Turmoil prevailed from start to end - Red Bank Register Archive

48
Your lown Pagei B The Sunday Register —. JL _ _ ^ ^ VOL. 107 NO. 220 YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER . . . SINCE 1878 MARCH 17, 1985 SEVEN SECTIONS 40 CENTS IN THE KEY OF Q-REEN - Frank O'Farrell provides the music and Ethel Frankel, left, and Ann Ross provide the vocals, for the Red Bank Senior Citizens St. Patrick's Day Party. Today's the day sons anddaughters ol Erin'really celebrate. Frances Ryan Quinn sees mostly red toda BY T. PATRICK HILL INTERLAKEN - If you had been at the Democratic mini-convention In Memphis, Tenn., in December 1078, you might have overheard her speaking to Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale about the need to include Northern Ireland In their human rights agenda. If you had been in Washington on Feb. 20 this year, you might have seen her outside the United States Capitol protesting while British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher addressed a joint meeting of Congress. If you had been at the Sheraton Centre in New York earlier this month you would have seen her participating in the Irish American Unity Conference on human rights. If you had been at the famous Midland Hotel in Manchester, England in 19+4, you would have seen her wrangling with Winston Churchill tenaciously, but with infinite courtesy over the Irish question. That was when Churchill used to call her his beloved Irish rebel. Rebel or not, to this day, she recalls the bravery of the British as they took everything the German Luftwaffe could throw at them. She was an air raid warden during World War II, and that was her way of fighting back for basic human rights. Today she lives here. She is a wife, a mother and a grandmother. Her name is Frances Ryan Quinn. As courteous as those distant Manchester days, she is even more tenacious in her fight for the recognition of the basic human rights of the Catholic minority population in Northern Ireland. For most Americans, including the 40 million Irish Americans, the conflict in Northern Ireland is a religious one between Roman Catholics and Prot- estants. For Frances Ryan Quinn, it is really a conflict over human rights. "You can compare the position of the Catholic minority," she says, "to that of the Black minority fighting for their civil rights in the United States."- Since the formation of Northern Ireland as a political entity Independent of the Republic of Ireland in 1920, the evidence of political, social and economic discrimination against Roman Catholics has been well documented. In modern times, it tub iwliUMUW | pg transcend sectarian differences, its leaders looked for a coalition among professional and working classes as a force against the long politically dominant Ulster Unionists made up largely of wealthy landowners and business interests. The civil rights movement was only partially successful. But It did shake loose the monopolistic power of the Unionists, and caused unheard-of dissension among their ranks. Politically, the result was a much more volatile, often violent, situation, which the British Government attempted to control bv sending in the troops. They would, It was officially " H.iilii pH0t.br DM LOM CHURCHILL'S BELOVED IRISH REBEL' - Frances Ryan Quinn of Interlaken wears a Tara broach, symbol of the ancient kings of Ireland. claimed, act as honest brokers between the warring factions, preventing in future the possibility of such incidents as the invasion of the largely Catholic Falls area by members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary. The British troops would keep the peace. Quinn rejects this claim out of hand. "If you must know, the final responsibility for violence in the north rests with England. Both the policies of the British Government and the behaviour of the British Army disregard basic human rights," she insists. Obviously moved, she cites the example of 89-year- old Brian who was never allowed to touch his father when visiting him in Long Kesh prison. Brian would plead with the soldiers onduty, but they always refused. Finally rtrlvi»n hpynnri pivfnraiwa ho rantw IMI §lfeft up Wt -iwiiiu uuj rt gull rtlHI S1IUUI one of them between the eyes because ul wlwt they had done to him. "This is violence breeding violence," she says. "The British Army's methods of interrogating anyone thought to be associated with the IRA," she continues, "is just as disturbing." She recalls one incident which an Anglican minister shared with her at the recent Irish American Unity Conference. He was visiting Long Kesh prison. As he passed one room, he heard a voice Inside the room call for a two by four. Curious, he (See QUINN, Page 4A) The Donovan years Turmoil prevailed from start to end BY MERRILL HARTSON WASHINGTON (AP) - In the end, Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan was overcome by the painful conclusion, after months of agony, that his intractable legal problems had hamstrung the agency he sowanted to run. Personal problems, Donovan said, could no longer be allowed "to distract the president or the country from the administration's mission of securing America's pre-eminent position in the world." And on Friday, Donovan sub- mitted, and President Reaganac- cepted, his resignation. Indeed, distraction was the most pervasive element of Raymond Donovan's tenure in Washington. It was a period of inescapable disruption, for the secretary, the people who worked for him, the groups who do business with the department, members of Congress who oversee it and, ultimately, the president who is accountable, but who stood behind Donovan for four troublesome years. Editorial view on Page 14B Yet, Donovan's era left an in- delible mark, both his critics and admirers say. "I loved his quiet Irish tenacity," said Mike McKevitt, executive di- rector of the National Federation of Independent Business. "How ironic that he called it quits on St. Patrick's Day weekend." "He is the first secretary of labor I ever saw who wanted to put kids back towork in the summertime," said McKevitt, alluding to Donovan's staunch lobbying for legislation authorizing employers to pay teen-agers OS cents below the minimum wage for summertime work. "For years, it was not-so- facetiously called the Department of Organized Labor," said Mark de Bernardo, manager of labor lawat (See DONOVAN, Page 7A) RAYMOND J. DONOVAN Phone device life-saver for hearing-impaired " iv -~ " *Y **VIN When faced with an emergency, the majority of county residents just pick up a phone and call for help. But for a cross-section of comity residents — the hearing-impaired the telephone seems only to contribute to feeling of Isolation. In the past year, however, a movement has taken place to bridge the communication gap between the county's deaf and some life-saving public services with the use of Phone-TTY's, telephone devices for the deaf. The brainchild of New Yorker I. Lee Brody, TYY's enable the deaf and the deaf and blind to send and receive messages by attaching reconditioned teletype machines to telephones with the use of an "acoustic coupler." The coupler allows residents to send printed messages through the phone lines by typing on a keyboard. Brody vowed to give the telephone to the deaf more than a decade ago after a hunting accident left him partially paralyzed four miles into the woods in upstate New York. After seven hours in the frozen wilderness, Brody was able to crawl back to his car and safety, but was unable to contact his wife, Alleen, back in Fair Lawn to let her know he was alright. She is deaf; his bearing is impaired. While recuperating from the accident, Brody learned of a deaf woman's desperate attempts to get help for her husband, who had suffered a heart attack and died two hours later. Since then, he has been able to turn his promise into a full-fledged business that now serves thousands of deaf people across the country. His New York-New Jersey Phone-TTY Inc., a non- profit organization, now offers a doorbell signaler to announce visitors, a bed vibrator that awakens a deaf sleeper, and a baby cry signaler that alerts a deaf mother. In addition, he has invented an instrument that allows the deaf and blind to communciate on the phone by sending and receiving messages in Braille, and has developed a less expensive, portable version of the TTY for home use. (See PHONE, Page 4A) f f » BRIDGING COMMUNICATION GAP - Eaton- town Police Chief Joseph Pelella and Sgt. -Dale Bennett, former captain of the borough's First Aid Squad, work with the department's new Phone- TTY, telephone device for the deaf. The unit enables the county's deaf to communicate with some life-saving public services. Water company on asbestos: No health hazard is evident BY STEPHANIE GLUCKMAN SHREWSBURY - There is no evidence that swallowing asbestos in tap water can cause cancer, according to the Monmouth Con- solidated Water Company. In fact, a water company spokes- man said there is no evidence that swallowing asbestos is a health hazard at all. r ir...o—,.-_. m i Manager Paul Burdan says that the puDiic was unduly alarmed by recent publicity surrounding a Middletown investigation into the possibility of asbestos contamina- tion in the Swimming River Reser- voir. Addressing proposed legislation that calls for a state study to determine whether asbestos in drinking water causes cancer, Burdan said his company had of- fered to help determine* standard. But be stressing that Monmouth Consolidated already filters asbestos from its waters using the most advanced technology avail- able. Commenting on asbestos test results reported by Middletown, Burdan said that Monmouth Con- solidated was not aware that the tests were being taken, and that the company's own tests, begun in 1979, showed no detectable amounts of asbestos in treated water. (See WATER, Page 4A) I Arts Index- 6B finininn Classified 6D 3^:, 11B Editorials 14B Your Town 1B Lifestyle .' 10 Make a Date 6B Movies 8B Sections People i 2A Monmouth Magazine Obituaries 7A TVUpdate Lcvolor Bllndi All Verticali 50% off. Mini's 40% off. 842-0550. Sal'i Tavern-Coned Beef 4 Cabbage. Sun. Mar. 17, 12 noon. Olde Union Houie-Brunch 1M Beginning March 24, we will be open St. Patrick's Buffet, 4-10 p.m. Red on Sundays from 9-1. Fair Haven Bank. 842-7575 Hardware Inc.

Transcript of Turmoil prevailed from start to end - Red Bank Register Archive

Your lownPagei B

The Sunday Register—. JL _ _ ^ ^VOL. 107 NO. 220 YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER . . . SINCE 1878 MARCH 17, 1985 SEVEN SECTIONS 40 CENTS

IN THE KEY OF Q-REEN - Frank O'Farrellprovides the music and Ethel Frankel, left, andAnn Ross provide the vocals, for the Red Bank

Senior Citizens St. Patrick's Day Party. Today'sthe day sons and daughters ol Erin'reallycelebrate.

Frances Ryan Quinnsees mostly red toda

BY T. PATRICK HILL

INTERLAKEN - If you had been at theDemocratic mini-convention In Memphis, Tenn., inDecember 1078, you might have overheard herspeaking to Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale aboutthe need to include Northern Ireland In their humanrights agenda.

If you had been in Washington on Feb. 20 this year,you might have seen her outside the United StatesCapitol protesting while British Prime MinisterMargaret Thatcher addressed a joint meeting ofCongress.

If you had been at the Sheraton Centre in NewYork earlier this month you would have seen herparticipating in the Irish American Unity Conferenceon human rights.

If you had been at the famous Midland Hotel inManchester, England in 19+4, you would have seenher wrangling with Winston Churchill tenaciously,but with infinite courtesy over the Irish question.That was when Churchill used to call her his belovedIrish rebel.

Rebel or not, to this day, she recalls the braveryof the British as they took everything the GermanLuftwaffe could throw at them. She was an air raidwarden during World War II, and that was her wayof fighting back for basic human rights.

Today she lives here. She is a wife, a mother anda grandmother. Her name is Frances Ryan Quinn.

As courteous as those distant Manchester days,she is even more tenacious in her fight for therecognition of the basic human rights of the Catholicminority population in Northern Ireland.

For most Americans, including the 40 million IrishAmericans, the conflict in Northern Ireland is areligious one between Roman Catholics and Prot-estants. For Frances Ryan Quinn, it is really aconflict over human rights.

"You can compare the position of the Catholicminority," she says, "to that of the Black minorityfighting for their civil rights in the United States."-

Since the formation of Northern Ireland as apolitical entity Independent of the Republic ofIreland in 1920, the evidence of political, social andeconomic discrimination against Roman Catholicshas been well documented. In modern times, it

tub iwliUMUW | pg

transcend sectarian differences, its leaders lookedfor a coalition among professional and workingclasses as a force against the long politicallydominant Ulster Unionists made up largely ofwealthy landowners and business interests.

The civil rights movement was only partiallysuccessful. But It did shake loose the monopolisticpower of the Unionists, and caused unheard-ofdissension among their ranks. Politically, the resultwas a much more volatile, often violent, situation,which the British Government attempted to controlbv sending in the troops. They would, It was officially

" H.iilii pH0t.br DM LOM

CHURCHILL'S BELOVED IRISH REBEL' -Frances Ryan Quinn of Interlaken wears a Tarabroach, symbol of the ancient kings of Ireland.

claimed, act as honest brokers between the warringfactions, preventing in future the possibility of suchincidents as the invasion of the largely Catholic Fallsarea by members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary.The British troops would keep the peace.

Quinn rejects this claim out of hand. "If you mustknow, the final responsibility for violence in thenorth rests with England. Both the policies of theBritish Government and the behaviour of the BritishArmy disregard basic human rights," she insists.

Obviously moved, she cites the example of 89-year-old Brian who was never allowed to touch his fatherwhen visiting him in Long Kesh prison. Brian wouldplead with the soldiers on duty, but they alwaysrefused. Finally rtrlvi»n hpynnri pivfnraiwa ho rantw

IMI §lfeft up Wt -iwiiiu uuj rt gull rtlHI S1IUUI

one of them between the eyes because ul wlwt theyhad done to him. "This is violence breedingviolence," she says.

"The British Army's methods of interrogatinganyone thought to be associated with the IRA," shecontinues, "is just as disturbing."

She recalls one incident which an Anglicanminister shared with her at the recent IrishAmerican Unity Conference. He was visiting LongKesh prison. As he passed one room, he heard a voiceInside the room call for a two by four. Curious, he

( S e e QUINN, P a g e 4A)

The Donovan years

Turmoil prevailedfrom start to end

BY MERRILL HARTSON

WASHINGTON (AP) - In theend, Labor Secretary RaymondDonovan was overcome by thepainful conclusion, after months ofagony, that his intractable legalproblems had hamstrung the agencyhe so wanted to run.

Personal problems, Donovan said,could no longer be allowed "todistract the president or the countryfrom the administration's missionof securing America's pre-eminentposition in the world."

And on Friday, Donovan sub-mitted, and President Reagan ac-cepted, his resignation.

Indeed, distraction was the mostpervasive element of RaymondDonovan's tenure in Washington.

It was a period of inescapabledisruption, for the secretary, thepeople who worked for him, thegroups who do business with thedepartment, members of Congresswho oversee it and, ultimately, thepresident who is accountable, butwho stood behind Donovan for fourtroublesome years.

Editorial viewon Page 14BYet, Donovan's era left an in-

delible mark, both his critics andadmirers say.

"I loved his quiet Irish tenacity,"said Mike McKevitt, executive di-rector of the National Federation ofIndependent Business. "How ironicthat he called it quits on St.Patrick's Day weekend."

"He is the first secretary of laborI ever saw who wanted to put kidsback to work in the summertime,"said McKevitt , alluding toDonovan's staunch lobbying forlegislation authorizing employers topay teen-agers OS cents below theminimum wage for summertimework.

"For years, it was not-so-facetiously called the Departmentof Organized Labor," said Mark deBernardo, manager of labor law at

(See DONOVAN, Page 7A) RAYMOND J. DONOVAN

Phone device life-saverfor hearing-impaired

" i v -~ " * Y **VIN

When faced with an emergency, the majority ofcounty residents just pick up a phone and call for help.

But for a cross-section of comity residents — thehearing-impaired — the telephone seems only tocontribute to feeling of Isolation.

In the past year, however, a movement has takenplace to bridge the communication gap between thecounty's deaf and some life-saving public services withthe use of Phone-TTY's, telephone devices for the deaf.

The brainchild of New Yorker I. Lee Brody, TYY'senable the deaf and the deaf and blind to send andreceive messages by attaching reconditioned teletypemachines to telephones with the use of an "acousticcoupler."

The coupler allows residents to send printedmessages through the phone lines by typing on akeyboard.

Brody vowed to give the telephone to the deaf morethan a decade ago after a hunting accident left himpartially paralyzed four miles into the woods in upstateNew York.

After seven hours in the frozen wilderness, Brody wasable to crawl back to his car and safety, but was unableto contact his wife, Alleen, back in Fair Lawn to let herknow he was alright.

She is deaf; his bearing is impaired.While recuperating from the accident, Brody learned

of a deaf woman's desperate attempts to get help forher husband, who had suffered a heart attack and diedtwo hours later.

Since then, he has been able to turn his promise intoa full-fledged business that now serves thousands of deafpeople across the country.

His New York-New Jersey Phone-TTY Inc., a non-profit organization, now offers a doorbell signaler toannounce visitors, a bed vibrator that awakens a deafsleeper, and a baby cry signaler that alerts a deafmother.

In addition, he has invented an instrument that allowsthe deaf and blind to communciate on the phone bysending and receiving messages in Braille, and hasdeveloped a less expensive, portable version of the TTYfor home use.

(See PHONE, Page 4A)

f f »BRIDGING COMMUNICATION GAP - Eaton-town Police Chief Joseph Pelella and Sgt. -DaleBennett, former captain of the borough's First AidSquad, work with the department's new Phone-TTY, telephone device for the deaf. The unitenables the county's deaf to communicate withsome life-saving public services.

Water company on asbestos:No health hazard is evident

BY STEPHANIE GLUCKMAN

SHREWSBURY - There is noevidence that swallowing asbestosin tap water can cause cancer,according to the Monmouth Con-solidated Water Company.

In fact, a water company spokes-man said there is no evidence thatswallowing asbestos is a healthhazard at all.

r i r . . .o—,.-_.

m i Manager Paul Burdan says thatthe puDiic was unduly alarmed byrecent publicity surrounding aMiddletown investigation into thepossibility of asbestos contamina-tion in the Swimming River Reser-voir.

Addressing proposed legislationthat calls for a state study todetermine whether asbestos indrinking water causes cancer,Burdan said his company had of-fered to help determine* standard.But be stressing that MonmouthConsolidated already fi lters

asbestos from its waters using themost advanced technology avail-able.

Commenting on asbestos testresults reported by Middletown,Burdan said that Monmouth Con-

solidated was not aware that thetests were being taken, and that thecompany's own tests, begun in 1979,showed no detectable amounts ofasbestos in treated water.

(See WATER, Page 4A)

I ArtsIndex-

6B finininn

Classified 6D 3 ^ : , 11BEditorials 14B Your Town 1BLifestyle .' 10Make a Date 6BMovies 8B SectionsPeople i 2A Monmouth MagazineObituaries 7A TV Update

Lcvolor Bllndi All Verticali50% off. Mini's 40% off. 842-0550.

Sal'i Tavern-Coned Beef 4Cabbage. Sun. Mar. 17, 12 noon.

Olde Union Houie-Brunch 1M Beginning March 24, we will be openSt. Patrick's Buffet, 4-10 p.m. Red on Sundays from 9-1. Fair HavenBank. 842-7575 Hardware Inc.

2A The Sunday Regirtcr SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965

Qrder and colormark THE paradealong Fifth Ave.

; NEW YORK (AP) - The skywas blue, the beer was green, the•fkces were a cheery red and' police and politicians were out in'force for the St. Patrick's DayParade along Fifth Avenue yes-terday.

Shouts of, "Hey, it's the may-' or!" and "Look at the horses!"

rang from the rows of mothersand fathers who held smallchildren aloft for a view past theranks of police who lined theroute.'

Many of the estimated 1.2Smillion spectators wore green'hats, sweaters and buttons, andeven the politicians dressed upfor the day.

Mayor Edward I. Koch worean Irish knit sweater, which hetold reporters he bought inBlarney, Ireland. Sen. Daniel P.Moynihan wore his trademarkIrish wool hat and carried ashillelagh. City Council Presi-dent Carol Bellamy wore a green

^scarf.,. Archbishop John J. O'Connorwore no green, instead sporting ared cap and black cloak But theRoman Catholic prelate stood onthe steps of St. Patrick's Ca-thedral throughout the 512-hourparade, dutifully clapping hislong, graceful hands for each ofthe 185 bands that passed by.

Startling among the green hatswas the full Indian headdress ofBig Minnow, of Middlesex. N.J.

Big Minnow said he was anIroquois, "the only official Indianscout" for Second RevolutionaryWar Regiment of Middlesex. 30of whose members marched inthe parade.

Margaret and Mary McKenna,sisters from Kew Gardens,Queens, wore green hats on theirheads, tiny shamrocks on theirc h e e k s , and c l a p p e denthusiastically for the ranks ofcity firemen who clowned as theymarched.

"The firemen are the best.They laugh and they talk. Thep o l i c e m e n d o n ' t , " saidMargaret. / ^

The police, 4,200 of whopf linedthe route, cheerfully buf sternlyenforced their orders to keep thecrowd behind barricades and

' confiscate alcohol. The measureswere implemented several yearsago after complaints that drunk-eness was spoiling the show.

One police officer was over-heard telling a spectator, "Thisis the best parade we've had eversince we took it back" from therowdies.

Mary Boyle said the sobrietyorder made the parade "morecivilized."

"I haven't seen a green beerall day, although I'm planning onseeing quite a few later on." saidMs Boyle, a New Yorker.

PEOPLE

Perkins plans tripto Africa if healthy

O'KOCH ON PARADE — New York Mayor Ed Koch marchesdown Fifth Avenue like a true Irishman in the St. Patrick's Dayparade yesterday. Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward, right,sports a black thorn walking stik as he participates in the festivities.

ST. LOUIS - MarllB Perklni,longtime host of the "Wild King-dom" television show, says he'lljourney to Africa if he recoverscompletely from cancer of thelymph nodes, a battle he sayshe's winning.

Recent tests indicate thecancer Is in remission, Perkinssaid Friday. He underwentchemical and radiation therapyfor a year.

"I've slowed down, there's noquestion about it," said Perkins,who turns 80 on March 28. "Assoon as this thing clears up, Ithink I'll begin my exercisesagain and regain my vigor."

Perkins, host of television'slongest-running wildlife show,said he hoped to go to Africa thiswinter with his wife Carol.

Curiosity satisfiedD A N V I L L E , K y . -

L'Orchestre de Paris was verycurious about what seemed likean unlikely stop on its U.S. tourthis month — this KentuckyBluegrass town of only 14,000people. Robert Weaver satisfiedtheir curiosity.

The professor from tiny CentreCollege — groggy, rumpled andunshaven from an overnightflight to France — was taken tothe manager's office last monthand interrogated about his home-

town about 40 miles southwest ofLexington.

"They were really curious,"Weaver said. "I have a feelingthey thought we'd come out in biboveralls and drive up in tractors"for the March 22 concert atCentre College's Norton Centre.

Not quite.The orchestra and conductor

Daniel Barenbotm can expect afairly sophisticated audiencewhich has already enjoyed or-chestras from Moscow, Czecho-slovakia, The Hague andScotland, as well as several topU.S. orchestras, opera com-panies and Broadway road pro-ductions.

William* more creativeELOY, Ariz. - Singer-song-

writer Paul Williams says get-ting free of the bodyguards he'dsurrounded himself with over Theyears has freed up his creativity.

"I was very isolated. I thought,'What am I going to write about— room service at the hotel? I'ma writer. I need people,'" Wil-liams. 44, said Friday.

"I just let go of all that andtold (the bodyguards), i f I needcigarettes, let me go get them.Let me go into the bar by myself.Let me get into trouble, I'll getout of It And it worked. I startedwriting again" about a year ago,he said.

'HE WEATHERLocal weather; Today will be partly cloudy witha 40 percent chance of showers in0ie morning. Highs will be in themiddle 40s in the morning. Windsfill be northwest at 15 to 25 mph.tonight will be mostly clear withlows in the upper 20s. Tomorrow*ill be mostly sunny with highsaround 40. Ocean watertemperatures are in the middle 40s.

Extended forecast• Weather will be fair on Tuesday.

*hile Wednesday will be cloudy witha chance of rain Skies will be partlycloudy Thursday. Lows will rangefrom the upper 20s to the lower 30sTuesday Lows will be in the middleto upper 30s Wednesday and Thurs-day. Highs will be in the lower 50sTuesday and Thursday and in theupper Ms Wednesday.

i

School club aidsStatue of Liberty: FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - TheVocational Industrial Club of Ameri-[a i VIC A i of the Monmouth CountyVocational School-Career Center,Kozloski Road, has completed itsfund-raising drive to help restorethe Statue of Liberty and EllisIsland.

For the past several months, the40 member club has been collectingKdlogg's boxtops and has sent morehin 500 of these to the Statue of.iberty-EUis Island Foundation Inc.n return, Kellogg's Company willlonate $50 to the restoration pro-

ject.I The effort was coordinated byRodney Riller, Neptune, vice presi-dent of the Career Center VIC A Theclub's faculty advisor is Gail Swann.

Marine forecastWinds will be north at 10 to 20

knots this morning and northwest at20 to 30 knots by this afternoonthrough tonight. There is a chance ofshowers this morning, but thisafternoon and night will see fairweather. Visibility generally will beover 5 miles but from 1 to 3 milesin showers. Seas will rise to 3 to 6feet by this afternoon.

Weather will be fair tomorrow.Winds will be northwest at 15 to 25knots.South Jersey

Today will be partly cloudy witha chance of showers in the morning.Highs will be in the lower to middle40s in the morning. Skies will bemostly clear tonight. Lows will be inthe middle to tipper 20s. Skies willbe mostly sunny tomorrow. Highswill range from 35 to 40.

The Sunday Register(USPS-334-570)

PuBi.she<j Sunday by The fled Bank RegisterEttabiisnM .n 187B

Dy jonr H COOK ana* Henry ClayMa>n Ofliu

One Ragnier P i u a . Shrewsbury. N J 07701(201) 542-4000Brcncn 0«<CW

Monmot-ff> Counry Ccoflhouse,F'MftOkl. N J 0772B

Members o< me Associated P<es* TheAsso&aieaP'4tu » emmea ••ciut'vtiy io me u u d a" ma <ocanews ptinito in tne newspaper as *«n as an AP news'd'ipaicftM

Member of ma Ama'<can Newspaper PubiincraAuociaiion. mt Audit Bureau o* Circulation. in« NewJeney Pratt Ataocation

Second Oass poaiaga pud at R M Bank, N J07701 Published wwkiy Man sutoc'ipiioni payabw madvanca

ToiaiMa>i Rain Daily &

T»rm Oai'y Sunday Sunday1-12 * • # « * 1 70/ week 75/ 24513-51 w t M i l 55- wee* 70/

1 y u i t 45/ week 65/ we*k 2 0M«ii rates 'o' coinage students and m.niary peto

net — '? o> above ramHome delivery by Carrier - Oa<ly and Sunday

Si 35 a week. Sunday omy 35 canta, Daily only 1 00Single copy ai Counter - Oaily 25 cen». Sunday

40 cent*POSTMASTER Sana addreu cnangea 10 Tne

Daily Regriior P O Box 520. fled Bank N J 07701

Showers RaJn Flurries Snow

GARDEN STATE. SECURITIES, INC.

Diacount BrokersMembers: Boston Stock Exchange. NASD. SIPC

777 Broad Str«et (Rt. 35) Shrewsbury. NJ 07701

800-624-0144 201-530-9400COUPON

20% OffOur AlreadyDiscounted

CommissionsCoupon ooo«i tn May i. IMS Service With Substantial Savings

NtfooM Wm**L$*r*C9 NQAA, US Dtpt ol Conwrc«

245/ #2 25/2 10/

FOn rurtlhLh

LOW BACK & LEG PAINII you have experienced low back and/or leg pain, conalocr thes* toeta:

• One out of every three people have back pain

• Over II million people a day are treated for back painTTi» number is Increasing by two million people annually

( • Ten million people are confined to bed each day because of hack pain

It s not normal to have back and leg pain, whatever your age. yet over II million people a day are treatedtor back pain Pain killing medication merely covers up the problem without correcting the cauae allowingthe damage to continue

Very often a structural imbalance is the underlying cause ol many types ol painlul disordersChiropractors employ a method that gives particular attention to ike structural and neurological aspect oi thebody By realigning spinal vertebra* into their proper position, through Chiropractic adjuslnwnta. thepressure or irritated nerves is relieved, thus enabling your body's natural recuperative powers to functionnormally

If you have any questions regarding low back and leg pain please call Kraiuu Chiropractic Center

• MAJOR MMCAL• K M SHIELD

• AUTO ACCIDCNT 1110% C«v«fM»l• AUTHOMaD WOWtHAH't COM*

• MOST UNION MAMS

KRAUSS CHIROPRACTIC CENTERFAMILY PRACTICE

79 Oak Hill Rd.. Mlddletown. N.J. 530-7773

ShopRite Is The

LOW PRICELEADER!For Fresh Dairy Savings,ShopRite Has The Answer!

ShopRite Is The

LOW PRICE LEADERSAVE ON

LamaurHAIR CARE PRODUCTS

Minute MaidApple Juice

REG. OR DRY-DAMAGED CONDITIONER OR

Perma Soft Shampoo

16oz.btl. 249

Five AliveDrink 64-oz.

cart. 159Perma SoftHair Spray EXTRA HOLD

REG.ORUNSCENTED7-oz.can

Frigo Parmesan- Soz.

439Style Shampooor Conditioner bll.

199

I A O

Please TakeNolle* of

nyarantFlushing!23S

——

SEb-4 O 1 "

Red StarFresh Yeast 2-oz.

pkg. 59Hair Spray MctHUM

SUPER UNSCtNrbU

***•* Wispride Soft Sharp £%»*•' or Wine Cheddar ££ £m

39StyleHair Spray

169MOISTURIZING

FernMist

189InJrdlv to HMira • tulNctanttupptv ol tales ilems lo* all our cutlome rs we must fettrv* mt rtQhl lo limnilia M.II h f l tn unltl ol 4 ol any «•!•• iltmi «ic*pl whcfi olh«rwisf noted Not responsible lotMS^aohlcal *>or». PtlcM tMtxIlo Son Mm I7lh>u5al Mat 23 IMS None told lo o l M lelaiK'S 01

Ht unite olt f Price* attocArtwork doe* r»l

In order lo H l u n • lulllclinl lupply ol U I M Items lor all our cmlomtn, «e must reserve Iht rlgM to limit the.purchase to unite ol • ol any u m lltmi. f nets! otim otherwlsi nottd Not responsible lor tvpograohicaltnors Prices ellKlivt Sun. Mar 17 thru Sal Mtr. 23. IMS. Nona sold loot htrrtlallm or »rtnlesaltrs.*nworlidon not ntcnurlly represent item on sale. It it lor rjftplay purpottt only Copynjhl WAKEFEKN FOOD

111*1 »#»•

; # * » » » * *

c0*SS ' S * * *

SUNDAY. MARCH IT, 1965 The Sunday Register 3A

THE STATE

Garden Staters ready the green

Officials move to avoid drought

. New Jersey resident* marched inthe bif St. Patrick's Day Parade inNew York City yesterday as aprelude to several festivities to beheld in the Garden State today.

An estimated 200,000 marchersstepped by more than 1 millionspectators who lined Fifth Avenuefor the 2Mth annual St. Patrick'sDay Parade, which took place undersunny skies.

But the National Weather Servicewas forecasting a chance of showersfor today when New Jersey com-munities honor the patron saint ofIreland.

The Newark St. Patrick's DayParade will celebrate its nth an-niversary today. The grand marshalis Peter J. Smith of Irvlngton, whowill step off at 2 p.m. from St.John's Ukranlan Church on SanfordAvenue in the city's Vailsburgsection.

The parade has a touch of politicsconnected to it, because the IrishConsulate in New York won't par-ticipate.

Michael Collins, a spokesman forthe consulate, said Us office won'tbe in the Newark march because theparade chairman, Essex CountyFreeholder Thomas P. Giblin, re-ceived the Michael Flannery Awardfrom the Irish-American FenianSociety last year.

Jersey City's 23rd annual paradewill begin at 1:30 p.m. and willmarch along Kennedy Boulevard toJournal Square. It will be led byJohn J. McMullen of Montclatr,chairman of the Houston SportsAssociation and the New JerseyDevils.

In the Morris County communityof Wharton, the seventh annualparade will start at noon and followa route on Main Street from St.Mary's Church to the AmericanLegion Hall.

An estimated 55 units, includingpipe bands, fire companies andvarious civic organizations will par-ticipate in the parade, sponsored bythe Irish American Association ofNorthwestern New Jersey.

BY EUSSA MeCRARY

TRENTON (AP) - Reservoirs operated bythe Delaware River Basin Commission arefilling up again, partly because of conservationefforts earlier this year, but environmentalofficials said a drought has not yet been averted.

"Right now we're In a day-to-day monitoringsituation," said Dirk Hofman of the stateDepartment of Environmental Protection. "Itcould go either way — improve or get worse.The month of March may tell the tale."

Since last August, only 8.5 inches of precipi-tation fell In New Jersey, 10 inches less thanusual.

As a result, the commission, which monitorswater supplies in New Jersey, New York,Pennsylvania and Delaware, issued a series ofdrought warnings, asking resident to conservewater.

Last week, a second-phase drought warningwas changed to a less serious first-phasewarning after water levels rose at threereservoirs in upstate New York.

"We had feared that by about this date we

would be in drought emergency," said com-mission spokesman Dawes Thompson.

Thompson said it inches of rain would haveto fall by summer to fill the reservoirs, nearlytwice the normal amount.

DEP spokesman James Staples said officialsare trying to avoid a crisis with early warningsto residents to cut back on unnecessary waterusage.

"We're putting forth the idea that peopleshould take the opportunity to fix leaks and notrun water needlessly," Staples said. "Peoplethink water is like air, it never runs out andthat's Just not so."

Hofman, deputy director of the Division ofWater Resources in the DEP, said unseasonablywarm weather in February contributed to thewater problem.

"What usually happens in the spring is thatwarm rains melt the snow and it goes into theground and rejuvenates the water supply. Wemissed that this year, and it has hurt thesupply," Hofman said.

During the drought that parched New Jersey

from September IBM) to May 1M1, the slate wasforced to set tough water restrictions.

Residents and businesses were fined morethan t> million by utilities - most of them inthe northern part of the state - for using morethan their share of water.

Emergency regulations put into effect by thestate during the drought included orders thatrestaurants serve water only to customers whoasked for it, that paved areas, such as parkinglots and driveways, not be washed and thatautomatic sprinklers be used only on a limitedbasis.

Meanwhile, the DEP has allowed threenorthern New Jersey utilities — the Hackensack-Water Co., North Jersey Water Supply Districtand Commonwealth Water Co. — to reduce thevolume of water they send into the Saddle,Wanaque, Ramapo and Passaic rivers.

Currently, 15 counties are operating underdrought warnings: Bergen, Essex, Hudson,Passaic, Morris, Somerset, Middlesex, Union,Mercer, Sussex, Warren, Hunterdon, Burl-ington, Camden and Gloucester.

Newark Airport is ninth busiest

Court papers: Youth bragged about fireTOMS RIVER - A 15-year-old

boy bragged to another that hestarted the May 11 fire at GreatAdventure amusement park thatkilled eight teen-agers, according tocourt papers filed here.

The assertion was contained in anaffidavit filed Friday in SuperiorCourt by attorneys for the park.

The teen-ager, identified only asJ.R., allegedly told a second youth,identified as W.G., that he startedthe blaze in retaliation for an earlierincident in which he was ordered bysecurity guards to leave the park,

the affidavit said."While watching the fire, I over-

heard a boy (J.R.) near me say hestarted the fire," the affidavitquotes W.G. as saying. "Later,while still watching the fire, J.R.said to me that he started the fireto get even with Great Adventurebecause they had thrown him out ofthe park for causing trouble.

"J.R. said he started the fire in awaste basket and then ran out of arear exit In the Haunted Castle andaround to the front," W.G. wasquoted as saying.

BY RICH MENDELSON

NEWARK (AP) - Newark InternationalAirport had the fastest growth rate among thethree aiports in the New York-New Jerseymetropolitan area and moved into ninth placeamong the world's busiests airports in 1964,officials said yesterday.

Passenger traffic at Newark increased 36percent from 1963, compared to 8 percent atLaGuardia Airport and 7 percent at John F.Kennedy International Airport during the sameperiod, according to the Port Authority of NewYork and New Jersey.

Newark, surpassing LaGuardia to become thesecond busiest airport in the region, handled

nearly 23.7 million passengers last year com-pared to LaGuardia's 20.3 million passengers.Kennedy remained the busiest terminal in themetro area with 29 9 million passengers in 1984.

In 1964 Newark had 32 percent of thepassengers in the New York area, as comparedto 27.2 percent in 1963, and 21.2 percent in 1982.the port authority said.

LaGuardia has dropped from 32.5 percent ofthe total passenger traffic in 1962 to 29.3 percentin 1963 and 27.5 percent last year, the agencysaid.

Kennedy Airport carried 40.5 percent of theregion's passengers in 1964, but the airport hasseen its dominance in the market drop. In 196246.3 percent of the area's air passengers used

JFK, and in 1963 43.5 percent used the facilityThe port authority said despite the redistribu-

tion of the region's passengers, all three of itsairports increased business last year.

"Bolstered by the low-fare competition of aderegulated industry, airline hubbing, a healthyeconomy and strong dollar the growth rates forboth domestic and overseas travel in 1984 werethe highest since 1967," said Port AuthorityChairman Alan Sagner.

The success of People Express, a low-priced,no frills airline, which flies out of Newark isconsidered the main reason for the New Jerseyairport's growth, said John Hughes, a portauthority spokesman.

Camden policeman shot in drug raidCAMDEN - A gun battle during

a drug raid left a Camden policeofficer critically injured yesterday,only one day after a Plainfieldpolicewoman was killed in a con-frontation with a gunman, prompt-ing one prosecutor to call for bettertraining of police officers in "com-h t I t t l "

Detective Winiam Galtaflnef, 36,was in critical condition at Cooper

Hospital University Medical Centerafter being shot in the hip andabdomen, said nursing supervisorFlorence Kesler.

On Friday, Plainfield police-woman Abigail Powlett, 33, died ofa gunshot wound after being heldhostage for nearly halt an hour by anassailant who had wrestled her gunaway from her.

The Register wins six awardsin press association contest

MCAFEE — The Daily and Sunday Register has won six awards inthe annual New Jersey Press Association "Better Newspaper Contest."The presentations will be made at the 1985 Spring Conference which willbe held Thursday through Saturday at the Americana Hotel, GreatGorge.

Four of the awards were earned by The Register's news department,including a second place in the editorial comment category. A third placeaward went to reporter Alan Sipress for his Sunday Register enterprisestory on the insufficient preparation on the part of civilian agencies inthe event of a nuclear weapons accident at Naval Weapons Station Earle.

The Register also received third place awards for general typographyand layout of the entire newspaper and in the special editionscompetition for its 1984 Business and Industry Review. The awards willbe presented at Friday night's banquet.

The Register's advertising department )Aill receive two awards atSaturday night's banquet, including a first place, best special section,la classified advertising. The winning presentation was the Autos '89andReal Estate Guide.

An advertising campaign for the Marketplace won second place in theretail advertising contest, best advertising campaign, large space.

SAVE ON

RevlonQUALITY PRODUCTS

Steinbach

ASST. VARIETIES

BIG NEWS IS HERE-YOURLATESTCLINIQUE BONUS

"SMALL TRIUMPHS"Yours at no charge whatevr with anyCllnlque purchase of 7.S0 or mort.Sizes are small but the triumph is great-with these fiveClinique favourites: two to help build better-lookingskin, perfect its texture. Two to add wonderful colourto eyes and mouth, and a special extra to perfectmakeup the Clinique way. All, in the small travel sizesthat are never buyable, only available when it'sCllnlque bonus time.

Clarifying Lotion 2. Sweeps oft dead skin flakes, showsbetter-looking skin.Dramatically Different Moisturizing Lotion. Famous"drink" of moisture all skins need.Blended Face Powder, Brush. Qives skin a flawlessfinish. Transparency 3.Raspberry Lip Pencil. Perfects lip-line, helps preventfeathering at edges.Crape Iris Lipstick. This shade, one of Clinique's greatlipstick triumphs.

"

For a fast, free skin analysis,come and meet theCLINIQUE COMPUTERClinique Is a total system of skin care. Andthe very heart of the system Is the CliniqueComputer. Programmed by a group of leadingdermatologists, it asks eight essential questionsand analyzes the answers to determine skintype and the proper Cllnlque products andprocedures. Then a sequence of three'minutesin the morning and another three minutes atnight result in better looking skin.

RevlonFlex Shampooor Conditioner

YOUR CHOICE

23W

REVLON

\m> Flex PumpHair Spray 8-OZ.

btl. 219

AEROSOL

w| Revlon FlexHair Spray 7-OZ.

can 219

art REGULAR OR UNSCENTED

III MitchumRoll-On I.Soz.

cont.

-|99•as- HEG. OR UNSCENTED ANTI PERSPIRANT

1 1 MitchumSolid 2-oz.

cont* 249

r'i I UNSCENTED AEROSOL

MitchumAnti-Perspirant 4-OZ.

can 239

nASST.VAR.

CLINIQUEOn* bonus to a customer.AH Cllnlque products arc allergy tested and 100% fragrance I ra* .

I ibolor*S 'SEE STORE FOR. REBATE FORM

box

MFR. REBATE

[29[OO

FINALCOST 29

REG. OR EXTRA BODY

«#••€•• i i

orConditioner

bti.

MFR.REBATE

r

O49*

• Elizabeth • R*d Bank • Brlcktown • Manalapan• Shore Mall • Seavlew Sq.

'SEE STORE FORREBATE FORM

FINALCOST .50

«• ourchMo i* unin S « oTSn! um IWM. I U M «km m u m MM. HM II|I"»»H toti[iilinii"iii r i m nmr I'm mn •Tinniii MH n i w luniinniint m » i nutinrinnii. AnaoDi * » • not MCMurtt nantoil Mm on ute, N h tor «ook> >«riim 0X1.

Copyitg«il«WKEnM<FOODCOR>0lwn0Nim. ^ ^

If.

4& ;Tha Sunday Register SUNDAY. MARCH 17,1985

Phone(Coatt—fd Iran Page 1A)

Lot November a TTY unit m i donated to theEatontown Police Department, a gift (nan the boroughfire department, tint aid squad and Police BenevolentAMoclatlon.

"We've opened oue line for emergency purpose! toall residents In the county who have their own »yttem,"•aid borough Police Chief Joseph Pelella.

According to the most recent statistics, 10 percent ofthe, nearly 400 county residenU suffering from hearingimpairments have their own TTY unit*.

"We haven't been faced with an emergency situationyet," Pelella said, "but when it snows we do get callsregarding school closing!."

Other borough groups have expressed interest indonating the system to other public services, Pelellasaid.

"I usually recommend they look into donating theunits to needy residents," he added.

'William Spaulding, vice president of Tele-oommunciationi for the Deaf Inc., said he would liketo* see all police, fire, and first aid departmentsconnected to the TTY network.

'•.''The sytem has been picking up very slowly. I wouldUk* to see it become even more popular to break downthe damn communication barrier that the deaf havebeen faced with ever since the telephone was invented,"said Spaulding, who has been deaf since the age of 3.

He accredited the system with recently saving the lifeof a Toms River woman who was striken with food

"Her husband contacted me, and I referred them tothe New Jersey State Police Hotline. The Toms RiverFirst Aid Squad was at the house within five minutes,

and the woman was rushed to the hospital," he said.In addition to Eatontown, Phone-TTY's have also

been installed at all county hospitals.

"It gives the deaf the oppurtunity to communicate,especially with hospitals and other services that theycouldn't reach before," said Vincent L. D'Elia. directorof Social Services at Bayahore Community Hospital,Hobndel

The hospital is equipped with a main console unit inIts emergency room, as well as a portable unit whichcan be taken into patients' room*.

The system was also installed at the Eastern Branchof the Monmouth County Library in Shrewsbury

"We've really become a deaf contact in the countyand continue to serve as a contact for the deaf until onecan be established," said Deborah VanDyke, supervisorof circulation at the library.

The system was donated to the library last Septemberby the New Jersey Library for the Blind andHandicapped, which is also paying to have Ms. VanDykeschooled in sign language.

The library receives approximately four calls a dayon the system "mostly to confirm doctor's appoint-ments," VanDyke said

Since calls on the TTY system take considerablylonger than the average phone call, Spaulding said thestate Public Utility Council awarded the state's deafcommunity a 25 percent discount on all toll calls.

"However, since the break-up of AT&T, we have seenlittle of this, so we are now taking up with the PUCagain. But I am not sure how it will be taken care of,"Spaulding said.

A variety of portable TTY units are currently on themarket, ranging in price from 1300 to S900.

Q

THE IRISH ARE HERE — The theme is green asMrs. Mary H. Gionet, Eatontown, a teacher of thesecond grade at Shrewsbury Boro School, dressesup her car with shamrocks and Irish greetings. Herelfin helpers are, left to right, Kyle LeBaron,

h|IM|Mt«|OlllM

Theresa Sperber, Katharine Kelly and Jeffrey,Becker, all 8-year-old students in her class. Thisis the fifth year Gionet, who traces her Irish heritageto County Kerry, Ireland, is celebrating St. Patrick'sDay with her unique accessories.

uinn(Coatiaaed from Page 1A)

stopped and looked in. To his horror, be saw a man,naked, bent over a table and a soldier bringing thewooden plank down on the prisoner's back. The forceof the blow smashed his face into the table and brokehis nose.

"For the first time in my life, I was ashamed tobe a member of the human race," the clergyman toldQuinn.

"Unfortunately, the list of human rights violationsby the British Army does not end there," she says."As a woman, I am particularly disturbed by thepractice of strip-searching women at ArmaghPrison."

Since last September, there has been growingconcern over this practice both on the part of BritishMembers of the Parliament and their counterpartsIn Dublin. The National Labour Women's Council inBritain recently voted to condemn strip-searching.

Strip-searching applies to any woman who entersor leaves a Jail, including visits to a hospital or courtappearances. Citing an Irish Times report of lastAugust, Quinn points out that when a woman issubjected to a strip-search, she is taken to a cubicleand told to strip naked. Any sanitary protection mustbe removed, and if she refused it will be removedforcibly. Her body is then inspected front and rear.In cases where women have refused to strip, they

Water(Continued from Page 1A)

Burdan cited a report prepared bythe federal Environmental Protec-tion Agency that states there is noevidence that swallowing asbestoscauses gastrointestinal .cancer

But he said Monmouth Con-solidated, which serves more than66,000 households in 23 county mu-nicipalities, is willing to help draftlegislation that would set standardsfor asbestos levels in drinkjngwaters. Such legislation was recent-ly introduced by state As-semblywoman Jacqueline Walker,

D-Monmouth."We think some kind of standard

should be instituted. It removesdoubt in the mind of the public,"Burdan said.

The Middletown Township Com-mittee discovered last year thatabout half of township homes areserved by asbestos cement pipes. Anad hoc committee appointed by theTownship Committee last yearfound 1.38 million asbestos fibersper litre in the reservoir, 30 timesmore than was found in water froma private Oak Hill tap.

But the ad hoc committee soonfound there were no federal or state

standards concerning asbestos inwater supplies.

An EPA spokesperson confirmedBurdan's contention that noevidence supporting a connectionbetween cancer or other ailments,and asbestos ingestion existed.

Walker conceded that there is noevidence that swallowed asbestos isharmful. But she added, "we knowthat inhaled asbestos is harmful,and I'd hate to see us 20 or 30 yearsfrom now discovering that asbestosingestion causes the same sort ofproblems that Inhaling asbestosdoes."

A Super Toy Store...and a Whole Lot Mora!

STORE

CenturyWAYTO GOSTROLLER

DeltaUMBRELLASTROLLER

GericoGUARDIANCAR SEAT

DeltaLUV BUGGYSTROLLER

No. 451

EvenfloBOBBY MAC

WINGS CAR SEAT

24"No. 479

ACOUNATONALCOMMMY

HAZLET EATONTOWN

iRt. 35 Shopping Center

Poole Ave. I South St. & Wyckoff Rd.ijOUWt: m » H n »nl SMuntay CM A.M.-*M P.M. • * • * » 11 :•» A.M.*St P.M.

have been forcibly stripped, beaten and their legsforced over their shoulders.

"Requests that independent medical and psy-chiatric doctors be allowed to monitor strip-searching have been consistently denied," she states.

In the face of these and other abuses, such asinternment without trial, indiscriminate housesearches, and the use of lethal plastic bullets —outlawed everywhere else in the United Kingdom —Quinn insists that the American public must be toldthe truth. "It is essential that we support legislationintroduced by Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan andCongressman Mario Biaggi for the appointment of aspecial envoy to Northern Ireland. This would be one

way to bring American influence to bear on the Irishquestion, and end what has been a virtual conspiracyof silence by successive American governments,"she adds.

On St. Patrick's Day this year, most Americanswill only see green. A more knowing part of FrancesRyan Quinn will see mostly red because of theinjustice which grips the soul of Northern Ireland,and locks two communities — one which happens tobe Protestant, the other Catholic - in a vicious andpointless struggle.

•Injustice is the source of that violence. Britishinjustice. There is no time like the present to endthat injustice," she concludes.

ArrivedSPMMG

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday Register SA

THE WORLDAngolan rebels free22 civilian hostages

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa(AP) - Twenty-two British, Ameri-can and Filipino civilians arrived inJohannesburg yesterday on a RedCross transport plane after beingfreed by Angolan rebels

Officials said the men - 17Filipinos, three Britons and twoAmericans — would be examined bydoctors before being sent home.They were captured Dec. 29 whenguerrillas of Jonas Savimbi's Na-tional Union for the Total Indepen-dence of Angola, overran a miningtown in northeastern Angola.

The Americans, Alan Bongard, 56,of Pleasanton, Calif., and GerhardOpel, 54. of Seattle, were abductedalong with one of the Britons whenthey landed their Hercules transportplane in the town shortly afterrebels took control.

That crew was flying for Trans-america Airlines of Oakland, Calif.,under contract to the Angolangovernment. The insurgents at-tacked the airplane, apparentlythinking it was ferrying governmentMidlers.

Survivors said co-pilot WilliamReed of Chlco, Calif., was killed inthe attack

The other captives, also abductedat the mining town, were mineemployees.

Acting presidenttakes over in Brazil

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) - Presi-dent-elect Tancredo Neves, whoseemergency surgery on the eve of hisInauguration forced his vice presi-dent to become acting president,should be able to assume his dutieswithin "several days," his doctorssay.

Jose Sarney, a 54-year-old poli-tician who was to be Neves' vicepresident, took his oath of officeFriday and became acting presi-dent, ending 21 years of rightistmilitary rule.

Neves' sudden hospitalization foran Intestinal problem on Thursdaynight caused the cancellation ofmany official inaugural cel-ebrations. Undaunted, thousands ofpeople took to the streets, backed bymarching bands and samba groups,Joyously greeting the return ofdemocracy.

Neves, 75, was selected by anelectoral college last year, after apopular movement for direct presi-dential elections was defeated in •

tSkfNM.Doctors said Neves was recover-

ing well, but no date was set for his.swearing-in. Congressional leaders'said tkeyuwmld. parfarm the car.-™.™,...

^SMby a* soon as tat president -electm i physically able to take office.

Neves is a long-time centristopposition political leader.

More than 100 countries sentdelegations to the inaugural. On-lookers applauded when U.S. VicePresident George Bush and DanielOrtega, president of Nicaragua'sleftist SandinisU government, shookhands.

"This is what democracy isabout," Bush told the Sandinistaleader, according to the U.S. am-bassador to Brazil, Diego Asencio,said. .

The presidents of Argentina,Uruguay and Ecuador and theforeign minister of Colombia dis-cussed insurrections in. CentralAmerica and Latin America's multi-billion-dollar foreign debt. Brazil'sforeign debt is the largest in LatinAmerica.

Soviet Third Worldarms sales up a bit

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - TheSoviet Union and its East Europeanallies are delivering more weaponsto non-Communist developing na-tions but fewer to Soviet clients inthe Third World, according to a neweconomic study by NATO.

The report, tracing East Bloc' economic relations with the de-

veloping world from 1980-1683, alsosaid economic aid and tradesubsidies to all Third World nationsin 1983 fell 4 percent from 1962.

A summary of the study, releasedFriday, said the Soviet-led WarsawPact delivered $6.3 billion worth ofweapons to non-Communist develop-ing nations in 1983 — the most recentyear for which the North AtlanticTreaty Organization experts havefigures.

That was a 3 percent increasefrom (6.1 billion in arms sales in1182 and compares with sales of $4.2billion in 1980.

The main buyers were in theMiddle East. Syria, Iraq and Libya

together accounted for 55 percent ofthe total |6.3 billion in deliveries in198J, the study said. Other majorcustomers were India, Algeria,Angola, Afghanistan, Ethiopia andNicaragua.

The study, whose authors werenot identified, estimated weaponssales represented more than 40percent of all Soviet exports to non-Communist developing countries.

Arms deliveries to East Blocclient states in the developing worldfeU by 90 percent in 1983. to fJMmillion from 8771 million the yearbefore. Eighty-five percent of thedeliveries were to Cuba and Viet-nam.

China okays nudesin art academies

PEKING (AP) - Two decadesafter the start of the CulturalRevolution that included the closingof art academies, artists In Chinacan now use nude models and trytheir brush at abstract palntlnp

At the Central Academy of PineArts in Peking, Mei Hongti pulls herrobe tight around her ana tells avisitor she makes good money as anude model for anatomy students.

Ma Gang, son of a furnace factory

worker, works on a Picasso-likevision of disco dancers. He says themusic of John Lemon and theCarpenters inspired him to do the oilcanvas.

Bat while the tour of the academyindicates some relaxation of China'sartistic mores, limitations remain.

"Creative paintings not under-stood by most people will not bedisplayed," the vice director of theacademy, Jin Shangyi, told a re-porter on Friday. The CommunistParty's principles on the arts,traditionally socialist realism, stillprevail, be said.

Traditional Chinese paintingusually features wispy landscapes,and most modern work depictsgalloping horses and bamboo for-ests But it is sketches and paintingsof male and female nudes — onecanvas snows Adam and Eve — thatline the academy's studios andhallways.

Peking's art schools advertisedfor models last August and got 200applicants and a lot of publicity.

The use of nude models hasstirred controversy in prudish Chinasince before the 1149 Communistrevolution. In 1964, Mao Tse-tung,

• replying to those suggesting a ban,said models were essential forpainting and sculpture.

American newsmankidnapped in Beirut

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Terry A. Anderson, chiefMiddle East correspondent of The Associated Press,was kidnapped by armed men off a street in mostlyMoslem west Beirut yesterday.

It was the third kidnapping of a foreigner in westernBeirut in past three days. The two previous victimswere British.

Donald Mell, an AP photographer, witnessed theabduction and said three bearded men, two armed withpistols, forced Anderson into a green Mercedes and spedoff.

The abduction took place in the Ein Mreisse sectionJust after 6 a.m., Mell said. There was no claim ofresponsibility for the abduction of Anderson or the twoBritons.

G.G. Labelle, Middle East news editor for the AP,said the agency was informing police, government andmilitia leaders and asking their assistance in gainingAnderson's release.

Nate Polowetzky, foreign editor of The Associated' Press, said In New York: "We are deeply concerned

about the events In Beirut, and are seeking all possibleinformation regarding the welfare of Associated Presscorrespondent Terry Anderson. We will, of course,pursue all avenues for his release and safe return."

Anderson, 37, an Ohio native, has worked in Beirutfor more than two years.

His kidnapping followed the abduction earlier thisweek of two Britons, businessman Brian Levick, in hislate 50s, and metallurgist Geoffrey Nash, 60. British

Ambassador David Miers warned British subject! inLebanon "not to remain unless there us a compellingreason."

Five other Americans have been kidnapped orreported missing in the past two years and apparentlyremain in custody of their abductors. A shadowyterrorist group believed linked to Iran, Islamic HolyWar, has claimed responsibility for abducting them.

One of the kidnap victims, Jeremy Levin, 52, Beirutbureau chief for Cable News Network, escaped from hiscaptors Feb. 15. He had been abducted in March of lastyear and said he had been kept in an apartment buildingin Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, often chained to a radiatoror to the wall.

On Thursday, 18 Americans, some of them diplomats,were moved by helicopter from Beirut to the nearbyisland of Cyprus in what White House officials said wasan evacuation necessitated by a militia rebellion inChristian east Beirut. .,

A pro-Israeli militia chief, Samir Geagea, broke awayTuesday from the Phalange Party of President AminGemayel, demanding that Gemayel and his partyreconsider their essentially pro-Syrian stance.

Islamic Holy War, the group that claimed responsi-bility for kidnapping the Americans, is believed to benude up of radical Shiite Moslem followers of Iran's'Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

DON'TIMISS IT!

WALLTO

WALLSAVINGS

t 95I . SO. YD.

OA.Sw

NO-WAX

VINYL

SAVE UP TO 50%100% DUPONT

ANTRON

By Mohawk'

« IO.SQ.YD.

INSTALLED

SHIRTS, SLACKSSKIRTS, SWEATERS

SHOES ETC.

119 E. River RoadRumton

"SPECIAL"

COMMERCIALSTRIPES

Ideal for f lbasements W a i SO. YD.

w d m Material Only

100% NYLONPLUSH

95SQ. YD.11.

INSTALLED

AREARUGS

$10-$15-$25"A Real Bargain"

P • SQ. YD.

MATERIALONLY

WHILE THEY LAST!

ingoleuirivinyl floi

SPECIALLY PRICEDFOR THIS SALE!

POLYESTER9 5

SO. YD.INSTALLED

COUPON

TAKE AN ADDITIONAL

10% OFFREMNANTSWITH THIS COUPON

BUILDER'S

FLOOR COVERING

OPEN 'SUNDAY11 a m 4 p m

CARPET»VINYL«REMNANTS25 HIGHWAY 36EAST KEANSBURG

OPEN:Monday -Friday 9-9'Saturday 10-5Sunday 11-4

tA .Thc S«uKJaj ReaUter SUNDAY, MARCH 17. I985

THE NATION

Heart recipientmisses wedding

JASPER, tad. (AP) - WillUmSchroeder missed hii son's weddingyesterday, but it waa a historic addhappj day for the second artificialheart recipient, who equaled the 112days' survival of bit predecessor.

"He's In really good spirits to-day," said Larry Hastings, clinicaldirector at Humana HoipitalAudubon in Louisville, Ky., whereSchroeder remained yesterday.

Doctors had decided the 90-miletrip to Jasper for hit son Terry'swedding would have been too muchstress for him. Instead, the hospitaltook the wedding party to Louisvilleon Friday for a dress rehearsal anddinner which Schroeder attended.

"That was real special for him,"Hastings said.

No mention of Schroeder wasmade at the wedding of TerrySchroeder, 25, and Julie Schnarr, 22,at St. Joseph Roman CatholicChurch.

But before leaving for a receptionafter the wedding, the newlywedsaid his father "really enjoyed thedress rehearsal. I think last nightwas just as special as today." Thereception, at a nearby communitycenter, was closed to the newsmedia.

The wedding, which was per-formed by William Schroeder's un-cle, the Rev. Sylvester Schroeder,marked only the second return toJasper for Schroeder's wife,Margaret, since the implant Nov. 25.She has remained by his bedside.

Robert Jarvik, inventor of theplastic-and-metal pump sustainingSchroeder's life, flew from his SaltLake City home for the wedding.

Jarvik said it was the effects ofSchroeder's strokes, suffered Dec.13, that kept him from the wedding

and not the artificial heart.He noted that it had been

Schroeder's goal since the operationto attend the wedding and that hehad been deeply disappointed whentold be couldn't go.

But Jarvik said the event was stilla "happy milestone for the patient."

"He has far more than he couldhave had without the treatment,"the inventor said.

New York copsin hit and run

NEW YORK (AP) - A policepatrol car struck and killed anelderly nun on Park Avenue thencontinued without stopping, andthree officers were suspended yes-terday, police said.

A second man was seriouslyinjured in the accident Friday night.

The police car did not stop afterstriking the men at Park Avenue and72nd Street, said Sgt. Ed LeSchack,a spokesman.

"We are horrified," said Assis-tant Police Chief Charles Kelly, whoadded that he had heard of nosimilar incident in his 37 years onthe force.

An off-duty corrections officer,who asked that his name bewithheld, told WOR Radio he sawthe police car, traveling at anexcessive speed but without emerg-ency lights, hit the two men. He saidthe car did not stop.

The suspended officers wereidentified as Sgt. FrederickSherman, 37, on the force for 11years; Officer Edwin Collazo, 26, onthe force tor one year; and OfficerAnthony J. Conte, 25, on the forcefor l'/i years.

Suspended worker kills 4, selfin Pennsylvania glass factory

SOUTH CONNEIXSVILLE, Pa.(AP) - A glass factory worker whowas "furious" over being suspendedknocked out a gate guard and thenshot five plant supervisors yester-day, killing four of them, before beshot himself to death, authoritiessaid.

The gunman, Mansel "Sonny"Hammett of nearby Dunbar, was anemployee of the Anchor GlassContainer Co. in this Fayette Countytown, about SO miles southeast ofPittsburgh, said police Chief PeteCasini.

Hammett "had been sent homefor disciplinary action" shortlybefore 10 a.m. Saturday, he said.

"He returned to work with ahandgun, overpowered a gate guard,entered the plant, shooting andtaking the lives of four individualsand wounding another," Casini saidyesterday afternoon outside thegates of the plant.

Hammett then turned the gun onhimself, Casini said.

Phillip Halfhill, 46, of MountBraddock, a box loader at the plant,said Hammett was angry aboutbeing disciplined for talking to hiswife, who also works at the plant.

"He was talking to his wife and Iguess his shift foreman told him notto," Halfhill said. He1 said theforeman was one of those who werekilled.

"He got furious over that and sothey took him into the office andsuspended him 'till further notice.So he left and came back with a gunand started shooting," Halfhill said.

James W. Cable, an auxiliarypolice officer, said he arrived at theplant shortly after the shooting andsaw the guard "lying down inside

LENNOX•

PRE-SEASONair conditioningInstalled $2502*Sale Rebate 200*JCP+L Rebate 312*YOUR PRICE $1990

INSTALLEDInstallation on wWIng hot alt turnac*«W115 n . « fayoafajon pi pa. 15 It ol

MONTHLY PAYMENTSAS LOW AS $65

WITH UP TO60 MONTHS TO PAY!

(First PaymentApril '85)

Model • HS13-4113 Ton

5 Year Protection PlanCovers Parts, Labor and Refrigeration

A.J.PERRI Air Conditioning & Heating

747-3131 431-1808 583-3838Rod Bank Freehold MaUwan

MMomtoomnrnf ttntctmnkKptrtuam•immmodl ..-™—_^_ .*-uttUttM approvM, by It* Public UnWty CommtMon • OfhK may t» withdrawn without oottc*

to changt without none* • Avatobtt from puWtc

OPTl-CABEEYEGLASSES ***

Fashion Ey«wear at Affordable PricesOPTI-CAHE-S Professional Promise:

-SEBVICE GUARANTEEon Ad|uttiMnt» and Minor Repair. FIEE to all our valuedCUftQRKfS.

ONE-YEAB GUABAHTEE AGAINST BREAKAGE.from date d fra-cha—. W« wtU repair or raplac* anybroken p u t n f e t of charge.

Yv—Sakit Uurarrt Cynw—r

M.T.110:004 PM.,

Friday 104 P.M..Sal. 104 P.M.

Red Bank60 Broad St.(rsntno Lot Behind Store)

530-5151W«Ar«McdimctProviders

oFF

ANY COMPLETE PAIR OFPRESCRIPTION EYEGLASSES

With Thla Coupon OnlyNo other dl.couni. apply. Offer expire* March SO. 1985 I

' • • • •»" • •• k l a \ MaBkaaaM

Dr. Ornstein, 60 Broad St. • Call for Appointment and Information 530-4484

G»a»l OpratatSato

Dally Soft ContactsTinted LensesExtended Wear(Sl*cp In Up To 30 Days)

Includes: • Examination • Starter Kit • 45ftlow Up • Same Day Fitting In Many. Caws.

Rag

•169*

"Regula7$30.00

EYE EXAMIncludes:

Glaucoma Chack. ColorVision Chack and

Panphafal Fiald Chack

VWth Coupon Only. E»plr«a 3/30/85

the gate ... in a pool ol blood."A box loader in the factory,

Howard Widener, » , of Dunbar,said he saw Hammett "comingdown through. When I heard the gun,I left."

A guard who answered the tele-phone at the factory but refused togive his name said about 600 to 700people were working at the time ofthe shootings and everyone had beenevacuated.

Casini said the dead were DonaldAbbott, Hammett's shift foreman;John Coligan, quality control super-visor; and Ralph Tamaro and PaulGabelt, both department managers.

Wounded were Richard Hosier,3D, of Uniontown, and JamesSilbaugh, 42, of ConnelUville, saidJames Wagner, spokesman for Con-nellsville State General Hospital.

Hosier was in serious condition atAllegheny General Hospital in Pit-tsburgh with a gunshot wound in thechest, according to a hospital nurs-ing supervisor. Workers said Hosieris also a plant supervisor.

I — Judy Hammett is led away from the AnchorGlass Co. in South Connellsville, Pa., where her husband, Mansel,shot live fellow employees, killing four and himself.

Connect the dotsto see how much

kids likeRariney-in-the-Summ£r

A big, ear-to-ear smile on your child'sface tells the whole story. Choose Ranney-in-the-Summer, and you'll know youpicked the right day camp.

For a tree brochure and application,call Karen Bogardus, Camp Coordinator, at542-6085 or 5424777.

Ranney-in-the-SummerDay Camp for Boys and Girls,

Ages 4 to 12At the Rnnney School campus • 235 Hope Road, Tinton Falls, Nl

Oil Delivery Inc. Announces

The Grand Re-Opening ofHANCE «? DAVIS

on Saturday, March 16

Everything forthe lawn 6t garden! I

• Chemicals• Bird Seed & Bird

Feeders• rire Place Logsl

• Garden Sf LawnImplements

• Quality Fertilizers• Peat Moss• Red Wood Bark

26 Shrewsbury Ave., Red Bank, NJ 07701 747-0103Hours: Monday - Friday 8am to 5 pm Saturday 8am - lpm

Your neighborhood lawn * garden specialist since 1902

coupon

l A O f off any1 U /O purchase

Offer Good thru May 1

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965 The Sunday Register 7 A

OBITUARIESMichael B.D. Simpson

ALEXANDRIA, Va. - MichaelButterfleld Deighton Simpson, M, aformerly of Little Silver, N.J., diedFebruary 22 at hit home here.

Mr. Simpson was born In LittleSilver, and spent most of hitchildhood there.

During World War II he served onthe carrier USS Rendova. He earneda B.S. degree in 1181 In civilengineering from the University ofMiami. He worked as an engineer onconstruction of the Garden StateParkway and on a U.S. Air strip inFrench Morocco.

Between 1955 and 1957, Mr.Simpson worked as a constructionmanagement engineer for the Bu-reau of Aeronautics, Department ofthe Navy.

In 19S7, be joined the Bureau ofYards and Docks, subsequently theNaval Facilities Engineering Com-mand.

He was assistant project managerfor pacific Missile-Range Construc-tion projects on Wake IslandEniwetok Atoll. He was also theassistant project manager duringthe construction of the first floating

drydock for the polaris missilesubmarine, USS George Washingtonin Holy Loch, Scotland.

Prior to retiring in 1(79, he earnedcommendations for outstanding per-formances as officer In charge ofconstruction, contracts for the uni-formed services university of healthservices, Bethesda, Md., and therehabilitation of the Bethesda NavalHospital.

He was project manager forplanning and construction of theReindeer Station, Diego Garcia,Indian Ocean, and for the militaryconstruction pollution abatementprogram.

Surviving are his wife. MarjorieEwing Simpson; three sons, DavidSimpson of Champaign, III., MichaelSimpson, here, and Philip Simpsonof King George; a stepson, RobertEwing of Key West, Fla; hismother, Kathryn B. Stewart ofInverness, Fla.; a brother, JohnSimpson of Cottondale, Fla; asister, Mrs. Patricia Hunyon ofRunuon, N.J., and two grand-children.

Brookdale, shore funding billspending in state Legislature

John It. MurphyHOLMDEL - John Ryan

Murphy, 82, died Thursday atBayshore Community Hospital,here.

Born in Balla Philip, Kent County,New Brunswick, Canada, and hadlived in Brooklyn, NY., and RedBank prior to moving here two andone-half years ago.

He was a steel worker and amember of the Steel Worker's UnionQueens Village, Local 361, LongIsland, N.Y.

He was superintendent of Ameri-can Bridge Co., New York City, for25 years.

He was a communicant of St.Benedict's Roman Catholic Church,

here, and a member of the Som-merville Elks.

His wife, Elizabeth Murphy, diedin 1966.

Surviving are a son, John M.Murphy of South Branch, NewBrunswick, Canada; a daughter,Mrs. Olive Cunningham, here; twobrothers, Owen Murphy of SouthBranch, New Brunswick, Canada,and Raymond Murphy of Van-couver, British Columbia, Canada;two sisters, Mrs. Mary St. Jacquesand Mrs. Gertrude Cullen, both ofPawtucket, R.I.; four grandchildrenand one great granddaughter.

The Day Funeral Home, Keyport,is in charge of arrangements.

BY ALAN SIPRESS

TRENTON - Brookdale Com-munity College and shore protectionprojects would both benefit if thestate Legislature adopts severalresolutions introduced last week toamend Gov. Thomas H. Kean'sproposed state budget.

State Sen. Frank Pallone Jr., D-Monmouth, and AssemblymanAnthony M. VUlane Jr., R-Mon-mouth, each offered resolutions inthe Joint Appropriations Committeeto allocate additional funds for boththe college and the shore.

Villane introduced a measure thatwould increase state funding for'county colleges by tll.6 million,including an extra $1.07 million forBrookdale.

The resolution would boost thestate's share of funding for thesecolleges from 32 percent to 38percent. The state now provides(71.5 million to these schools.

If the Legislature does not ap-prove this measure, Brookdale'funding would run some $450,000 lessthan anticipated thus leading to acut in services, according to Law-rence Kerrigan, the college's de-velopment coordinator. The areamost likely reduced, he said, wouldbe student activities.

Lorena SchierlohOCEANPORT - Lorena

Schierloh, 86, died Friday at Mon-mouth Medical Center, LongBranch.

Mrs. Schierloh was born inLouisville, Ky , and lived in LongBranch before moving here 33 yearsago.

She was the director of thenursery school at Fort Monmouthfor 20 years and retired in 1970.

Mrs. Schierloh was a communi-cant of the Main Post Chapel, FortMonmouth, and St. Dorothea's

Mildred A. MillerM ATA WAN - Mildred Ann

Cooper Miller, 66, of 147 Ravine Dr.,died yesterday at Bayshore Com-munity HospiUI. Holmdel.

Mrs. Miller was born here, andlived in Keyport before returninghere in 1(54.

She worked as an assorter withthe Armstrong Cork Co., Keyport,for 12 years. She retired in 1952.

Mrs. Miller was a member of theFirst United Methodist Church and

was a former Sunday school teacherthere.

Her husband, Henry A. Miller,died in 1953.

Surviving are a son, Henry A.Miller Jr., at home; two brothers,Leroy Cooper of East Keansburg,and Emerson Cooper, here, and twosisters, Miss Ruth Cooper, and Mrs.Betty J. Kramer, both here.

The Bedle Funeral Home, here, isin charge of arrangements.

Mildred L. MorrellMARLBORO - Mildred Lydia

Morrell, 82, of 234-C Tennent Rd.,died Friday at Freehold Area Hospi-tal, Freehold Township.

Mrs. Morrell was born in English-town. She was a lifelong resident ofthe Marlboro-Englishtown area.

She was a member of the SanfordMemorial Methodist Church, Eng-lishtown.

Her husband, PhiUp Morrell, diedin 1972.

The Bloomfield-Cooper JewishFuneral Chapel, Ocean, is in chargeof arrangements.

Anna LapidusLONG BRANCH - Anna Lapidus, U r e great-grandchilden.

85, died Thursday at her home here. T ^ Bloomfield-CooperMrs. Lapidus was bom in Prussia.

She lived in Monmouth County since1938.

She was a member of LongBranch Hadassah and CongregationBrothers of Israel, here.

Surviving are two sons, SeymourLapidus, here, and Isidore Lapidusof Brick; a daughter, Mrs. DoloresRosen, here; a brother HymanGellls, here; 10 grandchildren, and

Doris ChadwickORMOND BEACH, Fla. - Doris

Chadwick, 69, a former resident ofMonmouth County, N.J., died Thurs-day at Ormond Memorial Hospital.

Mrs. Chadwick was born in Phila-delphia. She moved here fromMonmouth County in 1953.

Her husband, Charles Chadwick,died in 1971.

Surviving are a son, GaryHellerman of Edison, N.J., and twobrothers, George Hellerman ofFarmingdale, N.J., and RobertHellermann of Daytona Beach.

The CHT Clayton and Son FuneralHome, Adelphia, N.J., is in chargeof arrangements.

"The colleges have progressedwell beyond the open enrollmentpolicies of the past and are nowdoing a lot toward providing a stableand educated workforce that is partof the foundation for New Jersey'seconomic prosperity," Villane insupport of his resolution.

College officials from around thestate will testify before the ap-propriations committee Wednesdayin support of the $13.5 millionincrease originally urged by thestate Board of Higher Education.

Brookdale would also receiveanother $50,000 for the establish-ment of a learning center in AsburyPark under a resolution offered byPallone. Along with county funds,the state money would most likelyfinance the renovation of a existingbuilding to be used for the center, hesaid.

The state budget included asimilar appropriation last year butthe funds were used to expand theBrookdale learning center in LongBranch.

"The money will provide anadditional incentive on the part ofthe state and show the state'scommitment to community that istrying hard to redevelop," Pallonesaid of his new proposal.

A second resolution introduced byPallone would allocate $10 millionfrom the state surplus, estimated at$«00 million to $(00 million, to ashore protection fund.

He offered a bill last month thatwould mandate this allocation butsaid the issue of shore protectionfunding is best addressed during thebudgetary process.

"The shore legislators from Mon-mouth to Cape May counties met atmy request last month and decidedat minimum that we should seek $10million from the budget surplus forshore protection," Pallone said.

Shore officials hope this moneywould be supplemented by thatraised under one of several plansnow before the Legislature. Oneproposal, made by Pallone, would

tax hotels, motels, campgroundsand seasonal rentals. A rival planoffered by Villane would earmark ashare of beach fees for shoreprotection projects.

Last week, Villane also in-troduced a resolution that wouldallocate $80,000 for research by theMarine Sciences Consortium onSandy Hook in part on perchedbeaches, a type of beach thatrequires less sand and erodes moreslowly. This study would be es-pecially relevant for Long Branch,which is suffering from severebeach erosion, the assemblymansaid.

The remainder of the funds wouldfinance research on the per-formance of different types ofjetties, groins and other shoreprotection structures.

Freehold taxes unchangedFREEHOLD — The Borough

Council has introduced a municipalbudget that would allow the tax rateto hold steady at 86 cents per $100of assessed valuation.

The 3.7 million dollar budget, up$274,570 over last year, calls for$1,616,543 to be raised by local taxes.

Of $2.1 million in anticipatedrevenues, the borough expects toreceive approximately $50,000 fromthe Hudson Manor senior citizenproject and $704,000 from the Man-

asquan River Regional SewerageAuthority.

Capital outlay is $42,500, including$17,500 for a computer.

The budget is $22,000 less than thestate-imposed limit on spendingincreases.

Included in the budhget is $45,000for improvemetns to the firehouse,$250,000 for road improvements, and$15,000 for a dump truck.

A public hearing has been sched-uled for April 15.

Roman Catholic Church, Eaton-town.

Her husband, Herman Schierloh,died in 1948.

Surviving are a son, John F.Schierloh of Edison, a daughter,Mrs. Mary Komoroske of Alexan-dria, Va.; three sisters, Mae, Vir-ginia and Anna; nine grandchildren,and 15 great-grandchildren.

The Robert A. Braun Home forFunerals, Eatontown, is in charge ofarrangements

Charles F. LargaySOUTH PARIS, Maine - Charles

F. Largay, 74, died March 2 atMaine Medical Center, Portland.

Born in Bangor, he lived inEatontown and Lakewood, N.J.,before moving to Maine in 1970.

He was employed by the J. KridelClothing Store, Red Bank, N.J., andlater by the Buck Engineering

Company in Wall, N.J.Prior to retiring in 1982, Mr.

Largay was employed by the Uni-versity of Maine Extension Service,Lewiston.

Surviving are his wife, MarionMurphy; and several nieces andnephews.

Frieda SteinerABERDEEN - Frieda Steiner,

88. died Friday at Monmouth Medi-cal Center, Long Branch.

Mrs. Steiner was born in Poland.She came to this country in 1922, andmoved here from Queens 20 yearsago.

She was the widow of Sol Steiner.Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.

Alice Grun, here; a brother,Abraham Brass of Israel; twosisters, Mrs. Cecilia Goldenberg andMrs. Geitcha Allweis, both ofQueens, and three grandchildren.

The Boomfield-Cooper Jewish Fu-neral Chapel, Ocean, is in charge ofarrangements.

Helen W. Mitchell

Mrs. Morrell was also prede-ceased by two sons, Wallace W.Stroby and Charles R. Stroby.

Surviving are a son, Richard M.Stroby of Manalapan; a daughter,Mrs. Virginia S. Smith, here; ninegrandchildren, and 14 great-grand-children.

The Hulse Memorial Home, Eng-lishtown, is in charge of arange-ments.

FAIR HAVEN - Helen W.Mitchell, 83. died Friday at The NewIvy House Nursing Home, Middle-town.

Mrs. Mitchell was born in LongBranch, where she lived until mov-ing here 27 years ago.

Surviving are her husband, FrankE. Mitchell; a daughter, Mrs.Charles W. Heilmann of LaHabra,Calif., and three grandchildren.

The Robert A. Braun Home forFunerals, Eatontown, is in charge ofarrangements.

Roseanna F. BoroSTATEN ISLAND, N.Y. - Rose-

anna F. Boro, 52, whose sister,Dolores Cirronella Is a resident ofRed Bank, N.J., died Thursday atRivervlew Medical Center, RedBank.

Mrs. Boro had been a lifelongresident here.

She had been a supervisor withthe American Telephone and Tele-graph Co. for 30 years.

Her husband, Richard Boro, diedin 1962.

Surviving besides her sister arethree brothers, Peter Ferone,James Ferone and Robert Ferone,all here; and a stater, Mrs. PhyllisMurphy, here.

The Meislohn-Silvie FuneralHome, here, is in charge of arrange-ments.

Donovan-(Continued from Page 1A)

the U.S. Chamber of Commerce."What we see now ... is a lot morecredlblity in terms of the businesscommunity."

What the trade union movementsees, said the AFL-CIO's Rex Hard-esty, is that "unorganized workershave no voice in the august halls ofWashington, except us, so I thinkthat claim by the business communi-ty is ridiculous since the charter ofthe Department of Labor says 'toadvance the interest of workers.'

"That charter is quite differentfrom the charter of the Departmentof Commerce," Hardesty said.

The Donovan years were reflect-ed in exceedingly high turnover inthe Labor Department.

In his three years and nine monthsin office, he had four press sec-retaries.

There were four chiefs-of-staff,two Department of Labor solicitors,two inspectors general, two heads ofthe Occupational Safety and HealthAdministration, two mine safetyadministrators, two Employmentand Training chiefs and two policyand evaluation directors and twoheads of employment standards.

Donovan oversaw a deep cut inthe department's staff and left theagency with some 18,000 employees,compared to 23,500 when he came in.The budget was cut 20 percent.

He carried out the Reagan admin-istration's initiative to roll backgovernment regulations consideredburdensome for business, infuriat-ing organized labor.

"I think the key issue is OSHA(Occupational Safety and HealthAdministration)," said Hardesty."It's a tragedy what's happened tothe American workers with dis-mantling of enforcement of safetyand health regulations."

Donovan saw it differently. Hisaim was "to remove the fangs, notthe teeth."

Said the NFIB's McKevitt:"OSHA was no longer a four-letterswear word in the business com-munity. ... I never thought a smallbusinessman would tell me an OSHAinspector was almost a help, apartner, in making a safer work-place."

Donovan eased provisions of aDepression-era law requiring con-struction firms with governmentcontracts to pay "prevailingwages." That usually meant payingthe highest union-scale wage.

He wrung from the scandal-scarred Teamsters Central StatesPension Fund millions of dollars inreimbursements from trusteesnamed in civil suits that had beenpending for years.

He reinvigorated the laborracketeering strike force, steppedup audits of unions, even intervenedin 1981 to jawbone professionalbaseball players and managers tosettle the baseball strike.

Among his greatest disappoint-

ments was his failure to persuadeCongress to enact the sub-minimumwage for youths.

A Roman Catholic and formerseminarian, Donovan kept a pictureof Franklin D Roosevelt on hisliving room wall. On Friday, hewent to President Reagan, hislatter-day mentor, to resign.

He quit because a New York judgerefused to dismiss fraud and larcenycharges and ordered Donovan tostand trial on an indictment stem-ming from his days as a New Jerseyconstruction company executive.

Donovan, a multimillionaire, hadsaid many times that he servedReagan "to pay back my country."

But his moment of crisis foundhim alone and idle. His wife, Cathy,and family were vacationing inFlorida.

His tenure was plagued by FBIinformants' allegations of past as- -sociations with mobsters. At leastone informer subsequently admittedhe'd lied.

Donovan thought he'd been ex-onerated when Special ProsecutorLeon A. Silverman concluded in 1982that there was "insufficient credibleevidence" on which to bringcharges.

Even after he took an unpaidleave of absence last October andvowed to prove his innocence,Donovan commanded intense loyal-ty among many of his troops. At thetime of his resignation, there was acampaign within the agency to raisemoney for buttons and balloons tosalute the boss.

That was reminiscent of the "Iam a friend of. Ray Donovan"buttons passed out to a thousandsupporters at a celebration dinnerafter Silverman issued his report.

Donovan fought back tears as hethanked his audience.

Long Branchpublicistchanges jobs

LONG BRANCH - R. BarryKamm — who has become a fixtureIn the corridors of City Hall over thelast 17 years — is resigning as publicrelations director to join the LongBranch Sewerage Authority.

"People are implying that I'm «-•• in

implyingleaving because of pressure .politics," he said. "It's not. It's just '.*my own decision that it was time for J |a change."

Kamm saidXhe will remain thecity's civil defense director as wellas a member of the Fire Depart-ment, to which he has belonged formore than 40 years, the Chamber ofCommerce and the First Aid Squad.

"I'm not leaving Long Branch.The things I can contribute throughmy expertise I will." he said.

a n w H U V f I HANKSTHE DAUGHTER oi uwi &«•>< < Mlo attand M o m «anu Mt « nw ulndnimi andtympaViy axlandad during Iw 6oioa»p»af>l at ViaIOW OI n4W

202 PtATH HOTrCE8MITCHELL — Holan W, | I M WMa) ol FanW W N.J.. on Friday Mann l i . al Tha Nd» hyHouaa Ntnmg Homo. Wddlawaii. N.J 'ynoral•oMooMondayMarcn II .al n am frominartooanA Bnun Homo M> 'imaMa, 1M troad St.EakMoon. N.J.. <mn ma Kn. Arthur W. Undonliminaaiiu Frlandt may can at tha tunaral homa tMaavonmo 7-9 pm. Kindly omn wuwail. Oonattonamay ba mada to Iha SahaHnjJtrmy. » ~Ava. Had Banh. N J Intarmant HbodtMnaOcoanpon. NJ w -

•FUNERALS •• IMNTZVAHS

HOSPITALS •WEDDINGS• ANY OCCASION

W

MIDDLETOWN

671-2507Hwy. 35. Mlddletown

Flowers Speak From the Heart"KOCH Florist & Gifts

1870 Hwy 35, Middletown, N.J. 07748671-0744

"Middle-town's Finest"

54 W. Front St.. Ke

739-1850"Flower* say K B**t"

Your full tank* ftorlm - Wt can

Colonial Flowers5 E. Front Street, Red Bank

741-4666All Ma|of Credit'Canh Acnptad By Phont

a Layral l U i . HaUM

787-0049Phonei ordora aceaptod with cradlt card

World-Wide Wire ServiceRIVERVIEW FLORIST

Fruit Basket* a Gifts a Balloons741 -2695 111 W. Front St.C. Ou Bun Bad Bank, N.J. 07701

a .IM |H *m k

206 Main 81.K.yport 264-0497

125 Markham Pflua, urn* Slhrex

630-6303rmitTSIASKITflAU.OOMfn.0WIMCredit Card Ordcre Accepted By Phono

Flowers by Bob Goodman749 Hwy 35, MiddletownAH major credit cards Kccpted by phone

671-0346»»• DMhrVr Baf#iy •MOOAVM ThlnQ

Say re woods Florist II114 Main St.. Matawin

(Acraaa tram Jany BayaTa ruaaumil)

566-3200

MaVor CreoW Card* AccapMd

78O-79SO

120 Norwood Avc Deal

531-7766

v*

• A T h e Sunday Register SUNDAY. MARCH 17. 1965

ShopRHe And General Mills TeemUpForA

Coupon SaviiSpectacular

BETTY CROCKER, ALL VARIETIES

RTSFrosting 129

ALL VAR., BETTY CROCKER

CakeMixes 1-lb 2'/.

oz. box

BudsWHY PAY MORE'1*

BisquickMix 21b. 8

oz. box

FREEONE (1) 5-POUND BA

TURE VALLEY. ALL VARIETIES

'SSillES

GENERAL MILLS CEREAL

LuckyCharms

Gold MedalFlour

WITH COUPON BELOW

Cheerios

14-oz.box

GENERAL MILLS

WheatiesCereal 11b. 2

oz. box

GENERAL MILLS

TWxCereal

GranolaDandy Bars 6.5-oz.

box

REGULAR OR UNBLEACHED

Gold MedalFlourBETTY CROCKER, ALL VARIETIES

SpecialtyPotatoes 4.75-oz.

box

GENERAL MILLS

TotalCereal

12-oz.box

GENERAL MILLS CEREAL

CocoaPuffs

VALUABLE COUPONWITH THIS COUPON ECR

'3 'uOZ BO<ES OF BFTTY CROCKER

WP Potato Budsi «»>i Mm FOR I™ ' , ;n,rvir. rwvH il in , ^hr iB.lo Uirtol I ,m.l nn« u

ONE (1) 5-LB. BAG OF REG. OR UNBLEACHED

3old Medal

Coupon good it any ShopRItt MariillCoupon (Htctlvt Sun., M«. 17 thru Sil

WHY PAY MORE™

CheeriosCereal 15-oz.

box

GENERAL MILLS, FRANKENBERRY OR

CountChocula '£

12-oz.box

BETTY CROCKER TUNA OR

HamburgerHelper

Coupon good ai any ShopRile Marker Limit one per 'a^

EHectiveSun Mar 1? thru Sal Mai 23 'M5

VALUABLE COUPON

NATURE VALLEY, ALL VAR., CHEWY

Granola

VALUABLE COUPON

ONE (1) DOZ GRADE 'A' U.S.D.A.

