Sourlis case may spur state-wide legislation

34
STATE NEW JERSEY AND YOU Gov. Kean is expected to sign a bill passed yes- terday by the Senate re- quiring all top state of- ficials to live in New Jersey. Page IB The kids are on holiday vacation from school, and you've got to keep them entertained while you plan for holiday gather- ings. Cheer up. There is hope. Page1C SPORTS NYBOUND The Philadelphia Fly- ers sent disgruntled goal- ie Bob Froese to the Rangers, and he's happy about it. Page ID The Register Vol. 109 No. 102 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S NEWSPAPER ... SINCE 1878 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1986 25 CENTS Santa? Depuration plant owner looks to aid clammers By KENNY TRAINOR The Register HIGHLANDS — In the midst of a Christmas season that has brought little holiday cheer to the nearly 100 clammers who've been unemployed since Dec. 5, Jayson JlHarvey has taken it upon himself to play Santa Clans. Harvey, who owns Jersey Shore Shellfish Co., one of three High- lands depuration plants, said yes- terday that he has secured a contract with Add-On Pools in Middletown to truck water to his plant so that clammers can bogin work again this weekend. •—:— The only matter left to be Tesolved is formal approval from the state Department of Health, and Harvey said he is hoping to get that today. State Sen. Frank Pallone Jr. said yesterday that he will meet with state health of- ficials to expedite Harvey's proposal. "I felt this was the best Christmas gift I could give to the 'clammers," said Harvey. "You get tied up in something like this and you feel bad for everybody. I felt it was my responsibility to do something because there doesn't See CLAMMERS, Page 4A Sourlis case may spur state-wide legislation Red Bank mayor contacts Kean By MARY The Regi JOHNSON' A vision of THE FIEG!ST£rvQP.ra3 EU.MAW s Peter Stallmach, owner and chef at the Inn Between restaurant in Red Bank, touches up a gingerbread church he built. The house stands over 4 feet tall and Is on display at the restaurant. REDiBANH-^Mayor Michael Arnone has asked for state sup- port in pushing for legislative changes in the municipal tax sys- tem prompted by the borough's recent experience witli local de- velopers Ted and Elaine Sourlis. . The couple was 364 days ov- erdue in their 1985 property taxes, as well as water and sewer charges, paying the $88,179 worth of taxes Dec. 1 — the day before foreclosure procedures would have been initiated against them. When contacted yesterday, Elaine Sourlis said she anticipates no problems adhering to the proposed changes. "Certainly,- we're not attempt- ing to do anything illegal," she said. The mayor sent a letter earlier this week to Gov. Thomas Kean, with copies mailed to Sen. S. .Thomas Gagliano, R-Monmouth, Rep. John Bennett, R-Monmouth, • as well as governmental bodies including the state League of Municipalities, Conference of Mayor uiid the Municipal Manage- ment Association. "Any type of legislation thai would assist us in collecting taxes more promptly would help us," Arnone said yesterday. ••Any type of legislation that would assist us in collecting taxes more promptly would help us. >• Michael Arnone Red Bank mayor The changes the mayor seeks would make it less attractive for large developers and multi-build "itrg owners-whotiave theoption of delaying payment of taxes for up to a year. Arnone proposed that residen- tial non-owner occupied three- unit properties be declared delin- quent if taxes are six months overdue. A tax lien sale could take place at that time, and foreclosure could begin six months later. The shorter deadline also, would apply to commercial and industrial properties with outstanding taxes. Another possible change would require property taxes and water and sewer charges of an applicant to the local planning or zoning boards be paid before a final resolution is adopted by either board. "The fiscal integrity of our communites and particularly... Red Bank must be secured and I believe this is an area long- overlooked for reform," Arnone stated. Under the current system, a property owner has up to one year before the municipality can sell or place a lien on a property with delinquent taxes and begin fore- closure. Although a municipality sets aside a portion of every tax dollar for its Reserve for Uncollected Taxes to cover outstanding debts, large amounts can affect the See SOURLIS. Page 4A Judge extends Highlands sewer repair deadline By KENNY TRAINOR The Register FREEHOLD — The Borough of High- lands avoided fines of up to $50,000 a day from the Departm«nt of En- vironmental Protection yesterday, when Superior Court Judge Patrick .1. McGann Jr. agreed to approve a motion to postpone today's deadline for the borough to repair ee sewer line break until .Ian. l.'l "Ailing on short notice, the borough has done everything in its power to correct this problem." said Michael f'asano, an attorney representing High- lands. "There's a limit to how fast we can act." The DEP sent a telegram to the mayor and council Dec. 15 ordering the borough to construct H bypass system to keep effluent from tlie sewer line from running into the hay. Failure lodoso-by— today would have subjected the borough to fines of "up to $50,000 a day." Also included in the DEP order was a stipulation that the three clam depu- ration plants in Highlands would be closed until the effluent problem is corrected. Yesterday's motion was part of an existing lawsuit instigated by the owner of Stymie's Ice Cream on Rt. 36 evolving from damage to the property resulting from the broken pipe. Stymie's is suing the state Department of Transportation, the Borough of Highlands and other property owners. The borough has contended all along that it was willing to comply with the DEP order to repair the sewer line, but that the pending litigation has still not determined whether Highlands or the state DOT caused the damage two years ago, and which party is responsible to pay the cost of repairs. - "The purpose of this litigation -is-to™ determine who has responsibility for fixing the pipe," said McGann. "Now the borough is faced with an urder from the DEP." McGann said he would also permit Highlands to enter an .amended com- plaim adding DEP to the suit. Considering all the parties involved in the litigation, Fasano said Highlands wanted to make^sure the repair work was done properly. See HIGHLANDS. P a g e - 4 * — Quality control Marlboro Hospital weathers accreditation storm By JUDY HOLMES The Register status was inadequately monitored by the year accreditation. MARLBORO — Marlboro Psychiatric Hospi- tal could have lost its accreditation by the- Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospi- t a l s ..(JCAll.)jf the hospital did not change ihc way it monitors the quality of patient care. Recently, the Mental Health Association of Monmouth County, in a critical report on the hospital, said the lack of quality control safeguards resulted in poor patient care. In one case, the report said a-50-year-old woman died from pneumonia because her medical Lottery The winning number drawn last night in New Jersey's Pick-It Lottery was 9Q4. A straight bet pays $223, box pays $37 and pairs pay $22. The Pick 4 number was 2297. A straight bet pays $2,954.50 and box pays $246. The Pick 6 numbers were 13, 17, 18. 21. 30 and 34. The bonus number was 33142 ! : Index staff. In an April 1!I8~) survey of the facility, JCAH said the hospital's quality control program was deficient in several areas including monitoring of patient rare, taking action to resolve problems and monitoring of emergency ser- vices for patients While officials at the hospital had no comment on the Mental Health Association's assessment of the reasons the woman died of pneumonia, they did say that their new quality control system should prevent "tragedies" from occurring in the future. , The new system will address issues before lospital received a temporary JCXfl majorprotrtemsTnrcur, said Victor-Fongemie, accreditation, and was given until April of 108(> to implement a new quality control program or face losing its accreditation. Yesterday, officials announced at the Board of Trustees meeting that JCAH recently ap- proved the hospital's new quality control program and granted the facility a full, three- clinical director at Marlboro. "You can then take action before something really bad happens," he said. Fongemie responded to questions about the hospital's quality control program at yester- day's meeting. See HOSPITAL, Page 4A Agencies agree to study of ocean's health effect By STEPHEN MCCARTHY The Register Ann Landers 5C Movies , 8C Bloom County 7A Nation 2B Bridge 4B New Jersey....... 1B Business 7D Obituaries.. 6A Classified 3B Opinion 7A Comics 8D People 2A Jumble 7C Sports 1D Make A Date 6C Television 8C NEPTUNE — On the strength of 293 case histories of illness re- ported along the Jersey Shore, state agencies will consider in- vestigating the effects of ocean water quality on human health. A group of Jersey Shore physi- cians calling themselves SOS (Save Our Shores), this week presented state health, environment and medical officials with "non-scien- tific" evidence of a relation be- tween sickness and swimming in .the ocean during a meeting at the New Jersey Medical Society's headquarters in Lawrence Town- ship. As a result, the agencies, the state Department of Environmen- tal Protect4on^.state Health De- partment, the New Jersey Medical Society and the University of Medicine- and Denistry, agreed to plot a strategy for a preliminary investigation at a meeting sched- uled for Jan. 28. Though money has not been formally discussed, estimates place the cost of a full-scale study See STUOY, Page 4A Hasenfus arrives ASSOCIATED PRESS Eugene Hasenfus and his wife, Sally, arrive in Miami yesterday after his release by the Sandinista government. Masenfus had been held in Nicaragua since Oct. 6. See story, page 3B. CLAM HUT, HIGHLANDS 872-0909. Closed 12-1-86 to 12-25-86. Reopen Pri. 12-26-86 LOVE LINES "Love's got a line on you" With Pictures Coming December 24 In The Classified section New Years Day Brunch Oyster Point Hotel 630-0111 Rack of Lamb Bouquetlere For two & Chateau Briand for Twoat The Old Union House Red Bank, 842-7575 RUMSON ROULETTE Will be late tonite and Sunday 12-5PM Yuletlde Girt Certificate Any Dollar amount from the Old Union House, Red Bank 842-7575

Transcript of Sourlis case may spur state-wide legislation

STATENEW JERSEYAND YOU

Gov. Kean is expectedto sign a bill passed yes-terday by the Senate re-quiring all top state of-ficials to live in NewJersey.

Page IB

The kids are on holidayvacation from school, andyou've got to keep thementertained while youplan for holiday gather-ings. Cheer up. There ishope.

Page1C

SPORTSNYBOUND

The Philadelphia Fly-ers sent disgruntled goal-ie Bob Froese to theRangers, and he's happyabout it.

Page ID

The RegisterVol. 109 No. 102 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S NEWSPAPER ... SINCE 1878 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1986 25 CENTS

Santa?Depurationplant ownerlooks to aidclammersBy KENNY TRAINOR

The Register

HIGHLANDS — In the midst ofa Christmas season that hasbrought little holiday cheer to thenearly 100 clammers who've beenunemployed since Dec. 5, Jayson

JlHarvey has taken it upon himselfto play Santa Clans.

Harvey, who owns Jersey ShoreShellfish Co., one of three High-lands depuration plants, said yes-terday that he has secured acontract with Add-On Pools inMiddletown to truck water to hisplant so that clammers can boginwork again this weekend. •—:—

The only matter left to beTesolved is formal approval fromthe state Department of Health,and Harvey said he is hoping to getthat today. State Sen. FrankPallone Jr. said yesterday that hewill meet with state health of-ficials to expedite Harvey'sproposal.

"I felt this was the bestChristmas gift I could give to the

'clammers," said Harvey. "You gettied up in something like this andyou feel bad for everybody. I feltit was my responsibility to dosomething because there doesn't

See CLAMMERS, Page 4A

Sourlis case may spurstate-wide legislationRed Bank mayorcontacts KeanBy MARY

The Regi

JOHNSON'

A vision ofTHE FIEG!ST£rvQP.ra3 EU.MAW

sPeter Stallmach, owner and chef at the Inn Between restaurantin Red Bank, touches up a gingerbread church he built. Thehouse stands over 4 feet tall and Is on display at the restaurant.

REDiBANH-^Mayor MichaelArnone has asked for state sup-port in pushing for legislativechanges in the municipal tax sys-tem prompted by the borough'srecent experience witli local de-velopers Ted and Elaine Sourlis. .

The couple was 364 days ov-erdue in their 1985 propertytaxes, as well as water and sewercharges, paying the $88,179 worthof taxes Dec. 1 — the day beforeforeclosure procedures wouldhave been initiated against them.

When contacted yesterday,Elaine Sourlis said she anticipatesno problems adhering to theproposed changes.

"Certainly,- we're not attempt-ing to do anything illegal," shesaid.

The mayor sent a letter earlierthis week to Gov. Thomas Kean,with copies mailed to Sen. S..Thomas Gagliano, R-Monmouth,Rep. John Bennett, R-Monmouth,

• as well as governmental bodiesincluding the state League ofMunicipalities, Conference ofMayor uiid the Municipal Manage-ment Association.

"Any type of legislation thaiwould assist us in collecting taxesmore promptly would help us,"Arnone said yesterday.

••Any type oflegislation thatwould assist us incollecting taxesmore promptlywould help us. >•

Michael ArnoneRed Bank mayor

The changes the mayor seekswould make it less attractive forlarge developers and multi-build

"itrg owners-whotiave theoption ofdelaying payment of taxes for upto a year.

Arnone proposed that residen-tial non-owner occupied three-unit properties be declared delin-quent if taxes are six monthsoverdue. A tax lien sale could takeplace at that time, and foreclosurecould begin six months later. Theshorter deadline also, would applyto commercial and industrialproperties with outstanding taxes.

Another possible change wouldrequire property taxes and waterand sewer charges of an applicantto the local planning or zoningboards be paid before a final

resolution is adopted by eitherboard.

"The fiscal integrity of ourcommunites and particularly...Red Bank must be secured and Ibelieve this is an area long-overlooked for reform," Arnonestated.

Under the current system, aproperty owner has up to one yearbefore the municipality can sell orplace a lien on a property withdelinquent taxes and begin fore-closure.

Although a municipality setsaside a portion of every tax dollarfor its Reserve for UncollectedTaxes to cover outstanding debts,large amounts can affect the

See SOURLIS. Page 4A

Judge extends Highlands sewer repair deadlineBy KENNY TRAINOR

The Register

FREEHOLD — The Borough of High-lands avoided fines of up to $50,000 aday from the Departm«nt of En-vironmental Protection yesterday,when Superior Court Judge Patrick .1.McGann Jr. agreed to approve a motionto postpone today's deadline for theborough to repair ee sewer line break

until .Ian. l.'l"Ailing on short notice, the borough

has done everything in its power tocorrect this problem." said Michaelf'asano, an attorney representing High-lands. "There's a limit to how fast we

• can act."The DEP sent a telegram to the mayor

and council Dec. 15 ordering theborough to construct H bypass system tokeep effluent from tlie sewer line fromrunning into the hay. Failure lodoso-by—

today would have subjected the boroughto fines of "up to $50,000 a day."

Also included in the DEP order was astipulation that the three clam depu-ration plants in Highlands would beclosed until the effluent problem iscorrected.

Yesterday's motion was part of anexisting lawsuit instigated by the ownerof Stymie's Ice Cream on Rt. 36 evolvingfrom damage to the property resultingfrom the broken pipe. Stymie's is suing

the state Department of Transportation,the Borough of Highlands and otherproperty owners.

The borough has contended all alongthat it was willing to comply with theDEP order to repair the sewer line, butthat the pending litigation has still notdetermined whether Highlands or thestate DOT caused the damage two yearsago, and which party is responsible topay the cost of repairs.

- "The purpose of this litigation -is-to™

determine who has responsibility forfixing the pipe," said McGann. "Now theborough is faced with an urder from theDEP."

McGann said he would also permitHighlands to enter an .amended com-plaim adding DEP to the suit.

Considering all the parties involved inthe litigation, Fasano said Highlandswanted to make^sure the repair workwas done properly.

See HIGHLANDS. P a g e - 4 * —

Quality controlMarlboro Hospital weathers accreditation storm

By JUDY HOLMESThe Register

status was inadequately monitored by the year accreditation.

MARLBORO — Marlboro Psychiatric Hospi-tal could have lost its accreditation by the-Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospi-

t a l s ..(JCAll.)jf the hospital did not change ihcway it monitors the quality of patient care.

Recently, the Mental Health Association ofMonmouth County, in a critical report on thehospital, said the lack of quality controlsafeguards resulted in poor patient care. In onecase, the report said a-50-year-old womandied from pneumonia because her medical

Lottery

The winning number drawn last night in New Jersey's Pick-ItLottery was 9Q4. A straight bet pays $223, box pays $37 and pairspay $22. The Pick 4 number was 2297. A straight bet pays $2,954.50and box pays $246. The Pick 6 numbers were 13, 17, 18. 21. 30 and34. The bonus number was 33142 ! :

Index

staff.In an April 1!I8~) survey of the facility, JCAH

said the hospital's quality control program wasdeficient in several areas including monitoringof patient rare, taking action to resolveproblems and monitoring of emergency ser-vices for patients

While officials at the hospital had nocomment on the Mental Health Association'sassessment of the reasons the woman died ofpneumonia, they did say that their new qualitycontrol system should prevent "tragedies"from occurring in the future. ,

The new system will address issues beforelospital received a temporary JCXfl majorprotrtemsTnrcur, said Victor-Fongemie,

accreditation, and was given until April of108(> to implement a new quality controlprogram or face losing its accreditation.

Yesterday, officials announced at the Boardof Trustees meeting that JCAH recently ap-proved the hospital's new quality controlprogram and granted the facility a full, three-

clinical director at Marlboro."You can then take action before something

really bad happens," he said.Fongemie responded to questions about the

hospital's quality control program at yester-day's meeting.

See HOSPITAL, Page 4A

Agencies agree to studyof ocean's health effectBy STEPHEN MCCARTHYThe Register

Ann Landers 5C Movies , 8CBloom County 7A Nation 2BBridge 4B New Jersey....... 1BBusiness 7D Obituaries.. 6AClassified 3B Opinion 7AComics 8D People 2AJumble 7C Sports 1DMake A Date 6C Television 8C

NEPTUNE — On the strength of293 case histories of illness re-ported along the Jersey Shore,state agencies will consider in-vestigating the effects of oceanwater quality on human health.

A group of Jersey Shore physi-cians calling themselves SOS (SaveOur Shores), this week presentedstate health, environment andmedical officials with "non-scien-tific" evidence of a relation be-tween sickness and swimming in

.the ocean during a meeting at theNew Jersey Medical Society'sheadquarters in Lawrence Town-ship. •

As a result, the agencies, thestate Department of Environmen-tal Protect4on^.state Health De-partment, the New Jersey MedicalSociety and the University ofMedicine- and Denistry, agreed toplot a strategy for a preliminaryinvestigation at a meeting sched-uled for Jan. 28.

Though money has not beenformally discussed, estimatesplace the cost of a full-scale study

See STUOY, Page 4A

Hasenfus arrivesASSOCIATED PRESS

Eugene Hasenfus and his wife, Sally, arrive in Miami yesterdayafter his release by the Sandinista government. Masenfus hadbeen held in Nicaragua since Oct. 6. See story, page 3B.

CLAM HUT, HIGHLANDS872-0909. Closed 12-1-86 to

12-25-86. Reopen Pri. 12-26-86

LOVE LINES"Love's got a line on you"

With PicturesComing December 24

In The Classified section

New Years Day BrunchOyster Point Hotel 630-0111

Rack of Lamb BouquetlereFor two & Chateau Briand forTwoat The Old Union House

Red Bank, 842-7575

RUMSON ROULETTEWill be late tonite and

Sunday 12-5PM

Yuletlde Girt CertificateAny Dollar amount from theOld Union House, Red Bank

842-7575

2A The Register FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19.1986

PEOPLEHe does it his way

CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA, Calif.(AP) — Mayor Clint Eastwoodhas bought the 22-acre MissionRanch, appeasing environmen-talists and officials angered by aits owners' proposal to build about60 townhouses on the site.

"It's not what an investmentcounselor would say to fly into,"Eastwood told the Carmel PineCone newspaper. "But the more Isold everybody else, the more Idecided I'd do it."

The actor, who has promised notto build on the site, did not revealtlu'_ cost of the purchase. Theowners asked $55 million for theformer dairy farm that houses abed-and-breakfast inn, tenniscourts, restaurant and piano bar.

Ejastwood. currently starring inthe movie "Heartbreak Ridge,"bought the property with TehamaProductions, his movie-makingcompany.

KYW gets a new SellPHILADELPHIA (AP) — ABC-

TV's morning news anchormanSteve Bell is leaving the networkto anchor newscasts for NBCaffiliate KYW-TV in late January,said the station's news director.

Bell, 51, a former White Houseand Vietnam War correspondent

for the network, will anchor thestation's 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. newsshows, KYW news director BandyCovington said Wednesday.

.Carobel Daniel, Bell's assistantin Washington, confirmed yester-day that Bell was leaving ABC towork for KYW.

Bell has anchored the ABC newssegments on "Good MorningAmerica" since 1975 and co-anchored "ABC World News ThisMorning" since 1982.Earns minimum wage

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — U.S. Rep.Jim Weaver will join RepublicanSen. Mark Hat field's staff as aconsultant until August so theoutgoing Democratic congressmancan qualify for congressional re-tirement health benefits.

Weaver will receive $112 amonth for his services. Withoutremaining On a congressionalpayroll, he would be about sevenmonths short of qualifying forcontinued health benefits, Hat-field's office said Wednesday.

The six-term congressman fromEugene dropped out of his raceagainst Republican Sen. BobPackwood in August because ofan investigation of his campaignfinances.

The House ethics committeefound in October that Weaver had

violated House rules by improper-ly borrowing $82,000 from hiscampaign and by failing to fullydisclose the investments he madewith the funds.

Weaver wrote to Hatfield Dec. 5to ask for a minimum-salary con-sulting position while living on hisfarm near Eugene, according tocorrespondence released by Hat-field's office.

Hatfield agreed to the request ina Dec. 10 letter to Weaver, sayingWeaver's "knowledge of pressingenergy and nuclear power issueswould be of great assistance to meduring the coming months."

Charley would agreeDEERFIELD. Mass. (AP) — The

farmer who let author JohnSteinbeck sleep under an appletree the first night of the cross-country trek that led to "Travelswith Charley" has vowed that hisfarmland must be preserved.

Arthur Rogers, described bythe Nobel prize-winning writer as"one of the very few contentedpeople I met on my wholejourney," has asked that his 500acres be protected by the state.

"This place has got to have acow on it, not a golf course," saidRogers, 61, who wants to quitdairy farming but would ratherturn the operation over to a youngfarmer than to developers.

Under a program designed topreserve Massachusetts farmland,the state will pay Rogers thedifference between the land'sworth as a farm and its worth asacres filled with condominiumsami tennis courts.

Rogers, who took over the farmfrom his wife's famiy in 1952, letSteinbeck and his poodle Charleyspent the first night of theirfamous journey there in 1958.

"The dairy man had a Ph.D. inmathematics, and he must havehad some training in philosophy,"Steinbeck wrote. "He liked whathe was doing and he didn't want tobe somewhere else."

Steinbeck, who died in 1968,erred in one detail:. Rogers had amaster's master's degree in

l

ASSOCIATED PRESS

HERE COME DA BUQ! — Former Volkswagon owners will be relieved to know that after their autos areno longer fit for the road, at least some of them are given a second chanceJn Calgary, Canada, for instance,this VW Beatle hangs over an Autotech used car lot to catch prospective buyers' eyes. Motorists areencouraged to look at the rest of the cars in the lot instead of hunting for a giant fly swatter to get ridof this (jne. Here Autotech employee Ulrich Adams is fixing one of the bug eyes, or headlights, for betterviewing.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MAY THE BETTER PUP WIN — A pair of eight-week-old ChineseShar-Pei puppies are a mass of wrinkles as they dive into their sharedbowl of breakfast milk Members of the second-ever litter born inTallahasse. Fla., the pups sell for anywhere between $600 and $800each Some folks say it hurts to be beautiful. It also costs.

p i l f i l g yOne step for mankind

LOS ANGELES (AP)Academy Award-winning actorCliff Robertson, who PresidentKennedy picked to play the leadrole in "PT 109," has received aHollywood Walk of Fame star.' More than 200 fans gathered on

Hollywood Boulevard for the un-veiling Wednesday of the star, the1,840th along the Walk of Fame.

Robertson began acting onBroadway in the 1950s and madehis screen debut in the movie"Picnic." He followed with a star-ring role in "Autumn Leaves,"went on to "PT 109" and othermovies and won an Oscar for"Charly."

The Hollywood Chamber ofCommerce presents sidewalk starsto celebrities after a sponsornominates them and pays $3,500.•A group of friends sponsoredRobertaon!s_star^-aaid... chamberspokeswoman Kathryn Shepard.Hopes for full recovery

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Lt.Gov.. Ruth Meiers' surgery toremove a walnut-sized tumorfrom the right side of her braincould lead to her recovery fromcancer, doctors said.

In a telephone interview from ahospital Wednesday afternoon,Mrs. Meiers, her voice strong andclear, sajd also that she expects afull recovery and that her goal isto preside over the state Senate inJanuary.

"Hopefully, the surgery will bea great success and she will con-tinue on for many, many months,"Dr. Gerry Lunn said at a hospitalnews conference, adding that shecould go home within five days oftoday's surgery.

Mrs. Meiers, 61, checked intoMedcenter One on Sunday afterbecoming disoriented. Tests show-ed the tumor had doubled in sizeover the past two weeks afterhaving been reduced by radiationtreatment, Lunn said.I pity the fool!

NEW YORK (AP) — Nick Man-cuso, starring as a mystery man ina Corvette who helps those in need

in NBC's "Stingray," is replacingGeorge Peppard, Mr. T and therest of "The A-Team" on theFriday night hero lineup.

NBC said Wednesday that it wasshutting the door on "You Again?"and had given walking papers to"The A-Tean>," starring Peppard,Mr. T and Dirk Benedict. RobertVaughn was added to the cast inthis, its fourth season.

"Stingray," like "The A-Tcam,"is a Stephen J. Cannell produc-tion. It will air in place of "The ATeam" in the Friday 8-9 p.m. E6Ttime period beginning Jan. 9.

"You Again?" will have its lastbroadcast Jan. 7, with nofrom the network on what willreplace it. The half-hour sitcomstars Jack Klugman and JohnStanioH as father and son.

COMPILED BYChristine A. Rowett

THE WEATHERTht ForscMt/for 7 p.m. EST, Fri., Dec. 19

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overnight low to 8 a m . EST.

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TidesSandy Hook

TODAY: Highs, 9:57 a.m. and10:40 p.m. Lows, 3:47 a.m. and4:37 p.m.

TOMORROW: Highs, 10:40 a.m.and 11:24 p.m. Lows, 4:24 a.m. and5:14 p.m.

For Rumson and Red Bankbridges, add two hours. For SeaBright, deduct ten minutes. LongBranch, deduct 15 minutes. ForHighlands bridges, add 40minutes.

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Today will be partly sunny andwindy. Highs will be in the middleto upper 40s.

Skies will clear tonight. Lowswill range from 25 to 30.

Skies will be mostly sunnytomorrow. Highs will be in themiddle 40s.

Marine ForecastManasquan to Cape Henlopento 20 nautical miles offshore

Winds will be northwesterly at20 to 25 knots today and at 10 to15 knots tonight.

Waves will average 6 feet earlythis morning, 4 feet in the after-noon and 3 feet tonight.

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through Tuesday. Highs will be inthe lower to middle 40s. Lows willbe in the lower to middle 30s.

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Normal highs are in the lower tomiddle 40s. Lows are in the upper20s to the middle 30s. Normalprecipitation is around six-tenthsof an inch.

Abilene.TexasAhron CantonAlbany.N.Y.AlbuquerqueAllentown •AmanlloAnchorageAshevilleAtlantaAtlantic CityAuitinBaltimoreBaton RougeBillingsBirmingham

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The RegisterDEPARTMENT HEADS

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FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986 3A

DIGESTMan arrested after bar fighta TLANTIC HIGHLANDS —O A Leonardo resident wasr a a r m t e d and charged withdisorderly conduct Wednesdaynight following a scuffle atPaul's Tavern on First Avenue.

Glenn Milliard, 21, of 33Brookside Road, allegedlystarted a fight with his brotherScott which was broken upshortly afterward by otherpatrons. Police said another

scuffle broke out later whenMilliard allegedly hit hisbrother again and then hitJames Murphy with a barstool.

Sgt. Timothy Duncan andPatrolman Thomas Weniel re-sponded to a call at 10:50 p.m.and had to forcibly enter thefront door due to numerouspeople fighting.

Milliard was released on hisown recognizance.

3 hurt in chain-reaction accident

HOLMDEL — A townshipwoman suffered seriouship and leg injuries

Wednesday evening followinga chain-reaction, four-vehicleaccident that occurred onLaurel Avenue near Highway36.

A car driven by Mary Don-nelly, 2 Taylor Run, Holmdel,was struck as it exited adriveway on Laurel Avenueabout 5:42 p.m. by a vehicledriven by Jeffrey Pfister, 31Pine Way, New Providence.

Donnelly, 56, got out of hercar and was then struck by thevehicle operated by Pfister, 41,which was struck by a vehicledriven by Steven L. Makow, 23Oleander Way, Clark.

Makow, 21, was also struckby a vehicle operated byClaudia Miller, 32, 9 TulipDrive, Fords.

Police said Donnelly wastaken to Bayshore CommunityHospital, here, by the HolmdelFirst Aid Squad where she isbeing treated for leg and hipInjuries.

Pfister and Miller, who alsowere taken to Bayshore Com-munity Hospital, sufferedminor injuries and were re-leased Wednesday night.

Police said Mikow sufferedno injuries.

Patrolmen Thomas Franzoniand James. Hammond in-vestigated.

Rumson-Fair Haven reinstates bowling

RUMSON — Varsity bowl-ing was reinstated by theRumson-Fair Haven Re-

gional High School Board ofEducation Tuesday night.

Some school board memberscited the cost of the program, alack of interest in the sport andthefact that the ?port should -be considered a recreationalsport as reasons they voted toeliminate the bowling team lastOctober.

But according to team coachAlex Koharski, because theschool board eliminated theteam without telling anybodythe subject was even on theagenda, supporters did nothave a chance to make apresentation to the board insupport of the team.

Since October, team memberscollected about 90 signatureson a petition representing stu-dents and parents who supportinterscholastic bowling.

Team members say theyhave about 25 studentsinterested in joining thisseason, which runs about 10weeks during January andFebruary.

"Bowling costs less thanother sports at the school,"said Bob Bowen, a senior who

is also the team captain. "Iwouldn't mind paying for it, aslong as we had a team."

Koharski even volunteeredto donate the $300 stipend hereceives for coaching the teamto pay for the students' bowl-ing fees, as long as the boardreinstated bowling as: afflBter-scholastic activity.

Board members who dis-agreed with the October de-cision said that until the boardexamines the entire sportsprogram and develops criteriafor scholastic and recreationalsports, it was unfair to singleout bowling, label it as' arecreational sport andeliminate it.

In other business, the boardaccepted the resignation ofMartin Barger, board attorney.In his letter of resignation,Barger cited new commitmentsas the reason he could nolonger continue as the board'sattorney.

The board appointed RobertClarke, who was its labornegotiator during the recentcontract talks with teachers, asBarger's replacement until theboard reorganizes in thespring.

Junior Museum addition authorized

BROOKDALE — The Boardof Trustees last nightauthorized construction of

a Junior Museum addition tothe Monmouth Museum onproperty leased by the'collegeto the museum.

College architects reviewedconstruction .plans and in-dicated that the plans compliedwith the aesthetic consider-ations of the campus.

In other business, the boardapproved the acceptance of a

$25,000 grant in aid under theHigher Education Services forSpecial Needs Students.

The program will provide anintensive instructional orienta-tion program that will helpstudents with disabilities ad-just to a new environment.

The board also accepted theresignation of board memberJohn Villapiano who will as-sume the office of the Mon-mouth County Hoard of Free-holders effective Jan. 2.

Union Beach OKs suit settlement offer

UNION BEACH — The caseof Sue Brown vs. UnionBeach Borough may soon

come to a close.The Borough Council last

night adopted a resolution call-ing for an $8,000 settlement inits ongoing legal battle withBrown, a former police dis-patcher who in 1983 filedcharges against the boroughfor failing to act on a sexualharassment complaint she'dlodged against former boroughPolice Chief Joseph Schauf fler.

Schaufflcr, then a policesergeant with the borough, wascharged with sexually harass-ing Brown while the two wereon duty in 1981.

Brown, who was employedfor five years as a boroughdispatcher, also had filedcharges against then-UnionBeach Police Chief RichardTrembley for failing to takedisciplinary action againstSchauffler, and the boroughfor supporting the chiefsstance.

In the proposed out-of-court settlement announcedlast night, Union Beach willagree to pay Brown $4,000,

More local newsFor more information on civic organizations, clubs, fund-

raisers and other community events, see the Your Town page inthe Living Section. If you have a press release about a comingevent or news about your organization, please send it to: KarenSpiewak, Your Town Editor, The Register, One Register Plaza,Shrewsbury, N.J. 07701.

Schauffler will pay $3,000 andTrembley $ 1,000, said BoroughAttorney Norman B. Kauff.

"This is the first time that areasonable figure has been puton the table toward a settle-ment," Kauff said of the five-year-long legal dispute.

Brown declined comment onthe settlement when contactedat her home last night.

Borough Council men John J.Keating and Lee Bernsteinvoted against the tentative set-

- tlement last night, arguing thatthe borough did,not yet knowwho was guilty in case.

"When we first got into this,the council set out to find outwho was guilty. Now-, we'rebacktracking and we don'tseem to care who's guilty,"Keating said.

However, Mayor CarmenStoppiello argued that none ofthe parties involved are stillemployed by the borough andthat, thus far, the borough hadexpended nearly $45,000 inlegal fees on the case.

Stoppiello voted in favor ofthe resolution along withCouncilmen Richard Ellisonand Frank DiCicca.

Colts Neck school board callsfor halt to Earle constructionBy M M V M Y JOHNSONThe Register

COLTS NECK — Following the lead of thetown fathers, the Board of Education lastnight unanimously passed a resolution callingfor the immediate cessation of all constructionat Earle Naval Weapons Station.

The board also directed its attorneys toprepare a suit against the Navy.

In doing so, the board expressed its commit-ment to working with the Township Commit-tee, as well as the Concerned Citizens of ColtsNeck, in seeking a remedy to a possibleonslaught of 500 housing units at the base.

The units, to be phased in during the nextfew years, will bring more than 1,000 militarypersonnel and their families to the smalltownship. With the growth will come anestimated 600 school children, causing an

increase in local property taxes and a $1million boost to the school budget, officialshave said.

"This is an attempt to work as a combinedbody since our goals are the same," boardPresident David Kostka said last night.

"This is an issue that sometimes changes bythe minute ... and there have been somedifficulties keeping all of the committees up todate," he said.

The six-fold resolution passed by the boarddirects the establishment of a steering commit-tee to coordinate activities related to Earle.The committee will comprise board members,Township Committee members and residentsin the citizens group.

In a related development, the board dis-cussed its on-site inspection of the baseyesterday, specifically, some of the 200 unitsthat are being built on wetlands.

The Army Corps of Engineers announced

last week that an investigation of the landconcluded that the Navy was in violation ofthe federal Clean Water Act when it filled inabout two acres of wetland and proceeded tobuild on them without a corps permit.

Board member Brook Crossan was at the siteyesterday with the board's special attorneyand environmental consultant. Accompanyingthe trio were corps and Navy officials todetermine if any additional structures havebeen slated for wetlands.

The board is in the process of developing itsown environmental assessment study, and willuse its findings in the study, as well as inpreparation of its court case should it pursuelegal recourse.

Crossan said another trip to the siteprobably will be necessary because of yester-day's rain. He said he observed that many ofthe surrounding areas adjacent to the con-struction site also appear to be wetlands.

THE REGISTER/GREGG ELLMAN

Neither rain norLetter carrier Pete Palumbo of Long Branch braves theelements to deliver mall on Overlook Avenue In the West Endyesterday. /&

Marlu-Twitchellcondemnation _hearing delayedBy BOB NEFFThe Register

FREEHOLD — Superior CourtJudge Alvin Y. Milberg yesterdayset a Feb. 9 hearing date in thecounty's condemnation of themultimillion-dollar Marlu-Twitchell tract in Holmdel.

In setting the date, Milbergmade it clear there would be nofurther delays in the courtproceedings begun more than ayear ago. He said Judge MarshallSelikoff likely will preside.

The latest delay came at therequest of county Counsel RichardO'Connor, who requested extratime to prepare a defense to arecent appraisal of the tract by itsowners, developers Ronald Ac-quaviva and Frank DiMisa.

O'Connor said the appraisal has"so complicated" the already-complexlitigation that he neededthe extra time. "I've never seensuch a thing in 20 years," he said.

The appraisal puts the value ofthe 366-acre tract at $30 million,while the county has offered $12million in an effort to preserve itas open space, and three condem-nation commissioners have set a$19.2 million price tag.

Milberg, in granting the delay,said he wanted to "make it

perfectly clear that (attorneys)will be given no more time. This isa Christmas present."

Milberg said he probably wouldassign the case to Selikoff, who, headded, is an experienced condem-nation judge.

The tract comprises two adja-cent farms on the Holmdel Middletown border, along the Swim-ming River Reservoir. Developerswant to build on the land, but thecounty fears development maycontaminate the reservoir andwants to acquire it to preserve itas open space.

Yesterday, Milberg noted thatSelikoff on Monday is scheduled tohear another county condemna-tion matter, an attempt topurchase by eminent domain theBamm Hollow tract in M.id-dletown.

In the Bamm Hollow case, de-velopers DiMisa, Harry Kantorand Victor Losquadro had plannedto build town houses on the tractwhile keeping some of the golfcourse already there, when thecounty filed for condemnation.

The 276-acre tract is home tothe Bamm Hollow Golf and Coun-try Club. The developers wouldhave to pay $16.3 million todevelop the land, while the countyhas estimated the tract's worth atabout $8 million.

Brookdale, faculty resume talks todayBy RANDY BRAMEIERThe Register

MIDDLETOWN — Both sides remaincautiously optimistic that falks today willresolve a 14-month long contract dispute,heading off a possible faculty strike atBrookdale Community College.

Talks between the college and facultyassociation on a three-year contract willresume at 3 p.m. today with Lawrence'Hammer, a fact-finder with the Public Em-ployees Relations Committee.

A faculty strike seemed imminent after a13-hour bargaining session Dec. 3 failed toproduce any progress. Faculty members votedoverwhelmingly Dec. 11 to authorize theirbargaining) team to call a stcike, pendingtoday's talks.

Faculty members have worked without acontract since June 30.

"Realistically, we have to be optimistic orwe wouldn't show up," Gary Lavorgna, aBrookdale faculty member and a part of thebargaining team, said yesterday.

"It won't be a piece of cake because we havea long way to go. But it's not an impossibleroad," he said. "Reasonably, we have a little

time to work something out."For months, the teams have sought agree-

ment on several issues, namely the facultyschedule and pay. Faculty members wantparity through a shorter work schedule andhigher pay, comparable to that of other statecolleges.

Brookdale President B.A. Barringer,through a letter to all faculty members Dec. 8,said the college team has proposed across-the-board salary increases of $1,000, $2,000and of 7 percent during the next three years.

Coaches and other specialists would receive1

5 percent to 7 percent increases each year.Part of the optimism, Lavorgna said, stems

from the move by the college team to call forthe meeting. "We hope they have something totalk about," Lavorgna said.

He said he sees no point in striking duringthe holiday break, from Dec 24 to mid-January.

"That would toe like having a war andhaving no one show up," he said. "If ithappens, I believe that it'll happen at thebeginning of the term."

David Clevinger, director of. Brookdalepublic relations, said, "We're always op-timistic. You have to have that attitude innegotiations. We're working to settle it as soonas possible."

Members of the college board of trustees lastnight agreed to lengthen the current semesterby two days, to Dec. 23, because the facultytook unscheduled holidays off as allowed bylaw.

Faculty members have agreed to work theadditional days.

Lavorgna said several items remain on thetable, but "some are not troublesome" toresolve.

He said the teams remain apart on release 'time, used to handle work-related jobs, for -faculty members. College negotiators proposeimposing hours on the faculty for release time.

Faculty, meanwhile, propose handling re-lease time according to what each job requires, |he said.

"It's difficult to compromise. You have tovote yes or no. Someone has to give," he said.

Lavorgna also said the college's efforts toseparate librarians and counselors from therest of the faculty represents an obstacle.

"There is some concern with that in terms ofit being a 'union-busting' kind of action," heexplained.

He described the mood of the facultyassociation as "angry." "When you vote 93 or94 percent in favor of a strike, you'reindicating that you're not very happy," hesaid, referring to the vote to strike last week.

Middletown woman devises own housing planBy RANDY BRAMEIERThe Register

MIDDLETOWN — With the re-vised township affordable hous-ing plan drawing some criticism,Cathy Sullivan of Leonardo de-cided to do something about it.

Enraged over the first plan, andconcerned about the possible im-pact of new housing on schools,she devised her own proposal.

Township planners have con-templated the state-imposed planon-»nd-off for two years. A re-vised plan becomes due to thestate Council on Affordable Hous-ing Jan. 5.

So far, her plan has receivedsome support from PlanningBoard member and TownshipCommittee-man Charles V. Carrolland the promise of considerationfrom board Chairwoman Judith H.Stanley.

"I'd rather be Christmas shop-ping, but it looks like my family

will get the fair share housing planfor the holidays," she said.

Under the current proposal, thetownship would allow builders toconstruct 2,170 units on five sitesin exchange for setting aside 435units for lowand moderate-in-come families.

Another 25 single-family dwell-ings would go along the Bayshore.

Planners targeted 1,045 units atthe Port of Monmouth, 530 unitson Kanes Lane, 318 units onTaylor Lane, 168 units on WestFront Street near Shady Oaks and109 units on Route 36, east of theAction Auction property.

Using school district maps and alist of the 81 proposed housingsites, Sullivan said she picked 12sites to scatter 1,150 units withoutburdening schools. Her plan in-cludes the Port of Monmouthhousing proposal.

She said New Monmouth andFairview elementary schools donot have the space to absorb theestimated 248 school children that

the proposed Kanes Lane housingwould include.

Her plan taps sites on CrestviewDrive, Route 35 by Twin BrooksPark, Route 36 and East Road,Route 36 and Orchard Avenuenear Highlands, Crawfords Cor-ner-Everett Road near Holmdel,Holland Road, West Front Street inLincrdft, Red Hill and Dwightroads, and Laurel Avenue.

She retains the Kanes Lane,Taylor Lane and Route 36 sitesfrom the current plan.

Sullivan said her plan essential-ly provides the board with aframework to maneuver thesmaller proposed sites if theywish. N-

Eight schools would absorb thenew students without the need forschool redistricting. Her plan alsoreduces the average number ofunits per acre from 12 to 7.5, shesaid.

Besides her research, themother of five children spent eighthours compiling the plan, finish-

ing at 3 a.m. Wednesday. Shesubmitted the proposal to the/board late Wednesday night.

Stanley said board memberscould consider shifting some of thesites, possibly with the help ofSullivan's proposal. But, Stanleysaid, subcommittee members shiedaway from planning severalsmaller sites because of the costand for other reasons.

She said the current plan wouldprovide access to transportationand produce better buffers withdevelopers- paying most of theupfront costs. Coupling the af-fordable housing with units ofmarket value would allowmanagers to better maintain thestructures.

Carroll, who criticized the siteselection in the current proposal,said Sullivan's plan deserves a .strong look.

Board members will conduct apublic hearing on the matter at 7p.m. Dec. 29 in the main meetingroom of Town Hall.

TW if, DECEMKR 19. 1986

DIGESTFree PATH rail fare is set for holiday

Free fare will he. providedfor riders of rhe PATHinterstate rail rapid Transit

•jyverri on Vew Yearn Kvefrom 1 1 P M Wednesday fx>remher ;11 unnl K A l l finThursday. January I 1!W7Pnrr Authori ty ChairmanPhilip fi Kaltenharher annmwrert

This is rhe fourth year thatthe Pnrr Authority has offeredfree transportation on PATHor New Year1* Bve ro dis-courage driving afrer holidaycelebration* PATH normallycharges 7R cenrs a ride for its200 iiOO daily riders

This program is aimed arkeeping holiday celebrants offrhe road after they may haveoverindulged in drinking Highway traffic deaths due rodrunk drivers are rragic senseless and, moreover largely

I avoidable Puhlir rrarispf.rration is an excellent alrernarive to driving and ensures asafe icmrney . for all ronrerned. he said Last SewYear « Five nur PATH sysremprovided over 27 iii'm. peoplewith free rides which werp safeand i-onvenienr.' Mr Kalterv.-rvac her said

In addition to the free fareoffer. PATH will increase rhefrequency of New Years Evetrain service, operating on a 15minute frequency her weenNewark and rhe World TradeCenter, and between JournalSquare and .13rd Street viaMfitwiker., insread nf the usual30 mimite service from mid-night to ft A M New Year'sDay All of the trains will haveseven cars instead of rheshorrer rrams run on weekendsand holidays Additional PATHmanagemem supervisory andmaintenance personnel will heon duty to facilitate trainoperations and assist in crowdcontrol

Thairman Kairenhacher alsopointed our that additionalPorr Authority police will he atall trans- Hudson facilities, the(ieorge Washington Bridge andrhe Lincoln and Holland Tun-nels, and the Bayonne andd o e r h a l s B r i d g e s andOurerhridge < rossing.

"Our police will he carefullymoniroring rhe New Year's Evetraffic to help ensure safe,trouble-free travel for allmotorists." Chairman Kalten-harher said

Intersession course registration set

WEST t / )Mi BRRegistrarion for Inrersession 'ourse ar Mon

mouth College will fie ronducted Jan i in Wilson .Flailcollege aclrrjirusrration centerHours will he from H :VJ to Ida m l 'to 3 p m ancl from f, ro7 p m

1 Monmourh s intersession' lasses which are open tostudents from other colleges,run from -Ian 2 through 17

The short term intensiver'ourses in such subjects asaccounting, management..marketing, computer scienceE n g l i s h m a t h e m a t i c sp h i l o s o p h y a n dspeech communication rheater arts', all farry three credits

Additional information onrhe Intersection offerings maybe obtained from the college(if f 11 e of A d m i s s i o n s

Parkway exit ramp 100A to be closed

WrK'OBRir/rK The CKuuing ,muA .exit -ramp-fror.-. rhe ,cfr lane of rhe

northbound f«arden StateParkway will W perrrianenrly,rlosed rorraffir at |ri 00 AM onTuesday Ur'rrritifr 23 rheNew I '• r s e y H i g h w a yAuthority announced TheAuthority, operares rhe 173-rrille (larder Srare Parkway*r,/| rr,e ''.ar/leri HUM: Arf j< enrer in Ifolmdel. The e<ir ramp is a ronnertionbetween the northbound

Parkway and Roure W» F'.a r in.~lb».Hi*tntH,tnit-Hi* Tint.on kall«

in Monmouth fViuntyAr the same time a new I WlA

ey it ramp from the right lane ofrhe northbourid Parkway willhe opened to traffic This newramp will make the directconnection to Route1 6fi Kast1 • This re-routing was done toirnorove r|-,e rnr»vement rir traffir ir, this area a i part of theInterchange |f)0 imprcive-ments

Long Branch youth charged with assault' > ' . ' . FtRANC.II A localjuvenile who tut anotherjuvenile on 'he head with a

'1 limb during a fight Monday

'h aggravated assault aridssession of a wapon for an

rhe Hnctw Whjre laundry Vil .lagp at (532 firoadway at aboutH p m The vKtim was taken r/,Vtonmouth Medical ( i n f e r sF.mergency Hfiftw wJhere hewas treated for a minor heartlaceration ancl released from

The iir.hr behind rhe hospiral. police said

Highway Authority to aid coalition

W h<)hV.UIU',y. The

New Jersey HighwayAuthority •' " i l l con

tribute I.Vj 0'J'I ro the *ij>ratiori of rhe transportation'(derations f oordinating f'.orrirrii11«•«• ' T K A ' . V O M ; the'oali' i ' i r i ' < f ' f -I I - - . [ . ' i f ,}* ,<,!; -if '! * r , r ffir eriforornehr agenf ie<s iri the

.Sew York *< '••//. .1 '• r s '• ymetropolitan .irea. HighwayAuthority ' hairman Judith HStanley finrio'ur,ife'fl, r'p'."nrlyThe Authority fiperates theI7.'( in i l " ' . . i rd 'T i HlatcParkway arid the fiarfjf'n Sfat'-A r u fcr i t iT ir i Holrndel

In. the lace of increasingtr. i f f i ' voliirnf1 ttiroughoutrnilfh of N*'W Jersey, and 'ertnitily most fiperially in rh'*1

ri'irth'rri.si'i tor. we iire pleasedtii Mintribute to this importantf ofrimuni'Jitions effort," SHidf.tiinr rmiii Mfinl i 'v "(heI'/irkwuy fortstaritly 4ceksWHy<* to trnprov*1 thf' flow of

rraffi ' 'on its own roadway,now wi th T R A N S C O M spresent efforts and ambitious

.future plans, not only Parkwaypatrons but the entire travel-ing public should benefit, interms of an improW'd trafff'j n ' t i i r e 1 The -TKANSCOMoperations renter, located inJersey City is staffer! hypersonnel of its fifteen memberagencies twelve hours: a flay

Commented . TKANSCOM .Chairman J<ouis J Oambirrini,Assistant Executive !)irertorfor Trans Hudson Tranfiportat iffn for the Pr»rt Aut.horit.y f»fNew York and New Jersey,"TN 1 Garden Stale Parkway isa major transportation arteryin the hi state region TKANSCOM welcomes this financialcommitment by the New JerseyHighway Authority ConvmissioriiTS and the Authority'srorU'lniC'd partirlpatton iri thisunique cooperative ef for t"

Two added to Brookdale Trust Board

LI N C- H It V T T h e

f'rrifrkfliile ' firnrniinity College boiirfl fif trustees has

appointed twfi new members tothe llrookfliile KfiundiilifinTrust llo>ir<l '

Appfiiriterl ffir fine yearterms **•> < been fHtriria I'Clvne. l.'fiint I'liiisiiril, midKlf i (enff Kubri l#fif andro,Mlildlelown

Clyne. who bus been thei-XI'l Illlvi" fliret lor of I hi1 Morifii'iiiib flfiuill l»fvelftpnient' fiuricil sinfe I ((84. tins nhill helor i lli'gil'l' from Keuliiif'Ni-W Vorki ( ollege In I I IHI,site ri'ceivi'd the Kcnl'ji CullegeA'utiiriiM' Award for OulsliiniiIng I'riifrssloiuil Ai hli'veinrnl

She WHS previously I he ilirector of Inforriuitlon ServlrcHat Ori'fin ( ounly C'ullvffc HMIIi l in i tof of ('ommiinlty Kelulion', lit Jersey Sliiire Miilii ill('•'lilri III Ni'ptiiiii'

l''uliri f.oi'iuiiho is the ni ltiirul ci'iili'i fund HilmiiilHtmtiir nl tin1 Oiirtli'ii Suite Art.s( ruler

She In in live with the N I I -tliilllll SIM Irly nf KiiuilKxenitivrs, Onl i r of I lit

ern Star, is on the Advisorylioiird nf I be Itowery Kurid,New Jersey Itusiness HiProfessional Women's AHBOCiation, Monmoiitb Ocean !>'•velnpmi'nt Council and the N.J.Assoi iatiiin for Retarded .Chil-dren. She IIIIH spent '/.<> yearn inHoy Scouting iinii ha", receivedthe John I)eer<r Award forOutstanding Woman of theYear

The board reappointed.dimes liruno, I .it Me Silver;Clifford I'arr, Spring Lake;I in vid Cohen, llolrndt-l andShiiriin I'urtman, Ocean, tothree year icrinN,

Appointed to one year lernmwere Prank A. Oamplone,Kreeliold; Milton Oale, LittleSilver; Prank (iitnhlr, Interliikcn; William ('. Johnson, Jr.,M ldd le town ; Jumefi Joy ,IxiL'lint; .1. l.i'oniiril Ki/.iin, At -lantlr Highlands; William PaulMacl.iiiighlin, KrOl'hold; Dr.John Miii i alt. Little Sliver;Jo'.i'pli Mrl.ooiii'. I'li'i'lidld,Koberl Obertt, Sr.. Red Bank;Hrn I'rliilo. Maniisquan Park,mid William J. WUIHII. Jr.,M»nasi|iuin

Hospital —Continued from Page I A

f.inger Mulligan executive di-rector of the Mental Health As-sociation of Monmouth County.said the association was pleased tolearn ehe hospital had » newquality control program, but thatthe association would remainskeptical of the program until if,could evaluate it* results

"We were tcid by Che Marlboroadministration that the prior sys-tem wan state of the art. ' she said

But that was disproved by theinitial lark nf JCAH accredita-tion "

Mulligan Mid that many of rhehospital's policies are "excellentin theory, but fall short in im-plementation."

For example, Mulligan said the

hospital's Incident Review Com-mittee, which studies unusual in-cidents ar rhe hospital siwh assuicide attempts and patient topatient assaults, was a good com-mittee in theory But, in practice,Mulligan said that "of 9ft unusualincidents reported nn one servicear the facility, only one case wasreported to the Incidenr ReviewCommittee

"That's why we are skepticalthat the new quality control pro-gram in going to he che panacea.hut I hope we're proven wrong forboth the patient's sake and themany good staff members at thehospital who are trying to do rheirbest."

Hospital officials maintain that..[TAH did not criticize the hospi-

tal's services and programs Theysaid the report criticized the waythe facility monitored its pro-grams on a continual basis eninsure that the programs met theneeds of Che patients.

"It's «oe that our services werebad, " Fongemie said "But on aroutine basis the services were notbeing evaluated."

According to Pongemie. before1962 the hospital had no system ofreviewing patient care and ser-vices

He said the first remnants of aquality control program began inearly l»83 when the hospitalhired a quality control coordinatorto occasionally conduct special-ized studies of programs ar. thefacility

f ,'nder the old system, there was

nn ongoing monitoring of pacieatcare, Fongemie said The systemoperated only when problem** «e-nirred. it did not work to preventthe problems from happening, hesaid.

Fongemie said the new system isdesigned to look at what is goingon in the hospital — both good andbad and in the short time thesystem has been'operating, hospi-tal officials have learned a lotabout the way their facilityoperate*

"Clearly we are doing thing*better than we did," he said. "Butthere us a long way to go And inspite of all of these things, therewill still be someone who oc-casionally falls through thecracks "

StudyContinued 'rom Page 1A

between t l million and 11 millionThere 's enough posit ive

pressure from the public that sucha thing should be done said OrSteven Berkowitz. one of thefounding physicians of SOS and anorthopedist in Neptune

Berkowitz said, the group hascharted clusters" of illness inplaces such as Wildwood PointPleasant and Seaside that are•just too coincidental."

The physician said he fears thatmany more cases are not reportedto Jersey Shore doctors hy swimmers who don't live at rhe Shore

SOS told the officials 'abouthundreds of letters it receivedfrom physicians describing ai l-ments su'ferecl by patients whoswam in ocean waters The range

Clammers —Continu«ri from Paqe I A

seem to be a short- term solutionto this."

While the t)Bp l i f ted a.shellfishing ban yestejrday thatresulted from a ruptured sewerpipe in Rumson two weeks ago the.rhree Highlands <!<•[.v1 A\ ion pUni shavp been ordered < loseci until thehorou(th can construct a bypasssystem for a broken sewer mainadjacent to Shore f>nve

Harvey said he received ap-jproval from the f>KP to bring in'sijlf water from the end of SandyHook Bay and has followed fjepart.ment of Health guidelines to'reate a proposal that, will' Ramformal approval

Highlandsfrom PIQB 1A

tf the f>KP is goinsr, ro put a gunto our heads, we want. ,to hav»control of rhe work.1 said Fssanri .

John t"»elson, attorney fo/Stymie's said his cjienr. would

SourlisCbtrtinuid frorr r-Vf. 1A

borough's operations.Currently the fax rate in fieri

(tank is.12 percent, and an additional H percent goes solelytoward the tax reserve In IftftS,the riorou({h's rate _of_sucejai_jn_collecting taxes dropped from 'tlpercent to 5(4 percent because, ofthe Sourlises' 188,000 plus of unpaid debts to Red P«ank

"It s quantity - it's the. amount,we're talking about, " Arnoni: said

In his Utter to the governor,Arnone said the rising develop-ment in the borough, coupled withland speculation, has made the. taxcollection rate, drop, a.s multipleproperties are bought up by indi-vidual developers

"The; resulting increase,to theReserve for l.'niollefted Taxes is-unacceptable to me as an electedofficial,11 Arnone said

The Sourlises, resident."! ofKurnsori, own many buildings andproperties in He.d Hank Theirportion of unpaid taxes rep-resented '18 percent, of all delin-quent taxes in IflHTi. They wereremiss Iri paying $81,279 at build-Ings on H7 properties and $*J,8!(!(of water and sewer charges

However, Sourlis said articleswhich have, detailed the couple'soverdue taxes have been unfairbi'ciiuse the 488,001) only rep-resented a portion of what theyactually paid to the borough for1085.

"Our taxes' in Ked Hank wereover |500,000," she said. "...Idon't think the borough Retshurt."

In explanation of the delinquentwater anil newer ihargen, SourlisMud the figure was comprised oftenants in their buildings whowere remiss In paying their waterhills.

"Now we become the collectionagency," she said

All lute tax payers are chargedun interest penalty by the boroughof H percent fur the first $1,500owed, and IH percent for anythingowed ufler that. The interest ac-crues from the date of the delin-quency until it in paid.

Taxpayers who wail until afterthe tax nale to pay their overdueilclils lire subject to an 18 percentinterest rate on the entire amountof their delinquent taxes.

of sicknesses include eye nose, ear»nd throat infections, upper re.-sirarnry complications, vagimtis,gastrointestinal and urinary tract.infections and skin disorders

He described the case of an 11 -year old girl who "took in severalmouthful* of water" while swim-ming in the ocean off WildwoodWithin IH hours, the girl de-'/ e l o p e d s a l m o n e l l agastroenteritis, and symptoms ofdehydration vomiting and highfever

Though she recovered from thesickness, and nven'overcame jointpain related ro salmonella whichdeveloped a month later herphysician concluded that, the i l l -ness was probably related toswimming in dirty coastal waters

Another case involved an 11 -year-old boy who contractedhepatitis, possibly from swimmingin the ocean, and died within twomonths

"When they tell us how difficult,this study would he to performand complain about how much itwill cost, how are you going to cellthat to that child i mother."Berkowitz said

James Staples a-spokesman forT;RP said Chat a coordinated ef-fort between environment andhealth officials is "definitely"being considered, though neithercost nor strategy has been de-terminer] •Between us, weredefinitely going rn do something,we just don't know what," staplessaid, who added It won't be a

cheap thing." 'SOS is asking the public to call

the governor's office to urge that,stare money be provided specifi-cally to do the study said f>rRobert f>ennis. an orthopedic sur-geon and another founder of thegroup SOS will al.so urge the stateagencies to contract large portionsof the work to outside agencies sothe research will not "get hoggeddown in bureaucratic inner work-ings "

f)enni.s said SOS would alviinsist (that the study r*» conductedduring the summer of I W 7 , whenpeople are in the water, and. not.spread over several years

The group is supported by nearly 7.IW) people, including officialsof the Jersey Shore MedicalCenter, said Berkowitz

. The trucks used by Add-OnPools transport water to bothfresh and salt water pools Harveysaid the trucks will he sanitizedbefore they begin transportingwater to the plant to satisfy healthofficials roncerns as well as hisown_ My pJant . is . .wor th_A. i ia l f_million dollars," he said I'm not,going to fool around with myequipment for a truckload ofwater "

He has also met. with, localclammers to work out an arrange,rnent for the_added cost of truck •ing tije water to he split ber.we.er.himself and the clammers Harveysaid the deal was made feasiblewhen Add- 'm Pools agreed u> do

the job ar a discount rate r.c neipChe clammers • •

"I II be running ar. about abreak-even point,1 said HarveyI It's sf/iinf! re, he nxpensive but Iwanr ro see the. clammers a(o backr.o work and I want ro it, hack rowork, r.oo "

Harvey said he will 'onra. f r*eowners of r.he other-two riepuration plants in Highlands,Shrewsbury River Clam Co andHighlanrisShe.llfish. and give themrhe option to operating out of hisplant until the crisis is rive.r

1 V.'\<cu if rhe other plants don'taccept' rny offer I want, the clam-mers t.a know that they are allwelcome J".o work for me he said

"I'm doing this so all the clammers'an go hack to work "

While Harvey spent the dayironing out the details of his planto get clammers bark to workborough riffirials began reviewingapplications from clammers inneed of financial assistance

-•rVirmer mayor- ilahww Whit*.,who * < i appointed as A srn'rialadvisor to assist Highlands Wel-fare director Nanette Beatly inreviewing applications, said thatabout j!O rlammers applied yev-rerday morning and more arcexpected today

A lot of the people r a n t handlehaving two weeks off aroundChristmas, said White

nave no problem with r.he boroughS(mn«( ahead with repairs as lonf(i ; r.he engineer s puns show.that,-.c, f-ir*.r,erViamaaie wil l be done tothe property

fix r.he une said fielson ' We.'»ar.r, the line, fixer} Were, the oneswho instituted thi.s suit

F'a.sano said it will .cost anestimated $30,000 to $315,000 to do

re willing CO do aoyr.hmg to the. work required, to comply with

the fJfcP order and Mcfiann hasre'-ier/erl the. right to review thepiar. < ftefrife the work can be. done

ff I give my consent I want tobe sure we don't .se.nd Stymie'ssliding down the. hill." *aidMr/iann •

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fRIDAY. DECEMBER 19 10B6 The Register 5A

Senate OKs bill to study sewage systemsBy STEPHEN MCCARTHYThe Register

THKNTON - The Senate yes-terday IHINMMI U hill funillnKir>i)(),ooi) to trace the complex,and ili'ii'i UII ill inn. network ofsewer |ilpen anil storm drums Ihaiexport* liny contrlhiito greatly towater pollution

The hill, moiloloil after an Intensive sower lino survey In Minimouth County, would fund similarstudio* In ill her parts of the Mate.lly samplliiK. sin veylnK and niiippinK iiiulormoninl sowor linos,hoalth and sunllHtlon officials willbo able to act quickly to stanchsewage flow wlien pipes breakunderground,

The legislation emerged largelyfrom a hearing this summer beforethe Senate Special Committee on

Coastal I'ollutlon where LesterJargowaky, Monmouth Countylioalt h coordinator, testified aboutthe county's experience with thecleanup of Deal Lake.

