10
- in totitttmtthMnirMrifaMrvi**^'^!****^^ l ^'*- : ' ll 'r J * ! '^'* :: ' i *-* : L.-I^ . .. -J»C3£... :;/.j.-. ; -. ; ';;:. ; '^-T^o.- S12CRANTORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHjtONlGLE Thureday, July 13,1972 i 1 : Hie fallowing seventh aM ighth gidhi •tudento Ji awards fqr being on die honor roll three or-moretitne$: )onald Balnes, Sheri kerian, Linda Baldwin, Barbara Behrens, Debra Bryers, Jane •yJEllenByko, Joan CaUJolln, Marguerite r. i Cartoned Joanne Chatfield, Joseph Christiano, Jeanne Peary, Clare Cody, Linda Duckworth, Rhondja Fingennan: Also, Susan Goldberg, Susan Goednsky, Linda Greer, Fran Grunstein, Scott Haviland, -Minday Holzman, Virginia Jordan, Steve Kalt, Connie Kastelman, Kathy Kirk- patrick, Betsy Kluge, Bar- bara KOchner, Deborah Korzelhis.ChnstineKowalski, Karen Lamb, Martha Lynes, Kathleen Mackenzie, Carol Ann McNally, Marc Mandel, Diane Miller. Also, Joanne Mitchell, Edward Nappen, Nancy Neuman, Nancy Nicholls, Colleeen O'Brien, Christiane Olsen^ Alison Pestrichella, Matthew Ppppei; Laurel Pringle, Susan Reiss, Karen "TttylSBldS, K l t e f Rocky; "Sue Scheme!, Stephanie Schwait, Michael Sof man, Robin Stone, T l T « / . JSP* Jane . Tomalavage, Tracy Wallach, Geoffrey Walters, Susan Waters and Anita Jean jh~T''c^ r "Trj T~~~~T'~~ Ninth and tenth grade students who received scholarship, awards were: -Cory Ackerraain, Susan Bator, Robert Bazewicz, Patricia Berl,- Sheila Borick, Theresa; Buccine, Thomas Sucker, Susan Byko, Gregory Cser- nica, David Daniels, Donald Daniels, uebra Dennis Dei Jianne, Edward Denstman. -A1SA V Marcy Dubinsky, Dean' Ellis, Tataara Ewanik,' Russell FinestetntT Alisoii Fisher, Susan Gatto, Judy Gitterman* Lillian Green, Martha Hernandez, Susan Hicks, Nancy Hopko, Diane Kalinowski, James Kasteknan, Henry Korngut, Paul' JOmlicka, Kelly K'Meyer, Amy Levin, Theresa Madonia, Mark Malzberg, Daniel More, David Novello, Irene NowakowskL . Also, Janet Paterson, Jane Pearlman, Helen Penvenne, Ellen Person, Virginia^Porter, Gerald Putzer, Kevin Quinn, Stephen Reiss, C&ri Rinaldi, Robin Roman, Alexa Romano, Naomi Schneider, Mark Schultz, Michael Schutzer, Barbara': Siegel, Dawn BmoEnske, Cawu Terregino, Joseph Testa, Susan Thill, ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ : : - ; y ; - " ' ^ ^,'-:'P •,.-•,----^-,•;:,•;.;; p , , Amy Thomas, Linda . Tur- zynski, Mark wainger, Lisa Wallach and Gary Young.' CRAWL SPACE -Bonnie Mason makes her way through crawling tunnel during session of perceptual training program at Livingston Avenue School. Movement through the tunnel fosters body awareness and muscular development. The federally funded summer project helps Identify and coreect perceptual dif- ficulties which may impede learning for children entering the first through third grades.. Pupils were selected through recommendations of teachers In local public and parochial schools. • . Elizabeth, (Rumors of the Good Fatty .Doll Museum located at 205^ Walnut Ave. will present a doll show entitled Fairy Tales and Frm" on BARON'S NOW O N ALL YOUR SUMMER NEEDS REGULAR >39 , ,6 oz. - -CRANFORU PUBLIC SCHOOLS CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY NOTICE TO BIDDERS PROPOSALS: ' Fuel Oil Pupil Transportation Medical Supplies Band Uniforms . Cumber for Industrial Akt Classes Sealed proposals will be received at the Business Off ice. Boaraof Education. Lincoln School. Thomas \Street.' Cran lord. New Jersey at twoo'dlock. p.m. on Thursday. August 3rd,. ',973 lor the furnishing and delivering FUEL OIL .. MEDICAL SUPPLIES PUPIL TRANSPORTATIOI BAND UNIFORMS CLIMBER FOR INDUSTRIAL ART CLASSES . to the Cranford Public School system. Specifications and . proposal forms W s d p may Wsecured upon applica Business Office. Board of Lincoln School, • Thomas Sir ford, >New Jersey. Only the vendors complying with the N Civil Rights legislate* will sidered. The Board of Education re»e riylif 1O' fjJiet.1 any or informalities and award conl rnay be deemed best^ror the in! me Cranford Publkf Schools. . V John E. Dw - - Sctiool Business Adrriir Dated: Juiv 13. ' ^ Fee:».3* ' on at the ucatlon. , Cran- bids of Jersey e/Con" f-. r Vcs the ^ waive' act as. FRO/yi_ MIAMI •v SUNTAN CREME •$.189 8 oz. 'PAIN &). "4 OX^tr'-i " VACATION • MOID & forCanip Wednesday morning,. July 19 at the Geraldine Nursery School^ 34 Forest Ave. Mrs. Connors will, bring hundreds, of dolls for the children to see and-hold-ia Rotarians Attend /". *. - - f _ TAKE NOTICB th»t'm« totlowfoa •ctKn* vwrt t«Mn py.tht tainrt public mtttlpa MM JMn*Mtti,^tn.Muntclp«laulkllag. •oul«v«rit, \fm\ ol ttf lyrtmtnt or ttw • o f w a f j * KrtHwortH a t « :Board of •)•• . . 3 ?2 .-.'TK; 0. tuwwi., V 5ia W«ihinotoo Avt* .' ; Rtlltf from A ' . J - ' ' ' •: '.'«••! .. Six of fleers and committee representatives of the Cranford Rotary Club at- tended an all-day assembly of ruatrict 751 at the Far Hills Ina at -SomervUle last -,._- day;. The assembly is held to indoctrinate new offlters and. chairmen of key, committees in their duttftB <H«rhHi the Rotary Year, beginning July. Those attending were club president, Dr. Eldward M. Goe; vice-president, Norman Roden; secretary, Stepheta Cymbaluk; past presidents, Horace K.Corbiiw_J(r. and Arthur K. Burditt, as well atf club director, Ralph -P, Taylor. ~fhe morning session was devoted to district reports and UrplShs of the new district governor, "William A. Balogh. Following the luncheon, the 235 Rotarians were grouped into seminars according to the assignments andduties for the new Rotary year. , M^i^rt- L •••"•*£ , tot Nfw«rK Avmut '• '. Rtlltf f«m VNJ. .,; ..:.' wio.% nthst. N: irtfm Arttci* * r Stctloh J Par»vr«ph» : condlti ' ta 4-7J Nichotn' oiPaola ' <W Boul»vard ' Rtlltj from Ordlrt«nt« " or»,nW lirbltct to •..•;"..' . .- - ........ ,.- • K«n||Wortt>.UJ. •* ••. V «1Q, ;— - •.-••., .' v condition*. ; - . •' -••.• twr**ouioAr*latl^toft<«artlonot«Ma6inlof AdiMtmMtratptctiWM bMfiflltdlnthtOHlcvof MWBoard at ftwMunlclwi BulWlno.oorqoohof KBNIUWORTH, N«w Jtrity,ai«l»a¥allab»» ^\ VOL. 72 NO. 29 Serving Granford, Kcnil worth and Gar wood -:•- ' " ' , ; ; . . . ' .• ' - V ; ' ,'. \ : ' > _ ' : - . ' : . : : ' ; . . ' « ' k . - . - . . ^ Published Every Thursday V^T '••.-ir....^.:.,.^., •-..' -„-.. Tfeunjd>y,July2Q,l572 ^/;.""',. ,&condClassTbstagePaid Cranford,N.J:07016, ISCENTS"*' ho .•• LivingTston Mall opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJhe doU show is one of the special events planned in the summer day camp program at Geraldine Nursery School. BOROUGH OF KENILWORTM ", ' . KENILWORTH. NEW JERSEY . ' ORDINANCE NO'. ,7M6 AN ORDINANCE TO AUTHORIZE THE PURCHASE OF : QME TRAFFIC RADAR SYSTEM AND MAKING THE NECESSARY APPROPRIATION THEREFOR. V ' ", . . , . 'APPROVED: • WJLLJAM E. CONRAD. JR.. Mayor ATTEST: ' . MARGARET ^Clerk McGEVNA/ Borough l STATEMENT ' \ Take notice that the above Ordinance yvas passed on final reading after public hearing a? a' regular' meeting of the governing body of the Borough of Kenilworth and was approved by the Mayor on the Ilfh day of July 1W2. Oated: July 13. 1573 Fee: S7.20 Amis duV'm -ftliHDS Of WlHl" NOW COMES TO THE GREATER WHAT IS LES AMIS DU V»N?. ... a group of wine lovers devoted to the appreciation of fine wine and the art of leisurely dining. Their, ap- preciation is cultivated and sharpened through a program of active, continuing education. Those who have just become interested in wine wijl become a connoisseur; the connoisseur will become a •specialist, through ; membership in the Friends of Wine: • ' , ' V ' • " '•" .. . ' ' '• JLes Amis &u Vim .i ... is rxtrqint'ly proud that thejTcilii bring to you all of the following benefits, of memberihip:, a sub- scription to VVINJK "Magazjn«; and the club's iicwslt;tter;_«ur special "selection of an interestlK^ vvinc-eVery mouth at an exceptional prict, an op- portunity to participate in tastings and vineyard t-y.t:ursiojis; an'opportuiilty U> personally Intel the vi/tirld-s ouliioritieii ujkd discuss good-food 1 and wine with llurtti. ly'lhr. whole wonderful world of. wine is yours..in fact, through membership-in I,*™ Amis iiu Vin. ... -- .... •' lyil EM EEU SHI 11* ' EL AN1K S AVAil'LAELii^ AT '" OJAL filed ),-„ ... _^ Garry Kiinger, presently serving a four to five-year term at Yardville state prison for two armed robberies at ' Cranford ! Association on 1870 and March . suit July 13. M Trenton claiming tte^Granford Pplice, twer h i s ^ r to aban^r without uthorjzation. , ngermairitained that i Crantord police released his' 19© Volkswagen to the Community ^National State Bank w/Richmond, Staten Island, f l o w i n g his inv pruionnient solely on the basis of a letter from.the bank citing he received a letter from Cranford detective Sgt. MchaelF. Fedroff on October 26,1971 asking permission for the release of the car and informing him the bank had a $2,700 lien on the vehicle, the police subsequently turned the car over to the bank without his conscpt or I i r f Mr. Klinger has requested counsel be appointed and that the court order his car returned.';.. \._ '• ... • 'C .. In addition to the two Cranford robberies, he was also found guilty of air armed robberyv€S City Federal: A public hearing on the site plan for the construction of a . 34-unit townhouse complex '""i Ave. was held at townhouses according will circle the/townhouses. Pj"J»i **• fa <* to Tlie plans can for at least, one of the. site which is garage space for each plans in an attempts© save-a landmark American elm.' tree was and any decision from the next its. I Savings and Loan Association in Elizabeth on October 20, Stating A" that his 14th 1970 . and the First.'Federal Amendment rights of due Savings and Loan in Clark on process wane violated, Mr. *&$ 6 . 1971 - •«"•••- Klinger alleged that mere was The case will come up in, no judicial prder authorizing Superior Court of Union the seizure of his cat, valued- County. As of Wednesday, at»i,o(»,------ : -~~-v"~"--" ; ---'-"\(*anf^-bfflclatt jiad not' He also said that Sttnough. been served with any papers. 3 -The site of the proposed development is -the former Vehneri property on which the Corey humestead-had %en located. This house was demolished last fall. •: According to the plans of the developer, Cranford Ntirth Inc., each of the 34 units will Of the development. A sbr-foot b^fk shrubbery been estimated that 3 Residents or- Charter ,the five commission elected last November to study government in' Cranford, is Farris s: Swackhainer, said the finalreport is complete but needs the signature ofone member who is on vacation. Mr ; Swackhamer said be Created in last general election provisions of the Ne C?tJonaT MunicipaTSartaT Law; the chartercomi?iuision cewhich-was adopted by expected tto be released next expected the report to be has interviewed former and ,> njumcnjahly in December, Thursday. signed this weekend and i>resent pubUc officials ill 1970,: The commission chairman, released next Thursday, E'-.i?' ? #- %$$Vh?j* : ffi*''l'/' :••*,.; Three Cranford residents make appropriate referrals on have been appointed to staff pollution complaints. Initial positions at the Union County projoctson which the staff will Environmental Resource be working during the sua> Center which yesterday met- include a Union County opened to the public at the- Environmental Recycling County Administration Calendar, a comparative Building, 300 North Ave., jrtudy of jenyitonmental rWestftelo; -^ ^ "• : - ' "' materials available at the - James J. Fulcomer, county's variou>4ibraries, a ^chairmftn-^t»e count^ .Environmental Health Ad.-, envirdnmental. film 'visory Cominittee appointed; bibliography. Mrs, piana French of U Craig •••..- PT. •;; an administrative aide, TB" "M Mrs. Nancy Asbedian of 608 L J Brookside PI, a coordinator, •/• and Mrs Jean Koening, of 228 JLJ Hillside Ave. a substitute at_x :-»&e. ,¥:; ' • "" ••'•'• , S ^ ••'••• •.'"-.. -• • '.'. , Ronald van VWnckel NpB_ODY HOME ^A^tlre of uj^edermlnfidrorigin Fridiiyhight damaged the rear portion of this vacant house at 4 Cranfoed Ter. The Fire Department an- swered this alarni just 4 after midnight Earlier f h ^ extihgulshed a blaze In a Sttffaae^t^-aiqnS'W^ the BoVJe Midway" Co. 3 water pipe ruptured. . . • X ' 5 Sites beopeny Monday, through Friday during the summer from 9 a.m. to noon and will be open Development iHUD) sent a after Labor Day from9 a.m. to representative to visit the five 4 p m The center is staffd d i di 4 p.m. The center is staffed entirely by ."altruistic, en- vironmentally oriented volunteers," noted Mr. Fulcomer, "at no cost to the taxpayer." An "environjujental action line," 654-4499, has been established to receive pollution complaints, and inquiries from the public. The center will assist Union County-citizens in. their efforts to secure^overnniental action on pollution violations:. / The purposes of the center rejected Cran- eels have arisen which we feel ford's application for funds to warrant our action. , '". purchase five parcels of land / "Parcel No. 1, 3.3 acres for open space, the Newark along the Rahway River on office of the Department of Springfield Avenue, . is Housing aria Urban currently occupied by four Development -(HUD) sent a frame houses whose rear,yard extends. to the riverbank. doctor's office is housed at 38 Springfield v Avenue. No mention of this is made in the application. Any project estimated to be $500 is unrealistic in terms of the relocation .workload involved. proposed sites, according to the letter informing Cranford the application did not merit a priority rating. HUD indicated the low priority rating was based on a review of the application and the site visits. This low rating was one of the factors that led the Township Committee to withdraw a similar • ap- plication for state funds.-' The committee announced it was' withdrawing the ap- plication because of the in- formation from HUD that the are' to disseminate in- request did not rate priorities' Although , your application classifies three 6f: the; struct tures as substandard, Only one, 48 Springfield Avenue, appears to be visibly deteriorated. We note that a Laurie Likes Calls of "pilot to control tower" are greeted at Keejler Air Force Base iii Biloxi, Mis> families, or individuals en- housing space; Therefore, the of tijese payments, County arid see no reason to place the land in public Ownership especially since the, land is in no imminent danger of loss and because the owners wish to continue in their farming enterprises. Since- the remaining , Nos. 3,1.72 acres, and do not. rate a to or greater than other pending--'ap- She JS an active member ot' the Keesler Aero_Club and" hopes to get hp*: private license soon^ formation on environmental equal to or greater than other by the feminine voice of Set. and then begin work on her n i:«.., in _,. •:,,„*. .jn"'*-'", ~ r •--- ! - •••"• instrument and commercial P^at'ons.. .we wiU - Hot con- n mnta q g ,problemjs,j(COlk«;t data, oh the pending applications; arid environmental health of I the because the Dreyer and Ditzel families pledged at the June 13 meeting that it was their in- i i : county, * pnovlde; r a com- •';' municijtjon center for en- vironmental groups oil their "various activities, and to ! Cranford community pool members with long hair-now arjj required to we,ar bathing caps.when they swim.' The new ruling, which was effective' Monday, July 17, applies to both- men ana women, tho Recreation Department reports. tention -to» continue to farm tlieir lands. Subsequently Mayor Jack C. Mcyey announced that- Cranford's planning con- sultant \^<)uld make a-com- plete, review of the open space requirements called for in the muster plan. "" >«^ In its letter, HUD noted that "any application not ac- companied by the required A- 95 Clearinghouse comments'' with a coirtpleted-'lOn- 'vironmental . -Clearance Worksheet ^i»ofJ -by two in- dependwrfl, appraisals with The hni'th ofhair requiring ^ disct'otion ol the upp»i<iisa!s-. for each "Most ,-i ;i .Jr' -I pool mam (lepartn|o<it r>v says cri Scrioil! . qU ostioiis 'concerning Ihico of the p^ir- ec r ,HOY: . .'a.raft of COLONS.:,..-..• delectable or to sun your K Thirteen Crvmtorcj r^.-.>lder»tL. named to spring honor roll ol Union Col logo. Slory P 5. ' . .". paiieros oosvalgiic or your horirne. ;A ran or svmmer at Habie's 3m Morikiak, b-ie'wark 'an -Q.-A 1 i ->N hour youths b<*iho m u ^ k story of Th.- devole Mini; j n d money io il tdlont to O'.intofd, The. E;-Cupe Hatch on Pog^'ST- a Church. t:(.lltork'il Laurie MacKenzie over the radio as pilots prepare to land. Sgt. MacKenzie is the first' WAF Air traffic Controller to reenlist in tlie 2052nd Comm. Sq. (AFCS) in more thau 15 years. She is assigned to the control lower and also -has obtained her FAA rating for the area. A native of Cranford and graduate of CratrfoVd High School in lUjjU/'Cjiurie' is the diiufihter--tlf JVlrs. Amies C. MacKenzie,of ;iO4 Stoughton I, Ave. " ' . i Laurie unlisted in Uie Air Force Octobor 0, 1WSH. Slu- uttended Medical Helpers School at Shepyard AFH, Tex. 'uivd'Was assigned to ()tis AFli, Mans, as a dental technician. ' She was interested in air traliit^cjmtrol, but was unulile to gel iulo the program taooaU-Si' ol ;i shortage"' ol vacancies. Finally, m March l'.)7i;hcrr<-quc.sl lOrair traffic control was approved and slu- U"aiuiieri'etl io Kivsler lor Iraining. Shu w;is assi^',n»*il lo. tlu- 2in"r.d upon ;-;ra(iu;iiioii.. Irom air. traffic ctmlrol school ah.I lu.'|',an Uainiii;; lor lur liv<- level in the control loy/err ;Ute.l' CoiHJileliii;; llel' ll'.ilWin^, slu' del'icied lo roeiilisl ami continue her career in. ciir irul'iU 1 conlro!. .. iilulu^ VuJunl. v-1\.;J |,)i" viillv i:i Sonlhe.isl A^i.; ' and {?; hopeiully .iw^iiin;; ".m over r uf inl1k . - sider them focgra'nt purposes. I Vurie h-m trnvrfi-ri' P v lt is our > el «W! that because Laurie has traveled ex- theji4> l a t t e r , two, parcels ens.velyin Scotland and rep -f^ scnt on , m8S f o{ me England,, &he . enjoys total estimated acquisition mechanics, art work, sewing. cos t of $948,913, the Township embroidery, crocheting and o r Cranford may be" able to has' shown some of her purchase the land withits own luimtuigs at. exhibits on base. f...i^- •> •« . LEAPS TO SECOND - Rich AAcMorray's running leap was good'for second place u* the Recreation Department's Junior Olympic games last week at Brookside School. ' , • . . The results of the Cranford recreation playground 'Junior Olympics held at Brookside Schoo-1 July VJ. 'were an- luxmctid' by • lhf~TtiJcreatioi\ peparlineni. -' ' HiiiiniKi; l)ii>:ul.)uiup Hoys II and under: lirsi plate - Su-ven CainprHrll of HrooksidL-,, -with 4 jump of •|2«"; ,s<;con(i place Hich IVlclVlurray of Itoo.st'veh, with a jump oi' l:;o"; thirci place - Kohri'l ^irber ot Lincoln, with a .jump ot" 101". Ifoys liarulKi: /jrsi jiiace - Sieve .lacksoii oi IVlcniorial, wilii a jump ol J?!!"; 'secoml place Su>ve -Maney 01 Menuinul, Vviih a juuy) of plac- Mill. Uo.-;s <if u'Hh .1 ii 1111 ! 1 "I thin Si . Spo/ \ .\!;t. MacK.-n.'.i. .iVl.ldou 111 ilrl :,i!.ice en joys IK- .Ion. Cirh. place' llUllliUei' "ol K.uvn SiuMi u.iili jump:', II .liui .mi. 1 lie lu-IU'ee •i-.-.ki Ol (i or: ln-.s't |i Ivaieil .Hi." .111(1. I .wieoln. pla<ST.- .KUen O'Dounell of 1 Brookside, with a jump of 65"; third place - Mary Ann Tliomas of Brookside, with a jump of W". Girls' 11! and 13: first place - Marge Molnar of Lincoln, with a jnnip.of VH /T ; second place - l'anrWaid of Ijrooksidt.-, with a jump ot 73";.'third place - Ooima Cniba of Lincoln, uiili a jump oi 70 . - Girls U and IS: lir:;i place - Tit)-' I'.iyz ol A'dams Ave., \i(i|h a jump 01 yii".- Hoy.-; 11 and. tinder: lirsi - . Oavi-. Wal:.h of Hrookside; second ..- Paul Smnir -ol Hrookside';-' l.liird. -. H();;ei : Thollias ol Adalns.' I>oys 11! ;.il(J 13:. rir.-.l Clui:; Moi'i'lS ill I.UK'oin! :.econd ivevm S;de;,'ol .lohii.Mui; Ulli'd ( Jo<- ('iiiecino oi l{oo.-.;-wll. ' SoKb.iiriJn (iv. iui- !!>r.(..iu-.- - lioys II -..ini."under: in:,I, Brookside of Adiims. (rirls 11 tliird - Joe and under: first - Nat Stobierski of Lincoln; second, - Stac.ey Walters of Brookside; third - Beth" Siobii'rski of Lincoln. Boys 1:! a n d Ki: first - Chris. hlorrJs of Lincoln; second - Tom Bianco of Brookside; third - Greg Ford of Brookside. H. Girls I'.: and 1!J: first - Aliison r<.-:;irichvrlla • ot Bivxikside; second - Carol Bender of Lincoln; third - Jill IV'slrichelki ol' Brookside: Boy.*;, 1-! and 15: lirst Kevin Hai'iLlnd oi Kr,(is<'vell; secoiui - Nick Clnccir.n ol KiusseVelt; third Rich Smith in Jolni.;oo. . Girls l-i ,!ndJ5: ti-.si Kaihv .Williams of Ad;nil;,. ' Cliiccino Roosevelt. SuYurdUu'sli Boys tl and under David Granitski of Brookside. '"•• •' 75 Yard I>ash Boys -1 and 15: first - Nioir^ 'Girjs 11 and 15: first - Ho.llic T'olvor of Memorial; Second - Kathy Williams' of Adams; .third - Tina Paei'. of~Ada'»is. SliiittleKelay Hoys 12 and 13: team -. Charle.s Me Davis, Laurel Bolk.'r, Sit^sh<-n .Chester, all of Memorial; .Second place team - ihch McMurray, Bill lvose.s, Joe ('hiciiiio 1 , Thil I'Vrraro, all of Koo.seveli; third ])lac\- leam - first - Uich McMurray oi .Hftose.v^lt; s<H'oiui - David Granif.'.k of Brookside; third - John Williams of Aiiams. "Girls II and under: first - Slacey Wallers of Krookside; s<^c(>nd - Beih Stohierski oi. Liitcoln; tliird - Nat Stobierski 01 Lincoln. Boys i'avid se*^"U.) •ee ol -•Alike- .4 .Br.wikside; Mi-rvin ei ' ' -, " i iee .01' B MiS-e. :'vl ar.d lOiiii l.j;tc,oln; i 1 ill... of 'li.-lm third Boys rjaiul i;i: first - Keym Sale:, 0/ JoluiSdjij SeeOJld - I'hil l-'eiraio oi Udost-yeli; ihjrd - Steve JacL:i)n oi' ivK-inoi ivil. (.'iris lilaiui l.L lirsi I'diim,- S.iltejileld ol' Lincoln; '.secoittr Allison Peslnelu-ll.i o; nrook.side;. tntrxt--jvt^rr^e" Molnar s>f Lincoln. <*^~ f«.:il X^cil 'O.:.sii ^. Cfinrle.. Mc(.;ill of memorial; SeCOii|l Louis ivel.'iher ol Uoaseveji.; third -.-. . I >.u it'll rilnni.i:, 01 ,!oi>ji:-.()ji. Joe Thomas, Ko;',or Thomas, John William;;, Lovey Williams aji ol Adams Ave • Girls li! and Ki: lir.si .plnc'o kam - Ailene Sreuum, 'IV.'icv. iilenkowski, -Atjrge ftfohuu-." Constj),ee SailertieUi, a]l oi Lincoln; scaniil place tean- - < -n'ol kapji, /Vllison -i'e:.U icliella. Jill Ivsirichel!.., Terry Piase.-ki, all ;u( Cranford and other com- munities. It also bftsjipld two public meetings at which residents gave their views and listened to the views of municipal managers from ^.three communities in New Jersey. ;_• The commission • can recommend change or nb change in the form of the local government/Alternate forms of government specified by law or a special charter can be requested: At .the" publtar hearings, most discussion centered on the size of a governing body, the direct election of mayor and the use of a manager. If (he. commissfon recom- mends a change in the form of local government, that recommendation will be placed before the public on -tgis November's ballot. Augusts is thodeadun&forrtbej submission of the com- mission's report. The other members of the charter study are Mrs. Nor- : man Brubaker, Charles M. Ray, Edward .R. Trush awl- Burton C. Belden. Accidents 3/. >,. Saturday v ' : '•/ - Three residents' 'were in-' - jured Saturday in mofbr vehicle accidents jn Cranford. J Bruce Farfitt, 18 of H9 : North Ave* W. Saturday night " suffered :a. lacerated ankle '--. when h'e was thrown from the"." '"•'... fender of a car on Spruce St x \\$ was taken' to Rahway Hospital for treatment. According to. the. report, • • ' > Farfitt was riding on the fender of a car driven by Karl ' \\ Elosge, 17, of 1 Estelle PI. .. whea.'the aijlo collided with a ;_<. parked car owned by Annette " H. Arthur of 102 Carpenter PI. Farfitt and~ Elosge were issued summonses for riding : and allowing to ride on the • fendGr .of a-c5r!- Elosge also was citetj for careless driving,,.. Saturday afternoon. 11-year- old Charles McCarty of 121 North Ave. W. received scrapes and bruises to his left l«.'g_ w.hen his bike collided'with an automobile at the in- tersection of Lincoln and North Aves. The report in-" " ' dicatcs the niotorist, Petei; L. . McCormick olyl Woods Hole first pkice-hulk'tH'or tlie stop signal and* was" proceeding forward when the cyclist rode into his path. No summons \,va:\ issued. . . Kuth Kchaucr o!J»3i) Hillside ...- Ave. sufftjred a, bruised. ^"* 7-1, oi tho same' .uiiji^ess, u \ lacerated foivhead wheii their 11 y>-hicle sirtlck a utility pole CJI IU.yi-fleS(. Tlje entire, ivont end W-iS tLmiagt.-d accor<iiil;j to tfio leporl. .. > , i ".. Stanley l)objcm.uUu of 2-m Hillside Ave. was chained with'. di'iv-in;; while . lu> wa:i hi- collided c;n' 1'vliiiidjy • * .*i »^ '• n uuh Hoys il ani! !:>: "lir.sl p);;t\. le.'un -. Nick ('hiccino, Ki-vin llanland, Alan HarlLuul, J<),- Cliuvino, all ,,'/ iu-O-ewlt. ii!.".i!t oil" Worth jjh Injured ir. itu- collisioji l.mi.tiiii; DonrowoloKk I^is: elixir. Tiie parked u.is mviK-d by JaC Lawrence 01 li!I North LL Aw. • -r

BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

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Page 1: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

- in totitttmtthMnirMrifaMrvi**^'^!****^^ l^'*-:'ll'rJ*!'^'*::'i*-*:

L.-I^ . ..-J»C3£...

:;/.j.-.;-.;';;:.;'^-T^o.-S12CRANTORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHjtONlGLE Thureday, July 13,1972

i1 : Hie fallowing seventh aMighth gidhi •tudento

Ji

awards fqr being on die honorroll three or-moretitne$:

)onald Balnes, Sherikerian, Linda Baldwin,

Barbara Behrens, DebraBryers, Jane

•yJEllenByko,Joan CaUJolln, Marguerite

r. i

Cartoned Joanne Chatfield,Joseph Christiano, JeannePeary, Clare Cody, LindaD u c k w o r t h , RhondjaFingennan:

Also, Susan Goldberg, SusanGoednsky, Linda Greer, FranGrunstein, Scott Haviland,

-Minday Holzman, VirginiaJordan, Steve Kalt, ConnieKastelman, Kathy Kirk-patrick, Betsy Kluge, Bar-bara KOchner, DeborahKorzelhis.ChnstineKowalski,Karen Lamb, Martha Lynes,Kathleen Mackenzie, CarolAnn McNally, Marc Mandel,Diane Miller.

