· 18/05/1994  · b-12 the chronicle may 11,1994^ test drive base price: -$16;508 z~lt~~ price as...

12
B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z ~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc HORSEPOWER: . 1 lQCa 5600 rpm TORQUE (ft/lbs): 115 (a 2800 rpm TRANSMISSION: Five- J- ;! speed manual CURB WEIGHT: 2415 lbs FUEL CAPACITY: 15.9 gals. TIRES: -P185/70R14 V;'; BRAKES (F/R): Front disc, rear drum, both/ABS . DRIVE TRAIN: Front engine/froht-wheel drive : . VEHICLE TYPE:. Four- PER^RMANCE: EP>^ Eeonomy, mpg, city/highway/average: 27/34/31 ; .••.-..'•.. 0-60 MPH: 9.9 seconds STOPPING TIME: 1/4 mile in. ii.k seconds at 79 ; . m p h _ • "".••'•;• •" . • . TOWING CAPACITY: 2000 T — pounds"; ' •ages-.- Toyota's Celica shows the most evidence of its redesign up front s new look is / •' , '• . r . " \ ' - . ' •'•• ' . Few The Price Of Ordinary Weight-saving materials, rack-and-pinion steering mean better gas mileage, handling ByTOMHAGIN FORBES NEWSPAPERS For Toyota Celica historians, 1994 might be confused with 1973. That was the year ment the cntiy level one years later, for Tuyota added a Celica GT model to ebmpli- T version. Twenty- 1994, Toyota has dropped the GT-S model, trimming the Celica line to only an ST and GT. A sports package, optional on the GT liftback, re- places the GT-S version. It's supposed to make things easier. Introduced in 1970 as a '71 model, the Celica has undergone six body transforma- tions. In 1976, a hatchback was added alongside the notchback, while the Supra model, which began life as a Celica, is now _an exotic sports machine and still uses its original inline six-cylinder powerplant Cel- ica-is jiovsLoffered with_ eitherabase_JLg:_- liter or more powerful 2i2-liter engine. Un- fortunately for those enthusiasts who de- mand the most performance, the 200-horse AU-Trac turbo with all-wheel drive has been discontinued in the U.S. EXTERIOR The complete restyje is mpst noticeable in front. Four small headlight lenses peer at those ahead and usually provoke a love- it or hate-it response. A massive intake throat, is Jocotpri nnripr the Tnynja ENGINEERING Toyota's concentration on weight-saving materials has produced a new car that's lighter as well as stronger than previous generation Celica models. By using alumi- num pieces under its skin, Celica is. not j while aerodynamics are addressed by elim- inating all square corners, and using a sleek roof line which roDs gracefully to a shortened rear deck. Both ST and GT come with standard five-spoke hubcaps, or can be ordered with optional alloy wheels- Our model's rear spoiler added a touch of sporting flair to what was otherwise a base model car. INTERIOR The dash is dominated by a central speedometer which intrudes slightly into the space occupied by the tachometer, fuel and temperature gauges.-The stereo and heating/cooling controls have been slanted only 10 percent lighter, which increases fuel mileage, but staffer by 20 percent The Celica's new rack-and-pinion steering is more precise, its tires give good grip and the suspension offers minimal understeer all of which make for predictable, fun, sports-level driving. Front and rear sub- frames isolate those inside from road noise without sacrificing road feet and electroni- cally controlled two-way shocks control jounce and rebound. Anti-roll bars are found on both the front and rear suspen- sions. -HANDLING The base model Celica ST has been fit- ted with a 1.8-liter twin-cam in-line four- cylinder engine. Upgraded from last year's 1.6^1iter, 103-horsepower version, the '94 Celica is good for 110 horses and 115 foot-, pounds of torque. Twin cams anii four valves per cylinder provide optimum "en- gine breathing, while a new snort-throw shifter make slipping through the five for- ward gears a pleasure, especially on twisty ToadsrAtteqnately grippy I85/70R14rubber-j comes standard on Celica ST. Past experi- ence has deemed Celica as having legend- ary reliability as there have been several in our family bver the years. Many had bro- ken past the 100,000-mile threshold and, performed faithful service well beyond. My niece Shannon drives a '79 hatchback model with over 100,000 miles and plans many more before she's done. L '"" : SAFETY Celica features dual airbags up front, while anti-lock brakes (ABS) and automatic locking retractor safety belts are provided. for all three passenger locations. toward the driver for easier operation. Front bucket seats move fore and aft, and are also adjustable for seat cushion length and height. So, too, are the headrest heights. A full center console comes as standard fare, while the- AM/FM cassette stereo uses four speakers and has more than adequate, performance. Headroom and legroom are plentiful up front, but rear' seating may become somewhat cramped. SUGGESTIONS Our jnodel was loaded with optional equipment which included power windows and locks ($510), cruise control system ($265) and air conditioning ($975). Other options include floor mats ($73) and a rear intermittent-wiper ($155). I strongly sug- gest the ABS($825) and the power tUt/slide moonroof($740>. 8110 Automotive Parts, Accessories and Services ABSOLUTE AUTO We pay $25 & Up For Any Complete Car FREE Pickup-Local Area With This Ad GoOd-Untll-3/31/94 1-800-670-3202 JUNK CARS WANTED Late model wrecks & trucks. Top S$S Paid: 908-548-6582 PLY.— 85 Voyager, body in great shape; needs engine, $1000 B/O. 90B- 218-9380 8130 Miscellaneous Automotive AAA NORTHEAST Buys late modol jeops. trucks, cars. (201) 376- $$$$$ AAA $$$$$ $$ FREE REMOVAL $$ Of Any Junk Car " 24 Hr Towing Service • 908-754-5383 boopor 9QB-B19-1944 ALL AUTO— acquired, Cash lor cars & trucks any S2., 908-231-0689 or beeper 1-600-712-1179 8200 MOTORCYCLES 8210 - ATVs 8220 - Mopeds 8230 - Off-Road 8240 - On-Road 8250 Parts,,Accosorlos Service 8260 Mlacollaneoua 8210 ATV's ALL TERRAIN VEHICLE 6' wheel, brown w/roll bar, seats 4, 18 hp, Kohlor eng. $2000 or BO. Call 908-7,88-0228 ' ' ~ 8230 Off-Road Motorcycles ATK- 90. 604ES. Motorcross. Never usod. $7000 +now, sacrifice (or $4500. Call 234-2456. 8400 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 8410- Campers and Trailers 8420 Motor Homos 8430 • RV Parts, Accosorles & Servlco 8440 - Mlsc RV Advertise In the Classified! 8420 Motor Homes WINNEBAGO- 87 Chlol- taln, 33 ft. sledps 7, like new, 6K ml. fully oqp'd. $28,900. 908-563-9497 8440 Miscellaneous RV CAMPGROUND MEM- BERSHIP— Ovor 700 re- sorts, $1-$2 nightly. Val- ued at $5000.00 Must sell. Sacrifice at 5150.00. 1-800-207-2267, : DID YOU KNOW .. : that an ad In this local paper also gooa Into 22 other local papers? Roach over 380,000 readers with ono call! 1-800-559-9495 8600 BOATS 8610 8620 8630 8640 8650 8660 8670 8680 8690 8700 8710 Boats ' Power Boats Sailboats Motors Marinas Rentals & Charters. Slip Rontals Storago Supplies Parts and Accessories Sorvlco Mlsc Boating Advertise In (ha Claialflsdl 8610 Boats SEANYMPH BASS BOAT- 16' 40 HP, bowj mount motor, 2 live wells, galv. trailer, new seats & batteries. $3250. 752-5195 after 6 SUNBIRD- 17 ft. Mer-j cury outboard motor, 11 & \ hp. galv. traitor. $6500. ' 906-7850 ' 8620 Power Boats 16FT. 8PORTSCRAFTI BOAT & TRAILER- w/| 65HP Morcury outbd. $1100/BO. 908-725-7099 CENTURY- 84 3000, 18' cuddy cabin, trailer, spare tire, loran & depth finder. $4500. 549-2811 ask for John 8640 Motors— MARINER- 9.9, 1982, fro3h water only, used 3 soasons, exc. cond. $775. S26-02S1 after 6pm 8710 Miscellaneous Boating JETSKI- 1984 KAW 550. M6dlflod. Many extras. 2- skl trallor, ski loto. $1200. 548-0231 attor 7. Can Offer \ini Ekteionlniaiy More Car For Your Money Vs. Honda. Or Toyota 1994 MAZDA rJWJ I Hi IjJii Base model, 4 dr., 6 spd. man., 4 cyl., p/a, p/b, bckt sts., t/glass, rw def., no a/c,MIN#R0765155,Stk.#94M299,MSRP $9465, Discount $505. BRAND NEW 1993 MAZDA _,._ 2 dr., auto. w/od. 6 oyl., p/s, pA). AM/FM sler. casa., cloth Int. bckt us., p/w/loks., p/trunk. p/ant., p/sls., remote mlrre., sun rf., a/c. t/glass. rwdef., tilt, cruise, bauogs, all season SBH, alum. whla.. VIN* P5237CM8. Slk.# 93M727. MSRP $21,SM; Discount _MX6LS $3205. BRAND NEW 1994 MAZDA 4 dr., 5 spd. man.. 4 cyl., p/s, p/b. AM/FM star, case., cloth Int., bckt ets., p/w/lcks., p/trunk. p/ant, remote mlrrs., a/c. l/olaaa, rwdef.. Hit, cruise, aaugas. all ssason S8R. 1 VIM»R516O053, Stk.i 94 M480. MSRP $17,005, Discount J2210! $ 14,T95 lie Most Powerful Import Brand Trucks Available PICKUP £Sl CK Base model. 5 spd. man., 4 cyl., p/s, p/b, VIN# RTM68383, Stk.# 94M448, MSRP $9933, Discount $1000 Includes $400 rebate. BRAND NEW A~A PTPlf ¥ TI> 1994MAZDA **Xrl rMA^JYUJr Short Bed, 4x4, 6 spd. man., 6 cyl.. p/s, p/b, AM/FM eter. cass., bctt. sts., eport mlrrs., t/glasB, VIN# RTM60134. Stk.# 94M317, MSRP $14,980. Discount $1655 includes $800 rebate. ?S£KK 4x4 PICKUP Cab Plus, 4x4.6 spd.man.. 6 cyl., p/s, p/b, AM/fM star, oasa., bckt. sts., sport mlrrs., t/olass. all season SBR. bad liner. VIN# RTM65S42. SlX.i 04M398, MSRP $18,065. Discount $2870 Includas $800 rebate. \ Painters and landscapers Run all summer for $99 in our classifieds Classified begins page B-4 First to the line Cranford High gtrls win See Sports, page B-1 The Right Stuff Previewing the new G re at A dveritu re attract ion See WeekendPlus (ftrattftirfr Wednesday, May 18,1994 i GRANFORD* GARWOO^-KENIUrVORTH^ A Forbes Newspaper 50 cents The One Mazda Store That Has It All! Thic'Ww I jixury L*^&iiit2SKK^KS&&fo<y^ Jv -' i '<^ y i> 1995 MILLEMA Here Now!! Over 250 New Mazdas Available Prices include all costs to be paid by a consumer except for lie, reg. & taxes. Flemi Rts. 202 & 31, Memingtari, NJ 908-782-7500 Briefs Parent network The Single Patent Networlr meets 7:30 p.m. tonight at the- Community Center. Call 709- 0495. SEEC meeting Special Educated and Excep- tional Child (SEEQr a parent support Rroup for all special needs children, p".m. tonight at Orange Av- enue School. Conversation circles will focus on specific topics and future agendas. Call 276-6173. LWV meets The Cranford Lcaguo- Women Voters meets 8 p.m. tomorrow. Call 272-7696. Older Women League The Central New Jersey Older Women League meets 10 a.m. Saturday at the YWCA in Summit. Call 276- 5671. Cops open house , The Cranford Police De- partment hosts an open house 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Satur- .jday. Exhibits included •mounted pjJUbls, canine unit, ^weapons, driving while in- toxicated, and narcotic dis- jdays. Also, finger printing and photographs available. Democrats picnic The^ Democratib Club hosts a picnic noon Saturday at Nomahegan Park. Republicans meet The Republican Club of Cranford hosts a cocktail party 8 p.m. Saturday. Call 272-7534; DWI checkpoint ', Cranford Police will stage a drunk driving checkpoint 10 p.m. Saturday- 3 a.m. Sunday at Centennial Avenue and Cuyuga Road. Rummage sale Trinity Episcopal Church holds a giant rummage sale 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday in Sher- lock Hall. Craft, car show Cranford FMBA hosts a craft and car show 8.,a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday "at Union County College. Proceeds benefit St. Barnabas Burn Unit. Golf outing -Crahiord Rotary Club hosts a gplf outing Monday at Twinbrooks Country dub, ^Vatchung. Call 276-6000. Cut-a-thon Salon 117 holds a cut-a- thon Monday to profit Project Graduation. Appointments *re needed. Call 272-7117. Beauty workshop WHair It's At hosts a beau- ty workshop seminar &30 p.m. Monday. Tickets are >JJO. Call 276-1925. ^ Parliamentarians The Cranford Unit of Par- liamentarians meets 10 a.m., May 25, at the Cranford li- brary. CO-OP meets COrOP, Caregivers of Older People, support group, meets -3 p.m. May 25 at Cranford li- brary. Founders fest ' Community organizations are invited to participate-in the upcoming Founders Fest activities 1-5 p.m. June 5. Uni-hauler garbage tabled 5-0 By JOANNE McFADDEN THE CHRONICLE modifications, and some want no change, -"buTTiorig'seemingly-liave no opinion^-- with a five-minute digital clock, since the from Willow Street "It's like a dictatorship" mayor-onlv-allows-€ach-person~to_speak-foj: hprp anri they will try to ram this through in Mr. Albert's change of heart came just two five minutes. The commissioners were often June, July, or August when we re away and The Township Committee last night ta- weeks after he introduced the original one- described as "arrogant," and the mayor, as a busy with summer things. Keep your, eye on ] tirn t» hiH fnraJ3nahmiW gar hanipr resolution approved 32 along party "dictator." . them." _ "Wlial is deai it. Uie-arreganee^ortoayed— Thp crowd was calmed by one Komore d p gar- resolution, approved 3-2 along party lines. Mayor Carolyn Vollero and (Jommis- h l d i f bs0C collection system. Instead it will con- mica. xTiajui vAuvyn »v«*wi.v* i***v* -^w..»»»~« ... wv »« _~™. — — o ^ T ~—\%r - ,-—j- r x~i*v*A~ duct a town-wide survey to determine public sioner Dan Aschenbach also voted in favor, by this township committee," said Mr. Sands Road resident, James Walsh, who said be opinion. Although hesitant to endorse a township ref- citing recent decisions by the town to act on respectful to the mayor and township com:. ^niTrneoinnm-*; vntH ft-" hgfffl-» a prPTT^"T» last, wpolr, Mr. Albert said Monday a takeover of the first aid squad, and to -"'<•<•!<—«" missioners. "BDweQ'.'oUt* into the halls. "This issue has caused a lot of angst among people," said Commissioner Norman Albert. "I've talked to a lot of people and ' most^s»<^ffective-"TTiw^~fofwreini with a land-swap oppoaed-'by 3end y way to get an evenhanded response." The three commissioners took plenty of heat Tuesday for their vote. The crowd often broke into applause when residents finished neighborhood residents. "More time is spent timing people and in making political speeches," he said. "Carolyn Vollero is arrogant and doesn't some want the change, some want some speaking. Craig Sands presented the mayor like, free speech," said one senior citizen tax bills to all residents and commercial, property owners. It will have a preamble that explains the township's proposal, arid then will ask specific questions. (Please turn to page A-3) it '•fl »» 1 'Suddenly...' AUGUSTO F. MENEZES/THE CHRONICLE Girl Scouts and friends at Sunday's major expo gathering at Union County College in Cranford listen to African folk tales as told by Hassan K. Sallm. Middle school tracks are 'out 9 wins time from town Juiier6"is D fot response on : compromise pact By JOANNE McFADDEN / THE CHRONICLE- The Cranford First Aid Squad last night won a delay from the Township Committee on a sched- uled vote on a compromise agree- ment between the two. The township and the squad have been dickering over how to cut daytime delays in responses to calls. Negotiations over township involvement in the solution were evidently continuing into yester- day. According to Capt Jane Zawod- niak, the squad received the agree- ment at 6:30 p.m., two hours before the township was scheduled to take its vote. Based on the advice of an attorney, Ms. Zawodniak said the squad needed to "take a closer look at the implications of the agreement" Ms. Zawodniak presented the governing body with an interim agreement, and said "we definitely do want to work this out for the benefit of the Cranford residents. Her statement was met with ap- plause and shouts of "Bravo" from By JOANNE McFADDEN THE CHRONICLE School officials last week .announced they will implement a middle school program in the fall to eliminate ability grouping at the seventh- and eighth-grade level. Emalene Renna, superintendent of schools, said homogeneous tracking of students was detrimental to both middle- and lew-ability stu- count the unique needs and characteristics of dents, and did not appear to benefit high-ability the young adolescent, she said. These needs groups either. . .~ _ .1 encompass physical, psychological, intellectual, "We are going to move from a subject^Safial, moral, and ethical needs. The program centered curriculum program," said Dr. Renna last week at a presentation attended by both parents and board of education members. "It will really benefit all students." The middle-school philosophy takes into ac- will be phased in over a two-year period and also includes lengthening the school day by 30 minutes to provide an eighth period. Foreign language will be included in the cur- (Please turn to page A-3) Library vacations drawing fire By JOANNE McFADDEN THE CHRONICLE Mayor Carolyn Vollero called the town li- brary's staff vacation policy too generous and has instructed the township liaison to have it changed. Last Monday, Commissioner Norman Albert said he had talked to the library director, who would address the request at the May 26 board meeting. Library employees receive 20 days vacation after one year of service. "We really feel the policy is too generous and should be more in line with what we give to our employees," said Mrs. Vollero. But the president of the Library Board of Trustees said it is common in public libraries throughout Union County and the state. According to Paul LaCorte, Hillside library employees receive 23 days vacation based on one year of service; Westfield, Berkeley Heights, Mountainside, 22 days; Plainfield, Gar- wood, 21 days; Summit, Scotch Plains, Union, Roselle Park, Linden, 20 days; New Providence, Springfield, 15 days; Rahway, Roselle, Clark, 12, days; Elizabeth, 13 days; and Kenilworth, 5 days. In many municipalities, the library vaca- tion time is more generous than township poli- cies, said Mr. LaCorte. "Having four weeks vacation allows us to compete with other libraries for first-rate per- sonnel," said Mr. LaCorte. At a May 2 meeting May 2, Township Admin- istrator John Laezza estimated the cost of the library's vacation policy to the taxpayers at $4,000. There are 10 (ull-time employees with salaries from $17,160-$43,000. The library is open 58 hours per week, and there is no ovei^ thne budget It functions as an autonomous agency, with policies set by the trustees. Lot swap deals may be done deeds soon By-JOANNE McFADDEN THE CHRONICLE The transfer of three township-owned resi- dential lots for property located between the Cranford Public Library and the Cranford Unit- ed Methodist Church on Walnut Avenue should be completed by the end of the week. In addi- tion, Township Administrator John Laezza said the plans for a proposed subdivision of town- ship-owned land at the end of Cranford Avenue will be ready this week, too. Mr. Laezza said the final details of the Wal- nut Avenue swap were worked out last week. In April, the Township Committee approved the trade involving lots at 1002 Orange Ave., 423 enman Koad, and 188 LocusfDHve; The Cranford Avenue subdivision plan is on the agenda for the June 1 Planning Board meeting, although township officials are con- cerned they will not be able to meet the filing deadlines. If unable, the application will prob- ably be heard by Planning Board members at the June 15 meeting. Residents within 200 feet of the property will be notified by mail 10 days prior to the meeting as required by law, said Mr. Laezzn. ' In September, township officials approved at $18,700 contract for a study on the subdivision of the property which abuts the conservation center. The engineering report determined the wetlands under Department of Environmental Protection and Energy (DEPE), so the township will move forward with its plans. Mr. Laezza said the land could be subdivided into 22 lots. In December, township officials also con- firmed that a letter of intent existed between a Miln Street property owner who wanted to 1 swap his downtown proRerty for owned parcel. "Our intent is to use the land for whatever purpose the Township Committee wants to us,e it for," said Mr. Laezza iTriday. the standing room only crowd and dozens of uniformed aid squad members from around the area. Mayor Carolyn Vollero said, "We meet on June 6. I want a decision by then." Ms. Zawodniak said the squad "has made strides in the last six months" to address the problems it faces, "but we haven't perfected some of the things we want to do." The Township Committee last night also heard from Terry Mc- Carthy, a Cranford resident, para- medic and hospital administrator. He offered help in mediating a so- lution, something he said he has offered twice over the past two years. Ms, Zawodniak said she would appreciate his help, but township officials did not answer his request to participate. According to Public Safety Com- missioner Dan Aschenbach, und,er the proposed agreement the squad would hire paid emergency medi- cal technicians (EMTs) to provide coverage 6 a.m.-6 p.m: daily. One; ambulance and the EMTs will be housed at the squad building, while another ambulance will be housed at the flrehouse on Spring- t field Avenue. That ambulance will be manned by township employees and used only w h e n c e first re- sponse ambulance is out on a call. Mr. Laezza said the squad would retain ownership of the ambu- lances, but the township would li- cense them. The township will con- tinug to provide insurance for squad members; the squad will in- sure the vehicles. There would be no cost to the township residents, said Mr. Laezza .;••;

