cil 1 j ^timrks - digifind-it · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. however, the state has notified...

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J 4 ' /-• , ; -j. ; .. CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE ., Page 24 Thursday,. December 18^ 198Q -* Regional school budget s at $18.7 million 1981 -ife^.budget',-of the "Union County " A tentative $18,763J01 for' Regional High School district was ap-" proved for submission to the county schools superintendent bythe board of education Tuesday This ^represents an increase of $1,533,812 over" the ,1980,ftl budget or 8.9percent.. ~ •, _ . -• The total includes tentative expen- ditures for-«urrent expense, capital out- lay and debt service. The first two com- ponents are subject tofi'nal.apprdval by . the school board following a public hearing March-II al_ Gov. Livingston' Schooi.and will be presented for'voter approval April 7. .". The nVr,enLcxpenso-budgehshows--a- 9.7 percent' increase from $.15,979,950 this year to a projected $17,538,983 next year. The-'proposed capital outlay is down by, $2,509 from $390,400 this year to $387,891 for'1981-82. Debt service a1st ~fS~~dTTWi|-|jy S22.7I2 from $1159.530 in 10110 81 to $836,8277 » cil ._The amount to'bejjaised by taxes for the .total budget is $^4,(ii)7,35(i, an in- crease of $1,032,563 or 7.5 percent.- The-; board \villnot know the tax rate for th,e six towns in the regional district until. January. This mcludes'Kenilworth and Garwood. The.state bases the tax rate in regional districts on student distribu- "TioirartfKvalu'e'ot'property ratablfs in vliacITTjorrimunity: •" - ' • J . The tax rate will be offset by a ,ten.- ...tjativo.29 percent increase in state aid of. $664,628. The district is slated to receive $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient funds. The. board-also intends to use$400,000 from surplus to offset the tax increase. This year $500,000 was used. . - The tentative budget includes $71,770 -for the reinst.itution of suirWner'schorilr It had beeru'iit last year to save money ; ... but many parents wauled the .summer session back. The summer school ten« tatively. . is •• scheduled for David Brearley and Gov. Livingston and'will offer make-up courses for students who failed, original- credit courses, and- enrichment classes. .-• •-.:' The capital outlay budget, which is- subject to voter-, approval, has ear- marked $ll;550 to construct a drama •' room aj Brearley complete -withstage .and . lighting, Parents of drama . ' students this year objected to the use of i 'i'2=lS^ celebrate holidays... ^ ^V M- 1.1 4> M \ V ^ l ^ I I V M IllvVV Senior citizens | page 10 ., > , . t ^r ^'•••"_ . .. f maygef J $t^fb:.page1O^ VOL, 88 No. 51 Published .Every Thursday Wednesday, December 24, 1980 Srri/ing\(ltanford, Kenilworth and (iurivood . " . ^ -TJSPS I3C 800 SecpndiCldSs Pos'tage PaicTcTanforil N ' J . 20 CFMTS '\ In Our H i.SGROOGE' was presented by students at St. Theresa School Sun- GHOSTS in the cast of 80were, frorri left, Kevin Griffith? Jimmy day. Leading players were, from left, Wayjie Federico as Christmas Sauer, Anthony.DeRose, Patrick Jacques, Michael Michitsch^ Future, Patti Killian as the, ghost of Jacob Marley, 'and Michelle _,^._ "• ., . 1N \». .. ; . \ . Spataro as Christmas Past. Photos by Greg Price.- tra ining room.... The weigh main where ft ts. ^ , , .. . . Also slated for Brearley is $^,000, !o be matched by -federal funNs. to remodel the lighting at the s malic 'it-mor-e^-unej:fry-efiicieut^ saved is expected tooffset the cost.of the project. The project.is 1 expected lo . be. recommended in an energy study authorized- by the board Tues'day. '- DistrictwTcre, $<M).,000. is earmarked.for 'energy saving projects which will •generate another .$90,000 from the federal government.' The cvapital budget also includes ' $8,400 atjirea'rley for cable-television equipment to lie in with the, cable. system in (he t w ^ g vide 'production and ' t capiibilitif's n 1 th" school p Cablevision is obliged to- spend.$25,000 at the school under terms of'its agree- R M h b h Another $12,370 is allocated -for s-eveiv air conditioners at Brearley jo he used as backups in rooms which have ho win- dows. Schering to spend $775,000 toe upgrade jobs for women By ROSALIE GROGS' KENILWORTH-- Schering Corp. "has" agreed to spend4775,000 in back pay and incentive- programs to encburage women to advance.into better positions iri an agreeemept announced this wteek- between the pharmaceutical company arid theU.S. Departments Labor which alleged the company discriminated against women employes in the Kenilworth and Union faci/ities. TA spokesman for Schering said yester- day that the agreement does not con- stitute admission^of sex discrimination. He said the company has hacTa number of programs over the years to encourage women to^move into more responsible' positions,—but T thVresponse~ J was irolras": great as,,the comphay! had hoped. He said these programs will be stepped up. Schering, whjch; employes 4,000 per- sons'inthe twoplantsrwill-pay $165;000~ to 400 women employed iri' packaging and production who the—government laims-were-not'afforded^suf ' portunity tojTTOve into higher level posi- The company will.spend^SO.OOO to ex- pand its eaual employment t)Jiportuhity program by providing training for supervisory positions and'counseling to encourage women to seek higher level jobs in the company. ' Another $160,000 will he earmarked.' for incentive- programs to help eri- courage^women to participate in train- ing programs and subsequently qualify .for higher paying jobs in the pharmacy and chemical operations departments. The findings by the government of sex discrimination stemmed from an in- vestigation launched in 1979 by the labor department's office of federal contract •^compliance whiph checks adherencejo federal laws prohibiting federal con- tractors from . discriminating on the basis-of-sGXT-r-ace r r-eligion-or handicap. ^14ie-drug-fh*nT-has-$-17-nTrHion-in con- tracts with theDefense Department and Veterans-Administration. — -' jchertng-spokcbman said the-hrceir~ tive and training"'programs will be -dcvpolopcd-carly-in-1-981-.-•'"- :7 •———----'-' •%•• \\ - - Hospitals combine to provide TITLE ROLE of Scrooge is played by Michael Mancino in scene with Michelle Spataro as Christmas Past. " ' ' \ Memorial General Hospital will play a key role in a mult,i-hospital system that will provide a coordinated 24-hour, seven-days-a-week emergency life support service for nearly 800,000 residents in three, counties, it was announced.' • " • Victor"^. Fresolone, president, announced that Memorial General, and two other hospitals have received final approval From the New -Jersey Department of Health to establish the first~ Mobile Intensive Care (MIC) system in northern New Jersey. The system^vvas developed jointly by Memorial General Hospital, Overlook Hospital, and Saint Barnabas Medical Center. Mountainside Hospital, ... ... , . , ,. , , with the final state approval cxpecte^-^^S^^T^^ 4 **^^ 1 ^ this month^ccording to Presolone When . lhe s >: stem '? operot.onal.- police —- "In-all, six .MIC .units will provide three METS units since' 1977 in the communities of Union, Roselle, Roselle Park, Cranford, Kenilworth, Hillside, Garwood, Winfield and the Garden State Parkway, in cooperation with local first . aid squads. Under the • new system, which is expected lo get underway in the spring, 'Memorial General will add another unit in southern Union-Courtly- "The new MICsystem will further '"stren'gth"en";"~the""hosp'il r ar'-s "mobile" emergency services in our service area" Fresolone said, "since the new system will! provide backup service to the unit on call, so that nfy area will be without ' coverage. 1 ' ' .... Because" of its centralized Officials blast proposal to shift control of cops to state INTERLLrQE_betweerv acts was'provided by dancers, from left, Michelle Spataro, Patty Harms, Kathode Manus : , Patty Killian. Nearly 300 children in the nursery thtough third grade participated in the musical portion of the-entertainment. • . . ,.-„ Soilfree plants blooming here •-Or coverage from strategically located centers to the communities serviced by *the four hospitals," according to Dr. Joseph Imbesi, director of emergency services at Memorial General, and a co- director of the project. "This will bring sophisticated life support coverage to many communities for the first time, including several inthe southern part of . Union County." The current plan is for Keriljworth, Cranford and Garwood to be served by the unit out of Memorial General, as in the current procedure. A center is.being considered for somewhere in the southern part of the county, possibly in Clark or Rahway, in the future. Fresolone pointed' out thaLJVemqrial patiefrts. General's current Medical Emergency ^^Fresolone.,. who is also a member of Treatment Services ( METS)' wj-H^the MIC steering committee which will become an integral parKof tho^ea__b£_cespQnsible-fQr-J.he-pi:Qgram-said-a- system. /• /^ total of 43 municipalities in the three Memorial General hasjigeifproviding counties will be provided, with MIC mobile intensive carc^oVerage with its. servfce when the program Lakes effect. and first aid squads will use a central "hot line" number to call for MIC services . for life-threatening emergencies such as heart attacks or t •major accidents. The central dispatch" will send the nearest unit totHe" scene, according to Fresolone". . Fresolone said the hospital-based units will 'be staffed by full-time paramedics. All units will continue to^ utilize volunteer drivers. , / Fresolone noted that volunteer ambulance. and rescue upits in 'the service area wiH be integrated into the- MIC systj&rru fhe>ef units provide emergency services and patient transport .white the MICunits provide rffe-supjStffi' only and do not transport KENILWORTH- Lynn and Jim Vitale of Kenilworth have been appointed area center managers for Deco Plants ftompany.. Poco; a::division~ofzRalston_: Purina Company, markets plants and "plantsystem" ' products' through independent consultants who explain hydroculture at horne^ parties. Deco, which has beenki^operation five years,'is headquarte^Min St. Louis"with distribution centers in 28states. As area center majjagers,' the Vitales will ser.vice Union County. They are located at 20jm 14th St. Mrs." Vitale became a peco plant consultant in 1978. DecoVSoilfree Plantsystem is based on theprihciple, of hydroculture which is growth in a water-plus-nutrient solution,/' Soil has been replaced by a clay-based aggregate called "living stones." The stones provide clean, stable support for the roots and aid in balancing the air and moisture supply. A,nutrient solution, added at every watering, provides vital substances for healthy Unit I "Overlook 90,700 "Unit II Overlook 132,900 1 Unit III Memoriul GonoraT '113,900 Unit IV Memorial Gentsrul 144,200 Unit V St Barnabas . 118,900 Unit VI Mountainside 100,900 - Totnl 789.600 / T. health careers KENILWORTH-- Patty Lafferty and Myrtelynn Tomc/yk of Kenilworth are among a group of 25 high school and college students interested in health- care careers who have found a way to actively explore theirgoals. They are members of the Medical Explorers Club, sponsoi'edby Memorial General Hospital in conjunction with the Union County Council of Boy Scouts. Members are able to learn, observe and to participate ih a variety of tasks performed by health-care professionals. They are provided with a varied program which introduces them to most departments in the hospital. The club meets once a month,-but most members do volunteer work at the •hospital. They are slated to learn the cardiopulmonary "resuscitation technique and will hear a" variety of talks on career opportunities. TJC welcomes growth, - /^ This/s>pilfree plantsystem 1 ' may be purchjisecl only from Deco consultants ^MmfiL-parties; It: ismotravailablerat: res. The plants also may be purchased at the N. 14th St. warehouse Monday^ Wednesday and Friday, 9 to ll;30a.m.; Wednesday and Friday, 3:30. to6 p.m., and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Vitale are seeking individualsinterested in holding a plants party and in selling Deco plants in. the Cranford, Roselje Park and surrounding areas.^Call them at work, 272-950$, or at home, 272--2886. Kenilworth ., Calendar Saturday, Dec. 20: 10 a.m. r noon: Art leseonsr Recreation Center;. noon'- 4 p.m.: Girls' gymnastics, BrfflHey. Monday, Dec. 22:^7 p.m.: Municipal Trmrt; 7- * p my Ons"""*"" office open; 8 p.m.: Borough Council workshop. - Tuesday, Dec. 23: 6-8 p.m.: Boys' basketball, Harding School; 0:30 - 8:30 p.m.: Boys' wrestling, Brearley, 7 - 9 p.m.: Recreation Center open, building and zoning offices open; 8 p.m.: -Borough Council tneeting. Wednesday, Dec. 24: 12:15 p.m.: Rotary Club meeting, Villa Barritta. Byrne's administration to shift operational control of local police departments to the state came under.- fire this week by Livio Mancino, mayor, •and Bob Franks, assemblyman. In a letter to John Degnan, state attorney general.Mancino said he was "shocked, and disturbed" by the. prospect. He threatened a law suit if the proposal becomes a reality; - : ' Healsoblasted.attorneys who serve in, the-legislature for having "taken steps Jx> prevent the reform so desperately . needed^ for. the purpose" of reducing insurance costs. Why? -Because, they derive benefits. Isn't this a conflict!" He went on to say that these same lawyers passed laws preventing building inspectors from working within the- .cdmmunity4heys.ervetb avoid conflicts.- "Isn't it also strange, " Mancino wrote, "how the laws are written to benefit those who write or enact them." Franks, a resident,.,o_f. Berkeley Heights who represents the 22nd' Assembly district which includes Kenilworth, labeled theproposal to shift police control to the state "scary:" He said local' governments would be inclined to "turn their backs on police Business robbed KENILWORTH- Break-ins., were reported at two Fairfield Avenue businesses this. week. Europa Sport, Inc., reported the theft of an undetermined amount of clothing during a break-in Sunday night. A win- dow w^afi broken to gain entry. A second attempt was made to enter the building Tuesday night, but the alarm was ac- tivated andapparently scared off the in- ••tr-uder-.- Drug dealer gets 3 years in jail KENiLWORTH- A man arrested on the Boulevard last year, has received a three year prison terrn for possession of a. i'downer" called methaqualone with, intent to distribute it. - Superior Court Judge Cuddle- Davidson imposed sentence on Phillip DeGregorio, 128 Elmora Ave.,. Elizabeth, who had pleaded guilty to the charge in October. GAR Industries reported the theft of two calculators Monday "night from its office on Fairfield. There was no sign of forced entry, but the front dooV was found open in the morning. . •_,-•' YOUTH EXCHANGE Youth for Understanding is seeking homes for 43 South American students who will be arriving in this area • in January for a six-month stay. Anyone interested may call Ellie-Kullmann, 233- 8042, or make a collect call- to the regional office in Spring House,'Pa., 0- department budgets atuTteirthe state to pick up the bill." .. ^ He called the proposal "-a form of mandated regionalization, similar to state attempts to force school districts to merge.". Franks, in a press release, argued that if suburban policemen.were shifted to urban areas, citizens in the suburbs '''would be underprotecbed and would have a legitimate gripe with the systemsBesides, they-are paying the hill' 1 Former exec here guilty of forgery KENILWORTH- A forjner Kenilworth business executive who is serving.aMerhi< in federal prison for kidnapping has received another prison sentence on embezzlement and forgery charges here dating back to 1975. ^ Lloyd Johnson, who formerly owned a trucking firm in the borough, pleaded guilty to charges of embezzlement, forgery and uttering a forged instrument. Bradford Bury, assistant prosecutor, said the case involved Johnson.'staking a check made out to the wife of one of his ; employes ahd depositing it into an' account of his own firm and eventually spending-it. The amount was $5,000. . In sentencing Dec. 5, Judge Cuddie Davidson ordered Johnson to majce restitution on the J5,000. He also sentenced Johnson foserve four to j five years on the charges. Uttering a forged instrument is,a legal term for making a false endorsement of a check. Johnson is now serving a 15-year' sentence for kidnapping. He is In the —fedora l-ponitentiar-y-;at-Petewburg7-Va^ That sentence stemmed from an ' incident in southern NewJersey several years ago. His Superior Court sentence will be concurrent with the kidnapping ' imprisonment. DEPRESSION CUNIC Fair Oaks Hospital; Summit, is opera- ting an outpatient depression research unit which is able to offer new arifi- " depressant medications not yet generally available. Patients, must apply to the program, and if accepted, will revive a full evaluation of their de- . pression.without cost. Call 277-2300. OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, DEC. 20th ten residents SERVICE AREA - New Mobile Intensive Care system will back up first aid squads in designated areas. METS (or MIC-upit-s/as they might be deslanated later) will continue.to service Kenilworth, Cranford and Garwood out of Memorial General, .though Overlook will provide backup. Note: Garwood is still in Area III though map shows it bridg-' Inq two areas. ' f '•. KENILWORTH- Ten Keh'tlworTh— residents are among 1,153 full-time students who launched their college careers in UnionCollege's fall semester. , Iteuilwortli residents include: Scott Uoffert, 515 Richfield Ave.; Mercedes Caneiro, 44 N. 22nd St.; Vincent Christodm-b, 312 N. 22nd. St.; Carmen f i()ffi 211N 21s( st.;MarkFrolich, 3411 M, )m . (K , A'VC.; Vance King;'2H2 Monroe, S( -, Rafael olivoros, 215 N. 11th St. 1 !Moor Reid,''370 Monroe Ave.; Lisa Reuter.r. i{ e( i Maple Lane/ and~Brait WjjKon, 91 , g ' Park Dr. . f Bradford Bury, assistant prosecutor, said DeGregorio-and James Nesbitt of Konilwor'h h.-iH 7»» pjlls of th<> depressant in their possession. They were stopped May 3,1979 by late Police Officer Warren "Jaeckel, who was off duty at the time. Bury said Nesbitt has pleaded guilty to the same charges and is awaiting sentence, WHALE OF A LESSON /"' KENILWORTH-- Forty-five .students' in^the effective writing clauses at David Biearley High School, will visit,whaling museums and .exhibits, in Mystic, Ct., Jan. 9 in conjunction with their study of "Moby Dick." ' . , 10 A,M. to2 P.M. The exciting 1 new way"to The Soilfree .pprn Plantsyotc'm BUY A PLANT AND WE'LL GUARANTEE IT FOR 2 YEARS DECO PLANTS CO. Division 01 Halslon Piirm.i Co ".200-/Nv14th STREET S [School budget , The Board of Education had a nice I Christmas present for students the other night. After threatening for I weeks to make serious program cuts j to reduce spending next year, the ^board-found-alternate-ways^tojaling I $177,378 to cut spending and reduce | the "magic" cap cut figure to $85,000. Saved are-these perennial ' targets: -summer school, driver | education, 7th and 8th grade sports , and 8th grade foreign languages. Story on Page 3. -— Fastjcop Cool thinking by a 78-year-old 1 potential burglary victim, steady | phone work by police dispatchers | and a fleet-footed officer- were [ credited in'the arrest of a. would-be. ) burglar hererthe resident is Edna I Norr.the desk people are Kathleen Ditzel and Lt. Vincent Brinkerhoff I and the speedy officer is William j~peters. Story on Page. 2. Family safe Tom Rotella .closed his barber ( shop, flew to Rome and took a tajci to the mountains to find out what happened to them in the earthquake, All 56 of his relatives survived. Photo and story on Page 2. Bank center The Planning Board approved the site plan for the new operations center of United Counties Trust Co. The 45,000 square foot center will be built on 3.47 acres pff Commerce Drive, and will house about 160 ^employes-. Donald Creighton, bank attorney, presented. the .architect and engineer who described the plans. After approval, Tom O'Brien, Planning Board, chairman, said "United Counties has demonstrated confidence in our town and in very nice taste." .- Holiday (jiifiiur ol MUIWII KENILWOflTH 272-2886 The Chronicle wishes its readers a Merry Christmas anda white one, if the snow lasts. Farris Swaekhamer has a seasonal message on Page 4. This week and next we're printing early, and the deadline for next week's paper is 5 p;m. Friday. The public library is open Friday and Saturday and till 6 p.m". Dec. 31. Municipal offices close Christmas for the weekend. Perry shot William' Perry, the 31-year-old Port Authority patrolman who was shot to death Monday, was a 1968 graduate of Union College. Ilis -broth'er.-Fred.-coaches basketball at- the school. William was shot by a man he had arrested fbr.ismoking on "a PATH t r a i n s Mason hurt Cranford Police Det. Milt Mason was accidentally, shot at hie..home Momjaywhen his pistol fell to the floor and fired. The bullet grazed his >lCft leg and lodged in his.chest. He was able to walk downstairs and^was taken to Rahway Hospital where he was reported in good condition. Surgeons planned to rejnove the .32 calibre bullet from muscles near his lung yesterday. The plaza The preliminary plans for "Cleveland Plaza! 1 on the downtown school site call for the new retail building backing on the First Presbyterian Church property to ^cethe^enterortheTtazaTmtraiBO" to have a retail opening along North Union Avenue. The developers. Saul H i. for^K^jmy^ By ROSALIE GHOSS Seven Cranford public school teachers are seeking retroactive salary credit for time they served in the military. The teachers filed, a petition -with the state commissioner of education, Fred Q. Burke, on Nov. 24 It asked the.state to ^order the Cranford Board of Education to compensate, eacjh teach'er feej» the ITrhe oj kis ltufTfl .employmentr"Vh<F seven teachers have an average of 26 division.'.of W.CW...J.0"sey -.Superior. Court These teachers are appealing rulings by the OAL apd upheld by Burke Thft.-decisi'on involving Union township teachers.cited the statute'of limitations which bars a claim for back pay that is mort than six years old. The Pltfijisterl decision went a step further and denied the six-year- retroactive claim- The 'decision said.Ihe CTVTpToye had a duty to request the..saU\vv_cradHji 'IJLCOMO Christmas-scene: Frank Loyacano created this image for the season, of Trinity Episcopal Ghurch. ^timrks The claim stems-from a 1954 state law which enables, school districts to advance teachers on the salary guide for tbesame number of years served in-the military. If a teacher served in the military for two years, he, would be granted two years' credit for time lost in his career and be placed on the third year salary step. . The seven Cranford teachers4iave an average of twVyeikrs and two months military service, all. prior to their employment here. " ' —-rhe-teaehers-are-Hftaym&nd-D. Ward, gym.teacher at Orange Avenue School; Emil ScHumanrf, industrial arts teachers at Hillside Avenue School; A. Donald Whellan, music teacher at TJmp1oynTCTit7ir n(J also slated schrxii - districts-have-limited' sources of funds- and may -not .have the money I'i compensate past claims •• . Appeals of these deeisKiriK wi-rc- argued in the past several.weeks and ;i decision is-pending. Should the. Cranford teachers be successful, in their quest for retroactive salary credit, the local school--board-• could be-forced topay a totaPof 'ru'ir 1 ; than $100,000.'The most senior member of the petitioners is Daniels, who started working here in 1940after serving two .years,-10la.months.iriMhe militaryvftf4hf- seyen,. Ward has teen here thetshort.es[ time,., since, 195H, . Yanuzzi "la'as the shortest military service - one ytar, oight rn.onths. Hillside', Ralph Notaro, guidance c6unsellor" at Cranford High; Herbert Several DV ' save college By STUART AWBREY 'Ella Pethick of Cranford is playing a significant role^in efforts to save a small' college in Pennsylvania. She calls it "a -life.and death_struggle.'.'andlthe. battle has sent shock waves into college boardrooms across the nation. The school is Wilson College in Chambersburg., Mrs.- Pethick, an alumnae and former teacher?- of the woman's college, challenged ..the school's administration on its policies and helped galvanize alumnae and student opinion to save the 110-year- old institution after the board announced plans last year to shut it d ' She and other "Wilson women," who include a number of local residentsfsee box), mobilized to fight the~closing.. They raised. $1 million in pledges and took the board to court. The board...argued that Wilson was. broke and running out of students and needed to close.....in order_ to_saLvag< assets. Acounty judge upheld the "Save Wilson College Committee." He admonished the board for npt doing its job properly, criticized the management and by reversing the decision to close gave Wilson a new lease on life. The old board resigned. The rebellious alumnae took 11 of the 26 trustee seats. Mrs.' Pethick is- one, and she is now chairman of the Annual Fund andon the financial policy committee. Rev. George Pike of Cranfotd is another, his Presence re-establishing the school's historical ties with the Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Pethick graduated in 1934 and after attaining '^.master's degree at Columbia University she taught in prep schoo'ls in New ^ r Brunsw,ick and Milwaukee; During World War I she worked for the F.B.I and the French Colonial Supply Mission. She went back to Wilson after the war to teach French "for^JjryeWsTThenliheswItcTiea careers and went into the brokerage business on Wall Street. She kept her ties with Wilson, serving on the alumni association board in th<? 1%0's, and found the school b*ecoming "too elitist and too conservative" in the 1970's. Instead-of broadening its liberal arts curriculum and expanding its student base as other small .colleger- were doing, Wilson doggedly stuck to its old ways. Enrollment dropped from a peak 750 to 1%. The failure of three popular teachers to gain tenure while seven others did iri 1977 prompted Mrs. Pethick to investigate. Facts assembled, she and Terry Hume, also of Cranford, vjsited the board chairman at his New Jersey home. They tried toconvince him that Jie handling of the teachers was "dreadful and demoralizing. "He just sat there," recalls.Mrs. Pethick. She put her sentiments on paper, with questions, and sent them to him. The president of the student government posted a copy, on .campus and the effect .among students and alumnae was BuU alumnae, says Mrs. Pethick. The "Save Wilson Committee", was formed. Alumnae lobbied board meetings including one in New York - City—whcro-studentK sang— the-^-lma— mater" outside. They raised money. They cracked theunanimity of the board but still couldn't reverSe'the decision. "We felt betrayed," said Mrs. Pethick. "It was like a French novel." The school prepared for what most .believed would be its. final commencement."Then the. local judge, John W. Keller, came out with his 87- page opinion that laid the blame to the board and administration. The college was saved;- •••••••--•--— u The rebels hoped the judge would throw out the entire board," which resigned, but he retained a nucleus group of theniiu One, an alumnae, became chairman', anil-Mrs. Pethick has high regard for this woman,JEJisSi5eth JIudnut Clarkson. -^""' —-T-he-eollege-slill-has-arlong-way-ftrgor' Wilson ties In addition, to Ella Pethick, the -reorganized-Wilson-Gollege-board-tif- trustees includes Rev. George Pike of the First Enjsbyterian Church, who was added to help re-establish the college's historical ties with the denomination. Betty Brubaker has been an alumni representative fqjv: her class. Terry Hume joined Mrs' Pethick in the,,1977 confrontation with the then board chairman and Mrs. Hume's daughter,' Kathleen, helped set up an urban semester social" work rand "political "science" program, for student in the 1970's. Other local alumnae include Carolyn Dittmar and Ruth. Pringle,: '" r g y e i f t o y - Daniels, industrial arts teacher "at CHS; and Michael Yahuzzi, science teacher at CHS. The case was referred "by the commissioner's office last week to the Office of Administrative Law -tOA4), slate agency in which an administrative law jydge hears controversies brought before state departments The decision rendered by the judge can be affirmed or jJejiied by the commissioner of re(|U(Ai in Other districts were denied because the claW was fyarred hy the si;iine of education. Two similar cases filed by teachers in the Union and Plumsted school districts presently are before the appellate limitations. A spokesman for the New' Jersey' School Boards Association said thai although the law has been.on the books since 1954, the New Jersey Education Association only several years, ago notified its members the law'is in effect .and.many, teachers are'jUsi'becomiiiL'. aware-the law exists „ The seven Cranford veterans have not received any salary credit' for time 'rri the service. The teachers are represented by Goldberg and Simon, counsellors at law, Clifton, attorneys for the Cranford.Education Association' recent edition of itSTeports. Keller was aJbsolved there. Two prominent educational lawyers,"Kent Weeks and applications are up, and the curriculum lias been altered.' Mrs. Pethick is working on foundations and corporate support. (See<related story.) Joseph C. Giels of the association of 'Governing Boards of Universities and €oll(jges (-AGB) said Keller's action "stirred a furorthroughoUt t\)p national higher education community.'V^ener was accused of unwarranted judicial "interference" and attempting to bolster his re-election chances. Responding to widespread controversy in academic circles, the AGB analyzed the Wilson case in a Philip-Anderson;Teviewed;the case~ancT wrote tjial—ihe most impdrfanT conclusion was that college trustees should make sure - they are fully informed before making decisions. Fred Hechinger, the education writer, said in The New YorkTimes that "the- ruling may have created so much resentment because it pointed a finger at an excess of selfrighteousness and a lack of self searching in some academic boardrooms and.executive suites. The lesson > h a t Judge Keller tried to teach., is that trusteeship responsibilities should not~~be~'"taken" lightly, especially when they deal with the life or death of a beloved college." Barbara Moran of Doering Way tjalled home from County Cork in Ireland last week and asked: "What's going on with my godfather?" fleFecstatic family responded.; He's sTbeen appointecTby~RonaI3~Reagan as the next secretary of labor. ..V The family represents a formidable CfanfoFd connection to the Department of Labor and the presidential cabinet. Four sisters and numerous nieces and nephews of the secretary-designate live here. ' : Donovan's sisters," Claire, Maureen, Joan and Helen all moved here in the 1960's from Bayonne. They are among 12 children whose parents'died when they were young. The older ones helped raise *S <\- Seltzer and Joe Vizzoni, told the l Planning Board last week that their goal is to blend the architecure on the site with the church, the nearby firehouse and the adjacent downtown area. Paper drive ' The Cranford High School choir is sponsoring a paper drive Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the parking"! lot behind the school. For pickup call 272-4860. <. the school management locked alumnae out of-the admissions building, banned ~to financial" liquids and graduates from recruiting or fund raising effectively. Mrs. Pethick says the" board, dominated by the chairman and the school president, became increasingly , isolated from factu and decision making processes. Sbp recalls an atmosphere of "psychological oppression" in which students, faculty and alumnae were Intimduted. Four deans had resigned in. four years, The stage was'ripe for _wider confrontation. ' It -came when the administration announced ojn Feb. 19, 1U70 that the school would Close. The announcement unleased "<•>•< >•»(*<* new em for women' Does a^small woman's liberal arts college have a place in...higher- education today? Ella Pethick and The "W-ilson women" flunk so. 'They're now trying to rebuild the school along modern lines while regaining its strong orientation toward women's^education and social responsibility. Seven teachers from other schools volunteered their.services free last year. Enrollment reached a nadir of 110, but this year it was up to 196 , with the largest freshmen class since 1973, and inquiries and , applications have mounted sixfold. The goal is to attract 500 students "and garner tuition to help meet costs. , ti _- Under a theme of"new options in a new era for women," Wilson has expanded, offering from its liberal arts base to include interdisciplinary career-oriented courses lffleclinology, business and equitation. < - A With a new president, new board leadership and new courses, Mrs. Pethick sees a "great and justifiable hope" that Wilson will survive. She feels there is a place in the national scene for a school where women can gain leadership experience that will prepare them to be leadersrShe also feels Wilson -oyer the years has created,-individuals with a strong sense of social responsibility and service to people. "There is a sense of values being transmitted, to students," she says. These factors have fueled her enthusiasm in the fight to save the college/ Ella Pethick: from "creative rage" against those who wquld close her alma rfm+or-Mo bbardsmanship and a theme titled "new options in anew ora for women," . the younger ones and the family became tightly knit- under- the trying cir- cumstances. The family hopes to travel to Washington for the cabinet advent of, Raymond, the seventh of the twelve. "I'm so proud," says Mrs. Joan Moran, the moment in history I'dlike to see The sisters'ineludk Claire, a practical nurse who Jives' on Hiilcrest, and Maure.ejLji.imanor munjein.aLemplo.Ye wlio^iow works for "Eastern Airlines and "liveTonElm. They married "men named Donovan, cousins, andthus retained- their surnames. '•' Then there is Joan O'Donnefl who lives on Orange Ave. and works at F.cho Lake Country-Club, and Helen Moran who lives on Doering and is a registered nurse \it St. Elizabeth Hospital Her daughter .Barbara," 'Raymond's \iw\" child, is studying'in Ireland this year The family grew up on Third Street m Bayonne-. "We stayed together-arid rais " ed each other, and that's something "ofr Raymond told The New York Times after his appointment "I am what I am because of my older brothers," adds. Mrs. Moran. She-said the four sisters and.their families even tually moved to Cranford because of •'us beauty and convenience.'' Raymond lives in Short Hills. Other siblings'live iii his younger sister. "We're quite close. Elizabeth, Princeton, Maplewood lieu The day of the appointment I spoke'to'*" Bank and California _cvcpy-ono^f-my-bFothers^ M-rs-Mxmm-s7rl"d-slu'' was proudiTuT ymybFothers^ They congratulated Raymond and re- quested tickets to his swearing in. "I don't care about the inaugural ball," says Mrs. Moran. "The swearing in is as proud not surprised, at the appointment She felt her brother is well qualified for the job and says he is,witty intelligent'and has a very, very warm heart " Her first Christmas: Melissa RenaudI.has her first encounter with San ta Glaus. She's eight months old. Sister Jessica, right, and Nicold Allen Joined him Saturday at Newcomers Club party.

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Page 1: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

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CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE .,

Page 24 Thursday,. December 18^ 198Q -*

Regional school budgets at $18.7 million1981 -ife^.budget',-ofthe "Union County

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A tentative •$18,763J01 for'Regional High School district was ap-"proved for submission to the countyschools superintendent by the board ofeducation Tuesday This ^represents anincrease of $1,533,812 over" the ,1980,ftlbudget or 8.9 percent.. ~ •, _ . -•

The total includes tentative expen-ditures for-«urrent expense, capital out-lay and debt service. The first two com-ponents are subject tofi'nal.apprdval by .the school board following a publichearing March-II al_ Gov. Livingston'Schooi.and will be presented for'voterapproval April 7.

.". The nVr,enLcxpenso-budgehshows--a-9.7 percent' increase from $.15,979,950this year to a projected $17,538,983 nextyear. The-'proposed capital outlay isdown by, $2,509 from $390,400 this yearto $387,891 for'1981-82. Debt service a 1st

~fS~~dTTWi|-|jy S22.7I2 from $1159.530 in 1011081 to $836,8277 »cil

._The amount to'bejjaised by taxes forthe .total budget is $^4,(ii)7,35(i, an in-

• crease of $1,032,563 or 7.5 percent.- The-;board \villnot know the tax ra te for th,esix towns in the regional district until.January. This mcludes'Kenilworth andGarwood. The.state bases the tax ratein regional districts on student distribu-

"TioirartfKvalu'e'ot'property ratablfs invliacITTjorrimunity: •" - ' • • J

. The tax rate will be offset by a ,ten.-

...tjativo.29 percent increase in state aid of.$664,628. The district is slated to receive$2,9:18,760. However, the state hasnotified school districts of the slrnni:likelihood that state aid will be lessbecause ofinsuffieient funds.

The. board-also intends to use $400,000from surplus to offset the tax increase.

This year $500,000 was used. .- The tentative budget includes $71,770

-for the reinst.itution of suirWner'schorilr• It had beeru'iit last year to save money;...

but many parents wauled the .summersession back. The summer school ten«tatively. . is •• scheduled for DavidBrearley and Gov. Livingston and'willoffer make-up courses for students whofailed, original- credit courses, and-enrichment classes. .-• • •-.:'

The capital outlay budget, which is-subject to voter-, approval, has ear-marked $ll;550 to construct a drama

•' room aj Brearley complete -withstage.and . lighting, Parents of drama .' students this year objected to the use of

i

' i ' 2= lS^celebrate holidays... ^ ^ V M- 1.1 4> M \ V ^ l ^ I I V M I l l v V V Senior citizens |page 10 ., > , . t ^r ^'•••"_ . .. fmaygefJ$t^fb:.page1O^

VOL, 88 No. 51 Published .Every Thursday Wednesday, December 24, 1980 Srri/ing\(ltanford, Kenilworth and (iurivood . " . ^ -TJSPS I3C 800 SecpndiCldSs Pos'tage PaicTcTanforil N'J. 20 CFMTS ' \

In OurH

i.SGROOGE' was presented by students at St. Theresa School Sun- GHOSTS in the cast of 80 were, frorri left, Kevin Griffith? Jimmyday. Leading players were, from left, Wayjie Federico as Christmas Sauer, Anthony.DeRose, Patrick Jacques, Michael Michitsch^Future, Patti Killian as the, ghost of Jacob Marley, 'and Michelle _,^._ "• . , . 1N\». .. ; . \ .Spataro as Christmas Past. Photos by Greg Price.-

tra ining room.... The weighmain where ft ts. ^ , , .. .

. • Also slated for Brearley is $^,000, !obe matched by -federal funNs. toremodel the lighting at the smalic ' i t -mor-e^-unej : f ry-ef i ic ieut^

• saved is expected to offset the cost.ofthe project. The project.is1 expected lo

. be. recommended in an energy studyauthorized- by the board Tues'day.

'- DistrictwTcre, $<M).,000. is earmarked.for'energy saving projects which will•generate another .$90,000 from thefederal government.'

The cvapital budget also includes' $8,400 atjirea'rley for cable-television

equipment to lie in with the, cable.system in (he t w ^ gvide 'production and ' tcapiibilitif's n1 th" schoolpCablevision is obliged to- spend.$25,000at the school under terms of'its agree-

R M h b hAnother $12,370 is allocated -for s-eveiv

air conditioners at Brearley jo he usedas backups in rooms which have ho win-dows.

Schering to spend $775,000toe upgrade jobs for women

By ROSALIE GROGS'KENILWORTH-- Schering Corp. "has"

agreed to spend4775,000 in back pay andincentive- p rograms to encburagewomen to advance.into better positionsiri an agreeemept announced this wteek-between the pharmaceutical companyarid the U.S. Depar tments Labor whichalleged the company discriminatedagains t women employes in theKenilworth and Union faci/ities.TA spokesman for Schering said yester-

day that the agreement does not con-stitute admission^of sex discrimination.He said the company has hacTa numberof programs over the years to encouragewomen to^move into more responsible'positions,—butTthVresponse~Jwas irolras":great as,,the comphay! had hoped. Hesaid these programs will be stepped up.

Schering, whjch; employes 4,000 per-sons'inthe twoplantsrwill-pay $165;000~to 400 women employed iri' packagingand production who the—government •laims-were-not'afforded^suf '

portunity tojTTOve into higher level posi-

The company will.spend^SO.OOO to ex-pand its eaual employment t)Jiportuhityprogram by providing training forsupervisory positions and'counseling toencourage women to seek higher leveljobs in the company. '

Another $160,000 will he earmarked.'for incentive- programs to help eri-courage^women to participate in train-ing programs and subsequently qualify.for higher paying jobs in the pharmacyand chemical operations departments.

The findings by the government of sexdiscrimination stemmed from an in-vestigation launched in 1979 by the labordepartment's office of federal contract

•^compliance whiph checks adherencejofederal laws prohibiting federal con-tractors • from . discriminating on thebasis-of-sGXT-r-acerr-eligion-or handicap.

^14ie-drug-fh*nT-has-$-17-nTrHion-in con-tracts with the Defense Department andVeterans-Administration. — -'

jchertng-spokcbman said the-hrceir~tive and training"'programs will be

-dcvpolopcd-carly-in-1-981-.-•'"- :7•———----'-'

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Hospitals combine to provideTITLE ROLE of Scrooge is played by Michael Mancino in scene withMichelle Spataro as Christmas Past. " '

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Memorial General Hospital will play akey role in a mult,i-hospital system thatwill provide a coordinated 24-hour,seven-days-a-week emergency lifesupport service for near ly 800,000residents in three, counties, it wasannounced.' • " •

V i c t o r " ^ . Fresolone, president,announced that Memorial General, andtwo other hospitals have received finalapproval From the New -Je r seyDepartment of Health to establish thefirst~ Mobile Intensive Care (MIC)system in northern New Jersey.

The system^vvas developed jointly byMemorial General Hospital, OverlookHospital, and Saint Barnabas MedicalCenter. Mountainside Hospital, . . . ... , . , ,. , ,

with the final state approval c x p e c t e ^ - ^ ^ S ^ ^ T ^ ^ 4 * * ^ ^ 1 ^this month^ccording to Presolone W h e n . l h e s>: s t e m '? operot.onal.- police

—- "In-all, six .MIC .units will provide

three METS units since' 1977 in thecommunities of Union, Roselle, RosellePark, Cranford, Kenilworth, Hillside,Garwood, Winfield and the Garden StateParkway, in cooperation with local first .aid squads. Under the • new system,which is expected lo get underway in thespring, 'Memorial General will addanother unit in southern Union-Courtly-

"The new MIC system will further'"stren'gth"en";"~the""hosp'ilrar'-s "mobile"emergency services in our service area"Fresolone said, "since the new systemwill! provide backup service to the uniton call, so that nfy area will be without 'coverage.1' '

.... Because" of its centralized

Officials blast proposal toshift control of cops to state

INTERLLrQE_betweerv acts was'provided by dancers, from left,Michelle Spataro, Patty Harms, Kathode Man us:, Patty Killian. Nearly300 children in the nursery thtough third grade participated in themusical portion of the-entertainment. • . . ,.-„

Soilfree plants blooming here

•-Or

coverage from strategically locatedcenters to the communities serviced by

*the four hospitals," according to Dr.Joseph Imbesi, director of emergencyservices at Memorial General, and a co-director of the project. "This will bringsophisticated life support coverage tomany communities for the first time,including several in the southern part of

. Union County."The current plan is for Keriljworth,

Cranford and Garwood to be served bythe unit out of Memorial General, as inthe current procedure. A center is.beingconsidered for somewhere in thesouthern part of the county, possibly inClark or Rahway, in the future.

Fresolone pointed' out thaLJVemqrial patiefrts.General's current Medical Emergency ^^Fresolone.,. who is also a member ofTreatment Services ( METS)' wj-H^the MIC steering committee which willbecome an integral parKof tho^ea__b£_cespQnsible-fQr-J.he-pi:Qgram-said-a-system. /• /^ total of 43 municipalities in the three

Memorial General hasjigeifproviding counties will be provided, with MICmobile intensive carc^oVerage with its. servfce when the program Lakes effect.

and first aid squads will use a central"hot line" number to call for MICservices . for life-threateningemergencies such as heart attacks or t•major accidents. The central dispatch"will send the nearest unit to tHe" scene,according to Fresolone". .

Fresolone said the hospital-basedunits will 'be staffed by full-timeparamedics. All units will continue to^utilize volunteer drivers. , /

Fresolone noted that volunteerambulance. and rescue upits in 'theservice area wiH be integrated into the-MIC systj&rru fhe>ef units provideemergency services and patienttransport .white the MIC units providerffe-supjStffi' only and do not transport

KENILWORTH- Lynn and Jim Vitaleof Kenilworth have been appointed areacenter managers for Deco Plantsftompany.. Poco; a::division~ofzRalston_:Pur ina Company, marke tsplants and "plantsystem" ' products'through independent consultants whoexplain hydroculture at horne^ parties.

Deco, which has beenki^operation fiveyears,'is headquarte^Min St. Louis"withdistribution centers in 28states. As areacenter maj jagers , ' the Vitales willser.vice Union County. They are locatedat 20 jm 14th St. Mrs." Vitale became apeco plant consultant in 1978.

DecoVSoilfree Plantsystem is basedon theprihciple, of hydroculture which isgrowth in a water-plus-nutrient solution,/ 'Soil has been replaced by a clay-basedaggregate called "living stones." Thestones provide clean, stable support for •the roots and aid in balancing the airand moisture supply. A , n u t r i e n tsolution, added at every watering,provides vital substances for healthy

Unit I "Overlook 90,700"Unit II Overlook 132,900

1 Unit III Memoriul GonoraT '113,900Unit IV Memorial Gentsrul 144,200Unit V St Barnabas . 118,900Unit VI Mountainside 100,900

- Totnl 789.600

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health careersKENILWORTH-- Patty Lafferty and

Myrtelynn Tomc/yk of Kenilworth areamong a group of 25 high school andcollege students interested in health-care careers who have found a way toactively explore theirgoals.

