summit?* erall - digifind-it · shilling, $25; mrs. florence t. towner, $25, and mr. and mrs....

20
Does Downtown Need More Parking? —'•—•-• »»»>iuv»Tll I ^ WV* IV1WI W I UllMllM i "Yes", Say 72% in JC Poll Residents who drive block alter block in downtown Summit searching for a parking space will be interested in the results of a survey made by the Summit Jaycees. Approximately 72 percent of the people contacted fell the city needed additional parking downtown while 28 percent felt no more was necessary. But when it came to financing, 70.3 percent did not want tax money spent for more parking while 29.7 percent did, if necessary. The construction of tier-parking found 54.2 percent in favor while 45.8 percent were opposed. Of the latter, 17.4 percent wanted no tax money spent while 61.7 percent were con- cerned about appearance, 5.2 percent were worried about crime and 15.6 had various other reasons. As for a location for tier parking, there was no one spot greatly favored over another. Maple and Deforest received some votes and Grand Union some but other areas only a few. An interesting point was lh»t 58.3 percent of those surveyed did not feel that more parking would increase traffic while 41.7 percent did. The families interviewed shopped in Summit 1,090 times per week. Only 21.6 percent shop on Saturdays with 78.4 percent visiting stores duringthe week. About 34 percent knew the Kemper lot was free un Saturday. The distance normally walked when shopping Summit was: one block, 19.7 percent; two blocks, 37.4 percent; three blocks, 26.7 percent; four blocks, 11.7 percent; five blocks or more, 4.4 percent. When shopping at a Mall 56.9 percent felt they walked more than (Contlnu.donP.ii* 2) MMT's"I Do!,I Do!," Reopens at8:30 SUMMIT?* l ib *«*, ERALL Serving Summit Since 1889 VOL. 88, NO. 6 L'T.I " ' " ' " " ' * * " " ' " " " " " " " ' THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976 $7 A YEAR 'Important Appointment", Mayor Says ... Lawyer Fills School Board Slot Route 78 Hearings Awaited Residents Mass'Ammunition' James H Clark <if S7 Portland road has been by .Lucy Meyer Concerned residents are laying the groundwork for public hearings on I-78's missing link scheduled for June 23, 29, 30 and July l. The corridor hearings will be at Governor Livingston Regional High School, Berkeley Heights from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and from 7 p.m.to11 p.m. Planning to speak are members of Impact-78, a citizen's group. "Not only will various < members of our group speak at the public hearings, but they are busy now passing out bumper stickers and literature," June Leatherbee, chairman, said in an interview. "We feel certain areas weren't covered well in the Environmental Impact Statement (E1S). We feel they haven't given proper value to the Watchung Reservation's meaning to Summit and Union County, and by the same token have underestimated the devaluation the highway would cause to residential Votey is Reelected GOP Chairman Edwin S. Votey of Canoe Brook parkway, a former member of Common Council, was reelected chairman of the Republican City Committee at the an- nual reorganization meeting held Monday night at City Hall. / Also reelected were Mrs. Eileen Totten of Springfield avenue as first vice chairman and Elwood Cornog of Colony drive as second vice chairman. Others elected included Mrs. Norene Cahill, secretary; Mrs. Jiacondina DiMuccio, assistant secretary; John H.C. Anderson, treasurer; Martin Rubashkin, assistant treasurer; Benjamin Scheppe, county representative, and Miss Elizabeth Cox, alternate representative to the county. Dominick DiMuccio was elected sergeant-at-arms, while Allen Fullerton was elected parliamentarian. Chairman Votey selected Richard Poole as associate chairman in the first ward, while he picked Mrs. Lenore (Contlnuw* on P*«t 20} property along it." Her group is also unhappy with methods the Depart- ment of Transportation (DOT) used in analyzing traffic patterns and projections for the Summit area. "They've projected a great increase for traffic on Glenside avenue even after 1-78 is built. This highway is being designed for 1995. The EIS said by 1995 industry will have moved out here because of 1-78 so traffic on local streets by that year will be back to what it is now. I would be shocked if they get this road built by 1980. So they are telling us they are wrecking this section of Summit for 15 years of convenience," Mrs. Leatherbee said. The DOT considered it an advantage that over the long term 1-78 would increase traffic by bringing more industry to Summit. "But I think speeding up urbanization is what this road will do, and Summit will lose the special quality tConrtnuwJ on P*fla 21 James B.Clark -sn^rd to the Board of Education by Mayor Frank H. I^ehr, it was announced at a meeting of Common Council Tuesday night. Mr.Clark will fill the seat left vacant by the resignation last April of Gerald Hale when he was appointed Councilman-at- 1-arge. Mr Clark will fill Mr. Halo's unexpired trm pnding February 28, 1977. Mayor Ijehr, in filling the vacancy, said the ap- pointment "will probably be one of trie most important ones 1'ii ever make. For the last several months, there has been a movement In the city to change the Board of Education from an ap- pointed to an elected one According to Mr. Lehr, Mr. Clark™ is pro-appointed board. His brother-in-law Robert Kelly of Fernwood road, is among members of a committee entitled Board Elections Stimulate Thoroughness (BEST) which advocates an elected board. A partner in the law firm of Yauch, Peterpaul and Clark of Springfield, Mr. Clark received his bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering from Notre Dame, in 1956 (Continued Of* P»fl« 2) Wolfenbarger Elected Dem Head Robert J. Wolfenbai-ger of Harvey drive, was reelected chairman of the Democratic City Committee during the annual organization meeting held Monday night. Elected first " vice- chairman was Mary-Jane Cross of Colonial road. Malcolm Schwarli of HUD Gives Verbal OK for Housing Woodland road was elected second vice-chairman and Mrs. Leda Perselay of Hsdeau avenue, third vice- chairman. Dr. Rodger Winn of Pembroke road was elected secretary, and John W Atherton oT Bellevue avenue was nam«d to the post of by Lucy Meyer With federal approval this week of 30 units of low- income housing for Weaver street, the controversy between John Lager, owner, and the Housing Authority begins to heat up. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) gave verbal approval of the "financial feasibility and Camp Fund at $2,238 The 28th annual Summit Herald Fresh Air Fund passed the $2,200 mark this week with $320 in new donations. As of Tuesday, the amount collected to date totals $2,2%. At this time last year when the fund was in its seventh week, donations stood at $2,975. Needed to provide the 100 local boys and girls with camp vacations this year is $4,000 or, another $1,800. "We are beginning to cut back on the number we originally planned to send because of the decrease in donations," Norman E. Rauscher, fund president said this week. Last year donations to the fund reached $4,764 and were received from over 100 local persons and organizations. Among donors this week was the Playhouse Association, an annual contributor, which gave $50. Other donations, in the order received, came from Mr. and Mrs. Ernest S. Hickok, $10; Dr. Luther S Roehm, $25; Martin S Lewis, $25; Mr. and Mrs. William J. Pyle, $10; Rev. and Mrs. Robert H. Stephens, $10; Harold P. Kurzman, jr., $30; James A. Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one for $70 and another for $25. The Fund operates on a nonprofit basis and makes no solicitations nor conducts any mail appeal. Those who receive vacations arc usually boys and girls who otherwise would remain in the city during the summer because of family financial dif- ficulties or family problems. Contributions should be forwarded to the Summit Herald, 22 Bank street, Summit, New Jersey 07901. Checks should be made payable to the "Summit Herald Fresh Air Fund." Gala Fair July 3 Hundreds of booths will grace Springfield avenue July 3, when the Bicentennial outdoor fair opens at 10 a.m. in Summit. From the east endtothe west, fair goers will be treated to exuberant entertainment. Carrying the nation's growth as a theme, colonial decor wil punctuate each booth. In the center of the fair, a Moonwalk will be sltuated-a bubble to bounce "For the Ride of Your Life." Snow cones and cotton candy will be available In the Promenade and sandwiches and cold drink* will be sold at each end of the avenue. Hot dogs will be sold at the Kress booth. Festivities will continue until 4 p.m. with a rain date of July 10. Craftsmen, artists, plant shops, business firms and service organizations who would like to reserve a booth are asked to call John B. Sayre, Executive Director, Chamber of Commerce as soon as possible at 277-6800. architectural plans" for the Weaver street and Morris avenue property. Written documents confirming the telephone conversation arc expected next week. An annual contributions con- tract with HUD will cover the total principal and in- terest cost on the $13 million undertaking. Most of the land is owned by Lager and Hurrell, the orchid-growing firm, but a strip belongs to the Balish family. The price offered by HUD in the past was reportedly about half what the owners thought they could get in the market place William L. Machmer, Housing Authority chair- man, called the recent HUD decision a "key step by the federal government to financially assist Summit in (Continued an P*qp 20) Mr. Wolfenbarger said the Democratic City Committee plans an "aggressive" campaign in Summit during the fall and hinted that a full slate of candidates would be fielded for the November election. Last week Alan T. English of Drum Hill defeated James E. Nickelson of Prospect street ina Primary contest in Ward 2. Mr. English will meet GOP incumbent Watson B. Smith, {Continued onf *g« 2! AS OVER S,M0 WATCHED - The Summit Fire Department was out in lorce Saturday during the cliy'i Bicentennial parade that marched from Summit High School to Memorial Field. Onthe left, (he department'* oldest truck, dating back to the I9J0», Is shown. Bearing the sign Chemical Engine Co., Number 1, the vehicle wai restored by member* of the Fire Department. KoDowing the parade the truck was •warmed by >iHinfslcrs st Memorial Field, See page 4. for a tad pace of parade photograph* (Judy Preedman photo). WiUy to Sp.ak H«ro on "T&E" B> Bruce Kntcht State Sen. Stephen B. Wiley, the author of the still unfunded "Thorough and Efficient" school code, will speak and respond to questions at the Summit High School auditorium next Wednesday, June 23, at 8 p.m. The State Senator was invited to speak here as a PRESENTING THE CLASS OF 1926 - Members of the Summit High School Class of 1926 areshown during their recent.50th anniversary reunion held at Canoe Brook Country Club. Traveling the furthest distance to attend was Miss Anna Fay, (fourth row, third from left and to the left of C. Baldwin White) whoflew in from California. Representing the class was Mrs. Eleanor Hanle Gray of New England avenue, (back row, third from left) who was vice-president of her class in 1926. Those on hand and pictured above are: front row: Sylvia Frumkln Slgal. Dorothy Day Stoll, Bernicc Houston Strauss, Betty Kberlein Brown, Blanch Klcmser Weaver, Mildred llurgmiller Shaffer, Robert Peterson; second row: Nancy Baum Melgs, Jeanette Palmer Rocco, Irene Cullis Baker, Katherine Rummlcr, Hoxanne Eberlein, Katherine Connelly Tlghe, Matthew Zeigner: third row: Charles Syvret, John Sayre, Carl Plcozzl, C. Baldwin White, Morrison Hubbard, Jr., Robert Cain; fourth row: Jane Clark Sisco, Mildred Stout Mayer, Anna Fay, Sarah Ahearn Rennie, Phillips V, Dean, Laura Spence Darby; back row: Leslie Cole, George Rogers, Eleanor Hanle (iray, Lester Genung, Douglas McGrorgc. (Fred Rowe pholo) result of interviews that he recently granted the Summit Herald. His address is being sponsored by the PTA-PTO Presidents' Council. Wiley's appearance here will be just one week prior to the Supreme Court's deadline for full funding of T&E with the threat of a statewide closing of schools. The Morris County Senator will explain why he feels that T&E will benefit Summit. He strongly sup- ports increased community input for public education. Speaking of his address next week Wiley said, "T*E is not well understood by the public; it my hope that the discussion on Wednesday will promote a better un- derstanding." (Continued O/i (•»»• 20) Council Adopts Capital Budget Looking tothe future, Common Council Tuesday night adopted a capital budget from 1976 until 1981. Councilman James E. Lovett said the capital budget was for all the departments in the city "for planning and budget pur poses. Each item also has to be approved in the year the money will be spent," he said. The Councilman invited the public to attend the meeting between Council and the ad hoc committee on 1-78on June 23 at 7:30at City Hall. "The ad hoc com- mittee will review their findings on the effects of the highway with the Council that night. Then the next OPEN Sundays 9.00 to 12:30 for your convenience. Brown's Hard ware, 460 Spring*icld Ave . Summit. night, the public is invited to attend ana give their feelings on the routing of 1 78 to the Council." A resident, Clark Brooks, made an impassioned plea to the Council to change its mind and grant his request for rezoning Elmstreet. The Planning Board had turned him down in May, and the Council was preparing to write him they agreed with the Planning Board. "Elm is a one-block street running from the station to the junior high school and is currently zoned R-10. It doesn't abut any neigh- borhood but is an isolated area separated by major thoroughfares," he said. He owns three of the Victorian- style houses, approximately 75 years old and is buying a fourth. (Continuftd on P|g« 2) In Other Action In other action Tuesday night, Common Council: • Approved an ordinance to provide funds to construct new sidewalks in the city's business district. • Granted a livery license to the Tri-City Cab Co. • Introduced an ordinance to change some regulations pertaining to the Fire Department. Apublic hearing has been scheduled for July 20 • Approved all local liquor licenses effective July 1, 197fi through June 30, 1977 • Awarded bid to Turnpike Ford Truck Sales for purchase of a dump truck costing $14,168. • Approved a resolution controlling vehicle use at the Transfer Station and the disposal area. • Approved a resolution to construct a second floor apartment in the Wisner House on the Arboretum grounds. ART'SCAMERASHOP 383 Springfield Avenue Summit. New Jersey 07901 t;3'7427 XefcOX COPIES WHILE UWAIT Fletcher Line. Merc. Satsun Daily Rentals^ Leasing 68 River St., Summit . 277-0234

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Page 1: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

Does Downtown Need More Parking?—'•—•-• » » » > i u v » T l l I WV* IV1WI W I UllMllM i

"Yes", Say 72% in JC PollResidents who drive block alter

block in downtown Summit searchingfor a parking space will be interestedin the results of a survey made by theSummit Jaycees.

Approximately 72 percent of thepeople contacted fell the city neededadditional parking downtown while 28percent felt no more was necessary.But when it came to financing, 70.3percent did not want tax money spentfor more parking while 29.7 percentdid, if necessary.

The construction of tier-parkingfound 54.2 percent in favor while 45.8percent were opposed. Of the latter,17.4 percent wanted no tax moneyspent while 61.7 percent were con-cerned about appearance, 5.2 percentwere worried about crime and 15.6had various other reasons.

As for a location for tier parking,

there was no one spot greatly favoredover another. Maple and Deforestreceived some votes and Grand Unionsome but other areas only a few.

An interesting point was lh»t 58.3percent of those surveyed did not feelthat more parking would increasetraffic while 41.7 percent did.

The families interviewed shoppedin Summit 1,090 times per week. Only21.6 percent shop on Saturdays with78.4 percent visiting stores during theweek. About 34 percent knew theKemper lot was free un Saturday.

The distance normally walked whenshopping Summit was: one block, 19.7percent; two blocks, 37.4 percent;three blocks, 26.7 percent; fourblocks, 11.7 percent; five blocks ormore, 4.4 percent.

When shopping at a Mall 56.9percent felt they walked more than

(Contlnu.donP.ii* 2)

MMT's"I Do!,I Do!," Reopens at8:30

S U M M I T ? *lib

*«* ,

ERALLServing Summit Since 1889

VOL. 88, NO. 6 L'T.I" ' " ' " " ' * * " " ' " " " • " " " " ' J

THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976 $7 A YEAR

'Important Appointment", Mayor Says . . .

Lawyer Fills School Board SlotRoute 78 Hearings Awaited

Residents Mass'Ammunition'

James H Clark <if S7Portland road has been

by .Lucy MeyerConcerned residents are

laying the groundwork forpublic hearings on I-78'smissing link scheduled forJune 23, 29, 30 and July l.

The corridor hearings willbe at Governor LivingstonRegional High School,Berkeley Heights from 10a.m. to 4 p.m. and from 7p.m. to 11 p.m. Planning tospeak are members ofImpact-78, a citizen's group.

"Not only will various< members of our group speakat the public hearings, but

they are busy now passingout bumper stickers andl i t e r a t u r e , " J u n eLeatherbee, chairman, saidin an interview.

"We feel certain areasweren't covered well in theEnvironmental ImpactStatement (E1S). We feelthey haven't given propervalue to the WatchungReservation's meaning toSummit and Union County,and by the same token haveunderest imated thedevaluation the highwaywould cause to residential

Votey is ReelectedGOP Chairman

Edwin S. Votey of CanoeBrook parkway, a formermember of CommonCouncil, was reelectedchairman of the RepublicanCity Committee at the an-nual reorganization meetingheld Monday night at CityHall. /

Also reelected were Mrs.Eileen Totten of Springfieldavenue as first vicechairman and ElwoodCornog of Colony drive assecond vice chairman.

Others elected includedMrs. Norene Cahill,secretary; Mrs. JiacondinaDiMuccio, ass is tantsecretary; John H.C.Anderson, treasurer;Martin Rubashkin, assistantt r e a s u r e r ; BenjaminS c h e p p e , c o u n t yrepresentative, and MissElizabeth Cox, alternaterepresentative to thecounty.

Dominick DiMuccio waselected sergeant-at-arms,while Allen Fullerton waselected parliamentarian.

Chairman Votey selectedRichard Poole as associatechairman in the first ward,while he picked Mrs. Lenore

(Contlnuw* on P*«t 20}

property along it."Her group is also unhappy

with methods the Depart-ment of Transportation(DOT) used in analyzingtraffic patterns andprojections for the Summitarea.

"They've projected agreat increase for traffic onGlenside avenue even after1-78 is built. This highway isbeing designed for 1995. TheEIS said by 1995 industrywill have moved out herebecause of 1-78 so traffic onlocal streets by that yearwill be back to what it isnow. I would be shocked ifthey get this road built by1980. So they are telling usthey are wrecking thissection of Summit for 15years of convenience," Mrs.Leatherbee said.

The DOT considered it anadvantage that over the longterm 1-78 would increasetraffic by bringing moreindustry to Summit.

"But I think speeding upurbanization is what thisroad will do, and Summitwill lose the special quality

tConrtnuwJ on P*fla 21

James B.Clark

-sn^rd to the Board ofEducation by Mayor FrankH. I ehr, it was announced ata meeting of CommonCouncil Tuesday night.

Mr.Clark will fill the seatleft vacant by theresignation last April ofGerald Hale when he wasappointed Councilman-at-1-arge. Mr Clark will fillMr. Halo's unexpired trmpnding February 28, 1977.

Mayor Ijehr, in filling thevacancy, said the ap-pointment "will probably beone of trie most importantones 1'ii ever make.

For the last severalmonths, there has been amovement In the city tochange the Board ofEducation from an ap-pointed to an elected one

According to Mr. Lehr, Mr.Clark™ is pro-appointedboard. His brother-in-lawRobert Kelly of Fernwoodroad, is among members ofa committee entitled Board

Elections StimulateThoroughness (BEST)which advocates an electedboard.

A partner in the law firmof Yauch, Peterpaul and

Clark of Springfield, Mr.Clark received his bachelorof science degree inmechanical engineeringfrom Notre Dame, in 1956

(Continued Of* P»fl« 2)

WolfenbargerElected Dem Head

Robert J. Wolfenbai-ger ofHarvey drive, was reelectedchairman of the DemocraticCity Committee during theannual organizat ionmeeting held Monday night.

Elected first " vice-chairman was Mary-JaneCross of Colonial road.Malcolm Schwarli of

HUD Gives Verbal OK for Housing

Woodland road was electedsecond vice-chairman andMrs. Leda Perselay ofHsdeau avenue, third vice-chairman.

Dr. Rodger Winn ofPembroke road was electedsecretary, and John WAtherton oT Belle vue avenuewas nam«d to the post of

by Lucy Meyer

With federal approval thisweek of 30 units of low-income housing for Weaverstreet, the controversybetween John Lager, owner,and the Housing Authoritybegins to heat up.

The Department ofHousing and UrbanDevelopment (HUD) gaveverbal approval of the"financial feasibility and

Camp Fund at $2,238The 28th annual Summit

Herald Fresh Air Fundpassed the $2,200 mark thisweek with $320 in newdonations.

As of Tuesday, the amountcollected to date totals$2,2%. At this time last yearwhen the fund was in itsseventh week, donationsstood at $2,975.

Needed to provide the 100local boys and girls withcamp vacations this year is$4,000 or, another $1,800."We are beginning to cutback on the number weoriginally planned to sendbecause of the decrease indonations," Norman E.Rauscher, fund presidentsaid this week.

Last year donations to thefund reached $4,764 andwere received from over 100local persons andorganizations.

Among donors this weekwas the PlayhouseAssociation, an annualcontributor, which gave $50.

Other donations, in theorder received, came from

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest S.Hickok, $10; Dr. Luther SRoehm, $25; Martin SLewis, $25; Mr. and Mrs.William J. Pyle, $10; Rev.and Mrs. Robert H.Stephens, $10; Harold P.Kurzman, jr., $30; James A.Shilling, $25; Mrs. FlorenceT. Towner, $25, and Mr. andMrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15.There were also twoanonymous donations, onefor $70 and another for $25.

The Fund operates on anonprofit basis and makesno solicitations nor conductsany mail appeal.

Those who receivevacations arc usually boysand girls who otherwisewould remain in the cityduring the summer becauseof family financial dif-ficulties or family problems.

Contributions should beforwarded to the SummitHerald, 22 Bank street,Summit, New Jersey 07901.Checks should be madepayable to the "SummitHerald Fresh Air Fund."

Gala Fair July 3Hundreds of booths will grace Springfield avenue July

3, when the Bicentennial outdoor fair opens at 10 a.m. inSummit.

From the east end to the west, fair goers will be treatedto exuberant entertainment. Carrying the nation'sgrowth as a theme, colonial decor wil punctuate eachbooth. In the center of the fair, a Moonwalk will besltuated-a bubble to bounce "For the Ride of Your Life."Snow cones and cotton candy will be available In thePromenade and sandwiches and cold drink* will be soldat each end of the avenue. Hot dogs will be sold at theKress booth.

Festivities will continue until 4 p.m. with a rain date ofJuly 10.

Craftsmen, artists, plant shops, business firms andservice organizations who would like to reserve a boothare asked to call John B. Sayre, Executive Director,Chamber of Commerce as soon as possible at 277-6800.

architectural plans" for theWeaver street and Morrisavenue property. Writtendocuments confirming thetelephone conversation arcexpected next week. Anannual contributions con-tract with HUD will coverthe total principal and in-terest cost on the $13million undertaking.

Most of the land is ownedby Lager and Hurrell, theorchid-growing firm, but a

strip belongs to the Balishfamily. The price offered byHUD in the past wasreportedly about half whatthe owners thought theycould get in the marketplace

William L. Machmer,Housing Authority chair-man, called the recent HUDdecision a "key step by thefederal government tofinancially assist Summit in

(Continued an P*qp 20)

Mr. Wolfenbarger said theDemocratic City Committeeplans an "aggressive"campaign in Summit duringthe fall and hinted that a fullslate of candidates would befielded for the Novemberelection.

Last week Alan T. Englishof Drum Hill defeatedJames E. Nickelson ofProspect street in aPrimary contest in Ward 2.Mr. English will meet GOPincumbent Watson B. Smith,

{Continued on f *g« 2!

AS OVER S,M0 WATCHED - The Summit Fire Department was out in lorce Saturdayduring the cliy'i Bicentennial parade that marched from Summit High School toMemorial Field. On the left, (he department'* oldest truck, dating back to the I9J0», Isshown. Bearing the sign Chemical Engine Co., Number 1, the vehicle wai restored bymember* of the Fire Department. KoDowing the parade the truck was •warmed by>iHinfslcrs st Memorial Field, See page 4. for a tad pace of parade photograph* (JudyPreedman photo).

WiUy to Sp.ak H«ro on "T&E"B> Bruce Kntcht

State Sen. Stephen B.Wiley, the author of the stillunfunded "Thorough andEfficient" school code, willspeak and respond toquestions at the SummitHigh School auditorium nextWednesday, June 23, at 8p.m.

The State Senator wasinvited to speak here as a

PRESENTING THE CLASS OF 1926 - Members of theSummit High School Class of 1926 are shown during theirrecent.50th anniversary reunion held at Canoe BrookCountry Club. Traveling the furthest distance to attendwas Miss Anna Fay, (fourth row, third from left and tothe left of C. Baldwin White) who flew in from California.Representing the class was Mrs. Eleanor Hanle Gray ofNew England avenue, (back row, third from left) whowas vice-president of her class in 1926. Those on hand andpictured above are: front row: Sylvia Frumkln Slgal.Dorothy Day Stoll, Bernicc Houston Strauss, BettyKberlein Brown, Blanch Klcmser Weaver, Mildred

llurgmiller Shaffer, Robert Peterson; second row:Nancy Baum Melgs, Jeanette Palmer Rocco, IreneCullis Baker, Katherine Rummlcr, Hoxanne Eberlein,Katherine Connelly Tlghe, Matthew Zeigner: third row:Charles Syvret, John Sayre, Carl Plcozzl, C. BaldwinWhite, Morrison Hubbard, Jr., Robert Cain; fourth row:Jane Clark Sisco, Mildred Stout Mayer, Anna Fay, SarahAhearn Rennie, Phillips V, Dean, Laura Spence Darby;back row: Leslie Cole, George Rogers, Eleanor Hanle(iray, Lester Genung, Douglas McGrorgc. (Fred Rowepholo)

result of interviews that herecently granted theSummit Herald. His addressis being sponsored by thePTA-PTO Presidents'Council.

Wiley's appearance herewill be just one week prior tothe Supreme Court'sdeadline for full funding ofT&E with the threat of astatewide closing of schools.

The Morris County

Senator will explain why hefeels that T&E will benefitSummit. He strongly sup-ports increased communityinput for public education.

Speaking of his addressnext week Wiley said, "T*Eis not well understood by thepublic; it i» my hope that thediscussion on Wednesdaywill promote a better un-derstanding."

(Continued O/i (•»»• 20)

Council AdoptsCapital Budget

Looking to the future,Common Council Tuesdaynight adopted a capitalbudget from 1976 until 1981.

Councilman James E.Lovett said the capitalbudget was for all thedepartments in the city "forplanning and budget purposes. Each item also has tobe approved in the year themoney will be spent," hesaid.

The Councilman invitedthe public to attend themeeting between Counciland the ad hoc committee on1-78on June 23 at 7:30 at CityHall. "The ad hoc com-mittee will review theirfindings on the effects of thehighway with the Councilthat night. Then the next

OPEN Sundays 9.00 to 12:30 foryour convenience. Brown's Hardware, 460 Spring*icld Ave .Summit.

night, the public is invited toattend ana give theirfeelings on the routing of 178 to the Council."

A resident, Clark Brooks,made an impassioned pleato the Council to change itsmind and grant his requestfor rezoning Elm street. ThePlanning Board had turnedhim down in May, and theCouncil was preparing towrite him they agreed withthe Planning Board.

"Elm is a one-block streetrunning from the station tothe junior high school and iscurrently zoned R-10. Itdoesn't abut any neigh-borhood but is an isolatedarea separated by majorthoroughfares," he said. Heowns three of the Victorian-style houses, approximately75 years old and is buying afourth.

(Continuftd on P|g« 2)

In Other ActionIn other action Tuesday night, Common Council:• Approved an ordinance to provide funds to construct

new sidewalks in the city's business district.• Granted a livery license to the Tri-City Cab Co.• Introduced an ordinance to change some regulations

pertaining to the Fire Department. A public hearing hasbeen scheduled for July 20

• Approved all local liquor licenses effective July 1,197fi through June 30, 1977

• Awarded bid to Turnpike Ford Truck Sales forpurchase of a dump truck costing $14,168.

• Approved a resolution controlling vehicle use at theTransfer Station and the disposal area.

• Approved a resolution to construct a second floorapartment in the Wisner House on the Arboretumgrounds.

ART'SCAMERASHOP383 Springfield Avenue

Summit. New Jersey 07901t;3'7427

XefcOX COPIES WHILE U WAIT

Fletcher Line. Merc. SatsunDaily Rentals^ Leasing

68 River St., Summit .

277-0234

Page 2: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGE 2 THE SUMMIT IIKHALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 17. IV76

Rights CommissionTo Meet on Monday

The June meeting of theCivil Rights Commissionwill be held on Monday at 8p.m. at City Hall.

Mrs. Jan Matistic, af-firmative action officer forthe Summit public schoolsystem will discuss af-firmative action in the city'sschools. The public is in-vited to attend.

Among items to be

discussed are complaint ofemployment discrimina-tion, complaint ofdiscrimination in feesagainst single individualsand discussion of whether totake up the matter ofp o s s i b l e r e l i g i o u sdiscrimination.

At its May meeting, theCommission heard a reporton a meeting by its housing

committee with the SummitArea Board of Realtors. TheBoard of Realtors state thataccording to its rules anyone coming into the office ofany member of the board isshown the whole book oflistings, and they are thentaken to visit homes in theprice range they request.Members of the board donot, they indicated,discriminate against blacksor hispanics. Further,prices are listed for. everyhouse, and they are notraised if the person seekinga home is black or hispanic.

COLUMBIA FURSDry Cold

FUR STORAGEFUR VAULTS ON THE PREMISES

277-2953»Repairing 'Remodeling • Refining 'Cleaning

FINE FURS AND FABULOUS FAKES ON HANDALSO CUSTOM MADE

71 UNION PL F.mlly of Furrltn Sine, lit* SUMMIT, N.J.

Clark(Continued from Ptga 1)

and was graduated from St.John's University school oflaw in 1959.

The new appointee holdsmembership on the StateChamber's Committee onPersonnel and LaborRelations and the labor lawsections of the New JerseyState Bar Association andAmerican Bar Association.

He is also a member of theEssex County Bar

Association and theIndustr ia l Re la t ionsResearch Association aswell as being oh the Bars ofthe states of New Jersey,New York, U.S. DistrictCourt of N.J. and U.S.Supreme Court.

In his early forties, Mr.Clark has been a lecturer onlegal matters for theAmerican ManagementAssn., N.J. State Chamberof Commerce, N.J.

' Manufacturers' Assn., N.J.Publishers' Association andother state-wide, as well asnational associations'

Residents of Summit for10 years, he and his wife,Patricia, have four children,ages 14, 12, 10 and 7.

Active locally as Chair-man of the Summit RentAdvisory Board, 1975 and1976, coach for five years inthe Summit Junior BaseballLeague and trustee ofClearwater Swim Club, he isalso a member of St.Teresa's Church andBeacon Hill Cub.

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WHY SHOP AT

AhatttB ?Tremendous Selection

a. % million dollar inventory

Complete Storea. Virtually everything a man or boy could possibly want from jeans

through suits can be found at Adams.

Wide-range of sizesa. Boys' sizes 8 through 20 including slims and huskiesb. Men's sizes 36 through 48 - shorts, regulars, longs and extra

longs,c. Tall man shirts are always in stock.

Name brandsa. Almost all major brands are carried.

Sales Personnela. Pleasant, knowledgeable employees to assist in selection and co-

ordination of merchandise.

Alterationsa. Prompt alterations available by two onpremises tailors,b. Free lifetime alterations given on all merchandise (as long as you

own it, we will alter it at not charge),c. All alterations including blue-jeans are free.

Exchanges and Returnsa. All exchanges and returns handled promptly and courteously,b. We give refunds.

Free tiea. Free tie given with the purchase of every suit or sport coat and

slack (except when on sale).

Free Charge Accountsa. Adams charge available (never any interest or service charge),b. American Express, Master Charge and BankAmericard also avail-

able for your convenience.

Packaginga. All merchandise attractively boxed (no charge),b. Free zipper garment bag given with all suits or sport coats pur-

chased.

Personal guaranteea. Adams personally guarantees all merchandise sold (even sale

merchandise) and will take back any merchandise that you feelis not satisfactory.

Convenient Hoursa. Adams is opened 63 hours per week:

Monday, Thursday,'Friday, 9-9Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday 9-6

Convenient Parkinga. Adams has ample front and rear parking.

3fcwtltl#1275 Springfield Ave., New Providence • 665 0800

STILL SAYING "1 DO!" — Haying to a packed houselast Friday through Sunday, Judl Adams and MitchL a w r e n c e will continue their musicalexpertise and cake cutting at the SummitPlayhouse tonight through Sunday, June 17-20, asMetropolitan Musical Theatre concludes "I Do! 1 Do!",tracing SO years of a couple's marriage through songs,quick costume changes and strong characterizations!Tickets are available at the door if space permits, orfrom the Summit YMC'A, 273-3330 (William Schnellerphoto)

Parking

Rt. 78(Contlnukd from P|Q« 1)

most of us came here for,"she pointed out.

Mrs. Leatherbee said hercommittee found the E1Shad minimized the resultingair pollution, noise, waterrunoff, water pollution andflooding which Summitwould receive after themissing segment is built. Ifresidents want to see forthemselves, she suggestedwriting Helen Neuhaus,director of CommunityInvolvement, 1035 Parkwayavenue, Trenton, N.J. 08625for a copy and the technicalsupport documents which goalong with it. Copies are alsoin the Summit PublicLibrary.

"We are trying to con-vince the DOT they'veoverlooked the most obviousway which is to improveexisting highways and usethem to their maximum. Westill don't feel they've done aproper evaluation of Wat-chung Bypass and usingRoute 22," she declared.

43 bouses goIn Summit approximately

43 houses will be destroyedif the ridge route is chosen.No homes are in the path of

(Contlnu«d tfom »

percent drive, 9.4 percent walk and2.3 percent take (he minibus. Driverspark within one block, noted 35.7percent, with 37.5 percent parkingwilhin two blocks, 13.9 percent withinthree blocks and 12.8 percent withinfour blocks.

The Jaycee survey completed 308interviews, representing 1,033 people,which is 4.4 percent of Summit'spopulation. Of those, 2.18 people perfamily drive and 6.5 percent work inSummit

The results of the survey weretabulated by the Management Ser-vices department of CIBA-GEIGY.

they did in Summit, but 43.1 percentwalked less. Parking problems havecaused 31.6 percent not to shop in aparticular store. However, 51 percentsaid that parking problems had neverstopped them from shopping inSummit at all with 49 percent sayinglack of parking had.

Of those who said parking problemshad caused them not to shop inSummit at all, 26 percent felt theproblem existed all the time, 12percent felt the problem existed mostof the year except during the sum-mer, 29 percent at Christmas-and 30percent during sales days

When shopping in Summit 85.9

Alternate A, also called theoriginal alignment. AHright-of-way has been ob-tained throughout BerkeleyHeights and Summit for A,except for the WatchungReservation, according toJack Wouters, Division ofProperty and Relocationwith the DOT.

"Original A could berushed through if a decisionis made for that route," Mr.Wouters said. "With theridge route it would taketime to acquire the homes.Approximately 11 houses onBaltusrol road, 14 houses onStockton road, 14 on OakRidge avenue and four onRotary drive will be taken inSummit. If there's anymodification, these would besubject to change. We justdrive by and our rough notesdon't include value. We tryto project value a year inadvance."

Mr. Wouters made clearthat the DOT staff is notallowed to give theirpreference of a route at thistime.

"Until the commissionermakes his decision aboutwhich alignment will bechosen, we are prohibited bylaw from taking sides. Thisis how they get an impartialanalysis on each route," hesaid.

After the corridorhearings in June and July, aDOT committee will

Capital(ContinuMj t'oni Pgg* 1)

"The long-term outlookfor Summit is theseproperties will go downhillas current income fromthem is not sufficient tomaintain them properly."He pointed out Elm is not forfamilies with children astraffic is heavy. He wantsElm rezoned so he can buildmulti-family housing for themiddle-income group.

The Planning Boarddenied his request as it saidhe would build for upper-income tenants and therewas a need for middle-income rentals in Summit."That's like Catch 22," hedeclared.

Council made no decisionbut will discuss it in con-ference.

ANNOUNCINGOUR EXPANSION SALE

SAVINGS OF 10-50%Big things are happening at the New Zeigner's. In thisbicentennial year and the 64th year of our existence,Zeigner's announces with pride a major eipansion ofout showroom area.

The new display floors will permit us to add top-qualityContemporary furnishings to our offering of the best inTraditional and tarty American design for whichZeigner's has long been known.

To celebrate our growth and to make room for the newmerchandise, we are inviting everyone to join us at aGreat Warehouse Sale where savings of 10%to 50%canbe enjoyed. All floor motels also will be substantiallyreduced.

Cash & Carry. If delivery is required, due to the sub-stantial reductions in price, there will be a nominalcharge.

Special For Dad

25% Off

All In Stock Barcaloungers

Starting at M99C100

; ofv-/SUMMIT

siftru/fft' ~- < srr/rtut ,/'Jtp

tabulate all letters and oraltestimony and will come upwith a tentative recom-mendation for the conWmissioner. Then Com*missioner Alan Sagner willmake a decision on thealignment which goes toWashington where theultimate decision is made.

"It may be sent back asimperfectly documented,and then we start all overagain," Mr. Wouters said."That's what happened inthe first EIS. If it's not sentback, the Bureau of FederalRoads will give their ap-proval, and we'll be free toproceed with building thealignment."

After the alignment ischosen, design hearings willbe conducted in com-munities involved, ac-cording to DOT officials.

Dems'Continued from Paga 1)

jr. in November. It has beenhinted that Mr. Nickelsonwill run against incumbentGOP Councilman-at-largeGerald Hale in the faUelection. No Democraticname has surfaced as yetwho might face Mrs. JanetWhitman, Republicancandidate in Ward 1.

County GOP

Elects ResidentMrs. Hannah S. Rauscher

of Midland terrace, amember of the RepublicanCity Committee and itsformer alternate delegate tothe county organization,was elected secretary of theUnion County RepublicanCommittee Tuesday night atthe annual organizationmeeting held at RosellePark.

Reelected officers of thecounty group include Mrs.Barbara Claman of West-field, chairman, andRichard Hat/ield of ScotchPlains, vice chairman.Other officers are Mrs.Loretta Andrukite ofHillside, second vicechairman, and WilliamPalermo of Linden,treasurer.

