16
PUBLIC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 THE*BAYSHORE * I n d e p e n d e n t . . The Weekly Newspaper SERVING MORE THAN 20,000 HOMES IN HAZLET, MATAWAN, KEYPORT, HOLMDEL, LAURENCE HARBOR, AND MARLBORO Vol. 2, No. 23 Wednesday, April 12, 1972, Matawan, N.J. 15 Cents Keyport unveils proposal to build municipal marina In Marlboro Residents receive threats on day camp MARLBORO A spokesman for the Parents Assn. of the N.J. School for Mentally Retarded Children and Adults Monday accused Mayor Morton Salkind of “railroading” the Planning Board’s rejection of an application to locate a 35-acre day camp in Morganville. ( Marvin Mills, chairman of the association’s day camp committee, charged the mayor “ deliberately distorted the picture” in vetoing the association’s application, but also indicated that the controversy over the day camp plans is not over. Mills claims the association has leased the property to the state for $1 a year, and therefore, “They cannot legally reject us.” Despite Sal kind’s proclamation that the issue is “over and done with, and that’s it,” Mills said the association intends to meet April 19 to discuss their “alternatives.” Since the property, which is located along the Green wood-Texas Road area, is under state control, there is a question of whether the township has any jurisdiction to prevent the establishment of the day camp. Another possibility the association will discuss April 19 will be a $50,000 purchase proposal made by Salkind at Thursday night’s Planning Board session. Salkind made the offer in a two-page letter in which he outlined his opposition to the day camp and made several counter-proposals. He said one reason he opposed the day camp site was because of the “negative recommendations of our Police Department caused by the increased demand a camp for the retarded would entail and the recent outbreak of crime incidents concerning the camp site.” The property, he said, has been tabbed as a recreation site for local residents, some of whom have allegedly harrassed an elderly couple caring for the grounds. The couple has received at least five threatening phone calls, and a note tied to a rock which came crashing through a window. “Get out while you can. We don’t want your type or these retardeds in this (continued on page 5) KEYPORT Taking a step to “revitalize’ the borough, the Harbor Commission announced Monday it will seek federal and state aid to construct a deep-draft 146-boat marina at the old Beach Park site at the end of Broad Street. The $350,000 project “will not cost one cent in tax dollars” , said Ivan Pedersen, chairman. The commission expects 60% of the cost to be funded through state and federal aid and the balance to be funded th rough a self-liquidating bond issue. Estimating annual revenues from the marina at more than $50,000, commission members said the bonds would be retired in approximately three years. After that, Pederson said, revenues will be applied to the township budget to reduce the property tax rate. The commission will probably use the township’s borrowing power to float the estimated $140,000 bond issue, and councilmen said they see no problem in obtaining the required permission from the state Division of Local Finance, because the town is in “good financial condition”. Although commission members said they consider their chances “ are very good” for obtaining aid, they have no indication now that they will. Richard C. Ackerman, commission engineer, is applying for grants from the federal Legacy of Parks, state Green Acres funds, a state dredging grant, and state shore protection funds. If the commission does not receive the aid expected, Pederson said, the project will be abandoned. Presently there is no target date for completion of the marina. “We won’t know that until we know what happens with the grants,” Pederson said. However, he added, the marina can be built within six months after the grants are approved. Calling the marina “the most beneficial thing that has happened to Keyport in many years,” Pedersen said the commission hopes the marina will “bring a new (continued on page 14) Breakthrough claimed in Holmdel murders By Judie Zug HOLMDEL Police have made a breakthrough in the investigation of the murders of an Oceanside, L. I., couple, and are now confident they will solve the case, Police Chief R. Bruce Phillips told The Independent yesterday. Neither Phillips nor Albert McCormick, chief of county detectives, would elaborate on the new development in the three-week-old case. “At this point in our investigation,” Phillips said, “we could lose out if the information is printed.” But Phillips did say more than one person is believed to be involved in the shooting of the couple, found March 26 in a ravine off Longstreet Road. “Test results show that .38 shells were used,” he said, “ and that they possibly came from two guns.” Police had originally theorized that only one killer was involved. They (continued on page. 14) Morales: I knew about lost’ money HAZLET Former Mayor Joseph A. Morales yesterday denied charges by Committeeman Herbert Kupfer that his administration had forgotten it had $20,000 in time deposits in Sun Savings & Loan Assn. Kupfer said last week that the Democratic majority on the Tow'nship Committee had discovered the deposits while taking an inventory of the township’s assets. The deposits, he said, had apparently been overlooked in the treasurer’s and auditor’s reports. In an interview with The Independent yesterday, Morales pointed to entries in the auditor’s report for 1969 and 1970 showing two $10,000 time deposits with Sun Savings & Loan. Morales said the money was invested in Sun in 1969 “ at the request of Mr. Kupfer,” although the Republicans controlled the committee and Kupfer was a minority member. Kupfer had said that certificates of deposit were discovered in a locked box in the clerk’s office, and implied that the committee might not have passed an emergency appropriation to cover overexpenditures, if it had known about' the $20,000. “The reason it was in the clerk’s office,” Morales said, “is that’s where we have a fireproof vault.” The emergency appropriation was required, Morales said, because the committee was increasing its adopted budget. “ To add to the budget, you have to pass an emergency appropria- tion,” he said. “ We have a finance chairman who is a vice president of a bank and doesn’t know how to read an audit report,” Morales said, “ and we have a treasurer who is an accountant and doesn’t take the time to read the audit w j _ « x__ report You ve got a long way to go Morales charged that the ^ Ecology board proposed MATAWAN TOWNSHIP Councilman Peter Lumia said Monday he will ask the Township Council to create an environmental advisory board. The board would be appointed by the council, Lumia said. It would have five members, who would serve staggered two-year terms. Lumia earlier this year had proposed a conservation commission, and last month the League of Women Voters urged the council in a letter to establish a conservation group. Lumia said he had “worked up a tentative proposal for what the group’s mandate would be” and would present it to the council at its caucus tomorrow night. Some of the projects the environmental group might undertake, the councilman said, include a survey of air quality in the township, operation of a reclamation center, and special studies for the council. ‘‘It would make recommendations to the Planning Board—just like other boards do—concerning the impact of proposed developments,” Lumia said, “ and it would investigate allegations of pollution by companies or individuals. ’ The board would be a fact-finding body, Lumia said. It would not have police powers. Hazlet GOP taps Morgan HAZLET The Republicans have nominated Charles Morgan as their candidate for Township Committee. Morgan, vice chairman of the party, was selected by the GOP steering committee on the second ballot Sunday night. Also nominated were John Costigan, a Brookdale student, for township clerk; and Frank Koss, a Zoning Board member, for township treasurer. Costigan and Koss were upopposed for the GOP endorsement. James Shea, an 18-year-old high school student, and George Robinson, campaign manager last year for former Mayor Joseph A. Morales, (continued on page 14) statement that the $20,000 had been found “ shows irresponsibility on their (continued on page 5) Photo of optimistic hitch-hiker was taken on U.S. 1 in California and is part of a current photo exhibit entitled “Images of Concern” now at the Monmouth Museum in Red Bank. The exhibit features photographers from all over the world and their documentation of the 20th century. Prints are for sale, benefiting the Fund for Concerned Photography. {Photo by Bob Burroughs, Copyright 1971) Artists’s conception of Keyport’s proposed municipal marina for 146 boats.

SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

P U B L I C

m a t a w a n j o , n ^ a I N s l - R e e T

m a t a w a n , N. j - 07747

T H E * B A Y S H O R E ☆ * ☆

I n d e p e n d e n t☆ . . ☆ T h e W e e k ly N e w s p a p e r

☆ ☆S E R V IN G M O R E T H A N 2 0 ,0 0 0 H O M E S IN H A Z L E T , M A T A W A N , K E Y P O R T , H O L M D E L , L A U R E N C E H A R B O R , A N D M A R L B O R O

Vol. 2, No. 23 Wednesday, April 12, 1972, Matawan, N.J. 15 Cents

Keyport unveils proposal to build municipal marina

In Marlboro

Residents receive threats on day camp

MARLBOROA spokesman for the

Parents Assn. of the N.J. S c h o o l fo r M e n ta lly R etarded Children and A dults Monday accused Mayor Morton Salkind of “railroading” the Planning Board’s rejection of an application to locate a 35-acre day camp in Morganville. (

Marvin Mills, chairman of the association’s day camp com m ittee, charged the m a y o r “ d e lib e r a te ly distorted the picture” in vetoing the association’s a p p lic a t io n , bu t also i n d i c a t e d t h a t th e controversy over the day camp plans is not over.

M i l l s c la im s th e association has leased the property to the state for $1 a year, and therefore, “They cannot legally reject us.”

D e s p ite S al k i n d ’ s proclamation that the issue is “over and done with, and that’s it ,” Mills said the association intends to meet April 19 to discuss their “alternatives.”

Since the property, which is located along the Green wood-Texas Road area, is under state control, there is a question of whether the township has any jurisdiction to prevent the establishment of the day camp.

Another possibility the association will discuss April 19 will be a $50,000 purchase proposal made by Salkind at Thursday night’s Planning Board session.

Salkind made the offer in a two-page letter in which he outlined his opposition to the day camp and made several counter-proposals.

He said one reason he opposed the day camp site was because o f the “negative recommendations of our Police Department caused by the increased demand a camp for the retarded would entail and the recent outbreak of crime incidents concerning the camp site.”

The property, he said, has been tabbed as a recreation site for local residents, some of whom have allegedly harrassed an elderly couple caring for the grounds. The couple has received at least five threatening phone calls, and a note tied to a rock which came crashing through a window.

“Get out while you can. We don’t want your type or these retardeds in this

(continued on page 5)

KEYPORTT a k in g a step to

“ revitalize’ the borough, the Harbor Commission announced Monday it will seek federal and state aid to construct a deep-draft 146-boat marina at the old Beach Park site at the end o f Broad S treet.

The $350,000 project “will not cost one cent in tax dollars” , said Ivan Pedersen, chairman. The commission expects 60% of the cost to be funded through state and federal aid and the balance to be f u n d e d t h ro u g h a self-liquidating bond issue.

E s t im a t in g annual revenues from the marina at m o re th a n $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 , commission members said the bonds would be retired in approxim ately three years. After that, Pederson said, revenues will be applied to the township budget to reduce the property tax rate.

The commission will probably use the township’s borrowing power to float the estimated $140,000 bond issue, and councilmen said they see no problem in obta in in g the required

permission from the state Division of Local Finance, because the town is in “good financial condition” .

A lth o ug h commission members said they consider their chances “are very good” for obtaining aid, they have no indication now that they will. Richard C. A ckerm an , commission engineer, is applying for grants from the federal Legacy of Parks, state Green Acres funds, a state dredging grant, and state shore protection funds.

I f the commission does n o t rece ive the aid expected, Pederson said, the project will be abandoned.

Presently there is no target date for completion of the marina. “We won’t know that until we know what happens with the gran ts ,” Pederson said. However, he added, the marina can be built within six months after the grants are approved.

Calling the marina “ the most beneficial thing that has happened to Keyport in many years,” Pedersen said the commission hopes the marina will “ bring a new

(continued on page 14)

Breakthrough claimed in Holmdel murders

By Judie Zug HOLMDEL

Police have made a b re a k th ro u g h in theinvestigation of the murders of an Oceanside, L. I., couple , and are nowconfident they will solve the case, Police Chief R. Bruce P h i l l i p s t o l d T h e Independent yesterday.

N e ith e r Phillips nor Albert McCormick, chief of county detectives, would e laborate on the newd e v e lo p m e n t in thethree-week-old case.

“A t this point in our

investigation,” Phillips said, “ we could lose out if the information is printed.”

But Phillips did say more than one person is believed to be involved in the shooting of the couple, found March 26 in a ravine off Longstreet Road.

“Test results show that .38 shells were used,” he said, “ and th a t they possibly came from two guns.”

Police had originally theorized that only one killer was involved. They

(continued on page. 14)

Morales: I knew about lost’ moneyHAZLET

Former Mayor Joseph A. Morales yesterday denied charges by Committeeman Herbert Kupfer that his a d m i n i s t r a t i o n had forgotten it had $20,000 in time deposits in Sun Savings & Loan Assn.

Kupfer said last week t h a t th e D em ocratic majority on the Tow'nship Committee had discovered the deposits while taking an inventory of the township’s assets. The deposits, he said, h ad a p p a re n tly been overlooked in the treasurer’s and auditor’s reports.

In an interview with The In d ep end en t yesterday, Morales pointed to entries in the auditor’s report for 1969 and 1970 showing two $10,000 time deposits with Sun Savings & Loan.

Morales said the money was invested in Sun in 1969 “at the request of Mr. K u p fe r ,” although the Republicans controlled the committee and Kupfer was a minority member.

Kupfer had said that certificates of deposit were

discovered in a locked box in the clerk’s office, and implied that the committee might not have passed an emergency appropriation to cover overexpenditures, if it had know n about' the $20,000.

“The reason it was in the clerk’s office,” Morales said,“ is that’s where we have a fireproof vault.”

T h e e m e r g e n c y appropriation was required,Morales said, because the committee was increasing its adopted budget. “ To add to the budget, you have to pass an emergency appropria­tion,” he said.

“ We have a finance chairman who is a vice president of a bank and doesn’t know how to read an audit report,” Morales said, “ and we have a tre a s u re r who is an accountant and doesn’t takethe time to read the audit w j _ « x _ _report You ve got a long way to go

Morales charged that the ^

Ecology board proposedMATAWAN TOWNSHIP

Councilman Peter Lumia said Monday he will ask the Township Council to create an environmental advisory board.

The board would be appointed by the council, Lumia said. I t would have five members, who would serve staggered two-year terms.

Lumia earlier this year had proposed a conservation commission, and last month the League of WomenVoters urged the council in a letter to establish aconservation group.

L um ia said he had “worked up a tentativeproposal for what the group’s mandate would be” and would present it to the council a t its caucustomorrow night.

Some of the projects the environmental group might undertake, the councilman said, include a survey of air quality in the township, operation of a reclamation center, and special studies for the council.

‘ ‘ I t w o u l d m ake recommendations to the Planning Board—just like other boards do—concerning the impact of proposed developments,” Lumia said, “and it would investigate allegations of pollution by companies or individuals. ’

The board would be a fact-finding body, Lumia said. It would not have police powers.

Hazlet GOP taps Morgan

H AZLETThe Republicans have

nominated Charles Morgan as th e ir candidate for Township Committee.

Morgan, vice chairman of the party, was selected by the GOP steering committee on the second ballot Sunday night.

Also nominated were John Costigan, a Brookdale student, for township clerk; and Frank Koss, a Zoning B o a rd m e m b e r , fo r township treasurer.

Costigan and Koss were upopposed for the GOP endorsement. James Shea, an 18-year-old high school s tu d e n t , and George R o b in s o n , c a m p a ig n manager last year for former Mayor Joseph A. Morales,

(continued on page 14)

statement that the $20,000 had been found “shows irresponsibility on their

(continued on page 5)

Photo of optimistic hitch-hiker was taken on U.S. 1 in California and is part of a current photo exhibit entitled “ Images of Concern” now at the Monmouth Museum in Red Bank. The exhibit features

photographers from all over the world and their documentation of the 20th century. Prints are for sale, benefiting the Fund for Concerned Photography. {Photo by Bob Burroughs, Copyright 1971)

Artists’s conception of Keyport’s proposed municipal marina for 146 boats.

Page 2: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Page 2 The Independent April 1 2 ,1 9 7 2

Clarification asked on teachers’ pact

Reclamation center to open in Matawan

Mataw an puts 12 in chorus

Matawan Regional High School Chorus has placed 11 students on the Region I I State Central JerseyChorus.

Those selected wereMary Lawlor, Carolyn Fry, Lynne G e n tile , Janet Kaufman, Glenn Wilson,M ary S a n to r i, Sharon McPherson, Sally Evans, K evin McNam ara, Joel C orm an, and StephenManderville.

Students are chosen by scores based on their quality , intonation, and musicianship of scales, a solo, a quartet, and tonal memory.

Tryouts were Saturday, March 25 at Lawrence High School in Trenton. The 23 students from the Matawan R egional High School Chorus tried out under the guidance of Mrs. Anne Hannah, its director. The Region I I Central Jersey Chorus w ill present a concert May 7 at Freehold High School.

KEYPORTThe Keyport Teachers

Assn. wants clarification of proposed sick day benefits before it witl consider the 1972-73 contract.

In a letter to the Board o f Education, KTA P r e s i d e n t N o rm a n Zweiacher said there was concern over the wording of a section in the proposed contract which allows any teacher a maximum of three days sick leave. The sick leave can be used by the teacher, according to the contract, if anyone living in the teacher’s household becomes ill.

Mrs. Helen Pote, a board m em ber, agreed the teachers should be given a clarification of the section.

But Board President Earl V. Hallam said the board was not able to clarify the section at the board’s

meeting last week.Zwieacher, who attended

the meeting, said the association had no other questions on the proposed contract.

“The board’s attorney should clarify the section, said board member Frank L. Laughlin.

The board, Laughlin said, should sit down with the attorney and ask him why the section was written the way it was. He said it has a double meaning.

Board Secretary Donald Hill said there is a question as to who is actually covered in the section. The section, he said, states the teachers can take off if a relative, or any other person living in the household is ill.

The board was to meet with its attorney yesterday to discuss other business and request a clarification.

Hill said the new teachers’ contract is similar to the one approved last year but includes a pay raise. The raise, he added, is within the 5.5 per cent federal guidelines.

Mil l igan starts4-month cruise

Lt. Cmdr. Richard D. M illig a n , son of Mrs. Andrew J. Milligan, Sr. of Keyport, has left Pearl Harbor aboard the destroyer escort USS McMorris for a four-month cruise in the Western Pacific.

His ship will be operating off the coast of Vietnam and will make port calls in the Philippines and other Western Pacific nations.

MATAW AN BOROUGHC onstruction of the

borou g h ’ s rec lam ation center is almost complete, and the first day of o p e r a t i o n has been scheduled for Saturday, A pril 15, according to D e n n is R ike o f the Conservation Commission.

The cen ter, located behind Town & Country Dodge on Main Street, will be open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. initially, Rike said.

Residents will be able to bring bottles, cans, and paper for recycling. The commission expects some residents to donate material.

but it has established prices it will pay.

Bottles will be purchased at the rate of one cent for every two pounds; and paper, 30 cents per 100 pounds.

B o t t l e s should be separated according to their color, Rike said. Caps and m etal rings should be removed from the necks of the bottles, he said.

Aluminum and tin-plate cans should be separated, he said, and paper should be bundled.

“ Once we get going,” Rike said, “ we expect to extend the hours of

operation. We eventually witl be open during the week, and we’ll have more hours on Saturday.”

T h e com m ission is seeking volunteers to work at the center, Rike said. Anyone in terested in working on the project can call Rike at 566-3722.

Troop 136 marks trail, historic siteHAZLET

Boy Scout Troop 136 of Hazlet camped this weekend in the Freehold area. On Saturday m orning the Scouts marked a trail and several historic sites in the Monmouth Battlefield State P a r k , w o r k i n g in cooperation w ith the Historic Trail Committee of the Order o f the Arrow and the Battleground Historic Society.

Saturday afternoon the Scouts cleared the site of the old Tennent Parsonage o f brush. Between this building, to be rebuilt by the s ta te , and Molly Pitcher’s Spring the heaviest fighting of the battle look place. On Sunday the Protestant members of the troop attended services at Old T en n en t C hurch . Despite snow and cold weather Friday night, some advancement work was made by the Scouts.