They are members of the MedicalExplorers Club, sponsoi'edby MemorialGeneral Hospital in conjunction with theUnion County Council of Boy Scouts.Members are able to learn, observe andto participate ih a variety of tasksperformed by health-care professionals.They are provided with a variedprogram which introduces them to mostdepartments in the hospital.

The club meets once a month,-butmost members do volunteer work at the•hospital. They are slated to learn thec a r d i o p u l m o n a r y " resusc i ta t iontechnique and will hear a" variety oftalks on career opportunities.

TJC welcomes

growth, - /^This/s>pilfree plantsystem1' may be

purchjisecl only from Deco consultants^MmfiL-parties; It: ismotravailablerat:

res. The plants also may bepurchased at the N. 14th St. warehouseMonday^ Wednesday and Friday, 9 toll;30a.m.; Wednesday and Friday, 3:30.to6 p.m., and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Vitale are seekingindividualsinterested in holding a plantsparty and in selling Deco plants in. theCranford, Roselje Park and surroundingareas.^Call them at work, 272-950$, or athome, 272--2886.

Kenilworth., CalendarSaturday, Dec. 20: 10 a.m. r noon:Art leseonsr Recreation Center;.noon'- 4 p.m.: Girls' gymnastics,BrfflHey.Monday, Dec. 22: 7 p.m.: MunicipalTrmrt; 7 - * p my Ons"""*"" officeopen; 8 p.m.: Borough Councilworkshop. -Tuesday, Dec. 23: 6 - 8 p.m.: Boys'basketball, Harding School; 0:30 -8:30 p .m. : Boys' wrestling,Brearley, 7 - 9 p.m.: RecreationCenter open, building and zoningoffices open; 8 p.m.: -BoroughCouncil tneeting.Wednesday, Dec. 24: 12:15 p.m.:Rotary Club meeting, Villa Barritta.

Byrne's administrat ion to shiftoperational control of local policedepartments to the state came under.-fire this week by Livio Mancino, mayor,•and Bob Franks, assemblyman.

In a letter to John Degnan, stateattorney general.Mancino said he was"shocked, and dis turbed" by the.prospect. He threatened a law suit if theproposal becomes a reality; - :' Healsoblasted.attorneys who serve in,the-legislature for having "taken steps

Jx> prevent the reform so desperately. needed^ • for. the purpose" of reducinginsurance costs. Why? -Because, theyderive benefits. Isn't this a conflict!" Hewent on to say that these same lawyerspassed laws preventing buildinginspectors from working within the-

.cdmmunity4heys.ervetb avoid conflicts.-"Isn't it also strange, " Mancino wrote,"how the laws are written to benefitthose who write or enact them."

Franks , a resident,.,o_f. BerkeleyHeights who represents the 22nd'Assembly dis tr ic t which includesKenilworth, labeled the proposal to shiftpolice control to the state "scary:" Hesaid local ' governments would beinclined to "turn their backs on police

Business robbedKENILWORTH- Break-ins., were

reported at two Fairfield Avenuebusinesses this. week.

Europa Sport, Inc., reported the theftof an undetermined amount of clothingduring a break-in Sunday night. A win-dow w afi broken to gain entry. A secondattempt was made to enter the buildingTuesday night, but the alarm was ac-tivated and apparently scared off the in-

••tr-uder-.-

Drug dealer gets

3 years in jailKENiLWORTH- A man arrested on

the Boulevard last year, has received athree year prison terrn for possession ofa. i'downer" called methaqualone with,intent to distribute it. -

Superior Court Judge Cuddle-Davidson imposed sentence on PhillipDeGregorio, 128 Elmora Ave. , .Elizabeth, who had pleaded guilty to thecharge in October.

GAR Industries reported the theft oftwo calculators Monday "night from itsoffice on Fairfield. There was no sign offorced entry, but the front dooV wasfound open in the morning. . •_,-•'

YOUTH EXCHANGEYouth for Understanding is seeking

homes for 43 South American studentswho will be arriving in this area • inJanuary for a six-month stay. Anyoneinterested may call Ellie-Kullmann, 233-8042, or make a collect call- to theregional office in Spring House,'Pa., 0-

department budgets atuTteirthe state topick up the bill." .. ^

He called the proposal "-a form ofmandated regionalization, similar tostate attempts to force school districts tomerge.". Franks, in a press release,argued that if suburban policemen.wereshifted to urban areas, citizens in thesuburbs '''would be underprotecbed andwould have a legitimate gripe with thesystemsBesides, they-are paying thehill'1

Former exec here

guilty of forgeryKENILWORTH- A forjner

Kenilworth business executive who isserving.aMerhi< in federal prison forkidnapping has received another prisonsentence on embezzlement and forgerycharges here dating back to 1975.

Lloyd Johnson, who formerly owned atrucking firm in the borough, pleadedguilty to charges of embezzlement, •forgery and uttering a forgedinstrument.

Bradford Bury, assistant prosecutor,said the case involved Johnson.'stakinga check made out to the wife of one of his ;employes ahd depositing it into an 'account of his own firm and eventuallyspending-it. The amount was $5,000. .

In sentencing Dec. 5, Judge CuddieDavidson ordered Johnson to majcerestitution on the J5,000. He alsosentenced Johnson foserve four tojfiveyears on the charges. Uttering a forgedinstrument is,a legal term for making afalse endorsement of a check.

Johnson is now serving a 15-year'sentence for kidnapping. He is In the

—fedora l-ponitentiar-y-;at-Petewburg7-Va^That sentence stemmed from an

' incident in southern New Jersey severalyears ago. His Superior Court sentencewill be concurrent with the kidnapping

' imprisonment.

DEPRESSION CUNICFair Oaks Hospital; Summit, is opera-

ting an outpatient depression researchunit which is able to offer new arifi-

" depressant medications not yetgenerally available. Patients, mustapply to the program, and if accepted,will r e v i v e a full evaluation of their de-

. pression.without cost. Call 277-2300.

OPEN HOUSESATURDAY, DEC. 20th

ten residents

SERVICE AREA - New Mobile Intensive Care system will back up firstaid squads in designated areas. METS (or MIC-upit-s/as they might bedeslanated later) wi l l continue.to service Kenilworth, Cranford andGarwood out of Memorial General, .though Overlook will providebackup. Note: Garwood is still in Area III though map shows it bridg-'Inq two areas. • ' f '•.

KENILWORTH- Ten Keh'tlworTh—residents are among 1,153 full-timestudents who launched their college •careers in UnionCollege's fall semester., Iteuilwortli residents include: ScottUoffert, 515 Richfield Ave.; MercedesCaneiro, 44 N. 22nd St.; VincentChristodm-b, 312 N. 22nd. St.; Carmenfi()ffi 211 N 21s( st.;MarkFrolich, 3411M,)m.(K, A'VC.; Vance King;'2H2 Monroe,S( -, Rafael olivoros, 215 N. 11th St.1!MoorReid,''370 Monroe Ave.; Lisa Reuter.r.i{e(i Maple Lane/ and~Brait WjjKon, 91 ,g'Park Dr.

.• f

Bradford Bury, assistant prosecutor,said DeGregorio-and James Nesbitt ofKonilwor'h h.-iH 7»» pjlls of • th<>depressant in their possession.

They were stopped May 3,1979 by latePolice Officer Warren "Jaeckel, who wasoff duty at the time. Bury said Nesbitthas pleaded guilty to the same chargesand is awaiting sentence,

WHALE OF A LESSON /"'KENILWORTH-- Forty-five .students'

in^the effective writing clauses at DavidBiearley High School, will visit,whalingmuseums and .exhibits, in Mystic, Ct.,Jan. 9 in conjunction with their study of"Moby Dick." ' . ,

10 A,M. to 2 P.M.The exciting1 new way"to

The Soilfree.pprn Plantsyotc'm

BUY A PLANT AND WE'LLGUARANTEE IT FOR 2 YEARS

DECO PLANTS CO.Division 01 Halslon Piirm.i Co

".200-/Nv14th STREET S

[School budget, The Board of Education had a niceI Christmas present for students the

other night. After threatening forI weeks to make serious program cutsj to reduce spending next year, the^board-found-alternate-ways^tojalingI $177,378 to cut spending and reduce| the "magic" cap cut figure to

$85,000. Saved are-these perennial' targets: - summer school, driver| education, 7th and 8th grade sports, and 8th grade foreign languages.

Story on Page 3. -—

FastjcopCool thinking by a 78-year-old

1 potential burglary victim, steady| phone work by police dispatchers| and a fleet-footed officer- were[ credited in'the arrest of a. would-be.) burglar h e r e r t h e resident is EdnaI Norr.the desk people a r e KathleenDitzel and Lt. Vincent Brinkerhoff

I and the speedy officer is Williamj~peters. Story on P a g e . 2.

Family safeTom Rotella .closed his barber

(shop, flew to Rome and took a tajci tothe mountains to find out whathappened to them in the earthquake,All 56 of his relatives survived.Photo and story on Page 2.

Bank centerThe Planning Board approved the

site plan for the new operationscenter of United Counties Trust Co.The 45,000 square foot center will bebuilt on 3.47 acres pff CommerceDrive, and will house about 160

^employes-. Donald Creighton, bankattorney, presented. the .architectand engineer who described theplans. After approval, Tom O'Brien,Planning Board, chairman, said"United Counties has demonstratedconfidence in our town and in verynice taste." • .-

Holiday

(jiifiiur ol MUIWII

KENILWOflTH • 272-2886

The Chronicle wishes its readers aMerry Christmas and a white one, ifthe snow lasts. Farris Swaekhamerhas a seasonal message on Page 4.This week and next we're printingearly, and the deadline for nextweek's paper is 5 p;m. Friday. Thepublic library is open Friday andSaturday and till 6 p.m". Dec. 31.Municipal offices close Christmasfor the weekend.

Perry shotWilliam' Perry, the 31-year-old

Port Authority patrolman who wasshot to death Monday, was a 1968graduate of Union College. Ilis

-broth'er.-Fred.-coaches basketball a t -the school. William was shot by aman he had arrested fbr.ismoking on

"a PATH t r a i n s

Mason hurtCranford Police Det. Milt Mason

was accidentally, shot a t hie..homeMomjaywhen his pistol fell to thefloor and fired. The bullet grazed his

>lCft leg and lodged in his.chest. Hewas able to walk downstairs and^wastaken to Rahway Hospital where hewas reported in good condition.Surgeons planned to rejnove the .32calibre bullet from muscles near hislung yesterday.

The plazaThe prel iminary plans for

"Cleveland Plaza!1 on the downtownschool site call for the new retailbuilding backing on the Firs tPresbyterian Church property to

^cethe^enteror theTtazaTmtra iBO"to have a retail opening along NorthUnion Avenue. The developers. Saul

• H

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for^K^jmy^By ROSALIE GHOSS

Seven Cranford public school teachersare seeking retroactive salary credit fortime they served in the military.

The teachers filed, a petition -with thestate commissioner of education, FredQ. Burke, on Nov. 24 It asked the.state to

^order the Cranford Board of Educationto compensate, eacjh teach'er feej» theITrhe oj kis ltufTfl .employmentr"Vh<Fseven teachers have an average of 26

division.'.of W.CW...J.0"sey -.Superior. CourtThese teachers are appealing rulings bythe OAL apd upheld by Burke

Thft.-decisi'on involving Union townshipteachers.cited the statute'of limitationswhich bars a claim for back pay that ismort than six years old. The Pltfijisterldecision went a step further and deniedthe six-year- retroactive claim- The

'decision said.Ihe CTVTpToye had a duty torequest the..saU\vv_cradHji

'IJLCOMO

Christmas-scene: Frank Loyacano created this image for the season, of Trinity Episcopal Ghurch.

^timrks

The claim stems-from a 1954 state lawwhich enables, school d is t r ic ts toadvance teachers on the salary guide fortbesame number of years served in-themilitary. If a teacher served in themilitary for two years, he, would begranted two years' credit for time lost inhis career and be placed on the thirdyear salary step. .

The seven Cranford teachers4iave anaverage of twVyeikrs and two monthsmilitary service, all . prior to theiremployment here. " '

—-rhe-teaehers-are-Hftaym&nd-D. Ward,gym.teacher at Orange Avenue School;Emil ScHumanrf, industrial a r t steachers at Hillside Avenue School; A.Donald Whellan, music teacher at

TJmp1oynTCTit7irn(J also slated schrxii- districts-have-limited' sources of funds-and may -not .have the money I'icompensate past claims • • .

Appeals • of these deeisKiriK wi-rc-argued in the past several.weeks and ;idecision is-pending.

Should the. Cranford teachers besuccessful, in their quest for retroactivesalary credit, the local school--board-•could be-forced to pay a totaPof 'ru'ir1;than $100,000.'The most senior memberof the petitioners is Daniels, who startedworking here in 1940 after serving two

.years,-10la.months.iriMhe militaryvftf4hf-seyen,. Ward has teen here thetshort.es[time,., since, 195H, . Yanuzzi "la'as theshortest military service - one ytar,oight rn.onths.

Hillside', Ralph Notaro, guidancec6unsellor" at Cranford High; Herbert

Several DV '

save collegeBy STUART AWBREY

' E l l a Pethick of Cranford is playing asignificant role^in efforts to save a small 'college in Pennsylvania. She calls it "a

-life.and death_struggle.'.'andlthe. battlehas sent shock waves into collegeboardrooms across the nation.

The school is Wilson College inChambersburg. , Mrs.- Pethick, analumnae and former teacher?- of thewoman's college, challenged ..theschool's administration on its policiesand helped galvanize alumnae andstudent opinion to save the 110-year-old institution after the boardannounced plans last year to shut itd '

She and other "Wilson women," whoinclude a number of local residentsfseebox), mobilized to fight the~closing..They raised. $1 million in pledges andtook the board to court.

The board...argued that Wilson was.broke and running out of students andneeded to close.....in order_ to_saLvag<assets. A county judge upheld the "SaveWilson College Commit tee . " Headmonished the board for npt doing itsjob properly, criticized the managementand by reversing the decision to closegave Wilson a new lease on life.

The old board resigned. The rebelliousalumnae took 11 of the 26 trustee seats.Mrs.' Pethick is- one, and she is nowchairman of the Annual Fund andon thefinancial policy committee. Rev. GeorgePike of Cranfotd is another, hisPresence re-establishing the school'shistorical ties with the PresbyterianChurch.

Mrs. Pethick graduated in 1934 andafter attaining '^.master's degree atColumbia University she taught in prepschoo'ls in New rBrunsw,ick andMilwaukee; During World War I sheworked for the F.B.I and the FrenchColonial Supply Mission. She went backto Wilson after the war to teach French

"for^JjryeWsTThenliheswItcTiea careersand went into the brokerage business onWall Street.

She kept her ties with Wilson, servingon the alumni association board in th<?1%0's, and found the school b*ecoming"too elitist and too conservative" in the1970's. Instead-of broadening its liberalarts curriculum and expanding itsstudent base as other small .colleger-were doing, Wilson doggedly stuck to itsold ways. Enrollment dropped from apeak 750 to 1%.

The failure of three popular teachersto gain tenure while seven others did iri1977 prompted Mrs. Pethick toinvestigate. Facts assembled, she andTerry Hume, also of Cranford, vjsitedthe board chairman at his New Jerseyhome. They tried to convince him thatJie handling of the teachers was"dreadful and demoralizing. "He justsat there," recalls.Mrs. Pethick.

She put her sentiments on paper, withquestions, and sent them to him. Thepresident of the student governmentposted a copy, on .campus and the effect.among students and alumnae was

BuU

alumnae, says Mrs. Pethick.The "Save Wilson Committee", was

formed. Alumnae lobbied boardmeetings including one in New York

- City—whcro-studentK sang— the-^-lma—mater" outside. They raised money.They cracked the unanimity of the boardbut still couldn't reverSe'the decision.

"We felt be t rayed , " said Mrs.Pethick. "It was like a French novel."

The school prepared for what most.believed would be its. finalcommencement."Then the. local judge,John W. Keller, came out with his 87-page opinion that laid the blame to theboard and administration. The collegewas saved;- •••••••--•--— • u

The rebels hoped the judge wouldthrow out the entire board," whichresigned, but he retained a nucleusgroup of theniiu One, an alumnae,became chairman', anil-Mrs. Pethick hashigh regard for this woman,JEJisSi5eth

JIudnut Clarkson. -^""'—-T-he-eollege-slill-has-arlong-way-ftrgor'

Wilson tiesIn addition, to Ella Pethick, the

-reorganized-Wilson-Gollege-board-tif-trustees includes Rev. George Pikeof the First Enjsbyterian Church,who was added to help re-establishthe college's historical ties with thedenomination. Betty Brubaker hasbeen an alumni representative fqjv:her class. Terry Hume joined Mrs'Pethick in the,,1977 confrontationwith the then board chairman andMrs. Hume's daughter,' Kathleen,helped set up an urban semestersocial" work rand "political "science"program, for student in the 1970's.Other local alumnae include CarolynDittmar and Ruth. Pringle,: '"

r g y e i — f t o y -Daniels, industrial arts teacher "at CHS;and Michael Yahuzzi, science teacher atCHS.

The case was referred "by thecommissioner's office last week to theOffice of Administrative Law -tOA4),slate agency in which an administrativelaw jydge hears controversies broughtbefore state departments The decisionrendered by the judge can be affirmedor jJejiied by the commissioner of

re(|U(Aiin Other districts were denied becausethe claW was fyarred hy the si;iine of

education.Two similar cases filed by teachers in

the Union and Plumsted school districtspresently are before the appellate

limitations.

A spokesman for the New' Jersey'School Boards Association said thaialthough the law has been.on the bookssince 1954, the New Jersey EducationAssociation only several years, agonotified its members the law'is in effect

.and.many, teachers are'jUsi'becomiiiL'.aware-the law exists

„ The seven Cranford veterans have notreceived any salary credit' for time 'rrithe service. The teachers arerepresented by Goldberg and Simon,counsellors at law, Clifton, attorneys forthe Cranford.Education Association'

recent edition of itSTeports. Keller wasaJbsolved there. Two prominenteducational lawyers,"Kent Weeks and

applications are up, and the curriculumlias been altered.' Mrs. Pethick isworking on foundations and corporatesupport. (See<related story.)

Joseph C. Giels of the association of'Governing Boards of Universities and€oll(jges (-AGB) said Keller's action"stirred a furorthroughoUt t\)p nationalhigher education community.'V^enerwas accused of unwarranted judicial"interference" and attempting tobolster his re-election chances.

Responding to widespreadcontroversy in academic circles, theAGB analyzed the Wilson case in a

Philip-Anderson;Teviewed;the case~ancTwrote tjial—ihe most impdrfanTconclusion was that college trusteesshould make sure - they are fullyinformed before making decisions.

Fred Hechinger, the education writer,said in The New YorkTimes that "the-ruling may have created so muchresentment because it pointed a fingerat an excess of selfrighteousness and alack of self searching in some academicboardrooms and.executive suites. Thelesson >hat Judge Keller tried toteach., is that trusteeshipresponsibilities should not~~be~'"taken"lightly, especially when they deal withthe life or death of a beloved college."

Barbara Moran of Doering Way tjalledhome from County Cork in Ireland lastweek and asked: "What's going on withmy godfather?"

fleFecstatic family responded.; He'ssTbeen appointecTby~RonaI3~Reagan

as the next secretary of labor. ..VThe family represents a formidable

CfanfoFd connection to the Departmentof Labor and the presidential cabinet.Four sisters and numerous nieces andnephews of the secretary-designate livehere. ' :

Donovan's sisters," Claire, Maureen,Joan and Helen all moved here in the1960's from Bayonne. They are among 12children whose parents'died when theywere young. The older ones helped raise *S <\-

Seltzer and Joe Vizzoni, told thel Planning Board last week that their

goal is to blend the architecure onthe site with the church, the nearbyfirehouse and the adjacentdowntown area.

Paper drive' The Cranford High School choir issponsoring a paper drive Saturdayfrom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the parking"!lot behind the school. For pickup call272-4860. <.

the school management locked alumnaeout of-the admissions building, banned

~to financial" liquids andgraduates from recruiting or fundraising effectively.

Mrs. Pethick says the" board ,dominated by the chairman and theschool president, became increasingly ,isolated from factu and decision makingprocesses. Sbp recalls an atmosphere of"psychological oppression" in whichstudents, faculty and alumnae wereIntimduted. Four deans had resignedin. four years, The stage was ' r ipe for

_wider confrontation.' It -came when the administration

announced ojn Feb. 19, 1U70 that theschool would Close. The announcementunleased "<•>•< >•»(*<*

new em for women'Does a^small woman's liberal arts

college have a place in...higher-education today? Ella Pethick and

T h e "W-ilson women" flunk so.'They're now trying to rebuild theschool along modern lines whileregaining its strong orientationtoward women's^educat ion andsocial responsibility.

Seven teachers from other schoolsvolunteered their.services free lastyear. Enrollment reached a nadir of110, but this year it was up to 196 ,with the largest freshmen classsince 1973, and inquiries and

, applications have mounted sixfold.The goal is to attract 500 students"and garner tuition to help meetcosts. , ti_-

Under a theme of"new options ina new era for women," Wilson has

expanded, offering from its liberalarts base to includeinterdisciplinary career-orientedcourses lffleclinology, business andequitation. < -A With a new president, new boardleadership and new courses, Mrs.Pethick sees a "great and justifiablehope" that Wilson will survive. Shefeels there is a place in the nationalscene for a school where women cangain leadership experience that willprepare them to be leadersrShe alsofeels Wilson -oyer the years hascreated,-individuals with a strongsense of social responsibility andservice to people. "There is a senseof values being transmitted, tostudents," she says. These factorshave fueled her enthusiasm in thefight to save the college/

Ella Pethick: from "creative rage" against those who wquldclose her alma rfm+or-Mo bbardsmanship and a theme titled"new options in anew ora for women," .

the younger ones and the family becametightly knit- under- the trying cir-cumstances.

The family hopes to travel toWashington for the cabinet advent of,Raymond, the seventh of the twelve."I'm so proud," says Mrs. Joan Moran,

the moment in history I'd like to seeThe sisters'ineludk Claire, a practical

nurse who Jives' on Hiilcrest, andMaure.ejLji.imanor munjein.aLemplo.Yewlio^iow works for "Eastern Airlines and

"liveTonElm. They married "men namedDonovan, cousins, and thus retained-their surnames. '•' •

Then there is Joan O'Donnefl wholives on Orange Ave. and works at F.choLake Country-Club, and Helen Moranwho lives on Doering and is a registerednurse \it St. Elizabeth Hospital Herdaughter .Barbara," 'Raymond's \iw\"child, is studying'in Ireland this year

The family grew up on Third Street mBayonne-. "We stayed together-arid rais "ed each other, and that's something

"ofr Raymond told TheNew York Times after his appointment"I am what I am because of my olderbrothers," adds. M r s . Moran. She-saidthe four sisters and.their families eventually moved to Cranford because of •'usbeauty and convenience.'' Raymondlives in Short Hills. Other siblings'live iii

his younger sister. "We're quite close. Elizabeth, Princeton, Maplewood lieuThe day of the appointment I spoke'to'*" Bank and California

_cvcpy-ono^f-my-bFothers^ M-rs-Mxmm-s7rl"d-slu'' was proudiTuTy m y b F o t h e r s ^They congratulated Raymond and re-

quested tickets to his swearing in. "Idon't care about the inaugural ball,"says Mrs. Moran. "The swearing in is

as proudnot surprised, at the appointment Shefelt her brother is well qualified for thejob and says he is,witty intelligent'andhas a very, very warm heart "

Her first Christmas: Melissa RenaudI.has her first encounter with Santa Glaus. She's eight months old. Sister Jessica, right, and NicoldAllen Joined him Saturday at Newcomers Club party.

Page 2: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

. \f, - , •

<- "I

[ - • • •

Page 2 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Wednesday, December 24, 1980• • • " ' • . • • •

Speedy cop nabs btirglarysuspect in nighttime chase

With his family: relat ivei^k this picture of Tom Rotella with hmo.ther, Carmelle-DeCunzo, and,two hiecesHn sohbolhou.se: thserved as temporary home in Ayelllno,

Ftotefla finds his familysafe in earthquake area

Thomas Rotella went to Italy at thes beginning of the month to find out whathappened to his 5& relatives. He,foundthem alive and generally well in theAvellino area, though some weredisplaced from their Jiomes by thedevasting earthquake. ?

. RoteJHa closed his • Modern ' BarberShop on Eastman Street and flew to

'quarters in a schoolhouse where he slepton a floor and became ill himself. Buttlerecovered and came hotne, relieved,and was back at his.barber shop-by lastweek . ' - . . ' . .

"Rome. There he hired a taxi thaUtookhim to the mountain village where hehad lived before coming here in 1959.

•-- After some effort, he found hi.s_ mother^and father, four siblings and many'nieces and nephews. He delivered

.sweaters and other clothing and cooked.their first hot meal since theearthquakes.

Rotella joined them in . emergency

Meantime, , local residents, arecontinuing efforts to help surv^rs ofthe -disaster. Amasio

Cool thinking by a 78-year-qfdpotential burglary victim, steady phonework by police dispatchers and a fleet-footed officer were credited in the arrestof" a would-be burglar here lastThursday night. , •

Mrs. . Edna Norr called policeheadquarters' at 9:56 p.m. to report,persistent front doorbell ringing at herhouse at 3 Cherokee Road. She stayed onthe phone,, .with dispatcher Kathleen

—Ditzel^ts the noise shifted tobanging onthe rear door. Lt. Vincent BrinkerhoFfdispatched prtlice to the scene. j v

Officer WilliairTConnell and "William-Peters raced around opposite sides ofthe darkened home and spottedtwo men.running away- One disappeared, b'ut'

• Peters tra.cked the other one through therear yards, jumped over a fence andcaught him behind a home on OneidaPlace. ' • . - • ' • " • '

Del. Lt. Donald'Curry said the bellringing.approach was a typical pre-

' burglary ploy. He credited Peters with

charged with, attempted- burglary andconspiracy to commit thejft_jA vehicleleft behind has led to a search warrant •

-for the accomplice.Other officers who were oh the scene

included Sgt. Jerry Andrews, OfficersArt ' Anderson, Ron Abram.st- LouisKleeman and James Switek. and JackHicks of the detective bureau. Curry

"said that Mrs. Norr was "very smart"for using a flashlight instead of truninf**1

her iight&on- c ....,,.....___„

^Several G&ii2£-thefts were reported'topolice last week. A thief entered the DonLynch home at 16 Hampton'St. FridaythVougha cellar door and stole an "audio.mixing.board and. three .guitarsl.ArTV..[-.set,'stereo receiver and turntable were'" NEWtaken Thursday from the-.~FrederickFern residence ist Lenhome Dr. A sum of$200. was stoler) from a cash box atUnited Methodist Church Saturday aftera Christmas Party.

A motorcycle was

OWNERS — Dick Haag and Barbara MajurhaVe purchased:'Country Kitchen Deli on North Union,

Mnrsi'

His. are•vtv\>rs ofaigfta .ni.

Cranford Barber Shop reports that morethan $1,300 in cash has been donated andit, along with^additional clothing

jiollected, will be"forwarded to Italy.

helped, collec%d 75 bags of. clothing and$203 for rejief efforts. Collection andtransport was organized by UNICO, the ,United' Neighborliness IntergrityCharity Organization. -

. „ stolen frombeing fleetsqf foot and accomplishing Matthew Jagusak, 120 "Walnut Ave.,"good police work," . V." Saturday. Hubcaps were taken from the

The-j;uspoct_is Freddy Rodriguez, 22, ca^jvMVIiphapi^lvI.-igiiiro,1|Craig 'PI.,•f:itt"l\itTill)eTry7'^?wark;'who-has been parked at the train stationTtec/16. '**

^ ^ Majurbuy Country Kitchen Deli

Dick Haag and Barbara Majur are thenew owners of the Country KiTchen DelTat 12 North Union Avenue.

<-M . 1 V -. " • 1 - . «• i The Deli will continue to carry the

btevens ins ta l l ed as pres ident o r bar assoc . same items as before, with mc new. _ . . — j : „:..-.'_., .- ~'" ' additions. Hot breakfast sandwiches will

now be available

enjoys tennis and skiing. _. .try-yKitchen^Deli 'rwiU: be

extending their regular hours; they arenow open from. 7 a.m. to 7 p".m. Mondaythrough Friday, Saturday until 6, andSundays from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.

1ll> lllis lie IIlt<rli<lli\ to ' ~

n-»H'inlM.T.. f i l led -.u i lh the'charm

Innlit ions ...-—<-^}': tLlMS

TED ESMONDINSURANCE --.

James , R. Smith andCharles jj. Kardel havebeen appointed permanentmembers of the CranfordFire Department, •

-Charles J. Stevens Jr. of Cranford wasInstalled as presi'dent for. 1981otof theUnion County .Bar Association at'-ahinstallation dinner at the Chaticfer Dec.

• 1 1 . ••• ". ' " . " . • V - •• •

.Other officers arc: Charles Winetskyof Linden, president-elect;. LeoKaplowitz of Linden, "vice, president;.'Stanley A. Fink of Clark, secretary;Raymond S. Londo of Elizabeth,treasurer; and William R. Holzapfel of'

, Cranford, parliamentarian.Newly elected trustees of the

"association areDounglas W. Hanson ofScotch Plains, Lawrence J. Barisonek ofRoselle and Michael B: Blacker of

.Scotch Plains.- ' , •'District Court Judge Alfred M. Wolin,was toastmaster and ' Leo Kaplowitz,former Union County Prosecutor, gavethe invocation. Harry V. Osborne Jr.,Superior- Court judge spoke to the..

fresh produce and Barbara's homemade,cheesecake. In ac t ion , the owners willbe preparing fresh dinners daily. Billedas' items One can "heat arid eat," theseofferings cater to professional coupleswho want td~~pick up a last-minutehomemade dinner to go. " "

Dick; ,niay be familiar to arearesidents -he lived in Cranford 15 yearsbefore- moving to upstate New York,

1

MERRY CHRISTMASAND 4

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Fourf r

Alex Bibby & William Dc'lflnls

-24 North Ave., Cranftird276-4765

. i

• /

> ^

--a-

?/

up stacks ofvvishi^Tor a

' w a r m i\n(\ festive"hojic-ta^y! you

I'ATIIHAKk of l i t I M O I t l lJohn Kowalsky *Gen^ral Store Manager

Steve Prasa k Howard Van Duyne •.. Asst^Stuire Managers

• • • • ' " , Uolljuy limns: . " . ' ' / V-!>lor«! C\o*e* ChrlnttniiK Kv«- ;il s P.M. * , ,

- l(<-O|>.-.i>. Dec. L'<U A.M. '" ' "' Stmc Clou<-;; N«w YfurVKv.- at 7 IVM.

- H.<>[xns .lull. L' -H A.M.

^Mu^iT^r>

At the Holiday Seasonmor.q than evjer, our

^ . to those who have:made,. oiir progress possible. It

V ,> ""T"s"'m P'y "I5u rsmce"fel jT7~

•ift "Thank you and ~JK\ Best Wishes

and aHappy-New Year."

CRANFORDSPORT CENTER

38 North.Ave-.,'{.,

Cranford « 276-1569

-association—and Walter N, Readr-Wjie|-e he_JVQrked for Big-V_Shop.Ritepresident of the New Jersey State Bar a n d Pathmark... in a_managerialAssociation, extcnded^greetinKS; "capacity. < Eventyally he decided to

" I - - t h e - large corporation and

by JOAN V A R A N E L L I

' We" have a sleighful of Vuletide wishes forall our friends and patrons who have

~bB©Tf^~tmd"Tfrrd^hT^the year.,,-the very me'ffiest-;of---Ghrfstmases"to one.aneHall! True peace, love and joy!

, fromJudy, Carol andTPran

Searbroiigli'sBeauty Salon

establish a small business "backn o m e . " , . _ . . . . . < • • • • • • . • •

"The day of the Momand Popstore iscoming back," he says. ' People preferpersonal cowta'cT.' DicE feels thatCranford is an exceptionally "friendly"tbwn, and he welcomes the opportunityto move back to a more urban .area. Hisson, Richard, now attends Orange

Varan's Travel Agency_3\>ould•lik&'f.rf'wifrh all of •-our customers and friends

. a joyous Christmas.•-———May-the-le-ving—:—

Avenue School.. - -—Barbara calls herself a "farm girl,"

since she grew up in Pine Island, N.Y.•"where her family raised onions andother produce. Shelter worked for Big1-V Shop-Rjtc as an assistant comptrollerand personnel administrator. She has no

spirit of the seasonremain with youthroughout thecoming year.

regrets, about leaving corporate..headquarters and. beginning her own•small-business venture.-!tMove to coo It,"'she says, and she'll be doing a lot of it atthe Deli. Time permitting she also

(Blut RiW>t>n Shopping Center)

' >#4 North Avenuex^Garwood—7,89-0063

W, - •

j you ailAl'l:n5 lifrie of the \'omA ploi itiful fnoasuro of

YULETIDE CHEERA ijpocial thnnks to all our friends and custoinorswho contributed to our Italian relief efto'h. Youholped to raise around $ 1,200 in addition to col-lecting .6 .truckloads of r\oodod,crlothing & othermatorLals. v • _./~ - —

Wo a/o alsoTjratofj.il' to Mario DiFabio & BonitoMontini for i)ivjnc| us the use of their trucks.

CRfiNFORD BflRBER SHOPAmasio MuFslgllu

Vlncotuo Rivottl, Angoto-'AcltoGiusoppo MIIBZ^O-

T 1th thanksfor many friendlyfavors, we sendwarm greetings .

to you and

Chris

DRUG STORE

? Meetings'l'l»> Mi'iiihcrK of Ihc (r;infor<l I,ions

Cljili I'xteiul tlicuIJest Wishes for a

Ilappy Holiday Season to 'all" theirFriends and Nei^lihors. They also,

would like to thank all those who par-

ticipated in their recent Campaign for

the Blind and Visually Handicapped

and their other projects,

throughout the year! \).ON^

Walter Ituskouski,President

BUTLER travel• • • • •

• • •

• • ,

__.__.Each_^ear-it means st+lAnd our gratitude behind i.t

Ip warmer than before.

CHAPMANBROTHERS

36 North Ayo. E. Cranford276-1320

plHHMHUIUffB

The Place to

THE

Gala Celebratlonlncludes-Complete Filet Mlgnon <?r Lobster TailsDinner served with wine at 9:3O p.m.Champagne toast at midnight.Continuous music frdm 5> p.m. lor yourdancing pleasure. ••/Lavish floor show. ""Added attractlonr exotic dancer.-Open bar - all you Can drink.Party favors and nolsemakers.Contlnentol breakfast Ipllowlnp i ^ ( -

U Por CotlploInclud. l All Ton.

And CralullUi

Our Safe Overnight' ,Galo Celebraton Includes:^Coniploto Gula Colobiollon pucliuu» plus ovmnluht uccom- Iinodollons lor Iwo, ulono wlih our lut» chockaul. iavou cdn ISlav end on|ov Iho foolbull gomsj on Now V«ar s Duy

*"" J i i ^ ^ o n p"' coupi«• • * W*m Include* All Taxvi• * ^ « b l ' And Ciolulll.i.

GARDEN STATE PKWV. EXIT 136,CRANFORD, N.,1. Phone '201-272-4700

Early I

School board finds 'painless' way to cut budgetWednesday', December 24, 1980 CRANF0KD ( N.J,»- CHKONICUK Page .!

By HaSALfE'GROSS• The dim prospects of maHsive cuts in-public school programs here lor" nextyear all but vanished a^a school boardbudget workshop Monday as the boardcame up with] a relatively painlessvariety of methods to reduce'the amount,of ca\> overage by $177,378.

The board started the workshop facedwith the necessity of reducing theproposed J981-82 $13 million budget" by$247,871 ,to get und.er- the cap—ohincreased spending. By the end of .tfieevening, all that remains to- be cut isapproximately $85,000. This may takethe form of three~..f.ewer teachers in

• —y-

DELI-"~~ is now

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIPi. For your conveniencewe are extending your hours.

Now open 7 a .m. - 7 p .m. M-F; Sat til <;•••" SUNDAYS FROM. 7 A.M. - 4-P.I*!.'

As always we will continue to carry thafinest'quality cold cuts^horriefnade salads,

desserts, fresh bread, pastries, soups'|& more

US CATER YOUR raRTYSPECIALTIES . . /

Momenfade Choesecake f Hot Breakfast--Sa;,»dwit4irisJftail^..«J^atAlElaJ^jndnnci^.

Fre^h Produce and Baked.-Goods

12 N. UNION • GEANFORD • 276-616{)

grades K to 3 and .three fewer acrossgrades 7 to 12. This decision will bt-

' made ,,.ai Ihe board's next budget..' workshop, Monday, Jam 5.

In action taken'Monday,- the board cut$98,9087rom proposed spending forjiextyear and came up wittanother $78,4.70 inadjustments'to the cap figure.

The item which will Have the greatest "*impact on students is the reduction of$23,375 for shuttfe busses^lransportirig .student athletes from, the high school toMemorial Field for, football, swimming,track1 and basebafl-pr-aetie«T-T-he-l)oar-d—

ffelt.it would rather make this cut than^reduce-any sports programs. . "

Another $34,955 ,wae trimmed fromfunds for compensatory educationreflecting cuts in state funding for ihe 'remedial 'program. This ' s basied onfewer children targeted, for theprogrant-^-

, resulting from improved scores in thestate Minimum Basic Skills iests.

The remainder of the $98,908 in. cutsincludes $15,000 for unused teachersabbaticals and $25,578 to be saved jnsalaries by replacing retiring senior ..employes with less .experienceti peoplewho willr.be paid lower salaries.

The other $7(}»470 in cap figureadjustments included: the r&n'ovtri of$34,070 in unemployment compensationinsurance increase from the cap, $25,000for renting Lincoln, School, $12,470 less

-tuition cost for-Cranford children• educated at state institutions, $5,000reduction* in worker's compensation

insurance,, and $2jQ<H) less /in themaintenance" aScduntsT

28, and a first gra^eiat Orange with 27.The secondary cufe would include twoteachers at the high school and a ledf \teaching position eaeh at Hillside"andOrange at the 7ttrand 8th grade levels.. Sam Morneweck, board, member,suggested cutting the leaching supplyjjecounts and the number of secretaries•and clerks bpfore considering teacherreductions. John Witheringtoh, board,memberj advocatedy^ne or twQ multi--age groups at the 5th arid 6th grades inpreference to increasing class size at the

• All these options will be discussed Jan.5. The budget, ifi .due at the county,superintendent's 'office by Jan. 15,"andwill be presented for voter approval}April 7.

The board, undeiH'he cap law, will beallowed to increase this year's budget by

,$U71-;000 for a projected tax increase of20 cents per $100 of assessed value. Thisis approximately $100 a year on a house,valued at $50,000.

Another item for discussion Jan, 5 is aprojected increase in the.price of school-lunches to either the board or the-children who'buy them. The 'federalgovernment is ciitting ill; support of the-lunch program by sto 10 cents per mealbeginning-Jan. 1. The board must decidewhether the estimated shortfall, whichcan range from $8,750 to $17,500, will beborne by the board or tacked on to thelupch pKiccs-for students.

We will W-pIeasedto award a /

FREE>50 00GIFT GERTIFIGATE

to theFIRST CRANFORD BABY

—bum inCl.IASI CAU. US WITH BAIW'H WAMi:

TIMI: Of IHHTH & HOSPITAL BY l'/'Sl 81

• Arl.-r.."-'t ,„,,"„"•.- ,•» I...I li'.u, ••H'-''• -

PEB^HEIR27 l4. Union • Cranford •• 276 0881

reciictions werfe^lpproved. The proposedbudget-already includes the reduction 6f_three elementary and two high schoolteachers.

^-Jl'he-three-classesio-be-affectedliy-tiie^K-6 teacher reductibn next year wouldbe a fifth grade at Bloomingdale with 28students, asecond grade at Hillside with

*- i J In this season of happy

surprises and magic delight, we join Santa

in delivering best wishes to our many good

friends. Here's to a fun-packed holiday... .'-

and thanks for your faithful support!

RANKINFUEL

On the other side of. the ledger, theboard still has to add $15,000 to thebudget topay the township for u e of the

-field nouse facilities at Memorial Field. vHowever, the board agreed it would notsign the.lease with the township unlessassurances were received fansj could use vrest rooms next year when the Cougar

—football team plays-in-the-afternoonThe rest of the proposed c.uts •

presented by the administration were "$45,000 -for three secondary teachers',J$33,000 for three elementary teachers'less the salaries of three aides needed to

• help with the larger classes, and $5,198in ri-duced fringe benefits if all teacher

' Robert W. Tudor, son of Mr. and Mrs,.Rowland W. Tudor,.513 Claremont PL,has completed his para-medical studies^at Northeastern University, -Boston,Mass...He will begin.Jijs internship atNew England Memorial Hospital,Boston. Tudor will graduate in August,

j ^ t i l G C A N S E b g t ,Betsy':Hi'ggins7Watchung, formerly-of.

Cranford, was elected program~directorfor WCPE,- .the Union 'College studentowned and Operated, radio station. . .

MADRIGALS THEREThe 25th annual Singalong for county

employes is scheduled today at thecourthouse in Elizabeth. The madrigalSingers from Cranford High School areamong-the participants,

< «•«*•••

BEST

WISHES

Let your home beblessed with goodhealth and hap'fSi-ncss throughoutthe year. Thanks"

ALDOTVSERVICE CO.

2T8 Centennial Ave.Cranford -276-1160

Count our verywarm wishes fur a

holiday without measure, umonjyour tfifts this Christmas.

Hmiiks for heinjj[- our friend..

RICHARD HARTIG... PAINT& WALLPAPER

101 N. Union, Cranford•274-1540Mon-Sat 9 5. Open Thur tiV8:30. Closed Wed.

Closed Dec. 24; Open Jan. 5

May the magic of ChiTstmas unfoltf u/itHln-_ your heart and home bringing special joys and

remembrances. As .this,season of love andcheer arrives we extend warm wishes for, a"truly happy holiday.

Sincere thanks,

REEL-STRONGFUEL CO.

349 LEXINGTON AVENUE, CRANFORD * 276-09OO'frlmndly, Ompmndabl* S«rv(<« ilncm 1923'

»

Home 1B whoro hearts are...especially during Christmas.

"VOljr hope is that every homeis filled with Iho warmth ofthe true.Christmas 'spirit.

for letting us help you witha gloriously "memorable Christmas

to.the important people in your life.

FrornT^f of UsT To All of You

Our most sincere Wishes for

& a New Year filled withLovev Peace and Good Health!

Wo would liketo thank all

our friends andneighbors for

their patronage.

789-05X5

IMTIKH k N U I M S 1 1 LIQUORS•z NOH H I AVI;. <;AI(VH')OI> rftwiosiu LINCOLN HE.)

Write fi

Prescription ,„

• B»K

(f-t

.PHARMACY» M..SON

" '.O UNION »y[

Y<2CX.(JO. LJ)r\

•C) Kl l O ' U K I ". . . n

fr-v

-•4, 1

Befl/ n8

17 N. Union Ave. SCranford S276-0062 , S

" • . • • • • • • • • • • • ; " • ' • . . n

: i, * • • ' .

