vol. 50 no.—25 lynmiurst, n. a letter for our pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · a letter for our...

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Lynd!iur3t Library Valley Brook Ave. Lynlhurst. K. J. SAMPLE 07071 ,v;- ; . 1 -. - *■ - A (Urates Youth Seek Rec Center In Township - BY AMY DIVINE Youth and age had much to say at Tuesday's Commission meeting when the young people, all of high school age. and old- e • residents besieged the Com- missioners with demands and oi'i^tions Barbara Daoust. spokesman for 'the young people who were p;«S€Tjt fifty strong. for the second time requested a “place to meet and th taWc," unchaper- -■flied, supervised by their own committees and backed by an adult advisory board." She de- manded a “written guarantee fiom the Board of a place with- in three months time.” and pro- mised that if this written com- m tment were given the group would “call off the rally” plan- ned for late February in the l.*cal park. The 4-family building now un tier construction at 125 Stuyve- sar.t Avenue came under fire from many local residents and questions as to the action of the local Zoning Board of Actfust- ment in granting variances for its erection bombarded the Qoard. Mayor Peter J. Russo said the present board of com- missioners had not appointed c-iol board and could not dic- tated to by Commissioners. “It presents a budget to the Com- mission, as do the P 1 a n n i n < Bt^rd and the Free Public Li- brary and we allot them ooera- tkn? expenses but have no juris- diction over their actions." saiti Russo. Complaining residents, among whom were E d w a r d Roeschke, Second Ave.. John Ckiro/alo, 129 Stuyvesant Ave., A. J. Becker. 440 Hazel Street, Michael Guarino. Mac Chierico and Anthony Mangini, were told that Commissioner Peter F. Curcio, under whoee Depart rncnt of Public Affairs the Zon- ing Board operates, has request ed township attorney Ralph A. Polito to determine whether the construction is proceeding un- der any violation of the local zoning law. Russo suggested al- so that citizens might attend meetings of the zoning b o a r d which are public. _ Russo read a list of services rendered to the township by the Bergen Coun4y Board of flios- wa Freeholders as requested by Chierico. president of the Tax- payers Association. The report: TO U» state for mental health paUsuU. $100,000; roads and bndges. $390,000; vocational school, $25,000; Besgen Pines Hospital. $113,000; Community College. $18,009; Welfare pay ments to 129 local residents. V222.000, in addition, our share in operation of county courts, probation office, police, jail, mosquito commi*sion, surro- gute's office and park commis s en. It al90 contributed tt.000 toward summer employment of 15 local younf people. All the commissioners agreed they want to help young people but some qualified their posi- tions: Thomas Gash said there are legal and moral responsibil- ities accruing to the Board and that its greatest responsibility is to the entire citizenry; Jos- eph A. Canicci, recreation com- missioner: I am in favor of a youth center, but 1 want it ckarly understood there must be supervision over both facili- ty and program. The suggested CAP-WtiffiWM^ii the c o u n t y park, If anowhen tide la set tied, might be too far away fivm things and would be per- missive of out-of-tovmers, who have caused trouble at prevntfa local gatherings, such as the Youth Center in the former Lyn Maid factory oo Vajky Hfook Ave. at high school dao- oes where he had chaperoned at times due to Infraction of rules, and at local block dances: Cur- c.o: all organizations have tneir own halls to go to; I al ways felt that young p e o p l e cou!d congregate at the schools: Gash: assuming you accepted the responsibility of running a youth center, who is liable If anything happens? We have a trust and that is to the town at large: we are not going to turn youth loose; committees with ruies and regulations to keep problems from arising should be formed; what does the youth of Lyndhurst want? I km for youth but I won't commit my- self on a building right now; Russo: I’ve worked with youth for 25 years. I think they must have proper chaperonage. Miss Daoust was most firm in her declarations of “ We want" and "We don't want" and answered Gash when he inquir- ed if they meant to exclude out- siders. "Yes. this is for Lynd- hurst youth only." But she had no reply when Gash asked. “Suppose a Lyndhurst girl has o Rutherford boy friend?" At this point denim clad, long- (Continued On Pag* Eight) BERGEN REVIEW TEN CENTS Ter Copy Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. J.. JANUARY 14, 1971 TELEPHONE GENEVA 8 *700-8 * r Second-claa* postage paid at Rutharfprd. N A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the Alliance is sponsoring a letter writing campaign that has been launched throughout the country to aid American prisoners of war in North Vietnam. The following letter is suggested to be •ent to Ton Due Thang, president Demo- cratic republic of North Vietnam, at a cost of 25 cents. To the Honorable Ton Due Thang: President, Democratic Republic of North Vietnam: We take this means of apealing to you on a situation which is cloee to the hearts of all Americans. This issue is not wheth- er Americans should be in Vietnam or whether we should pull all our troops out immediately. The issue is not whether you are right and we are wrong or that we are right and you are wrong. The issue is the 450 American Service- men who are held in your prison camps. Another 1,150 are listed as missing and. possibly some are your prisoners. Their situation is our united concern Both the “doves and the hawks” of America feel deeply about them and their welfare. We ask you to consider their immediate release. 1hy have no m litary va.ue to you. They can’t hurt or hamper your war effort and no longer would help ours. Ihese men, Hke your soldiers, do not institute policy but merely serve as sol- diers have done since time began. Like your men, they performed their duty and were willing to sacrifice for their coun- try. Like your soldiers, they left their homes and families not because they wanted to but because their country call- ed on them. Patriotism is not limited to the men of Vietnam orTo the man of America but is the privilege of aH men. They fight un- der their flag whether it be red, white and blue or red, yellow and blue. i from the release of the prisoners. This, more than anythin? else, would demonstrate thaf you too do not reek revenge against men who did their duty. This, too, would show the world -'^hat compassion, not punishment can load to peace. The arguments of your critics that human life means nothing to you would he baseless if you allowed iust peace by acting quickly to the appeal. If your heart contains mercy and your soul compassion and if you truly seek to help the cause of peace, you have an opportunity to achieve these images in the eyes of the world. The feeling here is that you don’t care about the individual; that his needs and wants and desires don’t matter; that life is not sacred to you. Your actions can give lie to these be- liefs. An act of amnesty tuward Ameri- can prisoners would show the world that you are concerned with life and that al) life is sacred. Family ties in America are strong and all Americans want these men returned with their families. Some fathers have never seen their children. Some are miss- ing the joy of watching them "row. And, the children, they live with a constant dream and hope that they may again be a whole family. Few men in the history of the world have been given the opportunity that you now have. History can record you as a man of compassion; a man who respected hu- man life and held it in high value; a man who held that family life ii pa *arr^unt providing a measure of peace to many families. Return these men to their families and the world would hail you. Retain them and your supporters can’t help but won- der about your sincerity and motives. We address you not as one enemy to another but as one human to another. As citizens of the United States we halve no power to offer anything as in- dividuals hut goodwill in exchange for the men you holj. We have no power to make threats if you d o n ’t. We only have hope; hore that you will heed the ple^s and restore these men to their families. Signed Dump Costs Increased By Freeholders The State has ordered Ber- gen County Board of Free- holders to suspend at once its new price schedule on dump- ing in the Lyndhurst mead- ows. It wss a significant ac- tion — indicating that the De- partment of Public Utilities Is the boss of dumping in New Jersey. A hearing Will be held January 21 to determine if the new schedule should not be eliminated. The county had received permission to In- crease costs to 40 cents per cubic yard but then moved ahead to put costs up to 50 cents. PUC clamped down! The Bergen County Board of Freeholders have increased dumping costs at their refuse operations in Lyndhurst and Ttaneck by 25 percent. It will now cost 50 cents per cubic yard instead of 4<f cents for dumpers who use the Ber- gen accomodations. The rise is on the same plan followed by the freeho’dcrs since they undertook refuse dump operations • and. although they are a non profit making agency, the freeholders have been no less successful than pri vate operators in keeping down costs. New regulations, which make g.ubage collection more costly. ? Jus the ever rising expenses of labor, keep jiggling the prices up. Freeholder Victor. M. Will- iams said the hike was neces- sary because the state now re- quires that more earth fill cr>ver and enclose the garbage. • The county is to create horizontal (Continued On Page Four) Peoples Trust Opening Branch In Lyndhurst Lyndhurst wiH get its fifth bank in short order when Peo- ples Trust of Hackensack opens a branch in the Lyndhurst Of- fice Park. The Trust Company will occu- py 1.650 square feet on the first floor of the office park's new tn wing building at 1099 Wall Street West. The coming of Peoples Trust to Lyndhurst continues the fan- tastic cycle that has seen the banking community move swift- ly to capitalize nn the township’s tremendous residential and in- duxtrial potential. While it is the fifth individual bark it actually will give Lynd- J.urst six baWdng offices since Community National Bank has branches on Ridge Road and at Stuyvesant and Park Avenues. Community National recently acquired property on Valley Brook Avenue so that it can de vtlop a commodious drive in a f ciiity in connection witfi the Ridge Road branch. Only recently Kearny Federal Savings opened a Lyndhurst branch at Stuyvesant and Val- les Brook Avenues. On Ridge Road just south of Ten Eyck Avenue. Community Commercial Trust of Jersey CU tv opened a branch. Peoples Trust last year opin- ed a branch on .Schuyler Avenue North Arlington. It has had a branch in Rutherford for many years. The coming of the bank to I ynrthurst was announced by Daniel Brachman.. vice presi dent of Bellrmefld Dcvelooment C^rp.. which is the owner devel- oper of the off:ce park. Effective date of the bank’s tenancy is January 1. with bank ing facilities expected to be in oiK’ration during the^ fir«t half of 1971. according to Clifford H Coyman. the bank's executive vec president. According to Coyman, "We are looking forward to becom- ing a member of the Lyndhurst cmmunitv and to Darticipating yn the exciting development of the I.yndhUrsi Off ce P irk and the mcadowlands in the months and years ahead.'” Peoples Trust recently be- crm? a part of United Jersey Banks, d multi-bank holding comoany that now combines five New Jersey banks into a siate wide financial organiza- tion capable of serving individu a’s. businessmen, bankers and municipal offices. United Jersey ha* 47 offices throughout the state and is the oaly bank that is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The total assets are $820 mil lion, total capital $55 million and has a lending limit of $5 5 mil- I’OI j. On the Board of Directors are ?uch mctn as Charles G. R od man, president. Grand Union Co.; Arthur D. Van Winkle, pre- sident. Van Winkle & Liggett Rutherford; Edward A. Jess- er Jr.. chairman and president m ‘ Peoples Trust and chairman of the board of United Jersey Banks and Joseph William Cow gill, chairman and director. Tlurd National Bank and Trust Co. of Camden. The member banks of United are Central Home Trust Co.. E- lizabeth; Cumberland National Bank, Bridgeton; Peoples Na- tional Bank of Monmouth. Peo- ples Trust and Third National Rank and Trust Co. of Cam- den. LTA Demonstrates At Town Hall Seeking Here SSS More than 40 taachers demon s'rated around the Town Hall1 yesterday (Wednesday) to ex- press dissatisfaction over the fact- the Board of Education has failed to reach an agreement *v th them on a salary schedule. However. Frederick Censullo, president of the board, taid that a bodnd committee and an as- sociation group have spent over 100 hours studying the teach- ers’ proposals. According to board members many of the elements brought up at the conferences have not been related to the Lyndhurst situation. The teachers have been ro- p esented by a paid organizer for the State Education Associa tion. Some board members have complained that issues winch have no relevancy i n Lyndhurst have been raised and are blocking a satisfactory con- c’usicn. On January 10 (he association eke la red that an impass exists and that the board would not meet with the teachers. The let- ter was received on January 11 (Continued On Page Four) * * A Sp o rts C en te r T o G row In South Bergen ? ’^ a a te g W iB ilu -M II »■ ^ 1T — South Bero.n leaped back po-,.-l program It not known. under no cireum<t»>.r»« -m ................ .. ___ SPORTS ARENA SITE? These photographs dramatically shaw why a sports complex in the South Bergen meadows ka a reality. They rhow the battery of toll gates in Carlstadt marking the location of the new $400 million arm of the New Jersey Turnpike. Traffic and parking Pp°hlems of anv great sports complex in the npodtsn area. The Turnpike and the meadowlsnds • aolution. This Turnpke, nhotovraphed from the Paterson Plank Road bridge in East Rutherford shows why South Be***en has the Jaadas a location for the sports •itc. Next i PU, Btii S fe /i - *1 South Bergen leaped Into the sporting news again this week when reports that a special governor's commissi- slon It considering a plot in the mesdowlends for a sports srene. The reports say the *ite to be selected Is in the Lynd- hurst-Rutherford East Ruth- erford srea. Best sources indicate the site selected in the East Ruth- erford meadows is probably the meet likely. Twice a Long Island syndi- cate attempted to erect a har- ness race plant on the territo- *■* Twice the New Jersey Rac- ing Commission turned it posal program is not known. The Leader has asserted that such a sports a r e n a would be possible without cost ■Wthe taxpayers if it Included facilities for disposing of re- fuse. The need for a disposal removal program in South Bergen has become more and more pressing. The state has indicated that under no circumstances the municipalities now dump- ing in the meadows be prohib- ited until alternative means of disposing of the refuse is found. Engineers say that It is feas ible for a modern incineration program to be included with a sports arena. Indeed, most engineers say it would be teasible because the incinera- tor could produce power and heat for the surrounding build ings. Stat^. Treasurer Joseph Mc- Crane, who has had experi- ence in the racing field, hat been named by the governor to head the special committee that is studying the sports complex. Budget Up, School Tax Down Now the plan Is to put up an ell sports center of some serf. A harness treck plus base- bell and football accommoda- tion* would be Included. Whether The Leader propos- al that the sports arena be combined with • refuse dls- A school budget that reduces the amount to bo raised for tax- ation by $13,783 was adopted on first reading Monday night by the Board of Education. The total budget was *$2 883. 659 — an increase of $50,300 — bi»t the amount taxpayers will h.»ve to raise is gr&y $5,402,400. The rest of the money comes in tlu» form, of state aid. Interested spectators at the meeting wore members of 'the Teachers Association which has ' L v ooened negotiations with the b'*ard for a now contract. Earl H. Greenleaf Jr., vice president of the board, who pro serrted the budget announced that a public hearing on t h «? document will be held Jan. 28 at the high school library. At the session the issue of a recreation center Jpr youth arose Barbara ^Daoust of 206 Court Avenue, a high school student, who is conducting a campaign for a youth center, ap- peared at the meeting with her mother. Mrs Helen Daoust. Trustee Anthony Scardino took the occasion to read a pre- pnred statement on the subject. Tlie statement follows; "I personally respect and liorstand the reason why this >vU’th group has been formed. 1 also believe tlwit a rally by the youth of our community In order to show strength and uni- ted conviction for their cause is (Continued On Page Eight)

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Page 1: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

L y n d ! iu r3 t L i b r a r y V a lle y B rook Ave. L y n l h u r s t . K . J .

SA M PLE

0 7 0 7 1

, v ; - ;

. 1

- . - *■-

A(Urates

Youth Seek Rec Center In Township

- BY AMY DIVINEYouth and age had much to

say a t Tuesday's Commission meeting when the young people, all of high school age. and old- e • residents besieged the Com­missioners with demands andoi'i^tions

Barbara Daoust. spokesman for 'the young people who werep;«S€Tjt fifty strong. for t h e second time requested a “place to meet and th taWc," unchaper-

-■flied, supervised by their own committees and backed by an adult advisory board." She de­manded a “written guarantee fiom the Board of a place with­in three months tim e.” and pro­mised that if this written com- m tment were given the group would “call off the rally” plan­ned for late February in the l.*cal park.

The 4-family building now un tier construction a t 125 Stuyve- sar.t Avenue came under fire from many local residents and questions as to the action of the local Zoning Board of Actfust- ment in granting variances for its erection bombarded t h e Qoard. Mayor Peter J . Russo said the present board of com­missioners had not appointed

c-iol board and could not dic­tated to by Commissioners. “ It presents a budget to the Com- mission, as do the P 1 a n n i n < B t^rd and the F ree Public Li­brary and we allot them ooera- tkn? expenses but have no juris­diction over their actions." saiti Russo. Complaining residents, among whom were E d w a r d Roeschke, Second Ave.. John Ckiro/alo, 129 Stuyvesant Ave., A. J . Becker. 440 Hazel Street, Michael Guarino. Mac Chierico and Anthony Mangini, were told that Commissioner Peter F. Curcio, under whoee Depart rncnt of Public Affairs the Zon­ing Board operates, has request ed township attorney Ralph A. Polito to determine whether the construction is proceeding un­der any violation of the local zoning law. Russo suggested a l­so that citizens might attend meetings of the zoning b o a r d which are public. _

Russo read a list of services rendered to the township by the Bergen Coun4y Board of flios- wa Freeholders as requested by Chierico. president of the Tax­payers Association. The report: TO U» state for mental health paUsuU. $100,000; roads and

bndges. $390,000; vocational school, $25,000; Besgen Pines Hospital. $113,000; Community College. $18,009; Welfare pay ments to 129 local residents. V222.000, in addition, our share in operation of county courts, probation office, police, j a i l , mosquito commi*sion, surro- gute's office and park commis s en. It al90 contributed t t .000 toward summer employment of 15 local younf people.

All the commissioners agreed they want to help young people but some qualified their posi­tions: Thomas Gash said there are legal and moral responsibil­ities accruing to the Board and that its greatest responsibility is to the entire citizenry; Jos­eph A. Canicci, recreation com­missioner: I am in favor of a youth center, but 1 want it ckarly understood there must be supervision over both facili­ty and program. The suggested CAP-WtiffiWM^ii the c o u n t y park, If anow hen tide la set tied, might be too fa r away fivm things and would be per­missive of out-of-tovmers, who have caused trouble a t prevntfa local gatherings, such as the Youth Center in the former Lyn Maid factory oo Vajky Hfook Ave. a t high school dao- oes where he had chaperoned at times due to Infraction of rules, and a t local block dances: Cur- c.o: all organizations havetneir own halls to go to; I al ways felt that young p e o p l e cou!d congregate at the schools: Gash: assuming you accepted the responsibility of running a youth center, who is liable If anything happens? We have a trust and that is to the town at large: we a re not going to turn youth loose; committees with ruies and regulations to keep problems from arising should be formed; what does the youth of Lyndhurst want? I km for youth but I won't commit my­self on a building right now; Russo: I ’ve worked with youth for 25 years. I think they must have proper chaperonage.

Miss Daoust was most firm in her declarations of “We want" and "We don't want" and answered Gash when he inquir­ed if they meant to exclude out­siders. "Yes. this is for Lynd­hurst youth only." But she had no reply when Gash asked. “Suppose a Lyndhurst girl has o Rutherford boy friend?"

At this point denim clad, long-(Continued On Pag* Eight)

B E R G E N R E V IE W TEN CENTS Ter Copy

Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. J.. JA N U A R Y 14, 1971 T E L E P H O N E G EN EV A 8 *700-8 * r Second-claa* p o s ta g e p aid a t R u th a rfp rd . N

A Letter For Our Pow’sA nthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst

V eterans Alliance, announced th is week th e Alliance is sponsoring a le tte r w riting cam paign th a t has been launched th roughou t the country to aid Am erican

prisoners of w ar in N orth Vietnam.The following le tte r is suggested to be

•ent to Ton Due Thang, president Demo­cratic republic of N orth Vietnam, at a cost of 25 cents.

T o the Honorable Ton Due T hang: P residen t, Democratic Republic of N orth V ietnam :

W e tak e this means of apealing to you on a situation which is cloee to th e hearts of all Am ericans. This issue is no t w heth­e r Am ericans should be in V ietnam o r w h eth er we should pull all our troops out im m ediately. The issue is not w hether you a re right and we are w rong o r tha t we a re righ t and you are w rong.

T he issue is the 450 Am erican Service­m en w ho are held in your prison camps. A nother 1,150 are listed as m issing an d . possibly some are your prisoners.

T heir situation is our united concernB oth the “doves and the haw ks” of

A m erica feel deeply about them and their w elfare. W e ask you to consider their im m ediate release. 1 h y have no m lita ry va.ue to you. They can’t h u rt o r ham per y ou r w ar effo rt and no longer would help ours.

I h e s e men, Hke your soldiers, do not in s titu te policy but m erely se rv e a s sol­d iers have done since tim e began. L ike your m en, they perform ed th e ir duty and w ere willing to sacrifice fo r the ir coun­try . L ike your soldiers, they left their hom es and fam ilies no t because they w anted to but because th e ir coun try call­ed on them .

P a trio tism is not lim ited to th e men of V ietnam o r To the m an of A m erica but is th e privilege of aH m en. T hey f ig h t un­d e r th e ir flag w hether it be red, w hite and b lue o r red, yellow and blue.

i from the release of the prisoners. This, more th an an y th in ? else, w ould dem onstrate thaf you too do not reek revenge against men who did their du ty . This, too, would show th e world

-'^hat compassion, not punishm ent can load to peace.

T he argum ents of yo u r critics th a t hum an life means nothing to you would he baseless if you allowed iust peace by ac ting quickly to the appeal.

If your heart contains m ercy and your soul compassion and if you tru ly seek to help the cause of peace, you have an opportunity to achieve these im ages in the eyes of the world.

The feeling here is that you don’t care about the individual; that his needs and w ants and desires don’t m atte r; that life is not sacred to you.

Your actions can give lie to these be­liefs. An act of am nesty tuward Ameri­can prisoners would show th e world th a t you are concerned w ith life and tha t al) life is sacred.

Family ties in America are s tro n g and all Americans w ant these m en re tu rn ed with their families. Some fa th e rs have never seen their children. Som e a re m iss­ing the joy of watching th em "row .

And, the children, th ey live wi t h a constant dream and hope th a t they m ay again be a whole family.

Few men in the history of the world have been given the opportunity tha t you now have.

H istory can record you as a man of com passion; a man who respected hu­man life and held it in high value; a man who held th a t family life i i pa *arr^unt providing a m easure of peace to many families.

R eturn these men to their families and the world would hail you. Retain them and your supporters can’t help but won­der about your sincerity and motives.

W e address you not as one enemy to ano ther but as one hum an to another.

As citizens of th e U nited S tates we halve no pow er to o ffer a n y th in g as in ­dividuals h u t goodwill in exchange fo r the men you ho lj. W e have no p o w er to m ake th rea ts if you do n ’t.

W e only have h o p e ; h o re th a t you will heed the p le^s an d re s to re these men to their families.

Signed

Dump Costs Increased By FreeholdersThe State has ordered Ber­

gen County Board of Free­holders to suspend at once its new price schedule on dump­ing in the Lyndhurst mead­ows. It wss a significant ac­tion — indicating that the De­partment of Public Utilities Is the boss of dumping in New Jersey. A hearing Will be held January 21 to determine if the new schedule should not be

eliminated. The county had received permission to In­crease costs to 40 cents per cubic yard but then moved ahead to put costs up to 50 cents. PUC clamped down!The Bergen County Board of

Freeholders have increased dumping costs a t their refuse operations in Lyndhurst and Ttaneck by 25 percent.

It will now cost 50 cents per

cubic yard instead of 4<f cents for dumpers who use the Ber­gen accomodations.

The rise is on the same plan followed by the freeho’dcrs since they undertook refuse dump operations • and. although they are a non profit making agency, the freeholders have been no less successful than pri vate operators in keeping down costs.

New regulations, which make g.ubage collection more costly. ? Jus the ever rising expenses of labor, keep jiggling the prices up.

Freeholder Victor. M. Will­iam s said the hike was neces­sary because the state now re­quires that more earth fill cr>ver and enclose the garbage. • The county is to create horizontal

(Continued On Page Four)

Peoples Trust Opening BranchIn LyndhurstLyndhurst wiH get its fifth

bank in short order when Peo­ples Trust of Hackensack opens a branch in the Lyndhurst Of­fice Park.

The Trust Company will occu­py 1.650 square feet on the first floor of the office park's new tn wing building at 1099 Wall Street West.

The coming of Peoples Trust to Lyndhurst continues the fan­tastic cycle that has seen the banking community move swift­ly to capitalize nn the township’s tremendous residential and in- duxtrial potential.

While it is the fifth individual bark it actually will give Lynd- J.urst six baWdng offices since Community National Bank has branches on Ridge Road and at Stuyvesant and Park Avenues.

Community National recently acquired property on Valley Brook Avenue so that it can de vtlop a commodious drive in a f ciiity in connection witfi t h e Ridge Road branch.

Only recently Kearny Federal Savings opened a Lyndhurst branch at Stuyvesant and Val­les Brook Avenues.

On Ridge Road just south of Ten Eyck Avenue. Community Commercial Trust of Jersey CU tv opened a branch.

Peoples Trust last year opin­ed a branch on .Schuyler Avenue North Arlington. It has had a branch in Rutherford for many years.

The coming of the bank to I ynrthurst was announced by Daniel Brachman.. vice presi dent of Bellrmefld Dcvelooment C^rp.. which is the owner devel­oper of the off:ce park.

Effective date of the bank’s tenancy is January 1. with bank ing facilities expected to be in oiK’ration during the ̂ fir«t half of 1971. according to Clifford H Coyman. the bank's executive v ec president.

According to Coyman, "We are looking forward to becom­ing a member of the Lyndhurst cm m unitv and to Darticipating yn the exciting development of the I.yndhUrsi Off ce P irk and the mcadowlands in the months and years ahead.'”

Peoples Trust recently be- crm ? a part of United Jersey Banks, d multi-bank holding comoany that now combines five New Jersey banks into a siate wide financial organiza­tion capable of serving individu a’s. businessmen, bankers and municipal offices.

United Jersey ha* 47 offices throughout the state and is the oaly bank that is listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

The total assets are $820 mil lion, total capital $55 million and has a lending limit of $5 5 mil- I’OIj.

On the Board of Directors are ?uch mctn as Charles G. R o d man, president. Grand Union Co.; Arthur D. Van Winkle, pre­sident. Van Winkle & Liggett

Rutherford; Edward A. Jess- er Jr.. chairman and president m‘ Peoples Trust and chairman of the board of United Jersey Banks and Joseph William Cow gill, chairman and director. Tlurd National Bank and Trust Co. of Camden.