A team assembled by Jargowskyconducted an intensive survey ofthe urban blocks around Dealbate*, using metal detectors to findpipes beneath the pavement anddyes flushed through toilets inprivate homes to detect leaks andruptures in the antiquated,dilapidated sewer line system.

The health coordinator saidmajor breaks in sewer lines andimproper storm drain connectionswere detected. "As a result of thatsurvey, we found collector linesthat no one even knew werethere," he said. The team revealedillegal storm drain connectionsbelieved to be the cause of oceanpollution that resulted in beach

County budget'seffect on taxesto be determinedBy LISA R. KRUSI

The Register

t'KKKIIOI.D — The countybudget is rolling along andshould be ready for the free-holders within i he next twoweeks. Hut whether thai moanscounty taxpayers will see anincrease or decrease in their taxrate is still unknown.

Finance Director Mark Ackersaid his office has finished withthe appropriations review of allcounty departments. His atten-tion, lie said, would »now boturned to the revenue portionof the budget, And that's whenthe tax figures will begin totake shape

"I'm pleased with theprogress." said Aeko-r, Woshould.he able to come up withthe numbers on a tax rate byearly or mid-January."

The budget process was notwithout some difficulty, how-ever.

Since revenue sharing wascanceled this year, the countylost some $:l I million in federal

aid. Hut last year, the countyonly spent $2 million of thatfederal money, saving the $1.4million as a cushion for the11)87-88 fiscal year.

Hut. the freeholders madeseveral land acquisitions lastyear and each time propertywas purchased, the county hadto put up ft percent cash.

The cash — to the tune of $1million — came from the excessmoney from the federal rev-enue sharing fund, Acker said.

As a result, only $400,000from t lie federal revenue shar-ing money is leftover for thecounty to use in its 1987-88budget.

"There's a $ 1.0 million loss tomake up for." said Acker.

Although Acker said hedidn't soo a need to eliminate

j 5 glie Would have a better ideaafter the budget hearing.

"The majority of the work isbehind us." said Acker. "Theother two parts of the equationare not as time-consuming (asappropriations! We shouldknow by early January wherewe'll be '

Union Beach policeawait new councilBy KEVIN FRECHETTE

"-•e Reg sit' ,

ON BEACH -* Negotiatorsongoing contract dispute

th< Borough Council andhewnen's Benevolent As-

JMi said they will wait untils pain control of coun-

n 1 before attempting toit a now salary package.

.if-1 attorney Martin Kudnick.epresents 12 PBA membershfil'nion Beach Police De-ent, said in a telephonei w last week that negotia-

>* •.h the council's all-Demo-regaining,unit reached an

iT.pisst earlier this year.

La*.; month, Democratic Coun-ii.rr.tr. Lee Bernstein was replaced•a* hthd of the council's bargainingunit, !•> follow Democratic Coun-cilman Alan Brunner. RepublicanCouncilman Richard Ellison also» as cAiled in to help with negotia-tions

Rudr.K k said he hoped the coun-

I'SI•r. US

;r ,1ar.krr.TTi

Hw.i«t i i ' r».:.!• lpartm.-:<—.

cil's new bargaining team will bemore receptive to the PBA's re-quests. Union members are seek-ing pay parity with borough streetand water department workers,who received a 1986 salary in-crease of between. 8 and 8.5percent. The police have been.working without a contract sinceJan. 1. when their previous two-year package expired.

Kudnick said he will try tonegotiate a new three-yearpackage after Jan. 1 when Re-publicans gain control of the coun-cil.

Brunner said the police officersarc due for a pay raise but saidcertain aspects of the PBA's latestproposal must be considered bythe council before a settlement canbe reached. He declined to com-ment on specifics of the contract.

• "The Union Beach Police De-partment is one of the lowest paidin the county." Brunner said yes-terday. "The men deserve a nicesalary increase and they shouldget it."

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closings at Asbury Park in 1986.Jargowsky estimates that the

team's efforts resulted in stoppingmore than 3 million gallons ofsewage a day from flowing intoDeal Lake. He said municipalpublic works crews and otherpublic agencies worked quickly tofix sewer line breaks as they werediscovered.

Jargowsky said his testimonybefore the Senate committee wastaken "almost verbatim andplaced into proposed law."Further, the governor's officeasked him to detail the team'sexperiences with Deal Lake as amodel for other communities inthe state.

State Sens. S. Thomas Gagliano,R-Monmouth, and Frank Pallone,D-Monmouth, co-sponsored thebill, which originally contained a

$2 million appropriation.However, the Senate Appropria-

tions Committee reduced the al-location to $500,000. The stateDepartment of EnvironmentalProtection will use the money on amatching fund basis to establishsimilar survey programs in otherNew Jersey counties, particularlythose along the Jersey Shore.

The measure passed in the Sen-ate by a 37-0 vote.

Each county health agencywould develop its own programunder the bill, preparing outfallmaps which locate and numbereach storm drain and sewer dis-charge pipe.

"This is the future for NewJersey," Jargowsky said. "If weforget about the infrastructureand don't monitor it closely, we'regoing to lose a lot."

If sewer lines continue tocrumble, the New Jersey tourismindustry, especially crucial alongthe coast, and the general qualityof life, is bound to suffer, he said.

Jargowsky said that sewageflow into streams, lakes, riversand the ocean spurs the rapidgrowth of aquatic plant life.Often, this • accelerated growthresults in algae-clogged rivers andchoked off lakes.

By stemming the flow of sew-age, lots of money on dredging andrestoration could be saved, hesaid.

The mapping of complicated andantiquated sewer line systems alsowill provide valuable data forcounties to apply for federal orstate public works constructiongrants, he said. Lester Jargowsky

Hazlet man guilty of woman's slayingNAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A court in Rwanda

convicted a wildlife researcher from Hazlet inhis absence yesterday of murdering DianFossey, a noted expert on gorilla behaviorslain at her remote jungle camp a year ago.. The three judges delivered the verdict

against Wayne Richard McGuire, 34, of Hazlet,after considering the evidence since a one-daytrial last Thursday.

Conviction carries an automatic sentence ofdeath by hanging, but McGuire has returned tothe United States, which has no extraditiontreaty with the central African country.

McGuire was a research assistant to Fossey,a 53-year-old American who spent 18 yearsbefriending, studying and protecting themountain gorillas of Rwanda. She was foundhacked to death last Dec. 27 at the camp on theslopes of Rwanda's Mont Visoke, a dormantvolcano.

Investigators initially suspected poachers,but in July issued an arrest warrant forMcGuire, who had left Rwanda a few days

Prosecution evidenceincluded a letterpurportedly written byMcGuire in which he wassaid to complain thatFossey never gave himaccess to her research.

earlier.He denied involvement in Forney's murder,

but said he would not return to Rwanda todefend himself.

The Rwandan government wont ahead withthe trial without either a defendant or defenselawyer. It was held in Ruhengeri, which is t>0

miles north of Kigali, the capital, and the only-population center near the Fossey camp site.

Prosecutor Mathias Bushishi said McGuire'smotive was the theft of Fossey's researchmaterials. He had taken time out from doctoralstudies at the I'niversity of Oklahoma atNorman to work with her.

Bushishi declared that McGuire also brokeinto Fossey's cabin, which was guarded, onFeb. 3 of this year and took two cartons whosecontents were unknown

Other prosecution evidence included a letterpurportedly written by McGuire in which hewas said to complain that Fossey never gavehim access to her research, and a few strandsof hair found in Fosjsey's clenched right hand

Tests in France found that the hair camefrom a white person other than Fossey. andMcGuire was the only other white in the campor area that night, Bushishi said.

The government revealed yesterday thatofficials had cleared four of five Rwandanworkers arrested at Fossey's camp. •

OBITUARIESBennslt, William.E. Sr.Borkowski, Adam A.Evans, DennisFusser, LudwioGibb, Arthur E.Jones, CongoSchneider, Irene E.Stanton, Joanne

Irene E. SchneiderRED BANK — Irene £.

Schneider, 92, died Wednesday inRiverview Medical Center, RedBank.

Born in Brooklyn, X.Y., Mrs.'Schnieder resided in Glendale,N.Y. before moving to Red Bank in19070.

She was a member of the FirstBaptist Church in Red bank.

Her husband. Nicholas A.Schneider, died in 1953.

Surviving are three niecesThe John E. Funeral Home. Red

Bank, is in charge of arrange-ments.

Arthur E. Gibb Joanne Stanton Dennis EvansMIDDLETOWN - - Arthur E.

Gibb. 63. died yesterday at home.Born in Holy Oaks, Mass., Mr.

Gibb resided in Kearney,Keansburg and Cliffwood Beachbefore moving to Middletown 2Syears ago.

He was a self-employed esti-mator and project manager. Helast worked for Thorn Construc-tion Company in Red Bank for 10years.

He was a U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II.

He was a member of the Societyfor Preservation and Encourage-ment of Barbershop Singing inAmerica, Raritan Bay Chapter,where he was the past presidentand one-time director. He wasalso a member of the Big AppleManhattan Chorus in New YorkCity. I

Surviving are Mis wife. PatriciaWitzel Gibb; a son. Guy AlexanderGibb. at home; and a daughter.Samantha Roff, of Chicago. III.

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

- LONG BRANCH — Joanne St;mton, Hi, died yesterday in Mon-mouth Medical Center. LongBranch

Born in Long Branch. Miss Stan-ton was a lifelong city resident.

She was a junior at Long BranchHigh School, where she was anhonor student and a varsityscholar award recipient.

She was a member of SecondBaptidst Church in Long Branch,where she was a president of theBaptist Training Union, a memberof the Sunday School, member ofthe Junior Usher Board and theYouth Choir. She was also an aidfor the Vacational Bible School.

Surviving are her parents. JohnH; and Florine Stanton; a sister.Rhonda Stanton at home; herpaternal grandmother. LouiseYoung of Long Branch; hermaternal grandparents. Jerry W.annd Pearl Stevenson of Supply.N.C.; and several aunts and uncles;

The Cofor Memorial Home. RedBank, is in charge of arrange-ments.

SAN FRAM ISO) - DennisEvans. 33. diet] Wednesday athome.

Born in Philadelphia. Mr. Evansresided in Aberdeen for manyyears before moving to Californiafive years ago.

He was a 1971 graduate ofMatawan Regional High Schooland attended Kings's college inWilkes-Barre. Pa.

He was a clerk for WilliamsSomona Retail Co in San Fran-cisco

He was a U.S. Navy veteran ofthe Vietnam War

He was a former communicantof St. Clements Roman CatholicChurch in Matawan.

Surviving are his parents. Rob-ert and Louise Evans of Aberdeen;throe sisters. Theresa Gatarz ofllillsborough. Deborah Lewis ofPort Crane. N.Y and Susan Evansof Aberdeen; and several niecesand nephews.

The Want Funeral Home,Morganville, is in charge o'd ar-rangements.

More obits page 6A.

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Christmas services across the countyChristmas and Christmas Eve

services at area churches havebeen scheduled for months inadvance to enhance to spirit of theholiday season. The churcheslisted welcome all to attend.

The Trinity Episcopal Church— West Front St., Red Bank —Christinas Eve: Sacrament of Re-conciliation at 4 p.m.; Vespers andCarols Service at 5 p.m.; HolyEucharist and Carols at 10 p.m.Christmas Day: Holy Eucharistand Carols at 10 a.m. Sunday,December 28th : the usual 9:30a.m. and 11 am services will beconsolidated to the Service ofLessons and Carols at 10 a.m. withthe Parish Christmas Receptionfollowing.

St. Mark's Episcopal Church— 247 Carr Avenue, Keansburg —Christmas Eve: Festival of Carols& Lessons at 7:30 p.m. ChristmasDay: Mass — 9:30 a.m.

The First United MethodistChurch — Atlantic Ave. andChruch St., Aberdeen ,—Christmas Eve: The Family ser-vice, being done by all the childrenof the church, will begin at 7:00p.m. and will include the Cherub,

Carol, and Bell Choirs. The tra-dition service of reflectionthrough carols and scripture willbegin at 11:00 p.m.

Old First Church — 69 KingsHighway , Middle town —Christmas Eve service: The specialservice is a lovely, calming inter-lude between the business ofChristmas preparations and thejoy and delights of Christmas day.During the service the Christmasstory is told through words of theBible and singing of Christmascarols. The service begins at 8p.m., child care is provided andeveryone is welcome.

The First Baptist Church —Third and Main Streets, Keyport— All are invited to the ChristmasEve Candlelight Service at 7:30p.m. The service will include thechoir and congregational singing.Rev. Kenneth Scovell is the pastor.

Cross of Glory LutheranChurch — Cambridge Drive,Aberdeen — Christmas Eve: 7:00p.m. Children's Service, and 10:00p.m. Candlelight Service withHoly Communion, Choir andspecial music.

Calvary Baptist Church to add education wingRED BANK — Rev. John C.

Smith, pastor of the Calvary Bap-tist Church has announced plansfor the church to build end extend.The church has planned for sometime to renovate present meetingrooms and offices. Now plans callfor extension to present edificeand the building a 3 story struc-ture for education purposes.

Rev. Smith feels that the ad-dition will be an enhancement tocommunity needs and involve-ment, At the same time thechurch 's ministry will bestrengthening to its black ex-perience through counseling, wit-nessing and missions. Construc-tion is expected to begin in thesprjng of 1987.

OBITUARIESLudwig Fusser

FAIR LAWN — Ludwig Fusser,86. Saturdsay in the Fair LawnManner Nursing Home.

Born in Germany, Mr. Fussercame to the United States in about1925.

He was a textile chemist withGAF in New York City. He wasalso a part- t ime assistantprofessor at Farleigh Dickinsonand Columbia universities.

He was a president of the Rad-burn Seniors and treasurer of theRidgewood Seniors.

His wife. Edith Sawtelle

Congo Jones,local horse trainer

TINTON FALLS — Congo Jones,76, of Tinton Falls, died Wednes-day in Riverview Medical Center,Red Bank.

Born in Tinton Falls, Mr. Joneswas a lifelong Jersey Shore resi-dent.

He had been as a horse trainerfor the C.V. Witney Stables andthe late Joan Payson, a formerowner of the New York Mest. Healso worked for Gerald Balding inEngland for several years in thesmae capacity.

In 1952 he founded the CongoJones School of Horsemanship inMiddletown where he trained racehorses for 25 years.

He was a member of theShrewsbury Avenue Mae ZionChurch, where he was a memberof the laity counsel.

Surviving are his wife KatherineJones; two sons, Gary Jones andGrant Jones of Tinton Falls; adaughter, Deborah Collier of RedBank: eight grandchildren; andone great grandchild.

The Childs Funeral Home, RedBank, is in charge of arrange-ments. . .

1

254A Death Notice

G O O D E — Minnie ol 72 Bank Street.Red Bank on December IS. 198S Da-voted wile ot William Loving mother ofMilton. Fond sister of Sandy Williams andIda Harris Grandmother of 3. great-grandmother of 2. Funeral service Friday,11 AM. at the Pilgrim Baptist Church.Reverend Millard Hama officiating intern-ment Monmouth Memorial Park, TintonFalls Freinda may call up the Church

, Thursday evening. 6-9 PM. Arrangementsby the Childs Funeral Home ol Red Bar*.

B O R K O W S K I — Adam A (LI Col USAlenredl ol Tinlon Falls. NJ on Wednesday. Dec 17

• at Riverv.ew Medical Center Funeral mass Monday.Dec 22 at 10 00 am. Irom SI Leo the Great RCCturch Lmcrotl. NJ. Friends may call al the BooedA Braun Home lor Funerals. 106 Broad St..Ealonlown Sunday 2-4 and 7-9 p m. Kindly omitfloorers Donations may be made lo the AmericanCancer Society. 125 Corlies Ava Allenhurst. NJ07711 interment Woodbine Cemetery

J O N E S —Congo, ol 61 Springdale Ave-. TimorFalls, on Dec 17. 1966 Devoted husband ofKatharine Losing father of Grant and Gary Jones andDeborah Collier Grandfather ot eight and greatgrandfather ol one Funeral service Monday at 10 30a m . Rev Andrew Foster officiating Interment atMonmouth Memorial Park in Tinlon Falls Friends maycall at me luneral home.Sunday 6 to 9 p m In lieu of(lowers, please make donations to the ShrewsburyAvenue Mae Zion Church building fund in the nameol Congo Jones Arrangements by the Childs FuneralHome ol Red Bank

Fussaro, died in 1984.Surviving are a son, .Walter

Fusser of Tinton Falls; and twodaughters, Anne Boyd of FairHaven and Ruth Sherman of NewYork City.

The Edward F. Kugler FuneralHoihe, Saddlebrook, is in charge ofarrangements.

Adam A. BorkowskiTINTON FALLS — Adam A.

Borkowski, 66, died Wednesday inthe Riverview Medical Center, RedBank.

Born in Philadelphia, Mr.Borkowski resided in Tinton Fallsfor the past 21 years.

He retired as a U.S. Army Lt.Colonel after 22 years of service.He was a veteran of World War IIand the Korean conflict.

He was a member of EatontownLodge no. 2402 of the BPOE, theNational Rifle Association, andV.F.W. post no.2226 of Oakhurst.

He was a communitcant of St.Leo the Great Roman CatholicChurch in Lincroft.

Surviving are his wife, Doris A.Borkowski; a son, Adam R.Borkowski of Hawaii; a daughter,Denise M. Pettersen of Colorado;three brothers, Witold Borkowskiof Pitman, and Andrew Borkowskiand Frederick Borkowski, both ofPhiladelphia; and three sisters,Mary Dobolack of DuBois Pa., andHelen Scully and Pauline Seczech,both of Philadellphia.

The Robert A. Braun Home forFunerals, Eatontown, is in chargeof arrangements.

William E. Bennett Sr.LONG BRANCH — William E.

Bennett Sr., 76, died yesterday inMonmouth Medical Center, LongBranch.

Born in Long Branch, Mr. Ben-nett he was a lifelong city resi-dent.

He had been an instructor andsuperviser for the New JerseyNatural Gas Co. for 44 yearsbefore his retirement in 1974.

He was a member of the Inde-pendent Fire Co. of Long Branchfor more than 50 years, of theExempt Firemens Organization, ofthe Firemens Relief Association,of the New Jersey Natural Gas Co.Lamplighters Club and of De-Molay.

He was a member of the AsburyPark United Methodist Church inLong Branch.

Surviving are his wife, E. CeciliaJordan at home; a son,' William E.Bennett Jr. of Long Branch; twobrothers, Alfred Bennett of Crest-wood and Richard Bennett of LongBranch; and two sisters, MarthaGlasgow of West Creek andAudrey Rockwell of Springfield,Vt.

The Flock Funeral Home, LongBranch, is in charge of arrange-ments.

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO/ATTEND OUR CHRISTMAS SERVICES/

Christmas Sunday, December 2110:45: Worship Service

6:00: Choir Cantata-'"Everlasting Light"

Christmas Eve Candlelight Services7:00 and 9:00

LINCROFT BIBLE CHURCH790 Newman Springs Road.

LincroftRoute 520 (opp. Brookdale College)

Phone: 747-1231

RELIGIOUS SERVICES

First Assembly of GodSHREWSBURY

220 Sycamore Av.nue Shrewsbury Sun. 8:30j . m VVorship Service. 9:40 a m SundaySchool (or all ages 10:45 a m Worship Ser-vice. 7 00 p m Evening Rally. Wed 7 :& p mFamily Night Services. Youth Royal Ringers

COLTS NECK BAPTIST CHURCHMerchants Way. Colts Neck. Sunday BibleStudy all ages 9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship ser-vices 11 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Nursery for adultservices, Wed. prayer service 7:00 p.m. Fullygraded music program. Active yourth GroupPre-schoolers—High School 462-2779

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHRED BANK

Maple Ave. at Oakland St. Worship 8:45 and 11A.M. church School 9:45 A.M. Evening Service6:00 P.M. Bible Study and prayer group. Youthfellowship - Wed. 7:30 P.M. Pastor EdwardVanderHey, Assoc. Pastor Martin W. Bovee

CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH1305 Eatontown Blvd Oceanport SundaySchool - 9 45 A M Sunday Morning WorshipService - U A M Sunday Evening Worshipservice- 6 00 P M Wednesday Prayer Meet-ing and Bible Study - 7 30 P M Pioneer Girl»— Thursday - ? P M Grades 1-7 StockadeBoys — Saturday — 1 0 A M Grades 3-6 RevPaul E Tavener Pastor 542-2226

HEW MONMOUTH BAPTIST CHURCHCherry Tree Farm & New Monmouth RoadsNew Monmouth Rev Donald N ScofieldPastor Rev Dwight C Smge< Assistant

"Pastor Sunday School tor alt ages 9 30 A MMorning Worship. 10 45 Evening Service7 00 Wed Prayer and Bible Study 7 30 P M

LEONARDO BAPTIST CHURCHDeclaring The Doctrims ol Christ

Corners ol Leonard and Highland Aves BibleSchool 9 30 a m Worship 11 a m Sundayevening and mid-week prayer mtgs at 7 p mPastor Joseph Rebeck y 291-0669

OLD FIRST CHURCH,MIDDLETOWN

Established in 1688. 69 Kings Highway, Mid-dletown Village an ecumenical fellowship, infull communion with the American BaptistChurches and the United Church ot Christ.Church School and the service ol Worshipbegin at 11 a.m. Nursery available. Rev. CraigAnderson. 671-1905

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTISTRED BANK

211 Broad St Red Bank Church Services &-Sunday School — Sun 10 a m Wed Eve8 i 5 p m (Nursery available Sun & Wed)Reading Room 22 Monmouth St Red Bank.Mon Sat 10 a m to 4 30

ALL SAINTS. NAVESINKComer ol Navesink- & Locust Ave Navesink291-0417 Rev H R Sorensen. Rector SundayServices, Holy Eucharist. 8 a m 10 am

HRIST CHURCH; SHREWSBURYFounded 1702

Broad (Rt. 35) and Sycamore. Sunday Ser-vices at 8 and 10. Church School for all ages at10, Nursery. Visitors always welcome.

CHRIST CHURCH, MIDDLETOWN92 King's Highway. Sunday Services: 8:00 AM,Holy Eucharist; 10:00 AM, Holy Eucharist.Church School. Wednesday: 9:00 AM, HolyEucharist and Healing.

ST. JOHNS EPISCOPAL CHURCHLittle Silver Point Road. Little Silver 741 -7826.The Rev Hugh Livnngood. Interim Priest.SUNDAY SERVICES Holy Eucharist 8:00 &10 00 am

ST. GEORGE'S-BY-THE-RIVERRUMSON

Waterman and Lincoln Avenues 842-0596.8:00 Holy Eucharist, 9:30 Holy Eucharist andChurch School, 11:15 Morning Prayer, HolyEucharist First Sunday of the Month, Wednes-day 9 AM Holy Eucharist.

ST. MARK'S CHURCH247 Carr Avenue, Keansburg, 787-1075!Anglo Catholic Tradition, Sunday School 9:15a.m.. Mass 9:30 a.m., Tuesday Bible Class7:30 p.m.

CHURCH OF THE HOLY COMMUNION-FAIR HAVEN

Corner of River Road and Church Street.Phone 747-4671. The Rev. Arthur P. Powell,Rector. Sunday Eucharists at 8 and 10 a.m.Wed. 9 a.m. - Eucharist and Healing.

ST. THOMAS. RED BANKCorner East Sunset and Bridge Ave. RedBank 747-1039 Rev Terrance RoseuvelSunday 9 a m Holy Eucharist Church School "9 a m Sunday

TRINITY CHURCH. RED BANKTraditional Worship- Biblical Preaching

M West Front St.. Sunday Services S. 7:30.and 11:15 a.m. Sunday School and Nursery at9:30. Wednesday Holy Eucharist and ServiceOf Heeling at 10 s.ro. Rev. Kenneth Atdrich,Rector. Rev. Charles Sakm, Associate Print.741-4581.

UNITED METHODIST CHURCHOF RED BANK

247 Broad St. Sunday Services: 8:30 a.m. HolyCommunion in Chapel; 9 30 411:00 Worship iChurch School, Nursery provided. Pastors, C.Ross Collins. Thomas Ft. McKee; Iitor, Marjorie Squire. 747-0446.

; Parish Vis-

EMBURY UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

49 Church Street, Little Silver, 11:00 a.m.Worship, 9:30 a.m. Church School lor AN ages.Rev. Carole E. McCallum. Pastor, 741-4182.

FIRST UNITEDMETHODIST KEANSBURG"A Caring Congregation"

Church St. Sunday 11 a.m. Worship. 9:30Church School. Nursery provided. Rev. JohnA. Benson 787-0289

CHRIST CHURCHUNITED METHODIST

FAIR HAVENThe Friendly Church in the Fields, off RidgeRoad, Fair Haven, serving the Rumson-fairHaven communities. 9:30 a.m. Church School;10:55 a.m. Worship. Holy Communion firstSunday. Nursery for infants and toddlers.Robin E Van Cleel, Pastor. Call 741-0234 or741-3009.

MIDDLETOWN UNITED METHODIST924 Middletown-Lincroft Road. MiddletownN J 671-0707. Rev Norman W SchankJPastor. Sunday 'Worship Service 10e m Nursery provided 11 OS a m ChurchSchool classes lor all ages

MAT A WAN UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

CHURCH .STREET JUlAJXMTiOj^NyiL.ABERDEEN Church School 9 15 MorningWorship with children s church and crib nur-sery 10 30 Robert H Heuiiti Pastor 566-2996

I NAZARENE |MONMOUTH CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENEAll are invited to hear Pastor Emery Cook.Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:45 a.m.Evening Service 6:00 p.m. Located at theHolmdel Fire Company, Route 520, Holmdel.Services will be held at the FarmlngdaleGrange Hall, Route 33, Freehold. SundaySchool 9:30. Worship 10:45, Evening Service6:00.

C0N6RE6ATI0N BETH SHALOMCongregation Beth Shalom 186 Maple Av-enue. Red Bank Traditional Services RabbiJoseph Fishman 431-4719 or 741-1657 Sat-urday morning Services 9 15 A M Sis-terhood/Hebrew School/Activities

OLD FIRST CHURCH,MIDDLETOWN

Established in 1688, 69 Kings Highway. Mid-dletown Village - an ecumenical fellowship, infull communion, with the American BaptistChurches and the United Church of Christ.Church School and the service of Worshipbegin at 11 a.m. Nursery available. Rev. CraigAnderson. 671-1905.

KING OF KINGS, MIDDLETOWNCherry Tree Farm & Harmony Road, Mid-dletown. 8:00,9:15,10:45 Services, 9:15 Sun-day School. Pastors William Hanson andLouise Ostrem 671-3348. '

LUTHERAN CHURCHOF THE GOOD SHEPHERD

Middletown and Crawford's corner Rd..Holmdel, Sunday Services at 8:15 a.m. and10:45 a.m. (Nursery provided for 10:45 Ser-vice). Church School j& Confirmation 1 Classat 9:15 a.m.

HOLY TRINITY, RED BANK150 River Road, 741-9241 Sunday WorshipServices 9:00 & 10:00. Nursery provided for10:00 service. Sunday School 10:00 VisitorsWelcome.

LUTHER MEMORIALLUTHERAN CHURCH

Misuar i SynodTINTON FALLS

818 Tinton Ave. Tinton Falls Sunday Worship10:30 a m Sunday School 9 a m Rev Paul RHuenke

FIRST PRESBYTERIANAT RUMSON

Park Ave and E River Road. 842-0429. Sun-day worship services 9 45 a.m Nursery avail-able Church school lor all ages. 930 a mRev Foster "Skip" Wilson

FIRST PRESBYTERIANAT RED BANK

Tower Hill Harding Road, Red Bank.747-1348. Worship Hour and Church School9:15 and 11:00. Nursery provided. Dial-A-Thought. 747-1182

LINCROFT PRESBYTERIANEverett Road and West From Street741-8921 Worship and Church School st 10a m Nursery care provided Rev JohnOeVnes. Pastor

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHAT SHREWSBURY

362 Sycamore Av»., Shrewsbury. 747-3657.OHirehSehool 9:15. AduH Forum 9:15.Worship Service 10:30. Nursery provided. Dr.David P. Muysken

THE WESTMINISTERPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

94 Tmda.li Rd . Middletown. Rev Harlen COurfee pestor Adult Bible Study at 9 i « iMorning Service al 10 a m Nursery Providedsnd Sunday School Oisl-a-Mediation671-9011

BETHEL BIBLE CHAPEL. RIVER PLAZAW Front and Applegste Sts River Plsze. RedBank Sunday Lord s Supper 9 30 e m BibleHour and Sunday School 11 m Eveningservice 6 p m Wednesdsys prsyer snd Biblestudy 8 p m 741-1331 or 222-8955

OCEANVIEW COMMUNITY CHURCHLEONARDO

Kenneth Gamble Pastor. Appleton and Burl-ington Ave. Leonsrdo. 291-2698 SundaySchool 9 45 a m Sunday services. 11 a.m6 0 0 p m Wednesday Bible snd Preyer Meet-ing. / 3 0 p m

CALVARY CHAPEL201 Port Monmouth Rosd. Port Monmouth. atBsyside Way and Park Avenue. Rev RichirdL Shaw, pastor Sunday School 10 a mWorship. 11 s m Youth Meeting 7 30 p mPraise 7 30 p m Prayer and Bible Study.Wednesday 8 0 0 p m Home Bible weeknightCall 291-1641 tor information

BAYSHORE COMMUNITY CHURCH"The Church for all People" 185 Ocean Ava..

East Keansburg, N J 787-6199. SundaySchool at 9:30 A M and Worship Service at 11A M . Rev. Joan Higgins

LINCROFT BIBLE CHURCH790 Newman Springs Rosd. (oppositeBrookdsle College! Rev James H Persons.Pastor Sun Worship 10 45 s m snd 6 00p m Sun Bible School. 9 4 5 a m Bible Studyand Prsyer every Wed 7 30 p m Ph747-1231 or 747-8194

KINGS HIGHWAY FAITH FELLOWSHIP44 Memorial Pkwy (Hwy 36) Atlantic High-lands Pastor Ben Ragusa Co-pastor RoseRagusa. Youth Pastor Phil Rayms SundayService I t e m Youth night Wed 7 30 p mGuest Evangelists Bible Teachers. GospelMusic Groups every Friday al 730 p m AWord ol Faith Teaching Church 291-2915

AGAPE CHRISTIAN CHURCHPresently meeting at Ranney School. BrodBuilding. 235 Hope Road. Tinton Falls. NJ07724 John Ferguson Jr Pastor. (201)747-7231 Nursery provided for all servicesSundsy worship. 10 30 a m Evangelistic Ser-vices 6 p m Wed Bible school for sll sges et7 p m

1 EVANGELICAL |

FAITH EVANGELICALFREE CHURCH

Meeting at Atlantic Elementary School Route537 Colts Neck Sunday School 9:30 a.m.Classes lor all ages. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m.-Rev. Jack Carhart preaching-nursery avail-able. SINGSPIRATION & PRAISE-7:00 P.M.Atthe Mutual Aid Bank, Central Ave., OceanGrove, NJ -Rev. Carhart preaching BIBLESTUDY & PRAYER MEETING - Wed. 8 P.M.6Meredith Drive, Tinton Falls For more Infor-mation call 774-6158 Faith Evangelical FreaChurch, meeting at Atlantic ElementarySchool, Route 37, Colts Neck, invites you to: ACHRISTMAS CELEBRATION Sunday school -9:30 A.M. Worship Hour - 11:00 A.M. - SpecialChristmas music, - organ, flute and vocal.Pastor Carhart preaching. Nursery available.Sunday evening - 7:00 P.M. - Meeting at theMutual'Aid Bank, Central Ave. Ocean Grove.For more information call 774-6158

REFORMED CHURCHOF MIDDLETOWN

123 Kings Highway, Middletown, 671-1786.Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Service ol Worship11:00 a.m., Rev. William Coventry.

REFORMED CHURCH OF KEYPORTWorship Service at 10:45 A.M. Nursery avail-able. Sunday School at 10:45 a.m. 284-1198.

REFORMED CHURCH OFTINTON FALLS

Worship service st 10 A.M. Nursery CareAvailable • Sunday School and Adult Dis-cussion 11 A.M • 62 Hence Ave., Tinton Fells• 747-1285 Rev Frederick Mold. Jr.

FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH145 West Front, Lincroft Minister Harold R.Dean Services. 10 a.m. Nursery 10:00 a.m.747-070710 a.m. Holiday workshops for Chil-dren and Adults (No Formal Service), 8:00 p.m.Christmas Candlelight Service. NO MORNINGSERVICE, "The Second Annual UnitarianRevels and Shared Supper" 5 p.m.

The Non-Pfofit Rate is $7 06 per Column inch ,*th« Religious Notices We wslcome new accountsFor Additions or Corrections. Please call 542-4000.Ext 308.

The RegistergOAN.Y ° MMMV

Founded in 1878By John H. Cook and Henry Clay

Published by the Ked Bulk RegisterA Prior Conununuiiinu rarporaliun Nrmpgprr

CUFF SCHBCHTMAN, Editor*

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

GARRKTT STASSE, Sportt EditorPAMELA ABOl'ZEID, Features EditorCARL D. FORINO, ChieJPhotographer

* 1986 TIM H « Bo* Ragalw. Ml Righu

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19,1966 7A

E0ITORIALSOn striking kids

Foster Friends Inc., a statewideorganization for foster parents,plans to sue the N.J. Division of

Youth and Family Services (DYFS) inorder to overturn the agency's policywhich forbids them to use corporalpunishment.

While dealing with displaced chil-dren may at times be extremelydifficult, under no circumstancesshould foster parents be given theright to strike children placed in theircare. Many children come to fosterhomes because they've been physical-ly abused by their natural parents.And it would be absurd to subjectthem to situations where even theremotest possibility of further abuseexists.

The foster parents' organization,based in Keyport, maintains that theuse of corporal punishment remainswidespread despite the DYFS ban ineffect since 1983. And ArnoldHerman, director of Foster Friends,insists his organization now seeks theright to use physical punishment fordisciplinary purposes 'only as a lastresort."

Herman, who himself has been afoster father to 14 children, arguesthat the DYFS policy frightens would-be foster parentSvaway and, moreover,is used manipulaiWely by some fosterchildren. He claims these childrenaccuse foster parents of hitting themin order to gain transfers to otherhomes.

Fortunately, DYFS — the state

agency which oversees placement ofchildren in foster homes — standssquarely behind its rule. "If fosterparents can't agree to our policy, thenthey shouldn't be foster parents,"states DYFS Director Tom Blatner."The idea of a state agency puttingkids in foster homes and then condon-ing physical punishment is just ridicu-lous," he says.

Blatner is right. While most fosterparents never would use excessiveforce in disciplining children, there'salways a chance — just as withnatural parents — that some would.It's simply not a chance worth taking.Youngsters placed in foster careusually have enough problemswithout facing the possibility of get-ting smacked around.

Although DYFS is holding to itspolicy on corporal punishment, itnevertheless recognizes the dif-ficulties faced by foster parentstoday.

The agency is starting a series of in-service workshops for foster parents,offering them some alternatives whenit comes to discipline. The progarmalso helps them to recognize drug andalcohol use, to improve relations withnatural parents and to deal withchildren who have been sexually andphysically abused..

This is the ''.."id of help fosterparents should be getting — not thelicense to strike children when they'realready down.

• - ; , . . < ,. •;.,.-»y-IM .:,!

A federal bargainAfederal advisory group proposes

big salary increases for con-gressmen, executive officials and

judges. Senators and representativesalone would go from $77,400 to$135,000. The natural urge is to scoffat any such idea. We sympathize withthat instinct, but we also recognizethat many public officials do in factdeserve raises. The challenge here isobvious: If the public is going to payits officials more money, how does itmake sure that it gets its money'sworth?

The Quadrennial Commission onExecutive. Legislative and JudicialSalaries wants to get the salaries ofthe top 3,000 employees back up towhere they were, in real terms, in thelate 1960's. There have been onlycost-of-living increases since 1977.As a result, declines in earnings since1969 range from about 30,percent fora district judge to more than 50percent for a cabinet secretary. Pay-ing for the raises would cost $150million a year.

It's hard to say what pay govern-ment officials "deserve."

The judges may be the most deserv-ing of pay increases. Their jobs aresupposed to be for life, so they don'tbenefit from the revolving door. Thecurrent $81,110 salary for federaldistrict judges would go to $130,000.President Reagan has been appointingmany younger men and women to thebench, which creates the specialproblem of raising a family on thecurrent federal judicial salary. Onejudge with teen-age chi Idren resigned,complaining of "maltuition." A totalof 39 judges have resigned since- 1970,three-quarters of them for financialreasons. Lawyer and former federalofficial Michael Horowitz has saidthat "pretty soon the judge will be theguy looking to impress the lawyer toget a cushy partnership."

Public compensation needn'tachieve parity with the private sector,but the industry experts needed foragencies such as the Commodity Fu-

• tttres Trading Commission aren't alllifelong Jeffersonian citizen-ser-vants. Moreover, some executive of-ficials can look forward to earningmore over their lifetimes because theirgovernment service makes them morevaluable in the private sector.

Congressional pay, on the otherhand, poses a different set ofproblems. Men and women now spendmillions on political campaigns for

jobs that pay $77,400. What does theelectorate get in return? Does it reallywant — as it is now getting — endlesshearings run by huge staffs crammingmore laws, rules and amendments intoan already fat federal code?

In the private sector, most peopleassociate big raises with work — real,productive work. We can think of onlyone way to achieve a return on »nyraises given to congressmen and highofficiais: Cut their staffs.

We doubt that the security of theRepublic would suffer if congressmenhad fewer staffers whispering intoboth ears. Congressmen could do theirown work instead of wheeling anddealing for honorariums to supplerment their salaries. An added bonuswould be that, if legislators had to domore of their own work, a differentsort of person might seek office.

The courts could do a much betterjob of creating sensible and predic-table law if judges had to make dowith less help. It is an open secret thatmost judges have responded to thelitigation crisis in federal courts by

. letting their clerks write their opi-nions. It's nice for the brightest lawstudents to become de facto judgesupon graduation, but this is probablynot the best way to do justice. Judgescould get by with fewer clerks if theyagreed to-hear fewer cases. Liabilitygenerally could do with some narrow-ing.

Anyone wondering how federalsalaries could have fallen so farbehind need look no further thanCapitol Hill. Congressmen have rou-tinely insisted on linking their pay toexecutive and judicial pay. But inrecent years, congressmen have re-fused to vote themselves pay in-creases, fearing what would happen totheir prospects for reelection if theygave themselves raises. Executiveofficials and judges have sufferedbeing on the end of the congressionaltail that didn't wag.

This year, Congress passed the buckto the president by cleverly turningthe legislative process upside down:President Reagan's request for payhikes will become law unless bothhouses pass a joint resolution againstit. By doing nothing, congressmenwould give themselves a $67,600raise. Let's pay them more. But let'salso cut thetr staffs and make themearn their money.

Wall Street Journal

%U NEVEKTAKEUS AUVE7YAHEM*ME? OWE ANGET

COMMENTEven his own mother doesn't like him

When I've suggested in the past thatIndianapolis is America's largest hicktown, the Hoosiers have been offended.But now I have conclusive proof.

As sports fans know, Indianapolishas been puffed with pride because itmanaged to filch a pro footballfranchise — the once-mighty Coltsfrom Baltimore.

It did this by showering the franchiseowner with goodies. It built the HoosierDome stadium and a multimillion-dollar practice facility. And the towngave him financial deals that havemade the Colts one of the mostprofitable franchises in football.

And what did Indianapolis receive inreturn?

It got a team that is one of the worstin the history of pro football.

But even worse, Indianapolis gotRobert Irsay, the rich Chicagoan whoowns the team.

Irsay has long had a reputation inChicago as a loudmouthed boor andbraggart. And in football as one of thebiggest bumblers in the game — amillionaire who treats a team like hispersonal toy and his players andcoaches as disposable slaves.

Of course, being a loudmouthed boorand braggart is not unusual in Chicago.Just Jook at some of our biggest civicand political leaders.

But now we learn that those areamong Irsay's teeniest imperfections. In

- its current issue, Sports Illustratedprints a meticulously detailed story ofthe grubby life and times of Bob Irsay.

It says that he ... that he .. well,there's so much, I'm not really surewhere to start.

I mean, what are we to think of a guywhose own mother, at age 84, is quotedas saying about her son:

"He's a devil on earth, that one. Hestole all our money and said goodbye."

Irsay's mom was referring to how, asa young man, Irsay got his start towardbecoming Chicago's biggest sheet metalcontractor and a. financial wheeler-dealer.

MikeRoyko

His motner, his own brother, andothers say he did it by quitting hisfather's sheet metal company, takingaway customers and employees, andeventually driving his old man out ofbusiness.

As his younger brother put it: "Bobactually worked to destroy his ownfather. Oh, he's a real sweetheart allright."

Then there/s his military record.Irsay has occasionally boasted abouthis war-time exploits. In interviews, hehas told of being injured by a Japanesegrenade on New Guinea, and beingdischarged as a commissioned officer.

__Many of us like to talk about ourwartime injuries I've often told n>y kidshow I wrenched my back when I gotstewed and rolled out of an upper bunk.

But the magazine checked Irsay'sversion with the Pentagon. True, hewas a Marine. But the Japanese soldierwho tossed the grenade must have hadan incredible arm, since military re-cords show that Irsay never left thestates. And he was discharged as anenlisted man.

The magazine also looked into Irsay'sfrequent boast that he played Big Tenfootball at the University of Illinois,while getting a degree in electricalengineering. All this while waiting ontables at a frat house to work his waythrough school because his family waspoor.

Being a former Big Ten footballplayer has given Irsay the aura ofhaving knowledge of the game.

But the magazine found that Irsaydidn't play football. Nor did he get adegree. And while he went to Illinois, he

didn't wait on tables — he belonged tothe fraternity and his businessmanfather picked up the tab.

Oh, details, details.The oddest thing about Irsay's ver-

sion of his life story is his religion.Irsay, the magazine says, has always

claimed that he was raised a Catholic .Which is fine. Nothing like being an'altar boy or having the nuns teach you,the three R's.

But Irsay's parents were immigrantHungarian Jews. Their name originallywas Israel. And his mother and brothersay the children were raised as Jews,according to the magazine.

Now, there's nothing wrong withbeing born a Jew and raised as a Jew.And if somebody who is Jewish decidesto become a Catholic, that's his busi-ness.

But why go through the bother ofdenying being born into one of civ-ilization's oldest and most magnificentheritages?

Irsay doesn't explain. When themagazine asked him about his marriage

.-UL.1847. he stud the .reporter_hadihis__hilarious exchange:

"I'm a Catholic. I was married byFather Dolan in the Queen of All SaintsChurch in Chicago. You can look it up."

"You converted?""No."The reporter then asked him about

another wedding performed by RabbiLouis 1 linstock at Temple Sholom, paidfor by his motlier.

"That's correct, also," Irsay says. "Ihad two weddings."

And he added: "Maybe my motherconverted to Jewish. I don't know."

So that's Bob Irsay, the rich man thatIndianapolis has helped make evenricher.

Say, I wonder if those Hoosiers wouldlike to take a few other Chicagoans offour hands.

I have this uncle, see. He used to pickpockets ...

' Mike Royko is a syndicatedcolumnist.

Iranian affair more dismal every dayWASHINGTON, Dec. 15 — Is there

anything good to be said of the Iranianmess? Apart from praising the presi-dent for his good intentions and for thebasic wisdom of his policies, I can findnothing at all. The affair becomes moredismal ar d more damaging with everyday that passes. .

At this writing, it is hard to see whatmore the president himself might do inhis own behalf. He has named a blue-ribbon board to investigate the role ofthe National Security Council. He hasasked for a special prosecutor. He hasurged the two key figures in the affair,Vice Adm. John Poindexter and Lt. Col.Oliver North, to be forthcoming; buteven as commander in cliief he cannotorder them to testify if they wish toinvoke their Fifth Amendment rights.

It would be an exercise in futility forthe White House to issue its own whitepaper, hi the present poisonous at-mosphere, any detailed statement bythe president would be denounced asself-serving. Cries would be heard ofthe fox and the chicken house. Beyondany question, the administration'scredibility has suffered, and the loss ofcredibility is a wound that bleeds.

To borrow a legal phrase applied tojurors, 1 do not stand indifferent in thiscause. I have known the president formore than 20 years. I love the man. Ibelieve he has been badly served bypersons around him. On the mostdisturbing aspect of the affair, involv-ing the diversion of funds to the"contras" in Nicaragua, I believe thepresident is telling the truth. He knewhothing of this. On this score he will notdisappoint me.

BLOOM COUNTY

JamesKilpatrickW

Other persons in the administrationhave grievously disappointed. Not longafter the story broke last month, chiefof staff Donald Regan had breakfastwith a group of senior correspondents.He left us with the clear impression thatthere had been only a single shipmentof arms to Iran. Later that same day wewere briefed by Adm. Poindexter, whowas then head of the NSC, He leftprecisely the same impression. We maynot have been lfed to, but we surelywere misled.

Adm. Poindexter and Col. North haveproved the greatest disappointments.By "taking the Fifth," they have estab-lished a presumption of guilt. As SidneyHook has written, "Those who invokethe privilege against self-incriminationcan properly do so only because thereexists in fact some evidence whichreasonable men would legitimately con-strue as indicating guilt, although notnecessarily conclusive proof of guilt."

Professor Hook's masterly book,"Common Sense and the Fifth Amend-ment," spells out the implications withdevastating logic. He asks the question:"Not knowing whether a person isinnocent or guilty, what can reasonably

or naturally be inferred from a refusalto answer a pertinent question, put bysomeone in authority to ask the ques-tion, on the ground that a truthfulanswer would tend to be incriminat-ing?" The question answers itself. \

More than 30 years ago, theoverseersof the Harvard Corporation took thesame position: "We deplore the use ofthe Fifth Amendment by a member ofour faculty.... We .will not shut our eyesto the inferences of guilt, which the useof the Fifth Amendment creates as amatter of common sense."

Ronald Reagan cannot make the twooff.jers testify publicly under oath, butas long as they fail to do so, the countryis justified in drawing an inference thatthey have acted unlawfully. I assume,on the basis of their reputations ashonorable men, that neither officer haspocketed money from a Swiss bankaccount. I assume that the unlawfulconduct, if any, has to do with defyingthe Boland Amendment prohibiting-transfer of funds to the contras.

Other disappointments: Most of thepress coverage of this affair has beenresponsible, but some elements of thepress have relished what MichaelKinsley calls "the delightful collapse ofthe Reagan administration."

Writers of greater maturity, notablyDavid Broder of The Washington Post,have seen this situation as it is —- as asad time for the country, for theinstitution of the presidency, and forthe decent if fallible man who mustcontinue to lead our nation for the nexttwo years.

James J. Kilpatrick is a syndicatedcolumnist.

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NEW JERSEY BFHIDAT. DECEMBER 19. 1986

Senate approves bill requiringofficials to live in New Jersey_ . „ « „.—„... ""• live in New Jersey. of the state community," Russo said. "This t

THE STATESenate OKs municipal aid package

TRENTON (AP) —. The Sen-ate and Assembly ap-proved bills yesterday to

help municipalities replace lostfederal aid, but the Senate billwould tap the state's budgetsurplus while the Assembly

'• measure would rely on a taxamnesty program.

The divergent positions leftunresolved how the state willhelp iyear,

s cities and counties nextwhen they will be

without approximately $127millio i distributed in 1986under the federal revenueshariig'program.

The) Democrat-controlledSenate voted 32-5 for legis-lation opposed by the gov-ernor, to provide $67.6 millionin stale budget surplus fundsfor cities and towns.

- "Wfthout this legislation to

restore that lost aid, thesecommunities will be faced withsignificant property tax hikesand forced to lay off scores ofpolice officers and fire-fighters," said Senate Presi-dent John Russo, D-Ocean, thebill's sponsor.

Russo said the state budgetfor the fiscal year ending lastJune 30 shows a surplus about$73 million higher than ex-pected.

"The state could send thechecks out tomorrow to thesemunicipalities if it wanted to,"Russo said.

But a spokesman for Gov.Thomas H. Kean said the gov-ernor still opposes the bill.Kean maintains that any ad-ditional surplus money isneeded to balance next year'sbudget.

State rests case in murder trialfcOMERVlLLE (AP) — Thet prosecution rested its case

' ^Pyesicrduy in the trial of| two revolutionaries accused of.shouting a highly decoratedslate trooper in 1981, and

;- defense attorneys immediately'.asked the judge to dismiss most'of the charges.

Richard C. Williams andI'IKmms W. Manning each arecharged with one count of

' murder, one count of escapeand robbery and two counts of

f felony murder.But defense attorneys

argued there was virtually no• evidence indicating Trooper0 Philip Lamonaco seized a gun• from Manning seconds before

the officer was gunned downon Dec. 21, 1981. Therefore,they said, all but the murder

charge should be dismissed.Superior Court Judge

Michael Imbriani reserveduntil Monday a decision on themotion, saying he needed timeto review the testimony ofpassing motorists who wit-nessed different stages of theshooting.

The s t a t e c o n t e n d sLamonaco took a gun fromManning after stopping thefugitives for a traffic violationon a rural stretch of Interstate80 in Warren County.

Deputy Attorney GeneralAnthony Simonetti argued thatWilliams shot Lamonaco andManning recovered the gun,und that coin fled - allegedacts that led to the robbery,escape and felony murdercharges.

Drug-test immunity bills signed(AP) — Gov.

rhimias II. Kean signed)4ls j

KENTONTlbills yesterday upgrading

Pthe crime of attempted murderjto a first-degree offense and'granting civil and criminal im-ainunitfr to doctors Who performIdrug lest s for police.3 Tins attempted-murder bill•'increases the penalty fur that .offense to between 10 and 20years from the current five to

.' 10 years. The offense had beena secind-degree crime.

"By crqating this exceptionto the general grading for 'at-tempt to commit' crimes, werecognize that an attempt tocommit murder is more serious .,

. than an attempt to commitpother i. . . crimes," Kean said.

The bill, sponsored by As-,semblyman Walter Kern, R-Bergen, and Sen. EdwardO'Connor, D-Iludson, is effec-tive immediately.

Under the drag-test bill,hospitals, Airses and doctorsinvolved in obtaining breath,

blood or urine samples fromsuspected offenders can not besued or penalized for ilu-iractions.

Medical personnel oftfn arereluctant to take such speci-mens for police because of thefear that the accused' may

instltUte-etVttTor criminal dam-ages for-assault, Kean said.

" It is simply unfair to subjectmedical personnel to possiblecriminal and civil suits fordoing what a state or local lawenforcement officer has askedthem to do," said a sponsor ofthe bill, Assemblyman WilliamP. Schuber, R-Bergen.

Under the bill, which is ef- .fective immediately, immunityis granted as long as the blood,urine or breath specimens wereobtained in a medically ac-cepted manner. Sen. JohnDorsey, R-Morris, and As-semblyman Thomas Shusted,R-Camden, also sponsored thebill.

; Reagan, Kean discuss welfare reform

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Reagan, Gov.Thomas II. Kean and a

• panel-of experts met yesterday' to dispuss the sweeping reform« of the nation's welfare system'.called; for in Reagan's 1986. State of the Union message.

Kean said the hour-long• White House session focused'on ideas offered by state gov-ernments, academia and thebusiness community forshrinking the welfare rolls.

Invited guests also includeda fotmer welfare recipient,Kean Raid.

He said Reagan began themeeting with a story about his

- father who served during theFranHin Roosevelt adminis-tration as a welfare adminis-trator. Later, Reagan listenedto ideas from the panel, Keansaid. '

"He's still looking for sug-gestions," the governor said.

Last week, a presidentialadvisory panel told Reaganthat the nation's current wel-

fare system "fails the people itis designed to serve." Membersof the Domestic Policy Councilrecommended giving state andlocal governments more roomto structure their own systems.

Kean said Reagan seemssympathetic to what the gov-ernor called changes "from thebottom up," letting states,cities and even welfare reci-pients offer ideas.

Kean supported spendingmoney on job training andother self-help programs,which he said will ultimatelyshrink welfare rolls.

"I don't call them expenses. Icall them investments," hesaid.

New Jersey has seven pilotprograms for which it is seek-ing federal help, he said. Theideas include low-cost loans towelfare recipients, help foryoung mothers and a healthmaintenance organization-style network of family agen-cies.

Woman convicted of murder-robbery

CAMDEN (AP) — A 23-year-old Camden womanwas convicted yesterday

of murdering a nearly blindman she thought of as herfather during a robbery of hisCamden home.

A Camden County SuperiorCourt jury deliberated about3W hours over two days beforefinding Viola Walker guilty ofTelony murder, robbery, aweapons offense and hinderingapprehension.

Superior Court Judge IsaiahSteinberg set sentencing forJan. 16.

Walker was one of twowomen charged with murder-ing Willie Banks, 62, an at-tendant in a men's room at aCherry Hill restaurant. Thesecond woman, Regina Harris,pleaded guilty to the murder.

Banks was shot twice in thehead and once in the chestduring a robbery of his apart-ment.

Walker testified she visitedBanks almost dally andthought of him as a father. Shealso said she had a sexualrelationship with him.

By NICHOLAS 6 . KATSARELASAssociated Press

TRENTON — The Senate, with no debate,passed a bill yesterday requiring all top stateofficials to live in New Jersey.

The measure now goes to the desk of Gov.Thomas H. Kean, who is expected to sign it intolaw.

By a vote of 36-1, the upper house approvedthe measure, sponsored by Senate PresidentJohn Russo, D-Ocean, which orders the gov-ernor, state judges, legislators and Cabinetmembers to reside in the state.

"The taxpayers and citizens of the statedeserve the best service frorif public officials,"said Russo. "A residency requirement for topofficials will ensure their direct involvementwith the issues and concerns that residentsface every day."

Kean was in Washington, D.C., for the dayand could not be reached for comment. Aspokesman, John Samerjan, said the governorhas expressed his support for any legislationthat requires Cabinet members and judges to

live in New Jersey.The governor and members of the Assembly

and Senate already are required to live in thestate, but Russo said he wanted his legislationto reaffirm that requirement.

The legislation is the product of a merger ofRusso's bill and a measure co-sponsored byAssemblymen Prank Pelly, D-Middlesex, andJohn Rooney, R-Bergen.

The measure defines residency as the placewhere people vote, consider the center of theirlives and spend the majority of their free time.

The Assembly approved the measure by a49-14 vote last week.

Critics said the residency standards wouldbe too constricting, and some lawmakerscomplained that they may fail the residencytests if they spend time away from New Jerseyon business trips.

Russo disagreed. "This legislation will eraseany doubt about the residency of our topgovernment officials.".he said.

"Government officials who work in serviceto the state and collect their paychecks fromthe taxpayers nave an obligation to be a part

of the state community," Russo said. "This billwill see that they meet this obligation."

Residency became an issue in the Legislatureearlier this year after state Supreme CourtChief Justice Robert Wilentz said at his Julyrenomination hearings that he spent most ofhis non-working hours in New York City to benear his wife, who was being treated in the cityfor cancer.

By a narrow vote, the Senate grantedWilentz tenure.

Wilentz refused to discuss the Senate'saction when reached at his Perth Amboy homeyesterday.

During confirmation hearings before theSenate Judiciary Committee, he told Kean in atelephone conversation that he would mnvg_back to New Jersey if the condition of his wifeimproved, or if the Legislature enacted a lawthat clearly and constitutionally spelled outthat judges and justices must live in the GardenState.

If he didn't move, Wilentz told the governor,he would resign.

Extension ofcap on budgetincreases OK'dBy JOEL SIEGELAssociated Press

ASSOtlAf ED PRESSCAP LAW EXTENDED —. Senate President John E. Russon, D-Ocean, talks to reporters before the Senate session yesterday inTrenton. Russo's bill to extend a limit -on the rate at which localgovernment budgets can rise was passed.

TRENTON — The 10-year-oldcap law that limits municipal andcounty budget increases would beextended tor another three yearsunder a bill approved by theSenate yesterday and sent to Gov.Thomas II. Kean.

The bill cleared its final legislat-ive hurdle on a 34-3 vote withlittle debate. Kean is expected tosign it.

The Senate delayed until nextyear a vote on a second bill thatwould create new exemptions tothe cap spending limits and repealseveral existing exemptions.

The current cap law, whichexpires Jan. 1, limits annual in-creases in a large portion of eachmunicipality's budget to 5 percentor to an inflation index, whicheveris lower.

Municipal government officialsurged the Legislature to let the caplaw die, claiming the spendinglimits complicate the budgetprocess and do little to curbproperty tax growth.

Some legislators agreed, butothers said the measure wouldprovide at least some spendingcurbs and most conceded it would

be politically dangerous to let thelaw die. when so much attention isfocused on high property taxesacross the state.

Sen. C. William Haines, R-Burl-ington, cast one of the three votesagainst the extension bill. ,

"I have to opposethis •:-;. mostly •because we impose the caps onmunicipalities, and we don't everimpose the same caps on thestate," Haines said.

But Senate President JohnRusso, D-Ocean, reminded Hainesthat the Senate already has passedlegislation to limit state spendinggrowth.

The Senate approved the capextension bill earlier this year, butanother vote was necessary be-cause of an Assembly amendment.The amendment would allowmunicipalities to set the cap at 5percent when the inflation indexfalls below that figure.

The New Jersey State League ofMunicipalities, an indent oppo-nent of the cap law, again urgedthe Senate to end the budgetlimitation.

That bill would repeal cap ex-emptions for increases in utilitycosts beyond 10 percent andmoney spent on historiccemeteries.

Undercover police work drainingBy FRANK BAJAKAssociated Press

NEWARK —. The undercoveragent who won the trust of a mancharged with using cyanide, gunsand knives to kill partners in crimefor cash and protection said yes-terday the case was as perilousand draining as any in his lti'iyears of undercover work.

During the period in which heworked on the six-year "Opera-tion Iceman" investigation thatled to Wednesday's arrest of Rich-ard Kuklinski, 51, of Dumont, thefederal Bureau bf Alcohol,Tobacco and Firearms agent said,"I wasn't sleeping real good.

"Have you seen this guyV hesaid of the man he ensnared, whois being held in lieu of $2 millionbail. "He's about 6-foot-5 and 250pounds.

"A lot of people are worriedabout me," the investigator added,refusing to say whether he has afamily.

The highly-decorated agentsaid "Richie" was not necessarilyany. more ruthless or unpredic-table than the dozens of otheralleged murderers, weapons deal-ers and mobsters the agent hashelped coax into prosecution.

It was what the agent knew ofKuklinski's methods — from con-versations he taped with the al-leged murderer — that makes himrelieved to have closed the casethat was the center of his life forabout four months, he added.

Kuklinski Is a highly dangerousentrepreneur charged with settingup meetings with three illegal drugor pornography dealers — promis-ing goods, but delivering deathand taking the victims' cash,authorities say.

And he allegedly killed .twoaccomplices to make .sure theycould not incriminate him.