' - • J

Page 3: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

•v--s

' . V-.; •

"Page/4 CRANFQRD (N.j'.-l CHRONICLE Wednesday, December 24, 1980

Nature notes: 'holy days "

for rev jrfence and humility'- By KARRIS SWACKHAMER : meant complete. Plants and animals

idatlcame fo pass_wHil«: they w.er_e_ were revered and brought into the house

Viewpoint; governmentFor the first time in:a number of years, two members of Cranford'sgoverning body are completing two full terms simultaneously.

there,- that the day£ for Her bq bedelivered were fulfilledAnd shebrought

. forth her firstborn £on, and' wrappedhim in swaddling ciothes, and laid himin a manger, because there was noroornfor them in the inn." , ' .."

Legend tells IK that the day was cold.

the newborn babe warm.' As the sunsank below the hills, the" cold becamemore intense. Mary and Joseph dozedand finally sank into a fitful sleep. Thefire burned low and firgid air curledunder doors and through cracks.-

Up in the eaves, smal^ robins twitteredin their sleep. Finally the cold awakenedone of thentand he fluffed his feathers toinsulate his tiny body. Then he noticedthe Christ Child and watched the. Babe's

during these days of new hope after the r

passing .Qf; the winter solstice, The sunhad stopped in its journey south and hadbegun to climb ba.ck into our northernskies, once again. .

Among the holy plants was the holymallow. Today , we dream - over its

;ctm^Tr~thrrst»d-t^rt»iogs^:m<l--eH^i4-hollyhock. Greens are draped from ourmantles to remind us that life and leafwill soon return Wittv-the sun. Amongthese greens, is one with prickles and

As the first and only woman to serve the new poljce_chief. " _ r .on the .Township. Committee, Barbara . She.also feels Satisfaction with herBrande thinks women have made community involvement throughprogress-in local govejnnirient,here and appearances and liaison with variousshe hopes it won't bcariother 100 years .groqps. . • •before a •woma'n 'is elected to the It was,not easy at first for a Woman togoverning body. •"' • si)t in what had been an exclusive male

tho jnfr ":i ' enclave. •• Ship recalls that some

held various commissioner posts. Both retire from the TownshipCommittee at the end of this year. The Chronicle asked them toreflect on their experiences for the following-stories.

Dreyer:- " - - . • / . • ._For Henry Dreyer Jr.", the last of his other projects were given scrutiny,

six years on-the Township Committee " Hnp n( nrpvpr'e (fiorhp.c'Vinc hwn ihas been by far the best: .He was aminority Republican for. tlje. previousfive and 191)0 marked his advent to themajority andhis chairmanship of theTownship Committee, ' a job better

Collegians to lead Methodist . Obituariesrecognition service Sunday Raymond R.

little tireder" but says "I've enjoyed thesix years tremendously and -I'm feelinggood," And'after hor. experiencein locaTgovernm^tit7^h«4Jbinks she might like top goveriuiTe7ir7sh«JJtlinks sh g

red berries. We call it.holly but early .tackle.anolherpu^blicTrffiCft-.possibly theman called itholy " " $ t t A ^ s e m b l y providing she canman called it.holy.

There was even a hofy-'fish, holi butteto the Middle English. Whefi. we go to thefish market today we seldom think, ofthis when we buy halibut.-' .Animals th&tinian •domesticated'when

§tate~«'Assembly, providing^she canbalance -the job 'with her ah^ies asdirector of the IMon • County of]Catholic Community. Services,

She thinks the sunshine law has

colleagues,aawstaff were discomfortedand that she felt pressure-as-the-firstvejected wfonan to' "do it right,". Menfound-themselves offering pardons aftertelling off color jokes; Enroute homefrom a Trrent6n • meeting, one local"official ushered her into, a restaurant,

;e of. vWiisked her. out when they found it was a...topless pub, and drove her all the wayback to the Coachman Inn for lunch. But

"I went from the bottom to the,.top,',"he~riotes\ :'"" " . .. ' r

•••—No strident—'-par-tisan,-- Dreyernievertheless feels that "he has beeninstrumental in his party's resurgence.When he was first elected, he says, 'theparty was in shambles here, dividedinto splinter groups. "'Now it is onceagain a viable political organization,"

One of Dreyer's themes nas been thatthe tovyhship , has' voted for', manyimprovements-without consideration ofhow they \Vould be paid off. "In bondingwe put five percent down and neverthought about it again^" he'says. "Now_the process includes nethods of how wepay for ~ ' — —

•\ -

College and univejfsity students homefor the holidays will conduct the 10. a.m.worship service Sunday at the' CranfordUnited Methodist Church. This is theannual observance, of , Student

•r" Recognition Sunday. ' .,-.„.-1 1 Speakers will be Lisa DiTulio, a senior,. at^Drew University; David LeDuc, a

juniorat Drew, and Cathy Sheldon, a• senior a£ Stockton College. Liturgists

include Robert Bresenhan, a student atSeton Hall University; Paul Halligan,

He saysthat the government s. e^to pay more-attention to the downtown,which"was described by the new master-plan as~vulnerable to problems. "We've •-made- p'epple more aware of the \concerns," he>says. "The downtown'srise and fall affect us all:" . .

Dreyer ranks recycling as his biggest.

Cullt-ge;

Princeton University 'and Nan Davis,Rutgers. Ushers will be Tom lyetiuc,Union College; Wendy Conklin,, RhodeIsland University; George Frank, Jr.,Wurman College, and Susan Ashfield,Trenton.State. Serving as greeters willbe Lisa Campbell," Seton Hall, andPeggy Seymoiir, .University- of-Delaware. ' . '.•

These and other students- in thecongregation will be honored at a coffeehour reception in Randolph Hall

-fallow Itig imrservtcer

Calvary Lutheran offers communion

HaynesFuneral services for Dr. .

'Raymond R. Haynes wereconducted Sunday atCal.vary Lutheran ChurchDr. Hjjynes, 45, died Dec18 at Overlook Hospital,Summit.J' k

A native of Toledo, Ohio,fie moved tti Cranford fiveyears ago ^ fromC h a r l e s t o n , S . Climployiid as dtrwH"_r*uf _'manufacturing for tfuTMobay Chemical Co.,

Wednesday.. Decembar 24, 1980 CRANFORD <N.j: > CHRONICLE Page

B'nai BVith sets youth...appeal...brunchAlan Goldstein of'West-

field' will bjiJiotiorwi at aB'nai *' B'rith - YouthServices Appeal Brunch tobe held Jan. 11;. at theShackamaxon Country

- Club, Scotch Plains.B'nai B'rith Youth

Services" supports'" Hillelactivities on college'campuses and local youthactivities. "' •

Goldstein, an attorney,-is past president of- theJewish Federation ofCentral 'Mew Jersey, past

r—nf-

The guest speaker at the from at-fcerkkflg the MadridAppeal Brunch, will be Conference held,to.reviewWiljiam Korey, director1 of. the.implementii'tionof- theinternational policy •'"Helsinki 'accords onresearch for B'nai BJrjth human rights. ,,:

For reservations oradditional ^Tnformatioiiabout the Appeal Brunch,call Joe Fox, 233-3131. „

International, and formerB ' n a i . B '"r i t h.representative to the UN.Korey recently returned

tbreath as it hung white in the air. The, he ceased to be a nomad, wan.dering" fire • burned low though much of the ' -->--- •- •-<--- '-•-->' •• •-•• - -« »•--

the major recent impact in the way theVthat was an exception; after a year she

" fire • burned low though much of thewood was not*yet alight. The robin flewdown and fanned the coals with hiswings until new wood blazed and thebarn warmedagain.In order to createthedraft necessary tamake the fire leapand dance, the robin ventured close and

• the reflection of the flames shown red onhis breast..

from place to place a,nd living off theland, were granted holiness too. Thecattle that shared the barn . K jpl theNewborn' Child and -the -lambs (hataccompanied the shepherds play a parU--^^ body went into the bi-weekly publicin the legend that surround this event of—Ejessions-i'with a script," she says. _almost 2000 years ago. ' . . . - -

In 196£, Hal Borland

committee operates. Before it went in,the committee met in private caucusevery other week, and meetings "r.tanlonger and went off on tangete."differences were resolved in private and

and male members found her presencemore comfortable. '

Among frustrations, Brande cites aneed for "more readable street signs,recy*cluj£,( "we had a good volunteer

..program and moved backward") and

he says, "We can have good candidates^__disappointment. The township, programand the organization to give them-an d]eH*two-years ago.even.shot" at election.

Dreyer" first rah in 1974,. Whilecanvassing a neighborhood, he went tohis car to pick Up -eampaigtriiteratureand heard "8n tHe radio that. PresidentNixon had resigned'. He figured nobody

Christmas, "There waswrote • of

mysterv and

jssions-'with a script," she says.—_ - thG-town'sHnced-fora-rnaiorioodoutlet: wanted to^tolk^-to--aThe new, law opened the workshop ": s h e a i s 0 tJeiieves t n a t theTownshjip -cahdiaare7tha£day. so'Kejssions. "It got us to ^ iscussJh2ngs_ j^ f t e ( r^ f f i u i t ; | | L l y ^eir^ggraowntowH, 7T<rwaTeIected that fall b

'bSo touched by the _bj£d^_ihjefaiTwafrFeverwicertorTrTeI^T6Ieof life,

thoughUulnfasrthe~€hild^td~TIim that•—henceforth the breasts of all robins

everywhere would be red tocommemorate that first night.

""• Man found his first gods in nature. The-holy of holy days; or holidays as'wo callthem, foundits root in "whole" ana evenin "healthy." In those days, healthy

healthy, mystery and holy reverence,before man began saying he knew all theanswers. The basic mystery prevails,and on occasion man Can even admitthat he neither made the earth nor setthe stars in their courses. The holidayswe now celebrate are such an occasion,holy days,for-reverence and. humility."

stayed late-jand argourselves. Now when .we'i

—liStehThg to the public."

Brande notes that most, municipaldepartment heads have changed inrecent years, "by and large we madepositive steps," she said: "Almost allchanges , were bipartisan and

.unanimous. Applicants were judged onmerit and were approved not out of the

""political- process but out "of goodadministrative practices."

'•."" She feels that Cranford is lucky in itsmunicipal employes.jw.ho ia heLVJew doa good/job .and : lend .stability to;overnment. She leay,es feeling that

^ J 2 ^ f t e ( u i t | | L l y ^e^ggraowntowH,;. 'beiore, w e parking_pi?obl9ms, that it will ha<?e-to^the committee under- circumstigucd -among acjdf1>sf *wirh nool "financing and unusual for a Republican. For tlie•> r ^ m m w e r e - _ i _ • . . - _ . . r * - , , i . , . . •• . * : . ~ •:« t u « i —. ,u:~», . m ^

g

i

maintenance, and will have a strugglejust to provide services people expect."It'will take gutsy decisions," she saysof the future. ' .1 Brando's .election in 1974 helped the

••Democratic Party to its first majority:

status in the township's history. Lookingback, . she thinks that consensusdeveloped as a style for, decisionsmaking by the governing bodydeveloped under the . 104-yearRepublican regimes and was- continuedby the Democrats, .". She thihTcs^~Granford voters elect-"people for community service, "not tog t

iieir-jobsare-not-easiGr-rpar-tly-beeaus'erf i i t f f T t

\n a dour economic season, underscore the trend toward of-Cranford nevertheless hasrs6rne~^ffces instead^of manufacturing,

so"we're callingitihe ollice in-

r p yof growing interference from Trenton•which is negative, not positive. Oneexam' "which

awkward, she saysr, because, manycitizens: who are elected-are indeed

but camo on to'.under - circumstances

firsttime in the township's 104 year's,Democrats held a' majority, which theyretained -until this year. Dreyer nowbelieves the Republicans have achievedunity and began to establish a crediblerecord in. office:

Dreyer feels that over the years he hastried to make reasonable decisions for-the township, regardless of partisanpolitical considerations.Hefeels that he's •tried to think, out positions carefully,.avoided undiie influences, from specialinterest groups and been consistent.

He also takes-pride in the sale andpe'rffling development. joilihe__Cleieland T

•hool site. "It will du ulutrtrrupllft the

"I wjsh I'd donemore, " he^ays. "I still think it can bedone." •• •

In, his final year, he felt that he had alot more input into government. As aminority member, he says,, one isrelegated to approve or disapprove ofppliciesyand-programs-As a- majority;-memher, he f r i d A i l f b l t o

The Sacrament of Holy Communionwill be offered at the 11 o'clock serviceat Calvary Lutheran Church Sunday.The Rev. Paul Baranek will preach. Heis director of-the LCA's Designated Ad-vance. Gifts (DAG) program and hastraveled; extensively.

Sunday Cliurch School is-held at 9:45a.m. with the Adult Forum meeting in

the lounge at the same hour." Several^members of the church who visited.Oberammergau and saw the PassionPlay, will be sharing their pictures,slides and experiences with the AdultFdfum. All are welcome. First worshipservice is at 8:30 a.m. , •

There is child care for small children•from 9:30 to 12:30 p.m.

Union, for 12 • D r VISITOR — Rev. Bob Longaker, right, pastorHayncs was a gradate of emeritus of First Presbyterian Church, gavethe University of Toledo annual Christmas luncheon talk lo Crantordand received' his PhD' in 5 r t a r K C J u £ l a s t W e e k ' H e was. Introduced by1%2 from the University of Glen' Qusch, progratn chairman. /

p d pEnianu El, Westfield, anda charter member of theWestfieki-MountainsideLodge of B'nai •B'rith.'-1

Kappaare

Trinity sets New Year'fe JEve partyTrinity Church; North and,, Forest The traditional ''Ushering in the New

avenuesj-announces its own program to Year" partywJJl beheld Dec. 31 at 8:30keep its parishoners^safe and o f f t h f f * t

direetions and as mayor, able to setpolicy. In his •view a mayor, who inrecent years has served one year in thatpost,'doesn'-t have much time to getthings dene, and Dreyer thinks mayors.might serve longer. • . ' .,

As for committee jobs, he feels sixyears, or two terms, is plenty. He thinkspeople "burn out" after that time. Thehours'are long, on top of. a regular job.He found himself'averaging about fourmeetings a week >• as mayor, plusceremonial chores, consultations at the -Municipal Building orat his farm duringthe day, and reading reports.

Dreyer feels th&t^ the consensus:pattern that dominates~lhe legislativeproeeiSSlTCT&^eherally serves the town

l l H f ) r r V ?

KeepMgh\

positive business news.United: Cotlnties_ Tru^t Com-

pany is shifting its operationscenter here and will build a con-temporary large structure to-house it. The bank, longestablished in Cranford,.has..'en-_joyed growth from -beyondUnionto two other counties-and-its additional presence through

appearance of downtown," he sa^s. He. .„ ..^.,,*,, ..„. ^ o . . . . . . ^ - - - - - also" believes-the government has takenpie: a state-imposed health .officer politicians.-.However-r-partisan politics^, positive, beginning steps to,.alleviate) the township has to underwrito. does n0^ surface, much in Cranford's parking problems and accomplished the

highways on New Year's Eve.

Dreyer to address

Adult Forum "The Adult Forum of. the First

"Presbyterian" Church opens its programfor the New Year on Sunday, Jan. 4 witha discussion with. Henry Dreyer Jr. swhose"term as mayor of Cranford endsJan. 1. Dreyer will present his viewson-old and new issues facing the com-munity in the foreseeable future"

The,, meeting wjLL take place in thechurch's youth center beginning at 9:45a.m. All church members ~a"YitfgeneraLpubIic-areiinvited7 [.._

J., both;, atmother, Mrs.Zelner Haynes,Tex.; a brother

his wife,Reau

Kevin JEL, Parnela

hisLoretta

Houston,the Rev:

MEN'S BREAKFASTThe Christian Business

Melvin, both of Kenil- retired in 1975 from the Men',s Committee ofAmer i can Fore-i'gn Central New .Jersey1 isSteamship Co., New York having a men's breakfastas assistant treasurer at the Perkin's Pancake

supervisor at the Gerteral after 29 years of service. House,-960 U.S.* Route ;>2,Motors

Melvin, a Brickresident, Vas a

Tfiere will be a movie, "Bed-Knobsand Broomsticks," followed by acandlelight Eucharist at 11:30. p.m.•Then, comes^ breakfast an the GuildR o o m . ' • • • * . ' - '

All members of the Church and theirfamilies and friends are invited to par-ticipate in the celebration.

Osceola sfervice

own

was a veteranKorean conflict..

His funera 1- was

s assembly plant in He was past president of North- Plainfield, on Jan.i for 26 years. He the National Association 10 at 8 q:m. The. speaker

in

"Turning OverA Nfe<v=Leaf,..Againl''from the text 2 Corinthians 5:il-21 hasbeen chosen by thtepastor as his sermontopic for the 10 a-.m,^worship serviceSunday. A time for coffee and fellowshipwill take..place inJBellowship-Hall-invmediately following the ser-vice^unday JuistinoV. Labbate

La.vaco.-Tox,;" i*"pd threesisters, Mrs. GladysTober, Swanton, Ohio,Mrs. Virginia Reinecke,Corpus Christi, Tex!,-andMns. Sa'rah Putmari ,^ A s s u m P t l 0 n ; ^Houston internment in Greenwdod

Arrangements were "Cemetery, . Manasquan.completed by the Gray' •• „ ' ,Memorial Funeral Home:- "jYfr|B. Hf lH-SC

KENILWO'RTH-- ' '•:.Funeral services for Mrs.Meta Haase,'83, were heldMondayat the MastapeterSuburban, Roselle Park^

rs. Haase died Saturclay

of the of Water. Transportation will be Bob McHugh.Accounting Officers. He All'men. are urged to

held—was- World-"War II -ttovy- attendsthisJii^akfaiLjxnd

Christmas Eve

Candlelight Commonion' • - .. ' - A t ' ' :.;•,

Saturday frorrT "the veteranMastapetet Funeral- the Sea Bees:.Homo, Roselle Park. Afuneral mass was offered

the Church of thefollowed by

Members are reminded toSurviving are his wife, bring at least.one non:'

Mrs. Irene Waldschlagel. committed guest to hear of

First Presbyterian Cherch!t Union & Spriigfield Ave.

December 24, 19180 'N 9:00 P.M. - WESTMINSTER

Solbist^girrenivrclver .U-M.^-M. -CHANCEL

' C-HOIR & HANDBELLS

Soloist; Ann Weeks

IntermentOhio.

took place, in

JuistinoJLahbate

Cramer; a son; Allen ofBraintree, Mass,; adaughter, Barbara athome,' and a grandson. •

In lieu- of /flowerscontributions maj be,made lo the -South OceanCounty Hospital MemorialFund.

Mr. McHugh'stestimony. .

Christian

Shall Leadjhen\'H. Pike. Pastor

the School classes for all ages are provided—at-9 a.m.-on^Sunday-mornings—

dustrial park. It 's zonedROKresearch office jndustrial)and there is some research be-ing done there.too. Altogether,the park, by any name, is doingquite well.

Further-west on Raritart, a

Another:: the limitation on sale ofmunicipal property to expand townspending limits: •„ •

Brande was1 instrumental inestablishing a local consumer affairsoff ice ....and getting senior .citizenprograms moving through a Committeeon Aging. She thinks advisory

government except on appointments.Brande feels that the consensus processhelps members work for the communityrather than for personal notoriety orparty interests, and that it helps producebetter legislation and programs. -

the-sizeablenoperata^J S d t t h t h b h d

Brande was mayor in 1977 and found_ _ ihTrT^TenTomlf n-eq u i reinerii t"s, e x t fa

computer—terminal—sales—firm—committees.are-nbtusedsufficientLy.and ?P.eetings -and policy leadership, •-will rpmnrfpl thp nlH ARA should have close continuing contact especially in that-year when there was a Policywin i c m u u c i m e uiu t\i\t\ w j f h ^ governing body, transition in administrators, all made priorities

purchase of the Sordill property - ohAlden with a view not only to acquisitionbut to long-range development.

Dreyer says he has.tried this year toattack the basic concepts of localgovernment rather-• than the fringes.Thus, he says, he tried to make thegoverning'body more of a policy unit andto make departments responsible and

committee candidates not. asprofessional politicians but as people

to the community. He saysrhvays—hrolced—forward—tcr

government meetings and ranks hispeers as all having been "top quality."'•'Cranford's been fortunate" in itscommittee members, he says.

For the future, he sees a necessity forthe town to focus "on basic- plantmaintenance,, a business property

•••••••••••••••>••••••-»' FULL SERV1CE-

CAR WASHIncludos windows insido & out, intoriorvacuuming, hund wipinQ, Rog. •$4.25

HOT WAX

Eaton

welcome.Its developments-just off the

Garden State Parkway on Com-merce Drive will be the thirdnew major addition in that

. neighborhood in two years." MeeRer Sharkey Moffatf 'justcelebrated the opening ,oLJtshandsome new quarters andCali Associates is-nearing com-pletion of its'building across theroad. Modernization of the newheadquarters of U.S. Lines tookplace last year and the big plant

, at 1 Baltimore Ave. wasrWamped this year, A new

Hesidents in that neighborhoodhave tilted'for a long time withthe Veltiding machine businessand its trucks. So they will bepleased with the switch to officespace, a remodeling and a clos-ing.jof_ajrp.a.d connection to Colin"Kelly.:.—. - .* -^—r-.-jn_the, town center, the "see-through"-gutting of ClevelandSchool marks the passage of theschoolhouse into a shopping andoffice' complex. The architec-tural transition is from Vic-torian schoolhouse to a colonial-

She leaves office expressing pleasurein progress in these areas:- floodcontroKprimarily Brookside andLenape' basins)-, communitydevelopment projects (especiallyhousing rehabilitation on. JohnsonAvenue), the new firehoqse, completion .of the long sought senior citizen housingcenter, review of updated- job.

-d«aeriptions and. pay scales for non-

the job, more time-consuming. She hadmore flexibility to cope that year _.___,_ „ . .. .because of a job assignment to the local _and municipal.managers. Top priorities»*. r. . / - . . : I J . . . i n c l u d e d t n e Brookside'basin and

downstreamimprovements-^

Mt. Carmel Guild.This year, for the first time, she was a

minority member. That's easier, shesays,-because the responsibilities for

maintenance code, parking, recycling,dny^to^day operationgj swim pools.J'he most pressing problem.

making focused' on setting -now is money, he says, citing statefor decision "so everybody ' restrictions nnd-hurlgct^ry—rpstraints^

know s where we're going," A list was . This will become pronounced in 1982developed and refined by the committee- When - Orange swim pool r,debt_ . i :„:„„, „ „ - . . ... :„„:.:„„ paydowns must start. He also sees a

union municipal employes and choice of "the bottom line."

Gallows Hilla new . personnel

ordinance and a'new plan for paying offprograms- are usually carried by. long term bonded indebtedness. Thernajority-members.Sheloun±it..toughcr capital impmyeihenLprogram-Eeceivcd-toJuein'the majorityandTfesponsibler for-rmore.attention^through Planning;Board

confusion in local ordinances and thinkscodification might be in ordem-

Dreyer says he will miss, -theinvolvement \>\xt looks forward todevoting more time with his wife and

illness. A 60-yeaf residentofXranford, Mf7t;abbate

. was born, in Montefer^|.—tantCrsftlXaly-,—He—was—i

construqtion

' •"•• Reg. 41.OT5 ~~~

UNDERCARRIAGEWASH &RUST—I N H I B I T O R . »•«"•• * I -2B

ALL 3 REG. '6..50

re t i reeworker.

He was a- communicantof St. Michael Church,where a funeral mass wasoffered Saturday. Inter-

.>ment-was..in-SL-GertrudeCemete ry , C o 1 on ia .Funeral arrangemmentswere by the DooleyFuneral Home.

—Col—Wilfred PrJEatoni. . . Vr , ,v. US!. Army,: retired, died

.—Mrs . Haase came to th.s- F r i d a F i f t Toms- Rivercountry from her rlat.ve. C o m r r | u n i ^ Hospital. HeGgl?aany46yearsago:and h ^ i l ^ ^

brief illness.

settled in Kenilworth Her , i v e d i n Cranforclfor manyhusband was Albert , ^ f moving- toHaase, who died in 1967.She is survived by ab r o t h e r , H e i n r i c hKaminski, a resident ofthe borough.

Arthur C.Cramer

review, and swim pool financing andwhen he entered politics: He plans to'seewhat I've missed in six years."

As we were

type school and nearby retailmedical officebuflding-has-been—buildingT^heplans-are-noHinalapproved for construction along^ jyel but the progress toward a

B Arthur and Hazel Hurditt5 years ago

Twenty-page book about Cranford,England, is on dispjai'at library. Copysent by author, tMaTfaim ElizabethN uhn7~toiocal-Rotary^31(!Hall c,elebrat£s his 40th anniversary

V, ;i0 years. 'jPerrnit granted to Frank Byrnes to

move his house from 447 North Ave. E,,to 51 John,'St...Permit granted bytownship committee-toJVictbr Shaheen

alterations to the formerGray home. It will continue to be used as

3L TlaritarTRoad nearby,—lhe-not- hew^^Gleveland-Plazaz^:ih"ow"s:—^wlth^Cjacon-Research-ahd-Enginoering a dwelling in therear:--of the-s"tores.,Tax-—~so-old industrial park is doingquite-well. The latest additions

tasteful consideration—for-town's needs.

Co. He works as a research associate in collector's salary raised fcorn $4,500 to

Community calendar

-._ r \

Saturday, Dec. 27: 9 a.m. • 4 p.m.;paper drive, Cranford High Schoolparking, lot, sponsored by schoolchoir.Monday, Dec. 29: 9:30 a.m. - noon;Vacation day activities, grades K-3,Hillside Avenue School; 10 a.m. - 3p.m.: Union College painting class•for seniors, Comrmmity Center; i - 3•p.m.; Vacation day activities,grades 4-6 ' at Hillside AvenueSchool; 4:30 p.m.; •iry_board ..Center-,

meetings; 7 p.m.: Horror movie,"Night of the Living Dead,"Community Center.Tuesday, Dec. 30: 9:30 a .W- noon:Vacation day activities, grades K-3,Orango Avenue School; l - ;i p.m.:Vacation day activities, grades 4-6,Orange Avenue School; 7:30 p.m.:Concert by Fallen Angel,Community Center. 8 p.m.:Heritage Dancers meet, Community

the government research lab at Linden.10 years

Township Committee namesRecreation Consultants, Inc., .SpringHouse, Pa., consultants for secondmunicipal swim pool.'

20 years -Ira Dorian presented a' silver- bowl by

the Rotary Club for his six years ofserving on the Township Committee...Joint Committee for EncouragingCandidates, for4 the Board of Educationwas formed in 1954 with 13organizations represented. In I960 ithas 16 organizations and its president isNelson Lightcap...Cranford Realtorsinstalled Henry Detering president andthe Women's Association installed Mrs.Mary Knierim...Teachers to .receive

-.$200-to4600 in raises...Temple B c t h . E l - s t o l e - m o n e r - a - t m s n , l g h t a n a a s n i r t

officially will open its doors Monday at J r o m a cranford milk man. The items338 Walnut Ave. were recovered. '

5.0 yearsHistory of T.B. Christmas sea,ls: In

1903 a. postal clerk, Eivar Holbell, atCopenhagen made the suggestion duringChristmas week of charity stamps.. Acommittee was formed and in 1904 thefirst stamps were, issued bearing thelikeness of the deceased wife of KingChristian IX, Queen Louise. Two millionwere first issued, then another fourmillion and over five million were sold.The money was to be used for theerection of a tuberculosis,hospital.

$5,000 and township engineer's, $5,500 to$7,000...H. Russell IVIorss Jr. deeds to S.& H. Bronze Bearing property in NorthAvenue old hear old Alex Steward Roadfor $50,000. (Now site of M, Bergen and_Sons Tobbacco, 344 North Ave. Er)

40 years.. Permission given to G.B. McDiarmidto change* his house at' 302 Walnut Ave.from one family to two family..-Dedication of the Jfames Warner Plazawill be Jan. 1, 1941 with the unveiling ofa bronze plaque...The Home Gliard willbe organized in January with three.conipanies comprised of those'"overdraft age and one company with thoseunder draft age..,Civic' and BusinessAssociation will hold home decorationscontest...A Jersey City youth admits he

shirt

CARWASKT

South Avenue E. ~Cranford • 272-7230

NOW 5.95 nWITH COUPON • EXPIRES 1/7/81

! • • • • • • • • • • • • • !

lil

We wish allour friends aseason filled

with-happiness—and good

cheer.-Sincerely,

The Chronicle staff

¥•

t

. . / •

I.• • • » ' • - J

REGION BAND MUSICIANS — Fourteenmembers of the Cranford High School band wereselected for the All-State Region II North band, or-chestra and wind eijpemble at auditions pec. 13 inHazlet. They will begin rehearsing for the regionconcert on Sunday, Jan. 18 at Trenton State Col-lege at 3 p.m.,Musicians are, from left, seated, vKathy Meade, Susan Lagrlola, Jill Pinto, Leslie

-I

Hunt, Lori F^rrante (orchestra), Donna Rappoqcio,all clarinet; standing,Xarol Marclno (wind ensem-ble); Stephanie Lange and Dave Pringle, Frenchhorn; Patti Lee, English horn; Gary Gross, baritone

.horn; Jeffrey Phillips and Rudl Schubert, alto sax-ophone. Not pictured is Steve Gorny, clarinet.CHS instrumentalists consistently place a largenumber of students in region groups.

Stuiilt AwbreyBrvrrley Awbrey

Kunulle C.rotiuMury Hrcker

• Mlchrli* nt-riutrliiElular V. WallKully IUUIMIAudrey HeckJean Illy Die

rmifqrb CfjrcmicleKdltur1'ubrtnhfr.AilvrrtlslH

Newn KdllorHi-nlilrml AdMunufler

A(lvrrllslii((

Director

I'rwluctlon MunuKrrCirculation Mutiu^trCluanllitMl Ada

The Cranl'ord Chroujclo is; published1.y Thijrsduy by /Awbrey, Coin/

t i 4 N ) lJftmuU!atiQtm4lwNow,)^rHwyl>ic,, n cor-|X)ralion ;it 21-2:1 Al<len Street, CranfordN:J.070iev.usHS i:«j iioo. .

Memlk-'C Audit fturenu of Circulation,'riew Jersey Vrv.nn Association, CrunfordGnamber of Commorco, Natiomil Par.ssAssoolution.

Subscription rates by mail prepaidone year, within Union County $9.00, oui-ofutate, $12.00. • . '

All nuiterliil copyrighted 19110 'byA.CN.J. Inc. Official newspaper forCraiiford, Kenilwbrtli and Gorwood, Se- 'cond Class Postage; Paid at .CranfordNew Jersey, 07016, Tele C20i) 271M1000.

RICHARD SHEINBLATT, D.D.S.,B/

•Generql Dentistry'

/Drtho'donticseriodontics

EndodonticsReconstructive Dentistry

•Inhalation Sedation(Nitrous Oxide)

•Intrqvehous Analgesia

. Hours.By Appointment

Richard Sheinblatt, D D.S.,221 Chestnut Street_RoseMe, New Jersey O72O32451615

by three brothers, John ofCranford, Vincen/.o inItaly and '"'-"Victor inArgentina. His wife?*Mrs.Rose' Scioscia Labbate,died 14 years ago.

WilKam

Melvin Sr.KENILWORTH-

William J. Melvin Sr., 50,died. Deo. 17 in PointPleasant Hospital after abrief illness. He was thefather of William J.Melvin Jr..and Miss Linda

Arthur C. Cramer, 69,died Sunday at the SouthOcean County . Hospital,Manahawkin, after a longillness. His funeral is at 10a.m. today at the DooleyFuneral Home, 218 W,North Aye.,, with the Rev.Paul Letiecq, associate

years before moving-Toms-River two years ago.

Born in Massachusetts,Col. Eaton graduated fromthe Massachusetts insO-tute of Technology in 1930 .and serv.ed 32 years in the•Army, retiring in 1968! Hew a s ' s u b s e q u e n t l yemployed as a civil'engineer by RaymondI n t e r n a t i o n a l I n c . ,Houston, Texas, retiring in1977.

Surviving are his wife,Mrs. Linda Stone Eaton;two sons, Douglas W., Ft.Lauderdale, Fla., and•Anthony, W\ -/-Water-b h M t d h

RENIJA NEW CHEVY OR OTHER

~ FINE G/WL CAR FROMAll cars fully equippedRent it here . . .

leave- jyhere.-:Froo wbrid wide-. reservation servtce-

or month

GREC01GARAGI

Avts features CJM. cars

We try harder. 3 0 1

-272-6Q90

South AveCranford

borough, Mc^jwo daugh-pastor ~6f "-tKe^^-frSt—tensT"•-MrsT—Gitrda*--1TZr-Presby.terian Church Connors, Madison andofficiating. Interment Mrs. QaroL E. Kramp,follows in Ocean View—Denver, Colo., and threeCemetery, Staten Island, grandchildren.

Mr. Cramer was'born in»St, Louis, Mo. and lived inCranford 30 years beforeymoving to Manahawkinabout two years ago. He

Col. Eaton's funeral withfull military honors was.conducted yesterday a_tArlington National Ceme-tery, Virginia.

DEDICATED TO DIGNIFIEDSERVi€E SESGE 1897T"—

C\l. D I R E C T O R S

KWKiMI TniTVFJK •PAVIIJH.CHABIKI;

VVI I.I.I AM A. DOYLE

VVLST.FIELD: 31H Eas t Broad St.. F r e d l f . t i r a y . J r . Mgr.- 2:w-0l43i

CRANFORDH2 Springfield Ave., William A. Doyle. Mgr., 27(i-0Oi)2"

LEGALST"TbWNSH!PrOf^CFfAFFORD

CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY—%, ORDINANCE NO. 00.15

B O N D O R D I N A N C EP R O V I D I N G FOB THEACQUISIT ION OF A , , N E WA E R I A L E"QU>PPEO F I R EENGINE DY THE TOWNSHIP OF

Law.Section, (a). The Improvement

hereby authorlzecLand purpose lorthu f inancing of wh ich saidobligations are to be Issued Is theacquisition of new and additionalfire fighting equipment for thoTownship consisting of ono (1) new

CRANFORD, .IN TUE COUNTY—aoris l—oqulppod-—IIre onglneOF UNION, .NEW JERSEYAPPROPRIATING JI90.000.THEREFOR AND AUTHORIZINGTHE ISSUANCE OF S1B0.900BONDS OR INOTES OF THETOWNSHIP FOR FINANCINGSUCH APPROPRIATION.

BE IT ORDAINED BY THETOWNSHIP COMMITTEE OFTHE TOWNSHIPOF CRANFORD,IN THE COUNTY OF UNION,NEW JERSEY (not loss than twothirds of all the members thereol.af(Irmatlvulv coricurrtno), • ASFOLLOWS:

Section I. Tho Improvementdescribed In Section 3 ol this bondordinance Is hereby authorised as a(K'noral Improvement to be madeor acquired by Tho Township of

' Cranford, In tho' County of Union,_N:tw Jjme.v.. 'Fat ttie ii

Improvement or purpose stated In Isinot a current expense and Is ssaid Section 3, there Is hereby property or improvement which thoappropriated the sum of J1VO,000 . Township may lawfully acquire or

together with all. original tind .appurtonjint equipment, all asshown orrand In accordance with-the specifications therelor on file Inthe olf Ice of tho Township Clerk andhereby approved.

(b). The estimated maximum'1'amount of bonds or noTos to beIssued for said purposo Is $180,900.

(c). Tho estimated cost ofsaldpurpose If 1190,000, tho excessthereof over the said estimatedmaximum amount of bonds ornotes to be Issued therefor belno theamount of tho said 19,100 downpayment for said purpose.

Section 4. Tho followingadditional matters are hcrobydetermined, declared, recited andsti/ted:

(a). The said purposo describedIn Si'rtlfin 3 nl thK hnnrl nrrllnanrn

ordinance wi l l bo within all dobtlimitations prescribed by said Law., { d ) . An aggregate amount no*

exceeding $12,000 for Intorcst onsaid obligations, costs of. Issuingsaid obligations, engineering costsand other Items of expense listed inand pormlttod undor soctlon 40A:2JO.of said Law may be Included as'par t . of the cost of saidImprovement and is Included In theforegoing ostlmato thereof.

Section 5. The full faith and creditof the Township are hereby pledgodto tho punctual payment of theprincipal of and Interest on the saidobligations authorised by this bondordinance. Said obligations shall bedirect, uryimltod obligations of thoTownship, and tho Township shallbe obligated to lovy ad valoremtaxes upon all the taxable proportyw i th in the Township for rtn;,payment of said obligations undInterest thoroon without l imitat ionof rate or amount.

Soctlon 6. Tho capital budget ofthe Township Is horoby amended toconform with the provisions ol this

-henti ordinance to the ukfgnt of any

DOOLEYHMERAL HOMF

77A-07.S.S

A Funeral Home . . . ofhomelike atmosphere, cqrn-pletely modern, air conditioned," off street parking.facilities.

' alsoDOOLEY COLdNIAL HOME556 Westfiaid Ave., Westfield

' ' 233-0255

said sum .bulno Inclusive ofappropriations heretofore madetherefor and .Includlno^the sum of19,100HS tho down payment for saidimprovement or purpose requiredby law tind now available thereforby vlrtuo of provision In apreviously adopted budget orbudgets of ttip-Township for down,payment or -for capitalImprovement purposes.

Section 2. For the financing ofsaid improvement or purpose and

as'a penoral Improvement,cind'no part of the cost thereof hasbeen or sha|l be spoclaliy-jistessedon property specially benefitedthereby.

(b). The period of usefulness ofsaid purpose within the limitationsof said Local Dond Law, accordingto .thu reasonable... Hie., thereofcomputed from the date of the saidbonds authorized by this bondordinance, Is ten VI0) years.

(c). The supplemental debt>to moot thu part o( said $1VO,000 statement requlfodby said law hasappropriation not provided~lor by b~ecii~dUIV made and filed In ,theapplication, horounder of said down o((lcu ol the Township Clork and apayment, nuootlable bonds of the complete executed duplicateTownship are hereby authorised to thereof has been filed In the office

of the Director of the Division ofLocal Government. Services In

pbo Issued In tho principal amount of$100,900 pursuant to the Local-BondLaw of New Jersey, In anticipation Department of Community Affairsof thu Issuance of said fands"and To' of the 5|ate of NeW Jorsey, andtemporarily finance said such statement show* that theImprovement or purpose, gross debt of the Township asnegotiable notes of the Township In defined In said Law Is Increased bya principal amount not exceeding thu authorization of the bonds and11UO,900 are hereby authorized to be notes provided for In this bondIssued pursuant to and within the ordinance by $180,900, and the saidlimitations prescribed - by said obligations authorized by this bond

Inconsistencies herewith.

Section 7. This bond ordinanceshall take effect twenty (20) daysafter the first publication thereofafter final adoption, as provided bysaid. Local. Bond Law.

HENRY A DREYER. JrChulrmun of tho

—Townohlp CornmlttooATTEST:Wtmloy N,;Phllo ^Townahlp Clork

STATEMENT""% 'Tho bond ordinance published

horowlth htia.bflon flnully adoptedon Ducombor 23, 1080 and tho twen-ty day porlod of llmltutlon withinwhich a suit, nation ol proceeding.

..QUUStlonlng the validity of ouch ordlnunce can be commenced, aH pro-vided In the Locul Bond Law, huubegun to run from tho duln of thefirst publication of thla.btatemunt.

WESLEY N. PHILOTownahlp Ckirk

Dutwd: December 24, 1080F«J: % 47.68 -

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-i -26-sotmrAvr.EASTCRANFORD. NJ . , .^

1-eprOSeiUln^ , ' 2 7 6 - 3 0 0 0 . ••VS.OOO.Y rlyU.nrwaW.Term, 10Yr.

T Thr TravrlcrH Insur imce Company .and Its Ali'llhjtrd Coii \p;uilr«.llarllorcl, Cniincotlcul OBI IS

THE TRAVELERS J

:""

•-''.;"•X...-:

Page 4: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

• J . . _ • ! . .

i S..

'age (i CRANFORD (N.J..) CHRONICLE Wednesday, December '24, l'JHO

.*».

Judith Sil^erman to marry in July

Gaeta-LearyThe -marriage of J a y no El len Leary. to

Louis Daniel G a eta took' place Nov. 2(1 atSt, Michael Church' with a reception atthe-Coa.chnian Inn . ' •_ •

TTTe bride is the-daughter of Dr. and

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Silvernuin, -145Manor Ave., announce the e n g a g e m e n tof their daughter , .Judith, to LawrenceSletzinger, son of Or.-and Mrs. MeyerSletzinger, North. Plainfield.

Miss- S i lve rman is a .student ,in theG r a d u a t e • Sctiool.,..of Bus iness Ad-ministration at BostoVi pnil 'ersi ty. ShehoTds a bachelor of a r t s -deg ree from

Cllof l f l i ' HPf* ' g -' f[' ' ' 'rln:tt(* of

Phoenix Productions A4 The

CRAfG THEATER

~. Her f iancejs a cum' laude gradua je ofTufts University and has a m a s t e r ' sdegree in electrical engineering fromColumbia Un ive r s i t y . l ie is chiefengineer of Harva rd Medical School'sultra-sound laboratory in the depar t -merit of radiology. ' '

A July wedding is planned.

CANDYSTRIPERS u e ' K h ' r e n b e c k ,

Crahfowl, is among 11-c-a r\A y-^Lr-Lp-ex-S a~LMemorial Genera lJlo.spi.tal to receive., anaward", for' 100 hours of

G Kon< Ploco Blvd. Summit

•"p" PRESENTSA Marvelous Reproduction Of '- •

The Musical

"FAWNY"FRIDAY & SATURDAY PERFORMANCES

• 8 :40" P . M . Thru Jan. 10thBRING THE WHOLE FAMILYJ* •

e Grc^up D i s c o u n t s A v a i l a b l e ' *

.RESERVATIONS &. ' .' , : 2 7 3 - 6 2 3 3INFORMATION CALL. , . . ' ' . . . . 9-5WEEKDAYS..

volunteer service. party to vetsMembers of Capt.N^R.TPiske Post '! . '«,

7Vcttrratia^>f-PomgH4!tor.'i,-nnfl the Anx-

Mrs'. Ralph:J .Leary. .211 Oak Lane, andthe groom is the son of Mr. and MrsSalvatore Gaefa; Summit.1 Msgr. JohnF. Davis performed the double ringceremony. »

The wedding da te also marked theMth weddii/g anniversary of the bride 'sgra'ndp«refnts, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph MU&ry,"5l> Elizabeth Ave. .' Y

Janet Ann Leary was her' sister'smaid of honor. .The brjde's other sistersMaureen Cecchetti, Kathleen andPatricia Leary, were bridesmaids alongwith' Linda Gaeta, the groom's sister.Emmy Francen, cousin of the bn'de,Was the.flower girl.

".v'Ah'th.ony ' Accorsy, Warren was thebest man. EJshers were Salvatore GaetasndRalph--John-JLeary-,- brothers of thenewly weds, Joseph F. Downey HI,Mountainside, cousin of .the bride, andRichard Cecch'elli, Mendham, brother-in-lawiof the bride"

Mrs. Gaeta graduated from MotherSeton High School and was a student atkean.Colle.ge. She is attending RutgersUniversity and is employed.ircinventorycontrol' at Tenncco Chemical,Piscataway. .

".- Her husband, a graduate- of SummitHigh School, -is employed as alaboratory-technician with EngiehardIndustries-, Newark. He ".plays' football'with the fey^

The couple are residing in North. Plainfield following a honeymoon trip toSt. Thomas. " , • .'