The member banks of United are Central Home Trust Co.. E- lizabeth; Cumberland National Bank, Bridgeton; Peoples Na- tional Bank of Monmouth. Peo­ples Trust and Third National Rank and Trust Co. of Cam­den.

LTA Demonstrates At Town Hall Seeking Here SSS

More than 40 taachers demon s'rated around the Town Hall1 yesterday (Wednesday) to ex­press dissatisfaction over the fact- the Board of Education has failed to reach an agreement

*v th them on a salary schedule.However. Frederick Censullo,

president of the board, taid that a bodnd committee and an a s ­sociation group have spent over 100 hours studying the teach­e rs’ proposals.

According to board members many of the elements brought up at the conferences have not been related to the Lyndhurstsituation.

The teachers have been ro- p esented by a paid organizer for the State Education Associa tion. Some board members have complained that issues winch have no relevancy i n Lyndhurst have been raised and are blocking a satisfactory con- c ’usicn.

On January 10 (he associationeke la red that an impass exists and that the board would not meet with the teachers. The let­ter was received on January 11

(Continued On Page Four)

* *

A S p o r t s C e n te r T o G ro w In S o u th B e rg e n ?’ ^ a a t e g — W i B i l u - M II »■ ^ 1T— Sout h Bero.n leaped back po-,.-l program It not known. under no cireum<t»>.r»« - m ................ .. ___

SPORTS ARENA SITE? These photographs dram atically shaw why a sports complex in the South B erg en m eadows

ka a reality. They rhow the battery of toll gates in Carlstadt marking the location of the new $400 million arm of the N ew Je rsey Turnpike. T ra ff ic and parking

Pp°hlem s of anv great sports com plex in the n p o d tsn area . The Turnpike and the m eadow lsnds

• aolution. This Turnpke, nhotovraphed from thePaterson P lank Road bridge in E ast R utherford shows why South Be***en has the Jaadas a location for the sports

•itc. Next i P U , Btii S f e / i - *1

South Bergen leaped Into the sporting news again this week when reports that a special governor's commissi- slon It considering a plot in the mesdowlends for a sports srene.

The reports say the *ite to be selected Is in the Lynd- hurst-Rutherford East Ruth­erford srea. *» •

Best sources indicate t h e site selected in the East Ruth­erford meadows is probably the meet likely.

Twice a Long Island syndi­cate attempted to erect a har­ness race plant on the territo- *■*

Twice the New Jersey Rac­ing Commission turned it

posal program is not known.The Leader has asserted

that such a sports a r e n a would be possible without cost ■W the taxpayers if it Included facilities for disposing of re ­fuse. The need for a disposal removal program in South Bergen has become more and more pressing.

The state has indicated that

under no circumstances the municipalities now dump­ing in the meadows be prohib­

ited until alternative means of disposing of the refuse is found.

Engineers say that It is feas ible for a modern incineration program to be included with a sports arena. Indeed, most engineers say it would be

teasible because the incinera­tor could produce power and heat for the surrounding buildings.

Stat^. Treasurer Joseph Mc- Crane, who has had experi­ence in the racing field, hat been named by the governor to head the special committee that is studying the sports complex.

Budget Up, School Tax Down

Now the plan Is to put up an ell sports center of some serf.

A harness treck plus base- bell and football accommoda­tion* would be Included.

Whether The Leader propos­al that the sports arena be

combined with • refuse dls-

A school budget that reduces the amount to bo raised for tax­ation by $13,783 was adopted on first reading Monday night by the Board of Education.

The total budget was *$2 883. 659 — an increase of $50,300 — bi»t the amount taxpayers willh.»ve to raise is gr&y $5,402,400. The rest of the money comes in tlu» form, of state aid.

Interested spectators at the meeting wore members of 'th e Teachers Association which has

' L v

ooened negotiations with t h e b'*ard for a now contract.

Earl H. Greenleaf Jr., vice president of the board, who pro serrted the budget announced that a public hearing on t h «? document will be held Jan. 28 at the high school library.

At the session th e issue of a recreation center Jpr y o u t h arose Barbara ̂ Daoust of 206 Court Avenue, a high school student, who is conducting a campaign for a youth center, ap­

peared at the meeting with her mother. Mrs Helen Daoust.

Trustee Anthony Scardinotook the occasion to read a pre- pnred statement on the subject. Tlie statement follows;

"I personally respect and liorstand the reason why this > vU’th group has been formed. 1 also believe tlwit a rally by the youth of our community In order to show strength and uni­ted conviction for their cause is

(Continued On Page Eight)

Page 2: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

PAGE 1W 0 T H E L E A D E D P R E S S THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971

Bank Deposits Over $ 2 BB erfen County bank deposits eight erf its origin*? c h a r t e r

c 3r>tinucd. above $2 billion a t the rod of 1970. after achieving that uoal for the first time last June&•

nicmber banks, all opened be- tv*wn 18fff) and 1970. Eleven member banks were chartered between 1919 and 1934. The oth­er 11 bank-member banks were organized in the pasixi2 years.

“No m atter how you analyze the figures.'* Eck said, “wheth-

WiUiam J. Eck. Jr.. president of the Bergen County Bankers Association as well as vice pre «.ioont and mortgage officer. Cit'zens First National B a n k , er by assets, deposits or bank liidgewood. reported that the ing facilities, you can feach on- < i o n ization 's survey of its 30 ly one conclusion." m ember banks Operating fromheadquarters within B ctrm "R is clearJv evident.' he County, tabulated December 31 f , 'nclud™- "that the dollar a id deposits a t J2.174.036.343.42. £ rowtl1 10 morr than two billion

in, deposits was achieved notThis, he noted, compared with cnly by growing with Bergen

?2,156,89,91 in resources and County but also through custo SI .917.457653 in deposits on De- mer service . . . adequately comber 31. 1968 meeting the needs at the coun-

At mid>1970 the resources a- ‘y 's *rowin* Population, busi mounted to 0.286,75.245 and de •-'cs». industry and eommuni-

^> sit.s to $2,018,28,860 - tits "

The number of main office Since I960, banking a s s e t s J f I banks in the county remains at have increased approximately 30. unchanged from a year ago.

The total number of full serv »oe banking offices increased from 127 to 147 during 1970.Eight banks headquartered in f*Tur other counties have 14 of f»ces in Bergen, not including two Hudson County banks which have only Joan offices here. Ber gen County banks have 12 off.ces in two other counties. . . .

nas the largest number of bankDespite the new state banking ing offices. 11; F a ir Lawn and

laws which liberalized over Fort Lee have six each; andcounty line expansion 18 months Tcaneck has three.ago. Bergen County banks have ~ .not decreased in number nor in f ^ V ™ a ° " i“total offices. w cry 5-900 in count-v P0^

iation. Ten years ago the popuThe county association, which lation average per banking uf

was established in 1915. has f^ce was about 10.000.

177 percent: the number ofbanking offices has practically doubled, and the county’s popu lation has grown by 13.7 per cent.

Of the 70 fJergen communi- t es only Rockleigh and Alpine hick local banking offices. A- n «°ng the county’s four largest population centers Hackensack

N orth A rlingto n

P . T.A. A/eWILSON

loe Capades At CardenKcamy. A reception will follow the service.

| W JOY DIVINE

The Ice Capades has returned ‘ to Madison Square Garden. This

f 'glittering 31st edition of their £ annual show runs until Jan. 1 IT. I

The lavish costumes. intricate choreography, colorful props and sets follow the Ice Capade

1$ tradition. The them e of the 1970 Ice Capades seeks to enccm-

* pass both tradition and the mod cm . winging, psychedelic mind b’own world. Its em phasis i s youth- “Get unstrung if y o u want to stay young.”. Since all of us. alas, a re not young we are to free our kna- inntions. In "Life is a Three— Ring Circus” skater-circus seek er Debbie leaner m eets Mr. Im ­agination. Walter Hypes, who encourages her to let her mind rcnge free to find her circus. Of course her and our minds are then helped by the Ice Capades c^st. who treat us to a specta cular parade, a sexy lion tam er (Cherrie Moritz), an even sex­ier routine by panther (Bill Cha pel), and for the really young, a ,> ide for the children on circus Wagons.

The show featured the pro­fessional debut of 1970 World Figure Skating Champion Tim Wood. This reviewer m ust ad­mit that not being an expert figure skating analyst. I much p-eferred the comic antics of veteran skater Freddie Trenkler and comedy team Hans a n d P( pe. who show that grace i s r.ot the only requirem ent for an entertainer.

The precision required o f cotiples who skate together , in reacting routines overwhelms me much more th if f do s o l o skaters. Helga and Jorge Valle performed admirably, as did graceful doubles Margot and t)anne.

The second half of the show

celebrated the stars. Gemini’s “Alice in Blunderland" featur­ed Spanky the chimpanzee, a highlight to delight .any of the young at heart.

Psychedelic Libra ns turne<l on when black light on the cos­tumes of the Corps de Ballet produced a striking effect.

The Finale was a Tribute to Aquarius wibh music straight from Hair and costumes from out of this world. I t ’s not diffi­cult to believe an estimated f500.000. is spent on costumes foe each show.

Somehow the show lost some of the appeal it had when I was a child. The glitter is now a 1'itle gaudy, and the pre-taped sequences created a distance un warranted by aesthetics. The lighting, excellent in s o m e places, bleached out the cos­tumes in others. But if you’re young in years o r a t heart, i t is a show worth seeing. Take Um children.

" A R T I S T O F T H E M O N T H "

A 79 year old local woman has been selected by the North Ar- lirgton Junior Woman’s Club as "Artist of the Month."

Mrs. Louise Harper of 91 Ber gen avenue. North Arlington hove three of her oil paintings on display a t the Kearny Fed­eral Savings and Loan Associa­tion. 80 Ridge road. North Ar­lington, during the month of January. “Snow Scene” and “Old Mill’’, both copies of Cur­rier & Ives scenes, won blue rib­bons at the Newark Hobby know. The third oil is titled ‘ Covered Bridge.”

Mrs. H arper exhibited work in the Newark Hobby Show for

e ight years. She was awarded a total of 16 ribbons for her paint­ings. a hand-made quilt and A mcrican flag, and table decor a-vions. The hobby show, spon so;ed by the Newark business­men. has since been discontin ued.

Residents wishing to see their work on display a t the bank or students -who would like. *their work displayed in the North Ar­lington Public Library are ask­ed to contact Mrs. Robert Wol- ansky a t 998-3014 or Mrs. Rob­ert Bianchi a t 998-7856.

SCHOOL’S BACK DRIVE

CAREFULLY

St. Paul's Holding Annual Meeting

The annual meeting of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. North Arlington, will be held this Sun­day a t the church. The meeting will begin a t 5 p.m. with a free smorgasbord dinner.

Election will be held for three vestry members for three-year terms, one vestry m em ber for a i-y*ar term, three delegates and three alternates to the Dio­cesan Convention for a 1-year term, and six delegates to the North Arlington Interfaith Fel­lowship for 1 year term s.The Rt. Rev. Leland Stark will

make a visitation to St. Paul’s on Sunday. January 24. a t 4 p.m. The Rite of Confirmation will be administered to a class from St. Paul’s and to candi­dates from Trinity Church.

Freshen Up your home with our fine custom made slipcovers and draperies r suited to your budget.

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the ACKERSONS41# H A C K E N S A C K ST. C A R I STAD T, N. J.

IM -21 U oc XU«N V I D ’ M M B tR NATIONAL SOCIETY

INTERIOH DESIGNER*

< • ■> m- •: . . J V X

g-ounds and qualifications. The j E S i j K l T ' "Board of Education election will be held Feb. 9 a t the regular voting places.

The members of the executive ’n u ‘ ov»r-»U drive now atanda a t $3,«2t>,*80 fo r 94.1% of thy,committee met Tuesday at the W.O'.O.UOO to r US health, recreation and welfare ag. ncien

I-cfebvre Plan* for a fiah and (chad . in Em rx ami Went Hudson-North Arlington. Locally, the over,chip dinner and a fashion show Reservations must be made ^ Hndaon .North Arlington campaign la a t 89.4%.WERE MADE. Uyey will be h ^ tbe end of the month by any ,in March. one wishing to attend the B e r ---------------------- *-— -— i.»

Marl* MadMfl-Agnes HolmasO i Monday. Jan. 4 the execu­

tive board of our unit held its meeting a t the homo «f Mrs. R.

“Let’s keep it going and make the goal.’* aaya Julia Abrew of Newark, “Miaa Sueeeaaful United Fund , Campaign” this year.

At our next PHA. meeting. Pen County Founders' Day Din.Jan. 21. the Board of Educa rH-r- This year the affair, cele J o h n K e e g a n H a stion candidates will present brating Bergen County's 5i.il c ; |_ Jtheir platforms. H ie budget al- anniversary in PTA work and r H e a e o sso will be presented. This will **» 74th anniversary of the Na John Keegan of 84 Boston avebe your opportunity to ask the ti'mal Congress of Parents and flue. North Arlington, has filedcandidates questions and make Teachers will be held Feb. 17. a petition to run as a Board ofyour decision as to what will be beginning at 7 p.m. a t the Cam- Education candidate in t h ebest for the benefit of y o u r 81 Restaurant. Mrs. A. Rivas is February 9 election,children. The meeting will be in charge of dinner reaerva gin a t 8:15 p.m. Fourth grade ticna. Please contact her a t m others will be hostesses for 991-7622.

interest in the school system by supporting his bid for election.

the social hour.

WASHINGTONANNETTE GAVEN

Our unit will hold

M0SEVELT^ » e Newton

its firstQur regular monthly meeting

. ------ . . ._____ , . '■'ill be held Monday evening.h 'o r election to the

r, b c North Arlington Board of Ed ‘ “ t n a tio n will speak. The candi

£ £ £ i s i s r # ; : « * * ■ml*** t . iv « .k«_ ...____ n __ Ktegan, 0 . Richard Haag, andW-.lliam Delner.

The election will be held Feb. 9 from 2 to 9 p.m

slrart talk or their views. There a re four candidates for the two s t a ts available this year on the

The public is invited to attend this meeting as our unit feels it is important to meet an t h e candidates and leam their back

SKEPTIC

t

Keegan was appointed to the Board last June to fill the seat left open by the resignation of F rederic L . Cobb in .

“Having had the opportunity to serve on the Board, I know thr progress being made. I t "is my aim to continue to assist in this progress through any con- t. ibutions or ideas which I can offer," Keegan declared.

He said he is confident the people of the borough will rec- ogmje his deep involvement an

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-

Page 3: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

* * * * * * i * K t S S - Vf A O E 1 UK bJS

M a rr ie dMr. and Mrs. LeRoy D. Kolar

Sick of Ridgewood Drive, Liv­ingston, announce the marriage of her daughter Regina Carol German, on December 19 to Ronald R. Tomatic, sotr of Mr. and Mrs. Albert A. Tomazic o f Devon Street, Kearny. T h *> bride is the daughter also of the late Anthony A. Gorman.

Tbe ceremony took place in Sacred Heart Church. Lynd- hurst.

Miss Patricia Gprmao was maid of honor for her sister, end Martin J . Kolarsick. step brother of the bride, was best man.

The -bride attended the Col­lege of Steubenville in Ohio, 3nd Lyons Institute of Techno V>gy. Mr. Tomazic, the bride­groom. is attending the Interna tional Institute of Computer Technology.

Single Men Invited To Pence In Belleville

Single men college graduates or attending college, and single women college, professional or business school grads are wel come to attend a party a n d dance Jan . 24 a t Darwood Cat erers. 751 Washington Avenue Belleville, starting a t(7:30 p.m. and sponsored by the intermidi- ate age group of age 23 to 45 of the Singles University Alumni Club. The party will feature live entertainment, cocktails. re freshments and dancing.

A ski weekend is set for Feb. 12 to Feb. 14 a t a luxurious Swiss Chalet on Lake George. New York. Skiing will be a t Mt. Gore in the Adirondacks. For infoornation call HE.3-8766 or write to SUA Club. Box 7881. Jersey City, N.J. 07307.

The Club also conducts a dat­ing program open to singles of all ages. For more information on membership or the dating

project send a stamped, self- addressed envelop e to SUA Club MR. 1507. 744 Broad. St.. Newar. N.J. 07102.

Lyndhurst Man To Be Sentenced

A Court Avenue, Lyndhurst. man will be sentenced Feb. 3 on changes he took nine checks from Steve and Kessler Textile

Company, Paterson, worth less than $200.

He is Luis Ruggiero. 4!) of 26* Court Avenue.

Lfsst week Ruggerio pleaded guilty before County Judge jo seph M Harrison in Paterson. He had been indicted on five counts of passing'five checks worth $2,200 in the First Nation al Bank of Passaic between Juiy 1’7 and July 21.

MRS. FRANK ROMEJKO

Miss Noreen Sciacchetano of North Arlington and Mr. Frank D Romejko of Lyndhurst were m arried on Sunday. December ?0. 1970 a t a 4 o'clock Nuptial Mass in Our Lady Queen of Peace Church, North lArhngton. A reception, immediately fol­lowing the ceremony, was held at Mayfair Farm s, West Orange

Miss Gail Sciacchetano was her sister’s maid of honor. At­tendants were Miss Paul A. Re nxjko, sister of the bridegroom Miss Rena Gangemi. Mrs. P e t­er Diglio and Mrs. Clement li-ierley. Paul McCarthy serv ed as best man, and ushers in­cluded Richard Bing, cousin of tn? bride. Jam es Reynolds, cousin of the bridegroom. Jos eph Vran and Joseph Lynch.

■Rie bride wore an off-white brocade gown with mink coll <ir. Her headpiece, also of mink

and brocade, held a Cathedral- length Veil She Carried a bou­quet of led roeee. Tbe maid of honor and bridesmaids wore ruby velvet gowns and floor- length velvet ribbon headpieces. They carried velvet muffs trim mod with red roses and white glamellias.

Mrs. Romejko, a graduate of Oueen of Peace High Sohool and Caldwell College, is em ­ployed by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare as a Claims Representative for the Social Security Administra

' * .1 t ™ ■ ‘Mr. Ramejko. also a gradu

a<e of Queen of Peace High School, has recently complete! a four-year enlistment in the Lniied States Marine Corps. He is now enrolled as ar> electrical engineering major a t Fairleagh Dickinson University. Teaneck.

MISS DYAN

Miss Dyan M artiniak will be m arried this sum m er to Jam es L. Sutton of Cleveland. O h i o . The engagement has been an­nounced by the future bride's p a r e n t Mr. and M rs. Walter Marctntek of 7M Sixth Avenue, Lyndhiifst. ' ^

Mr. Sutton, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sutton of Cl eve

land Heights. Ohio, is a gradu­ate of Fordham University and is attending Ohio College qf Po-

Miss Marciniak. a graduateof The College o( New Rochelle, is a commercial a rtis t for Me­tro Associated Services in NewYork.

Sweetheart DanceSt. Michael's Holy Name So­

ciety will sponsor a Sweetheart dance Saturday Feb. 13 a t 6 - p.m. in the Parish Hall, Page Avenue and Ridge Road. Lynd­hurst. Tickets a re now available through Al Lopacinstl o r after Sunday Mass. CaU after 6 p.m.

Music will be by Bobby Stav ins' Orchestra in its first ap­pearance in the South Bergen area.

Actor* C a fe TheaterActors Cafe Theatre. J5J Oen-

;ral avenue a t South Munn East Orange, is looking for a direct­or. musical director and pianist and choreographer for it* pro duction of ' “nu-eepenny Qpera.” Production is se t fo r A b . 23 through Mrach 27. t

Additional information may be obtained by calling David G. Kennedy, producer, a t the theatre.

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Mondays, 1:00 PM — Wednesdays * Thursdays, 7:S0 PM — B’Nal Israel, 780 Kearny Ave.

LYNDHURST —Mondays, 1:S0 PM — Tuesdays, 10:00 AM — Scardino's Hall Valley Brook and Chase Aves.

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"The B eauty o l A m erica Is In YOl'R H ands”

IN , PUBLIC INTEREST

B IIO O K » A L i: R I V I i l . y , I SC LIFTO N -B LO O M H E LD

IN o w - of no E x tra Cost!

R E S O U R C E S

DIETBROOKDALE

Cash and Due from Banks. .Investment Securities:

U. S. Treasury Securities ,•Securities of U. S. Government Agencies and Corporations.- Obligations of States and Political Subdivisions........Other Securities ........ ....... ......... ......... ........

Loans................................. ...... ...................... ........Bank Premises and Equipment ... Customers’ Acceptance Liability •Other Assets .... ...................

Total .

$ 5 2 ,6 8 1 ,2 0 0

53,921,799 3,141,002

103,242,547 865,975

232,927,222 9,072,769

130,229 >75,195

r,957,9383J»7

$ 4 5 * 9 5

LIABILITIES

DepositsDemand Deposits - ...................— .................... $154,595,912Time Deposits.................................... 255,234,768

Acceptances Outstanding ........ -.... ............ ........... ,,,, 130,229Other Liabilities................ 14,795,614

Total Liabilities .......... -■............... $424,756,523Reserve for Possible Loan Losses ................. ’ f 4,300,664

j CAPITAL. A C C O U N T S |

Equity CapitalCapital Stock (Par Value $6.25)-------

Number of Shares Authorized....Number of Shares Outstanding™

Surplus...................... ........... ....... ....... ..Undivided Profits

—.2,072,350..>1,674,253

Total Capital Accounts........................................Total Liabilities, Reserve and Capital Accounts

$ 10,484,081

15,400,000 5,036,870

$ 30,900,751 $459,957,938

The above figures do not include th# assets of the Trust Departm ent Member Federal Deposit Jnturance Corporatism • Me mb* r F tderal Reserve Syettnh

J

BrookdaU ' makes a great c a s a

for dieting.

BROOKDALE BEVERAGE CO..OinON-BLOOMflELD 472-6900

; _ a L v

Page 4: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

m ^ F F O T T R T H E L E A D E R P R E S S THURSDAY, JANUARY 14,1971

*t?*3 -<W» li

Caanercial LeaderAnd The Ssuth Bergen R e r tmL y t d h in t ’i Official N ew iptpw

Since 1921 Publication Office

151 R ldre Rond I ▼ndhunrt. N.J.Telephone 458-8700 — 8701

Second Class Postafe Paid M Rutherford. N. J.

WHtflf John SavinsSubscription S3 00 Per Te*»

Ten Cent* Per ropv

No/Arlington Leader4 n€ The t r r ( f n •sunrtav Leadti

North Arlington's Official Newspapet

1*7 R M rf Rd No \r1inr1nn N.J.Telephone 4X8-8700 — 8701

ftditor John SavinoSocial Editor — 991 1839

second Clam Postage Paid M v V Kearny. N J 070*1?

'•Inscription $3 00 Per Tear Ten Pfnt< P**r Pop*

j c . ■■' v . ■ •-7 0 0 0 • Wo o k l y

The LEADER SPEAKS for

SOUTH BERGEN ■

Leader-Free PressOfficial Newspaper of the

Boroughs of vj»st Rutherford St C’arlstnd*

276 Grove St., East Rutherford 417 Sccond St., Carlntadt

Publication Office '*51 Rider Road Lyndhurst, N J.

telephone 188 8700 — 87'# •

Survives An A irplane Crashin 1970. This year’s fee, for 8erne number of loads, is

EditorSecond Cluss Postage Paid At

Rutherford. N. J. Subscription $2.50 Per Tear

Ten Cents Per Copy

N a tio n a l A d v e rtis in g

A me r i c a n P ress

■ Vork C hicago D e tro it . P h ila d e lp h ia

THURSDAY. JANUARY 7, 1971

Fighting - BackPolice departm ents are waging a game

w ar on m uggers, break-in artists and o ther deapoilers of the modern scene.

But they cannot do it all.T he policemen rightfully complain th a t

in today 's society everything is left fo r Charlie. The o ther fellow. He is supposed to pick up what others leave. He believes th a t everythin <* that happens is the o ther m an's responsibility.

Policemen will tell you that break-ins occur in the presence o r under the obser­vation of neighbors. Said neighbors all too often pull down the shades and try to imagine thev saw nothing.

This a ttitude is helping the stree t enemy.

Donne said it all when he said: “Never look f*>r whom the bells tolls, it tolls forthee.”

T h e next time you decide you don’t w a n t to becom e involved in somebody else’s trouble, just rem em ber you may be the victim the next time.

W e in South Bergen a i t am ong the lucky ones. W e have small, self-contain­ed municipalities. They are small com­m unities phvsically: therefore they are easy to patrol and easy to guard.

B ut thev also are congested.T he policemen can do only so much.

T hey can be on c a ll B ut they cannot bo everyw here a t once. H ow ever, a call to

How a disaster once again touched South Bergen became known last week when a pret­ty brunette, blue ey^d air stew-

JohnSaylno ardess visited with her mother." ** Mrs. Irene O’Grady of 17-M

Garden Terrace. North Arling ton.

Patty O’Grady. now M r s . John Russo of Queens. w a s one of the four hostesses aboard tSe Trans Caribbean Airlines je t that crashed While landing on the island of St. Thomas De cember 28 killing two persons and causing injuries to 41 oth ers.

Patty suffered cracked fibs and bruises — but she is ha] to be alive. And she is anxious to return "to the skies. ^

“There is nothing like flying, she declared, “and it is safe, in spite of the accidents.”

Two Lyndhurst athletes, members of the Marshall foot ball team, lost their lives when 75 were killed in the crash of their football team Nov. 14.

Before that a former Lynd- hurst girt, 9 stewardess. V a ^ n

whena hijacker tried t o ^ k e over the plane while it jv is landing in

R e p re se n ta tiv e

Asso cia tio n

police headquarters will bring a quick re ­sponse. And the response can be in the m a tte r of minutes.

W ith your cooperation police can in- hurst girt, 9 stewardess. jvi crease th e ’r efficiency many times over. * plane inqjrigntBut tKey do need help.