S'J t * fVJL f

for,f 1

HOUSEWARESGIFTS

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IOP the Dicentennial,two bright ideas.

One lor you, another for somebodyyou care a lot about. All in 14 karat

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Use one of our convenient charge plans orAmerican Express • BanKAmencard • Master Charge

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' The Mall • Short HillsMonlclair • Wayne • Paramus • Woodbriage

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Page 3: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

TIIK SUMMIT HERALD, THURSDA V, JUNE 17,1976 PAGE 3

Car Mishaps Injure Threethree person* were in-

jured In two-automobileaccidental here last week.

On Thursday, DeiireeDagner, 5, of John streetwas taken to OverlookHospital for treatment ofinjuries after the was struckdown by a car at Broad andNorth streets. The driver of

Nalr to Direct

Summer ChorusG.L. Nalr, music director

of the Summit Chorale, hasbeen named to conduct thethird season of the DiamondHill Summer Chorus.

Membership is open toamateur singers who wish to •prepare and perform choralmusic during summermonths. First rehearsal isscheduled for Wednesday,June 23, at 8 p.m. in theDiamond Hill MethodistChurch, Berkeley Heights.Subsequent rehearsals willbe on Tuesday and Thur-sday evenings, culminatingip a public performance onJuly 24.

To become a member, callManager Robert Duffy, 464-1899.

the car was Identified asJerry Russo, 3f, of Beavuolravenue. • 4

Police said the accidentoccurred alter Mr. Russohad halted for a stop sign onNorth street and beganmaking a left turn intoBroad street when the childapparently ran in front ofthe car and was hit beforethe car could stop.

Investigating the accidentwas Patrolman Praizer.

Two persons were taken toOverlook Sunday afternoonwhen the car they weredriving went out of controland struck a tree at Division

Holyok* Gives

Local B.A.

avenue and Lavina court.Taken to Overlook for

treatment of bruises andabrasiom were FrancesFletcher, 17, of Dorchesterroad, driver of the car, andLeslie Bitting, 16, of War-wick road.

The mishap occured whenthe car made a turn intoDivision avenue from OldSpringfield avenue andstruck a tree. Both toldpolice that they didn'tremember how the accidenthappened but a member ofthe driver's family said thebrakes had a tendency tomake the car swerve whenthey were pressed.

Inves t iga t ing wasPatrolman Gerald Holmes.

Secretory UnitBarbara R. Biglow,

S t l e r c o f B iowndQf

Mrf, A w a r d s G r a n t sFernwood road, wasgranted a B.A. degree, cumlaude, by Mount HolvokeCollege, South Hadley,Mass., at commencementexercises held May 30.

Miss Biglow had beenactive with the collegechoir, which toured centralEuorpe earlier this year.

SEIKO QUARTZFOR DAD AND GRAD

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Thunday until 9, Sunday 12 -4:30 for browning

At the June 2 meeting ofthe Summit Chapter of theNational S e c r e t a r i e sAssociation presentation ofthe Barbara E. MildrumScholarship Awards wen1

presented to three Summitaren students by BarbaraIlinlz, chairman of thescholarship award Com-mittee.

Klaine Accorsy. daughterof Mr. and Mrs, AnthonyAccorsy of Summit, willgraduate from Summit HighSchool today. She will useher scholarship to attendThe Katharine GibbsSecretarial School whereshe will pursue the one-yearadvanced secretarialcourse. Her career goal is toU-come a legal secretary.

Joanne Colangelo .(laughter of Mr. and Mrs.I-ewis Colangelo of Summit,will also graduate fromSummit High today. Withthe scholarship she willattend ;t one-yearsecretarial course at TheKatharine (iibbs SecretarialSchool where she willprepare for a career as anexecutive secretary.

Ann Marie Picone,daughter of Mr. and MrsAndrew Picone of NewProvidence, will graduatefrom New Providence HighSchool With this scholar-ship award she will attendihe Berkeley SecretarialSchool for one year when1

she will Bturiy to r*ccom*' 4>legal secretary

Art Show Prli«For her watercolor,

"Barrels," Gladys Russellof Summit won first prize inthe professional category atthe 7th annual Franklin ArtsCouncil Outdoor Art Show inEast Millstone, N.J. lastSunday.

Methodist Clerics Renamed

GOLDEN YEAR AWARDS—Established In June, 1*26. the Summit Rotary ClubScholarship Fund recently awarded $4,000 in scholarships for its 50th year to seniors inNew Providence and Summit High schools. Shown at the ceremony for Summit (left toright) Donald P. Braender. Rotary president; Michael Jahl, who will attend Klog'iCollege. N.Y.; TUmanGioblg, Cornell; Tim Boyd, Rensselaer Polytechnic: Jeff Graham.Williams; BradCabibi, Georgia Tech; Richard Gross, College of Holy Cross: and SummitHigh Principal Dr. Donald R. Geddb. (Howf photo)

Sharing Workshop ToList Course Offerings

Two local Methodistministers were reappointedto their respective pulpits,and a third was newlynamed to a Summitmethodist church during the119th aesaion of the NorthernNew Jersey Conference ofthe United MethodistChurch at Drew Universityon June 6.

Reappointed to a fifth'year as pastor of the FirstUnited Methodist Church ofSummit was Rev. Dean A.Lanning, while Rev. R.Douglas Merrian of OakesMemorial Methodist Churchwas renamed to a secondyear. Rev. Steven D.Hussalesi was newly ap-pointed as associateminister of the First United

BIcen CalendarListed on the official

Summit BicentennialCommittee Calendar for thisweek are:

June 19 - BicentennialCelebration - Summit AreaChapter, American NationalRed Cross Presentation ofawards to the winnrs of bestessays on "Our Nation'sHeritage."

Methodist Church.Rev. Clark D. Callender, a

former pastor at OakesMemorial Church wasnamed to a fifth year asminister of the WayneUnited Methodist Church,while Rev. Mathias S.Torgersen, Jr., formerpastor of the NewProvidence MethodistChurch, was reappointed toa fourth year as pastor ofthe Westwood UnitedMethodist Church. Rev.

Norman W. Walz, anotherformer pastor of OakeaMemorial Church wasrenamed to a second year asassociate minister of theMorrlatown UnitedMethodist Church.

Rev. George F, Jackson, adormer pastor at the FirstUnited Methodist Church ofSummit was named directorof the chaplaincy service ofthe Community Hospital ofSpringfield and ClarkCounties, Ohio.

LOIS MULLINSHairstylist

IT'S H E B E ' ^

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665-4)616

The course list of theSummer Sharing Workshopis being mailed out thisweek to all Summitresidents,

Stsrted last summer theworkshop courses are opento all Summit residentsfrom high school age on upand are staffed by volunteerteachers.

Among the courses of-fered this summer, almostall of which will meet eitherMonday or Wednesdayevenings in July, arebeginning and intermediatephotography, folk dancing,and bridge taught bymembers of the King ofClubs bridge club. In ad-dition, of special interest toparents is a Wednesdayevening discussion group on"parenting" led by Kathyand Jim Newman of BerkeleyHeight. Mr. Newman ateacher, at the Unitarian Co-operative Nursery School,and Mr. Newman anelementary school teacherin Newark and director ofthe Summit Child CareCenter's elementary schoolsummer program, plan todeal with the problems ofpre-adolescent children.Teaching as a couple, theNewmans hope that parentswill be able to attend thediscussions together.

Of special interest to thoseconcerned about the en-vironment is a series oftalks sponsored by KEEPgiven by Peter Hay, HenryVaugle, Richard Menkes,and Gerald Hanslercovering nuclear power,l imited technology,recycling, and govern-ment's role in en-vironmental issues. Forthose who enjoy music butwish they knew more aboutit, Gerald Burt will give amusic appreciation coursetracing the development ofmusic through the ages.

There will be courses intyping, French, Spanish,and a writing course givenby retired public relationsexecutive, John Tharrettwith special tips on writingresumes and publicity. Forthose whose native languageIs not English, there will be•* cwmwMMoii croup *orImprovement on Englishlanguage skills, and (or do-it-yourselfer* then will be acourse in home repair*.

Sponsored by the SummitBoard of Education and theSummit Area CommunityCouncil, the SummerSharing Workshop is open toall Summit residents fifteenyears and over for a smallregistration fee. Somecourses are limited, andregistration for these is on a

Ckoftus

June 19,1976 9:30am-5:30pmltt Squa/xe

A fire on March 9, 197ft completely destroyed the homeof the Newark Hoys Chorus the world-fnmed chorus fromNewnrk, New jersey. In order to help them recover fromthis disaster, Ihe shop-owners at Murrny Hill Square willdonate n portion of their proceeds from sales ninde onSnturdny. June 19. 197ft, mid encournjjc dircclcontributions lo the work of the Chorus,

Twelve of the hoys and their Director, Terence Shookill be at Murray Hill Square from 2:0(1 to 5:30 I'M ntidill perform two mini-concerts U | 2:30 I'M mid ,'t:30 I'M.

I'lense plan to come on June 19. 1976 to hear the boysiiijj and to support them in their important work.

w l

wi

first come first served basis.Because of the limits,propectlve students shouldonly sign up for courses theyare sure they will attend.

Registration starts theweek of June 21, and classesbegin on July 7. For in-formation on courses andhow to register call theSummer Sharing WorkshopInformation Line at 273-O704between 9 am and n am,Friday June 18 and MondayJune 21 through Friday June25.

When it comes to fathers,there's no comparison;

you're the greatest,

Richard Harrison

Love, Liz & Emily

Dad deserves it!He does so much for you. He means so much to you. Show him

your appreciation with gift&frcmgo'bts.Our suqqestions for Father's Day '76.

200-Year Eagle: a limitededition of the Bald HeadedEagle commernoratmgourBicentennial. Each eagle ishand sculptured, painted andsigned, 50.

Shoe horns: carefullycarvedMallard or Eagle, fromltaly, 1 I.International scents: colognesfor all his moods. Kanon-arefreshing Scandanavian scent.4oz.cologne,8.50,after shave,6Pino Silvestre-a different scentwith the natural fragrance of pine,from Italy, 5-1 2oz.cologne, 12..after, shave.8.50. Monsieur deGivenchy-a crisp blend of spices,sandalwood and citrus fromFrance, 3-2 '3 oz.eau de toilette.10.,after shave, 8 Capucci-tlistmctivcly ensp.yet understated.Item France, 2 oz.eau de toilette,9 Aoi aftershave, 1 1

Pill holder: an unusualcontainer for his magnum ofsweeteners or headacherelievers 3" tall,6.

A stimulating Idea: a back-scrubber imported from Austria,great for slower or sauna.Stripes, 8.50, natura.1,7.50Soap-on-a-rope in a healthyscent,by Kanon.6.

To keep him out of the rain:our sturdy umbrella has analuminum shaft and is bigenough.to take care of afouisome on or off the course.Imported from England, brightlycolored, 25.

Summit/ mim A lhnn'iiii /red bank 'Slnilay unlilrt i iiM

Remember, Father's Day is Sunday, June20.Shop for it.at Roots - Dad deserves it!

ROOTSsummit • red bank

Phone order«:dal(201)277-! 175andask (or Mrs Vass. Mailingcharge ot2,00 on allitems.

Page 4: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

fAGE*T|«; SUMMIT HEKAI.D, THDHSBAV. JUNE 17,1976

Summit Salutes the Bicentennial With Gala Parade*Mori than 5,000 persons lined the route of march last Saturday to watch the city's

Bicentennial Parade with over 1,000 participants marching from Summit High School toMemorial Field. Leo O'Grady, chairman of the city's Bicentennial Committee timed theparade and tt took one hour and 10 minutes to pass a given point. As can be seen below, itwas a gala day with floats, marching units, old cars, crowds and a multitude of people all

'enjoying Summit's contribution to celebrating the nation's 200th anniversary. A total of 71separate units including 1$ floats participated In the gala parade which ended atMemorial Field inhere Angela Merola, from a cherry-picker (shown below), conductedfour of the bands that had marched In the parade. The Summit, New Providence, Madison

and Verona bands massed on the field to play "The Stars and Stripes Forever" and "ThinIs My Country". At the end of the parade 1,100 marchers from the bands Girl ScoutsJunior Baseball Leagues and /loots walked off with as many franks, sodas and deserts'Due to the special occasion, Summit restaurants donated 1,880 hot dogs. Tract's donated1,000 c u p c a k e s and 500 o t h e r d e s e r t s w e r e g i v e n b y t h e B e a c o n F i r e Chapter D A RFortnightly, Democratic Women, United Af.tnodi.f Women and College Clubs PepslCola'Inc. donated/.OMcanso/soda. About 40of the Summit Band Parents served the food withhelp from principal Wilbur flelson, who opened Brayton's cafeteria, offered the booth andcanopy and was seen helping with the clean-up. Among out of town guests were the Morris

County Militia, from Chatham, which marched with fifes and drums. They later playedand paraded at Memorial Field. Also after the parade, under the trees, the Drake Houseladies, from Washington's Headquarters on Front street, Platnfleld, demonstrated suchcolonial crafts as quilting, iptnntng. candlemaklng and making dolls of corn husks oiuapples. Weatherwlse, the day was perfect, a far shift from the hot, humid weather the daybefore. Following the day's festivities, which included a block dance tn front of the YMCAon Maple street, one person was heard to say "Probably the greatest day tn the history ofSummit" perhaps It was. (All photos with the exception of the Burry Biscuit float weretaken by Judy Freedman. The Burry photo was taken by Dr. J. J. Dunne).

Page 5: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THE SUMMIT HERALD. THURSDAY, JUNt 17,1976 PACES

Lynch Scholarship GranisTotaling $13,050 Go to 15

A total of $13,060 has beenawarded by the Adele M.Lynch Nursing and AlliedHealth Scholarship!Committee to enable ISyoung women from localhigh schools to start careersin the medical field and tofurther the schooling of (ourothers.

Recipient* of this year'sawards were announced byMrs. Longley Walkerchairman of the committee.

They an, from SummitHigh School, Carolyn Zottl,to attend Duke University;Joanne Kacantello, to attendUnion County TechnicalInstitute; and Ellen Paytas,to attend Georgetown

University. From NewProvidence High School,Aina Eglltis, to attend KeanCollege; Jane Weldeli, toattend Duke University;Kristy Johnson, to attendOverlook Hospital School ofPractical Nursing; DenaVan Keuren, to attend theUniversity of Delaware;Carmela Madonna, to at-tend Villanova University;Nancy Week, to attendWagner College; and WendyFlanagan, to attendOverlook Hospital School ofPractical Nursing.

From Oak Knoll School,Mary Ann McDonough, toattend Seton Hall Univer-

City Federal To Sdl TicketsCity Federal Savings will

again serve as a ticket outletfor the Garden State ArtsCenter located in Holmdel.The announcement wasmade today at theAssociation's headquartersin Elizabeth by Gilbert G.Roessner, of Lenox road,president of the billiondollar association.

According to Koessner,"Since our depositors havebeen quite pleased with theconvenience of purchasingArts Center tickets at ourmany branches, includingSummit we are delighted to

be able to continue thisservice

The service is being of-fered at all of our offices andtickets may be purchasedduring box office hours —from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.Monday through Friday."

An individual wishing toobtain tickets for a par-ticular performance mustdo so in person arid allreservations are subject toconfirmation from theGarden State Arts Center.There will be a charge of 25cents per ticket.

sity. From GovernorLivingston Regional HighSchool, Dorinda Cosimano,to attend Slippery RockCollege; Laura Kimball, toattend Virginia Com-monwealth University;Judy Menosky, to attendElizabethtown College; andAmy Townsend, to attendthe University of Colorado.

Carolyn Zotti wasawarded the MitchellScholarship, the only con-tinuing grant, which is givenfor four years. PreviousMitchell Scholarship win-ners whose grants wererenewed are: Karen Sibleyat the University of Miami,Mary Ellen Behme atAmerican University, andRoseanne Tullman at theUniversity of Rhode Island.

The Alice Van SehmusSmith Award was againgiven to Patricia Cotterel ofSummit, a student atP e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t eUniversity. Miss Cotterelwas the original recipientwhen the contribution wasmade for the first time lastyear by Samuel A. Smith,Jr., and his daughters inmemory of Mrs. Smith, whohad been an offleor «f the.Red Cross, the JuniorService League, the Con-valescent Committee, andthe ' Visiting NurseAssociation.

Mrs. Walter Cox, fund-raising co-chairmen of the

Members of the.Scholarships Committeeare: Mrs. Walker, Mrs. DonG. Mitchell, Mrs. C. BensonKeeney, jr., Mrs. EdwardOlcott, Mrs. EdwardReeves, Mrs. John Cooper,Mrs.' Cox, Mrs. Robert

Potter, Mrs. ElizabethHiatt, Mrs. Joseph Meinert,Mrs. Sheldon Smith, Mrs.John Hogan, Mrs. EdwardKenyon, Dr. . WarrenNestler, Howard Conklln,representatives from theguidance department* of the

high schools, and It iss AdeleLynch, H.N., a formerdirector of the visitingNurse Association and apioneer in public healthnursing in the 'area, forwhom the awards arenamed.

IIKRKS TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH - Six of the It recipient! of the Adele M. LynchNursing and Allied Health Scholarships are pictured among the tools of their trade. Fromleft to right are Nancy Week, New Providence High School: Carolyn Zotti. Summit HighSchool: Jane Weldeli, New Providence High School; Laura Kimball. Governor LivingstonRegional High School; Joanne Racanlello, Summit High School; and KrUty Johnson, NewProvidence High School. Of the group, two will become nurses, two will be licensedpractical nursei, one a physical therapist, and one amedlcal assistant.

Counties Trust Company, Convalescent Fund-as wellthe National State Bank, theCIBA-GEIBY Corporation,and C.L. Bard, and thefoundations—Willits andCheseborough, YouthFriends' Association and

Adele Lynch Committee,cited "the public-spiritedinstitutions such as the CityFederal Savings and LoanAssociation, the Summitand Elizabeth TrustCompany, the United

as the individuals, all ofwhom are interested in theeducation of our youth andat the same time in helpingfill needs in the rapidlyexpanding health field."

FINE STATIONERS SINCE 1910

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Chess Sets

Photo Albumn

Mont Blanc and

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Page 6: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGE 6 THE SUMMITHKIMLD,THURSDAY. JUNK 17.1976

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SUMMQuality Weeklies of New Jersey

Audit Bureau of CirculationNew Jersey Press AssociationNational Editorial Association

Eve E. Forbes, PublisherNorman E. Rauscher,

Editor

Barbara SmytheAdvertising Manager

IllllllllUlllllllllimimiili uiumiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin

ERALD

Published by The Summit HeraldEvery Thursday at 22 Bank Street

Summit, New Jersey 07901

Entered as Second Class MatterOctober 5,1889 at the Post OfficeSummit, New Jersey, under the

Act of March 3,1879

ALL DEPARTMENTS: 273-4000$7 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE BACK COPIES 30c EACH

iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui lllltlUIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIilUIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII

Amendment Target

The Showdown NearsThe future of Route 78 through the

Summit area is heading toward ashowdown after nearly a generation ofcontroversy.

There are still many who fear thatcompletion of the unfinished five milelink will do irreparable damage to theWatchung Reservation which lies inSummit's backyard, and will causeenvironmental harm to the vastspecies of flora and fauna. There's alsothe question of what route would causethe least harm to Summit in the way ofhome and property destruction. Thosewho live in the area affected as well asenvironmentalists would just as soonsee plans dropped for any completion.

On the other hand, there are thosewho feel that the link must be com-pleted in light of the money alreadyspent to complete Route 78 fromPhillipsburg to here, with its plannedterminus at Newark Airport TheRoute was supposed to provide asmooth highway through the state inplace of Route 22, an archaic, hazar-dous roadway that has outlived itsusefulness. Route 78 was supposed toeliminate heavy dependency on Route22, and completion now would ac-complish that task.

From a selfish point of view, many inSummit are already feeling the affectsof the so-called Route 78 "missinglink". Traffic exits at the BerkeleyHeights-Scotch Plains terminus and isforced to use residential streets inorder to make Its way towardSpringfield and points e a s t A» aconsequence, Summit is being sub-jected to more and more heavy traffic.Streets such as Ashland road, Moun-tain avenue, Springfield avenue, Broadstreet, Morris avenue and small,

highly residential streets that linkhigh-use roads are more and morebeing used as a thrcughway fromRoute 78's Western terminus. Sincemost of Summit's roads were notdesigned or constructed to ac-commodate heavy traffic, we fear roadrepairs in the not-too-distant futurewill swell to awsome proportions.

That Route 78 was not wanted In thefirst place has been pointed out timeand again. In 1957 when the idea wasfirst made public, The Summit Heraldwent on record as opposing its con-struction. However, the road wasconstructed, and now halts ai the gatesof Summit. The traffic spilloff from itsterminus in Berkeley Heights is fastbecoming a noticeable nuisance.

In order to avoid any additionaltraffic from entering Summit from thewest, we feel the "missing link" shouldbe completed at the earliest possibletime. We are not keen about losingportions of the Watchung Reservation,and we are most concerned that somearea families face the threat of losingtheir homes to make way for the high-way. However, in light of what anuncompleted Route 78 would create,we must go along with those who wishto see the highway completed so thatthis part of Union County, (Berkeley

"Heights, New Providence, Summit andSpringfield) which houses nearly 70,000people, will not become a snarling,pollution-filled, traffic jammed areawhere all signs of suburban existencewould fast become a memory. A deep-cut through a portion of the reservationaway from homes1 and people, couldvery possibly eliminate undue noise,.pollution and unwanted traffic throughour streets. Will we be given any otheralternative?

Wildlife ComebackWith so much talk about various

species of wildlife nea ring extinction, itwas heartening to bear the report ofthe U.S. National Wildlife Federationthat five species which appeareddoomed are making a comeback.

The gray whale, sea otter, northernelephant seal, Guadalupe fur seal andJuandez fur seal are stagingcomebacks.- The gray whale is nowdoing so well that it is approaching thenumber that existed when the whalingindustry began.

Mexico is credited with doing muchto save the gray whale, having setaside a Pacific lagoon in which whalehunting is banned.

Some idea of what conservationregulations can accomplish can berealized when one notes that therewere only two known elephant seals onGuadalupe Island in 1892 and now thereare 15,000.

But along with this good news thereis bad news that the bald eagle is stillthreatened with extinction. Perhapsthe furor that has been raised over theshooting of some of these eagles onwestern ranches will result in in-creased efforts to preserve them. Topermit our national symbol to becomeextinct would be a disgrace.

We nearly lost another nationalsymbol when the buffalo reached theextinction stage toward the end of thelast century after it was mercilesslyhunted and slaughtered.

Fortunately some thoughtful peoplein the government took steps to halt theslaughter and to preserve and increaseherds in our national parks.

Thus current campaigns to saveendangered species of our animal andbird life seem to be gaining headwayand this is indeed a cause for rejoicing.

Slings and ArrowsThe "Atlas Shrugged" Syndrome

Did you ever get the feeling thatyou're always being ripped off, oneway or another.

And, sometimes, the feeling is notgenerated by high costs, but by neglectand apathy. «. .•-„ ,,

For instance, we are quite fortunatein this area to have many fine servicepersonnel to take care of householdneeds.

So, when a plumber is needed, or acarpenter, or a painter, or an ap-pliance repair person, there are manygoodcraftspersons around to take careof specific needs.

But, craftsmen seem to feel that timeis not any quality of value.

For instance, just recently, we triedto get some service work ac-complished. Now the job was notmonumental in nature; but it ditrequire fairly immediate attention.

Calls to a reliable service personwere answered by that anonymousresponse known as a telephone an-swering machine.

Well, after two days of talking to amachine, we gave up in despair andfound a fine, good working serviceperson, who answered his own phone

without the aid of a machine;.andwhat's more who knew what theproblem was and corrected it im-mediately.

Most of us have had similar,frustrating experiences; maybe weought to band together and publish alist of reliable service personnel, whoare visible and audible and willing towork.

It was with some local pride that weread this week of the accomplishmentsof the students at Summit High School,who not only will graduate from theHigh School tonight, but who have alsobeen graduated from the Union CountyTechnical School.

These young people, most of whomreceived awards for excellentachievement in their respectivevocational fields, must have demon-strated responsible behavior to receivethese accolades.

We can only hope that the spirit ofdoing a job well and being responsiveto community needs carries over to thework-a-day world, which, they nowenter.

We're counting on you, kids.W.S.

Although it has not yetgone into effect, the PublicSchool Education Act of 1975(Chapter 212, Laws of 1975)is already subject ofnumerous legislativeproposals for amendment,observes the New JerseyTaxpayers Association.

Many of the proposedamendments are con-troversial and involve ad-ditional cost. Fiscal implications are largelyunknown and unpredictablebecause of inadequate dataor time to calculate impact.Even the scheduled ef-fective date of the law —July 1, 1976, is open toquestion in view of therecent Supreme Courtruling which declared thatunless the Legislatureprovides monies to fullyfund the new statutoryformula, the public schoolswill have to be closed at theend of this fiscal year, June30.

The new "thorough andefficient" education law wasapproved in the Senate by avote of 23 to 15 more than ayear ago, on May 27, 1975,and was ratified by theAssembly last September 22by a vote of 42 to 32. Courtreview of the act's con-stitutionality resulted in afavorable decision on thecondition that theLegislature provide for full-funding of UK law. up io theend of May, the Senate hadbeen unable to agree withthe General Assembly on arevenue program to providethe necessary additionalfunds beyond those includedin the Governor's budget.Additional state fundsneeded are calculated bystate officials to be $378million.

Examples of proposedamendments to the "T andE" education law include( D a change in the methodof calculating pupils fordetermining school aid fromresident enrollment on thelast day of September tostudents available forenrollment during Sep-tember (Assembly No.1780). This would permitcounting of pupils who donot attend public schools.(2) Change in the method ofcalculating the equalizedvaluation of real rapfaper* student for

yp lo include Hiecaptalized value of businesspersonalty replacementtaxes and gross receipts andfranchise taxes (AssemblyNo. 1964). This might serveto reduce the aid allocationof a number of districts. (3)Eliminate the power of theCommissioner of Educationand State Board ofEducation to order changesin budgets of school districtswhich do not show sufficientprogress toward theireducational goals (SenateNo. 1439). (4) Limit theauthority of the Com-missioner of Education toincrease budgets overstatutory limits (ewe") to10 percent of trie totalnumber of school districts(Senate No. 1415). (5)Require the State Board ofEducation to establish goalsand uniform statewidestandards of proficiency inbasic communications andcomputational skills, andrequire local boards ofeducation to set interimgoals and develop a plan toraise achievement levels ofpupils who are below thes t a t e w i d e s t a n d a r d(Assembly No. 1736, passedAssembly and passedSenate after amendment.Awaits further Assemblyc o n s i d e r a t i o n ) . (6)Establish procedures bywhich the difference bet-ween anticipated StateSchool aid and full aid en-titlement would be allocatedbetween property tax reliefand budget adjustments toadopted 1976-77 schooldistrict budgets (Senate No.1503). (7) Change formulafor apportioning costsamong member districts ofa regional high schooldistrict to provide a phase-inperiod so as to ease theproperty tax shift (Chapter45, Laws of 1976).

Drastic changes whichmay only result in furthermisunderstanding of thenew law should be carefullydeliberated before enact-ment, suggests NJTA.Citizens ana educators whowish to gain an un-derstanding of Chapter 212will find a useful guide in the44-page booklet — "T and E• A Primer for SchoolImprovement in NewJersey" recently issued bythe State Department ofEducation, Trenton.

I LetteLetters to the EditorEditor, Summit Herald:

The attached letter hasalso been sent to theHonorable Barbara A.Curran, and the HonorableDean A. Gallo

We hope these letters willencourage them to takeresponsible action and hopethat other concernedparents and citizens willexpress their concern tomembers of the legislature.

David II. AndrewsPresident,

Wilson School PTAColonial road

Against ClosedownThe Honorable James P.Vreeland83 Old LaneTowaco, N J .

Dear Sen. Vreeland:At the June 7, 1976

meeting of the board of theWilson School P.T.A. ofSummit, New Jersey thefollowing statement wasunanimously approved:

As parents of school agechildren we are distressedthat action has not beentaken to meet the NewJersey Supreme Court'smandate to fund thethorough and efficienteducation legislation. Whilewe do not agree entirelywith the Supreme Court'saction, we respect theirobligation to interpret NewJersey law and feel that itwould be irresponsible toignore their ruling. Wetherefore call on the NewJersey Legislature to takeresponsible action to seethat closing of the schoolsfor any period of time isavoided.

On behalf of the board, Istrongly urge you and othermembers of the legislatureto put the welfare of thechildren of New Jerseyahead of political concernsand take the actionnecessary to prevent schoolclosings. I would appreciateknowing what your own planof action is in this regard.

David H.AndrewsPresident

Wilson School P.T:A.167 Colonial Road

Questions AuthorityEditor, Summit Herald:

The letter in a recentSummit Herald from Mrs.Linda Smith, wife ofCommon Council PresidentWatson B. Smith andpresident of the BraytonSchool PTA, raises somefamiliar arguments forretaining an appointedBoard of Education.

But it also raises somequestions about theauthority with which a PTAexecutive board can speakfor the entire membershipof an association which itcan be assumed neverparticipated in the decision.

By contrast, members ofthe Wilson School PTA wereasked their views — andvoted 34-30 in favor of anelected board, with ten votesundecided.

The decision of theBrayton PTA board isillustrative of a disturbingtendency toward decisionson vital educational mattersby ever-smaller groupsacting without membershipapproval and without fullpublic presentation ofconflicting opinions.

In short, the Brayton PTAboard apparently chose to,,:establish policy for its entiremembership without somuch as a vote by the rankand file or a public hearingof views of advocates of bothsystems. Is this democracyat work?

More to the point, MrsSmith's letter sets forth as"facts" arguments for anappointed board thatare probably more myththan fact.

For example, it can beargued that a change to anelected board would lead toless rather than morepolitics in the selection ofschool board membersbecause it would strip thecity's partisan politicanleader — the Mayor— of hispower to name that mem-bership and confer it whereit resides in every othercomparable community:with the public.

Second, such a changewould widen rather than

(Continued on P»B« 71

FROM FACTS AND FICTION TO COMEDY AND TRAGEDY — Summit's first librarybuilding, now the stage of the Summit Playhouse, was neither "Free" nor "Public" whenthis building was erected on Ite present site (the triangle of land bounded by Locust drive,New England avenue and Tulip street) in 1891, with funds privately subscribed by Summitresidents. Before it had this building, the Summit Library Auodation, which had beenorganiutd and incorporated in January 1874 at the instigation of three leading citizens,had kept ita book collection. In turn, in the home of Dr. William Risk (now Brough FuneralHome), in Public school No. I (now the municipal building), and in the rear of Mrs.Itapelyra's dry good store at 408 Springfield avenue. Then, in 1889, when George Mauleyoffered a piece of land If the Library Association could raise funds for a building,Augustus F. Uts&y conducted a drive which netted $3,724, and the building shown wasopened June 10, 1891, with Ml»s Louise Leiluray as librarian. In April 1893. this activity,which had previously been shared only by stockholders and subscribers, voted lo becomea free library (though still corporation-owned) provided sufficient public support could beobtained (the Town Committee voted SIM a year), smJ in November 1901, ft became fullyI s : supported ss the result of a public referendum. After M=>- IS, 1911. when the erstwhile> f How brick library building was opened on the present library site on the northwestcorner of Maple street and Morrlsavenue (present building opened May 2,1984), the littlebuilding shown remained vacant up to 1918, when it was leased to the newly formedSummit Dramatic Club (now the Summit Playhouse Aisociation) for II a year. TheMarjorir JeTftrson auditorium was added behind it in 1980, and in 1967 the building wasdeaded over to the Drama group, (contributed by the Summit Historical Society)

What Does ConRail Mean?To paraphrase the old

song, we've been working onthe railroads, trying to keepas many of New jersey'sfreight and passenger linesas possible from riding intooblivion like so many others.

It has taken more thantwo years of planning,studying and a lot of hardbargaining to do it. Butwe've been able to providerail commuters withassurance their trains won'tstop running because ofdisagreement over a ser-vice contract And we'vebeen able to give affectedfreight shippers andreceivers a long respitefrom uncertainty so theycan develop their own futuretransportation plans.

The change occurred onApril 1, when the sevenrai lroads providingpassenger and freightservices in New Jersey weremerged into a neworganization called ConRail,created by Congress to runthe railroads at a profit.

On that date, ConRail-theConsolidated Rail Cor-poration-took over most ofthe properties of thebankrupt Penn Central,Erie Lackawanna, JerseyCentral, Reading, LehighValley, Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines andLehigh and Hudson RiverRailroads.

That is why those oldfamiliar names have beenslowly fading out of thenewspaper columns and youhave been reading more _,--about Con Rail operations inNew Jersey.

We actually began workon the railroad takeoverearly in 1974, when we werehanded a preliminaryproposal by the U.S.Department of Tran-

sportation. The UnitedStates Railway Association(USRA), a federal agencycreated just to direct the railreorganization planningtook over this responsibilityshortly after.

It soon became obviousthere were two majorproblems we would have toovercome.

The first was that anyprofits ConKail would makeon freight operations couldnot be used to help pay forlosses in passenger service.ThU meant the state wouldhave to pay out staggeringlyhigh operating subsidies toConRail for passengerservice-unless a fairagreement could bereached.

We turned to ourrepresentatives in Congressfor help. They saw to it thatthe Railroad Revitalizationand Regulatory Reform Act(Quad R) which was signedinto law shortly beforeConrail took over, dealt withthis problem. The act notonly provided for a smoothtransition to ConRail, but italso required that theamount of state subsidywould be decided by aseparate, impartial federalagency lather than in acrisis negotiations, under apossible threat that servicewould be discontinued.

The second problem aroseover the question of whatwould happen to those railproperties and freightoperations which ConRailwould not absorb. Would thestate's ecohbiM suffer?Would an irreplaceableresource be lost to the state?

A questionnaire waswidely distributed toshippers and receivers. TheState Chamber of Com-merce and other business

groups and public officialshelped to assemble in-formation to feed to theUSRA, review its reportsand try to correct its errors.

It quickly became ap-parent that most rail freightoperations in the state wouldbe preserved, with onemajor exception--thetransportation of 16.000carloads of sand a year fromsand pits in southern NewJersey to glass manufac-turing plants in Monmouth,Hudson and Morris Coun-tt»» M«i««lBta« * vtm»t>.quick route f r o w p l t t ofactory was vital to the glassindustry, to the regions inwhich it is located, to theapproximately 3,500 personsemployed in the industryand therefore to the well-being of the state as a whole.

Strong arguments byDepartment staff and in-dustry representativesconvinced Congress to in-clude all of the CentralRai lroad's SouthernDivision in the mergedsystem.thereby assuring thatthe rail facilities would bekept intact for the sand haul.

When April 1 arrived,ConRail had taken all butabout ISO miles of the 1,742miles of rail lines in thestate, this mileage havingcarried less than one per-cent of the freight carloadsoriginating or terminatingin the state.

Since the fate of theseleftover miles of track wasthe responsibility of thedepartment, a State RailPlan was prepared whichprovided that operations onnine of the freight lines-totaling 55 miles-willcontinue until next April 1with the federal governmentpaying the estimated

(Continued mx P*g» 7)

Looking BackwardSniimiiniiiiiini

Seventy-five Years Ago

The High School class of1901, all male, included K.}I.Gardner, Orion O, Oaks.J.M. LaRue, J.H. Crann,W.C. Johnson and A.T.Ricketts, of whom four were ,headed for college.

Kramm's RiversideRetreat on the Passaicriver, then dammned for .mills in the Stanley avenuearea near Mount Vernonavenue, was opened for theseason with boats to rent, amerry-go-round and apavillion.

The salary of PostmasterWilliam H. Coggeshall wasraised from $2,400, to $2,500annually because of in-creased business during the «vear.

Fifty Years Ago

The city took over thescavenger department and

cancelled a contract with aprivate group.

At the Epworth League ofthe Methodist Church:"Untrue to Type" and"Indian Summer."

At the Summit Com-munity Players: "Call theDoctor"

Twenty-five Years Ago

Jersey Central Power andLight Company installedunderground electricconduits along Morrisavenue in the vicinity ofWashington school.

Ernest S. Hickok wasreelected chairman of theRepublican City Committee,and Roger W. Williams wasreelected chairman of theDemocratic City Com-mittee.

At the Lyric Theater:Bette Davis and BarrySullivan in "Payment onDemand."

imumiimiiiniiifiMifn

Ten Years-AgoSummit and New

Providence reached anagreement to share staffand office facilities for their-respective United Fundcampaigns.

YES officially opened inquarters at the YMCA.

Rohert S. Stafford ofFernwbod road was namedto fill the Common CouncilWard 1 vacancy created bythe resignation of EdwardC. Holmes.

Five Years AgoAt Glenwood place: 18 of

the 40 units in the complexwere nearing completion.

After collapse of a ceilingat Roosevelt School, Dr.Robert G. Salisbury,superintendent of schools,assured parents the buildingwas safe. I

At the High School: WestPoint Glee Club under thesponsorship of the Fort-nightly Club.

Page 7: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THrfSJfMWIT IjKR Alii. THUH81M V. JUNE 17,1976 PAGE 7

Hiiiiiiiumiimiiiiuig

Letters I(ConttmMd tram Faga a)

restrict public participationin the selection of boardmembers because it wouldgive to all a voice in aprocess now exercised by afew: the organizations andinfluential Individuals whodominate school policy.

Third, such a changewould require the schoolboard to Justify to all ratherthan a few its objectives forthe school system and itsspending plans forachieving those ends.

And fourth, such a changecould lead to more ratherthan less fiscal respon-sibility, for it would makethe board responsive to theentire community ratherthan to the few.