ShopRHeLarge EggsWITH COUPON BELOW

VALUABLE COUPON

( SAVE 40 ' )»——OHTl

VALUABLE COUPON

VALUABLE COUPON

WITHTHIS COUPON

FREEONF (1] DO?EN U S DA

ShopRite Large Grade 'A1 Eggs

VALUABLE COUPON

WITH THF Pl IRCHA

WITH THIS COUPON ECRONE i' '101 SOXOf FRANKENBfRBVOP

Count Chocula79

i\^^»^H|

Gold Medal FlouriNi ' '. 0? B' ' (I

Total Cereal

i VALUABLE COUPONC o u p o n g o o d a l any S h o p R ' i i ' W : r " ' L K

C o u p o n e f f e c t i v e S u n M a i ' T 11 il

WITH THIS COUPON ECR^ • ^ - | . ONE HI l ib 2-OZ.BOXOF

WHfATlES W h e a t i e s Cereal

l^iMaaiupon good at any ShopBile Marttl Limn one p»i limily

EMerlm Son Mai 17 tnnj Sal Mv 2] 1965

Save 5.00 With TheseBONUS Coupons

VALUABLE COUPONWITH THIS COUPON FCR

ONE HI 12 0 1 BOX I f CEREAi

t) Trix Cereal

Coupon good al any ShopRite Martei Lmil one per (a

Effective Sun Mar 17 thru Sal Ma' 23 1965

•( SAVE

wmilMBM wwrvn

VALUABLE COUPON

VALUABLE COUPON

Coco'aPuffs

WITH THIS COUPONONEin ' i 0 i BOXOf CEREAL

Cocoa Puffs•79

2.50 OFFP ' J R C H i ' . l I .'.•, •,M •.! H • ' . '

General Mills. Betty Crocker. Gold Medal FruitCorners. Nature Valley or YoPlait Products

— - c

VALUABLE COUPON

VALUABLE COUPON

In OH» lo iMOTitutfcl>nt8U|i^(Ht^i>iiwlofillouwloniw,iw muttN

Ht^i>iiwlofillouwloniw,iw mutt it$«nttti« rightsMir.23,19K. NontMldtoolMrnUlinoraMMilia/bli^ do«nol n ^ ^

The Sunday RegisterSUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985 Your Town THE ARTS •

BUSINESS 10

EDITORIALS 14

She's a firstin ranks offirefighters

BY JAN MARIE WKRBI.IN

MANALAPAN - When the call {or aid wasreceived at Gordon's Corner Fire Company Number1,1st Lt. Steve Burdick gave the order for everyoneto 'pack up.' The volunteers hurriedly readiedthemselves and their equipment.

"Packing up," to a firefighter, denotes donning aself-contained breathing apparatus — known by itstrade name "Scott Pack" — a device providingpurified air to those entering the fire. DonnaCarchesio, a novice to the actual fighting of a fire,was a bit alarmed.

"I couldn't believe it. I said, Me too?' He said,'You too.' It was the first time I had actually put onthe Scott-Pack,' and it was a little frightening toactually be on the fire-line," Carchesio explained.

Carchesio, the only woman firefighter in Man-alapan, initially became interested in becomming afirefighter when as an employee with the ManalapanBureau of Fire Prevention, she would type theirreports. Her interest was further sparked when sheserved for three years as a member of theEnglishtown First Aid Squad, often rendering helpto victims of fires.

Encouragement to pursue the field came from herboyfriend and other friends involved in firefightingin Englishtown. Her passion for firefighting nowfully ignited, she resigned in September to join thefire company.

"I guess I've always been a tomboy," she said. "Iused to watch the other firefighters and say, 'I cando that...I know I can.' The First Aid Squad requireda definite commitment of my time. I couldn't be onthe First Aid Squad and also be a firefighter. I reallywanted to do it, so I joined in October."

After six weeks of formal training at the firehouseand two weekends of "rookie school" at theMonmouth County Fire Academy, Freehold,Carchesio's duties were performed, for the mostpart, after the fire had been put out. She assistedwith pulling hose, manning the hydrants, ventilatingsmoke filled buildings and a lot of cleaning up.

"There is a six-month probation period when youare constantly being evaluated. They don't let you goin (to the fire) until they feel you are ready. I thinkat the beginning there was a little of the attitude of'well, let's see what she does.'. But they ail knew m»from the First Aid Squad, so thif helprt.'-rtnMsV.'' I was concerned at first that rest of the squad mightbe a little over-protective in certain situations, but

.they weren't, sbt said.- -

Carchesio's biggest fear was that she may not bestrong enough to handle the heavy equipment. The"Scott-Pack alone weighs 40 pounds.

"I felt that if I could show them I could handlethe physical part of it I could earn their respect,"she explained.

Carchesio continues to build both her strength andendurance by lifting weights, Nautilus training andparticipation in advanced aerobics at a localwomen's health club.

"To the company, the fire on Thursday was not amajor, big deal fire, but they knew it was my firstone. They let me know they were proud of me," shesaid.

HHIIIiriimiUlOiiHrtiwHAT'S OFF — Donaa Carchesio stands aboarda lire truck at the Gordon's Corner Firehouse,Tennent Road. As the only woman firefighter inManalapan, she proved she's got what it takeswhen she battled her first fire last week.

At the fire site, a wooded area near Arky's .hazardous waste dump in Marlboro which wasburning out of control, Carchesio was one of fourfirefighters manning the hose if n i l * of the fireAs air In individual >Scoti-PackS""de]>Uteo', necessiuting a leave to replace the tank, the line at menadvanced on the hose. Carchesio found herself at thenozzle, a, position where she was-directing the waterto tnvnre".'-r '

"Thai fire to me was a turning point. In effect,when I was allowed to pack up and man the hose,it was like them saying, 'OK we've taught you whatwe can teach you, and you've learned all you canlearn. Now it's time to prove yourself,'" she said.

When the fire was under control, Carchesio left theblaze with glory as others in the company praisedher efforts. It wasn't until she removed her helmetthat she received quite a few stares from membersof the other fire companies as her long blond hairtumbled free.

"They looked at me as though I was some foreignperson," she said. "Women firefighters are still ararity in this area." -

Van Wagner billswould aid Keyport

KEYPORT - The borough mayreceive a double dose of aid from thestate legislature in the amount of175,000 under two new bills proposedby state Sen. Richard Van Wagner,D-Monmouth and Middlesex.

In addition, 42 other munici-palities will receive matching fundsto beef up their local police depart-ments, and four others currentlyreceiving aid will gain additionaldollars. Keyport is one of eight statemunicipalities which will qualifyunder the new Small Cities UrbanAid bUI. Under the old urban aidformula, only communitie withpopulations greater than 15,000could qualify.

•We sat down with Sen. VanWagner and told him that Keyportfit every criteria for the urban aidformula except for population,"Keyport Mayor Richard Bergensaid. "Sen. Van Wagner had peopleinvestigate this in Trenton, and herealized we were right."

As a result, Keyport is eligible for162,500 under the small cities legis-lation. The other qualifying stressfactors include: publicly-financedhousing; muncipal tax rate whichexceeds the state average, equalizedvaluation per capita that equals lessthan 80 percent of the state valu-ation per capita; a municipal Aid toFamilies with Dependent Childrenratio less than the state ratio; andan unemployment ratio for the past4 years that exceeds the stateunemployment rate.

Bergen said the additional moneycould help cut his tax rate by 4 or5 cents.

"But I never spend any moneyuntil I get it," Bergen said.

Van Wagner said that a rural aidbill covered communities with popu-lation under 5,000 and the urban aid

bill covered municipalities withpopulations greater than $15,000.

"So we applied all the criteriaexcept population and found eightcommunities that actually had morestress factors than some of thequalifying communities," VanWagner said. "That really triggeredmy decision. These communitieshad as much difficulty dealing withurban problems as the others, butthey were disqualified because ofpopulation."

"I suspect there are other com-munities that would qualify with afew additional stress factors," VanWagner said.

The bill has passed the stateSenate, and is currently In commit-tee at the Assembly. It should comeup for a vote during the next session,which is scheduled to begin nextmonth.

Four county muncipalitles quali-fied under the old urban aid formula— Asbury Park, Keanburg, LongBranch, and Neptune. Keansburgqualified because its population hada density that was more than 1,000per square mile.

Forty-three municipalities, in-cluding Keyport, could be eligiblefor matching funds for the stateunder an expanded Safe and CleanStreets program, sponsored by VanWagner, and state Sens. Francis X.Graves, D-Passaic and Bergen, andFrank Pallone, D-Monmouth

Under the Safe and Clean streetsproposal, the state providesmatching funds so muncipalities canprovide extra police and publicsafety protection.

A total of 150 million is allocatedfor the new program. The billpassed the Senate, and is in commit-tee in the Assembly. Van Wagner

said there are indications that Keanwill sign the bill.

The money can be used primarilyto hire police offocers, and to buycertain types of safety and sani-Uation equipment..

"I think it is important for thestate to provide addtional fundingfor muncipalities to offset properytax increases," Van Wagner said."It will allow communities to main-tain services."

The new towns that would qualifyare: Aberdeen 123,193; Allenhurst,$6,627; Allentown, $4,142; AtlanticHighlands, $11,597; Avon, $8,283;Belmar, $17,395; Bradley Beach,12,425; Brielle, $11,597; Deal, $9,940;Eatontown, $26,507; Englishtown,$828; Fair Haven, 19,940; Freehold,f 18,223; Freehold Township, $28,163,Hazlet, $29,920; Highlands, $8,281;Holmdel, $17,395; Howell, $43,901;Interlaken, $4,142; Keyport $12,425;Little Silver, $12,425; Manalapan.$26,507; Manasquan, $14,082;Marlboro,28.991; Matawan $16,567;Middletown, $72,893; MonmouthBeach, $7,455; Neptune City,$12,425; Ocean, $48,043; Oceanport.$11,597; Red Bank, $35,618; Rumson.$14,082; Sea Bright. $6,627; Sea Girt$6,827; South Belmar, $7,455; SpringLake, $9,940; Spring Lake Heights.$9,112; Shrewsbury, $9,112; TintooFalls, $14,910, Union Beach, $9,940.Wall, $34,790, and West LongBranch, $13,253.

Four other communities whichalready qualified under the old safeand clean streets programs willreceive dollars. The towns, and theirold and new amounts are: AsburyPark. $337,010, now $507,826;Keansburg, $96,872, now $148,986;Long Branch $443,695, now $668,585;and Neptune, $255,371 plus $384,807.

Freehold Regional budgethelps some, hurts others

ENGLISHTOWN - Marlboro, Manalapan, English-• town •nd Howell residents wtHKt i decrease next yearin the portion of their property taxes going to theFreehold Regional High School District.

However, residents of Freehold, Freehold Township,Colts Neck and Farmingdale will all be faced with taxincreases under the regional school board's 1985-86budget.

The $38.6 million budget was adopted by the regionalBoard of Education after a public hearing — whichattracted few members of the public — Thursday night.

The budget's fate now rests with the residents of theeight communities comprising the five-high schooldistrict. Voters gave their support to last year's $35.6million spending proposal.

Tax rates for individual municipalities are based onassessments of communities' ratables, taken fromupdated yearly statistics provided by the county taxoffice, according to Board Secretary and BusinessAdministrator Nobert H. Renick.

Marlboro's rate will decrease one oent, to 62 centsper $100 of assessed valuation. The township'selementary and middle school Board of Education, also

Ttt&"'rateof Jl-1 -Freehold residents, whose K-8 school tax rate will be

97 cents per $100, face a high school rate of 77 ceaUper $100 assessed valuation, an increase of a nickle overthe current rate.

In Colts Neck, taxes will be 71 cents per $100, a three-cent increase over today's rate. Freehold Township,with a proposed rate of 72 cents per $100, will be hitwith a IVi-cent increase.

Manalapan and Howell residents will see three-centdecreases, with Manalapan's rate at 62 cents andHo well's at 61 cents per $100 of assessed valuation.Englishtowns rate will dip 4 cents, to 42 cents per $100

The largest rate hike under the proposed budget willbe in the tiny borough of Farmingdale, which faces a12-cent tax hike for a propsed rate of 73 cents per $100of assessed valuation.

Slightly more than half the projected revenues willcome from the property tax levy, while most of the restwiU come from state aid, Renick said He added thatsurplus allocation, federal aid and miscellaneousrevenues account for about 2 percent of revenues.

Youngheroeslauded

BY ARMANDO MACHADO

ABERDEEN — Whoever said "ahero ain't nothin' but a sandwich"never met Edward Cooney, JosephMurphy, Howard Perlstein andGary Grimaldi

The four brave young men -Cooney, 25, Murphy, 20, Perlstein, 19and Grimaldi, only 7 - havereceived plaques and certificatesfor outstanding heroism.

The doers of the noble deed eachrecently received a plaque from thetownship Patrolmen's BenevolentAssociation Local 163 for the cap-ture of a burglary suspect last July2. They were each awarded acertificate of appreciation as well,on behalf of the township, lastSeptember.

Independent suesAsbury Park Press

The incident,little Gary'sGrimaldi:

as described byfather, Joseph

r.arv had been nlaving outside his

MORE THAN A SANDWICH - Heroes arecongratulated by Jackie Jurewicz, president of the

chase. When they captured thesuspect Hi blocks later, they heldhim down until police arrived.

n u m b wi> aintruder enter the unlocked garagedoor of his uncle's bouse nextdoorHe ran into his house and alerted hismother, who, in turn, alerted herfather-in-law.

When the father-in-law wentoutside to investigate, and saw theintruder leaving, he called out toMurphy and Perlstein. who then ranafter the suspect.

Cooney, who had just arrivedhome from work, Joined in the

ft iti umaKtt lie UlierttUme the money, but I said no andthen I tackled him," said Morphy"That's when he threw toe money is

Jie air." Murphy described hisactions as "just my good deed forthe day."

The unarmed burglar was Paul M.Dombrowski, 30, of Cedar Grove,according to police. He bad stolen$750 in cash and some jewelry andsilver coins. All the cash wasretrieved, and only one gold chainand several coins were apparently

lost in the chase, according to theowner of the burglarized home,Michnal nrimaMi Onni's nnrl*

i wait euiieu, atfiu UK untie, iW«ks happy Ukti uuuuuj jjot uuii." IIil-sald he and his wife. Kathy, aredeeply grateful to the heroes.

Gary's father said he felt reallygood about Gary's involvement. "Ifmy little son hadn't seen theintruder, (the intruder) would havebeen in and out, and gone," be said."(Gary) knows what he did. But hegets embarrassed when people talkabout it."

Little Gary admits he was 'a littlescared," but he knew he had to helpget the bad guy.

Aberdeen PBA. Left to right are Edward Cooney.Jurewicz, Gary Grimaldi and Joseph Murphy.

"They didn't have to," saidCooney about the township and thePBA presenting the awards. "ButI'm iilad thev did "I felt verv

KEYPORT - The Bayshore Inde-pendent, a weekly newspaper ser-ving nine northern Monmouth com-munities, is suing The Asbury ParkPress for alleged predatory pricingin the sale of advertisments.

In a suit filed Wednesday in U.S.District Court in Newark, the. Inde-pendent charges that The AsburyPark Press has violated federalanti-trust laws by offering cut rateson advertisements in its subsidiary,The ADvisor, to businesses that alsoadvertise in The Asbury Park Press.

David Thaler, publisher and edi-tor of the Independent, said thisarrangement has given the Advisor,with which his newpaper competes,an illegal advantage, particularly inattracting advertisements fromautomobile dealers.

Besides predatory pricing, thesuit charges that The Asbury ParkPress, the ADvisor and SomerfieldOperating Company, also a Presssubsidiary, have attempted to estab-lish a monopoly in northern Mon-mouth County and discriminatedamong advertisers in setting rates.

Under the Press' policy, anyonewho places an advertisement in thePress mav run the same ad in the

Mayor Burton MilUflhnh'k l>M «fthe four: i t s good when the localcitizens take an Interest in protect-ing one another's property, and aninterest In protecting the communi-ty. When that type of feeling isknown, then the criminal element isless likely to target communitieswhere the community spirit is suchthat everyone cares."

Capt. John Kinnane of the policedepartment said, "They are fouroutstanding young men. They did agreat service for the township."

— -*~-*-*•»* -.it 41*<* *******«4>4w-j ., , ^w4ifc ^4 t i n^j i r i i i i • gill

Starting last month, an auto-mobile dealer receives a 75 percentdiscount on an ADvisor advertis-ment if the same ad rus In the Presswithin the prior week.

If an automobile dealer runs anadvertisement in the Press threetimes within seven days, he receivesa free advertisement in the AD-visor, Thaler said.

"This is directed at the Indepen-dent," he alleged. "Auto ads havebeen a large part of the Indepen-

dent's advertising. Before this 71percent off, the advertising of autodealers was almost none in theADvisor."

The suit alleges that this policyconstitutes predatory pricing be-cause it uses the Press's profits toset the ADvisor's prices below costin order to obtain monopolitisticcontrol of this market.

The pricing policy, he said, alsoviolates the rate-discriminationstatute by differentiating amongadvertisers in setting prices.

In addition, the Independent hascharged the Press with illegalpricing in providing free classifiedadvertising in the ADvisor to thosewho run classifieds in the Press.

Thaler declined to reveal theextent to which his publication hassuffered, since this might affect theamount of damages awarded.

George Lister, president and pub-lisher of The Daily Register, said hewas approached about joining thesuit and is seriously considering thatpossibility.

Asked about the suit. E. DonaldLass, president of The Asbury ParkPress, responded, "All I can reallysay is that what we offer in termsof- rates are within the guidelines

Lass said he would not commentfurther until he has reviewed theallegations.

As of Friday evening, the Presshad yet to be notified officially ofthe suit, he said.

A clerk in the U.S. District CourtIn Newark confirmed that the suithad been filed but that It had beentransferred to the federal court InTrenton, which has jurisdiction overMonmouth County.

2B The Sunday Register SUNDAY. MARCH 17,1983

College has right chemistry for faculty-student successWEST LONG BRANCH - The Committee on

Professional Training of the American ChemicalSociety has awarded formal accreditation to theMonmouth College chemistry department.

Dr Marilyn Parker, assistant to the provost, who —as professor of chemistry and Immediate past chair ofthe department — directed the study leading toaccreditation, announced that the endorsement is for anInitial period of three years.

"Because of the lengthy and exhaustive examinationprocess, however, it is most unusual for accreditationto be withdrawn following the initial period," Parkerstated "We are confident that it will be continued."

Endorsement by the ACS, which is the officialaccrediting agency for chemistry, set a seal of approvalupon a department that, since its organization in 1956,has been identified within the college as an area ofexcellence conducted by a group of highly qualifiedprofessors who, while engaged in research, arededicated to the commitment of the institution to Usrole as a "teaching college." The prime concern is thestudent.

There are five full-time faculty members, all withdoctoral degrees, and with backgrounds covering allareas of their discipline — inorganic, organic,alalytical, and physical chemistry. In addition toParker, who continues to teach while fulfilling heradministrative duties, they are Dr. Donald Bretzger.Dr. Datta V. Naik, current department chair; Dr. JackRiehlin, and Dr. Robert Rouse. Together, they haveachieved an impressive record in publishing, research,and active involvement in professional and scholarlyassociations.

Naik's many professional pursuits are representativeof the activity of the faculty as a whole. He is the authorof 24 research publications, immediate past chair of theMonmouth County ACS Section, chair of the Arrange-ments Committee for the 19th Middle Atlantic RegionalMeeting ACS, to be held at the college in May. and amember of professional organizations, including thetociety of Sigma XI and the Academy of Pharma-ceutical Sciences. He has been included in Who's Whola Technology Today and several other prestigouslistings of science professionals.

Of his involvements, Naik states: "This is a living,relevant subject we are teaching. It is necessary to meas a professional to participate, to contribute. Students

HERE'S HOW — Dr. Dana V. Naik, left, chairmanof the Monmouth College chemistry department, isat work on his hydrazine research. Assisting him

need to be taught that from their studies must also comeinvolvement and engagement in society."

Because the faculty-student ratio is favorable withinthe chemistry department — as with other departmentsof the college — there is a close working relationshipbetween professors and their students. Chemistrymajors, especially, are encouraged to participate inspecial experiments and are granted generous time inthe laboratories to conduct projects of their own, oftenwith the assistance of faculty members. The depart-ment is well equipped with modern instrumentation andhas five independent 24-person laboratories.

are Debbie Vaughn of Millville, a senior, and DanVasquez of Shrewsbury, a post-baccalaureatestudent.

Under Naik's leadership, the chemistry departmenthas developed close ties with the secondary schools ofthe Shore area — largely through summer institutes ininstrumental analysis which he developed and for threeconsecutive seasons directed. For two years — 1980 and1981 - the National Science Foundation funded theseinstitutes which provided participants opportunity tolearn to conduct sophisticated analytical experimentswhich they then took back to their own classrooms. Naikand his departmental colleagues followed up thesummer programs with visits to the high schoolteachers in their home laboratories to observe and to

offer assistance, as needed. In turn, Naik invites thehigh school teachers to continue to draw upon theprofessional staff at the college.

For another institute he developed and directed insummer 1(83, Naik received a grant from the NewJersey State Department of Higher Education. For highschool teachers also, this program enable participantsto update skills and, for those in other sciencedisciplines, to train to teach chemistry.

All members of the college chemistry faculty are oncall to lecture to school groups. They also participateregularly in science fairs, and the like. On home ground,the department hosts ACS-sponsored workshops foradvanced high school students, often using Monmouthstudents as lecturers and experiment leaders.

Naik's current preoccupation is with a project heundertook on appointment last summer as a researchfellow in the Faculty Research Program of the AirForce Office of Scientific Research at Tyndall AirForce Base in Florida. He was awarded a fellowship towork on research on the atmospheric chemistry ofhydrazine, which is a rocket fuel, for the purpose offinding methods of ameliorating dangerous conditionscreated by the accidental vapor release of the fuel,which is toxic.

On the basis of his work in Florida, Naik has receiveda matching USAF grant to continue his work on theproject in the college laboratories. "This is especiallypleasing," Naik states, "because it provides opportunityfor some of our chemistry majors to be Involved."

There is wide variety in other research ongoing in thedepartment. Bretzger is involved in two projects — thestudy of sex attractants, and of chlorophyll-likematerials (porphyrins). Riehlin is investigating theproperties of surface active materials, includingdetergents. A paper by him. "Using Electronic Top-Loading Analytical Balance for Surface TensionMeasurements, " was published in the March issue ofReview of Scientific Instruments, journal of theAmerican Institute of Physics. Rouse continues a longinterest in the environment and energy, subjects aboutwhich he co-authored a text, "Energy: Resource, Slave,Pollutants,' published by MacMillan in 1975. He also isdoing investigation in the area of the environment andtoxic substances.

Ranney 8th GradersGet Hypocycloids

Rannev Schools advanced program lets8thGrade math whizzes take geometry' andexplore all its fascinating shapes... instead ofspendingaboringyearwiiharithmetic.asistraditional in most schools. Giveyourchildachance to go as far as he can in this years 8thgrade at Ranney. Call today for full details.

Ranney School 542-4777

ou Can For2 Weeks

'I lost 86 lbs. and 48V?inches on theNutri/System Program!"

• No diet pills, no injections• Professionally supervised• No constant calorie counting• No strenuous exercise• Exclusive Weightminder'•'

Evaluation• Exclusive Nu System Cuisine

entrees, which include manygourmet delicacies

ShopRhe Is The

LOWLEADER FitadCWdam

Fill Your FreezerWith TheseFrozen Food Values!

WHY PAY MORE

BanquetJFried Chickenart

MACARONI 4 CHEESE, BEEF,TURKEY OR CHICKEN

BanquetPot

ALL VARIETIES

BanquetDinners

BANQUET ITALIAN CHICKEN PATTIES,VEAL PATTIES OR BEEF PIZZA FATTIES

Entree

11-01.(*<)••'

WhafsNewAtShopRhep

MRS. PAUL'S FISH DUON. FISH MORNAY OR

run

$?Q* C D C / V / W LOSE ALL THE WEIGHT%/»7 OrEKslHL YOU CAN FOR 2 WEEKS

Prwwt rNtcoupon i i iny Nutrt/S«t»m WtKjMLot*C#nVtf Ittttd T rwrtwrtiKr-tTredoVwortwrw * # • • * > « • • »rtlv*V trompwton to p*f«Of> ' ftsCMM o< ItW BpKW rKi otrm dtKourila <n« Bpoff OfhttpfO|riin«wMlMp>Mtntt(,«ilNn«olco»Butu«on OntrHacountpffptnon V»Ud tot n«wctantt only E i p l r t t h U r c h H . IMS.

CALL TODAY FOR A FREE NO-OBLIGATION CONSULTATION!

Valid only it tNt partJctprtng cwrttr.

Tiiirnii m i 1 o /OITHYI 111 B «#•« I >••_••« aaiw - ^ -

389-2420. Falls Plaza Mallhrewsbury Ave.

MRS. PAUL'S SHRIMP PRIMAVERA,SHRIMP ORIENTAL OK

PAUL*

— ^

What's For BreakfastShopRHa

Apple Juice

.89Lunch Or Dinner Favorites

CHEESE

Elllo's Pizza429

BANQUET MOZZARELLANUOQETSOR

ChickenNuggets

319

OnThQuick Ahd Easy

HICKENIOLAZED.W/ISOSAUCEOIIPUUinioi*. 'Ught&t Entrees "roes

P*0 a fcUght&

Entrees p*g /I39

ShrimpCreole

WTTHTHrS COUPONONim woz. PKa OF CHEESE

Ellio's Pizza

99ECR

tFlORENTINE"

tEntreet

Banquet Pot Pies !

.10IMIIIaBie/raiBrVI

^ WITH THIS COUPON ,0Mt(1)11OZ.PKa0FALLVAH -

"* wet Dinners !

••m,Ha'.ir«MlM.la>.l3

. — 1 SAVE .40 1I f l u*i HAH c rrut

,®* I*M4 on a hn M«* pnffMi

SMCMI don not mchja* cost ol l»cHi»!«NutrUSyittm foods

Mutta«tSo«rnortlt« owwttghtOvti 700 ciflttra m North A nutlet

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J

SAVE .50

wwwi wnawv vutmmmm HUBM mn nefmneireteJIers w, wnolei4iiers> Artwoot ooet not

_ arronv M O M a « M l * * lurZ, Urn. 17 «ru SM, ktar. JJ, 1M& Nona sold to Mharipraatnt itam on uht. It la tor dtoptoy purpoaaa only. Copyright WAKEFERN FOOD

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday Register 3B

Governor's aide to give keynote address at instituteWEST LONG BRANCH - Dr

Richard Mills, special assistant toGov. Thomas Kean for education,will five the keynote address Fridayat the annual Monmouth CollegeGovernment Institute, a forum onpublic issues (or high school stu-dents.

Approximately 350 students from» high schools throughout the state,many of them sponsored by localservice clubs, will attend the in-stitute. Some 14 service organiza-tions have underwritten expensesfor school delegations.

Three students will read award-winning papers they have preparedon the Institutes theme, "The NewJersey Public School System: Is ItDoing Its Job?" There will also bea panel discussion of the question.

Mills has special responsibilityfor advising Kean as a member ofthe Governors' Education Com-mission of the States. The governorwill shortly assume the chair of thiscommission. From 1982 to 1984,Mills served as an aide to EducationCommissioner Saul Cooperman. Be-tween 1975 and 1980, he held anumber of positions in the stateDepartment of Education, such asdirector of policy analysis anddeputy assistant commissioner forresearch.

Moderator for the panel dis-cussion will be Arthur J. Blake whorecently retired as the first per-manent assignment judge of OceanCounty. Blake was admitted to thebar in New Jersey in 1940. As alawyer, he was active in trialpractice, specializing in medicalmalpractice and products liability.

In 1973 Blake was appointedsuperior court judge, assigned toEssex County, and the followingyear became assignment judgethere. In 1MB, he was appointed thefirst permanent assignment judge ofOcean County.

Panelists will be Sen. MatthewFeldman, D-Bergen; Edithe A.Fulton, president of the New JerseyEducation Associatoin; Donald C.Mann, vice president. Human Re-sources Department, Prudential In-surance Company of America; As-semblyman Joseph A. Palaia, R-

Monmouth County; Dr. Richard A.DiPatri, special assistant toCooperman; Christopher M.Rossomondo, a senior at Middle-town High School South and the firsthigh school student to serve as apanelist.

Feldman began his career inpublic service when he was electedmayor of Teaneck in 1958. In 1968 hewas elected to the State Senate andbecame chair of the Senate Educa-tion Committee. He was Senatemajority leader and chair of theWays and Means Committee from1974 to 1975. In 1976 he be-

camepresident of the Senate. Since1978, he has been chair of the SenateRules and Order Committee, and amember of the Senate Revenue,Finance and Appropriations Com-mittee, while continuing as Educa-tion Committee chair.

Fulton, who has been president ofthe New Jersey Education Associa-tion since 1981, serves as a memberof three Governor-appointed com-mittees — the education AdvisoryCommittee on Block Grants, theCommission on Master Teachersand the State Internship Panel.From 19H to 1981, Fulton was a

classroom teacher at LakehurstElementary School, from which sheis on a leave of absence whileserving as NJEA president.

Mann was named vice presidentof personnel of Prudential in 1983.Having Joined that company in 1964.he advanced through assignments inseveral divisions in the company's.Eastern Home Office, /Includinggroup insurance, personnel andcommunications and training. He isa member of the governor's JobTraining Coordinating Council, andthe education commiisioner'sUrban Education Task Force.

Palaia began his political careerin 1967 when he was elected acouncilman for Ocean. In 1980, hebecame a Monmouth County free-holder. He was elected to the.Assembly in 1982 for the 11thDistrict. Upon his re-election in1984, be became assistant minoritywhip, and a member of the As-sembly's Education Committee, andthe New Jersey Commission onBusiness Efficiency in the PublicSchools.

DiPatri is former superintendentof schools in Rumson and principalof the Forrestdale School in that

district. He currently is a policyanalyst who directs the Governor'sTeaching Scholars project.

Rossomondo has attended Middle-town public schools for the past 13years, and is currently a senior InMiddletown High School South. Hehas been active in Student Govern-ment activities, and serves asstudent representative to theMiddletown Board of Education. Heis also vice chair of the YMCA'sYouth in Government program. Hewill be attending the Edmund A.Walsh School of Foreign Service atGeorgetown University in the fall.

LOW PRICE LEADER!

A'NEW ENGLAND

Frosh Codfish

TheMEATinrWaceiA CHOICE Bi El WITH BOTTOM ATTA^HEI

Boneless Bottom I Boneless EyeRound Roast I Round Roast

The Produce Place.NATURAL ORWASHFD

FreshMushrooms

US. GRADE W,

Fh S

VOLUNTEERSIN ACTION

• U! ." - •<* 1[fSOmf -i"' - ' ••-..the Voluntary Action Center of

Moamonlh Cwarty reenils volun-teers for placemen! In non-profithaman service, cultural, «hMB»Ifonal. . t i l th tad civic organiia-Itons. Tfce center matches thevolunteer to the volunteer opening.Each Sunday, The Register publish-es notices of a few of the center'smany volunteer openings. For moreinformation, call the center at741-3330 from > a.m. to S p.m.weekdays.

Red B a n k res ident s

Many volunteers are needed tohelp our community. Thoroughtraining will be given in first aidtechniques for the ill and injured.Volunteers must be 18 or older.Classes will be scheduled twiceweekly. This is an extremely im-portant opportunity for all who livein Red Bank.

Carage saleA local charitable organization

wants a garage sale enthusiast tochair its treasure and trivia com-mittee. You will visit sales, ac-quaint sellers with project, and pickup items to be donated. Duration ofthis opening is from June throughSeptember. An organized personwill really enjoy this project!

Palish interpreterIf you can speak and understand

Polish, your assistance is wanted tointerpret by phone or in person.Teen-agers or adults can fill thisspot on an on-call basis.

Medical aideVolunteers will be trained to

assist a physician in a medicalsetting. Mature attitude and abilityto work well under close supervisionrequired. Two to three hours weeklywill be scheduled during eveninghours.

R u n n e r s , j o g g e r sAvid runners can conduct work-

shops for beginning runners startingMarch 23 and continuing throughMay 25. Must be familiar withhealth, clothing, terrain and

- i nnt\nn ic iitoal

i S j .._!„_.™ro should he of pro-

fessional level.

K e e p busy on w e e k e m U

...Or any day of the week If youwould like to be jack-of-all trdes ina museum setting, there is avolunteer spot for you. You will beanswering the phone, responding toquestions from visitors, sellingarticles, running a slide showPatience is a necessity in this busy

• interesting volunteer job

5* t -3.39FRESH QUALITY ASSURED _ _ _

Cherrystone Clams* *>, 2 .39USORAOE fA ATLANTIC. PAN READY _ _

Fresh Whiting*! ..1.79MAINE, AQUA CULTURES _ _

Fresh Mussels* . . . . .79

Jumbo ShriThe Dairy

ShopRiteMozzarella

U.S.O.A. CHOICE BEEF

Boneless JggtR u m p R o a s t ^ I DNOT LESS THAN 85%

Extra LeanOroundB-f »KS» lb

BEEF FOR SWISSING fusSD

Boneless Bottom (aa«Round Steak ».US.DA CHOICE BEEF ROUND „_. • _ TZ

Cubed Steaks . . . . © . , 2.49LEAN* TENDER . _ . _ _ _

Beef Round Cubes M* 2.29LOIN PORTION, »11 CHOPS . _ A

Pork Chop Combo * 1.59MEATY RIB PORTION , _ _

Pork Loin for BBQ . 1 . 5 9RIB PORTION, BONELESS _ _ _

Pork Loin Roast .2 .39.1.89

FOR SOUP »

Fojkvl®Short RibT of Beef W. 1.89CHUCK CUT „ _ . . _ _

Boneless Beef xs,. @. . 1.99The Grocery P lace -nm*

HOLLY FARMS, JUMBO PAK

ChickenDrumsticks 79HOLLY FARMS, JUMBO PAK

ChickenBreast BS& 159HOLLY FARMS, JUMBO PAK

ChickenWings 79WHOLE WITH RIB CAGE . _ —

Chicken Breast ® * 1.59FRESH TWIN PAK . — ^

Perdue Cornish Hens D . J .39ShopRII. SHOULDER, WATER ADDED . n M

Smoked Pork Butts . 1 . 8 9SMOKEDTURKEY . _ _

Kielbasa Sausage . 1 . 6 9GREAT FOR DIETS . — —

Smoked Turkey Ham . 1 . 6 9

Smoked'Pork Shoulder . . 8 9The Froicn MEATing Plare

.1.69

THOMPSON IMPORTEDsr**" 89Orapes *.\J*i40 SIZE. FLORIDA .

Seedless Grapefruit 4.«.iM SIZE CALIFORNIA _ ftft

Navel Oranges 5* .99<t SIZE, IMPORTED ISRAELI _ _ »

Jaffa Oranges 5,, .99HIGH IN IRON 1 VITAMINS _jt

Fresh Spinach 7,'.89EXTRAFANCVI20SI2tOOlDCNOFI1l3SI2E _ _

Red Delicious Apples . . 6 9US I I CALIFORNIA _ . _ _

Sweet Carrots 3 & 1.00usut _ A

Yellow Onions £ .79URGE 30 SIZE _ _

California Celery , , . 69130 SIZE, US. I I WESTERN

Anjou PearsThe Plant Place = E f

LOW LIGHT FOLIAGE

Phiio, Pothosor IvyNEW ZEALAND FROZEN. BLADE CUT

Shoulder Lamb ChopsGRADE A'FROZEN ,

Concord Ducks ® .aUAKERMAID FROZEN, HEAT* EAT . - A FRESH ASSORTMENT OF SEASONAL BLOOMS - _ _

Meat Balls r 1.99 Spring Flowers ,2.99H M H M B H I M I ^ H The Frozen Food Place m

Echewria tT, 3.49

MINUTE MAIO REG OR COUNTRY STYLE . _ _

Orange Juice '3? 1.59REGULAR QUARTERS _ _ _

Mrs. Filberts Margarine 2J&. . 9 9ASSORTED VARIETIES _ - _ _

La Yogurt 3^1.00The Deli Placet

LINCOLN REGULAR OR NATURAI

Juice

Ellio'sCheese Pizza

Fried Chicken &2.78MAC « CHEESE, BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY _ _

Banquet Pot Pies £ . 3 0ASSORTED FLAVORS. ICE CREAM , . . ^

Classic Creation.. ."»1.99Fresh Bake Shoppei

VS 1.79Kosher Franks.HERRUD

Meat FranksWHY PAY MORE"

ShopRite Pork RollThe Appy Place!

STORE SLICED

CookedPastrami

STORE SLICED

Chicken Breast .2.99IMPORTED AUSTRIAN . _ _

Swiss Cheese , . 1 . 7 9STORE SLICED DANISH MAJESTY

Imported Cooked Ham. .».*, 1 .59The Bakery PlacciASM VAUS 1 INCH

ShopRite AJr. Pies "MOUND TOP OR SANDWICH

ShopRite White Bread 2 ^ ' . 9 9CROWN TOP frPACK

English Muffins 2ZZ .79ASSORTED VARIETIES (DOZEN PACK)

ShopRite Donuts . . . . . ' $ .99BAVARIAN DUTCH. BALDIES OR THIN _

Anderson Pretzels ...'&?- . 9 9

WHY PAY MORF

KraftMayonnaise

ScottBath Tissue FRESH RAKEDmean OMI\CU - , • •

Rye Bread a 1.79MINI (15O1 TOTAL WEIGHT) . - - . . _

EggTwist Rolls 12*1.19Health & Beauty Aids-MRevlon FlexShampoo

Attention ChiUnntnmmgmmt-13t

Bntmw thopnif, fmmfr Coloringmnd Doeormtlna Conta.i. Knirylormm mrm mvmUmblo at Ma CouftaayBooth. Thm Oomdllna la Hmrch 90,19BB. All mntrr lormm mro to 6*HmnnmllmH mt thm iimairtmmM •

«»»•"• »'» • • •nnouncmi on mmn•in at lutvv m.m. mom aiera torlurthordotmll:

ShooRM DANISH

Butter CookiesGROUND COFFEE

Chock Full O'NutsIMACK

Capri Sun DrinksALL VAR ShopRIU

Instant Oatmeal..FRUIT PUNCH. GRAPE OR ORANGE. I-PK.

ShopRite DrinksREO.. OR UNSALTED. ORY ROASTED

Planters PeanutsREGULAR OR UNSALTED

ShopRite SaltinesNEW1100% NATURAL, ALL VAR.

Winter Hill Fruit JuicesALL VAR. CHEF BOY AR DEE _

Soup Di Pasta . 2PINK

Libby's Salmon

i*>.un

1.491.99

67 5 01 4 Q Q. loptg. 1.99

WITH FABRIC SOENE

Fab DetergentClorox BleachStapRII. WITHDRAW OR RE0..M.X

D D F d9 01. bo>.99

t.«.pk«. . 9 9

^2.99. . bo< . 9 9

..tt.991^.89

1.49

StapRII. WITHDRAW OR RE

Dry Dog FoodREQ.0RDIET0ilB*%CAF.F

Vintage Cola JSIS.

Glad Trash BagsM«»«ouii»c>«aii«iio«»«Ki>

ShopRite ComPrince LasagnaIMPORTED ITALIAN

Riena Tomato SauceRienzi Tomato PasteWHY PAY MORE'"

Mazola Corn Oil

2.89ar.79

SJ 3.99.59

2.99

HEQULAR Oft DCODORAN i miuu ntug

Silhouettes ^ 3 . 2 9REO. OR WrMMMAOEO SHAMPOO OR CONOITIONER _ . .

PermaSoft '^2.49DEODORANT . . .

Dry Idea Roll-On 'f ir1.11General Merchandise • •ValvolineMotor Oil

.S-

.

FOLEY QALAXY, ASST. VARIETIES

Kitchen Tools139

••ch f6SS1.00

4^.99..»1.79

Circulars AvailablePick up a copy of the latestShopRite circular filled with

hundreds of sale items at

See The High Quality Our Low Prices Can Buy!gffWd «wEnm noEcbtfOMnoN HBS.

4 1 The Sunday Register SUNDAY. MARCH 17. 1985

Hazienda on a highWith the aid of a "cherry picker," workersfrom the Hazienda Evergreen Plantation,Holmdel, affix a bow to a wreath positioned10 the side of the Jersey Journal building inJersey City. Hazienda was contacted by the

New Jersey Motion Picture Industries Councilto construct a 30-foot wreath for a new JohnTravolta film, "Perfect," being shot in JerseyCity. The motion picture should be release byearly summer.

Some words of caution,especially for seniors

BY SALLY MOLLICA

AFFAIRS

HOME REPAIRS: If someonecomes to your door and wants to fixup your home, be suspicious Don'tsign anything until you:

1. Make sure repairs are needed.2. Get other estimates.3. Make sure repairman is legit-

imate.If you do sign a contract, read it

all.WORK AT HOME SCHEME: Be

aware. The come-on is supplementyour income. Most at-homeschemes:

1. Do not guarantee a salary.2. You have to make an invest-

Olympic medalist to speak at dinnerMIDDLETOWN - Former Olym-

pic gold and bronze medal winnerRonald J. Freeman will be the guestspeaker at the 16th annual Park andRecreation dinner sponsored by theMoomouth County Park SystemThursday at Squires Pub. West at6:30 p.m.

Recreation professionals, boardmembers, elected officials and theprivate sector have been invited.More than 250 individuals rep-resenting most of Monmouth Coun-ty's municipalities are expected toattend. Each year the maximumnumber of exhibit spaces have beenfilled for organizations displayingthtir programs and services.

In addition, recreation and parkdepartments can maximize thenetworking potential of the dinnerby participating in the "Getting ToKnow You" slide presentation, a

new dimension added this year."Getting To Know You" will high-light organizations who contributeslides and information regardingtheir facilities and programs. .

The Charles M. Pike Award forPark and Recreation Facilities andthe Victor E. Grossinger Award forInnovative Programming will alsobe presented at the dinner.

Freeman, executive director ofthe Governor's Council on PhysicalFitness and Sports, was a team andindividual standout in the 1968Olympics in Mexico City. He was amember of the 1,600-meter goldmedal United States relay team thatset the world record for that eventin 2:56.1. His time of 43 2 seconds isthe fastest 400-meter run.

Since his days as a formerArizona State University under-graduate, College Athlete of the

Year award winner and Kean Col-lege master's degree candidate,Freeman has continued to excel asa proponent of sports and recreationprograms. He is a former OlympicCommittee spokesman and rep-resentative of of the Organization ofAmerican States. He assisted in thedevelopment of sports programs inseveral third world countries and isan international lecturer on sportsand sports motivation.

In 1984 he was head, track and fieldcoach for the British Virgin IslandsOlympic team. As founder of theGarden State Games, he developedthe largest sporting event in thehistory of New Jersy. which utilizedthe talents of park and recreationdepartments throughout the state.

Where moreAmericans finda bigger re

H&R BLOCKWe can't promise everyonethis, but in a recent surveyof customers who gotrefunds. 3 out of 4 believethey got bigger refundsthan if they did their owntaxes. 3 out of 4!

FoundTracey Daniel

$513!What can we find for you?

MIDDLETOWN671-9314

RED BANKKEYPORT

LONG BRANCHFREEHOLD

Alao In most maktf during regular store noun

MON.-FRI. 9 AM-9 PM. SAT. 9-5 SUN. »-3

UNBELIEVABLEBUT TRUE!_

cd

IIP

Attain

On my way back to the office * * * v « . # » . • > • • -after a speaking engagement before L U N b U M ba local senior citizens group I wasmaking a mental picture of what tostress in my next article.

Not being a Journalist, I find somedifficulty in writing. The topicsshould be educational, of Interest toa large consumer group, as well as "easy to read and understand.Simple? So today is directed to "myseniors," and thank you for askingthe questions.

BUYING BY MAIL: All of usreceive a lot of Junk In our mailbox.Before you buy anything by mail,see if you can do better at a localstore. Be careful about mail thatoffers an "easy" way to makemoney at home or a "bargain"retirment home in the sun. If themail order gives only a post officebox and no physical street address,be wary. These businesses can openand close in six weeks, taking yourmoney and moving elsewhere...newname and new post office box.California, Arizona, New York andFlorida lead in this area.

BURING AT THE DOOR: Don'tfall for the "gimmicks!" or for the"free" gift offers. When a salesmancomes to your door and starts topressure you to buy something rightaway, don't! If you're interested,tell him to come back tomorrow,and check him or company out.

SIGNING YOUR NAME: Beforeyou sign a contract/agreement, askyourself:

— Do I understand everything itsays?

— Do I agree with everything itsays?

— If you answer "no," then don'tsign.

— Make sure you keep a copy ofany contract and also don't leaveany empty blanks.

BUSING CREDIT: Don't befooled by words of "low" monthlypayments. Find out the total amountyou'll be paying over the time life ofthe loan. Subtact the cost of theitem. The difference is what you'repaying in interest.

ment.3. The work you're asked to do

often continues the fraud by gettingothers involved.

CHARITY ORGANIZATIONS:1. Know your charity. Asjt tor

literature and read it.2. Don't succumb to pressure. No

legitimate organization will expectyou to contribute immediately.

3 Demand identification4. Don't fall for the emotional

tear-jerker.5. Beware of telephone solici-

tations.6. Don't be fooled by a convincing

name. Some organizations usenames similar to the well-known,respected concerns.

7 Check out mail solicitations ifa trinket was sent to you. For acontribution federal law states ifyou didn't ask for the item, keep it.It's yours without making the con-tribution.

8. Give to worthwhile charities.There are a lot of good ones. Avoidgiving cash if possible. If you mustgive cash, ask for a receipt.

NOTICEMONMOUTH BEACH RESIDENTS

There will be a public hearing Tuesday,March 19,1985 at 7:30 P.M. at the BoroughHall, to discuss the proposed reconstruc-tion of Griffin Park.

Would You TrustA Plumber To

Operate On You?Than why the hill are you buying your jewelry atcoin stores, department stores or jewiery parties?

AT 6EMS IWUMITED WE OFFKR:you will find Jewelry Craftsmenand • Professional Qomologlstoh.the premises at all times.

WE ARE THE EXPEHTSII

Jewelry repairs whlle-u-watchExpress Jewelry repair serviceRepalrs-whlle-u-waltLowest prices on designergold jewelry', sterling silver,diamonds, gsmstones, etc...Written Appraisals

TimelessEyeBeauty.

A radiant Carefree look thatcan't be duplicated withconventional eye makeupcan now be yours.

Natural Eyes"1 is an excitingnew technique that createslasting eye enhancement.This short procedureinvolves the placement ofcolored pigment around thebase of the eyelashes, giving

the appearance of darklashes and attractivelyoutlined eyes.

Perfectly suited for theactive woman .Natural Eyes 'is also ideal for women whohave difficulty applyingconventional eyeliner.

Natural Eyes" enhanceseye beauty, allowing you to

awaken each day with inattractive, natural look.

For niorf information or anappointment call.

MID-ATLANTICEYE CENTER(201) 741-0858

.«••»•

30%-40% SAVINGSon all our

1985 Furniture CollectionsSniurt vnur summer furniture NOW Pav for It durlna our

• vsMon 3 « L C uriu UHUUCT. an extra iu» u r r our aireaay' low pre-season prices. Delivery at your convenience

BIG SAVINGSfor MISSY,WOMEN. JUNIORSIn ourCOAT & SUITDEPARTMENT

SMOATUMOmt

zif-ounvatwM M MM

srMM coAn«aJuMM*in

ioSSSJ'JooMhjMtolM

SSSSRST——VHWHIB'IHSHOttT JACKITSIIP OUT HAINWtAR

HOURS:MON.-SAT.

10-5:30SUNDAY 10-4

29»«-69M

29M-39*29»-39»59M.79M

19»«79»»-33»4999.3999

49»»-59M

£19-799term WEMTOM and Mtonw. 799

Muni won t soon 1499.IQ99

SPECIALSAVINGS FORMEN ANDYOUNG MEN

SMMtr JUCKfTS*«tuMto*M0

, M i M baMa

55»»-89»29H-69"

BIG SAVINGSIn our WOMENand JUNIORSFASHIONDEPARTMENT

Mtt, . 80%»DfWM SHIRTS * SPORT SHIRTS

ACTIVtWtAR and MOM/

SPECIAL SAVINGSIn our CHILDREN'SDEPARTMENTtenma

8H.39MNOKHMHBt

44APPLE ST.

TINTON PAILS

842-2727'.

DEPARTMENT STORE

SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985 Th«- Sunday Register 5Bv

DR. PRISCILLA RANSOHOFF ALYCE GREENE ARTHUR Z. KAMIN

Three named to receiveAngel Awards April 16

TINTON FALLS - Alyce Greene of Red Bank,Arthur Z. Kamin of Fair Haven and Dr. PriscillaRansohoff of Monmouth Beach will be honored at theseventh annual Angel Awards dinner sponsored bythe Monmouth Center for Vocational Rehabilitationon Thursday, April IS.

The event will be held at Squire's Pub, West LongBranch, with cocktail at 7 pm. and dinner at 8 p.m.

The private, non-profit agency which is based inTinton Falls, and has a satellite operation in HowellTownship, trains physically and mentally handi-capped residents of Monmouth County for com-petitive employment.

Greene, who operates a licensed boarding home inRed Bank, is being recognized for "providing abridge between day and night time services to thehandicapped, thereby insuring a continuity of care."

Arthur Z. Kamin, former editor of The Daily andSunday Register, is being cited "for his continuingunderstanding of the special needs of the handi-

capped and for conveying those needs and the goalsof MCVR to the public."

Ranshohoff, a pyschologist who is a specialist inpersonnel affairs at Fort Monmouth, will be honoredas "one of the founders of MCVR who recognized theneed for competitive rehabilitative services forhandicapped people in Monmouth County."

Former recipients of the award are: Alex G.Alessi, Joseph Azzolina, Dr. Paul K. Bornstein.Charles J. Buesing, Gloria Filippone. Roberta Fox.Marvin Glanzer, Craig S. Helfricht, Michael Hoep.Dr. M. Noel Jennigs, former Monmouth CountyProsecutor Alexander D. Lehrer, Antonia Marolta,Glenn Pizza, John J. Reese, Lee Sosower, Elaine B.Spellman. Joseph E. Trible, Marie B. White.Lorraine Wurtzel. Bruce Barton, Kenneth J. Moserand Michael Pizza were last year's award recipients.

Reservations and additional information can beobtained by contacting the Center at 30 Park Road.Tinton Falls.

Reiger citedfor servicesto fisheries

SANDY HOOK - George Reiger.author and naturlisl, has beennamed the 1985 recipient of theMacMillan Award for services tomarine fisheries

The award was presented to himby the American Littoral Society ata meeting at the American Museumof Natural History in New York onWednesday, during an evening pro-gram of marine mammal films andlectures.

The MacMillan Award is namedfor Graham MacMillan who startedthe Littoral Society's fish tag-and-release program some 20 years ago.It is now the largest volunteertagging program in the country withmore than 200 participants and some155,000 tags in circulation.

Previous winners of the awardhave been William Gordon, Wash-ington, head of the federal NationalMarine Fisheries Service; and JackCasey, Nirrangansett, R.I., whodirects the service's shark-taggingprogram.

Reiger is conservation editor of"Field fc Stream" magazine, andthe author of several books onmarine topics, including "Profilesin Saltwater Angling," "TheAudubon Book of Marine Wildlife 'and "Wanderer on My NativeShore-

He is a graduate of PrincetonUniversity and now lives inLocustville, Va.

SALE! SALE! SALE!WEDNESOAY, MARCH 13, through TUESDAY, MAflCH 19,1985

RED BANK ARMY NAVY STORE12 MONMOUTH ST • RED BANK • 842-8333

50% OFF EVERYTHING• FEATURING *

OVER 2000 INDIA DRESSES, SKIRTS & BLOUSESAMPING EQUI& Gl. SURPL JIPMENT

* PLUS •THE FOLLOWING ITEMS WILL BE SOLD

AT PRICES BELOW WHOLESALE!!!1. INDIA GAUZE BLOUSES • HOW m i * 3 . 9 92. CANVAS SINGLE END PUPTENT • NOW WHY ' 1 2 . 9 93. 5-PIECE MESS KIT * m mi *2.994. WATERPROOF 2 CELL RUBBER AND

CLAD FLASHLIGHT * now OftY » 2 . 9 95. SINGLE BURNER FOLDING STOVE • NOW ONLY » 1 . 9 96. CREWNECK SWEATSHIRT OR SWEATPANTS * now ONLY ' 3 . 9 97. VINYL GROUND CLOTH 5'x 7' ' • m MM '1 .998. LIDDED POCKET COMPASS . now our » 1 . 9 99. G.I. STYLE FOLDING SHOVEL • NNf OftV ' 2 . 9 910. MARINE TYPE POCKET KNIFE • NOW M Y ' 4 . 9 9

(OFFER GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST)OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

w*. ' . ^ ^ i

AIRIOYCONDITIONING CO., INC.

/hackRadio /hack

COMPUTERCENTERS

SALE! START COLOR COMPUTINGWITH A TRUE FAMILY COMPUTERSSave $40

•51 sis16K Extended

Color Computer 2Reg. 159.95

Low At $20 Par Month on C I U U M *

• Ready-to-Run Software Availablefor Education, Budgeting, GamesWord Processing and Much More

• Leam to Program In ExtendedColor BASIC (tutorial manualIncluded)

• Create SophisticatedColor Graphics, with Sound

• Connects Quickly to Any TV• Easy to Expand as Skills

and Needs Grow'CitiLine revolving credit from Citibank Payment may vary depending upon balance

Enjoy Total Support from the World's Largest Computer Retailer

CHECK YOUR PHONE BOOK FOR THE PARTICIPATING R a d M / h a c k STORE. COMPUTER CENTER OR DEALER NEAREST YOU

A DIVISION Of TANDY CORPORATION PRICES APftV AT RADIO SHACK COMPUTER CENTERS AND PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

LIQUO*

•Cain i Carry on all ittmt• wt rrarvt tht right to limit quantum. Al prleat inciudt M M tax

PRICES 6FKCT1VEMON, MAR. 18ththru WED., MAR. 2Oth N E w iERSEV

flfST&rStlSStSum,mnblmi \f ,'XSXSZSioI At oaat o w p y y, q

Siom andwmt pradura mty not M on hand

—••! ""JrSS."". I '™.35«™ . I j a a n u .

I**8*:!. THE USTED «TAIUIKANODOfSMOTCaiSTtTlJ

X)WrO«RATION OR COMMON INTEREST OWNERSHIP

6B Thr Sunday The Arts SUNDAY, MARCH I?, I960

County joins Bach birthday celebration

RED BANK - A special concertelebrating Johann Sebastiantach's 300th birthday takes placetiursday. the date of his birth, at 8

m in the sanctuary of The Unitedlethodist Church. 247 Broad St.

Sponsored by The Internationaloncert Series, the program. "Thelusic of Johann Sebastian Bach."resents Bach 's music forarpsichord. organ, flute, soprano,nd trumpet.

The closing feature of the concertivolves the audience in singing•veral Bach choruses, including awingle Singers' arrangement ofach's "Bourree" from "The Kng-sh Suite. No. 2. conducted byobert G. Spencer, director oflusic at the church.The evenings celebration fea-

ires Dr. James D. Jones andharon Peer. Lincroft. performing aach concerto for two harpsichords,erbert Burtis. organist of Boston.

is performing three organ works onthe Austrian-built tracker.

Peggy Noecker. Middletown. ispresenting several soprano's ariasf r o m Bach's "St. Mat thewPassion."

Mardee Reed-l Imer. TintonFalls, is performing a Bach flutesonata

James Mcllvain. Florham Park,is featured in three trumpet solos,accompanied by William E. Todl.organist of the I'nited MethodisiChurch

To complete the tricentenni.ilcelebration, the audience is receiv-ing copies of the Bach choruses'Jesus. Joy of Mans Desiring."

"Now Thank We All Our God."Bourree." and "Lord Almighty.We Sing Thy Praise Forever '

The special instruments used forthe evening concert include twoconcert harpsichords. Although theyare nut reproductions of ancientinstruments, they were built usingtechniques from the Baroqueperiod

One instrument, owned by .lonesof The New Jersey Keyboard In-stitute. Lincroft. is decorated with apastoral scent) in an 18th centurystyle The second harpsichord, own-ed by Todt. is decorated in a 17thcentury Flemish landscape styledepicting a Resurrection scene.

The organ at the church was

Mardee Reed-Vlmerdesigned to include registrationsthat convey the tonalities and spiritof the Baroque literature. Installedin 1975 in the gallery of the church,the organ was built by OrglebauOberbergern. under the direction ofGerhard Hradetzky. The firm, nearVienna. Austria, has built threeorgans in the United States and ispreparing a major three-manualinstrument for a church inCleveland. Ohio. The firm, whosework has been noted by the Austrian

Peggy Noecker

government, has been selected forseveral major restorations ofBaroque organs in Austria.

The community is invited tocelebrate Bach's birthday by attend-ing the concert. Tickets are notrequired. Contributions will be ac-cepted.

Aged organist makes offer Bach, Handel refuseBY ROBERT BARR

Johann Sebastian Bach andeorge Frideric Handel were born

.ithin 80 miles and 26 days of each(her but the two masters ofiaroque music never met.

They had some acquaintances inommon. though, including alaiden desperate for marriage andquack eye doctorThe maiden was Margreta Bux-hude. daughter of Dietrich Bux-•hudc. the most famous organist ofis time.

In August. 1703. the 18-year-oldlandel and his pal Johann Mat-neson set off to Luebeck to visit theged organist, apparently with an

Bach artis stillinspiring

BY BARRY HANSON

NEW YORK I APi - JohannSebastian Bach's art is like no otherLines of music — voice, organ.larpsichord. strings - are inter-twined in magnificent counterpoint,iriven by relentless rhythm to peaksif tension. •

"The music has everything," saysKenneth Cooper, a New York-basedconcert harpsichordist and Bachspecialist. "There is all kinds ofmusic from the most sublime, themost tragic, the most religious, themost devoted, the most emotional tothe lightest and bounciest and mosttheatrical — and coarsest even '

Bach's motet "Sing unto the Lorda new song" was a revelation toWolfgang Amadeus Mozart, whoexclaimed: "Now here is somethingone can learn from."

For every succeeding generation.Bach has sung a new song Hisfugues, oratorios, concertos andcantatas are as fresh as the lastperformance or recording, as con-temporary as today's composerswho have learned from the master

"Bach has had a tremendousinfluence on me and my style ofplaying jazz. " said pianist BillyTaylor. "One of the things thatfascinated me was his ability toimprovise."

The 300th anniversary of theBach's birth on March 21. 1685. hasfocused international attention onhis vast and varied works, on theinventiveness and emotional intensi-ty which secured his place amongthe world's greatest composers

During a 50-year career as singer,choir director, organist and com-poser in various German Lutheranchurches and royal courts. Bach'soutput was staggering.

Historians have determined hewrote almost 300 cantatas — workstmm mini. i . rhmr an/1 nrr*hp>*lr;i

purfnrmpH during the long Sundaychurch services of the time. He alsowrote dozens of organ works, nu-merous concertos, suites, sonatas,oratorios and masses.

However, the musical genius wasnot widely known during his ownday. and after his death in 1750 hiscontrapuntal style fell out offashion. Plates for The Art of Fuguewere sold for the price of the metalwhen'no buyers could be found

eye to succeeding him. However,there was a catch. Buxtehude hadmarried his predecessor s daughter,and he expected the new organist todo the same for his daughter, then30 years old - ^

Handel and Mattheson left town"Whether Fraulein Buxlehude

failed to attract them or they simplyboggled at marriage is not known."Herbert Weinstock wrote in hisbiography. "Handel."

Handel never married.Bach went to Luebeck two. years

later and was offered the samepackage deal. While Bach hadnothing against marriage — hemarried twice and had 20 children -Ms. Buxtehude didn't tempt him

By now near death. Buxtehudearranged with the church councilthat no one would become organistat Luebeck without marrying hisdaughter.

F i n a l l y , the unfor tunateMargareta was wed to JohannChristian Schiefferdecker. a mu-sician of no distinction whatever

The quack who crossed the twocomposers' lives was John Taylor,who styled himself "the greatestophthalmologist ot all time."

Al l brass and bombast ."Chevalier " Taylor traveled aroundEurope in a coach decorated withbig painted eyes and the inscription."Qui visum dat. dat vitam ' — "Whogives sight, gives life."

Taylor favored the world withthree volumes of his reminiscences,dwelling as much on his amorousconquests as on his practice

"The eye is the Orator of Nature,and talks the language of theUniverse, of all beneath the moon,of all above it," Taylor said in a

lecture at Oxford. "It talks thelanguage of Heaven, too. it rendersuseless all sounds except the tendermeanings of lovers, those turtlecooings of desire, those namelessthrobbings of fruition; these are thegenuine dictates of the brokenraptures of the soul, which shescorns to-shape into words; nor canshe lose time in so base a labor."

Taylor operated on Bach's failingeyes in March and again in April of1750. According to the obituary co-written by Bach's son. Carl PhilippEmanuel, "the operation turned outvery badly. Not only could iBach)no longer use his eyes, but his wholesystem, which was otherwisethoroughly healthy, was completelyoverthrown so that, thereafter, hewas almost continuously ill for a fullhalf a year."

Taylor seems to have had adifferent version, according lo anaccount of a lecture he gave inLeipzig. The notice said Bach had"recovered the full sharpness of hissight, an unspeakable piece of goodfortune which many thousands ofpeople will be very far frombegrudging this world-famous com-poser and for which they cannotsufficiently thank Dr Taylor."

Bach was dead by the end of July.Handel was treated by Taylor two

years later, when the composer hadalready lost sight in one eye. Handelsurvived more than six years afterTaylor's ministrations, althoughwith no sight in either eye.

Taylor's reminiscences devotedbut part of a sentence to Handel. Inhis admirably convoluted style, itwas a sentence that began bynaming unusual animals that thegreat quack had seen in his travels.

A paid directory of coming events for non-profit organizations. Rates $3.75 for three lines for 1 day iyt.00 earnadditional linei. 1500 for three lines for two days ill.50 each additional line). I t 50 (or three lines for three days112.00 each additional line 1,17.50 for three lines (or four or (ive days I $2.25 each additional line i, $9 00 for three linesfor six to eight days I $2.50 each additional line). $10.50 for three lines for nine lo ten days i $3 00 each additional line >113 50 for ihree lines for eleven days Each additional day I t 00. each additional line $3.00 Deadline I I A M two daysbefore publication. Call The Daily Register, 542-4000 ask (or The Dale Secretary, i

WHOLESALEWALL PAPER

SALE

30%FG. SUGGESTED LIST PRICE

SELECT FROM368

WALL BOOKS

SaleExtended

thruAPRIL 1st

FOWLER PAINT & DECORATING1088 OCEAN AVENUE 8 4 2 * 5 3 1 5

SEA BRIGHT Mon.-Sat. 7:30-5:30, Sun. 8-12charge card! accepted

15% OFF ANY ACCESSORY WITH THIS AD

MARCH 17 - SUNDAYVFW Post 2170 Flea Market. 9

a m -4 p m. at Cost Building. Hwy. 36i East i, Port Monrnouth mext toA&Pi Reservations. 19 per table. Call241-3925

Unity is in your community Ser-vice 3 p.m. at the YMCA, 166 MapleAve.. Red Bank. Daily work maga-zines are available

Delicious Turkey Dinner. Middle-town Reformed Church, 123 KingsHwy., Middletown 5-7 p.m. Take outorders Tickets $5 adults. $3 childrenunder 12.

MARCH 19 - TUESDAYA self-help group (or divorced and

separated women will meet at 7 p.mat 225 Hwy 35. Red Bank Anyoneinterested in attending may callMichele at 741-2202 for additional in-formation and or directions. No sign-ups or advanced registration isnecessary.

Parents Without Partners.Bayshore Chapter 644. Cocktail partyand dance Town and Country, Hwy.35. Keyporl. 8:30 SHARP. Orien-tation Members $3: non-member. $5Chapter phone. 727-6020

MARCH 20 - WEDNESDAYSingles Again dance at the Cin-

namon Tree. Route 9,' Freehold.Orientation, 8 p.m. Dance 9 p.m. Forfuther information Call 528-6343

MARCH 21 - THURSDAYBACH BIRTHDAY CONCERT:

The Music of J S Bach." The Unit-ed Methodist Church. 247 Broad St.,Red Bank 8 p.m. Dr James DJones, Sharon Peer, harpsichord;Herbert Burtis, organ; Mardee ReedI'lmer. flute: James Mcllvain,trumpet; Peggy Noecker. soprano.Audience participation THE INTER-NATIONAL CONCERT SERIESContributions accepted.

The Sea Bright Fire Ladies Aux-iliary will sponsor a grocery bingo. 8p.m at the Recreation Center. OceanAve Auxiliary to furnish groceriesRefreshments Donation $1.

Luncheon-fashion show to benefitthe Family & Children's Service.Squires Pub Reservations. 747-9359

MARCH II - FRIDAYArt Auction. Benefits Boy Scouts of

America Preview 7 p.m Auction 8p in Monmouth Mal l . CivicAuditorium. Admission, free.

Third annu.il Fish & Chips dinner.Rpd Bank Regional Cafeteria Ad-vance sales only $5, adults (3. chil-dren. Call 741-4010 or Band members.5-830

Velter School PTO presents their<o*imA uaauaj rhinpsp Auction 7pm Vetter School. Grant Aye.,Katiintuwn $4 admission includestickets and refreshments Win week-end at NY Hotel & tickets lo AtlanticCity show

MARCH K) - SATURDAYSi Joseph's PTA. Kevport, Will

sponsor * Flea Market and CraftShow from 10 am -4 p.m in theschool auditorium Tables 112 50. For

info, call 566-1422 or 583-4520

Morganville United MethodisiChurch will sponsor a Roast Beefdinner. Serving from 5-7 p.m. atMorganville Volunteer Fire House onTennent Road. Marlboro Township.Complete dinner $7 per adult, $3 perchild under 12. Call 591-1819 for ticketinformation.

Flea Market and Crafts 9 to 3. 21Main Si (Firehousei. Oceanport. Re-freshments, cake sale. Tables. $10.542-0365. Sponsored by The OceanportLadies Auxiliary.

The Chingarora District of theMonmouth Council Boy Scouls ofAmerica is sponsoring a Barn Danceto raise money for Scouting. It willfeature callei Ike Icenhower as wellas a hot and cold buffet. The eventwill be held at the North CentervilleFire Company on Middle Road inHazlet at 8:30 p.m. Donation is $10.Reservations may be made throughTony Straniero at 264-3754 or PaulKolodziej at 264-1160. Tickets may beavailable at the door.

Mater Dei PTA annual luncheonfashion show to be held at The ShoreCasino. Tickets $16 per person. CallCarol. 871-2775 or Cheryl; 291-5626.

The Irish Federation of MonmouthCounty spring dance, with theTommy Doyle Band. Featuring AlLogan at St. Benedicts Hall. BethanyRd., Holmdel. 9-1, refreshments ser-ved. BYOB. Donation. $10. Prepaidreservations. Call 495-2231. 229-3723.842-8382. 787-1079.

MARCH 24 - SUNDAYAtlantic City bus ride to Harrah's

Trump Plaza. Sponsored by St. AnnesPTA Leaves church parking lot, 2p.m. Cost $12. Includes $12 rebate. $3meal, and $3 deferral. Call Eileen.787-6615.

Brookdale Community Collegesponsors a post-St Patrick's Day cel-ebration bus-trip matinee of DylanThomas' "Under Milk Wood,"McCarter Theater, Princeton. Busleaves BBC at 1:15 p.m and returnsafter free time (or dinner at 8 p.mSeals $27. Call 842-1809.

MARCH 25 - MONDAYJr. League presents Condict Man-

agement Worshop, to demonstratelemques in dealing with conflict athome, professional life and volunteeractivities. Monmouth County Li-brary, Eastern Branch. Shrewsbury.9 30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Reservations callPat McCarlan by 3 22 85 at 530-4799

MARCH 28 - THURSDAYSi Catherine's Altar Rosary So-

ciety, East Keansburg, will hold theirannual Chinese Auction al the ParishHall Shore A r m A.v» rVmrt will

open at 7 p.m ncKets may bepurchased at the door Highlights ofthe auction will be Persian Rug. Cab-bage Patch doll. lamp, rocking chair,and many, many beautiful and hand-made articles Donation. $2.50 Re-freshments will be served

Lunch with Ann Abernathy ofABC s The Morning Show. 12 noonShadowbrook. Shrewsbury $20 per

person. Choice of entree For info,call Louise Shivers. 870-5121

Bus trip to Metropolitan Museum.New York Sponsored by MonmoulhMuseum. 3 exhibitions. The Age ofCaravaggio. The Treasury ol SanMarco and Man and His Horse Busleaves Museum parking lot 8:30a.m..returns 5 p.m. Fee: Members. $12Non-members. $15. Covers transpor-tation only. Call 747-2266 for furtherinformation

MARCH 21 - FRIDAYFairview PTO Chinese Auction al

Fairview School, Cooper Rd Middle-town. Doors open 6 p.m. Auction be-gins promptly at 8 p.m. For ticketscall 747-3308 None will be sold al thedoor. Over 200 prizes plus CabbagePatch Dolls and other special raffles.

MARCH 3* - SATURDAYLeonardo American Legion. Ladies

Auxiliary, Post 338. indoor Flea Mar-ket and Easter crafts. 10 a m -4 p mBring own table. Cost 18. Call495-1785

APRIL 4 - THURSDAYLIBERACE and ROCKETTES Din-

ner at Galleria. $45 Leaves StMarys 4:30 p.m. Call 787-9138 or787-3657

MARCH 31 - SUNDAYAll you can eat tamily style Ham

dinner Oceanport Hook It Ladder.Main St.. Oceanporl Adults. $6.Senior Citizens It children under 12.$4 50 1-6 p.m.

APRIL 1 - MONDAYEaster Grocery Bingo. 8 p m High-

lands Firehouse. Donation $1.50.Given by Fire Auxiliary

APRIL 16 - TUESDAYBridal fashion show, lo benefit

Eden Institute for artistic handi-capped children Free adm . horsD'oeuves at Sirianni's Friendly Cafe.West End. Reservations requiredCall 367-3057.

APRIL 26-28 -FRIDAY-SUNDAY

WASHINGTON IN BLOOM De-part 6:00 p.m Malawan MethodisiCruse too! For info call 5668048

APRIL 27 - SATURDAY50's dance. 9 p.m.-l a.m. Holy

Trinity School auditorium. LongBranch, NJ Tickets $6 Call Kalhy842-8276 or Dana. 229-5857 or the Rec-tory. 222-3216.

APRIL 26 - FRIDAYMid-Atlantic trip-M.S.G.N Y.

Circus Exc seals, $1950 adults.$1850 children. 7:30 show Call787-1921 or 566-3812

JUNE IPI1 -FRIDAY-THURSDAY

*>) AfiDtK f'htiroh Ml'inlir. Ui»K

lands, will sponsor a trip on the Mis-sissipi Queen. Memphis lo New Or-leans. Call 291-0(76 or 291-0272

SEPTEMBER 2-11MONDAY-MONDAY

St. Agnes Church. Atlantic Highlands, will sponsor a trip to Norway.Sweden and Denmark Cost $1649 perperson, double occupancy. Call291-0876 or 291-0272.

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday R< gUler 7B

WHAT'S GOING ONMI/SIC

CLASSICAL MUSIC FESTIVAL— The third annual Classical MusicFestival concludes today at theMonmouth County Library, EasternBranch, Shrewsbury.

The Monmouth Civic Chorus,William R. Shoppell Jr., directing,is presenting selections from con-certs performed In Germany andAustria lait summer.

The concerts la free and open tothe public

CHAMBER SINGERS - The firstof three Lenten concerts by the NewJersey Chamber Singers takes placeat 4 p.m. today at the Church of theNativity, Ridge and Hance toads,Fair Haven.

There it no admission charge, buta freewill offering is being taken.

IRISH. AMERICAN MUSIC -Music on the Brookdale Stage(MOBS) celebrates St. Patrick'sDay with a concert at 2 p.m. todayat the Performing Arts Center ofBrookdale Community College, Lin-croft

MOBS lingers are Dane Smith,Fair Haven; Macalre Henderson,Holmdel; Carol Fine. Glendola;Vincent McGowan, Lincroft; TerryAtkins, Metuehen, and JamieSaulU, Colts Neck.

Tickets may be purchased at thedoor.

MONMOUTH SYMPHONYPLAYERS - The Monmouth Sym-phony Players, an ensemble of sixmusicians from the Monmouth Sym-phony, present a free concert at 2p.m. today in the ballroom of TheVillages, Freehold.

CHIEFTAINS AT MC CARTER— The Chieftains, noted exponentsof traditional Irish music, maketheir annual St. Patrick's Day -plus one — appearance at McCarterTheater at 8 p.m. tomorrow.

Tickets may be obtained bycontacting the McCarter box office.

CZECH CHAMBER SOLOISTS -A concert by the Czech ChamberSoloists, an 18-piece orchestra withsolo flute and harpsichord, takesplace at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in PollakAuditorium at Monmouth College,West Long Branch.

The soloists are the fourth eventin the 1984-85 Monmouth College: InConcert subscription series.

Tickets are available at the door.MUSIC, COFFEE HOUR - Lori

Goldschmidt pesents a demon-stration of the Orff Schulwerkmethod at 10 a.m. Wednesday at theMonmouth County Library, EasternBranch, Shrewsbury.

The event is part of the MonmouthArts Foundation's new music pro-gram and coffee hour. It is free andopen to the public.

MUSIC IN THE COMPUTERAGE — A lecture and performanceby Dietrich Gewissler, "Music inthe Computer Age," takes place at8 p.m. Saturday at Howell CivicCenter, Howell.

The program is designed forpersons Interested in music,acoustics and electronics.

Tickets are complimentary.

N. J. CHAMBER SINGERS - Thelast of three Lenten Concerts by the

New Jersey Chamber Singers Is at3 p.m. next Sunday at OakhurstUnited Methodist Church, Monmouth Road, Oakhurst.

The 26 members are residents ofMonmouth, Ocean and Middlesexcounties. Jeffrey linger, Man-asquan, is the director.

The Singers are performing inToms River Friday.

ST. JOHN ORATORIO - Onehundred singers of the combinedOratorio and Tower Hill choirspresent The Passion According toSt. John by Bach at 7:30 p.m. nextSunday at the First PresbyterianChurch at Tower Hill, Harding

JERRY AND JULIE — SingersJerry Vale and Julie DeJohnappear at Club Bene DinnerTheater, Morgan, Thursdaythrough next Sunday. Thurs-day, Friday and next Sundaythere will be one nightly show at9. Dinner is at 7 p.m. thosedays. Saturday shows are at7:30 and 11:30 p.m. Dinner isat 6 and 10 p.m. The dinnertheater should be contacted forreservations.

Road, Red Bank.The Bach masterwork, which

relates Christ's suffering andCrucifixion as recorded in theGospel of St. John, is directed byGary Meredith, church director ofmusic and fine arts. Accompani-ment is by the Stretto ChamberPlayers, wind instruments and or-gan.

Soloists are Madeline Rochelle,soprano; Margaret Baroody, alto;Patrick Romano, tenor, and RandHix, bass.

The concert is open to the public.MARCIA TAYLOR CONCERT -

Recording artist Marcia Taylorreturns to the area for her first soloperformance in three years at 7:30p.m. next Sunday at the FirstUnitarian Church. 1475 W. Front St..Uncroft.

Taylor, a member of BrightMorning Star, is performing selec-tions from her new album,"Tinder," along with blues, Latinand folk music.

This is the second concert in aseries of cultural events for socialchange produced by the Arts Ac-tivist Alliance.

Free child care is available.

THEATER" T H E MOUNTAINS OF

ARARAT" - McCarter Theater,Princeton, begins its eighth seasonof Playwrights-at-McCarter at 7:30p.m. tomorrow with a staged read-ing of "The Mountains of Ararat" byGeoffrey Brown.

Set In Korea in 1954, the play tellsthe story of a young army lawyerfrom the States who is assigned toinvestigate the deaths of threeKoreans and a black Army man.

The reading is at Forbes CollegeTheater, 115 Alexander Road on thePrinceton University campus.

Admission is free." A P E A S A N T OF EL

SALVADOR" - The story of howone farmer and his family struggleto maintain their way of life amidstturbulent events in El Salvador inrecent years, "A Peasant of ElSalvador," is being staged at 8 p.m.Tuesday in the Performing ArtsCenter of Brookdale CommunityCollege, Uncroft.

The performance is sponsored bythe Student Services Board andLatin American Association at thecollege. Tickets may also bepurchased at the door.

MUMMENSCHANZ - Mum-m e n s c h a n z , t h e S w i s smime/masque theater returns to

(See WHAT'S, Page 8B)

TRICENTENARY SOLOIST -Soprano Sally Sanford is accom-panied by harpsichordist Ray-mond Erickson at a tripletricentenary celebration concertat 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the Fir§t *"?.Presbyterian Church, Rumson.The concert, in honor of the j -birthdays of Bach, Scarlatti and , iHandel, is part of the Chamber ™Music Series of the MonmouthArts Foundation. Sanford is re-garded as a leading specialist inthe performance of Baroque andclassical music. A special Bachbirthday celebration lollows theconcert. Tickets may be obtainedat the door. y T

SYMPHONY SOLOIST — Pian-ist Jaime Bolipata joins theMonmouth Symphony for a 3p.m. concert next Sunday in theCount Basie theater of the Mon-mouth arts Center, Red Bank. Heis performing the Liszt PianoConcerto No. 1. Also on theprogram are Brahms' SymphonyNo. 2 and Respighi's Pines ofRome. John Carr is the conduc-tor. The Arts Center box olficehas ticket information.

ON SALE TODAY TWHI TUESDAY

35% 5.

GLADIOLUS, MIXEDPack ol 25 Bulb*

1 . 9 9 Reg. 2.99Excellent for home gar-dans, lovely assortedcolors. Long stems,ideal for cut flowers.

8" HANGING BASKETSI Popular varieties, choose:I • PURPLE SWEDISH IVORY |

• BRIDAL VEIL| • PIGGYBACK PLANT

WANDERING JEW Reg 9 99

Best Selling Indoor Floor PlantsLush 3 to 4 ft. specimens in 10" pots, some with 3 plants per pot!

GIANTDAHLIAS

4,or*5Pack of one bulb. Reg. 1.891Choose: Anemone. Mlgnon.Border, Qlraffe and Col-larette.

• COLORFUL CBOTON• GREEN RUBBER PLANT• BURGUNDY RUBBER PLANT

Reg 19.99 9.99 Each

• TROPICAL ARECA PALM

• WEEPING FIQ - STANDARD TREE

Rag. 19.99 12.99 Each

BURPEE .SEED N STARTThe easy way to gel yourglrdan growing earlierChoice of exclusive var-latiet ol vegatabm andflowers. Contains laedi.growing medium, trayand Instruct ions.

(1*63778) „ '

1.45 KitReg. 1.95

ASST. SWISS FARMS 'POTTING SOILS

Bag Reg

Choose 8 qts. General PollingSoil, 4 qt Cactus Soil or 4 qtAir. Violet Soil.

SPECIAL SELECTION OF

NEEDLECRAFT KITSReg. 2.29 to 24.99

75% OFF*Special selection from "Columbia Mlntrva"... olcross stitch, needle point, csndlewlcklno.. crewel& plastic canvas kits. LOOK FOR THE GREENDOT. Not all styles In every store. Limited quan-tities, sal* limited to store stock only. No rain-checks.

Over 100 colors!

Lion Brand Yarn

1/2 Price SaleBUY ONE SKEIN AT REG. PRICE,QET SECOND* AT HALF PRICEI

pM* •>•, ne. 1.*> a e>

16 qt». PERLITEOR VERMICULITE

2 . 6 9 Reg. 3.59Use as a soil additive to lighten

I and aerate.

12%" FLIP POTS

7 . 9 9 Rag. 9.99Asst. decorative colors. '

•am* pric* group.

ALL PEAT POTSPacks 0) 12 to 30.Sizes 2 Y and 3".Round or square

All Brands* Lawn Seeds & Fertilizersat GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Off

WE WILL NOT BEKNOWINGLY UNDERSOLDWe are confidant that our prices of lawn seed andfertilizers are the lowest in the area and we back It upwith a written 30-day guarantee! If the items youbought are advertised at lower than your purchaseprice (within 30 days after your purchase date) bringthe ad and our guarantee with the sales receipt. You'llreceive credit for the difference. (Check our guaran-tee)

FOR EXAMPLE:

WONDERLAWNLAWN STARTERFERTILIZERSpecially formulated lawnWtlliZVf rOf flfSt rMOWQol newly sodded and teed-

W. LONG BRANCHMonmouth Rd. (Rt. 71)Phone: (201)229-2587

QREENVIEW

QREEN POWERAll-aeeeon lawnfertilizer. (1358)5,000 sq. ft

7.99• 10.000 aq. ft.... 14.99

• 15,000 iq. ft.... 19.99

QREENVIEWCRABICIDEGREENSpring crabgratspreventer pluslawn fertilizer5,000 sq. ft. (»38O)

13.99* 10,000 sq. ft.

Beg. 36.99 26.99

* all brand* In our stock

FLOWER TIMELUXURY LAWNSEED MIXTUREQuality s«ed mix ol 3 Ken-tucky bluegratses and othervarieties.

5.993 lbs. Reg. 8.99

LOFTS TRIPLEXLAWN SEED MIX

A bfcnd ol Palmar. Preludeand Vorktown II permanentturf-type rytgraues. Grows In5 to 7 days. (13947)

5.993 lbs Reg. 7.99

Off regular prices.Store stock onlyl

BELOW WHOLESALEI32 Gal.TRASH CANHigh density brown poly,will not creek.Reg. t . M , sele 7.99trhVa rebate) 2.00Vow final v * mcoat re 3 i V VLimit 3 per person.

J&mi

«!-—- GRANULARLIME. 50lbs.

| Easy spreading

1.49Reg. 2.19Limit 5. Exp. 3/18/85

ENQLI8HTOWN, ManalapanRt. 9. Four miles north of Freehold

Circle. Phone: (20D838-77M

OPEN Mon. to Thurs. 9 to 6, Frl. 9 to SSat. 9 to 6, Sun. 10 to 5. W» reserve theright to limit quantities Sale) ends 3/18/85

54% offHUURbl ANVIL!

.PRUNER-True-Temper A-35

4.99Limit one. Exp. 3/19/88

t B The Sunday Register SUNDAY. MARCH 17, 1965

WHAT'S GOING ON: •

I (CMltMcd Iran P«ft 7B)

". McCarter Theater, Princeton, Tues-* day and Wednesday.

For the first time since 1978 the• three original creators of Mum-

meoschanz are returning in personwith a new full-length productionwhich they have been developing

over the past three years.Curtain is at 8 p.m. both days."MEANWHILE, BACK ON THE

COUCH" - A new offering, "Mean-while, Back on the Couch," opensFriday at The Dam Site DinnerTheater, Tinton Falls.