If you tee a suspicious person in your neighborhood call .police and tell head- Boston.q u arters about it. - — # Patty cheerily declared

If you recognize somebody engaged in “It was like being reborn, this a wrongful act don’t hesita te to identify coming through the crash with him for police. our lives.”

If you notice children engaged in some Probably P a tty 's h u s b a n d , w rongful act take action yourself. You -John, suffered m ore than sho can pu t a halt to much of the mischief did. He had been at Kennedy -m aking th a t now takes place if you act Airport awaiting the return of firm ly and like a good citizen. the a ir liner when he heard

And take p re c a u tio n s^ action fo r your about the crash, own saJety. P u t your car in your drivew ay St. Thomas is a favorite vaca or in a garage. Don't leave it parker in the tion spot. I* is close to Puerto stree t. Be sure it is locked when you leave Rico and it is known as a free it fo r the n ight. Don’t leave valuables ib port where shoppers can avoid your car. In o th e r w ords, don 't m ake it American taxes.

plane. Mrs. Russo doesn’t re ­member seeing either of them.

“Inflating the emergency chutes is what we’re trained to do. It's p a rt of the emergency procedure, and it’s what saved our lives,” Mrs. Russo said.

LTA Demonstrates(Continued Fr*m Pag* 1)

and notice of an impasee the the following day. The board has asserted it Wants to con­tinue negotiating and does not reed the help of any agency at this time.

HAPPY VISITOR — Mrs. John Russo, the former P a tty 0*Gr»dyof North Arlington, relaxes a t her m other's home a . she re. covers from ilrplnae crash Injuries suffered a t St. Thomas Islandin the Virgin Islands.

Dump Costs(Continued From Page Ons)

and vertical barriers at the sites to prevent underground fires.

Use of additional fill has in­flated operating costs a t Ber­gen’s Teaneck and Lyndhurst dumps.

After adoption of the increase jesterday. Vernon Conant, su­pervisor of the landfill depart ment, said tlie new rates would add about $180,000 to the depart ment’s 1971 revenue, raising it to a total of $1.25 million.

The 25 municipalities which contract with the landfill de­partment will be hard hit. Eng kwood. for example, paid $24. ifcfi to use the site# in 1969. bud­geted $25,500 in 1970, and is slat ed to pay $45,500 for 1971.

Bergenfield’s 1971 budget alio

also h a j a shuddery -*trThe runways a re aimc i

peak, went out of con

trol. ran up the runway anti

profitable fo r a sm all-tim e thief. . n These are all basic i

values are self-sri<*ent. Yet police com­plain th a t the average m an doesn't under­stand b is own periL . __ . __ _

By m aking it easy fo r the crook— w arns blasted into the mountain th e policeman—you encourage him and Ntaeteen persons were hosp finance him so tha t he can go on to big- tallied and 32 were treated for g ar ac ts of crime. minor injuries. Two New Jen * ,

residents were killed in t h e m * . v

Repay Loyalty

“I was told that this type of d 'm , she recalled the following crash was worse than the one about the crash: ihat killed those football play- “jAfter we hit the mountain, I cates $33,000 for the dumping ers. We were so lucky to live, immediately got up from my expenses, representing a 25 per It just proves that when your seat and ran to m y exit to try cent increase over the 1970 fi- time's not up, ft’s. not up, no to open -the door. I was one of gure of $27,000. matter what,” Mrs. R u s s o the first up. but some n a v a l Harold Florence, superinten- said. personnel must have helped me dent of the Ridgewood Waste

Mrs. Russo was comparing open it because we were on an Control, said of the county’sthe accident with a Southern angle with the door facing up. *>ew cost schedule: “We haven’t Airlines crash Nov. 14 in West “ As soon as the door was op- heard anything about it offically Virginia in which 75 persons en. I opened the emerggj^y It will still be much cheaper died and the Marshall Uni- cnute and yelled for everyone to than an incinerator. You don t vtrsity football team was wiped &et out. There was fire in the have much choice anymore.” out. Thirty persons, including 13 plane, and people were escap- Lodi will not suffer the cost members of the Wichita State iig from the three holes in the increase immediately. I t has a University football team, were fuselage and thro|igh the exits, five-year contract wit}) a ̂ pri- jv led in an Oct. 2 a ir crash in “As soon as everyone was out vate scavenger. The contract:he Colorado Rockies. j went down the chute, but there does not expire until 1973.

Mrs. Russo. 20. claims she** was quite a drop from the chute ‘‘Then we’ll have to negotiate aready to fly again/ as soon as to the ground as we were on a ihjw contract." and we’ll feel itshe recuperates. She has been hill. then,” Borough Manager Rona stewardess five years. ... . , , , _ _ M , aid Gasalberti said.

I think I hurt myself then,"We flew back from St. Tho- as I remember flying through One of the largest scavenger

mas Dec. 30. I wasn’t nervous, the a ir and landing roughly.” f.rms using the dumps is V. but I was afraid the jolts would The plane exploded several Stamato & Co. of Lodi. F o r hurt my rib,” she explained. minutes after all but two of the estimated 50 loads a week, i t

Although her memory is passengers were out of t h e was scheduled to pay $27,000

Deborah Dreher Study In Denmark

Deborah Dreher of 51 St. Clair Avenue. Rutherford, a student at Paterson State College, will leave for Copenhagen, Den­mark. on February 2 to study for one semester at the Univer­sity of Copenhagen.

Paterson State has been par­ticipating in the Sejnester A- years. Under thJs'jjogram , stu­dents frGm tfttf state colleges of New Jersey are presented with the opportunity to travel to England in the fall and 'Copen­hagen in the sprang.

In order to qualify for the program, students must be in their junior year of college and have a t least a 2.5 cumulative average, roughly a “B” .

The courses taught abroad are altered to adhere to Ameri­can requirements. The courses are taught in English by Danish professors.

Applications a re sent to the juniors or they may be secured from Mrs. Gunver Satra, advis­or of the program at Paterson State.

Braille Department A t Mrs. Nicaretta's

"Hie Braille Department of the North Arlington Junior Wo­man's Club met a t the home of Mrs. Mario Nicaretta to make posters for a pre-schcol vision screening program to be held in February under the direction of Mrs. Brian Loughlin and Mrs. David Sullivan, in cooperation with the New Jersey Commis­sion for the Blind. '

Members also decorated braille birthday cards and made matcb-um boxes.

T he cry around governm ental offices these days is to increase efficiency and production and thus cut costs.

One w av to increase efficiency and pro­duction is to repay those w ho offer it.

O ur school svsteras, fo r instance, have generous sick leave allowances. In many instances unfortunate school employees use up their allowances whesi they be­come ill.

On the o th er band, th e re a re many teacher, and o ther employee* w ho b are the good fo rtune to have th e health and

the desire to establish fine attendance

W hile it is tru e the sick leave th a t is unused accum ulates it is equally un true th a t when th a t teacher re tires the ac­cum ulated sick leave m eans nothing.

W oukhi’t it encourage b e tte r attendance if those who accum ulated unused sick leave w ere repaid fo r i t a t the end of their careers? I t could increase the am ount of pension o r be given in a lum p sum , a s the teacher desired. W hy no t rew ard faith ­fu lness? And encourage it?

W hy Not Try Integration ?Lyndhurst School Board President Fred

Censullo equates the recent defeat of hi* board's $7.6 million building p rogram w ith the grow ing unwillingness of taxpayers to shoulder fu rth er burdens.

Censullo would like school boards w ith like problem s to begin changes a> the s ta te k i w ith high parochial school Censullo says, suffer because s ta te aid is distributed on the basis of

Censullo raises some interesting points.But certainly there is little justification

in the argum ent th a t taxpayers have been unwilling to put up m ore monev fo r edu­cation. Tlie record show s th a t in the las t decade educational coats have m ore tlurn doubled and, in som e cases, have tripled, And the taxpayers, perhap* complaining, perhaps not, have continued to pay.

T he rejection o f the building program in Lyndhurst, Kke th e rejection of spend­ing program s elsew here, certainly indicate an unwillingness of taxpayers to add debt to their already sky high costs.

B ut if the tim e fo r belt tightening has arrived shouldn’t educators talk about it

F a r one th ing , if the high cost of run­ning tw o school system s in one com m unity is to o U gh shouldn’t educators begin ta lk ­ing about th e possibility of combining them ?

Ha*. M r. Censullo, as president o f the B oard of Education, asked Sacred H eart Church and S t. Michael’s Church, both of which operate parochial schools, of the possibility of combining all into a single system ?

W hv should Lyn& m rst, a community of 24,M t, have three separa te school sys­tem s?

If, a* Censullo says, Lyndhurst is being discrim inated against under the sta te form ula, has he propoeed how Lyndhurst m ight get m ore money by qualifying under the form ula?

P arochial schools a ^ in desperate trouble. They have loaded huge burdens upon Catholic families th a t m ust not only support the public schools but the paro­chial as well.

Perhap* the answ er does not lie in com­bining tlie school system s.

B ut Censullo m ight .veil study th a t pos­sibility as he goes along w ith U s p b n to change the sta te aid form ula.

Research CountsT he Philips Company in the N ether­

lands next week in Brussels will demon­s tra te a pollution-free passenger car en­gine.

At the auinual au to salon which opens Jan . 19 Philips will show off an engine th a t completely consumes the fumes of its own exhaust. Therefore, pollution is non­existent, according to the company.

T he engine w orks th is w ay: Incited fuel heats a closed cham ber in to which a gas expands and drives a piston. T he gas then passes into a cold cham ber and is recycled to be heated again.

According to Philips the engine will operate on 10 different kinds of fuels, in­cluding olive and salad oils. T he engine has now been placed in an autobus and in M arch the vehicle will began com m er­cial operations.

The in teresting no te about the new en­gine is th a t G eneral M otors biggest U. S. auto m anufacturer, has a license fo r the engine.

If the re are engines such as Philips is prom oting available the national in terest dem ands th a t they be utilized a* quickly as possible.

T he fact that Philips is introducing th e engine in an autobus has wide significance. In o u r cities, w here polluton is a t its w orst, much of the poison is spewed by public vehicles.

New York’s buses end taxis are respon­sible fo r nearly 75 percent of the pollution city people have to breathe.

The federal governm ent m ight well authorize in terest free losuis to cities and companies th a t change th e ir fuel consum ­ing equipm ent to fo rm s which do not th reaten the atm osphere.

This would not be a small step forw ard. It would, be a U rge one. ,

And th a t governm ent should equip its own vehicles with pollution-free engines goes w ithout saying. I t is a field in which governm ent leadership ought to be No. ) a t all times.

Page 5: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

THURSDAY. JANUARY 1 4 ,1971 T H E L E A D E R P R E S S- V - PAGE FIVE

T lie fee is $6.00. The instruct*)- Hurvey Conley.

The organization meeting of the Board of Recreation was

The North Arlington Recrea- from 4 to 5 p.m. and the second the eight classes. Instruction gue will play a t Bergen County **an 7- at 8 P m Waltcr tion Commission is sponsoring cia&s from 5 to 6 p.m. A fee of will be given Thursday nights in Park during May through July. uand°wski was nominated Pre- 17 activities In this year's wint- J? per lesson is chapgcd. the gymnasium of North Ar

Rec Program Listed In Borough Fijjed For Auto T icketsding fite parkin? Ruggiero. 129 Sanford Ave. for nf MSV.' Pii*rr«w

. , «rdent and Robert Noe V i c ee: program. Social dancing classes for se- bngton High School. .A o u n m T fo r planned ski trips Presldent- Kay IscmT,a"n was

Baton instruction for boys and vcnth and eighth grade students Teen basketball lor toys agf' s for a()uits and high school stug'rls will be he’d Saturday mor- will begin January 13. Seventh 13 to 15 years old will be heldmngs from 9 to 11 a.m . Class grade classe, from 8 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays from 7:30 to 10 p.m." es are scheduled for January 16. A $2 registration fee must be in tjie high scliool. Girls* bask 23.20; February 6 , 20, 27; Mar. paid ait the first c las* etball for grades 8-12 will be6. The fee is 50 cents. Instruction in classic and <Bs- Mondays from -7:30 to 10

Small Fry bowling classes for cotheque dartces will be open to P m - also in the high school.Bid _________ _______boys and girls between the ages aaults on Wednesdays from 9 dy basketball will be' p i a y e d gram Tor a ll a^Js.cf 8 and 12 will begin this Sat- to 10 p.m. a t Jefferson School Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 1uiday. Classes for girls will be beginning Jan . 13. Registration p.m. at Roosevelt School,held a t 9:30 a.m. in the North fee of $2 is due a t this time.Arlington Bowl O Drome a n d A program of karatg^graJ'-'JCr for boys at 12 noon in Arlington do for old and yowTfgis being

dents. Also still to be announced is the date for the annual ,John F. Eagan Bike Race held uncbr the auspices of the North Ar- l.ngton Wheelman’g Club. a Recreation Commission pro-

29 at North Arlington H i g h School gym from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. The last leSibn will b e aeid at a local driving range.

^G o’f program will begin o n Thursday, Feb. 18 instead of

.A creative arts program for scheduled, Jan . 14. Prograr\i H- children ages 5 through 9 is be^ include nine lessons begin

youftg is being ir.g held Saturdays from 9:30 to Iling Feb 18 and ending AprilLrnes. A weekly charge of 85 held Saturday mornings through a.m. in the high school cemts covers the cost of tw o March 6 in the gymnasium of cafeteria.Eames and free bowling shoes. North Arlington High School. Men's Softball is beginning its Bowling w.il begin January 16 Warren Martin is instructor. third year. The slow pitch lea- and continue through March 20. Women interested in having

Ceramic classes a re beins fun, slimming down, and play- j 1held Saturdays at 173 Hendel ing volley ball m ay join the avenue. North Arlington. Class- women’s Physical Fitness pro-1 es are open to boys and girls gram Wednesdays from 8 to 10 fige 7 a rd older, and are held p.m. a t Roosevelt School. The in two periods, 9 to 10:30 a.m. program began last night. A and 10:30 to 12 noon. There is a physical fitness program for 23 cent fee for each lesson and men will be held Wednesday a small charge for materials nights from 7:30 to 10 p.m. at uicd. North Arlington High School, j

Ballet and acrobatic ins true- The instructor -wfll be Joe Tos- I tion is being given Tuesday af le t.■ternoons for children ages 5 Registration for golf classes i thru 7 and 8 thru 11 a t Miss wi*l be held tonight a t North Vivian's School of Dance. 37 Arlington High School. There Ridge road. The first clas£ is is a five dollar registration for

nominated Treasurer. George Lewis was appointed Program Director. Nancy flartlett v i s appointed Secretary. The lowing Committee appointm#Us were made by President Walter LewandowSkL

Walter Le\randowski — Littl? League — Playgrounds

Robert Noe — Biddy Basket­ball^— Teen Basketball — Lai- £oi» to Bd. of Ed.

John Price — Bike Race — Bike Club — Playgrounds

John Leonard — Block Dance Si Club

Kay Isenmann — Finance. — ACTIVITIES — Senior Citizens

Tor disregarding summonses Samuel S.055 Ten E yck Avenue, Lynd hurst, was fined $25 in L y •hurrt Municipal Cou Thursday.

iin£s levied by Mu r pal C ourt Judge W ’liam Iv.' H ona w ere $20 to Donald R. K nvnski, 721 Schuyler Ave.. t violation of the motor vehit a! s e c t io n and not hnvimr h s cense in his possession: S fi” C*s to Thom:is' \ ; > t ^ l i H elleville for not h . i^ ig c; p:vr* m ade: A lb.j*' li> Ma- 238 M ountain Way. °n an ov , due inspection: Miss Janie :' K

parkinn Ruggiero. 129 Sanford Ave.. for of 235 "E. Pierrepont Ave.. Ru- Tutt’e of failu re to have repairs made thertord. was forfeited and ano-

a r d Milton Oropkin of Freehold tner bench w arrant wa3 ordered for speeding 69 miles an hour when she failed to appear on a

a 60 mile zone.J*’.n ts u! $10 each w ere p-tffi

s G Bills. 122 Fore t1 u - .1. Baroody. 2V~>

bst£r Av*?\ , both for ob-.truci ■: it a;, c Thom as Capas. > Teancck to r loading a truck

i • thu* f .ur ton l^mit: L a vv " ( P nohue. 551 Third Ave .

fai’ure to have repairs ' and a $5 fine to H erm an

«- alt - 230 SMiyvesant Ave..t parking ticket.

The- S25 bail of Lynda M. Getz

com plaint of obstructing trafficon M arch of last year..

Warrants were o rie red f o r S : / i Kamm, 432 Fern Afve.t .1. ' Smith of.Newark; Antho-

Irvir*'? Place, (iirfie ’d: Florence Burrows o f

Kra'chville: Jeffrey Sylvester. l .r 4 Huyv.ard Place. Walling'ton; Antho-r. Mirici. 74 . Lake Ave.,. i S'.amato and Iom m etti Co.,1 Rom? 17 Param us, all "dTr w^om fa"’led to appear on traf- tic complaints.

Nancy Bartlett * Pu^fidtj

K'ouncilmar\ Matthi

is the Liaison to ~^he Bd.

Makaus creation. . Ads Bring Results

North Arlington High SchoolM enu • vii'

MONDAY. JAN. 18 St tiffed Cabbage Rolls with Oven Brown Potatoes Tossed Salad, dressing Sread and Butter th icken with Rice Soup Cheeseburger on a Bun Country Club Salad Plate Turkey Sandwich American Cheese Peanut Butter and Jelly TUESDAY, JAN. 19 Meat Loaf with gravy Baked Potato with butter Red Cabbage B.-ead and B etter Beef Noodle Soup Chuck Wagon on a Bun Chopped Chicken Livers Salad FRIDAY. JAN. PlateB o lo g n a S a n d w ich

^ anut Butter and Jelly WED., JAN. 20 Baked Ham and Noodles OratinButtered Green Peas B iead.and Butter Split Pea Soup Grilled Cheese with pickles

PlateRoast Beef Sandwich A . Cream Cheese and Jelly Sand wichChicken Salad Sandwich THURSDAY. JAN. 21 Golden F re d Chiaken Whipped Potatoes with gravy Buttered Carrots Bread and Butter \egetable SoupFrankfurter on Roll sauerkraut and relishF ench Fried Potatoes Tunafish Salad P la te 'Sliced Ham Sandwich Peanut Butter and Jelly Ham Salad Sandwich FRIDAY. JAN. 22 Baked Flounder with lemon but

hero

^ rs le y Buttered Green Beans Bread and Butter

Au- Chicken Gumbo Soup Meat Ball Sandwich on rollChicken Salad Plate Cooked Salami Sandwich Tuna Salad Sandwich

STA RT N O W W IT H TNISEX TRA BONUS COUPON

Make your food budget > oo fnrtfier this year

Gm " 1* Union ind sea how useful Tripls-S Blue Stamps are

Cottage Cheese and F ru it Sal^id Peanut Butter and Jelly

Public-Private Support Strengthens 4-H Programs

Representing the public and private sectors in support of 4-H are Mrs. Shirley Carlson, The Sparry and Hutchinson Company; Or. E. Dean Vaughan, Extension Service, USDA; J. Roger Lennartson, Westinghouse Electric Corporation, and Norman C. Mind rum, National 4-H Service Committee, the nonprofit educational organization wtiich performs a liaison function.

Last year about 4-million boys tion. Awards will include medals and girls 9 to 19 years of age of honor, expense paid trips to received technical as well as National 4-H Congress in Chica- practical training in 4-H and re- go and 286 scholarships valued lated programs. at $166,700.

With cooperation and support Among donors whose support of business and government, the has continued since the 1920’s “learning-by-doing” educational are: Armour and Company; Bur p r o g r a m has e xpa nde d and lington Northern Inc.: The Mfl- become a vital organization for waukee Road and Wilson & Co.. u. ban as well as rural youths. Inc. .

This year enrollments are ex- As the 4-H program broadened pected to be at the highest point its educational offerings, it has ever as young people every- been strengthened by the sup where find 4-H flexible and to port of additional corporations their liking. and foundations. Added to the

They meet in groups or clubs, donor roster were: General Mo work on self-determ ined proj tors: American Oil Foundation; ects and activities, learn through St a nda r d Oil Company (Ken special 411 television series and tucky); The Chicago Board of indepejjjfent study. And 4-H’ers Trade; Livestock Conservation, are encouraged to proceed in Inc.; Sunbeam Cor por a t i on; t he i r educational activities and Union Oil Company of Califor- pr oj ec t s as far and rapidly as nia and the Conrad Hilton Hotel, they desire. In the 1930 s 4-H opportunities

Over -the years the private expanded further with the addi^ sector has assisted 4-H youths in tion of donors such as Chevron their quest for knowledge, fun Chemical Company ■ Ortho Divi- and fe l l owshi p. Through (he sion; Cities Se r vi ce Company; National 4-H Service Committee, Elgin National Industries, Inc.; corporations, foundations and H e rcu les Incorporated; Home- individuals have been encour lite, a Division of Textron, Inc.;

r

Va l u a b l i co u po h WWW

STAMPSWITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE

OF $7 SO OR MORE (Except items regulated by law)

Limit^ one coifpsn p«r custom erCoupon good th ru S a t . Jan 16th

YOURCHOICE

WO** SAVERStoMtMMttf SIcm V«y S .Ihoi ElKtTK lW «0i }Cotomal S t* « | 8<ikt< J9 )J ............_ 4 _

I1‘.

PENN. DUTCH NOODLES

FIN E. M E D IU M . BR O A D

Tomatoes 3 £ sl°° Applesauce «m> 3 £ S100 ScotTowels-Lr1 3 £ s1°°

F R U IT MONTED R IN K S

| | LEGS O F mLambf (M INTERTAINING Copp*. Im*x 0*h tfl-iSSl Cop**. Owhni Dnh <?3 1W' Set ol 6 fondue fprls (?} 411) Pin thin Pudw t?J 1401

4 -:-*|ooGBAeC. (BOeiCAl PUNCH PINE-CHERNY. ORANOC

S]0 0

Shoulder Chops * . 89* C o m b i n a t i o n 59* Loin Lamb Chops /I s9 Rib Lamb Chops . I18

Grapefruit uciioin 4Marshmallow ROT 4 '|m 1̂̂Start Drink .SIX 4 00~~" ̂ £9

R O N Z O N I m ’ICO w S P A G H E T T I 9 .C |

O R SPA G M E TT IN I T l f c S F

ClciTnato M llllAMATO 5 ̂1 ^Sweet Peas SSI 5 £ s1°°

a i m K.V.V

M IN U T E M A ID

Morton DinnersOOIANNPotatoes

Broccoli ClWfl.F R E N C H *F R I E S |

Hot Dogs “»" Shell ^teaks Franks

H.s.i.4. CNOKI N il IOIH

Will ItUUUP

MAI AU IW

59cS ] 69

79c

Ground Chuck uu Chuck Fillet"?,1,1"’ London Broil MIOUIMV

ORANGE JU IC E!S

EARLY MORN

9 01 } p»»*

01 lAVAIIAH (■IMrum

John's PizzaOrange JuiceRich's Eclairs

F L A V O R E D R Y O G U R T 3

G RA N D U N IO N

Breakstone U tM R (HUM

_ | ilADY 10 DtIM _Bordens 2White Bread .Hn 3

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ R e d e e m t h e s e v a l u a b l e c o u p o n s

£ 3 9 cS 4 9 c

- 1 9 c

2 5^ 7 9 ‘

t 24c ‘* 4 9 c

. g g <

i 3 1 c

:_r 39c

i ^ . 8 9

M» * 7Q c(Ml « / 7>IMIU« 70C

MAfll tb / /

3 r . 7 9 c

Q JIIicken LegsU™

C hicken B reasts ,

F lanken Ribs d™. ol'i

Whole Fryers Shells of Beef Pork Sausage Sliced Beseem

Jones Sausage Sliced BaconS hrim p C o c k ta il •”»

IICllllKlltn’S M ayonnaise

H einz K etch u p CampbeH’s Soup s=

Broadcast " ’E."* »S.75C M a rg a r in e ^C h e f B o y -A r-D e e ’r i S T l̂ 7 9 c M a rg a rin eNabisco OreosSSl«.X,45c P a lm o live .

— c f a s & f =SHOP GRAND UNION FOR THE FRESHEST PRODUCE IN TOWN

U NTRIM M ED

WHOLE OR HALF

HOT OR SWE£T ITALIAN STYLE

w ith th is coupon and purchase of 1 0 w ia r

INSTANT

NESCAFE COFFEELimit on* coupon p•» customer Coupon good th ru

Sat Jan 16th

■5<w ith th is coupon and

purchase ol p*c o l SO FOOD WRAP

b a g g ie sLxwt one coupon per customerCoupon good t« m ]

W Www

w

w

w

■ w

w

w

wTemple Oranges T. I0SS9

IIIISCNMANirS

X -

Emperor Grapes Potatoes ALL PURPOSE

U.S. No 1 SIZE A’

MtTIM PIIKKMK ■ cot pm

MM.

. ■ wnrtM iApples .“ r Avocados not Mushrooms

CREST TOOTHPASTE

1 0 k» 6 9 c

« 2 9 c

; 2 6 9 c

DEAL LASH - MG o* MJNT

"■ • 2 9 '2 0 « 8 9

Strawberries tinoon Pineapples crr Red Radishes (■HP

LIPTON TEABAGS '

DEAL PACK

Miss Breck r ; Cotton Swabs:::"

:73c1 4 4 '

Macaroni PIHNII

F ab ric S o fte n e r t"",'

cImported ClfeijsluceiitcFii}e Clyqa- 0 -

T H IS WEEK B EEATURE.

C O F FE E C U R

I VHCTIVi THRU SAT JAM I6ih Wf U W Y I THK WWtl TO UMIT QUANTIHU.

aged to share their t echni cal expertise, to provide educational mat -rials and visual aids These donor s also have f ound incen­tive* and recognition useful in motivating young people.