For their work on the trail, the following Scouts earned the Boy Scouts of A m erica Historic Trail Award: Edward and Steven D e m p e w o l f , D o n a l d S w i n a r s k i , M ic h a e l O’Donnell, Walter Scott, K avid Turlington, Karl Vetter, Gary and James Morris, Jeff and Charles Lowther, Andy Beresford, Rich Pezzano, Tony Sasso, Michael Gardzalla, Gary Latvala, and Scoutmaster William Burket.

Cubs help buy ham for familyHOLMDEL

The boys of Cub Scout Pack 431, Den 1, earned money by recycling bottles to buy a ham for a needy family which is sponsored by the Holmdei Village Club. Den mother is Mrs. Henry West.

At their March meeting V illag e C lub members collected canned goods and clothes which, together with the ham, helped make a Happy Easter for the family that they have undertaken to care for.

AUTO INSURANCE

15% SAVINGS

to qualified drivers

Sail 3660700DICKSTEIN ASSOCIATES

J N C

740 LLOYD RD. MATAWAN

s u n p ^ 1 0 9

vvffUe ! c K ' n 9

c ^ a v 9 e . . ^ e e ^ e e - ^, c o r n p

\ e t e Wo\ $>3° °

. n d

c 0 u n V S,n a » > a » "c e ° a rt's 0 ° ° ­

* N O c W ' S 6 P l . n e . » P -w n i . N \c e

-t ftW se

- - f t a T 9 e -

rnon

d a V -U e e

\ n a " d n b \\te

l o -

v ja y '

a V '° 9

P E O P L E S NATIONAL B A N K of M O NM OUTH C O U N T Y

w ) A United Jersey Bank . M e m b e r f d i c

P h o n e N u m b e r fo r A ll O f f ic e s 2 6 4 - 2 8 0 0

Jerry Hourihan (left), Andy Bulinsky, and Anthony Bucco, work on construction of bins to be used in re-cycling program in Matawan Borough. (Photo by A. Herman)

□ IM I I I I I I I I ID I I I I I I I I I I IM I in i l l l l l l l l l l ia i l l l l l l l l l l l l l lG I I I I I I I I IM iD II I I I IM I I I iq .1

I Bic cooks up jj a free offer I! for you. j

Buy a gross of Bic pens and get

| $19.95 Corning Wareset free*

ESTABLISHED 1949

| B a y s h o r e S t a t i o n e r s j| w h S S A T * TEL. 264-5555 KEYPORT |u a i i i i i i i i i i i i a i i i i i i i i i i i i a i n i i i i i i M i D i i i i i i i i i i i i n i i i i i i i i n i i a u i i i i i i i i i i a i i i !

Page 3: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Matawan Council may try teen participation program

Deadline For News Is Noon Monday

MATAW AN TOWNSHIP The Township Council

may decide soon to appoint high school students as non-voting members of official bodies.

A program designed to i n v o l v e s tu d e n ts in municipal government was proposed by Councilman Hans Froehlich earlier this y e a r , a n d S a tu rd a y Froehlich and three other councilmen visited Sparta Tow nship to ta lk to students involved in a similar program there.

Although all of the councilmen said Monday night they had reservations about the Sparta program, at least three of them indicated they would be willing to try it in the township.

“ I ’m not adverse to trying it for a year on a lo o k -see basis,” said Councilman Peter Lumia, “ to see what kind of interest we have in the high schools.”

C ou n c ilm an Eugene Valanzano said he favored a program in which the high school would conduct an e l e c t i o n o f s tu d en t representatives.

“ I would want to have the students run for office,” he said. “I think it would give them a little more interest.”

One o f the things that concerned the councilmen was a decline in the number of Sparta students who participated in the program. A p p r o x i m a t e l y 20 participated last year; 10 this year.

“ Nobody could give us a good answer when we asked why there were fewer students this year,” said

Mayor Tom Powers. “The township manager said it was a lack of interest, and the students said it was a lack of communication.”

The councilmen met with three students and Sparta’s assistant township manager, William Hyland.

“ I personally was very impressed with the calibre of all three students,” said Froehlich. “I was amazed at their maturity.”

Lumia said the students were “a rare kind of kid. They are typical of a nice minority.”

U n d e r th e Sparta program , high school students are asked to apply for appointment to official m u n i c i p a l b o d i e s . Applicants are interviewed by Hyland and screened by a school administrator. The tow nship council then appoints students to such bodies as the planning board, zoning board—and the council.

T h e th ree students in te rv ie w e d S atu rd ay , Lumia said, felt that the interviews should not be conducted in the school and that an administrator—in Sparta, it ’s the disciplinary officei^-should not screen applicants.

“The kid who is a non-conformist shouldn’t be precluded,” said Lumia. “He may have something to contribute.”

A ll fo u r councilmen com m ented that other students did not attend township meetings to see their friends.

“There doesn’t seem to be participation by other kids,” said Powers.

C om m en ted Lum ia: “They told us that no other

youths came out to the meetings. Some kids asked them from time to time what the council was doing, but there was no indication of how widespread that kind of interest was.”

I f the Township Council decides to implement a program here, Lumia said, he would not expect too much o f it.

“I t would be on the basis of giving a few kids some exposure to municipal government,” he said.

Powers said he wanted to “sit down with the council and talk about it” before d e c id in g w h eth er to structure a program for the township.

Froehlich said he would “very much like to try” the program. “ I ’m not kidding myself that it would be all sweetness and light,” he said, “ but on balance I would like to see it tried here.”

MIDDLESEX COUNTY OFFICE

583-1010★

MONMOUTH COUNTY OFFICE

787-1010

BUY-RITEREALTY

Licensed lo oker

THE A C T IO N AGENCY

HOMEOWNERS!Thinking About Selling?

If so — Don't Pay High 7% or 8% Commissions!

With _ SalesOur W CommissionLow J / 0 Plan

V o u w il l save m a ny H undreds o f $ $ $ . W ith no cost o r o b lig a t io n we w il l p ro m p tly send one o l o u r expe rie nce d e va lu a to rs o u t to d iscuss th e m a rk e t va lue o f y o u r h om e . Call N o w —

W e Ha ve Buyers Waiting!!!

DO N ’T LEAVE IT TO MACHINE POLITICS

WANTED: McGOVERN SUPPORTERS

Select your own delegate slate at the County Democratic Convention.

Saturday A pril 15th 1 p.m.Civic Auditorium Monm outh Shopping Center

For further information, call 583-1758$1 Registration Fee Paid fo r b y T e d S ch n e id e r, 6 9 0 L in e R d ., M a ta w a n , 0 7 7 4 7

Is this the

perfect Datsun?

1200 COUPE $2189

A s k t h e e x p e r t

Y our Datsun dealer is the Small Car Expert. Let him show you what makes the 1200 Sport Coupe so perfect.

Reclining fron t buckets4-speed stick sh ift or optiona l 3-speed autom atic transmission Fold-down rear seat Up to 30 miles per gallonDrive a Datsun . . .

then decide.

Drive a Datsun... then decide.

DATSUNP R O D U C T O F N I S S A N

WASHINGTON'S

AUTO SERVICE3 7 0 Broad Street

Keyport 264 -1323

HIGHWAY 36 8. POOLE AVE. HAZLET, N.J.

N e w

Jersey’sLargestKitchenShowroom

Now you too can have this expensive looking kitchen

All Mica Laminated Care-Free Kitchen at a Saving of a Lifetime.

12 Linear Feet of Mica Cabinets including STOVE, O Ml YEXHAUST H O O D , DISHWASHER, and SINK. W I I L ■

O r you m ay select all w ood cabinets.

- m m ^ OVER 30 YEARS OF KITCHEN DESIGN EXPERIENCE

Cabinet Industries & H ome D ecor venter °pen & t,l ? ™HIGHWAY 36 & POOLE AVE. HAZLET NJ. 739-1199 or 1188 e a s y f i n a n c i n g t e r m s a v a i l a b l e .

Page 4: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Page 4 The Independent April 1 2 ,1 9 7 2

T N E B M Y S H O R E *, * *

INDEPENDENTt r . . <T Th« W « a k ly N tw a p ip c r

IT -tf t t

Vol. 2, No. 23 Matawan, N.J. April 12,1972

Published every Wednesday by M onm outh Com m unications Corp.

M .R .I. Box 20, Route 34 Matawan, N.J., 07747

583-2210

David Thaler, Ed ito r and Publisher

Roger Dunn, Advertising Manager Ralph McGeehan, A r t D irector

_____________Mail Subscription $7.50____________

Keyport’s planned marina

The most encouraging news to come out of the Bayshore this week is the announcement that Keyport will develop a municipal marina on its waterfront.

We have always felt that the key to the borough’s future is the one natural resource which a century ago made it the county’s most vital community—the waterfront.

For too long the waterfront has been neglected, and the result has been the deterioration of an asset into an eyesore. The Ring Road project was the beginning of a revitalization that was obviously needed, and the proposed marina is an important next step,

The H arbor Commission deserves to be congratulated for proposing the new facility—and for devising a financing plan which not only will not lap the taxpayers’ pockets but also promises to provide some tax relief within the next few years.

I f the financial projections are accurate, there appears to be no reason to abort the project, even if the anticipated state and federal grants are not forthcoming.

It is not easy to exaggerate the importance of developing the waterfront to the future of the borough, and if the borough is called upon to make a greater investment that it presently anticipates making, we hope it will respond favorably.

This is, however, a project which deserves state and federal aid. It is precisely the kind of proposals which the authors of the Legacy of Parks and Green Acres programs must have envisioned when they wrote the legislation.

Hopefully, the state and federal officials who administer the programs will realize that the requests for grants are, in effect, an invitation to help Keyport secure its future.

44Found99 money in Hazlet

Ever since the Democrats on Hazlet’s Township Committee said they had found $20,000 in a locked box in the township clerk’s office, we’ve been rifling all the boxes—locked and unlocked— in our own offices to see if we would have similarly good luck.

We haven’t, and yesterday former Mayor Joseph A. Morales dropped by to tell us that the Democrats’ discovery was something less than hitting the number of the day or coming up with the winning ticket in the state lottery.

Mr. Morales showed us the township’s audit reports for 1969 and 1970, and both contained entries for the two $10,000 certificates of deposit which the Democrats found last week.

Mr. Morales pointed out that Committeeman Herbert Kupfer, who had disclosed the case of the missing $20,000, was the one who two years ago had suggested depositing the money in Sun Savings & Loan Assn. Mr. Kupfer confirmed that fact last night, adding that he thought the certificates carried a six-month maturity and would therefore have been off the books by the end of 1969.

I t ’s all more that a little confusing, but as best as we can figure it out, someone knew all along the township had the $20,000—but it wasn’t the Democrats.

Perhaps the mixup is just one of those things to be expected from a change in administration, and it gave residents a week in which they could experience the pleasure of thinking they were $20,000 wealthier than they really were. No damage resulted from the illusion, except perhaps to the Democrats’ reputation as careful bookkeepers. *

LETTERS TO THE EDITORW o m e n ’s Lib: Round 3

Sir:To the Defenders of Women’s Lib (or Miserable

Souls):Pardon me if I misinterpret the concept of your

movement, but you do leave a few questions open.For instance, while women are out competing with

their husbands for equal jobs, and equal pay, who’s going to be home supervising the children during the day?Shall Mom work half and Dad work half a day for equal supervision, or both work full time and let the kids run themselves?Most men who are hired on a full-time basis and could not hold onto their jobs on any other basis would be out of work permanently, especially where special skills are required.

Also, while there may be a number of jobs a woman can do as equally as a man, there are a good many manual jobs, as construction of roads, putting up buildings, digging tunnels, etc., that you liberal-minded ladies not only couldn’t perform, but wouldn’t dirty your manicures on. You want equality, but it is unlikely you would compete in any job which you considered beneath your dignity as a “ woman.”

I t ’s been stated that the modern conveniences men provide have made women “ birds in a gilded cage.” They have too much time on their hands. Well, if you ladies can’t find enough to get into to fill your time, I suggest the following (until, of course, you find “ your true selves,” uninhibited, intellectually responsib le, in y o u r unstunted future, as unstereotyped somethings):

Try painting the whole outside of your house, start a vegetable garden, repair the car, put down the lawn and install a tool shed in the backyard, etc., etc. Of course, this used to be men’s work, but you ladies will need the practice and experience for the future. You can’t all be inventors, scientists or engineers, and it will take up most of your spare time, is very healthy, and does wonders for the figure. Don’t knock it until you’ve tried it. I ’ve been doing it for years and I ’ve had help with my work, too, but not because any law liberated me or my husband.

As one man put it bluntly once, “I f you can’t stand the heat, stay the hell out of the kitchen!” That goes for the reader who said I ’m suggesting sacrificing more people by sending them to war. What she very “ lady-like” turned about to suit her own meaning really was, “ I f you wish to step into men’s shoes and wear their pants [at] home, then you should be willing to pick up their guns and crawl into their foxholes in equal defense or service of your country. And if need be, die right along with them. That’s true equality.”

And last Ladies, it’s all too generous of you to offer your movement as liberation for men, but let me tell you, the ones who could use it don’t need your help. They’ve already started their own movement, and it’s not called Men’s Liberation, either!

As my husband James just commented, “A-MEN!” Mrs. Irene Passarella (Address Withheld)

Confessions of a m a le chauvinistSir:This is in reply to the recent letters that have

appeared in your paper on the subject of women’s liberation.

I am a real live card-carrying male chauvinist. I enjoy opening doors for members of the female sex, lighting their cigarettes, treating them as dainty (not helpless) creatures, and yes, most assuredly, thinking of them as lovely, mysterious, and desirable members of the opposite sex.

The only real excuse I can give for being a male chauvinist is that I must have inherited it. My father was a male chauvinist. He worked 65-70 hours a week all of his adult life and let my mother stay in her role of a housewife. Unfortunately, he always believed that he was working so hard to support his family, not to oppress his wife. >

My grandfather was a male chauvinist also. I ’m sure that he didn’t know it either. After all, women’s liberation hadn’t been invented then, so he couldn t have suspected that he was mistreating grandma by loving and caring for her all those years.

I guess the fact that my forefathers managed to stay happily married for a total of more then 70 years must be discounted; after all, their spouses were too busy raising families to realize how miserable they were.

The fact that I ’m a male chauvinist doesn’t mean that I ’m against women rights. I do feel that a female should be paid the same wages as a man if she is doing the same work. I do feel that a women should have the same basic opportunities to hold jobs and seek careers as they see fit. I do feel that women should not be discriminated against because of their sex. But most of all, I feel that a woman should have the right to decide for herself whether she wants to be a liberated female, or not.

This right is being withheld from members of the female sex by the very people who say they are fighting for women’s rights. An example of this was the insistence of Kathy Dean on referring to Mrs. Passarella as Ms. in her responding letter. Mrs. Passarella had made it quite clear that she was happy and proud to be a Mrs., but apparently this freedom

of choice is not permitted by feminists.Women’s rights should apply to all women. Not

just to those that agree with what the liberation groups say. The right to stay oppressed—if that’s what being an old-fashioned wife and mother really is—should be given as much play as the right to be liberated.

I personally hope that male chauvinism stays in our family. I want my sons to be male chauvinists. I want them to believe that their place is to protect and provide for the female of their choice. I want them to believe that the problems and the responsibilities of today’s world falls on their shoulders, and that they must face them, not pass them off to their wives.

I hope to see my daughters marry male chauvinists. Men who will protect them, treat them as females, and love them as women.

I don’t want to see women equal to men; that would be a step downward for the female set. The women I know are already at least one step above any man, at least in the eyes of this male chauvinist.(Name withheld)

w omen vs. Aid Squad

(The fo llow ing le tte r was sent to the Matawan Borough F irst A id Squad.)To Whom it May Concern;

I t has been six months since our first of two letters was sent to you, without a simple courtesy of a reply. We are still interested in being First Aid members.

I t makes me ill to know we have “Male Chauvinists” in the Matawan Borough First Aid Squad. You are holding us back because we are women. We are willing and capable of answering first aid calls.

We have taken our general course in first aid, and are now on our way in the advanced course.

You as men of Matawan Borough and fathers in our community are putting yourselves and families into jeopardy by being prejudiced.

We know for a fact you need day members desperately, and now it’s getting so bad you need members for night calls also. You are really being ridiculous about the entire situation.

We are not trying to change your organization, only trying to better your service.

The people of Matawan should be aware of the additional help available, but because of our sex we are being denied.Mrs. Frances Brizendine Mrs. Eileen Jones

A p p o in tm e n t ch a llen g ed

Sir:At the April 4 Matawan Borough Council meeting,

questions were asked pertaining to the newly created position of police clerk. One of the questions asked was that if a test was required and open to applicants. The answer was no. I t seems the mayor and council have already decided who is to be appointed. Currently, this individual is now a part-time employee. Formerly, the applicant was a full-time employee in a position that was terminated three months ago.

You will be surprised to learn that this part-time position will be abolished upon appointment to police clerk.

The question in my mind is this: What necessary purpose has the part-time position filled for the past three months?

I think it best that if the position of police clerk is to be established, it can be best filled by selecting an individual on the basis of open competitive examinations.

History has shown that political patronage does not result in the best-qualified people filling positions in government.Pearl Cronin 4 Colonial Dr.Matawan

H a z le t Com m ittee p ra isedSir:

As a resident and local businessman, it was a source of great satisfaction and pride in our Hazlet Township Committee to be present last Tuesday evening at their regular meeting. At that time, ad op tio n o f am endm ents to two zoning ordinances—both of which are of obvious value to our community—were submitted by the committee.

The first, calling for a re-zoning of Raritan Valley to entirely residential, reflects the efforts and active concern on the part of the present Hazlet Committee members for the citizens of that area. The light industrial zoning, presently in existence, has been a two-fold dilemma for the residents of Raritan Valley for the past four years. It not only lowers the re-sale value of their homes, but it also imposes the additional uncertainty of finding themselves at any time in the future, neighboring on an industrial structure.

The foresight of our committee members prompted the submitting for adoption of the other amendment, namely the establishment of a fee for a

(continued on page 8)

Page 5: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

April 12, 1972 The Independent Page 5

Fire chief cites parents’ responsibility

Kids p laying with matches cause rash of brush fires

By Arnold D. Herman “ We know they are being

set. We know when to expect them—during lunch hour, shortly after school, Easter vacation, weekends. We even know the age group mostly responsible. That’s the worst part, the ages range from 8 to 12.”

The statements were m ade by C hief Louis Auriemma of the Matawan Township Fire Department w h i l e discussing the increasing number of brush fires that have plagued his and other fire departments in the Bayshore area.

“ Seventeen of the 41 fire calls that we responded to so far this year have been brush fires. Eight of these 17 have been at the same location, Reids Hill Road,” Auriemma said.

“ Last year we had a total of 61 brush fires in my district. This compares with 34 other types of fires. There is no justification for that many brush fires in an area that contains as few wooded lots as this one does,” he said.

Problems with brush fires a re n o t peculiar to Auriemma’s fire district. The sentiments voiced by him have been echoed by fire chiefs in many Bayshore towns.

“ We could cut the number in half, at least, if we could get the full cooperation of parents,” Auriemma said. “ I f they

Morales on finding "lost” funds

(continued from page 1)part. They’re just looking for sensationalism, and all ihey’re proving is that they don’t know their jobs.”

The Democrats probably realized the township had the $20,000 in Sun Savings & Loan when they received a q u a r t e r l y in terest payment. Morales said.

“ They get an interest payment for the first time,” he said, “and they go looking for where it came from .”

He contended that the D em ocrats should have consulted him, the auditor, or the former treasurer before claiming that the money had been discovered.

Kupfer said that he ca lled the auditor last Wednesday, the day after he stated the money had been found.

“ He said the $20,000 was d e fin ite ly in the auditor’s report,” Kupfer said. “ It was carried as a surplus.”

Kupfer confirmed that he had suggested depositing the money in Sun Savings & Loan. “They were paying the highest rate of interest at the time,” he said. “What all this means is that we’re now going to make $1,000 m ore interest than we anticipated.”