In light of these differentinterpretations, it can beargued that a change to anelected board—like those inuse in every communitycomparable to Summit andin 95 per cent of the state'sschool districts — wouldindeed "alter the characterof education" in the city,and for the better. For itwould return control ofpublic schools to the public,which has no less an interestin quality education thanthose who profess to speakfor it.

Admittedly, fewer votersparticipate in school boardelections than in generalelections, but we cannotignore — nor should Mrs.Smith — the fact that aneven smaller number voteh political party primarieswhich, in Summit, ef-fectively determine whoshall sit on CommonCouncil. Yet no one wouldcontend that such limitedturnouts are an argument'of letting the Mayor ap-point Common Councilmembers.

As for rejection of schoolbudgets, it can be debatedthat school budget defeatselsewhere more commonlystem from a failure tojustify school spending thanfrom ' voter disapprovalalone. Certainly, therefection of school budgetsis a risk — but an acceptableone if you credit the peopleof Summit with the goodsense to support theirschools and if you considerthe legal safeguardsprotecting the schools fromeconomic deprivation.

Needless to say, wewelcome Mrs. Smith'scontribution to thegathering debate overcontrol of Summit's schools.But we should also place hercomments in perspective asthose of the wife of apolitical leader who isreflecting the views of asmall group acting withoutinstructions from itsmembership and withoutany public discussion of thereasons for and against itsdecision.

Robert A Kelly18Fernwoodroad

Robert J. Wolfenbarger30 Harvey driveWilson J, Allen

75 Butler parkwayLyleE.Fox

7 Lower Overlook roadBarbara Pannone46Baltusralroad

PattSisk17 Madison avenue

STA Role Explained

Editor, Summit Herald:Councilman Schretter's

assertion at the June 1Council meeting that theSummit Taxpayer ' sAssociation "would be allfor vacating (Sylvan roadand Beauvoir avenue)because of the tax saving"belies his apparent lack ofunderstanding of theassociation's purposes andobjectives.

So that CouncilmanSchretter - and others -may better understand theassociation's purpose, I'dlike to provide excerptsfrom a membershipbrochure:

"Ours is a non-partisanassociation of taxpayerswho work for economy ingovernment in the followingways:

" We monitor to the city'soperations and report ourfindings to the membershipand the public alike.

" We r e c o m m e n dspending priorities for thecity's most pressing needsand, sometimes, we adviseno spending when webelieve spending's not theanswer.

" We work to helpguarantee that city ac-tivities involving spendingare well-planned, well-admmlnistered andprudently financed. '

" And we work towardassuring a municipal taxrate fair for all."

The prospect of a taxsaving is not - and nevershould be - the sole reasonfor a Taxpayer's

• Association position, on thevacating of city streets orany other matter. Forclearly the potential taxsavings from the vacation ofstreets are insignificant ascompared with the potentialof the precedent-settingdecision for eroding theresidential character of thtpart of the city, and, moreimportant, for destroyingthe quasi-judicial process bywhich such decisions aremore normally reachedthrough the Zoning Board.

Indeed, the Taxpayer'sAssociation is more con-cerned about the manner inwhich this decision wasreached - the maneuveringto give Councilman Hale (aformer Overlook trustee) a jdeciding vote, the rejectionof Zoning Board objection,the absence of sworntestimony and cross-examination - than aboutthe possibility of taxsavings.

After all, what are in-significant tax savings ascompared with yet anotherdenial of due process to thepeople of Summit?

LyleE.Fox, PresidentSummit Taxpayer's Assoc.

7 Lower Overlook road

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Con RailIContlnutd from Paga «)

subsidy cost of $503,000 forthe full year. The federalsubsidy is to decrease eachyear "and end after fiveyears. A request has beenmade for subsidies torestore service on four otherlines totaling 30 miles.

The Quad R Act also gavethe state the power to buyrail properties, such as thevital Hoboken terminal areaand others, to put into atransportation land bank atthe reasonable price set bythe USRA As a result, thestate is purchasing $3.5million of these railfacilities, with the money tocome from 1968 Tran-sportation Bond Issue fundsand the federal government.

It was only with the help ofour Congressional delegationand strong support of thepublic at public hearingsthat we have been able tomake "ConRail" meanmore to New Jersey thanconsolidated rail service.

It also has meant con-tinued rail service.

Local StudentsWin Awards

Three local students at theUnion County VocationalCenter received awards at aspecial ceremony held at theScotch Plains campus June1.

Included among theaward winners were DavidMalieo of 3 Edison drive,appliance repairs student;Frank S. Russo of 110Orchard street, aulo body;Michael Delia Piazza of 12Clarlc street, baking, andGail Harooiunian of 21Middle avenue, beautyculture.

Malieo received a $400scholarship to the WhirlpoolSchool, Michigan, from theElizabeth town Gas Com-pany and Public ServiceElectric and Gas Company.

Designated "recipient ofthe Teachers' Award, Russoreceived a savings bond andtools worth $100 from SevellAuto Body and RichardMitchell, auto body in-structor.

D«lla Piazza received ascholarship worth $385 toattend the DunwoodyInstitute. Contributors werethe Tri-County Baker'sAssociation, InternationalMulti-Foods Corporation.Allied Paper ProductsCompany, John Charley.Bernstein Baking Companyand Bell Laboratories.

M i s s H a r o o t u n i a nreceived a $600 check tocontinue her education.Contributors were MariaPole Skin Beauty Institute,Linden Chlorine Cor-poration and Queen CitySavings and LoanAssociation.

Eastman GivesMusic Degree

Leslie Hay, daughter otMr,, and Mrsv Charles P.Hay, Jr. of Summit wasgraduated from the East-man School of Music,Rochester University, witha bachelor of music degree.

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Deaths I Resident Edits New EssayBook by British Scholar

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Mrs. William 11. Lawrence

Mrs. Myra CoggeshallLawrence, widow of Dr.William H. Lawrence,founder of OverlookHospital, died on June 10 ata Hot Springs, Ark., nursinghome. She would have been99 next month.

Mrs. Lawrence was bornin Summit and lived hereuntil 1940 when her husbandretired. For many yearsthey lived in Maine. Dr,Lawrence, who died in 1960,founded Overlook as aprivate 30t>ed hospital in1906 on the same site it islocated today. In 1914Overlook became a publicinstitution. During WorldWar I, Dr. Lawrenceorganized an ambulancecorps which served in thefront lines of France.

Mrs. Lawrence is sur-vived by a son, William H.jr., of Winchester, Va., adaughter, Mrs. J. MiltonLent of Hot Springs; asister, Mrs. Ada BlissCoggeshall; six grand-children, 26 great-grandchildren, and onegreat-great grandchild.

Graveside services wereheld on Monday at Fair-mount Cemetery, Chatham.

John R. Atterbury

John R. Atterbury ofEdgewood drive, died onMonday at OverlookHospital. He was 75.

Born in Chicago, Mr.Atterbury lived in GlenRidge for 20 years beforemoving to Summit 15 yearsago. He retired in 1972 as apartner and head ofresearch for Wood-Walkerand Co., a New York Citybrokerage firm, with whichhe had been associated withfor 45 years.

Mr. Atterbury attendedAndover and Yale.

He is survived by his wife,Mrs. Frances JarvisAtterbury; a daughter, Mrs.J. Peter Harrington ofSummit; two sisters, Mrs.Charles G. Mortimer ofWhite Plains, N.Y., andMrs. Joseph B. Mathewsonof Ithaca, N.Y. and threegrandchildren.

Graveside services wereheld yesterday at CedarLawn Cemetery, Peterson,from the Burroughs andKohr Funeral Home, 308Springf ie ld a v e n u e .Memorial contributions inMr. Atterbury's memorymay be made to theO v e r l o o k H o s p i t a lDevelopment Fund.

Misa Martha A. Schneider

Martha A. Schneider, aresident of Summit from1951 to 1973 and formerparish secretary at CalvaryEpiscopal Church, died atage 74 on June 10, 1976, inBlissfield, Michigan.

She is survived by herbrothers, George C.Schneider of Blissfield andAugust C. of Chrisfield, Md.

Funeral services andinterment were in Blissfield.

Shirley Sugerman ofWhittredge road, a memberof the Drew Universityfaculty, has edited andcontributed to a new book ofessays focusing on a centraltheme of the noted Britishliterary critic Owen Bar-fleld.

Titled "Evolution ofConsciousness: Studies inPolarity" and just releasedby Wesleyan UniversityPress, the volume alsocontains contributions fromnovelist, poet, and shortstory writer HowardNemerov; critic Norman 0.Brown; and 13 others, in-cluding two British scien-tists, one of whom is Bar-field's brother.

"Poetic Diction"—OwenBarfield's second book(1928), twice re-issued, andalso made available inpaperback—remains alandmark of modernliterary criticism. Hislatest, "What ColeridgeThought" (1971), developedfrom lectures given in 1964-65 during the first of threeseparate appointments tothe Drew faculty as avisiting professor.

Holder of four degrees'from Oxford and for manyyears a practicing barrister,,he has also taught in thiscountry at BrandeisUniversity and HamiltonCollege.

As Dr. Sugerman explainsin the forward to her hook,the persistent theme ofBarfield's life and thought—"the dynamic in-lerpenetration of poiaropposities"— is also "thevisible thread that rundthroughout the essays."

Using Barfield's writings

Dr. Shirley Sugarman

aij points of departure andreference, the authorsapproach this theme inmany ways—throughdiscussion of the poetic andthe prosaic, novelty andtradition, fact and value,exceptions and rules, en-joyment and contemplation,attachment and separation,and so on.

Moreover, the essaysrange from the polarityexpressed in a single life tothat involved in theevolution of human con-sciousness generally andexemplied, for instance, inthe seesaw history of thereputation of Darwin'stheory of evolution. Also,several of the authors' ex-plore the idea that the"illness" of modernWestern consciousnessstems from a failure tosustain the dual visionessential to polarity, leadingto what the editor calls "a

common madness-singlevision."

A lecturer on worldreligions in Drew's College,Dr. Sugerman is alsoacademic coordinator forthe Graduate School'sAquinas Program, fundedby the, Aquinas Foundationof New York. Over the lastsix years the program hasbrought several prominentinterdisciplinary thinkers tothe campus, includingBarfield. It also sponsors amonthly faculty seminar inwhich professors fromevery department of theUniversity's three schoolstest their ideas on eachother in advance ofpublication.

A graduate of BarnardCollege, Dr. Sugermanholds the Ph.D. degree fromDrew and has trainedprofessionally at the Centertor Modern PsychoanalyticStudies in New York.Articles and reviews of hershave appeared in a numberof journals, including the' 'Psychoanalytic Review.''

In addition to editing andwriting a forward to"Evolution of Con-sdousne&s," she has con-tributed a wide-rangingconversation with the critic,now 77, recorded at hishome in Kent, England, inthe spring of 1974, and anessay on the philosophyunderlying Samuel TaylorColeridge's doctrine ofimagination, a touchstone of19th century romanticliterature on both sides ofthe Atlantic.

Dr. Sugarman's husband,Morton Rosenburg. is deanof graduate studies at KeanCollege,

Mrs. Gladys RiceServices for Mrs. Gladys

Rice, 90, of Summit wereheld last Friday in Elmira,N.Y.

She died June 9 in theIngletnoor Nursing Home,Livingston.

A 1908 graduate of ElmiraCollege, Mrs. Rice taught inthe Elmira school systembefore retiring. She was amember of the RetiredTeachers Association ofElmira.

Born in New York, shemoved to Summit sevenyears ago:

Surviving are a son,Charles, and three grand-children.

Final SummerSing on Tap

G.L. Nair, music directorof the Summit Chorale, willconduct the Chorale's finalsummer sing on June 22.

Mr. Nair, who is alsoknown in the area for hiswork with the SummitChorale Chamber Singers,the Chamber Symphony,and the New Jersey All-State Orchestra, will con-duct readings of the Faure-Requiem and portions ofHandel's Messiah.

The sings, which are opento the public, are held onTuesdays at 8 p.m. at theOak Knoll School, Black-burn avenue. Music isprovided and admission is$1.50.

For further informationcontact Mrs. T.P. Alton at467-3093.

N.Y.

Denison Gives B.A. Degrees

Merchant of the Week

HANDYMAN'S HAVKN-For 40 years, Brown Hardware & Supply Co., Inc. onSpringfield avenue has helped provide commercial, residential and Industrial installationneeds with a full range of hardware supplies the home handyman also finds useful. Afterbusiness relocations and military duty took him to various cities through the U.S.,Manager Ray Cabrera, a Summit native, returned to this area to live in ChathamTownship with his wife, Lyn, and two children. Hit mother, Janet Cabrera, was at onetime social editor for the Summit Herald. A member of the Summit Chamber of Com-merce, Ray attended Lycoming College and studied business administration at FalrlelghDickinson. President of the firm Mrs. Margaret Colandrea. is a member of Christ ChildSociety. Fairmont Country Club, Copper Springs and the Madison YMCA.

YAA Resident Camp Has Openings

AREA CHAIRMAN — Hugo M. P la i t of Prospect street, recently attended HamiltonCollege's leadership conference which officially began the coOege's campaign to raise$16,000,000 for endowment, renovation of Hamilton's chemistry building and constructionof new athletic facilities. Mr. Hf»Hi, who is shown above with College President J. MartinCarovano, b a graduate of HamiUon and to chairman of the New Jersey region. A formerUnion County Assemblyman, Mr. Pfalti is a local attorney. Hamilton College U in Clinton,

Two local students at Frederick Anderson, son of graduate.Den i son U n i v e r s i t y , Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Also graduated wasGranville, O. were granted Anderson of 59 GloucesterB.A. degrees at com- road, who majored in Martin Cloran, son of Mr.mencement exercises held history, was a member of and Mrs. Martin T. CloranMay 29. Phi Delta Theta fraternity of 55 Gloucester road, who

The graduates included and is a Summit High School m a j o r e d i n economics. Aneditor and contributor to theuniversity experimentalmagazine, Cloran is a

graduate of the Morristown-Beard School.

There are still openings insome periods of YMCAresident camps, CampWawayanda for boys andCamp Hird for girls (ages 8-16), coed teenage AdventureCamp trips, and FamilyCamp at Frost Valley, NewYork, according to CarminSommo of the Summit AreaYMCA staff. Registration istaken at the Summit Y forall YMCA resident campswith the advantage ofautomatic summer mem-bership in the localorganization so camperscan enjoy gym and poolwhen not at camp.

Camps Wawayanda andHird are situated on theformer 2,600 acre For-stmann Estate in awilderness setting. Theprogram is varied to ac-commodate diversifiedinterests and the needs ofeach age group. The

Chairman NamedBy County Fund

Alan R. Ryan, president ofthe Burry Division, TheQuaker Oats Company,Elizabeth has been namedgeneral campaign chairmanFor the United Way of UnionCounty's 1978-77 fund drive,according to Robert L.Weeks, president of theseven-year old organization.

Mr. Ryan is a director ofthe Eastern Union CountyChamber of Commerce,trustee of Alexian BrothersHospital, Elizabeth and as amember of the United WayBoard of Trustees. He isimmediate past president ofthe Biscuit and CrackerManufacturers' Associa-tion, Washington, D.C.

GraduatesMercersburg

David N. Manley, son ofMr. and Mrs. John A.Manley of Knob Hill drive,was graduated from Mer-cersburg Academy, Pa., atcommencement exercisesheld May 29.

Manley received letters invarsity football and trackand was a member of theyearbook staff.

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WHITTLE AWAY THE HOURS — With a smile andexperienced hands Ed Le Roy carves a variety ofcountry figures from white pine. A graduate of CooperUnion, Mr. Le Roy has been woodcarvlng for over 30years. Using knives, carving tools, and gouges, Mr. LeRoy quickly turns a piece of wood Into a bucolic figure.He also demonstrates his dexterity with wood by craftingfine clocks and furniture. A man of many talents, Mr. LeKoy paints in oils, lectures on transportation, and haswritten the "History of the D & H Canal," currently In itsfifth printing. Mr. Le Roy will be "On-The-Square"Thursday, June 17 from 7-9 p.m. and Saturday, June II)from 1-4 p.m. at Murray Hill Square, New Providence, todemonstrate'his'craft and share his talents.

Tht' Area's iMrgest tind Fine*! Facilities

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youngest campers arescheduled for activities toensure a balanced andbroad program experiencewhile older campers plantheir own activities withstaff guidance.

Teen adventure trips forages 14-17 will includebicycling through Oregon,Idaho, Montana, andWyoming, cycling toursthrough Yellowstone and theGrand Tetons. rafting downthe Salmon "River of NoReturn," backpacking in theWind River Range ofWyoming, touring andclimbing in the CanadianRockies, and visiting Banffand Jasper National Parks,and the Grand Canyon.There are also Penn-sylvania, New England andCatskill bike trips,Delaware River raft trips,Adirondack and Canadiancanoe trips, CatskillMountain backpackingtripe, and staff trainingprograms for teenagers.

Family Camp, a one weekperiod before Labor Day,offers over 100 activities forall ages with meals servedin the dining hall. Each

family has a private cabinwith modern bath facilitiesand there are specialprograms such as carnivals,hootenannies, corn roasts,hayrides, and fireworks.Call the Summit YMCA, TO-3330, for brochures andfurther information.

Boys ChorusWill Benefit

A Newark Boys Chorusbenefit day this Saturday,June 19, at Historic MurrayHill Square, will feature aconcert by 12 boys from thegroup in the courtyard at2:30 and 3:30 p.m.

Learning that the ChorusSchool was recently burnedout of its quarters, Jean andGus Stasi, owners of the ArtCraft House on the Square,enlisted the help of allmerchants, who mil donatea portion of the day'sreceipts to the School.

Historic Murray HillSquare is located on Flora)avenue, New Providence,and is open 9:30 a.m. to 5:30p.m. Saturday.

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Page 8: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGES THKSUMM1THKHALD,THURSDAY,JUNK 17,1»76

Harbor Pilot Not Sure He Wants Son to Follow in Footsteps

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A Summit (ather whoenjoys being a New Yorkharbor pilot is not sure hewants his son to follow in hisfootsteps.

Capt. Ludwig ABreitenfeld, 23 Dale drive,said his ton Steven is anapplicant apprent ice .Steven is 19 years old andattends Union College inSchenectady during , thewinter.

"I have mixed emotionsabout Steven being a harborpilot. It's a very erratic jobas far as'time-off is con-cerned. I never know whenI'm going to work. Mostships move at night, a fewduring the day. I get threehours notice. So we can't

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make plans as a family. Ibuy tickets for plays four orfive times a year and makeabout two of them," he saidin an interview in his home.

Steven was with his fatherrecently when he waspiloting a ship from JerseyCity to Ambrose LightTower at 1:30 a.m.

"We sailed out of JerseyCity with a ship carryingscrap iron headed for Italy.It was a clear night andSteven enjoyed being on thebridge. He had never beenthrough the harbor at nightbefore," the father said.

Capt. Breitenfeld s p k eproudly of his daughter,Cathy, age 22, who is astudent at AmericanUniversity in Washington,DC, She is majoring inpolitical science and workedfor California CongressmanJames C. Cormen lastsemester.

"She had an internshipwith him and enjoyed it verymuch. It lasted threemonths, and she receivedcollege credit. She didresearch for him for variousbills coming up inCongress."

For recreation theBrdieiifelds don't head forthe water. They go hikingand camping.

"Two years ago Cathy andSteve and I camped for fourdays in the Mt. Washingtonarea in New Hampshire. My

son and I have done section!of the Appalachian Trail.The three of us went twosummers ago and Steve andI last summer. My wife,Sonja, likes to hike butdoesn't enjoy sleeping out,"he said.

The family has politicaldiscussions but no greetdisagreements, the fathersaid. "I'm the most con-servative, and the kids aremore liberal, but we're notfar apart. We've never hadany problems that way,"Capt. Breitenfeld said.

Family of seafarers"I had two uncles who

were pilots, and I have abrother who is a harbor pilotin New York now. Mygrandfather was a seacaptain and his father aship's carpenter. Mymother's family have beenseafarers for generations,"the captain said. His fatherwas from Germany but hismother's family fromNorway.

Being a harbor pilot is"fantastically interesting.No two ships are alike. Ilearn a lot about differentnationalities and differentways of life.! meet a iot ofinteresting people. I enjoyworking with ships. Eachone is a new challenge," hesaid.

Each ship leaves from adifferent part of the port and

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FAMILY GETOGETHER — Capt. and Mn, Ludwig A. Breitenfeld of Dale drive, areshown with their two children, Steven «nd Cathy daring a recent Interview.

goes to a different placewith a different crew, heexplained. There's a dif-ference between piloting bigships and small, betweentankers and freighters andpassenger ships. Traffic inpassenger ships hasdeclined, he noted.

Only one or two passengerships a week in the winterleave New York harbor,usually for cruises. In thesummer four or five, when15 nr tg a ufAAlr IHU«H t/> Railhe said.

"The most difficult thingas far as piloting is con-cerned is putting big tankersin anchorage in New Yorkharbor when it's crowded.Channels change so dredgesconstantly dig to keep atmaximum depth, butchannels still change fromweek to week," CaptainBreitenfeld said.

He's been a pilot since1950. He suited as an ap-prentice in 1943 and is now* member of the SandyHook Pilots Association!'

The association is owned bythe pilots and to become apilot an apprentice has to besponsored by another pilot.

"You have to have* twoyears of college now. youdidn't when I started. Also,a seven-year apprenticeshipis necessary. During thattime they stwi «» deckhands and work their wayup to Master Pilot. Whiteapprenticing they go aboardships with pilots and learnhnw to hanrfU* t ^6 m " ^pointed out.

To learn the channelstakes much studying. Eachport is individual. A pilot forone port does not navigateanother.

"1 do the port of New Yorkand New Jersey. It coversthe Lower Bay of New Yorkharbor, Upper Bay, EastRiver, North River, NewarkBay, Hackensack andPassalc Rivers as far asnavigable, Raritan Riverand HariUn Bay,KiJlv»nkyll and Arthurleft,* he'Saftf.1

Largest shipThe largest ship he has

piloted was the QueenElizabeth I. The QueenElizabeth H is smaller. Hehas directed battleships andeven took submarines toSandy Hook.

"The hardest thing aboutthe submarine was gettingon board as it was lew in thewater and difficult totransfer from the launch,"he said CHmhino aboardUrge ships from the launchis hazardous in bad weatherand sometimes pilots areinjured.

"One pilot smashed hisleg and was in the hospitalfor aix months. I haven'tbeen hurt except for asprained back. I did itclimbing over the rail on aship. It happened to be anice day. But once theweather was so bad Icouldn't get off a ship andhad to go to Puerto Rico.The first four tixyw wwreterrible with rolling so bad

Piano Repair is Course TopicRoger Endress of the

Endress Piano Firm will bethe instructor when Kent-Place School will offer asummer course entitled,"The Piano-Its Mechanics,Maintenance, Design, andRepair." The class, whichwill be open to interestedhigh school students andadults, will have anenrollment limited to 15. Itwill begin June 29 andcontinue through July 15,meeting Tuesday andThursday mornings .from9:3O-ll:30a.m. A fee will becharged.

Mr. Endress, who hasbeen in the piano field for 25

years, has taught similarcourses at Kean Collegeover the last three years. Healso has serviced pianos forsuch artists as Van Cliburn,Jose Hurbi, Peter Nero, andMischa Dichter, as well asfor many teachers andschools in this area.

The content of the coursewill include an introductionto tuning and voicing.Repair of the instrumentwill also be covered, asstudents learn how to copewith anything from a penciltrapped behind the keys to acrack in a sounding board.In addition, piano designand the history of the piano

will be discussed.For more information

about the course, contactLouise M. Connolly,director, Kent PlaceSummer School, at 273-0900.

Kenyon Gives

Honors B.A.Timothy G. Byrne, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J.Byrne of 59 Lenox road, wasgraduated from Kenyon-College, Gambier, 0., with aB.A. degree in English, cumlaude

Graduation exerciseswere held May 22.

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we couldn't sit down. Wehung on. They couldn't'serve a meal the first threedays. We grabbed a sand-wich."

Several times a year apilot has to stay on a shipbecause of bad weather, he•aid. Ships are taken awayfrom the docks by tugboats.The pilot takes the ship afterit clears the dock or brings itto the tugs when coming in.A large ship will require twoor three tugs to dock it. "Intimes of strike we do bothpiloting and docking, andit's difficult," he said.

The pilots usually comeaboard ships at inlandwaterways which run fromSandy Hook to AmbroseTower to Coney Island.

"We assist the captain.The local pilot knows thebuoys, channels, rocks,reefs and shoals. Captainsare used to a vast ocean. InNew York harbor we areworking within 100 feet or soof other ships. Two ships inone channel are close, andthere are sharp turns. If youdon't do it right, you runaground."

He has no desire to ownhis own boat. In hjg freetime he would rather hike ortravel with his family."Each year the children getmore enjoyable. It interestsme to see them maturephysically and mentally,"this father said, summingup his feeling aboutparenthood.

Meeting

CalendarThe Zoning Board of

Adjustment will meet inexecutive session onMonday, June 21, at 8:30p.m. in the Mayor's con-ference room, City Hall, 512Springfield avenue.

The Board of Educationwill hold a special meetingTuesday, June 22, at 8 p.m.in the Senior High Schoollibrary, 125 Kent Placeboulevard. The agendaproposes a review ofprospective actions at theregular June 24 meeting anddeclaration of a closedmeeting for personnelnutters.

The B w d of EQocatUmwill mat* In regular •«•*<<»Thursday, June M, at 8 p.m.in the Senior High library.

The Local AssistanceBoard will meet Tuesday,June 22, at 8 p.m. in the localPublic Welfare office, $20Springfield avenue.

The Union CountyRegional Board ofEducation will meetTuesday, June 22, at 8 p.m.in Board offices at 841Mountain a v e n u e ,Springfield, to discuss themusic program and theConstituent Board ofEducation Committee.

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Page 9: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THE SUMMIT HKH AID. THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976PACK 8

In Phi Beta KappaDavid H. dose, son of Mr.

and Mrs. D.H. Close of 35Shadyside avenue, has beenelected to the Theta ofIllinois Chapter of Phi BetaKappa at Lake ForestCollege, HI., where he is ahistory and English major.A consistent Dean's Liststudent. Close has served asstaff member and editor ofthe campus weeklynewspaper.

**»In Honor Society

Two area students atL e h i g h U n i v e r s i t y ,Bethlehem, Pa., have beeninducted to Phi Eta Sigma,national honor society forfreshman students. Thosenamed included Beverly E.Hjorth, daughter of Mr. andMrs. T.A. Hjorth of 23Baltusrol road, and DonaldJ. Gardner, son of Donald J.Gardner of 152 Stoneridgeroad, New Providence.

***Acceptance?

Two local students will be

members of the freshmanclass at Saint LawrenceUniversity, Canton, N.Y., inSeptember. Included areJames H. PitepaWsk son ofMr. and Mrs. JoTta P. Titz-patrick of 10 Colony drive,and Jaime K. Kelly,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Thomas L. Kelly of 9 RobinHood road.

Perry S. Atheneos, asenior at Summit HighSchool, and the son of Mr.and Mrs. Stratos Atheneosof 17 Ruthven place, hasbeen accepted for admissionto Davis and Elkins College,Elkins, West Va., for the fallterm beginning in Sep-tember.

• • *On Dean's Lists

Nancy J. Baker, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. E. CarrollGerathy of 42 Knob Hilldrive, has been named to theDean's List at theUniversity of NorthCarolina, Greensboro,where she is majoring inchild development andfamily relations and is ajunior.

•**Leslie A. Cabibi, daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. F. AnthonyCabibi of 11 Little Wolf road,has been named to theDean's l ist for the springsemester at Green Mountain

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**•. Two local students atRensselaer PolytechnicInstitute, Troy, N.Y., havebeen named to the Dean'sList for the springsemester. Included are AlanKaiser of 10 Hillviewterrace, and David W.Powell of 690 Springfieldavenue.

• **On President's List

Three area students atUnion County TechnicalInstitute and VocationalCenter, Scotch Plains, havebeen named to ihePresident's List forAcademic Excellence forthe spring semester. Thosenamed include Judith P.Melick of 133 Beekmanroad, computer science;Elaine M. Taggart of 40H i l l c r e s t a v e n u e ,mechanical technology, andManju Hirani of 9 ChestnutMill drive, Murray Hill,chemical technology.

Pingry SchoolGraduates

Seven local students at thePingry School, Hillside,were graduated at cer-monies held June 1.

The graduates includedMichael J. Curry of Summit,Christopher Deininger of 10Parkveiw terrace; StephenGianis of 270 Ashland road;Douglas Martin of 135Hobart avenue; RichardMoser of 43 Druid Hill road;Kenneth Robson of 104Portland road; ThomasVHsle of 22 Portland road;Thomas E. Ward of 16Llewellyn road, and DianeWasserman of 71 Hillcrestavenue.

The cermonies weremarked by the presentationposthumously of the AlumniAssociation's Lettei-in-LifeAward to Mark N. Donohue,who was a member of theclass of 1955. Mr. Donohue,ST. of Valley view avenueaccepted the award.

112 Crane drive A.B. Southgate road, A.B.; L. Ochmanek of»GalliMonAlso receiving degrees Cynthia A. Huling of 74 drive, M.L.S. all of Murray

were Jean H. Frantien of 2 Walnut street, and Barbara Hill.

WINNERS—Donald P. DeBanico, of principal Summit Junior High School congratulateswinners of the 1976 National French Contest organized by the Americp.. Association ofTeachers of French. Awards were presented on June 5 at a special awards ceremony heldat the French Institute, New York City. Sallsh Singh, grade 7, gained second place inLevel I in the Metropolitan ares, and Jeanne Gllroy, grade 9, gained fifth place in level 2.The two students competed against entrants front private and public junior and seniorhigh schools in the Metropolitan area. Their teacher. Miss Mary Debly, is a member of thrAmerican Association of Teachers of French.

Rutgers Degrees to Area ResidentsRutgers - The State

U n i v e r s i t y g r a n t e dgraduate and un-dergraduate degrees to 33area residents at com-mencement exercises heldMay 27 at New Brunswick.

Summit graduates in-cluded Peter F. Caliguari,Jr. of 22 Risk avenue, BS.;Helen H. Chan of 158Ashland road, A.B.; GeorgeF. CoUings of 49 Drum Hilldrive, M.S.; Barry W, Davisof 85! Springfield avenue,A.B.; Margaret Cretsingerof 192 Summit avenue, A.B.;Barbara S. Gardner of 5 OxBow lane, M.S.; StephanieJ.Geinsercf 84 River raod.A.B.; and Angela M. Giustiof 7 Milton avenue, A.B.

Other Summit graduatesare Helena S. Halperin of 66Mountain avenue, M.A.;Jonathan Hart of 152Hillcrest avenue, A.B.;Julia A. Huettel of 6 Hickoryroad, B.S.; Paul B.Jeselsohn of 2 Rose lane,J.D.; Kevin P. Kenny of 26Fairview avenue, B.S.;James B. McGrath of 32Lewis avenue, M.B.A.; Gale

***

T. Nairne of 34 Glen Oaksavenue, A.B.; John C.Ogoraaly of 156 Warwickroad, J.D.; Stephanie E.Owen of 128 Maple street,J.D.; Michael J. Fennucci of722 Springfield avenue,A.B.; Rita A. Pinzino of 8Franklin place, A.B.; andCarol J. Tomason of 27Bellevue avenue. Ed.S

Graduates from NewProvidence are Barbara A

Azzolina of 71 Fairviewavenue, A.B.; KennethCherry of 29 Gales drive,A.B.; Carl B. Cooper of 18Willow street, A.B.; LindaI>. Gutreuter of 22 Fox ran,A.B,; Richard W.Piotrowski of 14 Shelleydrive, M.B.A ; HelenPiuciennick of 43 Inwoodroad, A.B.; John F. Smith of29 Wilber street, M.B.A.,and Theresa M. Williams of

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VOICE TRAININGGroup & Private Instructionwith N.Y. City Opera singerNancy Honeooer Roy

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e better buy!Think of it! 1976 Chevette standard in this price is front ^M

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Though the Rabbit costsheavy hundreds more, itgives you lessmpg(perEPA).

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sturdy bumpers with better,body protection, smoother-riding full coil springs, rackand pinion steering. And somuch more

ARROWWhat More Can A Little Car Give?5 Speed or Auto vailable. Factory Air Condition.Several In Stock, Various Colors.

Summit ChryslerPlymouth

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' • • ^ ^ B P ^ • ^ P ^ ^ B hurry by to

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CHevydealer

and see why.

Page 10: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGE 10 TI1E SUMMIT HI It Al.D, THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976

Reception to IntroduceRevolutionary Diorama

A Summit Historical Society reception open to the

TALENT INC.for

KIDS—KIDS—KIDSTOTS—TEENS—CHILDREN OF ALL AGES

BEGINNERS• MODELS • ACTORS

• DANGERSFOB

TV Commerckili • AtoWei • Catalogue*

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

Call Now for AppointmentMONDAY THRU SATURDAY

(201)355-7760

public at lhe SummitLibrary on Sunday, June 20,from 3-5 p.m. will honorPhilbrtck M. Crouch andSummit native Harold C.Thompson, who will in-troduce their "Diorama ofthe Revolutionary Period1780-1782," on display in thelibrary during July.

The Diorama shows thearea contained within thecorners of King's Road(Rte. 24) and the Road toTurkey (River road) inSummit as it appearedduring 178042.

Formerly of Summit andnow of Short Hills, Crouchstudied at the Beaux ArtsInstitute of Design andcreated several large un-dersea dioramas for the 1939NY. World's Fair.

Thompson studied at thePennsylvania Academy ofFine Arts, was part of theoriginal group to form theSummit Art Assn. and in1930 designed a pictorial,map portraying the historyof the Battle of Springfield.

Schools will have use ofthe Diorama for fall studies.

Seton Hall LawGrants Degrees

Two local students atSeton Hall University,School of Law, Newark,were awarded juris doctordegrees at commencementexercises held June 6.

ROCK AND REVOLUTION—Sixth graders at Franklin school recently enterUinedstudents and parent* with a Bicentennial Bandstand. After historical facts were narrated,pantomimes were accompanied by popular rock tones. Among the scenes, performerssang "Saturday Night" for the Boston Tea Party, "The Rhinestone Cowboy" for PaulReveres Ride and, as pictured, "Don't Rock the Boat" for Washington and his oarsmencrossing the Delaware (left to right) Albert Haiback. Ken Newman, Grant Cortiss WUIllaiback and Blair King. The program was organlud by three Franklin mothers—Mrs,•jam™ S. '.Veavrr. jr., Mr.. Petrr R. Newman and Mrs. Thomas Moakley.

Included among thegraduates were GlennGeiger of 51 Canoe Brookparkway, and John E.O'Neill of 6F Beech Springdrive.

Local Men Graduate

Tor Dad o% Ijjs da^Tathers "Dm, June 20th!Tastefully unusual sportswear

. . .for the wonderful Dad in yourlife, choose from an exciting

collection of tastefully unusualsportswear including knit shirts,

sport shirts, casual slacks andleisure suits by Christian Dior,P Oi J MY i

many other outstandingdesigners.

MEN'S CLOTHIERS•I HISTORIC MURRAY HIU. SQUARE

55 Floral Ave Murray HillStore Hours: 9 30 to 5:30 Thursday Till 9

Two local Students at theGill-Saint Bernard's School,Gladstone, were graduatedat ceremonies held June 12.

Included among thegraduates were Scott S.Schnipper, son of Mrs.Avone Schnipper of 79 Broadstreet, and Marc Vilain, sonof Mrs. Carolyn Vilain ofSummit.

Vilain, who received theBausch and Lomb Award in

Science, was on the honorroll for four years, served asphotographer for theyearbook and attended ashort-term institute forstudies in physics. He willattend the University ofRochester in the fall,

Schnipper was a memberof the literary magazinestaff and traveled to theSoviet Union with theRussian studies' class.

Plumbing

ElectricalGardenSupplies

WE LIKE TO HELP

II It Oil \ II MM) VI V It I

City of Summit1976 -1977 .

Expanded Newspaper and MagazineCURBSIDE PICKUP PROGRAM

(See Zone Map)

NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES WILL BE PICKED UPAT THE CURB IN EACH ZONE ON FOLLOWING DATES:

ZONE 1

I (Mon.)3 & 17

17 &21January- 77

fgbruary- 77March _7 7April 1976May 1976June 1976July 1976August 1976 1 ^ . - ^|iimber7?1xllMOctober 76 _ T 4 & 18Ncwmber7.6 ! \ & 15December 76 16 & 20

L' 5 & 1913 & 17

7 J . 2 1x & f9" 2 1 1 6

(Tues.)4 & 1 81 & 1 5 -7 & 2 36 & 2 04 & 181 & 156 & 203 & 17

yy2 T5 & 192 & 16

! 7 & 21

| (Wed.)i 5 * 19

2 & 191 & 157 & 215 & 192 & 1 67 & 2 1 ,

^ 4 & 18*T'iT5]; 6 & 20;' 3 8,171i l & 15

(Thurs.)6 & 203 8, 172 & 161 & 156 & 203 8, 171 8 , 155 & 192 & 167 & 214-4 182 8, 16

( m .7 & 214 & 183 8, 172 &167 & 214 & 182 & 166 & 2 03 & 17i & i55 4 1.93 4 19

NOTE:Pickup dates are 1st and 3rd Monday, 1st and 3rdTuesday, 1st and 3rd Wednesday, lsl and 3rdThursday, 1st and 3rd Friday of each month.Except holidays. Alt paper must be at curb nolater than 8:00 AM

Collected By:Monari Trucking Co.

Chatham, N.J.635-5579 or Call

City Engineer for more information

Ottermlnt your ion* by tht map and circle your pickupdate*. Keep thli schedule lor your convenience.