Also, Joanne Mitchell,Edward Nappen, NancyNeuman, Nancy Nicholls,Colleeen O'Brien, ChristianeOlsen^ Alison Pestrichella,Matthew Ppppei; LaurelPringle, Susan Reiss, Karen

"TttylSBldS, Kltef Rocky; "SueScheme!, Stephanie Schwait,Michael Sof man, Robin Stone,

T l T

« • / . • •••

JSP*

Jane . Tomalavage, TracyWallach, Geoffrey Walters,

Susan Waters and Anita Jeanj h~T ' ' c^ r "Tr j T~~~~T'~~

Ninth and tenth gradestudents who receivedscholarship, awards were:-Cory Ackerraain, Susan Bator,Robert Bazewicz, PatriciaBerl,- Sheila Borick, Theresa;Buccine, Thomas Sucker,Susan Byko, Gregory Cser-nica, David Daniels, DonaldDaniels, uebraDennis Dei Jianne, EdwardDenstman.-A1SAV Marcy Dubinsky,

Dean' Ellis, Tataara Ewanik,'Russell FinestetntT AlisoiiFisher, Susan Gatto, JudyGitterman* Lillian Green,Martha Hernandez, SusanHicks, Nancy Hopko, DianeK a l i n o w s k i , J a m e sKasteknan, Henry Korngut,Paul' JOmlicka, KellyK'Meyer, Amy Levin, TheresaMadonia, Mark Malzberg,Daniel More, David Novello,Irene NowakowskL. Also, Janet Paterson, Jane

Pearlman, Helen Penvenne,Ellen Person, Virginia^Porter,Gerald Putzer, Kevin Quinn,Stephen Reiss, C&ri Rinaldi,Robin Roman, Alexa Romano,Naomi Schneider, MarkSchultz, Michael Schutzer,Barbara': Siegel, DawnBmoEnske, Cawu Terregino,Joseph Testa, Susan Thill,

• • ^ ^ • ^ . • • • ^ • ^ : : - ; y ; - " ' ^

^ , ' - : ' P •,.-•,----^-,•;:,•;.;;

p , ,Amy Thomas, Linda . Tur-zynski, Mark wainger, LisaWallach and Gary Young.'

CRAWL SPACE -Bonnie Mason makes her way through crawling tunnel duringsession of perceptual training program at Livingston Avenue School. Movementthrough the tunnel fosters body awareness and muscular development. Thefederally funded summer project helps Identify and coreect perceptual dif-ficulties which may impede learning for children entering the first through thirdgrades.. Pupils were selected through recommendations of teachers In localpublic and parochial schools. • • .

Elizabeth, (Rumors of theGood Fatty .Doll Museumlocated at 205 Walnut Ave. willpresent a doll show entitled

Fairy Tales and Frm" on

BARON'SNOW ON ALL

YOUR SUMMER NEEDSREGULAR

>39 ,

,6 oz.

- -CRANFORU PUBLIC SCHOOLSCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

NOTICE TO BIDDERSPROPOSALS: 'Fuel OilPupil TransportationMedical Supplies •Band Uniforms . •Cumber for Industrial Akt Classes

Sealed proposals will be received atthe Business Off ice. Boaraof Education.Lincoln School. Thomas \Street.' Cranlord. New Jersey at twoo'dlock. p.m. onThursday. August 3rd,. ',973 lor thefurnishing and deliveringFUEL OIL ..MEDICAL SUPPLIESPUPIL TRANSPORTATIOIBAND UNIFORMSCLIMBER FOR INDUSTRIAL ARTCLASSES .to the Cranford Public School system.

Specifications and . proposal formsW s d

pmay Wsecured upon applicaBusiness Office. Board ofLincoln School, • Thomas Sirford, >New Jersey. Only thevendors complying with the NCivil Rights legislate* willsidered.

The Board of Education re»eriylif 1O' fjJiet.1 any orinformalities and award conlrnay be deemed best ror the in!me Cranford Publkf Schools.

. V John E. Dw- - Sctiool Business Adrriir

Dated: Juiv 13. ' ^Fee:» .3* '

on at theucatlon., Cran-bids ofJerseye/Con"f-.rVcs the

^ waive'act as.

FRO/yi_

MIAMI• v

SUNTANCREME •$.189

8 oz.

'PAIN&).

"4 OX^tr'-i

" VACATION• MOID &

forCanipWednesday morning,. July 19at the Geraldine NurserySchool^ 34 Forest Ave.

Mrs. Connors will, bringhundreds, of dolls for thechildren to see and-hold-ia

RotariansAttend

/ " . * . - - f _ •

T A K E NOTICB th»t'm« totlowfoa •ctKn* vwrt t«Mn py.tht ta inrtpublic mtttlpa MM JMn*Mtti,^tn.Muntclp«laulkllag. •oul«v«rit, \fm\

ol ttf lyrtmtnt or ttw • o f w a f j * KrtHwortH a t«

:Board of

•)••. . 3 ?2 .-.'TK; 0. t u w w i . , V 5ia W«ihinotoo Avt* .' ; Rtlltf from A

• ' . J - ' ' • ' •: ' . ' « • • !

.. Six of fleers and committeerepresentatives of theCranford Rotary Club at-tended an all-day assembly ofruatrict 751 at the Far HillsIna at -SomervUle last -,._-day;. The assembly is held toindoctrinate new offlters and.chairmen of key, committeesin their duttftB <H«rhHi theRotary Year, beginning July.

Those attending were clubpresident, Dr. Eldward M.Goe; vice-president, NormanRoden; secretary, StephetaCymbaluk; past presidents,Horace K.Corbiiw_J(r. andArthur K. Burditt, as well atfclub director, Ralph -P,Taylor.~fhe morning session wasdevoted to district reports andUrplShs of the new districtgovernor, "William A. Balogh.Following the luncheon, the235 Rotarians were groupedinto seminars according to theassignments and duties for thenew Rotary year. ,

M^i^rt- L •••"•*£

, tot Nfw«rK Avmut '• '. Rtlltf f «mVNJ. .,; ..:.' wio.%

nthst.N :

irtfm Arttci* * r

Stctloh J Par»vr«ph» : condlti' ta

4-7J Nichotn' oiPaola ' <W Boul»vard ' Rtlltj from Ordlrt«nt« " or»,nW lirbltct to• . . • ;" . . ' . .- - . . . . . . . . , . - • K « n | | W o r t t > . U J . •* ••. V « 1 Q , ; — - •.-••., . ' v c o n d i t i o n * . ; - . •' -••.•

twr**ouioAr*latl^toft<«artlonot«Ma6inlof AdiMtmMtratptctiWMbMfiflltdlnthtOHlcvof M W Board at ftwMunlclwi BulWlno.oorqoohof KBNIUWORTH, N«w Jtrity,ai«l»a¥allab»» ^\

VOL. 72 NO. 29

Serving Granford, Kcnil worth and Gar wood- : • - ' " ' , ; • • ; . . . ' . • ' - V ; • • ' • • , ' . \ : ' > _ • • ' • : - • . • ' • : • . : • : ' • ; . . • ' « ' • • • • • • k . - . - . . •

^ Published Every Thursday V T'••.-ir....^.:.,.^., • - . . ' -„-. .

Tfeunjd>y,July2Q,l572 /;.""',.,&condClassTbstagePaid Cranford,N.J:07016, ISCENTS"*'

ho .••

LivingTston Mallopening day-coming soon

• • • • v

ir

and'

eluding Thumbelina andhouse.

TJhe doU show is one of thespecial events planned in thesummer day camp programat Geraldine Nursery School.

BOROUGH OF KENILWORTM ", '. KENILWORTH. NEW JERSEY

. ' ORDINANCE NO'. ,7M6

AN ORDINANCE TO AUTHORIZE THEPURCHASE OF : QME TRAFFICRADAR SYSTEM AND MAKING THENECESSARY APPROPRIATIONTHEREFOR. V ' ",

. . , . 'APPROVED:• WJLLJAM E. CONRAD. JR.. Mayor

ATTEST: ' .MARGARET

^ClerkMcGEVNA/ Borough

•lSTATEMENT '

\ Take notice that the above Ordinanceyvas passed on final reading after publichearing a? a' regular' meeting of thegoverning body of the Borough ofKenilworth and was approved by theMayor on the Ilfh day of July 1W2.

Oated: July 13. 1573Fee: S7.20

Amis duV'm-ftliHDS Of WlHl"

NOW COMES

TO THE

GREATER

WHAT IS LES AMIS DU V»N?. ...agroupof wine lovers devoted to the appreciation of finewine and the art of leisurely dining. Their, ap-preciation is cultivated and sharpened through aprogram of active, continuing education. Those whohave just become interested in wine wijl become aconnoisseur; the connoisseur will become a•specialist, through; membership in the Friends ofWine: • ' , ' V ' • " '•" .. . ' ' '•

JLes Amis &u Vim .i

. . . is rxtrqint'ly proud that thejTcilii bring to you allof the following benefits, of memberihip:, a sub-scription to VVINJK "Magazjn«; and the club'siicwslt;tter;_«ur special "selection of an interestlK^vvinc-eVery mouth at an exceptional prict, an op-portunity to participate in tastings and vineyardt-y.t:ursiojis; an'opportuiilty U> personally Intel thevi/tirld-s ouliioritieii ujkd discuss good-food1 and winewith llurtti. ly'lhr. whole wonderful world of. wine isyours..in fact, through membership-in I,*™ Amis iiuVin . ... - - . . . . • '

lyil EM EEU SHI 11*' EL AN1K S

AVAil'LAELii^ AT '"

OJAL

filed

),-„ ... _

Garry Kiinger, presentlyserving a four to five-yearterm at Yardville state prisonfor two armed robberies at 'Cranford !Association on1870 and March .suit July 13 .M Trentonclaiming tte^Granford Pplice,

twer his^r to aban^r withoututhorjzation.

, ngermairitained thati Crantord police released

his' 19© Volkswagen to theCommunity ^National StateBank w/Richmond, StatenIsland, f l o w i n g his invpruionnient solely on the basisof a letter from.the bank citing

he received a letter fromCranford detective Sgt.MchaelF. Fedroff on October26,1971 asking permission forthe release of the car andinforming him the bank had a$2,700 lien on the vehicle, thepolice subsequently turned thecar over to the bank withouthis conscpt or I i r f

Mr. Klinger has requestedcounsel be appointed and thatthe court order his carreturned.';.. \._ '• ... • 'C ..

In addition to the twoCranford robberies, he wasalso found guilty of air armedrobberyv€S City Federal:

A public hearing on the siteplan for the construction of a

. 34-unit townhouse complex'"" i Ave. was held at

townhouses according will circle the/townhouses.Pj"J»i * * • fa<* to Tlie plans can for at least, oneof the. site which is garage space for each

plans in an attempts© save-alandmark American elm.'tree was

and any decision from thenext

its.

I

Savings and Loan Associationin Elizabeth on October 20,

Stating A" that his 14th 1970. and the First.'FederalAmendment rights of due Savings and Loan in Clark onprocess wane violated, Mr. *&$ 6 . 1 9 7 1 - • « " • • • -Klinger alleged that mere was The case will come up in,no judicial prder authorizing Superior Court of Unionthe seizure of his cat, valued- County. As of Wednesday,at»i,o(»,------:-~~-v"~"--";---'-"\(*anf^-bfflclatt jiad not'

He also said that Sttnough. been served with any papers.

3- T h e site of the proposeddevelopment is -the formerVehneri property on which theCorey humestead-had % e nlocated. This house wasdemolished last fall. •:

According to the plans of thedeveloper, Cranford NtirthInc., each of the 34 units will

Of the development. A sbr-footb^fk shrubbery

been estimated that

3 Residentsor-

Charter,the five

commission electedlast November to studygovernment in' Cranford, is

F a r r i s s : Swackhainer, saidthe finalreport is completebut needs the signature ofonemember who is on vacation.M r ; Swackhamer said be

Created in lastgeneral electionprovisions of the NeC?tJonaT MunicipaTSartaTLaw; the chartercomi?iuision

cewhich-was adopted by expected tto be released next expected the report to be has interviewed former and ,>njumcnjahly in December, Thursday. signed this weekend and i>resent pubUc officials ill1970,: The commission chairman, released next Thursday,

E'-.i?'

? #-

%$$Vh?j*:ffi*''l'/'

: • • * , . ;

Three Cranford residents make appropriate referrals onhave been appointed to staff pollution complaints. Initialpositions at the Union County projoctson which the staff willEnvironmental Resource be working during the sua>Center which yesterday met- include a Union Countyopened to the public at the- Environmental RecyclingCounty Administration Calendar, a comparativeBuilding, 300 North Ave., jrtudy of jenyitonmental

rWestftelo; - ^ — "•: - ' "' materials available at the- James J. Fulcomer, county's variou>4ibraries, a^chairmftn-^t»e c o u n t ^.Environmental Health Ad.-, e n v i r d n m e n t a l . f i l m'visory Cominittee appointed; bibliography.Mrs, piana French of U Craig • • • . . -PT. •;; an administrative aide, TB" "MMrs. Nancy Asbedian of 608 L JBrookside PI, a coordinator, • / •and Mrs Jean Koening, of 228 J L JHillside Ave. a substitute at_x

:-»&e. ,¥:;' • "" ••'•'• , S ^ • • ' • • • •.'"-.. -• • '.'. , Ronald van VWnckel

NpB_ODY HOME ^A^tlre of uj^edermlnfidrorigin Fridiiyhight damaged therear portion of this vacant house at 4 Cranfoed Ter. The Fire Department an-swered this alarni just4after midnight Earlier f h ^ extihgulshed a blaze In aSttffaae^t^-aiqnS'W^ the BoVJe Midway" Co.

3 water pipe ruptured. . . • X '

5 Sitesb e o p e n y

Monday, through Fridayduring the summer from 9a.m. to noon and will be open Development iHUD) sent aafter Labor Day from9 a.m. to representative to visit the five4 p m The center is staffd d i di4 p.m. The center is staffedentirely by ."altruistic, en-vironmentally orientedvolunteers," noted Mr.Fulcomer, "at no cost to thetaxpayer."

An "environjujental actionline," 654-4499, has beenestablished to receivepollution complaints, andinquiries from the public. Thecenter will assist UnionCounty-citizens in. their effortsto secure^overnniental actionon pollution violations:. /

The purposes of the center

rejected Cran- eels have arisen which we feelford's application for funds to warrant our action. , '".purchase five parcels of land / "Parcel No. 1, 3.3 acresfor open space, the Newark along the Rahway River onoffice of the Department of Springfield Avenue, . isHousing aria Urban currently occupied by fourDevelopment -(HUD) sent a frame houses whose rear,yard

extends. to the riverbank.

doctor's office is housed at 38Springfield v Avenue. Nomention of this is made in theapplication. Any project

estimated to be $500 isunrealistic in terms of therelocation .workload involved.

proposed sites, according tothe letter informing Cranfordthe application did not merit apriority rating.

HUD indicated the lowpriority rating was based on areview of the application andthe site visits. This low ratingwas one of the factors that ledthe Township Committee towithdraw a similar • ap-plication for state funds.-'

The committee announced itwas' withdrawing the ap-plication because of the in-formation from HUD that the

a r e ' to disseminate in- request did not rate priorities'

Although , your applicationclassifies three 6f: the; structtures as substandard, Onlyone, 48 Springfield Avenue,appears to be visiblydeteriorated. We note that a

LaurieLikes

Calls of "pilot to controltower" are greeted at KeejlerAir Force Base iii Biloxi, Mis>

families, or individuals en-

housing space; Therefore, theof tijese payments, County arid see no reason to

place the land in publicOwnership especially since the,land is in no imminent dangerof loss and because the ownerswish to continue in theirfarming enterprises.

Since- the remaining, Nos. 3,1.72 acres, and

do not. rate ato or greater

than other pending--'ap-

She JS an active member ot' theKeesler Aero_Club and" hopesto get hp*: private license soon^

formation on environmental equal to or greater than other by the feminine voice of Set. and then begin work on her ni:«..,in_,. •:,,„*. .jn"'*-'", ~r

• • - - - ! - • • • " • • instrument and commercial P^at'ons.. .we wiU - Hot con-n mnta q g

,problemjs,j(COlk«;t data, oh the pending applications; aridenvironmental health of I the because the Dreyer and Ditzel

families pledged at the June 13meeting that it was their in-

i i

: county, * pnovlde; r a com-•';' municijtjon center for en-

vironmental groups oil their"va r ious activities, and to

• ! •

Cranford community poolmembers with long hair-nowarjj required to we,ar bathingcaps.when they swim.'

The new ruling, which waseffective' Monday, July 17,applies to both- men anawomen, tho RecreationDepartment reports.

tention -to» continue to farmtlieir lands.

Subsequently Mayor Jack C.Mcyey announced that-Cranford's planning con-sultant \ <)uld make a-com-plete, review of the open spacerequirements called for in themuster plan. "" >«

In its letter, HUD noted that"any application not ac-companied by the required A-95 Clearinghouse comments''with a coirtpleted-'lOn-'vironmental . -ClearanceWorksheet i»ofJ -by two in-dependwrfl, appraisals with

The hni'th ofhair requiring ^

disct'otion ol the

upp»i<iisa!s-. for each

" M o s t

,-i •;i

.Jr'-I

pool mam(lepartn|o<it

r>v

says c r i S c r i o i l ! . qUostioiis'concerning Ihico of the p ir-

ecr

,HOY: . .'a.raft of COLONS.:,..-..• delectable or

to sun your K

Thirteen Crvmtorcj r .-.>lder»tL. named tospring honor roll ol Union Col logo. Slory

P 5.

' . .". paiieros oosvalgiic or

your horirne. ;A ran or svmmer

at Habie's 3m Morikiak, b-ie'wark 'an

-Q.-A1i ->N

hour youthsb<*iho mu^kstory of Th.-

devole Mini; j n d money ioil tdlont to O'.intofd, The.E;-Cupe Hatch on Pog^'ST-

aChurch.

t:(.lltork'il

Laurie MacKenzie over theradio as pilots prepare to land.

Sgt. MacKenzie is the first'WAF Air traffic Controller toreenlist in tlie 2052nd Comm.Sq. (AFCS) in more thau 15years. She is assigned to thecontrol lower and also -hasobtained her FAA rating forthe area.

A native of Cranford andgraduate of CratrfoVd HighSchool in lUjjU/'Cjiurie' is thediiufihter--tlf JVlrs. Amies C.MacKenzie,of ;iO4 Stoughton

I, Ave. • " ' . i •Laurie unlisted in Uie Air

Force Octobor 0, 1WSH. Slu-uttended Medical HelpersSchool at Shepyard AFH, Tex.'uivd'Was assigned to ()tis AFli,Mans, as a dental technician. '

She was interested in airtraliit^cjmtrol, but was unulileto gel iulo the programtaooaU-Si' ol ;i shortage"' olvacancies. Finally, m Marchl'.)7i;hcrr<-quc.sl lOrair trafficcontrol was approved and slu-U"aiuiieri'etl io Kivsler lorIraining.

Shu w;is assi ',n»*il lo. tlu-2in"r.d upon ;-;ra(iu;iiioii.. Iromair. traffic ctmlrol school ah.Ilu.'|',an Uainiii;; lor lur liv<-level in the control loy/err;Ute.l' CoiHJileliii;; llel' ll'.ilWin^,slu' del'icied lo roeiilisl amicontinue her c a r e e r in. ciirirul'iU1 conlro!.

.. i i l u l u ^ VuJunl. v-1\.;J |,)i" viillvi:i Sonlhe.isl A^i.; ' and {?;hopeiully .iw^iiin;; ".m over

rufinl1k. - sider them focgra'nt purposes.I Vurie h-m trnvrfi-ri' Pv lt i s o u r > e l «W! t h a t becauseLaurie has traveled ex- theji4> latter, two, parcels

ens .ve ly in Scotland and rep-f^scnt o n , m8Sfo{ m eEngland,, &he . enjoys total estimated acquisitionmechanics, art work, sewing. c o s t of $948,913, the Townshipembroidery, crocheting and or Cranford may be" able tohas' shown some of her purchase the land withits ownluimtuigs at. exhibits on base. f...i^- •> •« . •

LEAPS TO SECOND - Rich AAcMorray's running leap was good'for second placeu* the Recreation Department's Junior Olympic games last week at BrooksideSchool. • ' , • .

. The results of the Cranfordrecreation playground 'JuniorOlympics held at BrooksideSchoo-1 July VJ. 'were an-luxmctid' by • lhf~TtiJcreatioi\peparlineni. -' '

HiiiiniKi; l)ii>:ul.)uiupHoys II and under: lirsi

plate - Su-ven CainprHrll ofHrooksidL-,, -with 4 jump of•|2«"; ,s<;con(i place • HichIVlclVlurray of Itoo.st'veh, witha jump oi' l:;o"; thirci place -Kohri'l ^irber ot Lincoln, witha .jump ot" 101".

Ifoys l iarulKi: /jrsi jiiace -Sieve .lacksoii oi IVlcniorial,wilii a jump ol J?!!"; 'secomlplace Su>ve -Maney 01Menuinul, Vviih a juuy) of

plac- Mill. Uo.-;s <ifu'Hh .1 ii1111!1 "I

thin

Si .

Spo/ \.\!;t. MacK.-n.'.i.

. i V l . l d o u 111 i l r l : , i ! . iceen joysIK- . Ion.

Cirh.place'l lUl l l iUei ' "olK . u v n SiuMiu.iili jump:',

II .liui .mi . 1

l i e lu-IU'ee

•i-.-.kiOl (i

o r : ln-.s't|i I v a i e i l.Hi." .111(1.

I .wieoln.

pla<ST.- .KUen O'Dounell of1 Brookside, with a jump of 65";

third place - Mary AnnTliomas of Brookside, with ajump of W".

Girls' 11! and 13: first place -Marge Molnar of Lincoln, witha jnnip.of VH/T; second place -l'anrWaid of Ijrooksidt.-, witha jump ot 73";.'third place -Ooima Cniba of Lincoln, uiili ajump oi 70 . -

Girls U and IS: lir:;i place -Tit)-' I'.iyz ol A'dams Ave.,\i(i|h a jump 01 yii".-

Hoy.-; 11 and. tinder: lirsi -. Oavi-. Wal:.h of Hrookside;second ..- Paul Smnir -olHrookside';-' l.liird. -. H();;ei:

Thollias ol Adalns.'I>oys 11! ;.il(J 13:. rir.-.l Clui:;

Moi'i'lS ill I.UK'oin! :.econdivevm S;de;,'ol .lohii.Mui; Ulli'd (Jo<- ('iiiecino oi l{oo.-.;-wll. '

SoKb.iiriJn (iv. iui- !!>r.(..iu-.-- lioys II -..ini."under: in:,I,

Brooksideof Adiims.

(rirls 11

tliird - Joe

and under: first -

Nat Stobierski of Lincoln;second, - Stac.ey Walters ofBrookside; third - Beth"Siobii'rski of Lincoln.

Boys 1:! and Ki: first - Chris.hlorrJs of Lincoln; second -Tom Bianco of Brookside;third - Greg Ford ofBrookside.

H. Girls I'.: and 1!J: first -Aliison r<.-:;irichvrlla • otBivxikside; second - CarolBender of Lincoln; third - JillIV'slrichelki ol' Brookside:

Boy.*;, 1-! and 15: lirst KevinHai'iLlnd oi Kr,(is<'vell; secoiui- Nick Clnccir.n ol KiusseVelt;third Rich Smith in Jolni.;oo.. Girls l-i ,!ndJ5: ti-.si Kaihv

.Williams of Ad;nil;,. '

Cliiccino o£ Roosevelt.SuYurdUu'sli

Boys tl and under

David Granitski of Brookside. '"•• •' 75 Yard I>ashBoys -1 and 15: first - Nioir^ 'Girjs 11 and 15: first - Ho.llic

T'olvor of Memorial; Second -Kathy Williams' of Adams;

.third - Tina Paei'. of~Ada'»is.SliiittleKelay

Hoys 12 and 13:team -. Charle.s MeDavis, Laurel Bolk.'r, Sit sh<-n

.Chester, all of Memorial;.Second place team - ihchMcMurray, Bill lvose.s, Joe('hiciiiio1, Thil I'Vrraro, all ofKoo.seveli; third ])lac\- leam -

first -

Uich McMurray oi .Hftose.v^lt;s<H'oiui - David Granif.'.k ofBrookside; third - John

Williams of Aiiams."Girls II and under: first -

Slacey Wallers of Krookside;s< c(>nd - Beih Stohierski oi.Liitcoln; tliird - Nat Stobierski01 Lincoln.

Boysi ' a v i dse*^"U.)

•ee ol

-•Alike-

.4

.Br.wikside;Mi-rvin ei

' ' -, " i

i e e .01' BMiS-e. :'vl

ar.d lOiiii

l.j;tc,oln;

i 1 ill... of'li.-lm

third

Boys rjaiul i;i: first - KeymSale:, 0/ JoluiSdjij SeeOJld - I'hill- 'eiraio oi Udost-yeli; ihjrd -Steve JacL:i)n oi' ivK-inoi ivil.

(.'iris lilaiui l.L l irsi I'diim,-S.iltejileld ol' Lincoln; '.secoittr

Allison Peslnelu-ll.i o;nrook.side;. tntrxt--jvt^rr^e"Molnar s>f Lincoln. <*^~ •

f«.:il X^cil 'O.:.sii ^.

Cfinrle.. Mc(.;ill of memorial;SeCOii|l Lou i s ivel. ' iher olUoaseve j i . ; t h i r d -.-. . I >.u i t ' l lr i l n n i . i : , 01 ,!oi>ji:-.()ji.

Joe Thomas, Ko;',or Thomas,John William;;, LoveyWilliams aji ol Adams Ave •

Girls li! and Ki: lir.si .plnc'ok a m - Ailene Sreuum, 'IV.'icv.iilenkowski, -Atjrge ftfohuu-."Constj),ee SailertieUi, a]l oiLincoln; scaniil place tean- -< -n'ol kapji, /Vllison-i'e:.U icliella. Jill Ivsirichel!..,Terry Piase.-ki, all ;u(

Cranford and other com-munities. It also bftsjipld twopublic meetings at whichresidents gave their views andlistened to the views ofmunicipal managers from

^.three communities in NewJersey. ;_•

The commission • canrecommend change or nbchange in the form of the localgovernment/Alternate formsof government specified bylaw or a special charter can berequested: At .the" publtarhearings, most discussioncentered on the size of agoverning body, the directelection of mayor and the useof a manager.

If (he. commissfon recom-mends a change in the form oflocal government, thatrecommendation will beplaced before the public on

-tgis November's ballot.Augusts is thodeadun&forrtbejsubmission of the com-mission's report.

The other members of thecharter study are Mrs. Nor- :man Brubaker, Charles M.Ray, Edward .R. Trush awl-Burton C. Belden.

Accidents3/. >,.

Saturday v ' : ' • / -Three residents' 'were in-' -

jured Saturday in mofbrvehicle accidents jn Cranford. J

Bruce Farfitt, 18 of H9 :

North Ave* W. Saturday night "suffered :a . lacerated ankle '--.when h'e was thrown from the"." '"•'...fender of a car on Spruce S t • x

\\$ was taken' to RahwayHospital for treatment.

According to. the. report, • • ' >Farfitt was riding on thefender of a car driven by Karl '\\ Elosge, 17, of 1 Estelle PI. ..whea.'the aijlo collided with a ;_<.parked car owned by Annette "H. Arthur of 102 Carpenter PI.Farfitt and~ Elosge wereissued summonses for riding :and allowing to ride on the •fendGr .of a-c5r!- Elosge alsowas citetj for careless driving,,..

Saturday afternoon. 11-year-old Charles McCarty of 121North Ave. W. receivedscrapes and bruises to his left *«l«.'g_ w.hen his bike collided'with •an automobile at the in- •tersection of Lincoln andNorth Aves. The report in-" " 'dicatcs the niotorist, Petei; L. .McCormick olyl Woods Hole

first pkice-hulk'tH'or tlie stop signal and*was" proceeding forward whenthe cyclist rode into his path.No summons \,va:\ issued. . .

Kuth Kchaucr o!J»3i) Hillside ...-Ave. sufftjred a, bruised. ^"*

7-1, oi tho same' .uiiji^ess, u \lacerated foivhead wheii their 11y>-hicle sirtlck a utility pole CJIIU.yi-fleS(. Tlje entire, ivont endW-iS tLmiagt.-d accor<iiil;j to tfioleporl. .. >, —i"..

Stanley l)objcm.uUu of 2-mHillside Ave. was chainedwith'. di'iv-in;; while . lu> wa:i

hi- collidedc;n' 1'vliiiidjy

• * . * i

» ^ '•

nuuh

• Hoys i l ani! !:>: "lir.sl p);;t\.le.'un -. Nick ( 'hiccino, Ki-vinl l an l and , Alan HarlLuul, J<),-Cliuvino, all ,,'/ iu-O-ewlt.

ii!.".i!t oil" Wor th j jhInjured ir. itu- collisiojil.mi.tiiii; DonrowoloKkI^is: elixir. Tiie parkedu.is mviK-d by JaCLawrence 01 li!I North LL

Aw.

— • - r

Page 2: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

mmmmmmmmmmmmmiw-.M^ vu»&****»»*^*&^^ :

BeatingThe Heat

The scene in" Trentort the", othernight must have been, in its way,dramatic and memorable/ perhapsmodestly recalling the moments of

triumph - ahdCdespair- of ,lhe~Democratic convention of the week."hefore. • •''' '..•' - ; T ~ •: ' " ,_'' •

There, late o^Monday, theRepublican majority in the StateAssembly riot only killed GovernorCahill's tax reform proposals—which included a state income t a x -but stamped on them, crushed themand, seemingly, destroyed them forall time;. With the defeat of the jn-come tax plan, revisions of theproperty tax structure and hopes forState assumption, of welfare andcourt costs also died:

After Monday night's work,Jersey taxes remain Jersey taxes—stuck right there on a property basis

honored even in the White Housewhere not all Republicans areconsidered papable and dedicatedto tax refcrm from the beginning of

proposal pf his administration. He^explained the needs find while therewas /perhaps .some\ criticism of

- specific points in ; the "reformpackage, there was no doubt that taxmatters had to be teviewed if thefinancial problems of the state andits taxpayers at ievery level were tobe faced and solved: Yet theRepublican majority signally andbrutally failed their chief executive.