Scouts clean B ethany RoadHAZLET

Junior Girl Scout Troop 748 recently assisted Boy Scout Troop 235 in cleaning the Bethany Road area of debris.

T h e g i r l s w h o participated were Claire B rennan, Karen Buono, E ileen Kaplan, Bonnie M a r m e r , a n d D ebra Principe. Ivy Kaplan of Girl S cout Troop 376 also helped.* # * * *

The Keyport Aeromarine built the first enclosed airplane cabin.

only knew how dangerous it is to allow a child to carry matches, I ’m sure that they woutd prevent it.”

“We have had many times where one youngster has pointed out another as the person who started a brush fire,” he said, “ but we can’t act on that alone.”

“I questioned a young boy one time who I caught carrying matches and he admitted that he didn’t smoke. He said that he carried them to light incense in his room,” Auriemma said.

The chief spoke of the dangers that children face just by being in the area of a brush fire.

“ In addition to the danger o f being burned, there is a real threat from smoke inhalation. Smoke can knock a person out quite easily. It can also carry poison ivy with it, and getting that stuff in your lungs can be real bad news.”

“Also, if one of our hoses sp lit the water pressure could in ju re anyone nearby. The hoses carry up to 800 pounds of pressure. That’s enough to cut sheet rock from a wall, so you can imagine what it could do to a human.”

The cost to taxpayers for fighting brush fires is also a concern to Auriemma.

“ Each time we go out, $ 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 w o r t h of equipment rolls. It can run as high as $200 in real cost to fight a single brush fire. I f we could eliminate all brush fires we could reduce out total budget by more than 25%,” he said.

A separate problem the chief warned of was the danger of the men and equipment being tied up fighting brush type fires.

“We were called on to fight four separate brush fires at one time last year. A house fire then wouid have been a real problem.”

A u r i e m m a s p o k e repeatedly about the part that parents can play to stamp out the rash of brush fires.

“ I f every parent would make sure th a t their children is not carrying matches we could solve this problem. Parents should also explain the danger of even being in a wooded area around this time of year. M a rc h to June, and September to December are particularly bad months for fires to spread,” he warned.^ ■ s o i e B a B E B i a H i ^

i »I I

I to p ,

E

Canadian Hemlock SALE% $1.99 — limit 10 per customer

5W:V*‘

5-10-5 Fertilizer$ 1 . 5 9 - 5 0 l b s .

APPLESH O M E M A D E APPLE PIE

DEARBORNHwy. 35 FRUITFARM g g

Holmdel 9 a m to 5pm Closed Tues

■ Y O U S A W IT IN T H E IN D E P E N D E N T ■

f ' m i

Pgr*?

Residents receive threats on day camp

(continued from page 1)town,” the note warned.

Salkind said the site plan application was not in order because no topographical survey of the property had been submitted as the zoning ordinance requires.

He suggested the Parents Assn. sell the land to the township for $50,000 and locate the day camp in the eastern section of Marlboro among the 1,000 acres of land the state owns there.

A ccording to Mills, however, $50,000 would not cover the association’s investment, including, he said, approximately $5,000 spent for lawyers’ fees, c l o s i n g f e e s , an d improvements.

To accept the $50,000 would also be counter to th e w i s h e s o f t h e association’s broker, Mills claimed, who suggested that the association could realize a substantial profit over its orig ina l investment of $1,250 per acre.

As for the charges of harrassment, Mills said the

state school had enlisted the aid of the State Police, whose investigation, he claimed, found that the incidents had not been the work of local residents. He admitted, however, that he did not know how the state p o lice came to th a t conclusion.

He then charged, “ It seems to me like it was all m a n u f a c t u r e d . I ’ m dism ayed by all the resentment that is being generated against us. There’s no reason for it. The day camp will be for the use of residents of the Woodbridge School. These are retarded children, not mentally ill children. And that should be emphasized because I think there are some people who are using that to raise false fears.”

J.PARKERinc

INCOME TAXPREPARATION

ONLY 5 MORE DA YS! DEADLINE IS APRIL 17th!C om e In Now, Or call — No A p p o in tm e n t Needed. A ll Returns Prepared by Graduate Accountants. C o m p l e t e l y C o n f i d e n t i a l . Tax Deductible. Fee as Low as $4.50.

INC.A. J. PARKER(A S U B S ID IA R Y O F D IC K S T E IN A S S O C ., IN C .)

Master7 4 0 LLOYD RD. Charge.1

M A TA W A N5 6 6 - 0 7 0 5 Available

Y O U S A W IT IN T H E IN D E P E N D E N T ■

1IaiiiiiiiiiiBII

I 1

I I I I Is 1 I I I I

I I I I I I

I I i 3 I I

iQ H B U B B ia n a t H s e s t B mm

’ 70 IM P A L A C u s to m 2 ar. H .T ., y e llo w w ith b la ck

V -8 , a u to m a tic , a ir c o n d i t i o n e d , p o w e r s tee ring & p ow e r brakes, ra d io .

m ileage 2 9 ,5 4 0

'6 9 IM P A L A C u s to m 2 d r. H . T . , g o ld , 327 V -8tu r b o -h y d r o m a t ic tra n s ., p o w e r s t e e r in g , a ir c o n d it io n e d , ra d io , m ileage 4 7 ,5 6 8 $ 2 1 9 5

’68 IM P A L A 2 d r. H .T . SS, m a ro o n , V -8 , a u to m a tic , b u c k e t s e a ts , p o w e rs te e rin g , ra d io .

m ileage 2 4 ,2 7 2

’ 6 8 IM P A L A 6 pass, s ta tio n w agon , b lu e w ith w h i t e to p , P.S., V -8 ,a u to m a t ic , ra d io , a ir c o n d . m ileage 3 7 ,4 4 3 $ 2 0 5 5

’67 C O R V A IR 4 D r. H .T ., W h ite , O r ig in a l M ileage 2 8 , 3 9 3 . A R e a l C re a m p u ff.

•69 C H E V E L L F . “ 3 0 0 '’ 4 o r. sedan, y e llo w w ithb la ck ro o f , V -8 , a u to m a tic , a i r c o n d it io n e d , p ow e rs te e rin g , ra d io . W a rra n ty j /a i la b le fo r re m a in d e r o f 5 0 r0QC m ile w a rra n ty , m il cage 4 1 ,1 7 7 $ 2 3 9 5

*67 C H E V Y B E L A IR 4D r. Sedan W h ite , V -8 ,A u to . , R ad io .

$ 1 2 9 5

’68 C H E V Y B E L A IR 4 D r. S edan, 6 C y l, A u to ,R ad io ,

$ 1 6 9 5

•6 6 C H E V Y % T O NChassis w ith u t i l i t y b o d y , g reen, 6 c y lin d e r, 3 speed, m ileage 3 4 ,7 3 7 $ 1 6 9 5

'7 0 C H E V Y II N O V A S/S 2 D r. G reen , R ad io , W ith S te reo Tape , 4 Speed, 350 C .I.D . V -8 , A ir C o n d ., P o s itra c tio n

$ 2 6 9 5

Call now 5 6 6 - 8 0 0 0 Ask for JIM CRINE

MULLERRT . 3 4 M A T A W A N

C H E V R O L E T

5 6 6 - 8 0 0 0

HARRY’S HOT DOG HAVENLOCATED ON RT. 34, STRATHMORE SHOPPING CENTER,

MATAWAN, N. J.(Facing Now Twin Cinema)

OPEN 10:00 A .M . TO 12:00 P .l/.

- 7 DAYS A WEEK

"pcatwUny *7^e "pinaC

*)n Sttyiz O u x S p e c ia l t i e s

JUMBO KOSHER FRANK L — ' BOILED OR GRILLED k i t ' WITH THE WORKS ■ W ll

........... ........... ......... ................................... - "' /„ lb. FRESHLY GROUND

HAMBURGER / K O N A TOASTED BUN ml U

IN D IV ID U AL * » P |

PIZZA PIE . / D

DELICIOUS HOT . n POTATO OR KASHE £ 1 1

KNISHES

TASTY SLICED STEAK *SANDW ICH I n i l

O N A N ITALIAN ROLL l , U U

G IA N T SIZE HOT - CORNED BEEF OR 1

PASTRAMI SANDW ICH 1

S id * Orders French Frio* .4 0

Side Orders o f Stu Ffed

Side O rder Onion Rings .60

Derm a (K ishka) .50

HONEY DIPPED ■! Q r

CHICKEN IN THE BASKET I . U U' JUM BO FRIED SHRIMP A

IN THE BASKET f c . U U

M a n y O ther Platters and Sandwiches

For a Desert Treat Try our V aried Flavor Line of

Home M ade Ita lian Ic e * ............................ 2 5 & .5 0 ,

( IE V.HICK IU IH U U U I UKUCIU

C A L L : 5 6 6 - 7 7 5 1

Page 6: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

' 0 i 6 T u ! 5 6 2 J ° u o t)B [n d o d e q?|A\ ‘A ?u n o Q q ? n o u i u o ^

ut A ?t [e d ra iu n u i ?s3 | | e u is

aq ? st a S e n !^ j o q j y q o o q

* * * * **e u n f

ui p p q aq o ? A u o q j u y ’? S j o ?sE 3 j s q ? joj u o i?e jB d 3 jd ui p jaq S u ia q st [ e p o s a q x

ireAVBiBjv j o (i,8Ct-99S) p 3 n ?J E [Y p e q o t jv g u in e aA q p a u ie iq o aq Ae u i ‘u o s ia d

Jad 0 0 'S $ ‘s j a ^ 'X ’W l uosipBj/\i ‘p B o y a j (B n b a sa a q 3

‘a s n o H 3 J ! j uo sip Bpv aq ? ? e ‘6 2 I P d V ‘A B p jn ?B S u o a a u e p p u e ? 3 j j n q |Bnuue ?s i i j s j i j o s u o d s lit av B n p B j j o A u o q ? u y •?S j o A ? 3 ( 3 0 g a q x

% % :f: jj: :fc

•uEuureqa a u jq su n s ‘q o s a y a u s y -sajv p u E t s u i i s ?b -jut’a S ja s ‘q s p M ? j a q o y 'SJj\[ ! A j E ? a j 3 3 s ‘ j | U B ig p a J J I V " s a w U a jn sB a j? ‘J a j io j u q o f - s j ^ ;?uap|sajd 33|a ‘ip j E q o g u o q ?U 33U |a ‘sjp\[ t iu a p i s a j d punBj\T -g u q o p -sjj\[ p a p a [a X j j u a a a j q n p a m

• s n u sA yu o iu q 'S u i p im g u o ! ?B 3 jo a yJJJBJ IBUOUIOIAI s u B i a p ^aq ? "IB X s p u o iM u r d c x : 8 ‘?3 |z b h j o q n [Q 3 i?B J 3 o iu 3 a s ^ a u i o ^ 3 q ? j o g u t ?3 a u i e ? e uaA iS aq h ia \ u o n B JO o a p p u E S u i ^ B U i - e i p u B a j o u o i ? B j ? s u o u i3 p y

if' * * * *

£ S £ L - 9 9 9 ‘^ a q uajjBjV\ -sjjm 3ui|iBa Aq apetu aq ubo s^uauijuioddB puB j n o ? aq ? S u ip j e g s j s| !e ?3g

•jno? s q ?u i p s p n p u i aq ||iav p o u a d u o i^ E j u a u o j b m s u b - u o i ? • s a n b y " p a j a a d s u i p u B p 3 ? is iA aq ||iav ‘m o o * ^aiDSntU ,, pU B 3ui5JJOA\pOOM p u E ‘ j u a u i d i n b a p u B S3 t?i|pe j pjEA-AB|d j o o p ?n o ‘s u io o J S S E p a q x 'p a A ia sq o aq A b u i (ls ja q ?o u i g t n d p q , , aq ? j o S 3 i?n p p u B a a n p a o o jd p u B ? u 3 iu d in b 3 i u o o j s s b o •u o ijB A ja sq o s q ? g u u n p 3 ?Bd p i?.tB d o ? p a ? ? t u u a d a q [j| M j a i o o q o s - s j d S u i^ i s ia a q x ‘u o is s a s u i s s s p |en?DB u b a A ia sq o p u E ? is ia I|ia \ s ja jo o q a s -a jd j p q ? puB s j s q j o iu j o s d n o ig H Eu ig p jE o q aA i^noaxa j o o q o g

Ajasjnf<[ s q ? j o s ja q u ia u i A q p a p n p u o a a q [| iav s j n o ? p a p in S jn o q - j iB f j

•IZ| u d y ‘A B p u g p u B ‘e l p j d y ‘A B p s a u p a ^ a s n o q u a d o p jo q i |ia \ ‘UBA\BjBp\i ‘| o o q a s X j a s j u N u B n a j A q s a y a q x

'8 ^ Z ,^ 6 Z ,9 ‘z ? i m o j o h B jia q gp u E '.frZZI-WZ ‘u E u u a d o o o

• S I 6 8 ' 9 9 9 ‘u o p j o g a i i a ? S 3 uiojij p a u re jq o aq A e u i sjasfo ij S u iu ja a u o a uo!?buiiojui

•a o vp E id a^EAud ut pa§E§ua pub A?isj3Aiu_rj B iq u in io o ‘ a 3 a u o o s .w q D B a x J ° J J S j s a q ? uo osp sr aH uoi^Bjinsuoo A^iuniuuioo jo jojButpjooo puB }Sigo[oipAsd jaiqo uaaq scq ggex aauis pus ‘£961 aouis ‘UA\o?uo?Eg ‘ja;uao ouqEiqoAsj s^aipjtqQ aq? ;b uaaq ssq jaSiaquia^ ‘Ja

•ubmbjb^j ‘? a a j ? s q o m q o P UB 3UBT ? u o u n A v ‘uxo[Eqs ajdujax 5E A s p u n s 't u 'd O S '-8 ((A i a p o s S u iS u E q o e u i q ? n o ^ „ u o j a S i a q u i a ^ p i B j a o • jq A q a j n p a ] b ? u a s a id [[ia\sarpn?g qsiA\af ?|npv JOj a^njtjsu j aioqsABg aqx

* * * * *

,/sjagEuaax « o ! lI!V i aajJEn5

V „ ‘u ij ij a q ? A \o q s osjb

Him 3H ' looqos qSlH >lUB9 p a y ?b A s p u j - u i d 0 £ :Z ^ ‘a j d o a j p u B u o i j E i n d o j‘ u o p n n o d , , ‘ s a j n ? a a [ j o u o is s a s q ? J in o j a q ? ? e ‘A ^ u n o o q ^ n o u iu o j^ u i s ja SB u a a ? S u o u ie u ia jq o jd e ‘o s sa s ip p a ja u a A s sn o s ip h i m q ?[E o jj j o ?u a u i? j re d a a a ?B ?g a q ? j o ? jo d u a A E ( j uiBq|!A\

ry p<°n i° 4inoS 0001 n ON ,VMH 3IV IS

L I L 8 - 9 9 S

N V M V 1 V W

30IAX3S MOIlVAiiJS3S JO/M Q1HOM 31X1

ajO’m : ano3( ’ • ■ jjsi( ji iu»y • pajouoq spJOJ jipj-sj jolovy • D D U oin su i p u o '| to ' s o 6 a p n p u t ( ^ ju o u i j o ' \ o p 5340.* m o-j •

jo t ;h i i JD q iC jo u jh o u iAi ^ m d u B u i j^ jo d s o J ? ; sn ' , . 0 3 •

: » p j o q A n e /A•uoSbav uoi?e?s arqq

aq? Aq Aspsanqx 'ui'd og:6 o?0£:i 3uip|ing uoi?Eaway ^ ie j ?a?zBH aq? ?e no ?i dojp Abui ‘aAup iadBd ?xau aq? jo a?Ep aq? ‘g t Ae^ |i?un ?i aabs ?ouueo oqM jadEd q?|A\ sjuaptsai Bajy

-8 iudv ‘q?uoui aq? jo AEpjn?Bs ptiooas aq? pa?onpuoo sba\ aAup aqX '9 1 lu d y uo p[aq 3uiaq sb aadsd s.jjaaM ?sbi ui pa?si[ A[?oauooui sbm bauq aadBj ?noag lapER H ^ v aqx

♦ >(C + ♦ #

•o?a ‘q s ij ? sa 3 u o ( ‘(Jt3 e A q ?q3nBO ?sj|j ‘A oq E A q ?q 3 n E 3 ?s i i j S u ip n p u i ‘ s a t i o 3 a ? B D ? u a a a j j i p j o la q u in u s u i u a \ i3 a q h iav sp jE A ^ v 'J n o q a u o a o j s u m p u E u o o u ? b s ? i b ? s ? sa ?u o a a q X 'u o o u p u B -u j ' b j j u aaA \?aq ja ? s i8 a j o ? a u ii? ui ? u a u id in b a S u iq s ij q ? p \ jjjEd a q ? o ? a u io o o ? si A jB ssaa au s i ? s q ? (IB p u s ‘p a jp o ^ s aq ][iav p u o d a q x '? s a ? u o o S u t q s ig j o i u n p | B n u u Ei p q ? srjsoq S5(jojv\ IP A \ o h

d u o ?s (h a q ? ‘ A B p j n ? B Sj i 'j b j aq B is a a m irv I V

* * * * *

•jjEjjE a q ? ? e sp jEA \E [ s p a d s a a q ?o A u e u i p u B s a z u d j o o p aq [jiav a ja q ? piBS ‘s u o u i u ig a g j o a o -s j ^ t p u e

a u o jB u u E f S B U io q x ‘H 'SJW ‘u a u ij iB q s -o o a q x u a u io o u o iq s e g j iB u q a g a q ? Aqsa iA ?s I u u n ? s a j ‘?a|ZEH ‘g g a ? n o y ‘u u j A s p q o H a q ? ?b ‘ZZ Hj d V ‘A sp a n jB s 'u i- d x p p q aq o ? A \o q s u o iq s s j p u B u o a q o u n j a q ? j o j ap B iu aq sujtnja^ [bu ij ?E q ? p a ? s a n b a i sEq ‘?u a p is a jd A j B i j i x n E ‘A i i a q o u o ? i j e 3 p

■jo?B j(?suom ap ? s a n 3 a q ? a q [ [ i m • 0 0 ? q 3 iq p u B j a M o j p j ? u ’a o A a s ia f j o a u s j { a s o y •anuaA V a o u a a o ig ‘S u ip im gqojnqo ?sipoq?ajv SjUqop •?S ABpsanx -urd 8 PP^l aq o? |B?idsoH AjiunuiutoQ sjoqsABg aq? o? AjEi[ixnv d iq su A v o x ?3 [ z e h a q ? j o uoissss ssauisnq jstngaj aq? A \° n o j ui/a u o ^ B jq su o m a p guijjooD a n p u o j y

4e * * ^ sjc

‘S 9 9 0 ‘6 £ i ‘u o i j b u u o ju i j a q ? j n j j o g -u i’d f o ? ‘w e 6 u i o i j A ]rep ‘a u u a A y u o iu f i ‘s o r a o u o !?B a jo a j a q ? -?b ‘X Ae[aj o io j a q io ? s ig a i ‘ A sjd

o x 'ZL61 ‘I -w? A q g x u aa q aAEq ? sn u j s a ?E p ip u B 3

• s g u i u a A a A e p s i n q x p u B A s p s a n x ? J n o QEipBaoai ?e paAsjd aq jjiavsa u iB Q 'a3 fJE i3 q g n n aq HIA\ jo ^ o a jip a q x 'u o i s s j m iu o ou o i? B a io a y ? a iz « H 3Lt"t Aq p a io s u o d s aq ii;m g g o ? g x u a u i j o j angEat i|Eq?a5(SBq ? in p s g u n o A a a u iu in s v