Tills y< ar nearly 60 donors are « (fc'MNling 4 H youths with chal

lending inspiration and recogni

Moorman Mfg. Co.; Olin Corpor­ation; Ralston Purina Company; The Singer Company and White Farm Equipment

The as s i s t ance of these and other 4-II donors is channeled into supporting activities jointly p l anned with the Cooperative Extension Service.

Grand Union 579 Ridge Road, North ArlingtonStore Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

“ Instant Redemption ServfcT' Bloomfield, New Jersey, 22 Washington Street

Page 6: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

SCHOOLS TRAIN for a pood position a* a secretary, typist, cleri­cal worker or comptometer operator a t low cost in the shortest possible time at

Rutherford Secretarial School

2 Franklin PI.. Rutherford Phone 939-7147

— FOR RENT —’

HELP WANTED - MALE —

MAN wanted with some knwldg

BRING IT IN Papers, $.50 per hundred, .rag$, Alurrtinum, brass, copper,/lead, batteries, and Iron. v'—^

KEARNY SCRAP METAL 178 Schuyler Ave., Kearny, N. J.

9914432

CHANGING PLACES — 1071 freeholder Director Frank A. Buono Jr., left, presents outgoing Dirrctor William D. McDowell with a plaqn* In appreciation of his achievements as director lnsl year. At the Jan- 1 reorganization meeting, McDowell was elected deputy director by his fellow f r e e h o ld s a position held by Buono last year.

C o m p le te H om e Im p ro v e m e n ts A dd itions . D o rm e rs ■

O a ra g e s - r u s h e d B a se m e n ts and-' A ttica

K itch e n s M odern ized A lum inum Siding & R oofing A lum inum Doors & W in d o w s

Film Festival Tolev Broov A « . Now ST rW jp Aye._ E R. Be Held By Q.P.ley -Shop. Sec. and lease req. 744- 4553. A.M. only 10-ltTF

3 ROOMS 939 0644. 12-10 TF

LOVELY 4-rm. apt., new-2-fam. ciose to everything. Pvt. heat­ing. Avail, now. 935 1173. 1-14

LYNDHURST: 5 rm. apt. adults onlv. 939 2677 after 5 p.m. 1-7

NO. ARLINGTON: 4Vi rms., new 2-fam. HAHW, air cond. Business couple prefd. 999*7197.

1-7

N.A. Large new 5 rm. apt. with mod. kitchen A bath. H&HW supp., private ent. Business a- tea. $250. 997-2404. 7:30 8 p.m.

1-14

NoA.: Apt, avail S-1. Pvt. park­ing, H&HW, $220. Bus. couple or adults pref. 997-1040. 1-14

LYND: Lg. furn. rm. for men only. 438 9879, 2 to 6 p.m.

1-14TF

LYND: 2 rm. apt. in clean apt. bldg. conv. to shpng. A N. Y. buses. No pets. Avail 2*1. Ma­ture woman. 933-2823. 1*f4

LYND: Office space, 2000 sq.ft. ideal loc. 933-75M bet. 4 4 7 p.m

* f*M t#

MEN NEEDED THfc ( ijD of Queen 6T P eace”TO DRIVE Semi-Tractor Trail- w'fl hold an International Film ers local and over the road. Ex- Festival on five Tuesday eve- perience not necessary. Earning m g s beginning January 19. The potential $10,500 to $16,000 per f ims. to s : a r L j f c ^ ^ j . . will be year after short training. For s.vrnvn in ^ R > auditorium ofapplication and interview, call Queen of Peace G r a m m a r ?C1 826 C079, or write Advance School. fD.T. Dept., Edison Industrial On January 19. the film will Center, Administration Bldg. 80, Sc Jules Dkssin's “ He Who R^u|e 1, Edison, N.J. 08817. ^Must Die" from the novel 'T he

v 1-21/^treek Passion.” Other filmsIMMKD OPENING, full or part

icy which has its headquarters Course offerings in the follow- m Delran. ing will be made: 4 rt Funda-

(fc f of m? largest barfx hold- W ^ a ls . Audio-Visual Materials tog companies in the East. Fide ^nd Methods. Development of liiy Un&n Banoorporation i jj_ P S. n . Comparative Modern

Orchestra. Feature of the eve­ning will be the Crowning of the King and Queen of Hobos. Tickets are available in ad-

loce‘ed in Newark. It has com- ’tJovornmenl II. Basic Modern c'oor.

time, must be over 21. Car nec. Call 997 0880. Mr. Jones

vili be “That Man ftom Rio” in Frcnch starring Jean-Paul Bel-

HfcLP WANTED ~ FEMALE —

— MALE ~ FEMALE —

STEADY MONEYIf you have telephone sell. Ing experience a iu i want to establish a good income a t your own home, contact The I-eadpr, 251 R idge Road. Lyndhurst- 438.8700.

, ;Tp n'undo *nd Francois Dorleac,- nans “SlMlay Send Cybcie" in

with

b.ned r t ;ourccs of close to IBOO Mathematics H. Contemporaryitytlian and total capital ac- M ute. Philosphy o< Man. Phil-c"'jn:s of a;>f>rot.'mate!y' $86 osophy for the Now Generation, xn.ilion. Combined loaning ca,ja A1 so: General. Abnormal. So- c 'ty of the erru» is in excess of £.'■'! P-vchotogy, Introduction to t'ons will start.V1 million to a single borrower. An' > . ;xilogy, Institute of Child For further information

Unde- tiie new ho ling e*n» Oriented Theology and Religi the Carlstadt Turn HaU, prfty. Mr. Davis said, each of or' ' of the World. ^ Sf44.the member banks will retain The music department will ------ ---------iti own corporate name and after a new course in Strings.' Cub Pack Bowls ir'ontKy and continue to functioo fo r further information write: 'witn its own board of directors, V rccMlr of Evening Division. The ‘I'ub Pack 89 b a l in gaclvipory boards. ad:ninistr«tW» itelician College. South Main league resutMM at the / Lynd-officers . L j, s r . ------- . . . . . J ,

414 F o r* .t Av«. L y n d h u rs t t

438-3663

v a tw fw m nwrrtbeW or a t the Alterations & Repairs

A reminder to all members i’ that gymnastic classes have re ­sumed and that preparation for the annual gymnastic exhtoi-

call438-

t. Lbdi, *i.J. 07744.French with Hardy Kreugeran^ NicolCourcel. February 2; Henri VernuH’s The Twenty - F i f t h _ House” with Antho­ny Quinn and v im a Lisi, Feb­ruary 9: Ingm ar Bergman's "The Seventh Seal" .with Max Von Sydow. February 16.

The films have been selected to represent the finest in film art from around the world.

Immediately following t h e fi*m presentation, there will be a discussion and coffee hour.

run for six consectutive Satur­days with trophies awarded at the conclusion.Women's Federation Active Turners

M eet On Wednesday Hold Social Jan. 23» At the next Pack meeting to

The Pi%iflgnts' Council and The Active Turners will hold be he'd on Friday. January IS,Midwinter Board meeting of the tb tir first social activity of the at Coimbus School, the boys

New 1fea» on Saturday. Janua- and their parents will see ary 23. The Lumpen Ball (Hobo K arate demonstration given byDance) will start a t 9 p.m. with Mr. Jam es Zelinsky. 2nd degreemusic by Matt Leyden and his Riack Belt.

NO JOB T O O LARGE OR TOO SM ALL

Additions, Insolatton, garages, bathrooms, dormers, store Croats, roofing, and porch™. Recreation rooms and masonry F ire damage Work.

W e do our own w ork. Financing arranged.

F ree estim ates Call BOB

743-0100 or 3?2-<

Piano - Organ Accordion

A unique method created

for your enjoyment by

VICTORFRANGIPANE

C-m poser and A rran g e r for Cleff • Century . H eritage

and ^ c h u p ir t M usic Co. of x Ycjfk City.

A D U LTSlnay also apply for oecawonal lessons a t your

homeCALL ft39-0644

— INSTRUCTION Fidelity Union0N - TnNew CorpoiCorporation

-- . -------------------------------- — OUITAR LESSONS. B a n n e rs .. . .LYND: Storage spsce. ideal lo- Please call 933 0949 121 I ideHy Union Bancorporatioocation, Immed. occ. 933 7584. - _________ a regl'^tered bank holding com-

1-HTF NURSERY SCHOOL —- pany sponsored by Fidelity -------------------------- ■ — - e - - Union TRM Company. Newark.LYND: JVi rm i. sun porch, H i HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY became operative Jan 4 it wasHW, adults prsl. 4311907. 1-21 accepting children ages 1 to 5 announced here today by CLYND* 6 lg rms In new 2 fam °l>e" •» R«fl«»*re<l Malcolm Davis. Chairman. In'0 '8 - rms. in new z-iam. #ikj iicen-M n*w ftr

^th District Federation of Wo m m 's Clubs will meet a t t b e Rutherford Woman's Club at 10 a.m. next Wednesday. Jan. 20; with Mrs. William C. Mulert newly appointed vice-president of the 8th District presiding. Mrs. Mulert was elected to All the place of the la te Mrs. Rob­e rt J . Citrino. All chib presi­dents. treasurers, secretaries and 8th District chairmen are ir.vited to attend the Jan. 20th meeting.

sod licensed. Day or weekly adcEtfon to Fidelity, the lead .» !« , C sterin , to ths working bank, affUiates o( the new cor- ~ » 1W ta l l Q g .M ia p or ate entiiy are The Na.ionalFAROUHAR Nursery School] Pank of N’«*' Jersey which has state certified, Rutherford, mor- ,ts headquarters m New Bruns

FAMILY of 4 urgently needs 5 nl"»«, mod. rales. Exp. stafl. wick and the Bank of West Je r or more rms. vie. Koamy, NJL Part ,im® or full time. 939 Q002 -------------- ----------------------------

2 baths, own heat. 237 Madison St. 933 6317. * 1-^4

waTTtYd TO r e n t ’—’ “

Or Lynd. 998-2741 any flmo.r

YOUNG m arried couple with 2 children urgently noed X bdrm., 4-rm. apt. South Borgan a r i a . Max. $175 with haat. References.

^438-7615. H ^ 1-tl

COUPLE ddlires 4-rm.N.A.-Lynd.

or 939-0245. 1-14

with % yr. ofld cMId rm. a|M. bdrm.) In I. area. 9 9 l4 rS . 1T4

— PERSONALS —

MRS. DUNN, gifted reader and adviser. Advice on all problems •f life. Card and Palm readings. » a.m. to 9 p.m. Ca'I 65344T0. 210 Sip Ave., Jersey City, NJ. Established 6 years. 124TF

- MALE - FEMALE —

- FOR SALE - ' -SOUTH Bergen Mental Health Center in need of piano In fair cond. to be use^ for Resociali-

TWIN SIZE Antique white tation program. W1H arrange French Prov. bed w-mattress A for pick up. Please contact Jan box spring, brand new, w-night Frontln 933-4096 after 4 p.m. I . * . * lamp, t o * * 7 12-17TF REDUCE w )h REDOOSE7 ^

MOVING. Many items tor sale remove excess fluid withIncludng S'nner console sewing FLUIDEX. Only 98 cents andmachine, $25; $ kitchen fables, $1-69 at Edlins Rexall, North$10,* antique bureau and mir- Arlington. 2-4ror. 933 8067. ‘ 11-17 I t . . . - , f _________ CMAIR5 recovered, factory op-

— ---- -------- -------- «n 6 days 10-10 p.m. 47 EssexPEFRIG, Philco coopertone w- St. Hackensack (by Ct. house).scparat« tcp freezer, exc. cond Customers recommend their$100. High back c h a ir / brown friends because the price 1$slipcover. Maltog. leather top right. 9 3TFcoffee table. 991 3137 after 7p.m. or 775-2771, ask for Mrs.Hill, days. 1-14

— SERVICES -

TWO STORM windows for pic.V. S 70 46" x 47Vi"; 46" x

$ r \ Biltrite coach carriage. 4381474 r 1-14

I'EC PSAK6 diamond eng. ring $ Pitch ing wedding band. Set, *i00. Grig. $400. 997-1041. 1-14

L IG H T H A U L IN GU'ill Also Clean Atti< *,Cellars, A G arages.

F.M .G.Call 933-6634

e W e re in te re s te d in you!

T Ve V isit o u r o ffice only o n r# .

e M any jops in S o u th e rn B er- Offn C oun ty .

TEMPS UNLIMITED100 Johnson Ave.,

C o n v en ien t P a rk in g

fo r m ore in fo rm a tio n call

487-0700

Fs-Jecian Classes Commence Jan. 28

Spring semester late after noon and evening classes will OTnmence a t Felician College. January 28

Registration for courses will be held Monday, January 25 in the college cafeteria 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to S p . m .^

MALE — FEMALE " " "

NO FEE

Tfce Leader will publish Rum m age Sale itelhs 2 w eeks w ithout charge. If you do not sell, you owe nothing. If t o a sell, you owe us $1.50 fo r each item sold. AU item s m ust be w ritten by you and received in our offices by Monday noon week of publication. Limit 2 item s, 20 w ords, value under $100. P rice asked m ust appear in ad. No autom otive, boat or pets. P lease give name and w ith releases.

CHAIR bed, green tweed, good cond., $25. 998 t42i. 1-21

HOFNER bast guitar, exc. con- dltion, $100. 9H 0S02 after 3. 1-21

WILL exchange for girls Ice skates size t for size 7. 43*5190. 1-21

— BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES —

A c co u n tan t-O sn l. o r Public A c c o u n ta n i-N ite S tudent B ookkeeper TraM ee D riv e r PkQ. M achtne M ain tenanceSr. C o lle c tio n s .ex p . ____T eller, esc p. h.bOOShiD pin* ' VarM F o r e m a n «,000

C M iw iie i T r a i n e * 6,000

f a m . C teH oai T ra in e e ------T e l le r , - T e s ts e e

O th e r P ositions p ispatcher-C l**-fc T ra in ee e,000

T ra in e e F E M A L E

B«rv icem an

13.00011.000 9.1007.0007.000

MS

5,200

NO FEET efler o r T ra in # * T r ave l A g e n t, E xp.S te y . w .^ ' ----d e rfc Ty,

w.^r.eT / J .1I Typ 1

110110

J'*0

•1c2 . 0

S tc r « t« r y .4 u n *Keyoti/'fliiT—C > /‘TlH 'L y n d )C enl. O ffice -P h o n e n e ^ e p tm ru v Pr«<.Clork Typist <** 4:10)C le r k T y f r h t ( L i t e C x p . )

O th e r P ositions T v p e -F ig u re s W a itre s s S-1 t ip s +H o s te s s P .T o r P .T

Ronald PiperEmployment Agency

33 Ridge Rd., No. Arlington N.J.

998-7900Open Friday Till 7 F.M.

* T C A A MONTH * # J U PART TIME THE LITTLE DELIf f

THE NEWEST IDEA IN VENDINGf t f w lo r Iks first time distributorships for TH* LITTLE DELI ara available la this area.As a LITTLE DELI Distributor you ran ran i that EXTRA MONEY ,»‘r month In yonr sphrr time. You do no selling, need no experience. We contract all accounts. You merely re. stock with popular, nationally advertised, individually pack, aged delicateaOT) inrat and eheeae products like Kraft Cheese and Slim Jim Beef.T tm U T T U I O K U is the most exciting nmv Idea in mer. tfttndlafng.Yon most have a good car, and be able to spend 4 to IS hoo n per week. Cash Investment of 89,100 to 94,890 required for equipment and Inventory- We encourage yoor Investigation and will gladly exchange references with yoli!For more information, write to us today. There is no ohliga. tton. All Inquiries answered the same day they are received. Pie—e enclose your name, address, phone number and refer.

Little Deli• AUTOMATIC DELICATESSEN

COMMERCE TERRACE BUILDING SPK1.VOHLLD MISSOURI 6J804

- S K T -

Arrow Contractors.511 Schuyler Ave. l

K earny, N. J.998-4907

CUSTOM D ESIG N ER KITCHENS

BATHROOMS VANITIES

O F ALL D ESC RIPTIO N ALL SERVICES DONE

U N D ER ONE ROOF

DiamondPainting &

Paperhangfrig

\ - I J o bImr^edial

9 9 7 -lediate Service

1 0 3 1

Plumbing

Electricians

U „ „ v r -'M l. H.‘t A FUft.

' 1 ii'i.Mi. *)\ \ * r w220 vo lt — 3 w ire

GE 8-4505A.C hasar& Son

r.I.I Cl lilt IANS•*; : uv 1 > • 1 » A-., l.jodhvrw

Glass Contractor

ARROW GLASSSI I Schuyler A vs.

. . Kearny, N. J.998-4907

A LL T Y PES GLASS REPLACED

S torm panels and screens, wood sash, table tops, m ir­ro rs resilvered, auto glass, sto re fronts. Heavy duty s td tljl windows and doors. P ick up and deliver.

Masonry ^

M & MMason a Brick Wotit

— Brink Veneer — WaBs — FeUss — Sidewalks — Alterations . Free Estimates

Call Anytime

7$9-2572

M r M t i e a v g

Pick up u

“ Do-It-Yourself” Plumbing Heating Electrical SuppliesSinks, Bath Tubs, Toilets, Basins A E lectrical Supplies. Bathroom Vanities m ade to order.

PIPES CUT A THREADED TO ORDER

East Rutherford Supply Company

234-236 Paterson Ave.E. Rutherford 933.1430

Service

11TO V ER AND GLASS

Stove P a rts All M akes OfFor All M akes Of Stoves’

6303 Bergenline Ave. W est New Y ork, N. J . 07093

Phone 866-S355

T. V. Service

Television Service and Sales

A D M I l t A LColor — Portables

PEGERDON’£ T.V.Form erly

Fristik - Degerdon 209-B Ridge R<L N orth Arlington

991-4369

JO H N 'ST.V. Service & Sales

438-9120RCA - Zenith - H itachi

B. * W. * Color T.V. Discount Prices

M* Chase Ave^ Lyndhurst

Page 7: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

N

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14,1971 T i t L E A D E R P R E S S PAGE SEVEN

n « IT'S A WOMAN'S WORLD INH antny pa n try pr id e countrvi

UY POW ER" PRICED M ^A T DEPARTMENTIU S D A C HO ICE BONELESS TOP OR S O H O M - B O N U S SPEC IA L1

ROUND *» ROAST - “ .

american LAMB SALE BONUSSPECIAL

. " f I .f>* R R< ' ^ S T SO U A Pf CUT or

- N FkG SHOULDER C HOT'S PIUS

NEC* & SHANK

SHOULDER CHOPS

B LA D E IN T

F r e s h G r o u n d B e e f , - v v r v 3 ' ; V ' .

F r e s h G r o u n d C h u c k

Q u a r t e r e d C h i c k e n s e c s " b r e a s t s

I t u l i a n S a u s a g e

C h u c k F i l l e t S t e n k

Q u a r t e r e d P o r k L o i n

FRANKSOSCAR MAYER ALL MEAT OR

ALL BEEFlb.

Sliced Bacon HOLLY RIDCI

BolognaSliced Pork Roll ’»■« Italian Maid Pizza Pies All Meat Franks

79‘• o.p^t

PANTRYPRIOR

69‘ 4 9 «

3 xv M 00 3 v-v.5100

* 69‘

t CHOCOLA T|-VANILLA-RUTTCRSCOTCH

25<om BROWN 00L0

LIMIT I -ONI COUPON P t t FAMIIY COUPON OOOO THRU JAN I*

| VALUABLE COUPON

lAMGAPKMUItalian Style PepperoniPuddings CHOCOLA T

Genoa Salami Barbecued ChickensRICM IN PROTEIN-LOW IN FAT

turkey su ami

ha lfl b . 79’

h u sh maocRCADY TO SRRVC HOT

lb.

.3 FROZEN ^ ^

BOSTON MACKEREL >49Medium Shrimp w ts *345Fish Crisp e»«NAtioM {tj. 55Whitefish PROZIN lb 69*Dungeness Crabs COOK CO lb 7 9 *

ROCCA BELLASELECT RIPE

A /A PPLE79

J , »

39‘89‘69‘

it

PANTRYPRIDE

Buy Power Priced P ro du ce Dept! COUGH MIXTURC

G O LD E N RIPE FLA VORKUL ■ r v i V

ANANAJuicy Florida Granges 5 9 fFlorida Seedless Grapefruit 5 9Broccoli Rube f , A K D F N I RESM |(, 3 9

STRAWBERRIES 39'W l M S f l V I T H I t l C H l 1 0 LIMIT O U A N T IT IIS N O T l l t r O N t l t l l f O » f Y .O G tA P H I C I M O t l

U S T 'l "3 "«m .

b l l .

<

VICKS 44«r

Hellmann's Mayonnaise s. 65 MaxweN House ijs 78 ‘Rolled or Flat Anchovies 4 :.v. *100 Progresso " « * ■ 5 £ * 100Green Giant Niblets 5 'is * 100 Sacramento w 6 i.v. s1°° LaRosa Spaghetti '* 5 Ehlers Tea Bags Chock Full O'Nuts c°'m<Freezer Queen Dinners % 99 Perx Coffee Lightener 6 s 100

A U M i d * I W f C T l V I A T lY N O H U ffS T P A N T R Y P tlO C O N L Y A U PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JA N 1 6

Page 8: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

FACE LIGHT T H E L L A D E R P R E S S THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971

School Trustees UnitingThe incumbent team of Mario

P Rizzo. Earl Greenleaf, J r . Frederick A. Censullo and V'n- cpvI A. Carini have outlined the a: ms of their candidacy as “Project *71 Report".

The prim e goal of “Project 71" is to reduce the cost of ed tication in our community by increasing State and Federal Aid.

The ensuing weeks will un fold, via a aeries of articles, the •Project *71 Report” , outlining

the ways and means neooss'iry to bring more of our tax dollar back to our community.

“The “Project '71" Team feels it has the experience, abil­ity and invention to reduce the tax burden of education in Lynd hurst and in similar communi t«M. The inequities in the exist­ing formula for return of tax dollars for education to o u r Community will be the prime Luget of this group.

"Project '71" will show up the grossly unfair burden placed on nur and similar communities, when we attempt to improve our educational systems O u r efficiency in using our educa­tional dollar is being overlooked *hile the bulk of our tax doll i r s are-being pumped into in ner city schools where the effi­ciency is fa r below ours. More incentive must be given to com munkies like Lyndhurst. More recognition for innovation must be given in the form of State Aid. The false formula basis which states that assessed valu ation means more ability to pay must be changed. The “Project T l’’ team has fully researched the inequities and is now prom­oting county- and state-wiide in­terest in .this cause.

The methods of ta \ relief for our community and similar coin munkies throughout the* state " Ll.be made public in "Project ’71 Report" in a se-ies of week Iv articles to the citizens of the corrafumity. county and state

We have and will continue to make progress by being innova­tive as the record wiU sho<v. Our citizens can no longer face the burden of spiralling costs .ftid we must move ahead by new and even spectacular inno­vations. The school budget for the forth coming year will ac­tually reduce the taxation by more than $13,000 or greater or one full tax point. This is a first for our community and will hopefully establish a trend throughout the county and the state. The efforts of “Project ’71" will result in even more teductions in local tax burdens in the future.

Earl GreenleafEarl Greenleaf, J r. was elect­

ed Trustee in 1968. He is cur rently vice president and Fin ance Chairman, and heads the Negotiations Committee on which he served during his three years in office. Greenleaf. a graduate of Lyndhurst High School, holds a degree in En­gineering from Stevens Institute and a M aster's Degree from Fairleigh Dickinson University. He resides with his wife and three children at 322 W i l l o w Avenue. Greenleaf’s civic activi t ’es include membership on the Executive Committee of Bergen County Boards of Education, as w< 11 as founder and past presi dent of the Lyndhurst Council of Cnurches. Mr. Greenleaf is Na­tional Account Executive. Frue-

hauf Division of Fruehauf Corp­oration.

Mario RizzoMario Pe<ter Rizzo, first elect­

ed to this Board of Education in 1959 is completing 12 years or service. Rizzo, a past presi­dent. has served on all com­mittees. A lifelong resident of Lyndhurst. Rizzo graduated f -am Lyndhurst High School in 294 .̂ He resides a t 46 Stuyves- ant Avenue, has two daughters. Beverly and Marion, and a grandson. Sean. He is an inves­tigator for the Treasury Depart ment. Division of Taxation. He lists among his activities, mem­bership in the Italian American Circle Club, West End Indepen dent Association. Dvility and Labor Political Society. Amvets Post 20. and Knights of Colum bus.

Carini is employed by P r u ­dential Insurance Company as Manager of Ordinary Change and Reinstatement Division in Newark. He has served as chair man of the Lyndhurst Mental Health Association and is a member of the Lyndhurst Elcs and the Independent Mens' Club.

Frederick

Vincent CariniVincent M. Carini was elect-

cti to the Board of Education in !!<67 and served three y ean , lie was appointed in August 1170 to fill the unexpired year ■n Anthony Anabrosio.. Carini S' i ved as vice president." as well a 5 chairman of the personnel, fi lance and negotiating com mittees during his terms of of fice. A lifelong resident of the community, Carini graduated from Lyndhurst High School as president of the senior class and was the recipient of All- State football nonors. He holds a bachelor's de gree fromFair- loigh Dickinsoo and a Master of Business Administration from Rutgers University. He lives with his family a t 613 Chase Avenue.

Frederick A. Censullo w a s elected to the Board-H Educa tmn in !96fi and is now presi dent. He has chaired the P er­sonnel and Negotiating Com­mittees. Censullo attended St. Peter's Prep and College. Fair leigh Dickinson. Seton Hall and New York University. He holds a degree in Chemistry with a minor is psychology, as well as a certificate in industrial man anoroent Censullo resides with his family a t 419 2nd Avenue He is employed in Newark by the S. B Penick Unit of Corn Products International, where he holds the position of Produc tion Manager of Antibiotics Di vision.