WDMI EN IN-QOVERNMENT - The women at 8 Springfield Avenue (themunicipal building) were guests of the LeaaiiQ of Women Voters an-nual "evening with" Dec. ii,.Promrleft-are Mar on Bonnell registrarvital statistics; Mary O'Hidy, senior account clerk for the jownsh ptreasurer; ' Harriet LoW,. deputy township clerk,, .and EvelynChamberlain, court clerk,., :, .

DeRernardis :eyes TV show

Births•iliary sponsored a bingo par ty for pa-tients q), the East Orange VeteransHospital'Dec. 9. The local post suppliedp r i z e s in the fo rm of c o u p o n sredeemable at the hospital canteen.

Harry Snyder, past •commander, andFrances Boyk\ auxil iary.viccprcsident,were 'chairmen. Also at tending were

: Minna Sriyder, Pat Korner, Carol Sier,Edward Hughes, Peter Sudia, PeterMurray, S.1 Rossi and-W. Wronko.

.:- The Tost posi-has.-been-entertaininghospitalised veterans—more than 30.years . / -* ' . • — '.

Mark anrJ'JeaneUe Strattori7315 Ter-rillRd.;Fanwood, announce the birth oftheir first child, Kelly Marie, Dec. 14 at.Muhlenberg Hospital. Maternal grand-parents are Mr: and Mrs.-Philip F.Kearney, fi-W, Lincoln Ave., and pater-nal grandparents are Mr. and -Mi's:William Stratton,125 Dartmouth Rd. •;••-.

" Bob DeBernardis, former* Cranfordresident, is on his way t9 making a namefor himself in the entertainment world.'

After producing and starring inseveral variety shows, the dancer andmodel Has-been asked by New Jersey,Cablevision-to-star in a pilot for a varie-ty show with ' an • eye for national

"Anytime you're ready," the pr6-ducers told Bob, who selected him after,seeing him host several local varietyshows including one for the recent NewJersey League of Municipalities; conven-tion in Atlantic City.

Bob, 25,.is in the processthe show and deciding on the format.

In the meantime, the former realestate salesman is operating a dry

Senior citizens

cleaning business' in: Raritan, Jives inPiscataway, and is working as a-mocjelfor Barbizon Agency in Highland Park.

His agent, Donna Eastman, says he isbecoming noted for mannequin androbot modeling and lids developed hisown distinctive style of jazz robot danc-

, ing and mime. - • -

"hosting the Miss' New Jersey Shore"Pageant and starring in a fashion showand dinner production last night at ClubBene. .

Ms. Easttjian, who is eagerly awaitingthe "Bdb DoBernardis Show" on TV, is

The~ehtertafneP's~No7 n5a53teirr"HeVa-local boy determined to make a namefor himself," she said. "He's got moxieand determination."

Wednesday, December 24, 1980 CRANFORD 'N .1. / CHRONICLE P a g e 7

Mary Etetfi Hogan sets Invitational, .school records; team excells in relays

Cold fails to fazeCHS girls on the track Winning K ^ ^

i>'..« ..r.>.r>.<-..<• .'«••>.'&< s medlev r e l av - two 220s and a nuarter1""" -1 . ^ ^~~ —~ ,~. M- ^ . —— . -• . ' wBy LAURIE SULLIVAN

pr—Mary Beth Hoganlhianaged to placefirst in the Queen of Peace Invitational,outrunning more than 40 girls. With "anincredible' time of 5:20, Mary Bethbettered _the ..meet record by - eightseconds. She showed what .an outstaiMFing runner sh'e is'because with the windchill factor on Saturday it'must have feltlike 15 degrees there. She. was the onlygirl from Cranford chosen to compete inthe Invitational.' J ' •. On Monday.the girls track team heldtheir, first dual "meet relays againstJonathan Dayton- They had agreat day

WINNING PIN Jt>y Cranford's Steve Honeywell, on top, ea rned him wi™»»g almost every relay.Cnlnn LJ nil i n . , ^^^ , . 'I • _ t • i - " '

medley relay-two 220s and a quacter-"mile leg followed by a half mile, was

Despite the freezing, bitter cold won by Sue Rosenthal, Be|h-Waters,weather last Saturday, Cranford High's LJsa Weiner and. MaryiBeth JHpgan.-...

hoopsters

Seton Hall tourney heavyweight crown.

US'

)lers capture 2nd.

. yPlacing first in the two mile relay

weffe- Ropin Lefkovic', Cindy Iannelli,Lisa Murray and Mary Beth Hogan.Third place in the two mile-relay went toJld J C

Seton Hall mat title_==u__;(_t-Jt Jones , Crissy Ruggiano^_JrIary

. . Beth Rehbein and Laura Brown.Susan Rosenthal , Susan Gaudious,

Susan Yochim and Amy Burd placedsecond, in the 880 ya rd relay. The spring

WJWJWJVi

Third place in the same event went toCriss Ruggiano, Mary Beth, Rehbejn,Laura Brown and Tori Jannelli. ".;- ,

The most 'dramatic race of the day. came in the one mile" relay. Cindy"Tannelli gave Cranfdrd the lead with a

time of 68.8 in the first quarter, followed" by Beth Waters who 'completed her legtwo steps behind the Dayton girl .„ Beth,handed'off, to Lisa Weiner,. jvhoiin turnfinished 15 yards behind her girl. Theanchor leg, .though, was—handled-by^Mary Beth Hogan, whp.ran just ahead of

. the Dayton runnfai ajpfiL set a quartermile relay reconTof 63 seconds forCranford High School.

The best times of the day went toCindy Iannelli and Robin Lefltqvic, both

,with eXcellent times for^the^hw) mile

quarter-mile leg oh the sprint medley"team, and last but not least Mary BethHogan, for her/fantastic anchor leg inthe mile relay.

•'- CUANFORIXiUlAHW, . ..Cranford traveled to R a h w a y Dec 17

for their second win of the season Thegirls outclassed•-Railway with strongdefensive play and a successful .-fast-break, leading io-toTO at the erldof thefirst half. Kathy McNerney and DawnG r i c e w e r e high scorers with ?.2 and l1.)points, respect ively.

u u J u u " ,-^ ff1 tf V. tf ^ A i

By H Z MATTSON,

HOKROR FLICK• The Cranford Youth Council is spon-soring a horror movie in the CommunjtyCenter Mon(Tay'at 7 pfm. It is "Night of

— the Liviiig Dead," Admission-is 50cents.---

Green Thumb has

celebrate Christmas Christmas dinnerThe Cranford Senior Citizens Wednes-

day Club had its f i rs t -Chris tmas ..party-Dec. 40 at the1 Communi ty-€enterr -Ap-proximateLy l'4O members la t t en t ied the

-cater-ed-party,—' . • • -r—'—* ^ ^ > f l d f P kA^rlnf

~S'ch()Op6f

• The December meeting and'Cinjistmas party of the Green ThuirjfbGarden Club was held at. the home ofGerri Livelli; - •"

en f romParke rsang-Christmas

th ti"SchVOpW" Miadresex "sang~thnstmascarols and.songs fr,om (jther countries.

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' \ Fri. 11:30-10:00 P.M.

Sal. 11:30-10:30 P.M.Sun. 12:00-9:00 P.M.

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king's Court

Prizes included an afghan donated-byAnn Fairchild. ~

The Wednesday club reelected this. year's officers forT981. They are: presi-dent, Harry Duchez; first vice presi-dent, Joseph FaUucca; second vicepresident, Joseph Krowicki; secretary,Ann Fairchild; financial secretary, AnnDuchez, and treasurer,JHelen Grayce.^ ^ — - *- ' • •

Tuesday seniors

Th<> Golgor Family Wishes you all a vory Merry,|Christmas und u hoalthy und happy Nuw Year:-,,In

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1 932, tho Goigor Family oponod a produce and cidurstand at tho Springfield Avonuo, Wastflold location.In 1950, a rostaurant 'wos oponod which hasbocorno tho wollknqwn "GEIGER'S," ownod andoperutod by tho samo family. It now has 3 attractivo "

-dining rooms In gracious Early American docor foryour dining pleasure.

The menu offers many tasty Soafood itoms,-tondot, julcy.J3eaf.—Veal,—Calves-Xlvor-and—Pork-

Chops. Also sorvod oai Salad Plattors, Hot and ColdSandwichos, or try. one of Goigor's Famous G-lubSandwiches. Dully Blackboard Specials aro available.For example, on Wednesdays, Broiled Shrimp Par-mlglonu with Linguinl Is offered; CompleteDinner..$7.95. A Sunday Blackboard Special in-cludes Suuorbruton with Rod Cobbago; CompleteDinner. $7.25. A 20% FOOD DISCOUNT ISAVAILABLE ON SUNDAYS^..Huvo o family got-togothor soon. All entrees Include u salad, avogotablo and potato, and hot broad arid butter. BeYour Own Salad ChofK-Toss Up A Great Salud-justcheck off your favorites listed, sit back und rolax,und be served in stylo. A Childron'g Menu is offored.^jbnerous naff-portions at affordable prlcos areavailable for tho lipht-oators. Between 2:30 and5:00 PM euch.day. a SPECIAL DISCOUNT on yourfood.soloction-ls andtrior benefit. For your listeningploasuro, overy evening there Is piano music, (exbopton Mondays).

Bo suro to visit tho Produce soctloh whoro you willfind delicious and fresh Itoms ready for your HolidayTable.: Foliow the enticing ^aroma Into -theBakery...Homemade Plos, Cakes, Gelgor's famousChoose^ako ojid ovon Frozen Pie* you cart enjoy bak-ing at homo, aro all available. For a groat HolidayHostess Gift, auloct a beautiful Fruit Buskot. Orchoose from a full rutiga of Gourmet Items; Domesticor1 Imported Jams, Jellios or Condlos.

Private dinner party facilities aro uvoilable forspecial occasions for 60 pobple or loss. You mayalso arrange for a Hot and Cold Buffet fom small |»r-t y . •• • *. •>

Geiger's Is open 7 days a week from 11:3O A ;M,until the last sdrvlng at 9:00 P.M.; Friday and Satur-day until 10:00 P.M. Sunday hours are from'Noon til9rP.-M-CIOBed-Chrlstmoa-.Day. and_Now.Vour^s Djiy.On New Year's Eve, Gelfler's will'close at 10:00P.M. -Directions: 560 Springfield Avonuo, WostfUjld(across from tho Springfield Avonue - untrunce toEcho Lake Purk). Major credit cards honored.Telephone: 233-2260.

^ • By Mar t E.BeckerThe Crunford Chranlcli

elect officersThe Cranford Senior Citizens Tuesday

Club recently elected officers for'l98i. •They are: president/George Holler-

bach; vice presicdent,"Ypljinda-€olornvban; -sieetmtf—vjK»™*president, Frank.Rielhau; secretary—Bronis- Gondron;-financial secretary. Alice Berger, andtreasurer, Joseph Barrett.; ... ...

Members recently enjoyed ;a bus tripto Radio City Miisic Halland held theannual Cliristmas luncheon at theGalloping Hill Inn, Union.

There_wi.U'be a New Year's luncheonDec. 30 at noon at the Community-Center. The next business meeting isJan. f> at 1p.m. •

were given by special committees: com-.• m'unity projects chairperson AudreyYoung reptjrted the planting of tulips

"lina 'daffodilsS^tthe Miln Street parkinglot. Also, .with^Hte.help of Mrs. RoseAndersen,-Mrs. irena Conti and Mrs.

...JeannK'Meyer, table arrangementswere made for the" Booster ClubChristmas party.. Service projectschairperson Mrs. Velma Hastrup thank- •ed all members wh.o helped make trayfavors for the East Orange Veterans Ad-ministration Hospital. •

The Christmas dinner was planned byRuth Hurley, Mrs. Livelli and Natalie

="Iyrerin:—B aT ba ra—S]nrds—marte—aChristmas centerpiecelrf red and whiteto compliment the table decor. Audrey,Young hosted the.games for "the" evening,"and^n the gift exchange Mrs. Conti wonthe prize for the best wrapped gift. .

'GodspeJUL' bows

at renovated Ritz"The "newly renovated Ritz Theatre,

1148 E. Jersey St., Elizabeth is present-ing "Godspell" as its first professionaltheatrical venture. - _

Gary Cohen, director,-has updated* and^pedesigned the production to includeTTraoy. innovative features includingsimultaneous sign interpretation for the

l d

For the second"consetulive"CHS varsity wrestling squad captured

the Seton- Hall Christmas WrestlingTournament title. Cranford was greatlyfavored to win the tournament and didso by defeating second place Seton HallSaturday by a, score of 188 to 170'/;:.

Accounting for" the victory were five-champions, three second place winners,

one fourth place and three sixth placefinishers,-- Having to-mpye up to the 10U pound

; vyfiight classy -.Robb,ie_ Pender1 was'Cranford's first .champion-. Perider

we]L_who_ also pinned all of hisHis final opposition was

Apgar,of Essex Catholic, whom Stevepinned with 36 seconds left in the match.

Also earning a chance to wresile in thefinals were Richie Briscoe, MarcSjrockman and.John Vicci. All threewere defeated in.their .attempts- aVachampionship title, - •

Corcapt. Briscoe, 129 received a byein the fFfst two rounds and then (Jofeated-his opponent- 9-6 before Ferretti of

. Scotch Plains -pinned him in the finals in- 1 : 3 3 : - , - _.•_ ---. ~ " - i : .". ... • ' - . , ,

Sirpckma_A, 1.58, :.-.tfec1sionecT"his

girls triUrrrj)h(.'d/bver HillsideRriday, making their .confereriOe'jrecnrd2-0'and their seiison record :i-4J-fV;jnfoj;dpliiyed.a sluggish first half with Hillsidetrailing by two at half t ime , 24 lo 22.After a faltering offense to Hillside'sman-to-man deferuso, Cranford ., pulled

!aheqd^iai^ rarsthir lctt-qiurrtt ' ivit 'ot 'P -of~'Cranford 3*, Hillside. 28. Hillsi 'desparkedin the fourth q u a / t e r and tied the score -at 39 to 39. Anne Gaven. went to the foulline with one minute left and hjt for twoLori, Stokes of Hillside s u n k - a short

The C^rinford High School swimming' team defeated K e a r n y " on Friday hv a"score of 59 to 17'in a home meet w.hicTTsaw the locals swe<;p every event butone', taking nine out of ten first placesand .n ine out of ben seconds. ( ***'

First ' place in the 2(K), ya rd m e d l e y "relay went to the Cranford t eam offson•Baker. - E r i e -Sehultz-.-Jehn.. Har r ing ton ' 'And B'rian Drwley with a t ime of i: 55.07."Second-place in.the eveht went to 'Pe te rSmith , Rich-Uutus's . Rich Smith andKurt Wolfram, who swam the dis tance

' in 2:02.7.' . Sieve Craft won the 200 ya rd freestyle

. in 2:09.2 followed by Peter .Bowman whofinished second in 2--09.5. • '

The 2/K) yard individual medley waswon by John.Harr ington in 2 32 6, withRich Smith a close second w k h a lime of2:32.8.. . •*•. ' «

Other Cra°nfb;-d.-winners.-and their.• . .V 'ven f j j jwe ' r t ; : ' " -" : ™ ~ " ' . . - • , ~ '•""---

50 yard freestyle 1st place, BrianDooiey, 0:24%9; 2nd. Kurt Wolfram...

Ktf" y a r d bu t te r f ly -•'"lst,- J o h nHarr ington, 1:05 9. 2nd, Barb.'ira Silvey,

_ ._ - _._. to—tulversaries_g?7.jn-overtime and 4-1. to - C1& l, , -.„•get into the f inals , Ift! defeated Bottino of e a r n a ^ l a c e in the finals Gordon of— B " d ^ e t \iioa^Sb'tbrvTHLaJl in Ihe final 19 seconds of the Scqtch Plains defatjed Marc 2-1 irua-very ' d e f e n s < ; throughout

^rr iatchjby Raptur ing a t akedown: The ' cl0ge~matchT :

final score wa"S""4^ 1—=—rr~-Co-captain Phil Sandl<jfd,"wrestling a t

122, was the sc«5nd of Cranford'sgrapple rs 4^' be named champion.&\ndford pinned two of his opponents toearn a place \® the finals. He then pinned

By LISA PERROTTAThe Brearley varsity, girls' basketball

team lost its home opener Dec! 16 asthey were'defeated by Ridge 40 to 19,Ridge took atrearly lead and, althoughBrearley stayed in the game for the firsttwo quarters, never relinquished it.

Allyspn. Gjembooki, a sophomore,spiirked the Bear's offense scoringseven points. Senior Patty Yutz addedfive- points and led in rebounding with

basketball t e a m s will play in the District1 Regional High School Chr is tmasTournament which will be h e l d ' P e c . 26,27, 29 and 30 a t Governor LivingstonHigh School, Berkeley H e i g h t s ^ A l s opart ic ipat ing, in addition to Brearleyand the host . school,;, a r e /Johnson

Tourney on cable TV_

With' t e n s e r orids left, P a m Baublis sunka short j umper to win the- game forCranford 43-41. . " ' - . - . ' ' .

"Dawn Grice had lf> |K)ints and Kat+^iMcNerney had 13. Gaven andw e r e , high rebouriders with ••eight and.seven, respectively.r The g i r l s ' hosted " M o t h e r Setonyes te rday and will-be-participa'lfri'g' inthe ••Ronald Brown Chr i s tmas ClassicTourney in Morrfsfbwn*ljec. 27-a;ul 29.

ltHLyard-freestyle--1st, Kurt Wolfram, •0:57.6; 2nd, Conrad Rehill, 0:590;

5fX) yard freestyle--1st, Peter Smith.5:58.2; 2nd, Stacey Hegna, (;:l(i.3,

" y a r d b a c k s t r o k e - 1 s t , . Br ianDooiey ,• i: 111). 2nd,. Rich Snjith, 1:14 9; •

100 yard breast stroke -2nd place,Jennifer Morns, i:2f>7,

4(Mi yard frees.tyle relay 1st, ConradRehillT'Tom' Bog?ir. timriry -Bowmanand Drew Hnnrle.'4:11 7 . r

the

: i rs t—varsi ty—attempt-subdued hjs opponents by a pin in 1:15and a 9-2 decision but was pinned withonly 33 seconds left in the m a t c h byMatos of I$ssex Catholic.

Wrestling to a very respectable fourth.Molinaro of Livingston in 3:27 to attain .place finish in his first varsity effort was

and Doniki Savorgiannakis chipped inwith two poirifs7eachT :

Ridge led 17 to 10 a t the half andmanaged to outscore the Bears in thesecond half . b y a m a r g i n of 23-9.

The girls ' varsi ty lost its second game

? f t h cthe title.

At 135, Scott Senkarik grappled hisway into the finals by defeating- his firstopponent 9-3 and pinning the second in5:27. Scott defeated Seton Hall's

Larry. F.errar6.Also wrestling well were .Dennis

Sullivan, Glenn Breucr and.DaveGclber, wh"o all placed sixth.

Coach Herb Farrell summed it all upby-say ing^Pheboysd id f ine iob t

in a 69 to 23 defeat by Gov:

Patty' "Vutz score<i over half ofBrearley 's points a s she netted 12. Yutzand Allyson Glembocki each pulleddowa seven rebounds .

—Suburba n-Oableviaion-^wiH-cable--i iggress ive : castTTor. t t ie . f i rs t . t ime, the anniial

g a m e , netted ; Gov. Livingston High School Basket-:}—t-ball-Tour-aam,ent-via-its4joea4-€haB^

nel, TVr3""6'n Sunday, Dec. 28 at 6consolation*

-C-lBS-booters honoredGlenn Skoog,, CHS s e n i o r ' a n d mid--

fielder on the varsi ty soccer team,"wasnamed to the second'oi l-county soccer

••• Sk(wg and two team mates , P a tO'Brien and Dave Da'niels, a l so s.eniors,weni.named,tln.»'fall'va'rsitv t eam's Most

team in the recent Star Ledger poll "Valuable Players the first time-1 thehonor has been shared by three playe

'obtaining the winning takedown.Brian Merkel, 170, pinned his first two

opponents in the first period to reach thefinals. Merkel then "defeated Hyde of

_ Kearny 14-9 for the championship.The fifth Cranford champion in the.

heavyweight division, was Steve Honey-

; Both the girls' and boys'.. varsity students,

seen first, followed immediately bythe final. '

The Tournament will be Repeatedon Tuesday, Dec.30 at 9:30,p.m.

Regional of Clark and Jonathan Dayton,Springfield. Trophies will be presentedto all participants and all-stqr teamswill be selected. Tickets will be avail-ableat'the door at $2 for adults and $1 for

come through—with the trop*hy and-defend their title successfully." . ,-

On Friday and Saturday, DecT26 and27, the CHS grapplers will strive fortheir second team title at the UnionCounty Tournament at Elizabeth HighSchool. ••—•-•' ' ' . v

twisters gymnasts score well

The Butss HornYour Hot^s:Don Lclnbabh andJeff VTanDcrMelrcn Offer A<\ Authentic

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144 QHERRY STREET, ELIZABETH 3 5 4 . 5' onn ' i nl IV Ciriinil O p p / S m l l h C.KIIIIIIC)

CICUCIBLE'CASTINGA cas t call fo r ' "The Cruc ib le" is set

for Dec. 28, 30 and Jan . 4, at 7:30 p .m. atthe Uni tar ian Church, 724 P a r k Ave.,Plainfield. The show is the. secondoffering by the P a r i s h P l a y e r s which isscheduled to open F e b . 27 through

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777 Uaritiiii Roiul • Clark • 3H1.-6220

Admissionsoffice open

The office of admissionsat Union College will beopen during the holidaybreak for individuals whowould like to apply for ad-missions and or enroll incourses for the SpringSemester.

The college's break will-run—from—December—24-

through January 4. Admis-sions Office will be openfrom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec.26, 29 and 30, and Jan. 2,and from 9 a .m: to 1 p.m.on Dec. 27 and 31 and onJan. 3. " '"• '

gp ^There are matinee, and evening per-

formances from Friday, Dec 26 throughSunday, Jan. 4. Call the .box office,352-SHOW, or Pisces/Capricorn, Cran-ford, 272-4070, for tickets which are pric-

• ed at $5 for all performances. Discountsare available to students, senior citizensandgroups— "•

FALLEN ANGEL Is the name of the band to appear at the CommunityCenter Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. From left; are Tony Capobianco, BradGrosso', Dave Meyers, Tom Cataldo and Norman Dryer. Admission Is

$2. r r ~Down the

"The Twisters" from Mile High Gym-nastics Academy, 18 N. Union Ave.,returned with top team honors from thefirst Physical Ability .Skills GymnasticCompetition held at Lake Gym in

~Parsippany. " --.-, -']'-The competition was based on ten

."readiness" skills in areas of strength,flexibility, speed, with a possible score

SLIMNASTICS AT "Y"'The.YM-YWHA of Greater Westfield,

.305 Elm Street, will be offering two slim-nastic courses as part of their' adultdepartment during the winter session.Slimnastics is^a way-to^tone-ancj-trim-your body, to exercise and>stay fit, whilemoving to music. During the wintermonths when there is not as muchopportunity to exercise, it is a great wayto stay in shape. '

A slimnastics class will meet everyTjijesday for eight weeks, from 4:30 to.5:3Q'j><ni- beginning Jan! 6.

For those1 who like to get an early startin the morning," there is a class whichwill meet e^ery Thursday for eightwtieks.fromQiSOto 10:30 a.m. beginningJan. 8. • ' . • '

For more information regarding feesand registration, call the "Y" at 232-5514.

HOI IQAY TFA - Thw annual hnllrlayd h Sh

y psored by the Orange Avenue School PTA forstaff members was Monday at the Morrowresidence, Prospect Avenue. Enjoying con-versation and-,-holiday treats are, from left,Margaret DBlGrl p prj. an. a Id B^—Y-vo-n n eHamilton, first grade teacher, apd Lois

"Bassln,.English teacher ~!~^c~.

Jr. VFW ladies

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LUNCHEON • DINNERDANCING a ENTERTAINMENTWEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY

Opun / Days . . • Haiiqunl Fsclllllos |

HI "" /ooo Kiirilmi k'otiil. Scotch /la/us.XjI.|

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HlQh galoot) in tho GunA/oodJunior Bowllnfl Rolury Club LouauuSalurduy w«ro rollud by: JohnGlndol, 100, 158, 158; ChrlolrophorTroy, 177-; Toddy Stawunz, 177;Mlolwul Wtillo 108; Munny Ciirllno,1B0; Jollroy Dunyua, 151; Polor

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i by; -John Glndol, 505; ToddySluwuni, 45tJ;- Mlchuol Whlto, 410;Mlcholu Mulondy, 447; Elloon Cullan,342; Robin Kolvok, 340. High loumQamo und hlQh toam aorlus byLloyds Roaluurunl, 023, 2017.

Qpbblo D^llapgor^load hor loam, D& D Trucking, to u thruu'namu ayjoopwith a 202 gamo In a 533 aorluo.Othors who bowlod high aorloa woroMarlon Cymbaluk, 510; Ellon Kor-dlch. 613; Loulao Murray, 510; Pat-Kornor, 509; Holon Donnla, 507; Boa

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lumbus Leagus Saturday warg rollodby: Edward W»o"or, 130; JohnBrodle, 13.1; Honry Rlley, 127; TracySchmidt, 1&e; Sandra Csrlllo, 135;Chrlnllna Colllna, "fid. High norliawura pooled by: Eric Boldln, 343; Ed-,wurd W.cjnor, 310; John Brodlo, 308;Trucy Schmidt, 373; Sandr« Corlllo,31H: Chrlntlna Colllnn, 300. High

Drying, 88T"

Honors this wook In thoLivingston Loaouo wont toMauroen Chllonskl wlt|l 176, 167, 164(or a 507 series, flthor high gamesweftf bowled "by. Marilyn Roo, 192;Carolyn Poultnoy, 171, and Shollado Myirr 167. High series bowlorswore Joan Foraona, 46S andMarilyn Mae, 440. •

loam oamo by Sprayhigh t«arn. uorloo by Woslwood2327.

WjS/l(8tWOO<i

A K Trucking 2ttVjKnights ot Columbua 25Qurwood Auto Purts(S) 22Accuratn Uushlng(4) 23Petro Plastics 10. .UHlnnkusOroo ' 10SpriTy Urylno .IBMi

I.

MuitkuluurnBollurlnuaLucky Strlkoa

—CBnoycnnno"( t j V , Cuiiiooa

Wondor WomonLlltluRubculsVictorsPin Huud»Tourn 0 . •Odd Hull*

202322202026 Yi

•312UV;

24 Mi.2423 Vi2120 *'17W13 -

—L-12

23 Vi

24'/j2,72B'30 Mi-3b

HOCKEYA special "tikate, pass

uud shoot" contest isscheduled .at WarinuncoSkating Center Jan. 6 at 6ti.uu.Call 241-3263. .

), SKATING'' Registrat ion is,now Pfor varibiis c lasses in iceskating at the. Warlnanco.Skating Center. Call 241-3263 for information.

KENTUCKYCAMNELCOAL.

THE FINEST FIREPLACECOAL DIRECT FROM

KENTUCKY

Extremely low in ashand sulphur content-

ideahfor your, fireplaceor wood burning stove.

BLOCK SIZES RANGE

WE'LL, SELL IT BY THEBAG AT OUR YARD OR

DELIVER IT IN HALFAND TON QUANTITIES

HORAN LUMBER

of 100 points. The -Twisters had thehighest team score, as well as four of thetop five individual places, among 68competitors. ^ ' _j __-_._^ :' -• ---"' All-aTound''~aWr"age-'group~'1winners

u-jwece ;J3ajyJLCagliari H s L A ^ r - M .Grace Arnow, 12 (2nd AA, 1st AG),Maureen Nakly, 10 (5th AA, 2nd_AG),Amy-Avis, 13 (4th AA, 1st AG),' fjjna.Sabatino, 12, (3rd AG).

Earlier this.fall, .Dawn Cagliari andMaureen-Naldy attended tryouts for theUSAIGC National 9-'l(ryT. old. Jr. EliteTeam. Both gjrls received severalperfect scores of 10, Maureen becomingthe first gymnast in the country to^

"TnasteFa particular les t item. TfThe girls7

qualify, they will attend a TrainingCamp in Ohio. •/-

Mile-High coacft-director Bill Shermannounced that' the Twisters will belooking . for other potential team,members through tryouts Sunday, Jan.4 by appointment. Interested gymnasts;should plan1 to come in prior to then-to-reveive . information and selection.•criteria. Inquiries are welcome from 10a.m. to 10 p.m. at 272-2560.

Soccer referees

' to libld a school"The State Soccer Referees Association

of New Jersey will conduct^A school aiithe Westfield Library, on sM Mondaynights, Jan. 5,. through Feb. 9 jDronri 7:30to 10:30 p.m.

The school is for met! and women,older boys and girls, wha are interestedin officiating soccer garWs. For USSFregistered referees or incfevjduals" who-ohave already attended one.schools, there is no charge. For al:others, there is a charge of $20. "~

To~qua1ifjnis~^Br—tlSS't"—referecandidates must complete the course,pass a USSF written examination whichwill be given oh the lasf. night of theschool, and- pass a USSF physical(running) test which will be arrangedat a later date. Contact Joseph Berger,473 Otisco Dc Westfield.

HIGHGYMNASTICACADEMY

Bill Shewn, Director "

.. . ANNOUNCES -/.'

NEW CLASSES FORMING JAN. 5thEXPANDED PRESCHOOL

HIGH SCHOOL'CLINICPROGRESSIVE CLASSES..

TUMBLING FORCHEERLEADERSTRAMPOLINETRAINING SQUADS ' •

NEW!. SPRING ..

FLOORSTRIP &. .

FOAM " P I T "

MULTIPLE-'CLASS

DISCOUNT'S

TEAM TRYOUTS.. JAN 4th

1 FREE CLASS • WITH THIS AD, -Toward tnfollment-Of New-S4udent

18 N. UNION AVE.CRANFORD(3rd floorl 272-2560

M&*etttt

co^oMGt*

You may.ijQ...-damaglnq your records '

without realizing It! So got yourturntable or rocord channorInspected and analyzed for:

. Stylus Wear, Tracking- Force,Tumtablo SpeedTAntl Skate,

Phasing, Crosstalk,-Channel balance .

andTrackablllVy. This.Inipnrtlnn and

optimization Is performed ruslno over 54,000 worth ol

tost,oqulpmont...and It's FREE

Tuosdaya and Fridays!

ALL DAY on TUESDAYSand FRIDAYS ONLY!

OR CALL FUR AN APPOINTMENT!

fudio9jnc.Cull uu,

^Hinolai* ^ **o*iU Ave. East, Wostfldd -232-0483appoinliituiil""- OjaneU Mall, R1..208, Rarllan - 62*4434

BUYING

GOLD&SILVERCOINS & JEWELRY

we wi l l payad'd ifr of h 31, civ e r 'q til ft '&' s i I y o r .

•Value-,'based on antiquityand saleability.

^ V r~

T u u u W u i l . i i J i u ; U l i u l i / T h m s J n lo 9

.Martin1 Jewelers-serving you with "__integrity for .- ,more than35-yrs.

Page 5: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

Page 8 CRANFORD CKOI-*CHRONI.CI.E'Wednesday, DeceriibenW, 1J180. .

BUY, SELL.TRADE OR RENT THROUGH THEWednesday. December 24, 1980 CRANPOfW (N.J ' CIJHONICI.l'; I'.IKC <>

.-... LEGALS ~ ~

NEWLY LISTEDCOLONIAL

J, Beautifully -decorated dnd landscapedi' aluminum sided' hortiie- situatedjoa quiet,

JLtree lined Qtreet.LFLwith fireplace, formalDR, eat-in: K, powder room, "end. sideporch on first floor. 3 BR & bath on se-cond. Lg. rear brick walled patio with gasgrill, 1 * car attach": garage.$ 9 2 , 5 0 0 . ; ,..: ••• v :

NORTHSIDE COLONIALr LR, formal DR, sunroom, rear.end. porchj on first floor. 3 BR & bath on.second. 50 xLJ:5O pmpertv,_l__car garage.-Owner.wilTT-k consider giving mdrtgatge to" qualified;

buyer. Price: $ 8 2 , 5 0 0 . "

McPHtRSON REALTY276^0400

. Realtor

Alden Street

More than ever, or

Chrisrmas, home is

where rhe heoH-is. In the • \. '.,

pray your hearts and

homes are filled with peace'

and happiness.

- Realtor-Notary Public

"106 North Union Ave .Cranford

272-4020

THE BOYLECOMPANY REALTORS

BELIEVE IN SANTA!12% MORTGAGE

The oWner is Offering to financequalified buyer of the gorgeous 4bedroom, 2V2 bath colonial. Featuringinvfting family room with fireplace,large ultra modern kitchen,-formaldining room, 2 car garage and finishedbasement. $146,900.

CALL 272-9444630 SOOTH AVE E., CRANF0RD-272-9444„ 540 NORTH AVEV7 UNIOfi-353^r2OCr

INpEPENDENTLY owned and operatedGalleries In Morristown & Summit

LEGAL NOTICE. TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD

CRANFORD, NEW JERSEYORDINANCE NO 8047

AN ORDINANCE TO ESTABLISHA SALARY POLICY AND TO FIX THEBASE WAGE OF CERTAIN OF

.FICIALS AND EMPLOYEES OF THETOWNSHIP O'F CRANFORD IN THECOUNTY OF UNION FOR T^E YEAR1981,

HENRY A. DHEYER. Jr' Chairman ol

Township Cornmlltue'ATTEST ••• " ••--

•WESLEY N PHILQ •Township Clorlt *

STATEMENTTho foregoing brdinanCu' was

finally pas9^d ,nl a moeilna o( ihoTowriRl^ Ip . Cornmlt too of tho.

t Tpwnshlp ol Cranlord, N J on Tuos~~ day, .Dociimbur 23. 1980 (

WESLEVN PHILOT TrjWnahlp Glork

Dalod: Docnmbor 7,i. 1980Foe: ? 7.SA ""

' Bg&Al NOTICETOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD

'Intornat Ol V>«' Town»hl|j lo onrjarju_ Ufi uxpur'l t j / . lu'nlsh pioltresionulEnglnoorlrnj u%d Futlrj ^Ijrvicub .Ipconnection wuilli thu construction ol ^.Itlo BroOksldu Placo DuTonljonBasin'Chanmil ImrJrOYornunts Pro|ect • Starjo H and

WHEREAS, th(p Local Public ConIi"acl3 Law IN J S 40A I I l o t sou. I1

requires thai a Resolution ol tho.govornlnrj body authorizing award of.' c o n t r a c l s for "p ro foss i onu ltjurvlcus" wiOioul competitive bidsmust"be publicly advortlsod*

.,. NOW._TH.EnEFiOR£. .13E. ITRESQLVED by Iho Township Com-mlttoo o^Uio Township of Cranlorddoos horoljy onrjagn tho flrni ol

t Olako-Lohr Asaoclalos, ConsultingEnglnoors 2035 US Highway 22.P Q Ron 1627. Union. Now Jersey07083 ' lo perform thu noCosoaryEngineering.Flold Survi£o3 ruqukud-in tho mattors'to which roloroncn isniado In lh«j proamblo of this RutolU-tlon at a loo not to oxcood 3 5°<, oltho project prlco lo be Piyd lot out olBond Ordinance No BO-4 ami BE ITFURTHER RESOLVED THAT

1. The Mayor l!i hereby authon^ddIn i lhn nnii1hcr,ln>t' tn ntloi.l .ihri af

SERVICES INSTRUCTION

ORDINANCE NO BO-49 .AN ORDINANCE RENAMING

fFOTAIN PORTIONS OF MOENSTREET IN HONOR OF ROD SMITHAND THE.COLANEfll FAMILY-

HENRY A DREYER, JR^^-Chalrman of Tpwliship Cornmrtloe

ATTEST •" . . 'WESLEY N PHILOTownr.hlp Clerk ..

• . STATEMENT.The loreflolng-ordJiuia^ wus-

" Ilm7lly*""pa'»!''»d as amended at amooUlng of tho Township £omrn!itoo ,of tho Towpshlp ol'Cranfp'rd, N J onTuesday, Docombor 23. 1980.

: ; ^—WCSLEVN PHILO. . • Township Clerk

.Diltod DocolnDer 24, itfUOPoo J A 44 . , . •

MICK'SODD JOBS...

Coll 789-2351.

CLARINET. SAX, FLUTElossons in your homo. D,Whollan • 232-4919

HOUSING

William C. Kfumas, S.R.A. •• SENIOR.RESIDENTIAL

Society of Rea^Estate' Annraisfirs '

TCOJWAS & GAIS~663 Raritan Rd,Cranford. N.J.

272 : 4 io6

I RENTALS

:1

V

\

V

' X

• •

b ' • • " , •

: — — - —

•.'if" " " • • • ' ^

v - ' ;:-A• • • • . ; • ? •

' V "T?

It

Cambridge

ridge

lOO's

Soft Rack.\

1 me tar4 mg t r 100s

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined <-That Cigarette Smckiny Is D'angeraus to Your Health.

E D I S O N - R A M B L I N GRANCH, . Fire place, 4bedrooms, 3 baths, roc.room, 2 car garage on largolot. Occupancy . Dec. -1 5.272-3047 or.276-9161. '

CRANFORD - HOUSE FORRENT-. Unfurnished. 3

—Bod-room S-p-U-t lovel-r-$7 50/mo.' Brounell &Kramer, Realtors,686-180.0..-- ,. '

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY SERVICES

LIGENSEDREAt ESTATE SALESPEOPLE^Expefienced-lnexperienced

MORE IIMCOME?JoirvUnion County's laroesiTouf os'tate oFgahiibtionwith offices in Union,-Cranfnrd. Summit rriTrVlv|nrris

^County... Wo will-train you to bo effective throughTho Gallery of Homos Training Program. Loarn about

-our..<computbrizod -NationaWRolocation Sorvieo andGallery's uniquo soiling system. Call Ruth Browstorat 353-4200 - • .

THE BOYLE COMPANY^_ _ Gallory of Homos • * ' . • • .

Roa1 Estate Sinco 19°O5 ". Independently Owned nnd-Operatod

MASON UVORK• WATERPROOFING oncF

' REPAIRSStops, walks, patios, drains

Call 276-3526

J O ME IMPROVEMENTS PAINTING Interior and ex-~ nO~j8fc"TO0 S l i l f ! - .'erior: Call 276-5774

FREE ESTIMATES . ••• . ——'•

PERSONAL

FULLY. INSURED

mm mmim ALUMINUM SHOWROOM

Porch and Patio "Enclosures"'

COMPLETE DECORATINGSERVICE Draporios and slipcovers custom made (yourfabric or. mine), completolyinstalled. "Wovon woods,lovnlor and Roman shades.Also drapories clean od,altered, and rehung at a sur-•prisingly low cost.

DISCOUNTED ."*••" ' PRICES

889-6315

Jalousies A'wninq Windows

Kluprimo RoplacomentWindowsStorm and

- Screen CombinationsCombination Doprs-25 Styles

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS INC.

102 South Avo W 276-3205

SISTER SUZANREADINGS

^HANDWRITING ANALYSISTAROTCARD READINGS

)~ -—A SPECIAbTV—^n5-B-North Avo., W. Cranfordi

FOR APPOINTMtNI

272-9791

• TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

PUBLIC NOTICE Is horoby ol«onthai tho (ollowinrj rosqlutlon WJJBtidoptod by tho Towpshlp "Commit-too ot tho Townohlp of Cronlord atun official pubtlc.mootlnrj hold at IhoMunicipal Building, B SprlngfloldAvonuo, Cronford, N o * Joraoy onTudr.d;iy, Dncilmbor 10, 1980

•' BY ORDEPTOF THETOWUSidiP-CQMMITIEE-OF1—i

THE.TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD •»(' TOWNSHIP OF CRAWFORD

CRANFORD, NEW JERSEYRESOLUTION. . .

WHEREAS. If is .Iho opinion oV.th'oTownship Commltloo ot tho Town-ship of Crynford that It in In Ihtj bpnt

lix tho soa! of the Townyhlp of Criinibrd to an'Agrounnint Dotweon fh.iTownship of Cranford. Now Jmsity.and Ihn aald firm o( M D.iakoA anoc I a t fju, [; n v i r o n rrie n I a I[inglnoorlno Conaultania for thu pro-leaslonal Engmuorino Finld Snrvice;.lo bo rondorod by n lo Ihi/-Town-.ilupof Cranford•. 2 Thiu contrjict is awardedwilhout cornpitlillvri bi(lr1ln(j a;, profeti'Jlonjil ;j|jrvice!i" under. Iho, provldions of ihn Local- Public Contracts Law because Ihi) prolensionalaorvlcoa contrjrnplalfyd aruof such anature that it (Joe;l .not lond itsulf locompetitive bidding, and

3 A copy of thi;i Rrmolution ahallbo published in Ihn Cranford Chromcl« au.requlred Ijy law within InrTliOIdayn o( ita adoption, HENRY A DREYER:'JR

Chairmjtn, Townnhip CDmmittei'WESLEY N PHILOTowQshlp ClorkDated Docomher 24. 19B0Foe $. 71.54¥ ; ¥-¥ .1/¥¥¥¥.¥¥¥¥¥-¥* 4

tPREPARE FOR COLD *^ W E A T H E R ' : ' " " " '

vacation

prograirisThe Five Points YMCA

will be sponsoring V.IL;Ition programs for hoysand'Kirls, aKeti-(i' \'J. (iur ,ing the Chr.istmas rw<ss.

On Frithiy; Uec. 2(i, PostChristmas Olympics willbeheld at the Y Children'will \\n participating invarious types, of -relay

Morri.stown Nat ionalHistorical Park wi l l bevisited Monday; Doc,. 29On Tuesday Her '3.0. theprogram will include^ ices-kitti ii j»" a I .War inanciPark in Ihe Mior-iiin^. andgames at the Y.VK'A ',lining'the afternoon -

Wednesday. Uec ill willbe swim.-, gym. and craltday iit the FJi/.aiielh YM--CA.Fridai1- .'an- •- wi l l fie

•movie day at the Y .. For further information

LOST

HELP

CLASSROOM AIDEADOLESCENT program foremotionally disturbed. Cran-ford location. Contact Mr.DdShiolds, 27.6-1 26Q.

WALLET BELONGING TO?—B artrara Do <Tripg. FTndor

ploase call,' .276-0936.Cranford United MothodisiChurch.

LOST - KEYS ATTACHiDJpa wooden... block. Finderplease call 2 76 1 781

hu.uUH-So! .8. Clii!i:k'Mi,.._353-9244

-S-ttMORft-EXXON:SERVICENTER

S. Elmora Avonuo-•• v-vElizabetlir-r-r •-'Corniir Cnco tielwoon

HELP WANTED

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

H.O. TRAIMS includes track, ;cars, swltchegv errgines,~ac-cessorlos.. Bost offer. Call-276-3489 t-/g—•CUSTOM MADE CURVEDj jobch , : 8Oi '_. ' / riooJds _reupholstory. Bost < offer,

—•276-8494 12/31

CHEVY. CHEVtTTE 79, . 2door hatchback,,-4 spd,AM/FM, 8 track stored, air,exc, condit ion. Asking$4,350. Call ovonings,272.-5838. . 1/22..

1968 FIAT 124 SportCoupe, 4 spoe'd, 58,000!Not in running condition.Bost.offer. 276-21 7,0, 1 2

VW KARMENGHIA.