The work, a comedy, is producedby Katby Reed and directed by

Robert Kras.Starring are Run Carthy, Long

Branch; Glean Kelman, Hobndel;Kathleen Cagney-Villa. Red Bank;Jon Weinstein, West End; RobertW. Faulls, Point Pleasant Beach;Maryann Shedden. Toms River;Pamela Ward, Hailet, and LucilleA. LoSapio, Atlantic Highlands.

Performances are Wednesdays,Fridays, Saturdays and Sundaysthrough April 21

Reservations are required."MASS APPEAL" - The St.

Row Community Players present"Mass Appeal" Friday and Satur-day, and March » and 30 at the St.Rose Gymnasium, South Street,Freehold.

Curtain is at 8:15 p.m. for allperformances. Tickets may bepurchased at the door.

"UNDER MILK WOOD" - Thedrama season at McCarter Theater,Princeton, continues with "UnderMilk Wood" by Welsh poet DylanThomas, through next Sunday.

"SLOW DANCE ON THE KILL-ING GROUND" - WilliamHartley's "Slow Dance on the KillingGround" Is featured at CrossroadsTheater Company, 330 MemorialParkway, New Brunswick.

Performances run through MarchSI.

"INHERIT THE WIND" - E. G.Marshall and Robert Vaughn star ininherit the Wind" at the Paper

Mill Playhouse, MUlburn, throughnext Sunday.

MUSICAL THEATER"THE MIKADO" - "Tile

Mikado." by Gilbert and Sullivan, isbeing staged at I p.m. Saturday atthe Strand Theater. Lakewood.

The Glorianna Players are fea-tured.

"THE FANTASTICKS" - Dinnertheater at Slrland's, Long Branch,features "The Fantastkks."

Performances are Wednesdaythrough Friday, and April 10,11,11and 13

Curtain is at 8 p.m., and precededby dinner at 6:30 p.m.

The Atlantic Stage Company isfeatured at Slrianni's Friendly Cafe,M9 Brighton Ave., West End.

Performers, under the directionof Paul Chalakani. Asbnry Park, areFrank Soldo, Little Silver; LisaChalakani, Asbury Park; Dan Moo-Uno, Eatontown; Jim Maccioli andKim Van Varenberg Rausch, LongBranch; DebiTaormina, Ocean, andHal Hoist, Rumson

DANCEPILOBOLUS WORKSHOPS -

Carol Parker and Peter Pucci,soloists from Pilobolus DanceTheater, present workshops and aperformance at HoweU High SchoolTuesday.

They are offering master classesin theater movement and moderndance improvisation to the studentsof the Fine and Performing ArtsCenter

The center is based at HoweUHigh School and provides intensivetraining for promising arts students

LBS BALLETS J A S — A concertby Lea Ballets Jaxx Montreal takesplace at 8 p.m. Friday in the CountBasle Theater of the Monmouth ArtsCenter. Red Bank.

Tickets for this one-night per-formance are available at the ArtsCenter box office.

AUDITIONSPERFORMING ARTS PRO-

GRAM - Teen-agers with talent indance, theater, writing and tele-vision may audition Tuesday andWednesday for admittance into thepre-professional Performing ArtsProgram at Red Bank RegionalHigh School. Little Silver.

Students should call the director.Midge Guerrera, at the school toschedule an appointment. Auditionhours are 3:30 to t p.m. both days.

Prior formal training is notrequired.

Theater students should beprepared with two monologues of nomore than two minutes each. Themonologues should demonstrate twocontrasting styles

Students will also be asked toimprovise. f

Television production majorsmust submit a video tape and/orstudent-prepared television pro-duction materials Students whohave not developed television pro-

duction should pBjvlde a writingu m o u or artwork reflecting anSeVstanding of television pro-d t i concepts.

creative writing dhristaejplores the world of professionalwriting Students must submit aportfolio of their work." O T S T H I DRAMA - Audition,for the Gilbert and Sullivan musical•The Pirates of P * ? " " * " " •scheduled by Center Drama Work-shop at the Jewish CommunityCenter, 100 Grant Ave.. Deal Park.

Auditions are at 8 p.m. today and

'"penions auditioning shouldprovide music and be prepared to

^"accompanist will be provided,performances are at the Com-

munity Center beginning June »Paul Chalakani. Asbury Park, is the

Additional information is available from the Center office or bycontacting Harold Arm, 47 PalmerAve., West Long Branch.

LECTURES,FILM

SUBSTANCE ABUSE - A com-munity forum, "Substance AbuseAmong Our Youth: Does it Exist?What Can We Do?" is scheduled for7:30 p.m. tomorrow ai the Mon-

(See WHAT'S. Page *B)

m *t Can Ha—

CAROUSEL IMAGES — Kirk Rendelson, Red Bank artist, is theguest at this week's Super Sunday series at the Guild ot Creative Art.Shrewsbury. The artist, who uses carousels as a source ot inspirationfor his paintings, is giving a guided tour ol his exhibit and a watercolor

.demonstration at today's program Irom 3 to 5 p m. The event is opento the public. The Rendelson exhibit, "Geometric impressionism,"continues through March 29.

MOVIE TIMETABLEinformation for lh« movt* llmoubto (•

provided by ffinlir OfMrMort. 8«nc« movtM •*••ubfact Mchango. it M rarammondtxi that r«*d-•f • call th* m*awr to confirm corrott time*

t u w u m m * i-i-Hksrr*

Hissimto c w r m « -Bl 1:00. 7 » . »*>

SHORE REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOLPRESENTS

March 15, 16,22, 23 - 8 P.M.

kill

All Seats $500

Ticket Information222-9300

Shore Regional High SchoolRt. 36 W « t Long Branch. N.J.

snunwoM CMMMA I -Hanoi Hato U. (R| 2 00. 7:30. » 30

I T M I M M M CIMUU II -

"•iStSSSS iS. 7:30. MOHT. 0 CtMtMA « -

TO. KMMgFMMa (H) I 00. • 00

"iZ'sZliJfiira-U) t.oo. 7» MSvwon Ouaat («TsSii??- * "

LVMC I — TMATM —All MaM Adult F»n» (XXXI coxivuiota ftom

noonmrouoMI30p.nlLVNC II — TMUTM -

AH O»l Adult Fin™ (XXXI oonwXKHn fromnoon throuon 11:30 p m M M CINtalA —

Tao Hoi M M l U M F i l . (XXX) onnno

TumiU IPO-IS) 7:30, MO

30 pl U g M Film.

MM tFilm. (XXX) connnuoui

LOMO MAMCM I -B M I v W Cop (HI 1 00. 7 20. • 30

T J O M ^B B 8 ^ATLANTIC C I M U U I -

Tufk t U (fO-13) 2:00. 7 30. > 15ATLANTIC CINCMA II —

M M ARpMI 1*01 7 15ATLANTIC CIMUU W -

" T U B

B , rtW V ( ) 1.00. 3:14. 5 30. 7:44.• • 4 5UA MMMUTOWN M —

" " ' " * • * 1 B ) ' M - 3 • * * • " * * ' * * ' ' "

HM Hott (HI 1:00. 7 30. a 20

OFBRAUHAM l OCCAM M.VO, ATLANTIC

sr

Into «<• NlgM (HI 1:00. B 36. Maak 7:20» A i t aauNawicR

•RUNmwICK SOUAM CINfktt I —Tha Sura Thlna |PQ-131 2 00. 3 55. 5 58 7 55

Mi•KUN*WICK ( O U A M CUMMA II —

Night P.lrw (Ft) 2 00. 4:00. « 00 100. 10 00• M I H O L D CIHIMA • —

MO tha Nlont IK) 1:00. 8 35. Maak 7 20

rn* p.o««J»i IQI 1 00, 300.7 00. a 00

Tn. b M I M U (PI) 1 00. 7:35, a »

T S K M ^ S 1 ? ! " " * »"» a nFUIHOCD CIMIHA • -

•avafiv Mill. Cop (HI 1:00. 7 20. B 30

) 1 00. 300. S00. 7 00. B 00UA WDOLITOWN V -

T M Fakxwi t no Snowman IH) 2 00. 4:20.7:00. a 30

2 S K ^ V 3 : 3 0 . 5 30.7 30. .SOHaJflPO) V4».34». 5 4S 7 46.

9S0UAVIIW tOU

T h a M

J^O.' 3:30. 5 30. 7:41.

II —0 330

AVIIW t O U A M CINCMA IIThaaraaMutOuC 1*1 130. 330. 530. fM.

WMOUIMIOOK I •»A SoWlafa Story (PO) 1:00. 7:20. M O

For a great time on March 17, do what St. Patrickdid—come down to the waterfront Celebrate

St Patty's Day at Bahrs RestaurantCome see "Diver McDan." Enjoy a sing-a-long in the

lounge and Corned Beef and Cabbage in Bahrsdining room.

St Patrick's Day party, Sunday March 17, all dayuntil closing.

ff 2 Bay AvenuTHighlands, NJ (201)872-1245 \iV VV Just off State Highway No. 36 )) )

(Q| 1 00. 3.00. 7:00. a 00

Tha Sura Thing (PO-1I) 1 30. 3 30. 5 30. 7:30.§-.90SMMWSMMT PLAZA CmtHA III -

1:00. 3:10. 5 20. 7 30. 8 40COUMTT

v 2 00 4:00. • 00. • 00.

"pSaotakfSHMMP<M*<0.4:00.• 00 • 0010:00

JACK LEMMON

APPEAL E 2

TIMOTHYMUTTON

EVEHLY HILLS COTIB

leauenhelpus

REE VIDEO CLUBMEMBERSHIP*

with Purchase ot VCR or Csmara

RENTALS3 yr. SOLO CLUB MOO1 yr. SILVER CLUB MS

P A N A S O N I C * CABLEREADY VCR

$1 983ForOnly

$449 •15" DOWN

PV 1231RWIKliSS MMOIE, 2 a U proo/Mii. mMtma.ln«rt ncord. Mil Mm. Dem M a t 11% AM

OTHU F»MOU« MUNOS AT LOW »«iCH

JU8T ARRIVED: Qon« With Th« Wind. Cr1m«a ofPMMon. Bachalw Parly, navang* ot ma Nardt.Shaana. Star Tr*h III. Onca Upon A Tlma In Amartea,Had Dawn. EJilarmlnalor II. Main Sir#•». Tho EvH Trill

Fopt Of Of••nwtch VHlag*. IrrsKOncllabM Ot1«rSnc«n.Th« Bottonlana, Country. Th« Ruor'i Edtw. Ditto

SWITCH TO BASFCHROME VIDEO

TAPES

r v »6 " >*?«&!!<

Count Basie Theatre Presents!

"THEBREAKFAST

CLUB1 ISDEFINITELY THE

BEST IN ITS CLASS."—Jo* Siagal. ABC-TV.

GOOD MORNING AMERICA

THEBR EAKFAST

CLUB

nil

mrm

IWHU

SSSUSSL

"'INTO THE NIOUTISIRSfSISTIBU...

ASPARKUNOTHMLLHt.MttwcantwanilwoailrwmcNtM'

- Plclwnj Ca lm Wt MAGAZINE

"WTO THt NKSHT- SNEAKS UNOflIHEJWN proponed by BBKIntfihauottng blue. Mlcrwae PMfw k

olurtng and touching."- D<Md Annn. NEWSwtEK MAGAZINE

lEFFGCUDBlUM-MICHELUPfEIFFER

• IWIL Will \0

•MtTAKT CKNT APPHOVM. TO OUAlIf 1(0 BUVEI6 • NO FmiKCE CHAM( IF PAID IK » DAKS' • « Muaf fcfrjainlal F» Tm MmuraWp

Club Membership Honored At All 40 LocationsCOITt NICK 3 0 I T . 34 (Next to B«ck»f Hardware) 780-1310NWUMN 0 2 RT. 7 9 (South ot Charlie Brown's) 583-MOOtNKWHWIY 443 Put St. (Next to Pizza Hut) 530-2002W. LOW WMCH ..HT. 361 ttwiitt W. (PxMocics Pisa)... 3SM979

AMEX • VISA • MC OPEN 7 DAYS

Friday. M irch 22. 1985 at 8.00 PM

COUNT

I "WINNINA"

T H T A I R E

Tickets $17.50, $12.50 & $7.50 atbox office Mon.-Frl. 12-6, Sat.KM. For info call 842-9002Monmouth Arts Canter99 Monmouth St. Red Bank

RT 9 CINEMA THE MOVIESFREEHOLD 780-4436 RED BANK 747-0333

m ACADfUY AWAP.PS MABCH IW» |

\

The Sunday Register SBSUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985

WHAT'S

GOING ON

TATELMAN'S TALES - MiltTateiman, an advertising manwho has masterminded hun-dreds ol Hollywood film cam-paigns, presents an illustratedlecture, "Seduced at the Mov-ies," at 8 p.m. Thursday inAnacon Hall of the CollegeCenter at Monmouth College,West Long Branch. He is dis-cussing behind the scenes go-ings on, and narrating a 30-minute film depicting HollywoodHim flams. He is also demonstrat-ing two different advertising cam-paigns tor the same film andinviting the audience to vote onthem. Tickets may be obtained atthe door.

(Coniinurd from Page IB)

mouth County Library. EasternBranch, Shrewsbury.

Speakers are Karen derrick, RedBank Drug Outreach; BeverlyLindsay, Middletown, and ArtAlbritio. Red Bank Regional HighSchool.

This free program is open to thepublic.

SPECIAL EVENTSSOAP MAKING - Fre* soat

making demonstrations take place 1to 3 p.m. today at Uxigstreet Farm,

: The farm staff' is aim conductingfree guided tours of the Farm andfarmhouse.

AIRCRAFT EXHIBIT - An in-door show of homebuilt aircrafttakes place today at MonmouthMall, Eatontown

Display hours are noon to S p.m.RECORD SHOW. CONVENTION

— The second New Jersey RecordCollectors' Show/Convention takesplace 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at theRamada Inn, Clark

The show is open to the public.

ATLANTIC CITYATLANTIS - The Captain and

Tennille are on stage twice nightlyFriday and Saturday. Comedian.Stewle Stone opens their shows.

CLARIDGE — "Promises, Prom-ises," starring Frank Gorshin, is thefeatured attraction. There are per-formances twice nightly Tuesdaysthrough Sundays. Performances arethrough April 4.

RESORTS INTERNATIONAL -Shecky Greene and Keely Smithentertain Friday through next Sun-day.

SANDS - Clint Holmes High-lights is featured Friday and Satur-day.

FOR YOUR EASIER DINNER

AT THE PODIUM - HenryLewis, internationally-acclaimedconductor, is on the podium lor™; •;-... ; "....::!:uriv Or-chestra's salute to spring concertat 3 p.m. today at the CountBasie Theater o! the MonmouthArts Center, Red Bank, in thistribute to spring, the orchestra ispresenting Robert Schumann'sSymphony No. 1 in B Flat Major,the "Spring," and three works byRichard Wagner. Tickets may beobtained at the Arts Center boxoffice.

IMPORTEDCANNED SAVE

$13°°

SEE IN STORE FOR COMPLETE DETAILS

Fre^h Gov t Insp Boneless RibiO' Reo Emperot

Skinless B'oasl White Thompson Seedlos

Chicken Grape-OCutlets Rama

MllMlOMOfmoM

Ground ChuckUADA Chotoa Mat 1*1 Cut

Chuck SteakRortda Indian Hva» White Saadten

Grapefruit

399*London Brow ^ V Shoulder Butt ».» I Celery<*rW> " W *O* St*/%1Q ^ % ^

BraostofVeol 9 i

•och

SupwaueGround lurtwy

Chicken Wing*»Florida

Top Round Roatt b . * 2 w Rump Roast

In Oil or Walet Chunk Light

Bumble BeeTlina

I HUNT S TOMATO-BAMAl

RegularorNo SallHui

TomatoSauce

g

FoodtownSoda

MaxwellHouse 12,a

vauo

Wesson $ ^ 4 9Oil cg

oa:y*l

awtovNosoHHwri

Tomolo PorteHunfi -)?»,* i. ii^i-v— 32OZ.WflWIOKWCnUp bti

PASSOVER VALUES

toadh land* Fob

tiSSHk ^ 8 9 *

MiiNUFnaunciTs COUPON

to<

fmnCmwiofOm 8Oi79*Frown Stourtet

«<*

AuorM Rovon Foodlown

Ice Cream159

MMtxttlnndiAaortMIV

SefHteFish VM **»*» *an<» Mtonta V M M M M a>

wnnsfisnPike "K,

AH Popukit Brands

Egg SI39box

Golden $159Honey ' ^ l

Sour Cream com

SlicedBacon

BaatorMaat

BallparkFranks pE

^ D o * ^ foodtown |

FREE!i m ^ m m m ^ m MMMM • • • • • • • •

MANUFnauncns COUPON

! INSTANT $ 5 0 0 REBATE!! BUY ANY 12 DIFFERENT GENERAL MILLS

M t M . c « . « O 9 9 • BRANDS AMD OIT $5.0O OFF YOUR TOTAL ORDEIMiFfMhSCOJODt b * tm (Oillwent flavors Of sizu ol

™^J_^__^^^^__ | ^ ^ B V Q t ' JWMi) same brand do not quality)Ho»tCru*»linCiotimKiloitan I«n* iwiiia

CodotSctodfW >. aft49 I Nam*.

n-h Uctao* *» luw mm lot.

I Addrew ;IW1TH THIS COUPON Coupon (jood ct n->y « : u'o«n S jp i rmat i ' t t limn

on* coupon pciaduil tamlly Coupon good Mn-;117 thm Match U W 5 IV I

In aidw to cmum a niflctantavalabto m COM M I . Pitcat

ot i d * Hams lot al our cuMomM, w»

rtwwn ON tor daMgn purpowt and do not

ntos to 3 packaOM ol any Ham unteu othttwlM noted Sate Kamii nottor typoOicJaNoalaTion. M-mb-r twin Countv Gtoc«. Soma plcturai

rty «pmant Hams on K**.

10B The Suml.iv Register Business SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985

M y *7* ' •

^r » If • |

(if

L. *IVL | M I I -A

DINING WITH A VIEW - Work has begun on the new giass-enclosed deck at The Haulout Restaurant. The view is south towardChannel Towers, background right, and shows part ol the newKitchen extension at right.

Overhaul startsat The Haulout

MONMOITH BEACH - Extensive remodeling and expansion planshave been announced for The Haulout Restaurant here.

Located al the foot of West Street and adjacent to the Channel Clubparking lot. The Haulout is one of the area's few year-round waterfrontnMaiuants It lus undergone a number of expansion programs sinceits opening more than 15 years ago.

According to Walter Mihm. owner and operator of The Haulout anda number of other local restaurants, the current renovation will servea two-fold purpose.

Despite having the latest and most efficient kitchen equipment, wejust can't cope with customer volume in the confined area we nowoccupy." Mihm said. "The addition we plan for the west wing of ourbuilding will provide badly needed room to expand our staff andfacilities "

In addition to the building expansion, Mihm also revealed plans toconvert the restaurant's outdoor deck into a year-round dining area.

"Under our present set-up." he said, "we're forced to close our decknine months out of the year. Now, thanks to creative use of glasspaneling we will be able to accommodate our patrons with a delightfuldockside setting every day of the year."

The deck, which extends out over the water, will undergo extensiverebuilding to provide a controlled-climate atmosphere regardless ofweather.

Mihm also pointed out that a number of aging buildings nearby hadbeen razed to provide additional parking facilities for restaurantpatrons

Work on the restaurant is already under way and a completion datehas been targeted for late April. The renovation program will notinterfere with the restaurant's regular schedule, Mihm emphasized.

"We will continue to open for lunch and dinner seven days a week,"he said.

Videotapes help spur salesof high-priced real estateBY DAVID GRKGOR1O

SHORT HILLS (API - Hundred*of people walk from their BMWs,Mercedes-Benzes and Rolls-Roycesinto a local shopping mall eachweek, where one of the first thingsthey see is Tom Skobo's televisionshowing videotapes of million-dollarhouses.

Often enough, one of them buys,Skobo says, producing a commissionof 110,000 or more for his 2-year-oldreal estate f i r m , DistinctiveProperties Inc.

"One woman told me she couldnever have gotten her husband to goto a real estate broker until sheshowed him the video and whettedhis appetite," Skobo said.

Distinctive Properties specializesin selling houses worth $250,000 ormore, and Skobo said sales hadincreased enough recently to justifythe cost of professional-qualityvideos and prime shopping-mallspace.

" I think that for brokers who wantto compete in the high-priced realestate market, videos are going tobe a necessity in the very nearfuture," he said.

TheNational Associaton of Re-altors, based in Washington, saidonly a few members were usingvideos to sell houses, but spokesmanBill Adkinson said the practice wascatching on among those who servethe wealthier market.

Joan Knox, president of the SanFernando Valley Board of Realtorsin California, said most West Coastreal estate firms saw videos as "athing of the future," with just a fewcompanies in areas like BeverlyHills able to afford them.

Even Skobo, who credits videoswith helping his firm earn hundredsof thousands of dollars since hestarted using them last summer,said. "If I were selling (100,000houses I wouldn't use them."

But, he added, "because of themarket I'm in, videos are worth it.It takes a little extra effort to, sella home in the affluent market."

One advantage is that he can showthe videos constantly on the TVoutside his shopping mall office.

! I l l iliml m\\ • • • IIMII « • •ii i i i HI

m HIM* I ' ISM ir ii tl 1» ^ I I .i •••• a i i I I i

i ** " s : ' i l l

V • t v

ft ^* JtK *S ' .•" H^

Ii -

\

ikawHMPMwikMi

REAL ESTATE VIDEO — Real estate saleman his clients tours of many properties by using thisTom Skobo, right, directs a videotape crew at a video marketing technique.$1.5 million masion in Somerville. Skobo can give

The mall, which attracts upper- and happen to see a video tape," he .plus $5 per copy, said it took threeincome shoppers with brokerage said. "They stop to look and end up to five hours to film a house andfirms and stores that sell designer buying." grounds and several more hours toclothes, is particularly suited to To attract potential buyers, it is edit the tape to an appealing six- orSkobo's firm. important that videos be made seven-minute presentation

" I ' l l take out a (1,000 ad in a professionally, he said. " I triednational magazine and I 'm very making some with a little hand-held Skobo said he made sure the videolucky if I maybe get 20 calls," he camera, but they came out terrible was shot at a time of year and timesaid. "But on a typical day in this and actually made the house look of day when the house looks its bestmall I'll have maybe 15 to 20 people worse than it does in real life." " I t can take six months to a yearstop in to look at videos of different So he hired Steven Classman, a to sell this type of house, so it's ahomes. local professional with a (25,000 great advantage if you can show the

"You wouldn't believe how many camera and access to top-line house and grounds as they appear inhouses we've sold where people are editing equipment. Classman, who April to a potential buyer in thejust passing through the mall here charges (200 to produce each video middle of the winter," he said.

BUSINESS BRIEFSR. Keith Elliott of Rumson has

been elected vice president, finance,and chief financial officer, ofKngelhard Corp.. Edison, He is thefirst person to hold the titles sincethe spin-off that created EngelhardCorp. in 1981. El l iott joinedKngelhard in 1981 as vice presidentand treasurer. Before that, he wasvice president and treasurer ofKennecott Corp and treasurer ofthe Carborundum Co which wasacquired by Kennecott in 1978. Healso held financial managementpositona with E.I du Pont deNemours and Co.

Marguerite W. Rousseau of RedBank has received a lapel pin for 15years of membership in the KnappService Club from the Knapp King-Size Corp. of Brockton, Ma.

Elizabeth Chrislner, the formerElizabeth Lacy, daughter of GraceLacy and the late Joseph Lacy,Little Silver, has been appointedchief of staff at the Hitler AnimalHospital. Philadelphia. A graduateof Red Bank Catholic High School

.. and Monmouth College, she re-ceived a degree from the Universityof Pennsy vania School of VeterinaryMedicine. She also taught sciencecourses at Temple University,directed the veterinary techniciantraining program at Harcum (Pa.)College, completed an internship inpathology and did part-time clinicalwork.

Roberta Jane Merrill of RedHank, service representative forNew Jersey Bell. Shrewsbury, hasmarked 35 years of service with thecompany

Walter F. Windeknechl of Lin-croft has been named president ofAtlas Supply Co.. Springfield, aprivate brand automotive after-market products company.

John Miller of Lincroft has beennamed director of Systems Engi-neering and Networking Center atAT&T Information Systems. He isresponsible for systems engineeringof advance business communica-tions systems, including voice, data.

Lincroft.

Robert M. lamello of Wanamassahas joined the Deal architecturaland planning firm of Tomaino &Tomaino. He was an associate in theTomaino firm from 1977 to 1981

Arnold Silberman of Wayside hasbeen named to the board of directorsof the Professional InsuranceAgents of New Jersey. He ispi isident and chief executive officerof Silberman Braun Associates.Oakhur.it. which he founded in 195H

Alex Zakson has joined SyntrexIncorporated, Eatontown, as vicepresident of development.

Donald Vaughan of Oceanport hasbeen appointed manager of personalcommunications marketing forStantel Information Systems, FortLee. His responsibilities includenationwide marketing for MajorCall, a tone alert radiopager. Hepreviously was manager of com-munications and electronics for theNJ Transit Corp., where he super-vised all telephone and radio equip-ment purchases and was responsiblefor new systems installations. Elliott Merrill Christner Windeknecht Miller lamello

deserve a superior retiiementr

1

Term

6-Months

1-Year

18-Month Fixed

High-Yielding IRA Plans*

18-Month Variable

3-Year

5-Year

AnnualYield

9.20%

9.75%

9.85%

8.84%

10.75%

10.75%

AnnualRate

8.83%

9.34%

9.43%

8.36%

10.25%

10.25%

MinimumDeposit

$500

$500

$500

$100

$500

$500

'Federal regulations require substantial penalties and |ou nf UubdcCetud Itailll ™ IkitbdMwall 1made before age S9'/i. Interest on certificates shown is compounded and credited monthly

except for the 18 Month Variable Rate Certificate which is compounded continuously.

Shadow Lawn Savings firmly believes that the besttime to prepare for the future is today. That's why weoffer a comprehensive range of Individual RetirementAccounts that let you plan for a secure retirement ac-cording to your financial situation and savings goals.

And, of course, all Shadow Lawn IRA's are free ofmanagement fees, feature guaranteed rates of return,as well as tax benefits, and are insured to S 100,000 perdepositor. Visit Shadow Lawn Savings soon for com-plete details. One of our Savings counselors will beglad to help you choose the Shadow Lawn IRA thatbest suits your needs. Plan for tomorrow, today . . .and get superior retirement account performance,from Shadow Lawn Savings.

"Shadow Lawn - always finding better ways to serve you!' A Loan Association

Offices throughout Monmouth,Ocean, and Middlesex Counties

Member FSLIC

222-1100

Ulo

8LJJ

ooen

o

IIIzLJJ

ob

CO

111111

J

iiiiiiijilniii! i iiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiii m-*JJMJ J * *t'£i£ '*•' £

7 * i » 7 T 7 T • • I T T T T I i 7 " N » • • • • » 7 7 i • t • ' 7 7 7 i i 7 i f ' i . J " I I I J M t i

S 5 3

9llii!llliiilMiifsllfill§Sflfsns

iiiiiiis ciH i i S• • •

**** * ** "*£' -"-"--£

BiiliiIliiisUllgSiiiiiiiiiiis|gsri!lSiasSsli§EB§Bl!sigiilS

5235

l isilillff.lifiiliiiifflill

LUO

oUJ

z<o£UJ

9 j

ififiiiill« I I I I »•! M I I• I i t I *

s ! | l B; - -S -5=-98

• s *ssj! »»« 8

ffiidiiiiiiriifiii^i

5 9

"= = s „ s -

fiiiiiiiifli

asas9 ~sa

S" 88 8 9 »88

HiiiiatiiniiiHft

€0o

LL

<

Z3 SS3S38 3 S S8338 3: 558 388 8SSBSSS 55 88 8 S3 89S888I I I Iiiti

383 83I I I I I

358 S» S88SS9S

99

385 38 55 88858 3888 9 88 38 3=8

s j t K.

338 5== S S9SS SSSS88 5

;;; m i an mm i8 8

5 58 8585 5 5S SS » S3: 883

i ill iii* s 58 *8 S *CS Jia

8858 3885 35 ~88s85 B 88 8 8 83 5S5 55 S85SS8 :S855S58

I 2i» 5 § 2§ 25 is

llilliilifii.liili^ifsillilliilliililili

2 2 I S8 s.i = Su 9.

88 38S5S 8 855 S8 S88 SS 9 S SS8883S 5 S88 8 8858 5 3 8=38 8 3858 8 888 98 13859 S= 88 8 It I 85 83 8 8558 58 8 588

8 SB 8 SS 8 8S8 8 83 5888SS8S 8 58 855 3=»8S8588=8= 55 S8 S 8 S S 8 8 S S 5 55 gS a 8CSS8 C8 85 E

i I i i^j i§i i^.mm *iJJ «J*iJijSi»JijMMhMMiyi;^^^ ui5 2?§22S!g*!=S32» 5*JS 552§2!225252s5*32 Jig^g^SSst^il 25^2*123 ii*55g|=5225!252; «5s

35 ~«3 =;;«?*|«. 52g5|*1 5 Ss 5 3 1 .5 552! 2 2 § | 2 5 2553 5 23 25 5 " 5 | 2 "" | "«5 " 2 5=

lJ!liiHiiIiliii||!!lI|ii!li!iiiliiil|!liliiil||i|lii!fff<i»filiiii]ti»§8iiiiIl38ill|^

;8SB 38385 58 85=85 SSSS8S

8S85S S 85 5S8 8 88888

5 =8 a

I •" - I

888 8III I

5 *ii -i

S 585 8 3S88 58 53 8 85363 5 588 SS855S5

i 2 " - ^§3 32 i i : | | i i i i *1<

21 f

tS8S8*X83

1552

;SS SSS88S=88SS8 88

\ii iagciseiiiii ii

11!?=

58 S 8885S8S =883 8 9

5252 | 2 |

35B588SS33SS88 888SS8C8 8 3 8385888= 58 S3 SS 88 3 85 888 88SS8 35S3S* 8588 S858=88R8*

ii ii « ii i ii iiiii,,25

I I S j; B 8 » « ;

ii f3#2 25 S 2 35 3 a

iiiijHiiiJiiiiisfiiiiinii fiiifiiiiiifiiiiiii niiiiitiii i5";

ig

? 5 S l ; 5 J 5 5 2 3 J< 5 5 5 2 8 J J ; J J g

iitiiiiii-iiiihiritiifiitiii liiuiiiffiiifiimi slfsniffsiiin>{ftiit Hi iuiitihiifii* l 7 7 i ! i !• I i i is "I. 7 7 . r . . » 7 M » 7 ••. i i . 7 i » 7 7 7 7 •• ••" i 177 ~ » M « » I * i"7 17 i i * • ii i s i i ' l T 7 * l " i'i

TlrHMSiHHiS^iiSiiiliiiillli^M"^

- z ' "2 *5^5;5S5 !"5 3 ! 3 M 5 S 3 5 - » Wi* 5"lssS 5 !3" * « M ~ • «35Hl5t'5 «32"«i^«'»35!E"58« *»?!2 "225 '2*»2^5 "52! ' ' " ' *"* s*~" -

~lli iidiiillidllsilflliHIllllflillilUfillHilHIlllli ilHlilSlllliflililinilllffl^fl 8ls3iml£l!lIll!il!lt!ltllIlilHilS

(0

zoQ08(0

a

_«M 8 999

"SS 8 888 8S8888SSS88SS88SS

T« • • • • • • + ••••••

IP biiliiiiiihiisllSliU %JHUin!ilJlHiti

(0IU

oUltn

oo

IllliL i i l i if i l!Sz« I*§"•£

53!

Mi ,«•!

ill ci

Illlilliiililll i£ls!l£r2

12tl Tin- Kunila* Bi*ni»i«T SUNPAV MARCH <?

HOUSE OF THE WEEKNow from United Jersey:

IMPOSING — Contemporary emphasizes passive solar energy features built into construction.

It's all in the family roomBY ANDY LANG

Here is a striking two-storypassive solar house that soaks upradiant heat through its expansivesouth-facing glass walls and skylight- and does its best to hold on to it

Design P-20 is a contemporaryopen plan that begins to exhibit itsenergy-saving features as soon asyou Walk through the front door andenter the airlock vestibule, whichprevents cold outside air frommixing with warm inside air

Architect Charles Koty has placedmost of the passive solar traits ofthis house in the family roomFacing south, its large sliding gbuudoors and overhead glazed roof on adi amatair slope ceiling accept solarenergy, which is then absorbed bythe ceramic-tiled thermal floor Theimulated floor holds on to this heatand releases it after the sun goesdown. A high-efficiency fireplace isflanked by two soaring windows .milhas provisions for utilizing exteriorair for combustion, thus avoidingthe waste of warm interior airthrough the chimney.

Other heat retaining featuresinclude full R-19 insulation in all olthe exterior walls and a thickblanket of R-30 insulation in theceljPhgs.

In warmer weather, the glazedroof and sliding doors in the familyroom have adjustable built-inshades to reflect heat. Deep rootoverhangs provide desirable shadeAn operable double glazed skylightover the reception hall also helps tocool the house by allowing auto-matic conventional air draw.

The formal living room is separ-ated from the family room by a pairof bifold doors that can be openedwhen necessary. The kitchen is opento the family room and adjacent tothe formal dining room An extra isa glass-enclosed, circular dinettearea that juts out into the back yard

In the center of it all is the two-stqry reception area that features acircular staircase leading up to abalcony hallway on the second levelThere the four bedrooms can befound. The master bedroom hasample closets and a private bathaccented by a whirlpool tub and askylight. A second bath with doublesink serves, the other threebedrooms. Not to be overlooked inthis plan are the two terraces at therear of the house.

P-20 STATISTICSDesign P-20 has a living room,

dining room, family room, kitchen,reception area, airlock vestibuleand powder room on the first floor,totaling 1,110 square feet There isa two-car garage. The house can bebuilt on a concrete slab, with plansincluded for an optional basementUpstairs, there are four bedroomsand two bathrooms, totaling 878square feet. The overall dimensionsof 47' by 52' include the garage andboth rear terraces.

1 «> ^

«ri{r««i'i«t'iSi«l^ 3 ip

Come to the fast-moving bank for theIRA options you want and the IRAanswers you need.

FIRST FLOOR PLAN ||

We've got the options:Annual Rate % Annual Yield %

FLOOR PLAN — SpacouS ana pmpress-ve recept.C .1 •circUar staircase leads easii> to an parts ol tie house

MORE DETAILED PLANSFull study plan information on this architect designed

House of The Week is obtainable in a $2.00 baby blueprintwhich you can order with this coupon.

Also, we have available lour helpful booklets at $2.00each. "Your Home - How to Build. Buy or Sell it." "RanchHomes." including 24 ol the most popular homes thathavt appeared in the feature, "Practical Horn* Repairs,"which tell* you how to handle 35 common house problems,and AFrames and Other Vacation Homes," a collectionol our top 24 vacation styled houtM.

TF THE w?EK(NAME OF NEWSPAPER)CITY ANO STATE

Enclosed n check or money order lor biby blue prints

V $2.00 each ol Design P - M

Enclosed is S2.00 for MNCH HOMES booklet

Enclosed is $2.00 lor YOUR HOME booklet

EnckMd is 12.00 for PRACTICAL HOME REPAIRS

Enclosed is $2.00 for VACATION HOMES bookletNime

6-monthIRA CDminimuminvestment SI,000.

30-monthIRA CDminimuminvestment S500.

60-monthIRA CDminimuminvestment $500.

10.25% 10.65%

11.00% 11.46%

I Sireei.

Cily . Stale.Do not send cnh or stamps

. Z i p -

HOME BUYERS o REFINANCING o HOME EQUITY LOANS

1st

2ndMORTGAGES

OPTION PLANS

FIXED RATE PLANS

•HOlMlll Hrrnuvra. inui

For complete details call The Money Store today!LOCAL OFFICE

MIDDLETOWN • 923 State Highway 35 N.PHONE 671-5600

Mon. • Fri. 9 to 7:30 • Sit. 9 to 12

T H E M O N E Y S T O R E out of Are. e n ™ F™ 1800-221-9000O IMS THE MONEY STORE*

Other IRA accounts.18-month fixed rate CD. Minimum

investment S500.. 18-month variable rate CD.

Minimum investment S100.48-month fixed rate CD. Minimum

investment S500.Money Market Retirement

Account. Minimum investment S25.

Self-directed IRA.• Experienced investors may prefer the

option of a self-directed IRA, availablethrough our discount brokerage subsidiary,Richard Blackman & Co., Inc. Please callcollect 201-368-0800 for more information.Annual yields shown ore baud on quarterly compounding of

. interest Annual yield shown on 6-month Certificate of Depositassumes reinvestment of principal and all interest at maturity atthe same rate. Rates are subject to change without notice.Federal regulations and bank policy require substantial interestand tax penalties for early withdrawals from IRA time deposits.

We've got the answers:We're ready to answer your questions

about rates and investment options.

Call toll-free 1-800-222-0276.Call us any time between 9 am and

5 pm on weekdays, to learn more aboutyour IRA options and to find out whichof our 115 offices is nearest you.

(For rate information only, call thesame toll-free number 24 hours a day.)

Win a free Bahamas cruise!To launch you toward an IRA, we're

holding a cruise sweepstakes. You could winan all-expense paid trip to the Bahamas on oneof the "Fun Ships" of Carnival Cruise Lines,the most popular cruise line in theworld. (Shipsregisteredin Panama.)There's nodeposit necessary'to enter; free entry'blanks and ,sweepstakes rulesare in all our offices.

[[[i!Q United jersey. The fast-moving bank.

United Jcney Bank/Midatate13 ollus n Monmouth, KWillesei ind Octin CoulMMini office 1300 Sun Hi|l»ir 36 H U M NJ 07730Fo< I I * oilier neirnt you. cat 264 2800 679-2100 » 364-2100Mtrnt*! FDIC Mtmoet bank ol Unitad J«K» Bl l* l • H Wlioo linincul I t n i m wpnuition «,in olfiai IUrou|tioiil N » Jftlqi

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday R«d»' e r 1 3 *

MAKING EXTRA MONEY

Try to place4bet' with bank

BY MILTON ROCKMORE

I had an Idea. So, I ran It up the flagpole and, well, here's the story:I have a 24 month CD that pays 10 percent interest and matures In

December (Current rates at this bank are: 9 5 percent, two yean; 9 25percent, one year; 1.5 percent, six months.) I called the bank and asked,"If I extend my CD (or another year from the date of maturity wouldyou be willing to lock In the issued rate?"

After a very short wait, came the reply, "O.K., if you will send usa letter saying you will not withdraw during the extended term." Thebank and I had just made a bet. I bet interest rates would go down,they were betting the other way. Come December, we would know whowon.

Would other banks take the same "bet"?Saul B. KUman, president of The National Council of Savings

Institutions, said, "This Is a totally new concept. I've never heardanything like it before. Whether banks would be willing to extend interestrates is a matter for each individual bank. Sounds fascinating."

George Rutland, president of the California Federal Savings and LoanAssociation, an institution with more than 200 branches headquarteredIn Lot Angeles, recognized the idea's consumer appeal immediately."It's the kind of opportunity Institutions with the consumer's Interestat heart would appreciate. Now that it has been brought to our attentionwe might very well consider putting it into effect."

The essence of good banking practice today is minimizing interest raterisks. "Gambling" with interest rates is like Russian roulette to bankersand their first reaction is to shun any suggestion that smacks of it. Butwhen It was pointed out that they were spending huge sums advetisingto attract new depositors and that here was an opportunity to retainthose they already had but might soon lose, they began to see it in adifferent light. It slowly dawned on them that here was a new, never-before-tried promotional tool.

"Yes, I can see how you might launch a promotional campaign," saidNorwick R. Goodspeed, chairman of People's Bank with headquartersin Bridgeport, Conn. "You might send out a letter to customers, sayingthat their CD's will be maturing in six months to a year and would theybe interested in adding another year at the same rate they now have."

Later, when he had Leonard Manicro, executive vice president of thebank call me to discuss the matter in greater detail, I learned theconcept would also enable banks to do a better job of matching theirloans with their deposits. "We are intrigued with the idea," explainedManiero, "because it would help us improve the gap between our assetsand liabilities. Stretching out the terms of our loans would give us moretime to create a better match between the two."

By granting rate extension, banks, in some cases, would be merelyconverting shorter term Instruments into longer term certificates whichalready carry higher Interest rates. "What they in effect would be doingin some Instances Is moving you into a longer term investment withouta penalty payment," one observer noted.

"This should be particularly welcome news to retired persons whodepend on interest payments for income. Looking in on a rate they havegrown accustomed to, could give them some measure of security,"observed Stephen D. Messner, bead of the finance department at theUniversity of Connecticut.

"Don't be afraid to sit down and negotiate with your bank," advisedMessner who serves on the board of three banks. "They are always opento negotiations, especially the smaller ones."

So...If you have a CD you've grown accustomed to and would like tolock in the interest rate as a hedge against falling rates (remember,you'll forgo the advantage of rising rates) try to place a "bet" with your

(For tips on "How To Succeed in Your Own Business" send one dollarand a kSng-telf-addressed, double-stamped envelope (39 cents) to:Business Success, (name of this newspaper), Metropolitan PressSyndicate, P.O. Box 545, Stratford, Conn. 06497. For money-making ideasand opportunities see the classified ads of this newspaper.)

There's an unsung note of hopeNEW YORK - The "developing"

nations, as they are often inac-curately called, have gotten a badname in much of the U.S. — and forthe very best of reasons. Faced withmassive economic problems, theyhave too frequently favored rhetoricover action, bad loans over goodpolicy, socialism over the proventechniques of freedom.

But the good, and largely un-reported, news is that such self-destructiveness may be waning inmany of the world's poorer nations,as they Increasingly recognize thepractical advantages for their owncitizens of policies that favor growthand even (bite your tongue, KarlMarx) capitalism.

Now comes a remarkable study ofjust how far this trend has gone ina direction that fashionable theor-ist* would have found incredible amere generation ago: the establish-ment of successful Western-stylesecurities markets in the "emerg-ing" countries of Asia, Latin Ameri-ca, the Middle East and Africa.

Emerging equity markets, itseems, have grown to a total marketcapitalization of an astounding $133billion — a figure that represents 10percent of all stocks outside theU.S., and 28 percent of the size of theold, traditional European markets.Even without such well-known en-tries as Hong Kong and Singapore,the figures remain substantial.

As the study's author, Antoine W.van Agtmael, put it to me, "To myknowledge, neither the general pub-lic nor even many sophisticatedmoney managers are thus far fam-iliar with these facts." .

What's more, he reports, the turntoward capitalism in 35 countriesranging from Korea and Taiwan toTurkey and Zimbabwe has, overall,been a remarkable success for thoseparticipating. The return of theemerging markets in U.S. dollarsbetween 1976 and 1983 was severaltimes better than the internationalaverage, despite a major drop in

LOUISRUKEYSER

1981-82. and "the picture would lookeven better" if 1964 were included.

Van Agtmael, an experiencedinternational economist who Is nowa division chief at the World Bank,says there are two main reasons forthis dramatic, and potentially his-toric, trend:

(1) Traditional capitalists havefound attractive new markets.

With the rapid growth of pensionand mutual funds in the U.S.,Europe and Japan, internationalmoney managers have been seekingpreviously uncharted areas for riskdiversification, higher returns and

undervalued opportunities. Thesemanagers have discovered, he saysthat risk diversification can )bebetter achieved through investing inemerging markets than through theforeign markets with which U.S.investors are more familiar — andhe's convinced that this trend willaccelerate "when developing coun-tries begin to recover from theeconomic crisis of the early 1980s."

(2) New markets have foundcapitalism attractive.

In many developing countries,there is growing disillusionmentwith what van Agtmael calls "the

College sets manager instituteWEST LONG BRANCH - The

Monmouth College School of Busi-ness Admininstration will sponsorits first Advanced Executive Man-agement Institute for upper middleand senior managers.

A two-week residential programto be conducted on campus June17-28, the institute will address thesubject of "Strategic Managementin Global Society" through lectures,discussions and case analysesdirected by prominent specialists,consultants, and the senior officialsof some of this country's best knowncorporations.

James R. Greene, dean of theSchool of Business Administration,

announcing the institute, reportsthat enrollment will be limited tobetween 30 and 35 participants.

"We have already received appli-cation from almost half thatnumber, but we are still invitingqueries from others who may beinterested in enrolling."

pitfalls of resource allocation bycentral planners, the Inefficiency ofmany state enterprises, thestranglehold which commercialbanks often have over the economyand the financial system, and de-pendence on foreign creditors."

Van Agtmael has recorded hi*detailed findings on the 20 largest ofthe 35 securities markets in develop-ing countries In a new book, publish-ed by Euromoney Publications inLondon, called "Emerging Securi-ties Markets." It gives statistics onmarket capitalization, trading vol-ume, return (in dollars and localcurrency), actively traded stocks,price-earnings multiples and yields— and seems likely to become thestandard work for professionals inthis field.

The average American investor,on the other hand, is unlikely to rushout and start buying stocks inPakistan or Indonesia, though hamay find it useful to participate >•world market trends through amutual fund specializing in inter-national securities.

More important is the note ofhope as poorer nations, battered byoil shocks, loan crises and theincreasingly recognized failures ofcentral government control, turnwith growing success away from thewords of Lenin and toward the skillsof Bernard Baruch. Capitalism is a -fragile, but increasingly hardy,plant in many of these countries,and Americans who too often tend todespair about the future have reasonto give this dramatic new bloomingboth nurturing and applause.

$ 5 9 , 9 0 0 FurnishedBeachfront Resort Condominiums from

• 90% financing* includesfurnishing! • Optional on-iilerental management • Millions

' , of dollars worth of recreationalamenities • Phase IIconstruction underway

TOLL FREE 7 DAYS 1 M0 145 till. IN SC 1-W0-92I-7049.

GARDEN STATESECURITIES, INC.

Discount BrokersMembers: Boston Stock Exchange, NASD, SIPC

777 Broad Street (Rt. SS) Shrewsbury, NJ 077S1800-624-0144 201-530-9400

COUPON

20% OffOur AlreadyDiscounted

CommissionsCoupon aooa -m May 1, Service With Substantial Savings

•*PrtceoftheYeai%• #

By CHANGING TIMESThe Kfclinger MagaxhK

Would you pay way too much for in-surance you had never heard of and youdldnt have to have?

You might say no, but insurance In-dustry sources say that more than 70percent of all loans are insured withcredit life insurance, a qnmtionshiefinancial decision.

Before you next encounter an offer ofcredit life insurance, you should knowwhat it U and what your alternativesto it a n .

Insurance companies issue creditlife, and banks, finance companies,retailers, auto dealers and otherlenders sell i t It resembles a decreas-ing term policy since the amount youowe is amortized as the loan U paid o«.The policy will pay off whateverbalance is left if you die.

Some lenders use hard-sell techni-ques, such as telling a customer that aloan will be difficult to If h i

't h

MOVPLEX ICOXDOMLYIOI

OFFICE itriUMiVG

a c u oto process If the in-

dsuranceMany cr

health andIng jour msick or in an

be difficult to prisn't purchasedcreditors try to throw in creditnd ad'Mlmt (Insurance cover*

thl t If 'ciden) t

ce coements If you're) that can easily

• Apple* lie duodisk system • 128 K• 80 column board • lie monitor •Printer interface card • Two disk drives• ImageWriter Printer^'

on the state.People buy It because, as one state

an Inves t i ga to r told Changingbuy It se, a

InsuranceInvestigator toldTimes magazine,T'The finance offichas the upper hand because he decideswhether or not a customer gets a loan.People are afraid to rock the boatunder those circumstance*, e r a Ifthey're not sure they want coverage."

•ftecost of credit life depends large-ly on the size and term of your loan, and

state you live In. Unlike most ln-ance policies, a borrower's age

. * * the rate: JHnar-olds pay

8 SUITES AVAILABL E

or early ous. m m •»« m,.TO.you're usually ineligible

The credit We premium Is usuallytacked onto the loan; so although yourannual percentage rate stays the same,

rtb payment ncrsasas Tnsnmr iHrtnb paysnowDau enter otWig-term l

cnarges on* makes the

• Outstanding route 9 location• Ample off-street parking• IOO% financing available• Condominium ownership• Elevator service• Fnninntfi fnr uour needs _

This contemporary office building, con-taining eight exclusive office suites, each withits private entrance opening off an impressiveoctagonal lobby and located on desirableKoutc 9, is rapidly selling out.

Business and professional people havelearned that a convenient highway locationwith ample parking provides a big boost tobusiness —simply because clients and cus-tomer like the ease of access.

Condominium UWIRI9III | I p,stantial tax advantages, a latiui yuu iu',a;,;want to discuss with our representatives. Ifyou're growing with today's economy, but stillrenting space, this could be the relocation op-portunity you've been thinking about.

Apple lie Professional System• Complete system for business• Used in schools• Expandable• More software• Professional keyboard

$1985-By popular demand, this specialClancy-Paul price has been extended untilMarch 31 or as long as supplies last

Regular Retail Price $2529

« ~ j . .„,) HM Auto tago »rt ugh «T»rt» ol Aw* Conwtfw. Ire.

insurance amaloc InvestState reKfiaUon ^sets maximum

dousW around the country. For exam-p £ t n e credit life charge for a 11,000.iMnonth loan at 15 percent annualpercentage rate would be US» inAlabama, Louisiana, and SouthCarolina, and just $71* NMYork.

•7 *

Available ThroughnOVTWIIAN REALTYLicensed Kcal Estate Broker

431 2233

CLANCYI ttVUL I

1 I U - 1 O K 1

»uthori»dApot», Compaq.HMtMt-Packanl and

BMOMtat

The Princeton Shopping Center(609) 683-0060The University Computer StoicAt the Princeton Univenity Store(609)921-8500The New Bnirawkk Computer StoreThe Ferrari Mall(201) 246-8585The Red Bank Computer Store .25 Broad Street(201)747-7150

14B The Sunday Regisn SUNDAY, MARCH 17.

The Sunday Register Grace findings supportedEsUbllihed In M7I - Published by The Red Bank Register

A Capital Cities Communications Inc. Newspaper

BUlToompxn

SBUkfaMl J. KasalaDlrrclor «/ Htrtumt

GEORGE J. LISTERPreiidenl and Publuher

ChirlaC. Triblehon

Lawraace C. NewmanClmlutoa Dlncur

Jam FoderaroCat t*wr

MkhMl J. PeUegrino

WASHINGTON - The General Ac-counting Office - the cold-eyed, non-partisan investigative arm of Congress —has just completed a nine-month review ofthe Grace Commission's findings on wastein government

The GAO gives its qualified approval ofmost of them.

The GAO's auditors have been exposingwaste, fraud and corruption in the federalgovernment for years. Their sharp pencilshave jabbed many a bloated bureaucratand crooked contractor.

"We found overall merit," they say, "inabout three-fourths of the Grace Com-mission Issues on which we had a basis tooffer an opinion."

The Grace Commission recommended2,478 ways to cut government costs — atan estimated savings of $424 billion overthree years. These reforms are aimed notat necessities intended for the needy, notat basic programs (or Middle America,but at wasteful management, unintendedbenefits to ineligible receivers, assortedfreebies for the undeserving and preferen-tial treatments that the public knows littleabout.

Because the bureaucrats use part ofevery dollar that filters through theirfingers for their own purposes, they won'tgive up a dollar without a fight. They havesought to discredit the commission'scrusty chairman, J. Peter Grace, bychallenging his figures and engaging himin polemics.

I am not a disinterested spectator in thiscontroversy. I have joined Grace as co-chairman of a grass-roots group, calledCitizens Against Waste, which has de-clared war upon government extrava-gance. Now it appears that we haveacquired an important ally.

At the instigation of Sen. William Roth,R-Del., the GAO fine-toothed-combed theGrace Commission report. The review,which will be released this week, sum-marizes: "Our overall support for theGrace Commission's issues was consistentacross all subject areas."

Of the commission's 2,478 specificrecommendations, the GAO's fiscal ex-

•What do you know about this kid?"

Ponder those pay raisesWhen government officials, at any

level, make up their minds to dosomething, it is all but impossible tostop them.

Such was the case last week, whenMonmouth County's freeholders de-cided to vote themselves a 56 percentpay increase. The raise made themthe highest paid freeholders in thestate.

On Thursday night, the freeholdersheld a public hearing on the raise —they were required by law to do so —and only three citizens showed up toprotest. It is not clear whether themeager turnout was a sign of publicapathy or an indication that thefreeholders' $9,000 pay raise enjoyedwidespread public support.

Maybe we'll find out the next timethese gentlemen run for election. -

Meanwhile, the taxpayers who turn-ed out for the hearing had plenty tosay.

"If when you were up for re-election you said you wanted to giveyourselves a 56 percent pay raise, doyou really think the voters of Mon-mouth County would have electedyou?" asked David Williams of Eaton-town. .

And Carl Linfante of Long Branch,while acknowledging that the free-holders had done a good job of runningthe county, said this:

"If I had a business where I felt likemaking twice as much as I do nowbecause I worked until 10:30 at night,and I told my customers I was raisingmy prices so I could make twice asmuch money, my customers wouldjump into the Yellow Pages and findanother service."

Amen, we say.There is an important distinction

here, of course. If Mr. Linfante wererunning a private business and de-cided to give himself a juicy pay raiseat the expense of his customers, hewould be perfectly within his rights asan independent entrepreneur. If thebusiness failed, it would be hisproblem and his alone.

But the county freeholders work forthe people. The taxpayers cannot openthe Yellow Pages and shop for a newcounty government. They can throwout the rascals at election time — butthe new freeholders will still bemaking $25,000 per year.

The freeholders seem to have alittle trouble understanding the dif-ference between public service andfree enterprise. Freeholder John J.D'Amico, for example, defended hisexorbitant pay increase by dredgingup that old story about baseball greatBabe Ruth's comment when he wascriticized for making more .moneythan President Herbert Hoover.

"I had a better year than Hooverdid," growled Ruth.

"The county had a good year,"echoed D'Amico.

What Babe Ruth did not say - andwhat D'Amico apparently chose toignore — was that the Babe was beingpaid by the New York YankeesBaseball Club, a private business.Hoover was being paid by the tax-payers of the United States.

John D'Amico and his colleagues onthe Board of Freeholders ought tospend a little time pondering thatdistinction.

Donovan decision overdueRaymond J. Donovan made the

right decision Friday when he re-signed as U.S. Secretary of Labor.The decision was long overdue.

Perhaps, when all is said and done,we will discover that Donovan hasbeen railroaded. Perhaps we willlearn that the fraud and larcenycharges against him were drummed

i:»:~-l A-n t/s hancc him

agan.Perhaps we won't.Either way, innocent or guilty,

Donovan has been — and would havecontinued to be — an albatross aroundthe .neck of the Reagan adminis-tration. The indecisiveness and lack ofleadership resulting from Donovan'slongstanding refusal to step down hadall but paralyzed the Department ofLabor, and had cast a lingeringshadow over the entire Reagan gov-

ernment.Whatever the final outcome, the

Donovan situation is the latest exam-ple of a serious flaw in Reagan'sleadership: his blind devotion tosubordinates who become embroiledin controversy.

There is nothing wrong with loyal-ty. It is a rare enough commodity in

_ * • • - .--..u i

it where we fina it. oui aii Uw often,Reagan's loyalty to wayward andcontroversial appointees defies expla-nation and undermines his ability togovern. Richard Allen, James Watt,Ed Meese, and now Donovan — theseare just a few of the employees whowere permitted to hang on long afterReagan should have sent them pack-ing.

The Great Communicator needs tolearn two new words: "You're fired."

JACKANDERSO

perts venture an opinion on 1,436. "Wegenerally agreed with 1,158," they report."We generally disagreed with 278."

The GAO largely accepted the com-mission's proposals for "strengtheningfederal management systems, federaldata-processing operations, federal creditand cash management efforts and civilianprocurement and property managementactivities."

But the GAO took exception to rec-ommendations that are likely to raise apolitical outcry. Here's how the reviewersput it: "While the potential savings fromimproved program administration are .significant, the greatest potential savingsfrom changes the Grace Commissionrecommended would involve policychanges that are relatively con-troversial."

The GAO challenged, for example, theGrace Commission's recommendedchanges in Medicare and federal pensions;alterations in these two thorny areaswould save an estimated $88 billion,according to the commission.

Last year, the GAO issued apreliminary study, which questioned theGrace Commission's method of estimat-ing economies. Peter Grace relied onefficiency experts from the corporateworld whose accounting practices aredifferent than those of governmentauditors. This resulted in some statisticaldiscrepancies, which critics have cited intheir attempts to discredit the GraceCommission's findings.

Once again, the forthcoming GAO

report disputes many of the GraceCommissions figures. But the GAO alsomakes this point: "While noting that thesavings estimates that the Grace Com-mission prepared were in large measuretoo high, we agreed that, regardless of theactual savings potential, recommen-dations having merit should be vigorouslypursued and implemented '

In other words, the GAO experts stillbelieve the Grace Commission "over-stated" many of the savings. "However,even if they are much less than the GraceCommission estimates," the GAOauditors add, "they are often substantial."

Whether the commission is right that$424 billion can be saved over three yearsor whether the lower GAO estimates arecorrect, GAO sources said that theygenerally support the commission's cam-

"•'I don't think that every judgment ofthe Grace Commission's issues should reston whether the savings estimates areprecisely accurate," one GAO official toldmy associate Tony Capaccio

The federal government is a spendingmachine of Rube Goldberg design, whichis inefficient in all things except consum-ing money.

In the business world of Peter Grace, astandard of competence is furnished bythe profit factor. If a business branch iswasteful or loses money, a bell goes off atheadquarters and that branch is eitherpruned or cut off.

But the government bureau, with nosuch automatic arbiter, can always claimthat a poor result could be improved uponwith a bigger staff and more money. Thebureau chief is often rewarded, not (orefficiency, but for the number of people hehas under him.

It is not the needs of social justice ornational defense that are bankruptingAmerica. It is waste, inefficiency, spong-ing by those who aren't poor, preferentialtreatment for those on the inside, and thecatering by Congress to small groups ofvoters and contributors who have gloomedonto something extra at the taxpayers'expense.

Insight into Metcalf affairWASHINGTON - The papers had a

great time recently with the case of ViceAdm. Joseph. Metcalf. By the time thescornful voices of the media were donewith him, Metcalf had been cast in the roleof a specially privileged naval officer whohad received kid glove treatment.

"He got off easy," declared onetelevision commentator, "while enlistedMarines who had done exactly the samething were court-martialed."

Well, a closer look at this affairdiscloses that Metcalf did not get off"easy," considering his high rank and histrivial offense, and the court-martialedMarines had not done "exactly the samething." In fairness to a distinguishedofficer, the record should be put straight.

You will recall that a force of U.S.> Marines and Rangers, under MetcaK's

command, invaded Grenada on Oct. 25,1963. After a few days of intense fighting,the action ended. Our forces captured alarge quantity of Soviet-supplied arms andammunition.

On Nov. 2, through his chief of staff,Metcalf formally requisitioned 24 cap-tured AK-47 rifles and magazines to gowith them. "The items are to be utilizedas command presentation articles."Moreover, the rifles were to be renderedinoperable by removal of their firing pins"and shall be permanently disabled uponarrival home station, Norfolk." Therequested weapons thereupon were pack-ed into five crates and put aboardMetcalf's plane from Barbados to Norfolkon Nov. 3.

Meanwhile, on Nov. 1, customs agentsat Norfolk had been tipped that effortswould be made to smuggle Soviet weaponsfrom Grenada into the United States. All

JAMESKILPATRICK

aircraft arriving from Barbados were- tobe closely inspected. A team of inspectorsheaded by Jack Ragsdale boarded Met-calf's plane on arrival about 3:30 in theafternoon. Ragsdale asked if any auto-matic weapons were aboard. Metcalf'schief of staff, Capt. Conrad Ward, im-mediately identified the' crates ofweapons. The AK-47s then were taken intocustody. On Nov. 8 a gunnery expert at theNorfolk Armory confirmed that theweapons were inoperable and that themagazines contained no ammunition.

Adm. Metcalf's offense was that he wasignorant of a certain naval regulation346O.7(a), which implemented a Depart-ment of Defense regulation, which im-plemented the Gun Control Act of 1968.Because his unfamiliarity with the regu-lation "was deficient for an officer of hisgrade and responsibility," Metcalf wasgiven a formal letter of caution. At flagrank, this hurts.

What about the enlisted men? As thefighting on Grenada subsided, more than

300 Marines liberated (so to say) rifles andpistols that had been lost by the island'sdefenders. They were warned that suchtrophies must be turned in to be disarmedand registered. More than 300 Marinesobeyed the rules, received amnesty, andhad 350 trophies returned to them.

But there were exceptions. A handful ofMarines, attached to the 2nd AmphibiousAssault Battalion of the 2nd MarineDivision, set out knowingly to violate thelaw They concealed captured weaponsbehind bolted metal panels and within voidspaces of amphibious tractors. Back in theUnited States, Cpl. C.P. Kalman wascharged with selling not only a capturddAK-47 rifle but also an anti-aircraft oraitfi-Unk rocket, Sgt. JW Newman andLance Cpl. J.A. Cockrili were chargedwith selling hand grenades. Gunnery Sgt.C.W. Dedmond was charged with sellingtwo Soviet 7.62 mm bolt action rifles.Gunnery Sgt. B.H. Coates was chargedwith dealing in other captured weapons.

The several defendants pleaded guilty.They were sentenced variously to fines,imprisonment and reduction in grade. Thelongest sentence (seven years, reduced tothree years when he agreed to identifyother Marines involved in the illegalactivities) was imposed upon Kalman.

What the record discloses is that Adm.Metcalf acted openly at every step of theway. He left a paper trail a yard wide. Bycontrast, the court-martialed Marineswillfully engaged in criminal conduct. Theoffenses weren't "the same thing" at all.

Moral for the media: Get the other sideof a story; and consider the possibilitythat an admiral may have been merelymistaken, while the poor little Marineswere crooks.

War against drug abuseWASHINGTON - I wish so fervently

that it were not so, but we are beingoverwhelmed with evidence that theUnited States is losing the war againstdrug abuse. What is worse, this wretchedsocial curse is spreading like lava from amonstrous volcano, addicting and corrupt-ing more and more countries every year.

It seems that the whole world is goingdrugs-crazy. If you think that I overstatethe problem, look at one day's fare ofdrugs stories in Thursday's newspapers:

A federal prosecutor alleged, in U.S.District Court here, that over five yearsa Washington-based cocaine distributionring paid some $20 million to MarcosCadavid, an accused Colombian drugwholesaler.

In exchange for a 10-to-20-year prisonsentence, Robert B. Reckmeyer agreed totestify against his brother Christopher,who goes on trial Monday on charges thathe ran a tlOO-million drug sales operationfrom his Virginia estate — an operationfrom which Christopher Reckmeyer al-legedly made $11 million.

Mexico, stung by charges that Mexicanofficials allowed the escape of a keysuspect in the kidnapping and murder ofU.S. drug agent Enrique CamarenaCnioiir annmtrwoH (hat 3fl npnnlp —including three Mexican icueidi policecommanders and nine other police agents— had been arrested for "criminalconduct" in connection with the Camarenacase.

In a Senate hearing, Sen. Paula Hawkins(R-Fla.) demanded angrily that the U.S.cut economic aid to countries whichproduce drugs and won't intensify theiranti-narcotics operations. She mentionedMexico, but was especially angry thatBolivia got $900 million in U.S. aid lastyear, but still produces half the world'scocaine. A State Department official saidthe time is not yet rot such punitive actionas denying Bolivia aid. -

CARLROWAN

Brazil announced that it was launchingthe biggest operation ever to try toprevent Colombian drug traffickers fromexpanding their operations in westernBrazil and their efforts to bribe Brazilianofficials.

The flow of illicit drugs into the UnitedStates clearly hasvbecome a flood. Thesituation is so ball that the NationalAssociation of Attorneys General, thegovernors of the Gulf stales, severalmembers of Congress, New York CityMayor Ed Koch are demanding that the

lUUIlllj a uviuuj U,HJ ui b ! . . _ . . . . .

against drugs.In a speech before the National Press

Club last year, Koch said: "How can weask Thailand or Pakistan or Colombia orother drug-producing nations to take usseriously when drugs are sold openly onthe streets of America? Clearly, there issomething wrong with our anti-drugtactics."

Koch urged that we use the Air Force,Navy, Army along with the Coast Guardto protect the country against drugsmugglers with the same zeal they show.in protecting America against Soviet

ships, submarines, spies . . ."If the Russians were doing this to us,"

Koch said of the invasion of cocaine,heroin, marijuana and other illegal drugs,"we would be in a state of war. As it is,something even worse is happening. Weare doing it to ourselves."

Some argue that the post-Civil WarPosse Comitatus act forbids use of themilitary for civilian law enforcement. Butthe use by President Eisenhower of troopsto enforce court-ordered school de-segregation in Little Rock in the 1950s andseveral other usages have made PosseComitatus pretty much a dead letter.

I find it hard to argue that, even thoughthe 101st Airborne Division was used inLittle Rock, the military cannot be usedto combat people who are poisoning thissociety just as surely as if they weresneaking across our borders and puttingdioxin in our drinking water.

If we will not use every law enforce-ment resource we have, we must do whatsome in the Drug Enforcement Adminis-tration already have done: argue that"education" is the only real solution -education that wipes out the Americanappetite for cocaine, heroin and otherillegal drugs to the point that the moneyto be made is not so great that so many• w l t M w M •••ill ritlr nrrp«t ami nrisnn

That Kind 01 eaucanon is not in ihecards that we now are holding. I wrotethat sad litany of some of Thursday's drugabuse stories at the beginning of thiscolumn in the certain belief that millionsof Americans are so depressed that theyhad refused to read them on first sight. Ifear that the number willing>to read thisfar in this column about a terriblyunpalatable subject is so small that wehave a new measure of evidence that weare losing the war against drug abuse,losing people we love and becoming somired in hopelessness that we have lostthe will to fight.

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday RegiMt'r 1SI

OUR READERSOPINION

'Shame to him9

* Fair HavenTo the Editor:

Geraldine Ferraro has said that she's glad shechose motherhood. As far as I know it's the first timean American politician has gotten into troublepraising motherhood. x

A recent male correspondent to The Register wentso far as to claim that her remark is an endorsementof abortion. The worst thing that could happen to amale politician who said that he was glad he chosefatherhood would be defeat and exile to Whimptown.He could still remain, as all of them are, peronallyopposed to abortion."

When an attack on Ferraro is this contorted andabsurd, It discredits the pro-life movementl. Itschurlish.

I am of the same age and educational backgroundas Ferraro (Molloy College °S9). Here, for the fenefitof your holier-than-thou writer are the choices wehad: chastity in the single life; chastity in theconvent, or chastity in marriage. Then, as now, theCatholic rite has the couple declared before God andtheir witness that theyk will welcome and raisechildren. In the context of our life and times, thatis the only thing Ferraro can have meant by hercomment. Her life's call was to marriage andmotherhood, and she's glad of it.

Freely translated from the French, shame to himwho looks for shame in others.

Teresa E. Kneuei

Grace's responseNew York

To the Editor:A recent (March 3) column by James Kilpatrick

incorrectly stated that W R Grace & Co. paid nofederal income taxes over the "past three years."We would like to correct this statement, which hasbeen perpetuated — and not only by Mr. Kilpatrick— since it was initially made in a report by a groupcalled "Citizens for Tax Justice."

The facts are that for. 1981-1983 (the period chosenby the CTJ), Grace paid federal income taxes of $40.5million. This figure does not include deferredpayments. Over this same period, Grace paid stateincome taxes of $27 million and $275 million inforeign taxes. These figures do not include thehundreds of millions of dollars in sales, real estateand other taxes paid by the company to various stateand local entities in the U.S.

It is unfortunate that these misconceptions can beperpetuated to a point where even a thoroughjournalist like Mr. Kilpatrick can be misled bypeople seeking to discredit the findings of the GraceCommission, and who find only roundabout andbasically irrelevant ways to do so.

Antonio NavarroSenior Vice PresidentW. R. Grace 4 Co.

Chief is praisedHazlet

To the Editor:The following letter was sent to Middletown Police

Chief Joseph McCarthy:I know I am not the first, nor the last, to

congratulate you on the prosecutor's probe clearingyour good name as Middletown police chiefconcerning the unfortunate incident surrounding theburial of your police hat.

I had the opportunity for 28 good years workingwith your department and personally with you onmany cases, and it is still my opinion and mydepartment's that Middletown Police Department isstill one of the best run departments in the state.

As chief, you accomplished many goals. Keep upthe good work. You may always be assured of mydesire to cooperate with you and your department onall matters of mutual concern in making MonmouthCounty one of the safest communities to reside in.

Holmes J. GormerleyHazlet police chief

Britain's 'rock9

Long BranchTo the Editor:

As most of you probably know, a wide-ranginggroup of British rock stars under the name Band-Aidrecorded a song called "Do They Know It'sChristmas?" to raise money for Ethiopian faminerelief. Every penny beyond direct expenses goes tothat cause. The amount raised worldwide hasbeenenormous.

I've just learned that in an act of monumentalstupidity, the British government of MargaretThatcher has told Band-Aid that it's going to tax theproceeds of the record.

Let's all send appropriately nasty letters to PrimeMinister Margaret Thatcher, 10 Downing St.,London, United Kingdom.

Footnote: A group of American rock and bluesstars calling themselves "USA for Africa" has alsoreleased a record to raise money for fighting hungerin both Africa and the United States. Buy it.

Linda L. Erickson

Jail treatmentRed Bank

To the Editor:Your editorial of March 6 relating to the treatment

of Herbert Holtoway at the Monmouth County Jailis very appropriate and timely. Many residents ofMonmouth County are starting to ask questions withregard to the general treatment of prisoners at thecounty facility.

. *rn* , h a , S h e r | f f W i i | |am Lanzaro isi:2*."r^?^ »»Hon thp Public Auvinraic a u u m UK,*k..toat the correctional facility without prior notice. If itwere not for concerned state officials and your goodnewspaper, I'm sure the public would never be awareof the "medieval" conditions at this jail.

As you pointed out in your editorial, it's a very realpossibility that an innocent person taken into custodycould very well be subject to a savage beating. It'scause for concern when we start treating people like"animals"

Donald Dominguez

Is Reagan going soft on Russia ?President Reagan's sunny daffiness is on particularly

radiant display in a new interview with Newsweek'seditors. Why, he is asked, does he think he can get anarms negotiation at last, after so many failures?

"There are a couple of things that lead me to believethere's a possibility. No. 1 are their own words. One ofthem said to me, just between the two of us, he said,'Can we go on forever sitting on these ever-risingmountains of weapons?'"

If Jimmy Carter had said such a thing, that he thinksthe Russians will cooperate because one told him so"just between the two of us," he would have been hootedat. Yet it should be far sillier for Mr. Reagan to saysuch things. He is the man who thinks the Soviet Unionis the evil empire, the very center of evil in the world.He is the one who says Russians are unlike Americansprincipally in their readiness to lie to accomplish theirends. Yet here he is producing the word of one such liaras evidence that a new age of negotiations is dawning.

The steadiest keeper of a Reagan watch over theyears, Lou Cannon, has a theory that things musthappen to Reagan personally for them to register in hisview of the world. According to Cannon, the point is notthat a Russian said something promising, but that hesaid it to Reagan. (The moral for some of those aroundReagan is: Keep him away from Russians.)

GARYWILLS

The president's blithe attitude toward consistencyallows him to be as extreme in his optimism about theRussians as he is extreme in his pessimism andcondemnation. These things come and go like the briefshowers of tears and rapid daybreaks of laughter in achild. So, in the same interview, when Reagan wasasked why the Soviets would not be frightened into afirst strike if we add Star Wars and MX to our arsenal,he cheerily said: "Because there's another — and abetter — answer." Disarmament all around. All sweetreason himself, he expects sweet reason from the

Soviets when they are presented with a "betteranswer."

This is the Reagan who says he will turn over ourtechnology to the Russians once he has made nuclearattack obsolete. He not only expects reason from theother side, but is betting on it in future occupants ofthe White House and the Pentagon. As Theodore Draperhas put it, a president would have to bomb the Pentagonbefore he could get military secrets put into a formsendable to the Russians.

Norman Podhoretz writes in the current ForeignAffairs that Reagan is going soft on the Russians, thathe is loitering toward the deterrent path Podhoretzbelieves in the sunny moods. He need only wait aminute. Clouds gather quickly in that inner landscapeReagan could, after all, explain in the same paragraphwhy the MX both is and is not a bargaining chip Wehave to have it in order to negotiate, but our reason forhaving it is not that we have to have it in order tonegotiate. See, Mr. Podhoretz? You can relax.

The president believes that the Russians will be nicewhen that fits one of his dreams, Star Wars. That is thedream he loves the best of all. because — as he proudlyand implausibly puts it to the editors of Newsweek —he "thought of it myself." Well, he thinks he thought

' it. And that is what counts.

'Million-dollar baby9 up for saleThere was a great deal of excitement in our

neighborhood last week. The first house advertised tosell at over a million dollars was put up for sale.

Most of the homes in our area were built in the '40sand '50s and originally sold for $30,000 to $50,000. Overthe years they have increased in value, but no one everdreamed that one of them would ever be advertised fora million.

Trembling, who reported the news to me, said, "Iknew someone would break the six-figure barrier sooneror later, but I never thought it would be Ed Hurwitz."

"I can't believe Hurwitz is asking a million for hislean-to. I don't think he paid more than $63,000 for it10 years ago."

"I saw the ad in the paper this morning. It said,'Historical mini-estate, located in one of the mostprestigious neighborhoods in Washington. A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for that special affluent family whowants more from a home than just a place to live.Offered at $1,450,000. Within walking distance of theSwedish Embassy.'"

I said, "It's a joke. It has to be a joke.""Oh yeah? You should see the lineup of cars in front

of the house. You would think T. Boone Pickens wascoming to dinner."

Out of curiosity we decided to wander over toHurwitz's house. Sure enough, there were Mercedes-Benzes, BMWs, Jaguars. Lincolns and chauffeuredCadillacs parked all along the street. Women in furcoats stood in line waiting to get in, and Hurwitz passedout a mimeographed sheet describing the features of thehouse. This included "antique lighting fixtures, a wet

ARTBUCHWALD

bar in the basement, contemporary library with originalmoldings, and a state-of-the-art laundry room."

"What a turnout," I said to Hurwitz."It even surprised me," he said, "but not the real

estate agent. She said the only way to keep out thebargain-hunters and attract the upper-bracket crowd isto ask for more than a million dollars for your house."

"Aren't they disappointed when they arrive?""They don't seem to be," Hurwitz said. "They figure

if you're asking over a million there's got to be moreto it than they can see. Besides, people who can payprices like that want to gut the structure anyway, andspend another million to make it 'livable.' One of thebig attractions of this place is they can throw outeverything in the house and not feel guilty about it."

Hurwitz took Trembling and me inside.

"You didn't even paint it," I said."Why paint it? Whoever is going to buy it will only

REPAINT it. Women's eyes light up when they see tjbjsjoint and they can hardly wait to call their decorator.The one thing I learned in selling a house for a millionbucks is the less you offer somebody the more chanceyou have of getting them to buy it."

We went into the kitchen. There was a 1960 gas stove,a 1970 refrigerator, a scarred wooden table, two chairs.and a spice shelf that Hurwitz had gotten with greenstamps.

One of the women said to the other, "It's utterlycharming. You don't see kitchens like this anymore '

The second woman said, it 's a dream. You can startfrom scratch and do anything you want with it." v

"That's true of the bathroom too, ' Hurwitz toldthem.

When we got back into the living room I said. "Iwouldn't believe it if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes.The people are actually salivating to buy this hunk ofjunk."

Hurwitz seemed offended. "It may be a hunk of junkto you, but for the people who came here today it's thedream they worked for all of their lives '

"Hey, wait a minute," Trembling said. If you gelone million four for this wreck that means all our homesin the neighborhood will be reassessed for tax purposesand we'll be paying for your scam."

"Don't blame me," Hurwitz said. "I originally asked$100,000 for the house and had no bites Now that I'masking for a million I can't keep people from kickingdown the door."

It was a dark and dreary night,..It was cold and dark when I awoke, a little too early

to get' tip but too late to take a chance going back tosleep. J

Lying there, in the lew moments 1 give my sen to rallyto the idea of starting a day's work, I suddenly had anawful feeling. It was a premonition of disaster/almostas though some unearthly power was whispering awarning to me. ~~>v

"Something terrible is going to happen today,A Ithought to myself. I don't often whisper words under mybreath but I whispered those.

It nagged at me as I showered and dressed. It wasa cousin to the feeling I have when I've forgottensomething. I've never thought I might have forgottensomething when I have not so I wasn't treating thispremonition lightly.

My mind started checking, computerlike, throughthings that could happen to me.

It stopped on "accident.""The train would be safer than driving to work," I

thought to myself. "... except," I continued in my head,"if something's going to happen, there's nothing I cando to prevent it."

"I'd better be careful crossing the streets today,though," I thought, not giving in completely topredestination.

On the train I tried to concentrate on the newspaperbut every bit of bad news in it reminded me ofsomething awful that might happen to me. I put downthe paper and searched the faces of other commutersfor some clue. I saw no tension on any face. It's going

ANDYROONEY

to be a personal tragedy, I thought, not a nationalcatastrophe that touches everyone ... not a nuclearbomb.

One dread thought led to another. I was obsessed. Iknew that I could not deny so strong a sense thatsomething was going to go wrong. On the other hand,I tried to be rational. I'm not a person who believes infairy tales, mysticism or magic. I'm not a person whogives a second thought to the report of a flying saucer.

Still, there it was and I couldn't get rid of the thought.When I got to the office, I immediately called each ofthe four children, in order. I asked how they were andwhat their plans were for the day. I told them nothingabout what I felt was going to happen.

Much of my day was spent thinking of worst cases.What would be the worst thing that could happen? WasI going to discover a lump somewhere on my body? Was

I going to feel a sudden stabbing pain in my chest'1

I worked intermittently and by the end of .the day Iwas relieved to notice that nothing had happened yetThe premonition of disaster was still there but I'd gottenthrough most of the day. Now if I could make it homeand find everyone safe and the house still standing,perhaps I could relax a little. Maybe, I thought, I'm justkidding myself. The sense of foreboding was too strongto dismiss, though.

We had an uneventful dinner but at exactly 7:45, whilewe were sitting in the living room watching a badtelevision show, the phone rang. It seemed louder, moreinsistent than usual and my heart sank. Margie went toanswer the phone. I sat, staring at an open book but notreading anything. I turned down the television soundI didn't want to hear but I couldn't keep from listeningIt was one of Margie's friends looking her to substitutein a tennis group.

At 9:30 I realized I was too anxious to concentrateon reading or television so I went to my basementworkshop. As I switched on the overhead lights, theteeth on my power saw glistened. I stood for a momentas my eyes scanned a variety of sharp and dangeroustools. I switched off the light and went back upstairs

Shortly after 10 I went to bed. I turned off the lightand lay there for a moment in silence. Suddenly I hearda small creaking noise. It seemed to come fromdownstairs. First it was almost inaudible but it grewlouder and came with greater frequency.

That's the last thing I remember before 1 fell asleep.So much for premonitions of disaster.

TODAY IN HISTORYBy The Associated Press.

Today is Sunday, March 17, the 76th day of 1985 Thereare 289 days left in the year. Today is St. Patrick's Day.

Today's highlight in history:On March 17, in the year 461, according to tradition,

St. Patrick — the patron saint of Ireland — died in Saul.On this date:In 1776, British forces evacuated Boston during the

Revolutionary War.In 1870, the Massachusetts Legislature authorized the

incorporation of Wellesley Female Seminary. It laterbecame Wellesley College.

In 1905, Eleanor Roosevelt married Franklin D.Roosevelt in New York.

In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt used the term"muckrake" in a speech to the Gridiron Club inWashington.

In 1910, the Camp Fire Girls organization wasformed. It was formally presented to the public exactlytwo years later.

In 1941, the National Gallery of Art opened inWashington.

In 1942, during World War Two, General DouglasMacArthur arrived in Australia to become supremecommander of Allied forces in the southwest Pacifictheater.

In 1958, the U.S. Navy launched the Vanguard Onesatellite. _

in 19U0, UMWuvut ttftUl UWM ~ -

beatified. She became a saint in HIS:")In 1966, a U.S. midget submarine located a missing

hydrogen bomb which had fallen from an Americanbomber into the Mediterranean off Spain.

In 1969, Golda Meir became premier of Israel.In 1970, the United States cast its first veto in the UN

Security Council. The United States killed a resolutionthat would have condemned Britain for failure to useforce to overthrow the white-ruled government ofRhodesia.

Ten years ago: The U.S. Supreme Court ruledunanimously that the federal government had exclusive

rights to any oil and gas resources on the Atlantic OuterContinental Shelf beyond the three-mile limit.

Five years ago: The ambassador of Uruguay,Fernando Gomez Fyns. made a daring escape from hisleftist guerrilla captors inside the Dominican Embassyin Colombia.

One year ago: A jury in Fall River, Mass., found twomen guilty of the aggravated rape of a young womanon a baroom pool table in New Bedford while onlookersjoked and cheered.

' Today's birthdays: Actress Mercedes McCambridgeis 67. Ballet star Rudolf Nureyev is 47. Singer-guitaristPaul Kantner is 43. Singer-songwriter John Sebastian is41. Actor Patrick Duffy is 36. Actor Kurt Russell is 34.Actress Lesley-Anne Down is 28.

Thought for today: "I don't think there's any pointin being Irish if you don't know that the world is goingto break your heart eventually." — US Senator DanielPatrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.

Congressman sounds offWASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan adminis-

tration is making consumer protection a do-it-yourself project rather than providing Americanswith government protection, a leading consumeradvocate in Congress charges.

"I think (consumers) should know that they havean enormous responsibility thrust on their shouldersto protect themselves." Rep. Henry A. Waxman, D-Calif., said.

"There are going to be some consumers who aregoing to be very informed and very sophisticated andthey will handle matters for themselves," Waxmansaid, "But ... one of the ideas of government

lumen [rtrtn sittnWaxmans seemingly shy, soft-spoken approach

tends to camouflage his firm grasp of how Congressworks.

A long-time liberal still willing to carry thatbanner, Waxman is not pressing new consumerinitiatives, but instead is wielding his political skillsto protect measures put in place over in recentdecades.

Often, he finds himself up against an adminis-tration that has stressed consumer education rather

than regulation, that has tried to get people tounderstand the marketplace without imposingburdens on business and industry.

Waxman agrees that consumers need to beinformed of the potential risks and dangersconfronting them.

But. he says — leaning over his desk for emphasis— "they expect government to make sure that a lotof these things are safe ... that the products they buyhave been screened by somebody for egregiousdefects and that the food is going to be safe and thatthe drugs are going to be scrutinized as carefully aspossible."

•• :-. i>.>.. nwomiTiMii nrnteetions. accumulated-..»- tho yoara that Waxman aajs ne plans .« e n -close scrutiny as a member of the House Energy andCommerce Committee, where he chairs the healthand environment subcommittee.

The slight, balding congressman who representsHollywood and the San Fernando Valley, also serveson the telecommunications and consumer protectionsand finance subcommittees and on the GovernmentOperations subcommittee on commerce, consumerand monetary affairs.

16B The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985

wnw wjuttt>—»itmx

Now at incredible savings

Fine c

ST. PATRICK'S DAYFROM ALL OF US AT A&P

Porcelain ChinaGenuine Gold or Platinum Bands

On SaleThis WeekSaucer

t i tea.

with every S3 00 purchase

CHILLED...1O0V. PURE

I WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASE

GET FOUR CANS

! ANY VARIETY...TIDBITS OR

! Friskies Buffet 4 Q Q O l <

WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASE

GET ONE CARTON

!

• Cat Food Orange Juice 64-oz.

cm. 1Limit One Coupon Per Family: Valid

Sun., Mar. 17th thru Sal.. Mar. 23rd. I M S .Limit On* Coupon Por Family. Valid

Sun.. Mar. 17th thru Sat.. Mar. 23rd 1985.

WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASE

GET ONE ROLL

KLEENEX...ASSORTED COLORS

Hi-DriPaper Towels'""I

100 sheet 39*WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASE

GET SIX CANS

• PLUS DEPOSIT WHERE REQUIRED

! Shasta• Diet Soda

Limit On. Coupon Par Family. ValidSun.. Mar. 17lh thru Sal.. Mar 23rd. IMS.

REQUIRED

B 1OO2S I

Sun.Limit One Coupon Pat Family. Validm., Mar. 17th thru Sat., Mar. 23rd 191198S.

