g e C R IU m iL D— ™ U A fM C C O , IN C .2700 Branewlclt P ib « <Alf. Rt. 1)

LawraaemriUe, N .J.Can (609)882-1000

W IN ia iZ IN GClffCK-UP

tfwl OM ftofing wUh fionulnt OM p«ls.

Good thru

IIIIIIIII

I12/3M8

I I I I I I I I

Could be your car's front end is out of line. We'll give if a co m - ■ plete alignment at a special ’| price!1. Align your front e rd 2 Rotate your tires'3, Balarce your wheels

tu m o M i

}39.»5 .Kttp nut snM OM Ittling

withgtnulnt OM pvu.

, Good thm 12/3068 .

r 'I I I I I I I I I

FREELUBE!

With!using GM Goodwretxh

Motor Oil and a new GM Ol Filler. .

K*f p thti gfMt CM IttBng wUJi gtnwln* CM portk

7 ; ^ OMCUAUTY ^ 1 StIWCi PANTS1 1

Good thru 123068

■ 1

IIIIIIIII

OMMAurr •uvwifMurrs aer—niuuL" C H E V R O L E T

T he F am ily Name B u ilt o n In tegrityRts. 206 & 518 (Opp. Princeton Airport)

Just 16 minulas soutti of the Somwvtls CkcitPRESENT THIS ENTIRE AO FOR SERVICE

Cal lor prompt tenrioa609-924-3350201-707-8383

241-B id (flngSetytees

• Major R a n o v a ^ s arid Residential Additions

• P ro je c t Coordination Ideas/Plans/Permits

• Supervision of Trades Architectural Services

• Free Consultation and Detailed Estimates

S u fH o iu A e ^

&444Me/fiA>

N J 201-359-1877 :' P A 215-968-8670

M A S 0 N 4 B U U D E RAll phases of masonry. Stone work specialist. Fall 4 Winter S p r a ts on all Fireplaces 4 Slone work. Fplly Insured 4 Guaran­teed.' Free. Estimates

S .J . OBvar Inc 609-584-1607

/ S H E E T ROCKING S P A C K U N G

PAiNTINQ

Repairs 4 New Conslruc- lion. Free. Estimates.

, J o e B a y is 8 0 9 4 4 8 -3 6 0 5

S M A LL JO B S U N U M ITED

Finish baserhents, sun-.- decks, carpentry, addi- lioris, rooting. ■ Workmanship guaranteed!

609-448-7139, Lentite

Home RepairsH O U D A Y DEADLINES

Thursday, December 29, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line to place or c ^ c e l your regular classified ad for Tuesday, January 3.1989.

Friday, December \ 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line to place br cancel your regular classilied ad lor Wednesday. January 4. 1989.

W E W t a B E C LO S ED M O N . JA N U A R Y 2^1989 N e w Year’s Day HoBday

A B A TE CRIME! - Locks 4 doors repaired or replaced. Locksmith 4 Carpenter. 609-466-1287

A C S E N T E R P R IS E S • Home Improvements: qual­ity painting and carpentry at reasonable rates. For a free estimate call Alan at 609-737-7552 after 6pm;. ALL CAR PEN TR Y - Decks, porches, stair^'we special­ize in rotted wood replace- ment. Millstone Homo Re­pair. Refs avail. Residential 4 commercial. 201-577- 8984.

APPLIANCE REPAIRS - Most brands, all types. When it stops working.' call The Repairman. Fast, lo­cal, reliable! 609-448-t i 22 O f 921-7554.

A T TE N TIO N AR EA Resi­dents - Creative Woodcraft has now added total base­ment renovations 4 small homo additions to its long list ol jobs we can supply to you. Call 609-586-2130

246 Home Repairs 246 Hotnfa RepairsB U IL D IN G R E P A IR S - Roots {metal, shingle, tar- slate), chimneys, gutters, spouts, (lashing, walls, vralks, patios, garages, porches, steps, driveways, fences, demolition, carpen­try, painting, caulking, glaz­ing, stucco.masonry, point­ing, patching, Inspections. G u a ra n fe o d . Insu re d 609-921-1135.

CARPENTRY. MASONRY- Finish carpentry, tllework.

, stonework. Int 4 ext, HuberConst, 609-683-8816

, CARPENTRY 4 PAINTING -'Bathrooms 4 flooring. In­terior 4 exlerior home Im- provenients. C all' Richard anytime. 609-443-3024.

. C A R T E R ’S H O M E Im ­provements - Interiof/ex- terior carpentry, painting, paperhanging 4 rrioro. For quality work call; Joel. 609-8e8-2912.

CERAMIC TILE • Repairs, tile installed permanently w/riewcement board. Bath- - room remodoling, plumb-, ing, lowest prices. DELA­W ARE VALLE'Y TILE. 34 years ol experience. 609-888-1067. _____________

COBBS FLOOR'SANDING 4 Retinlshlng - Floor Stain­in g or R bconditioning. Make old floors like' new!!. Free Estimate. Call 609- 298-3424. t '

C R E A T IV E H Q M E t m -’ pravements - Carpentry, paneling, sheetrock, flnish' basements, plumbing, new Kitchens, painting, custom bathrooms,, watt papering, tiling ol all kinds'. Reason­a b le ra te s . R e lia b le , prompt 24 hour service. Call John 609-695-1236

• FLOOR- SANDING - Free estimates, 12 years experi­ence. Call John. 609- 466-9223.

FLOOR SAN D IN G R e flfd s )^ & IfistaBation

609-921-3939 National Floors, Inc.

-Ctifton GrantOver 23 years experience

GARAGE DO O R Repairs • R e p ta c e m e n t g a ra g e doors. Challenger garage door openers. Radio con­trols. Miller Garage Doors. Sales and service. 609- 799-2193. .

G U TTE R C LEA N IN G

$50. All root repairSi insu­red. Call M Y G U TTE R M A N , 6 0 9 -6 8 3 -8 6 3 6 . 201-821-8621

HANDYMAN - Carpentry, electrical, plumbing, bath­rooms, kitchens, tile work. decks. Call 201-297-8021

HANDYMAN H O M E Re­pairs - CustqMe closets^ no

"job too small. .Free esti­mates, call 609:799-6197.

HANDYeMAf^l

No job loo big -or' small. CarpoQtty. Plumbing. Elec­trical, painting. Remodel­ing, wallpapering 4 ap- plianras inistalied. Call Lou201-274-2416 __________

HANDYMAN - No job tod big, loo small. Carpentry m y s p e c ia lly , flexible hours. 201-297-0523.

HOME REPAIRS By Brian- No job too big or smalH Just call anytime. 609- 466-9444.

HIRE C R EA TIV E Wood­craft Inc. - T o do the 1001 c^d jobs no one else wants. Bathrooms 4 base: riienls re m o d e le d . A ll phases bf-carpanl7 4 trim work. Rolled wood 4 ter­mite damage repair. Refer- ences. Call (509-566-2130 H O M E IM PROVEM ENTS

M ASONRY• Sidewalks• Driveways• Steps• Tile Work

CAR PEN TER• \lnstalfl'Windows-Doors• Screen F*o«:b’ “ ' .• Decks'Patios • , ' .• House Additions,

FR A N C O C A R N E V A LE V609-896-2946

UN ITED GENERAL Con­tracting > No job too small or too big. Baths, base­ments. kitchens 4 general carpeitiry. Licensed 4 in­sured. F re e eslirnates. Please call 609-585-5753 or 585^5438

251 Painting & Paperhan^ing

AC A D EM Y PAINT 4 WALL Paper - Residential 4 Com- mprdal. Free estimates. 7 days per week. No long waiting list. Call ioday, 609-778-7398, .

A L L E N S P A IN T IN G 4 • Restorations - Owner oper-

, aled. Prompl free esti- ' - males. Fully insured. Local

rplerehces. Serying all of — Womer''County. Cali Kirk

Ailen-, 609-771-4169.

A N EW LO OK Painting - . Interior 4 exterior, best

quality, low prices. Senior C itize n Discount. Plus power washes lor Sxlerior surfaces iriduding all sid-; ings 4 masonry products. Free estimates call Brad at, 201-828-8077. ' . ,

B E A U TIFU L PAINTING - . Quality work. 30 yrs exp, tree oslimale, Iniexl. M4P Painlihg, 609-799.4660

BELL’S C U S TO M Painting• Interior and exlerior. Also wall paper removal. Free e stim ates, reasonable rales, quality work, tuliy in- sured. 609-443-3408

BILL'S PAINTING • In- tor'ior/Exterior. Takas care ol all stains, wall repair.

. winddw pane rdplacemenl. wall papering, very neat 4 clean. A e e esliriiates. Call201-287-1491.___________CHEAP W ORK is not good! good 'work is not cheap, I'm reasonable. 609-448-4819,

CO M PA RE MY Prices - Don Steinberg Wallpaper 4 Painting 609-298-9611

C U S T O M P A I N T I N G S e rvic e - R easonb ale rales, fully Insured, work

. giiarenteed, excellent ref-.

. erences. interior 8 exterior. Free estimates, call 609- 0 8 2 -1 9 9 7 or 6 0 9 -9 2 4 -6300.____________________

CUSTOM.yVORK • Exterior 4 Interior, commercial 4 residential, fully insured Call Nick. 201-658-9235 E X C ELLE N T PAINTING ■ /Vid more! 18 years of quality experience. Inter- ior/exterior residential, in­dustria l 4 com m ercial work. Free estimates, rels. 609-393-2803.

251 Pc^ntind & P ap erh g n g ln g

G EO R G E'S PAINTING .- Finish Carpentry, SjbMl rocking, Spacklirig,; Palrit- ing (Interior 4 exterior), quality, work. Cat) George (o r free .e s tim a te s , at 609-567-0481_____________

H IG R U G I^ PAIN TiN G 4

PaperhangingInterior and Exterior

All work done 4 supenrised by

Andreas F. Noske ■ 201-821-5124

INTERIOR PAINTING - Big ' o r small, joto. Tile work,- paperhartginig 4 odd Jobs. Call Brian 609-806-8471

J 4 R P A IN T IN G - Special- iz in g jn residerttial work, interior 4 exterior, .paper­hanging 4 light carpentry. 609-466-9033 MIKES PAINTING. V In- terior/Exlerior, 8 yrs exp, reasonable. F re e esli- malesl 609-799-2251.M Y PRjCES are • reason­able - 4 my work is guaran­teed to your satisfaction.-; Housepaitiiiiiy. uy Richard. L. Sleimer. Releronces throughout, the Princeton, Kendall Park area. Fully insured. 201-297-1864.

P A IN T IN G 4 P A P E R ­HANGING Tfe e esti­mates. reaMnable rates. Call Jeff, 609-259-3066. PAPERHANGING - at a reasonable price, 10 years e x p e r ie n c e , a ll w ork

. guaranteed. Call for free estimate, Nancy French 609-466-0365a PAPERHANGING 4 In­terior Painting - 15 years exp. Done tprolessionally. Removal 4 wall prep. Call Tony 609-58a-d628

JULIUS K . CROSSInterior 4 Exterior .

Painting 4 PqjertiangingDoing highest quality work lor over 25 yrs. in this area. 609-924-1474-Prfnceton RALPH A KLANACSKY ■ Strictly painting, strialy in­teriors. Call 609-883-4427

. SPECIALIZING IN Interior Painting - Lite construction 4 repairs. Commercial 4 residential. 201-821-9566

VANHANDLE'S PAINT 4 Paper - Interior-4 exterior painting 4 paper hanging. All typed o r jobs, san^ 4 stucco. Finish ceilings, wood staining 4 varnishing. Free est. 609-426:1252.

V IL U G E PAINTING Co - ' Traditional quality and rea­

sonable rates. Fully in­sured. Call 6O9-803-8i375

256 ElBCtricians /’ A LO EE E lf C T R IC

SER V ICEResidential

CommercialRepairs

Licensed Elec. Com Free Estimates - 609443 -3338

ELECTRICAL JO B S Ians, lights, etc. Complete alarm systems at discount prices 201-946-0516. E L E C T R I C I A N - Lie #8440. Industrial, com­mercial, residential. Steve; 201-521-2261 leavp msg.

T h e r e 's s a f e l y in n u m b e K .

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iX<i»on#)h#nei««a9*.vw»* ijo r*a7$'-A.'rti4#y wjrw th*«i

W hile a lot of cars claim tr) olfur sujtt’rior .safelY the numtiers speak for themselves. " . •

As you can see, the Saab 9()0's injury lo.ss rating vyas best in its class ol small four and two-rioor models. What \ou don't see, is tlinl the Saab 900 also ratttdbeiter than all midsize four and tw cM ioor models.

Arid the Saab 9000 not only rated best in its tla.ss, it tw/at iill but four of the 207 models studied.

.For a copy ol the complete Highway Loss Data ln.stjtute study, or to test drive a new Saab, .see us today.

The nxssi inlcltigt'iit c.vi i-u-r tniiii

SPORTS4 NDSPECIAtlSTI»\RSX ARCTIC PARKWAY

TRENTON. NJ 08038 ■J609)«89^SAAB FAX NO. 989-0163StUes, .Service, Parts and Custom Leasing

10B Week of December 28,1988 A.1Httket PuMcation

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levcivif^^nwoolwj^PBICE EXCLUDE8 SALES TA X AND M V FEES

Shop Reedmen Cen.Trucfc LeeehHl W odd Center12 Now Cat rranchiood Makoa Amoncon & Im­port! 2200 Noiw Cnrs '& Truck! Pnvaio: IrVdividuol; DU!inoo!. Hoot Loaning.' Loo!ing Doalera Businou Wolcorno, *'Pttco, Tormn, And Condinona On Leomno. Differ From Our Rotoi) Customer, Safes “ Phono

215*757-4981

R o u te 1', L a n g h b r n e , P A 2 1 5 - 7 5 7 -4 9 6 1

250 BactHdansLSI E LE C TR IC r ResWen- tial S CoiTimerdal Quality Work. Guaranleed Low Rales. 609-588-4008.LOUIS E LE C TR IC • Rosi- cfential 4 Gommordal. NJ electrical license-C a!L£09;^ 599-2120.

*71 Roofing &S k f i i ig

ROOFING -A H types, new and repair gutters, gutter cleaning 4 (lashings, John Brokaw 4 Sort, B09-466- 1949 or 201-281-6S69.

286 Paving

*01 H e a t i n g & A i r

C o n d it i o n L n g

ALDEE H EA TIN G 4 Air Coiidllioning • Hesidsntial quality w o rk. 609 -4 4 3 - 3338.: -DESIGN Mechanical Sys- terns Inc - Sales, aenrice 4 installation. Heating 4 bath remodeling. Prompt sor- vice, call 609-446-8479.

HOME .EN ER G Y Systems - Heating designed to save you money. High effidenl gas .4 oil swlems. C u t ' utility bills in V4. Free sys­tem Inspection. 201-920- 3335.

271 Roofin^aSIcflngJ-.

ALLIED R OO FIN G • tree estimates given ori any tool for any need, .also ralaput- tors, leaders.' 100% guar­antee for 1 y e v , Insulation 4 driveways done. 609- 448-5707. I ■BELLE M EA D R O O F IN G - Over 40 yrs In business, all types of roofing, gutters, chimney flashing,- gutters cleaned.,. Member of the Consumer Bureau. Call 201-359-5992 day qr eve­n in g , ( lo c a l call from Princeton). .B RICH R O O FIN G 4 Paint­ing - rubber roof, shingle, ext ,4 Int painting. Uc/ins. 18 yrs. 609-662-7738.

CO O P ER & SCH A FER Inc. ‘

SHINGLE T IN COPPER S LA TE

.G U TTE R S LEADERSOffice — Workshop

63 Moran Prlricaton924-2063 ‘

G U TTE R CLEANING - By Allens Painting, owner op­erated. Call 609-771-4189.Interior Painting._________J.C . E ISE^M AN N Rooting • Roofing, sheet rneial, chimney flashing 4 gutters.

' 809-466-1228.K 4 K (X IN TR A C TO R S

Siding, Roofing 4 Builders Only Quality Work

Guaranteed Lowest Pdee 24 Hr. Service

Licensed 4 Fully. Insured Hamilton Ollice ,609-586-5057

qSHINGLE 4 SINGLE PLY ^ M EM B R AN E ROOFS

S e a m le u Ajumbium Guttera

9 2 t-1 2 ?7 , 924-7737

T H E R IA U L T R O O F IN Q - All types of roolingi gutlers, downspouts. Free ■ esti- males; 609-466-2645.

*70 M o v i n g &

H a u l i n g , .

JJ's AFFORDABLE HAUL­ING • Baserpents, attics 4 garages cleaned. Call 609- 393:5295K E L E M E N M O V IN G - PM 00350. Apartm ents, homes and. offices. Low rates. All size jobs. 25 Bear Brook Rd, W. Windsor, NJ. Call 609-520-8414. ■ ~

MOVING -“ Fumlturo 4 ap­pliances moved, free estl- mates. PM #00470. Call

■ 6Qg-585-2254 PRINCETON MOVING ..- PM00379local 4 long dis­tance, no job too big o l _ small, 306 Berwyn Ave„ Trenton, N J. Kirk, bus 609-883-2699,( it no ans 609-771-4169 ,

281 S n o w p l o w i n g

H O U D A Y .D E A O U N E S , TtHirsday, December 29,

1 at 5 p.m. Is.our dead­line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Tuesday, Janudry 3,1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 at S p.m. is qur dead­line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Wednesday. January 4. 1989.

W E W ILL B E CLOSED M ON. JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 New Year*# Day Holiday

SNOW PLOW ING • Also driveway stqne, delivered arid spread. Please call 609-921-8691

SNOW PLOW ING

• Resideritial• Commercial• Free Estimates• Fully Insured• Pron^t Service iPrihcelorvW. Windsor Area

609-448-3623

SNOW PLOW ING 4 Side­walks - 24 hr SVC, msg check every '40 min. Call 4 Iv Phono#. 609-396-8534.

JIMMIE HARRISON PAV­ING - Driveways, parking lots, seat coating, stone 4 gravel, grading, designs available. Free estimates. PrirK»ton. NJ; 609-921-’' 3944.

20^ F e n c i n g

YORK F E N C E - Custom wood 4 chain link. 10% Fall dtlcounl. Call lor tree quote, 201-359-2976.

296 G a r d e n i n g &

L a n d s c a p i n g

BRUSH 4 LEAV ES Clean Up' -; Tree pruning, enow Plowing. Free estimates. Fiarhirez Bros., 609-466- 4263- • . ■B U R D W O O D S L A N D ­SCAPES. Inc. - ottering a cornplete list of. services including desigti 4 Inslalla-

, lion, patio, R.R. ties, rock wall 4 boulder work. Cali 609-924-4271.

C A R R O LL4C 0'.TneaexpesTt

• Quality Wortonanshlp• Rrewood Delivered '• Fully Insured• Prompt Servite

Ph(Mie.S09:896-1736''

D O ER LER— .LA N D S C A P ES , INC.

VVhon you're planning to landscape, landscape witha plan! , '

LandscapeArchitects & Contractors

609-896-3300

E W F IR ET R E E

S P E C I A L I S T SComplete tree 4 slump re­moval,. pruning, fcabling, feeding 4 site clearing. Reasonable rales, year round service, Free eali- mates, 609-896-1640.

FRED JO H N S TO N III• Lawn Mainlenanco '• Landscaping• Railroad Ties• Land Clearing• Brick Walks

Old 4 New Lawn Seedings 201-369-7104

HORIZON LA N DSCAPES• French Drairts• Lawn Installation• Guaranteed Plantings• R.R. Tie Walls• Drives. Graded'Stoned• Eed Construction• Tree Servico• Flag 4 Brick Patios

Free Consultations and Estimates, 609-737-3654

208 GanJerUiig& Landscaping

F A L L C L E A N U p s ■ Leaves, branches. Vacuum for ivy beds. Call anytime, 609-6S5-8530.

HUBER 4 SEEM S Land­scaping - Brick, flagstone, walks and patios. RR tie, natural stone, retaining walls 4 steps, design, plantings, grading, new lawn installation, all phases of landscaping and land­scape construction. Call 609:737-2592. .

JO H N KO CH IS y LAN DSCAPIN G

Custom Dealffi Cornmercki/ReiiderittX

609-466-3308 609-443-8283

LA N D S C A P E DESIGN G ardei^ig/Lsw n Serv.

Residential 4 Commercial Pruning 4 Tree Removal

Cleanups 4 Mulching Patios 4 Walkways SN O W R e m o v a l

C aB Lariy Q . ScanneUa 609-896-3193

L A N D S C A P IN d / L A W N Service • Decks, patios, sidewalks. Call Frank. 609- 737-0286.LAWN 4 Q A R D E N -S e r - vices • ' Spring/Summer cleanups, lawns mowed, . Morth/South Brunswick 4 surrounding areas. Mutch, s ^ i n g , thatching, lapd- . scaping, tertilizing, grading 4 rototining. Hedges 4 bushes trimmed 4 shaped. 201-249-2989.

LEAF REM OVAL Special­ist'- Fall cleanup.' Ail lawn area, bagged.; very 'clean

w/without lawn cut. Bed work also; Omega Inc., call anytime, 609- 396-8534..

P R IN C ETO N IRRIGATION

S P E C IA LTIS T, INCMem. N J Irrigation Assoc.

' Design •• Instailation • Service •

Specializing In Fully Automatic

Lawn Sprikler Systems

609-275-4480'U-W E-DIQ - 4-7' Blue Spruce. White Pine, Nor­way Spruce',' Douglas Fir. S20-50. 2-4' White Pine. Blue Spruce, Concolor Fir, Douglas Fir $8-10. 7'Peach, Yellow Delicious Apple $10. 10 yr old Blue­berry bush $20. Fruit produdrtg Blueberry plant $6. 6 yr old Rhododen­drons. (potted) $12. 3" Bradford P ear$10.5' Birch (potte d) $ 1 0 -1 5 . 10' + Birch $40 • 60. 609- 737-2178.

011 Autos WantedCtARS W A N TE D ■ 1978 and up. Fdrolgn and do­mestic. T o p dollar-paid in cash. Siato Motors, 609- 599-1444. Specializing in Toyotas. Oatsiins, Mazdas. We will come to inspect. W A N TED - Junk 4 used cars; Call 201-359-4707.

C A R S W A N TED

A M ER IC A N 4 FOR EIG N T o p D o B a r P ^

Nebbia Chevrolet Rte.130 l6 (^ts to w n ,N .J. 609-448-0910 587-8226

010 A u t o s

f o r S a l e " ;

H O U D A Y D EAD LIN ES

Thursday, D u m b e r 29, 1988 at 5 p.m. Is our dead­line to place or cancel your regular cliassitled ad tor Tuesday. January 3,1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line to pfbee or cancel your regular classified ad for Wednesday. January 4,' 1989.

W E W IL L B E C LO S E D MON. JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 New Y e »* e Day HoM ay.

■95 BU ICK S P EC IA L-M int Unrestored condllloni Gar­aged, •’Wildcat 310” V8, auto, everything original only; 29.000 miles> '$2300 o r , best otter. Call Mr Hamlin days, 6 0 9 -8 9 6 - 1206, eves 896-3521.

'68 BM W 2002 • Red. re­built engine, has potential. $900 or best offer,. Call Tom, 609-863-5945 ■

‘69 VW V A N • VG cond. No rust. 40k mi.on record en­gine. $1450/80. 201-329-6512'.; _________ __

■72 TR 6 - rebuilt eng, too many new. parts- (0 list. $1500 dr best ,otter; 201- 874-3477

•75 V O LV O W AGON 245 EL - new exhaust, tires, brake, p's, pb, am, body good, must sell. $475. 609-466-3328, 215-698-8934 Bob._________ ■'76 F IA T 124 Spider - Needs some work. B3K miles. $350. Please call.609-520-9860____________

■76 M U S TA N G C O B R A II • 2 dr hatch. ^ 0pb. arc, full, sound, mag vrheeis. Hot classic, good cond. $1400. Call at! 6pm 201-874-3394.'76 O L D S - Custom Cruiser wagon. V-8, loaded, every­thing works. Good cond $900. 609-426-0197

010 A u t o s

Sale ^■78 FORD T-BIrd - 2 dr. 8 cyl, a/c, p/wiridom, p/s, p/b. Good cond. $1500. Call 609-921-9522 eves

■78 VW R A B B IT - 2 door, auto, 77k ml, $600..Greaj starter carl 609r44a-6171. •79 BMW 3201 - Exc cond. auto, am/tm stereo, met silver, $3900/besl offer.609-921-3057.____________

'80 CHEVY VA N - Exc cond, aulo, p s , p/b, amdm cess stereo, captain chrs, $2500. 609-924-9382 aft

^ m or 924-9555. : *

•80 HONDA CIVIC-'72k mi, ■ exc cond, 5 spd, . am/tm cass. Orfg owner. $1500. 609-663-1913 (Tom ),

■81 TO Y O TA CO RO N A ■ 5 dr hatch, exc cond, 63k ml, P c. auto trahs, p b , over- drive, $2900 609-65$-()63Q

'62 AMC E A G LE * Statlor wagon, 4WD. $2000. 201-369-5866. _________'82 BMW - Gold, model 320, excellent condition. Asking $4200. Call 609- S6B-5566 or 393-7800.

'82 BUICK SKYLAR K • 4 dr, a'c, 75,250 mi, new tires. Call 609-520-2419.

'82 DATSUN - Maxima, 4 dr. Black/silver. Aulo. 6 cyl, loaded. 59,000 mi. M90b.

; 609-89S-2030, Elaine. ,

'82 VW J E T T A - 4 dr. Pc. am/tm cassette. 60k plus miles, eke bond.. $3000. 609-466-2797. .83 BMW 528E - Excellent condition. Call 609-924- 7371.

■63 BUICK R E G A L Ltd - 1 owner,., loaded 76k mi, $3800, 609-566-1649. .!

■84 C O R V E TTE .- Great value, nany extras. Asking

, $12,900 Call 609-466- '3427 ,

84 FIERO : Red, 4 spd.Pc, & tots-more. Need cash, Rrst $2000 takes it. Call 609-6(3-9062 ~

•84 MAZDA RX7 GSL • 5 spd, mint cold, loaded, low mi. leather InL $6,900. Please call 8)9-924-7562

•84 M ER C U R ' MARQ ■ 4 dr. am/tm.' a*, ps, pw . cruise, exc cmd. $3500. 609-466-2797.

•84MITSUBISHTRED1A- 4 dr, auto, 24k ni on new eng, v e p well rointairied. moving ihus( sa. $3200.m iF 2 Z P Z 5 1 .

R EN AULT'84 R EN AU LT EtCORE ■ diamond odiUori. t2k mi. Pc. aiPfm sterei cass, superb cond, movitg over­seas, $600Q/b.o. 6B-446- 5996-att 7pm. day 201- 563-5981.

USED CAR VALUES1985 OLDS 98 REGENCY BROGHM.

4 Of.. 4 Cjl.. *s1o Cruise, Till, Stereo Cass., Pwr. Wind.. Pm . Sts,, R/Del.. 56,988 Miles, VIN 479651. •

IVas 59588 Now ^8 5 8 8

1985 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC4 Of.. V8, Auto., PS; P8. Nr, Till. Cruise, T/Glass, AMTM Stereo,, Pwr. Wind. IVOel.. 51.418 Miles. VW 788012.

IVas 57488 Now *6588

1982 CHEVY CHEVETTE4 Cylindet, Automatic Tram, Po«f Steering & Povrer Brakes. AM Radio. 59,998 Miles, VIN 114987

IVas 4f2488 Now ^1 9 8 8

1985 CHEVY SILVERADO P/UV8, Auto.. PS. PB. Nr. Cruise, T/Glass. PW. POL Bedliner, MUST BE SEEN To Appreciate 44,130 Miles. VW 3378M.

/ ‘ 7 4 8 8

1987 MAZDA SE**5 PICK-UP4 Qyl., 4 Speed, Power Steering & Power Brakes, AM/TM Stereo, Rear Step Bumpr, 19,870 Miles. VW 837001. ' ....- ■

57988 Now *6888

1988 FORD LTD COUNTRY SQ. WGN.Auto., PS, PB, Nr. Tilt, Cruise. T/Glass. lug. Rack. AM/FM Stereo, PW. Woodgrain.3 Pass.,

■ 38,701 Miles. VW 116724. '

* 9 4 8 8

1988 CHEVY CAPRICE WGN;V8, Auto„ PS, P8, Nr, T/Gtss, luggege Reck, AM/TM Stereo. R/Del., Om Owne, 25,186 Miles, VW 187222.

IVas 510,588 Now *9588

1984 CHEVY CELEBRITY4 Dr.. 6 Cjl.. Nito.. PS. PS. Nr, T/Glass. tW/FM Stereo, RWD. 49,886 Miles. VIN 687116.

* 4 6 8 8

1988 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC4 Of,, V8, Auto.. PS, PB, Nr, Cruise, T/GI., Stereo Cess.. PW, POL R/Oel., Exec. Demo, 5,970 Miles, VW;726m

Ust 517,220 Now * 1 2 ,9 8 8

1985 PONTIAC 8000LE4 Dr., 6 Cyl.. Auto., PS, PB, Nr; Tilt, Cruise. T/GI., AM/FM Stereo, PW, P/Sts., IVDef.. 1 Owner,

. New Trade, 54,198 Ml.. VW 768101.

Was 58588 Now *5988

1984 CHEVY CAPRICE WGN.94>ass. V8, PS. PS, Nr. TIR, Lugfege Rack. AM/TM St«eo, R/Oet.. Tu-tone Paint 65,190 Miles.VWl35167,-

I V 8 8 5 8 7 8 8 N o w * 5 9 8 8 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

1988 FORD E-350 CLUB WGN.,V8. Auto., PS. PB. Nr, T/Gliss. Stereo. 8-Piss., 54.100 Miles, VW 762892.;

Was 58988 Now *7988

Mon.-Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 5

RT. 130, HIGHTSTOWN, NJ 609-448^910 587-8226

Prices Include Freight Be Borne By A

1, Shipping, Dealer Prep & Any Other Cost To isumer'Except Licensing Cost, Registration Fees & Taxes.

.•MOMIw..

M

1N n 1B.1M

C^53 1 3

310 Alito!F o r S i t e , .

'85 M ER C U R Y CAPRI 3 dr hatch, tow mi, loaded,\ exo cond. 609-448-2055 aft 5pm. __________ ^

'85 M ER CEDES . BENZ - 300 0 Turbo, Black Peart with Palom ino Interior, "Pristir«" condition. 2t,000 miles. Asking 21,500. Call 201-823-1214 after 7 pm. . ■85 N IS S A N S T A N Z A Sedan - $5995. BluPgroy, exc cond. P c, cruise, stereo.cdss, 56K ml. 609-, 89is-2770 P msg.

'65 NISSAN MAXIMA •• P/w, pli p s , pb , kbyloss

entry, well im alnlalned. $8000, 201-359-SB21.'85 PLYM OUTH HORIZON • 4. dr, 4 spd, good cond. Would be a good station car. $2995 or-3/O. -609- 393-9577 or 586-7449.

'86BM W 325-4df.D ephin Grey. Exc cond. Low ml. 5 spd; Pc, arpfm cass, aruf. $15,700. 201-281*7769 '66 HONDA CRX - 9300 ml, pb, Alpine ats'reo, stick shift. Mint condition. $iS250. Call 609-924-9361 88 NISSAN SenUa - 4 dr. ted, aulo, am/tm. Pc, 3000 rriles, $5700. Evenings, 2)1-874-5829

•ffiOLDS D E L T A -B rb u g - han, 4 dr, 6 cyl, 29,320 ml. Li{ht blue w/darlc blue int. Fuly loaded. Excellent condllon. Call '609-586= 7449•87 : O B D T - B I R D • BlackQray int. mint con­dition, fully loaded. Asking S10,2(0/negotlble..Call, 609-87,-8983 . * .'87 N IISA N m a x im a - L q a d e b , 2 5 ,0 0 0 m i. $11,950. Call 609-896- 1467.•87 NISSAN - ,14k mi. fully equipped, computerized dash, snrf . lilarm w/beeper, exc I cond, thany extras. Asking $12,500. Call days 718-429-2100. eves 2 0 i-329-6996 all 9.___________

■87 VOLKSWAGON G O L F GL -' auto. kBded, 29k ml. best offer, 201-753-7973 Iv msg.'87 VOYAGER - 25K ml. auto, deluxe travel pkg, am/tm ta p e , g a ra g e d . $13,500. Must sell! 201- 297*1637 alt 7pm, hr rnsg.

'88 H ONDA CRX Si - 15,000 mi. Pc. amdm stereo, $9800. Ca'I before 10pm, 609-799-8353

88 HONDA ACCORD U l - 4 dr,' 5 spd, blue, loaded, fm cass. P c, psiirf, p s . cruise, garaged, 13,200 hwy ml. $14,500 Must o«H' 201-297-1637 aft 7pm, Ivmsg. __________'88 M ER CURY C O U G A R - Smojted Gray, loaded, a must see. Call Michele.201-329-8866.____________

'68 M ER CU R Y C O U G A R - Smoke gray, loadedT ' a must see. Ask (or Michelfe. 201-329-8888.

AuthorizedMercedes-Benz D eP er

Princaton MotorsporLInc2910 Route 1

Lawrencevllle, NJ ■ales - Service-- Leasing

European Delivery

609-771-8040NASSAU CONOVER

MOTOR CO. f=ORD

ws-ServIce-Leasing \ Da8y & Long '

. iTe m i Rentals Rtesoe, PihKaton, N .J. re0»92i-6400

N im SUBARU - Sates ■Service'

Parts

S83 Route 33 HaUtton. Square, NJ

P9>*Sa6-1331

-321 l i o t o r c y d e s

ALLi^lCESRE0UCB)laqtts move 'em i

, svPtebte. Cycle Ranch .

Square ’.«354

0*0 T ^ c k s

7 3 C H B Y ’ PICK UP - V8,.4 spd, rWda work, $300/BO a s ji1. Hillsborougharea. 2n -369-3162 aft6pm. \'84 C H 0 Y BOX Van -26,000 m1 excellent* con-ditkm. Oi1 owner. 201*534-4937.

331 M a ^ n e i y &E q i

A T T : __________Routine masenance & re­pair services^ PI types of heavy equlpmnt, tnx:i(8 & Irplers. In ou shop br-on your job. En^gency field senrice avPtr

Jo h n VlHoM & A s o o o ^ fne

N J

We Spectefae^ UpMme

3<0 B o i r t s

CAPE DORY -tee’ sail. Riistol condlUon.\Loeded. 609)-882-1927ev46r883-

/ 7800 d a y s . - - - , .

A «uppl«m«m to The Granary Press. Windsor-Hights Herald. The Central Post, North Brunswick Post. TTm Manvilte News. HiUsbwouqh Beacon. The .Franklin News-Beconf. The Harhilton Observer and Hopewen Valley News. Week of December 29 1988 lIB i

REM. feTATE IN BRIEF.

: Schlott’s toy drive is success• ___ . ' , ( .

. The holiday ;scason was a lot brighter tl is year for childrcirtrom the ; Princeton Nursery School and Womcnspacc due to tHc efforts of Schlott . Jtealtore Princeton office; " ■ , ,

Joyce Hairigaij^hhd Iva Barros.; office coordinators of the Ninth Arinuai w T o y s for Tots D rive., reported that the response from the community was ’ "o ve rw h e lm in g ." Area reridents o f all ages supported the drive from its

start in late Novem ber by donating new or "ge ntly used" toys for the holidays.

Louro named Builder of the YearJoseph L o u ro . president of the '

B & L B u i l d i n g G r o u p , h e a d ­quartered in Freehold, has been honored as Builder of the Year by the N e w Jersey Shore. Builders Association.

•w,

A member o f the N e w Jersey Shore Builders' Association since 1971, M r. Louro is.abdut to c o m ­plete a.third term as its president. His tenure hUs been charactcri^d by advocacy against excessive g o v ­ernmental regulation of shore arc.i development. t

Joseph Louro

Foreign realty money doublesA National Association of-Rcallors' (N A R ) study shows that between

1982 and 1987 total foreign direct invesimeni in the United Slates more than doubled from $I2.T () billion to $261.9 billion. Th e study concludes that in 1988, approximately SI o f credit out of every $5. or $130 billion of our cstimaled $660 billion net credit demand, w ill be Hnanced from abroad.

Th e N A R study. ■'Foreign Investment in U S Real E.slatc: Status. Trends and O utU xik. 1988. " looks at foreign direct investment (equity) in the United States compared to U .S . d i^ c t investment abroad. At the end of 1987, the study reports that foreign detect investment totaled $262 billion w hile U .S . direct investment abroad totalled $309 billion. It'was released during the association’s 81st Annual Convention, arid Trade Exposition attended by 2 0 . 0 ^ realtors from a ll over the country.

, Foreign direct investment in U .S . real estate doujbled from $11.4 billibn in 1982 to $24.5 billion in 1987. according to thq study/The study also found that foreigners owned approximately 1.4 percent of non-farm, lion-residential real estate in the United States and slightly less than 1.0 percent of U .S . agriculatural land at the end o f 1987.

"La rg e ly because we have been running constant foreign trade deficits, thc.rc arc a lot o f dollars in the hands of foreigners. Real estate continues to be. an attractive place for those dollars, meaning that foreign ownership of U .S . real .estate will be a grow ing phenom enon." said Dr. John A . Tu c c illo . chief economist for N A R . .

" A s long as the United States consumes more than it produces, the difference rptis? be financed. C popsing neither to increa.se domestic savings nof to cut current consumption, this country is resorting to foreign finance at the present tim e !" said Nestor R . Weigand. Jr ., N A R president.

" T h e world has changed dramatically in the p ^ t 15 years. Today it is not uncommon for a major project to be developed by a Dutch company, perhaps with Japanese partners." M r. Weigand. "Japanese and European banks compete ficrecly to provide construction financing for projects developed by both foreign and domestic companies Offshore contractors, most notably the Koreans and the Japanese, are actively trying to gain a foothold in the U .S market.

" A ls o , foreign companies arc entering the domestic property manage­ment. brokerage, mortgage banking, and investment banking businesses. A n d foreign investors continue to acquire prime properties in most major U .S . cities. C learly the real estate industry is becoming international­ized, " M r . W eigand said.

Although foreign investors once confined their investments to the cast and west coasts, cities in the nation's heartland like Chicago. Atlanta and Phoenix arc now seeing significant foreign investment, the study reports.

W ith the possible exception o f housing, foreign investors have shown a willingness to acquire virtually all types of property including offices, hotels, shopping centers, and industrial space, the study reveals

“ A weak dollar in recent years sent U .S . investors abroad looking for bargains." said Jack H ow ley. vice president of International Affairs, at N A R . ^

" F o r the foreign investor, the United States offers the largest. n\osrstable • and most diverse economy in the world. European investors are particularly

attracted to the United States because of its political stability and is free market tradition." M r.'H o w Ic y explained.

T h e study predicts that foreign = invcstirienf in U .S , real estate w ill continue because foreign investment is an.intcgral part o f a globalized U .S .

. economy. ,

Th e NarragansettThe Narragansett is one of 10 niodels being offered at Oid Mill Estates ip .Waii. township. Priced from $325,000 these four- and five-bedrobm, 2'/a bath homes heve fuii basements, two-car garages. Other features inciude York energy-efficient central air-conditioning and heating units, Peachtree windows and doo rs,; country kitchens with breakfast areas, Tappan appiiarKjes, solid oak cabinets and pantries, ^ m e models have a butler's pantry.

All entry foyers with ceramic tile floors, .formal dining rooms, d o ^ with space-saver shelving, hardwood floors, wall-to-wall carpeflr^, ceramic tile baths. The 65-home community has city water, sewers and gas, and all utility lines have been placed .uruJer^grpund.; 7o v/s/f 1-195 JEast to New Bedford'Road,turn right for one block,- then left onto 18th Avenue to sales offim and models on left. ,

University W oodsA grouping of choice n e w hom esiles, m a n y backing u p to naturally

w o oded a re a s, has b e e n a d d e d ' at University W o o d s . W inding cu l-d e -sa c streets add to the am biance of the com m unity. Show n a bove is the Princeton m od el.

Provincial, federal. V ictorian or classic coloriial exteriors enhanced by brick, stone or s tu cc o are a m o n g the selections available to h o m e b u ye rs al U n iversity -W o o d s. E a c h home irrcludes a

TRANSACTIONSBecause these m l csUlc iransactiims are

the rcfult of saki am! common that may hate been negotiated aetemi numths prior to clos­ing and because of a delay of approximately (»t> ijtottibs, between closing and publication, the following list may not leliect the current market value

M ER CKR fO U N TV

Ea.st Windsor

5V6 Edi«in l)r . Mivhacl |- and Konna I Uccehma frem Frank 1 and 1‘dilma l)a\cv SI25.000

4.T I I Oatdenvicw Ic rt . t htiMinc Dilanrzyk (roiii Mcrcci InvcMmcni Asmh . ■S9(j.OOO.

45-37 Old-Millstone l)i . Joanne K Hem ing rrom Mercer Invcslinenl A sm k . $77 .(XX)

llamlllon

■ IHI3 S Broad .Si . Rohen 1) and Maril) Cunningham from Roben G and l.inda I) Applegate. $92,500

41 Chambord C'l . Wai mg and Syanping Yu from K Hovnaniana al Hamilum II. $112,559

216 Ellon Ave . David f and Barbara Rich from Victor L and L Migliarcsc. $I76.IXX)

Middleton Dr . Stale of N J Dept of Tnmspottalion from Stale of N.J . $10,200

713 Silver G l.. Phillip I - Kructek from Carol,L. Dubreuil. $85,000.

1837 Spuree St.,* Frank anU Belie Giar- ralano from Norman and Uliana Spadaccini. $138,750. •

64 Walt'Whitman Way. Alan Meier from Robert J. and Betsy S, Omar. $140,000.

29 W illo w Bend D r . , l-ra inc M . DiMarcello from Hrude W . Varunyak. $127,900.

' Hopewell .Township

■■ MouQfjiin Church Rd... Victor. M. anil Judith D. Consali hum William J and

Nosnitsky wins realtors’ award

Mildred E Suydam, $188,000I

Uswrence

624 Valley Forge Ave,. Glenri EJhardl from Arthur t'.'Williams Jr-$ l2 3.pdo

43 Woodlanc Rd /William I. arid Paddy J Dowdy from Earl Uirsen. $295,000

47 WoodmunI '^r . Andrew and Ned Buchanan from PntKSJon/"S^ilods al Law- rencc. $232,098

Prihcclun Borough

21 Falwaids PI . The fruvieev ol I’nnecum University from Joel D and Damnginn Zieden. $305,000

Princeton Township

158 Springdale Rd.. Stephen and Clara F Anderson from Cieorge and Lynn Schloss. $815,000

West W indsor

120 Acadia Apr b I ’t . t ‘ ti and Janci P , Whitney from Carnegie Park ASsik Int . $1365.990

29 EllswurtH Dr . William U and Maureen O ’Connor from PoIckofI parm Inc . $336,340.

30 Ellsworth Dr.. Gerald Bloch from Polekoff Farm Inc...$383.105.. ,4 Grover Cl.. Fiank D . and Patricia A. Catbee from NSL Service Corp'.. S440.000.

I Logan Or., Eden Institute Foundation from Anne V . Gallagher. $125,000.

14 Roselands Cl:. Hidong and Chiing Rim from Gallon Homes Inc.. $294,990,

M ID D L E S E X C O U N T Y

’ •% . jimesburg

10 Deerfield Ln., Irene M. Sloffcl from Brad and Robin Siegel. $144,000.

Anne Nosnitsky

Schreiber Realty Company Inc; sal es r c p r c s c r i t u t i V C A n n e Nosnitidky has been selected from more than 3,000 realtor associates in Mercer Gotinty to receive'the Mercer County’’Eloard o f Realtors 1988. ' ‘Rcaltor-Asspciatfc of the Y w ” 'Awajrd.

Ms. Nosnitsky was honored at the'New Jersey Association of Re­altors Co'nve'htibn in Alantid City

’ on December 2 at a special aWards ceremony at Bally's Park Place

-H o te l. .

wood-burning lireplace, a full basem ent, wall-to-wall carpeting in a variety ol colors, and insulated w indow s. H o m e s m ay be custemizecl with optional features including tw o -zo n e central air-conditioning, a central vacuum system , an intercom , a sound system , skylights, and a whirlpool in the m aster bath. Prices start at $244,900.

For fdrther information about University Woods, call the sales office at (609) 586-9897.

Mllltown '\

14 JTiyllij PI . Pyongky and Yong Ncc T'ou from Jeannic C. Choi. $362.(XX)

Monror

3UU N Santurd Ln . Beatrice J Handcll from Helen E Kaiuc. $8I.5UU

292-C. Sharon Way. Barbara H Mat Gregor from David and t’hriciinc Bell. $130,000

511-B WeMpon Ln . James H and Georgia U Mlnogue from Rodnev and l.inda I’loio $100,000

lOthAve . Juveph I andl llciiMc I leiiiioii Irom Guy and Carol tireco $2lXi ixxi

Norih Bruiuwirk

199 Liberty Bell Cl . Mildred A I wceli (rum Ronald J. and Jan S Duhin. $14

139 Pennsylvania Way, William-V Debora Sullivan from Joel Kaiser. $111

167 Pennsylvania Way. Karen Wetse]Leda Reilando. $J07.(XX)

449 Willow Brook Dr Susan I'eir Robert Connolly $20t.(XK)

Plainsboro

61 Bradford Ln . RotKrt R and Lorrain Liszewski from Hoscco Rcsideniial. $301,346.

155 Hampshire Dr., Thcixiore A Brown from Unprb Plainsboro. $145,470

134 S. Parker Rd.. Roialyn M.-.Andrews from Sheldon and Evelyn Boyarsky. $275,000. •• 3)I Ravens Crest Dr.. Thomas A Prinlon from Unpro Princeton, $111.7™'

3-2 RgVens Crest P r..' Edsvard M. Pawlowski from Linpro Princeton. $124.6.TJ.

52-S Sayre Dr.v Roberta E; . Brand from Princeton Landing Const.. $229,910. ..

45’ Thoreau D r,, Caihlccn M, Palladimi from Francis X . and C. B. CaulFicId, $155,000,

South Bruiuwick

117 Eleanor Dr . Narasimham and Cijas Vadlaniani from Tim ber Ponds Int . $334,384

.'9 Hannah Dr . William R and Rulb E Ulcar from Jerry and,Patneia Papp. $’l70;0(X)

Healhcole Bam. Blame Fos from Kenneth R Page. $420.(XX)

9 Holder Rd . Dennis and Carolyn Gramaia from Kenneth and Albert A Hntinan $216,000

5 Inlerla.ken Rd , Jamet A and Angela Ermi from Weiner Homes. t.W.4.11

las W New Rd . Uiuit Slrugala Irom Sidney and Bartiura Einkcltiein $IH9.tKXl

39 Wexford Dr . Edward and Cmdcc Sft Grady from Weiner ffomes. $297,612

61 Wexford t)r . Slcvcn K 'and Karyn A BiilLmd from Weiner Homet. $.303,467

SO M ER SET C O U N TY

Franklin

11 t Berger Si IXmald Ramos Irom Cals in ■rdan. $154 .(XX)

98 fyriflwtHHl Dr , Mane Klinger troiii ihcryll 1 Day. $I52..S(XI

99 Slonehcdgc Cl . Erans inc ,M Kooii Irom (albs I Freeland. $154.(XKI

liilUbo rough

46 Anicrmian Ln . Robert J Micle Irom N C V t)cv I nt . $292 790

If) Moniford Dr . Paul and Ives Chevante from Thomas G.. Reynolds. $185,000.