260^:- Auto,. AM/FM.-AVC.- ^^.con[i't'^.lOXCf:^

o n b - o w n i r , - very Tow" ^ i l e a ^ : 4 s p e e d s t l c k ' B +

miloagp,. new paint. Best pf-for-2 76-6653 • .12/31

.STEVE'S COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIALPAINTING SERVICE

REDUCED WINTER RATESInterior/exterior painting, professional work,

"reasonable rates,-quality paint, fully insured,Joeal references-. - -;-- " " "

272-4033 or 467-3993

GIRL/GUY FRIDAY:'Immediate opening available in offi.cn 'of small-manufacturing compony. Opportpnity for fastlearner. Diversified, dutios Include typing, filing,telophono etc. Must be.good vvith figures.. 13' paidholiriays-iBlua-Ctassv- Rtrm S.hinlrl. Ma|or~M.(>dical.Call 24 1 -2420 for appointment.

Jorortie Industries" :~~ ' 1 d b HJIurI(5T~ST •

Kpnllvyorth, N.J. 07033

fi'.' Ask ing '24'1-292O~, -

$1800 .

ROBBINS & ALLISON 1~-—ko-cal-:Movirig-:&-Siqrage-

AGENT /AIJJEDVAN

SOUTH AVE./E. CRANFORD

TEL. 2-76:0898 '••*••.

B 2 0 " COLUMBIAbike,- 3 speed hand brakes,highrise handlebars, bananaseat. Excellent condition.$40.276-8413 12/31

EXQUISITE. FRUITWOODBREAKFRONT, one-of-a-

coffee table,Call 272-9156 .1/6 •

LOVE- SEAT—AND—Sofaf-Brown and gold, 2 years-old.Good buy, $ 2 9 5 . 0 0789-1 455 after 4 p.m. 1/8BIRD'S . EYE ' MAPLEbodroom set. Four poster'

jAdesk, bureau. Call'^ _35j^q 690-afror five. 1/8

DYEAR SNOW TIRES 17l35-H (Sure Grip IV)

tubeless $25. Call Tues.,Wed., Fri. after 6 p.m.276-7384. Ask for Ron.

_ • ' . " • T/29

WHITE BEDROOM SET ~Double bod, 2 dressers, 2night tables, Excellent condi-

197 8 CHEVY- IMPALA ~ .WAGON • air, powor win-TRAVEL TRAILER 14"-•dows, powor stooring, 6 SHASTA. Sink, stoVn, -icepassongor, a'uto. Call box, closot, plenty of

J789-0963.' $3.S9R-- Nnw/stornge- firnilt l o r , i ^"radtnHiresrnow bfrttory"——ftsfiirig—QT—cnrr>pin&=—

_. . - ' • ' ' " 12/31 789-1434.0775.00 12Call

itt> One Stop Shopping • Largest Selection

In Central N.J.- BIG Stock Of Used| Hondas, Toyotas, Datsuns, Etc. • Latest

American Compacts

SPECIAL!!!ACCORD

$3895HONDA

S SpJ.. 4-Cyl.. AM, r-M.MS MB Ulu. Mini

AS.000 Mi

M V I . . 1 Kl

tiorK-Call 276-37O8Tjfter5P.m. • 1/29

FULL 1 YR. WARRANTEES ON MOST CARS

|VIP HONDA Rt. 22EASY TO REACH FROM EVERYWHERE

753-T500 FORDTREfJTlONS

. COMPUTER TRS - 80 Lovol I(Radio Shack) includes many

.extra games. Like now inor ig inal box. $ 3 2 5 .

-27-2-4606 after-5-p-.m-.--.-2/-G—-|

Service DirectoryALUM. PRODUCT

LIFETIME \l I HIM M

Home ImprovementProducts

Storm Windows &. Doors

276 3205105 SOUTH AVENUE

CBANFORD '

AUTO SERVICE

PRIDE AND

DRUMSET-LUDWIG 5 Pc.;Cymbals, cusos, $650. P.A.system-Trayno/, $995 orbost offer. 241.2094 aftor6 p.m. .'-• 12/31

2 PAIRS ~~^NTIQUE Satindrapes, aquu, 180 x 7 5,140 x 77'. Twin bedsproadsw/rhatching drtipe^a^276:3179 1/22

ARCHIE'S^ ICE SKATE~"G><(

change Ih Myorsville has a ,big uupply of new und usodskato« for sale und .ex-change. Open Sat. &' Sun.10-6 . Weekdays 3-5. v

647-1 149:

2 PAIR DRAPES - ouch 95"long, sheer, culory, p'lhch

$2 5. Antique sutln,o-itutmuihuuta |

with valance. Llko, now.*6O. 276-1020. 12/24

OIL, 276 GALS. Bumeiw/tranaforrner, 75.6%-off.Best offer. 789-0660- 2/5

NOTICEV.I.P. Honda, The World's Largest HondaEverything Store, Is Cleaning Out 1980Honda .Demonstrators, Leftovers & Exe-cutive Cars At Savings Of Up To$1 500...While They Last! Come See The1981 Hondas, The World's Most Sought-After Cars...They Hold Their Price BetterThan Any Car Built. Honda Is The Car TheWhole World Is Copying, Beat The PriceIncrease And Get.lmmediate Delivery At.,.

V.I.P. HONDAWorld's Lartjest Honda Everything Store

Rt. 22 North Plainfield753-1500

JUJTO CENTER

Your CompleteAutomotive Service. American & Foreign _..IV Years Experience

101 South Ave., Cranford

276-7573

FUEL OIL

AUTO DEALERS

REILLY

AUTHORIZED

OLDSMOBILE

SAL'ESS, SERVICE,

232-7651

'iisii N O K f H A v E F

W t h r I- i F 1 D

BANKS

kEUORTH

FREE "

CHECKING

2724500•m BOULEVARD, KENILWORTH

Member-FDIC

FUEL OIL

AUTO DEALERS

LINCOLN

MERCURY•Quality Unvd Cars

Superb ServiceRed Carpet Lease

BUILDERS

A BUONTEMPOGeneral Builder

since 1950Alterations —'•Additions .:Concrete WorkFireplacesCommercials, Residential

j General.Repairs 'i Fully Insured ,>-' Free Estimates.'

272-5177.License #02160

INSURANCE

AUTO DEALERS

VALUE IS YOURS IN NEW CARS,USED CARS. SERVICE & PARTS.

COUNTY339 N. Broad Street

Elizabeth. NJ 354-3300

COLLISION REPAIRS

AUTO DEALERS

FORDI W I U I I I i l l W i l l I OKI*

A n t n r i Ju 'd f- O U O . __

[)>• ,H IT S.ru c W.'O • ,

S.iles Service RentalsOpen Eves t i l 9 30

Srtt III 6 00 . '

245-61001 5 8 W.ESTFIELD AVE.

,ROSELL£ PARK, N.J, _

WE'LL PUT IT BACKTOGETHER FOR YOU!

BODY & FENDER STRAIGHTENINGCOMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE

TOWING

H.F. BENNIR,INCB06 SOUTH AVE , E. CRANFOHD"

276-1111

INSURANCE

el Cc.

• FUEL OIL

• COMPLETE HEATINGINSTALLATION

i REPAIRS AND SERVICE

• AIR CONDITIONING

230 Centennial Ave.Cranford

Call 276-9200

FOR SALE WANTED

PUBLIC AUCTION: 100 OCD GUNS-SWORDS-INDIAN REUCS-COINS-PAPER MONEY:

Strt., Jan 3, 1 P.M., Rumudu Inn, Clark, N.J., Exit136 fcfiirden St. Pky. From Rorjur Hoiplo Colluction &others. Jnsp. 12-1. Cash, VISA, MC, Am. Exp. Con-signments wuntud. Phono: 71 7-334-4B0'*.

S TAMPSU.S. PLATE BLOCKS.Singles, ACcumulutiona, Col-lections/Canada. Top Pricespnld. Call 527^8011 , "

PLUMBERS

REYNOLDSPLUMBING & HEATING INC.God. Cuozzo Tony DIFablo

Ovor 36 Vrs. Ex>)Orl«"Cji •SAME DAY SERVICE

Bathroom and Kitchon' . .• Modornl/utlons

'SERVICE SALES REPAIRS\Ni) Dt) Tlio ComplBlo Jot)

REASBNABLE HATES

276-5367,, j368 NORTH AVP.NUE E.' •' CRANFORD

REEL-STROM

Dependable, I-nendly Servia

Since 1925HEATING OILS

1 549.LexIngBon Ave. .

-CRAUPO.RP

276-0900

SEWER/DRAIN CLPLUMBERS

Plumbincj

Coolincj

Altijrdtions

Air Conditioning SEWER AND BRAINCLEANING SERVICE

NOMTH AVE .CRANFORD

INDEPENDENTBROKERAGE_

SERVICEPersonal-and Business

Insurance Planning

RALPH J. LAGRIOLA

DONALD E..BRUTZMAN

,115 No. Union Avenue

Cranford

272-7250TELEVISIONREPAIR

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Page 6: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

<£•«

Schbols\7ririg--in-:ihe holiday season c CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE

<@arhWednesday, December '24,-J980_jPage 10 r/;

.j:

GARWOOD public school chorus performs.at lastThursday's holiday concert under the direction of

His first aid^training

Marguerite Modero. Photo by Jon DSlanp. KENILWORTH students,wish, everyone a "Merry

^

By ROSALIE GROSSGARWOOD-- Robert Scherer

•remembered the first aid training he. received from the Boy Scouts here andfrorrYthe Garwood First Aid Squad when

. it counted the most—when a fellowMarine was seriously injured in an aUto-

sriqbile accident on the Parkway.The accident occurred at 7 a.m. Dec 7

as Marine reservists were on their wayto a driiTat ForbMonmouth. Scherer, 23,sa.W'a car hit,a guard rail on the Park-way in Red Bank. In secondsv he was atthe side of Robert Gonzales, 20, of Tea-neck, who was en the ground hear his

••......tptaily,_de tr y_©d_,new...JFMpebird; Both.men are-lance corporals, but did not-

•-- know one another weir ' • . •, 'A'-

In addition to cuts about the head; thevictim's left hand was badly mutilatedwith blood gushing from his wounds.Scherer pulled off .his shirt and used thetop of his long Johns as a tourniquet justbelow Gonzales' elbow. The lifelongGarwood resident used his tee shirt tobandage the hand. He kept the victimwarm, andcomfortedhim until the.statepolice, and ambulance arived some 10minutes after the. crash. Gonzales. wastaken to Riverside Hospital, Red Bank,wher-e he was listed in good conditionlast week and expected to be homeforChristmas. . • :'.

'11L remembered my Boy Scout firstaid," said Schercrr "Ihad paid attentiohand knew what.to do. You can't just sitthere and panic. The guy could havebled to death."

Robert Schorer

operations on his hand and has two moreslated jaraisedScheceX from his hospitalbed.'Tm really proud of him," he said."He comforted me and kept me out ofshock. I could have lost my hand."Gonzales said he will look into gettingsome kind of commendation for.Scherer."Scherer, who lives at 408 HemlockAve.„ joined the Majrines in Nov. 1979and served seven months active dutybefore becoming a reservisttast springrHe has had three promotions in less thana year- arid is up for full corporal next"month" "based largely oh his ability to-recruit 10 new Marines in the past fewmonths. He is assigned to a motortransport outfit and is employed locallyas a mechanic for Vogel Bus Co.

Christmas" at assembly program Friday. Prjoto byJon Delano. " ^-- ;

Seniors' craft store eyedKJENILWORTH-- Borough seniorn^gnsTTra^rsson-irave- an - onttet-f o r

selling their own handmade crafts.Livio MahcinOp mayor, and Jack

Landau, president of the Senior CitizensClub,are looking into the possibility of,opening a "60 Plus Shop'- on theboulevard sometime next spring. Thestore would be operated by seniorcitizens who would sell craft items theymake. ' . - •-:^

"Manclno said1 he recently discussedthe coflc<5p£withthe mayor of Vineland

where a ''60 Plus Shop" has'Jbeen"operating^uccessfniiy. Another "stoTe~is~in business in CapeMayLanding and oneis expected to open in Dunellen.. The store" would make enough moneyto cover operating costs; said the mayor,plus provide retired seniors with extraincome. "The seniors are elated," hesaid, and added "they're very talentedpeople."

The shop would be located either in arented, store or in borough-ownedbuilding.; - - - - . , - ~ -

THEY REMEMBERED — Fourth graders in Miriam Bono's- class atHarding School designed Christmas cards to send to the Americanhostages in Iran. Standing, from left, are Michael Fuentes, Lisa Vac-,ca, Michael Russoniello; kneeling, Nicole Pierro, Anthony Petracca,

-Adriana Chessa.- . - - , . . ' • • • . . •

GARWOQD,-- A former Garwood (or that action in which he was captured,resident, Padraig M. O'Dea, was among Col. Samsel recalled that some of theWorld War II veterans who were' armored units raced 180 miles ahead ofhonored by the French Government this infantry troops and that altogether themonth for their role in the liberation of unit liberated 6,000 square miles ofthat nation. France in 15 days. -

• The event held poignant memories for O-'Dea, a. lieutenant, .stayed in theO'Dea, who was a. young Army officer in Army until 1963 and, ironically, had twothe invasion oJ-Southerh-France-in-1944—tours-of-duty-in Germany and one inand who earned the .Distinguished Korea. He has since been with the U. S.Service Cross on the" day he was Army Reserves in which .he holds thecaptured by German troops in high rank of lieutenant colonel. Next yearground above the Riviera. he'll mark the 50th anniversary of- his

Col, Harold SamseK association first attendance at a summer militarypresident, accepted on EetelFofTits camprat-Camr>Dix, which later becamemembers a copy of the Unit citation and Fort Dix. • "Croix de Guerre(Cross,of War) with Col. Kenneth Klein of Cranford, corn-palm. The, original honors were mander of the 5th Squadron of the 117thpresented in 1946 but were'"tost. Col- Calvary of the N.J. National Guard,Jacques Pons', French Army liaison invited Samsel and the other veterans toofficer to the U. S. Army Training and vrecejve the medal during the unit'sDoctrine Command in Virginia annual awards ceremony. Manypresented the medal to Samsel at the association .members recalled theNational Guard Armory in Westfield original presentation at Fort "Meade,D e c - 7- • Md^_on July 22, 1946". \

O'Dea, known as Paddy, now lives in •Bloomfield and his sister, Kathleen O 1 1 "11Moffatt, and his brother, Sha^n, live O a S S a J l O B U S h e S / D l l lhere. A native'of New York City, he • .-.--..-...Mr •_moved here with his family in 1917 and | • « ' |graduated from Cranford High School in O i l S a l C S O l I l i e t a l S1934. • .

—mPfiaJflined the old 10?.rl squadron Assemblyman C Louis Bassano hasbefore the Westfield-based unit was pUt~eaflecr~upon tfie~SenateTSwTTubllc"on active duty in the war. After.the unit Safety and Defense Committee to beginwent to England, it was redesjgnated the consideration of his bill, A-U66, which117th Calvary and O'Dea,-along with he1 termed,' "the first real step towardother local residents including Charlie comprehensive consumer protection in.Hoag, Bill Maloney and Bernard precious metal transactions."diBattista, Went'""withTone squadforr "icT"" "My bill,'>BassanosaidT "is the resultNorth Africa and thence to the Italian o f monfhs^of, study by an Assemblycampaign. Curtis G. Culin, later to gain committee. Itr;'touches on all aspects offame with his creation of a hedgerow precious metals transactions, proyidingcutting device in Normandy, and Bob' protection for'all parties involved, bothAckland, went with another squadron to buyers"«hd sellers, i ".. r;:.-.:--

"Not only does my bill protect thevoluntary parties involved in the sale^f

7 F ,*.:.._1_

Garwood: $300,000borough hall rehabput on hold for •>' ' ;

now.page 8

VOL. 88 No. 52, Published Every Thursday.- Wednesday, December 31, 1980 -Serving- Cranford, Kenilworth unti Garwood

Schooftime..page 10 ^Kenilworth spot <&

checks oh homes to *&begin..page 8 ~

L'SPS 136 8Q0 Second Class Postage Paid Cranford N.J. 20 CENTS •••:

A sampling of salient-quotations onvarious experiences and events in thearea during .the eventful year of 1980:

THE FLUMEHenry Dreyer'Jr.,' mayor, after bond

approval for flood contfof in July: 'J^hinkit's important that we just voted toraise money for two flood,_.,cpntrolprojects while it's raining cats anddogs."- • .'* .

George Sgroi^ town engineer,Prookside detention project: "When theprogram is finished, people will admire

.,y f ~> -g~!-w • s </>•

On top: Phil Sandford was named Most Valuable one of the stalwarts of the Cranford High SchoolWrestler In Union County-Wrestling Tournament—, squad, also received atrophy for the most pins.

TasTWeekT^Cornpeting- at 122 poundsrSantlfordr^—Here^e4^n-sttcceisftilouifrigtheweekbe^re

In OurTown

New Year- A - H a p p y New Ye^r to all-Chronicle nedders. We're out a day

I early this week hut".back to theregular schedule next week. It's aholiday for-nearly. everybody but

[government leaders .and families:reorganization meetings are-

• scfie3Ole(3 iri Garwoocl at noon,'J-Kenilworthat 1 p.m, and Cranford at •

2 ry.m. • - . ' ! . .

Escape fireThe four-member Walter Garth-

waite family safely fled their homeat 126 Riverside Drive "Saturdaywhen a fire started in the basement.

-Combustible material neaLa__flue_pipe ignited and spread to cellarbeams and into walls where it wasretarded by insulation. Firemenextinguished the blaze and there wasminimum damage.

it.

1 ''Project Friendship-provided a busyChristmas holiday for B'nai B'rithvolunteers from Cranford Lodge 2276who helped the Police Department.

" The^roject: is a: comraunity_ser_yice_program designed to allow^ as many non-enforcement police personel as possibleto spend the Christmas holiday withtheir families. Volunteers from- thelodges,assisted at the '".desk Tin

efforts. "Because of a full complementof volunteers, we were able through.careful scheduling ,.and standby

" procedures-to let more people have, timejth t h i f i l ith ff

q p:01-aTin-bn-Dec—2fi—They-perforjned

dispatch-duties, complaint reception,and communications.

Police chief Robert A. Guertin andB'nai B'rith . co-prestdents FrankNassberg and Henry Ricklis called theproject an overwhelming:.success. "It.promoted civic goodwill during theholiday season as well as providing aunique service to the township and thePolice Department," they said.'

During their 36 hours of service severe

ppwjth their family without affecting.thequality'_p'f..our.protectionLor service,"

Lewis" Burton Coe, lodge projectchairman said "oor^perceptions of thePolice Department certainly have beenPosi_Uv_§)y.__5I[ected by our exposureduring this project. It is clear that theirh i h i b l i t ^

^ D, Marotta, public workscommissioner, in retort: "Then?, is noway you can tell me a stone coffin can bebeautiful." .

Janet fiarton of Fifth Avepue, duringflume bridge construction in front of herhouse: "I'm not a plank walker,especially in high heels.";_Georgory Sgroi at Cal.houn-Barton

bridge showdown: . "It doesn't makemuch sense talking to onewoman, and"talking to two women makes' no senseatal l , 'T '

Sgroi, same site, same conversation:"Why dojVt you go back to your teaching

"andJejrvejhe"engineering to me?''John McCarthy, Garwood mayor,

-banning flume construction trucks fromChe borough: "The people of Garwoodhave had e n o u g h . ' ' . • '

—Dreyer—about* bridges-^and—-flume-,-

ON FREEDOM. Mrs. Anca Dumitrescu, whose familywas - reunited here after -fleeingRomania:."We thought it was best togive the youngsters a free life withopportunities, so we took the risk."

Vietnamese family upon arrival,speaking to Calvary Lutheran' Churchsponsors: "Thank you, thank you."

CHASES ,Officer Ronald Coles, beginning his

radio report to headquarters on UFQ-'s:flying over Cranford:-"You're_not-g'oir)g-

-10 believe.this, but..." • -: ~~~''•-Officer William Connell after chasing

wild deer four hours in'town: " I neverran so much' in my life:" - . .

ni.,rr, K,,vi,,w

CAMPAIGN TALKJames D. Scanlon, eijtlri'fy jail

administrator, one week in July: "If thekitchen gets dirty, it gels clean. None of"us would stand for anything less."

Sheriff Ralph Froehlich, his boss the .following week: "If the kitchen getsdirty, it gets clean. None of us would.

.stand for anything less?" /-••-•—"Ralph'Taylor, Republican chairman:

"Let's look'at the, record ", , . ..... Ronald D,. • Marotta, Democraticcommitteeman: "A look at the record isdefinitely in order" , .: .. K"

- ' " ~7"?TSUGGESTION " " . '.,;Bob Seyfarth, CHS-principal, advising

football fans on how to handle bathroonVba n—by—4ownsh ip4-^^I

receiving calls for things not within their-control. Our members cooperated inhandling over 200 inquires just aboUtsnow removal, road clearing and

•weather conditions. This was in additionto accidenj calls, medicals-alerts, a

-couple of family disputes; and generalrequests for information."

Lodge members serving included AbeChasnoff; Lewis Coe; "David Cotler;

..eatherandToad conditions~added to a—Arnold Ehrich; Zavel Fitikelstein;busy work load Which includecTover 13 'Goodwin Horowitz (project co-

to. accidents;

POSTER GIRLS — Lisa Faucher, Colleen Beurer.and ElisaStamegnadisplay their posters for Harding Seniors, annual book fair lastmonth. AH winners received a book of thei?"choice.°

* » feted on" . :" • • " . • " • ' i s ,

Watchuiig Tool Co, birthdays

HOLIDAY.GOODIES — Two-year-old James 6'DelI of Kenilworthchuckles at the books and "snowman" with.candy cane being givenhim by Mildred Foster of the Union Police Wives. Jamesis a patientat Memorial General Hospital. Betty Q.'Rourke, RN, employee healthnurse/looks on. Police wives donated tfboks and playthings to youngpatients at the Union community hospital. .

Pair sentenced in silver theft

T

GARWOOD--A lone employe, working,overnight at the Watchung Tool Co,,South Avenue, was robbed of his pants,pay check and wallet containing $70cash around 8 p.m. Dec. 17.

Theodore Stohr saw one man enter thepremises, while someone else grabbedhim from the rear at the same time andthreatened him with a lug wrench. Stohr'left the plant after the robbery andreported the incident to his employer thenext morning. • , :

EXTRA TRAINSGARWOOD-Three commuter trains

will make extra stops at Garwood on-the"RaritarrValley-Eineehristmas Eveand-New Year's Eye. the ]p .m. , 2:30jp.m.and 3:40 p.m. trains from Ne~wark toRarltan will stop in the borough in thespecial holiday schedules.

KENILWORTH-- t h e KenilworthSenior Citizens Club feted severalmembers recently for their Decemberbirthdays. They were: Jennie Geores,Minnie Parrell,, Mary Jarusz, -HelenSwift, - Mary Wirtz, - Henry Stewart,Helen Keller andLAgjies Murelfo.

The group sang Christmas songs andFrank Rasinski, second vice president;read a poem, "You Know How Old YouAre When....". The^club's next regular meeting will

-be-Jan—7-at—1-prrri. at-the^Veteran's-Center. Officers will be installed.

DECK THEKENILWORTH- The first grade

Ttudehtsr~ot"Hardlng Schoolrunderthe-supervision of Eleanor Binder, Dorpjhy

'Matthews, and Angela Marinaro, addeda festive holiday touch to their hallway.The children made paper chains,snowmen, holly people, reindeer-,wreatha,-and Santa-Claus decorations.-The first graders would like to wisheveryone a very happy holiday season.

KENILWORTH- Two men havepleaded guilty to stealing silverwarefrom a' home here last spring. Onerecefved a four year suspended jail termand the other faces a potential ten-yearsentence if he is caught.. .

Superior Court Judge Cuddie Daviit^son issued a bench warrant Dec. 12 forEdwin P. Fonseta, 286 Howe Ave.,Passakj and ordered his bail forfeitedrFonseca pleaded guilty to burglary andtheft in November but then disappeared.

—The- charges stemmed—from-^theburglary of the Victor Krolick home onCoolidge DriVjj April 15, The two thieves

House decoration—

left with a paper bag full of silverwarebut dropped it oh Columbia Avenue aspolice' scoured the neighborhood.

Assistant Prosecutor Bradford Burysaid Officer Scott Phillips, then off duty,

jchased.and tackled Herman Rios, 305Main, Passaic, while-Fonseca disap-peared. Bury said Rios pleadedguilty to burglary and agreed to testifyagainst Fonseca- Bury said Fonsecafaces a jail term of ug to ten y ea rs.

precious metals, it also helps to prevent

France from the other direction.O'Dea • recalls the invasion began

August 15, 1944. His unit landed at St.MaximionSt.Tropez and drove inland to the-sale of stolen valuables, which,"Montrevel, where on Sept. 3 the ilth' Bassano added, "is on an upsurge withPanzer Division inflicted casualties and ' n e recent increase in transient*i^pturjid many of the Americans. O'Dea purchasers of gold, silver and otherreceived a Distinguished Service Cross precious metals."-

J

judging on SundayKENILWORTH-- The RecreatiQn

Committee will judge the annual homedecorating Contest on'Sunday, Dec: 287

A $50 savings bond will be awarded tothe owner of the best decorated home ineach of the borough's five Votingdistricts. - '.-.- - - •'

In order to encourage energyconservation, the committee will have adaylight judging as well as' night.

Kenilworth

Saturday, Dec. 27: 10 a.m.-noon: Artlessons, Recreation Center; noon-4p.m.: girl's gymnastics , Breadey.Monday, Dec. 29: 7 p.m.: MunicipalCourt; consumer affairs office open.Tuesday, Dec. 30: 6-8 p.m.: Boy'sbasketball, Harding School; 7-9p.m,: 'Recreation Center open1

plumbing, zoning, building officesopen; 7:30-8:30 - p.m.: Boys'wrestling, Brearley-

LEGALS

BREARLEY KEY CL'UB members Darlene AyTes, Ddnlki Savo.rgian-nakls and Lisa Perrotta perfo«rned service project by helping BayLeaf VFW entertain youngsters at hbllday party. One o,f tneir clients

. was Dawn Materla, second from left. -

JOINING SANTA at Baytea^^HW Auxiliary Christmas party Sundaywere, from left,- Mark Peden, Daha^gstaldo, Teresa Goodell, DawnCastaldo and,Lynn Castaldo. Mrs. Cormi<GrbodeH, chairman, Is atrear..Sant& helpers incluojed Florence Castald^Rae Clevenger andAugustine Lawrence. ,^ " ~

. LEGAL NOTICETOWNSHIP OF CRAN£ORD

' CRANFQRD, NEW_JER'SEYORdlNANCE NO. B0.-48

AN ORDINANCE REPEALING OR-DINANCE NO. BO-34 AND AMEND-ING SECTION 2361 OF CHAPTER23 OF THE "REVISED. OR-DINANCES OF THE, TOWNSHIP OFCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY (I0S0)"BY MAKINQ PARKING LOT NO/7(MILN STREET) A PARK AND SHOPLOT AMD nEQLM ^TINO THF PAnt^ING OF \UiHICLES THEREIN.

HENRY A. DREYER, JH.Ghulrnian of Township Coinmlttuu"

ATTESTWESLEY N, PHILOTownship Clerk

STATEMENT.. v : . • J .. •

. Thu fo^ofloInQ ordlnuru:^ wuuflnully. puudud ut u motjtl'iU ° ' 1^**Town^hlp ComtTilttuu of. th«Township of C/unford. |J.J. on TuotP -duy, Dtictiinbur 2'J, 10BU.

>..

WESLEY A. PHILOTownwhlp ClufW •

Oulilli: D,ii;.irnbnr 24, 1UU0

•> PUBLIC NOTICE - .,•Tho 10B1 Tov Llat lor IhaiJorouah

ol Kvnllworth will bu av^lljible forpubl ic Inspact lon buglnnlnaDuconibuc. 20lh 1080, Monduy thruFriday, botwoen Iho hours ol 0 AM 8.4 PM. ,

Robert W. BrunhanTux AtjBtisaor

Datad: Docembar 24, 19SOFOB: $ 3,Qg - ^

LEGAL NOTIOE c ,UOHOUGM-OP-KEWILWOBW

BOROUGH OF GARWOODGABWOGD, NEWJERGEY

.•;."V N O T I C F ' "•' -Public Notlco In horoby (jlvon lhai

Iho Mayor, 6nd Council of theBorough of Qurwood, Now Jorsoywlll-ha(d lib Slno Dlo rnuotlnn, of 10HOul 11:30 AM Junuury 1, 1081, In ihuBorouah Hall Council Chumboro,South, Avonuo'and CBtitor Slroot,Gurwqod, Now Joraoy. Thurooraanlzutlon muotlno of Iho n«wlyuloctod Gpvornlnrj nody will bu huldon Junuary 1, 1081 at 12 o'clocknoon In Council Chumburu,Munlclpul Bulldlno, Qurwood, NHWJurHoy,

Datod:-Docernb«r 24, 108QFun1 \ U J —

KENILWORTH, NEW JERSEY. ORDINANCE NO. BO-2/

,i\N ORDINANCE PROVIDINGFOR COMPENSATION' FOR THEPOLICE DEPARTMENT OF THEDOROUOH OF KENILWORTH.ATTESTMARGARET ADLERUorouoh G(url<

STATEMENT '.Tuku notices Ihut thu ubovu Or-

dlnui]c<i wuti puttutid on thu flnolruuillng uftur public huurlnu ut urunulur rTiuotl.nQ of tho Qo'vofrxlnobody ol th« Uorouoh of Konllworthon l|w 23rd Duy <)( Ducornbui", 1080.

' MAHQAHET ADLERUbrouQh Clork of tho

' i ' i;iorou(Jh of KonllworthDulud: Htjc.imbor 24, 1080Fun: % n..u • -J

LEGAL NOTICEBOROUGH OF KENILWOHTH'KENILWORTH, NEW JERSEY

• . ORDINANCE NO. 800AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND

BOROUGH ORDINANCE NO Bfl-IBATTESTMARGARtT ADLEH -Borough Clark '

STATEMENTTuko notloe that Iho abovo Or-

dlnunco. waa puaoorf on the flnulroudlnf) aftur public ruwi io at a"(ooUlar rnttotlno of Iho noUornUinbody bf tho BorouQh pi tcSrfllworthon tho 23rd Day o| Dacnmbor; 1080

- •MARGARETADLEH• -.- ' j i ; UcmiunhClurk ol tho

,-, \ • „ 1 l o r o u 0 ' ' orKDulud. DHU«nib«r 24. 1080>•'"«: * S.uil

••[

y . Eugene earmodyrfreeholder, has^distributed questionnaires to resi-

dents along the ConralKLehighValley) railroad seeking specifics onnoise problems that have aroused

I concern.' Meantime, the TownshipI Committee has. taken note of 'Wisedisrupting the • tranquility of the

1 area" and petitioned Conrail and thej freeholder board to take corrective, action. .

A primerHenry Dreyer Jr. has spent the

past year as farmer-mayor. Startingtomorrow he "retires" to the title offarmer. Dick Salway, townshipcommitteeman, gave him a farewellfrom government book titled"Complete Guide to SuccessfulGardening." •

FlotveiyBarbara Brande received a

flowery farewell from her peersafter six years on the TownshipG o m i n i t t e e W P h l t a h i

responses to. accidents; 6 responses,"along "With the First Aid Squad, formedical assistances were suspectedcoronaries), and 5 responses to privatealarms.

Liaison officer Lt. Harry Wilde saidthe department . was . "deeplyappreciative" of the B'nai B'rith for its

chairman); Alan Kane; Jonas Leifer;'Arnold Marks; Herbert Mason; NeilMayer; Erwin Rpusch.;1 ^MichaelReitman; Eric ". Roll man,;':. BruceNassberg; Michael Rekoon; and LeeWarmbrand. On* call and available asalternates were Frank Baker;„ RobertBernstein;" and Perry Rabbino.

ON FOODHarold Cohen, upon retirement after

making one million' donuts and fivemillion pounds, of French Fries in hiskitchen management^ career,:"Personally, I prefer apple strudel;"

DEMOLITION;Dick Salway-, real estate

-commisaioneivadvocating deirjolition ofCleveland School prior .to .its sale:"Clearance will- make the site looklarger." —:..-•..._ .-.--.: --^..,'

GLOBAL FAMEJury, verdict,Neerpelt.Belgium choir

festival: "Cranford, USA, high school.choir-first prize, surnma cum laudej '

DOti

RETHtEMENT1 Rev. Arnold Dahlquist on his 29 yearsin the ministry: "I haven't had to hide._behind that (clerical) collar,"

Marion' Cymbaluk's message tohusband Myron upon his and herretirement from police'clean shirt duty:"The Last Shirt! No. 6,755. Thank Godhe retired!" " ...

residents complaining about his -letterciting *dog\ ordinance violations:''Everyone whose dog has run loose haeviolated it. Come to our schools-there

, are hundreds of loose dogs".".

BUDGETING PERILSDr. Robert D. Paul, • school

superintendent, on potential 1981 cuts:- "We hayelto Jace rthe list of-horrihles..'.'-; Penny Brome, with help fromShakespeare, titling library annualreport: "Thrift, Horatio!"

ON SURVIVALElizabeth Kerr after her escape from

the MGM Grand Hotel fire in Las Vegas:•"It was arj experience! wouldn't wantmy worst enemy to go through."

Mrs. Amasiq Marsigila's brothercalling from earthquake-torn Italy:"Thank God we're alive."

Mrs. Marilyn Hoag on son Eddie'srecovery from hit-run accident: "Hisattitude is excellent.'.'

TATCTTVG CHANCESAssemblyman Chuck ~Hardwibk:

"New Jersey needs more gambling likea drowning man ne£ds_..a bucket ofwater." " .'

Jean Jacobson qf Gallows' Hill Road,after winning free trip to Hawaii: "Inever won anything before."

WJEST END TREESGr.egory Sgroi, "town engineer, tin

removal of eight CHS trees withoutschool board involvement: "They don'thave to be jiaformed."

Bob Seyfarth, CHS principal: "Aschool withofut trees Ts'like a classroom ••without students." .

Fred More, ., schooj businessadministrator, after_being asked to findreplacement species: "I don't know onetree from anoiher,r^.: i.

BONDS THAT TIEBarbjira .Brandt;, .commenting on - '

marnages'Tihe con'ducTe^li'^lnay'oF.in''7""''•1977-i "I- hope all-those people a r c stillm a r r i e d . " ' . • . • , . • • ' • • • . . ' . ' • • . . .

THE RAILKO/IJ)Mrs. James Watson 'of . Hillside '

Avenue, commenting' .on nJrtlrqad noiseproblems: "It was quieter'in the oldxlays." • ., ' : ' •" '

CEREMONIESHelen Moran of.Doering Way after her

brother'was named secretary fof labor- '"I dorrt tafe about the inaugural ball.The swearing in is the moment in historyI'd like to see." .

" Carol p>abou.t-~ returningprofessional, responded,i " '

Jersey-.. as."It :feels real

nice.

Holiday help: B'nai B'rith member Lewis B. Coe at police desk withSgt. Stephen Schlapak, standing, and Officer Edward Zarzecki.

nrWesPhrloTtawnshipclerk, presented one of-his home-grown orchids. Dick Salway gaveher a rose. .

RibbonsThe idea proposed to the Township

Committee two weeks ago was toplace yellow ribbons on the munici-pal Christmas tree as" a ' symbolic"gesture of. disapproval of thecontinued detainment of U.S..hostages in IrSn. But the governingbody expanded on that with a resolu-tion asking civic organiimtUmsJ totake similar steps and urgingcitizens to display yellow ribbons ontheir properties. *

Francis Heineman diesFrancis J. Heineman, retired postal the N.J. State Firemens Assn., a

superintendent here and a Fire Depart- member of the Cranford. Exempt Vire-|~m^ntrca11maTi"Jrfir4t)7eaTS7died-Monday—memmd-treasuremof- therrlocal-Pire-

rnen's Relief Assn. He was also a

A VICTORYWilliam Dunscombe, Union College-

prof, after finishing 7,305th in New YorkMarathon: "I had my own internalvictory-over the fear of failure."

BANDAGES ANDTVState Sen. Anthony Russo, favoring

TV for the s"tate_: "It's a crying shamethat children in this state think Ed Ko chis their mayor, largely because of theexcessive. dependence. on Manhattan-oriented news programs' that virtuallyignore our state. By. permitting NewYork City stations to get off the.hook byassigning part-time reporters-to NewJersey is like putting a Band-Aid on acompound fracture." • .

NEW HOME• Henry Dreyer Jr., mayor, at firehousededication: ."It represents our town'scommitment to ourselves."

Leonard Dolan,' 'fire chief, sameplace: '.'This has to be the happiestmoment of my life."

--.•••" " SURVEILLANCE '"•Yale Manoff, school b«ird attorney,-

addressing. Superior Court on casebrtmght .by Cranford Education""Association; the sctiool board has a rightto "Resort to some investigative body toexamine the-ability of staff members toperform." "

Yyonne Hamilton, president ofCEA: "Are fear and 'suspicion to be •new watchwords of a 'brave new world'in public employment?" ^

John H. Stamler, proseautor, on the.litigations: a. "tempest in a teapot."

Superior Court Judge EdwardMcGrath, in decision: "Nowhere in thedepositions upon which plaintiffs rely isthere a scintilla of proof to support thecomplaint as it stands. Everything in thedepositions is-hearsay and sometimeshearsay upon hearsay."

AN-BNDI-NG-Gregory Sgoi, town engineer, after

reporting; to" government an ovelrurTof$32,921 on $62,529 street constructionjob: "It came out beautifully."

CHS.. A petition from 109' Cranford HighSchool students has been presentedto the Township Committee " insupport of relief ft»m" a" two-hourparking limit in the vicinity of theschool, The students said they needabout four hours. Most of the peti-tioners were identified as partici-pahts.in the Hfhool's ^ riprogram who need cars to get towqric: •,

Church tripsRichard Blxon, a member of Boy

t< Scout Troop 178, has organized anetwork of volunteers who will

I provide transportation for those who! are unuble toget to church. Now he• needs the names of local residentsI who are in need of this service, CallI him at 272-7168. Story on page 4.

-at his home after a brief illness.-He-jretired two years ago after 36

years with, the local Post Office. Hestarted in 1942 as a letter carrier, raterbecame a clerk and superintendent ofmails. He was superintendent of postaloperations five years before retiring.

He became a callman in 1940 and wasa lieutenant from 1975.

Services will be from Dooley FuneralHome, 218 W. North Ave., at 9:15 a.m.Friday. Mass will be celebrated at 10a.m. at St_Michael..Church, where Mr.Heineman was life member of the HolyName Society, president of the St,

-Vincent de Paul Society and servedmany years as usher at the noon mass.Interment will be in Fairview Cemetery.

Born inv Jersey City, he came here atage tWo; He served in the Army AirCorps in World'War II. .

Mr. Heineman-was a life member of

member of Clark American Legion PostNo.'328. " ' _ . ' .

He was a past president of Local 754 ofthe National Assn. of Letter Carriers. Hewais a former member of the NationalAssn. of Postal Supervisors Branch No.237 and a member at large of theAmeHcan Postal Workers Union.

An" avid bowler, he also served assecretary of the Cranford BowlingLeague. '.

He is survived by his wife, LorettaPasco Heineman, a son, Mark B.Heineman at home; two daughters, Mrs.Evelyn M. Berroyer of-Jackson and Ms,-Barbara T. Heineman of Cranford; abrother, Carl, of Avenel, and threegrandchildren.

In lieu of flowers those that wish maycontribute to the American Heart Fund.Friends may visit today 2-4, 7-8 p.m.

Ex-mayor succumbsWilliam M. Tester, 94, Tornier mayor

of Kenilworth, died Dec. 25 in Coloradowhere he had lived since 1970I_ L

Mr. Lister was elected to serve asmayor from 1952 to 1954 after havingbeen a member of the Borough Councilfor. four.years. Earlier, he had beenpresident and secretary of the Board ofHealth and was president of the Kenil-worth Board of Education from 1932 to1934. • ,

He was a Kenilworth resident for 60years, coming to New Jersey from hisnative Iowa after serving five years inthe.Navy before World War I.

Mr. Lister was employed as a

• " , • • " • • ' . /

"machinist at volco Brass and- CopperCo. until he retired. During ths period ofhis gi-eat(>siirimLvim£Bll>i^i]-alf."he -reported on Kenilworth activities "forThe Chronicle. He was a member ofAzure Lodge F&AM, Cranford.

Surviving members of his familyinclude two daughters, Mrs., How;ardFinkel and Mrs. Edwin Schaeffer, bothin Florida; four sons, .WiHiariiJr. of LosAngeles, Richard, of Leba»m?K, N.J.,Roderick of Denver, and,.James of NewYork City. He also leaves 14 grand-children and 10 great-grandchildren.Services were held in Colorado.

Fables PoVid at UFvlon College Is being formalizedIn status as S stormwater detention basin.Cran-ford township bullf control structure and underpending agreement will-maintain It and pond. Con-tract Is designed to formalize exlstlrig arrange-

and town hopes eventually to expand thesize of the basin to ease flobding In theneighborhood. Pond Is surrounded, by wildlifesanctuary. Sperry Observatory Is In background.

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' Page 2 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Wednesday, December 31, 1980 r

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1981WINTER PROGRAM

• ' • • ' - ' . . . " • ' • *

CRANFORDINDOORPOOL

CENTENNIAL AVENUEJANUARY*&» /JUNE 5 -••->•'•

HOURSMONDAY'thru FRIDAY '6:1 5AM-7f3OAM

• • ' • ' . . • 9 : O Q A M - 9 : 3 O P M

-SATURDAY " . 1r:3<i>PM-6:00?>MSUNDAY i9:nn-f;onpM

BABYSITTING"BABYSITTING will be available

during the following houfs:'MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY,

.THbWfc&BAY & FRIDAY9:00 AM -• 12 NOON. ^

PROGRAMSOPEN SWIM, for Fun, Relaxation and Recreationl

WEEKDAYS

MONDAY -TFRIDAY 9:00'AM - 1 1:30 AM• " ".' 1:30 PM-2:30 PM. -" ; ." .-'• '\ 2:30 PM-3:30 PM

.MONDAY-FRIDAY 3:30 PM -5 :00 PM" " 8 :00PM-8:30PM

- ' - (8:00-8:30 Share Pool)-8x3_0:PM - 9:30Pifcdrz:

WEEKENDS^SATURDAY

SUNDAY-

1:30 PM- 2:30 PM——.' (HalfMhePoal)-

2:30BM-.5:00-RM-1:00 PM- 5:00 PM

'LAP SWCNIMING for aerobic and ca.r-diovascular fjtness, especially importantto adults. . : '.-,EARLY BIRD SWIM

MONDAY-FRIDAY 6 :15 AM-7:30 AM

LUNCH HOUR SWIWU 4 ^ 1 — - .,MONDAY : FRIDAY' 1 1 :.3O AM-1:30PM

"ADULT AFTER WORKMONDAY, WEDNESDAY,THURSDAY; FRIDAY 5:00-6;30PM

• (Half Pool)TUESDAY . • " 5:OO-6:00'PM

6:00-6:30 PM(Half Pool)

ADULT EVENING —/MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, ."^ T R U R S D A V & FRIDAY 8 :00-9 :30 PM"

WEEKENDSSATURDAY - - 1:3Q - 2:30 PM

(Half Pool)5 :00-6 :00 PM

-SUNDAY 12 NOON-1:00 PM5:00-'6:00 PM

MASTERS SWIM PROGRAM8:30 - 9:30 RM (Half PooD-THURSDAY

SWIMMING LESSONSSPECIAL COURSES

Swimrning is for relaxation, for safety^for fitness, for therapy, for competition;for recreation, for a life-time guarantee ofan individual activity with healthassurance. '

LESSONSJanuary 12 - Five (5) week sessions.Next five. .(5). week .sessions to be an-nounced.