DANGEROUS GAME — Richard Kuklinski, left,was arraigned Wednesday on five murder charges.

ASSOCIATED PRESSAn agent who gained Kuklinski's trust says the casewas dangerous and draining.

Kuklinski is also being in-vestigated for possible roles inother murders, prosecutors say.

The ATF agent said his ex-perience keeps him from gettingnervous when he meets withcriminals, something that does notdetract from the intensity of suchcases as Kuklinski's.

' "I feel like I'm coming downfrom a natural high," said theinvestigator, who agreed to beinterviewed on thte condition ofanonymity. >S

He said that until the case wasclosed, it "was the first thing onyour mind in the morning and thelast thing on your mind at night. .

. . It's been very tough, it's beenlong. I'm physically and mertalitired."

The agent said that over theyears he has infiltrated all fiveNew York City organized crimefamilies and "portrayed myself asa murderer, a gun-runner, anexplosives expert, a torch man(arsonist)."

The Kuklinski case was novel,he said.

During meetings with the agent,Kuklinski had "graphically andcandidly" boasted of innovativemurder methods, according tostate Deputy Attorney GeneralRobert Carroll. •'

The agent said that kept himconstantly on guard.

"You want, to come home," hesaid, noting that he has lost atleast one good friend to job-'related violence.

The investigator said he haddeveloped a relationship of trust,with Kuklinski in meetings thatbecame frequent in August. Pof-safety's sake, he would not sayhow long ago or under whatcircumstances they met.

In October, the agent boughtwhat he called an assassin's kit'from Kuklinski — a "beautiful".22-caliber pistol with a silencer,he said.

N ATI or:, WORLD2B

THE NATIONStudy: Sweden has best quality of life

WASHINGTON (AP) —The United States lagsbehind Japan, West Ger-

many and Sweden in both.economic performance andquality of life, concludes astudy released yesterday by aneconomic research organiza-tion.

The four-nation com-parative study by the Econ-omic Policy Institute said that,on the basis of 17 measures ofquality of life, the I'.S.performance was worst andSweden's best.

The I'nited States had thebest performance on only three

quality-of-life measures:home ownership, living spaceper person and expenditure onmedical care per person, thestudy found.

It had the worst performanceof the four in 11 categories,including infant mortality,male life expectancy, homiciderate and unemployment.

Of 17 economic indicators,the United States again scoredlast overall among the fourcountries while Japan wasfirst, said the study, whichcompared da ta from1960-1985.

Texas inmate executed for '84 slaying

HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP)— Convicted killer Rich-ard Andrade shunned a

final statement and, despiteearlier protests, ignored thosewho watched as he was ex-ecuted early yesterday for the1984 rape-slaying of a CorpusChristi woman.

Andrade, 25, was given alethal injection for killing Cor-delia Mae Guevara. He waspronounced dead at 12:32 a.m.,nine rpinutes after the lethaldrugs began flowing into hisarms.

Strapped to a gurney, An-drade shook his head 'no' onetime when asked by WardenJack Pursley if he had any

final statement. As the drugsbegan taking effect, he gasped,coughed and gurgled slightly.Then his eyes closed and therewas no other movement.

Andrade earlier Wednesdaytried to have reporters barredfrom witnessing the executionand sobbed for some time whenhis request was denied. Earlierin the day, the U.S. SupremeCourt denied his hand-writtenappeal for a stay.

Guevara, 28, the manager ofthe Chiquita Fajita Lounge inCorpus Christ i, was stabbed atleast 14 times with apocketknife, raped and left in apool of blood on the floor of herclub in the 1984 killing.

Gonorrhea epidemic hits Philly teens

PHILADELPHIA (AP) —Hundreds of tcen-.agersare turning up at

Philadelphia clinics with a! ii'Mln 111 ll I I-.IM :i 111 si r:i i II c 11

gonorrhea that has hitepidemic proportions, accord-ing to city physicians.

Dr. Robert G. Sharrar, direc-tor of the city Health Depart-ment's division of disease con-trol, has alerted all city physi-cians and outlined a program tofight the resistant strain,called penicillinase-produeing

Neisseria gonorrhoerae, orPPNG.

At least 330 cases of thestrain were reported in the city

1985, according to statistics.The- large increase classifiesthe disease as an epidemic.

In 1985, more than 17,000cases of gonorrhea were re-ported; 22 percent of the pa-tients, or 3,776, were 15 to 19years o|d, according to cityfigures.

Parents complain of slavery lesson

LAKEWOOD, Colo. (AP) —A history lesson in whichhigh school students are

assuming the roles of slavesand masters for a week hasdrawn complaints from Someparents, but the teen-agerstaking part said yesterday it'sbeen a yaluable experience.

The parents said the project,in which most students areassigned roles as slaves withothers serving as plantation

owners and managers or asfree blacks, encourages abuseand is demeaning.

"I understand the anger,"said Tamara Lang, 15, a stu-dent "slave" on Le Tigre Plan-tation, created within theclassroom of history teacher.Bill Wright.

"I think it's very worth-while," said Cathy Yarcho, 18,a senior who is participating as» plantation owner.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ACQUITTED — Actors Griffin O'Neal, center, and his father,Ryan O'Neal, talk with reporters outside of a courthouse inAnnapolis, Md., yesterday after Griffin was found not guilty ofmanslaughter.

O'Neal acquitted of manslaughter

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) —The son of actor KyanO'Neal was acquitted of

boat manslaughter but run ,victed of a lesser charge yes-terday by a judge who said hewas driving too fast when hisboat hit a tow rope, killing theson of director Francis FordCoppola.

Griffin O'Neal made an errorin judgment Memorial Daywhen he cut between two boatsconnected by a 50-foot towrope, ruled Judge MartinWolff. Gian-Carlo Coppolawas hit by the rope and thrownto the bottom of the 14-footrunabout with such force thathis skull was crushed.

Wolff found O'Neal, 22,innocent of manslaughter and

two charges involving recklessoperation of a boat. He foundhim guilty on one count ofoperating a boat "in such amanner that endangered theperson and property ofothers," and merged two othernegligence counts into that one.

Sentencing was set for Feb.27. The maximum penaltywould be 30 days in jail and a$200 fine.

As he left the Anne ArundelCounty. Courthouse with hisson, Ryan O'Neal said he was"thrilled" at the verdict. Headded, "My heart goes out tothe Coppola family."

Said Griffin: "It was an acci-dent. I'm very sorry that ithappened."

Senate panel.can't accountfor arms funds

ASSOCIATED PRESS

REPEAT PERFORMANCE — Former National Security AdviserRobert McFarlane is escorted by Capitol Hill police as he arrives fora closed-door hearing of the Senate Intelligence Committee,yesterday. •

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senateinvestigators said yesterday thatdespite three weeks of secrettestimony, they are unable to fullytrace funds diverted from thesecret sale of arms to Iran toContra rebels battling theNicaraguan government.

"How much money was divertedfrom the Iranian arms sale to theContras and to which Contras? Itis impossible to come to a de-termination on that," Sen. DavidDurenberger, R-Minn., the chair-man of the Senate IntelligenceCommittee, told reporters.

"All the money could be sittingin a Swiss bank account as far aswe know," he said.

Durenberger assessed the threeweeks or hearings in a hallwaynews conference outside thepanel's super-secure room inwhich he also disclosed that CIADirector William Casey hadundergone surgery for removal ofa tumor.

Separately, officials atGeorgetown University Hospitalannounced surgeons had removeda cancerous brain tumor, addingthat the problem "appearstreatable" and that Casey will beable to resume normal activities.

During the surgery, whichlasted more than five hours, "atumor was removed from the innerside.of the left brain, the arearelating to movement and sen-sation of the right side of the

body," a hospital statement said."The operation was performed

without complication and Mr.Casey is in stable condition anddoing well," the statement added.

At the White House, spokesmanAlbert Brashear said PresidentReagan had not ruled out takingthe unusual step of appearingbefore a congressional committeeto testify about the Iran-Contraepisode. But the spokesman alsosaid, "It's still very hypothetical.There's certainly been no decisionmade to do so, even if he (Reagan)were asked."

Meanwhile, White House chiefof staff Donald T. Regan, talkingto reporters after appearingbefore a congressional in-vestigative panel, said, "If at anytime the president thinks I'm notserving him well, I'm perfectlywilling to go."

Several members of Congress,including some Republicans, haveurged that he step down.

Regan made the comment aftertestifying in closed session beforethe House Intelligence Committee.The panel reportedly wasinterested in what Regan knewabout an Israeli shipment of armsto Iran in August of 1985 — adelivery that former National Se-curity Adviser Robert McFarlanesays the president approved of inadvance.

EAH8

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Celebrating O u r N e w CenturySEAtn HOME APPLIANCES STORES: MIDGSHAMPTON. N Y , UNDEN. N.J.. POMPTON LAKES. NJ

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19,1986 38

THE WORLD

Voyager halfway around world

MOJAVE, Calif. (AP) —Voyager crossed themidpoint yesterday in its

non-stop, non-refueled triparound the globe, but its pilotswere bruised by rough weatheras they headed for the winds ofAfrica and set new world avia-tion standards.

Meanwhile, concern aboutfuel consumption persistedyesterday and pilots Kutan andJeana Yeager did a scries ottesta to determine how muchfuel was left on board.

The spindly experimentalplane was just off the coast ofSomalia by noon PST, having

passed Longitude 60 in theIndian Ocean, the midpoint inits estimated 25,500-milejourney that began Sunday atEdwards Air Force Base.

Meteorologist Len Snellmansaid sharply fluctuatingAfrican land temperaturesprobably mean more turbu-lence for Voyager, but Rutanand Yeager were in high spiritsas their four-year, $1 milliondream soared closer to reality,despite a battering they tookwhen Voyager was tossedaround like a kite by stormsover the Pacific and Indian

Kazakhs riot after leader replaced• • O S C O W ( A P )l l f l ' ' H o o l i g a n s a n d1¥I parasites" rioted in the;streets of Alma Ata, capital ofKazakhstan, ufter the Kremlinreplaced the Central Asian re-public's long-time leader withan ethnic Russian, Tass re-ported yesterday.

It was believed to be the firstreport of riots in the SovietUnion to be published by of-ficial media.

Tass said the riots occurred, Wednesday and yesterday. TheJ news agency's report indicated* the riots wore-continuing,-——

Dinmukhamed ' Kunacv, a74-year-old Kazakh and Polit-buro member who led the re-gional Communist Party for 22years, was retired Tuesday bythe Kazakhstan party CentralCommittee.

He was replaced by Gennady

Kolbin, 59, a Russian who hasheld party posts in the Volgabasin and in Georgia, thesouthern republic where .losefStalin was born.

The Tass report said: "Agroup of students, incited bynationalistic elements, lastevening and today took to thestreets of Alma Ata expressingdisapproval of the decisions ofthe recent plenary meeting."

"Hooligans, parasites andother anti-social persons madeuse of this situation and re-sorted- te unlawful—actionsagainst representatives bMaWand order.

Meetings at factories,schools and party organize-.lions condemned the "totallyunwarranted actions" by ri-oters, the agency reported.

Hasenf us gladto back in U.S.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

HOME AT LAST — Eugene Hasenfus, pardoned from a 30-year jailsentence in Nicaragua for running guns to Contra rebels, speaks toreporters in Miami yesterday.

MIAMI (AP) — GunrunnerEugene Hasenfus, pardoned froma 30-year jail term in Nicaraguaand carrying the key to his cell,returned to the United Statesyesterday, thanking God that "Iwas able to be free and be with myfamily" for Christinas.

The 45-year-old former Marine,accompanied by his wife Sally,arrived in Miami aboard a com-mercial flight from GuatemalaCity shortly after 3 p.m. and thenappeared briefly at a news con-ference, where he refused to talkabout his experiences inNicaragua.

They were to fly on to theirhome in Marinette, Wis., lateryesterday.

"Right now, I am just looking forsome time in these special hol-idays that I was allowed, andthank God I was able to be free andbe with my family and I'm lookingfor a little private time withthem," he said.

He told reporters he couldn't"explain the gratitude in my heartat seeing all of you here and beingable to step on American soilagain. My great gratitude andappreciation I have to send tomany people who have morally,helped my family, my wife Sally,my in-laws and myself with cardsand letters and phone calls."

He said he was especiallyple.ased to be able to arrive homein time for the holidays and the

birthday of his son, who turned 7yesterday.

He told reporters that he lookedforward to "another time when I'llbe able to speak with you all at adifferent time."

Hasenfus ignored a barrage ofquestions and said he would holdother comments for a later date,"if you'll please understand "andbear with me."

He landed in Miami one dayafter Nicaragua's leftist govern-ment freed him in what it called agoodwill gesture to the UnitedStates.

In Miami, the secretary generalof the Contra umbrella group, theUnited Nicaraguan Opposition,yesterday questioned the motivesof the Sandinista government infreeing Hasenfus.

"I do not think that it was in thespirit of Nicaraguan tradition thatthis was done," said LeonardoSomarriba. "We think it is aneffort to manipulate United Statespublic opinion, and especially theU.S. Congress."

Hasenfus said in Guatemala thatNicaraguan Interior MinisterTomas Borge, who oversees thenational penal system, had givenhim the key to his cell at Tipitapaprison, 12 miles east of Managua.

He said he believed the Sand-inistas released him as aChristmas gesture. He declined togive his view of the Nicaraguangovernment, saying, "This will betalked about in time."

Viets choose reformer as leaderBy PETER ENGAssociated Press

HANOI, Vietnam — Economic reformer NguyenVan Linn was chosen yesterday to lead a newhierarchy replacing the revolutionaries who saw theCommunist Party through half a century of colonialand civil wars.

The Vietnamese party's sixth congress concludedby making Linh, 73, party chief and moving otherreform-minded figures into positions of control.

Linn's emergence appeared to reflect the victoryof reformers over conservatives who were criticizedfor relying too much on central control and leadingVietnam into economic crisis.

He leads a new 13-member Politburo, the party'sruling body, as general secretary. Six members of theformer Politburo were dropped, including the threemen who retired Wednesday: party chief TruongChinh, 79; Premier Pham Van Dong, 80, and keyPolitburo member Le Due Tho, 75. Those three will

become advisers to the party Central Committee.Ranking second to Linh in the new lineup was

Pham Hung, who became associated with partyfounder Ho Chi Minh in the 1920s and is one of thefew "old guard" members left in the leadership. Heis 74.

Vice Premier Vo Chi Cong, a 73-year-old formeragriculture minister, ranks third. He has supportedreforms that increased agricultural production byallowing farmers a free market for whatever theyproduce beyond assigned quotas.

Chinh made his final speech as party leader in theBa Dinh conference hall from a stage containing abust of Ho, who died in 1969, and portraits of Marxand Lenin. He receive a standing ovation.

Linh said in his acceptance speech that Vietnamfaces "numerous difficulties".

The congress made important changes in the"process of inheritance and renovation in . . .leadership," he said, an apparent reference tochanging leaders by retirement rather than givingthem life tenure.

Nguyen Van Linh:Vietnam's new leader

CLASSIFIED ACTION LINE 542-1700

Public Notices(Legals)

Special NoticesLost and Found-Special NoticesTravel-TransportationInstruction

Business ServiceArts » Cratts

EmploymentHelp Wanted M/F.Pan Time__Babysitting/ChildcareDomestic Help

006009

.012015

.021022

051.052

053054

Situation Wanted Female.Situation Wanted MaleSituation Wanted M/FChildcare/Nursery Sen

FinancialBusiness OpptyMortgages-Money TO LoanMoney Wanted-^

MerchandiseMerchandise For Sale-Garage/Yard Sale—Machinery For SaleRental Service.Farm EquipmenAuction SalesPets & LivestockAircraft

055056057058

061062063064

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Swap or ExchangeBicycles/Mini BikesSports EquipmentSwimming Pools-CB's. ElectronicsMerchandise Wanted.Price Buster

.079080081082083084085

Real Estate RentalsCondo» 100

Commercial RentalsBuildings/Garag

Wanted to Ren

Real Estate For SaleOpen Houses—,Houses (or SaleCondos/Town Houses-Income Property :Farm Property-Commercial Property-Industrial PropertyLots & AcreageMobile HomesCemetery LotsReal Estate Wanted—

130131132133n136137138139140

RecreationalBoats ft Accessories 152Camping Equipment 153Recreational Vehicles 154

AutomotiveWanted AutomotiveConstruction Equipment-Auto Financing-Auto InsuranceAuto Rent/LeaseAuto Service/PartsMotorcycles-MopedsVans.

20020521021522022S230235240245250

Trucks & Trailers -Autos tor Sale

READ YOUR ADTHE FIRST DAY

IT APPEARSIThe Daily Register will not be re-sponsible lor more than one in-correct insertion ol any

advertisement and only when itmaterally affects the value of thead. If it contains an error callclassified. All ads are restrictedto their proper classification andset in the regular Daily Registerstyle ot type, night is reserved toedit or reject any copy or ad.

TO PLACEYOUR

CLASSIFIEDAD

CALL THEACTION-LINE

542-1700MONDAY-FRIDAY

8:30 A.M.-4:50 P.M.

001F EatontownPUBLIC NOTICE

RESOLUTION OF PLANNINGBOARD,

BOROUGH OF EATONTOWNPLEASE TAKE NOTICE thai

on NovamMr 10. 1986. thePlanning Board ol the Boroughol Eatoniown adopted a resolu-tion approving the minor siteplan applicaiiorf cf Robert No-vember in respect ol premisesKnown and designated as Block69. Lota 25 through 29. locatedon Route 35 in the Borough olEatoniown.

The Planning Board ap-proved plans entitled "Site Plan—Existing Building. Block 69.Lot* 25 through 29*7 to permitthe rehabilitation ol property lo-cated at the aforesaid premisesfor office use and for use by anexisting tenant. Sunroofs ofAmerica. Site plan approvaldoes not require the granting ofvariances since the proposeduse Is a continuation of a pre-existing non-comforming use.The applicants approval wasB'bject to applicant complyingwith requirements of the Eaton-town Borough Engineer andsubject to use of the existingsign at the premises or applyingtor appropriate variances for thepurpose ot changing the sign.OIL DOUGLAS MESSINA. PC.179 Avenue at the CommonShrewsbury. New Jersey 07701{201)369.-0400Attorney for ApplicantDecember 19. 1986 $15 12

001N KeyportNOTICE

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that themanning Board ol Borough olKeyport. at its September 25.1966 public meeting, granted theundersigned the relief describedbelow In connection with thesubdivision ot premises knownas Broadway and Maple Place.Keyport. New Jersey, end

Advertise in one otour FRONT PAGEREADER ADS atjust >20 per line(minimum 2 lines • .maximum 4 lines)and you will getyour advertisingmessage acrosswith FRONT PAGFIMPACT! .

001N Keyportshown on the Keyport tax mapsas Lot 1, Block 5 01 The reliefgranted is as follows

1 Minor subdivision appro-val.

2. A variance from Section16-5.8(8) of Keyport BoroughOrdinances with regard to mini-mum fronl yard requirements.

3. A variance (com Section18 5 8(a>(3) of Keyport BoroughOrdinances with regard to totalSide yard requirements **

4. Variances from section 18-5.8<aX3) of Keypon Borough Or-dinances with regard to mini-mum side yard requirements.

Copies of the resolution, ap-plications, plans and other sup-porting documents are on file atthe office Of the Secretary ot thePlanning Board at the BoroughHall. 18 20 Main Street, Keyport.New Jersey, and may be in-spected by the public duringnormal business hours

HOLLYWOOD SERVICEc/o Jeffrey Rich. Esq.

Wilentz. Goldman A Spitzer900 U.S. Highway 9. P.O. Box

10WoodbnrjQo. New Jersey 07095

December 19 $15.13

001Q Long BranchPlease take notice that on

Tuesday, Jan 6. 1987 at 2pm. apublic sale will be held at theol.'ice of Tamarack Self-Storageand Warehousing. Inc 610 Jo-ime Ave Long Branch. NJ ofpropertery belonging to MableTucker. Joan Wtcklund, and Ebz-abeth Taylor which has not beenredeemed in accordance withrental agreementDecember 19. Jan. 2 $8 64

QOIUMlddletownATTENTION NHNOK1V

CONTRACTORSNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Notice is hereby given matsealed proposals wM be re-ceived by the Mtddteiown Hous-ing Authority, MonmoutliCounty. New Jersey, for:

QARAQEAlice V. Tomaso Plaza Complex

Oakdale DriveMiddleiown, New Jersey

Proposals will be received unirl12 00 Noon on January 15. 1987at the offices ol the MlddletownHousing Authority at the Alice V.Tomaso Plaza Complex. Oak-dale Drive. Middletown. NewJersey and will be publiclyopened and read aloud at 8:00P.M. on that date.

001U Middle town

Copies ot the Drawings.Specifications and ProposalForms may be obtained at iheoffices of the Middletown Hous-ing Authority upon payment of$35. not refundable- Checksshould be made payable to "TheHousing Authority of the Town-ship of Middletown '

Proposals must be made onthe Standard Proposal Forms, Induplicate, in the manner desig-nated in the Contract Docu-ments, must be enclosed insealed envelopes bearing thename and address of the Bidderand the name of the Project onthe outside, addressed to theMiddletown Housing Authority,and must be accompanied by aStatement of Consent of Suretyfrom a surety company autho-rized to do business In the stateof New Jersey and acceptableto trie Middletown Housing Au-thority, and a Bid Guarititee tothe Middletown Housing Author-ity for not less than ten Percent(10%) of the amount of the bid,except that the Bid Guaranteeneed not exceed $20,000.

The award of the Contractfor this work will not be madeuntil the necessary funds havebeen provided by the Middle-town Housing Authority In a law-ful manner

The Middletown Housing Au-thority and the Architect reservethe r'ght to require a completefinancial and experiencestatement from prospective bid-ders showing that they havesatisfactorily completed work ofthe nature required, before fur-nishing Drawings. Specificationsand Proposal forms, or beforeawarding the Contract.

The right is also reserved toreject any or alt DKJS or to waiveany informalities where such in-formalities are not detrimental tothe best interests of the Authori-ty The rtfiht is also reserved toincrease or decrease the quanti-ties specified, in the mannerdesignated in the Specifications.

Bidders are required to com-ply with the requirements ofPublic Law 1975. Chapter 127.and Public Law 1977. Chapter33.

Bidden are further requiredto comply with the requirementsof Executive Orders 11625 (36FR 1967) and 12432. relating tome Minority Business Enterprisegoal as set forth in Paragraph12 ot the General Conditions.Supplementary contained in the

001 u Middletown

Specifications.The successful bidder shall

be iequired to comply with theprovisions of U.S. Departmentof Labor Wage Rate Determin-ations sot forth in the Specifica-tionsBy order of the MiddtetownHousing Authority of Middle-town. New Jersey.Richard A. Gage, Executive Di-

rectorOK. 18. 19 $74 88

001Z Soa Bright

BONO ORDINANCE FOR THEPURCHASE OF A FIRE TRUCKAPPROPRIATING $117,000.00FOR THE COST THEREOF ANDAUTHORIZING 1111,150.00BONDS OR NOTES TO FI-NANCE PART OP THE COST.BE IT ORDAINED by the Gov-erning Body of the Borough ofSea Bright in the County ofMonmouth, State of New Jersey(not less than two-thirds of allmembers of the Borough Coun-cil affirmatively concurring) asfollows:

SECTION 1. The im-provements to be made de-scribed in Section 3 ot this bondordinance are hereby authorisedas a genecal improvement to bemade by the Borough ol SaaBright. In the County of Mon-mouth. New Jersey. For the saidimprovements or purposesstated in said Section 3, there ishereby appropriated the sum ofSi 17,000 00 said sum being in-clusive of all appropriationsheretofore made therefore, andincluding the sums ot $5,850 00as the down payment tor thesaid improvements now avail-able therefore by virtue of thecapital improvement fund.

SECTION 2. For the financingof said improvements and tomeet part of said $117.000 00appropriation not provided torhy application hereunder of saiddown payment, negotiablebonds of the Borough are here-by authorized to be issued in theprincipal amount of $111,150.00pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40A2-22gi In anticipation of the Issu-ance ot said bonds and to tern-p o r a n i y f i n a n c e sa idimprovements, negotiable bondsof the Borough in a principalamount not exceed ing$111,150.00 are hereby autho-rized to be issued pursuant toand within the limitations pre-

001Z Sea Bright

scribed by said lawSECTION 3.

(a) The improvements herebyauthorized for financing of whichsaid obligations are to be issuedare:

(1) purchase of tire truck(b) The estimated maximumamount of bonds* or notes to beissued for said purposes is$111.150 00(c) The estimated cost of saidimprovements is $117.000.00the excess thereof over the saidestimated maximum amount ofbonds or notes to be issuedtherefore being the amount of$5,650.00 is TOW available asfollows: $5,850.00 down pay-,ment by -virtue ol the capitalimprovement fund

SECTION 4. The following ad-ditional matters ere hereby de-termined, declared, recited andstated!(a) The said purposes describedin Section 3 .of this bond ordi-nance are not current expensesand are improvements which theBorough may lawfully make asgeneral improvements and nopart ot the cost thereof hasbeen or shall be specially as-sessed on property speciallybenefited thereby.(b) The period ot usefulness ofsaid purposes within the limita-tion of said Local Bond Law.according to the reasonable lifethereof computed from the dateof said bonds authorized by thisboAd ordinance is ten years.(c) The supplemental debtstatement required by said Lawhas been duly made and filed inthe Of.ce of the Borough Clerkand a completely executed du-plicate thereof has been filed inthe Office of tte Director of theDuisior. of Local Finance andthe" Department of CommunityAffairs of the State of New Jer-sey, arid si'Ch statement showsthat the gross debt of the Bo*»rough as defined by said law isincreased by the authorizationof the bonds or notes providedtor in this bond ordinance by$111,150.00 and the said obliga-tions authorized by this bondordinance will be within all limi-tations prescribed by said law.

(d) An aggregate amount notexceeding 10% tor Interest onsaid obligations, costs ot issuingsaid obligations and other itemsof expense listed in and per-mitted under N.J.S.A. 40A 2-20of said law may be included aspart of the cost ot said im-

001Z Sea Brightprovemonts and is included inthe foregoing estimate thereof.. SECTION 5. The full faith and(redit of the Borough'are hereb>-pledgad to .he punctual pay-ment ot the principal of and,interest on the said obligationsauthorized by this bond ordi-nance. Said obligation shall be.direct, unlimited obligations ofthe Borough, and the B&roughshall be obligated to levy advalorem taxes upon all the taxa-ble property within the Borough,for the payment ot said obliga-tions and interest thereon with-out limitation of rate or amount.

SECTION 6. This bond ordi-nance shall take effect 20 daysafter the first publication thereofafter final adoption as providedby said Local Band Law.

The foregoing Ordinance wasintroduced by the Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of SeaBrignt on November 17, 1986and on December 15. 1986 wasfinally adopted and approved bythe Mayor and Cjuncll.

CECILE F NORTONMayorMARY LARSONBorough ClerkDecember 19. 1986 < $56.88'

0G2C Tinton FallsNOTICE

An Ordinance entitled an ordi-nance creating a fire district inthe Borough of Tinton Falls.County ot Monmouth. New Jer-sey •.- was introduced on November24. 1986 and on December 6,1986 and was finally adopted bythe Borough Council of the Bo-rough ot Tinton Falls.

Jo Ann StaffordDeputy Borough Clerk

December 19 $5.04

002G MonmouthCounty

MONMOUTH COUNTYSURROGATES COURT

ESTATE Of ADA JOYCE DO-HERTY. DECEASED.

Pursuant to the order ol J.WILLIAM BOYLE, Surrogate olthe County of Monmouth thisday made, on the application ofthe undersigned, James A. MeCue. sole executor of the estateof the said Ada Joyce Doherty,deceased, notice is hereby givento the creditors of said de-ceased to present to the saidsole executor their claims underoath within six months from this

002Q Monmouthdate. - tDated-December 5.1986Me Cue A Me Cue. Esqs205 Broad StreetRed Bank, N.j. 07701Attorneys* James A. Me Cue

205 Broad StreetRed Bank, N.J. 07701

Sole ExecutorDecember 19 $9.72

. MONMOUTH COUNTYSURROGATE'S COURT

ESTATE OF GREGORY • MC-CRACKEN, DECEASED

Pursuant to the order of J.WILLIAM BOYLE, Surrogate Ofthe County of Monmouth, thisday "made, on the application otthe undesigned, Catherine Mc-Cracken. Administratrix ot Iheestate of the said Gregory Mc-Cracken. deceased, notice is'hereby givjn to the creditors ofsaid deceased to present to thesaid Adminlstratilx their claimsunder oath within six monthsfrom this date.Dated: December 5,1966Messrs. Oa.nlin. Scottland.Rosen, Cavanagh & UllanoP.O. Box 36Wast Long Branch, N.J.Attorneys

Catherine McCracken147 West End Avenue

Long Branch, N.J.Administratrix

December 19 $10.08

MONMOUTH COUNTYSURROGATES COURT

ESTATE OF LEROY EMMONS.DECEASED.

Pursuant to the order ot J.WILLIAM BOYLE. Surrogate ofthe County ol Monmouth, thisday made, on the application ofthe undersigned, Edna Morson.administratrix ot tiie estate ofthe said Leroy Emmont de-ceased, notice is hereby givento the creditors ol said de-ceased to present to the saidadministratrix their claims underoath within six months from thisdate.December 9th. 1966Thomas C. Pieper, Esq.One Ravine DriveMatawan. N.J. 07747Attorney

Edna Morson37 Andover Street

Red Bank. N.J. 07701Administrates

Dec 19 $9 72

PUBLIC NOTICEPUBLIC NOTICE OF REAL

E S T A T E FOR U N P A I D

002G MonmouthCHARGES DUE THE NORTH-EAST MONMOUTH COUNTY-R E G I O N A L S E W E R A G EAUTHORITY.

Take further notice that pur-suant to the provisions ofN.J.S.A. 40A 14A-21 that I.Frances T. Martinson, will on the31st dav of December 1966 at9:00 a.m. in the Boro Hall at 95Poplar Avenue, Watt LongBranch, N«* sell the lots andparcels of land hereinafter de-scribed for unpaid sewer aervigtcharges of me Northeast Mon-mouth Counjy Heqiqnai Sewer-age Authority allot whicn is inaccordance wltn a statementfiled with ma by said Authorrty.showing tfw Amount and duedate of such unpaid chargesand identifying the lots and par-cels of lands chargeable. Thesakl lets and parcels to ba soldand the names-ot persons Inter-ested in said tots and parcels,against which said unpaid serv-ice shall be charged as follows:

Raymond L. ft Barbara Bacon975 Broadway

$369.24

When the sale takes place,payment ot all taxes ind/orcharges, costs and interest mustbe paid by the purchaser beforeIhe conclusion' of the sale.otherwise the property will beimmediately resold.

At any time before the sale.the collector wilt receive pay-ment of the amount due. togeth-er with interest and coatsincurred to the date of paymentby certified check, money orderor cash only.

Witness my hand and sealthis 3rd day ofDecember. 1966.

Francis T. MartinsonBorough Collector

Dec. 5, 12. 19, 20 $76.32

002H State of• New Jersey

SAWYER, QAUE 4 DOYLE2S14 Highway 36Maitet, Hew Jervey 077302Q1-2S4-4000Attorneys foe PtaJntttfIN THE MATTER OP THE AP-PLICATION OP REOINA MUZZI-CATO POM LEAVE TO ASSUMETHE NAME OP REQINA. KATH-LEEN VOUNQ

SUPERIOR COURT OFNEW JERSEYLAW DIVISION

MONMOUTH COUNTYDocket No. W-001165-M

CIVIL ACTION

0tf2H New Jersey »ORDER FIXING DATE .<

FOR HEARINGApplication being made to

the Court rV*Sidney I .Sawyer,Esq.. of the firm of Sawyer, Gale& Ooyte, attorneys for me^Matr)-titf. lor a Judgment authorizingthe said Regina MuMteatp tq-assume Another name and lotentry-of an Order Fixing, Datv.forHearing ot such application:'

It is on this 6th day pf Dec*-meber. 196t> • •

OHDERED that the »th dayOf January. 1997: at nine o'clockjn the forenoon, or as soonthereafter as tha matter can beheard, at the Court House. Free-hold, New Jersey tM rix*4 atthe time and place few the hear-ing of such application and ofany objections that may bemade thereto.

It Is further Ordered that •notice ot such application bapublished in the Daily Registeronce at least two weeks pre-qeeding the date set tor thehearing.

William T. Wtchmann. J.S.C.Dec. 19 $16.92

0021 Other PublicNotices

MINUTES OP A MEETING OPJOBHAR.LTO.

WE THE' UNDERSIGNED,being all of the partner* Jn JOB-HAR. LTD., a limited partnershipassociation wind up Its affair*and to transfer its property tothe partners*.Dated: November 28, 1066

HERBERT FREEDMANJOEL FREEDMAN

BERNARD STRAUSSDecember 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, ft23 $3024

NOTICE OF PUBLIC•ALE

On Saturday, January 10, 1967at 12 Noon, the toOowtng con-tents of Units #5061 HOVPARK.Mini Storage. 950 ShrewsburyAve.. Tinton Fad*, NJ. will be•old by public sale In bulk bysealed bid received not laterthan 12 Noon EST on the dataof sale. Bidder* must ba presenton that day of sale and paymentmust be by cash or cash****check Contents can ba viewedbetween the hour* ot 1 and 5P.M., rtventy-two (72) hour*before the sate

Radio. Boxes. TrunkPubhc sale subject to cancella-tion.December 19 $7.66

4B The Register FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986

w» sm Maa»i w sue

• Ma. U-CMActsaai

NOTICE OF HE AHUMTO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE matthe undersigned w * apply to theMonmoutn County Courthouseon the 9th dey of January. 1907.at 9.00 o clock in the forenoon.or aa soon thereafter as counselmay be heard, in me Borough ofFreehold. County of Monmouth.State of New Jersey, torjudgment euthonzing ArteneBerber* Mascen* totha name of Anene BarbaraMorgan

Wilson, filter. Moekowill. Edelm e n * DickerBy Joseph A Galk). EsqOne Gateway Center. Suitetaoo201 624 0600December 19 1986 (11

006 Lost and FoundFOUND CAT — Gray a\ whitamele Cell 671-2654

FOUND DOG — Stray HuskyBlack a c/aam. famala. 1 or 2yra. old. Contact SPCA. 542-0040

FOUND — On Broad St.. RadBank Saantific Calculator, datam mamory Idantify to claim Call530 7966

FOUND — Oranga color cat.haa nama Sam on collar, foundin Navaaink Call 291-0829 attar5pm. dayl 872-1065FOUND — Solid black maladog Rad collar Approximately 1year old. Trainad. wall cared for787-1544

FOUND — 2 dogi. 1 vary small,white terrier type 1 small collielype. black with brown mark-ings. Found in Holmdel areaHolland HO 671-2493. aval

LOST DOG — Famala. blackwith brown in coat. Terrier typeFlop ovar ears, no collar, needsmedication. Colls Neck araa.Dae 10 REWARD1 Please call780-2441

LOST — Female dog About 2yrs old. Tan & white, mediumsized Has tan collar on. Keyport. Aberdeen area. Contact739 2457 or 2641497 Freeway

LOST — German shepard. tanw/black & white spots & slendersmall bait Answers to SharaCall 767-3967 Reward

LOST GOLO WATCH — Inscrip-tion on back Leather band onAcademy Bus from Naw York toKeansburg. Dec. 17th. RewardCall 787-6531.

LOST — Large, long-hair huskyshep mix Red collar, freindly.Wolf REWARD' 688-0917

LOST — 6 mo old Shepherdpup. long tail, front teeth justcame in Call 787-7643 days.767-1613 eves

009 Special Notices

LOVE IS GOINGTO GET YOU.

LOVE IS GOINGTO FIND YOU.

LOVE IS RIGHTBEHIND YOU.

LOVE'SGOT A

LINE ONYOU

009 Special Notice*Aa a serve* ba our oommuntty.Tha nagamr la onanng a FREE4 - m FOUND ad for 4 daysunder ma rename allnn Loat a.Found.The Register appreciates yourhonesty I a t a ) • pan Infending th* original cPlease cat us at 442 1700

AIRLINE TICKET — On* wayNewark to Denver Saturday.December 20th J125 Cel 7417193 after 6 pm

CAR POOLHwy 36 (E.J. Roberts) toRed Bank or Shrewsburymornings. Return eve-nings. Red Bank orShrewsbury to Hwy. 36(E.J. Roberts). I need aride — Kim 542-1700.8 30 am to 5 pro. Mondaythru Friday.FREE CLOTHING — Sat 12/20.9-11:30. Given at Lunch Break.121 W Beroen PI., Rad Bar*

MRS. SYLVIAPSYCHIC READERAdvisor on all problems of ufeTarot Cards. Astrology a Palm

2104 Kings Hwy . Oakhurst(behind Denny s)

493 0666/775 9572

NEW CREDIT CARD! — No onerefused Visa/Mastercard Call 1-619 565-1522 eat C 364 NJ 24hrs

PET PORTRAITS — Do Youlove your pet or have a Iriendthat would appreciate a gift thatkeeps on giving? Send ma afavorite pel photo a I will cap-ture that special pet on canvas1 provide you w/a life long trea-sure. Contact Ev at 530-1697.

WISH TO CORRESPOND WITHFEMALE ADULT — White, mala32. yra old, nice personality agood sense of humor. Respondto James Mele. boH 051. c/oThe Register. One Register Pla-za. Shrewsbury. NJ 07701.

012 Travel /Trant po nation

RIDE SHARER — From Trentonnear Hamilton to CECOM Build-ing. 7:30-4 p.m. Call 609 8864946 between 8-5 p.m.

051 Help Wanted M/FADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Red Bank sales office lookingfor a person with good tele-phone, organizational, typing &follow up skills. Prolessional at-titude & appearance S daya perweek, full or p/t. Hra. can baschool nrs BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY SERVICES. 751-9200

ADULT CARRIER — ForShrewsbury, Tlnton Falls. Eaton-town A Long Branch. Mileagereimbursement plus Incentives.Call Francine 542-8880

AIDES — 3-11. lull time/pantime, call In all shifts, new payscale For Information call 8710177.

AIRLINES NOW HIRINGFlight Attendants. Agents. Mechanics. Customer Service Sal-aries to S50K. Cull 600-6S7-0000EKt, A-124Z.

AUTO MECHANIC FULL TIME— For rental fleet. Must havetools and experience. Call Mr.Somers 747-1212.

BARTNEDER — Experienced. 1year. Full time. Waitress, experi-enced Delivery people, full time,pan time.must have own car.Call 291-3937. 12 noon-10 pm.

BOOKEEPER —Pi/It. Matureperson for cash recp and dis-bursements, payroll, billing,bank reconcile and collections.Red Bank Or.s' office. All Info,confidential. 747-9100.

BURNER SERVICE — Contrac-tor. Experienced in heating, airconditioning a plus. Excellentopportunity with establishedMonmouth County fuel oil deal-er Call Mr Mcgrath at 291-3200

CARPENTER — Experienced.wanted Call after 6 or leavemessage. 741-1144.

CAHPENTERS HELPERNeeded Must have trans Aexp. Call 787-4117.

CLEANING — Offices/houses,days/nights. Flexible hours. Call741-3246. leave message.

CLERICALDetail oriented person neededto work In fast paced Advertis-ing Services Department. ApplyIn person at The Register. OneRegister Plaza. Shrewsbury.

* * * * * * 1CLCMK.TYPIST — General of-fice duties, good typing skills,pleasant phone mannerism.Computei exp. w/knowledgi ofbookkeeping. Call 739-2271.

Our telephone linesare open and readyto help you sell a

house, a car, a boatr:a puppy, a couch, asaw, a lawn mower,a fur coat, a bird, achair, an antique

rocker...

PUBLIC NOTICISchedule for publication MAKE IT

YOURSELFCLOSINGAn lea* o

fhuTsday 12 noonThursday 12 noonFriday 12 noonFriday 12 noonMonday 12 noonTuesday 12 noonWednesday 12 noon

SATURDAYSUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAY

tU—Crochet 13-inchsquares ol women) in 3colors man |Oin intoatghan Center MoralmoW » WMd 10 createinteresting Mntur*

Send or deliver PUBLIC NOTICE with voucher to

Legal ClerkThe RegisterOne Register Plaza «Shrewsbury, NJ 07701

Fach pattern S3.2S plus75c poslagp handling

Sent*C l

llmsti run» ol yooi nmeaperlU H Honnern Ir.0 WeMMMNf 1137? aiMZ» Sat Pefltrn * « • «

GET DISCOUNTCOUPONS WORTH J14

NURSING/HEALTHCARE

POSITIONS AVAILABLE

in our Si Cr.lllt'log Use »""" l

.IKI'SStlhl".- more Iti.in 1000 ili'llltp

,fn 96 color p.i(|fs OrderCatalog »B6 C Send SI10 PI,- i.l,-' M.I, 6? 10

ein lli.il WlliHiIM ¥ '7

RN'S • GN's • LPN's • GPN's • AIDESLAURA WHEELER

C R A F T SExplore the opportunities. Contact the participating recruiters in thisDIRECTORY and please mention The Register.

Personnel DeptALL HEALTH CARE

SERVICES INCPenelope Lane

Middlelown. N J 07748(2111)671 MOO

HOME HEALTH AIDESMrs Cinadino

FAMILY a CHILDREN S SERVICE191 Bam Avenue

Long Branch. N J 077401201)222-9100

NURSES AIDESHOLMDEL CONVALESCENT

CENTERIBIS Hwy 34

Holmdel. NJ 0773312011946-4200

S u n 12to 20. D O N S haa elasticwejat Slie 14 takes 2%yarda of 45 Inch fabric. •/,yard of 45-Inch fabric forcontr eat trim

PEOPLE CAHEOF SOUTH JERSEY. INC

244 Broad St /P O Bo« 6625Red Bank. NJ 07701

12011 530 1888

Each pattern S3.25 plus75c postage handling

*M tan 'i*

Aid£s/Housetieep*rsWAYSIDE RESIDENCERETIREMENT CENTER

1211 West Perk AveWayside. N J 07712

(2011493 3096 linen nan ol (Our nraipeptrlU-10 fcxtrurn BW WoooulsNV 11177 "ml New UdrstlIV Sus Patlim

RIVERVIEWMEDICAL CENTER

GET DISCOUNTCOUPONS WORTH 114in out $1 Clatters catalog .Use them tor greatkits hooks accessories— more lhan 1000 itemson 96 color panes OrdarCatalog »B6 C Sand SIto Header M.H 6? 10Northern Blvd WoixJS'dc N Y 11377

HEALTH FORCE157 Broad Street3 West — Suite 3

Red Bank NJ 07701530-1191

he ProfessionalHealth Care Service)

Personnel DeplMetapleK Mgmt Services ol

MCOSS NURSING SERVICES151 Bodman Place

Red Bar*. N J 0770112011 530 6666

Information on placing an adin this DIRECTORY

please call542-4000 ext. 252

MARIAN MARTINP A T T E R N S

I

TheClassified542-1700

Bridge Advice

WithPictures

On Christinas Eva. Wednesday,December 24, we will publishanother new "Love Line!" sec-tion lor you, your sweetheart,friends and family to enjoy.Happy Birthday! Happy NewYear! Happy Anniversary! HappyHanukkah! Merry CHRISTMAS'

Say something cute, clever,seasonal or romantic, to yoursweetheart, friends or family.Paraphrase your favorite songlines. No matter what you say,your meaningful thoughts will bea wonderful surprise, which willbe shared and remembered fora long, long time.Introducing photographs withLove Lines. Now your phototogether with your love line willbe published, to enhance yourlove line message We prefer ablack ft white wallet size picture.No poiarlod pictures. Your photowill appear no greater than 1inch deep by 1 inch wide. It maybe necessary for us to reduceand crop your photo to fit.Therefore, all photographs be-come the property of The Regis-ter, and will not be returned.The cost for publishing yourpicture IS $10.00 in addition tothe line cost of your Love Linemessage

.75* per line. Minimum 4 lines.26 characters and spaces equaleach line. Additional $1 00 forrow of Hearts at top of yourLOVE LINE

Mail or bring us yourLOVE LINE

together with your payment.Make this very special day,

very special Do it right now.

The RegisterLove Line Department

One Register PlazaShrewsbu^ NJ 077ui

Fatal Opening LeadBy ALFRED SHE1NW0LD

A risky opening lead may set off.fireworks but may burn you badlyeven when it seems to be just adamp squib.

South's ten of hearts told himthat West had chosen a dangerousopening lead. Why had he done so?

New York expert David Berah,for many years one of the leadingplayers of South America, knewthat West's other leads must havelooked even worse. This meant thatWest held all of the missing highcards.

FINDS QUEENBerah began with the king and a

low spade, finding the queen with-out even needing to finesse. Henext led a club to the ace andreturned the jack, playing West forthe queen.

This unusual play in clubs pickedup the entire suit, and South wasnow sure of four clubs, three spadesand three hearts. All he needed forthe slam was two diamond tricks.

After running his tricks in theother suits, declarer led dummy's10 of diamonds and let it ride for afinesse. West won but then had toreturn a diamond, giving South thelast two tricks with the A-Q.

DAILY QUESTION

You hold: • 1 0 9 8 2 ^ 8 7 6 5 3 0*3 • 10 7. Dealer, at your left, bidsone heart, your partner doubles,and the next player passes. Whatdo you say?

ANSWER: Bid one spade. Theweaker your hand, the more essen-tial your response. If you pass thedouble, declarer should win fivetrumps and several outside tricks,each worth 100 or 200 points

(depending on vulnerability) 'Yourhand will be worthless. But if youbid one spade, your hand willprobably take two or three tricks

- by ruffing clubs or diamonds; andyou will wind up with a plus scoreinstead of a substantial minus.

North dealerBoth sides vulnerable

NORTH• AJ65<5>A420107• K984

WEST• Q4

OKJ852• Q653

EAST• 10982V 8 7 6 5 30)43+ 107

SOUTH• K739KQ10OAQ96• AJ2

North Eut South Weil1 * Pass 10 Pass1 * Pass 4NT Pass5<9 Pass 5 NT Pass60 Pass 6 NT All Pass

Opening lead-- V JA Pocket GuMe to Bridie writ-

ten by Alfred Shelnwold l i availa-ble. Get your copy by sending $2.50,including a stamped, ie l f -ad-drcued No. 10 envelope, to Shein-wold on Bridge, In care of tblinewspaper, P.O. Box 1000, Lo§Anielei, CA 90093. Not availableoutside of continental UnitedStates.

• 1968. IM Ana** Tntl SynfceU

VE'S GOT ALINE ON YOVt

With PhotographsSomebody very special in your life

wants to hear from you.On Christmas Eve, Wednesday, December 24, we will publish another new"Love Lines" section for you, your sweetheart, friends and family to enjoyreading.Happy Birthday! Happy Anniversary! Happy New Year! Happy Hanukkah!M e r r y C h r i s t m a s!... Say something cute, clever, seasonal or romantic,to your sweetheart, friends or family. Paraphrase your favorite song lines. Nomatter what you say, your meaningful thoughts will be a wonderful surprise,which will be shared and remembered for a long, long time.Introducing photographs with Love Lines. Now your photo together with yourlove line will be published, to give your message special quality. We prefer yougive us a black & white wallet size picture. No Polariod pictures. Your photowill appear no greater than 1 inch deep by 1 inch wide. It may be necessary forus to reduce and crop your photo to fit. Therefore, All photographs become theproperty of The Register, and will not be returned.

The cost for publishing your picture is $10.00 in addition to the line cost ofyour Love Line message.Take advantage of this perfect opportunity (especially during this holidayseason). Mail or bring us your "Love Line" and include your picture to makethis very special day, very special. Do it right now.

CUSTOMER NAMh-

ADDRESS PHONE_

' Line Minimumper line

EXAMPLE

ENTER YOUR MESSAGE IN THESE BLOCKS26 characters (letters, punctuation marks and spaces between word*) equal a line.

PauIRt love you more

lhan words can sayYou brought so muchhappiness into my litei love you now and alwaysMy love to you lorever

Eva Mane Hot* to My - Use trptratc p r II ntcmury.

CHECK HERE YES D NO • IF YOU WISH TO ADD A ROW OF HEARTS ACROSSTHE TOP OF YOUR LOVE LINE, AT AN ADDITIONAL $1.00 CHARGE.

CHECK HERE YES • NO D IF YOU'VE INCLUDED PHOTO $10.00 extra.Total CostSEND YOUR MESSAGE WITH PAYMENT TO

The RegisterDAILY SUNDAY

Love Line DepartmentOne Register Plaza, Shrewsbury N.J. 07701 • 542-1700

FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986 The Register 5B051cooxjCHtr HtiftH - too*• » i M I y . »•« Applyut panan thora M M M I , Ha>36. HUM.C O U N K U M - CAC or aquM-lartt •apaHanoa m w o n day anm

aaury an) banaMa. E.O.E. ConlaaShaUa• • I 946 3030

CUSTODIAN — Evarung,mo. poMUon Immadiaia opanmg Long Brandi araa Black• M l kcanaa pral AppacaUondaaduna Dae 31. I M S Manmouth County Vocational SchoolDUtrlci Cat 431 7842 EqualOpportunity Emptoyar M/F

DATA ENTRYSaa Our Ad Undar

KEYPUNCH583-3660

MCC/CMFOCU * UOUOff — Kara ha

paw vacation tana. C M M a .«0W tttgn 11am o« a«lar 1pm.

DENTAL ASSISTANT — Qualityparaon (or prograaalva office IRad Bank araa Xray kcanaaraquirad Houra. salary and ban• i n . nag Call 7 4 7 M I 3 Sundaya and avaa. call 842-1216DENTAL ASSISTANT TRAINEE

F/T/P/T. Rad Bank. Orthodonticottlca naada an atari, dapandabla paraon WK tram. All intoconlidant.al 747 KlOO

DIETARY AIDE — Full Mnaavary othar waakand on. applIn parson, Eatontown Convakjscant Cantar. 139 Gram AvaEalontown

DISHWASHER — Can managa2-5 pm Evarybody » Cafa. HadBank IM* 4755

DRIVERS — F/T days Ihawa axcallant driving racordCall 747 0810. Mon Frl only Datwaan 9-3 p.m.

DRIVERS NEEDED — Tlbusinass doing wall, addingmora cars. Naad 1 lull lim.days. 1 »/i aftamoons A 2 P/Tavamnga Apply in parson. MiddWown Vallow Cab. 55 Longwood Ava. MiddkHown

M I V t M WANTED — Full limallmo drlvars naaadad. axp.plus CaH 739-32*7.

Oua to expansionCarriara naadad In tha followingaraat

RED BANKRIVER PLAZAEATONTOWN

LONG BRANCHMARLBOROLINCROFT

COLTS NECKUNION BEACHKEANSBURGLEONARDO

HAZLETCall 1-800-648-0352

to apply

Tha RagiatarAn Equal Oppl y Emptoyar M/F

ELECTRICIANS — Full timepoation. Making conscientiousparaon with good knowledgeand skills Small business, grow-ing fast Serious electrician naadonly apply 7392091

GENERAL CONTRACTORSeeks help in various aspects ofhouse renovation! Salary com-mensurate with axp. Call alter5pm 530 5406

OOVERNMENT JOBS119.040 - tS9.230/yr Now h.rklg. Call 605-667-6000 Ext R•247 for currant federal list

HOST/HOSTESS — Wait-ars/wartrestas Maitra'd Applyin parson. Buttonwood ManorRastauranl, Hwy. 34. Malawan

HOUSEWIVES. STUDENTS. RE-TIRED Now taking applicationsfor part lime opamngs mourMailroom Two shirts available1 00 am to 6 00 am. one to lourdays weekly, or 7 00 am to 3 00pm. one to two days weekly.Apply in parson at The Register.Route 35. Shrewsbury Nophone calls. Plaase'

KEYPUNCHOPERATORS

EXPERIENCEDFULL/PART TIME$5.50-$7.50/HR

(Based upon skill •and experience)

Expending data entry servicecompany located in me Matawan/Aberdeen area has immediateopenings for experienced key-punch operators on 2nd and 3rdshifts. Additional first shift sta-tions will be available in Jan-uary.

• Earn money ior theHOLIDAYS

• Choose your own hoursMonday-Sunday

• Brand new office• Excellent benefits• 100% company paid

medical, dental,vi3.on.and lifeinsurance for full time

II Interested call lor an appoint-ment.

583-3660MCC/CMF

Equal Oppty Employar M/F

051 HrtpWntodUBOUP TIACHm — Long•fanoll ant. Mud have AA Da-gn» «mi « KM it « » amora In Early Chadhood Educe•on. ««p wonung wan pra-aonool diadran Racan CoaagaOral* MM! wtm a tut yaar da-g>aa m Earty CMUhood C a n *

I-773BContacts

HUNDHEDS WEEKLY! — Homemawng pcograml mio.rn.oon?Sand S.ASE I D L.M Lmhar192 WhartakM Condoa. Manmouth BaacK. NJ 07750

ITALIAN RESTAURANT — Alpositions aval*. Can 172-1251attar 1pm.

JANITORIAL — Local contractCleaning Co. looking lor F/Thalp In Hokndal Can 1-100-392

JANITORIAL — Local contractClaamng Co looking lor F/TSupervisor w/minMnum 2-yrsaxp. Black seal kcansa raquiradCan t S0O 392 <M4a

KITCHEN HELP — wanladinvnad for mv. shift Tha LeftBank 530 5930

LEGAL SECRETARY — Enparl-ancaraquirad Call 871-8100.

MAINTENANCE PERSON —Liva in, must be experienced In

types ol repairs, black saalicense Eacellenl benefitsEqual Opportunity EmployrnenlSand resume to Highland!

Housing Authority, 215 SnoreDrive. Highlands. New Jersey07732.

MAINTENANCE — H an houro start depending on qualitiesions Handy man must haveools and Irans Start Immad.741-9451.

MECHANICAL ASSEMBLER —Manufacturer of medical equlpt-menl requires an experiencedechmcian lor small part assem-

bly Basic understanding ol ewe-rical wiring and schematics a

plus. Must bo thorough and de-tail oriented Excellent workingconditions and benefits ContactSummit Hill Laboratories at 201-291 3600 for interview or sandesume to P.O Box 535 Nave-

sink NJ 07752

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST —'ull time position In Red Bank.Eperience pref. but' will train

tha right person. Sand resumeo Box X428. c/o Tha Register,' Regisler Plaza. Shrewsbury.NJ 07701

MODELS/MOVIE EXTRASALL AOES 8 TYPES

No axp nec S15-S125 par hourN J Slata Licensed

UNIVERSAL CASTING 855 2900Pa.rkway Towers. Woodbndga

051 Hip WantedMCNCTAHV/rvnST — Ma

•42-1021

SECURITY — Oaurds naadadFor hnhar1400.

SERVICE PERSON — tannedopening lor busy haatlng and acco Good ban., axp raq CaM294 2551

SHEET METAL TRAINEE.MMnga for' busy

healing 4 a/e company Goodbenefits, no axp necessary CaMMt-0302 tor application Sam4 30pm

SUB CONTRACTOR — Immadopening lor busy haatlng and acco Good ban. axp. raq. Can2*4 2551

swrrcmoAUD OPERATOR —JMM awn. TIT or P/T. l a * .

TEACHERS ASSISTANT — InLong Branch araa. High Schoolgraduate, axp. working withyoung children Contact I

TEACHER — • month positionNJ certification, early elementaryexperience raquirad to leach 3rdgrade; January 5. 1987 throughJune 30. 19S7. Call lor appoint,mam; Principal Deane-PorterSchool. Rurnson 8420330Deadline December 23. 19B6

TELEPHONE WORK INShrewsbury Office availablenew exciting opportunity withNational Promotion CompanyEvening hours Call Mr. Douglasat 542 6880

TRUCK OPERATOR — Full orpart lima. Must have experiencein flatbed A light duty towing.Musi live In surrounding araa olRed Bank Call 530-4041

WAITER/WAITRESS — Full orpart lime, lunch and dinner.Tuesday through Sunday, goodworking conditions Call Ruison Country Club. 842-3333. lornlerview

WAITRESSES/WAITERSApply In paraon, Town & Coun-try Inn, Rt. 35 A Broadway,Kayport.

WAITRESSES/WAITERSS A N Restaurant, axp Call 7470307.

* * * * * * *

MOTOR ROUTEDRIVER WANTED

IN FREEHOLD AREAA M OELIVERYMILEAGE REIMBURSMENTPROFITS A TIPS

Call Jail Cadyor

Chris Smollon542-8880

- * • — * * » — * - . * . . , * „ .

MURSES AIDE — 7 3. 4 and 5ay positions benefits exp«nnee preferred. Apply in person.

Monday through Friday. 10 lo 4.Arnold Walter Nursing Home.

22 South Laurel Ava.. Haitol

NURSES — RN/LPN. 7-3, 3-11,lima/pan lima, naw pay

scale. For Information call 671-177

NURSESRNS & LPN'S M/F

NURSES AIDES $5 25/HHHOUSEKEEPERS to-t HOUR

LIVE INSI315 WEEKocal Cases, no' lees. Incentivend referral bonuses CaH lor

nlerview at People Cara, 244road St. Red Bank. 530-1888

600 Union Ava. Rl 71. Brlelle.28-9432. Freehold. 150 High-ay 9 431-1886

FFICE HELP WANTED — F/Trokerage Firm. Exp. nee-usury Call for apt. 542 6989

WAREHOUSE — Full lime/partime for flower bulb CO. Recelv-ng/shlpping, other warehouse

duties. Apply in person, between9 am. and 3 pm. Langeveld BulbCo . 282 Fairileld Rd . Freehold780-3611.

WAREHOUSE HELP — WantedFt/pl Packers lor flower bulCO. 8:30 am-S'OO pm., 8 30 pm12:30 pm, 1:00 pm.-5 00 pm5:00 pm,-9:00 pm Apply in parson at Langeveld Bulb Co 28FairlteW Rd.. Freehold.Senior Citizens and retireeswelcome 780-3811

052 Part Tim.HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER

Musi have own trans A Ret. 3emeu children. C M between 7 A«pm. 571-4319

NEED CAUH AFTER THEHOUDAY87 S u n now and yourUral check will coma right attarme 1st ol the yaw Earn no lass

Can Dianaweakly plus incentivessal 583-6210

NEWS PAPER ADULTMOTOR ROUTE CARRIER

Wim reliable car is naadad InMkMWown. Leonardo. Beltord.

Highlands. Saa Bright Mon-mouth Beech, A tha LongBranch areas This Is a goodposition with earnings ol 1300- I(400/mo. plus cash incentivesCall toll Iraa 1400-242 0650 or877-4222

OSS Situation Wanted

TRAVEL COMPANION — Wounyou Hke to have the expertise ofan R.N M Via salary of a com-panion? Recently retired PIN.desires position as a companiononly to ambulatory paraon whowishes to travel Female pre-ferred- Salary highly negotiableII you travel to the right places. Imay make you an otter Impec-cable references Some may beasked of you Excellent driver Amap reader P.O. Box 1914.Monlclair. N J 07042.

071 MarchandisaDINETTt; me I -cfwaire, table, good oond.. maple.taOO or beat Oder 787-1066

DRYER — GE Heavy Duty OasDryer lyr old Exc cond MOO.Call 747-8361.

DRYER — Norge. good runningcond.. M 0 or beat offer Can493-9362

ECONOLIFT — Standard ream-er Leather • moa ok) Was$1200 new Asking M00 Parled cond CaH 290-1779

ELECTRIC RANGE — Hotpoimsail cleaning oven. S50 or b/oCan 671-0130.

PART TIME BUS AIDE — Posilion available at Rad Bank Priman/ School 222 River SI RedBank. NJ. 07701 II interestedplease call 758-1530 E.O A A.E

Part Time

Get involved

Assist Credit Manager in busy•department Plenty ol phonework Call 542-4000. Ext 206

PART TIME — Help wantedGood starling salary. 2 3 hoursa day. Great for homamakera orretirees. 957-0852.

PART TIMEMAIL ROOM

Paper handler's needed. Twodays per week, T I M . A Fri. Guar-anteed 16 hrs per week. Musibe able to lift up 50tbs. Twopositions, open. Contact TomSpagnelt or Kim Walkei before10 00am Mon thru Sat 5424000 ext 277or apply ir person,The Register, One Register Pla-za, Shrewsbury, NJ 07701 Alsotaking applications for variousother positions including clerks& inserters. Early morninghours, 12 midnight to Sam. 2 to4 days per week Homemakers,retirees, students & military wel-come.