What now? Surely Monday's vote• does not exorcize the problems of theJersey tax structure, easer theburdens on property; taxpayers,cause non-property owning intereststo contribute more in keeping withtheir resources," or eyen explain why

TdWNSHIP OF CRANFOROA N O NEW. JERSEYORDINANCE NO. 7JU

AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZINGTHE.0S BETV»6eN

.-EMfj . IPHi;-;

> ' ' . ' • . •• • •

^•nrc-.^

A*

IN TMB SWmlno lu»oni ft _ iCranfwrtf communityPo*|on Or«no« Avt. cogWn'thAv« tmn scbtdultil « t £tetfcr flm* tor t y W - o MOrag Jacobion. Whllt

rt$ld«ntting In thi

trio Bill PMmawi cenUir's J»B«inent. AIflhtiiuE. sound svBteiti

frsrfqrm tftTbeEscape HatchjtaWe* and chair* for-^« Saturday, August: s, at 8andio.p.m, r

heal mm, Oresto cool off andsomething at theDm*. Instructor ItSilvers. •

ItarnHIMDavFd

with ho hope for the cities and their Republicans in 1972 cannot support aproblems or for the smaller propertyowneif and Bis. Who « the moredesperate4s-armatter-ef-debate,rbut—only of that

Tax reform reeled when laborgroups deposed it weeks ago, but theprogram was unpopular with theRepublican-majority even earlier.Who needs another income taxseemed to be the predominant view,and, in a way, it is hard to fight thissort of molelike statement of theproblem.

But Governor Cahill, a Republican

Republican > gdyeruor i TheAssembly, which_so__gleefully.

Protests Parking. Summons

To the Editor: 'Oh June 29. 1972 I lef

automobile in Lot 3 in order tolake * train into^tew-York

-entrance

defeated The governor, now shouldassume the responsibility of offeringits own tax reform program whichinevitably must include muekof thegovernor's.

This state reformed an 18thcentury legal system not long ago. Itnow needs \o do not just somethingbut a great deal aboutyan 18thcentury tax structure. OnRepublicans, to the 26th centurybehind your governor.

•A:.

ce, one that will not be{changed bemuse someoneI wants ToZbuild a 33-unit-apartment. If only fivechildren live in this apart-

~ t of sending themch jQnfi_yiar_wilLbe.

jQiicgda-sign Hhto the lot marked restrictedbut on notjng the meter insideI Assumed the restricted,^ignmeant Uie lot to ,be formetered parking or the"Sticker" would-be used inlieu of the meters. I paid theappropriate amount for 12

Veil over $2,500. Multiply, this:by '12, the number oT yearsthey are in school, and you canreadily see-'it's "cheaper tofight than give a variance

With tV town sojlesperatefor park or open "area, theAmerican Legion propertyshould have

Managing EditorJohn M Waring

News Editor..Carol Bunck

Mary LoUi55NSJ.rague;Advertising Director

C rredenc Raker

Associate PublisherCarter J Bennett

Kt-tail Advertising Manager; ' ' . ; Carolyn Kugel.

x

on my car.On contacting the violations

ejerk, I learned that therestrictions sign tneant thatthis lot- was reserved for._Cranford residents only whodisplay asticker-l protested atthat time on two grounds: that^restriction marked residentsonly in a metered parking lotdiscriminates against non-residents and the sign isdefinitely unclear in its

There should be no problem asto the disposition of theproperty now occupied by two

schools, in the even!torn down. \" "finere has been no nKHJ'about theproposed terminal ifrCranford, but we now have a

>n study parking,eicpcGl! on thiscpect

thatterminal project that we don'twant? • • : . • - •

The overhead wire projectof Public Service also'hasbeen put of the news: Will weget another surprise?. It- should be the duty of

every citizen of Cranford toprotect'and improve our townrather than clutter anddestroy.

John R. Herbert47FairfieldAve.

Above and Beyond

To the Editor:I would publicly like to

thank the Cranford First Aidmad and the three members

whorespoifiaiije^enUv. tojny_call for help in transportingmy husband to the RahwayHospital. .-•.Me was in excruciating pain

and had to be handled verygently. I'ni sure their com-passion and warmth went farabove and beyond their,normal duty.

May God bless them all.

Mrs: Kathrytn V. Kuhar-. 158 Mohawk Dr.

t X C H A N O B O r T . * N 0 S BETHE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD ANDGEORGE B. t-IDDY .

WHEREAS, the Township «f CranfortI j the owner of cert»ln vacant land*situate, lying ahd being In jhe^Township-«« Cranford, County ol Union and Stateof New Jersey, designated on the currentCranford Tax Map «lots40 through^.

- and >;»• and " • -in mock tutof tot U7S.

News of

meaning even to Cranford" "majoring inresidents, I protest again andrefuse to pay the summons.

I grew'up in Cranford, at-tenijedTTs~ pubRc~SChool S7received scholarships from itscivic organizations, became ateacher and returned to teachin the community for twoyears. May I'suggest that the

Arthur Perry Sarkisian of420 North Union Aver.wasnamed to the dean's, list atRehsselaer Polytechnic In-stituie in Troy, N.Y; fpr- thespring semester. He is

electrical

Schindler,

Governor Tells WhereLptieryMdney

engineeringSharon K.

daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Russell-J. "SehmdleF --of- 22Parker Ave., has been ac-cepted as a sophomoreBarnard College in New YorkCity for the'fall semester. Shecompleted her second

/Governor William T: Cahill outlines the allocation"of State.Lottery proceeds.

/ 'What did they do with all-?'is-one-ofv t h o y y

lhe^questions most frequentlyaskedr-and answered—instate government.

•'It's a good question, andsince the lottery programrepresents one of the bestbargains the citizens of NewJersey receive, it's-a questionwe invite. . ' ,

"Undoubtedly, many peoplehad the impression that in-come from the lottery wouldresult in tax reductions.

'To the ejrtent that it helpedprevent greater tax increases,this is eo. But to be literallycorrect, it would be qecessrarythat state expenditures bestopped at the. level theyreached two ye^rs ago,

.-It would mean that no onereceive salary increases, JIO

. matter how deserving; thathere be no additional aid forpur schools and colleges;; nonew highway programs; nofurther attempts to help-ou

poor, our old, 'our infirm; noimprovementsJfl our prisons;no remedies for the pollutionjf our land and air and waters.

"W<»v would even have to.default on gome of ourobligations.. . .- ,

We were ible to Ose lotteryfunds for the demands, ofeducation and institutions,thus making regular staterevenues available for; (heprograms in, ihe "other vitalareas of state government.

The unprecedented suc-•ess of the state lottery in itsirst "2',-j years will have

opened the doors to more than44,000 New Jersey young menand women for collegeeducation—a significantai'compl ishmen t.

"Neariy 25cents oi every 50-c-ent lottery ticket sold is beingspent (or education and stateinstitutions. Almost the entireremainder.goes directly backlo the purchasers as prizes.

"More precisely., on thebasis of the number of 5O-centtickets sold since the lotterywas launched on December J6,1970, it has been calculatedthaj. gross receipts and in-_" _^earned by June 30. 1973

will have amounted to $319.9gmjllion.

^"During .that .Z'/i-ryear.period, net profits turned overto the - state - for aid toeducation and institutions willhave totaled nearly- $151.4million. .While the lawrequires that a minimum of 30per cent of gross lottery,receipts go to the state, actualnet profits to date haveaveraged 47 per cent.- "Regulations require that 45per centof lottery receipts'goback to the public in prizemoney and five per cent isdistributed as commission tothe agents-who sell the tickets,

"These two items account•for $15B.'<; million ui the 2.';.-year period. :^>'-' "''

erection of suph barriers, eventhough they be vague, isone-of-the most inept acts of, publicrelations that I hav6 ;_everseen.

If you '„ wish to provideparking for Cranfordresidents then do it. byallowing them to purchasestickers which will . permitihem to park in lotsspecifically marked forstickers only. Gel rid of thepublic meters! .. ' \

1 believe this to be one of theworst affronts I have eversustained in'- my own hometown.

Barbara J. Brown Little. _ . . . < Mrs. James S.)

•-••''•' Orchard Park. N.Y._ • _ . ' ' - L

.Advice for the fo\A/n

To the Kditor: —,, , - ' -It was kmd. of. the Mayor to

review the Green Acresproject, but very unnecessary.The-citizem^of the town saidno. so it should have been

C e r Plan may bi>«'matter of public feciSrd. batthat doesn't mean it's what the jcitizens of this'tbwn want. TheTownship Commi tleemenHhould carry out the will of thepeople vvho elected them.

The best protection-a towncan,gel,is a good zoning or-

semester at Union College.KENILWORTH "&~ Marilyn

E. Torrenti, daughter of Mr.and* Mrs. Vincent .Torrenti of43S£18th SL, was named to thedean's list at Wilkes College inWilkes-Barre, Pa.

Jill Panetta of 25 HarvardRd., a chemistry student atNortheastern. University, jnBoston, was recently electedsecretary of the NortheasternUniyer is ty Amer icanChemical Society StudentAffiliates Chapter. ;

Gary Kester* Hicks, son ofMr. and Mrs. James AutstinHicks of 25 Berkeley PI.,appeared on the i secondsemester dean's list at theUniversity of the South hiScwanee, Tennessee.. Kevin W. Kenlan, son of TVlr.

and Mrs. Arthur J: Kenlan of113. Makatom Dr., has.beennamed a college scholar, thehighest '-recognition ... foracademic acievement.'for thespring term at- MiddleburyCollege in.Middlebury, Vt.

,-The Berklee, -College- ofMusic, Boston, announces thatFrank Grasso, son of Mr. and

Rutgers College, NewBrunswick, with the highestdistinction in the sociology.Idepartment. He received aB.A. degree. A 1968 graduateof Cranford High School, Mr.Blrib^uer, ' will enterWashington and Lee LawSchool, Lexington, Va., inSeptember.^

Askild Melnyczuk, son otand Mrs." Edward

Melnyczuk of 12 ClaremontPI., is among freshman andtransfer students who enteredAntioch College. YellowSprings, Ohio, orr July t. Hewas graduated this year fromCranford High School. .

The University of Vermont,Burlington, has announcedthat Judy-Lynn Goldenberg of21 Dunham Ave. and SuzanneG. Tenenbaum of 26 Wad/sworth fer. are on the dean^slist for the fall and spring inthe College of Education.

Joanne Lynes of 8 Oak Lane.<ha3rbcen'narned-to the deanjslist" for the spring semester atSt. Bonaventure University,St. Bonaventure, N.Y. '..

1 . - " ' i

Miss J e a n Wiegand,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. H.G.Wiegand of 38 Iroquois Rd.,has completed her first yearas a student nurse atMassachusetts GeneralHospital School of Nursing,Boston. She achieved thehighest average in clinicalnursing and was elected headproctor ~fpT~lhe~incl)ming~freshmen. She also will serveas treasurer of her class nextyear: Miss Wiegand plans^tospecialize in operatingxroomand surgical nursings She willbe home on vacation inAugust. / • "

RichBaine^of Cranford Wasnamed to^ the dean's list atBucknefl •" "University inLewisburg, Pa. He is a juniorand a member of the baseballteam. ' - .

Henry J. Zielinski, son ofMr, and Mrs. H.J. Ziellnski of206 Centennial Ave., receivedan undergraduate degreefrom the University ^fxNotreDame in- commencementexercises. Jl«f majored' in

"'

and th? wortrly twelve (U) fe«t of lotWat irt elotk 547, and • - .

WHEREAS Osorge B. LKMy l» th«owner of certain vacant land* andpremises situate, lying and being to 1hjTownship ot Cranford and designated ortu ld Tax Map as lots 45 and 46. In Block169. lo»» 525 throuoh lots 537. In Block 701.lots 1B00 thjouoh lM3,.ln Block 545. lot*14)9 and 4M, In Block 54V, am)

WHEREAS, the,Township proposes toconvey said lot* 40 throbgh 45, In Block34», lots 1674 and 1877, and the easterly(0urteeruO4) »«et of lot" 1875, ahd thowesterly twelve (M) feel of lot I87i- InVlsck 547. In exchange lor ssld lot* ASand 44, in Bock 1« / lots 525 through 527.

Jn Block 7M, lots 1SOT Ihrouflh IBO1;-Ii>Block 545, lots 1619 and 630. In Block 541.and a cash consideration of Twothousand Dollars ($1,000.00). which sumrepresent* the difference In value bet--

Sridiald idTTdw^'byCeSfgrBrtWByTand - -

WHEREAS, It Is deemed In the publicInterest that said exchange ol lands be,consummated, and / •

WHEREAS, the Township Committeeot tho Township of CranforcK hasdetermined that sald'lands to-be con-veyed by Ihe said George B^UWdy to theTownship and the cash consideration ofTwo Thousand Dollars ij.OOO.OO) to bepatd by the said Geonje B. Llddy to theTownship are of areater value to theTownship lor public use than said landsto bo conveyoif by Ihe Township to Ihesaid Geore* B. Llddy,

BE l / ORDAINED BY THEYOWNSH!.P__Cp»flMIT.TEE QF_.IHE-TGjSfiSHi'P- OF CRANFORD. NEWJERSEY:• • . . -

Section ' I . That the Township olCranlord convey, pursuant to_ N. J.S.A.<0A:l?14. said lands owned toy tt anddesignated as aforesaid .to the saidGeorge B. Llddy In exchange *>T said'lands owned try him and a 'cash con5lderatloo or $7,000.00, *hlch additionalconsideration represents Iho differencein value between said lands- to be ex-changed as aloresaW. - V

Section 2. That Ifte proper officers olthe- Township execute a deed of con

• veyance covering said lots .to.be coivveyedby Iho Towniljlp as aforesaid andIhe Township Clerk deliver sold deedjefIho said Georgia. Liddy In exchfjntro loraTleed ol tonveyanco In lorjM^and substance approved by .Ihfl-^iownshlp AKtorney, covering thp^a ld lots ownetf byhim as a!ores»itl7-and said cash"'conslderatlo<v«fs2.pO0.0O

SecJiolv 3. This ordinance ibftU-takeC*f6'cl upon publkoilon alter llnol

'passaflt? as provided by law.

Map as lots J and 4, Vt Ctlock 34*. lot* 10through" M. In Block W , loft J, 4.JAthrough 19A, JO.througrt 22. In Block 3»t.

* W H E R E A S , the Township propoMrOoconvey'saTd r«n»tnW»o»r»*; m^tpekm. lots JO, 305 through 311, In Block387; and 139 antM4fc In Block 405, Inexchange tor, sakT lots 3 and 4,- In Block349, lots 10 through \J, In Blp«k 397, «OdK>tsi«. 7A through WA. JO through M. InBlock *W, and the agreement of VlntonlBrothers Construction Company to oav«the portion of James Avenue hereinafter-referred lo, arid •..

H Is diemed In ihepublk-

four Cranford youths, islocated in thecommunity Center at thecorner of Alden and MUn Sto.

Tlcketa for the two showsarepriced at $3 and currentlyiare onjsale at Bergen Cameraand other locations, in thearta, Ticketo also may bepurchased at the door. Thereare no reserved seats. '

Bob Buontempo ofManor,Ave., Michael Korn of17 Oak La., Fern Mulkeen of401, South Union Ave. tad LeeWolansky of 7 Dorchester Ave.are producers of the show.

The Hitch, which they say is-oatterned-after Gfeenwrch

VUIage clubs likfe^Tlie Bitter^End and GasliRht Au Go Go, is

pebble were Installed in recentmonths. AS«riety of "exotl«>,non-alcoholic beveragserved by waitresses" iwill be available. : :

Men

FraMrs. Salvatore. Grasso'.of 122

ji

J' Taxpayers who feel theirproperty has been unfairlyvalued-by the local assessorwill'have to act quickly to layobjections to 1972" 'pVBru-ty

h i e ' the

15 is .the

County «oards ot Taxation, itwas 'announced this week bytiiti Neu- Jersey

.- Association. .Augustdeadline for filyig appals.

Under oxiSfrtig' law, un.in-tlividual taxpayer mjy-aijpeolpersonally or through anattorney if he is "o^rK-ved 'by llu- a:WL-.ssnn--nt en hi:; ownpropcity or brliev<.-> it to b.-discnmii^itury- Such appeal i-.-imade \>u t'oriii:; provid.xi byCounty Board;; u( Taxation.Kach board ;uii)i>t;» it:,, ov.nruk-:) ol proi-cdtiif. ,ul)J ; r lo

•- approval by'tu.\aiu.,'i.

.:pj)..-..I i

Association preit-rited to theNew.... Jersey'" Tax PolicyCom.miltine a procedure bywhichjofficial data could beused by appellaiif fa.xpayers toprove, discriliiination inassessments.' Subsequently,the recommendation wasiransiiiilU-d lo Coveinoi('al)ill by the Tax PolicyCommittee '!> ' t s .

prehensive reportThe . NJTA recom-

mendation, embodied lor themost part in Assembly Bill No.12^6, would allow an: in-d i v i d u a l ' s p r o p e r t yassessment ratio of assessedlo true value to be' measuredjgaiiLst the official "commonIcveLrange", ol' l!> per - evt\l( NJTA had urged 10 per cent)

Cslen<This Community Calendar, which is published J.U-<-k!y ;i«d

conUiius1 iniur.ination about <:v^nb; i>i coininiiniiy interest,that :.iv opt-n to I)1.-- public, irf coinpil«-d by iln- CianiordK.Tiv.UiOii I)t-paruiu-iil. T<) submit a<i e-vi-ni loror for additiojial information, call tlu- Ki-civ.uion .l).-j>art-

oi • (he c i i i i i i c i s averageassessment ration. Ad-justments would have' to bemade to assessments with anuio outside of the range. Byuiiiiig A iip icified measure. oldiscrimination, taxpayerswould be saved ' the oftencosily obligation of developingposiiive ' proof oidiscriiriiiiaiion on their own..

In a related development onproperty tax appeals, a ivcenlcourt -decision is important.Taxpayers on several oc-casions hav«- (-'.one lo court lotry to obtain access to ivrtamproperly (ax re.<:ords. TheSeaside Keij'.hts PropertyOwners Association recentlywon a partial victory in a raseinvolving .i<-ees\ihillty of

l jpeity record cardi

Thom.as St., a junior majoringapplied ma'sic, has earnedplacement on tho dean's lustfor Ihe spring semester of the1071-72 school year:His curriculum includes

courses in arranging, solo andorchestral .performance,composition, harmony, as u-Wl;is courses in Ihe humanities.Upon graduation fromBcrkk-e. Mr. (.rasso will he(|iialifit-<l ;is a teat-hyr,arranger. coin[MJS«.r and in-sirtiiiienialist.

I'fiiti- area rt-sidenls arc onthe dean's list for Ihe springsemester ;<t Buekneil

livec' jiy, Lewishurg, Pa.'rheyareUiclianl I>! HamesolCChiremoril I'l. and Sandra !•'.

•ll)\ ol 10 IU-(,;ch SU-

Paul PatrkK^bour, son ofMr. aniiMrs. Donald Dour ofV22< Burnside Ave. wasrecently enlisted in the MarineCorps. . - • " . . ' -'»' '

He enlisted under" theground ^enlistment programfor assignment in thetechnical specialist field.Upon completion of basictraining at Parris Island. S.C-.he will- receive a course of•instruction- inr his new oe-cupiitiori.

Included in this enlistmentprogram are, fields such asmilitary police, motormaintenance, constructionand heavy equipment. Ifmusically inclined, he myyfrmJ himself assigned to one ofthe many Marine Corpsbands. ' s

The new Marine can expectto return home on his .firstleuvo in -about 11 weeks.

Captaiir Gerald Senna, son<)f Mr. and Mrs. .Joseph Serina

"oil I Marsh St., 1ms receivedthe U.S. Air force com-mendation medal • -formeritorious seryiee.

Captain'- Se.rirm; a xeniiuivigaior' at McGnire AFH,XL-tciytui the award loi' his

('i';)iilord, and,John (ioodinan •,l>\ opf '.'M'-i l ioujevani,"Kenilworth.- .lellVey K.'

K<l. is

performance as anU d i d r

assistantcommander in su|>-

pnrt of the annual joint AirNavy logistica

operation, "Deep Freeze!,which is conducted in Amarciica.

The captain, iii h llio aviation cadprogram in l!>(>2, is a niernb

li

orce bases and can examineareers ih wHich they mayisli" to serve as officers.dditiooally, they receive

urvival training, aircraft andlircrew indoctrination, smallirrris training and visit otherUr Fonee b?ises.

Caddl Schuling is a jnember>f the AFROTC unit at' Grove"ity (Pa.) College. He is a 1970graduate of Cranford HighSchool.. ' :

GAHWOOD - Navy seamanecruit John T. Lesak, son of^lr. and Mrs. James J. Lesakuf -161 4th Ave., visitedMalaga, Spain -'aboard the.aircraft carrier-USS Jqlin F.Kefinedy. ~ -

IIij; ship's;nix-day stay in thesouthern Spanish coastal townmarked the first, timfi anaircraft carriec had vfsitedthere. • • • .

Chairman of TownshlR.Camn'iltieeATTEST; '/ • ' . , -Wesley N.-Philo,Townshtp Clerk '

: - ' N O T I C E * •The lortooino ordinance was In.

troduced and passed on llrsl readino ol airteollno o< the Townihip Commltteo olIhe Township, trf-Cranlofd N.J. onTuesday. July 11. W1 and will hoconsidered lor linal B»ss40C alter publichearing, at .another meeting... ol saidTownship Comirtitteo *il MunicipalUUllillno. Cronford. Now Jersey, onTuesday, AuouSI 8, Wi .il'U:30 o'clock-P.M. (pre'vailina time), . /;.' -1 WESLEY N-. PH(LO

'. • Township ClerkDdlcd: July 20, 19?3 .. , -,-"" (Foo: J24.96 - " • / ' " ' •••

.' TOWNSHIPOI-CRANCORDCRANFORD. NEW >EMS£Y .

ORDINANCE NO. 73 IV

AN ORDINANCE AUTHOKlZING THECXCHANOE OF LANDS BETWEENTHE TOWNSKIP OF CRAN^OHD ANDVIZZONI -BHOTHEHS CONS T R U C T I O N C . O / ^ P A N Y

VHtRtiAS, TW? Tow,ivship p* Cr.infordIhe owner at certain UdCjnl landsujle, lying and bwlng In Ihe Township

ol Cranlord, County ol Union jind Stale'oi N«-W Jt-r-sey. deiiQnoledonlru) currentcr<inlo«-d T,ix Matt .is lofi.JBO-throuohM6. in Ulock -."W, loll VU3. 3O1 mrounhJ l l . in OlOCk SD7. ,md lol l UV ai\d 140, inUlock 405, .ind -

WHEKEAS. Vi/zonl - Drothcin Con-•jruttion'Company - i * Ihu ownur oftur t j in vacant land'i .irjd (jrer<S(ii;5•Jtuolo. lymo andtwlno in '-.iid townshipot Craniotd ,ind 0«f4i'jnaled on v^i^ Tjx

interest that such exchange of land* b*consummated, and • - .- • . ^ ;

WHEREAS. the Towmhlp Commlth*dt the township Of Cranford hflloeterrnined that, salct lanoi to b« con-veyed by Ihe said Vliionl Brother*Construction company to tW-Townihlp,and the ao/aenieut. to, pave the saidportion ot James AWhue by and at theexpense Of sold Viuon) Brother* Con.itruction Companv. art ot greater validto the Township for public U M thaiv«aldlands to be conveyed by th« Townoilp tosaid Vliionl Brother* .Coniiroetloh

C ° B T 7 T OBOA.NEp^eV THE"TOWNSHIP COfflMIJEfE OF THETOWNSHIP. OF O&NFORD. NEW

section'. >. iKat the Towjishipfot• Cranford coptfey, 0ursuant to^J.J.S.A.

id lands owned by it and»aid to the saw..

vixiOHrBrother* ostruction Company..in exchange for said" lands owned by It

' I the agreement to pave salo" portionJames Avenue lylno between me

southerly curb line fill Rankjn Avenueand a point approximately 320 feet to theexisting, paving south of the- boundary-line between said lots 311 and 31} to awidth of 30 feet. a,ll In accordance with.the"spcclllcaHpns on I I I* tn the oftlco otihe Township Engineer. . . ' . - .

Section 2. Thai. Ihe proper otllcer* ofthe Township eVecute » tleed of con-veyance covering said lots to be con-voyed by the Township as aforesaid andIhe Township Clerk deliver said deed fOthe said VijMnl Brother* ConstructionCompany i>-exth*n9» for a d««d o»conveyance. In lorm and substanceapproved by Ihe Township AttorneYjcovering Ihe said lots owned by V l i i fBrothers Conslrucllon .Company ^contalnlng a covenant io V

Avenue, as aforesaid. '•Section 3. This ordinance shall take

cllecl upon publlcallon/alt«r flmj"passage as provlded^yTaW^ ,

-"•?••,•-.•-." " • - ' JaclvChairman ol Townspiptommlllee

ATTEST:Wesley N. Phllo>Township a * * * : .

y ^ NOTICEloregolng ordinance was In- -y

^iroduxed and passed onllrst reading at a /meeting ol the Township Coifimltteeof .Iho Township of Cranford. N.J/onTuesday. July »1. IWJ and-will J * con-sidered lorUnai passage, afjer-public"hearing, at another meeting ol saidTownship Committee A\ Municipal .Bujlding, Cranlord, New . Jersey, onTUESDAY. AUguslB.lv'Jal 8:30 o'clockP.M. (prevailing time).

WESLEY N.PHILOTownship Clerk

Dated: July 20. 1971

for the serious music listenersto hear professional acts,"Pot and,Michael report.

The four youths,* who ob-tained the permission of theRecreatioa-to operate The

Tjie Escape Hatch is hotAssociated , with the Cof-feehouse which also hasoperated at that location, Bot>and Michael said^ they have,invested about $250 and a lot oftime into the venture. -; .;

"Hie continuation of the club,they, indicated, hinges uponthe succesa of the August 5show. They are encouraged bythe sale-of tickets which havebeen available for a week. Aprofit from the August 5 showwould be channeled back intoth§ club for future per-fofihancesr . -

In the ten years he has beenon the music scene, Van Ronkhas recorded ten albums,has toured college cam'fbrxsoncerte &lm

is. «e.puses

around eariy friend of Bob Dylan, VanRonk has appearedalclubs onboth coasts and Jne Newportand Philadelphia- folkfestivals. His^ repertoire in-cludes Jiia^own music "andselections^from Joni Micbelland rd Cohen.

JulyVthroughJury3V

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'Iho Coupty'o* Union,. New Jersey, as'loltows: -• . I . .

'' - St/itoment, - • : • • ' • ' - • • • , ~

The torcQoIno ordinance W J S adoptedon iin.il rtadino J'nir public nearlng o<> .-th« n|h dov oi July l«',2. , ;

• • . " - • • A.T.MOSCAOorouoh ClorV-

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Jf CONTAlNtkiiO L: I ll C 1 I () N

oIMM-KI.ICTIONAl.-1-UMNT.rUwl.:." I of.-iu" L.>IIUUJI)U l-'..i)or.iiory

I i' I lutlronU

Tho Cronlurd Clllltn ami ChronlcloIs published qyury Thursday by-thoKlv/crvlow Publishing Co.. Inc. "corporation at 21 73 Aldcn Struct,Cranlord, N J. Eubscrlpllon rates bynull postpaid: one • year. • wlttilnUnion County, S4.59T In N.JI. 17.00rclsvwhuro In U.S. SIO.OO; overseas,tits.00. Otllclol nowspopof vfiir'Cranlord. Kcnllworlh «nd Garwood;Second .Cldii-'Postaoo Paid litCriiiiinid, Now Jonoy " 0'OI6..

i

'harmaciesa week

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BELL'S —SCHER'S WILL BE CLOSED

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PERSONALIZED AND F R I E N D L YSERVICE EVERY t{AY OF THE YEAR.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, SHOPYOUR LOCAL PHARMACY-

"024 to'60-month Savino*Certificates provide a salo,convciniont form of saving with guuruntood Interestand you can pick tfju tlulu o( inatu'rity ironv 24 to 60months (minimum account only-SSOO.). Special Inves-tors Paaabook Accounts provido 6°/u |Jor year Intyrost(rom'day-of-dupobits'to day-oKvilhdrawal' (providingS>0. romains yn do|)o^it at tlio ond o( quailorj.-fhla^.Idoal toi uavorsi who with to dopouit (undu loi u uhgrtpuiiod of tlmo. Rogulur Pj^^book AocoUntu providei';« iiUC'ttist P}Hf*}to;.tf''i)H all l)^lanc»ju ovor Sbf). Ui.-

roiToi br/foio tho )Oth ot any.monthHit,) l i t . Ailor thu 10th, o.ii.nin!):; utait

Tioin d'jy of dupo^lt.-i-'ii-o tr.mstor if yout nuxioyoluuwtujrvj. All dupo'jlt;; liuiurud lo

Ihursday, July 20, lg^CRANFX)RBtXN.J.

Ronald Van Wlnckel

IN THf HATQi*.*-. The four organizers of The Escape Watch; located at theCommunity Center, test sound equipment for August 5^how featuring Dave Van

k. From left they are Michael Korn, Fern Mulkeen, Bob Buontempo and Lee[ p l ' a n a k y . . .• . • _ ; _ ' . ; y . - . : ,--; / . ' • • ' - . ' ••'-.'• • ; ' ; • / . ^•_.-.

fii Golf TifSm^eniRobin McCorinick, ,s6n of_

Mr. ind Mrs. Robert h-Wc-Cormick Jr. of 4 Woods, HoleRd.,'recently returned fromcompeting in the-13th annualinternayonal PeMplay golftournament held July 11-13 onthe Moila Shrine Coontry Clubcourse in St. Joseph, Mo.