His community activities in­clude presidaicy of the Civic Interest League, past coach of the Amvet and Circle Elub Lit­tle League and a Biddy Basket ball team. Cenaullo served as a member of Sacred Heart Youth and Social Boards, a s wtU as the Bergen Q uirty All Faiths Aotkxi Group. He ha* been an instructor in gymnastics a t the Union Hill Youth Gymnastic So­ciety and holds membership In the Knights of Columbus. Itali­an American Circle Club. Am- vets Post 20. and Lyndhurst TBcs 1505.

S3t

IP rV t - W *i

L H i t

r 1

CANDIDATES — The anti-hoard ramtldntw formed their own ticket h u t week. Left to right: John P. Bush, William F. Smith, William IV‘Hie trie in n and Chillies 8- Przychocki.

Anti - Board Ticket Forms

Wolff’s Candidacy Pressed j r -

Alfred H. Wolff of 140 Jay Avenue, LymBiurst, a resident of Lyndhurst for 13 years, has announced his candidacy for tlw Board of Education.

Wolff has two children, a daughter. Judith, M. a freshman 8* Montclair State Colk*e, a id a son. Alan. 14, a student in

An insurance agent with John Hancock in Passaic, WoW also is the proprietor of the Ridge L.-iundramat a t Ridge Road and Sixth Avenue. Lyndhurst. Prior to coming to Lyndhurst he own ed and operated a trucking com pany

Born in Germany, Mr, WOWfwas educated in that countryand spent a year in a collegein Scotland. ThisV * h T & S ■***,: ' \ , . :-

---

phase was interrupted by a Governmentt | ^ Mr W(rfff

br.tish Army He served in the .infantry and tank unit and spent Lyndhurst Lodge of Elks. Am18 months in the public safety v tta- Kiwanis and Lyndburstdivision of the Allied Military Booster Club.'

> full ticket has been formed by an anti-Board of Education s’ate of candidates. It consists of John P. Bush. Charles Przy­chocki and William Smith i'cr three year terms and William Demetrician for the' one - year term

The biographies of the candi­dates #follow:

John P. Bush of 688 Ten Eyck Avtnue. Lyndhurst is nvarri?d 16 the former Jean Pawlowski a rn is the father of a son John, and a daughter. Dolo-es.

John is employed by Western L lectricCo* of Kearny, a n d ha*5 been, supervising for the past years. He is active in labor union activities and has served as delegate on the Exe­cutive Board, has -been plant editor of the Local 1470 Journal and a former staff member on the Post Eagle newspaper. He is past President of the New Jersey Communications Anchor Club; he is a member of t h e Queen of Peace K. of C. Council in North Arlington; The- Holv Name Society of St. Michaels,

Lyndhurst: The Polish Ameri­can Citizens’ Club; the New Jer

%scy Republican Na-tional Carrf- n rttee - Nationalities Division; ne is currently Auditor in the Polish American Citizens' Club.

John was born in Jersey City and is a graduate of Dickinson high and has completed courses at St. Peters’ Institute of I .dus trial Relations.

Charles Przychocki married to the former Satia Jerzowski is the father of two daughters. He is known as *f‘harlie Polo" f'X)m his ball playing at Lynd­hurst High School and througlF out this vicinity.

He has been a supervisor with Curtiss Wright Corporation V Woodridge. N J. for the past 20 years. He ha* completed t h e £uctisa_ _ Wright Corporation F»eld Service Training Courses end as .a resuk he spent five w a rs travelling extensively for his employer throughout Europe Asia. Africa and Australia visit­ing military and commercial air bases, rendering engine service instruction and maintenance ad

vice. He is currently employed asHe has completed courses at a sale-m an wljh R.S. Knapp Co.

the Newark Institute of Techno- Lyndhurst, (Printers). He is a logy pertaining to metals and member of the Lyndhurst Planwelding.

He has served as an elected member of the Lyndhurst Board of Education as Vice-Pro s'dent for a full term between 1952 and 1955. r

He is a member of the St. Michaels' Young Mens Club; St. Michaels’ Holy Name So c etv; Polish American Citizens’ Club; has been president of th » latter, until recently has been active as Political Chairman and is a member of the East End Democratic Club.

William F. Smith 42. is m ar­ried to the former Eileen T. O' Keefe and the father of f o u r ch.ldren. He is a graduate o f St Marys' High School in Ruth erford.

He is best known as "Smitty the Cop" having served as a p3trolman for 17 years with the I.jndhurst Police Department. He has been a resident for ?8 years.

tung Board *Smitty.has be^n activc in the

I yndhurst Midget Footbal Lea­gue for seven years. .

He is a veteran of the U. S. A’-my. having served three years. He is a member of the Sacred Heart Holy Name So- c.rty.

William Demotrician of 731 Elizabeth Ave. Lyndhurst. was borr and raised in Scranton. Pa attending schooh in that -city. He was a dispatcher with the RccJgers Motor Lines a”d was tran^fert'ecf to' the Lyndhurst de pot eighteen years ago.

Bill “Rodgers" owns and op­erates the Kin;??!and Truck Co., Inc.: a firm in Lyndhurst lea§- :ng trucks.

His past employment history irclude* five years as a super­visor with General Motors. Inc.

He is the father oi two child­ren.

Censullo Urges More State AidRec Center

(Continued From Pago One)

administration o f to $12,500 a ruin

noted that thia fund

Russo, former presidenthaired Thomas Larson cam e to the Park Commission, pointedthe microphone and after giving his nam e and adding "of North Arlington," was refused p e r mission to comment

A temporary budget of $09. t!5 was approved.

Appointments were made to

out to the audience that the park commission prov ides num­erous opportunities for “some- tiang to do” such as camping, tobogganing, skiing, ice skating, horseback riding and hiking in its numerous facilities through-

ALFRED H. WOLFF

(ContlmW Pram *»■» ©«•»

' Tmovements on the p a rt of youth m various surrounding commu­nities. In every case that I have read about, it is the gov

urnecesaary. This young group «™ ng body who have taken the kgs a legitimate complaint -p situation in hand, have listened that the twrmlvp should pro- what the >,oun8 people have vide some type of facflity Where t0 and have even gone as they can congregate o u t social- far as <k>in|! something a b o u t iie in an atmosphere other than meeting their requests For ex t t* ir home or sctonl. but one aniP^° Saddle Brook's M ivor which can 'creM e (or'fflem a Ed Kugler, who is also the head healthy diversion as weg as a 14 the recreation depart- docent place to go to. m en . has opened the basement

•TWs facility need not be e ,- f Ha“ “ JnofMitM* antrm . ^ —s-M youth center. Mayor

thJ . Carl Persak and Councilmen <>f

» i kp i 0,0 basement of their town hall in

s r s is s : ^ ■they desire is a t laaat a t*«npa*»ylL?)^'[' place ary center which might only m a n the price of. rental on the part of the township, for it Is * *

t t n nAtnm * , t » lhe *uls the understanding andMy understanding f t * it i» the the ^ a „

the Local Assistance B o a r d : out th e county.Mayor Russo, term to end Dec. Michael Guarino again s u g 31. 1971 and Estelle Shabunia. Rested th e town sefl the 400 665 Marin Ave.. te rm ending Seres on w hich Intercity Is Dec. 31. 1972; and Arthur D. Li- dumping noting t h a t the va. to the Planning Board, term dikes on tkis land have broken ending Dec. 31. 1974. ctam and dumping stopped

An ordinance establishing pro tie rs , twice within the past six cedure for approval of claims months. He said if Viola con- was passed. tinues to dump he ought to

Cheirico suggested one c o m - *pjace funds in escrow’ to pay puny to hold insurance policies fur future dike repair. He ask for the township instead of sev- ed who would pay for the re eral companies as a t present pair if H teaks again after the which causes higher premiums, five-year contract with Viola is

Roeschke asked Curcio why terminated, some streets have garbage col-

arv place of recreation meeting together. Lodi is

aixrther good example of a town’s governing body having

lection three times a week while others have only two. The com­missioner replied that only in business areas is this done.This led to his mentioning strict en fo*cement of anti-Htter laws; ncting that customers t a k i n g market carts off parking lots

of their people by also opening up a youth center. Another ex ample is East Paterson, o n t of the few communities Ltat have a permanent youth center * nd are now in the process of expanding their activities. In every single case the situation was brought before the govern­ing body of the respective com­munity-and these peonle did not relinquish or hide their respon­sibility by diverting the young sters elsewhere.”

youngsters themselves w+» will clean, paint and fix up any pre raises entirely on their own. I strongly feel that the young peo­ple of this community deserve not only our understanding in this m atter but also a Valid

-Jj committment to fulfill t h e i r request.

am pleased that my fellow board members are wiae enough (0 agree with the recommend# t^m of this committee that the request mat.': upon this board by the Y.A.M. be returned to 0 em. I personally am surpri*M that these young people had ORDINANCE NO. 14*5 to be diverted to us by repre AN ORDINANCE ESTAB sm tatives of the township gov- LISHING A PROCEDURE FOR

body and I say this for THE APPROVAL OF CLAIMS J WITHIN THE TOWNSHIP OF

LYNDHURST, COUNTY OF BERGEN AND STATE OF NEW JERSEY

NOTICE Is hereby given that th* above Ordinance was read and considered a second time and passed at a regular meet­ing of the Board of Commis­sioners of the Townshio of Lyndhurst on the 12th day of January 1171 Dated: January 14, 1971 FEES: 55.33

the following 1. The request made by this

group is strictly a township re Fponslbility. It is my f e e l i n g Dial for some reason responsi fcllHy is being shirked and even more serious I think t h e s e young people a re deliberately being deceived, for surely it is crystal clear where the respon "M ity and cooperation lie.

i . In the recent past, articles have been appearing in the ma f a newspapars concerning

Commissioner Walter Janow ski lauded the men of the Pub­lic Works Department for their suow removal work for which he said many residents had sp& ken praise

Christmas Decoration Awards were made by Mr DeMarce of

s rd pushing them thru tJTe Lyndhurst Garden C l u b st-eets will be apprehended, »ho declared that the club, in and that businessmen must (yjoperation with Mavor Russo't place garbage out in weather- Beautification Program made proof containers. He cited the town one of the most beau- ' Lnree candy stores and two tiful a t Christmastime of any drug stores" which put refuse around. He also presented a on.the curb so av*o allow the plaque of appreciation to t h e garbage to be sliewn all over mayor and to the following: the walks . - | |g y a r ' .Award - Dr B, Killeen,

Russo, m his report mention- 461 Kingsland Avenue: Safar's ed that local violators of anoir Park Cleaning Co . 215 Stuyve- M noval ordinances will be pro- gant Ave. secuted. He said some serviceL-iations had plowed their lots Al*o; Mr. & Mrs. John Snow- eitd piled the snow on t i d e- Wilson Ave.; Mr andwalks where it blocked any ^ *XX11S ^ Andrea, 764 Sixth passage of pedestrians. Side- kSt-; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Tab- *alk display of merchandise al- **• Travers Place: Mr. andso cam e in for criticism as did ^ IS- Dominick Saltarelli. 42 people who shovel snow back in ^ ^ ^ t Ave.: Mr and Mrt. Ri- sto the road after snowplows Agnolet. 162 Rivers id#have been thru. Russo told * Ave.; S. Pollina Jewelers, 238 citizen that trucks parked on a S.uyvesant Ave.; and Kearny particular lot for more than 43 ^wieral Savings & Loan^ssoa- hours. an ordinance violation, Stuyvesant & T o n t i n ewill bring the lot owner into ^ ye%-

15 001 *°P Charles Dauler was chairman ro i He noted that super mark- * jud(<„ an<J Mr,et«. after numerous complaints ivtary. of citizens, have been notified itis against the anti-Utter ordin- * “ ------- ---------- -a*ice to take carts beyond the n*urket parking lot and viola • j!>£ will be prosecuted. He said carts are worth $50 each.

Gash reported thiit “ 10 or 15 local residents receive L y n d * hurst welfare aid’ and Querico

Communities where parochial schools cut down the number of publifr shcool children and the amount of state aid should join hands and fight for more help, according to Fred Censullo. pre sident of the LyndhUTsf TBoard cf Education.

Censullo is running lor ree'ec tion in February. The $7.7 mill­ion building program defeat in Lyndhurst has sparked some new thinking on school pro­blems.

‘Taxpayers have reacted to the pressures of the economic situation today." Censullo said.

“We want to form a work ing nucleus where we can bring attention to the prob lems. Communities l%e North Arlington. Eat Rutherford. Ruth eiford. and WaUington might be n terested in the group. We could even cross countv lines to include Secaucus and Kearny.", Censullo said.

“ We are going to emphasize th t fact that a community like Glen Rock can receive t h r ssm e amount of stale aid as Lyndhurst. Our contention is that the peop’e in areas with a high population of parochial school children are bkng pan alized. These children are not counted in the formula of aid given to a community by the slate Department of Educa t’on.

“ What is going to happen to these communites when the parochial school system dies? These pupils will not be able

to come into c o m m u n i t y schools already over-crowded 1 .i nsullo said.

To w n s h i p public schooh now have 3.100 students. Some 1.400 children attend Sacred Heart and St. Michael’s gram ­m ar schools.

Censu'Io said that solit sea­sons will be inaugurated i n township schools in September <;s a result of the referen­dum's defeat. The proposal tailed for a new high school, conversion of the present High

School to a 68 grade middle school, and renovations to six elementary schools.

In Rutherford. Lyndhurst’s neighbor on the north, board president Paul Williams said:

“ I think his (Censullo s) idea is worth a collective a p peal.”

Residents in Rutherford, where crowding in schools is aiso a problem, rejected a 56.5-million expansion plan in October by a 2-1 margin. The, proposal included a 641 grade

m i d d l e school, elementary scnool repairs, and conversion o< the Junior-Senior * High School to a four year high srnool.

Williams agreed that t h e tax burden on the homeowner iveds lightening. He was opti­mistic that a solution will be found by ̂ a commission re­c e n t l y established by Gov. William Cahill to redesign the State's tax structure. r “ I think industry ought t o p iy a larger share, ' he said.

Now bonus interest rate on U.S. Savings Bonds

DRIVECAREFULLY

THE TRUTH THAT HEALS

What Do You

Mean Disease Isn’t Reas?

Th* fullolna utalioiM In Vn» Jen ey will broadcast our new radio nrrien:Atlantic City UMIf)Dover WHANHamilton ton \ \ VIIILong Branch W lil.lt I MWorrlfttown (l»t) WMTR Newark WVNfNewton » WN'NMOcean n g r „ WSI.TPlainfield M ER API. Pleannnnt \ V \ i m iMVineland WWBZ

Now all U. S. Savings Bonds pay5% interest, PLUS a H* bonus when held to maturity. This over­all 5Vi% interest payment means th a t now you get a little b it more money for your money.

T echn ically , h e re ’s how th e bonus works:1. The bonus interest ra te applies

to all new Bonds purchased since June 1, 1970, raising their rate from 5% to 5'/i% when held to m aturity. Series E Bonds, whose m aturity rem ains a t 5 years 10 months, with a first-year rate of 4%, will have the '/i% increase added as a bonus a t maturity. Series H Bonds, with a 10-year m aturity and first-year ra te of A'h%, will receive the bonus in the form of increased semiannual interest checks for their last 5 years,•to y ie ld a n a v e r ­a g e 5>a* fo r th e 10-y e a r p e rio d .

2. There is no reason to cash in Bonds you now h o ld .Y ie ld s on o u t­standing Bonds, p rio r to m atu r-

M sta fo ck in A im rico .nnfcmMinagiiniiii.pii.fc

ity , w ill b e increased by for semiannual interest periods beginning on or after June 1, 1970. For E Bonds, the increase will be payable a t maturity; for H Bonds, through larger semi­annual interest check* for their last 5 years. »

3. For Bonds now in their exten* sion period, yields will be in* creased by approximately \~i% to next m aturity, whenever re­deemed.

4. Finally, all Bond* maturing on or after June 1, 1970 while the bonus is in effect, will receive a' 5vi* yield until next maturity.

Now, more than ever, it’s to your advan tage to buy U. S. Savings Bonds and hold them to m aturity or beyond.

S ign up for Sav­ings Bonds through the Payroll Savings P la n w h e re you work, or the Bond-a- Month P lan where you bank.

U. S . S a v in g s B onds. Now th e y pay a bonus to long­er-term holders.

© @ :^ ̂ h , -tn

-n«4 h i •»«« .mi n«ml ll» 11 MOTH J u 4 fha Advatfaaaa* ‘ ------1

SP-1077B

I

Page 9: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971 H E L E A D E R P R E S S

W ildcats Beat LyrtdhurstLyndhurst’s hard • nosed bas at least two weeks. Geminer 21 markers. Diminutive back- points. Dennis Keihn

PAGE NINB

Varsity team, going all way. Perry s c o r e d

thefive

kfteerg dropped an 81 to 60 de- c :sion to unbeaten East Ruther ford last Saturday at the G ar f:eld Gymnasium.

P u t E ast Rutherford got the tough game it expected. Lynd­hurst, which hasn't won a single game this year, has play ed good basketball.

But East Rutherford had too points, tilling guns and went on to win E ast Rutherford. outscor-iis ninth straight victory. ing the Lyndhurst rive 25 13 at

Coach Rich Hinsicker wcht the end of a quarter, moved with a box-and-one defense to a 40 lead at the inter- a^ainst East Rutherford su- mission but could manage por-star Le» Cason. Four men only 11 pqints in the third plnyrd a«one defense while period as Lyndhurst pulled Stove DeJfJsa had the unen- to within eight points of the viable task af guarding the 7 1< ad at 51-43 at the end of toot-10 Cason. quarter.

Big Les finished with 20 Lyndhurst, scored firstpoints, cne point below his the final fram e but as( nsonal average. E ast Ruth- court press employed bv

250 Cleveland Avenue. Cost i s $1 per trip.

Ski Trip to Craigmer f o r adults arc being planned, f ir s t

. . . . „ and trip was held , J in . 8th.h id been averaging 20 points court operative Dwight Hall, George Schifano were Also in Mrs Jardine ftWfite ft presia game. Larry Gleeson was threw in 18. Becker's total twin figures with q7 and 16. oent of the Ski Club Anyone inalso missing from the Golden wa* his high mark of the year respectively. fur the coming year a t theirBears linkup. while Hall tallied 18 against East Rutherford returns to terested in registering, m a y

The Golden Bears used onlv Palisades Park earlier in the aofon tonigh against St. cat the Parks Dept 49I-0066five men in the gam e with Vill season. John s in Paterson. Lynd- Ski equipment rental and les-Perry. a starter on the Junior R=» "Bums led Lyndhurst in hurst visits Eastside in a

the scoring column wkh 20 Tuesday afternoon game.

L y n d h u r st

Recreation Newsthe

A Tobogganing Trip 1 1 ,ticke«~is Jan . 29th. Cost S2 Camp Gaw is being planned by cash There is a limit of 72 tic- the Parks Dept, for boys and kets — so it will be first come g.rls, a-ges 14 through 21 years first served. Activities open to

man-for man Golden Eagles the Woldcats

backfired and “f ®*e ' °“ Sunda-V' F Aof Dick Vitale Buses will leave from

14th. Lyndhurst residents only Parks Swim trip to Passaic YMCA

sons a re available at Craig-meVe.

Skiers - - Beginners and Ex­perienced: Tho Lyndhurst Ski C ub has once again started its w ifely ski trips. Bus leaVea the Parks Department Off ice .Cleve­land Avenue (5Tf Valley Brook > each Friday at 6:30 p.m. and re turns a t approximately 12:30 a m. Only cost is $2.75 for the «ki lift, rental of equipment if needed and lessons if desired are extra. Please call Parks Department office. 438 0060, to reserve seat on bus or for addi- t'cnal information.

age17th Biddy Basketball

erford playeddefense ___ _______ ____ ________

Lyndhurst was hurt by . the asserted themselves against a t ^ a m - Tobogganning for boys 9 to 13 years ofloss of high-scorer Dan Gemi- tlie press and steadily moved wi^ ** from 12 noon 10 3 n. m. w?11 begin Saturday. Jan. ner who injured his knee i n away. . Those wishing to participate and will run for ten weeks. Bus BY ED CZERMINSKIthe gaime against Passaic. Kim Becker was high point 1,1 ^ Pr°8ram are to get- tic will leave from the Parks Dept. In the opening game of the(tom iner will be sidelined for man for East Rutherford with kets a t ^ arl<s • .25o Geve- at 6 p.m. Those who would like season. Nick’s food Products

la>’.d Ave. starting Monday, Jan L register for the Swim Clob stunned Me Dowell - Me Evoylftth. Deadline for receiving may come io Lhe Parks Dept., Agency. 37 18. with Tom Gra

Corner on Sports

ziano topping all scorers with14 points.

Rich Hutchinson pumped in15 points as the North Arlington F ire Department defeated Jar vns Oil Co.. 38 - 18. Mike Caer- nunski hit for 12 points for the Oilers.

Tem perature Processing Co. ripped Earle Electric Co. 44 8. as Bill Rudowitz and Mike San- dowick collected 14 points and 10 points, respectively.

PBA snuck past North Arlim» ton Recreation. 25-20. With Bill P itterm an and Bob Lefrebvre netting 9 points each. Frank Rafferty garnered 12 points to­ward a losing cause.

In a seesaw battle, Sergeant (Chevrolet ripped Green Bros. Market in the final seconds. 25- 24. Joe Potter with 12 points and Tony Mattarazzo with 10 points shared scaring honors for the victors. Tom Nolan. 8 points. Richie Long. 6 points. •:nd Ollie Stringham, 6 points, were high men for the losers.

In the final gajne, Jchn Mr Vey's 20 points and Togey Will­iam s' 12 points were to much as they teamed up to help F a ­hey’s Bottle Shop overwhelm Food Associates by a score of 7o 21.

Don Zoch Just Too, Too MuchQueen of Peace didn’t fiod St.

Cecilia’s basketball team too tough.

But Cecilia's Don ochj Did the Irish find him tough!

Last Sunday Zoch scored 43 points to 38 for Queen of Peace And. of course. Queen of Peace lost. The rest of St. Cecilia toss ed in 35 points. They Qucfcn :>f Peace could have outscored!

Zoch a junjor, tossed in 18 field goals and added seVen p o i n t s from the free-throw line in recording his 43. He spaced out his points rather evenly, scoring 10 in the first quarter, eight in the second. 13 in the third, and 12 in the f nal period.

St. Cecilia led all the way as Zoch threw in the first two baskets to make it 4-0. J im Oox sank a free throw for-the Queensmcn but the S a i n t s cam e back with a seven point string, five by Zoch and the other two by Bob Walsh, to begin to pull away.

The Saints, with the regu­lars playing all the way, had t^ree nine-pomt streaks »*tor in the contest. Cecilia enjoyed

its biggest burst in the third quarter when it outscored the Queensmen, 24 8.

Paul Zoch. Don’s o l d e r b: other, added 14 points and Charlie Wroblewski chipped in with 13 for the Saints, who are 7 2. Cox tallied 11 points and Bill Larkin had 10 for Queen of Peace. 3 7.

Ricci'sDiner

113 Park Ave. Lyndhurst, N. J.

- 2 » . » o

ICE CUBES SOLD HERE A tS O

If was a strang* coincidence that when Harvard passed over Carlstadt's Larry Catuzzi for Joe Restic they stuck with New Jersey material.

Restic goes to Harvard b y way of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian League.

But before.Restic went to blq tim e coaching he wa* Neptune's High School's mentor, m entor­ing the frosh team there in 1954 and the varsity a year . later.

Restic had played his college football at Villanova and his professional stint with the Phila d elD hia Eagles.

From Neptune Restic went to Brown, then Colgate, an assist­ant in both places. And from Colgate he bounced into t h e Canadian League.

It Is quite something for ol' Harvard to pick a professional for Its football coach. The Ivy League Is changing. They want to win at Harvard just as they do at Southern Cal., Texas, Notre Dafe or any other feet' ball powerhouse.

Maybe Harvard iTreams of go mg to some bowl or other Who can fell?

SHORE TEAMSLyndhurst High Is dropping

out of the Passaic Valley Con­ference. The Bears are seeking a new leanue set-up but are hav inq difficulty.

The possibility Lyndhurst will play independent football should cause no concern - except with the athletic department that that will have to scratch around and use a little Imagination I n putting together schedules.

The restriction^ of league play are a disadvantage In many respects. For one thing, a league ties a school to t h e same set of opponents y e a r after year. There is no variety. And much of the so-called rival ary that develops in league play is spurious at best.

There are hundreds of high schools in New Jersey .Most of them have good athletic depart ments. There Is no reason why Lyndhurst should not go into Morris County, into Essex, into Hudson or into the shore area for opposition.

t im e was when Lyndhurst played teams such as South RfVer and Dover, to name a cdupfe. Why not pick on some shdr'e teams. It would be a nov­elty - and good Iports business- to pray some feifms from other areas Of the staff.YEAR OP NONQUARTER BACKS

The football season just past was described as the year of the quarterbacks. The college brand, that is. Certainly there were some marvelous college signal callers.

But if the college boys were great their counterparts in the professional ranks were just plain lousy. You should excuse the expression.

But when high • paid, ex­perienced men like Johnny Uni- VA and Craig Morton can 't hit relbfrers at 15 yards there must be something wrong with their arms, their heads or their hearts.

These two guys will meet next Sunday in what certainly has to be termed the Battle of the Wooden Arms. It is true that now and then they unveil a long pass. But there Is little duubt that among the quarter backs of the professionals Unl- tas and Morton had to rate as fWo of the worst In history.

We are not talking of the Uni tas of years ago. We are talking of the Unitas who has b a a n

missing on short throws, long throws and medium throws.

And Morton! Here is a man with high school, college and professional experience - a n d he has to wait for his coach to send in plays. And ther* is al­ways a good chance Morton will louse up the plays.

BLOOPER BOWL?The upcoming game between

Baltimore and Dallas may well mean the end of professional football as a real sport. These teams are probably the worst representatives ever to get into iie so-called Super Bowl.

Remember, Dallas is going Into the bowl with only one vic­tory over a major rival: that was over Minnesota. The score: S-0. What a laugh I

It is true Dallas surged in the last part of the season. B u t that was when the patsies came up on the schedule.