70-D Monigomery Rd., Ruth E . and Jane Black.from Henry M. Stairs. $265,000

Millstone

1423 Main St.. Lawrence Taranlimi from Felix F. Fabrizio. $400,000 •

1 . . ' Montgomery:

■ 45'$lciiov Hollow Ln.; William Gemiann from Dian^T. McLaughlin. $279,006.

365 Apt/House to Share .

HOUDAY OEAOUNeS

Thursday. o i ^ r n b « r 29t 1988 at S p.m. is our dead-

-linoTo place or cancel your regular classified ad for Tuesday,-January 3,1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. Is our dead- nrie to place or cancel your regular classifldd ad- (or WednoKlay, January 4, 1969. I . . ■

W E WIU B E C LO S E D MON. .JAN U AR Y 2. 1989 New Year’a Day Hofiday.

CHRISTIAN G EN TLEM EN (2) - Have an urgent, need (or housing beginning 1/8. If aiiyone car) help ue with this Important heed, calf .609-921-71CIO x263, Iv a msg for Wayne Lundbei^ and Oa\dd Wischrhaler .at The Dean Ol Students Ofc.

EW INS - M/l, non-smoker. Professional or grad stu­dent. Spacious 2 bdrm apt

: In-farmhouse. Wshr/dryr. fpl, heat & water incl. $42S/mo. 609-530-1103 eve, 896^1200 x 327, day..

Apt/House to Share ____

FRANKLIN PARK - Rem ndw, own next; Female To , share luxury twihse; 3 Udm. ZVa bath, priv rm & bath. Close to N Y iransp. $395 -fl2utils. Option to buy, avail (or prof with good credit. $6000 down, easy terms. Call 201-297-0969

HAMILTON V Shafo new 3 bedroom Townhouse. $395

, Please call 809-566- 6780 -

H O P E W E L L ; C o u n try house to share lor a responsible, mature per- son. Call 609-737-6967

HO PEVyea - share new ranch tise w/2 prof mates near all stores in ctr ol town. 609-466-0485.

LAW RENCE • Soefaty Hill.. 2 bdrm, 2 bath fwnhse io

share w/prof mala. $404 mo. Call Greg 609-921- 7171 days, 393-3266 eves

LAW RENCE Square • 2 females’ seek student or

■ professional to share lovely 3 bdrm'townhquse. $300 t ’’/a -utils. Call, 609-' 584-1063.

365 Apt/House to Share

LA W REN CE Square Vil­lage - Spacious 1 yr old 2. bdrrri. 2 bath corido.- all appis. prof, lemale'male wanted. $400 * utils. No pels. 609-584-1242.

L A W R E N G E V IL L E , Soc HiD - Prof Female seeks same to share 2 bdrm, 2 bath (»}ndo wshr/dryr, a'c, $378 +'/z.-609-896-Q945,

LAVt/RENCEVlLLE Society Hill - Sebkitig nonsmoking prof to share 3 bdrm lo w n h o u s e fu lly furn . wash/dryor incl. $305 v 'h utils Call 609-393-3539

LA W R EN C EyiLLE' • Res- ponsible, caring petpon to share Ige, priv ttoionlal apt house. $400 or $265 mo. Brian 609-896-8471 .

N O R TH BRUNSW ICK • v Young professional Ictoklngfor'same (m/0' 2 bdrm. 2 bath condo. $400 -f 'h utils. Security. 201-277- 2627. eves.'■PRINCETON • A R E A . ■ All am enities, suitable lor serious, professional male,. 609-392-3787

365 Apt/House to Share

P R I N C E T O N A R E A - female prel for 2 bdrm gar­den apt, $360 + ’/, mils,

^01-821-3247. ________

PRINCETON B O R O -1 Ige bdrm avail itnmed. Beaut­iful newly renovated Vic­torian house. 1 block Irom c a m p u s . $ 3 5 0 utils, wshr/dryr, dishwsher. Cali Ann 201-932-3174 days, • 609-921-1291 eves

PR INCETO N - Female preleired, to share beaut­iful 4 'bdrm house. Wshr/ dryr, fpl, garage. $325 mo V 14 utils. Days. 609-

734-2395. Eves, 609-497-1705. __________________

PRINCETON - Furnished bdrm. washor/dtyer. lire­place, pool, solarium, great

' location, $450 mo Vutiis & .security deposit. AvallnowJ Call alt Spm, 6097921-3148

P R IN C ETO N U N D IN Q • Need 1 -person to share nice 2 bdrm apt.-isSO/mo. Call 609-520-8454 ;

PRINCETON - Near cam­pus. 3 bdrro, share with,2

’ genllemerr. $390 fn<:luding parking aiSd'- uUlities. Call 609-921-0559, after 10pm

\ ■

W e ^ of D ecen^r 28, 1988J3?

A Packet Publcation

385 Apt/House to Share

PRINCETON - Non- smok­ing professional wanted fo share large 2 bdrm apt with mirslc lover. $420/mo utils inci Avail I/I.'89. nego­tiable 609-921-6807,

PRINCETON - Roomate wanted to share 3 bdrm Duplex with single parent S300 mo <- V, utils. Call alt 5pm wkdys, 609-683-5066

365 /^t/House 1o Share

R O B B IN S V IL L E ■ Prof female seeks same to share 2 bdrm. i '/i bath spacious apt. w/w carpej & cent air. + ’A elec.Call 609-259-0815. R OCK Y HILL - Fum’d house to share w/young prof. 5 mlri to Princeton, 10 min to Rt 1. Ige yard, quiet location, wshr/dryr, must like animals. $550 -r-utils. Oays/eves 609-497-0320

370 Rooms for Rent

J o r T h T N e w Y S ^ " ^

__________ . _ I and artist wife have made numer­ous Improvements on this delightful 4 bedroom-Ranch. Take advantage of their efforts and get a truly fine So. Brunswick home lor only , $154,900.

MLLSTONE TOWNSHP 18TAQECOACH ESTATES

. 3 Very &iecioua Models ,Front £ m [900 & up. '

. BROdKSnE ESTATES 16 Cuetam BuB Homes on

214 to 4 Acre M y Wooded Lots • from 3,300 to 3,900 eq .lL< $389,900 A upTNa property Is wHhin approxlrnalely 10 tides of New Jersey TuiinIks ExH B, Route 33, and other majorroutes and line resktemial areas at r ------------ -------------poteia in MOstone Townshk).(NRECnONS: From Exit e of NJTP, ttete Rte. 33 East lor 4A ndes, turn right onto MKstone Road and oonifnue to Monmouth County 524. Turn left at stop. Approx. Vt nds on rIghL look lor Stagecoach Estatea sign and sates office. -

Satee Offite (201) 577-0060 or (201) 577-6990 Tueeday-Surxtey 930 A.M. to S P.M.

By appt. onty on Dec, 31 A Jan. 1

I one ol'the hlghM

ADLERMAN CLICK & co.

%nufillors " A Insurors1‘- ‘v l. '.fk j S I l^ w tc rK w i U J '

(40»| 924-0401 (409) S84-1020

IX JH C IM I% T IK I s r / U I CAW »<O H r TO U A M t’ t rvTfTr Tv»n.KHrv IK nir 4/ica C4ci jwtrriut

F U R N I S H E D M O T E L Room - wllh satellite tv. radio. IndMduat heat con­trol. air cond. w/w canpat. private bath. Windsor/ Hightstown area motet. From $140/wk Ca» 609- 448-8637.

H I L L S B O R O ■ B d rm w/private bath In luxury townhome. Avail weakly or monthly. Call and Iv msg. 201-281-6465.KENDALL PARK - Sunhy carpeted room Tor .qutel •.

. non^moker. ,15 mins to' Princofon, 5 mins to NY

“ b its . L ig h t k itc h e n priveledges.'S250 mo. Call 201-297-5164

L A W R E N C E - P rivate home. Use of laundry, modem kitchen, heati^ pool. Prof parson. Sec dep. $300 mo. Includes heat A utils. 609-896-9140.

LAW RENCE Square Vill - Short term available. $360 per mo +13 utils. Call609:890-7514 _________

M ERCERVILLE • Furrf. Master Bdriii, V4 bath, utils, incl. $345 or $395 mo + w/kll Pfiv. 609-587-1793

P R IN CETO N - Fum. -1(1 lovely home on NY bus line w/kit privileges,’ parkhig. M on-Fri. prelorred. Avail afler Jan 3. Refs required. $375. Call 609-924-4691.P R I N C E T O N J C T ■ Furnished im, pvt entrance & baih, within walking dis­tance to station. Call. 609-799-1624 i

i PR INCETO N • Levy rent, utils, fpl, near bus A shops, Singles,'' couples, student ok. 609-924-2040. .•

PRINCETON - Room A bdth in private home tor nonsmoking femiale. $400 per mo. Call 6(^-683-8043

P R IN C ETO N .- Sunny, im­maculate, exc location, avail Jan 1. No pets. $325/mo. 6P9-987-8340

W E S T W INDSOR - Room In priv home, gentleman business exec preferred Call 609-799-0137

375 j^itm entiB for Rent

H O U D A V O E A O i t f ^ .,

Thursday, DecemtiAr^ad,' 1S88 at .5 p.m. Is our dead­line to place or c a n ^ y o u r regular clarified ad for Tuesday. January 3, 1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 St'S p.m. is our dead­line 10 place or cancel ypur regular classified ad lor Wednesday. Janilary 4, 1989.

W E W i a BE" C LO S E D M ON, JA N U A R Y 2, 1989-’ Mew year’s'Oa/. HoSday

f^ D U L T COM M UNITY - OOality Apts at affordable prices, Yardly Pa. area with easy access to Rt 1 A 1-95. Only 20 mins, to Princeton.1 A 2 bdrm Apts from $525 irici heat, hot water, use of pool, tennis courts, saunas, recraation room, door an­swering autism to screen A

•'Selectively admit visitors. Short term leaqes ori 1 Bdrm ^ t s . Visit bur model Morf-Fti, Oam-Spm, Sat A Sun 10-3pm, Castle Club Apta.'2M W, Trenton Av-

. enue, Mbrrlsidlle Pa 19067. 215-295-3300. '

BORDENTOW N .Park Apts ,

Spacious,! bdrm ip is In beautiful.setting. $600m o. Iilcl w asher/dryer. w/w carpet, baseboard heal A hot water, 2 air. condi­tioners, swirtimi.ng pool, on site parking. Master TV system. Cable ready.' Of­fice at Apt 1 A, 601 Park St. or call 609^298-0002 Mcn- Fri 10-6, Sat 9-3

• - . - I •

b o r d e n t 6 w n TW P . Pointe Breeze Apt

Large 1 A 2 bdnh apts'itrom $550 mo, W/w carpet, 2 air conditioners, swimming pool, baseboard heat A hoL i water Included. O n site parking, master TV-systom. Cable avail. Office loacted at Apt 31, 710 Route 206, Mbn-Fn 10-6. Sal 9-3 or call 609-298-6910

375 Apts For Rent 37s Apts Fbr Rent 7S Apte Fo.r Rent 375 Aptg For Rent 37S Apts PorRerit

BRID GEW ATER - Newly remodeled 2 bdrm. Wshr/ dryr hook up, new appis, cent air. $750 mo, l ’/4 mo sec. 201-469-5423.

CHAM BERSBURQ - Mod- em 2 bdrm, all appis, near. SI. Francis Hospital, call 609-883-2407 aft 6pm.

D AYTO N - Luxury 1 bdrm apt, all util paid, $600/mo. Call days, 201-329-2503 or 329-2960 all 5.

’ -O EER FIELO / “ . j W E S TE R LE A

Applications being apcapt- ed for luture. occupancy.- Located in Hightstown, NJ. Mins from NJ Tpk, major h ig h w a ys, churchds A schools.. Spacious 1 A 2 b d rm a p ts w ith large closets. For more Intor- mation call 9aim-Spm, Mon- Fri; Sat 9am-12noon.

609-448-1933 V EH O V

EAG LE R OCK-Located in Hamilton Tw p now accept­ing applications for 1 bdrm apis. Open Mon-Sat, 9am- 6pm( 609-585-8051 ■E A S T W INDSOR • Hamp­ton Arms. G re a t'I^ U o n , best services. Lovbty' A spacious 1-2 bdrm garden apts, w/w carpel, air condi­tioned.' Includes heal plus many extras. On silo park- ■ Ing, Superintendent A laun- diy facilities. Apt B -lf or phone 6 0 9 ^8 -1 4 4 0 .

" E A S T W INDSOR TW IN RIVERS APTB.

Studio r:$505 1 Bdim - $5804600

2 B d n n -$ 7 0 5 Some furnished apts

Best location In e area Includes tndividua'i heat control, cbntral a/c, new custom drapes, w/w carpel: in£f, patio or balcony, all Twin River pools, tennis courts, A recreation, '/i block NY buses, 1 mile Exit 8 NJTP. Apply at A l Ab- binglon Dr., ott Rt. 33. near Princeton Bank A shopping mall. Open Moe^ri. 10- 4:30 Safs appt only

6 (»te 4 8 -7 7 9 2

East Windsor Off Rt 130 *1 & 2 B ED R O O M

A P A R TM EN TSSuperbly maintalnod gar­den apartihents. Fully car­peted, air cdnditibned. Bat- cohisa or patios. Swim dub available. Evening hrs by appt.

BR OO K W O ODGAR D EN S

Hickory. (Jomer Rpad 609^448-5531

If No Answer Call 201-721-9336

East Windsor Off Rt 130 B E S E LE C TIV E . .

All modem, supeijily maln- talhed. 1 2 bedrooniapartments. Fully carpeted, air conditioned. Evening hrs by appt.

W YN BRO O K W E S T Located on Dutch Nack Rd

609448 -3385 . If No Answer Call

201-721-9336

EA ST W INDSOR - Village East Apts, Twin Rivers. To p services, con veni­ences A location. Adjabent lO'Mall A N Y Bus'Stop.' All Twin Rivers amenities In­cluding tennis courts A pools. Spadous, bright. Studio^ 4 A 2 bdrni a^ts.

' Fully carpeted with Individ­ual a/c A heat. Plenty 6! parking, ori^ltd Manager A laundry fairaities. Apt J-23 or phone 609-443-3220.

EWING TOW NSHIP 1 & 2 B E D R (X }M S

Spadous apts with w/w carpet. Rent Includes heal,

>hol water, eledric, gas, a/c,' parking A pool privileges. Laundry fadlities on pram-, > ises. Settle; Into our maln- .talned hullding in beautiful 'wooded surroundings, in prestigious area. Ideal for Sentor Citizens - conve­nient to shopping A trains; busafdobrj;! block to golf course. Evening firs by appt.W O OD BR O O K H O U S E 886 Lower Ferry Road

609-883-3335 'It No Answer Call

201-721-9336

EW ING TOW NSHIP 1 & 2 B E D R O O M S

Air coditibning, swirnming . pool, off street parking,

ceptlo nally w ell m a jn - tained, spadous..grounqs. Laundry /fadlities. Real In duded» jevening hre’^ y j

T Q A T E A P TSParkside A Buttonwood Dt

609-883-7537 If No Answer Call

201-721-9336

EW ING TO W N S H IP 1 B ED RO O M S

SUPERBLY M AINTAINED GARDEN A P A R TM EN TS

CO N VEN IEN T-LO CATIO N EVENING HR S BY A P P T

PARKSIDE M AN O R 1475 PARKSIDE AV E : ' 609-771-9471

It No Answer'Call 201-721-9336

Ew ing Tw p.D E U W A R £ H Q Q H T S . Luxury Garden Apts.

ShOwplace of N J O ve rlo o k in g D ela w a re River. Many with finished basements. ~

1 & 2 B d im A p t;From $575/Mo.

Includes heat, hot lyater, dishwasher,.-.tennis court. Swimming pool at nominal dost. •1 M O S E C U R ITY O N LY !

609483-1707 DIRECTIONS.- 1-95 south to Exit 1; take Rt. 29 No. to second exit on right, •

Rental Office Apt 706 Scenic d V.Aft. Hours Apt. 708

Open 7 Days a Week

EWING, TW P HIGHRISE i & 2 BED R O O M S

Lots of Space! ExtrasI (k )h - . venlencesi Our exception­ally well maintained build­ing offers you air.condiljon- Ing, off-streei parking, spa­dous grounds overiopking pool. Laundiy fadlities on each (loof, intercom sys­tems. Some apts with dls- hwaShof. Evening hrs by appt.

HIG H G ATE A P TS Parkway A Olden Ave

609-883-4626 It No Answer Call

201-721-9338

FALLS TW P Rock 'Spring Apts

1-2 bdrms Includes heat, hot water A cooking. Sr citize n discount. O pen Mon-Fri 9am- 5pm. Sat . 1 0 -4 p m . C a l l215-736-2270.

FURNISHED 3 A 4 Room Cottages - with kitchens,

.^telljte fv, radio. Individual, control, air cbnd, wAf/ sis. Windsor/ Hlgh-

ftowh area motel. From $23S/wk, Inds all utils. 609-448-8637. _________

FURN ITUR E r e n t a l s ' Hdme/Offtce. Immed. del.. short/Iong term leases. 100% purchase option, vast selection,' decorator SVC A tax advantages. Call Shirley a t . I f R 609-392- 1666 or 201-227-7700.

H a ^ ^ . '

Greenw ood VBage Apts

NOW R EN TIN G . Beautiful park llkesetting, 1 bdmi apt starting at $445, easy ac­cess to all major transp A shopping. Heat A hot water Included. 20 min to Prince­ton. Otlice Hrs-10-S. Mon- Fri, call 609-587-0357

HAMILTON AR M S Apts - Now accepting applications for 1:2 b d rm ’ apts. Rani

' includes heat, hot wqler A cooking gas. .Excellent lo­cation on bus route. Within . walidilg distance to baiiki schools 6 shopping. Easy access to Rt 1, 1-95, etc. $515 A up. Call 609-587- 2743,. Mon-Fri, 9am-5pm.

HAM ILTON TW P W IN G A TE AR TS

(VOW accepting applications fqr future rentals. 1 A 2 bdrm apts. W ell maintained gprden apt complex. Heal, hot water, cooking gas, new appis avail, air condi- tibnerj Olympic size pooj.

■ From ..$516. Apply rental agent Wingate Apis, Wert Ave near ^ Olden Ave, or call 609-.888-3275. Mon-Fri 10-6pm,’ Sat 9am-3pm. Sun i1am-3pm.

HAMILTON TW P Kuser VWage.

Luxury 1 A 2 bdrm spa­dous apis, w/w carpet, pvt enhance, cent air, heal/hoi water incl,. closets A cab­inets galore, balcony or patio, dshwshr. 10 n)in to Rte 1 (Jenlers, '/i ml to 1-295. From $555. No pets. Cali 6(j9-587-49S9 Mon-Fri 10-6, Sal 9-3, Sun 11-3 or office, 102 Nottinghlll Ln.

From all of us at Weidel

A t this special time of year we would like to

wish you all the greatest holidays and a happy and prosperous New Year.

We would also like to thank everyone who helped make 1988 our best year ever, we truly value your business. We’ve tried our best to live up to our commit­ment to offer you more. And next year, we’ll continue to strive for that i^oal.

In 1989, if you are think­ing of buying or selling a home, call a Weidel sales­person .and watch, our "■ commitment pay off for you.

In the meantime \^w ish you all the best the holidays have to offer.

W e id e l n e ig h b q r h o o dOFFICE LOCATIONS

i i io v n ; ( » iE n i T tm A s iiip b i t t i A v n

Yest (duality upgrades liko double oak front doom w/Ieadeo'gtass,' impressivo marble foyer, crown moldings, hardwood Iloors AIm , vaulted ceiling w/skylights, fireplace, atrium doors to deoK. Total ol 10 rooms. 4 BRs, 2W baths. Jacuzzi In master suite. Agemi $410,000. C A U

- Bridgtwatsr676 Route 206 N. Building 2 (201) 68^8200East WlRdtbf Rl. 130 Princeton Rd. (609) 448-6200Eurtno’'47SiMchRoad(609)883-8950

*flamllton1970 Route 33 (609)586-1400Hliltborough/Montgomsfy873Route20e (2()1) 359-7100Hoptwfll45 W. Broad St. (609)466-1224

Uffltwrtville18 Bridge Sf.(609) 3W-0777Umsactvills26St Main 81. (609)896-1000

'MartiBwilte 1948 Wtwhlngtbn

-Valley Road (201)4694300Piaaiagion

’1Wo,Route31 ■ (609)7371500PriBcetofl"'164 Naaaau St. (609)921-2700(kirpiKrti RslocsHon(609)737-1551Mot^N)* LiMllt(809)737-1000( m ) (1)6354)977

24 OFFICES SERVMQNEW JERSEY a PENNSYLVANIA

■I

WEIDEL, HOPEWELL 609-466-1224

ltlU5iMHUHI.ll Tim5SIIIP OWABB T l) LS.SIST IN (XOSIM.

Wefl cared tor ranch on paik-tee acre Open tloor plaii. hardwood fioore, DR w/slidere to a muttl level deck. TNa 2 BR iMeuty indudee a greal Wtehen w/center istend. new DW, refrigerelor. traah com­pactor ♦ a'eeduded back yard Convenient to SomarviOe A Princeton. $189,900 C A U WEIDEL HOPEWELL 609-466-1224

_ EAST AATADStmThie tovoly Aapen Model in Windsor Woods is oantrtfy tocated and convenient to al major road- •waya. t f ^ Townhouse features a s e t e ^ Rving room/dtoing room wWi a cozy wood burning fire

and centrally tocatad bath/Tastette decora^ adda to that country ambience. $139,699.' - C A U WEIDEL PRINCET10N 609-921-2700.

.AMIVrtMXMEBV

.wewwvw ev.vwinif ■*#, eeiWMiunail. VVBlOfn .DWRmantte over tee flrafteoe; txMi In taitlat, book-

wooden deck lor eutntner

c S l WEIDEL PRINCETON 609^1-2700.

. ■ HAAOLTWA .Uke new Cotontel leittjtteg 4 BR 2»B. only 4 yra. young a ltu ^e ri a beeuWul wooded lot liada of

and upgrades too numerous to mandon.

a o s a v a s s ® * * "CALL W ElOa PRINCETON 609-921-2700.

n u M x n m d i t l e x

kk/k -K---------------------wMUngN ^ tu$m and trains, and hotpHal. $220JXX) RsduotdlC A a WEIDEL PRINCETON 809421-2700.

AAtST HTNDSim NETT) A LUU:E IHteSET

Wa'vs lust Mad this executive home featuring 6 bedrooms. 2 VA baths, saaened-fn porch with

I and 2 brick paUos. Perfect lor the lamily at Idvea to etdeilaln and wante to be In the hub ol

y. Schools, shopping, trains and parks an I watiing dlstanca. Asking $334,900.

CALL WEIDEL EAST WINDSOR 609-4484200 (17 HEREFORD).

UKiiiTKnmiATALK ABOUT BAR(3AINS„.WEVE GOT 2

Wa've got 2 new homes to brag about 3 year old Colonial ottering 3 bedrooms. 1 VA baths, large country kitchen and spactous rooms. Easy to finance. Priced to sel last at $139,500.Two lamfiy with posstote commercial variance Perfect for the Pr«sesional who needs irvhome

M w R U B i f l U U U U U U H U B U B U n

La w r e n c e v il l e /FRANKLIN CORNERS

Bedroom Garden Apartments I Available Ckinvenienl to Quakerbridge Mali,

1 Bedroom $492.00 per month '' Includeis'Heial and Hot Water

For More Information Call: 609-896-2796

B B B E S n B B B E

HAM ILTON TVyp Lalor (W d e n s

Studto, 1 A 2 bdrm apts. Now accepting applications (or, future rentals. Rent Incl heat/hot water, all new appl. Fully renovated apts with wW carpet also avail. Park like setting, garages a v a il .\ A p )> ly S u p e r ­intendent Lalor Gardens 1 SA.SIenton Cl or 609-392- 6644 Mon-Fri 9-5. Sal 9-3

HILLSBORO ■ large, 1 bedroom, $550/mo. 201- 873-3M 9 ah 6pm.

rateboro.Twp, N J

r & 2 Bedroom Gterden Apts

BEEKM AN GUVROe^S

O n New A m w e l Rd.Off R t . ^

Includes: Heat, hot water, dishwasher, tennis courts A e x tra o rd in a ry p la y ­ground.Lai^gefil swirnming pool In area a^nomihal'cost.

CaB 201-359^7180 i 07 874-6644 .

HAMILTON TVVP - Mod- ’ em, central air garden apts.•1 bdrm (rom $510. Heat supplied. Senior citizen dis­count. Private parking. Off Rl 295’ at Exit 62. 609- 8a8-3052.v;.

H IG H TSTO W N AR EA ’ ■ FurrAshed studio 2 rms tor 1 professional. Cable T V .

J9-443-4017.

HOPEW ELL - 2Jxlrm apt heat incl. witfi vfshr/dryr, S725'mb. Call 609-737-

■ 1818. ' i i •HO PEW ELL B O R O Area • Cottage for rent, furnished. ' on 12 acre rhini farm, 15 min to Princelon, Private.' $525/mo. Oil heat! Avail Jart 1. 609-466-3328 or 21S-698-8934, Bob. ' .

HOPEW ELL BO R O U G H ^- , 1 bdrm, largo kit 4 living '

r(3om. 2nd floor, very nice cond. Nb pets or Kids Single or professional cou­ple prel. $650 - elec609-466-1069.____________

LAMBBRTVILLE • t or 2 , b d rm u n it in 1 8 6 0 ’ s restored building otters the chami of another era, but the corivenleniM and effi­ciency of today. Uv rm w/beamed and cathedral celling, Irg bdrm w/wood • floors, custom kit, A oak

, staircases to addifinal bdrm or den. $695 A util 6 0 9 -7 3 7 -1 5 2 2 or Y37,- 1564. _______________

LAM BEHTVILLE - built in the 1860’s and oimplqleley restored in 68 offers a bright A iriieertul 1400 sq n ' unit w/Iivlrig room, iCuslom dining r b ^ . eat-in kli w/oak cabinetry A ap­pliances, carpet A wood floors, garage, ceniral air. period fixtures $ much m o r e . $ 8 9 5 + u t ils 609-737-1522/1564.

olllce. Curreitey beltig used as a 2-lamily Qraal Investment potential lor $129,900.CUUJ. WEIDEL EAST WINDSOR 6094484200(137 ROGERS. 144 FRANKLIN)

llUIIL’niN tOlTVIlIV S ETm e .

IS THE ioeteion o( thte l o ^ . ranch on % awa lol wNh malwe ptenttegs. (Ttlarlng; 3 bedroofhs, 2 full bathe, famSy room with brick ffiepiaca. scraenad-in — c^2w|g^andlufibasamanLArealgood

. . 1l WEIO'EL ^ T WINDSOR6094484200 (2 W0(X)F1EL0).

. . EXm -nVE IHtelEWHhin minutes of NJ. Ttxnpto (Exit 6) and wak­ing dtetenoe to town and Paddte School. This 4 bedroom CotonW boasts; (amw room vrlih brick llraclye. (ontial dtotog room, llntehM basameni and 2 Car gii . SAuated to qutel rasktonfiat naighboihood dS is a Itoe otiaiiiig at $239,600. C f l i WEIDEL EAST WINDSOR 6094W4200 (84 MEADOW DRIVE).

EA-kTIVIMHiOnIIOMEBtTIM: lies NE1ER BEBV EUaER

Wa have an oulstendtog aeteefion ol Condos and Townhouses. (tel about ow ’no poini’ .inotkmte program, buyer Ineenlives and, cximptemeixaiy 'Home Buyara Handbook', Ask about Our wal-atockaa tnyantoiy in Twin R ivm Prteoeton

. SILUWW OAK.S - OOIIPOR4TE E X E C im E OFFERING

(Xir 4 Bedroom Ctelontel ranto Ngh on lha ladder Ol suooaMlul iMng. SNuaied on 1 acre kX thit ttetely home dtors etiNng ertey tew, ban- qual-aiza dtotog room, formal Ivfog room and l«i)W room wtft fireplace. 30x18 ft deck oil of deigmd Mtohen, ctelned hardwood Doors and Iniyound spfinkter sytten adds to the a te gm ol

OWNER EAGER TO S E U 198 ^ t ’Ward St., Hightstown

609-448-5370(Xtstom Ranch featuring 3 bedromns, 2 baths, Nving room w/firdplaca, dining rm., family rm„ sun im„ 2 car garage and numerous amenities. Locteted .on a wooded lot bordering a presUgdus private school. $210,000

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

Al mtr« rjwtpspef •$ suOisci to Federst fgit Housing Act ol 1066 wtxn msites it

to . adveft'M any ptfltiancct iimitaiion ordiscMmmaiion based on race cMx rehgon tex cy nabona) oogm of an witenton to make an> men preleience. limitation or d>$crtfntfvat>on Thr$ nevnpapef «m8 fx« Knowingly accept any adve7ti$ing lof real estate

r$ m.«Totafion of the (aw Ouf rtaderi are heitby formed that aa OweSmg$ edvertiadd in • newspaptf. are ava<ab4e on I an e<)uai opportunity ba»

T o / / b ro th e rs , nc.

Ftwn emyone here at Toll Brothers,

Visit o u r communities/'during this festive season. W e a re o p e n th e d a y a f t e r N e w Y e a r ’s f r o m l 2 -5 , along w itn everyday next w w k , We are closed; New) Y e a rs D a y , Fo r inform ation on any T o l l Brothers co m m unity please call T h o m a s M iller, Vice President of Sales, at (215) 9 3 8 -8 m - ' v , ; ;

Open 12/31 from .12-3

P I C H A P D

I I A ’

A U§mb*i Ol

■ MIOCXTiUk^ bvICi :; ■

0 W E’VE g o t r o o t s w h e r e WE’VE GOT BRA INfCHES.

REALTORS

S in c e ! 9 ! 5

■ / -

(^AUSTilV ESTATESm

. ■ — Rsi^tan 'Towndilp

Priced (riMa $319,700 — - onc'inB' two •cre-puceh, nine rooms, Jenn-Air. kitchens, centra] air, etc... We at East Coast Lifestyles believe that no Itoine buyt will invest in a new home unless that product exceeds standardized consbleouireinenu. We build houses With .the same thought, care and craftsmah^Ip we build into our own personal homes.' .

D IR EC TIO N S: From Ficmington Circle lake Rl. 202 North to rust light (Rl. SI4) to right uoUl Rt. 514 ends, turn right, make next left onto Clover Hill Rd. Homes \(l mile on left. *M O D EL OPEN 1-4 p.m. (201) 788-5077 or Evea. (201) 232.2359 O ff lc tf (2 0 l).S 3 4 -^ .. .. . . ..

R ic h a r d C . F is c h e r In c . , R e a l E s t.ilc -.,.3514 U.S. ROUTE 31 WEST. W IilTEIIO USE. NEW JliKSEV u m < . i,

(201) 534-4195 f

•v '

A Packet PiMcation Week of December 28, 1988 13B

Apts F o r Rent 37s Apts For Rent 3?s For Rent

HO PEW ELL tW P - near 195, on 72 acre lann. 2 WriHi 1V4 bath, modem kit. oshwihr,J675 eteo'4 heat Incl. 609-^37-6753. For Professionals only.

LA FA Y E TTE HOUSE Berkeley Sq. historic dis­trict. Convenient location overlooking balcony, 24 hr. doorman, IdecU for pro- feskional, 1 & 2 bdrm. apts. from $480. Call 609-393- 26^6 for appointment.'.

H OPEW ELL BORO - 3 bdrm aparfment. No Pets..

• $700 per month + ulllitJes. Please call 609-737-1565

LA M B E R TV IU E ■ VVic- torfan Cottage” that is tucked away, offers 1 bdrm &'many custorh features an atrium 'door leading to private dec^. Don't delay on this one'. S595v& utils. 609-737-1522.LAW RENCE TW N's Finest r While Pine Apts. 1 bdrm apts & 2 bdrm twnhses. When avail. 609-883-3333.

U W R E N C E TW P - 1 bdrm. kit,. IMrig rm. yard, garage. $570 mo -r utils. No pets. 609-92T-6721L A W R E N C E V IL L E - 1 bdrm. $550 per month,

. hdat. included. Avajl im- -mediately. No pets; Call ;609-896-8406 alter 6pm

L A W R E N fc E V IL L E - 1 b d rm a p t, d e c o r a to r

''planned, lovely, quiet,‘no smokers. $600 -r utits. Call 609-896-3546

LA W R EN C EV ILLE

Spacious' 1 M m i garden apts with eat-|n kit, din rm.

. hardwood firs, air cond, $510-$550 mo Includes-, heat. Call 609-896-2796 or

'2 0 1 -3 9 6 -3 6 0 0 ask lo r, Terry.

LUXURY, 1 4 ? Bdrm Apts - $535 .4 $635/mo, heat 4 hot wafer Incl. 3 ml. from ctr ol P'ton. 609-452-2104

M ERCERVILLE • Charm­ing 1 bdrrn plus den, living rm. kitchen, $500. Boyer Realty 609-921-1605 Brkr M O N TG O M ER Y TO W N ­SHIP - Apt for,rent on farm. Living room, bedrobln, kit­chen 4 bath. $600 + utils 4 secuttty. Possitively No Pets. Call 609-921-2754

• M ORRISVILLEI.

A m e rica n a Apts, Adult Community. 1 4 2 bdrms. starting $ ^ mo. Office hours, 10-3. Mon-Fri only. 10 mins to Trenton. 20 mins to Princeton. Call215:295-4608.____________N E W , t o P E - 2 bdrm. spacious, immac, on river. $iS95/mo.'lnci heat 4 park-

' Ing. No pets. 609-987- 8340.

N O BRUNSW ICK - 1* *4 2 bdrm apts, $525 4 $625, heat 4 hot water included. Car201-828-1057.

PRINCETON -1 bdrm apL 1 block off Nassau. Call eves, 201-B74-558Q.

PRINCETONA R EA

Largo 2 bdrm $595 with option to buy.

Incl heat, pool. In private ^community..

. Also i bdrm from $495- ■

: 669-448-4848 ■ O R

20t-398-3600

PRINCETON BO RO - 1 bdrm apt, center of toim. $675/mo Incl heat. No pets. Avail Jan 1. Reply to: Box # 1 1 2 4 2 , c/o Princeton Packet, . -

P R IN CETO N - Center of Town. 1 studio apt w/fpl, Pullihan Kit, $625. Also-1 bdrm apt w/fire^ace 4 Pullman kitchen. .^ 5 0 .

PRINCETON2 bdrm, ■ 2. bath apt on Harrison St. hear shopping center.'$900 -►utils,'

^ CaSaway Real Estate 609-921-1646

PRINCETON - Close to the U n iv e rs ity . G o o d size room, kitchenette 4 bath.!- $450 includes heat 4 water. Associates Retalty bl Prin^ton 609-924-6501 P R IN C ETO N H O R IZ O N S - 1-2 4 3 bdrm apt. Includes pool arid tennis. 609-924- 6739 .PRINCETON - Luxury 1 bdrm apt, completely fur­nished,-‘ long/short term,

■$995. 609-924-5624.PRINCETON. - Private, spacious apt, 1 bdrm, bath, kildtenotle, liv/din area. Western section, close to town, $600/mo incl heat 4 aJc. Nonsmoking, prol le- male prel. Call 609-924- 8956 aft 5.

Trenton Suburb (RcAiblnsville)

SH A RO N A R M S On Sharon Rd opp

Sharon Country Club,1 BED R O O M S

Fully carpeted, air condi­tioned apartments. Only minutes Item Trenton on Sharon Rd off- Circle of Intersecdons of Rputes 130 4 33. near Tpke Exit 7-A, just Vi mile North ol 1-95. Evening hrs by appt.

609-529-9449 It No Answer Call

201-21-9336

►WEST W INDSOR - 7 rooms, $900 mo -i-utils. Available how, 'call 609- 443-4381

W E S T W INDSOR (Close to Princeton)

N E W LU X U R Y A P TS •1, 2 4 3 Bdrms

A M Q 8 T IE S• 2 Pools• Nautilus/Fltness Center• Rackelball, Tennis• Sauna

D E P O S IT SPECIAL •$500 Security Deposit

S T E W A R D S W A TC H 1000 Jamie Brooks Ln

West Windsor 609-275-9577

WINDING BROOK - Lo­cated In Hamilton 'Twp ac- cepting applicatidns for' 2 ' bdrm aplS/ Open M o h -N ,- 9am- 12pm, Sat, 9am- 12pm, 609-5854000.

Y A R D L E Y B E L M O N D O on the Oefawara • i . 2 4 3 bdrms, heat 4 hot water, included. Easy NY, Phlla, Princeton commute. Frdm $625, Mon-Fri. 9-5, Sat

'11-4 sun 12-4. Call 215- ~~493-1988.

Houses for Rent

E A S T W INDSOR - New 2 Story House, 2 bdrm, 1'/i bath, garage,' all appls, po6l/terinis. avail now.. $900. Call 609-443-6844.

EW IN G• R A N C H -3 bdrm. 2 bath. 2

garage, $1000.'mo. 609- 924-1600.

Houses For Rent

HOPEW ELL B O p O - 3/4 bdrm, IVi'. bath, wshr/dryr,

■'1 car gar. 609-466-4650.

380 Houses for Rent

H O P EW ELL TW P

SPLIT RANCH • 4 bdrm. 2Vi bath. 2 car igar, 2 acres. $1l00'mo. short term 609-924-1600

‘W o x ^ ^ a z o

KINGSTON T W

COLONIAL s p l i t ; .- 4 bdrm, 2V^ bath, 2 garaged. $1350/rho.-609-f‘ ^ --------

EW ING - 3 bdrm home lor rent, l'/j bath, vrshr/dryr, Ip l, u n iq u e d e ta ilirig . partially fum'd. Profession­als pref.-No pets. $900/mo -► utils. Avail immed,- Call 609-3974951 tv msg

G R O VER S MILL.Cottage - Lo ve ly country'estate.. Large living room fireplace. II bdrm, bright kit,'din area, secluded g k rd ^ , parking. 3 mins to train. Avail 1/89. $895/mo.. 609-799-1244

H A M ILTO N TW P COLONIAL • 4 bdrm. 2'h bath, 2 garages, cent air $1000/mo, $1200 lum-ished. 609-924-1600.

T o x & ^ a z o

H IG H TSTO W N - 2 story, 2 Ixirm, private yard, quiet residential area, $750/mo -►Utils. Call 609-448-1075.

HOPEW ELL - 2 bdrm house in country, low rent in exchange for child care, some chores. Nonsmoker.609466-3855.____________HO PEW ELL BO RO - 2 bdrm house, hardwood firs, 2 car gar, qUIet street. Avail Feb 1. $90d/mo. 609-466-, 1246.

U W R E N C E V ILL E • 2 ex­ecutive rentals with Prince­ton phone 4 address. (1) 4 bdrms, 2'/i bath Center

,Hall Colonial in prestigious Foxcroft Developm ent, $1950 mo. (2) Queen Anne Brick Manor Jtouse on 3 wooded acres, adjacent to new development of line homes.. 4 Sdtms, • 3v? baths, new kitchen, line panelling thru .out house, 4 fireplaces, library 4 more! Also*'Guesi HoUse avail- - able if required. Manor House 4 - Quest House, $2500. Manor House only $1950, C a ll.Th o rn p so n L a n d R e a lt o r s , -6 0 9 - 921-7655.

LAW RENCEVILLE - Near Rider College 2 bdrm. liv rm. din rm. kitchen, den, bath and'/i. Off street park­ing. $900 mo. Avail Feb 1. Call 609-883-6370.

N O R TH BRUNSW ICK • Brand new 3 bdrm, 2 Vi. bath twnhse. W/w carpet, fpl, all appls. cent air. ten-

.^ntopool., tmmed occup. $1075 ■►utils.. Please call 201-821-8909' ,

PR IN CETO N - Charming 3 bdrm. 2 Vi bath duplex on Bank Si. Avail Feb i $1250 + utils '

N T CNIaway Real Estate 609-921-1646

P R IN C ETO N - Gracious living on Steward St. Bdrm. loltbedroom. Hv rm open­ing to secluded palio, gar­age. $1000.

N T Ctfaw ay Real Estate 609-921-1646

PR INCETO N LANDING - 3 bdrm Atrium, bsmt. 2 car garage, wshr-dryr, pool teyinls. $1400 ■* utils. Avail 3/1/89. 609-275-4772 PRINCETON - Walk to town, fabulous Jefferson

j y location. 3 bdrms. Ilv rm w/fpl,, parking, $12Q0 mo t utils. 609-924-9665.,

R ENTING, W H Y?To learn more about how our unique BuyAbillty Plan can make your first home affordable. CALL TO D AYl 201-466-4959; 609-443-3606.____________________

TrentonHISTORIC M ILL H ILL

Im m ediate possessipri, charming JrrfBN^^ngle. ' 6 rooms CorhplolelyresJorW. $750/mo.^ c e Gage 609-396-8241

Real Estate Agency

382 Townhouses & Condos For Rent

HO LID A Y D E A D U N E S

niursday, December 29, 1988 at 5j).ni. Is our dead­line to place or cancel-your regular classified ad for Tuesday, January 3,1989.

Friday, Decembe? 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our.dead-

: line to place or cancel your regular classified ad for Wednesday, January 4, 1989,

W E W ILL B E C L t ^ E D M ON. JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 N ew Year's Day HoRday

C A N A L P O I N T E - 2 Belvedere's, now • $795. K.M. Light Broker, 609- 924-3822.

C A N A L P O IN TE - 2 bdrm, • ■ 2 bath "Cloister'' Condo,

■ $1000.

N T Ceiaway Real Estate 6 0 9 -9 2 M 6 4 6

CANAL Poinie Condo' - 2 bdrm, 2 bath, wshr/dryr. fpl, avail 1/1/69. $850/mo. Call 609-520-9785 '

E A S T W INDSOR - 1 bdrm.1 bath. 2nd fl. end unit, $600 Incl heal. Avail im- med. 201-821-1899

EA S T W INDSOR Condo Nevriy renovated 2 bdrm, i'/j baths. Immed Occup $700 mo Inct. heat 4 hoi water utils. Call '2 0 i- 874-4921 after 3pm

FRANKLIN PARK - New 2 bdrm. 2 bath condo. Cent air. fully upgraded. Wash- erdryer Wiridow treat­ments. Pool/tennis. Avail immed. $850 -► utils.' Call Mike 201-821-7713 or 201- 271-6824 _______________

FR/iiNKLIN TW P - Im­maculate 1 bdrm upstairs condo, convenient location, avail immed, $600 t utils 2 q i-369-6160 aft 6

Leonard Van Hise Agency

A C R EA G E 4 PR IVACY plus a be'auUfully de­corated Country-Colonial situated on 1.8 acres. In Upper Freehoki that offers: 3 bedrooms that open oft a sitting room; 2 baths; living room 4 dining room both have lovely hardwood floors; a recently re­modeled kitchen w/neW cabinets 4 appliances; 2 outbuildings; and a great big.yard! $219,000

r c w U S r m G I Awaiting you in East Vyindsor is this 3-bedroom/2'/4 bath custom-built homo which tndudes a lomftal living room 4 dining room, up­dated kitchen with new appliances; a spacius family room that has a full-wall brick fireplace: partially finished basement; 2-car garage, and deck In back yard that overlooks wooded grounds. Call Now!

$215,000

C 0 2 Y ft C O N V B ^ n ? Yesf This HIghtstown ranch has todi ot these qualities, PLUS 3bedroorhs, Bving room w/6replace, dining room,. . . . . . . . --------

136,9W

kitchen, d M , la im ry area, garage, and lovely yarc widt m ^ shade trees. Must see to appredate

r l ^ 9 0 «

N ^ Y E A R — M EW HOM K. Start out the New Year In your new 2-etory home In HIghtstown that awaits you iwith a dinkig room, living room w/wood biffnkig stove for those cold winter days, eat-(n kitehen, a fvnity room that has French dows operi- kig up to yard in-ground pool. Don't wait onttiisone. $145,000

B U Y N O W — Don't end up old 4 gray with boxes of rent r e c e ^ . This 2-stofy Allentown homo oHers 5 bedrooms (great for the growing famllyL living room, dWng room, eat-in knchen, andJJ3' denat an affordabfe prteo ol $114,00011

B U O Y A H O M E without the vrony of exterior maintenance. Come see this E. Windsor con­dominium oflertog a living room w/cathedral ceiling, dining.room, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, and carport. Great closets and storage areas. The unit also has

wtodows, walt-to-wali carpeting 4 a private$102,000pal

Office: 609-448-4250MEMBER MERCER COUNTY MULTIPLE U$T1NQ SERVICE

After Hour* Cal:ShMeyOtoen 448-8368 PsI Roee 443-3410 Atm StsrSng 4430588 M surten P p tk ^ 2760S6S160 Stockton,St.

Mghtotown; N: J.

R C I

S IH L L■ •th ro u g h c la s s Ifle d M

Call Today for more Advertising Information

The Pririceton Packet The Lawrerice Ledger WIndsor-Hlghts Herald' The' Cranbury Press Hillsborough B eaco n' The Manviile News

;609) 924-3250609609609:201

(201

896-9100448-3005395-0730359:0850725-3300

The Franklin News-Record The Central Post North Brunswick Post The Hamilton Observer

' Hopevrell Valley News '1201) 469-9040 201) 329-9214 201),821-p550 609 587-1012 609) 466-1190

382 Townhouses & Condos For Rent

E. W INDSOR George­town 2 bdrm, iV j bath. $860, pool 4 tennis. Boyer Really 609-921-1805 Brkr

FURNITURE R EN TALS • Home'Offico. Immed. d e l. shorviong lerm leases, 100% purchase option, vast selection, decorator SVC 4 tax advantages. Call Shirley al IFR 609-392- 1666 or 2(|1-227-7700 -Ha m i l t o n , sodoiy hiii - 2bdrrri, 2 bath. 3rd Jlr, fpl.. ■ c e n t. air. all appls. incl ■

. wshr/diyr, extra slorfigo. ■pool'lennis. $750/mo incl condo fed. A va il-lm m ^, 609-426-2670 days, 201-968-4986 eves.._________ -HAMILTON Society Hill - 2 bdnri. 2 bath condo. All appls + extras, $'700 mo + utils. Call Torn. 609-655- 3300 days, 586-3831 eves.Avail 3/1/89____________HAMILTON Society Hill 11 - New end unit jownhouse. 2 bdrms, 2'/i baths. Ilv rm, din rm, all appls, pool' ten- • nis. $800 mo,' short -term avail. Call. 609-387-4046.

HAMILTON - Society Hill. 2 bdrm, 2 bath end-unit,.FpL skylt, pool lannis._$725 mo. Avail 2/1. Call-days Rick 609-771-2374 or Mike T . 292-5339^ eves 890 0377

HAMILTON TW P - Society Hill It. Newly built twnhse. 2 bdrm, 2'/? balh. liv.rm, din rm;, kit w.'appls. cent air. lennls pool $900 mo - ulils. Avail Immed 609- 452-5941 days. 924-1788 alt 7pm- . ^H IG H TSTO W N Wyckoffs Mill -, 2 bdrm, 2 bath, (pi. patio, pool/tennis, $775 ► i Jan -1st. 201-438-1474 .