Work PapersTo be Issued

Beginning June 21,working paper* for student*will be Issued i t the high•chool Monday throughFriday, from' It a,m. to Itnoon. The noun correspondwith the summer hoar* ofthe Youth EmploymentService which It abo locatedin the high school.

Worker* under 18 arerequired by law to haveworking papera.

Student* must have i Job,or the promise of a job,before working papers canbe Issued. All request* mustbe made In person becausecertificate* cannot be tannedto parents or friends.Paper* can be Issued onlyfor Job* within New Jersey.Social Security number* arenot required, but employersneed them for payrollpurposes. Applications for aSocial Security card can beobtained at the Post Officeor at the Social Securit)Officei in Elliabelh orMorris town,

BPW to Award

ScholarshipsThe Business and

Professional Women's Clubof Summit will hold itsmonthly dinner meeting atthe Hotel Suburban onMonday, at 7 p.m.

Club Officers for 1976-77will be installed, threescholarships will be•warded to Summit HighSchool students, the club'scareer advancementscholarship will bepresented and a continuingscholarship to a formerscholarship recipient will beawarded

Catherine E. Hall,Morrtstawn, will be in-stalled as president; MaryAddonizio. Summit, firstvice president; Janicelasello, Summit, secondvice president; Elizabeth A.Kofel, Chatham, recordingsecretary; Joan ('arcrfan,Springfield, correspondencesecretary and JohannaKuba, treasurer.

Lisa Condit, Gail Frickeand Carol Richardson, allSummit High Schooistudents, will be awardedscholarship*. The club willalso grant a scholarship toKrin <CtakHs, Summit, tocontinue her studies at HolyCross College. Mrs. Mar-jorie Quade of Summit willlie awarded the club'scareer advancement.scholarship.

Anyone interested inattending the June 21meeting or joining theSummit BPW may callMary Valenti at 464-2400

Girl Scout

Open HouseCamp Madeleine Mulford.

ii Greater Essex Girl Scoutfeeilitji--which- IncludesSummit, will hold anopenhousr to which thepublic is invited atDingman's Ferry in theI'oconos June 27 from I to 4p.m

The camp is accredited bythe American CampingAssociation and is availablel« be charged on Master-Charge. The camp can bereached by Route 80 west. to206 north to Dingihan'sKerry, proceed over bridgeloSilverLake road, turn leftone mile past Child's StateI'ark, turn right 500 yards tocamp

Loyola GrantsM.S. Degree

Mrs. H. Dwight Munson.daughter of Mr. and Mrs.John B. Sayre of Stanleyavenue, received a masterof science degree in coun-seling and child guidancefrom Loyola University,Baltimore, Md., at com-mencement exercises heldMay 30.

LEARN.ELECTROLYSIS

the KR[[ wayQ carter tft

tcrmantnt ftau rsmovaifje no barker Fuliof partttme

Day or Eva. Mtn. Wom*nCome, writ* or phone lor

FflEEIOOKLETK.

KRti\A**t,</*

itucnoirsisIM ». «1 tl, m. IM|| • HID 1IM1I0

(Xeruviuhf?

-757-7677

VOLUNTEER FLEET — The Newtrucking firm, Jerry V. Carbone, Inc., recently donatedthe use of eight dump trucks and volunteer driv ers to theSummit Elks Lodge No. 1246. The trucks were used tohaul flll dirt to Elks Camp M«ore in HaskeU, N. J. forconstruction of t parking lot area. The camp is ownedand operated for crippled and handicapped children bythe NJ. State Elks Assn. Shaking hands are (left toright) Jerry Csrbone and Patrick J. Fitigeraid, sr,Exalted Ruler. Lodge No. 124«. Other participants wereLloyd Coleman, Cliff King, Wayne Ericswi and BobbyEricson, all of Carbone, Inc.; Charlet Van Werth, jr. ofChatham Main; Jimmie Berry of A. Costa Trucking andowner operators Pa»! He's! aa William Piersop..

ISABEL PALMERInteriors

525 MILLBURN AVENUESHORT HILLS, NEW JERSEY

379-2318

will assume responsibilityfor y o u r . . .

Home* Plants* Petswhile you're away

464-5066Summit firm - Insured - Raftrtntw

bkenlerwid seal revivesen eleqant Vacation.

Seal your letters, documents, andparcels as Washington and the other

great Colonials d id-wi th sealingwax and a seal. Our Bicentennial

Seal has a sterling handle and14 karat gcM-plated base. Inspiredgift, useful possession. Complete :

with sealing wax and Instructions inattractive box, $18.50.

Something Beautiful for Everyone.^U » on* at our anvwitant chaw puna or

Amarican Eipraw • BankAmtrlcard • Master Charge

01.A F»ne Jewelers Since 184B

The Ma l l . Short HillsMontclair • Wayne . Paramus • Woodbridge

E. Brunswick • Nanuet. NY. • Stateh Island. NY:

•L I

Page 11: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THE SUMMIT HERALD, THURSDAY. JUNE 17,1976 PAGE 11

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS - Jean Kim-brough and Stacy Diamond of Summit (left to right) arethe first among »U area Undent* to receive a Hose MarieF. Schade Memorial Scbolanlip for tummer study at theSummit Art Center. Both were honored at a June 10reception at the Center. Miss Diamond, who will attendPhiladelphia College of Art in the fall, will take a printingcourse. Interested In cartooning. Mb* Klmbrough hasselected drawing and painting as her first course. Bothwere recommended by their Summit High art teacherArt DeBrito. The scholarship fund was established byfriends of the late artist from Berkeley Heights.

Red CrossOpen House

Tin- ntany familiar, asHHI as behind-the-scenesservices of the Summit Are»lied Cross Chapter will heinhibited and-or demon-strated from 10 ii.in. to 4p.m.. Saturday, ft a specialBicentennial open houseprogram in tin' ChapterMouse at «»5 Springfieldavenue.

The program, which isbeing inaugurated this yearus an annual event, has beenarranged to acquaint areuresidents with the variousKed ( ross activities that aresupported liy Ihrlrdonations. Refreshmentsn ill he served and »l!committee chairmen will be•in band la answerquestions. I red N. Abbott;' nvice rhairman iif theChapter, is in charge of theprogram.

Junior HonorsKeith Robison of Summit

was inducted into theNational Junior HonorSociety at the Morristown-Beard School during a June3 ceremony.

The Best ForYour Home

• Bothtique• Draperies

• Bedding• Curtains

•k Bedspreads

lose Water Bleat withODRiNIL - Naturv's WayODRINIL M I > I elimineta Meets w«gh(.Moll tnd pullintlt tttlliwd during pie-menstriu!cyeta ODWNIl Il'f H«Iui««Wiy. SiUifKtton M Moiwv Back.

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No pill, tablet, ot capsule ReducingHan sow direct to the public is strwgec.« w « po*«1i. i l . fll mOlft IstfecttWe t t l l f l

the new triple-action NfffM foimulaOOSMtl Reducing Plan1

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USS PHARMACY171 Sprllttjlitld Avenue

MAIL ORDERS FILLED

KNGA<iKI>—('apt. (I'.S.N..• el.) and Mrs. Owen A.Roberts of I'lltsfield, Mass.announce the ennaHemcnt oftheir daughter. Michele S.Huberts of Washington,l).t'.,tolilenn('. Celijer. son•if Mr. arid Mrs. Charles4>eiKer of Canoe Brookparkway. A pro inrriloKradnate of I'itlsfield HighSchool. MESK ItobcrU, who isasfcistanl direilm ofprograms of (he(•eoruetowit UniversityAlumni Association, is aDean's list ^radiiate of(•forgelown's t'ollei<e ofArts and Sciences. Herfiance, who will he law clerkin September for .liul^e TimMurphy <>f the OMri.l ofColumbia Superior Cimrt. isa graduate of SaintBenedict'* I'reparatonS c h o o l , N e w a r k .(ieorKetown I'nlversi^( ollege of Ails and Kcirncesami Seton Hall I'nivrrsihI aw ( enter. A u Milling isplanned for Au£usi 21 atSacred Heart church.IMtUfield

< Hocheleati Photo!

Jobs for YouthStart in July

Under the federally-funded ComprehensiveEmployment and TrainingAct. Summit will beallocated 24 Job slots to befilled by disadvantage*youth, ages 14-21, in thecommunity.

The Summer Program lorEconomically Dlaadvant-aged Youth will begin onJuly 6 and run for eightweeks. Young people foundeligible for the program willreceive 12.30 per hour, atwages.

Adminis ter ing theprogram is Union CountyCommunity Services, Inc.

Dragons Them*

Of ProgramDragons are the theme of

the Summer Reading Clubat the Summit Publiclibrary this year.

All boys and girls ofSummit who have finishedgrades 1 through 6 are in-vited to join. After readingfour books at his or herreading ievei, each childwill post a dragon on thebulletin board. Each groupof four additional books readwill add the dragon's scales.Children will choose theirown books on any subjectthey wish, and the onlyrequirement is that theyread at an appropriate level.

Sign-up dates are anytime between June 21 andJuly IS. An end-of-summerparty will be held for allthose who have read at least20 books by September 4.

Engagement Announced

Mrs. John R. Blnsi

Blasi-White

Mr. and Mrs. Krank JMcBridoof Creenville, S.C.,formerlv oi Suminil. an

Temple SinaiDance Course

A six week co-ed moderndance course will beginThursday June 24, atTemple Sinai, 208 Summitavenue. Classes will meetevery Thursday from 6:30 to9:30 p.m. and are open toadults and teens of bothsexes, with or withoutprevious dance experience.

The classes will focus onrelaxation, muscle tone, andenergy distribution, and willinclude exercises andmovement to a wide varietyof music.

Instructor is ManilaFriedler. For informationand reservations, phonePolly Salmon at 277-1938, orMrs. Friedler at 273-5279.The Women's Association ofTemple Sinai is sponsoringthe glasses.

iiounce the engagement oftheir daughter, Nancy Anne,lo William J. Ginivan, son ofMrs. Casimera Ginivan ofl.yfm, Mass., and of Ihe lateItohert W, Ginivan

A graduate of SummitHigh School andGeorgetown University,Miss Mc'Bride is an editorfor the American Council onEducation. Washington.D.C. She will begin lawstudies in the fall at theMarshall-Wythe School oflaw. College of William andMary. Williamsburg, Va.

Her fiance, also agraduate of Georgetown,who was n consumerprotection specialist withthe Department of Housing•tnd Urban Development, isnow a second-year lawstudent at William andMary

A wedding is planned forJuly 24 at Maris StellaCatholic Church, Avalon.

••Clip Thlt Ad

«

QUICKWBGHTLOSSIS AS EASY AS

.•24...D.C.C.SAVE *9

UkmkffW

Ma daw •" aw > M " " * ( >

CLASSES MEET IN:

BERKELEY HEIGHTSEVERY THURSDAY, at 7:30 PM

C l IAilJi.AI"Y" Jewish C«fflmunlty CenteraUfVtfVtl I 47 Kent Pl ic. Blvd

EVERY TUESDAY, 9:30 M l ft 7:30 PM

351 Millburn Ave.Millburn, N.J.

Open Thurs. to tPM,376-7480

The soft, mallow calfskin has a touchof white stitching for a sportive look.

Soft, cushioned innertolt lor unsur-passed comfort. Genuine stacked

leather heels for the finaltouch. Tan, bone oi

white. $39

Diet coNtroi cersiters,

Nlee Pell's386 Springfield Avenue, Summit. N.J

WALL TO WALL

mmIH TH£ STOIf

: 60%OFSAVESAVt-

SAVt

H i m CUtUMN CMATfO ITOUI ADVIITISINGUHNCY - JUST TOmu> Aovnmsi m l

HIB II tUNPASdNATION -

COMTUMNTIKIMJ WU,nui orroanmnY to.

WtWiUI*Op«n

FrMn Ntaht

ut PRIZEColor TV S«»2nd PRIZE

Grandfather ClockPLUS —MORE-

BEAUTIFUL PRIZESPRIZES WILL BE AWARDED

12 Noon 7

Ri'iil Chapel. SamforriI Diversity, Birmingham.Ala., was the selling June 12lor Ihe wedding of MissMary K. White, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. William K.White ol liirmingham. tolohn It Blasi. son of Mr.and Mrs John A Itlasi ofSummit I'olluwing Iheceremony, a reception washeld at 'Hie Club.

TSii' bride was given inirarriage l>y her father.Miss June (iodsey was maid"f lionnr, while ihe l>rido'ssisters. Mrs Mark l*mleviif New Orleans. La., andMrs Sue Werkley ofI'. t r in i n t> h n m u'prpl)ii<lesmaids

The h r i d e g r o o m ' sbrother-in-law. Joseph J(irasso, was liesl man.I'sher-- included Craii!I'i'vins nf Birmingham, andHolier' Buncli ofI rediTicksburg. Va

Mr Kliisi iv ,i lawyer.'ssneiale*! v ith ihe

EngagementAnnounced

Mr. and Mr«. MartinWalsh of Shantalia, Galway,Ireland, have announced theengagement of theirdaughter, Nuaia TheresaWalsh of Brighton, Mass., toMichael Albert Quinn, son ofMr. and Mrs. Edward J.Quinn, jr. of Colony drive.

A September 25 weddingis planned in Brighton,Mass.

For in-depth reporting onIhe local icene, read theSummit Herald every week.

iiepartment of the Interior.Washington. DC

The couple will reside atAlexanderia, Va.

ANTIQUES/ f l u r i i l ' s

Mccnlight SaleEleganza invites you to a wine and rosesclose-out of clothes gathered on our sentimentaljourneys. Romance from France. Nostalgiafrom Italy. Stars from designers' heaven. Saint laurent,Jean Muir, Ungaro, Albini, Mic Mac, Issey Miyake,Pancaldi, Basile, lesCopains, New Man and many more.The beautiful labels of $200 to $800 fame.Now Moonlighting for $5 to $50.Thursday & Fr iday nightsJune 17 and 18Eight P.M. to midnight.Don't let us sale without you.Cash only.

225Mil!burn Avenue, Millburn, New Jersey(attheUpperCommon)Tel. 201-376-2129

NIMANfNTHAIIIEM0VAL

SMtraMMkdbkhaCM

ranCWwDE FRANZ

ELECTROLYSIS

»MKVMIIU.«J

l7t-MS©

ERIC Handwrought Jewelry

BRACELETSSTERLING SILVER

CUT OUTS • OVERLAYS • WIRES

from M500

103 SUMMIT AVENUE, SUMMIT 273-1499

Beginning June 21 it

5o!ef wiHi prices..

RE6ULAR.LY ZO°° - 35,

Red Cross. Socialitiei, Cobbiai,Careisa. PappagalloWomen's Florsheim

blacks, blues, reds, greens,tans, bones, casuals,

and some sandals

Wee Dell's. s u m m i t .

Open Thursday til 9: 273-2042

Page 12: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

r ACE 12 THKSUMMIT HERALD, THURSDAY.JIJNE 17,1976

Student Council Gives $600 in Grants, kyBnceKBMht

The student Council atSummit Hlllh has awarded

$600 scholarships to threeseniors. In the past theCouncil has given only one

DINNER-THEATREMow Showing

"THE BOYS IN THE BANDS"(CALL 273-1513)

HIGH ATOP THE NEW HAMPSHIRE HOI SI,IN

For the ManIn Your House...June 20 is Father's Day

He'd certainly enjoy being invited outfor dinner, especially at the Old MillInn!

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 766-1150

$400 award.This year, the council has

a balance of dose to $4,000.At the last council meeting,the executive committeeand the council agreed thatthe additional scholarshipappropriations were thebest way to use the extrafunds.

A student-faculty com-mittee choose Jane Pinzlno,Debby Sperco, and JimFlannagan to receive thescholarships. They werechosen on the basis offinancial need and con-tributions to the studentbody.

The scholarships will bepresented at tonight'sgraduation ceremony.

At the last student councilmeeting Terry Crowly wassworn in as president of theGeneral Organization fornext year. Woedy Oliverwas made vice president.

The two have indicatedthat they plan to sponsoranother submarine sale nextfall, and Council leaders will,work over the summer toplan the sale.

Rlnaldo Compiles College Financial Source BookletA comprehensive listing

of major sources of financialaid for college students fromI'nlon County has beencompiled by Hep. Matthew.1. Kinaldo, it was an-nounced today

The Free booklet,"Congressman Rlnaldo's(lulde to Sources of CollegeAid," lists scholarships,grants and low interestloans available to NewJersey students and in-cludes advice on proceduresto apply for the funds.

Copies of the booklet aretieing distributed throughpublic libraries in Union •County. A limited numberalso is available to residentsof the 12th District at theCongressman's district

office, 1961 Morris avenue,Union

Kinaldo said the booklet,was compiled as a result ofnumerous inquiries fromconstituent!! in Unionf'dunty who are uncertainabout qualifying for collegeassistance. The UnionCounty Congressman said it

Impaired Drivingfats Fines for 2

Impaired driving nettedtwo drivers fines of $75 eachand revocation of theirdriver's licenses for sixmonths.

Those penalized inMunicipal Court werePatricia A. Urban ofElizabeth, and Roy R.Butler of Argyle Court.

r e f l e c t e d g e n e r a ldissatisfaction over therising costs of college that iscausing an increasingnumber of middle classstudents to drop out ofc-ollege.

Kinaldo has introducedlegislation to provide taxwrite-offs for tuition andliving expenses at publicand private colleges.Kinaldo said it was neededtn permit more youngpeople to finish theireducations.

He also has sponsored abill to establish a nationaldata bank that would offerstudents information onhigher education op-portunities and scholarshipsavailable in other states.

Copies of Rlnaldo'stwokiet on higher educationassistance may be obtainedby writing to his districtoffice at 1961 Morris avenue,Union, or the Washingtonoffice at 314 Cannon HouseO f f i c e B u i l d i n g ,Washington, DC. 20515.

Music and entertainment

every Friday and Saturday evening

BernardsvilleRt 287 Is at our doorttep. Rom Morriston, 2 Exit 26B

'BcmwdsviUe. from Somervilte, N.Maple Ave , West)

Father's Day Reservations

1 - 3 - 5 - 7OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Entertainment Friday and SaturdayLunch 1 1 - 3 Monday-Friday

Dinner 5-10:30 Monday-SaturdayOpen Sunday 2-9

Happv Hour Monday-Fridav 4:30 - 6Hot or Cold Hors d'oeuvres

Monday-Tuesday Special Prime Rib Dinner S4.9S

279 Springfield AvenueBerkeley Heighta

4644927 f

Marco f>©IoItiUanAmtrlam Cuuinr

siitct 1934

Appearing: in Juneevery Thursday, FridaySaturday and Sunday

THEMICHAEL MAURO

SHOWN.). Newest Singing

. Sensation withFflings for your

listening and

dancing pleasure

Mm Ewtj SUNDAY Is

j m w r t nBring the children

Entertainment ft Dancing7 p.m. U p.m.Ewrj Wednesday

Greek Night

FOR RESERVATIONS

PHONE 277-4492527 Morrii Am:, Summit

REVUE AT PENNY LANE—Now In Us ninth season.Penny Lane Players, a dramatic workshop sponsored bythe Summit YMCA, Is presenting an original nuukalrevue July 17-24 at the Summit Playhouse. Auditions willbeheldSundny, June JO, from 1Z-4 p.m. at the VM for aUinterested students, Sth through 12th grades. For furtherinformation, call Producer D.W. Fletcher, 273-KS1.Pictured are tome punt performers of the troupe.

Toens Noeded As VolunteersTeenagers who wish to

volunteer summer hours atJohn E, RunneUs Hospital inBerkeley Heights may at-tend a training class forCandy-Stripers from June29-Juiy I, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Volunteers are needed inboth nursing services and inthe recreation department

assisting patients in artsand crafts, sewing, dancingand social activities.

Adult volunteers, are alsoneeded. For information,call Doris Grow, volunteercoordinator, 322-7240, ext.293.

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Have a deliciousPrime Rib dinner

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Malpero's Restaurant381 Springfield Av*., Summit 273-9822

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Prime Rib Steak 54 Lb 4.15Chicken Cutlet White meat, French Fries and Tomato 3.10Fried Fillet of Sole, Tartar Sauce .3.16"Grilled Catf's Liver and Fried Onions ...,.' 3.45Malpere's Italian Baked Lasagne with Fresh Ground Beef 2.50

All dinners Include - Juice, Soup of the Day, tossed salad,choice of dressing, dinner rolls, choice of 2 vegetables Inc. oneof our specialties - stuffed baked potato, dessert nlua pot ofcoffee, cgfa pjeS/ ice Cream, Puddings - Homemade on Premises

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Cwivanl»nt> Tut villa I I loc»l»d in tha kacrt of Summit, SS Rlvtr RaM. Optn 7:H a.m. #,ml larvinsbrHklait, luncn and diantr. Malar cr«4ll earth ara honor«l. *mpl» parking u avaJUMa.

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Tha food matt t * tMta tattad to u truly aagnclalad, rha Italian and *m trkan antraat ara ovlttand-tnt and th* prkat found an tha maau ar* I M main raaton Tht Villa bouts "Summlt't FamilyRattawant." - '

Want Hma you and your lamlly dint out atw al Tht Villa and My Italh) to noil Tcny Covlallo.

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y

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Broiled Lemon Sole,French Fried Sea-food Cakes, Deep,Sea Scallops, and '

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So, if you are a Seafood Lover, brine someone who sharea yourpassion to Stouffer's this Wednesday or Thursday" w*

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Page 13: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THE SUMMIT UlCKALD. THURSDAY, JUNK 17,1976 PAGE 13

Four Off on Summer AFS TripsSouth America and Europe are the

summer destinations for four SummitHigh School students who will spendthe next three months abroad as partof the cultural exchange program ofthe American Field Service.

The AFs students are: SallyBrinker, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.Ray Brinker, 19 Badeau avenue, whowill live in Heinola, Finland untilAugust; Deirdre Geddis, daughter ofDr. and Mrs. Donald R. Geddis, 116Ashland road, who will visitAusbutte), Germany; Victoria Rock,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S.I. Rock, 6Warwick road, who is going toCorriwites, Argentina and GregoryDrummond, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.Alan Drummond, 18 Dorchester Rd..

who will travel to Bogota, Colombia.Announcement of the placements

was made at Sunday's fawn party:given at the home of AFS chapterpresidents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald F.Nelson, 68 Oakland place.

Honored guests at the party werethe three AFS students, who havespent the past year, at the SummitHigh School. They are: Jorg Luft,West Germany, who has stayed withMr. and Mrs. S.J. Koten, Oak Ridgeavenue; Sandra Kezan, Campos,Brazil who has spent the year with Dr,and Mrs. Brinker, and Marrti Kor-piljaakko, Southern Laapeentra,Finland who has stayed with Mr. andMrs. David L Farnam. 43 CanoeBrook parkway.

EAGLE SCOUT — Scout Troop 162 of Central Presbyterian Church recently awarded therank of Eagle Scout, the highest rank In Scouting, to Steven Pool* of 206 Blackburn road.The Eagle rank was given at the troop's annual award dinner on Monday, June 7. Shownare Steven and his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Poole.

May; Hotter Than NormalA little warm for May is Galatoia of the U.S.

the way Dr. Anthony Cooperative Weather

Authentic

American Indian

*( Jewelry

Scrimshaw Jvwclry . . .an etching or engraving onto Ivory which is thenblackened in to give it contrast Your signedSuinnhaw jevwiry i» i-ngraved onto ivory sr,d sstinto hand made silver.

RINGS BRACELETSPENDANTS EARRINGS

ALL STERLING SILVER DESIGNS & INITIALS

BUY A GIFT - SAVE A LIFEPercentage of Proceeds to Summit Animal Welfare League

JERRY'S INDIAN TRADING POST- « . 33 Maple Street, Summit 273-3553 mm

^ * Monday thru Saturday 9 • 5, Thursday til 9 *™

i

Station at Union Collegedescribed the merry monthin his tm'terological sum-mary to the NationalWeather Service. ,

The mean temperaturefor the month was H2.7degrees, two degrees abovenormal. The highestmonthly temperature was 8"idegrees on May 15. withMay 4 and 5 sharing honorsfor the monthly low (if 31degrees. Dr Gulatolnreported.

The highest temperatureon record lor May was-recorded in 1962 when thethermometer reached »7degrees The record low of26 degrees occurred in 1974.

Precipitation for Maytotalled 4.07 inches, an in-crease of 0.4:5 inches aboveoverage. The wettest day ofthe month was May 2, when1.31 inches of rain fell.

The greatest rainfall onrecord was 8.38 inches in1968 and the lowest. 1.32inches in 1965

IIKRE SUNDAY — Rev.Dm Id K. Ham well D.D.minister emeritus of ChristI hurrh, will return to hispulpit and conduct morningworship at 10 a.m., Sunday.

now in summit

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PERFORMERS AWARDED • Receiving the innusl Performing Arts Student award fromPlayhouse Assn. president Henry Crotx are Summit High seniors David Fletcher andJanet Una. David, who will attend Brigham Young University this fall, was mostrecently assistant director and scene designer for "The Music Man." He has composedmusic and directed several original plays for the Penny Lane Players In summer monthsand has appeared at Metropplitan Musical Theatre. Janet, who most recently played Mrs.I'liroo in "The Music Man," attended the American School of Paris where she achievedhigh honor*. She plans to attend Drew University. Memorable mentions went to MichaelCordon and Andrew Soccadnto for technical stage expertise.

Nat'l Honor Society Inducts 23 JuniorsTwenty-three students in

the junior class of SummitHigh School were inductedinto the membership of theNational Honor Society,Wednesday, June 2.

Members were selectedby the school faculty for

The 5*cylinder Mercedes-Benz 3OOD.Another engineering milestone that has

quietly inspired a changein traditional automotive design.

The Mercedes-Ben: 5001) hasquietly cliangeJ the rules of

the automobile g;mi(f. This 5-cyl-inder Diesel automobile otfers aunique combination ot perform-ance, luxury, economy and quality.It is the most powerful, the mostcomplete and the swiftest Dieselpassenger cat ever sold. SinceMercedes-Benz introduced the hrstproduction Diesel passenger car 40years ago, that is only fitting.

No tune-ups—ever

Ginsider the benefits of tinsMercedes-Beiu. The 100D usesecnrttxr.icii! Dlese! fuel. Gsintr '-wide, every gallon averages 4C-7Cless than regular gasoline.

Diesel fuel also has more en-ergy per gallon than feisoline, soevery gallon not only costs you less,it takes you farther. And, Dieselfuel is plentiful. Thousands andthousands of stations sellit all across America.

The i tf l toJa 3iX' DKK-I odntixi EVAimiewtfe i-Utnuslt% »f 1H m/ig (htuhway}t»SW-«(<lH,if , l Wfiilr Your milrag*

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Another plus: Witii tin- 1001 ">yuu can forget ah>ui rh.it expen-sive automotive tuMom known athe conventional tuiii'-tip. Beim;-*-it has no spark plugs, poinis, Jisrrih.-K-.r, csrsdenscr or c.irKiretur,the Mercedes-Benz KTOD imn .eivr, needs one.

One more thing. While the300D is not as hig, not as heavyand not as thirsty as most full-sizedsedans, this 5-passcnger automu-

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Over the p.i**t hw yc.ir-. Nteiuiles'IV-n: jutoniohilo h.tve IK-U theirv.iku' Ivtfcr than any ntlu r in,ikei>l it'Min Cii st'IJ in AmerK.i Itvt.tikk to ro.*Min tlur the KVPwillK- no t-xieptiun Afterfi.h iiitfifitotivt' toreruii.ilicul it*l.iv. tt ^ Kusound .issi-i while the

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meeting high standards ofscholarship, service,leadership, and character.New president of the societyIt Sue Gavoor; secretary,Elizabeth Mason. Otherinductees include LorraineAdams, Sarah Boyce, DianaCooksey, Terrence Crowley,Kenneth Dengler, JackDorer, Deldre Geddis,Kathleen Harte,' MarcMauser, Katherine Himsel,

d C h NA h K . l

Lauren M

Pilar Ramirez, CarolynSchwanhausser, JuliaSmerald, Georgene Whelan,Weady Whitlock, KathrynWilson and Louis Zachary.

Summit NHS memberstutor within the high schooland community, and alsoserve as ushers at the highschool graduation. This yearthe society, under theauspices of the SummitUons Club, sponsored thqeye glaar drive for NewEyea for Ifae Needy.

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Page 14: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGE] TIIK SUMMIT HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976

New Anti-Crime StrategyNeeded Now,Rinaldo Says

Rep. Matthew J. Rinaldosaid today that1 a newfederal and state anti-crimestrategy must be developedto rollback the wave ofcrime engulfing America'scities and spreading to itssuburbs with increasingviolence .

He called for

Congressional action torestore the death penalty,impose mandatory five-yearprison terms on anyonecommitting a crime whilearmed with a gun, increasedinternational efforts to curbnarcotics smuggling, andfor more funding of juvenilecrime prevention programs

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BEACH ANDTENNIS CLUB

201-647-9888on New Vernon Road, inMeyersville, just south of

Chatham

through the Law Qiforee-m e n t A s s i s t a n c eAdministration

The New .lerseyCongressman warned thaiunless a new effort is madeto curb crime, it woulddestroy the nation's cities bycompelling more businessand middle class residentsto flee to the suburbs

"Crime is the enemywithin America," Rinaldosaid. "Violent crime hasbecome so much a part ofthe daily scene that there isa real danger it may boaccepted as a normal wny ofIife.'f

He said that unless thecriminal justice system canstart curbing crime,American democracy willnot be able to live up to theConstitutional guarantee ofa s s u r i n g d o m e s t i ctranquility for the people ofthis nation. The result wouldbe more governmentrestraints on the way thatpeople live, work anil travel;ind increased mistrustbetween Americans

As a start, Kinaldo saidthai the nation's leadersshould honestly admit thatAmerica is losing the war oncrime und that a freshapproach must b<- takenliefore it is too late

One of the first things toacknowledge, Rinaldn said,is that the prison system isincapable of rehabilitatingmost criminals, and that tin-prisons should t>c used tomake convicted felons worktff their crimes. He also

sharply criticized the use olfurloughs for convicted

d i N J

Summit Man Winner InCarter Delegate Slate

prisons, and the widespreaduse of narcotics

Rinaldo pointed out thatnearly two-thirds of prisoninmaies had used drugsregularly, and that onefourth were convicted ondrug related charges Yetlittle is being done in theprison system to curb druuuse and narcotics are still

I'PBEAT TREAT - As part of the city's Bicentennial celebration, the I |i With Peoplemusical troupe will perform at Memorial Field on Friday. July 2, at 8:45 p.m. In case olrain, the concert sponsored by CIBA-GEIGY will be held at the scheduled time In theauditorium at Summit High School, Kent Place boulevard. The audience will be seated ona first-come, first-serve hauls in the auditorium. Up With People IK comprised of youngmen and women, ages 17 to 23. from 17 countries and morr than 40 slates.

heing smuggled into manyprisons, he complained

Reviewing his legislativeproposals lo Congress,Rinaldn said they includeearlier lulls that he in-troduced to restore theilealh penalty in certaincases, including the murderof law enforcement officers,and for mandatory five-yearprison terms lor anyonecommitting a felony whilearmed

The legislative packagealso includes proposals forrape prevention ami conI nils, and a kin on thei in p o r t a t i o II a n dmanufacture of cheap hand-guns known as SaturdayNight Specials.

Itinaldo said thill theit-tviii appropriation byCongress ol $2-1 million toimplement the JuvenileJustice and liolimiuency Actvas far too little in eomparison tn the size of theproblem More than half thecrimes in America involveteenagers, he noted, and hepointed nut that they havet 'ecome i n c r e a s i n g l yviolent

[THE SUMMIT EXPRESS co. INC.]66-76 RAILROAD AVENUE

Agtnt For

AALLIED VAN UNES

277-0315

MOVING & STORAGE

The Jimmy Carterdelegate slate, winner inSummit balloting, took twoof three positions'in the 24thlegislative bi»imt race fordelegates to the DemocraticNational Convention nextmonth.

Mrs. Marian Smith ofParsippany, of the un-committed slate, andRavenal Curry of Summit,of the Jimmy Carter slate,were apparently electeddelegates from the districtto attend the Democraticconvention in New YorkCity

Unofficial returns alsoshowed that David Simon ofParsippany, from theCarter slate, was electedalternate delegate, SummitDemocratic Chairman BobWolfenbarger, announcedthis week.

Confirmation of theunofficial figures is ex-pected shortly from NewJersey's Secretary of State.

The three led a field ofDemocrats ' representingseven slates competing inthe June 8 New Jerseyprimary. Within days of theballoting, however, it ap-peared that Jinuny Carter,former governor of Georgia,is the party's apparentPresidential nominee.

Voters in Summit had toovercome a difficult ballotto support the presidentialcandidate of their choice. Tovote for a single slate meanta voter had to pull the votinglever five times in threeplaces: once in thepresidential preferencecontest, once for the atlargedelegate slate, and onceeach for the two delegateand one alternate positions.

"Many voters didn'tunderstand the mechanicsof voting for an entireslate," said Mr. Wolfen-barger. "It was apparent bythefall-off in voting betweenthe preference voting anddelegate selection that a

great many Democratsdidn't realize they had tovote in three places to cast ameaningful vote for theparty's nominees."

"Needless to say," saidMr. Wolfenbarger, "thecomplicated ballot costevery slate many votes."

Visit FaisonAt City Hall

Councilwoman NaomiFaison is scheduled to be atCity Hall Saturday morningfor informal talks withcitizens.

Theater Needs

More PersonnelThe Gemini Repertory

Theater of Berkeley Heightsneeds additional personnelfor its upcoming summerseason, which includes"Celebration" and threecaberet-style productions.

Auditions will beheld onWednesday, June 23, from 7to 11 p.m. at St. John'sLutheran Church.

All are invited. Bringaudition material, musicand monologue. For furtherinformation call 464-2122 or322-5611.

Roanoke GivesBiology B.S.

Lynda H. Sagan, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Robert ASagan, of 28 Baliusroi road,received a B.S. degree inbiology from RoanokeCollege, Salem, Va., atcommencement . exercisesheld May 23,

A Dean's List student,Miss Sagan was a memberof Chi Omega and thestudent government.

1M»NOHKI>—Mrs. FrankKompany "' Van!>>*•' P'a«'*receh «•<!the Walnut Plaque;i«ard in i ecoKnilion forsmici-s In the <;irl Seoul< oiincil "f (irraler I'sspx('«u»l>. I'n-siilrnl Itarhanillomaine presided over theCouncil's installation ofofficers and award(iieoioniev at the annual..ssrmlilv oK-ellnK held ntMe'morial llit>»' Schooli rdar (irove. Active insi-Milim*. since HIM. Mrs1-nriipanv lias also receivedIII. I listiiicuisliecl Serviceaward and the <Hrl Scoutpin. Her volunteer service-ini luitc; assistant leader,liiiili-r. district chairman.hiMiii iiinsuiUiiil. neigh-Imrliooil chairman aniluMiiicil hoard member.

SwarthmoreConfers B.A.'s

Two local students wereawarded BA. degrees by

Swarthmore College, Pa., atcommencement exercisesheld May 24.

Included among thedegree recipients werePatricia M. Fairfield,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.John Fairfield of 116 Coltroad, and David L. Sacks,son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis D.Sacks of 166 Hillcrestavenue.

Sacks was graduated withhigh honors and was electedto Phi Beta Kappa. A Latinmajor, he was a member ofthe wrestling team and alsoplayed lacrosse and rancross-country. He will at-tend Oxford University.

Miss Fairfield, whomajored in history, wasgraduated with honors andwas a participant in thehonors program.

Vermont GivesArea Degrees

Two area students weregraduated from theUniversity of Vermont,Burlington, at com-mencement exercises heldMay 28-30.

included among thegraduates were DavidOzsvath of Summit, B.A.,and Carla B. Lewis ofMurray Hill, BA.

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Page 15: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THE SUMMIT HERAI-D.TIIIIKSIMV, JUNK 17,1976 PAGE 15

BAND BOYS - Continuing weekend through June 27 at the Craig Theater are DavidGarf inkel (left) of Summit and Ed Hurley of Cranford as two of "The Boys in the Band." anon-musical play for adults, depleting the Interpersonal retatlonshipa of a group of men ina N.Y. environment who gather for a birthday party given for one of the charactersplayed by Walter Talley of Summit (not pictured). Playwright Mark Crow ley reveals withhumor their social behavior and personal problems. Shows are at 8:30 p.m. and 7:30Sundays. For information, call 273-6233.

Gall© Urges CutsIn State Spending

• i

Assessing his first fivemonths in the New JerseyAssembly, Dean A. Gallofrom the 24th District in-cluding Summit noted thathe has attempted to "morestringently control statespending" by introducinglegislation.

His bill, ACR-129,proposes an amendment tothe State Constitutionproviding that any billwhich reduces the locallyderived revenues of anymunicipality, county orschool district must passboth houses by a 2-3 vote- or54 votes. It will come beforevoters in Nobember.

Gallo stated that asminority freshman memberof the AppropriationsCommittee.hefeelsthat "theGovernor used the budget inan attempt to bring on anincome tax. In doing so, hecut the most sensitive areasin order to bring pressure onthe legislature and thepeopie in the stated

Gallo relieves theseservices should be restoredand administrative costs cutinstead because "...fiiow-sive increases in stateadministration were madeto absorb the moniesderived from the cuts," hecharged.

T h e R e p u b l i c a nrepresentative declaredthat he will seek support inthe Assembly for spendingreductions and state aidrestorations.

New HavenConfers B.S.

John N. Stillwell of 18Madison avenue wasawarded a B.S, degree incommunication by theUniversity of New Haven,West Haven, Conn., at

iheld June 6.

Garage SaleAids AnimalsThe Summit Animal

Welfare League will hold agarage sale Saturday, June9 from 10-5 at 124 Ashland

road, at the corner of Colonycourt. Featured will belawnmowers, both powerand push types, smallfurniture, china, g la» ,books, Jewelry, figurines,and household furnishing).