GROCERY I •JREDUCTIONS GROCERY REDUCTIONS GROCERY • •JREDUCTIONS

ANY VARIETY MIX

LIPTONRICE & SAUCE

IN OIL OR WATER

CHICKEN-SEATUNA

READY TO SPREAD

BETTY CROCKERFROSTINGS

SUPREME

BETTY CROCKERBROWNIE MIX

4 ' 2-OZ.

pkg-ChunkLight

612-oz.

ANY VARIETY...8>AOZ. PKGAN? VAKIt I I.B'M-Ui. HKli. m a j |

Betty Crocker Chicken Helper 1.49ANYVAMETY.6VrOZ.BAR 4 M M

Nature Valey Dandy Bars 1 .89ALL PURPOSE . . . . - , — —

Gold Medal Flour 10^1.95FOR THE DISHES *•#»<••

Ivory Liquid Detergent •££ 6 9 *

sri-094041.REGULAR OR WITH PULP

Sunsweet Prune JuiceDECAFFEINATED 8-OZ. JAR 4.89 OR REGULAR _ _ r t

Folgers Instant Coffee ^ 3.79CRISPY CRUNCHY FLAKES « — —

Wheaties Cereal ri.69NATURAL OR CLEAR M M *

Tree Top Apple Juice "?95r

HOLIDAY TRADITION

A&P Hot Cross BunsA t P BAKERY "PIE OF THE WEEK"

Fresh Lemon PieFAMILY PACK

Kleenex Facial TissuesWHITE

Kleenex Dinner Napkins

10-Mpkg.

22-oz.pkg.

250 inpkg.

1.4999"

1.09

23'2-oz.

DETERQENT FOR THE LAUNDRY - M M

Concentrated Al Z7 4.9964-OZ PLASTIC LIQUID FOR THE LAUNDRY _ _ _

Hnal Touch Fabric Softener 2 . 2 9FOR THE DISHES LIQUID * ,

DELI PRICEi 'JREDUCTIONS MEAT PRICE • •JREDUCTIONS

SKINLESS BEEF WHOLE WITH RIBS

MEAT PRICE • • J REDUCTIONS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

HEBREW NATIONAL PERDUE SHOULDERFRANKS ICHICKEN LEASTS! LONDON BROIL

Sunlight DetergentWHITE OR ASSORTED

Kleenex Facial Tissues175 In 79*

MEAT PRICE I *J REDUCTIONS

FRESH WITH BACKS

PERDUECHICKEN LEGS

In Storeswith

Deli Dept pound

99", SODIUM FREE. 99% CHOLESTEROL FREE A a % *

Lorraine Cheese ESS 9 9 °STORE SLICED OR SHAVED.. HALF POUND MMA

Swift's Premium Chopped Ham 9 9 °STORE CUT IMPORTED O f f *

Irish Blarney Cheese p«,n.3.49FRESH

New Bedford O 9 9Cod Filet * mL10 T012 COUNT SUPER SIZE — n n

Peeled & Deveined Shrimp .b 9 . 9 95.99

THIN SLICED FROM THE LEG SPECIAL FED

Veal for ScaRopiniSMOKED OR HOT SAUSAGE OB

HMshirc Polska KieibasaPORK SHOULDER-WATER ADDED

White* Smoked ButtsNEW-SWIFT ORIGINAL OR HOT

Brown & Serve Sausage MeatBOLOGNA CHUNKS 1 59 LB

A&P Liverwurst Chunks

Ib.

Ib.

12-01.roll

Ib.

Ib.

7— — U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

. 9 9 Shoulder SteaksM ama* U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF SHOULDER

.b 2.39 Top Blade Steaks1 n n PURE PORK

. 9 9 Jones Link Sausage1 M M GREAT WITH AtP KRAUT

. 9 9 Krauss Beef Franks. J A BREAKFAST FAVORITE _ _

1.19 Jamestown Siced Bacon X 1.69

1.992.39

X 1.99XAJS

OVEN ROASTED. BARBECUE OR SMOKED

DAIRY REDUCTIONS PRODUCE I •J REDUCTIONS

Ib.Large Sea ScallopsECONOMICAL TREAT

Fresh Cleaned Whiting . . 1 . 9 9

HBA PRICEi *JREDUCTIONS

CONDITIONER AND

IVORYSHAMPOO

ANY VARIETY ALL NATURAL...FRESH

DOWNYFLAKE CAMPBELL'SWAFFLES MUSHROOMS

Breast of TurkeyFROZEN-BASTED

Grade "A" TurkeysCOUNTRY PRIDE

Fresh Chicken WingsSEE WHAT YOU BUY

UncannedDAK HamsHARD OR GENOA SLICED

Oscar Mayer SalamiANY VARIETY-THIN SUCED

Carl Buddig MeatsCOUNTRY PRIDE

Fresh Chicken Livers

3.69,79^,89"

3,7X'2ptr

Z.3959*79°

FROZEN REDUCTIONS

59*

12 InGILLETTE ..BONUS PACK

Atra Razor BladesCINNAMON OR MINT

Act Fluoride Dental RinseREG., MENTHOL. LEMON/LIME OR SKIN CONDITION

Barbasol Shave Cream «

3.692.29

JumboPack

REDUCED ACID 10 OZ. CAN OR REG. OR CTY. STYLE M ^ M

Minute Maid Orange Juice " r 1.19ANY VARIETY

Frozen Lender* Bagels VlCHEESE. SAUSAGE OR COMBINATION 10-OZ. PKG.

Crisp'n Tasty Jeno s PizzaBUTTER. CHEESE OR WHEAT/HONEY - _ n

Sara Lee Croissants K 1 . 6 9ASSORTED VARIETIES

A&P Poly Bag VegetablesNON DAIRY AiP MMA

£'89*NON DAIRY AiP

Handi Whip Topping

U.S. NO. 1

Russet Baking PotatoesIMPORTED FROM CHILE

Granny Smith ApplesPLUMP k TENDER

Fresh Jumbo ArtichokesCRISP STALKS

Fresh Pascal CeleryRICH IN VITAMIN A

Golden Crisp CarrotsU.S. NO. 1 MEDIUM SIZE

Bulk Yelow Onions

I Ib. 99*79*99°59°

3^99*5.99*

Ib. i

bunch I

PASTEURIZED

A&P Sour CreamLIGHT N' LIVELY OR SMALL OR LARGE CURD

Sealtest Cottage CheeseREGULAR QUARTERS

Promise Margarine

89<"*» oneeont. i/yM

^ 1.09

WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASE I

UCI unc DVI ikL nw iv« mew* «•.

SUGAR FREE, Dlfcl HITE OR

! 2-Liter67.6-oz.

plasticPLUS DEPOSIT WHERE REOUIREDLimit O n . Coupon Par Famil* Valid

Sun.. Mar. 17th thru Sat.. Mar. 23rd. 1985.

• i — — _ -

IRCCola 79*1WITI- THIS COUPON AND'7.50 PURCHASE

< J C T nuc oxn

EG, 5ACCS SOUS C!!EAa SCJR CRL'.S 1 O W N Of! B*Q

RufflesPotato Chips 7-oz.89*

Limit One Coupon P«r Famil* ValidSun.. Mar. 17th thru Sat., Mar. 23rd. 1985.

WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASE

GET ONE BOX

NADK>IU...3MLI CU un UIMMki w.

PremiumCrackers 1b-oz. 79°!

WITH THIS COUPON AND '7.50 PURCHASEGET ONE BOTTLE PEPSI LIGHT, PEPSI FREE

t o m» IUFT OB DIET OR REGULAR

Limit On* Coupon Par Family: ValidSun.. Mar. 17th thru Sat.. Mar. 23rd. 1985.

3-LiterPepsi Cola 101.+OI.1

Limit On* Coupon Par Family: ValidSun.. Mar. 17th thru Sat.. Mar. 23rd. 1 Mi.

PLUS DEPOSIT WHERE REQUIRED

Prices effective Sun., Mar. 17th thru Sat.. Mar. 23rd 1985 in ASP Stores in New Jersey & Rockland County Only.in order to assure a sufficient quantity of sale items for all our customers, we reserve the right to I imit sales to 3 packages of any item unless otherwise noted. Not responsible for typographical errors.

The Sunday RegisterSUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1965

Sports c JONNI FALK 8LUKE FORREST 6HENRY SCHAEFER 7

Winfield:Last yearwas worst

FT. LAUDERDALE, FU. (AP) - Thenumbers suggest It was the best of DaveWinfield « 12 major-league seasons. Ask Mm,though, and he'll tell you it was hit worst.

"When it ended, I couldn't wait to take offmy uniform and get out of the stadium," theNew York Yankees' All-Star right fieldersaid of the 1904 season. "I was emotionallyand physically drained, glad It was finallyover. It was not a nice season."

On his last at-bat of 1964, Winfieldgrounded into a forceout and lost theAmerican League batting title to teammateDon Mattingly, .343 to .340. He'd seen his .341-.339 edge over the young first baseman vanishas he went l-for-4 to Mattingly's 4-for-S.

Winfield, removed for a pinch-runner afterhis final at-bat, quickly showered, dressed,and left the ballpark even before the gameended. A magnum of champagne from teamowner George Stelnbrenner remained un-touched in Winfield's locker.

"It was Donnie's day," he explained. "Hewon. I didn't want to get in the way. Thepeople were supposed to talk to him. I hadnothing to say. So I picked up and wenthome."

In 141 games last season, Winfield setpersonal highs in batting average, hits (193),runs (10S) and doubles (34) while pounding 19home runs and driving in 100, his thirdconsecutive year with at least that manyRBI.

"I never quit," he said, "even though I'dwish the season was over in May. I playedthe game the same way the whole waythrough — hard."

So why is the $20 million man unhappy?Winfield insisted it had nothing to do with

losing the batting crown, or with the Yankeesbeing out of the divisional race two monthsinto the 1(84 season. "It involved things thathad nothing to do with baseball," be said.

For years, Winfield has feuded publicly aswell as privately with Steinbrenner. Winfieldsaid Steinbrenner reneged on fund-raisingefforts for the Dave Winfield Foundation, acharitable organization for underprivelegedchildren. Threats and lawsuits followed andlast season, with the bitterness reaching itspeak, the two resorted to name-calling

Winfield said repeatedly during the seasonthat "distractions" were ripping away hisenthusiasm for the game. So this January,

talb.Uie two decidedrTinitlatloiV

IN YOUR FACE — St. John's Mike Moses lands a left to the nest ol Arkansas'Joe Kleine as Kleine tries to move towards the basket during their NCAA Westregional game yesterday in Salt Lake City.

Jadwin unfriendly

County is blankedin state

- • T m not tart I fcrghnartarget, but I'mwilling to let it die. I don't need any moreproblems while I'm here," said the 33-year-old Winfield, whose contract extends throughUN.

He's looking forward to a peaceful 1985,where his attention will be focused on gettingthe Yankees into the World Series.

"We have a good professional bunch here,"he said. "We have a better chance with thisdub than we've had in a couple of years."

And what of himself?

"Well, I feel good," Winfield said. "I'llprobably be up there with my usual greatnumbers. Hey, I know it sounds like I'mbragging. But I've done it."

r ftarnHPRINCETON - Princeton

Twelve grapplers went alive entering second-round action Friday night, and only two ofthem escaped to the quarterfinals.

Tyrone Davis of Long Branch, wrestling at130 pounds, captured a third place by rompingover Steve Pilione of Clifton in an 18-5superior decision. Davis, 24-4-1, was awardeda first-round bye and advanced to thequarterfinals by pinning George Muench ofNew Providence in 3:44.

In the quarterfinals, Davis squeezed pastJim Mancini of Piscataway, 6-5. Davis wasedged by eventual runnerup, Joe Hollywoodof Depford, 7-5 in the semifinals beforerebounding to trounce Pilione.

Mitch Turk of Manalapan, competing in the

Mater Dei invites French cagersMIDDLETOWN - Mater Dei High School will

play host to Lycee Alienor d'Aquitaine HighSchool of Portiers, France in a three-weekexchange program from March 23 to April 13.

The program will be a three-part affair:cultural, educational and athletic and thestudents will live in the homes of some of theMater Dei students.

All but three of the students are girls from 13to 18 years of age. Three adults will alsoaccompany the group.

The cultural part of the program will includetrips to New York City, Philadelphia andWashington while the educational part willconsist of attending classes at Mater Dei.

Mater Dei has received permission from theNew Jersey Interscholastic State Athletic

Association to host a series of girls basketballgames between the French school and severallocal teams.

"Seventeen of the girls are members of theschools' basketball team," Mater Dei athleticdirector Bob Kison said. "In addition to playingMater Dei, St. Rose has also received per-mission to play two games and we might get oneother local school."

Mater Dei will play host to the French teamMarch 29 and April 12, while St. Rose will playthe team AprU 3 and April t.

The language will not be a problem."Most of the students can speak some

English," Kitson said. "And the ones who speakless English will be put with those Mater Deikids who can speak some French."

Georgetownsocks Owls

BY The Associated Press

Top-ranked Georgetown, the defendingnational collegiate basketball champion,continued its quest for a second straightNCAA title, beating Temple (3-46 yesterdayIn an East Regional second-round game atHartford, Conn.

Michael Jackson's 14 points led a balancedoffense for the Hoyas, who won their 14thconsecutive game in improving their season'srecord to 32-2. Defensively, the Hoyas put thewraps on Temple forwards Granger Hall andCharles Rayne The two, who had combinedfor an average of 31.2 points per game duringthe regular season, collected only a total of13 against the big, muscular Hoyas.

Georgetown's smothering defense forcedTemple to shoot mostly from outside.

"We weren't so much concerned about theinside," said Temple Coach John Chaney. "Ifa team is going to double down on you, youhave to take shots from the outside. Wefigured every time we'd get it to Granger,they'd double down on him.

Reggie Williams scored 13 points forGeorgetown and Patrick Ewing and DavidWingate had 12 each. Nate Blackwell ledTemple, 25-6, with IS points.

"It's our time of year," said the Hoyas'Ralph Dalton. "We've worked hard toaccomplish what we started.

"This game was another on the way towhere we're going."

The victory moved Georgetown into nextThursday's round of IS in the NCAAtournament. The Hoyas will next face No. 14Loyola of Chicago, a 70-57 winner overSouthern Methodist in the other East Re-gional second-round game at Hartford.

In Southeast Regional second-round gamesat South Bend, Ind . seventh-ranked NorthCarolina edged Notre Dame 60-58 on Kenny

Smith's driving slam-dunk layup with threeseconds remaining and Auburn upset No. 13Kansas 66-64 as Frank Ford made all nine ofhis field-goal attempts in scoring 23 points.

And in Midwest Regional second-roundgames at Tulsa, Okla., No. 8 Louisiana Techtrimmed Ohio State 79-67 and No. 4 Okla-homa, behind the 29 points of Way manTisdale, downed Illinois State 75-69.

In a West Regional second-round game atSalt Lake City, No. 3 St. John's advanced witha 68-65 victory over Arkansas. In a latergame, No. 9 Nev -Las Vegas faced Kentuckywith the winner meeting St. John's in theRegional semifinal.

The second round will be completed today.In the East Regional at Atlanta, it will be

Georgia, 22-8, against Illinois, 25-8, andSyracuse, 22-8, vs. Georgia Tech, 25-7.

In the Southeast Regional at Dayton, Ohio,the pairings are Michigan, 26-3, vs. Villanova,20-10, and Maryland, 24-11, against Navy,264.

In the Midwest Regional at Houston,Boston College, 19-10, plays Duke, 23-9, andAlabama-Birmingham, 25-8, meets MemphisState. 28-3.

And in the West Regional at Albuquerque,N.M., Alabama, 22-9, faces Virginia Com-monwealth, 26-5, and Texas-El Paso, 22-9,opposes North Carolina State, 21-9.

Carl Colston scored 20 points for Loyola,which extended its winning streak to 19, tielongest in the nation among major colleges.

The Ramblers. 27-5, the 1963 NCAAchampions, also got 14 points from AlfredrickHughes, the nation's leading scorer with a27.3 average.

Jon Koncak paced SMU, 23-10, with 19points and Larry Davis scored 14.

Loyola, which took the lead for good late

(See NCAA, Page 4C)

whad a bye Jp the lint

Jabis Baiion VI tide,'Ironically, Turk gave Darnell Myr» ofCentral Regional his only loss.

Turk advanced to the quarterfinals byrecording a superior decision over PeteMavroff of Shalick, 12-0. The Brave grapplerwas treated rudely by Mike Gibbons ofBellville in the quarterfinals, 16-5. Gibbonswent on to take a fourth-place medal.

In other action, Greg Griffith of Pennsvillecaptured the 102-pound title by beatingMonico Nadera of St. Benedicts' Prep, 4-1, inovertime. Dave Boncher of Pbillpsburgcaptured the 109 title by defeating top-seededBrian Bauer of Somerville, 6-3. Boncher wasthe state champ at 102 last year.

Dave Glawsen of Pemberton controlled the(See WRESTLING, Page tC)

CLO8E COMPANY — Dominque Golden of Burlington City High School shootslor the basket with the defense of Rutherford's Dave Brooks, right, on his backduring the first half of the NJSIAA Group II championship basketball game atthe Meadowlands yesterday. For roundups, see Page 2C.

YOU EARNED IT...Now You Deserve the Best

Your Money Can BuyYou labored hard for your money. Now you deservethe best value for it. You can't a/ford an automobilethat will gobble up your paycheck with major repairs.intl time lost from wink.

That's why Detroit II created the Detroit II Automobile.It's a new kind of used car, designed to meet your needfor reliable, affordable transportation. Every Detroit IIAutomobile must pass our exclusive 137-point Stan-dardized Inspection and Renewal System. Faulty partsare repaired or replaced, then reinspected before wegive the car our Gold SealSM of approval as a Detroit IIAutomobile. The inspection report stays with the ve-

hicle so you can see for yourself how thoroughly it'sbeen checked. No guesswork,' either on your part orthe dealer's.

Then we give it our exclusive 12 month/12,000 milewritten Limited Warranty. It's the most comprehensivelimited warranty you're likely to find on a pre-ownedcar. There's no deductible, and it's honored na-tionwide, not just locally.

The Detroit II Automobile: a new kind"of used car.Inspected. Warranted. A car you can trust.You earned it.

LlbSIKVU */«•>>' f MIW wttmu

STRAUB MOTORS, INC STRAUB LINCOLN-MERCURY INCBuick-Renalt-Jeep Mercury-Lincoln-Continental

Highway 35 at Parkway Interchange 117, Kayport

«364-4000 264-8500

e Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965

WrestlingJ (Coatinued from Page 1C)

lKVpound clau by turning back TonyWilliams of Ridge, 7-0, in overtime. BobMalatesta of St. Augustine's took the 123drown with a pin over Larry Goodman of,faramu. in 128 John Welch of Ridgedecisioned Joe Hollywood of Depford, 8-1, towin the (31 title and Clifton's Karl MonacoCaptured, tlw 1 * championship by wallopingKick; Sartoelli of Hopatcong, 13-1

•y Durso became the second Ridgeer to take home a state title, hammer-•ff Turner of Phillipsburg, 15-3. to take

! crown. Top-seeded Enzo Catullo ofdefended his 149-pound title as he

da 15-4 major decision over Bill WardAugustine to finish the season at 32-0.

m McGourty of North Hunterdon upsettop-seeded Jason Suter, pinning thePauisboro wrestler in 36 seconds for the 159title; Ben Oberly showed no mercy infrouncing Mike Willingham of Depford, 14-2,t» win the 171 championship.| Myres won his second state title in a rowSy decisioning Glen Baclnko of East Bruns-wick, 10-4. Ironically, Myres won the heavy-

championship a year ago whileg the uniform of Toms River South,

ny Siragusa of David Brearly Regionalin Kenilworth was the surprise of theheavyweight division. Siragusa decisionedtop-seeded Dave Szott of Clifton, 8-2, in thesemifinals before pinning Todd Goodwin ofMJIIyille in 1:48 of their championship bout.

McGourty was voted the meet's outstand-ing wrestler for his 36-second pin over Suter.Warren Reid of Toms River East was votedCoach of the Year.

Sam Cole of Long Branch said he wantedtajiiin four state championships, but he willhjave to settle for three as he lost to eventualchamp Boncher, 6-4, in the 109-pound class.Cole spotted Boncher a 5-2 lead after twoperiods before rallying in the last.

Chris McAleer of Ramsey ended JoeDiBiase's dream of a state title, defeating theGreen Wave grappler, 54. Middletown

" h s John Fagan didn't find the 116-poundket any brighter as he lost to Dom

i of Ramsey, 10-7.ne got a double dose of Monmouth

Ity, exiting Frank Metta of Howell, 9-2,before losing to Davis in the consolations.

Both 136-pound candidates, RegusArmstead of Freehold and Bob Valaziotis ofWall, had a rough time. Armstead took theworst beating of the area wrestlers, droppinga 13-4 major decision to Jim Bocchino ofRidge. Frank Grace of Roselle Park slippedpast Valaziotis, 5-4.

_ Simon Skove appeared in control of his bouti Joe Cocuzzo of Seton Hall Prep, but was

led in the closing moments to come outi short end of a 4-3 verdict,l Gluckow of Neptune lost to eventual

.) Catullo, 12-1 and Phil Black of WestMilford decisioned Mike Liguori of Man-aiapan, 8-6, as both 149-pound candidates tookit on the chin.

WRESTLING

•lealele. phau H J—m H. P iNMa

BIG LEAGUES — Spacious Jadwin Gymnasium at Princeton University played host tina's where high school grapplers from all over the state put all of their talents onto yesterday's N.J. State Interscholastic Athletic Association wrestling tournament the mat. Unfortunately (or Monmouth County, no local matman made it to the finals.

Martina blames sight for recent defeatsNEW YORK (AP) - After ruling women's

tennis with an iron hand for nearly threeyears, Martina Navratilova returns toMadison Square Garden this week with ashocking three losses in her last seventournaments and a new weapon — eye-

102 — Gran Orrfl.lh (Penntvilla) d Monco Nadara (SI Benad'CttPrepi. 4-1 OT

109 — Dave Boncner (Phillipaburgr a Brian Bluer (Somerv.l*).6-3

116 — Oav« G « M l n iPemberlonl d Tony William* (Ridga). 7-0OT

123 — Bob Malatetla 1S1 Augoatine) p Larry Goodman (Peremut)<2t

131 - Jonn Weicn iR doe) 0 Joa Hollywood iOapttordl, 8-1136 - Karl Maneco (Ciinon, td Nick Sarmaih (Hopatcongt, 131

I' *? - Jarry Durto (Ridga) ad Jalt Turnar IPnillipaburgl. 15 3•49 - Enjo CakiHo iSummitl mo Bill Ward {SI Auguiline). 15-4t 59 - Tom McGourty (North Hunterdon) p Jaeon SuWluitboro) 36

,171 — Ban Oberly (Warren Hil»| d Mike Wilhngham ,D«p'orai.14-2

189 - Daman Wyraa (Canirai Regional) a Own Bacinko (EatiBrunawick) 10-4

uni - Tony S.raguta (Biaa/ly) p Todd Goodwin (Miiivtlei I 46C O M O l A T I O N a

102— Bob LaFranco (Lenapavallrytd Tim Bergman tBeiviOere).10-5

10ft - Adam Goktatam IVineiand) d Wayna Slevenion iDoveri4-2.

118 - l u r e Faglione (Prmtipaburgi p M iU McHugn {Uorm Hum

3552 — Gary Bandai (Norm Hunterdon) d Jamee Sloan (Fairiawni.

— TryoneOavH (Long Branch) id Siava Pii*n«,Clifton) 16-5— Chin Wrnman (Penagrove) d Chrii Maya (Oakcretl). 8-3

_ - flaipn Dan iHackeneeck) won by lorteil ovar Mike Lamb149 - Jon Fredrick (Gateway) d Kevin C'owlay (Normern Vallay).

3-7IS9 — Bruce Hay (Manchester Twp) d Oamian floas

ifl'Ogewocot won on referee'a daciaon malcn M I 3-3 m regulation;I 1 m OT. won on criteria moal takadownt

171 - Bob Martm (Brick Memorial) p Tom BilWC (Giaaaboro) 36• 169 - Rob Connor (Jackaon) a Mike Gibbona (Beiiv I » I 6*3

Unl - Dave Szcfl (Clifton, md B.11 Hflnrose (Pambarlon). 16-3UMIF1NALS

102 - Madera d LaFranco. 5-3. Griffith d Bargman 10-5109 — Baurer d Goidilem 3-0 Bonchar md Stevenson 14-2.

* l i e — Glawaan d McHugn. 6-4. Williama p Fagliona 5 2 *, 123 - Goodman d Bendeii. 8-v Maiateaia 0 Sloan 2-0I 130 - VVelch d Piiione. 9-4. Hollywood d. Davit 7.5I 136 - Monaco p Maya 3 03. Sannalli d Wiltman. 7 11 142 - Durso ad Daat, 21-2. Turnar d Lamb. 4-2I 149 - Catullo d Crowrty 9-4. Ward d Fradnck. 13-8( 159 - Suter p Hay 4 58. McGourty p Roaa 4 42• 171 — Willmgnam d Martm. 8-5 Oberly p BilkK 2 46! 189 — Myrae p Connor 4 19. Bacinko md Gibbona. 10-2', uni - Sirejuea d Szon. 8-2 Goodwin p Hignroae 46

"I definitely had a hard time seeing," theworld's No. 1 women's player said aftershowing up with eyeglasses for a match at theVirginia Slims of Dallas this past week.

"I was mis-hitting a lot of balls," she said."For a while, particularly indoors, I washaving a hard time with the light. I thoughtit was the lights, but nobody else was havingproblems."

A trip to the eye doctor revealed she wasnear-sighted and glasses were prescribed.

"As soon as I tried the glasses, right awayit was much better," she said.

The left-handed native of Czechoslovakiawho now lives in Fort Worth, Texas, refusesto blame her recent losses on her eyesight.She did lose to Helena Sukova of Czechoslo-vakia in the Australian Open last December,she lost to Chris Evert Lloyd at the VirginiaSlims of Florida and she lost to HanaMandlikova of Czechoslovakia in the semi-finals of the U.S. Women's Indoor Cham-pionships this month by a very un-

Navratilova-like CCore, 7-6, 6-0.I couldn't believe I lost the (first) set,"

Navratilova said. "In the second set, myheart was gone, and that never happens. Iwas disappointed with myself over that."

Her two losses this year match the numberof defeats she suffered in all of 1984. And in1983, she lost only once - to Kathy Horvathin the French Open.

With her new glasses, Navratilova will beout to defend her crown when the $500,000Virginia Slims Championships begins Mon-day. The tournament is the culmination of theyear-long women's tour, with next Sunday'swinner receiving $125,000, the largest prize inwomen's tennis.

Others in the 16-player field include Lloyd,Zina Garrison, Pam Shriver. Kathy Jordan,Kathy Rinaldi, Lisa Bonder, ManuelaMaleeva of Bulgaria, West Germans ClaudiaKohde-Kilsch and Sylvia Hanika, Man-dlikova, Sukova, Carting Bassett of Canada,Australia's Wendy Turnbull, Sweden'sCatarina Lindqvist and Andrea Temesvari ofHungary.

Lindqvist, Maleeva and Bonder are makingtheir first appearances in the Garden. Bondercould be bumped if Bettina Bunge. wins theDallas torunament.

Although Navratilova is a strong favoriteto repeat, it won't be an easy task. Besidesthose who have beaten her in the past fourmonths, Bassett and Lindqvist gave hertrouble in the inaugural Lipton InternationalPlayers Championships at Delray Beach,Fla , last month. Lindqvist took a set fromNavratilova, while Bassett teed off on herservice returns.

"I feel I can put a little more pressure onthe other player," the 17-year-old Bassettsaid. "Against Martina, you have to do that.When you make an outright winner, shebecomes a little bit tentative."

Mandlikova hasn't been tentative this year,capturing the Virginia Slims of California byupsetting Lloyd in the final, then winning theU.S. Women's Indoors, beating NavratilovaIn the semifinals.

"Everyone knows when she puts every-thing together she's dangerous," Lloyd saidof Mandlikova, who turned 23 last month."She's very unpredictable. If she could everstring a number of tournaments together, shecould be No. 1"

Winner of the French Open in 1981 and theAustralian Open in 1980, Mandlikova won fivetournaments at the beginning of 1984 andreached the semifinals of the French Openand Wimbledon before going into a tailspin.

But after a long break at the end of the year,she returned in top form.

"Last year, I had two bad losses in thesecond part of the year," she said. "This yearI've lost to Lindqvist, Bassett and Rinaldi."

With the rise of the young stars such asSukova, Lindqvist and Garrison, and thesuccess of Navratilova, it's almost easy toforget Lloyd.

"What most people don't realize is that ifit wasn't for Martina, I would be dominatingwomen's tennis," Lloyd said last year.

In December, she won the AustralianOpen, keeping alive her streak of winning atleast one Grand Slam tournament victoryeach year since 1974. And her victory in theSlims of Florida in January ended a two-year,13-mateh drought against Navratilova

Sukova's victory over Navratilova at theAustralian Open wai special in two ways.

"You think to yourself, 'If Helena can beather, maybe I can,' " said Bassett, notingSukova's feat lifted the hopes of all the otherplayers on the tour.

It also put Sukova into the final, becomingthe second member of her family to reach aGrand Slam singles final. Her late mother.Vera Sukova, was the 1962 Wimbledonrunner-up.

HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL RESULTS

Rutherford 60. Burlington City 58Mark Zielinski hit a 13-foot jumper from

the key with five second to play yesterday tolift Rutherford over Burlington City in theGroup II championship game.

Zielinski's decisive basket, his only fieldgoal of the afternoon, capped a rally that sawRutherford, 27-1, score the last six points ofthe game to overcome a four-point deficit.

Dave Brooks and Matt Shannon eachtallied 16 points for Rutherford, while RodneyCorry and Tony Timmons each had 16 forBurlington City, which completed its seasonwith a 20-7 record.

GirlsGroup IV

Morrell SI, Washington Twp. S3Pammy Hammond tallied 17 of her 25

points in the second half Saturday as FrankH. Morrell of Irvington rallied from a nine-point first-half deficit to win the Girls Group

IV championship with a victory over Wash-ington Township of Sewell.

Hammond, a 6-foot junior, who alsograbbed 14 rebounds and blocked five shots,scored five points in a nine-point streakbridging the third and fourth periods thatgave Morrell, now 25-3, a commanding 48-36

Group IISparta 60, Middle Twp. 49

Helene Reigstad scored 19 points andgrabbed 11 rebounds and Cathy Wille added17 as Sparta captured the Girls Group II titlewith a 60-49 victory over Middle Township ofCape May Courthouse.

Group IHoffman 59, New Providence

Lynn Ust tallied 21 points and MaryanneLewis added 12 yesterday to spark H.G.Hoffman of South Amboy to the Group Ichampionship with a victory over NewProvidence.

VIEADOWLANDS RESULTS

let: U.MO.paca.roaa4-T Ta Prua Figntet (Plulinol 9 20 6 40 3603-Qofcfen Gait (Campbell) 11.60 6405-Thata Sue <O'0onna<l)w

3 40 2nd: M.OM.pace.mlte2-Gratuily (Campbell) 3100 1160 5605-Shannon Baauty (ODonnell) 5.00 3 604-Britk Almanunt (Gmagner) 4 20

DwMo: 4-t eaU 1117.40Eiecta: I I paid M l 40

ltd: M.OOO.pace.maeI.Gam Adagio IParkar) 13.60 5.60 3607-Sundream (Campbell, 700 4 202 Am A Devil (Wabaier) 3 20

• M M * 1-7 paid H l «4H|: la.OOO.aaca.mK.

9-Real Skipper H (Campbell) 9 00 6 60 6 007-Tiiobal (O'Donnell) 900 5 806-Saundera Gaielto (Hadgaa) 5.20

TrMecta: B.7-4 peM MU.26M : l10.ool.paca.Mle

10-B M B (Collaio) 460 3.60 3406-Hirry Houdmi N (Sheehan) 2040 I I 40*B-Propnel Looeil (Copefand] 15.60

tUCta: 104-7 |MM I 1 M . M

em: t14.ooo.pKa.maa2-Peeris Falcon (Campbell) 18 60 6 60 5 607-Governori Choice (Dohertyi 5 40 4 009-Salamc (Remmen) 400

I i a M K 17 paid (14I .W71k: IIO.OOO.Daca.rMla

3 CoolidOB (Abbaliellot 4 40 3 20 3 007-Nencyt Baal Bat (King) . 7 20 5 202-Oddemeker (Oavis) 4 BO

«iecla: J-7 paM 641 toMl: W.OOO.pac.rM.

9-HedrK* (Day.) 1660620 5407-Autumn Olo (DohanVI 1500 6408-Al The Limit (Plur.no) 6 20

| t-7 pau M7I007-Publm (Ramman) 12 20 5 40 4 003-Mauid.n (Cempbeil) 4603606-Port Fella (Maker) 1 2 f l 0

DoutHa: 1-7 pau SITa.aO••ana: 7 1 paw u e 401 M : ee.OOO.peca.mlla

5-Therapulic Agent (Campbell) 7 00 3 60 3008-F*ahy Snortattp (Oonerty) ...... 460 2806-CAeyanne Hanover (Poplinger) 3 20

Tr»e«a: H 4 M d I71.6*I i . u i . i i 6 lnaaei.ee 11,774

Red Bank student gets way, wins Golden GlovesBY JONNI FALK

RED BANK - If Ron McGhee of the MiddletownPolice Athletic League boxing program had had hisway, Denard Trapp would have stayed home.

Instead, Denard Trapp had his way. and he camehome with a state Golden Glove championship in thelight heavyweight novice division.

Trapp. an 18-year-old senior at Red Bank RegionalHigh School, won that title in only his second amateurfight. He has been training under McGhee for only threemonths. Until he started to work out at the MiddletownPAL. , he had been strictly a football player and trackMilt.

"I don't know if anybody has ever won a Golden Glovetitle in only his second fight," McGhee mused, "but itcertainly would be rare anyway. I really didn't think hewas ready, but he wanted to go badly."

Trapp won both his fights by decisions, thechampionship coming on a win over Curtis Lee of theSilk City Boxing Club in Paterson at the Jersey CityBoys Club. To Trap^ boxing was a natural step fromfootball.

• "All my life I really wanted to be, a boxer," heexplained. "It ramp from watching Muhammed Ali

Thrilla in Manila" against Joe Frazi'er. A lot of it wasvVli's bragging. If he told you he was going to knock youout in the third round, you went down in the third round.

.'"I think the kids of my era followed Ali instead ofFrazier because Ali was more of a talker, like the kids.They talk big and brag to their friends like Ali did. It'sthe competition between the kids. They could relate toM." .

There is another^ason why Trapp, a tight end in

football and a 400 man in track, took up boxing. Hisbrother-in-law is Freddy Boynton of Red Bank, a formerGolden Glove champ himself who is currently aprofessional fighter. Boynton's next fight is April 2.

"Freddy has been an influence on me," Trapp said"He told me to train hard for a fight and don't letanybody push me into doing anything I don't want to do.He said I shouldn't box if I don't feel confident, and hetold me there were times when he didn't do enough roadwork. If I slacked off, He would get on me about it."

Boynton's prodding and McGhee's coaching bothplayed roles in Trapp's two wins. Trapp realized afterthe first fight that he needed more work and ran sixmiles a day between that and the championship fight.After working out at the PAL. , he would go home andtrain some more.

"McGhee is a good coach," Trapp said. "I went upthere knowing nothing and in two months he taught mea lot. I sparred with Ed Reid (of Little Silver), and thathelped, too. Reid is good. He was too young for theGolden Gloves (his time, but he will be a champ nextyear."

Still, McGhee wasn't too eager to see the inexperi-enced Trapp make his boxing debut in the GoldenGloves, He wanted to bring the new fighter along slowly' » • '••• " " * • " - - - • " " » « • • • . . - , . , . „ - . . . .„ - ~j

'though."I entered the tournament without any previous

fights because I honestly thought I could win," Trappsaid. I thought the lights would be easier than theyactually were. It's easy for kids to sit on the sidelinesand say something is easy When you try the sportyourself, you find out how hard it is

"I went up to the fights the week before my own firstfight to see how the competition was. I was surprised

at the quality of the boxers I saw. I knew right awaythat I needed more training. The guy I fought in the firstbout wouldn't give me any rest. He was right on me allthe time. That's when I knew I had to do a lot morerunning and started to do six miles a day the next day."

Trapp is the youngest of eight children, and his fourbrothers and three sisters are divided about his boxing.The brothers seem to be for it, and the sisters areagainst it. His first two fights have whetted his appetitefor more although he admits he doesn't really like tohit people, and he certainly doesn't like to be hit.

"I want to get a feeling of self-achievement fromboxing," Trapp pointed out. "I got inner satisfactionfrom the Golden Gloves, but I'd like to go farther. Nowthat I'm a novice champ I have to fight in the open class.Eventually, I'd like to enter the New York GoldenGloves.

"About three years up the road I may think aboutturning professional," Trapp continued. "I want to workwith Ron McGhee for those three years. Everything hehas taught me has worked well, and I know he can teachme a lot more. He thinks I need a lot of work with theleft and getting shots in to the body. He says I'm a quicklearner, so I have no problems seeing myself as aprofessional."

Trapp wants to become a mason after he finishes highwhrvtl and whilp hp pnnlinltprj to train anH Floht tnr thnco

next three years Kunning on the Buccaneers trackteam this spring will help keep him in shape. That'sabout the only way track will help him with his boxingcareer.

"Boxing is different from the other sports." he said."In boxing you have to be ready all the time. In footballyou have to be ready most of the time. When you boxand lose, you get hurt emotionally and physically. Intrack or football, if you lose you can walk away from

DENARD TRAPP

it and say you'll do better next time. Sometimes youcan feel that you did well, but your teammates didn't.

"In boxing, if you lose you can't blame anybodyexcept yourself. That makes it a completely differentkind of sport, and that's whV I like it."

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday Register 3C

County's top 12 hard to pin down

TYRONE DAVIS MITCH TURK SIMON SKOVE MIKE UGUORI BOBBY VALAZIOTIS

DAVE SUMMERS

1985 All-County WrestlingWEIGHT102109116123130136142149159171189HWT

SECOND TEAM102 Gary Uyeyama109 Ian Assael116 John Fagan123 Jim Ervin130 Frank Metta136 Regus Armstead142 Mike Chrlster149 John Gluckow159 . Merrill Neal171 Tom Cur ran189 Tim CurranHwt Ray LeBron

FIRST TEAMNAMESCOTT WALTERSSAM COLEJOE DiBIASEDAVE SUMMERSTYRONE DAVISBOB VALAZIOTISSIMON SKOVEMIKE LIGUORIBOB LYNCHRODNEY WATKINSMITCH TURKDAN MclNNIS

SCHOOLMIDDLETOWN SOUTHLONG BRANCHLONG BRANCHFREEHOLD TOWNSHIPLONG BRANCHWALLLONG BRANCHMANALAPANMANALAPANLONG BRANCHMANALAPANMONMOUTH REGIONAL

Shore RegionalWallMlddletown SouthRarltanHowellFreeholdHowellNeptuneNeptuneWallWallLong Branch

102109116123130136142149159171189Hwt

THIRDJohn GagllanoJeff DIOIIvieraJoel BernsteinBrian JacobyEdison PintoDoug CardChris MartinJoe TomaslelloBob KindMatt GudaltiaTom GeorgeMark Coppollno

TEAMHowellR.B. CatholicShore RegionalWallMlddletown SouthMiddletown SouthManasquanRarltanKeyportManalapan .Long BranchRarltan

BOB LYNCH

DAN MclNNIS JOE DIBIASE SCOTT WALTERS SAM COLE RODNEY WATKINS

Long Branch places five on teamLong Branch plays a starring role in the

1965 All-Monmouth County Wrestling Team.Five members of the Green Wave team arelisted on this page. That is quite anaccomplishment when one considers thatthere are only 12 weight classes.

Manalapan, another potent group, hasplaced three of its grapplers on the elite list,while four other schools, Middletown South,Monmouth Regional, Wall Township andFreehold Township, all have one wrestlernamed to the team.

The wrestlers named to the 1985 array, inorder of weight classes, are: Scott Walters,(101), Middletown South; Sam Cole (108),Long Branch; Joe DiBiase (115), LongBranch; Dave Summers (122), Manalapan;Tyrone Davis (129), Long Branch; BobValaziotis (135). Wall Township; SimonSkove (141), Long Branch; Mike Liguori(141), Manalapan; Bob Lynch (158), Man-alapan: Rodney Watkins (170), Long Branch;Miixh Turk M1WI Manalanan and HanMclnnis (Heavyweight). Monmoutn Ke-gional.

Here is the lineup:SCOTT WALTERSMiddldown South

Walters, unbeaten last year in freshmencompetition, almost did it again this season.He did finish with a 19-3 record.

Walters won the 98-pound title at theNeptune Classic and then suffered two of his

three losses in the Middletown South Invita-tional. He was beaten by Pat Wall of TomsRiver East and Brian Copman of MiddletownNorth.

From then on Walters was unbeaten duringthe regular season, including a revenge winover Copman. He won the District 22championship at 102 pounds and beat Cop-man, 10-2, in the finals. His lost in the firstround of the Regions, however, when he fellto Angel Martinez of Monsignor Donovan.

"He works real hard," Middletown Southwrestling coach Tom Erbig said. "He'sdeceptively strong for his size and was invery good shape from the start of the season.

SAM COLELong Branch

Cole was a real surprise in his first varsitycampaign, winning both the district andregional crowns. He received a bye in thefirst round of the state tourney and wrestledtop-seeded Dave Boncher of. Phillipsburg

at 101 last year."I knew he would be good," Long Branch

coach Chuck Rutan said. "But I was pleasedand surprised that he had that many wins. Heis one of the hardest workers I have evercoached."

Cole has been grappling since he was 8years old and attributes his success to anumber of factors.

"I work hard and I think experience has a

lot to do wih it. As the years pass by, mytechnique matured. My parents, actually myfather, has been training me and conditioningme and all my life they've taken me totournaments.

Most underclassmen making their first tripto Jadwin Gym would be thankful to get thereand hope to gain enough experience to return,but Cole is looking for something bigger."I'm not going to be satisfied unless I do well,and I expect to do well. My goal is to win fourstate championships."

JOE DiBIASELong Branch

DiBiase has enjoyed an outstanding seasonwith a 26-3 record. He won the 115 pound titleat the Neptune Classic, Top of the EastClassic, Minuteman Classic, and Distict 23meets.

DiBiase almost won the Region VI cham-pionship, but dropped a 5-0 overtime decisionto Toms River East's Tonv Mani ih

His first place finish in the MinutemanClassic was his biggest moment.

"I beat Dom Cerrato of Belleville in thefinals," he said. "He was seeded over me."

DiBiase. who has been wrestling for sixyears, is also a goalie on the Long Branchsoccer team.

"I like wrestling because it's a physicalsport." DiBiase said.

"Joe is one of the few wrestlers who never

stops moving," Long Branch coach ChuckRutan said.

DiBiase plans to continue his career nextyear at Bloomsburg State College (Pa.).

DAVE SUMMERSFreehold Township

"He's tenacious and dedicated," FreeholdTownship coach Gunther Schmiedl said ofSummers. "He lives for wrestling."

Summers posted a 21-5-1 record and wonthe title in his weight at the Hawk Classic,but a setback to Madison Central's JimMcCauley was a big disappointment.

"He came into the match with a bad knee,"Summers said. "I put him on his back andhad him stacked, but the referee called itpotentially dangerous anmd I didn't get anyextra points for it.

"My best match was against John Faganof Middletown South." Summers said. "Hepinned me early in the season. I hadn't

in IK. -• " ; ;„ ; * , , , *f»*>i<<i b«H-n»i<;#» nt a '

.~..^.w>, Uil . tied him il in the rematch."Wrestling is the only sport for Summers."I've been wrestling since I was in the

eighth grade," Summers said. "It's achallenge and exciting."

Summers will continue his wrestlingcareer in college but hasn't made a choiceyet.

"It will be somewhere in Pennsylvania."he said. "I want it to be a good wrestlingschool."

TYRONE DAVISLong Branch

Davis, a senior, has been wrestling sincehe was in the seventh grade and posted a23-3-1 record this season with 11 pins.

He was second in his weight class at theNeptune Classic, but came back to take firstplace in both the District 23 and the RegionVI meets.

"He is an outstanding wrestler," Rutansaid. "He's been team captain for two years,is very strong and has great balance."

"I like wrestling because it is physical,"Davis said. "It's me against my opponent andthere are no excuses.'

Davis, who has been wrestling since he wasin the eighth grade, is also a pole vaulter onthe Brancher track team. His best effort was12-6 last year. «

He will continue wrestling at ChowanJunior College in North famiin-. »<••• tcason.

BOB VALAZIOTISWall Towithlp

Valaziotis had an outstanding season forthe Crimson Knights with a 24-4 record.

He finished third in his weight class at theNeptune Classic, but came back to win theTop of the East Classic and the 135-poundDistrict 23 championship. He dropped a tougk5-3 decision to Brick Memorial's Pete Bonillain the Region VI finals.

(See ALL-COUNTY, Page 7C )

jtBrThe Sunday RcgUter SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1965

Trump denies he told to go easy on FlutieBALTIMORE (AP) - The owner or the Baltimore

s w n laid he wai asked by New Jersey owner DonaldTfump to have the Stars "take it easy" on Generate'maWon-dollar quarterback Doug Flutie, according toth* Baltimore News American.

Myles Tanenbaum said the request was made aboutsix 'weeks ago, Just after Trump signed the &-toot-W*Hefsman Trophy winner to a five-year deal worth anestimated ft million to $8 million, the newspaper saidIn late editions Friday.

•A> league spokesman said yesterday Trump had "noreflection" of such a conversationH i e SUrs, the 1984 United SUtes Football League

champions when they played in Philadelphia, are 0-2-1seHfar this season and play the 2-1 Generals today atCortege Park, Md , in a nationally televised game.

• ''Donald was serious," Tanenbaum was quoted assaying "He wanted me to talk to my coach so he couldtalk to the players because we play them a couple timesthis season.

"He said the players should try not to hurt Flutie.Donald said, It would be a terrible thing for the leagueif nut ie got hurt,' " Tanenbaum told the newspaper."It sounded like he had talked to a number of other

USFLoweers, too. He wanted to protect his investment."

Tramp was unavailable for comment yesterday, batUSFL spokesman Jim Byrne said Trump "has norecollection of any such conversation and I think tosome extent it't a case of Carl trying to motivate hisplayer* before the game."

Carl Peterson is president and general manager of theSUrs.

"I think It was an off-hand comment made to areporter as a kind of a Joke and he picked It up and wentwith it," Byrne said.

Peterson said be told the SUrs' defensive line aboutthe alleged request.

"How did they respond? Actually, they all kind oflaughed," Peterson told the newspaper.

"It's incredulous," be said. "But that's Donald.You've got to understand and appreciate the guy. But,yes, be was serious about It.

"Myles told me. 'You wont believe this.' But I did.Myles told me when Donald asked him to have theplayers take it easy on Flutie, he Just kind of swallowedhard and told him 'OK, I'U discuss it with Carl and(SUrs Coach) Jim Mora."

Mora said he wasn't taking the alleged requestseriously.

"I just chuckled." he told the News American.SUrs' defensive coordinator Vince Tobin said If

Flutie "promises not to run, we'll promise not to tackle

Meanwhile, Generate Coach Walt Michaels saidFlutie learns new lessons every time he plays.

"Each week's an education for him," Michaels said."This may be the most experienced secondary that we'llplay — they disguise their defenses very well —and he'sgoing to see something new.

"My guetu is that they'll try to come after us withsafety blitzes so they'll get the smaller, faster peoplerushing him," Michaels said.

In other games today, Memphis is at Birmingham andJacksonville is at Oakland.

Last night, Arizona visited Tampa Bay, San Antoniowas at Los Angeles and Orlando traveled to Portland.

Stallions linbebacker BUI Roe knows what the moodof the Memphis Showboats will be.

"They will be keyed up for this game," said Roe, whoplayed for Memphis last season when it lost 54-6 to theSUlUons.

"The whole team took It very personally," he said."For most of us, it was the wont beating of our entirecareers. At the time our coach and a lot of our playersthought Birmingham ran the score up on us."

Coach Pepper Rodgers said his Showboats "don'thave any particular revenge motive against Birm-ingham, but most of us would like to play better thanwe showed last year."

Memphis now is 3-0 and atop the league's EasternConference, with Birmingham right behind at 2-1

Oakland concludes a four-game homestand and willtry to get back on the winning track when it meets theBulls.

Following an opening-day 31-10 victory over theDenver Gold, the Invaders have been tied 17-17 byBaltimore and beaten 42-7 by Houston.

"It's time to turn things around," said Coach CharlieSumner. "Jacksonville has a pretty good team withplenty of good players. It won't be an easy game."

CAACoaUaaed frem Page 1C)

in the first half, took command during a 5:03stretch late in the second half. In that span,the Ramblers scored seven points whileholding SMU scoreless and built their leadfrom 56-50 to 63-50.

Colston said he was looking forward to thematchup against the mighty Hoyas.

"It will be power and speed vs. our speed,"he said. "Georgetown has all the advanUges,but this year it will be our turn to be giant-killers."

Smith's winning basket for North Carolina,264, came on a lead pass from Curtis Hunter.

Hunter had grabbed a loose ball that kickedoff the left knee of Notre Dame freshmanDavid Rivers after the Irish had run down theclock for more than a minute in hopes ofgetting the final shot with the score 56-58.

Rivers said the ball was slapped away.Smith saw it differently.

"I saw the ball go off his leg and I brokedown the court," tie said. "Hunter picked itup and threw it to me."

Notre Dame Coach Digger Phelps de-fended his strategy of having the youngRivers Uke the final shot.

"We've been living with David all year,and we'd been living with him today," saidPhelps. "David had the gree light to go. Onceit got down to 20 (seconds), David was going.

"If I had the same opportunity again,Rivers would still have the ball and we'dmake the same move," said Phelps.

Smith finished with 12 points, whileteammate Brad Daugherty led all scorerswith IS. Rivers topped Notre Dame, 21-9,with 15 points

Chuck Person added 21 points for Auburnas he and Ford took control of the game inthe late sUges. Ford gave the Tigers the leadfor good with just under three minutesremaining. Auburn, 22-11, then pulled away toa TM1 lead on two baskeU by Person.

Calvin Thompson, who finished with 21points, pulled Kansas, 264, to within 6544with six seconds remaining. But Person madea free throw to give Auburn iU final margin.

Karl Malone, a 6-foot-9 junior forward,scored 27 points and grabbed 14 rebounds,leading Louisiana Tech, 29-2, over Ohio SUte,20-10.

Malone scored the first nine points of thesecond half, giving the Bulldogs a 46-30 leadand control of the game.

Louisiana Tech built IU advanUge to 19points, 51-32, with less than 15 minutesremaining and coasted from there.

Sophomore Dennis Hopson was the leadingscorer for Ohio SUte with 20 points.

"Physically, Malone is as strong as anyplayer we've played against this year," saidOhio SUte Coach Eldon Miller. "They'regoing to be a force to contend with down theroad. They have an outstanding front line."

Tisdale made 14 of 16 shots from the fieldas Oklahoma, 30-5 and the top seed in theregion, shot 66 percent from the floor andoutrebounded Illinois SUte 30-22. Tisdale leda 12-4 run that gave the Sooners a 69-58 leadwith 2:15 left in the game. Lou Stefanovic ledRedbirds, 224. with 21 points.

Chris Mullin scored 26 points as theRedmen, 29-3, held off an Arkansas rally. St.John's led 60-52 with 4:23 left on two freethrows by Mullin.

TWO BIG ONES — Ohio State center Brad Sellers drives in for a score asLouisiana Tech center Willie Simmons delends during yesterday's NCAA MidwestRegional tournament in Tulsa.

V

Richmond looks to big NITgame with familiar Indiana

BY The Associated Press. The college basketball teams of Indianaand Richmond will have that old familiarfeeling when they meet Tuesday night at

1 Boomington, Ind , but instead of playing int the NCAA tournament as they did a year ago,tfiey will oppose each other in the NationalIqvitation Tournament.!• "We're looking forward to our second-round matchup with Indiana," RichmondCoach Dick Tarrant said Friday night after

. (he Spiders had edged Fordham 59-57 in anapening-round game at home. "Getting to

•lice the Hoosiers again in postseason play isexciting They have a great basketball

'•idition, and we look forward to a rematchbf our showdown with them from the NCAA

•jfcrnament in Charlotte (N.C.) last year."V , Last year was not a happy experience for\ n e Spiders. They were beaten by the

Hoosiers 7547 in the NCAA East Regional.This time, Richmond will come into the

game with a better record than Indiana, 21-10to 16-13. But the Hoosiers appeared to be atthe top or their game Friday night, thrashingButler 79-57. Their shooting was superb, asthey hit 62 percent of their field goal attempts(34 of 55), and their defense was air-tight,forcing Butler into 19 turnovers, Includingeight steals by Steve Alford, and 44 percentshooting.

In other second-round NIT games Tuesdaynight, it will be Marquette at Cincinnati, St.Josephs (Pa.) at Virginia, New Mexico atFresno SUte, and Nebraska at UCLA.

The second round will be completedWednesday night, with South Florida atLouisville, Southwestern Louisiana at Ten-nessee, and Tennessee-CnatUnooga atLamar.

Jury convictsMcLain of three charges•Jf TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A jury yesterday.jynvicted former baseball pitcher Denny*l(eLaln of racketeering, extortion and co-

e possession charges after deliberatingthree days.

r nine-woman, three-man panel, who. lfetened to 350 hours of testimony, foundbaseball's last 30-game winner innocent on

.ape count of conspiracy to smuggle cocaine.: CodefendanU Seymour Sher and Frank

Cocchiaro were convicted of racketeering,conspiracy and extortion, while a thirdcodefendant, Joe Rodriguez, was foundinnocent on a charge of conspiracy tosmuggle cocaine.

McLain faces a maximum penalty of 75years in prison and fines totaling 175,000. Sherand Cocchiaro each face a maximum 60 yearsin prison and fines of 160,000, said AssisUntU.S. Attorney Ernst Mueller, the prosecutorin the case.

While the NIT does not have the sameimpact as the NCAA, it is important.

"The NIT means a whole lot to me — notjust winning it, but going as far as we can,"said senior guard Kevin Johnson, whose six-foot baseline jumper with three secondsremaining broke a 57-57 tie and gaveRichmond its victory over Fordham.

Johnson's winning field goal came after hegrabbed a loose ball from a scrambe under.the basket, following a missed shot by JohnNewman, game high scorer with 35 points.

Alford, Indiana's standout guard, had sixsteals in the first half against Butler,including three during a 14-point spurt thatput the Hoosiers ahead to sUy. He also wasthe game's high scorer with 26 points.

"Everybody came out and really workedhard," said Alford "That's a key. I don'tthink we've worked as hard as we're capableof working, both as individuals and collective-ly this year and that's MIM«I «™»>« »~*-

Virginla's New York-oriented •••"" i«imping to get to Madison Square Garden forthe NIT final despite its mediocre 16-15record. IU next step toward that goal isbeating St. Joseph's, 19-11.

"If we get to New York, I know I'm gonnabe about three stories nigh," said Virginiafreshman guard Mel Kennedy, a native NewYorker. "Maybe there, we'll win for the NewYork gang."

In addition to Kennedy, the Cavaliers'"New York Gang" includes sophomorecenter Olden Polymice of New York andsenior guard Tim Mullen from nearbyRidgewood, N.J.

COACH AND PLAYER — Georgetown's coach John Thompson, led, gives apat to player Patrick Ewing during a basketball game. Thompson was onceconsidered to be ineducable.

Hoyas9 Thompsonmore than a coach

BY The Associated Press

John Thompson talks about the young-ster who was doing poorly in school, whosefather couldn't read or write, whosemother was concerned about her son'spotential.

She brought him to a professionaleducator, a doctor who invited theyoungster into his office and asked him toidentify objects around the room.

"Radio," the boy said. "Telephone."Then he froze and fell silent.

"You shouldn't be embarrassed," theeducator told the woman, "because it'snot your fault. But this boy isn'teducable."

The boy earned his bachelor's degree ineconomics and his master's degree inguidance and counseling and ultimatelybecame the ' basketball coach atGeorgetown University.

"This little boy," John Thompson said,"is talking to you."

John Thompson Is far more than simplythe coach of the nation's premier basket-ball team, the defending NCAA champion

He is a complex man, an amalgam ofemotions.

He is driven to win but even more toexcel. He will needle, threaten or benchhis star player if he isn't giving everyounce of effort. He will suspend him if hefails to produce grades in excess ofGeorgetown's and the NCAA's minimumstandards. Some critics call him morethan driven. They call him an ogre.

He shelters his players, too, protectingthem in abbreviated locker-room Inter-views — sometimes timed to the secondby a stopwatch — and often housing themin isolated places on the road. Some criticssay he is more than sheltering. They callhim paranoid.

He is black, with an exclusively blackteam at a predominantly white chool.Over the years, he has seen and heardeverything from subtle allusions to hiscolor to out-and-out racial epithets. He hasheard it ail since he was a child. If it stillhurts, he doesn't show it. He doesn't lashback.

If he has a credo, it is almost certainlyembodied in two rhymes.

One was sung to him in childhood by hismother: "You can do anything you think

t . . . . . . ... Urn kUuri juu get, young man.V?" ftttlSt fed juti tfic guilty u> uo 11.

The other is a verse from HenryWadsworth Longfellow: "The heighU bygreat men reached and kept, were notattained by sudden flight. But they, whiletheir companions slept, were toilingupward in the night."

Thompson does not Uke potentiallightly. He has seen professionaleducators overlook it in others — inhimself — and be is a professionaleducator.

From Patrick Ewing on down, his

players aren't attending Georgetown forthe sole purpose of winning basketballgames.

The Rev. Edward Glynn, now presidentof St. Peter's College, was Georgetown'sfaculty represenUtive to the NCAA earlyin Thompson's tenure. "From Day One, hewas dedicated to making sure his playerswould leave school with more than theability to shoot a basketball," Glynn said.

"He'd tell them there are too manypeople hanging around street corners withnothing but their newspaper clippings,heroes in high school or college andnothing after that."

For a few of his players, life afterGeorgetown will mean professionalbasketball. For Ewing, it means guaran-teed stardom and millions of dollars. Forteammates like Reggie Williams andDavid Wlngate, it could mean a lucrativepro career as well. It likely will mean thesame for Michael Graham. He, too, haspotential. But in Thompson's eyes, it wasbeing wasted at Georgetown.

As a freshman Ust year, Graham wasa major factor in the Hoyas' nationalchampionship. Nevertheless, Thompsondropped him from the team because, hesaid, Graham wasn't measuring up to thecoach's academic standards, even thoughhe had met Georgetown's and the NCAA's.He said that, in the long run, he wouldhave been hurting Graham by permittinghim to play.

This year, Graham attends the Univer-sity of District of Columbia, sitting out ayear before becoming eligible to playagain. He won't Ulk publicly aboutGeorgetown or Thompson.

When Lefty Driesell, the basketballcoach at Maryland, gave his son, Chuck,a basketball scholarship four years ago,Thompson bristled. Young Driesell, whohas sat on the bench most of his collegecareer, could have been a starterelsewhere, outside the Atlantic CoastConference, Thompson said.

He called It "a wasted scholarship foreverybody .:. if I have a scholarship leftover, I want to give it to somebody whoneeds the education, who couldn't get Itsome other way."

And, in a pointed comparison betweenhis OWnnlavpr* anrt tl.. l» -v- '

., IM|MUfl MINI,

'"">"• kw« "•«• r ' " - ; - : - . :cc Mioca-tlon from a fine institution. They're going'to nave to work for it. They're going toplay"

Thompson also has a son, John, playingcollege basketball. He could have been ascholarship athlete at Georgetown. Heisn't. He plays at Princeton.

When he recruited Ewing, Thompsonknew Patrick's mother was interested inacademics first. They spent the betterpart of an hour In the Ewing householddiscussing the subject.

Then Patrick spoke up. He asked aboutthe social life in Washington, D.C.

SUNDAY. MARCH 17. 1985 The Sunday Register 5C

Islanders gives Stanley victory previewUNIONDAtE, N.Y. (AP) - John Tonellis second

goal of the game with nine seconds remaining in thesecond period yesterday lifted the New York Islandersto a 6-4 victory over the Washington Capitals in whatcould be a preview of an opening-round National Hockey

NHL

League playoffThe Capitals stand second in the Patrick Division and

the Islanders are third. If they finish that way, theywould oppose each other In the best-of-five first roundin the Stanley Cup playoffs

The Islanders have eliminated the Capitals from thelast two playoff series.

Tonelli snapped a 4-4 tie when be picked up a loosepick along the right wing boards and sent a slapshottoward the Washington net The puck tipped off the armof Capitals defenseman Darren Veitch, then sailed putgoalie Pat Rlggln

Duane Sutler clinched the Islanders' fourth straightvictory with a 40-foot stapihot at 1357 of the thirdperiod that went In off Riggins stick.

The Islanders jumped out to a quick lead when MikeBossy converted Bryan Trottier's cross-ice pass just 20

seconds Into the contest. But Washington surged aheadon goals by Larry Murphy and Craig Laughlin, both ofwhom beat goalie Kelly Hrudey to the stick side.

Denis Potvln tied it with a 40-foot slapshot just nseconds Into the second period and Tonelli got his firstgoal of the game at 8:03. Tonelli, who twice earlier hadmissed open nets, sent a short backhander throughRiggin.

It took Washington's Bob Carpenter 26 seconds to tieIt. During a scramble In front of Hrudey, the puckbounded off Carpenter and Into the air. New Yorkdefenseman Paul BouUlier juggled it and it fell into thenet.

Ken Morrow's first goal of the season gave theIslanders a 44 lead, but Mike Gartner got that goal backfor Washington on a power play.

Sports Authority isbent on baseball team

FUmci 5, Brains SBOSTON — Carey Wilson's second goal of the game

In the third period lifted the Calgary Flames over theBoston Brains.

Geoff Cortnall had two goals for Boston but Calgarygoalie Reggie Lemelin's 36-save performance stifled theBruins' attack.

Wilson blew past Boston defenseman Mike Milburyand nipped a backhander over goalie Pete Peelers'shoulder for the winning goal with Milbury hanging onhim.

Wilson also scored the first goal of the game in thefirst period when he stole an errant Boston pass andbeat Peeters for his 20th goal of the season.

Cortnall tied it up with a dash down the left boardsaround Calgary defenseman Paul Baxter to foolLemelin with a 25-footer.

Keith Crowder gave the Bruins a 2-1 lead whenCharlie Simmer's shot went in off his skate in the secondperiod but Eddy Beers tied it for Calgary.

Cortnall's second goal of the game gave the Bruinsanother lead in the second period but Mike Eaves cameback to tie It once again.

Doug Risebrough scored the clinching goal forCalgary with less than three minutes to play.

Peagalas S, Rangers • . 'PITTSBURGH - Mike Bullard and Mario Lemfewi

scored unassisted first-period goals and Denis Herronstopped 26 shots for his first shutout of the NationalHockey League season as the Pittsburgh Penguins beatthe New York Rangers.

The victory, Pittsburgh's fourth in the last 12 games,gives the Penguins SI paints, three points behind thefourth-place Rangers in the race for the PatrickDivision's final playoff spot.

Bullard scored at 4:52, stealing the puck from BobBrooke and beating Ranger goalie John Vanbiesbroack'on the glove side with a shot from the top of the dotfor his 28th.

Lemieux scored his 14th of the season at 15:11. H«took the puck off the stick of New York's GeorgeMcPhee in the defensive zone, skated the length of theice and, with Steve Richmond checking him, circledbehind the net and used his reach to push the puck inthe net.

Gary Rissling converted a pass from Bullard at 16:04and Dave Hannan scored the only goal of the secondperiod after he and John Chabot worked a two-on-onebreak at 359

Arto Javanainen scored his third of the season in thethird period.

It's beginning to look like a sure thing that NewJersey will eventually have a baseball stadium and amajor league team to fill it. In fact, the way things aregoing in the major leagues, there may be teamsstanding hi line tor a crack at the stadium.

The coup. — and it's hard to call it anything else ifit happens — came a step closer to reality Friday whenthe New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority tabbed$100,000 for stadium studies. That money will go to somelucky consultants who will conduct marketing surveys.

The Sports Authority, which had its origins in therarsighted minds of people like Sonny Werblin of ColtsNeck, has become the nation's largest sports en-trepeneur. Its operating budget for 1985 will be astaggering $44.5 million.

The tentacles of the authority now embrace threeprofessional football teams, a hockey team, a basketballteam, a soccer team and both flat and thoroughbredbone racing. Its facilities include the MeadowlandsRace Track, Giants Stadium and the MeadowlandsArena. The stadium and the arena are used for manyevents other than professional sports.

Going on the theory that success breeds success, theauthority has been sniffing around baseball ever sinceGiants Stadium opened. At first, it hoped that it couldbuild a baseball stadium on some unused land which iscurrently part of the Meadowlands complex. Morerecent studies indicated that that land is not suitable,so a new hunt for a site was started.

Where that hunt will end is anybody's guess. Sitesfrom North Jersey as far south as the Amboys havebeen discussed. Anybody who has 100 to 200 acres of landwith good access to main highways may find a willingcustomer in the authority.

The state legislature has already authorized theauthority to build a stadium and to negotiate with teamsinterested in using it. Cleveland, Pittsburgh and SanFrancisco are possibilities, but recent disclosures thatmost major league teams are losing money may bringothers to the negotiating table.

. The imbalance of the two leagues, 14 teams in the' American and 12 in the National, also suggests that an.expansion team is a possibility. However, the feeling on< the authority, never officially expressed, is that it would

rather have an established team.Current discussions between the major leagues and

the players union may have a resounding impact on1 thefuture of baseball in New Jersey, too. If the players gainmore benefits in their new contract, a few of the poorerteams may have to look elsewhere for new fans, a largerstadium and a sweetheart deal. Some owners will haveto sell, and there is nothing to prevent New Jersey

JONNIFALK

interests from buying — as long as they can getapproval from other owners.

There are still problems to be overcome, but they arenot insurmountable. The biggest snag could be theterritorial rights of the Yankees and Mets Even thePhillies could get into the act if the stadium is proposedfor a site closer to Veterans Stadium.

The feeling here is that knowing that success breedssuccess the authority will not be opposed to payingindemnities for territorial infringement. Such paymentsare scattered over a long time period anyway.

A baseball team is the only thing missing from theauthority's jewel case Just as the MeadowlandsComplex created countless jobs and brought money bythe bucket Into the state, a baseball team will createnew opportunities.

The part of the equation missing, of course, is faninterest. The marketing surveys financed Friday willbring an answer to that question. Many people canprobably already give the answer. -

Baseball is the great American game. Most of usplayed it as youngsters and have retained an interestin it. Baseball reminds us of those lazy days of summer,playing ball or sitting in a stadium eating peanuts.Adults know that baseball is different from other sports.It's a continuous thing which binds us to our parents andto the next generation.

The Sports Authority has already given us the Giants,Jets, Generals, Devils, Nets and Cosmos — and, yes,the Cosmos will continue to play foreign teams at GiantsStadium although they are no longer in the NorthAmerican Soccer League. The authority has given ushigh quality college sports, harness racing, thorough-bred racing, ice shows, the circus, rock concerts,evangelists and countless other events.

Don't doubt for a minute that it will give us baseballin the not too distant future. The way the authoritythinks and acts it may give us the Olympics someday.

Success breeds success.

CORNER CRUSHER - Pittsubrgh Penguins'Doug Bodger, left, slams into New York Rangers

Ron Greschner in the corner during yesterdaNational Hockey League game in Pittsburgh.

I Local Irish coaches display the Gaelic spirit

tT

ti

The minstrel fell. But the foreman's chainCould not bring that proud soul under;The harp he loved ne'er spoke againFor he tore its chords asunder;And said, "no chain shall sully thee,Thou soul of love and bravery.Thy songs were made for the pure and free,They shall never sound in sloven/."

Thomas MooreBy JACK RAFTER

Thomas Jefferson probably knew better thananyone of the greatness of America ... its people.Tall, short, wide, slender, black, white, yellow, red.People of all spiritual persuasions.

Whether Jefferson knew the numbers of groupswho would test our shores is questionable, but thethought remains ... our people are our greatest gift.

Each ethnic group looks for its own roots, buttoday those of the Irish persuasion will stand up abit straighter

And would you be carin' to talk a wee bit aboutthe sporting game as well?

Those who are in the coaching field feel that tinglewhen they, hear the scurl of the pipes and theMinstrel Boy being played. For football coach PatMcCann of Red Bank Catholic, today is more thananother day of rest. "Since I was a kid, we went overto my aunt's house for dinner. It's always a Irishsoda bread, the whole thing. I was brought up in aCatholic tradition, and a great many of my friends,and needless to say, my family, were Irish. "TheIrish came to this country and went through all thesame difficulty the other groups went through whenthey first came here. But I have always beenimpressed with the Irish in terms of their bondingat difficult times. They are always willing to help.I think that translates «ver into, sports. There is awillingness to help the other fellow and work withthe other guy. At at Red Bank Catholic the symbolof the shamrock means even more to me. Itrepresents the four leaf clover with the adminis-tration, teachers, students, and parents all part ofthe stem. We have a unique group of kids at our

srhonl For Jn*Unn» RRT ravp mnrv nlnt« nf hlonrt

I T S THEIR DAY — Monmouth County highschool coaches, left to right, Jeanne Dickinson,Mater Dei; Dennis Harrington, Raritan; BrianBedell, Keansburg and Pat McGann, Red Bank

"I grew up with many Irish friends, but the mostunusual was my Uncle Pat, a friend's uncle, whocame over from the old country and did it on his own."I do not think Irish athletes are better than anyother athlete. We didn't think we were from Ireland

Catholic, will all be wearing their green today.The quartet, all of Irish ancestry, will celebrateSt. Patrick's Day in grand style.

when the Irish show their pride and unity."My town, Keansburg, is holding its largest St.

Patrick's Day ever for next Sunday, so as not toconflict with the other parades. It's great — it's a

„ *. - v • - •»**-of pride in working tmrotrnr "wn* in m» (n k» •remarkable quality of the Irish."

McGann concludes, "Our Country is great becauseof all its ethnic groups. Much of what this countryii*s dcompllshed is the collective blood and sweat ofall its people — not just one group, but many.

"But the Irish are extremely proud of theirheritage. And this is our day — March seventeenth."

Dennis Harrington, basketball coach in the Hazletschool system, think first of the boiled dinner -corned beef, cabbage, and potatoes — with thefamily. "My grandmothers are both still alive. Onone side, one grandmother is from Cork, the otherfrom Ireland as well.

"And I don't think we're better athletes thananyone else, but In terms of pride of one's heritage,you better believe I am proud to be Irish."Harrington concludes, "As for today, I know I'd jointhe family, and I am sure that we will all have atouch of the dew — or two."

Brian Bedell is an assistant baseball coach atKeansburg, his hometown that he loves so well. "Ihave extreme pride in my Irish background. I thinkthat anyone who is associated with the superior Irishrace," Bedell winks, "could not help but thinkotherwise. I think Irishness reflects in all walks oflife and I think St. Patrick's Day is one occasion

Day parade in Helmar and 1 hope to take in todav sparade. It is good to see all the St. Patrick's paradesand get in the spirit. I'll do my best to add to themeaning of the celebration.

"I think that in life and in athletics, the Irish weartheir nationality in their attitude on life. Theirattitude, their effort, their pursuance — all that iswhat Irish is to me. Ireland's greatest export hasbeen its people. We have proven over and over againour willingness to work, help, save and serve othersin their need. All these things surfaced as a trait inthe early years."

Football, basketball, and baseball official JimmyLeo is Red Bank Regional's golf coach who ably

guided the Buc athletic department for severalyears. He feels that the Irish have a special sort ofpride. When you get 50,000 people in Belmar for aparade, it must be for a noble cause. "My mom andgrandmother were born in Ireland. My grandmotherwas born in Roscomon, and my mom in Carey. I havespecial ties to the old sod for obvious reasons. Mywife's name was Patricia Dunn and that is a bitIrish."

Does Irish pride carry over into other sports? "Idon't know if Irish people have any edge in sports,but we are a competitive lot. The Irish people arehard workers, and have an excellent work ethic. ButI believe they have a special sensitivity. Combinethat with a good sense of humor, and win or lose,they will give it their all. They'll battle you down tothe wire and be the first to shake your hand whenit's over. Above all, they are still your friends afterthe contest; they have a great sense of fair play,"Leo said.

Pat McCann has coached St. Rose High togreatness in basketball for years. "St. Patrick is mypatron saint, my dad's patron saint, and his dad'spatron saint. We go back to County Roscomon andmy mom's maiden name was Gilmore from CountyMayo." McCann feels that the Irish in athletics,whether those that he played with or coached, werethe equal of any group he has known.

"I'm impressed with the Irish effort of giving theirall toward an effort on the athletic field. We waitedmany years for a John Kennedy to happen. Like anyethnic group, if you work for it, you get there. Westruggled like anyone else, but we made it — and I'mproud."

Jeanne Dickinson, Mater Dei's girls Softball coachis an interesting study in Irishness. "My grand-parents came from the old country (Ireland), so Iam a third generation removed. I associate St.Patrick's Day with parties. I'm really don't thinkIrish athletes are better than any others, but I do feelthey have a better sense of discipline. They can anddo take correction in a relatively positive way andI admire that characteristic," she said.

People scratched their heads and asked how"Jumbo" Elliott of Villanova won so many

cracked, Thai's easy, Aei Lingua Aiiuuea. ouaigiiito Ireland and back with five or six Irish kids."

But Arkansas University — the good old boys —wondered if theirs was some magic in the Irishrunning shoes? When this week's National CollegiateChampionship concluded and Arkansas had won thenational championship in indoor track, the announcerstooped a bit to ask the winner of the National MileChampionship for some thoughts on the race. LittlePaul'Donovan of Ireland answered, "Oh, I justworked hard and I had a great respect for myopponents. I'm glad our lads (Arkansas) did sowell." But isn't that the story? To the Irish, allpeople are friends.

i

it

ii

6 C The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965

Zechman's 842, Davis9 710 lead MonmouthThe regular bowling season is moving into the final

quarter of the year. At theend of the season there arespecial awards given to the male and female who haverecorded the best scores in sanctioned league ortournament play.

In Monmouth County the bowling fiscal season Is fromJuly 1 to June » for bothABC and WIBC members. Itshould be remembered that this special high scorerecognition includes summer leagues also. Thosesummer leagues that have a schedule that runs throughthe June 30 date are subject to the same fiscal seasonregulation for high score recognition.

LUKE

FORREST

In this week's summaries we put on hold the usualrundown of weekly standings and scores. Instead,devote that space to all those who have shot the leading3 game series totals reported for both the men andwomen so far this season.

The season still has another three months to go beforethe leaders can be officially recognized.

If the season were to end today Frank Zechman, withan 842 series, would win this special award He postedhis county leading score last October on games of299-300 and 243 at Middletown Lanes.

For the women, we find Joann Davis of Brielle. withthe best series of 710. Joann shot games of 227-246 and237 last November and ranks as the only woman bowlerto break 700 so far this season in sanctioned play.

Both of these leading series scores can be beaten.Sometimes a high series score comes out of summerleague competition. Dave Bracken was always a threatto shoot the big score. One season he copped the topaward by bowling the county's highest score on June 30,the last day of the fiscal season.

No score is ever safe. In bowling, a 300 game and a900 series are the limits. The only 900 series shot insanctioned competition came when Glenn Allison did itin summer league play on July 1, 19(2.

Allison was denied ABC recognition for his historic900 because the lanes were judged to be improperlydressed. It would have been so much more rewardinghad the lanes been found to be within the regulationsof those required for ABC certification. AlthoughAllison's 900 did not receive ABC recognition, it didindeed make him one of sport's most outstandingathletes.

It is extremely unfortunate that the game ofAmerican Tenpins is subject to a lane conditioningjudgement call. This, in effect, says that the playerearned the score in compliance with the rules or thatthe lanes were not in an acceptable condition and.

' • ' • ' .

G

J.

h I Hi.. IT

SERIOUS STUFF — Swiss champion OelyHoward displays her winning style in the 20thBowling World Cup at Rushcutter Bowl in Sydney,

therefore, the player was able to get a score that didn'trequire very much skill or ability on his part.

When the scores summarized here today are lookedover carefully, it can be noted that there are 227 serieslisted on the men's side of 700 or better. In addition tothose listed, there may well be another 30 or so thathave not been reported. Some league secretaries fail toreport any honor scores at all, while some others turnthem in at the end of the season.

No doubt we will hear from some players wonderingwhy their scores are not listed. One reason is the onejust explained. Any 700 series shot in sanctionedcompetition is a newsworthy accomplishment. So is a600 for that matter and especially if it is the player'sfirst 600 we would like to report it to our readers. Ifany league player feels that a league secretary is notreleasing noteworthy scores, then blow your own horn

BOWLING SUMMARIESMOMMOUTTt COUMPr M M

!•»«« UMCnONED LtAMI. I M H H aUlBBBBStafa f r \ T A j aft

1 Frank Zechman2 John Par>s3 Knm Park*4 An Uannktr5 Jimmy Sm,tn

0 Larry Miranda7 Jonn Paris8 Don GrrfMh9 John Par>«to Oan Gany1) John York12 Wan Salmon13 j>m Renman14 Cm' i . * ViUW15 Cnartie v.uw16 Chan* vna-s17 Aimand Feoe"Ci Jr1ft Tom Guanno19 Dan Gaily -20 Armand Fedeixi J(2t Jerry Esposto

22 Ron Wayde23 Boo Sertx24 Joe Pignaieiio25 Tom VueHtng26 John Paf«27 Jerry Etpoiito28 Fred ADDey29 Rich Schram30 Scamp Somtxs31 Barry Kenne'32 JO"" Pans33 Sean Cannery34 Jim Smith35 Armand Fedaf>ci j r36 FfccK Schram37 John Paris38 Pa'ker Bonn HI39 John Paris40 Tom Guarino41 Walter Boyd42 Jerry EspoSilO43 Charlie Vitaie44 Don Gnlhtn45 John Vorh46 Jerry EspoSilO47 CfUr i * VitaW48 lick Schram49 B'l' Walker j r50 Uike Lukosms51 Mike Fowwr52 Tony Savage53 Frank Zechman54 John Pan*55 Charlie Viiate56 M*k« ZaipsK.57 Ralph Ayles58 Jay SardeiO59 Nick Slran,ero Jr

60 Ne-i Nappi61 vVilham walker j ,

62 Tom Guarino63 Aimand Federal Jr64 Tony Savage65 Charlie Vila**66 Jtm McConnaii

67 qiCk G r d l68 Rick Schram69 John Pans70 Joa Eoiio7i Frank Zechma"

72 Rou War*73 Jm\ Murphy74 Bill McCormack75 John Parn76 Paiher Bonn in77 Fred ADDey78 Chame Viiaie79 JOhn MandiaSO Jell Kluck81 Ertc Holman82 Tony Savage83 Randy Jacques94 Jim Raymond85 On Roaaman86 Joe Eollo87 JOhn Par*89 A/manO Fed#r,Ci Jr

89 Chan-e V<taie90 Oom Farro91-Bfic Ogietby

• w a r n •aaavaaaK

93 John "Butt/" Ra.mondi93 J*T> Smilh9* Jtrry Espos'to .« Frank Zechman

9} Jtnt Murphy'9f JaM Tricancoiff) Or) RoaemantOt Stove KiMslina102 John VatcM.103 H t McCormack

104 Jonn Parts106 Tom QuarinO) M Bon McKn-jhli M / H * * von Sa*petfi r john Spotfre10B rretf AKDtyM0 Scamp Som«*sM l Armand Ftde*c Jl i r j u n FotCfte* -113 John Vet*. -114 John VorhMjJ jm Met i<oy_

niphi tm mm* *mtimi<ii M mm mm117 HMafl von BMP*I I * t , jM . HOtfd

iiaiMrM|kHi

MM teefe, • * n

raelasf a H M M

'wr.

299 300 243259 259-267260 277-246 -266 257 279267 254 279

?4?-?«l».3ft7 --258 300 236290 254 245277 216 269269 259 256256-276 237267 258 246

235 266 266223 276 267296 244 2272*7 268 226236-279 247226 267-267233-237 290269 204 284245-256 255266-234 255259 288 207252 257 245256 236 257255 265231225 279 247226-244-278245 244 258232 258 256249-238 259236-252-257276-223-246 -234 247 263276-256-212259-241-243226 228 289221-278-244 -269-215-258 -265 212 264257-237246224 257 259289-236 215248 223 269296226215258 266 213250-266221238 27'.224257 224 256258:258-222247 233-256213 256 266231-227-279215-243-27626624222622326624]254 256224203-262-269246 232 255290226217243 268221210-279-245226 227 279290-227-214246 207 278254 200277258 258-215206 268-257259237 234237 225-268279-246 205266-199-264225204 300232 231 266254 219 266244 247236225-235-268245245238195-277-256235-277215234 225268257-278 192256 245 225

232 247-247232246 248222-257247279-233-213247 253 225234 269-222237 256-232269-199-257257 213 255227 26B 229

266 221 235254-236 234192234-300

244 235 244245-215-263212 268 243243 256-224241 259-227

223-296 203248206 266276-186 256

232 222268234-210-278237 206 278221 277-223256-247 2'6

ML 642

DDS05Hv-aosDD-602HB-600A P - 7 M 'HB-796AP 769ML-7B4DD 784AP 771ML-771HV-770ML 769ML 766ST 767AL-761AP 762HB760MO 760DD 757ML 756ML-755DD754ML 754

• ST 751• AP-7S1

HB 751- ST.748- ML-747- ML 746• MB-746- HV-745

DD-745- OD 744• ST-744

- ML-743• D0-743

RB 743OD 742

- ML-741

- AP-740- ML-740

MB-740DD-740AP 739ML 739ST 739ML 739HB-739ML 738AP 7360D 737HB 737

ML 736HB-736

• AL 734ST 734HB 734ML 733ML 733

• AP 732DD 732ML-732

• ML-731MB-731DO 731ST 731

• ML-731ML 730

- ML 730• MB-730- ML-729• ML 729

ML 729• ML 729

MB 729ML 728ML 728

• ML-728ML 727AP 727

- ML-727HY-726ST 726AP72600-726DO-726ML 725

• 0D 725DD-725AP 725HB 725AP725ML 724

• HV.T34- ML 724• MB-724• ST 724

• MO 724HY-723

• ML 723

HB-723• AP 723• DD-723

DO 722

M\-722- MB 722

Ml 722• AL 722

M L - 7 2 1

• MB-721MB 721

269-216236 AP 721lee mala a* I taphia tot «onen e M

leaned W the towMng EoHer to be

237 248 235226-236-256247 279 193

ML 720- DD 720

ML 719

119 Jon* Pike120 Paul PoMo121 Sean Gamotf122 Frank Zecnman

123 Doug Lippincofl124 Mark F«x.l»

125 Er) Se-aim ,126 Nick Slraniero Jr

127 Pew Oamui$i»128 Jim Murpny129 Larry Scot!130 Fred Abbey131 Jonn veicnik132 Jerry Esposilo133 Jonn Pant

134 Fred AM»y135 Jonn McConneil136 Bill Slembacn137 Tom Guarino136 M.ke Fowter139 Jen Mean140 Joe Eollo• 41 Mike Lukotiva'42 IrValt Salmon

143 Bob Ba/yakj144 C h a n * Viiaie145 Jonn Spoflke146 Larry Natarcoia147 WilLam Knudaen148 Mank won Saape149 Doug MeyerISO Jonn Pans151 Dom Farro152 Tom Claary153 Sieve Emanuele154 Boo Seroe155 Bob Bazydk)156 Keitn Maltais157 Oom Farro156 Jay BarWO159 Parker Bonn ill160 Nick Straniero161 Tony Picaroni162 Frank Zecnman163 Frank Zecnman164 Bob Teetue165 Phil Praacn166 Jonn Pant167 Al Kinsley166 Jrfn Murpny169 Tony Savage

170 cnaiiie Vilale171 John Mammano

, ...., 236-246 236. . . 234 253-232

. 2&5 234-230 -226 225 268

267 222 229227-267-224168 267 242

202-248 268257 216 244242-228 247223 278 216204 234-279263-221 232

221 209 279205-235-276247 233 236237 266213

' . 202-257-256225 235 255279-224 212256 247-210216 255-243

223 212-279265 212-264279-236 214 -245 232-237212 254 246245-245 224255 243 215 -236 220 247

227 216 266256 222-232209 257 246226-252 234269-176-246222-211-278 -222-243-246226-266 217

246 226 239220256 225226 236 248224 226 258233-247 230219-256-235246-237-227206-265 238247 205-257

192 257 259248-256-204

• 72 Wan Meisanoacner173 Rick Scnram174 Hank von saspe175 Ralon Ayles176 Pal wnaien177 Hank von Saspe

178 Dene Dmon Sr179 Ricn Bennett180 Jerry EspoSilOi8t Cnari* Vitaie182 Boo Serbt183 Bill Slumski184 Parker Bonn III185 Deke Carson186 Armand FederiCi<67 Sieve Emanuele

168 Al Vanderveer189 Gary Renoolpn190 Ron Qiampieiro191 Jim Murpny192 Bob Se.De193 Dan Oaisy .194 Hank von Saape195 Jonn Pans196 Jonn Pans

197 Water Boyd198 Armand Feaenci199 Gery RanrJoipn200 Frank Zecnman

201 Mike B'ias202 Kenn Mariais203 Jonn Sportke204 Bud Boyd205 Tom Guarino

206 Tony Savage207 Jonn Wagner208 Jerry Esposilo209 Bob Serbe2tO Frank Moms211 j .m Murphy212 Bill Burns213 Pete Nedoslup214 jonn sponke

215 Bob Ba/y3lo

2 t7 Steve Oomenick218 Jim Murpny219 Tom Granam220 Pere Osmulski221 Jim McConnel1 Ji272 Al Dustal223 Frank Morris

224 Mike Butler225 Ricn None226 Jonn Pans227 Ed Goldman228 Pele Osmulski229 Gene DeFaico230 Jonn Cogliano

1 Joann Davis, 2 Evelyn Cuikm

3 C* ro Vocal4 Sue McEiroy

5 Bea Parulis6 Claire Vogei7 Sue McEiroy6 Helen Coulo

279-205 224238236 234268-235-204235-228 244

300-194 213225 236 245214-244-246235 255-216268-207-231238 199 269

Jr 222-289-195 -230257219

2O0-217269213-204 289227245233256-222225223226-256

s . 225-201-279^ - « 221-257-227

223 193 289236234235

215-277-213Jr 216 234 254

163-289-232276 246-160201 245256234 258212256246-202220-258225266 235200

246231 226222-235'246214-232-257265-217221

286 216 199256-248 198196-255251244 202-256

24r-268-l92^ , ^ 334-.235-2.12

?4B PO9 V4fi

257 235-209232-212-257137 260 235

' 233-226-241

233-258-209232 246222

223-216 259222 243235222 290 188229214-257255 20 (238256 245-197235232233

MONMOUTH COUNTY WOMf NIM4-U MNCTHMMD H A O t M

HIGH m H I TOTAL!227246237246226234

215234243265204221200 266222195 254-216229-201 233

> 247 196 212

ML-719S».71»nY neML-719HY-718ML 7 1 8

ST7 I8MB 718

MB 7IBMB 718ML-717HB-717MY-717AP 717

HB-716

MB-716AP 716MY MhAP-716ML-715MY-715AP 715AP-715ML 714AP 714ML-714

• HV-714AP-714ML-714OD-714ML-713ML-713DO 713

ST-713MY-713

• ML-712- AP-712- AP-712

DD-711• ST 711• HL-711• AP-711- MY-711

• M l 710• ML-710- AL-710• DD-710• 00-710- HY-710

ML-709- ML-709

ML-706ML 706NY-708ST-708

- HB 708- AL-708

• AP-707- 00-707

MO-707• HB 707

AP 706- ML-706- ML 706

ML-706Ml -708MY-706

- MO-706MY 706

•• AP-706- HB 706- AP-705• HB-705• HB-705

HB 705DD-705

• HB-705ML 705

ML 705MO-704HB-704

- ML 704HB-704

- HB-704- MY-704

ML 703- OD-703

• DD-703MY-703DD-703AP-703

•• MY-703ML-702

• OD-702• ML-702

-• MV-701AP 701

• • Ml -701

• MB-701- AL 701

HB'701- HB-700• DO-700

- HY 700

• ST-700•• MY-700- 00-700

00-7W

• HB-700- MO-700- ML-700

• DD-710• AP-706

ST692AP-690MB 690MB 665AP663MY657

Australia. Dely, a fierce, but friendly competitor,won the right to compete wtih other championsfrom all over the world. It was one ol the toughest

and get the recognition you feel is deserved.One reason why some scores are not listed here is

because those shot after March 4, have not beenincluded. Listed are four 800 series. At this writing thefifth 800 series shot this season came in after this longlist was put in order. However, it is a fact that JimmySmith of Matawan shot an 800 as reported last weekwhen he stacked games of 267-254 and 279. In addition,there have been ll other 700's shot recently that havenot yet been included.