REGISTRATION - being taken now at theCentennial Indoor Pool from 9:00 AM to9:30 PM.,. — . :

LESSONS - Hydro-Babies, Tiny Tots (Age3 - Pre-Kindergarten),.Beginner I, Begin-ner'l l . Advanced Beginner, Intermediate,Swimmer,. Adult AM & PM, Diving,Private lessons available.

COURSES - Swim & Slim, Hydro .Fitness,Bed Cross Advanced Lifesaving, WSI.

FIELDHOUSE PROGRAMSCENTENNIAL AVENUE

REGISTRATION being, taken now atCentennial Indoor Pool frorn 9:00. AM to9:30 PM. ,

ADULT PROGRAMS - Exercise/Fitnessclass, Begjriner & Intermediate Racquet-ball irurtrucDon. : ••~~~"

CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS - Kindergym(Age.3 pre-Kindergarten) AM - PM,'StoryTime/Mime & Afterschool Gym program.

A 1981 DETAILED BROCHURE OF THEENTIRE CENTENNIAL AVENUE INDOORPOOL PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITYSCHEDULE CAN BE OBTAINED AT:

.THE RECREATION £ND PARKS OFFICE\ • 114 MILN STREET '

CRANFQRD, N.J. 07016

Bergen admitted to NJ BarBruce H. Bergen, son of

Bdris and Betty Bergen, 10W.JHolly St., was sworn inas a member of the Bars ofthe' State of New Jersey.a.rYd the federal District-Court for the District ofNew Jersey in a ceVemonyin Trenton Dec.18." Bergen graduated from'Seton Hall UniversitySchool of JJIW with a JurisDoctorite last May,rankingln the top to

grade point -average.While a' student he was a

member' of the FamilyLaw Clinic, Since' hisgraduation, Bergen hasbeen employed by UnionCounty Legal Services,Elizabeth, where he plans 'to continue as a staffattorney. ' """' "

He also, is serving his ••second term as a'memBe.1"of the Cranford and UnionCounty Democra t icCommittees and is .Vic%president of the. Cranford

^Dferhbcratit:Ciub.''' ''. CA 1977 graduate of Case

W e s t e r n R e s e r v e

University, Cleveland,Ohio, Bergen received abachelor "of arts degree•with "majors in sociologyand psychology. While atCase-Reserve, Bergenwas editor of the campus ;

newspaper, headed' the-student government,wbfked~oti Die campus"radio station . as, ane n g i n,e e r ,a,n dproducer" director, / andwas a member of the ZetaBeta Tau fraternity. ......

After ttirithnasBonanza

James Korn sworn to NJ BarJames R. Korn, Court,, and Clarkson S.

Parkway Village, was Fisher, chief'judge6f theSworn iato the New Jersey United "States. DistrictBar before Robert N.. Court for the district ofWilentz,. chief justice. of New Jersey. *>-.the New 'Jersey Supreme Korn was graduated

HERO HONORED^Si Herbstrleft, €ranford;grpnd chancellor of the Knightd ofPythiasofNeW Jersey, arid Alfred Silberfeld, past grandchancellor, unveil plaque at the PATH-Sfai-tjnp .|ortifly r,ltyt to rnmmpmnrntft |hp |OOth

•0RESSES« BLOUSES!• SHIRTS • V0.OURS J

• SLACKS • f i t • SETS** HANDBAGS•SWEATERS

•SKIRTS * ETC.

ALL GIFT ITEMS-MUST GOREGARDLESS OF PRICEI

TIMEX WATCHES_ • • . • . • » '*•'•*•'

25% OFFALL GIFT SETS

2 PRICEViASSORTED PERFUMES

ALL HAIR DRIERS& ELECTRIC RAZORS

10% OFFOUR REGULAR LOW PRICED

anniversary of the heroism of PeterWoodland; a Pythian, from Pennsylvania, whodied In an accident In the underwater rail tun:nel excavation in 1880 whTje «avlrigwllves of-eight, co-workers. Representatives o f -43^ Jlodges attended as well as Kenneth L. Diss-inger, grand chancellpr of Pennsylvania.

A "and SnowsOHs

John R. Erbeck andJohn J. M[affey, both of

anfordTare un the honor*roll for the first quarter at

Seton Hall PreparatorySchool, South Orange.

-SPFfEAblNQ CHEERi^F Students fronts"BfD'ORside School, brought 15 cartons of toysand food to - the Cranford Family Care

n^sltoclaTroTtfo^—temilies-for-GhFlstmaa—Prom-leftT-areHviatt—

Paradiso, Allison Gregory, Steven Vath, JohnCapezza and Patty Muray. Burton Mandell,principal, oversees packing.

Henry,; • » • . • • • . , . • • • • . • • ' • • • • . . I ' • •

SUPER JOB!

544 North Avo. Ensl; Woslllojd • 2320483Gronoli Mall. Rl. 206, Rurltan • 526-4434

Wednesday, December HI. 1980 CliANKGKU cK'..J i rUH()NjrLK.l';i(i.- :i

You rinayibodamaging your-records^

without realizing It lSbflet your""turntable or record changerinspected and analyzed (or:-

Stvlus Wear, Tracklrvg_Forca,Turntable Speed, Antl-Skale,

Phasing, Crosstalk,•^.Channel Balanceand Trackabllity. This..

Inspection andoptimization is performedusing over $4..PP° wqrth of

tost oquipmont...and it's FREE. atSTUAHrsAUDiq,Qn

—• ' TuoodayoanojF'iildaysl

from Seton Hall. LawSchool /in June. While at-tending law school, he wasassociated With the

.. cDonough, Murray andKorn law firm of-Westfield, He presently is

-with the Union CountyProsecutor's Office.

Kofo is married to the,1

former Joanmarie Henry,Soutii Orange, and he is-the son of Mr. and Mrs.'Leonard E. Korn, Cran-fprd. . , ^_

Deb N Heir• KLOTHES FOR KIDS ' ,

27 N. UnionCranford, MJ276-0881

December, 1980

Tommy;

Medical building ApprovedThe Planning Board has development of . a

ap£T«>vecl the si^s- plan for J satisfactory parking plana hew'medical^offiqeji by the bank,1 which _ isbuilding on R^UafrRoadv swapping some land;fromnext to the National'state; .the two doctors' who areBank. ~ .• building ' the office

The board also approved s t rue t u r e, ' An th o n ya two foot, rear yard- Invernn and Franklin'variance on the property Spirnc o n t i n g e n t u p.ft n

The exchange would• fiivt each party..strips of.property from jjaritanthrough, to McK'inTeyStreet. The parcel/; arebehind! >toe bank dri've-inand-^fhe ' proposed 6.00JJsquare -foot two-storyprofessional building.

The • .board — ;recotriniciiiied laTownship ( ominni«-i- -McKinJty, a iin\ sti*-(-ironi'rnercie'"lJr ivc, Ivacated so ihe tou"ai

would not- h;ne to• responsible i or. niaintehance

A-X

ADDITION'.DEDICATED — Dr.. William H.West, ..Cranford, former-county superinten-dent of schools, addresses guests at dedica-tion ceremonies marking completion of anaddition to a building named after him atUnion County Vocational Center, ScotchPtalns. The school will utilize the new80,000-square-fqot: addition for several pra-.grams including' special lieeoT" courses.West served on the schooirs.board of educa-

4

DRUGSTORE. • • • - ' r-»

EcKtnton -Sfr^-^Cranforcl- 8 -

C" 276^100 ^y

_ TAX HITe 'Senator Anthony

E. Russo. has" expressedstrong "opposition to thepossible jmp(^ition of afive percent sales tax ongasoline. Russo said hethoughfrthe idearof-g-new"

Mevy on gasoline sales^ould be "the crudest taxof all. It seems insensitiveto ask our hard-pressedmotorists, who have beentaxed 400 percent byMiddle-Eastern sheiksoverthtrpast -geveri:j?ea'r6fto come up with anadditional five_ percent ontop of all they've beenforced to endure."

FERRANTESE DINNERThe P e r r a n t e s e

Association held its annualChristina's dinner danceDec. 7 .at -the -Knights- of-.. C o l u m b u s h a 11 ,•Kenilworth. .

DECORATOR SPEAKSMarlene VanPoznak,.

interior decorator, willspeak Jan. 7 at the YM-YWHA of Greater West-field, 305 Elm St. at l p.m.

present a problem whichMs. VanPoznak willdiscuss. Call 232-5514 toregister.

WOOLDRESS SLACKS

reg. $49.50-$55

.S39

SPORT JAGKETSBLAZERS • • • • • .;?79-s199

reflr$175-$295

OVJI I O •-..-.." r • . , , , . , , \Z- 7 —

. $15-$50

SWEATERS $9.9Q-S29.99

OUTERWEAR& RAINCOATS .

reg. $60-$ 175

. . .M9^S139HATHAWAYDRESS^HIRTS

reg. $22.50-^25 .

2 FOR S37.5Q

.Major •--,Charge CardsAccepted

ncmcni!CORHCR

11 NortK'Oiii^h V\vertue,"Cr¥rfrdrePTJhonc 272-5350"

TREAT YOURSELF TO OLYMPUSBERGEN CAMERA

WILL:HELP YOU select the correct

-piece—of—equipment—for—your—needs & budget'

"TEACH YOU how to use it'CMARG'rYoU a competitive •DISCOUNT PRICECONTINU^TO TEACH YOU .photography as "long"asn you.w a a W o l e ~ a r f i : : '' .-"•• •".'-••:•.•••?

-SERVICE your equipment - i f ,and-when ibneedsJllrj/ifEZ

WILL SEND It tb thefactory at NO CHARGE

LET US DEMONSTRATE

OLYMPUS OM-10

LISTpRICE:$359.OOOUR PRICE $241 95

"»"§iti3lfr"quTBT-and light.• Fully dutomatig

-•-Aperture preferred---'-• -ElectronJs. exposure .^•..Brightest viewtinder."'•

EASTMAN ST~»276 1024

---,

I ' • U .

'/&

HII Itertjs!

—Cranford •

/ V FLOWERS116 North'Ave. W.. prpnford "" ' , ••

276-47Q0T143 Chosliiul St.. Rosollo Pk.

241 ^797 : ._^_130 VJ. ThltdAVo.'. ROSOllo' .-— —

241-2700 • rt< ii« you suy il r

: James'R. Korn

Itenis stolenfrom threecompanies *

Offices of three firms.onChristiani St. \vere broken,into over the Christmasholiday. A typewriter,calculator, copy machine,dies and six wall photo^were taken from Worth.Tool; 7a7~box containing

Industrial blocks valued at$200 was taken from KKDand Tool, and a calculator

-from Sure^Cast Products.

Three in family hurtThree persons including

a two-year old boy wereinjured in a two-carcollision in front of 333North Avenue Monday,

A car driven by iPeterCjccone, '325 North, col-tided with "one driven byFrank Carrijat of Madi-son, who suffered bruisedknees and elbows. Mrs.'Carrijat had a bboken jawand their son Frank R, hada-cut~chin.. They Weretaken by; the First AidSquad to Memorial:General Hospital Ciccohereceived a,Summ,ns for

near Benner's. Both-weretaken by the squad toElizabeth General with1

,.lace lacerations. She wascited for improper•passing... ,.--

_ 2 ^ carjiriyen by JarriesSpaziani Jr., 1581 Spring-field Ave., struck a treeand then hit a car. drivenby Mark R. Silance,^301Lincoln Park E. on pec;23.__Spaziani was taken toRahway Hospital with "a"bloody"nose.and received asummons for car'elessdriving, , •

theft Christmas Eve at theapartment of RosannaRenda at 8 Riverside Dr. Alarge amount of jewelry

' and about $1,000 in Italiancurrency were stolen).There was no sign offorced entry.

Maureen Givens, 104Balmiere Ftd,, said' awallet was stolen from her

1

A four car, rear:end col^lision resulted jn oneminor injury t>ida,y.George Collins, WestXield,was taken by the squad to tration for men-JMemorial General. Other I962 w i l ' t a k e P l a c e n e x t

for draftSelective^Service regis-

orn in

"drivers at the North andP

Men' born in 1963

, ,<-•

CHRISTMASCHECK LASTA LIFETIME

•cut

[ . i - : i . i : , < • • ' : ' , ':•'•: i } \ : . > '•• - :

AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY: : REGISTERED JEWELER

RICHARb SHEINBLATT, D.D.S.P.A,

•Generai Qjentistry

•Orthodontics*freriodorrHcs•Ertdodontics•Reconstructive Dentistry

•Inhalation Sedation

•Intravenous. Analgesia

— - Hours By Appointment - — ^

WcharcUSheinblat^D. D,S^P-A^221 Chestnut StreetRoselle, New jersey O72O3245-161^ .

t f

RoMnsdn'sJanuary Foundation

COINS & JEWELRY

Moti Tin's I'ri 9:30-5:30. 9:30-8:30

< Sat. 9:':I Wid. 9":30-5:00

Whenever possible we—addrtionarrover gotd~8rsitvBT

value, based on antiquityand saleability.

Martin Jewelers-serving you withintegrity for .more 'than35 yrs.

"••:i'

4:'

I

WARNERS1 0 5 8

-i •' r e g . 1 0 . 5 0 . .... .,. . . . , , ' .• . . . .-. . . . 8 8 . 9 9•*l'OO2 - "My Skin" Bra -*• - '•••--.

• ''reg. 8,50 , . . =..- : ; - 7 1 9#206 "My Skin" Hipster ^

reg. 4.50 - . . . . 3 . 6 0#652 "In Control" Parity

. . . . " reg. 21.50. T T 7 . rvv::. .", . . r-- - • 18149#653 "In Control" Long Leg\

reg. 2 2 . 5 0 . . , . . ,.\. ,,., . . . .;.".:• .19:49_

—f

VASSARETTE# 1 9 1 7 - F i b e r f i l l B r a , reg. . 8 . 5 0 . . . . . / : . . 6 . 8 0

1*4017 S o f t C u p B r a , reg. 7 5 0 . . . 6 0 09^0#471 - Brief, reg. 12.00

# 4 3 1 7 - U n d e r w i r e Bra , re.g. 1 0 . 5 0 . . . . . . , . : . . - 8 . 4 0# 5 1 7 - P a n t y G i r d l e , reg;. 1 6 . 0 0 . . . . . , , . . . . . . 1 2 . 8 0

F O R M F I T - R O G E R S L#420 - Soft^up Bra, reg. 9.00 . .. J.. - .7,20

'#520 - Fiberfill Bra, reg. 10.00 , . . . / . , .8.00#487^RunningBra,reg. 1L00.. , • - - - ' . , , J, i •.•9.50 .(.

MAIPEMFORIU*6818 " Nothing" Bra r „

^ x a l Q : J#6848 "Sweet Nothing" Fiberfill Bra

• reg. 8.50.,. Y v . . ' . . . . . . . 6.99

S l ^ ^

15 N. Union Ave,, Cranford • 276-0234Open 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Dally; Tburs^tll 9 p.m.

- * • - • *

Centennial scene included and la ter should registerJohn F. Stucy, Rpselle,' within 30 days of their lBthwho received" a careTess birthdaysr""sTv " ^driving citation, plus John This is a conftmiatton ofL. Fourney, Cedar Hilli the program begun lastPa., and"Simon L. Rosen- -sTimme'r., whereby menbach, 11? Spring Garden. Pom in 1960 and 1961

On Dec. 23, cars driven visited post offices acrossy Percy Gibson the nation to fill in the

Elizabeth, and Lin^regis t ra t ion form. MenCantor Roche, Millburn, may register this time atcollided on South AvenuT""P°st- offices, too.

i Dnv• . j . • . . (

•' Q[- /«n J - n . Mur^ l u t v . . ' l '^ » • •

- ,V,n't 9 V< V - I - ' ; '• W^d 9 'Ki ' ' ( < l

z %

Selections in every

Misses, sportswear,jackets, suits

blazers

2O - 5OOFF

Childrens'coats and jackets"

1/3 OFF

Evening separates

OFF

Evening dresses

2O-5O%OFF

limited selections,broken sizes ^

. WES1I l£LD • UENDHAMM£W JtRStV

137 Central AveWestffeld2324800"-

ANNRANC

COMPLETE STOCK OF

SHIRTS • SWEATER!

SPORT COATSSUITS

DRESS SLACKSSPORTSMAN'S

SHOP103 N. UNION AVE •^RANFORD

Major Credit Cards Accepted-1099

r \

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Page 8: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

•••• . . . , J

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Page 4 CRANFORD (N..J.) CHRONICLE'Wednesday, December 31, 1980

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Editorialsproperty

Town awaits announcementof Martin Luther King Day

News of our congregations

<4iWednesday, December 31, 1980 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE! Page 5

Obituaries Norman

make it. Unfortunately," somelandlords or business buildingbwners have not followed theadage and their-Jaxity has-con^ lion,tribujted to some dilapidation amples of neglect or lack of

. of properties around town:That-—maintenance. For its part, theis why a property maintenance Planning Board concluded t h tcode is in the works fer comer-ciaj^iridustrial and businessstrucSures. The Planning Boardhas given the proposal careful

from ClergyA wise landlord knows that it programs are then needed to br-is necessary to spend money to ing the community back t6

_,._ ^ ^ . L i . - ^ . . . . - ^ ^ . • - - • „ . hea l th ."

, The commerce unit didn't findwidespread blight or delapida- ab m e u i su i e c ip i cm uic iwoiui i

i t m g -on_iy ISGmtcuv CA- - Luther King AwaVd for Human and CivilRights, The. program is scheduled for 8p.m. Thursday, Jan. 15 at Temple BetFf-El under the sponsorship of the Cranford

by reason of lack ofmaintenance and progressivedeterioration, the condition ofcertain premises has the further

scrutiny in recent* months andV-effect of creating blighting con-has .forwarded it to the ditions and initiating slums.Il.Township pommitteg for COR- The extend of Blight may besideratipn in 1981. V • ppen to question, but the conclu-

The proposed law states that *ion speaks to the " v u l n e r a b i l i t y

Cfioir to sing Bach in Germto Mrs. Dorothy Adam

JtCitizens of Cranford.are awaiting the

celebration of Martin Luther, King, JtvDay when a local resident will be namedas the first recipient of the Martin

Clergy^ Council.The choirs of the First Baptist Church,

Trinity Episcopal Church and TempleBethrEl will render ifiusic. A tribute willbe given in_ behalf—"of the nrotestantchurches by theTRevTArnoUJ Dahlquist.Rev. Monsignor John F. Davis willspeak for; the Roman Catholic

-community and Rabbi1 Charles Krploff,

Temple'Emanii-e'l, Westfield^N.l willrepresent the Jewish community.

The person who has been judgedCranfqrd's outstanding leader in humanand^civir rights will be awarded theannual award commemorating Dr.King. • • • • ' . . • . :

All churches and the temple arecooperating in the selection qf, .therecipient a.nd all citizens are eligible fornomination.

The collection will be used to establishthej^aiUquist Fund for Race/Rela tions.Refreshments will be- served at theever^, of which the Rev. Dr. DeborahCannon Wolfe is serving as generalcliaii pet soil. •—

Leipzig. JKjappelmeister

to change" of the downtown asreported in the master plan. •

It is not too late to address thestructural elements of the realand potential problems. Proper-ty values in the town center im-pact directly and indirectly onvalues throughout the communi-

4y. Acsthcties and safety-affect^

"there exist in the townshippremises which are, or may

• becorne.unsafe or unsanitary,or dangerous or detrimental tothe health or safety or otherwiseinimical to the welfare ofresidents." Bob Biach, chair-man of the Comerce Committeewhich forwarded "the original

-proposal to the Planning Boardjput it more bluntly: "Urban everyone. The proposed code of-blight is a.contagious disease," fers the township an opportunityhe wrote. "If not quickly check- through enforcement power onred and cured, it spreads rapidly ly to -correct building deficient-r" : .

1 "- • cies but tor forestall their spread. SCSSlOIl tO a d d r e s sTo thatrenditrdeserves-support. T T •;''""• :

will attend convention^. "Our Refuge Amid Increasing the loc^l areajy» planting to attend theDangers" will beJthe subject of the gathering.this weekend at the assemblypublic address to be-featured at the. halJJn-Monroe, N.Y, A peak attendanceconvention for local Jehovah'js^of' about 1600 is expected. TenWitnesses at the beginning of the new congregations, comprising a portion ofyear, Family groups frqm^the two the local circuit, wjll.be represented.tranford congregations and guests from MTjGJ F T l F

A post Christmas concert (Nach Sebastian Bach, wil be presentedWeihnacht Konzert) of music by the Sunday at 4 p.m. at the First Unitedwemnacni ivojutu ««.._ ^ ^ Methodist Church, Westfield sung frt

German, the language for .which >the umusic was conceived. A

"To sing these solos and choruses in ::;takes the 'Bach' ouV of "'the~T

music", says conductor Philip >•,Dietterich. "No matter how carefully_a»<-f1

English" translator works to^feyelop a :/.singable text, it is ^imgossible to iduplicate the exactplatfefnent of vowels ;.>and consonan.ur'wth the music. Forinstance^-the harder, more explosive :l(}eririan consonants which the Chorus ii

-"^sings in an arpeggio, ,'auf, preiset die >'Tage', which .means, 'up, praise the 'f.

!' cannot be sung if translated Word.since there are only four

syllables In English versus six in therGerman. So an English paraphrase, ,,'this Day of Savatioh,' is necessary J

(according to Dietterich. • / 'l(,

"This misses both me exact meaning* ••;,and the lively sounds of the German \,consonants for which Bach has writtgn -,highly rhythmic musieTT-The-language—<-x-

Mrs. Dorothy May Hull Mrs!Adams, 73, died Dec. 23 at mojidr^Plainfield, andRahway Hospital after ajffrsT PpH y Hoxey,long illness. A • lifelotig Roselle; three sons, Floydresident of Crapfora, Mrs. j r _ Orlando, Fla., John

"born in the Edward, at home, and Sgt.„__ on Bumside Bernard Adams, stationedpri whichshe resid- with the U.S. Army at Ft.

ed at the time of her death. neVens, Mass., six grand-She was a member of St.Mark A.M.E. Church, itsFlower Club andCosmopolitan Choir.

She is. survived by herhusband, Floyd Adams

Norman E. Hewison; 84,"1 gfWestfleld died Dec. 25 in

Ham- Muhlenberg Hospital,

children and three great-grandchildren.

Funeral* services wereconducted Friday at St.-Mark Church. Intermentw.as iri Fairview

daughters, -Cemetery—ArrangementsKatherine w e r e yy t h e G G. Woody-Westfield; Funeral Home,

Tfrs. Helen ttayecITMrs - Helen Humphreys , member of its

Hayeck, 59, died Dec. 22 athome. Her-funeral wasDec. 24 at St. Michael

Sr.; — threeMrs.McAllister,

Plainfield,. after a long il-lness. . ' ... Mr. Hewison was thefather of Rober t E.Hewison of Cranford andis_also- survived h.y_his se-cond-wife, Mrsr Dcfrothy.Tayldr ' Hewison; adaughter, Mrs. Doris H.Schlak, Westfield, sixgrandchildren and sixgreat-grandchildren. Hisfirst wife, Mrs. MargaretJones Hewison, died in1971. ., ..i

.Bom • in Brooklyn, Mr.Hewison, who lived,-~inWestfield 60 years,'retiredin 1962 after 32 years as an

[ephone Co.Surviving are _. two

daughters, Mrs. Julia LeeWilliamson, Westfield andMrs." Elizabeth Hailey,"California; seven 'sisters,three brothers, fivegrandchildren and agreat-grandchild.

Interment in FairviewCemetery followed yester-day's services. Arrange-ments were by the G. L.Woody, Funeral Home,

Presbyterian Church, theold Guard of .Westfield,,and a. life member of theTelephone Pioneers "inArrterica. . • _

A 32nd degree Mason.'hewa,s a member of the Elm-cfare-Ashlar, Lodge,Chicago, for 67"yearb. Hewas" also a Shriner andmember -of the MedinahTemple, Chicago.

Surviving are his wife,

He .retired in 1960 after. wprking many years as aArainman for the Central

Broherhoodl r i n r n e n

of Ra.lroad

Wabf

QrvilleFaarspri, *l

• Funeral j services Havebeen condueted.for OrvilleD. Parson, a retiredengineer and.52.year resi-d|eiit,of Cranford, who diedD#c. ' 23 in Memorial

-Hospkol, Unioftr

son; two sons,OrvjyeJD--Jr.*anf4.Riiss,ell H.-.TJoth athome; a. daughter, Mrs.Shirley Corcione,Metuchen, a grandson and

Arrangements, were bythe Walter J. Johnson

. .Funeral. Hj>me;i"^ark,where services were heldSaturday. Entombmentwas in Graceland

Columbus, Clark. -—His wife, Mrs. May•lvJiller'Cody, died in 1977.Surviving are a daughter,Mrs: Alex StfSpak,Cranford,.^with whom helived, "two grandchildrenand two great-grand-children.

~~- Arrangements were "bythe Dooley Fuperal'Home,21? W. North Ave. «•

lifeof Flagler

Chapter . 355, OES,•Niagara^all8,--N.V. •••••'-

• Surviving are a son,

and four granddaughters.Her husband, Bruce B.Williams, died iff 1971.

Funeral services tookplace Monday at the GrayMemorial FuneHd Home,.Interment-' was . inHollywood MemorialPark, Union.

Hedwlgdied Dec. 25 in AlexianBrothers Hos"p"lta;i,Elizabefp.1 She'nvas 85. Amemorial service isscheduled for l'-p:m. todayat', the EmmanuelLutheran Church, MewYork City., • , . .1 Mrs. Albertson was born

'in Germany and came to. nriade•the United States 67 years Lungago. Shg.lived many years

are a brother,, of Cranford,

d. siister, ..Mrs- Berthal .'....Hofmann"' in'Pennsylvania", • and ag randson , RudolphWillrich. ••- .

Arrangements were bythe Gray MemorialFUneral'Home. In lieu offlowers , donations may be "

to • the American . -„ Association^—1740

Broadway, New York-

Elaine f^rati will appear asfeatfirecj soloist— In—-6erman-language concert of music by J.S. Bach Sunday at the "First

M h d

Church where a Mass ofthe Resurrection, was of-fered, followed by inter-ment~""in7Str~G;ertrude

Uiutedsynagoguep py

and can quickly engulf a com-rri unity. Massive redevelopment

Law-and enforcementNo law by,itself does much

good if jt is not enforced. As thetowffsfiip has learned painfullythis year, some laws on thebooks have been.' ignored iri the

t i i t t i

to meet minimum establishedcode standards. However; thePlanning'Board ran into a'snagover enforcement— The con-struction official and buiding in-

"N70. McRae qFThe West Cranfordcongregation, who will be acting asConvention Overseer, stated thata widerange of information will be covered in afull schedule of talks, 'demonstrations,'and group discussions. He also said thatmany young people will be especiallyinterested in the several parts of theprogram thapwill be "directed to them,including^consideration of..the theme

The Presidents' Council of the United "Knowjng Jehovah Safeguards Youth."Synagogue, New Jersey Region will hold "Thtfflnal talks on. Sunday are always

tyVestfleld.-Mothodlot

togetherthat the entire projection is lostif sung. in English. We have beenworking diligently on our German so

Mrs. Hayeck, who mov-ed to Cranford from

conservative issues

^ w o g ye n , l K a l w e mTght convey riieanings and

word atmospheres as the audiencefollows both texts - German arid English- which will be printed side by side in theprogram," Dietterich concluded.

Two soloists will join New York guestsDilys Smith and John Ostendorf in theprogram. Elaine Pratt, mezzo-soprano,of Cranford a student of Garyth Nair,will sing alto solos, and will join DavidNoovine, tenor, and, Dilys Smith in a!trio,

its first annual dinner rifeeting at theClinton Manor in Union'; on Thursday^Jan. Or / ^

The guest speaker will be Rabbi Neilof New York [Cit;

"School

Specially encouraging," said McRae.One of these titled "Our Rewarding,Friendship -with God," wil l ' , beconsidered by W.G. Cpndilis, atraveling '

ean of the—representetivje-oLtheJVatchtower Bible& Trdct Soqjety.

Scout offerstransportationto churchgoers

Richard Dfxon of Cranford Hoy Scout• Troop 178 is working on a special servico1 project as part of the requirements for ,, , -Eagle Scout rank. He has organized a ^ chuy«*. A member of the touring

in Jersey City. She was acommunicant of St.Michael Church and a

, Rosary.Society. •• ., '. Surviving are her hus-band, Michael Hayeck; ason,, Michael T. Jr., ScotchPlains; a daughter, Mrs.Mary Benenati, Cranford;her mother, Mjrs.Margaret Humphreys,Cranford; three sisters,Mrs. Edna Boyle and Mrs.Jean Ri/kalla, both oL

accountant with the

Cranford and Mrst MargeRaythen, Washington', and Cemetery.two grandchildren.'

after a short illness._, , . _, Born in Chicago,Fireman^s Insurance Co., ^ ^ 3 ^ f r o m t h eNewark. He was an Army f,n j inst i tuteveteran bf World War Iand was a member ofAtlas Lodge 125, F&AM,Westfield,;•" Funeral services -wereconducted Monday.'atvtheDooley Funeral Home,Westfield, by the RevRobert B. Goodwin, whoN

dso—reail—the— commitalprayers a-t Fairviaw

heII-of

Technology there. Ho wasa licensed professionalengineer in New Jerseyand was employed as anelectrical engineer—by-

CharlesM r s . W i l l i a m s

wil,iamSi

Kearny for 37 years untilhis retirement in 1955.

Mr. Parson was a

Gody -.ISFuneral services were

held yesterday for CharlesH. Cody, 88, wh|» died Fri-

-day-at—Alexian^ BrothersHospjtaJUJ&lizabeth, aftera lopg illness. '

Born in Morristown, helived here 45 years befor^

died-Dec! 24 at John E-Rurinels H o s p i t a l ,Berkeley Heights^after along illness.-,

B o r n i n Pennsylvania,she^ moved to Cranfordf r « m Elizabeth last^ear.

. s h f e w a s employed by theJamesburg. Board of-Educatronas an instructor

cnildrerr.uhnli-

DEDICATED TOSERVICE SINCE 1897.

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

KKEDH. GKAY.'JR.. . . DAVID B. CKABIKL

WILLIAM A. DOYLE

WESTFIELD: 318 East Broad St.', Fred H, Gray. Jr., Mgr. i?33-ci43CRANFORD: 12 Springfield Ave., William A.Doyle, Mgr, 276-0092

•-'••.v-y 1 Jfr*--

' -J

\.-.-.'; - » *

•A-

~ e*L''

Mrs. Theresia Klose

Pratt is the mezzo-soprano soloists at.

• KENELWORTH- Mrs.Theresia Klose, 78, diedMonday in HunterdonM e d i c a l C e n t e r ,Flemington. Funeral

^services .are beingconducted at 1 p.m. todayat the Kenilworth FuneralHome, 511 ^Washington

Mrs. Virginia

Johnson

oithe... .Jewish qyTheological Seminary of America. HYS;. A group baptism, representing fortopic will be "Are Conservative Rabbis Witnesses a public declaration of one's'topic will be "Are Conservative Rabbis, Witnesses a public declaration of one's'Trained to/Meet the Needs of Our dedication to God, will mark theCongregations?"' •. ' • "_ ir^grarnJ&nlSaturday^-Meinbers-of-thc-

—Jn,veTw of-theJact that the speaker!s^Cranford-congregations~will—1topic both significant.and relevant to participate in the program but will also

past; varying interpretations, spectorare those two jobs, heldlax enforcement and other fac-V by one person, require a greattors have surfaced in the deBite 9eal of time already. Anothero w commercial—and—reerea—person—may—be-required—to

•tiona-lyjBhicIe-j«rkingandrnthe bpls te r^ l ie -eporceT^i rTaF topic both significant/and relevant to t » . ^ . l - ^Sidewalk improvement cam- paratus. Initially, the Planning^/Oeaders of Conservative synagogues, volunteer their services in the severalpaign, to Cite two examples. Board decided to pass this ded- invitations to this meeting have been convention activities.

Sion to the Township Commit- extended to rabbis, ritual 6r, religiousThe proposed property

maintenance code carefullydelineates definitions ofdeterioration andjnuisanj^and^so~FaF as penalties are "concern-.

contactedtheir own. j

Richard, has contacted variouschurches in the community," outlininghis project- and—signing -up—church

serve~as driversr

cpmmittee _ chairmen,- program" aridmembership chairmen as well as. tosynagogue presidents, vice-presidents

, . , _ _ . . . , and former presidents. It is expected to, a ^ . ^ . ^ I ^ ^ i l l S t r a 1 _ d r a W | a large attendance and to facilitate i Joul -Food" from the text 1

tion couid rail in ltspurpose. The matters, reservations should be maijed

p Qtee, but it is now drafting astronger recommendation: Thismakes , senses.. The ordinance

'Soul Food'isJopic of sermon

ed, it carries teeth in the form of - new enforcement power in the to the regional office, 910 SalemCorinthians 11:17-34, has been chosen bypastorJiexJElpberLkopp as-his-sermoii

than Jan. 6, 1981.The D'var Torah will be offered by

Rabbi Gary Atkins of Temple Beth Abmin Aberdeen.' —-'•

Sunday at Osceola PresbyterianChurch. This is a - sermon on theSacifament of the Lord's Supper whichwill be. observed in the service.

maximum $500 fines-or90-dav--ejode-needs-SOmebody-to-OverSee~Avenuer-Hillside, N.J—oraoSTno later topic for the 10 am worship service bnjail sentences for those who f a j j / and follow through. . - f h n " ! a n c 1Q01 " " ~ . • _ . . .

Polwe^blotter squibsQee; • 1(7:01 p.m )—No Demosthenes standing by vehicle on street. She^s a

• — here.- -yotingster -throws stones- at —-• neighboivlocked-outt)f-hcrcar,-waitrnglibrary instead of. chewing them. for help."

„,Dec. U&\05.p.m.)— Local company Dec. 8(11:40 p.m.)—Case of Breezyadvised, not to fly U.S. "flag "upside "Burglar, solved by tracingopen door4o

treacherous winds.Dec. 8(3:04 p.m.)—Too bad for pupils:

their school bus breaks down after, notbefore, school.

a.m.)—Good'morning:/down.Dec. 3(8:34

_.'.. squirrel raps from back side of fire-.; - place glass doors.Dec. 3(10:10 a.m.)—Bookkeeper gains

credit entry for setting off a burglaralarm. __>

Dec. 5(4:32 p.m.)-Youth who sits andcontemplates-natureunder tree shallbe reported to authorities assuspicious character.- Merely restingfrom bike labors.

E>ee--5—-Townshi p—C hr-i-s-t-mas- -tree-—lights~overloadedrcomplairrby"going"

off temporarily.Dec! 6(9:37 p.m^^-Egg^thrower-hurls

one at movieho'use. Unknown whetherhe's disturbed at "Cry Uncle" or "TheWarriors: these are the armies of thenight."

'Dec. 6(10:24 p.nO^-Bad Samaritancalls police about suspicious woman

Dec. 8(8:35 p.m.)—-Suspicious vehiclereported at nearby gas station. Checkreveal it belongs to unsuspiciousowner of-station.

Dec. 9(9:46 a.m.)—Report of youngsters* smokin^nder bridge goes up in puff.

Dec. 1O( 12:03 p.m.)—Door-to-doorjewelrytown but avoids jewelry stores.'

Dec 10(2:13 p.m.)—Strange substanceattracts environmentalist experts whodfitowmire oil is in, not on troubledlocal-water. • • .

Dec. l^t.?:^ p.m.)—Purse reportedstolen at grocery store.

Dec; 12(8:45 a.m.)—Victim of purse: theft finds it in her car.' . . . .

Community-calendar

transportation system for l o c a l T ^ P . the : Wesley Skgersr she" • =pfirioxined-as solpist—with-ithe-choir-in~+-

England, Germany and; Switzerland.She is a member of the Summit Choraleand recently performed as a sbloist in ;,their Christmas concert. - ;

Norwirie, tBribrT_has-ser«ed—as— the_j--church's-tenorsoloistrfbrseveral years: 7,He performs frequently in the Westfield

' area and has had lead roles in several- ,J.musical productions, with Community •,Players. • ;

The Nach Weihnacht Konzert will ''feature Christmas choruses, chorales,arias, ^duets," trios and instruniental

froni tne~ church "wilj"smg severalportions of the composer's "Christmas "Oratorio." : ~ ~~~y~Z~

Tickets are on sale at Jeannette's Gift 'Shop and at the First United Methodist \Church- office, 1 E. Broad St. The '; 'community is invited to attend thisspecial music program. :

Ave.A borough resident since

1939, Mrs. Klose was bornin Germany and lived in The funeral of ^Mrs.Hillside and New York Virginia Johnson, 67, wasbefore settling here. held yesterday at the First

Surviving are her sop, Baptist Church. Mrs.George, two sisters and Johnson died Saturday atone grandchild. ' her Westfield home, where

she. had li^ed since 1976.S n e h a d -previously, livedi^F~'W yeafs:"Si':

died D e c v, H o s p S Summit, after aH^lLtod

up'Jpd Richard is now looking for morenames of people who needtransportation. The elderly,handicapped and others who lack themeans to get to church are eligible andare invited to callRichard at 272-7168.He will serve as coordinator between

-driVers-and-passerigers;—^———The need for such a~program^was

suggested to Richard by formerCranford^ mayor Ray Molnar of the'Retired "Senior Volunteer Program(RSVP). Richard also surveyedresidents of the local senior citizenhousing . complex to determine theirtransportation needs.

,4

Thursday, Jan 1: 2"p.m.:-TownshipCommittee organization meeting,Municipal Building; CpmmunityCenter closed; Women's openvolleyball cancelled.Friday, Jan. 2: Community Centerclosed; 7:30. 10p.m.;;Open centerfor youth in Community Centerbasement.Saturday, Jan. 3: 9 a.m. - J p.m.:Scouts paper drive, Hillside School.Monday, Jan, 51: 10 l m . - 3 p.m.;Union College painting class forseniors, Community Center; 8:15

-pjnr^Board-of,Adjustment-meetfng—Municipal Building. ** ~Tuesday, Jan. 6: 7 ]basketball, Orange Avenue

gymtf :3p p.m.; Township Commit-tee, 'Municipal Building; '8 p-.m":Heritage Dancers meet in HillsideSchool. ' . .Wednesday, Jan. 7: 1 -p.m.: Men'sopen volleyball in Orange Avenuegyrti; 7 - 1 1 p.m.: Women's,basketball-league meets at HillsideAvenue School; 7:30 p.m.:* JerseyCentral Railway Historical Societymeeting, Community Center"; 8p.m.: Planning Board meeting,Municipal Building. .Thursday, Jan. 8: 1 p m.i Bridge

Xommunity— Center;

volleyball, Orange Avenue gym

Mrs. Elizabeth Gree"Mrs. Elizabeth Drey

Cree, 59, died yesterday athome after a long illness.

Afuneral eucharist willbe celebrated at 11 a.m.Friday at Trinity•Episcopal Church. Mrs.Cree was a member ofTrinity Church and aformer member of its

vestry.Mrs. Cree, who was born

in Newark, lived inCranford since 1950. She issurvived by her husband,Hobart J.; (fhree sons,Hobart J. Jr.',- Seattle,Wash., Ronald Ross inWarren and Pavid Jon athome; two ' brothers,

As we were

ViewpointPlow the river

To the Editor: _ • : -' Remember how beautifully clear.Christmas Day was this year? ahdjet'snot forget 'The Day After Christmas" ittoo was an absolutely gorgeous day -cold and crisp; the kind of day thatmakes you think of all your childhoodwinters, .spent skating on the river forhours on end. People hom,e for the.holidays, kids off from school, andfriends home from college .couldn'tenjoy that pleasure becasue our townhas chosen not to plow the riveranymore. I ihink the least the Townshipof Cranford could do for its people isplow a sectionjjf the river when skatingconditions are ideal. The river wasfrozen solid.'and yet it was impossible to

"skate through the thick blanket of snowleft on thcriver.

So Christmas 1980 passed by and^a lotof fun times and family enjoymentmissed by all. I just hope 1981Cranford holds better skating

• opportunities for its residents.Mary K. Walsh6 Ramsgate Rd.,

-i

Stuurt Awbrey EditorBeverley Awbrry Publisher,

^ . A4vertl«lng DirectorIttwulie Croon News EditorMary Uecker Keglonal Advertising ,"

iWUHtrlr 114'riiNtcla Advertising Promotion*l.loUt- V. Wull llunlnraa MunutfrrSully Illood Production MnnugerAudrey Heck Circulation ManagerJeaM Mlunic Cljiai»lfl«d Ada '

Tho (yranford 'Qiroiiicle is publishedovery Thursday by Awbrey Com-munications in New Jersey Inc., a cor-iwiatlon at 21-23 Aldeti Street, Cranford,N.J. (17016, USPS 136.800..

Member Audit Bureau of Circulation,Now Jersey Press Association, CranfordChumber of Commerce, National PressAssociation.

Subscription rates by mail prepaidOHO ycui1, within Union County $l).(K), outof state, $12.00. -

All material copyrighted li)«) byA.C.N.J. Inc. Official news|wi)er forCninford, Kt'nilworth and Garwoml, S<;;

1 cofid Clasri Postage; Paid at CranfordNew Jersey, ()701«, Tele (20I)-27«-(S(W).

By Arthur and Hazel Burdltt(i. "'• 5 years ago •',

Clinton Crane, president of Reel-Strong Fuel Co., elected president ofRotary Club. .

loyears " "Henry T. Pry or of High Street named

assistant to the president of UnionCollege....FBI joins local police in probeof $11,965 holdup and robbery of localsavings and loan office. .

, 20 years . -"Township Committee approved a

permit to Ann Levin Scher, wife of. theggist Sid ScherT" for a 4wo-story

commercial building^t 102 Walnut AVe.for $53,000. The former Scher Drug Storebuilding built before 1900 wasrazed.;. Chamberlin to be mayor in 1961.McAteer, finance committeeman;La Corte, public works; Philo, publicaffairs; and, Kirwin, safety.

3OyeursFred Andersen and Clarence Fritz to

take office on Tuesday succeedingNdstrand and Doran....Jack WhittingtoH"proprietor for five years of the Home &Family store at 101N. Union Ave. leaves

to take-a job as personnel director ofNorwalk;, Hospital....First snow of thewinter fell Dec. 26....Taliaferro andBlake announce their candidacies forthe school board....Mr. and Mrs. CharlesRoberts, 133 Columbia Ave. celebratetheir 25th wedding anniversary., . 40 yearsJJoard of Education meeting to

• consider'a referendum fora field houseat the Walnut Athletic Field....Throughthe Cranford Welfare Association, 141bushel baskets were dona ted if or Christ-mas by townspeople.