Donations of saleableItems may be left at thegarage entrance any time.

Shopping Day

At RunnellsThe dining room of Mary

Connolly Hall at John E,Runnells Hospital will betransformed into a mam-moth Shopping Centerwhere patients will be ableto browse and shop to theirhearts content.

The Traveling Store willset up at 9:30 a.m. on June18 and the patients will haveuntil 3:30 p.m. to shop. Themerchandise will includeclothing for men and women,special items for wheel-chair patients, and robesand nightwear.

Volunteers will be on handto transport patients to thestore area and assist withtheir selections.

Gives Master'sKaren Jaffe Ward,

daughter of Mrs. GraceJaffe of Edgewood road,received a master's degreein community organizationfrom the University ofRochester al a springgraduation.

A graduate of SummitHigh School, Mrs. Ward isa!so a graduate of KeuSiaCollege for Women.

\ for graduation . . .* \ a TYPEWRITERt / J.K. OFFICE MACHINES\ » / «w. Summit Avenue & Bank Streety Summit 273-8811

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DIRECTOR - Mrs. JudithCorney, of BerktleyHeights, has been named tohead the relocationdepartment for Douglas andJean Burgdorff. Inc.,realtors covering MorrisCounty, Somerset Countyand the Summit area. Inresponse to the need forspec ia l ized individualservice for corporate em-ployees moving to a newcommunity , BurgdorffRealtors is the first in theSummit area to create aseparate department to fillthis need. Through regionaland national affiliations,Mrs. Corney will help acompany provide Its em-ployees with a completerelocation service, whetherthe move is local or to adistant city. Mrs. Comey, agraduate of BrownUniversity, is a member andformer finance chairmanfor the League of WomenVoters. For the last fouryears, she has served as atownship appointee and co-chairman of the BerkeleyHeights Committee ohHousing for Senior Citizens.(Wolin photo)

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EDUCATION SPEAKER •Dr. Edward F. Carpenter,director of the HarlemPreparatory School inN.Y.C., will speak on"Education and the Future"at 8 p.m. tomorrow, June 18,at n& Blackburn road. Dr.Carpenter holds a doctoratein education from theUniversity of Massachusettsand an honorary doctorateof laws from iona College.He has appeared on suchTV programs as "TheToday Show" and "SixtyMinutes." The meeting,open to the public, Issponsored by the Baha'lGroup of Summit as part ofRace Unity Day. For in-formation and tran-sportation, call Dr. AnnSchoonmaker-Boyd. 273-4665 or Tonnie Shelton, 273-15*5.

TO KNOWV O I R NKV. TOWN

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Dividend AnnouncedAt its meeting June 10, the

board of directors of UnitedCounties Trust Company,authorized payment of theregular quarterly cashdividend in the amount of 25cents per share, payableJuly 31,1976, to stockholdersof record July 9,1976. Basedon the 1,928,546 shares

outstanding, the cashdividend distribution willamount to $482,137.

The bank's statement ofcondition as of March 31,1978, revealed assets inexcess of (400 million withcapital funds and reservesshown as approximately $39million.

Resident Named To New CompanyJames M. Robertson of

Oak Ridge avenue has beennamed executive vicepresident of the newly-formed Frank Ilenjes & Co.,Inc., dealers in investmentsecurities at 100 Wall Street,N. Y. C.

A graduate of Colorado

State College, Robertsonattended New YorkUniversity graduate schoolof business. He is marriedand has six children.

The new firm willspecialize in municipal andcorporate bonds.-

CANINE CAROUSELPROUDLY PRESENTS. ..THE PET OF THE MONTH A WARD

CHILD CARE TKUSTEES •• Newly elected President of the Summit Child Care Centerboard of trustees D. Anne Roessner Alherton (left) confers with new Executive VicePresident Lucy Tinker and Bob Lurie, Center, executive director. Beginning her fourthyear on the board, Mrs. Athorton has set a goal to complete the necessary 1150,000 fund-raising. Also elected to the board but not pictured are Diane Johnson, vice president;Phyllis Lemkau Welch, vice president; Ruth Schwartz, secretary and Beth Currytreasurer. (William Schneller photo)

Voc. Tech GraduatesEleven local students at

the Union County TechnicalInstitute and VocationalCenter, Scotch Plains, weregraduated al com-mencement exercises heldJune 9.

The graduates includedMichael E. Barber of 52Beauvoir avenue, auto bodyrepair; Edward B. Bland of56 Springfield avenue,automotive mechanics;Michael Delia Piazza,of 12Clark street, baking; Hob h,Gundersen of 16 Hotarydrive, welding; Gail

Harootunian of 21 Middleavenue, beauty culture, andCandice J. Kessier of i7Henry streeet, beautyculture.

Also graduated wereMichael K. Luciano of 13Harvard street, automotivemechanics; David Malleo of3 Edison drive, appliancerepair; Joe S. Quirk of 68Canoe Brook parkway, autobody repair; Frank S. Russoof 110 Orchard street, autobody repair, and GerryZiros of 606 Springfieldavenue, beauty culture.

Colgate Gives Honors B.A.Karen K. Anderson,

ilaughler of Mr and Mrs.Custat Anderson ol 57Wallace road, wasgraduated from ColgateI'mvorsity, Hamilton. N.Y .May 30, with a HA degree,rum laude. with honors inpsychology

A graduate of SummitHigh School. Miss Anderson

She plans to enter theUniversity of Virginia inSeptember to work towardsa (loclnralf in school-child|isych(i|ogy.

is a int'intHT of the nationalhonor society in psychology.uas chosen as a Charles A.Dana Scholar ami receivedthe I'hil I! MillerPsychology Award

Boston College

Gives DegreesEight local students at

Boston College, ChestnutHill, M iss., w?re swj*rfj*vjdegrees at commencementexercises held May 24.

The graduates includedMary K. Geiger of 51 CanoeBrook parkway, whomajored in English; MonicaTrindade of 23 Old Oakdrive, French; Joseph E.Clabby of 25 Tulip street,A H , English; Thomas P.O'Neill of 227 Oak Ridgeavenue, A.B., English;Margaret M. cruder of 4iRowan road, A.B.,sociology; Marianne E.McConnell of 75 Princetondrive, New Providence,B.S., accounting, and LindaC. Sharkus of 1505Springfield avenue. NewP r o v i d e n c e , B . S . ,chemistry.

Kor in-depth reporting onthe local scene, read theSummit Herald every week.

Smunthi Hoffman, Wireh»ir Fos Terrier owned by theHof fmans of Summit. If your dog It not becoming toyou — he should be coming to us, Linuie Carousel,1794 Springfield Avc, New Providence, 4644024

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hum Itu- lumiluti.- in the IIOUMMO ilu-took in ilk' slieii, I rum the tawlll si[-n k>uiblc utensil-*, hiv was lllc winlti ol \WHK!He «as a traltsinan vvlm n.ulil hishiuil atliait wiihitnl nails, a lable unhuul t'Jtk'.His w.is .i ilvmaiulin^ al I UHKII iiuU'iiutiul.

In Li'lclir.m' I)K- HiiL-nlciini.il .milhirnu us .ill clusci IIMIIII i.ilotiial lu'iil.ijle.I'niu-d Siaus Savings Bank (\sliusi- ownhislon |ioes hack moiv ihan IOOUMIS) uillpii-scnl .1 sri ies o) L i all tk-mon^llatiults

I17|i/f llh' \ii/>/>/\ licl-., urn ifHiiv fmiiComplifiH'tlttrnf, Itill-i olm . Ulluiiiiaphcdpnnt\ ut Hc\ iilttiioiuin sccNt . Alt<u\'sttiut-hhl.nlnwwin

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Page 16: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGE 16 THE SUMMIT HEKALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976

Summit High Wins Eighth StraightSuburban Conference Olympic

Led by the best golf teamin its history, Summit HighSchool has now won itseighth straight SuburbanConference OlympicTrophy, symbolic of overallathletic supremacy in bothboys and girls varsityathletic competition. Theannouncement of its win-ning the Trophy for 1976 wasmade by Howie Anderson,the school's athleticdirector, at an awardsbanquet last week.

Summit High School'scompetition in the SuburbanConference is consideredamong the best in New

Jersey and consists of teamsrepresenting Millburn,Verona, Caldwell, NewProvidence, Madison andWest Orange.

The varsity golf,volleyball and tennis teamsall won Suburban Con-ference Championships thisspring and other spring andwinter sports teams did wellenough to enable Summit toamass more points than anyother conference school.The varsity volleyball team,relatively new after onlytwo seasons, has yet to losea match in conferencecompetition. And the golf

team's record was par-ticularly impressive.

Under Coach RayOatroski, the golf team setan all-time school record,winning more matches andmore points than any teamin the school's history. Theold record was set back in1931; the record that yearwas 19 wins, four losses anda tie. The new record set thisyear was. 20 wins, four lossesand a tie. The new record setthis year was 20 wins, oneloss and a tie. The lone loss,ironically, came in Sum-mit's first match againstWestfield, a non-conferenceopponent. Summit avenged

the loss by drubbingWestfield later in theseason.

"Victory over Westfieldthe second time around wasparticularly sweet,"] saidCoach Ostroski, himself aformer top-ranked amateurplayer.

Captain of the record-setting golf team was DavidCorradi, a senior. Othermembers were StephenCorradi, a junior whoreceived the "MostImproved Player Award,"Richard Hegwood, JohnJameson, Randall Mooreand Alan Sarno. Teammanager was Barry Sleek-man.

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Winners ListedIn Net Tourney

Andrea Filippone (grade10) and Jon Slmondsdefeated Pat Conley (grade12) and Mrs. Dorrie Dillon,6-1, 6-1, recently, to win theKent Place School Student-Faculty TennisTournament

Despite some good pointsoff Mrs. Dillon's backhandand Pat Conley's strongserve, the pair never gotInto the match and suc-cumbed to Andrea Filip-pone's often brilliant playand Mr. Simond'sdevastating forehand and"court savvy."

In the consolation tour-nament finals the winnerwas decided in a cliffhangerpro-set finale. Meryl Kasfier(grade 10) and Art Conleyoutlasted Dede Krleger(grade m and Mrs. LynnMorgan and won, 9-8.

£

Shut-Outs and Extra InningLead Jr. Baseball Contests

In his first pitchingassignment of the year,David Braunworth hurled a22-0 one-hitter for the RootsRed Sox win over theQuality Automotive Orioles.Two other shut-outs inJunior Baseball Majorleague play saw the MabenAgency Cardinals take theBassett Associates Tigers,B-0, while the EnglehardYankees overcame theQuality Auto Orioles, 12-0.

Meanwhile, the MajorL e a g u e ' s A m e r i c a nDivision-leading FaisonRealty Indians capturedtheir sixth straight victoryby heading off the BassettAssociates Tigers, 19-4.

In the IntermediateLeague, the DeuchlerOpticians Bulls nipped theSummit Computer Colts, 5-4, in an exciting extra-inningcontestMets - 14~- Cardinals • 11

The tying and winningruns came across on JoeCallaghan's double in thefinal inning for '.heSchiavone ConstructionMets. Winning her second

g a m e , S t e p h a n i eOMahoney struck out fiveand walked eight in the one-hitter. Claire Callahan andBiUy Verry each had threehits for the Mete and SteveBredahl and Fred Deming,two each. John Ross was thelone1 hitter for the Cardinals.Mets -18 — Dodgers - 11

Scoring in every inning,the Schiavone ConstructionMets defeated the UnionCounties Trust Dodgers fortheir third consecutive win.Steve Bredahl went 4 for Sand Chris Badgley had 3 for4 including a home run.Claire Callahan, BillyVerry, Joe Callaghan;, FredDeming and RobbieHorowitz each had two hits.For the Dodgers, KenNewman and Alberto Alonzoeach had two hits.Yankees - 9 — Red Sox - 2

In their seventh con-secutive win, the EngelhardYankees saw Dan Freemanplay outstanding defensiveball at shortstop while ChrisMurphy, pitching 13strikeouts, also contributedthree hits. Other big bats

RECORD-SETTING AWARD WINNERS — JayHamilton (left), winner of moat points in conferencecompetition and winner of "Moil Improved Player"award, and Stephen Corradl, No. I man on the team andwinner of "Moct Valuable Player" Award. Golf team•mailed brat record In hlitory of Summit High School,breaking previous record set back In 1031 and helpingSummit High School win Suburban Conference OlympicTrophy, lymbolic of overall athletic supremacy, toreighth Airtight year.

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Minors (Ages »-12)Standings unavailable for publication this week.

Majors (Agea 10-12)National Division

1. Braves (CIBA-Geigy)2 Giants (Ken Johnston's)3. Cubs (Summit & Elizabeth Trust Co)4. Pirates (Holmes Agency)5. Mels (Schiavone Construction)6. Cardinals (Maben Agency)7. Dodgers (United Counties Trust Co.)

American Division1. Indians (Faison Realty)2. Red Sox (Roots)3 Rangers (Stale Farm Insurance)4 Athletics (l.iss Pharmacy)5. Yankees lEngle Hard)£. Tigers {Bssscii Associates;7 Orioles (Quality Automotive Co.)

Intermediate (Age 13)1. Rams (Torcon)(6-2-l)2. Colts (Summit Computer) (4-5-0) <3. Bears (Printon-Kane) (5-3-1)4. Bulls (Deuchler Opticians) (2-7-0!

Senior (Agea 13-13)American DlvUlon

1. Condors (Brookdale Deli)2. Falcons (S.J.B.L.}3 Eagles (Summit Dairy Queen)

National Dlvtaion1. Jay* (SJ.B.L.)2. Hawks (Brooks)3. Owls (Garden State Cycle Ctr.)

Record..PU.M-07-7-16-8-06-S-fi

5-l(H>5-10-04-9-1

11-2111-4-010-3-09-6-09-5-0

3-9-0

5-1-04-2-02-1-01-5-0

10-3-03-8-084-0

7-4-04-7-13-8-1

1815!21210109

2322201818

6

10842

20616

1497

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were Vercolli, Kennedy,Weiss and Catullo. D.Hubbards led the Red Soxattack in the sixth inningwith a single followed byGeoff Davis' homer.Cardinals - 8 — Tigers - 0

Lauds Wade pitched aone-hit shut out as MabenAgency Cardinals M.Corradetti and M. Riordanwith two hits each, and.P.Bradford with 3 for 3,dominated the offense.Cardinals • 5 — Braves - 4

In another one-hit per- •formance, Cards pitcher M.Riordan notched sixstrikeouts. T. Wade and T.Thomas chipped in hits forthe winners.Indians • 19 — Tigers - 4

Al Haiback and TedAdams led the FaisonRealty Indians' offense with2 hits each. Bill Kelsey, DanSternberg and Haiback allhit doubles. All 12 Indianplayers scored at least onerun apiece and John Graberscored three.Yankees - 12 - Orioles • 0

With two doubles, BillVereelli led the EnglehardYankees' attack, assisted bythe hitting of Murphy,Kennedy, Hess and Weisse.Good fielding plays byDegradi, DeRienzo, Cotulloand Corrigan !cd thedefense. Quality AutoOrioles' hitters wereNewell, Conti and Regan.Red Sox - 22 - Orioles • 0

In a 21-hit attack, GeoffDavis went 6 for 6 for RootsRed Sox, including twodoubles, a triple and a homerun; Bill Mauze went 4 for 4,including two doubles and atriple; David Work had twohits including a double;David Walsh, three hitsincluding u double and JohnBartz, two hits including atriple. In addition, BobConey, David Braunworthwho piiched the one-huier,Murray Captinger andGrant Curtiss all con-tributed to the volleyBulls - 5 - Colts - 4

Chip Lovejoy went thedistance as the DeuchlerOpticians Bulls won anextra inning contest fromthe Summit Computer Colts.Matt Felix raised his battingaverage 477 with three hitsand two RBI'*. BUI Hainnhad two Mta, The big Mowfor the Colts was a soloround-tripper by DavePlaut.Rams - 13 — Colts - 1

Clutch hits were providedfor the Torcon Rams byGeorge Miles, Andy Englishand Eric Ray. Miles alsocaught both outfield hits bythe Summit Computer Colts,whose hitters were Rob Nyeand Dave Plaut.Storms - 6 — Blizzards - 1Storms - 5 — Monsoon - 3

Mountain Agency Stormspitcher Wally Nilson led histeam to two victories,striking out 14 and 15 battersrespectively for a total of 29K's out of a possible 36 outs.Condors -11 — Falcons • 3

ElksSplitPair

The Summit Elks playedtwo games last week in theIntra-County baseballleague. Summit traveled toCranford and lost a 3-2decision, and hosted Clarkwinning by a 5-0 score.

Summit jumped off to aone run lead in the firstinning, at Cranford. AlanWessel walked, stolesecond, and scored on ScottLeisher's single to rightfield. The Elks increasedtheir lead to two runs byscoring again in the fifthinning as Kevin Phelansingled, stole second, andcame around to score fromsecond as the Cranfordshortstop, Jeff Walters,booted Alan Wessels groundball.

Two runs were all Summitwas to score off Cranfordpitchers Jim Carsey and JoeGachko, but two seemed tobe enough because Elk'spitcher Bob Cotterell wasshutting out Cranford on onehit for the first six innings.

However, the seventhinning proved to be fatal forCotterell and Summit. BobHahn led off the inning forCranford and reached baseon an error by Summit thirdbaseman Alan Wessel.Cotterell struck out the nextbatter for the first out, butthen Dean Roberts knockeda double to score Hahn forCranford's first run. Cot-terell then struck out op-posing pitcher Joe Gachkofor the second out, butfollowed by walking EllieDorin to set the stage forJi™i Sheehsn. Shsshansingled to right center toscore Roberts and whenSummit attempted to cutdown Dorin going to thirdbase, the throw was low andthe ball bounced over thirdbaseman Wessel allowingDorin to score the winningrun for Cranford.

Summit gained its firstwin of the season Saturdayagainst Clark, behind thethree-hit pitching of JohnMerchant. The Elks scoredthe first two of their fiveruns in the second inningwhen Merchant tingledand moved to secondon aground out. Hethen scored on a double byMike Tarashuk. After aground out, Tarashukscored on a two-out single byDave Connollv.

Holding the S.J.B.L.Falcons to six hits, EdRodriguez led his team with3 for 3 including a double, ahome run and 4 RBI's.Ttrnmy Clark turned anunassisted double play forthe Falcons in the first in-ning when he shared alinedrive off the bat of SteveMiddleton and tagged EdRodriguez.

1975Montego MX Bro.

* door hard top, darfc btuermtaltta, with \>, vtnyf roof,full power. SpecialBrougham custom interior.•«80O«'•

1975^ Montego MX Bro.brakes, •tearing, alaotrlowtndow d*roo0*r, »lr oond.,custom Interior, many, manytnora luxury oar features•Z0OO8-

1975Mercury BobcatNtw ttlttvtr, 3 Of. RUMMul, |»lartwhttt with bucket ttati, r#irdtlrosttr. powtr brtlifi «nd•mrlnt. AM FM i.aio, put lot. olVoodlti. Save. uv.«, uve. He. twos

1975Montego MX Bro.

2 dr. hard lop. Yellow withbrown roof * Interior, fullpower equipment, tut wheel,raar window defooeer. airoond,, •terao rUJ3, PLUS,PLUS. •asoio»«

3 door runabout,dacor group, air• room**

1975Cougar XR 7

2 dr. hard top. PraMdantielKeck with V« Landau rooftwin oomfort Mate , manytthw airtrss - 38020' *

AND MANY OTHER MODELS TOO !see us soon.

. I ? M o n t h O i 1 ? , O ( ) O M i i i > t . x . t o

\ H M , \ \ V I I M i l I I ' \ l l . \ l i l

i i A ; K : N I ; K(>"< > I J I \ ( I 11 o . l 11

MEMBERS OT MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICES INHINTERDON, MORRIS, SOMERSET i UNION COUNTIES

NATIONWIDE FINDA-HOME SERVICE, INC.HOMERICA IN HUNTERDON COUNTY

Hi: Summit Atoitui: Main SucetPluckemin

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201 -658-4040

Page 17: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

I I I l i M I I I • : H A I J » . T I I i : i « S I H ^ , J I ! M - : i 7 . 1 9 7 f t PAGE 17

Regional Junior Olympic Springfield te Host JuniorVVWfl &y Al(fl#6ffC?* ,rhc S p r i n | j f i e ) ( j Jun|or B a s e b a n Division All Stars will play the nigl

Fifteen swimmers of theSummit YWCA AquettesSynchronized Swimmingteam traveled toSpringfield, Massachusettsrecently to swim in the AAURegion I Junior OlympicChampionships.

Competing against the topswimmers from New York,New Jersey and NewEngland. Cathy Reed wonthe fifth place medal in the11-12 age group solos andthen teamed with Sue

Caivano to capture theseventh place medal in the11-12 duets. The 1112 teamof Debbie Feinseth, SusanReed, Tommie Ann Gibney,Joelle Haughey, GingerWhinery, Melissa Sampson,Sue Caivano and CathyReed won seventh placemedals.

In the 13-14 age groupDebbie Scharfetter placedninth in solos and the teamof Nancy Fox, StephanieSampson, Heidi Willis andMary Helen Borchert placed

eleventh: To participate Inthis meet the swimmers hadwon first, second or thirdplace in a qualifying meetheld in February for NewJersey Swimmers.

The medals won atSpringfield are the first theAquettes have won in theirthree-year history. Girlsinterested in synchronizedswimming should call eitherJean Knight at the SummitYWCA, 273-4242, or coachVera Hammel, 7544489,

The Springfield Junior Baseballleague All Stars will play host to theSummit Junior Baseball league AllStars on the nights of June 19 andJune 26. Both games will start at 8p.m.andi'ndat 10:15 p.m. The Held islocated next to the SpringfieldMunicipal Pool. To get there fromSummit, take Morris avenue toSpringfield, just before the Route 78overpass turn to the left fork in Iheroad which is Morrison road. Followroad past swim club to baseball field.

The All Star teams are composed ofII and 12 year old players selected bythe coaches for their proficiency and

Division All Stars will play the nightof June 19 and the Summit NationalDivision All Stars will play the nightof June 26. Starting June 29 bothSummit All Star teams will thencommence playing in the Tri-CountyTournament against teams fromChatham Borough, ChathamTownship and Millburn. This Tour-nament will end with both Summitteams playing each other on July 17 atJelferson Field, Summit.

Starting in August, one team will beentered in the lrvington doubleelimination tournament which will beheld at lrvington.

Terry's, Dairy Queen Atlas Nine ContinuesStill Hold On to Lead t o Roll; Still Leads

Bumper to Bumper 10-4In the first game hot-

hitting Bob Triolo hit athree-run home run in thethird innipg to give the

1 winners a lead they neverrelinquished. They iced thegame in the following inningwhen they scored seventimes After two errors anda hit, Art Clerici singledfollowed by hits off the batsof Dick Peterson, BobSmith, Triolo, a hit batterand with two out BillyDunne got the final hit of the

Holes-in-OneShot by Pair

Larry Dodge, of NorthStreet, scored a hole-in-oneon the second hole in theSummit Municipal GolfCourse. While MarionDeKonzo, 48 Madisonavenue, scored a holein-oneon the third hole.

inning. Bob Smith got the City Auto Top 8 3 0 16win as he aided his own The Sounds 7 1 1 Hcause with two hits. Bumper ToPeterson, Triolo, and Dunne Bumper 5 5 0 10also had two. Marco Polo 3 7 0 16

AmericanSTANDINGS Legion 2 9 1 5

TEAM w L T n.. Franks Tree 2 10 0 4Atlas Refinery 10 2 0 20 Service

Bd. of Rec. SummerBaseball Set to Open

The Board of Recreationreminds those playing in thesummer baseball leaguesthat Tuesday, June 22 isopening day.

Fourth and fifth gradersnot already signed up areasked to be at Diamond No.1 (near Ashland road)Memorial Field at 9 a.m. onMonday morning.

Sixth, seventh and eighthgraders are to report to

Diamond No. 2 at 9 a.m. forassignment to teams.

This year a new formatfor the group will be tried.One day will be set aside fora higher level instruction onthe finer points of baseball.

Harold Ahern willsupervise the fourth andfifth graders, and Arthur,Cotterell will supervise thesixth, seventh and eighthgraders.

In a battle for first placein the West Division, Terry'sLunch topped Sky Wind 6 to5 on a grand slam home runby Eric Sunshine to putTerry's in first place. GreggGelson was winning pitcherfor Terry's and DaveConroy the loser for SkyWind. Ricky Armstrong hadthree hits for Terry's andJim Faitoute had three forSky Wind.

Masco PBA had a 21 to 10victory over SuburbanHotel. Scott Ketcham wasthe winner for Masco andMike DeRoberts took theIOSS for the Hotel. LouVecchia with a grand slamhomer, Rich Asarnow twohomers and a triple andPete Kelly a double and twosingles counted for 14 of theruns batted in.

Sky Wind had an easy 17 to7 win over Summit Bakery.Mike Prezuhy had the win•Or Sky Wind aim Juim

Fairfield the loss for theBakery. Chuck Foley withtwo homers and Tom Sur-man one homer lead SkyWind. Jim Monoca had ahomer for the Bakery.

East Division leader,Dairy Queen, topped WestDivision leader, Terry'sLunch, for the second timethis season 7 to 4 givingTerry's its only two losses.Jack Formicheila waswinning pitcher for theDairy Queen with two hitsand Ricky Armstrong hadtwo homers for Terry's.

Masco PBA won itssecond game of the weekwith a 9 to 6 win overFleming and Son. MarioLombardi was winningpitcher for Masco and SteveCooke the loser for Fleming.Asarnow had a homer forMasco and Kevin Donnellyhad three hit for Fleming.

Summit Bakery had a 9 toi victory over Waiters. Ed

Natale had the win for theBakery and George VanLaar the loss for Walters.Ralph Zotti, Tony Santoroand Steve Moore had homeruns for the Bakery.

Hotel Suburban won itssecond game of the seasonwith a 13 to 10 win overFleming & Son. MikeDeRoberts was the winnerfor the Hotel and CarmenIadanza the loser forFleming. Carl Bressen hadtwo homers for the Hotel

.and Frank Veil a homer forFleming.

Standings:EASTDairy QueenSummit BakeryFleming & SonWaltersWESTTerry'sSky WindMasco PBASuuufumi Hotel

The Atlas Refinerypowerhouse continued toroll in high gear this pastweek as it beat theAmerican legion 8-6 andthen came from behind tobeat thfi Vfery tough CityAuto Top 6-5.

Willie Horn slaked theLegion to a l-o lead in thefirst inning with a home runbut Atlas tallied four timesin its half of the inning onthree singles, a double,walk, and a couple of passedballs. The lend was shortlived though as ihe Legionput together three walks andsingles by Brent Cromwell,Chris Ruhtike, and MikeHorn lo know the score at 4-4.

In the third inning,American Legion lookedlike the team of old as itwent ahead 6-4 whenCromwell homered with oneon. But Atlas won it in thenext inning when it scoredthree times. With two outsand a runner on base JimDiet?. singled, SteveSchroeder doubled, and BillSimo gave Don Geddis thewin with the third lii! of theinning Dietz and Sehroederhad two hits apiece as eachdoubled and Schroeder

Atlas had to come frombehind again against CityAuto Top as the Toppersbroke out on top and held a5 1 lead after four innings o[

Junior Olympic Program EndsWith Summit Taking 3 Firsts

The Summit JuniorOlympic Program, whichbegan four weeks ago with600 boys and girls competingfor local titles, endedSaturday with the teamwinning three State JuniorOlympic Track Cham-pionships and taking fourseconds.

Running on a lighteningfast, all-weather track atMiddlesex K.S., BradKalber and Robert Mortoneach won a dash title withKalber picking up a secondgold when he anchored thewinning relay team to a 58.2victory.

Kalber, a 6th gradestudent at WashingtonSchool just did qualify forthe final in the 50 after athird place finish in his heat.Running in lane 1, he got offto a very good start and wonby a foot in the closest race

of the day. His time was 6.6.The next four runners in therace also received the sametime. Brad then placedsecond in the long jump witha tremendous 15*1" jump.He later anchored the 440-relay team to a first placemedal. The relay was one ofthe most exciting races asDan Freeman lead off andhanded the stick to littleJohn Cottingham, Johnpassed the baton to WayneNewell and then to Kalber.

Robert Morton ranperhaps the most spec-tacular race of the day inwinning the 100-yd. dash in arecord 10.75. Robert won hisqualifying heat in 10.8 to setthe stage for his fine effortin the final. In winning hisstate title, Morton beat theno. 5 ranked sprinter in thenation last year. Secondplace time was a good 11.4.

Robert also placed second inthe long jump with a per-sonal record leap of 18WiHe was V behind theleader. Besides running andjumping, Robert also anchored his relay team to afourth place spot. The otherrunners were Ray Blackley, •

Torrie Everett, and JayGreene.

The girls also did verywell as the womens trackand field program inSummit comit'iiirS to niak<°-grcat advances

Ingrid Swenson, whosesister I-ennea holds 7 trackand Held records at theJunior High had the best clayof all. The pretty littleblonde from Franklin Schooltook second in the 50 with7.1, a third in the 100 with14.2 and a third in the longjump with a fine leap of12'6". These are very goodtimes for a girl in the 9 andunder class. The weekbefore, in the district meet,Ingrid was first in the 'Mi.ami second in both the too

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Open daily 9 5 X) I Thtirs 'til 9 P,irk ing t. at Fntrimv acrms ihe Stm-t

and LJ.Jackie and Lisa Uusritun

l>oth scored seconds in Ihestanding LJ with Lisajumping 6'5 in the !) and

Jackie taking second in the1(M 1 class with a 7'!M •.. jump.Both girls won the weekbefore at the district meet

Also competing Saturdaywere Surah Jahries in theLJ. John Cottingham in the88(1 and David Munzn in thebaseball throw.

All Athletes arc remindedttiat they can continuerunning track and fieldevery Thursday night atTat kick Field starting at (ip.m. ThfYnext meet will beJune 2?>, Everyonu in in-vited A

play. Bob Triola's two rundouble in Ihe first and triplewith one on in Ihe third werethe big blows. But in the fifthinning The Tanners scoredfive runs to take a 6-5 leadWith a runner on, winningpitcher Geddis walked.Steve Baker doubled. ArtThomas strolled, hitting JimI>ietz singled, and SteveSehroeder all walked inKuceftssjon. Then with tineout Bruce Demaio. and JimFraser, singled to tally lht>final runs. Geddis shut outCity Auto over the last threeinnings to preserve the win.

City Auto won its othertwo games of the week byblasting the undermannedAmerican legion 172 and

OpeningsAvailable

openings in the SummitRecreation Youth TennisClinical Memorial. Tat lock.and Wilson Courts are stillavailable.

Those completing gradesfour through twelve andinterested in tennis lessonsare asked !o register alKdison Recreation Center.100 Morris Avenue byFriday, June 18

5 important reasons fortrying htfl dry chlorinein your pool1. Effective.HTH controls algaeand odors. Killsbacteria. Keeps poolwater sparkling.2. Convenient.No empties to carry.No drips, no spills.3. Easy-to-use.No extra additivesneeded.

4. Economical.Used as directed,one drum can lastan entire season.5. Choice ofChampions.Official supplier tothe 1976 OlympicGames.

POOL WATER CHAMPION

SUMMIT, NEW JERSEYFREE PARKING

76Audisfor $1000 lessthan VolvosandBMWs(even Saabs and Peugeots,for that matter).

Noimks Nuwoidiiann.'s YUIHYHI actually get our leasi expensive Audi ^^Ki lor about $1000 lessihanlhelraslt'XjX'nsiveVolvo BMW. Saab or Peuneot

And not only will you Ix? spending less, but you II begetting moreMon1 miles (x.'i gallon than any of ihom 37 on the highway and 24 in the city tor our standard

shiltnH>di-i based on the latest I I'A estimates (Mileage can vary, ot course, depending on Ihe car'scondition optional oqiuc'ient as well as the way you drive )

You ll ,ii>,(.11« Mieiiniq advanced engineering features, like fuel inpclion. Iront-wheel drive,rack and pinion steering dual diagonal brakes and torsion crank rear axle

Roller hi my. ihoui)ii When you oiler so much car tor solitlle money.Ihoydon! stay around so lunq

n tuii'i lr(11 lei,HI I'l .'Hist C<\t;\ oi WcM Coasl PO f;

Essex Sports Cars, Inc.2191 Millburn Avenue •Maplewood

762-8500

Page 18: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THURSDAY, JUNE 17,1976 THE SUMMIT HERALD, THE NEW PROVIDENCE BERKELEY HEIGHTS DISPATCH, THE CHATHAM PRESS

SUMMITNEW PROVIDENCE BOARD OF REALTORS BERKELEY HEIGHTS

PASSAIC TOWNSHIP MLSP ? E A L ESTATE FOR SALE

SUMMIT SUMMIT SUMMIT SUMMIT

BERK-SPRING COLONIALin Berkeley Heights, 4 or 5 bedrooms, den, gimiroom end centril eir with electronic filter. Celltoday.

MtROARETR.SMIPARDAOENCYJ7J-HS0 E v i l . Mr i . Oast, 4»4 ie»»

SUMMIT

SOUTHERN SPLENDORA commanding setting befits this stately five bed-room Colonial in one of Summit's quiet areas.Large center hall, formal dining room, den and3V4 baths are just some of its ingredients forgracious living. Only eleven years old and justreduced to $149,500.

ReaHori-113 SprtngfiaMAve., Summit273-7010

JUST LISTED4 bedroom Celoaltl, »._.;!i.y f~.m, -KlrStSS Mi insraifield area. Nlctly decorated Including mw WW car-p*tlng, 7Vt b»th>, rec. room, porch, etc. Large lot

CALL US NOW WHILE FINANCING IS AT IT] MOSTI l i e BATES

Sunnier Agpttrg273-6546

Ivor • - Ounnttar, Realtor*Apevtmant " < i m l ButMata CN

Ev«. 8> Sunday, B66-128B or 665-0743

CONTEMPORARY

NEW LISTINGCenter hall Colonial In Braytori School » Memor-ial Field area. Living room with fireplace, dining 'room, new kitchen with eating ana i dlahwash-er. Screened porch, lavatory on first floor; 4 twinsize bedrooms t 2 twin baths. 2 car attachedgarage. See now with

THE STAFFORD AGENCYREALTORS

10 Bank St., Summit 273-1000

Eves. I Sun. Mrs. Curtis 2772»I7, Mrs Close 277-2711

l*»f>* p.**** a.** «.*K***«lliiiiiiai>««. •.**>>*•», ft*** a. [

A MOST COMELY(and comfortable)

COLONIAL

Accompany ui to Summit's Rotary Orlva andwi'll «Mw you how tuccaiilully a homt cancombine gracttul proportions with a practicalfloor plan that rtally worm lor everyday tamllyliving. Tht tntry hall Itadi to a living room withformal firtplact and a dining room wheM i l iawelcomes dinner gathtrlng. The wall appliance*kltchtn l>, largt, too, arm optnt to an Invitingfamily room. Tuctttd upstair* art 4 tedroomi.whllt back on tht «itln floor It a dan ttttt couldbocama a »h barroom, if desired. Thare'f alto aquitf ttudy, a 1 car attachtd garagt and (lullbasement. This Colonial tnfoyt a private, pro-ftuionally landscaped lot with 1M ft. w i nfrontaga and a long dtck to makt tht transitionfrom indoor to outdoor living any. Olltrtd at

WeichertRealtors

277-1200

Tread New Providence lol • with (round htvel rec. room• oH Ice • laundry • dan or bedroom • tilt bain -ttrranopallo • t i t . floor - tntranct lul l - living roam (wlttlfireplace) dining araa - hltcHtn - eating area • lav. • Ibedrooms - 1 baths • balcony • many custom features.Offered at SIM,WO.

DON'T BE SORRY5 lovtly bedrooms and 1 bath* upstairs • loyar - livingroom -diningroom • kitchen (tat-In aria) - family roomwith tlraplaca • Hill (action of Berkeley Htlghti -terrific buy at »101,OW.

WARRANTY AND EOUITY PROORAMS

rFAITOUTE

S Bwhwood Rd.

NATIONAL"RELOCATION

273-5522

ReaJUrSummit

Evening! and SundaysVirginia Takact, I W I I I 0 Barbara Nact, 4*4-5100(IVB KKI'l TATION IS Bl ll.l ON I'KHSONAI. SKHVIf-'K

J7I Springfield Ave., SummitWITH OTHER OFFICES IN CHATHAM.

MORRISTOwN, »ASKINO RIOOE. CHESTED,CLINTON * SOMERMT SOUTH

SPKCI ALll lHO IN CO*OOK*

212121 21 21 51 21 21 " 21 21SUMMIT

21 Coma st« this wall maintained ',21 brick and frame split leval. I t21 has an tat-in kitchtn, 321 bedrooms, dining room, living i.21 room, family room, and lovely i.21 private fenced in back yard. A '21 horn* you will tntoy- Asking il

2121

21 SM.fW.

4640475

PETRONE AGENCYRealtor

We're national butwe're neighborly

Eves. Angela Tango 4*4.9004

2121 2121 21 21 21 21 21 11 21

daar CHria....Quaaa wbat??I"M moveing to SO. Carolina. Oonna mlaaold Summit and our bigold houa«bacuz wev» lived h«r« foraver.Mom/Dad dont naed ? bedrma anymore.Parry and Bath were, l iving In luk-ahury up tbsra on the 3RD floorwith privet bath .hope we hava2 fireplaces again in our next hou-aa.

I"LL miss dropping marbles downthe hot aire regiater and llatening to them fall,,,,KLUNK-KLUNK tothe basement. We"Re selling thruHOLMES A Gey and you ;better'comaup soon befor Its gone.

your frelnd....STEVIEPS I bilt my own CB antenna.