'LZZI - S 8 9 i s s n a u i j - sa ^ [|BO ued q n (o a q ? S u ju io f uj p a ?sa a 3 ?u i a u o A u y

p a Su n q D x a si A a u o u i 0 [\j - lu a jsA s ? u io d e S iq s n w q ? o qoB3 j o j ?!sAqt’q oqA \ s .i3 q ?o iu a j o u iq ? E i ? s j o S?S!SU 0 D q n p s q x

u b a \ b ? e ia i

‘auBq puE[q?joM 61 ‘snouy u!?aEj^ sjiim j o a u io q aq ? ?e ‘qz i u d v ‘ A E p sa n x ’u r d 8 ?3au i [i|A\ q n i o 3 u [ ? ? is A q E g

a j o u i q ? E j ( ? s a q x

# sje sjt

•?D ii?s ip (o o q o s aq? ? n o q 3 n o j q ? p a sn sa a n p a a o jd u o ! ] 8 .i n p a | e a i s A q d a ?B j ? s u o u ia p ||!,w ‘u o !?B a n p a IB a isA q d jo o q a s A jE ?u a u i3 \3 j o j o s p w d n s ‘| p u u o Q ( o

liafsl PUK h3!UU3Q PlBU0Hu io o j asod.ind-||E

s,| ooqa s s q ? ui ? q 3 iu o ? 8 ?E 8 u i?3 a iu O X J a J o u iq ?B X ?s e j o a u u a q j s q ? a q IJIav uo!?Banpa (EareAqj

* * * * ^

UBA\1?'ieiAI

‘ Id L ‘S U 0 A 0 1 Sa u r re q u io a j p o u m iq o oq ut?d s j a q iu o iu -u o u pu i? sjaq ijuaiu a o j s d n o i S u o i s s n o s i p I b d o ( [ p ? m s 3 u ’i p a ^ 3 a jUO[5T?lUJOJUI ‘‘e A V

p u B iq g iH 9 ‘% U ! H l Bd 1 D B ?u o a A e u i s d n o j g ‘j35jEads M O N B i s a n b a j o x •q^no iuuojM ? j o j ‘q j ? a s u n s g X ‘i u n q q ? B y i p o U K)UE3 ff?uap!S3J UO!?BUIJOJUIj s q ? j n j j o j j o ‘j a i s p a j

,rOX ‘3Z!S SSE]D Uj p3?!U II| s i ?n q ‘(x<J) s ja q m a u i-u o u d u e s a a q u isu i o ? u s d o si u o ! ?B j ?S !3 a y -A ? p u ? a a p p u n g u i q o i n j d 3 u i o q j o u i iu p u B 'A j ? u a a jB a s ja u i is ‘3 0 U B U a ?U IE lU JB 3 a i s s q 3JB 3SJI103 <(UBU IO A \ApU BH a q ? j o j s ? u i H , , 3 M ? j o j S D id o x '9 Abjm p u s ‘6 2 [ iJ d y lZZ m d y : sg u iu jo u i A E p jn ?E g e a jq j u o a So ijo Q A ? i u n u i u i o o 3 [ B p 5 i o o j g? e sd cq s3 (J0A \ U B iu A p u s q JO S3U 3S B j o s u o d s J(!A\

(U 3 lU O A \ ->0 J u o i ?b z iu b 3 j o [b u o i ? e n ) M O N JO w id s q a A ?u n o Q q ? n o u iu o j ^ a q x

* * * * *

•qojmqQ s ^ o ip a u a g ■?s j o u o s j a p u y q iu b iiu m •Aay a q ? p u B ? jo d A 3 }| j o q o j n q o ?s;poq ?3p\[ ? s j ig aq ? j o A a n y y u b u i j o ^ -A 3 y a q ? ‘a f d u ia x a q ? j o J3psa| lE n ? ij id s ‘j a u i a ^ A j u a n w q ^ y s q ih m sja5 {B3d s' U O t g l| 3J 3 A ! ? B J B d UI O 0j o jo a fq n s s q ? o ? p 3 ?0 A a p s q fi[A \ u i B j g o j d a q x •aueq j u o u ij A v ? e p 3 ?E 3 o [

‘s i d u i s x s q ? ? b A s p s a n x •ui d 0 8 :8 S u ip a u i [B jauag B p|oq |jia\ iu o [E q g a |d u i3X

j o p o o q j a ? s i s a q x

la j j n q p io o iq S iu p i iu e p u B ‘s ?s i| A ?s a q ? j o D jsnu i a q ? o? g u io u B p A q p3MQ||oj ‘- u r d

6 o ? 8 P I^H aq ||!A\ j n o q I!B?j(dod v 1 3 | ze h ‘q a jn q o s (? a !p a u a g -?g j o |[Bq p ia o s

3 l( l u i ‘zz l? J d v ‘A f ip jn ?B g p p q a q iu a \ ‘ q a j n q j IB d o a s id g A ? iu i j x j o q n | 3 sa jd n o Q a q ? Aq p o jo su o d s 33U Bp | B n U U E 11 e ‘ ( l i>ofsj S u u d g u| S u iq x Jno„

•?3(ZBH ‘[1EA\|V >(3!J?BJ UIOJJ3|qB[!EAB 3JB ‘g$ ‘s?35f0!X ’X o ? 6 i u w j o jsn u i aauEp UE3JJ3U.I y p ilE q s u ] AB|d I[im B J ?sa q a jQ sa p n q g uaaJQ

a llX s;l! u ! - ia ?u 3 3aq? dpq o? ‘3jnqsuB.n[ ?SBg ‘ s, q ? i ui g >) a n g ?e iz t u c iy aairep iijausq E josuods iijm uoi?Ejap3^ qsjj] aq? jo ja?dnqo \?uno3

q?nouiuo'x\ aqx ' ? o y sj3a\oj (Biaads aq? japun (eij? ?noq?iA\ pauosuduii uaaq 3ABq oqA\ uaui jo saifjutEj 3q? S1SISSB PU B ‘?II3UISSBJBqj o a sn B aaq s a u io q jja q ? aa[j o ? p a a io j u a o q a v c q oi|A\ j o p a u jn q u aaq 3ABq s a iu o q a soqA \ s a q a u E j sp iB ‘s u o s ja d 0 0 9 ‘2 a u io s S u iA ja s s s a g n ja j q s u j j o j s ja ?u a o gg sa ?B J3d o ? s B j [ a g u t J a ! i a y j o j J3 ?U 3Q u o ! ?B u ip j o o 3 a q x

4e >|e * * *

•p u iiu ^ a | r a jo u j ‘J 3 ?q 8 u q b d o p A . ip d p q o sjb ? n q ‘? u a u id o p A a p A p o q s tp iiq o b sa A O jd u ii A [u o ? o u u o ! ? s a n p 3 [BajsAqd j o u iB jg o jd p 3 U U B |d *[p M b M o q j o u o i s s n o s i p B 3 q OS|B IIJAV 3 J3 q X 'S 3 IJ!a i ?3 b j 3 q ?o p u E ‘A s ip o qJOO|J ‘guqMOq ‘gU!?E5JSj 3 (joj ‘A ja q a j s ‘uoi?B?uasajd apjjs b a p n p u ! j|iA\ uiBjgojd 3 q X -s ? u 3 p n ? s a j n ? B 3 j H!A\ u jm jo ? !p n E s q ? U! p p q3q O? SU0!?EJ?SU0UJ3Q

q o o q a saq? ?b ‘61 i!Jdv ‘Aspssupa^ u i-d 8 3 u i?a a iu o S X d P « o y

pAon e jo suiaq? aq? aq j|ia\ uoi?Bonp3 paisAqj

•pu3??E o ? pa?!AUis i o q q n d a q x 'S . A j B i v •jg ? b ? s iu b 8j o A (ja u j io j s e a \ 33||V ‘u e 3j o ? im q a j A|?u3oaj a q ? u o s u o ip a j a s A jB J o d u ia ^ u o a p u s i b d i s s e p

JO U IB jS o jd E ? U 3 S 3 j d Him a n ’?J o d A a > i ‘? 3 3 j ?g ? u o j g ‘q a jn q Q [E d o a s id g s . A j e ^ - ?g ui A B p u n g - u r dfr ?B ]B ?p 3 J U EgjO UB ?U 3S3 jd[[ia\ ‘u o ?g u !| jn g ‘ i p j n q o [ E d o D S | d g s . A j b m - ? g j o ? s !u b 3 jo ‘33J IV J a S o y

H jej |apui|oj{ ?e u o o u ja ? j « aq ? p u a d s ||ia\ sjaia a q x 0 E ( u d y d o o j ? a q ? joj p o u u fi\d sj q a u iq ? n o ) ) o o a y

'ZZ I 'J d y ‘ABpjn?Bg ^ j o x M 3 N u i sn o j jQ aq ? o ? d u ? i? u o s|J!3 aq ? ajp:? o? p o g u E j jE OAEq ‘SjapB3| d o o j ? ‘UB|dB)i g - s jp v pu i: S xaq z ja jx -g - s j ^

•5fjOA\a3pBq p a ?B p J g u iu ja a u o a aABq Awui S(ji3 3q ? s u o i? s a n b j3a \sue p u B BajK a jo q sA B g a q ? j o A jo ? s iq a q ? ?n o q B A B p u j

d o o j x Jo ju n p j o s|J(3 aq ? o ? >\|«? h ia\ ‘u B jW js iq A iu n o o q ? n o i u u o ^ p u w ?si?je ‘q ?|U is A u o q ? u y

j*c H< * * *

•jooqas a q ? ?e 8 J | u d y u r d 0 8 ;8 u ‘u o i ? a y u i

lo o q a g Jno„ ‘3 u iA \o q s a p q s B aq ||ia\ a ja q ? a sn o q u a d o aq ? p u a ??B o ? a iq E u n a so q ? jo.} -sassE(3 aas jji.vi sjo?!Sj/v sp o q ?a u j p u E A q d o so | tq d jo

u o !?B iiB |d xa ub q ? i M in gaq ||IAV u o js sa s u o i ? E A j a s q o q a s g ^ u a u i d o i a A a p | E ia o s p u B a o u a i j a d x a3 u n U E 3 | ‘ U O ! ? E A I ? O U l ‘ u o ! ? 3 E J 3 ? i n u i n i u i x B U i j o j S3SSE|0 o » ? s ? i u i d n o j g a 3 s 9 o ? g s q ? u i U3jp|iqo s a x i iu [ o o q a g m b n 3 q x

UBA\B?EW‘6L a j n o y j j o ‘a u s q s j a A y ‘q o j n q o IB d o a s id g A ?m iJ X ?n S| (o o q a s a q x "A|UO -u rd g o j x u io j j 8 1 I u d y pu E

m-B 0 E : I I 0 £ :6 w°-«J 0Z P UB 6 1 ‘8 T v u o a sn o q U 3 d o p n u u B p j iq ? s?j p jo q ||IM ‘?d 3D U 0 3 Aep p 3 ?B jga ?U I q s t ? u g a q ? u o p a s c q lo o q o s A jB ?u au j3 [3 a ?B A u d e ‘ A?unoQ q?nouiuoiM j o lo o q o g a \3 N a q x

* * *

009i - m ‘Plldsoq aq? ?B pqja jl ?3UE[> guiuoqdap? Aq aiqeipAE aje sja^oi? }0 A[ddns p3 ?iuii| b ?Bq? pres H301! ^ 'SuwiiBpos ?S3n3 3 q? o? psiOAapa q ||im g u iu 3 A 3 sq? jo ?souj ?Eq? os s?u3 UiaguBjJB asaq? apBui SEq 33??|uiui03 s q X - p 3 i n p a q D S sc UlEJ§Ojd |BUJjoj J3ijq b puB SBip sq ?ou U|A\ 3 J 3 q x 'u i-d I IB A\0 ||0 J Ol isuuip q?[A\ •uj-d 0£ :8 1B siiB?>iao3 q?m 3ui?je?s ‘q?noiuuoy\[ ? jo j ‘ IIBH sqqio 1B ^Bpung aq ||ia\ ipq aMX ‘lE?!dsoq 3 q? jo guiuado Abw aq? 3ui?Bjqap3 A ? J e d a o u B p - i a u u i p s q ? p u a ??B o? 009 UBlI1 sjow ?aadx3 ‘ ipg [BjnSnBui |E?idsoH A ? iu n u iu io 3

sjoqsABg sq? jo usuupqo[ B J 3 U 3 S ‘ ■ J f j o o q o g ■Q SBjJBqo -SJW -JW

3 i a \ / n Q a v 3 H aawiAins qnw O N IH d S b O O A

S I d O H S S.NVIAI 0 1 9

3~IJ.JLn 3 H iNWIAI X IJ

o i a a v H3HX HOd

d O H g N v y y

o i g 3 1 1 1 1 * 1

3H1

jjlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllliiiiiililiiiiiiiiTnnfiiiirniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiimiiiiii'^iiiiiiirTiiiiiiinTTniiiitniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiinnminiiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ii|'5 T N ' ucmpjcja) ' to p ^ o a * 0 ‘d *}uapuactepui a y x 05 cjnjo jinoA uj siuqab Sujiuoodn smsu puas S

I S1N3A3 V3«V

i9NlN3ddB’H’ S.1U-HAV| 32IOHSAVQ O l] s a m o j s m a vj 111 .ni miimiim

0 I S S - E 8 9 ‘lu a p u s d o p u i a q X u i o j j A j 3 u o i ? e ? s p u B ‘s ? u a u i a o u n o u u B ‘SUOIJB? 1 A ll I p a A B j g u g

% 4c s)< He

uoj^Bn is luauno aq ? j o s j n ? a id a ?a| du io o 3 Jo u i b ?a3 o ? s o u a ip n E a q ? d p q |[!A\ ‘A o q o d x b ? j o s j s ? ?b u i u o a\3 ia j o s ? u io d [je 8 u !?u a s3 jd 3 j ‘p u B d y '3 ?e ? s s q ? 33BJ qaiqiW s 3 A i?E U ja ?p sno !JEA 3 q ? j o s u o i ib s i j iu j e j| B 3 S I J p U B | E 3 I ? 1 1 O ds q ? q ? o q u o ?q 8 q S u iM O jq ?‘E U IU lsp p [E3SIJ S (AaSJ3p A\0J\iu i s j o ?o b j Aa>| s q ? ? n o 3 u u q O? 5J33S IJIAV u im o j 3 q x

• U B o q q n d B y E SI SJB3S • 3 3 ? ') lU !U lO 0 A a q o j x b x s q ? j o j s q u ia u i3 1 ? E J 3 0 U J 3 Q E ‘ U I 3 | ^u u y u E u io M A j q u i s s s y aq Hi m s j B s g q ? iM g u iJ B s d d y

• ?U 3 U ld o p A 3 Q p u s u o | ?B 3 n p g A ? t u n u iu j o o j o ? u a u i? J E d a Q s p g a n o a a q ? p u B S J 3 ?0 A u a u io A \ j o a n S B a q B s j y ?|UBg p s y 3 q ? ‘s s s j j 5}jej A j n q s y a q ? j o u o iJ B ja d o o o aq ? q S n o jq ?

8 1 I « d y -iu-d 8 5B a S a i lo o A ? j u n u J i u o Q 3 | B p 5 | o o j g ?b o j iq n d a q ? j o j pa ?ua sa .id aq |[im q a iq M Aasaap M a w u( u u o j a j x b ; u o u im o j b ?b jas|Bads p s jn ?E 3 j b s q h ia \ ‘a ?B ?s a q ? ? n o q g n o j q ? s a p j io 3IA10 PU B |BDI?I|Od 3UUJ1?S S I ?JOdaJ | B | S J 3 A O J ? U O O a s o q A \ ‘ 3 3 ? ? t m u i o o A 3 1 1 o j X B X a ? B 1 S a q ? j o u B U iiiE q a ‘s jB a g qAJJBH "U 3 g 3 ?B ?g J3 U IJO J

x d o a o N n

Iff no HI S^SJOLj9l]4 UIOJJ

"S9XD4 9 J D J 5

2Z.6L'2U!JdV iuapusdspu| am 9 aBej

Page 7: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

April 12, 1972 The Independent Page 7

Sun Oil hits another roadblock in HolmdeiHOLMDEL

S u n O i l C o . o f Piscataway will have to wait until next month to learn if its site plan for renovation of a gas station at Laurel Avenue and Route 35 will be approved by the Planning Board.

The Planning Board tabled action on the site plans until May 4 to examine changes suggested by the state Department of Transportation.

T h e state suggested moving an exit from the gas station 25 feet west of its present location.

The Planning Board said it was unable to act on the site plan ap p lica tio n Thursday night because the change had not been subm itted in time for members to study it.

The board had rejected a previous site pian at its Jan. 15 meeting because certain deta ils weren’t shown. Among the details missing, according to the board, was lack of spaces for the planning board chairman, secretary and engineer to sign. Also, the required tax map lot, dates and block numbers were not shown.

The Board of Health also declined to take action on the site plans because it said it d id n ’t have enough information.

James R . Minogue, attorney for the company, said the existing station will be renovated into a colonial style building and site improvements will be made.

In other action, the Planning Board denied waiver of site plan approval to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Santangelo, 70 Park Ave., Shrewsbury. The couple, owners of the Holmdei Village Shopping Center, Route 520 and Holmdei Road, want to use a former dress shop in the center for a gift shop.

In denying the waiver, the board said parking a r r a n g e m e n t s i n relationship to entrance and exit at the center were inadequate and the garbage d is p o s a l means was unsightly.

The Bayshore Hospital, scheduled to open May 1, received approval from the board to erect several signs at the hospital site directing the way to w ard the h o s p i t a l ’s em ergency entrance.

T h e h o s p i t a l ’ s a p p lic a tio n had been rejected at the last board meeting because of the sign’ s dimensions and proposed locations.

Earlier in the meeting, M a r t i n B r i l l i a n t , McCampbell Road, had questioned the board’s p r o c e d u r e s on sign application hearings. After th e h o s p i t a l ’ s sign ap p lic a tio n had been approved, Brilliant asked if it was proper for the board to grant approval if the hearing procedures had been questioned.

P l a n n i n g B o a r d C hairm an Jack Sipress replied that he didn’t think the m atter should be discussed then but assured Brilliant the board was acquainted with the proper procedure.

The board held for further study a request to waive site plan approval procedure for Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stafford, Tricorne Farm, Holland Road and Laurel Avenue.

The Staffords intend to sell the horse farm.

The board pointed out th a t a site inspection showed the farm’s exit onto Holland Road presents a driving hazard. It said shrubbery and trees located at the entrance but on private property blocks a 'lew of the exit. The board suggested erecting a warning sign on Holland Road to warn approaching motorists of the exit.

Also, the board said, the

farm’s driveway has been eroded, creating a drainage problem.

Approval was given by the board for waiver of site plan procedure for the New School o f M onm outh County Inc.

P resently located in Matawan, the New School will take over the 1 1 /3-acre R u d is ill C o u n try Day School in Middle Road.

The New School, which uses the British primary method of instruction, will

have a 45-student capacity. Mrs. Florence Errickson, president o f the school’s board of trustees, told the board the school currently has 33 students and two part-time teachers.

A public hearing on an

application for waiver of s i t e p l a n a p p r o v a l procedure was continued u n til the board’s next meeting.

The application was su bm itted by Dr. M. Leonard Genova and the

Mar Len Holding Co. The doctor wants to rent offices in his medical building at 999 Palmer Ave. to a real estate firm. The board said the real estate concern has a lready occupied the offices.