50 yearsZoning Board presents a new map

including proposed apartments on MilnSt. from Eastman to Springfield Ave.and on Forest Aye. from Hamilton Ave.to North Ave. New • business zones on

• Raritan Rd., from Centennial to MoenAve., Centennial Ave. from Raritan Rd.to Lincoln "Ave., property betweenMyrtle Ave. and the Lehigh Valleytracks, both side of South Ave....Fivetrack workers for the C.R.R. Jkilled 50yards west of the signal tower during asnow storm on Dec. 23 by a flyer.

Nostrand died on his 94thbirthday last Wednesdayat Seaview Hospital andHome on Staten Island.

Mr. Von Nostrand was.born ip Elizabeth andlived here before movingto Staten Island* 14 yearsago. He was a machinistfor the Central Railroad ofNew Jersey for 26-yearsand' retired 26 years ago.He was a member of theNew Jersey Junior Orderof United AmericanMechanics in Trenton.

His wife, Helen, died 26years ago. Surviving are ason, Norman L- ofCranford;. a daughter,Mrs. Lola E. Gilbert withwhom he lived," threegrandchildren and fivegr0at-grandchildren.

ePrall Funeral Home.

Robert D. Palzer,Hillsboro, l

a n d Ka rj R>Palzer, Rahway, and agranddaughter.

Friends may call at theGray Memorial FuneralHome, 12 SpringfieldAvenue, from 2 to 4 and 7to 9 p.m. tomorrow.

—In—li,eu—of—flowers—"contributions may bemade, to the TrinityE p i s c o p a l C h u r c hMemorial Fund.

HflPPYNEW YEAR!STARS &. STRIPES

ARMY& NAVY

by JOAN VARANELU

Happy New Year from ,Varan's Travel Agency.

• We hopethe new year will bring you

new happiness and prosperityand a chance to see

new sights and mtike•new friends as you visit'

new places.

with ywi a££

Hew tjeat.. Ague*, Wwicij. T l™n k *<? ^ T

• 'MX . cont inued pa t ronageandtouk I

(BIU« Ribbon Shopping C«n!«r)

94 North Avenue6arwood—789-0063

THE CRANFORD BOOKSTORE32 NORTH AVF . W • CRANFORD. N J O / 0 1 0 • 201 2 JG 0.TJ0

HolidayGreetings

andBest Wishes

for theNew Year ^

Thank You

for Your

Patrona00

Burton:Goodman

- and Staff

REGALm NORTH AVE., yv.V CRANFORD •'•• Opp. Rustlcfyllr Diner

BurKpn' Goodmjm .

276-009^

Oursincerestwish forpeace :and- —prosperity

BOB EVANSAGENCY

202 Centennial • Cranford • 2 7 6 - 8 8 1 2 '

"jcredit^ union

Mrs. Johnson"retiredtwo years ago as a clerkfor the New Jersey Bell

Rev James P Sapp, 16, 27, A&A Scottish Rite Free"was•« m ^ m b e r . o f t h e Ftirsi

died Dec 22 in Sveribok Masonry . - Southern * ^ J * & J * & * *Jurisdiction, and, the Im-

-periai-Cojintn oTShrinersrassistant pastor of the all inr SavannahTGa.'Second Baptist Church, Rev. Sapp is survived byRoselle, for seven years his wife, Mrs. Theresaand was a missionary Sapp; a son, James P. Jr.,minister and a,member of Wharton; a sister, athe First Baptist Church, grandson and five great-Cranford. grahdchildren.

Bom in Millen, Ga., he Funeral services were^noved^toaSrariford in 1958-Held Offr. ?A at'the First

following his retiremenrBaptist Church hererwithafter 35 years as an agent interment following in

-for North Garolina-Mutual-Ros em o-unt-Mem.or-ialLife Insurance Co. He Park , Newark. Ar-graduated from the~Nor- rangements were by thethem Baptist School of G. G. Woody FuneralReligion in 1969. Home, Roselle.

A 33rd degree. Mason,Rev. Sapp was a memberof Mt. Moriah'Lodge 15,

Ezra Gonsist6r^v

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Mrs.MarieW.

CoburgerGARWOOD- A funeral

mass for Mrs. Marie W.Coburger was • offeredSaturday at St. AnneChurch. Mrs; Coburger,75, died Dec. 23 inMemorial GeneralHospital, Union, after a

-brieHUness, • I _^_..Born in Warsaw,

Poland, she moved-to-Gari-wood from Irvington 20years ago. She was ajojn-muoicant of St. AnnChurch and a member ofits Rosary Societyjmd wasalso a niember of the Gar-wood Senior Citizens.

Her 'Husband/,'* WilliamCoburger, died in 1972. Sheis survived by two-sons,William H., Irvington andRichard J., Edison, eightgrandchildren and threegreat-grandchildren.

Interment took place iriHoly. Cross Cemetery,Nortfi Arlington. Ar-rangements were by theDooley Funeral Home, 218W. North Ave,

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17-Vage 6 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Wednesday, December 31, 1980

Seniors to get tips on clipping couponsSenior citizens will learn how to save

money by clipping Coupons at the"Sandwich-and" lecture lunchebrf'serieson Thursday! Jan. t8., at noon* at theQommunity Center.^""""t •--..,,

Gwen Waranis of the Union CountyExtension Service will be-the speaker.

Seniors are invited to bring asandwjch: Beverage and dessert will boprovided. • • ' , ' , •

^ . TRAVEL SLIDES '"Summer in January " will be the HOO Boulevard,

topic of the Westfield Photographic .Society Thursday, Jan. 8 at 8 p.m. at u r d v e i . s "Gracfi Orthodox Presbyterian Church, public is welcome.

Westfield. Summer

will be reviewed. The

recommendsaving devices

THIRMOSTAT

Ries, Hillnuptials held

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund T. Hill, 33 N.22nd St., Kenilworth, announce themarriage oY their daughter^ Sharon;»«..-;« t,i D....1 r-,»--!..„ DU,,..i,nn'l>r.M>i

and Mrs. Henry A. Ries, 9 Dorset Dr,,Kenilworth.

The wedding took place Oct. 19 at St.Theresa Church, Kenilworth. The Rev.Frank Delia performed the double ringceremony. A reception followed at theBlue Shutter- Inn, Union. / , • . $

The bride was given in marriage byher father, Joyce Berry, sister of .thebride, was matron of honor. Brides-maids were Betty. Ann Gargiulo, Jean

..Tanner, Martha Torma and CindyEdwardy — — — —

Michael Gillican was "ties

Wednesday, "December-31, ,1980 CRANFORD (N.JJ CHRONICLE Page.7

i Cougar: Coriiei*

ALLIES

Predictions fdr 1981

Cranford sports, If Jeanne Dixon can-do it, why can'ti I ? • • ' • • ' . . " - - - • _ . • •

SOFTBALL - High cpuhty ranking; •must overcome the Westfield jmx-_*.

GIRL'S TRACK - A winning season: •County/ranking. •

" • • c •

BOY'S TRACK - A shade less than #

the girl's:. "* r " ;, •

VOLLEYBALL - Still . iii i h T Vdevelopment stage. ' 4

1 BOY'£ TENNIS - A Winning season. #

- High county; •

Cooper sets CHS 'diving^ecqrd

. 1 -

GIRL'S TENNISrankings. * -1

Christine LawrencoiVj

man..Gilligan vServing as ushers were Steven'Surhoff,trlenn Berry, Bob Coloney *and BillH o a ' g . ' ' / - • • ' ^ ' '• ,

The j>ride is a' graduate of DavidBrearley 'High School and FairleighDickinson University,. Madison. She isemployed byMhe Summit'Child CareCenter.-,

The groom is also a graduate of DavidBrearley High School. He is thebwner ofHershey's Delicatessen, Kenilworth. .

' ' ' - " " " " j s e 'Island in.r the Bahamas, the coupleresides^ in ^Cranford, * '•- ' ,

becomes brideChristine A. Griffin, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs, Robert E. Griffin, 215Stbughton Ave., was married to Glenn

• Fv."Lawrence,, son of Mr..and Mrs.Joseph Lawrence, Colonid. •

The ceremony took place Oct. 4 at St,.>Michael Church. The Rev. James

JaE5e3ettQ_officiaied,_ assis

• '• • •

VARSITY BASKETBALL -One of the bestrteamspverrRankedin tba county^nd possibly the state.

BOY'S;BASKETBALL- Winseveralgames in '81. Point toward winningseason in '82.

WRESTLING - Best team_ever.Ranked in state. Several,teammembers compete in States

• Tournament and WIN.

WINTER TRACK - Winning season.Ranked in county.

five •

Daniel Wilverding. A reception followedat the United Auto Workers Building,Cranford, catered by the Galloping Hill

I" Inn; ' ,The matron of honor was Adeline

Kellett, sister of the bride, Bridesmaidswer Mary'Ann Usher, cousin, of the brideand Ma ry Beth Mulligan. MelissaKellett was the flower girl. ]'

The best man was George Clark. Serv-ing^ -as"ushersT were JohJT; Lawrence,"brother 6f;the groom, and Dennis Clark;

The bride is a graduate' of MotherSeton Regional High School, Union1 Col-lege and Kean Gollege. She is employed

<b"y Howden.Swanni C.ranford.__The groom is a graduate of,

SWIMMING - BestRanked in- county.

season "ever.

BOWLING -county.

The best team in the

FOOTBALL - Four, maybewinsTThe drought is over ,—

CROSS COUNTRY - Continuing the •tradition-of-winning season^ _ •

GYMNASTICS - As good as '80 •which was good. *

SOCCER - A representative year •with more to cbme in '81. " •

FIELD HOCKEY-Will put Cranford*on the map in state field hockey. The,^best ever: •

• " • ' ' - • ' - * .

• ' ' • • •

Jf oujnighLsay J^TJus; guy's crazy^j»_He's got just about every team in the ; •black." So...I just happen to believe^Crahford's athletes are as good as-*any around land as soon as the #

athletes themselves, the coaches £and the spectators recognize this-.*

Jace, the sooner we'll have winning-*teams. . ' *

. The CHS swinrteam captured a 103 to69 victory Dec. 23 over Bridgewater -Raritan East.,Cranford's Allisori'Cooperset ajjiew school record in_diving,.~scoring^l64.0 points in six dives >andfinishing second. Teammates J^rnie-Kalkstein,'with_J35.1, and Jim.Smith,128.45, took third and fourth "place,respectively. " - ....

Off the starting blocks,^ localswimmers also excelled in all'events.Events and top finishers include:

100 yard butterfly- 1st place, DonBaker, 0:59.4; .2nd, John JHarrington,1:00.9; 5th, Barbara Silveyr 1:13.1;

100 yard freestyle-- 1st, Brian Dooley,0:55.8; 2nd, Kurt Wolfrom, 0-:;57,I>.4th,Drew Haerle, 0T59.01 r r^Tp:r i'J 500-yard . freestyle- 2nd, PeteBowman, 5:42.6; 4thPete Smith, 5:52,5;5th, Steve Crafty 6:00.4; • ,

100 yard'back Stroke - 1st, Don Bake'r,

again\:<$$; 3rd, Ridr Smith, 1:11.3; 4th,Stacy Hegna, -1:12.0; ..

100 yard breaststroke-- 1st, EricSchuHz,!; 13,9; 3rd,.Rtgh Preuss, 1:17,9; 1' .400 yard freestyle relay-.- 2nd. KurtWojfrom, Conrad Rehill.Stevx" Craft,Pete Smith, 3:50.3; '2nd. Tom Bogar,-Tim Bowman, Drew Haerle,'BarbaraSj)vey.,:*:14.5;- ' ' ' .

• v 200 yafd medley relay- Don Baker,Eric Schultz, John Harrington, BrianDooley, -1:5.5.7; 2nd, Peter Smith, HichlPreuss^ Rich Smith, Conrad Rehill,1:59.1; I'

-... 200.yard IreestyJe=_2nd,--Steve_Cratt,_2:02.91 3rd, Peter Bowman 2:05.3; 5th, •Drew Ha^rle, 2:12.1; ' />"'• 200 - yayd individual medley--- 2nd,y-John Harnngio.q, 2:24.b; 3r7T; HiclrSmith, 2:fltt.l.;. •

50 yard.freestyle-- 1st, Brian Dooley,0:24.3; 2nd, Kurt Wol.from, 0:25.0; 5th,Rich Preuss, 0:26.0. . -

giidif onstandoutsselected

Tony Walker,-CHS senior, has b&enna med to the Daily Journal All-Metro'football as defensive' punt-kick returher.Walker was also, designated for thesame position on the All-Union Countyfirst . team and in the Watchung'Conference National Division. "

Crahford lineman "Rob Conroyreceived a spot on the All-Metro secondteam, while linebacker John Vfcci rated'honorable mention, fconroy and yidciwere Both also named to the: National-

,j .David Brearley High School placed

linebacker John Hammer; Bear's co-captaln^ on the All-Mjetro and All-Countyq T ^ ^ p yMetro honorable: mention^.

The-selected players~were nominatedby their coaches, Ray Mtirphy of CjfiSand Bob-Taylor, DBHS. \ "";

• BASEBALL - Will be in 'the• W a t c h t i n g C o n f e r e n c e^ Championship and possibly win the _« Union County Tournament. - > ~ NEW YEAR! 1

Registration set for craft classes•Re'gistratioiClfor._.all_ craft classes

sponsored by the Recreation and Parks

Mondaysirom3:30to5p m. The cfor kufe 4-6" will be Fridays,; 3:30 to-5

technological University, Michiganis employea"byMercfe aTTarCbmpnyiIs.

p y

The classes Include "mommy and

After a honeymoon trip~to Mexico, thecouple reside in Garwood.

OllD meeting tO

Sharon and Paul Ries

nes -Hoffacker:,

A variety of adult Education courseswill begin the week'of Jan. 5 at theYMHA3 of Greater Westfield,. Theseinclude,: dance aerobics, introductlon46_Chinese painting, practical parenting,self-actualization,.. sljrnnastics,-calligraphy, and ceramics. Cajl23.2:5514.

and two new classea: "crafts foF tids_grades K:3" and "crafts for kids grades

. - 4 ^ - 1 ^ : . : : . : _ ' • " • ; • - . .

Programs are for 10 weeks with a feeof $10. Some of the classes will haveadditional minimal fees for supplies.

"Register by calling- the Recreation -Department, 276-6767.

The "prafts fbr-kids K-3" wil-be

M[jav^ John P. Lynes,Cranford, ann6>ince"\the engagement of-their daughter, Joanne Marie, to JayJeffrey Hoffacker, son of Mr. and .Mrs.Albert >K'Hoffacker, Cranford., .-

Miss Lynes-,i a graduate of CranfordHiigh S"choo.r. received "a" ffiS'Tge'Srei? inmathematics vfrom-^St. BonaventureUniversity and an M.B7A-.- degree frbmFairlei'gh Dickinson • UnfVersity,Madison. She. is employed hy WesternElectric Cotn'pany. J '

Mr. Hoffacker, an electrical engineerwith Exxon.. Company USA, graduatedfrom theWardl'aw School and holds aB.S.E.E., and M.S.E.E, degree fromNorth Carolina State-University. . ~

A. September wedding is planned.' •

Sunny Acres litSunny Acres Civic Association for the

first year participated in the tjUininaria,-the- tradition on Christmas Eve of thelighting of candles along streets anddriveways. Eighty members and non-members joined in this glitter of lightingthe way for-.Christ on Christmas" Eye.

focus on antiquesThe annual business meeting of the

Wednesday Morning Club will be Jan, "7at 9:30 a.m. at the Cranford PublicLibrary. Because thexlub history beganin the 1890's , Barbara Walker, co-chairman of the1 antiques' department,Will talk On commemorative items ofthat decade and relate them to clubprogramming of that era. •-< "','.•

^=4:heirexecutive board-will-meet-Jani-5-at 9:30'.:a~mr^at.,;the. home of HelenaMackjin. " ^ ^ - - - ^ ^

' ; Oh Jan.8 at 1 p.m. Irma IVtir;hoSt the literature department, She1

.report on Sherlock Holmes. Co^hostesseswill be Helen Markowich and Id& Young.

At the December business meeting.- Alice Ughtcap, Jklria .fatten and.Mary-

IoU Mineur.were elected to serve as thenew nominating committee with Mrs..Lightcapchairman. Mation Hanson was"

I welcomed into the club as a newmember-7^ — _ ' .- '

r*' /•

AHEAD--Ktefy"BWi')1Hogan won-1500 meter girls4eaiTUxuak»thTrJplace inJij&lfiQILCpeter relayrun for Cranford in Union County Holiday Track and qt Saturday's meet.. .. . '•Field Meet. With a time of 5:03.8/Hogan edged out BRUCE PAK-- right, finished second in 55 meterBlpomfield's-Naney;-Deneka(5:04r1)^GHS- runner, high -hurdlest=;jcl0Gked at 0:8,2.. Photo.s by JonCindy lanelli was third in 3000 meter,race and local Delano. -

is lone GHS cfeamp as matmeri3P&;in XJC tount^y -

I*--

-By-WZ MATTSONS ^

-niost pins trophy and shared the-Most awarded third place when Diskoy

^ c S S r varsity—wr^tline'—tearh^competed in the Union CountyTournament last week finishing in avery disappointing third place with 81points. Westfield and Roselle Parkfinished first and second respectively'

Wrestler 'aw'jirri wjlh Rich~ tilnion) forfeited. Steve • H'

• CHS VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM coached by. Kilty-White", standing at right includes, from left, seated: wVth'To8 and 85'Zpoints'McNerrty, Dawn Grice, Laurie McDonough, Eileen Hartmann. Standing are Mikl_ phil-Sandford was CiCranford'.s only

champion this year. He was awarded the'Joanne Connelly, Kathy'Holmberg, Karen McKenna, Ma*ry'Beth Heesters, Eam_Baublis, Anne GaVen, Ginger Jones.

feirls lose hoOp^EOUllds, beat -CoUege to host 6th Owl Classic-, " J . 7 ITninn r'nilanmnill Kirvct itc civth annual « tn. -jnfl ' tho fhnmrtlftnchin (

Madison in Christmas ClassicUnion College will host its sixth annual

Owl Classic 'on Jan. 7 and 8 at tfieCranford court, featuring teams from

d l

p.hv. and the championship contest"scheduled'for

IS

Ferrettii Scotch Pla\nS:Sandf 6rcl-prnncd~all four of his opponents in less than 7 :"26.In the finals he pinned Matt Shields(Westfield) in 2:16 for thechampionship..

Four CHS grapplers finished in thirdplace. Richie Bfiscoe (129) was defeatedby Taylor(GL)7-4 but.came back in theconsolations with a superior decision 15-0 over McLaughlin(.Pingry>• ScottSenkarik (135) lost to Rusin (RP) 9-5andthen pinned Rusen (Pingry) in'4:46 forihirdlplacjL Yinelin^ (GL) decisioned

in the first • quarter, 13 to 4. Their

-ZONING BOARDThe Zoning Board of Adjustment will

hold a public meeting J a n 5,1981 at 7:45in the Municipal Building. *

KIRK BROMQTED^ „ „The National State Bank, Elizabeth,

announced the promotion of VirginiaKirk to assistant branch manager,

^ k _ ^ _ Cranford Office, 643 Raritan Rd. Mrs.Dr. Michael A. Tansey will speak about hyperactive children and .Kirk has received the basic, standardblofeedback treatment on Tuesday, Jan. 6 at7:30 p.m. at the Cranford jind general certificates from ThePublic Library. Tahsey, a clihical psychologist, will discuss various American Institute of Banking and hasmethods of treatment Including medication and bibfeedback, taken several bankcourses.. She residesdiscuss case histories and take questions.. . in Elizabeth.

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12,938li2.Qu30 Month Savings Certificate ($1,000. minimum)

November 27 through December 10COMPOUNDED CONTINUOUSLY ...

The open center foryouth sponsored by theRecreation Departmenthas been such a successthat two other centers-areopening. One wttl be in thebasement of the Com-munity CenterjWednesdaynights and the otherFridays at Orange AvenueSchool.

The Community Center

basement will ^open Fri-day, Jan. 2 at 7:30 p.m.During the month ofJanuary, ti\e basementwill be open each Wednes-dayinight from.7 to9 p.m.The basement is for thosewho enjoy ISfile^fennis,billiards, board gamesand cards. Music will bean added feature at thebasement. The Recreation

Department is looking for second open center, ThisCranford residents who new center will alternate

withwould like to perform-in-formally, this might in-clude instrumental musicas well as singing. Nosalary is available. CalltfieTTlecreation Depart-ment for more informa-tion. .

The Orange Avenuegym will he the site of the

T h t ) J t > 0 v 0 y u l c l t i . i p p l y w ' U i n n . u m n c j t t , i n t l i j r , M C i | ) , l l . i f t i l o f l o n U U [ H J ' . ' 1 \ ^ \ ^ \ ) \ \ \ M W y t - j r . n r o v i M i m j K m r . i l o f y m . i l h l * l M u s . i n u t

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the open center atHillside Avenue SchoolJanuary's schedule willhave Otange Avenue opeijJan. 9 and 23. Hillside wiljbe open Jan.-16 and Janj30. Beginning in February jthe Orange Avenue gymwill open each second andfourth Friday night andthe, Hillside gym will opetithe first and third Fndajfnights. " ' [' I

The new schedule forboth Hillside and Orang$is 7to.9:30p.m.

•/ The CHS girl's varsity-basketball Cougar defense, changing-tJranford's-oisuffered^ieir first los^of theseasonlasfc^itjl game. Crtmford trailed by eight~at

;week to Mother Seton. Cranford held hafftime-butwas buried in the third.Mother Seton in the first JiahV trailing by quarter 37 to 2f^Dawa_Grice was high

^only- seven. In the • third...quarter, *SCOren with 18 points. AnnTGaven andCranford outscored the Setters, 15 to 9, Mary- Beth. IleesXcVs were high-making the score 34 to 35. Kathy rebounders with eight and sevenMcNerney and-Lgurie McDonough respectively.

--:. !combTn«jd t'p.score eleven .joints in the - Cranford came back to beat Madisonfourth quarter to tie the score at 45 each.^ Borough 55 to 31 in the consolation round

4n overtime play Cranford remained Of the classic Monday. The localsjed by w-.n n i a vscoreless throughout, losing the match, Only three points at the half, 22'to"197v—- .

_"45 to 5.1. McNerney and Mc'Donough Their aggressive play in- the- third—.were high-seorers-with—^14-and—n^—quarter-resulted -in Cranford-outseoring— -

•respectively. '',"-*• '•- Madison 17 to 6. Daww-Grice scored 11 of "Cranford travelled'to- Mornstown for her 16 points forthe final win, 55 to 31. ' App l i ca t ions

. the Ronald Brown_ChrisUnas Classic, Mgy Beth Heesters was high rebounder available for thewhere" theviJoMHajefr^h. y .jwhile Laurie McDonouglTHad" eightyweak sess

Hockey Clinic

New Jersey^ New York and Delaware.. Participating in New Jersey's longest

continuous holiday tournament forwomen cagers will be Delaware Tec'h--Stanton, New YorkCollege, and OceanToms" River : T -

Union has not been a particularly goodhost, winning-its own tournament all butonce^Jhe only Joss coming in 1978.

Phillips^'reported that the openingcontest ohTJan.-7^will=be played at 12:30p.m. and the second game^

h t

GYMNASTS SCOREThe Bridgettes Gymnastics Team of

South Plainfield recently took-a step upin the' national rankings by placingsecond in the Parkette National

City Community^ Invitational Meet held in Allentown, Pa.County College, Teams from Maryland, Illinois,-

'•'•.'•"•'••'• " " California, Montana., Ne"w' York,"Pennsylvania and New Jersey- competedin the meet. •-' — . . .

Glenn.Breuer (141) 12-4 Glenn was then- beginning""at~3:4S7

•a me-bacJt-to-pin-Sorpcn t i n<>-<-Clat'k ,M n-4:36 after being.defeattul.10-4 by Dixon(PlainfiekD, ~"-..:... -

Fourth place finishers'were ScanSullivan (148). and John Vicci, 1188"r~"A-Uo. :competing were Wayne-Aldrcdg'c 'llMl),Dennis Sullivan (1151 Marc SirwkTnan(158), and Pave Swans on (170).

Robbie. Pender (108) .-and BruinMerkel were not able to compete duo toillnesses.

The Cougars' first regular season-match,is Wednesday Jan. 7 in Plainfield'

| On The DBHS Sports SceneBy USA PERRO'JtTA

On Jan. 8, the two opening round losersat 12:30

"The Brearley varsity boy's basketballteam recorded its first'victory of theseason last Tuesday. The Bears weren'tas successful, later in the week as theylost both rounds of the' Union County-Regional Tour'nameht

Brearley .defeated North Plainfield^

The score remained close throughout'the game as the Itwl seesawed. T)ieBulldogs hY'lcl a 27 to ±! lead at halftimoand only widened the', margin in th.«?fourth quarter. . . .'• . ••

Glena.Lewis again led" t'ho_offense ashe net tea.. 17 poinLs. Jeff Kopyta and

a-iresecond

Center'sShop.

Time Skate aspectsPartici

-to 42 in Kenilworth to advance iheirrGregKJ'apjUa added l<l-and-li-*oirits—•record to 1-3. ^ . , '- r. respectively. Rounding out the, scoring-,

•r_.-.: _. Setiiors-Greg-Kopyta and-fllefinlewis wasJLJxn Bra^n with six pointx\and\Vito. • each scored 12 points-foi" the victorious Saggese with two points.c — . BearfiUDiiveJKeenan and Jeff Kopyta

each added. ,efghT~points ' while Jimof hockey. "Brown andjim Lftonnrd sunk six each,

nts must "bring Brearley scbrfcd, 19. points in the

The Bears' next game is Tuesqlay inHillsbo'rough. . __.

The girls varsity basketball learnsuffered its- fourth consecutive loss last

second loss of the season. "Thc-gifJsUosL nine.•to Boonton in the first round,.dropping to "77**,, ,-3-2 tyit still undefeat«sdin the Watchung r Cranford's record now stands,at 4-2.Conference, Boonton took an early lead The girls meet Rahway Jan. 7.

CLEANism

WANTEiJENEWEINVOLKSWAGEI

y , at theWarinanco Ska t ingCenter, Roselle. The,;firsthour-long' elass will. beheld on Tuesday, Jan. 13 inthe semi-enclosed rink inWarinanco Park.

This instructional

^fieTr^iwi^~^iDn^r^C0^"including—^klTtes l i l id^^^ead^t^he^half^hich-they^nev^tr^w^^r j j accompany including skates

registration. A' discount sticks. Helmets J with•card for .either 25 or \0 protective face masks arevisits can be purchased to recommended but notlessen the, costadmission to the rink.

Six to 17 year-old hockey

required.Applications, which

must be accompanied b

h o c k e y p r o g r am ,. players are invited tosponsored by the Union enter the Second Annual

of Skate, Pass and

Linden

486,6200

i t -

"•-a1

County DepartmentParks and Recreation^ isopen to youth, six to 16years old, whether or notthey~have played. The 6p.m; session' is designedfor- six to 10 year olds,while the 7 p.m. session isdesigned for 11 to 16 yearolds.

Each week, studentplayers will learn • stickhandling, skating andrules and regulations.They will practice hockeymanuevers during ascrimmage at the end ofclass; ;

Participants must havehockey skates and sticks.Helmets with protectiveface masksrecommended but

Skate, Pass and ShootContest on Tuesday at theWar inanco S k a t i n gC e n t e r , R o s e l l e . ;Sponsored by the UnionCounty Department ofParks and Recreation, itbegins at 6 p.m./"Youmgsters will beplaced according .* to ageinto categories for six toeight, year olds, nine to 11year olds, 12 to 14 yearolds and 15 to 17 year olds.During^ the contest, they

will guide a puck througha course and shoot intodesignated goals. Score iscalculated by total ska,tingtime, passing accuracyand shooting percentages.

ar,e ..Trophies willjbtf'awardednot to the wiruier and runner-

located in Warinanco.Park, Roselle, near theThompson Avenue aecess.It is open, weekdays from9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.,

required. AH can be up in.each division,purchased at the Skate, Pass and ShootWarinanco .Skat ijrjg^iiighlights the safe and fun

relinquished.The Bears met undefeated Arthur L.

Johnso/i in the first round oflheTeglonaltournament on Friday. The Crusaderswon by a score of 63 to 40.•* GlenrTtewis-led the Bear's scoring

$£50 regist7ation"fee/afe^ attack with 19 points, Greg Kopyta,available at the rink, D a v e Keenan, and Jeff Kopyta netted

six points each as Vito -Sagge.s_e_ and_Vinnie LaPrete each added two pointsfor Brearley. . .

On Saturday, the Bears faced thoBulldogs of Jojiathan Dayton irvtneconsolation game. Brearley was

pjn. to 5:30 p.m. Weekday narrowly defeated, 61 to,50f8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.session are . held onThursdays and Fridays.Friday also features a 6p.m, family- session. Onweekends,--the centeropen from 10:30 am,/ to12:30 p.m., 1 p.m^to 3p.m., 3:30 p.m. to 5-130p.m. and 8:30 p.m. to 10:30p.m. .-^

Information regarding"'Hockey Clinics,." theSecond Annual Skate,Pass and Shoot HockeyContest, and group iceskating lessons, -can beobtained hy calling theWarinanco'Skating Centerat 241-3263.

""Ally-son Glembocki, only a sophmore,sunk 19-points and pulled down 12rebounds in a superb effort for BrearleyPatty Yutz scored 13 points and grabbedseven rebounds. Bridget Iloag nettedeight points and Doniki.. Savorgiannakisrounded out the scoring with two:

The Bears hit-77 percent of their shotscompared>--f6 Nortli—Plainf ield's G4percent.' The majority -of Brearleyspoints came from freethrows as thoysunk 20."The girls participated in the UnionQounty Regional Tourna_mjijal)last night—in Berkeley Heights.

the alley»Granford . n.Mj<iriimy. 201;

373(J .35W35W35Vj

4 _!, IBOB PYNE of Cranford varsity evades an opponent from Arthur L

"Johnson Regional, Clark. Cougars Were defeated by the Crusaders 85 .-to~52on-Dec.-23^Locals^also-Ios±.aLc!Qse encounter Monday, fallingto South Plalnfleld 58 to 53 rn Intercounty Tournament. Photo by JonDelano.

Cruntord Sport Cantor Incrousod Slgnoru. 213; Churllo Ro.borto. 200,thulr loud to Upolnta as thoy took Ed Dullon, 214; Glonn taycock, 213;thieo Irom Howluhd Roultors, Al.- Rich Jonws, 204; Bob Bruna. 210; AIColanorl, 220, 603. Huyrvold'u Plumb- Hooun, 214; Anthony Colunorl, 200;mo run Into u 1-2 pi»JW whon Tom Al Colunorl,-220, 204 und JohnKuno und Huy SunlfJlp bowlod 501 P<>rrl»kt 20ti^ ...»_".•• •.-••:• . ^ : .1::.und SB1 roapuctlvaly, ua Horun ' w LtnrnBDr-w«i3.4 to o^o-mo»o-lntp—Cmilont-SpotlCuntur 51 , — ^ P —uouond piuco, Hrldflo ttxon took u 3 Hoiun Lumbor 37to 1 vlclorv Irom the B.B /B und .BrldQo ExxonBruno Eloctrlc bhuloul Crunlord Bruno EloctrlcHotol, Al Hooun 214, 577. Tho ThoChronlcIoChronlcloodflodHuyuck'aFoodalor Howlund Roaltoma 3 lo 1 victory und Crunlord Cmnlord Photography 34Photogruphy buhlnd Alox Uuntlnij'B OB ii . 34213, B04,"blunkudCruw(ordGult4to Huyock'u Poodu 33Vj0 • • • " Hoynold 'a P lumbing 33

Mll lb Ducorutort. hoa l tho 6 ik» 4 to Mllla Docoruloro 33Ound Oohmor'a Klowor Shop topptid Dohitior/a FloworSl.op32Mo'thodlat Mon'a Club 3 to-1. Couch Couch 8. Four 31H Four won u 3 tq 1 contoat Irom Cronlo/d Hotol' .31Crunlord Burbot und Toll-Engol Mothodlat Mon'aClub 30bout Volorun'a Uurbor Shop 3 to 1, Toll-Ena*' flumblno 30doaplto Arnlo Llon'a 200, 650. Cruwford Gull ,30Moilurn Durbur Shop, aplll with Crunlord Burbora 20V F W und ijwan apllt with Globul Qrunlord ElkaCarpota. Happy Now Your. Modoro Eurbora

Holllno 200 gumoa woro: J o Votorun a BurboraCornoy, 203; HoaB Hlit iol, 222, Arnlo V.F.W.Lion, JOO; John lUol, 227; Tom Knno, Qolbul Curpota201, 210; Ray Sunlolju, .237; Alon SwunClounora

Mondaymorning jewels

High gumoa woro bowlod by PuttlCuluro, 107; Clulno Porolru. 19.1;..Mury Andorson, IBM; Ann Kolly, 178;Llndu Woh,' 173; Roao Wyckod, 172

Hiflh aorlod bowlora w'oro PutllCuluro, 406; Ann Culuro, 4B7; Ponny

. Yak, 4-7.1; Gprt Oomhrownkl, 4H0; _\J,'Mury' Anddrib'n, 457; Arlono Sorru, /

202127272423

2 / •2B •28W28Vj70Vi303030W31313233333434343b3537J7.174041

-4<K>^ —

striking Trio'Something DlltorontWhoLucky StrlkoaSplltaTOM PlnaPin UpuUltchoraGophorsAlmoat Ton -Tho EndaPorloct Ton

—w—.383738 .35 Mi3b

-32Vj3232322Ufj2423 Vi

L—28272828 Vi2031 V*j

32323237 Vj

• 4040 Vj

f

TWO COACHESUnion Gollege will have

"twin loaches" for its ..... .1.. . ...» ,»•«——MHMHMnpnnaHHnwrestling team this year. rjBHS top scorer, sophomore Allison Glembocki, shown shootingScott Puzia of Hillside has ag£thst Gov. Livingston, tallied 19 points and 12 rebounds in Bear'sbeen hired as "co-head |o s |n Q encounter with North Plalnfleld last week. Photo by Jonmentor" of the team with rWannHick Wjlson of Elizabeth. u o l d n u

: • " \

—L - i

Page 10: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

., r..*>•>•

CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE

Page 8 Wednesday, December 31, 1980

; • »

Spotchecks onhomes to 1

By ANNET8HUHANKENILWORTH-- Spot checks to

uncover illegal conversions of single; family homes to multi-family use will be

undertaken_ throughout ' the boroughj—after Jan. 1, according to LJvia Mancino,

mayor. . **• . • • ' .Mancino told Borough Council last

week that complaints have beenreceived from neighbors of homeowners*who are suspected of violating localordinances by renting rooms orconverting one-family homes to two-family use. Most of the complaints havebeen based on traffic congestionresulting from street parting by illegal-

WednesdayrDecernber 31, 1980 CRANFORD (N^JjCHRONrcnE Pag<-

BUY, *ELL JRADE OR RENT THROUGH THE Nursing degree counseling set

'EftIn addition to creating a "trafficsard, Maneino^pointed^ou^hat-extra-

tenante place a'heavy'burden on. ajl * A-•._;•, - . w ...-,_,_• _ . , . . . ,, . . . . .municipal services. They may also^HOLIDAY MUSIC - Sanford W. KnolWr conducts

/ jeopardize their own lives and safety in the Garwood public school, band at t h e annual(„. case of fire, if firemen are unaware that

there are additional occupants in a'Rome. \ ' • " • " • ; .

. icino also promised that he willk'every course of action necessary

to keep disregard for human life out ofthe borough." His remarkB wereprompted by the recent shooting deathsof Elizabeth refuse contractor Crescent

holiday concert Dec.-18. Photo by.Jon Delano.

BdircTHall renovationD.L. BENTLEiY

GARWOOD - A $300,000 bondordinance to refurbish and renovateBorough Hall was' tabled by BoroughCouncil last w^ek because there was an

William P^rry of Roselle. Mapcino said~»McrcntTiumbertrf-members totake

almost two

commercial buildings conduring 1980 with similar gquar|

tructedfootage-

_ ! > • HA.telNG THESPIANS — Cast-rnembets-oUhejChrlstmas assemblyat Harding school are, frornlejtrWIarcV Salern6^ShwrH©«Prl8oo-andMichael MciCoy. They are performing in "A Family without Children."Photpjay J^ojiDelana ~_^ _ l l • _ L _

i • • : • ' . ' - ' . « '.

Stamler to speak to B'nai Bt'rithgraduated from Vanderbilt UniversityJohn Stamler, ITnion CpUnty

' pEOsecutor.-Will.speak at the meeting ofthcTtYanfofd , lodge of B'nai BritfvTuesday at-TemplerBeth-Ei-at-8-p^rnr

Law. School; He was named assistantprosecutoon Union County i

he was acquainted.with.both victims.Council voted Tuesday to pass on

second reading an ordinance banningodN, 14 Street. Also

passed wai an ordinance adopting policedepartment salaries and alloWancesJnaccordance with the two year contractnegotiated earlier this year.

The reorganization meeting of the 1981cbuhcil~will . take place at l p.m:tomorrow . Phyllis Baldacchini. will besworn in as a council member and

-numerous municipal appointments willbe announced. All\residents are invitedtoattejndj j . ; . \ '.. '- ' • , ;.

•;-f - •

'...causes, effects,;and ftow^to cppe_with.it..The -meeting .is open to the public"Stamler'recetvedHlihi^uHdei'^imiuc

degree from Lafayette College and

•ateor-is'-eouRsei—to-the New-Jersey.Narcotic Enforcejnent Agency, artiernber of the Dru& Abuse Council, and

.. .Following almost two hours ,of

discussion during the public hearing,Mayor John J. McCarthy took an

-teformaipoil of councjrBteelingsafter-which he. declared the ordinance was"mute'^nd recommended the tHblimj.

The shift in support of- the ordinancecame when Dominic Carrea andGeorgians ^ Gurrieri, councilmember's, sided with residents whocalled for a feasibility study of costs fora total new construction of BoroughHall.

McCarthy explained that in order forthe ordinance to pass or fail, the councilmUst~have' four votes on either side;.

that were in line with, the proposed costof renovation. He said that] as ataxpayer, he would rather see a new

-faciufy-coiistwictedjnstead-of-spending-"that kind of money refurbishing a 66-year old building." .•"•''

Silver also noted that if a, feasibilitystudy of a new building had not been

oiiDoris Mann, Anthony Liroone and

Walter Maszczak, botineil -members,questiohe^!.. ...where the boroughemployees (Would work' while the newbuilding was being constructed, pointirig

-oiit that .would be. anIadditional.cjMts_MZthe project. Other coste they listed weredemolition, increasecllegal, bonding andarchitect fees as well-as added costs fornew furnishings. Me 'Carthy noted that

made, how could council decide whether;-^the-heating" system might go anyday—'--* i.'^_-—.in— i t - - i i l—: '. r ...u:~u ...r-.-iA _ « „ „ ««««J!««" ticninn

•' REAL ESTATE

A special program of individualizedcounseling has been arranged b,\f .UnionCollege in early January for nurses whoare considering preparing for entry iriloa baccalaureate nursing program^

.four-year degee, Union .College' isoffering courses for those nurses whomay lack some of the liberal arts andbasic science courses .required forer\trance into a fpur-year/tns.titution

As part of a new trend (hat is sending Union College will provide'the courses,registered'nurses back to school for.-a which will help nurses enter four-year

or not renovation was, the best course ofaction. "Are you planning for__thefutHRrrr he asked the mayon '"

Both the mayor and Berry replied thatsince the structure, itself is sfpnd, theyfelt renovation was the answer. Theynoted that costs for new constructionwould be much higher thai/ renovationand that was what the council was tryingto avoid. 1

McCarthy pointed ^ojut that JJhgadditional -^ space in the pblice

which woiild mean spending $15,000immediately. If a new Building wasconstructed, the borough would lose thatinvestment., ' \

Although Gurrieri had been defendingtherenovation plan, she later stated that ja new-facility should be looked into "just '•eutof curiosity." Both she and Carreastated that although they were sure thebuilding could4 riot be constructed for thesame amount of money, they werewilling to renegotiate with the architectand;Sfie-what-the-figures-shoW'

Ik.

fflm.f)at acquaintanco will %»•

never be forgotten. We deeply „apgrccintr your-palf»nip<i anJ l<M>k forward

to lerving V<>u .l_hji New Year. Hope it'» happy!' ;

MUmbw^ol Cl^antord Boards W.iMI.W Board•l id Union County Multiple Llitlna S«rvlc«

^ Raaltor - Notary Public

106 North Union Aye. Cranford

Ol ive r brlls chirnr, fi l l ing th<-W wllh hew i i h o , for a yrar of unlimited happiness.

THE BOYLE COMPANYC.IIANF (HID . ' / ; ' !14IINIIIN' I'.i.l .l.'OO REALTORS

iJoyoas

It nearly time to1

celebrate the NewYear...but before"you do. . we warvt

—to-be-tfio vory-tiBt-to say, '"Happy New.Year one and all!We especially thankour many dear pa-trons and- pur loyalfriends. Be happyl

S. Kuzsma

and Staff,'i- ,_y;-.M'-f../

D.S. Kuiskna Realty^RoaltSr••"* M f a " #2-8337All OHic»s Independently Owned & Op«r«l«d

turnout•. Local voters turned out in greater

percentages at the polls in ,the presi-dential election (han the. statfe'average.Donald Lan, secretary of state; reported-79.8 percent of the state's registeredvoters went to the polls. Garwood reach-ed the 84 percent mark, Cranford'^jndKenilworth were both at 82,percent.

colleges with upper division standing.The individual' counseling sessions

will be Thursday. Jriri. 8,from7 to9 p.m.and Saturday. Jan '10, from 10 a:m tonoon."Call 27G-2600, '&xt: ,218 for anappointment. ^,,

Happy

• New

Year1.

-BUSINESS-OPPORTUNITY

LICENSEDREAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE

Experienced-InexperiencedDESIRE MORE INCOME? ^

Join Union County's largest real estate organizationwith offices in Union, Cranford, Summit and MorrisCpunty.'.We."will tram voa to be efioctivo throughThe Gallorv of Homes Trarning Program, Learn aboui

cojjr computerised National Relocation Service andGallery s unique selling system.rCall RutPTBrewst'erat 353-4200 . • '

THE BOYLE, COMPANYGullory of Holmes .1 - ' '"

* Real Estato Sinc/o .1 905 .Independently Owned| and Opo.ratod

JFQRJSALE PERSONALSERVICES

NftW It GAF 8 XJflrVPolice Academy at Union College.

School board to meet on contract, budget

during the meeting under terms of theSunshine Law. ' . " • - .

Tinve" for. the meeting is 7:30 p.m._ ' _2 " . • • , ' *u

KENILWORTH-- The KenilworthBoard of Education has planned aspecial meeting Monday at HardingSchool at 8 p.m. to discuss terms and

"salaries, under consideration in -••-•-••:••*- REGIONAtr BOARD -. • & •collective bargaining with teachers for A The Board of Education of the Union1980-81 contract. The board also will County^ Regional Sigh School Districr

tra^tentativeschool-budget-for49&l--^o.ajvill_meeLJ!uesday_aL8 p.m._at82. the board will meet in closed session Arthur L. Johnson High School,. Clark.