HILLSBOpO - 1 bdrm. kit, liv rm. din area, dshwshr, heal 4 hot water, w.w carnet, pool 4 tennis. Avail 1/1/89. S700/mo. Call 201-646-3180 ________HILLSBORO ■ 1 bdrm. 2nd II unil, Ige rooms, w/w ca rp e l, b alco ny, quiet neighborhood. $675<mo. ♦ electric- Call 201 -674-8746

HILLSBORO • 2 bdrm condo, all appls. available Immed. $825 month. 718- 446-86P2 leave* message. HILLSBOROUGH • Large 1 bdrm, all appls. pool, tennis Heal 4 hoi water included $700 mo. Call 201-216 2692 or 359-8898

LAW RENCE S O C IETY Hill• Oil Cold Soil Rd. Lge 2 bdrm. 2 balh, premium lo­cation. wshr dryt, cenl dir, carpets, dishwshr. liv rm, din rm, eai m kitchen, pool & .lenrtis. Ayail Jarij ,1.5.

, $ 795? Pleasq-^ll'M f Perry %09-452-2589 ' '

C i J FT

E xpect tHe b e s t

co L o u je u .b a n k e r Q Expect the best,

We Guarantee ft.

HILLSBOROUGH Excellent opportunity! Florists/growers. Retail (lower and oift shop, six greenhouses, all on 3 plus acres. Established business 50 years. Excellent location. O n-site residence. C a ll 3 5 9 -4 1 2 1 . To ta l package.

*4 7 5 ,0 0 0 -MANVILLE Totally new interior, furnace, roof, elecUic. Ca-. fhedral ceiling, eat-in kitchen, 2/3 bedrooms, nursery, full basement, all new appliances, wall to wall carpeting'Great starter home. To see call 359-412|. . * 'i3 4 ,9 0 0HILLSBOROUGH Impressive Tudor Colonial offers 4/5 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, full basement and professionally landscaped 1 acre lot. This horhe hastrcastom deck which leads to an in-ground pool. Extras loo numerous to mention. Call 359-4121. *309,9 flDSTANTON Enter into an era of charm when previewing this circa 1770 vintage Colonial set on 5 acres in executive homes in prestigious. Stanton. Four large fireplaces, hand-hewn beams, 4 bedrooms. 3 ’/2 baths, 'Winding stair­case and your ovim pond are only a few ameniii'es. Call now for an appointment 359-4121. Offered for just *4 1 5 ,0 0 0MONTGOMERY TWP* Executive Colonial in prestigious MiH'Pond area of Montgomery Township has everything. 4/5 bedrooms can be a master suile/offices or live-in quarters, 2'/2 baths-, hardwood floors, and more. Call 359-4121. Only

*3 2 4 ,9 0 0CONVENIENT YET PRIVATE You'll aippreclate commuting from this spacious 3 BR Ranch. New deck, mainten­ance-free exterior, fireplace, and lovely yard for'enterlalning. The far rear yard has its own“ hideaway" for those special moments. Call now to see this commuters ^eam — 359-4121. *1 8 9 ,9 0 0HILLSBOROUGH Flowing creek and wooded rear, is the setting for this 1 year yourig 2 BR, 2 V2 baths end unit townhome. F u ll basement. CAG, and all appliances., IM­MACULATE! Call 359-4121. ' *1 5 3 ,9 0 0H IL L S B O R O U G H C orp orate p fo p e /ty , 2 bedroom iownhouse, beautifully decbrated; plush Carpeting, mirrored walls, immediate availability. Call 359-4121. VVith $2i500 bonus towards closing costs, priced to sell at *1 2 7 ,5 0 0HILLSBOROUGH Five bedroom mother/daiighter home,

• 3Vi baths, eat-in kitchens, fp, enclosed porches, areage, convehienf to Princeton. Mom’s area as beautiful as daugh­ter's. yet definitely separate. Call 359-4121. *2 6 5 ,£k)0NESHANIC Authentic nine-room stone house on the moun­tain. Set on 3 plus acres. This unique old stone work is the product of a master craftsman. 5 bedtooms, 2'/z baths.

acious dining room and livini eorgian Italiarf marble fireplace

more. Call 359-4121.

mg . fl

room which features hree-stall horse stable &

*4 3 9 ,9 0 0Ask About O ur Marketing Services Guarantee

AMERICA'S Ij ARG EST FULL SERVICE REAL E S TA TE COMPANY

300 Quiknbni]{i mil Ntlioii's Comet lU Roule 206k

ll«tr>cevtne. KJ(un in-sMs

Sboppwi Ctrtlei Belle Ueiil. lu

NilltlioroiitiL WRttI 3»4tir

m il 114-4111

t i j m A

The Packet Publications

Real Estate Section

PLAINSBORO • Bnllany lownhomo 2bd(ms. • toll. 2' ibairi. country kil. dm

,tm. lam rm wipl. Ac. 'n -h carpel.'all appls incl Im­med avail. $1000 mo Call

P R IN C FTO '^ _ whispanng Woods Town hous« 2 tW'ms ? '. Dairissun 'rr fp! 'elng d-STwasrioi wasn df>e» poo* jaculli icnnis $tOOO mo By owne^PRINCETON AREA • Rob- binsville. 2 bdrm. 2 bath condo, pool, cenl air, washer,dryer; balcony. $685 mo • ulils Call

avail immed $650 owner,S wkends. 609-98' wXdays_______PLAINSBORO ■ fl Cresi East Brand bdrm. 2 bath ait condo, 1st Hr.

•soulhern exposure graded appls. wvv Ing, pool, tennis, $ plus ulils. Avajl Au

ETON AREA ■ An- 3len. new 2 bdrm. 2 3ndo. cent- air, pool • . lease w opllqn. Terms oegoiiable.

or''201-922-

C E T O N A R E A - ynng Woods Luxury , o hmh nwnitw rm

PRIN 1 b( balcc pool Avail 609-! PRIN Elegi tKHISCath lights ore.wilh I

10 : e la*-609 99 >900 Colo na< e Poinl Lux pi!

Rli im

iB ir Shull j 3 liam sta i-H

ipli COiL i i

Central Jersey’s PrimeFor advertising information

call 609-924-3244

Packet Publications

1 1 weekly and twice-weekly community newtpapen letving Central New Jency

i s ;

V

14Bn ■■■Week of December 28,1988 A Packet Pubicetion

-ft

382 Towlihouses &.Condos

Fo r R entLAW RENCE SQ • 3 bdrm. 2'A bath, liv rm/din on combo, all appls, compac­tor. pool, tennis, club­house, exc cond, close to iralns & shopping. Recently repainted. $695. Avail Feb1 215-736-2217.

LAW REN CE SQUARE Vil­lage - lop (Ir, 2 bdrm condo. IVi’ bath, fpl, w/w, avail

. Fob 1. Call 609-588-^1911 . atl6:30prh. t■' LA W REriCE SO Village - ■

Slop .f l ig h t . Hara! Don't". looirAJiy Further. Beautiful2 bdrm. 2 baih w/all appls. Exc cond. Great commut­ing. Imnied occupancy. Vou'll lOve the rent at $750/mo. Call now 609-587-1887 .__________ •LAW RENCEVILLE . - The

. Manors. 3bdrm,'2'-4 baths, osmi, gar, fpl;- cent., air. Purchase option, avail Feb 1 201-369-8968.

LAW RENCEVILLE Society Hill- Cold Soil Rd, 2 bdrms.1 bath,. 1st fir end unit, no pels. pool'iennis Included. $725 mo + utils. Call. 609-882-3525 .

Townhpuses & Condos For Rent

L A W R E N ^ I U -E Sq ■ Brand new 2 bdmi condo. 2 fuir baths, kitchen, ail appls. Separate laundry rm, liv rm & din rm. Private parking. Pool, clubhouse & tennis. $ 8 0 0 utils. Call Irene anytime, 201-418-6553

LAW RENCEVILLE Wood- moni - 2 bdrms, 2V5 bath.. upgraded, liv rm; w/f|ro-

' place, ground f ir ' Master Bdrm.;eat In kit. all appls,

’ pooLlennIs. AvalKnow; call, ^• ? 2 4 -4 5 5 5

LA W R E N C E V ILLE -6 rms,2 bdrms, 2’A baths, appls, cent air,, garage, pool incl. $850 mo -t-utils. Please call 609-921-2965 eves, 921-3474 days

LAW RENCEVILLE Sodety Hill - Largest model 2 bdnh., 2 bath unit In complex.' Loaded w/upgrades even a miprowave, dose to club- hou'se/pool, faces woods, end unit for more'sun. Avail Feb 1. $760. mo. Call Mr Ham lin days, 6 0 9 -6 9 6 - 1208, eves 896-3521,

mt?f AtTon

tOUAI. IIOVSINC i)«v»n sir*

A FR EE C H O IC E and AN INFORM ED C H O ICE

MEMBER»MERCER C O U N TY BOARD O F R EA LTO R S

1432 Brunswick Ave.. P.O.-Box 54.55 Trdnton, N.J. 08638

(609) 392-3666

332 Townhouses & Condos For Rent ^

LAW RENCEVILLE - Soc Hill twnhse. Cold Soil. 2 bdrm, 2V5. bath, kit appls, wshr/pryr & more, $775/mo rconod fee 609-737-1034 LA W R E N C E V ILLE . Cold Soil Rd - 2 bdrrn. 2V5 bath

'lownhouse, wshr/dryr, erid unit, pool & tennis. $775/ mp. -i-utils. Condo lee. 609-737-3124. M O N TG O M ER Y W O OD S- 2 bdnn. 2v4 batf)3, cathe-' dral ceiilngr $1100. Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Brkf

M O N T G O M E R Y W O O D S- Igo 3 bdrm, 2V4 baths, cathedral ceiling. Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 BrkrNEVVTOWN PA • Brand new dondo, 1 bdrm, fpl, skylight, waSher/dryer, ten- nis/pool. Avail Im med. $695 Includes condo fee. Kevin Cruse 609-452-2838 days, -215-321-0390 eves. N EW TO W N PA - Twnhse. 1 year new. All appls. 2-3 bdrms, garage, full bsmi, country-like sotting, 5 mins to 95. close to Princeton. $800 -f utils, w/oplion to buy. Call 215-86<F0162

•\ '■ ■

382 TOWnhOUMS & Condos For Rent

NO. BRUNSW ICK - Gov­ernors Point. New condo, 2 bdrms, 2 bath, liv rm, din rm, kit, laund rm. cent air, wshr/dryr. relrlg. dshwshr. stove, w/w carpel, tennis, pool. S850/mp. Call 201- 369-3603 eves & wknds.

PLAINSBORO • 1 bdrm jCondo, riew, w/cent air, wAV ‘carpel, washor/dryor, re- ftig.$650 m o. C all-.201- 825-9305 . V

PLAINSBOFtO r . Aspen condo, 2 bedrooms, 2 b a th s, all. appliances, le ve lq r blind s, freshly painted. $715 mo. Avail­able Jan 1. Call 718-948- 0157 or 718-748-9097,

PLAINSBORO Aspen - 2 bdrm, 2 bath condo, liro- place, all appliances, avail Jan 1. SSOOmb -h utils. Call 201-530-6687. PLA IN SBO R O - Bnlslmy. 8 bdrm. 2'A bath. loft. Call 609-924-1600,

' MANVILLE6 bedroom, 2 Bath Cape Cod. Good location. Central Air, Gas Hot Air Heat. Located on a Corner l-ot. 75’x100’.

$139,900CALL

F.J. BONGIORNO & ASSOC: INC.37 South Main St.•. Manyille

, 722-007370Member Somerset County Multiple Listing

jSSSTSWChoose your next apertment carefully ... you'll lira there for many years. Consider the finest

* RobbinsvilieRural setting.^with acres | Of b re a th in g space j around lovely apart- i

im e n 'ts . E x tra large | j rooms, virith'wall-to-wall j I carpeting. Free parking i I lor 2 qars Convenienr i I lo all highways

SHARON ARMSI Sharon Rd across from

the Country Club. Just K ( east on RIe , 136 al Rie.

33 North ol 1-95 at Exil 7A N.J Tpko.

59-94,49 V

• EAST WINDSOR5ln_ th e P r in c e -

toh-Hightstown area Luxury garden apart-

Qmenls in quiel suburban y settings All have pn v a l e b a l c o n i e s . „ s p a c i o u s wel l Kepi | grounds Wali lo wall c a r p e t i n g utt-street parking Swim j Club

WYNBROOK WEST

Do^C NwcA Ru440-3385

BROOKWOOD GARDENS

Co'f'Cf448-5531

Ewing Township

Luxury apartments wiih } private pools.' Elfieien-

cies lo oversized 2* b e d r o o m s . L a rg o ‘roorhs. Beautiful lar.d-K I scaping. ' Conveniently | . located. Free otf-streei | I parking. For fuluie oc-j6i cupancy.' call out ResL dent Managers

WOODBROOK HOUSE

8G5 LOwor Forry Rj i Story oievaior bldg883-3335

„ HIGHGATEHoiden Ava al Parkway Avo

S story alavalor bldg883-4626 ~

EASTGATE1505 Pi)rks><la Ave

2 slory garden apis. S o m e w ith p iiv a to balconies and com ­pletely carpeted.' MMEOIATE OCCUPANCY -

883-7537

PARKSIDEMANOR

1475-Patkaida Ava 2 tiory Oardan Apti.

771-9471

-i<rSrtc

NOW RENTING ®Princeton ArmsLuxury Apartments 1 and 2 Bedrooms

Starting from ^$580 per month

Features:Wall-to-Wall carpeting over concrete in 2nd floor apts.All utilities except Electric Individually controlled heal 2 air conditioners Private entrances Walk-in closets . - Individual balconies Storage room within apl.Laundry .Rooms Superintendent on site

Open Mon.-Fri 9:00-4;30 p.m.

Sat,-Sun. 10:00 - 4:00

609-448-4801OtifrthmK f'nm PrUKvtoa: tUmrtom UltkMitmn W -. turn rifirf am Otd T r f tm ltd.. tnUt turn kfl «arf /Mow

H E A fa l l

w i n t e r *

Lease an apartment this week and move in by January iOth, and ^ t FREE H E A T ALL WINTER at Princeton k^fdm|s. FREE H E A T M I m iheday you mov||(K& continues until tM b U tu u jfw in ^ . 3/19/

T OncMmn!|Ri«l|n at 15S5. 2 bdrm at S685T

has wall to wall carpet, full drapes, A/C, dishwasb^, r - frigenUor,'walk-ih closeL patio or'balcony. Some [ndudea washer & dryer.

ly have a fireplace. All h A ^ n n it courts & swin _Country Club memberahip is avMl. Plus, get FREE MEMBERSHIP in the new VIP CLUB. It's worth up to S600!

1 Bdrm call 799-27102 Bdrm call 27$.0490

PRINCETON MEADOWS

OPEN M-F 6PM,SAT 5PM, SUN 4P.M Near Ris. I. 1304 N.J. Turnpike Plainsboro. NJ 'SaSIKf

382 Townhouses &Cohdos For Rent

P U IN S B O R Q . Hampshire Townhomes - 2-3 bdrms, 2</5 baths, fireplace, all neutral, avail Jan 1. $925 mo -t-security deposit. Call 609-443-8919 Of 275-0643

PLAINSBORO - Hamp- shlre twnhse. Cambridge model. 3 bdrm, 2V5 baths, loti, fireplace, all appls.

.Avail 1/1/89. $935 -Hrtlls. 609-896-2512 PLAINSBORO - Lovely ;2 bdrm, 2 ,bath, /Vspen, fir^ place, $7S0/mo.j.T: Boyer Reality 669-921-ie05.Btkr.

P U IN S B O R Q - Ravens Crest Ealst, new 2 bdrm, 2 bath condo avail immed. Refrlg, washer/dryer, sell­cleaning oven, tehnis & swimming. SB50/month. Lea'se purchase qptior) avail. 609^621-2170. P R IN CETO N Address - 2 ' bdrm condo, 1'/* bath, im- - mac, ceril air, wshr/dryr, \

.alarm sys, walk to shop & bus, pool & tennis. $750 mo -K utils. O p t-to buy. Homo 609-924-8213 hh; nisg, *wfk 586-4591 ■■ . PRINCETON A R EA - U w - rence Square Vil. New 2 bdrm, Z'h bath, 1500 sq ft; twnhse. + covered, paUo,' all appis. Asking $825. 609-799-9332

P R IN C E T O I^ A R E A - 2 bdrm luxury coiiido, all appls, w!w carpeting, cent air, pool/tennls. Rrst month tree. Owner pays monthly maintenance tee, 15 min tb Nassau St. $750 mo -t- ■ uUls. 201- 359-8024, hr

' ■P R IN C ETO N A R EA -.W yn- wood. Very large 3 bdrtri, 2 bath end unit condo,'fpl. $865.609-896-1595 P R I N C E T O N A R E A - Beaut 2 bdrm, 2 bath, appls, w/w, cent ajr. deck, storage, pool. $850/mo. Call 201-526-6359

I

Hilton Realty Co.194 Nassau St. P rince ton

Residential - Commercial • Industilal • Land

A 5 A C R E PARCEL IN C R A N B U R Y TO W N SH IP zoned for light Industry — adjacent to the New Jersey Turnpike -— Featuring a large 12 room

BSldeEarly Victorian residence. Locate your oi or plant hero. $375,000

HOPEW ea TOW NSHIP — Split Level 2 Story Colonial with spacious rooms: 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, huge 800 square foot deck. On 2.03 acres. Attractively priced for the family who wants fine schools and convenient shopping. 12 minutes to Princeton. $230,000

NEW C O N S TR U C TIO N IN P R IN C ETO N TOW NSHIP - Chamilng Tra­ditional Farmhouse on fully wooded 2.5 acre lot. Manning Custom built 4,000 -F .square feet. Make your own choicos on certain dwjfln^Mg

30 A C R ES IN T H E H A R B O U R TO N HILLS AREA of scenic rolling hills, and valleys. Zoned lor 2 acre lota In West Amwell Township. 3 miles east of Lambisilville.^ $700,000

ROOM T O R EN T — Pumlshed with kitchen privileges. Hopewell Town­ship — 2 miles east ol Penningtoo.

RETAIL S TO R E SPACE AVAILABLE — Many Central Jersey locations.

R EN TALS: HO U SES A N D A P A R TM EN TS

Princeton Real Estate Group County MLS

AlflNated. Independence Brokers ‘ Nationwide Referral Service

EVENINGS AND WEEKE7«>S CALLWlHiim Schuessier, 921-8963Asa Q. Mowery, 395-1671 Hitfvey Rude, 1 -3 6 9 -5 3 2 7

Danteae AKord, 737-6555 . Emma King, 497-1287

Tom Nlederer, 737-3728

2nd floor« The Hilton Building

(609)921-6060

382 Townhouses & Condos For Rent

P R I N C E T O N A R E A - Beaut 2 bdmi, 2 bath, appls, w/w, cent air, deck, storage dpace. $850/mo. Call 201-626-6359

P R IN C ETO N Area - Mont, woods, 2 bdmi BIrchwood Twnhse, 2V1) bath, no pets. $1050/nio. 609-924-6756

P R IN C ETO N AR EA ■ Fox- moor,;^beaulihil 2 bdrm cOndp,. all appls, cent air,.

■ easy commute, $695/mo . 4 utils; 2 0 1 -3 8 3 -^ 7 . . ' .

P R I N C E T O N - Catia l iPointo. 2 bdrm.-2 bath, 1st

n, all appls, pool/tennls. - 609-921-1864/921-1639

P R IN C ETO N - Contem- porary' Ranch style, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, large liy rm. 2 car gar. $ l2W m o.+utils., Call JR W , qt Hondersen Investment Pfoperty Itic, Brokers, 609-921-9111. ^

P R IN C ETO N E A S T - 3 bdrm twnhse, 2V4 bath, lly rm, kit, gar, all ednve^ oioncos. Immed occup. ,$975'mo. 609- 883-8503

P R IN C ETO N LANDING - Luxurious, spadous atrium . twnhse. 3 bdrms, 2V4 b a ^ . Skylights, 2 car gar­age, bsmnf. West W ind- sor/Plainsboro schools.. VA mos; Security.' Reis. No pots. $1400 mo +utils, Avail 2/1. 609-799-2537 P R IN C E T O N ,L A N D IN G Area - 2 bdrms, 1'/j bath townhouse. dining rrn, liv­ing rm, eat in kit, atrium, deck, lull basement, all appls, blinds, pool/tennls. $1050 mo + Utils. No pels, long or short term. Call eves; 609-452-9168

P R IN C ETO N U N D IN Q -2 rtiaster bdrm suites -rden; 2v5 bath, diti mn, llv rm with

' fireplace, eaf-ln Wt, central atrium .& dock, 'lull bsmt. $1550 mo + utils. Avail Jan 1. Call 609-921-9435 leave message.

382. Townhouses & Condo|3 For Rent .

ROBBINSVJLLE Foxmoor - 3 bdrm, 2V4 bath, exc cond. $825. + util. Hamilton Park RHrs. 609-587-9S95.

S O C IE TY HILL II At Hamil­ton - For rent or sale, furnished or unfurnished, brand new, 2 fir, 2 bdrm, 2'A bath townhouse, $850/ mo plus .utils. $132,000 sale. Furnishings nego- tible. 609-397-0362.

TRenoN.ClevelBtid Ave, 3 bdnn, i bath, off-street parking.. Can 609-924-1600.

t w i n r i v e r s - 3 bdrm’, 2Vi bath twnhse, all appls, neutral colors, great loc, 6 0 9 -4 2 8 -5 1 8 3 o r 4 4 8 - 5389. ..

W EST WINDSOR - Prince­ton Greens. 3 bdrm, 2'A bath, 2 gar, bsmt, Jacuzzi, deck. Call 609-924-1600.

\

W HISPERING W O O D S - Luxury 2 bdrm, 2 bath, tree view. $850/md. J .T . ‘ Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Brkr

385 Resort Properties

A TTEN TIO N V ETER A N S !- Century 21 Parade ol Homos Realtors welcomes "No Money Down" V.A. purchasers. Homes avail-

1 able in. Southern Ocean County. Call today for de­tails. 609-494-360a

FR EE FR EE Brochure - For the Lowest priced Jer­sey Shore Waterfront Com­munity. Prices starting in the $W'8..Call this niimber- for Ihformation. 1-800-633- 1145. Zachariae Realty. Realtors.

388 Resort Propeities

FLO rTd A • Ocean front apt In Southeast Ftorlda. Pro- feuionBtly decorated, avail 1/1. $2300/mb. 3 mo min. 609-737:1975 .

HILTON HEAD. S.C. -2 b r.2 bath condo. Goff, free tennis, pool. $319-$399 wk. Owner 609-924-5560.

JER SET SHOREYear around living in Point Pleasant, a 3 bdrm R a n ^ . Fam rm. gw , g w heat, season steal, 1 mile beach. $142,500.

ERA SHORE REALTY 20i-89»4100

O C EA N & TEN N IS Para­dise - Vero Beach: Fla. Sea Oaks Beach . & Tennis Club, 4 star fating by W TA . 1550 sq ft, 2 bdnn, 2 bath Z»ndo. Ckt beach, 50’ from ocean, healed pool' at doorstep. 2 ml South of exclusive Johns Island. Club has membership in Hawks Nest Golf Course 15 min drive. Rent: $3000 m o . B u y : f u l ly tu rn $240,000 firni. C a ir Mr. Meara, 609-393-4143.

SEBASTIAN. FLORIDA - Fum 2 bdrm,', 2 bath houM in famous sport fishing At­lantic inlet,, la'fga treed lot bn fishing,'canal, cent air and'heat, mins from golf, beaches, inlet. Many fea­tures.. $250/wk... $900/mo s e a s o n . $ 5 5 0 , out of

' season. 609-599-3831.

385 Resort Properties

PO CON OE LAKE Chalet- All seasons,. weekly and weekends. Boats available. 201-937-9571.

S TR A TTO N . V T • Now 3 bdrm. 3 bath townhouse, available weekly. Call 609- 737-6730 evenings.------------------ J ------------------------------------

ST. C R O IX _ ^ U S Virgin Islartda, deljlxe ctsndo, fully hfaHOyeO pools, tennis,

rlqstaurant, ^ f near by Ocean view ol SL Thomas A Buck Island. For book Ings 809-773-8470 or eves 609-588-6301.

SUMMER VACATIONS Luxury waterfront condos & apts. Available for rent Contact Mandn) Real Es tale, 304 So. Bay Ave Beach Haven, N J . 08006

• 609-492-7371. ________

SE N S A TIO N A L S T . M A A R TEN

Luxury 3 |xfrm/3 bath villa bn mountain overlooking Simpson Bay with private p o o l/h a b ita t, c lo se to bfeach. Luxury 2 bdmV2

-bath penthouse at 5 star resort w ith, pools, tennis, caisino, restaurant, -etc. 1 bdnn & studio also avail. For info/piclu'res gall Resi­dents 201-439-2512 or Business 201-467-9298.

T U C K E R t 6 n B E A C H Waterfront - Boaler’a,'de­light 2 bdnn Ranch on Lagoon within minutes tb bay. Bulkhead, dock, deck,

-central air, $l35,000. Cas­tle Realty. 1-800-582-7631 or 609-597-5200.

UNKHJE R .O R H )A VA CATIO N

Safety Harbor, North Cap- tiva Island, West Florida. Closa but seperata Irorn mainland near Fort Myers' Unspoiled gull beetles, pool, tennis, restauranis, terrric views. No cars. 2/3 gdnn townhouses on water or 2 bdrrn house wfith gulf view. For info/pictures cail Resldense 201-439-2512 or Business 201-467-9296. U TA H . Dear Valley Park pity - Custom passlVe solar hom e with m agdiflcent

. views of slopes. Sleeps 4-6 p e r s ^ ; 3bdnns, 3 baths wifli master w/jacuzzl. N onr smokers. Avafl Dec thru April. Minimum slay 1 week. $450-$600 per nighi varies with season. 801- 6 4 9 -0 6 4 4 or 8 0 1 -6 4 9 -8663. ___________________Y O U CAN M OVE Right Into this newly remodeled Manahawkin lagoon front R a rx ^ 3 bdrms, 1 bath, fireplace, gas heat Call

■Castle Realty. 1-800-228- Q083 or 609^96-5200.

380 ^ s in e s s Properties

H O LIDAY O E A IM ^ e S

Thursday^ December 29,, 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead- ' lino to place o r c a n c e l j ^ r , .regular dqsslfied a rrTo r

, . n | ^ a y , .iaiibafy'O; 1989.

: Friday, December 30,' 1988.at 5 p.m. is bur dead­

line tb place or cancel your regular classified ad tor Wednesday, January 4. 1089.

W E W ILL B E O .0 8 E D M O N . JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 N ew Year*» Day Holday

DESK SPACE - entro- preneural office; carpeted; secty avail: fax; telephone; 609-924-8668.

E A S T W INDSOR - Prime retail space, 884-2500 sq ft, on Rte 33. TWin Rivers. C a l l M r. S c h w a rtz ', 609-448:1511.

HAMILTON TW P

New Quakerbridge Rd ol- flea building for lease. 100O lo 14,000 sq It. Ovmer will­ing to condo 1st 4000 sq ff.

A L SUSSM AN. R E A L TY M C R EA LTO R S

6 0 »S 2 0 4 )0 7 7

H IG H TSTO W N - 2nd floor commercial rental )Mth a p riva te e n tra n ce from street 2 rooms, 2 baths: $800/month. The Leonard Van 1 ^ Agerx^. 609-

.. 448-4250.

HILLSBORO - Prime Route 206 location. 2000 sq ft retail space available im: mediately In new shopfring center. Kiosk also avail- ’ able. Please call 201-931- 6630.

A Packet Piii}lcation Week of December % 1988 1SB

BusinessProperties

390 Business Properties

FURNITURE RENTALS • Home/OfflM. immod. del., ahoft/lonfl term' leases, 100% purchase option, vast ^election, decorator dvc & tax advantages. Call Shirley at IFR 609-392- 1666 or 201-227-7700.

E PRINCETON OmCE

m O M D U A L. E X K ^U TIV e O FFIC ES

Princeton: Proleaslonal Park. Private offlciM, sur- rouhd. conlerence/rocep- tion rooms, secretarial ser­vices. Pleasant environ-

■'mont & unlimited free park­ing. Immediate occupancy due to expansion. Please call for further details & brochure, 609-921-0007, The Princeton Office, 601 Ewinp St.-Princeton.

W S TA N T O FFIC E• Furnishede ponference Room• Tim e -Shared Business

ServicesD/J B usineM Servics Inc ; Rogtfr 206, . . Princeton. N J 06540

609-924-0905

KIN GSTO N - therapist’ to sublet furnished office, 5 mins for downtown Prince­ton; ideal for psyr^wther- apy. Weekends and/or 1 day/Wk. 609-921-3665.

M ONR O E TW P - 16x16 ft offico for rent. TR A M Build­ing. Comer Applegarth & Prospect Plains Rds. 609r.. 65S-5S3S.M O N TG O M ER Y ' R O U TE 206 • Store for rent. 1000

• sq ft. Please call 201- 359^5837

- O FF IC E For Sale - 6 mos . no payments new units to ' 5000 sq ft Boyer Realty

609-921-180S Brkr

O FF IC E F m R EN T TO N C E N TE R

DISTR ICT

Well situated, next to a secretariat service, desig­ned to me«t the needs of a trim professional operation.1 srnalier private small: a large open work space, pri­vate tiled lavatdry & oft street parking. Avail now. $900 mo -H utils. Cali Princeton Inti Properties 609r 921-3257.,O FF IC E SP ACE -.20CK800 sq ft, Nassau St Idcathm. on-site parkiiig avail^le, call Thompson LarKi, Ro-

. 6Horri800-921r7655. O FF IC E S P A C E - Exc lo- cationiin Kendall Pk, fum/ unfum, wfith/withgut ap- swering'service. ro i-6 2 i- 7733 days: 201-297-2303eves._____________________

O F F I C E S P A C E F O R R EN T - central Nassau St. Small or large avail, now, low rent. Telephone secre­tarial services available. 609-921-0400

O FFIC E SPACE AvallaWe - Mountain View Office Park, W . Trenton,,3734 sq. ft. locatisd on the 3rd floor. Available immediately. Call 609-896-2047.

O F F I C E S P A C E • In Princeton Jet, in presti­gious location lor 840, 1500, 1700 or 2,0OOTKT<f All utilities paid by landlord. Walking distance .to tralit. Cali C ^ a r Real Esfete, 201-750-1191. '

O F R C E S P A C E LE A S EWill divide' & build 16 suit

Hopewell-5000 sq ft ,Hillsboro-12,000 sq It.

Princeton:5500 sq ft Hillsboro-Dr's offica $675

Other locations avail J . T . B O Y E R R E A LTY

6 0 9 -9 2 M 8 0 5 Brkr

O FF IC E SPACE - Mont- gomery Knoll, 494 sq It, private entrance. 3:otfices, jBceptlon area and bath. Call 609-466-0168.

P EN N IN G TO N O FFICE

1 large room, professional­ly decorated arid elegantly furnished. Receptionist, phones, and other services available, S595/mo. 609-. 737-3333. .

. PLAINSBORO - 3100 sq ft office or lab space. Finish ter suit. $12/sq It, Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Brkr. PLAINSBORO • Office. Ctr at Prirreetor Meadows. 350

i sq ft, consultation room, waiting rm & bathroom.. Call 609-799-1416 ‘

P U IN S B O R O Woodsida office condos. Suites lo purchase from 745 sq ft to 11,000 sq ft. 1 story, pri­vate entrances, In ie r ^ built to suit. For tnore Info contact Susan, Tlie LInpro Co, 609-799-7578

P R IN C ETO N ADDRESS & PHONE

Limited office suites from 1000 sq ft. 1 yr leases avail - below market rate. Call Tim Norris • Research Park. 609-924-6551.

P R m C E TO N l P LA IN SB O R O AREA

Office space ^ t h Recep- tionist/Secrelary, newly de- c o ra l^ , furnished or unfur- n i^ e d . Call Jay 609-924-1022. . ::______PR IN CETO N - Nassau St.

-near center of town, 310 ft office space, very reason­able sublet lo July 1st. 609-921-8939, Jv message

T P R M C C TO N t e m S T A N T OFFICES*

• Fumiahed/Unfumished Teiepfione A n s w e r ^

• ConfeieiKa &-• Reception Room• F ill Secretarial Support• W.PjCopier/TelexT^ax• InwnefSate'Occupahcy

Corporate P u k Rt 1 Prtoceton Office GaBery

609-452-8311

380 Business Properties

P R IN C ETO N ' S M A LL O FF IC E

A V A ILA B LE

Furnlshed/Unfurnlshed. short term lease possible. Call Terri, 609-452-8411.

Corporate Park Rl 1 Princeton Office GaBery

PRINCETON Professional Park - Office Space. Single room, shared wailing area With 1 other offico. Call Dr Ben-Ruben, 609-924-7596

R ETA IL SPACE - E i Wind- . sor, Hillsboro, Princeton-.

Prlthe locations. J T Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Rrtl r

R O U TE 130 Robbinsville - 300 sq ft. Available Immed­iately. All utilities, parking./ 609-259-7900, . /SM ALL BUSINESS Own- era/Freetocers - Rent pri­vate office in. 1300 sq ft. Modem office condo In Kendall Park with Opinion Researcher! Optional use of copier, fax land con­ference room. Ideal 'for someone In public rela­tions,'advertising, graphic arts or other service busir

^ e s s . . Good for home . based busine^V moving

outside home. Reasonable rent and flexible terms. Call 201-297-8100.

W INDSOR IN D USTRIA L PARK‘Si.

Windsor. Rl 130. 4200 sq ft office building, free stand­ing, Executive Offices. At-' tractive rental.

A L SUSSM AN R E A L TY INC R E A LTO R S

6 0 9 4 20 -0077 ,

W . TR E N TO N PRIM E O FFIC E S P A C E

1600'A 32p0 Sq. ft. Pres­ently la w ye r’s offices. Great - localioti. Minutes- from downtown Trenton, MIntues from Interstate 95. Chip shot from Trenton Country Club. Modem 3 story prof I offico bldg., with 'lot of parking. 770 River Rd. Call,AR DLEIGH PR O PER TIES

1-800842-3387

395 Investment Property

Ha m i l t o n • m uhi lease com m erclal/re'sidentiat prop. $33,000 net Boyer Realty 809-921-1805 Brkr H IG H TSTO W N - Handy­man special 5 bldgs good income $325,000 Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Brkr

• HOPEW ELL - Commercial prop $208,750 positive cash flow, net lease Boyer

, Realty 609-921-1805 Brkr INCOME P R O P ER TY '■ Hopewell Boro. 3 family apt buildiilg. $199,000. Weidel Real ^tate , Inc. Realtors.609-397-0777.____________

O FFIC E BLDG - lease in­come $185,000 net, ex­cellent location. J T Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Brkr

^ Business dpportuntttes

ANSW ERING/SacraUriai V Serviee - Princeton good income A potential $25,0iD0 R ESTA U R A N 1S - Prince­ton $ 6 0 ,0 0 0 ; Hopew ell seats 125 $850,000uoudR License - e .Windsor shop ctr $150,000 R ES TA U R A N T - Rt 1 Law-

‘ rence, seats 120. $240,000 H E A L TH S T O R E - High Incoma, good hours, seller financing $240,000.

J .T . B O YER R E A L TY 609-921-1805 B ikr

/BUSINESS Loans - 6 days? Private lender. No financial

' or i ^ forms needed. Call Mr, Winn 201-446-5111.

IN VESTOR S W A N TED - For new limousine com­pany Stan up in Princeton. Serious inquiries only. For more information please vrrite P O Box 3902. Tren­ton. N J Q8629 .

L I Q U O R L I C E N S E - Princeton. $115,000. Must Mil. quicklyllll J .T . Bbypr Realty 609-921-1805. Brkr

^2 0 Land for Sale

E A S T AMW ELL - 1.74 acre, $99,600; 2.53 acre. $ 1 1 0 , 8 0 0 ; 7 . 9 r s u b - dividable acre, $260,000; V,93 acre with a view. $1 3 0 ; 0 Q 0 ; ' ' 3 a c r e . ' $120,000. Apprqved pores. Doris Pessel Real Estate. Broker. 609-737-3113

' E A S T AMWELL - 4 + acres, approved building I b l , , A m w e l l V a l l e y .

. $129,000. 201-782-0924.

HO PEW ELL TO W N SH IP - .Approved builrfing lot, 3.25 acres of beautiful wooded sloping land with 33 itiches of top! soil & drillod wqll, Peyton Associates. Realtor 609-737-9550

HOPEW ELL TOW NSHIP • 22 acre commercial Zone C- l . with log cabin, fronts on Rt 31 & 510 Call609-466-1212.____________

• M ON TG O M ER Y ■ Bldg Lots 1 & 3 ac $165,000- $250,000 prime area Boyer Realty 609-921-1805 Brkr M O N TG O M ER Y TW P - 14 lot approved subdivision, good ideation. J T Boyer Realty 609-921-1805.8rkr

P R IN CETO N A R EA - Im- proved lots Ibr sale w/cily water & prestigious Prince­ton address. These lVj-2 acre properiies are located In a prime area o t, Law­rence Twp. Prices'starting' at $230,000. Call 20,1- 390-0259, , . ,W E S T A M W E LL Ready to got Tw o fully approved heavily wooded residential lots. 3.1 & 3.5 acres $130,000 per lot. COM ­M E R C I A L P R O P E R T Y NETW ORK. REALTORS. 609-921.8844

^2 0 Land for Sale

NINETY FiVE )- Secluded woodland acrec op Sour- lahd Ml. Hopewell area. 609-468-1687.

W E S T A M W E U Twp ■ 2.15 acres, perced & ready to gbi $120,000. Call 609-397-0920 or 397-334V W. W INDSOR - Approved 1 aae building lot on North Post Rd, water & sewer, wooded. Asking $165,000. 609-799-1365. ________

'* *20 Real Estate

30 Real Estate For Sde

'*20 Red Estete Fo rS d e

for SaleH O U D A Y e E A P LO IE S

Thursday,,0e<;amber.29, 1888 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line lo'place or cancel your regular classified ad for Tuesday, January 3. 1989.

Friday, December 30, 1988 at 5 p.m. is quf dead­line lo place or caheei your regular classified ad for Wednesday, January 4. 1989.

W E .W ILL B E C L O S ro MON. JA N U A R Y 2, 1989 New Year’a! D ay Holiday

A D U L T COM M UNfTIESClearbrook Concordia Rossmoor

. Whlttlngham ...See our r e ^ e listings.,.

Leyinsqn Associates Reattora .

60945S453S Are you thinking of relocal- ing? We can help. Call us for irifomiation on real es­tate anywhere in the U.S S C H L O T T R E A L T O R S . 201-297-7171.

b e l l e ' M EAD • Oppor- tunllyl Open Ho u m on Jan: 2nd, 1-4pm,-4-5 bdrm Col,-, onlal house, belovv market - price. 1st class, schools, 1. acre. Montgomery Twp n e x t to g o l f c o u r s e . $239,000. 201-359-5960 I .C A S H B U Y O U TS

Arranged for SELLERS. No mortgage contingencies Call Barry or Al Sussman at Al Sussman Really. Re­altors.‘609-520-0077

EAST W INDSOR • 3 bdrm Ranch twnhse Wfbasemeni & patio. $127,500. Boyer Realty 609-'921-1805 Brkr

E A S T W INDSOR

Co-Ops Are Batter Than Condos

Call us lor the amazing details. We have 3 in The O r c h a r d . P r i c e d al $ 5 9 , 5 0 0 . $ 5 1 . 0 0 0 & $52,000. All in magnificent shape, 1 & 2 bdrms. Ask lor Phil .for the unbeiieveable tacts. We also have avail­able unita for renti Call for details.

■ • n e o U y *201r329-0700

SO. BRUNSW ICK R EA LTO R S

DELAW ARE TW P ■ 5-f aaes. ^autiful country setting. Price reduced. Brown & Brown Realtors, 609^799-6200. Eves 609- 397-0385.

E A S T WINDSOR - By ovmer. 2 bdnn, 2Vi bath twnhsa. ConvenienttoTPK Strain. $118.000.609-448- 6409. Brokers Protected.

^ S T WINDSOR - Tvrin. Rivers twnhse. For sale by

owner. 3 bdrms, 2 % baths. Split level, eiid unit, fin­ished bsmnt. $138,900. Please call 609-395-9026

E A S T W INDSOR r Wir'd- . sor Mill 2 bdmi, 2 bath, tbp

fir end unit, w/w carpet over hardwood firs, mirrored wall In din rm, Irg bdrms, all appis plus pool & tennis. Exc cond. Price to sell at $101,500. Cali 609S148-2904 for appt. __________

E BRUNSW ICK - 3 bdrm Cape Cod. $179,000, On quiet country road. Gas heat-Munidpalwater. 2 c a r garage. Well maintained'. Levinson Associates, Re- altors. 609-655-5535.

^ HAM ILTON - By owner! 2 bdrm'condo. Pleasant set­ting adj to Veterans’ Park. Pool, balcony, cent air, storage. $89,900. Eves 609-585-2317, days 609- 984-7003 , -H A M ip O N TW P • Newly remooeled 3 bdrm brick Cape Cod on nearly 1 acre.2 car garage/workshop. Dog kennel, pole bam -f m any extras. $165,000. 609-587-5089.H E LM E TTA - Raijch w/2

.bdrrfis! New 16x22 ft family room, easily adaptable to. the master suite,-2 bath, completely remodeled w/ new roof & vinyl siding.

. Excellent starter : home.' $139,000. Lbvinsori As­sociates. Rlirs. 609-655- 5535H IG H TSTO W N Wyckori's MiH • 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2nd Hr condo, vaulted ceiling. Ipl, balcony, cent air. all appis, neutral colors, premium lo­cation. pool'tennis. Anx­ious Miter, 22.000. Call 609-443-6657. ‘

HILLSBORO C O N D O - 2 bdrm, t Vi baths, fpl. 3 firs, cathedral ceilings: prime lo­cation Immaculate, walk out to woods. $145,900. 716-343-4273 anytime.

HILLSBORO ■ New 2 bdrm, 2'/ bath, twnhse, large rms. walk In ctOMt, l u l l b a s e m e n l , pr i ce $119,500. 201-874-6580. HILLSBORO - Your gain is our. loss. Spacious 2 bdrm end unit, 2VV-baths, llv rm w/(pl. din rm, eat-'iri kit, loll, lull bsmt. gar w/opener,' coqt air, ceiling Ians, cus­tom windbw. ireaunenis. plus much more .St 49.900. Anytime all 6pm, 201- 359-5488 Open House Sunday

HILLSBORO - Ideal for first time hbme'buyer, large 2 bdrm twnhM, 2W balh, end unit, fin basehient, laundry tm ^^aaher/dryer Incl. $i30,906; For direc­tions. 201-874-6288

H O M E S . G R E E N - H O USES, Decks - Save money end Umel Eric As- soclales specializes In quality custom modular homes. Rnished homes starting at $7SK on your lot. F in a n cin g a va ila b le .to ’ qualified buyers. Details- 609-466-1817. ’ ,

» . ' »H O P E W E L L A R E A - R a n c h e r w/S a c r a a , stream, pod, bebutiful M t- fing, more land avail. 609-466-1687

H O P E W E L L T W P - Proposed 8 lul subdivision. Project '-old • contingent upon ar4>rt>val'. .Excellent locatio'>. near Princeton. . schruls & country club. B rp m & Brown Realtors. 609-799-6200. Eves 609- 397-0365.

L A W R E N C E T w p & Schools : Tiffany woods, 2 bdrm; 2'/» baths, new Beaumont Mmi-delached house on quiet secluded Streets backed up lo state owned wooded land. Pri­vate entrance to com­munity ol 200 hpmes, Gas heat, air, choose own carpet. Avail Feb 1 st. 2 ml from Trenton Train Station.8 ml lo Princeton.' Will pay Z points toward dosing. $119,900. Owner, 609- 298-5377

M O N TG O M ER Y T W P ' - ' Country condos! 2 bdnn.- $139,000.3 bdrm vrith fire­place: $159,000. Both units- irtcl all new appis. On 2.2 acres.. Calf 609-989-1205. Brokers Protected.M O N TG O M ER Y TW P - No ! Money Down! New house lor sale. $410K. Outright sale or .rent with option to buy 609-921-0440 N O R TH BRUNSW ICK - No Money OownI New house lor sale. $280 K. Outright sale or rent with option to buy. 609-921-044b

PEN N IN GTO N BORO - 2700 sq ft, completely re­novated Colonial on Y, acre wooded lot, living rm. dining nn. kitchen, lamily rm. 2V} bath, jacuzzi, cent air., fireplace. New .-etpet- Ing, deck, kitchen cabinets & appliances. Call eves.609-737-0246.____________

PLAINSBORO - 3 bdrm. 2 full baths, ’4> acre corner lot. dose lo schools, shop­ping & train.' Low taxes. By owner, $ 181, 900. Call 609-799-7820. .

PLAINSBORO - Aspen, 1st fir, Grenoble model, end unit w/southem exposure, 2 bdfm, 2 balh, Ipl. all appis, $105,000. Days 609-452-7288 ot eves 609- 275-9606 ask lor Tom

4 ^ Reai ta te For Sale

P U IN S B O R O - Aspen condo 2 bdnn, 2 bath, end unit, ail appis, by owner. $101,000. 201-359-0471.

P U IN S B O R O - Brittany T o w n h o u s e . A y n s l e y Model, end unit, 3/4 bdnns,' prime location, many up­grades, low taxes & main­tenance. Ask $210,000 Call 608-799-7848

1 .............. .rP U IfiiSB O R O CO N D O - Longmont model. "Largest unit type In Aspen." 2nd fir, 2 bdmisi 2 baths, toft,-fpl, skyllght, all appis incl;' wshr/dryr, dshwshr, dis­posal A refrig. Avail Jan 15. $121,900. Call Diane. 609- 799-2880 g-5;30, eves & vrknds. 799-4752.

P U IN S B O R O - Hamp­shire tovmhouse on goll course, fpl, finished loft, all appis. 2Vi bath, w/w car­pet, swim dub & tennis. Weekdays, call Anita! at 609-799-2880, evos/wknds 896-2065. $139,000.

P U IN S B O R O - Tamarron end unit, premium park lo­cation,. 2 bdmi, 2. batti, 2 balconys, fireplace, cath ceiling, loft wrian & skylighi, all appis, Verticals,, upgra­ded w/w; many extras! EveMfkend. 609-799-7011.

PR IN CETO N AR EA - Only 20 mins to NasMU St! 4 id.nn. 2*/» bath Colonial w/calhedral mstr bdrm suite, tarn rm. 2 car gar & huge walk out bsmt, 2 yrs old, exc schools, don't pay Jersey pricesi Unbeliev­able 2500 sq 'ft for .only $219,900. By owner, call 215-968-6907 tor brochure

P R IN C ETO N Area - spac­ious 3 bdrm o>ndo,'>2 bath, end unit, Wynwood. Rie V. $13S-.000. 609-896-1595.