R o b i n / r e p r e s e n t i n gBremner Chapter of the Orderof DeMplay, tied for thirdjJaeeJ"Lthe "B." iU^lti<5l !he_54-hole medal play tourney.The only entrant from NewJersey, the if-year-old localgolfer competed in a field of 57golfers. 'itQja all over the

country. The participantsranged in age from 13 to 21 andwere divided into six flights.

Just coming from a, thirdplace finish in the boys'division of the Nj State PGO,Robin shot «6-80-te-257 on theMpila course and was onestroke off the pace until atriple bogey on" the 16th hole ofthe final round put him out of,contention. _ /

Robin is planning u>- com-pete next in the fi Uf annualRutgers junior ^open, spon-sored by theRutgers Golf Clubon August -7-9 on the RutgersUniversity ^course. •

Parliamentarians PlanConvention Reports

Two members of theCranford Unit ofParliamentarians.will reporton their attendance at con-ventions at a: unit meetingWednesday_aMP -a.«n.- at thehome of Mrs. F. S.Swackhamer, H) Herning Ave.

Mrs,. G. P. Weinhaimer;immediate past president ofthe New Jersey Federation ofWomen's Clubs, will report onher attendance at a session ofthe-General Federation of"Women's Clubs Trii Denver,Colo., and Mrs? M. L. Bowenwill give an account of theArizona State* Federation ofParliamentarians, convention.;At'a recent meeting of the

Cranford Unit, held at thehome of Mrs. W. H. Lang, 20Tulip St., there was a progressreport on recent revisions in«ihe by-laws,, presented byMrs. Lang and Mrs. A. R.Mirante.. ' -

Mrs. Mirante received .aletter of thanks for theprogram on parliamentaryprocedures that she. gave forthe provisional members ofthe Junior Service League->

The Cranford unit will behost at an all-day workshop

The Cro'nlord Cjiriun jhd.Oironlflci i pu&lished^'cry Thursday tiy theKlverjikAPubUshlno'Co., inc.. jCQHTlir<iUon Jt 21 23 Alden Streot,-Odniord, N.J. Subit'H^tion rj ies 0vinslil , i.M)stP()|d:' one yejr, within'Onion County.'Si.50. In N.J., S/.00.t?Kewhorc in U.S. M0.0O; overseas,515.00 Oltlcittl iVw^paP*.'!", ' o r

Cr^nloru, KwiUworth tind Gjrwood.Si-cond Clj^s PO&IJUO Pdl'l .itCranlord. N.-w JuricV 0701,6.Ycluphqnv IVllD UfTiKa. _ '

LOtsparksBY

WARREN RAN.KIW-

CHANGE OF PACE

Paris, ' , Norway, London,Koine or just a low short

• mill's Iroiri liomc-a hriflV'acriiiiun oupjit to l)t- nowj^ivi'n io|) priority, lor uvall lu'fd _.a ;; . • . -f IKIII i i* olM-<-IU'. al -leastsome i'hanj.;e111 DID" l iHUHH'.

for the sixth district officers ofthe Federated Women's Clubson September 21 at the ClioClub, Roselle. •

The^ugust meeting will beon August24 at the homeof thepresident, Mrs. ' Weinhaimer,in Beach Haven. -•...':.,..•

- V ! • " ! • ' • ' ' ' • •

ly Arthur K. Burdfft,"hntatnt, " ' •

HtM^und of CranfordOne of the agencies included

in the United Fund of Ctanf ordis the Union CountyPsychiatric Clinic at i l l E.Front St. in Plainfield. Its

county toiy»ng problems > ot a

growing urban population. Itco-operates closely with otheragencies such as the MentalHealth Association of NJ., theMt. Carmel Guild and three ofthe largest hospitals of the'area, Elizabeth- General,Summit's. Overlook andPlainfield's Muhlenberg.

The clinic's staff, headed byJay W. Fidler, M.D., is drawnfrom all areas of Oie county,with professionals in the fieldof medicine, psychiatry;psychology; and social work,as well a£ -with consultingprofessionals inotjier medicaland health specialBEs.

Similarly, th$- clinic'smanagement, headed byBenjamin H. Haddock,,executive /^director, is

30YEARS WITHWilliam E. Stantpn of 34Canterbury PI. /recentlycelebrated •his/- 30-yearannlversary" wTth tssoResearch and EngineeringCompany, Fiornam Park,principal technical af-filiate of; the/ worldwideStandard Oil-Company(New Jersey).

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-trustees drawn- from lllcommunities and all activitiesof—the county. Each com-munity also has^a cliniccommittee designed to -keepthe management and; the staffinformed of local problemsand conditionswjCranford has20 members on itsjeomniunitycommittee,- representingchurches, schools, welfare,law enforcement and layactivities, with Mrs. HenryFcahme as chairman. . '-

Dr. Fidlerhias reported thatthe .Elizabeth General

Hospital Mental Health Centerhas been granted federalfunds for the next eight years,in amounts that will decreaseannually/'but sufficient toinclude funds for the ex- -took over the orphaned girlpanslon of the associated **-''*--•* • - .—=_.. .—psychiatric, clinic staft which

vice, as well as the con-sultation and education. ,

As medical director, Or.Fidler issues tegular financial,and service: reports bt theclinic's operations. Theseshow that the clinic's expensesare close to half a milliondollars annually. The servicescover 2,685 patients requiring24,056 hours of treatmentduring 1971, as well as 1,654hours of conference onpatients, 961 hours of trainingof staff workers, 154 hours ofresearch, 1,416 hours ofconsultation services, and 309hours of community servicesfor a total of 28,550 hours.Cranford had 149 patientsrequiring 904 hours of treat-ment, and three on a waitingl i s t . , , f.'--'. ' • . . . " • • • • ' •

Patients' are charged feesaccording ^to-their:rabilitypay. for consultation andtreatment Since no one isturned away for financialreasons, the fees do not beginto cover the operational costsand contributions are received^from various county- UnitedFunds, from other voluntary'contributors, from: municipalgovernments, school systems'and from the state and federalgovernments. - • • ' . ' ' :'

Executive director Haddockcited as a typical example ofthe clinic's services, a 12-yearold girl whose father had

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lBut' had many disciplproblems. Consultations^wjt•€rerajdihe~ and; with herguardians opened up com-munications between—{hentrHer depression eased and herbehavior: and school per-formance improved.

GARWOOP-Array privateKenneth.C, Sanders, son ofMr. and Mrs, Ray Sanders of%

completed eight'advanced- individual trainingat the U.S. "Army ArmdrCenter, Ft. Knox, Ky. *

During the. traimng>v Istudents learn the duties of atank crewman, including thefiring of the tank's armamentand small weapons. They also

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miradio operation; mapand tank maintenancerepair. ' '.';.. ';:•••'. Z'Pv.t. Sanders is a/i970

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Page 3: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

^

• . . . - • - '

vcrnzKN A

• - - , , ••**—] ...••

«UOT3^

IfllifS^ ^/ • . " •

; 5 * F ? ? ^r : ;:$••**•

•k -

• • • • . . . ' . (> ' , • . . ' • • , " - ;

^TtitattjtaiCranford residentsl ^ ^ 1 W U W o n i C o J l W ,

' : > • ' • ' ' > ' / ' ' " '

day Bad evening sessions-named to the president's

honor list for the springsemester, it was announced

:• '••fK• ' ' - * • ' • - • • ' • > ' : • : • : • ' • ' • . * • » . * • . • • • * • ' . • " : . . " " ' • ' • ' • ' . ' • • ' J * • • I " ' i > . " ^ T . : * ' ' ' ' • • ' * ' • ' • • — ' ' ' ; " * • ' ' • • * • ' " • ' ' • ' . ' ' ' « * " • • " " • '

KENILWORTHr Therewere 123 students at DavidBrearley Regional HighSchool whose final averagequalified them for listing on

. the honor roll for the 1971-72school year. Tiiey included 39freshman, 32 sophomores,juniors and 23 seniors. The listis as follows:

Ninth Grade!, '•', Patricia Aramann, Nancy

Balogh, Lisa Borealo, MaryJane Bradley, ChristineBruce, Lance Bury, Mary1

Cirigliano, Carolyn Coppola,Thomas Crisofulli, 'JoanneCuccari, Enrica Del Cafnpo.Robert Fol, Ronald Givens,Margaret Jacpbi, MaryKeating, -Karen v Kincaid,Barbara Korschek, KathleenLeary," Susatt McDonald,Susan .' Morison, DebraMuravsky, Deborah Orlik.

Also, Ibone Palau, Vincema""'fantano, • JoAnn Pentz,

Richard Polidore, Gary Prish,Phtricia rRussell, EphimSavWgianakis , DeborahSoney\Lori Stark, MarthaToi'ma^<Joseph Troiano,

- Patricia Wagner/ LorrindaWebb, William Weiss, DianiWist, Mary. ^Yawylak andKathleen Zickgral^

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TenthGrade .EleanorBarbarotta, Donna

Barbella, RobeFt—RaxBes,Diane "Boyle, LorraineGeislex,' Emit Guarino, Jef-frey Haines, Lissa Heider,James Hild, Barbara Jacobi,DeniseKarlik,

Jaskot,Anthony

WilliamLimone,

Garey Maietta, Bryan Mann,1GherylMarko, Patricia Pelak,Barbara Puszkar, MelaniePyle, Jacquelyn Quinnan,Gary Rica, Joleen Sadlon,John Schlingman, Karen Sc-hweitzer, Christine Sigety,Kathleen Stawash, CathleenStollen, Peter Swaszek, SusanVigeant,. Joseph Weber,'Michael Wolski and JamesWright.

Eleventh Grade '. Carol Bergstrom,—Ej'sarBoeninghaus, Randy Bury,GinaiCalicchio. Linda Clark,Anthony Delia, . WalterDudzinski, Joel DuPlessis,Deborah Frim, Maureen

Gavin, Mark Glowinski,George. Grdezinger, TomJadelis, George Jom) Ann,•Marie';-—Kaiser^-; WendjfKnudson, Robert LandauiEileen McCaskill, Kurt Mc-Cue, John Miller, DebraMorrison, Ljhda •-, Olock,Joseph Santiso, KarenTavaska, Frank TenEyck,Phyllis • Troiano, LynnWaldvogel, David Ward andRobert Wise.

TvielfthGrade rJoan ' '.Barren, Dolores

Capece, Patricia Ca,sale,Wayne Csupa; Mary. AnnCzander, Kathi Fiamingo,Karen Hammer, WendyHarris, Joyce Honrath, Jo^ceInfantino, Marilyn Jacobi,Dennis Julius, Bevery Karlik;Debbie KilbucR, Stephan.Linkel, Susan Lueddeke,Richard, Metzinget, Mar aPugliese, Diane Recknagei,Barbara Rein, Marilyn Seelig,Susan Sylvester, and MicheleYaras. • • . ' . ' • :.

Receive AtvardsKENILWORTH -.A number

of awards were presentedrecently a t an awardsassembly for graduates ofHarding School.

The following awards werepresented: Veterans ofForeign Wars Post - 2230,Melissa Wood ,&nd ScottBergman; Veterans" ofForeigbsWars Auxiliary Post2230, Sbsan Degelmann;American legion Post 470,Shirley Boyden" and BarbaraMarko; Lions>Club. ScottSdnford and )CaroIj<n D'Arcy;Rotary Club, Shirley^oyden;Recreation Commission.

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Joanne g a s k e t and RonaldYuhLv^PBA AdministrativeMerit Award, Michael Vent re;Fitzpattick Industrial ArtsAwards; Carolyn D'Arcy andScott Sc.hafer

Debbie Delicot won the,Home Economics EssayContent Award. Honorablemention certificates werenresented to Carolyn D'Arcy,Donna Fiorellino, MargheritaRisotti, Theresa Lloyd, DefcraSJiollar, Shirley Boyden,Melissa Wood, Terri Genovaand Randi Levine. ,_...; ' . __

Leslie Pucik . won^- th«TNational Science-Teachers,Association Award and-cer-tificates of participation were-awarded to Nicholas Lordi,Steott Bergirtann, ShirleyBoyderj^Susan Degelmann,-DQnna\Ptorellino and RandiLevine.

Other awards were: BandBoosters Awards, Gary. Pr-zybylek and Susan Phillips;PTA Awards, Theresa Priscoand Gary Przybylek: SigneS w a n b e r g S t e p h e n s 'Mathematics Award,- RandiLevine. and John KrUpinski:Margaret F. Ray Art Awards.-Leslie, ...Pufci k,-and RogerSpaeth;; Italian American-Welfare Association Award,Nicholas Lordi; Ben MolJewelers Award, NicholasLordi and William Thwaites.

Sehool service awards weregiven to Joanne Basket,Debbie -Delicot, SusanD e g e l m a n n , B a r b a r aKrautter, Karen . Mjhalek,Margherita Riscotti, CynthiaBoeninghaus, Susan Phillipsand Janet Ktigelman.

The' Kenilworth TeachersAssociation Awards for out-s l a n d i n g • s c h o l a s t i cachievement were' presentedU> Shirley Boyden, CarolynD'Arcy, Susan D.egelmann,Randi Levine,- BarbaraMarka, Scott BergmanrJohnKrupinski, Nicholas Lordi,Scott Sanlord and KurtSeheuler.

Honor Roll certificateswere awarded to RonaldBagnaJI, Ethel Balzer, JoanneBasket, Scott Bergmann,Shirtey Boyden, CarolynD'Arcy, _ Susan Degelmann,TJiubbie Delicot, • DoiinaFiorellino, Timothy H<.'<ile}\Lisjj ..Johnkins, BarbaraKrautter, John Krupinski,Randi lx-yinc, Debbie Lodato,.Nicholas Lordi, Barbaraj\Jarko, Tobj* Pt-rlman, SusanPhillips, Cary . 1'rzybylek,Ixslie. Pucik, Scott Sanfonl,-KurtSfhcfflor,'Marfa Soinma,Janice ScWood ami

•\:;Z;

READY TO ROUGH IT » Three Garwood Girl Scouis, DebbleO'Such of Senior". Troop 791 (left). .Cheryl Nead of Cadette Troop 3*1 (center) and Jill Greve ofTroop 791. practice settlngyjp one oMIve tents the scouts purchased recently withrecycling funds. The tents are-avallable tp^alf troops In Garwood. -

DemocratsTo Recruit New

GARWOOD- A major driveto recruit chapters of theYoung Democrats in everyUniopCounty community willbe launched in t|ie next fewweeks. •

Union County DemocraticChairman Christopher Dietzsaid today, that thejdrivej£HFbe led by Robert M> of Garwood, thejpfesident ofthe YoungDeoiocratic Club ofUnion "County and the newly-elecjedtirst vice president ofthe New Jersey State YoungjQemocrats -,-—,—

Mr. Dietz said "We considerthe young people bfCounty among our greaassets.from the standpoint ofentiii>siasm and desireto work'for the best possible and most

JniojK•atest

effective government at alllevels. We welcome theifactive paf ticipation M anypolitical project-..-w^ich* wifirmean good ^overnjrnentriorour people' in-every com«-

i t ; 1 ! " " 'Egles, who is. 18, is a

political science major atRutgers University andresides at 164 Myrtle Ave'. Heis a : graduate of. DavidBrearley Regional HighSchool in KenHworth.,,Mr Eglies founded the

Youngv-Democratie Club" of"Union County in 1971 and-Currently serves' as itspresident, He is treasurer ofthe Young Voters of. UnionCbuntyanid a" member ii

SeTin Garwoody j P

the Garwood democraticClub

of. MinoritiesLearn Clerical SkillsKENILWORTH - Mrs.)Iita Quinones of 648 Newark

Ave. tsamong 14 women fromminority\backgrounds takingthe first ^tejps toward newcareers as seeretarjes in a ten-week training program jointlySponsored by Union Collegeand the Union County UrbanLeague. • ; \ ^

The program, con.duptedsat'Union College's Elizabeth

Pleads GuiltjfTo EmbezzKngBank Funds.__GAH;WO.()b •_-- ChesterKabaniec Jr,,-2l, of 1<H> Lo<iQstAve., pleaded guilty Friday infederal court in Newark toembezzling . $2,340 while!employed at' ' Union CountyTrust Co., Elizabeth, betweenJanuary'l and May l'of thisyear. ..-"''

Ac-cording to Herbert J.Stem," U.S. attorney for- thedistrict of New Jersey, theGarwood man faces) amaximum sentence of jiveyears imprisonment and a

campus, is intended to giveminority women the op-portunity to 'upgrade th^irtyping skills and .to Jearnshorthand, according to LeVoyColes, executive director ofthe Union County UrbanLeague."The program is designed in

two phases. The first, whichopened in June and will.meetdaily through September 1,•i-oncentrates on typing,•business, English, officepractice and procedures, andIntroductory stenography.The second phase will meet inthe. eveningaxin the fall andwill" concentrate '.'., onstenography. \

The; secretarial grainingprogram. wa^.cowceiVe.d -bythe Urban League ..in

s,r«jue'sls from industry forsecretaries from minoritybackgrounds,' according toMr.1 Coles. He'also pointed outthat Department of ' Laborstatistics show a nationwideshortage of trainedsecretaries that is forecast tocontinue through 198fv,

and the GaH^ped^ YoungDemocrats^''"Jl£-was elected first vice

tiresident of the New JerseyYoung Demojctais_aL.Jh.CL'.group's convention in AtlanticCity. ...' Mr. Egles said the group'sgoal will be to establishchapters of Young Democrats-in all tou-ns in the county tojoin* the several organizations.whiirhjiow exist. .

Twenty-flve kenilworth andL7 Garwood residents areamong 1,388 students enrolledin t h e day and . eveningsessions of Union College'sannual stuqiher: session,which opened on June 19. andcontinues through July 28.

The ^nroUment of 1,38ft isthe largest in the 39-yearhistory of the college.; Kenjlworth re s ident s

enrolled are: Brian Brown of534 Boulevard, Marshall C.Brown of 218 North Ninth St.,Miss Catherine M. Budsock of360 Boulevard, RaymondCaponetti of £22 BloonungdaleAve., Jeffrey S. Ciemniecki of2 Red 'Maple Lane, Jairo CCortes of 532 Boulevard, MissMaria Cuppari of 21 South 21stSt., William H. Dunn of 21Tulip €t., Miss Elizabeth k.~Emmert of 90 Pembrook Dr.,Bruce E. Ervin of 227 North21st St., Miss Rosemary Galloof 221 North 18th St., VincentR. Gribbin of 535 Newark-Ave., Edward W. Grasrtif 30North 18th St. > - ^ ^ ,

Also, MiBsrEmma M. Jeansofj32rMaplewood Ave., Missfifarita E. Kuhnen of 719 Rich-fjeld Ave.,.Len S. Kuscavageof 335 Roosevelt Lane, MissLinda C. Lishona of 45 NorthSixth St., John U. McGevna ofII South 23rd St., Kevin F.O'Connor of >28Worth 21st StvJoseph A. Restuccia of 236^Jorth Uth St., Robert J.fteuter of 5 Red Maple Lane,Miss Irene. Rusiniak of HiNorth 23rd St., Elio G.Stamenga of 46 South 23rd St.,Miss Nancy T. Vitale of 200

KENILWORTH - WidiamBranison was installed aspresident of the KenilworthRotary Oub recently at aluncheon meeting in theHoliday Inn. He succeedsWalter Stollen.

-Mr. Branison, president o( L&M Finishers in Kenilworth,

GARWOOD''-, Playgroundchampionships, softballgames in surrounding com-munities and field trips areamong the activities ^of theGarwood summer recreationprogram,' which is conductedweekdays from 9 a.m. to 4p.m. through August 25.

Counselors are JaniceMacDonald, Pat DiFabio,Carol Bare, Jim Badavas, BobBradley, Joe Anthesand .GaryPrish. ,

Field trips_ are pi armed tothe TurUe Batk " ?oo, theWatchung Reservauon, andYankee Stadium or SheaStadium." • "•> ' '. For the first- time a lighted

basketball court is-availa,ble.Winners of the July 4 Field

Day events are as follow**-Maria Troiane, JudyZuchowski, Phyllis DiBat-tista. Pa|ty Renzo, ' KaTei^Ousterman; .Mary BethKoch,e, Nancy Balogh,

In Bank Post(iAKWOob -"- Miss Lorraine

2uchowski, .a resident ofGarwood, has been appointedto .the. ..position -'of ad-Biinistrative assistant in the

-mVtgage department, at theHi l lU N i lp ,

; office of the Nation;>l.State Ba^k, Elizabeth.

She .jok^d, the bankfollowing her {jraduulion froirHoly'ifamrly • Academy in

X

fAttorney Stern praised the

special jigenls of tht: FBI fortheir work, in the 'case.

Assistant U.S. AttorneyWilliam Hianiff handled thecasc'for the

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Maureen Block, Dayle ZaluK,Eileen Vbtt Ohlet, MarilynAnthes, NaneVDiBattista,Lisa. Perrotta;-^ DonnaCielmski, Warren Oustetman,.Dayid Legg, Eddie TbthLance Pecina.Pat Depao rJoey Perrdtta, John Mc-Farlane, Tom Perrotta ajndPaul Krisanits.

Future activities are-open toall ages, according to RichardA. Fqster,,: recreationsupervisor./''

Parker Ave., MUs»Deborah A:.ilvetten, president

for the president's honorCk brXStobert G. Longaker,

I former pastor of the FirstC. Miller of 2 | Retford Ave.k Mr*.

Charlotte KulikOwski of 35BroadSt, Peter J. Sanford of111 Glenwood R d , and Mis*Donna M. Nardone of 315

yPI., Mlfls Dorothy M. PoraS V r i Ms> Judith Edelman of

yIS. VariV BMren.- Avr.,hSharon K. Schindler. of

• Miss Edelman is a graduateof. Cranford High School and

in liberal arts aUnion College. She is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs

. . . - . .

, July. 20,1972 CRAWFORD ( R

CranforAreoidents namedare:^Hs> Judith Edelman of37N,LenhomeDr, MUuj Susan

••>'•

Lafayette Ave., and M WMary E. Wills of 44 South 23rdS t ; • - •.. •• . — < ' • • , .

Garwood residents enrolledin Union College's SummerSession are: Miss JoannAllmontiof 321 Hemlock Ave.,Jeffrey A. Baber of 310 North7

Aye., Richard J.Bowlby of 301Cedar St., Miss Annette M.Cirincioneof 662 WUlow Ave.,William R. Coatello of 472

Fourth Ave., MissiHyacmtheF. DeFabio of 150 RanWnrAve,, Dennis L. Dl Battista of •432 Second Aye., Miss PatriceA. Di Fabio of 414 Hemlock .Ave.; Dennis,J. Foley of 353Hickory Ave.4, Miss OhrlsUneGuerrier^of 802 Center St.

Also, Mias Pamela C.Hardman of 233 Hazel Aye.,Bruce J. Karalius of 413Fourth Ave., Miss Patricia A.Knierim of 506 Third Ave.,Jeffrey A. Latawiec of 344Hazel Ave., Robert P. Mc-Sweeney of 118 Anchor PI.,Gregory D. and Wesley D.IWanat of 78 Third Ave.

: ... U..'....;.„

has been a membeTTof RotarysinceJSiWfVle, his wife

and three childrenlive in Berkeley Heights.

Other new officers installedby Mr. Stollen, past president,were Richard Tellson, vicepresident; Hank Milne,secretary; and John Kish,treasurer. r <

Roofing-SidingGvtters-Leaders

Since 193$

John J. Di Fabio

276-110$

. Louise Wetjen ofI, owner of Cranford

Travel Inc.,; has been ap-pointed national conventioncontact chairmaVi for theNational Federation ofBusiness and ProfessionalWomen's Clubs, Inc.

Appobtoxl, by Miss . JOstfrUnderwood of. 'Nashville,Tenn., National BPWpresldent'^iB^j97i-72,' 'MissWetjen is chiefly responsiblefor all the arrangements for''the coming national conclavefrom July 23 to 27 at theChalfonte-Haddon HaU Hotelin Atlantic City.—"For—many years, MissWetjen has been energetically'engaged in serving BPWU

and Professional Women'sClubs, lnc.i has been ap-pointed chairman of thehostess and pages committee.

Namedrto this post by MissJVefjen, Mrs. Robins isresponsible for; assigningpersonnel to assist, at thebusiness and social functionsduring the four ; day con-;vention. •••'--

An active BPW member,Mrs.. Robins has served theCranford dub fpr many years,

personally very happy that* - a c c ^ t e d Uus-impoFtant

TRINI LOPEZ ENZO STUART!July 28-August

FOR RESERVATIONS. CALL. (J01)

Tht pL\yboy club-hbTcl ATqiiEAT qdiiqEtJleMea', Now Jorsoy (5JM

PATflOONE & FAMILY August 11

assignment," said Miss Un-derwood. . — -••• •••••'•'• •' Miss Weljenhs BPW* career

includes the presidency, of theCranford BPW Qub and theNew Jersey ^Federation ofBusiness and ProfessionalWomen's Clubs, inc.

Most recently, MisssWetjen,has served as a member oilthe national^ program com-mittee for the nationalfederation. .' •/•'

Her civia-<contributionsinclude jjafucipation in theCranford Adult School Board.

,,„_. Aline Robins of^Cranford, currently serving aspresident p( the PastPresidents Club, an

organikjfttloij of, the" NewJersey Federation of Business;

Dance AwardsKathyT5atto, 12;daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gattowon second place in a,c6m-pelition sponsored by the NewJersey Dance Theatre GuildJune 25. She was awarded a$50 dancg/scnolarship. .

Ledie'Strauss, 14, daughteripf/'Mr. and Mrs,; JRichardStrauss, wrin second place inthe- senior division of thecompetition and received a $75dance scholarship. Lesliecaptured first place - in thejunior division at age 11. :

The two winners arestudenta^of the Yvette DanceStudio here and arelactive_to-tKS~"New Jersey DanceTheatre Guild Ballet Convpany. "

moving up the ladder to thepresidency and the NJFBPWJo appointive positions' andelected posts, such aschairman and member of thestate nominating, committee.During recent years, she hasbeen appointed state chair-man of the Nike-SamothraceRace and member of the stateprogram committee. "> \

WPCtoMeetThis Everiin

Union Coupty Women'sPoliticat cawwS will meettonight tp lan next year's

at"-the-home" ofa-Nalvenr4327 Putnam-

, Pla_infield at 7:30 p.m.Those attending are asked tocontact Ms. Nalven.

Click of Cranford,secretary pro teih of ibe state•Women's Political Caucus,was elected I delegate to thetemporary steering com-mittee o the New Jersey WPC.

Sondra- Markman of Fan-wood will serve as temporarypresident of the'eounty WPCuntil permanent structure isestablished and elections areheld in the fall.

Shop Cranford

y In the heat of summer

SEEyour cool

Edelman.- ; ^..Miss Eilbacher, a graduate

of, Cranford High School, is abiologylmajor. MiSS Eilbachjris the daughter of Mr, andMrs, Raymond Eilbacher/* A-graduate of Cranford HighSchooi Mr . Kane is a liberalarts education major at Union-College. Mr. Kane is rajrried.

Miss Kelinjs-a liberal artseducation majof, and a;graduateVo/, Cranford HighSchool. Miss Klein is- thedaughter of Mrs'. Annette

former pastor of the FirstPfesybterian. Church, hasjoined United Counties Trust

c u s t o m e r r e l a t i o n srepresentative for the bank'sMonmouth County offices, itwas announced by RaymondW. Bauer, president, .j-: . -;

-pr. t ng ifier ^ minifttfr in

, Miss Pora graduated fromMother Seton Regional HighSchool,-Clark, and while'atUnion College is majoring inliberal arts education. She isthe daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Stanley Fora.

School; Miss Schindler'is aliberaT arts major.- irid thedaughter of Mrs. RuSsiglJI'Schindler. .

A Cranford HighSchoof graduate. MissSweitzer is a ' liberal artsmajor. Miss Sweitzer is thedaughter of Mr. and' ^ r s .-George R. Sweitter. /;

Miss Smith; a graduate ofCranford High School, is ujedaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Doriald Smith She majored inliberal art^ at Union College.

Mrs. Westrals enrolled inthe nursing program at Union^ollegerS&fs ^graduate ofCranford High School.

A graduate of Lincoln HighSchool, Jersey City, Mrs^KuHkowski is a liberal artsmajor ,in Union College'sevening session.

Mr. Sanford is a graduate ofCranford High School and is aliberal arts major in UnionCollege's evening'session. He•is_.ther...son...of,;.Mr...:...GeorgeSanford, Jr.

Miss Nardone, a graduate ofCranford High School, is aliberal arts education major&t_ XJnion^College-.- -.Miss -^ax-done is the- daughtex-HoTMr.^nd Mrs. AlberifNardone. \>

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p g nthe Presbyterian church for 3?years, retired from thes

_ _ ministry on January 1 of thisOi-rRobert G. Longaker year-""He served Ihe First

Announce AdditionalScholarship Awards. Hillside Avenue Junior High

School has announced that thefollowing 51 , additionalstudents have earnedscholarship awards for the1971-72 school year:

Seventh grade. - LynnCappbianco, Nancy Cook,Alan \ Deutsch, SheljeyFischer, Jeffrey GmitroKennethj H u d z * r 'Allisonbaac r Sandra-Kaplan, EdithLaezza; David Levine, LindaMacNaWra, James Michael,MrchaeWyLeary^ Levinf apa,Larry'Paul, Susan Rosman,Richard Schwalback, ArleneSeemonv Cheryl Segebade,Sylvia Siu, ElHs Talb'e'rt,Diane Zemboulis. ' ,V \ ..'

Eighth grade ^ D o n n aAlbanese, Michael Berkman,Linda Drude, Michelle Feld,John Gorgol, Michael Hughes,Lynne Keating, KathleenPickering, Gary Schecter,Michael v

Eighth,, grade. . l^Dunjut"ATBanese, Michael Berkman,Linda .Drude, Michelle Feld,John Gorgol, Michael Highes,Lynne Keating, Kathleen

Pickering, Gary Schecter,Kenneth Sperling, MonicaTiller..