Morton has been all year the sickest excuse for a quarter­back ever to get Into a major competition. He has been slew. He has been uncertain. He has­n't been able to get the ball to men a dozen yards away.

This is a quarterback?And Unitas looks tike a tired

businessman who is trying toqet the lawn mowed before Itrains. He has always been anungainly, accidental type o fathlete. In his declining years he as become an old, clumsy type of player.

You have heard of the battle of the quarterbacks?

On Sunday there is going to be a battle between the unquar terbacks of the Yearl Unitas Vs. Morton!

Wow. We urge high school coaches to run some knitting classes next Sunday to k e e p their quarterback away from the silly tubes. Their careers could be destroyed.

MR. Vlt-LAPIANOThere is a kind of Justice a-

bout bowl games....They give guys who have been in t h e shadows for years merely be­cause they are not members of the powerhouse teams a chance to show their stuff....There I s no doubt had Dan Pastorini, the all-everything man for Santa QL?ra, been playing on Notre flame or Southern Cal he would have been better known than O. J . Simpson....Where do y o u find a guy who can run, pass and kick — and all of them su­perlatively, as he showed in the North-South game at Mobile.... And who ever heard of Phil Villapiano until t h e bowl games?....Phil Is the t - 2, 117 pound son of Gus Villapiano, athletic director of Asbury Park High School....After s tar­ring at AP for three years Phil went to Bowling Green a school engaged In playing teams like the ill-fated Marshall eleven In the Blue Gray game and I n the Senior Bowl game Villap­iano, playing linebacker, was the outstanding lineman....The Toronto Argonauts of the Cana­dian League want Phil....He got $1,500 for his first professional game, and a beautiful shiner... But he was happy, happy, hap py. CONSERVATION NOTE. . . A 31 - pound striper caught off Cape Hatteras last week was carrying S tt million eggs....It was just one of thousands of cow stripers that were being netted, many of them 20 pounds and sold for a nickel a pound.... Thirty five pounders were be ing thrown at people for six bucks.... What klndof senseless murder is allowed In our watars?

NORTH ARLINGTON O FF IC E

$ 5 7 ,4 5 1 ,9 4 6IN TOTAL ASSETS

Plus 3 conveniently located offices to serve you!

A S S E T SFirst M ortgage L oan. .................................. $45,486,782.82Loans on Savings Accounts . . s ................... 304,246.07

O ther Loans ................................. *27,503.99Federal H om e Loan Bank S to c k ................ 42S,000.00United S ta tes Governm ent Bonds

and Obligation* 1,824,011.OSO ther I n v e s tm e n ts ...................... 4,028,005.29Cash on H and and In Banks 3,004,606.11Office Buildings and Equipment,

Less D epreciation . . . , : .......................... . . 1,114,539.77Deferred C harges and O ther Assets 457,250.95

*57,451,946.08

Statement of ConditionDecember 31, 1970 1 \

L I A B I L I T I E SSavings A c c o u n ts ............................................. $50,282,470.89

965,000.00 189,902.97

Federal Home Loan Bank Advances O ther Liabilities .T ax E s c r o w ........................................................Loans in ProcessD eferred C re d i ts ........................... .........Specific Reserves

R ESER V ES AND SU R PLU S: VGeneral Reserves . $2,900,129.70Surplus 1,575,047.16

943,219.54484,152.40104,829.10

7,194.32

4,475,176.86

$57,451,946.08

O F F I C E R SDonald J. Montelth

P re s id e n t

Herman Farina V ice P re s id e n t

Robert I-ang V ice P re s id e n t

M argaret T StierT r e a s u r e r

.lame* J . Duffy, Jr. S e c r e ta r y

fieorge A. T urtu rroA s s is ta n t S e c re ta ry

Olympia Toscano B ra n c h M a n a g e r

Matthew T. AcClane, Jr. Comptroller

D I R E C T O R SHerman Farina

ililtor. II. Hodgrft Robert I.aiig

Frank J. Maghcr Leighton R. Carlson Donald J. Montelth

Frederic L. Cobb, Jr.D ire c to r E m e r itu s

Ralph E_ Bever C h airm an

Charles F. Post Vice C hairm en

Saul J. Abraham

A T T O R N E Y SKoch and Koch Gillespie and Gillenpie Masinl and MaNihi

_ p m \% - ^ 2 %p e r 4 PKR & / L *•**ANNITM ANNUM ■ ANNUM ANNI M

In te r e s t fro m d a y of de po*it to d*y of w ith d raw al.

P A V A B L I Q U A R T E R L Y

o u a r J(n « e ott M O N TH S

Minimum $1,000

4 PER ANNUM

G U A R A N T E E D 1 YEA R

M inim um $6,000

G U A RA N TEED 2 YEAR

M inim um *7,600

L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N

MAIN O F F IC E : 614 K E A R N Y AVE., K EA RN Y N J NOftTH A R L IN Q T O N O F F IC E : 80 RIDOE RD LYN DH U I*ST O F F IC E : V A L LEY BROOK AND STU Y V ESA N T A V E S.

M em ber F e d e ra l S a v in g s and L oan In su ran ce C o rp o ra l on

Page 10: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

1 U E L E A U L H I' H E S S THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971

Keep Your Faith, Co To Church Every Sunday And Holy Days

They Called Him Canny Simone !lii Church ServicesLyndhurst

his human life, he demonstra­ted the divine Life. Out of the amplitude of his pure affection, he defined Love. With the af fluence of Truth, be vanquished error. The world acknowledgednot his righteousness, seoirfe it football, died Sunday in

SACRED HEART R.C.CHURCHRidge Rd. A New Jersey Ave.Rt. Rev. Megr. Henry G. J.Beck, Pastor

MASSESDAILY -7:11, 1:90, 9:90, 4:30 p. m.

Set. - 7:00, 1:00, 9:30, 9:09FIRST FRIDAY -

4:00, 7:00, 7:30, fcOO, 9:00, 0:90 p.m.

HOLY DAYS - 0:00, 7:00, 9:00, 9:99, 19:00,I t Neon, 4:10, 1:00 Evening

SUNDAY - 4:10, 7:19, 1;4$, 10:00, 11.1S, 12:1 0 ,1 p.m.- 9:45, 11:99 Auditorium

BAPTISMS - Every Sunday, 2 p.m.

DEVOTIONS —Monday evenings at 7:99 p.m. Miraculous Medal Novona

CONFESSIONS - Saturdays; aves of Holy Days end of First Fridays — J to 5 p.m.; 7 to 9 p.m. Monday eve­ning! after Novena Devotions.

LYNDHURST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Stuyvesant and Tontine Aves. Rev. Norman Smith, Pastor 307 Tontine Ave.SUNDAY -

9:15 a.m. Youth Choir 9:45 a.m. Church School 11 a.m. Divine Worship (First Sunday — Holy Com m union)7-9 p.m. Senior UMYF

MONDAY -

not; but. earth received t h e h<»rmony -his glorified example introduced.”

Services held at F irst Church cf Christ Scientist. E. Pierre-

439-4929 porx & Lincoln Aves.. Ruther­ford. are open to the public and

^vg in at 11 a.m.

Carmine M. Simone, once the player. He was burly and h e r-sided in Lyndhurst all his scourge of *emi professional was fast. Many said that if he life before moving to Florida

Mercy had gone to college he would two and a half years ago. HeHospital. Orlando. Fla. . have’beer? a tremendous star.

When Mr. Simone played fool I,i Mr. Simone’s day tlx* star ball he was known as Caifty. players could be. found on the He was a hard - hitting, fast defense as *well as the offense, moving fullback who was proud Mr. Simone loved bone-crunch of his ability to crash through ing tackles and he gloried in tlie line on the offense and t o make bo noshaking tackles an

u;«s a retired bus driver forthe Community Bus Lines.

"ttTfton, N.J.Surviving Mr. Simone are

his wife, thie former Rose Spi tale: a son. Kenneth, a t home:

ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCHStuyvesant A Forest Aves., lyndhurst, N J .Rev. Covaj T. G rater, Rector

7:15 p.m. Junior High UMYF Office Phone: 431S669

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL PARISHChurch - 149 Copeland Avenue 3rd SATURDAY -

♦th MONDAY —9 p.m. Parents of Teenagers

1st TUESDAY — r f 7:30 p.m. Council on Minis­

tries2nd TUESDAY -

7:30 p.m. Church School Board

WEDNESDAY - 7:90 p.m. Choir rehearsal

1st THURSDAY —Women's Society of Christian Service

2nd A 4th THURSDAY - 9 p.m. The Graduates

3rd THURSDAY —1 p.m. Mothers & Pr* Schooi Children

near Riverside Avenue Rectory — 197 Klngslaryj Ave.,

at Willow Avenue Phone: 935-1177Rev. Edward J . Hayes, Pastor Rav. Henry Naddeo, Assistant MASSES -

Saturday: 4:39, 7:39 p.m. Those who attend fulfill Sun day obligation.Sunday: 7, 9, 9, 19. 11, 12:90 Weekdays: 7:39 a.m. and 7:19 p.m.

CONFESSIONS - Saturdays and Evenings of Holy Days, 9-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday befo day, f to 9 p jn .First Friday before Mess

BAPTISMS - Sunday at t p.m. by

7 p.m. 3 F

REED MEMORIAL UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

291 Stuyvesant Avenue

Church Telephone: 439 7497

WESTMINSTER UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH The Rev. Lee R. Bundgus Ridge Road and Page Avenue

939 7920

SUNDAY —9:00 a.m. Holy Communion 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion, Church School11:00 a.m . Holy Communion, 1st A 3rd Sunday Morning Prayer, 2nd A 4th Sunday

1st MONDAY - 8:00 p.m. Vestry

TUESDAY - 3;30 P.M. Brownies

WEDNESDAY - 10:00 a.m. Morning Prayer, Holy Communion 7:00 p.m. Boy Scoiits

THURSDAY —4:45 p.m. Family Choir 7:30 p.m. Senior Choir

1st FRIDAY —7:00 p.m. Cub Scouts

SATURDAY r - 9:09 p.m. Alcoholics Anony­mous

HOLY DAYS —As announced.

the defcn:Mr. S iA n e played with such

teams asfthe Iroquois A.C. Its home grounds wfcre the fields bc’ow Marin Avenue. There the Iroquois met some of the strong est teams in the state.

An annual game was that be tween the Sapphire A.C. of of Carlstadt and the Iroquois.

Mr. Simone was a stand-out

the fact be usually emerged three sisters. Mrs. Irene Sanfi from them uninjured. lippo and Mrs. Risa Mararac-

Mr. Simone’s brother Michael ci. both of Lyndhurst and Mrs. a survivor, also had a nofed Lucy Cutro of Brooklyn. N. Y. caieer in athletics: Michael was and a brother. Michael Si- at star semi professional cat mone of Lyndhurst. cher. Later be (ftanaged and Funeral services were at 9 coached championship semi - a.m. Wednesday at the Nazare professional teams. Memorial Home. Inc. to bo

But Canny was the b e s t fv Mowed at 10 a.m. by a high k -own for his tremendous speed r e q u i e m Mass a t Sacred and durability. Heart R. C. -Churth. Lynd

Born in Nutley, N.J. he had hurst.

Final Game Of Jimmy Banksson C. Smith University in Char k tte , N.C.. Mr. Banks had been arrested Dec. 20 for possession of heroin and several days later for selling heroin. He was out

For Jimmy Banks the cheers over Lyndhurst in 1964 was are over. found dead in the bathroom of

The youngatQr who played !us apartm ent in Hackensack, hard, at times brilliant football His full name was Lucillias fnr East Rutherford H i g h J (Jimmy) Banks. He was 24.School early in the sixties died Crowds remember him as the on bail on both charges, of an overdose of heroin Friday surging halfback on some o f night. according to Hackensack the better team s of East Ruther

ford High.Jim m y’s wife Suzy and a

friend discovered the body iii the apartm ent at 84 Essex St.

An accounting major at John

for

po.ice.

Dave, whose last game "East Rutherford High was a 6-0 Thanksgiving Day victory

Mr. Bank's death was the se­cond from drugs in Bergen Co. this year. Barry Schiller, a jun­ior high school teacher died of an apparent heroin- overdose Jan. 2 in Fair Lawn.

Michael Sluice Sr.

MARRIAGES — Arrangements to be a l the Rectory as i

NOVENAS - Miraculous 7:31 p.m.St. Anthony pJH.

RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION - Wednesday, S:1S p.m.

pier familiesREGULAR SERVICES -

first Fri- Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.Sunday Worship Service-11 a.m.Sunday. Jan. 17 —9 45 a.m. Bible School classes

for all ages 11 a.m. Morning Worship

Guest Minister: The Rev. William N. Lovell-. Nursery and infant care is provided during the morning service

2 p./n. Combined meeting of the Women's Association circles.

Thursday. Jan. 14 - 8 p.m. Choir rehearsal

luesday. Jan. 19 -—8 p.m. Bible School teachers and staff meeting.

Michael Sluke Sr.. 73. of 295W.llow Ave.. Lyndhurst. diedJan. 4. a t Dover General Hospt a l after a short illness.

Mr. Sluke. who retired i n1972. was first mate of a tug

« beat of the New York HarborOV' Marine Department of the

Pennsylvania Railroad for 40 . ,_____ .. ■ years. He was a parishioner ofparents are four brothers, « __, „ . „ . .. ^ Sacred H eart R.C. Church and

Christine PandorfChristine Pandorf. i n f a n t

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rocco Pandorf. 430 Page Ave.. Lynd

Church-going families are hap- hurst, died Jan . 6 at New YorkHospital. She was bom

Surviving in addition to her

Russell. Thomas. Rocco Jr. and William, and a sister. Kath- etine. all a t home, and h e r grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Vic tor Pandorf of E ast Ruther­ford and George Roberts of Carl stadt.

il Monday,

Tuesday, 7:39

a member of its Holy Name Society and the Seafarers' In­ternational Union. J e r s e y Ctty. Born in MoAdoo. Pa., he had lived in Lyndhurst 2 3 years and before that for 30 years-in-Jersey City.

Surviving are his daughter. Mrs. Rody Grasso of Lake Hopa

Fiorentino Gall of E ast Ruth icong: three sons. Theodore of erford died January 4. He is Wvckoff, Michael J r . of Ulster, survived by his children. Mi P a , ^ Jotm P . of East Bruns chael alio Angelina P u tfa . wick. a brother. John S. of Jer lie* Mas pro deceased by his city, and seven g r i n d -

1

■ t> LinesT

%from

M r h , :

P ^ \ % ' ■ '■L. H. 5 .

Gy Christine Falco

Fiorentino Gall

ST. MICHAEL’S R.C. CHURCH RMb* Ro*4 « Pag* Avanua Rav. Ladialaua J . WHcaawafcl. R adarFr. Anthony F.Fr. Martin S t a r Sunday M a m : T, ( , 9. R and

t 1:M a.m.Waafcday H u m : J, 7 M , l:M

ST. MATTHEWS EVANGELI­CAL LUTHERAN CHURCH VaHay Braak Ava. A Travan FI Rav. E m ail Cf. Lind—r. Paator OfBca: US Travar* Plac* ■Ffcaaa: O M 1M *:1J « 1»:4S Warship Sarvlcaa t: tS a jn . Sunday School

LATTER DAY SAINTS OF JESUS CHRIST A. E. Starfcs, Paster Sarvlcas Evary Sunday al tho Adsnlram M sssalc Tample.B I Stcaad Ava., Lyndhwsl

I t a jn . — Church School I t a.m. — PraacMng Sorvlcc

V/ESTSflNSTER- PRES Week of Jan. 14 —Thursday —

7:30 p.m. Choir Rehearsal Friday —

9:30-12 Office Hours Monday —

8 p.m. Deborah Circle 8 p.m. OOCXT Meeting at Lyndhurst Methodist

Tuesday —9:3(W p.m. Preparation of Annual Report

Wednesday —9:30 a.m. Dorcas Circle j :30 p.m. Communicant's Class

v ifc Madeline, and a son Anth ohy. Survivors also include a

LYND b other. Joseph, sisters Clara Bango and Jg^ephine Romano.

The Ski Club took its first trip Friday night to Snow Bowl. The club is planning it's next ex petition for Friday. Jan . 29th Monday is being collected now.

On Thursday, Jan. 28th. the Lyndhurst High School Concert

duhiren. His wife, the former Hand will give its annual win-

John Nissl

r iR S T CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTISTE. Plerropont A Lincoln Aves.Rutherfoed New Jersey Branch of the Mother Church- The First Church of Christ Sci­entist, of Boston, Mass.Sunday Services — 11 a.m.Wednesday Evening Meeting at __-—9:15 o'clock at which te s t im o n ie s 51" - ****? Budz Cemik.

John Nissl. 88 of Cuddoback- v:!!e, N.Y.. formerly of Carl­stadt. died Jan. 5 in Sunnyside Hospital.

Bom in Germany. Mr. Nissl came to this country as *a ycung man. He lived m Carl S>adt 30 years before moving to Pert Jervis 25 years ago. Mr. Nissl was a retired machinist with the Amja Corp.. Brooklyn. He was a mcrrtber of the Mas onic Order.

Surviving arc Ms wife. Bertha and two daughters. Mrs. Schmidt of Walden and Michael Melofcik of Carl stadt: five grandchildren and 14 prcat -grandchildren.

Anna Sims, died In 1971.

Funeral Services will be held Thursday Jan . 7 m McAdoo and interment take place in St. Michael's Cemetery there, fol lowing a funeral m ass in St. Mi chael’s Byzantine Cathedral. Arrangements are being han­d e d by the Steever Funeral Home

te r concert. The band, directed by Mr. Jam es Oliphant. w i l l p’ay classic and contemporary selections.

The Lighthouse. L. H. S. s schooi newspaper is pi am ting i

town wide drive for D. A R. E D. A. R. E. is an addict rehabili tation center in Newark. The center is run by ex - addicts. D. A. R. E. relics on eontribu tions to continue its work, it has Jhe same needs as a family - canned goods, soap, toiletries, etc. Some Saturday in the very near future a Lighthouse staff member will be knocking a t }<ajt door asking for k eontribu t:on — try to give a t least one can of soup — it’s for a very good cause. *

Queen Of Peace’s HotlineMrs. Rose Robertaza

Mrs. Rose Robertaza. 79 of 237 Court Ave. Lyndhurst died Jan. 10 a t South Bergen Hospi tal Hasbrouck Heights.

Mrs. Robertaza. bom in Vera Newark, had lived in Lynd Mrs. hurst £7 years. Her husband

J*iseph. died in 1924. She was a communicant of St. Mary s R.C. fJhurch Rutherford.

IX>UANNMILONE

ROHAT.VNROVI

Mrs. Mary Budz CsrnikShe is survived by four

Ceorge and Victor, ofsonsEast

87

LYNDHURST HEBREW CENTER333 Valley Brook Avenue, be­tween Ridge Rd. A Stuyvesant Ava., Lyndhurst Rev^DevId Brawn Cantor Study: 439-9S92

! 93S-9744

RUTHERFORD BAPTIST CHURCH

John Dexter Greenleaf 4394795

"The Church of the Royel Wel-

of Christian Science healing are given. Reading Room at 5 Sta­tion Square open effective April 1, Monday thru Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Closed legal hol­idays.

What life really means in the light of the Christianity taught by Christ Jesus will be consid ered Sunday at Christian Sci enee church services.

TMe Lesson-Sermon on ‘Life” conUins.these words of the Mas ter Christian: ’T he thief com cth not. but for to steal, and* to kill, and t/> destroy. I am come

Grand St.. Garfield, died Jan. o in St. Mary s Hospital. Passaic, a Mrsafter a short fitness. " Ha?ao of Lyndhurst.

Mrs. Cemik resided in p a r field for the past 57 years. She w rs a parishioner of St. J o s ­eph's R. C. Church. Passaic, end a member of its Rosary So ciety. also of St. Michael’s So- ejety of Passaic.

Her husband. Frank, died in 1958. Mrs. Cemik is survived by her tow sons. John of East Rutherford and Joseo tti Garh

Coed gym classes are being Teshima. Mark Duffy. Chrisxrvwvc .uni VKMH raasi introduced this week a t Q. P. P.^gdanowitz. Tom Anderson.Rutherford, Dominick of Saddle Thc ,AivUy that wiU **' dnd Kerk Makowski. the stageB ook and Frank of Lyndhurst Is s<)“arc df nc‘7 f T h e m^ « r .

' Joseon * ve n tearmn^ aU L̂1Cvarious dances since mid-Octo ber and are now preparing to teach the steps to the boys. This cliange is a considerably b i gLittle Leaque

Moms W ill Meet departments have separateThe Women s Auxiliarv of the <' '4SSOT and «'m continue to. Be

N'-rth Arlington U ttle longue ,ide» ^ lunch, researcn will meet Tuesday. January 19 cm ters. assemblies and some at 8:30 p.m. In Calo Sass VFW *rt clas,es aPe coed T’w S' 0

With the cooperation of the teachers, the girls’ Stu-co has formed a Curriculum Commit­tee. to study what subjects

step for the school because both ™ “ld. ^ be* 10 uffc^ th<' slu

Post 4697. River road. M rs M ane Higgins, president, will

girls a re not aware of the sub joctt necessary for their en­trance into college, and t h i s committee would look into these problems.

field: three daughters. Mrs. Boley Ogonowski of Garfield Mrs.

THE LORD'S DAY - » :« a.m . Bibl. School 11 a.m . Mamlng Worship, Youth Fallawahip 7 p.m. Evangallsllc Sorvlco

I p.m. Haur of Blosalng

thst they might have life, and Frank^Papp of Garfield Miss An thai they might have it more abundantly."

\ supporting passage . from Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy states:

"Through the magnitude of

the Minor League are especial­ly invited to attend.

jiela Czemik a t home: two sisteH in Chicago: five g r a n d will be films taken at the Aux children and tour great-grand il ary 's installation dinner, ch Idren. • liefreshm ents will be sen-ed

’ T

co is also planning to havom ore joint meetings. BITS AND PIECES - T h e

Two one act plays are being Mission Club ranked sixth in planned by the Drama Club. -d. .nations for 1970 with $6.81 per The first. Becket. will have as capita. The girls' student body main characters Mr. Mangin. has proposed a Winter Cotillion

Thc program for the evening tlie dram a coach, and Father to the faculty. This will be sep- Caprio. Come Into the Garden, a ra te from the Senior a rd Ju Maud, will be next. Directed by nior proms, but the possibilities P.oslyn Rovi, it features Ann of having one arc dim. '

. - - ■ . --------

li'i Church ServicesNorth Arlington

QUEEN OF PEACE CHURCH North Arlington 'Rev. Msgr. Thomas J. Touhy,

PastorRev. Joseph M. Quinlan Rev. Jam es J. Brady Rev. John Bonner *Rev. Gerald CoprioRectory — 19 Frenklln Place,991-7660Convent — 19 Franklin . Place, 997-2141Christian Brothers Faculty House — 290 Ridge Road, 991-0235 MASSES - 4Saturday: 7:90 p.m. (those who

eHend fulfill Sunday obliga­tion)

Sunday: 4:30, 7;30, 9, 10;30a.m., 12 noon, and 5;30 p.m.. In the Church10:30 a.m . in the Auditorium

Eve of Holy Dry — 7:30 p.m. (Those who intend fulfill their Holy Day obligation)

Holy Days: 6^0 t 7:30, 9, 10;39 a.m ., 12 noon, 9:30, 7:30 p.m.

BAPTISMS —2nd A 4th Sundays of the month a t 2 p.m. Both moth­ers and fathers a re required to make an appointment with a priest to register their child and to receive necessary In* st ruction.

MARRIAGES - should be arrenged with the Priest at least 2 months in ad vanco.

CONFESSIONS - Saturdays and evening of Holy Days and First Friday,

4-5:30 p.m., and evenings after Mass.

Alpha Omega: 4th Monday of month, 9 p.m.

Men's Club: 1st Monday of the month, 9 p.m.

Church Council: 2nd Monday of the month, 9 p.m.

Church Bowling League:Every Tuesday, 9:30 p.m.

Ladies Guild: 3rd Wednesday of the month, 9 p.m.

Pre-Confirmation Class: EachWednesday, 3:30 p.m.

Confirmation Class: Each Thursday, 7 p.m.

Senior Choir: Each Thursday at 9 p.m.

Church Social Club: 3rd Satur- day

tast RutherfordCHRIST METHODIST CHURCH East Rutherford N.J.The Rev. Hae-Jong Kim,Pastor

ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCHSunset Avenue and York Road North Arlington, N.J.The Rev. Frederick C. Fox, III, Priestin-Charge Office Phone: 991-7252 Rectory Phone: 991-3137

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHRidge Road A Ilford Avenue North Arlington, N. J .Phone: 991-3464Henry C. Kreutzer, PastorWorship Services — 9 A 11 a.m.

BILTMORE PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE 119 Biltmore Street North Arlington, N.J.Rov. Joseph Lattell Telephone: 999 9019 SERVICES - Sunday School Sunday Worship Prayer, Tuesday Mid-week Service,Thursday

9:39 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 7:30 p.m.

7:30 p.m.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF ARLINGTON650 Kearny Ave., Kearny, 9M. The Rev. Robert E. Stetson, Minister.Mrs. Robert Heff, Minister of Music9:45 a.m. — Church School lor

all ages.11 a.m. — Morning Worship 6 p.m. — Jr. and Sr. Baptist

Youth Fellowship Ail are welcome.

GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 233 Rldge Road,North Arlington Pastor, Charles M. L. Oberkehr 213 Ridge Road Church Phone: 991 2893 Parsonage: 991-7140 Sunday School — 9 a.m. Services — 9 A 10:30 e.m. Luther League: 2nd end 4th

Sunday of month, 7 p.m.

THE FIRST PRESBYTERIAH CHURCH OF CARLSTADT 457 Division Avenue <39 5526Rev. William G. Doxsey

9:15 a.m. Church School11 a.m. Divine WorshipYouth Meetings — Sunday

John Garippa Narr.ed College "Who's Who"

John Garippa. son of the Rev. Jol.n Garippa and Mrs. Garippa of 45 York road. North Arlington has been named to the 1970 edi tion of Who's Who in American Lniversitic-s and Colleges.