P R IN C ETO N Area - Canal.' Pdnie. 1 yr old Conterh-

porary 3 bdrm, 2% bath home, wwiih cathedral ceil­ings! hot tub. whirlpool bath, minors, recessed lighting, oversized private back yard, tennis, swim­ming. 5 mins to train. Must Mill Asking $299,500. Call 609-520-9067V

PR INCETO N Canal Pointe ■ Brand now 2 bdrm condo. Cathedral Mlling, fireplace, cent air, appis, pool & ten­nis. Sunny exposure^ Near train. Priced for quick sale. $10,000 below builder's pride. 609-5^-9110 or 201-287-1698. P R IN CETO N LA N D IN G -3 bdrm, courtyard. 2 car at­t a c h garage, many up­grades, principals only609-921-3371 ___________PRINCETON LANDING - New 22^ model: ^ bdmns. 2Vi baths, master, w/ex- qulsite bathroom suite, ex­tensive upgrades, whin- pool, cent vac, security A much more. Must be Men. Principals only $299,000 201-297-8244

^ Refid Estate For Sate

TW IN RIVERS • For sale by owner.. Desirable 3 bdrm, 1 % balh fwiihse. in­cludes cent air, finished bsmnt, ceiling tan, new alarm system A new neu­tral decor throughout! Brick patio yard A^easy NY com­mute. Must see. Asking $126,500. 609-426-9718

TW IN RIVERS - Lake condo, upper unit. 2 bdrm,1 bath. $91,000. Call 609-448-3258 W E S T W INDSOR - By owner. 3 bdnTi Ranch, Prided at $188,000. Cedi 609-799-5249

W HISPERING W O O D S - 2 bdrm condo nice view fpl $131,000 must M il Boyer Realty 609-921-1865 BrkrW HISPERING W O O D S - 1st time offered! 2 bdrm, 2'A bath deluxe town- houM ,. Italian tile entry A. kitchen, fireplace, security systsem, many extras. $159,000. Owner anytime;201-274-2720 _________

YARDVILLE - 62 Argorine Ave, 3 bdrm, i bath rancher. New roof, furnace, hot water heater, cent air t^ft A sldiiig. all Under 4 yrs old. 3 ceiling' Ians. ..Well kept A neat. $1.47,500, 609-723-4200,'

Y E S ALICE There Is A Wondpriandl • Victorian G a r d e n e r s Cot t age in quaint viltage ol Cross­wicks, where children still paly on the town green Wake up to see horses grazing In the pasture, then walk downtown -to pick up the mall. This charming 3 bdmi on tree-lined avenue of stqtely homes has been tasteful ly restored by w i l l i a m s - B U i t d e r . Al l amenities. A l l . within a stones throw ot the Rlo't corridor and commuter- trains. For sale by the ovmer. $285.000.609-587- 6500, 8-4:30 weekdays.

435 Pennsylvania Properties

H O U D A Y D E A O U N ES

Thursday, December 29. 1988 at 5 p.m. is our dead­line lo place or cancel yog' regular - classified ad lor Tuesday, January 3, 1989.

Friday, December 30, 1 9 M a l 5 p.m. is our dead­line to place or cancql your regular classified ad for Wednesday. January 4. 1989.

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last yean

* Percentage o f Americans who say that El Salvador^ goviernment is a pro-Soviet regiine:

9 Estimated anoiml expense. incurred by an untreated '' addict, in hoUdi, welfare and law enfoKemeht coats: '

Number o f the 7 ,8 ^ Soviet Jews grimted Inaeli visas

84.1 billion

35

. 8 1 4 , ( f ^

6,7399 Percentage of Jews living on the W est^ank who emigrated firom Europe or the United States:

• Portion of all U .S. cropland that the govenunent pays farmers not to plant each year:

6 Percentage of American adults who say they have not had sexual relations in the last year:

• Number of the 90,000 Illinois'matriage-licenseapplicants screened fo r AIDS this yiear who tested positive: ■ .

• Percentage increase in fatalities on rural interstates V where the speed limit was raised in 1987:

2 2

•*/<

2 2 t ‘‘x

111

M

• Pairs of green socks the Defense Logutics Agency purchasedin 1 9 8 7 : .

’’ jh la rp er’s I n d e x .” C o p y r ig h t © 1 9 8 4 r ’8 5 , ’8 6 , ’87. Reprinled by special pepnission.

4 6

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ON THE COVERIn saying good-bye to 1988, the staff at TIME OFF reflects on ., the year in theater,’music, art, film, iestaui^ts and the other forms of entertainment that continue to make Central New Jersey so interesting. Cover il­lustration Was done by Ray McCarthy.

/

' ' T i m e d F F r, d o m E P r i n c e t o n P A C K E t ' joo p.o. bIm doPimtiom, Nj 0t)12 609:924.1144 n l . H 4 or 149-

EDITOR: David W. Major

A s s is t a n t e d i t o r : Patrick Monaghiui•. * ■ 'f - ' ■

ASSISTAN TSr Wendy Heisler

A D v E R D S IN G M a n a g e r Laura M . M u q > h y2 / December 28.yl988 / TIM E O F F

.December 21 y 1988

Page 3 FEATURE 3

^ g e k D e l l t S a n i t i

It wu a banner year for arts and leisure in the Priticeton area. T IM E O F F salutes the authorsi a^ts,> riteni and enttr- ttiners whip slupeid our I tivity in 1988.

tuneac-

. o n s t a g e 5

S h u t t D u t i c a n

In a final tribute to a year featuring many. great performances, T IM E O FF nominates4tsd0 best theater prcxluctions of 1988,

I n C o n c e r t 8

E . G r h h s i i n M d G n l e y

P a t r i c k M o n a j g h a t i

New Jersey’s ckssical music scene con­tinued to flourish in 1988 while area rock. fans had their share of ups and downs. ~

Et AL. 1 1> i:

W i l l i a m J H a y w o o d

. R e b e c c a C a m p b e l l

tWhat to do and'where to do it oh Neu( ir’s EveF7:/Af£pi7^asked:;‘’What happen in ’89,’’Ouf resident fore­

caster takes a look at how. 1989 shape <up astrolpgicaily. Special pullout section Sot Curtain Calls I9 8 8 i • ‘

ON VIEW 1 9

E s t e l l e S i n c l a i c e

In the world of art. New jersey’s self-consciousness as a second banana had reason“to diminish in 1988 ,with the-. openings of new galleries, world-class .exhibits and the rise of photography to the level of fine art. -

R e s t a u r a n t s

S u z a n n e G o l ^ e n s o n

F r a n H u l e t t e

Feature: Some of the most memorable meals in. 1988were enjoyed outside of the Princeton area, Reyiewi Olive, in Wash­ington Crossing, Pa., offers upscale cuisine in a cozy setting.

o N sc Reenb -* '- ■ •

T h o m a a S i m o n e t

Feahlres: 1988y^ be renvembered as the year of the sibling (i»ge. j,;New •and h w mcme presentations'fihtrk / heightriied competitibh fo aiea cihemas. ReW e^EW b^^w iViffge p jS a M erm t Brealtdown and' W orkmg G irl. ‘

D e p a r t m e n t s

. BTAL. 13 D i r ^ G G U I D E ^

M IN I-R E V iB ^ i s T W N C ^T O D O 29

CROSSWORD 32

YOUNGSTERS 13 MOVIES 26

CABLE GUIDE 27 REBECCA’S 32

Because o f its proximity to major cities and the abundance of universities, the Princeton area appears to be a magnate for artists and entertainers alike

B y A N G E L A p E L U S A N T I

A L L it a'happy accident of geo­graphy, but. the Princeton, area's p r o x i m i t y to New Y o rk and P h i l a d e l p h ia , ’ and. thb nunier- ous uiiivetsities. make it an id<»i

locale for Tine artists^ A nd the area’s am­bience only adds' to the attraction, say the authors, artists and actors who call Central New-Jersey. hoDW.

'nw.tajents of some area, celebrities, like Joyce! Carol Oates, who teaches at Princeton University, are visible, year-round. Others, like pop aitjst Roy Lichtenstein, stop by on|y long e n o U ^ to say hello. Between its full-time resident^ and overnight visitors, the Princeton area-hosts an abundance of creative people.

Some, like author Ralph Schoenstcin, ac­tress Dodic Pettit and painter Bcmarda

- S h ^ n , are less well known but equally talented. T l « n thfte arc those with special hobbies and interests, like Larry D^valo,, who restores antique high-wheel bicycles. Still others, like television cameraman Alan Fried­man; work behind the s<%nes quietly making a difference.1 A ll in all, 1988 was, a banner yeiir for the

Jarts, entertainment a i^ leisure scene-, thanks to dozens of'dttiicated contributors. TIME

■ OFF salutes some of the many people .who helped shape our leisure time in 1988:

• Former Tim e magazine correspondent W aibce Ten y. paid homage fo black Vietnam veterans in his book. Bloods, which proFiles the wartime, experiences o f two dozen enlist­ed men. After courting rejection for 12 longyears, M r. Te rry Anally found a publisher, Ranoom Hmise. N ow working on a sequel

> M.

’1*1

and a Aim script, he appeared in New Jersey in January. !

• Lany Capo, the administrative director of McCartpr Theatre, was respr^ib le in' Feteuary for the first A ID S beneAt to be staged at the P r iiK ^ o n .titte r . Th e landmark fundraiser, a performance o f the musical co m edy Stepping O u r , co in c id e d w ith benjeAts at o t m conununity theaters in the area. The event raised $20,000 for A ID S education and patient care.

* Pool ahatlc Loom Jon Jonea o f H ill­sborough M s beea racking up irq p h iu since adolescence. Currently the women’s straight pool champion, she is ranked second in the world. Ms. Jones, concerned about pool’s seedy image, says, ’ ’People confuse, bars with b illia rd . Bars aren’t billiards." A t her pool hall on Route 22 in Green Brook, M s. Jones caters to a family clientele.

O When Penn State scholar D r. James L w . West i n stumbled onto a partially developed F. Scott, Fitzgerald Story 10 years ago, he wasn’t quite sure w lM to think. " I t struck me as an irritated-story wrinen by a man who was fed tip and frustrated,'V D r. West said, o f A FuW LiTe, "Which he dis­covered in the Princeton University archives.

i988' was a banner year for the arts, entettattunent and lebure scene, with the .many diverse and talent^ residents -r- 'actora, authors, arrists — providing the catalyst. Among some of die hi^lights: The Williams Collection gallery hosted an exhibit of 10 fdiotos of John Letmon taken by Rutgers University alumnus Allw Tannet£aum, the last nun to photograph the famous Beatle before he was killed; Hillsborough p o o ld i^ Loree Jon Jones racked ’em up at hw pool hall in Green Brook; and L a ^ DaVala diowed hb zeal fm antique bicycle restoratiem. .

T h e previously u n j^U id ie d story, by Prince­ton alumnus Fitzgerald, w u printed in the w in te r e d ilid n o f Princeton University. Library Chronicle,

,* * The pcccsament Princeton physicist A l ­bert Einnein was bricAy resurrected when an ambitious play-in-progress premiered on the uniyeraity campus in ^ b ru a ry . Th e pnc-inan dranui. With Albert Einstein, was the brain . child of tvra ITiiladelphia playwrights, who sie now reAning the script.

tS Ftinner Princeton Ian Dodie Pettit played various felines'in the Broadway musied Cats

' for three years, th e n the actress, who also sings and dances, landed a role in Andrew

Lloyd Webber’s sniar.^. musical The hiantoin' . ofthe O j ^ . *Tn (RmtOm) I have m y own ro le ," the Princeton-Ballet alumna cooed: “ There’s prestige. I ’m in the original com­pany, land I ’m not waiting in the wings.’

Princeton University scored a coup this year when it- enticed John W ibncHliag, an expert on American art, to accept the school’s f ir s t , f u l l y e n d o w e d A m e r i c a n a rt {xofessorship. M r. Wilmerding arrived at the university in September, after tying up loose ends at the National Gallery of A rt in Washington. D .C . , where he had been depu­ty director.' • What - can art instructors, say about.

legendary pop artist Roy Lichtenstein? Nothing the painter cannot say about himself, apparently. Princeton University’s Human­ities CotuKil sponsored a o n e -M y visit by ’ M r. Lichtenstein in March during which the controversial and w ildly successful artist attended classes, Added questions and — yes — even critiq 'u^ his worit.

• New Jersey’s 15th vineyard qrened in April, making the Garden State a ceriiAable wine producer. Cream Ridge Vineyards on Route 539 is tun by Jetty Amabiie, a third-generkion winemaker .and the first of tb ; Amabtle clan to make a living at it. In all,

(Continued on N ex t Page)

'TlMI OFF / December 28. 1988 / 3

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In April, Jeny. Atnabile, a third-generation, winemaker, Route 539 near Allentown. •

opened Cream Ridge Vittfeyards on

\ (Continued from Preceding Page)mote than 500 acres of l^ew J e ^ y faniiland

- is devoted to grape cultivation; Some400.000^ p llo n s of Jersey-grown “ grape juice” is produced e a c h y w .

• bringing fiction to film was the subject of a June discussion between novelbt Joyce: Carol. Oatca and filmmaker Tom Cole; who participated in ah innovative small group foitnn at Princeton D ay School. TTic two

V discussed Smooit/i Talk, M r . Cole's distuib- ing feature film b a s ^ on M s. (gates' equally

haunting short story. Where A re You Going, Where Have You Beeti?

9 A n area sorely lacking liight spots, Princeton welcomed Ceiitral New Jersey’s fust comedy club in. June': Catch A .Ridag Scar,' in the Hyatt 'Regency Princeton on Route 1, hiked Saturday Night Jlf ve.peiformcr Kevin Ncaloa to launch the club. Cable T V tepklu' B ill Midler followed, and Csrdi'has b ( ^ delivering comedians ^ local audiences e v e r y .^ k s ih e e .

4 Ruq^n-Univenity alunitHi* AUan Taa- aenbaum was the last person to photograph John Lennon, snafuing hundreds of shots just days bhfoie the ex-Beatle was shot. In June, lO b f M r. Tannenbaum's p h o to weruexhibi- ted for the fust time at die Williams Collec­tion gallery in Princeton and Hopewell.

• Humonit l ^ p h Sdioenttein has h lot in COthmon with comedian Bill Codiy: Both g r m up in big cities, fof example, and both are'idoting fathers who reap a r c ^ y supply of one-1inm from their, offspring. Th e dif­ference betweea- the two men is that M r. Cosby is filthy rich and that M r. Schoenstein helped him amass a portion b f that w.ealth. M r. Schoenstein, of Princeton, co-wrolc bothof M r. Cosby's recent best-sellers, Fathahood and Time Flies. He's also authored several of his own books, including qne'alxnit his two oldest dauhters.

. • A small cable television system took a big risk three seasons ago by airing a low-btdget public affairs program with-the deadly ’^ o u s name, Cauam New Jersey. N ow the gamble is paying off. Caucus entei)ed iti third season this fd l, doubling iu production schedule to 24 segments. Despite the doomsday forecast that preceded the first

Caucuscpisodc, the program has'becomc one public affairs show that people actually watch.

• Still-life painter Gerald Gatiki is beingtouted as a master r— and lie’s only 34. A Pennsylvania resident, M r. Gatski paints in. the t r i l l io n o f the. Dutch masters whose!

works he. painstakingly replicated while learning his craft. It lakes M r. Gatski up to a month to complete one still-life; a f times he paints with a brush so fine that it contains a single hair. W hen exhibited at Lambertvillc’s Genest Gallery in October, his paintings'were snatched' up by admirers, collectors and investors alike.

• Busiitos executives and artists may 4 / ^ like a strange combination, but,the two can actually .compliment each other, as ad­ministrator Tiib lia discovered. .As dircc- t o o f BusincM VqluntMt* for the Art*, a Central Newt Jersey community service pro- jqrt, Ms. Tu b liq pairs business folks w i ^ arts o ^ a n iz^ o n s . l i ie executives^ provide arts ^ u p s with business sense,, and. the business folks get to mingle in w otherwise alien cultural worid. A third B V A chapter.in h(fonmouth County, began in October.

• W lw n the cast of The f^utaadtee took center s t^ e in December,, the performances were cause for celebration. T h is .season’s rendition marked t o 25th).consecutive 'y e m . that Th e Priaccton Bdllet performed the classic Christmas story,. O n ly four other professional ballet companies in t o nation have been, doing it longer. Back-stage reu­nions and a cast party helped make t o event as rnemorable fo r t o veteran cast as The NutcTKkerhas become for area audiences.

• B e n u n U Shahn is a model for senior citizens; A t 85. she paints mostdays and is compiling a book dii the drawings of her late hiislMUid, t o celdmued American artut Ben Shahn. A . successhil book and magazine i l i u ^ o r , M rs. Shahn began painting in her her husband’s studio following his drath in 1 ^ . She’s been producing surreal oil paint­ings for almost 20 years. A retrospective of her work is on view at Ellarslic, t o Museum of t o City of Trenton, through Jan. 6, 1989.

T

• . ' . ‘n

Aihid the ongoing enthusiasm for loc^ a bahner year for }! J. st g^ith in ^ performances and productions attaiiung new levels o f excellence:' ' : ■ ■

B y S t u a b t D u n c a n

IS the scawn to be jo lly , but the ,

; , year’s end is tra— d i t io n a l ly the time for reflect­ion and renewal, a respite io look back at 'the ac­co m plish m ents

' " .of the preceding 12 months and anticipate the pleuures^^of the next. . ' ^

DurihgM 988 I visited 33 theaters in the area and saw a total o f '129 productions. TJie year bad its share o f hits and flops, but the quiUity of presentations in Central New Jersey remains extraordinarily high. And from all reporti; the support o f theatrrt-going audiences remains enthusiastic.

Ix t ’S'pay a final tribute to the fop produc­tions of 1988. Please remember < tiut the election is solely in the opinion o f a single critic, but at least one who cares. , ■ -

In no particular order, here ^ m y nomina­tions for the best lO theater pnkluctions of the

■past year. . ws2 . ■ V

T R A C E R S : a devastating play about Viet- itam, vwittenity a group o f Vietnam veterans, and presented last spring at George Street Playhouse. T h e show was not to-, everyone’s taste: many members of the audience walked out. Those that re m a in ^ saw a hard-hitting, often cruel, stage portrayal of that conflict performed by a cast of 'N am vctcrar^'who had lived through the horrors. The evening still haunts me.

S M O K E O N T H E M O U N T A I N : a fpot-stomping blue grass revival musical that, played at McCarter Theatre as part o f its su tn m e r s e r ie s . M a r v e lo u s , o ff -b e a t chanMrters, a fine whimsical set, a solid cast and-seamless direction led to an evenitig of rare delight. Look for this show to reach New Ybrk soon. ‘

R O C K Y .A N D D IE G O : another summer show, this one at the Levin Theater at Rutgers. T h e title refers to the conflict between financially conservative but ^ i a l i y liberal' Nelson Rockefeller andXoim iiunist

' piegot Rivera, the artist, ovcir' the latter’s palnting’o f a mural at Rackefellef Center in the ’ 30s. Th e story may have been a strange motif for a play, pnhaps, but it’ had a beautiful s c r i^ , which was highlighted by impeccable performances and the sensitive direction of Edward Stem.-

A I N T M IS B E H A V IN : the final produc­tion of Stage’ One’s summer season at the Fine Arts Tlieater on the Rider College campus. S a r ^ Etb directed a grpup of the area’s most talented and accomplished sing­ers and dancers, and turned this tribute to Fats Waller into a vibrant, foot-bouncing evening. Members o f the audience laughed one mo­ment, cried the next and screamed its ap­prove at the close.

A C H R I S T M A S C A R O L : the o ld

theater-goers were treated to a ktrong year in 1988. S o m e o f the better w ere, top ,''Sm ojee on the Mouataitu a fpo t-sto m p in g b lu e grass revival that p layed M c C a rte r T h e a te r; rig h t, A Cbmtaas Catvl, w ith G e o rg e E d e in the ro le as S cro o ge ; a n d ,.le ft. Tracers, a d e v e s u tiiig p lay a b o u t V ie tn a m , w hich was p r i ^ n t e d at G e o rge Street Playhouse.

Chrisunas favorite at McCarter has never been better than this year’s offering. W ith its Dickensian setting and rich costuming, the play was a feast for the eyes. And with George Ede in the role o f Scrooge arid Robert Lanchester’s knowledgeable direction, it was an inspiration for the soul.

IJ R ^ a n d L E G E N D S : musical storiesof the late Harry Chapin was a major success at OH-Broadstieet. Chapin’s talents have been almost forgotten by a fickle music

business aimed, as it is, at the teen-age market. But this production mounted by Bob Thick and his wife, Julie,' brought back "T a x i” , and "Cats In Th e Cradle" and the rest of C h a in ’s hits with love mid poignancy made ^1 the more .effective by its simple presentation. '■ W H A T I D I D L A S T SU iyiM BR i at the Princeton Rep Com pany, a summer group operating at the intimate Murray Theater on the University campus. Producer Victoria

Liberatori's troupe staged a series of winners during the summer, this one being m> favorite. A .R . Gurney J r . ’s early work was in the superb hands of director Dennis Delaney and a Tine cast led by John Prosky.

T H E L A T E G R E A T LA D IE iS O F B L U E S A N D J A Z Z : is Still playing at the Crossroads. Theater in NeW Brunswick. Sandra Rc- Avcs-Phillips spent sevcii years perfecting her one-woman' show, in Which she presents

• (Continued on Page 29)

\

TIME PCF 7 December 28, 1988 / „5

The Year of Brotherly Loye1988 movie screen had a hosi^of twin billsout to brothets and sisters undertaking the searcK^or family security

By-Th o m a s Sim on bt

’ ■ , i W O p r o d u c e r s X battled for the same

title in 1988, and it turned out to be the byword of the yean Twinsi,

‘ ” The tide ultimate-•5 . ■ ly w e n t to the

A rn o ld S c h w a rze n '■ “ I egger Damny De­Vito comedy. Th e losing contender for the name, the JcremyiTOns psychological drama, ended up being called Dead Rin^rs,. Rc- mailcabty, a third movie coiild have used the same title: Big Business, starring Bette M id­ler and Lily To m lin , .a comedy about two p ^ ofbirthtmtcs.

Twins, arc not unheard o f in Hollywood. Hayley Mills portra^^cd them in TTie Piwent Tiap'm 1961, and Bette Davis played them in Dead;Binger in 1964. BuNthree films in one

•year is extraordinary.. ,Moreover, two pthcr- filths this year

focused primarily oh relationships between ' Inotbers: Ddm/n/dlr and Eugene and Rain Man. Meanwhile, Afystic Pizza featured sisters'. ••

Sybaritic Hollywood was going bonkers over, siblings.

; • 0 n top of that, other f i l i a l relationships also got big play. Distant Thunder dealt with a father and son; Rocket G/bra/ter .was about a grandfather and grandchildren; Clara’s Heart portrayed a housekeeper and boy; and Running on Empty showed a whole family.

What happened to movies about couples? Was I987’s Fatal Attraction their last gasp?

N o, but movie romances changed.A s always, they were about three people,

not two,, tiK triangle proving eternal. Usually the combination w a s; two men . and - one w om ui: ^ s s in g JDeiaiiccy, Everybody’s All-American, Tequila Sunrise, Bull Durf am and Fresh Horses followed that pattern. Frantic was one;of the rare films to show two women competing for one man.

The new twist'this year was that romances wetfc not resolved very benignly. The fadeouts generally had a bittersweet " O K , let’s'see where we go from here" feeling' tbther than "W hoopee, thfis wfil be bliss forpver/’ 1988 saw no simplistic hashdance, no' corny Dirty Dancing. A few years ago. Ah Unmarried Woihit} who was StartingiQver would decide It's My Turn and pick out a guy: Baby, It's You, The result? Endless Love.

No longer. This year’s movie women wanted to get away from men (Mgrricd to the Mob), pursue careers (Punchline) or hang out with ^ tu a l apes, not just the kind in singles bars (Gorillas in the Mist).

The men, meanwhile, were chasing cars (Tucker),, cocaine (Bright Lights, Big City) or the conunodity every N ew Jerseyan longs for, qren spiace (The Milagro BeanTield War).

What men and women did not much pursue was each other. One of the few traditional romances of the the year was Alan Alda’s A New Life, and it bombed. It seemed anything but new.

C lo d m is e frotri db o ye : Jeretny Iro n s a n d 'G e n e vie ve 'Bujold; ttt Pead.Riitgea; B e tte .M id le r and L i l y .T o m lin in B ig Business} D u s tin H o ffm a n a n d T o m C ru ise in Ram Man.

The new thing was, an increasing con­sciousness — epitomized in Fatal Attraction and reinforced ^ is year in The Accused and Betrayed— that sexual relationships are not only unpleasant but dangerous.

It’s a belief system of the A ID S era. Sex, never inconsequential,'. ttow looks unsafe. Th e mbvies, as always, reflected deep fears and r e in f o r ^ fond, escapist dreams. O ur heroes and 'teroines thus started fording di^erent streams.

Stories about tvvins, other siblings and families provided natural, safe substitutes for

talcs o f erotic love. Th e family narratives offered intimate relationships virtually devoid of sexuality. They even escaped the latent homosexuality suggested, in some male or female ‘ ‘buddy’ ’ films.

If one thenw stood out above all others in the movies of 1988, it was; “ Everyone needs a f a m i l y T h e political campaigns rode the same notion.,On screen, the doctrine was repeated in films as diverse as Big, Scrooged and Oliver & Company. A il of the brother, sister and family films prixiaimed it. C o­coon; The Return thirrqieted it literally to the

skies.instead of boy meets girl, etc., or even boy

meets boy, etc., the story in 1988 was brother meets brother, etc. Th e twist offered fascinat­ing psychological ramifications. One part of the self met aiK>ther.

It used to seem that the secret of life, according to Hollywood, tvak finding that special someone to live with haf^ily ever aher. Today’s movies don’t d is a g ^ . They just say he or she has been there all along.

The secret was all in the family. So no sex, please.

Movie features .and reviews continue, beginning page 2 5

61 December 28. 1988 / BMEOFF

M azow sze, the N a tio n a l D a n c e C o m p a n y o f P o la n d , w ill p e rfo TO at the State ^u X i S r t o n A v e . , N e w B run sw ick , o n Ja n . 6 at 8 p .m . F o t tick e t, o r further info rm atio n.

201-246-7469.

Poll«hbanci9rs Perform In Colorful Nqtive DroM

Tradition^ dances 'and songs of Poland will come to life when Mazowsze, the National Dance Company o f Poland, per-

.forms at the State Theatie, 19 Livingston A v e .. N ew B tu n m ick , on Jan. 6 at 8 p .m . ; . .D m in g in colwful native costumes, the ' trotipe w ill perform such well-knoum daitcn as the Polonaise and the Mazurka. In the course o f tlwir'concert, the c u t. of 100 danceirs and singers makes inorc than . 1,000 commie changes! Traditional and regional folk soiigs are also scheduled.

T lw troupe was founded in 1948 by! Tadeusz S ygie tyn ^i and hiS ' wife Mira Ziminska, a famous Polish actress. B y 19S1', Mazowsze had made its first tour abroad, to Paris.\Since the death of her husband in 19SS, Mme. Aimlnska has led the group.

Tickets are $25 loge, $20 orchestra, $17.SP rear orchestra and balcony arid $12 gallery. Group rates are available. For tickets

\ or rndre information: 201-246-7469 or\ t o l l - f r e e o u t s id e the 201 a r e a , 1-800-525-7469.

Late Gredi Ladles Enjoy Spotflght 4 More Times

Four perforfhances have been added during the five-week tun of " T ^ Late Great Ladies of B lu u &. Ja zz" sitarring Sandra Rc- Aves-Philli{^ at the Crossroads Theatre C om ­pany, 320 Memorial Parkway, N ew Bruns­wick.

Additional performances are: Dec. 20, 8 p.ni.; Dec. 27, 8 p ;in .; Jari. J , 8 p .m ., Jan. 12, noon. The show w ill run through Jan. 22. Regular perform ances arc W ednesdays through Fridays at 8 p .m ., Saturdays at. 4 p.m . and 8:30 p.m . and Sundays at 3 p.m .

For ticket information: 201-249-5560

Arts Council Offers New Creative Dance Classes

“ The Creative Dance Experience" includ­ing creative, modem and jazz dance for children and adults w ill begin at the Arts Council of Princeton, 10 Witherspoon St.. Jan. 10 through March 17.

i W . iww program w ill be taught by dancer/cboreogra^icr Dina K u sh n ir,. T o r -f

. m o ly with "IGdcidoscopcV of Seattle,' Washington. Creative M o d ^ Dance w ill be held Thursdays 7 p .m . to 8:15 p.m . (ages 13

.a i^ up), and Fridays 4 p.m . to 5 p .m . (ages 9-12); Jazz classes w ill be Tuesdays 4 p .m . to 5 p.m . (ages 6 -8 ) and 5 ^ p.m . (ages ,9-12).

A n infcnrmal gathering and performance by two dancers from the "J^ e id o s c o p e " troupe will talre place the first week of cUssin.^ For fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n and re g is tra tio n : 609-924-8777.

Dinner Theatre Serves Miirdor and Musical Fun

The Broadway musical "A n n ie ” w ill open at Peddlers Village Dinner. Theatre in the Cock ’N . Bull restaurant. Route ?63, Lahaska, Pa. beginning Jan. 6 and running through Feb. 12, Also opening Jan. 6 in The Pub in the COck ’ N B u ll w ill be a new murder mystery,' "B id .fo r M urder.’ *

A ll productions at the Dinner Theater-ire pitOKled by the “ Raave Review Bountiful Buffet" and Sal^ad Bar. Th e Murder M ys­teries in The Pub include a choice o f two dinners s^cd .ta b le s id c as part of the eve­ning.

I ^ r more information or ticket reserva­tions: 215-794-3460.

Joyce’s 'Dubliners’ Adapted by pearKnows

' The Jrish. humor, lyricism and playfulness of,4anies Joyce’s D ubliners, adapted by the DcarKnows Company of New York C ity, will be presented at the Whole Theatre, 544 Bloomfield A ve ., Montclair, from Jan. 4 to 22,

The DcarKnows Company received special permission from the James Joyce estate to adapt the Dubliners stories, ■‘C la y ." " A Mother" and “ A Little C lo ud ,” which deal with the small victories and domestic tragedies of Dublin life. Formed in 1985, DcarKnows Company is composed of former members of John Houseman’s The Acting Company and the Guthrie Theatre.

Tickets range from $18 to $23. For tickets or more information: 201-744-2989.

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Hilarious and superbly talented, this ali-mdie dance company playfully pokesTtih at cIcEssical ballet, Hs cliches arid diwices.En polnte and in tutus, no one is safe from ttie Trocks.

Saturdayi January^? at 8 p m$16-$i26

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1ME OFF / Dcocinbcr 28, 1968 / 7"►e' ' i r i ’• ) ‘

••ft

Subtle but Significant ChatigesAnniversary celebrations, openings and debuts, and a few farewells were part

Central New Jersey classical music scene, which continues to flourish

T h e cUusicai music scene e x p a n d e d -a n d iP ourished in 1 988. A n u ib g the highlig;bts w ere , to p . V o ices, a gro u p o f 11 p ro fe u io n a l singers that d e b u te d at the M i l l H i l l V u ito rs at W estm inster C h o irC o lle g e ; a n d , left, Princeton P ro M u sica , celebrating 'its 10th a n n iv e m iy ^ ^ ' ^ \

B Y E . G r a h a m M cK i n l e y

w

H E R E weren't a lot o f im p o r t a n t changes to the local m u s ic s c e n e in 1988. But the year marked something s u b tle r. T h e a n ­niversary celebra­tions, openings and debuts s h o w ^ that

music is expanding and flourishing in the Garden State.

T w o detnits Widened concert-goers' op­tions this season. Yokes, a group of pro­fessional singers accompanied by a pro­

fessional. pianist and conducted by Lynne Ransom, niade its official debut Feb. 28 and went on. to have a healthy concert season. In A pril, the goigeously renovated Sure Theatre in New Brunswick opened its resonant stage, providing a welcome — and lushly attractive — new forum for performances.

Central New Jersey's other large hall, the Trentoo W ar Memorial Auditorium, was adopted this year by the State of N ew Jersey, after some intense bickering with Mercer County officials, raising hopes that state funds may. bring about some of tire mainten­ance the ireglect^ hall requites. N o improve­ments are visible yet in. the aging building, however.

Anniversaries abounded. The Greater

Tm itd a C h o n I Society is celebrating its 40th this reason, and the Princeton Pro Mutica its 10th. A n d the Casavant organ at Trinity Church in Princeton — tire area's only tracker-action organ - r also passed the dec­ade mark this year.

On a saddet note, the departure of West- nunster Conceit Bell Choir Founding Direc­tor Donald Allured marks the end of an era. Himself a landmark, D r. Allured is almost single-handedly rnponsible for the enormous popularity haiidbells enjoy in this country today. How ever, his departure allowed Weat- miwtcr ^Chok College to import Kataumi Kodttia from Japan for the year. M r. Kodama's characteristic style, which differs considerably from D r. A llu ied’s, will show

students and audiences another side o f .hand­bell ringing.

1988 was also a year o f some wonderful concerts — many of which^ were in ­dividualized by sonrei.nbt-prccisely'' musical events. Th e fo llo w i^ is an informal and, partisan list o f year-end awards. ‘

Mott Driuhatic Last-Minute Performance: Easton, Pa., native Gary Schockcr got a call two and a half hours before concert time, asking him to step in for world-reno\racd flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal in a guest appear- M cc with the New Je r ^ y Symphony.

'Without blinking a n , eye, M r. Schockcr stepped on stage and played a M p ^ con­certo from memory, although hd hadn't performed it since he was. in high school in Easton. - •

Most Madcap P^ormance: Westminster Choir Cpllcgc's production of Gianni Schic- chi, in which no oppdm nity was left unex­ploited to speed up the pace or spice up the humor.

Mmt Unusual Set: Juno. Opera Festival's ret for Britten's A Midsummet Night's

.£heam ,'which crawled with giant insects, writhing vines, blasted trees and sparkled with plentiful splashes of glitter.

Jurt Plain'Too Long Award: W hen ceilist Nathaniel Rosen broke a string at 11 p .m .. near the end of a performance o f a lengthy Beethoven string qututet, he quipped; "Shall we start from the beginning of the first movement?'' A large portion of the audience had already vacated their scats at the July 1 Waterloo Chamber Concert, apparently of the opinion that the concert had gohe on long' enough. W hich just goe^ to show that, after two and half hours, even Beethoven can be too much of a good thing.

Most Active Musk Stand: He pulled it up between every movement of the Christmas portion of Handel's Messiah, "but as Dr. Flununerfeit conducted the opening bars of each movement, the stand would slowly and hypnotically subside onde again. It was. retired during intermission, but the question remains: W ho knows when it t^H turo up (o r down, as the case may be) in a performance again? '' Dropped Baton of the Year Award: This

year, N ew Jersey Symphony Condi^ctor Hugh W o lff revealed the solution to that nagging problem of the baton that slips from unwary fingers during a dramatic moment: F|at(e one o f your playcre pick it up. In an October concert, one :o f the violinists retrieval the cmint stick and haiided it babk to the conductor — apparently without miss­ing a beat.

Better Late Tha n Never Award: The N ew Jersey Syinphony, which has to battle trafiic from Newark and New Y o rk on its way to Trenton, reached a record high this year of late starts. The climax was reached when, after waiting half an hour. D r. Joseph Flum - meifelt decided to lead the Westminster choir through the whole Christinas portion of Handel’s Messiah accompanied by only about half the orcHesm.

Moat Welcotne New Trodidotu Amahl and the Night Visitms at Westminster Choir College, which just completed the third of what hopefully will be many seasons to conre.

8/ December 28. 1988 / HME OFF

A Rollfer Coaster RideThe rock ’n’ roll scene had its share of ups and downs in 1988, as headline acts

perforincid in the area, which often can’t artra<^big-name bands after big-time* * bucks- By PATTudc Monaghan , :

O R area rock fans, 1 9 8 8 w i l l b e r e - '

■ membered as a year of - ups and downs. Plenty-

V , - ■ of good came 9 (itK)f the ■",/i ^ “ year, but plenty of dry

spells blanched the area . •,vv‘ v t. as well. Trcnton’s.City.

Gardens, the only area* club offering altcma-

tive music consistently, delivered some of rock's'm dsl critically, acclaimed acts during the year. Sell*out crowds saw Public Enemy; Sinead O 'Connor. . B illy Bragg, Robyn Hitchcock, Iggy Pop, The Smithereens, Devo and the Ramones.

Rock cqnnoisreurs, however,'looking back on 1988, might well dismiss it as an off year \ fdir Hve music.

The super groups predictably toured the urban hqCkey halls, and stadiums. But some of 1988's bigger names in alternative music steered clear of the Central New Jersey area. Trekking to New York or Philadelphia clubs

. was necessary to.sec acts such as The Feclies, Jarie's Addiction, Tracy Chapman and W a s ,:

■ • Not\Was;-...City Gardens proihoter Randy Ellis — a

former postal worker— striigglod in 1988 to book his acts, a commendable feat — con­sidering the impressive lineup, in the face of

. financi^ adversity. Throughout the year, and especially during a particularly dry summer ; spell,: M r. Ellis was caught'between the perennial rock and a hard place: Wanting to draw as many people to the c|ub as possible by keeping ticket prices down, he was confronted with bands requiring larger sums of money up front in order to play. T o break even, or to have a chance at making a profit. City Gardens had to attract in excess o f 1,000 people to performances.

“ 1 don’t k n o w ," M r. Ellis said in moments of self-doubt. “ I may have to go back to delivering mai|.” '

M r. Ellis was often in bidding wars with T o m B e n e , o w n e r a n d m a n a g e r o f S a ^ v i l le ’s C lub Bene. Some « :ts — guitar great Robin Tro w er for one — played Club Bene, but not C ity Garefens. C lub Bene pursued bands much more aggresively in 1988 than it had,'but the club seeing to sdffer from an identity crisis. The “ dinner theater" concept blends well with some perfcmnances Elvis Irnpcrsonator Larry Seth,' for example — but not for others. Dinner and Devo don’t mix.

Some performances were cancelled. Los Angeles' Jane’s Addiction, who received.a lot of critical attention over a provocative cover to an impressive debut album, were originally booked to play City Gardens only to back out. Big Audio Dynamite was scheduled to play Trenton as well, but band leader and cx-Clash guitarist Mick Jones came down with a case of the measles, putting B .A .D . 's tour on an indefinite hold.

But the year wasn't without its bright spots, >

• City Gardens had to turn people away one spring evening for a performance by Ireland's Sinead. O 'Connor, one of Rolling .9fonc'.s darlings of 1988. Ms O 'C onnor used her powerful vtKals and a technically flaw ■

• - - 'The local rock scene had great moments pid nqt-so-great moments: top: Devoxperformed at City Gardens during the group’s 1988 comeback tour; right, Jimmy Cliff; one of the reggae highlights of the year; and, left. the Smithereens, aband on the brink of huge success.

less band to recreate songs from her debut album. The Lion and the Cobra.

• Talking Head Jerry Harrison and' his Casual Gads re w ril it up at C ity Gardens in mid^^arch. ,T Ik show drew a dqyoted crowd of-Triking H e a ^ fans, who are perhaps tired of Head David Byrne's refusal to consider a Talking-Heads tour.

• The Ramones made one of several 1988 City Gardens stops in .A p ril, turning the crowd on to their tmdemark brand of blitzkrieg rtKk 'n ' roll. In an'interview with TIME O FF. lead singer Joey Ramonc said the band was "stronger right now than we’ve ever been." adding that the band was "still threatening."

.• The Smithereens enjoyed their most successful year ever in 1988. In August,, the band played C ity Gardens in. support of its latest album,, ij/ecn Thoughts. Commenting on the constant comparisons made bciwcen his band and the Beatles, guitarist Jim Babjak i«|d TIME OFF- "W e' always fell ii was more

in(eresting to write about the darker side of reality, ra^qr than the Good Day Sunshine stuff." ^' • In November, Trenton State Colleger landed one of the .best twin bills o f the year with Fishbone and Living Colour. A rockin’ arid rap roarin' good time was provided by two emerging acts from the black rock scene.

• TreiUon audiences were treated to a taste of the Reggae Sunsplash To ur with per­formances by Yellow Man and Toots and the Maytals. Other reggae shows included Burn­ing Spear and Jim m y Cliff.

John and Peter's m New Hope, Pa . booked its share of good shows in 1988. Continuing its longstanding tradition of providing original blues and rock music, John . and- Peter’s landed the likes of, Johnny "C ly d e " Copeland, Flamin' Harry. Moses Rascoe, Aztec T w o Step. T in y T im and Papa John Crcach

There were several ;di-'>uppointmcnis, how ever Princeton University has apparcntl)

..decided to offer little to no rock music to students or the public, and the live music scene at Rutgers cooled off as \yell.

.“ I remember when Princeton Uitivcrsit^ used to have triftnendous ^hpw s," said Peter Zimite, an avid fan o f a wide range of musical styles. "T h e bands arc still around; maybe they're just asking too much (money) to p la y."

The lack of live music at Princeton Univer­sity does little to help an already dcplclcd Princeton music scene. Marita's Cantina, a Mexican restaurant on Nassau Street, began a policy of offering live music in 1988, but it hardly .seems like the appropriate setting to sec a band.

New Biunswick's Court Tavern tailed off in '88. but by year’s end the club made an attempt to get back to its tradition of present­ing many of the talented New Brunswick arca-ba.sed bands.

It is hoped that' this trend will continue in 1989 for all the area clubs and colleges

■ I

TIME OFF / December 28. 1988 9

'Si-.

T h e

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The Canadian Brass will perfbnri at the State Theater in New Bnimwick widi the New Jersey Symphony .Or- ches^ ^t 8 p.m. Jan 31.- For further informatiom 201-745-7396. ^

Brass CUlIntet Joins Orcfiestra in Trenton

A brass quintet. Th e C h a d ia n Brass,'wilt perform at the State Theater in New Bruns­wick with the New Jersey Symphony O r- chestia at 8 p.m . Jan. 31. Th e concert will raise funds for the new joint cancer program of Robert W ood Johnson University Hospital and St. Peter’s Medical Center.

The Canadian Brass was the first brass enseihble to p!ay in Carnegie Hat! and the' first chamber ensemble to tour the People's Republic of China. Th e ir credits also include appearances on television and the per- ftwmaifce of the soundtrack for the movie

..“ The Couch T r ip .”' Tickets range from $25 to $200. For more

information: M l-7 4 5 -7 3 9 6 .

Dig Roots of Rhythhn At Franklin Theater

‘ ''N. 'T w o concerts interweaving African, Caribr

bean and Latin American music w ill be presented'at I t a.m. and 1 p .m . Dec. 28 at The .tm n k lin Villagers (Bam Theatre, 475 JJeMott Lane, Somerset.

“ T lw RbPts of Rhythm” w ill be p»rformc<^ by the Spirit Ensemble oh'native thstmments„ Tickeu are $5 adults and $4 for children.

Resm atidhs are available. I ^ r more infor­mation: 201-87^2710.

Pete Seeiger Performs Benefit For Wortd Peace

Renowned folk singer Pete Sceger will perform " A New Year’s Concert for Peace on Earth” at 8 p.m . on Jan. 7 in the Princeton University Chapel,' Princeton.

A n annua] event, the concert will benefit the Nuclear Disarmament Education Futid of the Princeton-based Coalition for Nuclear Disannament. T o reserve seats, send name, address. tele]:dione number, number of re­servations and check to: Nuclear Disarma-

meny Education Fund, 40 Witherspoon St., Princeton, N J 08542. Suggested donations are $20 (regular); $50 (patron); and $100 ( s p o n ^ ) .

For more information: 609-924-5022,, be­tween 9:30 a.m. and 5:30 p .ip ., Monday

. through l^ d a y .'

IntemotM yiollnlsf: Adds ; Jeisey tp list of CrpdHs

Violin virtuoso Shlomo M ihtz w ill appear . with the N ew Jersey Symphony for a scries of

four commits throughout N ew Jersey Jan. ^ - 8 . Locations include Englewood, Red ' Bank; Trenton and Newark.

M r. M intz, who each year plays o vc r-i(X )’' ’ conceits worldwide, will pcrfoim Bartok’s Violin Concierto N o. 2. Th e program of m usic‘' w ill be devoted to m ld-Europew composers which w ill also include the Smetana Overture to T h e Bartered BH de and the Dvorak Symphony N o , 6 in D major. Op. 60.

Tickets range from' $9.50 to $28.. Stu - dent/senior rush tickets are available half an .

' hour'before each concert. For tickets and m o re in fo rm a tio n : 8 0 0 - .A L L E G R O o r 20T-624-8203 weekdays between 9 a.m. and

.3 p.m . ' ■

Theater Gains Weight To Hold Magic Flute

More than 4b,o6() pounds, of lighting and scenery w ill bcnised in the production of The Magic Flute at The Newark Symphony Hall, lO M Broad St.,,on New Year’s Eye and Jan.2. Th e Houston'Orand Opera production w ill be giyen by the Montclair State CollegC( O p m M usic 'nwatcr Institute o f N ew Jersey ;

The additional tonnage has required cx - ' tensive suiictural changes at Symphony Hall. Costing more than $30,000. the work ex­pands the theatre's technical capacity to accommodaUi large productions of this type iq the future. Supported by funding from the Governor’s Challenge for Excellence grant through the School of Fine and Performing Arts at Montclair State College.

Fbr further information: ^Ol-bdS-dSSO.

Flamin’ Harty*a Blues Band will wip up a jxKkin’ New YeaFs Eve this Saturday at Jtdui BC Peter’s, 96 S. Main Street, New Hope. The Flame, dnlmmer George ^Midnight”. Miller and "Pumpin’ ” Pip Trimmer promise ian evening of the best hot nxdcin’ blues arouUd, complete widi hats and horns and the New Year’s trimmings. For fu r ther in fo rm at ion : 215-862-9951.

L -

10 / December 28. 1988 / TIME OFF

A s i t h e B a l l F a l l s . . .'A guide td where to be in New Jersey as Princeton area locales usher in 1989

A N Y jJ_ b fV th e clubs , and res­taurants in the P rin ce to n area w ill be cclcbrat-

■ing New Year’s Eve with a host^of-r#:activities and New Year’s revelry, what follows is a sketch of some of the fun. Happy New Year! .

Bobby Rue’s Eatery and Spirits, S23 Hamilton A v e :, Trenton. Piano player Michael Lucas; party and

■ buffet. 609-392-8648.B u tto n 'D ow n .C a f e \ ^ '4 ’l 6 0

9 u b k e r b r id g e R o a d s Labw- renccville* D J starting at io p .m .; specia l m e n u , p a rty fa v o rs . 609-799-3335. ' ;

Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt Regency,' Carnegie. Center, .West Wind.sor.• Comic Ellen DcGcheres; party.

609-987-8018 6r.609-987-1234. The Clarion Hot.el, 399 Monmouth

S Im East Windsor. Band and D J; champagne toast at midnight. 609-448-7000.

Comedy Cabaret at the George Washington Lodge, Route I and P A Tu rn p ik e i exit 28; Bensalem. Craig .Shoemaker, Scott Bloom and M ike Green. 2 1 5-355-LA FF.