• * * * * .r * • * * » «

, * • * * * * « **■*<

FRIDAY APRIL 14th

THE BAYSHORE’S MOST INTERESTING GIFT SHOPPE

(Formerly ‘The Added Touch’)

1m

?SSv

4 5 Piece Ironstone D i n n e r w a r e , O v e n p r o o f , D is h w a s h e r Safe, Assorted Styles.Reg $49.95 $

SALE95

Hanging Swing Chair

Reg. $49.95

SALE S O A 9 5

F ry ’s Milk Chocolate Covered Nuts, 14 oz. TinReg $2.00

SALE 9 9 *Ashtrays (ceramic)R e g - 4 9 ( m

SALE | \ j

OPEN HOUSE

Th urs. Apr. 13th |j|IR E F R E S H M E N T S SE R VED

PUBLIC INVITED 6 -1 1 P.M.

r:; Peacock chair (Fanback chair) 54'" Reg. $129.95 $ 0 0

SALE W W

A \^A \\\\ \\ \\ \\ \\\ \\ \\ \ \ \ \m \\ \ \^ ^Hand Dipped Tapered Candles 8 To 15 Inch, Many Colors. 5 ^ L EValues to 4 9 k 1 0 < t ea

w \\\\. A vcGenuine Lead Crystal Fruit or N u t B o w l , Imported from Germany. C J L 0 5Reg. $12.95 * 0

Twin Size Simple Heart Wicker Head Board

Reg.$14.95

Nymph chair 15" high

195

Im ported from Portugal, hand painted ash trays. 12 styles.Reg. $2.00 $ V 00

SALE IMatching bud vast;. £ j f ^ 0 0Reg. $3.00

Stainless Steel Chafing Dish Reg. $12.95 $ # 00

SALE

1 2 4 W. FRONT ST. KEYPORTHOURS 12 TO 1 TUE5. TH R U SUN.(Across from the Ye Cottage Inn) H0URS 12 T0 10PM

2 6 4 - 13 4 0

5 5 5 5 5 ^

Page 8: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Page 8 The Independent April 1 2 ,1 9 7 2

Keyport board seeking vice principal for KHSKEYPORT

The Board of Education is still looking for someone to replace George Wood, former vice principal o f the high school.

Wood resigned March 1 to accept an administration job in another school system.

S u p e r in te n d e n t o f S c h o o l s Douglas W. Fredericks said he has received 10 complete applications for the job and 10 incomplete applications and is currently conducting interviews.

Six candidates had been

HANDCRAFTEDCHROMACOLOK

fine-furniture styled giant-screen 23"console

S U P E R - S H A R P P IC T U R E

The W A L D E N • C4516W 3C o n te m p o r a r y s ty le dlo w b o y c o n s o leF U L L Z E N I T H Q U A L I T Y• Chromacolor Picture Tube• Titan 80 Handcrafted Chas&is• Super Video Range Tuner• Automatic Fine-tuning Control

W e D o O u r

Own ServiceEST. 1930

Ten Eyck Ronson, Inc.

Oldest & Largest Zenith Dealer in the Area 283 Upper Main St.

Near H w y . 34, M ataw an 566-1600

interviewed by yesterday, he said.

The Keyport Teachers Assn. expressed concern in a letter to the board about the delay in appointing a new vice principal. The association’s letter, read at last week’s board meeting, s a i d t h e t e a c h e r s understood that the board wanted to hire the most qualified man for the position, but, the delay was hurting the study body.

More than 30 days have elapsed, the letter pointed out, since Wood left.

George DeBonis, will be in charge of the high school building when Principal J.S. Zampelle is away. The a u th o riza tio n is only temporary until the board hires a new vice principal.

W om an’s Club elects officers in HazletHAZLET

Officers for the Woman’s C lub o f Raritan were elected at a meeting held last Tuesday at the North Centerville Firehouse.

E l e c t e d were Mrs. Edward Wyan, president; Mrs. James Keating, first vice president; Mrs. Harold Rosen gren, second vice p r e s i d e n t ; Mrs. Eric R o s e n g r e n , record ing secretary; Mrs. John Strick, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Jack Wood, treasurer.

Delegates were named to the N.J. State Federation of W om en’ s Clubs’ annual convention. Mrs. Louis Rabenda, president, and Mrs. Wyan will represent the club at the convention, which will be held May 9-12 in Atlantic City.

Mrs. Theodore Koller, Mrs. Wyan, Mrs. Keating, and Mrs. Rosengren today are representing the club at the Fifth District Drama Festival of the N.J. State Federation of Women’s Clubs at S t. Andrew Methodist Church, Spring Lake.

The speaker for the May meeting will be Frank Licitra of the Monmouth C ounty Department of Public Service, who will discuss narcotics.

c o “ oUt*v......

1 1I

Front-End Aligned fJhmMost

compact ■ ■ ■ f t .

I J L

Restore that new- car steering with an expert front- end wheel alignment. Get safety at a savings . . . No appointment necessary.

S A W

1. . f in f

This special offer is only good with discount coupon. Work and products guaranteed!

0 i W : C I l l iA l lV :

1IIIIiI

MULLANEYTIRE SERVICE

BROAD & M A IN STREETS M A T A W A N

5 6 6 -9 5 8 0

iiixiii

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR■

(continued from page 4) certificate of occupancy within the township upon change of ownership. This requirement will insure a thorough inspection by the building inspector on all properties at the time of sale, thereby assuring the new owner of the quality and condition of the home he is purchasing and will also act as a deterrent against the deterioration of neighborhoods in Hazlet. The nominal fee of $15 fora certificate of occupancy will also provide additional funds for the municipal treasury without the possibility of a further burden upon our taxpayers.

There was another matter raised and acted upon at the meeting last Tuesday evening which, by its very nature, deserves the praise and appreciation of every resident of this community, regardless of where his political feelings lie. I am referring to the ban resulting from a contract authorized by the Township Committee on the showing of X-rated films at the Route 35 Drive-in. 1 know that as a parent of three children, my thoughts on this commendable action are shared by all other concerned parents of this area.

Congratulations to our new Township Committee for restoring progressive action to our local government.William Van Derbeck 4 Raymond Ct.Hazlet

Police prom otion d e fe n d e dSir:

A recent editorial in another newspaper reported that “A t least several members of the Matawan Borough Police Department do not agree with the present method of promotions, contending that the committee of three councilmen should not have the final say”. The article went on to state that “ recently the borough officials promoted a patrolman of three years experience despite the department’s recommendation of a detective with seven years on the force” .

This appears to be an attempt by a few disgruntled individuals to mislead the public into thinking that this promotion was made as a political selection rather than on merit. In actuality this promotion was made under a fair competitive system by which the eligible candidates were allotted points for seniority, the endorsement of the chief of police, and a written and oral examination. The system had been established jointlv by the Borough Council and the police department’s superior officers as a progressive improvement over the straight seniority system. Under this combined point system, Sgt. Carl Policari appeared at the top of the list at the time that this matter reachcd the council. On this basis, the Borough C ouncil unanimously added their endorsement to his selection.

It is therefore evident that Officer Policari deserves full credit for achieving this promotion.A concerned resident.

Partisan politics scoredSir:

Two of the worst features of single party rule, arrogance and disdain for the public, were recently displayed by the Holmdel Township Committee. At the recent budget hearings a citizen was admonished by Mayor [David]Cohen to avoid using the word “ democrat” since that was interjecting politics. Yet this same mayor apparently condoned using a portion of the March 20 Township Committee meeting to reply to an alleged charge of disunity leveled by a local newspaper [The Bayshore Independent] Compounding this blatant display of partisanship at

BROWN FOR THE BEST DEAL IN TOW N. VINYL COATED CHAIN

LINK IN COLORS PRIVATE LINK DO-IT-YOURSELF orWE INSTALL

This Week’s Do-lt Yourself Special !1 0 ' P o s t & Rail Paddled End $ 4 .7 5 a Section

EXTRA SPECIAL SALE

Be th e First on your block w ith the

ALL GREEN FENCE w ire, post, fitt in g

Never Needs Painting

WE ARE THE COMPETITION”FOR FREE HOME ESTIMATE CALL: ^

MIDDLESEX MONMOUTH OCEAN ^56 6 -4 7 1 9 787-5131 244-0049

POINT PLEASANT 8 9 2 -6 08 8

the expense of township business, Committeeman [J. Paul] Jannuzzo spent another period of time extolling the virtues of the Republican Party. He even discussed the various possibilities coming up in the primaries.

Committeemen, will you please refrain from using the time at public meetings to address your grievances with the press. Please pay more attention to the numerous problems that are assailing our community and at least outwardly concern yourselves with the public’s needs.Robert H. Lippincott 4 Cardinal Rd.Holmdel

Shelter ing of dogs praisedSir:

We have read with interest the letter of Martha Simon in your “ Letters to the Editor” with regard to the two homeless dogs who sought shelter in her garage. In the same issue of your newspaper, we have read the article in which a neighbor signed a complaint against Mr. Simon for having the dogs. We wish to commend Mr. and Mrs. Simon for their kindness to these animals. I f more people were like them, there would be less animal abuse and cruelty which so much of is going on these days. To us, anyone who lends a hand to help a homeless and stray animal cannot be a bad person, but a person with a big and kind heart. How can anyone be so mean and thoughtless as to sign a complaint against the Simons just for trying to lend a helping hand? If there were more people like the Simons, maybe this world would be a better one.(Mrs.) Donna Mansfield (Mrs.) Shirley Boyle 71 W. Main St.Freehold

Redistricting condem nedSir:

The following is an open letter to the New Jersey Legislature:

As a young voter in Monmouth County, I would like to take this time to condemn the actions of the New Jersey Legislature in the planned redistricting of Congressional districts.

As a new voter, I have not had much experience at the polls, but I have worked actively in many campaigns and have seen how the efforts of everyone involved, working as a team, have led to successful campaigns.

Through this redistricting, these valuable teams, made up of the towns, townships and cities in the district are being cut to ribbons, and a team, split up, cannot function as a team. For years, we in the third district have been concerned with our problems because they were similar throughout the district, and now to be redistricted into a new area, we almost have to face our problems alone and this is ridiculous.

Our shore area problems in Keyport, Keansburg, Union Beach and Hazlet are already familiar in the area, but now these areas are being connected with a Central Jersey district that really has no experience with our problems.

The people in these and other areas have the right to choose their representative, but then having chosen him, they get redistricted to a new district and election seems to me to be a violation of our rights in a democratic system. These Congressmen have enough problems already and now to take on new problems is bad for them and the people they represent.

Once a district is established, it should remain so in order to better benefit the people in the district. Chuck Morgan 21 Elm Ave.Hazlet

PUBLIC AUCTION

S A T U R D A Y , A P R IL ^SMATAWAN TOWNSHIP FIRST AID AND RESCt E SQI AD HI JLDl.VG

hrwiwct Avenue. OilT»>«xl. N J off Rt 3!» inspection 4-7 pm. Auction 7pm

A U C T IO N E E R : E D W A R D C O L E M A N , Coleman Galleries. !ac-N.Y.C.

Telephone of ulf 201 566-306'ESTATES OF HENRY T. HOPKINS ANr>

JOHN E. WEBSTER III AND VARIOUS OWNERS DRUG STORE ANTIQUES-pestlcs k morUrj. one cast iron; old brass NCR cash register: druggist scales with weights: unusual medicine bottle.: apothecary j.rs. FURNlTURE-beds; oak table, and dressers: Sheraton Mahogany bow front server; mission oak rocker; sectional book case: Victorian card table and sideboard PORCELAIN. CHINA. CLASS-Limoge. ' Occupied Japan". Cope­land Spode. Bristol. Hc.sey. Bavarian. Nippon. Hsviland Lin>o(c dinner set. 29 Royal Copenhagen Christmas plates from 190 -

SPORTS EQUIPMENT-Sam Snead Golf Clubs, hand tooled golf bag, punching bag and mounts, weight lifting set with bench: bongo boards, archery set. boxing gloves, baseball (loves.MISC. - Trunks: mirrors; chandeliers, pewter: silver and brass. Post Card collection in album-over 400 cards circa 1.905: bound Harper’s Weekly circa 1BOS; 18b% Springfield Rifle.Over 250 items - all cataloged

SO CENTS ADMISSION APPLICABLE TO PURCHASE

Page 9: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

S V # f Ixi i r o A ;nf*bn!>t|sfcn) v 'April 12, 1972 The Independent Page 9

Strathmore team teaching experiment wins approva l

A ir pollu tion , economy topic o f film at library

By Brian Curtis MATAW AN

A t S t r a t h m o r e Elementary School a pair of young teachers have helped to bring about a significant change in the school’s educational approach.

Starting last September, Ken Friedman and Sally Rogge com bined their talents and their classrooms in an attempt to utilize “ team teaching” techniques for their fifth-graders. Team teaching on the elementary' level is not new to Matawan, but the adaptation of a tra d it io n a l closed-type b u i l d i n g , s u c h as Strathmore, to the new concept has never been tried here before.

“There are many types of classroom organization,” says Friedman. “There is tra d itio n a l, team, open space, and a combination of any of these. Each teacher must decide what is best for him. We work on a ‘team’ a n d ‘ o p e n ’ t y p e organization. Team teaching involves using the resources of more than one teacher; ‘open’ involves the use of the entire room at all times; the children can move about freely, and use all the materials present.”

T h e atm osphere is relaxed and unrestricted. The two classrooms are divided into various subject areas and students can move back and forth as their work requires. “ Everything is shared,” says Mrs. Rogge. “None of the subjects have basic texts, instead there are a number of books covering each subject, so the student can choose which he likes best.”

The project demanded many months of planning. “We started working on this last January (1971),” says Mrs. Rogge. “ We had to research the idea, and then submit a 20-page paper to th e S t a t e E ducation Department. However, the final decision was made by Mr. Clarke.”

Sumner Clarke is the school principal, and he questioned the- idea from top to bottom before giving his approval.

“ My main concern was with how thorough the planning had been for the project,” Clarke said. “ I asked Mrs. Rogge and Friedman to submit a paper on the subject and after a series of meetings with the parents, the plan was accepted.”

D e s p i t e t h e c o m p a r t m e n t a l i z e d structure of the school the idea seems to be taking

Fire chiefs attend meeting of state group

Chiefs and ex-chiefs of Matawan Township’s Fire Department recently joined more than 600 other fire chiefs from throughout the state at the spring meeting of the State Fire Chiefs Assn. at the Playboy Club-Hotel at Great Gorge.

The chiefs considered problems associated with arson, report was received regarding pending legislation that affects firemen, and the training committee reported on educational programs being conducted throughout the state.

A program presented by Chief Thomas Carmody of the L a m b e rtv ille Fire Department discussed gas e x p lo s io n s th a t have occurred in his municipality and the operations of his department. Based on the experience gained in the Lambertville tragedies, the members were encouraged to revise their pre-fire p la n n in g fo r s im ilar emergencies.

Mrs. Sally Rogge and Kenneth Friedman, teachers at Strathmore School, team up to assist Ellen Borowka with a history problem. (Photo by A. Herman)

root, and other teachers at S t r a t h m o r e h a v e in co rp o ra ted the new techniques. Clarke said four or five other classrooms are preparing to adapt the open system.

The students like the freedom of their classroom activity. One fifth-grader said that she “enjoyed school more this year than last year,” and also felt that she was working harder.

“ Each student is treated as a separate person,” Friedman explained. The program is designed to be flexible enough so that it can be tailored to cover individual differences.”

Assignments are given out on a “ contract” basis. All the assignments for a unit are written up and given to the student when he is ready for them. Each student works at his own pace. “They know what to do,” said Friedman. “They don’t come running up during the day to find out what they are supposed to do next.”

According to Clarke the

response of the parents to the two-teacher class has been favorable. “ One child was phased out,” he said, “but that was because the parent didn’t want her child

in that environment. The child did not dislike the class. For the most part, parents like the approach because they see that their children like it.”

Sales gain announced by real estate company

Record sales and listings have been reported by S t e r l i n g T h o m p s o n Associates for the first quarter of 1972 by G.J. S t e r l i n g T h o m p s o n , president.

The real estate company, w hich has o ffices in M id d le to w n , M arlboro, Matawan and Rumson, has increased sales 18% and listings 147% over the first quarter in 1971, Thompson said.

In 1971 sales totaled more than $10 million for the four offices, according to Thompson.

The housing market, according to Thompson, has

’ 6 9 S U N B E A M ALPINE GT, 2 dr., Green, Auto, Heater, 4 Cyl., 20,742 Miles - ................$1650

’ 7 1 T O Y O T A COROLLA 2 dr. Sedan, STD. Shift, yellow

.............................$1695

’ 6 9 P L Y M O U T H FURY II I , 2 dr. H.T., Blue, V-8, Auto., P.S., Air Cond..............................$1695

• ’69 OLDS ROYALE DELTA 88 2 dr. H.T., Gold, Auto,. P.S., P.B., Air Cond............................. $2550

’ 7 0 C H R Y S L E R N E W P O R T 2 D r., yellow , Auto., - V-8, P.S., P.B., Air Cond. .................... $2795

’ 7 0 P L Y M O U T H FURY I I I 2 dr. H.T., green, air cond., P.S. ............................ $2395

’ 7 1 V A L I A N T DUSTER 2 Dr. Sport Coupe, Tan, Auto., P.S., Air Cond., 6 cyl., 9366 miles, extended warranty..............................$2695

’ 6 9 C H E V R O L E T KINGSWOOD 6 Pass. Station Wagon, Blue, Auto, P.S., P.B.,

.............................$1995’70 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER, 2 dr., H.T., au to ., 440 C .l.D . engine, full power PLU S. Green with green vinyl roof

.......................... $3495.’66 AUSTIN HEALEY S P R IT E , Conv., 4 speed, 4 cyl., radio

..............................$895.’71 GREMLIN 2 dr. sedan, white, 6 cyl., auto.

.............................$1995

I Buhler & Bitter I| CHRYSLER # PLYMOUTH |AUSTIN (j|) MGjl

I Sales 3 2 9 0 Highway 35 , Hazlet Service I1 2 6 4 -0 19 8 Established 1925 2 6 4 - 9 0 9 0 (

MATAWANIn honor of National

Library Week -April 16-22— the Friends of the Matawan Joint FYee Public Library will sponsor a program on Friday, April 21, at 10 a.m. featuring Donald M. Mohr,

Hazlet forms dancing classHAZLET

Spring dance classes for adults start April 14 and those interested are asked to register by next week with the H a z le t Recreation Commission. The course of 10 weekly Friday night lessons has been popular wi th adults seeking to improve dance skills

Instructor Eric Brown, 19 lnvin PI., studied dance in England, taught in an Arthur Murray studio and was owner-manager of the Scott Dance Studio, North Arlington, before moving to Hazlet six years ago.

P r e - r e g i s t r a t i o n is r e q u i r e d f o r t h i s n o m in a l- fe e program . Classes are held at the recreation center, Veterans M em oria l Park.

county agricultural agent, who will talk about “Air P o l l u t i o n a n d t he Economy” and show a film on the subject.

Following the program, the Friends will have an organizational meeting. The public is invited to attend.

Linda Pincus, R.N. and ASPO member, will return to “Coffee Break” this Friday at 10 a.m. to explain the Lamaze Method of C h ild b ir th Preparation.

The next 10 a.m . Tuesday session of “Coffee B re a k '’ w ill welcom e Sumner Clarke, principal of the Strathmore Elementary School, who will discuss “Young Children in the Family.”

The discussion group “Contemporary Concepts, will meet on Thursday, April 20, at 10 a.m. Hannah Green’s “ I Never Promised You a Rose Garden” will be the basis for a discussion on m en ta l d isorders and i n s t i t u t i o n s . A nyone interested in sitting in on this lively talk session or any of the other programs sponsored by the library is in v ited to attend. No pre-enrollment is required.

e x p e r i e n c e d a sharp increase.

T h e c o m p a n y ’ s marketing and advertising p r o g r a m i n c l u d e s publication of Monmouth Moods, a monthly magazine distributed to 40,000 area residents and 3,000 national companies and executives. The magazine contains articles about the county and homes the company has for sale.