Hoase CodeAll of the scores listed below are coded so that the

reader can easily identify in which establishment thescore was shot. For example, ML in front of the scoreidentifies it as being shot at Middletown Lanes. Othersare HY for Hyway 35 Lanes, HB for Harmony Bowl,ST for Strathmore Lanes and DD for Dave Davis Lanes.Others are similarly identified.

HIGH GAMES are not listed here, but Bea Parulismay have the highest game among the ladies. LastNovember Bea shot a 268 and no better score has beenreported here.

On the men's side we have had 14 perfect 300 gamesshot so far this season in Monmouth County. In the order

Scientisi&re

and most prestigious annual events.

in which they came the first recorded was by BillMcCormack Point Pleasant, Greg Lazarchick PointPleasant, John Paris Keansburg, Frank ZechmanMiddletown, Jim Valerie of Long Branch, Gil Rosemanof Aberdeen, Tom Guarino of Keansburg, Parker Bohnin of Freehold, Dennis Jacques of Belford, ZadickCoffino of Hazlet, Dom Maisano of Cliffwood Beach,Raymond Broeder of River Plaza, Jeffrey Mead of Walland the last was by Richard Bennett of Middletown.

Three keglers hit four 299s They are John Sera ofFreehold, James Kirk of Oceanport and Frank Zechmanof Middletown has done it twice.

If Frank Zechman hits a 298 game he would be thefirst to hit the cycle in one season. He already has an842 set and a 300 and two 299s The last time he hada 299 in the Masters he did not realize that 8 pins onhis final ball would havegiven him all four honor scoreawards in one season. He still has time to do it.No otherMonmouth County bowler has ever done it in one season.

Jerry Esposito. of Matawan, recently bowled a 300game outside of this county, bowling for St. Peter'sCollege of Jersey City. But he has one of two 298 gamesshot here while Thomas Stahl, of Red Bank, owns theother.

on great Olympic featsSTATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) - Richard Nelson

remembers watching Bob Beamon long jump 29 feet,2'* inches at the Olympics in Mexico City in 1968 andasking: "How did he do that?"

Four Olympiads later, Beamon's jump still is a worldrecord, and Nelson and fellow sports scientists areabout to release the first in what they hope will be aseries of films analyzing the feats of elite athletes.

After marveling at Beamon's jump, Nelson eventu-ally approached the International Olympic Committeewith a plan to capture future Olympic events on high-speed film for analysis.

Under the sponsorship of its medical commissionchairman, Prince Alexandra de Merode of Belgium, theIOC took up the task at last summer's Los AngelesGames.

The result - film of some of the world's greatestathletes in gymnastics, weightlifting and track and field— will soon be available to the public.

No one will ever be able to scientifically analyzeBeamon's jump, said Nelson, director of thebiomechanics laboratory at Penn State University,since no slow-motion or high-speed film was taken ofthe event.

Had the IOC's high-speed cameras been there, filmingat 100 frames a second as they were in Los Angeles,scientists would have been able to "document what wasdifferent about (the jump)," Nelson said.

Documenting and analyzing that Olympic differenceis what Nelson and seven other biomechanics re-searchers, who study how engineering principles can beapplied to athletic performance, have been doing sinceAugust The results of their work "will allow scientistsworking with coaches to modify or adjust training" forthe next generation of star athletes, Nelson said.

When the Games ended, the researchers returned totheir labs and digitally analyzed films of the athletesmovements, computing such things as joint movementand center of mass.

Although the analyses are meant to serve as modelsto be expanded upon by other sports scientists, theresearchers have come across a few interestingdiscoveries, according to Robert Gregor of UCLA's

biomechanics laboratory.For instance, Gregor said, accepted theory in the shot

put and discus is that a thrower's feet should be plantedwhen the weight is hurled.

"But all of the good throwers are up in the air whenthey release," said Gregor, who filmed those track andfield events. "So that in a sense is quite unique and quitestartling."

Gymnastic movements also are changing."They're more complicated," said Nelson, who

analyzed the women's vault, which he filmed. "We'reseeing some movements that weren't present four yearsago," he said.

As far as most conclusions go, "the jury's still outon that," said Gregor, a member of the IOC'sbiomechanics subcommission who organized the film-ing.

The "model analyses" will be published in the Mayissue of the newly founded International Journal ofSport Biomechanics, of which Nelson is editor

With the beginning of the Olympics film archive,sports scientists win be able to study an internationalspectrum of world-class athletes "with results appliedto the better understanding of training methods, loadsimposed on the body during elite competition and injuryprevention," Gregor wrote in the premiere issue of thejournal.

They will be able to watch Mary Lou Return executeher perfect vault or Carl Lewis his long jump and have"at least something for comparison," Gregor said in aninterview from his Los Angeles office.

Nelson antiipates that the films, which are beingduplicated for free by Kodak, will be made availableto the public by this summer, as well as videotaperecordings — at the same slow speed — of the topperformers in each event.

"Now we have such data," said Nelson, who has beenat Penn State 21 years. "We really have some actualinformation about them (the athletes) in competitionand this is just one little part.

"Four years from now, if we can continue this, wewill have an update."

New York YC: Something's missingNEW YORK (AP) - Inside the primandproper New

York Yacht Club, an ornate chandelier hangs from thedomed ceiling of an elegant oval room.

It is a comfortable room, with two clusters of maroonand dark-wood chairs neatly arranged in semi-circlesaround soft couches. Paintings of classic ocean racescover the wall, and cabinets are filled with the trophiesof glorious victories from the past.

imprint can be seen in the royal blue carpet.The imprint was made by a table, which for a long

time held a trophy case, which used to hold theAmerica's Cup, symbol of yacht racing superiority.

"That piece of furniture belongs in that roomdownstairs," says Bus Mosbacher, commodore of theNew York Yacht Club, with a pleasant smile. Then, witha determined look, he adds: "We want to get it back." -

From the time it was first won in a challenge matchwith England in 1851, the Cup made its home in theUnited States, more specifically at the New York YachtClub. From 1870 to 1980, the Cup was successfullydefended 24 times, usually at the current interval of fouryears.

Then came the summer of 19(3, when a racingsyndicate from Australia and a 12-meter yacht named

Australia II used its mysterious keel design to beat theAmerican defender in the seventh and deciding race offNewport, R.I.

That victory capped a comeback from a 3-to-i deficitin a series that attracted worldwide attentionheightened by the bitter accusations that zingedbetween the confident — some said arrogant — NewYork Yacht Club and the often light-hearted

h l t

iw» , uit: t-up is uuwn UIIUCI, uie possession nf Id*Hoyal Perm Yacht Club.

"It's on loan," says Chuck Kirech, chief executiveofficer of the America II challenge.

Last week, still almost two years before theAustralians will be asked to defend their prize, the NewYork Yacht Dub, in conjunction with the U.S. MerchantMarine Academy Foundation, and 33 affiliated racingclubs from around the country got together to talk.

They talked about how a record 24 challengers fromnine countries have filed for the 19(7 races. And abouthow it will cost $12 million, part of it put up by theCadillac Motor Car Division of General Motors, tomount the America II campaign. And a little about theirU.S. rivals, including the strong San Diego Yacht Club,led by Dennis Conner, who skippered Freedom tovictory in 19(0 before losing the Cup with Liberty In1983

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday Register 7 C

Bass conservation: One reason for 2-mile lawConservation of striped bass was part of the reason

(or the enactment of New Jersey Statute 23:1-47, the lawwhich prohibits trawling within two miles of shore,former Ocean County senator William T. Hiering, TomsRiver attorney, said in a telephone interview last week.The other reason was pressure by ocean pound netoperators who were being squeezed out of business bythe more efficient motorized boats.

Hiering, the son of a commercial netter who was agood friend of the late Axel Carlson Sr, founder ofCarlson's Fisheries, Point Pleasant Beach, wrote thestatute which was enacted in 1947.

During the 1940s it was legal to erect pound nets alongevery mile and a half of beach, and they extended froma half mile to a mile and a half out from the shoreline.Before the law the trawlers would ride between the netsto harvest fish that might otherwise have been trappedby the nets

The law failed to save the ocean pound netters whowent out of business one by one during the 1950s. Whateffect, if any, the law had on striped bass is unknown.

While Hiering was not asked to comment on SenateBill 2346, by Senator Richard Van Wagner. D-Mon ,which would reduce the two-mile limit to one-half milefrom shore, he volunteered that he could see no validobjection "as long as they stay a reasonable distancefrom shore."

The United Boatmen of New Jersey, representingparty boat operators, and the Jersey Coast AnglersAssociation are fighting the bill, which is still incommittee, on grounds that it would wipe out the stocksof fluke, striped bass, bluefish and weakfish.

Belford, Point Pleasant Beach and Cape Maytrawlers who attended a meeting of the MarineFisheries Council in Absecon on March 7, point out thattrawling is permitted from a half mile out along LongIsland, N. Y., and other seaboard states, with no adverseeffect on the fish stocks.

The trawlers contend that for three months eachyear, when fluke and other species are close to shore,

HENRYSCHAEFER

they cannot catch enough fish beyond two miles to payfor the cost of fuel.

Frank J. Valgenti Jr., Madison lawyer who wrote theoriginal striped bass anti-netting law, said that one ofthe major reasons commercial fishermen have faredpoorly in the Legislature has been their failure toorganize. Another reason is their relatively smallnumber, "and they have never had a newspaper to backthem."

Valgenti pointed out that during "the great stripedbass war" of the 1940s the New Jersey State Federationof Sportsmen's Clubs fought for the anti-netting law,which only three men fought to protect the winterlivelihood of Ocean, Burlington and Atlantic Countypeople who netted striped bass.

They were Senator W. Steelman "Steels" Mathis ofOcean County, senator frank S. "Hap" Farley ofAtlantic County, and Capt. Dave Hart, Cape Maycommercial fisherman.

Hart, a former chairman of the state Fish and GameCouncil, was chairman of and still is a member of theMiddle Atlantic Fisheries Management Council. He isactively opposing the bill by Senator Frank Pallone Jr.,D-Mon. which would forbid menhaden seining within 1.2

miles of the beach, but declined comment on thetrawling bill.

Axel B. Carlson Jr. of Manasquao, a commercialfisherman representative on the fisheries council, alsohad no comment.

About 100 commercial fishermen presented theircause at the meeting of the council this month but oneof their leaders, Swede Lovgren, was stricken andhospitalized last Tuesday.

Cousins Rod Building ChampionJim Cousins of Sea Bright won first prize in the

Johnson's Point Pleasant Hardware year long rodbuilding competitor which was judged on the final dayof Hunting fc Fishing Expo, March 10, at Asbury Park.Second prize was won by Shawn Brown, Tabernacle;and tied for third were Chuck Miricle of Brick, and BobHelbig of Point Pleasant.

There were a number of competitions in this firsthunting-fishing expo on the New Jersey coast, andattendance which was light on the first afternoon pickedup at night and was very heavy at the close. George andBarbara Cuba, Sportsman's Sanctuary, Fair Haven,who had a display, siad there were so many people overthe weekend it was difficult to move.

The people came from all areas of the state whichsurprised producer Thomas H. Gasque. He hadanticipated that attendance from the northern countieswould be light because of the Rockland County, N.Y.show which concluded only four days before his showstarted.

Gasque said that many people told him thta theywould cut the New York show next year in favor ofAsbury Park.

"The goose and duck calling contest drew severalhundred enthusiastic audience members cheering forthe various contestants," said Gasque. The judges wereJohn McKean, president of Greenhead Co., manufac-turer of calls; Dr. James Dubel, president of theNavesink River Chapter of Ducks Unlimited; andRobert Bower, an expert caller.

First place in both forms of calling was taken by TodCannaday of Peapack, who won the junior worldchampion duck calling contest in the national contestin Maryland. McKean commented: "This was anexcellent contest and next year its growth will bephenomenal."

New Jersey is a big slate (or waterfowl hunting onits many bays and estuaries where some 25.000 peoplehunt, most of them using calls. Without doubt a lot ofthem "didn't get the word" on this competition this •month.

All through the Jersey Coast Boat Show, about which -he had no worries, Gasque kept asking, "do you thinkthe word is out" for the hunt-fish show.

The two-day Wildfowl, Art and Decoy Competitionand Show drew almost 80 exhibitors Judges were Alfrett ' •Evans, Rahway; Jim Seibert, South Dennis; and GeorgeWalker, Trenton, all experts. Best of show award [ordecorative wildfowl went to Dick Cash, Waretown, fora carving of a chickadee.

Floating decorative and gunning decoys were judgedby Terry McNulty, Medford; James W Allen,Tuckerton; and John Sebalusky, Bensalem, Pa. The bestof show prize for a gunning decoy went to RichardJessen for a wood duck, and bets for a floating ;decorative decoy to Al Evans for a drake mallardThere were more than 200 entries in the wildfowl art 'and decoy competition. Some came form as far northas Maine and as far south as Virginia. New York andPennsylvania were well represented.

Dubel was quoted as saying, "for a first waterfowlart and decoy competition and show it probably rankedamong the best shows nationwide. Next year it will bea major event for carvers and those involved inwaterfowl art and decoys."

Al Klenk and Mike Fairbanks who supervised theshooting next to their booth, A. & M. Archery, have a7:30 p.m. Tuesday target league and a 7:30 p.m. .Thursday bowhunter league now in progress at theirindoor range at 201 Second Street. Lakewood

There is a difference between health, fitnessISecond in three-part series on chole«lerol|

For years nothing bothered me more at myclinics than to have someone get up andcomplain that running had not lowered hischolesterol. I would then quote Santayana."To use sport in the interests of longevity islo be a barbarian." Running is an end not ameans. Anyone engaged in running forutilitarian purposes lost my interest and evenrespect. I was looking at a Philistine whocould not see the terrible beauty inside therunning experience.

I no longer draw those lines. Running is agood life. It should be a long life as well. Therunner should know his cholesterol level andbe concerned about it. If the running and theweight loss associated with it hasn't broughtyour lipid profile into the normal range youmust do something about It.

I had been taught the importance ofcholesterol long before most other phys-icians. Dr. William Dock, who was my Chiefof Medicine in 1947-49 at Kings County

GEORGESHEEHAN

Hospital, was one of the first proponents ofa low fat, low cholesterol diet. When I hadhim join me for lunch in the intern's diningroom, he would take no eggs, butter, wholemilk or fried food. Chicken and fish, fruit andvegetables formed his diet. Dock believedeven then that the fat in the blood was theChairman of the Board in producing coronarydisease.

A classmate of mine. Jeremiah Stamler,took a similar view. Upon graduation frommedical school he began a lifetime study nfcholesterol, receiving the Lasker Award forhis work. Stamler today feels that whateveryour cholesterol is. you would be better offif it were lower.

Nevertheless, I have been cavalier aboutmy, own cholesterol. Until I went to theCooper Clinic I did not know what it was. Ibelieved that with my weight and my mileageI had nothing to worry about. One thing I wascertain of was that I would never have a heartattack I assumed that my cholesterol wasnormal. There was surely no reason for meto be anxious about my diet. I could eatanything I pleased.

Fortunately that assumption turned out fobe correct. My cholesterol HDL ratio andLDL. HDL ratios are far below the levelsjudged to constitute a risk factor for coronarydisease. My penchant for eggs and meat and

ire cream had not resulted in any significantrises in my blood lipids.

Nevertheless, this is an assumption norunner should make. Running and the weightloss associated with it almost always bringthe cholesterol down to a desirable figureSometimes, they don't. The runner whobelieves he can eat anything he pleases mayalso be eating his way to his grave. The onlyway you can be sure your present life styleis freeing you from the specter of coronaryartery disease is to check your blood lipids.

There are increasing reports of highmileage, supremely fit runners with ab-normally high cholesterol. Jim Fixx was oneexample. Here was a man averaging almost70 miles a week for more than 10 years, yethis cholesterol was 285. Dr. Bruce Waller hasstudied the cases of 11 middle-aged runnerswho died during or shortly after running. Allhad severe coronary disease. These men hadbeen running for an average of seven years

and were doingweekly mileage in the 30 milerange. Cholesterol levels were available lorsix runners. They were 240; 272; 278. .1115',310!; 468!!. The 49-year-old with the 305 hullbeen averaging 100 miles week and had runin six Boston Marathons and seven New YorkCity Marathons. His high mileage traininu,and competitive racing had failed to lower hischolesterol and protect his coronary arteriesIWaller, Bruce F "Sudden Death in Midlire."Cardiovascular Med January 1985; 55|

These fatalities occurred in runners whowere fit. well conditioned and doing acommendable volume of training. The- pointmust be made that there is a differencebetween health and fitness, between preven-tion and performance. It is now obvious youcan be fit and not be healthy. You canperform superbly, and still have underlyingdisease. You can exercise into superior levelsof fitness and not make inroads on yourcholesterol level - and the mischief it isdoing to your coronary arteries

Acid rain will head the Reagan-Mulroney talksPresident Reagan and Canada's Prime Minister

Brian Mulroney are to begin a couple of days of talkstoday in Quebec — talks which might be seen asembarrassing the visiting team.

That's not likely. One thing to be said for our chiefis that he doesn't embarrass easily.

Mr. Mulroney has said acid rain will be at the top ofhis agenda for these discussions. The president, who nodoubt would rather not hear about it, probably will bea politically polite listener.

Canada has been trying for some time to convinceWashington of the need for a joint program of the twonations to curb the air pollution which is the basicculprit of the acid rain problem. The administration'sreply has been that we'd like to keep on studying that.

Earlier this month, Ottawa announced that it wouldlaunch a major program of its own to combat theplague: a plan to reduce sulfur and nitrogen oxideemissions by 50 percent in eastern Canada over the nextnine years.

Immediate attention will be given to cleaning upsmeltering operations in the provinces. Tighter auto-mobile emission standards are planned by 1887.

An official speaking for the prime minister deniedthat the' timing of the announcement on the eve of thetalks was designed to put pressure on the president tojoin the Canadian effort.

Still, this hard evidence that our neighbor to the northis doing something to put out the fire while we go onfiddling might strike some as putting us in anuncomfortable position.

Mr. Reagan, however, is not easily swayed. He hasridden unabashed many times thorugh situations thatmight discomfit most others. Nor is itlikely that, havingignored the advice of the most knowledgeable peopleavailable on the subject, he'll be convinced of the needfor action by Mr. Mulroney.

We could be surprised. The forces at work ininternational politics are many and varied. If the primeminister wins any concession on the issue, we can'countit as made in the interest of diplomacy and continentalgood will.

We'd hail it, of course, in any name.ON WEDNESDAY AT 11:14 a.m. the sun will cross

All-County

BILL

SANDFORD

the line of the equator and spring will have arrived inthe northern hemisphere.

A couple of things thai happen only twice a year occurtoday. One is that the sun rises and sets due east andwest of us.

That could be useful — if sky conditions permit - toanyone wanting to make an accurate orientation of afixture like a weathervane or sundial, or to check thecompass variation (the difference between true northand magnetic north) of a given site.

Your vantage point has to be on a plane with thehorizon. If you have to wait until the disc clears a maskof hillside or a building, it will then have slippedsouthward (to the right) a little.

Use well-smoked glasses or a sheet of exposed filmto protect the eyes, and once the sun has cleared thehorizon don't attempt to look directly at it even withthat protection. Sight along with W-E rod of yourweathervane and align it so the E end points to centerof the rising orb and tighten the set screws. Sight theopposite way, of course, if you use the setting sun.

Aim your compass at the center of the disc and thedifference between your bearing reading and 90 degrees(for sunrise; 180 degrees at sunset) is the variation forthat spot. It should be about 12 degrees west for ourarea.

If your due-east reading was 78 degrees, it meansyour compass is pointing due north when the magneticneedle is on 348 degrees.

Once you know how to read your compass, of course,you won't have to get up before sunup and risk blindingyourself to set your sundial or weathervane.

Another thing that will make next Wednesday semi-annually unique is that the day and hight will be equal.Well, roughly. Or more precisely if "day " and "night"are tightly defined. f-~_

Now and then an observant tyro almanac watcher willcome up with a question: If day and night are supposedto be equal on the equinox days, how come the sunrise-to-sunset figures on those days are more than 12 hoursapart? (It will be about 12 hours and 8 minutes here onWednesday.)

The difference is that between what we see, and howwe clock it, as opposed to a true astronomic — orgeometric — day.

The astronomic day begins when the sun has halfcleared the horizon in the morning and ends when it hashalf set. Sunrise and sundown figures are given for thetimes of first appearance of the top of the orb to thefinal disappearance of the bottom, thus adding a coupleof minutes.

The second factor is optical illusion — refraction.Because of bending of its rays on entering the

atmosphere, the sun appears to our eye belore itactually has cleared the horizon line in the morning andstill is visible after it has dipped below it at sundown,adding more minutes.

EQUINOX TIME IS, for bird buffs, the time to lookfor the return of the osprey — and the phoebe, laughinggull and yellowlegs.

The harbinger birds of spring — those that precedeit and alert us to its approach — are for the most partspecies that we might see in mid-winter if we lookedin the right places. Now come those which have traveleda distance to get back to us.

The osprey is one that's eagerly awaited. A symbol.of sorts, of shore life, it is a popular bird and one forwhich there has been a lot of concern in recent yearsas its numbers declined. Now it seems to be staging acomeback and may be the first species to be removedfrom the state'sendangered species list.

We've clocked it in as early as March 9 and as lateas March 27, but those dates are unusual extremesThere were so many years in which it arrived innorthern Monmouth right on the day of the vernalequinox that we're inclined to regard it as theembodiment of spring.

Jarryd reaches Belgian finalsBRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -Anders Jarryd of Sweden

outlasted countryman Stefan Edberg 7-6 (7-2), 34, 6-3yesterday to advance to the final of the $267,000 BelgianIndoor Tennis Championship.

Jarryd will play in today's final either against fellowSwede Mats Wilander or Pat Cash of Australia, whoplayed in the other semifinal match.

Edberg and Jarryd enthralled a crowd of some 4,500with attacking tennis as both Swedes tried to dominatethe net.

The 23-year-old Jarryd got off to a flying start,breaking Edberg's service at the first opportunity andleading 3-0 before his Davis Cup doubles partner wasable to respond.

The players then traded service breaks but Jarryd

looked to hold a firm grasp on the first set, leading 5-2before Edberg started a three-game rally which leveledthe score 5-5.

Each player then held service. In the tiebreaker,Jarryd never gave his 19-year-old opponent a chance,winning the decider 7-2.

Early in the second set, Jarryd's quick footwork andhis flashing passing shots gave him 3-1 lead. His youngerteammate, however, started a spectacular comeback,agressively controlling the net, and won the next fivegames.

Edbereg took the set 6-3 when he put away a shortlob. Jarryd constantly looked in trouble when trying tolob against the quick-moving Edberg.

(Continued from Page 1C)

"My best match was against Kelly Conklinof Toms River East in the first round of theregions," Valaziotis said. "I beat him. 5-4 "

"Bob is not that strong," Wall coach TomJansky said. "But he never stops. He is avery aggressive, hungry wrestler."

Valaziotis also plays on the Wall soccerteam where he is a center-halfback.

Like several other members of the

,,.llT K« ntitauiina Chftuian Junior t'ollpppSIMON SKOVE

Long BranchSkove is the last of the legacy and has

carried the family name well this year. Heracked up a 22-3-1 ledger and captured theDistrict 23 championship. He was third in theregion match.

"I worked hard and hoped to do this well,"Skove said. "My goal is to make it to the finalfour in the state. I've always watched mybrothers win the districts and the regionals.now I want to do it myself."

Skove is one of five Green Wave wrestlerson the club and despite winning the "B"Division North championship and the district

title, Skove felt the Branchers didn't live upto their preseason billing.

"I think we were overrated. We weren't asgood as people said we were. We neverwrestled well when we went up against thetougher teams. I was also disappointedbecause I thought we would do better in theShore Conference."

MIKE LIGUORIManalapan

Liguori's immediate goal is to win a statetitle. His goal of going undefeated in the

.--*%-- »-:- J — i— »- ....:_ Ihn Nnnlimo rii««:tr

and a district championship.Liguori's 23-1 record of this year and his

23-4 mark as a sophomore ranked him amongthe lop grapplers in the county over the lasttwo years.

His only regret was his loss to Neptune'sJohn Gluckow in the regional semifinals.

Liguori was a staunch blocking back andlinebacker on last season's outstanding

Manalapan football team I BOB LYNCHManalapan

Lynch was one of four Braves to make thesquad. Lynch compiled a 24-1 record goinginto Friday night's state match with top-seeded Jason Suder of Paulsboro Among

honors that Lynch captured this year was theDistrict 21 title. He finished third last year.

' He was also runnerup to Kevin Oliver ofLakewood in the Region VI tournament.

"Bob is super aggressive." Manalapancoach Bill Terrell said. "He loves wrestlingand is always working on technique."

Despite the success the junior has enjoyed,one title put a damper on his dual meetcampaign. "I had a good season but Iexpected to win the Regions, that has beenthe only disappointment."

I nntr RntnrhMost high school athletes would be happy

with the season Waikins had. The GreenWave senior had a record of 21-4 and addedthe Top of the East and Minutemen Classicchampionships to his district crown. Losingin the first round of the regions, however.really put a damper on the campaign.

I lost to Brad Parks and I beat him in thesame round last year Bob Martin (BrickMemorial) really wrecked my season. I couldnever get any momentum going. Every timeI had some steam and confidence built up. Iwould wrestle Martin It was a lot differentthan last year when I went into thetournament with 18 straight wins Had I not

had to wrestle him (Martin) so many times,I think I'd still be in it."

I just want to thank Coach Rutan for myfour years at Long Branch. He really helpedme out a lot."

Watkins is looking to attend Chowan JuniorCollege on a wrestling scholarship aftercommencement.

MITCH TURKManalapan I

Turk has no complaints with his 22-4season, especially with a victory in the

uhAn nno rnnsirtprs Ihp fact that hf W3S OnlV8-8 as a junior.

"I did a lot of lifting and running whichhelped," he said. "I also got myself mentally-prepared before the season started."

Turk's next stop is Jadwin Gymnasium inPrinceton University.

His future lies in electronicsDAN McINNIS

Monmouth RegionalMnnmouth had an off-year in wrestling, but

that certainly didn't apply to heavyweightDan Mclnnis who had a 23-2 record with 17pins.

His only setbacks were a 3-2 upset to LongBranch's Ray LeBron in the District 23 finals

and an 11-2 loss to Monsignor Donovan'sGordon Nelson.

The loss to LeBron was controversial. Thedeciding point was the result of a penalty forstalling.

"I thought I was riding him most of thetime," Mclnnis said. "But the ref hit me forsuiting."

Mclnnis had his best match in the RegionVI consolations where he outlasted TimRioux of in a 2-1 overtime thriller.

"Dan is a combination of strength andaitUiti, " Unnmmilh nnstrh lim falvPTt Said."Whatever he s got, ne uses it

Mclnnis also starred in football where heplayed tackle both ways, but his first•preference is wrestling.

"It is a more individual sport with me."he said.

Mclnnis plans to attend an Ivy Leaguecollege and hasn't made a final decision. Hehopes to play football and wrestle as afreshman.

"I'll try them both and see if I cansurvive," he said.

Mclnnis was a Register Scholar-Athlete infootball. He is a member of the NationalHonor Society and a National Merit Scholar-ship finalist.

8 C Th«- Sunday Regis ter SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985

AMERICAN STORES C O M P A N Y ^

ifMrMwimC

WaldorfToilet Tissue

DetergentWHILE SUPPLIESLAST!

NORAINCHKOCHARGE 1/2 OF THE POKE MARKED

SAVE 40* A LK —^PORK LOIN

S-BLADE, 3-SIRLOIN, 3-CENTER

Assortedpork Chops

SAVE $ 1 1 0 ALB.pSAVE60«ACNT

Illl RECUUUt OR UNSCENTED

Scott BaFresh wipes

LANCASTER BRANDOVEN READY LARGE END 7'CUT

BeefRib Roast

BEEF ROUND BONELESS

Bottom'Round Roast

SMALL END ROASTS ISJ09 La J

FEATURE OF THE WEEKCountryside CollectionGOURMET COOKWARE

8W1 OPEN FRY PANSAVE 90< ALB.

USOA CHOICELANCASTER

BONELESS BEEF ROUND

RumpRoast

BandedSAVE ON COMPUTER ITEMS

SAVE 100

covered eSugar Bowl

; Grade A, 5LBS OR

Chicken

SAVE $5.00

A different cookware piece tobe featured each week! 18-OZ L O A F \ V

REGULARLY 99c A LOAF--. -

9-OZ. REGULAR FLAVOR OR8.2-OZ.WINTERFRESHCEL

Colgate 4 7 7Toothpaste •™TS

"Tell AFriend"Coupons

SAVE 40« ALB.IMPORTED THOMPSON

seedlessGrapes

CALIFORNIA SUNKIST

Navel 4Oranges a

Detergent Napkins

64-FZ.BTLWrTH THIS COUPON. OFFER GOODFROM M M 17 THROUGH MAR 23,1985UMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

JOO-CT.PKG

: WITH THIS COUPON. OFFER GOODi FROM MAR. 17 THROUGH MAR 2] , 1985• LIMtT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

WITH THIS COUPON. OFFER GOODFROM MAR 17 THROUGH MAR 23UMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

isic pickles carrots

IS? 9*.• i 32OZ JAR I ^ ^ ^

"ONOFfERGOOD WrTH THB COUPON. OFFER GOODmriMS UK . ^ b l FROM MM 17THROUGH MAR. 23, H»S^mMS FAMilY"1 _4.fjVM UMITOHtOOWONPIRFAMKY # «

wic«j»»T«ctlv«MarctiT7throughMardi2s,i9e5 In Bergen. Essen Hudson, MldansenMonmoutfiMofm.Pajsalc.SomerMt.Sussenunlon counties Ana m«« communities Washington md Pow Plmant (None sola to oOltr n j t m n or wtxnesalen. Ouantltv rtgnts

reserved) Not responsiwe for tvpograprnalerrors . , . >

The Sunday RegisterSUNDAY. MARCH 17. 1965 Lifestyle D

ADVICE 2

ENGAGEMENTS 3

CLASSIFIED 6

Van Brunt is Horatio Alger success storyLITTLE SILVER - Robert T

Van Brunt, a senior at Red BankRegional High School, has goodreason to feel like a character fromany one of the 132 Horatio Alger(lories

The Horatio Alger Association ofDistinguished Americans Inc., NewYork, has announced that he is therecipient of one of its 1965 (5,000scholarships

One of 20 such high school seniorsfrom IS states, the first and only onefrom New Jersey, he said he almostdidn't fill out an application becausehe felt be didn't have a shot atwinning. "I wasn't going to trybecause there are some really

bright people here, but my girl-friend, Cheryl Feragne, urged me toapply," Van Brunt explained. "I feelvery honored and surprised."

He went on to explain that he wasinformed about the scholarship justbefore his parents' 25th weddinganniversary. "It was like an earlypresent for them," he said.

According to the associationliterature, "Scholarship winners arestudents whose lives and attributesmost closely resemble those of the ,heroes in Horatio Alger novels:They are self-reliant, industrious,charitable, involved, love theircountry and respect its flag, andthough having limited financial

resources, possess unlimited prom-ise." Winners are also required tohave participated in a Horatio AlgerDay for Students.

Robert M. Nogueira, Red BankRegional High School principal, firstlearned of the scholarship programfrom an article in a school activitiesmagazine. He called it to theattention of Robert Strangia, socialstudies supervisor, who discoveredthat in order to be eligible for ascholarship, high schools are re-quired to run a Horatio Alger Dayfor 1,000 particiapting juniors andseniors. Strangia and BettyNicholson, student council advisor

ENRICHING EXPERIENCE - Robert T. VanBrunt ol Shrewsbury, a Red Bank Regional HighSchool senior and an Horatio Alger Association ol

R*f*M» p«ou * Cart ForiM

Distinguished Americans Inc. scholarship winner,will be honored at the association's annual dinneron May 10 at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York.

and English teacher, coordinatedthe program.

"We were too late last year; sowe contacted the association inearly September, " said Strangia.Schools are required to submit aHoratio Alger Day plan to theassociation for approval. The as-sociation provides a keynotespeaker, who has also received theHoratio Alger Award given annuallyto recognize outstanding Americanleaders who have overcome signifi-cant obstacles to achieve greatness.

Dr. Peter Guida, Cornell Univer-sity Medical School director ofsurgery and inventor of the heart-lung machine, presented a motiva-tional address to 1,000 juniors andseniors at the school on Dec. 6.

Scholarship winners are requiredto demonstrate scholarship, leader-ship in school activities, communityinvolvement, an ability to overcomeadversity, a work history and futureobjectives. An application screeningcommittee made up of seventeachers, counselors and adminis-trators read through the appli-cations and narrowed them down tothree.

"We read the applications withoutthe names and ranked them inde-pendently," Strangia explained. Thefinal selection was made by theassociation's scholarship commit-tee. "I'm thankful for an opportuni-ty like this for a student who has.worked so hard," said Strangia.

Van Brunt, who has an 85 gradepoint average, had to overcome asetback early in his high schoolcareer. A virus which was hard todiagnose and treat kept him out ofschool for two months in hisfreshman year. "I was just startingto get used to school," said VanBrunt. "I had to do all kinds of workwhen I got back and it really hurtmy grade point average," he said.

The virus recurred again in hissophomore year, causing Van Bruntto miss 20 more days of school. "Myparents were a big help," heremembered. "They told me to justtake one day at a time."

Through it all, though, he hasmanaged to play freshman football,

varsity baseball, and work on theschool newspaper staff. He alsoplays Carleton League baseball andCYO basketball. He is an assistantgirls Softball coach in Shrewsburyand is putting money away forcollege by working after school as astockboy at Shop Rite.

His scholastic schedule this yearincludes advanced placement Eng-lish, physics and calculus andarchitectural drawing.

-Van Brunt is planning to study

electrical engineering. He has been jaccepted at the University of Mis- >souri and the Rochester School of 'Technology and is still waiting tohear from Rutgers School of Engi-neering, Bucknell University andthe University of Connecticut.

He hopes to participate in a work-study and co-op program while incollege and said, "If necessary. Iam willing to interrupt my studiesand work at a job unrelated to mymajor In order to pay for college •tuition and expenses." *.

'Profound culture shock'greets Ready iir Nicaragua

BY MIM BRYAN

BOSTON — A concern for social justicetook Kelley Ready, former Atlantic High-lands resident, to Esteli. Nicaragua, for afive-week stay.

Learning Spanish was an excuse for thetrip, but Ready felt her real goal was to"come to a better understanding of theNicaraguan's experience." She has nowreturned to her home in Boston.

A "profound culture shock" wasReady's first reaction upon arriving inEsteli, the town which would be her homefor the next five weeks. "The sight of tinyshabby houses containing large and ex-tended families took me aback. Seeinghow little people have, it is hard toimagine there is more here than there wasbefore the Revolution. The family I livedwith is part of the sector of society whichhad the most to gain.".

Ready's foreign "father," a shoemaker,one of many small craftspersons in thearea, has his shoe shop in half of one roomin the house. The other half is a bedroomwhere the mother, father and two childrensleep. Ready had her own bed but shareda room with four or five other children.

Cooking is done over wood in a small

clay stove outside the back door, then thefamily eats in a dining area at two smalltables using three chairs borrowed fromthe adjoining ironing room, the mother'swork area for the ironing she does forother families. A niece and her newbornbaby also share this space.

Ready, always interested in developingways for people to have more control overtheir lives, became interested inNicaragua sometime before the 1979revolution when Peace Corps friends whohad been there talked about imminentchanges in the country. Their reportsabout literacy campaigns, health careimprovements and a people very muchbehind the government contrasted sharplywith information available in newspapershere in the United Slates

These contrasting reports increasedReady's curiosity to learn more about thesituation in Nicaragua first hand.

After deciding to go to Nicaragua,Ready chose the NICA program (NuevoInstituto De Centroamerica) which shefelt would give her the broadest possibleexperience. NICA arranges for families tohouse Americans in their homes, intensivestudy of Spanish, meetings with communi-ty leaders and work with Nicaraguans to

reconstruct and develop their country.During talks or "charlas" held by the

NICA in Esteli, Ready and other Ameri-cans discussed conditions with both sup-porters and opponents of the revolution.Their host families were active supporters .of the FSLN, but the visitors were free totalk with people in the community.

What they found and saw, Readyreported, was a people who have struggledlong and hard to control their country.

The United States has been inNicaragua since 1926, she said, firstduring an occupation by the Marines, laterthrough the Somoza- dictatorship main-tained by a national guard trained by theMarines. Esteli was the site of threebattles between 1977 and 1979.

The Nicaraguan government came intopower in 1979 after overthrowing the right-wing dictator, Somoza, who actuallybombed his own country in an attempt tostem the opposition to his rule, Readysaid.

The government is currently defendingitself against an American-sponsoredinsurgency.

Ready heard residents say that during

(See READY, Page 2D) Kelley Ready

Robert Rabbit hippity hops down library trail

ANIMATED ARTISTRY — Puppeteers JeanHershenov, left, Fair Haven, and Phyllis Judman,Freehold, both librarians at the Monmouth CountyLibrary headquarters in Freehold, display three ofIhe handqafted puppets that appear in the'

Monmouth County Library System's spring presen-tation, 'Robert Rabbit's Roving Puppets." Thepresentation of four puppet shows will besponsored at over 20 Monmouth County Librarybranches during March and April.

BY JAN MARIE WERBLIN

FREEHOLD - For many children, the arrival ofspring denotes in part the shedding of heavy winterwraps, more outdoor play, and the anticipation of avisit from an old friend ... the basket-filling EasterBunny.

For the past five years, another long-earedcharacter has hopped a route through MonmouthCounty, delighting children, while gaining fame at eachof his stops.

Robert Rabbit and his entourage are on tour againthis spring, having already made visits to a few of the27 locations listed on the six-week itinerary.

While the Easter Bunny is employed in the deliverybusiness, Robert Rabbit's vocation lies in the field ofentertainment. Although he puts on a good show, hehas been described as a "rather brash young rabbit,"a character trait which could be attributed to the factthat he is constantly being manipulated at work. In thetruest sense of the word, Robert Rabbit is a puppet.

He is master of ceremonies, and narrator, forpresentations of four puppet shows that have beenadapted from popular childrens' stories. He is also a

DeBartBK&i ~:::.. : . : . . . .^-£ c ™ : y L I S - ™ Esstem.

Charlotte Lesser, coordinator of the children'sdepartment, along with librarians Phyllis Judman,Jean Hershenov, and Janice Haraz, adapted the fourplays from the books: "The Very Hungry Caterpillar,""Tikki Tikki Tembo," "Squawk to the Moon, LittleGoose." and "The Gunniwolf." The quartet is alsoresponsible for creating all of the puppets, scenery,and props.

"We usually have new shows every year, and createnew puppets and costumes," said Lesser. "This year

there is one new show. The puppets average aboutthree to 10 hours to make, depending upon what theyare. We made an elephant which is quite large, andtook a while, and then there is a bird which is only twoinches by three Inches."

The puppets, constructed of assorted fabrics, arehand sewn from original patterns designed by thegroup. They have designed hand manipulated puppetsas well as "rod" puppets.

"We use rod puppets, made from umbrella wires, inone of the shows. They are constructed like theMuppets. Your hand doesn't go into the body of thepuppet, only the mouth is moved by your hand, thearms are moved by the rods," Lesser explained. "Forthe caterpillar, we used a "slinky" covered withfabric. The slinky is stretchable, so when you pull therods apart it looks like it's walking."

Sam Venti, a staff member of the library, touted byLesser as one of the handiest people she knows, built.the wooden backdrop frame and collapsible theater*'used for the shows.

"Three of the backdrops we made are hand-appliqued in felt. We have a fourth which we kept plainbecause that particular show is so colorful, we didn't

Since the shows require only two puppeteers, thefour women alternate their time.

"The show is an absolute joy to do," said Lesser."We can't see the childrens' faces from behind thestage, but we can hear their giggles and shrieks.Sometimes we'll hear them repeating certain line*-.from the plays ... it's great."

Robert Rabbit's Roving Puppets Spring Show isbeing presented in 27 branch and member libraries of 'the Monmouth County Library System through Marchand April.

2 D The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985

ADVICE

Why do people send gifts to celebrities ?Dear Ann Landers: I have decided

there it something desperately wrongwith society's value* and common tense.Please bear me out.

Recently a photo of a glamorousactreu appeared la a well-known maga-zine. The star was making an appeal fortads (a worthy cane, I should add). Inthe background wat a thelf that held atlean 1M stuffed animals tent by fans tothe star's daughter. Jutl yesterday Ibeard that the Salvation Army in our city(Detroit) had to close one of its sheltersfor the homeless because of insufficientfunds.

This sayt a great deal about the sadstale of our priorities. Why do peoplesend gifts to movie stars, rock heroes,TV personalities, the president of theUnited States aad hit wife, members ofthe royal family aad other celebritieswho need them least? The news stories

and photos of the gifts lavished on thefirstborn of Princess Di nnd PrinceCharles made me tick. (Almost all ofthem ended up In children's hospitals I

The public should know that therecipients of these gifts consider them anuisance.

I realize the gift-givers mean well butsomebody needs to tell them they arethrowing out their money. It would be apublic service. Will you be the one? -Love You In Mount Pleasant, Mich.

Dear M.P.: I didn't have to be the one.You were. Your letter reflects goodsense. I applaud your candor.

And now to answer the question, "Whydo people send celebrities gifts?" Be-cause it makes them feel closer to thosethey admire. It puts them (for amoment) on an intimate level with thesepeople. The points you have made.

ANN PLANDERS 1

m-1

however, are valid. Thanks for writing.

Dear Ann Landers: My life is a livingnightmare brought on by myself. What 1did has affected every member of myfamily.

Early last year, I embenled a large•urn of money from my employer. I wnscraiy to think I could get away with It.Of course. I lost my job. I also losteverything I owned. As a first-timeoffender, I was nut on probation andordered to. repay the money.

Several days ago I approached a verywealthy relative for financial help. Sherefused, saying I should solve my ownproblems since I created them. I prayevery night that she will have a changeof heart, but as each day passes, Ibecome more discouraged.

I have received both psychological andreligious counseling, but suicide Is on mymind constantly. I'm sure my permanentabsence would be a relief for my familyand death would release me from thisliving hell.

The moral of my story: No matter howtempling, never, never lake anything

that does not belong to you. You mayhave to pay for It with your life. - StickyFlagert In S.C.

Dear S.C.: I feel terribly sorry for you.Your letter sounds like a veiled threat toyour rich relative. Your message, how-ever, is a good one, especially from onewho has learned the hard way. Mean-while, keep up the counseling. I'm sureyour family loves you more than youknow.

A no-nonsense approach on how to dealwith life's most difficult and mostrewarding arrangement. Ann Landers'booklet, "Marriage — What to Expect,"will prepare you for better or for worse.Send your request to Ann Landers, P.O.Box 11995. Chicago, III. 60*11, enclosingSO cents and n long, stamped, self-addressed envelope.

'Hard of hearing *

means he is 'deaf9YOURHEALTH

BY DR. LESTER L. COLEMAN

Dear Dr. Coleman: I know that my father doesn'thear well. He refuses to admit this. When I say he is•deaf," he says he is just "hard of hearing." We argue

about this a lot because he said he won't do anythingabout this until he's deaf. This strikes me as beingnonsense. Is there any difference between being deafand hard of hearing? - Miss R.J.W.. Texas

Dear Miss W.: There really is no distinction betweenthe two. Some people have used this verbal difference,hut it has no real significance.^Vhen a person cannot hear distinctly over thetelephone, she or he must be considered as having somedegree of deafness.

When a person cannot listen to radio and televisonprograms with an intensity that is not bothersome toother people, he or she must be considered to have somedegree of deafness.

When a person cannot carry on normal socialconversations, or when speech is not completelyintelligible, they must be considered as having somedegree of deafness.

Once this simple concept is understood, the deaf, thehard of hearing, the deafened, or any euphemisticvariation thereof, will be more inclined to confront theProblem and to do something about it.

"ar too often, a person with a hearing loss will try.

as does your father, to exploit the distinction betweendeafness and hard of hearing in order to deny that asignificant hearing problem exists.

How often have we all heard someone say, "I canhear everyone except those who mumble? I can hearsound fine, but I don't understand the words, or, myhearing is fine, you just don't talk loud enough?"

These are all verbal techniques by which the deafevade coming face-to-face with the reality of the factthat they can't hear and something must be done aboutit.

The psychological impact of deafness can sometimesbe devastating. Unfortunately, many people becomeirritated when they have to speak louder to the deaf fora long, sustained period of time. It is tiring andexhausting and often there is a tendency to give up onsuch communication. This serves to further accentuatethe painful isolation of the deaf.

We must be patient with those who cannot hear. Onlythen can we be persuasive in getting them to seekhearing aid amplification. Unfortunately, all patientscannot be benefited by hearing aids. Yet many can beliberated from the despair of not hearing.

Deafness is a funless, lonely, isolated world. Unlessthose who surround them fully understand themagnitude of silence they cannot play that importantrole in liberating the deaf from the dark recesses ofsilence.

Medical center to conduct open houseLONG BRANCH - Monmouth

Medical Center will conduct an openhouse Saturday to mark the dedi-cation of its new linear accelerator,an acquisition which places thehospital among the few in NewJersey capable of treating cancerand deep-seated tumors with high-energy radiation.

Tours will be conducted andrefreshments offered from 11 a.m.to 4 p.m. for those who come to viewthe device in the newly-expandedDepartment of Therapeutic Radio-logy in the Winone J. Eisner

Pavilion on Dunbar Avenue.Scheduled to speak in a brief

ceremony at 11 a.m. are Robert C.Stanley, Jr., chairman of the hospi-tal Board of Trustees; MMC presi-dent James Heimarck, and Dr.Erwin Tepper, director of thera-peutic patnisjftgy.

Tho-uepaftment has served as aregional resource since 1969, treat-ing thousands of patients from theMonmouth-Ocean county area overthe years.

According to Tepper, approx-imately 7 out of 10 patients coming

to the medical center for cancertreatment will benefit from the ISmillion electron volt photon beamsproduced by the new linear ac-celerator.

"These beams are capable ofdelivering dosage more preciselyinto deep-seated tisssue, " he said,"with much less radiation to sur-rounding normal tissue."

He added that the new unit is alsoequipped with electron beams rang-ing from 6 to 20 million electronvolts.

Don't expect grandsonto be dad's carboncopy

BY DR. JOAN D. ABRAMS

Dear Dr. Abrams:I have a wonderful grandson, my son's boy, who

is in seventh grade. He does not seem to be interestedin academic work. His only interest in school it lunchand gym. I cannot understand this because his fatherwas a wonderful student while "Keith" just gets by.

Grandma M.4

Dear Grandma:Do not expect your grandson to be a carbon copy

of his father. Each child is an individual withpersonal strengths and weaknesses. I'm sure thatthere are things your grandson can do that his fatherwas not able to do at his age.

Try to remember that not everyone is cut out tobe a Scholar It is possible that your grandson haspotential in other areas. From what you say, I gatherhe is a very sociable person. That is an importantskill A recent study of employers revealed that mostof them were more interested in the ability ofpotential employees to get along with other peoplethan they were in their specific skills, which theemployers felt could be learned on the job. It soundsas if your grandson would be a good employmentcandidate under such circumstances.

Furthermore, your grandson may be more of aright-brained person. His skills and interests may liein areas that are dominated by the right hemisphereof the brain rather than the left.

Suggest to your son that he go to your grandson'sschool and ask if they can do a profile of the boy thatwould indicate which hemisphere of his brain isdominant and in what activities he excels becauseof this. Then concentrate on his strengths. It is onlyin recent years that we have recognized that thehemispheres of the brain play such an important partin determining a person's way of relating to theworld.

Many people who have not been good in academicshave become very successful and happy people byfollowig their natural interests. Keith can lead a. ^ M | ntvMliMxHuA lifp if hp ivnrkft to his

sirengim. Conversely, if sf'.er ample opportunity tosucceed you try to force him into a mold for whichhe is not suited, he could become a thwartedindividual. Give your grandson a chance to behimself.

Dear Or. Abrams:Two yean ago I failed firtl-year algebra.' Since

SCHOOL

AND CHILD

then I have learned a great deal and I nowunderstand the subject very well. However, mymother grills me constantly about how I am doingIn math. She stands over me when I do my homeworkand insists on calling the teacher every couple ofweeks io see If I'm really telling her the truth whenI say everything is OK. This is very embarrassingto me. Furthermore, her nervousness is beginning toget to me and to make me nervous. How can I gelher to lay off?

Jim

Dear Jim:Sometimes when parents mean very well they

pressure their children to the point where the childturns off. Such pressure often becomes a way ofasserting authority that goes beyond the subject. Sitdown with your mother and ask her to listen to you.Tell her of your feelings and remind her that sincethat one instance when you failed you have beendoing well in math.

Promise her that if you are having trouble you willlet her know. If necessary, write out a contract thatboth of you sign whereby she lets you work on yourown and you promise that if there are problems youwill make her aware of them. Remind her that

• - _ j _ „ „ „ „ ! NM(yj»MUiiUty as withevery other skill, mast be practiced in order to belearned. .If she lets you handle your own schoolaffairs, you will be learning independence andlearning how to be responsible for yourself. Remindher that this is just as important a lesson as learningmathematics.

Since we already know that she is interested inyou, my guess is that she will give this plan a try.

Tips on thoughtfulnessin sending get-well cards

GOOD TIP FOR GET-WELL CARDSDear Heloise:For some time I have wanted to write to ask your

readers who are sending wishes to friends and relativesin the hospital to follow these tips:

Please put your name and return address in full onthe envelope.

Put the patient's full name on the envelope. If she isa married woman, use her first name, not herhusband's.

fry to have the correct name and address of thefacility.

Include the correct zip code or the mail will bedelayed.

I feel badly a dozen times each week while sortingpatient mail because it can't be delivered-beeause I amunable to properly identify the addressee. In some casesthere is no name, only a room number. That room mayhave been occupied by several different patients overthe course of a few days.

So, if you are going to send a card to a relative orfriend in the hospital, make sure that it has all thepertinent information or your thoughtfulness will neverbe recognized. — Ruth S. Grual

I couldn't agree more! If you think the person mightbe going home, put their home address instead of yoursfor the return address and they will get your card. —Heloise

DEFROSTING FREEZERSDear Heloise: I need a super hint for preventing frost

buildup in my freezer-refrigerator. It seems I mustdefrost it once or twice a month and the job isn'tpleasant!

I vaguely remember hearing someone say that yousuggested using shortening on the inside of the freezerwalls to prevent ice buildup. Does this work? — PamBeck

Spraying the inside of the freezer walls with a non-slick vegetable spray may not prevent ice build-up, butit sure simplifies the defrosting job. The ice falls offthe tides much easier. — Heloise

BATHTUB MATSDear Heloise: I'm nearly 80 years of age. When on

a trip recently, I could only take a sponge bath as notub mat was provided in the hotel.

Upon returning home, I purchased an extra one andnow keep it in the trunk of my car to use when traveling.

This idea might be helpful to others and prevent therisk of falling in the tub. — A Reader

Ready—(Continued from Page ID)

the years before the revolution itwas a "crime to be young." Onemother, whose children were killedfighting against Somoza, relatedstories of random killings andmissing children known to be killedbut whose bodies were never found,or those who were killed and left inthe street as an example. Otherswere dismembered and paradedabout the street on a stake, Readyrelated.

"These people put themselves onthe line for many years, riskingtheir lives and their families be-cause living under Somoza wasabsolutely intolerable," she re-ported.

"They had no hope that it wouldget better and so they made a choiceand that choice was to support theFSLN."

Through her many talks with localpeople Ready concluded that manyof the problems in this troubledcountry are "problems of under-development."

A visit to a growing farm cooper-ative was among Ready's moremoving experiences. Members ofthe cooperative, who had worked onthe farm under deplorable con-ditions when it was privately owned,had to deal with not only military

HINTSFROMHELOISE

DOCTOR'S OFFICEDear Heloise: Waiting in a doctor's office can be

trying when little ones are impatient. I have madeflashcards to keep mine occupied.

I put the colors, numbers, shapes, and letters on thecards. Not only are my children learning, but it makestime go by a lot faster for everyone. — Tina

PRE-MADE SANDWICHESDear Heloise: I have a hint that has worked so well

for me, I thought I'd pass it along.I never objected to housework but hated making up

lunch, so my husband makes his own sandwiches aheadof time in the following way:

At one time, he makes enough sandwiches for onewhole week. He freezes them, then each morning takesout one to take to work.

He says it is as fresh as if it were made the sameday. Why I never thought of this before I'll never know.- Kathrvn'Braak ' J

Natck, bold the lettuce and tomato? - Heloite', 2

FRUrrlUICESDear Heloise: A great way to squeeze juice from fruit

is to cut the fruit in half and wrap the cut side withgauze.

The juice will flow through while the gauze keeps theseeds from falling through. — Cheryl S.

If you haven't seen your favorite hint in this column,tend It to Heloite, P.O. Box 32000, San Antonio, Texas78216. She can't answer your letter personally but willuse the best hints you send her in an upcoming column.

problems — such as the murder oftwo of the cooperative's membersby contra attacks in the last year —but economic problems as well.

Two of the cooperative's threetractors were inoperative becauseof their inability to obtain spareparts.

"In both of these problems, ourgovernment has a hand," Readysaid. "Nicaragua's problem withforeign exchange is devastatingtheir economy," she observed.America's efforts to cut off tra-ditional sources of internationalfunding are believed to be respon-sible for many of Nicaaguas econ-omic problems. "The shortages andabsence of products and materialshas made an already impoverishedpeople do without more," Readysaid.

Shortly after the group of Ameri-cans arrived in Esteli, several localpeople were killed in a contraambush to the north, one the next-door neighbor of an Americanstudent's temporary home in Eseli.

"The most recent strategy of thecontras," Ready explained, "hasbeen to attack people who arecarrying out projects of the govern-ment — health workers, teachers,agrarian reform technicians andproduction workers. These people

were going to cut coffee when theywere attacked and murdered'.Brutally murdered, I should add;three were decapitated."

"These kinds of attacks by peopletrained, equipped and supported bythe United States are easier toassign blame to than the economicsabotage," she said.

In spite of problems communicat-ing with her "family" and othersbecause of her imperfect commandof Spanish, Ready said, "It is clearthat they've found hope where noneexisted and ways to act as anIntegral and valued part of theircommunity and government ratherthan having to react to its terror."

This is not to say that "everythingis wonderful here," Ready ex-plained. "These people who foughtthis revolution had no idea how togovern a country when they came topower and they have made In-numerable errors. Still theirachievements are notable and theyhave substantially changed econ-omic relationships which were prac-tically feudal."

Ready, now working at a Bostonprinting collective, has organized orbeen otherwise involved in suchissues as farm workers' rights,labor union organizing, women'srights and food cooperatives.

BIRTHSRIVERVIEW

MEDICAL CENTERRED BANK

Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Coulton(Virginia Gerdon), 26 Melrose Ter-race, Middletown, son, March S.

Mr. and Mrs. James McNamara(Kathleen Finnegan), 19 Barrington

March 5.Mr. and Mrs. William Garrison

(Beverly St. John), 237 Creek Road.,Keansburg, son, March 5.

Mr and Mrs. Theodore Fox (GailKlenman), 186 Manor Parkway,Lincroft. son, March 5.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Meagher(Patricia Carter), 639 Clark Ave ,

Union Beach, son, March 5.Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kelley

(Janice Collins), 11 Tracy Place,Tinton Falls, son, March 5.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Strenk(Pamela Archibald), 30 AmeliaCircle, Little Silver, son, March 6.

Mr. and Mrs. Don Broyles (Sand-ra PlTont t Innnwnvt AIM* RedRank Hanohtpr March 6.

Mr and Mrs. John Miller(Kathleen O'Hara), 273 OutlookBlvd.. Cliffwood Beach, daughter,March 6.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Young(Mary Finnegan), 581 Patten Ave.,Long Branch, daughter, March 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Larkin {Rose-

mary Cannon), 11 Greenway, Haz-let, daughter, March 7.

Mr. and Mrs. John Schubel (Sand-ra McKinney), 6 Bluehills Dr.,Holmdel, daughter, March 7.

Dr. and Mrs. Steven Komar (SallyBlakely), 67 Clay St.. Locust, daugh-ter, March 7.

Mr.and Mm. Paul Gour ITerriLynn D'Amico), 225 Lorlllard Ave.,Union Beach, son, March 8.

Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas (Pa-tricia Konowalow), 434 Hwy. 79,Morganville, son, March 8.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Byrnes(Barbara Wall), 16 Union Hill Lane,Hazlet, daughter. March 8.

SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985 The Sunday Register 3 D

ENGAGEMENTS

JLencyzk-Miknich

LITTLE SILVER - Mr. and Mrs.Berald O. Miknlch, 31 Circle Laneannounce the engagement of theirdaughter, Gail Marie Miknich. to 1stU Joseph Harry Lenrayk, son ofPr. and Mr». Joseph Lenczyk, 178Laird Road, Colts Neck.

• The bride-elect is a graduate ofRed Bank Regional High School,here, and East Stoudsburg Univer-sity in Pennsylvania. She is a juniorhigh school science teacher at St.James Grammar School, Red Bank.Her fiance is a graduate of Middle-town High School South and SetonMall University, South Orange. He is[a U.S. Army executive Officer for•Air Assault Infantry Rifle Co., 101

Gail Miknlchand Joseph Leaciyk

Air BoDivislon, Rapid DeploymentForce.

The wedding is planned for June21. 1986.

1Mack-DykstraSUTTON BAY, Mich. - Mr. and

Mrs. Gene Dykstra, here, announcethe engagement of their daughter,Jacqueline Ann Dykstra, to DavidEdwin Mack, son of Mr. and Mn.Alfred Mack, 1 Uppincott Road,Uttle Silver, N.J.

The bride-elect is a graduate ofMichigan State University, whereshe received a BA degree in market-ing. She is an assistant gift buyer forMariott Hotels. Her fiance is agraduate of Ohio Wesleyan Univer-sity, Delaware, where he received aBA degree in mathematics andeconomics. An assistant controllerfor Allnlt Communication Services.

Mountcastle-McCee

ORIENTAL. N.C. - Mrs. MichaelP. Bivona, here, and Robert EmmetMcGee, New York, announce theengagement of their daughter,Maureen V. McGee, to RichardTurner Mountcastle, son of Mr. andMn. Vernon Bass Mountcastle,Raleigh.

Miss McGee, formerly of Mon-mouth Beach, N.J., is a graduate ofthe Kent School, Connecticut, andattends the Univenity of NorthCarolina, Chapel Hill. She is anactress and has been featured inseveral summentock and dinnertheaters in in this area. Her fianceis a graduate of East CarolinaUnivenity at Greenville. He is the

Sava- KaufmanWINTER PARK, Fla. - Nancy

Kaufman, here, announces the en-gagement of her daughter, ClaudiaJoanne Kaufman, to Richard Ed-ward Sava, here.

Miss Kaufman, also the daughterof the late Jerome Kaufman, is agraduate of Lake Howell HighSchool, Maitland, and ValenciaCommunity College, Orlando. Mr.Sava, son of the late Mr. and Mrs.Frederick Sava, is a graduate ofColonial High School, Orlando, andattended Valencia Community Col-lege.

An Aug. 3 wedding is planned.

Meyer- TerodyHAZLET - Mr. and Mrs. John

Terody, 30 Compton Ave., WestKeansburg, announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Ann MarieTerody, to tan High School, and is asecretary for the Channel Club,MonmouU) Beach. Mr. Meyer, alsoa graduate of Raritan High School,is an assistant service manager forBuhler and Bitter, here.

A Sept. 14 wedding is planned.

Claudia J. Kaufman

Ann Marie Terody

Jacqueline Ann Dykstra

he is also a graduate of New YorkUnivenity.

A May 18 wedding is planned.

Mansfield- heavySHREWSBURY - Mr. and Mrs. California Slate University in Long

David M. Leavy, 89 Birch Drive,announce the engagement of theirdaughter, Andrea Leavy, to L. RexMansfield, son of Verna Mansfield,Attica, Ind , and the late VernonMansfield.

The bride-elect is a graduate ofRed Bank Catholic High School and

Maureen McGee

vice president of Interior Dis-tributors Inc., Raleigh.

A June 22 wedding is planned.

Montclair State College. She attends

Shea-MIDDLETOWN - Edward H.

Acosta, 11 Florence Road, an-nounces the engagement of hisdaughter, Suzanne Marie Acosta, toDennis Shea, son of Mr. and Mn.Daniel Shea Jr., 13 North St.,Rumson.

The bride-elect, daughter also ofthe late Gertrude Acosta, is a

Davis-TINTON FA11S - Mary Clark, 43

Leland Terrace, and Joseph Clark,Omak, Wash., announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Lisa MarieClark, to Harold Davis, son of thelate Mr. and Mn. Harold Davis.

Miss Clark is a graduate of

Beach, and is the geriatric eldermedical program director for LongBeach Community Hospital. Herfiance is a graduate of CaliforniaState University and attended In-diana State University, TerreHaute. He is a plant manager in theindustrial service industry.

A June 8 wedding is planned.

Acostagraduate of Middletown High SchoolNorth and is a secretary with RedBank Title Agency, Inc. Her fianceis a graduate of Rumson-Fair HavenRegional High School and is aconstruction supervisor for StorerCable Communications, Eatontown.

An Aug. 24 wedding is planned.

ClarkMonmouth Regional High Schooland is employed at MonmouthDental Center, Eatontown. Mr.Davis is a graduate of MiddletownHigh School North and is employedby Zoubek Associates Inc., OldBridge.

A Sept. 7 wedding is planned.

Don't delay another day!Become a fabulous NewWfoman today before ourrates 30 up and before thosewinter coats come off! Theswim suit season is just aroundthe corner and now is thetime to-discover how easy itcan be to discover the NewWaman inside you!

We trim and invisorateyour body in aerobic andexercise classes and onfabulous equipment desisnedjust for women-with a pro-gram designed just for you.MHz shower you with elegancein sparkling whirlpools andswimming pools-in saunas-optional sun tanning facilities.\Xfe make fitness fun.

Starting today plan abeautiful summer for a beauti-ful New you.

HKmgc on a couree basis

Shrewsbury/the Market Place/ltoute 35Also AKendale Gnraminson, East Brunswick, Emerson, fwfkJd, OW Bridge, Spnngfitld, NJ,

Great Neck, New City MW»le Hams, NVjnd Center 5quare,MC1966 N«w Wtyi^ajn Inc

Marriage yieldsFuture Shock

When psychologists and thera-pists speculated on the gloomyfuture of marriage, they alwaysfigured it would be a time whencouples stopped saying, "I do."

.That hasn't been the case atall. More couples than ever aresaying, "I do." But they'resaying it often.

The drip-dry wedding dress isa reality. Better or for worse isa comparison of Wife No. 1 andWife No. 2. The symbol of a first Ianniversary is no longer paper .. . it's a milestone.

Fifty percent of marriagestoday will end in divorce. Of thatnumber 60 percent will remarrywithin five yean. About 34 ofthese will go on to marry for athird and even a fourth time.They're called Serial Marriagesand their numberp will make abig difference in society.

If you can stand any' moreFuture Shock, here's what youcan expect.

In the year 2,000, the rulingclass will be lawyers. They willdrive around in big cars, live inmansions, and have kidneysshaped like swimming pools.Many of them will enter politics.One will be elected King.

Some enterpr i s ing en-trepreneur will come out with avideocassette on how to get yourown divorce. It will be choreo-graphed with Prince singing inthe background. It can be rented,or if you're someone who is inand out of the marital state, youmay find it cheaper to buy one.

Open House for parents willhave to be held on three nights toaccommodate double and triplesets. The Parent-Teacher As-sociation will become one of thelargest and richest organizationsin the country on sheer numbersalone. They will eventually buyCBS and Dan Rather will beputty in their hands.

The logistics of so many chil-dren who are offspring of somany unions will have to beresolved by computers. In ad-

ERMABOMBECK

dition to blood tests before amarriage, names will have to berun through a computer to makesure you are not marrying some-one to whom you are relatedthrough divorce.

A more efficient way for"singles" to meet new mates willhave to be devised. In California,at present, several dating ser-vices are being used. One is aTail Dater that has a bumpersticker indicating you'reinterested, and another is called"The Freeway Singles Club,"where you flash a numbereddecal in the car window if youlike what you see at the trafficlight. In the future, look for"drive-ins" where you honk ifyou love pot roast and blondes.

Serial marriages will bringabout a lot of social changes inthe year 2,000. Greeting cardswill read, "Merry Christmas toDad and Whatshername " TheIRS will have group rates. And achild of divorce will have enoughAdvantage Hours in the air toown the airplane.

So how will you know if you'reone of the 50 percent who canmake a lifetime commitment?

Easy. Before the two of youtake your vows, (1) pick out acarpet together, (b) hang apicture, (c) play Monopoly.

It could save you from becom-ing a statistic.

SPRING CAI CDECORATING O A L t

SAVE UP TO 60% ONCOMFORTER SETS

PLUMP WARM COMFORTERS WITH MATCHINGSHAMS AND MATCHING OR COORDINATING DUST

RUFFLES... MANY PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM

TWIN, FULL, QUEEN, DUAL

3999Reg. 60 to 100 ALL SIZES

SAVE 50% to 70%ON CAMEO • RUFFLEDSHIRBACK • CURTAINS

-100% POLYESTER STYLESILHOUETTE..."PULL THE TAPE

FOR A PERFECT DRAPE"

7 WIDTHS FROM 96" to 460"5 LENGTHS FROM 54" to 90"

6 COLORS. WHITE, OYSTER,BLUE, ROSE. PEACH. COCOA

(Not All Colon In all Sizes)

999 „ 4999Reg. 20 to 130

t theHome FurnishingsFactory Outlet **<•

DISCOUNTS • UOSPtEAK • MAKS • OMTAINS

Shrewsbury PUza-Kt. 35 & Shrewsbury Ave.YOU WILL FIND OUR ENTRANCE AND PARKINGAROUND THE BACK OF THE SHOPPING CEN-TER WHERE THE TRUCKS ENTER.

542-8329 Non-Sat. 10 to 5:30

4D The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965

DonH hesitate to write the manufacturersBY MARTIN SLOANE

Sometimes a product gives you l eu than youexpected, and sometimes it gives you more. If the resultleave* you unhappy, it makes good sense to let themanufacturer know about It.

Barbee Knecht of South Sioux City. Neb., purchasedthree boxes of Tender Vittles cat food. When she openedthe first pouch, she was surprised to find It was empty.

"I didn't think much about it and just threw the emptypacket away," she says. "But when I found an emptypouch In the second box, I decided to write to thecompany. I included the empty pouch and wrote downthe production number that was on the outside of thebox '

•Two weeks later, Barbee received a letter from

Eileen Nixon at Ralston Purina s Office of ConsumerAffairs. "There could have been a mechanical problemwith our filling equipment," wrote Ms. Nixon. "We dohave check-weight equipment that will remove short-weight cartons from the line. However, a short-filled orempty pouch may go undetected if the other pouchesin the carton had sufficient contents to meet the totalcarton weight. The production code number youprovided will aid our Quality Assurance Department indetermiring where and when the product was manufac-tured and viii aiiow us to bring this to the attention ofthe manufacvinng plant."

Barbee says that included with the letter were twofree-product coupons good on any size Tender Vittles."Needless to say, I am very Happy with the RalstonPurina Company and its concern for customers," shesays.

Would you write to the company if you found a packetof pain reliever was one tablet short?

That is the problem that confronted Judy Learned ofBoyerstown, Pa. "Considering the cost of theCoTylenol. I decided to write to McNeil."

Two weeks later, Judy received a letter from A.C.Barret of McNeil's Office of Consumer Affairs. Theletter said they were at a loss to explain how thissituation occurred. But they did have the answer tokeeping Judy a loyal customer. "Included was a $4coupon for any one of their products. I'll- stand byTylenol products any day!" says Judy.

SUPERMARKETSHOPPER

There are occasions when a product will give you alittle too much of a good thing.

Mrs. J.P. Abies of Sunnyside, Wash., says she waseating a sandwich she had made using Snyder's breadwhen she noticed something unusual. "The bread washoney bran crushed wheat, and there seemed to be morethan the normal amount of fiber. As I chewed andchewed, I decided to write and let the bread bakers atSnyder's know about it.

• I tried to keep the letter pleasant," says Mrs. Ablet."In fact, I told them I got more than I had expectedfrom their bread. Just a few days later I received abeautiful letter from the company, and it explained bowtheir honey bran crushed wheat got that crunchytexture. They also sent me five coupons for free loavesof bread. I was surprised and very thrilled."

How have the manufacturers treated your problems?I'm interested in hearing about it. Please write to mein care of this newspaper.

CUP I f FILE REFUNDS(Week of March 17)

Health Products (File No. 11-A)

Clip out this file and keep it with similar cash-offcoupons — beverage refund offers with beveragecoupons, for example. Start collecting the needed proofsof purchase while looking for the required forms at thesupermarket, in newspapers and magazines, and whentrading with friends. Offers may not be available in allareas of the country. Allow 10 weeks to receive eachrefund.

The following refund offers are worth HI 06 Thisweek's refund often have a total value of $S0.M.

This offer does not require a refund form:Special MAALOX Coupon Offer, William H. Rorer

Inc., Box NB-170, El Paso, TX 7W77. Receive two 50-cent coupons good on the 12-ounce or M-ounce MaaloxSuspension, Maalox No. 1100-size Tablets or Maalox No.2 SO- or 100-aixe Tablets Send the NDC number from

the front of a trial-size bottle of Maakm, plus theregister tape with the purchase price circled. ExpiresJune 1, 1MB.

These offers require refund forms:B-D Micro-Fine III Offer. Receive up to $275 in

refunds, and a Zxtnt donation will be sent to theAmerican Diabetes Association. Send the requiredrefund farm and the Lo-Dose or Plastipak name andorder number cut from the tuck-in flap of the syringebox top from the following: 100 B-D Lo-Dose one-halfcc insulin syringes No. M61 (U-100), or 100 B-DPlastipak 1 cc insulin syringes No. M10 (U-100), or No.MIS (IMO) with the Micro-Fine III needle, or 100 B-DPlastipak 1 cc insulin syringes No. Mil with the Micro-Fine needle for a $2 refund; or send the name and ordernumber cut from the tuck-in flap of the Alcohol Swabsbox top for a 75-cent refund. Include the register tapewith the purchase price(s) circled. Expires June 30,MB.

CORT1ZONE-S $1 Refund Offer. Send the requiredrefund form and the entire outer carton from

Programvolunteersare needed

"Caring and support are thespecial ingredients of the ParentAide volunteer program," accrdingto Mary Ellen Hemenway, volunteercoordinator for the program de-veloped by the Volunteers In PublicService at the Monmouth Count*Board of Social Services.

The goal of the Parent Aideprogram is to build better familylife by relieving pressures that couldcause child abuse and neglect.

Volunteers teach parenting andhomemakinf skills or simply serveas a trusting and caring friend whocan be counted on to willingly listenand give sympathetic support intrying times.

Many requests for Parent Aidescome from single-parent householdswhere isolation, frustration andoften despair are common. Somemothers were themselves victims ofabase and need to learn better waysof coping.

Volunteers help mothers locateand utilize comunity resources.Parent Aides are asked for acommitment of one year, generallyspending four hours weekly with therelationship either days, evenings orweekends.

Some husbands and wives arevolunteering as partners and thiscouple arrangement is working well,according to Hemenway, "becauseit adds a new dimension — it isfamily-oriented problem solving."

LMHTED TIME! How rtrntji April IZtt

Complete coverage of entire day. including:1 c 8K 10 COLOR PHOTOS-, -1 ° for BricW and Groom g fm ^ % %

24 4«5COLOR PHOTOS ^ y y .*•** tor Parent* • • • • • ^ ^•^ tnm

1 1 v 1 A DELUXE COLOR PORTRAITI I A I * • for framing

a c x j ^ dif you reserve at once!

LORSTAN THOMASSTUDIOS

Mini-Mall, Lower Level80 Broad Street, Red Bank 747-5540

SOVtUSHOHE

$1000

SHIRTS, SLACKSSKIRTS, SWEATERS

SHOES ETC.

119 E. River RoadRumson

t^^9w Tf^**> l*4^^m f"

Aberdeen 566-8221Avon 988-4122Celts Neck 780-1867

Englishtown 1-800-532-0016Freehold 431-3680Holmdel 946-8542Keansburg 747-7685Lakewood 528-7703Lincroft 946-8542Little Silver 842-6060Manasquan 528-9174Marlboro 721-4082Matawan 842-0775

CLASSES STARTMARCH 25

CALL NOWII

Middletown 291-8435Ouanpwt 222-0518Pi. Pleasant 458-2061Red Bank 495-9248Rumson 291-8435Shark River Hills 223-6001Spring Lake 52*6367Tom River 364-8742Wall 5284367West Long Branch 870440'

TOLL FREE 1-800-532-0016

LOSE 30 POUNDSOR MORE BY SPRING

Naturally!

•SSSs-

Natural UfeStyte" proudly announces the QrandOpening of cHntcs throughout the Mew York. Mew Jerseymetropolitan area!

• Your weight loss of 3-7 lbs. per week Is assured—naturally!• You'll receive individual guidance ft support from our

Professional UfeStyle Advisors—naturally!• Your permanent weight loss Is guaranteed with our Natural

LifeTime Program—Naturally!• no Drugs • Mo Expensive Prepackaged roods • Mo Exercise •• Mo Crash Diets • Mo Hunger—You Lose Weight—naturally!

Call your nearest Natural Lifestyle" Center for a FreeConsultation plus our Grand Opening Special!

50% OFF GRAND OPENING SPECIALAMERICAN natural UfeStyte" will make a donation to the'J5KSS American Cancer Society for each new client whos o a i T Y enrolls before March 30.1963.

Marlboro536-8100

Ntddletown671-8622

Oakhurat531-7600

Toms River929-2700

Cortixone-6 1-ounce-slze creme, plus the register tapewith the purchase price circled. Expires June 30, IMS

MICATIN Refund Offer. Receive SO cents in cash andtwo SO-cant coupons good toward future purchases ofMlcatin Antlfungal for Athlete's Foot. Send the requiredrefund form and one of the following proofs of purchase:the Universal Product Code symbol from the outercarton of Mlcatin cream, or a piece of paper on whichyou copy the Universal Product Code number from theback of your Micatin powder bottle, spray liquid orspray powder can, plus your cash-register Up* with thepurchase price circled Expires May 1, IMS.

PREPARATION H Booklet Offer. Receive the Healthand Beauty Aids Coupon Booklet worth $11.80. Send therequired refund form and two entire outer cartons ofany combination of the 1-ounce or 2-ounce sice ofPreparation H Ointment, or the Its, 24s or Us size ofPreparation H Suppositories. Expires June a , IMS.

SUDAFED Free FeverScan Offer. Receive aFeverScan Forehead Thermometer plus two IS-centcoupons good on Sudafed or Empirin Aspirin. Send therequired refund form and the Universal Product Codesymbol from a package of any Sudafed product and SOcents for postage and handling. Expires May 31, IMS.

TELDRIN $1 Cash Rebate. Send the required refundform and the Universal Product Code symbol from anysize package of Teldrin or Teldrin Multi-Symptom.Expires June 30, IMS.

TOOAV thm•MUCH S M I ALL STORES SELL-A-BRATE THE

All New Craft Dept. in New City

WHITE EYELET

2.88.DOUBLE KNITS

Mr wfcm MaMm lamtfti.

1.OO.

UKftBKS!?S.MVMU

2.97

1.57

et** EmTiia wwi

1.88.T-SHIRT KNITS

t o WM., Cotton.WKy—fr,

1.77

FREE CRAFT DEMO!•vwv r im. • Thurv at 10 Ml awrpt

MAKM HMJi flnd MMKH IdfltMAKE VOUR OWN lASTtJtBUNNYl

Learn how to make your ownlittle Easter Bunny qutcfc & easy

MR «, MRS PETER RABBfTIFREE COFFEE SERVED TOO!CRAFT SPECIALS!

8x10 REC. 7.99 Sato 4 . 7 *11x14 .. REC. 11.99 Sato 6.9918X24 REC. 16.99 Sale 9 . 9 924x36 .REC. 2«.99 Sale 1 4 . 9 920x28 REC. 18.99 Safe 11.39

50% off25% offAlBeautysJ*

atg. vm PH. 4 «K*s m pack, an* 4

R. coupon gooatnruMMxn 23

25% Offwwu wicxerBaskets5 for

| t coupongoodOiruMRK 11

TiffanyR CURTAIN

24-50-36 Reg. $5.77

m a n1.09

5.59summer

cotton chintz

2 for 5.00Mate! ilno Nrtpttins

25% SSKIRSCH

Drapery Hardware

>imPBTahoe t Patso

1 . 7 7 BATH-REC~ 5.97Hand Towel. Reg. $3.69 1.77wathdotn, Reg. $2.97 %.fj

ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAYS, Mon thru Fri 10-9:00 Sat 10-6

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday Register 5 l »

Lemon has zest and zing for health and tasteBY BARBARA GIBBONS

Everybody knows about "lemon aid." reecuer of theflavor in foodi for more healthful eating. The testy tingof lemon can more than make up for the lack of excessfat. Hit and calories. Lemon juice has anotherimportant contribution to the foods that fight fat: eye

The ascorbic acid in lemon Juice — vitamin C — IsMother Nature's color keeper. What good luck! And itworks Its ipeclal magic on the very foods dear to theheart of dieters, fruits and veggies, even seafood.Here's some useful information you probably didn'tcatch hi chemistry class:

The red compound in fruits and vegetables Inanthocjranin. The rosy hue in red cabbage, beets, blngcherries, blueberries, black raspberries and boysenber-ries Is enhanced by lemon juice.

Some fruits and vegetables quickly turn brown whenpared or cut: apples, pears, bananas and potatoes, forexample. The cause is oxygen In the air reaching theexposed surfaces. The ascorbic acid in lemon Juice willprevent this from happening.

Lemon Juice added to cooking or poaching water canhelp certain white foods keep their whiteness bycounteracting alkaline ingredients that promote yellow-ing. Add lemon juice to fish, cauliflower, rice andpotatoes.

Does lemon juice help the color of every fruit andveggie?

Lemon juice doesn't change the color of carrots orother carotenoid-containing orange-colored veggies likesweet potatoes or rutabagas

And the acid in lemon can destroy the fresh greencolor of cooked vegetables by displacing the magnesiumin chlorophyll, causing it to form pheophytin, the murkyolive-green pigment that's typical of canned orovercooked vegetables. So, to keep the bright greencolor of veggies from turning yukky olive drab, don'tadd lemon juice to the cooking water (or any other acidIngredient, wine or vinegar, for example). But there'sone green food that lemon can help. Lemon juice added

THE SLIMGOURMET

to fresh raw avocado wUl help it keep its green colorby protecting it from the browning caused by oxygenIn the air.

Here's one more point about lemon juice and foodcolor: to prevent the discoloration of lemon-treatedfoods, avoid putting the food in contact with aluminumfoil or uncoated aluminum cookware or storagecontainers.

Some ideas:

LIGHT AVOCADO SALAD DRESSING - Combineequal parts mashed fresh avocado, lemon juice, low-calorie mayonnaise and water in blender or foodprocessor. Season to taste with garlic, salt, pepper,herbs. Store some in the refrigerator, another bottle Inthe freezer for use later. It won't change color.

LEMON CHICKEN STIR-FRY - In a non-stickskillet with little or no fat, stir-fry cubes of raw chickenbreast, diced red peppers, sliced onion, sliced yellow(summer) squash with 4 tablespoons each of water andlemon Juice. Add thinly sliced green zucchini at the verylast minute and serve immediately to keep the lemonjuice from affecting the green color of the zucchini.

FRESH APPLE SAUCE - In blender or foodprocessor, puree raw fresh apple slices with lemon

Juice, 1 tablespoon per apple, and sweeten to taste, ifdesired, with sugar substitute.

SWEET AND SOUR RED CABBAGE - Shred redcabbage and cook, with 1 sliced red onion, in equal partslemon juice and water. When tender-crunchy, removefrom the heat and sweeten to taste, if desired, with alittle honey or sugar substitute.