• KE~NiL'VVOR1ilH- Another "first" forthti borough is in store on New Jfear's'Pay. ,

For the first, time, two women will besworn in at the same time to three-yearseats on the Borough Council. VivianKeenan will begin her second term andPhyllis Baldacchini will fill the year-long vacancy caused by the resignationof Harry Grapentnin.'•'

will begin at 1 p.m..

leaving councilexcept to

._-- lilAra all nm4 nf tW li ih^A ninnnmrt U*» ftrtllAQrtnoo1 n^Hill^il Mftdnrt .tt\l/*»with no alternative- were all part of the future planning. Heie~motion~^ added that putting the off ices on the first

counciI"meetlng^is"theTrfloor allows—easy-accessibilityHohandicapped—residents and

"Since•1 reorganization. :meeting;"~the

tabled measure will have to hold until anew buildings and grounds committee isformed. Also, council will have torenegotiate the contract with , DickBerry, architect, before any. other plansare looked into. • '• •

The controversy arose when EdSilver, a resident and member of the firedepartment, questioned the council's

renovate" Borough1 Hall

seniorcitizens. The energy' savingimprovements prospoed in therenovation plans also are geared to"lowering costs. ' • .."

Two other firemen, Dick Beyerl, 516"Beech St. and Bob Korinchak, 350Spruce Ave., echoed . Silver'ssentiments, saying that a new* facility"could be constructed within theconfines of, the renovation costs."

and ^e^Ws meSe'New Year s message

to renovate" Borough1

instead^)U)iiildirig^a-new^acility-on-the—Korinchak said he felt the Qnly_thjngsame site. He quoted figures for being salvaged from the structure^were

the four exterior walls and that if newheating, plumbing and electricalsystems and windows were put in, a newbuilding might as well be built.

He'-and-BeyerLnoted th^.t_jso_matter

colleagues' attitude, noting, "We hiredthis man (Berry) on faith., alter>V-interyiewing-six—other—applicants-and^should-rjase our decision on his expertopinion, After all, that's what we hired,him for, his expert opinion." She saidthat this issue had been put off for"years and years and years^' and shefelt it was time to put a plan into action.Maszczak and Litnone supportedMann's contentions.-' ' ,,_,„•

According to McCarthy,, it "Could n >w'be at least six to eight weeks before a nyaction can take place, on the issue. Heestimated it would take four to six weeks"fbl^B^rryTto.lrlalceTthe, study if. thecontract was renegotiated.

Carrea said that since councilwaited for many years to makt)decision, it could wait anotherweeks. • ' ' ' '

what work was done according to the r~Maszczak~Thead .orthe. building-knd_ plans, there would have to be additional grounds committee, said although] "

COLONIAL

Thjs attractive home has been renovatedthru-out, and is in A1 location close to,transportation.- Immediate occupancy —

7O's.HAPPY

NEW Y E A F T

FROM

THE STAFF

McPHERSON REALTY CO.276-0400

19 Aldeii

ew HOUSING

Street Granford

H.O. TRAINS includes tracRT"cars, switches, engines, ac-

vceB8ories. Best offer. Call276-3489 .--__. 1/8

AUTOS FOh SALE

• LEGAL NOTICEPl.easu take nonce J will not t>«

(osponsiblu lor any dobty Cftiatod by, anyone othe'-than .mysuH Don.ildM "

GussDated pecomber ^ i • 1<J8O .vyiJanuary 8 ifafli \j>

"^IV—"^'- "1""J_ •"—"~~•NOTICE TP CREDITORS

ESTATE OF VINCENXA SALE'SIODeceasod

Pursuant lo th« or/inf of WALTERE ULRICH. SurroQ.ittj ol ihu Countyof Union, maffi on th»j 26I'1 cj.*y olDoCoi^bof A D 19H0 upon ihe ;ipplication of thr* u"dofyirjrj(-rj ;r. P« .OCljtrlCOS 0) IfHr _ tiSt^lt* Ol itidtJ

• docojieod no:;ct; i-, hurubv Q'VIMI ir;<thoXfoditorN of>,'nd ddco.is<:(J tr> c-

---hibtl-lo-iha tunucr)bof:unduf oaituo: _ _ .•aHirmalvon t n o u C 1 j i im, ,i'u1demands tigumst lh(» ostjiif' u' ;;.'nd

." dbcoaaod "wilhiii ;,ix- tTiOjiir,' frorr ;, tho date ol tioiO o'du' of i»'i*y win bo t

(o'ovor toaf'fud Irom [HOSHCIJIIIKJ oi

CUSTOM MADE CURVED- douch . 8 0 + . " needs— reupholster.y. • Bust offeT7

. GJRL'S Vyibikfl^-3'spe«d hand

seaf. Excellent$40..276-8413

condition.12/31

HELP WANTED

changes made as the renovation gotunderway.. L _ _ •"...-Jl^i_-r-^r"^The three men also—advocated:

building a new -Borough-Hall- andincluding a cellar in the plans to be usedfor .storage, police ~ lockers anddarkroom, In that way, they said, morespace £ould be utilized on the firit floorand the- additional costs would bem i n i n a l . "'^- ••-_i_. •• ~ ~

.Berry pointed-out that including ainhabitable cellar in the plans wouldcost the samt amount as construction ofthe first floor, but the men argued (hatthe costs would be. less because footingsundpartial^walls would have to be put inwhen the Oobr-on-the-lower-level-was^^-wording-ivould-noLcause-any problemr e c o n s t r u c t e d . . . . ' . . wlththe cojitract's acceptance.

1p p ^ g thejbjjnd"

he was glad the .proposal was not k liedaltogether•• The tabling, he said, le; >yesthe council an opportunity to reconjiderit at a later ^date along with a newconstruction plan.

Council also failed to act dn theTeanisters contract which had beententatively set for last Tuesday'smeeting. According to Mann, boroughattorney Robert Sheldon had suggestedthree minor---wording changes- in the-contract before^council 'introduced theordinance. Mann said a letter^vas beingsent to the Teamsters Union requesting-the changes-She seemed confident-the-

• SENIOR RESIDEjNTIAL.;.- -APPRAISER:;: -

—Society of RealjEstatoApprBiaerji

KLUMAS-& O A I S ^1 693 Raritun Rd.

_••" Cronfqrd, N.J.,272-4taO

-SECRETARIAL ROSIT.IONHejvy customer contact.

- Pttfaaant" telephone"voictLjfmust.' Basic good skills re-quired. Excellent benefits.

-351-5O5O-1—^

EXQUISITE FRUITWOODBREAKFRONT, one-of-a^k i n d , coffee table,CaWlii-B^SG 1/8'

LOVE" SEAT AND Sofa.Brown and gold, 2 years old.Good buy, $ 2 9 5 . 0 0789;-J145S nfter4p.nr- 1/8

BIRD'S EYE. MAPLEbedroom sot. -Four posterbed, desk, bureau. Call353-1 690 after five. 1/8

GOODYEAR SNOWl TIRES,>^set, 735-14 (Suro-'Grip IV)

Lean Line'snewweightpgtam

For classes in your townCall collect: 201-757-7677

X O'/J d F 0 R D./ C I.'A n K t ) 5 tfl-o 1.1Prosbylortan Church. 1GI19 Rariinn fld 'T m i - j i ? 15 p.m. _S '.

~ALUMINUM_SHOWROOM.

Porcb^and"Patio Enclosures

MASON WORKWATERPROOFING and

CHEVV VEGA GT ' 7 5 2 doorhatchback,'. 3 speed withsnow tires. 85 ,000 miles,good- running co.ndition.$1200. 276-4021 . . :

1968 FIAT 124 SportCoOpo, 4 speed, 58,000.Not in running condition.Best offor, 276-21 70*

Ro'jil Ap[j(j//;i!o iindSara Swift

. . - EiKCulricosHoward P. iGoloijitrrj Atlomuy 'M4 North.Avu EaulCranford. N J 07016 .Dalod • Janun'y 3i 1980Fob S6 72

^PREPARE FOk COLD *+ WEATHER . . NOWl I

tTune Up 27.76?* M o i l b cyl AnM-rii ,in (..If. *

* Klouv Curoli!"1."." '''••'•• ''•"""• *

' 2 / 1 2 V' • lnul . i l ill Si'

Steps, walks, patios, drains"—Jalousies-Awning-Window's—;———Gall-276'-362Q:r—'—

Nuprlme ReplacementWindows '•"Rtn>m~7frVrr',

SCTptftifiJpmteinattonsComBTnation Doors-25'Styles

LIFETIME ALUMINUM '-1 PRODUCTS INC.

102 South Ave W 276-3205

PAINTING - Interior and ex-terior. Call 276-5774

-COMPLETE-DECORATING^2S£BSEO!rop.ari'e 5._3nOi[f

cbyers custom made (yourfabric gr'mine), completalyinstalled. Woven woods,levolor and Roman shades-Also draperies cleaned,altered and rehung at a sur-prisingly low cost.

DISCOUNTED.PRICES

889-631 5

mileage, 4 spoe'd stick, RH. •— Aski i ig $ 1 800 .

-24-1-29207- -—r

t'974"Vi SILVER^DATSUM"260z • iAuto, AM FM. A/C,one owner, very lowrVnleagB.-new paint. Bast of-.or- 276 6653 . . V2/31 •

An()lu'Ad|tiHi«] HI'M Sfl i i i r i i ior S.'l I'cin-r .nil

* " . :. .^353-9244

53,196 sold (Or $44Tl"4'3'"

Ext 632't .for. inform:. .tinr) nn hnw lp [jurrh;i;;o

SERVICENTERS Elmora AVOIIUO

fTiTornc lyw.ly Cm.it, ^

SERVlGEr

iVed., _p£i.._ after . 6 _p.|in-276-7^84. Ask-for-RonT—

—• T/2'9.WHITE BEDROOM SET -

HOTOHMPROVEMENTS

• Job Too Nul lFREE ESTIMATES

WIGHT APPOINTMENTS^FULLY INSURED

KiRICH RKM0BKL1M

STEVE'S COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIALPAINTING SERVICE

REDUCED WINTER RATES ,'|nterjor'/exteri'or painting, professional \feork,reasonable Trates, quality paintriull'yrinsurQdT

l i / i CHEVY IMPALA'WAGOjM • air, power winclows, -power steering, 6

" p a s s e n g e r , a u m Cal l7 8 9 0 9 6 3 $ '3,59 5 Nowradial tires, new bnttory,-

12 '31

YTTAvEL Tfl^\tftfVrnr~SHASTA. Sink/ stove, ico|box. closet, plenty ofstorage. Groat for hunting,fishing or camping. Call

• 789-1434. $775.00 12/31

272-4033 S>i 467-3993

RENTALS

E D I S O N - R A M B L I N G, - R A N C H , - F-i r-op I a c-«,- 4

i3edroorT\s, 3 baths, roc.' room, 2 celr garage on largetot. Occupancy Dec. 15'.

-_27-2JO.47-or-276--?-V81

TEXAS OIL "COMPANYneeds dependable personw-ho—tan-^-w«>tk—wittout-supervision in CrarifdrdiContact customers. Age-uaimportant, but maturity Is.We train. Write W. D. Dick,Pros., Sou thwes te rnPotroiaum.. Ft. Worth; Tx.76101.

Double bad, 2 dressers, 2night tables. Excellent condi-tion. Call 27&-3708 after 5p,m, • •• . ' 1 / 2 9

.CHEVYl-CHEVETTE ..'79, 2'. door hatchback, i_ spdi_"AM/FM,"8~tra"cT<~sT5reo, air,oxc. cond i t i on Asking$ 4 , 3 5 0 . . C a l l evenings,272:5838. .' n/22

ROBBINS & ALLISON Inc.Local Moving & Storage

AGENT \AIJJED VAN LINES

"24JTSOOTH^VE., I . CRANFORD

TEL\276-0898

manager 18 ..named VP Republicans to be seafefl on

Box: Less than0.1 ingtar.

if.

\ KENILWGRTH^CarlosJ. Giievara, Fords, hasbeen elected assistant vicepresident at City FederalSavings and LoanAssociation. He -Willcontinue as manager ofthe Kenilworth office, aposition he has held sinceMarch 1979.. Guevara jmned~CTtyFederal in 1971 assigned tothe Elmora officer He wasnamed assistant managerof the Woodbridge office in1975. Later that year he.servecl as manager of the'ter th Amboy office untilcoming, to Kenilworth.- A graduate of Seton Hall-University with a B.S.degree in MarRetlng, he isa member "7 of theKenilworth Rotary Club.

Five new ~courses setat college

TJnibn College1 will offer' five new credit coursesduring its spring semesterbeginning Feb. 2.

The new studies, whichare offered in both day and.evening sessions, are allaspects of programswhich have been introduc-ed at the College over the

including

Warning: The Surgeon General Has, DeterminedThat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health,

urrii Inc. 1950

LBSS than 0,1 mg "tar;'0.01 mg-iiicotino uv. per cigarette by FTC Method.

a fine arts option \n thedance and two options inthe college's new humanservices program--gerontology and inter-preters for the deaf,

The new courses, all ofwhich carrythree credits,are introduction to Tech-niques of Interviewing andCounseling, Understand-ing Social Research, Psy-chology of Aging, Sociolo-gy of Aging,"and ModernDarice. Call 272-U5B0 forinformation.

- , - j -

GARWOODr Mary Jane " LeonardDeHanes and James Gaeta will beseated to three-year terms on theBorough Council at the annual,reorganization meeting at noonThursday. .- The Republican newcomers willSucceed Doris Mann, GOPcouncilwoman who did not seekreelection, after two terrns_, and John

New cops graduateGARWOOD-; Leonard DeStefano Jr.

and Robert McCarrick, both of" the,!Garwood Police Department, are"among-54 policemen who graduatedfrom the 42nd Union County PoliceChiefs1——fiaflle -Academy —-at-commencement exercises Dec. 15 atUnion College,

The Police- Training Academy isoperated jointly by the Union CountyPolice Chiefs' Association and UnionCollege and is certified by the NewJersey Police Training Commission.Newly-appointed policemen mustcomplete basic training in a certified

. program to continue employment withpolice departments in New Jesey.

Schering to fight

IRS back tax claimKENILWORTH- Schering-Plough

Corporation said it will contest anInternal Revenue Service examinationreport received las^ week that seeksadditional taxes for the years 1971through19(75;——• — --

The report claims additional taxestotaling nearly $71 million, primarilyrelated to Schering-Polough's PuertoRico operations.

Schering-Plough contends that thebasis for this proposed additional taxconflicts with the-applicable provisionsof the Internal Revenue code and'regulations. The company1 added .thatthis position is supported by outside tax'.counsel and the firm's independent!

-auditors and that ultimate-resolution of'this matter will not.'have a materialeffect on the company's consolidatedfinancial statements..'

\

wasOgonowski,-—Democrate whodefeated in his reelection bid. • - , • •

The"' 1980 coiincil will wrap up itsbusiness at tfie "sine'die" meetingbeginning at 11:30 a.m.'

L1M0NT GRADUATESKENILWORTH- Douglas Lamont of

the Kenilworth Police Department isamong 54 policemen who graduatedfrom the '42nd Union County PoliceChiefs' Basic Academy atcommencement ejeercises Dec. 15 atUnion College.

RENTALSWANTED

WANTED "i & 2 bodrooirrrontals from $3OO-$450. for corporute tranBforoos.'No fooCall: 539-5551-9 6 p.m.

HELP WANTED

WANTED FULL TIME recoiving and shipping clerk forlocal industrial supply firm.Call Mike at 245-5400.

WANTED FULL TIME driverto deliver small packages forlocal Industrial supply firm.Call Mike-.at 245-5400.

• FIELD SERVICEREPRESENTATIVE

[.npnricnced Finld_ SorviCB Rep wilhp111c Iro • moch,inicn J t^ukf i r r innr l

ol andtofl & -fnhasod elnclronicg desirod wilh aminimum of • 2 years anporience

PRODUCTIONSUPPORT ENGINEER

M.inOl.lc 111' in(] ongmuor (lflet(erj~~tolodosifln uquipniont lor cos) nflec-livormas ilnd devBtopmanl of lostmethods, proctitlurns .A oquiDme»l.Minimum 3 K'J v^Jrs miinulaclufliiQ orciotlro-mfich.inic^H nys!om« uxpononcoSend rosuMu 10 H E Oonjvon

RHEOMETRICS, INC.95 Pronrm St.

Union, H.J- 07083 . •

COMPUTER TRS - 80 Level I(Radio Shack) includes manyextra games. Like now inor ig inal box. $ 3 2 5 .272 :45,06after5j3,m. 2/5

DRUMSET-LUDWIG 5 Pc.Cymbals, cases, $650. P.A.

-systemTraynwr~y9T9n5 or"best offer. 241-2094 after6p.m. 12/31

drapefe, aqua, 180 x .75,1 40 x 77. Twin bedspreadsw^mBtch ing . drapes!276-31,79 . . . 1/22

^RCHIE'S ICE SKATE ex-change in Myersvilte has a 'big supply of new and usedskates for aale and ex-change. Open Sat. & Sun.1 0 -5 . Weekdays ' 3 - 5 .647-1 149. " .

HARDWARE CLERKSRequires retail experience!.preferably in hard-lines; Goodstarting salary, commensuratewith experience". Referencesrequired. Contact Mr. Burke,Brown Hardware Summit1273^049.

SOLOIST —-«tacle Court plays"Adoration of; the Magi" duringvlollh dolo at Garwood concert^

'I-

LEGAL SECRETARYExperienced for djver-slfied law flrrr) located InUnion County. Shorthandnecessary. Please* callHarriet, 388-5464. .

BENCH REPAIRPerson needed to Test &Repair Home Cable TelevisionConverters. Wiring and Soder-In'jfability a-pias. We will train

j | . ouLCran|QrjUaci!itx_S!ar:Ung rate $4,30 per hour;evaluation & increase alter 90days. All company benefits in-cluding Health Plan, SickLoave. Vacation Plan & ProfitSharing, Contact Greg Ryan'at276.-8728 between hours of

•9':'dO'S"ivr:'i&i'i'.oo"P-:w.SUBURBAN CABLEVISIDN'

1 Baltimore HazaCrtnJord, N J.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

OIL,. 276 GALS. Burnerw/transformer, 76.5% 'off.Best offor. 789-0660 2/5

WANTED 11STAMPS

U.S. PLATE BLOCKSSingles. AcctimulaticMsrCol- •lection*, Canada. Top. Pricespaid. Call 527-8011

INSTRUCTION

pLARlNET, SAX, FLUTEiossons a in your homo. D.Whellan-232-4919

ALUM. PRODUCT

LIFETIME \ l IMIM M

PRODUCTS. INC.

Home Improvement •Products

' Storm-Window;. B. Doors

276-3205103 SOUTH AVEJtUE

CRANFORD " ~ ~

AUTO SERVICE

PR1BE ANB

PERFORMANCEAUTOtENTERYour Complete

Automotive Service~~ A'niericairnr^ore'ign

19 Year? Experience

101 Sollth Ave., Cranford

276-7573

FUEL OIL

AUTO DEALERS

OLttSMOBILE. INC.' ' A U T H b R I Z E D

OLDSMOBILE

-SA-UES 8. SERVICE

232-7651

' •>*!•!..NOR T H A V E fw E s r F i E L 0

BANKS

k K U l WORTHSTATE BA^k

FREE •

CHECKING

, - 272-45004// BOULEVARDKENILWORTH

Member FDIC

FUEL OIL

AUTO DEALERS AUTO DEALERS AUTO DEALERS

LINCOLN

MERCURYFORD

Quality Used CarsSuperb Service

Red Carpet-Lease

IV.'O "

•S.ilcs Service Rentals'.n.en.£ v-ts..Jil,.» JiH. _

Silt III 6 00

245-6100WESTFIELD AVE.

ROSELLE PARK, N.J

BUILDERS

A. BUONTEMPO. General Builder

since 1950 , . . ,Alterations. .AdditionsConcrete WockFireplacesCommercials,'Residential

General Repairs |Fully Insured I

j Free Estimates

' 272,5177^ ^.

Llc«ns« #02160

INSURANCE

COLLISION REPAIRS

WE'LL PUT IT B A C K

T O G E T H E R > O H YOUI

BODY & FENDER STRAIGHTENING

! COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE

TOWING

H F . BENNERJNC606 SOUTH AVE , E. CRANFORO

276-1111

INSURANCE

PERSONALt Cc:

SALES SECRETARYIndustrial equipment manufacturer needs sales

-orlanjerj person for'Union office. Excellent 5 day•week position. Samp travel, salary, bonus, cur, paidInsurance, good benefitisTPonitiori prornptly loads toterritorial sales manager. r-*.-

201^-964-0573 Ma.JVIRAZ _2204 Morris Ave,, SuItF2"03 ~<

Union; New Jersey 07083

SISTER SUZANREADINGS

fHANDWRITING ANALYSIS

" TAHOT CARD READINGSA SPECIALTY

^t15-B-(Jorth Avu, W. Cranlordj

FOR.APPOINTMENT

» IUFI OH

• COMPLFtl Hf AI ING

INS1AUA1I0N• Rl PAIRS AND SERVICE

• AIR CONOIIIONING

230 Centennial Ave.Cranford

Coll 276-9200

HEEL-STRONGFUEL CO.

| Dependable. Friendly Service

Since 1925HEATING OILS

INSTALLATIONSSERVICE

'549 Lexington Ave.CRANFORD

276-0900

GIRL / GUY FRIDAYImmediate oponlnrj uvuilublo in office of smallmanutactur lnq company. Opportunity for f oatleBrner. Diversified dutlas includo typing. ' " ' " 0 .telophono etc. Mus i ba good with f i o " ' " 8 - 1 3 ^holldaVa-Blue Cross - Blue Shlold, Mujor Mudical.Call 3 4 1 - 2 4 2 0 for uppolntmont.

Joromo industries136 Market St.

• • Konl lwor lh. IM.J. 0 7 0 3 3 r — •'

272-9791

CHRONICLECLASSIFIEDCAU 276-6000Minimum chtrgt SZ.70 tor20 words; eich iddiliondword, AQC. Rtptit Inser-tion, <?.OO (or 20 words.

PLUMBERS

REYNOLDSPLUMBING & HEATING ING.GuCkjCuoZJO Tony QIFiihio

Ocrior 35 Yra ExporioncuSAME DAY SEHVICE

Dathrooni JmrJ Kijctuing

y~~iai"'nrJtuiU/.')tioMS-StHVtCE SALES "REPAIRS

Wo Do Tho Cornpluto Job• HEASONABLE RATES

276-5367368 NORTH AVENUE E.

CRANFORQ. --•"

PLUMBERS

~mm\ BROS.« Plumbing - -a Hfi i tmg- Cooling

1 • Alterations - -Repairs« Air Conditioning '

276-1370

INDEPENDENTBROKERAGE

SERVICEPersonal and Business

Insurance Planning

RALPH J. LAGRIOLA .l! DONALD E. BRUTZMAN

115 No. Union AVBIJUO

Cranford

272^7250

SEWER AND DRAINCLEANING SERVICE

.3i NOHTU.-AVE. E\ CRANFORD

M I t v l l l t (lMI'ANY

COLORBLACK & WHITE

All Makrts -Admiral to 2anl(hi-' SorvlcoWKhin 24 Houn

ANTENNA INSTALLATIONAND REPAIH ,

. 276 1160 ;l^, 21 B Conianrilal Auo

CONTRACTORS

DAVIS BROS.

Jack Davis

• AlterationsAdditions

Remodeling -

Free EstimatesCALL'CRANFORD

276-1474

LUMBER

srppiA ro.LUMBER

BUILCHNG MATERIALSMILL WORK t (/

t '

2764505

334 CENTEKJNfAL AVE.CRAKiFORD

TREET

HEYDERTREE

SERVICE

• Landscapingfc Pree estimates• Fully Insured '• Reasonable prices

789-1951

AUTO DEALERS

4J3 North Ave.WesHleld,-N.J.

SALES

DAILY RENTALS >

LONG"TERM LW'SING n

ALL MAKES . _

232-3700 • ^

Service - Parts

,,,£54-3222

"75 Location"

\x

TERMINAL

MILL END STORES, Inc.- ^^^v Cu*tom Mad«

M B_j DHAPtHIEST T | -.tsLiPcoveKj?L^ L«rg« »»l«cttonol

1 ' P»b/lc»bv Ylrdor Bolt

" - Foam Rubber

Interior DecoratingSpecialists

Call 688-9416IMJL' Stuyv.csunt Avenue I moil

THIS

SPACE

CAN SELL

YOUR"

SERVICJE-

>~CALL

276-6000

TREET

S.J SHAW. JR.Approved Arboitsi4Olh Y..r Syvlno

TRBC SERVICE

• TREE SHHV.ICP• SPRAYING• FULLY INSURED• MEASONABLE RATES

2*j Tulip.St., Oonfocd

J

276-3607

I

Page 11: cil 1 J ^timrks - DigiFind-It · 24/12/1980  · $2,9:18,760. However, the state has notified school districts of the slrnni: likelihood that state aid will be less because ofinsuffieient

\•• 1 P V •'

\ .

." \

Page 10 CKANFUHU (1NI.J.) CHKOJMlCLt; Wednesday, December 31, 1980

Santa's workshop bustles at Hillside

Some friendly letters to a desk mouseCreative • writing is a fun way of

developing writing skills .such assentence .structure and paragraphing.Below.are "letters" written to a mouse-who has chosen to liy-X'jn each .student'sdesk in'Ann-toucherjijiixthjy-adi.' classat L i v i n g s t o n S c f i o o T ' • ' .

Hear Mr. Mouse, -Jrr".I know that you are an intelligent

awuse, with your living in my desk and1 all, but thereisone problem: you are not

i k

box and put them s6mewhere els6. Ican't, because I use my crayons formath. • • « . . .

One time, I think, you had a party, andyou left cheese all over. Next time,please clean up!

Your desk mate,LisaTedeschi

Dear Simon, ' . •How do. you like living in my desk?

paying rent. I know you probably have .How long have you been living here?nomoneyrsol willmakca-deal-with l W h f a r e - y ° u living m here?you. You won't have to move out of your l h o P e y ° u ' r e feellr>g w e H- If y°u n e e d

cozy-desk home. something, tell me.I hear you came out and scared every^

one out of. the school. Then you and yourfriends went home in bookbags, went to

desk tomorrow. So be ready to go homeaj; luhchtime tomorrow. > s,

I'd better get my math test done-By,the way, what's 7X7 4J9?* Never mindabout that. _ . . • . .

Do you think I shou ld^ to chorus?rdon't know whether to eat lunch at

Sue's house or-not. I guess not, becausethen I can't take you home. " „"

.__.__-_\ 1'T.i' Your friend,JeanW.oods

Dear £Ji6bles;First of all, I hope that you, are as

comfortable as ;a rat-on a mat;-Whydon't you come out during math so it

grade• thespishs at Hillside AvenueSchooT?Bceiv€d5ccolades*frorn parents andrelatives as theyBFttttghtJolife the toys in"Santa's Workshop" - an original play bytheir teacher, Mae Cummins.

Among the toys, presented by the happyelves for Santa's approval, were dancing

"dolls, toy soldiers, happy clowns, Raggedy#- Ann and Andy, a dancing bear, talking/ d511s, and a iack-in-the box. . '

Red nosea Rudolph led a team of eight""r"~'tiav reindeer - ''borrowed" from the

knldergarte^n to help pull Santa's sled forthe grand finaler — _

IS'--

Every day, when I get to-school, I findmy desk in a mess. What do you do,throw wild parties every nighf I findlittle beer cans, too!

Instead, I will compromise: if you do People there.my homework and Clean my desk, you -v m o u s e !

,. Your landlord,Andrew Bardes

a Girl Scout meeting and scared al^theIf this is true, you're a

Sincerely,,) _ .-, Carolyn Capone

Dear Mouse, " _Why do you like it in my desk at nightT

Especially when it is messy? How is it.atnight in my desk with nobody around?P6 yoijjeel lonely? I really don't see how

i can like it in-thcrc-w-tthout-any-fgficl

D e a r M o u s e , >•• • • • • , ' ' . *-•"•

I've noticed-you'•vc-bccn-h'ying.j.n mydesk. I've found cheese scraps ana liltfiT

yoti home and let yousleep in my bed, or even the hamstercage with my hamster." When I go out-side you can play kickb.aH; football, orbasebail with me and my friends. WhenI play with my Star Wars figures, I'll letyou play with the best ones. When I dpmy homework,you can help me with the

-'hard-stuffrO/KT?—•••-"-~ .. V< •Sincerely,

' •• ' ' MichaelLeig

• « • •

7

TOY SOLDIERS in first grade Santd workshop were played by An- JACK-iN-tHE:Bdx Is really Vic.thony Bello, Michael Andrews, and John White. , . tor Worthlngton.

-or friends. OrAren't vou • a

tfny footprints in my books.By (he way; you also left your glasses

in my reading book. That I really didn'tm ind-a t-all-rbuti t-got-onmy-hervesTwhen"

do you. have friends?- you started"eating my notebook,field mouse roaming When you started to-doodle in my.t night? I'd really like (o""tKf3ks, that was going a little too far.

know some things about y.oiu-how old Stealing my homework papers and thenare you, and what color are you'HDp you giving1 them back after 1 got a zero on

them wasn't fgnny^either. So I'm askingyou to lea.yivBCiy.fciesk'. Otherwise^ themousetraps!;'"'-"*'" -•' " •

y p yparents or broThw?" andhave any

sisters? • ' ——*-.I really don't mind your being in my

desk. I wish-you would and could saysomething or help me with my home-work. . ' , • ' .-•

Someday I hope' to meet you. Wouldyou! ike-to meet me andjusl

run around at night or stay quiet and-hrcidun away in iny ricsk^-Wtralare so:

The next morning*! find this note in mydesk:. • '

Dear Michael,• I-woiild-love-to-sleep-iTrajnice'bed

or cage. I really love sports,especially the ones you like. I love,the figures you bring to^ftfeoal each""'day. I hate homework as much asyou 5o~\ ~i*w'- .-<

'- ' "~ —•""•'•' ' ' " . . . S i g n e d ,•"•-"'. Nibbles

Dear Mouse,I am glad to see that you have finally

accommodated yourself in the'riice little -corner-house! made for you. I'm sorry I

•oW'-lW4 f o r W A H t t - - w ^ ^' / I n . H i d 1 1 | I U I fclUU' III H I V U L p " ' ' •—• • v i • ' ' ' » - i • • • i ' L' . -, u • •• . .

rr'Vhff^"1"- ' n o p e y o u l k ll" '• t fe?r-"Hfod should see-alHhe-hem^wopk-]

'Sincerely yours,Harold Reeves

• ft.

„ \

. .naine.and, if you do, what is it? Whatyou have for breakfast, lunch,''arj'ddinner?" ' / ,: --:'

Phope you will read this letter ;.|indanswer the questions. - •;•••;•* •

Sincerely,. " Donna Goldstein

row.

Dearer. Mouse," ;.& really .like, it ifyou would

up-isfe^ h

Dear Mr. Mouse, . ,'i1'-•",-1 wish you would stop chewing pi) my

pencils, scribbling on my pWsvv.andhaving wild mouse parties every ivj ht.

.Your mouse friends break bottles m^rny^k)ik,.';l''liave'to keep picking thovpierc.es-

;s. Then I have to:pick-'ip.'.before the teacher "inspects;

our desk. I always have to stay after,because my desk is"-a mess. i • '

So I'll make a deal: you clean up rdesk, and I won't kick you out

-Yours-truly' Bert

Squeaky, __•' i___ "t wreck my desk like you

did last night. I spent most of my lunchtime cleanmg.it. I realize ytiu like tohaw fun playing .with my pencils andt. p.. "...i n ^ i . "

: erasers, but please straighten them up • l M • n u i l i ; i .when youlre done." \

••iiigelling, K r i f t n r < y > v e r y t h i n g -T--giif^s '*•tickets to the V o u C 9 U ^ t e ^ because my deskign't as

Rpttpi' IKNIW•': m.^sy, as usual! I'm sick of it,write till tomor -', $ m 8omg to Pa tty's today. She's soW l I t C t i l l tXJl l l t / 1 • I v i v n» -v 1 1 ! » « •

-< vi smart, Ill^eopy her homework. Mrs.Sincerelv ': T^egsofKwonT"know4he difference.

••''• • Em-^writing thrs. note during mathlse it's so bornpg.

in trouble for throwing

: - - - - -----

and Patrick Lassen. himself is also Known as William Hull.

What educationr

Let's all help save water

means

math, if you know the answer, you wijiyell out the- answer, That is —•iu- -"ra is ing! . ' • . . ' '•., Sometimes you will eatmypens. Last week, you ate myBO1! had to tell the teacher I dylnot do it

. i „„;„„ it!. wait until 1:4

^l^v^ustscnthimdowntoMr. Zoffle, Boy, is. studentssixth

, because that's Schoolx when we change-to-Miss Mark's class.

She'sj".eally .nice. Boy, time drags whenyou're not having fun.• Here it is, 1:10 p.m. I'm getting boredhalf to death in math. Oh, oh, more math

During American Education Week,from Mildred Kranowski's

class at Hillside Avenue-expressed their feelings for

Education means a good life and togrow up smart. It gets^-boringsonietimes, but in the long-run you feelgreat because ypiT>finished j t .Sometimes I feel l^want to throw it all

t)

I}iIj •' Save water', by winterizing your'• pool water. Put chemicals in and-'—water need not be (ihangedrMichael"

Yablonsky *; . - > ' . 'Take only a half glass of water if

you know you will not drink all of it.Heather Dobbins

Water shortages are not fun. Hereare. a few- tips from Mary Giba'sthird graders at Brookside School tohelp conserve a • valuableresource—water.

Why-"ifeaste water on washingsidewalks; use a broom instead.Patricia ^ ^

' Use sink stopper when washingboards at school. Cindy Riley' Turn off your faucet tightly to save

water. Every drop is a waste ofwater, Katrina Anderson

When waiting for the water, to_.._warninip,-bottle'rit'for plants or store

it in the refrigerator for~dr.inking orcooking. Daniel Stf*Lawyns

_'"'"" "When bathing. use, half a tub of~ "waterTSusannah Hulf •

, Use a pail of. water jto wash .your1 car instead 6*- running hose. Chris

De$ella , ' ' ' ••»

r ^ ± i L ^ : ^ ^ ^ L T ^ ^ ^ : W h e n scrubbing-or -mopping

P.S. Please leave!John Ruggiano

Just a warning: wStch out for themousetraps that the custodians have set

•around the school. \ .• •' - •;.- Your friend,

• - Charlie KellerP.S. I-left a piece of cheese in my era

fen—you tcnearr •

I don't blame youMor living in mydesk. It looks like a ratVri^sJ,. Anyway,I'm glad you came to my desk, because Oh, oh, herecomes Mr. Zoffle anthere aren't many people who have a .Eric. I have to put this letter awaymouse friend IJold one of my gjrl if d l ^

good education. 11 makes you feel good ._. just in case when' you finish a report or something 'h^ser^^nU-J>n<iget.an_^^ want a good education so (

think just half of your house crayoned J csffl getTa good job?;^ enjoy a lot ofblue looks good! activities wedotp learn. 1 've got to go_to" I like Miss M"arks because she teaches school or I just won't ever Succeed inlanguageThd sbciaf science. (My two life.1! t's like sayingvtliat if-I-ilevei-gelfavorite subjects!) It's almost 1:30 p.m.Fifteen minutes to "go!

Oh, oh, here'comes Mr. Zoffle andV

mouse friend. I told one of my gjrlfriends about'youT and you know-whatshe thought? She-thought t h a t j couldstart a new invention! '

becaliseit's 1, 45, and Mr. Zoffle's^here.See you tqmorrdw.

• • Your friend,

•Dear George,Please don't nibble on my. books!

gtnpnihhlingnn my ponr'ilc:' My

She thought that if everybody ted a___w ,.„ 1 M ^ : M — _mouse, and everybody taught it to do .' *XWc«STadS7to

;(idjjld do our schoolwork for us! ft r , x w t

-t—T—T T--T—•—i—• 1—i —might got a stomach acheher head, and her bra ins m u s t "- —-r>—• =

-- { saver shower cap to use less water.William VanBehscholten . ^

Mothers, while Cooking in the kit-chen use a moist cloth to clean offhjinds instead of.rinsing them" con-stantly. Jasbn

JLIse two disrj. pansjo wasjidisone for washing, one for rinTKristine Buydos * ••"

in .. - Don't turn'faucet on full force. Youstead of under: running water and ' ^ % ™™ than you use. D^ina

• -• - •"• - p - - McSulla ~: ;, .Avoid running, water 'while

washing hands;-put-stopper down in

g ppfloors, use a half pail of water. SilviaKimlicka- Scale£the^fish_at-the stream -tead of under: running water a

wasting gallons of it. James JudgeUse half a tub of water when

h

teacher is'getting mad, because you're1

nibbling on my things. ^ ' fallen out! Well, I have to. do my home-Are you;the tine who ate my English work. Good-Bye!

homework? I would like tojneet-you! ,,. Sincerely;Sincerely, . ,' Michele Meleridez"

• \ . Tina ^ito Dear Skag, _•Dear Mouse, " . Quit making so much noise'during

I got your letter sayingUh^t you lived, matli'and spelling. Maybe we-carrwprkin the back of my math book;,. I don't something out. I can ask you themind your staying, but I don't want you

:._—4o-UUuvmy; papers from my books anduse them as carpets anymore.

In your letter- you also asked me if Iwould take my crayons from my crayon

Education, to me, means help, infinding out about the world and ithepeople, past and present. Education canhelp you in yoiiHater.years, too. 11 willhelp you-to-get-lnto'a-gQod-eollegerand—j Never, leave-water-ruimmg-while

;—then— to—get a good job. J^ducation ', shaving. Fill the bowl halTway. Two-don't gnaw .teaches you things you would not know { gallonst, and you without it. I t explains and tells you more j Kim Field

i-fot—about-things' yon already kn»y -"-- -1

the sink and use little water. Jason...Jacobus _ . :

Do your -laundry only when you. have a full load. Billy Pietrucha_ When brushing teeth, do not keepwater running.-Use a glass to rinseaway the foam. Greg Kachdogian

Don't use your toilet as a trash can

V' r Jpfrwjj.

janitors; they might swat you. Get out • Education is important for allbefore the teacher comes! . Humans, but many people don't get it in

For fun on April First, go in the foreign countries. I get an educationteacher's desk or in the girls' lockers, and'I-don't mind it. very much, but IOr, on Halloween you can decorate your hate getting up "early for school-,face-to look really scary and hop on eachdesk. Maybe on, the last day of schoolbefore.Christmas^you can dress up like

I'm me! I'm special! v

Tom.VV.alsh

questions,^and you.can give me theanswers. ~u>' , \ •

Will you look for my orange pencilwith gold printing on it for me?> \

Mrs. Fabra is making us clean our

Santa Claus, or maybe you can dress upas one of Santa's elves!

Sincerely yours,J.ohn Newman

P.S. Could you straighten up my desk forme?

Education means being a smartperson, getting a good job, knowing-right from wrong, and knowing what todo in an emerge/icy. Education means alot to me. . . . .

Dawn-Santos

Local Latin slaves get their first taste of Roman 'torture'The life style of the

Roman, after being buriedsince the fall of Rome in476 A.D., rose againrecently to give the newmt(mbers of the CranfordHigh" School .Latin Club the

true meaning of the words"slave" sr\d "torment."

After being stripped ofall Western clothing,Roma_n_ tunics weredonned by all the initiates

Temple of Janus (god ofbeginnings and ends)where they would begintheir lives as Romanslaves. '

After • a formal, , , After a formalwho were then led to the candlelight induction, the

slaves, bedecked in theirRoman garb, paraded infull view of the watchfuland critical eyes of theirprospect ive n\asters.Winner of the "best

*.-- -

CRACKING THE WHIP — Andy Strattdn,Latin Club auctioneer, cracks the Whip-to get

dressed slave" award wasGary Gross.

A public auctionfollowed when oldmembers of- the club, whoare considered the"mastenC-purchased theminds and souls of theinitiates, who would bebound to serye them untilthe Roman banquet inM a y . • . •

Blindfolded by theirmasters, theinitiates wereled to the portals of theC o l o s s e u m , . T h epassageway through this1,900-year-old amphi :

theater - began witha meal (anchioves andjuice,) which for somewould be their last.

HaVing survived thisrepast, they were takenthrough the- blood redsand-blood red_^ because

-the- Romano-loved-bloodand gore, especially thatof slaves. Warned that agood fight could sparetheir lives, each slaveentered the arena wherethe animal games becamea matter of life, and formost, death. There theyfelt the razor sharp clawsof the lions (backucratchers) pawing attheir deljcate skin.

Not only did man • fightsl AVF AUCTION — Auctioneer, Andy-More ._.^... ~ > ,-— — r - *,-- . ,., -., , . , - , , .,, -., •sell J o a n n e Tuccl, a slave, at Latin slaves RoJ>ln Lefkbvlc and Bill Anelll dancing beast, but heulso fought will end the yegrtongtiatlorr: " \ - - for t h e i r ' m a s t e r s . 1 . ' ; " ^ : : " ~ m a n himself. They felt the of servitude.

pain .ana thrusts of thegladiatorial swords(paper towel rolls) uponthelPjflesh.-The clashing ofswords resounded in theancient building. Thosewho survived the collidingswords met with aColosseurn flooded for anaval battle,experienced theaboard a ship (large handtruck) in^i battle betweenCaesar and Pompeii.

The more^. fortunateslaves who survived werethen reminded of exactlyhow fortunate they were,for they could feel themangled flesh (silly putty)of those who had been tornapart by a wild beast andthe. broken bones of the

-less fortunate .ones werefurther evidence' of. thebattle for survival.

• Those "who made itthrough the ordeal haveassumed a position as abona fide member of the198<m Latin Club andhave promised to • servewell thelrijdub and ri^w.lyacquired "masters."

Hope does, however,spring eternal. For theloyal and faithful; there ist h e in a n um i s s i o nceremony, in May which

term

Sixth graders in Kathy Schultz's classat St. Michael School wr6te these poemson the theme "I" m Me! I'm special."rnrverjrspeciar ~ 'Because God made me.I have brown hair < • • " ' 'And rny blue eyes can see.I'have a brain ..That helps me think.-I Have two earsSo I can hear."With my two hands .I can help someone..With my two legs , . " ' " .I can walk and run. ' 'I have a heart / iThat gives much loveThis is'a giftFr,om God above.

Stephen MizejewskiGod created the land and sea; .God. also created me. 'He gave me brown hair atid'eyes of blue,Then-said, 'there is no one quite like

Thev y°U;" • • ' • ' "terror * a m a n ' c e uy> a s o u c a n s e e '

The will to be good,And Satan .despised;I am special in God's eyes.God gave me a choice, ->w-*—.*•*.•*.-.. ••I chose this way.I try to followHis word every day. ,$.-- • Frank Kurkowsky

I can hit a ball, - .lean climb a tree,These are some of the thingsThat make me'.,",me.I like to swim,I like to fish,- 'And sometimes....I get my wish. ' ' .I've got big hands,I've got big feet,But my' Mom and DadThink I'm neat. •My God is always blessing me ;But I'm not so sure • . , ••That you can seeAll that He has done for jne.7-7-

David Glegcrlch

I'm me! I'm special!Look around and see.You won't find anyone .Who is just like me. .My hair is light brown;My eyes are brown, too; •My face has freckles,And-«iy name is Sue.I've my own feelings; '•• ""'"Do things, my own Way; . ; •

• I'ntjmique in myidoks,And things that I s,ay.I'm xnel I'm special!Look around and see.You won'l find anyone - "Who is just like m e

Susan Plytuuro

A-

Club • Initiation:-

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