S t e r l i n g Thom pson Associates covers 250 square miles in Monmouth County from Matawan on the north to Howell Township on the south and from Middletown on the east to Manalapan on the west.

International

Lawn Party.

C u t Y o u r s e l f a D e a l

B u y a m o w e r a n d

p i c k a p r e s e n t .

when you buy any IH Cub Cadet Tractor

Y o u can easily d ream u p 10 good oxcuscs n o t to c u t th e grass. W e’ ve g o t 10 good reasons w h y y o u s h o u ld . A l l free .

Just b u y any C ub C adet la w n and garden t ra c to r , and w e ’ ll give yo u y o u r c h o ic e o f one o f 10 fre e g if ts . S o m e th in g specia l to get y o u o u t on th e la w n . L ik e th e W eber B a r-B -Q k e tt le and w o rk ta b le .

The In te rn a tio n a l L a w n P a rty ends June 3 0 . S o com e on o ve r. A n d get c u tt in g .

HI. Any way you cut it*

RARITAN GARAGE inc

So. Main St. Keyport 264-0361

Page 10: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Page 10 The Independent April 1 2 ,197 2

m p

m

■ ' ■

.' ' '

Interested in Interest Rates?

We are too!■■

■y

OUR INTEREST RATE ON REGULAR SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

HAS NOT BEEN LOWERED

W e s t i l l p a y t h e h i g h e s t r a t e

a l l o w e d b y F e d e r a l R e g u l a t i o n s

WE ARE YOUR LOCAL BANK WE ARE YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK

C e n t r a l J e r s e y B a n kA N D T R U S T C O M P A N Y

with 22 offices in Monmouth County and 2 offices in Union County

M em ber Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Page 11: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

April 12, 1972 The Independent Page 15

Mark Limongello pitched a two-hit shutout yesterday as the Raritan Rockets defeated Neptune 2-0 to run their conference record to 3-0.

Limongello was nearly untouchable, allowing only two balls to be hit out of the infield. He pitched no-nit ball until the fourth inning, when with one out opposing p itch er Bob Feeney lined a single to right field.

Raritan scored the only run it needed in the top of the third inning. With two outs, John Oliver walked, and Denny Vandermark reached base on an error by the shortstop. Eddie Carroll doubled home Oliver.

Limongello was given an insurance run in the fifth when Mike Killeen blasted a home run over the left-field fence. The drive, which just did stay fair, traveled an estimated 340 feet.

T h e w in b r o u g h t Raritan’s overall mark to 3-1 and dropped Neptune to 1-3.

I t was the second consecutive two-hit shutout

for Raritan. Last Thursday, Mike Sahli blanked Brick 10 -0 .

Raritan put that game away with six runs in the fifth inning, and then added four more runs in the sixth inning.

Pat Schiavino led o ff the six-run fifth with a single, and after Steve Hagan popped up to first base, Sahli bunted for a base hit and pinch-hitter Killeen walked to load the bases.

Oliver brought home two runs with a single through the right side of the infield. Vandermark laid down a suicide squeeze bunt and was safe at first when Brick third baseman Tom Walker bobbled the ball. Carroll's grounder to second was also mishandled, accounting for the fourth run. Lou Neri then doubled to left to score two more runs.

In the next inning, Frank Agresta’s bases-loaded triple was the big blow.

Patty Chewey, Matawan’s third baseman, connects for a base hit during game against Cedar Ridge Monday afternoon. Catcher for Cedar Ridge is Michelle Lauro. Matawan won the game 11-5 to start the season on the plus side. (Photo by A. Herman)

Floor hockey popular Keyport nine loses 4-1at Lloyd Road School fa P t Pleasant Borough

The bovs at Llovd Road includes holding the hockey C jThe boys at Lloyd Road Middle School are winding up their league games of floor hockey this week. Its probably one of the most exciting activities for the boys at school.

The girls this spring may start field hockey using the same equipment, with only a change from hockey puck to ball.

The students are first taught the basic skills which

includes holding the hockey stick, dribbling the puck, passing the puck and shooting.

The length of the games usually run from five to eight minutes, depending on grade level. The boys at Lloyd are now presently involved in intramural (team) league activity.

The floor hockey activity provides fo r vigorous activ ity .

Edward Welstead (center), instructs Kevin Bulmer (left), and Douglas Braca during boxing practice at the Broad Street School Friday. Boxing sessions are being held three nights a week under the sponsorhsip of the Matawan Township Recreation Commission and the Matawan Township PBA. (Photo by A. Herman)

Key port’s baseball team yesterday dropped a 4-1 decision to Point Pleasant Borough in a D Conference game played on the Raiders home field.

P o in t Pleasant never trailed in the game, striking for one run in the first inning and three more in the fo u rth before Keyport could get on the scoreboard with a run in the bottom half of the fourth Inning.

The big blow in Point Pleasant’s four-run fourth was a triple by Jim Williams which scored Jeff Stephens and Mike Divanno. Stephens had reached base on a single, and Divanno, on an error,

Keyport scored its run on an infield hit by Don Bielek after Rich Cardoza had reached third on a three-base error by the left fielder.

The loss dropped the Keys’ record to 2-3 overall and 1-2 in conference play. Point Pleasant is 2-1 overall and 2-0 in the conference.

Monday Keyport had

Pease returns to home base

Airman Andre Pease, son of Harold R. Pease of 31 Crest Circle, Matawan, has returned to homebase at the N a v a l A i r S t a t i o n , Brunswick, Maine, after four months in Sigonella, Sicily, with Patrol Squadron 23.

C H E L I N 'X4 0 ,0 0 0 M IL E S G U A R A N T E E D

I BUY THE S BEST

99*e

This radial tire has two strong STEEL belts going

around the tire under the tread to take the torture*

of high speed driving.

GUARANTEED FOR 40,000 MILES OF TREAD LIFE!

VIRTUALLY STOPS CHANCE OF PUNCTURES AND BLOWOUTS! GIVES UP TO 10% GAS ECONO­MY!

GREATLY IMPROVES CORNER­IN G . . . BRAKING . . . TRACTION IN THE WET!

Michelin Tire Corporation's 40,000 mile guarantee covers credit or re­fund at its option, based on your original purchase price and propor­tion of mileage run.

C R O W N

H IG H W A Y 36, PORT M O N M O U T HAN AVE

7 8 7 - 7 2 7 2CORNER MICHIGAN AVE

OPEN DAILY ’TIL 8 P.M SAT, 'TIL 6 P.M,

edged Southern Regional 4-3 on the strength of a four-run rally in the third inn ing and the six-hit pitching of Keith Orr. It was the second consecutive win fo r the Raiders: LastThursday, they downed Keansburg 11-7.

Keyport scored all four of its runs against Southern Regional with two ouls. Flynn tripled to center to score Bielek, who had led off with a walk. Then Barry

McQueen beat out an infield hit to short, scoring Flynn. Hal Ackerman struck out but reached base when the catcher let the third strike get by him. McQueen took third on the play.

Ackerman then stole second, and he and McQueen both scored on a single to center by John Albrecht.

Keyport was edged by M a r l b o r o 2 - 1 l as t Wednesday.

| m ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ !

I I I I

I I I

G / im it A

FIGHTS INFLATION-

IIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIIf t

if i l h i t u s r o u p i m

PLASTICTUMBLERS

DNLi

37*P K G .N

P k g . o f 2 0

I I I I ' ID O / . N l / l

L IM IT ; 3 P k y * . c u s to m e r 's

TMURS., m i . , SAT.

0N IY

• I .in l free cotton te rry &• S t r ip s and checks ^

L IM IT : 1 !»*«•

T h J W »

FRIO N L Y

FOR DOGS, CATSGRANTS FLEA COLLAR 5

iK il lx flea* ai once*

• E ffective for months L IM IT : 2 pnr r » i l o m » f

I 1

H A Z L E TAIRPORT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

HIGHWAY 36, HAZLETOpen Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Raritan blanks Neptune on 2-hitter by Limongello

Page 12: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Page 16 The Independent April 12, 1972

Referendum on purchase of 53 acres set for April 18

School boa rd denies land bank chargeBy Richard Barclay

MARLBORODenying charges it is in

the land bank business, the B o a r d o f E du catio n announced Wednesday it will hold a referendum April 18 on the purchase of 53 acres on Wynncrest Road.

Voters have defeated two previous proposals to build a middle school on the tract.

O p p o n e n t s of planned referendum an elementary school on the site. They feel

the want built

_ they are being misled by the

board, which says it is too early to determine the type of school that is suitable for the site.

The board says it wants to purchase the land before its option expires. Under the option, the board can

buy the site for $3,300 and acre.

“ Purchasing property and putting it in a land bank is fine if we can afford it ,” said board member Norman Lunde, who voted against the referendum. “ But right now taxes are too high for

most residents to afford the additional burden as in this proposal.”

A l s o , he said, “ I personally feel the public has twice told us its feelings about the middle school. This money can be utilized much better if we take a

This is the Country Club Community.

W here you can boat and fish on m ile-long, tree-lined Shadow Lake.

K ' - I .

Tee off al your private, executive 9-hole golf course just a chip shot from your own back door.

Swim and sun at your own private pool

Play shu ffleboard w ith ne ighbors and friends on your private courts

Volley on professional, private tennis courts that are even lighted for n igh t-tim e play.

«■a i i i a i

Dock up and en joy a snack—or just re lax— in your very own lakeside boathouse.

T h is Is th e l i f e yo u ’ l l love to liv e !Imagine a year round vacation at your favorite spot with your favorite people where someone else does all the work — and you have all the fun! That's what day-to-day living is all about when you live at Shadow Lake Village.But our gracious Country Club atmosphere isn't all you'll enjoy. You'll love the whole life style at Shadow Lake Village. You can choose a condominium town house or terrace home from $31,500 to $43,000 many of which overlook the lake or golf course.How do you join this fabulous community? If one member of your family is 52 or over, just come out today and take a look around.Isn’t it about time you started l iv ing?

ShadotvjLaheVillageMiddletown. N J.

T h e C o u n t r y C l u b C o m m u n i t y b y K e v o r t t S . H o v n a n i a n

(m ta m a nt N T t R P R l S t S

Di ^ ECTr S: Route 35 to Navesink River Rd. (just north o f Navesink River Bridge); turn

T a t V ? ,,ag " P h l , R T l o u S d2 .9°400Ubbard A ~ ^ R d ' ): * " > « * « * ° ^ a d o w.test.**' ' II*

look at our needs.”His conclusion was that

M a r l b o r o n e e d s an elementary school more than a middle school.

Board President Dr. C h a r l e s O . W eb ber, how ever, claimed that residents living in a $40,000 home could easily afford t h e p r o j e c t e d $ 3 6 assessment, which would be

over a three-yearspread period.

“ For $ 3 6 you will acquire some property for a new school,” he said, adding “and that might add up to a substantial saving of money in a few years.”

One township resident, Sidney Leveson of School Road West, said the board should investigate recent changes in the zoning ordinance before scheduling the referendum.

Several weeks ago, the T o w n s h i p C o u n c i l introduced a new zoning c o n c e p t , c a l l e d “ superc luster” zoning, under which developers “ donate” parcels of land to the township in exchange for permission to build homes on lots as small as a half-acre in areas where one-and two-acre lots are required.

“I think it behooves the board to take the calculated risk that land will become a v a i l a b l e i n t h e n o t-to o -d is ta n t future,” Leveson said. “ I think the board would be in a much better position to follow this new concept instead of a land bank concept.”

Leveson also suggested that the board sell a 25-acre tract it owns adjacent to the Robertsville school and use that money to help pay for the new school, to be built when land is donated.

The board rejected Leveson’s plan, because, Webber said, “The board cannot become involved in the making of deals.”

When an ordinance establishing the supercluster concept was introduced, Mayor Morton Salkind said, “ No longer w ill this municipality be forced to go to its citizens and ask for money to buy land for schools, as they will on April 18.”

C o m m e n t e d board member Robert Granger: “ I do not want to see any misconceptions arise now that the cost of education will be diminished because of a gift from the mayor a n d c o u n c i l . O u r educational needs are now, not when some builder is ready to deed over some parcel of land. It is not just important to have the land when you need it, but also to have land in the right place.”

The property which might become available to the township under the supercluster zoning lies south of the 53-acre tract on Wynncrest Road.

Just when the land would become available to residents will not be known u n til after the council settles a lawsuit with six l a n d o w n e r s who are contesting the constitu­tionality of the present zoning ordinance.

Granger, eh, nan of the board’s building immittee, also claimed tbt. the April 18 vott th e b o a rd ’s program i f the

lefeat of ould set

build ing back a year. Even

referendum isapproved, construction of a new school would not come until 1973, which is the b o a r d ’s deadline fo r avoiding a split-session school day.

Of the $186,000 the board is seeking, $100,000 will be drawn from the board’s current expenses

.account; the other $86.,000.. Will be raised thYou'gh the sale of bonds.

Page 13: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

April 12, 1972 The Independent Page 17

T H E H BAYSH O RE ☆ * *

Independent•fr , -ir T h e W e e k l y N e w s p a p e r

Highway 34 * ☆ *North of Lloyd Road

Classified Want-AdsPHONE: 583-2210

P.O. Box 404Matawan, New Jersey

07747

Announcements Employment

F I S H E R M E N — A r e y o u in te re s te d in jo in in g F is h e rm a n ’ s C lub? I f in te re s te d in sa lt w a te r f is h in g w ith o th e r fis h e rm e n , ca ll 2 6 4 -8 7 5 1 .

Autom obile Dealers

C. D O U G LAS A L A N Mercedes Benz

Sales-S erv ice-P arts

100 Ocean Ave.,L itt le Silver 842-5353.

B U H LE R & B ITTER Chrysler—Plymouth

3 2 9 0 H ig h w a y 3 5 , H a z le t

264-0198

D R IV E A DATSUN THEN DECIDE

Washington A u to Service

3 7 0 B ro ad S t.K e y p o r t

264-1323

LIPPINA re a ’ s o n ly A u th o r iz e d

VO LKSW AG END E A LE R

R o u te 3 5 , S a y re v ille 727-130U

SH ERM AN T O Y O T A A T T E N T IO N BOYSG e t y o u r hands o n a

T O Y O T A —y o u ’ ll neve r le t go!Sales—S erv ice— Parts

US Highway 9,Freehold 431-1300

12 YEAR S OR O LD ER

Autos for Sale

'6 7 F O R D F A IR L A N E S ta tio n W agon . A ir c o n d it io n e d , new sn ow tire s , a u to tra n s ., R & H . $ 9 0 0 o r best o f fe r . Call 7 3 9 -1 3 5 9 a fte r 7 p .m .

'6 1 F A L C O N —C lean , good c o n d i t i o n , a u t o m a t i c tra n s m is s io n , $ 1 0 0 o r best o f fe r . 2 6 4 -8 9 0 8

TW O TR -3S . G o o d p ric e . C all B ill a fte r 6 o r a ll day S a t. o r S un . 5 6 6 -5 5 8 2 .

'6 8 D O D G E P O L A R A , 4 d r., H .T ., V in y l ro o f , P.S., P. B ., A ir C o n d ., A u to T ra n sm . Best o f fe r . 5 8 3 -1 9 2 3 .

'7 2 B U IC K S K Y L A R K - 2 d r. H . T . , f a c t o r y a i r , P .S . , T u rb o -h y d ro m a t ic tra n sm ., 3 50 c u . in . , V -8 e ng ine , v in y l t r im , c u s to m c a rp e tin g , cus. s te e lin g w hee l, t in te d w in d s h ie ld , w .w ., fu l l d isc w he e l covers, b u m p e r p ro te c tiv e s tr ip s , co n v e n . g ro u p dua l h o rn s , m a n y e x tra s . B rand new , fu l l d e live re d p rice p lus ta x & license fees a ll fo r o n ly $ 3 5 9 9 . C all 4 6 2 -0 8 4 7 .

'71 H O N D A C T -7 0 , M in it r a i l, e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n , best o f fe r . C all 5 6 6 -2 7 8 3 a fte r 6 p .m .

D e l i v e r T H E IN D E P E N D E N T on Wednesday afternoon. Call 583-2210.

N U R S E L P N - by e x a m in a tio n fo r Charge N urse p o s it io n , M ed ica re W in g , 11 p .m . to 7 a .m . s h if t . A p p ly in person 8 a .m . to 2 p .m ., M o n d a y th ru F r id a y . H o lm d e l C onva lescen t C en te r, H w y . 3 4 , H o lm d e l.

Pets & Supplies

MR. “ D ’S "D O G G R O O M IN G

P E T S U P P L IE S 3 W est F ro n t S tre e t

K e y p o rt A L L B R E E D S A L L S IZ E S

739-1115

S C H N A U Z E R , M ale , 5 m o n th s o ld . A l l papers. H ou se b ro ke n . C a ll 5 6 6 -7 5 7 9 .

A K C M IN I P O O D L E S - $ 6 0 . and u p . C a ll a fte r 6 p .m . 5 9 1 -9 7 1 1 .

Photo Equipment

CAM ERA REPAIRSP ro fess iona l repa irs on a n y m a k e o r m o d e l c a m e ra , in c lu d in g classic & a n tiq u e cam eras. We also b u y o ld cam eras.

H A Z LE T CAM ERA REPAIR 264-8665

Photography

WANT ADSI cover your KJ needs

Photos by Jerome

Pictures w ith a personality

566-0066 - 566-5205

B O Y S . . . 16 years o r o ld e r to h e lp m ove c o n te n ts o f s to re to n e w lo c a tio n . H a rd w o rk , good p a y . C a ll " “

\ M o re th a n 70 people responded tp th is ad in last week's IN D E P E N D E N T !

A Shou ldn 't YOU be using Independent Classified Ads to carry your message? Call 583-2210

Bicycles

Paste-up a r t is t, th re e days a w e e k (M o n d a y , Tu e sd ay , F r id a y ) , fo r w e e k ly n e w sp a p e r’s a d v e rt is in g d e p a r tm e n t. Call 5 8 3 -2 2 1 0 .

D E L IV E R Y C L E R K —P a rt-tim e p o s itio n ava ilab le fo r d e liv e ry c le rk . M ust possess N ew Jersey d r iv e r ’ s license a nd be fre e to tra v e l f ro m 6 p .m . to 1 0 :3 0 p .m . E x c e lle n t sa lary and fr in g e b e n e fits . C o n ta c t Personnel O ff ic e , B ro o k d a le C o m m u n ity C o llege , 765 N ew m a n S prings R d., L in c r o f t , N .J ., 8 4 2 -1 9 0 0 . A n equa l o p p o r tu n ity e m p lo y e r .

N E E D E D IM M ED IA TELY T o Train for S teady High Paying Jobs as

F R O N T O F F IC E MGR. C ONV ENTIO N MGR.

F O O D DIR EC T O RIn th e N a t io n ’s Leading

R E S O R T HO TELS Job openings locally

& all over the co un try T u i t io n T erm s —Jo b Guidance —

F or free in fo rm a t io n Call o r write

201-446-6068 P.O. Box 42

Allen tow n, N.J. 08501 JO H N ADAMS IN ST ITU T E

of Cherry Hill, N.J.

Boats and Marine Equipment

S A IL B O A T - P e n gu in , 12 1 t., fu l ly -e q u ip p e d , 3 h .p . o u tb o a rd . E x . c o n d . V e ry reasonab le . 5 6 6 -0 3 1 0 .

Household Goods n lM O V I N G - M U S T S E L L - C h iid re n ’s B e d ro o m set p iece - F re n c h ; L iv in g ro o m so fa - I ta l. P rov ., C o ffe e ta b le ; D esk-m a p le ; F o rm ic a k itc h e n set w ith lea f. M u s t see. C a ll 5 8 3 -1 9 2 3 .