"YOGURT HELPER" - In blender or foodprocessor, puree very ripe fresh peaches, nectarines orother summer fruit (in season) and combine with lemonjuice, 2 tablespoons per cup of puree. Sweeten to tastewith sugar substitute, if desired. Pack in jars, label andfreeze. Thaw and store in refrigerator, spoon and swirlinto plain unsweetened low-fat yogurt for a sugar-freesnack or lunch.

BAKED BANANAS — Peel firm bananas and cut inhalf lengthwise. Spread lightly with diet margarine andlemon Juice, sprinkle with coconut and bake 10 to 15

minutes at 47S degrees, on a non-stick pan sprayed withcooking spray.

CHEERY CHERRY TOPPING - In season, halve;and pit fresh cherries, chop coarsely. Pack in glass jars. •with 2 tablespoons lemon juice per cupful. Label andfreeze. Thaw and serve on ice milk.

BLUEBERRY SPREAD - In blender or foodprocessor, process fresh or thawed blueberries with thejuice of 1 or 2 lemons per pint. Sweeten to taste, ifdesired, with honey, fructose or sugar substitute. Keeprefrfgerated, and store extras in the freezer. Use inplace of Jam.

Chocolate flan, creamy fondue, fudgy devil's cake,mocha mount and more! Sinfully rich yet calorie light.A brand new Clip's Cook Book collection for chocolatelovers. Send SI plus 25 cents for postage to SLIMGOURMET, la care of The Register. P.O. Box Mitt,Cleveland, Ohio 44101. Be l ire to ask for Recipes forChocolate Lovers.

Seeing Eyes for blindREADING LESSON - Ashlf'Guida, 13, reads a school bookwith the Seeing Eye, Inc., Ger-man shepherd, Xeric, she israising in her Chatham home.When Xeric is about a year old,he will be returned to the SeeingEye for training leading to hiswork as a guide dog for a blind,person.

'

Sheraton Showplace presents

AN ELEGANURIDAL FAIROn SundayMarch 242-5 PMTheSheraton-Hatletsad Joan Duggan,Expert BridalConsultant ofMonmoulh and OceanCounties, Join togetherto present BrldalExpo'•).The Expo fives you achance to have all thethings you need for that"special day" in one place.

rV Professional services include:I Shtrttofi Showpticv1 DoHIK TuMdOi7 PartyCorntr

' NorrondltMwyRainbow SocMyBnndMlO nHltyUnl-«lebalUlnbo»TnMl

1 MkoHamtnotitOtvotlon

BrMalWocMnlWVlCW Fkxllt

VldaoGnniMryKayCoamtlctHihaf JMtfcjr aOu^rat Photopjraphara•toga McKtma InvttaHontLI.M.O.

Includtd It tnMrttlnmant. ratrtthmtnts, dow print,mmon atww and mucn mon. No admission cftarga.fv rattreaUona, call 2*4-2400, at* Iw Bangui (Met.

eritonl

Marble & Ceramic

10% TO 60%OFF OUR ENTIRE STOCKCHOOSE FROM: VILLEROY ft BOCH, ROYAL MADRID, CHEDES,

ANTICHE, ELIOS, RICCHETTI, AND MANY MORE!!

We must clear our warehouse to make room for our expansion.Come in today and SAVE BIG. Every "IN STOCK" marble andceramic tile is on sale. Quantities are limited.

ol tileOP cERomic POD maum ? m*$

OMN: «H»«a> Mmwil a • « •• •.«•.; THwMaii M

AssociatedPress photos

ON CALL — Eleanor Campbell,an apprentic insturctor with theSeeing Eye in Morris Township,calls for the dogs she is trainingto be guide dogs for the blind. Ittakes about 12 weeks of dailytraining to prepare the canines towork with blind persons.

PRACTICE RUN — German shepherd Oueenie leads Cynthia Brownon a practice run through downtown Morristown during the finaltraining in the Seeing Eye instruction program. Following and keepingwatch is instructor Drew Gibbon. i

HARD WORKOUTS.HARD BODIES.

NAUTILUS

AEROBICS

TAEKWONDOLIFECYCLES

sauna • whirlpool

MATAWANRT. 34, NICHOLS PLAZA

SM-6123

MIDDLETOWNRT. 35, PATHMARK CTR.

671-3223

EDISONOAKWOOD PLAZA

494-5700

6D The Sunday Register SUNDAY. MARCH 17, 1965

COMMUNITYCALENDAR

MONDAYMATAWAN - AlMoa, ACOA.

mettlap will be ipo—ortd everyMonday Iran I to r » p.m. atTrtiity Episcopal Church, Ryers

MATAWAN - Than will be aprogram meeting and ttndwichland) at l l JO a.m. *t ft* dibboaseof Ike Womcni Club of Matawaii.1M Jackam Si. Marilyn Pckar.chairmaa of Ibe drama department.«lUgivcadefnao*tratwnoi Ukrai-nian E n Decoratlnj."

COLTS NECK - The Colts NeckLibrary, HtMn Mill Road, will

t a crota tUtch demomtraUoDby Mary Schenooe, owner of theCoin Neck Stitchery. at 10 a.m.Dora* the clan, participants willdo a piece of counted enw stitchR«fiatratton is required by contact-inc the library.

COLTS NECK - Regittration forspring pre-scbool story times beginstoday at the Colts Neck Library,Heyers Mill Road.

MARLBORO - Kindergartenrejutration will be conducud at theCentral School, Route 7», from 9 to10:10 am Children must becomefive years of age on or before Dec.SI. IMS. The requirements foradmission Include a birthcertificate, an up-to-date immumn-ttoai record, and proof of residence.M r further information, contact theMarlboro Township Board of Educa-tion.

ThM ato annual01X*School DM-

BirrU MSOLVID.IK«I i n . Ouoo-t loi IHoMS-1SM SonooTvoor« haraky

M ) M MM « <•M ) Mappropriation 10 bo votad on Kiobatatal ma Annual ScnoolBac-

m on N Hc u m NT EXMNSE - to bo

OMod Dy mo toe* Toa lany.7S0.5MO0

March 11. IMS ^ ^Barbara D. FhMfBm smoi

GRIMM BIRTHDAY — It is a happy, albeit Grimm, birthday party. Kindergarten through grade five children celebrate the199th birthday of Wilhelm Grimm, one of the greatest fairy tale masters, at the Hazlet Township Library. Nancy Tomson, left,program director, serves a birthday treat to Kelly Bendixsen, 5'/2, and Erin Kelly. 6, both of Hazlet.

BIRTHSRIVERVIEW MEDICAL

CENTERRed Bank

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Samras iNikkiSleethi. (9 Kemp ave., Fair Haven,son, March 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McGcwan(Pamela Higby). 46 Village GreenWay, Hazlet, son. March 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Middlecoop(Jean Gallagher). 7 Northside St..Keansburg, son, March 9.

Mr and Mrs. Ronald Werner(Joanne Ciccone), 3 Avenue C, PortMonmouth, son, March 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lyttle(Eileen Hand), 4 Deercrest Drive,Holmdel, daughter, March 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Martin Edelman(Gay), 133 Statesir Place, RedBank, son, March 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Rosato(Jody Rothman). 34 Murray St.,Freehold, son, March 10

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Buckley(Jean Fiedler), 141 Sand SpringDrive, Eatontown, daughter, March10.

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Greeley(Mary Walker), 91 Stillwell Road.Leonardo, daughter, March 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tulley(Colleen Browne), 136 Village GreenWay. Hazlet, son, March 11

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Netla (DebraThorpe), 54 Morningside Ave.,Keansburg, son, March 11.

MONMOUTH MEDICALCENTER

Long BranchMr. and Mrs. Richard Smith

(Debra Miskulin), 816 Downing StParlin, daughter, March 6

Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Jeter(Ernestine Stevenson), 2103Rutherford Ave., Neptune, son,March 6.

Mr. and Mrs. John Dotterweich(Cheryl Daneen Schaefar), 407'iEuclid Ave., Loch Arbour, sonMarch 6.

Mr and Mrs. Kenneth King I VitaMichna), 103 Hiawatha Ave , Ocean-port, daughter, March 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy McCoy(Sandra Martin). 1701 East St.South Belmar, son. March 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald DeSantisiIda Parnnoi, 1320 Franklin Ave..Ocean, son, March 8.

Mr. and Mrs. James Smith(Margaret Norris), 79 Wesley Ave.,Atlantic Highlands,son. March 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wood(Roxanne DeCorso), 248 19th Ave..Brick, daughter, March 8.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Puterman(Sharon Carducci), 103 WestonPlace, Eatontown, son, March 8.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bonilla((Catherine Wojta), 28 C HickoryAve., Farmingdale, son, March 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rindner(Susan Bloir), 513 6th Ave., AsburyPark, daughter, March 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Fray(Paulette Bennett), 920 MonroeAve., Asbury Park, daughter, March

Mr. and Mrs. James M. Coles Jr.,(Diane S. Smenthowskil, 1382 OceanAve., Sea Bright, son, March 9.

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Ciaverelli(Nancy Perlsweig), 415 RooseveltAve., Oakhurst, daughter, March 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lamano(Laurene O'Shea), 142 Highway 36West Keansburg, son, March 10

Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Sklodowsky(Corrine Lenard), 121 Maple Ave.,Keansburg, son, March 10.

Yvonne Skinner and MichealLangan.. P.O. Box 112. Rplmar ™.

Lisa Porcello and F miij DiCapua,13 Forest Ave., Keansburg, sonMarch 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Berube(Nancy Lee), Farmingdale, son,March 11.

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Dobies(Debra Vukcevich), 132 Shark RiverRoad, Tinton Falls, daughter.March 11.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Knipfing

(Lucy Lennox), 249 Heyers MillRoad. Colts Neck, daughter. March11.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Orio (Bever-ly Walker). 4 Woodland Drive. LongValley, daughter, March 11.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McAleer(Barbara Chemei. 90 Main St., Apt.E8, Matawan, daughter, March 12.

Mr. and Mrs. James Lenzo (De-nise Dispotol, 40 Park Road, Mon-mouth Beach, son, March 12.

Mr. and Mrs. D'EspositoI Kathleen Kennedy), 210 W MorganAve.. Deal, daughter, March 8.

Mr. and Mrs. Armando Orsini(Elizabeth Kenny), 5 Garden Road,Little Silver, daughter, March 12.

Sharon Parker and Steven John-son, 1332 10th Ave., Neptune, son,March 6.

Janice Shipley and Steven Jones,551 2nd Ave. Apt.#9, Long Branch,son, March 11.

DIGGING IN — Or. Carl Gardiner, Shrewsbry Borough Council president,is treated to a cream-filled doughnut during ceremonies celebrating theremodelling of the Shrewsbury Dunkin' Donuts shop. Ready to servecustomers with dozens of doughnuts are, left to right, Terry Soley, companyoperations director; Robert Wiggins, district manager, and Alexta Whitehead,store manager.

GUARANTIEDHOME DELIVERY

Larry Newman, Circulation Director ofThe Register, personally guaranteesyour home delivery subscription.

We want you to enjoy the convenienceof having The Register delivered toyour home. If you are having a problemwith your delivery service, or if yourpaper doesn't arrive, simply give us acall.

542-3830

If you don't have The Daily Register by5 p.m., call us by 6 p.m. If The SundayRegister hasn't arrived by 8:30 a m ,call us by 10 a.m. Well have your paperto you that same day. Guaranteed.We believe in service, and we want youto have confidence in us. Problem solv-ing is only a phone call away!

583-5210

sxisiT,M • • <T Fnohouoi. and

K IT niRTKPJ MSOCVIO.mo Soomvy a Mra>« « -H 10 ROM M M OIM

MdMM M U N Wgh-orough Ma».. MUland

MM 1

U N WgOmoo. Borough Ma».mhnk. MUland

pubMnod m Iho DWy Roglo-> and M AoMry Park PraM at

Boom c yHigManda Boort ot Education

PoaSWjaWOK pvWnUBj ,

Highlands. NJ 0773217 SI47S

239 Rad Bank

pjoncaA M O R O I N A N C B

A U T N O R I I I N a AH AP-PtrOnuATKW PURSUANT TOK.J.B.A. 4*A:4-U FOR T MPREPARATION OP A MB-

IONS AND COOanCATlON

TMHMOWHOrMDUW

Mtltod

ICMMK 4*. F.L. 1tM»

• MHotonommitraiwM

WHCMAS. pUfllMM K>mmmi '

a«md, anaaaaP...

"SStHtSSbom.H S .— Swam* oi M am

Thaunolli I .OOO 00 » hon*.

•on of M oonaral and par-manant ardlnanoaa ol thoBorough « Wad B a t a— ol— •

proptlauon aa daflnad anapraOdod lor In N.J. I A40A4-U. M. and M. Bakl wtt-

UKMlllHllfc

M Muattn ol •) laaat

W IT FURTHER OROAIKO.ay ma Mayor ana Ccunoa ol MBorough ol Had Bar*, mat •oaMad o l M Odn

g ad •oarMad oop. ol Ma Ordnanoa.m *. U ma «a» Wa a

M <X O M t t l Lm *. U ma «a» Wa arooMr M <Xm OMottl ol LOOMOo»ammanl M M DapanmaM<* ma Trmnry.

auaucNonFUBUC MOTjCl l

nanca « • • Introduced andpaaoM an Ural raoana, an Man*13, i t M and mm ba oommmdtor Dnal paaMea and aoapHanMa ragular rnaaana ol ma Mayorand Coonc» o l * . aarougn olRod Bonk. CouMy ol Monmo*.SMaol Naw Janqr. la kohaW mma MuMclpM auMMa, » Man.

sirrMarcll 77. IMS .1 tOO P.M.anan aMaclona. * any. k> mo

ol aama mm bo ta-

MUE«WMltBorougn Clocii

CHAPTER 4. APPOWnVE OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEISARTICLE 1. COMPf NSATIONI t c n o w I. Annual inarm andoominmalnr. Tha Annual iand ciompaiMallonollhaollloani and ampMiooa

MfHOfs tWlt iVlw tf##crib#dI aa k « n payaMa mmUtmHOt imMM omocwHo haram

Borougn.

•nftwinli CMirk

Boroufh PraaacutocCnMnnanclal OMo

40.412. 22!414

irjgg11.141

c o i w w . Taa taaraharConamglon Onwial. Roloctuon Omoar .

OMalor ol PuHo 1•ugarvaar ol PuMa IWarMOrnvtor «• Parka and HacraoWn.flra Marahal/Sub Coda Official ...UaM C«M BumMig « UanrHal In wocio

. m.mt11.ru

... 3.071U.SK

. N.4H

. 14JO0. <uni« 00022.1U

,.. >.4gi11.323

llouamfj r»O|>ail1lrl 14100PurehaMng Agam and Offioa Managar M,4g4Ptumomglnopacioc 7 7 1 J.O77flaiiaial rniaiiiaii 33 012Community Oa»alopmanl Okaclor 27^72Mayor 4 000Councaman '. lioOOCwat ol Ponea 44.702

M.SMMJM•Mil13 l i t11.0*130.5*130.0(1

UaManaM — o«ar M yoan o) m W .Uayajnam — o«ar 10 yaara ol aannoaaargoam — om n yaara ot aannoatxgnn l — awi 20/25 yaara ol larvlca

3SJSirgnnl — ami 15/20 yMra 01 MrvloaSargaonl — H * 10/15 yaan o l a n uOimpi'i — M i 20/25 yaan ol aantoaa m i l n — Mil 15/20 yaan ol MMoaDwocnvi — on* 10/15 yaan ot aameoPMroMan lot ofeM ami ovar IS yaan ol aorMco..Paxmimi 1« O U M aim 20/25 yarn of oantoaPatrolman 1« oMa a m IS/30 yaan ol aarMoa 21.047Potumian tat MaM ami 10/15 yaara of oarvloa ITJMTPaauKiiaii 1 * eUM ami 8/10 yarn oroarvtoo 27.047

3S.047M.S47

aooordWg 10 low.puauCHOnca

PUBLIC NOTICa M haraky ghan mat ma tangoing OrdManoa aaaMroduoad and paaaad on Ural reading on Maroh 13. ipas and a *

MAKE IT YOURSELF

• C M any pawn m a . cra-tlm 01 nalon In 2 cowi Fa-wn TOO cnxtw dncum.6«USuM6l2«irJud«l

SMakraicripagani MtiOtMO nmrn fer nosugi M i

n UMW

LAURA WHEELER

Nrtlicnf. Dipt 61

TIM Daily ftofistor

S!SfSV£!.M*M.«,.n*JnlM>.

•5 NMkcrin Cattkg - ISOJ * " * " * " J2 • 504 p > n

Laura WftMMtorC R A F T

EASY n-draM dwMtii!s« M M I tun md pacnpock* 1W1 k wol or CMOU

M M M k n MM «tom-M'I«U«StI«31.U, JS.37.M. 41». 44. 4S* Mcnai

u.aitotjctipinom AonsoiHen MlMrn kr pnUM andl m l a M H

IN FASHION

MARIAN MARTIN

Pitt.™ Dtp I. 420

Tht Daily Rtfittar

The RegisterDaily ' - 'Sunday

Your homttown namtpapar tinea 1ITI

NEW Spring Sumrrar PawnCjUog Fan Unions rar busywornM. Frai pantm couponSand U 00 pkil SOl postagaBOOM U SO • SOt u pit.

IK-MtlMbinnflAHIAM MARTINP A T T E R N S

I 2 M Freehold Township

2 M Free>w»d TownsMp

dlaone la M aMaana auto daaJ-eratup sactaty wNcn wal total13.4H equere taat M area, and

M Let 1. M Mock (7.

« " Jereey. The w u m• • • m i l by the PtanNna k Mw o n We an« a.asHIJIi far pub-no M M W I I me omoa oTlheisrltlatakjnafl. M m Municipal

and be pnnMdof general

Ml 10ornwraMk

HOW. THEREFORE. K IT BE-OLVED. on me IH i do* oftoron.jMtby ma h M u r npmntieelonere of Fire OMrtci

No 1, Freehold Townehlp. matBernard I. Wslnmin, Up. t« ao-

7. 1*

•or Ma wend ending

'*S?TrF<S

211

i»otvfDfjtel me reaeon effly thai Board, le•—idwg euoh oorwool without

OH okMnglo mat ma at-00 •%pf>o4'ii#<l It • fitofntoclego/ profeeelon and Hgal

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE thaimo undoreMnod hoa appulig toma Zoning Board of Adtuetmontor mo Townehlp ol Aberdeen lor

aaU aWuH end tor the furtherm thai a contract tor pro-mat aomlooa l i an exoep-

en 10 the requirement tor pubHc

Seceon40Mol tne Zoning Ordl-nance aaae •'Parmit a «•¥)**»

On prvtTWvvV *Win • tot CQYV>BBQ#ol M.BSH where a m maximumla U P ma. and a Mdi»aid ol S.4'where 7' mmhnum la raojulratf on

1 on 3 81 JO.

OnalanWy a—Ing knoan • •Stock SOS. Lot Son l ie Taa Map.which lo wantn 200 k M 04 proparty owned by you.

Th. application,puna ara on Ma at ma Depart-moal ol Planning. Zoning andD#V#l0pffltffi1i Ofl# At>#rSo... ABardaan. N.J..

date Irom »:30 s m . i o l 3 0 p . r nThis epoeel is no« on the Sec-

retary s calinlsr, end e publichearing haa Men ordered torMarch 27. 1M9 evening, at SOOp.m. pT6)VeWinQ Urns). In tinCouncil Chambare el whtch timeyou may appear either In pereonor by agent, or attorney endpr#Wtt einy OoyOdlQO wMct* yOimay heve to granting ol this ep-peal.

This nooce le served upon youby order ol the Aberdeen Town*snip Board ol Adlmtmanl.

flichsrd HendrlckeenDATED: 1/7/SSMarch 17 110 92

24» l ists of Ngw Jersey

F PARKSASIO PORSSTRV

B U M A U or

anon ol mopropoealo tor the operho Raoteurenl and Ba

i kited bakwwm berecrerved by the Director. DMewnol Parka and Faraotry, Labor andInduetry Bunding CN 404. Tienton. H i O t t M . unw 11:00 amWaoMeeoay Apm 10. l i b . a

iit111 I~I stramjai — _ — _ • — . . H i i

•ntfCfi •Jrnov, pfOpOoMM Win Dpuwoly opened and read

The h u l l mom and Bar Coni i i i l i n wiin a RefreMmonStand la ipema at Sprir.

•OOOvB%jp rVenW JVf ajajvy.

The duraaon olmoooncaoalonagraaiwanl anaH be tor one (1year Mm tour 14) one-year opHone ol ranemi at me aoh) dle-cremm or the Oopenment baaadon portormanoo end aamoe.

natomenki aa to nnanew and. OEpanonco quauflceuone mui

be reoehad on regulation formaprovided by the DirectorDrvrtion ol Parka and Foraatryon or betore 11 00 a.m. MondayApmi. I B M

Flnenotal end aaperlotafeMMM tormat and amormoHon ganaainlwg (be eon.• i n n may be otannaa at theolaoe M ma Supamear ol Camomloni. phono loot) 2M-27Unaom eoi Labor and MdualryBunding. CN 404. Trenton. NOHM. during normal buaMoaeMure or • M a.m end 4:00 pmMar 14. tg. 17 U400

Freehold. OMMM No I . D M .M M r a H need lor ksgol ear-OM tor eueh Boer*, andWHEREAS, lunde ere or sea DaM U M * lor euoh purpoee. andWHCMAa. laoM P U M G Con-« M M t

oommanoMQ todayat the nau annual

r

OK Searby. Voe; Sevino. ve«:irwen. Vea. Kantier, Vat.I

ltsd: 2. MSTh*> lor«golno rMOkiUo w u

uty adopted by m* Bo*r 0 oflr# OooifntaWton#f• of Disfkil

No 2 ol Freehold Townehlp onthe 12th day ol March, law andla on Mo wHh mo eald Board.

Kobart F. KlrwanSecreury. Board or Fire

Commletlonere Dlitrlcl No 2Freehold Townehlp

Mar. 17 (22.32

51 Help Wanted

m Heal — H Kmeoumoei

MAS: Local puoec oon-lew n j n 40A.111 at

BeWlieees" eBhBvraw U o S J 4V

eontraol and mm to* pubMefy

V*r* • • • M a m nswdwwjcxurfi M r w t o M kn con-*m an eVcMtacturM r»>

— »*# DCItBOO) tTeeMIOfl aft *ft#Borough ot R e d Bonk. County 01Monmouth: a n d

Tha annual report roe; .ba lead under Teoeon SOM olhe msemel revenue cede of the

el the pnncipelof-

Blreet. Pad Bank. New Jereey.during nieeai liuelnaaa hdureaMMn 100 deys alter the pub*-oeeon ot Me nooce.

Earner Foundation

avellewe tor .hie purpoee.NOW. TH«WFr55irBE IT RE-

SOLVED HIM Ho Mayor ol theBorouih of Red Benk le herebyeutnor&ad 10 enter Into e con-trect102

o etertrect with Mlgnane102 Weel Front I

tural review or the ponce atatlonaualacl to ma tag not aeoaading• lO.ooo oo and eublaot kirtner Sepprovel ol me contract by me

RESOLVEDtnetmeoontraotlamedewltnout

aa a pro-10" Ml

with N.J.S.A. 40A11.tX.1Me) otthe Local PubW Contracte Law.' suee II Is s i. performed _.authorliad by tew to precuce e

pracBoe la regiitaied by lew. theperformance ol which requiresknowledge of an edvenoed typein a field of looming ocqutredbyprolonged formal course Ofapeclalliad instruction, dis-tinguished Irom generel

- — o r eppren.ttC##h*p oWlvj afeeVftaflA,

BE IT FUPJTMEP. KEBOLVEOthat ma Borough Clark it herebyauthoruad on benaH ol theBorough to om» the Corporate

BE IT .that a copy ol this ReaotiNon bepublished In the Deny Registeraa required by lew wttMn ten (10)deyi of Ita paesiga

Ruth M EachelbechBorough Clark

March 17 $22 32

2M Fraahotd TownlhepNOTICe OF DSCIStOH

lease take notice that theFreehold Townehlp Planning

at Ita meeting or Merer. 7. IMS Inme metier ol Hope LutheranChurch granting the oppHoantPreummery Slta Plan approval, aConditional Uee Permit. Vert-

ronel. end Final Site Pun

to me church connoting or arnuw-purpooo room. 3.000 eq ftIn nee. e choir loll wMch re-qmrea ma addition ol an outeMeatalua,. end ma conetrucnon ole church tower to be 45 toot MnvQtn on pfwnlaTfeW k nown MM Lot1A, In Block 04, located on Elton-Aanphit pjoad. m me TownaMpol Freehold. Monmouth County.Now Jereey. The reeotuMnleoopted by ma Planning Boardere on Me end available Tor pub-lic Inapecnon el the omce ol theunderMgnau. In the MunicipalBuilding. Freehold Townthlp.NJ.Dated. Marcn 7, tg*t

JEANETTE MAHRINQTOMAdmlnMreHvo officerTownehlp ol Freehold

Mar. 17 t i l —

i 51 Holp Wanted

229 Ffoehow Townatiap 250 O th f FubBC Wottcat

Tultrlayt ori.m. atma~

month at SOD. Fire Houei el the feelP M Compeny. Dutch

Read. Freehold. New Jer-eey More apeclllcelly. the

_a _• t _ _• ^ — A ^ ^ a L s u * eejafffekesea flefhek*

aTtfr>BjOussjo rrsaBjawifi reauviut • > • -

S/tS/Si; 4(a/i(. 4/1S/SS;5/14/«S. S/21/IS. 9/11/15:

a/ta/as; T/S/SS; r/ts/ss;S/13/S9, I'2O/I6. S/tO/SS:»/17/S5. tO/S/SS. 10/15/19.11/12/aa. i i / ie /as: i2/io/e9;12/17/19. 1/14/M. 1/21/le.2/11/aa. i /n /ea .Marcn 17 S7.SSZIlHolmdal

On March 27. 1M5 al 1:00 p.m.ait HoHTptfaM Townohlp Hwl, Of fltauch other time end piece ee tneBoard may adkwm to mereener.M * j * • ! * • ' - • T j k w I I M nM

O m o t f J o w # p a a O Q

Board tnell eoneMer an epprl-cetlon to oonetrucl email oaokeateaoh enkence0'iuV end « x teatery of ma structure

beard to conform with codeproviding two entranoee andeast, Ini l t ta of the one emeting

N J. 077)3 known atto at Block50. Lot 30 on the ta< mep of theT n e M p ol Hdmdel Docu-mente relating to mie epplloatlonmay bo viewed el the office or theHonndal Townehlp Clef* waek-daye Irom goo am. to 4:30 p.m.,except holiday*, and other llmeaby appointment

Joan OrahamElmer Oraham

Meroh 17 >to.44

51 HelpWnttd

Dr> WTBIOIXOnuieerap.

CAMKrr. OBSPO. FOBS 4 BANFH.IPPO. ESOB272 Broad Street. P.O. Boa BM• M Bank. New Jereey 07701201) 741-tMt

the Meaar ol KIPUT AMIN,PRAFUL AMIN end ASMOKPATEL. I/a The smoke Signal.

O O P A L P A H I K H a n dOHARMISTA PARIKH

In eccordence trtet Section12At-107 ol the New Jersey Unltorn Commerclel Code notice le

1 Thai KIRIT AMIN. PRAPULAMIN and ASHOK PATEL. t/eThe Smoke Slgnel, ee

10 make e bv01 properly to OOPAL PARIKHand DHARMISTA PARIKH. ee

_ I t 21 MiBorough olEatontown. County ofMonmouth end State of New Jer-

Tne home end buHnaaa ad-A - j a e » ^ . _ e J . _ _ — — im^ Aaee%

QtMal OT m i araVvvvWWvl ' • aT B

Sumrmi Avenue. Jaraty city.New Jereey O7JO6

4. So far ee le known to mat

not uMd any buttfMW m m * or•ddr—• otfw ttwn th* tvbov*dvtioQ thr# tfirofj yVeVai IvM psti

5 AH ol the oebtt of the lren«-lerort we) bo paid m tun ee theycoma duo. Crodrlore ara to eenden MM to the undarHgnad atPO Bo« SM. Had Bank, NewJ 07701Jereey 07701CASWDV DEB

701DEBPO FOBS • SAN

FILIPPO. ESOSBV ROQER J. FOSS

Attorney! for TrenteanjeeDATED: March 11, 1905March 17 S1I.44

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 T h e Sunday Register 7 P

ClassifiedPhonHj42-1700 PHy t:30AM TolPM laurdevtMAM To 12:30PM

22J Feef H»»»nHOTsCS

Ptaoae lake nonce met me Felr•Men Zoning Board ol Adkiel-nent dtd. el «e regular meeeng

on Merch 7. ISSS. grant a varZa to Timothy end MereU . 12 OllllStlll Ava . BKck

SI. Lot 21. ueimltltiu eonetruc-oon ot a garden ahad, upetalrobathroom dormer, and to ctoceIn tront and side porch

Petrlcle MurphySecretary

. 17 SS.04

51 Help Wanted

223 Fek Me»en

At the February 20. IMS meet-ing e rteokiaon wet adopted tp-poinong Theodore J. Labreoque.Jr., ee Attorney tor the Boerdduring ma year ol IBM

A rteolulion wee edoptedgranting minor tubdhrleton ep-provel to George end CharlotteBharier. Block f i t . Lola 22 » 23

JudvEhrnertSecretery

M 0 4

51 Help Wanted

MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIESThe Register hat an opening tor a District SalesManager in its circulation department.Tha entry level position involve* supervising youthcarriers in the area* ol tales, service and collections.We provide training and an excellent compensationpackage. We are interested in agrestive individualswho have prior sales/or supervisory experience.

To Apply ContactJanice Vo4chack542-4000 EM. 217

orM3-S210

I N A N C E A M E N D I N GHAPTER XV. "LAND USE ANDEVELOPMENT . OP T H I J I -ISEO GENERAL ORDINANCES

OF THE BOROUOH OF FAIRAVEN, COUNTY OF M0N-OUTH. STATE OF NEW JtR-EY . wee presented lor in-oducuon end llrit reeding onObruery 11. 1SSS. by the Mayor

end Council ol the Borough olair Haven, and on March 11,USS. waa knotty adopted end

approved.NANCY E KERN

MAYOR

WtWemC. Rueorough Ctork-AdminiitretorE. Revised General Ordi-

22» Freehold TownahlB

51 HelD Wanted

MANAGERRETAIL FOOD

Leading Monmouth County foodretailer is seeking manager forthe cheese/dairy/deli depart-ment. Position requires a mini-mum of 5 years experience in aretail environment with' athorough knowledge of the de-partments involved. Good startingsalary and fringe benefit package.Attractive working conditions andpleasant surroundings. Interestedapplicants may send a resume to:

General Mgr.

C/0 ORCHARD MARKETS INC.36 Hwy. 34 South

Colts Nock. N.J. 07722

100% TUITION REIMBURSEMENT

Clinical Coordinator) poetUone tleo available

si Htlp Wanted

DO YOU HAVE ANURSING BACK-G R O U N D A N DWANT TO PUTYOUR SKILLS TOWORK AT HOME?

We Need LPfis * RN's toprovide temporary care tomentally retarded childrenand adults with special

-medical needs. Earn Irom$240 - $300 par week Invour own home. For moremloifnation about becom-

i n g a respite provider, call-The Ocean County As-sociat ion lor Retarded

Citizens, Respite / Inter-vention Program at

IT

"(201)920-8333.

<RtsfiklIntervention

CAREER OPPORTUNITIESCLASSROOM TRAINING

a Data Entry• Nursing Assistant• Copy Machine Technician• Telephone Installation• Food Service Worker•Clerical

DATA PROCESSING (Special i

• Packer Inspector• Dry Cleaning• Automated Business Machine.• Computerized Bookkeeping•Baking

• Are you Interested In any 61 the above mentioned careen? If you are, why don't youI contact the RCA Training and Placement Service Office nearest to your home?•The Classroom Training sites for various courses are located in Asbury Park, Red I| Bank, Manasquan and Morganville.

-All applicants must meet federal income guidelines.•APPLICANTS C A N N O W BE CERTIF IED BY RCA STAFF MEMBERS ATTHE SATELITB OFFICESSo hurry while there are still seats available.

Asbury Park Bayshore Long Branch230 Main Street 25 Highway 36 279 Broadway

Asbury Park E. Keansburg, N.J. Long Branch, N.J.774-8610 495-3100 229-3500

- RCA TraUag awl P I M M M * Satellite Officer -Training is funded under the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA)

An Equal Opportunity Employer

CAREER OPPORTUNITIESRCA is pleased to announce that in cooperation with the following campanies

we can place you in Jobs with career value. You need have no previousexperience.

Participating companies span the spectrum of industry from business ser-vices to Hi-Tech! Companies like:

C.P.P. Inc., Keptet, Monmouth Rubber, R&D Wiping Cloth, Dorran Photonics, Inc.

Positions presently available for Training:Sorter > Die CuttersSlitter PackerGeneral Laborer Protective Security OfficerGrinders PolishersMounters Quality Assurance Inspectors

Sub-AssemblersLight Electro andElectronic AssemblyAssemblers

Please take notice thai thereehold Township Planning

Board adopted two raeotutlonaI Ita meeting ol March 7. 1 gas m

me matter ol Freehold ElectricInc. granting the eppNcent

Preliminary Site Plan approval.erlance relief, end Flnel Site

Plan approval to construct awerehouee addition ol 3.120square tool to en entering onelory Mock building end to eelati

In an t

WHENYOU'RE AREGISTERCARRIER

YOU GETAROUND!

HOLMDCLfenoct

Coventry Square

••.»

You get around to earning thai extra money youwant. Being a Register carrier means prizes andincentives too Right now, we're looking lor car-riers. It's eaay and it's tun join the Registercarrier stall today and get around!

KfVtHMT

AnOrotHOTlCf

MMed 'AN OR.

eh oe ep gstructure previously ueed » • • >lealtlenrja on premleee known aaLot M. In Block 43. located or.ionter Street. In the Townehlp otreehold. Monmouth County.

New Jereey The retdutioniadopted by the Planning Boardare on IHe end available Kir pub-ic inspection el the office ol theundersigned In the Municipallulldlng. Freehold Township.

feted March 7. 1SSSJEANETTE HARRINGTON

Admlnletrattvo OfficerTownship of Freehold

Merch 17 (tilt*

6 Loal and FoundFREE FOUND ADS

Aa a eatvloe to our community.The Dally Regteter le ottering eFREE 3-llne FOUND ed tor 4day* under our toot S FoundclaeemcetlonThe Register appreciates yourhonesty a will do Ire pen In find-ing the original owner Pleaeecall us el 542-1700DOO 1'17 TINTON FALLS —small ten temele mixed Pug.

Humane Society. 822-0100.

FOUND — Male block Leb. Littlewhits on pewe. Teg eeya "'red".In Aberdeen area Call M1-29O*

FOUND - Small white malepoodle type Almoel tin In PortMonmouth er<» area Call 2»1-IO27

LOST — Indian bracelet nlverwith blue turquolae stone Loalparking lot to BBC Cottage Inparking tot 2. Reward Sentimen-tal velue Call 2gt 3331

444 BathroomRemodeling ACeramic T i l *

ALL TILE AREAS — Export re-_fc^j — tm - *>• • ••• n rtilln r» _i

pevrv. tieiin rtjnTTivOfjwng wnc*J

tSSS. Bob Aklue. 2OO-OM7

CERAMIC TILECONTRACTINGi i t rOWff t , HVBVIB) m flOOfeV

PrOITipl e9#l*VtC4. r r## tteWfelMeM-

Call enytlmo tor aopt Wa-MTOCERAMIC INSTALLERre do it eH. bethroome.

call Steve at S7S-0S2S.NEW CERAMIC TILE a REPAIRS

li ȣ'447 CarjHUitryCALT BROS. CONSTRUCTIONAddltUne. kltchene, bethroome.

ita. rooting, skylights.etc. Neai I reasonable.

HOME CRAFTSMAN — Carpen-try, woodwdk. lobe dona withmcinon. Job too tug tor you?oo smell tor others? Cell Ken

SoOarlund. 04XJ-2871 efler 9 PM.

RETIRED CARPENTER - Smallend medium ailed lobe, enddecks. Free oobmetae. Cell741-S7S7 or 774-0100

450 Carpet CleaningA-1 EXPERT Carpet Cleaning —

ratal Mome Hoffman, 747020a

485 Carpot InrtillaMonJIM'S CARPET INSTALLATION— Seiee. cleaning, re-leye. ro-MreHhee a repelrs. 2S4-at77,

506 Dallvary ServiceA PICK UP AND DELIVERY SER-VICE — Anlhing-anywhere. Inand out of Mate. Joe. 4S5 n»7

530 ElectricalServicesBEST ELECTRIC

Lie No. S271. Feet dependableeorvtoe. Reeeoneble ratee. Free

1-0H1

540 EntertelnmentCISO'S ROCKIN DISCO

Livery perty-tlme OJ'a Mixedconenuoul music

Can 7S7-9I41.

565 Fireplaces *Woodstovee

FIREPLACES-WOOD STOVESChlmneye. brick heerthi • waHs

Brick, atone, block, concreteRepairs J. Black. 2»1.0O37

592 Health AFitness

PEB9ONALIZED PROORAM —Fof VroMQtit HfllnQ. Your r>Ofn#,prrvale trainer Beet reeulta Con•70-BM7

595 HomeImprowmants

ADDITIONS — CompMe re-modeling service Cell 741-4H4or 2S4-StH.

A. J. BUILDERS.AddltJono enarebona, unique)dock dealgns Lie. builder. In-lured. Pteaaa leave meeeaoe. Ireturn ell cane Andy Valentino

ALL ARTS - Oo with the pro sRemodeling, renovenons.additions a bethroome.

Call N1-S4S0.

details.

Asbury Park230 Main Street

Asbury Park774-0610

Long Branch279 Broadway

Long Branch, N.J.220-38OO

Bayshore25 Highway 36

E. Keansburg, N.J.490-31 OO

RCA Training and Placement ServicesFunded by The Job Training Partnership Act

An Eoual Opportunity Provider

D. J VEKIOS S SON - Oenerelcontractor. Home or buMneai ro-pelr. remodel or build, 12 yearsIn Dunnoos Cell 4SS-2ISS.

D. J. VEKIOS S SON -Oanerelcontractor. Home or busmees re-

— Total Bunding S renovetJone.Now i old Additions. Kltchene.Bath. Deeki. etc. Cell 741-10SO.

MS Hem*Improvtmtntt

ED DAY CONSTRUCTION -Quality builders since 1S4S Over

FOR WINDOW — Deooreeng•f i lh ft fj0ttlftt*efJeTf> flsBpT. Df ttOSJf efjM,

vertdea. mlrM blinds, shadeelQIC. CM Carolyn Hunt ST1-S4I0.

HOME IMPROVEMENTS24 HR. Emergency Service. 10H

DISCOUNT For SeniorsSS2-S7S2

REPLACEMENT WINDOWSding, doore a decks free eat.,f l 10OH geursnlee

Len Crowther 5U-27M

STEVE RUBIN GENERAL CON-TRACTORS INC.. Meitercraftsmen of new construction aremodeling. professionallycreeled from your plant, or oursr% • - .. _ J J U I , -t*iilnhla AaU

forma decile » hot tube, custom

sursd (00»>443-2«24

TOTAL RENOVATION CON-STRUCTION INC. — Addwone.windows, decks, Jsilart eentee.Free eetlmatee 73O,2»9»

599 HouseCleaning

LADY SUO. HOME CLEANINQSERVICE — Ottering thatpolished look to your home. Re-liable. S71-SSSS. S71-M2S.

606 Income TaxCertified Public Accountenl

will Prepere Buslnaos a Personel Rapirne. Your Piece orMine. Cart R. SpWeret 741-4603.

O » E TAX SERVICE - Tan re-turns prepared In your home.

INDIVIDUAL ATTENTIONRaaaonaMe ratal. Can 5SJ-4111.INCOME TAX - Prepered In

eroe. IS years exp. Fed.. Stela.Nonreeldenl C Devil •72-«4S7eves a eeekende.

INCOME TAXES PREPARED -IS yoara e.parlence VeryrOoMOOes!>!•}. T O U f n O f * l # O f fT>lf>#.

Can MI-S223.RETURNS PREPARED — Buat-rteee end personnel 30 veers mMldrJotoen Can for appt. Ma-lorte Troveto S71-1MS.

ROBERT F. FLYNN. CPAIndividual-Parlnarshlp-CorpTen return prepsretlon a plen-nrng. Can S42-SS47.

STANDARD PACKAGE — 1040.Schad.A.S.ES+NJ.SM.Each addwonel form. So.

NY forme, SIS. Preperer enrolled» practice before the IRS.

E. Ortltlthe, UO-SMa

616 JewelryRepair

LE JARDIN D€S JEWELS. Expertlewelry repairs S diamonds re-mounted white you watch. Estab-Irohed 1»78 Ce« 431-O0S2

617 KeroseneHeater*ALL MAKES — Kerosene

. - • • — — J m * . - - J a*fc»rvsjelMKei, eTeWVIGejO * 16J6n6nl f o r

117 H -f perta. Moat wKki aparts in stock Call Heitat Ser.vice Co 7M-o*M. »w-soei

625* Lawn Care

ABC'S — 04 Lawn cere endshrub maintenance. Cleen up.

Call The"o'round Hoge. QregWerneke. 530-7192ALS LAWN • LANDSCAPESERVICE - Oerdeni rototilledComplete lawn and landecepeservice Rail. available4M-B1S0

»2J Lanrjjcaplng*Lawn Service

665 Moving *Storage

OeFAZIO LANDSCAPING.COMPLETE LAWN SERVICE -Top eon. Mulchee. Deooraava•tones. R a R Bee. Rototming."eckhoe service. Stone drlvee

Call 747-47MJOHN FALVO - Complete lawneervlce Ineured. reliable. o»-perlenoed Serving Pea- Hsven,Little Silver, Rumson.Shrewebury, Tlnton FineS42-S2S0.LANDSCAPING — Commerclel• no rvJVtOflmieV' MOwiny, irlrTi-

mHlQ, vfC. Piwrvr «J)«IC##J LOW

ram. Can 7S7-797S.LANOSCAPINO

•.• _ t • a e i M i a ^ n f — - - aBJLPfO lanVn rn«WnfjpnejH>C#. W con-

rrasBrick welki. sod.

LAWN MAINTENANCEFun lawn care, shrub melnten-enee. Can early for your springdaan-up Free esomste Lime

LAWN BARON LANDBCAPINO

PLUNKETT BROS. - QualityNJC. '

eppHcewr EPA Lie S3044. Hor-ticufture degree specleluing mturf. Complete chemlcel pro-Dram and lawn mamtenanoe.Cutting, Irlmlng. thatching, andseeding Spring ctaan-upa. rototilling, I muKhei Can S72-S011

PROFESSIONAL — Lawnshurb melntenani commerclel. Reeeonable

TOP SOIL-MANUREbeet quality,ardene D

Rich term top eoll - beet quAleo, menure for gardene. Delivery evamata. Hotrndol Parma:

13

Aleo, mlivery ev2*4 9,1

626 Lawn MowerTuno-upa

SERVICE a REPAIR - Reeson •• rates, guaranteed work.

Free pick-up a delivery Cell2S1-14M or §72.2340

635 Light Hauling1. HOUSES — Oaragee. yard agutters cleaned out a hauled

747-I12S.:N 8 INDUSTRIAL —

tlel a BuHnaaa clean-out serviceOulck-dependeble BoHer-hjrnece removal. FREE setl-

CLEAN YARDSCallers, attics a geregee

741-2140CLEANING YARDS

Colters, stiles a geregse Freeeetlmetee Cell SSS-S421 or5W-424OCOUNTRY HAULING — Wa haulanything. Funrfure. spls , etc.Pay 1 tow hourly rate. Celt431-3106."VAN FOR HIRE" — We drive.Small to medium local haule.Specislixlng in furniture moving.Experienced 2O1-tao-OM7.

636 LimousineService

JAMES LIMO SERVICEOo enywhere anytime

>s Cell 717-23

650 MasonryService

CORNERSTONE MASONRYSlope, block work, patios

Specials on ell concrete workFree eetlmatee. Pete 717.4328

DUST BUSTERS - Commerclel.reeldentjel. Floor wexlng. carpetshampooing, general cleaningAct nowt die-SOW.

I ie3e. prompt depandabto ser-

from our nureery. S42-071S.COMPLETE LAWN CARE —8peclaHiing m smell lawns Ro-lleble. Ineured. experienced

le. Can 747-0723

JOHN ROESINOInterior/exterior home repelraCertlflcele of Occupancy work

No lob too email4BS-M0S

COMPLETE LAWN CARECell anytime tor tree estimate

Tel-seatF0RE8T HILL LANDSCAPING.

Complete lawn and shrub main-tenance. Cleen up. Lawn edging.Spring aeodlng. Free eettmate.

MASON CONTRACTORMcMullen Construction.

MASONRYBrtck work. Stepi, PeUoa. Side-welks. Stone Work FireplacesDrlvaweyl. Belgium Block asmell robs

Cell 842-iaoo

PROMPT MOVERS INCLarge or smell, we move themell Apartments. household,commercial. E.pd. andatncienl.Free setlmstse Can 2S1-2210

Leonerdo. N.J. 07737

TEACHERS MOVING INC —Free eaamaM*. Local-Long r>s-tence-Storige Uc. PCOO057Shrewebury Ave. Red Bank.Florid* Specials Cell MO-1333

675 Odd JobsATTIC — basement, gerage.house, gutter cleaning YARDSCLEARED, cut. painting, etc

DANNY. JSS2leS.

Do you lemail or*odd lobe dona? Cell tneOdd Job men. 530-S515

660 Painting 4Paperhanglng

ALL-AROUND PAINTING

-j&iSStJSSSiWaHye Peming 2S1-HB1 evesA a L PAINTING — In-tanor/Mssrlor work Fro* eetl-metes Insured Referencesprovided Con 741-SO10

DJS PAINTING

2*43477 Ask for lid

PAINT a PAPERQuality workmanarup-reason-abto. Eve. a weekend sootsFree Eetlmatee. Can U0-422S

PAPERHANGING

The Feminine TouchFree Eel 741-MM

SOUTHPAW - onting. Intarlor/ratenar. Free estlmslea

Csa S3S-7S1S.

666 PavingDRIVEWAYS

Basketball a Tennis Courts

Finest quality materials andworkmanship. Fn

695 Plumbing ftHeating

LEAKING BOILER - Hot watertank, insufficient heat need e

ODD JOBS - Clean up. enythlngIn a around the houee. fire dam-

l lihap e o a gtUndeceplng. Frank

. e dalight hauling endrank m m .

YOUNG PLUMBER — Looking toll« old pipes Waenand a njhi

706 ResumesSUSAN K. PORTER/RESUMECONSULTANT — Ftary-Cfvtllan. FUN Svices 741-7132.

715 Roofingft Siding

SUPERIOR SIDING a ROOFINGIneuHeted vinyl awing, aluminumtrim covennge. Free estimates

cJ22»-iaao

740 Trae ServicesWOOOYS TREE 3ERVICETree t shrub trimming t

removal Fully Ineured. Free•s Cell M 0 - H I 2

750 TutoringPeycho Educational

approach to learning.

MONMOUTH CONCRETE INC.Serving Monmouth ft Oceen 19veers Uniquely designed poolaprons, patloe. driveways, welke.decore a retaining waMa. toun-drto noo 3 i V L i i iterlocklng paving none. Belgiumbtpek. ante, brick. Mock, con-crete. Free EMmatoe 222-3944

756 Typing ServiceOf)#jjpOnofJ o d poc#>6Q

Reeumea. Letters, ReportsPAR EXCELLENCE

Shrewebury. 741-S700 anytime

765 WeldingAUTOS — Car wean equip., bur-gler-proof wlndowa. pipe maw-ing. HEAVY EQUIP . containerrepairs, commerclal-reeldenlial.24-HR SERVICE Ouerenteed73S-2BSS.

8D The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965

I Lost a »d FoundFOUND 211* — tuck • Momala rjarman Shaphara Pan 01chain Ittactied to cottar Hwy 54I Scrwnck Rd . H O M H M Owner01 good horn. Wamly or Hatan,2W-S519 o> M e » 2 4

LOST - In Bod Bank area 2tgna MHjo tirew bag. $ M rewardlex saM ralurn Can 747-1400 ors»-e«ieLOST - 12 10. In 1 ypon HaiHM aroa. II you found n orhave pound! you would kka toloaa. try my now natural Iterbalnutrition program. 100%gauranload Caa Ed. 734-H45

LOST — M I . MGraynound Huaky. looka Hka athin Huaky. Predomlnelety whitawearing a choker chain collarwith saa Girt taga Call 449-52A0

LOST - Blond hairad mala dogMad. Mia Waanng rad coHar. <nHutat area Reward tor hia re-lurn. Call M 4 M 1 1

51 Help Wanted

KEYS FOUNO - Naar HnMa•ourte, Bodman Par 'nn Cat W-UH

LOST HUB CAPFor 1444 Chevy wheel

a. 741-7447

0 Spoclal NoHesw

•alaapeople who areo want toloae »elgm. 734-4143

BRUCE SPWNOSTtENBROOK SHIELDS 4JOHNNY CARSON

Ara juil a tew ol the hundreds ollamout people who WILL NOTbe appearing at Tha Homa 4Leitura Show But Ihera WILL BEIhouiende ot people there look-ing lor VOUR product CanArmstrong Entarprlaaa. NOW. toreeerva your booth. 2234434

COLOR ANALYSIS — In yourhoma Skin cara. facial, maka-ovar. ISO Evaa. 442-4465

St" Htlp Wanted

17 Nolle**Federal. SMe 4 Cum |obe nowaveneble. Cae 1414-444-4304

tor MM 24 ho

GOVERNMENT JOBS —S19.000-UO.000/yr POMIHH Allnctupawina. CM1-405-447-4000 Cat R-MS4 tofind out how

17

GOVERNMENT HOMES from ( 1(U repair). Alao daWrtouanl tax

- II 1-4OS-&7-40O0lor InformationE»l O H - H H t

I WILL NOT - Ba laaponalMa torany dabta other man thoaa »>-currad by myaaM. Robarl FOroMuaen. PO Bok 917. Kay-port

LOSE WEIGHT 1 EAT TOOIAll Natural Harbal Dial

Full ratund It not aatujnadCan valaria 5M-51M

Si Help Wanted

PHARMACISTSRivBrview Medical Center's Pharmacy Department has immediateopenings due to expansion of services.

We now provide unit dose. IV additives and oncology services.

Expansion to Include pharmacy satellite and kinetic dosing ser-vice. All pharmacy services are supported by a computer.

Excellent opportunity in addition to a very competitive salary andbenefit package NEW GRADS will be considered.

Ham iMa r u m « tat Sane K.rVuaat. Mcnrttr |I01| iXtm

RIVERVIEWMEDICAL CENTER ZZZZ

POSTAL EXAM *WORKSHOP ©

CLERK-CARRIER (Starting Pay: $9.Z0/hr)Special jnnounctnwnl tor all CMdMstss pluming ts trga up tor Me Clerk-Carrier Examat the MlDdWown, Hatlet iad Lang Branch Araa Post Offices u will at man; etker PottOffices Is the 077 Zip Coda Area whea H l i asimafsd. [LaH ghiet) la 1 H 3 - awl t i t sII wont He offered again for st Isati 3 w a n , tJoal into eutllNOW It DM H I M to prtaart TN pnswn It M K tan a Walt n atnlMi lo «•( the /06. CarattP M I H WHttrt will M W urn • tuning ulary ol S1I.U2 aim senelltt - trlta aa arcilirenrj M iirxrMM plM; man wd aonttrl. fteirellM tt aft. an KlflWt TM lirtl lt«» taaranj i aKtal u n k tClfttr It girling ycur rtarnt Mta tt» fltonler ot EllgiolH. •hich It KEOmplllltH I f Bth.." rMtEiwi Tl b. one ol IM linl hind, you ntad to git ooo ol UM M|Mr Klrttl and It Da Mrad • HIduring trio nut three »tirj you will need lo (ton U 1—1 >SH.

3'/.-HOUR WORKSHOPScore 95-100% or Your Tuition I* Refunded!

It is possible lo get a very high score with adequate preparation From years of experience and discussionswith our Advisory Board (consisting ol termer postmasters, training managers and examiners!, we knowthai n takes exactly three and a hall hours to teach you everything you need lo know to score 95% orbetter - which is what you'll need to get a iob

This workshop is being ottered now. prior to the formal announcement ot the examination dates, to giveyou adequate time to prepare lor the test Many post offices begin testing within a week ot the announcementwhich isn't enough time to prepare properly By starting now. you II be ready to attain high scores usingour methods when the test is given

Benefits derived Irom this course extend far beyond the Postal Exam The skills and attitudes will helpin every area ol future learning and test taking We have helped thousands of people successfully preparefor the Clerk earner Exam But don t take our word for it take our guarantee1 Come to the wortshopII you don t reef, at me end ol trie course, that it will help you achieve a score ol 95% or bttter.don'r pay for tha workshop' Furthormont. If your aeon ra k a man • * * » on KM officialex»m after using our ttcftniqun, wa will rmmadlalaly refund your tuition In lull!

* You are minted to bring your tape recorder to record me workshop tor personal exam review• You may attend as many extra sessions ot the workshop as you like ion a space available basts) without

additional tuition chargeWORKSHOP TUITION - S3S (Includes guaranteed 3',; hour Workshop. The Corey Guide 10 PostalEnams [with 6 complete practice tests], a Sample Exam with Answers. Workshop Workbook.POSTAL EXAM ALERT WITH SIGN-UP DATES MAILED TO YOUR HOME. Follow-upconsultation privileges. Achievement Award lo high-scorers and Practice Kit containing SixAdditional Practice Exams with Answers. Memory Tesl Flash Cards, and 'Simulated Exam"on cassette tape) Please Dnng two No 2 pencils with you to Ihe Workshop BRING THISAD WITH YOU to receive a FREE copy of our new booklet "12 Important Steps tor GettingHired into the U S Postal Service

Seating is limited pie-registration tiy phone is advised Otherwise you may register try arriving thirty minutesearly Tuition is payable at the door by cash check money order. MasterCard. VISA or American Express

CHOOSE 1 OF 2 WORKSHOPSFRI . March 22nd - 1 pm-4 30 pm; 6 pm-930 pm

MOLLY PITCHER INN - RED BANK88 Riverside Ave (Exit 109 off the Garden State Parkway)

For Instant WORKSHOP RESERVATIONSCall Today - MIDDLETOWN 741-4343

UKAILE TO JtTTINO? O'ctei compile *oi>sruo on cassette tape Serai 145 ipius S3 00 lo. sniMNng and lundfcng) lor meOei« Cider Womnoo - professionally reco'dea on 3 cassettes - *t*cfl includes w urofUitop mjiefuis desenbttf above- same guarantee Send order nnciwH slieet address and leieptfone number) Mitt, payment to The Achtevemeni Center697 Union Street Dept 1?14 Manefwiter NH 03104 Charge Card orde-s *«n oe sfupwd *ilh.r, 48 hoofs by phomog lo+ifree i BOO-233 2b*b t»i 1714 <Add U <o' fede-a; E<press gua'anieed 1 2 day delivery iTne Actevemeni Center, kit tl i ion profit educational corporate dedicated M aclMvement through preparation Not .tf*atad*ilh the U S Postal Serwf • Copyright 1964 Achtfwmont Ctnttr

MANAGEMENTTRAINEES

Step #1: Walk through the Joor ..four OPEN HOUSE on Tuesdayor "Wednesday, March Nth or 20th.Step #2: Talk to us about your previous work experience and letus show you how it can relate to a career in the fast food indus-try.Step #3: Take a good look at the competitive salarv and ben-efit package We offer as an expanding division of the presti-gious Marriott Corporation.Step #4: After completing our extensive S week trainingprogram, you will start to manage one of the most diver-sified restaurants in the industry rodav.Step #5: Your hard work and success are rewardedthrough the Marriott's corporate philosophy of pro-motion from within.

Attend ourOPEN HOUSETuesday. March Nth, IPM^PM orWednesday, March 20th, I0AM-SPM atThe MarriottNewark International Airport(Exit 13 off N) Turnpike)

If unable to attend, please call800-222-1285Or send your resume to:ROY ROGERSRO. BoxB94Paramus, NJ 0765 MW4An Equal OpportunityEmployer M/F

at the top, butwe expectyou to endup there!

MRS. SYLVIAPSYCHIC READINGS

775-9972

OVWWrtlOHT? OfPRCSMD?UNO€RW1IOHT7 NO Pf • »

ARTHRITIC PAINTOtOMTIVt PttOwLSMSt

Cae Tom 740 4404Your H a r M DwMDutor

12 Travcl-TranapoftaMow

NOCfM NtEOCO - tar kuuryvan pool leame • imimin at5 40 a m Ma Had Bar* * WddW-men. Arrtyaa M H . . .H at e SOU M Newark at 4:40 p m.

mmiW15 Instruction

PRIVATE MUSIC INSTRUCTION— Aaboglnnlnejtnae-iiiwenwied-vancad trumpal) »1 -41M

si Halp wanted

61 H.lp WantedMataerPamala

•»-w~ • wsvawawawar • * * • B«w a jBr—f .

' i n n i i y Co paid tAfptjr in paraon. E r *I t IrHuatilaL Or. C

KtMMl tY raVf — «M »amApph. at Moaon Syaaama. SI•torian PI |o> ot thmiMluiyAm.), Snraajltny. M l 1040.

ATTENTION!Pla in manaon THE RCOtSTER

5t HwloWanfd

51 HrlpWMttd

AUTOMOBILE SALESWa haaa an bnwleaiele openlna

I » youaraloenny to.

•onwac. 3 M Br,Beak. 741-4110.AUTO MECHANIC - Oaaa A orB foaMon I m i l l tor oood

35 Union St.. Red Bank, N J 07701EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER MF

RcyRpgers

IEMODIALYSI!NURSES

We are currently peeking Hemodlelyeli Nuraeewith critical cara background lo wort withinour Intonelve Can area*. Provan experience InHemorJIelyele preferred, but Nuraaa wltti eetlInltlethra or reUled e»perleocwa who would likelo poreue a caraar m the HanwdWyaej araa w»»

| be conaiderad.Salary commanaurata with experienceOutatendtag bwnam program.

For further irHormattonCan or applyStapnan FortmuHerPereonnel Dept 530-2200

RIVERVIEW.MEDICAL CENTER:

»UnrjnSt Red Bank. NJ 07701COUU. OPKRTUMTY EMPLOYER Mrf

UTO BODY PfJWON — F m

SI HlrpWllW

51

taV • • • yol new raps you apanaor171-4144 or 4714444

AUTOBRAKE A EXHAUST

MECHANICS

AUTO

SALES

jlENCEDOUMMO POtf NI IM MO OOO

d

EXPERl

oaeoo, eonua nan Contact Bob

"GEORGE WALLLINCOLN/MERCURY

11 H ip Wanted

CLINICALCOORDINATOR

(HEAD NURSE)

For Medical/Surgical Unit

Challenging opportunity for ex-perienced professional with provenleadership/management ability.BSN required. Extensive back-ground In Medical/Surgical service*preferred Salary commensuratewith education and experience plusa wide range ol employee benefits.

Call or applyStephen Fortmullor

(201) 530-2200 _ • _Personnel Dept. TT

RIVERVIEW j L ^MEDICAL C E M T E R ^ ^

M Unions. Rad Bar*. NJ 07701I0UW. 0P»OKTUWTT 4 W P U W MT

STOCK ROOMATTENDANT

Must be able to utilize CRT to maketransactions such as Issues, receipts &posting of Inventory records in the elec-tro-mechanical field. Should be familiarwith every day stockroom duties such asIssuing materials to requisitions or workorders, cycle counting, properly storing& Identifying materials. Some heavy lift-ing required. Driver's license necessary.Good benefit pkg. Apply in person.

:CON|laroBATioai

15 IrforidisM) Rd., Eat on town, N.J."Tho oo/nfitny ttitt pton&mnd jntf oparattson IhxH* work horn"

Si Help WantedMT - Par k m tMWaynaatrar-

MAUTICUHf. WANTEI - PanM * i v l . Mr anop m 1"mtah. m-44O» dajraa

Oapt elIIl-UMEil 1301

UUXANTtC/MEHCHAMTJEqual Oppty Employer M/F tOOKKaWfR - fit otianjat.

TELLER

MAKE A CHANGEFOR THE BETTER

Grow with us!

I M M 440 TO MOKIV. HO TIWN4POP.

ATKJH NfCtSSMIV. HOW-van you MUST U V I IN•ANSSUMI. PORT WON-

MOUTH. MA2LET AfMUUl. TMWi NOT A PAP€H noun, ron

MOM rMFONMATION CALL. Hia TAYLOR

c t a w M Opan-mg M m

MIDDI

rnaMtma I M I I_ J madloil oo»-

•raga For a LOCAL MMrvtMlappotmmani pfaaaa em* CINDVSOTT at

434-5100, Ext. 474

COMMERCIALTRUST

• • " " • " B K H V

MEDICALRECORDS

Rlvmvrtw Medical Center has the followingposition cwranrly available

CODER/ANALYZERFull Tims. Pr thnMy an A R T with at least? years sxpsritncs In coding.

Ws offer competitive salaries and com-prehensive benefits package

Call or applySharon K. BarrowsPtitonnsl Rscrullar •( M l ) 530-2222 ^ f ?

RIVERVIEW XMEDICAL CENTER ZZZZ

35 UMon St. Rad Bank. NJ 07701M U M . orvomwnv EMPLOYER. *r

BANKING

Part-TimeTeller

Opportunities

HAZLET11am-3pm

any 4 weekdaysSat: 9am-12pm

FREEHOLDany 4 weekdays

and Sats.Pick iha bast tkna and placa to

' di caraar withln«tu»on

l

a rewarding carat Our griming l

n bngm. rmMvaMopportunity to work Iailva and c H l

- - opportunty to wo n a pro-graailva and cioHnlonll an-

partanca prafarratf. but «•'«M your

ground

You • racaM an mcillanl Plan

C I I I I I can Mr. llomlaln «i |M1324-1057

CARTERETSavings A Loan

Equal Oppty EmpUyar M/FBARTENDERS - bpartanoadh l D i m pay. OrW bparttneanaipfui Apply baiwaan < s P MMoaarn Tlmaa. Hwy U . MkfcHa-lown M 2 » » 2

SAKTENDCn/MAlO — Waaliday*, maakanda. aap. na«a»ianrCait tafaan 4-7 pm. 747-4444a E N O e r V B A m H AWanlaa lor oo-go bar M i « - »l>ot panta «W train 734-4444.

• i Morieaee* 141 MoTtgageT* Mertgaf* \U

1 Hel» WantedI PVArSN t UAD VOCAl-- Par k r 'W

BOYS/GIRLS

MEWWOMINDua to a rapid groom, wa na>a

avananta W VOUM AMA. CMM O 8 W 0 M O l d M

duM muel haw a oar.STAR LEOOtH #1 IN JER4CT

CARRINTUTO HELPERor MtacetHirH a n . re-work, cea Swvsaos 4mudaikia

M4-4104.CARPENTER WANTED — En

9 M

CARPENTER — A" around Ap-prantioa. Tranapdrtaaon a loctan i c i m r y Can 830-4*42CARPENTERS — Appranllca. la-

a»aa. 347-4744.

work at homa 3-4 t in. deny updating mailing Mia and local cul-tomar Ma Oood pay and ken-e m Send brief rooume to eurNational I laadmiartan: TCS.4754 Hollywood Blvd.. Surkj 110.

Angaiaa.CAI

CLEANMOHELP130 e p.m.. Hotmdal

•4 hr Cal 244.1750.CLERK — 5 day week. Howe I Sp.m. Beneme a Itoaeeye. canbet 2 4 4 o.m. uneran Pker-macy. 741-7414.

ClerksSecretaries

CRT/Data EntryWord

ProcessorsTypists

Are you looking for e lemporaireeelgnmenl that «*« leal 4 mo*. •I yr 7 We heve the K M . ea weneed le you. Our caont n a Fortuna 500 lala-cornmurucal-ncore Wealed In me Un-.croft/Hobnc9ftl • ' • • Mfcjn noynypay rate No tee. Oreal beneM

MANNTEMPORARIES

43 OMOert SI No Shrawabury

842-4224*2

Attention Middlesex & Monmouth County:Buying or Refinancing Your Home? ' •

New mortgage plancuts interest costs in half.Cut your mortgage interest costs almost in half...saving'70,000-$ 100,000 and more, and reduce

your pay period from 30years to 18 years!

rAmboy Madison is making home ownership much lessexpensive with a revolutionary mortgage plan. It won'tcost you nearly as much money as a 30-year conven-tional mortgage, and is no more difficult to qualify for.Introducing the fixed rate 'A Pay Mortgage.

It's simple.The W h y Mortgage ^ based on the 30-year fixed ratemortgage. But instead of making one payment eachmonth, as you would with a conventional mortgage, youpay V4 that amount every two weeks (bi-weekly). Forexample, if your normal monthly payment on a 30-yearmortgage was $800, with our !/4 Fay Mortgage youwould pay $400 every two weeks.

Big savings.By paying every two weeks, you make 26 half paymentsinstead of 12 full payments each year. This reduces yourloan principal much faster. Your equity builds more rap-idly and your interest costs are cut almost in half. Asyou can see in the comparison chart, you will save over$69,000 in reduced interest costs on a $50,000 mortgageand over $100,000 on a $75,000 mortgage.

Burn your mortgagW sooner.A comforting thought for many is thai our Vt Pay Mortgage jalso pays off years earlier than a conventional one. Bymaking bi-weekly payments you may own your homefree and clear in just 18 years. Not 30 years. Free andclear in IB years!

Easy payment procedure.The n Pay Mortgage payment procedure is delightfullyeasy, too. No checks to write, less bookkeeping. All youdo is open an Amboy Madison regular checking account. |We will automatically deduct your mortgage paymentevery two weeks.

See bow much you'll save witha 1/2 PAT MORTGAGE

$50,000 Mortgage based on 13% interest rate*

1

Payments

Paid in fullTotal interest paidInterest saved

ConventionalMortgage

$553.10every month30 years$149,116.00

1/2 PAYMORTGAGE

$276.55every 2 weeks18 years$79,934.94$69,181.06

$75,000 Mortgage based on 13% interest rate.'

Payments

Paid in fullTotal interest paidInterest saved

ConventionalMortgage

$829.65every month30 years$223,674.00

1/2 PAYMORTGAGE

$414.83every 2 weeks18 years$119,895.53$103,778.47

$100,000 Mortgage based on 13% interest rate.'

Payments

Paid in lullTotal interest paidInterest saved

ConventionalMortgage

$1,106.20every month30 years$298,232.00

IfyuuVt tcai'iy tu buy of ivlinanre, now's the time toleam more about our */t Pay Mortgage plan.Call us (<xl.iv: 721-2800

1/2 PAYMORTGAGE

$553.10every 2 weeks18 years$159,871.23$ l 3 8 . a m T T

n purptan mty and nVM nfrn amaal wrM -*nd- !

AMBOY MADISONNATIONAL BANK

Okl Bridge. New/eney201 7212800

V SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1985 The Sunday RI-KJSUT 9DSi Help Wanted

COMPUTER OPERATOR

INDEXranewnos

UEQN.S)

6 lost and Found» SpacatNoKM

12. ' r a t * Treneponaaon15. tattucMn

51 Help WtMM laslt o.NMH

52 BeDylilling/Ctukl Cvt53 OomesscHelp54 Srkistont D I M

55 Situation WtnlM U kM Sflutnons WanM

Mtw/Ftffltie57. CtukJ Cere/Nursery

Schools

91 SusintM Opportunity

63 MoneyTolotn64 Money Waffled

7i UtfcMndiH tot Silt72. Gtngt/v«a Salt73. Machinery For Sale74 feral Strvict?5 Faim Equipmtnl7b Auction Sawll. Pels and livestoc-78 Aircnft78 S«ep ot EunangtSO ftcycies/Um Bikes>1. S p a n Equipmtnl82 Swimming Pools• 3 C8s E h o o n i n«4 UncnandiH Warned85 Price S u e *

101 o102 Houses to. Renl103 Refflalslo Share104 Wimer Rentals105 Summer Rentals106. Furnished Booms107 Nmng/fltMimenl

Homes106 Commefcial Denials109 Buildings/Garages110 Wanled MFKnl

WHEinTEFMUU130 Open Houses131 Houses For Sale13?. Condominiums/Town

Houses133 Income Properly134 Farm Properly135 Commercial Property136 Industrial Properly137 Lots and Acreage136 M o b * Homes139 Cemetery Lots140 Heal E s u * Warned

152 Boats and Accessories153 Camping Equipment154. Recreational Verifies

220 Wanted Automolue230 Construction Equip

MM240. Auto Financing250. Auto insurance260 Auto Rent/Lease270 Auto S m n o n / P m260 MotorcyclM290 Trucln and Train*300 Autos For S t *

KMYMMMTHE ran UYrrnmua

The Daily RtgiMtr n i l not Mresponsible lor more man oneincorreel inseiton ol any ad-vertisement and only often itmaterially affects the value olthe ad II it contains an tnorcallclassikedAll ads are restnc»d » t a nproper classiKcaMn and satin tht regular Only Registerstyle ol type Right is reservedto edit of rend any copy or

TO PLACEYOUR

CLASSIFIEDAD

CALL THEACTION-LINE

542-1700MONDAY-FRIDAY

8:30-5:00

J1 Help Wanted SI Help WantedCOOK f OK PMVATE HOME -Cook avarung meal lor Fair

DUtOOC OPERATOd - E.-

wKmuiDomi rM«». Aegroolmalslv 10-ia M M It» M L Salary ito par aaax.•n* Ma a*M M MK pherw

nimtarle •«• 0441. Fan knrenP«O« aS t^, S3

COOKS — Bansnoers-bs

• M m ann»aaHan • bus psrsonnet, lap'd only. Call Mar t

•72-1191COOK* - Fun Una paawona (or

- -aoke. Call i<x •» -

DRIVEREarly morning Route Drivers'art-time IvaMcIa supplied).lUet h*aV# WJSfl drive* % ItCsBfiee

and a clean driving record Noexperience) raqulrad. Tha Dan*

tgMtr , Ona FlagMar F iau ,I m a t v r y . H i Apply In parson• m -a a mEqual Opptytmployar M O

COOK-SHORT ORDERWAITRESSES/WAITERSExp'd only F/T 1 P/T AM •KinsYaar round employment ApplyIn parson 1-8 p.m. Howard Jonn*e m Weetiurant, MMdMown.

OITOBIAL ASSISTANT — Forbualnesa magaalrta Soma aap.Helpful; willing proofreadingskins Important. Fteeume lo Box

~ • Bank, N J 07701

COUNTCrVOCUVERY PERSON- Ntgtlla. M U M ba ovar I t Must

Kaaneounj.

Apply in w n x i lo120 Carr Ava..

COUNTER ATTENDANT —Wanaad pan tuna. Muat ba par-

We and like working with4a. Apply In parson Brunt-Airport P i a u Lanaa, Rt. 38.

COUNSEiORS - VMCA DayCamp. Work wtm children agaa9-14. S K I M required In groupwork, aporta. crstu, outdooreducation. Exp. and/or dagrae InPE or NEC Call M « 4 5 M or741-2804.

DATA ENTRYM entry wasnllB-

Hon Is seeking EXPERIENCEDKEYPUNCH OffERATORS lor lulland pan lima positions on 2NDand 3RD SNttt. Exoallant salarysnd banana packagt.

CMF CORP583-3660

Equal Opply Employar M/FDAVCARE ASSISTANTPart Una mornlnga.

CaH 741-M72DELI CLERKS

Part lima hours Evanmga and•aeksnds will tram Ooodpay Sbanatlta. Apply m paraon atAcme Markata. Fsver Rd.. Fair

DELIVERY PERSON - Days SEvanlnga. Mutt have own car.Apply In paraon Danny'a Plzta.UWa Slhar.DENTAL ASSISTANT — OurQuay orthodottc office ts search-Ing lor a bright, energetic par-ton. Certified or registered assis-tant prafarrad. Vary confidentialWa otter a challenge with ben-etita 8 a fast pecad team en-vironment inlarsalsJI CallCarolyn 747-8100

DENTAL ASSISTANT a RECEPTIONIST - Full 8 part-tlma poe-Itlona. In ganaral dantal practlca.Call 842-2337

DENTAL HVOIENISTM a u w m Parlodontal office. Panlima leading to full time. EK-parlanoa prafarrad.

Can SSl-sm.DENTAL. ASSISTANT — Eacap-Bonal opportunity In Rad Banklor imangant D.A. who itcapabla of using good ludga-mani. hat aatf-oonlldanca andsbUlty to Know through Mutt ba••P#**ajt*vc*>0 Oa* 411 "»auil a<rMsOtramad with asaantlal cradan-aaH. Vary oonwdantal 840-4737DESK CLERK - Moral Exp d orwta tram, natttaaa wakcoma

a. 542 3208DtSIQNER/CMECKER

PRINTEDCIRCUIT

HEAVY CHECKING EXP

IMMEDIATE OPENINGH U H RATES

VERY LONQ TERMN J SHORE LOCATION

CALL TONY

CDICORPORATION40 Av« at tha Common!Shrawakury. N J . 07701D I R E C T O R S / P R O S ) FtAM

SPECIALISTS — YMCA DayCamp work with cMldran1-14. Skint raqulrad in as-arasas: Sports, namra. outdooraduoason. cratts. gymnaanca.group work, tun aupervtalontup 8 a coMaga dagraa raqulrad(Pt/REC poiBrad). "848MMS or 741-2804

DOCTORS ASSISTANT - Forbun contact MM praeHoa. E«p

and ralaieimae to Son Z-401ThaDaDy rN.J. 07701

productsDRIVER -parianosd «ffln atRaoly in conlWancsraauma to: Box B-488. Tha Oall

'. NJ 07701DRIVER — And Halpar looa*>*t(rt truck. Muat ba exparkmsad. Can 2S4-8388

Sand and Qraval Com-r» BMka MdMdual lor lull• posMorv tama mattiaMcali. hatatj. C l l 187398

a a t a. Call 187-3981.

DRY CLEANERCOUNTER HELP/ASSEMBLER

Cal ISS 1881

ELECTRICIAN'S HELPER -

Can altar 8 841-8088EMBROIDERY OPERATOR -utt lima Tstung lor Bonnaz ma-hlna will Iran quWnad paraon.

441-1800 between 10-2 pm.

EXECUTIVE SEC-RETARY/ADMINISTRATIVE AS-SISTANT - Top qualified ealeearvtce axp. nacattary. Llncrofi

location. 830-5 p.m. Salarynagotitbw Mall raauma la: POBOM 217, Unta Sllvar. NJ 07738.

EXPERIENCED SERVICE MAN-AGER — For aprinkaUng Com-pany 842-1400 or 881-1800.EXPERIENCED WORKER — Forfloral shop 8 greanhoueaa. Muatnave axtantlva knoarteoga ofplants 8 nowsrs 8 floral assignaxp. 2*4-0259 between B-Sp.m.

FACTORY HELP M/F - Steadypart lima Light assembly FISH-bkt hours. MMdkMown eras.Ftaass phona 787-1SS7.

FARM WORKERS - Paoplanaarfad tor ganaral malntananoawork on Korea ferm Call ColesNeck Training Track 848-4244.FULL TIME WORD PROCESSORTo work avst 8 Sat. Capabla ofopsrtimg an IBM Display Writer

~ - can 741-3400.

OAS ATTENDENTS — Apply M-F Schsidta Sunoco. Rt 34/Mor-ristown Rd.. Matawan. bat. 0 8 4

•GAS*STATION

ATTENDANTS

Women & Men

You should applyfor a parmansnt position

with our txcallent company

Full or part timeGood salary & benefits

vary nlca location In Rad Bank

642-8858

EXXON CompanyU.S.A.

A Division ol Exxon Corp.An Equal Opply Employer M/F

P/T OIRLS SOFTBALL LEAGUECOORDINATOR • Evst ConlsctMarlboro RscreaBon SH-O200QOLF COURSE PERSON — No

Country Club. 50 Luffburrow Lana. Mlddlstown Orphona for appt. 841-3111.OROWINQ DENTAL PRACTICE

Stake 1 islsnisd IndMdiOna with exp. In appolntmanscheduling t s ganaral knowlsdgs ol the business area • Thaother with sxp. In billing, collsclion, 8 Insurance Applicant

it ba anargetlc. flaxlblaanlhutiasilc. frlandry. 8 hava agood rapport with adulla as wslae childran Hrs. 8 s.m.-8 p m 4days Call Sussn 741-8550

HAIRDRESSERS - Qraat opportunlty lor talantad hsir stylistswith lollowlng. lor Fslr Havanaraa. Call 830-1134 from »•P m , M2-M51 aftar 7 p m .HAIR STYLIST WANTED — Withexperience tor Hsilsi shop. ExcaMant salary -f commission Fuor pan lima. 488-8188.

HANOYP -aARMHtR

pool. Flax, hrs Sand retuma: POBon 812. Llios Sllvar. NJ 07718

HEAVY EQUIPMENT- OPERATOR — Exparlancad only. Calwasasnds 477-7113. waakdsys477-1880.

HELPERS — CarpanlarsSidsrt Exparlanca. tools,tranaportatton hslptui Call Samat 741-8O30.

HELPER WANTED — For AwnIng. Naad driver's luenaa and bahandy with toole. Part or full time572-0200HOR8EPERSON - FiThoroughbrad Farm. Must trxpenanced. Call 848-8480.HOUSEKEEPERS — Full lima.Must work anarnatlng waaki7-3, 1-11. 8 11-7. Apply In parson 1 0 a m to 1 p.m.ABJOvilla144 Baachway. Kaanaburg787-2S0O.

HOUSECLEANINQExp'd parson only P/T 8 F/TMutt ba able to work weakandeApply In parson 10-2 p.m. How-ard Johnsons Motor Lodge

1 Help Wanted / 'HOUSEKEEPER/COOK —* 8days. Qsnarat Blearilng. Cooking

Ironing Must « —

Holmoal arae. Can 718M4S9

MNTENANCE - Beach club,laborers, lull, pan t •aakande.Apply m parson mornings. Pan-Mnama Houas. Sea Bright. SeeOary 142J100

HOUSEKEEPED — 2 daye a8»/nour Can alter 7 p m

47-7488IN MY EATON tOWN APT

xwarerutt. own IrsnsporaoonStudants welcome 3SS-SM1.

NSURANCE CLAIMS REP-RESENTATIVE — Experience

• notTyping raqulrad. [iictllenl ben-stirs Wrrte Boynton 8 Boynton.PO Box 887 Red Bank. NJ 07701

ENNEL HELP — Parmansntposition at Berg Animal Hospital.Rl. 34. Matawan. «88 8810.

KEYBOARD OPERATOR - 5.m.-3:30 a.m. 4 nights par weak.uH lima for video display ter-

minal at busy computarlaadlypeeetllngco Keypunch or datairocasslng exparlanca hatpful,Hit not nsciaaaary. Wa wM train

qualltlad parson Must type 70VPM and hava a dealra lo kaarn.

PACKAGINGLINEMECHANIC

Day Shift

• «r« kwktng (CM an EX-ERICNCED PACKAOINQ LINECCHANIC E v n a rttHty com-

Mitry at Chanal, • worldin if

meucs/fragrances Industry! Yourexparlanca anould include thaoMMng: CARTONERS. FILL-NO MACHINES. LABELERS.ELLOPHANER8. and moral

Hatp kaap our lino moving andMO'H make II realty worth yourMhHo. right down lo the eansasntbanetoa package! Apply in par-son, to our personnel Dapt.. be-

)hoapnalllauon. Ills Insuranceand profit sharing Sand dataMadbackground Information lo: Per-sonnel Managar. JM PostOraphlce. PO Box U S .Kaanaburg. NJ 07784.

o ou p a t o M fn 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

HANEL, INC.Centannlal Avsnua

acslsway. N J 00454 Equalpportunlly Employar M/F

KITCHEN HELP — Raqulrad Im-mediately by Tha Lett Bank, SLinden Place. R.B. 8830-8830

ECHANtC — Parson lookingtor opportunity to loam a tradaas a mufnar machanlc 8 axhauat

. 1 . Can Joa 871-totO.81-1013.

LANOSCAPE CREW HELP —Fun Urns. For planting snd con-struction craws Soma sup hatp.ul or a wWmgneas to leem. Muat

ba physically tit and hava a gooddriving record Can 482-8180attar 8 p.m.

RN's • GN'S • LPN's • GPN's • AIDESPHYStCIAMS • KDICAl TICHIBCWIiS • MEDICAL MCHn/UIIES, He

Explore the opportunities. Contact the participating recruiters in thisDIRECTORY, and please mention The Register.

Stay • " . B A

we.

P8OPL8 CAPS!

844 Broad Bl/PO Bail 8828FM Bant. NJ 07781

(Ml) U0-I8M

NURSES'ARN l l t -

MDEL CONV

SERN llt-71

HOLMDEL CONVALESCENTCENTER

TS 0T81Httmaa(181)

Mr. Fuitnutar/Mra. BsrrowsPeiaonnal Rsorunsrs

RIVERVIEWMEDICAL CENTER

38 Union Sna tRad Bank. NJ . 07701

Nursing DsplDROVE HEALTHCARE CENTER

t t t Orson Orovs RoadNeptune. NJ 07783

1201) 822-3400

CRITICAL CARE NURSESJacquaane Owvar. RN

SAYSHOM CCtaMUHtTY HOSPITAL727 North Sssrt Strsst

H t M s M J U 07733(201) TSt-Sttt

HOME HEALTH AIDESMrt Clttsdlno

FAMILY 8 CHILDREN'S SERVICE181 Bath Avenus

Long Branch. N J . 077401201) 222-9100

Ip

on ma 11 k>7aMfLChko Cars Cantsr

Is avaHsblsFree Parking

Fsmy ChafM. Jr.. RN

ST IIIZAIKTH HOSPITAL229 wlNlamson StrsstEUabstn. NJ O7207

1201) 827-U28

Jana OraanProltaalnnal Racruilar

JERSEY SHOREMEDICAL CENTER

1848 Corllas Ava.WptuneNJ 07753

Four Vo'hour sMftepar weak on the night SMR

Personnel DsplALL HEALTH CARE

SERVICES. INCI t Kings Hwy

MlddMOwn. NJ. 07741(201)871-8400

Personnel Dtpt.Metapltx Momi Ssrvtcaa of

MCOS8 NURSINO SERVICES181 Botman PHoa

Rad Sank, NJ 077011201)-

Tad Rotsnbsrg. E»sc OrA-ROUND THE CLOCKNURSING CARE. INC27 Wast Front SlrastRad Bank. NJ 07701

(201) 747-8844

Etta KuMfiau. RN. BSNProtsaslonal Nurss Recmnsr

MONMOUTHMEDICAL CENTER

Long Branch. NJ 07740(201)870-8012

NICU, ADOLESCENCE.ONCOLOav. OULYSIS

LANDSCAPE-GARDENERSHELPER — 3 lull lima positions

avsllsue. Exp prstsrrad. but nolnaceeaary. Call 842-8888.

Lawn MalnlanancaLandscape InalaUara. Yard andSalat help needed for rapidlySMpandlng Nursery buelnass.Full time, anperlancad only. Toppay, excellent working con-ditions. Health benefits. Call787-1484 tor appointment

LEGAL SECRETARYLocal law firm Call 842-8200.ask lor Joan.LEGAL SECRETARY — Part Unafor real aattta closings for mow •ng rasl salata practlca. Salarynagotlabta 830-7600LEGAL SECRETARY — Answerthis ad and your ssarch for tharunt fob will ba over. Call780-8400 If you are a top sklHadlegal sscretsry in the WesternMonmoulh srss who snjoyt thachallsngs ot Real Estats trsns-

LIOHT PRODUCTION WORKDay shin.

Call 8423080

FACTORY

LIGHTASSEMBLERS

AND MATERIALHANDLERSALL SHIFTS

ALSO OPENINGSON MINI SHIFTS

W« ara curranily accepting ap-plicatiom for ptthara end pack-aft, and malarial handlers torEdlaon and Eaat Bruntwtch lo-cauom. lor 2nd A 3rd •riltta.

Apply Plant Parwmnat Dopl.9 AM to & PM

REVLONRoute 24 8 Ralmadge Rosd

EDISON NJ.

E.O.E. M/F/HLOCAL CONTRACT CLIANINQ. COMPANY .