CONTEMPORARYFEELING

If your tastt is light, bright,airy and contemporary, this> BR. split Itvtl In BtrktltyHtlghtt will surtly appeal toyou. it's centrally air condi-tioned, tamlly room withfireplace, and a lot large andsunny enough for a vegetablegarden Asking M7.S0O.

NEVADA'S GAINWhen this house was new 5years ago, the owners put Inall tha lovtllntts that made itthair dream home - built-incolor TV, ctnlral air Conditlonlng, garagt door opener,Solarian kitchen floor, circu-lar drive, Intercom - andspent untold hours creating apark-like setting- Now theyare moving to Nevada andmust leave all this behind inMllllngton. 4 br. Colonialwith expansion for fifth bedroom. It's priced to sellquickly. Asking 1103,500

RANCHSimplify ami beautify yourlife i Try one floor living.This Ollietta home, nestledamong the trees on a knollhas ) brs., I l l baths, tamllyroom off th* kitchen, firstfloor laundry and a fireplace.Walk out to large, patio ordownstairs to a large finish-ed rec. roam and den. Pricedwell, in thi S70's.

BURQdOBff785 Springfield Ave.Summit

273-8000

5 Mountain A»e.Murray Hill

464-2100

SUMMITThis 4 jtworeom. iva oath colonial ts anideal family home located in one atSummit's im«»4 naijfitKirfHiwa*. in se-dition to the living room/ dining roomand eat-in kitchen, tntr* is • eoi y den,rtc. room, and screened porch. Asking

WARRENCountry living • city convenltnces.Levi i i 4 yr. old Wiliiamsburg styieohome with proftssionelly landscapedlawn, in a woodland setting. City wattrand sewtn, and underground electric.Convenient location. Main floor masterbedroom suite. Immeculelel AskinglUS.wo.

BERKELEYHEIGHTS

Wffittd - yeunff coupl* to occupy thtt 4Ordroom, 3'-, bath Split with • «rouftdl*v«l family room. Walking diitanc* toschool, immtdlatt occupancy. Aiklng14MW. Submit offtrt.

CHATHAMThis charming 3 bedroom, u^ bathColonial has many entra laaturasnatural woodwork, new roof, wiringand htating unit, not to mtntlon theliving room with fireplace, formaldining room, den and workshop. Pricedto sen at ist.oM

Ml Morris Ave., Summit, 273-!*oo

Eves 4 iuns ,Mrs Hamilton, I 7 I I 1 U .Mrs. Heinle,•U-III2

SUMMITELEGANT LIVING

One floor living in thisspacious brick and shingleranch, with possibility forexpansion. Large livingroom with fireplace, 3 bed-rooms, 1 baths, library, patioFranklin School. Has to beseen. Asking ti l l ,W0.

SUMMITCOOL COMFORT

Central air and lots ol spacein this It year old Colonialsplit. 4 bedrooms, 3'T baths,large property. FranklinSchool. Asking I10J.000

SUMMITINVESTMENT

OPPORTUNITYCould be converted to 2 f*mUy hout* Presently uttd byon* family - mo wins out ofcountry - »nxlou* tar offers. 6btdroomt, 2 full baths. Ash•no 150 »

MADISONCHILDREN'S PARADISEDead end street borderingBorough Park. Family roomplus den or 4th bedroom.Large country dining room,beamed ceiling, randomwidth floor. Transferredowner looking tor offers.Listed low s«C's

Serving you in 4 counties:UNION SOMERSETMORRIS HUNTERDON

JVaomi SB. @at<km, $nc.fRPAI IY1DC 102 SUMMIT AVENUE, SUMMITKtALFUKS 273-8224

FOR SALE

CHATHAM BOROUGH

CUSTOM BUILT ranch in Hillsection • j bedrooms, L.R. withfireplace, DR.. )>, bath, eat-Inkitchen. 1 car garage I't.sw.Principals only. els.2211,

THfUBCHlLDRBN have loved ttirapretty 3 floor remooeled olderColonial. For salt by ewner. 4bedrooms, t h baths, llrst flowlaundry, basement playroom. Deeplot, walk to everything. UJJW »)j.

I CHATHAM TOWNSHIP I

SPACIOUS COLONIAL • WALK TO TOWNThis gracious older home has fireplace in living roomand dining room. Entrance hall, living room, diningroom, eat-in kitchen. 7 bedrooms, 3'i baths, deck.Early occupancy. 578,000.

W.A. McNAMARARealtor* in Summit alnce 1915

3> MaptoSt .Summit 2 7 3 - 3 8 8 0

Lois Schneider 271-1191 Helen Stiblti 4l« 54S»Oottlt Amrnon tu-MM

BROWNFOWLERREALTORS

HISTORIC MURRAY HILL SQUARE 464-5200Opposite the Murraj Hill Train Station

THISIS NIFTYIF YOU'RE THRIFTY

It isn't everyday that you can find a OOOD house at aLOW price with LOWER taxes. This one In NtwProvidence is unusual In all respects Besides 3bedrooms (Including a large master bedroom), wtoffer a newer kitchen, saparatt dining and livingrooms, a screened porch and private yard at well.Priced at $57,900. call toon for an inspection.

BROWN CHATHAM TOWNSHIP

FOWLERREALTORS

HISTORIC MURRAY HILL SQUARE 464-5200Opposite tht Murray Hill Train Station

AN ADDRESS TO BEPROUD OF

Ideally situated in one of Summit's finest areas. Attrac-tive setting, a brand new modern kitchen, plus centralair, fireplace, finished basement and 4 good-sitedbedrooms. Just listed at $II2,QW.

OUR EXPERIENCE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

$54,000is the asking rpice of this THREE BEDROOM (witha possible FOURTH) home. Living room, Largedining room, kitchen, porch, recreation room, IVicar garage. Lot size 100 x 200, Ideal location fora young family, minutes walk to grade school.

Courteously serving Greater Summit

FARLEY,PETER). m n i s L I Realtor77?Sprinqiietd Ave., Summit

273-4U1Eves 742-7352 -273-31*3

PRIVATE PARKING IN THE WEAR

SPLENDID NEW LISTINGClassic, 4 yr. old Colonial Inpriie Chatham Township loca-tion. Center hail, family roomw fpl., living room, formal din-ing room, tge. kitchen w-eat-ing area, powder room, laun-dry room, A large btdroomt, 3deluxe baths. Centra? air conditioned. Beautifully carpetedthroughout. Largo level rear

) yard

| 1124,500

\ Call:\ AUGUST G.SCHMUHL, INC.j REALTORS-635-5510

CHATHAM TOWNSHIPUnder const....beautiful 4 betJrm.home in new section. Ultra-modern Kit., raised hearthfireplace. Alt large rooms. 7O's

NEW PROVIDENCENew..,.4 fcedrm., family rm. withfireplace, }<i baths. High eo'j.

Call to Inspect today

JOMAST REALTY CO. 464-3355Realtor Eves. 464-8344

GREEN VILLAGE: LOOKINGFOR A HOME IN THECOUNTRY? UNDER S70.000?Ctr. hall Col.. Ir. w-lpl.. l.r, dr.kitchen, l i t Oaths, 3 beds., study.Call ni-OIK. Principals only.

I FLORHAM PARK I

B ROOM, 1-tlory canter entranceCoion.*lj Itnctdln park-likt set-tinej 4 bedrooms, 2V% baths, eat-inKitchen with iei(-cleanIns oven,family room with fireplace, fullbasement, 1-cir attached garage.Conv»nimi to train and shopping.Enjoy benefit of direct sale andreasonable taxei. Asking »7,SBO —mtht offer. Principals only. l l j .no

I L0TS / ISUMMITS

Large, improved wooded lot;quiet prestige area; majesticskyline view; walk to shops ft RRstation. Owner anxious for quicksale.

OWNER, 17) 5515 or 273-5525

SUMMIT

THREE BEDROOM BRICK HOME IN SUMMITTrim neat lines ot thl. «oo* JpoJIM home »n wall » ton a traad and landscaped lot. Enloy this »">">" • ' '"your air conditioned new homel Call us tor more Infor-mation, Price t74,»00.

KopiaCharles Realtors, members ol RELO, a nationalorganliation to help make your move easier.

635 0800

5eww »

REALTOR!

NEW VERNON-HARDING TOWNSHIP

New Vernon-Harding Twp.lot Y E A R OLD colonial Farmhouse - on H-< acres, 4bedrooms, living room, dining room, d«n, modern eat-in kitcfifrfi, completely ramOSeied, *n excellent offeringat ns.ooo Low taxes - itn.

WATERFRONT PROPERTY with own private beach •Ml Kemble Lake area. Beautllul level lot with trees,excellent swimming, boating, fishing. TrMevef Con-temporary In perfect condition. New aat-ln kitchen, 3bedrooms, l'/i baths. Huge living room-dlnlng roomcombination, den, low fanes, Price IM,OO9.

WOODED PROPERTY with privacy and garden - Mt.Kemble Lake area, Colonial with lots of charm - Idealfor larger family, huge living room with Deemed lira-place, targe dining room with beams, dan, 4 bedreomi,1 baths, tow taxes. Price Slt.HO,

LOO CABIN bordering Jockey Hollow National Park onthree secluded and heavily wooded acres. Large livingroom with fireplace, kitchen with bar room, familyroom, 4 bedrooms and I baths. Deck with excellentview, A good offering at SM.OM

FANTASTIC BUY • Imagine owning this immaculate 4bedrooms. 3 bath centrally air conditioned t t yr. oldhome on over three well landscaped acras. For familyfun mere Is a pool t 4 Box stall barn with paddock 1pasture. And separata I room apartment: low taxes. Aline offering at I11S.M0.

P R I V A C Y IS ASSURED In this I room center hall NewEngland Colonial located on 1 plus acres of partiallywooded land. Living room with fireplace, formal diningroom with fireplace »n6 2nd fl. has 4 family bedroomsand 1 baths Taxas under l!.M0 Asking SIM,MS.

1M YEAR OLD VICTORIAN Farmhouse on 5 1 primeacres, with extra large two story barn, a two storystorage building and a two car garage. Center hall,large living room with fireplace, family room withFranklin fireplace, dining room, country kitchen andporch. Four bedrooms and SVfe befhs. An excellentoffering at ItM.MO.

•eUBfTatiAN'f OKtlAM • PreneK Parmhwse resi-dence on ten acres, solid brick with hand split shingleroof, elevan rooms, including panelled dm and familyroom with fireplace, • bedrooms. 5 1 baths. Heatedswimming pool, pool house with bar 1 bath. Stable with4 box stain, tack r » m , lav , ] rssns apartniifii, M o wriding ring. 1 paddocks. Property completely fenced.Low taxes. Offered at a fraction ot reproduction cost atI4JCM0

MENDHAM BOROUGHFIVE BEDROOM EXPANDED RANCH on one land,scaped acre, living room with fireplace, family roomwith bar, eat-ln kitchen. Asking S77,$O0.

To see these and other homes call

E. GEOFFROY WARD, REALTORMembers of Morris 4 Somerset Board of Realtors

CI.A, Landvest, tnteroom3UMAIN ST.. MADISON

(JOt> j n 1«S4

MISCELLANEOUS REAL ESTATE WANTS)

BEAUTIFUL COLORADO!.Pietot*!, tisdown, sis monthly Loton high bluff, overlooking nurbyriver. Panoramic view of San JuanMl Rftnpt. Accessible, .turvtyed.

I SUMMIT I

3-4 BEDROOM home on quietresidential street in NewProvidence. Prlc«d in sci. Nobroken. fM4094.

SPACIOUS Sbedroom 31] bath homelor sale by owner. Many uniqueauthentic features: wide boardp*9Ved oak floors, real wood ceilingbttmt, chair rait, extra wide"cooking" fireplace. Moderatefaxts Brayion School Oiltrict. 2732310.

NEW LISTINGLarge older home In one ofSummit's nicest areas. 3rd floorideal for roomer and extra incomeS47.0M.

OREOORY CLARK, RealtorJ7M4DO

LOVELY 4 bedroom, l bath splitlevtl with recreetion room, l!repla«and centre! elr conditioning. Housfnewly painted on lot with beautifultrees. Principals only 373tt67.

NEAR BELL LAB. HOUSE WITHPRIVACY. 11, ACRES - MOUN.TAIN AVS BEAUTIFUL TREES -BROOK. 46O5I0

RENTALSRooms Furnished

WARREN 1WARREN — 2-STORY COLONIALBY OWNER. On well landscapedwooded I'vpiut»tre». (.arse formalliving room and dining room,fireplace, family ktttcntn withMteclout cabinet*, 22x31' lamtiyroom with pant inns and beamedceMlns. 4 bedroom*, JVi batha.Newly decorated. J l t tM. By ap-pointment, 7U-2144.

PENNSYLVANIA

POCONO MOUNTAINS — LakeNaomi. A-frame. 3 bedrooms, largeup*t*frs loft, b*th, kitchen, separatedining room, living room with,fireptace, sun deck. Half acrewooded lot. Attractively furnished,immediate, targe private take;Olympic tile swfmmino pool; life-guarded sand beaches, tenniscourts, clubhouse facilities, teen ae>center. Mtd s«'v pitase call n?-* 4 4 i m

. . . use Classified Ads

CHATHAM, business woman orstudent ~- kitchen privileges.6J5 7JD.

1SUMMIT—MILLINOTON: Starehouse. Own room, utilities Included-Summit, SHS; Mllllngton, SIM. M>-

I Apartment Furnished I

SHORT HILLS: J'i room apartmentin Isvely older home. Near alltransportat ion. Gentlemen .preferred. »M14<.

SUMMIT. Centrally located. ThirdMoor, private apartment, 3 roomsand oath. Parking. July 1st. Ouletmature business gentleman only-J7J-MH. J7J «11.

WARREN TOWNSHIP. Extra taraasplit level. 3'* room furnished apt.Wall-to-wall carpeting, heat ft hotwater supplied. No pets, leasa.security. 1350 a month. 75S-3W.

I Apartment UnfumijhtdATTENTION RENTESSI W. havehundreds ot houses and apartmentsto choose trom. Save time • money.HOME LOCATERS «5. fM-«lJ).

NEW PROVIDENCE: 3 roomapartment, 1145. Security. Avail-•ble July 1st. (M-7S75.

SUMMIT: ivi rooms; secondfloor, heat and hot water supplied.Business couple. 12 Aubrey St.,"HWI.S U M M I T — sub-let; one town houseand 11.bedroom apartment; secondfloor, Call 171-SNS after a p.m.

SUMMIT: 4 rooms, centrallylocated; couples only. Supply owngas and electric. sHDpermonth. 177m i .

MEYERSVILLE. Unfurnishedapt., heat and hot water, completekitchen and bath. »)>s month,•M-337S.

Page 19: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

THE SUMMIT HERALD, THE NEW PROVIDENCE BERKELEY HEIGHTS DISPATCH, THE CHATHAM PRESS THURSDAY.JIJNE17.1OT6

RENTALS I L HELP WANTED FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE WANTED TO BUY

H « w Unfurnished IW E H A V E A P E W - M A Y B E O N EF O R Y O U I F A I T O U T E A O E N C YR e a l t o r s , 1 7 I 1 5 J I .

S U M M I T - Q u i e t e l e g a n c e .S u b u r b i a a t I t t b e s t . N o m a i n -t e n a n c e 1 B e d r o o m s . I V . B a t h s -l u x u r i o u s e x t r a s , c a l l t a r r e a l i s t i cd e t a i l s . A s k i n g M S O . M . M O U N T A I NA O E N C Y . R e a l t o r s - 1 7 3 . 1 m 1 5S u m m i t A v e . , S u m m i t . E v e s . AS u n s . 1 7 7 - 1 0 4 4 ,

B E R K E L E Y H B t O H T S . 1 b e d r o o mb r i c k r a n c h , S 4 M p e r m o n t h . 4 4 4 -I l a f e

House furnished |3 B E D R O O M h o m e e n s h a d e d l o t .c o n v e n i e n t t o b u s l i n e t o B e l l L a b s .F r a n k l i n S c h o o l d i s t r i c t . N e p e n .J u l y I t h r o u g h N o v . 1 0 . 1 7 1 - 1 4 O T .

L E O A L S E C R E T A R YS u m m i t l a w l l r m . E i e e r l e n c e d i ng e n e r a l l a w p r a c l i c i . E x c e l l e n tM M I I I I a m ) s a l a r y . C a l l M r sG a u t l e r , / 1 7 7 - 1 1 0 0 l o r I n t e r v i e w

P B R S O N ' f W l t h r a t a l l e x p e r i e n c ep r e f e r r e d l i e r h a r d w a r e - h o u s e w a r es t e r a . s d a y w e e k ; c l o s e d W e d -n e s d a y s ; n o n i g h t s . B o n u s . H a r v e yJ . T i g e r . 1 M M l l l b u r n A v e . .M l U b u r n . 3 7 4 0 4 4 1 , • : » t o « I ' M .Altar 7, nuns

P A R T T I M E - L a d l e s o r m a n •w o r k ( r a m h o m t o n n a w t a l t p h a n *p r o g r a m , e a r n 1 2 5 t o > I M p a rw e e k d e p e n d i n g o n l i m a a v a i l -a b l a . C a l l e l s - M e J .

L Hwse Untarnished IHinted I

PREPARE FORImmediate Employment

All Secretarial SkillsS T A F F O R D H A U L

S C H O O L O F i U S I N E S S17J1U1

C H A T H A M ' K i W N S H I P H I O HS C H O O L T E A C H E R w i s h e s t or a n t ( o r 1 y r . f r o m J u l y l i t o rA m . I t t . p r i v a t a h o m a i n C h a t -h a m T o w n i h P p o r C h a t h a mB o r o ; r e l i a b l e m a l n t a n a n c aa n d s e c u r i t y o f f u r n i s h e d o ru n l u r n i i h e d h o m t . p r o v i d a db y s t a b l e f a m i l y i n e x c h a n g et o r l o w r a n t . C a l l R o b e r t K u e h -n e r . 4 J 5 - H 7 S , » « » J 5 t

Offices

SUMMIT

A t r r a c t i v a * - r o o m o n i c a t u r n ;s e c o n d f l o o r , 1 1 0 0 s o , , f t . N a w

/ b u i l d i n g , c e n t e r o f t o w n . C o m -I p l e t e l y c a r p e t e d , a l r - c o n d l t l o n t d .

/ u t i l i t i e s , d a i l y l a n i t o r i t r v l c a/ I n c l u d e d .

2734000M r . C l a r k t o r M r s . F o r b e s

T h e H e r a l d B u i l d i n g2 1 H a n k S t .

S u m m i t

Part Time PorterP e r * o n t o c l e a n o f f i c e s , e » f e -t e r i » , t i e . f r o m * p . m . • 1 0p . m . , 5 d a y s p e r w e e k . S h o u l dh a v t t o m e e x p e r i e n c e a n d b eb o n d * b i t .

A p p l y P e r s o n n e l D e p t .

Wilkinson Sword Inc.1 0 0 I n d u s t r i a l R d . , B e r k e l e y H t i .

A n e q u a l o p p o r t u n i t y e m p l o y , m l

R.N.A r e y o u I n t e r e s t e d i n e n t e r i n g t h en e w a n d p r o g r e s s i v e f i e l d o fc s r d i s c r s h s S ! t t s t * s f ! * T f c t e - f t r tt i m e p o s t t f o n e v e n t u i t t y w i l l b ef u l l t i m e a n d w i l l b e a v a i l a b l e t h i sA u g u s t f o r a n R . N . w i t h a m i n t -m u m o f I y e a r C C U e x p e r i e n c e .E x t e n s i v e o r i e n t a t i o n p r o v i d e d .

P l e a s e s u f e m f t y e u r r e s u m ea l o n g w i t h a h a n d w r i t t e n c o v e rl e t t e r I n c l u d i n g s a l a r y , h i s t o r ya n d r e q u i r e m e n t s t o :

R i c h a r d P . W i l d i u n a sS u m m i t M e d i c a l G r o u p

t a p S u m m i t A v c .S u m m i t

S U M M I T - O f f i c e S p a c e . C o m -p l e t e l y f s r n l s l i - s £ ; ; r p ? r « p r !v a t e o f f i c e . F u l l t i m e r e c e p t i o n .1 s t . P e r s o n a l t e l e p h o n e a n s w e r i n g .C o n f e r e n c e r o o m f o r y o u r m e e t -I n g . B A N K S T R E E T P R O F E S -S I O N A L C E N T E R . C A L L > ? ! 3 J S S

S U M M I T ; S m a l l o f f i c e , c a r p e t e da n d f u r a i s f c M . w l t h c o n f e r e n c e r o o m

a c c e s s i b i l i t y . F u l l r e c e p t i o n i s ts e r v i c e a n d m a i n t e n a n c e . P h o n e :

S U M M I T — I b l o c k f r o m s t a t i o n -e l e v a t o r 1 5 5 0 t q . i t . a t s s o o s q . f t . a sI s , p a y a w n u t i l i t i e s . A l s o s o e s q u a r ef e e t o f w a r e h o u s e s p a c e S 7 5 . 0 0m o n t h I n C h a t h a m . T h e R I C H L A N DC O . R e a l t o r s , 1 7 1 7 0 1 » .

B E R K H T S — R e a l E s t a t e o f f i c ef u l l y e q u i p p e d W r i t e B o x 1 5 7 , B e r kH g t s . 0 7 9 U f o r I n f o r m a t i o n o r c a l l4 4 4 1 7 0 0 .

S P R I N O W B L O — M o r r i s A v e n u e a tC e n t e r . A p p r o x i m a t e l y n o s q . f t .3 7 4 1 3 1 0 .

AVON

Stores JS T O R E F O R R E N T : W e l c h o n gT r i a n g l e . C h o i c e l o c a t i o n w i t h f o o dp a r k i n g , r e a s o n a b l e r e n t , a v a i l a b l eI m m e d i a t e l y . C a l l a l t e r i p . m . , U 4W S J .

I Vacation Rentals |

TOKEN LAKE CLUBLITTLE MEADOWS,

PENNSYLVANIAC o n t a c t n o w f o r a v a i l a b l es u m m e r d a t e s , i n d i v i d u a l a n d

g r o u p a c c o m m o d a t i o n s . B i l l a n dJ a a n R e c h . M 1 - 4 U - 7 M 0 .

L HELP WANTED JRESUMES!

E a c h r e s u m e ' a r e s u l t o f i n -d e p t h i n t e r v i e w a n d g e n u i n ec o n c e r n f o r y o u r n e e d s . C a l lf o r a n a p p o i n t m e n t : 3 7 1 - 1 0 1 5 .

KERN A. ULRICH

BANKING-TELLERS

Changingmakes Sense...

. . . w h e n y o u b e g i n a m e wr o u t i n e a s a F u l l - T i m e T e l l e ra t S E T C O , o n e o f N e w J e r s e y ' sl e a d i n g b a n k s . J o i n o u r S u m -m i t o r N a w P r o v i d e n c e a r . e ab r a n c h . Y o u ' l l e n | o y a p l e a s -a n t a t m o s p h e r e a n d f r i e n d l yC O - w o r k e r s . E X P E R I E N C E DP R E F E R R E D . W e o f f e r a

g o o d s a l a r y a n d b e n e f i t s . F o ra n a p p o i n t m e n t , c a l l P e r s o n -n e l O e p t . a t 2 J 7 - 4 M O .

3 » 7 S p r i n g f i e l d A v e . ,S u m m i t , N . J .

E q u a l O p p o r t u n i t y E m p l o y e rM - F

T Y P I S TA C C O U N T I N O O F F I C E

W e a r e l o o k i n g f o r a g o o dt y p i s t . T h e r i g h t p e r s o n w i l l b ep l e a s e d w i t h t h e s a l a r y . H o u r sl : » a . m . l o 4 : M p . m . , f i v ed a y s a w e e k .

N O K E A N D H E A R D2 2 B a n k S t . S u m m i t

1 7 7 . 4 1 4 5

L E G A LS u m m i t l a w f i r m n e e d s e x p e r i e n c e dp e r s o n w i t h t a k e - c h a r g e a b i l i t y i nT r u s t s a n d E s t a t e s . E x c e l l e n tb e n e f i t s a n d s a l a r y . C a l l M r s .O a u t l e r , 1 7 7 - 1 1 0 0 f o r I n t e r v i e wa p p o i n t m e n t .

A L L A R O U N D O F F I C EN o s t e n o r e q u i r e d . G o o d t y p i n g

• s k i l l s j p a r t - t i m e p o s i t i o n t o s t a r t a n dm a y d e v e l o p i n t o f u l l t i m e .M E L I T T A I N C . t l - t e S a n k S t . ,S u m m i t . 1 7 1 - 0 1 5 1 .

P A R T T I M E - g e n e r a l o l f l c ed u t i e s , c a p a b l e w o m a n w i t h g o o dt y p i n g s k i l l s , f l e x i b l e h o u r s iC h a t h a m c e n t e r . C a l l 4 3 5 W 4 1 w e e k -

d a y s t t o 5 .

E A R N I N G S M E A N F R E E D O M !R e d e c o r a t e , t r a v e l , s p l u r g e . I ' l ls h o w y o u h o w t o d o i t o n y o u r o w n

i i h i * . C a i i » m u i i S i i i ; 2 7 5 - 5 7 S 2 .

B A N K I N G

TEMPORARY

PART TIME

FILE CLERK

TRUST DEPT.I n d i v i d u a l w i t h b u s i n e s s b a c k -

g r o u n d . W e w i l l t r a i n y o u t o w o r ka s f i l e c l e r k i n o u r S U M M I TT R U S T D E P T .

T h i s 1 - 1 m o n t h | o b m a y l e a d t op e r m a n e n t p o s i t i o n .

For appointment call:

PERSONNEL DEPT.

354-3400

THE NATIONALSTATE BANK

Elizabeth, N.J.A n e q u a l o p p o r t u n i t y e m p l o y e r

N E I O C A S H tB e a S a r a h C o v e n t r y f a s h i o n s h o wd i r e c t o r I n y o u r a r e a . N o I n -v e s t m e n t . N o d e l i v e r y . E x c e l l e n ta r r a n g e m e n t t o a d d t o y e a r f a m i l yi n c o m e . O p p o r t u n i t y f o r l o c a lm a n a g e r . P h o n e W - 4 a S t o r 1 7 1 - 0 1 7 1 .

F A C T O R Y F O R E M A NM u s t h a v e s u p e r v i s o r y e x p e r i e n c e ;w i l l t r a i n ; f u l l t i m e . C a l l M r .E n g l a n d l o r a p p t . 4 4 S - 0 M 0 .

U N I Q U E S H O P i n S u m m i t s e e k s f u l lt i m e e n t h u s i a s t i c s a l e s p e r s o n f o ra c t i v e , d i v e r s i f i e d p o s i t i o n , i n t e r e s tI n a r t h e l p f u l . A d d r e s s B o x 5 »S u m m i t H e r a l d , S u m m i t . N . J .

E I G H T o p e n i n g s f o r b a n d s t o p l a yf o r t e e n d a n c e s a t N e w P r o v i d e n c eH i g h S c h o o l . D a n c e s a r e o n e a c hT h u r s . n i g h t f r o m J u l y I t h r u A u g .2 * . s p o n s o r e d b y N . P . - 8 . H . J a y c e e s .F o r a u d i t i o n , c a l l C l i f f P e l c h a t . H I -

• 7 7 e .

E X C E L L E N T t y p i s t n e e d e d f o rd i v e r s i f i e d d u t i e s I n s m a l l c o n g e n i a lo f f i c e I n S t i r l i n g , m u s t b e e x -p e r i e n c e d . H 7 - U 0 0 .

R E C E P T I O N I S T — t y p i s t f o r s m a l lo f f i c e I n S t i r l i n g . 4 4 7 - 3 0 0 0 -

C L E R I C A L — p a r t - t i m e p o s i t i o n a tJ o n a t h a n D a y t o n R e g i o n a l H i g hS c h o o l i n S p r i n g f i e l d . A pp r o x l m a l e l y 5 h o u r s p a r d a y . S d a y sp e r w e e k . G o o d t y p i n g s k i l l se s s e n t i a l . A t t r a c t i v e w o r k i n gc o n d i t i o n s , b e n e f i t s , a n d s a l a r y .C o n t a c t C h a r l e s B a u m a n . A n tS u p e r i n t e n d e n t , U n i o n C o u n t yR e g i o n a l H i g h S c h o o l D i s t r i c t N o . I ,

H I M o u n t a i n A v e . , S p r i n g f i e l d , N . J .0 7 0 1 1 , T e l . 1 7 M M 0 .

C L E R I C A L — f u l l - t i m e p o s i t i o n I nI n s t r u c t i o n a l M e d i a C e n t e r a tJ o n a t h a n D a y t o n R e g i o n a l H i g hS c h o o l i n S p r i n g l i a l d . c o n t a c tC h a r l e s B a u m a n , A s s ' t . S u p e r i n -t e n d e n t , U n i o n C o u n t y R e g i o n a lH i g h S c h o o l D i s t r i c t N o . I , H iM o u n t a i n A v e . , S p r i n g f i e l d , N . J .0 7 0 1 1 , T e l . » i - U O 0 .

C L E R I C A L — f u l l - t i m e p o s i t i o n I nf r o n t o f f i c e a t G o v e r n o r L i v i n g s t o nR e g i o n a l H i g h S c h o o l i n B e r k e l e yH e i g h t s . G o o d t y p i n g s k i l l s e s s e n -t i a l . A t t r a c t i v e w o r k i n g c o n d i t i o n s ,b e n e f i t s , a n d s a l a r y . C o n t a c tC h a r l e s B a u m a n , A s s ' t . S u p e r i n -t e n d e n t , U n i o n C o u n t y R e g i o n a lH i g h S c h o o l D i s t r i c t N o . 1 , H IM o u n t a i n A v e . , S p r i n g f i e l d , N . J .0 7 0 1 1 , T e l 1 7 4 4 1 W .

S E C R E T A R Y — f o r d e p a r t m e n t o ft r a n s p o r t a t i o n a n d b u i l d i n g s a n dg r o u n d s I n s c h o o l d i s t r i c t b u s i n e s so f f i c e . G o o d t y p i n g s k i l l s a n ds h o r t h a n d e s s e n t i a l . T h i s i s a f u l l -t i m e , t w l e v e - m o n t h p o s i t i o n . A t -t r a c t i v e b e n e f l t s e n d s e l a r y . C o n t a c tC h a r l e s B a u m a n , A s s t . S u p e r i n -t e n d e n t , U n i o n C o u n t y R e g i o n a lH i g h S c h o o l D i s t r i c t N o . 1 , H IM o u n t a i n A v e . , S p r i n g f i e l d , N . J .0 7 0 1 1 . T a l . J 7 4 - 4 3 O 0

A D M I N I S T R A T I V E A S S I S T A N T

T y p i n g , s t e n o , p l u s a b i l i t y t o c o m -p o s e o w n c o r r e s p o n d e n c e . M u s t l i k ew o r k i n g w i t h f i g u r e s . F a m i l i a r i t yw i t h I m p o r t , e x p o r t , f o o d o rb e v e r a g e I n d u s t r y h e l p f u l . S a l a r yo p e n . F e e p a i d b y e m p l o y e r . P e r -m e n a n t . B E R K E L E Y E M -P L O Y M E N T A G E N C Y , » •S p r i n g f i e l d A v e . . B e r k e l e y H e i g h t s .

E X P E R I E N C E D b a b y s i t t e r , e i t h e ry o u n g m o t h e r o r m a t u r e w o m a n t oc a r e t o r 4 m o n t h o l d c h i l d I n y o u rh o m e i n S u m m i t s t a r t i n g S e p t .I M o * , t h r u F r i . I A . M . t o I P . M . IR e f e r e n c e s r e q u i r e d . C a l l e » - I M ff r o m t t i l I .

S W I T C H B O A R D O P E R A T O R t o rt e l e p h o n e a n s w e r i n g s e r v i c e i nS u m m i t . E x p e r i e n c e d o n l y . 1 t o I Is h i f t . C a l l 1 7 1 - I I H .

S E C R E T A R Y . L i g h t s t e n o . S 1 7 0 .F e e p a i d . F o r o n e w i t h a b i l i t y t oh e l p r u n o f f i c e w i t h l o t s o l p e o p l ec o n t a c t a n d p u b l i c r e l a t i o n s . C a l lU S - t l S O . B L A I R P E R S O N N E L ,R T E . 4 0 , P A R S I P P A N Y .

S E C Y — C h a l l e n g i n g , n e w l yc r e a t e d s p o t , w o r k i n g f o r 1 c o .o f f i c e r s . L o v e l y o f f i c e , t u i t i o nr e f u n d . F e e p a i d . S t S O , S H E L -L I N G A S N E L L I N G , 4 S 0 S p r i n g -f i e l d A v e . S u m m i t .

C A R P O L I S H E R 4 U T I L I T YM A N . W e h a v e a n o p e n i n g i n o u rS e r v i c e D e p a r t m e n t f o r a c a r

p o l i s h e r e n d g e n e r a l u t i l i t y m a n .M u s t h a v e d r i v e r ' s l i c e n s e . G o o dp a y , g o o d w o r k i n g c o n d i t i o n s a n db e n e f i t s . P h o n e f o r a p p o i n t m e n t -a s k ( o r E d d i e .

1 7 ) 0 5 1 1„ S T E I O L E B U I C K C O .

BEAUTICIANS

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E q u a l O p p o r t u n i t y E m p l o y e rM - F

SECRETARY-LEGAL

Enjoy lawful

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. . . w h e n y o u l o i n K e m p e r , o n eo f A m e r i c a ' s l a r g e s t a n d m o s tp r o g r e s s i v e i n s u r a n c e o r g a n -i a a t t o n s . W e r e q u i r e a l e g a ls e c r e t a r y w i t h g o o d t y p i n g a n ds t e n a s k i l l s a n d s o m e f a m i l i -a r i t y w i t h M s i n e s s l a w . T r a i nI n o u r S u m m i t o f f i c e t o r 1 4m o n t h s , t h e n t r a n s f e r t o P a r -a m u s . Y o u ' l l e n l o y a g o o ds a l a r y , e x c e l l e n t b e n e f i t s a n dp l e a s a n t c o - w o r k e r s . P l e a s ea p p l y I n p e r s o n o r c a l l 5 1 1 - 4 2 0 2 ,

KEMPERINSURANCECOMPANIES

2 $ D e f o r e s t A v e n u eS u m m i t , N . J .E q u a l O p p o r t u n i t y E m p l o y e rM-F

CLERK-TYPIST

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M a k e a m o v e t o l o i n K e m p a r ,o n e o f A m e r i c a ' s l e a d i n g i n -s u r a n c e o r g a n i z a t i o n s . I f y o uc a n t y p e a t l e a s t 5 0 W P M w e ' l lp r o v i d e t h e c h a l l e n g e . W e ' l lt r a i n y o u f o r 1 t o 4 m o n t h s I no u r S u m m i t o f f i c e t h e n t r a n s -f e r y o u t o P a r a m u s . Y o u ' l le n | o y a g o o d s a l a r y , e x c e l l e n tb e n e f i t s a n d p l e a s a n t c o - w o r k -e r s a t e a c h l o c a t i o n . P l e a s ea p p l y i n p e r s o n o r c a l l 5 2 2 - 4 2 0 2 .

KEMPERINSURANCECOMPANIES

2 5 D e F o r e s t A v e .S u m m i t , N . J .

E q u a l O p p o r t u n i t y E m p l o y e rM - F

Antiques JL Furniture

BENEFIT AUCTION

June 18 - 6:30 p.m.

OGDEN MEMORIAL

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

E l m w o o d A v e . a V M a i n S t .C h a t h a m , N . J .

Antique, new, collectible,

artistic, decorative, useful.

B U L L 1 . B E A RA N T I O U E S O A L L E R Y

UNPRECEDENTED ANTIQUE

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D i s p o s i n g o f 3 f l o o r s o f c l a s s i ca n t i q u e t u r n i t u r e ; A m e r i c a n ,E n g l i s h , F r e n c h ( m o s t a l l o ft h e P e r i o d ) i n c l u d i n g a c c e s -s o r i e s a n d r u g s . A r t i c l e s w i l lb e s o l d b e l o w d e a l e r c o s t . A l ls a l e s f i n a l . N o d e l i v e r y . W em u s t c l e a r t h e b u i l d i n g t o r am a l o r r e n o v a t i o n .

1 4 w . M a i n S t . , M e n d h a m» t o 5 . c l o s e d M o n d a y

T H E T R A D I N G P O S TA n t i q u e s

1 1 1 H I C K O R Y T A V E R N R D .M E Y E R S V I L L E

FATHERS DAY SPECIAL

M P E R C E N T O F FB a r n f i l l e d w i t h f u r n i t u r e I nt h e r o u g h . B r o w s e i n o u rA l r - r n n d t t t e n e d s h o e t o r g l a s s ,c h i n a , s i l v e r , e t c .

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H i g h q u a l i t y , s o l i d w o o d , f u l l yl a n d e d * a s s e m b l e d , r e a d y t op a i n t o r s t a i n . H u n d r e d ! o nd i s p l a y • B o o k c a s e s , D e s k s ,C o r n e r C a b i n e t s , H u t c h e s , e t c .- H A N C O , R t . 1 0 a t R l d g e d a l eA v e . ( a c r o s s f r o m S a n d o i l E .H a n o v e r , N . J . 1 1 7 . 1 5 0 0 . O p e nM o n . , W a d . , S a t . t o I : J O ; T o e s . ,T h u r s . , F r l . 1 0 t .

O F F I C E F U R N I T U R E - E x -c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n j t o p q u a l i t y 1r e a s o n a b l e p r i c e . 1 w a l n u td e s k s , 2 w a l n u t c r e d e m a s ;w a l n u t s e c r e t a r y ' s d e s k w i t hr e t u r n ; 2 s w i v e l c h a i r s , 4 m i s c .o f f i c e c h a i r s ; M o s l e y f i l i n gc a b i n e t s a f e ; I B M e x e c u t i v et y p e w r i t e r , s e r v i c e d b y I B M ;l a m p s , s o f a A m i s c . I t e m s .P h o n e i » W I b e t . » - 1 .