A 1967 graduate of North Arlington High School. Garippa is majoring in economics at Rutgers University. Newark. A senior, he iias served as pre sident of the Economics Chib for the past two years and is chairman of the student c o m niittec for curriculum evalua t'on. He has been named to the oean’s list for the past three years.

Cited by the Essex County Children's Shelter for establish ing a music program at the Shelter. Garippa is church or­ganist a t the Christian Apostolic Ciiurcii. Kearny, where Ik* is a iso choir director.

North Arlington Girl Young Model

Sheri Zintel m 35 Birchwood drive. North Arlington, w a s graduated Friday from Barbi zon School of Modeling. Mont Clair. She received a diploma at ceremonies held a t the school.

The 13-yearold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mel Zintel was t'.ie youngest member of t h e class at the Bart>izon School. Sue is planning a career as a pnotographic model.

Sheri, an eighth grade stu­dent a t North Arlington High School, is a member of t h e Carlstadt Turn Vercin and plac ed fifth in tlie November 15 Turn Verein competition a t Del aware in which members from Niw York. Delaware. Pennsyl­vania and New Jersey partici paled. She will be competing In Another four-state competition on February 14.

lm enr , ousan Moldt of A115n Drive, /n lo r th .Arlington, has been prt>

mated to manager of Joan Bari Bags and Gems. Bergen Mall. Paramus. effective February \.

Miss Moldt was formerly as- •nstant manager of Joan Bari. Newark.

BURK Funeral Home

DIRECTORSJohn L. Burli — Paul Konarslci

52 Ridge Road * Lyndhurst, N . J.939-0490

XS3

STEEVER FUNERAL HOME

Successor To Collins Memorial Stuyacaaot Aaawaa Lyndhumt,

2 0 1 -9 3 9 -3 0 0 0

Waldo J. Ippolito Funeral Home

425 Ridge Road Lyndhurst, N. J.N. J

438-4664

Dependable Service Since 1929

NAZARE Memorial Home

403 R id*.

Inc.JO SE PH M. NAZARE. M fr.

R o.d L jtnA ural,

UA-7272

N J

PAROW Funeral Home

SERVIN C EVERY RELIGION

H E N R Y S. PA R O Wn iR ttT fm

IKS R id * . Rd•M-7SS5

N orth A rling ton

Page 11: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14 ,1971PAGt ELSTON

L jn d h n r s t L ib r a r y N otcwby Bernard Rosenzweig In order to be of greater ser­

vice to the community, the Lyndhurst Public l ib ra ry Aa* altered its hours. We will A w be open during the following hours:

Monday & Friday — 1 to 9

hurst History Hunters, is in its second year. Co-sponsors of the dub are Mrs. Jean Fox and Miss Carol ROrowski. both tea­chers at Franklin School.

This year’s officers' staff in­clude: Andrew Dingsor, presi-

* . — - dent: Colleen O’Neill, vice pre-Tuesday & Thursday — 9 to 5 sident: Carol Niebo, secretary; Wednesday — 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. I.auren DiTonto, treasurer and We will be open from 12 noon Sandra Zablovsfcy, correspond-

to 1 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednes- :ng secretary, day and Thursday. Program Chairmen are Arth-

In keeping with our belief that u r Hendela and Robert De Mar- t'ie library |and community tJno* (Robert is also vice presi- rhould have as much contact as ^ent the State organization), possible, jve now have ar- O-her m^pabers include Janet rarxgements which help in this Urgolo. Eileen Dowling. Brian

Balodis. Glenn Ambrose, and

itted .for two years and has ac- Mrs. Frank PenoD a, presi coated for membership children dent, and Mrs. Bruce Oliver, cf 4 and 5 years old. TTie pur chairwoman of the L.J.W.C. dur pose at this club is to unite the mg 1970. greatly encouraged the members in activities that growth of these library p r o - would promote a greater inter- grams. Last year, a Junior est in service and the princi- Library Club was also organ- oles and practices of active cit- ized by the L.J.W.C. as a chil- izenship. These purposes a re dren’s library program, admirably displayed in the chil- The library in its turn has at- d-en’s program which this Club tempted to aid in community

areaThe Junior Jerseymen of the

New Jersey Historial Society vill be meeting in the L y n d - hurst Public Library New Jer- 3‘ yana Room. The local charter group chose the name of Lynd *** hurst History Hunters. I would like to thank Miss Carol Borow- ski for the following informa­tion on the group.

The Junior Jerseym en

Jam es Kaminski The members have b e g u n

working on plans for their anti­pollution campaign, using post­ers and a pamphlet to be pub-

They will'continue work on their compilation of a .history of Lyndhurst which will include interviews and photographs.

It is the library’s hope that when this compilation is com-

sponsors and runs.

Mrs. George Woertz, Mrs. Pe ter Amato and Mrs. I,ewis Man £< rpan run this program. They teii stories to the children, play £arpe$. .and have worked out a delightful program.

The Peter Pan Club has a spe r f ic form at — stories, .pro­grams, and games are geared toward a weekly them e i.e.; as a two-part safety program, in­struct children how to cross streets, meaning of traffic lights and visit with local policemen.

The Peter Pan Club was an Hall on January 18, 1971 at expansion of a half-hour reading 7:00 P.M. prevailing time or as program which had been ar-fl <>on thereafter as can be heard, ranged for the children. To connider for ronflrmatlon

programs by disseminating lit- wlien possible. It is our hopethat in the future we may find o\her ways to hofp^he commun­ity.

TOWNSHIP OF LYNDHURST

-fcKGAL NOTICE CONFIRMATION OF

ASSESSMENT REPORT Notice is h-rehy given th a t

the Board of Commissionem of the Township of Lyndhurst N. J., will hold a Public lli-:»r infc in the Council Room, Town

the report of the Assessment ( oinmi<tsinn for benefits accni- ing by reason of the improve. mMit* made upon, Tyler Street from Thomas Avenue northeast. «*rly to the dead-end thereof as authorized by Ordinance No. 139!).

AU persons and interest* af. fee ted thereby shall be heard.

Herbert W. Perry Township Clerk

Dated: January 7, 14, 1971Fees: $12.88

StUt n! brf ? °f we will be able to" add .the New Jersey. H .stom l Soce- copy * lhis hjgtory to ^ New' Jorseyana Room shelves.The student groups joining • This group also plans to par-

throughout New Jersey are ticipate ' in statewide activities chartered independently. of the Jerseymen. The annual

The state program was found- Winter Holiday a t High Point id in 1962. and is designed to S^ate P ark (which will include e./courage New Jersey s stu- tne first bi-state meeting be- de.its to learn more about their tween Pennsylvania and New state and their responsibilities Jersey junior historians), the as jtsi citizens. The s t u d e n t annual convention, and a com- members of our local group biation spring picnic and con were chosen on the basis of Beach.tU ir common interest in New There is a busy year ahead Jersey s history, and their en- for this group of energetic and thusiasm and dedication to the enthusiastic Lyndhurst young 5 K s of the Jerseymen Club, people, who are proud to be cit- These 5 R ’s a re Researching, ijens of their town and their Heading, Restoring (and pre- State.serving with visible reminders The second contact with ttie of our past). Reproducing rem- Lyndhurst Public is with nants of our past (through the Lyndhurst x Junior Woman'? drawings) and Rendering the Club. This contact has resulted valuable knowledge gained to in a necessary and well receiv- fe.low students, community and ed children's program — the

k* Peter Pan Club.This local group, the Lynd- The Peter Pan Club has ex-

MARVEL STORE405 K earny A ve., K earny

O pposite T ow n HaU — 991-3818

TOW '.SH IP OF I .V M lim iS T

I.KfiAI. NOTICE CONFIRMATION OF

A-i'F.SSMKVT REPORT Notice is li reby given th.»t

tlie Board of Commissioner* of the T.iwnshlp «*f LyntlSn «*t, N. J., win hold « Public Hear. ii'K the < ouncii Roam. Town llall- on January 18, 1971 a t 7:00 P.M. prevailing time or as soon thereafter as can be heard. To consider for confirmation the report of the Assesament Commission for benefits accru-

Ing by reason of the Improve, ment made upon, Van F.yck Court from Kingsland Avemte northeasterly to the dead-end, thereof as authorized by Ordin. luice No. 1407.

All persons and Interests af. feeted thereby shall be heard.

Herbert W. Perry Township Clerk

Dated: January 7, 14, 1971 Fees: *12.88

TOWNSHIP OFl y n d h u r s t

LEGAL NOTICE CONFIRMATION OF

ASSESSMENT REPORT Notice lb hereby given th.it

the Board of C.oinmisHlnnarti the Township of l.yndlui N. J.. will hold a Public Hear injf in the Council Room, Town llall on January 18, l!);i j.t 7:00 P.M. prevailing t rue or as soon thereafter as can be heard. To consider for confirmation the report of the Assessment Commission for benefits ac4>ru. in* by reason of the Improve, ments made upon. Summer

Avenue from Sixth Street to Seventh Street thereof as auth­or I zed by Ordinance No. 1433.

All persons and interests af. feeted thereby shall be heard.

Herbert W. Perry Township Clerk

I):it«d: January 7, 14, 1971 Fees: $12.88

r.« or uirst,

"G irl In Soup"

A r M e a d o w b r o o k

The fly in the soup of the oldv u<k vilie jobs was transform <•.! into a ^irl by Terence Frisby v' ':* n he wrote the play that be i .me a'London and Broadway

m»sh hit. On Jan. 28. “ There's • G tI 'in My Soup” will open at

t o Meadowbrook Theatre Res mrant in Cedar Grove with

Van Johnson starring as the American gourmet writer , and connoisseur of women.

In this hilarious comedy about gastronomy and seduction, the sophisticated food andAvines au thority who lets himself get trap

ped by a 19 - year old siren. Tnty meet a t a midnight party and he brings her home to his smartly furnished home f o r what he thinks will be another gay romance.

The girl who has left her long haired mod sweetheart, upsets his practiced approaches b timing his maneuvers. Despite♦he comic retreats end advance

their mating game, successtv'lcws and tfc< y spend a bliss­ful fortnight on a wine tasting jaunt in France. Hut. lasting success is not for the hero. On their,return , the shagey boy friend appears and - well - Cas­anova embarks on the next se­duction which beckons on t h e - t n!ep?lone.

“There is a Girl in My Soup” is just the right entertainment for lifting midwinter spirits. It will be a t the Meadowbrook thru Feb. 28.

DRIVE CAREFULLY

A Caribbean Carnival

SALE blow G O IN G O N

Drapes — '/2 O ff Special Selection O f Dis­continued Numbers

Tailored Duralon Curtains t " 2.00 pr.WHITE OR COLOR

A Limited Number O f Bedspreads Are Specially Priced.

Cafe, T ie r and Tailored C urtains $1.00 PairU»e M aster Charge, BankAmerinird. Or lay .A w ay Plan

Open » T ir 9 Thum. * Fri. — Other

Cold Beer Wines & LiquorsFree Delivery

Complete Catering ServiceWEDDING — BANQUETS

PARTIES — ETC.•

HOME MADE Cole Slaw Baked Beam

Potato Salad Macaroni SaladClam Chowder

•NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS

SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERSHOME MADE

KISZKA and KIELBASY

Hours Daily: 8 A.M. to 11 P.M.

S U N D A Y 8 A .M . to 1P.M.

GARDENDelicatessen

'4 1 8 Page Ave. (Cor. Chaae) LYNDHURST, N .J.

W E 9 - 2 9 5 0

Our new building is complete, and we want you to join us at our Opening Celebration. W e're having a Caribbean Carnival in mid­winter to chase the snow aw ay— with palm trees, calypso music, and tropical punch.

Come in with your straw hat and tropical print attire, or come as you are.

Saturday, January 16th 10:00 a.m . to 3:00 p.m.Free Souvenirs Free Balloons Free Refreshments

Sweepstakes ContestA Sweepstakes Contest that anyone can enter from January 16th through .January 22nd.

First Prize ^ = » —Set of luggage

.Second Prize Ten-speed blender

GiftsGifts for new savings or checking accounts of $50 or more

Beacon Thermal Blanket7 2 ' x 90" machine washable, non-allergic— warmth without weight

Red Cap Fire Extinguisher * Protect your home, car, or boat—

I.C.C. and Coast Guard approved

Corningware Menuette Set1 pt. covered saucepan 1 Vi pt. covered saucepan 6 V2" covered skillet

Agfam atic 126 Instant-Load CameraPrecision-made lens, automatic shutter speed adjustment for flash, automatic flashcube rotation

GiftsGifts for new savings cccounts of $5,000 or more

Corningware Starter Set

Shelton Deluxe All-Purpose Tool Kit

Peoples Bank of South Bergen C ounty

192 Paterson PJank Road,Corner Gotham Parkway Carlstadt, New Jersey 07072

Martin J. Dannenfelser, President

Page 12: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

L t a i> t K i K h. A »

LETTERS™™ EDITOR.TO LETTER BOX WRITERS:

No latter will b« published unless II l» slflned. You may rcqiiMt the! warm ba with­held, but communication must contain your nama an# address.“Roeschke turns fi*ht on

County” : such sad headlines and half of his fight apparently dedicated to straightening out Jaw enforcemtnt Or the sheriff's office.

PLE1A3E. Mr. Roeschke, beg you, don’t give up. we need you here in Lyndhurst .to h iip us straighten out our pol Ice commissioner. Commission- , .e r Russo uses the same method you described for picking our p / ic e departm ent appointments Political patronage exists right here in your own town. How can

year 19W.I can aasune you that your

kindness to us went a long way to the staoeeas of our activities.

Jatnes P Gallagher. PGK

D ear Gentlemen:I would like to dedicate this

le tter to our wonderful Police n<f*artment of North Arlington.

As I sit here, and recall that wintry ni|fht of Jan. 7. If?®, the

Recreation will be the theme of the meeting for the Evening Membership Dept, of the Wo­m an's Q ub of I*yndhurst. Thurs

. , . . . . .. . day. Jan. fcl a t Lyndhurst High, enjy pleasant thing that c o m « Commissioner

T ? 15 t h c * ’ y, ‘he P**” cf Racrertkm and Parks. Jo- treated me when the carriedm e down the front steps on a

the steps were asJaet cf ice. I had fallen andto re the ligaments in my kneewhich is extremely painful. Notonly did they bring m e to WestHudson Hospital for x-rays.

i H U K a i A l , JLAiVL A l Q i * , l » U

•A . A very nice officer. Jtxpes through the Youth Conservation O’Connell, took Us there a u d Dopt to r UNICET. The Sodal waited for us while David was Service Dept, will collect used thoroufthly examined. Christmas cards and .cfrilA-en*

1 know a lot of people have books for schools in rW f a r an awful lot to say about the po east and the Caribbean, lice department, but to my hus- Every two years the Evening band and I. they a re the kind- Membership Clubs throughout

state of New Jersey work o n ohe. Project. The selection for vote for 1971 1972 will be either Camp Mary H eart, a camp for crippled children or Inte- grety. Inc. a dope rehabilitation center in Newark. Lyndhurst Evening M embership Dept, will vote their selection a t the re­gular meeting Jan . 21.

American Home Dept, will meet at the home of Mrs. Hen ry Jacques. 517 W eart Ave. Lyndhurst. Tuesday. Jan 12. at S p.m. The Club cook book will be prepared.

est people who a re very dedicat ed. and act in the line of duty.

Doris E . Whitehead

Carruci Speaks To Woman's Unit

gUCJt

you fight it some place else and lp*r Cf “ b a f • and > f* cd ™ up and brought me home. Inot here and why?M Burnett

MRS. JAMES McNAMARA MISS ANTONIETTA CIOLINO

Miss Constance Cecilia Crogsbride’s brother John B r u c e Mrs. Lina Ciolino of Lynd; of Brooklyn. N.Y.of Towscn. Maryland and Mr. James Joseph McNamara of Lyndhurst. were married in the Church of the Immaculate Con ception. T o w s o r . on December 26. Father Brian Rafferty of

C-ms ushered with John Wald- hurst has made known t h e ron. er-gagement of her daughter

A receptionnat Green Spring AntontotU to Pietro BiondolliloInn Chib followed the wedding. _

After a honeymoon in Acapul­co. Mexico, the couple w i l l

crarn^i-the church officiated at the mrJce their home in Saci12:30 ceremony.

The bride, daughter of Mr. The bride is a graduate of thepnd Mrs. JohnL . Cross, 1307 University of Maryland.Marfcarette Ave.. had as her The bridegroom, son of Mr.m«id of honor. Miss Carole Ann arid Mrs. Jam es J . McNamara cf America willCross, and the Misses Martha of 452 Third Avenue. Lvndhurst. the early rapid

Pioneer Boys W ill Hail Pony Express

As part of their “Adventuresin Pioneering” program, t h e Star Unit of the Pioneer Boys

c<5mmemorate delivery ser-

Dear Sir:On behalf of myself and the

members of the Lyndhurst Coun The anmxincwnent was m ade d , K C. Public Relations

or December 20 at a party a t Committee. I take this opportu the Am vets in thier honor. I ^ e nity to thank you for your won- couple plan to wed April 24. 1971 dcrful news releases during the

was laid up for six weeks after that, but I will always remem ber the kindness that these four officers had given me.

A few months later, my little two year old boy had picked up some ‘Oven Spray” , and ac cidently sprayed it his eyes. I w as told to take him to the Eye

seph Carucci will be the speaker.

Mrs. Walter Friedrich was hostess for the Executive Board meeting Thursday. Jan . 7 a t her home 726 Fifth Avenue. Bus ir.ess included in the meeting was the appointment by Chair­man, Mrs. Horace Bogle, of a committee to update the

Private Fela Graduates

laws and records of the mem- Training bers. The committee will meet a t the home of Mrs. Bogle • ■ ■ ■ Thuredajr, Jan . 14. Appointed were Mmes. Henry Frank.Themaj Hickey. Norman 'Hwm pson. Ways and Means will hold a rumm age sale in the Spring.Mrs. John Sloan announced that

Marine Pvt. Thomas G. Fela, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank F e la of 822 Valley Brook Avenue. I yndhurst. was graduated from the Aviation E lectrician’s Mate School at Naval Air Technical

Center. Jacksonville,

E a r and fcose Hospital in New- $179JO had te e n collected

W e are still try in g W e will no t atop.W e need ft dog pound. W e have a m oral obliga­

tion to all anim als. Call 933-1174

Rfttenhouse and Patricia Walk- i* a graduate of the New York v.ce of the Pony Express by ae r were b- desmaids. State Maritime College a^ri em- vi-i; to the United Parcel Ser-

Jny McNamara served h :s ployed vr>h the National Cargo \.ce facility a t Saddle B ro it.brother as best man. and the Bureau. Sacramento. on Thursday evening. Jan. 21.

— ; - ' _ - .___ The S tar Pioneers will* be♦?ke* on a tou r- of the fi»g:irty

•d slvyvn how modern d tyJ o ^ n ^ e C a l f a r e s e pHny;M I T , p I Mr. Irw.n received his B.A. inrlO f id S I n i f r • c r s o n n c l Eoo^om cs from the University rap d delivery is accomplished^

The Board of J) rectors of Peo pies Trust of New Jersev has promoted Joanne T. Calianese

P^ironne’ Office- and arooi’tf. ewJ Gary L. Dill to Personnel Qf-

and Arthur E. Irwin *a Officer in the Staff DvisiOn.

miupfenning Sendees ]

of Syracuse and his M B A. from Harvard University Grad uate School of Business.

Mr. Irwin is currently s e r . 'n j a j Treasurer of the Tcaneck Li oas C ub and is a im m fjer of the H arvard Business School Clubs of New Jersey and New

M bs Caliareae Joined Peo>«» York.T ' l - t in *1 a Secretary in Ke and his wife Dabney live>**< OraflrP Office. She trans- in River Vale with their daugn- f 'r rW trt fo- Personnel Depart te r Whitney mew' ;(i 1« J a-»l was appointed ----------------

0ffi<*r Openings For Enlisteesier of 1968. r 3

Mi i ' l a n e s e is a nr-mb-T T-Sgt. William F Conroy of of the Advisory Board of P a n - the United States Air Force Re- ir.Us High School’s Cooperative o u ltin* Office in Passaic, re ­work Experience Programs. port* that he has several vacan-

She ii a resident of Param us c«* open in the Mechanical,t n t a graduate of P aram General and Electronic careerus High School.

Mr. DU1 joined Peoples Truat In June of 1«M as a M^n ■>*»- ment Trainee in the Operation* D'vision and la ter became Man aeer of the Bookkeeping Depart m ert before he was transferred to the Personnel D epartm ent

Mr. DQ1 received h i , B.S. In Business A&ninistratton (ram the University of Nebraska and worked in various bank jobs Airin* Ms years in school.

He and his wife Judith live In Hawthorne with their dsitfhU r Erin. ■

Arthur E. Irwin joined Pi pies Trust in February of 19701 f r« n Arthur Young and Com­pany where he served as a Staff Accountant. Previous to that he worked in Planning and Ana­lysis with Bankers Trust C o rn ­

fields for January enlistments.Job seekers can determine

tfceir qualifications by contact­ing Sgt. Conroy at the USAF Re crulting Office. Room 201. Pes- sa 'c Post Office Building, or by calling 472’3131 for an appoint menL

i "!

i-P f r o m

V o lk s w a g e n :

Buy lew, Sell

MORE? ‘WHY >RI?

1— StHB-tE COVNTT VCLKSWAOEN

701 RfVCmorAVI. LYNDHURST • 933-6383

. » "ill MVttl «f RtKrt« Jt■ t v t F».t

BANQUETDINNERS

3 *1

W SHOP PI TE BONELES SHRI SKET I

BEEIF! F l R S T C U T T97]

E | CW I b d

SHOP-RITE FRESH

French Fries-MCI-Shop-Rite Pizza

Sausage LinksAPeU/OUTCM APniyCOCOMUT STRAHKMtV RMUBAMMrs. Smith's Pies

ried Chicken

P g R S O N A L

“ Sinol«. W idow ed.O iv o r f td t"

ri»Ml happ ineea by *neetir»o to m e e n e new

Por a r u t f eonfilMtial In te rv iew call

INTRODUCTIONSUNLIMITED

O Ml. N.. JkHlngM

M etz Je w e le r s

Mickey's Coin Operated Machine

2S8 Ridge Rd., Lyndhurst, N. J.

8 lbs. 53.50Sam e D a y S e rv ice

W e clean anything. Special on dry cleaning

3 H o u r S e r v ic e P r e s s w h i l e C w a it

Export On Alteration — Quick Worlt Presses SlacksSlack Suits 81.25 Skirts 65*Suits SweatersShort Coats Trousers

■<

><So9m•>»

French Green BeansMax u-oi com s/w*Coffee Lightener

F ro m o u r D a ir y Cam*

*Ji69e 2 k 9 9 4

S 7 9 ‘

2 ^ 9 9 *

2 S 7 9 ‘ 6 2=»1

PORK LOINSCOUNTRY STYtfSpare Ribsvpuy my momt ^Fresh Spare RibsnwsN roe oimvy muck

Pork Neck Bones.IMP CUTLoin Pork ChopsSMoe-MTrs ooNtiCMSmoked Butts

C E N T tR C U T R O A S T S o r

P O R K C H O P S

\ <

>\ <5o*• o

BON ti£>S f BST CUT

Fresh BrisketFR( ' i f 1CtD CUT UF FORSOliP SAl AD ORFRICASSF

Whole Fowl

79c33‘

Chuck SteakMtSNatMMGround Chuck

TROPICASA (

ORANGE JUICE

4 9 c•NOP-KITE LAME or SMALL CUM

Cottage CheesenaMMPACKioCitrus Salad

.4 5 *- Qmolity F r t th F rn it i an d V«*«tabf*»

f L f F[)I hSS

G r a p t ? f r u i t

10 59— 5 9 *

r 5 9 *Crescent Rolls 2 9 *•MOP PiTE COLOAEO WMITf COAIMMATIOM IW M

American CheeseGeneral Merchandise (Whmre Available)

1ST QUALITY CANTRECE II 40 O ff LA M L 1 ^ .

Shop-Rite Panty Hose 9 9

Me Intosh Apples : 2 9 c |Green peppers J 9 (

S 12*- 39* S E T "HUH MCMOU M CMcory ^ 1 “PASCAL OMP |Celery * * 1 9 *

( in s M o in u o R Onions s-» H 2 9M O OSLICIOUS. SXTPA EAMCY . . .Apples ft. 2 5

\>• <

So

-A p p * tix » r D ip t . -

R O A ST BEEFSTOPF Q Cl cSLICLO 0

Jewelry Watches 1

’ ’ • Diamonds J

Sil',erwa,'e

Ears Pierced

C S s n n t s e i Repatrn

1 Kiflp* R oad Norffe A rH n ftn n

^ S - f6 3 9-L

1 LOUIS?V, i PONTIAC .

n 1 .

i o u o. we itLL Moitt' '" t>OHTlACS,Bt CAVSE ^

WE SFll FOR .LjESS- i , WE PAY MORE FOR YOUR TRADE

WF GIVE BETTER .SERVICE ><> ■* ALWAYS A LARGE SELECTION

OF TOP Q UALITY USED CARS

^ Y#o»i e l W o o y Poo tan O b o < • s a t io n * -uM, ..-

FORMERLY DeWASSl PONTIAC

Q T Q f i i n n 2 9 5 P A R K a v e n u e3 0 3 - U i U U LY N D H U R S T

><

SoS 3m

WYfHIBHOUWWMWWCHmyiLiverwerstPiVMOUTNPOCKSpiced Ham

KAUi SALfc. 'I

Shop-Ri te S htckhausF ra n k s F ra n ks

' ,h Q ̂ 1 « 6 9 c.SauerkrautM NErimmwSliced Bacon

;r

Chkken Chow MeinM ush room C h o w M e in

Shrim p C h ow M e inTurkey C h ow M e in

Meatless Chow Mein -------------- ^ ---------- x —

CHUNKING79*2 -lb .