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Page 1:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^

TEST DRIVE

BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter

D0HCI4w/EFIENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/

1762 ccHORSEPOWER: . 1 lQCa 5600

rpmTORQUE (ft/lbs): 115 (a

2800 rpm

TRANSMISSION: Five- J- • ; !

speed manualCURB WEIGHT: 2415 lbsFUEL CAPACITY: 15.9 gals.TIRES: -P185/70R14 V;';BRAKES (F/R): Front disc,

rear drum, both/ABS .DRIVE TRAIN: Front

engine/froht-wheel drive :.VEHICLE TYPE:. Four-

PER^RMANCE:EP> Eeonomy, mpg,city/highway/average:

27/34/31 ; . • • . - . . ' • . .0-60 MPH: 9.9 secondsSTOPPING TIME:

1/4 mile in. ii.k seconds at 79;. m p h _ • "".••'•;• •" . • .

TOWING CAPACITY: 2000 T

— pounds"; '

•ages-.-

Toyota's Celica shows the most evidence of its redesign up front

s new look is

/ • ' , • '• • — . r . " \ ' • • - . • • • • ' • ' • • • ' . • • • •

Few The Price Of Ordinary

Weight-saving materials, rack-and-pinionsteering mean better gas mileage, handlingByTOMHAGIN

FORBES NEWSPAPERS

For Toyota Celica historians, 1994 mightbe confused with 1973. That was the year

ment the cntiy levelone years later, for

Tuyota added a Celica GT model to ebmpli-T version. Twenty-1994, Toyota has

dropped the GT-S model, trimming theCelica line to only an ST and GT. A sportspackage, optional on the GT liftback, re-places the GT-S version. It's supposed tomake things easier.

Introduced in 1970 as a '71 model, theCelica has undergone six body transforma-tions. In 1976, a hatchback was addedalongside the notchback, while the Supramodel, which began life as a Celica, is now

_an exotic sports machine and still uses itsoriginal inline six-cylinder powerplant Cel-ica-is jiovsLoffered with_ eitherabase_JLg:_-liter or more powerful 2i2-liter engine. Un-fortunately for those enthusiasts who de-mand the most performance, the 200-horseAU-Trac turbo with all-wheel drive hasbeen discontinued in the U.S.

EXTERIORThe complete restyje is mpst noticeable

in front. Four small headlight lenses peerat those ahead and usually provoke a love-it or hate-it response. A massive intakethroat, is Jocotpri nnripr the Tnynja

ENGINEERINGToyota's concentration on weight-saving

materials has produced a new car that'slighter as well as stronger than previousgeneration Celica models. By using alumi-num pieces under its skin, Celica is. not j

while aerodynamics are addressed by elim-inating all square corners, and using asleek roof line which roDs gracefully to ashortened rear deck. Both ST and GTcome with standard five-spoke hubcaps, orcan be ordered with optional alloy wheels-Our model's rear spoiler added a touch ofsporting flair to what was otherwise a basemodel car.

INTERIORThe dash is dominated by a central

speedometer which intrudes slightly intothe space occupied by the tachometer, fueland temperature gauges.-The stereo andheating/cooling controls have been slanted

only 10 percent lighter, which increasesfuel mileage, but staffer by 20 percent TheCelica's new rack-and-pinion steering ismore precise, its tires give good grip andthe suspension offers minimal understeer— all of which make for predictable, fun,sports-level driving. Front and rear sub-frames isolate those inside from road noisewithout sacrificing road feet and electroni-cally controlled two-way shocks controljounce and rebound. Anti-roll bars arefound on both the front and rear suspen-sions.

- H A N D L I N GThe base model Celica ST has been fit-

ted with a 1.8-liter twin-cam in-line four-cylinder engine. Upgraded from last year's1.6^1iter, 103-horsepower version, the '94Celica is good for 110 horses and 115 foot-,pounds of torque. Twin cams anii fourvalves per cylinder provide optimum "en-gine breathing, while a new snort-throwshifter make slipping through the five for-ward gears a pleasure, especially on twisty

ToadsrAtteqnately grippy I85/70R14rubber-jcomes standard on Celica ST. Past experi-ence has deemed Celica as having legend-ary reliability as there have been several inour family bver the years. Many had bro-ken past the 100,000-mile threshold and,performed faithful service well beyond. Myniece Shannon drives a '79 hatchbackmodel with over 100,000 miles and plansmany more before she's done. L'"" :

SAFETYCelica features dual airbags up front,

while anti-lock brakes (ABS) and automaticlocking retractor safety belts are provided.for all three passenger locations.

toward the driver for easier operation.Front bucket seats move fore and aft, andare also adjustable for seat cushion lengthand height. So, too, are the headrestheights. A full center console comes asstandard fare, while the- AM/FM cassettestereo uses four speakers and has morethan adequate, performance. Headroomand legroom are plentiful up front, but rear'seating may become somewhat cramped.

SUGGESTIONSOur jnodel was loaded with optional

equipment which included power windowsand locks ($510), cruise control system($265) and air conditioning ($975). Otheroptions include floor mats ($73) and a rearintermittent-wiper ($155). I strongly sug-gest the ABS ($825) and the power tUt/slidemoonroof($740>.

8110Automotive Parts,Accessories and

Services

ABSOLUTE AUTOWe pay $25 & Up

For Any Complete CarFREE Pickup-Local Area

With This AdGoOd-Untll-3/31/94

1-800-670-3202JUNK CARS WANTED

Late model wrecks &trucks. Top S$S Paid:

908-548-6582

PLY.— 85 Voyager, bodyin great shape; needsengine, $1000 B/O. 90B-218-9380

8130Miscellaneous

Automotive

AAA NORTHEASTBuys late modol jeops.trucks, cars. (201) 376-

$$$$$ AAA $$$$$$$ FREE REMOVAL $$

Of Any Junk Car "24 Hr Towing Service

• 908-754-5383 •boopor 9QB-B19-1944

ALL AUTO— acquired,Cash lor cars & trucksany S2., 908-231-0689 orbeeper 1-600-712-1179

8200MOTORCYCLES

8210 - ATVs8220 - Mopeds8230 - Off-Road8240 - On-Road8250 • Parts,,Accosorlos

Service8260 • Mlacollaneoua

8210ATV's

ALL TERRAIN VEHICLE6' wheel, brown w/rollbar, seats 4, 18 hp,Kohlor eng. $2000 or BO.Call 908-7,88-0228

' ' ~8230

Off-RoadMotorcycles

ATK- 90. 604ES.Motorcross. Never usod.$7000 +now, sacrifice (or

$4500. Call 234-2456.

8400RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

8410- Campers andTrailers

8420 • Motor Homos8430 • RV Parts,

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Briefs

Parent networkThe Single Patent Networlr

meets 7:30 p.m. tonight at the-Community Center. Call 709-0495.

SEEC meetingSpecial Educated and Excep-tional Child (SEEQr a parentsupport Rroup for all specialneeds children,p".m. tonight at Orange Av-enue School. Conversationcircles will focus on specifictopics and future agendas.Call 276-6173.

LWV meetsThe Cranford Lcaguo-

Women Voters meets 8 p.m.tomorrow. Call 272-7696.

Older Women LeagueThe Central New Jersey

Older Women League meets10 a.m. Saturday at theYWCA in Summit. Call 276-5671.

Cops open house, The Cranford Police De-partment hosts an openhouse 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Satur-

.jday. Exhibits included•mounted pjJUbls, canine unit,^weapons, driving while in-toxicated, and narcotic dis-jdays. Also, finger printingand photographs available.

Democrats picnicThe^ Democratib Club hosts

a picnic noon Saturday atNomahegan Park.

Republicans meetThe Republican Club of

Cranford hosts a cocktailparty 8 p.m. Saturday. Call272-7534;

DWI checkpoint', Cranford Police will stage adrunk driving checkpoint 10p.m. Saturday- 3 a.m. Sundayat Centennial Avenue andCuyuga Road.

Rummage saleTrinity Episcopal Church

holds a giant rummage sale 9a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday in Sher-lock Hall.

Craft, car showCranford FMBA hosts a

craft and car show 8.,a.m.-4p.m. Sunday "at Union CountyCollege. Proceeds benefit St.Barnabas Burn Unit.

Golf outing-Crahiord Rotary Club hosts

a gplf outing Monday atTwinbrooks Country d u b ,^Vatchung. Call 276-6000.

Cut-a-thonSalon 117 holds a cut-a-

thon Monday to profit ProjectGraduation. Appointments*re needed. Call 272-7117.

Beauty workshopWHair It's At hosts a beau-

ty workshop seminar &30p.m. Monday. Tickets are >JJO.Call 276-1925. ^

Parliamentarians• The Cranford Unit of Par-liamentarians meets 10 a.m.,May 25, at the Cranford li-brary.

CO-OP meetsCOrOP, Caregivers of Older

People, support group, meets-3 p.m. May 25 at Cranford li-brary.

Founders fest 'Community organizations

are invited to participate-inthe upcoming Founders Festactivities 1-5 p.m. June 5.

Uni-hauler garbage tabled 5-0By JOANNE McFADDENTHE CHRONICLE

modifications, and some want no change,-"buTTiorig'seemingly-liave no opinion^--

with a five-minute digital clock, since the from Willow Street "It's like a dictatorship"mayor-onlv-allows-€ach-person~to_speak-foj: hprp anri they will try to ram this through in

Mr. Albert's change of heart came just two five minutes. The commissioners were often June, July, or August when we re away andThe Township Committee last night ta- weeks after he introduced the original one- described as "arrogant," and the mayor, as a busy with summer things. Keep your, eye on

] tirn t» hiH fnraJ3nahmiW gar hanipr resolution approved 32 along party "dictator." . them." _"Wlial is deai it. Uie-arreganee^ortoayed— Thp crowd was calmed by one Komore

d

pgar- resolution, approved 3-2 along party

lines. Mayor Carolyn Vollero and (Jommis-h l d i f

bs0C collection system. Instead it will con- mica. xTiajui vAuvyn »v«*wi.v* i***v* - w..»»»~« . . . w v »« _~™. — — o ^ „ T ~—\%r - , - — j - rx~i*v*A~duct a town-wide survey to determine public sioner Dan Aschenbach also voted in favor, by this township committee," said Mr. Sands Road resident, James Walsh, who said beopinion. Although hesitant to endorse a township ref- citing recent decisions by the town to act on respectful to the mayor and township com:.