PART TIME — Mi|i trainee,salary plus/bonus. We seek

individual to run tele marketingprogram for well known dallypublication. Musi have excellent

people skills, to accomplishhiring, training, motivating &

supervising. Eve. hours 5 to9pm. A Sat. morn, call DougReese at 583 5211

061 BusinessOpportunity

EXERCISE EQUIPMENT• Total free W*t0hl gym consistingI of Ivanco dumbatfa. Ofymptc

weights Serious weight lifter orbody builder must a«e. 4951221. aak for Jack.

SIGNIFICANT GROWTH OPPORTUNITY — Exists with thefastest growing frozen yogurtfranchise in the country. For aprostectus on lh<» limited part-nership write: Htarttanda Manag-

ment Co.. P.O Box 6311. RedBank. NJ 07701

062 MortgagesATTENTION HOMEOWNERS

Low rale lat A 2nd mtgs/rafi-nancing/credrt problems andforeclosures ok.Kramer Financial 306-0840

LOANS TOHOMEOWNERS

For any reasonLow rates. Fast approvals.

Sterling Mortgage LTD583 59399-9 daily

Credit problems understood.

MERCHANDISE

071 MerchandiseFor Sale

FIBERGLASS CAP — 811 wti.le.S275. Formica 40 men wall &desk unit. 1100. Perego Car-nage Stroller. $45. 2 am. todrmdressers. 140 pair 717-7311

FILL DIRT ANDROAD GRAVEL.ANY QUANTITY,WILL DELIVERANYWHERE.

493-9782FIREWOOD — For sale, splitand delivered. J75 Vt cord $125cord Catl 642-5409

FIREWOOD — Mixed seasonedhardwood. fti25 a cord deliv-ered Discounts on 2 or moracords Call 747-4659 after 6PM

FIREWOOD — Oak & mixedhard woods, seasoned, split,stacked A delivered. S130/cord.$70/Vi cord 870-923V

PART TIME SECRETARY —PoSilion at Red Bank PrimarySchool. Steno and school expe-rience preferred. 12 month posi-tion. If Interested please sendresume to Mr. Wade Turnoch.Principal. 222 River St.. RedBank, NJ. 07701. E O A A E

052 Part TimeANSWER PHONES — And d.9patch taxis weekdays 2-6 p mPhona exp & some knowledgeol Middletown necessary Appl]in person. 9-5 p m. MurphTransportation, 55 LongwoodAva . Middlatown

BOOKKEEPER — General writeup work, payroll A tax returns. 2or 3 days par week. Send resume to Box F462 c/o The RegI star, One Register PlazaShrewsbury. NJ 07701.

CLEANING PERSON WANTED— 30 hrs. a week. Large officeCatl for appointment Mondaythru Friday 11:00-3:00: Al Zulto542-4000

CLEANING WOMAN — 1 dayMkidietown area.

381-3030Cal

CLERICAL HELP — Accountingoffice. Light typing, dependableCall Linda at 787-7778.

FFICE WORK — Some expertnee. some bookkeeping. 946100.

IL BURNER — Mechanic. Ex-wnenced only. Company bene

Excellent salary. Aironditioning experience helpful811291-3200. ask for Ed

IZZA MAKER — Experiencedighta Apply in person after 4m.. Circle Pizza, Eatontown

062 Mortgages

LUMBER — Min 4yrs. exp inbbing A remodeling. Exc.

steady position Call 531 0594.

PRODUCTION COACH — AAdegree, or 60 credits in psychol-ogy or related loild to teachwork skills to menially retardedadults and .assist in production.Send resume to P.O. Box 672.Long Branch. NJ. 07740. E.O.E.

REAL ESTATE — The Cr'owellAgency in Fair Haven welcomesnewly licensed or exp. SalesReps Congenial, friendly atmo-sphere Exc. training Generouscommissions. Immediate floortime For confidential interviewcall Stan Rtee. 741-4030.

RNS — 11 to 7 shift. Full orpart time. Full fringes Compati-ble salary Caft Mrs. Smith, 9-3.

SALAD PERSON — Call man-ager 2-5pm. Everybody's Cafe,Red Bank. 842-4755.

SECRETARY — For non-profitorganization. Entry level posi-tion. Good typing skills. Ability towork independently. Good tele-phone & interpersonal skills.Send resume to P.O. Box 377C.Shrewsbury, N.J. 07701. EOE.

SECRETARY — For insuranceoffice, will do bookkeeping andtrain for the Insurance business

.to become licensed Must besharp and have 2-3 yrs. officeexp. Gardiner Marek Agency.Atlantic Highlands 291-0477.

COOK — P/I inintuttonai «p ptat«rr»oEmwy Mann*. Nurtmg Horn*. SM-0400CUSTODIAN — Part time Im-mediate opening. Hazlet area.Black seal license pref. Applica-tion deadline Dec. 31, 1986Monmouth County VocationalSchool District: Call 431-7942.Equal Opportunity EmployerM/F.

DELIVERY PEOPLE — Neededto Deliver Telepage TelephoneBook in the Freehold, Manalapan. HoweM & Marlboro areasMake your own' day light hrsCall Jim at 349-2292 or 6233200 between 8 & 2:30

DRIVER$5/hr 25-30 hrs per week. EarlyAM hours Valid NJ drivers li-cense a must. Could lead to fulltime. Call Dave Lucas or TomRobbins 542-4000 An EOE.

FLEXIBLE HOURS — Doctorsoffice. Answer phone, light typ-ing, billing. Call 741-5017

HORTICULTURAL TECHNICION— Reliable, exp. in maintaininglive plants interiors in commercial office buildings. Car nec.•alary negoi/benefiis. 938-5111.

HOUSEKEEPER — 2 half daysper week or 1 full day Salarynegotiable. Starting end of Jan-uary. Mlddletown. 530-8627

INSURANCE A BILLING DEP1In a busy.Keyport Chiropracticoffice, Mon.-Frl.. afternoons-ear-ly eve. hours. Exp. preferred Incomputer billing and Insurance.Call 264-6902 for appt.

INVENTORY — Need extracash after the holidays? Trainnow to start work in January asan inventory auditor. We offer$5.25/hr. to start & flexible hrs.Call 972-6698. EOE.

062 Mortgages

Fixed RateMortgages

-J3/4From Points

91/2%... 30 Year 9.70 Apr91/4%...15 Year 9.55 Apr

Rrfinnncf and Purchast Program! Available

(201)342-6594Call on other programs

ARMS from 7 % % (apr 8.92)No Verification programs

Second Mortgages from 12.99%

Chelsea FinancialServices. Inc.

131 Main Streetn Hackenteck. N.J. 07601

Rates appry to appUcaUons taken after October 16. 1906 and aresubject to change wtthout notice

JANITORIAL — Local contractCleaning Co. looking for floorpeople In Little sliver. Experi-ence preferred, but will train.Call 1-800-392-6946.

JANITORIAL — Part time gener-al cleaner, m/f, experienced. 4-6:30 pm. Call 462-2227.

101 Apartments

•7" PERSON NEEDED — Tohelp in our growing accountingfirm Typing Involved, flexiblehrs Call 671 9325 for interview

RECEPTIONIST ASSISTANT —For Chiropractic office musthave terrific personality exppreferred but willing to tram Call291-1515 Mon Fri 3-7

TEACHERS' AID — Early child-hoed; private achool. 3 hourHay Mmirtny through FridayCall 542 4777

TELEPHONE SALES Parttime. Earn high commissionsselling the Register in your ownhome during your free time

LITTLE SILVERFAIR HAVENRED BANK

MIDDLETOWNEATONTOWN

542-8880

WAITRESSES/WAITERS — Apply in person Shamrock DinerHwy 35. Mlddletown

WAITRESS/WAITER — Caimanager 2-5pm. Everybody sCafe Red Bank 642-4755

053 Babysitting/Childcare

BABYSITTER — Need womanto do occasional daytime baby-sitting in my home For 2 chil-dren ages 2'v & 13 mos Nomore than 2-3 hrs at a time andpossibly only 1 child at a time.Will provide trans if necessayS3O-6715.

BABYSITTER — Wanted in ourUnion Beach home, mostly day-time hours, references neededCall 264-3563

BABYSITTER NEEDSD —.For 1yr old child in my Leonardohome. Tue. A Thurs . 8-12 noon.Call 291-3093

BABYSITTER — Mature womanto take care of 3 yr old boy forprofessional couple 12 30-630PM weekdays. Own car946-4176. Holmdel

BABYSITTER — Needed imme-diately Mature minded womanto care for my 16 mo. old childin my home. M I . ref'&< & trans.Call 9-5. 741-1301. after 5PM671-5899 ask for Christine

BABYSITTER — Needed forafter school care in my Rumsonhome. Mon -Fn Own trans. &ref. Call 370-2400 days. 758-1251 eves

054 Domestic HelpHOUSEKEEPER — Mon . Wed..Frl., 6-3. Mlddletown area $40per day. Ref. & own trans Call671-5899 alter 5pm.

055 Situation Wantedfemale

BABYSITTING — In my home.Monday thru Thursday, 9 to 3p.m. Call 842-3286.

CLEANING BY KAREN • Rea-sonable. Reliable with Refer-ences. Free Estimates. Call

872-1927

EXPERIENCED IRONING - La-dy will do ironing pick up Adelivery Call 530-9693.

HOUSEKEEPER — For theweekends. Some experiencewith elderly. I have references."74-9213.

Young women wishes domesticday work for busy working peo-ile. All chores. Cleaning aidsnctuded CaM Kathy. 264-13S6

101 Apartments

SELLThe ThingsYou Don't

WantDid you know there are nundreds of shoppers reading thfclassified section of The Regis-ter everyday, for the best buyson used merchandise for saleNo doubt things you want to selwill sell when you place your aflin the classified section•To help you sell your furnitureappliances, clothes or anythingelse, we'll give you plenty oladvertising time In The Registerat a very reasonable price($1090 for 4 line ad — your adruns 10 days.)If you're selling a single item inyour "Merchandise for Sale " ad.and you haven't sold it in 10days — you still have moreadvertising time Call us on theKith day and we ll be happy torerun your same sir^la item

Merchandise for Said' .id foranother 10 days al no charge(FREE-)

Need more help to sell youimerchandise. We II put your adin the newspaper called TheFort Monmouth Message, whichis distributed at Fort MonmouthMore than 13,000 military andcivilian personnel stationed atthe Fon read this weekly news-paper with avid interest For anextra S2.40. your Merchandisefor Sale " ad runs in the Registerfor up to 10 days (20 days forsingle item ad if necessary) plus1<week in The Fort MonmouthMessage. Of course if your mer-chandise is sold, you can cancelyour art anytime. The price slaysthe same.

Call 542-1700 to place your ador for information

ANTIQUE MARBLE STATUEBeautiful & large Roman type.R Hiiger Sculpture $1200 Call946 3971 after 3pm.

APPLIANCES — All major appli-ances at discount prices, 2 cu;ret, $69. chest freezers. $129 &up, 2 dr. tin cu ret. $229. wallovens, $249. 530-2997

BABY ITEMS — Crib. $75. Play-pen. $30 Highchair. $20. All inexcellent condition Call 741 -1669

BAND SPLIT — Selling guitars,amps, bass,, keyboards. PA.,echo and effects. 727-1895.

BOAT W/TRAILER & MOTOR— $300. Jeep hard top. Bestoffer. 747-5112

BUTCHER BLOCK TABLE —With chrome tegs, good condi

. $75. 747-3482. after 5.CANDIAN GEESE PLANTER —Great gift for Christmas $40Call 530-7523

FIREWOOD — Oak. SeasonedSpirt,, delivered and stacked$125 00 495-1917 or 741-3706

FIREWOOD — Over 50 cords instock, all oak and mined hard-woods, all split with free deliv-ery. Call 544-0949 or 229-4281.

071 Mrchandi—

PROVINCIAL _ Bonn »m. oom-

Mtra enttque cheat 1700. 642176«or 427 7276

ROLLS iv — Etactrc wheelcha*r. never used AskingS2.400 291-4M3

Muii — AreaI Z ' H I S . assorted ptctur<artificial tree Call 741 6195

w/peOdtng.MCtures. A

RUO — Texas ateetHd. vwmalcarpet Brown and white Appros 5x6 $400 767-0203. leave

SACRIFICE - Dming room laWe. and 6 upholstered chairs. 2extra leaves and a pad $500hrm CaM tor appoint 741-1133 '

SAVE ON THESE' — Otd drea-ears-$1250. ctwid chmerobe.$10 50. 2 door metal wardrobe.$14 50. oak chest of drawers119 50. oak nrte Ubte. $10 50.rnhg twtn bed. $18 50. 2 uphswivel chairs $15 00 each, mod-ern day bed $1950 More andmore! Rusais. 25 E Front St.R.B 741-1693

SEARS — Deluxe ping pongtabte. Puch Moped, VarsitySchwinn 10 *pd b*e. 2 pairchildren* K 2 skis & polls 747-1994 after 5pm

SEARS — Washer. A gas dryer,fireplace screen & grate, surfboard Moving, must sell Call671-6459

SILVER FOX — Jacket Likenew Size 12-14 Georgeous1

Asking $500 Call 642-8125

SKI BOOTS — Mans NordicaForce II. site 8, rarely used, axecond $50 747-0165

SLEEPER COUCH — Oun siteChair A loveseat, plaid. Hercu-lon. Small dresser & dressinglabie $50 takes all 495-1243

SLEEPER COUCH — Oun sizeChair & loveseat, plaid, Hercu-Ion Small dresser A dressingtable $50 lakes all 495-1243

FIRE WOOD — Seasoned, split,delivered $60 helf cord- Callbetween 2 A 9 462-7693

FIREWOOD — Split and delivered Call 229-6345 eves741-7072 days.

SLOT MACHINES — Old. Alsoold Penny arcade games A gum-

I ball machines Modern videomachine, elevator action , $350includes delivery Great X-MASgifts 671-6268

FIREWOOD — Stove wood. Halcord. $40. Also any combinationof your choice we can make upCall 495-0292.

FIREWOOD/STOVEWOOD —Full cord guaranteed or keep ttuload free. Every piece measuresA split 22 m. cord = 750 pieces53Vi in.x22in.x16 ft. 16 irc o r tl - 1 2 0 0 p i e c e s4fi.xi8jn x24ft Kelly Ptunkettsince 1972 872-9011

FISHING RODS — And reels. Inshore and oft shore, some CUBtorn, some international S426825.

FOR SALE — 25 In color consul, $175. 19 cu. ft. retigeratorbrown, $190. Both great condilion. 739-4921.

FREE OELIVEHY — This weekonly. On sate: maple d/dressew/mirror. heavy duty twin bedsnite tables, small walnut chinacloset, base cabinets, boxsprings and mattresses, kttche.sots, etc Ruscils. 25 E Front StRod Bank. 741-1693.

FUR. COAT —. Full lenflthNorwegian blue fox. Sizes 8-10Real good cond Call 670-1149

FURNITURE — 3 pc livingset. $50. Coffee table A 2 endtables. $150. Vanity. $40. Cai495-4906

FURNITURE — 2 BenmngtonPine Platform Rockers. 2 regularchairs. Karestan Carpet, 12x153 Custom made draperies50x100 with matching king sizebedspread Call 730-0912.

GARAGE DOOR — Wooded, 9ft. like new $125. Call 741-8744

GERMAN GRANDFATHERCLOCK — Mahogany .3 chimesmoon dial, beveled glass. $585Call 544-8261.

GIVE AN — Antique forChristmas W<de selection. In allprice ranges Also . a beautifulcollection of music boxes.Mary Jane Roosevelt. 109 EastRiver Rd.. Rumson. 842-3159.

GRANADA 'BASE CITIZENSBAND RADIO — 23 Channels ASilver Eagle Microphone Work-ing cond Asking $90. Call 264-7656

HOLMDEL FIREWOOD INC. ANNOUNCES — Condominiumservice All IB m. seasoned oakStay out ot the cold, wall bringit to you for the holidays Callweekdays 264-6440.' 10-4 pmtor details Wo serve all of Mon-mogth County,

HOSPITAL BED — Manual,$150. Adult 3-wheet bike, $60.495-9606, 10 am. to 4 pm.

CANTATA — 700 backgroundmusic system. 2, 700 selectionapes plus 2 wall and ceilingipeakers. good for home, office

or small restaurant. Call 566'6589.CHANGE KITCHEN DECOR —3whirlpool kitchen appliancesside by r side refrigerator ancfreezer, double oven range, ancdishwasher, all lop of line, avacado color, all excellent cond-tion. $500. Call 642-9267.

COMPUTER — Apple tie. 128kRAM, extended 80 column card,CP/M card. Monitor ///. Diskdrive ll. fan with surge protoc

joy stick. Many program'sncluding word processing, database, spreadsheet, games$700. Call 389-3925 after 6pm

COMPUTER — Commodore 64Monitor, keyboard, disk drive,with white computer cabinetExcellent condition $450. Early\mencan queen sire sola bed.Herculon fabric, gold tones, eicellent condition. $300: Browitull sizedloather sofa Cushionsredone Like new. Asking $150.Need room, must sell1 747-8655

- a .

^Tfipusand

COUCH — Colonial style withwood trim. 2 matching pillows,very good cond. $150. Call 7395416

What a Place toCome Home to!

E>ua sue loums(some witn family rooms), anconditioning, lots ol close! space, balconies.odk C'jonng and ceramic tiled bains There isample parking Deautilul landscaped grounds.on site lenms courts, and a children's play area

SPACIOUS 1,2,8,3 BR. Apts.Starting From $570 P*r MontA

RENT STARTINGAT $570.

(201)291-4050Olractloni: Garden Slats Parkway to Exit 117. TakeRoute 36 approximately 1OV» miiss to ThousandOaks on the loft.

DELUXE CHINA — Darby-golden awes. Service lor 12. Usedonce. List price. $7,800 Soilingprice. $4.000.531-3132.

DESK — Cherry. $200. IBMlypewwar. $100. Call 671-5114

DESKS. FILES — Tables,chairs, storage cabinets, com-puter tables, oflico equip, etc. atbargain prices. Now or usedA.A.C. DESK OUTLET. 1709 Rl.35. Oakhursl 531-3990

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE — Vt etring $575. 2/3 Iw ct ear studs.$525. V, cl tw ear studs. $400.Call 544-8261.

DINETTE SET — 5 piece withglass table $200 Call 721 0932.

DINING ROOM — Pecan lightedchina,, bulfet. lable w/leaf. 6chairs. Chairs need work. $225or besl oiler 671-2962

DINING ROOM — BenmngtonPine. 47 Inch round table with 212 inch leaves and 4 Windsorarmchairs Excellent cond. $500.B426316.

DINING ROOM SET — Table. 5chairs, bullet, china closel. solidMaple, good cond.. $350. Call291-5145 anytime.

DINING ROOM — Antique fromthe 30's. 6 chairs, large table,glass china closet. Beautifulwood. Call 530-0213.

DISHWASHER — Sears. Por-t/urtOrcountr. Nearly naw. Used10 K. Original cost $499. Sacri-fice. $199. Call 767-4727.

IBM TYPEWRITERSRENTAL $25 & up per monthHenl-oplion to buy 747-1661INDUSTRIAL CARPET CLEAN-ING — -Machine and aqiupt-menl. $350. Call 291-5999. after7 pm.

JEWELRY — Charm bracelet.8 0 dwt $125. Wedding set.white gold. .39 ct. Brll.anlshape. VS1 $450. Pearl ring,yellow gold. 1.7 dwt.. $60. Also6 assorted charms. $25 each.Call 872-1041.

KITCHEN CABINETS' — Witt!electric range $350 566-7376.

KITCHEN. SET — Formica toptable. 4 chairs Very good cond.$165. Call 2901779.

KITCHEN TABLE — Oval, withleaf and 4 chairs. $75. Refriger.ator. GE. white, top freeier. $50.Freezer, Sears, 16 cu. ft. $100.54J-2B17.

SOFA — Antique, vicionan.green velvet with mahoganywood trim, seats 5 Good condi-tion. $795 946-3872

77 P»ta A Livestock

FREE TO OOOO HOMESnuggle* ia a mad. aua dog. 1moa OH Moving, can I tafca

use can aHer 4pm

FEMALE ROTTWEILER —moa.. house broken, most seadue to aaargae Aakmg $300Can avaa 495-9547

LABRADOR — Pupa. 7old. 4 wfMe 4 black Just m tone(or Christmas' $150 767 2871

MALTESE — Puppiee. AKC.weeks, the ultimate stockingstutter' 384-4904

PUPPIES FCW SALE — AKCLhasa Apso. shota, a wfcs. old$300 Greal Christmas gutsAvailable now 542-7859

SCHNAUZER— Puppyone left. Female. Win now unwChristmas $400 CaH 5*3-0294

SIAMESE FOR SALE — Pleasecan 767-4844

TANKS-A-LOTPetShoope

39V> Broad St . Red Bank747-3440

AKC PUPPIES

Hu»ky. Fsmale Sheltw. F«mal«Shthizii. FemiM Chihuahua

Toy poodts. ApricotToy fox tumor

Pocket Toy. Ftmata Lab ft coHteMini Poodto. Apricot

Btchon, Mat*Cocker Spaniel. FemaleGolden Relrtavvr, MateGreat Pyrenees. Female

Scome. FemaleMiniature Schnauzar, Female

Short ft long hair hittansPersian & Hwnilaya

Now available at 2 greatlocations

39 Vj Broad S i , Red Bank747-3440

Animal KingdomHwy 35. Ocean Twp 531 1104

wo will hotd all livestock tilChristmas ave till 5

SOFA — Bad. tull size. $75-Recljning rockor. $50 Livingroom chair, $50 2 end table.130. 2 twin beds. $25 1 full sizebed. $20 Organ. $35 Kenmorehumidifier. $15 49S 0770

SOFA — Yellow A brown floralprint. Colonial. 2 living roomChairs, very old records. T Vw/cabinet Call 741 5956

STOVEI STOVE1 STOVE'Al cond Wood and/or coalMade in USA $125 or b/o

Call 747-1679 anytime

STOVE — 40 in. GV deluxeelectric. 2 ovens, auto burner.good conn, j ioo Call 8423129

TIRES — 4 General steel beltedradials. whiiewall. P205/70R14,20.000 mi. $100 Call 739-9064after 6PM

TIRES — 4 14 in. Firestonewhiiewall. all seasonal radialsBrand new $200 Call 741-8216

TIRFS — 2 new Dunlop steelbelted radial snows 195-60R14$90 Call 2M-3394 anytime

VIDEO ARCADE GAME — Frog-ger. ong paid $125 asking $65Call 739-2307

VIDEO CAMERA -r- FREE foryou to use in your home VideoCamera/VCR (camcorder) + atree blank tape. Also limited tothe 1st 100 calls. Call 240-0600Mon-Sat., 9-7 p m. excludingholidays.

WALL UNIT — a shelves withdoors on bottom. $75. Standinggarment bag, 36" wide, $20.Call 741-1689.WASHING MACHINE — Ken-more $100, Wood burning stove$100 or b/o. Rolleiflex Camera

'/accessories $50. 291-9099.

W A T E R F O R D — Glasses.chand Paperweight coll. crystaldishes, oriental screen. 12oyster plates. 9 bone chinacups 672-1856

100 S OF PUPS — NJ s largestselection fr $50, if you see morepups anywhere else ill give you• pup no charge, all breedshandled, open Dec. 20.21.22and 24, hrs 10-5 me/visa. J PONeill kennela. US # 1 . Princeton. N.l, ['. mi south of AlexanderRd]

080 Bicycles/MinBikes

BOYS BMX — 20 $20 GirlsDessert Rose. 2 0 . $20 Girlsspd Nassau. 24 $25 All goodcond Call Jean before 10am orafter 4pm 264-2747

084 MerchandiseWanted

AA ANTIQUES WANTEDAlso contents of homes, attics,used furniture, etc 264-6456

ALL ELECTRIC TRAINSLionel. Flyer. Ivesi old toys. etc.Highest $ paid Nobody beatsmy price 264-5075

ALL LIONEL TRAINSOr Flyer Top cash appraisalPrice no object. 946-2893

BEFORE YOU HAVE YOURSALE — Call Second Hand Lil.264 07T7 - Aftm- 5 264-8615Highest prices paid for all items,antiques, etc. For bargms. stopat 24 Broad St Keyport

MILITARYUniforms, medals, swords, bayonets. ail souvineers WWi ftWWII, etc Call 566-6030.

WANTED TO BUY — Handtrucks, dollies, storage shelves,steel barbells and excerciseequip . wheelchairs, railroad Ian-tarns, small desks Wilt also buybroken vacuums, commercialfloor waxing machines and carpet steam cleaners Call 530-5146 or 291-1307.

100 CondosAsbury Park — Spacious, clean.6 rms. shrt/long lerm. kids/petsok $565 Fee after rental. Wei-cheri Rentals. Bkr 530-5200

WHEEL CHAIR — With ComodBittachment 1 yr. old $200. 2

oygen cylinders. 1 is D withjage attachment, $65 1 is E,MO. Call 290-1779

YAMAHA RX 15Drum machine

Like new $350Call 542-3009

YAMAHA — Snow mobile,1972, oil injected. 2 spd trans ,mint cond Asking $400 Call787-3664

072 Garage/Yard Sale

LIVING ROOM SET — 5 pc..floral print, glass tables includ-ed Asking $400. Call 767-1401

MAPLE DESK — $25. 2 match-ing twin beds, antique headboards complete $100. boxspring and mattress $50. coloni-al triple dresser w/large mirror$75. wood chest of drawers$30. twin bed complete $75,264-6458

MIRROR — With gold frame.35: 55. Chandelier, antique gold. 3

layers. Both672-1041.

easonable. Call

MOVING — Contents of house,must set). Antiques, sofa & love-seat, chairs, refng., wall hang-ing, lawn mower(new) 95 EastBurgen Place. Red Bank or 7475946. Fn.. Sat, ft Sun.. 12-5pm.

ORGAN — Conn Spinette Mod-el. Leslie earphone attachment,Funmaster ft bench includ.Exccond. $400 Call after 5pm. 7417142.

ORGAN — Hammond electric.Very good condlton. $500. Call787-1166.

PIANO — Beautifully MahoganyVeneer. Ivory keys, carved legs,compact dimensions, light-weight, short compass key-board. Perfect for apt. $1100,Call 946-2693.

PIANQ. — Upright Howard. Ex-cellent condlton. Bench Inc.$600 or best offer. Call Jeannieat 222-1350.

POOL TABLE — Slate top.heavy duty, $325. Call 787-3616

QUILTS — Hand done try my 87year otd grandmother. Very rea-sonable. 760-5377.

RACCOON COAT — Lady's.Like rww. Compare at $3,600Asking $1,400. 462-2214.

REAL FARM LANDTOPSOIL

ANY QUANITYWILL DELIVER

ANYWHERE493-9782

GARAGESALES!Sell all the things

. you no longer needFor Cash...

...FastiStan your garage salewith an ad -right here4 lines. 3 days. $3.50.

:ach additional line 75C extra.Also, pick-up your FREE garagesale kit which includes signs and

things to help your saleCall 542-1700

ATLANTIC HN3HLANDS — Lux-ury 1. bedroom condo. ac. w/wcarpeting sliding glass doors toterrace All appl Heat includedExc. location Heat included$675 per mo 671-5980.

MIDDLETQWN — 2 bedroomtownhouse Garage, fireplace.,amenities 'Rent with possibleoption No- Fee Owner/realtor941-5126

MIDDLETOWN — Spotless. 5rooms, carpet, fireplace, yard,kids ok. Fee attar rental. Wei-chert Rentals Bkr. 290-9555

RED BANK — Ultra 5 rooms,'washer/dryer, carpel, basementFee after rental. Weichert Rent-als. Bkr 530-5200

SEA BRIGHT — 1 bdrm. 1 bath,furnished, private beach. $775 1yr tease Call eves 566-8137Tmton FallsWINDING BROOK2 bdrm. i bath luxury cdhdoW/W carpet throughout, centralair. all appl. eat-in kitchen &patio $950/mo Call 642-2760Joseph G McCue Realtors

APTS RENT

101 Apartments

101ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — 1BR garden apt Large room*.ovartootung pod. nioa araa.Haai A hot waflar mcl S60S/mo291-1221 after 8PM

HILLS Of HIGHLANDS — 2bdrm ootiage with spectacular

hMt. adults pralerrad. no pets$675 par mo Cell 872-9004

KEANSBURG — Attractivetarge studio apt Modarn krtch-an. Ma bath, parking apace,laundromat Suitable for amgteperson No pats $475/mo Utilmctud Calt49V9619

KEANSBURG — 2 bdrm apt$550/mo ptui *t*c 1"J securityCaH 7B7 6055

LONG BRANCH — 1 bdrm $600mo . 1V4 mo aac . newly remod-eled 2 bdrm $800 mo, 1 ' * moaac. newty remodatad. no pal*awowad Cm 670-6170

LONG BRANCH — 3 room gar-dan apt naar ocean, trantportalion Prwrva location. Adults pref571-14W, .___LONG" BRANCH — WEST ENDBEST NEIGHBORHOOD, QUI-ET. SECLUDED, IW BLOCKSTO BEACH 2 OR 3 BED-ROOMS. 1 Vi BATH. LARGEMODERN KITCHEN. LARGEPORCH, EXTRA ENTRANCE.W/W CARPETING. WINDOW

•LINDS. WASHER/DRYER.CELLAR STORAGE OFFSTREET PARKING HEAT IN-CLUDED $800 AVAILABLENOW IV* MOS SECURITY

379 2892LONG BRANCH — Large

in. 3 rooms, terrace, yard,quiet area Fee after rental. Wet-chert Rentals. Bkr 530-5200

LONG BRANCH — Newly deco-ated 6 room duplex. '>i block to

beach, ktds o k Fee after rentalWeichen Rentals Bkr 530-5200MODERN APARTMENT — Nedrtransportation Best time to cailbefore noon 495-0416

OCEAN GROVE — Newly deco-ated 4 rms. 1'ti block to beach,

close to buses Fee after rentalWeichert Rentals Bkr 530-5200RED BANK — Luxury 2 bdrmtownhouse. W/w carpet disn-was_her. A pkg. $725 530-7300RED ~BANK MANOR — OHSpring St 1 bdrm, heat, hotwator. parking, carpeted,M50/mo. 741-7870

RED BANK — RIVERFRONT*New 1 bdrm.. 1 bath overlookingthe Navesmk. $850 mclud utilRent with option Call 741-0516

RED BANK — Sunny & cozy 3rm apt. Adults $475/mo includ-es heat. Call 741-4604REO BANK — 2 bdrms nowavail $725 heat mcl, call 741-5672

RED BANK — 1 BR on rvr Exc.toe $595/mo me heat & waterNo pets 741-1493 after 6

RED BANK — 1 bdrm with loftand skylight Off st park In-town $750 571-0552

SEA BRIGHT^— 1 BR. $550/mopi 1 mo sec Heat suppliedAvail Dec 1 741-5937 or 758-6335SEA BRIGHT — 1 bdrm apt Nopets Lease, ref $450/rno pluselec. Call 741-0398

102 Houses tor RentAvailable Now'

FAIR HAVEN — Quaint 2 bdn1 bath Tudor Ranch w/fireplaceclose to school, shopping, busme $1150/month

HIGHLANDS — Hi-Rise, 1bdrm, 4 room unit w/luxuryamenities & great views$825/month

LINCROFT - - Secluded 3bdrm. 2 bath Colonial Cape,close to schools. GSP. BellLabs $120p/rnomh

SEA BRIGHT — ContemporaryI bdrm tondo w/all appliances

Convenient to NY transporta-$675/month.

GLORIA NILSONREALTORS 946-3200

AIR HAVEN — Emaculateirm.. exc schools, $675/mo

Call 642-3288 or 229-5064rAIR HAVEN — 2 bdrm Ranchlas everything. $1000 mo plusttils. no pets Call 201 696-043

HIGHLANDS —ly decorated

Sm house,appl near

pets o k Fee after rental.Rentals. Bkr 290-9555

KEANSBURG — 7 rm house. 3BR, modern k.tcn carpetedarq Avail immed 355-3598

<EYPORT — Spa'cious 6 rms.arpet. yard, short/long term,ids o k $750 Fee after rental

rVeichert Rentals Bkr. 290-9555

EONARDO — Clean 7 rrns.1

rplc. NY bus oeach. snort/longerm. kids o k Fee after rental.rVeichert Rentals. Bkr 290-9555

tTTLE SILVER — Cozy 2drm. 1 bath, large attic, base-lent. back yard .Call 530-7560

AT THE LONG .ARRANGEROUTLET — 92 ShrewsburyAve.. Red Bank Extra holidayshopping hours Open Fri., Sat..Mon & Tues, 9-3. Sun. 12-4. Youcan still buy a whole room orunusual "smalts" beforeChristmas.

BASEMENT SALE — Tuesday.12/16. Sola bed, $15. apt. kitch-en table and chairs. $15. fire-place. $15. rug, $5. 18 mo. oldboys clothes, ladies blouses andpants, fewelry. etc. Wednesday12/17. $2 bag sale B.Y.OB.(brown bag), 13 Oregan Ave.Hazlet.

CHRISTMAS SALE — Toys,novelties, gifts ft |«welry. EveryFrl.. Sat.. Sun. & Mon.. 11/2712/22. 9am-5pm.. 911 5th St..Union Beach. For info 739-3814.

CHRISTMAS GIFT & SILKFLOWER — at 30 Highview Cir-cle, off East Rd.. Middletown.Friday. 2-6. Saturday. 11-3. Call671-9565.

HOLMDEL — 12/19. 12/20.12/21 9-4. 2152 Hwy. 35. Diningroom set. kitchen set and manyother items

NEW MONMOUTH — New toys.Rte. 36 to Wilson Ave- to SylviaTerr, to 5 Defores PI. Sat. &Sun.. 10-4 p.m. 671-3574.

SILVER & GOLD JEWELERY(by weight) Schnmshaw & nauti-cal giftware. Well below retail.The Tiller. 241 Navasink RiverRd. Mlddletown. 747-6243. 12-8Mon-Frl. 9-4 Sat or by appt.

077 Pets & LivestockADVANCED AND BEGIN-NERS— Classes. January ses-s ions. $45- BayshoreCompamon Dog Club. 741-6046.

AKC — Male Lhasa Apso. 1 yr.old. golden and white $175 firm.Call 495-3720.

FREE PUPPIES8 weeks old.

787-1401.

HIMALAYAN ft PERSIAN — Kit-tens for Christmas reserveyours now $200 Call 842-5751

ALL LANDLORDSMonmouth & Ocean Counties

NO COST TO YOUWe have qualified tenants wait-ing to rent your property

No Charge'No Obligation!

We personally escort prospec-tive tenants to your property

Cait the Professionals'Weichert Rentals IncAberdeen 290-9555

Point Pleasant 295-1100Shrewsbury 530-5200

I it en-.HI! Mi'.'il E'st.ilo BrtiKof

ASBURY PARK — Luxury 1bdrm . 1 block to ocean $435-$455/mo plus util. No Fees Call201-774-0202

ASBURY PARK — Clean 5 rms.new kitchen & bath, beach area.yard. Fee after rental. WeichertRentals Bkr, 530-5200

ATLAN+Ic HtGHLANOS — Lux-ury high rise Large studio and2 bedrooms on water overlook-ing manna NY city view Com-muter ferry, train and bus Allutilities included. Starting at$595 Call 201-291-0237

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS —Large 2 bdrm apt in privatehome, completely redone. 5 min.from ferry service. $800 momcl utils., 1V% mo. sec.. 1 yr.lease. ABSOLUTELY NO PETS .avail immed Call 291-6549

BELMAR — Luxury 1 bdrm.townhouse. 1 block to oceanw/w carpets. $525/mo. plus utilNo Fees. Call 201-988-8900.

EAST KEANSBURG — Clean 5rm. 3 br in 2 family, appl. carpet,yard, kids ok. Fee after rental.Weichert Rentals, Bkr 290-9555

FAIR HAVEN — Cozy 1 bdrm.cottage for rent. Across Irompond Recently remodeled Ga-rage & private back yard. Lovelyneighborhood. Avail. Feb 1$625/mo. + util. 530-1590 after6 p.m.

GREEN GROVE GARDENS— 1& 2 bedroom apts. Exc. location

GSP. Beautiful spaciouscourtyards. Nicest rentals inKeyport 264-1846. 9-5. Mon-Fn.

HIGHLANDS — 2 bdrm withriver views from balcony. $525plus utii sac. No pets. Avail,immed. 787-4108.

MIDDLETOWN — Prime areabetween 35 & 36 2 bdrm. nouse

rent Beautiful cond. gaseat $695/mo plus util. imo

security, no pets. Call 495-3717

MOBILE HOME — Hazlet areaGood location Adult communityNo pets Call 739-9555.

RUMSON — . Nice 2 bdrmhouse w/ Ir. dr. kitchen, andbath Quiet neighborhood. $750/mo plus util 291-2575

RUMSON — 2 bdrm . iiv rm1,kitch . central air. ntce yard, walkto trans. shopping. A schools$875 + util 842-3313.

SEA BRIQHT — 2/3 bedrm 1'ibath Totally renovated in down-town area 2 blocks to beach$850/mo plus util. Avail 'orshort term, slightly higher for 1yr 747-3457 eves. 4 wkends '

TINTON FALLS3 bdrm . 2' -• ban- Split Level,Family rm , garage,*available im-mediately $i250/mo plus utili-ties Call 842-2760. JOSEPH G.McCUE Realtors

103 Rentals to ShareIN SEARCH OF — 1 mature.responsible person to share 3bdrm house in. Highlands $275per month inc, util. Bdrm availFeb 7th Please call Laura.eves after 8 pm. 872-2866

KEYPORT — Large 2 bdrm apt.to share with man. $350/mo..plus ' i util. heat mclud Catl

M257

RED BANK HOUSE — Non-smoker, professional prof Verynice. 2 BR Good loc , conv. toG5 Pkwy walk to Bell CoreNewman Spga . 10 mm. to BellLabs Holmdel, $395/mo plusutil. David day 949-1521eve:758-6434 msg. 756-6469.

RED BANK — Prof, female toshare 3 BR duplex. Walk to NYtrams & shopping. Call Kim 548-5505 days or 358-2709 eves.

104 Winter RentalsOCEAN GROVE — Winter rent-

1 BR efilcenciefl & room*ranging from $50-$140/wk. Fur-

ished All util. Security req.774-1133 ask tor Joyce.

106 Furnished RoomsABERDEEN TO RED BANK ,

Rooms & studios from $40 a wkHOME RENTALS. Bkr 389-1234

HAZLET — S300/mo. Call 868-1879 after 7PM.

MIDDLETOWN TWP. — Fur-nished or unfurnished offThompson Ave. Rt. 36. nonsmoker, neat & quiet m bighome, wall mannered workingindividual. $100 wk. CaH 787-0203 leave message.

6B The Register MIMV. DECEMBER 19.1986

•OS Fufruih#<i Rooms

KEANSBURO — Room t o rant.n u n <m» rar-aeea or TIT-7247

LONO BRANCH — Clean, quw

Oertoe. KUcften prrvleoea WalkK> ocean Call (721S53 eve-

RED BANK — Bast locationWomen s CkH> of Rao Bank74I-14J5OT 747-Wel

REO BANK — Furrnahad roomfor ram. Eldarty man pral« M oaakly. Can 2*1-4743

108 Commercial

Rentals

106 Commofds!

RED BANK /Lu«ury orftoe epeoeamuot t For purehaae can 530-7300

BED BANK — PrMeeakxiei or-

Zlmmerer ouHOmge mat ara carpettd. A/C. and nav* avaaeDMparking. RakM ranga from Mpar sqrt Plua utk Can Mgr.Rotten Oassaway B42-S695

RED BANK13S aq n omoa. carpatad *oaooraiad $200 par mo., lyr.leas* Can Judy 747-7510

OFFICE — To lei New arcnltecturally award warning bunding.1«00 aq. II. 5 omcee and recep-tion araa. CorMaNant Rt 35location. Naar parkway.Shrewsbury common* S10 a aqI t plua uwwaa. C M 741-1330

RUMSON — Prime omoespace E<c location Parking.aOO K) fl Can 048-1234

REO BANKPRIME LOCATION

400-2000 aq ft - M and upCarpatad. air eondwonad. el-evated bunding, avail, parkingC M Judy 747-7M0.

131 Houses for Sale

131 Houses

lor Sal*GOVERNMENT HOMES —FromSI |u rapair). Deanquem ta*properly. Repossessions CallB05-W7 eooo ant. OH-S247 torCuffOt WPO Wtl-

131 Houses tor Sale

HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS

Picture perfect is this gracious center hall Colonialin a superb Rumson location. 4/5 bedrooms, 3 fullbaths, fully finished basement with workshop, awaitthe family looking for a beautifully appointed home.$449,000.

MAKE YOUR ADDRESS RUMSON IN19871

Tucked away on nearly. 2 acres in the estate area ofRumson is a very special home. Call us to see this4 bedroom, 3 bath Ranch with generously-sizedrooms and marvelous landscaping. $450,000.

WINTER WONDERLAND -NAVESINK RIVER WATERFRONT

Enjoy this Naveslnk River waterfront Contemporaryin Fair Haven with scenes of boating and sailingfrom your own windows all year round. 3 bedrooms,3'.' baths, 3 fireplaces, on over one acre of primebulkheaded property. $950,000.

TWORIVERS

Realty

530-6550114 Avcnnc of Two Rivers, Ramon. N J .

MiOdmown

Take the TimeCall now to see this priced-to-sell 3 BR home

wounderlul family neighborhood. Recantupdates include an energy-efficient gasfurnace, water heater, s/c range, refrigeratorand washer. Think summer and the greattimes ahead enjoying the in-ground pool. Of-fered at $135,900

Tinton Fall!

Royal GardensOn a small, quiet cul-de-sac, this 4 BR, 3 BNew England styled home features a LR withcharming garden bay window and brick FP,formal OR, newly appiianced kitchen, spaciousbedrooms, 19 ft. FR and 20 ft. screened porchoverlooking the private "English Garden" set-ting. Call for details. Asking $240,000

Mlddlatown

Custom ColonialA beautiful maintained 4 BR, 21/; B Lincrofthome with quality amenities of 2 zone HWBBgas heating, 2 zone A/C, hardwood flooring,natural stained molding, trim & chair rail. The.eat-in kitchen overlooks i country FR withfull-well brick fireplace and sliding glass doorsleading to a delightful sunroom with skylights.Manymore fine features. Priced at $329,900

MicKenzlt-MorrisRealtors

Mlddlatown

871-1780

REALTORS

RED BANK -PRIVATE BOAT SLIP!

And magnificent views available from thetwo waterview decks of this beautifullymaintained townhome offering 2bedrooms. 2Vi baths, fully equippedkitchen, formal dining. 18' family room, at-tached garage and available for immediateoccupancy. $239,000 741-7171

SHREWSBURY -A WINTER WONDERLAND!Imagine being able to look out of your ownliving room window, fire blazing in thehearth, watching a soft winter snow fallonto your own wooded lot of this brick 3bedroom, 2 bath Ranch on private treedlane in executive area. $299,000 741-8600

LITTLE SILVER-A NEW DIRECTION

In living awaits you In this exciting Ranchwith contemporary flavor offering 3bedrooms, 2 baths, recessed lighting infireplaced den, magnificent hardwoodfloors, 1/2 acre of property, plus 1000 sq.ft. of multi-leveled deck. $269,900741-7171

• 646 Broad St. Shrewsbury 741-8600

•v e 112 E. River Rd. Rumson 741-7171

131 Hoti—t tor Sat. 131 H o u — for 8 . 1 .

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDSHMaMe Ranch In great neighbor -hood of Atlantic HighlandsLarge Irregular shaped woooealot. 3 bedrooms. 2 bams, greatdeck aurroundlng the pool withoutdoor Hgnrs. With aome taste-ful decor. Bus properly wW bean encellent Investment$102,500 FHV 117

SCHLOTTREALTORS a42-7aO0

AlFor aala by owner End unn

townhouae. 2 Mrme. 2W bathw/ loft overlooking entrance.

Ir w/ fireplace, dr. eat Inkitchen, c/a. upgradon carpaltnrougnout. attached oarage ,

moral Aaklng f 145.000.CeHM»-0«71

EATONTOWNSeme says, buy your love aclassy Colonial! A gift that willkeep on gMng down throughthe years' Ours Oder ao much!Fireplace m family room. 4bdrms.. 2V> bathe, decks, basemem. central air • upacaladdecora t ing throughout .(265.000 E.A. Armstrong Agen-cy Realtors. 555 Prospect Ave..L.ttle Silver 741-4900.

EXCLUSIVELY OURSMIDDLETOWN S224.900Just luted split. In move In condSet on 125 < 175 lot In lovelyarea. 7 rms . new kitchen appli-ances, partial basement & de-tached garage.

BENEDETTORealty Group

REALTOR 671-0404

MOLMOELEDWARD W. COLLINS

AGENCY REALTORS V46-4144

MIDDLETOWNHlalorlc Land Mark Circa 1600.Wide punned floors and 2 "re-places with a formal central hallentrance, leading to a comfortable kitchen Outside tha door, aprivate decked garden area anaa working wan Carriage housewith a hide-away studio. Needsredecorating and TLC. All show

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201842-7800MIDDLETOWNPRIME AREA OF MIDDLE-TOWN. DONT MISS THISI....3bedroom. 1 Vi bath, fully heatedbeeoment Ranch la lust waitingto ba decorated Priced to seaBring your investors $149,900FHV-106.

SCHLOTT131 Houses lor Sale

131 Houses tor Sale

MIDDLETOWNRelax on the front porch or tnls

heating system, and tuk base-ment Surrounded by total pri-vate landscaping. I!CM.900 Forfurther information can our M o

Otnoa at 871-3500.

Merrill LynchRealty

NEPTUNELocated on quiet dead endstreet, this brand new Colonialsurrounded by trees, wans torthai special family. 3 bedrooms.2Vi baths, formal dining room,plua attached garage Priced tosell el »129.SOO FHV-116.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201 842 7600RUMSON — Water view. 3bdrm.. 3 bath, spin-level on 1Viecres in prime erea. Move Incond. 747-0337. S39g.000.

131 Houses lor Sale

131 Houses tor Sale 131 Houses tor Sale

LITTLE SILVERStool Before you M r * of bund-ing your dream houaa. comeeaa this lovely 6 bdrm.. centerhen Cotoniall Cuuom bum bypresent owner a Includes ecadeof antras you navnt eventhought otl WKh current ratee.ao attractive, this move up pouk)be ao aaayl (485.000 E.A. Armstrong Agency, Raaltora. 666Proapact Ave.. Little Sliver 7414500

MIDDLETOWN — 2 bdrm.Ranch. Prime araa. gaa heat,a«c between 35 a 36. $96,500Can 4953717

SANTA SAYS!s u n the hew Year on right!Become a home ownert YouHfind currant rates very anrecttvelOur 4 bdrm.. Iv i bain MkMle-town home costs larga. manywindowed family room wHh fire-place, overlooking a park Hue.wooded backyardl wonderful!t16S.S00. E.A. Armstrong Agen-cy. Realtors. 555 Proapact Ave .Little Silver 741-4500.

131 Houses lor Sale

FAIR HAVENTransferee* owner hates toleave. 4 bdrm.. IVi bath ColonialSplit with central ac & superefficient heat pump. 3/4 acreprofessional landscaped lot.$249,900

NANCY KOORealtors 530-0900

GOOD VALUERed Bank colonial uaad as 7room office with apartment up-stairs Excellent location foryour office. 1 block to bus line.Early possession possible$275,000 Call today

Century 21 Cozens. RealtorsIndependently Owned/Operated

613 River Rd.. Fair Haven741-7666

LITTLE SILVERWe're making a list and check-ing it twice & we're convincedthat our lovely. 3 bdrm. Colonialis the best buy in the neighbor-hood! Assorted formal rooms,stately Spruce trees. Everblooming gardens & a most en-viable location. $229,900. E.A.ARMSTRONG AGENCY. REAL-TOR. 555 Prospect Ave , LittleSilver 741-4500

A FIREPLACE

For SANTA to comedown, to snuggle aroundon cold winter nights canbe found in tastefullydecorated three bedroomEatontown home. Formald i n i n g r o o m f o rChristmas dinner, eat-inkitchen. $175,000

DECK THE HALLSFive bedrooms, den,family kitchen, large liv-i n g r o o m f o rCHRISTMAS tree with allthe presents f romSANTA underneath.Cheerfull Hazlet home.$164,900

747-6226131 Houses lor Sale

Any Slit House A Garden

Under The Sun"

RUMSON TOWNHOUSEThis mos! Desirable flUMSON MODEL in the only lownhouseenclave in exclusive Rumson two bedrooms, formal, living anddining rooms, fireplace, family room Exceptional landscaping,tjnek walkways, etc Minutes away (torn all the necessities ol lite$280,000 530-2800

EXECUTIVE RETREATTms custom five bedroom, three and one half bath brick andredwood contemporary otters the finest amenities Great Roomwith wet bar. dining room with solar greenhouse, country kitchen,terra cotta floors, skylights, heated lake bottom pool complexWooded Holmdel setting m a world of your own at $635,000530-2800

BAYVIEW CONDODesirable second floor unit with large living room, dining area andone bedroom one bath Short walk to the commuter terry and withits own sandy beach Walk-in.closet Highlands at its best1!$95,000 530-2800

RUMSONUnique contemporary on one of Rumson s most private andprestigious lanes Designed by Kobayashi. this five bedroom, threeand one halt bath home features hand rubbed cedar wood wallsthroughout and an interesting floor plan One and one hall acres olbeulilully landscaped properly 790.000 530-2800

Gloria NilsonREALTORS

110 AVENUE OF TWO RIVERS, RUMSON530-2*00

LINCROFT COLONIALwith sparkling in-ground pool. 4 bedrooms. 2's baths,large foyer, generous living room, and chair-raileddining room. Panelled family room, kitchen with break-fast area. 22 patio, central air. built-in vacuum systemand intercom Full basement and 2 car attached gar-age $315,000 842-6009

METICULOUSLYmaintained and tastefully decorated in neutral toneswith lots of light - this Shadow Lake condo can beyours. Huge master bedroom, 25 living rouYri anddining room combo. Desirable lirst floor. Priced forquick sale Owner would like to close belore year send. Call immediately. $119,900 642-6009

DECK THE HALLSthe formal living room, dignified dining room, spaciousfoyer and family room for holiday cneer Impressivebrick colonial atop private natural wooded grounds.Bonus great room surrounded by long, elegant win-dows. 5th bedroom on first floor with full bath addsversatility to your lifestyle A gift that will last alifetime! $465,000 842-6009

SHADOW LAKEExperience the illusion of outdoor living in this condowith skylights extraordinary. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath unitwith peaceful solariu. Cozy winter white tones Instintmove-in ability! Call today! S149.900 842-8009

LANDright in the heart of charming Fair Haven. One of thefew remaining lots m this prosperous community Arare offering at S85.0QO 842-6009

GloriaNilsonREALTORS

U 0 Rt. 35. Shi.w.bury 142-6009

"Any Slie Houae aGarden Under The Sun"

LUXURY FOR LESSBrand new contemporary townhouse in Mld-dletowns historic Chapel Hill section at $15,000under current price. ZBR, 2%B, 2 car garage,fireplace, deck, all appliances. Act now andsave! $179,900.

MEDICALOFFICE/RESIDENCE

Excellent opportunity for physician in Mld-dletown. Medical office with seperate 3BR resi-dence. Parking for 12 cars, total building is2,800 sq. ft. High visibility location. $395,000.

RUMSON'S BEST BUYCompletely updated contemporary In move-incondition. 2-3BRs, comfortable living room,modern kitchen w/dining area, large deck ov-erlooking private rear yard. Has all appliancesincluding refrigertator, washer/dryer and garagedoor opener. Great starter or retirement home.Only $159,900.

Why go anywhere else?

842-1894—

Rumson ReallyI West River Ko.nl, Rumson, New Jersey

REALTOR MLS

SHREWSBURYMere e • Home lor the hoeaevea n't abeokitely loaded teen

i fonteii dtfWng room,tun b«ha. J bdrma.. Deeement

amohad gang* 4 pretty privategrounds UHJMO. EA. Arm-

t a g e c reaHora M egstrong agency. reaHora. M eProepect *ve , UWa Sliver 741

132Condo»/

TownhouM*ABERDEENLovely two bedroom condo.move In condition. Immaculate,convenient to all transportation.

In overalie Irving room, ahed toretra atorage. FHV 107.S123.SO0.

SCHLOTTREALTORS

TAMPA AREA — 2 townhoiew.2 bdrm.. 1Vs bath, no moneydown, assume mortgage Also 1Condo Orlando 2 bdrm. 2 belliSame terms Owner tranafenedto Germany Can 644-0261.

131 H O U M * lor Sal*

i32CondoayTownhouw

HsgnHloonl maurtoue WMg mM a t bedroom eunny comeruna. Tenrae oourte. pool. e«et-dee room era kie» aome of theainarellss. ctoea I D Mny eerv-I M SO NYC $1»7.OO0 FHV10I

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-B4Z7600

137 Lot» > Acfwg*

NAVESINKHALF ACRE

WMLAN RtALTT OMOUPREALTORSMI-TIM

138 Mobil* Hom*»

HAZLET. —Home. 2 bdnri.. expendo, ac.ww carpal, sun porch A ahed.Call anytime 922-2461 untilnoon, 2M167« lpnvSpm.

131 H O U M * for Sal*

iStMoWtoHomM.

waaner t «r»ar.717-OatO, leave message

MOMLf

Leave msaasga.

140 R*al Eatatt

9L2S. . One Reamer FMU.&A»«rsburv.NJ0Tf01.

154 Re>cr*attonalVehicles

SNOW MOBILE - « 7 ' " *Cat B Tlgra. vary laat.good

Mfraa74 wave mssssoa

152 Boats ft

Accaaaori**SANTA SPECIAL

12 WOODEN ROWBOATASKINOtJOO 77H492

131 Housesler Sato

FOUR SEASONS; MUTOM

EAST POINTENo expense in decorating this beautiful "penthouse" 2 bedroomcondominium in Highlands. This spacious unit features a 20' livingroom, dining room, den, lovely master bedroom with views ol the bayand a luxurious bath with Jacuzzi. Valet parking, gym and suana areamong the amenities. $179,000

MOVE RIGHT IN!To this immaculate 4 bedroom. 2V> bath custom built home situated onheavily wooded lot. Some of Its special features include a masonaryfireplace with built-ins in the family room, new carpeting, full base-ment, hardwood floors and a screened porch.. Great Lincroft area ofMiddletown. $279,900

PARK LIKE SETTINGThis 4 bedroom. 3 bath custom built brick ranch Is situated on v/iacres of privet professionally landscaped property in Tinton Falls. Theslate foyer leads to a sunken living room, family room with fieldstonefireplace, spacious kitchen, dining room and a delightful screenedporch. $329:900

COLTS NECK FINESTThis classic 4 bedroom, 2Vt bath garrison colonial on beautiful privateproperty is meticulously cared for and has unusually spacious rooms.The den has a field stone fireplace; there Is a wounderlul master suiteand a large country kitchen. An outstanding value! $399,000

97 E. River RoadRumson, NJ.

530-9600

59 E. Main StreetHolmdel, N.J.

946-3700

CALL US FOR A COMPLIMENTARY MARKET ANALYSIS

12 Kings HighwayMiddletown, N.J.

671-5200

The Best Getting Better.Our People Make The Difference.

A RARE FIND!Long Branch - Walk lo iht ocean from this beautiful Victorian home that iszoned professional and residential This could be your dream house withfireplace and two tenants to pay the expenses Come see this mwitcondition home which is close to the tram station and medical centerOffered at $265000

INCOME PRODUCINQILong Bianch - Two family home in a nice neighborhood, only three blocksfrom the ocean This home has been recently renovated and freshlypainted four bedrooms, two baths, cprner property with lovely, fencedyard Asking SI 56 900 ^ ^ _ ^ _ ^ _ _ _

. Olimpia EstevesOtlmpia is just one of the successful SalesRepresentative working 'out of our mid-dtetown Office. A dedicated and caringprofessional. Olimpia takes pride in satisfyingeach and every family she works with. CallOlimpia in our Middletown Office today,671-3500. to assist you with all your realestate needs.

Merrill LynchRealty

Middletown Office671-3500

The Best Getting Better.Our People Make The Difference.

Barbara Friedman has Just found the Ideal home for

two families in Monmouth County. She is an

outstanding Sales Representative of Merrill Lynch

Realty's Matawan Office.

Irwin Einbinder, Vice President apd Area Manager

of the Monmouth, Middlesex/Mercer Region,

remarked, "Barbara is truly one who makes a

difference! Salespeople like Barbara set Merrill Lynch

Realty apart from the rest."

A true professional, caring and meeting the needs of

her clients and customers, Barbara is in love with her

real estate career. She looks forward to the challenges

of the day, finding the right home for the right family.

You will love working with Barbara, too!

Barbara resides in Holmdel with her husband,

Myron, and her three sons, Stephen, Christopher and

Daniel.

Call Barbara in our Matawan Office today,

566-1881 , to assist you with all your real estate

needs!

»5!B

Barbara Friedman

Merrill LynchRealty

Matawan Office566-1881

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19.1986 The Eegtoter 7B

WHEELS

Firebird strictly a macho carThis is an all-points wimp and

sissy bulletin: Do not ride in or buya 1987 Firebird GTA. This 1 1/2-ton all-American sports car is notfor you. It will scare you.

The GTA is Pontiac's superluxury high-performance machodrag wagon, but women enjoydriving it, too. A 350-cubic-inchport fuel-injected V-8 engine islocked to either a five-speed stickshift or the four-near automatic.This gives the GTA a zero-to-60-mph acceleration time of less than6.6 seconds. And then there is thatV-8 sound. Lots of performanceengines sound good but nothingcan match a thundering V-8'sexhaust tone. It in so American...

Looking at the GTA's powerplant is also exciting. The largealuminum tubes that carry air toeach intake port show that this isthe real world of thundering V-8s.The automatic transmission is eas-ier to live with in the long run, Justshifting the big V-8 takes toomuch effort, and the clutch re-quires a great amount of springpressure .to keep from slipping.Besides, the automatic trans-

mission performs within a splitsecond of the stick, and it requiresless maintenance.

The Firebird GTA has a 3.27axle ratio, and it seems to be aboutperfect for decent fuel economy.The engine is turning in the low2,000 rpm's at 65 mph and it'ssnoozing. There's just a pleasantexhaust rumble at that speed, andalmost no drumming inside thecar, even though it's a hatchback.

There is more to the GTA thanjust go-go. The handling is worldclass. The "WSG" suspension andthe big 246/50 x 16-inch tireskeeps the GTA nearly flat onhigh-speed sharp turns. I drovethe GTA on a professional rally

course, and it's very difficult toget the GTA sideways — you runout of nerve before it happens.

The styling accents are low-key. The GTA badge, plus thecrisscross deep-dish aluminium16-inch wheels are a clue that theGTA is more than a Firebird. Thegills and intake slots on the hoodgive the "bird" a little spaceshiptouch, along with air dams, lowerbody side skirts, and a big body-colored rear spoiler. At 140 mphthe spoiler has a userful effect ofhelping hold the GTA's tail down,I've been told.

Inside the most noticeablechange is the fully articulatingbuckets that look like "Star Wars"props. They are able to adjust toany normal earthling's needs. Apower-driven lumbar support willease those aching lower backs, andthe ribs can even be held in via apower adjustment. The headrestsgo up, down or forward. There's acargo net on each seat's back. Therear buckets are not too badeither; they fold down for extrahatchback cargo space.

THIS ONE'S FOB YOU SPORT — The Sporty 1987 Firebird GTA, base priced at $10,359, has a zero-to-60-mph acceleration time of less than 6 5 seconds.

The instrumentation is betterwith the back lighting at night,and with the headlights flippedup, it is just like a jet plane. Itlooks great in the dark.

The GTA requires the purchaseof a good radar dector. Why?Because it is difficult to rein in,and if you are abiding by the speedlimit the paint job might be enough

to get you a ticket.Edward R. Noble is syndicated,

automotive columnist irha's1

column appears every Friday in\The Register.