Laoklng Mr ganaral daai ,Part lime evst In tha Rad Bankarea Can 1-800-382-8848.LOCAL CONTRACT CLEANINGCO. — Looking lor part timemorning supervisor In tha Kayport area Call 1-800-381-8848LOOKINQ FOR EXTRA MONEPart-Uma. Actlvaly-growing markatlng firm eeeke aggraaalvapaopla to make tslephons callsfrom our n i 19 office. HouraMon t . 0 p m 8 Saam. - i p.m. tut Inkarvlaw. cal542-4000, E.I 237. ssk for JoanLOOM TENDER - For third shiftWill train. CaH Arrow wovenLsbal Co. 780-8898.LOOKING FOR 90 PEOPLE - Tilose watght while you earn sxlrsmoney. Guaranteed to Iota10-28 iba e month on Hsrbslproduct. For mors Info, contac741-7823.PART TIME - Looking tor 29paopla to loss weight and/orearn money. 787-0038 days787-4384 avaa.

LPN — M/F, Full lima 8 pan limapositions available on the 11-7shift. Immediate openings Excsalary • banatlta BrookdaieNursing Center Call 284-9800for an appointment

MACHINIST — To operate CNCMill. Fsmlllar with programmingand operating. WavatronWa488-8700 8 a.m.-12 noon.

MACHINE OPERATOR — OpenIngs tor 3rd thin only Apply

740 Lloyd Rd., Matawan.MAILROOM HELP WANTED —Midnight shift. 1 to 3 days parweak depending on work loadNo exparlanoa neceeaary-wMtrain. Minimum waga. Cal842-4888 between a em-8 amAsk tor Mr. Conner Equal OppEmployar.

MANAGEMENT - With salesability tor beauty school Dadcalad career-minded Beautyculture background and bl-ilguaSpanish hslptui. but nol nacassary Sand raauma Include salarydesired to: Box T-491. Tha Dall

'. Shrewsbury. NJ 0770

Msnagamant Training

NOW HIRINGIMMEDIATE OPENINGSPERMANENT POSITIONPeople to start work Immediate!with local company. Noparlance neceeeary. Exot .working conditions and benefits

$1200 MO. TO STARTFor Interview Call

671-6556 or 981-1852MANICURIST — Padlcurlsl. axpFollowing preferred for new nasalon in Monmouth Araa830-1870MASON HELPER — 1 yr. sip. Ntools. Own transportation. Drtvare llceneo raq 921-4848.MECHANIC/WELDER — Fotmtll Industrial CompanySouth Brunswick. Full tims poItkm. Call 207-3381.

Help wantedFFICE CLEAMNO - Evaa.on -Sat.. Mate wan araa. 136

•ak 8*8-0740.

PERATOR/MECHANIC — Par-ananl position at good salary

V axp paraon to work lor aa contracting firm. Muatto: Drive light trucks,

tractor loaders 8bteuioe. email t a n g equipment,sod wear, chain saw. Me 8 poe-

mechemcal talat 10msmtaunoa for

ca» Jot Moraau at 4U-81S0 bo-I 4:30-9 p.m.

AINTERS - 8 years sx-parlanoa. Tranaporulon a mustCall 9-7 pm < M 1380

PART TIMEFatpratanlatrvaa lo do tsasibuilyludiaa in your sraa tor growing

Southwestern Company Tio seil-ng Involved Must ba ovar 21.neat appealing, and hava Mglblehandwriting. Umllad number ofppllcanta being accepted Act

now: For free details, write:ICA

30 Elm Street. Dapt. A/8Bergentkakt. NJ 07821

PART TIMEEarn SS par hf We will trsln Inlelemsrketlng. No aip. nacsss

ry PletMnt personality ra-ulrsd Collage tludants. houaa-

wlvaa walcomad.Mornlnga - 8AM 10 1PM

Afternoons • 1PM to 8PMEvanlnga-9PM 10 8PMMonday through Fridayae call 747-8800 before 3PM

atiy. reaw onicaa iocat#o at H I .38 8 Navaalnk Rlvar Rd.

Mechanic*al C lan with cvxttflcatlon.

Mechanic'sHelper

ART TIME — Naad extra cash7Work on home phona program.

laxltM. Earn up to 810 par hour.' Barbara. 747-8888

Good salary and benafue./ary nlca location in Rad Bank

842-8858

EXXON CompanyU.S.A.

A division of Exxon Corp.An Equal Opply Employar M/F

Adals E. Rsaclgno/Alms Pann. RParaonnat/Dtractor ol NurteeMARLBORO PSYCHIATRICHOSPITAL (StMa FseWtv)

Rl 920. Marlboro. NJ 0T74t1201) 848-8100. X424/303

DTELEMETRY

CRITICAL CARENM

10 hour ntghi thin

HEALTH AIDESNursing Dapt

Da LaSALLE HALL810 Newmon Springe Pka

Lmcron. NJ. 07TS81201) UO-M70

on placing M I MlIn this DIR1CTORY

call 542-4000 mxt. 306

MECHANICAL

DESIGNER

utisiyn oi pupar anacardboard boxes.

IMMEDIATE OPENINGHIOH RATES

VERV LONO TERMN J. SHORE LOCATION

CALL TONY544-0844

CDICORPORATION40 Avs. st Ihs CommonsShrewsbury, N J 07701

MEDICAL SECRETARY — Futl-ima. axp'd. to work In a private

M D't office in Rad Bank araaFull benelila. Ws ars sn sai

onsl opportunity employer liig lor a mature-mlndad

outstanding employes. Pleaeacall 747-8188

MEDICAL OFFICE WORK - 2-3days a weak. Work 1 lo 1 with Di8 patientt Tlnton Falla. Wllrain. Call days 844-0800. After 8

S30-0188

MEDICAL SECRETARY - Partime. Experienced In cardiology

MUMMown 871-0887.MEDICAL SECRETARY — Fullima Bright energetic. Llghtyping Long BrtncF/rtad BankAraa 2228222. between 10-12MEDICAL ASSISTANT - Recap-tlonltl. part lime (30), Exp. or wMtrain. Sewnd resume to: Monmouth Palna Inlllluls, 48 EnglishPlus. Rad Bank. NJ 07701.

MEDIA CENTER AIDE — Typingand clerical skills rsqulrsd Fulltlme-12 mos. Apply In wrung toPrincipal. Rad Bank RegionalH.S . 101 Rldga Rd Lima SllvarNJ 07738 OaadHna data. March28,1888. Equal Oppty Employar

MEN OR WOMEN — To8190 par day. Part lima tailingsxlblllon booth! In Tha Home ILMsurs Show, your araa is luted

i prospects Detain.Armstrong Enterprises222-0838MUSIC PROGRAMMER - Tltechnician trslnsa. Syndicatedradio mualc service. Matawaaraa. Part time. Must havs gooiclerical •kill . Raply lo: BoxF-431. Tha DallyShrewsbury. NJ 07701

N U D 8 D — H you have a law hrss month 8 a car you can helpHajtio aofft«j)ofs# to tafca Mnkcoupka ahopplnfl, doctor* appt*& arrandt Mull ba dapandabla* hava nf. Call 741-3503.

NICHOLS HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER — We havasoma Immediate openings avalable lor full lime ompioymenStart minimum of 37 hours

>k. Banatlta Include commissions. discountspurchases, psld holiday* anmore. Apply In paraon only, 1e.m -3 p.m. Nichols, Rl. 34Lloyd Rd Mattwan. N.J. E O E

NURSES

ATTENTION!Ptaata maMon THE REGISTER

whan fsptying 10 s Registeremploymantad.

NURSES M/F — If you are nighmotivated 8 oara about peopleIhlt |ob la for you. Wa aranational weight lota earvtot thahaa an exciting position lor youCall Bath at 388-2422.

NURSES M/F - Part-time. RNLPN, 11pm-7am, for skilled nure-mg facility, geriatricpreferrad. Can forFreehold431-92173/7/88.

ConvtCcntar

NURSES (M/F) - Full-timeRN/LPN Full-time • part-Hi11PM-7AM thin for sklnad nurs-ing facility. Geriatric axppreferred Call for IntervtawFreehold Convaleactni Csntar431-9217. Position svsil. 3/7/85

NURSESRIM'S & LPN'S M/F

CERTIFIEDNURSE'S AIDESHOMEMAKERS

HOUSEKEEPERS 8 LIVE-INSM/F

Full or pan-lime, needed toNorthern Monmoutn Araa. Hlgpay. no fat. Cat tor MtarvkM aPaopla Cera. 244 Broad S I . RadBank. 830-1888. or 800 UnionAva.. Rt 71. Brians. 828-8432.NURSES M/W - Part-timeRN/LPN. 7-3 JO. aklllad nursingfacility. Every othsr Sst./SunMust hsve geriatric axparlencaCsll lor interview. Freehold ConveCenter. 431-9217. 8-4 PM

NURSES M/F — Part-timeRN/LPN. 11 to 7 shift For tkIliadnursing facility. Osrlatrlc sxpprsfsrrsd Csll for InlannawFreehold ConvaCsnter431-9217. Position tvsll 3/7/1NURSES AIDES M/F— AccapIng new applications only. 8 !a m -3 p.m., 2:80 p.m.-8 p.mshirts. Psrmanant positions. Experlencad or New JerseycarMkM aides preferred Pardram pan lime rats start st $4 89par hr. II you ara Inlareeleddevoting yourssrl completelyins propsr care ol tha garlstrpsusni. plaaaa apply In psrac-Mon.-Frl. 10-12 noon a1:30-3:30 p.m. Holmoal Convalascsnt Center. 188 Hwy 34Holmoal.

NURSES PER DIEM M/F

PART TIME RATE R. N. 878. LI88990. PLUS BENEFITS REOUIREO BV LAW Geriatric ana#l«nf* t olm Aootv In

1 Help WantedPLAVOROUND AIDE — 2 hours

day 9 days par was*. 84.40hour. Call D,an Porter

School. BUCkpoInt Rd Rumaon.12-0330 EOE

EAL ESTATE SALES — Wahave 2 poaitlont avsilsbis lor

•aapaopla lf*caaa#your potanllal can Darrah As-

Shrowabury. 741-3838.

REAL ESTATECAREER OAV

March 28. 1888 8:30 s mOPEN TO PUBLIC

MOLLY PITCHER INNRED BANK

ntareattd m a career in Raalstats 7 Join Monmoulh Coun-ts tsstasl growing, lull sarvlca

Raal Eatate Company wllri ol-cas in, Hazlet. Middlatown.

Rumaon. 8 Long BranchSPINDRIFT REALTORS

264-9593Rasl Ealata Sales — Bshrt Ra-artors 8 Apprslssrs. tha shores

1 Real Eatata Co.. la now hiringtuN and part urns eaaoclalea.

ormal training, ample floorma COME WITH THE MOSTRUSTED NAME IN REAL ES-ATE. Bahrt RaalUXS. 872-1800

ART TIME — Screen 8 glassepalra. We will leach Mull ba

ualcka. Prowna. 32 Broad 8 1 .

PART TIME WORK - naar youlhome Is available supervisingnawaptptr carriers In the eerrymorning hours You will ovsrataha carrttrt delivery, salsa, 8 col-

—on aclMtalaa. Pr "vsllsbW In the lollowlng areas

I 1-M0-242-08O0IOIIMorganvWa.I M l free.

'ART TIME - Dtslsry aMa25-32 hours par waak. Ex-

Htcao praiarraci, DUI WI Irain. Varied shifts. Apply In par

son King Jsmae Nursing Homa.400 Hwy 38, MIOdkBown

PART TIME TELLER -Shrewsbury Stats Bank Houra.Wad 8:30-4. Thure.. 8 Frl . 2 8Sat. 8-8. Can Mr842-7700. sxt. 297.'ART TIME — School bus drlv

ere License prsfarred. bul willrain. Hrs. 7-8 am and/or 2-4 pm.

Summer work available. Applynow Murphy But Service. 898 Rl35, Mlddleiown (bahlnd Slpara-eln s Palnl store).'ART ITME EMPLOYEE —

Httdad tor small JewelrySpecialty Shop Fan Havan araaSaturdays 8 weekdays. Ex.parlance preferred Win trainWrite tob history t rataranota toJawslry. P.O. Box 733. Naw Mon-moulh. NJ . 07748.

PART TIME- — _Janitorial work In tha Rad Bank

PART-TIME SECRETARY - Forbusy Raal Ealsla offlca. weak-ande. Real Ealata license a plue

PART TIME SECRETARY —Racrsslion Committee Ability totake 8 tranacrlba minutes Applyat Borough Hall. 100 Flrat Ava.AH. Highland!, NJ.

PART TIME

•ATTENTION!

Please manllon THE REGISTER

Photography

•PORTRAITPHOTOGRAPHY

•SALESCONSULTANTS

No Experience Required

Focus on successwith PCA Nallonsl

We're a leader In ins colorportrait Induatry operating Inpretugloui department storesand financial Institutions nanonwkJe As wa expand m the

Inge for PhotographaraSales Consultants

As a PORTRAIT PHOTOORAPHER. ws'll g M you tha IMoettraining In tha Induatry...trainingthat will equip you for eimneat Itht anon and long term.

AS a PORTRAIT SALES CON-SULTANT, you'll handle ealea olfinished portraits to our cut-tomara. If you hevo people orkan-tad. professional personality and

atlas experience...your successIS certain. No cold calling or

Both poattjona require a oependaMa car. aunty to travel ovarnight, and work occasional Salurdaya.

In sxchange for your snthusiamand lalant, PCA offers a " "load salary phisyasr's earnlnge818-20.000) and comprehanatvs

ri oflsrs a guaran-t commission ( I t

FOCUS ON VOUR SUCCESSNOW! Call: Bob Shaker

201/389-2800PCA National

equal opportunity amptoirar m/lPIZZA 8 SUB MAKER — Part

InporttnoaT ApplyLukjl'a, HaHat.PIZZA MAKER — FuH and partH I M avail. Experienced only. 84cura poaJtton for raaponalviparson. Csll 842-4988.PLAVOROUN0/LUNCH ROOMAIDE — 8 days par waak. 2 hrapar day. 85 par hr CallShrewsbury school for Interview747-0882. EOE.

PLANT MANAGER —extlusion Small shop. Musi bsversatile and abka to do ill tuneHone. Can 10 am-4 pm872-0404

PONDEROSA NEEDS YOUIICALL NOWII 838-3820

A few positions ara SIHI svsil fortutl/psrt lima personnel Need Xmas money? Wa hava theantwart C M 838-3820 tor Inter-

51 Help WantedALES HELP - Part lima.hurt or Frl. avaa.. Sat. 8 Sunslurs minded paraon lo workDelis Hosiery, Mareket PI Rl,_Malawan:

ALES — Sae our ad under realeelals halp wanted Century 21 •Coians Agency

ANITATKM TRUCK DRIVER —Borough of W Long Branchneeds licensed qualltlad drlvar

pplicauona at Borough Hall. 86Poplar Ava . W Long Brsnch ba-

1 S a.m.-4 p.m.. Mon -FrlSCHOOL SECRETARV — 12month position. Hours 5M 30Must have exosllenl typing, or-ganuettonal a compulation

kills Word procaaslng helpfulully paid family medical in-

ranee, pension. 22 paid hol-idays. + wecalion Salary tnanga ol 19000 Sand resumend ietie< of interest lo, Valerieoger Malo. School Bustneeedminiatratof. Shore Rationaltgh School Board ol Ed . Mon-rOutn fern Mwy. WSST Long

Branch.

SECRET AHY/A8SIST ANTuty Rumaon raal N U M ottlca

naextt bright, waaniiad. paopia-ortanlatatf paraon lo admlnia-

ata ofttcaa 530-2M0,

REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON

(canaad. Qrowlng agancy inCotu Nack. incantltlva com-

ELLEN BUTLERREALTY GROUP

(77-1211 of 6T1-3*t3a

ECRETARV — Ad Rap. firmMusi be msturs minded, reliable

nd hswe good typing, ateno andhone •Mill Company paid Den-

ai and Medical Insuranceaiary commensurate with ex-

perience Relurneee Welcomeall Varns si 872-1811

REAL ESTATE SALESi-cnaaad aataa paraoni naadad.incroft/MKldialown otftc*. Ha-* v a training and national ban-

ERA LINCROFT REALTORS47-3830 747-66S7

ECRETARV - Part lima. Lttand Haalih Inauranca Agancyand raauma to, P O Boa S47,

Rad Bank, N.J. 07701.

REAL ESTATEYou've thought about It. Left talk

bout It now. Our office la ona ofhe top 4 in the Rad Bank araa.

Wa ara buay We naad you Exctraining, motivation a guidanceavailable Wa currently have 1Mlllum-Dollar aisocltlss. Nssd 3nort. Exparlancad or beginners.

SENTURY 21 COZENS. Rasltors"Independently Owned

813 Rlvar Rd. Fair Havan741-7888

SECRETARY - High SchoolIploma required. KeanaburgMUdants 8 prior ottlca sip.referred. Call Mr. Waltar Col-

man. 787-5822.SECRETARV — For school oM.cewith variety ol responsibilities

yplng skills required. Sand re-ums to SecratartaJ position.

P.O. Box 805. Rad Bank, N.J17701.

RECEPTIONIST — DapandablaMrson. Must type, anmar

phonas. rile. Call lor Interview.mmedlale petition for tha right

parson 530-8858.RECEPTIONIST — 22 hrt 'ak.Mutt ba flexible, personable 8havs axe. phona mannsrs. Exp'dirsfsrrsd, bul not necessary.M l 747-0004. Anthony luos. 18Ayars Ln.. Lulls Sllvar.REST HOME HELP NEEDED —3-10 shift. Possible others. Onlyreliable naad apply, relerencaaraqulrad. Call 229-1200 10

.•2 p.m. only.

RETAIL SALES CLERKS — ForVideo Store M/F. Full/part timeCall 738-4100.

Part TimeReceiving

Material HandlerDapartmani atofa ohtlaion ol \tHhighly auocaatlul SuparmarkaMOarvaral Corporation haa anclt-ing opantnga al our Rad Bankatora tor axparlancad ratal) ra-caMng dark.

If you ara Intaraatad In loinlng anaxpanding organlution withptartty ol advancamant opportunlly,

Apply in paraon 10am-5pmMonday to Saturday

STEINBACH121 Broad SI.

Rad Bank. NJ 07701Equal Oppty Employar M/F/H

RN — 3-l tpm. 7-3 pm Full timeand pan lima for long term carenursing Monmoulh Convaieacant Center. 228 Bath ava., LongBRsnch. 228-4300.

RN. — 7:30 AM-3.30 PM. FuUrns new wage scale

RN M/P — VMCA Day Campwaak summar poattton. CaH«*e-45M Or 741-2804.RUMSON — Enterprising youngstars wanlad. You will ba runnlnyour own buslnaaa wMta aarnliprlna. tnpa and cash.Tha only raquiramants ara thayou ara at kMSt 11 yaara otd•raraady to work.To sign up. call 642-4000. Exan.SALES •ATTENTION!

Please mention THE REGISTERwhan replying to e Ret

employ mant sd

SALES HELP PART TIMExciting houaawaras FactorOutlet Sat. * Sun 10am 0 pmExp helpful but not naceeaaryApply In parson, Baste Llns inci f industrial Dr.. CHftwoodBeech. NJ

SALESPERSON — Cslico Coinars al Tha Market Place Shopping Canter In Matawen la lookmg for a atlaeparaon who vrlan|oy working with decorativefebrlce for tha homa. Retail ordacoraung axp. la hsiprul. bunot raqulrad. if you would Ilka towork with paopla In a ptaaaretail atmoephera, pit ta tCalico Corners al 883-8223.

BALES — Part lima evanlngaweekends. Musi be sthieUcmindad and outgoing. Retail pertonality a muat Apply In paraonFast First inc. 62 Broad St., RadBank.

SALES - Part time. Conaclanttous sales hatp tor retail clothingstore. Flaxlbla hours avail. Night1 waakanda. High schooldiploma of eqtvalanl nacaa .Plaaat apply in person to atorManagir. between to andHaband. Rl. 38 8 Harmony RdM M M , 871-8472.

BALES APPLICATIONS - Iacoapstd tor part and full timeschedules In the automottvo

provamenl oantar and domingbptnanca la daalrad. Msny finsbenefits Apply In parson only. 1a.m.-3 p.m. Nichols. Rt 34Uoyd Rd.. Malawan E O.E

SALES PERSON — Full or panUrns. Apply In parson. RomanoJ l . n l • n . MMdaMown ShoppinCenter.

SALES - Lsroa establishedaggressive Insurance Agancytaexe a Casually and a LltsAgent for tha Monmoulh Countyeras Ouakfled wadi tufmanadPtaaat sand raaumas to: BoN-480. Tha DaHy RegisterSltiaaratuiY. NJ 07701.

Woodbridga Cantsr. Wood-

PORTER ORDERLY — Full timeposition on day shift Piaaaa calltor appotntmeni Hilltop NursingHome. 871-0177.PRINTING — Camera work astflpppmg Exp helpful but WINtrain. CaJTaWar 4 pm. 747-0331PROOF READER — Experiencedlull ume proof reader needed forbuay typesetting co Specializing

r'»ait> , ia* M™, - U | tMHVal and corporate work. t»-

flaftay. peg*, camera copy andHues reading, Some speckingbackground necessary Open-ings lor both day snd eveningSand resume to: Office Manager,JM Post Graphics. PO Box 33*.Kaanaburg, NJ 07734.

101 Apt*, lor rent

1 Help Wanted

TELLERS

FULL TIMEPART TIME

Positions AvailableMONMOUTH COUNTY

osilions require some prsvious•list experience In soma araasnd haavy cash handling Inbars. Earn a salary com-ensursls with your oxpsrlence

Excellent company package andtuition reimbursement plan

FOR IMMEDIATECONSIDERATION CALL

JERSEY SHORESAVINGS

PERSONNEL349-1000

Equal Oppty Employar M/F

OOL A DIE MAKER — S yaarailnlmum aip., for light ctaan

ntaraailng work, [mold -cav.iybackground halptul. bul nol aa-aanti*.). Ovartima A banalita. En-

Inaarad Pracliton Caaling Co .IMdlatown, 671-2424.OW TRUCK DRIVERS - Ex-

perienced needed in llghl dutyow trucks and Hal bads Part iull time Call 530-4041.

IECURITY — Plain clolhaa dac-va lor targa '•tail itora Fullma, part tima schadulaa avali-

abta Exparlanca daalrad Goodopportunity, axcallant ban-aliu Apply in paraon onhy atNtchola. Rt. 34 t Lloyd Road,MaUwan, N.J. E.O.E.

SECURITYOFFICERS

WELLS FARGOFuH Ume/Ptrt ume

Waskands

Monmoulh, Mercer, Mlddloeei8 Union Countist

Requirements Rsusbl*. steadyworkara. own car andpnona-Valld NJ. drlvare licenseclean police record.

(201) M I - I M SEqusl Opportunity Employar

M/FSERIOUS FAT PEOPLE — Wantad lo lose weight on herbal prod-uct. Weight lost of 10-28 lot parmonth. For mora tnfo.747-8015.

SERVICE STATION ATTENIANTS M/F - 2 p.m.-10 p m 810 p.m.-8 am shifts Mlddle-town/Holmdef tree. Call8718777 or 871-8782 EOE

SET UP PERSON — PerthAmboy. To apply lettering to alh-isllc gsrmsntt Oood speller, aysfor sccurscy Ospandabls Fullume. 442-1800 between 10-2pmOllls

SEVERAL POSITIONS — Avall-sbls Holmdal Motor Inn. Rl 38Hdmdel. Call 264-4600 for interview.

SEWING MACHINEOperaior/presssr, must be eblsto read snd write English Noaxp necessary. Full urns yaarround work In pleasant: atmosphere Csll tha CurvonCorp. 34 Appts 3 t . Tlnton Fails

SEXTON — To care for FalHavan Church, building andgrounds References requiredCaM T41-0a»4 m 741-OQTT.SHOE SALES - Pan time Expprsfarred. Apply In paraon SidBootery. 24 Prospect Plait LintsSilver.

SPRINKLERMECHANIC 8 LABORER842-1400 or 581-1300

STENOGRAPHERRIVERVIEW MEDICAL CENTERis looking for an individual toprovide excellent sacrstsriscapabilities for our NursingDlvitlon This unique IndrvlduslShould ba proficient In bothtyping snd steno snd possesssuperior written and oral com-munication skills. Our opportunlty often a Mon -Frl. position vrlthhours of 8 4 . Wa provide compeutiva starting salary withoulttandlng banatlls.

Csll ol applyStephen Fortmullar

Personnel Oapt.530-2300

RIVERVIEWMEDICAL CENTER

38 Urnon St.Rad Bank. NJ 07701

Equal Oppty Employar M/FSTOCK BOY - Mutt ba out ofachool. Apply in paraon E.LRobarts. 8 Hwy 38. KaantburgSUPERVISOR — FullUrns. For local Janitorial Com«ny. Experlen-800-382-8848.

SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR— 3 or 4 p.m. on. Long termwork, plaeaant working condltiona. CaH 741-4700.SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR -11 p.m. lo 7 a m thin Exparlance nottrain. 871-8200.TEACH 8 ADMIN. JOBS - 85-88

100*1 ntw weakly. For subs info3078M-0170 or eend SASE toNESC. Dspl Ron 12OC N t in ERtverton. WY B2501.TEACHER - Physical EducaHon. F/T. Local private achoolContact Mrt Cundarl. 542-477E«t 2S bstwasn g-a pm.

TEACHER — Summer employmant. Recreational programChildren ages 5-8, • a.m -5 p mSand raauma to Plaza. BOH 20'Hsztet. NJ 07730.TEACHER OF THE HANICAPPED — Immediate openingCan principal 881-8800TEACHERS AIDE - Pra-achoolRaply P O Box 8B1S. Rad BankN J. 07701.EACHER — Cartitled. grouteacher tor PM Toddler Progrsmfrom 1-5 pm. Exp. preferred Cal842-4732 after 1 pm.

101 Apti. (or rent

1 Help Wanted

IRE PERSON - Must nsve ex-r a p ^ l a r g . turck

raa Call 2

TRAIN FOR SUCCESSha raal estate boom ol the 90 aas arrived. ERA IS willing toam a select few lo reap the

ewsrds. We csn guarantee anncome ot $30.000/yr Wa re-uire an ambitious, hsrdworking

ndividual willing to learn whileearning ERA Melmed Realtors.

71-5C5O

TRAVEL AGENT — Commercial,mmedisls opening Exp. only.

Sabre or Apollo background re-quired Managerial potential.Csll Debbie or Bonnie at

revelers Ona 741-5090

TRAINEES — S u n at W 05 andup 10 $12.55 Full/part lima

Steady work, no lay ofls Collegestudents welcome Courteousand hard working need onlyapply Call 747-95M between12-3 p.m.

TREE DIGGERSSkilled in B A B method PartIme. Now through December

Call 462-5100 4-5 p.mTRUCK DRIVER NEEDED

Tandem dump truck. 2-3 yrsexp Small Monmouth Countycontractor Call 2O1-&42-0300

TRUCK SERVICES - Manager,arge ahop eerwlcing AH makee' medium and haavy duty

truck* Exp. required Great•alary + comm All benefits paid"•end reaume to PO Box 756.

Red Bank, NJ 07701TYPIST— Muat be neat, ac-cuiate. 6 hra /day 5day/wk RadBank aree 592-5890

TypitU SecralanaiLight induatrial CRT's

6mm

$35Bonus

That's right, juit work 90 hoursand you will receive an additional*35 00 No Unngi attachedRegister today- be workingtomorrow High hourly pay rate,incentives, no fee charged

New applicants only. Bring thisad with you to qualify Oder ex-pires March 31st.

MANNTEMPORARIES

43 Gilbert SI North(OH Shrewsbury Ava )

942-4224WAITRESSES/WAITERSHost/Hoaateas, Full and parttime. Apply in person But-tonwood Manor Restaurant. Hwy

WAITERS/WAITRESSESit you are serious about becom-ing a top flight server in anoutstanding dining room. Call forappointment Experienced helplul. bul nol required We will payyou while you train201-642-1303, Mr Penevolpe

WAITERS/WAITRESSESHosts/Hostesses ApplyOak Oner. Rt 35. HaitatWAITER/WAITRESS — BottleGround Country Club, aip.prafarrad. uniforms providedCall 482-7575. ask lor CandiWARE HOUSE — F/T, HolmdelComputer Firm seeking full Umewarehouse person. Duties in-clude picking A pecking com-puter orders, misc. shipping andreceiving, etc Entry level pos-ition. Please call Staci Ambroseat 2S4-596S £ O E

WA8TE WATER PUMPSTATION LABORERS

The Manaaquan River RegionalSewerage Authority has open-ings for mechanically oreintedlaborers High school grsduaterequired. Experience helpful, butnot neceeaary Sand raauma to

i.RS.A.. PO Box 509. Free-

X-RAY TECHSFull time, par diem and weekendpositions. Must be NJ licencedand registered or registryeligible '

Contact Sharon K. BarrowsPereonnel Recruiter. 530-2332

RIVERVIEWMEDICAL CENTER

36 Union SI.Raxl Bank. NJ

Equal Opply Employar M/F

52 Babysitting-Child Car»

BABYSITTER — For Infant In myhome Mon.-Fn. Full time. Cell591-9114.BABYSITTER — tor 2 year otd mmy Middtotown homa. Wee*days. Teachers hours. Non-smoker Own transportationhelpful References. 671 -4240wsafcdays aftsr 3 30

BABYSITTER WANTED — For21 mo. otd boy. 3-4 times parweek. 8 hrs per day. In my FairHaven home Call after 5 30 p.m530-3061.

101 Apts.forrtnt

SuburbanLivingwithCity

OFFICE POSITION •*- Lightbookkeeping & light typing.Some sup preferred. Full ben-efits 9-5 p.m Sand resume toBox J-443. The Daily RegisterShrewsbury, NJ 07701.OFFICE PERSON — All skills in-cluding telephone Must be ableto work on your own. Reply Inconfidence with brlel resume toBoa B-469. The Daily Register,Shrewsbury. NJ 07701.

OFFICE PERSON — PerthAmboy Llghl typing, filing Gen-eral office work Interestingduties Commom sense a must.Good job tot person re-enierlngthe job market 442-1600 be-tween 10-2 pm Ollis

PT ADULT - - House, pal babysll-ters. Ideal for active seniora-re-tlreee. Need car. 642-0597.1 t-SREPORTERS - Needed to covermunicipal government meetingsfor The Dally Register. Some •«•partence nacaaaary. Paymentper article. Pieces donl callSend resumes and work sam-ples to Jane Fodersro, City Edi-tor. Bon 4-406. The Daily Regis-ter. Shrewsbury, N J 07701Ware Equal Opportunity Em-ployers M/F

Matt ten Mavfri. 104 pa • Wnktafe 10-5 pa • 413-2331«Hii,t,uiuuiui\vvulwiv\u\iiiiini.iiuuii[iiiiuuuuuiiiiiiiiiiiii,Ln u u

10D Th< d«y Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17,1985MfeytlttlMChild Car*

COMPLETE CAM FOB YOU*CHILD - win a u i , m mCMM. Mon-Frl.. In my M m . Fun

KID KARE AGENCY - Is hiringpeople for houee

. baby. P " a vecebon

LOVIHO MATURE WOMAN

• m a 4 yrs. mour RumeonM m $ or 8 days • week. (Mon-Frl. •-•) laiM HfM hOUOS-UWHt Non-smoker Ownirsneponseon • muM. CallX l « i i M I alMr Tp.ni.LO«wa DEPENDABLE PER.SOM - To « to> 4 yMT OH gM Mmy Home. 2-3 wesfcdey M l .some weekends aa wal. Call7S7-O3M 01 SM-3T00 sak 10.LlsaPagonoLOVMO MOTHER OF 1 - WrXcsre tor your child In my reerd.ti>i K M EM home Snack. •lunch provided. Rare, even.

- II1MUI^PROFESSIONAL

COUPLE — Seek, melure-mlnd.ed woman lo cere for 2 monthold mlsni In our homo. Part Hrna•Israng mid-April tor 1 month..lh*n lull lima, Some light house-ksaotrn Salary Mgooeble. (tot.Can SH-2727 It no answer leeve

M SltaattomWMi*j«|

SUPEROIRLS INC.•p gam norm ntaMananoo.wo

< your homo as » « wee ourI. On* vtM ami M r l agreeSet-Seat or 4B» <4Bf

TVW) WOMEN — Looking torhoueework. HerdworkereThrough lobe. W a

oryona —lWang to pHaaan eel •«• 0173

WILL CLEAN VOUR HOME —endhoneet

18.WILL CLEAN VOUR HOME -Apartmant or bualnOM- Emotonl.ryanduiuHsslulna|. IMkMkamm. rtoMxW.OKI arldga and H am a i l toon 2*4 -1«7» » no

—II.

SS SituationsWanted Mai*

l MercMae1.seHrU*

ANTIQUE OE8K - Oe* sue by•safe Unanlohod. Sendee only.woo caa S 7 I - M I O

ANTIQUE — Parlor SO4rma ana

ANTrOUC - Wicker, rapper.iron, cryotal. oak dock. Deeuefui

ANVK. — Appro.—our, MOma.. S i rs . Laad meieno pot S30.HO pWtorm truck | W Can747-54e»APPLIANCES — Pjotrtgoralors,

• l i l k i l l l l »too a up. Cana n i i . Wo M l by CM OoUan

EXPERIENCED - EMMa per-tlma m Jon-

GUTTERSCloenea end Repaired

CaH 747-2S45 or 747- S K IL A W M MOWER-Scrvtoe are-paw. Vary raej

Call 741

RELIABLE PERSON —To mind

330-1 p.m.. Mon.-Frl. InLaonardo. Call atlar S p.m•72-1 IMTEACHER SEEKING - Raapon-slMe paraon u car* tor 1 yewold In my homa bsglnnlng Sep-Hmkar 'SS FkulMa .tlarnoohnoun. Call 73S-0104W O M A N - T o babyan day hour,for Infant. My homo or your..Qood pay. 2-J day. a »aok RedBank. Snrawabury araa. CaHTarry S30 -MM.

83 DoHT.tlc H»lpDEPENDABLE WOMAN - Tocara tor okHrly lady From 2p m -6 p m 5 day. per waak. Carand rets, required Call171-0443

DUST BUSTERS — Commercial.rMidontial. floor waxing, carpot•nampooing. genorel cloenlng.set . » 04e-s«WHOUSEKEEPER - Llvo-ln foul14) day. par M M Kind familyTwo school aga cruMren Oak-Hurst sree CaH 531-535S

LAWNMOWER — SarvKa and'apalr. Vary laaaonaNa rates.Call altar 5 p.m. 741-2OM.LAWN SERVICE - CompkMalawn maintenance, spring daan-upa. parfeiiod rMaa. CON•71-1211

APPLIANCES - Lall hand C M. P i l m i amk. M M a tank

71 MetXMrVtJISeHrUH

mum- *>• *bargain a r l m New or uaadAA C DESK OUTLET. 170B XLU . Oakhunjt. U t -Mgo

•SAZi,s—a.. ortonae-BsTSaHys.

D4NINO ROOM SET - Tra-qadkB*

D4NINO ROOM SEfJeeYrOnw. ' • lJr>aBTBl>TEj#^ a j o a i BJ

ohoee. MSP. Colonial tfimlsmr• n m mat #aee S7S. CM

mat

• 1W0 Can day* 7S»-2lse; Eves—-tin.BABY PURNITUM - Changingtable, swing, baby bod a Mamore Cos Iwojit)

BABY ORANO PIANOflood oortdwon. tiOOO or baatotter. Oa» arUr 4 p-m. 747-M42

MAN t TRUCK FOR HIRE —Pick up a da«Mr light h H sSmall moving pea. Varde, . t o et n u n ctoanad. ouuara att.Froa aaumataa. Jo. Tss-tas?

PANELINO — Doora. Window.

plumbingReasonable ratea.mates. 2 M i ; j i

TNT LAWN SERVICEWo do a dynamna rob at . groatpriea Wa cut lawna. wood, odgo,trim. OK. Can onytlmo TimM S - 7 N 7 or Dava SW-KUS

61 BusinessOpportunity

HOUSEKEEPER - To caro torHolmdol houo. A 2 chUdran ago.2 S 4 tor protoaalonal coupk*L>v« out 7:45 a m -8 p.m.. M o n -Fn Salary U 2 S par wk. Mul ldnva and ha«o r«oonl cnockabktrofa Rapry in writing to. BoxR-470 Tha Dairy ~Shnwabury. NJ 07701MATURE FEMALE — To cara forwdorty woman Rad Bank. Sun-day*. 5-flPM Own Iran. Rotor-wiea . Roply » Box N-44a. TnaOHry Rogtttor. ShrawUXKy NJ077OIMATURE RELIABLE PERSON

To baby.it two 4 month ok) twin.• "d . 3 yaar old in myKoanaburg homo a coupM ofd . y a . w a o k Call 7S7-2MS

MATURE COMPANION-AIDE —For aldorly woman, nv. in. non-•mok«f Sand n u m to Box2-404. Tha Daily IShrewsbury. N J 07701

54 SituationsWanted Female

ABOVE THE RESTIN CHILD CAREI

Your child should ba content,nappy and well-cared for whMeyou work I am a Fair Havenmother who can do all ot thesboval 2 i year, experience Inchild care wllh TERRIFIC refer-• n o ! Call M2-BM7

AT-HOME SITTING SERVICEHOME BUDDIES

Exclusive child, pet S housecaresgency by bonded protoaalonal..See ad in Yellow Pages "Sitting'HOME BUDDIES. M2-0M7

BABYSITTINGIn my Eetontown home. Deys.Call before 7 p.m. 542-1296

BABYSITTING! — Experiencedyoung mother will care tor yourchild/children. Full or pan timein my Keansburg homa. (Acrossthe street from St Ann's aFrances Pt School.) varyreasonable rates Excellent retsCall P«tty. 7S7-23O4

BIRD TRAINING• BIRO SITTING

In your homa.Call 531-1172.

BOOKKEEPER — Full charge,tree lance. A/P. A/R. Ledgers,bank records Specialty in pay-roll I payroll taxea Call73» i s to after • p.m

DELI - Oancslaoaan t Grocery•lor. Exc location unlimitedpotential Call 211 i m

EXHIBITORS — For home •leisure ahem 30.000 new toco.Armstrong Enterprleaa.222-0*3«

JAMES LIMO SERVICEI anytime.Cell 7t7-23ee

OPPORTUNTIY FORMANAGER/OWNER

looking tor an op-portunituy lo manage and own amulMr frencMee. Can Mr,Longo. after 5 pm at•7I-1010-M7-ODSO

OPPORTUNTIYFOR MANAGER/OWNER

Person looking for an opportuni-* 1 manege and own a muffler

Ktiree. Call Mr. Longo. after5 pm. al •71.10IO-857-O0O0

BAND EQUIPMENT — Nomebrand gutters, amps., baas, key-board., elec eccordian echo. 4

t . 727-ia»6

BAR STOOLS - Receney re-

SreTS. Can 7»7-a2T7 aWar i pm.BEAUTIFUL PIANO — Yamehe

I wrm bench Ltoad a mo.. Colonel A steel si »1 too- M M anytime

Somet .MepklC747-BNBEAUTIFUL LIGHTED SHOW-CASE - araaa/gray. Like new.matching oaaf) regrtler aland,botn tor S3S0. Caah tegmer S7S.

WffSraaar11*A BEAUTIFUL — Carved perkxorgan, c. 1(70. Waekes of Lon-don Appraleed $4250 SaleS27SO. Frl or S a l . » lo 1 AxMfurniture. « Colemen Ave.

BEDROOM SET _ Full sue

chest, triple dreaaar and M m .Night tabto. manraes. box springA 4p#ts of •^ • • ts , 1 rTvaUcnlOQbedspread 1 winter gold aprearTMake offer. Over t u o Cell747 W M

karaa tornHy TaMa open. IBIS1*' « i 5 0 S / « Bob Raiiaotph

0 M M 0 ROOM SET — DanWlwemut TabM wrtn s Maaraa, S• r a m . buftot. esc. cond MOOCan m ana.

71 Marchandlttfar Sal*

end tests, round Mat• M oner cat 4 S * - i 3 1t p.m.UV*IO> ROOM FURNITURE —

uvma ROOM —

LIVING ROOM BIT — • PC* velvet miafiliiiis. kt-

en. rocking chelr. I, 1 ooHe. table wWitad, a me. md. Moved

n a m c s a au>. sea si7»

9CBL , D i B M . •Smtol ttmes. lac. cond Cana i m T p.m. TST-aaaoLIVING IWOM - Comemporery.tm whria vehret eoto and loveaaM e«h (nan a gold floralprmt Green velvet choir. 3Gordon table., breaa Door lamp.glees tab*, lemp t l e M . CanMar 10 » m 4H-MO7

DINETTE SET - Table B •ohMre. pertect cond.. MO; a an-•Quo Ice creem pokkr chairs.• 100. Wire dOB OSS* ISO. Ce»•71-iosa M

I T — 1 piece.le with 4 h*-b

i. awood look tmsh 1300 7»7J4O0or 171 PM2 Ask tor Juke,DFNINO ROOM SIT —Italy, 12 n long Breekfronl 3 PCentrance haJ tat. "22»-454o

DOG HOUSE —

DRUMS — 5 pc aangertend. >ZHdgen RMo cymbor.. M-hat.Week, exc cond. e l 000 Cat

DRUM — Tame tsilngtltr —Black. S modd.. mini cond.muel ate. Inckjdea. 1 floor lorn. 122- beet drum 1 snare/stand 2

pwhna. Tom-tom, tnare, bchidmg 1 Camber cymbal.cond. »2O0 5U-27U

BEO ROOM SET - White. Incl..dresoor. mirror, box spring withhe.dHO.rd. Exc cond. 8100Cea 741-13S3.BEDROOM SET - Royal bkiedreeter, hetdbnard (boys).breaa hardware. S50. CallI t l l l l l alHr a pm.

82 Mortgaoaa

GET VISA/MCRegerdleH ot credit history orincomel No-nek guarantee. 4year old corporation listed wrmiocs! business bureeu Insuredand secured wftn S S L bank.Oeedline eoon tor apppucemaFor brochure end applicationsend S3 tor poetess and hand-ling (refundable) lo: FAC. Inc..P O Box 104a. Smyrna. OAJ00S1-104S Phone404-5S7-2811

LOW RATESu i Mlg refinancing. 72 hour ap-provala. 2nd Mlga a CorpLoan..Kramer Fin I 3S4 50M

63 Money to LoanA BETTER LOAN RATEFOR HOMEOWNERS

I still offer 11 '* H govern-

losn. alto evaUeble at low rale,with . . tended paybacks. Wasolve your financial problems,

COLONIALFINANCIAL ACCEPTANCE. INC

TOLL-FREE800-323-6556, Ext. R88

BEDROOM SET — Double. •puces, oak by Mamnevllle. S475;Antique mahogany desk. 40x20.WO Dining room set. Urge Chinadoaet server. > table. ISO-.Wooden Chest of drews. S25 aS3S: Twin bed 550. Quean siteD M I r B i MajleU GsvfnsW GSDHvfMSIS; Large wooden Oothee cabl-net S2S; Oueen sue sots, h lde^-bsd. exc 5275. Sofa bed withmatching chair 5100. Double bed5S0. Folding cot 520 2S4-S4M.

BED - Single Never used WithDOigtveKS OefiHltO'lel bfltfrllly ' • • t570 Llncroll CaH 747-7512^

BOKES - CORRUGATEDFor Moving a Storage, and torInduMry. A comphtt. line of

suppkee 452-4072 or

B O Y S - 24- Huffy to sod. bike.Like new. 570. CNMadreaecr/werdrooe by Lukeby.need retlnlehlng 550. S71.O3W

BUNK BEDS - From O w nStrokes. compkMo. U 6 0 ; Castrocouch A charr. 5175; 2 unusedspace negte tcSMea . a i a « S « l .

BUNK BED SET — Contem-porary wnn. torrmca. walnut trimwith desk and storage drawers.Exc cond. Asking MSO Cat747-75SS.

DRUMS — 5 pc.. CB 700 par-cueskm wine color, exc cond..MuM set Asking SSOO.757-5734

DRV CLEANING ELECTRICCONVEYOR — aOO hanger..good oondmon. used only 3 mo.Rsssnnsms. Caa 7J7-44MEARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE1 couch, 1 chair. 2 end tatilaa. 1coltoa labto. pr lempa. 5 25' TVSow aa set. only Including T VCat 741 Oboe

OHtF• Cop

hood. 5100; Formkia• M a . 4 padded oh Mrs. 555;Me adding rMoMne. Hka545. Brack Bedded bar. 4 •575. Cat 757-0067

71 MerdMndlMlor Sal*

SERVICE STATION EQUIPMENTUaraaN M-500. tnoloi an*

'.COM 10-10 anMaaToia STS-atT ot afi-Ttra.

SOFA - < M bu«t Gold

SOFA - L shape. 3 ptooaa.• m o Batae. a SB* eeuere per-guet coneTitol. 5*00 or bsetoffer Cet ete-4014

SOFA BEO -i i » M « ( r S - » u - d | . « ,• 7S Can enef 5 p.m. 757-1341

SPINET ORGAN 6 BENCHwtXJfVtmWU* - ivesliV OOeiSeTeBrJQsl. F Pere"B

ueed. MOO, Caa see-ins.B O F A - r mns chMr. pertor family room Of IM apt SAlso Ptna collee t endSKee. 741-5051

AM/FM radio. • Keck two) endphonograph. Cat T5T-S51S.

STONE OFFERnVKto hM FMMMon*.rock t cm -*>o» t«ft from

B a a

• ovMUl*s.5aa.

MENB ENGLISH BICYCLEasmeti.

Cet 542-OMIMOVINO-MU5T BELLI - OUT.•-piece bedroom eM, pMg open

tor. Colonial coltoa a end lables.recaner, towel a rug set CatHin»MOVING MUST SELL — Sofa.etjrsD, chairs, lamps, table, etc.Frl 5 Sal March 5 5 5. 10-4.321-4 Spring St. Red Bar*.

MOVING — RadkVrecofd player520 A/c 4000 btu 570. Whickerchanging tab* 530. Rug 5 x 5gold color, need, cleaning 57.Kugt . green H I So»MO4M O V I N G — Sofa bad. QueanWim at CU#aO"i WWrWiy IT\ell#'»Je>*tool covers 1 never ueed. 5250Ethan Aten Maple end table. 12)5135 eech Coffee table S i rs , tMaple bureau 515 MUJC. 5X12 •3 amMtor oval braided rut* .575 Cek 741-2U0MOVING OUT OF STATE -Great buys Sennmglon DMebedroom eel, 5550 2 consolestereo unit., 5125 M. 13' Zenithcolor console TV. 5100 Oueena m sofa bed. 575 valour tre-dltlonM chair. 550. Antique che.1of diaeen. 550. Beige pkiehcerpet B50. Large federal mir-ror. 190. Lamps 5 other item.Cat 542-M15

ELECTRIC

anuwner757-I3M

GUITAR —ck.tege 505150 firm

155 aflar 5:30 pmEVEREST JENNINGS — Extratare wheel chelrCea 7S7-4O12.FENCE - Redwood pointed. 5yrs old. 43 « eecOonii/po.t.Remove It and ire your, tor 550.Cet after 5pm «72-iMi

FIREWALKEXPERIENCE

April 15. with Tony RobblnsNYC For bcketa cell 747-5111FISH TANK - 55 gal., 100 1MHhealer, oque king Mar. dkuamfat. _ »_^w*> - • ^w^e,»#m^»» bi nn t%

nnvf evfm Qfwfifwi cPewnvr noooend aland. Also 12" •neke need.5200 Cat! 747-0114.4 TIRES WITH WHEELS -(2IE-7H4 snows. (2) 700-14 510a«Ch. Schwlnn bike 2T S35. CM741-0610 anytime

4 CRAOAR SS MAGS — 14*. bUbolt penarn Ptymoulh. 2 withm e . Asking S IM.

da.

CABBAGE PATCH POLLS — AllVaVlVttsN ifrCllKJrOQ AdMsVtGreat grtt tor any occhoeday. Ca l 530-5455

BOOKKEEPER F/C — Free-lance, post ledger, trial bei.nce.payroll, payroll tsaea. bank rac'aCaH 73g-10o0.CLEANING AT ITS FINEST —Trustworthy. personal. of-lordable Call Valeria. 775-3540.

Merchandisefor Sal*

SECRETARY — Art decobedroom, and enure contents olhouse. This is a huge sale. 23Hlghvlew Circle. Middletown Frl• s s i , g to i.

CAMERA — Nikon FO-20, wide

lens SO-aiOmm. 50mm lens Cetevea. 5 aeekend. 5421554

CARPETING — Well to wet.m.ior mill Hquldetlng enureSlock, brand new 100% nylon,any 3 rooms living, dining,bedroom to 375 eg ft. 5155 Inclcustom Installation over pad-ding, rlnenclng. CaH Berry201-555-7200

FOYER CHAIRS — 2 woodenhigh-beck, velvet easts. auMbtetor issMurant or motel. 2 endtebtaa. etc. Cat 747-7153. 5a m.-i2 noon.FREEZER - Small che.1 typeVery good condition. S75. Cat

2siysr

MOVING MUST SELLBon igoi soar . O.E. troetfrseenergy sever. Almond. 17.6. 2veers dd . S400 G. E. Washer,electric dryer. Almond. 2 yrs.8400 pair Caa 741-175T

MOVING — Upright piano, pooltable. M M bad. bureeu. chesl of

d i n m . set weehsr (needa belt).Cell 571-1155.

MOVINGAH furniture muM goMuM MM by April 15

CeH544-«H7

MOVING TO SMALLER HOMEOrlenUI rugs, 500 books-manyCOMctbH Antique. welnuldouble bed, welnul chert, targecsrvtMl fnflnoDBny vwvM up*noMered chelr, plaltorm rocker,pair red leather Hull-woodchair. Hammond spinel electricOOVi ftno b t t h t t f 4 d

n v p T * n O U f a < # O e W G » v P j W l P u ,grey a eMte oray '* PRICE.BUfnMad mat a term.SPECIAL rock lax oranukv atoneface panto. M M • x 20. 555.entire h o u e . 1 . 100. SU*. PriceMet labor a material. Cat Montecooed dayrove met. Sun.573-5400

SWIM POOLS WAREHOUSE -Forced to dispose of new on-ground 31'long pools. CU I I IU I I I Iwith huge »un decks, fencing, hl-reto finer., pump, ladder., wer-

_^_ * ^tZl BxBxexexl anae—

f s V T e e M . VfJC A e t J I I n y « H P M COfT*"

ptoto F m l g M U k Cat)ptoto.San l

10 PIECE ANTK3UE WHITEPioranaal I

Lingerie Che.1. _ J l OnsMt with

hutch Vanity table, floor mirror.

X Mand. haedboerd. chelror M offer455-0755 after 5 pm.

Pate andLivestockAdvanced And

BeglnneraDOQ TRAINING

BayeltoreOesClBb.T41.a04a

ALL ELECTRIC TRAINSLionel. Flya.. etc. Hkjhaet 5 paid

DALMATION PUPP1E8A M . Champion seed

Show or petCea » l - 3 e U or M1-SSS1

EASTER BUNWEBUnaMes. DeMte. tope, a regs-

Ptok em noej HuMtiae Mao.CManyerr>.4«o-O477/«Ose

_ YOU HAVE YOURSAl i - Cat Seoond Hand Lt.

14-0777 After 5. BM-SSte.«heel prue. peld tor ex Item.,

snaques. etc roTbergeln.. • « »24 Broad St, Keypon

FREE TO GOOD HOME

•HERO PUPS

of UvM Top quelrry. honU re»ed.quamy. home rale.

fcatsri-aiM.GREAT DANE — Pure bred 10

beauty with a>. Garni and w-

owner In piOgTOOS New femHyMuM heve their own home. At

5100 Cat 544-5515GREAT DANE PUPS — Fewns ol

* tut. Champion•0-SSSO. 3544001

IS.MINI SCHNAUZER PUPS

Cropped Pel a sheer qualityHomered, oood -nth childrenCet PAM jar-4aai^POODLE - Toy. spayed female.cocoa color, m id t lovable lokind people. 7 yeare d d . SIS.Cea 671-1367PUQ PUPPIES— Reedy to go forEaster. AKC isQiaiirin. At snotoa wormed. Beet offer. Cek254-251450 RHODE ISLAND REDS — aPlymouth Rock laying hone.5100 Cat B42-OSO3.

TREES. TREES. TREES -Flowering Dogwood. 5-6'. US aup. Shedemesksr HoneytacueL10-12 S3S. Siilllgiiih Meple.6-6'. sia Plamtng svsllsbls Raj5 5 . SIS Ptoneng t v . l sLendeceplng. 251-1557TREES — Maple. Birch. CMMpe.Mimosa. Dog Wood. SweM Gum.etc. 51 p e r b o t Wtuame Farm.S4S W RNordMa Ave.. TlntonFete. Alter 2 p m deny Phone542-1452

TV— RCA Color. 21-; New pic-ture tube, beeutrful5100. Cat 542-500314X45 BILNOR -

Likeemmmlngwerd M t -

Ing 5150 or beM offer. BuyerrrHMdreeaaembto Can 2 5 4 4 * 4 5after 3.TYPEWRITER — 1MB correctingSaioctrlc III 12 pitch modal.Ea*a Msinsnls 5 ribbon., SSSOCet 757-7015.USED FURNITURE — 54' couch,2 chelr.. TV console. S singlebed Reasonable price. CetBT1-53B5.

VELVET SOFAPrte gold sniped, like new, SITS.Cat 757-5341VIDEO DISC PLAYER RCA —Mint condition Asking 5155. Can572-2451.

T HROUGH BRE DS - 3 wall eom-tormed New Jersey bred year-xngs, by Duke Tom 5 Provento.SSMO e . 3 brood meres In foaltoboMaa btade. 515005 52500.Ca l Oetbrook Farm 201 S4S3515.

80 BicyclesMini BIKes

BMX RACING BIKESkyway custom. 5155

Cat 045 5055 eve. /weekend.

(vtorcharMIM

CASH FOR BOOKSI BOOKSIBOOKSI BOOKS, BOOKSI

CLEAN FILL DMTAnd topeoa wemed.

Pteese cat errytlme 541-0517

Guy Johnson

Anewre furrmure. lewetry,sjvertel C t HJ4MS

WantedPIANO WANTEDAny oondreon. 4B3-4B11

101 AprtmenfA-l ABERDEEN TO RED BANK

Keypon reedy now 5200Oeel. heel perd 5300.

Long Branch, baa pd_

MANY O1MERB AVAtCABLSlHOME RENTALS, Bkr. BSS-ISSt

ATLANTIC HfOHLANOB - SmT-

B&iSGS&la hoi water Ind. 251-0005

UI Houm lor SaltMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS IALLI

ANY AOE ANY CONDITIONTOP DOLLAR PAID 244-1077

OLD PLASTIC MODEL CARS -EMclrtc racing cere. Lionelnine. Ol Joe items Any toys,any cond. any•Mow131 Houm lor Salt

84 MerchandiseWantad

A-1 USED FURNITUREAntiques, contents ot home, el-tca. cetar. etc Can h«ui, 1 placeor all Top doker paid. 254-5455 |

A LITTLE BIT OFHEAVEN FELL

FROM OUT THE SKYONE DAY

AND LANDED INATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

WITH A VIEWACROSS THE BAYO P E N HOUSEMTMMT • man

i tt 3 r •42 Hooper Ava.

$154,500

BAHRSRealtor!

1 B», ».« H'jhli'uli

872-1600

I Colts Neck

COLONIALFARM HOUSELovely setting, ex-cellent area. Homefeatures l ivingr o o m , d i n i n groom, ki tchen,den, and threebedrooms. Fullyfenced propertywith heated barn(4 stalls, 2 outsidestalls) '

$159,900

577 -121 1

A BASIC LIONEL TRAINPrivate collector «rlt pay hlgheetprice. 551-5054 or i C e W

ALL LIONEL TRAINSOr Fryer. Top cash appralaal.

Price no obfoct. S4B-25B3

131 Houtai tor Sale

WASHER/DRVER — dlsh-•aeher. a t Kanmore leroe ca-peclty. hervsat odd, good com)..5110 oa. 741-OO62

WASHSURN GUITAR - Blackwith white trim. K.hler tremolosystem Hard shet ceaa 2months old. Effects also. 5550firm. Cat eRer 5. 254-SiaS.

bate. Dreael buffet. White metaldateclor. and meny more collec-tibles Can S42O415MOVING-MUST SELL — QueenAnn mgti M y . Kins heed board.

seats, coffee table, corner hutch,buffet, carpeting, tiesjer Call254-4525 tor appt k> aee.

BUNDLES OF PAPER

SOOd oondlOon. 171 M H HKorld•er 11, D M action rifle 5100Can 747-1024 or 747-0757

WASHER — O E 5150. Kenmoro«esher 5125 G E Waaliar 5125.Kenmore portable «e»her S100.Kenmore electric dryer 556Whirlpool Gas dryer 5175. O.E.Coin operated commercialweeher SMO Maytag matchedset. com operated angrier andelectric dryer SSOO. A/C Phuco•700 Btu 550 Oeurentaed. de-

C a t T o m at 757-7721

cyde Delux 576 or ban offerCet 456-4014

OAK CLAWFOOT TABLE —Round. 4 carved-back chelr..old. «»c cond, SSOO/eM.741-5051.

FULL SIZE — Bedroom set Re-dlner-Nauaehyde. Tgbret,lamps, red wood petto sal Ot

COMPANION — To elderly per-son Live In or out. 5 dsys. Salarynegauetil. Rets. 747-4267.COMPANION-AIDE — To seniorCItiMns or convalescent Partlime or temporary. Cooking, driv-ing, personal cars Flexiblehours. Nearby Rumson.

Cell 530-eMfJ

CREATIVE. RESOURCEFUL —Innovative person with otd-feshloned convlcitons. who en.Joysorganlilne. problem solving,end helping people. Is seeking•mploym.nl Reply to BoxR-455. The Deny Register.Shrswsoury. NJ 07701.

2 KING SIZE — High rise bed.5100 each. Kitchen table. 510Brown carpet, alia 12x13. 55Cell 735-4755.

2 TIRES FOR SALELR 75 15. 540 lor bothCell between 12-1 p.m.

543-2524.

EXPERIENCED CHEF — 14 yrsexp. Looking for permanent pos-ition. Institutional cooking beck-ground. Csll after 3:30.459-4450.EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER— Hea 1 day open. Holm -Mid.area. 540 par job. Ref. Ownir.nsponatlon. Call 455-2331GRANDMOTHER WILL BABYSITIn my Heilet home, sge. 3 5 up.Fanced-ln yard, nice neigh-borhood. Lunch 5 snacks in-cluded, rote, supplied. 767-8730

5 HOMES WANTED5 homes needed k> display newsolid vinyl siding by BethlehemSteal Cedar shske and woodgrain panels available. Some In-sulated Qualified homeownerswin receive dealer incentive re-betes .mounting lo huge sevlngsfrom retell price • free gift In-•un.i ion required, no moneydown 100% financing availableNo payment, im June. Cet201.645-5672.

CARPET — Haw aaconds. rots 5cutt Hanydman's speciel. Only52 55 to 55 SO p.223-9134.

6 SO per yerd. 24 Mrs

iT8' SOLID WOOD —Garage Door, $150.

Call 495-2137.

HOME HEALTH CARE 6COMPANION

Exp'd and dependeble ledy wingive TLC 10 disabled person orbe . companion and do the dallyroutine. Reference .nd transpor-tation. Call 571-2107.HOUSECLEANING — Between$20-530 Experience 5 owntrsnsponetion Cell between 4 •0 Pta. only 774-6423I OFFER CHILD CARE — In mySea Bright home. Mon.-Frl.8-4 30 p m. I have sxc ref... andam reliable Csll 930-1353.

KID KARE AGENCY — Baby, pel& vacation sitting, house-clsanrng, errand running 5 partyserving Dsy or evening N J .bonded i licenced. 747-2257.

LADY WILL DO IRONINGShirts, and fsmlry Ironing Exp.References Csll 530-5553LOVING MOTHER OF t — Willcere for your child In my resldan-ilel Weal End homeSnccke •lunoti provided. Rots, avail Lotsof leetng Csll «70-«o33.

SgWjMESBy llfmer peCoiepmi typabl»Oall 570

ESa JOS SEARCHpersonnel consult.nltyping service, avall-570-5196

I N CommarclalRanUli

A LOW BUDGET?Shop the Used Furnllure Center

of Red Bank157 Shrewsbury Ave 542-1445

A LOW BUDGET?Shop the used Furniture Center

ol Red Bank167 Shrewsbury Ave. 542-1446

AMERICA'S BESTI - RepulebMSWIMMING POOL OUTLETmust dispose ol their enure slockof big. new. leftover, 1554 family-Bile) pools with dock, fonc#, flH#f1 warranty - for only 5555.00complete. Will finance Cat Bob:1-500.223-0307:ANDERSEN WINDOWS 6DOORS — 6 Atrium door.. 60%discount. Deposit fully InsuredDelivery 1-600-523-5707

CARPET - 2 3 ' M I I Exc cond .Brown/geM/belga meg 6100Cat 671-S357

kitchen a « . 70" round table, 4capt. cnalra Professional B 5 C.inesci sprayer, preeeure tool airpump. Quadrophonic system,record, radio and tape. Sewingmachine. 747-5525

FURNITURE — Wrought Iran agreen kitchen lebto a 4 chairs.540. Sofa 4 lovoooat. brownstripped, needs cushion covers,•75. Bookcaaa »io. D r u m SIS:Ok) law books, decor use only.best offer. Cet 254-0750

OE ELECTRIC RANGE - XT.

ing oven. 5116. Call 767-1562

CARPETING — Exc. cond 20yds. for Irving room/dkilng room.M yds bedroom sa3-S77s after

CHECK THIS OUT...Get more readers to check outyour ed wrth a CHECK al the topand/or bottom of your copy CeHThe Deny Register Clsssmsd Da-penmen! todey for642-1700.

CHESTS |2) - 3 drawer with 6'removable top 540. 2 f—C M 530 Cet 555-5764Inge-COLOR TVs - (2) 16*. 6100/aa.Mod. SKe fWngerslor. 590Coooh/bed. 530 or Met offerCan 571-2131. Bob

ANDERSEN WINDOWS 5DOORS — And Atrium doors90% discount. Delivery1-SOO.543.B7OO

ANTIOUE DOLL CARRIAGE —Wicker body, wooden wheels.Good condition. Csll 254-7790.ANTIQUES — Grand piano. Veryornate Ers 1675 Vslued SISM00 will sell for 55500. Coffeeisble. Oak. brass lop. 16X24X45555. Ornate brass bedroomeet52500 Call 545-3571.

ANTIOUE DRESSER — with mir-ror ig30's-sndeco Si2Sor bestoffer Maroon leather like loveseal, chair, and ottoman $75Csll 730-2704.

1M CommercialJUnUli

COLONIAL RUST PLAID SOFA5 ottoman, pine coffee table andfloor lamp. SSOO. ColonialKitchen sal. 2 leave., 5 cnalra5200. Cat 455-5407 .Her 10 a

COMPLETE STEREO CAR SYS-TEM — am/tm [Sl imBack a front spaakero.equsluar Cet 747-1055

GILSON — 6 HP. gear driverotower. 5225 Tires 2. A76 13vrlth rune. 529/pr . 2.P2O5/75RIS steel ben with rim..SM'pr Cet sftsr 5 542-1252

PICKET FENCINGAbout 75'. 3' high 539 Phone741-2225

OLD NEWSPAPERS — From1545 Price negotiable Cell

" "HO;1 SODA MACHINE 5260. 1 Ck)-aarme macMne 5290 3 desksend chairs. 676-6129 CabinetsCeM 254-5576ORGAN - Lowrey. full sue withrhythm anechemeni M i l iht5 bench Aking

y5 bench.747-1531

Asking 87M.

ORGAN - Hammond. 125 XL.IMS for 52.710 «m sen lor 51.500or beat offer, mint cond.. menyoutstanding feature. Cet455-3025 after «

WINDSURF BOARDS - Newquenty Only212-215-2017. •ss

WROUOH IRON FURNITUREFor patio, pool, or porch. 6chairs. 1 round table, sole, clubchelr, 2 end tebkej. chelae. 5450.Cet 741-4655 alter 5 p.m.

YELLOW FRENCHPROVENCIAL — Secretary desk.S75. Call after 3 p.m. ST1-1SS1,

72 Oarage/YardSalas

HAMMOND SPINNET ORGAN —Aurora modal, automatic rythmn

Philharmonic string* sectionMany a m e . Exc cond.. 13*00Can 542.ia-osrsHANDCRAFTED WOOD TOYS- Cara. enrmafa etc. 67-516 Ex-cetenl tor schools Sate 6durable Cat 530-5151.HAVE — An uneetnUd flam ortwo you'd like to eat? An ed thissue tor 10 deys. lust 55.50. CatThe R"—542-1700.

HIDE-ABEDSimmons. Good cond

STS. CA» 741-4511.HIGHBOY — Clock. Wicker.Game Hate. 12 Bentwood chew.desk. CM pointing., frames,ormoire, aee che.1. Chine, set-a e . Good mkH. 542-3940HONEYWELL ELECTRONIC AIRCLEANER — St/OHy car seat,and many baby Kerne. Reeson-abty priced. Cell 4BS-4o07.HUTCH

PIANO FOR BALE - axcetenlcondition Studio upright. 5550.Dey. SOS-SST-0131 Evea.Day.747-15PIANOS - Organs. Gutters.Drums. NEW 5 USED NameCheng. Sale. Lowrey OrganCenter. 542-5150.

E 5 OAK FURNITURE 5BASKETS — 20% off Wicker 5reran porch, dining 5 den sets.wicker BeekeL S3 Rt 34. ColtsNeck, 452-5559POOL 24' — You dismantle youcan take It tree) Good condition.C M 254-734}

RAILROAD TIES - 6xcx«. 55.40.Praesure treated 6x6x5. 5550 .7>7kS. 55.50. Cat1-500-623-5707 Can deliverRAILROAD TIES — ««•«•. 55.40,7x7x5. 67 to Prsisurs-treated,SkSxS. 56.76. 7x7x5. 610.46.500-621-5707. Can detver.RASPBERRY PLANTS - 904 ee616 a doten. After 2 p.m wnuemFaYffli 348 W f l t RrvajrrJftPe) Aw. ,Tmton Fate. Phone 642-1452.

ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHINGFor sale, but especlelly 50 yearold dining room, art decobedroom, secretary, taacart.Also tools, hkte-e-bod, detux re-cllner. chine, sterling Thl. I . ahuge aakrl Frl. a Sal.. 5 to 1. 23Hlghvtew Circle. Middletown.Ta le Kings Hwy Esst. left overNavy trecks. then right Sale runby the Lone Arranger.

Shrewsbury:A 3 BR. 1 B ranch withF.P. on a Vi sere lot withstream in a papular andpretty neighborhood.Asking $99,900

Red Bank:A good investment at$66,500 featuring two 1-bedroom apartmentswith good parking &one-car oarage. Call lordetails.

Holmdel:Trees surround this 3BR, 2V. B ranch withpicture pretty L.R. andDR.. F.fl. with F.P, largedeck and walkout base-men). Oflered at$225,000

714 Highway ISU BHW JefselaTentAsaetaTa U I

•••J s^sWsWejn " ^ W " t I v v

671-1780

Hills of Highlands

NEW LISTINGNestled on a hillside is this 3 bedroomhouse. Eat in kitchen, bright living roomand large family room with barn panellingand Franklin stove. Workshop area, laun-dry room, brick patio, well insulated andgas heat. $88,500

A TRADITION OF SERVICE

11 WIT I

07780(201) 842-3200

Old Bridge Township"Motlw-daughtsr" raissd ranch on ona acrs olland. 3 bedrooms, living room, kltchan, bath up-stairs. Downatalrs family room with sliding doors topatio and In ground pool. Apartmant has separateentrance. A , W n g s 1 0 6 , 0 0 0 .

201 591-0080

Real ly Rea l to rs

AN ANTIOUE OHQANAs wall es e green house, barrefrigerator, couches, drapes,chairs, teWea. hedge trimmer,mower Frl. t Set. a to 1 MC0t#fnaV1 Avt , MWQIteTeOWn, OnNeveelnk River Bd Another LoneArranger SaleOARAOE SALE — Set S/1S. SSun. 3 / 1 M 0 am. to 4 pm. Mov-ing, everything must go. BebyItems, hou.ew.re. BIS Bo.Laurel Ave. MextelGARAGE SALE - Set > Sun.Houee solo All must go. KitchenM bedroom set l o n g e c h l r

glounge chelr.ts 114 Holly-

h

. - 50- wide. Pin., lightedglees top. Perfect condition.•375 Caa 49O-1081 aner 4 30

COMBINATION V1CTHOLAAM/FM Radio In cebmet E«ccond., »50 Includes records.

Cell S71-1SS4CONTEMPOHARV DINETTE

TABLE/LEAF4 chaira, Qood cond

•71-1243.COUCH — Matching cneir. Cof-fee teble. End teble. Electricdryer Exc Cond. Beet offer. Caa404-5706

COUCH S MATCHING CHAIR -Coffee table, end teble, electricdryer Exc cond Beet offer. Ce>4SS.170S

COUCH a ROCKERSolid maple Colonial, goodcond Make oiler. Call M I - t e Mdays: Eves. S30-8SM.COUCHES (3) — 1 gold valour. 1plaid colonlel, ISO each. Colonialvalour lo, m a t $75 Can•73-S11S.

CRAFTSMAN 1 HP AIR COM-PRESSOR — With hoe. • sprsy

IBM TYPEWRITERSRENTAL S29-S1S per mo.Wanl-oeeMn to buy 747-1BS1ITALIAN PROVICIAL — Cut vel-vet sole, r long - 2 high beckchelra - 8' long carver, tike new,SMO. 54- oval cocktail laMo andoctagon table, whits and grayrtaken marble. W O Ce> after ip.m 2H-43M.

KITCHEN CABINETS — UsedAil wood Coterie gee wen over a

•71-1672deys

evea. or 330-OS43

LARGE CHEFFROBE — ISO:Student desk. SaO. Small chinedoeM. l ae : Table and 4 eetvelchelr. SITS. Call S72-OUS.LARGE WOODEN BOX — Forstorage or up lo s r T.V. Mageby ceblnet maker. With doorsSolid Pine. S1S0. Many use. An-tique chair 1350.

Cell Warren 5 O - M W

LAWN T R A C T O R — John Doers.14 Hp wHh 4e' mower. Complete-ly rebuilt Hydroetattc drive. Full

REDWOOD PATIO - Furniture.Beby Orend piano, •' pod table,ber/w I stools, hi-nsar. steeps 2,desk wtth bookcase top. Cashonly. 73e-3134

Side by side flood condition•150.

•72-0506REFRIGERATOR

IScuHt root SMO.Call 741-2S21

REFRIGERATOR FREEZER — 14cu. f t . S7S. OE dtehnaahai. SSOor beet oflar. C M 222-aS4i

REFRIGERATOR — 17 cu. ft HotPoint. S60. Ping Pong table. SIS.• smnciei Chrlstmaa tree. S2S.Can 747-1031.RUG — Oriental style by Cerlsen,lOaia SO00 » < l i . I15O 4x6.SSO. Hell runner. ( ISO SmallArmolre, S 7 » De.k kidneyetioped. SSOO Ornate Frenchmirror, S7S0. Couch table, 1100ceii esr-isMRUMSON — Aseorted piece, offurniture, large desk. Maple bedffejfne) 4*OtJ dP*Nss«aW, fftQ€%. Mov-Ing anxious to SMI •42 -M41SEARS RIDING TRACTOR - 10hp, 36- curler, like new. MOO. Skiracks (2) «2O oa Lawn roller. 30gal. tsnk. »25 Lawn spreader110 Large Anvil 140 Stilts(aluminum) S M Bunders wall

eM. bedoo .etc. All house effects ywood Ave.. W. Long Branch.644-4S4S or 222-1S4S.GARAGE BALE — Tool..furniture, portable radio., elec-tric heeler, organ, and muchmore 3/15-3' i fTe 3/17, 10 to 1 .7 Sanders Or . Middletown (offol Thompson Ave )

MOVING - Everything must gothia «eeksnd Inudeaout Ham-mond Phoenix organ. 2 menus'.IB slops with rhythm section. 1

749 Highway 135, Shrswsbury, New Jersey 747-022164 Montgomery St., Wast End, Now Jersey 571-0400

SIMO-secrfflee tor MOO ChinadoeM. clothing, furniture, house-hold Items. Frl -SSI-Sun . 11-6,43 Birch Ave.. Lime Silver.TOMS RIVER-3/16 a 3/17.lOe.m -Sp.ni . household Items.nlnjailfi r* ' • -' • axifc. . _ • Q . Jc*oinir>y, jwflowajry« B i n f f niooejMMlr«m«nl Community. 97 Edirvburgh Dr.. Tonw W v r76 Auction Salaa

DEPRESSION GLASS SALEMarch 21. 1»eS. Corts Neck Fire-house. Rt. 537. Ccrls Neck N JOver 500 pieces of Ospr.sslonera giesa, + some related pot-tery. Preview 4:30. sale Marts at• Conducted by Teddy BeerAuctions. For Information7SO-S722

77 Pets andLivestock

1 YEAR 0 L 0 GERMANSHEPHERD - Mala Great withchildren Extremely lovable. Allshots Csll S42-4OM.

ASKAKX/70UB -EQUlTYAOVtHCC fit

LIVING AT ITS BEST ,»«•««•» c i ncHOLMDEL - In a aplendld wood- B A C R T A B D FULL Of PARK

wm m^t "^ "r™ *™ • > • •*? ^T • • sea m M

j j O B n v n w «e« • isaW.a_ a

RED BANKNew Office: 2 spaces for lease

(1) 1522 sq. ft. (2) 500 sq. ft.ALSO

2000 sq. ft. suitable for(a) Conferences, (b) Legal Library,

(c) Active StorageC A L L J O H N A T T R I D G Ei 717.9177 or (201.741-6351

11 iric confection oven. S200. Cea | C M 264-6066 evea.LAWN TRACTOR — John Deere,model 200. 30" mower. Exc.cond.. s i sob Cea 44S-4OM.

CRAFTMATIC ELECTRIC BED— With masssna Full sue. wasSJ5OO. seklng 11000 2 monthsOM Can 717-4207S . egOM. Can 717-4

CUSTOM SOFA2 flrockio chelra, lempe. cofles aend tables. Cea 7S7-S373DARK PINE Colonlel beaconsbench « rocking chair. S 2 U forboth Can a l w r i .

DARK PINE - Youth bad S40.Twin sue Maple canopy bed.M 0 . Both m a - -CM4SS-SS00.

OE8IGNER HEADBOARD — Fullsue, gow crushed velvet. Excel-•axil OOnOtDOn. rtvsAOftaoeax

'• • »« • * " • • • • "«»

LAWN EOLHPMENT — 2«GoooeH mower wtth catcherWOO 4 x • lilt bed trailer 6*00.30" Reel mower for Gravely•100. 5So-647«

LAWN EQUIPMENT — Leafvacuum, SSOO. Tractor spuadst.•40 Lawn spreaders. S10 eech.Cell 7«7-1571LAWN TRACTOR — 12 HoneSrmpHcrty Lendlord. » T cut exccond SMO Cea ST1-H11.LAWN TRACTOR - with JO"mower. Wheethorso. S hp KooNeengine, ten firm. Caa star a p.m.

I Bieek Lheae Apeo.weeke on. H » i-eii

iM 'a Men's. . . l i S poles Good

oondmon, t ioo. Cell 4SS-07S3.SOFA S I M . Roomer I7S,dicesCoffee lebre SIOO, BreekfronlSJOO.Server J150. Hope Chest•SO. and table S40. Lemps S15eech Can after 5 30 4S3-2SM.

SOFA BED — Oueen sueGood condWon. S229

Cea »71.417«SOFA - Chelr, exa.cteuch beige linen

SOFAS ( I ) — Leather chelr. 2arlng beck choirs, lemps. Huntdesk a chair, appliance..

mew. u | s ] |,«rv*w-

BIRD — Yellow Cheeked Ame-Hand tamed, great per-

BLUE-FRONTED AMAZON —About 3 yrs. old Tame • larking.Strictly 1-poreon bird. Otherbirds even. Me-3141

CHIHUAHUA — MeM. 3 lbs., 2years Ud. Good dog. AKCpapers l l » Cell «71-ie»1CHOCOLATE LABS — S weeksOM AKC rsglMarsd. Only 4 Mrl.S37S Cea daya 747- tUO aeves. 530-57MDALMATION - Brown spotted.I year old. Femele. Oood with

Heawooo rjontemoorary. S BR.J'/V Dams. Family Hoom boasts lullwsll Fleldstone FP + built-in wsllunit. Ceramic tile Kltchan withcooking Island. Asking $435,000

36-8926

ecuiive lypa naignDornood ol IIColts NOCK nomes. Hartacl con-dition 4 BR's, 2'A balh Colonial on'/t acre. The landscape la eager tobloom around tha In-ground pooland terraced patio. $225,000

WeichertRealtors

Holmdel Office55 Eist Main Strut

946-9400

Office Open•:M a.m.

lo 6:00 p.m.•3 officers through! I

the Metropolitan Are. I

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985 The Sunday Register 1 1 P

ID! Apt lor WartBAVetM MLFOM) - I M M

bam 1 p m n or couplt only.M < K M . Urn lit

WI-M44.BBVUnWM. NEW. BM - I

Ba/anoie ana.» par man*, *f-SBM

mumrt n 10 buy

fATONTOWNOareMn. Mr. oapau. 3ocra9 i gem air, Joo/aM MOO 0M M MJUST MNTMJ, Mr . 1 » I U !

• roomJUST«

HAZLtT3 room. INMoo DOM. Mffs

JUVTMNTAIAMr. .HrOHLANM - 1 Mdroom. 00-curily, ' I l l l l l l l l , No POM. t*30* u«i«ll. Cot M H OHtOHlANOS — 1 booVoonoplMOO • uWMoo. Bolwo Hllrlora.•72-1*00

MOHUUIDS« • 4 room.. I W O i

LOMHfdualoa.liMollno.tMr>HOUC P I N T A U . B*r. M0-12M

iMMoo Womoad. I 4 » Co>7*7. r 71

KIANSBUM1 bodtoom, om>. saoo a3 room., Mao POM. D M

3 badrooma, >Mo lino. S300 .HOME RENTALS. Mr. Jaa-1234KEANMUMI — 3 rooma. nopolo. 1 + 12 month* securitySutlaMe lor 1 or 2 aduM. Can•Mr 4.30. U4-0M0

131 Houses for Sale

KEVPORT - Liuury apre. I a aMdroam Cooklna. oaa,,Waal a

ssa-iallsTsp.lniSl'^rt.0"

Ca» i tmigK1VPOBT

4 rooma. carpoM. 40»a3 lurtuwim narrien MOJUST MWTAU. » > r W iKIYPOMT - Naarty renovated,oarpated I aadrosm apt suema-, eaai ueaaaa Can w - i a a i

KSYPOUT

LONO MUNCH4 roomi >Ma « » •5 rooma. HMO. 400 •JUST PJBITAU. Bkr.. MS-ISMMATAWAN — < badraom gar.

— a n m o m evanaMe no*.CM 9M-O029

MATAWANOardan. Mda. K M paM. 40ffaf rooma. kMe, hau paid, soo aJUST MNTALS. Bkr . SBS-IStaMIOOLfTOWN

KNOLLWOODGARDENS

Eacluawa 1 A 2 badroom aptaIndMdgal gat hatt A canval airE«c location JuU on Rt IS onKing. Hwy Eaat (Warning dla-lanca to Foodtown Shopin

MODfHN APT. — Naar traneoor-uuon loot «mo lo call Datora

WO SANK - Prlma rOeaHnSunny 2 odrm with bay window»S25 • MIH S7I-970S evee.

BED BANK - 4« room apt.. 2baiha. no p M . 1700 +raoo/aacurlly. 74I-S4S1.

131 Houiti for Sail

Fair Haven

BE GOOD TO YOURSELFLife flows Easily in this friendly neigh-borhood, In this family Ranch home.Attractive treed & landscaped lot: ap-pealing 3 bedrm house. Convenient toshopping, Garden State Parkway, trans-portation & schools. The All-Americanchoice at $119,900,842-2760

JUST LOOK AWAYLooking for the perfect site to * t yourdream house on? JUST LISTED - 2+wooded acres in Rumson. Beautifularea. Bring your ideas or plans & walkthe land. EXCLUSIVELY OURS.$255,000 842-2760

101 Apt. for Ron!W O SANK — 1 poraon 1 roomapt (1 badraom). One) poMod.••curtly, ralanncn l a aM M * EHc/naat Can after Sp m. or aartenaa. 74r-MM.NO

M O S A N KIDOMaVIGeM 400 ' •

Diiplai. S rooma, UdellJUSTrWNTALS. Mr., 3M-1556M O SANK _ i badroam a.clocation. Topoond.. nowoarpeta.Mow. rarnoaraler. IMS * utn-Mee. Con 4M-10M.t Bedroom, one. location, lop

Dook. M M

RED BANKNear bue. Bag »>eekl)

3 rooma. Roady. a j—^ALS. Bkr.!

weaklyo o a . ftaady. $200 •

HOME RENTALS, Bkr. 300.1234

THOU8ANDOAKS

VILLAGEEaoluahro 1. 1 A 3-Dadroom

irtfrv#nls wtth dtanVatottMfa) «••oma baeamanta. IndividualhooHng. fioananl locationJuol o* m. M naar AMntle Hloh-l«no< (Walking dUUnOO K A I PSnooping CanHr) CoaW1-40SO. i2-o dally.

Joseph G

McCUE4 E River Rri

Rumson

842-2760

GREAT FAMILY HOMES

RUMSON - It's not easy to find a fivebedroom home on 2Vi acres in Rumson lorunder $300,0001 Well maintained, enlarged•nd updated, this house was formerly thegardener's cottage on a large estate andneeds only decorating to be spsctacularlSpacious property has many varied trees andplantings On quiet, low-traffic lane near golfcourse and river. Asking $272,000.

WAYSIDE - Ten room custom built on cul-de-sac. Three zone gas hot water heat. Excellentschool system nearby. Hardwood floors,newly redecorated. $149,500.

Why go anywhere else?

842-1894

Rumson ReallyI West River Road, Rumson, New Jersey

REALTOR MLS

REALTORS

HISTORICAL APPEAL!Just listed, this charming, over 180 years old, 3bedroom, 1 bath Colonial brings back memories ol abygone era. Home features rocking chair Iront porch,living room, formal dining, Quaker basement, workingwishing well, 62x200property, new heating system,plus within walking distance lo shopping and transpor-tation. Located in Eatontown and offered at $99,000

CHARM PERSONIFIEDIs reflected in this majestic waterfront Victorian featur-ing grand entrance foyer ideal for gallery, 10 magnifi-cent rooms, high ceilings, handcratled moldings, newcountry kitchen, plus all the charm ol bygone dayswhen quality wasn't an option Located in Red Bankon the Navesink with 150' bulkheading in the CrealiveZoning area. $225,000

COLONIAL SPELLED " S U P E R "Older and mellower but in great shape, this 3bedroom home has homey almosphere to raise yourfamily and to share with Iriends when entertaining.Featuring eat-in kiichen, lormal dining with built-incupboard, relinished wood floors upstairs, lull dark-room in basement, attic storage, maintenance freeexterior, 2 car detached oarage, plusjoca^ed in River

DUTCH COLONIALLocated in Red Bank, this 3 bedroom, t bath homeoffers spacious and bright living room with high,beamed ceilings, sunny eat-in kitchen, new neutralcarpeting new hot water baseboard heal — 2 zone, tcar detached garage, lull basement, plus greatarchitectural appeal lor Ihe crealive buyer. Just listedand priced to sell at $83,500

741-8600•4S Broad Slrw.1. ttwewsbury, N.J. 07701

131 Houses for Sale 131 Houses for Sale

101 Apt, for WontM O BANK — 3 roomi. prlmaaraa. parking, w/w capratSmgtolaoupla. No pou B4S0 »Uda. «ac/fUM 747-MO3

furnMhM 1 bdrm. WaoMr/dryor.M75 mo • uH'o. No paM/cMM.747-3MJ or 042-0041TINTON WOODS TOWNHOUSE2 badraoma. 2'* batM. garaga.pool A tonnla prMajgai Brandnow. No pauiuO'mo • uW-naa. 747-MII

TWINBROOKVILLAGE

GARDEN APTS.1A 2 badroamo kom $4M. Uod-arn. •pacuut apis Hau. not ACOM wator Cooking gat In-cluoad On-pramMaa tonnlacourts, pool. racraoHon araa.Naar Eatontown ahopplng. ENC.achoort. OeoonTwp.