^niTrneoinnm-*; vntH ft-" hgfffl-» a prPTT "T» last, wpolr, Mr. Albert said Monday a takeover of the first aid squad, and to -"'<•<•!<—«"missioners."BDweQ'.'oUt*

into the halls."This issue has caused a lot of angst

among people," said Commissioner NormanAlbert. "I've talked to a lot of people and

' most^s»<^ffective-"TTiw^~fofwreini with a land-swap oppoaed-'by 3endyway to get an evenhanded response."

The three commissioners took plenty ofheat Tuesday for their vote. The crowd oftenbroke into applause when residents finished

neighborhood residents. "More time is spenttiming people and in making politicalspeeches," he said.

"Carolyn Vollero is arrogant and doesn'tsome want the change, some want some speaking. Craig Sands presented the mayor like, free speech," said one senior citizen

tax bills to all residents and commercial,property owners. It will have a preamblethat explains the township's proposal, aridthen will ask specific questions.

(Please turn to page A-3)

it'•fl

»»

1

'Suddenly...'AUGUSTO F. MENEZES/THE CHRONICLE

Girl Scouts and friends at Sunday's major expo gathering at Union County College in Cranford listen to African folk tales astold by Hassan K. Sallm.

Middle school tracks are 'out9

wins timefrom town

Juiier6"is Dfot response on :compromise pact

By JOANNE McFADDEN /THE CHRONICLE-

The Cranford First Aid Squadlast night won a delay from theTownship Committee on a sched-uled vote on a compromise agree-ment between the two.

The township and the squadhave been dickering over how tocut daytime delays in responses tocalls. Negotiations over townshipinvolvement in the solution wereevidently continuing into yester-day.

According to Capt Jane Zawod-niak, the squad received the agree-ment at 6:30 p.m., two hours beforethe township was scheduled totake its vote. Based on the adviceof an attorney, Ms. Zawodniak saidthe squad needed to "take a closerlook at the implications of theagreement"

Ms. Zawodniak presented thegoverning body with an interimagreement, and said "we definitelydo want to work this out for thebenefit of the Cranford residents.Her statement was met with ap-plause and shouts of "Bravo" from

By JOANNE McFADDENTHE CHRONICLE

School officials last week .announced theywill implement a middle school program in thefall to eliminate ability grouping at the seventh-and eighth-grade level.

Emalene Renna, superintendent of schools,said homogeneous tracking of students was

detrimental to both middle- and lew-ability stu- count the unique needs and characteristics ofdents, and did not appear to benefit high-ability the young adolescent, she said. These needsgroups either. . .~ _ .1 encompass physical, psychological, intellectual,

"We are going to move from a subject^Safial, moral, and ethical needs. The programcentered curriculum program," said Dr. Rennalast week at a presentation attended by bothparents and board of education members. "Itwill really benefit all students."

The middle-school philosophy takes into ac-

will be phased in over a two-year period andalso includes lengthening the school day by 30minutes to provide an eighth period.

Foreign language will be included in the cur-(Please turn to page A-3)

Library vacations drawing fireBy JOANNE McFADDENTHE CHRONICLE

Mayor Carolyn Vollero called the town li-brary's staff vacation policy too generous andhas instructed the township liaison to have itchanged. Last Monday, Commissioner NormanAlbert said he had talked to the library director,who would address the request at the May 26board meeting. Library employees receive 20days vacation after one year of service.

"We really feel the policy is too generous andshould be more in line with what we give to our

employees," said Mrs. Vollero.But the president of the Library Board of

Trustees said it is common in public librariesthroughout Union County and the state.

According to Paul LaCorte, Hillside libraryemployees receive 23 days vacation based onone year of service; Westfield, BerkeleyHeights, Mountainside, 22 days; Plainfield, Gar-wood, 21 days; Summit, Scotch Plains, Union,Roselle Park, Linden, 20 days; New Providence,Springfield, 15 days; Rahway, Roselle, Clark, 12,days; Elizabeth, 13 days; and Kenilworth, 5days. In many municipalities, the library vaca-

tion time is more generous than township poli-cies, said Mr. LaCorte.

"Having four weeks vacation allows us tocompete with other libraries for first-rate per-sonnel," said Mr. LaCorte.

At a May 2 meeting May 2, Township Admin-istrator John Laezza estimated the cost of thelibrary's vacation policy to the taxpayers at$4,000. There are 10 (ull-time employees withsalaries from $17,160-$43,000. The library isopen 58 hours per week, and there is no ovei^thne budget It functions as an autonomousagency, with policies set by the trustees.

Lot swap deals may be done deeds soonBy-JOANNE McFADDENTHE CHRONICLE

The transfer of three township-owned resi-dential lots for property located between theCranford Public Library and the Cranford Unit-ed Methodist Church on Walnut Avenue shouldbe completed by the end of the week. In addi-tion, Township Administrator John Laezza saidthe plans for a proposed subdivision of town-ship-owned land at the end of Cranford Avenuewill be ready this week, too.

Mr. Laezza said the final details of the Wal-nut Avenue swap were worked out last week. InApril, the Township Committee approved the

trade involving lots at 1002 Orange Ave., 423enman Koad, and 188 LocusfDHve;The Cranford Avenue subdivision plan is on

the agenda for the June 1 Planning Boardmeeting, although township officials are con-cerned they will not be able to meet the filingdeadlines. If unable, the application will prob-ably be heard by Planning Board members atthe June 15 meeting. Residents within 200 feetof the property will be notified by mail 10 daysprior to the meeting as required by law, saidMr. Laezzn. '

In September, township officials approved at$18,700 contract for a study on the subdivisionof the property which abuts the conservation

center. The engineering report determined the

wetlands under Department of EnvironmentalProtection and Energy (DEPE), so the townshipwill move forward with its plans. Mr. Laezzasaid the land could be subdivided into 22 lots.

In December, township officials also con-firmed that a letter of intent existed between aMiln Street property owner who wanted to1

swap his downtown proRerty forowned parcel.

"Our intent is to use the land for whateverpurpose the Township Committee wants to us,eit for," said Mr. Laezza iTriday.

the standing room only crowd anddozens of uniformed aid squadmembers from around the area.

Mayor Carolyn Vollero said, "Wemeet on June 6. I want a decisionby then."

Ms. Zawodniak said the squad"has made strides in the last sixmonths" to address the problems itfaces, "but we haven't perfectedsome of the things we want to do."

The Township Committee lastnight also heard from Terry Mc-Carthy, a Cranford resident, para-medic and hospital administrator.He offered help in mediating a so-lution, something he said he hasoffered twice over the past twoyears.

Ms, Zawodniak said she wouldappreciate his help, but townshipofficials did not answer his requestto participate.

According to Public Safety Com-missioner Dan Aschenbach, und,erthe proposed agreement the squadwould hire paid emergency medi-cal technicians (EMTs) to providecoverage 6 a.m.-6 p.m: daily. One;ambulance and the EMTs will behoused at the squad building,while another ambulance will behoused at the flrehouse on Spring-

t field Avenue. That ambulance willbe manned by township employeesand used only w h e n c e first re-sponse ambulance is out on a call.

Mr. Laezza said the squad wouldretain ownership of the ambu-lances, but the township would li-cense them. The township will con-tinug to provide insurance forsquad members; the squad will in-sure the vehicles. There would beno cost to the township residents,said Mr. Laezza

. ; • • ;

Page 2:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

I!

A-2 The Chronicle

Tellerin $14,000 theftOver 3 months. n ;

A Plainfield woman was arrested' '-'Monday afternoon after a month-Oxilong investigation bythe Cranfordj-police into missing money at Firstfidelity Bank's drive-up facility.

""According to lieutenant William-! "O'Donnell, Monica S. Johnson, 23,

nut and Lincoln avenues. He alsoreceived a summons for passingthrough a red light

Student arrestedAn Ift-ypar-olrt Pranford

a teller at the bank, diverted ap-proximately" $14,000 from a busi-"ness account She was charged

•"•"with theft by failing to make prop-; ,".er disposition of property and was., released on her own recognizance.' ITie matter has been referred to

--the Union-€ounty-Grand-Jury,-and-/,.;to the Federal Bureau of Iri-

School student was charged by theschool administration with posses-sion of a beeper on school,prop-erty.

TrespassingThree Cranford juveniles were

arrested 9 p.m. May 14 lofTres-passing at the Orange Avenue mu-

The discrepancies were noticedrby an accountant for The Rusticr.Mill, which, made early morning.deposits at the bank. The discrep-

nicipal pool. The teens, two 13-year-old females and one 14-year-old male, were released to theirparents.

first appeared^ in February,"-said Lt O'Donnell, and Cranford

—pf>tiee were notified by tho bankCriminal mischief

security jlast month, Officer Tho-mas Feeney led the investigationwhich allegedly revealed thewoman developed a scheme usingother teller's stamps to take thecash.

The police do not expect to re-of th oney, said Ltixivta any of

O'Donnell, or to make any ad-ditional arrests. Ms. Johnson wasan employee at a Scotch Plains"bank absorbed by First FidelityBank last year. In January, shewas transferred to the Cranford of-fice. Ms. Johnson was arrested atpolice headquarters after being in-terviewed.

—i'he-ewner-ef-trhide on Lenhome Drive reportedthe passenger window broken May15.

Two cars parked in a south sidemunicipal parking lot were dam-aged May 10 between 6:30 a.m.-6:30p.m. Both owners reported large

COURTESY CRAWFORD FIRE DEPARTMENT*

A-3C

Hot pickupCranford Firefighters Charles Kardei and William Merwede attack fire consuming a pickup truck on the Garden State Parkwayat North Avenue last Tuesday morning. The vehicle is owned by Goodyear Auto In Clark. __

AARP meetsMay 27 to see

scratches to the rear of the vehicle.The cars were parked next to eachother. — :

StolenTwo cars were stolen from the

township this week in unrelated in-cidents. The owner of a Mazda 323reported the car stolen May 11 be-

n 6:30-7:30 p.m. while parkedin the lot of World Gym on Com-merce Drive.

A 1989 Honda 4-door was stolenfrom the rear parking lot of a resi-dential home on North Avenue W.between 11:30 p.m. May 15 and2:11 a.m. May 16. Police are inves-jigatihg both cases, said Lt WilliamK>TDonnell.

The owner of a car parked in thelot at World Gym reported the reardoor window smashed overnightMay 14-15.

The rear window of a ChevyBlazer parked on Wall Street wassmashed overnight May 10-11.- A Granford High School studentsreported her car scratched whileparked on Beech Street during theday May 11.

An employee of a Birchwood Av-enue business reported a rear win-dow -broken at the office buildingMay 12-13. No entry was gained.

Aported damage to his lawn causedby a car driving over it between 7-8p.m. May 10. " " ^ ^ v •

A Lewis Streetjfesident reportsthe driver,.fjjjfejjjjairor, smashed on

Cranford Chapter 4269 of theAmerican Asuuriatiun of Relink}Persons will meet at 10 a.m., May27 at Lincoln School.

Dr. Arthur J. Bilenker, a dentistin Cranford and a Lt Commanderin the U.S. Naval Reserve, willshow his slides on Iceland. A ques-tion-and-answer session will follow.—Elections - of jofficers-Jbr-1994^95will follow the presentation-. Reser-vations will be taken for the instal-lation luncheon June 5 at the West-wood Restaurant in GarwoocL-

Trips to Showboat Casino, Atlan-tic City, are scheduled for June 7and July 8, leaving Centennial Av-

_enue Pool at 8:45 a.m. The cost is$11 with a $10 coin return. A trip toKelly's Resort, Gouldsboro, Pa.,June 26-July 1 for $275. Includingtransportation, lodging, meals andentertainment Reservations arenow,.beuig.dakeri:xior_^^ aNiagra Falls and Toronto. S

•j. A Hollywood Avenue resident re-Jborted a gym bag with clothing

-£and—wallet stolen from their car

The right side-mirror was portation, lodging, meals and vari-smashed on a 1986 GMC truck ous tours. For further informationwhile parked on Ludlow Avenue or reservations call Mike Finnegan

-ovemightMay-940. at276-O814. - —•jbvernight May 9-10 while parked?Jn the driveway.I-* A red" maple tree was stolen fromJthe front lawn of a Forest AvenueJiouse May 13.•J Camping items were stolen from» motor vehicle parked on WillowStreet May 13-14.::Stolen bicycles£ A 15-year-old reported a bicycleStolen while shopping at thejjkrauser's market on South Avenue5May 10 at 9:18 p.m. The bicycle»vas a Dyno-GT, chrome and yellow33MX.£ A blue Schwinn bicycle was sto-Ipn frprn a garagp nn WaHe Av-Senue. May 10 between 5:15-8:30

; A 21-speed Marin gray, mountainbicycle was stolen from the rear

rd of an Arbor Street home be-n 5 p.m.-midnight May 14.

A bicycle was stolen from theyard of a Hawthorne Street

Jiome overnight May 12-13.

JVarcotic arrests;~A 17-year-old Newark man wasarrested May 11 for possession of(marijuana after police stopped himp. the corner of North and Forestavenues for driving without head-lights. He was also charged withpriving without a license, drivingfvithout headlights, and possessionof a controlled dangerous sub-Stance in a motor vehicle. He was(eleased to his aunt* Melvin L. Toran, 45, of Rosellewas charged with possession offnarijuana after police stopped himat the intersection of North Avenueand the Garden State Parkway 2$.m. May 12. He was also chargedwith possession of narcotic para-phernalia, possession of a con-trolled dangerous substance in artiotor vehicle, driving with a sus-pended license, driving with an^pen container, and failure to stopi)i a red light• Vincent Vacca, 20, of Montclairwas arrested May 9 at the intersec-tion of North Avenue and the Gar-den State Parkway for driving

^without Jpsurance, and possessionof marijuana. Officer JohnHeesters stopped Mr. Vacca bec-uase his car had one headlight out

DWI chargesTheodore Rudnicki, 39, of Clark

was charged with driving while in-toxicated May 16 when policestopped him at the corner of Wai-

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NANCY MEHRILUTHE CHRONICLEWalnut Avenue School Principal Joan Melvin kisses Lucas, a Vietnamese pot belly pig, ashis owner Matt Jagusak watches. The kissing act was part of the school's "Pig Out onReading" celebration last week. In November, the school signed up with the STAR readingprogram and pledged to read one million minutes. Students met their goal In January, andMrs. Melvin challenged them to read an additional 400,000 minutes before the school'sannual buy one-get one free book sale. There was a standlng^o^^^oTily^rowcrthree fows~deep watching as Mrs. Melvin, dressed in pink with ears and tail, puckered up.

Middle school tracks are 'out' \riculum, a peer leadership pro-

»m4mptementedranda student-teacher adviser program started.Ability groups would still be usedin math courses, since it is a skill-oriented subject, said Dr. Renna,and ability grouping would helpteachers pace the instruction.

According to Dr. Renna, nationalresearch shows test scores of stu-dents in high-ability groupings didnot improve even if they weretracked. A similar in-depth studyof Cranford students mirrored^na-ti&nal research, she said, addingthat students in the gifted and\al-ented program in sixth-grade didnot have higher scores on stand-ardized testing in seventh- oreighth-grade even though theywere tracked in the honors level.

With the middle school programlannedj-gifted—and—talented-stu-

dents would still be tracked in>th, participate in a pull-out pro-

gram that would stress the hu-manities including literature, and

join an atter-scnooi enrich^ment club.