1528PORTSCRAFT — 18

with motor* trailer. .1,1200Cs* 872-9254

152 Boats

120 MER — In board motor.New. 4-cytlnder. $700 or b i l loffer CM 542 8455

225 Auto STVlo/Psrts

CAMARO PARTSMiscellaneous

TB7-7124

225 Auto Srvtc»/ParUCUBA — 1873 Puling out.Hood, fenders, door*, trunk M.Keystone classic mag'a. ANlensee. 3ie V 6. wailarn dotswfMJ a. cad attar 6. 671-5636

Business Directory

225 Auto S r v i o / P a r u 250 Autos tor Salo

MASK — For 1961 Oataun280ZX, Hack leather w/red 1wfine 2802 emblem, perfectcond Can 741-1325

TOYOTA COROLLA HATCH-BACK — 1982. sunroof, stan-dard ahift. sell lor parta 291-9232. Leave meaaage.

A DAILY GUIDE TO BUSINESS SERVICES

160E AccountingOAKY MAYBURV

Accounting—BooklieepmgAnd Ta« Servfcje

CH3M-MKI

160M Air ConditioningCMC Refrigeration ft Haawtg

Air conditioning, nitrtgarauon.atuc tana. Sala I Service. Raal-dential« Commarclal 2224737.

163A BartendingPARTY MeLPf RS

Bartandar and/or vvaJtraaafor your party. You ralax.

wa do tna work Cat 291 8032

1831 Bathroomg/

Ceramic TitoALL TILE AREAS

Expart protaaakxial repairsa bam reroodekog «noe 1955

Bob Akkis. 260 0397

CERAMIC TILE CONTRACTINGKitchens. Floors. Wills » Baths.Fraa Estimates. Prompt 8arvtoa.

Ca> 295-3199Maw Catamlc T»» a, Rsaalra

164A CarpetCleaning

A-l EXPERT Carpal CleaningUPHOLSTERY CLEANING

MORRIS HOFFMAN747-0209 or 842-7405

174M Light Hauling

1641 Counter TopaDIFE COUNTERTOPS

Complata Una of quality madeformica * cortan countanopaCall lor Iraa aat. 201-758 8177

164Q CateringWE BE COOKING. INC.

Catering lor all occasions Int Icuisine. peraonaHzed service,customised menus 671-2070.

IO*»»LIVING SPACE ASSOC

Ceramic Me Install Floors, wane.oountertope Repairs Enpertservice Free eat Can 530-1580

SecretarialService

165R Compulortood

t Mkm••TIM

COMPUTERIZED BUSINESSSERVICE — Word Processing.Data Entry by exp secretaryualng IBM software. 291 8178

163U CarpentryCARPENTRY - Rcllred carpent-er. Smell, madkirn alia kibe.Decks Free esllmM.s Cei 741-5797 or 7744800.

FULL LINEHOME IMPROVEMENTS

NO JOB TOO SMALLFREE EST. CALiL 739-9M7

HOMI ' C f m n w A K — Carpantry, woodwork. lobs donewith precision. Jco too big foryou? Too email lor others? KenSodarkind 96S-2971 after 5pm

JO-JO WOODWORK SAdd-ons. Addltkjne, Paneling.Painting, Decks. Patios Lat'atalk. Can Joe union (IB yfsaxp) 787-2239

NEW HOMES. ADDITIONS.Alterations, kttchans, decks, alltypes remodeling. All work guer.meed Can Chnu 291-8894.

RT BUILDERS — Dormers,doors and floor* 20 years exp.Siding, roofing end more FreeEsta. Call 767-0? '1 anytime

S QAOLIANO - - A H types Ofcarpentry, roofing and aiding229-0889. or 229- 1989 ,

164J CanvaiiProduct*JEAN'S CANVAS

We've Got Tna Coast CoveredWinter Cover II - Biminl Tops

• Repairs -Interiors - CushionsWINTER WATIH (201) 787-0070

1S4M CarputInstallation

JIM'S CARPET INSTALLATIONSalea. cleaning, re-lays, re-stretchea 8. repuurs

264«177

166E ConstructionI D DAY CONamuCTIOH

OuaWy bunders since 1945Over 1000 satisfied customers

AHsytlon a nmtu dating1.741-1144.

1681 ElectricalServiceBEST ELECTRIC

Lie. No. 8273. Fast dependableservice. Reasonable rates Freeestimates. Can 8714121. •

B U T ON YOUR VCR REPAIRGuaranteed computer: C-04 and

PC systems A telephoneQuality work. Can 7584873

Scudero electrical Connectorslicensed, reliable, reasonable

Servicing all yourelectrical needs Can 583-7317

170U GeneralContracting

D.J. WHELAN — General Contractor. Additions, renovations,custom work. 24 hr. answeringservice, tree est 7874850.

170Y GutterCleaning

RELIABLE GUTTER CLEANINGPlus Screening. Repairs aveH

FuHylneuredCan 571-4M3 leave message

174M Light HaulingAAA HAUL AWAY

Clean up construction debrisAmes, yards, cellars, guttersYou don't have to look at Itanymore. Free eat 495-1697

A-1 HAULINGYards, cellars, garages cleanedDemolitions & construction de-bris Call Jerry. 542-5910.

CLEAN YARDSCellars, attica a garages

Free estimates741-2149

171E Handy ManODD JOB SPECIALIST

Plumbing, Electrical, Carpentry,and other repaira. Rumeon. CallFrank. 530-8860

171Q Heating Service/Repair

KEROSCNE HEATERSAll makes serviced at (1995 piparts. Moat parta & wicks ifetock 7394899 or 9885081.

I i IU IIUIIIV

:——ImprovementBAUHENTS FINISHED

INTERIOR REMODELINGGARDEN STATE HOME IMP

871.0080FLAWLESS INTERIORS

Expert Painting, Sneettockmg.Trim, Doors ft. much more. Yoursatisfaction is our business. Caleves 747-7910INTERIOR DESIGNS — Customkitchens, baths, ceramic tile, pa-per hanging, patating.free esti-mates Call 787 4117

Newell Home ImprovementsSpecializing In carpentry,

painting, and home rapalraSmall kma welcome 495-1819

Total Renovation ConstructionInc. — Vinyl siding, windows.decks, additions No (Ob toosmall 739-2958

173Y Landscape/Lawn Care

A shrub to complete landscapedesign & construction. Totallawn service. Call Sandy ofQMO 741-5138.

176A Moving/Storage

TEACHERS MOVING INC - Bigor small Licensed ft. insuredFree estimates Fair Haven 530-1333 NJ License No 57.

1761 Odd JobsA-1 ODD JOB SERVICE

Expert home repaira.Fully InsuredCall 530-8515

WE CLEAN • Gutters, windowsand do gutter and roofing re-pairs. Wa also resurface drive-ways Small painting andcarpentry (obs. No job too smallFree estimates.,741-1517

176M Painting/Plastering

EUROPEAN PAINTERS — Carpentera avail, for quality workReasonable rates. Honest A. Reliable. Free estimates. 571-0904.

LIN a QRADY PAINTINGInterior a exterior painting, plastenng. sheetrock. and tapingTuny Insured Call 530-1541.

176M Painting/'PlasteringROBERT CAR0NE

Professional paintingInterior a Exterior

Sheetrock or Plaster Patching

Neat. Clean. Quality WorkFor Free Estimate Call 291-8021

176Q Painting/Paperhanging

• ABSOLUTE PERFECTION*DENNIS a SONS

Quality work assuredFree quote Call 872-2626

AITORDABLE PAINTINGOne room to whole house, mteriot, exterior, insured, lowespneeds. Free estimates. SeniorsCltizene discount Call 264 2520

JUST WALLSFine Pemting-Paperhangirig

Wall Glazing-TexturesMarbeHing-222-4158

215 Auto Insurance

CHECK OUR RATESPhoenix Brokerage, famous forlow-cost auto Insurance andfriendly service, now giving freequotes by phone Take the op-tions You may save hundredsRl 36 Keyport 2643087

Broad St Shrews 544-1401

230 Motorcycles

AOUILA ALLSTATE1951 Italian motor scootermade for Sears a Roebuck

Runs good Good cond $295Call 988-4186

HONDA ATC 70 — 1985Good for young rider.

Excellent condition. $550.Call 583-0683

MASTER PAINTERS a DEC.European experience m

papernangmg a painting etc.Nod Middletown 671 -6365

MS. PAPERHANOERFeminine touch

Decorating consultantsCall 741-5650

PAINT AND PAPER — Special-izing In kitchens a baths. Qualitywork - Reasonable rates. Freeestimates Call 530-4228

WALL-NUTS — free estimatesWe lake pride m what we doPaint, paperhanging. stainingMolding a paneling 495-1931

WE PAINTING CO — Call Willie2295016 The Happy PainterFree eat. Fully insured. 20 yrsexp. Res or comm.

178Z SheetrockA a S DRY WALL -

Sheetrock. taping a finishing,reasonably priced, fully insured,laat service Call Gary 7752349

179E Snow PlowingSNOW PLOWING

ResidentialCommercial

Call 741-8544

1801 Tree ServiceWOODY S TREE SERVICE

Tree trimming a removal. Stumpgrinding. Fully insured Free es-timates Call 530-1812.

1811 VideoJERSEY SHORE

Audio/Video Productions-Professional videoProduction Service-

WeddingsParties

RecitalsMusic videosSpecie! events '

Duplication a Editing availableHigh Quality/Reasonable Rates201-291-1489.

4 LINES - 30 DAYSFOR ONLY $49.00 542-1700

250 Autos 250 Autos 250 Autos 250 Autos

Drive the car you really wantNo Money Down • Early Termination • No Application Refused

ALL '87 makes and models available.

HONDASTREET BIKE

ANDATCSALE

Save up to $1400 on86. 85 84 New Street BikesSave on all ATC and TRX's

FREEHOLD HONDARl 9. FreeholdCall 462-4881

HONDA 750F — 82 18 valves,sport tires a handle bar Exc.cond Forced to sell $975 or

745-1508 or 872 9351

HONDA S0OCC — 1975. Silvera brown. 16.000 mi., exc shape.$800 291-0545.KAWASAKI — 750 1981 S750or beat offer Call 542 8455

SHORE CYCLEKAWASAKI

ITS HOLIDAY TIMENEED A GIFT IDEA'

* ACCESSORIES *• Street. Din and Jet Skis

Don't have time7

GIFT CETIFICATESCall and we'll send it to you. anyamount

Visa or Mastercard heededRt 35 North. Point Pleasant. NJ

899-4050235 MopedsPUCH NEWPORT II — 1982Mint condition, vary low miles$395 Call 264-8053

240 VansASTRO VAN — '85. 6 UyCompl. carpeted. Captainchairs, low milage, en. c dReasonable 842-9518

SELLYOURCAR

Did you know more prospectivecar buyer» In this area first readthe classified section of TheRegister, for the best used cardeals. No doubt an ad will helpyou make the best deal for yourcar.To help you sell your car. we'llgive you plenty of advertisingtime m The Register at a veryreasonable price ($1090 for 4line ad — your ad runs 10 days(Everyday 23.000 people buyThe Register.) Call us on toe10th day if you haven't sold yourcar and we'll be happy to rerunyour auto for sale ad for another10 days at no charge (FREE!)Need more help to sell your car.Well put your auto for sale ad inthe newspaper called The FortMonmouth Message, which itdistributed at Fort MonmouthMore than 13,000 military andcivilian personnel stationed atthe Fort read this weakly newpaper with a*id interest For anextra S2 40. your auto for salead runs in the Register for up lo20 days if necessary, plus 1week m The Fort MonmouthMessage' Of course if you sellyour car you can cancel your adanytime The price stays thesame.

Call 542-1700 to place your ador tor information.

250 Autos

CHEVY — Monte Carlo 1988.completely loaded. T-Roofs. ve-tour int., power everything, 4.3Her luel injection, low mi., mustsell moving. 5 yr unlimited warantee Call 888-0524.

AMC — Hornet. 1973. 8 cyl.auto. a/c. p/s. 59.000 plus ml.,runs greet, recently tuned. (450.Call 542-7478

AMC SPIRIT — 1981. 2. dr.,Mack beauty, chrome mag'a,44.000 ml.. 4 cyl.. 4 spd. sun-roof. am/fm(s/r). $750 All cashoffers Call after 6. 671-5838

AMC — 1978 Concord 01 . 4 dr.ps/pb. a/c, am/tm cass . newUrea t ie . cond. S12O0 Can290-0372

AUDI -~ '76 5000. Excl cond.Loaded Asking (2800 Will ne-gotiate for quick sale Call 922-1923.AUDI 5000 — 1978 New paintjob. runs well (3100 or bestoffer. 842 6681

BUICK — Regal 1984. 4<loorVS. completely loaded, a/c.am/tm radio, ps. tilt wheel,p/windows, velour seats. 20.000mi., extra clean Call 495-9435 or495-9639 leave message.

BUICK SKYLARK — 1981 4 dr.,auto, 6 cyl. air, pb. ps. am/tm,exc. cond . (3100 583-4028

CHEVY — 1983 Long body Ac.radio, automatic, pb. ps Varygood condition Low mileageCall 671-3338CHEVY — 1978 van. V8. 7 pas-senger, needs engine work,S2O00 Call 842-9580 9am-5pm

DODGE — 82 .van V-8 318 CuIn. PB, PS. good tires. AM/FMradio, new paint job, excl. cond.Asking (3595 Call 739 9226 at-tar 6PM.DODGE —.1978. 3/4 ton. B200window van. 8 passenger, auto.49.000 on new 318 engine,needs minor body work, 1 own-er (1500 Call 291-1275TOYOTA — 1984 Windowedcargo van (4.600 787-0861 al-ter 6 pnv

245 Truck & TrailersCHEVY

Pick up. $500 as is5114.CHEVY — 1984 Blazer K J Verygood cond . low miles S9BO0Call 291 3229 after 5pnv

Make • Modal 27614

Pontiac Grand AMBMW 325Honda AccordNissan 300ZXCadillac De VilleMercedes 190EAudi 5000SCadillac EldoradoCorvettePorsche 944

MonthlyPayment!

$159.185.199.219.239.249.249.283.299.299.

Make ft Model

HyundaiToyota TercelChevy SpectrumHonda CRXChevy CelebrityToyota Pick UpDodge CaravanV.W. JettaToyota CelicaOlds Cutlass

MonthlyPayments

$49.69.69.89.99.99.

110.149.149.159.

P R O M Quotes AvailaWa • We pay cash for tradw • Call Today

WORLDWIDE LEASING542-4400

, IHIIIIUI, tafW, MIMtaTMsiMtT.

• ( • • ) • SfaV VIsiWWW* MTW Man* in««a* •»»»• • • •» • i i aw • •»>•••• isi i aaiaya ia l a i m

Open 7 days, Mon. - Fri. 9-8, Sat. <* San. 10-4

CHEVY — 1971 Suburban, goodwork truck Asking (200. Call7874202DATSUN — 80 King cab pick-up. 5 speed, am/lm cassete.Insulated caps. r.ow s/b rsdiala.(1800 Call 229-1980. eves

DODGE RAMCHARGER1979 V-8, auto. 4 WD. am/fmstereo tape. exc. cond Looks Aruns excellent. No dents or rust(2750 741-1368DODGE — 1980 Pick up Step-skies. 6W b«d. 6 cyl. 4 spd..running boards, toot bo*, am/fmlape Exc cond $2350. Call741-1368FORD F150 — 1962. 4 x 4. 302v-8. auio. ps. pw, cruise,whawl. cap. much more. B/Oover $6000 284-5129

FORD — "75 pick up Ctub Cab.3-spd. runs good, 75.000 mi.$900 Call 495-2935.

CMC — 84 7000 series. Pa,pdb. Allison auto. 1020 Urea.28,000 gmw. cab exc. condition.49.000 mi. Call (718) 494-9769days. (201> 495-1930'eves.JEEP CHEROKE — Lorado 8JT2-dr. black, showroom cond.Fully loaded. Low miles.(13.500 Call 946-9417

NISSAN — 4 wheel drive. Magwheels ft. tires, custom int. ste-reo cass . sunroof, 54.000 mi..$3800 or b/o Call 787-6617.

TOYOTA — Pick-up. '83. CUS-TOM CAB. Seats 6. 4-wd. Pa,pb, ac. am/lm stereo case., 4new tires + extra trim. Must r""(9.000 or b/o 495 0376

UTILITY TRAILER — 5 X 7deck, excellent condition. (200.284-8094

UTILITY TRAILER — 9x5 It.Perfect cond Asking (100. Cell264-7658

BUICK SKYLARK. — 1978 6cyl.. good transportation. (500or best offer, auto, am/tm. 747.5382 between 6-9 pm

BUICK SKYLARK — 1985 4 dr..auto, ac Creampuff. Must sellby Christmas. No reasonableotter refused Call 739-3325

CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE.1966. Excellent condition(3000 Call 5634698

CADILLAC ELDERADOCONVERTIBLE 1972 Red wrtn

white inter. Exc. cond.Rumson Call 842-4072.

CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE1979 White.with red leather Allpower (2750 Call 531-0369 a!ter 7pm.

CADILLAC — 82 Coupe deVille Full power, fully loadedleather, exd. cond Wire wheelsMany extras. Call 922-6528

CAMARO — 1981. auto. a/c.am/tm cass . ps/pb. 55.000 mi .•xo. cond (4150 Call 671-7429after 8pm.

CHEVY — 1980 Citation 500Call 787 9013.CHEVY — 1964 Impale SS 283rebuilt eng . ps. auto, console, 2dr., all orig , very, good cond.$2500 or b/o Call 721 3155

CHRYSLER — Cordova. 1977Pa. pb. automatic. 92.000 mi.Runa good $500 495 3816

CHRYSLER — LeBaron '79.Good body, runs good, am/fm,a/c. Approx 69.000 mi. Goodtires. Passed inspection tor yr.,b/o. must sell Cell 264-0991CHRYSLER — '77 LeBaron. 4new radial tires. AM/FM stereocass . (500 Can 7415679 after5PM.

CONCORD — 78 Low mites.A/C. all power, clean in A out,check it out Asking $900 Cal583-7560CONQUEST — 1985. (Starionauiu, uiyiioi UWt. tMtfw intsnor, loaded, excelent condition69.000 pky mi. $6800 nag. Cal467-4067 ext 422 or 493-8652everCUTLASS SUPREME — 1976ac. rebuilt trans . recent tune upnew tires, inter, mint $550 Cal264 9056 after 6pm

250 Autos 250 Autos

JEEP — 1987. CJ5 w/plowRebuilt V 8, new tires, brakes.battery. Many new pane. Goodcond (1650 871-3951

PONTIAC — Fe.ro 84 Red.Automatic Good condition.$6 500 787-6409 or 495-5841

KITSON CHEVROLET COHwy 36 Eatontown

542-1000

PONTIAC FIERO SE — 14.508mi., air, red, am/lm stereo, mint.

7200 or b/o 870 1294

LINCOLN — Continental. 19892 door V-8. ps. pb. pw. Leatherinterior. 1 owner. Good condi-tion (295 Call 988-5531MALIBU CLASSIC — 1979 FuHyloaded. 4 dr. (1700 or b/o Can291-4292 ask for JimMATADOR787 3995

1972 $300. Can

MAZOA RX7 OS — 1985Ocean blue, 5 spd.. am/fmcass exc cond . $8995 Mustsell, buying house 586-6717.Mike.MAZOA — RX 7 '79 5-Spd,A/C. AM/FM cass . runa great.(2350 or best otter. Can 842.2522.

MAZDA - 81 GLC 4-dOor,front wheel drive. Asking (1100.Call 974-0461. after 7 pm

MAZDA80 626. 5-spd. asking (1200Call after 6PM 291-1748.MERCEDES BENZ — 1979280E. Loaded Ong. ownerNeeds minor mechanical work(5000 II interested 747-8381

MERCEDES— 280. 73 Air. au-tomatic $3800 1989 250 auto.$800 Both pa. pb 2904092

DATSUN B210 — 1979 4 sp .am/lm cass. a/c. exc. cond..good gas mileage 8 all seasonradials $1500 542-2684DATSUN — 1982. Model 210 2door hatchback, auto., ac. pa.pb. sunroof, very dean. 50.000mi $2700 or b/o 290-0372DATSUN —~197B^80Z, 5 apd..am/fm stereo, sr, meg wheelswith locks, black on Mack. ac.orig owner $3600 747-8381

DAYTON* TURBO — 1984 5sod., 33,000 mi., loaded, sun-roof. A #1 cond. Call 671-5427.DODGE CHARGER — 1977Good condition. $500. Ps. pb.am/fm radio. Call 642-2269

DODGE COLT — 1976 4 apd.standard. $700 Of b/o Call eves.291-6409DODGE DART — 1975. Auto-matic/6.90k mi. Best offer Can747-4723

DODGE MONICO — 1976. A/C.power, good transportation. 1st$500 takes it 291 1407

DODGE VAN — 76. $450. as laCall 291-5999. alter 7 pm

DUSTER — 1973 Needs engine New brakes, master cylinder. alternator, fuel pump. $200or beat offer 264-4627 after 5pm.FORD — Escort L. 83 4 cyl. 2door hatchback. Automatic Pa.pb. Radio, heater, am/lm cass.Excellent condition Sacrifice$1975. Call 758-1850

FORD ESCORT — 1982 Grayw/red int. Exc. cond. $2600. Call8724936

FORD — Escort Wagon 4dr.,good shape $2700 Call 7872772FORD i—' Fairmont wagon.1981. 4 cyl.. standard. 60.000ml., $2200 Call 747-4502FORD — Grenada 78 Excellentrunning condition. Power steer.ing. power brakes. 81.000 mi$1050 Call 741-3437. eves

CAMARO Z2B — 82 Maroon,am/fm cass.. rear detog. lou-vers, a/c. reasonable offer. 671-5763. • - . . . •

CAMARO — 76 3-speed Goodcondition Asking $1,000 Call291-5437

CHEVELLE — 1970. Rebijilihigh performance 350. SS hood.Keystone mega, am/fm cass..best offer 842-1619 after 6 pm.CHEVETTE — 1980 4 door,manual transmission. Am/fmstereo radio 54.000 mi $1,2005440960. eves and weekends.758-2511. days

CHEVY CAPRICE WAGON1978 pa. pb. ac. exc cond.. 1owner. Garage kept 65.000 mi.(2500 Call 9579024.

CHEVY CAVALIER — 84. CLHB. EFI4. 5 sp-. a/c. ps. pb.alum, wh., luver. more. 16.000ml Mint. $6350 542-3055.

CHEVY IMPALA — 1964. Bestoffer. Also 1975 Mercury Mar-qua. Best offer. Can 291-4709.or 291-2813.CHEVY — Malibu 1960. 4 dr.140.000 ml., good transporta-tion. (750 or beat offer. Can671-167Bafter6pm. •

CHEVY — Malibu 1973. goodcond . $250 Call 5684137.CHEVY — Malibu 83 6-passen-ger wagon. 29.000 ml. Loaded.excl cond. Must sea Call 264-0791;

CHEVYNova 77. 6-cyl, auto. exd. run-rong cond $650 Call 495-5035.CHEVY NOVA — '77. 8 Cya.standard shift, runs excellent.Many new parts. $500 or beetotter Can 2849750. days only.

CHEVY — 1986 Cavalier 224.Beautiful. Show Room cond.,loaded with options, fast, greeton gas 13.000 mi. all Hwy. Toomuch to list. A true sports car$12,000 or b/o. Ask lor Sieve264-6182 after 5pnr

FORD — Grenada GL 81 4-dr.6-cyl. auto trans.. A/C. PS/PB.AM/FM radio. 32.000 mi. Excl.cond. $3000 or b/o. Call eves747-4348FORD LTD — Wagon 1984Am/fm. ac. ps. pb. new tiresExcellent condition $5,900 642.5707. 530-3464

FORD MUSTANG — 1979 VS.auto, good tor parts or repair.(550 or best offer 290-9455

FORD — Mustang 1970. 6 cyl,auto, good cond.. dean, mustsee $2500 or best offer. Cal671-2110FORD PINTO — 1976 Lowmileage, excellent condition,new tires, woman driver, asking(325 389-2614.

FORD — T-bird '77. 351 V4.Orig owner. PS. PB. AIR. NEWTIRES. + BRAKES High MilesClean, dependable. (1400. orbest offer. 957-9548

FORD — Torino '89. 4-dr. bluew/vmyl top High mileage. Verygood cond. (700 or b/o. £71-4580FORO — '88 Escort PB. seniordriver, excl. cond. Must sen.Asking (4800. 389-2614.

GRENADA —' 1977 82.000 miJust passed Inspection. Excel'lent condition Aslng $850. Call495-4123.HONDA — 1982 CIVIC, goodcond.. runa great. $4700. Call871-7883 after 6pm.HONDA — 1981 4dr. AccordCass. sunroof. 5 apd.. verygood cond $3000. Can 2641168HONDA — 1980 Accord. 2 * .auto, stereo. 67.300 rM. B/Oover $2000. Attar 4pm t onweekend! 264-2214.

HONDA — 1978. Civic, rebutengine, new radials. runs good$800. Can 2904784.IMPALA — 1977. a/c.spoke mags, runs well, (950 orbest offer. 872-1345.

LINCOLN VERSAILLES ADDI-TION — 1979. loaded. $1800 orbest offer. 872-1345

LABRIOLA MOTORSNewman Springs Rd Red Bank

7412433

MERCURY — Bobcat station-wagon '78. 54.358 mi. 4-cyl.asking $800 Call after 5PM 7474074

MERCURY — Capri. RS1979. 60.000 mi.. 8 cyl. ps/pba/c. auto, am/fm stereo, rallywheels, sunroof, extra set tiresCan 739-4172.

MERCURY — Couger '78 <door. a/c. pb. pa. Exc cond(1.700 Beat hour 6-11 pm. 7475927

MERCURY — Lynx 85. 5-spdAM/FM cass $5600 or lakeover payments Call 290 0276alter 5PMMERCURY — Lynx '81 wagonauto. PB. PS. air. good condAsking $2500. Call 495-0328

MERCURY — Marquis 60 4door, V8, air. am/fm stereo, pov-er aeat. pw. pi. pb. pa. crusecontrol, vnl. roof, rear dot., tintglass Vary deen. $2,495 7875844MERCURY — Monarch. 1980asking $750 or best otter Caleves and weekends 493-3205days Nancy 544-9199

MERCURY — I960 Colony ParkStation Wagon, a/c. ps/pbam/fm. exc. cond.. asking(2600 Call 758-9215

MITSUBISHI — Tredia. '83White. 'Ac. am/fm. 5-speedtrans Great gas mileage,must see< 530 8466MUSTANG — 79 4 cylinderpa. pb. 70.000 mi Asking (800291-5543.

MUSTANG — 1976 HatchbackAuto 4 cyl.. ps, rebuilt motormany new. parta. runa & lookgood Asking (950 495-2687

NISSAN 300ZX — 1984 Exccond.. garage kept. (10.9OCCall 201-370-4901 eves. 201544-3543 days.

NISSAN 200SX — 1984. 40.000mi., exc. cond . sunroof, airam/fm. must sell $8400 or b/oCall 291-8656 .

OLDS — Cutlass. 1984. exccond. 26.000 mi. (7800 Caafter 5pm 842-1931

OLDSMOBILE FERENZA1986 4 dr.. exc cond.. lowam/tm. a/c. lift wheel, aakinc(10.600 Must sen 495-5725OLDSMOBILE — Omega 19802-door V-6. ps. pb. ac. am/fmnew tires. Good condition. (350Call 968-5531OPEL GT — 1972 aiAo. newpaint, 76.000 ong mi., exccond (1200 Call 888-0571OPEL — 1974. 2-door statiorwagon. Runs and looks grea(300 or best offer AM/FM cassole Call 4954280

PLYMOUTH DUSTER — 1974am/fm stereo cass . rear cleftKmanual steering 8 brakes. $65or b/o Call Ed at 787-1132.

PLYMOUTH HORIZON — 81dr.. 4 cyl. auto trans., am/fmcass . red w/black vinyl int Asking $850. 290-1823.PLYMOUTH — Rekant 1983auto. 4 dr sedan, very goodrunning engine, low mi., bodneeds work, asking $500. Caalter 5pm 495-5228PLYMOUTH — Rekant Wagon1981, no rust, engine needswork. See days & weefcanda291- 5889

PLYMOUTH — Volant '76. 2-drlust passed inspection, originalowner Asking $400. Call <weekends 530-5382

PLYMOUTH1973 CHALLENGER

lor parts or to fix up. $300. Ca842-0365 after 5pm as* forQfy.

PLY VALIANT — 72.cond.. many new pans, torieonbar problem. B/O. 70 Laurel DrUtBe StVer, 842-8245

PONTIAC — Le Mane. 1978.dr. a/c, p/s. p/b. 8 cyl.. 90.000ml.. 2nd angina at 70.000 mt(900. Days 949-9019 or eves229-7354.

PONTIAC LEMANS — '78. Psac. pw, new ores and brakesGreat engine. Sight damagethe hood by tnle amt>. 741.8877

PONTIAC — 1983 Firebird. V6p/s. pw. ac. M wheel, am/tmcass . T-Tops. gauges. $5000Call after 6pm 5834278.

PONTIAC — 1979 Safari wag-on. 9 passenger, runs good.best offer Cell after 8pm 291-

16.PORSCHE

84 944 Auto. roof, sapphire,mml cond 431-2727

SAAB80 99GLI. A/C. FM caas Sacri-

1. bast offer Call 747-2000SANSONE OLDS-CADILLAC

Newman Springs Rd . Red Bank7414910

STRAUB BUICK-OPEL9 ACRES of New A Used Cars

Hwy 36. 264-4000 Keyport

TOM S FORD200 Hwy 35 Keyport

264-1600TOYOTA CORROLA — 1980Damage to root by tree limb,can be fixed Great for parts,make offer 741-5577

TOYOTA — 1985 Celeca GTSLoaded Very clean Call 389-2132. till 10 pm ' . 'TRIUMPH — TR6. red. 1970.good for restoration or parts.1450. Can 671-7969 or 671-

UNDER $2000See our back row for

"AS TRADED"Specials.

Rassas PontiacCall 741-5160

VOLVO CLEARANCEvlove them out prices on all letemodel stock. Big selection.83s. 84 s. 85s Red. Bank

Volvo. Newmans Springs Rd. Rt520 741-5886

VOLVO GL — 1984 4 dr . silverwith black, leather inter. sun-roof, pw. pi. am/fm cass 39.000mi. Mint cond. $12,600 Can671-4922VOLVO — 78 Excl cond-84.000 mi PS. PB. A/C. sunroof.AM/FM radio. $3500 negotiableAfter SPM 671-3486 or days741-2813VOLVO — 71 144 model Goodrunning cond.. interior a-1.Am/fm cass. stereo, manualchoke. 4 door, new engine

s $650 or b/o 530-6142

VOLVO — 70 Model 1800 ECoupe. Excellent condition Ac.luel iniection $6,800 Call 87a9067VOLVO — 1982 4 door, white,like new 40.000 mis. A/C. ste-eo cassette Asking (7800

747-4391 or 747-6345

VOLVO —. 1980 Wagon OLE. 5apd. with overdrive, loaded,leather seats, only 55K mi.$5400 Call 642-5344

VW GTI — 1984 Exc cond.black w/biue int.. a/c. togs,am/fm stereo cass . sunroofCan Bill after 6 p m . 747-5729

VW RABBIT — 79 Bronze. 4dr.. in good cond . (800 or bestoffer 842-7092 after 5 p m

VW SUPER BEETLE — 73 'Good running cond Needssome work Best offer over$400 Call 741-3741

VW •.Vanagon L 80 4 spa. AM/FM.good cond $2500. Call 741-5352 evenings 'VW — '72 Superbeetle. Runskke a dream, needs body work.$900 Call 671-4345 between 9-4PM

VW — 1974 Super Beetle, runsgreet, body needs work (425 orbest offer. Call 8721291 alter6pm

VW RABBIT — 1981 Diesel. 5spd . 4 dr. am/fm cass . exccond. (900 or best oiler Callafter 6 p.m.. 642-8446

WE BUY — Used cars lor ex-port Schwartz Chrysler-Plym-outh-Mazda. 141 West Front SI.Red Bank 7474787

EDAYS "TIL

CHRISTMASSet theholidaymood. Orderfirewoodthroughclassifiedsservicedirectory.

REGISTERCLASSIFIED

542-1700

6B The Regtoter FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986

IPS PumlXod Room» M M Commercial

KEANSauRO — Boom lot ramP M H eM 7S7-MM or 717.

LONG BRANCH — Clean. « | MM U M Superintendent m nOenoa. Kttchan pnvWOM *10 ocaan. CM ( 7 M M 3 eve-

RED BANK — Best locettonWoman's ctoo ol tad Bank741-1436 or 747Mei

RED BANK — Furnished room•or rent. Elderly man preferredtoo weekly Ca» 291-4743.

108 Commercial

R»nUI»

OFFICE — To m New aroNtac-mraty award winning buHrXna.'«oo x i i t 5 onoaa and raoap-«on araa. Convtemem ni 35location. Naar parkway.Shcawabury commona. $10 a eg.n pajs m a i n . c*a 741-1SM.

RED BANKPRIME LOCATION

400-2000 eo,. H. - H and upCaipeml. air condwonad. el-« * M bmung. avail, parking.CM Judy 747-7510.

'31 HOUM* for Sale

RED HANK /umury offloa apaoaaveUHe For purohaaa can NO-7300

RED BANK — Proles slonal ot-to* M a n a w u a m venousZanmarar buaalnga mat ar* car.paiad. A/C. and M M availableparune. Ralaa ranga from Sipar sqll Plus uW CM MarRobert O U I I M I M2- IH6.

RED BANK13* aq. ft oflKdaooraMd S200 par molaaaa. Can Judy 747-75*0

— Prlma ofnoispace E»c. location. Parking(00 aq. tl. Can 842 1234

131 HDUMI

for Sal*

OOVERNMENT HOMES —From$1 (u repair) Delinquent u>proparty. Repoaaeasmna. CaHM K W - « 0 0 0 art. OH »247 forcurrant rapo Mat.

131 Houie(torSale

HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS

Picture perfect is this gracious center hall Colonialin a superb Rumson location. 4/5 bedrooms, 3 fullbaths, fully finished basement with workshop, awaitthe family looking for a beautifully appointed home.$449,000.

MAKE YOUR ADDRESS RUMSON IN1987!

Tucked away on nearly 2 acres in the estate area ofRumson is a very special home. Call us to see this4 bedroom, 3 bath Ranch with generously-sizedrooms and marvelous landscaping. $450,000.

WINTER WONDERLAND -NAVESINK RIVER WATERFRONT

Enjoy this Navesink River waterfront Contemporaryin Fair Haven with scenes of boating and sailingfrom your own windows all year round. 3 bedrooms,3% baths, 3 fireplaces, on over one acre of primebulkheaded property. $950,000.

TWORIVERS

RealtyLT3

. 530-OSSO ^ _ _114 Avcnoc of Two Riven, Ramon, N J .

Take the TimeCall now to see this priced-to-sell 3 BR homein a wounderful family neighborhood. Recentupdates include an energy-elficient gasfurnace, water heater, s/c range, refrigeratorand washer. Think summer and the greattimes ahead enioying the in-ground pool. Of-fered at $135,900

TInton Fain

Royal GardensOn a small, quiet cul-de-sac, this 4 BR. 3 BNew England styled home features a LR withcharming garden bay window and brick FP.formal DR, newly applianced kitchen, spaciousbedrooms. 19 ft. FR and 20 ft. screened porchoverlooking the private "English Garden" set-ting. Call for details. Asking $240,000

MKMKtown

Custom ColonialA beautiful maintained 4 BR, 2Vi B Lincrotthome with quality amenities.of 2 zone HWBBgas heating, 2 zone A/C. hardwood flooring,natural stained molding, trim & chair rail. Theeat-in kitchen overlooks a country FR withfull-well brick fireplace and sliding glass doorsleading to a delightful sunroom with skylights.Many more fine features. Priced at $329,900

MicKanzia-MorrtiRealtors

Middle-town87M780

RED BANK -PRIVATE BOAT SLIP!

And magnificent views available from thetwo waterview decks of this beautifullymaintained townhome offering 2bedrooms. 2'/i baths, fully equippedKitchen, formal dining, 18' family room, at-tached garage and available for immediateoccupancy. $239,000 741-7171

SHREWSBURY -A WINTER WONDERLAND!Imagine being able to look out of your ownliving room window, fire blazing in thehearth, watching a soft winter snow fallonto your own wooded lot of this brick 3bedroom, 2 bath Ranch on private treedlane in executive area. $299,000 741-8600

LITTLE SILVER-A NEW DIRECTION

In living awaits you in this exciting Ranchwith contemporary flavor offering 3bedrooms, 2 baths, recessed lighting infireplaced den, magnificent hardwoodfloors, 1/2 acre of property, plus 1000 sq.ft. of multi-leveled deck. $269,900741-7171

• 648 Broad St. Shrewsbury 741-8600

• 112 E. River Rd. Rumson 741-7171 - .

l )

131 Hou— tor Saw 131 Houta» lor Sala

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDSHHIWM Ranch in grail nalgnbor-hood of Atlantic HlgnlandaLarge irragular ehaped woodedlot. 3 badrooma. 2 beme. oraaidec* aurroundlng the pool wrrhoutdoor Hghta with aoma teete-ful dacor, «na proparty wW baan axcallant Invaatmant$182 500 FHV-117.

SCHLOTTREALTORS •42-7800

For sale by owner End unittownhouaa. 2 bdrma, 2vt bathw/ ton overlooking entrance.

Ir w/ tireolece. dr. eat mkitchen, c/e. upgraded carpelthroughout, attached garage a

morel Asking $148 000CallSN-0871

EATONTOWNSanta says, buy your loveclassy Colonial! A gilt thai «keep on giving down throughthe yearal Ours otter ao muohlFireplace In family room. *bdrms . 2Vt bathe, decks.mem. central sir & up:decorating throughout.$285,000 E.A. Armstrong Agen-cy. Realtors, SS5 Prospect Ave .Little saver 741.4900.

EXCLUSIVELY OURSMIDOLETOWN $224,900Just Uitad split In mova In condSat on 125 > 175 lot. In lovelyaraa. 7 rmt., new kitchen appli-ances, partial basement a de-tached garaga.

BENEDETTOHearty Group

REALTOR 671-0404

HOLMDELEDVVAHO W COi-LINS

AGENCY REALTORS 944-4144

MIDOLETOWNHistoric Land Mark Circs 1100Wide planked floors and 2 fire-places with a formal central hallentrance, leedmg to e comfort-able kitchen Outaktt tha door, aprivate decked garden aree anda working wan Carnage housewith a hide-away studio Needsredecorating and TLC. AH show-Ings through listing agent(2(9.000. FHV-114.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-842-7*00

MIDOLETOWNPRIME AREA OF MIDDLE-TOWN. DON'T MISS THISI....3bedroom. 1 v* bath, fully heeledbaiemem Ranch Is just waitingto be decorated. Priced to sen.Bring your Investors (149.900FHV-1M.

SCHLOTT131 Houses for Sale

FAIR HAVENTr«nst«r«J owner hat*» toleave 4 bdrm.. IVi bath Colonial^ntn with central ac A superefficient heat pump. 3/4 acreprolesitonaly landscaped lot.$249,900

NANCY KOORealtors 530-0900

GOOD VALUERed Bank colonial used aa 7room office with apartment up-stairs Excellent location foryour omce. 1 block to bus line.Early possewon possible1275.000. Call today

Century 21 Cozens, RealtorsIndependently Owned/Operated

813 River Rd, Fair Haven741-7688

LITTLE SILVERWe're making a list and check-ing It twice & we're convincedthat our lovely, 3 bdrm. ColonialIs the best buy in the neighbor-hood! Assorted formal rooms,stately Spruce trees. Everblooming gardens & a most en-viable location $229,900 E.A.ARMSTRONG AGENCY. REAL-TOR. 555 Prospect Ave . L.nieSilver 741-4500.

A FIREPLACE

For SANTA to comedown, to snuggle aroundon cold winter nights canbe tound in tastefullydecorated three bedroomEatontown home. Formald i n i n g r o o m (o rChristmas dinner, eat-inkitchen. $175,000

DECK THE HALLS

Five bedrooms, den,family kitchen, large llv-i n g r o o m f o rCHRISTMAS tree with allthe presents f romSANTA underneath.Cheerfull Hazlet home$164,900

747-6226131 Houses for Sale

"Any Slit Hou— A Garden

uinnrr Ttm Sur."

RUMSON TOWNHOUSEThis mos: desirable RUMSON MODEL in the only towntwuseenclave in exclusive Rumson two bedrooms, formal living anddining rooms, fireplace, lamily room Exceptional landscaping,brick walkways, etc. Minutes away liom all the necessities ol life.$260,000 530-2800

EXECUTIVE RETREATTins custom five bedroom, three and one half oath brick andredwood contemporary offers the finest amenities Great Roomwith we! bar dining room with solar greenhouse, country kitchen,terra cotia floors, skylights, healed lake bottom pool complexWooded Holmdel setting in a world of your own at $635,000530-2800

BAYVIEW CONGODesirable second floor unit with large living room, dining area andone bedroom one bath Short walk to the commuter terry and withits own sandy beach. Walk-in closet. Highlands at its best'!$95,000 530-2800

RUMSONUnique contemporary on one ot Rumson s most private andprestigious lanes Oesigned by Kobayashi. this five bedroom, threeand one half bath home features hand rubbed cedar wood wallsthroughout and an interesting floor plan One and one hall acres olbeutifully landscaped property 790.000 530-2800

Gloria NilsonREALTORS

110 AVENUE OF TWO RIVERS, RUMSONUO-2M0

i LINCROFT COLONIALwith sparkli'ng in-ground pool. 4 bedrooms. 2's baths,large foyer, generous living room, and chair-raileddining room. Panelled family room, kitchen with break-fast area. 22 patio, central air. built-in vacuum systemand intercom Full basement and 2 cat attached gar-age S315.000 842-6009

METICULOUSLYmaintained and tastefully decorated in neutral toneswith lots of light - this Shadow Lake condo can beyours. Huge master bedroom. 25!, living room anddining.room combo Desirable first floor Priced forquick, sale. Owner would like to close before year send Call immediately. St 19.900 842-6009

DECK THE HALLS 'the formal living room, dignified dining room, spaciousfoyer and family room for holiday cheer. Impressivebrick colonial atop private natural wooded groundsBonus great room surrounded by long, elegant win-dows. 5th bedroom on first floor with full bath addsversatility to your lifestyle. A gift that will last alifetime! $485,000 842-6009

SHADOW LAKEExperience the illusion of outdoor living in this condowith skylights extraordinary. 2 bedrooms, f bath unitwith peaceful solariu. Cozy winter white tones Instantmove-in ability! Call today! S149.900 842-6009

LANDright in the heart of charming Fair Haven. One of thefew remaining lots in this prosperous community Arare ottering at $65,000 842-6009

GloriaNilsonREALTORS

M0 HI 35. Shnwibury B42-6009

"Any Size M O U M &Garden Under The Sun"

131 HOU—t tor S>H 131 Hou— torSaito 131 Hott»M lor 8rt>

MIDDLETOWN(Wax on tna Ironl porcn ot manome. wooo ceu*nei». newhealing eyitem. and tun beee-ment. Surrounded by Mai pri-vate landeoaptng. ftoe.MO. Forrunner Information can out MM-dmown omoa at eTi-ssoo.Realtor

Merrill LynchRealty

NEPTUNELocated on quiet dead endatreet. true brand naw Colonialsurrounded by treei. w im torthat tpeclal tarMh. 3 badrooma.2W bame. formal dMng mom.plus attached garage Priced toee»at$l2».5O0. FHV-lie.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 201-842-7600RUMSON — Water view. 3bdrm., 3 bard, •pin-level on Ivaacres in prune area. Move Incond. 747-0337.1389.000

131 Houses for Sale

LITTLE SILVERSlopl Baton you think ol buM-mo your dream houaa. comeaaa ttws lovely t bdrm.. centernan CotonteJf Cuetom bunt bypresent owner t nduoee ecadeot extras you havn't •thought oil with currant raao attractive, this mova up pouUba ao easyl (4S6.00D. E.A. Arm-strong Agency. Raaltora. 9MProapact Ava.. LIMa SUver 741

MIDDLETOWN — 2 baRancn. Prime araa. gaa heat.e«c. between 35 4 33. SM.S00.Caa 496-3717.

SANTA SAYSIStart tha Naw Veer on right!Become e home owner! You'llfind current rates very ettrecttvelOur 4 bdrm.. 1U bath Middletown home boats large, manywindowed family room wrm tirepiece, overlooking a park like.wooded backyard! Wonderful!$169,800 E.A. Armstrong Agen-cy. Realtors. S5S Prospect Ave.,UWe Silver 741-4SO0.

131 Houw tor 8>te

r?\LUXURY FOR LESS

Brand new contemporary townhouse in Middletown's historic Chapel Hill section at $15,000under current price. 2BR, 2KB, 2 car garage,fireplace, deck, all appliances. Act now andsave! $179,900.

MEDICALOFFICE/RESIDENCE

Excellent opportunity for physician in Mid-dletown. Medical office with seperate 3BR resi-dence. Parking for 12 cars, total building is2.800 sq. ft. High visibility location. $395,000.

RUMSON'S BEST BUY

Completely updated contemporary in move-incondition. 2-3BRs, comfortable living room,modern kitchen w/dining area, large deck ov-erlooking private rear yard. Has all appliancesincluding ref ngertator. washer/dryer and garagedoor opener. Great starter or retirement home.Only $159,900.

Why go anywhere else?

842-189*

Rumson Reallyi R d K Slw J

I Wcsi RiveT Road, Kumson, Mew Jersey

REALTOR MLS

SHREWSBURYHera'e • home lor Ma hoKdava

lad wMi

place, formal dmmg room, danituat

ground*

• ah

Mtn*X 9td p*vo> i pn/Kv Id* $1tt.6OO E A Ann-•QsnCy. fMUWfti 66*5

t Ave.. LrMe Saw 741-

132 Condo*/

TownnousosABERDEENLovely two bedroom condo.move In oondttlan. Immaculate,convenient to an transportation.great tor the Mvaaur. fireplacem overalie Irving room, ehed loratra atoraga. FHV 107.$123,900.

SCHLOTTREALTORS 20I-442-7000

TAMPA AREA — 2 townhoueee,2 bdrm., 1W bath, no moneydown, aaauma mortgage. Atao 1Condo Orlando. 2 bdrm. 2 bath.Same terms Owner transferredto Germany CeH544<261.

131 Housas for Sal*

MegnWosnl knurioue tving HiMa t bedroom eumy oomarurn. TatMa ooune. pool, mm-dee room are |uet eome of »XeamanHles. Ctoee 10 tarry eerv-loae 10 NYC. Ila7.000 FHVIOi

SCHLOTTRCALTOM 201-442-7BO0

137 Lou > ACT—goNAVESINK

HALF ACRE

• 4 3 7 M *

13S Mobil* Homo*

HAZLET. —Home. 2 bdrm.. eapando. ac.• a carpet, aun porcn 4 shedCan anytime M2-2461 unWnoon. 2»4-1»7» Ipm-tpm

131 H O U M * for Sal*

HAtlfT - I t by M. > bdrm.

man. - ao—•teener • dryer.

7f7-24Oi

140 R*al Eatat*

RIO BANK MANORPrincipal «nehee 10 purchase <or 2 bdrm apt preterrebiy mRed Sana Manor. Mndpale on-ly reply to Bon J*e» o/oTneL M M fina nenkrter Plaia.atwawabury.

154 RocrMttonal

V*

MO-6274 wave g«

152 BoM* A

Acco—ort—SANTA SPECIAL

12' WOODEN ROWBOATASKWQtMO. 77H492

131 Homes for Sal .

FOUR SEASONS;

EAST POINTENo expense in decorating this beautiful "penthouse" 2 bedroomcondominium in Highlands. This spacious unit features a 20' livingroom, dining room, den, lovely master bedroom with views of trio bayand a luxurious bath with Jacuzzi. Valet parking, gym and suana areamong the amenities. $176,000

MOVE RIGHT IN!To this Immaculate 4 bedroom. 2Vi bath custom built home situated onheavily wooded lot. Some of Its special features include a masonaryfireplace with built-ins in the family room, new carpeting, full base-ment, hardwood floors and a screened porch.. Great Lincrott area ofMlddletown. $279,900

PARK LIKE SETTINGThis 4 bedroom. 3 bath custom built brick ranch Is situated on IV)acres of privat professionally landscaped property in Tinton Falls. Theslate foyer leads to a sunken living room, family room with fieldstonefireplace, spacious kitchen, dining room and a delightful screenedporch $329,900

COLTS NECK FINESTThis classic 4 bedroom, 2Vt> bath garrison colonial on beautiful privateproperty is meticulously cared for and has unusually spacious rooms.The den has a field stone fireplace; there is a wounderful master suiteand a large country kitchen. An outstanding valuel $399,000

97 E. River RoadRumson, N.J.

530-9600

59 E. Main StreetHolmdel, N.J.

946-3700CALL US FOR A COMPLIMENTARY MARKET ANALYSIS

12 Kings HighwayMiddletown, N.J.

671-5200

The Best Getting Better.Our People Make The Difference.

'.-,1

A RARE FINDILong Branch - With to the ocean from this beautiful Victorian home that isfonea p'oiessionai and residential This could be your dream house withfireplace and two tenants to ply the expenses Come see this mintcondition home, which is dose 10 the train station and medical centerOttrefl at $265 000

INCOME PRODUCING!Long Branch - Two family dome in a n « nBighboihood, only Irirea blochifrom the ocean This Home Has been recently renovated and treshlypamled Four bedrooms two baths corner property with lovely, lencedyard Asking $156900

Olimpiaf stavesOlimpia is just one of the successful SalesRepresentative working out of our mid-dletown Office A dedicated and caringprofessional. Olimpia takes pride in satisfyingeach arid every family.she works with. CallOlimpia in our Mlddletown Office today,671-3500, to assist you with all your realestate needs. •

Merrill LynchRealty

Middletown Office671-3500

The Best Getting Better.Our People Make The Difference.

Barbara Friedman has just found the ideal home fortwo families in Monmouth County. She Is anoutstanding Sales Representative of Merrill LynchRealty's Matawan Office.

Irwln Elnbinder, Vice President and Area Managerof the Monmouth, Middlesex/Mercer Region,remarked, "Barbara is truly one who makes adifference! Salespeople like Barbara set Merrill LynchRealty apart from the rest."

A true professional, caring and meeting the needs ofher clients and customers, Barbara is in love with herreal estate career. She looks forward to the challengesof the day, finding the right home for the right family.You will love working with Barbara, too!

Barbara resides in Holmdel with her husband,Myron, and her three sons, Stephen, Christopher andDaniel.

Call Barbara in our Matawan Office today,566-1881, to assist you'wlth all your real estateneeds!

Barbara Friedman

Merrill LynchRealty

Matawan Office566-1881

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19.1966

WHEELS

Firebird strictly a macho carThis U an all-points wimp and

sissy bulletin: Do not ride in or buya 1987 Firebird OTA. This 1 1/2-ton ail-American sports car is notfor you. It will scare you.

The GTA is Pontiacs superluxury high-performance machodrag wagon, but women enjoydriving it, too. A 350-cubic-inchport fuel-injected V-8 engine islocked to either a five-speed stickshift or the four-|;ear automatic.This gives the GTA a zero-to-60-mph acceleration time of less than6.5 seconds. And then there is thatV-8 sound. Lou of performanceengines sound good but nothingcan match a thundering V-8'sexhaust tone. It is so American...

Looking at the GTA's powerplant is also exciting. The largealumnium tubes that carry air toeach intake port show that this isthe real world of thundering V-8s.The automatic transmission is eas-ier to live with in the long run, Justshifting the big V-8 takes toomuch effort, and the clutch re-quires a great amount of springpressure to keep from slipping.Besides, the automatic trans-

mission performs within a splitsecond of the stick, and it requiresless maintenance.

The Firebird GTA has a 3.27axle ratio, and it seems to be aboutperfect for decent fuel economy.The engine is turning in the low2,000 rpm's at 65 mph and it'ssnoozing. There's just a pleasantexhaust rumble at that speed, andalmost no drumming inside thecar, even though it's a hatchback.

There is more to the GTA thanjust go-go. The handling is worldclass. The "WSG" suspension andthe big 246/50 x 16-inch tireskeeps the GTA nearly flat onhigh-speed sharp turns. I drovethe GTA on a professional rally

course, and it's very difficult toget the GTA sideways — you runout of nerve before it happens.

The styling accents are low-key. The GTA badge, plus thecrisscross deep-dish aluminium16-inch wheels are a clue that theGTA is more than a Firebird. Thegills and intake slots on the hoodgive the "bird" a little spaceshiptouch, along with air dams, lowerbody side skirts, and a big body-colored rear spoiler. At 140 mphthe spoiler has a userful effect ofhelping hold the GTA's tail down,I've been told.

Inside the most noticeablechange is the fully articulatingbuckets that look like "Star Wars"props. They are able to adjust toany normal earthling's needs. Apower-driven lumbar support willease those aching lower backs, andthe ribs can even be held in via apower adjustment. The headrestsgo up, down or forward. There's acargo net on each seat's back. Therear buckets are not too badeither; they fold down for extrahatchback cargo space.

THIS ONE'S FOR YOU SPORT — The Sporty 1987 Firebird GTA, base priced at $10,359, has a zero-to-60-mph acceleration time of less than 6 5 seconds

The instrumentation is betterwith the back lighting at night,and with the headlights flippedup, it is just like a jet plane. Itlooks great in the dark.

The GTA requires the purchaseof a good radar dector. Why?Because it is difficult to rein in,and if you are abiding by the speed

, limit the paint job might be enough

to get you a ticket.Edward R. Noble is syndicated

automotive columnist who's!column appears every Friday in\The Register,

152

8POHT6CHAFT — 16«Wi mow 1 tWr . 1,1200.

CM 172-9264

152 Boats

120 MEN — In board motor.New. 4-cyknder 1700 or b u toffer. CM M2-S4U.

225 Auto Service/Parts

CAMARO PARTS

7*7-7124

22S Auto Service/Part.CUDA — 1973 Parting out.Hood, fandara, doori. trunk IMKayatona classic mags Alllanaai. 3IB V 6, waatarn slotsw/SOV Can altar 6.671-5636

Business Directory

225 Auto Service/Parts 250 Autos lor Sate

A DAILY GUIDE TO BUSINESS SERVICES

160E AccountingOAKY MAYBUHY

Accounting—Bookl leapingAnd fen Servkje

Can 3M-381'I

160M Ale ConditioningCNC Rafrigaratlon A Haatmg

Air conditioning, mfngaratlon,•We fan*. Sala 1 Service). Raat-dennal 1 Commercial 222 6737

183A BartendingPARTY HELPERS

Bartender and/or vv«,i, . i ilor your party. You relax,

we do Ka work. Can 291-1032.

1631 BathroomRemodeling/Ceramic TileALL TILE AREAS

Enpart proraaalorial rapalra1 bam remodeling *nce 1855

Bob Akkrs. 280 0397

CERAMIC TILE COhitRACTINGKIHMna, Floors. Walla 1 BathsFraa Eattrunaa. Prompt Samoa.

Ca« 2*53165Hew Caramlfc-Tm a, Wepak-e

' i lapUl liif, fixtures.. prlcas. F H E . . 0

164A CarpetCleaning

A-i EXPERT Carpal Cleaning.UPHOLSTERY CLEANING

MORRIS HOFFMAN7*7-0209 or 642-7405

1641 Counter TopaDIFE COUNTERTOPS

Comptata Una of quality mad*formica I corian ooufflertope.Call for fraa ait 201-756 8177

164Q CateringWE'RE COOKING. INC

Catering tor all occasions Inncuisine. paraonaNzad sarvtca.customized manua. 671-2070.

164V Ceramic Ti le.LIVING SPACE ASSOC.

CararrHc Wa Install. Floors, walls.oountartopa Rapalra. Expertsarvtca Fraa ait. Csll 530 1500

SecretarialService

185R Computeriiod

6K-7114.

COMPUTERIZED "BUSINESSSERVICE — Won) Procassing.Data Entry by a»p aacnttaryusing IBM software. 201 8176

163U CarpentryCARPENTRY • Railrad carpent-er. Small, madkjrn slta |ooa.Decks Fraa esttmittes. CaM 741-5797 or 774-0600.

FULL LINEHOME IMPROVEMENTS

NO JOO TOO SMALLFREE EST. CAUL 739-9607

HOME CHAFTIViAN — Carpamry. woodwork, lobs donaarrth precision. Jc« too big foryou? Too amatl for others? KanSodariund 666-2971 after 6pm

JO-JO WOOOWORK SAdd-on's. Addrtrone. Paneling.Painting. Decks, Patios. Let'sis* . Cal Joe UtltoU (18 yrsexp | 707-2239.

NEW HOMES. ADDITIONS.Alterations, kltchans. daoks. antypes remodeling. All work guarantaad. Can Chrni 291 -6694.

RT BUILDERS — Dormars.doors and floors 20 yaars expSkUng. roofing and more. FraaEsta. Can 767-0° n anytime

S QAQUANO - - AH typas ofcar pantry, roofing and aiding229-O669. or 229-1969

164JCanvanj ProdtKfta

JEAN'S CANVASWe ve Got The Coast Covarad.

winter Covarn - EWMm TopaRapalrs -Inter.urs - Cushions

W M T H RATEfl ( M l ) TtV-OOTO.

164M CarputInstallation

JIM'S CARPET INSTALLATIONSslas. claaning. re lays, re-stnttcltaa 6. ref-airs

. 261-6177

166E ConstructionED DAY CONSTRUCTION

Quality builders slnoa 1946Ovar 1000 sansflad customers

Alteration 4 mimJetxig1.741-11*4.

1681 ElectricalServiceBEST ELECTRIC

uc. No. 6273. Fast dependableservice Reeaonabk) raws. Fraaestimates Can 671 0121

BEST ON YOUR VCR REPAIROuaranlaad computar: C-64 and

PC t y slams a telephoneQuality work. Call 766-6673

Scudaro tlactrlcal Contractorsllcansad, raHabla. reasonable

Servicing all yourelectrical needs CM 663-7317

170U GeneralContracting

D.J. WHELAN — General Contractor. Additions, renovations.custom work. 24 hr. answeringservice, tree eat. 7674650

170Y GutterCleaning

RELIABLE OUTTER CLEANINGPlus Screening. Repairs avail

Fu»y Insured"Can 671-4363 leave massage

174M Uflht HaulingAAA HAUL AWAY

Clean up construction debris.Attica, yards, cellars, gutters.You don't have to look at Itanymore. Freeeai. 495-1697

A-1 HAULINGYards, cellars, garages cleaned.Demolitions A construction de-bris Call Jerry, 542-5910.

I HaulingCLEAN YARDS

Cellars, attics & garagesFraa estimates

741-2149

171E Handy ManODD JOB SPECIALIST

Plumbing. Electrical. Carpentry,and other rapalra. Rumson. CallFrank. 530-6660

171Q Heating Service/Repair

KEHOSENE HEATERSAll makes serviced at $19 95 pipans. Most pans & wicks instock. 739-0699 or 966-5061.

171U HomeImprovement

BASEMENT* FINI6HEDINTERIOR REMOOELINO

GARDEN STATE HOME IMP671-0060

FLAWLESS INTERIORSExpert Painting. Sheetrocking,Trim. Doors 6 much mora. Yoursatisfaction is our business Caneves. 747-7910

INTERIOR DESIGNS — Customkitchens, baths, ceramic We. paper hanging, peinting.frae esti-mates Can 767-4117

pSpecializing In carpentry,

painting, end ftome repairsSmal )oDa welcome 4960919

Total Renovation ConstructionInc. — Vinyl siding, windows,decks, additions No km toosmall 739-2956.

173V Landscape/Lawn Care

A shrub to complete landscapedesign 6. construction. Totallawn service. Call Sandy ofQMO 741-5136.

176A Moving/Storage

TEACHERS MOVING INC - Bigor small. Licensed & insured.Free estimates Fair Haven 5301333. N J License No. 57.

1761 Odd JobsA-1 ODD JOB SERVICE

Expen home rapalrs.Fully InsuredCall 530-6515

WE CLEAN - Gutters, windows,and do gutter and roofing re-pairs. Wa also resurface driveways. Small painting andcarpentry jobs. No (Ob too smalt.Free estimates. 741-1517.

176M Painting/Plastering/

EUROPEAN PAINTERS — Carpenters svail. for quality workReasonable rates. Honest & Reliable. Free estimates. 571-0904

LIN 6 GRADY PAINTINGInterior & exterior painting, plas-tering, eheetrock. and tapingFuHy Insured. Cat! 630-1541.