D I X I E F U R N I T U R E C L E A R A N C EZ E I O N C R ' S i s c l o s i n g o u t a tC L E A R A N C E P R I C E S o u r s t o c k o lw h i t e b e d r o o m f u r n i t u r e b y D i x i e . I Iy o u w i s h t o t i l l i n y o u r s e t a t g r e e ts a v i n g s , c o m e t o Z e i g n e r ' sW a r e h o u s e S a l e s t a r t i n g J u n e t . 4 7 1S p r i n g f i e l d A v e , S u m m i t . 1 7 1 1 4 0 0 .

A . I C O N D I T I O N . E n t i r e f u r n i s h i n g !1 r o o m a p a r t m e n t . L e a v i n g s t a t e ;m u s t s e l l . F u l l s i t e b e d . d r e s s e r a n dm i r r o r , l a m p s , t a b l e s , r u g t , p l a s t i cl i v i n g r o a m f u r n i t u r e a n d m o r e . 4 4 4 -0 5 1 7 , e v e s , a n d w e e k e n d s .

C O U C H — l i g h t b l u e c u t v e l v e t , o n ey e a r o l d ; 1 1 5 0 . 4 3 J - 4 7 0 4 .

L A W S O N S T Y L E c o u c h ( 1c u s h i o n s ) , g r e e n . G o o d c o n d i t i o n .

S O F A , g o l d , o r a n g e A b r o w nf l o w e r d e s i g n . F o r p l a y r o o m . S 2 0 .o r b e s t o f f e r . W 4 - M I I .

JL Garage Sale II Miscellaneous

C H A T H A M O A k L E R I S S , 1 4W a l c h u n s A v e . , C n a t h a m , « J 57 7 0 5 . W E B U Y A N D S E L L f u r n i -t u r e a n d f i n e p a i n t i n g s .

E X P E R T C L O C K R E P A I R I N G .W o r k g u a r a n t e e d . T H E C L O C KW O R K S , S J t - M I O .

D O U B L E S I Z E OCX S P S I N C a n dm a t t r e s s I n g o o d c o n d i t i o n , S 1 5 ;l a d i e s d e s k , a n t i q u e d m a p l e , w i t hc l u i r . 2 7 7 - 0 5 5 ? .

• a " S O F A B E D . G o o d c o n d i t i o n ,u s . . 3 1 1 7 1 0 .

Auction

Child Care

COOK — FULL TIME, PARTTIME. CALL 4M M75.

L I C E N S E D ' n u r s e w i l l c a r e l o ry o u r c h i l d i n m y h o m e . B y h o u r o rw e e k a t r e g u l a r s i t t e r ' s r a t e s 1 7 7 -

| EMPLOYMENT WANTED |

A N Y J O B y o u n e e d d o n e , I ' l l d o .Y a r d - g a r d e n w o r k , h o u s e k e e p i n g ,b a b y s i t t i n g , p a i n t i n g . 2 7 3 - 4 1 5 4

E X P E R I E N C E D T E A C H E Ra v a i l a b l e f o r t u t o r i n g p r i m a r y o ri n t e r m e d i a t e g r a d e s . C a l l b e -t w e e n 1 : 3 0 a n d » : 3 0 , 2 7 7 - 4 1 1 0 .

K E N T P L A C E s e n i o r , a l m o s t I I ,a c c e p t i n g s u m m e r [ o b i . H o u s e w o r k ,s e r v i n g a t p a r t i e s , c h i l d c a r e , o t h e rr e l a t e d w o r k . E x p e r i e n c e d ;r e f e r e n c e s . M a r t h a B r a d f o r d . 2 7 1 -H 0 I

Y O U N O C o u p l e d e s i r e t o s e r v ed i n n e r s a n d p a r t i e s . C o m p l e t ec a t e r i n g . 2 i 7 - 3 M 7 a f t e r S p . m .

H O U S E C L E A N I N G W O R K d e s i r e d .E x p e r i e n c e d . O w n t r a n s p o r t a t i o n .C a l l « v - i » 7 .

T U T O R I n F r e n c h a n d M a t h .R e a s o n a b l e r a t e s . C a l l 4 * 4 - 5 2 * * .

Y O U N O W O M A N s e e k ; d o m e s t i ce m p l o y m e n t f o r t h r e e d a y s . E x -p e r i e n c e d , r e f e r e n c e s . C e l l * 7 * - 7 2 5 1 .

E N T E R T A I N I n s t y l e . T w o c o l l e g es t u d e n t s w i l l i n g t o p r e p a r e , s e r v ea n d c l e a n u p f o r c o c k t a i l p a r t i e s ,l u n c h e o n s , d i n n e r s e t c . R e a s o n a b l er a t e s . C a l l t U - I U O ; a s k f o r P e g g y .

AUCTIONFUA MARKET

S U N D A Y , J U N E M1 0 A . M . 1 0 4 P . M .

O A R D N I R F I E L DR T . 4 4 , D B H V I L L E

R a i n e r S h i n e , u n d e r t h e T e n tH o u s e h o l d i t e m s . F u r n i s h .I n g s , L a w n a , G a r d e n T o o l s ,A n t i q u e s , m u c h m o r e .A l s o n e w m e r c h a n d i s e , i ne l u d i n g 1 0 - s p e e d b i k e s , b o a t sa n d 1 9 7 * C h e v r o l e t N o v a t ob e o f f e r e d a t a u c t i o n . C a k es a l e a n d A r t s a , c r a l t s s a l e .

. P R I M I T I V E S - A N T I Q U E ST O O L S

S a t . , J u n e a e , 1 0 a . m .4 1 7 ' M a l n S t . , C h a t h a m

( P a r k i n g a t H i g h S c h o o l )A F I N E C O L L E C T I O N

O F P R I M I T I V E SL a r g e a n v i l , w o r k i n g f o r g e ,l a r g e b u t c h e r i n g k e t t t e w -s t a n d a n d s t o v e , h a n d w r o u g h fh a r d w a r e , t a d I r o n s , b l a c ks m l t l ) t o o l s , b r o a d a x e s , a d i e s ,b r a s s a n d i r o n p a l l s , c r o c k s , .P a u l ' R e v e r e l a n t e r n , i r o nl a d l e s , s m a l l e x y o k e , w a s hb o w l a n d p i t c h e r s e t , b u t t e r -c h u r n s , E d i s o n s t a n d a r dp h o n o g r a p h w - M o r n i n g G l o r yh e r n , o v e r 1 0 0 E d i s o n r e c o r d s ,c o f f e e g r i n d e r , e a r l y c o b b l e r ' sb e n c h , s i g n e d c a r n i v a l , c u t ,p r e s s e d , m i l k g l a s s , a r t , p e w -

t e r , c a s t I r o n f e e d e r s , e a r l yg o a t a n d c o w b a l l s , R a y o l a m p ,s e v e r a l p i e c e s o f T o l e w a r e , o i ll a m p s , o l d l a n t e r n s , s t o v e s ,i r o n s t o n e , o a k f u r n i t u r e , w o o d -e n p l a n e s , b l a n k e t c h e s t , n i c ee a r l y d e s k , u n u s u a l h o l l o w t r e eb a r r e l , c l o c k s , h a n d p u m p s ,e a r l y s t o r e s c a i e s , i c e t o n g s ,b o o k c a s e , c h a i r s , w a s h s t a n d ,w o o d e n h a y f o r k , a p p l e p e e l -e r s , p i c t u r e f r a m e s , g u n c a b -i n e t , s t u f f e d a n i m a l s a n d B i r d so l d t r a p s , p a i r T e x a s l o n gh o r n s , e a r l y t o o l s , a d v e r t i s i n gp i e c e s . W i n d s h i e l d a n d a x l e f o ra M o d e l T , 3 w h e e l g a r d e nt r e c t o r w - a t t a c h m e n t s , p l u sm a n y i t e m s i n a s s o r t e d b o x e s .T E R M S C A S H I I B R I N OY O U R C H A I R S .

1 C H E R R Y Q u e e n A n n e e n dt j t b l M . * m o n t h s e l d . S 7 S e a c h ,m a h o g a n y D u n c a n P h y f e d i n -i n g r o o m t a b l e , b e a u t i l u l c o n -d i t l o n , S 1 I S , l a m p , m a d e f r o mo l d v a s e w i t h s i l k s h a d a . S 5 5 .C o l o n i a l d o u b l e c a n d l e s t i c kl a m p , H I . P a n a s o n i c s t e r e ot u r n t a b l e , A M - F M r a d i o I nc o n s o l e c a b i n e t , e x c e l l e n t c o n -d i t i o n , H I , h a l l t a b l e , o r l g . B .A l t m a n ' s , S I 7 5 . w i l l s e l l f o r M S .n s - i O M .

CONTENTS OF HOUSE

• U R I j l e v P I . w t U f . u aJ u n e l l l . l t t : ) O t o « o n l y4 p c . t r u i t w o o d b e d r o o m s e t ,D u n c a n P h y f e d i n i n g r o o m s e t ,s o f a , c h a i r s , d i n e t t e s e t , o l ds e w i n g m a c h i n e , p i c t u r e s ,t r u n k s , r e f r i g . , c h i n a , g l a s s -w a r e a > m i s c . F o r i n f o r m a t i o n

WHIPPLETREE

MUST SELLC a r v e d m a h o g a n y s l t f e l w a r d .b r a n t r i m . C a r v e d m a h o g a n yw a r d r o b e . L a r g e k n e e h o t ed e » k . A l l v e r y r e a s o n a b l e . C a l la f t e r 4 , 7 7 7 - 6 1 4 4 ,

L GarattSale

G L A S S W A R E , g i r l s b i c y c l e ,t y p e w r i t e r , i c e s k a t e s , c l o t h e s ,g a m e s , b o o k s , r e c o r d s . M a n y

o t h e r I t e m s . G i v e a w a y p r i c e s 5 *L i n c o l n A v e . , C h a t h a m . F r i d a y ,S a t u r d a y , J u n e I I , I f . l O t o l .

M O V I N G - F u r n i t u r e , ' t r u n k s ,w i c k e r , i r o n e e d s . c h e s t s , m a n ym i s c e l l a n e o u s i t e m s . F r i d a y *S a t u r d a y , 1 0 a . m . . J u n e I I , f t . 1 7 4l l a c k b u r n R o a d , S u m m i t .

f.

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* ) 2 N o . S e c o n d A v t ,R e m a n , N J .

( N r . S e m e r v i l l e C f r }A n t i q u e s a p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y ,c o n t e n t s • r o o m h o m t H l f i f t i a n dP a r k , N . J . a n d o t h e r s f r o m P r i n -c e t o n & B o u n d B r o o k -F u r n i t u r e : i t t h C P i n t J a m c u p -b o a r d , 3 O t j t t i , C o u n t r y p i n e ,C h i p p e n d a l e s t y l e t > M i s s i o n o a k ; 3r o u n d o a k t a b l e s ; O a k c h a i r s j O a t tb o a k c e s e s , A r t D e c o b e d r o o m s g l t t ;2 C h i n a c l o s e t s ; M u s i c c e b i n t t )B l a n k e t ^ c h e s t s ; V i e t , s o f a ; O a ks i d t b o a r d t w e s h s t a n d s / L a w y e r sb o o k c a s e ; H a n g i n g c o r n e r c u p -b o a r d ;

S e l e c t i o n o f R o y a l W o r c e s t e r V a s e sA P i t c h e r s j S e n d . O a l t e c a m e og l a s s ; 1 S « n d T i f f a n y C h a m p a g n e s iL i m o g e s ; S t e m w a r e ; R o y a l C r o w nD e r b y ; P i t c h e r s * B o w l s ;P a i n t i n g s ft P r i n t s ; 4 f i n e a n c e s t r e lp o r t r a i t s , A t t r l b . t o B a s s O t i s *H o r a c e B u n d y ; L a n d s c a p e s s i n d ,L . W . P r e n t i c e , N o r t o n f t e h n ft O .W i e g a n t t ; 1 7 t h C D u t c h m i n i p o r t ;j a p . w o o d b l o c k p r i n t s ft S u m ! Ed r a w i n g s .C l o c k s : F i n e G r a n d f a t h e r , I d a y , C .. • » ; M u s i c a l V i e n n a r e g u l a t o r ;

S c h o o l c l o c k s , J e r o m e ft A n s o n l a ;M i i s i o n O a k w a l l ; F r e n c h B r a c k e t ,

o t h e r s ; A v e r y d i v e r s i f i e d s a l e i n -c l u d i n g O r i e n t a l R u g s , a n d E s t a t eJ o w e l r y , C a t a l o g A v a i l a b l e a t S a l eT e r m s t C a s h o r T r a v e l e r * c t t e c k to n l y . N o p e r s o n a l c h e c k s u n l e s s w ek n o w y o u . A i r C o n d i t i o n e d .G E R A L D S T E R L I N G , A u c t i o n e e r .A p p r a i s e r , M e m b e r A p p r a i s e r sA s s o . o f A m e r i c a , N J S S A , N A A 3 0 )• I 9 - 9 M 5 - 4 4 4 - 4 0 4 7 .

S A T J u n e I I H T i m e I I t o 4a t 3 5 4 A s h l a n d R o a d S u m m i t( b e t w e e n D r u m m i l l a n d C o u n t r y ,s i d e ) t o y s • b o o k s • b i k e s • e m p t yo d d b o t t l e s - e t c . . . .

G R O U P S A L E — C o c k t a i l a n dm a t c h i n g e n d t a b l e s , c r i b Ac a r r i a g e , b i c y c l e s , t o y s , c l o t h i n g ,c u s t o m d r a p e r i e s , F r i . A S a t .J u n e l l A 1 * . 1 0 t o 4 . I M L o r r a i n eD r i v e , B e r k e l e y H e i g h t s .

P R I C E D T O S E L L . M o v i n g J u n e3 0 . » t o 4 , F r l . A S a t . , 4 C r e s t w o o dD r . , C h a t h a m , o f t L a f a y e t t e A v e .( T a k e S o u t h e r n B l v d . l o L a f a y -e t t e . ) E l e c t r i c m o w e r , 5 1 " p i n eb u f f e t , c o r n e r t a b l e s , a n t i q u e s ,a l u m . e » t . l a d d e r , g o l f c l u b s , t o y s ,b o o k s , g a m e s . Q u a n t i t y o lc l o t h e s : m e n f c 4 0 , w o m e n s t o , J r s ' .7 - e . R u g s , b a b y i t e m s , m u c hm o r e .

B E R K E L E Y H E I G H T S : V F WG a r a g e S a l e , J u n e I I , » a . m . - Ip . m . , J u n e I t , 9 a . m . • f p . m . , a n dS u n d a y . J u n e 2 0 , 1 p . m . - 4 p . m . -i n s i d e p o s t h o m e o n L o c u s t A v e .

o f f S r i y d e r A v e . , n e i f d o o r t oR e s c u e S q u a d . ' v v ;

F R I . A S A T . J u n e I I A 1 » ,9 : 3 0 ) : 3 0 3 1 S p r i n g R i d g e D r .B e r k e l e y H e i g h t s . : A n t i q u e s a n dA t t i c T r e a s u r e s !

C O M B I N E D O A R A O E S A L ! -J u n e I I , » t o 4 , J u n e I t , i s t e x ) .l l H a w t h o r n t R d . . S h o r t H i m .O a k d e s k , r e d u c i n g m a c h i n e ,b i c y c l e s , c r i b , g u n r a c k , h o u s e -h a i d I t e m s , s a m e n e w , f i r e -p l a c e s c r e e n , f i l e c a b i n e t ,w o r k b e n c h , u p r i g h t f r e e z e r ,m a p l e d r e s s e r , b r l c - a - b r a c .C a s h o n l y .

PRIVATE SALE1 0 1 T i l l o u R o a d ( o f f U p p e r W y o m i n g A v e . , S o u t hO r a n g e . ) F r i d a y a , S a t u r d a y , J u n e I * - I t , 1 0 t o 4 .

P a r t i a l c o n t e n t s o f h o m e I n c l u d i n g I t t h c e n t u r yA m e r i c a n , c h e r r y l i n e n p r e s s , S h e r a t o n d i n i n g t a b l e( c i r c a 1 1 1 5 - 1 I 3 S ) V i c t o r i a n r o u n d b r a s * m i r r o r .E m p i r e s o f a , r u g s , s l i v e r , c r y s t a l , c h i n a a n d m a n yi n t e r e s t i n g i t e m s ,

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I T o y s , c h i l d r e n ' s a n d a d u l t s 'c l o t h i n g a n d a c c e s s o r i e s ,

I b o o k s , f u r n i t u r e , p i c t u r e s , I' f r a m e s , b r i c - a - b r a c a n d m u c hI m o r e . J u n e l t - 1 0 . S a l . , S u n . , 1 1, a - m . t o 7 p . m .

A N T i a u t S , l u r n l t u r e , V i c t o r i a nt i d e c h a i r s , M i l , g i r l s ' b i k e a n dm o r e . S a l . 1 0 l o 4 . I M C a n o e B r o o kP a r k w a y , S u m m i t .

F R I D A Y , S a t u r d a y . » t o 4 . »C r e s l w o o d O r . , C h a t h a m . G e l fc l u b s , a i r c o n d i t i o n e r , r o l l a w a y b e d ,m i s c e l l a n e o u s I t e m s .

« O A K B I D O E A V E . S u m m i t . B r l ca - b r a c - s o m e t h i n g o l d t o m e t h l f l gn e w I n c l u d i n g m a n y s e t s o f n e wd i s h e s a n d g l a s s e s , h e a d b o a r d a n d( I t t l l t m i J u n e I t — t t o 4 .

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a n d b y e o p !

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f o r g o o d b o o k s A s e t s . P r o m p tr e m o v a l . H o r v a t h 1 7 1 - J 7 2 Ie v e s .

C H A R M I H O a n d d i s a r m i n g A f g h a nH o u n d p u p p l e i . l F - 2 M . 1 m o n t h s ,h o m e r a i t e d . A K C r a g . C h . s i r e d .t l s - U T l .

A N T I Q U E S , o l d c o i n s , o l d g u ma n d l u m b e r .

A N T I Q U E S R E S T O R E DM . J M j r i a n i . S J J J » 7 S

S U M M I T L a d y w i l l b u y h o u s e h o l df u r n i s h i n g s O r i e n t a l r u g s , a nt i q u e s , p a i n t i n g s , s i l v e r , c h i n aa n d j e w e l r y . T e l e p h o n e 3 7 7 - 1 1 4 4 .

B O O K S . G o o d B o o k s p u r c h a t e d .C h a t h a m B o o k s e l l e r , I G r e e nV i l l a g e R d , M a d i s o n . | ? M 3 i l .

L I O N E L . A m e r i c a n F l y e r , I v e si r a n u . I m m e d i a t e c a s h . W i l l p a y t oi l . M v T o p p n c « p a i d . 4 » l M t !

T O Y T R A I N S a n d T r o l l e y s .H i g h e s t c a s h p r i c e s p a i d . 4 0 7 - W e S .

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F O R S A L I : W e l s h C o r g i P e m b r o k e ,J m o n t h s o l d ; f e m a l e . ) 7 « M t e .

L O W , L O W P R I C E SO a r a g e S a l e . S a t . , J u n e I I , t t oI . I I H i c k o r y R d . b e t w e e n B e d -f o r d a n d B e v e r l y o f f W o o d l a n dA v e . , S u m m i t . R i d i n g b o o t s ,s k i b o o t s , s m a l l a p p l i a n c e s ,t a p e r e c o r d e r , h a i r d r y e r , d o l lh o u s e , t o y s , c h i n a , m o r e .P r i c e d l o s e l l .

D R I V E W A Y S A L E : t y p e w r i t e r ,t o a s t e r , c h i n a , l a m p s a n d f i x t u r e s ,c c o k w e r e , r a d i o a n d p a r t s , b o o k s .l a t o u s i e s . d r a p e r i e s , b r i c - a - b r a c ,

e l c . F r i d a y , S a l u r d a y . J u n e I I , I f , 1 0i s •- o n l y . R s ! r . a s t e s . n u s ! i t . t rC a n o e b r o o k P a r k w a y , S u m m i t .

F R I D A Y , J u n e l l l h , l l a . m . N Sp . m . , l a m p s , c h a i r s , m a n yh o u s e h o l d i t e m s , v e r y o l d c a k ep l a t e , e n d o t h e r o l d t h i n g s , d e l l s ,e s m « , e s e k s , I r e m b e n e . a i n l m u c hm e r e , t s t e n e r l d g e R e a d , a t t h ec o r n e r s f S e v e n O a k s D r i v e , N e wPrcvidsscc.

S A T U R D A Y - S u n d a y , J u n e 1 » » .1 0 - 4 . O i r l ' s t s p e e d " S p y d e r S M " .L e t t o f c h i l d r e n ' s t o y s , g a m e s .b o a t s . N e w o u t d o o r c o l o n i a l p o s tl a m p . C r a i g P i o n e e r c a r F M s t e r e ot a p e u n i t , w i n d o w t e n . H o u s e h o l di t e m i , b r i c - e - e r a c . N o e a r l y b i r d s .I l l S o r i n g R i d g e D r i v e , B e r k e l e y

H e i g h t s .

C A L I F O R N I A T R A N S F E R .C H A T H A M T O W N S H I P M O V I N GS A L E . S e l l i n g m a l o r c o n t e n t s 1 0r o o m h o m e . P i a n o , L R , D R a n db e d r o o m t u r n i t u r e . S e a c h e s t , i . z o ab o o k i , l a r g e a n d s m a l l a p p l i a n c e s ,t r a i n s a n d t r a i n t a b l e s , l o w i n g p M gp o n g t a b l e , r e c o r d p l a y e r s ." C h r j i t m o i i n J u n e . " Q u a n t i t i e s

h o u s e h o l d g o a d s a n d b r l c a - s r a c .A l s o , s i t e t o c a n d l e l i g h t w o o d i n gg o w n h e a d p i e c e . C l o t h i n g , 1 - 1 0 - 1 1 .1 1 ) 1 4 d o e r b r o w n a n d k e l g e h a r d t o pO l d s m o b i l e . B R O W S I N GW E L C O M E D ! T H U R S . , F R I . .S A T , , J U N E 1 7 , I I , I t . M e F A I R -M O U N T A V E . , C H A T H A MT O W N S H I P , ( v i c i n i t y S a u m e mB l v d . i n t e r s e c t i o n . ! P a r k . n j a r e a

a v a i l a b l e a t C h a r e * o f O w l s t .

M O V I N O t b a r g a i n s g a l e r e lM i s c e l l a n e o u s . S a t u r d a y , J u n e l * , et o l . I l l C o l o n i a l R d . , S u m m i t .

S I A N T N e i g h b o r h o o d M o v i n g S a l e ,F u r n i t u r e , e l e c t r i c d r i l l , a f t t l o . u a g a ss t a v e , l e y s , b i c y c l e , g e r b e g ed i s p o s a l , t e e d d r a p e r i e s a n d b e d -s p r e a d s , r u g s , a w r y t o r t o fh o u s e h o l d I t e m . I I A M t o 4 P M ,S a t u r d a y , J u n e i f . * 4 M o u n t a i nA v e - . S u m m i t .

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T W O A m C O N D I T I O N E R S - o n eK e n m o r e p o r t a b l e d i s h w a s h e r -m i m e o g r a p h r r n c h i n e - 2 7 3 - 7 3 8 1a f t e r s e v t n .

R I D I N G M O W E R . U " L i w n S e o u lw i t h s n o w p l o w a n d B r * " e a t f l t t r* m t f i t m e n t s . G o o d c o n d i t i o n . C * MM o n - , W e d . F r i . * v t l ; i l S M I l .

S K A T E B O A R D $ & w T t . t M . y K . t k f i i l ,X c « U b r t t r u c k I , M a r k I V w f t w l s ,

( r o o d c o n d i t i o n , S I S . 2 7 1 1 H 7 .

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L O V E A B L E . G o l d e n r e t r i e v e rw a n t * h o m e w h i l e h i t o w n e r i ta w a y f o r a l e w d a y * . C a l l 2 7 7 - 4 H 7i t i n t e r e i t e d , T h u r t . o r F r i .e v e n i n g s * H * r 7 .

S I L K Y T E R R I E R p u p p t t l , A K Cr e t M t t e n e d , b e a u t i f u l m a t * ! , d o u b t *g r a n d f a t h e r I n t e r n a t i o n a l c h a m -p i o n , M M . 2 7 M 2 M .

S U M M t T A N I M A L W E L F A R EL E A G U E S E f K S H O M E S . P a r -m a n e n t h a m a i d n o o r a t a i y ( M e d a df o r a l a w n u m b e r o f w a l l t r a i n a dm i x t > r « * d d o a i — a l l h a v a h a * t h e i r• h o t s . L a D ' C O l i f e - t a T r l e s r - s t t a l t t a .( T h e y a i l w a n t h o m e s t h a t w i l l b e f o rk e * p t » . A d o r a b l e p u p p i e s w i t hm y s t i r i o w b a c k g r o u n d s . 3 w a k n o w• r « p a r t p o o d i * . N a t i t t u r e d a d u t t

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C A R P E N T E R E X P E R T —A l t e r a t i o n s , b a s e m e n t s , p a n e l l i n g ,k i t c h e n c a b i n e t i . C a l l t i l M i l a l t e r

C A R P E N T R Y - A l t e r a t i o n s , b a s e -m e n t s , a t t i c s , r e c r e a t i o n r o o m s ,a d d i t i o n s F r e e e s t i m a t e s . 1 7 7 -3 > 1 S .

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(5s u n s e t c e l o r a d i p u r e P e r s i a n , ? t i n yt i m i d r o d l o n g l u l r a d t t g e r c a t s ,L a r o t m t l e c t l o n o f k i t t o n t — a l tc o l o n — | t t b l a c k , e a a r l y g r a y a n dp u r a w h i t e . A l s o m a n y c a i l c o s a n dr e d t t n w r t . G A R A G E S A L E — S a t .J u n e I * . 1 0 t o %. 1 2 4 A t f t l a n d R d .S u m m i t . D o n a t i o n s o f S a l e a b l em a r c h a n m s * ( o r o u r O a r a g e S a t * .S m a l l f u r n i t u r e , b r i c - a - b r a c ,j e w e l r y , c h i n a , e ) l u t . e t c . m a y b «l e f t a t t h e a b o v e a d d r e s s , f o rs p s y i i v s . a d o p t i o n a n d G a r a t a S a t *i n f o r m a t i o n p l a a s e c a l l 1 7 1 - 2 4 * 3 ;A f t e r I , c a l l 7 . 1 - a S U -

C A i j f c H T R Y - A d d i t i o n s , A l t e r -a t i o n s , r e p a i r s . N o w o r k t o os m a l l . G o o d w o r k a t r e a s o n a b l ep r i c e s . 1 7 4 - 4 1 1 7 .

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s e r v i c e . N o l o b t o o s m a l l . C R J -3 ) 0 7 1 . I f n o a n s w e r . 7 5 7 - S 4 0 2 .

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1 1 7 3 C H A M P I O N T R A V E L t r a i l -e r , 1 0 t t . s e l f - c o n t a i n e d , s l e e p s a ,S 1 S O 0 I n q u i r e C u r r y L e i s u r e ,4 4 4 - 7 1 1 0 .

I M S C H E V Y W A G O N , o r i g i n a lo w n e r . C a l l a l t e r a p . m . 4 4 4 1 5 4 1 .

' 7 1 C H E V E 1 . L E S S i n g o o dc o n d i t i o n . P S , P B , b l u e e « e r l o rb l a c k i n t e r i o r . N e w s t a r t e r , D e l t aU ' s a l l r o u n d . 1 7 3 - 7 1 4 4 .

1 ( 4 7 V O L K S W A G E N S Q U A R E - J O S E P H Z I C H I C M I A S O N S . I N C .B A C K , W h i l e , b l a c k I n t e r i o r , A n t i q u e s r e s t o r e d , f u r n i t u r e r e .w h i t e w a l l t i r e s , r a d i o . M i n t p a i r s a n d r e - f l n K h l n g . A n t i q u e sc o n d i t i o n : l o w m i l e a g e . 1 7 7 - 1 7 7 4 b o u g h t - s o l d . S l l M o r r i s A v e .a l t e r s p . m . t r w r } . S u m m i t . 1 7 M 4 6 1 .

I W 1 V O L K S W A G E N t q u a r e b a c k , ~ ~n e e d s s o m e b o d y w o r k . S a c r i l i c e .1 7 w C

Furniture

(fLtiatr-tttanA l l t y p e s o f c h a i r r e p a i r s r e - t i r i i t h -i n g . H a n d c a n i n g - r u t h i n g , s p l i n t -i n g , R e w e b b i n g . A l l t y p e s o f f u r -n i t u r e r e p a i r s a n d t o u c h - u p .A n t i q u e s r e s t o r e d , F U R N I T U R EB O U G H T t . S O L D , M A R T I N O .U R B A N S K I , 3 1 1 H i c k o r y T a v e r nR d . , M t y e r . v . l l e . M T - t f S t .

V A R I O U S r o o m i l l « r u g s a n d t h r e wr u g s , b e s t o f f e r . E x h t y a t ( N e tw i n d o w f a n , W f t . B r a t s d i n i n g r o a mc h a n d e l i e r . T w i n m a t f r a s s a n dl p i r n f l t i t , l » . U 4 - W J T

P O U C H S A L C — A i re l e c t r i c l i t d e l l f e e m e , c r i b ,t n . t d r e n s m i l e . * T S u m m i t A v * .C h a t h a m , F r i , J u n e 1 1 , t . » t o I

M O V I M O S A L EU S U M M I T A V K , C H A T H A M

F R I - S A T f - 1 1R e t r l t e r a t e r ; S e t o f C h i n a ; R e dO e b t e t i ; H a v t e w a r e s j L i n e n i ; B i r dC a « e a n d S t a n d ; B a b y T n i n g t j T o n so f d o f h t i i n c l u d i n g m a t e r n i t y ;M a n y B o o k s ; N e w S I M l n g t h e w e rd S S r ; M U C K S t s r « ; t

E N T I R E C O N T E N T S . E t h a n A l l e nr o u n d d i n i n g r o o m t a b l e , v i n y lt w t v t i c M i r s , o a k b o o k c a s e , o i lp a i n t i n g s , l a m p s , d e c o r a t o rm i r r o r s , r u g s , w r o u g h t i r o n t a b l ea n d c h a i r s , R a t t a n p o r c h s e t . t a r g eb r a s s t r a y , d r a p e s , h l - r i s e r b e d s ,g i r t ' s w h i t e c a n o p y b e d r o o m s e t ,m a h o g a n y b e d r o o m . T V , s t e r e oc o m p o n e n t s , f c i s c h e n w a r o , b r i e ab r a e . M a n y m o r e h o u s e h o l d i t e m s .3 4 H o b a r t A v e . , S u m m i t , F r i d a y *S a t u r d a y , • t o S .

E N T I R E C O N T E N T S( O w n e r t o

r e t i r e m e n t c o m p l e x . )b y C r u l k t h a n t t

C u t f l l a n , s i l v e r , c h o i c eL i m o g e s , a n t i q u e c h e r r y d r o pl e a f , V i c t o r i a n s a f a , m a r b l et o p t a b l e , h a n d s o m e m a h o g -a n y S p e n i i h s t y l e d i n i n g r o o m ,V i c t o r i a n R e n a i s s a n c e o a kd o u b t e b e d a n d c h e s t , 3 m a h o g -a n y 4 p o s t e r b e d s , w i c k e rc h a i r s , l a m p s , m i r r o r s , t r i s q u cd o l l * l i n e n s , c h i n a , g l a s s w a r e ,1 h u m p b a c k t r u n k s , f r a m e s ,b o o k t , 7 s m a l l H a m m a d e nr u g s , a t t i c t h i n g s , r e f r i g e r a t o r ,S S O . * T F a i l - m o u n t A v e . , C h a t -h a m B o r o u g h . F r l . . J v n e I I , ft o 4 ; S a t . , J u n e i t . « t o 1 2 .

1 9 7 3 C A D I L L A C , 4 d r . f u t l ye q u i p p e d ; l o w m i l e a g e ; n i c ec o n d i t i o n . C B H i n i f 7 i or 1 7 8 -» 3 t .

1 9 W L I N C O L N C o n t i n e n t a l , P S , P B ,P W , f » - * a a t » , r a d i o , A X , M W . C a Ha l t a r 3 P . M . W 7 - i M » .

m t P O N T I A C O r a n d V i l l a , 1 0 r . P S ,P B , A C , v i n y l r o o f . O r i g i n a l o w n e r .

T r a m f e r r c d o v e r s e a s : A i k f n gS 1 . 5 9 S . 4 4 4 - 7 4 7 1 .

' 4 7 M E R C U R Y S T A T I O N w a g o n ,a i r , p o w e r , 4 g o o d t i r e s , c l e m , g o o dc o n d i t i o n M 5 0 . 1 3 5 - t S S t .

The BAR Co.

C R A F T S M E N I N :

Sundetks

R a i l r o a d T i e C o n s t r u c t i o nB r i c k N ' l a M P r o j e c t s

V a r i o u s T y p e R e t a i n i n g W a l l sC r e a t i v e I d e a s i n L a n d s c a p i n g :

O r i e n t a l D e s i g n sA l l C u s t o m R e n o v a t i o n s

( a d d i t i o n s e t c >

822 2360 and 447-1455

Landscaping

I t a l C H E V Y 1 s t a t i o n w a g o n . S I M .4 4 4 - 4 0 4 3 -

1 V 4 5 O r l g i n i a l m o d e l M u s t a n g .1 1 7 0 O U t i e l c o n v e r t i b l e , b o t h i n

e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n a n d w e l lm a i n t a i n e d . 2 7 1 - 9 3 0 2 .

Motorcycle

I I S U Z U K I 5 5 0 . G O O D C O N D I -T I O N . P r i c e d t o s e l l . C A L L! > ! . ) » ) ! a l t e r » P . M

S u m m i t A n i m a lW e l l a r e L e a g u e

S a t . M a y I f1 1 4 A t h U n d R d . ( c o r n e r

C o l o n y C l . ) S u m m i t .i » A . M . t o 1 P . M .

P l e a s e - n o e a r i y b i r d s !S m a l l f u r n i t u r e , S o m e s i l v e r ,S o m e r e a l c o l l e c t o r s ' i t e m s

Musical Imtruments

Bicycles

S C H W I N N P i s i w l t t i t r a i n i n gw h e e l s , r e d . P e r f e c t f o r b o y ' s f i r s tb i c y c l e . J 3 0 4 » 4 - » 4 S 9 .

Furniture

M E D I T E R R A N E A N T R I P L Ed r e s s e r a n d m i r r o r , d o u b l e h e a d -b o a r d , S t e r n s A F e s t e r m a t t r e s s e n d

M O V I N G — p a r t i a l c o n t e n t s o fb e a u t i f u l h o m e . M a n y a n t i q u e si n c l u d i n g b r a s s s c o n c e s . h a n d s o m eV i c t o r i a n d e s k , m i r r o r s , d r o p - l e a ft a b l e , c h e s t o l d r a w e r s , I t a l i a nf r u l t w e o d l o v e s e a t , w i c k e r c r i b ,s t e r e o p p i c a n . m a h e a . s e t t e e .T a b l e s , , d r a p e s , c h i n a , a l a s i ,v a c u u m , t y p e w r i t e r , c o p t e r , p o w e rm o w e r , t o e l s , . c h e m l c e l t e l t e t . M u c hm o r e , T a i l , l i n d t h r u T t w r , M t i i i tt o 4 . O l e n A l p i n e R d . M t r r l i l o w n .I R t e m l e O l e n A l p i n e , c r e s s > I 7 -> r d d r i v e w a y o n r l i t i l l . N O P R I O RS A L E . M i l .

F R I D A Y . J u n e I I , 1 0 t o 4 . I I J o h nS t r e e t , C h a t h a m . O d d s a n d e n d s e fe v e r y t h i n g .

P A I N T i N S S b y U c y p . S a t . I O I O I .I M C a n o e B r o o k P a r k w a y , S g m m l l .

M O V I N O - M e t a l ft W o o d c a o l n e t s ,s t a n d s , t a b l e s , c h i l d ' s d e s k , c h a i r s ,t w i n m a t t r e s s A s p r i n t , a l c t w r cf r a m e s , d r e s s f a r m s , l a w n s w e e p e r ,m u c h m l s c e i l o n e w i . L o w p r i c e s .F r i « s a t , J u n e l l - l t . e , » . < P M .R a i n o r s h i n e . 3 2 t e v a r l y R d . ,S u m m i t .

MARVEL COMICS •

• BACK ISSUES *

• lSc,20c, 25c # '• M o r e t h a n U v a r i e t i e s i n e x c e l J L_ i e n t c o n d i t i o n . M o n . a \ T u e i , "

• j u m 2 1 , l l , I r o m I D • 4 . #a L C o m e t o O L L I E ' S C o m i c i S a l e

I M A s h l a n d R d . , S u m m i t

A L T 6 N B U R O -E L I Z A B E T H . N . J .

O p e n O a l l y t i l ' S a t . t i l sB A L D W I N P I A N O S A L E !

N e w B a l d w i n p i a n o - * * > >F u l l K e y b o a r d

. E i c e l l e n t T o n e. l O y e a r g u a r a n t e e

P i a n a R e n t a l P l a n I I M e n l h

3512000A L T E N t U R C P I A N O H O U S E

l t S O E . J e r s e y S t r e e tE l i z a b e t h , N . J .

l v 7 3 F I A T i l l s t a t i o n w a g o n , v e r yc l e a n , g o o d c o n d i t i o n , 3 4 4 0 0 m i l e s ,n e w b r a k e s , c l u t c h A t i r e s , s n o wt i r e s i n c l u d e d , A M - F M r a d i o , m u s ts e l l q u i c k l y . t l . M O . 1 7 7 - 1 5 5 5 .