Teachers would use interdisci-

ity and accountability.—A—committee was forraed-Iastfall, said Dr. Renna, to develop animplementation plan, for a middleschool program for Cranfordschools. It was chaired by princi-pals of Hillside and Orange Av-enue schools, Irwin Figman andMichael Blasucci. The committeesought the expertise 6f Roy C.Knapp, a middle school educatorand member of the Carnegie TaskForce on Education of Young Ado-lescents. Mr. Knapp . discussedability grouping at the formal pre-sentation.

Currently, students Jn seventh-and eighth-grade are tracked ac-cording to their ability in threegroups: enrichment, standard andbasic. According to Mr. Knapp,there is little evidence that abilitygrouping or tracking improves aca-demic achievement while there isoverwhelming evidence that abilitygrouping retards the academicprogress of students in low- and

-mtdtHe-abttity groupings. Instead,

he said, ability-gfettpmg-ppedeter—mines a students' future op-portunities and- aspirations.-In-ad—dition, he said, ability groupingcan be detrimental to a students'self-concept and self-esteem, canincrease discipline problems, and-has a general overall negative ef-fect upon peer interactions withinschools.

The Middle School Committeealso visited eight schools in thestate which moved from homoge-neous tracking to heterogeneousgroupings including Westfield andScotch Plains.

Other presenters included Fran-cis Lucash who discussed the ef-fective middle school philosophy;Catherine Dudley, interdiscipli-

-nary-teaehmgt-Regtna-Gavir:dent assistance; Warren Pinto,peer leadershipj___R_osemarieMacaluso, eight period day; andMichael Marcus, fui eigu language.

A Beautiful New - Look Kitchenplinary "ti?t*>gi.*'s to coordin??fe in-struction "across the curriculum,and use cooperative learning orsmall group instruction to encour-

iUni-hauler', (Continued from page A-l)| Under the proposal, gaibagt: Col~' lection would become a municipal', service paid for through tax dol-; lars. Property owners would be as-sessed for service according to thevaluation of their property. Com-mercial property owners wouldpay but not receive the service.

"The key word here is fair," saidTony Mack Tuesday, a residentand commercial property owner."We don't mind paying for educa-tion, we expect to. We understandwhere our duties are, but I don'tthink it's fair. If we go to a one-hauler'system, we go >down thepath of doom."

t h e bid, which is still unwritten,would call for twice weekly col-lection, rear-yard pickup, andmonthly, collection ojLbuJky; waste.Commissioner Albert said 75 per-cent of residents would see gar-bage costs drop, and if municipaltaxes are deducted from their IRSfiling, 98 percent would see a de-crease. Last week an IRS officialsaid the deduction would not beallowed, but local accountants aresplit on the issue.

"Almost all residents would ben-efit from a change to a single haul-er system," said Mr, Albert lastweek.

When questioned by Pete Furi-no, a resident and garbage hauler,Mr. Albert, an attorney, agreedthat if he were representing acommercial property owner inCranford and the proposal was

passed, he would appeal the taxassessment If tax appeals are suc-cessful, the cost of garbage col-lection would be shifted from com-

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Page 3:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

A-4 The Chronicle May 18, 1994

Upgrade beginsI. AUGUSTO F.MENEZESflUE CHRONICLE

Construction began last weelrarCranford's LincolrrParlcwhere the Recreation Departmental! instairamew play structtfferslx-unlt swing set ^nd spring animalsr In October the Township Committee approved a $95,000 bond ordinance to fundimprovements at four township-owned parks including Lincoln, Adams, Buchanan, and Johnson parks. Equipment at the parkswas rusted or in a similar state of disrepair, said township officials, when approving the bond ordinance.

Founder's Fest getsThe Cranford Founder's Fest will

-eeew in downtowit-Cranft>rd-wXf5-• Streetwalk Cafe along NortrvAv-

prh. Sunday, June 5.•.founder's Fest celebrates not

only Cranford's history, but alsothe people who have been at theheart of Cranford's successthroughout the past 123 years,"said Janine Johnson, DowntownManager. •""" 7

Activities include:• Celebration of community orga-nizations: , information-sharing,fund-raising, demonstrations.• Warner Plaza dedicatioiv cer-emony (1 p.m., plaza, area justnorth of the train station).• Magicians, oldies band and

ticipate by selling food from insjdetheir restaurants oi fiunrside

^Sance demonstrations.

^ ^ t^^K^ • ^ ^ ^ ^ • — ~ — — — ~ —

event-goers will be invited to.outside, in the Streetwalk Cafe ta-bles and chairs area).• Kids fun . including moonwafK,jface painting, hands-on activities.1'-• Costume contest: prizes will beawarded to those people who drjessin styles from the late 1800's to.th/eearly 1900's. , • Z^-.• Historical displays, including;'/£fire .engine display, snowing trucjtsdating from 1918 to 1994. ^ M

• Victorian photos (event-ggerscan have their photo taken at j^e

^^ctorianphoto/costumetiooth).., j .

iAsh rule imperils garbage disposaljplan; UCUA sees no problem herei By NICOLE A. GAV1NO|THE CHRONICLE

J A recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling and trou-~ibles with T^nhsylvania's state™ environmental"

j department may be signs of change to come inJNew Jersey's garbage system that in the endi will hit residents'garbage bills.j Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Courtruled that ash from municipal waste j s not ex-empt from strict "federal hazardous waste dis-iposal laws. These laws require all ash be tested[for toxicity and if deemed toxic, the ash cantonly be depositedin special hazardous landfills! — which are more expensive.J All ash is already tested and handled in thisi manner by New Jersey regulations. Union[County Utilities Authority (UCUA) says the rul-Jing will not effect solid waste management or•effectiveness of,Uie new county incinerator. ,J "Ever since Union County's facility has been

operating, the ash residue has been tested fortoxicity as required by the state Department ofEnvironmental Protection and Energy (DEPE),"said Blanche Banasiak, Union County UtilitiesAuthority (LJCUA) chairman.

"The ash is tested on a regular basis and theresults have shown that the residue is not haz-ardous. This decision has absolutely no impactwhatsoever on the way ash residue is handledin Union County." o

However, at the same time, the county ishaving difficulties disposing of its ash. UnionCounty sends ash to Empire Sanitary Landfill,Inc. in neighboring Pennsylvania.

On May 5, Pennsylvania Department of Envi-ronmental Resources issued a field order plac-ing a hold on ash deliveries to Empire. Nextday, Pennsylvania Governor Robert P. Caseyissued an order blocking all ash shipments dueto state ash testing. , • / ,

"The DER decided that they saw some proce-

dural deficiencies in ash testing protocols," saidJeffrey Callahan, UCUA executive director.

Due to this problem, Union County is nowtemporarily shipping its ash to Massachusetts.

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Mr. CaUahan noted Massachussets previouslycfid not require ash testing. And even after thenew ruling, Masssachussets is exempt

The problem with this, which worries localtrash hauling companies, is it is more expen-sive to ship ash farther away. According to Mr.

_CaUahan,JLcQsts aboiit$16r$20 more jper. too. to-transport the waste to Massachusetts. Cur-rently, Enipire Landfill covers the difference asthey want to keep Union County as a customer.

However, residents living near Empire Land-fill are fighting acceptance of out-of-state ash,claiming it unstable and unhealthy.

Garbage haulers in this area expressed, con-cern that if Union County continue to stop ashto a costly location, that cost will trickle downto them arid their customers' garbage bills

Factory Direct

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May 18,1994 The Chronicle A-5

still value s- H -

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-* Invites you tojoin us for the

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FridayMay 20th

SaturdayMay 21 s t

SundayMay 22nd

THE CHRONICLE

^J&mes* "Goodman never forgot

t Cranford teachers who sparkedinterest in writing and social

issues. And recently he found a'wpy to show just how much he ap-'pYeciated them. '. As the author of a book that justvjpS released called Stories of

~^SoUshoiv,~Mr. Goodman exploresthe 1930's much publicized court"*" of nine Black men accused of

lg two white women in Ala-1a.ie author uses a narrative ap-ich in explaining the history ofcase that indicted, tried andicted the nine men in a matter

;ks. The men spent sevenn jail~before they were lound

jpnocent of the charges. The book,Released just weeks ago, met with

teachershis Xirgt book, he acknowledgedfour teachers who played a signifi-cant but unknown part in his suc-cess.

After attending Princeton Uni-versity, he pursued' a career as aprofessor of history and socialstudies, ultimately acquiring a po-sition as an assistant professor ofhistory and social studies at Har-vard University, which he still

"tioldsr;While keptjbusy by his ca-reer and life as a husband and fa-ther of two children, Mr. Goodmannever abandoned his passion forsocial issues, history and writing.Or those who inspired him alongthe way. It is these four teachersfrom his youth that he applauds inthe first lines of the acknowledg-ments in his book.

Maria DebeHa-was-a-teacher-at-the now defunct Roosevelt School.He recalls that she sparked thefirst interest he had in social stud-

fimes and other major reviews.ij "Written with complete authority^. Stories of Scottsboro, is at oncejin inciteful social history and dra-jjjnatic courtroom thriller ... Good-' pair carries the mrrative~forward"

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week to weeRTTc31* to year,Jventually generation to generationSustaining both dramatic tensionJ»nd moral' authority. Few readersl^ill be able to "react without emo-

on to the stories of misfortunend trbuble that seem to haunt

ren the liberated Scottsboro de-lts for the rest of their lives.

. Although some might have for-gotten the teachers who inspired^hem along the way, Mr. Goodmanpever did. In fact, when he wrote

ies issues. Today Ms. Debella is ateacher at Orange Avenue School."Back then, though, a young JimGoodman was learning about poli-tics at an early age. His fatherBurt, running for a spot on_the-

-tewnship—governing body, thrust—him headlong into the politicalarena. This interest in politics wasfurther fostered by Ms. Debella,who encouraged the youth to dis-cover all aspects of local govern-ment as part of his elementary ed-ucation. His father won the elec--tion and went -U al-

Police Chief Harry Wilde* right, inspects cadets with a U.S. Army general during recent ceremony.

terms on the Township Committee,serving as mayor in 1974.

Another person honored by theauthor was Alice Alldian. Cited as a"wonderful Latin teacher," he hadin high school, Mr. Goodman ad-mits he never forgot the genuineconcern she had for each of herstudents.

Michael Marcus taught Englishnan in high school.-He •

remembers this educator as a "live-ly and animated," teacher whoused unique ways to help his stu-dents learn a subject that was notmet with enthusiasm. Today Mr.

still be found-teaching-at the high school.TO Naylor, Mr. Goodman re-

calls vividly, taught social studiesto him during the '60s. But morethan that, he remembers that this"teacher inspired everyone, espe-cially the impressionable JamesGoodman, who someday would.fecbgni?e ithese four educators-be-?;Tore ahydn'eelsel Today Mr.1 Nayloris a professor of history at the Uni-.

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Cranford police chief sees hisleadership training idea grow

For the past two years. Cranford Police leaders "of character and integrity" to meetChief Harry W. Wilde has been coordinatingan effort with the United States Military Acad-emy at West point to bring leadership trainingto New Jersey Law Enforcement. Chief Wildeis a member of the New Jersey State PoliceChjefs'jISducation Committee.

"In 1992, we did an audit of our police train-ing needs for the State of New Jersey," ChiefWilde said. "We concluded that we were doingexceptionally well at entry level training andin the area of specialized training. However, itbecame clear we were failing to teach our su-pervisors and commanders the leadershipskills that will be necessary to meet the chal-lenges of the 21st century."

Chief Wilde said it is going to take police

those challenges."We need leadership that is smart, thought-

ful and reflective," he said.West Point's world renowned leadership pro-

gram is what the chief s£t his sights on. AV I l V * U ^ T Y l i

leaders from throughout the state, includingCranford's Detective Sergeant Eric G. Mason,attended West Point's Faculty DevelopmentWorkshop in 1993.

They were trained in the techniques used byWest Point to instruct leadership development.They continued to work with West Point in aseries of exchange visits to produce a courseguide that will be used throughout New Jer-sey. The course will be offered in New Jersey

j>n a_regional basis.The program has sparked interest across the

nation. Next month, the Los Angeles PoliceDepartment will be meeting at West Point forfour weeks with New Jersey police officialsand will' take the program back to the westcoast The Houston, San-BtegQ-and-Washtng^ton, D.C. police departments have-also ex-pressed interest in the program.

Gen. Howard Graves, the superintendent ofWest Point, recently attended the opening cer-emony at the Union County Police Academywith Chief Wilde. Senator Donald DiFrancesca,Assemblyman Alan Augustine, Prosecutor An-drew K. Ruotokxand Deputy Attorney GeneralJames Mulvihlll were also in attendance.

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Page 4:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

- A-6

By CHERYL HEHLTHE CHRONICLE

.in Which came first?Legal handgun ownership rising here, butis it cause or effect of crime rate increase?

• L"!ansir

. The bittersweet odor of truth is barely dis-cemible-amidst those on the hot, swirlingpo-

£ litical winds that also bear the smells of gunif oil, smokeless powder, blood and cash.

Washington is fanning the furies nation-wide over how to still the dark forces behindthe Nation's growing preoccupation or predi-lection for "violence."

It's the media, if you listen to the hot windscoming from tile^ right quadrant. Televisionprograms, including news, comic books,

fears for their personal safety.

M . '•

" t L '\ ' I I •

newspapers, magazines, the "tabloid" style ofediting on paper or air waves, cablej certainDJs — the list goes on.

'1 Tfre-quesBon becomes whether the number ofhandguns and assault rifles led to the sharpupsurge in armed, violent crimes, or, the crimewave triggered the demand for firearms by citi-zens fearing the odds of them becoming crimevictims were shortening by the day.

The problem, at leastas seen by the potentialvictim in the gloom of night, is the number ofpeople drawn to commit violent crimes. Theproblem is not the number of handguns in citi-zens' hands.

Ordinary citizens want "something" done.Their elected representatives take rhetorical bel-

talized in terms of government or voluntarycontrols on these media. "The First Amend-ment" hangs higher on the politically correctcliffside than media_control — at least fornow, it seems.

far crys- lows in hand ana huii and putt" until

-""Still; the murderS'ContlnUe lHllrTVe-iiyg;drug dealsreven schools and stores-and-work—places. Something has to be done, and thenew federal Brady Bill requires a longer wait-ing period before buying firearms, and a

„ crime,bill endeavors to outlaw 19 specific ,as-\|sault rifles.' .,

ate a flame of action that might light their pathto re-election. "•'•.

-:-.- There are so many guns of so many calibersout there being put to so many uses that, shortof a state of martial law being declared, the odds

they Wfte simetterextto hegm a—neWy pistol~and rifle^free America are=over^

whelming.Maybe ammunition offers an opportunity to

allow continued possession of handguns, whilecurbing abuse by criminals. If the feds closely

Such responses get ink and air time, how-ever, they lack credibility and do not inspire|the confidence of citizens longing for safe^streets and homes. Neither do they chill those[inclined to jesolve domestic or criminalIgrudges with a firearm.[..Still the murders continue, and this week's[news is that in 1992 the nationwide number'of violent crimes where the criminal carried aihandgun reached record volumes.

Early this year, a poll of six police depart-[ments serving the suburban Union Countyjarea covered by these newspapers indicatedjthe number of citizens legally requesting per-mits to buy handguns is steadily rising.

It is safe, we pray, to assume that most ofthese neighbors are looking for protection. AMstol in the night table, the line goes, offers£ome security even if the gun is a double-idged sword that could be used by burglar orDrother to kill brother.

Allowing that protection and personal de-fense are the sole motivation for a neighborbuying a pistol, the gusty rhetoric in Wash-ington tumbling in the direction of even fur-rier constraints on buying handguns fallsheavily on the neighbors harboring growing

—restricted kinds and quantities moving lu letail-ers, prices would soar, but only those inclined towant large quantities would suffer. Recreationalshooters could draw supplies at club ranges.

Visions of ammunition black markets, ama-teur manufacturing of rounds, and bullets asunderground currency are not hard to bring intofocus while considering such an ammo-basedrestriction on firearms.