176M Painting/Plastering

ROBERT CARONEProfessional painting

Interior* & ExteriorSheetrock or Plaster Patching t

Neat. Clean. Quality WorkFor Free Estimate Call 291-8021

176Q Painting/Paper-hanging

•ABSOLUTE PERFECTION*DENNIS 6. SONS

Quality work assuredFree quote Call 672 2626

AFFORDABLE PAINTINGOn# room to whole house, inte-rior, exterior, insured, lowestprtceda. Free estimates. SeniorsCitizens discount. Csll 264-2520

JUST WALLSFine Pamiing-Paperhanging

Well Glazing-TexturesMarbeHztng-222-4156

MA6TER PAINTERS 6 DEC.European experience in

paparhanging & painting etc.Noel MUdlelown 671-6365

MS. PAPERHANGERFeminine touch

Decorating consultantsCall 741-5650

PAINT AND PAPER — Special-izing in kitchens I baths. OusHtywork • Reasonable rates. Freeestimates Cell 530-4226

WALL-NUTS — free estimatesWe take pride in what we doPaint, paperhangirtg stainingMolding a paneling 495-1931

WE PAINTING CO — Call Willie2295016 The Happy PainterFree est. Fully insured. 20 yrsexp Res or comm.

178Z SheetrockA 1 S DRY WALL

Sheetrock. taping A finishing,reasonably priced, fully insured.fast service Call Gary 775-2349

179E Snow PlowingSNOW PLOWING

Residential 'Commercial

II 741-6544

1801 Tree ServiceWOODY S TREE SERVICE

Tree trimming 6 removal. Stumpgrinding. Fully insured. Free es-timates Csll 530-1612.

1611 VideoJERSEY SHORE

Audio/Video Productions•Professional videoProduction Service-

WeddingsPartiesPortfoliosRecitals

. Music videosSpecial events

Duplication & Editing available.High Quality/Reasonable Rales201-291-1489.

4 LINES - 30 DAYSFOR ONLY $49.00 542-1700

250 Autos, 250 Autoa 250 AutOS 250 Autos

Drive the car you really wantNo Money Down • Early Termination • No Application Refused

ALL '87 makes and models available.

Make • Model 27614

Pontiac Grand AMBMW 325Honda AccordNissan 300ZXCadillac De VilleMercedes 19OEAudi 5000SCadillac EldoradoCorvettePorsche 944

MonthlyPayments

$159.185.199.219.239.249.249.283.299.299.

Make & Modal

HyundaiToyota TercelChevy SpectrumHonda CRXChevy CelebrityToyota Pick UpDodge CaravanV.W. JettaToyota CelicaOlds Cutlass

MonthlyPayments

$49.69.69.89.99.99.

110.149.149.159.

, QtwtM AvaUaMo. Wa pay cash for tradtt • CaU Today

WORLDWIDE LEASING542-4400

location** us. •»* mtmm. m*, f t* HWen. Tlntoi Wh

Open 7 days, Mpn. - jrt. 9-8, Sat, ft Sun. 10-4

MASK — For 1961 Datsun260ZX. Hack leather w/red swhite 280Z emblem, perfectconn CeH 741-1325

TOYOTA COROLLA HATCH-BACK — 1062, sunroof, stan-dard shift, sell for parts. 291-9232. Leave message.

215 Auto Insurance

CHECK OUR RATESPhoenix Brokerage, famous forlow-cost auto Insurance endfriendly service, now giving freequotes by phone. Take tha op-tions. You may save hundreds.Rl 38 Keyport 2643067

Broad SI Shrews 544-1401

230 Motorcycle*

AOUILA ALLSTATE1966 Italian motor scooter

made for Sears & RoebuckRuns good. Good cond $295.

Call 966-4169.

HONDA ATC 70 — 1965.Good for young rider

Excellent condition. $550Call 563 0683

HONDASTREE'I BIKt

AND ATCSALE

Save up 10 $1400 on86, 85 84 New Street BikesSave on all ATC and THX's

FREEHOLD HONDARt 9. FreeholdCall 462-4681

HONDA 7S0F — 62 18 valves.sport tires & handle bar. Exc.cond. Forced to sell. $975 orb/o 745-1508 or 672 9351HONDA 500CC — 1975. Silver& brown. 16,000 mi., exc shape.$800 291-0545KAWASAKI — 750 1961 $750or best oiler Call 542-6455

SHORE CYCLEKAWASAKI

IT'S HOLIDAY TIMENEED A GIFT IDEA'

* ACCESSORIES *Street. Din and Jet Skis

Don't have time?

GIFT CETIFICATESCall and we'll tend it to you, anyamount

Visa or Mastercard twedtxJRt 35 North. Point Pleasant, NJ

899-4050235 MopedsPUCH NEWPORT 11 — 1962Mint condition, very low miles$395 Call 264-6053

240 Van*ASTRO VAN — 65 6 cryCompl. carpeted. Captainchairs, low milage, ex. cond.Reasonable. 642-9516

CHEVY — 1963. Long body. Ac.radio, automatic, pb. ps. Verygood condition. Low mileageCall 671 -3338

CHEVY — 1978 van. V6. 7 passenger. needs engine work$2000 Call 642-9580 9am-Spm

OODGE — '82 van V-8 316 cuIn. PB. PS. good tires. AM/FMradio, new paint |ob. excl. cond.Asking $3595. Call 739 9226 af-ter 6PM.

DODGE — 1978. 3/4 ton. B200window van. 8 passenger, auto49.000 on new 318 engineheeds minor body work. 1 own-er. $1500 Call 291-1275

TOYOTA — 1964. Windowedcargo van $4,600. 787-0661 al-ter 6 pm. •

245 Truck & TrailersCHEVY

Pick up. $500 as is. Call 6715114.

CHEVY — 1984 Blazer K J Verygood cond., low miles $9600Call 291-3229 after 5pm.

CHEVY — 1971 Suburban, goodwork truck Asking $200 Cel787-6202

DATSUN — 60 King cab pickup. 5 speed, am/tm casseteInsulated caps, r.ew s/b radials$1600 Call 229-1980. eves

DODGE RAMCHARGER1979 V-8. auto. 4 WD. am/tmstereo tape. exc. cond. Looks iruns excellent. No dents or rust$2750. 741-1368

DOOGE — 1980 Pick up Step-sides. 6W bed. 6 cyi. 4 spd.running boards, tool box, am/tmtape. Exc cond. $2350. Cal741-1388.

FORD F150 — 1982. 4 * 4 302V-8. auto. ps. pw. cruise, titwheel, cap, much more. B/Oover $6000 284-5129.

FORD — '75 pick up Club Cab3 spd. runs good. 75.000 ml$900. Call 495-2935.

G M C — 84 7000 aeries. Pspdb. Allison auto. 1020 ores26.000 gmw, cab exc. condition49.000 ml Can (716) 494-9769days. (201) 495-1930 eves.

JEEP CHEROKE — Lorado 682-dr. black, showroom condFully loaded. .Low miles$13,500. Call 946-9417.

NISSAN — 4 wheel drive Magwheels & tires, custom Int., ste-reo casa . sunroof, 54.000 mi$3600 or b/o Can 787-6617.

TOYOTA — Pick-up. 63. CUS-TOM CAB. Seats 6. 4-wd. Pspb, ac. am/lm stereo cess., 4new ores + extra trim. Must$9,000 or b/o. 495-0376.

UTILITY TRAILER — 5 Xdeck, excellent condition. $200264 6094

UTILITY TRAILER — 9x5 flPerfect cond Asking $100. Cell2647658

SELLYOURCAR

Did you know more prospectivecar buyers in this area first readthe classified section of TheRegister, for the best used cardeals No doubt an ad will helpyou make the best desl tor youriv.To help you sell your car. we'lllive you plenty of advertisingime In The Register at a very

reasonable price ($1090 lor 4ine ad — your ad runs 10 days.

(Everyday 23.000 people buyThe Register.) Call us on the10th day II you haven't sold yourcar and we'll be happy to rerunyour auto for sale ad tor another10 days at no charge (FREEI)Need more help to sell your car.Wall put your auto for sale ad inIhe newspaper called The FortMonmouth Message, which isdistributed at Fort Monmouth.More than 13.000 military andcivilian personnel stationed atthe Fort reaa mis weekly news-Oaper with avid interest. For shSutra $240. your auto tor salead rune in the Register lor up to20 days it necessary, plus 1week in The Fort MonmouthMessage Of course it you senyour car you can cancel your adanytime. The price stays Ihesame.

Call 542-1700 to place your adOr tor information

250 Autoa

AMC — Hornet. 1973. 6 cyl.auto. a/c. p/s. 59.000 pkiS'rni..runs great, recently tuned. $450.CaM 542-7478.

AMC SPIRIT i - 1981 2 dr..black beauty, chrome mag'a,44,000 ml., 4 cyl.. 4 spd . sun-roof. am/fm(s/r). $750. All cashoffers. Call aftar 6. 671-5636

AMC — 1978 Concord OL. 4 dr.ps/pb. a/c. am/tm casa.. newtires, exc cond. $1200 Call290-0372

AUDI — 78 5000 Excl condLoaded Asking $2600 Will ne-gotiate for quick sale CaU 922-1923.

AUDI 5000 — 1976. New palmiob. runs wall $3100 or bestoffer 642-6881

BUICK — Regal 1964. 4-doorV6. completely loaded, a/c.am/lm radio, ps. tin wheel,p/wtndows, velour seats. 20.000ml. extra clean Call 495-9435 or495-9639 leave message.

BUICK SKYLARK — 1961 4 dr..auto. 6 cyl . air. pb. ps. am/lm,exc. cond . $3100 563-4026

BUICK SKYLARK — 1976. 6cyl., good transportation, $500or best offer; auto, am/fm. 7475382 between 6-9 p.m.

BUICK SKYLARK — 1985 4 dr..auto, ac Creampufl. Must sellby Christmas. No reasonableoffer refused Call 7393325.

CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE1966. Excellent condition$3000 Call 583-6696

CADILLAC ELDERADOCONVERTIBLE 1972 Red wrth

white inter. Exc. condRumson. Call 642-4072.

CADILLAC SEDAN OEVILLE1979 White with red leather. Allpower $2750 Call 531-0369 atter 7pm.

CADILLAC — 82 Coupe deVHIe Full power, fully loaded,leather, excl. cond. Wire wheels.Many extras Call 922-6528

CAMARO Z28 — 82 Maroon,am/fm cass., rear defog, lou-vers, a/c. reasonable offer. 671-5763.

CAMARO — '76. 3-spoed Goodcondition Asking $1,000 Call291-5437.

CHEVELLE — 1970. Rebuilthigh portormance 350. SS hood.Keystone megs, am/lm cass..best otter 842-1619 after 6 p.m.

CHEVETTE — I960. 4 door.manual transmission. . Am/fmstereo radio. 54,000 mi. $1,200.544-0980. eves and weekends.758-2511. days •

CHEVY CAPRICE WAGON1978 ps, pb. ac. exc cond.. 1owner. Oarage kept 65.000 mi.$2500 Call 957 9024.CHEVY CAVALIER — 84. CLHB. EFI4. 5 sp. a/C. ps. pb.alum. wh.. luver. more. 16.000ml. Mint $6350 542-0055.

CHEVY IMPALA — 1964. Bestoffer. Also 1975 Mercury Mar-que. Besl offer. Cart 291-4709.or 291-2813.CHEVY — Malrbu 1980. 4 dr.140.000 ml., good transporta-tion. $750 or best offer. Call671 1678 after 6pm

CHEVY — Malibu 1973. goodcond . $250 Call 566-6137CHEVY — Malibu 83 6-passen-ger wagon. 29.000 mi. Loaded,excl. cond. Must sell Call 264-0791.

CHEVYNova '77. 6-cyl. auto, excl run-ntng cond. $650. CaM 495-5025-

CHEVY NOVA — 77. 6 Cy»standard shift, runs excellent.Many new pans $500 or beatoffer. Can 264-9760. days only.

CHEVY — 1966 Cavalier 724.Beautiful, Show Room cond..loaded with options, fast, greaton gas. 13.000 mi. all Hwy. Toomuch to list. A true sports car.$12,000 or b/o. Ask tor Sieve264-6162 after 5pm

CHEVY — Monte Carlo 1966.completely loaded. T-Rools. va-lour Int.. power everything. 4.3War fuel Injection, low mi. mustsell moving. 5 yr unlimited wa-rantee CaM 886 0524

250 Autos

JEEP — 1967. CJ5 w/olowRebuilt V-6. new tires, brakes,battery Many new pans. Goodcond $1650 671-3951

CAMARO — 1961. Suto, a/c.am/tm cass.. ps/pb. 55.000 nil.,exc. cond. $4150. Celt 671-7429

KITSON CHEVROLET COHwy 36 Eatontown

542-1000

PONTIAC FIERO SE — 14.500rnt., air. red. am/tm stereo, mint,•$7200 or b/o 870-1294

CHEVY — 1960 Citation 500Call 767-9013.

CHEVY — 1964 Impala SS 283rebuilt eng.. ps. auio. console, 2dr., all orifl.. very good' cond.$2500 or b/o Call 721-3166CHRYSLER — Cordova. 1977.Ps, pb. automatic. 92.000 mi.nuns good $500 495-3616.CHRYSLER — LeBaron 79.Good body, runs good, am/tm,a/c. Approx. 69.000 ml. Goodtires. Passed inspection for yr.,b/o, must sell. Call 264-0991.

CHRYSLER — 77 LeBaron. 4new radial tires. AM/FM stereocass . $500 Call 741-5679 alter5PM.

CONCORD - i 78 Low miles.A/C. all power, clean In A out,check it out Asking $900'. Call563-7560

CONQUEST — 1985. (Starkm)auto, digital dash, leather interi-or, loaded, exualem aenriiMani69.000 pky nil. $6600 neg. Call467-4087 ext 422 or 493 8652eves.

CUTLASS SUPREME — 1976ac. rebuilt trans . recent tuna up,new tires, inter, mint $550 Call264-9056 after 6pm

DATSUN B210 — 19.79. 4 spam/lm cass., s/c. exc. cond..good gas mileage 6 all seasonradials $1500 542-2664

DATSUN — 1982 Modal 210 2door hatchback, auto., ac, ps,pb. sunroof, very dean. 50.000ml. $2700 or b/o. 290-0372

OATSUN — 1978 2802. 5 spdam/fm stereo, sr. mag wheelswith locks, black on black, acprig owner. $3600 747-8381OAYTONA TURBO — 1964 5spd., 33.000 mi. loaded, sun-roof. A #1 cond Call 671-5427.

DODGE CHARGER — 1977Good condition $500 Ps. pb.am/lm radio Call 842-2269

DODGE COLT — 1978 4 spdstandard, $700 or b/o Call eves2918409_ ,

DODGE OART — 1975. Aulo-matic/6,90k mi. Best offer Call747-4723 ,

DODGE MONICO — 1976 A/Cpower, good transportation. 1st$500 takes it 291-1407

DODGE VAN — 76 $450. as isCall 291-5999. after 7 pm

DUSTER — 1973. Needs en-gine New brakes, master cylin-der, alternator, fuel pump. $200or best offer 264-4627 after 5pm.

FORD — Escort L 63 4 cyl 2door hatchback. Automatic. Ps,pb..Radio, heater, am/fm cassExcellent condition Sacrifice$1975. Call 758-1850

FORD ESCORT — 1962 Grayw/red int. Exc cond $2600 Cal872-0936

FORD — Escort Wagon 4dr.good shape. $2700 CaU 7872772

FORD — Fairmont wagon.1961. 4 cyl. standard. 60.000mi . $2200 Call 747-4502

FOHO — Granada 78 Excellentrunning condition. Power steer-ing, power brakes 81.000 mi.$1050 Call 741-3437. evesFORD — Grenada GL 61 4-dr.6-cyl. auto trans.. A/C. PS/PB.AM/FM radio. 32.000 ml Excl.cond. $3000 or b/o Call eves747-4346FORD LTD — Wagon 1964.Am/lm. ac. ps. pb. new tires.Excellent condition $5,900. 842-5707. 530-3464

FORD MUSTANG^ 1979 V-6.auto, good for pans or repair.$550 or besl otter 290-9455.FORD — Mustang 1970. 6 cyl.auto, good cond.. clean, mustsee $2500 or best oiler Call671-2110

FORD PINTO — 1976. Lowmileage, excellent condition,new tires, woman dnver. asking$325 389-2614

FORD — T-bird '77. 351 V-8.Orig. owner PS. PB. AIR. NEWTIRES. + BRAKES. High MilesClean, dependable. $1400. orbest o«er. 957-9546FORD — Torino 69. 4-dr. bluew/vmyl top. High mileage. Verygood cond $700 or b/o 671-4580.

FORD — 66 Escon PB. seniordriver, excl cond. Must senAsking $4600. 389-2614

GRENADA — 1977 82.000 miJust passed Inspection. Excel,lent condition Asing $850 Can495-4123.

HONDA — 1982 CIVIC, goodcond.. runs greet. $4700. Call671-7663 after 6pm.

HONDA — 1981 4dr. AccordCass.. sunroof. 5 spd., verygood cond. $3000. Call 2641160.HONDA — I960 Accord. 2 dr..auto, stereo, 67,300 mi. B/Oover $2000. After 4pm. 6 onweekends 264-2214.

HONDA — 1978. CIVIC, retxarlengine, new radials. runs good.$600. Can 290-0784

IMPALA — 1977. a/c. stereo,spoke megs, runs well. $950 orbesl offer. 872-1345.

LINCOLN VERSAILLES ADDI-TION — 1979. loaded. $1600 orbest oiler 872-1345

LA8RI0LA MOTORSNewman Springs Rd Red Bank

741-2433

LINCOLN — Continental. 10692-door V-6. ps. pb. pw. LestherInterior. 1 owner. Good condi-tion $295 Call 966-5531

MALIBU CLASSIC — 1979 Fullyloaded. 4 dr. (1700 or b/o Can291-4292 ask for Jim

MATADOR — 1972 $300 Call767 3995. '

MAZDA RX7 OS — 1965Ocean Okie, 5 spd., am/fmcass, exc cond. $6995. Musisen. buying house. 568-8717.Mike.

MAZDA - R« J '79 5-spd.A/C. AM/FM cass . runs great.$2350 or beat otter. Call 642-2522.

IAZDA — 81 GLC 4-door.front wheel drive. Asking $1100.Csll 974-0461. attar 7 pm

MAZDA80 626. 5 spd. asking $1200

Call after 6PM 291-1746.

MERCEDES BENZ — 1979PROF loaded. Orig. owner.Needs minor mechanical work.$5000. If interested M7-8361.

MERCEOES— 280 73. Air. au-tomatic $3800 1969 250 auto.$600 Both ps. pb 290-0092.

MERCURY — Bobcat stationwagon '78. 54.356 mi. 4-cyl..asking $600 Call attar 5PM 747-4074

MERCURY — Capri, "RS"1979. 60.000 mi., 6 cyl. ps/pb.a/c, auto, am/fm stereo, rallywheels, sunroof, extra set Ikes.Call 739-4172

MERCURY — Cougar. 78 . 4door. a/c. pb. pa. Exc cond,$1,700 Best hour 6-11 pm. 7476927

MERCURY — Lynx 85. S-spd.AM/FM cass $5600 or takeover payments Call 290 0276after 5PM

MERCURY — Lynx 61 wagon,auto. PB. PS. air. good cond.Asking $2500 Call 495-0326

MERCURY — Marquis '60. 4-door. V8, air. am/fm stereo, pover sest. pw. pi. pb. ps. cruisecontrol, vnl. root, rear def. tint,glass Very clean $2,495 787-5844

MERCURY — Monarch. I960.asking $750 or besl offer. Calleves and weekends 493-3205.days Nancy 544-9199 t

MERCURY — I960 Colony ParkStation Wagon, a/c. ps/pb.am/tm. exc. cond, asking$2600 Call 756-9215.MITSUBISHI — Tredia. 63.white. Ac. am/fm. 5-speedtrans. Great gas mileage,must see' 530-8466MUSTANG — '79. 4 cylinder.ps. pb. 70.000 mi. Asking $800291-5543.

MUSTANG — 1976 HatchbackAuto 4 cyl.. ps. rebuilt motor,many new parts, runs 6. looksgood Asking $950 495-2667

NISSAN 3O0ZX — 1984 Exc.cond. garage kept. $10,900Call 201-370-4901 eves. 201544 3543 days.

NISSAN 200SX — 1964. 40.000mi., exc. cond. sunrool. sir,am/tm. must sal. $8400 or b/o.Call 291-6658

OLDS — Cutlass. 1964. axecond . 26.000 mi . $7600 Callafter 5om 642-1931

OLDSMOBILE FERENZA1986 4 dr.. exc cond.. low mi.,am/fm. a/c. tat wheel, asking$10,600 Must sell 495-5725.

OLDSMOBILE — Omega 1960.2-door. V-6. ps. pb. ac. am/fm.new tires. Good condition. $350.Call 968-5531

OPEL GT — 1972 auto, newpaint, 76.000 ong. mi., axe.cond $1200 Call 886-0571

OPEL — 1974. 2-door stationwagon. Runs and looks great$300 or best offer. AM/FM cassale Call 495-0260

PLYMOUTH DUSTER — 1974,am/tm stereo cass.. rear delog.manual steering & brakes. $650or b/o. Call Ed at 787-1132.

PLYMOUTH HORIZON — 81dr.. 4 cyl.. auto trans., am/fmcass . red w/Mack vinyl mt.Ask-mg $850. 290-1623.

PLYMOUTH — Reliant 1963.auto. 4 dr sedan, very goodrunning engine, low ml., bodyneeds work, asking $500. CaNafter Spm 495-5226.

PLYMOUTH — Reliant Wagon.1961, no rust, engine needswork. Sea days A weekends291-5669PLYMOUTH — Volare 76. 2-drjust passed inspection, origin*owner Asking $400. Can evesweekends 530-5382

PLYMOUTH1973 CHALLENGER

for parts or to fix up. $300. CaN642-0365 attar 5pm. ask forGary.

PLY VALIANT — 72.cond., many new parts, torieonbar problem B/O 70 Laurel Or.Uttte Sevsr. 642-6246.

PONTIAC — Le Mane. 1976, 4dr. a/c. p/a. p/b. S cyl. 90.000mi.. 2nd engine at 70,000 mi$900 Days 949-9019 or eves229-7354

PONTIAC LEMANS — 76. Paac. pw. new urea and brakesGreat engine Slight damage totha hood by tree amb 741 -5577

PONTIAC — 1963 Firebird. V6p/s. pw. ac. tut wheel, am/tmcass.. T-Tops. gauges. $5000Can after 6pm. 563-0276

250 Autos

PONTIAC — Feiro 64 Red.Automatic Good condition$6 500 767 6409 or 495^5641

PONTIAC — 1979 Salan wag-on. 9 passenger, runs good,besl offer Can after 6pm 291541b.

PORSCHE64 944 Aulo. root, sapphire,

mini cond 431-2727

SAAB80 99GLI. A/C. FM cass Sacri-

fice, best offer Call 747-2000

SANSONE OLDS-CADILLACNewman Springs Rd.. Red Bank

741-0910

STRAUB BUICK OPEL9 ACRES ol New 6. Used Cars

Hwy 36. 264-4000 Keyport

TOM S FORD200 Hwy 35 Keyport

264-1600TOYOTA CORROLA — 1960.Damage to roof by tree limb.can be fixed Great lor pans,make oiler 741-5577

TOYOTA — 1965 Celeca GTSLoaded. Very clean Call 389-2132. tin 10 pirr

TRIUMPH — TR6. red. 1970,oood lor restoration or pans.$450 Call 671-7969 or 671-

UNDER $2000See our back row for

"AS TRADED"Specials.

Rassas PontiacCall 741-5180

VOLVO CLEARANCEMove them out prices on all latemodel stock. Big selection63s 64s. '85s. Red Bank

Volvo. Newmans Springs Rd. Rt620. 741-5666VOLVO OL — 1964 4 dr.. silverwith Mack, leather .Inter., sun-roof, pw. pi. am/lm cass 39.000ml Mint cond $12,800 Cal671-4922

VOLVO — 78 Excl cond.84.000 mi PS. PB. A/C. sunrool.AM/FM radio. $3500 negotiable.After 5PM 671-3466 or days741-2613

VOLVO — 71 144 model Goodrunning cond-. interior a-1.Am/fm cass. stereo, manualchoke. 4 door, new enginepens $650 or b/o 530-6142

VOLVO — 70. Model 1800 ECoupe. Excellent condition Ac.luel infection. $6,800 Call 6709067

VOLVO — 1962 4 door, whitelike new 40.000 mis A/C. ste-reo cassette. Asking $7600747-4391 or 747-6345

VOLVO — 1980 Wagon OLE,'5spd. with overdrive, loaded,leather seats, only 55K ml.$5400 Call 842-5344.

VW GTI — 1984. Exc cond.black w/biue int.. a/c. logs.am/fm stereo cass. sunroolCat! Bill after 6 p m . 747-5729

VW RABBIT — 79 Bronze. 4dr.. in good cond.. $800 or bestoHer. 642-7092 alter 5 p m

VW SUPER. BEETLE — 7 3Good running cond. Needssome work. Best offer over$400 Can 741-3741

vwVanagon L 80 4-spd. AM/FM.good cond. $2500 Call 741-5352 eveningsVW — 7 2 SuperbeeUe. Runslike a dream, needs body work.$900 Cell 871-4345 between 9-4PM

VW — 1974 Super Beetle, runsgreat, body needs work. $425 orbest offer Call 872-1291 attar6pm

V W RABBIT — 1981 Diesel. 5spd.. 4 dr.. am/lm cass . exccond.. $900 or best oiler Callafter 6 p m . 642-8446

WE BUY — Used cars tor ex-port. Schwartz Chrysler-Plym-outh-Mazda. 141 West Front St.;Red Bank. 747-0787

EDAYS'TIL

CHRISTMASSet theholidaymood. Orderfirewoodthroughclassifiedsservicedirectory.

REGISTERCLASSIFIED

542-1700

8B The RegisterFRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986

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•-•'V HOUTE 35 EATOMTOWNCIHCLKy-| , . ! — —>.CIHCLE

I«HJ

ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986 cL M B M H B

SPECIALEVENTS

Just anold Scrooge ...

ART

Guild ofCreative Art 4

ITRAVEL

Skiing in -*New England ... /

INSIDEHELOISE ... 5

CROSSWORD ... 7

JUMBLE ... 7

HOROSCOPE ... 7

YOUR TOWN ... 6 .

ANN LANDERS ... 5

MOVIES ... 8

TELEVISION ... 7

School's out

5\OA«T«K>N:Keep your children entertained

Whether you goto New York orstay at home,there's plentyof activities tokeep kids busy

Tis the week before Christinas.The stockings are hung, their in-

sides still bare.And everyone will be happy if Saint

Nicholas is there.But suddenly the wee turtle doves

of yesteryear sound like 12 birdscalling together, "Ma, I'm bored."

What are you going to do with yourchildren to keep them busy while theyare on vacation from school? Well,read on. There's plenty to do up untilthe holidays and the week after.

• • •Some Monmouth County residents

head for the city — New York, that is.A trip to New York to savor theelaborate holiday sights appears to bea popular pastime some people opt forthis week and-nextrbetween the—calendar's two busy holidays.

Hot pretzels, the8'ant tree and ices l « t i n 8 a t R o c k -efeller Center,F.A.o.schw«rtiand the "Magnifi-

Storv bVUilHu WileHlldyWllSFontaine

cent Christinas Spectacular" at RadioCity Music Hall are some of theattractions several mothers of youngpeople plan on to fill their holidayvacation time.

"I send them to work with theirdaddy," said Mary Cox of Pair Haven.Daddy, David Cox, happens to havean office at Rockefeller Center, andsons David, 7, and Jonathan, 6, find avisit there to be a big treat.

"I go along to look at the tree," Coxsaid. "We usually get hot pretzelsfrom the street venders, and if thecrowds permit, we try to get intoF.A.O. Schwartz."

And the biggest treat, she said, is avisit to the World Trade Center."They love tall buildings. They Just goUP and they look."

The 64-year-old New York tra-dition, the Christmas show at RadioCity Music Hall, remains a draw foranyone within commuting distance ofthe city. Patti Brown of Middletown,the mother of four daughters, ages 12,9,6 and 4, is considering it along witha visit to Rockefeller Center.

It is also a possibility for Mary EllenConnolly of Little Silver, the motherof eight children from 23 to 2, who areon vacation from medical school topre-school. •

"WeTiave everyone at home," shesaid of the upcoming weeks.

The Radio City Music Hall showcontinues through Jan. 8. Tickets are$25 and $22, and all seats are re-served. Tickets may be purchased atthe box office from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.Monday through Saturday, and 11

a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. They may alsobe purchased through Ticket Mastercenters, (212) 307-7171or1-800-682-8080.

A musical show of a differentnature, "Sesame Street Live," is mak-ing its annual holiday visit toMadison Square Garden's FeltForum through Jan. 4. Tickets, $0.50and $8, are on sale at the garden boxoffice, (212) 664-4400; Ticket r< HIoutlets, (212) 390-4444, and by tele-phoning Teletron, (212) 947-5850.•••;

Visits to Grandma and Grandpa pullsome families out of the state. TheBrowns are planning to spend sometime visiting grandparents in StatenIsland. And while they are there, avisit to the Staten Island Children'sMuseum at Snug Harbor could be anoption. The museum has aparticipatory exhibition on architec-ture and the built environment. Theexhibit is recommended for children 7and older.

During Christmas vacation museumhours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. dailythrough Jan. 2, except for New Year'sDay, when the museum is closed. Call(718) 273-2060 for information.

Connolly suggests a visit to Mon-mouth Museum in Lincroft. Theholiday attraction ly'Totatly Ted^dies: Making the Holidays Bearable."This exhibition finds the lower galleryfestively decorated for the season andbursting with bears. "Living with theLenape" is Monmouth Museum's on-going exhibition for children in theJunior Gallery. It features an authen-

tically reconstructed Lenape village, asetting for activities associated withthe daily life of these native Ameri-cans.

The museum is open from 10 a.m. to4:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Satur-days, and 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays.Admission is free to members. Fornon-members there is a charge of$ 1.50 for adults, and 75 cents forchildren and senior citizens. Call747-2206 for more information.

The New Jersey State Museum inTrenton has a toy exhibition. "ToysYour Grandmother Knew" continuesin the West Gallery on the first floorthrough Jan. 4. It features 19th andearly 20th century toys, games andchildren's furniture from themuseum's cultural history collections.

The state museum's holiday festivalof the performing arts has fourdifferent programs of live entertain-ment planned for upcoming weeks. AHperformances are at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m."Peter and the Wolf and "Tubby theTuba" are being performed on Dec.27. "Magic and Mime" by Craig Collisis the offering on Sunday, Dec. 28."Gabriel Ghost" is scheduled forMonday, Dec. 29, and "The MaskMan" is scheduled for Tuesday, Dec.30. The performances are one hour,without an intermission. Admission is$3 at the door, and $2.50 in advance.Call the state museum educationoffice, (609) 292-7780.

State museum hours are 9 a.m. to4:45 p.m. Tuesdays through Satur-days, and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sundays.

See Vacation, Page7C

RENTAL FUN — David Cox, 7, and Jonathan Cox, 5, of Fair Haven, enjoywatching a rented movie on the family's VCR. Their mother, Mary, also

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVER

plans on taking the children to New York to fill their vacation time fromschool next week

JAM. concert setRED BANK — Recording stars John

Eddie and Glen Burtnick are beingjoined by area bands for a 7 p.m.concert Sunday at the Count BasieTheater of the Monmouth Arts Center,99 Monmouth St.

The concert, which also featuresThe Shades of Asbury Park, The

• Source of Manasquan, The JerseyArtists for Mankind (J.A.M.) '86Band, including a performance byguitarist Bob Bandiera, and Christmascaroling, is a benefit sponsored byJersey Artists for Mankind, J.A.M.'86. Proceeds will be used to help feedthe state's needy people. Concert-goers are being asked to take a toy tothe Hi' 'liter that can be donated toToys for Tots.

Lee Mrowicki, J.A.M. '86 director,said Bruce Springsteen has been in-vited to the concert. Mrowicki could

not say if Springsteen will show up."He has appeared at other J.A.M.

events. It is always possible, but henever tells anybody in advance," hesaid. He noted that Springsteen ap-peared, unnannounced, at two otherJ. A.M.-sponsored events earlier thisyear. One was a benefit concert forthe Minnesota Mining and Manufac-turing factory workers faced withlosing their jobs in Freehold.

. The second was a performance of"Lady Beth," a play that explored theplight of unemployed factoryworkers. Both events took place at theStone Pony in Asbury Park.

Tickets for Sunday's concert are.$10. They may be purchased at theCount Basie box office, throughTickemaster, at the Stone Pony inAsbury Park, and Galaxy Records andRyans Pub, both in Belmar.

Carolers spread musicBy HILDY WILS FONTAINEThe Register

For the people who do it, and for thepeople who hear it, Christmas carol-ing is one of the best parts of the joyof Christmas.

Caroling is a personal celebration ofChristmas for Gary Meredith, directorof music at First Presbyterian Churchat Tower Hill, Red Bank, and atradition he carries with him.

Caroling evokes nostalgic memoriesof Christmases past for BettyScharmann of Navesink, a choirmember for nearly 25 years.

And it is a special part of the seasonfor Susan Gardiner of Long Branch,also a member of the choir.

On Saturday, Meredith is takingmembers of the church's variouschoirs on a caroling tour to peoplewho might otherwise never hear the

sounds of live Christmas music. Some40 or 50 carolers are visiting nursinghomes, convalescent centers andprivate homes.

"To be able to do this for individ-uals and groups in hospitals is a lotdifferent from singing before a thecongregation in the church," Meredithsaid.

Meredith said he began the carolingtours about 10 years ago at a churchhe served in Washington. He con-tinued that tradition when he camehere four years ago.

His reason js steeped in caring. "It 'bothers me that people in the county 'can only hear Christmas music on theradio. They need to hear real livepeople singing," hftaaid. And sing thecarolers wiMJn-four-part harmonyunder Meredith's direction.

Among the people they will visitSaturday is 98-year-old Jennie Allen

See Caroling, Page7C

2C

[SPECIAL EVENTSFRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986

WHATS GOING ON[ DEADLINESt' All information for thia listingin The KegUter muat be turnedtn at leaat two week* in advance•f the event. All informationShould be mailed in. Pleaae in-clude ticket information, thelime and place of the event. ForContinuing events, pleaae Hat allpnea and events.

THEATERto THE OWL — Dinner TheaterIpstairs at Escondido, 1213ycamore Avenue, Tinton Falls,

jrasents' 'The Owl and the I'ussycaf by Bill Manhoff. throughan. 4, Thursdays throughSundays. Dinner is served at 7 p.m.Curtain is at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are28.50. The play stars Bob Malos

and Lisa Talerico and is directed byftuss Carthy. Phone 542-3120 forreservations.

, MUSICm HOLIDAY MUSIC —peaview Square Mall, Ocean, hostsa hdliday music program continuingthrough Monday, featuring choralgroups and bands from areaschools and religious institutions."The groups perform seasonalmusic selections in the mall'stenter court area. The groupsperform free at various times. Call822-81 OO.for a performanceSchedule.• RENNAISSANCE — TheClub Bene Dinner Theater, Route35, Sayreville, has signed theBritish classical rock groupRennaissance to perform tonight.The group will perform at 9 p.m.With an optional dinner at 7 p.m. ForInformation call 727-3000.I I RECITAL CANCELLED —A music students recital scheduledfor Saturday at BrookdaleCommunity College, Lincroft, hasbeen cancelled. Recitals had been

—tchgduladfor4:30 p.rruanrl Bp.m ,

MUSICALTHEATER

• CHRISTMAS — Radio CityMusic Hall's "MagnificentChristmas Spectacular," starring

IB Rockeries, is an encore of rta —I985 production. The productionContinues through Jan. 8. ItIncludes production numbers,special effects and the Rockettes ina high-kicking routine. Tickets forthe 90-minute Christmas show are$25 and $22, all seats reserved.Tickets may be purchased at thefnusic hall box office Mondaysthrough Saturdays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.and Sundays 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.Tickets may also be purchasedthrough TicketMaster and bytailing (212) 307-7171 or1-800-682-8080. For information, •call (212) 757-3100.

DANCE

presenting a Renaissance holidayromp in dance and mime,"Christinas Carnival," at theNewark Public Library, 5Washington St.. Newark, at 2 p.m.and 3 p.m. p.m. Saturday.Admission is free. For information,call the Newark Public Library at733-7797.

CHILDREN'SEVENTS

• BREAKFAST WITHSANTA — Children's TheaterUpstairs at Escondido, 1213Sycamore Ave., Tinton Falls,presents "Breakfast With SantaCiaus" Saturday at 11 a.m. and 1p.m. Children will be entertained bySanta and Mrs. Claus with stories,games and songs. Tickets are $4 atthe door. Call 542-3120.

• FAIRY TALE — A children'sChristmas show is being presentedat the Monmouth CollegeGuggenheim Theater, LongBranch, Sunday and Monday. "AFairy Tale Christmas" was writtenby and is being directed byMonmouth College alumnus JimDinella. The show includes 15original songs written by Dinellaand Patricia Cestare of Lakewood.It is about three characters whotravel through an enchanted forestseeking fame and fortune. Curtainis at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Sunday; 10a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday. Ticketsare $2 for children and $4 foradults. Call 571-3449.

• MUSEUM TEDDIES — Inthe lower gallery at the MonmouthMuseum, Lincroft, Tuesday,running through Jan. 11 is theholiday exhibition "Totally Teddies:Making the Holidays Bearable."The museum presents TeddyBears throughout special days ofthe year. The museum is open from10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdaysthrough Saturdays and Sunday

"from rp.m.TO 5~p.m, Schoofdays*the Junior Gallery is open only toscheduled school groups until 2p.m» Admission is $1.50 for adultsand 75 cents children and seniorcitizens. Members are admittedfree. For information call 747-2266.

impersonations. Wednesdaysthrough Sundays, the cost otdinner and show is $21.50 perperson. On New Year's Eve, aspecial party including open bar,

dancing, hats, noisemakers, taxand tips will be offered at $40 perperson. For information or toreserve, call 727-3000.

• ETHNIC HOLIDAY —Anexhibition featuring Christmastrees and other holiday symbols ofethnic groups continues throughDec. 31 at the New Jersey

Historical Society. The museum isopen Tuesdays to Saturdays, 10a.m. to 4 p.m.; and Sundays, noonto 4 p.m. The historical society is at230 Broadway, Newark. Admissionis free.

• ORIGAMI TREE —American Museum of NaturalHistory's annual Origami holidaytree sparkles with 1.000 multi-colored, hand-folded stars. Otherornaments include dinosauars,beetles, reindeers and birds. Thetree is on exhibit in RooseveltMemorial Hall, through Jan. 6.

AUDITIONSmREPERTORY THEATER —Aberdeen/Matawan RepertoryTheater is having auditions forAgatha Christie's classic mystery,"The Mousetrap." Al Wagner, ARTmanaging director, should becontacted at 583-5805 for anappointment.

CRATCHITTS AND SCROOGE — "A ChristmasCarol" continues at McCarter Theater inPrinceton through Christmas Eve. RobLanchester is Scrooge. With him are the Cratchittchildren, clockwise from upper left, Matt Chen as

Peter, Najah Mas'udi as Martha, Brian Lanchesteras Ned, Katie Adini as Belinda, All Johnston asDorrit and William Dean as Tiny Tim. TheMcCarter box office should be contacted for ticketnformation.

—f

• FRIDAY FLICKS — TheCheaters" starring Blllie Burke,Ona Munson and JosephSchildkraut, is being screened at7:30 p.m. tonight at the easternbranch of the Monmouth CountyLibrary, Shrewsbury. The film isfree.

P NUTCRACKER — The RedBank Ballet presents "TheNutcracker." Performances areScheduled for tonight at 7:30 p.m.and Saturday at 3 p.m. at theGuggenheim Theater in LongBranch; and Sunday at 4 p.m. andf p.m. at Red Bank Regional HighSchool in Little Silver. Tickets are$10 (or adults and $7 for childrenand senior citizens. Mail ordertickets are also available for allperformances by calling the RedBank Ballet at 530-9340. Creditcard orders may be filled by calling842-9002 and asking for the RedSank Ballet.»PETITE BALLET — LesPetite Ballets of Manalapan is

• HISTORICAL CHRISTMAS—The Monmouth County

Historical Association's holidayexhibit continues at the

association's headquarters at 70Court Street, Freehold, throughJan. 4, and can be seen during themuseum's regular hours.Admission is $2 for adults, $1 for .children ages 6 to 18, $1.50 forsenior citizens, and free tormembers and children under 6. Themuseum is closed Dec. 24,25,26and 31, and Jan. 1. Call 462-1466.

Clothes & (jiltsjer country living

speiial+FindsJor holiday ghimj

RumsonRoulette

298• Rag. $449.99 $13 MONIHIV

20-inchSquareviewcolor TV withremote control

Ask aboutSears

credit plan

MttutcMd TV wetpllen on both M M «om

13-in. color TVwith 5 keyremote

VHS VCR withSTEREO andInfrared remote

9.W• 1-butlon color. • Electronicluner. • 13-in. diag. meas. pic-

Channel scan on set.y 4-program timer

25-iunetion wireless remoteHQ-nigh quality picture

Cobt« compatible

• CLUB BENE — "The JimmyLane Show" continues at the ClubBene Dinner-Theater, Route 35,

Sayreville, through New Year'sEve: The show features female

•« you hav« an misting Swi« Charo»account balance. D M addition at milpurcnaM may or may not change yow.a r m ! monthly balance of your account.S H I M \». oWery or MaWWon cMnx* »any may c u m quot*d minimum monthlypaymant to M higher

Each of *h«H» advtfHt*d (tern* It raodty available for tal* a* advertised.

l a y Shorn. U •Hockemock. N J.•fcooMyn. NY •WduwtHe. LI.•hM Northport. U . Jamaica. URwhino, LI •LMnsrton. N j .ftXUIKIII HDOa, N.T. MOMopvQUQ, L I

*Nomwt, N.Y•Mm Bnmwlck. N.JN m Boch»ll«. NY•Ooeon. N J•foromul Park. N.J.Mvntwad. LI

•Bockawoy. N J.•Smith Haven. LISororeW*. N.J.SwmtoKt Conn.•Stolen bland, ut o r n RW«r. N.J.

•Union City. NJ.•Vallm Stream, LI•Woichung. NJ.*WhM nalm, N.Y

. NJ.

* tomw atom. SMIOHOiBAmiANCmTOms •KlOOBfMinoN. NY U N M N N J POMFTON 1MB, NJ. Celebrating Our New

MOAY. DECEMBER 19 IBM

OININO OUTItttegbter 3C

Malicious!I [ > n g I s ! , i n i l ( l . i i n sBlue Point < KslrrsI ilil of SoU-I l o r i d d ( ' r u n p * lI II I ) . I

OCEAN GRILL 222~4499

Old Ocean Ave., North Long Branch

Now open for Sunday brunch

Sample our delectable French andEuropean specialities in a charming,intimate atmosphere.

Celebrate our second anniversary with usat dinner, luncheon, Sunday Brunch andEnglish Afternoon Tea, Weekends.

Make your holiday reservations early,and let us plan your next exquisite party;your place or ours.

8 LINDEN PLACE. RED BANK• (SOI) BH0-S980

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THE PLACE TO BEPLA

ND•WEEKEND SPECIALS*V M I Eileen Seafood Ann Maria

Chicken Dervitle Spinach RavioliPlus our full Service menu. All Dinners Include antipastosalad bar, soup kettle, shrimp, homemade bread & fruit.

ENJOY NEW YEARS EVE WITH US!RESERVE NOW

2« 1-S080 ^t^\, • BANQUETFACILITIES

Point Inn

Open New Years Eve. Call For Inter

149 BRIOHTON AVB., LOMQ BRANCH289-7980

10:30-3 p.m.Children Under 10 * 4 M

WEDNESDAY A FRIDAY

LUNCHEON BUFFETStarting at11:30 a.m.

DINNERBUFFET • 1 0 "

Children Under 10Sum it 4 p.m.

ITAdulu».M

Salad Bar and Regular Menu Available at All Time.Dancing Friday and Saturday From 9:00 P.M.

Featuring JOEY SUDYKA — FRIDAYNU CREATIONS — SATURDAY

DORIS & ED'S

» IWS AV/ARM 0/ HXCHUKSVKV/iilf NJuvicii.ir Muxdtiiii-

SEAFOOD BY THE SEASIDE

348 SHORE DRIVE HIGHLANDS 201 -872-1565-

OPEN LATE FEBRUARY THRU DECEMBER.WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY.

FOR COCKTAILS AND DINNER

* * • N E W JERSEY MONTHLY

The Clam HutWishes AllA HappyHoliday

Closed for Vacation Dec. 1-25Reopen Friday Dec. 26thOpen New Years Eve

& New Years DayRegular Menu

the

CLAM HUTFoot of Atlantic St., Highlands, N.J.

Phone 872-0909 or 291-1284

{SEAFOODWITH A CAJUN FLAIR

OPEN HOUSE

NEW YEAR'S EVE ^

WStflVMIWIS ACCEPTED0MIV EXCEPT SATUMMV

RESTAURANT

DINNER SPECIALS THIS WEEK

FRIDAYTHE FABULOUS BUFFET

The grandest buffet of all... sum-tuous entrees of the freshest sea-food ... prima pastas... roasted tur-key ... baked ham ... savory saladsand a whole lot more!

OvtrkcAung The Channel Club MarinaWtst Stmt at Channel Drivt, MOIIIHOHIIJ Btacb

HUDDY'S INN

Enjoy New York Style DiningIn the Heart of Red Bank

New York Style Italian Culsinrand one of the "Shore's" mostcoinfy dining spots

HOURSMoa. ikraHu.-ll:M AM to I AM

Nund.y-Nooii U 10 PM.

• W. l ev , cklWr. .• K..I1, r.. lo, 11 , . . , .• Evrrylkim •••lUkfe far Utt —U• I n * lulUa-Aaartcui •>•»•

»ff ami'! narking

SHREWSBURY AVE. & HERBERT ST. • 747-1586

BHEAKFABT • LUNCH • DINNERHol*CoW

We Cater For:OFFICE PARTIESHOLIDAY PARTIESHOUSE PARTIESNEW YEARS PARTY Party Platters

L Dtaner Special* Start at

155 BRIGHTON AVE., WEST ENDFREE PARKING LOT 870-9133

Why-.brunchwhen you can

the Haulout?"It's a lot more than bacon and eggs."

Our breakfast menu elevates the morning meal out of themundane—and into the marvelous!

Try any of our imaginative and delicious offeringsAll prepared to order from the very freshest ingredients

And served in a magnificent riverfront setting .

And because we know that for breakfast, it's the littlethings that count, you'll find absolutely fresh-squeezed

orange juice Breakfast breads warm from the ovenAnd only pure Vermont maple syrup for our made-

from-scratch pancakes and waffles

So if you're a morning maven, or even if you never getup 'til noon, experience the new Haulout breakfast

It'll really open your eyes!Breakfast served Saturday and Sunday, 9AM to I 30PM

Wol Slrotal Channel Drivt.

Overlooking l l»7 irl Club Mamin AloFimoulli Beach Hafcout) (201) 222-7592

RESTAURANT

4CFRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1966

The Register

ART CALENDARDEADLINES

All Information for this listingin The Register must be turnedin at least two weeks in advanceof the event. All informationshould be mailed in. Please in-clude the time and place of theevent and how long exhibits willbe shown. For continuingevents, please list all times andevents.

• PARK ART — The MonmouthCounty Park System is hosting atwo-person art show featuring thework of Susan Kahn of Rumsonand Warren Satter of Elberon, atthe Thompson Park Galleries,Newman Springs Road, Lincroft.The show continues through Jan. 2.• ART FORMS — Art Forms,80 Broad St., Red Bank, isfeaturing abstract expressionistpaintings by Beth Nablo and ValRossman. sculpture by BlaiseBatko and Emily Rossheim;functional sculpture by Sam Shaw,Chris Brightman, Riki Moss;jewelry by Jenkins & Keith; and artglass by John Gilbey and GuyCorrie. Hours are Wednesdays toSaturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., andSunday by appointment, throughDec. 31.• GUILD — During December,the Guild of Creative Art, 20 BroadSt., Shrewsbury, presents works inall media by exhibiting andassociate members. The showcontinues through Jan. 2. Featuredis a special collection of mattedportfolio pieces.• BEFARAH GALLERY —Laurie Codella of Montclair isDecember's artist of the month atBefarah Gallery, 52 Main Ave.,Ocean Grove. Her hand-dyedphotographs are on exhibit in awindow display through Dec. 31.Photographs being exhibited arefor sale. Gallery hours are 11:30a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays throughSaturdays.• SLOVAK EXHIBIT — Worksby Interlaken artist Helen RuffSlovak are on exhibit through Jan.29 at the Monmouth County SchoolSuperintendent's Office, CampbellCourt and Route 9, Freehold. Oneof her paintings is in the UNICEFcollection of greeting cards.• CONTRASTS — HolidayRnortn im " fl rnllortinn nf

handcrafted pieces, is on display atContrasts. The works cover allmedia. "Holiday Spectrum " is ondisplay through Dec. 27, eveningsand weekends in addition toweekday hours. Contrasts is in RedBank at 49 Broad St. Call741-9177.• DIXON PRINTS —

Colorgraphs," photographicprints by R. F. Dixon Jr., are ondisplay in the meeting room of theMonmouth County Library's WallTownship Branch, Old MillShopping Plaza, Route 35, SeaGirt. The show continues throughJan'. 2. Dixon, of Manasquan, usespapers and chemicals to produceabstract images. During the month,the display cases highlight worksby members of theWall/Manasquan Junior Women'sClub.• ART ALLIANCE — The ArtAlliance of Monmouth County, 101Monmouth St., Red Bank, isplanning its Jean Townsend AwardExhibition with a members-onlyall-media show for December. Aholiday art sale also is on display.Holmdel artist Joyce AnastasiaUrbanski is the Showcase Artist ofthe Month. The shows continuethrough Jan. 6. Gallery hours are

• noon to 4 p.m., Tuesdays throughSaturdays.• MCGINLEY SHOW —Oilpaintings by Francis J. McGinley ofToms River are on exhibit duringlibrary hours in the meeting room ofthe eastern branch of theMonmouth County Library, Route35, Shrewsbury, through Jan. 5!

The artist specializes in historicsubjects.• ARTS GALLERY —Paintings by members of theMonmouth Arts Gallery depictingwinter scenes are on exhibit atMidlantic NationalBank/Merchants. 150 Broad St.,Red Bank, through Jan. 2, duringregular working hours.• SCHERER GALLERY —Scherer Gallery, 93 School RoadWest, Marlboro, is presenting aholiday show featuring colorlithographs by Marc Chagall;serigraphs, lithographs anddrawings by Will Barnet; woodcutsand etchings by Hundertwasser;ceramics by Picasso; stabiles andguoaches by Calder; and collagesand paintings by Dubuffet, throughSunday. Gallery hours areWednesdays through Sundays, 10a.m. to 5 p.m.• GREENHOUSE —TheGreenhouse, 206 Norwood Ave.,Oakhurst, is having its holidaycrafts show and sale. Piecesfeatured are blown glass,leatherwork, pottery, metalwork,weaving and woodworking.Regular gallery hours are 9 a.m. to5:30 p.m. Mondays throughSaturdays and Sundays 10 a.m. to

• HISTORICAL EXHIBIT —The Middletown TownshipHistorical Society has opened theexhibit, "Middletown — ThroughArtists' Eyes." It continues at themuseum at Croydon Hall Saturdaysand Sundays from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.through April 27. There is noadmission charge. The museum islocated on Leonardville Road, oneblock south of Route 36, betweenChamone and Bellevue avenues.The exhibit consists of more thantwo dozen paintings and prints byvarious artists.• INAUGURAL EXHIBIT —Marine paintings by Rumson artistBarbara Cocker comprise the firstmonth-long art exhibition staged atthe-Qeeanie Free Library 'mRumson. Nearly 20 works by theartist are being shown through Jan.5. Library officials are acceptingapplications from artists who areinterested in showing their work inthe future. Call 842-2692.• GETCHELL — EdwardGetchell of Long Branch is

—AxhihjjJng a rnllarlinp Ofwatercolors in the fine artsdepartment of the Long BranchPublic Library, 328 Broadway. Theexhibit may be seen until Jan. 6during library hours. The library isclosed Christmas Eve andChristmas Day. The library will beopen New Year's Eye 9 a.m. to 1p.m., and closed New Year's Day.• JENTRA — Through Dec. 31,Jentra Art Gallery is showing thewatercolor paintings of I. Joseph.

Also on display is raku pottery byDavid Smyth.Jewelry and letter openers by SAWMetalsmiths can also be seen.Jentra Fine Art Gallery is at Route33 and Millhurst Road, Freehold.Hours are Tuesdays throughSaturdays, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.;Thursdays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; and byappointment.• NIEMELA EXHIBIT —Poricy Park, Oak Hill Road,Middletown, is displaying the workof Colts Neck artist LorraineNiemela in December and January."Scenes of Monmouth County"were painted in watercolors onlocation. In conjunction with herexhibit, at 2 p.m. Jan. 4 at the park,the artist will lead a discussion onmaterials and techniques for on-site watercolor. Poricy Park NatureCenter is open on weekdays from9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and on Sundaysfrom 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.• STATE MUSEUM — Eighty-one works by 54 artists, includingfive from Monmouth County, wereselected from 371 entries for "NewJersey Arts Annual: Fiber, Metaland Wood'' at the New Jersey StateMuseum, Trenton. County artistsare Ellen Eichel, Allenhurst,handpainted silk hangings; -Deborah J. Felix, AtlanticHighlands, surface design wallhangings; Diane Josephs,Matawan, ceramic and seed wallhangings; Lincoln Seitzman, WestLong Branch, wood accessory; andHelyn Slovak, Interlaken, quiltedwall hanging. The exhibitioncontinues through Jan. 11.• VISIONS OF PEACE — TheSquibb Gallery, Princeton, ispresenting an internationalcollection of art by students age 5to 19 who have painted their"Visions of Peace." The exhibitionis open until Jan. 11.• NEWARK MUSEUM —"Avant-Grande American Painting,1911-1946" continues throughJan. 25 at the Newark Museum.This exhibition presents a range ofabstract expressionism. Also,museum exhibition "Coptic Art ofAncient Egypt: Treasures from theNadler Collection and the NewarkMuseum," is being extendedthrough Jan. 31. It features morethan 100 treasures from antiquity.The museum is at 49 WashingtonSt. It is open Tuesdays throughOundaya from noon to 6 p.nhAdmission is free. For informationcall 596-6550.• WHITNEY MUSEUM — TheWhitney Museum of American Artis presenting "John SingerSargent,'' a retrospective of 168 oilpaintings, watercolors anddrawings, through Jan. 4. Theexhibition provides an overview ofSargent's work and consists of hisfull-length portraits of prominent

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HOLIDAY SHOW — Jean Pierre Pezzella of WestDeal is an exhibitor in the Guild of Creative Art'sholiday show at the gallery in Shrewsbury. Works

THE REGISTER/BILL DENVER

in all media by exhibiting and associate membersare featured through Jan. 2. Pezzella is showingthis work, untitled, in charcoal and pastel.

English and American figures.• AMERICAN MUSEUM —The "Venus of Lespugue, afemale figurine created during thelate Ice Age is part of the exhibition"Dark Caves, Bright Visions: Life InIce Age Europe," which hasopened in the American Museum olNatural History's Gallery 3, NewYork. It continues until Jan. 18. Themuseum has a pay-what-you-wish admission policy.• COOPER-HEWITT— ,"Perspective: The Illusion ofSpace," an exhibition of 60drawings, prints, rare books,wallpapers, textiles and porcelains,is on view through March 1 at theCooper-Hewitt Museum, 2 East91 st St., New York. Hours areTuesdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.;Wednesdays through Saturdays,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sundays,noon to 5 p.m. The museum isclosed Mondays. For information,phone(212)860-6868.• MOMA — A retrospective ofworks on paper by French artistJean Dubuffet is on view in theMuseum of Modern Art's DrawingsGalleries through Jan. 13."Dubuffet: Works on Paper"features 13 prints, four paintingsand one sculpture.• WHITNEY MUSEUM — Anexhibition of cut-out sculpture isbeing shown at the WhitneyMuseum of American Art at PhilipMorris, New York, through Feb. 17."Contemporary Cut-outs"

presents 28 mixed media objects,both freestanding works and wallpieces. The exhibition gallery isopen free to the public Mondaysthrough Saturdays from 11 am: to6 p.m. and Thursdays to 7:30 p.m.Gallery talks are given Monday.Wednesday and Friday at 12:30p.m.

• THE GUGGENHEIM —"Oskar Kokoschka, 1886-1980,"an exhibition of 92 paintings and 91works on paper at the Solomon R.Guggenheim Museum, New York,continues on view through Feb. 16.

• COOPER-HEWITT —"Recollections: A Decade ofCollecting," an exhibition at theCooper-Hewitt Museum in NewYork, presents a selected overviewof museum acquisitions from 1976to 1986. It is on view until March 1.

The museum is at 2 East 91 st St.Hours are Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 9p.m.; Wednesdays throughSaturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; andSundays, noon to 5 p.m. Themuseum is closed on Monday.

• WHITNEY MUSEUM — Aretrospective of American abstractsculptor John Storrs continues atthe Whitney Museum of AmericanArt, Madison Avenue at 75th St.,New York, through March 22. Theexhibition of more than 150

scultpures, paintings, drawings,and prints examines his careerfrom 1913 to 1948.

• BROOKLYN MUSEUM— '"The Advent of Modernism: Post-Impressionism and North AmericanArt, 1900-1916" is featuredthrough Jan. 19 at the BrooklynMuseum, 200 Eastern Parkway,New York, in the rotunda andadjacent galleries, 5th floor. Theexhibition consists of 125 paintingsand watercolors by 54 American •and Canadian painters.

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ADVICEAnother unfortunate case of 'too little, too late'

Dear Ann Landers: Pleaseprint this letter so that otherswho find themselves In a similarsituation might be betterprepared to handle a sorrowthat will burden our familymembers as long as we live.

My father passed away a fewmonths ago. He was a fairlyreligious Jewish man who mar-ried a Catholic woman late Inlife, after Mama died. When hemarried this woman he stoppedpracticing his religion but he didnot convert to Catholicism.They were married for tenyears.

Unfortunately, father nevertold us where he wished to beburled. We Just assumed that hewould be next to Mama In theJewish cemetery. We werewrong. His wife had him buried

AnnLanders,

In a Catholic cemetery. We feelshe showed no respect for us, hischildren. We tried to talk herout of It but It was Impossible.Legally, we had no recourse.

We find it very difficult tovisit our father's graveslte. Wealso find it hard to believe thatthis is the way he wanted It. Wewill still never know the answer.It Is buried with him.

Too late we realised we shouldhave had a meeting with outfather and his wife and dis-cussed the situation. We arecertain he would have made Itclear that he wanted to beburied in the Jewish cemeteryand we would not now be somiserable. — ANGRY IN NEWJERSEY

DEAR NEW JERSEY: Anotherexample of "too little too late." Ifoel sad for all concerned. I hopeyour letter serves as a catalyst forsome discussions that will spareothers from suffering the samefate.

Dear Ann Landers: Privatebusinesses and government of-fices around the country have

apparently been conned Intohaving plped-in music for the"enjoyment" of the caller on

hold.Here's one caller who resents

being forced to listen to musicthat is not my style. Worse yet,some phones are tapped intoradio stations that can trap theholder Into listening to com-mercials. Many times I thoughtsomeone was talking to me andI have answered, "What wasthat again?" I feel pretty foolishwhen I discover I am talking tomyself.

The quality of music over thephone leaves a lot to be desired.But my real objection is that thegovernment la spending my taxdollars on tasteless, frivolous

telephone music and com-mercials.

I am not a chronic complalnernor a malcontent. I'm Just an

average citizen with a legit-imate beer. If enough peoplefeel as I do they should say so.In the face of a horrendousuproar something will have tobe done to get rid of this pestypractice. Are you willing to sayhow YOU feel about It, Ann? —BILL H., ROCHESTER, WASH.

DEAR BILL: Yup, I'm willing tosay. I don't care for the music orthe commercials. I've got nothingagainst silence. In fact I think wecould use a lot more of it.