Hlgnwoy 39, OakhurUS31-4023 M2-M12UNION BEACH — 1 badroom.S3M • uUt • V* mo aac Call7 3 H 7 I 5 or 2M-1S70

WEST END9 roomi. kMa. Haal POM. MOOHOMES A DUP1EXESJUST RENTALS. Bkr, 3M-1M9

101 Apt. lor Rent

FREEHOLD BOROGreat starter home. Completely remodled Colonialwith 2 bedrooms, living room, dining room, familyroom and kitchen New plumbing, new electric,wood burning stove and lull basement.

Asking •72,000.

201 591-0080181 I 'wy " 79

Mcr q.inville . N J

Real ly Real tor

HUSH EVES ARE SMILINGon this Oak Hill low maintenance vinyl sidedranch. Attractive landscaping and super location— close to schools, train and parkway. 3bedrooms. 2% baths with full finished basement.Hardwood floors and fireplace. A geml $159,000742-6000

ERIN GO BUYthis bi-level In top Tinton Falls neighborhood onquiet cul-de-sac. Spacious and well decorated 4bedrooms. 2'A balhs. Handsome family roomwith fireplace leads to private patio. Mint con-dition throughout. Call today. Asking $137,900842-6009

SHAMROCKS GROWon this waterfront peninsula with absolute privacy— over 750' of bulkheaded property. Panoramicvistas from all rooms. This all brick ranch fea-tures 4 bedrooms, 3 full and 2 half batha. Modernamenities throughout with 2 fireplaces, 2screened porches and 114' dock. Call for details.Asking $625,000 842-6009

LEPRECHAUN LUCKYand act on over 2Vt acres of superb groundsamongst other •slat* homes, thla Dutch colonialhas 5 bedrooms. 3 full baths. A unique residence

garaga g p y ,storage shed and extra carriage house. So manyextras — plesss call for details and brochure.Asking $400,000 842-6009

GloriaNilson

RUMSON PARK TOWNHOMESWvat lUaa. Swim

•Mat aeaa S«m>i lies l<e P.M.

" • arliaa Lm tiM.MO

RED SANK - CMan rurnWwd 9roam apartmanl. S400/mo w>-cluduig uWrMa Vary quw• a s 1 tualruM aanoaman• • I n m e n , aac. Altar 4.741-Wia.

102 Houses forR-nt

A-1 ABERDEEN TO RIO BANKMowed. 1 badrooma S300 a

Uruon Baeon. naar beach...SMO

WaM End. 2 badroom SMO

MANY OTME8 AVAILABLE!HOME RENTALS. Bkr. 3SO-12MABERDEEN - 9 baOraom. 3balti ranch houaa lg. dtntnoaraa. 2-cv aaraga. cantrai air.

i oarpating. an aps mo * uW'a. 201-e

AU.ENHURST - a badroom. 3Mban. SHOO.HAZIET - 3/4 badroom UTSLINCROFT - Adult Condo Ibadroom S47S.MIDDLETOWN - 3 badroomSSWflA LINCROFT REALTORS747.3SM Evaa 741-3304

131 Hout«» lor Sals

102 Houses for rent 101 MOMHW tor rant

ALLENMURST — S badroom. 3 *ban. S1100.

HAZLET - 3 badroom. SOTSLINCROFT - AooK CondoBadroam. SS7S.MIDOLETOWN - 3SS60LINCROFT — 3 badroom. SeooRED BANK — 1 badroom. SS3O

ERA LINCROFT REALTORS3 Swimming Rlvar Rd.

747-3S3S Evae. 741 1204

ATTRACTIVE - 3 badroom. 2bam. raiMly room, playOoaanport SS7S. S71-1030

CLIFFWOOD BEACH -badrooma. SSSO/nW.Avallabla 4/1 Call 4SS-302S

EAST KEANSBUROColUae. Mda Una. SMO a

3 badroom, klda/jMa. SSOO'eHOME RENTALS. SkTsBS-HMFAIR HAVEN - 3 badrooma. 1 '/•bama Avail Juno 1. 1 yr. laaaa,aaairiiy-ralarentae. caH7ss-7aaa.

131 Houts* for Sals

102 Houst* lor rantLINCROFT — Bnady Oaka. Adu«Condo. 2 badroom, duborlvladgaa M7S/mo.

ALLENHUR8T — Saaehora Col-onial. S badroom. 3'4 bama,S11.0C0

ERA LINCROFT REALTORS747-3B3S EvaaaS1-S117.

1M HouwilorrotWLITTLE SILVER- 2 badroom.baaamam. garasa. flraplaoa m

living room. Avallabla March 21S72S7mo. f uuiltlaa

LITTLE SILVER REALTY741-M9O

MARLBORO COTTAGENaorv donalAll b.lla pd. S400

HOME RENTALS. Bkr. 3SS-12M

600 Hwy. #35, SHREWSBURY, N.J.842-6009

Mlddlotown

MOTHER/DAUGHTER;FATHER/SON

Fantastic Finished Lower Level, featuring kitchen,bedrm, bath & huge living rm/family rm. Ideal lorlive-In relative. This attractive Ranch haa 3bedrms. 2 batha, living rm & dining rm upstairs.Convenient to Garden State Parkway. $249,900

946-2323

SeiDy Real Estate, Inc.Member: Nationwide Relocation ServiceMMttt

9(1 Holmdel RoadHolmotel

831-1772280 Norwood Avs.

Deal

CONDO BY THE BEACHNow I i the perfect time to move Into this spaciousCondo* with a panoramic view of the Ocean &Shrewsbury River. The owner is anxious to sell,the weather Is changing and the view Is greatfrom the Hills of Highlands. A true value In today'smarket $73,500.

MIDDLETOWNBRICK N FRAME RANCH

Are you In the spirit? We offer a home'guaran-teed to excite the entire family. Featured are anentrance foyer, lovely Living Room with Fire-place. Formal Dining Room, huge Family Room. 3Bedrooms 2 full baths, workshop, laundry andattached garage. Call today ... tomorrow may betoo latel $129,900.

OFTEN SOUGHTSELDOM FOUND

New Construction, Middletown location, priced at$139,900. Spacioua 4 bedroom, 2'/, bath Colonialhome featuring Andersen Thermopane Windows,central air conditioning. Formal dining room,family sized den, Master Bedroom suite withdressing area and a large wooded lot.

BOB WARNCKEASSOC. REALTORS

300 Highway 36.Middletown

747-7000CM or send for row compiimtnury copy

of our new Home Buyer's Guide

HAZLET COTTAGEAll biaa pd. raady. S400'a

HOME RENTALS. Bkr. 3et-12MLEONARDO - OpUon lo buy 1

In prlmaborhood. Room tor addition In

131 Houses for Sale131 Houses for Sals131 Houses for Sale

OAK H I U COLONIAL FINELY CRAFTEDTRADITIONAL HOME

FAIR HAVEN — A custom built 4bedroom 2% bath Colonial designedto delight your lamlly. Features fam-ily room with fireplace accessable tobasement recreation area and ashaded screened porch that over-looks the well landscaped lotLocaled on an outstanding tree-linedstreet minutes from the river,schools and transportation.RU-1029 $283 ,000

MIDDLETOWN - A spacious familyhome on a unique private lane. Offer-ng 4 bedrooms, V/i baths, centerhall formality, Living Roomw/lireplace. master suite with siltingroom, gas heat and central air con-ditioning.

Reduced $215,000.

Rumson Office30 Ridaa Rd. Ruauon

to «:0O p.m.93 Otlicat IIKOughoul

Our Leading Sales Representativesfor

February , 1985

t l Mat* Hkjkway. Mlddietoew. New Jesaey 0 7 7 a (Ml)t71-S2fM

91 Eaat smVar •sasL laeaaom. Na» Jstsey 077M ( M I I H M i M

S» East Nate Seraat, Haleasial. New Jeney »77M (2ai)946-37M

BUILDERS OWNThis spacious homo on a quiet cul-tfo-sc In MMdletown ismliculouily maintained and HAS many many Ultras: Hardwooddoors throughout, double Insulation In floored attic, centralvacuum and security system. All In a lovely setting with woodedproperty and within walking disarm of snooping and NV trsnspor-

STATELY ENGLISH TUDOROn over an acre and under tall oak tries, this unique 4 bedroom. 3bath home has a 251 great room with fireplace, perfect forentertaining! Totally renovated, there Is new wiling and plumbing,new roof, new energy efficient furnace. The 24' master bedroomhas adjacent sitting room. Wonderful Uncrofl location. Excellentaswmable mortgage to qualified buyers. $169,900.

HOUSE BEAUTIFULIn a natural wooded setting, this delightful 4 bedroom. 2 ' t bathcolonial hat dentil mouldings, chair-rails, parquet floors and 6panel doors. The spectacular country kitchen has a 16x14 break-nut room overlooking patio and lovely property Excellent floorplan has expansion possibilities: gas heat central air Located inprestigious Oak Hill, near excellent schools, transportation and IheGarden State Parkway. S229.9OO

MAGNIFICENT SETTINGAmidst tall trees and rolling Mils Is this custom built Zlmmererexpanded ranch 4 bedrooms, 2 ' i baths; over 3,000 square feet ofexciting living space. Many amenities Including 2 2«ie heat andcentral air. fireplace In family room, full basement and 40x20redwood deck. Full wall of glass and greenhouse window bringsthe outdoors In. In prime estate area of Holmdel $209,900.

YOUR PRIVATE WORLDIn the estate area of MkJdletown. tins handsome 7 bedroom. 3 ' ibath colonial sits majestically on 2' i sues at me end of a woodedcul-de-sac Two family rooms, a game room and den provide thelarge-tamily the ultimate In spacious, gracious living. ThreefkepWss. curved front stairs, backstairs, a huge dock, and tilefloors In foyer and kitchen are just a few custom leatures$49S.000.

RUMSON ESTATEThis gracious colonial Is situated on over 6 acres of private

1 1 1 fireplaces and a ruhmanv noor enhance me oeaumui living room nineNtcnon nasnan lecsnny remooeieo., rjaouwms, a uaini aiu2 powder rooms. A separate stairway leads lo a 2room suite with a full bath. There's a bar room«rith M t bar and a 33'sotarlum with sunsfloor NQW ifnckni htsting md slraconditioning lysttms and inter-com. $5so!boo.

When you'reready to move,

so are we.

At Rumson Realty, we love to sell Monmouth County— ~l *.-*-*•« An/4 S# chnmc ^

111 our sales recurus. in uie uiuusaiius of u s

sales on the Peninsula than any other real estateoffice in New Jersey.

til l 0- mu\t lot COmpiinfntli

FOUR•SAITOHS B X _ J

11 lUnga Mwy.. MkttMawn. N J.07 I a« Mvar (load, •Maon. NJ 0f73Ooa fae* Man svaai. HaMMai. N J .

we've marketed successfully lor countless Monmouth analysis ol your home ana a mil description 01 uurCounty homeowners. In the reputation for 100% master marketing plan for your valuable property,service that's earned Rumson Realty the number one You'll be sold on us, too. 9position year after year with more multiple listing ._ o < e &&*'

842-1894

Rumson Really 1 West River Road, Rumson, New Jersey

The Su»<Uy Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17,1966IK HtNNMrrMt

ARMSTRONGRUMSON

Uve It up and ed eeme luxury toyour Me atyw Kick ue your heetaana aanyaaay ft Bin eeekntoeeted a M Impi a—liieiii

S etdtotm. 1 4 eel

••-r,ted kltehon a M eaclttng eat/ee

— unoooRUMSON

. Tudor Mr.103 Rental* to

! ShareMON-auOKINO UALC — Fo>

, Hauea M MMdMoon. M r s r -M - u a . c m w i Mo-teoo

bain home toMaiH of primewar ft (Mil. S f l f •p l«r««, winding

• an]

. foe FurnishedRoom*

ABENOCCN TO RED BANKI a etudloa from »40 a wkHBNTALB. B«r SSS-IM4

. tATONTOVMM c M I and tx

• fen euppiied

'Kir* <""•y»moC«l

TONTOWN — I room.. ueeand bam. Heel and uw-

CManwonting

Can aaa-«»»

Doom ftrar-eaee7B77J47

KEANSBUROmi. Ptaeea7e7-2S47.

LITTLE SILVER ROOM -•eauWul prlvaM no™ u—an. Security. Call 741-a

homo. WO por

usiMtOOLETOWN AREA - Room I

MOLtTOWN — FurNehad roomk u hom. can efte. 4PM.

aMONMOUTH BEACH - Plvowtaom In welortront Iwmo. Quietana. 2M-4«ao.M O BANK — Convenient Broadft. Woaaon. Malwa peraon741-14*9 Or 747 W IOf D BANK — Lowly cloan roomm private homo. auiei Mfo arooOn Due Una 53O.J317ROOM — Oood nelghborl.„_Ovor looking ocean In the Eaal-kwajnaooe

meeceon g

106 CommercialRental*

i S ORES TO RENT — on n»y"•MdloeaBaii. " a - -

I. Cell 7» - *W5

I S ORES TO RENT — On HwyM . lood location. Parking araaHat* ' Cr" "

-COURTS OF M O BANKPiaKailunal Conoo office apacoawBatili for rani or ourchaaaPrkna location Can 530-7300 foradditional Information

IXECUTIVI OFFICE SUITES•Short 1 long-term laaao•Purnlahed/unfiimletied•PVraonalliod eneworlng eervtce•Racaouon/ConhKOnca room•Complete eecreceflel eanrico•ajkraM Call t o w 741-5700

IDS - Office/Storeviaw, corpetea. $225S34SS

HOLMDELrfB aq. ft. of prime offlea mm m 35 Proteeewnal BuildingNaaaonaMa ramREALTY BROKERAGE

201-340-0100HOLMDCL OFFICE RENTAL -•rime location. Hwy U endLeurei Ave. BOO aquara feetMBO monthConlury i t Reelty 871-BSS»MATAWAN — On Hwy 34 Pro-teeeionai Building. Spaca avail-

S!ri5Sil£i!8p*''''"9*u™M'MPOLETOWN - Hwy location

tor OINTAL ipaclaltyi Oral aurg. /ptumoed/oraarvioaa Jri-isae

riCE SPACE FOR RENT —i Srancn. Can » A M P M .

OFFICE SPACE - AvailableHighland! Second floor, fullyCajrpaiTajO r*tBMM CfcVI DfTwfff l Qam-Spm. Mon -Frl •72-0820RID BANK - omca apaoa 1400aq. ft.. M par aq. It. • utllluee.A/C. carpeting, on alia parking.Available Immediately. Callearner. Wetter ZlmrraMi -aeM.M O B A N K — Piulaaaniiiai Of-itoe eultea avail, in verioua zim-merer Bldga umla range from 1room to 3 room to 1400 aq ft. Atunite ere carpeted, air condwonad • nave on-aite perkingRatea range from 1700 mo -SI 1per aq. It. plua utll. Call o»Walter Zlmmerer S42-HS9

RIO BANK — Map. floor 1500

I/mo 741-S4SS.I BANK - Appro. 4.500 _'""qua dlalnct. Greet dlapla, «re. »2500/mo mcla. h.

13* Monmoutn St.. 843-5538

RtO BANK - Indualrial ipacfar rant. 3400 aquare fee747-8280RUWSON - Retail/office Pmarea U S aq ft 110 aq II. Mewlrenovated Off ttreet parking•42-7715 or 747 8023

RUMSON — New retail toeceSBS aquere feet available to toquality retailer w M will comptaant our hand-craned gift anoUS » 4 * and M2-taof

Several oniceaMIMSON - SaverM i l 8250-8500 perMat/unwparklng. EJIC. location

SHREWSBURY - Office SpecOK Rt 35 Prnlooalonala OnlyiKOra ttouee. Call 747-02MSHREWSSURV — Rt 35. La

' emu led. 1M0 Square tool Eva830-1784 Oeya 747-2M2.STUDtO'OFFICE — m me beerof Red Bank 2 large rooma. lavitary Second floor walk-up, convanlenl to municipal parkin8400/mo. utinnee inc. Ca7415307 a am to 3 p.m.

109 Building*/Qarag—

I aaariam. t i l >am, owoon iw.rrtnKm aBBiaka * - - ^ » iujBBileil

• t f c w i " m a n i H eBBjeeBje Ba, tweTTTIBB]

*"*loom' >erae eal-w kllehen,fVWy tQQm, WAOal Of UPffftaMv

natural, ana! unM. pnveM yerd.M a i locaaon Tea good la be

ryet Aaklrvj SB1.SO0.Call tor ep-only, 871-0237 Prln-

by a noted Danlen4.badroom. JH-

IDOLETOWN —iln-iavel wWt_2_fua bathe, family

/ • cerpeeng Ueny I

IvJntto ft*jPQnDOrnooo> Coo-venMni u achooia a tranepor-

— i. Bale by owner PrlnolaeH1134.000 Can 747-7741.

MIDDLETOWNroe lop prtvecyl Over an acre

I tMe 8-bd 3

, psttos tvd 9p)o#9Onlyyearn old and Mealed In mooat awchjolva anM. Offers in-ied. sui.ooo.

ARMSTRONGAgency. Reeltora

M l Praepoct Avo.UtnoSIMr

741-4500

MIDOLITOWN - Oek HUl aree.me bum 2 etory Coionlel"•• COttd- rQysjf, ItvtflQ fOaWit

fatnay room, atoptooa. Countryncnen. S bedroomt 1H batne

O»*rellBd 1 car garage Manyentree Cloee 10 everything,

144.S00. 747-esf-omy.

CUL-DE-SAC LOCATIONn Middlelown 3 bedroom Coderneke ranch Fireplace, central

eir. family room. 1124.900

47-S228

FAIR HAVEN(new Itatlng,

Charming older home on deepd yard |uat off RiverEncleood tunny porch,

open deck, huge petto. Trene-erred ownorl I t 10.000

HtCKEVReel Eetate Agency

222-4087FAIR HAVEN

On Pond. Cul-oa-Sac3-bedroom. 24-oath. eel-in

. «n. living room/flreplacelenelad den, 2-car garage, full

oaaamenl. By owner.8245.000 741-8281

FLORIDA'S - Flneat Adull Ooltad Country Club Communityreeo-lakee-eecurity Privateimquely deelgned manufacturec]

Komea. From SM.OOOI Lake Fair.«aya. PO. Bos 4838. N FtMyere. Re. 33803; or toll free1-800-237-8800HANDYMAN SPECIAL

(80 property 4 roomaNeede work 842.200 eaKlrwanCo 787-8800

HAZLCT - 3 bod-oome.bath, eat In kitchen aluminumaiding, fenced in yerd. dlan-weelter 8 micro-weve Wa.800Cell after S pm 787-4233

HOLMDELEDWARD W COLLINS

AOENCV O48-4144ABILITY.DEPENDABILITY

HOUSE WANTEDMiddlelown. Llncrotibedroom. aidehali Colonialpreferred Near Qamen SteleParkway Call 718-987-7388JUST LISTED - Striking con-temporery with megnTnclenvlewe of the ocean a river, eat inme Hlghlanda milt Cathedracelling!, open loft. 4-oedroomtgourmet kitchen. 2 peenut atone

— ' lighting Anenergy efficient home, plua manymtra 8288800

gy e c e t omtrao 8288.800SAHRS REALTORS 872-1800KEANSBURO — Doll Houaeledroome. living room, kitchen

•501 Cell alter8 pm

In yard7S7-7M

living ftird [31«7808.

KEANSBURO - Shell 20>M ItMuat be reflnlehed. Ideel lor eergo family BuaineM emuae-ment tone Cell after 8 787-OSMKEANSBUROMother/daughter 3 bedroom. Ioom ranch * efficiency ept7»24 kitchen. 2 balm. 2 car

garage, hot water baaefioardfleet »7i.»ooSTARK AQENCY 717-2777

LITTLE SILVER — 3 bedrooiIVi beat ranch on 4 aero. Allappllancea. tiraplaca. central anBy owner. 842-5217

LITTLE SILVERNEW LISTING — ImpecceblColonial leelurea 4 bedrooma2'* beiha. huge family room witcalherdral beamed. camn(balcony loft, floor to ceiling lire-place PLUS large den or 51bedroom. Screened porch overlooking lovely backyard on Cude-Sac atreet borderinShrewabury River S219.0O0

TWO RIVERSREALTY

Rumson. RMltort. 530-6550

monsyb

$84,900A lot Of houM for \ty•ought attsK Old SftBrick and CaKlar, 4 bedroomlull bath*, hardwood floorr 19aat in hltcrvan, .g(2 car) Call, w haws th« h«yf

Little Silver Realty741-0900 RM'lor O(Mn 7 days

MIDDtETOWN - OAK HILLSpacious Colonial Muin-itvhom* ioc*t*d on attracllv* iftxk>t Otf*KS 4 b*droom. 3 caramuta tMtnr Liv room wltfi fiiplaoa, lofmal din. room, • • (kitchen, ig lam. room. *cfporch. b«Mmant with gaa r.«aattachad gar Flva mm to M C0 S P a An nation. Conwanicnto all tcnooi i«v*ia Prtc*1169,900 Call ownaf for app671-37U

MIDDLETOWN. CAPE COD4 bedroom, living room, diningroom, largo kKenan on 75411lot Mini cond. Asking UKOOCall 41)6-3046 No raal iyi

300 Autos for salt

I I HoumfortoU

MIOOLETOWN — Only a mil* to

AdorMt* 9 bedroom homa wtthn p M M , Central Air. naw Q M

furnaoa. Move-in condition SuN-bta year-round or summer re-eat. Only t7a.ooo Leshsr As-

sociates Aaeiiora. 2910919

MIDDLETOWN — Beautiful aMbrick ranch aat on a wooded tot••luring 3 bedroom*. 1Vfc

balha. lMng room with flreplaoa,tormal dining room, large familyoom. 20x20 with full brick wei.nergy efficient, radiant heat. +car garage Minutes from ai

raneporutton. Principals only143,900 Call 671-7320IDDLETOWN/NAVE8INK

AREA — 3 bedroom, split level.baths, fireplace, family room,

garage. Gllmpee ottcean through wlntar traaa. Only125.000Leaner Aaaocialas Realtors

281-O919MIDDLETOWN — 4 bedroom. 2

Colonial 4 years old$102,000 MIDDLETOWN RE-ALTORS. S3O-OM0

MIDDLETOWNASSUMABIE MOBTOAQE

Available to qualified buyer onhis 3 bedroom ranch. Frbow window In IB living nMt-ln kitchen, hardwood noona ranced rear yard with ished, and much more MCENTURY 21 Elnbindar Realtors201 871-3500 Opan till 9 p mndependentiy ownad/operated

MIDDLETOWN — 3 bedroomhlHsJd* ranch, In-ground pod, i

places. overTooklng golfcourea 1159.000ALLENMURST — 6 bedroomi3'i baths, Seaahoro Coiomsi(135.000BRADLEV BEACH - 2 bedrooistarter home. M8.900.

ERA lINCROf-r REALTORS3 Swimming River Rd.

747-3939 Eves 992-4599MIDDLETOWN — Looking to buyor eell your home? Let ua hellyoul CENTURV 21 Elnblnder Reeltora, S71-3M0NAVE8INK RANCH — Malntenence tree exterior. Low teieaS7S.0OO MIDDLETOWN REALTORS. S3O-0S00

NEPTUNE TWP WAVSIDE RDColonial Specious 3 bedroomiformsl dining foom, 20x14 livingroom, tiled bath, enclosed porchOn beautiful iS2x127 cornereed lot. 179.000. Call B22-1S94

OAK RIME REALTYAdull Communities

341-0090RED BANK - 3 bedroom,bath, garage. EJIC. location$fl2 000 Call2i2-427-3769evet

RED BANK CONDOSi t in all Ranging from M0.000IO$110,000 Dining area, customled kitchens, wan to wall carpetng. Conveniently located. Cai

JEFF MORSE REALTY. Realtor942-4350

D BANKTHE

"COURTYARD"A UNIQUE

EUROPEANVILLAGE

12 new luxury town homes suidi t l

courtyardarc i k y

ca

roundingAmong the features i ylights, attached greenhouses, catfiedrai callings, balconies, fire-placet, underground parkinjind much, much morel Norbinding reservation* now beingaccepted Prices range from$129,900 to $169,900

NEW MARKETSREALTY"

REALTORS 741-821RUMSON

WATERFRONTWide view of Naveslnk from hudscreened porch of early 1600center nan Colonial 3 lirepiacsiwide board floors, 4 bedroom2 » baths, formal dining room27' living room Eic. cond Newroof. 133' stone buikneaddaep channel. All thia A 14lettes of mac* Quiet road yetcentral location By owner.$495,000 942-191

RUMSON — Charmingbedroom cape. Heataiator fire-place. Wall to wall carpetingblock from river. Mint condltio$79,500. Call 572-5496 Princpals only

RUMSONFeatured m "House BeautifulIhls impeccsbie 12 room CualoColonial has been tastefully up-dated by perfectionist ownerbedrooms. 5 baths, fireplace.brary, den. kitchen wtng Incluing family room, skylit breakfiroom and staff quarter* 'sere, specimen trees, deededecceaa to rivar $485,000

TWO RIVERSAeelty

300 Autos for sal*

anare. Itaraaai Aaung om,

NEW MARKETS REALTYKIALTOM 741-ai l l

RUMSONUnique. laaloiaU eernego houaeon 3 plua acre* m the heart oftown. Country kitchen Leroa Irv-ng roam ana dining room over-look wooded yard with pool.Pen, ber room end beamed tarn-y room. Sopeial* in-iaw or

gueel eune. 4 bedrooma Charm,charm-ottered at S4M.000. Cek

CENTURY I I COZENS Reeflora

BIS River Rd . fair HavenT41-7BW

RUMSON COLONIAL (Wa.WO

Can «ee>aeyaSHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP

•nda m oanenhlp la reflected inhe condition of ttils m bedroom

Co-opl Aaklng only 149.000enelng available with aa littletOHdownlNEW MARKETS REALTY

REALTORS 741 -ajt 1TIRED OF ICE a SNOW)How about a winter hWe-e-wey InDaytona Baachaa moot proe-ttgloua manufactured homeperk. Pod. aeuna. full ecthritleen dream clubhouao. ell included

with ownenthlp of thit 2tedroom, 1'4 bath, huge

tan, living room, florlderoom. 2 oar carport, overeliedutility room. Priced In the low120a Cell 201-741-aBB7

WALL TOWNSHIP — Open» . Sun. 12-4 34

bedrooma. r t bathe, gaa heat,woodbumlno alova. lerae(•need-In bedlyard. 170,500»1S Pierce SI M2-7SM.

WATERFRONTLovely apllt Colonial In Lime Sil-ver. 4 bedrooma. 2'* bathe, fam-ily room, fireplace, new furnace.

-ground POM. All new well totil. Many rooma with waterew. S232.SKCROWELL AQENCY

741-4030132 Condost.

Townhouaaa111 A BADQE OF DISTINCTIONShadow Lake Village. Reealee.WALKER « WALKED. Reellon

741-S313Evee.JohnV. Wlleon

S30-OM7

1*4— t m k M a i M a

13S Commarclal•roparty

OAKHURST - Rout* M 700 eqft. Free ataMWg aMea. 10 pevedoertKej teeaat. aaa.aoo

MIOOLETOWN RIALTORB

Profeaekmel Bmwmg ror aale onMaple A n . El nl enpoeure.Jull t l U . 0 0 0

REALTY BROKERAOE2oi->aa-oiooREOBANK

PROFESSIONAL Of PICESa room Vlctonen with 10 earperking lot. Approilmately 1.BS0eq It. new heeling end A/C eye-tome. Aaklng 1101.100.

NEW MARKETS REALTYREALTORS 7414211RETAIL OR RESTAURANT -tOOO eq. ft- LMre-modem Mon-mouth County. Property In-eluded Sale or leeee

CALL HOBIN ZAOER201M2-aja»

HELMSLEY-SPEAR INCEXCLUSIVE BROKEB

SHREWSBURY — 1000 aqaaMenoaUBfl.Mog

'47-afio.Commercial lone.

137 Lou andAcraaga

aoKioo Mmon Ave. ParaMa 10County Road CWfwood. SSSOO,or wiH build to auM. 3BX13ISpring St. Matawan BoroSit.too or will build to aull

Call 9aS-2SM

HOLMDEL — Heevlly woodedlota In Holmdel. Cell HeritegeHouae Realty • 04a-4ri4SHOLMDEL — 1 acre +. Citywater * eewer. tas.000 eecti.MIDOLETOWN REALTORS.SM-oaoo

INCOME PROPERTYFor aala by owner

Call 747-SMt or 747-MJ7.

UIODLETOWN. Near AtlanticHlghlanoa, 60 X 110/ wooded.Naede variance $12,000Leaner AaaocMtae fleeltmaainn

300 Autos lor SalaABERDEEN TOWNSHIP — 1bedroom condo by owner. Incl

appllancea. Fecllltlea in-cludetennle couna. awlmmlng Ipool, t logging trail. J7O.50OCall M3-M3] efler S p m .

H7 Lg>t»4Aeraaaoby

300 Auto* for Salt 100 AutoitarSal*

KAY MOTORS IS YOUR

RUMBON — WATER FRONTWITH BULKHEAOt S1SB.000• V OWNER. CALL a4»-U14

138 Mobil. Hom««MOBILE HOME - 10MS tbadrnom. weeher/dryer, re-thoarelor. $14,000. Cell4 tM47$ aner 1.

139 CamafryLota4 BURIAL PLOTS - ShorelendMemortel Oerdene. H u m $SO0

140 Real Eat at*Wanted

ALL CASHWe buy 1-4 family homee. North-_ _ ~ l a - - ^ ^ -ee* J*«-- — A. - f*ln aiii niern MUfMiiouiii oounry wnampaa aoon ea 90 daya poetlbla.ERA Maimed Reattora.07 IM50BASICALLY 1000-1400 aqTire Storage epooeawg muet have COS INear Red tank eree. Tire eftow-room O.K. Leea

Send deacrlpilon torate Keven a o a n . SS4 River Rd..Fan tleven. HJ 07701.HOUSE WANTED —one. 4 bedroom Cceamel orspirt. Qooo down payment- CeHi-7ia-fMS-iB4aINCOME PROPERTY WANTED

Any oandWan. Keanaburg orHlghlanda. $72-B0!lRUMSON-FAIR HAVEN — Home

houae with e broker. We ere afamily looking for an older homepoatiDly kt need of work. Pricedbetween S70.000-S1tO.000. Wecan make equick uncompflcelodpurchaoe. Saving both perllee elot of money. Cell W1-42H

152 Boat* andA c c e a a o r l e a

14 FIBERGLASS ALPEX —Open boat with trailer, MOO orbeat oner Call evea. TST-BOTS.1$' SEA RAY - Flbergleaa. 40HPetrinruda S trailer Qood con-dition. Moo or beat oiler. CallM1-B4I! after $.

300 Autos for Salt

Best Seiection, Best Prices..and SUPBiCARE Service!!!

This amazing now Subaru otters lha luiury and sport features you've,bean looking lor Add the turbo option and you've got one tun coup*!

4 en. . aw emMaaU V M aat

m *

. aw em nS JlJfff iL «.«.MaaU V M aat anaav frem « T M a m «. aattraaao. «am *g dock, a m M e , ut gam ranatida .Mitel AWug, reUMfa Hrl buctet ~ 0 Mycaraaal. chUMat aw lam. K M * grapNc tyawtaeaMet, kW-MHtr CMC* aM to eaxk. Mta» 44 wuaa torM uet Fru I? au

" gUR PRICE: $7,799

I MS SUUMHI t t NUTSlock W M

cS "piair eat Uel Rice. IOUR PRICE: $7,599

5 YEAR UNUMITEO MILEAGE WARRANTY AVAILABLE. ASK FOR DETAILS.we USB genuine Subaru part* t acceeeorlee All our technlclena are factory trainedtUWR CAM DMALKH *mm*B—sawiiai

^AY MOTORSHCAKSALtS • PARTS • LEASBIO • SERVICE

Man. Fit iV^Et •

201/S42-5900MenFrt,»l,e«tl:IO-i;

( aaaaaa»»"«a»- r I

ENOLI8HTOWN — MsntispinCovered Bridge I. near clubhouae. 2 bedroom, freshly ipainted. Available Immed. Prin-dples only. aWi-W.M)0e7.

i i i i t ia i f , • • • • •aejej»-e.ejBe ,Bt>weafaair > « • » •r •>* / e aeeee

HIGHLANDSBEST BUY IN EA5TPOINTE 1bedroom condo. pool, lenniscourt, clubroom. * smr•61.900Bahra Realtors •72-1600

( aaaaaa»»«a» r i <ataaa«aaaieieie«eiaaae«e:>eia» , • •aaaeja- . ^ / - r I r au I Y T V 1 ' r m ? '?•a«a» aaaav/ / / . t ? . • • • * / ' . i f / , • . L. jaa• • •e j lajaaar I «• «aew I i f •••ayj t< > ' J St * t i f!!!

I I S I I I S S B S B I i a i l l | a " a a a < » i f « " < a i - P i t i a j a i a l a a « I S I > ' « « * " « " I S I S a I S a a• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a / r i f ' i : r , - i _ _ a elr * ' • > I i I . - * ' ._J - • • • • • • • • • • • • a « « ) B - i a i s ) B ) B S i a i e : a• • • « • • • • • • • * ; f , a i * 3 m r- w * if 54 ..sK. < • ! ! • • • • • • • s i s

istf i / * . 9 i i , , . J 1 i ,2 . * i s iiv at . i i • • • •••••••••asaaBSjefseaseeeeeeeai tee >a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • « • • *

oaaeeaaaaaeaBieaaaaaBisiasesiBasiaBatBeaeee'eeB

NAVCSINK RIVER — Spectacu-lar vtew, new i or 2 bedroomfrom 1100.000 Call 741-0518 or741-4M1

afeaa«aaa%

PUERTO RICO — FalardoFurnished 2 bedroom. 2 baihlownnouse with ntarlna view.Beautiful grounds. Lit tennis.pool on premises. Near beeches,gon etc. Asking ••3.000 Call747-7M6.

RED BANKLEROY PLACE

1 AND 2ideal (or investors, starters orretirees. 10 one-bedroom unitsm an elegant ludor and IB one-bedroom units with contem-porary simospherel Super con-ventent locstionl Non-bindingrsservstions now being ac-cepted Prices range from150.000 to •110.000NEWMARKETS REALTYREALTORS 741-8211SHADOWTown hous>

LAKE VILLAGE —Town houae en golf course. Liv-ing room, dining room, den. 2bedrooms. 2'4 bains, fireplace,large patio, central air. garage.many extras. $137 500 747-0855Thurs. A Frl. after • p.m., all daySat. 4 Sun. Principles only.

c:::::::::::::::^::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::a. . . . , . . , , . , ! • • • • • • • • !

N.J.'S NEWLOW PRICE

LEADER

85 CHEVY;IMPAIA !

85 CHEVY MONTE CARLO

S8728 •B ' 8 1 " / «-• " '

SHADY OAKSTruly perfect Villa In Middlelown.with tunny private telling 2bedrooma. 2 bame. den and gar-age Muii ee teen I t 19 900

CROWELL AGENCY741-4030

m* in8b CHEVY ASTROVAN 8685

S17Z 3 4 / . . . SPECIAL$1,500*

'84 NEW SUBURBAN M49'V.»-Shadow Lake VillageADULT. NOT RETIREMENT

neeelea a RentalaCROWELL AGENCY

741-4030Retideni SalaapeopleEvenlnge a Weettende

Helga Stewert Jean Mitchell741-eMe (42.7311

133 IncomeProperty

FOR HELP — In buying or tell-ing, call Andy Rudoff In our com-merclal/inveatment dlvltlon. atCentury 21 Cotena. Baailor.74i-7«aaINCOME PROPERTY - For taleby owner Cell 747-ataa or747-0037

KEAN8BURQ — Mint condition.2 apartmenta tM.aoo CallPeggy. Kirwtn CO 787-8800RED BANK — 3 family home.Detached garage with work thopLow. low maintenance. Excellentcondition. Off atreet perking.Cloet lo town end hoepllelS179.W0BAHRS REALTORS 872-1800

300 Autos for tale

Tamarack Sell storage a Were-hauling. Hwy. M, Long BranchVanoua tue gerageeeiathaad doora. 232-1(-8712

110 WanfdtoRent3/4 BEDROM HOME

In Rumeon or Fair HavenCall 747-8S72

N.J.'s Largest Honda DealerSPRING SALE!

LOOKING FOR NICE — com-fortable boarding ladllilet lor 2elderly ladlee. Fair Haven aree•aepond la Bo« Z-401 Tn. DailyHegiater. Shrewabury. N J

MONTHS OF JULY - Furmtnedfteute. apt. or condo Minimum.I bedrooma, 2 baflta. Sea Bnghl.l a d Bank. Rumeon or Mon-mouln Beech aree. Cell7«7-8i79 after a

RESPONSIBLEMature working woman, tingle.Beekt private I bedroom ept.ajed Benk eree. Cue. references

Call after 8 P M 2B4-0223BENIOR CITIZEN — Active mala.rjeeda mobile home or motor

•Home 530-0402. 10-4 PM week-

WORKING COUPLEid apt forp

dry dOQ'e Look-

l

wtth 1 sn ) #)to pay mid tSOO'

en'Mlghlandt. All Hlghlanda.Port Monmoulh. Redi. Can auppiy aic. ref-

Pteeae cell 790-8039_ 8 30-5 pm.. 2 » - 4 9 Ma p.m.

ING MOM — With t childto rent 1 or 2 bedroomor epl. Cleen a quiet e

S480 with ulila. incl. Cella S72-»42.

ADDITIONAL

REBATES85 and '84 MODELS '

D I M CLOSE OUT — 3M - a M . To be located

_ . Franl Part, long Branch.000. Aveuewe May teasmtormenon phont 222-37M

OCtTa NtCM COLONIAL 0 On•CBioai i l l l eore.4 -"-- aaeta, formal 0

|n kitchen, we" I

earn. * bedroomiformal dining room.

_ e . " to well bricki M l a M > room Over•eet el Dving eree. Econ.

ATC Ma a

uniini «TP

U 172I I ' a—

'85 CHEVYCITATION

HATCHBACKStock #5761. Sid. equip., 2.5 IllraEFI, 4 cyl.. tleel belted radian,while wall Urea Opliom auto.,P/S. P/B, A/C, llnted glau. delaywipere. rear def., conaole. liltwheel, auxiliary lighting, aportpackaga. 1 In atock. LIST PRICE:

iiT.002 SAVE: *1929IMTKODUCTOftV P*ICS:

$9123J183"/.

s26,210

SPORT COUPESlock #5765, Sid Equip: P/S,P/B, AM radio. Options: V-6,auto. o/d. A/C, rr. del. sportmirrors, rear spoiler, whitestripe S/B radlals, quartzclock, pin striping, BSM,saddle cloth Interior. 1 Instock. LIST PRICE $11,771.

SAVE: $1,302IN IRO0UCT0MV M i d :

85 CHEVYCAPRICE CLASSICSlk. 15788. 4 dr.. Equip: V-9,auto, overdrive. P/S, P/B, powerlocka. aeatt 1 window*. A/C. tl-it.glaaa. raar dalg.. remote mlrrdfl,enllaa, tilt wire wheel covera,gaugai. am/fm alarao caaeettewith leeh S acan. aux. HghU.demo 2,200 mllee. Llat Price:

H5.3S1 $ A V E «2088IN IR00UGT0H V MIds

$13,243

'85 CHEVYCREWCAB P/U

FULLY LOADED! Slk 1513a.Equipped with: 360 CID V- l , auto,P/8, P/B. lint gtaae. alldlna rearwindow, A/C. H/O fr. aubmierbar*. locking dm,

w. fuel Iangina a i

tank, H/B ban.roof marker lampe. Highway S/Bradial*. SeonadaH Ptcg. 1 InStock. LIST PfllCE 117.-^1.

SAVE $3,0461IHTKOOOCTOHr M C I$14,125

$279™/.

lta

FREEHOLD HONDA

M i l . • cyl. auta .vz.rs.nt.fM tocka. M e n

32.000

yAeVHI eaao a n <tmm.uamttrlng.UlraM.U.OOO

ISaiCMiVTCITATIONCHEVETTE

Slock IM .301 . 4 cyl, auto..VZ. » Or P/S. P i t H.SOd

CRUISER WAQONI57M A. V-«. U o . P/S.

V

CUTLASS CALAIS

IPB. mi t>M..'«lmi«., 30.000 M.

•ssas

MO nm. «c, AH37.0»ml

•4898WBIKLVSPICIAL

1882 CHEVYCAMARO

a eyl.,

RT 9. Soulh Freehold Shopping Center Freehold. N JSales Open Mon Fri 9 III 8 P M /ICO /Saturday 9 ill 5 P M Closed Sinrtj, * » D a s " "462-4881

641 SHREWSBURY AVE. 741-3130SHREWSBURY. N J .

SUNDAY. MARCH 17. 1965 T h e Sunday Remitter 1 > P

i n

An. M k M OVyaar MM MM u»«ll»i (ino IDi fnn i». aat Iv Tom.

CATUJNA H - Tfta p M MM a t t w •> tooo oaaaoon

M M M t a M H»

CCLUMaAM-:

star

mini law » on. IIIHOCM ' a * Manan Y M M w74T-W10

MOOMMO - wan 150 H>anchor. OMM and buoy. M MtoM oana. AaMna O M or Matoaar. a t K o t l oriar ( pm

• u w a H L M M oo«d..MM Ml t ¥» U M /UMngI I U or M 4kr. U0-U4Jor»»(pm

Tracks*

cn«vr « « w _ «?'«. c» a utint

CHIVY CM — 11T4• q l . tMk raDOO. (MO.

cww ton im - r i M

OATtUN PICK-UP 1*70

DOOM VAX 1(77 -

•noire. M m m >b. MM.

7(7-(IIJDODOI N M m WAOON -l»M vary good oonaMon• 1300 or M oaor H M MoTOjr •

ram rvutoin — KM. 4 MIOM•Mo. m »/•. c w coraMA/C. AM/FM m M »Tonuo M r . Much mo.. (MOmi MM* arm CW alter 1T41-OM.KMO 1«T> F100 - H a w aWI000 » «Ul In uM Uoio CM

FOPS CARQO VAN 1000 -

AaungUaOD

HA NAY itTt - 11'. J00 H>l I/O. l l

1

i r ntoroaao boa 4 n w «Miitn t*Tte -Co» HI »M0

• eMnruaa. *1MO.

t f MAMH» - Tt ho JorMoon."(Mo n o o a a o r » M l n

IV (TAMCKAPTl i t Mr». Morcury ouvinyl n w . w

a CHAraaB. UAMMC C» - I

cat 74i.«aa 3571 p m

I M Racraattonal

AUO TKAVU THAIUH—1(7*.i r n i •, oarrejMo». opt

wan a/c tea. oaM.1MM

AUO TKAVU Tir. nnpi •,HMalmf wantMM.(T1-MM

KMO Flat tan-Hood body,runo good AaUngtTU ot boaon*, caa Tor-itro

row PICK upi»nWak oap. Oooa OOM.

C«a Tar-JOK. mar» aw.HOMOAMOiara

OooOcond AlUngUMraHMMManatOpm.

MO Auto* Hr Sal*

CMCVY CnATOH - M t a*.

CHIVY UAUaU MA«OH I Mp/e. p/», A/C. roar

vaa,raalra».-iom

CSio'liaoo- S^rarTiB«VY P. CI I1 I0 1»T1 -

MOO. CM OTOOaM <0m i p m

CHtWVtOArtnoanar MOD or boat on* • Mar ( pm U0-4K

— 4 * . 3M> * anra. E•.. toaaad tMM « n a . 11.C

«-. tT4M or 0/O 74H11JCHIVfTTt 10M - 4 dr., 4 aaiA/C. raar aM. dot. radwnaada Uutcn • Min i ma a

para or a eon bo luoa

CWCVY CAVBJCT law - Typ.

Manon. A r t amflm rodto. Mu•auut-wi300 Autos lor Sale

AVISYoung

CanFor Sal*

CHCKOKU. 70. w.O.1.(4(00. can. many o

M-41M

suvtnoo C M

TOYOTA PICK-UP 1(73 — UMn j . j j h . a p Aaung (1(M. CM

1(74. Ford MO tngma and

OTUTY TfUULEP.( IM . CM Wko

a*o> ( pm 4M-1U4

300 Auto* lor Sal*CMNCTTt 1M0 — 2 dr.. autonna.. radk). naar m (3.000

1(7>.(400CM Ma-Ola) M » ( P.M.

AMC HOMatr i(7( - Goodnnraaj oand.. Pt. raw ana, (

i r ammo - mmi" T™«OImaar. «MgM K M aja. (Haaa< t o a m w i K a o (ocfi-aea tMM. CM M1-1M7 or

TOVATA CHMSOK - I tn.MMM aaaaV oaMa aaaw aark(1M0. CM M1-0OM.

AutoanoUv*M tUT UMO CAM - Topaaaar peat taaaoraj Caryaar.atjamaa. M l W. Prow at . Hod

747-4000fXrUTf M aaJUHAMCl AOtHCV - CM a» baa ouoaaa

270 Auto 8o>rvlc»»/

CHaW MOTOR - MO.. Com-

AMC SPWT - loot) p/b. p/e.auej. a cjt.. onoa area. 40,000M UTtO. n.goHOI. Ca>

AMC QWMUII 1(71 — OaodI. aaad nmant oond. AoklfMjX%MIMMTI ^ ^

A STAR IS BORN...

naeiwbi n e v w e ajap****1

aje ptajp1 arv

placing a STAR el me noFor T l II caa ato Doeyni.mi r in i i i

Bajaratiaia. (4H710.

BUM - no re- - IOC 40.OIL. Fi*y loaded S apd Haraiocad. III.OOO » I H M

(MOP (PfCIAI. - 77

MMMayM

aio an - (M cc onoM.( M M mi, bKMt aaaa. feaat

TRUCK n m - uaa nM. MM>«• « a a d and oaancM or. •bMr»m(Hlon).CM»»i-o4t4

2t0 MotOfcycf»HONDA VM — l ( t» MaoMratal, wo M . MM aimaftn.UatW Cea OM-10K.

HAHLIV OAVIaOHitHPANHIAO

• M ortor CM dara » > 4 «Awar (:M a.1. M l Mt4.HAMLtv — 1(71 CaHam analMba. Muat ba ann. Aakln(MMMMMIHMOMOA WOMTMAWK -

b d O *ae.Ce>l

TMWoood , Or*, 1400

HONDA - 1M1. CXMO. ana*arho. aolor cooMd. enraa. lac.pond. ((7(. Ce«(T1-7(»(

HONOA VM MAONA — 1 ( 0 .Croohbar. KaHaaiaaa. teajyoar Lo* moaaa jbiorj ne«o-

HONDANIW jtpatra 11 votuaM

HONDA DEALERm. a. Praahau

402-40(1

laaOALCOUPf-iarT0 t a M M U B M .

CM 7f7-M(7tUICK CBITUeTr l (Tt — Mea-

aa Ma « r> •oat otar boaaao500 > uooo cea rnna

tUICK MOAt. LANDAU COUPt1(77. va, A7C. P/W. onVknn.OOO ml Aaung 12O0O Caa47t-*<77

Or*U*00

aMAL u r a44.000 ml tan. 2 doorcaoi«4-aua

__JCK L l O b f UTATEWAOON 1040 — ( d .va auto. pya. p/t>. p/aoor kjoko.p/omauaa ( aaaia. vouur M I• M i . A/C. ako iHi l i 74.000MO. Aaung M4M. CM(71-MM.bueCK FaOAl - l(7». va. dueA/C landau lop Mo* Oreo.AaVFal. La* mliai HunaaoodCHaSl made ( out MuM MAaUM t i M t or boat oiler CM7M l i l t . Aak tor tanloy or

OWCK rKOAL 1M4 — ILJMMdIdMan) awak. fur), loadad. TMaa. l a va A M . M (I(.OOOCM Mar (JO. MMMT.(LOCK PXOAl 10(4 — lUmnodmmmvfuo,IOUIK T-ioao,3(» + Ao»W (1S.000 CM ana.(.30 p.m. apMJMT,

ra - M.oooIM. Fua> MdOd. Eac OOM.M700 CM (71-(1(7onar 1 pm

I H . p M oba Lao no»moaa I M I bar. tnoM annwco7iti.RdKAWAtAM KZM0 I t r t — Oar-

KAWAtAKI r OU HZ 440 LTD4,700 m. aaraao >aat l>o

S S ZZ^rSX*»m CMU 7M i(>( - 10.(00 maaa.AaabaH (aBaaBi aVMbai daaalaaH AaaVaTaBf a r ^ P OTW* M P I " * W " * a^^a»waB|

MOO. CM '41-OOiE(UZUKI 1(7( PWO0 - Ooodrunnma oand.. roauM anaMa.CM albr ( p m 443-OOM

r 4 30 p.m.

YAMAHA TjOCC I d

YAMAHA «0 M0 - l ira. dflbMdM. now arao. orionaiari. ramaood. CM anor 7. 7(7-mo.

2»1 Mopodt

„ .EC PJOAL 1 ( » OM.•urbo. T-to«. rUC. p/b. p/apAMndaaa. pAoeU. cnaao. an

. . . . • ^ ^ ( ^ - ^ ^^BaiaaaaNHnMraa(4M0.tWCK Lf ( A W * 1(70 —(MOO orta. M.. «ary dapan-de«M ( 4 b or bail i "N141M.CADHLAC 1(M — COEM MM.. Ua M.. (boo) odor CM 22J-711CAOHXAC 1(77 - (0011111111.oanor. Sedan D0VM. LOOdOd(MOO Co» 7» t te7 .

CADILLAC. 74.

. (1200. 47741(0 I

CAMAHO — ian. no* pom.FoMy no* nmo ( arao. Dickieolndaaa. A/C. P/». P/l. AM/FM

aK* oar OOMT. (1400 M. I4O0OCM 4M-MM anyamoCAMAHO 1(7( - VoryuunMilr, P/t, A/C.Mroo.WQ (2T00 CM (71-MM.

CAMAMO - iMa. m va. 4 r>w4 epd. p/e. p/b. Naoda rbodVond a n t M aork I dboa onor CM lor more ettormoOon a/1 M7J. oa« He Fraroi

200 Trucks*Trattar*

CAMABOP1AIIV(POP.T1MO-JOa va. 4 epd. P I / P I . AH/FM•Mrao 0MMMB. T-tPPt MlMl Mt * W ) or beet oUor After • pm

•>*o. a n . p/b. oood «I II100 Ce« 747-4JM

•LAZIP. 1(T( - 4 »•, A/C.

mpwco itw , HA/C.om/MroM.crulMOOiWOIKM M M M T M CM74t-t»1( atar i .

CAPRI RALLY i a n - 4 aML.M I or.. MiaVv

CAPRKt taTATI WAOONiara ( i inin(i p/t. p/s.Po-a. MnOO*at Uckt A/C Taj•noaL AM/FM Marao Huotiearaa kpapo. (1200.

CM(71-MT(

KINOSLEY AUTO SALESTtT-TMT

CAMAHO KALLY (PORT 1(77- a • * . ana.. >aVPa. AVC.

• " aaoaaaa. roar ai l ir .—Tckaaar.MMal (77*0c-on-aoao

i Airta*larSal«

»0 Auto*, tar SaltCMaVY taFALA t t r t - 1 aTMoe A

W Autelttruli

CHMTTI 1M4 - 4 cyl. 4apod mal a m M

Auto* (Of S«lt 3oo Autot lor Salt 1100 Anton lof t i l t W At rK lhr tM

mnual a3 Or Man.

y.a m oMa n . iu/FU

SHORE MOTORS VOLVOExclusive Northeast Dealer & Distributor For

THE ALL NEW

1985 VOLVO GLE ROADSTER

.VOLVOwornm

r\

EH

1 1_ a

. I r1

AVAILABLE FOR 740 a 760 CUT. WITH or WITHOUT SUNROOF

SEE a DRIVE THIS LUXURIOUS SLEEK NEW VOLVOROADSTER AVAILABLE ONLY AT SHORE MOTORS

SHORE MOTORS VOLVOHMMWAYM 528-7500 M/CARO

* ••*• TO CHOOSE HI0M

VOLVO119 L nWMiUI SNUGS WAD 741 .SM6

YOUVE RFFN SHOPPING FOR!!

Parkway Olds brings you America's No. 1 Carat prices you can afford. Drive it home today!200 NEW OLDS IN STOCK

1985 OLDSMOBILETORONADO 2 DR.

VB W/Vinyt 100 AWFU SlfftoCaiscttt PS PB FVC P-f Lw-Sft WitxJtw.1 Pu-M VUipfff Rr O>tW i t WMt. P«( Trunh Fl M«tsSiOCh 17 M4

0 0*311.Per Mo.

n«i.oun una n naoM or.moflin c«09«d -nd I H N

1985 OLDSMOBILE'98 REGENCY

4 t> Sedan. V « U P F I PS. PB.AX: PW» Window* ft LOChS FullVtnyl Top CrutM. Tilt W>>* WMSHeci.nirvg Seals. PU<M W-p«f FlMais Slock 17145

$291. 58Par Mo.

BuiOuai 17 031» Oasad on «month cloud end K i u

"*>'

NO MONEY DOWN

1985 OLDSMOBILEDELTA '88 LS

4 0> Srta V4 Aulo PS PB ACPwf Windows A Lochs Ciuue T.li.W<>« W ' l Ltatntr Inieriof AM f MSie«eo Cassciie Beciming S«ats Rr0». Sioch 162M

^289. 50Per Mo.

RM-dual S6 7V41 based on 48month rlos-vj tnO *••**•

•^Vja/jfa:».

1985 OLDSDELTA 88

ROYAL BROUGHAM4Or V4 Auio PS P 6 AJC 6 WavPwr S»al Pttf.Dr Locht. CruiM T.II ,AUVFM Slerto Cassaii*. Wife wm- JTr»p Odomtttf FuK Vinyl Top. Trunk!n*>'««M Sloe- aues

$270.66Per Mo.

H«Ou>r HWSao tused on 41month closed end lease

Prtca( do not includeia«a» and M.V. t t t t . rn

14D The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1965300 Auto, tor Salto«€v«ocrr mum M M — *M M , 4 arneel * M «B*00. Cane&er I p.m. »1-U44c m w C I T A T I O N - itw.ecyi.

4 •cm. 4 near radial_ »1«0 Can M2-0U1

eftlajn.CHIVY NOVA I M I - i door, a

0O^'U00Utlrm<>>CaliI erler I pm.

CHeWY VAN I i79M running oond. (1000.

CM rlr-aiuCHIVY NOVA — It7». 4 doer.4t.OOO maee. No» Wee tmllmn H W AiUng 12700 Of beetOfler. CM 214-4711.CHEW MALIBU - 117!. 14.000ml., Looka I rune grael Won'tleal long et WOO. Ceil 747-O»l»CHEVY MALIBU — 1171. 4 doorMO. I cyl., 37.000 ml. good

CHIVY VIOA 1171 - Ooodoond.. 41.000 origin* ml. AeMna•MOOT Beet Offer CM 774-77ifCHIVY CU1TOM VAN 1171 -Muel MM. For Inlormauon call•tHr 1 pm 172-MU.

CHIVY IMPAIA 1M0 — 4 dr..PS/PB. W/W. Urea. A/C. U.000ml on engine. Now trena . Eac.aond.. 14.100 or M M o n * w«*kd m ana»» pm. 2t* -atwCHIVY IMPALA I M I — 4 dr..AM/FM. PS/PB. A/C. W/W UreaE»c oond.. IM00 or Mai offerWeeHdaye Oat 1pm 7W-WH

CHEW MALIBU CLASSIC -1M0, p/b, p/i. e/c. 4 door, whitearm Mue Interior, u.000 mlaaklng U400 Can Me-OaWCHEVY CAPRICE 1971 — Eatete

CHEW CHEVELLE 1*70 — • cylRum. n u l l «ork 1U0. Can

MO AutotlorfU

300 Autos for SaltCHCVY VAN 1177 —

«.. P » / P « . M m

CrMYSLW COMDOSA 1§7«M.000 IN., pkier. Manor, ruralpood 11X10 CM 111 MM.CttP.YU.fP. LIBAHON1171 — 4

M neQeaeete.I 8H Ti l l

CMCII CHtV1«M.ETShieaaouiyAira.

74I-3IJ01171__ - 311-VI. 117.1

Eng redone at es.211 ml.Neode lutM>up a eanauel pipe.Oood ear. MOO or b/o Cell alterI. "~DATSUN PICK-UP 1M0 — Ktogcab. tnergleee cap. 47.000 mi..a»c. cond . U M 0 . CM m - 1 1 M .

DATSUN MOZX TUMO I M I —UMrmrawga Evarybooa.PartacloonrWtree. Muat aM. aaMng memer)

OATSUN 900 SX 1MD - WhiteWWI beige Interior, eunroof A/C.auto. 54.000 M.. good o<•4*00 Cell I M l t S iOATSUN - 1M4 Maalma11.000 mi 5 apd. lltirar mm (ray101. A/C. AM/FM caaant. Crulaecontrol Much mora. 741-4404

DATSUN 710 — 1179 Engine «tranamlaalon ratHiUl 4 good liaa• tlOOO

aa• txakaa goodsaa-0327

CM

OATSUN 2»0ZX 1*7* — t-apeed. A/C. Cacellenl condition45.000 m. Aaklng W200 CellMS-41M arlar • XOATSUN 200SX — 1W2. auto.a/c, am/fffl caaatia. aporty.40.000 mi. a«c cond. iaooofirm. Can 21U2M1

300 Autos tor salt

300 Autos tor Sato1 — 1177

4 apd. t o t . AaMnaMOO

DOOOI CHAIMBI w itra —v-e, auea.. • « / * • , eVMbnMi

H M . • loo muoh u net747-1701 a i r 1 p.m

1171 — Ham

. 212-7111DODO* OAKT 1174 - Ante.p/a. p/b. M . am/»m, aun reel.Oraal Martor. Mual M aaanNaada angina or ar1140 CM>3»-0704

OOOQt COMMIT - 1071.1 cyl.M M ml. good running oond.Naada uaholaajri <aam. Saataltar. Ca.67i .J4i t

MM RT1I7* - ...cum » door Black « orange. 4-apaad, KeifHune maga. MuataW. 11000 or M M eeymantaAek ter ttary. TCT-CSeeT

1W1A/C. Pl/PB. *m/tm. raar derog.

- M.000 ml MOOOCM4W-M10

OODOC 100 VAN - 1 * 7 * ,

rime, now wee e/c. caaoveftieaM convoie* C*ID4Lchake. M.000 ml. Uual aee to

OOOOI ASPEN - 1171. Ilkanaw. 11.000 ortgtonal mMaa.MuM aaa (MOO. CM baraaanH p.m. 172-2421

Don't Settle ForW-H-O-L-E-S-A-L-E

SM your car. truck or van thaprnlamnnal way CM LouIckan. BUHLER 1 BITTEDC H R Y S L E R - P L Y M O U T H .M4-5OO0

NATIONWIDE AUTO BROKER

300 Autos for salt

300 Autos for Sate

nocim AMCB K WAOON —

EL CAMrNO 1174 - WWi oapP/S. P/B. MO t M L . naadapaint. CM Mar S I M I7T4.

FIAT CONVERTIBLE « 7 J

laaatar. 70,000 mlCM arlar S p.m. B4S-4W1

FIAT STKAOA - 1M0. 4 oyl. Idoor » apd am/tm c a u l reardecroat. Lu*»ege raokHew ra*-ei wee. DaHery A/C Sae. eon)• 1700. Cal S44-00B0.

rniiTim mmnwi m iPS/PS. A/C. em/FM I

FIRUMO 1*71 - Naaoe body' end e>Muet work. Kyne

or beat oner Can

FORD MUSTANQ 1177 — 4 cyt.tOVi rrtMaMaQV Oi l N i #JAQlfl*V Nf#*WbajttaJfV, fatanfj OMlaafAlaTrl APStBAVgood running. 11100 M1-M0T.FORO ORANADA — 117S. S cyl.

p/b, aye. am/lm AakmgCM 214-4011 avaa-

FORD MUSTANO FASTBACK301. auto . p /1 .

FORO FAMMONT WAOON -1*71. I cyl. auto.. P/8. am/tm.

0. oond., •1M0.

FORD OMAN TURINO WAOON1172 - RabuHI 400 angina BuyII now lor MOO or Mat artar CM•42-3074 M Rumaon.FORO MAVERrCK 1171 — 1 cyl.automatic, p/a. m/b. 71.000maaa. Vary good•1200. CM 171-S0M.

FORD PINTO 1(71 — U.000mllaa Good ovar M conditionAaklng 1000 Call M2-30M

Autos for salo

•>"m-

R icKaixls' Hondas demandthe finest homes.

v Come look at one of the latest selectionsof 1985s around...and take one home today

The new 1985s are in at Richards Honda City. And onceagain we have more Hondas to choose from than any otherdealer around.

That means Preludes, Accords, CRX's, Civics and in-troducing the new high performance CRX-Si and 4-wheeldrive, 6-speed wagon. Priced a lot less than you may think.

And don't settle for anything less than Richards' helpfulsalespeople, experienced service and body shop pros, andconvenient finance arrangements.

This year don't get a Honda from just anyone, get theHonda you want... at Richards Honda City.

HONDA CITYRoute 9 South, Freehold, New Jersey (201) 780-0666

'To qualify. aU you need is a down payment or liade-m equivalent ol one third Mammum financing $4,000 lor 30 months

300 Autos for SatoFORO MAVtWCK laTl — 1 cyl* dr.. auto, aamar Mailing.•7.000 mi. arts, earns. 171ftCM I I I MSI, e l f I pm

ORO PINTO UTS - 4 cyl, 4apd. AM/FM r i iuai Marao M

Autos for sal*

m AufsforsawPOROF

•saa

MO Autos for sal*FWTO — 1971. wary aoad•aat oajar. CM M M 1 7 2

Arlar 1 p.m. aM M4-aMl

MO Autos for saf

FORO LTD — 1174. In good aan-

10 WAOON LTD - 1*74.Mn/tm. tvc. mm M O M M . Or- '•a>*owrt O*M>#jr 70,000 fM., t37Sa. baal altar. CM M4-0OM.FORO LTD - 1171. 1 door.Landau oouee Aarto, p/a. p/b.a/c. am/tm aurao win tapaOood running, good lookingAaklng 11710. MrVlMSHONQAACCORD 1 1 7 1 -1 HnlliiiflHi caaaanaU.000 nua War, g. "

HONOA CIVIC OX 1M2 — Auto

rm. IK oond Aaklng

Can » • M l I arlar 1HONOA ACCORD LX HATCH-

A/c. lapa deck a m PS, „ „ , ,•utraa M.000 ml. Oajnar gam

•ad. Mual aM. waoo CaiS41-M41.HONOA ACCOM) - II

»r. I apd.. helohem/mi n u m . rune WuAQkWg M3O0 Can 717-71

0. 1back.

HONOA ACCOM) HATCHBACKI M I — 1 apd. am/tm Mareo,A/C. mm oond Baal offer. CM

HORIZON 1171 — 4 cyl.. 4 WO. 4Mm » _ t . , . ^ - j —-—--a—M — — * — -O*.,rajHsDMj IfwnflfMKIalVOri IXKatudani or oommular. 11250CM 4M-0211 Mlar 1.

JEEP CJ 7 1171 — 304 41. 3-apaad trana.. p/>. A/C. hard topAaklng 14200 or baal oner. CanBill alter 1 . Ml-Sa»T.

IS NEW ALWAYS BETTER? IS BIQ ALWAYS BETTER?

Is it possible that...AN OLD. SMALL DEALERSHIP IS BEST FOR YOU??

OLDSMOBILE

MO Autos for salo

SEE WHAT JACKCAN DO FOR YOU!

251 Broadway at 4th Avo. • Long Branch a 222-1234

r>

Good NewsTravels Fast!

6 0 MONTH FINANCING AVAILABLE TO QUALIFIEDBUYERS

The Volkswagen Scirocco is making headlines! Itsstylish, road-hugging design is brought to you fromthe German autobahns for exhilarating performanceanywhere. And the best news is the price! See foryourself today.1985 SCIROCCO STOCK #15135 MARS RED. 4 CYLINDERFUEL INJECTED, MANUAL STEERING, POWER BRAKES,AIR CONDITIONING, REAR WINDOW WIPERS, MSRP$11,420 SELLING PRICE $10,900.

PRICES INCLUDE FnfrSrlT I FWP EXCIUOE TAX 1 PLATES WHICH AH PAVAaU M CASH.- — — — i"— ™« »• MrwTue UTMTUI v. awNEMT 1343 14

'nfiAHCS r u t M f «1W 7? nfFFWO PWCIF 12.860 12 OffW tJUInt!, J/Jlne

YOU'DBETTER SHOP FREEHOLD

FOR THE BRAND NEW1985 NISSAN SENTRA

OurHuge Inventory Gives UsThe Best Price Leverage <

So You'd Better ShopFreehold

1985 NISSAN SENTRA 2 DR SEDAN DELUXE

l e e i '•' ••••', h s i : • •

del AM Sleiring • belt rad pi iad |i |uard i Iprool $6869

WWlWttUflV AVENUE 741^600

INS MtSAN KNTM t M. KMi KUIIE IE5* ma. kM. M . 4 ql.. 9 aM. am raa. P». rve. ttk. rrM lavniaai u « m > U « COM aM«Up ™« . • M a t a M l naaaial.. inliiLia UJTrWli.171

ODH PBCEi SC.7M

IMS mtuM VUOA MTCWCX nincm W N B •ailaiii M«0a «an• . * •egleaaraLaMleiuM.TkTaackUaPTU aiTil

IMS MtSM HUM « CNKaii M M Ret. 4 cyl. Ir. aM. dr.. S eat. Baa. tarn. P/». rtmm• • " • c m a w i a n , n m at a y ""J""* "fa.texa. LM Frloi: AMI « « . _ BaaMeraa, mm « •* •

IN* nmt i M. KMI i

• Sen Ma* 4 cyl. 4 a* amlem. • • > • • » . I

OUB PaOCEi S*S.4M

I M

I K ISTMUftl

C aM. diet t ru . f naa. /tllfalwr eem. •Mnti. P*U . rmte cnei. AC. uaa. rr m I m ••<*. LM Met t l 7100

mn t

volume PricedPick-Ups!

1985 KINGCAB STANDMIO

SI M » . WMa. 4 cyl.. tapd. men. trana. man.•teat. Pimm Mac Win.•M belt red. 1 hi etaefc.Llet Ptloa: I7.9W

OMPMCI :

$6,999

10S5 K8UUW K 0

VOLUME LEASINGMORE CAR* MORE TWMSI MORf OntONSI

I M S MAXIMAWAOON

. P», a

1HS KNTHn IM ftUM • CaeH

' AVAILAHIIO SUrUINIOWTin ON TtUCO ONLY,

-•w monwi oig—o «na mas. NO OMn&m*L mm ****** $mm*tm.pottt rMulrad. T i m MV I*M. kv-w m i i i-MMwiano*mm*.

MAKE US NO. 1IN THE STATE

RT. 9 NORTH, FREEHOLD • 201 780-3800 (1000 FEET NORTH OF FREEHOLD RACEWAY)CONVDraNT HOUM: taea awn any • a m •> i >m

M t«r« B l p m tarvloaaniaarBMenlirTi »9smParajapenlei. tarn to t p.m.

I AtrtBtlorSar*

•msjaap CJT LARBDO I M I - 4BPd. 4 « * * * Mr . I MM. t M .

tws. L _Ca>l7l-OU7

JEEP CJ I 1*71 - SIIOO arm.Ca» M2-I7J1 arlar i XKAKMEN (HA - VW Body Mrcond. EngM rotuM 1M1. AM.MB MOO. Co. Mar I . 717-7171

KITSON CHEVROLET CO.Hoy M

5421000LABMOLA MOTORS

•MnSormgoM. nad Bank741-24JJ

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 1171— Town oar. Good cond. aMingM t M . Can Da Man at Or -jCampoaa. JuncMn bran ua-

UNCOLN TOWN COUPS 1*71Fuayjoodod. 40.000 miS4&00 Ca»l4».»27

LOCALLVORIVEN USED CAM— PPJCED PMHT. RASSASPONTIAC. MS BROAD ST.. REDBANK. 7 4 M 1 M

MARCH I 1173 - MlOli.nicaHyand Mdy M gnat anapa. MuataM Mat Mar. Cm (71-2***.MATADOR — 1*7* 4 door. V*.A/C. RabuH auto. Iran.. 71.000orlglonal IM. Orau runMno oond.Aa » B M I anar. CaJ IT1-1S72OHM, or SM-0S4» day».

M A I M SE-S 1M4 - Pick-upiruck. 19.000 ml.. Mini Cond.MOM. S4MSU. Mom. or Eva.

MtAirtoshrSal*«wi« iiiini - ISM. t

ls*™w!"C "2S

' Ca» 747-S7M

EBSiSitStPONTIAC CATAIMA - 1*7*dMr.amrlMvprl.pra.vo.Na>

- - around, ajnadjaa.• anar • » m 741-OM*.

ONTIAC MOO I U I W O IMS- a dr.. m m OOM.. M M MM

PONTIAC TRANS AM 117* —I BaMsO., *^^p/r^ap, a ^ l / ^ , BBfVUrWI

MM. M.OOO IN.. Mrv CMan

star - • - — • « -PONTIAC VENTURA - 1ST*. Idoor. M0. • cyl.. IOt.000 IM..

MOO Caa anar «

e&sr1077 H I S Targ. and ISMSI ISC aunroo) oowa. BMP. oas.a Uasad. I l l MM.

PCD BANK MOTORS INC.131 N « ™ Spring.. Had I M

RENAULT 1M4 - 1 dr.. aria.A/C. PS/PS. M M M AM/FM

RENAULT RELIANCE DL 1M3 —" 1/rmHarao.

171-ISti.4 dr.. PS/PB. A/C.am/tot •

• SOCHI

MHO ml.. Aidingday H I MI7.

LINCOLN-MERCURY INC«O0RUo-OoaanTwp77S-H00

300 Autos for Sal*

300 Autos for Sal*

STRAUS BUK3t-OP«X• ACRES ot Now tuaMCai

Hvy M. M4-4O00 Kayport

SUSUUtU QL 1*H - «UM»na»lIn aac M M . Oraal mMMa NthMa awn n.ooo IN Parka i soar. AaUns 14100. Caa SM-0011•Barlp-m.

- . PK"o 1(7* — ama, A/C.AaVPM apa. i n « p WPaVPB. StMOor t m iBarjQpjrS pm PI7-OH7 or I71-MS7

Htm IMS - WMH t Mar.•rMMl inamr. *JC. Al paaar,

WOrMry. M

TOYOTA COROHA — 1*77. S•pa.,» aoor amrmi m m . MmOHM. CM 741-*4Mar SM-1411.Aak tar Boa.TOYOTA CEUCA OTB - KM.Hatawaok. a/c p>a, o/a. w

&TSS. ml AakJna H I M . Caa1 arlar 0. Ask "• tor John.

TOYOTA COftOLA 1M4 — 4 dr.,•ua>.. A/C. AM/FM M l <*»dock. E K . oond.. SM00 Ca>JOPJIM M I - M I S arlar 7 PM.

MS0. W-M1S.TOYOTA CSUCA OT UFTBACKIMS - Au«o . 4 cyl. crula.. A/C.a^EJMOn.MM.MTMTOYOTA•pd. A/C. AM/FM •a t oanar. w.1H I M . MI-MO*.TOYOTA CEUCA — 1172, .

StSO. Caa afar 4pS-asM*300 Autos for Sal*

300 Autos for Sal*

SUNDAY, MARCH 17. 1965 T h e Sunday Register 1 5 D

TOVOTA COUCH I 0 — itT*. _•M- . tVc. MIVEM. ITAV ii mm.

• • • •

VOLKSWAOIN DASHCT

dard'aMR. siioo Cad 747-MTS II I . SU-S14S aaakar

VOLVO PART* BALE - NuaM. tar a » raalarcCMapl RBD BANK VOLVO. I

NO DEALREFUSED

T- filUlllll Il|-T- ISM0.Caaalar».«7»Ml*.aak

VOLVO WAOON 1171 Mo IXAuto., a/a. p/b. AAJ. anvkn.DMao. S U M arm Cat 5M-O7 •- 'or I0S-S7X7.

VOLKSWAOSN SUPER BEETLE I- 1 * 7 1 SBM or Mat a«ar. CM | | ^

VOLKSWAOEN DASHER -ISM. Dtaaa) Wasaa. Eac. oon-dWon. Loar mL SJSOO

Cat 74T-17M.VOLKSWAOEN BUG - 1S70

RunaMOO.CaaiT2«BT.

VOLK1WAOEH — 10M OOn-v^ilb* NOB HOC. tx.««4.* » » MOO or MM o n * CM

VOLAMJK WAOON 1077 — Run.•aa M l r a * j aark. Baal oltar.A» la. Caa I M BOMVWaUO 1(7S— MM Mod.. M lout NamrMna. pamt MMry.rf*4jffBW. Clutch, raaMrlVf bOat, rrloViy

na» parki st.100. Uua) aM mo»-

VW BUG 1070

Caat2a-a7S4.ni i m m i g iVW «OROCCO 1173

300 Autos for Sals

an*ma anrk. S1B00 oroaat octar. can S4»-*444.MERCURY BOBCAT — IM0. IP/S. A/0. 44.0M ml. AMUng IS2SM. Ca» STO-OOM

MERCEDES — SM SIL. I M I IimmamjMa. Lap), bkia maMMc.

IM.000. Caa E = nibMERCURY MONARCH 1073 - 4 Idoor. 01.0M mi, MOO CM .nor |4 p.m. 747-04*0.

MERCURY MAROUIS - 1170. |E«c cond.. All potnr. air. a.

mnrl root. M.OOO mL. IT C m S I - S M t .

MERCURY COUOAR 1177 — 4 Idoor, 1 oanor. High mMaago- Ex-tanni ounoadoii. Mvai aio. II HOP. Ca» 171-1402 Q»M.

MERCEOSZ 4 M SEL 1*74 - II. CaS 222-29M

CONNECTONNEW 1985'SBEST BUYS NOW!

•VERYMAKEAND MODEL

542-100024 HOUR CREDIT APPROVALCALL THE

LOAN-A-RANGER

"ALL PRICESSLASHED

E c cogray, v

MERCEDES 2W 1074 - 4 dr.. IWuo. i n oond.. now ongM * IbrakM. A/C. auB Kan. . IS4S0 Ior MM COT. 041-441*.

MO* 1*77 CONVERTIBLE -Now root, no mat. M.0O0 IN.,waa mamainod. Aakln* 125002*4-4731 mar noon

s ^ l : : : t i l -H.^ i t !

Chevyland

542-1000

MUtTANO OT 1004 — 7.000rMMa. loadad Mm oondnonPrM nagoMMo, I12IOO CM707-7101 alMr I .NISSAN SINTRA - 11. 5 tpd

Eac cond «4S00

OLM CUTLASS SUPREME1071 - 2 - * . auto. PS'PB.AM/FM. A/C Niw m a . (ana..

M.OOO ml Eic oond. S4000 orMMonor 747-9M0OLD* CUSTOM CRUISER STA-TIC* WAOON 117* - M.OOO

IOCU. SMM.I23-I1S7.

_ I doorCM BM. or Sun

MfM- VMUlnnitoHiii *1 owwt N00Offll

asaoo. cai M74BJS.

m* <M»-p/o. am/tm

— J TORNADO BROUGHAM— 1170. luay loadad. 71.000 m.

CM M3- I4M orsaooa. c70O47».OLOOS CtERA BROUOHAM 1802— V I . M l . A/C. am/lm.ram. m M M 17400. muMaM ARar > » p.m 071-7141.OLM OMEOA - 1171 2 doorp/>. p/b. Eac. oond. I7S0. CManor I p.m. 7474047 or•71-0425

OLOS CUTLASS SUPREME —1*71. VI. M X 100.000 ml., ra-bum *am.. ongMa iwaiMulad•MNn la* iota) mi. AaMn*S3S0O. CM TOT-MOO. MrBobalrd.

The 300 SeriesA degree in physics isn't required to understand this equation.

Efficiency is the standard of the Mercedes-Benz 300 Series.

The Mercedes-Benz diescls couple highly efficient operation withincredible durability. This is exemplified by a privately owned anddriven 1968 200D Sedan which recently recorded its one millionthmi's.

Mercedes-Benz engineers have continued to enhance and refinetheir diesel engines. These advances are so significant that dieselsaccount for almost one-half of all new Mercedes-Benz motor carspurchased by Americans. .

MERCEDES-BENZ

(201)462-5300 ""•B i ( I

USW6HWATtS9r~MiM.UBWlaaica.aii FREEHOLD

NEW JERSEY'S LARGEST

AMC • DODGE DEA

the money

OLD* CUTLEIS -1071 — VI »u». PS/PS. A/C.AM/FM. Roar daroagar. Eac.oond. AMIng 13300. W1-0M7OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME1M1 - 3 door. VS. auto, PS/PB.p/w, am/fm. Eac oondiaon.iaMS. Col 2044MMO,

OLDS - Tornado. 1M0. DaMi.EMek/2 door. Maroon I M » I MM AM/FM OHTOO C* TW. Wka•Hul l 41.000 ml. S yr /M.OOOml. aarrany. 17500 Eu*idui»m* CM tiS-na anar 0.

OPEL WAQEN 11704 cyl.. amo.. runa «M. now a>-nauM I boMry. MSO. CM4M-001S.

PARK CHEVROLETnoiwiiio ran>

778121H U M i taMm

HI f. NOMunaPEUQEOT-SAAB OF WALL

PINTO 1174 — Rum »o». manyna» para, rawbkt nnaoonaWn- SIM CM 741-0734 «nar 7 p.m.or on naimndl.

* > *

PINTO 1970 — 2 door. 4-apaad.2.3 liar. Oood uundTOon. 11200.C M W I - M M M a r S p m .PINTO — 1ST*. > door runaboutM.OOO mMa. Rum good. 0 0 0CMSM-4M*.

PLYMOUTH HORgON 'MS —S4M0 or MM ' omw. CM

PLYMOUTH DUSTER - 1*72.

PLYMOUTH VOLARE — 1171 2daw, 3 mod . I cyl. Mry dapon-dablo. MUM M B CM 747: i i«PLYMOUTH VOLARE 1*71 - Scyl.. manual on floor, one m-larlor/aiHnor. PS/PB. M.OOOml.. t iMO/MM otlar. CM747-7514 mar * p.m.747-7514 mar * p.m.PLYMOUTH VOLARE 1*71 — 2door, p/s, m/a. air. groan • »«Nlo racMo Mrtoa. Loont andrun. good 11900 or MM otlar.CM 747.778*.

PLYMOUTH HORIZON TC3I M ) . 17.500 IM. good condS45O0 nogoMMo. 7iTi412PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA I M *— FaM back. *ood runningcond.. S400 of DOM oflor CM7414*14.

PLYMOUTH FURY 1170 -BUNS GREAT. NEW BRAKES.NEW TIKES. PS/PS. AM/FMSTEREO FIRST S375 TAKES ITCALL 4W-2UH72-24H

POMTIAC CATALINA 1171 -Flunt. Mutt Mil. nHdl tun*-up.S2M or MM OtNK 717-3717 .nar« pm. A4» tor ANCO.

PONTIAC TRANS AM 1M0 —muck t gold. M pmw. lo» mna-aga T.nnm Aalilna M a u / M M

t 7 i ' p*ni. 7**7-11*0.

PONTIAC FIREBIRD — IMS.Mini Pnrar Men. 21.000 mlMuM aM. Oar. Mua Auio CMI71-I210

PONTIAC BONNEVILLEBROUGHAM

1*7*. 41.000 ml . A/C. Mroo.loot dtfroM. po»T4r »li>do«.door*. I Irun* 4 door, (usury

" M S . 170-1173

SPECIAL SAVINGS ON EVERY aIOM LYNX TO LINCOLN

$17,777ribMy^:. - U*M mkt^i ******

SPECIAL VALUE SAVINGS!NEW '85 TOWN CAR

Lincoln, 4 Door• >k and • Awm anno * « . • • kuary .MMM'TJantikiin ' f " ! T " * l T lS!rl*i!nj!l.«m«l l*gl**?»*m

U»llTle.WI.I45.1li«»c«.#Ma4 4-OakiMlMahj. •Marti**

Signatures, Cartlers Available a( Comparable Savings

PrICM EuMM T u l M V H a

MrnKUR

check these low pricesARIES " K " OMNI GLH

^%^"\uTr,J.. St.'. I MB* Turbe-TSHI. .quip.. 4brakM, par. lIMfing, an I cyl.. S spaad. manual l/an».

d u t d gtaM. Siocn I Opt aqmp. Turbo cMroad. U8T P

*7941

8.8

dafeoMor. Slock f 12*4. LISTP « K f c M

ALLIANCE

Ranault. 2 door. Sid. aqup .4 cyl. 4 apiid, manual I rani .pw. due brakia. manualrack i pmton storing, vinylbucKol aMts. Opt. aqmp.raar dafroalar Stock 15287LIST PRICE: $6490

5959

MEW1MJ5

ENCORE

Ranaun. 3 door. Nflback. Sid•quip. 1.4 htr. angina. 4ipaad. manual Irara.. pwrdkc brakM. manual slowing.vinyl buckoi auts. StockI5J75 LIST PRICE $6231

•58888 C % FINANCING ON

a a * . - ALLIANCE • ENCORE

DAYTONA D-SOHCK-UPI CHEROKEE

OH. Opt a*ap.. S ana*. U M<• • ^ f l " * * . aBJBWUflf BTBWBVI pVW.

BriMa. par, nmli g. AM/FM Ma-FSO, BUCBUM V O W M I oontJOtaj, Hpj|ajdj*Ma. raa> daaoMar. can M Mu") Hil l S u n HIM. LISTPBJM IW.542

»*9333

Dodga. 2 6 «/« ongm. 4 cyl .9 spMd. manual n n . . par.brakas, manual .l.arlng.Cloth/vinyl b.nch *a . t *Stock ti i40. UST pmce:

2a2«ab3a|pa>. aamg. S

al W a *

'5995 IM0,995

NEW1IBS

EAGLE

AUC. 4 door. Salon. SI0 aquv.I cyl.. 4 Majal drNa. vm txMatpw. alaainaArrMa S/S rodwiBVVOX VVVyl/ClOtft rdKAaTMTQ wjoit l

Opl. «M> «no. air. M M oMmrav dphaMar. orwM, MR SMdi« 1 » . UST PPJCE: 112.131

'10,685

SHREWSBURY AVE., SHREWSBURY

747-5400 MOWW: Mm. Tim TtHira. B-sM.*-s,Ba«. * - •

747-3303 WoJm747-

1 6 D The Sunday Register SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1985

THIS SATURDAY, MARCH 23:

COME OUT AT THE SHOREThis Saturday meet your favorite Soap Opera Stars at one of the eight Shore Olds Dealers.

Come in to any of the dealers before Frkjay, fill out an entry form, and you may win a test drive with one of the stars.(No purchasers necessary You must be 18 years or older.)

You and the star will test drive Oldsmobile's hottest new star, the 1985 Calais.It's aerodynamic styling with state-of-the-art technology and standard features like 2.5 liter L4 engine with electronicfuel injection, reclining front seats, 5 speed shift in a sporty console, front wheel drive and rack and pinion steering.

.Jc

10:30 am- 12:30 pmDesiderio Olds

:M1() Sunset Ave.,Ocean Twp 776-9501)

2:00pm-4:00pmSansone Olds

NX)Newman Spr« Rd, Red Bank 741-WHO

KimUlrichWho appears as

Diana McColl'As The World Hums'

10:30am-12:30 pmIdeal Olds

Route 37, Toms River M9-MM

2:00pm-4:00pmDeFeliceOlds

Bay & Trenton Ave. It.Heasant Brh 899-2H44

Julia BarrWho appears as

Brooke Cudahy'All My Children'

J P " ' Mark Pinterr Whoappearsas

Brian McColl,'As The World Tkirns'

Greg Nelson M'All My Children'

10:30 am-12:30 pmRegency Olds

Route 88, LakewcxxJ 363-0583

2:00pm-4:00pmSea Coast Olds

m) Main St.. Belmar 681-2727

rLarkinMalloy^Who appears as

Kyle Samson'Guiding Ughf

10:30am-12:30 pmMcFaddin Olds251 Broadway Long Branch 222-\Zi4

2:00pm-4:00pmParkway Olds111 Hwy 36, Keyport 264-4333

K Krista TesreauWho appears as

Mlndy Lewis'Guiding Ughr

<m

KimZimmerWho appears as

Reva Lewis'Guiding UghT

on Lujack Luvonecek'Guiding UghT