The only other component on the "supplyside" of gun-eontaxjlrthenyisthe gunsihenpselves. But restrictions on supply, as with am-munition, only build value into weapons makingthem targets of burglars, black marketeers, illicitmanufacturers and the most emotionally, finan-cially and vengefully bereft among usr •"•"'

Nonetheless, citizen access to guns needs tocontinue, probably ever more tightly restricted;by a sort of beneficient embargo. Simulta-neously, an educational campaign has to belaunched to objectively, logically dispel any ap-

yjpetite in the youngest for owning or using a gunVof any sort in their futures.

Those aspects of our national violence prob-,, lem involving mutual human respect, the value,

of life and the power of learning and restraintare best left to those responsible for leading,teaching and; preaching, not legislating.

J

OF VOUR SECOND AMENDMENT RIGHTS

IRVING SCHNITZER

eXhroriicle A-7

residence for senior citizens. A taskhe take quite seriously, he insisted.

" Almost as seriously as he doesIrving Schnitzer is just a regular being a poet.

guy. He worked hard, raised a fam-ily and then retired. But if anyonethinks he is sitting in a rockingchair, think again. In fact, recently,he even got to hand deliver one ofthe poems he writes to PresidentClinton.

Mr. Schnitzer does not let any

So it wasn't unusual that Mr.Schnitzer would write a poem toPresident Clinton, expressing^ hisviews on health care reform andwhat the average senior citizenthought of the issue, and plan onhanding it to him when he paid avisit to New Jersey a few weeksago.grass grow under his feet If any-

thing, heJs_more_actiye nowJthan i!l_didn'.t think I'd get to hand ithe was before. Maybe that explains to Him personally since there washow he earned the title "mayor," atSenior Quarters on Jackson Drivein Cranfprd. He's the one whogreets each new tenant with ahearty 'hello,' and the inside scoopabout the upscale assisted living

such a huge crowd," said the re-tired scrap metal dealer who wasborn and raised in Newark. "Butthe Secret Service people werevery nice about it"

Irving worked his way through

the crowd gathered at MiddlesexCounty College in Edison that day,to the front line where people werestanding three deep.

"As the President got closer tome, I stuck my right hand out toshake hands and handed him anenvelope with my left hand," said apleased Mr. Schnitzer, obviously assurprised as anyone that he wasable to deliver the' poem to thePresident.

"I just said, 'I don't want yourautograph, but take this.' "_

"I was surprised when hethanked those of us who took thetime to leave something for him,"he said. "It was a good experi-ence," summed up the 78-year-old,whose son, Dr. Irving Schnitzer,lives in Westfield.

Mr. Schnitzer writes poems forall occasions, including those re-flecting on the homeless, what lifeis like at Senior Quarters and some"just for the heck of it"

Although he hasn't received athank you note from PresidentClinton, he is not disappointed.

"He's a busy man," said the se-nior citizen, "but he'll geVaroundto it I know he will. Just-as long ashe reads it. That's all that really

matters.Mr. Schnitzer lived in Hillside

prior to moving to Senior Quarters.An active volunteer for Jewish WarVeterans and disabled AmericanVeteran organizations, he recentlycompleted two years of active vol-unteer service at Union Hospital, jHe has received several citationsfrom various municipalities for hisvolunteer efforts.

Letters to the editor

Garbage panel chairmansets the reeordL^traighi

Soldier away~fromTTome, warshares his World War II logBy CHERYL HEHLTHE CHRONICLE

Not every soldier who enteredthe service during World War IIwent to the front lines. For thou-sands of others, there was a job todo somewhere in the world. Somestayed stateside; others were sentall over the world.Nat Bodian vividly remembers1944. As a servicemen with the AirForce Technical Training Com-mand, he was an active participantin the life of the American AirBase at Parnamirim Field in Natal,Brazil.

The Cranford resident doesn'thave to rely on memory to recallhis busy life at the air field, either.He still has a World War II "warlog," in which he meticulouslynoted each day's activities at thebasey his contacts with other mili-tary personnel and life in generalfor* American servicemen who

wrote criticizing the operation ofthe post exchange (favoritism oftransients over locally based mili-tary personnel for hard-to-getitems) brought official chargesfrom the post exchange officeragainst Cpl. Bodian and a subse-quent transfer to an isolated islandoutpost in the middle of the Atlan-tic.

Cpl. Bodian's war log recalls thefirst meeting when American sol-

shared this space in time.While there he started a base

paper named Foreign Ferry Newsand became its full-time editor andhad a volunteer staff. The paperwas typeset and printed at th^pf-fices of local paper.

The post exchange also'figuredprominently in Cpl. Bodian's mili-tary career because an editorial he

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diera had tu lay the groundwork torthe base newspaper. First theyneeded permission from the Brazil-ian government to use the nameForeign Ferry News. They werealso delayed because the paperwhere they planned to print theForeign Ferry News had a shortageof metal for its Linotype machine.

On his first trip into nearbyNatal, Cpl. Bodian wrote in his log,"Went into town...my first chanceto look around and shop. Quite dif-ferent from anything we ever sawbefore, and not very, agreeable.Burros and bulls across and block-ing the road, both going into andout of town. Everyone wanted tosell something from Portugese-English dictionaries to silk stock-ings."

Another entry from the log re-veals that war sometimes had itsadvantages.

"In the evening saw the movieStage Door Canteen. The picturebeing held up in the United Statespending its showing to servicemenoverseas. The two showings hereare more or less the world premierof this picture. Went back to theoffice and wrote a review of themovie for the base paper. It wasprobably the first newspaper re-view of the movie ever written."

In post-World War II civilian life,Mr. Bodian was a sports reporterfor the Newark Star-Ledger but de-voted the bulk of his career to ad-vertising and marketing. He retiredin 1988 from John Wiley and Sonswhere he was a marketing efive in the book publishing indus-try.

He is also the author^or numer-ous books on publishing, mar-keting and direct marketing. Histenth book, Dirtct Marketing Rulesof Thumb, will be published byMcGraw-Hill irt December.

To The Chronicle:There have been many letters printed in your paper

over the last two weeks focusing on one side of thegarbage collection issue. By reading these letters, youwould think the members of the Garbage Committeehad agreed on recommendations but had put nothought into the issue. That is by no means true. Thefollowing individuals met and analyzed a great deal ofinformation,^before concluding,.^hat, a change should.Be made.-These individuals' were: CommissionerNorm Alber^,Cornrnissipnjer Bob Hoeffler, Virice Ditti,Debbie Brooks, Al Gessler, John Warrington, JoanJuul-Nielson and me. Assisting in gathering the infor-mation needed to make an educated decision_jwere_Warren HeW and Patty LJVTUI of the Cranford HealthDepartment, Tax Assessor John Duryee and Town-ship Administrator John Laezza. '"

The objective of the proposal was to increase collec-tion services and decrease homeowners' costs. Whathas not been coming out of all the press coverage isthat we are proposing to add monthly pickup of anyjunk (bulky waste) whkrh, currently, residents have topay extra to have removed. So, where a resident'sannual base payments to a hauler might be $330, healso has to pay extra for the removal of any oldfurniture, broken appliance or other items that don'tfit into a can. Therefore, the $330 per year, plus par-ticipation iri junk week at $60, plus any extra paid tothe hauler to have anything removed brings manyresidents' true collection costs to $400. Under ourplan, the gross garbage cost to 5,634 residences (75percent of all residences in Cranford) would be re-duced to an amount no higher than $268 which, afterfederal tax benefits, would be rediifpH tr> nnrl^r $?nf>

"per household. According to Page A-2 of the 1993 1040Forms and Instructions mailed to every taxpayer bythe IRS, garbage cost included in your property tax isdeductible from your federal income tax if "the taxesare based on the assessed value of the property."

Therein lies the logic to allocating the costs by as-sessed value. This is a legitimate way to get a costreduction. By the way, Page A-2 goes on to say ttiatan itemized charge per household, i.e. flat fee, j erhouse for trash collection is not tax-deductible. Theapproach the Garbage Committee presented is corr :ctand legal in the eyes of the IRS.

As far as the current haulers are, concerned, t) lis''proposal would allow for any one of them (or a jo nt,venture corporation formed by any number of the n)to bid on the contract. In this way, it is up to therotodecide if they want to keep the Cranford"busiUBss.This proposal has a service bid cap of $1,200,000 Deryear. Hence, if no one bids to do backyard jservice,twice a week with monthly curbside pickup of \iUbulky waste for under $1,200,000, nothing will changein Cranford. Contrary to popular belief, a five-yearcontract at a specific fee. precludes an annual o)stescalation. You should not believe every fear mon-ger's prediction of doom. !

One possible reason why there has not been aj(iypositive press for the proposal is that the generalpublic has not been fully informed as to exactly hgwmuch they can benefit both with reduced costs aridincreased services. I am enclosing a report that is thesame one given to the Township Committee on Aplril18, 1994, adjusted only for revised rates for one haill-er, J&A (The Health Department had been given anincorrect rate by J&A when they were surveyed }nmid-April). The actual rates are reflected in this re-port. Please print the report in its entirety if spacepermits, if not, please print tables 1 and 2. J

I would appreciate reading comments from some ofthe 7,000 residents who stand, to gair< hy this propos^alter they have had an opportunity to be fully in-formed. ,

JAMES MURPKVChairmajn

Garbage CommitteeCranford

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Town move offends squad founderpersonnel. A Township Committee without long redence in Cranford and without long experience

To The Chronicle-After 40-plus years of volunteer service to Cranford,

our first aid squad members are entitled to the grati- public office should not have the authority to replacetude and respect of the community. Instead, they are this Cranford organisation without the community'^being humiliated by insensitive criticism at municipalmeetings and in the press, elected commissioners aremaking hasty and impulsive decisions that will havelong-range questionable effects upon all Cranford citi-zens.

The squad has been rendering outstanding servicefor decades artd are striving themselves to solve tem-porary problems typical of those that currently besetmany volunteer organizations. The squad should begiven adequate time, assistance, encouragement, andopportunities to regroup and retrain the necessary

community'sconsent and at the taxpayers' expense.

As one of the founders of Cranford's first aid squadand the recipient of an honorary life membership, 5am personally offended that those who serve withoutcompensation, but with loyalty and dedication, arfenow being regarded with ingratitude and disrespect..Have the citizens of Cranford given the commissionrers permission to create another branch of publipservice and another potentially costly budget item? '

EDWARD M. COE,.MDCranford

HASUparents most grateful to Mr. PedasTo The Chronicle:

HAS students who participated in the NJ. FestivalChorus '94 and their parents would like to commendMr. Thomas Pedas their chorus director, for his out-standing inspiration and support of this endeavor.

HAS was proud to have eight students from theelementary and junior high selected from competitiveaudition tapes for participation in this statewide eventthat culminated in a superb concert on April 23.

Mr. Pedas not only seized an opportunity to havethe students audition for the festival, but he gavemany hours of his own time in preparing the students

jr the audition tapes. It was a distinct credit to Mr.Pedas when the eight students were chosen from

such a select group. His dedication did not stop there)as many hours of individual practice sessions had tobe worked around the students' busy schedules»

. meaning many late afternoon and evenings in ordeilto prepare the students for the workshops they and,Mr. Pedas attended on the weekends. j

The results.were obvious to all who attended, the*concert and musical experience our children shared!will not be forgotten.

Thank you Mr. Pedas!MR. AND MRS. JOHN GILLESPIE, MR. AND MRS.MATTHEW JAGUSAK, MR. AND MRS. IAN MCKAY,MR. AND MRS. JACK MUHA, MR. AND MRS. DEXPEASE, MRS. CAROL STRAFFI, MR. AND MRS.RON SUBACIUS and MS. FAITH VIRGILIO

More letters to the editor are on page A-11

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May 18, 1994

TJAs column highlights t}iejaccomplishments and gener-

J)sity_of suburban Union vol-unteers and the services of thecharitable organizations theysupport. \'

Court seeksvolunteersforxases

ELIZABETH - The UnionCounty Family Court is in

to fill va-cant .positions on JuvenileConference Committeesthroughout the county. TheJuvenile Conference Com-mittees areis citizen panelsconsisting of six-nine vol-unteers appointed by the pre-siding judge of the FamilyCourt to informally hear mat-ters involving first or secondtime, minor juvenile delin-quency complaints that arereferred by the court.

If y6u~areTnterested~in-vol—(unteering one night a monthfor this program, contact theJuvenile Conference Com-mittee Coordinator, NancySpano Yurek, at 527-4325 (9a.m.-4 p.m.).

Drivers soughtto aid patients

ELIZABETH - The Amer-ican Cancer Society, UnionCounty Unit, is seeking vol-unteers for its Road To Re-

_coyery Program. Road To Re-,coyery is a free patient ser-vice program in which volun-teer drivers escort individualsto and from cancer treat-ments.

For more information, callCarolyn Fabrizio, service di-rector, at 354-7373.

450 turn out fortown's cleanup

SCOTCH PLAINS - J?orthe fourth consecutive year,Scotch Plains had a largeturnout for its Clean Com-munities Public Lands Clean-up day April 30. About 450participants from 23 schools,service, neighborhood, sport,and scout groups picked uplitter that had accumulated invarious parts of the township.

The most important aspectof this event is its impact onawareness, organizers said.The sheer number of partici-pants, all in bright blue T-shirts, was noticed by resi-dents and non-residentsalike.

•It's hoped that more peoplewill think twice before dis-carding litter on the groundonce they've seen that it doesnot simply disappear, andthat somebody has to pick upwhat is dropped, organizerssaid.

Those groups who partici-pated in the cleanup saw thataccumulation of litter blocksstorm drains and sanitarysewers and that litter begetsmore litter. Once an arealooks unsightly, that areaseems to attract those whoare dumping illegally.

Those interested in joiningthe Scotch Plains CleanCommunities Advisory Com-mittee should call 322-6700,ext. 243. •

Compassionate math teacher wins titleBy CHERYL HEHLTHE CHRONICLE

For 21 years Rosemarie Macalu-so has_had a profound effect onthe children atHHiDside AvenueSchool in Cranford. And this yearher unique ability to inspire stu-dents in a subject that produces"high anxiety" has earned her theTeacher of the Year award."

She is modest to a fault, prefer-ring instead to share the honorwith her fellow teachers.-'•'I don't feel I do anything that

is so different froni. any 'other

spent time assessing the stockmarket as part of their learningexperience.

But there are other significantreasons why she was selected asTeacher of theYear. Mrs.-MaGalu-so believes that education is atwo-way street. While she enjoyschallenging her students withproblems for them to solve, she

'equally anticipates the timeswhen the students challenge her.

Mrs. Macaluso always knew shewanted to be a teacher. She cred-its this to the great respect her

teacher here," she said.Part of Mrs. Macaluso's success

in teaching math throughout the-years—isHltnked to her ability-te—in-teaehmg-mathreduce the, anxiety mosf studentsfeel when they encounter mathproblems.

"Most students will automati-cally

own family had toTleachersTButIt"wasn't" until" she reached ~the—seventh grade that she decidedthat she was definitely interested

say,math,' and close themselves off tolearning," said the teacher. How-ever, by relating mathematicalproblems^ to life experiences thestudents" understand, Mrs.Macaluso has been able to makeinroads where others have failed.

Recently, for example, her sev-enth- and eighth-grade charges SchooIT

After college she was hired toteach in the Cranford school sys-tem, and one of the first peopleshe met was her" future husband.

: Gharle^MHneuso-was-a- scienceteacher at Hillside school backthen, and was put on the sameteaching team as Rosemarie.They married a few years laterand now live on Oak Lane withtheir daughter Cara, a senior atCranford High School. Charlesnov|j teaches at Orange Avenue

Milestones

KATHLEEN and MARTIN CAUZ

•-U.-

A-9--

Jodi Turner, Edward Brehm Jr.marry before Reverend Quigley

SHARON WILSON/THE CHRONICLE,

Teacher Rosemarie Macaluso guides her Hillside Avenue School class through another math

Jodi Turner, daughter of SueAnn Turner of Cranford andRobert Turner of WhitehouseStation, was married Feb. 20,1994 to Edward Brehm Jr., sonof Mr. and Mrs. Edward Brehmof Cranford.