Dear Ann Landers: Ourneighbor's child Is havingtrouble In school. He waslabeled a "alow learner." I be-lieve the problem started whenhe was a toddler.

The boy was left-handed andhis father insisted that he be

forced to switch over. Could thishave interfered with his learn-ing ability? — JOHNSTOWN,PA.

DEAR JOHN: The experts say itis not a good idea to try to makea righthander out of a southpaw.The forced switch may have inter-fered with the child's learningprocess.

Ann Landers' booklet, "Sexand the Teenager," explainsevery aspect of sexual behavior— where to draw the line, how ,to say no, the various methodsof contraception, the dangers ofVD, the symptoms and where toget help. For a copy, send 12 anda long, self-addressed, stampedenvelope (39 cents postage) toAnn Landers, P.O. Box 11995,Chicago, 111. 60611.

To safely clean a rag doll, remove stuffing and hand-washDEAR HELOISE:

Do you know of any way inwhich a rag doll might be cleaned?Recently, we found one which hadbeen stored for years in the attic.It has been uncovered and wasquite dusty and dirty. Also, theyarn hair is very soiled.

Thanks in advance for yourhelp. — Mrs. Grace Lucas

The most satisfactory methodI know to clean a rag doll orstuffed animal which cannot bewashed Is to open a seam In aninconspicuous place. Make theseam opening as small aspossible — usually Just largeenough to slip one's handthrough to the inside.

Carefully remove the stuffing,set it aside, then hand-wash thedoll in cool water, using a milddetergent. Rinse well and drythe material thoroughly.

If you do not want to use theold stuffing you can replace itwith new or add new stuffing tothe old If more Is needed forfilling. Then? restiteh the seam.

Many times the appearance ofa favorite muffed toy can begreatly Improved by simply dip-ping a brush in sudsy water andgently scrubbing it. Let the toydry, then brush It well with a drybrush to re-flufr the nap. —Helolse

Gift wrap suppliesDear Meloise: I seemed to spend

a lot of time getting out andputting away things I use to wrapgifts such as paper, tape, ribbon,etc.

Then I thought to wrap a coupleof boxes of Christmas paper andplace them under the tree. I put abow on top of each one and theylook 4ike gifts. N L l

know where the wrappingparaphernalia is. — Toni Black-well

Plant rootingDear Heloise: I love African

violets. The other day whilewatering them, I broke off a leaf.I didn't want to throw it away soI looked around for a small con-tainer to root it in.

I spotted an empty pill bottleand it worked fine for me. Ofcourse, the bottles come in all sizesbut I used a rather large one.

You can also jazz up the bottlesa little by decorating them withpretty seals. They make prettylittle containers for rooting othersmall plants too. — Clella West-erfield

Letter of thoughtDear Heloise: For those of us

who feel there is too muchemphasis on toys during the hol-idays and on other gift-givingoccasions, here's what I do: Ialways include a book for my littleones as their "special" gift.

I have three children. Now thatthey are older, they all enjoy theself-satisfaction and enjoymentone can get from the pleasure of agood book. I attribute this to theemphasis that has always beenplaced on books in our house. —Kathi Strivelli

Reading Is such a Joy andcertainly an everlasting gift. —Heloise

Trouser shineDear Heloise: My husband has

several pairs of pants that are likenew. Due to his sitting in a chairall day at the office, the pants'seats are shiny.

I remember you once had aremedy for this but I don't re-member what it was. Please helpas I don't want to have to discardthe pants. — Mrs. Peter Salamone

H'l'ry dipping a colorfast cloth inundiluted white vinegar, then rubthe shiny spots vigorously, first inone direction then the other. Letthe pants air-dry afterward. Ifpressing is needed be sure to use apressing cloth to avoid havinjthe—

shine recur.If the shine hasn't been

eliminated to your satisfaction,use a very fine grade of sandpaperand lightly rub over the fabric.Use caution when doing this. Youcould make the situation worsebut, if you I are contemplatingdiscarding the pants anyway youdon't have much to lose.

Hopefully, your problem will besolved. — Heloise

Shrinking meringueDear Heloise: For those who

have a problem with meringueweeping and shrinking, I havefound a neat little trick whichworks for me. Just add a dollop ofmarshmallow creme to the mer-ingue while beating it. Top yourpie and brown the meringue asusual.

There is little difference inflavor or texture and no shrinkingor weeping. I've had leftover piefor several days and the bottomcrust might be soggy but themeringue still looked as perfect asthe day it was baked. It really

works great. — CD.Line drying

Dear Heloise: Here is a sugges-tion for those who like to putshirts, dresses, etc. on hangers onthe clothesline to dry or to air-

Try putting the garment on onehanger on the line then, place asecond hanger in the same gar-ment so it will clip on the line inthe opposite direction.

This interlock will secure the'two hangers on the line and willkeep the garment from falling onthe ground when the wind isblowing.

I also put two clothespins on theline — one on each side of thehangers — to keep the hangersfrom sliding up and down the line.— Beatrice Simpson

Send a money- or time-savinghint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000,San Antonio, Texas 78279. Shecan't answer your le t te rpersonally but will use the besthints received in her column.

Be sure to clean the fireplace to prevent soot buildupIf your chimney needs cleaning,

do it now before the cold weathersets in and you have the desire fora warm, crackling Tlfe infireplace.

The first thing to do if you planto clean the chimney yourself, iscover your fireplace opening withan old wet sheet. The flying sootwill adhere to the wet sheer andyou'll have less of a mess to a cleanup after you're through.

The actual cleaning can be done

several ways. Old-timers used totie a rope to a small fir tree and3ull it up the chimney. A six footlength ol heavy cfiain or an OIB Betof automobile tire chains loopedand tied to the end of a rope canbe lowered into the chimney andswished against the sides, or fill aburlap bag with straw or rags,weight it with stones and pull it upthe flue.

A yearly check of your fireplace'is a must.

The smoke shelf should be freeof soot and there should be no birdnests, leaves or other debris in the

-Soot will bum M«*-charcoal if it is ignited.

You should also examine theinside top of your fireplace forbuildup of black crust or tar. If abuildup is evident, scrape it offand then stop burning soot-

producing materials in the fire-place. Some of the worse offendersare plastic-covered materials

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6C ThelegtoterFRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986

YOUR TOWNHovnanians honored at tenth anniversary testimonial dinner

ANNIVERSARY — John Russo, left, president of the New JerseyState Senate, presents a proclamation to Vahakn Hovnanian, right,

as New Jersey AssemblyHaytaian looks on.

Majority Leader Garabed "Chuck"

MIDDLETOWN — Vahak S.and Hasmig Hovnanian,Navesink River Road, werehonored recently at a testi-monial dinner celebrating thetenth anniversary of the Hovna-nian Armenian School in NewMllford.

During the event, which raisednearly $300,000 for the school,Mr. Hovnanian was presentedwith the Insignia of Prince ofCilicia, the highest lay honor thatcan be bestowed by the Arme-nian Apostolic Church.

In a letter to Mr. Hovnanianread by New Jersey AssemblyMajority Leader Garabed"Chuck" Haytaian, PresidentRonald Reagan said:

"Your tireless efforts and un-stinting dedication over theyears in preserving and promot-ing the cultural and religioustraditions of your ancestralhomeland are a source ofspecial pride to the members ofthe Armenian Community."

Other congratu la torymessages were received fromGov. Thomas Kean, CaliforniaGov. George Deukmejian, andCongressmen Matthew Rinaldoand Jack Kemp.

On hand for the recep-tion/dinner were AssemblySpeaker Charles Hardwick andSenate President John Russo,each of whom presented Mr.Hovnanian with proclamationsfrom their respective legislativechambers.

More than 500 friends, familymembers, business associates,

public officials and members ofthe Armenian community turnedout for the event. Mr. Hovnanianis chairman of the school'sboard of trustees.

Discussing Armenian schoolsin the United States, keynotespeaker Dr. Richard Hovan-nisian, professor of Armenianand Near East History at theUniversity of California. Los An-geles, said, "It is possible nowfor Armenian education to existin our communities...(but)Armenian education can suc-ceed only by competing with thevery best."

Other speakers included thecouple's children, Shant andNina; Martin Nalbandian, chair-man of the testimonial commit-tee and a founding member ofthe school; Archbishop MesrobAshjian, prelate of the ArmenianApostolic Church of America;and Rev. Vahrich Shirinian.

Also, Hiriar Hovnanian; ShantTashjian, representing alumni ofthe school; Zvart Ballkjlan, onbehalf of Friends of the Hovna-nian School; and Dr. KnarlgKhatchadourian, on behalf ofthe school's P.T.O.

Responding to the evening'shonors, Mr. Hovnanian paidtribute to all who had helpedthroughout the years to makethe school a reality. Quotingpoet Langston Hughes, Mr.Hovnanian said, "Hold fast todreams for If dreams die, life Islike a broken-winged bird thatcannot fly."

Borough history societyholdMs^nnuaLmeeting

RED BANK — The Red BankHistorical Society held its 14thannual meeting last week at TheOlde Union House.

Mary H. Kirby, here, presi-dent, conducted. Dr. RichardSorrell. here, professor of his-tory at Brookdale CommunityCollege, Lincroft, was guestspeaker. Sixty members andfriends attended.

Mayor Michael J. Arnone andGail Hunton, Roosevelt, histori-cal consultant to the Preserva-tion Committee of the society,were guests.

Kirby reported to themembership that restoration ofthe clock tower atop Red BankPolice Headquarters, Mon-•mouth Street, is almost com-plete. She praised Arnone forhis support in this effort.

The society will take part inrededication ceremonies in thenear future. Kirby pointed outthat this building was con-structed in 1892 as theShrewsbury Township Hall andthat it is listed in the NationalRegister of Historic Places.

All society standing commit-tees reported their activities for1986. George Ward, chairman ofthe Nominating Committee,presented a slate to re-electPresident Mary Kirby, VicePresident Alexander J. Finch,Monmouth Hills, and TreasurerRobert F. Worden, Middletown.Mary R. Hufnagel, here, waselected secretary to .succeedMalcolm E. Minton, here.

Mary Ann Kiernan of The

AlumnusO'Haracited

RUMSON — Eugene M.O'Hara has been honored asdistinguished alumnus of Uni-versity College-Newark (UC-N), Rutgers University.

O'Hara, a 1962 graduate ofUC-N, has been senior vicepresident and comptroller of thePrudential Insurance Companyof America since 1962.

He received his Rutgershonor at a recent reunion anddinner dance sponsored by theUC-N Alumni Association atRobeson Campus Center,Rutgers-Newark.

The event is sponsored eachyear by the UC-N Alumni As-sociation to allow graduates torenew and strengthen ties withthe school and theirschoolmates,, as well as tohonor alumni who have dis-tinguished themselves in theircareers.

The honoree began his ca-

Greater Red Bank "Voice" andauthor of "The Monmouth Pa-tent" presented an autographedcopy of the book to Minton.

Kirby presented the outgoingsecretary with a gold pen andpencil set from the Society'smembership.

Kirby reminded the audiencethat the society is a nonprofitcultural and educational or-ganization dedicated to historicpreservation. The society hasalready thrown its support to the"Plaque on the Back" theaterseat restoration at the CountBasie Theater, Monmouth ArtsCenter, here. In 1987 there areexpected to be expenditures forspecial preservation-relatedprojects that will endanger thetreasury's operating balanceand she made an appeal forvoluntary contributions to reach,a goal of $400. Ward pointed outthat members and friends of thesociety, for example, couldreach the goal through help offorty gifts of $10 each, or twentygifts of $20, or eighty at $5. Giftsmay be sent to the Treasurer,Red Bank Historical Society,P.O. Box 712, Red Bank, 07701,earmarked "Historic Preserva-tion Fund." The appeal alreadyhas been approved as anecessary implementation bythe society's Board of Directors.

The next meeting of the So-ciety will be held at 8 p.m. onJan. 30 at the municipal building.This is an organizational meet-ing and committee chairmen willbe named for the new year.

Eugene M. O'Hara

reer at Prudential in 1955 as atrainee in the auditing divisionand progressed through theranks to his present position.He did graduate work at CityCollege of New York andearned the Chartered LifeUnderwriter designation fromthe American College of LifeUnderwriters.

He is active in manyprofessional organizations andwas recently elected to theboards of trustees of Mon-mouth College,. MonmouthMedical Center and RutgersUniversity.

Getting acquaintedJunior Miss contestants got acquainted during arefreshment break at the orientation meetingheld recently in the library at BordentownRegional High School for the 1987 New JerseyJunior Miss Program. In photo, MonmouthCounty's Junior Miss Jennifer Noland, left, asenior at Monmouth Regional High School, and

Ocean County's Junior Miss Leah Benedict, asenior at Point Pleasant Beach High School chatduring the meeting. The girls will be among 20county representatives who will vie for cash andcollege scholarship awards and the title of NewJersey's Junior Mis* for 1967 on Jan. 10 at CherryHill High School East, Cherry Hill.

Dance classregistrationstarts todays

HAZLET — The HazletRecreation Department Is offer-ing beginner children's danceclasses at Hazlet Dance Center,Union Avenue and Middle Road.Registratieft-<e* tha- classesstarts today for classes to beginearly in January.

Classes in creative dance areavailable for three- and four-years olds from 10 to 10:45 a.m.on Thursdays; In tap for fiveyears and up on Mondays from4 to 5 p.m.; in ballet for six yearsand up on Thursdays from 4 to5 p.m.; in jazz for seven yearsand up on Fridays from 3:30 to4:30 p.m.; and handicappedjazzercise, including deaf andblind, for teens through adultage on Saturdays from 10 to 11a.m.

The discounted fee for eachten week couse is $19 for allexcept creative dance and thehandicapped classes. Creativedance is $17 and the handi-capped class is six sessions at$10.

Gift cards are available forHanukkah gifts or Christmasstocking stuffers.

•For reservations and furtherinformation, call the recreationoffice at 739-0653.

Buccaneer takes firstLITTLE SILVER — In the

Garden State Scholastic PressAssociation's (GSSPA) 1986Journalism contest, Red BankRegional High School's'newspaper, "The Buccaneer,"took first place in photography.

The awards were given at theGSSPA's 1986 conference heldrecently.

Seniors Donna Rizzo andKerry Mulvihill combined on theaward winning picture featureon the band "State Property"from "The Energy Show" tapedat the high school.

The Buccaneer was alsohonored for its overall layout on •"Teenage Pregartcies," a twopage special interest feature.The honorable mention awardwas shared by many of the staffreporters who worked on it withspecial commendation to seniorLaura Ross, who did a majorityof the layout.

Also, 13 professional journal-ists gave workshops to help thestudent journalists with theirtechniques.

Mary Koch, public relationscoordinator for First FidelityBank, discussed career optionsfor "The Corporate Writer" forthose students with journalisticbackgrounds who do not wantto work for a newspaper.

Professor of Communica-tions, Herbert Jackson, adviserto the newspaper of WilliamPatterson College, taught

"Copy Editing" to show studenteditors how to make writingaccurate, concise and interest-ing. The Computer Prospresented the newest thing inp u b l i s h i n g , " D e s k t o pPublishing," for the students toexplore.

Buccaneer Adviser Robert W.Thomas, put the awards inperspective. "It's nice to berecognized by this prestigiousorganization. It is a tribute to themany hours Mr. Perrine and thestaff put into publishing TheBuc. But we still have a long way

.xo go before we are consideredwith the top scholasticnewspapers in the state," hesaid.

Be part of Your TownIs your group planning a

benefit? Does your organiza-tion have a meeting sched-uled? Do you have somenews for the people of Mon-mouth County? Let us hearabout it and become part ofYour Town.

All information must betyped or neatly written andbe received at least twoweeks prior to the event. Allpress releases should in-/elude the time, date and

place of the event as well asany admission charges.

Releases must also in-clude a phone number forreaders to call for moreinformation. Picture ideasare also welcomed.

If the event has alreadyhappened, send us the infor-mation as soon as possible.

Send all releases to KarenSpiewak, Your Town editor,1 Register Plaza,Shrewsbury, 07701.

Make A DateA paid directory ol coming events. Rates $3.75 tor three lines for one day ($1.50 each additional line), $5.00 forthree lines (or two days ($1.50 each additional line), $6.50 for three lines lor three days ($2.00 each additionalline), $7.50 (or three lines (or (our. or live days ($2.25 each additional line), $9.00 for three lines (or six to eightdays ($2.50 each additional line), $10.50 (or three lines tor nine to ten days ($3.00 each additional line). $13.50for three lines lor eleven days. Each additional day $1.00. each additional line $3.00. Deadline 11:00 a.m. two

. days before publication. Call The Daily Register, 542-4000, ask for The Date Secretary.

EVERY SUNDAYS.O.S. (Starting Over Singles)Dance, free buffet, door prizes,Shore Point Inn, 2nd floor, Hazlet,(Every Sunday) 8pm. Admission$5.

DECEMBER 20 A 21SATURDAY * SUNDAY

Bus trip to Radio City Xmas show.

DECEMI{ SATURDAI Bus trip to Radl

By New Horizon By Camilla. Or-chestra seats. Bus leaves RedBank & Hazlet. $37. Call 872-2364.

DECEMBER SI—WEDNESDAYNew Years Eve dance sponsoredby The Jersey Shore Scots' Ameri-can Club. Music by the Martin

Flynn Shore Band. Onm-lam. S26per person. B.Y.O.B. Call 870-0625.

OCTOBER 17,1B877 days, 7 islands, Caribean cruise.Deposit required by Jan. 1. Con-tact Kay Lockwood 291-1653 af-ter 6pm.

RIDAY, DECEMBER 19,15

SMALL SCREEN TRAVEL7C

FRIDAY PRIME TIME

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Caroling—Continued from Page 1C

at the Red Bank Convales-cent Center. Meredith and hissingers visited her annually whenshe maintained her own apart-ment near the church.

"She had a fairly small livingroom but always invited every-body into her home, gave us somecandy and sent Home candy home.She insisted on inviting us in. Wewould not miss going to see hereanywhere," he said.

And evoking memories is whatcaroling is all about.

Scharmann began Christmascaroling when she was a young

Vacation

girl, in the Brownies, then con-tinued the seasonal singingthrough Girl Scouting and hercollege years. As an under-classman at SkidhWe in Saratogashe recalled that she and herclassmates donned white scarves,lit candles and sang Christmascarols outside the dormitories ofthe upperclassmen.

"When I was younger it wasprobably the most exciting thingto do, outside of Christmas Dayand going to view the windowsand Rockefeller Center in NewYork. It makes you feel excitedbecause that is the way you grewup feeling. It has carried over into

adulthood," Scharmann said.Gardiner has sung in church

choirs all her life and finds aparticular enjoyment in caroling."At any church I have been af-filiated with I have gone caroling.It is special to be able to sing thecarols and sing them well," shesaid.

It is also a sharing of themeaning of Christmas, Scharmannsaid. "I am always happy to bringmusic into the lives of people whocannot get out to hear it."

"This is a special time for thechoir. They feel really good to goout to people who really need tohear the music," Meredith said.

Continued from Page 1C

It is closed Mondays.Admission is free.

Skiing In Vermont for the Coxfamily, or in Maine for the Con-nollys, or at Arrowhead YMCASki Area on Route 520 in Marlborofor home-bound vacationers if theweather permits, is another op-tion.

And so is a trip to Disney Worldand Sea World in Orlando, Fla.,where Stanley and Ellen Straussof Fair Haven have family. "It issomething different," EllenStrauss said. But were she to stayhere with her son, 6, and daugh-ters 3 and 11 months, she findsthat Middletown's Poricy Park isa fabulous resource any time of

' the year.A holiday open house is planned

from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. next Sunday,Dec. 28, at the Murray FarmHouse at Poricy Park, Oak HillRoad in Middletown. Visitors maytour the colonial home, which isdressed for a traditional colonialChristmas, and see how Christmaswas celebrated in the 18th cen-tury. Admission is free. PoricyPark is also staging a scavengerhunt for children in grades 1 to 3at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 30.Registration is required, and feesof $4 are being charged for non-members, and $2 for members.Call the nature center at842-5966.

A final free event at Poricy Parkis a nature walk beginning at 10a.m. Jan. 3. There is no age limit,no fee and no registration re-quired. Walkers should meet in thenature center parking lot.

The Minimum li County ParkSystem plans holiday overnight

events for special populations ofyoung people 12 and older Mondayand Tuesday, Dec. 20 and 30.Overnight outing activities in-cluding bowling, arts and crafts,and movies. The fee for the two

"parks system=8ponsored^4=hour—programs, both of which begin atnoon, is $ 1(1. They take place atTatum Park Special Services

Building on Holland Road in Mid-dletown, and at Thompson ParkDay Camp Center on NewmanSprings Road in Lincroft. The feefor both programs includes allequipment. The park system,842-4000, should be contacted forregistration.

There's also plenty of informalactivities to keep your childrenbusy.

Stay at home.

Let the teen-agers have a party.Tour holiday decorations atnight, and just enjoy the season isa suggestion by Mona Garcia ofEatontown, the motherof a 15-year-old son and a 13-year-olddaughter.

The Monmouth'County His-torical Association Museum at70 Court St. in Freehold recalls thetraditions of past yuletide cel-ebrations in its exhibition com i miing through Jan. 4. The associa-tion's Georgian-style museumbuilding is decorated with tra-ditional materials, and the high-light is the recreation of a 19thcentury parlor on Christmas morn-ing.

There also are movies to rent towatch at home, and movies to seein the theater.

The Monmouth County Li-

brary System has a selection ofvideocassettes that may be bor-rowed. "A ton of kiddie titles areavailable," John Smothers, audiovideo/film librarian, said. Theytravel the system's video circuit.Each member library has a dif-ferent selection monthly. Disneyfilms and animated tapes based onchildren's books are designedspecifically for the younger set.

Most may be borrowed at nocharge, he said.

Non-member libraries have of-ferings, too. The Red Bank PublicLibrary, for instance, has"Dumbo," "Back to the Future"and Care Bears videocassettesavailable for circulation.

And a gathering around the VCRwith some popcorn can be the corefor a fun party at home withfriends or siblings.

Movies in the theater this seasoninclude "An American Tale," and"Song of the South."

"There is always a good chil-dren's movie in the theater. Wecheck out the local theaters.Whatever is playing for kids wetry to take in,".Cox said.

Just in case anyone hasn't hadhis fill of "The Nutcracker," a fewchances remain. "Nutcracker, TheMotion Picture" is playing at areamovie theaters.

If after all these choices, yourchildren still complain ofboredom, tell them they are wel-come to clean your house from topto bottom.

Chances are, before you get outthe broom and mop, they will havefound some sort of activity to keepthemselves busy.

By UNOA STEWARTRegister Correspondent

What sounds are sweeter than the squeak of newsnow crunched underfoot, the slap of boards againsta well-packed trail?

With school vacations and end-of-temn breakslooming Just ahead, all of New England seems to bebraced to receive its annual invasion of skiers. FromSaddleback in the western mountains of Maine toWaterville Valley in New Hampshire, the slopes aresnow-covered and the lifts are running.

Each year we're told the season will be bigger andbetter than ever. And each year it's true. For the past10 years there's been a steady improvement in theamenities, facilities and safety measures. NewEngland winter sports have come a long way sincethe days of Ethan Frame.

Since 1970 Killington, Vermont, has prided itself onbeing the first of the New England ski resorts to openeach year. Mammoth investments in snow-makingequipment have eclipsed the spectre of grassy slopes.From Killington Peak, reached by 3V4-mile gondolaand a 1U-mile chairlift, skiers can goggle at apanorama that extends over 5 states and intoCanada.

Most people who ski Killington are more thancontent to stay in the immediate area, whereaccommodations range from the super deluxe condosof High Ridge to immaculate bed and breakfasts. HighRidge and the likes thereof are priced between $ 175and $280 for 3 nights and 3 days. Kitchen facilitiesare included but if the family cook goes on strike,there are plenty of local restaurants from which tochoose. Considerably less pricey is the ChaletSaltzbury where rates are quoted at $65 per person,double occupancy, breakfast included.

Travel north from Killington along Route 100 andyou'll hit first Stowe and then Smugglers' Notch, bothlong established, welcoming second and even thirdgenerations of loyal skiers. Devotees of the snows ofStowe can ski one day on Mount Mansfield, the nextday on Spruce Peak. More than welcome is the newsthat a new chairlift carrying four abreast has beeninstalled on Mount Mansfield.

For those who eschew the heights, cross countryskiiing is readily available. Guests at Stowe's TrappFamily Lodge pay all of $5 for a full day's guidedskiiing over a network of cross country trails thatthis year has been expanded to cover almost 100miles. Apres ski fun includes a large, heated indoorpool where Charley horses can be gentled and soremuscles soothed.

DEPARTURE TIMEChances are a full day of skiing only whets those

junior appetites for ever more In the way ofactivities. Recent years have seen the installation of"video game lounges," intended of course to siphonoff some of that excess juvenile energy.

But no Pac Man game can compare in satisfactionto a full-size indoor pool where kids can cannonballon through the night. An indoor tennis court is, forthis same reason, a welcome plus. A midnight gameof doubles is as delightful to a 15-year old as a rumtoddy and a tube of Ben Gay would be to his parents.Topnotch at Stowe has free indoor tennis.

Brad Moore of Smuggler's Notch insists that noother New England resort is as attuned to wholefamily vacations. Baby sitting, day care, children'smenus, ski schools that start with toddlers and goright through junior racers... these are a few of theextras, often at no extra cost, by which themanagement at Smuggler's Notch annually attractsthousands.

Due east of Stowe and Smuggler's Notch, alongroute 2, just across the Main state line, is SaddlebackOne of Maine's undoubted charms is its lack ofenthusiasm for razz-ma-tazz: Saddleback Mountainoverlooking Rangeley State Park is as fine skiiing ascan be found in New England. The Rangeley Inn andSaddleback Lake Lodge are well appointed andsplendidly managed. Smaller inns and plenty offarmhouse bed and breakfasts are found all aroundSaddleback.

What isn't found?Crowded trails, long waits for lifts, long waits for

dining room tables and jam-ups at the tow ticketwindows. Typically Maine.

No less typically Maine is Sugarloaf, just a fewmiles north of Saddleback along Route 27. Not toomany maniacs brood over the possibility of bluebirdweather in mid-winter. Nonetheless, Sugarloaf thisyear will have more than half its trails covered bysnow-making equipment, virtually guaranteeingideal downhill conditions.

Both the Narrow Guage Station and the SugarloafInn report more advance bookings than in anyprevious year. First snow fell early in November andnighttime temperatures have obligingly remainedbelow freezing ever since.

more than a fireplace, a drink, dinner and bed, thesame definitely does not hold true for their kids.

A sleigh ride througha New England ski resort CROSSWORD

JUMBLEYOUR HOROSCOPE

i THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby Henri Arnold and Bob Lao

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,on* letler to each square, to formfour ordinary words.

| OONES

CEROWi n:

1

1BEWOLB: M • [••:

STEACKi 1 1 :

D \! O

TO PO.

Now arrange the circled letters toform the surprise answer, as sug-gested by the above cartoon.

Tesiemy •

(Answer9 tOfnofTow)FUSION BUSILY

it apiow salesmen has to be a master of—THE SOFT SELL

Jumbles: ELUDE JETTY

EoTeM am, off, n>

By Stella Wilder

FRIDAY, DEC. 19Born today, you are the living defi-

nition of the Renaissance man orwoman. You are multi-talented, andyour interests cover a startlingly widerange. You are quite capable in all ar-eas to which you devote your energies;this may cause some difficulty, for youwhen you are young and trying to de-cide what you shall do with your life.The choices are many, and no singledecision will satisfy you You are aborn humanist: Nothing interests youso much as mankind -• its strengthsand weaknesses

Men born on this date tend to besmall, compact specimens, thoughstronger and more athletic than othersmight suppose. Women possess a kindof unusual, "haunting" beauty, and areknown, too. (or their strength. Bothare quite aggressive in all things •• es-pecially personal relationships.

Also born on this date arc JeanGenet, playwright; Cicely Tyeon,•ctrese.

To see what is in store for you to-morrow, find your birthday and readthe corresponding paragraph. Letyour birthday star be your daily guide.

SATURDAY, DEC. SOSAGITTARIUS (Nov. ZZ-Dec. t l ) •-

A valuable new perspective could beafforded you today simply by a changeof location. Don't travel far. however.

CAPRICORN (Dec. ZZ-Jan. II) -You are needed by family members toguide them through midday decision-making today. Don't dictate; suggest!

AQUARIUS (Jan. tO-Feb. II) -

Quiet solitude offers you a much-need-ed break from family affairs - as wellas the time to solve a personal puzzle.

PISCES (Feb. It-March Zl) - Newsyou receive early in the day may be in-complete - or even erroneous. Don'tbe hasty in making decisions.

ARIES (March Zl-April I t ) -Envi -ronmental influences may be particu-larly strong on the unprepared Ariesnative today. Do not stray far.

TAURUS (April ZO-May ZO) - You,like your Aries cousin, feel the effectsof environment on energy, concentra-tion today. Double your efforts!

GEMINI (May Zl-Jaoe ZO) -• Re-main true to your course today, de-spite distractions, obstacles thrown inyour path by younger familymembers.

CANCER (June 21-July ZZ) - Youare struck with a sudden, surprisingrealization early in the day. Manypieces fall into place as a result.

LEO (July 13-Aug. ZZ) - Do not al-low yourself to be a mere pawn in theaffairs of your family today. Say whatyou must say; do what you must do!

VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. ZZ) - Whatotherwise would be commonplaceevents take on unusual importance to-day. Friends express concern.

UBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. ZZ) - Bounceyour timetable off an older member ofthe family today. Trust his/her inputto be objective, honest, valuable.

SCORPIO (Oct. ZS-Nov. Zl) -- Putyour cards on the table today and sitback and wait for the result. You mayfind that many fold their hands.

coprnft! im tiwri r « n SjUtuu lac

ACROSS1 Asperse6 Fan hat

12 Potter's tool14 Dabney or Gary15 Hero of

1884 noval17 I t cathedral

town18 Tender

feelings19 Oriental money20 Endure22 Egg container24 Way27 — in (confine)28 Torpor31 Exercise32 Superman

portrayer34 Showy flowers36 Computer item38 Relative of

a nerd39 Purplish-red

dyes43 Fall flower46 Alter —47 Be Impertinent49 Consume51 Shift53 Gaseous

•lament54 Stupor prat.56 Where Casey

rules58 Ruminants60 Rabbit

relative61 Folklore hero65 Music Man

portrayer66 Most insipid87 Vail68 FBI operations

DOWN1 Let off sparks2 Hand-knotted

trimminfl3 N.C. town4 Everything5 Lurch6 In favor of7 Actor Ron and

family8 Procrastinate

'1987 Tnbuna M M i Strom. Inc.All Rights RexrvM

9 Foreboding10 Sought office11 Blyth13 Meat cut14 Like a

cardinal15 Salmagundi16 Turn Inside,

out21 Taking •

plunge23 Coronets25 Peer Gynt't

mother26 —Moines29 Straighten up30 Sprung up33 Dutch city35 Select37 Church of

the Pop*39 Discharged40 Bygone)41 Md. women's

college42 Descend like

• hawk

Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:

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annnn rannmn nnnnnnnnnnn nnnnnnnnnn nnnnnnnnnn nnnnnnnnf^nn nnnUn RfflHnnnn nnnnn nnnn

44 Moat inex-

45 Weapons(orLendl

48 Prettyhopeless

50 Hopper52 Drench

55 Recesses57 Poker Make59 Thick slice61 Patty offi-

cials: ebbr62 Killer whale63 Mora distant64 Outback bird

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8C The EegUter FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19,1986

MOVIE TIMETABLEATIANTIC TWIN

, A N •• MUAHI I

ALL SEATS S2.50

MOHMOUTH COUNTY

7:30. 9:20PAUK

A»~Ma'la Adult FDrtia (XXX) continuous fromnoon through 11 JO P . MLYMC II THEATRE —

All-Girl Adult Films (XXX) continuous Iromnoon through 11:30 P M PARK CINEMA —

Two Hot Naw Straight Films (XXX) continuousIrom noon through 1 f 3 0 p M

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDSATLANTIC CINEMA I —

Fin Wakar IPO) 7 15. 9 15ATLANTIC CINEMA II -

Stand By Ma (R) 7:30. 9 20EATONTOWN

COMMUNITT I -Thraa Amigoa (PO> 1 . 3 . 5 , 7 4 0 9 4 5

COMMUNITY II —An Amancan TalllQ) 7 15. 8:45

FREEHOLDFREEHOLD CINEMA • —

Thraa Amigoa IPO) 7 40. 9 45FMCHOLD CINEMA ( —

CrocodM Dundaa (PG-13) 7 25 9 25FREEHOLD CINEMA • —

An Amancan Tail (Q) 7 15. 8:45FMEHOLO CINEMA a —

Paggy Sua Got Marnad (PG 131 7 35. S 35FREEHOLD CINEMA I —

Tha GoKrtn Child (PG-I3I 8 00. 10 00FREEHOLD CINEMA 6 —

Star Trak IV(PG) 740. 10:00RT a C r N E M A I -

Tha Color ol Monay (R| 7 15. » 35

Soul Man (PG-13) 7 25 » 40

Haartbraak ROgTlR) 7 25. 9 50RT. 8 CINEMA IV -

Song of tha South (G| 7. a 45HOWELL

CINEMA CENTRE 4Song ol tha South (G) 7. 8 45

CINEMA CENTRE 4 —Thraa Amigoa IPO) 7 40. 9 45

CINEMA CENT!!* 4 —Haartbraak Rrdga (R) 7 25 9 50

CINCMA CENTRE 4 —Patrol (R) 7 30. 9 25

LONO BRANCHLONO BRANCH I -

Star Tr^ck IV (PGI 7.45 10 00LONO MUNCH II —

Tha GoMan Child (PG-13) 7:30. 9 30MIODLETOWN

UA MIOOLETOWN I —LlttlaShopol Horrors (PO-13) 1 15. 7:45. »:45.

1145UA MIDOLETOWN II —

3)115. 7:30. »:»0. " S O Haaittraak RMa »45

RiOga (R) 7:30. 9 SO

• Oot Marnad (PQ-13) 7:20. 9:30

Song ol ma SouthjOl 7:00. 8 45

rWDIANKMOVWai —Haarttraak RMoa (R) 7:25. 9:90

RED BANK MOVIC* I I —Stand By Ma (HI 7:35. »J5

«MMW«auaiT(HIIEWUUIIV PLAZA CINCMA I —

Oowan CNU (PO-I317:30. 9:30S W I I W S W W T K A Z A CINCMA II —

5 945

"ooMan CMM (PO-13) 1.30. 3:20. 5:10. 7. *40 .10 20. 12 00BjijTIMM PLAZA f n a m a II

Lrm. Shop ol Horror. (PO-13) 1:45.345.5:45. tha Tramp (Q) 1. 2 so. 4:00. 5:30.

^SSrVSS^g^*^""

Music MakersTheatresare now

LOEWSTheatres

Lima SKop ol Horrors (RI 7:45. 9:45SMIEWSaOltY PLAZA CINCMA

MCHLO PARK CWtMA I —Star Tral i iPOj^ai5. 5:30. 7:45. 10:00

CrMdran ol a Lassar GoO [RJ 2.4:45.7:30,9 45A MIDOLETOWN II —Three Amigos (PG-13) 1. 7 JO. 9 20, 11:20

UA MIDOLETOWN III —Star Trak (PQ) 1. 7 15. 9 45. 11 50

UA MIOOLETOWN IV —King Kono (PQ-13) 1:15. 7 15. 9:15. 11:15

UA MIOOLETOWN V —

Goldan Child (PG-131 2. 4. 6. 8. 10:00CINEMA II — Clint

EastwoodUA MIOOLETOWN V —Colder, Child (PG-13) 1 5. 7 30. 9 30. 11 30

UA MioounrowN vi —HEARTBREAK RIDGE

STAND BY ME7:35. 9:25

STARTS TODAY

LlttK Shop ol Horror (PG-13)7:45. » 45

NO MERCY7:35.9:40

STARTS TODAYPRISM ENTERTAINMENT & J A M .

2 R0presentTHE ANNUALROCK & ROLLCHRISTMAS

SHOW

•MoiounnnrMn> L > m i i QunnLrMDIN»«aarSTROBCRTSCHOU

RVEPUX

FUNRUNTIfflEXmmtiw

To BenefitToys for Tots & N.J. Needy

gand SPECIAL GUESTS

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 21,7PM

COUNT BASIE THEATRE 99 Monmoulh St.. Red BankTlx: $10 at all TICKETMASTER outlets, 1-800-862-8080

or Box Office 201-842-9002

A SIZZLERI GERE'S BEST PERFORMANCESINCE 'AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN'.

-Jeffrey Lyons, SNEAK PREVIEWS/INN

STARTS TODAY

"EDME MURPHY ISA BRILLIANT COMIC ACTOR

...a genius...a 24-carat superstar...Great!"

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BUSINESS COMICS 8 DFRIDAY. DECEMBER 19,1986

You getFFF '86here 1st

The 1980 National FootballLeague swings into its finalregular season weekend tonightwith eight of the 10 playoffteams decided.

The "ifs" involving the re-mainder of the post-seasonfield would fill half of "Warand Peace," so we'll just steerclear of that scenario. How-ever, the votes are in on thisseason's individual standouts,and thus we present (drum rolland fanfare, please): Fig'sFabulous Footballers (FFF)

For 1986.Let's start out with the

"lesser" awards, in the spirit ofthe Academy Awards presenta-tions.

The FFF "Comeback Playerof the Year" competition wassomewhat lackluster. EarnestJackson was waived byPhiladelphia coach BuddyRyan, and picked up by afullback-needing Pittsburghclub. Jackson promptly turnedinto the Steelers' leadingrusher, needing 145 yards thisweekend for another 1,000-yard season.

However,- San Franciscoquarterback Joe Montana

d J k ' bid fqsurpassed Jackson's bid for anaward. Montana was felled by asevere back injury in Septem-ber, and many said he wouldnever play again. The NotreDame alumnus not. only re-turned, but will lead the 49ersagainst Los Angeles tonight,with the winner to claim theNFC West. Comeback winner —Joe Montana, San Francisco.—The Giants are a victoryaway from clinching the NFCplayoffs home field advantage,but which tram is near the samefeat in the AFC? Surprise. It'sCleveland.

Therefore, the FFK "Coach ofthe Year" honor rests withBrowns' coach Marty Schot-tenheimer, whose team needs avictory over visiting San DiegoSunday to' stay home for trieplayoffs. No one looked atCleveland as an AFC SuperBowl favorite in 1986, but staytuned. Coach of the Year win-ner — Marty Schottenheimer,Cleveland.

A number of interestingrpokles made their way into theNFL news in 1986, mostly withstruggling teams needing freshfaces.

The New Orleans' Saints canend up at 8-8 with a victorySunday, a few notches betterthan a lot of folks predicted.One of the biggest reasons forthat mild surge has been rookieRueben Mayes,.

With 1292 yards and a 4.8average* through 15 weeks,Mayes has been named to theNFC Pro Bowl team, and addsthe FFF "Offensive Rookie ofthe Year" plaudit to a list that'sbound to grow in the next fewweeks.

Offensive Rookie of the Yearwinner — Rueben Mayes, NewOrleans.

On the other sjjje of the ball,first-year players did not makethe same collective splash. At-lanta nose tackle Tony Casillashad a good year and the Giants'Mark Collins has made solidcontributions as notable excep-tions.

However, two linebackers-have emerged as faces to watchin upcoming seasons, andtherefore share the FFF "De-fensive Rookie of the Year"award.

Believe it or not, the MiamiDolphins stil l have amathematical shot at theplayoffs, despite their much-maligned defense. When HughGreen went down early thisseason to injury, the Dolphinlinebacker corps was given lastrites. That gave John Offerdahla chance to shine, and he hasn'tfallen short. Offerdahl's tech-niques have drawn criticism,but not his results.

. Kansas City has not been inthe playoffs since 1971, and avictory Sunday will give them awild-card berth. Insidelinebacker Dino Hackett's playhas been instrumental in theChiefs' late-season push, andhis efforts deserve notation.

Defensive Rookie of the Yearwinners — John Offerdahl,

See FFF. Page 5D

America's CUP

Conner:Give usUSA 1st

FREMANTLE, Australia (AP)— Veteran 12-meter skipperDennis Conner said yesterday hewould rather face fellow Cali-fornian Tom Blackaller and hisUSA in the America's Cupchallenge semifinals than the red-hot entry from New Zealand.

At the same time, Conner saidhe was confident his yacht, Stars& Stripes, could repeat its first-round success against the NewZealand entry in the challengefinals.

He also there was no bad bloodbetween him and Blackaller, asspeculated. "That's the media,"Conner said. "It's a long-timerivalry. We had to beat Tommythe last two times and we will doit in 1986."

Conner won the America's Cupin 1980 but lost the trophy toAustralia in 1983 off Newport,R.I.

Although he said Blackaller'syacht had improved over Itsearlier performances. 'I don't seeany problem beating him."

In the preliminary round to seewhich foreign yacht wouldchallenge the Australian defenderfor the America's Cup trophy,Conner's boat handed New Zea-land it's only loss in 34 matchraces during the series.'

"After racing Tom in a goodseries, we'll be better preparedfor the finals. I consider it a verypositive situation," Conner said.Asked if he could repeat his first-round victory over the fiberglassNew Zealand boat, Conner said: "I

' *Conner pointed out that Stars &

Stripes and New Zealand havesailed 72 miles with only 37seconds difference between them.

"The people who don't thinkwe're competitive with themhaven't been out watching theraces," he said.

Asked if New Zealand had apsychological advantage becauseof Its proximity to Australia andstrong' backing from its people,Conner said: "They have 3V4million New Zealanders behindthem. We'll have 200 millionAmericans behind us when wemeet."

He dismissed French Kiss as- a.mediocre boat which won't win a

' See USA, Page SD

Giantsearnedhonors

EAST RUTHERFORD — Walk into the NewYork Giants' locker room and turn right andyou'll find the lockers of Harry Carson,Lawrence Taylor, Leonard Marshall, BradBenson and Jim Hurt, in that order.

This year, the lockers belong to All Pros, asdo three others in the room — tight end MarkBavaro, halfback Joe Morris and punter SeanLandeta.

"Usually when you have a pretty goodteam and a pretty good record, you're goingto have a lot of guys to go," Carson said afterbeing named a Pro Bowl linebacker for theeighth time. "The Bears had a lot of guys golast year. When the 49ers went to the SuperBowl, they had a lot of guys. It just sayssomething of the quality of the team and howgood you are."

The Giants are very good this year. Theyhave won the NFC East and heading into thefinal weekend of the regular season, they are13-2 and riding an eight-game winningstreak. A victory over Green Bay tomorrowassures them of their best record ever and thehome-field advantage for the playoffs.

The All Pro selection, which is done by theplayers, was the sixth straight for Taylor andthe second straight for Morris and Marshall.It will be the first Pro Bowl for Benson, Hurt,Landeta and Bavaro.

"I thought I had a chance because we wonso many more games this year," said Benson,the offensive tackle who found a home hereafter being cut by New England in 1978."When you do that, it calls attention to moreplayers. I think it's a tribute to my teammatesas well, the other linemen. Being we'vedeveloped a reputation, I guess they (thevoters) felt someone should go. I guess I'm theildest, solKejnrtcked me."

ASSOCIATED PRESSMODERN TIMES — A pristine era of yachting ended yesterday as 12-meter yachts flauntedspinnakers with advertising logos during a fleet race. The race, won by England's White Crusader,is believed to be the first in which sponsors' names were allowed since the International YachtRacing Union relaxed its rules on advertising this year. The sponsors had hoped 20 boats wouldrace; eight showed up.

Burt, the nose tackle who has missed thepast three games with back problems, wasthrilled by his selection.

"I was disappointed when I didn't get it lastyear," he said. "After this year, I thought 1had about a 50-50 chance after 12 games. Ithought I was having a good year. But thenmy back went out on me and I didn't think Ihad a chance of making it."

. Marshall, the defensive end with 12 sacks,also wasn't sure.

"I'm just happy for the other guys whomade it," Marshall said. "I was a littlesurprised. There were a lot of guys in theleague who played well this year, especiallythe defensive linemen. I just (iope we cancontinue what we got now."

See GIANTS. Page SD

Hoop view '86'D' Division's first race could turn into a dandy

Mater Dei and Henry Hudson arethe co-favorites in the newlyaligned Shore Conference "D"Division boys basketball race, but'there are indications that severalother teams will be in the hunt,also.

Both Mater Dei and HenryHudson have veteran teams re-turning with Mater Dei beingfurther strengthened with the ad-dition of Jeff Daiker who trans-ferred, from Middletown High

• Tomorrow: 'B' South and 'C

School South.Holmdel and Keyport could also

be in the race, although Holmdel,with a pi edominatently under-class team, might be a year away.Keyport has plenty of size.

Keansburg could be a dark horsein the race. Point Pleasant Beachmight surprise with the return of

Jim Wisnewski' and WinfieldClarke, while Allentown is re-building.

MATER DEINEW MONMOUTH — Even

without the addition of Daiker,who averaged 20 points a game forMiddletown South last year, theSeraphs would have been con-tenders since they had . fourstarters returning.

Mater Dei coach Keith Glassexpects a good season, but remains

• The scholastic weekendlineup Page 4D

a little cautious."We should be pretty good,"

Glass said. "But how good willdepend on how hard and well weplay together. We won 10 of ourlast 11 games last year and thatwas without Daiker.

"We have good shooting but not

much size," he added. "Everyonewill have to rebound. We've strug-gled on defense in our first coupleof scrimmages, but looked a littlebetter against Neptune."

The other probable starters areseniors Kevin Bott (6-2V4), JohnFerrara (6-3) and Vaughn Abel(5-10), and junior Rich Williams(5-3). Another letterman back issophomore Jim Erhardt (6-3).

Top newcomers are junior JohnSee VIEW '86, Page 4D

Flyers' Froeseoff to RangersFlyers pick up a defenseman

NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Rangersobtained Philadelphia goaltender Bob Froese yes-terday in exchange for defenseman KjellSamuelsson and a second-round draft pick in 1989.

Froese tied for the NHL lead in victories lastseason, but lost his starting job this season torookie Ron Hextall. He has played in only threegames this season, with a 2.67 goals againstaverage.

"I'm very excited (about the trade)," Froese saidin a telephone interview. "I'm glad the last coupleof months are behind me and that I'm going to ateam that wants me."

Froese said he expects to share goaltendingduties In New York with John Vanbiesbrouk.

"I talked with (General Manager) Phil Espositotoday and he said there's no need to burn out oneguy," he said. "It's not going to be a one-quarterback situation."

Last season, Froese led the NHL' in goals againstaverage, save percentage and shutouts. His 31victories tied Vanbiesbrouck for the league lead.

Samuelsson, a 6-foot-6-inch, 225-pound nativeof Sweden, was the Rangers' sixth round draftchoice in the 1984 NHL entry draft. A rookie lastseason who played in nine games, he has been in30 this year, recorded two goals and six assists andserved 50 penalty minutes.

Last season with New Haven of the AmericanHockey League, he had six goals and 21 assists for27 points in 56 games.

"We are very pleased to acquire a player withKJell's size and ability," said Flyers GeneralManager Bob Clarke. "He is a big, rangy de-

.fenseman and he will add valuable depth to analready strong defense."

Clarke also said he was pleased to accomodate

Howser says he'llbe back in dugoutif health holds upBy DOUG TUCKERAP Sports Writer

REGISTER FILE PHOTOFROESE-N OUT — Bob Froese took over the,Philadelphia Flyers net when the team was reelingfrom the Pelle Lindbergh tragedy.

Froese's desire to be traded."Froese made a significant contribution to the

success of this hockey club, and he has our bestwishes for continued success."

See FROESE, Page 5D

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Dick How-ser, two weeks after a second opera-tion for a malignant brain tumor,,says he still plans to manage theKansas City Royals next year, "butI'm not taking anything for granted."

• Updates on Gooden and MorrisPage 4D

"It will be Dick Howser's de-cision," the 50-year-old managersaid yesterday at a news conference,his first public appearance sincefalling ill last summer. "But I don'twant to put myself in a positionwhere I jeopardize'my health.

"As important as managing is tome — and I think about things likeleft fielders and designated hittersalmost every day — my healthcomes first. It's really something tohave that thing looking you rightbetween the eyes and knowing thatif you don't come out of this opera-tion, things are going to be prettybad."

Two days after managing the

Howser Future worries him.

American League to victory In lastsummer's All-Star Game, Howser,who had seemed confused at timesand had been suffering memory

See HOWSER. Page 50

2D The Register FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19.1966

County briefs

NJSIAA ruling to come in January

M IDDLETOWN — MaterDei High School soccercoach Ken Van Schaack

said his team will have to waituntil Jan. 14 to find out if it willbe awarded the Parochial "B"Soccer Championship.

Van Schaack said that'swhen the executive committeeof the NJSIAA plans to an-nounce the decision concerningMater Dei's claim that thecoach of St. Benedict's Prep ofNewark also coaches some ofhis players in an offseasonrecreation league.

St. Benedict's defeated Mater

Dei, 1-0, on Nov. 21 to win theParochial "B" title. OnThanksgiving, Van Schaacksaw a tape of St. Benedict'scoach Rick Jacobs coaching theMillburn Strikers, a recreationleague team made up of playersfrom the Millburn area. He saidsix Millburn players also playfor St. Benedict's.

NJSIAA regulations prohibitcoaches from coaching theirplayers in the offseason.

Van Schaack said St.Benedict's and Jacobs haveadmitted to the offseasoncoaching.

Nets to award two scholarships

EAST RUTHERFORD — TheNew Jersey Nets, for theseventh consecutive year,

will award two $1,000 collegescholarships to high schoolseniors.

The winners will be among50 seniors throughout the na-tion who will be awardedscholarships by the NationalBasketball Association.

To apply, a senior must sub-mit an official applicationform, his or her high schooltranscript, SAT scores, a letteror recommendaiton from a fac-ulty member and an essay ofunder 500 words on the sub-

ject, "The Importance of aCollege Education.

Applications must be re-ceived by Feb. 13, 1!)H7, andwinners will be announced byMarch 13.

The scholarships can be usedat any accredited four-yearcollege or two-year junior col-lege or community college.

Scholarships applicationsand information can be ob-tained from high school guid-ance counselors or by writing:Scholarship, New Jersey Nets,Brendan Byrne Arean, EastRutherford, N.J., 07073, Atten-tion: Lisa (iyiai il.

7 area athletes on track at Rutgers

PISCATAWAY — Four menand three women fromMpnmouth County will be

participating on .the RutgersUniversity men ami women'sindoor track teams this season.

Robert Carroll, a junior fromMiddletown will compete insprints. Geoff Evarts, a juniorfrom Long Branch, and SethGolub, a sophomore from Free-

hold, will compete in mid-distance events and DonaldZeni, a senior from Matawan,will compete in pole vaulting.

The women's team featuresJill Duthie, a senior from Haz-let, and Joan Harriman andLauren Jelm, both sophomoresfrom Holmdel. All three areslated to compete in distanceevents.

Zucker slowed by back problems

PISCATAWAY — Rutgerscoach Craig Littlepagehopes Manalapan's Ed

Zucker is back at full strength-for tomorrow^ home gameagainst Princetniv

Zucker, a senior who has

filled the role of sixth man thisseason, is bothered by a seem-ingly chronic back ailment.

Through the Scarlet Knights'first five games, ZtiekeF is-thmion the team in scoring with an11.8 average.

Beltle gets off to good start

HAVERFORD, Pa. —Freshman center SteveBeltle, a graduate of Nep-

tune High School, got his col-legiate career off to a goodstart in Haverford College's

opening-game win over HolyFamily College of Philadelphia.

Beltle pulled down 12 re-bounds, blocked five shots and jscored 12 points.

Kraemer hitting hoops in Hartford

HARTFORD, CT. — KarenKraemer of Holmdel isaveraging 13.1 minutes of

action for the University ofHartford's women's basketballteam through the team's firstseven games.

Kraemer is seventh on theteam in scoring with a 3.1average. She is also seventh onthe team with an average of 3.3rebounds per game.

Hartford is 4-3.

YMCA swimmers stay out in front

RED BANK — Ariel Rad ofthe Red Bank YMCA wasHigh Point Trophy reci-

pient in the 13-14 age group atthe Peddie Fall Swim Festivalin Hightstown. Rad amassedmore points than any otherswimmer in the meet, ^three-day contest which "drawsswimmers from around thestate and surrounding states.

He also qualified for theYMCA Nationals when he wonthe 200-meter individualmedley. He also set a new teamrecord when, he took the 600-meter freestyle in 5:00.4.

In recent dual action, RedBank's boy's team beatLakeland Hills 'B' team, 135-49and the girl's team downedBeer Path Y of Flemington,129-60.

Eugene Imbemba qualifiedfor Nationals at the boys meetwhen he swam the 400-meterindividual medley in 4:29.95.Rad qualified for the 200-meter backstroke with 2:07.46.K-imi Castellanos was a Na-tionals qualifier for the girlswith 2:20.35 in the 200-meterbackstroke.

RBC to play at Georgian Court

LAKEWOOD — Red BankCatholic is one of eightteams scheduled to play in

Georgian Court CollegeChristmas Basketball Tour-nament for high schools to beheld at Georgian Court Collegebeginning on Dec. 26.

RBC will play the tourney'ssecond game at .1:30 p.m. onDec. 26 against Toms RiverEast.

The six other teamsparticipating in the tourney areWildwood Catholic, MonsignorDonovan, Lakewood, Toms

River South, McCorristin, andToms River North.

The tournament will con-tinue on Dec.'27 and concludeon Dec. 30, with the cham-pionship game scheduled for anoon tipoff.

Admission to the tournamentis $2, for adults and $1 forstudents. Tickets may bepurchased at the door. Formore information, contactKathy Perri, athletic directorat Georgian Court College at363-2374.

Bernstein named to all-star team

ITHACA, NY — Erik Berns-tein of Cornell Universitywas named to the ECAC

Division I-AA all-star teamthis season.

Bernstein, a senior punterfrom Middletown, averaged39.7 yards per punt and was

the Ivy League's top punter. Hepunted the ball 62 times in 10games for 2,460 yards. Hislongest punt was 70 yards.

Bernstein's punting helpedCornell to an 8-2 season and asecond-place finish in the IvyLeague.

Annual wrestling tourney begins tonight

NEPTUNE — Defendingchampion Brick Memorialheads a group of 18

schools who will compete in theannual Neptune WrestlingClassic at Neptune High Schooltonight and tomorrow.

Brick Memorial, MiddletownSouth and Lenape are thefavorites in the tournamentwhich1 gets underway at 6 p.m.tonight. Quarterfinals are setfor noon tomorrow followed by

the semifinals at 2 p.m., con-solations at 6 and the finals at7:30.

Other schools entered areNeptune, Wall, Ocean Twp.,Long Branch, MiddletownNorth, Red Bank Catholic,Ilowell, Freehold Twp.,Manalapan, Lakewood, TomsRiver North, Rumson-FairHaven Reg., Monmouth Reg.,Southern and Jackson Twp.

The striped bass controversy

go on over length limits"We're not going to roll over

and play dead," said State As-semblyman Anthony M. VillaneJr., R-Mononmouth, whosestriped bass bill was releasedfrom the Assembly committee onMonday, the same day the compa-nion measure by State Sen. FrankPallone Jr., D-Monmouth, wasreleased from committee in theupper chamber.

The bills — A-3439 and S-2803— were cleared without theamendments sought by the MarineFisheries Administration in theDepartment of EnvironmentalProtection. Administrator BruceL. Freeman and Russell L. Cook-ingham, director of the Division ofFish, Game and Wildlife, hadwarned that a moratorium onfishing would be imposed on thestate if it did not adopt a straight31-inch limit during the firstportion of 1987.

But Villane said, "I'm not con-cerned by a possible moratoriumimposed on us by the feds sincewe'll be having our ownmoratorium during the next twomonths."

Under the present state law,striped bass may not be takenduring January and February.The bills would extend thisprohibition through March. Thereshould be no opposition sincestriped bass do not become activein the northern part of the statebefore spring, and the formerlylarge wintering populations inOcean, Atlantic and Burlingtoncounties have gone into history.

The Villane bill provides for a

HenrySchceeler

one 18 to 24-inch fish daily, andtwo bass in addition of a minimumsize of 33 inches in the north zone.In the south zone, below BarnegatInlet, there would be a two fishlimit With a minimum size of 33inches. The Pallone bill providesfor an 18 to 26-inch fish in thenorth zone.

The Jersey Coast Anglers As-sociation, which has been taggingand releasing striped bass foryears, has found that the bulk ofthe fish taken north of BarnegatInlet are Hudson River stock, andthose below that inlet are thedepleted Chesapeake Bay stock.

Area fishermen feel verystrongly that keeping one basssafely below 30 inches poses nothreat to the Chesapeake 1982year class fish.

After hunting through the fire-arms deer season with his fatherand brother, Capt. Jimmy Morenzresumed striped bass fishing withhis party boat Miss' Take II lastweek and reported he found twobig schools on the surface oneday. '

They were actively feeding andabout 70 were caught on jigs,according to Morenz. Howevermost of the fish were under the24-inch limit and had to be tossedback into the water.

"And people are saying thatbass are scarce and want to raisethe limit to 33 inches," moanedCapt. Fred Morenze, Jimmy sfather. "If that happens we'll beout of the bass business in 1987.

The senior Morenz went into thecharter boat business at High-lands 40 years ago with a smalllapstrake sea skiff. He has nevergiven up on stripers althoughbluefish are the backbone of hisbusiness now.

Thirty and 40 years ago largestriped bass were plentiful innorthern Monmouth Countywaters and the fish that weretaken by trolling large plugs,spoons and rigged eels rangedfrom 10 to 50 pounds. Twenty-five to 30 pound fish were aver-age.

A 30-inch minimum fish wouldhave been no problem for boatfishermen, but that was long ago.

Villane and his two sons arefishermen too. Co-sponsor ofA-3439 is Assemblyman JosephA. Palaia, R-Monmouth. Palaiawas sponsor of our presentstriped bass law which raised theminimum length limit to 24 inchesand cut the possession limit from

10 to five. Boat Show updateThe dates of the 20th annual

New Jersey Trailer and CampingShow in Convention Hall, Asbu'ry

Park, have been advanced to Jan.16-18 at the request of • numberof dealers, announces directorJames J. McLaughlin.

McLaughlin said the people whowill participate wanted theearlier dates so they could displaytheir 1987 models of recreationalvehicles as early as possible in thenew year. The show had beenscheduled to begin Jan. 20.

About 76 exhibitors of recrea-tional vehicles, campgrounds andrelated camping and outdoorsequipment are expected to takepart in the show, which willoccupy two levels of thebeachfront auditorium, thearcade and the side promenadesoff the arcade.

McLaughlin said the show,which originated in 1968 and nowdraws more than 26,000 peopleannually, has been expanded by3,000 square-feet by using theoutside promenade on the northand south sides of ConventionHall.

"This means we can add about20 more travel trailers to theexhibition and run our number ofrecreational vehicles in the showto about 140 units," McLaughlinsaid.

The dealers are mainly fromNew Jersey, New York and Pen-nsylvania. Other exhibitors arecoming from New England,Florida and the midwest.

McLaughlin said all of theavailable space has been sold anda number of dealers are on thewaiting list for possible cancella-tions.

Holmdel's Semenza resigns after 11 yearsHOLMDEL — Holmdel High

School football coach GregSemenza announced his resig-nation Tuesday, citing family re-asons.

"I just wanted to spend moretime with my family," saidSemenza, who had been head

coach at Holmdel for 11 years."My son will be going into highschool next year and I want to seehim play. I know I'll miss it, butthe family is more important atthis point."

Semenza didn't want to singleout any one of his teams as his

best. •"This year's team (8-2) was

right up there," he said. "But the1979 (8-1-1) and 1981 (7-2)teams also won championships."

Semenza had coach manyoutstanding players and one ofthem, John Cannon, is playing

with the NFL Tampa Bay Bucs."I had other great players like

Fran Mullan, and Tom Dexter andTom Serluco from this year'steam," he said.

Semenza hasn't railed out re-turning to coaching at some futuredate.

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4D The Register FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19,1986

Morris, Georgechat; one-yeardeal discussedBy John Lowe

Knight-Ridder Newspapers

TAMPA. Fla. — Jack Morris showed yesterdayjust how far he is willing to go in order to leave theDetroit Tigers.

He's willing to accept a one-year contract.Morris told Yankees owner George Steinbrenner

here yesterday morning that he'd be happy to signa one-year contract with the Yankees for 1987.