Ninth grade - Jone Bones,Ruth Bunis, Mark Coulter,Deborah : Czarnatowicz ,Georgahne Doerr, SharonJones, Lynne Kirwan. RonaldMooney, Cynthia Palmer

Michael

Brace

Jef frey PastuzytiiPeteFman; ——• r -

Tenth grade —Bishop, Carol Blazejowski,•Chris DiLorenzo, GregoryKameiko, Robert Karczewski,Renee Pfaff, Joanne Pospisil.

Presbyterian Church inCranford for the past 26 yearsand is now pastor emeritus oft h a t c h u r c h . /••'•.'••'•: •

A graduate of HeidelbergCollege^ Tiffin, Ohio, hereceived his master's degreefrom Princeton Universir-his , bachelor of theoldegree from PrincetonSeminary, and—attained hisdoctor of divinity fromHeidelberg CoUege. '\ Dr. Longaker is a memberarid past president of theCranfm-d Rotaryrciub, serveson -the\ Juvenile CmferenceCommittee for Union County,is a trustee of the WestminsterFoundation of PrjincetonUniversity, and trustee of thePresbyterian Synod of NewJersey. He also serves aschaplain for toe CranfordPolice'Department. .."•..

Dr. Longaker resides inMiddletown with his fwife, thefqrmer Doris Oshwald ofNewark, whose father con-structed many of the publicbuildings in MiddletownTownship. The•• Longakershave two sons. Robert II ofWestfield; "who is generalcounsel "for Out Union Bank oiSwitzerland, with off fees onWall Street., N.'Y.C., andLeslie, who is with the AetnaInsurance Company, Con-necticut.

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liter of Better Homes andGardens Magazine, Mrs?,Jordan has bfen with PCL/since . 1968, serving , asassistant to the .director off •customer relations. Prior tojoining the Better Homes andGardens' New yorlf staff, shewas assistant to the directorofNews Services, N.Y1 \VorJd>'Fair Corp. , «..

Mrs: Jprdan was graduatedfrom Penn State University,

the New York Institute ofPhotography, She " i scorresponding secretary ofthe Spade and Hoe GardenClub of Cranford. , • - • . '

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Page 4: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

i«*-l_:'

w N.Y./merly of Qranford, to CharlesMichael Popik of 446 ManorAve.

Rt. Rev,Edward Eilert ofSt. John the AbosUe Church,Clarit, performed the doublei A tiring ceremony; A reception

followed at Wally's Tavern onthe Hill, Watchung

Madeo Juliano escorted hisdaughter to theMl Gharlnttft

altar, and'nf

Weatherly, Pa., served« asmaid oC honor. Bridesmaidswere Miss Carol Bolton ofNorristown, Pa., Mrs. SusanGaffney of Allentown, Pa,csister of the bridegroom, andMiss Pauhne Frankenberger

Charles PopiM,father~of thebridegroom, acted as bestman. Ushers included Jeffrey IValeslin of Cranford,-, |Cleaver of Pennsbutg}and David Murphy of OldGreenwich, Conn.

•The bride isBloomsburg State College,Bloonlsburg, Pa., where she"|majored—-in • secondaryeducation, English..'.,

: Mr. Popikr a graduate _. , .Gettysburg College, Get-Vjtysburg, Pa., plan$ to.attendJohn Marshall. School of Ijawin Chicago this fall.'

After a honeymoon in thePoconos, the couple will reside,in Palatine, 111! .

Wh.-

Thorn, Rozman Troth: • : / > ; : • ' •

Mr. and' Mrs. Walter E.Rozmanof62i t^exington Aye.have "announced - me

Miss Jacqueline Rozman

engagement of their daughter,Jacqueline Patricia, to JohnWayne Thorn, sod tof Mr.'andMrs. John F. Thorn of Rah-way.

The announcement . wasmadeTecently at a dinner heldal'THe^home...ol the"futurebride's parents.

The bride-elect is a 1969graduate of Mother SetanRegional High School, Clark,and will enter her senior yearat Holy Name Hospital Schoolof Nursing, Teaneck, in thefall, .; , ' . ' .

'Mr. Thorn is a 1966 graduate. of Bahway High School and a1971 graduate of King'sCollege, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Heis employed by the BeneficialFinance Company, Newark.

A, September, 1973 wed-ding is being planned.

Pi.-'

STUDIO * OF

PHOTOGRAPHYPORTRAITS WEDDINGS-BARMITZVAH

276-774911 NORTH AVE. EAST, CRANFORD

Mrs. Charles M. Popik

' • ' : - ' " i J ? $ : ' • ' • • • • • • • • - " • . • • • • ' . - - V - , ' - ' ; . . - • • • • . • . • • ? • • • ' • . • * • '• ' . ' • " i - V . ; ' ; " ' . ; - ' > ; ' - - ••'•'•• ,-', '• '-• • • '•.•-;.•• ; - ' - V " ' s ' ' - : •';•':' • : v - ' . f t : . : - ' ^ - . v , . I y > V : ' ' • • • • : - • ' • : ; ; . • ' - : ^ ' . M - ' ' - ' - j ' . v ' < j ^ ; i ^ ' : ^ i ; . - ' : - ' : : -..»-:~fMrr..

-&&£Mi

led Saturday in the Firstj'teria^Church between

Miss Valerie- Ross Barclay,d h t f M d Mdaughter of Mr.Sheldon Rote B

igld Ave,

y,and Mrs.

of 995

Mrs.)Rudkin, son of Mr. and

I Arthur Rudkin of

The 5 p.m, dpubleJ ringceremony was performed byRftV. Pqn] l.pHwji n« «[j<i tintpastor of the church, and areception followed at thepMountainsidetainside.

Inn, Moun-

Escorted by her fathpfthebride wore a traditional bridalgown of white silk organza andimported French lace. Thelong veil of English, illusionwas aYranged from a crown oflace leaves outlined in pearlsand crystals. She carried acascade of white roses andstephanotis.

S d n of honor was Mrs:Alexander E. . Wattay of

the bride, and maid of bjooorwas'Miss EUeenr Sulllvw ofCrahford. Bridesmaids in-cluded Mrs. William F<JT-

, Bister ofe g r M w

Kathryn Kelly of BerkeleyHeights, Mrs. Kenneth F.

Jean Marie . Svedeba ofWilliamsburg, Va;

The attendants woTfrA-lineapricot'organza gowns andcarried round bouquets ofq e s oapricot sweetheart hwes l)luecorn • flowers and baby'sbreath. f"

John Carroll Dulin ofChestertown, Md., served asbest man. Ushers were H.John Zielinski, William.Fortenbaugh, brother-in-lawof the bridegroom; Normanyv. BeU and WUUam Roberts,all of Cranford, and Kenneth.F. Habich of Hillside,

The bride, a 1968 graduate off d H i h S h lCranford

tendedHighOld

gSchool, . at-

Dominion'

Medical EducationNewark, She i s • secrett Scfierhig

rthV'^

of Cranford High ScnoQl,attended Bethany College,

graduate of Drew University,Madison. He will attend DrewSeminary in September.•* Mr. and. Mrs. Rudkin <spend their honeymoon inMontreal and ^ " "

JDbnrsday, July 20,1972 RIWM.J,) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Page?

mnes• Vilademmmmmmm

The appointment of theof-Wy€koff-efIrene .Theresa VUade* tiive, organiwtion.College -announced

the appointment of

deansv was forcement deparQnent,Mcinerney

'formerly of Garwood, 'diedMorristown three deans w head-'thea long iUness.' • • • • •• • • — r —

Friday at theniece^Mrtf. John

Reed diedJulylO in, John FKennedy Memorial Hospital,

TomsMontreaCanada.;

Sun-/'• - "

the United Synagogue

In Nuptial MassMiss Bettyer Jean Webb,

daughter of Mrs. James P.Webb of 700 Lexington Ave.,and the late Mr* Webb,became the bride of AnthonyFrank Glowacky, son of Mr.and Mrs. Michael Glowacky of1130 Raritan Rd., in St. Johnthe Apostle Church, Linden,on Saturday, ^t 2 p.m.

Rev. Edward .Eilert,assistant pastor, performedthe double ring ceremony and.was celebrant .of a nuptialmass.

The bride's gown was ofwhite silk organza with anempire A line, high neck, longsleeves with a detachabletrain. She wore a matchingCamelot headpiece attachedto a short mantilla. " .

Miss Webb was given inmarriage by her uncle, BobbyD. Nelson, of Greenwood,Miss. Miss Debra Mastrious

was her maid of honor, andJohn Glowacky served as hisbrother's best man. Both arefrom Cranford.

The bride was graduatedfrom Cranford High Schooland attended WestminsterChoir College, Princeton, andUnion College./She is em-ployed by the Argonaut In-surance Company, Cranford.

Mr. ^Glowacky wasgraduated, ii cm CranfordHigh School and served fouryears in,the United StatesMariaejZQrps. He is employedby Distillers Co., Ltd., Linden.

After a honeymoon in St.Thomas, Virgin Islands, thecouple will reside in Cranford.

A family dinner at theKnotty Pine, South Plainfield,-followed the wedding•ceremony. •"'- >--—.----

BridesIf it's true that "happy js the

bride the sun shines-on," thenujenTwere a lot of unhappybrides last month,'according

a monthly —-•-—1--1--1* Mrs. Jeffrey P. Rudkin

nummary issued by UnionCollege's MeteorologicalStation, a cooperative station'of the .U.S. Weather Bureau.-June, renowned - for-itsannual bumper crop of brides,this year produced asuperabundance of Tain. -..Total precipitation was 8.76

inches, setting a new recordfor the month of June. Theextra inches also brought the1

total precipitation thus far thisyear foffiWW- inches.

In aWUtion. to beirig wet,'June was also. cool. Theaverage temperature of 67degrees was 3.4 degrees belownormal.

CHAPTER NOWFORMING

ASK FOR DETAILS

vrsifoSppUNIQUE

MINIS AND tKWOHS

276-1044'30 Eastman St. "YOUR WINE LINE(opp. Theatre)

Cranford/ CranfordFree-Parking In Rear

Mrs. Anthony F. Glowacky

Linda Joan SaundersonMiss, Linda Joan Saun-

derson, daughter of Mr. aridMrs. R. J. Saunderson of i2Lexington Ave., was married

Saturday in St. Michaet'sC h h h

dyChurch to Arthur Schreiber ofMadison Township, son of Mr.and Mrs. Arthur Schreiber of 1

£7

, .• Double the regular quantity

150 princess sheets $ 100 envelopes or100 king size sheets & -100 envelopes or_ . • 100 so.mi.-notes & 100:ehvelopos.

(regularly $9.90)

M-v [ I : : - . ! t li^-...^. t i _ . , , , r i .:CO:-Q

iD^a THROUGH

rff J v . f , ,'jr, .. \ -

i^

1 ;i:j^.j

Aberdeen Ct.

Mrs. Arthur Schreiber

Rey. John pates, assistantpastor, performed the doublering ceremony, which wasfollowed by a reception at theClark VFW building.

Mr. Saunderson escorted his' daughter to the altar, and her

sister, Miss Colleen Saun-derson of Cranford, was maidof 'honor. --Bridesmaids - in-cluded Mrs. Reed Lipinsky ofEdison, Miss Karen Schreibf 1;of, Cranford, sister of ttiebridegrffsm, and MissPatricia Saunderson ofCranford, sister of the bride.

Reed Lipinsky of Edisonserved as best man. Usherswere Robert Clay oi Cranfor3,Charles Dick of Michigan andRichard' • Bernstein ofHamilton Township,

The bride, a 1968 graduate ofCranford High School, earneda B.S. degree innursing thisyear from Trenton StateCollege. She' is a nurse at

' South .Amboy" MemorialHospital.

• ,A-196Z,graduate of Crmtford- High' School, Mr. Schreiber-was graduated in 1971 from

the University of Bridgeport,Conn., with a B.S. degree in'business administration,. He isa marketing, information

-analyst with ' the 'Schering....OO..,..Kep.il worth,

"The couple will reside inMadison Township following awedding ttrip to Bermuda.

THE FRIENDLY HOTEJ.

•" ——ll iES^ON THE OCEAN

SWING LAKE, N. J. 077G2

PU1VA1E BEACH o ClbaiOUS SUaf•u puiVAte POOL c ALL scours «>CHi'infOL.uooM j t r r i r i cs o r,u-

ATTRACTIVE HATES

•M I.O.-JC D i S i

J tip:. 1 O

•A-iCc. *

Mr. and Mrs. Koficrl^ViHiiiiii' Johnwm of VVfstfioWannounce Hu; bh!h oi theirfirst child, a son, MatthewWalker Johnson on July 11 [n

IJiainfield. The p.raniipaiSiit:;are Mr. ami Mrs. (.'liarli-s- M.Jtifui.':u() ol Zi Beech St. andMr. and Mrs. William W.Roberts'.)r. ol ;> Hampton St.

t" '• —

' t t T ,

wI h i

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II..

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M.<\\ .

hi.

HAWTHORNE INNThe Ideal Family Resort• . *i» TUo Poconos

Imcliwv) t/ujli.h-ilyli.- Inn, .tti- '

f> riori hou-.c-Ltx-pKiy collonc-..

IJIUI, niit.k,^^ pool, QOK, nvc/y-

' i ' j ytiu wu.it i t , ifi.uur you/your

inly u tlin-iHIml tu-.IIul M t u -

' - • _-..•« In 2'iU iici,.-. 6 |

I'l'iiuin, l'<'i'"r"/ i"','",'li',ilu °"()V"uUit mi' ftjtl vv.'ok-..' Wri'lo iiit

HAWTHORNE INN S" " 'COTTAGES

A<1». focur.o, Va. 10344Call 7-1/ - 039-71.4/ »

T.

FLAT SANDALS

Sandier, DivinaReg. 10.95 to 14.95.

HEEL SA^NDALS"Amalfi, Fredolle, CaressaRea.,17.00 to 24.00.

.WOMEN'S O.S: KEDEITES• . . ' ' *

Rag. 5

..14.90

. 3.99••to "6.9-9

HANDBAGS- BJISASTICALLY 7

HI'S FiOiSSHEOiVrsiKIOES

:ttd Styii; . . . ., x

\ T S S C O V V S1KJO[££

2 3 . S 5 - i o 3 2 . 9 5 . . . . . . . . . ^

J&& 4 SO

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[J':

I 0 V N o ; it; Avo .

cot- C^:tin.A Avt ' .

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HOIJOH

' — /

chairman of the region's 1972biennial cpnyentida which willbe held on the weekend ofOctober 20-22, at Gibber'sHotel, Kiamesha Lake, N.Y.s A former "priesident ofTemple Beth-El of Cranford^Mr.'Banks is currently a vicepresident of the region and the

education. Serving with him5. Atextn*r Benkf °° ** cowerition'oominittee

• v are: Mrs. Evelyn Auetbach of

Continues

XSletx R9dc,: Horace' Bier, ofh I v i n g a t o n , M au r Ic eFriedlander of Maplewood,Norman GUkin of Hillside,S Gldb f L i d

o m n GSeymoiff Goldberg of Lindeir,B^SiiX^ri^ef

i Norman Ri

' Mtfrray Singerl T l k f N

^ of

of

At Osceola ChurchFurther remodeling of

Osceola Presbyterian Churchwill begin soon.

T.P. provide; additionalseating for those occasionswhen needed, a window wallwill be installed in the rear ofthe sanctuary in what is howthe choir—Fopm'. Overheadspeakers- wilLbV installed iathis room, and the presentlibrary-parlor will became thenew home of the choirs.

In late August anew churchsign wilTbe constructed on theRaritan Rd. side of thebuilding. Spotlights will beinstalled and shrubs will beplanted. '

Daily Vacation ChurchSchool will beheld August 7-14from 9:30 a.m. to noonMonday through. Friday,,Departments will includekindergarten, first and:second, third and fourth, andfifth' and sixth grades.

Members of the teachingstaff are Mrs. Frank Munkel,Mrs. Henry ApelianTMrs.Harold Syvertseh and Mrs.Edward Davison.

Questions regarding theschool should be directed toMrs. Davison, director, ofClark. Registration blanks areavailable in the church office.

,: OKTHE TUNNEL -On the next program of "The Truth that Heals," twopeople tell how their lives, had hit bottom and theythought death was the only solution. Listen nextSunday as they tell of their complete regeneration.Another C^Nstlan Sclwcej-a^Jo^progra^this Sunday.

ifieTRjJTHrt.jH€OLS

Broadcast,over many, stations Including:WVN*T- 620 - KC 9:45 A M .

' WERA - 1590 - KC 8:15 P.M.SUNDAY JUL¥ 23^-.-A Christian Science radio series

Clark,SaulTopolsky of NorthBrunswick, and Ralph W.Wolff of FiairLavra. :

' • • ' ' ' , ' " • • ' • " • ' ; ' ' * • ' ' • ' . • . ' • • '

The Northern' New JerseyRegion pt the UnitedSynagogue includes 86 af-Kulated congregationa, from'Ramsey to Toms 'W^er,representing over. 20,000families. The biennial con-yentionpf the region attractshundreds : 6 r - s y ^ g 6 g a eleaders from across the. state.

Summer

Calvary Lutheran Churchwill sponsor a summerprogram from July 31 toAugust 4 from 9:30 a.m. untilnoon for children who havereached tjieir fourth birthdaythrough and including {hosewho have completed grade 6.

The program for jrjrekin-dergarten and kindergartenchildren will be held in theeducation wing of the churchbuilding. Children in grades 1through 6 will meet in a daycamp in Nomahegan Park.The program includes Biblestudy, nature hikes, crafts andworship. Nature hikes areplanned in cooperation with

Children may be registeredat Calvary's church office, 108Eastman St., on Monday andTuesday, July 24 and 25, from9'a.m. to 4:30 pan..

At ConferenceMrs. Joseph R. ^Tunner of 2

Stratford-Ter. attended anintlrfaith conference lastweek in Ocean Grove of theWomen's Christian Tem-perance Union. " -Sherepresented the local and'county chapters of theWGTU.-

DEDICATED TO DIGNIFIEDSERVICE SINCE 1897.

Uved most of hi* life" hecin-to

KenDworth2p years agor Heiui the home

iinpiiiveinentSurviving are his wife, Mrs.

Dorothy R*ed;;a«on, Russell,^ " ^ . t b e M i s s e s

Eisenberg of Union;, hismother, Mrs. Minnie Jacobsonof Newark, and a sister, Mrs.Lorrain Wurtzel of Metuchen.

B. Rutkowski. A funeral mass: forA

Bronislawa Rutkowski, 79, oi55 Burnstde.-'' Ave,' wascelebrated Saturday in St.Adalbert's Church, Elizabeth.i , . Jluikowski di«d-last

Wednesday at home after. a

Born in Poland, she came^othe United States in 1910 andlived, in EhzabeHFp3t- year* a t the Galloway and Crane

Funeral Home, Bernardsjrille,,and 4pterment was in Fair-view Cemetery, We.stfield. •

Mrs. Reiniclt"

prior to moving here in 1954.She was a communicant of St.Adalbert's Church.

Surviving, are her husband,Stephen; a son,' Peter ofUndent a daughter, Mrs.Arthur Potts of Cranford; fourgrandchildren and five great-

Interment was, in' Stimde Cein^tgry^.Wood.bndge,

JbhnBatichGARWOOD Private

services were held Monday atFairview Cemetery inWestfield for JohnW. Batich,]60, Pf 109 WUlow Ave., whodied Saturday, July 15 "*atOverlook Hospital in SummitRev. Dale H. Forsman,

the United

officiated.

FUNERAL DIRECTORSFREDH..GRAY.JR.

President and General ManagerDAVID B.CRABIEL

Executive Vice-PresidentC.FREDERICK POPPY

-—:-".c'.: - ..-,..-.-.: ••,. k Vice-President

WESTFtELD: 318 East BroadI St., William"AjDoyle, manager23%01-43CRANFORD: 12 Springfield Ave.°Fred H. Gray, Jr., manager 276-0092

EV W.

Wo-Jtr.ioi'J

Born in Gary,1 Ind., Mr.Batich. resided here for 32years: He was an art directorfor 10 years with Maczco

Chflon.He was previously selfemployed. ' ~ " -

Mr. Batich was a member ofthe United Methodist' Churchof Cranford. ' •,

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Constance," SnydijrBatich; two daughters MissDorothy Batich at home, aridMts. Stephen Fath ofRutherford ;—tw<r sons, -John,-Jr. and Dennis, at^honie; hisfather, Theodore^ Batich ofRoselle Park^two brothersStephen of ^toselle Park and.Joseph ol Union. K./'" -~ Tbe,family has asked thatcontributions be made to theUnited Methodist Church inlieu of flowers.

Arrangements were com-pleted by Gray's FuneraH-rHone; 318-E. Broad St.,

e s t f i e l d . • • • ' " , • ''

John YoungKENILWORTH - Services

were held this morning forJohn Young, 70, of 143 N. 19thSt. who died Sunday, July-16 inMemorial Gejieral Hospiai;Union, .after a brief illness.

The funeral was from theWerson Funeral Home inLinden.. A funeral mass wasoffered in St. Theresa'sChurch, Kenilworth, ;jnd-interment was at CloverleafCemetery in Woodbridge.

A native of Hungary, Mr.Young came to Elizabeth 43years ago. "and lived inKenilworth-30 years ._

He was a self-etnpioytidmachinist for 30 yeai> u> Hiscompany, Young Brothers,Inc. of Elizabeth, until hisretirement five yeurs.iujo. Ik-was a communicant of St.Theresa's Church.

•He ijs- survived by his wife,Mrs. Viola Weber Young; abrother,. Coiiad of Edison; ;mdi (iister, Mrs. THeiestVirVivi-hat't of Lindt'ii!

James S. (Jarrctt ot Ki'ujk-itSquare, I'd., lornu-iiy <>|(VanJortl, died July !). .\nu-ii.iorial soVvici- was heldl:ist Thursday in the ('luirehx)fihf Advent, Koiiuon s<iuau-.

x)u way

5-' IV, -IJ St . U Y.

^ g ,England, Mrs. Vilade came toAe United States in October1»« and settled in Cranford,

h h H rf

wasat thelanager-

Cpuntry Club,^Basking-Ridge. •,'vptaihg World WarJI, Mrs.Vilade was an officer in the

England.-Fire

;: Surviving are her husband,Charles Edwin Vilade; threesons, Charles Jr; of Par-sippany, John Thomas ofTewfcsbury ToWnship andJames Louis of Bernardsvi|le;a1 daughter, Mrs. James J:D'Angelo Jr. of Bernardsvill&iher-father; Thomas P. Mageeof Widnes, England; a sister,Mrs. Kenneth Taylor of WestBromurch, England; three

1 t f 1 l i ( ~ M t b I fnd, and onesisters

grandchild.

The funeral -was on^ Friday

Mrs. Mary J. Remick, 93, ofSpring Garden St., died

Saturday in RurineUsBerkeley Heights.

Born in Frederica, Del., she.iived~there until moving toCranford 15.years ago, whereshe made her home withJierson-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs,- Fi^derick T.Deacon. ,°^ xJ ,..

Mrs. Remick, the Spanish-American War widow ofPhilip Jf Remick, was amember of the Bayonne unitof the Spanish-American War•Vetemhs; She--also—was—a~member of the FirstPresbYterian "Church.:/

Also surviving are twograndsons, one grand-daughter, two -•' great-granachlldreri arid four great-great-grandchildren.

Interment was Tuesday atBarretts' -Chapel Cemetery,Frederica", Del.

whom she JiveoV A funeralntasB wai1 c«ebraM Mondayin the ChurcbofSt; Anne byRev. Robert J. Rischmann,assistant pastor.

Mre. WilUams, aNorwich, Conn, lived inGarwood 54 . years beforemoving to Elizabeth aTyearago.; She was a formerRepublican committeewomanin Garwood, having served inthat j)ost many years: /__;• Mrs. Williams >was a

communicant of die Church ofSt. Anne afH a member ofnts j ^Rosary Society'. She also

of arts and isfisinesa; -science- > ^ - ^ - ^ ^ specialserviceseducation^

^ specialcontinuing

Dr. Kenneth W.lver8en,UCpresident, said Dr. Robert A.'Mafkoff of Madison, aflsociateprofessor <jf history at SetonHall University, "«ouUr"Orange, has been~appolnteddean of arts; Prof. John J.Siburn 61 Westfield; chaiftnanofJ Union College's biology

_ ^ has beejL_a]>-dean of cTence, anff71

Frank" P. .Dee- of :r% -^director,

t .

partmei>t of continuingIbelonged to the Ladies educationmsciraices,Rutgers

—"•--• jUnnttisity, New Brunswick,has been appointed dean of

AuxUiary of the Garwood Fire.Department.

three newrecommended by a search'committee elected by thefaculty. It a s headed bjfProf. FVmnlH SfhnjPitfkopf ofCranford, and the, othermembers^ were; . Prof.:Raymond Boly of BerfcelHeights, chairman-otbusiness department; • Prof.Decter;.Prof. Franpis Crosby

The widow. of John G. Wat io i ja l services, aU ef-Williams, she is surviyed by a |fecbye August^,son, George J. of Garwood,

Prof.' Donald HedeenCranford; ofthe jnatheniaticA^department.' ':.':; j " , ; _'-' •• -•.,>';~Th« Cftlien B«rchronlcl7 welcomet.Letters to the Editor. All fetter* mutt'contain the signature and addres* of thew r l t e r v . " •' • < ; . • • . , ' • • ' • . , ' : •

. o c e * ahotHflrreach The, Citizen ind Chronicle offfceno later Jnari3 p.|A. Friday for Iwerflon-in'the next edition, • -, ., v <

KErMWORTH FUNERAL HOMEConrad J.Wozniak,Mgr.

• - . • • • ' " - • • • . • . • " • • • , . • . • • ; /

WashingtonKenilworth, N.

Telephone.272-5112

Air Conditioned Chapels:•• AitipTrOff-Street Parking

arid two grandsons. She alsoleaves three nephews, JosephMcNerney ". of Linden,Charles McNerney of RosellePfed J LeyClark, and another niece, Mrs.James Day of Newark, Del.

Interment was in St. Ger- -trade Cemetery, Woodbridge,Where. Father Rischmannread the committal prayers.-Arrangements, wereDooley FuneralCranford. ,~

by theHome,

ToFetemen

KENILWORTH-—Allen H. Weber1 and Rey.Richard, N. Vitale, both for-mer assistant pastors at St.Theresa's Church, who wererecently transferred to otherpriestly duties, will behonored at a dinner dancefrom 7 to 12' p.m.. Friday,September 15, in the GalaxyRoom of the Starlight Lounge,linden. •

The evening will include ak j l j i h l d ! d

hors d'oeuvres, a completedinner with roast top sirloin ofbeef, open bar for four hoursand dancing to the music ofthe Sophisticated Swing. Thedeadline for tickets is August19. ; ; . . -

Information and tickets canbe obtained from Mrs. FranKnecht, Mrs. Kay Ivone, Mrs.Madeline SavuHch. Mrs, DotSoltys and Vincent Scorese.

APPLY NOW FOR

SEPT. 6, 1972.;«'Itaioi Coiaty TBrtiieil tastilii ./

rt of Unttafi County^s Comprehensive Community College System

Tuition and Fees -$^«6,0&Vear (Por Union County Residents)For further Information call 889-2000 (Dept '414)~or' mall coupon

UNION COUNTY TECHNICAL INSTITUTE1776 RARITAN ROAD, SCOTCH PLAINS. t i , ^ /

Check the program you are intermlid In v

2-YEAR ASSOCIATE IDEGREE COURSES

- f ~ l AccountlDfl •Dc«mBllfirJ>£OBraminl«

I I Chtqilcal Environmental Technotoav

f~| Mechanical Onltn Q Civil Technology

Hftl* -ADDRESS-

CITY.

STATE. ZIP-

Bob'^job-as a Senior Systoms Analyst is to getmaximum output and efficiency from our com-puters that screen, record andstore'informa-t'ion, haiidle all enrollment transactions, and

• issue checks for the more than eight millioneligible claims we pay every year.

Boh takes a hard line on operating expenses.Recently, the people in our Systems Depart-ment developed new procedures that will ex-tract more efficient work from our computersat'a savings of $65,000 a year.-

Thanks to people.like Bob and qur other dollarStretchers, the operating expcnsui; for New'Jersey Blue Cr.os's. and-BUie Shield are onlya tew. pennies of.'each membership, dollar.About' one-third the operating e;<f)onsos ofcommercial health insurers.

'•Rob Haas. It's your dolla; he's stretching. I k.-'sunortiei.'of the /na.iy reasons w.: (i^liv^i iiioieli.-.Ciiih (;ar<.; tor your hoalth-caro dolUr. r

.4-*

/ ; '

...._x-4 .__

:£V 3LU£ CfLOS:

TJl{••

i

Page 5: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

.

• • • : • - • • • r i - v - - ^ ; ^ r - : - - A - , ^ . • • • . • • • • - ' ^ : : r U t \ : , , ^ - J ^ % ^ a ^

the b a u d Dan LeRose,

Jacobs. Alan Jacohe pitched afi fi hi i d f

pfine five hitter in defeat and

the second game until the lasttWo' innings when fout runswere scoredjwlling the teamto within two runs of knottingthe score. Hahn

Laflt continued . h& !*££»*good hitting with a Bngjtriple.Bob McMahoo doubled, andsingled and Gary Fjogennan

^t^fVO-sinslfid... ArQm — -

McJVUhon

KntlemenLeRpse.Jacobs

18

RF

: PM ;

"LF38

P

R00100

• o000

Sheehao and John.fepositoeach singled to, complete theseven hits collected.

On Sunday July 16,again dropped two garijes, thistime to Irvington. Box scores'follow: '- ' .,-'.' .' -. .; •'

Announce

Cranfocd

KastlemanWaltersShivtra,

Lertk

JB LF1 ' SS• c

LF. «F

AB P3 03 1

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Grcoi -•LaforeeFitxglbbonBlenliowJkjDolanSheehan .Hahn .