The bride was given in mar-riage by her father during a cer-emony performed by the Rev.Quigley at St. Anne's Church.

Mia Hilbrant was matron ofhonor. Bridesmaids were TraceyVizzoni, • Suzanne Wheeler,

Adrianna Vizzoni was flowergirl.

Jeffrey Brehm was best man.;Ushers were James Bevan,"James Wozniak, Gerald Grilloand David Aldredge. JakeChusid was ring bearer.

The reception was held atTurnberry's at Rillos in East Ha-nover.

The bride graduated-in 1986"from Cranford High School andis a dental hygienist.

The bridegroom graduated in1985 from Cranford High Schooland is a vice president at FirstColonial Mortgage.

rQupie_hpnevmooned inAruba.

They live in Cranford.

LAW OFFICES OF

JOSEPH P. DEPA, JR.FORMER UNION COUNTY ASST. PROSECUTOR

PERSONAL INJURYAUTO ACCIDENTS » SLIPS & FALLS

CRIMINAL CASESTRAFFIC OFFENSES • DRUNK DRIVING

111 NORTH AVE. W.-CBANEQBCL7O9-9OO1

Socks projectHillside Avenue School seventh-graders display their wind socks — a new craft project aspart of their home economics, class.

Poirier appointedElizabeth mediator

Kathleen McGovern marriedto Martin Cauz at St. Anne's

_. Kathleen McGovern, daughter of.Tamps F.X. McGov-

Frank Cauz served as best manfor his son. Ushers were Ralph

Dr. Roger Poirier of-Cranford, amember of the Psychology/Sociol-ogy Department faculty at UnionCounty College, hasiJ been ap-pointed by the New Jersey Supe-rior Court, Court AdministrationMunicipal Division, :as a MunicipalCourt Mediator for the City of Eliz-abeth.

His appointment followed com-pletion of an 18-hour mediatortraining program held in Decemberat the College's Cranford Campusthrough a cooperative effort be-tween UCC's Department of Con-tinuing Education and CommunityServices and the AdministrativeOffice of the Courts.-

The training course was de-signed to prepare volunteers toserve as mediators in CommunityDispute Resolution Programs. AllNew Jersey municipalities are re-quired to implement such resolu-tion programs as pursuant to aNew Jersga^ Supreme Court direc-

tive. It covered the nature andmanagement of conflict; effectivecommunication techniques; andhow to conduct mediation sessions,including role-playing exercises tosimulate real-life situations.

Volunteer mediators, ..upon pfo-gram' completion, become specifi-cally involved in mediating minorinterpersonal disputes between in-dividuals who usually are involvedin ongoing relationships, such asfamily members, neighbors, co-workers, landlords, and tenants.They generally volunteer severalhours a month for this purpose.

Dr. Poirier joined the UCC fac-ulty in 1966 and rose through theranks to the level of senior profes-sor, the highest attainable rank. Heholds a bachelor's degree fromTufts University, master's degreesfrom both Springfield and Middle-bury colleges, and a doctorate fromRutgers University.

. ern of Cranford, was married Aug.7, 1993, to Martin A. Cauz, son ofMr. and Mrs. Prank Cauz of Cran-ford./.,The bride was given in marriageby her father during a nuptialMass performed by the Rev. James

\,Sperra at St. Anne's Church inG

McGovern was maid of^p for her sister. BridesmaidsJwere Jennifer Richards of Cran-ford; and the bridegroom's sister,

(Laura Laurita of Milford. . Thebridegroom's cousin, Nicole Cauzof Milford, was flower girl.

Reppert of •Phillipsburg, and LdamRyan and Kieran O'Dowd, both ofCranford.

The reception was held at Rich-field Regency in Verona.

The bride graduated from Cran-ford High School and the Univer-sity of Delaware. She is a sixth-grade teacher in Berkeley Heights.

The bridegroom graduated fromCranford High School and Mora-vian College in Bethlehem, Pa. Heis a certified public accountantwith Peat Marwick in Short Hills.

The couple took a wedding tripto Bermuda.

They are living in Union.

Christy Thompson marriesJPeter DiCapua at St. Helen's

Students sellbracelets tohelp needy

The sixth-grade class at titMichael's School of Cranford re-cently marked Friendship Weekby collecting $306 Jrom the saleof Friendship bracelets^, whichthey made, advertised arid soldthroughout the school. '

In photo at left, studentspresent the proceeds, to be do1

nated to aid needy childrenthroughout the world, to Princi-pal Mrs. Lea Kaluzny. '

Students representing the en-tire sixth grade are Peter Epple,Michelle Scutiere, Ryan McG-.lynn, Katie Carney and MaggieCunningham. !.\

| .i- Christy Lee Thompson, daughterof Nancy Thompson of. Garwood

jQnd the late Jerome Thompson,, uyas married Oct 3, 1993, to Peteryjohn DiCapua, son of Phyllis Di-f,^apua of Cranford., The bride was given in marriageby her father, now deceased, dur-ing a nuptial Mass performed by'fee Rev. William Morris at St:'Helen's Church in Westfield.

She wore a traditional weddinggown and a rhinestone crownheadpiece graced with a long veilShe carried cascades of purple andwhite violets and roses., Belinda Orellano was maid ofhonor for her cousin." She wore along fuchsia gown and carriedmatching flowers.

Bridesmaids were Dayana Bil-bao, Sandra Duque and Cindy LeeSmith. Their gowns were purpleand they carried bouquets similar

Men don't get the whole women communication thing.* By CHERYL HEHL\~. THE CHRONICLE

Sometimes I feel sorry for men. Theyfall in love, get married and never get aninstruction manual on how women oper-ate,

Think about it. Men are out there in aboat wjthout any oars. They have abso-lutely no idea how she operates, whichbutton will set1' her oil" or the fact thatwomen do not tide the same way everyday. What we say today could be just theopposite tomorrow. That's the beauty ofit.

_ For instance, why is it men leave them-selves wide open Cor the most commonthing women do? Jt can start over abso-lutely nothing. And men never see itcoming. She asks a loaded question like,"Do you think we are as romantic as weused to be?" He says, "What brought thison?" never prepared for the sigh that will

ShenanigansBy Cheryl Hehl

follow. Sighing is something men can'thandle. It's not a word, a statement orsomething logical they can relate to. Sohe drops the whole thing and watchesthe Simpsons or mows the lawn, unawarethat round two is in the works.

"Don't you care about keeping thespark in our relationship?" she says,lighting the cannon. And like a deercaught in headlights, he is trapped. Whatcan he say? If he had a manual he couldturn to the chapter on "Relationships,"and everything would be, right with the

world. But noooooo such luck.Out come the charts and graphs. It is

time to reassess the relationship, rehashand analyze what has happened, andmore importantly, what will happen. Andas all men discover, women use the oneauthority that cannot be beat.

"Do you know what can happen in arelationship?" she asks her husband whois beginning to wonder what horrible fateawaits them down the road. "Well, ac-cording to Redhook, 89 percent of couplesstop communicating after the secondyear of marriage," she says with a know-ing look. And what can the husband do?He's done for. She's quoting statistics.

It's an art you know. We are so good atit that men rarely are able to' match ourexpertise in this little-understood area.However, some men are very good atsidelining the issue. Take my beloved.

"No, we are not as romantic as we werebefore," he_say8,_Rut;before I cani inter-

ject, haul out the bamboo shoots, thebright lights and the dripping water, hequickly adds a postscript

"We are even more romantic than be-fore," he says with a triumphant smile.Score one for my beloved. He is learning.But most men are never prepared, andalas they tall right into the trap and mustsuccumb to the questions," the answers,the drilling, the charts and graphs thatillustrate the relationship. Now if therewas a manual, he could excuse himselfand slip into the bathroom and figure outhow to proceed.

The telephone is something else again.There isn't a man alive who doesn't won-der why his wife has to talk to him as heis carrying on a telephone conversationwith someone else. Why? Isn't it obvious,we are afraid you will forget something?And you always do.

Is there a man alive who hasn't ques-tioned why the woman in his life can be

five miles away but the minute he get$~,on the phone she is instantly at his side;like a homing pigeon. Let's face it, qlwoman just can't let a man talk on thb';phone without putting in her two cents. ;:• •',

"Who is it?" she asks. "Is it my moth;!er?" By that point we can't stand itjany,'.more. We have to lenow who it" is on theother end of the line. Once he lets u$know, we are oft' to bigger and better,'tilings. Like asking our mates to remem-|;ber to ask the party on the other end-'something. Or saying, "Don't forget to;tell him we're going to the shore." '..

As much as men hate this phone,coaching, and threaten us, we still do it"It happens to be something we just can'thelp, like blinking. Do we have controlover blinking? I think not. Besides, ai|wives do it. It's expected. After a while, 5or 10 years down the road, the husband,just getsused to it.,As it.shoiijd.be. -t

to that onhv! The bridegroom's niece, Caitlin

Architectural star(,,CHS junior Christopher Zehnderhas won first prize for plans for amulti-functional youth center sub-mitted to the 1994 architectural de-sign competition for high schoolstudents. A second year student ofdrafting instructor Robert Cot-tingham, Christopher won a five-j^ear full-tuition scholarship at theNew Jersey Institute of1 Technol-ogy.

Ann t)ifcapua, and the bride's cous^in, Vicki Safdeye, were flower gjuis.Their gowns and flowers wer£ alsopurple. f

Christopher DiCapua was bestman for his brother. Ushers werethe bridegroom's brother, SammyDiCapua; the bride's brother, EricPatrick Thompson; and the bride'sfriend, Steven Cifelli. David En-rique Orellano, the bride's cousin,was ring-bearer.

The bridegroom's sister-in-law,Betsy DiCapua, was soloist

A reception was held at PantagisRenaissance in Scotch Plains.

The bride is a graduate of Moth-er Seton Regional High School inClark. The bridegroom graduatedfrom Engine City Technical Insti-tute in Union.

The couple took a wedding tripto Puerto Rico.

They are living in MonmouthCounty. —

JODI and EDWARD BREHM Jr

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May 18,1994 The Chronicle A-11

Letters to the editor

questions principles, wants referendra•i?

To The Chronicle:f; As a resident of Cranford, I amlivery- dismayed at the Township^Committee's action being taken^concerning the one-hauler garbage'.'''collection system. This action also!.'leads me to strongly question the['ideals and principles of those on|;;the Committee supporting this sys-^tem. One may question what rela-litionship garbage collection has;'with ideals and principals of local'{government but what I see hap-rpening is a-continuation of govern-

ment to grow ever larger and be-come more burdensome. In addi-tion it is becoming more involvedin our daily lives leaving us withfewer choices and inevitably lessfreedom to conduct our privatelives as we see fit , . .

Why is our local government get-ting involved in an area which pri-vate industry is handling ef-fectively? Presently, the garbagecollection performed by our localhaulers is effective, efficient andresponsive to the current market

trends as examplified by the de- The Committee makes the argu-crease in their rates as their cost ment that I will realize a savingsdecreases. There is also competi- via the tax deductions available totion amongst,the haulers giving us, m e on my federal tax returns. Butthe consumer, choices. The com-mittee now wants to remove ouropportunity to freely choose ahauler, abolish an effective systemand put control of garbage collec-tion in their hands. I have yet tosee a government provided servicerun more effectively and Jess ex-pensively than what private indus-try can provide it at

at what costs and for how long? Ihave seen Mr. Jim Murphy's Gar-bage Committee Report (Which ob-viously was written to justify the •one hauler system instead of beingan unbiased report) and he does aneat packaging of the information.However, I question what will hap-pen if under the one hauler sys-tem, I-put out more than the indi-

cated two cans per pick-up. Willthe additional can(s) go unemptied,will it be emptied at an additionalcharge (difficult to do under theproposed assessed value system of

system is excellent If you wantSput material out, buy the starrfipsand p u t i t out during junk weekSifnot, Don ' t This gives thesumer a choice. <r

charging) or do I save my a d ^ . r ' I could go on about the benefitsditional refuse for the proposed of the current system and the d&t-

of the proposed sys

Writer reminds Mayor o f 88 scene£To The Chronicle:

This letter was sent to Mayor Vollero:

jrhad submitted to then Mayor Brinkerhoff in

wide collection you should divide the town col- should be restricted to award of a contract forlection into four sections and also request indi- one section only, unless a townwide collection

idttal bids-for-each-of-the-sections7-The-bid- contract is awarded. — ———package should indicate that separate awards T h e above suggestions are broad conceptual

once per. month jurlk pickup cre1-ating a health hazard. How will werealize any savings that may de-velop from future decreases in tip-ping fees if anything more than aone year contract is let I mightalso add that nowhere has it beenaddressed as to what additionalcost will be created in administrat-ing this new contract

The Committee advocates a ratesystem based on the assessedvalue of my. home. How is thisequatiable? Why should I pay $70 a

riments of the proposedbut Mr. Craig Sands letter of}4, 1994 effectively exploresissues. I just need to emphasjfcethat our Township Commit&eshould be investigating ways:$tosave money by decreasing the :of our government and its cost!stead of contributing to the grovof government and increasinglocal taxes.

I also firmly believe thatfinal decision of going to ahauler system should be put tipublic referendum. In my con\ryear more in taxes.for garbage

Tpickup t h a m n y T i e i g h b o r with the—"sation^with-neighbors-and-localsame size family only because m y quaintences, most are op

_waLbe_made .forjeach of JLhe four sections un- approaches. They could be developed and in- house is assessed $50,000 higher the one hauler system. It is ap]jj-great many of our citizens with a single garbage less a bid for the entire town collectionis; 25~~corporated into a eomprehensivei) idpackage to because-of , a_new_kitchen and a ent though that we are having^hauler system still exis t u " percent less than the total of the low four indi : m e e t the township's objectives. fireplace. (spf Garhagp Committee Kystprn~forrpH~~uporT~iis by

liip Cornmillee con-•jsider the following general approach to maxi-fcimize competition and potential tax savings forj^niir riti7pns with resppct to nnr garhagp mlW-

"vidual section bids. ~ ' :

The objective of the approach is to. maximizecompetition and to use more than one collector,unless there is a clear and substantial savjngjn_using only one-collector. The-percentage-GQuld-

In addition to requesting one bid for a town- be changed (e.g: 20 or 15 percent) and bidders

Enclosed is a copy of a Cranford Chronicleeditorial of October 6,1988 on this subject.

I trust these suggestions will be helpful inyour deliberations. tZIZ

BBS* "

Report, Table 5.) I also questionthe white trash Gunk) pickup. Whydo we need it once a month, whynot once a year, if at all? Why

Committee which has shown lirespect for public opinionseems intent upon servingowri personal agenda.

Cranford when I do not use it? The present ~Cr,

County salutes volunteers How about all eight haulers bill the townshipTo The Chronicle:

During National Volunteer Week,*\the Un,ion County office of Culturalf/and Heritage Affairs saluted the

AdministratorOffice of Cultural

and Heritage AffairsLINDA-LEE KELLY

—Freeholder T liaisonJvolunteer their time in support of(ithe programs and activities spon-sored by our office,s We note, in particular, the mem-•jbers of the Cultural and Heritage^Programs Advisory Board whose•^participation assists us to provide

—*3serviees in-the-arts and history^

Cultural and HeritagePrograms Advisory Board

Vet appealsfor generosity

To The Chronicle:The concept of allowing home-

owners to benefit by deducting gar-bage costs from their income taxthfbughthe•" real estate tax; "deducttion is laudable, but there is a bet-teti way than the single scavengernow being promoted. That is toallow everything to continue asnow, but all eight scavengers sub-mit a bill to the township on amonthly, bimonthly or quarterly

Without our dedicated volun-— ~ -basis,—

the Union County Teen Arts^ n d Very Special Arts Festivals•-.and Operation Archeology, annual'.-programs for over 3,000 students,!wpuld not be possible.;) In addition, we would like to rec-ibgnize volunteers who are the driv-

! Jng force of the arts arid historyOrganizations of Union County.•i SUSANP.COEN

IWait, Ms. Mayor,-until election time

fjTo The Chronicle:j To the people of Cranford - TheHrnayor and Committee won't listenito the people about the garbage

• collection situation.We'll speak, Mayor Vollero and

^friends ... at the polls.',: ANNA MAUCIONE

CHARLES MAUCIONECranford

at poppy timeTo The Chronicle:

In Flanders Fields,blow...