Comedy Cabaret at Poco's,' 625 N . ' Main S t., Doylestown. Pa, Doug White, M ike Stankicwicz and Led Fielding. 215-345-JO K E.

T h e ‘Country Inn; Route.130, Rob- binsville. Open for'djnner only. 609-259-2033.

Doylestown Inn, 18 W . Sta.p; St., D o y le s t 'o w n , P a . R a u c o u s Brothers, starting at 9 p .m .; no c o v e r ; s p e c ia l d in n e r 2J5-345-6610.

Gaslight Itm, 69 Washington St.., Mount H o lly. Rhythm and Blues band; H o jly M agic, in the Lounge with C h a m p a ^ toast at midnight. Ticket sales for dinner at Q uin ­cy’s; music by C liff Edwards Quartet. Doors open at 8:30 p.m . 609-261-0444. .

Havana, 105 S. Main St., N ew Hope, Pa; New Yeai;'s Eve party w ith th e M e a n M a c h in e . 215-862-9897.

Imaginations, U .S . Route 130, East Windsor. Rock and roll bowling

< all nighh 609-448-8012.J. Augui^s, 19 Dennis St., New

Brunswick. D J ’s Lisa and Spike; champagne toast and balloon drop at m id n ig h t ; p a rty f a v o r s . 201-246-8028.

Jessie’s, Route 130, Yardvillc. Live■ on W K X W radio. Gala party start­

ing at 9 p.m. Dinner available..609-581-3777. ,

John and Peter’s, 96 S. Main St., New. Hope, Pa. Party with favors and balloons, featuring Flamin' Harry’s Blues Band,^ beginning at 10 p.m . 215-862-9951. .

LambeitviUe Station, 11 Bridge St.. Lambcrtville. Black-tic affair at

The Inn at Lambcrtville Sution. Live band; champagne toast at midnight, 6O9-397-83O0.

Odirite’s, S. River Road, New Hope, Pa. Bob Egan at the piano ' and a P J ; seatings at 7 ’ p.m.-( d i n n e r ) a n d .1 0 p .m . Noisemakers, Chanipagne toast at midnight; continentul breakfast. 215-862-2432.

PhesMnt’s Landing, A m well Road, Belle Mead. Live entertainment in The Nest. 201-359-4700!

ScanriMn-Princeton, 100 College .Road East, Plainsboro. Banquet. Rooms Th e Delivery Boys; open bar. Copenhagen: Sandy Max­well's six-piece Dixieland Band; open bar. T i w l i : Rick Fiori Scx<- let; 'big-band swipg; champagne toast at midnjght. 609-452-7800..

Wycombe Inn, M ill'C re e k Road, ; W ycom be, Pa. Eve Short and The Jazz Quartet; three seatings; 5. pirn. - 6 p .m ., 7 p.m . - 8 p .m .. and 9:30 with free champagne toast. 215-598-7158. ,

H F T H E R your N e w Y e a r 's E v e c e le b ra ­tions call for party hats and

noisemakera or a quiet intimate dinner for two, one o f the area hotels, restaurants or-theaters may have an evening tailor-made for you. Justp don't forget t6 make reservations.

The following is a sample of offerings to give you a few ideas on some ways to start the New Year with a bang — or a whimper. Charaitcrie, Princetpn Shopping

Center, Princeton, 609-683-8388. New Y e w ’s Eve. N/A

C h a rle y ’* B ro th e r, R o ute 6 54, H o pew ell .609-466-^0110, New Year’s Eve. frOm 9 p.m . to 1 a.m ., choice o f prime rib, stuffed shrimp or chicken cordon bleu; four-hour open bar with cham­pagne toast, live entertainment, Danish and coffee. A t .1 ia.m. hats and noisem akers; reservations with $20 nonrefundable deposit. $60 a person.

FotiimTheatre Group,. 314 M ain St, Metuchen, 201-548-4670. Din­ner-theater offering Best Little Wtorehouse, Curtain time 7:30 p.m. Champagne toast during in­termission. Dinner afterwards at Cryan.'s. $65 a person.

Good Tim e Chariey’i, 40 Main St., Kingston. 609-924-7400. $65 a person. Five hours of o'pen bar. 9 p .m .- 2 a.m. Prime rib, stuffed shrimp or chicken. Dessert, cof­fee, hats, noisemakers, live mu­sic; Fat C l ^ c e , coffee and danish at 1 a.m . $55 more a couple if they

. wish to check in at 3 a.m. at the Compri Hotel. Cocktail reception at hotel w ith shuttle to Charley's at 9.

Holiday lnn.-.|95 Dayidson A ve ..Som erset, 201-356r 1700. P ro f

,; ^ra m , Dance and p in e ;' $65 a couple; deluxe', room for two; chaihpagne on ice and chocolates; cocktail hour, with hor d ’oevres'; choice o f Beef Wellington or lob­ster tail or surFand-turf; dancing and cocktails untiL 1:30' a.ni. Five-piece band- playing contem­porary T o p 40.music.

H y a tt R egency-rPrinceton, 102 Gaincgic Center, West Windsor. 609-987-1234. Dinner danie in ballroom; S75 a person, includes

. tax and gratutity; live band-playing •Top 40 hits; five-course dinner menu; balloon drop and cham­pagne toast at midnight.' Laser Atrium Party, which features laser show; live band playing To p 40;

■ $25 a person; T w o shows: Pam Matteson, 8 p.m . and. 10:30 p.iti.; $45. Admission includes show, buffet and laser party.

Hyatt.Regency — New Brunswick, 2 Albany St., New Brunswick. 2pl-'873-l234. $139 a couple; de-

- Itixe room, adm'ission to lobby and ballroom galas; three live ,b ^ d s ;

-champagne brunch' .New Year's ; Day-between 10 a.m . to 2 p.m .

Dinner at $55 a person, which in c lu d e s f iv e -c o u r s e m e n u ; nbn-inclusive.

L a h ie re ’*, 5 W ith e rs p o o n S t . ; Princeton, 609-921-2798. Special iTKnu offered from 6 - 1 0 p.m. Price is $65.

Marita'* Cantina, 138 Nassau St.. Princeton, 609-924-7855. Fiesta menu starts at 5 p.m .; complimen­tary champagne at midnight; hats and noisemakers until' 3 a.m. $14.95 a person.

Naiisau Inn, Palmer Square, Prince­ton, 60 9 -9 2 1 -7 5 0 0 , O vernight pacifage includes a bufi'et dinner in the Senior Rotjm; c h ^ p a g n e toast at midnight; a New Year’s Day brunch; party favors and the big

. band sourd^ of Panama Francis . and the Savoy Sultans in the baliroonr for $119.95. For $20 more, patrons have the option of

„ upgrading the package to include a sit-dovvn dinner in Palmer’s Res' taurant, with a choice of five entrees from-a specially prepared; menu. ; 'The Green House w ill feature a

special holiday menu; a la carte ' dinner at $30 a person.Paper M ill Playhouie, Brookside

Drive. M illbum . 201-376-4343. Paper Mill Follies, 20 women ' 'do their own thing.” 7 p.m . and 10 p.m. Tickets are $30 and $40.

Ramada Inn, U .S . Route I , South Brunswick, 609-452-2400. Party package is $165.50 couple: hot d ’ourvres; open bar, full-course diner choice o f prime nb or brbiled salmon with dill sauce:

(Continued on Page 29)

. And we want to welcome you to otir hev9 hotel. - Conventently located on Route 1, The Palmer Inn 1

.r .offm-Qne accommodations at affordable rates.. . .,• . „ ^lO d^est^m s/includ ing Suites, deluxe rooms '

. ^si^.pxivafe balconies, and emdendes, are . ':^^-'-beaunhlQy apfminted to'a^/ariety of rotm

..We provide toU banquet'and meeting facilities. ■’' And our Garden Room is the perfect. spot for.

^■vbreakfastandsmallparties;.remember, our doors are open.’But you ‘

N.

. won't want, to leave!

600 Chestnut Ave., Trenton

W i u W c i o s e d Jan. 8

and

Will Reopen On Saturday Jan. 28 as

d [u £ r ' ’For Reservations P lease C a ll

(609) 392-1500

TIMI.OFF / December 28, 1988 / H

f

ECONOLODGE

. .

M ONM OUTH JUNCTION N J 08852

201-329-4655Conference & .Meeting

HOT TUB & JACUZZI Executive and BridojROOMS AVAILABLE Suites Available

Coffee &x>p 8t Deli Shop

CORPORATE RATES & ACCOUNTS ACCEPTED- LARGE GROUPS WELCOME ,

j r 1 r i <

Ciass^es for young people and adults, In:

P A S lilDRAWINGPAINTING

SCULPTUREENAMELUNG

PHOTOGRAPHYWATEROOLORPICTURiTHIS’

CARTOON CAPERS ART HISTORY

UFE WORKSHOPS FIGURE DRAWING

CHINESE PAINTING AFTER-WORK ART

FOCUS ON c o l o r FIGURE SCULPTURE CREATTVE SEMINAR

SATURDAY MORNING ART EN H AN aN G COLOR

Classes be gin Ja n u a ry 15

“ C a ll (or a (ree c o p y of the Winter Class S ch edu le; ^

Aiiv/o^ks, Fiifv;e!o;i

6 0 9 / 9 2 1- 9 1 7 3Artworks/IrenSon

6 0 9 / 3 9 4 - 9 4 3 61^,/ . Dcccmijcr 28. 1988 / TIME OFF

\

As the old year gives way to the new, T IM E O FF asked: Whsit will happen in ’89

B V W I L U A M H A Y W b b b '

S the old jrear;giv^s way to the hew, dnc

■‘‘Can't help iwonder- in g w h a t 1 9 8 9 holds. TIM E OFF'S

readers had a few. predictions, and naturally we asketi them: “ What do you think will happen next y ia iT ’

B A R B A R A M A N K A , a Astrologer •

,N o tth«ist coitridor, which w ill imp­ly i n c r ^ a ^ trafTic congestion ^ o n g tlK major highways, the, loss of fann land and open space, a poten­tial water shortage as growth puts a . hew demand on our water resources, and finally decreasing options 'for getting rid o f increasing garbage.

T O M G R A B O W S K IShipping Clerk

T h o e continues to be a positive feeling; both in regard to what's going o n . in : the United S w e s and' wm ldwide. I think people want that to (tontinue. I don't see a lot. of n e g ^ v is m . B u ie values w ill be s t r e s ^ a little m o t^ '-a n d a new saneness, a feeling o f reason, will prevail. S

S A L L Y M A R S H A L L

Interior Decorator

Let’s be positive. Th e trade defi­cit w ill take a turn for the betten the, b t i d ^ w ill be balanced and I 'l l win the lottery. .

S T A N L E Y L E V I N EOptometrist

It w ill bp a recessional year, with higher interest rates. Th e • "Idve affair’ ’ between the new administra­tion and the Dembdatic-tlominated h o u s ^ will break. I don't think the people held captive in Lebanon will be released without some kind of confrontation.

K A T H E R I N E K . W H I T EAttorney

T h e Bush honeymoon w ill be tbp shortest on record.

L A R R Y B E N ^ N

Trans. C o . O w n e r

It w ill be worse than 1988.

V I V I A N R O U N D S Secretary

Sorrietl^ing w p n ^ r f u l . , 1 don't know what, but I feel it coming,

L A R R Y P A J A R O ORutgers Sophomore

T h e New York Yankees w ill be in the W o rld Series.

P A T T I P O W E R SStore Manager

I foresee a subway sinies, with the M ets taking it in five.

R I C H A R D W E T H E R A L DResearch M eteorologbt

Princeton University

I expect more growth in residen­tial housing, shopping malls and industrial parks throughout most of New Jersey, particularly along (he

It’s going‘to snow in January.

CHRIS SMITH. Student ■

It's going to be cold,

C A R M E N J U R A b O - Restaurant O w ner

It’s going to be hot.

S F I E R Y L BEAks Rutgers Senior

I 'm going to graduate! It’s all I've been thinking about;

T E R R A N C E O ’M A L L E Y

Teachers. ■•■ ■ ■

T h e stock market w ill rise over/ the course of the year.

G E R A L D H A L L .Vice President

N ;J . Cham ber o f Conwnerce

I think business w ill continue at a relatively high level. The number one problem is labor supply, and that w ill Mntinue. W e w ill see a decline in interest rates after tlib middle of the year. Retail sales w o n 't b e 't o o w o n d e r f u l fo r Christrrus.

T O M M I W A X M A N Hom em aker '

Th e potholes in Princeton w ill fmally make the. Guinness Bpok of W oHd Reemds.

J O H N N Y W I L L I A M S O NStudent

A U F O jwill land in N e w Jersey.

J . P E T E R W I L U A M S O N Broker

M ore of the saifie, don't you think?

L A C E Y S T A N G Court Reporter

1 keep having this swfu* feeling my dog is going to die.

J A C K M C C U L L O U G HProfessor o f Communication

and 'Theatre Trenton State College

Artists and artistic organizations will have a more difficult time financially.

G E O R G E W Q L ^ ■ S ^ o r Analyst

Every poiitidan elected in vember w ill break at least one campaign promise. Most w ill break, more t l ^ one.

A N T O I N E T i r E M A R p N B Hom emaker

O i n h W infrey w ill regain every pmind she lost.

M c C U L L Y A r t D irector

It’s funny you should ask that. I dreamed hot week that George B u d i was impeached: and it was so

.vivid , it stayra with me. .

L O U I S J A M E S J R . Records Clerk

Ferdinand Marcos w ill regain his health sufficiently to fly in the n i ^ to Some country that <k>esn't have

. extradition treaties with anybody.

H O l U C E S U T H E R L A N D : Sales Mamfger

E v ^ college in the country — particularly tlw one m y d a u ^te r attends — w ill raise its tuition. Yoti don’t need to be a seer to. predict that.

H O P E A R N O L D Data Manager

Miss America will be a Native American,

J O E Y D A S A R O ^ A u t . Branch Manager

Taxes w ill rise and thy salary won’t.

P E T E J E S S U P Retired

Daryl Straivhetry w ill learn how to catch. '

D O N P O R T E R ,1 , Editor

Somebody w ill build a new mall on Route 1.

E S T H E R B A K E RChurch Secretary

I think it's going ^ a good year. I've beeh thinking ^ u t what Gotby has been doing in Russia, and it's making me hopeful we can solve things yct.'^

M A I U O R I E L A N E Teacher

I think there's, going to be some kind of medical breakthrough — maybe on A ID S . O r maybe I just hope there will be.

Don’t Forget About Folkdcinee Group Ho«ls Nancy Drew Mysteries internalfdnal Teacher

Mysteries featuring women .private eyes will be the topic of the book discussion Jan. 3 from 8 p.m . to 10 p.m . at A Woman'.^ Place.

A speial gatlwring for women., held at the . P rL ^ to n Atts CouiKil., 102 Withersppon St.■ A W om an's Plaice nteets every week at the

- ' ' Arts C o u n cil,. and womeri can jo in the ongoing group at any time. Other meetings provide a coffeehouse and opportunities to share work.. Cancellation information due to inclement weather pan be obtained after 3 ^ .m . die day of the event. I ^ r further W orm ation: 609-924-8777.

AntiqiiQS Show Returns To New Hope Fire Hall

Th e N ew Hope W inter Antiques Show w ill be Jan. I4iand IS at the Eagle Fire Company Hall, Route 202 and Sugan Road in New

; Hopei Pa: A preview reception to benefit the _ Eagle Fire Company w ill be Jan. 13 from

■ ' 7 :W p.m . to lb p .m . '- . The 2nd . annual show w ill feature 36

dealers from seven states exhibiting, country and formal furniture, pmntings. textiles, folk

‘ art and appropriate period accessories. D e a l-. ers include Bea Cohen, Robert and Marylou Sutter, David Geiger, Shaia Oriental Rugs, Dennis and Valerie Bakoledis.^.and H i^ y Schwind Antiques.'

Hours are 11 a.m . to 9 p .m . Saturday and r a.ni.' to 5 p.m . Sunday, Food and freshments w ill be available. Admission is for the show, $25 for the reception., For

niore .information: 215-794-5009.

Israeli Choreographer Bentzj' T ira m will conduct a workshop Jan. 9 at the Princeton Jewish CentcTi 457 Nassau S t., at 7:30 p.m.

M i*. Ttram is director of folkdaiice, at several institutions in Is m l and is''a master teacher in the certification program for Israeli folkdance teachers Hn Israel. H e has taught throughmit the United States. Canada and Europe.

Admission charge is $5, For further infor­mation: 609-895-966Q.

Rutgers Plays Host To $poitsmen’s Show

The Sixth Annual Garden State Outdoor Sportsmen’s Shows held at Rutgers Univer­sity’s G y m and Annex, College Avenue. New Brunswick, w ill run Jan. 6 through 8. Show tjmes Ate 1 p.m . to 9:30 p.m . on Friday; K V d m . to 9:30 p.m . on Saturday; and 10 a.m.^to 6 p .m . on Sunday. N o w in its sixth year, it is the largest spor^men’s show in New Jersey,

O n display w ill be an expansive selection of fishing and huntirig exhibits, product demonstrations, seminars and guest speakers. Visitors can leam the art o f fishing from its basics to the niore advanced methods o f using iutificials, trolling and fly fishing. Show gioers can . hear a demonstration o f turkey calling and hunting methods. T h e , Fifth A n nud Gartten State Open Turicey Calling Contest w ill get uiulerway at 2 p.m . on Saturday . '

For more information: 201-968-3070.

Y p U N G S T E f l S

Families Take a Hike In Princeton Preserve

Families are invited to take nature walks levery Saturday morning at I I a.iii. at. the Mountain takes Nature Preserve, Route 206. P r i^ t o n . T h e hour-long walks g o ^ u n d n im e r Lhke in the Heart of the 70-acrc preserve. . *■

On;Dec. 3 l . .the focus w ill be on the types of trees, in the preserve. W arm clothes arid sUiidy slKies are recommended. , '

For more infonnati6n:’609-921-2772.

$ , e e ^ S t o r y S d l d c T

A P d A f r i c a n D a n c e ,

' This'hoiiday season, the NCiy Jersey Stale Museum, 205 w r State S t., Trdliiton.^has scheduled children’s theater events'' for families. Dec. 30 brings a blend of ten shoit children’s stories, named S to ry Salad I I .

A prograim Of A frie m dance, song and stoiydejling w ill unfeid on Jan. 8 with the Ishangi Dancers. Eriiliant clothing; mys­terious masquerades and insights into African family life i ^ e this presentation appropriate for die family. ,,

Al|, children’s theater events begin at 2 p.m , and cm>t $4 at the door, $3.50 by advance purchase o f for groups o f 10. For m o re in f o r m a t io n o r r c s e r v a t io h s : 609-292-7780.

Puppet Prcjects Files To Never-Never Land

Large puppets, marionettes and colorful scenery w ill fill the Kelsey Theater stage on Jan. 7 wiren P u f ^ t Projects performs the st(H^ o f Peter P u n . Shows are schooled for 2 p.m . arid 4 p.m ,. in the theater on Mercer County Community College’s West Windsor campus. ‘ >

PupfKt Projects recreates the tale o f the boy who refuses to grow up. A t home in Never-Never Land, Peter Pan leads a group o f lost boys, battles pirates led by the evil Captain Hook and flies, through the air with Tinketbell. '

Tickets arc $ & .;For reseiVatiops or more information: 6W-586^46?5.

Children’s Flini Set At the New York Met

A film . F ro m the M ixed U p FU es-ofM rs, Basil E . Frankw eiUer, w ill be shown at the North Brunswick Library, 880 Hermann Road, North Brunswick, on Jan, 3.

Based on a book by E .L . Konigsburg, the film is intended for an audience of ages 5 through 12. The story tells of the adventures of brother and sister runaways who hide in the Metropolitan Mureum o f

The film is free and;requires no tegis-, tration. For more information: 201-246-3545.

RESERVE NOW FOR OUR NEW YEARS EVE FESTIVE DINNER

COMPLETE p IN iV l^ $75i?pO|>er couple*

V ; Seiferal Sealings Available

Reservations Only

LIVE ON WKXWV ■ ■

GALA NEW YEARS EVE

P A B ^IN THE LOUNGE

FROM 9 p.m . TILL???JoitiT he Fmi

R u u ir I.SO H a m il t o n T t in i is h ip . >il O H (,W (< ,09) S H I-.'

Bring In the New Year

Restaurant and CocktaO, B ar

"A Touch o f O ld Europe"

Seating until m idnight Banquet Fatilitles

Live Music

Distihetty European dishes... food and d>fok trim's moderately priced and exceptkxially good. Our Menu fochides:German Specialties,

. Fresri Seafood, Veal arid P^sta D is ^ , ,Vast Selection'of ''German Beers and,Wines . ,

EatabHahed m t933. ottenng the Central New Jersey area for over SO years .(he hiphest 'standards fo serving dettdous food irtfi q u a i^ service.

2430 Ham ilton Ave. H air^H onTw o.

( ^ > 5 8 7 -9 8 9 4

TIME OFF / December 28. 1988 / 13

into^ Y R E B E C C A C a m p b e l l

A C H J a n u ^ I exam­ine the y e a n potential for each individual sun sign based on Jupiier!s transit w ithin the solar chart.

. / • J u p it e r n o rm a llyf."' . • sp e n d s a b o u t 12

' months in caich sign.’ ' ■ • • ' Being associated withtarge, lucky-and abundant developments, it's usually a nice treat when it transits your persona! sign. Th is year however, Jupiter speeds through three suhsigns!

'.You should expect a most active and I changeable, year. T r y to be adaptable to the

unique etiergics each o f these penods w i l l ' represent.

There wiH^bc important focus on material i and emotional security; Many w ill feel the

need to *(Mit dow n' or 'pull u p ’ roots. The status quo may be in for a joijt >

We arc entering a very business oriented period. Expansion will be cdnscryativc. Real estate w ill see existing hotnc sales down while new housing will be more in demand.

On the lighter side. Jupiter's transit of . Gemini — the sign of the Tw in s — may sec

more multiple births over the ^coming 18 months. . ' _•

■ARIES (3/21-4/20|! The early months of ’89 will continue to focus attention on .material and emotional security as Jupiter spotlights your solar second house. Benefits dpring.this

' period arc decidedly linked w ith others, perhaps more than is .to your lik in g ! .

Expect to be doing a lot o f thinkingiand .re-evaluating during this period, much of this will cfenter around career and fam ily interests, as'both Saturn and Uranus make their pres­ence felt in ' your solar tenth house. Th e ' confusion you may experience early in the year quickly dissipates.. Spring finds you more focused, although verbalizing ypur feelings and emotions may remain difficult at times due to Mercury's challenging position. The later part of -89 will be especially memorable .for many, you

, will reap the rewards of almost a year's worth of hard work. ;,

T A U R U S (4/21-5/21): As Jupiter completes its transit of your sign early this year your attention is focused squarely on 'self.'

Both physical and. mental well being .arc spotlighted, thinking is more .serious and

,c6n|emplative ... don't let it become morbid! The early and late months are .especially favqrable-Tor persona) change, an analytical'

^ V ^ fe i^ a irii nation wi l l lead to .*?sclfdmpr6vcment ih the months ahead, '

A change in marital status is possible for soihc, the need for more personal freedom is probable for many. A qucstiort o f power or authority maiy .rise to the surface.

If others accuse you of being 'distant' in '89. pay heed ... others will p la y a vital role in your evolving happiness o r unhappiness this year. D o n ’t ignore your health this year, physical and emotional aspects arc inter­twined, stress should be reduced and more time for R & R should be planned.■ This year be wary of severing bonds, learn _

i to listen or you could lose more than,you ever I dreamed possible. ‘! G E M IN I (5/22-6/21): This is a very special

year for you. ,But — and that's a big word for you this

year — this normally expansive influence may be tempered By the sobering influence of

Yo u may want tqi travel inore in , '89 .than . yoiir . situation m a y allow, a change o f

residence Is possible later this year, and your • personal plans take much bf your time arid atteiition during m uch of this busy period,

Ure this introspective period to plan and re-define goals, plan a course and stick to it. T r y to avoid extremes and be sensitive to others needs, there rriay be a lot of them hidden in the year ahead.C A N C E R (6/22-7/23): Planetary intluences in '89 will set the stage for influential developments in personal and profesrional relationships for scvcralvears to come!

You will be c o n c e m e ^ ith health, job and dependents interests': You must learn to air your grievances instead of suffering in silence. - x

Count on personal and professional rela­tionships being redefined under Saturn’s no nonsense influence.

Early-career delays indicate a time to regroup and rc-emerge later in the year as Jupiter enters' yo u r personal sun sign. As Jupiter enters yo u r sign go after what you really want, always being ready to.revicw and revise where necessary.

L E O (7/24-8/23): A renewed interest in career matters (or should I say status?) is emphasized under Jiipitcr'^ early influence in your solar l(Hh house. . ■

Stalled projeets n o w receive the green light as Jiipiter assumes a direct motion early in '89. .Expect added recognition, c.yen publicity to come your w a y.

Benefits arc jinked with ciders, parehts and those in authority: S o lit^ e ffo rts arc favored early and lide i n ’8 9 . In linking y o u r energies with Others, be careful of losing y o u r individ­ual ‘star quality.*■ Relationships b u m along, but schedule

..changes may tcnVporarily unsettle the smooth ■wortring.A>rdcr Of your life. Residence or living arrangements may change.

A new business m qy be bom under your roof in *89.

V IR G O (8/24-9/23): Tl)is year certainly promises some important turhing points for you; Early in '8 9 you will fOciis ypur. attention on personal goals, plans and life direction. ' More travel either mentally or, physically is indicated as you seek to.paint bn a broader canvas. Y o u r mental prowess is put ' to the test; a personal quest is begun.. Both your financial and emotional security may be an 'issue' in months ahead; it is, however, best:not to,go put o n a limb in either area. Keep your judgments well grounded and be willing to discard carefully ,andv cautiously where necessary. Start new where you must,

Romantic'trends rriay remain a bit unsettled for .many this yer. Som e serious thinking and - re-evaluating m ay see a change In rnarital status for some in '8 9 . As Saturn, Uranus and Neptune take up comfortable residence in your solar 5th house, plenty of changes arc guaranteed to unfold in romantic, creative and'children's interests, A business venture may have its roots in the next 18 months, Leam to tunc in to your inner voice then follow through. Career interests m ay take a giant leap forward under Jupiter's expansive'., influence in your solar icith house. Early months are the tim e to polish arid perfect skills and even add some new tricks to your repertoire.. Further education is possible for some. Others w ill incrca.se their 'wordly' knowledge to take full advantage o f Jupiter's Offerines.

L I B R A (9 /2 4 -lO /U ): The year ahead w ill offer the possibility o f foundational change, (h it m d but inore important internal trans­itions w ill be felt; CHhers w ill play 8 pivotal role, often atrting as a catalyst for important . developments. & t r a mone^ is part o f this ' year’s early scenario, tax, insurance, pen­sion. estate, settlements, a mate or partner could play a role in this: Others and their

. resources will be o f benefit to you early in ‘ '89. As Jupiter spends most o f the year in solar 9th house, further education', travel and- spiritual interests are all areas that lead to growth and expansion for you. Y o u r own initiative abilities may manifHt or inercdse during this time and cerebral efforts will.pay off handsomely late-stimmcr-fall as Jupiter transits yo u r;l(h h hOuse of career and pro­fessional status. As'Saturn and Uranus join

'Neptune in your solar- 4th house much attention'will be focused on home,.faip>ly and property interests . . : all o f which could be a bit- unsettled at the moment.

S C O R P IO (IO / 2 f.l 1/22): Jupiter’s c ^ ly influence h ig h li^ts your 7jh house. A ll k e y. relationships arc reviewedAmd rc-evaluated.' Ijhder Pluto’s,powerful influence much con­tinues to go on within, jo u plot and plan \in private, marital status raiscs a question or t w o .. You're introspective tendencies arc- increased perhaps irilblerably so for.- tlic importanf 'others’ , who arc attempting to uh^rstarid the. perwnal transfonnation they are witnessing... never mind that you arc the one experiencing it! Life and death issues could touch your life; literally or figuratively .. . for better of worre .... your Scorpion 'qualities are exhibited for all the worl^ to sec. As,Saturn and Uranus join Neptune in your, solar 3rd/house lo c ^ travel, ^u ca tio n and dealings w ith relatives will take on new meariing. A change in residence o r. living arrangements is contemplated, the financial aspect bf. cither playing a~ key role.

^ A U I I T A R I U S (11/23-12/21): Y o u have weatlwred the emotibrial storms of the last fe ^ years. N o ^ is the time to re-seed, and redirect your life both .financially (ind emo- . tionally. If much'has been eliminated there is plenty o f room for new growth. Early trends .highlight health and career interests, as Jupiter/ peas^ quickly, into your solar 7th house ' expect dealings within key rela­tionships to heat up. Expect many , new people, places and circumstarices to 'entcr your life in the months .ahead, contracts and-

.legal papers and issues arc sure to pla^) a big part in this year’s developments: A n ‘ in­heritance’, of sorts may touch your life this

'year, at the'vcry .least 'others’ resources will play' an intportant 'role in the ydaf ahead. You will have the opporturiitv t o ’mend’ certbiri areas of your life, once again you w ill have .'help' to accomplish this. A s Satum, Uranus and Neptune transit your solar 2nd house a practical, conservative approach to finariccs and emotions w ill work best.

C A P R IC O R N (12/22-1/20): You above all sun signs are in for dramatic changes in your life, the external changes could be infinitely easier to handle than the deep

. internal chances that you arc . already ex­periencing. Because you arc bom under Saturn’s heavy influence you actually have" an edge ... you rarely look for the easy w ay and are accustomed to hard work. Th e trick for you in coming years is to integrate the Uranian influence that will be with you for a long time to come. Y o u will need to leam to "tune in” to your; intuition, to be more

spontaneous and to let go of old m -outworn relationxbips of situations,, certainly sotne goodbyes are in .iriofe. Th e planetary buildup in your sign w ilf ^ up to'intensity, frus- ' tratlon, exciteqienl and anything but w hat you have grown accustomed to. Y o u r closest relationships'continue to undergo dramatic

' perhaps traumatic change, doniestic or family matters have been h o f and heavy for the last few months it's int^rtant to keep doors . open, agree to disagree. D on't shut yourself

' away from others now , share feelings and emotions to build better undeistandipg within key relationships. Y o u may- be a bit , pre-occupied with attaining a special goal or ambition, .business interests arc fired w . . . v before the year endsyou .will make a valuable . ally or pdrtncr. Although joining forces with others is. not really your preference you will sec the advantages o f such arrangements in *89, YoUr shrewd evaluation of this.circum- stance w ill allow you to make a concession, going ifa lo n c in '89 will reduce potential rewards ...\enoiigh said! \

A q u a r i u s (I/ 2 I-2 / I9 ): Jupiter's in- .flucnce in yoiir solar 4th house .‘accents dealings with family, property and domestic i issues. 'The expanrive nature o f this planet may sec an ‘addition’ to your family circle, or a new residence in the early months of '89. Progression into your 5th house sets up a ' harmonious aspect with your sunsign for

, much o f this y e a r,. romantic, creative arid - children's interests flourish in months ahead. Quite possibly a romantic overture could surprise you, an unexpected encounter is in store for some. However, Plutonian conre-

■ quenccs .'are usually harsh so be careful in ydur choices in '89. T h e power piacked trio ih Capricorn residing in your solar 12th hour) s u re s t quiet, subtle changes taking place. Notably influenced during this tinic will be job, h ^ t h and personal affairs.,

P IS C E S (2/20-3/20): The outer planets w ill have an important supportive influence

' in your life this year. A 'n cw circle of friends tnay be in -thc makittg.as you sever old or outworn ties once and for all. Special affilia­tions w ith clubs, groups and organizations are slated to Touch your life in '89. Influential

. n o tin g s are likely and deaings with the ^ast could surprise you in months ahead. Jupiter’s early transit p f your solar 3'rd house will step up local travel, communications and dealings with Siblings. Expect the tempo to.bd active, a.change in residence or living arrangements , is contemplated as Jupiter's influence moves into your 4(h house in Ia(e sprirtg .j.^onc'way or a n o i ^ you will be .improving or upgrad­ing your^surrouhdings. Exp w t personal rclq-

; Mionships .to come under s m tjn y ; frebdoiri' and independence arc accented, yoii Triay need to build on,firmer ground now, piit the. last few years of turmoil behind you. You w ill review your relation to yOur material world, you will be less impulsive and m ore, conservative in money matters. Y o u will also be concerned with lorig term security, ^ m c - fliing very new to your thinking and planning I'm sure! Some may need to consider a job chiinge as a means o f . attaining greater security, others, rnay iriiprove existing skills and all would benefit through further educa­tion early in ’ 89. Norm ally you live day to day and are quite unaffect^ by 'status' and ‘ its. uappings but as Saturn. Uranus and Neptune sextile your sun. from their place­ment in huririesslike Capricorn you w ill fe e r compelled to shift your thinking a b i t ... and maybe it’s about tirpe.

14 / December 28. 1988 / tlME OFF

TIME OFF / December 28. 1988/

F T E R two success- fill slrollinif N e w : Y e a r’s Eve parties., th e A rts i C o u n c il . w i l l once a g a in

jsesent. an evening of arts .a n ^ enteitainment events that takes rev­elers — young and old through. dowitiown Princieton to have fun at the many activities provided.» W ith the purchase of an $ 8 ad­mission button'»r- which depicts a circle of ’ thempon’s phases — participants are f m to watch d r take part in . song, tw e e and theater events tidung p la ce ^U evening in town. It’s a g r ^ t chanw-lb sec old . friends, rekindle that knse o f co m ­munity spirit and kick-off the new year oh im (^ im r s tk note.

S le e p -o v e r p a rtie s , treasure hunts,., mimes, . jugglers, nrovies, cabarrt music and dance by. (S in c e -. ton Ballet — even a- horse Hind b u ^ ride t - are only pMt o f the hoopla in store to celebrate the N ew Year. Instead o f waiting for the ball to drop, have one yourself — on •’Curtain C a lls ." So come along or go alone, it’s time to raise the curtain on 1989.

Here is a program of events. Mtme information is available at the. A lts Council o f Princeton, o n the comer of Witherspoon Street and

. Paul Robeson Place: 609-924-8777.some highlights arc noted:

I • Children o f elementary-school age tan join in a special sloep-dvcr party, which begins at 7:30 b n N ew Year’s Eve and goes until 9 :3 0 the next morning. Swimming is avail­able, and so are a range of ganies and crafts. Th e midnight party is the sp «:ia l fun.

• M a ^ Laycock will conduct the Chamber Symphony orPrincctoh in ■a c e le b ra t io n o f m u sic f ro m Gershwin to Strauss waltzes^

• Th e IPrinceton Ballet I I will perform a dance program choieo- graphed.by Sherry Alban.

• Th e Bel Musica Ensemble, < starring . Barry. Ellison, Rorence Lazzerie and D o n S h e lle y w ill perform d' medley of opera and memorable show tunes.

• ^ cabaret w ill -feature Diana Crane, John Watson Stewart. Mary Marstqp. . Martejjov Kevin Chamberlin arid W illiam Richer.

• Dance ihitsic will be provided* by Brad H ill’s swing music band.

: • Th e vocal music .of Princeton High School’s, singing groups, the Cat’s Meow and the Counteitoncs, can be heard. Th e Fust Baptist Church Choir, Caroline M oseley’s folk singing and Arthur Meisel and his son. M i c ^ , with banjo, guitar and autoharp w ill provide m usic as well. •

• “ Scroll A rt '89 w ill move from the Y W C A to the Arts Council building at iO:4S..

• Cecilia Hodges Drew ry will present a dramatic reading entitled

RICHARDSON AUD RICHARDSON U>UNGE YW CA BUILDING YM CA (FA)• • Siv'-

1. ■ *

7:30 p.m. ■ ' - 1 - s

•> Sit Badc/Tale Part „ ' Entertainment (8 p.m.)

SleepoverfpReservation

8:00 p.m.Bel Musics Eiulemble (8:15) The Princeton Ballet Meiseb Folksinging,

with Banjo, Autoharp . and'Guitar .

SieCpover: Games, Swi

8:30 p. ms, . ''

CiuolineMoseley,foBcainging

Folktale ! Fai^ lale. With Susan Reiman

9:00 p.m.'**LbveM on Ney— a diBair >

V •. *•V Yearis Eve”

.'

Cat^Meowand Cotmtertones /

(8-9; 15 p.m.) Fortune Telling

9; 15 p.m.Studio 6 Bmid

' . ' . fc.

T. McKinley, Comic . >

9:30 p.in. / •

*Zip-arDoo-Dah: Special Pot Pourri of Entc^inmenf

4 - . 'V

- 110:00 p.m. T i MdCiiJey, Comic '

Tfie Chamber Symphony

bf Princeton (10;1J5)

VFilms, with Popcorn (Contihuous Showing) i Th e Cure,” '

lOslOp.m. /

With Charlie Chaplin ' **Mickey Saves the Air Mail”

.•*1

11:00 p.m.

- .-y ^ ■ ■ ■ \ • ”Woody Allen” ”Thc Beatles at Shea Stadium”

'

A LL EVENINGV

Look for the Jugglers. Visit With Father Time Scroll Art, 1989: Good Wis Granada Nicara^a

les for Our S

11:45 p.m. Go to Couiitdown at Paul Robeson P(^e and Chambers Str.

\ ^ JL: X • X XXVXiJi ^

y For the third Straight ye^r, Prito come together for an evening,

•‘Magnincent Memories I I I " with a special' appearance by Reverend Michael Nabors.

'• Treasure hunts on tw o levels of diffiOtilty will.be:available,td add to

•alj the fun.. ,

•• There w ill also be either jug­g le rs fro m Jo h n W ith e rs p o o n M iddle School Or mimes' to enter-

. tain at various sites. -• Fijms w ill be shown cm the .

silver acreen to amuse all ages,

the following restaurants: A bel Bagel, The Annex, Th e Ruriy S c u p p e r, S c a n tic o n ,. A m e rica n D iner, .Winbcric’s, fh o m a s Eats, T h e Alchemist & Sarrister, The C a te rin g C o m p a n y ,;C h a m b e V s W a l k . T h e R o c k y H i l l I n n ,Lahiere’s, Marita’s, Mexican V il ­lage II, Hyatt-Regeiicy, Good Tim e Charley’s, Wadsworth’s and Prince­ton University Food Services.

• A t midnight — the highlight of the evening — fireworks, provided by Rreworks Unlimited i w ill light tire sky over town! Princeton B o r o u ^ M ayor Barbara Sigmund w ill 1 ^ the countdown to 'm idnight' at Paul Robeson Place, begiiming at 11:45 p .m ,.

I n a d d i t io n to w a r m , non-alcoholic beverage®, the festi­val W ill fcamrie. finger focxls from

Outdoor food snacks w ill be sold by tli&--French Club of Princeton H igh & h M l. N ew Year’s Eve party noisemakers, hats and related rev­elry paraphernalia w ill be provided by the SpectacleTheatre and Debate C lu b of Prinrreton H igh School.

’ ’ Luminaria,’ ’ the peace lights at each of the five sites, have been decorated by elernentaty school children and distributed by - the

T H E ./ N R T S COUHCWi ef ' P R t W C B T O t J

IXICHAfWSOMAUDITORIUM

Ccani

taar

-o fatGPi0RJeill

HBAAW

,PiT1ccg>T

16 / December 28, 1988 / TIME OFF

IE.Y) FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ARTS COUNCIL O U TD O O R EVENTS ALL EVE

Children by' Locy !40-8: Locomotive Ride to all sites \

iming, Fun s,■ ... . . /

Dance All Eveiiiitg With Brad HiU and Band .

Rip Pellaton, Town Crier

**Magnin.crat Meniori. m ”: Readings by Cecilia Hpdg;es Dtewey* with Reverend Michael Nabon

C^phplo^ in the Cafe 3 (8 - 10 p.m.)

Mime Juggling Troupe' .

V '

\

Jazz Piano and More in the Cafe

Sale pf.Motisse and Meringues by French Club of PHS

First Baptist Choir . -

Musical Selecdpns in the ^Negro”, Spiritual Tradition

Two-Level Treasure Hunt Begins / Fortune Telling

Party Hats and Noisemalcers . by Spectacle Theatre of P^S

" ' - ; • :

Band Breaks .CaFs Meow (9:401 Countertones (9:40)

■ ' tfi • ' ■/; • ■ , r. c ; . ■

Balloon Sale, Run by John Witherspoon Volunteers

Sm>liArt’89i ’ 3 3 : ' ^ ■ . 3 ' ' - I : . : 3 ' , : : ‘

• : • ‘ .

■ • • • ■ • . 1 •

t

' . - ■ ■ ■

■ ,v , . ....

er City,__________ ^ ^ ^ _____________________ '

Light Snacks Served , Angel Show iii the Gallery*

Hdtse-and-Buggy Ride,

Traveling to Sites

T P A U L R o b e s o n P l a <C E ^ ^

ton invites families f New Year’s fiin

tion for Nuclear, Disarmament rub'Scouts of Pack43. .

tendance is limited, t h e C u r- C ^ ls button was designed by : L o n n ie ^ e Jo hnw n, a native rinceton. dDvt buttbn is/opis:U.e> le fqlldwing placeis; th e A m icil of Princeton; The Princetoh" et; Bowhe & Peare; the Music u* at Titles Unlimited; Princeton ss Center, Landauls; Forest lers; Nassau St. Seafobd; H am -

Jewelers; Tem pting T ig e r; ;’s; the University Store; Walter Hlowe I n c . ; R ic h a r d s o n torium; H . Gross & C o .; emist & Bairister, Chamber’s i Cafe and the Y Pool Deck, addition to the Arts Council of tton and the major supped of Princeton Packet, the following mttibns and businesses have I generous support for C U R - i C A L L S ’8 »;

Chemical Bank New Jewey\MenrHI Lynch New je n ^ . National Bank

7B.Ri Squibb.American Cyanamid 'Commodities Corikiration BienerWallack&^Hill Prinnton Univenity Press Smith Stratton Wise Heher & Brennan

' Walter B. HoWe Inc.Church & DwightDick Bakker Inc.i . . «H illierC ^up ,•FMC Corporation 'H . Gross K Cq. - Bowhe dL Peare Nassau Saving 9C Loan Henderson Real Estate Revere Travel Stewardson Dougherty The Light Gallery.

OVER THE MOON SUPPORT

T he Princeton P acket Inc. .

FULL MOON SUPPORTChemical Bank New Jersey E.R. Squibb

Merrill Lynch 'New Jersey National BankTHREE QUARTER k O O N SUPPORJAiheriesut CyanamidBrener Wallack 6C HillCommodities CorporationPrinceton University Press 'Smith Stratton Wise Heher at BrennanHALF MOON SUPPORTChurch at DwightDick Bakkei Inc. ' ,Walter B. Howe Inc.q u a r t e r MC>0N SUPPORT^whe at Peare 'MG Corroration qjm Henderson Inc. dillier Group d. Gross at Co.The Light Gallery Nassau Savings at Loan Revere Travel Stewardson Dougherty and Aunt Jenny

IN-KIND CONTRIBUTIONSAlchemist 6t Barrister

Bowhe at Peare Chambers'Walk Cafe Competitive iSports First Bwtist Church of Princeton Forest Jewelers Hamilton'JewelersH. Gross Be Co.HuIit’sShoesIntemaponal <Center, Princeton University

' Lan^u’s" ■ -Ji'- ■ ■ ' '. The Music Cellar at Titles‘Unlimited ' •

Nassa'ii Street Seafood . . - Princeton Fiqjess Center Princeton Re'tord Exchange Princetbh University Store Richard Auditorium, Princeton University

YM C A ‘YWCA

SNACKS AND BEVERAGES;I n a d d it io n to w a r m ,

non-alcoholic, beverages,’ snacks and finger foods contributed b y the. following P rii^ to n restaurants w ill be at the M s Council of Princeton:

. A bel Bagel; A|chcmist & ' Bar- - rister, American Diner; Annex Res- '

taurant; Th e Catering Company;C h a m b e r ’ s W a lk ; G o o d ' T im e \Charley’s; Hyatt-Regcncy, Prince­ton; Lahiere’s; M a riU ’s; Mexican Village; Princeton University Food Service; Rocky H ill Inn; R u ^ y S c u p p e r ; S c a n tic o n ; S q u ir e ’ s C h o ic e ^ T h o m a s Ea ts ; V a le n - tino’sA/esuvio’s; Wadsworth’s; T h e , •W hole Earth Center, Winberies ' -

STEERING COMMITTEEP a m e la 'H e rsh , ;Karen Jeziemv'Atme Brener KahnAnne Reeves 'Jake Schmierer , V, .CURTAIN CALLS *88 COMMITTEEJenny Allen Lois Altschu Mimi Ballard Christine Chang Gregor Clark,Angela Coin Charlie DillCecilia Hodges Drewry Lydia Frank ^Suzanne Gbldenson . ^Reb^ca Hersh AnnaRosaKohn Colleen Kraynack Robin Middleman Bob MooreReverend Michael Nabors Qloria Nouri Joanne Osborne AJisbnTolitzmer^ate Randall > .

. latbata Sigmund ' '*atty Sofronoff ill Vincent .isbeth Winbrsky

Paula Wristen

SPECIAL THANKSWilliam Majewski Rip PellatonP n n e e to n B o ro u gh Police P rin ce to n Fire D e p a rtm e n t P rin ce to n U n ive rs ity

T o ail'the performers who give so generously and imaginatively of their time, the Man in the Moon smiles down on you tonight!

or

' ' i

\ .

TIME OFF / December 28. 1988/ 17

1

If You Need to Know What Goes oti in the World of . . . .

Books . . . Movies . . . • •

. . . . Take TIME OFF To Read About It.

To receive a subscription o f T I M E O F F , the national award-winning arts and entertainment magazine of P rin ce to n P acket P ub lica tions, call Carol Axelrod for subscription information: 609-924-5412.

18 / December 28. 1988 / Til^p.OFf

r :^

Year for ArtNew gaUeiry Openings, world-class exhibits, new-foimd interest in m

photography’s ascent to the l e ^ o f fine ar^were among the strong points in f 9 8 8

B Y E s t e l l e S i n <x a i r b

%WA

E N T R i ^ L N e w Jersej^'s 1988 ait y e a r b r o u g h t c o n s o lid a t io n ' and upward pro­g r e s s . W h e r e n e w s p a c e s o p e n c (j , t h e ir presence dr their s p e c ia lty w as

needed. Some'seeming peaks of 1987 and 1986 ethnic for example , r - looked, a year later liktf~SWcTls in a steidily risjng landscape. I^otography completed its climb into Tide art; all but a few traditionalist galleries exhibited machine-made - images with single-example paintings, drawings and sculpture. 'F ig u ra t iv e -p a in t in g ’ s return brought new interest iii unjustly neglected aitistS and the fields in which they labored; there: in c lu d e landscape, still life and; etching.

In the midst o f the couch-potato sj'ndromc. museum attendance increased nationwide.

. Judging from Central N ew Jersey gallery offerings, a new confidence was emeiging; at

-tong lasti viewers could distinguish enrativity ftorn self-expression. ^

A n d f i li a 1 i y , N e w J c r s c y ’ sself-coiireiousness as a second banaiia had reasqn to diminish; Manhattan dealers’ visits

. increased as they found stock in their gal­leries. ;New Jersey artists exhibited far beyond,'as well as in, the city; New Jersey galleries took exhibitions out-of-town; our museums sent their shows and collections a-ttaveling across the country aind to Europe.