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A24~-1011

Lli

StandingsThe summer basketball

shows the Bold Ones and theKnicks tied for first place.Earls Pearls,- with a 3-0record, leads the league forboys ages 17 - 21. The leaguesape sponsored by theRecreation Department.

..' League Standings (ages 13-1&) '

BoWOnes ' . ' • J OtCnicfcs •-. '• 2 -0Marty's Moles . 1 -GJants . s 0 1Raiders . . - o-

League Standings (apes 17-21)

Earl's Pearls , ' 3-0MeSorley's ' • 2-flJoss • I'.ORhythm Kings • . 4-1Champs 3-1N6 Names' - l->Heads • • lBornbadeers 1Seadog Volume 11 . 0 - 2Bulls" , ' 0"3CoeC'ub 0 -3

LOWESTPRICE IN2YEARS

IEG. $9^5

EXCLUSIVE 5 YEARDURABILITY GUARANTEE*

LAST TWO WEEKS!

I Cowers solidly, fast and easy! Soap and water cleanup!Pairit4>ven'in damp weather, resistsblisSering andpeeling! Dries in Vz hour);bug-free and dust-freq!

I Excellent color retention — resists unsightly chalking!Sapolin's tested 2-coat system stops "cedar-bleed"and other unsightly sap staining on wood shingles!

Matins riWbiclt by coringeight runs to tlw^tb

.headnouoffth*ohn Barbour (two'another nin In 0M bottom half

th Oof thft seventh to; wtah h l d d Speerand the flne

of h nth t w : Ogame. With hasea loaded and

V ; .manager* of e«ch teamd hf

home the 1st Martin runboya the helpin another run, ; . .;'';:

: KHKe LaEocge's double ,__ .scored runtthree M|d lour f f A n n i *and John EspoBitp'a single * * " * ^ " *8cot^ runs nve^ntTaix. Gary ' " -Newhtlnl tied the score withhis single and Bob Speer putthe fish ahead with hit numberfive after-4*0 were out

AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPIONS - The CranfordMedic Athletics won <£he American League cham-pionship with a record of 16 wins and six losses. Theteam members pictured in the front row, left to right,are Mike Storch, Dave Welner, John Cafaro, BobKnudsen, Mike Kiley, Rick Donovan, Marty Marks

and Phil McGo\rern; second row, co-manager BobBlunno,- Dan AAcCarifty, Charlie ;Matclno, JimMcKenzie, Ed Mitchelf, Gary Llkler. Pat Garrett, BobWllloi/ghby and co-manager Ben Avery; rear row,icoaehes Franks Lozler and Charles AAarcjno.

one in the seventh to again tiethe score on Bruce Gwrenti'sthird hit of the game.

As darkness rapidly ap-

on for

Athletics Capture American Crownthe

1972 American LeagueChampions* after complenbn.of the regular season schedulewhich was plagued by,rainouts and rescheduledgamesr—— • •

The ReetStrong White Soxfinished second by winningtheir Rescheduled. gameagainst the American LeagueCardinals. The final weeksresulted in a three way tie forthird place between _th~eRankin fuel Red Sox, the

, Martin Jewelers T)rioles andthe Builders' General

(Yankees.Albert H.upset -theh t

AntoineYankees

behiTom

i

two-hit pitching ofh and the SoundTm

hitting of KeUConstanza, RichPhillips and ChHs Zych. DaveCree took the lossNmd alongwith Roger Karalis nad theonly Yankee hits.

After the loss, the Y;came back to out-slug theMartin Jewelers Orioles by

Swim Team Defeated

ill -

Average 6 Room House Costs Less thaif $t§5

INSPECTIONESTIMATE!

The swim team of theCranford Swimming Club losttwo meets last week toColumbian of UniQn, 125-102,and to Manor Park, Westfield,149O.

TJie following Cranford girlswon July 13 in the free style.-first places, Carol McArthur,Nancy McGrath; secondplace, Kathy Brooksr^4hirdplaces, Kathie Anderson,Debbie Hogan. Breast strokewinners were: first, NancyMcGrath; second, Debbiertpgan; third, Crissy Heller.Medley relay winners wereKathy Brooks, NancyBonham. Lorrie Marti andKrisNeal,

In tne boys events, free stylewinners were: first places,Mike Stevens, Jim McGuik,John Robinson; second, ChipAmraann. Breast stroke

•winners were: first places,Branden DeHaven, ChipMcGrath, Jim IVicGurk;second, John Robinson; thirdplaces, Dave Doheny, Bob

Tudor: Medley winners wereSteve^ Czyborra, BrandenDeHaven, Dave and DannyDoheny, and , McGurk,McGrath, Tudor andRobinson. .

Winners in the girls eventson July 15 in free style were:first places, Nancy McGrath,Kathy—Brooks;—:secondv gavoAip one^hitto NeilShult-Melissa Lee, Leslie McVey; - - - - -third, Gigi Mortenson. Placingin the breast stroke eventwere: first, Nancy McGrath;second places, MaryEckhardt, Lorrie Marti; thirdplaces, Gigi Mortenson, LeslieMcVey. . ... .• Boys events winners in thefree sjtyle were: first,. JimMcGurk; second places. ChipAmmann, John- Robinson!third, Dave Doheny. In thebreast-stroke competition,first place winner was JimpMcGurk; second, JimmyRobinson; third places,Branden DeHaven and ChipMcGralh.

Snake ProgramAt Nature, Center

"Snakes: Facts and ^ancy"is the subject of a program tobe presented on Sunday at 2p.m. at The Union CountyPark Commission's TraUsideNature and Science-Center inthe Walchung Reservation.

Lester•! PilKngton of-Union

The Union County ,JIiClufc> has. scheduled a hike in

Pocono State Park inPennsylvania for Saturday,'July,22, for members andguests."

The hike, through the woodswill bring |Jie participants to'Deep Lake. Hikers must.bringtheir own lunches. The groupwill meet the leaders_N;it and

Levin of Itiihway, at theHoward Johnson Restaurant,Koulf 22, North Plainfield, at H

f i l l - f io%v3 GAL. -

3UY L-QOiVi A.L£ADK\j"G'"COiiV.PAWY OUi'J 3?Ei.lJ£i,'OCp WILL-GIVE YOU iv.OXE to.VlFOK^iViOiMEY. C A L L J-OR (r.mj^i.^ I ••*•-'

^ W SSAV£ YOJJ

will lecture on the subject;using slides and displayinglive specimens. .

. Also on Monday throughThursday, July 24 to July 27,Donald W. Mayer, director ofTi-ailside, will -present. half-hour nature talks for children..T.he subject is "Whales andPorpoises." The programswill begin at'4 .p.m. each day.

Featured .on Sunday at 2,3,and 4 p.m. at the Trailside.Planetarium will be aprogram, "Stars of .the

'•Summer. Sky." This proa"am,will describe the 'rammerconstellations and the legendsconnected with them. Thesame program will also begiven in the Planetarium onWednesday, July 2t>, at 1! p.mV

The Planetarium seats only:if> persoiis at a performance,so it. is 'necessary to obtaintickets for Sunday shows atthe Trailsule office on the dayo) thtr- (>iograms. Childrenunder eight year:; ,of ynot . permitted in ttiePlanetarium eitambei'.. The public is invited to visitthe center and view thethousands of indoor exhibits,and ..participate in thescheduled [irdgrains. Theceiil«:r is open evrry day,e.^ce|)i ifriday, from 1 to '•>P HI. . •*.

e-tire.ttie

the score trf IJr^ tof4rQary ThiBjstriking out 124 was the winnerwith Dave Cree's four hits,Roger Karalis'a two and TomPalmer and Dave Granitskywith one-each providing- thehitting. Greg. Lawlor, PaulRinaldi, and Dennis Meadwere the r hitters for theOrioles, Rich Nicbolls took theloss.

The Packing Engineering.Indians closed out the season

a. win over, the Tigers bythe of 6-4 . RonMarotta

was theJim

with a^ktuble, Matt Dyer andNick "Fnhtgello with . twosingles eacnied-the -attadr.Charlie WHHawinner strikingMurphy and Halihad singles. Tom Donahuethe only two hits for the Tigwith Neil Constanza and GaryLenhoff sharing the loss.

In another postponed game,the Yankees outslugged theSportsman's Shop Senators bythe score of 9 top as Dave Cree

ner. Dave also led the hittingwith two singles and RogerKaralis, Gary Thill, MarkYanowitZj Tom Lies andDavid Pahren chipped in oneeach.

In the White Sox-Cardinalgame, Dave Hilinsky got the 4to 1 victory. Ron Cunha'sdouble and single led the at-tack with Rick McCarthy, JoeAttanasi, Dave Doheny, JohnWeber' and Neil Sullivanadding singles. Miller was thelosing pitcher with hits by

Shuberf, Miller and Fitzula forthe Cardinals. 7

In another makeup gamethe Athletics outslugged theCranford Elks Reds by thescore of 14 - 7. Ed Mitchellwith .'four singles, CharlieMarcino a double and single.Jim McKsjRie's triple andsingle, .Pat-Garrett's doublearid Gary Lozier's triple ledthe attack. Dan McCarthy Wasthe winning pitcher as An-derson and Peterson took theloss and led the Reds hitting

k

with a solid groundt went by 3rd base like-

the Lexington Avenue expressand scored the game winning

Marlins 6-Colts 5Same teams, same _

-differentuiglm tha't was^thestory of game number two.

This time the . Marlinsstarted-their scoring with two-runs in the top of the firstinning on a single by MikeMcCarthy. However, singlesby Al Pawlick ami-BobMcMahon led a three runoutburst by the CoRs intheirhalf of the inning. The Marlins

_ " ' / • " - • /

Michael Ginsberg haa beetvnamed to tte honor^roll^tOrange Avenue Junior /HighSchool, His name was inad-

litvortc^itlv ort^ittod frriwi B lintpublished recently in theC h r o n i c l e . . ' ' ••-•• " .•,. :•••,••.

miMNCQlNMARK]• y

ilENEWElNOI JO I S! ..U»>.,l \ Avi I'H

t* f Shirts, #

( Rackets, Balls ^

Ll*rcfii\J*,,^ T-^ _--_ >rr •'"r.~"".""""".'

rM

HANDYMAN SPECIAL!| ' * i PLYMOUTH FUMY III,

VLUtVlIMAORMORE BEDROOMSCOLONIALr Pour bedr«em(, Rfireplace. Iwifaal dining I W I I . d

. ) C r r i ^

TtLlfHONIf tOLICITOm

HOWMIMVM, • Callark.Call

•*' ^ A i M'MfM'iwm^'MraS:pr«iiy.rtfiMij«M« I M * etmr.

iiilty for

"ACT NOW - JoHlttn oltftit Toy A O||tP«rty man UHtw country - our 15thi

m v to M « : Pantutic. Call or writ* SANTA.'*

**" °*°* l Tl*!*»»?*«»••*»•»••«** H In my homo.

..MM «Frt. »Mir. »o jp.m. tor t wertt.Wniprovwotraniportaiion, S« » r l m

EARN WHILEYOU LEARN

ThtCltlitn « Chronlcto nt«d> ilart.tlmework»n tor itt production d«p«rtintnt.

Ungi on MSWUVi, TUtUUy andnttdayt. V to I. Start Itarnlng and

•arWnt.attor AuguU 1. Apply at ouroHka. I t Aldan St...Cranfont bctwMn toa.mv*nd 4 p.m. ThundaV or Friday.

- In playoff games for third-and- fourth-positions, for/thei n t r a - l e a g u e doubleelimination championship, theRankin Fuel Red Sox Out-scored- the Orioles. TheYankees then eliminated the

ioles with a 5 to 3 vieForthe Yankees, 1was thexjnning pitcher ./TomPalmer'sDave Doheny*!

singles and.Qe led

the Yankee hitting/For theOrioles, Dennis Mea&s homerun over the cente7flel<led the Orioles' attack.^O'Neil had two singles andRich Dyer added another" inthe,Orioles*'attempt to stayalive; Mike/Merritt took theloss for the Orioles.

.- ' Final Sianainos -/ *'

TheAAc4it Athlelies .Reel Strong Wtille Sox •Rankin Fuel Red SoxBuilders' General YankeesMa/lln Jewelers OriolesSportsman Shop SenatorsAlbert fi. Antoine TigersPackingtnoineering Indians

W.IS

13'1313B .

.8.' 3'-

Softball Contest SetBy Park Com m iss i

The New Jersey AmateurSoftball Association cham-pionships,'1 sponsored by theUnion County Park Com-mission^ will be played atWarinanco Park, Elizabethand Roselle, on August 5,6, 12,13, 19 and 20.

Rosters of teams must besubmitted with entries bynoon on Friday, July 28 to LeoSjSirito, tournament director,the. Union County ParkCommission, P.O. r Box"^275,'.Elizabeth, '.New Jersey 07207..

Rosters are limited to 20players. Teams must havejalayed three -games in aleague by July ,1.

TRree classifications for-fhampionship play are in-

Tho V W wi»h «hoVJay ouj top is la

Lirsdbn,M. J .

SCO £. tctirchijth Avo.

volved; AA;representing.

and B,^respectively.

championship/calibre, not ofchampionsb/ip calibre, andclubs. / - c .

U.C POP WARNIR FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

CRANFORD CLIPPERS

1972 REGISTRATION

. . . . . . • _ . \

August l f2 f3 and 4

Walnut School Field

Open i^aU Cranford boys born 1959,1960,1961 and 1962weighing under 130 pounds. 1st year boys bring a cdpyof ybicth cef^ificate.Boys Interested in earlierregistration maY^obtain registration fornps at the

/Community Centeriw: Municipal pool. Fill-in"and mail(Tstyearboys include copy of birth certificate) to:

WARNERN.J.

CRANFORO PBOX 355, CRANFO

Or, bring to Walnut School field on any"dates above.

registration

mTHU1f' ill

illi)-1^1/ ihfU.

U.JI I2J/L!..I ot Cjikwjy. i'jiiMtij . '—

~

•cl]ij\l ijLJL^, 'JJ/JJ: ! St. 'fi.l'J

It's really a full time job to keep.yp with investments on• your own...oven with a good broker. whose advice your'espect. Butwrtth all. his help..you still find yoursolf tied upwith details. Like keeping track of income, • exercising'rights and warrants, having all security records up to dateat tax time.'"Doing all this can be a real headache.'Why not invest the' simple worry-free way" ... in one of

Capital Savings numerous high interest savings plans. Thechoice is yours and your investment htjs no way to go butupv>* It's'compounde'd quarterly and youc money Is Insuredup to 520,000-107 the'Federal Savings and Loan ^nsurancuCorporation. So, for poace of mind, start sav|ng ai CapitalSavings. ' .

o Union "Ave"r;ornnr NortnC l i l i l t o r d . I\1,;

O l l h

Hu.

:•/?.•

Otiu.•'AND LOAN ASS(3£:IA1ION

iit\j< : o » { r ( . > M > i i t n ii\i i nt : /

KJ-yi LY CRANr'oab-SAVINGS

( .01 iKir S o 1c()Md .Si

: \

PART TIMB SBKVICB STATIONATTINDANT NBBDBD - OABWOOD

TVCr<WllW000H B $ r , V « TAPPLY IN PERSON.

EARN THE DOLLARS you and to fillIhtt "tw<l9«l flip" tlw Avon w»y. ManyAvmRM0

RRtBTMtlWMKly. I

intttivit earn In estlnuttd(ailing Avon producti In

llnlr tpart tirnt near homt. Can youqu«llly» Find ou» by calling:Ktnllwortti. Oarwood. Cranlord, .LindenUMNO Scotch Plains Panwood 75*.ON. „ _ » • • • • • - •

GUARDSPull I lmr wanttd for Security PlantProttctlon all (hl(t(. (J.Jl per Or.w.mtrlt lncr»»»t atttr * mm. Mutt nay*car. phone, and clear record. Align-ment near home, Apply * a.m. - * p.m.dally. Wed. till * p.m. - Sat. »-U noon, orca!l74MM*. . • / _

PlNKERTON's 'INC.

J040 Mitlburn Avo. Miplewood, N.J.Secortd floor. Room JOI -4n Equal Opportunity Employer '

ZONING OFFICER- municipality ol 30.000; knowledge olprlnclple( of planning desirable In ad-dition to enperlfoca In -code' en-forcement. Including Helton withPlanning Board and other municipaldepartmanH. Salary- commensurate•wlm experience. Submit returns toSidney H- Stone. Township Ad-ministrator, Cranford MunicipalBuilding, • Springlleld Avenue, Cran-ford, New Jertey. .

C ^ S OUTSIOESECR6TARIAJ. SERVICE

DICTATION - -IILL1NG

TYPINGBUSINESS

6)2 NQRTH UNION AVE .576-5190

Porch and Patio Bnclo(ure>•; Jalouiles Awning Window(Nuprlme Replactment Wlndewi

Slorm Window andScreen ComolnatloiM

ComNMiion Ooon-33 styie(-LtFBTINWTip[MiN0M

PROOUCTsTlNC.102 South Ave. W. 27e-l!0S

~7

.GET FULL HOUSE POWERM0 volt Installations

, our specialtyZIMMERMAN BROTHERS

Electrical Contractors)

CELLAR GARAGECLEANED

RUBBISH REMOVALcad

__ John Borden

•ENNER'i SERVICE POOL does most

ODBLINO. ELECTRIC WIRINO.A P P L I A N C E R E P A I R S .

MONEY IN THE BANKYOU OIVE: Typing and general olflco

skills, customer contact, llgure work,no math. Good attendance. Hours ID -

YOU GET: Delightful suburbanlocation. &al«ry tilgh depending on(kills and «xperionce. Generous at-

_ l»nd«nco txinut on anniversary.

- RITA PERSONNEL10 Alden St. Cranlord 271-W40

CHALLENGING M U L T I P A C E T E Dposition in art-center. 4 days. Business

. experience prolerrod. Closed Friday.C«ll 172 « » M . • ' ' • • , .

TYPIST - HoitJlt»llr»tionand Inturanco.Pleasant worklilg. conditions. CallPersonnel 4:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. KetctiumDtstrlbutors Inc., 40 South Ave. W..CrenWd. 174-70OO. . . .

WORK WANTED

RESPONSIBLE BABX SITTER.REFERENCES SUPPLIED. LOVESCHILOgBfcl CALL Vt-U04. * :

PAINTERS. 3 COLLEGE STUDENTSnow taking I obi lor August. Experienced-- 3nd summer. 'RoesoQAblo ratos.Relerenco^ luppliod. Call 273^740between y a '7 p.m.

VBAR ROUND CM|LD CABg L j r g ,Unc«d j/Mrd Outdoor equipment.Trained supervision. F l a l n l i . <&n u 4 .0160 '

FURNISHED ROOM

LOVtLY "FURNISHED ROOM INBEAUTIFUL HOME FOR MATURE

. BUSINESS MAN WITH REF6HEN-

. Small--(urnlsf.ed room bor businessQcntloinitH. Convonlont to toMn. Ca

Molhur ol ont) or muru srrull children tohocp my 4 vf. old 7 attm-noom per wo«kstarting In October. ColK37J,sm.

AUTOMOBILES

•70 PONTIAC SPOHT LE MANS 2J1 dr. hardtop, bucUot &i>ati, W.W., ^P.S., P.B.y radio, console. Factory olr.v

tinted olaib, a e lrig mischlMu.•7! nuiCK-et.ECTRA Cuslom, < Or.hardtop. Full powur, factory olr,luxurious .nt.. trim. AM.FM, muchmore.'44 MUSTANG, W.hltu VI. "bulflo docorgroup, w a H, iirjltiht iticU, jv?s.

1949 COUOAK - 3 dr. hj id U;p, mud.\jrQ0il, W . a k gruofi Vlnvl top U. bucketloots, 1 tpoud &llcU flUVS.

'49 PONTIAC FIMEUIHDOk. bl W blackvinyl buckuf ^ujt^, consolu, radio, PL,factory oif. Jilv#S. - • r

'65 LINCOLN CONT.'MAUK Ml lull

powor. tjctory uir. Final Hup up.

•71 MUHCUHY MAKQUIS UHOUOtjAM

• Full i^jwcr, factory tilr, U. blue, dl^bluovinyl Und lu^urlou» lV,ln comlorf lou<iuuicoti, AM.h'M ' turuo. A bodUly.'7J\/LGA CY, J dr. coupu. bucl«of \.S&ZT^uldsu^til (irw^, puWui' dnk brokfr*r«^C.rujr^WliidowJ j^lroblur, AM^M ru^liu.Whool fuvurs, SlVLt) . whotiU, U.D.^uaijonulon, for. liuf. r»Uu--

•71 CADILLAC 1)1; VILl. l i tijnilluii,buf jUndV mouiidu-1 pjlnt, Vinyl roof,|xn»«r locU u<oU|J, till ituurlng tuliotil.r".S., V »i!o». •'.!>•< floor n u l i . JM. I -Milorvo, linlwU Ij '3*-^ p*)v *i' UUlduWVFoClurV AIW. MAKY O l i l i ' H j .

.'j» onoo'r. D A U I or I;IO»»VI. u'>u..l,UCUi.ll.oj|.., UJCU Vinyl tup'••ulo.'W^.H-.

• THOMAS •

15? scutti Avo. c , Wt>^irteiit

.1 WJnMt'iiuiy

, j i i CUMJ.;.O,,,I:<J,. -l v,i

T i l t , w i t i n - , l - i i i u .

CALL

A a, % HOME IMPROVEMENTS -Lawnscaplng, painting, windowcleaning, etc. » a.m. to 4 p.m. call JJ7-l t « . After I p.m. call 37* 1173, .

- Ch»rntink ,**•"J Wood Ftncing,- ' ' .. .

PorHblt Dog »un»• ' Compltltlin* including liil»te,Algminum Pinilvitc

fetfftt Ettipiat*Phone

TVPHOOM - •>• I I U M I

T V REPAIR SERVICE• COLOR A BLACK d WHITEFACTORY TRAINEOALL MAKES

QllABANIEEDWORK

CRANFORD T.V.274-7298

. „ . , , Wlth;'NmK Shape Tablet*;,and Hyiirex Water mitt, jQrM'a Phirmecy- uto Rarltan Road, Cranlord, 274-

>OOL. LADDERS, J J « C K F I L T E R S t

ETC. CALL 27MI7.I. ..•••'.*«•..

WANTED

\ ••• TV SETS WANTED 'PORTABLE JJ" CONJBt.e • COLOR

CASH PAIP CALL ttftil*'

HIWIIIVWCWUTWi

WILLIAM W B I i L > inKrlor anaBKf.ri.or- Pjrlirtlmj.. SUIM mikluinlcsPtrtonal tustnltlon. -*H-H**trHn».,qrmfcrK. c«il m . ) ; ^ — : .•CHEMCLBAN -Furniture (tripping andrefftlnlihlftg. All work guerantetd. Nowater tnetf. CalHM-4«j

SCHOOLTEACHER williialnt Interioror exterior ofyour home. Experienced,reliable, reasonable. Call 737-M74,

AKC REOIJTEREO BOXERS - CH.(ired, tails docked, «art cropped. Call

'a>s-4AW. '•" >

INSTRUCTIONS

PRIVATE TENNJS LESSONSI •FOB INFORMATION CALL:

BIIXMILLER 276-3183GUITAR* PIANO LESSONS

Beginner* Accepted - . 'Special rates if two In same family.Call: ADAMS, 37J-5IJI

APABTMfNT fOR RENT

4 ROOM APT. in 4 family house in-Crawford, Available Immediately. WdleBox I Si c.o Cranford Citizen andChronicle.

L^KwlWdroonjj, BrtMkuiM School area; Ur«* llvlnt roomwiltifjrtptaca, DIMM rqom, modorn «»t JiUdtcfcmi, l«v«tory, r»ar porch,n«»»«r#n»c*(Mljir«ai,q«lcitpo1m«l«fl;................,......l4».f0*COLONIAL:-flirtxMlroonu, CI«v«liiMi School aroa, two tltt bath*/-'twatory,Hnl»r»»d ttaMmtqt, modtrh klfelutt with diHiwnlwr, hot waltr

COLOlirlALV F'I'»» 'lUdriom'itnttr liiil hom»,' Liviiisiiofi' School «r«», .living room and dan *lth Iinplacat; V»rmal dlnlno ro<»ou»iMKlou» lot, (XI.

SfMT ueVBt: Pour boSo^mVRttJwvtintcftooi.r..,V Bflu/ROMavelTscftool are., i i n l l e i X l Sroom, formal dining room, ground levtlden with fireplace. Vh tuttfs, twocar garage, central air condmottlng.......-...,'..:~~»... . . (M,M«r ;•

G.E.HOWLANDJNG. 276.5900REALTOR 13 EASTMAN St. CranfOrtl

•EVELYN WADE A SONS

; - GIIACIOUS SPLIT ;For a very special executive split home, let os in-

troduce you to our Nomatwflan neighborhood,

* • ' . - V . ' _ • , - • ; ' ' • • • • • •

SPLIT LIVING VALtKES7~T^'Z7'^tn9 " I M l D l r t l n 8 rooms•.". Science Kitchen(with dishwasher).. Panelled 30' Rec. room . . .4 BRs. . .V/i Baths ... Utility and Playrooms - All these majorhousing asseta also feature: 1 Fireplaces .. Front.porch.. walMo-wall carpeting throughout, plus otherliving particulars. . .

..'Telephone us if this homo i> impnrfn n t to you. _^

EVELYN WADE & SONSREALTORS

23 North Ave.,E. 276.1053- Granford

BUSINESS OPPORUNTITESWE HAVE a wholesale boilneis, all cashaccounts, growing by leaps and bounds.We need a dependable associate In yourarea with $900.00 minimum to'invest inequipment and Inventory-wttfch willturn over about two times monthly.Income potential exceptionally high: Allreplies strictly confidential. -'CONSOLIDATED CHEMICAL CORP;Freeie Dried Products Divisionn i l Montrose, Suite 120 .Houston. Texas 77004 •

APARTMENT WANTED

IMPOSSIBLE I I j !ACrantOrd 7or 3 bedroom apartment/orhome, by, young mother and 3 schoolaged children.. To JIM. Call 274-3477.

fttAl ESTATE APPRAISALS

PHIL F HENEHAN.SoVySociety ol. • ' *

Rea l E U * t e Appr« i te rs" •••2S Alder* street . C r a n l o r d

MASON WORK '-—.WATER PROOFING and

REPAIRSSteps. walks .patios. drains

^ CalU74-mo

Home Improvements\ . tJo* Jod^Too Sffia"'

Oft ESTIMATES 'KIIOHT APPOINTMENTS'

' • " • • • F U L L " INSURED

REM0DE1TNG1IM114

THE DEACON

BfttTO* INSURER

117 North Aye. W.t ' '

•pperrTuei, ft Thun. Evenings'- '-.FREE PARKING IN REAR

McPHERSON

OpertD.ilyfl.}

I9ALDENST.

Sunday I-3-

THE OWNERS LOVETHE VIEW FROM

€4and you will too, as itoverlooks a tree shaded,fenced In yard.

Besides the view there is alarge Uvinj) room with aFireplace, Qining . room,panelled Family room,Modern Kitchen with a Dishwasher. Sun Porch, andPowder Room. 3 Bedroomsand Bath oii the 2nd floor.

A D E L I G H T F U LCOLONIAL HOME

.FOR S4jMi00, : _

G. G, NUNNRealtors and 'nsurors

181 North A>e.,

3BEDROOM

COLONIALLOCATED IN ONE QF CRANFORD'SF I N E S T - A R E A S , F I R S T FLOORLIV ING ROOM W.F.P., D.R., KIT,LAV. «. REAR PORCH 2ND FLOOR • 3LARGE BEDROOMS W. BATH.PRICED AT M7.H0. i . .

VICTQR DENNIS2ALDENST.

276-7618REALTOR -

S47.SM1KDROOMC0LONIAL4 BEDROOM RANCH••JOROOMCOLOMIAt g r « :4BEDROOMSPLIT • LowSfs4 BEDROOM CAPe COD 44.SMMANY OTHER MULTIPLE LISTEDft^ppllTm • '

REALTOR2714117 •" ' ' '

. IISMIInStraeiCrairiordMoltlple Listing Service -

Evenings Call .Betty Lloyd • , 131-4437Lee Raikowskl • ' > 574-5755L«Ml»e Marine . —JJAHolj

y VICTORIAN- vOlder home of e rooms - 4 bedrooms, 2ndfloor. ? on i m . Oil heat, detachedgarage. Perfect for large or growingfamlly,.M<:t00.-. - .

2 ' RANCH - SPLIT; . __Mi good area facing lake, a* rooms, 1bedrooms, J baths, extr4a large familyroom, 2 car attached garage. Gas h*«t.S4f ,«00. ' . • •" '

HANpi-MAN SPECIAL •CALL FOR DETAILS

S H A K E N AGENCY

R^ltorsIS North Ave., E,

' 274-1900and274-0777 '

OPENWEEKEUOSV Evenings CaM v

Salesmen: . •Margueriteitearwinr-"EleanorBrjdlleld , . : 'V.J74-7Jl»Irene Kowalski ", 777 it71,Ruth P. Detering- • ' 27t-at»

nampson \ 274-4574umphrey . 274-1543

sound condition. Looks poor, teat torn,(mall scratches and dents. Auto., P.S.,R.H. Many good miles left. »7»J. . - -

THOMAS ;, 3»» South Ave. E., westlield

Mercury—232-6500 &•

TRIUMPH O.T.*1^» Yollow w.Mack bitfkat; tMrtt. 4«PMd.Jra«4, win MrtiMlsa|Ml} R»««.plists. '

•:;" THOMASIff South A vt. C , WttttioM

2)24500.