These words of Col. John. Mc-Crae's immortal poem were dedi-cated to the memory of the menwho died in France during WorldWar I. Today, they are dedicated tothe veterans of all wars.

When you drop your money in apoppy canister, you have contrib-uted to the*,Veterans,of ForeignWars National Home'-for childrenof deceas&l or disabled veterans atEaton Rapids, Mich.; to the Na-tional VFW Rehabilitation Servicein Washington, D.C.; and to directassistance programs for needy anddisabled veterans in your com-munity.

Your generosity is sincerely ap-preciated.

JOSEPH A. POPECommander, VFW Post 335

Cranford

This single bill will list propertiesserved, pickups made and totaltonnage tipped. This information

the poppies will be invaluable to the townshipin the rapidly changing world ofsolid waste disposal. A single bill

will also save the scavengers cleri-cal costs preparing bills for eachhousehold. It would be a win-winsituation.

By continuing all service as now,the threat of commercial establishments suing and halting the entireproject would disappear. I find itinconceivable that anyone couldcharge firms tax yet deliver no ser-vices. No wonder they are upset.

No one has addressed the realworld cost of implementing a sin-gle scavenger pickup. No matterwho wins the bid, they will have topurchase sufficient equipment tohandle the work of the presentfirms. That start-up cost will haveto be paid by someone. And, unless

a long term contract is given, whowill make such an initial heavy in-vestment? I see many problems

_but_no solutions in going to a sin-^ P'ckup. even if a biggy suchas BFI is the winner.

W e h a v e h a d N e w J e r s e y SolidWaste since moving here in 1957

and have never had a compleither about NJSW or its predsor whose name I forget. Even'itruck crews give a friendly waviI walk~to the-stationHLet'sthis one put Don't throw outbaby with the bath water! Jj

WILLIAM R. WRldjHTCrannfrd

• •

Merchants earn players' thanks

More ideas going nowhereTo The Chronicle:

Will the distortion concerningthe purchase of the yellow housenext to the library never end? Lastwe fts letter on this matter pennedby Commissioner Aschenbach ismerely another example of truthtwisting and double talk by ourelected officials to cover up theirreal agenda, whatever that may be.Suffice it to say that this latest at-tempt to cover the tracks of thereal estate committee fails. TheChronicle has the facts and canprint them if they so choose.

Perhaps the township should

create another commissioner cat-egory, especially after the now fa-mous land swap deal and the pro-posed overhaul to our garbage pickup system. Both, bold actions com-ing from and going nowhere. Wecan call it Commissioner of Popu-lar " Enlightenment and Pro-poganda. No, I believe this was apost that was held by someone pre-viously many years ago in a far offland. Perhaps,- the Township Com-mittee can make use of their li-brary cards and do some researchon this proposal on their own.

PAUL T. LACORTECitizen

To The Chronicle:On behalf of the Cranford Reper-

tory Theatre, I wish to thank all ofthe merchants in downtown Cran-ford who so readily supported ourefforts to present our very first per-"'formance, "Godspell.1' I was one ofthe people who knocked on yourdoor to ask for your support eitherin the way of an ad in the playbill,or by placing one of our posters inyour business window, or by help-ing us sell tickets.

The play was a great success,and much of it was due to the factthat people saw the posters in your

windows. Our producer, Brian .Jen-kins, went to great pains to asairea beautiful and professional pfey-bill containing outstanding adssforyour businesses; and I think?)hesurpassed everyone's expectations.

It was truly a pleasure to fiewgreeted with smiles and operjessby all of the merchants. It is *urhope, that just as you support Shemany community activities iCranford, that the citizens of Cffen-ford support you by always fire-membering to shop in Cranlbrdfirst. -.- /•,;•••• \-

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bosses and (herearc bad bosses.And now there's

agrowingnumberof really bad bosses, -according to writerStanley Foster Reed,whose book The Toxic Executive, de-scribes how American business is beingdamaged by them.

Those are the people in authority whoabuse their power and the people andthe people who work for them, drag-gingdown the level of businessethics.They invade the privacy ofothets whileprotecting their own secrets. They arerude to co-workers, especially those

THE BOSS FROM HELLThere" are good below them, keep people waiting anjj

are unpredictable. These highly copetitive " control freaks" hate the ideaof others...until they grab credit fqthem.

Some employees are wowed by thjkind of manage style, or too cowed t|talkback. But independent and faircflworkers are likely to lose out on ih,rewards they deserve, the bookstatej

If you're unhappy working in suchdifficult situation, talk it over with a]experienced counselor. Together, yo|may find a reasonable way out of youproblem.

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COLDWELL BANKER SCHLOTTS Westficld Office has beenhonored for the following...

. Number of Listings Sold in 1993• Number of Transactions Closed in 1993• Number of Buyers Sold in 1993 ,• $ Amount Successfully Negotiated for

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r

A-12 The Chronicle May 18, 1994

I Obituaries JEthel Gold Golden, 90An executive secretary with Monsanto

KENILWORTH — Ethel H. Gold Sr., is deceased.

IUII1UI1Once a supervisor with a state agency

Spitzer, died in 1977.Surviving are his second wife,

^ CRANFORD — Solomon Spitzer,J 71, a former supervisor with the3 New Jersey Department of Vbca-stionai Rehabilitation, died May 13,•f 1994 at Robert Wood Johnson Uni-'IJversity Hospital, New Brunswick.

He was born in New York Cityr,--and lived in Cranford before mov-ijlJing to Edison in 1984.•ii Mr. Spitzer joined the De-

partment of Vocational Rehabilita-t i o n in 1962 and was a supervisor

-_£ 4n its -Elizabeth office when he re-I tired in 1985. He served in the> Army during World War II.

Golden, 90, an executive secretarywith Monsanto Corp. at its formerKenilworth plant from 1949-69,died May 10,1994 at her home.

Mrs. Golden, who was born inJersey City, lived in Roselle beforeShiffa Jaghab Spitzer, a son,

Howard Spitzer of' Washington,, moving*,*© Kenilworth in 1934.Her .husband, Joseph F. GoldenD.C.; two stepsons, Army Capt

Daniel Jaghab of West Point, N.Y.,and Ronnie Jaghab of MountOlive; a grandchild; two stepgrand-children; and a sister, EstherSpitzer in New York state.

Services were held yesterday atJaqui-Kuhn Funeral Home, High-land Park. - •?• ••<•. Army Capt. Nicholas E. Pgnaga-

Contributions- m a y - b e nAdeH»-^3tc>s^as^DeerrT3ecoic i ted^m t h ethe Deborah Hospital Founqation, Meritorious Service Medal.

S h e is survived by a son, JosephF. Golden Jr.; four grandchildrenand six great-grandchildren.

A funeral Mass was offered Fri-day a t St. Theresa 's Roman Catho-lic Church, of which Mrs. Golden.was a parishioner.

Arrangements were b y t h eDooley Funeral Home , Cranford.

May is especially busy a tCranford Health and Ex tended

" " C a r e T D u r i n g Older Amer icans 'Month , Nurs ingWeek a n d Nurs-ing H o m e Week, the farility h a sscheduled special activities a n devents.

To kick off the excitement,Cranford Health ,held a Gong

Show April 29. The Recreation y.Department hosted the event*'

^ranging^from singing and dancing tojoke telling and lip synching. .> V

During Nursing Week, May. l-7, the entire nursing staff was ihonored. All were rewarded with.appreciation gifts. ._ :iir

May 18, 1994 The Chronicle A-13

Chalk talk

Capt. Panagakoswins military medal

Brookside Place lists Cubby's Kids awardsThe following students have

been received Cubby's KidsAwards for March and April atBrookside Place Srhnoi:

Also, Matthew Ferreira, Stepha-nie Ferreira, Krista Fincke, JosephGaglioti, Paul Gaglioti, Nicholas

Also, Dennis Mui, Thomas Miir-ray, Erica Neadle, Meghan New-comb, Lee Newmark, Sean O'Hara,Patrick O'£

Youth symphonyLaura Schmitt and Andrea Sciar-

rillo will perform with the New Jer-sey Youth Orchestra 3 p.m. Sundayat Morristown High School.

WAS 2d grade portraitsAll of the Walnut Ave. School

second graders in Mrs. Kull's class-have made a special bulletin board.display using their new Macintosh..computers. The computers in their

perprint, to write a story aboutthemselves. —^ -

Architectural winner

New Jersey Region, P.O. Boic 820,i>_~.nr. i\/r;iic nonrs noon \His first wife, Audrey *Plaxe Browns Mills, 08015-0820.

I Julie Rozzi Mor^bito, 87jj Formerly a resident of Cranford ;

cieri,. Joannai^Arcieri, Kelly Arne- lory Harlin, Caitlin Helmstetter, Erica Pati, Michael Porter, Terence_ . . . , , f . son, Elizabeth August, Matthew Paige Heuer, Jill Humphries, An- Prunty, Carey Roach, D'Arcy'jSar-The medal is awarded for out- • «L *• V , r , T . T - _» . A "L o-ui__i : ™ - ^ ^is

standing non-combat meritoriousachievement for service to theUnited States.

Panagakos, an assistant opera-tions officer, is the son of Irene

Babineau, Caroline Bausch, LauraBelden, Caitlin Brady, BrianBrown, Paul Buonaguro, John Cat-ena, Michael Clark, Angela Daurio,Ashley Deevey, Erik Donahue.

drew Johnson, Jamie Lagarra,Adam Lanz, Meghan Maher,Bonny Markham, Christine Marra,RaimI Marx, Meghan Meise, TonyMonovano Katelin Morgan.

nelle, Amanda Schlenker, RobertTarantino, Christopher Varga,Tiffanie Wagner, Hallie Waters-Dashevsky, Michael Winters, Eliza-beth Zarnorski, Scott Zucker. ' ••"'

| CRANFORD - Julie A. Rozzi2 Morabito, 87, a former resident Of:[!» the township, died May 14, 1994 atft Overlook Hospital.

Heights, Mich., Carolyn Scala ofStuart, Fla., Irma Sicurello of Bel-leville, and Nancy Marsella of Fan-wood; 11 grandchildren and four

-and-Sam -Panagakos-of-528-Lex-

are set up in a packaged

fjEjram known as the Apple Earlyirning Connection. This pro-m includes four computers, one

"printer, CD ROM, one scanner/•'tfSrfous educational software and

lots of big and little books. The bul-rieEn board is named Two Por-traits, Tvx> Ways, One Artist . The

CHS junior Christopher Zefrhas won first prize" for plans for amultifunctional youth center sub-mitted to the 1994 architectural de-.sign competition for high schoolstudents. A second-year student ofdrafting instructor Robert Cot-tingham, Christopher won a five-year fnll-tnitirvn srhnlarehip nt

goals for the day. In January, 30middle school peer leaders had two

-•=days=-of- training ittSFi preparedthem for the ongoing mission:reaching out and helping youngerchildren in the schools who may bein need. Youngsters can come topeer leaders in confidence forproblems such as divorce, illness,death or school problems. The peerprograms are coordinated by BrianGilroy and Lisa Lesiak at Orangeand Leesa Barenboim at HillsideT"Peer leaders programs, which havebeen in existence at the highschool for some time, are becomingcommonplace throughout the na-tion. Research has shown them to

ington Aye., Cranford.Panagakos is a 1985 graduate of

Cranford High School. He earned anion Count? places! 01

Mrs. Morabito was born in Ma- great-grandchildren,sontown, Pa., and lived in Cranford

-baenelorVdegree-Jrora-Seton Hall

from 1969 untilWestfield in 1974.

—^Her-husband,-Garmen-Fr-Mora--1^,-diedTrrt§88r- =*" ~

She is survived by. five daugh-ters, Rose Morabito of Westfield,Frances Rumovitz of Madison

A funeral Mass was offered Mon-she * moved to day at Holy Trinity Roman Catho-

lic Church, Westfield, of whichMFs^-Morabito-was_a--parishioneiuBurial was in SL' Gertrude CerrF-

University, South Orange, in 1989.

_EUBUONQI1CE—RUBUCJJQUCE-

was metery, Colonia.

Arrangements were by theDooley Colonial Home, Westfield.

Alfred S. Daly, at 83I formerly an Alcoa supervisorf ' GARWOOD - Alfred S. Daly, 83,& a former supervisor with the Alu-;l! minum Co. of America, died May$' 14,1994 at Rahway Hospital.;jfj ; Mr. Daly was born in Summita« and had lived in Garwood sinceSj 1956. He was with Alcoa at its Gar-; | wood and Edison plants until his4 retirement in 1971.3H—Surviving~are-his-wifer^Johanna-

TVl. Hreuss DaJy, two sisters, RuthRamshaw and Ethel O'Neill; andmany nieces and nephews.

Private services were held underthe direction of the Gray MemorialFuneral Home, Cranford.

In lieu of flowers, contributions'may be made to the Garwood Res-cue Squad or your favorite charity.

located at 206 Floral Avenue, In the Borough otRoselle, County of Union, State of New Jersey, moreparticularly described In the Complaint filed herein,and to recover possession of said lands ond pro-mises.

• YOU, Mfis. C A R M I N E MONACO, W I F E OF CAR-M I N E MONACO, are made a defendant herein be-cause plaintiff has been unable to determine If Car-mine Monaco Is presently married, and If so, the prop-er given name and surname of hit wife and thereforeloins you as a defendant to this action as you mayhave an Interest In the property under foreclosure byway of dowry or pos

If you are linabie 10 omain _ . _eommunlcale with Hie Lawyer Referral 3ervlceUnion County (908) 353-4715; If you cannot afford anattorney, you may communicate with Legal Aid and/orLegal Services Office In Union at (908) 354-4340.

DONALD F. PHELANCLERK, SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY

$29.07 CC113 1x May 18,1994

BOARD OF EDUCATIONCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

NOTICE AND INVITATION TO BID

•The Cranford Board ol Education Invites your sealedbid lor , '

THE CHRONICLEIs Pleased To Announce

The Winner of the

GARWOODSFRING SHOPPING SPREE

Margaret Walterof Westfield

CONGRATULATIONS/ • • • ' i f

RENOVATION OF STAGE AND AUDITORIUM LIGHT-ING SYSTEM (INCLUDING AISLE LIGHTING) ATCRANFORD HIGH SCHOOLNOTE: FOR PROFESSIONAL AND SPECIAL SER-

--V1CES TYPE CONTRACTS, THE AGENCY SHALL IN-CLUDE IN THEIR SOLICITATION OR REQUEST FORPROPOSAL THE FOLLOWING LANGUAGE:

"II awarded a contract your company/firm will bo re-quired to comply with the requirements of P L 1975 c.

_ J27 (NJAC 1737)"

Sealed bids will be received by the Board Secretaryat the Board ol Education Business Office, 132 Tho-mas Street, Cranford, NJ until 10:00 AM prevailingtime on Friday, May 27,1994.

Specifications are available at the Office ol FacilitiesManagement. 132 Thomas Street, Cranford, NJ.

The sealed bids may be delivered personally at thetime and place specified, or by U.S. MalL However, theBoard ol Education will not be responsible for latemall deliveries, end no bid shall be accepted after thespecified time for opening all bids.