Merchandise

S E A M L E S S G U T T E R S — Free h o m e d e l iv e r y . S H O R E A L U M IN U M , H ig h w a y 36 , West K e a nsb u rg . 7 8 7 -7 8 7 8

Riding Horses AH O R S E S F O R S A L E —3—O ne q u a rte rh o rs e , 1 th o ro u g h b re d & 1 o ld e r r id in g horse . R easonab le, 7 8 7 -8 8 5 6 .

Wanted to Buy

M

WANTEDC o in & S ta m p C o llo d io n s . G o ld , S ilve r co in s and

w ar n ick le s . P ay ing to p c u rre n t prices. E x. S ilv e r D o lla rs , $2. and up.

Joseph R om eo 7 87 5951

Classified Ads

Do it better

B M M - H I R L

Income Tax t f

L e t * E x p e r ts

p r e p a r e

y o u r

Services Special

B O Y ’S B IC Y C L E -S C H W IN N 2 0 in c h , e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n , $ 2 0 . Call 5 6 6 -6 7 8 2 .

D O N ’T L E A V E H O M E

G R A N T 'S com es to y o u w ith c u s to m -m a d e d rap e ries & s lip co ve rs . Jus t a te le p h o n e ca ll b rin g s o u r d e c o ra tin g e x p e rt w ith sam ples to m a tc h y o u r o w n c o lo r schem e, is th e re any b e tte r w ay to shop? H ere 's o u r n u m b e r—2 6 4 -7 1 7 0 . Call us t o d a y . W . T . G R A N T C O M P A N Y , Q A ir p o r t Plaza, H a z le t.

Drapery Cleaning A TLA NTIC DRAPERY

CLEANERS— Guaranteed no shrinkage— P.emoval & rehanging— Graber hardware supplied— Free pick-up & delivery

C all an e x p e r t fo r p ro fe s s io n a lly c leaned d raperies .

264-3782

L E T US A N S W E R

T H A T

N G IN G

P H O N E

F O R Y O U !

D o c to rs - Businesses R esidents

BAYSHORE TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE

24 hou rs d a lly , 7 d ays a w e«k . A ls o " w a k e -u p " service

Reasonab le ra tes291-3636

B E S T T O P SO I L . G o o d f i l l d ir t , sand, e tc . E C K E L ’S T ru c k in g , 5 9 1 -9 7 0 7 .

P R I N T I N G

JO B P R IN T IN G

Engraved w e d d in g In v ita t io n s and a nn o u n c e m e n ts . Business fo r m s a n d c a rd s . (R aised l e t t e r i n g ) . B r o c h u r e s and p u b lic a t io n s . N ew s le t te rs and c ircu la rs .

THEBAYSHORE

INDEPENDENT

CLASSIFIED RATES

3 lines — 1 w e e k — $ 3 ** O nly $2.70 if paid in 10 days.

Serving m ore than 2 0 , 0 0 0 homes

in M a ta w a n Twp., M a ta w a n Boro.,

Hazlet , Holmdel, Keyport & Marlboro.

r ----------------------i Instruction - Musicali Services Personal JUjG U IT A R LE S S O N S in m yh om o. B eg inners. E xp e rie n ce d g u ita r is t, R easonab le rates.5 6 6 -7 7 7 0 .

Nursery SchoolsP A P P V H O U R S K in d e rg a rte n &. N u rse ry S c h o o l, H ig n w a y 34, M a ta w a n . R eg iste r n o w fo r F a ll sem ester. C all 5 6 6 -0 9 3 6 .

C H IL D C A R E - M o th e r In M a taw an area w il l b a b y s it in her h o m e . C all 5 6 6 -6 9 2 7 .

M O T H E R IN H A Z L E T area w i l l b a b y s it d a ily o r w e e k ly . Call 7 3 9 -0 1 7 8 .

W IL L D O IR O N IN G y o u r hom e o r m ine . L ig h t house c lea n ing . C all 5 8 3 -4 0 8 1 .

583-2210

Income Tax

INCOME T A X RETURNS

P R E P A R E D B Y A C C O U N T A N T D ay o r E ve n in g A p p o in tm e n t In Y o u r H o m e a t Y o u r C o n ve n ie n ce . R easonab le Rates.

Call W. Driscoll 264-8540

T A X RETURNSF e d e ra l-S ta te -C ity

C O M M U T E R S M Y S P E C IA L T Y P ro fe s s io n a lly p rep a re d In y o u r h o m e o r m y h o m e /o f f ic e at v e ry reasonab le ra te s . 7 -days per w eek . C all M r. Rosen M a ta w a n .

5 8 3 -3 1 4 5 o r 2 1 2 -5 6 3 -1 2 2 4 .

Having Trouble W ith you r income Tax?

CawGene N ee d h am 's In c o m e T a x & A c c o u n t in g S e rv lc o . 16 years e x p e r ie n c e . N o charge fo r a u d its .

Call 566-4445

T A X RETURNSF E D E R A L - S T A T E - C IT Y

E x p e r t ly p rep a re d In y o u r h om e

S e rv in g M a ta w a n , H az le t, K e y p o r t & "T h e L a k e r ld g e s "

T A X ASSOCIATES 566-8837

INCOME TAX RETURNS

Expertly prepared while you wait Federal, New York State & City

More than 30 years o f friendly service Open all year-round

Will prepare returns to satisfy you and the government. My service is your happiness.Open Monday thru Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 9 :00 p.m. Saturday & Sunday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

ISIDORE FRIEDMAN23 W. M A IN STREET, FREEHOLD

462-4116 & 4 6 2 -4 1 4 0

Services & Repairs Services & Repairs

LIG H T HAULING & T R U C K IN G

C l e a n Y a r d s , A t t i c s , Basements. Move furniture. Free estimates.

787-4557

CUSTOM CABINETST h e best c u s to m ca b in e ts are

th e w o rk o f B IL L 'S .— B a th ro o m v a n itie s— F o rm ic a to p s— P aneling— Bookcases

566-1040 or 566-2913

J. & B. Painters & Decorators

E x te r io r & In te r io r P aneling , P aperhang lrfg

C eram ic F lo o rs In s ta lle d S tu c c o W o rk D one

Free E stim a te s A l l W o rk G u a ra n tee d

264-6929

O L D N E W S P A P E R S a nd b o tt le s p ic k e d u p . N o charge . Call 2 6 4 -8 2 1 3 .

S A LA N A P A IN TIN G & PAPER

H AN G IN GIn te r io r — E x te r io r

E X T E R IO R $ 1 5 0 & u p F u lly G ua ran teed

F u lly insu re d

2 6 4 -5 5 2 6 o r 583-4562

Edward J. Spahn PLUM BING &

H EATING(N .J . L ie . 7 63 )

L O W S P R IN G R A T E S on a ll H o t W ater H eaters, B a th ro o m s , R ep lacem en ts & R em odo ling .’

7 Days - 24 Hours 566-6509

BOB'SAPPLIANCE

SERVICES E L L S N E W P A R T S F O R M A N Y A P P L IA N C E S .

S A M E R E L IA B L E S E R V IC E A T R E A S O N A B L E R A T E S

R E C O N D IT IO N E D A P P L IA N C E S C om o o n d o w n

42 BROAD ST., KEYPORT 264-8818

HOMEOWNERS-CALL THE HOUSEPAINTER NOW

For your Free Estimate Before the Season's rush

M. GRASSO PA IN TIN GCONTRACTOR

In te rio r ExteriorGuaranteed Insured

Quality work with Dutch Boy Windows (Inside) $3 .00 & Up. 5 8 3 - 3 6 7 2

or 5 6 6 -5 3 7 3

S v e n y t^ iA wS&ctnLcalWhy suffer with an inadequate ly w ired home?

Call

K & RELECTRIC C O M PANY

N. J. Lie. 3 4 4 6All types of Wiring & Rewiring

Experts in Light — Heat — Power Air Conditioning — Pool Wiring & GroundingADD SAFETY - PLUS VALUE

264-6112or 264-1670

Page 14: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Pirge H? The lYtttepemtenf April1 T2> VST®

T H E ■ BA YSH O RE ^ ^ ____

IniDEPEniDEIVT. . * ^ ^ * Th« W ««kly New ap»p«r

Highway 34 * * *

w5»w$?(

North of Lloyd Road

PHONE: “583-2210

M B isiiif i

For Know-How in Reai Estate

Apartments for RentiH J i Real Estate for Sale 1 *

c c c v m iD

l - B E D R O O M : M I D D L E T O W N T o w n h o u s e w i t h a spacious l iv in g r o o m , c a rp c t , d in in g area, science k i t c h e n , a ir c o n d i t i o n in g & te r race . L o c a te d in S h a d o w L ake , an a d u l t c o m m u n i t y fo r 50 a nd over . C o u n t r y C lu b l iv in g . S w im m in g p oo l , te nn is c o u r ts , g o l f course are o n ly some o f the fa c i l i t ie s ava i lab le p r i v a t e l y , e x c lu s iv e ly f o r residents. 2 4 - h o u r s e c u r i t y in a q u ie t & b e a u t i f u l e n v i r o n m e n t . 5 6 6 -5 8 6 8 be tw e e n 5 a nd 8 p .m . o r weekends.

U N IO N BEACH $13,500

C l e a n as a w h is t le - 4 ro o m s and t> a th , e nc losed p o rc h , Baseboard n o t w a te r hea t in g . Seeing is r e l i e v i n g .

S T E R L IN G McCANNReal Esta te B ro k e r .

566-9666

Real Estate for Sale

M A T A W A N - C u s t o m - b u i l t Ranch on b e a u t i f u l l y w o o d e d q u a r te r acre. O n l y $ 3 2 ,9 0 0 . Call 5 6 6 -5 2 0 5 .

0,<sAttractive Ranch

$3 2 ,5 0 0 .

% )N e w l is t in g , loca ted in h ig h ly desirab le area. 3 b e d r o o m s , l iv ing r o o m w /d in i n g area and k i t c h e n . P len ty c lose t space, b u i l t - in bookcases a nd cab ine ts . Gas heat , c i t y sewers, c a rp o r t . A - l c o n d i t i o n f in e landscap ing . Cal l n o w . . . .6 7 1 -3 3 1 1 , d o n ' t miss seeing th is one!

Exceptional ValueTh is b e a u t i fu l 4 -b o d ro o m , 3 • y e a r - o I d b i * I e v e I isw a i t i n g fo r y o u . E xce l le n t l a n d s c a p i n g , c a r p o t i n g t h r o u g h o u t & H W B B heat are just a few o f the m a n y extras! L o c a te d in p r im e M id d le t o w n area, ask ing $ 4 6 ,9 0 0 .

Springtime Fresh3-4 b e d r o o m sp il t in M i d d le t o w n w i t h e v e ry th in g to o f fe r ! 2 4 x 1 4 l iv ing r o o m , 1 5 x 1 3 d in in q r o o m and 2 4 x 1 5 f a m i l y ro o m are Just a few o f the r o o m sues.Wal l t o w a l l ca rpe t in g , In -g rou n d s p r in k l in g sys tem and c i t y sewers. 5 m in u te _ " - - -• - ■Cal l n o w f o r a p p t . . .

sewers. 5 m in u te s to R a i l road . A s k ing $ 4 6 ,9 0 0 . , . 6 7 1 - 3 3 1 1 .

W A LK E R & W A LK E R , REALTO RS Serving 4 M u ltip le L isting Areas

OPEN 7 DAYS

Holmdel Hwy. 35 671-3311

Shrewsbury Hwy. 35 741 -5 212

Jiass JV g tm n iDOLL HOUSE

B e a u t i fu l B i - L e v e l w i t h 3 bedrooms, l'/2 baths and fu ll game room. 2-car garage, c i t y sewers and water - many, m any extras. O nly 6 years young. Y o u ’ ll have to hurry, i t ’s only $34,500.

FOR A BIG FAMILY4 large bedrooms, IV2 baths, a large living room w ith eat-in kitchen.Extra large recreation room . Wall to w a ll carpeting and appliances galore. 2-car oversized garage, well landscaped p rope rty w ith over 200 ft. frontage. A steal at $39,900.

Free brochure u p o n request.117 H ig h w a y 35,K e y p o rt 2 6 4 -3 4 5 6

* « *

:®MtDlS)WO r w ra p m c o t t o n , enc lose y o u r p h o n e n u m b e r a nd mail in an enve lope t o : 28 L I N D E N P L A C L R E D B A N K , N .J .

YOUR LOCAL PEST CONTROLLER SINCE 1949® TERM ITES • WEEDS »W \SPS• RODENTS • PIGEONS • ODORS

T e r m i t e c learances fo r REAL ESTATE t ra n sa c t ion s M e m be • NaUonff l iv N e w Jersey Pest C o n t i 01 A ssoc ia t ions

566-1122 7 4 1 -U 2 2

AncnoEmviifJC E lU V

A . A REALTORS • I N S im O R S966 Hiqhway 36 Hazlet, New Jersey •

"EXECUTIVE C O L O N IA L "B u y o f an " e r a " . Largo a i r y l i v i n g r o o m w i t h f i rep lace , f o rm a l d in in g r o o m , eat-m k i t c h e n w i t h b reak fas t n o o k and b u t l e r ’s p a n t r y . R ec re a t io n r o o m w i t h b u i l t - i n bar, 3 master-size b ed ro o m s , fu l l b a s e m e n t , 2 car de tached garage. E n t i r e h o m e has been r e d e c o r a te d , new r o o f . A l l th is in one o f the f ines t sec t ions o f B a y s h o r e area.

$ 3 3 ,9 0 0 K E Y P O R TSpac ious o ld e r h o m e loca ted in f i n e s t area o f K e y p o r t . Large l iv in q r o o m , d in in g r o o m , n e w k i t c h e n and bath , 3 large b e d ro o m s . Fu l l b a s e m e n t , a l u m i n u m sid ing , 2 20 w i r i n g . W a lk to schoo ls , s h o p p in g . C o l l 7 3 9 -2 2 2 2 .

ACTIVE B U S IN E S S AREASweet shop $ 3 1 , 5 0 0 in idea l l o c a t i o n n o w h a n d l in g , b reak fas t , lu n c h and supper t r a d e w i t h ca te r ing fa c i l i t ies , fe a tu r in g m a n y e x tras n o t l is te d . A l l in q u i r ie s w i l l be by a p p o in t m e n t o n ly . D ia l o r d ig i t 7 3 9 - 2 2 2 2 . M o ne y m a K e r .

INCOME AND B U S IN E S Sr-ast g r o w in g bea u ty p a n o r b us tn ess p lus h o m e fo r y o u rs e l f fo r a d d i t i o n a l i n c o m e . B u s in e s s fea tu res qood

Inc fu d o s p r o p e r t ^ O n ly " $ 1 7 ,9 0 0 .r °<3 e ra tl0 n ' F u " Pflc e

W ANT TO SELL?l i y us, we believe in a d v e r t is in g a n d m e rcha n d is in g y o u r p r o p e r t y . Call our o f f i c e f o r q u a l i f i e d free appra isa l . Y o u ' l l agree th a t w e b e i . e v e in o u r m o t t o :

Dedicated to Award-Winning Service”O PEN 7 D A YS 7 3 9 -2 2 2 2

N.J.'s Largest Residential Real Estate Broker "Personalized Service”

the / V •

REALTORSA d v e r t i s e y o u r L is t in g s

w i t h th e

BAYSHORE INDEPENDENT

. , j 5 P 3 - 2 2 1 0 ,

AGENCYAll ads apply to qualified buyers

$ 2 3 ,50 0 2 Car Garage Alum. Siding

L o o k in g f o r e lb o w ro o m ? T h is f o u r b e d r o o m has th a t a n d m o r e - l a r g e l iv in g r o o m , d i n i n g a r e a , fa m i ly -s ize k i t c h e n , den, enc losed f r o n t p o rc h , t i le d b a th , spac ious lo t , washer, d r y e r , d ishwasher , freezer, p lus m a n y ex tras .

*ALL BUYERS $ 3 ,6 0 0 DOWN

$ 2 5 ,9 0 0 Rancher

Fenced YardB r a n d n e w l is t in g —three S p a c i o u s b e d r o o m s , Ta r ru l y .s i z e l iv in g r o o m , ^ a t - j n k i t c h e n , rec. r o o m ,

*' base m e n t , t i l e d b a th , 9 a r a g e , w a l l t o w a l l c a r p e t i n g , p l u s m a n ye * t r a s ,

* V A NO DOWN * F H A $ 1 ,5 5 0 DOWN

* M o rtqages based on 7% in t» 'r „ . ,m o n t h l y p a y m e n ts ) 8 .0 8 % ann i . - f , year . (3 6 0d o w n p a y m e n t fo r V e ts . ) p e rc e n ta g e rate . (N o

h a z l e t c o m m u t e r s D e lig h t

d in i n g r o o m , lo c a t io n r o o r n ' garage. N ice

' w a l k t o t r a in , buses$33,900°reS- W° n,t last at

P O P |K A G E N C Y85 Fleetwood D *H az le t

Real Estate Wanted

W A N T A C T IO N ? L is t y o u r h o m e f o r sale w i t h V a n 's A g e n c y . Cal l 5 6 6 -1 8 8 1 o p e n 7 days. S t r a th m o r e P r o f e s s i o n a l Bldg. , M a ta w a n .

2 6 4 -8 4 4 2

/ /^ /

<__________ / 4

p A U i

C A H IL L

Built For A HeapOf Living (Hazlet)

F o u r - b e d r o o m R a n c h , s c i e n c e k i t c h e n , f u l l basem en t and u t i l i t y r o o m . Large lo t & fenced in. A lso n ice c a rp o r t .

o n l y $ 3 2 ,9 0 0 .

jjffj

Middletown Undeniably Lovely—

Infinitely LivableC u s t o m R anch , 3 bed ro o m s , sc ience k i t c h e n and fo r m a l d in in g , f u l l b a s e m e n t a nd a t ta ch e d garage. Ready rose garden, l i lacs a n d m a n y sh rubs and f r u i t trees. W o u ld y o u bel ieve o n l y $36 ,50 0 ?

A Rare and Serene Beauty! Holmdel!

D es igned t o d e l ig h t , b u i l t t o e n d u r e and p r iced to please! 5 -b e d r o o m c u s to m C o lo n ia l , 2*/j ba ths , fo r m a l d in in g and fu l l f i n i s h e d basem ent and 2-car garage. S i tu a te d on a p ic tu resque p r o fe s s io n a l l y landscaped acre p lu s lo t .

o n l y $ 6 2 ,5 0 0

H o m e s f r o m $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 to $ 3 0 0 ,0 0 0 —

Paul T. CahillRealtors 5 6 6 -0 0 0 1M ultip le Listings

"W hen yo u 've tried the rest — try the best!

A t th e 'P ira te Ship' Route 35

CliffwoodBeach

1 h i GatttMjo t / M O M l S / ’

S t e r l i n g T h o m p s o n

A s s o c i a t e sREALTOR

1

0 4 O ffices to Serve You

# 3 M u ltip le Listing Services

# O v e r 800 Homesto Choose From

We handle Levitt, Y o rk tow n , and W h ittie r Oaks resales. Many other homes starting in low 3 0 's w ith over 800 choice dream homes to select from . S terling Thompson Associates can make your dream come true. Easy financing and good assumptions.

Open 7 Days a Week Call or w rite today fo r our co lo r brochure and a copy o f " M o n m o u th M oods" our County oriented magazine.

MARLBORO OFFICEC o r n e r o f R o u t e 5 2 0 & Route 79

9 4 6 —4 4 6 6A Division of Berg Enterprises. Inc.