The photography y ^ b” “ 8ht us niodes drat ranged from t r^ t io n a l ip images ob­scured by painting. The excitement began early at the N ew Jersey State Museum, where an exhibition of work by Roy DieCaraVa, M ilt Hinton, Anthony Barboza s“»d Shawn W alker inaugurated Black History Month (TIM E OFF, Ian. 27). M r. DeCarava was the dean here: M r. Barboza and h lr. W alker’s teacher,

' he exhibited in Edward Stcichen’s his-, tory-making 19SS Family of Man at the Museum o f Modem Art.

A w ^ k later, TIM E OFF reported a Michael A . Smith large-format photography show at Bucks County Com munity College; it included a Princeton portfolio com­missioned by Princeton Gallery of Fine Art. "Photography is W O W ! A ll the rest is

craft,” M r. Smith said, and lyas right on both co un ts a b o u t b is p o e tic la n d s ca p e s , cityscapes and architectural geometry.

Princeton University’s Milberg Gallep: of Graphic A rt showed Enid Mark and Prince­ton’s Margaret Morgan Fisher in March; Ms. Mark turned some of her images into shad­owy evocations and used them in artist’s books. Mercer Medical Center surprised one visitor by showing a star photographer in the person of D r. Jay M ichaef Goodind, who held his own ih 'the company of Princeton photography professor Emmet Gowin and M r. Smith J T / M E OFF. Aug 31)

A new photography teaching center and gallery went in to , action in September as Neptune’s 'P h o to . W orkshop placed Kate Bader’s and W illiam Anderson’s color photos at Educational Testing Service. Ms. Bader woHcs worldwide for organizations such as National Geographic; M r. Anderson is a Westerner notable for his evocative use of light (TIM E OFF. Sept. 7); Th e State M u- K um showed us a New Jersey six-day pedestrian race recorded in circular images by Thomas Cam p Jr.

Images in which photography played sec­ond fiddle'to artistic process included Naoini Savage’s 16-imagc "Partial Portrait,’ ’ shown first at Princeton Gallery, and Harrison Bums! bright overpaintings of big portraits of Ava Gardner. New Brunswiek’s Rabbet G al­lery showed the Bums work in its opening

exhibition. vK en Kaplowitz’a precise and Japoniste

'flower studies'iliushate the excitement that attends local discovery of talent. M r. Kaplowitz heads the Photography Program at Trenton State College. A n early 198? show at A T & T Corporate lo c a t io n Center and solo exhibitions at Ellarslie. Mercer' Medical Center and Plainsboro Library w ill follow I988’s group.

Artist Marge M iccio’s Artifacts Gallery on Trenton’s South Broad Street came to TIME O F F ’s attentipn late. Opening in 1987, it had become a .cozy spot in which to find Trenton historical reminders •— porcelains to post cards — as well as paintings by Trenton’s legion o f talented artists.

At Rabbet Gallery, Dot Paolo and Dan Danzig teamed consulting and framing skills

at ^w re n cc villc ’s .Dumont-Lahdis. ,ln 1988 they added a gallery, strorig in'prints, mono­types, paiiitin^s; sculpture and ceramics by artists who are expert but not overexpored. Ceramist Toshiko Tamaezu and Leon Bibcl exhibiting as sculptor were'recently among them.

Bargeron Gallery in Washington Crossing and Alicia dc Neve’s Art by Design in Rocky Hill took art to towns whore it was needed Ms. de NeVe’s artists include painter Ken Mclhdoe and.ceramist Connie Bracci M cln- doe'. The astonishing sculpture by National Academy o f Design Associate Barbara Lekbferg is a recent addition and well worth knowing.

(Connnued On Next Page)

rx TIM'EOFF/ December 28. 1988 ' 19

The New School for M usic StudyA NOS rMrtri/f»r»v

1Start the New Year

right —

with piano lessons!

New beginners classes slnrt in January Call us-today: 609-921-2900 "

Dealers Iri:Picasso • Ghagafl • Miro • Dali Calder • Warhol • Appel • Erie

, McK^ight • Santiago • Pascin R:G , Gonmn • Dine • Riv^Stella • Rauschenberg

Paintings W tiercolors D npwings Prints Posters C ustom Fram ing , ,

6 North Unioh Street, Lambertville. NJ 08530

609- 397-8900

Great American Swing Bandfeaturing Walt Lcvinsky on darinet

and vocalist Lynn Roberts

Sat, Jan. 14 • 18 p.m .I’ricc.s; S.iO. S iS , S20. SIS

\.N|H(i.il lo iK fri for |U// afiuitiuulos - .in cM'inni: nl )<n‘Ui imsialKUi. Iim ami a 1 pica’ saline to the U lc llcmn tiooilman. the jtn’.iU’si vhn’iirciisi of all-limc

A upt-ciai bencftl cJinaTl c<*-.spqn,s»)if d tlii- N w Brun.sw'ick CuKuniTtli-nUT

and llu’ •''•n’itdj.PnHci’ds will hi'ni'fll ihcja/v. Hall of ran.H'. to lH-'con.slructrd in tlu' Ctillund (■.I’liitT in l ‘)K ‘).

t l u r g t « k i t h \ i w j i ir M 4<strrt a r d

( ult i 2(M Hi * Hi*l o r liili l r r «

I HtHi > 2 ‘ H>*l mtlHitU ol jn j i mlr 201

SrttiHf Mud* til KitUi lull pr*ir dfU-r I p ill on iLn ot prfNifnumr

M W NHI N'VM I It I I m H I I I I M l U I M

(Continued from Preceding Page) „

W hen L a m b c rtv ille ’s H ow ard Mann Art Center became Howard' Mann Gallery, it beneftted from a- proprietor who had been an an wholesaler for decades. Michel De­lacroix’s charming Vieux Paris prints were a rccent cxhibition sub-je««- ■:

Expansion’s apogee came late, with the long-awaited opening of the. A rt Museum o f Princeton U n i-

'versity’s first renovated galleries. .D i r e c t o r A l le n R b s e rib a u m 's

A in ^ c a n collection lookt^ newly splendid and sensible on'the new walls. T o the reiar, late-19th and eariy 20th-century French works from the Pearlman collection pulled out every stop except the Degas one. T w o Degas works are on loan to the Metropolitan retrospective.

A t the Newark Museum, the . completed South Education Build­ing added a M ini-Zoo and continued as home\ fp the Museum Shop. (M ain Building work proceeds on Khedule toward a fall Grand Re- opening). .

P rin ce to n A r t A s s o c ia tio n ’ s ’ m etam orphosis rendered twins:

Artworks/Trenton has spacious jgal- Icty space as well as accomodations for teaching: Artworks/Pnneefon continues in business behind' the Battle Monument.

* *1As- for styles and types of paint­

ing, tntem'ationtil M o r i n ’s hold oh our affections continued as Prince­ton Galleiy showed us Wemer Drewes. Henry Moore, graphics came to Rutgers' Jane Voorhccs Zinimerli Museum, which also rein­troduced Benjamin Benho, a painWr who presents all styles at the sanw time. In Lambertville, Artfull Eye reintroduced Albert Kotin of The Ten by mounting a retrospective of material from his estate.

B u t e a r l ie r p a r n t e r s in F rc n c h to w n G a l le r y 's Twen- tieth-Caituty Still Life were equally appealing, w e looked back to ca. 1830 wliffin the N ew Jersey State Museum showed us After Eden, which presented American land­scape from Asher Durand through M ^ ^ n Hartley. Lamiscfpes of the Delaware Valley divided its ca': 1830 to 1988 canvases between

, Ellarslie (the Trenton C ity Museum) and Artworks/Trenton (TIM E OFF. Nov. 2).

By sheer good luck or unseen planning between Directors Dale Roylance and B ill Dane^ John T a y ­lor, A r ^ ’ reajistic etchings of G o th ic su b je cts at F ire s to n e L ib r a r y 's M ilb e r g G a lle r y of Graphic Art was still on view when Jo s e p h P e n n e l l 's R o m a n t ic 20th-century etchings opened at the Newark Public Library. As a result, we had something of a two-artist overview of the best traditional 20th-century work in this medium and another reminder of the Newark Library's strong graphic arts collec­tion.

Although Squibb Gallery's de­cision to curtail its schedule de - prived us of a summer exhibition'.' its Mural Art in the New Deal Era (TIM E OFF. April 27) and a'fall exploration of scientific subject matter continued C u ra to r Lora

"Brothel &ene,^ 1988, watercolor by Emile Bemaril, was part of the exhibit ^ rd e lto a and Prostitution in Turn of. the Century. A rt at the Ziththerli Museum.

Jones' tradition of finding and showing the fresh and unexpected.

The sheen excellence of Roose­velt's art colony came into focus as Rider College Student Center G a l­lery showed Stefan Martin's engrav­ings followed by Jacob Landau's, drawings. (TIM E OFF. Oct. 26. N o v . I I ) . T h e n T I M E O F F celebrated Beraarda Bryson Shahn with a feature story'and a review of her retrospiective at the Trenton C ity Museum, Son Jonathan, mean­w h ile , wqs s h o w in g p o w e rfu l sculpture in A rtw orks/Trenton’ s F/gurarive Inquiry.

If this attention' to American artists sounds x e n o p h o b ic , it wasn't. The Zim m crli showed us Bordellos and Prostitution in Turn of the Century French A r t ! (T I M E p F F r A pril 20); Leonardo da Vin-'^ ci's inventions during the summer: and rehimed to Paris for The Nabis an(( the Parisian Avant-Garde. Ac­companying th is on e w a s a multi-national show of pre- and post-Gauguin views of Tahiti. Both of these arc still on view. The Nabis. especially, merits a loud "D o n 't miss it!"

Lambcrtville's Four Comers G a l-, lery offered Haitian art in July and the striking Navajo work by Justin Tso in early fall (TIM E O ^ , Sep. 28). A nd of course we had seen in March the impact of Swedish cul­ture in the Delaware Valley as only the State Museum could explain it. The Swedish royal couple’s celebra­tion of New Sweden's tcrscs-

quicentennial initiuded a visit to the exhibition.

If more evidence is needed that New Jersey art interest states and countries beyond its borders, the following up-to-the-minute tidbits may be adduced. ’The present Zim - merli shows w ill travel to Budapest, Amsterdam and elsewhere. Hughic Lee-Smith’s retrospective at the State M u K u m goes on to Ohio, where another L « -S m ith show is in progress.

Alex Cokos took part of his Lamberville Optique Galletyi to (Connecticut, figuratively spet^ing. by directing a show there of paint­ings by American Impressionist G uy A . W iggins. And thfs fall. Director Gary Snyde^ of Princeton' Gallery showed Ralph Rosenborg's work in Maidiatian:

Ion Lash: Subjcct/Objcct showi w o rk b y the Jo h n s o n A te lie r sculptor at Manhattan's Victoria Monroe; paintings from the State. Newark and Montclair museums arc the subject of American Paintings at Manhattan's IB M Gallery of Sci­ence and Art, and 21 paintings from the Pearlman long-term loan to the University Museum will return to Princeton from the Metropolitan when their current Manhattan as­signments conie to an end. B'cmarda Bryson paintings may be found any time at New York 's Midtown Gal­lery.

Sounds like a promising art New Year for Central New Jersey, doesn't It?

20 / DcccmtKr 28. 1988 , TIME D fF

ON VIEW

Fem Coppe^ge’t C&rutnuu oa the Canal at New Hope u one of 36 wotiu'by the Pem^Ivania School of Landscape Paintets being exhibited at the James A. Michener Arts Center, 138 Pine St., Doylestown. For fuither information:213-340-9800.

New Hope Painters Are Featured in Doylestown, Thirty-six works by tum-of-the-centuxy artists, including Edward W . Rcdfield, Dimiel Garber, Elm er Schofield and W illiam Liuhrop, known collectively as the Penn­sylvania School of Landscape Painters or N ew Hope Impressionists, w ill be on exhibit at the iam c s ^ . Michener Arts Center. 138 Pine St., DSjW stown, Pa. ,

O n e o f the p a in t in g s o n d is p la y , “ Christmas on Canal at New Hope,” by Cq^rpedge (1883-1951) depicts a Now Hope of long ago^ w h di the rural simplicity and natural beauty of the village a t t r a c t dozens of artists to Bucks County. Bom and educated, iri the midsyest, I% m Coppedge moved,,.t6.-LumberviIle <in 1920, where she established her own studio.

Exhibition hours are 10 a.m . to 4 p .m ., Monday through Friday; and, 11:30 a.m . to. 4:30 p.m . on Saturday and Sunday. Sug­gested donation is $3. For more information: 215-340-9800.

Local Artists Depict 'Bams and Bridges’

I V B a n » and Bridges" w ill be on view at the. Peddler’s Village Upstairs Gallery, Routes 2 0 2 and 263, Lahaska, Pa., from Jan. 7 through .28. The ejihibit of works b y 30' tnembeirs will include many scenes of farms, bridges and bams of Bucks County and other local sites.

Am ong the pieces selected for this show are„wotks by Chick Blumberg, Terry Davis, Susm Stoll, Bea Reid, Louise Peardon, Glenda tin g e Bye, Jeanne Callahan, Robert Mays, Miriam Warfield, Harriet Ermentrout, Steve Campbell, K ay Grever U ch ty , To n y Thom son, Kathy Herring, A rt Skwieizynski and Jo Ardizzi.

G alieiy bouts are 10 a.m . to 5:30 p .m ., Sunday through Thursday; 10 a.m. to 9 p.m . oh Friday; and 10 a.m . to 6' p .m . on S a t u r d a y . F o r m o r e i n f o r m a t io n : 215-794-8486.

Artworks Adds Classes In Princeton, Trenton

Artworks (formerly the Princeton Art A s ­sociation) has added new classes and varying class times to.its winter course offerings, in addition to more, than 32 courses regularly given. Classes start the; week o f Jan. 15 and most run - for six weeks at Artworks, 45 Stockton S t., Princeton and at 19 Everett A lley, Trenton. Daytime, after-work, week-

. end and evening clasps w ill be offered for young people and adults.

Among the after-work classes (5 p.m . to 6:30 p .m .) w ill be Basic Camera Use and Introduction to Drawing. A Saturday morn­ing art class in Trenton for youth, ages 11 to, 16, will be conducted by Rosemary Krell.

For more information: 609-921-9173 in Princeton and 609-394-9436 In Trenton.

Pietro Designs Offers Wotereblor Experiment

A class in Experimental Watercolor w ill be held on Thursday evenings beginning Jan. 19 at Pietro Designs,'Princeton Junction.

The class is deigned to help the student see and paint ina.m ore creative way. Artists looking to, break out of old patterns should find this class especially helpful. The course is a p p n ^ a tc for all levels frotn beginner to advanced; prior experience with watercolor is not re q u ir^ .

The "fee for the eight-week course is $95. T o re g is te r o r for* m o re in fo rm a tio n ; 609-799-3714.

A LC IU Plan* But Trip To Q 'K eeH e^^IbH ibn

The Artists' League o f Central New Jersey w ill sponsor a bus trip to view the Grargia O'Keeffe exhibit at the Metropolitan M u ­seum of A rt in New Y o rk C ity on Jan. 21.

The O ’Keeffe exhibit consistS^of more than 100 w o r k s in c lu d in g the re n o w n e d “ Jack-in-the-Pulpit No. I l l ” and many o f her citysci^)es and' abstradtions in pastel, oil and watercolor.

‘The price o f $25 ($30 for non-members) in c lu i^ the exhibit ticket and round-trip bus transportation from East Brunswick. For r e s e r v a t io n s o r m o r e i n f o r m a t io n ; 201-985-5839 evenings.

Robert Raphael Shows Landscape Paintings

A reception on Jan. 8 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m . w ill open an exhibition of “ L a n d s c a ^ and Flowers in Gouache by Robert Raphael" at the University League Gallery, 171 Broad- inead, Wncetori. 'T h c exhibit will run through Jan. 31.

M r. Raphael, a Princeton resident, re­ceived both B S and ^ A degrees from N ew York University and has been an art professor at Pace University in N ew York; M r. Raphael has had solo exhibitions at Pace College, the Belanthi Gallery in Rnxrklyn and the Stover M ill Gallery in Erwinna, Pa.

For more information: 609-452-3650;V ’ ^

Architecture Influences Hopewell Phctographer

Photogra{4ty by Laury A , Egan, a Hopewell p l^ g r a {4 ie r and graphic d ^ ig n e r,' w iu be on view at Tucker Anthony Inc!, I0Q| Nassau St., Princetori, from Jan. 3 through 30. A reception w ill be held on Jan. 8 ftom 3 p.m . to 6 p .m . V'• .The exhibit, entitled "Architectural State­ments," wulbfeature plwtographs taken in the New Orieans' French (Quarter, the M iam i deco district. Cape M a y’s Victorian section. New Yo rk’s W all Street and Lincoln Center, Nantucket and the Greek Islands, as well as soiiK portraits of musical personalities and o th ^ studies.

T h e exhibit .w ill be ppen between 9 a .m .' ami 5 p.m'., M onday th ro u ^ Friday. For more information: 609-466-0574.

Artist Uses Buttons, Beads and Embroidery

Working with vibrant acrylic paints, but­to n s , beads and e m b r o id e r y , A n d re a Soorikian creates surrealistic scenes. Her works will be on display at the Chauncey Gallery of E d p ^ o n a l Testing Service. Carter and Rosedale R oal, Lawrence, from Jan. 3 to 31.

O n view in the show will be “ Post-Mpdehi Romance,” a work with multiple images of cmiiples diutcihg, and other wprits from M s. Soenkian’s recent sotor exhibition at the W illiam Carlos W illiiuns Center for the Arts in R u th ^ o rd .

G a lle y hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m . daily.< Admission is free. For more information;

609-734-1909.

accents American: Handcraftaleading selection1 m 3.26 of handcrafted,

^ functional pottery

Accents & Images Wonderful Winter Sale Proudly Presents...

Bargains Cast in StonewareBeginning Monday, January 2nd, you will find an tnaedible array ol wooden items, Christmas ornaments, jewelry, lamps, glass and pottery all at a reduced price of 10% to 60% off.

Th e sale will mn through mid-February, but remember to shop early lor the best setectioni

Hours:'MorvThurs 10-6.

Fri 10-9Sat 106, Sun 1 2 6

Peddler's Village Route 2i53

(opposite Cock ‘N Bull Rest.) (215) 794-7660

< !^ ille r-T o p ia D e s ig n e rsD « ik t

S«cr*t*rt*>Dining. Tabl«<

& Ch«ir}Ch*st>

Gam e Tables Corner Cupboards Bookcases Lowboys Canterburies Huntboards Blanket Chests Display Cabinets Chests-on-chests

Mlirors Paintings Btonres Inksvcils Candlcsticki Mus< Boxes

Phonographs Bedwarnsers Coalhods Cloisonne Atmolres

Teapots

Tri<KopesSideboards

“Importing' Directly Tit You"A N T IQ U E S American, English, FrenchHalkacki Drop-.Lcaf Tables Beds, . rr .. Member of N e w England Appraisers AssociationIron Garden Furniture lO -sV C a U F.rst Sunday.

SHbWROOMS a RESTORATION SHOPS:

Thousands of items-one of the largest invcnioriei on the East Coast

41 East Anon AvenuoY a rd l^ ,6 A

2 1 5 4 1 0 6 1 1 4

Cruel Sell Guns

LValiung Canes Linen Presses

Nautical Items

Scientific Instruments ScalesFireplace' Equipment Lamps & Fixtures Clocks ol all kinds etc

Expert Metal Polishing, Lamp Repairing and Furniture Restoration ShopI I I Free: 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 2 2 - 4 6 4 ^ — .......... —

13 TrwUon Road HutmovOe, PA 215-7B7-6482

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Hampton House Road London. England

TIME OFF / Dcccmix-r 2R. 1D88 21

Y j ^ ’S END: jUKlklNG Over 1988

New Directions in DiningE m ergence of N ew Brunswick as a culinary host and openings along the D elaw are m ark the year

V.BY SUZAJ^E Ck?U3BNSON’ S I leaf through m y

clijK for 1988, s y m - \bolically putting m y n a p k in and p e n down after a year o f

eating out to write about it, I fin d the most memorable meals over the past, 12 months were enjoyed beyond the Princeton area. Here are my favorites, some of.the delicious dishes I ’ve enjoyed, and some o b -; s e rv a tio n s on th e local a n d not-so-local restaurant scene. (W h y doesn’t downtown Princeton have bdter restaurants? I'll leave that perennial question for ano th e r column.) V

• Hands dow n, niy vote for the best restaurant to open in. the last year gdes to ^ ^ H a m ilto n ’ s G r i l J in Lambertville. This small stylish res-. Uurant, patterned after a Meditcr- rean p r ill is run by Jim and Melissa Ham ijton. a fathcr-and-daughtef team. ■

H a m i l t o n 's G r i l l fe a tu re s sophisticated, yet npt-,^overly con­trived food, presented in a simple but Smashing setting. Th e tiny locale carved into two dining spaces offers a casual ambiance with b a t ­ing in front of the open grill or more formal seating in the second dining room, which features .a mirrored and freseped ceiling and one sensa­tional flower arrangement. T h e

m e n u is eclectic. P d ^ib ilitiev in­c l u d e : p iz z a s , w i t h p a n a c h e (shellfish and goat cheese toppings, fo r c x a 'm p le ) b a k y e d ^ in a wood-burning oven, seafood and fish grilled with fresh herbs; pastas with black squid ink and.delicatp salads, such as Melissa’s house salad with a pretty flovyer fillip.

Excellent desserts atiound; You won’t come away'hungry at Ham il-. ton’s G rill. The food is adven-' turesome;, but eiriiriently edible. The prices are moderate, and you can bring your own wine. Dinner oiily. Reservations arc essential., A lo n g the same lines. W ood-

row’s, which opeiicd just before the beginning o f 1988. has Consistently

presented a good sampling of the new American cuisine at fair prices. Th is js a much larger restaurant than Hamilton's p rill and is located in nearby Princeton Forrcstal Village where there’s Iqts o f free parking. The restaurant has a liqiior license, handsome bar plus tvro additional tiers; for ‘ 'serious” dining. T h e " decor Is minimalist.\ The food is attractiyely p r i n t e d on oversale white china. Pastas and salads excel here, u do homemade soups, the over-sized burgers and desserts,

.which are made with a homemade touch. Lunch and ditincr are served.

For Japanese cuisine, f rec­ommend the newest Shogun (there arc two others in Somerville and N ew Brunswick), .oh Route 27. in Ker4all Park. Th e first full-service Japanese , rutaurant to open" on ftinceton’s periphery. Shogun ofi fers sushi, sashimi.'hibachi tables, tatarni rooms, and so on. A very p re tty in t e r io r and a tte n tiv e

Kimona-clad .service add to the ambiaiKe. A full bar whips up Trader Vic-like cocktail concoc­tions and-oneis a good selection of beer, saki tiui wine. Lunch and diiiner is. available. Prices range from moderate to expensive.

U t e .l^ is h ly .redone' and recently reopened Logan’s Inn in N ew Hope

‘ is a favorite vantage pointed Watch, the world go by with a cool drink on a summer day. It is hoped that this landmark hotel, and incredible res­toration done td .it, w ill do New Hope proud in the years to edme.

'r M y favprite restaurant out this way is Ristorante Marcella, which was once a popular Lambertville eating place with a regular clientele. Marcella’s moved to bigger,', rhore attractive digs across from the M id­way Volunteer Fire C o . in Lahaska at. the beginning of ’88. Th is infor­mal family-owned and dperated res­taurant offers freshly prepared pasta — pasta mid more pasta in all its

&

The Bagelsmilh31 K lin SI.. Ikmintton tOl-782-4800. tin plK* in tlenmiiton w itfrt peopte imcL . ind n L Em M IX M kflil l> hmdicon sdwUons ctniend inwiul our om dUidws banl. oaM tn t D urty hoowniiie twps. Hson; CJSim-t OOpin BOpI VM. iW Uc«(U: Ho. C ra«t C«dt: No. W kM leb^ilcetuM t;'Y n. H« - S iii£«S K a« t;N oThe Bog ' ' .Cnnbuij GoiTClub. SouIMkM Bo»d. Wtit YTindia townsbip 609-799-0341 CooinitflUl euilino u n til in liw rt <A • wod-bumin| lii^ K t . Howi; Hon- d«-Ihund»». I t JO IJI1.-9J0 p.ro.; fn d it IM Situnloy. I t JO «m.-10 p.m. Sundoy, I I *.i»,-9 pm. Uwat Uc m m ; I n t n « tw d l; fcntnan Eiprtu. bbUtfCtni. Vim . in ilM a k Sc c w iHfc Yei I t $ewU*| StcUoft HoCharcuterie CafeMneilon SHoppini Ctniif. Horth Htmson SUtil, Pnnetton 609-6S^IS . f dtMlMfri M i l epMitnci toc both hinUi ind dInMr iM turint Uit fintsi tnd h t* » t food* iv ^ b U r • " --------t : Umch; T oe^S itw d ty tlJO *.m.-2J0 p.m. bM tV S ondiyniw jd it SJO pjB.-9-JO pm. fridiy i(id S » t ^ until lO-JO p jfc; Sundty firo irti 11:00 |J» .-2J0 pjn. Cloitd Ifa jliy s . m iitM i. U IH ( lic ttM ; Yn C r*« Catdi: Aim Hcm Expttts. Vim . HultiCaid.

Charley’s BrotherHoy. 6S4. H o M I 609-4G6-OtlO. Modmltly pnetd dininf. Btnoutl

laciU tiii w H iM i. fc tn ; lunch: Mondiy-fridiy. ll;M i.m.-2 p.m.; Dtnnw: Hwidty-Tliundiy. 5-JO-lO pm.; rrid iy ind Situnliy 5;30-ll p.m.; Sundiy 4:»-SJ0 PJB. m tor UettM : t t * . CrtdH.Cirdt: All m»io* M idi octipltd W htilchilr AcctnWi-. Yn. I t TowtH i StcOM; NoCharley^ UncleV iH iif Citmi hoppiniCcnlef. Rt. IS. Eist8nuisotcb 201-2S4-4226. Hodtultly piKid dinint in i nmloitable. Victoriin ilmotphctc. PmiU meitini looms aviiUbli. M tin : Lunch; Mondiy-Fiidiy. bt|innln| at lIJO a m. tNnnti. -Mon- dor-niondiy, 5-JO-IO pjn.; fiw ny and Salufdiy, i-.3 0 -lt,p.m.;Sunday 4J0-9 p m. U M t Uctaat; Yes, C ttM Carte All mi)w caids aoaplid .te w le h ik k c tw ilt. Y ii i t SmtUai SacttMfc Yes rChlarttl’sCemar d Whitlakar I Butty Streets, Iitnlon.-NJ. (609) 69S-00II. Casual itmosphtn, spacialulni in Italian, cutsina. Htuti; lunch; Mon.-Fn. I t JO am-2:20 pm. Dinner:Mon-Thun. S00pm-U;00pm.Fii t Sat. S;00-ll:30.ClosadSunday Udimt UcMM: Yts. Wbaalclii l f AcctrilM t. Yes. CraAl Carte All major Ho S a H ^ Twriaa No.Clancy's PlacePraictton Shoppint Cinlei. No Hamson Slitel Pnnceicn. HI 609-921-^ Sptcialuini in staahs, huittn. nbs and salads. For lunch and dinnei, Moun Itam-IOM Monday Ihiu Ihunday, llam-llpm Fnday and Saturday Casual almraditia- Ho betnsa. but patrons aia welcome to bnni their own No bonsmoluai section tnd there is wrtVEtldiiir Kcissitxlity

Clarion Hotel an d National Conference-Bucklnghams399 Monmouth St., East Windsor G09-44t-7000. BreaUast lunch, and dinnei served daily. Elt|anl contincrtal dining.in Buckingham's Restaurant Neun: Sun.-rhurs, SJO a.m.-IO p,«.. fr i. I Sal 6J0 a.m.-l0;30 p.m., Sunday Brunch lO-JO a.m.-2J0 p.m, Eany Birr) Special Sun.-Fil 4-6 p.m.'Uduopllcama; Yu. C r«n Carte All major crtdircaids acctpltd W htahM Accattibla: Yes. He SarnkMi toeSaa: No.

The Clay PotU5. Route I t Major Road, South Brunswick. 201-297-6678. Serving luncheon, cocktails. Flash stanod; uaKmHtd salad bar. Specialiiing In baihecucd baby bach ' libs. Casual atmosphtn. Im t: Mon<ia SaturdaT, 11 a n t - I O p.m4 Suiiday. , 3-9 pm. t l^ Ucaai a. Y ti CridH Carte AH ihayar urds a « t ^ . Wktalclialr kccu iM i. Y ti Sa Srwnkkai tacbear Ho ^

Dallas BBQRoutt Ont. LawnnctvUle. by tba mercer Mall. Authentic leus hickory pit baibeque rite bool, pork and chicken dishes, slowFy smoked 12 hours in a stone-lined oven f r iM atmospherF.in wild west sunoundings "The Finest cowboy mStaurant outside W lone SUf State" Chikhen's menu, Horwi; Open Monday - fitday Iram I I a,m.. Saturday ami Sunday from Noon

Emmett’s InnSpotiwoodtkavel IttI Rd.. Monrae two. (201) 521-9111. Otteing tl» t o l i i i SMieod t AmMieaa favorttu ol raorhrata prieas In a m la^g and chea^ atmospbaip la m Opan OWy 4:00 pm. - Oesad TutWwi. Ertaitiiimm^^^. t S a l ^ Ik a M Yes. CifdR Carte AH kbjoi. Wkakdahr AceatiMp Yes. la Saiii Sacaasfc Np

Foisgate Cbuntry ClubFcngata Drnt,' Jamesburt 201-S2I-0070. Specttliiing In M iona l AmetiMn

Greenstreets3JJ6 Ouakarbiidgt Road. Meftervillt. NJ. (603) B90-IS46 (10 minutes (mm, Piincelonl An intimala dining eipenence lutunngticeptional continental cuisine and ipecialtits including Boneless Breast of Duck tnd Broiled Rack ot lamb. Daily spaUals oUtitd In addition to regular menu. Sundty Family Dinner Special 2-5pm. UwKk Haart: Hon.-ril. 11:30-3. Sun 2-8 IHantf Hours; Hon.-Fii. S-iO, Sat. S -II. Sun. 2-8 Ukter Ucaatt: Yes Ho Smekini StcDcn: No Mwtlchair AccetalMp No.

Hyqtt Regency PrincetonCrjetal SarteatReuta 1 and Aloandcr Road. Pitneaton 609-987-1234. Enjpr Fine contempotiry Amiricaa cuislae in a ganitn latting. Tht beautilul Aliium, rctuinf piano musk and eroiidtttul dMng matas-th« Crystal Cardan Ilia perfact placalor breaklast. kmch and dfainar,' ReseivaM MUnUad. H ttrt: Biaaktast: 630-11-30 a.m. daily; Smdn Brwich; I t a.m.-3 p.m^ Uinch: 1130 pm.-2-30 pm. daily, ligM Fan Mam 330-1130 p.m.. daily Omnar 6-11 pm. daily, lln a r UcartH: m . C rafI Carte AB major w ds accaptad. Whi ik kth AcciiiM l i . Yts. Na Tadtkkn

; Mb.

r iih a ODunby'clob goU toursa lioin th i main dinin| tuom. • Moodayff*:^. 21=^ a.m,-Jpm. and 4-930 pm.; Sahmlay. 1130 a.m,-3 pjn. md S-IO-30 p te ; Sunday.' t l am.-230 pm. and $430 p .a U p tr Ucantt; Y ti CtadR Carte: Moat iMjot credit cards accepted. WknaWmlr AectnMK Yu Ik Smikhv SacMM: lb .

The Golden Pheosaiit InnR ivtf Road (R t 2) Erwinna Bucks County, Pa. 18920. 215-294-9595. Eietant'1857 tieldstone tnn situated between the Delaware Rhrei and Pennsylyjnia Canal. Three'ro|nanlic dininguopms. including a plant Filled greenlwus^. Masterful, classical French cuisine by chel-owitpr Micliehfaure. Dinnei Tues.-Sun. from 5.30 p.m. -

Good-Time Choriey’s40 Main St. (2m l north ol Ppictten). 603-924-7400. Hoderattly piked dining in a Victorian atmesphen. Uvt antartainment Banquil lacilitias. Naart: lunch

J o k e ’s Restaurant and LoungeRoub 130, Ytrdvite 609-S8I-3777. Fcatumii Irish duleod, siiNing steaks and M wdcM M b a steebns aattkig. Lunch and ihnnar dalFy. Happy liour daily 4-7 pm. wNh cemplmanlaiy b u fltl EntiitainnMnt nightly. Rastaunnt dosed Moiidfy. la in ; Umch: Tuuto-Satarday, 1130 pm.-2;3()pm4 Dinnar; Tuesday, tNednes- day and Thmdiy, 4 ^ 9 p.m.; Friday tnd Seturdn 430-10 pm^ Smidiy Bullet D iM 300 pm. Uiaer Uc m m Yu . CreM Carte AmcikenEipms. MasUr- Canl Vita. M ailckalr Item tM a: Yes. Spuklai Sacliaa; YU.

John Henry’s .;earner of Weshinitan tnd MPIn Streets, Trpnton, NJ. (609) 396-2326. Sptdalij- ing in 'Mteod. iH n : Hon.-T)iun. IlOO em-IOOO pm, Fri, & Sat 11:00 tes-llOO M.,Sunday’ 3.O0 pm-10.00 pm. CradR Carte Vist. MastaiCard, Arnaricaa Eapress. Whie ickilr Acc tttb b . No. M Smakhv SaeNaa: No. U p iv

■ ;YU. ■ I ' ,

MondayTriday. 1140-2:30; Dinner; Molula^Thulsday. $30-10; Fridty-Satuiday. $30-11; Sunday. 4:30-9:30 Utaar UcMna; Yes. CieM Cute- AH major u rd i acttoled Wkeadckalr I c tassIMm Yu In Stntelni Snetbm Yu

The GreenhouseAt Tilt Nasuu Inn. 609-921-7SOO Orettooking ptcluiesiiue Palmer Square, the bri|ht, airy Grttniwuse is IhiiKelwi's choree lor power breaklasts and informal lunchu tnd dinners. Chonst Irom a variety ol detkiMS soups. Mlads, und- wkhts. and hot entrees 7 days a wtek Haurs: BiuUasl. 7-1130 a.m. daily lunch, 1130 a.m.-230 pm. dtHy.-DuiMr. $:I0 p.m. daily. Special "Eariy Bud Dinnar''with all the trimmings For U.9S - Sun.-thuii. S-7 p m, and Fri. $-6 30 pmUqur Ucarua: Yes, Crete Carte All Major uids. Wbotkhair AccetsHte: Y u I t SamUii SacOat; Yu

Lahiere’s$ Withorspodn $tmot Princeton, 609-921-2798. Dim in tho heart ol Princeton in stetoFy, Ord-Engbsh suitoundingt Spedoliring in Fratich cuisipo and traditional labcbonp Choose fiom the Fbost edensivt vnne cettii in.the tree Icetuiihg over $00 moderetaly priced. Fine wines. Ibais; lunch: Mondey-Fridey 12-230 pm.; Seturday 12-2 pm.; Dinntr: HondayPriday $30-930 pm.. Satuiday $10 pm. Uriew UcewN: Yu. Crate Carte All majoi Mids accepted Wkeetckelr AetattMe: Yu I t Saitklai gacbeie No

Le Plumet Royalat the Pbocock Inn20 B a«^ lent Otaute 206), Princeton 609921-0050, loceted In tho hoait ot town, Prhweloo'i historic cmintiy inn ntfers superb French cuisino in tho erea's most giackus and ttogant-dining nom. Ofta seven days. Rtars.- Umch:kbndavPriday I2J»-^M ( ........................................................ ‘$30-1040 pm. and " liq a ir U c tM Yts. I

-V.V'-

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22 / Drxember 28. 1988 t TIME OFF

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glorious forms and with a splendid variety homemade sauces. A wine list features Italian and Cali­fornia vintages. Prices arc mod­erate. Open for lunch and dinner. Reservations rccomjrcndcd..

Th e best chiU ever, was enjoyed in N e w .Brunswick, which is the hotte^ spot in the area for new' n»taurants. This prize-winning dish was sampled at the unique O ld Bay restaum t on Church Street, th? « ^ y -in Nevy JerseyspMializing in Cajun cooking. O ld Bay is an attractive rctror>t o f a tum-of-the century bank building that'nuuu'ges to evoke New Orleans despite its northern. setting. T h e menu is authentic and jntcicstihg. But some of the dishes are more Sutxe^ful than others.t Memorable was the pecan.pic, creme d ’angc, grilled- Po’ Boy sandwiches and crab bisquci Prices are moderate to expensive., •

. A stone's throw from Old Bay,

*The best chili ever was

enjoyed in New

-Brunswick^ yhe.

prize-winning dish was

sampled at the unique

Old Bay restaurant

specializing iti Cajun

cooking and evoking

images of New Orleans’

on Dennis Street-ne^t to the Hyan Hotel, are two^cxcellcnt restaurants cnscounced in charming vintage buildings that somehow escaped the wrecker’s ball that swept through the area. The Frog and The Peach is the more upscale of the two, fcatur-

-. ’ing nouvellc cuisine. Tine w ln ^ arid all the trimmings.

Expensive, ^ n k y , fun qnd not e x p ^ iv e is J . August, just next d M r . 'A l ig h t -h e ^ ^ n »n u suits the architectural salvage that decorates the interior. I recommend a m u l of starters here. Th e crab fritters wei* d i v i n e , , th e . s m o k e d r ib s Tinger-licking good and the gin­ger-accented Japanese dumplings delicious. Th is is a'good place to take the whole family. Kids w ill like the bambtugers and freshly f r ie d .p o ta to c h ip s . T h e re arc

-healthy, upscale entrees siich as Dennis Street dinner salads and grilled fish for the -grow n-ups. W ees .ajte moderate, and -lhe resv

taurant is open for^unch, dinner and until the wee hours when the res­taurant turns into a disco.

There’s a host of other New Bm nsw ick, restaurants still to be sampled. Fontana’s for haut Italian; Hocky at the R o xy’s for old-time deli; Panico's, another .upscale Ital­ian; and othefr smaller p l^ e s that dot theside streets around the newly restored r State . Theatre, Geoigc Street Playhouse and Crossroads Theatre.,„O o se r to home,, the but-tasting and best value in c ^ y b i ^ dinners was had at the rtyatt Regency, Princctoi^. For S8.95 (the price has since gone tip) our dinner included

• soup: choice o f entree; fish, chicken 'o r b u f ; salad; great bread; sorbet

f o r d e s s e rt a n d e v e n c h o c ­olate-dipped strawberries with the Check. Drinks, which added con­siderably to the tab, were not in­cluded. Hours are 4 - 6 . p.rh.. Sunday tluough 'Thursday,, ' l -

A month in die American ^ c s t this sumrrier, eating every meal in a restaurant, led to some pleasant surprises for me. Here arc some trends and tastes that I ’d like to sec travel cast. Non-alcoholic drinks,- lemonade, ice tea, cokes, coffee: You pay for the firsu-refills ate on the house. Southwestern . cuisine features s o p ^ il lu ; which is a batter bread s m ^ warm wjth honey, and com dogs, which are-hot dogs in -crusty. C Q m b r ^ jackets. Homc- miadc style pizzas with fresh-tasting sauce ^ fresh veggie toppings were also interesting, Attractive, too,, was b w f that melts in your mouth, and die generally healthy bent o f all rutaurant food (ex­clusive of.the fast food chains): cole slaw without rhayonaise; homemade souj^; gar^n-frcsh salads (one es­tablishment even, had an enomous organic garden in its backyard sup­p l y i n g it k n d n e ig h b o r in g restaurants with greens).

\

:V

Loo's Castib 'Prinaton Meadon C«l*t. 6fi0 Pliinsbon Bold 609-799-1008. OinitiiIfl inti fBKtf)# Mif to . f awlaaw**

!t>t lunch lAiO ilm .'toth dtrs DM .t til an. BittUast; 6J0 t.n.-Ii;30 ajH4 Umeib UJO

nete

IleaMfc (to CfM« Cartfc We a cc^ aU major, cwlil caidJ WhaMebab ktanM a; Yev Ho S iie i^ SacOtO: No t

Marita’S Cantinal3iNiuaHSl..RiflCtton, 609-92r-7855 Mencan (ood am) dm li GnIW specials lodude fm h tealood daiir. Dall| lunch Buttet. Sunday hnmeh. Naan: Daily IUO-2 n.m^ Sunday. 11 a.m.-9 p.m. UqMr Ucana; Yei CredH Catilt: Ml maKu cardi.accetXed- Yftw Ichalt BccattMa; Yea Ra SnOlai Sactiaik Yn.

Tho Marriott,201 VaUie Bind.. P lfa c ^ ForreUal'' Viltaie. Princeton. 609-4S2-7900,.. n« n ta fi Sraaa Saa ^ The Sea GriO menu (eatuiet freih suM .'HuanM f. tha laitaiHtnt i t laitely multi-pwpoM and otien XiDCrican oritine. Duimi is InlofmaL Drew U 'usual tno baOiinf tu ttti thMs and-shsM leiiuiitd).(iete»YatioMaiaMttetted.SeniiiM[Bieail:...................aedL ( t o fcr busMest all day. BitaUasI ____a:m.-4J0 pjB.j Owner; 4;30 pan.-II.CO p.m. (Sunday Brunch i t licipKend at this time). UtMT UMHa; Yet. CrndN Canbr Alt majot cards. Whailchair Ito tU h te Yu Mi H ld iK SicMoik Yis,M iia Our ipedSy r^ w a rit in the hotel. lU s an authentic bp sb ilteM 'lenw h» lilenter) Teppan YaU O ie li iM prepatt taafood, < and heat at yuM bhb. b jn a ebssb lu a ^M e hM ttk ii. Dinnet; iM y i m.-tOtM pan, Monday thisuih Saturday. I clesad Suisday: Rtservationt S u m ^ . AtUra l i neal hut n o W . XeUri! UcMM: Vet. CiadR Card!: A n m ^ caidt.' INkatlduir A irem iM t: Yet.' Rt SlMklm S#65ot; Y t l '

McAteera1714 Eatton Aw,iSomertet. 201-469-2522. Ameriuntoioental cutiine in an

iin t aattm i tpecialirini in chateaubrbod, rack oliamh. loiittei and veal Mev: Mnic Ibr danchti in the to te Friday and Saturday ta ih bird

Weddingt, hat n tbyrn . butioeu functioni. Heart: Uooday-Thuttdty. I I JO aan.-10 paia^bnrby 5-11 JO p.ra.: Sunday t-9 pan. U |a tr Ucaim Yet friffITrti rilniiiOi Wliiilrkilitcc ittM e . Yet. I t {M k la i SacUta: No. iKMcvct. proprietor hat inibiied toteothre tir/tnoka lillration tyttem.

Old Europo Inn765 Famtaotlh Art., BordcntoMi (6091 298-4141 Bomintic Atmotphere dinini. ipeciiinB f in Hoajiriin, Rpoinian t Germin dishet. Veal Paprika. SloHed C ito te . iRbner Schoital S tuki t Seafood. DlMtER ONLY Retcrvalioot

incittdt HMner ,Sclinilrel, SauerOraten, Roast Duckiiog, Chops. Steaks. Seafood and much morel Voted Best Valued Restaurant & Best German Restaurant in Central New Jersey featured in NJ Monthly Magarine. 10% Senior CHimi Discount (dr lunch. Hoitrs: Lunch-Tues. -Sat. li;4S-3:30; Dinner: Tues.-Sat. 3:30-9:30; Siin. 1:00-930.'Credit Cards: Visa. MasterCard. W hwlchair Aecessibfa; No No SmoUng Section: No Uqadr Ucaasa; Yes

Olivo1253 Rhrer Rd, Washiniton C iottini, PA 189/7 (2151 321-9667 Fine lepm il nalian dinini aloog the Delanra Rivet Outdoor terrace dining in the ummei Howe: (Nnner WW.-Frt. 5J0-9J0 jua.; Sat 5JO-10p.m.i Sun. 500-9.00 p.ii BniachSaL8SMi.Noon-3JOp.m.| ----------- ------- ‘wint H tpU tt'C tW dH C arda ; HO. i A c c a iS b l* ; NO. Ni> SmcAInO

3 f ja 4 Sal 5J0-I0p.m.i Sun. 500-9.00 p.ip L k ^ U cw tS 0: NO. Plate bring your ovki i; NO. Checks art a ch ^e d .'W h to ch a lr Hdnd Swetton: NO. Reservations itc-

Opeii (or hrtaUasl lunch and dinner. Seilood rpeciatlies and continental entrees; uidimiled salad bar. live entertainment Tuesdiy-Siturday Irom 9 p.m. Momt: Hbnday-friday and Sunday. 630 a m -10 pm. Saturday. 7 am -10 p.m. Unior Ucaise; Yes. CradR Cards: All major cards accepted WbMichaIr Acerallda: yes. I« Smekieg Section: No.Scanticon' DVOU CARDENS.. Continental cuisine in the atmosphere ol a line Eumpein lestavrant Open seven days a week, luncheon features outstanding gourmet buffet a t «ell as an escitmg|nevi a b carle Menu — a favonic spot for tenets lonch served I l JOam-S.dO^ S ^a tlie s ol the house include Grilled Notviegian Satnen, a variety ol rimely Specials including Portuguese Cabman and Tomato Salad a t an appether. and Healthwatch Selectiont indodmg specblty tow fitrioN

i heel entrees. Dinner oHers aivdid-iriiuiing a b caib menu served 6-10(mm

cholesbrol heel entrees. Dinner oHers aivdid-irinning a b caib menu served im. fanwd Scantovian Sealood Bullet served Friday aid Saturday nights i-U pm. Entertahment Thursday through Saturday evenings.-,

I Bvfiet — all you can eat SIS.

Palaco of Asia2055 Nctttttgham Way, Hamitbn (609) 589:9062. Erotic Indian Coisha- Vegkatian

person (19.95 children

tlOO ajL-200 pjn. Irish pub aimospbeie leatnring five a ito tic Irish music ' i t n i^ Kitchen specblties include, soN shefl crahTfrish cbms. the I fish (meats. Ctosed Sundays U«Nr U cett*; Yet. CttdR Cards: All

Hfliado

Palmer’sAt lib Nissku Inn, Palmer Square, Princetm, 609-921-7500. Casually eiegint dining, in a charming colonial setting. We bring new flavOr tc dassk American cuisine with the fresibst sealood and meats grilled to perfection ori our open hearth. NoBrs: Mon.-Sat., 6-10 p.m. Sunday B tv to feature live music to accompany fresh fru it, eggs benedict, smoked whitefish and loa. mini-bagels and more i ram:our ill-you-can-eit buftetr N ^ . l l a.m.-3:30 pcm.'Dining and brunch reservatmis recommerided. U qiior U cM it*; Y e. CriMltl All major e tds. W h N lc Ii* A ^ c ^ b le : Y e. Mo SRiokhit SecUbii: Y ePJ.'s Pancake House154. Nassau S i, Wioccton, 609-924-1353. Featuring honwmada spoebtUes in a b tg i mamt Food h r the whob (am% at itfordahh prices. BmUest it served eR dm tag. N e n Hoodey-Thur^, 7 JO em.-ID p m Fridey 7 JO em.-midnighl SMerdey, 8 am.-midoigM: Sundq, 8 a.m.-10 pm. ( J ^ tto s c ; No. CredN Cetdt: Ho credit cards a c te ^ . Wheelchair Awessble; Yes le SiMklai StcOimNo.