11 -ox . c a n

CHOW MEIN NOODLES4 ^ * 1

D EL M O M Ii S A L EOCLWCHTl _Tomato sjut« 1 0 ti'.8 9 eD TLIfONTS

Peas or CornDC. MONTE

Tomato Juice 4'is 1DC LIP5N TI . EC A P ffftU IT

Juice DrinkDEL MONTE

Tomato Sauce 5 ~ *1DEL V O N flfPM C H STYLE o r CUT

Green Beans 2 'iT 5 5DCL MONTE WHOLE PiELED O f

VStewedTom. 4 —*1.

WHY M Y MOW*

Sunsweet Prune Juice 3SC4

IT *' 1

SHOf W Tt or STOKBiV

Fruit Cocktail44

Grapefruit Sections rtaTiarTPears in SyrupSM OPetTf OMNGCorM M /M OULAII J f t ^

Grapefruit Juice 2 ~ 6 9Penin“5utch Noodles*

H—Uh A Beauty AUBaby Powder

Secret DrySMOP-MTt w o rr LAMLProtein Shampoo

^Miss B reck7 —w — . . S t a f ^ d S a v i n g IKing Crab Legs

5 9 erspMV

2 - 8 9 *’tr49* 1 :5 9 *

Xz<v><

oa

Halibut Steaks

W y B v k e r ySHOP-RITE S b BUY

REGULAR THHI -SANDWICH

WHITEBREAD

i * .

SHOP-RITE OLD FASHIONED

A P P L E r P I Ei-k.3 3 * £ 4 9 *

WHY PAY MdKK? d B B P P Q W HYPAY MORE? Jflp H K p ff tha right 10 Itmil qw anliliak P fk a i aHftctlva thru ia * . 11 ,1 f 7 1. —. W e lW ^ H e A le fcf lyy>gm pkieel errors.

Page 13: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

THURSDAY, tr ji. - T H E L E A D E R P R E S S

MISS CORINNE COLEMAN

Mr. and Mrs. E dward J.Coleman of Fisher place. North Arlington, announce the engage ment of their daughter Corinnc Mary to Garry Joseph Con Jon. son of Mr. and Mrs. Rowland F. Klein of Lebanon Township. A September wedding is plan­ned.

The prospective bride, a grad uate of Queen of Peace High School, North Arlington, is a senior at Ann May School 0 f Nursing. Jersey Shore Medical Center. Neptune. Her fiance, a a aiumifn* of North Hqmt^rdon High School, attended Missouri University and Monmouth1 Col­lege. h e is employed by M assa­chusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company.

MISS HELENE CAPPtNGER

Mr. and Mrs. John P. Cap pinger. 328 Terrace Avenue. Hasbrouck Heights, have an nounced the engagement of their .daughter Helene M argaret to William E. M arra III. son of Mr. and Mrs. W. M arra of Lyndhurst The bride-elect is a 1967 graduate of Hasbrouck Heights H ifh School ^ id js ex­ecutive secretary a t Hasbrouck House. QuaEtjn Motel. Has- bi'ouck Heights.

Her fiance, a graduate Of 8t. Francis Xavier Hi«h School. N<•* Voi% oily, is a student at Furjiham University. B r o n x , Now "Vorfc.

A November 13. 1971 wedding is planned

MISS DEBORAH NtfcTSCH

Mr. and Mrs. Louis E . Win- decker at 436 Tea neck road. Ridgefield Park, announce the engagement at their daughter. Dehroah Suzanne Nietsch. t o Kenneth George Hay, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jam es G. Hay of 11 Bond place. North Arlington.

The bride-elect, a graduate of Ridgefield P a rk High School, is a senior « t Montclair State College where” she is majoring ir. Business Education. S lu 'ls a member of Pi Omega Py honor fraternity and Delta AJjftia Chi sorority Her fiance, in aHmn

PAGE THIRTEEN

MISS DOROTHEA CANTY

During a family part a t the heme of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Canty. Tea neck, former council-

to Mr. Dillard Kirby Henderson of Perot. Alabama.

I5o:h Miss Barsch and Mr., Henderson are listed in Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities.

A Bccton Dickinson Scholar. Miss Barsch is a graduate of Fairielgb Dickinson University. Madison with a B.A. in psycho logy. She holds the Talrleigh Dickinson University “Student of the Year Award," the N,'w aik Star Ledger "Jerseyan of the Week Award" and is pas,t vice president International Af- fa.rs for the National Newman Student Federation. She is pre­sently employed by Suelling A Srielling in Bloomfield as a pro fesskmal employment counselor

Mr. Henderson received his B.A. in history and social tcicn- i t s from Troy State University. Troy Alabama He is a mem-

ounce iMant arrived Dec. 2". * The mother is the form er Chris­tine Vasiliou of Flushing, I,, f. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Anthony F erra tj

-of 311 Chase Ave,, Ly«dhur3t.’

Q O L O G N O F

m— . - N T O U C H H O S p iT A L .I T Y !

M ]>Y J A N E A SH L E Y HM

m an Stanley Barsch and Mrs. h , ^ p h nh; T WHarsch of East RutherfoM an- ^ry honor fraternity). Kappa

Delta Pi (education honor frat- -em ity ), and Alph Phi Gamma

. . (journalism honor fraternity),who was associated with The He u prcscuUy employed byP n a r t A r t i l n l I n a i iK n t tA A P a _ A _ . . . .

noonoed the engagement of their daughter Dorothea Ruth

MISS BARBARA JANOSIK

At a family party in her home Philip Ray Bogle, son of Mr.Mrs. George T. Janosik. 348 and Mrs. Warren F. Bogle. 108

nus of North Arlington High Maple Are.. Lyndhurst, an- Fom Avenue, also Lyndhurst School, is also a senior/at Mont- nounced the engagement <8 her Barbara is the daughter alsoClair State College. AI Business daughter, Barbara Marcia to of the late George T. Janosik administrationEducation major, he Is a mem ber of Phi Laniida Pilfratem ity

Prudential Insurance Co, as A Kent In Lyndhurst and S t a f f Manager in the O d a r Grove District. Barbara is a senior a t Jersey City State College m aj­oring in Early Childhood Educa­tion.

Her fiance is a senior at Tex

Brevel Products Co. in Carl- stadt.

A wedding is planned for Feb n iary 27. 1971.

Son For FerratoesA son, Ian Phillip has been

as Christian University. Fort bom to Mr. and M rs Dennis Worth, majoring in business Fefrato of 783 Fifth Avenue.

l yndhurst. The five-pound - 8

' Wine Sanee A4tlft (•oucmct Touch

Add a gourmet touch to hum, poultry or lamb witV this classic t'ame sauce. Ele- Kant enoafch for a dinner par­ty, this sauce is so easy to prepare you can use it ak-o to dress up leftover meats.

Cumberland Sauce 1 tablespoon margarine 1 tablespoon corn starch

cup beef bouillon 4̂ cup port wine fa eup currant Jelly 1 tablespoon lemon ju ice

Melt margarine in small saucepan; stir in corn starch, blending well. Gradually 6tir in bouillon and Vj cup wine, firing to boil over iriedium heat, stirring constantly Add jelly; bring to boll and boil gently uncovered about 15 minutes or until sauce is re duced to 1 cup. Stir in re­maining wine and lemon Juice, gerve with ham, poul­try or lamb. Mak^s 1% cups.

E n g a g e dMr. and Mrs. Ralph Wheat of

Fast Brunswick, formerly of Lake Hiawatha, announce tlie cn-gaifement of their daughter Judith Lynn to Richard V. W en schenk. son of Mr. a^d M ri. Joseph Weinschenk of Lincoln P<i!*.

Miss Wheat » a graduate ofC r>f*f i#in(inv llija L Q |- |in I 1 , _j t T n j i p j i n T T j t t t k T T , j v i n n " HI

employed at Morrison Steel Co., New Brurswick as a clerk typ­ist. Her fiance is a graduate of Passaic County Technical Voca tional High School and is em p'oyed at Center T umber Co. as an apprentice in Carpent-y.

Sinql* Collegians Invited To Dance

S:ngle, widowed, and divorc- f-ri a n d professionalp<vY»)!e beflvAni the ages of 30 and 58 are welcome to attend a gala opening party and dance sponso ed by tfco Senior League cf the Stofles University Alum­ni Club on Sunday. Jan . 31. be gtnniiy at 8 p.m. a t th e C^est wood. 7051 Kennedy Blvd. North Pergen.

The Singles Club is designed to provide a social meeting g-oirnd for New Jersey’s profes s.'onal men and women. Some 130 New Jersey Communities a re represented.

The Club also conducts a dat- ine program wbich is open t o singles of all ages. Anyone in­terested in meeting a comput­able date-match completes t h e Club's question application which includes questions o n fundamental attributes, person­ality traits, attitudes, prefer­ences, and interests. I t is then compared with tlie completed

questionnaire of the o t h e r p'xrple registered from which a Mt of compatible date matchers i* cofnpiled.

For more information o n membership or the dating nro- ject send a stamped. <*elf addres sed envelope to SUA C l u b , Room 1507. 744 Broad street. Newark. N.J. 07102.

Light BrigadeIn this Monday's Light Bri-

pr.de bowling high score for the partially-Sighted was made by Bob. O 'H ara with 224 for two gpmos. and for the totally blind by Harold Daiker with 118.

The group Will install officers ( i f :he -cofin# year a t t h e i r meeting fn St. Thomas’ Episco- pai Church tomorrow night

President is Martin Friedman vice president, Harold Daikor: recording secretary. Janice O- 'Hara; corresponding secretary. Eleanore Falkenstem : treasur­er. Jeane Starkey rnd sgt.-at- arm. Robert O’Hara.

I l ’s A R o yMr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Wil.

gus of Kearny are parents of a son. Timothy Richard, born Dtc. 22. at Clara Maass Hospi­ta l Belkvilfe. They are also parents cf a son, Thomas. J r. The children's mother is t h e former Holly Anderson, daugh­ter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Anderson, of Nortsh Arlington, where paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wiigus al- s j reside.

Alcoholics Anonymau*

Box No. 7SS

No. A rlington

763-1415

LOOK SMOOTH! Now Too C an Have UNWANTED

IIAIR REMOVED

in s ta n t ly . S afe ly - P e rm a n e n tly by th« S en sa tio n a l

Radiomatic Efoctrotysta By GINA OF

A OAT A BEAUTY SALON

G in a ’s E lectrolysisC om e In T e d a y fo r F re e C o n su lta t io n

W Y ra^ l-1 3 0 8IS? M idland Ave. A rlin g to n . N j

UNW AN TED HAIR PRO B LEM S?

R em eve th rm p e rm a n e n tly Be h a ir free a n d c a re f re e Electrolysis Specialists

O ivm en of A iie rc a n C fso trofysla Inatitw te

L 'c e n te d by S ta te of N J . , now O 'ving pH%.tte tre a tm e n t

by a p p o in tm e n t en ly in .R u th e rfo rd s re a .

* For appointment:O a y t — #4? 1*21

a v s m H y e — 438 M Sft

latest formal* at

iF YOU KfiVEN’T CHECKED

RIVERSIDE FORDKEARNY, N .J.

for P r ices onbrar.d new

i'i/i■ M S L

'71 FORDS&S%!>USED CARSyou haven 't gotten the lowest price!

W M f ON IN !

m ii -Z-* TAS'iAIC AVtiNUE KFARNY • ; 9 8 7 4 0 0

M A JO RFORMALiSi

• C utaw ays> S tro lle rs■ Oinner Jackets4 Tuxedos• Full D r ts sa AD A c cesso rie s

F i n e s t se le c t io n o f s t y l e s

ExprrUf fltlH M n d m l rulm f'««nipHitt**n tnry weeding c<iiiniu|lin« iP f V I r e

a v t t i i i iM f

M A J O R«

I C leaners St L aunderera 4S0 Ridge Road

No. A rlington M7-JSM

. . .

r- ”

is ■■ , ' ■3%.

irI .I , Vf ■•■■■■ i- ■■ B ' kM*. .•

&

rtV 'iW V> • '■'t ^ 5 ’M S iifa r t

n

I N T E R E S T O R COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY> - , / • : : : m i W , I . • . A

■ " " ■ i ■ iHf - • , , AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ^ ^ 7 »

KEARNY , SUSSK VERNON ,

Page 14: Vol. 50 No.—25 LYNMIURST, N. A Letter For Our Pow’s · 1971. 1. 14. · A Letter For Our Pow’s Anthony Celia, commander, Lyndhurst Veterans Alliance, announced this week the

PACT r OCTTn W T H E L E A D E R P R E S S THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971

Tamarack Holding Its Derby Local Nurse On S. S. HopeThe public is invited to view

the 23rd annual Klondike Derby sponsored by Tam arack Coun Cil. Boy Scouts of America, al the Cfarref Mountain R eserva­tion. West Paterson, on Janua rv 16.

TJ»e first flight of six Kk>n- dike Sledges, each pulled by tigh t Scouts, will begin the con test with a race from White­horse. Derby headqua-te-s. lo cated opposite the north end of

Aliens Must File, arns D. Rinaldi

Domimcfc F Rinaldi. New J « r* y • is tr ic t Director of the I mm igrjfcgn and Naturalization Service reminded alic*ns in New Jersey today that Sunday. Jan. ?1. is the deadline for filing ad dress report forms as required m der provisions of the Immi giation and Nationality Act

The Immigration official urg ed aliens who have not yet filed their address reports to do so immediately to avoid possi ble penalties.

The law requires every alien except those having diplomatic status and representatives of certain international organiza­tions must file the address re­port during January of e a c h >ear at the nearest Post Office or Immigration and Naturaliza­tion Service office

Harbour s Pond, at 9 30 a.m. K jrther races will be held at intervals all morning until an estimated 90 sledge teams are in the field. Each team will lo­cate and participate in the ma py towfis. or Scout skill stations, sc* up all over the reservation. This year's activities h#*vc been c ;aT»ged and made nx)re dtffi cult to present a greater chall enge to the teeams.

Trophies for the firtt five win-

Columbus PTA Lists Programs For Month• Tolumbus Schopl PTA 'm et D*Cf'21 fallow the school pr> gram.

The chtfdren participated^ in caroling and the sixth grade, upder the direction of Mrs. O aire Schumann, presented a sl'ort play.

Kefreshments were later serv efl by the hospitality commit­tee.

Or. Jan 4. Mrs. Dominick De luca. PTA Pres.ide.nl. held a meeting at her home to pla . the Board of Education Candi dates' Forum a t the H i g h School on Jan. 25. A Parent Ed meeting will be held on Mon day. Jan. 18 at 8 p.m. M \ s John Yamelski. Parent Ed Chairman, has scheduled a Chold Guidance Counselor t o speak on the topic of '^Child hovkw "

Company Gives Town 500 Trees

d Mr*. Jim i of their trees *n n be (milt.

, mm D n rn r and daughter Michele suburban homesite where future

Small Pinon. Ponderosa and moved from Earth Resources

in the town ofw h ic h

will mine the copper deposit northwest of Al*

aall to

of the community. JK a r t h Resources Company hired nurserymen to die and M l the trees, and s bulletin wss put out to the 1JD0 town fssidsnu that they would be svailable on s request hasu

Cedar trees which had to be re- Com pany's future Nacimiento Riven to r e s i d e n t s for re-

near the mine

and planted the of April 2S-26.

Mayor Augustin Eichwald of Qd», and members of the Boys' Clubs of America co- operated in helping arrange tor trees to beautify public

of the town On

planting day. members of ths Boys’ Club helped load the trees and in general played the "good youthful citizens” role of the community..

The forthcoming opening ol the copper mine which, with s mill, will be :n full operation in late summer 1971. will fur­nish employment for about 100 persons

In addition to the tree plant ing program for the commun­ity. Earth Resources Company has distributed a folder ex phunmg facts about the mine and that there will be no smelter and no air or streamoo!h:!ion

f RUTH REINS DRESS SHOP

f S A L E .I *>

Dresses & Pants Outfits also Half - Sizes

CLEARANCESALE

E X C E L L E N T V A L U E S

142 RIDGE ROAD.,t NORTH ARLINGTON• OPEN: Tues., Wed., Fri.} ' Sat. 10 - 6

Thursday 1 0 - 9 Closed on Mondays.

9 9 1 - 1 9 3 4

nt»rs will be presented at White horse'at 4 p.m. Newly designed Klondike 71 patches and netk- * . chiefs will b£ on sale all to participants and spectators alike.

Scout teams from the Tam a­rack communities of Rutherford Eust Rutherford. Carlstadt. Wood Ridge. Lyndhurst. North A iington. Nutley and B l o o m f t id will participate in the Der bv

FDU Lists SpeakerDr. George C3i»e Smith, pres

;d-nt of MacKayShieWs Econ < iiics. Inc.. will be speaker at the fifth annual “Executive Up­date ‘ Thursday. Jan. 21 a t 7 p.m. at the Tammy Brook Coun try Club. Cresskill. at a dinner program sponsored by the Cor poiations Committee of Fair- le»gh Dickinson University.

Further information i* avail able from Evelyn Terhune, the University, Rutherford. She is also acceptiivJ reservations for the evening

A medical - surgical nurst f’om North Arlington is partic. p iling in 'the hospital ship S..> Hope's ten-month medical teach ing mission in the West Indies.

Miss Mary Eileen Norton, daughter of Mrs. Peter Norton of 30 A Fourth street, left, yes tv d a y for Baltimore. Maryland from where the will depnr: tomorrow after having unde; #;ne repair and resupply in pro pj ration for the mission.

The SS Hope's teaching trea ’ rnent mission to the West Indies is a landmark in the history of l\-<plo-t^People Health Found a tion. Inc. Kingston is the first port of call in Hope's second decade of service, and the first part of a three-year hemisph< ric program. Missions a re sche­duled for Brazil in 1972 and Ven cruela in 1973.

The decision to send the hos ; vmp to the West Ind .- came in response to an invita t*on extended by the Ministry of Health through chief medical O f f i c e r In the West Indies t h e

Hope staff of doctors, nurses, and other para medical person lie! will conduct medical teach- ::.ig programs Tfi classrooms, la h< ratories and wards aboard the hospital ship and ashore in cooperat on with the Kingston Public H o s p i t a l , the U n i ­versity of the West Indies School of Medicine, and other Ministry installations through the island republics.

Miss Norton, an alumna of £t. Cecilia's High School Kear­ny. attended St. Mary’s Hospi­tal School of Nursing in Orange She is Jin alumna ,of Jersey City State College and received her M A. degree frofn Columbia Uni versify. Aboard S. S. Hope, she will be serving in the dual role of medical-surgical nurse and of consultant in education.

Writings by Dr. Wtfiiam B. Walsh, the Project’s founder and president, so impressed M ss Norton that she applied to scive on S.S. Hope two years ago. She was accepted, but lat­er found she was unable to go

on thc mission. She again sub- . milled an application in April If*70 and in November received word that she was one of the seven New Jersey medical vol­

unteers who had been selected to participate in the Ship’s nin- t f teaching, treatm ent mission sirxfc 1960

To become a staff member a- board the floating medical cen­ter. Miss Norton took a leave of

absence from her position as as sisiant director of nursing a t St. Jam es Hospital. Newark.

The People-to-Peopie Health Foundation, the parent organ ization of Project Hope w a s founded in 1958. I t is a private, i on profit corporation h e a d chartered in Washington. D. C. and supported by donations from the American pecple.

Airman Dick Kirk Assigned In Texas

Airman Richard Kirk son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A, Kirk. 4:7 Washington St.. Carlstadt. has graduated at Keesler AFB, Miss., from the U.S. Air Force pc rsonnel specialist course.

The airm an, now proficient in the preparation of personnel records and reports, is being as signed to Laughlin AFB. Tex., for duty with the Air Training Command.

Airman Kirk is a 1969 grad «:ate of East Rutherford High School.

Senior Citizens To Hold Classes

The Steering Committee of the Bergen Co. Senior Citiaen Clubs wishes to announce that the social security administra tion wiU give a series of four Classes on social security and medicare on Jan. 18, 25 and Feh 1st. At the Senior Citizen Center 133 River Street, Hackensack. 7 his will give senior citizens an opportunity to bring them up to date on this important subject.

The next presidents' meeting w l̂l be on Jan. 25th a t 1:15 p.m a t the Senior Citizens Center.

Private Sincock Wins Promotion

Thomas W. Sincock. 20. son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Sin­cock, 541 Davis Ave., Kearny, wag recently promoted to Army Spcciailist Four while serving with the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) near Phu Loi, Viet­nam.

~ A clerk in Company B of the Divisiin’s 15th Transportation Battalion. Spec. Sincock entered the arm y last December' and completed basic trainir^f at Ft. Dix.

He is a 1969 graduate of Kear- r.v High School

Lyndhurst News Service ^ P.O. Box t t l

Ly ndhurst, N. J.

Newspaper llnme Delivery Service

Dully & Sunday

We Deliver the ('omntercial lender

Call Manager

ROB DAVIS |9X.VIIM

FIRST NATIONAL BANEA N D TRUST C O M P A N Y OF K EA RN Y

STATEMENT OF CONDITIONAS OF DECEMBER 31,1970

RESOURCESC»»h A Due from B a d u $ 5,7(7,432.76

U. S. Governm ent O bligation, 3^38,873.09T‘- • 's‘

O ther Securities ....................... 9,800,757.42Collateral Loan* ...................................... 3,055,856.28

Bond. A M ortgages 11,941,838.21

Loans A D iscounts 11,553,573.17

Federal Funds Sold .................................... . 4,800,000.00

Banlrin* H o m o 6 Equipm ent .................................478,527.07

Accrued In te res t Receiv able . 333,416.96

O ther Assets . . . . . . . 55,239.68

*51,625,514.64

LIABILITIESTim e D eposit. $25,067,236.29Dem and Deposits 21,727,149.81

_ . . *46,794,386.10C apital:Common Stock . . . % 1,134,000.00

(113,400 shares)Surplus 1,134,000.00Undivided P rofits 786,290.87Valuation R eierve 688,400.75

$ 3,742,691 62Reserves $ 186,871.10U nearned D isc o u n t................... . 837.5t3.t2O ther L ia b ilit ie s ................................ ................ 64,t 6 1.90

$ 1,968,436.92

$51,625,514.64

SAVINGS CERTIFICATES

WE PAY THE HIGHEST BANK RATES PERMITTED BY THE FEDERAL RESERVE

J to I* jrm n maturittra . . . a t bolden option.

Th“ *14% savtojp. certlficste is thr hiKhMt in te n d rate any ronsne rdsl beak can pay on u v in r i such aa tliia. IU train fn itu rrs s n : .• M aturities are from 24 to 120 months . . The choice is

yourss Sold in an y am ount from sioo up• Interest paiit from day of deposit• Q uarterly dividend cheekj can he m ailed directly to the

saver, a t hio option at the rate „f (. per annum

OFFICERSADRIAN L RIORDAN

P re s id e n t

VINCENT CARUSOE n cc u tiv * V»c« P re s id e n t

DONALD B. FINCHV ice P re s id e n t - T rw st O ffies r

EUGENE MaeNABB V iee P re s id e n t . C o m m e rcia l C red it

ROBERT J. JONESV ice P r e s id e n t • C a sh ie r

HERBERT W NELSON. JR.A sst. C a sh ie r - T ru s t O fficer

JOSEPH R. BAKERA sst. C a s h ie r - M an a g er,

C o n su m e r C red it O ep t

WILLIAM J. SULLIVAND ire c to r of P u b lic R e la tio n s

t h o m a s r . McDo n o u g hA set. C a sh ie r a S pecia l S e rv ic e e

R e p re s e n ta tiv e

EUGENE J. McCORMACKA u d ito r

W est Hudson’s Only Locally Owned and O perated Commercial Bank

FIRST NATIONAL BANKAND TRUST COMPANY OF KEARNY

KEARNY OFFICE: Kearny and M id la n d Avenues EAST NEW ARK OFFICE : North 4th St. o t the bridge

SOUTH KEARNY OFFICE: Central Ave. Opposite W estern Electric NORTH A R LIN G TO N OFFICE. 600 Ridge Road

M f M I I * M OFRA L D fPO SIT IN S U .A N C I C O L O R A T IO N

EA ST NEW ARK O FFIC EDAVID J. STEVENSON

A sst Viee P re s id e n t • B ra n c h M an a g er

SOUTH KEARNY O FFIC EROBERT MULLIGAN %

B ran c h M an a g er %

THOMAS L I’POA sst B ra n c h M an a g o r

NO. ARLINGTON O FFIC ERRIAN P. BEIRNE

A sst. C a sh is r A B ran c h M an a g er

MARY J. ANDREWSA sst B ra n c h M an a g er

DIRECTORSRALPH E. BEVER

P u b lish e r - K e arn y O b se rv e r

WILHELM B. BRONANDER. JR. P re s id e n t

S c a n d ia p a c k a g in g M ach in ery C om pany

VINCENT CARUSOE x e c u tiv e V ice P re s id e n t

G. BUSSELL CLARKM em ber E x e c u tiv e C o m m ittee an d D ire c to r, G u a rd ia n U f a

In s u ra n c e Co. o f A m aric a

WILLIAM G. DAVEYR e tire d • F o rm erly

C h a irm a n of th e B oard

WILLIAM J. GLACCUMP a rtn s fr • B orgos A B orgos

CALVIN S. KOCHC ounsello r • A t. L aw

ARTHUR J. O'CONNORP a r tn e r , O ’C o n n e r-L a ffe y A Co

ROBERT M. POWELLR e tire d - F o rm e rly D ire c to r

an d S e c r e ta r y C o s ts A C la rk T h re a d C om pany

ADRIAN I. RIORDANP ree id e n t

NATHAN ROGOFFP re s id e n t, R ev a l L u m b er A M illw ork Co.

, COUNSELKOCH AND KOCH

C alv in S . K och • C alv in S . K och, Jr. , j