Page 15: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

April 12, 1972 The Independent Page 19

Classified Former Matawan resident filmsT H EK IR W A NC O M P A N YR E A L T O R SIN S U R O R S

r /i'fu M r/w Y / f t/finCampbell's Junction Belford

Unbelievable, but true!J u s t l is te d th is e legant c o lo n ia l s ty le h om e fea tu re s 3 large b e d ro o m s , 2 fu l l b a th s , m o d e r n s c ie n c e k itc h e n , fo rm a l d in in g rm . w ith beam ed c e ilin g , huge liv in g ro o m w ith fire p la c e and m o d e rn fa m ily s ty le d e n . P r o f e s s i o n a l l y landscaped 1 5 0 ’ lo t a t o n ly $ 2 9 ,8 0 0

A irp o r t Plaza. H w y 36

Th° Whole Thing $ 3 2 ,0 0 0B et >ou d id n 't d ream y o u ’d get th e w h o le th in g at th is lo w p r ic e ? Im p r e s s iv e s p ra w lin g ra nch w ith ta ll s h a d e t re e s , c o m p le te ly fenced p ro p e r ty , 3 large b d r m s . , eat in k itc h e n , pan e lle d fa m ily rm . O n ly 12 years y o u n g in e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n . D o n ’t pass th is u p . C all n o w .

/ j a / d75 Newm an Springs Road

English Tudor $ 3 0 ,0 0 0Just l is te d , an e n o rm o u s 4 b d rm ., 2 ba th Eng lish T u d o r lo c a te d on p a rk l ik e lo t in f in e re s id e n tia l area c lose to e v e ry th in g . Large eat in k itc h e n , fo rm a l d in in g ro o m and large c o m fo r ta b le liv in g ro o m . O h yes! I t has a fu l l basem ent. T h is is a M U S T SEE h o m e . C all to d a y .

160 H w y. 36. W. Keansburg

Dutch Colonial $30 ,9 0 0Larqe fa m ily w a n te d fo r th is w e ll k e p t f iv e b ed r. D u tc h C o lo n ia l. E x c e lle n t lo c a tio n , large lo t , tw e n ty tw o f t . l iv in g ro o m , fo rm a l d in in g ro o m , c o u n t ry s ty le eat in k itc h e n , h o t w a te r o il heat. C o n v e n i e n t t o a i l tra n s p o r ta t io n . L o w taxes. Call to d a y fo r a p p o in tm e n t.

THE KIRW AN COM PANY

<3M e m b er o f 3 M u ltip le U s I in# S e rv ic e s /A d s S u b ­jec t to G ov 7. A p p ro va l Q u a lified B u y e r s / T erm s A p p ro x ./C a ll u s c o l l e c t '

marine life to boost ecology drive WB sellA fo rm er M ataw an

! resident is campaigning for I marine ecology by showing 1 local organizations what it is he’s trying to save.

I Lee Ward, a native of Cliffwood, has filmed two

(underwater movies off the Jersey shore as part of an effort to stimulate interest in local marine life. Ward has been showing the films to students and civic and service organizations.

“When I was 13 or 14,” Ward says, “you could catch anything in Raritan Bay that you could catch in the ocean. I remember walking in water waist-deep off Cliffwood and fishing with scoop nets.”

P o llu tio n has made fishing off Cliffwood Beach futile, and Ward would like to prevent the destruction of marine life in other parts of the Jersey -shore, as well as restore the polluted areas.

One of his films follows the construction of an artificial reef by 16-year-old Mike Golda, a Boy Scout

Former chief convalescing

HOLMDELJoseph Phillips, former

chief of police, is now at the H o lm d e i Convalescent C e n t e r , R o u t e 3 4 , recovering from a massive stroke which paralyzed his left side.

P h i l l i p s was t h e township’s police chief and constable for 24 years. Prior to 1965 he was a one-man force. Phillips retired last August on his 65th birthday and was succeeded by his son. R. Bruce Phillips.

T h e f o r m e r ch ie f suffered a mild stroke early in January. He was out of the hospital only a short time when he suffered the more massive stroke Jan. 27. He was being treated in Riverview Hospital, but Wednesday he was moved to the convalescence center for continued therapy. He can receive visitors.

Newagencyformed

A new real estate firm has been formed by Harvey M. Bowtell and Theodore A. Bierwirth, to be known as Bowtell Associates, Inc. at 2 H ighw ay 3 6 , A tlan tic Highlands.

Bowtell, vice president of the firm, has been actively engaged in the real estate business since 1932 when an office was taken over from James Carroll on First Avenue, Atlantic Highlands. In 1955 his office was move to State Highway 36 where he has been active in both residential and commercial sales.

Theodore Bierwirth, new p re s id e n t o f B ow tell Associates, brings to the firm 15 years of service as a marketing manager with the U.S. Gypsum Co., New York City. A graduate of Upsala College, he received his B.A. degree in Business Administration.

Bowtell Associates is a member of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, the Monmouth County Board of Realtors, Red Bank Area Multiple Listing Service and is in the process of joining the N o r t h e r n M o n m o u t h Multiple Listing Service.

WHELANPONTIAC BUICK

WHELAN PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. \ 1 Q 7 0 k-Route 9 and Craig Rd. ' *4Freehold, New Jersey ^

1972 BUICK <

IT'S AS

EASY AS

A.B.C.

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! AS LOW AS

- ALL FOR ONLY -$ 3 5 9 9

- e1972

BUICK SKYLARK 2 door Hardtop

... D e live re d p lus ta x & license fees *

Lm.'V ■

b u ic k s SAVE, F a c to ry a ir , p o w e r stee ring ,

✓ tu rb o n y d ra m a t ic tra n sm iss io n , 350 C u b ic inch V -8 eng ine , v in y l t r im , c u s to m c a rp e tin g , cu s to m s tee ring w hee l, t in te d w in d s h ie ld , w h ite w a lls , fu l l d isc w hee l covers, bum p e r p ro te c tiv e s trips , conve n ien ce g ro u p . (D u a l h o rn , t r u n k lig h t, a sh tra y l ig h t, g love b o x lig h t, m ir ro r m ap lig h t.)

Add your own Special Dress Up Packages

A M R A D IO S 7 3 .0 0V IN Y L T O P 9 9 .0 0U N D E R C O A T 3 5 .00S H O W R O O M G L A Z E 4 5 .0 0 L IS T 2 6 2 .0 0N O W S A L E P R IC E $ 1 5 0

A M -F M R A D IO V IN Y L T O P = 9 -0 0U N D E R C O A T 3 5 .0 0S H O W R O O M G L A Z E 4 5 .0 0 L IS T 3 2 4 .0 0N O W S A L E P R IC E 5 1 7 5

5

V v A-

^ NOW

A M -F M S T E R E O $ 2 3 3 .0 0 V IN Y L T O P 9 9 .0 0U N D E R C O A T 3 5 .0 0S H O W R O O M G L A Z E 4 5 .0 0 B O D Y S ID E M O L D IN G 2 4 .0 0 L IS T 4 3 6 .0 0N O W S A L E P R IC E $ 2 4 5 *

4 6 2 -0 8 4 7

a p p ro p r ia te ly enough, “Michael’s Reef.”

The other film is the “Treasure of Shark River Inlet.” Visibility during the shooting of the film was sometimes as great as 100 feet, Ward says.

Ward became interested in diving when he was a teenager in Cliffwood.

“The whole gang I hung around with was interested in snorkeling,” he says, “ But only a few of us stayed with it.”

W a r d has w o r k e d o c c a s i o n a l l y as a professional diver, but selling advertising space for a daily newspaper is his

full-time occupation.For awhile, spear fishing

was a hobby, but he discovered that taking p h o t o g r a p h s of fish provided more enjoyment than killing them.

Last year, he flew to the Bahamas for a visit to an underwater habitat called Hydro-Lab.

His local films were made w ith the help of the Bayshore Loyal Order of the M oose, Keansburg. Organizations can arrange to have Ward show the films and speak by contacting the Loyal Order of the Moose or Ward (988-3231).

LEE WARD

working on his Eagle Scout project. Mike is the son of Eugene Golda, owner of Downes Pontiac, Main Street, Matawan.

“ He built the reef VA m i l e s o f f M o n m o uth Beach,” says Ward, “and it was a very successful project.”

The reef was built of automobile tires.

“Car tires don’t pollute the water and they don’t deteriorate,” Ward explains. “The ocean floor around here is sandy, and there are no natural reefs. I t ’s just like a desert. Some fish need ree fs— l o b s t e r s , eels, porgies.”

Young Golda dropped the first tire on Memorial Day last year, Ward says, and “ I photographed lobsters on Labor Day.

After a reef is built, microscopic marine life is attracted to it. “The life cycle starts gradually with plankton,” says Ward.

Fish who feed on the plankton are then attracted to the reef, and larger fish, who feed on the smaller ones then arrive.

Young Golda used 1,000 tires for his reef. Ward’s film of the project is entitled.

Agency picks Cavalli as its Man of the Year

Frank Cavalli of Keyport has been named Man of The Y e a r a t T he Roger H o l l a n d e r A g e n c y , S h r e w s b u r y . In the insurance business only a little over one year, he has sold over $1.5 million in life insurance. He has led the firm in production, agency development, contributions to th e a g e n c y and community relations.

As the recipient of The P e n n - M u t u a l Q u a lity Award, Cavalli’s photo will appear in Sports Illustrated on May 1 as well as in forthcoming issues of Time Magazine and The Wall Street Journal.

He was Man of the Month for four consecutive months last year. He is a m e m b e r o f T h e Penn-Mutual Leader Club, Closers Club, Presidents Club and Million Dollar Club.

Cavalli came to the insurance field after 15

successful years in show business. His desire for “a normal family life” sparked the change.

A Marine Corps veteran, Cavalli began his career in the entertainment field as a drummer and later branched o u t i n t o s i n g i n g , choreography and comedy.

A t T h e H o lla n d e r Agency, he is in charge of R e c r u i t m e n t a n d Development.

Active in Monmouth County Kiwanis, he is area coordinator for Monmouth County and is active in that o r g a n i z a t i o n ’ s d r u g education program.

Poleski returns to hom e base

Lt. (j.g.) David A. Poleski of 2 White Birch Lane, Holmdei, has returned to homebase at the Naval Air Station, Brunswick, Maine, af ter fo u r months in Sigonella, Sicily.

&WHAT A DEAL

ATSAL’S M ATAW AN

SUNOCO

TIRE SALE

BF GOODRICH POLYGLAS BELTED

WHITEWALLF78x 14 - 23.95 *G78x14 - 24 .95 *1178x14- 26.95 *G 7 8 x l5 - 26.95 *H 78x15- 2 8 .9 5 *

Plus F.E.T.

VWEXTRA SPECIAL

560x15 BLK 12.95 Plus F.E.D.

LARAMIE 4 PLY NYLON

BLACK65 0 x 1 3 - 12.95 *735x14 - 15.95 *775x14- 1 6 .9 5 *825x14- 17 .95*775x15- 1 6 .9 5 *825x15 - 17.95 *

Plus F.E.T.

IN S T A N T C R E D IT

utH iua E4NUU

FKI| W HEEL B A LA N C IN G !

W ith This Coupon :j {W ith A ny Tire Purchasesi I

more...’Cause we sellfor less!

★ i t ★ ★ ★ ★

3 0 D A Y 1 0 0 %

MECHANICAL G UAR AN TEE

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

'68 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER, full power and air conditioned, stock No. B 4 4 8

$1695'70 FORD TORINO, 2 door, 6 cyl., auto, trans., stock No. U 4 9 6

$1595’7 1 C H E V R O L E T CH E V E L L E , 8 cyl. a u t o , t r a n s . , air conditioned, stock No. U 4 8 3

$ 2 4 9 5'69 FORD LTD Squire Wagon, 8 cyl. auto, trans., air conditioned, stock No. B 505

$ 2 2 9 5'66 MUSTAND, Hard T o p , 6 cyl., auto, trans., stock No. U 5 1 9

$1095'69 VOLKSWAGON 2 door, 4 cyl., 4 speed trans., stock No. U 523

$1295'69 VALIANT, 4 doors, 8 cyl., auto trans., air conditioned, stock No. U 531

$1495'69 PONTIAC TEMP., 8 cyl., 4 speed trans., stock No. U 5 6 8

$1395' 6 8 R A M B L E R AMBASSADOR, 8 cyl., a u t o t r a n s . , a i r conditioned, stock No. U 614

$1295'70 FORD GAL. 5 00 8 cyl., auto trans., air conditioned, stock No. B 6 2 2

$ 2 2 9 5

TOMS FORDH w y . 35K e y p o r t

264-/600

Page 16: SER VIN G M ORE TH A N 20,000 HOMES IN H A ZLE T, M ATAW ... · 1972-04-12  · P U B L IC m a t a w a n jo ,n ^ aIN sl-ReeT m a ta w a n , N. j- 07747 T H E *B A Y S H O R E ☆

Page 20 The Independent April 12, 1972

Holmdel students discuss high school drug problem

By Maryann Graham HOLM DEL

Although it has been estimated that up to half of the 340 students at Holmdel High School are e i t h e r u s i n g o rexperimenting with drugs, the Board of Education and the Township Council’s recently appointed Drug Abuse Committee say the problem isn’t as serious as it sounds.

The two groups met last Wednesday night to discuss ways of turning the high school students off to the drug scene. The meeting was one o f many scheduled for the two groups.

T h e D r u g A b u s e Committee was appointed after the arrest of 95 high school students on drug charges.

While Board officials claim only a small portion of the high school students are involved in drugs, the students tell a different story. Sharon Jensen, 17 Mount Drive, a freshman at

the high school, said after the W ednesday n ight meeting that between 100 and 150 students in the high school either use or experiment with drugs. '

Drugs are easy to obtain at the high school, which this year has only the freshman and sophomore grades, Miss Jensen said.

Drug traffic, she added, has slowed down because many of-the students “have turned informer.”

S o p h o m o r e Paul Zoubeck, 10 Heather Hill Way, told the board and drug abuse committee that drug education should be started in the fourth and fifth grades.

“ By the time you get to high school, it’s too late,” he said.

He urged the board members to expand the h i g h s c h o o l’s sports program , concentrating mainly on interscholastic sports. Those students presently involved in the sports program, he said,

tend to stay away from drugs because they develop respect for their bodies.

The youth also pointed o u t th a t the sports p r o g r a m s should be expanded for girls, too. More girls in the high school, he said, are involved wi th drugs than boys because th e ir sports programs aren’t as large.

Both Miss Jensen and Zoubeck agreed that the high school’s present drug abuse program should be revamped and should be taught by teachers the students trust.

The girl students are unable to relate to the present teacher in the drug abuse program, Miss Jensen said.

“She reported some kids to the office (for using drugs) and you just can’t trust someone who does that,” she said.

T h e h igh schoo l’s present drug abuse course, explained Superintendent of Schools Jan C. ter Weele,

is taught as part of a health education course.

“ I t ’s pretty much a fac tua l type program,” explained Richard White, high school principal.

The schooL also has a drug counseling program which is held during the students’ activity periods. That program, White said, is voluntary.

But Miss Jensen said the high school’s drug program is uninteresting.

“Just to sit and listen to people say drugs aren’t any good. . . .it isn’t good,” she said. “ We’re sick of hearing that i t ’s no good !"

“Neither the teachers nor I are satisfied with what w e ’ re doing in the program,” said White.

M i s s J e n s e n a n d Zoubeck said the students want a place to go where they can talk about their drug problem s among themselves.

Drug abuse unit plans roundtable discussionsHOLM DEL

Follow ing a wave o f high school student arrests on drug charges, the H olm del D rug Abuse Committee has in itia ted a program aimed at prevention and which goes beyond the specific problem o f drugs, it was announced Monday by Douglas Franke, committee chairman.

The com m ittee w ill present a roundtable discussion group comprised o f local teenagers, police, teachers, a psychologist, and parents. The program, entitled “ A Discussion o f Youth Today: H ow They Are Growing U p” w ill be held 8 p.m. A p ril 19 at the Intermediate School, C raw ford ’s Comer Road. The audience w ill be encouraged to participate, Franke said.

“We should focus our a ttention on prevention and understanding o f what the problem really is, ” Franke said. “ I t is worthwhile to talk to one another and to try to cross the generation gap getting at certain points that are needed to create an understanding. ”

The discussion w ill be unrehearsed, Franke said, and w ill not be aimed a t a specific area but “ w ill be a p r e t t y g e n e r a l d is cu ss io n c e n t e r e d on communication. ”

The discussion group is to serve as a model, Franke explained, fo r sim ilar neighborhood groups.

“We are encouraging parents and youths to attend,” Franke said. Anyone who can appreciate the value o f this type o f discourse. We then hope they w ill want to try i t in their neighborhood.”

1969 TOYOTA Corona, 4 Door Sedan, Radio, Heater, Two to Choose

SAVE

1968 FORI) MUSTANG Convertible, V-8 A utom atic, Power Steering

SAVE

1969 PONTIAC 2 Door, Hard Top, 4 Speed,Power Steering, Green

SAVE

1969 MERCURY Marquis, V-8 A utom atic, Air Conditioned, Yellow

SAVE

1969 C hnsle r New Yorker4 Door, Hard Top, Full Power, Air C onditioned, Black Vinyl Interior, White

SAVE1970 VOLKSWAGEN

2 Door, Radio, Heater, OrangeSAVE

1969 FIAT 124 S p ider Convertible, Radio, Heater, 5 Speed, Yellow

SAVE1966 DODGE DART

4 Door Sedan, Radio, Heater, Blue

SAVE

1969 DODGE MON ACO Hard Top, V-8 A utom atic, Air C o n d i t io n e d , Vinyl Top, Yellow

SAVE

1970 BUICK SKY LARK V-8 A utom atic, Radio, Heater, Dark Green,

SAVE1970 PONTIAC

C atalina, Hard Top, Full Power, Vinyl Top, Radio, Heater

SAVE1970 SIMCA 1204

2 Door, Sedan, Radio, Heater, 4 Speed, Red

SAVE

1969 MERCURY MARQUIS V -8 A u to m a t ic , P o w er Steering, Vinyl Top, Burgundy

SAVE1971 OPEL

2 Door Hard Top 4 Speed Radio Heater Silver

SAVE1969 FORD GALAXY 500

2 Door Hard Top, V-8, A utom atic, Air Conditioned, Vinyl Top, Green

SAVE1971 OPEL

2 Door Station Wagon DeLuxe A u to m a tic T ra n sm iss io n , Radio, Heater, Color Red

SAVE

1970 Volkswagen Transporter n Wagor

Shite.S tation Wagon DeLuxe, Blue -

SAVE

1970 PLYMOUTH 4 Door Sedan, 6 Cylinder, A utom atic, Power Steering, Blue

SAVE1971 MERCURY MONTEGO

4 Door Sedan V-8 A utom atic, P o w e r S l e e r i n g , A i r C onditioned, Black Vinyl Top, White

SAVE1971 FIAT 850

Spider Convertible, 4 Speed,Radio, Heater, Red

SAVE1970 International Zt Ton

Pickup 6 Cylinder, Slick,Radio, Heater,

SAVE1970 OLDSMOBILE CUTLAS Supreme 2 Door Hard Top, V - 8 A u t o m a t i c , A ir C o n d i t io n e d , Vinyl Top,

1968 CHEVROLET Camaro, 2 Door, Hard Top, V -8 A u to m a t ic , P o w e r Steering, Gold

SAVE

1966 Pontiac Bonneville4 Door Hard Top, Full Power, Air Conditioned, Vinyl Top, Leather Interior, While

SAVE

3 3 4 M A M STREET M A T A W A N

Power Steering, RedSAVE

1970 FORD TORONADO GT V -8 A u t o m a t i c P o w e r Steering, Color Green

SAVE

1966 PONTIAC TEMPEST 2 Door Sedan, 6 Cyl. Stick, 1 Owner Car, Green

SAVE

1968 VOLKSWAGEN Do

Mar one2 D o o r S ta t io n Wagon,