Soggestid. N m 510 p.m. Tues.-Sun. Closed Monday. Ihpar Uceete: Yes C ro M C a ^ Viu, HastarCard. Ne SahUag Seethe: No.

Old Heidelberg2340 Hamilton Awniie, H am im Twp. (609) 587-9894. Easily accessible frdnl Route 195 S I2l95. Casual atmosphere with a ‘Touch of Old Eunm” . Modoately priced cootinerrtal cuisine. Banquet ta d lltie in iia b ie up to 250 offering fresh veal and pasta d isha . SpectiHies

Pofky’s Lounge/Hamllton Quarters812 Nooh 33. Henilloo Tap.. Nl 609-587-9295. Dining room servi dieair HoiL-ftL cocklaa to te . Ih i to MvM t<Mv Hi

I serving lunch end

ekW.

Yes. CredN n rds: Vise, American Eotets, I cte ttM i . Yet, Ne TmiMag StcOea; No.

Discover,1.00-93)0 pm. r, MasterCard.

Sandalwood Restaurant & LoungeAt the Remade bin, lU . Route I and Ridge Roed. South Bnffltwick. 609-452-2044 Also el Holidey Inn, Forsgite Drive and to e 31, UMioe Township, 609-655-47/6

day evenmgs:Sondn Brunch Bvfiet — i l l you can eat 116.95 per pers

under IQ. Served l0-J0aih-2Jp^ (eaturin| pteno entertainment.AN m ^ credit'cards tccwihd. CmnpIriMfitiiy valel perking. Whcctchaii

ecsets. Reseriritions recommended. - iiSweeney's Saloon668 & Broad a teems (ipm Api Ihr.) So Irenlon 609-393:j6689. Open Mon.-SatIlOO am.-200 pm. bish pub aim or....................................................every F it n i^ Kitchen specblties i fieshest fish (meets. “ " 'IQijCI f t r t tThreePalsC eeeerdli Skapplng Center, Creahury,i HJ, Prespect P la le t ( bmiib eni to n e f t Rd., i(609) 3950801 Americaa ChibM. Fli)i, CMcken, S|Mks, CMps. Iw k 7 d m I I am.-10 pm. Sandwfdm Served fit mIdnIjriM, EehrtaliiiiM Sat MQrt Emty Sbd Specieb 5SJ0 pm. I t o r Uoeaee; Y n C ia« C fdk M maim, p im d c to ( c ta it to Yet Ha SmSdi« Secaeife Ne.Tronsylvanfa Inn538 Adefine Si' TiWlon. 605393-6133. the only authentic Hunpibn, Roreinbn resUurant in the area. Serving dinner in in Euiopien eliposphere. Strolling vhfiirisb Fri. ( SeL'nighb. Owner only Mon.-Sat, Closed S m ^. Naan: 5 p,ih.

- U iM r Ucaine; Yes. CiadR C irdt; AN ruior cards arjeeptad. Reservations SocftsM.Yankee boodle Top RoomAt the Nassau Inn 6D9-921-7500. East, drink and socialize in the pub ftfflous lor Hs Norman Rockwell mural end historic collection of college memonbilia. New menu offers traditional British and Yankee favorites: Sheppard's Pie, fish & Chips, burgers, ribs, homemade chili. Large sem ions of imported and domestic beers. Hottrx: MotL-Ttan. and Sat, 11:39 UR.-19 |UR- FrI. a id Sun., 11:30 a jn .- l p jn . Rasanitioas racoRRaMM. liquor Ucaasa-. Yes. CreiNt Cards.- All major cards Whaaiclralr AccanWe-. Yes. No SmoMaf Sactioa; YesZ's Bor-A Rostaurqnt

419 Hudson Stiaal at Holt Street, Trenton, 6056957444. Ucetad in historic Chtmbanhort featwbii.briemitioAM cuitine meticuioosly piwbred by norid renowned chats end served In luxurious surroundings, Ertenshie wine

' l i l t iN n ; Sarehg kmch end dimer 7 days i weA U to Uennie: Yes. CredN Cmdw AMl MC, Ytst. Wheekhab: Yes. Ne'SeNkhi leethw: No. ResaMUens Sagfested.

-»ai

m

' 7;;:

TIME OFF. / December 28. 1988 / 23

II

R itxking Am ong O u m b trih u rg 'i f in a l

cS c lC ! Z ^ £ ^ O l t s d •

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Com er o f Fallon S Roebling Arenue Trenton, Nf (60$) 396-6t5$

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Rebecca’s Iprecastil Mate The Most Of'89You pei^xiol pco'iie is a de­tailed pdfsonoi.esnaivsis A 30 + txige look Qi vou ooieo- iiols aSo higNiQhis of uocoai- log itonsiis' mdicaiing you Dusdnoi hoi soots m. ttie yeoi oheod i

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I T A K E O U T i A V A IL A B L E

Sample the closest authentic. Japanese (Pod in Central New Jersey. M enu otters Sushi R Toriyaki dishes, plus rt.any unusual ones

from S6.95-$19.953376 SANDHILL RD. AND RT. 27

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AT THIS LOCATION HIBACHI DINING ROOM

E i ^ watching your chef prepare your meal Lunch from $4.96:

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RESERVE FOR YO U R HOLIDAY PARTIES NOW

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Valid Sun.-IhuiOne coupon pet party (XPIRES 12 30'88

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: A t the former location o f'T o sca ,’ new restaurantin W ashington Grossing, Pa., offers decidely upscale cuisine

B y F r a n H u l e t t e

E O R G E Barlow is a h ig h -p r o f i le res­taurateur. He greets guests at the door, guides them to their ,

tables, chats With theni about their nocals and other matters', and thatiks them for coniing as they leave.

He's trying so hard to make a go of things that you know hp's going to succeed with O live , his-; new restaurant in Washington Crossing, Pa, If you’ ve lived in the area a while, you might remember Olive as the former Fife and D rum Cafe then briefly as Tosca. if. you go bick evciir further, the building was once a hot dog stand, according to M r. Barlow, and has "s lo w ly gen- trifled itself.',’ ■

It certainly is upscale today. The interior could best be described as cozy-i(ophisticatcd: One room' is all glass, windows with lovely lace swags; the other has a nrcplacc, knotty pine paneling and sconces on the walls. 1 1 1 0 attention to detail is great, too: .White cloth-napkins are. rolled up on each plate and tied with a navy grosgrain ribbon. Little glass candle lamps adorn each table, and cut glass-type water and wine glasses add to this Victorian touch. When the meal is over, two wrapped amaictti cookies are served With the check.

A ll this charm is not without its cost. Seating only 40 (but in the: summer a tcnaceidoubles ca p ^ ity ) and without a waiting area, lounge or bar to visit while tables arc readied, O live is a tiny restaurant by roost standards, and it’s pricey. And M r. Barlow plays air traffic con­troller, moving parties in and out on a schedule, and he seems to handle his space limitations adeptly.

Some advice; Be sure to make 'a reservation when you plan to go to Olivp, and try to be prompt. M r. 9arlow blaims he turns ^way as many people as he serves on Satur­day nights.

Martha Blom is executive chef at Olive. Her credentials are as im­pressive as is the food she turns out. She worked at the Quilted Giraffe in New York, also the Frog and ihe Peach in New Brunswick, and wa.s sous chef at Roberta's 'in Princeton before if dosed.

She executes her dishes with panache — everything looks de­lightful. predisposing diners-to.en­joy before they even taste, A first-course salad of mixed greens (S3.95) was well peppered wiih radicchio Other leaf lettuces and

. some watercress, I believe, rounded if out. It was riot only delicious but healthful.

A house d re ssin g co m b in e d balsamic, vinegar., hazelnut, oil; white wine vinegar and extra virgin olive oil in a tangy mix. Crusty whole grain bread, not triadc on the premises, is patfrcled out two slices a person. Some other first-course offerings include sw eet-and-hot siiusagc on grillcd.polcnta''(thc Ital­ian eorribread) for $7.50. eggplant; caponata with g v iic crostini (S6.S0) a n d a m i x e d . g f i l i o f w i ld mushrooms with mint ($8.75).

There arc fiv^ pastas listed on the menu as half portions; all may be doubled and onlered as main courses. W e liked the lobster ravioli with Pernod shrimp-cream sauce

'($ 9 ;5 0 ); but U fo u ^t the lobster flavor could have l*en more promi- nenti Th e pasta, cooked al dchtcr se e m ^ more delicate ‘than, most comfneicial raviolis. .•

The credentials of: ■ . " I- ■ •

executive chef Martha

Blom are as impressive

as the food she

turns out, such as

grilled medallions of

pork with sauteed

red bell peppet,

fennel, roasted gaHicO n subsequent visits to O live , we

would be sure to try penne with chicken livers and pancetta ($7.50), or the wonderful-sounding com­bination of farfallc with piquant plum tomato, Sicilian olive and caper sauce ($8.25). Friends who had visited Olive raved about the grilled medallions of pork with sauteed red bell pepper, fennel, roasted garlic and balsamic vinegar ($16.95). They had good reason: Medallions of pork tenderloin were so flavorful and tender, with their pink centers, that they could have passed for filct. The meat could be ciit with a fork.

Gnllcd, marinated shrimp wiih

fre sh th y ir ic and h o t p e p p e r ($19.25) included five jumbos,that were perfectly cookqd, even moist; ransidering ttiey had been thrown

Ton a grill. T h e thyme was an interesting pairing with the shrimp.

On a recent visit, entrees were . s c ry ^ with crisp zucchini spears and new .potatoes, which-jseemed to have been ro a st^ then finished

.under the b r o ile r . , B o th w ere heibed. fresh and added lovely col­or to the plates. O live; also offers special entrees and weekly selec­tions of seafood. Other rcgulkr en­trees are sauteed scaMopinc of. veal with ihaisala sauce ($19.50); pan roasted filet of beef with chianti and pancetta ($ 1 8 .7 5 ); and braised breast o f chicken with mortadella and fresh mbzzarelia stuffing in sage wine sauce ($15.50).

In keeping with the Italian theme, O live olfers seasonal fruit ($3.95) and Cakes and tarts ($4.50) among its desserts. A large baked Rome ^ u t y apple had a pleasant nui . topping and w ^ served with heavy cream, poured on to taste by bur waiter different and fun, for »8 change of pace. The restaurant’s specialty dessert is tirami su, that Italian version of trifle (or perhaps the English Urc imitating the Ital­ians!). If you have never tried tirami su, Olive is the place to order this heavenly mix o f cake, mascaipone cheese, chocolate and a hint of liquor (rum or sherry perhaps?) This is a far cry from the cheesecakes'— no matter how good — on many local menus. D on't miss it.

Service is knowledgeable and amiable at O live. Th is adds to its ambiance as well.

O U V E

R ating:Type o f fo o d : regional Italian L iq u o r Ucetue: no, but patrons ake encouraged to bring their own. H o u ia : dinner is served W ednes- <. day through Sunday,. brunch is served Saturday and Sunday.C re d it cards: Mastercard and Visa accepted.L o c a t io n : 1253 River Road, Washington Crossing, Pa.

Access fo r handicapped: one step up into dining area.N o sm o kin g section: no, but

there are. ceiling fans. R e t e r v a t io i is : s t ro n g ly r e c ­ommended, esficcially on week­ends.T elep h o n e : 215-521-9667

24 / DcccnihctZS. 1988 TIME.QEF

V

A Topsy-Tutvy*1988 in CinemaNew movie offerings, more theaters and breaks with long^tstanding policies

highlight a year that saw heightened competition among cinem as^ing for viewers

A

A n o th er W om an, starring Mia Farrow (above), is among the lim its release, l^glish language filihs tfut the AMC Prince, began showing Christmas week­end as part of its new policy to show non-mainstream features. A major re­mit of the screen boom has been a shortage of movies — at least of movies that the chains think people want to §ee. Theaters have thus begun doubling up on popular fare like S c r o o g ^ or T h e N a ked G un.

BY Th o m a s S iM o t^ ,

T h e A M C P r in c e o n Christmas weekend began its n e w p o lic y o f s h o w in g hon-mainstieam films when it opeiwd Madame ^usatzka. Lair of the V^/fe Worm and Another

Woman. A ll are lim ite d -re le a se , E n g - lish-lan^age films. ,

Th e move ca{^)ed' a topsy-turvy year in local theiuen. General Cinema's Mercer M all 7 added four screens after being c lo s ^ three months for renovations. The Eric Garden and Erie Lawrenceville broke from a long­standing area policy of exclusive nins when

they began showing films in londem with other theaters, usually the United Artists nine-plex at MaiketFair. Ironically, U A does not own the Erics only because the Justice Depaitmriit thought a buyout would limit competition. -

The MarketFair theater itself found crime problems {sometimes accompanied its boom­ing business, especially on dollar days, a practice the t h e ^ drof^ied in November. The Prince its sister theater, tte A M C Q uaketbrid^, sought to-ieviye live show­manship with audience greeting programs in which managers offered door prizes before the slww.

A ll of those developments reflected the

intensity of movie competition in M ercer County, w h ic h .has’ seen' a' net gain o f 11 soeeris in 18 months (nine at MarketFair, four at Mercer M all and minus two at the Director's Chair in Hamilton).

A major result of-thc screen boom has been a shortage of movies — at least of rnovics that die chains think people want to sec. So the theaters have begun doubling up on popular fare like Semoged or The Naked Gun. both of which were playing last w c^k at four sites in TIM E OFF's listings,

A M G ’s decision to make an "art-house" of the Prince . is ra re ,. though Hot uh- precedented, for a major chain. The corpor­ation has done it for a few years at theaters in Hduston^'and Buffalo, N .Y . The im , said Prince manager Stcye Cluisto|K •. is to draw an older, more sophisticaii..i audience

. than the mall theaters.generally attract. His ! theater -,h ^ added new carpeting and aisle

lighting, is planning to re-cover the walls, and w ill have Dolby stereo m . a ll: three auditoriums by January. EvcnfuallyV the con­cession stand w ill add coffee, cappuccino and imported chocolates to the Uaditional offer­ings, he said.^ . \

One o f . the Prince’s Christmas films. Another Woman, was written and directed by W o o d y Allen. His films, until now, have always played at the Eric G ^ e i i iti dbwtt- towrt Princeton, w hrie O rion Pibtuies, per­ennially M r. A lle n ’s distributor, sought :thc university and in-town crowd. The next,few weeks w ill reveal whether that audiehce can be drawn to the Route 1; location in West Windsor. |

For the long-running art-house of the area, the Montgomery Center Theatre in Rocky H ill, the challenge by the Prince is the second from a major theater chain. United Artists announced upon opening the MarketFair in the summer o f 1987 it would dedicate two screens to foreign and offircat American fdms. But the policy soon was dropped; there have been oi\ly sporadic exceptions to main­stream fare.

Montgomery owner Bob Picchota says it. will be hard to get enough films for both his theater and the Prince A

’ ’W e ’re way down on the number of foreign films we show— I ’d say 75 percent less than in ptevipus years. They just aren’t importing many. It’s very costly to distribute a foreign film in the United States, t o tnakc the prints, to do the subtitling, to open in New Y ork, A n d theri if Vincent Canby says he doesn’t like U , you’re dead. '

” A l8o,ithite ’s no aftermarket in Video fpr rp)leign-laii|imge films, A big hit w ith a French soundtrack w iI I 'k II just a thousand Uipes nationwide. That’s a ll.’ ’

R rr most foreign films, few prints are available for theaters. Tam popp, a ‘Japanese epmedy, werit into American release - with only four prints, M r. Piechota said.

" F o r nine out of 10 foreign films, when one theater finishes with the {nrint on Th u rs ­day night, there's a m essenj^r waiting to air-freight it to the next city for showing on Friday. That's how tight things arc."

W ith the-offbeat American-faiei the. p r o ^ lem is not few prints but few titles, h e ^ d . Case in point: Madame Smisatzka opeikd Dec. 23 at both the Montgomery and tM Prince.

V m O P H Decend)er28, 1988 / 2S

M m ^ R B a e w s

ANOTHER WOMAN — Drama, Written and directed by (but not stfirrine') Woody A llen. Gena Rowland^ plays a college professor who undergoes self-discovery when she eaves£bps on the psyehjatric treatment of a (negnant woman (Mia Farrow). Rated PG.

BIG — very good — For 25 cents in a camiyal machine. Josh Baskin gt^s his fondest wish, the title wish of Uiis feel-great rrotnedy.

The idea of a kid, playing adult . may sound d r ^ l y familiar, but Big udees a cinematic cliche that has ofim ( ^ e d dead oii its feet and lesu^tates it with pure .oxygen. A deligiMfully positive ^ p t by Gary R ou and Anne Spielberg, crafty, direction by Penny Marshall and. a chamniing lead perfomiance by Tom Hanks ^ up to a movie nearly eveiyonc will love.. The movie walks on the aJge of sentiroenUdity, and its ending may not bear scnitiny, but the point is not so much gaining wisdom as holding on to innocence.. And the show-stoppers are heart-grabbers — for \example, when Josh and his boss (Rt^ert Loggia) dance' but "hisait and soul” , on gig^tic, light-up piano keys. With Qizabeth Peridns. Rated r a ftv a mild rex

:scene.\

Incredibly, these forces eventu­ally cause the mother to stand trial for the murder of heebaby. Director Fred Schepisi involv^ tire audience effectively with, glimpses ’of the

m ass hysteria an d . with haunting aerial shots 6f the desolate land where the killing occurred. But it is

> Ms. Streep’s staggeringly cpnvinc- ing performance that carries the film.

More than act, she becomes her . character — and conveys a painful

mix of emotions even in long shots. *^New Zealander Sam Neill ably

plays her supportive husband.^ While the rnpvie lays bare disturb­ing flaws in th e so c^ fabric, it alro provides inspiring mbde|s of en­durance in tire face of tragedy. It diould be near the top of every adult’s list of must-see films this season. Rated PG-13.

CmUJ’S'PiAY — Horror.A killer inhabits a doll and wreaks e v i l upo'n a m o th e r and; her 6-year-^ld son. With Catherine Hicks aiK{ Chris SariuidoA. Rated R.

CROSSING DELANCEY — very good — In its good-hearted humor and 'gently inflicted intelligence, this coinedy-roinaiKe feels like a European film. A i^ in its loving bemusement with euinic characters, it outcharms Moonstruck.

Amy Irving plays a New York bookstore manager' whose gr^d- motherv hires a marriage broket' on her bbhalf. The iriismatch that enstres — with a nice neighborhood pickle vc^or =- is all wrbng, ofcourse, Bu it prods the young womari to take a second look at herself, especially after another suitor — a fariious author who really excites her — proves far from - perfi^t.

With Peter Riegeit,> Reizl Bozyk and'Jeroen Krrmbe. Sensitively’ directed by Joan Micicitn Silver from a reript by Susan Sandler, who wrote the 1985 off-off-Broadway play. Rated PG for kiss-and-fadcout romance.

A CRY IN THE DARK — great — Meryl Streep, today’s greatest film actress, a r ^ another magnif­icent prtrformance to her cr^its. She plays the sturdy but inercasing- ly'^embittered victim of a real-life tragedy in Australia. The mother of an infant who was killed by a wild dog, hfer ordeal is prolonged by other packs of animals: incompetent, police, malicious gossipets and worst of all, marauding m ^ia.

DIE HARD —■ fair — Terrorists t ^ over a high-rise offure build- irig, arid Only Bruce Willis, Uie $5 million man,'can stop them. That’s the salary he was paid to try to hold a ratrishackle plot' together.

The producers, would have been bcttCT off spending their money to buy some more music (Beethoven’s *’(>de to Joy” replays distractingly) arid to-patch up a Swisi cliMse script, lire greatest tension comes from oMiuption in high pirees — elevalor shiifls, window ledges and the ro o f tb p — .show n in stomach-flipping 65mm. ,

But beyotid the action level, this vertical weston offers little. Rated

. R for abundant violence.

D IR T Y R O T T E N S C O U N ­DRELS — Comedy. Dueling, up- per-crtist con irien Michael Caine and Steve Martin try to outdo each other on the Riviera. Rated PG.

ERNEST SAVES CHRISTMAS— Cbtitedy. Santa 1$ retiring, and the leplacernent sleigh driver is walking catiutrophe Ernest P. Wor­rell (Jim Vaniey). Rated PG.

E V E R Y B O Di Y ’ S ALL-AMERICAN — very good — For Gavin Grey, life p ^ s in 1957 when he- Wins the Sugar Bowl and marries the Magnolia (^cen,

Not sutpii(singly, it’,s all downhill fiom there, as success etudes him ih his careet and his marriage. What is pleasantly surprisirig 'abouf this quarter-century love story is tbc richness of the lead ing per- formatrecs.

Dennis Quaid plays the perpetual jock, provoking mild revulsion when he triurnphs and strong sym­pathy when he fails. Jessica Lange turns in a grc,at performance as Babs, the beauty queen whore beauty never fa^ s but whore dreanu do. Xitnothy Hutton excels in a sui^xnting role as Gavin’s wofshipfiil nepirew who grows into a rival for Babs’ love.

Unfortunately, director Taylor Hackford (An O fficer and a Gentle­man)' tries to star in some scenes

X

East B r u n s w i c k l ^ ^ ^ i ^ ^ M ontgom eiyBRUNSWICK SQUARE CINEMA’(»)L238-2998) M O N TG O M ERY C E N T E R TH E A T R E Cincrnal: HeU IWser n , 2 , 4 , 6 v 8 , 10. (609-924-7444)Cinema U: Tequila Sunrise, 2,4:30,7:30,9:45; No Cinema |: Madame Sousalriw, Wed.-lTiur. 7:10,

2.-00 on Sunday.

East W in d so r

9:20.Women on the Verge of a Nervous BrridulOwri,

Wed.-Thur. 7:30, 9:30.

EAST WINDSOR CINEMA (609-448-1231)Cinema I: iScrooged, Wed.-Thuf. 2, 3:50, 5:40,

7:30, 9:20.Cinema U: The Naked Gun, Wed.-Thur. 2:15,4:10,

6, 7:45,’9:40,

Princeton!ERIC GARDEN (609-924-0263)

Cinema I: Twins, Wed.-Thur. 1, 7:15, 9:20. Cinetiia (I: The Naked Gun, Wed.-Thur; I, 7:30,

9:15.

HILLSBORO CINEMA (201-359-44^) Dirty Rotten Scoundreb, Wed.-Thur. 7:15, 9:30.

Somerset

Lawrence!pU C LAWRENCEVILLE (609-882-9494)

Cinema 1: Rain Man, Wed.-Thur. I, 7, 9:30. Cinema U: Scrooged, Wed.-Thur. 1, 7:15, 9:15.GENERAL CINEMA’S MERCER MALL 7

(609-452-2868)

RUTGERS CINEMA VK20U828-8787) Cipenui i: Wmkfaig GIri, 2, 4:40, 7:20, 9:30. Cinema U: Rain Man 1:50, 4:30, 7:io; 9:45. Cinema III: Twins, 1:40, 3:45,\ 5:45, 7:50, 10. Cinema IV: The Naked Gun, 2, 4, 6 ,8 . 10.

.Ciiwtna V: Scrodg^, 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:20. Cinema VI: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, 1:20, 3:25,

5:25, 7:35, 9:40.

Cinema I: The Naked Gun, 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:40, 9:45. ‘ ' W est W indso r

Cinema II: 1969, 7:30. 9:25.TheThin BlireLlne, 12:45,3:10,5:20,7:50. 10:10, Cinema 111: Who Framed Roger Rabbit, 1:45,

4:10. 'Die H ai^, 7, 9:50.Cinema IV: Ernest Saves Christmas, I. 3, 5 .' Cinema. V: C r o ^ g ' Delancey, 1:15, 3:15, 5:15.

7:20, 9:30.Cinema VI: Rig, 12:30, 2:50, 5:10.Cinema VII: Working Girt, 2. 4:45. 7:15., 10.AMC QUAKER b r id g e MALL THEATRES

'(609-799-9331)Cinema I: Twins, (on two screens) Wed.-Thur. 12,

2:15.4:30.7.10:15.Cinema II: Oliver and Company, Wed.-Thur.

12:15.2:30.4:45.6:45.8:15.Cinema 111: Tequila Sunrise, Wed.-Thur. 11:45,

4:15.7:15.9:55.Cinema IV: Twins, Wed.-Thur. I, 3:15. 5:30. 8.

10:15.

AMC PRINCETHEATRES (609-452-2278)Cinema I: Madame-Sommtzka, please call theater

for schedule. \Cinema II: Lair, bf the White Worm, please call

theater for schwlulc; • 'Cinema III: AriiRber W ennu, starts Fri. Please call

thrater for schedule. •UA Mo v ie s a t m a r k e t f a ir (609-520-8700)

ManvilleiMANVILLE CINEMA (201-526-6999)

Oliver and Com|Muiy, Wed.-Thur. 7. Everybody’s All American, 8:30.

Cinema I: Cocoon, The Return, Mon.-Thur. 12:30, 5:30.10:15.

'Cinema ili-’riie Land Before 'rime, Mon.-Thur. 1:20, 3:20. 5:20, 7:20.

Hellraiser II, Mon.-Thur. 12:45, 3. 5:15, 7:30. ; 9:45..Cinema III: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Mon.-Thur.

1. 3:10, 5:15; 7:30, 10.Cinema iV: Scrooged, Mon-Thur. 1, 3:15, 5:30.

7:45; 10.Cinema V; Rain Man, Mon.-Thur. I. 4. 7, 9:40. Cinema VI; A Cry In the Dark, Sun.-Thur. 3. 8. Cinema Vli: Scrooged^ see times above.Cinema ViU: Child’s Play, Mon.-Thur. I, 3:10,

5:20, 7:40,10:I0.Cinema IX: My S te p m o th e r is a n Alien,

Mon.-Thur. 12:45, 3:10, 5:40. 8. 10:20.

261 December 28. 1988 / HME OFF•Kn'% V

Packet: Channel 8j

T h e P M k irt Report: Princeton news, sports.and weather on the hour from.6 a.m .to noon and 6 p .m . to midnight.

Storer: Channel 81

FRIDAY, DEC. 305 p .m . — Little Dabblers. { .. <■5 d 0 p . m . ~ . Video U b ra ry .6 p.m, Th e Local Connection; Central New Jersey Local News

S h ow .:;--. ^ ■6 d 0 pim. Channel 8 Video Library. •7 p .m . — Your IRS at W oiki.7:30 p.m. — A Firm Foundation: Christian Businessmen's .Associa-

-:tl6n.;. • , ; : ■ . ;:8 p.m; — Channel 8 Sporu: Bwlcetball Replay - West W indsor vs.

Hopewell.'10 p.m. — The Local Connection: Central N ew Jersey L o ^ News

Show.

MONDAY, JAN. 2 ' .No cablecasting.

TUESDAY, JAN. 3 TI 5 p .m i — It’s Story tim e: ‘Native American.” .

5:30 p .m . — Video Library.6 p.m, — Sudzin C o u n ty Video.

, 6 :M p.m. — ' Medical Ccirtcr Report N o . 1.7 p .m . — Health arid Homo Report.7:30 p .m , — Channel 8 Special: to be announced.

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 45 p.m .— Adventure Pals., , ‘ ;5:30 p .m . — The. Joan Fontain Show i '6 p?.m .— N e w Jersey and Youi6:30 p .m . — Video Library . .7 .p .m . — Tender Loving Childcare.

:. 7;30 p .m .— Germany Today. ' ^8 p . m . A r t s W o rld ; ,8:30 p.m. — Common CbnccmS.9 p .m .-r -H e a lth and Fitness.

p.m. — New Age Foriim.

THURSDAY, JAN. 55 p.m. — Channel 8 V ideo Library.5;30 p.m. — Curtairt G o in g Up.6 p.m. — The Arts. '6:30 p.m. — 'Speaking o f Books.7 p.m.— You and Y o u r Health. '

. 7:30 p .m ; f - Rc<* Cross Films. V, '7:45 \p.m. — The r a m Report. v .8 p.m..— Psychology-in Action. .8:30 p .m . — Currents in Education.9 p.m. — You and Y o u r M oney.;9:30 p.m .— A Fihn Foundation.9:55 p.m. — Muddy Waters: soap opera.

C O M C A S T : C hannel 3.8;

M O N D A Y , J A N . 26:30 p.m, — Urgent Message from Baysidc.7 p.m ,— Tender Lovin g Childcare.

T U E S D A Y , J A N . 3 6:30 p.m. — Professor Lewis Gospel Hour.7:30 p.m. — Henry Porter and the Love Campaign.

W E D N ^ D A Y , J A N . 46 p.m. — Catholic Com er.6:30 p.m. — T E A M Churches Report.7 p .m . — New Jersey and You.7:30 p.m. — Mitchell's Comedy Cafe.

T H U R S D A Y , J A N . 56 p.m. — First Presbyterian O iurcli.7 p.m. — Calvary Presents.

himself.^using inconsistent techni- . q u e s , a n d ta c k s o n a n a U :

dietK»-pieasing‘ ending that.'gives false h ^ about a-deeply troubled

. mairiage. Still, this longitudinal study o f romance puts quite a few points'On the boanl. Rated R for iiuguage and relatively tame sex.

T H E L A I R O F T H E W H I T E , W O R M Comedy-horror. The

la te s t m in d -b e n d e r f r o m .. e v e r-o u tra g e o u s d ire c to r ' K e n

Russell (Salome's Last Dance). An ■ archaeologist digs up a mysterious

skiill. W ith Catherine Oxenberg arid . Sammi Davis. Based on. Bram ' Stoker’s novel. Rated R . ,

M A D A M E s b u S A T Z K A —Draiiia. Shirley MacLaine'plays a n - autocratic piano coach training her n e x t y o u n g v ir tu o s o ( N a v i n Chowdhty). W ith Peggy Ashcroft and Tw ig g y . Directed by John SchlesingCT (The Falcon and ihp. Snowman), w h o c o -w ro te the screeiiplay with Ruth PrawerJhab- vala (A Room With a View). Rated PG-13. .

M Y . S T E P M O T H E R I S A N A L I E N — r Comedy. A scientist (Dan Aykroyd) finds extraterrestrial life and marries her (K in ) Basinger). The idea doesn’t quite go over with'

, his teenage daughter. Directed by Richard Benjamin. Rated P G -13.

T H E N A K E D G U N very good — Dqh’t be'deceived by the staid, white-haired appearance o f Leslie Nielsen. He’s able to dance and

prance through any ambush. I f he could only remember to. set his parking b i^ c . <

It’s no wonder that as a Los Angeles police lieutenant he is able to turn the head of Priscilla Presley and foil thef plot of Ricardo talban. M r. Nielsen joins the ranks' of Don Adams and Peter Sellers in c re a tin g one o f t h e .s c r e e n ’ s .memorably comic law enforcers, a ro m bumbler who tnakes the Key­stone Kops look likea drill team.

The productlqn . trio o f Jerry ;^ c k c f, Jim A b i^ a m s and David

, Zuelwr (Airplane! and the T V scries Polices' Squhd! where v Nielsen’s character originated) score with hil­arity about once a minute. Tb e laughs: build into mini-vo|canoca^

' t ^ n startibver. ^ - , V ' _■ R itcdPO 'dM crtr^squc jokes.

O L I V E R & C O M P A N Y — very good — This Disney^ animation wins joyous attention instantly and holds it for its entire hour and IS minutes. In character variety and development, plot, music, visual style a ^ just plain fun, it is a super treat.

T t e plot is loosely inspired by Ouirles Dickens’ -0/iVer Twist. Th e

-m ovie biath simplifies the sfmiwling Dickens tale and adds contemporary twists as Oliver, an orphaned kitten,' is adopted by an uptown girl in a litnobsine, k id n a p p ^ by the b » l

guy and then rescued by scruffy canine friends in a c l im ^ ic chase through the subway.

Th e atmosphere o f contemporary New York C ity is wonderfully grit­ty ,L e ffe c tiv e ly c o u n te rin g the arkrrableness of the characters. B illy Joel, Bette M|d]er and Cheech Maritr, amng others, contribute vdkes, and tte songs ^ a l d e l l ^ t . Recommended for adults & well as children. Rated C ,

R A IN m a n ' - ' great — M uch will be said about Dustin Hoffman’s performance as an autistic savant, which is riothing short of the acting genius he displayed in Tootsie. ' .

His younger brother, well-played by T o m C ru iM , “ kidnaps” him for a cross-country jaiint during an inlmitance dispute. The growing relationship'between the characters is about air that happens, but thfit amounts to something considerable'.^

So the real star of this remarkable film is director' Barry Levinson (Dineir.Godd Morning Vietnam). H e uses M r'. H o ffrh a n ’ s p e r - forrruuice, which' might have made the centerpiece of a small film , as bedrock. Upon it; he builds castles.'■ B y knowing when to boldface a ^ c n c and when to play it lightly, when to say “ C u l” arid when to let things roll, M r, Levinson extracts from M r. (bruise the first teal acting the star has overdone. And he uses the camera .brilliantly to express moods and set rhythiys. Stay through the closing credits to sec ’ •Rain Man’s” snapshots.

Rated R for adult concerns.

S C R O O G E D — good.-r- B ill M ur­ray plays .the 1980s Ebenezer Scrooge, a T V network president and an often unpleasant character |n a rometitnes unpleasant comedy. But the movie docs offer laughs and touching moments.

The crass executive is planning the ultimate Quisfm as Eye special, a live Christmas Camli^ith M ary Lou Retton bouncing and T in y T im and Las Vegas shopgirls just bouncing.'Director RichW d'Donncr (Sufpchnaiij sets a ' zigzag course, weaving away from what the film docs best — shiup satire — , to Ghostbusteis special effects and ft’s a Wo/iderfui LiTc sentimentality.

Still, (Tharles Dickens would: probably give it at least one thumb up. W ith V Karen Allen, Robert Mitchum, Robert Forsythe and John G lo v e r.'' Rated P G rl3 .for langqggc and.

. sexual huinor.

T E Q U I L A S U N R IS E — p o o r — A premise lo lle d with potential — - two imperfect nasn love the same- beautiful woman — is ^ ^ e d in writer-director Robert Tow tie’s flat thriller.

A cop (Kurt R u ^ l l ) and a drug dealer (M el G ibson), who aie. for- iner higji schoolbuddics, share an interest in a restaurant^'owner (Michelle Pfeiffer). Some plot dc- vekpments are p rid ic t^ Ie to any-- one who has watched a television police showwhile others are totally

illogical.Meanwhile, lifeless dialogue saps

all die exdtement. Some conversa­tions go on so long,'you might wish for some pointless violence..

Th e d u w leaids are attractive but not admbable. Especially , disap­pointing is the woman, who proves a d o o v ^ . RauI Julia’s Zotba-like character Is the only one with any energy. Rated R for sex scenes and iebnive|y niild violence.

T H E T H I N B L U E L I N E — very . good — This innovative documen- .

tary pieora togctlwr Rashomdn like v e r s io n s o f a .19.76 D a l l a s cop-killing. In its fascination with

' what filrruiiaker Erro l'M orris calls “ the jigsaw puzzle o f details that

■can be assethblc^ in diverse ways to justify diverse cbnclusions;" the m o v ie , .a m o u n t s to an epistemologist’s: lab report. It also . tells a darned good murder mystery .

Th e movie assembles interviews, with a surimsing range o f partici-

. pants — including'the convicted, butl probably innocent, defendant,

R a n ^ l Admns; the man who m o s t' likely committecHhe’murder, career criminal David Harris; the trial judge; and several untrustworthy - witnesses.-These are mingled with surreally stylized re-enactments of the crime and flashes of newspaper reports ,^and actual sites. Around V three-quarters' o f the way dirough,

' the movie bogs dowri in detaji, but it recovers', f o r a ' fa s c in a tin g punchline.

Unrated, the movie is inoffensive but adult-level. , ,

T W IN S - r - fair — Anyone who has seen the ad knows the concept,' and sole jo k e , o f T w i n s . A r n o ld Schwarzcnegi^er and D anny DeVifo plaiy twin brothers. It’s no great su rp rise th a t the g e n e tic im ­probability pannotfrll an hour and 50 minutes.

T o do that, a few other things arc needed — plot,: characterization, etc, That’swhcrc producer-director

• Ivan Reitman (Ghostbusters) strug­gled. Tw ins loses p n ityw h cri the comedy dies at times to be a road picture, a thriljcr, a romance and • Annie. ’ .

Each star contributes humor, and . in a few scenes they prove enchant-,

ing together. But other moments falter, and taste is questionable from the premise on (the brothers resultdl from an experiment to. creatd a master race). , '

Rated p p but should be .ra -1 3 forTdnguage-artd sexy ^ r i e s . "

W H O I r A M E D R O G E R R A B -. B I T — good — Th is Disney e x - ' travaganza mixes animation and live action riK m successfully than any earlier attempt.

Roger RaMrit can ju m p 'in to ihc lap of a live a d o r like Bob Hoskins, shake him b y the lapels d r kick him convincingly in the pants, and the two really dd seem to be in the sanie world. Toontown, where the car- ,

-toon figures live , also houses Bugs ' Bunny, F ^ y Pig and almost every other a n im a t^ 1 ^ of h'istory.

TMEOFF/ December 28, 1988 / 27

T he movie, ^tarring Harrison Ford, Sigourney W eaver and Melanie Griffith, presents an.observant update on th6 status o f class structure in the office

her jangiy j e w e ^ ajrf s im peKabw wanbotw.

boyfrieml, the kind o f man Trend in bed, assumes she

[an' appearance in Traffic

Melanie Griffith, ttnter, is Teas McGill; Sigourney'Weaver u Katharine Pailcer; and Harrison Ford is Jack Trainer in Mike Nidiob’ cothedy<diama Working Giir/, a Twetttieth Century Fox release.

By T h o m a s Sim o n b t

E L A N IE G rifnUi is listed third in the credits for Working C/r/. but Ip iHc e x te n t th a t the c o m ­edy-drama 'offers cither'

.cdnaMy or drama, she provides it.f i l i n g the title role as Tess M c G ill, a

secretary .from . Staten. Island who craves ptOmotion to ejiccutivc status in a W all Street brokerage house, Ms. Griffith brings a strong blend o f sensually, smarts and likability to a part m a n y w o m e n w il l : id e n t ify w ith pleasurably. ■

Less interesting,: becati^ the script giyes

them so little and they return so little to it,/irc the movie's top dogs, Harrison Ford and Sigourney Weaver. .Mr. FOrd, playing Jack Traiiw r, an executive who forms;a secretive partnership in a deal with Tess, is B'rvcri almost no action and the. shallowest Of motivations. A n understated actor, he th riv e when pursuing large causes cooly pnd dis­playing twinkling' chann in the' midst of

"danger. W orking on a stock deal with a secretary, he has never been flatter.

Ms. Weaver, as. Te s s ^ fast-track boss, startf off great. She gives a lot’ of sin­cere-sounding talks about teamwork and. uses brockerage newspeak to praise a suggestion by the secreta^: .“ I like, it. contribu­

tion-wise." Everything she says in the begin­ning o f the movie has a tiny, perfect ring of friiuduleiice. That's riot easy — to act fake.

Later, however, her'character becomes a caricahm, a power-mad schemer who nukes

'.the ex^utive played by Faye Dunaway in Network look sensitive. It’s too much.

Fortunately, M s. GrifTith, the daughter of Tippi Hedren and a star o f Body Double and Sonwthing Wild, holds things together. H er corporate Cinderella is tired Of being chased around the desk, ,of fetching coffee and of having great ideM stolen from her;

" I ’m not going to spend the test o^ m y Hfc getting'nowhere following hilcs I didn't make u p ," she declares.

So she sheds borrows h e r Her Staten Is! who r e t ^ Moii is dressing for Court.

, Despite repetitive jokes about who is going to get the coffM , the movie presents an observant , update on the status o f class sUucture in the American office. T h e clerical help are treated-as wcond-class hurnan be­ings. Th e movie notices how all levels resist change and reinforce the system.

" V ^ o died and made you Grace K elly?” a friend demands when Tess starts "show ing airs." ■

Tess’s fight to break through class barricra , plays out against a simplistic story o f corpor­ate maneuvering and vvhat passes on W a ll , Street for romance. T o an extremely lo\ir-fizz love affair, the movie adds one funpy '80s touch: the leveraged buyout its. aphrodisiac. W hen Tess and Jack seal their corixsatc deal.' they get so excited that they literally can’t get into his apartment before tearing off each otliCT’s clothes. I

Director Mike Nichols provides a stunning, opening shot that circles the Statue o f Liberty

' before settling on thi; Staten Island Ferry.' His ending is cute and satisfying, culminating in aiwlher helicopter shot showing where 'fess has arrived.

* I ■ ■ ’ ■ . - . ■ i 'In between, though, there is a lot of slow

stuff that looks like outtakes from Ninie.to Five. Mr. Nichols, who proved a. comic innovator with The Gmluate two itoades

: ago; shtild be able to do better. It’s a good thing this movie had Melanie ;GrifTith work­ing for it.

The rating is a mild R for sexuaJ comedy. TTiCi movie was reviewed at General Cinerha's Mercer Mall 7.

Women on the Verge of a Nervous- X

A film th?it shifts into comedy and gradually builds to lunacy, as a circus of complications recall the frenzy oT a 1950s Arrjierican farce

By 'Thj^m as Sim o n b t

E P A knows, her lover. Ivan, is directing his. attentions elsewhere, ahd she wants to settle ^lis thihg. She wants to face him jh p e ^ n . not just hear his syrupy voice smooth as .Mrs. Butterworth's;— oh. her telephone answering :

machine.He is a professional movie soundtrack dubber. so he really

knows how to purr " I looovve y o u ," She is a T V actress herself, and one of her aissignments is to fill in dialogue in a scene he has already recorded. A h , that voice! She faints.

A t home, she nearly goes crazy. She sets her bed on fire. She throws the phone through, the w indow .JSbc.m ixcsla pitcher of gazpacho and poitrs in a bottle of sedative pills.

After a half-hour of that serious stuff, Spanish director Petto Almodovar’s Women of the. Verge of a Nervous Breakdown shifu into comedy and ^ r^ u a lly builds to lunacy. A ll of the above items — the bed, the phone, the mickied g a ^ h b and Ivan — become props in a circus of complications that recalls the frenzy of a. 1950s American farce.

N c * the end. converging in' the actress’s penthouse apartment are her lover’s sqn, the other woman, a terrorist victim, a couple of police olficcrs and telephone rbpainnani 'H ^teria ensues, happily gentler and more bemused t h ^ the Jerry Lewis and . Bob , HOpe comedies M r. A lm o d o v^,

.admirfes. V i . , ' . . ' i . . '• The film opened the N cw ..ybik Film Festival this fall and is considered representative o f the hew freedom and energy that are alive in post-Franco Spain.

The outspokenly homosexual M r. Almodovar creates strong and sensuous, if highly emotional, women. His . centerpiece, Pepa, is appealingly played by Carmen Maura, who never leaves a doubt that she w ill survive and thrive despite Ivan the terrible.

7 ' ’ tLast week I finally got him to admit he doesn’t love m e ," she tells a friend. " I t was like pulling teeth,"

The director also presents campy men, including a . bleach-blond taxi driver who runs a kind of 7-Eleveti in his cab. In the director’s depiction o f skirmishes between the sexes, there's little to be gained by either side. Biit he does admire ardent feelings.

-"Passion has its own irrational rules,” he has said, "and like indifference, it can drive people to subliihe or dangerous

positions. Society is, preoccupied with conirblling passion. because it’s a disequilibrium, but. for the individual it is undeniably the only motor t h r i v e s sense to life. ’ ’

Reveling in the incongruities o f passion, the movie offers plenty I'Of.laughs, though ,thc pacing could.be pjeked up in sOme places, and the filming-style could bc'less eclectic. In- some scenes,.the movie looks surrealiy avant-garde; in others, it has the ingenuous simplicity of The Gods Must Be Crazy; imd in still others, especially during a lame chase scene at the end. it looks like a student film.

Atnid the unevenness, some hilarious stuff happens. O n televisioni Pepa plays the mother of a criminal, and sometimes she carries the role over to commercials. In one, for O m o detergent, she hilariously derndnstrates how it can get the'blood out of his son’s garments before the cops arrive. Her tag line:“ Ecce O m o !” ' v

Most is Id least amusing, and ail o f it reflects a comic talent to be reckoned with seriously |n the future;

The rating is R but could be PG-13 for language. The movie was reviewed af the Montgomery Center Theatre, where it is behig shown in Spanish with subtitles.

..2 8 / .pccfmbeiM; 1988/. 1IM|OFF

January _S M f W

1989 F S 6 71 2 3 4 5

8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

February 1989S M T W T F S

1 2 3 4 5 '6 7 8 9 10 11

12 13 14 1516-17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28

Mu seu m s

C o rn e liu s L o w H o u e e /M Id U le s e x County M u M u n v 1 2 ^ Biver Road. Piscalaway, B i^ k ^ By tho Book; New Jersey Pattern-Book Architecture,

April 30, 2 0 1 -7 4 5 ^ 9 .

Jane Vooriwes Zbnm oii Art M n e t m ,deorge and Hamilton Streets.. New B ru n s w ic k , The Lure of Tahiti: (iaugtrin. His Predecessors and Fol­lowers, through Feb. 7, M l -932-7237.

Monmouth M utetan, Brookdale Com - ' munity C o lle g e cam pus, Lincroft,

Ho9days...Weather or Not, through Jan. 15, 20H747-2266.

. M o r r i l l M M usetm i, B k > ^ ^South MotmtsJn Avenues, Ktontddr,

V New Jwsey Walercolor Sodely SOth AnttNersaty ExhOMon, through Jan. 8; Art, fMlects Change: 20lh Century Landscapes; throtign Jan. 15; The Art of Adornment: Native American Art;

, throuj^ July 16:201-748-5556.

Monts Miseunv 6 Normandy Heights Road, Morristown. A Look Back: A' Cetebratidn of the Founding of the Museum, through D e c e m b e r;. The Dinosaur Portkrilo: Mixed Media Paint­ings ami Drawings by Philip Carlo Paratore, through Feb. V, Mother and Child: The Last Portfolio of Henry Moore. Jan. 2 -Feb. 26; New Jersey Artists Series: Sally Spofford, Jan. 7-Fel?; 26; 201-538-0454.

Museuh of Trades simI Crafts,Main Street and Green Village Road, M a d iso n , Personal Possessions, through May. 201-377-2982.

New Jersey State KMisetan, 205 W.State St., Trenton. Hughle Lee-Smith Retrospective, through Ja n . 2; New Jersey Crazy Quilts and Christmas on State Street, through Jari. 8\ Chair­man's Choice: A Miscellany of Amerfcm Paintings from the Forbes

ine Cotlecthn, through Ja n . 16; Ritual Masks: Entrartce to the

Spiritual World, t h r o u g h M a y ;’ 609-292-6308. »

Newarit Miisewn, 49 W a ^in g to n St.,I , Newark, Recait Acquisitions In the

D ecorative201-596-6550.