INSURANCE

JOBS WITH A FUTURE ...AVAIUBLi TODAY! rThe Prudential has the following excellent positionsavailable imrViedlately. —' -., , %^, •-••-.-•

S7 YEARS OF SERVICE

' M A K E AN OFFEROn this colonial having livingroom with fireplace, diningroom, den, laundry room, 4bedrooms, 2te baths, large lot.Listed at $44,906,, but ownerwill sacrifice;

PHIL R HENEHAN;• REALTOR

25 Alden street 1747933

Multiple Listing Service '

' ..Evenings CallKathleen Jenkins -

John A. Theisi

•."—u.:....273-1447

To train ih our headquarters In Newark for futureassignments In.our new Roseland offices (by 1973). Noexperience necessary. .;

TELEPHONE OPERATORS:No experience Is needed. If you have a" pleasantspeaking voice we'll teach you to operate our swit-

• c ' h b o a r d . . : . . , . ' , . . ' ' . ' . , :•"•' •• '.'

KEYPUNCH OPERATORS:Good salaries based on skills. Some^ experiencepreferred. ' .

GENERAL CLERICAL:- Excellent opportonHies for ihose^with cler4cal skills.

No experience necessary. /

' All of these positions offer good starting salaries and awide-range of benefits Including a T U I T I O N R E F U N DPLAN. Many and frequent cfiances for advancementt o o . ' ' V . .... ' . . . . ' ' / ' . . '„ • • • . - • ' ; .

Fof an interview, please visit our Employment Bureauany time between 8 A .M . and 2:30 P.M., 'Mondaythrough Friday. - • .

213 Washington Street, Newark, W.J. 07101

An Equal Opportunity Employer M.F

ALtJMINUMPRODL'CTS

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS, IMC

Home Improvement ProductsStorm Window and Doors

276-3265 ,102 South Ave.. W.Oanford

AUTO BODY REPAIRS

BODY ARTGeorge W. Kochera

Collision Specialists .

Au)o & Truck Ref inishing24-Hour TowingBody & Fender Shop

SHOP: 789-0330 ^RES.: 789-0604

6 South Ave. Garwood

AUTO DEALERS

1ENEWEINVOLKSWAGEN

-J Authorixvd -

VOLKSWAGEN . "•

SALES & SERVICECall HUnter 6-6200

900 Elizabeth A v e , E. Undon

SERVICE AND DtPEhiDADILITY- . POH OVER 4tt YEARS

Parts"£ Trnlnoil rvWchonlc^

Vc.Spoctfclliu In Arran(jomi:nlslJor European Dollvcrlus

hully Equipped Body Shop

EDW. K.

KLIiABCTfl

433 Worth,Ave. E.

iU-3TU

1'AINX AND I1ODVSHOP

'1-i Nortji Avouiiu

REILLYQLOSMOBILE,. Authbruecl

OLDSMOBIl.E

560 N- A«- We-sttield

TWINBORO AUTO CHRP.Authorized Ford Dealer

Since 1920Sales Service Rentals

open Eves, 'til 9 3 0 p.m.Sat . 'til 6 p.fl». _

S e r f A v eRoselle Park 245 6100^

UNION COUNTY BOICK CO.

Authorized

BUICK. Solos & Sf'U'co

GMC TRUCK SALESGOOD USED CARS

stf it: ••: ~ —fcllialx

AUTO RKPA1RS

Servicenfer

oTilno-ijp

o Gonora) Ropdrs

° Atlas Tirus 5i Bulturins"

•o Lubrication

o BraUu Siirvico'

FOH HAST HOAl) SI-. HVICt

Dial 276-b37fi 21itSt. , Kynilworth

CRANFORD

Hvipfr(oil?ti XfM11";Y- r|:\\<ffl'-y

SIERVICENTER-ICLN MtltK, I'lDP-

GENERAL HEPAIHSTllltS -- BATTEHIE55

"INSI'tCTION WORK ONALL CAMS

*^ oi.il ; ' /Xi Soutli Av.r. VV.

It \ K t -1 "

Cr jntord,

T<eni I worth's Own BankM a m b a r s . • • c .

FEDERAL DEPOS'T INSURANCECORPORATION •-• ^ ••

• Dial 2 7 2 4 5 0 0 •"'

477 Boulevard' Kemiworth -

THE NATIONALSTATF BANK

FIRST SINCE 1812

CRANFORDOFFICE .

643 Raritan Road • Phono 3BS-O80Q

Offering You

Complete "one fetop." Banking .

Mcpfibcrs R.D.I.C. »

Ample Free Customer Parking

DAVIS BROS.ENNINGERCO

Jack Davis-Chuck Benninger'A', Alterations

• Tlr'-Addition* *. -' ••" \if Remodeling

FHEE ESTIMATESCALL CRAIMFORd^

•'* 276-8758 >

"^ BUILDING. MATERIALS

For Convenient "Fu l l SefwioBanking in Cranforo.

CRANFORD OFFICE . " ' ' . "100 South Awe , E. 931-4833C R A N F C H O A U T O B A N i iChestnut SI aOJulnut Ave. 9J1 4831

united, countiestru?t company

ibcr: Fiidurai Rusarua SystemoKiI Do pout Inujraiicu Corp*,

CLARK OFFICES ;

and ElizabethTrust Company

10*0 Karltjp ad. — 10 Wcstllold Auo.

331-4300

•__-Mo'fViber F.O.I.C.

i.S IRVING COMPANY••• Lumber a Millwork

of Every DescriptionFuel Oil . . .Oil Burners

Hardware,. .233-1492

oOO South A v e , W. Westlield

Cranford-Westf ieW' Building Supply Co.

Complete Line ofBUTLDING MATERIALSDial 276-4600 or 7877.110010'S.oiiifi Ave.. . Garwood

SUPPORTHOTLINEFUND DRIVECLEANERS

BICYCLE-''REPAIR &~ ""V STALES :

EXPERT BICYCLEREPAIR .

CONGENIAL SERVICE

ffuo i<w;jl pkli-uif a. DollvcrvVISTAtt WOLLFAST SALbS

GUNTHERHARDWARE

CO. INC. -

3)6 Amsterdam A\ ic ,

l 241 U031

CLARK LANFS

.CAKCS Hi HASH l i lLS

ton AI i. orcASirtwsy LKi!<v.-d J- I \ . ;JJ p . , i lv

101 JMIIII Si.

'

HOWL INC, •

SixlACK HAH

COCKIAI i UAH

I'U T-S700

140 <J.n)(r.il A\/,!. . Clor!,

H l K l

Vi..oi

VA)\)

. Dry Cleaners .

Drapery Specialist!

Stilrt Launde; n

Fur Storage Vault

Wedding Gowns Cleaned

\ .274-3300 .'.— '•'

44 North Aye., E. Cranford

DlrXK••A

HOME BAKING '

SANDWICHES F.QR PARTIES

CJN ORDER

DIAL 232-0925

(Treat .

113

"WhyH; ^UJltfv UL-igr)AnJ purview Pouri"

'-: :, DUAPKRIKS.

T .EWMJNAL •HULL EMOSfOHES.'II^C.

115-• • • • Alii. 1 )O( .S«««» .

Quul i ly uroomlnu. rteusonablrHalei. KlndnfssAuurrd. S8orS9& up. 272-7017. Kves. 549-1632.

FUEL OIL

REEL-STRONG FUEL Cl][Dependable, Friendly Service

Since 1925He«ting Oils

InstoUatipni Service2760900

3 North -Aye!. E. Cranford

PHIL & JIMInterior & exteriorPainting ..New Roofing & RepairsLeaders & Gutters

SJuick ServiceReasOfwlWe Rates

FreeEstinjates353-8472 3544W2

Folly Insured > -

ELIZABETHJCOAL-£0J

Est.HM

24 Hour FUEL OIL ServiceWinkler L,P. Oil BurnersStewart-Warner Products

Boiler Burner Units — ConversionAir Conditioning

Call 3527430 :

SM.Westlield Ave, Elliaboth

SUPPORTHOTLINE -FUND DRIVE

L-

FUNERAL :Dll RECTORS

BOOLEYFUNERAL SERVKK

Funeral DirectorsPhone: 276 0255

218 North Ave.,W. Cranford

J)cn-<Sjtol JcwcUrt

Jewelry—"Keepsake" DiamondsWatches—Gifts—Silverware

China—Clocks—Engravirio•'.- ReoaiHng :

Bring This Ad in lop-Special DiscountOpen A. Personal change Account '

HiVidl-Ch'azge.or . r

Community Credit Plan

Call 276-3616SOQ Bouleyard Kemiworth

Funeral Directors

12 Springfield Ave.Cranford, N.J.

27B-0092

FUHNITIJRE

'S-CA RPUS I

iDOlNe"LI NOLI UM

I UUNITLIRI

Come In And Browse

6 7 v v i ; s i i [ | [ i) ..\Vjt-;

;IJTTKR SYSTEMS

WHITE BAt<ED

MOLEAKS,MO JOIMTS-FULLY JNSURED

-r.taE;>tlmaii;i. All work!3u;ir\int>_-cd. . • f

SEAMLESS GU I I'ER

LANDSCAPINGLANDSCAPINGINDUSTRIAL-'FJESIDENTIAL

DESIGNINGROBERTS&WIES^

27<5-3284276-3281 ;'

124 Thomas St. . Cranford

LUMBER

Building Supply Co. •Complule Lmu o(

LUMBER BUILDING MATERIALS

Dial 276-4600 or789-l 100

HTSouth Avo. Gcfvuood

BUILDERS' mumSUPPLY CO

Lumtwr o Building I

> j 276-0505 ~ ~336 Cunlunnial Ave. Crinford

-\1OVIN<; &

iP. TOWivlSEMD

MOVING .nui STOFJAGE

'_'.< I - i t ; : , . ,

n

l-'Kl-'i-: l ib l !i\V.-Y!'t-;Jit>f>^v i-jli-'ln<i In Kitchen- .

Alter . i t ion'j Of ,lli i r |V: ' , .

I'KN L)S V O U ' l . l 1 AKf. I t ;(-'.,11 J ( ! , - : ' v / i i ' lJ IO oi '.'U

2-11 Noah A w , W W.:n<u;lii

WE REPLACEfiBOJjEH FRAMES

WHILE YOlT^f ^ ^WA,T- ^

We replace all types oflenses, too. ,

Just bring in the pieces »of your "

broken glasses > • .'

. BRUNNER

Tonis River.

PLUMBERS

& TJ.T. Griffin, Prop.

PLUMBING - rlEATING& TINNING

276^)269 T206 So.uth Ave.. E. Cranford

CHAPMANBROS.

Plumbing—Heatlno—Cooling

s — AlterationsAir-Condltlonlng

J4 North Avo., E. Cranlord

A.UMBIWG & HEATING. INC.Gco. Cuozxo..... -Tony DiFobio

Ojyer 35 Yrs. EKpertonco.

SAMEDAVSERVICE

bathroom and Kitchon Modernizations

SERVICE.:.SALES...REPAIRS

Wo Do Ttiu Contpietu Job

"REASONABLE RATES"

.E : Crjnfurd.

t HK.-VTlNt;Klcctrif SfW«rr Cltunii^

aUT Hcaturs — Sump |)um

Alti-r.it ioiis • Itopairs

Av <'r.mi'oixl

PRINTING'DUPLICATING -SERVICES"'MAILINGSEWVICES •

Roselle Savings& toan Association

Mortgage Loans

Savings Insured •

Dial 245-1885235 Chestnut Roselle

Capital Savings& Loan Assn.

• • - ' •

Incorporated 1887'~"--^< Iruurod Saving*

Mon.toFri.

- ThUrs.Evo. «toa ^~--

Dial 276 55502 N. Union Ave. Cranford

655'

'. and

Raritan.

CranfordRoad

TELEVISION

TELEVISIONTV SERVICE

."OUR BASIC COMMODITY"Sales & Service

Color Blacks WhiteHi-Fi a. Stereo

Radios-rAntonna Installations li-1

Air-Conditioner>_

789-0606.15 South Ava. Garwood

RACQUETS

TENNIS RACQUETSRESTRUNG

CRANFORDSPORTv CENTER

' 30 North Ave. E.Cranford

• ' '• ' ' . ' r : 2 J 6 A S 6 9 ~ •• • • • ' • .

•tni-:i: SKKVICK

SHAMROCKTREE SERVICE

PRUNING. TRIMMINGTAKEDOWN

MJSKMESS

: : i - i I'.ii-k Av i -n

S a o i i ' h t ' l . i in ; . . \ ' I

ARROWROOFINGTt

Y R E f:IVIASCVIN WHALS'lY. •. HKAVY

BUILDINICON TRACTORS

KENILWORTHSTATE BANK

CRANFORDDOG GROOMING>-N. t N I O N A V K . . < K N I

I.NSU

Page 6: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

! Jjjjj j^^ > • : 'A/ • •

L*-. ..„ „.•„..._,

Pt.;8*WM^ M. Cbfe, newpresldmt of the CranfordI|0tary Club, announced•weral plans to celebrate theIpldea jonhfwwtty year of the

At the weekly1 meatiagheJdattherC!o«!chL__JBB b i t Thursday, be ajbnouWCttthat past presidentHorace K. Corbin. Jr., as

chairman of the anniversarycommittee, had already begunplans which included a picnic, •a birthday luncheon and adinner dance. Mh Corbin said,be planned a number bf»ub-committecm to assist in theplans. He is also chairman ofthe; pasjt presidents' com-mittee.

Some of the Key dates (or the

coming year were announcedby Dr; Coe. These include theofficial visit on August 17 of.district governor Dr. WiffiamB l f t meeting.ii£.anumber of Rotary districts onOctober 12 at the WaldorfAstoria Hotel in New York;City, and the district con-Jference to be held April 13 to 15at the Play Boy_CJ)ub_aLGreat

JLU

| HAVE IHf fIXfN'S!FREE BR 6 -1044 DtUVMY

^ "VOUB WINE LINE'

we...seii

Tickets

SO EastauuuSt.

WINES AND LIQUORtFREE PARKING IN HEAR

Entrance. .' Opp. Cxin<ord theatre

" G o r g e . - •": . •••••- ' • • > - ' ••'••'

Dr. Bernard Kott, a directorof the dub, presented ban-nerets he obtained on a recentvisiLtathe Rotary —••—•-KoaBy|o»art (Hong Koqjfl and of

Vice-president Norman/Roden reported on the districtassembly which severalmembers attended at the FarHills Inn at Somerville on July10 and also, on the crabassembly held at the home of"" ICntt «w Tilly H

CrusadeNear Goal

The Union County Unit ofthe American Caneer Societyneeds about $23,500 to reachthi y ' s ^ crusade goal$190,000, according to ArthurC. Fried, county crusadechairman.

The fund-raising campaign,in progress since AftriJ 1, ia\expected to close very shortly vDistrict captains and blockleaders are requested toconclude the canvassing and^urn-uHhe-eoHectionhfrfts--totheir respective crusadechairmen.

"The nation's fight againstcancer is continuous," statedT r- Eried. "particularivinHie_ t of the fact v that ap-proxunately two out of everythree families will be affectedby this' disease. Cancerresearch,- therapeuticassistance • and publicawareness of the warningsigns, of' cancer are thereforethe ultimate' goal of th'eCancer Crusade.",_Any .resident, club,organization or businessestablishment who has not hadthe opportunity of". con-tributing to the CaneerCrusade" may send a con-tribution to the Union CountyUnit of the American CancerSociety, 512 WestminsterAve., Elizabeth.

i Michael

1 in the Marine

naw|W(yHNB^i«

*^J&ie!jrMs*Ji''

,' V\A»

;__: ^_^_

* » < * ;

TiWMwMafuw" " A ••

y

) :

r A*

n jr.

TIME OUT TO FIGHT DRUGS - Joseph F Grail ofCranford, at rWht, cbor>-dlriating director of the Union CoAJnty narcotic and drug, preventlprf program,,poses with Miss Joey Heatherton, popular star of stage, screen,vrecord»ng andtelevision, who took tlrne wit from her act at the, InterhatlcHiamayboyjClub InMcAfee^ t o^xp i ^ rhe r TntereWTrTdrugT abuse prevention. MivGraH Attended theopening of Union County's narcotic and drug prevention exhibit at the New Jersey -State Freeholders convention. At left Is Union Couritv^Freeholder Walter TE-.U l r l c h . • . < ; . . . : , • • - • . : ; • .. •• . " . - . . • • • • - / -• • . . ;• •• • p •

crirr^TriAdlusted or WheelAlignment Checked. No]|Ujtt. One Prlc«;: ~ ~ 'MOST CARS

-j '•'

~i-Jil 6ObY AND FENWKCSTRAIGHTENING

ULliLliAiL':tm?W&.

TIM * PM.

606 SOUTH AVE.E.GRANFORD.N-J. '

Jeraey

. Fram soup cans to nuts (thehardware variety) a collectionof familiar objects areimaginatively assembled in agroup of sculptural wallhangings in an unqSuaexhibition now on display inthe Gallery of the Artist anilCraftsman Guild,/ Cranford.

The show incorporatesCvery-daymaterials/

p'objects

from theanden-

•?•

\

ttVlNGSTQlSJ MALL

• A n e w Hahne's,.. hears--co'rnpletion af-Liyingsto-n Mall. Three '•~ • •• [j

' levels, beautifully, designed for your shopping pleasure... _ "•»

--filled, vx/ith fashion for you and.j'-pr your home. Enjoy Hahne's

• •qualily; on 'ossurdnc^ or <..joof,/vajue and service, ioo. Open •„ * • • . • • * • ' • • • • . • . . . • • •

a CHARGl: ACcC^UNi now, ..ana w< li'ch. lor--aur opening' dare.

vironment recycled, andreyived by seven artists intoart assemblages sportingbrilliant colors, and Variedtextures.- Norman Pate of StatenIsland, has embedded^metalfindings in a soft groundsubstance" of. his own com:

bination of materials. Using asimilar technique BarbaraDarr of Staten Island hascreatred a_ composition ofautumn colors, impressingactual leaves and pods andpainting the resulting texturalrelief in aerylrcS.

Vivid colors highlight thework of Lois Shapiro of

Three AttendDemocraticConventionThr^e members of the

Young Democratic Club ofCranford who attended theDemocratic National Con-vention in Miami reported'ontheir activities at the July 17meeting" of the club at' theCranford Community' Center.

Those attending the con-vention were Daniel J. Mason,president, Kevin Daly, vice-

siclent, and .larnesGonftman. (rfq^i.irpr ' _.:_.

_The local club is open toindividuals between the ages

o { 1 5 a n d 3 5 . •••.••••'••

Ilisurance Co.Names Auditor

. Kenneth P. _~Carlson ©FCranford has joined theAmerican ReinsuranceCompany as an auditor, ac-cording to an announcementby TVIerl L. Rouse, chairman.

A graduate of ~Bloornsburg7State College in Pennsylvania,Mr. Carlson was a seniorauditoi4 with the Greater NewYork Insurance Group and theContinental Corporation priorto joining American Re.

Cranford, while a subtlemetallic effect' marks themosaic designs of SylviaPerkel of Branchville. Only ohclose examination by theviewer does the artist's use ofsuch things as clothespins,plastic spoons or bottle capsbecome apparent.

Struig things by MarjorieMargulies of N.Y. explore*geometric patterns, wherestraight linesT appear~ascurves. _. Kay Weiner of Mountainsideworks in varied techniqueswith stained glass as well, aswith plastic materials. Onewall relief uses rectangularshapes of plexiglass, whileanother is an embedment ofmetal findings in clearpolyester resin. Her-; thirdassemblage offers use of oldclock parts of assorted sizes incombination with stainedglass. ,

Bold contemporary acrylic'compositions by Bea Goldenadd the cotorful accentv tocomplement the/cdllecuMLHer bigger than life ruler anopencil lend a whimsical touch.The exhibit will continue

until August 26. Hours areMonday through Thursdayfrom 10 a.m. to" 5 p.m.,Thursday evening from 7:30 to9 and Saturday from 10 a.m. to2 p.m. The gallery is closed

JUNE »-SEPT.)

Tcimjng of the^Sferew v - Theilostog$Beyond the Fringe Troilus and Criessida

1 Pourgeois Gentleirtart • • • ' " ' M t l C M : M . M . « V - J . J l . ' - - - v " - ' : - ' . • ' ' • • • . ' • • • ' • • • ' . '

iEA$ONTICHBTl:*50.15PLAYSFOHTME PRIC6OF4) '•. .>HONe:;(ioiJcw^««»..^ ;_.J;.;.. :;;; •:.:::• ;-:::^ •_... ."

: .A Pro'leuMnal (Acton Equity) TMMr* Company-''. ,'

A]|p»rtorm»nce»«tl:00p.m.t»ctplS«turd»y '

•; TluHottW— JMly«.il»:M).IJ, l«i il.7l.J4 .: .Taming ol Th»Slwevi/ — July 7,», u, ?J, IS(».J0). JO, JJ, J$, 10

Trie Bourttol* Oenilemiin — July it. jpt i iOt

tridays.

1972 CAPRIYhsSsiyEuropMB

IN STOCK

1600 CC2000 CC and V-6

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

EVERYDAY oiBARON'

149

BRYLCREEMSOFT HAIR

79«

129

4 ^ & ^

WET ONES

Tl-

BLACK AND W-HITJE OK.COLORSATISFACTION (iUAKANTEEl)

• F o r I n f o r m a t i o n . . . .

. " . S t o p I ri or P h o n o

34.North Avo., W. • 27B-1024 '

CHOCOLATESmo

PASTRIES

w

19

J

Mi ,v

!f

STO^iE HOURS: Men. thru ft).-c!r30 ij.sj'j. xo iO p.in.

) - .

, : X' . '- :j',i*l^*I'-W'-'"''-1

- • • , • 1 ' ^ ' *

I " * - ' -

. * * * > . ' •

/

! ' - •

• . * > ' > . '

• r

SUMMER

v

Shop Where'/

-,S

The Red & White Signs

_ _ _ • >

'/.Friday.

f. Commerce

1<9y-2

irVco o i - i

^••r

_J

t*+T& rr

Page 7: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

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Page2 CRANPORT) (N. J.) CrTTTFW ay, July 20,1072

There's s New

(Where the Pet Shop

used to-be)

Remember

Portraits

WEDDINGS • BAR MITZVAHS

PASSPORT & ID PHOTOS

COMMUNIONS

pUSTOA/i Hand Carved Woad Plaques' - ' . \ ' • • " • • . ; . . • ; • • • ' • > ^ ^ . . . : . • • • • • .

. •.•• •;, _;• '; and Frames '..:',; .":•. ' . : '

BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AND SAVEL ___ fI^e^Framing Services

STubio ^ OFPHOTOGRAPHY

276-774911 NORTH AVE. EAST

. (OpDO^ite C ,R R Stat ion)CRANFORO

I l l

^ " Wjde^lact>in* Washable, .Crease Resistant, Permanent Press,All from Full Bolts, ^Quality;

-•Values to $t.9ayaV , ^ ;Group Includes:- ,. ,..;_• - ..- , w V-—»-

Klopman, Springmald, Rlegel^Bates V - l ' P A d i A l tetc. -

45" Cannon Printed Terry Cloth45" 100 Printed Polyester45" Printed Jersey _ ! ,

45''Reembroldered Lace

Cut from same faottr~~

, R fG. ^ NOW1.98yd. 1.25 yd.

2.29-2.98 yd. J.59yd.;1.^8-2.59yd. 1.00 yd.

Plus A Compfelketlne Of New Fall and Winter/Fabrics; AtDiscount Prices - "." /

. . - • - >

BOTANY YARNWnMtttt-4

lAtOll ZIPPERS7 inches I J

18 indies 3 Q C 22 bdies35C

V OTHER PABRICSML AT DISCOUNT PRICES

8 No, Union-Open Mon. thru Sat.

FABRICSCranford

I.-.:

SALE

&^<f>4ii^x'j-ytti""~;kv^^ ^ J._;..K. . .„

y ^2v59y«»: 1.59 yd .

f - M A T C H BUY ONE - GET ONE FREE MIX N HATCH• • • • . • . . . . - • K > • • ' ' • . ' " " • ' • ' . . - ' ' . ' •

'o

ip C ;

• • • • • ' ' • . . " •

€> ©r©ss

© Pajasi

-©.Dans!

GIRIS7

@S ® Bfl®US€iS

S@ts ® JaiinpsulfsgLj j^ Pre teen &mmh - .wGJrb-Swiin-SBife-sas ••.© .-Slacks'".' , .

dns © Sfa©rts

Suits-'.''©' Skirts

— . . . i - . . . . -...

.: :./# Si

-:.:.-_© _Pa

. © &

© S i

J & TODDLERS'

mssiits

i t s . ' . " " ";ui

reraOs • ; - " v -

it.ShMs-.; j : •

J o r t s . ' - . . . •..-.•

I/W iiOG^SF

SAWJC A1VJERBCA CHARGES'

Ttur^y,July^Jfl72CRANFORD(N.J

:•'•'••• • ^ r ' / ' i ;'•'i i'-

DACRON/WOOL j / / ;COATS

1W^HIOINk¥i l l0 l—^3^HW-

2Ji<p-. • »j

O--

^"\>. rB)

. r

•\ "

ALSOALLSLWAERSUITS

SLACKS

SWIM WEAR

BERMUDA SHORTS

ZIP JACKETS ;•a-

y^ j j , A ^ g } )=- rD

v .•

SPORT SHIFTS

REIS OAC/COTTONUNDERWEAR

SALE PRICED

. Co:

;. SHORT SLEEVE

ARROW DRESS•' e >

^ l / • '.Reg. to S* . ' ' ' • • •

S\ies UVb to la Neck

^ • ^ • •

COMPLETE STOCK OF BOYS'

5.S. - DRESS - SP

KNIT SHIRTS I

• - N

. X:\ . • •

THURSDAY £V£!VlJiViGS TILL 'J

V' -

. • • » _ •

r^;^' • ^ - • - v ' . v : ' ' : > ^ v ^ - ^ : ? - ' ' ; r f : ^ ^ •'•'•-.•;•.. ^ . - ^ - ' - - : . . , : > ^ . j v ^ - , ^ r • - • : - , ; : ••^-•.:: :; :-'. •

- •lM..-;....-*y—i.'»'M.1-**.'^.-1. ••.,'>..":r.*Jj.v:..v'4v. y y — i . . : , , , . . , i , . . : . . ^ i . . r - . - - , - ^ " , . . , ' ^ . • -•/ . •:•-' •:: •••"••'• "' • ' - ' * " l - * v ' ' " " • ' ' - ^ : ; ' - ' ; ; ^ * ' "•' ' f ' ' - ' ^ ^ _ t f

Page 8: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

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. • ' • • ' . _ • • ' / • . . - ; : _ • . ' • ' • ' . • • • ' • . . . . . . . . • • ' ' _ ,

• • • ' . - • . . ' • • " • • • • • ' ' ' • ' • • ' - • ' ' " ' • • ' - a . ' ' " • . . ' • ' • . -

1 ' ' ' ' " " . ' - • - v - ' ' • : "

• . : . . ; . . M . - . , • _ , ; • • ; , . . • / • , • ' • • ' • • ' : , : . ,

: ' " ; ' - • ' - • • ' • • : : • • I r - / - 1 ' - • ' ' • • • • y . - P - : i : : ! : : : : : : ' • -

• t . . . . . . • , . . ' • " ' " ' . ' . . " . • • . . . . - ; • . . . . . • ; • . .

For_LimitedJFini,e Only

Piaasa note. Fur-trim pilo and fake.furs slightly higher.

//

T

Special event I Don/twait. This money-saving

sale includes coats, jackets, outerwear, and

snowsuits. Same famous fastidious* quality

control service.

DELUXED DRY CLEANED & PRESSED

July 20.1972 CRANFX)RD (N J.) CnTBaENJ AND rHRONTflJ: Pqfle 5

UiidercounltM

Dishwa.sher

S210 $499 S163

Portable Fan$11.88

Westinahouse

Mobllaire $29,88

CHRYSLER

Quiet. EfficientAir Conditioners

Five Year

Warranty

On All Parts

•X:

: Women Shoes

REG. to $21.99

NATURALIZER - LIFE STRIDEBONE AND WHITE

No LowerPrfc^rAnywhere!

J

CRAWFORD

ECENILWORTH

Eivd. & 22nd St.Ssssio Pickup

ELMORA ..iu:xt to I'ahtry Pride

ELIZABETH - •

4 VJ. Seiwy Si,'

EU2ABET1H1

Ave. •

IMPORTED

SANDALS

W O M E N ' SAND

CHILDREN'S•ECIAL GROUP

'S ;<MEN'S ;<

CASUALS

^MSfflNi

REG.

shoos are discontinued styles

23 NORTH UNION AV£ CRANI

SHOBFfTS-

27642721^

• • • • > - . - . . / - • .

to 38.00

s •<-'?

5.0Q to 24.00 • v • • • — • • •:%PRICE

, ^ -T

BBD AApmber, Nev,/ Jersey's Largest Buying GroupTHE CENTER, On Eastman St,,(opp. She Theatre ) 2^6-1 7 7 $

OPEM THURSDAY,-FKIDAV '&,.MONDAY ii\3IGB-ilTS TILL'9

Clhorge Plans;. Our. KovoSving. Oiango; GA4AC;

Charge,

Llit PriceInc. Freight,

$567.

• - • . 610.

SatePrice

480.

CRANFORD BOAT AND CANOE COMPj for Canoeing sine* \m. Union County's SaUing

Sailboats. Canon. Rowboats., '." Sales and Rentals(Over 100- Boats' On Display)

SALE DAYS SPECIALS - FOUR DAYS ONLY JUtV 20-23Super Sailboat Values . ^

1970SOnflsh, blue deck, new • *. •""••.,

19M Sunflsh, green deck, hew

"T972 Suntlsh, Olympic, new (Blemlshea)

1972 Mach 11 new easy cartop sailboat >

1972Zef Sloop family daysaller (demo) -

1972 A M F Alcor t Puffer sloop, red sails

1971AMF Alcor t Flylngf Ish, red deck/used . - .