Moreover. Morris didn"t ask Steinbrenner for aspecific salary. Rather, the free-agent pitcherproposed thai his '87 salary be determined by anarbitrator who would choose between figures sub-mitted by Morris and the Yankees.

Steinbrenner told Morris and his agent, Dick Moss,(hat he would think about the offer last night andphone them with his decision by noon today.

Morris also offered Steinbrenner the same two-,three- and four-year proposals that the MinnesotaTwins rejected on Tuesday. I'nder all of thoseproposals. Morris would be paid at least $1.7 milliona year.

But Moss said the multiyear deals were offered "asa courtesy.1' After their one-hour meeting, bothsides talked as if the one-year deal was the oneSteinbrenner would most seriously consider.

The one-year arbitration plan is Moss' promised"offer that George can't refuse." Steinbrenner saidit was "a unique offer" and that "it gave me causeto pause." But he wouldn't speculate on what thechances were he would hire Morris.

If noon today brings a "no thanks" from Stein-brenner. then midnight tonight becomes important.I'nder baseball's rules, Morris has until then toaccept the Tigers' offer of salary arbitration for1987.

If Morris turn* down the Tigers' arbitration offer,he still has threeWeks to sign with them for '87. Buthe will have lost the right to be a free agent againafter next season. He also will have lost the powerof asking an impartial third party to pick his salary.He would retain both by taking the Tigers toarbitration.

Tigers general manager Bill Lajoie said after the

FBI enters Gooden case;lawyers pursue solution

Morris — Let's make a deal.

Steinbrenner-Morris meeting: "I'm not going tocomment on any developments at this time. We'restill interested in Jack Morris. I'm just not going tosay anything else."

But Moss said: "Jack does not want to arbitrate forone year with the Detroit Tigers, He is willing toarbitrate for one year with the New York Yankees."

Why with the Yankees and not with the Tigers?"I think it's obvious — because of the way they

(the Tigers) have treated me over the years," Morrissaid.

Morris is upset that the Tigers did not offer hima new contract before his four-year deal ran out atthe end of last season. He's further upset that theyhaven't offered him more than a two-year deal (for$2.5 million). He thinks he deserves a longer contractfrom the team he has served for many years.

"The Tigers have offered me a two-year contract,and I'm offering him (Steinbrenner) a one-year,"Morris said. "So if the (owners') cry about long-termcontracts is the problem, then it shouldn't be aproblem anymore."

But isn't this a major concession on Morris' part,to be willing to accept a deal of only one year withso much negotiating time left before next season?

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Whileattorneys continued to seek asettlement of charges pending inthe arrest of Dwight Gooden, theFBI acknowledged yesterday thatit has started a probe aimed atdetermining if the New York Metspitcher's civil rights have beenviolated.

Meanwhile, plans were an-nounced for Gooden to appear at aafternoon news conference thisafternoon at the office of hisagent, Jim Neader, in St.Petersburg. Neader declined togive more details.

Gooden, 22, and four compa-nions, two of them minor-leaguebaseball players, were arrestedlast Saturday night after thepitcher was stopped for a possibletraffic violation. Gooden sufferedminor injuries in a brawl withpolice officers.

Charles Ehrlich, Gooden's at-torney, has claimed police usedexcessive force in taking Goodeninto custody. Police officials havedefended the use of force in thearrest, saying Gooden would notcooperate with officers.

"We're conducting an investiga-tion into the alleged violation ofqvil rights of Gooden and others,"said Larry Curtin, a spokesmanfor the Tampa office of the FBI.

He added that he had no indica-tion of how long the probe mighttake.

"We're going to do it as quicklyas we can, but also we want to doa thorough job," Curtin said.

Deborah Burstion-Wade, a Jus-tice Department spokeswoman inWashington, said the FBI beganthe probe at its own initiative, notat the direction of the JusticeDepartment. She said the FBI

Nets down Knickson shot by Wood

=—Leon-Wood's 18-foot jumper with sixseconds remaining lifted the NewJersey Nets to a 94-93 NBAvictory last _ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ _night and ex-tended i iir l l n t a 9 4New York " " ™, - - ,Knicks' losing Kl l lCkS 9 3s t r e a k toseven games. .

The lead changed hands threetimes in the final 21 seconds. BuckWilliams, who had 17 points andl(> rebounds, gave the Nets a92-91 lead with 21 seconds to gobefore Rory Sparrow's 17-footerwith 12 seconds left put New Yorkahead by one.

After Wood's go-ahead basket,Sparrow had another chance toput New York in front, but hislayup attempt was blocked out ofbounds by Williams. New York'sinbounds pass then was tipped

"away by Kevin McKenna.Tony Brown led New Jersey

with a career-hieh 29 points.

-whilaJe.fi Turner jQine(LWi!Liams_with 17-—

Patrick Ewing scored 10 of his25 points during a 25-8 streak inthe second half that turned a 14-point deficit- into a 78-75 NewYork lead with 9:21 remaining.Bill Cartwright added 23 pointsand Gerald Wilkins had 21 for theKnicks. "

The Nets, winning only theirsivimtl road game in 14 tries thisseason, beat New York for theI6th time in their last 18 meetingsover the previous three years.New Jersey is 5-19 and New York5-20 this season.

The Nets, with Brown scoring 15points in the first 14 minutes, ledby as many as 14 points twice inthe first half.

Then, after New York cut thedeficit to 51-45 in the openingminute of the third quarter, Wil-liams scored seven points during a16-8 spurt that rebuilt the marginto 67-53 before the Knicks ralliedbehind Ewing.

ASSOCIATED PRESSHELD HIGH — New York Knickerbockers center Patrick Ewing (33)keeps the ball away from James Bailey (2) of the New Jersey Netsin action at Madison Square Garden in New York last night The Netswon, 94-93

Hoop view '86View '86

^'Continued from Page 1D

Gawler (6-3), freshman ChrisYet man (6-1) and senior BrianTierney (G-2j.

"Kerrara and Gawler are ourbest rebounders." Glass said. "Butwe still need some work onthings." t

The Seraphs open • the seasontonight when they travel to PointBeach.

HENRY HUDSONHIGHLANDS — Henry Hudson

is similar to Mater Dei in that theAdmirals came on strong late lastseason and have four startersreturning.

Henry Hudson coach JimMahoney is looking forward to theupcoming season and believes histeam will have little trouble bet-tering last year's 14-11 record.

"Everyone has been lookinggood," Mahoney said. "We have abetter bench and we're looking toimprove on last year."

The top returning player is WillTriplctt (6-6), the lone senior onthe starting five. He averaged 17points and 10 rebounds a gamelast year.

Back for his third varsity season• is 6-0 junior Carl Roth who aver-

aged 10 points, six rebounds andsix assists per game. Another good

. shooter is junior Bob Grenger (10ppg). The other probable startersare Andy Teeple (6-4) and JimByrne (6-2).

The top newcomer is juniorJason Schnoor (5-9) who hasplayed well in the pre-seasonscrimmages. Other prospects aresenior Eric Long (6-5) andfreshman Pat Lapanne (6-2).

HOLMDELHOLMDEL — When a coach has

only two seniors back from a teamthat was 9-15 the previous year,he usually has a gloomy outlook.

Don't count head coach Rich

Jones among them"We look to contend in the

division," Jones said. "We have agood group of kids and we willplay 10 of them every game."

The bulk of this year's team iscomprised of players from a 17-5junior varsity team.

"The jayvees beat Lakewood,Red Bank and Asbury Park lastyear," Jones saicf "They weresuccessful in running oilr systemand we have a good programestablished."

The only two lettermen back arejunior Steve DeBlasi (6-2) andsenior Scott Geisler. Both willstart along- with juniors ChrisPaglia (6-3), Tim McEneny (6-3)and Charley Harris (6-2).

"DeBlasi is a great all-aroundplayer," Jones said. "Geisler is agood defensive player and willdirect our offense. Paglia canscore from inside and is a veryhard worker."

Other players who could getplaying time are senior DennisStrid (6-0), juniors John Venino(6-0), Scott Cannon (6-2), SalTozzi (6-2) and Gary Liebesman(5-7), and sophomores DarylZaslow (5-11) and Chris Hef-ferman (6-4).

"We're pretty even," Jones said."There is no outstanding player,

but they all blend well togetherand all but two are back nextyear."

The Hornets will get a good testin their opener tonight when theytravel to St. Rose.

KEANSBURGKEANSBURG — Keansburg had

its finest season ever in basketballlast year as the Titans finished at13-13 and gained the NJSIAACentral Jersey Group I finals.

Tim O'Halloran, taking over thehead coaching job from Ray Col-eman, expects to continue thissuccess, but the Titans lack a bigman in the middle.

"We're pretty optimistic,"O'Halloran said. "We have ourguards returning but we arc not atall team."

Overall, five lettermen are backled by guards Brian Kmak (5-11)and Jim Markulin (5-11). Both aregood shooters. Also returning areseniors Pat Bowles (5-10). SeanEcklof (6-2) and Mike Smith(5-10). John Mihovch (G-i) is alsoexpected to start. Other varsitycandidates are Mike Reeves (5-10)and Ed Flesch (6-2).

"Mihovch averaged 20 points agame 'for the junior varsity lastyear," O'Halloran said. "Smith

was our number six man last yearand Ecklof was seventh. Ecklofand Mihovch will be our toprebounders."

KEYPORTAs a player, Nick Russo led

Keyport-High gchool to cham-pionship seasons in the mid 1970s.This season, he hopes to restorethat success to the Red Raiderbasketball, program in his firstyear as head coach. Keyport wononly six games last year.

"It's hard to tell right now,"Russo said. "We haven't been outthat long, but' we have good sizeand are hopeful of a .500 season.We should better last year's re-cord."

Four lettermen return, led byfootball stars Jerome Jeffcoat(6-5) and John Earle (6-5). Theother two returnees are Sal Amat-turo (6-3) and Tony Trigg (5-10).

Out for the first time is highjump star Wayne Lightbourne(6-0). Also vying for playing timeare seniors Steve Walker (5-11)and Bill Potts (6-1). and juniorSteve Antonucci (5-7).

"Walker and Potts are goodoutside shooters," Russo said."But we have to work on ourdefense."

PUBLIC NOTICEPlease be advised that the Planning Board and Township Committee of

Middletown Township will hold a public hearing on the proposed Master PlanHousing Element Fair Share Plan. Copies of the plan will be available forpublic inspection ten (10) days prior to the hearing at the Middletown publiclibraries, the Township Clerk's office and in the Planning Board Office.

This meeting will be held in the main meeting room of Town Hall, 1 KingsHighway, Middletown, on Monday, December 29,1986 at 7:30, p.m. at whichtime the public may appear in person or be represented by counsel.

12/12/86

Dorothy O'ShaughnessyPlanning Board Secretary

««I think the eyesof the nation arefocused on thiscommunity. There'sa lot of pressure ona lot of people. »•

Unidentified lawyer

findings will be reviewed in Wash-ington.

Gooden and the others werereturning from a college basket-ball game in three separate carslate Saturday night when an of-ficer spotted Gooden's car swerv-ing toward another driven byGary Sheffield. Sheffield isGooden's nephew and is a minor-league player in the MilwaukeeBrewers organization.

Witnesses said Gooden wasbeaten with nightsticks andflashlights after the scufflestarted. Police said one officer waskicked in the groin and anotherwas kicked in the head and suf-fered a mild concussion.

Gooden was charged with bat-tery on a police officer, resistingarrest with violence, disorderlyconduct and careless driving. Ahospital-administered blood-al-cohol test showed Gooden hadbeen drinking prior to the inci-dent, but he has not been chargedwith driving under the influence.

The others arrested were Shef-

field, 18; California Angels minor-league player Vance Lovelace, 23;Phillip Walker Jr., 23, and DerrickPedro, 17.

Police Chief Donald Newbergermet with lawyers representingGooden on Wedneday in what hedescribed as a "cooling off" meet-ing. "What we're trying to do nowis reduce emotions and get thingsback on an even keel," he said.

Attorneys have also been meet-ing to try to work out a com-promise on the charges againstGooden. Attempts by The As-sociated Press to reach Ehrlich forcomment yesterday were unsuc-cessful.

The Tampa Tribune reportedthat one lawyer involved in thediscussions said of the effort toreach an amicable settlement: "1think the eyes of the nation arefocused on this community.There's a lot of pressure on a lotof people."

Gooden and Lovelace were for-mer high school teammates atTampa HiHsborough. Another ex-Hillsborough player, FloydYoumans of the Montreal Expos,said he played in a benefit Softballgame with Gooden the day of thearrest.

He said Gooden asked him to gothe basketball game. "But I wastired and decided to go to my girlfriend's place. Lucky thing,"Youmans said.

Youmans said Gooden's successis his friend's biggest problem.

"Dwight is fighting himself. Hedoesn't know how he's supposedto be now that he's a millionaire ...It all came so fast to him."

The scholastic scheduleTODAY

Boy* basketball(All games 7:30 unless noted)

Freehold at Shore Reg.R.B. Catholic at Long Branch (8)Rumson-FH at Monslgnor

DonovanFreehold Twp.at St John Vianney

(8)Marlboro at Middletown NorthRed Bank Reg. at Monmouth

Reg. (8)Middletown South at CBAHolmdel at St. Rose (8)Raritan at Matawan Reg. (3:30)Neptune at HowellKeyport at Henry HudsonMater Del at Point BeachAsbury Park at CentralOcean Twp. at ManalapanPoint Boro at Manasquan (8)

Girls basketballShore Reg. at Freehold (3:45)Long Branch at R.B. Catholic

(6:30)Monsignor Donovan at Rumson-

FH (3:45)St. John Vianney at Freehold

Twp. (3:30)Middletown North at Marlboro

(3:30)Monmouth Reg. at Red Bank

Reg. (3:45) •Neptune at Howell -(3:30)

Shore Reg. at Freehold (3:45)Raritan at Matawan (7:30)Henry Hudson at Keyport

(3:30)Manalapan at Ocean Twp.(3:45) _ . _

Central at Asbury Park (3:45)Point Beach at Mater Dei (5)Manasquan at Point Boro (3:45)

WrestlingAt Neptune High School

Neptune Wrestling Classic (6)TOMORROW

Boys basketballFreehold Twp. at Middletown North(2)

Henry Hudson at Shore Reg. (4)Don Bosco Tech at CBA (4)

Freehold at Allentown (1)Wrestling .

At Neptune High SchoolNeptune Wrestling Classic (2, 6:30,8)

Winter trackNick Merli Invitational (At Red

Bank Regional 9 a.m.)Girls basketball *

Middletown North at FreeholdTwp. (2) . .Wall Classic (At Wall High School)

Manasquan vs. Long Branch (2)Neptune vs. Wall (10)St. Rose vs. Southern (4)

' Hightstown vs. Asbury Park (12)Allentown at Freehold (12:30)

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FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19.1986 The Register 5D

Sports briefsCollege grid expert now Hall of Famer

LARCHMONT, NY. (AP) —George Gardner , anauthority on college foot-

ball rules, has been named tothe National Football Foun-dation's College Football Hallof Fame.

Gardner was an official inthe Southeastern Conferencefor 16 years. He later served as

supervisor of SEC officials for28 years. Gardner also helpedwrite the first manual on col-lege football officiating.

Gardner is the fourth collegefootball official to beWmed tothe Hall of Fame. lie will beofficially inducted into the hallnext year.

Swedish hockey coach felled at game

MOSCOW (AP) — SwedishCoach Tomnii Sandlinsuffered a possible heart

attack Wednesday, shortlyafter watching Finland's 3-2upset of the Soviet Union in theIzvestia hockey tournament.

Sandlin was stricken in thelobby of the team's hotel. He

was first treated by Canadianteam physician Dr. JamesSproule, before being taken toa hospital.

"He was weak and short ofbreath," Sproule said. "Thoseare the symptoms of a heartattack."

British name '87 track, field entries

LONDON (AP) — Britain'sseven gold medalists in thisyear's European Track and

Field Championships were re-warded for their performancesyesterday by being preselectedfor the 1987 World Cham-pionships in Rome.

Daley Thompson (deca-thlon), Steve Cram (1,500meters), Jack Buckner (5,000meters), Roger Black (400meters), Linford Christie (100 •meters), Sebastian Coe (800

meters) and Fatima Whitbread(women's javelin) all were con-firmed as having receiveddefinite offers to compete,provided they are fit and fulfillqualification standards for theevent.

Coe is believed to have de-clined the selectors' invitationbecause he will not be runningany more 800-meter races inmajor championships, but willbe concentrating on shorterdistances.

Knicks' Ewing fined $5k for slugf est

NEW YORK (AP) — NewYork Knicks centerPatrick Ewing was fined

$3,000 by the NBA yesterdayfor punching Boston's GregKite during a game this week.

Ewing threw an elbow atKite and then slugged the re-serve center in the secondquarter of Tuesday's game,which was won by the Celtics107-96. Ewing was chargedwith a punching foul, but wasnot ejected.

Knicks spokesman JohnCirillo said thi' team had nocomment on the fine and thatEwing was not available.

Tlw KBA said Rod Thorn,vice president of operations,had levied the fine after theleague's security departmenthad investigated the incidentand reviewed a videotape ofthe fight.

Kite was not injured.There have been two other

fights in the NBA this week. OnWednesday night, Boston's

Rick Carlisle and Indiana'sJohn Long were ejected aftertrading punches in front of thePacers' bench. The nightbefore, Atanta's Tree Rollinsgot into a fight with Detroit'sVinnie Johnson.

An NBA spokesman said theleague is reviewing those inci- ,dents to determine if finesshould be levied.

The largest fine.for fightingin NBA history was leviedagainst Kermit Washington ofthe Los Angeles Lakers in1977. Washington was fined$10,000 and suspended for 60days 'for decking Houston'sRudy Tomlanqvlch.

The second biggest fine wasthe $7,500 that Boston's LarryBird and Philadelphia's JuliusErving had to pay after theyfought during a game in 1984.The fight triggered a brawlthat resulted in a total of$30,500 in fines againstmembers of the Celtics and76ers.

Ailing Garden State Park cuts purses

CHERRY HILL (AP) — Gar-den State Park hascanceled its $2 Million

Challenge and reduced the Jer-sey Derby purse by $500,000for its 1987 thoroughbred meetin a move to help thefinancially ailing track.

International ThoroughbredBreeders Inc., which lost $34million running the facility lastyear, also is cutting its stakespurses from $2.3 million to.•••Mi million during thethoroughbred meet.

Track President RobertQulgley said the $2 MillionChallenge was eliminated be-cause the track was unable toget (insurance to pay for theprize.

The bonanza was awarded toany horse that swept the Cher-ry Hill Mile, the Garden StateStakes, the Kentucky Derbyand the Jersey Derby, whichwill carry a $500,000 purse

this year.As part of the Challenge, a $ 1

million bonus also had beenoffered to any horse winningthe Kentucky Derby and two ofthe other three races.

Spend a Buck won the $2million bonus in 1985.

The Cherry Hill Mile and.'Garden State Stakes had theirpurses cut $50,000 apiece to$50,000 and $150,000, respec-tively« the track said in astatement Issued Wednesday.«Quigley said the Jersey

Derby still remains one of therichest races in the world.

"It is one of America'spremier events," he said. "Wehave every confidence it willcontinue to attract some of thefinest 3-year-olds in the coun-try." £

Last montfr, Garden StatePark did not apply for a har-ness mbet in 1987 because ofcontinuing financial tosses.

Cards deal for Expos' Wallach failsa MONTREAL (A1>) ~" A

l t f l d r ; i l thai would haveIwl '^ ' i i i third baseman TimWallach to the St. LouisCardinals in return for pitchinghelp has fallen through. Mon-treal Expo's General ManagerMurray Cook said yesterday.

Reports had suggested thatthe Expos were prepared to

send Wallach and a right-handed reliever to St. Louis forthird baseman Terry Pendletonand left-handed starter GregMathews.

Cook confirmed he had disjcussed the deal with St. LouisGeneral Manager Dal Maxvill,but said negotiations endedWednesday.

Chisox complete Hill trade with A's

CHICAGO (AP) — TheWhite Sox announced yes-terday that pitcher Bruce

Tanner will go to Oakland aspart of last week's trade thatbrought infielder Donnic Hill toChicago.

The White Sox previouslysent pitcher Gene Nelson toOakland as part of the deal.

White Sox spokesman Tim

Clodjeaux said Tanner, son ofAtlanta Manager Chuck Tan-ner, would be assigned by theA's to their Tacoma, Wash.,farm club.

Last season, with the WhiteSox' Buffalo farm team, Tan-ner posted an 8-10 record anda 4.16 earned run average. liemade his major league debutwith the White Sox in 1985 asdwas 1-2.

Blues' Lemieux injured, out six weeks

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Leftwing Jocelyn Lemieux willbe lost to the St. Louis

Blues about six weeks, the NHLclub said yesterday.

Lemieux suffered a severedtendon in the small finger ofhis left hand Wednesday while

skating at a the team'sChr is tmas pa r ty . Teamspokesman Susie Mathieu saidLemieux fell and a skate cut hishand.

The team said yesterday thatthe laceration was repaired insurgery and Lemieux' hand hasbeen placed in a splint.

Soviet wins World Biathlon opener

0BERTAUERN, Austria(AP) — Valery Mcdvetscvof the Soviet Union won

the opening event yesterday inthe World Biathlon Cup tour-nament, beating Czechoslovak

Frantisek Chladek and twoother Soviets.

Medvetsevi a double worldchampion, covered the 20-kilometer race in 1 hour, 10minutes, 4 seconds.

He's on cueASSOCIATED PRESS

Leonard Bludworth cues for some of the nation's best billiardsplayers. Traveling with players around the country, he clean thecues, spritzes them up with his "special juice" and makes acustom leather tip that he says doesn't hit "like a hard-boiledegg." He was in Atlantic City yesterday plying his craft.

FFFContinued from Page ID

Miami, and Dino Hackett,. KansasCity.

The FFF Defensive Player of theYear is everybody else's — 20sacks from his linebacker spot inleading the Giants to the bestrecord in football and thefavorite's spot in the Super Bowlderby.

Defensive Player of the Year —Lawrence Taylor, Giants.

Taylor and his mates, shouldthey get that far, are favored toplay a Denver team in the SuperBowl that has a lackluster runninggame and good, not spectacularreceivers. The defense is in the

upper echelon, but there are betterunits. So, what makes the Broncosso good?

The FFF Offensive Player of theYear, that's what. Only ninth inthe AFC ratings, but first in thehearts of the Denver faithful isStanford graduate John ElwayThe Rams' Eric Dickerson, NewYork's Joe Morris and Miami's DanMarino all deserve notation, butElway is tops in 1986 - '

Offensive Player of the Year —John Elway, Denver.

The rumor that the New YorkJets will be presented a specialhands-on-throat award is nottrue.

GiantsContinued from Page 1D

Landeta, who is averaging 44.5yards per punt, compared theGiants to his old team, the Balti-more Stars of the USFL. .

"This team has a lot of superplayers and this team is starting toget the mental attitude the Starshad, one expecting to win," Land-eta said. "That's the attitude youhave to have. You don't mean it tobe cocky, you just have con-fidence."

Bavaro, who has made 61 catch-es to set a club record for tightends, refused to comment on hisselection.

"I have to go lift weights," hesaid and for him, that's saying ulot.

Taylor, who has been a domi-nant force on the Giants' defensethis season, said all he was think-ing about was the Super Bowl,

"It's not as big a shock as it waslast year," said Morris, who hasgained 1,401 yards this season

The Pro Bowl will be played inHawaii aft,i;r the season, and theeight Giants will be the most in thegame since 1963, the last time NewYork won a division title. The clubhigh in a Pro Bowl is nine playersin 1961.

Who owns bush-league team?OLD ORCHARD BEACH, Maine

(AP) — Jordan KobrltZ, who sayshe still owns the Maine Guides, hasconsolidated his partnership'slawsuits and is now seeking $4million in damages from a Scran-ton, Pa., corporation and the In-ternational League.

The damages, according toamended complaints filed in U.S.

District Court, are to cover lossesresulting from delayed prepara-tions for the 1987 baseball season.

Until U.S. District Judge GeneCarter rules on the ownershipdispute, neither Kobritz norNortheastern Baseball knows whowill host the Philadelphia Philliesfarm team next spring.

USAContinued from Page 1D

race against New Zealand in theother challenger semifinal

"They did a good job Theydidn't have any m»j»r gear fail-ures. They didn't lose anybodyoverboard, they didn't lose anysails overboard, and they beat theboats they had to, but they are notfast. They're slower than CanadaH," Conner said.

Conner wasn't surprised by the

Howser

fate of America II, the New YorkYacht Club entry that failed toadvance in the challenge round.

"I felt they were off the pace,"lie said. "You must remember thatthis is the first New York YachtClub challenge. In the past, theypicked the defender who did allthe work.

"This was their first challengeand in many ways it was a Texaschallenge," Conner said, referring

to the large role played by Ameri-ca II skipper John Kolius, aTexan, and members of the FortWorth Boat Club.

Asked if he would move theAmerica's Cup to his home port ofSan Diego should Stars & Stripeswin, Conner said he had not madethat decision. Conner's SailAmerican syndicate representsthe San Diego Yacht' Club, ofwhich Conner is a former com-

modore."San Diego would be the logical

place for it," he said as preparedto tee off at the Royal Perth GolfClub during a rare moment ofrelaxation 'Our commitmenfjsID—do what is best for yachting andthe America's Cup, and to see howthat works out with San Diegobecause it is a large commitmenton part of the town, financiallyand in a lot of other areas."

Continued from Page IDlapses, was examined by doctors.

Five days afterward, on July 22,he underwent a three-hour opera-tion in which doctors discovered amalignant tumor on the left frontof the brain as big as a golf ball.The tumor was only partiallyremoved for fear of damaginghealthy tissue.

Two weeks ago in an experimen-tal operation in Los Angeles,cancer-killing cells were injectedinto the tumor.

Wearing a golf cap over hisshaved head and looking muchthinner than when he managed theRoyals to the 1985 World Seriestitle, Howser talked about thestrength he gained from friends,well-wishers and his strong re-

ligious faith."Every day is a fight," Howser

said. "It's not fun. It's still day-to-day with me. Some of thereports I don't know about. I don'twant to know about. Some of thereports were good. I'm siire somewere real bad."

Howser said he feels good and isplanning to be wit'i the Royalswhen they open spring training.

Asked his future plans, Howserlooked at his wristwatch.

"What's next for me'.' Thisafternoon." he said. "I'm serious.It's 1:30 now. What's next for meis going home, taking the dogs outfor a walk, feeding them. Peopletalk about three months from now.or six months from now. But whoknows? We don't know about next,Wednesday. Nobody does."

FroeseContinued from Page 1D

Froese. 28. in his third fullseason with the Flyers, had pluyedIn 141- games, .compiling a goalsagainst average of '1.7A. He be-came the club's No. 1 goalie lastNovember after Pellc Lindberghdied in an automobile crash.

'"I think we-made a fair deal,"said Clarke, when asked if hethought he received enough forone of the league's premier goal-tenders. .

Clarke was asked if he felt thetwo-month effort to trade Froesewas-made difficult because theteam appeared to be stuck with udissatisfied player.

"We never considered, that Wewefe stuck with him," Clarkereplied. "He is a heck of a goodgoaltender."

Esposito — It was a good deal.

Clarke made it clear at a news

conference that he was not closewith any other club on a deal forthe goalie.

"It was our intention to getequal value," said Clarke. "Hewantjfl to be traded, and we madethis move to help our hockey club.We were happy with this offer."

Clarke said the Flyers viewedSamuelsson as a good NHL de-fenseman "and they are very rareright now." '•

He admitted that Froese wouldhelp the . Rangers, a PatrickDivision rival, but said he"didn'tfeel that as a Ranger, Froesewould hurt the Flyers.

"They can only play one goal-tender at a time. He should helpthe Rangers against other clubs."

Clarke said he was convincedthat the Flyers made the right

move when they decided on Hex-tall as their No. 1 goaltender.

"We just feel that llextall. at hisage, and with his ability, can leadus to the Stanley Cup. I'm notsaying Froese couldn't, hut' wethought we had a bet tut. chancewith Hextall,"

"If we're to do anything thisyear, we needed another de-fenseman," Clarke said. "If we'regoing to go deep into the playoffs,we need seven defensemerv" •

Clarke said that 38-year-oldChitro Resch would continue toback up llextall and that if theclub found it necessary, it couldrecall Darren Jensen fromHershey of the AHL.

Samuelsson is to report to theFlyers at practice today.

Brookdalc offered exactly whatI was looking for!11

John J. Haberstroh, D.C.Chiropractor, Sea Girt

"I loved the idea of the actual professor teachingmy class rather than a hundred students in a

classroom and a graduate assistant teaching theclass. It was an easy-going atmosphere

that was conducive to learning. When I transferred,*• all of my credits were recognized at Canadian

Memorial Chiropractic College In Toronto."

Brookdale has more than 500 credit courses and 65 careeror transfer programs ... and a tuition rate of

$36 per credit! Registration for the Winter Term is Ofbenthrough January 14. Come to the Admissions Office at

Uncroft campus (park in area *3), Monday throughThursday from 8:30 a.m.-7;00 p.m., Friday from9:00 am-1 :00 p.m., Saturday 9:00 a.m.-noon.

For further information call 842-1900, ext. 375.

BRCOKCALECOMMUNITYCOLLEGE

SUCCESS STARTS HERE!An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Institution

60 The Befftster FMDAY. DECEMBER 19.19B6

SCOREBOARDHORSE RACING

Freehold: Posltime 12 p.m.M

Fnflay, D N . 191at Pace S2.M0 Clm M.000

1 Jennifers J«fl (0 FUion)5 Tomy Airliner (J Gtorgatnni)6 Division Table (J Mo<My«v) ...,2 mandy Royale. (J Scnwind)7 Peanut Candy tC ManzOB What Foot work |H Kelly)3 Jolly Joel (A KawoMlti4 Living Proof lG FrechjAEi Staidy Escort (A Kavoletf)AE2 Helen Trie Jaws) (M Stanisiao.

2nd Pace 11.700 MaMana4 Cnarlaus Oiprey (J Moiuyav)6 Cuitinwr (H Kalry)0 Jets Spectacular (ND)7 Precious Leader (0 Russell)1 Gambters Special (J Stafford)2 W.nds Launmont (G BaWechino)3 G#e See Bee (J Gallagher)5 Harpersun (F Williams)AEI Beiutys BO <H Kelly)AE2 Gay Eagle (W Kociurka)

3rd Pac* 12.040 Ctm 14.0007 Harbors Gi'l iM Fagliarone)6 Senator Dom (W vandervort)3 Great Romance (W Breanahan)2 Joanmes Pony (W Breanahan)1 General JR (0 Fii<or>)8 FW Sweet (D DePmto)4 Final Demand (G Snarkey)5 Brunnehilde (H Kelly)AEi Tarpon Scoot (J Moiseyev)AE2 Starlex Song [J Ryll)

4th Paca S1.W0 N/W 2 PM a3 Uphill (W Buckley)4 Rocking On Bye (J Moiseyavl5 Beatrice Lobeil (T Ciendenmg)6 Ever Amy (W Vandervon)1 Stampede (H kelly)2 Cheerful Kris (J Scnwnd) .7 Jeanettes Escape {J ViieHO8 La Cheta (M Gonzalez) . . .AEI A Miilionheiress (C Mann)ZAE2 Twitchy (H Kelly)

Sth Pace $2,400 Clm 17,0001 Captam Cnpp.n u Moiseyev)2 Bretuask OsDorne (J Moiseyev)6 Turi Idol (J Ingrassia) ..'5 Say Hey Fella (J Moiseyev)3 Doctor Hitch (D Hitchner)4 Mr Rogers (R Vinci) ,'....., .8 Say No More N <H Kelly) . . ,7 Cambretta (J West)AEI AnmouS Anthony (J Hiel)AE2 EZ Breton (A DanrJeol

6th Pace 62,200 N/W $22S/at6 Ben In A Hurry (H BelOte)4 Curtains Starlet (J Moiseyev)1 Chnt Tom (S DeCamp*}2 Xanadu (L Conseima)3 Charlottes Blazer u Moiseyev) .7 FW Richard (i Williams)8 Press Notice (J Manning) .5 Fine Adios (S Oliwa)AEI Leprechaun (M Maker)

7th Pace 13.000 N/W S300/at6 Algranti A iM Maker)1 Nimble BG (M Lancaster)5 Enqlish Tommy (W BuCklev)

5-27-29-25-16-1

S-27-29-26-16-1

10-110-110-1

3-19-27-26-18-16-1

10-110-1

7-23 i4-15-18-1

10-110-112-1

3-19-24-17-26-1

...' 8-112-115-1

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, 6-16-1B-i

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•. 9-23-14-1

2 Jettine N (J Schwind) 6-13 B>g Lowell <H Kelly) 6-17 Mighty Mouse (H kelly) ... 8-1E Tricky Bunny (J Moiseyev) 8-14 Eastern Spirit (J Moiseyev) 12-1

Bin Pace 13.000 Clm S10.0001 Departure (M Fagbirofw) 7-22 Happy Georgia (J Moiseyev) 3-14 P'lar Almahurst (J Ingrassia) 9-27 Mickey Rabbit (C Conner) W6 Fish ( j Moiseyev) 5-13 Blasting Cap (J Marsha") 8-15 EacitaWe (R Pasciuto) 15-16 SchiMi. David (J Sheehan) 15-1AEi Lindas Fantasy (J Viteih)AE2 QuiHason (J Moiseyev) »....

Sth Pace 63,000 N/W S300/.t3 Petrel* (C Manzi) 7-22 Courageous Fella N (M Maker) 3-11 Jac Lyn Stewen (T LaBarca) 5-18 Crafty Yankee (J Lerenie) 9-24 Slromy Lord N (J Scaramuzzo) 8-16 Tyche Easi (R Fiqliolino) 8-1

6 Brel Boy Osborne (C Manii)7 Fade To White (J MarshaH)

10th Pace 62,640 N/W «229/et1 Jets Bueno (ND)8 Sky Vlley (W Buckley)6 We Do Bg (J HUndeprtfund)3 Smilin Charlotte (C Fusco)2 Bad Cami (j Craig)7 Lord Peter N (L Pitrie)4 Hail The Leader (A Ungar)5 Todd Splurge (C Kvanaugh)AEI Clamch Si Pat (R Camden)

11th Pece $1,900 N/W 2 PM •6 Jays Joy (J Ingrassia)2 Joame Dream (D Filion)4 Mamma (R Beachy)1 Generals Honey (S OeCample)3 Scarlet Tassel (E Dennis)5 West Gate Inn (W King)8 An Act 01 Love (ND)7 Queenly Heart (A Kavoleft)AEI W Two IJ Berger) .......AE2 Twitchy (H Kelly)

Freehold Result*Thursday, Dec. 16

let Pace $1,700 Time 2:06.24 Sunnse Victory (J Falocchio) 23.20 8 60 4 401 Star Cheetah (W Bresnahan) 4 80 3 405 K is Breeze (H Kelly) 11 60Also"Padrmo. Nevada Lobeil A. Armbro Assault.Sugar E. Fly Fly Mike

EXACTA 4-1 $95.602nd Pace $1,700 Time 2:04.1

6 Sunday Afternoon (R Relsenweaver)1580 7 20 4 40

1 Peking Inn (H Kelly) 2 40 2 405 Sir Casar (J Girogianni) 6 BOAlso Gezonga. Willie Mays. Port Revenue. AIM Me.Hi PO Beach Boy

DAILY DOUBLE 4-8 S141J0EXACTA 6-1 $31.40

3rd Pace $1,900 Time 2:04.22 Direct Skater (M Roane) 4 6 0 2 6 0 2 2 01 Flying Phyllis (H Kelly) 360 2.105 Green Wave Jamma (G Baldachtno) 2.20Also Lee Liner. Toast The Choice, Cm Towner.Shannon Cadet. Ciaincn Dana

EXACTA 2-1 $13.60

4th Trot $2,600 Time 2:05 45 Eighty Eight Eric (J Moiseyev) . 5 60 4 20 3 002 Trip Four (A KavoleH) 21 60 7 208 ironstone Tanas (P Stanton) 9 20Also Tigress Song. Blue Star Pete Connies Bonnie.Ambassador ChrisDnt — Sir Orkan N

EXACTA 5-2 $68.40Sth Pace $1,900 Time 2:02.4

5 Amys Puppet (M Maker) 8 2 0 4 0 0 3 6 01 Brilliant Bromac (H Ketly) 4 40 2604 General Sionegate {J Moiseyev) 3 20Also Julius Coasar. April Fools Gold. Kreizers Vamis.Precious MasterScr Pure Fame A •

THIFECTA 5-1-4 $188.706th Pace S2.200 Time 2.04.1

5 R o n d o u l S e r e n a d e (A Dich'<aro|. 143 60 26 60 7 20

BASKETBALL HOCKEYEASTERN CONFERENCE

BostonPMadsiphiaWashingtonNew JerseyNew York

AtlantaMilwaukeeDetroitChicagoIndianaCleveland

Atlantic Division

16131055

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1110

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WESTERN CONFERENCE

DallasUtah *DenverHoustonSan AntonioSacramento

L A LakersGolden StatePortlandSeattle•noenixL A Clippers

M.d»e»t Division151411

976

Pacific Division1714151112.4

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Yesterday's Game•New Jersey 94 New York 93Crucago 97 Indiana 88Milwaukee 104 Atlanta 95Sacramento at L A Clippers, (n)Portland at L A Lakers, (n)

' Washington at Golden State, (n)

Houston at Seattle, (n)Today'• Games

Boston at Philadelphia. 7 30 pmSan Antonio at Detroit. 7 30 p mUlan at Cleveland, 8 p.mDenver at Dallas, 8 30 pmSeattle at Phoenix. 9 30 pmHouston at Poniand. 10 pm

TomorroM'a OameiIndiana at New York. 7 30 p mSan Antonio at Atlanta. 7 30 pmDetroit at Philadelphia j p mUtah at Chicago. 8 30 pmL A Lakers at Dallas. 8 30 p mBoston at Milwaukee. 9 p mGolden State at Denver 9 30 p m

NEW JERSEY (94)Turner 8-12 1-2 17. Williams 6-12 5-8 17. Bailey

5-10 4-7'14. Brown 9-17 11-14 29. Washington 1-20-02. Coleman2-30-04. Wood3-5 1 -2 8. McKenna1-8 1-2 3. Mannion 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 35-69 23-3394NEW YORK (93)

Oldham 0-1 0-0 0 O r 3-6 0-0 6. Ewmg 10-165-11 25 Sparrow 4-7 0-0 8 Wilkins 9-19 3-4 21.Cartwright 6-13 11-12 23 Tucker 1-6 0-0 2.Henderson 2-8 0-0 4 Thornton 2-2 0-0 4 Totals37-78 19-27 93NewJeraey • 25 26 22 21—94New York 17 26 25 2 5 - 9 3

Three-pomt goals—Wood Fouled out— BaileyRebounds—New Jersey 45 (Williams 16). New York49 (Ewmg 13) Assists—New Jersey 26 (Washington7). New York 18 (Wilkins 5) Total fouls— New Jersey27. New York 25 Technicals—New Jersey illegaldefense: New Jersey illegal defense A—9.978

WALES CONFERENCI

PhiladelphiaNY IslandersPittsburghNew JerseyNV RangersWashington

HartfordBostonMontrealQuebecBuffalo

Patrick Division

2317ISIS1110

W L7

1312141416

Adams Division161616146

912131521 t

Ti!1i1

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

MinnesotaSt LouisTorontoDetroitChicago

EdmontonCalgaryWinnipegLos AngelesVancouver

Norris Division141212119

Smythe Dl211815149

14 :13 fIS '14 !17 f

ilslon111314 .17 .20 .

Pts4B36

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102I IS11511697

129101105

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115/119'112140127

FOOTBALL

10-112-1

. .VI

. 9-2

. 5-1

. 4-1.B-1

. B-1

. 9-112-1

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2 Skippers Peggy (L Femero) 6 80 3 006 Oompas Scooter (D DePmto) 2 80Also New Courtship. Outastep. Future Primitive.Bridgets SongScr Brets Bob

EXACTA 5-2 6566.607lh Pece S3.600 Time 2:00

3 Vaiorall (J Schwind) 260 260 2 605 Chipil (V Fusco) 10.60 4.608 Marco Jen <H Kelly) 7.60Also: HH Frosted, Rolle Hanover. Egg Nog. Nan LorRan, Nassau County

EXACTA 3-5 626.80 .8th Pace $3,000 Time 2:01.4

3 Whatatron (H Kelly) 4.00 3 00 2 401 Jennifer Domino (J Moiseyev) 4 40 2 602 Red Terror (M Menllo) 580Also: Grapec. Delusive Mini Butler A. TittanysTriumphScr: Ciainch Buster

THIFECTA 3-1-2 1110.409th Pace $1,900 Time 2:04.1

2 Arthurtron <n Kelly) 5 00 5 20 4.205 Whata Steady Lady (C Manzi) 7 60 4 003 Uncommon Valor (M Gonzalez) 260Also Street Tiger. Diamond Major. GenerosityScr Whats Trip. Wild Willy Bambma

EXACTA 2-5 S2310th Pace S2.2OO Time 2:03.2

4 Cicero Andy (D Buckson) . 47 20 24 20 5 208 Larry Meadow (C Manzi) 19.20 7 603 Freight Song (M Liebman) , ..• 3.00Also JefS Volcano. Playful Misty Hunter Lobeil.Houston RocketScr Bonnie Wil

EXACTA 4-6 6428.2011th Pece 12.200 Time 2;02.1

4 Hit A Homer (J Sheehan) 4 60 3 00 3 001 Porchia (J Moiseyev) 360 3002 Image Of Falcon (j Stafford) 4.00Also Edgewood Odeever. Colonial Script. RamblingWarren. Winning Hitter. W Direct

TRIFECTA 4-1-2 S89.10Attendance 1583; Handle $315,066; Simulcast

handle $68,185

Yeaterday'a QamesHartford 6. Boston 5Philadelphia 9. NY Islanders 4Minnesota 6, Toronto 5. OTWinnipeg 3. St Louis 3. tieQuebec at Calgary, (n)

Today's GamesMontreal al Buffalo. 7 35 p.m.Washington at New Jersey. 7 35 p.m.

AUTO RACING1987 FISA Grind Pm Schedule

" DARlS |AP) — The 17-race 1987 World Cham-p.onsriip Grand Pm schedule announced yesterdayby the International Auto Sport Federation

Apm 12 — Rio de Janeiro BrazilMay 3 — San Marino. Imola. Italy.Way 17 — Spat-Francorchamps. Belgium

. May 31 — Monaco\ June 14 — Montreal. Canada

June 21 — Detroit. MiChJuly 5 — Le Casteiiel FranceJuly 1 2 — Siiversione. BritainJuly 26 — Hockenheim, West GermayAug 9 — Budapest. HungaryAug 16 — Zeitweg, AustriaSept 6 — Monia. ItalySept 20 — Estonl. PortugalSept 27 — Jerez, SpamOct 16 — Mexico 'CrtyNov 1 — Suzuka. JapanNow 15 — Adelaide. Australia

Auto Racing All-AmericanBURBANK. Calif (AP) — The 1986 Auto Racing

All-American team announced yesterday by the 400-member American Auto Racing Writers and Broad-casters Association

First TeamOpen Wheel Racing — Bobby Ranai and Micahei

AndrettiStock Car — Dale Earnhardt and Tim RichmondRoad Racing — Ai Holberi and Scott PruettDrag Racing — Don Garlits and Kenny Bernstein .Snort Track — Hershel McGnff and Steve KinserAt Large — Steve Milien and Tom Kendall

Second TeamOpen Wheel Racing — Robert Guerrero and AI

UnserStock Car — Darren Waltnp and-Bill ElliottRoad Racing — Wally Dallenbach. jr. and Derek

BellDrag Racing — Bob Glidden and Darrelt Gwynn

Short Track — Jack Hewitt and R ;h VolgerAt Large — Fabntio Barbazza am Irv Hoerr

1987 FISA Auto Rally SchedulePARIS (AP) — The 1907 World Auto Rally schedule

announced yesterday by the International AutoSports Federation

Jan 14-2 — Mome CarloFeb 13-15 — SwedenMarch 10-15 — PortugalApril 16-20 — Salan. KenyaMay 7-10 — Tour of CorsicaMay 30-June 4 — Acropolis, GreeceJune 25-29 — Olympus, WashingtonJuly 11-14 _* New ZealandAug 2-9 — ArgentinaAug 26-30 — 1.000 Lakes, FinlandSept 22-26 — Ivory CoaslOct 11-17 — San Remo. Italy .Nov 22-26 — RAC. Britain

|Fig's pro picksHome Mam In CAPS)

TONKeHT49ERS 26

TOMORROWGIANTS 30SEAHAWKS27

SUNDAYBENGALS 24LIONS 21OILERS 20 .'.Bears 17RAIDERS 29Chials33VIKINGS 24BROWNS 29CARDINALS 27Redskins 19

1Rams 20

.. Packers 10... Broncos 20

Jala 16Falcons 17

Bills 14COWBOYS 14

com 2oSTEELERS 2>

Saints 23Chargers 16

Buccaneers 7EAGLES 17

MONDAY NIGHTDOLPHINS 33 Patriots 20

Last M a * : I right, 6 wrong. Including saactBaara-Llona acora. Corta ara on a laarl To data:14S-U-2.

Jonni's pro picks(Home team In CAPS)

TONKIHTSAN FRANCISCO 23 LA. Rams 20

TOMORROWSEATTLE 21 Denver 20GIANTS 31 Graan Bay 17

SUNDAYCINCINNATI 26 r:. Jets 24Washington 16 PHILADELPHIA 14DETROIT 17 Atlanta 14HOUSTON 24 Buffalo 21Chicago 19 DALLAS 17LA. RAIDERS 34 Indianapolis 21PITTSBURGH 26 Kansas City 20MINNESOTA 21 New Orleans 16CLEVELAND 27 San Diego 21ST. LOUIS 30. Tampa Bay 24

MONDAY NIQHTMIAMI 31 New England 24

Laat weak: 7-7 (Congratulations 10 VlnnleTaetavarde lor escaping from Indianapolis and BobIraay). Saaaon lo data: 149-59-2 (.714).

NFL Playoff PossibilitiesAMERICAN CONFERENCE

EASTERN DIVISION—New England can clinch the division title by

beating Miami next Monday If New England and NewYork bom lose. New York will win the division basedon better conference record (8-4 lo 7-5). II NewEngland loses, il can clinch a wild-card berth with anycombination of two losses by Cincinnati. Seattle orKansas City.

—New York Jets have clinched a wild-card berthbased on conference record and can clinch thedivision title if New England loses to Miami.

—Miami can be a wild-card team if they beat NewEngland next Monday and Cincinnati. Los AngelasRaiders. Kansas City and Seattle all lose their finalgame based on better overall record than Raiders(9-7 to 6-8) and better conference racord (7-5) thanCincinnati (6-6). Kansas City (8-6) and Seattle (6-6)

CENTRAL DIVISION—Cleveland has clinched the division title.—Cincinnati can clinch a wild-card berth by

beetmg the New York Jets and Kansas City or New-England lose, based on better overall record than

Kansas City and head-to-head against New Eng-land. OR if New England loses and Seattle wins theirfinal game, based on Cincinnati beating New Englandand Seattle head-to-head

WESTERN DIVISION—Denver has clinched division tills—Kansas City can clinch a wild-card berth by

winning their final game based on better conferencerecord (9-5) than New England (6-5). Cincinnati (7-5)

and Seattle (7-5) If Kanaaa City loaas. they can emeua wild-card berth If Los Angelas RaOars. Cmcmnaoand SuWa and Miami lota, based on batter recordI9-7 to 6-6) then Los Angeles Raiders, end on betterconference racord (6-8) and Miami (7-5) thanCincinnati (6-6) and Seattle (6-6)

—Seattle can clinch a wild-card berth by winningits laat game and New England. Cincinnati andKanaas City losing their laat game, baaed on baiteroverall racord (10-9) than Cincinnati (9-7) andKansas City (9-7) Seattle also gats a wild-card berthif New England 110-6) and either Kansas City (9-7)or Cincinnati lose, based on head to head competitionagainst Now England and better overall racord thanKansas City or Cincinnati II Maw England wins.Seattle (10-6) can still be e wad-card team II KanaaaCity (9-7) and Cincinnati (9-7) use. baaed on Honorrocord.

— U s Angeles Raiders can only clinch wad-cardberth by beating Indianapolis whUe Seattle. KanaasCity and Cincinnati lose

NATIONAL CONFERENCEAll playoff teams have been decided

EASTERN DIVISION—New York Giants have cinched the division title

They can clinch homo M d advantage throughoutptayolts with a win tomorrow over Green Bay basedon better conference rocord (11-1) va. Chicago(possible 10-2).

—Washington has clinched wild-card berth baaedon overall rocord and win host wild-card game

CENTRAL DIVISION—Chicago has clinched division title Chicago can

clinch home field advantage throughout playoffs bywinning their lasl game at Dallas and the Now YorkGiants losing tomorrow.

WESTERN DIVISION—The winner of today's Los Angeles Rams-San

Francisco game will clinch the division title, the loseris the wild-card team and will play at Washington

No. 14 Baylor Svt M r ColoradoAJ A n e i W a *

Florida State 14 over Indiana

Florida Cane Sow!

No 10 Auburn 7 over Southern Cal

No. S To«aa AUMVk ovor No. 11 Ohio SUM

No. 6 Nebraska 4Vi ovor No 6 LSU

• M MNo 4 Michigan 2tt over No 7 Aruona St

Orange S o *No 3 Oklahoma ITVi over No 9 Arkansas

Friday. Jan. >FieeuSowl

No t Miami 7 ovor No. 2 Ponn SUM

Hanaha OddeRENO. Nev (AP) — This week s odds from

Harrah s Reno Race 1 Sports Book lor NationalFootball Leegue games and upcoming coHege bowlgames

NFLToda,

San Francisco 5Vt over Los Angeles Rams

New York Giants 11 Vt over Green BaySeattle 3 over Denver

SundayCleveland 7 over San DiegoMmnesole 3 over New OrleansPittsburgh ivj over Kansas CityDetroit 3 over AtlantaSt Louis 12 over Tampa BayHouston 3 over BuffaloWashington 3 over PhiladelphiaCincinnati 6 over New York JetsChicago 7vi over DallasLos Angeles Raiders 9 over Indianapolis

MondayMiami 4 over New England

COUEOESaturday, Dec. 20no#penoenc# BOWi

Mississippi 2W over Texas TechTuesday, Dec. 33Hall of Fame Bowl

I No 17 Georgia 2Vi over Boston CollegeThursday, Dec. 25

Sun BowlNo 13 Alabama 2V> over No 12 Washington

Saturday, Dec. 27OatorBowl

Clemson 1 over No 20 StanfordAloha Bowl

- No. 16 Arizona 8 over NortryCafflima- iMonday. Dec. 2S

Liberty BowlTennessee 5' * over Minnesota

Tuesday. Dec 30Freedom Bowl

No 15 UCLA 12 over Brigham Young

No 19 Iowa 7 over San Diego StateWednesday. D M . 31

Peach BowlNo 18 North Carolina St. 3 over Virginia Tech

New Englandy-NY JstiMiamiBuffalolnd.anipo*j«

x-ClevelandCincinnatiPittsburghHouston

x -DenverKansas CitySeattleL A RaidersSan Diego

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x-clinched division titley-cl.nr.hed playotf berth

Today'e GameLos Angeles Rams al San Francisco. 9 p.m.

Tomorrow's GamesGreen Bay at New York Giants. 12:30 p.m.Denver at Seattle. 4 pm.

Sunday's Oarne.Atlanta at Detroit. 1 p mBuffalo at Houston. 1 p mKanaas City at Pittsburgh.' 1 p mNew Orleans at Minnesota 1 pm.New York Jets at Cincinnati. 1 p.m.San Diego et Cleveland. 1 p mTampa Bay al St Lows. 1 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia. 1 p.m.Chicago al Dallas. 4 pm.Indianapolis at Los Angeles Haulers 4 pm

Monday's GameNew Englend at Miami, 9 p m

END REGULAR SEASON

NFL Playoff ScheduleTimes to be announced

Sunday, Dec. 21AFC and NFC wildcard games

Saturday, Jan. 3.1997AFC and NFC semifinal games

Sunday, Jan. 4, 1967AFC and NFC semifinal games

Sunday. Jan. 11, 1H7AFC and NFC Championship games

Sunday, Jan. 25,1967Super Bowl at Pasadena. Calif , 6 p m

DEALS SPORTS ON TVBASEBALL

American LeegueCHICAGO WHITE SOX—Sent Bruce Tenner,

pitcher, lo the Oakland As to complete an earliertrade

C L E V E L A N D INDIANS—sent Bryan oeikers. CurtWardie. Don Schulze and Jose Roman, pitchers, toBuffalo ol the American Association,

TEXAS RANGERS—Signed Mike Jeffcoat, pitcher,to a one-year contract, and assigned him to theirOklahoma City of the American Association.

National LeagueSAN DIEGO PADRES—Announced that Graig

Nettles, third baseman, and Dave LaPomt. pitcher,will not be offered contracts for the 1967 season.

American AnociationBUFFALO BISONS—Signed Doug Frobel. out-

fielder

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Auociatlon

NBA—Fined Patrick Ewmg, New York center,S3,000 for fighting

NEW YORK KNICKS—Named Brad Greenbergassistant coach

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS—Traded WalterBerry, forward, to the San Antonio Spurs for KevinDuckworth, center.

HOCKEYNational Hockey Leegue

HARTFORD WHALERS—Recalled Shane Churia.left wing, from Bmghamton of the American HockeyLeague

NEW YORK RANGERS—Traded KjellSamuelsson, defenseman. and a second-round draftchoice in 1989 to the Philadelphia Flyers for Bobfrqese. goaltender Sent Bob Crawford, forward, loNew Haven of the American Hockey League for atwo-week conditiomno period

SOCCERMajor Indoor Soccer League

WICHITA WINQ?—Signed John Barretta, goal-keeper, tp a 10-day contract.

COLLEGE• MIAMI. FLA —Announced it will replace NorthernIllinois with-Arkansas on its football schedule in the1987 and 1988 seasons.

SOUTH CAROLINA—Named Joe Lee Dunn assis-tant football coach and defensive coordinator.

WASHINGTON STATE—Announced SteveMorton, assistant football coach, will leave to join thecoaching staff at.iowa State.

TONIGHT *7 p.m. (MSQ) Big East collegebasketball preview7:30 p.m. (SC) NHL hockey —Capitals at Devils8 p.m. (6,7) NFL football —Rams at 49ers(MSG) Giants Journal8:30 p.m. (MSG) High SchoolSportsweek9 p.m. (MSG) Boxing — Fromthe Forum in Inglewood, Calif,(taped Dec 3.) " *10:05 p.m. (TBS) NBA basket-ball Rockets at Trailblazers11 p.m. (ESPN) College football— Division I-AA Championship11:15 p.m. (SC) MISL soccer —Express at Sting (same-daytape delay)

TOMORROW12 p.m. (2, 10) NFL Today —Brent Musburger hosts12:30 p.m. (2,10) NFL football— Packers at Giants1:30 p.m. (4) Sports Lifestyles— profiles of Don Carter, ownerof the Dallas Mavericks, andworld champion water skiierCamilla Duvall 2 p.m. (6,7) Golf— Mazda Champions — topplayers from the Senior andLPGA tours paired at Try all GolfClub

3:30 p.m. (4) NFL '86 — BobCostas hosts3:45 p.m. (2,10) Collegebasketball — Illinois at NorthCarolina4 p.m. (3,4) NFL football —Broncos at Seahawks6,7) Wide World of Sports —Scheduled Pernell Whitaker vs.Alfredo Layne in lightweightbout scheduled for 10 rounds;"Celebration... America on Ice "figure skating exposition withsome of the nation's topskaters(MSG) College basketball —Staten Island at New YorkUniversity

TOMORROW EVENING7 p.m. (ESPN) College basket-ball — Temple at Villanova(SC) NHL hockey — Rangers at

•Islanders(57) NHL hockey — Flyers atPenguins(MSG) Knicks pregame show7:30 p.m. (MSG) NBA basket-ball Pacers at Knicks8 p.m. (11, 17, USA) Indepen-dence Bowl — Texas Tech vs.Mississippi9 p.m. (ESPN) College basket-ball — St. Joseph's at Dayton

StraubLincoln Mercury

Mercury-LincolnMark-Merkur

Highway 36 @ Pkwy. Exit 117

KEYPORT 264-8500

StraubMotors Inc.

Buick - AMCRenault - Jeep

Highway 36 @ Pkwy. Exit 117

KEYPORT 264-4000

RemsenDodge

Dodge Carsand Trucks

' Highway 36 @ Holmdel Road

HAZLET 739-4010

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We are franchised Dealers For;

General Motors Corp.Ford Motor Corp.

Chrysler CorpAMC Jeep/RenaLilt Corp.

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Economy slowsBusiness plans only modest increase in capital spending

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — U.S. businesses, facedwith a sluggish economy and the loss ofinvestment tax incentives, plan to increasecapital spending 0.2 percent next year afterthe biggest spending cutback this year sincethe last recession, the government said yester-day.

The Commerce Department said businessesslashed investment spending by an estimated2.6 percent this year, the sharpest drop sincethe depths of the recession in 1982.

The department said a survey of businessspending plans found managers expected tospend $376.2 billion on expansion andmodernization plans this year, after adjustingfor inflation.

And in its first look at 1987, the depart-ment's survey estimated spending would total

$377.1 billion, only slightly higher than thisyear.

This weak performance compared to stronggains of 15.8 percent in 1984 and 8.7 percentin 1985 as the country was recovering from the1981-82 recession.

American manufacturing has been batteredin the past two years by stiff foreign competi-tion. With factory operating rates declining,business executives have seen little need toincrease capacity. J

The recently paswiToverhatn of the tax lawhas further depressed business spending be-cause it raises business taxes by removing avariety of investment tax breaks.

Michael Evans, an economist with EvansEconomics in Washington, estimated thatabout half of the cutback in spending this yearcould be blamed on the adverse impact of thetax law. While the law docs not becomeoperational until Jan. 1, Congress madeelimination of a key business investment tax

credit retroactive to last JanuaryGordon Richards, director of economic

analysis for the National Association ofManufacturers, said the Commerce survey wastoo optimistic and that capital spending islikely to decline by 4 percent next year oncebusinesses realize the full impact of the taxlaw changes.

"This survey seriously understates themagnitude of the contraction in capital spend-ing that will occur in 1987," he said.

Business investment spending accounts furabout one-eighth of total economic activity soweakness in this area could further depressoverall economic growth next year.

The Reagan administration last weekslashed its estimate for economic growth in1987 from 4.2 percent to 3.2 percent, a forecastthat is still higher than many private analystsare predicting.

26 firms to quit South AfricaBy JAMES F. SMITHAssociated Press

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Twenty-six more U.S. firms are likely to pull out ofSouth Africa over the next six months, thehead of the American Chamber of Commercesaid yesterday.

In the past two years, about 70 Americanfirms have withdrawn from South Africa orannounced they were leaving, including Gen-eral Motors, IBM, Eastman Kodak and Coca-Cola. U.S. companies are under pressure athome to stop doing business in South Africabecause of the government's racial policies.

Frank Lubke, president of the chamber and

an executive of the U.S. multinationalChesebroughrPonds Inc., said high-profilecompanies selling consumer goods in the

' domestic U.S. market were under the heaviestpressure to leave South Africa. Firms relyingon state and local government contracts alsocould succumb to disinvestment pressure, hesaid.

"We believe that most of the 259 U.S.companies still operating in South Africa willremain, but 26 — representing consumercompanies and those dependent on state ormunicipal contracts — will very likely not beable to withstand the tremendous pressure,"Lubkc told The Associated Press.

He declined to name the companies likely todepart.

U.S. investment in South Africa already has

fallen by half in the past five years, to about$1.3 billion.

More than 60 U.S. corporations have pulledout of South Africa over the past two yearsand about 10 others have announced plans towithdraw.

The exodus has accelerated since Congresspassed new anti-apartheid legislation in Oc-tober this year, imposing stiffer sanctions onSouth Africa and barring new investment.

Lubke said: "Our position here has beenconsiderably weakened by the U.S. anti-apartheid laws. That has been a major blow tothe confidence of the companies that remainhere and, indeed, to the U.S. Embassy in SouthAfrica."

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