C H E V R O L E T N O V A , l » 4 4 , t c v l . 1d o o r , a u t o m a t i c , r a d i o A n e a t e r ,1 1 , 0 0 0 m i l e s , c l e a n , e c o n o m i c a l ,d e p e n d a b l e , S I M : 1 7 1 - 0 4 1 O .

' I I F O R D G A L A X V S O 0 4 d o o r : P S ,P S , A C . 4 5 , 0 0 0 m i l e s . U S e . 1 7 1 7 4 4 4

' 7 1 R O A D R U N N E R . 4 4 0 h i g h p e r .l o r m a n c t , P B , P S . a u t o , s l a p s t i c k ,A C , A M - F M t a p e , m a g s , i n m i n tc o n d i t i o n , m u s t s e e . 4 4 4 - 1 7 1 1 .

A P A C H E t e n t t r a i l e r ; r e a d y t o g o .1 1 5 0 . C a l l a f t e r 4 P . M . 2 7 3 - 0 5 9 7 .

I M S V O L K S , v e r y g o o d r u n n i n gc o n d i t i o n , n e w c l u t c h , r e b u i l t m o t o r ,g o o d t i r e i , 1 1 0 0 . 1 7 7 - 1 5 * 5

L A N D S C A P I N G — C o m p l e t e l a n d -t c a p e l e r v i c e , m o n t h l y m a i n -t e n a n c e . A l s o m a t e n w o r k . F ' e ee s t i m a t e . R e a s o n a b l e p r i c e . C a l lM A P . C E L L O , J 7 7 1 1 0 5 a f t e r 4 ? M

M I K E M E D I N AL a n d s c a p e r

C U a n - u p , m o n t h l y c o n t r a c t s .G o o d p r i c e s . F r e e e s t i m a t e . 2 7 7 -t s i a .

P R U N I N G o f s h r u b s a n d t r e e s .F r e e e s t i m a t e s J 7 7 ! ! • » .

Mnon Coolnctors |

C U S T O M m e t a l w o r k , s p e c i a l i z i n gi n r a i l i n g s , f i r e p l a c e s c r e e n s . T o w nA C o u n t r y I r o n W o r k s - R o u t e I I ,L e a g e w o o d . N . J . S M - l w o c r n u m .

V . A N D J . M E R C A O A N T E I - 'M a s o n w o r k . W a t e r d r e i n a g e . S u m pp u m p s i n s t a l l e d . 4 4 4 - 7 S 7 5 . 7 4 4 - 0 4 1 0 .

KING IN MASONRY WORK

Ben Carfagnini

over 20 yrs. exp.S t e p , s i d e w a l k s , p a t i o , f i r e p l a c e ,

i » 7 l P E U G E O T A u t o , A C , A M F M , t c . F r e e e s t i m a t e s . C a l l a l t e r 4s t e r e o , s u n r o o f , l o w m i l e a g e , pB a l a n c e o l w a r r a n t y . 2 3 1 1 4 7 1

P I A N O , L e s t e r s p i n e l , m a h o g a n y ,g o o d c o n d i t i o n . I S M C a l l a f t e r ] , t » -

Pets

I Garden Supplies

A M A T O ' S O A R D E N C I N T E KS I S h v n p l k e R o a dM a d i s o n 1 7 7 - O S B J

G r o w e r s o f a n n u a l s , p e r e n -n i a l s , h a n g i n g b a s k e t s , h e r b s ,g r o u n d c o v e r s , s h r u b s , r o s eb u s h e s . L a w n a n d g a r d e ns u p p l i e s . C o m e t e e ; c o m e• a v e .

CANINE CAROUSELP r o f e s s i o n a l D o g G r o o m e r s

g r o o m i n g w i t h et o u c h o f c l a s s

• p p t s . , C a l l 4 e 4 - t t 2 4

b a . e ? * » * • « » * " , J u n e 1 ! I 1 1 .s p r i n g / n e w b e d f r a m e . B a s t o f f e r £ ' " " " ' " " . ' " A ' • " " > • " * • • •o v e r l i n o , a i s - l l i e a f t e r 7 P . M . S u m m i t . l O J O l U

L A W N m a t e r i a l s • s c r e e n e d t o p l o l l ;n e w a n d u s e d R . R . t i e s . D e l i v e r i e so n l y . 1 7 7 I I J S .

WISIpeople know Wont Ads•all merchandise last!

VACATION?

(at BoardingI n d i v i d u a l i z e d c a r e

S p e c i a l L o w R a t e sC a l l f o r R a t e I n f o r m a t i o n

* R e s e r v a t i o n sV a c a t i o n t i m e B o a r d i n g a l s o

f e a t u r e d f o r s m a l l a n i m a l sa n d b i r d s .

P R O F E S S I O N A L O O OG R O O M I N G

b e g i n n i n g I n A u g u s t t o ra l l b r e e d s

THE SUMMIT PET HOUSE2 7 7 - 0 1 3 1

• 7 } T O R 0 N A D O . F u l l p o w e r , s t e r e o V » J E X C A V A T I N O C o r r e c t o r s ,r a d i o , A C , v i n y l t o o . o n e o w n e r , b » c k h o « s e r v i c e , S p r i n g f i e l d , N . J . ,1 3 . 1 5 0 1 7 M S 1 » d a y s 1 4 4 - 3 3 4 2 . e v e n i n g s 4 4 7 - 3 1 1 1 .

H 7 S O L O S M O B I L E , D e l t a I IC o n v e r t i b l e F o r e s t g r e e n , w h i t et o p . S p e c i a l p a i n t . A l l e q u i p m e n t .O n e o t t h e l a s t t o b e m a d e . L i k en e w , 1 1 , 0 0 0 m i l e s 3 7 » s » 5 5

Used C J H Wanted

J U N K c a r s a n d t r u c k s u p t o U O 0p a i d , i m m e d i a t e p i c k - u p 7 d a y s a

w e e k . F r e e l o w i n g . C o u r t e o u sp e r s o n n e l . C a l l 3 S 1 H J ! .

I WANTED TO BUY "

P I A N O W A N T E DG o o d C o n d i t i o n

117. im

NANCY HERMANCEA N T I Q U E t U Y I N O S E R V I C E

F O R O V E R I S Y D S .H i g h e r P r i c e s - I m m e d i a t ec a s h f o r : J e w e l r y , F u r n i t u r e ,S i l v e r , c h i n a , O l a s s , D e l l s ,O r i e n t a l r u g s . P a i n t i n g s , e t c .

U l i l l l o r 3 7 7 - 7 . 0 5 4

L I V I N G S T O N c o l l e c t o r w a n t sl r a « n s , L i o n e l o r o t h e r m a k e s , s e t s ,p a r t s , » 9 ] . U 9 4 .

B A L T U S R O L C O N S T R U C T I O NC O .

M a s o n C o n t r a c t o r « . B u i l d e rS t o n e , b r i c k s i d e w a l k s . A l l t y p e sc o n c r e t e w o r X a n d c o n s t r u c t i o n ,N . R u d i s l , S u m m i t , C R J - 4 1 S 1 .

S A M R O T O N D I - D r y w a l l s ,f i r e p l a c e s , s t o n e w o r k , b r i c k w o r kA g e n e r a l c o n t r a c t i n g . C a l l 3 7 7 -I 7 U .

A L L N E W a n d r e p a i r w o r k , m a s o nb r i c k l a y e r , s l o n e . s t u c c o a n dd r i v e w a y s . F r e e e s t i m a t e s . 2 7 7 - O S 3 7 .

D . A . C H I E R A , I N C . M a s o n w o r k ,a l l k i n d s , a n d w a t e r p r o o t l n e 2 7 7 -0445.

' J O S E P H E P I S C O P OM A S O N C O N T R A C T O R

A B U I L D E RC O N C R E T E W O R K - s t e p s - w a l l s -p a t i o s - f i r e p l a c e s - p l a s t e r i n gg r a d i n g a n d d r a i n a g e w o r k c a r .p e n t r y w o r k - w o o d e e c k s - r a b a l r o rn e w f r e e a d v i c e A d e s l i n i n g 4 M 1 7 1 1

P A V I N S C O N T R A C T O R , g e n e r a lm a s o n w o r k , n e w l o b s , r e p a i r s .F r e e e s t i m a t e . C a l l M A R C E L L O ,1 7 M 1 0 S a f t e r s P . M .

Page 20: SUMMIT?* ERALL - DigiFind-It · Shilling, $25; Mrs. Florence T. Towner, $25, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kaus, $15. There were also two anonymous donations, one fo r $70 and anothe

PAGE 20 THE SUMMIT HKKAU).THURSDAY. JUNE " .

SERVICES IL SERVICES II INSTRUCTION t W A l MOTICI LtOAL NOTICI

L Mason Contractor.

JHario £[. <AmatoMason

PATIOS, Fireplaces. Brick, StoneReinforced Concrete Stairs, Sup-port Walli, RR T i n , stucco. Car-penter Work, Tite Work. Hut or*t i«», Etc., 11 Lafayette Ave,Summit. 173-8U5 after * P . M .

PERSONALS JL LOST

TIRBD of your own cookiry andparty planning? Try mlnet A uniquehorn* catering service featuring•ncltinv hot and cold hart d'o«uvrtt,Hungarian c»»r»t»rit to tlckl* ihepalate. Call «4-l25t tor furtherinformation, afttr a PM.

LOST: orange striped torn cat j riarlag in cast. Vicinity Chatham St.,Falrmount Ave. Reward. HS-S471.

LOST from pen and home: wirehaired male, answers to "Doc",with flea collar and collar, invicinity of Franklin school >"*<*Divliion Ava. *M-tM7 weekdays;273 *M7 eves, and weekends.

STUDY DRUMS WITHDAVID PETRMCORO

Learn Ml there li to knew aboutplaying tht drums. Reading, setwork, Jan, Rock and Latin.Teaching the tarn Ulano Method.For more Information call 171-01 i l

PRIVATE TUTORING - math,M I . Alao college boards, in .Mi l .

ASPHALT DRIVEWAY,S parkinglot*, ttnnli courts, curbing &sidewalks. Polenta P«vlng Co. Ell.I l l * For free estimate n i l «H I t t l

MistellanMus

NATALE'SPAVING COMPANY

6650888Belgium blocks, parkins lots.driveways, all m*son work,itept, sidewalks, patios, jton«work, RR ties & concreteblocks.

Miscellaneous'

EXPERIENCED MAN will dojanitorial and lawn cutting. Callweekends and after \ p.m. week-days. 377-4980.

ALL SERVICES: Spring cleanup; grass cutting; trash removed.Trucking Painting Satisfactionguaranteed. 123-13*0.

GUTTERS AND LEADERS in-stalled, repaired, cleaned. Win-dow washing- KEN LEPORE,37(0509-

CLEAN and remove appliances,furniture, brush, etc. from houseend yard Ail lypei Unditaptna andtree work. Fireplace Wood. FUR-NITURE MOVING ft HAULING.Charlie Vincent. 647 313*, 24-hourservice.

WINDOW cleaning, gutters clean-ed and repaired- F De Angelus,9924*3*.

TREE TRIMMING AND RE-MOVAL; very reasonable; freeestimates. 273-8715 after 4 p.m.

..AWNS cleaned and cut, cellars,attics and garage cleaning. Lighthauling and rubbish removed-Reasonable rates. Call 373-4340.

COOK'S Appliance Sates and Ser-vice on all appliances includingroom air conditioners/ t 'vctricalgarden equipment, toasters, vac-uum cleaners, Irons, etc. 110 ParkAve., Summit. J73 S4».

LIGHT trucking and deliveries -cellars and attics cleaned. Rub-bish removed. 273-2149 or 373-3*31.

LAWNMOWINO — I f yc old collegestudent will mow your lawn. Up to

|£acre, l ie • over, price arranged.444 7977.

Moving

TRIPLE "A" MOVERSAnythlnfl-Anyplftce-Anytime

One m m to a House fullspecialists in

Estate Liquidation

Seven Days a Week74 Hour Answering ServiceCallMr.MeCarry*277-41*t

WHEN YOU move calf ATLANTICEstimates cheerfully given. 23390*3

I Painting-Decorating I

MARK • TOM'S Painting Service.We w>M paint the exterior or interiorof your home tor a reasonable price.277-27*4 or 273-7342.

PAYTAS PAINTING. Experiencedcollage painters. Reasonable 273-71176.

SUN PAINTERS, 2o percent belowcontractors cost — exterior or in-terior. t)0O rebate — for more Intocan uee after S P. M. ZiJiQat.

EXPERIENCED PAINTER, inlerior-eKterior painting. Freeestimate.. James Pignatetlo, 271-

VINCENT BADOUTOPainting & Paper HangingINTERIOR (EXTERIOR

SWIMMING POOL SERVICEDRIVEWAY BLACKTOP

SEALERFULLY INSURED

2736385

THOMAS PAINTING CO

guaranteed, fully insured. Call alter5P.M.m.M37.

Piano Tuning

Tuning RepairingGEORGE M. OELANEY

273-1010 27316S7

PIANO Tuning. Fine tuning, re-pairing and regulating. CallJoseph Gravina, 756-3706.

FOR fine piano tuning and repair-ing call L. Horvath, 2770529

Plastering

PLASTERINGExpert repair or new sheet-rock & taping - preparation forpainting • We cooperate with"Do-lt-your-teHer." Knownrecommended Summit-ShortHills area. Phil EpiscopoHome Improvement & Repair.573-5B08.

PERSONALS

FR6D KOLB'S Birthday, PartyMagic Show, featuring "George"the iiw* magic rabbit. 7U-4S51.

MRS. SARAH - Reader and advii-er« Hindu Tarot card readings.Established over 20 years. 3t4AWatchung A v e , Opp. Post Office,Plain field. PL 5-6150.

PIANIST tor home parties, largerepertoire. Moderate rates. CallBrian, 373-21 IB.

SINGER SEWINGMACHINES

EXPERT REPAIRSAll Work Guaranteed

In Home Service

THE SUMMIT SEWING MACHINE CENTER44* Springfield Ave.

Summit (near the Strand Theatre)

2735U1

TUTORING by Licensed teachers(or ad subfects and all l*v*is, CallComprahensivt Tutoring Service,540-0123

LEARNING disabilities teacher,MA, , 10 yaan eitptHence -remedial, subject matt*r, per-ceptual training, Call 4*4-1439.

INSTRUCTION IWANTED I

NOTICE T O C R i D l T O R IESTATE OF W JAMES MARQUIS,also known 6& WILLIAM JAMESMARQUIS Deceased

Pursuant to the order of MARY C.KANANE. Surrogate ot the Countyof Union, m»ab on the Dth day ofJune A.D., 1976 upon the applicationof the undersigned; as Executors olthe slate of said deceased, notice Ishereby given lo the creditors of saiddeceased to exhibit to the tubscribers under oath or affirmationtheir claim* and demands againstthe estate of said dec eased within si*months from tha date of said order.

Now JerseySchool of

MLIJ2Tin association with

EDWARDVILLELLA

official school of theNEW JERSEY

BALLET COMPANY

Summer CourseJuly 5 - August 20

BALLET. MODERN JAZZBeginning. Intermediate, Advanced, Professional Claim

t,v rhiiriren Teenage'*. AdulTi

ORANGE174 MAIN STRSET 677 IMS

MORRISTOWN35 MARKET STREET 5*0 0466

SOMERVILLE190 WEST MAIN STRSET 52b 2334

CA' U-TBttAV.fOKBflOCHURC

Rib Weekend.(Just $11.95 for two.)

Have a deliciousPrime Rib dinner

for two this Fridayor Saturday at

Stouffer'sShort Hills

restaurant.A complete

dinnerincludingappetizer,

salad bar, vegetable,1

and beverage. And, for the perfect finish,a dessert of Chocolate Bavarian

I opped wit h almonds and whipped cream.All to the tune of Crawford and Christy's

entertaining and relaxing music.So have a Prime Rib weekend —

just $11.95 - for two —this Friday and Saturday evening.

SHORT HILLSThe Mall at Short Hills

Morris Turnpikeat River Road

376-7025

H.wr HO * j f K p«f**a*

STOUFFER'S

rnvinn* trom in* date Of u m oraer,or they will be forever barred fromprosecuting or recovering the sameagainst the subscribers

Edith E.Marxtuls andP idetity union T rust Company,

oINewsrk.NJ.

RIKer, Danzig, Scherer& Drbevoise,Attorney*744 Broad St..Newark, N.j.SH Junel7,1976

Executors

U.42

JAPANESE L1S5ON1 — will tradehousework — baby sitting? ContactMarianne Reltir, 373SH3.

LIOAl NOTICI

HUD{Continued from Page 1)

meeting this locallydeclared need".

Mr. Machrner stressed"the Authority still remainshopeful that a negotiatedsettlement can be reachedwith the two propertyowners of the three-acresite".

When asked about con-demnation proceedings ofthe land if the owners did notagree, the HousingAuthority declined todiscuss the matter at thistime. No sum was givenconcerning HUD's offer forthe land.

John Lager, who has beenopposed to selling hisproperty to the HousingAuthority, was out-of-townand not available forcomment on this latestdevelopment. In March,Lager and Hurrell took themayor and Common Councilto court for refusing to granta variance for th*? nrc*rtyin question which is zonedresidential.

The variance would allowthe land to be sold to aprivate- developer, Makor.Inc., for a 36-tinit gardenapartment complex formiddle-income housing.

NOTICEApplication tor Robert ft. Barbara

Lynyakfor a variance to permit theextension of their exftfing garagehaving \t%% sideyard distance thanrequired by the Zoning Ordinance onLot }, Block IMA, known as 309Summit Avenue, Located in Ihe R 25Sinelt Family, Residential Districtwas. granted, the ?th D«v of June.IWfc

Application of R adforcf &Katharine Covet! for a varl^nct topermit the construction of a tenniscourt havtafl >e» liaeyard da to neethan required by the Zoning Ordmanceon Lot }, Block 114, knowna& 100 Prospect Hill Avenue, locatedm m* K 25 Single FamilyResidential District warranted therth day ot June; 197A

Application ot F David Me Go wan,42 Highland Avenue. Madiion, Newjersey, tor a variance to permit meconversion ol J he existing one family

lfi ! h l d M i

Wiley{Continued from Pag* 1)

Senator Wiley stated that,"When 1 became chairmanof the Senate EducationCommittee in January, 1974,t was met with theresponsibility to define a•thorough and efficientsystem' of education asmandated by our SupremeCourt."

The Senator has beenoften mentioned as an ap-pointee to the State SupremeCourt and as a candidate forGovernor. He served asPersonal Counsel toGovernor Robert B.Meyner; and practiced lawwith former Gov. Meyneruntil he was elected to theSenate in 1973

VoteyFord for a similar positionin Ihe second ward, WallaceBarnes, a former citycommittee chairman, willserve as general counsel.

Appointments as chair-man of standing committeesincluded Mr. Anderson,finance; Mrs. Claudia Fox,registration; Miss Cox,public meetings; Mrs.Cahill, headquarters, andMrs. Hannah S. Rauscher,publicity.

Special commit teechairmen appointed by Mr.Votey are Tony Cox, con-stitution; Mr. Poole, plat-form; Mrs. Judy Sylvester,fund raising, and Mrs.Totten telephone.

Seafood Lovers9 Special.(Just $11.95 for two.)

If you love seafood (and havea companion who shares your

love) Stouffer's specialy 'Seafood Dinner for two

is made for you.Broiled Lemon Sole,French Fried Sea-food Cakes, Deep,

Sea Scallops, andFrenchFriedShrimp-

accompanied by a ^~rr , . ,visit to the salad bar, appetizer, vegetable and a dessert of

~ l Mocha Bavarian Chantilly.So if you are a Seafood Lover, bring someone who shares your

passion to Stouffer's this Wednesday or Thursdayfor a delicious and relaxing evening.

This special Seafood Dinner for two - just $11.95 at

J F K Parkway

StdufersSHORT HILLS

STOUFFER'SShort Kills

Mall |

The Mall at Short HillsMorris Turnpike at River Kond

376-702/iStmifor V Anwrirmi Kxpr^s oltwr mttjoi- crflit i'»nU

!fi i three familyiand that the screening butter

provi&iori* abo be varied on Lot 3,dlotk 4J, known at 32 Walnut Street.located in the R 5 Single Family,Reiideii"s! District,' was re.commended to the Common Council thftiw Day o' June. WftJune 8, 1?76

Zoning Board of AdjustmentArthur Cordon, Secretary

SH June 17. 1976 U M t ,

UOAt NOTICE

NOTICE TOA t J I N T DEFENDANTSUPERIOR COURT OF

NEWJERSEYCHANCERY DIVISIONDOCKET NO. M*445M

By Order ot the Superior Court otHftt Jersey entered on June 8, 1976,wherein your wife, Anne G. Cover, Isplaintiff and you *rt named asdefendant, you ar* required toAnswer or file an Appearance toplaintiffs Complaint on w beforethe 13th day ot August, 1974, byserving tatd Answer or Appearanceon John Anthony Lombards, Esq.,p la int i f fs attorney, at 441Springfield Avenue, Summit, New!»r«*y Q7M1, and Citing it with theProot of Service in duplicate withme Clerk ot the Superior Court,Stale House Annex, Trenton, NewJersey 0la2$ in accordance with theRuin Governing the Courts of NewJersey, and if you tail to file anAnswer or Appearance, default witibe entered against you and suchjudgment will be rendered againstyou as the Court m»y deemequitable and jus*.

The purpose. ot>ffM attOve men

Judgment of t>(«»rce dissolvingyour marriage to Anne G. Cover,

JOHN ANTHONY LOM&AROIAiiorney for Plaintiff

441 Springfield AvenueSummit, New Jersey 0790?

SM June 17, 1976

IHERIM'SSALESUPERIOR COURT OF NEWJERSEY CHANCERY DIVISION,UNION COUNTY DOCKET NO. F336 75 UNITED COUNTIES TRUSTCOMPANY, a New jersey bankingcorporation. Plaint iff vs. SPERCOMOTOR CO,, INC., a New Jerseycorporation, at at, Defcndanti

CIVIL ACTION EXECUTIONFOR SALE OF

MORTGAGED PRBMI1ESBy virtua of Ihe abovt tlated writ

ut execution to me dlrtcttd I shallexpute tor sal* by public vendue, inroom B 8, In th« Court House, in theCHy of Eliiabeth, N.J., ,00 Wadnesday, the 30m day of June, A.D.,\97t, at iwo o'clock in tht afternoonof satd day.

Atl that tract or parcel of land,tituaie. lying and being in theCltyofSummit, County of Union and Stateut New Jer»y.

BEGINNING at a point in thenorthwesterly line of Beverly Road.at laid out to a width of 40 ftet,distant m.toteet easterly from themtertecHon of the northwesterlyfine ot Beverly Road with the noreasterly line of Morris Avenue andrunning

1 abng the rear line ot lotsfronting on Morris Avenue, North 40degrees 7 minutes West 3J2.45 feet,mence

2. South 49 degrees 53 minutesWesi 125 f*et to the northeasterlyfine of Morris Avenue; thence ' .

3 along me northeasterly line ofMorris Avenue, North 40 degrees 7minutes West 3G6 S5 feet to a stonemonument in the southeasterly linet/t lands of the Summit Board ofEducation; thence

4 along the southeasieriy line ollands ot the Summit Board ofEducation, North 49 degrees 53minuteb East 250 teet to a atonemonument in the south winterly lineof School Avenue, thence

5 along the Southwesterly line ofSchool Avenue, South 40 degree* 7minuivt Ea&t 63i.il tett to the northwesterly line of Beverly Road,thence

6 along the northwesterly line otBeverly Road, South 47 degrees 44mi»iu!ei West 125 \a te«t to the pointof Beginning

Being ihe same premises con

'wo deeds as tuliows <.)) fromHarris) L Et>Dei&» widow. cJa'edf-eDruary 2, )Ui, and recur fleaFe&ruar/ 4, 194B, in Book 1675 otDeeds for union County at Page 527,and I?) from Summit Home LandCompany, by its surviving directorsand trustees >n dissolution, datedMay 1, 1V46, and recorded May IS,t?48, in Book 16V3 of Deeds for UnionCounty at Page 35EXCEPTION

Although not set torth in themortaaoe dated -April n . I B U ih*r*«* expected from taid mortgage thefyllowmg portion ot said premises:

BEGINNING at a point in menorm westerly line of Beverly ttoao,as laid oui )o a width of 40 feet,distant us 10 fe»i aasterly iron, mem*ersectlon of the northwesterlyline of Beverty Road whhih* notn-

eai'erlv Hn*nt Morris Av#mj* »nnrunning

) along the rear line ot tutsfrort'tnfionMorrti Avtnwe, Norm 40degrees 1 minutes West JM teef,ihence

2 Harm 4f degrees 44 minutesEa*i >iS >0 f«#t to the southwesterlyime ut School Avenue, thence

3 along the touthwetifrfy tfne ofSchool Av#nut, South 40 oegren 7minute* East 250 !«*! toth«north.westerly imt of Sever)y Road;'hence

1 Such tacts as an accuratesurvey and inspection ot Ihepremises would reveal.

2. Lien of unpaid taxes. (Taxsearch $ 12 75 shows unpaid 1974taxes for the 4th qtr. of 13,606 75,1975 taxes for the whole year of$I4,3«57B, l»76 taxes tor the 1st halful &;,192J9, all plus inter**!). '

3. Federal, State, and Municipala t ' i , laws, ordinances, andregulations affecting Ihe use andoccupancy of the premises

4 Restrictions and easement! ofrecord, if any.

5 Occupancy of the mortgagors, itany i Judgment contain* ajudgment tor possession, but «purchaser would heve to obtain hisuwn writ ol possession,)"

Tttcre is due approximately1174,2U 73 with interest fromJanuary 27. 1976 and costs.

The Sheriff reserves th« rlsht toadjourn thlt> sate.

Ralph Orisceilo. SheriffCampiwll & Campbell, Attys.DJ & SH CX 22V-06SH June 3, iO. 17, U, I9?6 $132.80

6*vtriy Road, Soum 4? degtves 44minutes West US 1Q ***t tothapobuof Beginning

Being th* same premise* conveyed by Sperco Motor Co., Inc.. •New Jersey corporation, to TheOratory School ot Summit, N.J., bydwd dated januory 10, 19». andrecorded January I I , tvsi, in Book3354 o4 OWN** for Union County at

aVvmim* (mown #* #*) MerrtsAve . Summit, N J .

"Th* sals will be made subject >otr>« following.

tiOAL NOTICI

NOTICESealed bids will be received by the

Purchasing Oepartment of the Cityot summit at t:30 P.M. on Monday,June 21 \m in the Council Cham,ber. City Hall. 513 SpringfieldAvenue, Summit, New Jersey,

8<ds will b« for: Construction &Reconstruction of Curbs andSidewalks In accordance with thespecifications and propout formsfor same which may be obtained attheottlceot The City Engineer, CityHall, 513 Springfield Avenue,Summit, New J«r&ey

No specifications and or proposalforms (hall be given out after 4:30p.W. on Friday. June 2i, W i ,

A Bid Security, made payable tothe City ot Summit for 10 percent ofthe total amount bid must be sub-mitted with each proposal,

All bids and Bid Securities must beenclosed in a properly sealed enveiope, bearing on the outside thename ol the bidder and meNATURE OF THE BIO CON-TAINED THEREIN.

The Common Council reserves theright to reject all bid* or proposals,waive any minor defects and or toaccept the bid that in Its judgmentwill be for the best Interests of theCity of Summit, and to consider bidstor «i*w (60) days after theirreceiptDated: June 15, )97e

DAVIOL. HUGHESC'ty Clerk

SH June 17, !?74 $9.20

THINGS TO BENTFOR evenv I V E H T <T>

AYLOR RENTAL§ c u t "§2M5PRINOFIELOAVE.

BERKELEY HflGHTS, NJ.4*4-9111

' T^nOjttfNUL CO»PQ»At|CW iVtj

UGAL NOTlCi

PUBLICNOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY uivENinat

the New Jersey Depsnmeni otTransportation willhold a CorridorPublic Hearing on June 28, 29, 30,and July 1, 1*76, at the GovernorLivingston Regional High School inBerkeley Heights Township, for thepMipu>*u cumfjifcfiori uf InterstateRoute 78 from Ihe vicinity otPlainlieldAvenue, Berkeley Heto<"STownship so Ihe vk inity uf BaltuSrolRoad, Springfield Township. UnionCounty The Hearing wili rgn from10 00» m I'jiOBp.ni and from 7.00[) m to u 00 p,m daily.

Toe purpus* ut the Hearing, asdescribed in ihe New JerseyDepartment of Transportation'sActiufiPlan (adopted April U, 1975),a "Ui ensure thai so opportunity Isafttjrdea for effective participationby fn't*rtsttn ptr'irirti in 'he processof determining me ne*d for and the

prOt'CfTiei! ' and lo provtae "apubiit forum that affords a M lopportunity for presenting views oneach ot !he prcpo&cd ailernativthiyfiwa^ locations ano The iotial,tcofitimic andenvitonmtr'tat ettftts

The Hearing witi ue preceded by

%t!,Sions: June 8, Valley ViewSctool, vaiiey View Road, WaiChung, June 9, Brayton ElementaryScnooi, Tutip Street, Summit; Juneif}, Deerf i t id School, Centre*

• Avenue, Mouni«»rii(de. June 15,Bf unner School, WM«i«td Soad,ScoKh Piaina; June le, JonathanDayton Regional H<gti School.Mountain A V M U I , Springfield ;June U, Governor LlvingitonRegional Migr> School, US Wfitctiuog

Each environmental session willbe upen trom 3 00 p m to 9 00 p.m(&r »>e purpose of discussing *ntpotential social, environmental anaeconomic impacts ol ihe proposedproject And All attier data containedin *he Dratt Environmental impactStatement Copt*t ot the DrettEnvironmental impact Stutemoru,AS well «i mspiarKi renderings, wilibe available fur pgtilic inspetUonarw3 comment

Trie Hearing lisei* wilt coosiit o(1 wo official pret tntai jont byC*panment of TrsnspcwTationpersonnel. ttstlQwea by an oppyr'unity lor o t i iens »o givetestimony regarding tf i* proposedimprovemen'. Atl lettimony will tteiec^d«d*ricl wiif t>e>comt part of theutticiflil Public Hearing Record-Questions piamt as part of an individual'* rt<ont*<i st«*«m«nt wiltto* efficlatty i M r a u M m mm Ftn*tenvironmental tmpacf statement,in addition. • ditptty and infurmation area »ti»t will run con-current A^fth (he Hearing wil l

UMUl WTtCIprovide an opportunity for in-dividuals to pose questions .anddhtcuw issues related to tht Public

•Hearing. These informal eon -vers*tfons will not b« recorded andwill not become part of the officialhearing record. Departmentalpersonnel will be available In theInformation area beginning at 9:00a m. each morning of tt>a Hearingand 6:00 p.m. each evening of theHearing.

in order to facilitate the presentat ion ot testimony and to accommodate all persons who wish tospeah, we are asking speakers topre register by sending their names,;

, addresses, phone numbers, andpreferred speaking time to theOffice of Community involvement.New Jersey Department of Transportation, I OSS Parkway Avenue,Trenton, New Jersey 08625. Preregislrations should be submitted inwriting as far in advance of thehearing date as possible, sincerequests for speaking time will behonored in the order in which theyare received by the Office ofCommunity Involvement Eachspeaker will be a Hotted five minutesin which to present his or hertestimony. In order to establish areasonable schedule, preregistrants should indicate threehalf nc>ur periods between 10:30 a.m.4 00 p.m, snd7:30'p.m. 11:00p.m.

on June 28 »nd between 10:00 a.m.4 00p.m.arid?,00pm. 1100p.m.onJune 29, and July 1 that would beconvenient. The Office of Com-munity involvement will notify preregistrants of their assigned

speaking, times

persons wishing to speak whohauenotpre regtsteredmust signupto speak upon arriving at theHearing They wilt be called upon inthe order in which they have signedin if there are available tirneTlo~hfthat have not bean taken up by preregi»tered speakers.

Pre registrants who wish to givetheir time to another '*pc*k«r .mayd» sy it they are present at theHearing when their name is called.Each pre registrant may relinquish'his or her time to only one other

Written statements and other:exhibits, related to the Route 178'project may be presented in place ofur in addition to oral statement*.made at the Hearing, Thesestatements and exhibits most besubmitted to the Department otTransportation's. Office of Commyni'y involvement By jy iy 31st iX}days after the close of the Hearing}.Ptrifjns interested in reviewing theHearing transcript may arrange tosee ana or copy il «l DepartmentHtadduarters in Trenton, In ad'd it ton, any individual or groupwishing to contact the Office duringine Department's evaluation periodis invited to do so in writing oroyC«il*ng 40V 292 6892.

UtOALMOTKa f

The Rovtc It Hanring t« beingconducted in accordance with thtNew J*r««y Department of Tran-sportation Action Plan. In confor mane e with }h« provisions of thatplan all maps, drawings andrelevant data related to theengineering, traffic, environmental,and relocation assistance aspects ofthe protect will be available forpublic inspection at the Hearing. Afuit description of the pro|ect wilt begiven during the Department'sofficial presentation on Monday,June28lhat 10:00 a.m. and MHp.m.

in the even: that the Route I 71project Involves the acquisition ofland owned by a municipality torpublic use, the provisions of NewJersey Statutes Annotated, Title27:7-223 will be observed and considered in the conduct of thisHearing.

in accordance with the ActionPlan and the requirements of Sec-tion l O i m i o of the National En-vironmental Policy Act of 1»W andsection 4{t> ot me United StatesDepartment of Transportation Actof tvW, a Draft EnvironmentalImpact Statement'Section 4{f)Statement concerning the effects ofthe various alternatives hat beenprepared. Thi* Statement isavailable for public inspection andreview at the following locations:the New Jersey Department otTransportation Library, Room 130,J035 Parkway Av»nye, Trenton^ Newjersey 0»62S; the New Jersey StateClearinghouse, 329 West State Sreet,Trenton, New Jersey; the FederalHighway Administration DtvblonOttice, 25 Scotch Road, Trenton,New jersey; the Federal HighwayAdministration Regional Office, 4Normanskiil Boulevard, Delmar,New York; (he Union County Ad-ministration Office, Courthouse,West Scott Place, Elizabeth 07201,the Somerset County AdministrationOttice, 63 Grove Street, Somerviile08676- The Statement is alsoavailable at the municipal buildingsand public libraries of the Borough

, ul Wttchung in Somerset County;* me City ot Summit, the Boroughs of

' Mountainside and New Providence,and the Townships o* B#«»»io)rHeights, Scotch Plains, andSpringfield In Union County. Copieswill be available for review a* thePublic Hearing and the Six envifonrnenial Information S£sslohs

p*rvnm wi&tiina to comment onthe prafi Environmental impactStatement may do so by writ ing, byJuly H i t (30 days efter theHearing), to Mr. J.F. Andrews.Director ot Division ot Economicand Environmental Analysis, NewJersey Department (of Tr»nsportation, 1035 Parkway, Avenue,Trenton. New Jersey 0*635,

SignM JeanG.Sch¥?»r1i(**<••)Oeoartment Secretary

SH June 17, 1976 $68.00

IMMIMIMMIIHH

holiday hillin mendham

the total experience in day campingfor boys and girls 4-14

explores ail areas ofathletics and the artsnow in its 20th season

professional graduate stafftransportation available

contact jean Johnson, 539-6996for information

I ot Hit

BERKELEY HEIGHTSRECREATION CENTER |649 Springfield Ave. |

Bwkj j jHWgjj t^ j

FOTIWFORinTlSwCMir

SKINDIVINGSCHOOL

NEW JERSEY1659 HWY ti 27

EDISON, NJ.

9 8 5 - 2 2 0 6

LIVINGSTONROLLER RINK

t U So. Livingston Av»Llvlnaiton, m-4Ml

Business Directory

ALUMINUMALUMINUM

SIDINGGuttersRoofing

HUGO HODULICH273-4094—2 73-6686

CARPETS

F-MKARPET SERVICE

ProfessionalCarpet Cleaning

FRANK YANOTTA

464-2381FBEE ESTIMATES

ELECTRICIANS PAINTERS

Electrical Contitctoc

A.SCHIPANI

All TypesHome & Commercial

Wi jng

464-8369NJ. License & Business

Permit 4811

KEN MELIA'SPAINTINGBrush or Spray

Home Improvement*

Days —- 273-0227Eves. — 464-6893

FENCINGSPRING SALE

.'Soft Guard Fences• Higfttst Qualify• Lewtst Prices

JiLC1HV

e i lm«« jReiid«nli»l 4Commtrcid

Prompt InstallationCall 822-0303FENCE co.FLORH*M PARK, N.J.

CARPENTRY

Vic Tomie, Jr.

CARPENTERAlterations, Siding

Roofing, Gutters

464-7179FULLY INSURED

DRAIN CLEANING

IN THE CHATHAMS

HOMEIMPROVEMENT

BUILDER INSUMMIT

lor many ytarv Specialiilng in

tiorts- Call

BOBGRILLO3Jt 72?; Daily

Evei a Weekend • m

6350766

TaggartInternational

Home ImprovementsAdditions * Alterations

Recreation RoomsFinished Basements

Attic ExpansionsAll Types ol RepairsGeneral Contracting

FREE ESTIMATESCall Dan or evenings

757-15005380505

EDWARD S.SCHMITTPainting

ContractorSUMMIT, NJ.

PHONE 273-8713INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

RENTALS

EVERYTHING FOR

HOME & BUSINESS

464-9111

ID Ltioosf t'Otn

TAYLOR RENTAL CENTER284 Springfield Avenue

Berkeley Heights

AUTOMATIC ATTIC, VENTILATORS

Irom $150.00

'RANK J. (ESIA JRPRES.

SCOTCH PLAINS-R89-4076

1 Beechwood Road

CR 3-1162522 Morris Ave.

CR 7-1910Delivery Service

CALL273-4000

TOPLACEYOUR

AD

o