1971 AAAF Alcor t MInl f lsh/ l l rnesai l , used

1972 Hobiecat 14, lime ivory, new

1972 Hobiecat 16, regatta blue white, new

. 1972 Windsurfer, Ba|a model, new

~Pre-*n Lightning sailboat and trailer ; '

. Pre- '71 Barnqgat Sneak Box' . ,

Pre/'71 Sklmraar Sailing dinghy --

,t Pre-'7l Jetl4,flberg.lass ."• ^-'-r

1972Snark Products Sunfjowejr^fioor model)

1972 Triumph trimaran, demonstrator"

- 1972 Grumman aluminum 15' Sportcanoe, green, with

617.

430.

735.

945.

1245.

420.

1260.

1770.

275.

1115. .

214.

370.

495.

395.

675.

855.

850.

3«r

1675.

445."

750.

330.

.230.

790.

189.

335.

i r i f l t t J? romman 17' shoe keel canoe, AAasterllto paddles, cushions and cartop

rack" ':.... / ' ; . 3^0. 295.

1972 Quachlta K>' aluminum canoe, yellow, wi th cushlohs, roof Tack and ash

paddles ^ ' . 250. 208.

1972 Aqua Sport 14' fiberglass canoe, blue, cushions} laHilnated wood pad- ,

dies ' • . . • • • • • ' - I I . 285, . ' 218.

—1V73G^uromatvatomtm<m-lS'-squara atom canoe, roof raclt, aah pnridlaa and

cushions ^ 328. 2a9.

1972 Ouachlta 10'aluminum Jonboatwllh oars 120. . 89.

1972 Dura N^Ajtic aluminum smwi-vec/Oersj used 260.. 100.

1972 Moby Dink 7' rowing pram, wi th oarr. i ieftK 129. 109.

Special Extra Sale Bonus with Every Boat Sold!

!•» S10 valde In free canoe tr ips on the river wiit\«» all boi i t j^o ld during sale. •-*•'*

AVE.

Open DaSJy M AM. - H P.^'L

, < .

reg 4.00 lo 32.00 : . . . . . .

JAMAOS & HOT PANTS4.00 fo 1M0, \

1'/2PRICECULOTTES & PANT SKIRTS

reg 8,00 to 22.00

PANT TOPS,woven7 reg l l O O to 20.00 . . . . . .

KNIT TOPSreg 3.00 to 15.00 . . . . . .

TENNIS DRESSES & SETSreg 8.00 to 20.00 • •.....

DRESSES, special group

r2 PRICE

'2 PRICE

SIZZLERSj.oo......;;^.. Vi PRICE

PANT SUITSreg 20.00 to 80.00 '/2 PRICE

LONG SKIRTS; ': r e g 1 2 . 0 0 to 3 2 . 0 0 ; . . . . . . ^ -

FLOPPY H/tt5_ reg 2.00 to 4.00

12 PRICE

i • - '.j ' \:^-^ ~ .

JEWELRY, special groupreg 2.00 to 12.00 . . . . . ± . . .

5 JO to 25.

—-*s^3J... 1

& • •

-Rear EnJrairlcc. from Municipal

. \ T- Opcn'Thpirsday Evcsraihgs —

Closed Wednesdays During July sndl

!<&•}

L,~ ...

L-J

' - - - : • - - • ' • • . • • • • - , • . . - : • . - ' ' ' : ' • - ' » • . - • • ^ • ' • ' • • ' " * T > S ~ . • . • " • ' * • , • • • • - . - i f ' • ' . , > T T S i . . — . : • - • • • . ' . . - . ; . • . • . " - : • • . < • - " . . ' - ' V : ' : • • • s . - • . V ; . • • . V . • . ' . w . . , C . . • : ^ ; . • • . : \ - . * . - » • , ' • " • • . • • . . : . ; • • . • • • • + i - ; - . • . : ; ; . ' . - ' • ; - . i . ' " ^ . • • • • , • • ' r > • • " j i , • . • . • • • . T < r • • • • • • . - • • • , - • . • . . ! ; • • - • : • • : • ; - 1 -

Page 9: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

• - \ ^

/ •

TS~^Z~:::::

• " " • »

\

— X.'.- .

.nCITIZENANn^HRONICLEThursrtAv JiiluMl toni. . ' ' "

. / •

\

102 N. UNIONCRANFORD. NJ,

PEJtfNYSALE>• •

• Ban Y SUITS

•BLOUSESi •

JEANS V• • . ; , • ; . • • • • . . . . . . V

SHORTS >

SLACKS

HANDBAGS

SLEEPWEAR

KNIT TOPS

> • • \

'•PANT SUITS

© SETS I : . •{.•-•.

' H BATHING SUITS' 1$| VPRICE fe

. D K E S S , E S .issey a Junior

I f OATSV IflrKFTS P=3 COATSG JACKETS wa- ; -^ . Vi PRICE , |

HONOR THYSELF

COME TO

r \

2 PRICE SALE

0tnittmtn' * CornerFor this special event. . . Open 9:30 a.m.'ti l 9:30 p.m. -Thursday evening• . / " •

IV NorthUnionCranford, N.J.

272-5350

RED GROSSCAMELOTAMERICAN GIRL

r\ r* r- * a *

BUSTER BROWN& JUMPING JACKS

MEN'S SHOESWALKOVER, J

FREEMANODDS&.FiNUS

KEDETTES•> i-iii-i tvjiv.f M

WOMEN'SSANDALS

I'/.ADP ii

Shoos on Sale Are Discontinued Styles

ill

tip

SHAPIRO'S CLEARANCESummer Merchandise

Thursday, July 20.1972 CRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Page 7

FARM AND GARDEN CENTER

Boys' S.S. Knit Shirts Re9. $4and $5 Now $2.99,

Boys' S,S. Dress.&'Spbrt Shirts Reg. $4.50 to $^5Q Now $2.99

Men's S.St Knit Shirts Reg. $4 to SS.SQ Now $3.49 each

Men's S ; l Press Shirts & Sport -A

Reg.$4.50to$6.50 ~ Now$3.99each

ual • Flare No-4ron~Slax ——^ ;

I • TWO LOCATIONS .331 SOUTH AVE. 299 DENMAN RD.

GARWOOD V CRANFORD

rSlze8T26t634only %eg;to$1 ? . ( * . " V l . W p r

Girl's & Misses Jamalcas by Wrangler ;

Broken Size Range . Reg. $4.50 $2.49 pr.

Infants Bubbles oVSuhsults Reg.$4.00 ; $1.99each

Broken Lot§ Boys' Bermuda Shorts Reg. to $5.00 $2.79 pr.

MANY MORE SUMMER ITEMS IN SMALL LOTSAT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES

PR ICES FOR JULY 20th, 21st, 22nd ON LY

ALL SALES F I N A L - C A S H & CARRY

(OPP. GARWOOD SHOPPING MALL)

TOMATOES 3 LBS. $1°°ZUCCHINI &YELLOW

PEPPERS

ONIONS

CABBAGE

19C1B.

29C1B.

2 LBS. 2 f

1OCLB.

uro s • Store19 N. UNION AVE. CRANFORD, N. J.

OPEN THURS. NIGHT TILL 9:00 PM.

PONY RIDES 4 TIMES AROUND 50<WITH THIS AD ONLY

And• ManyOther Fresh\ Vegetables And Fruits

APPLIANCE SALES DAYS

— JULY 20- 21 - 22 . . : ;;: .-.-Will Satisfy All Your Appliance Needs At Low! Low! Prices

WASHERS

Q DRYERS

QpREEZERS

D RANGED-"r 1 .

• AIR COND

• VACUUMS

DSTEREO

• COLOR TV.

, _ r . . . . . . , > .

WASHERS- F R O M $199.95

'DR'YJE.RSVI=ROAAc

DJSHWASHERSFROM $199.95

AIR C O N D I T I O N E R S .FROM $109.95

TRASHMASHERS )FROM $189.95;

USS OUR COMV5MIENTXHARGE!' PLAMS.

-DEALER '

C^ILV li L DEALERS

» . • '

^^V^Mitjlit ;?^£ijLh£zK&^8^&Z& ; i:>!i ; i ' j :K\;' ' ; i i ' ; ' . 'A-.' ' . ' . ' ' .: 'r<':.>•.'• ' .••.;-,••'•.•:>.' ".!••

Page 10: BARON'S - DigiFind-It · 1972. 7. 20. · opening day-coming soon ••••v ir and' eluding Thumbelina and house. TJh e doU show is on of th special events planned in the summer

• \

f/ -I. . ' • - •

/ • • • • • / • •

......i . . , ;_ >*.:.I*

TOJWSvP^5|ff*5!?*5r5?ff^-^^ffi^ ' •<., • • • " • • ' - .<---• - ; • • , "• , ' , ' . ' ' • • y •'•',•'• ••-••'-•• -••>-T..— -' W •

erving Cranford, Kenilworth and GarwoodVOL.72NO.3ff' Published Every Thursday July 27, 1»72

Second Class Postage Paid Cranford. N. J. 070M 15 CENTS

PageBCRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday, July 20,1972

i

,5?

r \

CRANFORD MID-SUMMER SALES DAYSTHURSDAY— FRIDAY-^SATURDAY • JULY 20—21^22

CELEBRATES

REDUCTIONS TO 80%!SPECIAL GROUP

MEN'S LIGHTWEIGHT

SUITSVLUESTO'llO >

$49.88

LIMITED SELECTIONBOYS k

SUITS \SPORT

JACKETSVALUES TO »55

—/SPECIAL GRO/ MEN'S

v^ , BREEZE WEIGHT

SPORT JACKETSNOW $29.88

MEN'S LONG SLEEVESPORT,AND DRESS '

SHIRTSVALUES TO *12

NOW $5.992 FOR $ 10

BARGAIN TABJgBOYS'AND STUDENTS' ' "*'

\ -LONG ANC^SHORT-SliiV

SPORT SHIRTS,KNITS, BERMUDAS

AND CUT-OFFSN . "

.'. VALUES TQi^>

CEACH

"Shall Council-Optional Municifor seven ct

Plan E. of theLaw, providingi f e d 'H

adopted by the Township of Cranford?"Thiaf question, Which is the result of a nine-

month study by the Charter Commission, willappear OA the November 7 hallot. The com-mission was elected last fall by popular voteand has submitted its findings and recom-mendations on local government duringCranford's 101st year as a township com-mittee.' In its report released-today, thepanel states

it "unanimously believefjhereis a better Wayfor Cranford to govern itself." The coin-mission's "better way" is a council-managerplan Which provides for the following:'

A seven-member council elected at large,by party ballot, with elections for four-yearoverlapping terms held every other year.

A mayor chosen by majority vote of thecouncil from its own membership. -•. * .

A* township manager hired by the councilfor his executive qualifications, serving at thepleasure of the council, but subject to

removal at any. time by a council majority:The council to act in all matters as a body

and to deal with the administrative servicesorely through the manager;

Copies of the full text of the commission'sreport will be available tomorrow at thetownship. clerk!a-'-.-office.-- and policeheadquarters in the Municipal Building, fireheadquarters and.the publiclibrary.

The members of the commission, chairmanFarm S. Swackhamer, vice-qhairman Mrs.Norman H. Brubaker, Burton C. Belden,Charles M- Ray and Edward H. Trush, will beavailable after September 1 to explain thereport to any organization. A one-pagesynopsis oi' the findings and recom-lopsji

nflati

history of serious polarizing conflicts.(2)"Jfownship Committees have_ been

aonscientious and hard-working, subor-dinating their partisan and personal interests^to the larger service of the people of Cranford.

(3) Direct election of a mayor has apparentdisadvantages which outweigh the presumedadvantages. .'.. . • •

(4) Division oflhe township intaAvards haslittle to commend it for the 'government ofC r a n f o r d . >-•..••

(5) A seven-member g'igive more effectivepresent fiye-membaKbody.

(-6) Superimposing a

ning body shouldntation than the

ftor fortn. It is a logical "next step"J o r d _ . ;.•;...>•

lew Jersey's optional Council-Managerr— E and the present township form ofgovernment have several features in commonthat can be retained with adoption of the new

p l a n e - • • — - ' - - - '••''-- - - - - - - -•'. - , ' • • • ' • • ' . - - -

' The charter report describes the-council-,manager form of government the "next step"toward strengthamig the township's internalworkings. The commission's preference wasbased on the advantages of a career executiveand his relationship to the council as outlinedi t h l

mendations will be mailed to all homes about •October 1. "

In its report, the commission notes eightfindings on which its recommendation isbased. The commission concluded: . -

(1) The citizens of Crfanford have abalanced, and active "interest in their logovernment. Their partisan Activity has Iboth vigorous and constructive and shows no

ministrator pinion on the Township Com-township ad- - Cranford presently employs an

The Planning Board lastWednesday evening postponedfinal approval for the 34-unittownhouse complex alongNorth Ave. until the.August 2meeting of the Board.

Following a public hearingattended by approximately 15people, the Board scheduled aworkshop session for lastnight to discuss questions of

mittee formrof government .by recent or"-dinance/has enabled Cranford to* keepsomewhat abreast of the times. In bothpractice and theory, however, the committee^

* istrator plan has some significant,weaknesses.

(7) The council-manager plan, adopted byvote of the people, provides the means tocorrect the weaknesses of the committee-

the pleasure of "the committee. He isresponsible for the supervision of the ad-ministration of all departments .and em-ployes, the direction, of fiscal affairs andpurchasing, the direction of personnel andadministrative practices; the preparationand recommendations of plans andprograms;

The report outlines three features of the

council-manager form which the commissionbelieves Ue at the hearUrf-good-practice-mlocal government.

(1) Accountability to the council for ad-ministrativeperformance - for renderingeffective service to the public - is focused mthe manager rather ;than dispersedthroughout the organization.' '••.• ."..••••..

(2) The manager appoints and removes allpersonnel for whose performance the councilholds him accountable. " .

(3) The council works as a unit rather thanby "committees" and communicates withdepartment heads and: employes, solelythrough the manager. •-These elements define the stamlard-pf-

couricjlsifeanager relationships whereasgeneral township law and Cranford's ad-ministrator ordinance do not. The-com-mission also concluded the council-managerplan is the closest form management, topractices used in business. *

Also available under an Optional MunicipalCharter- law (Faulkner Act), form areprovisions for citizen, involvement and

representation of the citizen interest that arenot-available-under- general- township laWr-These include initiative, referendum andrecall where 25 percent of the registeredvoters inay initiate an ordinance to be con-sidered by the council, or require the councilto submit an ordinance to vote of the people,or petition4ar removal of any councilman, bypublic vote.

The other provisions .include four-yearcouncil terms, the filling of vacancies, fromthe .party of the previous incumbent; andadoption of the plan by vote of the peopleinstead of by ordinance of the governing body.

. The commission concluded that the council''-manager plan "can improve CranfiWirgovernment without drastically changing i t "

Acknowledging that some residents spokein favor of a directly elected mayor, thecommission decided that direct election

. Would set up a third force between the counciland manager. "What is needed is a single,cohesive policy-making body that would act

• . Continued on Page 2

ousesJersey have been met. The .engineer and landscapesPlanning Board requested^ Residents, whose propertythat Township engineer faces the rear ofNorman E. Genii be presentalong with the architect forCranford North, JSurton R.Appel, and Us engineer,Richard Luster.

rear /(townhouses, questioned theadequacy of on-site parkingfacilities atld expressedconcern about excess cars

being parked on John St. and: Hamilton Avfe. .

John Duryee, zoning officer,' said there were more than twoparking spaces provided .foreach unit. Being close to mass

• transit, he said, 'would

, At last^week's hearing,plans foriighting, the outsideappearance. parking,

drainage, aesthetics and to drainage and the landscapingsee if all requirements of the Were presented byx the.Bureau of Housing of New^developer's ajrCjhitect,

SUP1ERB VALUEMAGNIFICENT DACRON/VVQOL

/7

- -SPCCBAt GROUP-YOUNG MEN'S . V

JEANSINCLUDING CORDUROYS, DENIMS

. AND BRUSHED DENIMS.VALUES TO *13 •• NOW *2.99 EACH

• f-

&*

MEN'SSHORT SLEEVE

REG. $7,00 and $8.00

f f » O8W3©

'%w®m'.

MEN'S SHORT/LEEVE

REG. $7;0O and^S.TJO

MEN'S

REG; $7.00 and $8.00

MEN'S

WASH 'N WEAR"

REG; $9.00 to $14.00

WJ •'

osesPa^tiii^PrQppsal

. • • < ' - -

••'. VT ~

Dr^6air Flinnj^memberof-the Planning"Board; was

.appointed a representative to/ newly created parking

conimittee/ headed byCoriimitte^raan Burton S.

'Goodman, at last Wed-nesday's , meeting of thePlanning Board.

The • s e v e n - m e m b e rmunicipal parking committeewas appointed at the June 27Township Committee meetingand has the support of theChamber of Commerce. Tlieremaining post is to be filledby an appointment from thePolice Department.

• . Committeeman. Goodman, aDemocrat, is seeking

.reelection' to the Township^Coiriniftte.?. this iQovernbor

and Dr. Flinn, a Republican,is running for a seat on thecpmnjittee.

John J. Vassallo, vice'. ohairmau of ,the Pbmnfng

Board, stated his objection tothe parking committee.-'"These areas of planning

, are rightfully in the area of thePlanning Board," he said.

"There Is ho merit or needthat this committee can serve.Definite proposals fromsomeone reliable in this areaare" needed," Mr. Vassallo.said." . • .

Mr. Vassallo said the im-portant areas of traffic and.transportation belonged to aprofessional planner and hewas "not happy" with acommittee of laymen set up tostudy this/ problem. Hesuggested the Townshipengineer attend the 'com-mittee's meeting.

Chairman Bernard Litwackagreed - that professionalplanning was essential and thecommittee was entering anarea in.which it has no ex-1

pertiSeT ? ' *• "In a letter Mr-Litwack sent

\to the "township Committee inJune, lie said the idea of thenarking committee "appearsto be good but it does not go. farenough.1' The letter said thecitizens committee appearsto go beyond^ the central

• . Continued on Pono 3

A LONG WAIT —Nearly'a year after Dorla destroyedthe Mohawk Dr. footbridge, construction of the newbridge began this week under the supervision of theUnion County Park Commission and the watchful ey^sof Cranford residents? |n the picture, CommitteemanBurton S. Goodman a.nd Sunny Acres residents peerinto hole for one footing of the $51,000, single-spanwalkway. ' , • - " T ~ "

probably mean less than twocars per family. The plan callsfor 43 garage spaces and 27off-street spaces.

Vincent Butera^ of 32 JohnSt. .questioned the number ofschool age children, to...headded to- Cleveland .andBlopmingdale Ave. schools:Several residents anticipatedan additional 60- to 100children. '.

Harvey Morkowitz, plan-ning consultant, said theBoard estimated 0.6 school-age child per apartment. Mr.Duryee said that 11 similartownhouse developments werevisited-'."by members of thePlanning—Board end- the"number of school agechildren seems to hold at 0.6per unit." .

Bernard Litwack, chairmanof the .board, explained thatthis information was conveyedto the Board of Education..With 300 plus seats available,in .the school system, Mr.Litwack said the estimated 15or 20 children at thetownhouses "would yoot in-cumber the; school system."

Thomas Howarth of 16Hamilton Ave. questionedwhether adequate drainagewas provided so that water didnot run onto adjacent,properties. Mr. ^LuSter,Cranfibrd North's "engineer,explained a perimeter stormdrain would connect ,to- theexisting storm sewer on NorthAve. The streets will be.curbed ' so., water would beconfined •t'aJi;the'~sewer1 andcatch basin. He said no*

^drainage can go off the tract.The Planning Board at last

night's workshop, was ex-pected to review the drainagein peripheral" road, areas and

Continued on Pag ' 3

?>*

ON TO" REYKJAVIK — The carnera created noconcern among these chess players last week, atLincoln School. They were testing their wits in theRecreation Department's games tournament. In the

fashlon(of the grandmasters in Iceland, a lsquirm and a scratch of thee-very move on the board.

g stare, <l

. MEN'SDQUBLEKNIT

REG. $18 $20

JLJ%" lj.(0)S7©

J «EG. $5-$7.5O

; a wcsm &>n.

'I/GO'9

Last October the TownshipCommittee approved a series

hih iparking on the residentialstreets bordering UnionCollege. However it was notuntil December, when theparking signs arrived, that the.new regulations could beenforced. • • " : •"

This delay between tho-'pu&jiiljv)'Of.'ii Iuv7 and its en-forcement lias now beenremoved, in thoao cases whichrequire new sijyn;. .Cranfordiias ventured into tfic'-'crat't olsigii-mukinfi and officials arepleased with tlio, initialresults.

Public Safety Com-mitteernan .Burton S. Good-

• man said the delay in deliv«>ryof jhe college area signs,caused by a strike at thefactory, prbmpted the

• Township Committee to in:

.elude sigEnnuking equipmentin the 1972 bud^>t. A machinewhich bakes1 a ,reflectorizedlacing to aluminum blanlcs,piic'ed at $yfl3, was purchasedin March. The -town alsopurchased silk-screeniiig'equipment for those gajntedsigns not requiring u reflec-torh/.ed surface.

Lieutenant Lawrenceli<)nneli','°~heud of the traffic

department and pleased withnew process, supplied theso-

i

- I

Olcyck-s svi/jrm th .- slrcois J-J young andold discover, u r^lloblo,. .ind (lOiilthyn.iuiint! ortrtinsportvjilon.Tho rules of tiv-i'did ;»re oh P igu 6.

'stop sign, herelated, previously cost theTownship 16.50. With the new-equipment the cost of thesame sign is $1(X. This includes$6.25 for. the-- metal blank,which can be stockpiled, andSH.75 for the reflectori/.ed

• facing,.-.winch •• is gUiir Hte<.'dfor five yeare.

The traffic officer continuedthat he formerly encountereddelays of four to six weeksbetween the order anddelivory>of signs. With the newequipment, LieutenantHoniK'll says a sijjyi can bemade in five minutes. *.

Another- savings for ilu-town in time and money, thelieutenant |M)inls out, is a newstate regulation-calling for ;«)-inch slop sij;n:.. Until veryivct'uily- all -I'M).slop signs uil.'i-.uilord Wfi<- ihc '

remarked Lieutenant Bonnell.Under an administrativei;hanjje made ljhisyeiiru three"workmen from the " public :works department weretransferred to the policetraffic bureau. Normal dQtiesfor these .men' include themaintenance of road,markings;, signs, lights' andmeters. When the weather ishad orthey have spare, time, •one or more of the men canproduce signs in' the shoplocated in the basement of theMunicipal Building, explainedLieutenant Itonnoll.

He said he presently is in-vestigating tin1 availability of

federal money to help support•the sign-making venture,vyhjoh is pot nniqiu; jinn* is used.

. in- other communities. Thetraffic officer is puttingtogether an application

Committeeman' Goodman,who is pleased with speed ofthe new equipment, says thedepartment..-also' is lookinginto the., possibility of

. replucing the. streel-nauiesigns, many of which aredamaged. He and LieutenantBonnell believe it may bepossible for the town toreplace these signs at a costlower than that of _an outsidefirm.

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variety. A\; of last week 7.S stopsi-.'ns hail lu'i-n rt-pljict'd.

l.ii-uiciiant Honiu-ll saysKllii SCI rc;llillj.', IS cl l l ' apf l" .Uldl a s l t T lor (!i<fc<> nif.;n^ !»>(ik-<liii I'll!;', ; i ' l v l U ' c t o r i ' ^ r d

s u i ' t a i ' i ' A p. i rk in; ' , sij'.n lli.ilt o s i tlj>- l o w n;mil vl> i i n n ) aTt:.ls oiilv V-l.li;*.is <;oinpK-U_(| iu

pri:vion:.lyIk-luwn ?!Vt-iulcr now'Hie T.,HV signi I u u i i1:; , U

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DelayeThe Memorial Kit-Ul coin-

imiuily ••swirninin;.; |MIOI u i l |not oprn <m .Inly '.''.), the d a l ep i v d i c l c d l>y ( ' o i i m i i l l t i - l i K i i i

lrwin I. Kent ;il Ihe la.si' l ' . i w n s - l i i ]) C o in in I I I e <•

K w i v a l m n lh i : -cU)i ' K o l i f l l• Kii is : ; ilu.s wei-k )<-(>«ii<-<l ilu-diililooi1 p o p l s wi l l IK- l i H i dw i l h wa l i r on M o n d a y , J u l y

; u . !li- i n d i c a t e d t h e ' d e c L a . v a!•; !iiu:>is>'il lull, p ^ n l i i i j ; . a n d

•j ' .uu . ' r u 'o rk a r e lu-in;'. c u m •plv-U-d ihlS V. e e k . .

'I'll.: d n o e l o r :..iiii lu- now is. " : I'.oolin:1 l (c ' . in Aui'i!:.! ;i

Local Families Tell

opening" ol lite1 pool. "The hath houses, where- Lho.

major lixillrts l>aw beeninsmlled. will not b'r- r<-;uiy forseveral Wt-ek.v, said (her<:eri-aticn direelo/. IK: ex-plained di.il lempurary loilHlaeililien eoulil Ik-' proi'i<ie<ltinlil Ihc "oalli l«)ii.sf.s 'W0ivlinislu-d.

Mr. Kin» also ,s:iulnumber nl iJBt"jts u. 'Ora l ly - Ayenue poolla |v ivd oil in liie .la;.i. "He altrilinli-d this lopt ' .a lar vaeation Vui-k.Inly and Aii;;u:.i.

SLIDE , ^Eitolma.n or

Brian19

on slid*; vat tlii; CiViMtora'"otnmunity Poo! on

vingo Ave. Just finishingtrip down is Mjrv/iu

icU ot i\lo\,Var'k.\^ co/icludiny_ vi

W e e k ' V l S i l W i t h h l l < l / 1

In-., t vim i Iy uikii-rp ol Vac "Wv.- Cvjrv-

loo

By .Carol Ann BunckWhether taking a dip in the

Cranford Community Pool,cyclingdowna-quiet street orpecking out "Chopsticks" onthe family organ, three black

-abildren from Newark arediscovering the uuburban wayof life \n Cranford. '

The city youngsters arespending two weeks with localfamilies imdjjr the- "We CareToo" program of the In-terfaith Social Action Com-mittee of Cranford.

Ten-year-old Craig Fitz-patrick is a guest for the third

— ycar-of-Mr-. and^Mrs: -Wiliiani-Dolieny of 104 Makatom Dr.and the. Doheny childrenCindy, 16; Billy, 13; Dave, 12;.Danny, 11; Douglas, 8, andTommy, 7-

'"When you've got six,what's one more'.'" said Mrs.Doheny. "'Craig is just one ofJLtie crowd," . ' •' '. • •

She 'described her younggwtst as "a delight."

'"kvery year i t gets • nicerl>i'cause he feels more athome," she .commented.

That's why it's a good ideu toh ive llie sauiv.' cliild slay withthe wiiiU' family yea.' ;ifter\ear."

.Mrs. Dobeuy feels h,:rt hildivit,-boiiviiit jusl us uuuhIrom their association withCraig as the Nevvark'bfty doei;liom his visit lo Cranford. I

"There are no bhwk<. hil<lr>ii in our lu-ighborhooil,o ibis is the only way my'

< niWreli have l.e -n able todevelop a ivhttionahip with ab!aek ehilii," she said.

Craig's lavuiiti-

of 19 Canterbury PL Since theEttelmaris are member of the,Cranford Community , Pool,Marvin is admitted free ofcharge during his visit.

This, is J the second yearMarvin has stayed with Mr.

. and Mrs. Ettleman and theirthree-children, Susan, 16,Laura, 11, and Brian, 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Berton Schw-ait of 683 GalltHvs Hill Rd. arehosts to the ' ihirff1

youngster, Fredie. Jones, who. i back with them for the thind.'

;

Mrs, Schwait.said the 9-year-old gets along like abrother with Jjer threedaughters, Stephanie, 12;

Jere; 11, and Laura, 7, and her-son Marc, 9: . -y " ~~

"We try to. show him anormal family routine," shenoted. "We've taken him tothe beach and the communitypool and given him chores todo." / .

Mr-9T Schwait and her~husband help administer the•'We Care Too" program |byinterviewing suburbanfamilies -interested in beinghost to a child. BesidesCranford, the. program.. ..ex-tends to Westfield,Hockaway, Edison, ScotchPlains, Fanvvood and Claitc.

Continued on Pogo-3'

State Veterans of l-'oreignWars Commaiuler (»j.Hirge L.Hejchel of Elizabeth an-nounc-e'ef/ that Vincent L.Hrmkerhoff of Cranford wilt-serve as tho chairman ol thel!)7.i annual-slate VFVV con-vention corporation,. Mr.Brinkerholf, a Cranford police.ittUtcnnnVwas also named byMr. Heichi'l as a member ofilu- \V\\ .Ka.sU-rn Slates

In his.<-oiu'enij()ii rolo, Mi;,l irinkeiholi will diiee.l a 20IIIMI eoininitu-j- lo handle ;'rllUniv-iions ol the conventionu'-hich is Ill-Id yearly in June atWibhvood. l ' r e -convent i.uiUKi-liir'S'ar.- luld llu'o

in<;i- lu-.arnv.-d, .uvoriliii;.; lob i s hit.lv:.-;.->, , i i ' ' « - . sw i i i i i i i i i>L ; in

liu- baekyaici jusol aiiij i idin;',his bu-yek-. Ht' al:,o .njoVS

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the year qn a regular.basis.Ih liis other capacity; Mr,

Brinkerhoff will bo one of 12 ,men on a major.policy-makinj*umt of Die national VFWstructure. Tlierc are five suchunits in the -country. Theeastern states group iscomprised of tin; 10 northeastseaboard states. ----- - —

Mr. Brinkerhoft is amember and a former com-mander of the 'Captain N.St.l-'iske VKW Vcsr.'Crtmford-"lie ,seryed as staU: VKW( 'HII I I I I ; I IM!I : I ' ill 1'.,,)'/.

Willis C. Bird, a tinvlinior'ranlord resident, now livingin Kahvvay, \«as IUIIL-IJ byHj'iciu-l as slate chu'l'-c-l'-JLa/j.Uinl is also a nichilX'r arid-utoi'iiu-r t'Oitvinandt-r . oi'-- the •

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