Arts,, o n g o i n g , .

Old Bsnacks Museum, Barrack Street. Trenton, M e ta l Style and Re^ora&jn Exhibit, th ro u g h D e ce m b e r 1990, 609-396-1776. ,

Submissions to all sections o f Time Off, in c lu d in g the Things To . Do calendar list­ings, must be received, two weeks (-14 days) b^ore the publication o f the appropriate issue. . Notices, may be sent in advance, , to be used in the appropriate week.

A ll submissions- must be typed attd double-spaced, and contain brief iiformation on the event — whne it is taking place, when, who is sponsoring it and whether d feedr^registratioh is required .

Submissions may be sent to Time Off, Box 350, Prince­ton,. N .j. 08542. I f you have o t h e r q u e s t i o n s , c a l l 609-924-32^, exit. 149.

G a ller i^

Paterson. Artists Invite Artists: An BdOiUlon of Painting, Sculpture and

Parformanca A r t ' through Jan. 6 ; Works by Contemporary Hispanic: Artists, t h r o u g h M a r c h ,3 1 . 201-8£^-3874.

. Allentown, Works by Marge Levine and Harmeke de Neve, through Dec. 3 l, 609-259^3234.

A itta c ts G a le ry , 1025 S. Broad St.,. Trenton,. Fesffvo yiesleryears, through

Jan. 14, 609-599-9(»1 . .

A rts .C o u n cl o f Princeton, t02 Withers­poon S L , Princeton, Annual Juried Hol­iday &K>w: Angels, through Dec. 30. 609-924-8777.

Artworks, 19 Everett Alley. Trenton, Rgurative Inquiry, through Jan. 27,

_ 609:394-9436.

A T & T C o tp o rM e EducaikMi Center O a ls ty , Carter Road, Hopewell, Col- ms <A the Spirit: Oils by Janet Purcell Piggott, t h r o u g h J a n . 11, 609-639-4655.

La m b e rtv llle , Alexander Calder: ■ Gouaches arrd Prints and S a t i r e by

Ernst Trova, th ro u g h D e c . 3 0 . 609-397-8900.

B e r g e r o n G a l le r y , 1087 G e n e ra l Greene Road. Washington Crossing, Pa., Italy 1^6-68: Paintings and Draw- itrgs by VHrcent Ceglla, through Dec. 30.215-493-1360.

B a rro n Arts C m ita r, 582 Rahway Ave.. W o o d b rid g e i Holiday Exhibition. through Jan. 15. 201-634-0413.

X taBookG aH ery, 19 W. MeN ew Hope, Pa., Hanneke

. Mechanic St., do Neve's

PeopledPaIntings, Etchings and Fiber Art, through Ja n . 3,-215-862-5110.

Pa te rso n M u s e u m , 2 M a rk e t S t.. Artful Pepoatt Galery, 9 N . Main St., AvantI Galeiles, 6 N. Union St.,'

Ctwiles A. Johanesen Scuk^ure Stu- dkj, Canal Road, Qrlggstown, Open House, J a n . 8 , 1 p .m -5 p .m . , 609-921-7161.

Cohfell G allery, 8'A C o rye ll. S t . , lamberlville, P co e d Sakson: Paintings of the Howell Living Farm and Richard Lenrrox: PeMngs ol the Delaware Riv­er Valley, t h ro u g h J a n . 8 , 609-397-0804. ■

Coeter’a G alery, 233 Raritan Ave., Highland Park, Mono-Transfers by Dorothy Yung, through J a n . 15. 201-247-2345.

Deyin OM arlet, Art Works Building. 12 * W . Mechmic St., New Hope. Pa., DIstppearbig Landscape by F/anMlnS.

]E( antier(Contitmed from Page 5) .

the lives iind songs of such black artists as M a Rainey, Bessie Smith, Ethel Waters, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington and Mahalia Jacksoin. It is more than a tour-de-force; it is a stujdng, emotional, inspirational look at the w o rld ." .

S O M E T H IN G ’S A F O O T : was a little • i ^ k i h g - ^ f f e r o f a show taken out o f the

eveiyday by some clever casting and creative­ly wacky peifpimances. A musical spoof o f tltt: Agatha Christie mystery genre, it had audiences at .Ofr-Broads|rect howling all

I rammer. ' ^F M N O T R A P P A P O R T : was Maureen

HefTbrhan's farewell present to the George 'Street Playhouse last spring. M s. Heffeman

' was passed oVer 'as 'the t l^ t (i| ’’s ,f i s t i c ' director, and she moved o h to othpir con­q u e r . H er final offering had a superb cast, ail Mtremely sensitive comic touch and the best set o f the year.

That is the T o p 10 — m y T o p 10, at least.A definitive list of all the fine work done in the area would have to include: //! This Fallen City at Trenton’s Passage Theatre; Shadow

. Box at Stale One Productions; The Robber Bridegroom at Bristol Riverside Theatre; Much Ado About Nothing, John B e K , tenbemier’s last directing project at the Levin before his death last summer. Room Service, also at the Levin; and Th e Foreigner at Princeton Rep Grm pany.

In any other year, any or all of these last-mentidped might have made the list. But 1988 was a banner year.

New Year’s—(Contined fiotr Page 11)

champagne toast at midnight; con: tincntal breakfast. O v e rn ig h t fxtticage includes party and over­night accomodations: at .$250 a couple. A la chric mehu in Sand- leWood restaurant. Reservations rriust be m ^ in person. Live b a ^ playing T o p 40.

Somcnct Marriott, l lO 'DavidsOn A v e ., Somerset, 201-560-0500. T h e King’s W harf. $269 a couple includes dinner; dancing to a live

' band; open bar from 8:30 p .in . to 1:30 a .m . ; 'p ^ y hats, and favors;

, v c h ^ p a g n e toast; overnight guest . ro d m ;^ ^ , breakfast buffet. <

j . B . ' W in j^ e , ' I Palmer Square, , Pnheeton, 609-92l'^700i Dinner

special for two: whole Maine stuffed lobster, two lb. live lobster s ^ « i with potatoes, vegetable and salad, served with two glasses champagne, chocolate mouse or che<»Make, and coffee. $59.95 a person. D ining room will be open until midnight; bar closes at 1:15a .m .'....... '

T h e WiflepccM, Main Street, K ing­ston, 609-921-6809, Special menu Including antipasti, z u { ^ and pasta. M a in course in clu d e s choice of broiled seafood, stuffed chicken, broiled veal, salad and Italian pastries. 6:30 p .m . and 9:30 p.m- seating. Reservations re q u ii^ .

nME o n I Dccemht 28.198S' »

Qalambo's, t h r o u g h J a n . 8 , 2 1 8 ^ -5 3 0 0 . '

OougiaM Coiaga U b m y, Rutgers Uni- vanity. New Brunswick, Photographic P o rtr^ by Mary Kom and Helen Slummer, t h r o u g h J a n . 2 8 , 201-932-7739. "

EaaVWaat OiMeiy, 41B Ferry St., New Hope,' Pa.,'Woodblock Prints by Hiroshige, Xhtough D e c e m b e r , 201-782-3«M .

Psf* thitMktg. * ****nlng Boulevard, Eaal WIndeor,' THCqunty Art Aaaodadon Annual Mambara’ Show, XHvoudh Jan. 11, - 609-448-1344.

EducaUonalTestktg Service, Rosedale Road, Lawrence. Teen >trts Touring Visual Art ExhibWon. through Jan. 3:

'. Fabric Art by Andtea Soonklan, Jan. 3-31; 609-921-9000.

F o u r S la te rs W in e r y , Route 519, B e lv id e re , Works by Madeleine laczhazy, t h r o u g h D e c e m b e r , 201-475-3671.

The CialBry of New Jersey Designer' CrsRsmen, 2S Livingstdn Ave., New

Brunswick, Craft Expectations, through Dec. 31. 201-246-4066. '

6 1 St. B e n u u d 's School, Mortimer < Gallery, Mendham Road, Gladstone, Pastel Demonstration and Slide Lec­ture, Jan. 8 ,2 :3 0 p.m.-3:30 p.m.; free; Emanuel Haller Predilections. Jan. frFeb. 1: 201-234-2345.

,(koup, Alexander Road, Prince­ton, flef/ecllons o n Technology. thfoughJan. 9,609-921-1142.

Howard Mann Art Center, 4^ N. Main St.. Lambertville. Uthographs by R.C. Gorman, t h r o u g h J a n . 8 , 609-397-2300. .

. Hunterdon Art Center, 7 Center St., Clinton. Oreamscapes: The Patterned Imagery of Quilts, through Jan. 22. 2 q i-735-8415

Hunterdon County LOrrary, Route i2. Flemington. Photography Exhibit and Local Bams by Mary Lou KorXuch through December. 201 788-'444 >

Jam es A . M c h e n e r A rts Center, i38Pine St,. Doyiestown. 20rh Century Arrierican Ad, through August 13 215340-9806.'

Jentra Art Gafeery, Rciute 33 and Mill- hurst Road, Freehold. Holiday Gilt PreHew and Works Dennis McNeill. through Decem ber;' Landsdapes b y Voland Hazzeto a nd Hand,-Blown Sculptural Glass by CUM Goodman, Jan. 131-.201-431-08M .

Jotmaon & Joimaon World Head­quarters, New Brunswick, Teen Arts VIxjal Touring Exhibition. Jail. 6 -3 i. 201-745-3898. x

J m Kreves, 15 Race Sl.t Frenchtown. Rude Awakmng, Jan. 7-Frtr. 12. 201-996^2136.

Larsen Diiman Galefy, 12 W . Mech- aide St., New Hope, Pa., Tls the Season Holiday txMbWon. through Jan. 2, 215-862-9308.

Logan km, Hope, Pa., Pastel Land- scapes fry Barbara Postel, through Jan. IS , 215-862-9308. . .

I Canter at Princeton, Withers­poon StreeL Princettm, Painters Sup­port Group Art Show, through Dec. 30. 609-921-7700.

Center, 446 Bellevue Ave., Trenton. Health Care Workers As Artists, through Jan. 27,609-394-4096.

79 Bayard Lane. Princeton.

The Art of Sandra Ooldberp, BMty Reeves Klank and Gail TrapneO Rob­ertson, t h r o u g h M a r c h 1 0 ,

, 609-921-770Q. '

O detia’a, S . River Hoad, N ew Hope, Pa., Pati^r^ by J o s ^ Halbherr, th ro u ^ December, 215-862-2432.

Paletta Pteoa A rt C a le fy , 7 8 l Hamilton S t . Somerset, Palntfn^ and lllustra-

' dons by Honnl Bosaman, through Jan. SO-, M kt Retrospect '88: QsJlety ArtErts. Jan. 5-27; 201-5453833. .

' ' ■ \Princeton UnivarsiW . Firestone Library,

MIberg Gallery, Princeton, Creative Papermaking, th ro u g h J a n u a r y . 609-452-3181.

Printanaidng C o iin d l of N .J ., Ralph T . Reeve Cultural Center, Station and Rhrer Roads, North Branch' Station, Collective Portfolio II: Prints and Photos, Jan. 7-Feb. 10.201-725-2110.

Rkikf C o ie g e , Studegl Center Art G a l- '' lery, 2083 Lawrenceville Road, Law- rericevlllo, Student Photo Corhpetitlon, Jan. 2-31, 609-896-5192.

Robeson C e n te r Q a le ry , Rutgers Uni­versity, 350 Dr, Marlin Luther King Jr.> B o u le v a r d , N e w a r k , Personal Mythologies, t h ro u g h F e b . 2 4 , 201-648-5970.

, . • ■ ■ \ R o s s i G a l le r y , 2 8 5 .S. M a in S t ,,

Lambertville, Jack Markow's Art ol the through Dec. 30. 609-397-1599.

S qu lib . G a ie ty , Route 206, Lawrence, American Classics: Hooked Rugs Mom

the Barbara Johrrson Collection, through Jan. 29 .609321-4000.

Sbiart C o im tiy D a y SchdoL Norbert Considine Galldry, Stuart Road, Prince­ton, Cbmpufor 6rap/iA» b y fluane Mr//- er and Frank Rivera, through Jan. 6.' 609-921-2330. V ■

Tucker.A nthoiiy ittc., too Nassau St., Princeton, Phoic^raphy by Laury A. Egan. Jan. 3 -30 , 609-4663574,

\University Le ague G a le iy , 17i Broad-

mead. Princeton. Landscapes and Flowers in G'ovachie by Robert Raphael. Jan. 8 -3 i . 509-452-3650.

Upstairs GaHery, Peddler's Village, Lahaska. Pa.. Oils by Elizabeth Rug- gles, through Jan. 6; Bams and

■ BrU^s, Jan. 7-28, 215-794-8486.

Washington C ro sskig K sto ric^ Park,Memorial Building, Route-32. Washing­ton Crossing, Pa;, Three Centuries of Acfiidyemenl: The Ads, Humanities and Sciences of Penns^ania, through Fob. 5. 215-493-4076.

s t « y n s s K )N S

Hunterdon A rt C enter /U m u li M b m - bera S how , Hunterdon Art Center. ?

. Center S t , CUnton,' entry deadline Jan. 6 , 2 9 1 -7 3 ^ 1 5 .

T A W A a t a e r a le , open to trienibers of the Treriton A r t i ^ Workshop Associa­t io n ,g e n try d e a d lin e F e b . 2 8 . 609-6953796 or 609-392-4561.

T W 8

M etropolian M useum Of A lt : Georgia O X e e ffa ExMbN, sponsored by the Artists' Leagrje of Centrat N ew Jersey. Jan. 21, 201-985-5839 evenings.

MetropoMan RAiaeuin bf A lt : G eorgia O X e e fta E x N b iL sponsored by the Moritgomery RecreaUorr and Jointure

■for Community Adult Education,- Jan. 28. 7 3 0 a.rn.-5 p.m.. 201-359-8529.

Nidional G a le ry of Art. W a s h i n g D .C .: Japa n — Th e Shaping of Dafcnyb. CultUro, sponsored by the Waldorf School of Princeton. Jan. 11, 7:45 a.m., 609-466-2247.

AUDITIONS •-------------- / - m r -

./•

f;

r f‘ •"* - -

1 / L- 4 - \

■ u :. c

Araenle aiMf C M Lace, Sornersel Valley R a y h o w , Route 514 (AmweU Road). Neshartic, Hidsboroogh, Ja n . 3-4, 8 p.m., 201-756-0539 or 201-369-7489.

D a n c e

B o m (>o ae -C yed Dance Concert forA l Agee, Gerenser Theater, Stockton and B r id ^ Streets, New Hope, Pa., Dec. 31. 8 p.m., 215-8823707.

\ ■ . .Israel Fol(danck)g , . spon»>red by the

Princeton t^aeli Folk Darice Group at* The Jewish Center, 457 Nassau St., Princeton; Mondays, 7:30 p.m.-10:30.

I .p.m., 609395-9660.

M e s^je re d e rs S t ^ r e D ance Club,Dutch Neck School, W . Village Road. West Windsor, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.-IO p.m., 609-448-4647.

M ezowsze, the Natlbnal D a n ce C o n v peny of Poland, Stale Theater, 19 Livingston Ave.,. New Brunswick. Jan.

. 6. 8 p.m.. 201-246^7469 or ton-free outside 201 area 800-525-7469.

Prirreeton Pole Oatwe G ro u p , River- side School, Riverside Drive, Prince­ton. T u e s d a y s ; in s iru c lio n 7 :3 0 p.m.-8:30 pi.m., request dancing. 8:30 p.m,-10 p.m . 609-683-9071

L e c t u r e

Pastel Demonstration and Side Lec­ture, Q lll/S t. B e rn a rd 's S c h o o l; Mortimer Galleiy,' Merxiham Road, Gladstone, Jan. 6 ,2 :30 p.m.-3:30 p.ni., 201-234-2345, free.

, fWM Aptrirale,' New Je rs m State M u­

seum, 205 W . Slate S L. .Trenton, Van. 8 .2 p.nj.; 609-2923464.

Mis c e l l a n y

p.m., 609324-8777.

Archaeoibgical Sbciety M atting, Morris M M eum , 6 Normandy Heights Road, Monistown, Jan. 3, 7 3 0 p.m„ 201-5383454, free.

Chrietmaa ExNbH of Haiidmade Oma-manta. B ow m an's H iirw ild flo w e r P re se rve , R oute 3 2 , W a sh in gto n Crossing, Pa., through December, 215-862-2924.

CuitNn C rib 1988: t^roMng Ntm , Year*e Eve Celebration, sponsored .

by the Arts C o u ro l of Princeton, 102 WHherspoon S i , Princeton, Dec. 31, 6 0 9 -9 2 «7 7 7 .

Gardwi ^a la Outdoor Sportsmen'a Show! Rutgers University Gym arid

■> Annex, Coltoge Avenue, New Bnins- wick, Jan. 6 ,1 p .m .-93 0 p.m., Jan. 7,

. 10 & m .'9 3 0 p.m. arid Ja n . 8 ,1 0 a.m.-6 p.m.. 201-968-3070.

Gingerbread House Conmetition, Ped­dler’s Village. Routes 202 and 263, L a h a s k a , P a ., th ro u g h D e c . 31, 215-794-7438.

SU Trip to Mt. Ascutney, VermonLsponsored by Class A . Travel, Jan. 27-29.609-497-0011 Or 800325-2772.

Stanw, Postewd and Basebal Card CoMctore Open House,. Aallstarpps. 38 N. Main St., MiiKpwn, JOn. 8 and 22,. 10 a.m.-4 p .rrrr:W -2 4 7 -1 0 9 3 .

Television Stodk) AuderKe Needed,write: .Common Concerns, P.O. Box 55597, Trenton. N.J. 08638 or call:

. 609-8833537.

btg, home of Otga Qorelli, Scotch R o a d , P e n n in g t o n ., J a n 6 , 0 )9392-1235,

S w e e t A d e lin e s >8ing* *»^long, Peoplecare Center, Findeme Avmiue, Bridgewater, Tuesdays, 7:15 p.m., 20t-874-3079.^

Vince Gioidanb and the New OflM raMghthawka, sponsored by the New Jersey Jazz Society at the Watchung View Inn, Phickemin, Doc. 3 1 ,9 p.m., 609-921-3119, advance reservations reqttired. '

TRH»8

Newark Symphony HMI: Mozart's "The Magie Fktte," departing the Princeton Shopping Center, N- Har­rison Streei Prkiceton, Jan. 2, 4 3 0 p.m,, 609-737-9039 or 609-921-2890,

OIMPETfTIONS

LMngston Symphony Orchestra Coiv certo Compentton ror Pianists, ages

\14-20,- application ..deedlfne Jarr. 3,^201-635-2345.

Music Competitions: N .J. Kgh School Voice; Graduate Vd^'HM .^School and &aduato Pbno, 1 ^ School and Graduate Organ and High School .Competition, sponsored by Westminster Choir College, Hamilton^ Avenue and Walnut Lane, Princeton,

' a p p l ic a t io n d e a d l i n e J a n . 6 . 609-921-7100, ext. 308. .

Night Spots

A Woman's Place: Book Discuation,Arts Council, of Princeton. 102 Withers­poon SI., Princeton. Jan. 3, 8 p.m .-IO

Hungm ian Brass of B udapesL State Theatre, 19 Livingston Avo„ New B r u n s w ic k , J a n . 8 . 3 p .m . . 800-525-SHOW.

'M o z a r t 's " T h e M a g ic F lu t e " b y -

Opera/Music Theaue institute ol New Jersey drid Montdair State College al Newam - Symphony Hall, 1020 ^ o a d St., N e w m ^ Dec. 31 and Jan. 2, 6 p,m„ 201-5963087 or 201-643-8009.

New Jersey SyrnphOny Orchestra and Viplniat aM m o Mntz, W ar Memorial Tlieatre, Lafayette atxi \Mllow Streets, Trenton, !Jan. 7, 8 p.m .; Symphony Half, 1020 Broad SL, Newark, Jan. 8 ,3 p.m.; ^1 -8 2 4 -8 2 0 3 or 800-ALLEG R O. i

■ • ■ VNew York Cham ber Sym phony:' Babh’a Com plate"Braiul6nburg

C onoM ," McCarter T tm tre , 91. UnP versify Race, Princeton, Dec.. 80, 8 p.m', 6093833000.

Orgwi SkiikAtonBA through Jan. 1, 1 30 p.m.; 2 3 0 p.m „ 3 3 0 p.m. and 4 3 0 p.m.; OrganM Richard Van Auken, Jan. 8, 2 3 0 'p.m.; Longwood G a rd e n s , K e n n e lt S q u a re , P a ., 2153883741.

Ooianiat RoBn Smith, Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, 801 W . State St., Trenton, Jan. 8 ,3 3 0 p.m., 6 0 9 - 3 9 2 - ^ .

Seeger, benefit for the Coalitiion for Nuclear Disarmament at Princeton University Chapel, Princeton, Jan. 7 ,8 p.m., 609-924-5022.

Ptano Teacher's Forum Monthly Meet-

Bobby R u e 's Eatery and Spirits, 523 Hamilton Ave., Trenton, Jerry Monk and Open Stage Night, a lternate Thursdays. 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m.; Uvo Mu­sic with Rich in s id e r, Michael Lucas and Bobby Rue with Barn Rostash, Fridays ahd Saturdays, 9'30 p .m .-l3 0 a.m.; 609-392-8648.

B ro th e rs S a lo o n , W h i t e -hwse-Mercerville Road. MeVcerville, Dance Night, Saturday: Tony NinTs Champ^na- Dance Party, Sundays; 609390-S604.

Button Down Cafe, 4160 Quakerbridge Road, Lawjrencevilla, Uve Eniertmn- ment, W e o n e sd a ys'-F rid a ys,' 5 :3 0 p . m . - I O p . m . ; D ancing,Tutodaya-Sundays, 10 p.m.-1:30 a m .; 609-7993335;, ■ ( ,

' Catch a R W ^ Star, t^att Regency, C a m e (^ C e n te r, West VWidsor, Ellen'

. O eQeneres, through.>fan, i , 609-987-8018 or 609-987-1234.

The Clarion HOtal, 399 Monmouth S t . E a s t ' W i n d s o r , Live p a n d s , W e d n e s d a y 8 - S a t u r d a y s , 609-448-7000.

Club Bene Dinner Theatre, Route 35. Sayievllle, Lm y Chance and the Earls. Dec. 31; Larry Seth's Tribute to Ehria.Jan. 7; 201-727-3000.. . ;

Coach & Four, To w n 'H o u se Motel, Route 33, Hightstown, Planist/Ogaiisi Andy Kasparian, Wednesday, Friday a n d S a t u r d a y , 8 p . m . - l a ; m . . 609-448-2400.

Comedy .Cabaret at the Q eorm W ash­ington Lodge, Route 1 and PA Tu m -

30 / December 28. 1988 / TIME OFF• • < » I « I t •

mmim

January 1989S M T W T F S1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 1 2 1 3 14

15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 3p 31

February 1B89S M T W T / F S

5 . 6 7 12 13 14 19 20 21 26 27 28

17 18 22 23 24 25

pace, exit 2 8 / Bensalem, Craig Shoe- LambeitvSe S t a ^ 11 Bridge SL,m^cer, Scott Bfoom and Myke Green, Dec. 30 and 31; Big Daddy Graham, Paul Sunlup and Herbie Quinones; Jan. 6-7; 215-355-LAFF.

LambeitvMa, ./A a Plano Friday and S a tu rd iv ' evenings;^ iJv a Jazz Groups, S u n d a y a l t e r n o o h s ; 60M 97-8300,

C e n t r a l A v e . a )1 -489^141.

C la r k , D o c . 3 1 ;

Coniedy Cabaret at Poco's 625 N . Main Hasaau kin. Palmer Square, Princeton.

17

St, Ooylestown, Pa.. Dot^ White, Mike Stanklewicz and Lee fmding, Dec. 30 and3l,21S-34S-JOKE

-T h a Country Inn, .Boiita 130, Roi>- btosville. Live Country Western Musk, Fridays and Saturdays. 9:30 p.m.-2:30 a m ., 6Q9-259-2033. \

CuttalMaa km . Route 32, Lumberyille, P a , GiMarist Joe Trigllo, Fridays, 7

‘P .m .-IO p.m.. 215-297-5062.

Daias BBQ, 3345 Brunswick Pike, Law­re n c e , Guitarist Lovey Williams, Th u rs d a y s -S u n d a y s , 6 p .m .-1 0 :3 0 p.m., 609-275-1200,

Doytestown bm , 18 W ; State St.. Ooylestown, Pa., Raucous Brothers,. Dec. 2 3 .3 0 and 31; Eric Aubrey, Jan. 1: 215-345-6610. .

t . . .

Emmetfa km , Spotswood-Gravei Hill Road, Mofiroe Township, BHI Strecker,

-'T h u rs d a y s , 9 p .m .: Mel Sahner, Saturdays, 6 p.m.;Prq/ecte, Saturdays, 10 p,m.-2 a m .: 201-521-9811.

i . - _.... ...Fbrsgate Country C ^ b , JamesbUrg,

pianist David Pappa/ardO, Fridays, 6 p . m . -9 :3 0 p . m ; , S a t u r d a y s , 6

’ p.m.-10:30 p.m. and Sunday mornings, 201-521-0070.

Gaslght km, 69 Washington St.. Mount H o tly , Open Jazz Jam Session, Tuesdays, 8-.30 p.m., 609-261-0444.

Ja z z at the Naas, T a p R o o m , T u e s d a y s , 9 p .m :-m ld n ig h t: Disc Jockey, T a p R o o m .v Tlnirsdays-Saturdays, 9:30 p.m.-12:30 \ a m .; Pianist Genie DaVlss, Lobby Bar, Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30 p .m .-l 1:30 p.m .: 609-921-7500.

Odette’s, S . River Road, NeW Hope, P a , Pianist Bob Egan, Saturdays and Mondays. 8 3 0 p.m.-midnight: Pianist John J o h n s o n , F r i d a y s a n d W ectoesds^, 8 p.m.-midnight: Plano Bar: Ifevto Arruda, Thursdays and Sun­d a y s , 8 :3 0 p . m . ;m l d n i g h t ; 215-862-2432.

Pheasants’ Landkift Amwell Road,'» B e lle M e a d , Live Enterlalnmehl,

Thursdays-Saturdays, 201-359-4700.

Porky’s Lounge,,812 Route 33, Hamil­ton Township, Uve Entertainment,

Oreater Princeton SkMdes Communt-ty, New Year's Eve Event, Dec. 31, 609-443-1283:

J.O .T.8. {Jewish Over Thkty Singles),New Year's Eve Party, Bensalem, P a , D e a 31, 9 p.m.: 215-943-8474 'or 215-355-6774..

kiBd lersey Jewish Singles, Bmnch and Rap, Jewish Community Center, 1775 Oak Tree Road, Edison, Jan . 8. 11 a.m.; Dinner Meettrr^, ages 25-55, Woodtxidge Diner, Route 35, W ood- b r id g e , T u e s d a y s , 6 :3 0 p . m . ; 201-549-5015. ■

New Begkihings, singles support. Dis­cussions, 651 country Club Road, B rid g e w a te r, F rid a y s , 8 :30 p .m .', 201-359^5509 or 201-469-0455.

Permits Without Partners, Mercer County Chapter, Orientation,'West Windapr Ubrary, West Windsor, Ja n . 4. 7 p.m .-830 p.m., 609-393-8696.

Wednesday-Saturday evenings, 9:30 Princeton Famly YMCA, Paul Robeson 87-9295. Place, P rin ce to n , S/ng/es'*Spof/s,p.m^-609-587-1

Scaiitfcon-Princeton, to o College Road East, Plainsboro, TlyoR Gardens

) Restaurant; Vance ViUestfego Quartet, Dec. 2 3 .8 p.m.-midnight; Ripk Flori Quartet Dec. 3 0 ,8 p.m.-midnight:

<Rlck Flori Quintet, Saturdays, 8 p .m . -m id r i ig h i ; Guitarist Barry

. Peterson, Frtoays, 5 p.m.-7 p.m.: Castro-Nevea Quartet, Fridays, 8 p .m .-m id n ig h t; Black Swan Res­taurant: Guitarist Barry Peterson, M onda^Saturdays, 7 p.m .-l1 p.m.

Fridays. 7 p.m.-9 p.m., 609-497-Y M C A .

Princeton Singies,. New Year's Eve Dance, Hopewell American Legion, Van Dyke Road, Hopewell, Dec. 31,-9 p .m .-1 a .m . , 2 0 1 -3 2 9 -9 5 8 2 o r 609-298-1387. .

Shore Singles, Hike at Allaire Stale Park, Wall Township,' Jan. 7,’ 11:30 a.m., 201-679-8519.

Single Faces, New Year's Day Dance., r-— >Copenhagen Room: Pianist Sandy Wbodbridgo Hilton, G SP exit 131A,

me; Q Main Cl Moo, unnoN Maiovoi/, Sundsys, 11 8.m.-3 p.m.;The Woodbridge, Jan. 1. 8 p.m.; Dance.9 i w ^ Room; The Delivery Boys. The Gallery. Route 1 S, Woodbridge.Havana,

Pa., The Outdome, Dec. 23; Pianist ■ John Bray, Qec) 26 and 2B; Mariist Qedrlc mtsdn, Dec. 27; Josh Break­stone, Dec. 29; Courtney ColiettI, Dec. 30\ New .YeaYd Eve Party with the Mepn Machine, D e c.< ,3 1 : Curtis IVaaver, Jai^ 1; 2 1 5 -8 6 2 -S ^^ .

kneBktaHons, U S . Route 130, ' East Windsor, Disc Jockey, every night; Live M usic, T u e s d a y a n d T h u r s - daytSatuiday, 609-448-8012.

J . August’s, 19 [ ^ n i s SL, N ew Bruns­w ick, D.J., F r id a y s -S a tu rd a y s ; J . August's Amatew Night with John Green, \M.C; Sundays, 9 p.m .; Uve Reggae, T h u rs d a y s , 10:301 p .m .; 201-2468028.

Dec. 31.9 p.m.-1 am .; 609-452-7800.fj • .

Swan HoteL Lambertville, • Plaiilst Jeff B a u m ^ e r and Bassist Ron Velosky, T h u rs ^ . 830 p.m.. 609-397-3552.

Jan. '8 , 8 p.m.; 201879-4311.

201-238-0972 or

Skigtoe Again, New^Year'd^Eve Party, Flag Post. Route 1. South Bnmswick.

i Dec. 3 1 .9 p.m., 201-928-2300.W ycombe Inn, M ill C re e k R o a d ,

VWoombe; Pa., Eva Short on .Plano Singtee Fe llo w sh ip , Meetings,and Vocals, F ridays-S aturdays, 8 p .m .-m id n ig h t, 2 1 5 -5 9 8 -7 0 0 0 or 216-598-7158.

S ingles

Route 1 % , YardviUe, DJ, ■ Wadnesdays-Sundays; Uvb on Radio with WkXW, S a tu rd a y s ; Comedy N / o h f, T h u r s d a y s , 9 :3 0 p .m . ; 6 ( ^ 1 - 3 7 7 7 .

John and Peter's 96 S. Main St., New Hope, Pa., Paul Pfumerl, Dec. 23; The Bo Pmker Chtfstmaa Show^ Dec. 24; Duke VM am s and the Extremes, Doc. 2S-, Mountain John, Deo. 26; Jam Dec. 27; Rimaway Boys, Dec. 28; Moses Rascoe, Dec. 29; The John HerafdBand, Dec. 30; New Year's Eve wkft Planin' Hairy, Dec. 31; Geoff CMdwea Bfues m d Jug B and, Jm . 1 ; Susan Rjoef, Jan. 2; Jam N IM J a n . 3; WInd-upe, Jan. 4; Morgan A FkiOc, Jan. 6;SM veG uygerandSw EjaM lo3,3ai\. 6; Road R im e rs, Jan. 7; The. Flamin' Cmrcaslans, Jan. 8; 215-862-9951.

Plwisboro, Wednesdays. 7 3 0 p.m., 609-275-1932 or 609-2759592.

' iThursdays Singles, ages 3 5 -p lu s ,

Dance Party, Inn Season, Routs 28, N o rth B ra n c h , T h u r s d a y s , 8 :3 0 p .m ,-m id n ig h t, 2 0 1 -6 8 5 -0 4 4 4 or 2018852157 evenings.

.§TAGB

Basset Vdtoy SIngIs Mkers, meets in . rear paiidng lot of the Tinton Falls

HOton, G.S.P. Exit 105, Sundays, 1130 aJit, 201-4457827.

Fbnjm for Stnglss. blacusslon Group. SodN Hour Old Special Programs, UnHarimi C tw c h , SO Cherry Hill Road,

• P r in c e to n , F r id a y s , 7 :3 0 p .m ., 609452-1854 or 201-828-7082.

Garden Stale Social Club, ages 30i )Iu8, Atew Year’s Eve igles Paty, Howard Johnson's Red Baron Lounge,

Crossroads Theatre, 320 Memorial Parkway, New Bnmswick, Late Great Ladfsa of Sties and Jazr, through Jan.

201-2455560.

Deiowsre Matey Regional ThM tre, inresidence at Bucks County Community College , L ib ra ry Th e a te r, S w a m p Road, Newtovm, Pa., A ' Oiristmas Carol, torough Diw . 30,215794-3043.

Forum Th e fitre , 314 M a in S t . , Metuchen, The Best Little Whorehous^ In Texas, t h r o u g h J a n . 1, 201-5488582.

George S bept Playhouse, 9 Livingston A v e . , N e w B ru n s w ic k , Tales of

. Vnsettawn, Jan. 4-29,201-2457717, ,'

Oft-BroscMreet Dessert Theatre, 5 S.Greenwood Ave., Hopewell, Sleuth, '' through Dec. 31; The Amorous Flea, Jan. 5 F e b . 11; 605465 2766.

Paper M i Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millbum, New Year'a.Eve Gala Revue', . D o c . 3 1 ; 7 ' p . m . a n d 1 0 p . m i , 201-3754343.

1 Pedder's Viage Dinner Theater at theCock 'ti Bull Restaurant, Routes 202

. and 263, Lahaska, Pa., Annie, Jan. 5 F e b . 12; Bid for Murder. Fridays and S a t u r d a y s ; J a n . 6 - M a r c h 1 2 ; 215794-3460.

Playtwuse 22, 210 Dunhams Comer Ftoad, East Brunswick, Dames At Sea by the East Brunswick Community P l a y o r s , t h r o u g h U a n . 2 9 , 201-251-3939.

T h e a tre -o n -th e * To w p a th , Tow path Restaufant, 18-20 W . Mechanic Sl„ New Hope, Pa., Murder Set to Musici through December, 215862-5216.

Whole Theatre, 544 Bloomfield Ave.. Montetair, Oubffners by the OearKnows Company, Jan. 522.201-744-2996.

Junction, Jan. 15M arch 9, 8 p;m.-10 p.m . ^ 7 9 5 3 7 1 4 . , •,

Skadno Lessons.’ soonsored bv the Princeton Skating Q u b iS ^ r in c e to n Day School Rink, Th e . Groat Road,

■, Pr i nc e to n , J a n . 1 4 - F e b . 18. 11 a . m . - n o o n , . 2 0 1 - 6 3 2 - 9 4 5 2 or 6054653981^.

Winter Alt Worfcahom, Somerset Art Association, Peapack Road and Pros- p e d Street, Far Hills, Jan. 12-30, 201-234-2345. , >

Yo u n g st e r s

F o r u m . T h e a t r e , 3 1 4 . M a i n S t . . Motudtm, Story Salad, Dec. 31, 11 a.m., 201-548-4670.

Ldngw ood C a r d e r ^ Kenneit ^ u a r e Pa., Chikiten's Garden, through Janu­ary, 2153856741. '• .

S t u d y

Cktfs Piayhouae, 416 Vietpria Ave., Piscataway, Erkica ^ Rita, Ja n . 5 2 9 , 201-9657555.

Club Bene Dkmer Theater, Route 35, SayrevUle, / Dot I Dot, through Jan. 1, 201-727-3000.

Alt Cisssss, Artworks, 45 ^ockton St., Princeton and 29 Everett AHey, Tren­ton, starting Jw i. IS , 609-921-9173 or 605394-9436.

Bdkoom Donee Oesaeay Permington D ance, P enn ingto n P re s b y te ria n Church, Mato Street and Delaware Avenue, Permtogton, beginners and advanced, Jan. 15March 7 and Jan. 12-March 9 ,6 0 9 8 9 0 8 5 0 3 .

Crsathrs Dance Expsrienoe, adults and chikken. Arts CouncH of Pitooeton, .102 WltheraiMxm SL, Princeton, Jan. 1 0 - M a r c h 1 7, 6 0 9 - 9 2 4 - 8 7 7 7 o r 6 0 5 4 9 7 -1 K 7 . '

ExpsrimsnW Watercoior, Pietrb D e­a l ^ . 962 Alexander Road, Princeton

at Fashion Pltoa; Route 1 S . North Brunswick, Carousel Rides,- through January, 10 a.m .-10 p.m., Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday. 201-7452000.

Manalapan SchooL Church Lane. Manalapan. Hansel and Gretel by the Yates Musicai Theatre. Jan. 8. 2 p.m., 201-462-8811.

Mary Jacobs U b r»y , .64 Washington S t . Rocky Hill, fheschdol Film: The Adventures' of Thaddeus Toad, Doc.

> 3 0 .1:45p.m .„605924-7073.

Msreer Cotnty Community CoOege,Keisey Thsater, West Windsor cam- SparPoter Pan by Puppet Prr^octs,

\ J a n . 7 , 2 p . m . a n d 4 p . m . . 6055854695.

Mourtrin Lakes Nature Preserve, 57M ountain A v e ., Princeton, Family Guided Nature Walla, Dec. 31, Jan. 7, 14,21 and 28,11 a.m., 609-921-2772.

New Jersey StMe Miieeun\' 205 w . State St., Ttenton,' Story Salad vby MaxhnitUon Produdions, Dec. 30, 2 p.m.; The Ishangi Dancers, Jan. 6. 2 p.m.: 605292-7780.'

North Brunswick Pufalc^^brary, 880Hemisrei Road, North Brunswick, Film: From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. FrariewMIler, ages 5 1 2 , Jan. 3. 201-2453545, free.

Princeton Famly YMCA, Paul Robeson. Place, Princeton,' New Year's Eve OvwnML grades K 8 , Dec. 31, 730 p.m„ 609-497-9622, regirtrabon re­quired.

Song WMOng Contest for ChMren, ages 51 2 , sponsored by Voices, con­test deadflne Jan. 6. 605737-9383.

TIME OFF / December 28. 1988 / 31

REKCCm FORECASTABIES (3/21-4/20): An air of con­fidence ushers in this period. Ac- c^tuoniM niununirations, and in flow ing a bit of ta a will go a long tivay within key relatioiuihtps. Later, a no-nonsense approach earns you another’s respect. Social dedbigs escalate. Travel is con­templated.'

T A U R U S (4 a i-5 / 2 l): T h e inten­tions are good, but the reality may be quite d iffm n t early this week. Ym t ctmld end up with e ^ on your face before it’s over! M ercury moy- ing intb your 10th house promotes dc^ings with elikrs and those in au^ority in weeks ahead. Jc ^ ad- yancem ^t is po^ible for some. L i ^ , pay attention to t h < ^ inner promptings;

GEMINI (9/22-d/21): Solar position continues ta.accent both material and emotional security. Lx>ng-range planning isfavored, and important

“ others” are likely to play a key role. Mercury entering your solar 9th house spotlights travel, legal, papers and de^ings at a distance in the weeks ahead. Later, certain “ roles” are changing. ;CANCER (6/22-7/23): You ihay be doing a rather intense

. self-examination in the weeks ahead. Introspective tendencies are increased, and others rhay f i ^ it difficult to teach you. Laiter,'pcr- Kihal and professional relationships move to the forefront. Untfer the influence of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, you can bet things A R E going to be different!LEO (7/24-8/23): It may be difficult to say noearly this week. But in your own best interests, perhaps you should. Key relationships heat

y up as M e n ^ enters yoiir rolar 7th hcMise. You will both be oh the same wave length; Later, job'and health chnsidd^tions benefit through a '< new, innovative af^Hoach. Go

a h ^ : try it! j u 'VIRGO (8/24-9/23): Job, healtHwd dqiendott's interests are all in­tensified in w e e k s ^ h ^ . You may consider a a n g e intlay-to-day schedule aiid also rewt person^ priorities. Later, home and faihily ' are on your mind; romance gets four stars; and after a rather unsettling period, mote security finally be­comes 8{^>aient:— from an unex­pected direction, perhaps? '

LIBRA (9/24-10/23): Visiting with friends or loved ones is likely early this week. Local travel and com­munications are also stepped lip. Creative (wtential is fa v o m as Mercury l i ^ t s up your solar fifth house. V yin g for your tinw and attention w ill be the heightened sexuisl expression that £ is ttaiisit also stimulates!

' SCORPi(^10/24-ll/22): I m p o r t d iscuu iq ^B W l decisions w ill high­light the weeks ahead. These w i l l '

revolve around family, p ro p c ^ and domestic concerns. A change in residence or living arrangements could be in the offing. Um ex^a carii wisely, and be wary of mis­haps or injuries to back, bones or joints. Don’t overdo now. ^G IT T A R IU S (11/23-12/21): Venus tranismiting your sun sign draws plenty of attention your way. S[»uce up image and appearaike, and consider dietary c i^ g e s where . necessary! Later, romantic and creative efforts pay off. Financial negotiations nci^ careful handling, - andmoR than o q c unexpected o c -

ctmnce will have important re- peVeussions.CAPRICORN (1202-1/20):Rnancial undertakings are likely to

. be linked with conununications ini the months ahead. Career directions expand; let others lead the way.Later, family, property or domestic interests continue a re^justmeitt period. It’s easy to sell yourselfor_ .

yourideu now, ahddearihg the'" decks now gives you an edge.

AQUARIUS (^1 -2 /1 9 ): A s Mercury enters youraign during this . period, expectpersonal communica­tions to assume importance. Y o u r ideas and opinions w ill be in de­

m a n d , and a more social trend .. prevails. A s a matter o f fact, ro­mance could turn up quite unex­pectedly for rome. Later, groupti, clubs and organizations are h i ^ - lighted; join in.

PISCES (2/20-3/20): N o doubt about it: Y o u ’re definitely in the limelight early this w m Ic. Benefits are liidced with elders or those in aiithority. Personal credibility is enhanced. Later,.rome perronal ’ ’weeding" is begun. O ld o r . outworn affiliations fade to make room for the new. Mercury spot­lights introspection. Now^is the time to regroup quietly behind the scenes.

<n«t O KCrossword Puzzle

Edited by James C . Boldt and Jo y c e ‘Nichols Lewis

B y LeUtia H om e A C R O S S

1 O ccur 7 Cold w tnd.oi

S . France14 Capiatn

.Q ue eg> .sh jp19 Silverware city

. o l t/ow Y o rk '20 Erik ot

"C H IP S "21 "As go od — "

' (well-behaved)23 S tan o l a

limely verse26 "Crossing the

B ar" poet27 Barbara ^

G eddes28 Everlasting29 Bert

Bob bsey's . twin

30 Handel's birthplace

32 Isle o l —33 A sa G ray 's

subject37 It's really hell

38 Garden pioi39 — do w n

(so lten )43 Ja n n in g s or

L u d w ig44 " — soit qui

m a K "45 T V 's Teniftlle

'4 6 R egrets47 M o re o l verse53 Acapulco-aunt54 "A b le w as —

s a w Elba"55 W aterless58 Rearranges57 First nam e ol

2 6 Across59 "W h e n M y

B a b y — At M e "

61 A rchitect Saarinen

62.TurK ish tille ol re s is t

85 Lovv-necked lace collars

67 San db urg or R einer

69 First-year cadet at U S A F

■ Academ y71 Bombastic

person74 R u b elbows76 B ank

tranM ction77 D idator's

scribe-79 C t ^ u c i e d '81 M o re o l verso85 Franklurt'S

river86 Beach

acquisitions87 "What's — lor

m o?"

88 Arabian Sea gull

89 Rat-bottom ed boat

-9 0 Alts.91 Person at the

helm9 3 K ind ol net or

belt'95 Favorite9 6 Shaped like a

volcano97 Attention98 All agrm. as

me uapoer- w ocky boy

102 Doctors' grp. .103 Stellar team

08 End ,o l verso112 R esprl

islands rn the , Bahamas

113 M uzzein 's ; tower

114 Put in a box 1 ( 5 M ason's •

partner116 Gam e

participants117 Relaxed

0 Neighbor ol Syr

9 Avesto High in pitch11 Becomes

tangled12 Designer

Simpson13 O n the ^

(lleeing)' -114 Act I aria 'Irom

"Norm a"1 5 Trem bly tree1 6 S llavinsky■ 7 Grammatical

entity18 Maxwell or

Lanchoster

. 22 Painter Andrea — 'Sarto

24 Long time ' 25 San'a resident

• 30 'V ie tn a rh ^. capiiai ^

31 Tennis 11 situatioo

33 Pulse34 vincii

am or"

35 01 iho'noap or the rip

36 The Greatest37 19th century

stitch ,specialist

38 M ore intrepid39 Most banal4.0 External41 Nerve: Prolix42 6lh senses44 Driven in a

group,45 Th in fabric48 Wind :

m ovbihont49 N a u t ^ l '.

hazard50 Highlander's

cap51 M ohawk,

lor one52 Franklin's wile58 Collection o l

green plants .5 9 ‘Miser M am er60V>errV M ason's

Della63 Actor Lloyd:■ and family

64 They're alv;ays •in a iambi

66 Pul up a picture

67 Modern apt complex

68 Doubleday''70 lll.'s neighbor72 Dodge73 Bowling alley

button74 Robin —75 — o l on e's

teeth77Xhurch council70 Tease80 Refuse82 'Please Don 1

— Daisies83 Concorde

wing84 Lummox91 Lbs Angeles

suburb92 S ort o l93 Butler's

tray94 boBlanc s

hero Lupin95 Upright or

grand96 Carp97 Yalio98 W .S. Gilbert s

' '— Ballads"•99 t in ie r Bagnoldtoo African '

gazelle,101 Nero 's 2009

■103 G-men104 Involuntary

twitches105 Rat--!-106 Subterluge107 Went in

hastet09tUnil ot elec,

current110 Between due

and quattro. I l f " — the

, ram parts.!."

D O W N1 O w l's cry2 Boleyn or

Bancroft. 3 Philadelphia's

founder ■4 Arris5 "The Texaco

Fire C h ie f ol radio

6 Voice a negative vote

7 Intend

U U lS U U U L IU U U U L J U U L IU U U U U U U U U JU U U ltJ U U U O U llU U U U U U L K J U U L IU U U U U U U L IU U U

□ U U U JU U U U IU U U U U U U U U L J U U U U U U IU U u u u

U U U U U U U L IU U U U U U U U U G U U Uu u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u U U U U U U U U D U U U u u u u u

u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u

u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u uu u u u

u u u uu u u uu u u uu u u u

u u u u u u u u u u u

u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u u

U U U U U Duu u u uu u u u u

u u u uu u u u

A N S W E R S T O L A S T W E E K ’S P U Z Z L E

32 / Decentoef28; 1988 / TIME OFF