, The bid must be submitted In a sealed envelope withthe specification name of Die bid on the outside of theenvelope, and addressed as follows:

CrantonJBoord of Education,P.O. Box 646132 Thomas StreetCranford, New Jersey 07018-0646

BID: Renovation of Stage and Auditorium UghtJngSystem (Including aisle lighting) at Cranford HighSchool

—Bythe Order of mo OontordBoarO of educationJeanotts Flora Nixon

School Business Administrator/Board Secretary

$21.42 CC1171x May 18,1094

Advertise InForbes Newspapers

• $10 per week is all it coststo advertise your religiousservices

•Reach over 25,000 homesthroughout Union County

•Call 908-722-3000,-BXf.6256, ask for Russell

t V

St. Paul'sUnited Church of Christ

13-Center-SLGarwood

789-1285Rev. Frederick Rogers

Worship and Sunday School

9:30 am

Child Care Available

ST. BERNARD'SCATHOLIC CHURCH

L.3J&8_Sumner Ave.

756-3393Mass Schedule

Saturday: 5:30pmSunday: 8:00, 9:30

11:30amRev. Joseph F. Barbone, Pastor

St. Theresa's Church541 Washington Ave, Kenilworth

908-272-4444Pastor: Rev. Joseph S. Bejgrowicz

Sunday Masses: Sat. 5:30pmSun. 7:30-9:0010:30-12 Noon

Weekday Masses: 7-9amMiraculous Medal NovenaFollowing 7:30 pm mass

St. Judes Perpetual NovenaWednesdays at 12 noon & 7:30pm

Novena Holy Hour

m.

in

i

KENILWORTHGOSPEL CHAPE&1

Newark Ave. & 23rd St, Kenilworttv908-272-6131 £Sunday Services: '"

11am — Family Bible Hour andl

Monday, 7:00pm - Boys BrigadeWednesday, 7:J0pm - Prayer and Bible Study

Friday, 7:00pm • Youth MeetingFriday Night Children's Club7-8:30pm (Grade School Age)

Call For More Information

n

CRANFORDALLIANCE CHURCH

f^HERRY STREETPhone: 276-1617

•9:15vam10:30 am6:30 pm

Sunday SchoolSunday WorshipSunday Evenings

Progranu for Children, Jr. A Sr. High.Singla. Coupla, FimiUc* anil Senior Adulu

TEEKHXROADBAPTIST CHURCH

1340 Terrill Rd. Scotch Plai us

Rev. Michael Seaman, PastorSunday; . ,

9:45am -Suricjay SchbiqiP11:00am - MornihjjWorahip6:15pm - Church Training7:15pm - Evening Worship

Wednesday:7:00pm - Prayer Meeting

Nursery CarePmvMad

«M

A*

WestBeld First BaptistCome Celebrate

PENTECOST(a time for spiritual renewal)

May 22nd, 10:30 ammusic by our children'* choirs'

• • • • . ; • • • • . •••: . • . r i

We're here foryoul „

170 Brn Street 233-2278,

New Jersey Institute of Technol-ogy.

School peer leadersA newly formed group of middle

school peer leaders from both Or-ange and Hillside Ave.. schoolswent to the Wildcat Mountain Wil-derness Center in West Milford for

the children make a picture ofgnselves with construction^ d

a day of intense training. The dayconsisted of team building chal-lenges with low ropes, nets and

be highly effective in encouragingchildren to ask for help in the earlystages of a problem.

St. Joseph's honors »Cranford resident John Leary, a

junior at St Joseph's High Schoolin Metuchen, was accepted into thesummer scholar program at St.Peter's College:

•k PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE

>i PUBUC NOTICEI BOROUGH OF GARWOOD

;> ' RESOLUTION NO. 94-216

"introduced by: Councllwomon Morgan

•i WHEREAS, the Borough of Gaiwood desires to constitute the 1994 Temporary Capital Budget of said*tfTtunlcipa!lty by Inserting therein Construction of Curbs Along Hemlock Avenue., • NOW, THEREFORE, BE fT RESOLVED that the Borough Council of the Borough ol Garwood as follows:.i, Section 1 . The 1994 Temporary Capital Budget ot the Borough of Garwood is hereby constituted by thelAdoptlon of a schedule to read as follows:

\ PROJECT., TEMPORARY CAPITAL BUDGET OF THE•» " BOROUGH OF GARWOODj, . COUNTY OF UNION. NJ

:, PROJECTS SCHEDULE FOR 1994't METHOD OF FINANCING

ESTIMATED CAPITAL

PUBLIC NOTICE

TAKE NOTICE that application has been made to Mu-nicipal Borough Council of Kenilworth to transfer ofRetail license #2006-33-006-002 from previousowner, 1133 Corporation, 651 No. Michigan Ave., Ken-ilworth to EJ's GrUle, Inc.

Objections, If any, should be made. In writing to:Margaret Adler, Borough Clerk, Borough of Ken-ilworth, 567 Boulevard, Kenilworth, NJ 07033.

Stockholders: Eugene Lord, Joseph O'Neill, 1283 Rt22, Mountainside, NJ 07092{14.28 . CC103 2x May 11,18,1994

^PROJECT

^Construction of Curbs Along Hemlock AvenueCOSTS

S10.000.000IMPROVEMENT FUNDS500.00

GENERAL BONDS$9,500.00

Section 2. The Borough Cleric be and is authorized and directed to file a certified copy of this resolution withJhe Division of Local Government Services. Department of Community Affairs, State ol New Jersey, within threedays after tho adoption of this proiect for 1994 Temporary Capital Budget, to be includod In Iho 1994 Permanent

,Xapltal Budget as adopted.jJAdopled: May 10,1994

' - - . - • - Approved: Michael Crlncoll, Mayor

W l s Polldore, Borough ClorkCC114 1xMay18,1994

I SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEYt CHANCERY DIVISIOljt UNION COUNTY.» .. DOCKET NO. F-6546-93( NOTICE TO ABSENT DEFENDANTS•k STATE OP N6W JERSEY» TOJlOHN DOE, HUSBAND OF CATHERINE K. WHITE.

'^AID NAME OF JOHN DOE BEING FICTITIOUS

JLS.), YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to^ r v e upon HACK, PIRO, O'DAY, MERKUNGER, WAL-lACE & McKENNA, PA, Attorneys (or the Plaintiff,Vwhose addrau is 30 Columbia TumpUio, FlorhamPark, New Jersey 07932-0941. an Answer to the Com-Jilalnt (and Amendments to Complaint, If there be any).Jllod in a Civil Action In which KNUTSON MORTGAGECORPORATION Is Plaintiff and CATHERINE K. WHITEJot ux. el als ere defendants, pending In the SuperiorCourt of New Jersey, within 35 days of May IB. 1994.Exclusive of such date. If you tall to do so, ludgmentxy default may be rendered against you for the reliefdemanded In the Complaint (and Amendments totomplolnt, if there be any.) You shall tile your answer

' Snd proof of service In duplicate, with trio Clerk ol theSuperior Court, Hughes Justice Complex, Trenton.New Jersey 08625 Tn accordance with tho ruloa otCivil Practice and Procedures.> This action has been Instituted for the purpose olforeclosing a mortgage dated March 31, 1966. madotiy CATHERINE K. WHITE. CHARLES E. WHITE, usmortgagor,nrid payable to KNUTSON MORTGAGECORPORATION, as mortgagee, tho Plaintiff herein,and concerns real estate located at 1145 WoodlandtfVvenue. In tho City of Plalnfleld. County of Union.State of New Jerssy, more particularly described In<he Complaint tiled herein, ond to recover possessionoi said lands and premises.I YOU, JOHN DOE, HUSBAND OF CATHERINE K.WHITE, SAID NAME OF JOHN DOE BEING FlCtTI-'jTIOUS, are mado a defendant heroin because plairnltftwi been unable to determine II Catherine. K. Whitouspresently marrtod, and If so, the proper glvon name0nd surname of her husband and therelore joins youas a defendant to this action 09 you may huvu anTntoreat In the property under toroclosuro by way ofpurtesy or possessory Interest., If you are unable to obtain an uttomuy, you muy•fommunlcato with Iho Lawyer Referral Service ol'Union County (OOfl) 353-4715: II you cannot afford an'attorney, you may communicate with Legal Aid and/orLegal Services Olllcc In Union at (008) 354-4340.

DONALD F. PHELANCLERK, SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY

;$28.56 CC112 1xMay 18,1934

ADVERTISEMENTJCranford Board of Education132 Thomas StreetP.O. Box 040jbranford, New Jersay 07016

Notice la hereby given that sealod proposals will bereceived by the Cranford Hoard of Education for tnofollowing contract

tONfTRACT NO. 1 • PARAPET MASONRY REPAIHS1 ft WATERPROOFING AT CRANFORD HS

' All bkfa shall be prosentod to the Crenlord Board of£ducauon by the bidders or their anenta on Thuradoy.Uune 2, 1094 at 10:00 A.M. In tho Office of the Cran-Jora^8oard of Education, 132 Thomas Street. Cranford,

CH 750880SHERIFFS SALE

CHANCERY DIVISIONUNION COUNTYOOCKET NO. F-571293

INDEPENDENCE ONE MORTGAGE COPLAINTIFF

VS.

GLADYS M. GIBSON; WEST JERSEYTEM ' ' ' • '

DEFENDANT

RPORATION

HEALTH SVS-

WRIT OF EXECUTION DATE - MARCH 3. 1994SALE DATE - WEDNESDAY THE 8THA.D. 1004

DAY OF JUNE

Promises commonly known as: 534 North Union Av-enue, Cranford, NJ

Tax Lot No. 6 In Block No. 284.Dimension ol Lot (Approximately): 100.00 feet wide x

152.00 feet deepNearest Cross Street Situate at the Intersection of

the southeasterly side ot North Union Avenue with thesouthwesterly sue of Garden Street

The above will fulfill the description requirements ofP.L 1979, Chapter 364.FULL LEGAL DESCRIPTION IS FILED AT THE UNIONCOUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE.

TOTAL JUDGMENT AMOUNT:THREE-HUNDRED NINE THOUSAND ONE-HUNDREDTHIRTY SEVEN & 35/100 (1309,137.35)

RALPH G. FROEHUCHSHERIFF

ATTORNEY:Weber, Muth & Weber v

1 Cherry LaneP.O. Box 912Ramsey, NJ 07446-0912

$11832 CC110 4x May 18.25, June 1,8,1994

NJ, All bids will be opened publicly and read aloud atthat time. Proposed forms ol contract document*. In-cluding plans and specifications are available com-mencing Wednesday, May 18, 1994 at tho Office ofLAN Associates. Inc., 6B2 Goffle Road, Hawthorne,New Jersey. A $35 cash or certified check nonrafund-able deposit la required for each aet of drawtnga andspecifications. Bidders need not be present at the tjrneof the opening of the bids.

All bidders are hereby notified that they must complywith the "Affirmative Action Requirement*" the new.statute P.L 1975 C. 127 (revised) (NJAC 17:27).

Any Bid submitted under the terms of New JerseyState Statute* (18A:1BA-26) not Including a copy of avalid end active prequallflcatlon/classlflcation certifi-cate will be rejected as being nonresponsive to thebid requirements.

Attention Is called to the fact that New Jersey Pre-vailing Wage Rates must be paid on thlsproieet andweekly payroll forms must be submitted. The Contrac-tor' must comply wtth the "Equal Opportunity for Em-ployment" requirements as promulgated by the Fed-

~ its and as described In theera) and State govemmenlbid documentation.

The Cranford Board of Education reserves the rightto reject any or all bids or to waive any Informalities Inthe bidding and further reserves the right to correctany erroneous mathematical computations In any pro-posals submitted, and to consider the bid on the basisof the corrected total or totals.

No bid shall be withdrawn for a period of sixty (60)days after the date sot lor the opening thereof.

CRANFORD BOARD OF EDUCATIONMs. Jeanette Nixon

Business Administrator/Board Secretary

52U.O5 > CC110 ixMoy 10, 1904

i SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY\ CHANCERY DIVISIONA UNION COUNTY

DOCKET NO. F-16602.Q3— •-, NOTICE TO ABSENT DEFENDANTS

STATE OF NEW JERSEYTO

MRS. CARMINE MONACO. WIFB OF CARMINE MO-NACO

(US.)YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and roqulrod to

oorvo upon HACK, PIRO, ODAY, MERKUNGER, WAL-LACE & McKENNA, P.A., Attorneys for tho Plaintiff,whoso uddroas Is 30 Columbia Turnpike, FlorhamPark, New Jersey 07032-0041, un Aiuwor to the Com-plaint (and AmendmonU to Complaint, II thoro bo any),Illod In o Civil Action In which FIRST FIDELITY BANK,N.A.. NEW JERSEY Is Plulntltl ond CARMINE MO-NACO, cl UK, ul als ore dolendunla, ponding In theSuporlor Court ot Now Joraey, within 35 days ot May18, 1004, uxcluslvo of such data. II you fall to do so,

Iudrjmont by default may bu rendered against you torho rollef domundod In tho Complaint (and Amond-

monls to Complaint. If thoio be uny.) You shall fileyour answor and proof of sorvlco In duplkute with theClotk ot tho Superior Court, Huglies Justice Complex,Trenton, Now Joraey 0U625 In accordance with therulos ol Civil Practice und Procedurou.

This action has boon Instituted for tho purpose oflorocloalnn a mortnaqa clatod Oclobor- 2t, 1077, madoby CARMrNE MONACO, a* mortijauor, to RE. ScottMortguoo und Asslflned to Tho Howard Savings Bank,Succa&iior In Interost to Thu Howard Savlnna Bankand puyublo to FIRST FIDELITY DANK. N.A.. NEWJERSEY, as Plulnlllf lurtiin. und concerns roal OSUste

JUDGMENT AMOUNTONE-HUNDRED SIXTY ONE THOUSAND FOUH HUN-DRED THIRTY FIVE & 89/100 ($161,435.89) ;

~~ By virtue of the above-stated writ of execution to medirected I shall expose for sale by public vendue, inthe FREEHOLDERS MEETING ROOM. 6TH FLOOR, inthe Administration Building, In the City of Elizabeth,N.J., on WEDNESDAY, at two o'clock In the afternoonof said day.

The property to be sold Is located In the'Townshlpof Cranford In the County of Union, and the State ofNew Jersey.

Commonly known as: 108 James Avenue, Crantord,NJ 07016

Tax Lot No. S In Block No. 412.Dimension of Lot are (Approximately) 100.00 feet

wide by 100.00 feel long.Nearest Cross Street: Situated on the Southwesterly

side of James Avenue, 100.00 feet from the South-easterly side of Bumslde Avenue.FULL LEGAL DESCRIPTION IS FILED AT THE UNIONCOUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE.

TOTAL JUDGMENT AMOUNT:ONE-HUNDRED SEVENTY THOUSAND FORTY NINE& 49/100 ($170,049.49)

1 RALPH O. FROEHUCHSHERIFF

ATTORNEY:Shapiro & Krelsman (CH)Trlpolnto Building457 Haddonfield Rd., Suite 420Cherry Hill, NJ 08002$10624 CC07 4xMay11.1B.25. June 1.1004

CH 750933SHERIFF'S 8AUJ

CHANCERY DIVISIONUNION COUNTYDOCKET NO. F-120193

FIRST TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATIONPLAINTIFF

„• VS.

GODSON G. KOTIA & GINGER K. KOTIA. H/W; MILSASANTIAQO. ET ALS

DEFENDANTWRIT OF EXECUTION DATE • FEBRUARY 14.1004S A L E DATE-WEDNESDAY W E 15TH DAY OF JUNeAD. 1094

JUDGMENT AMOUNTTWO-HUNDRED NINTY FOUR THOUSAND SIX-HUNDRED EIGHTY SIX & 25/100 (5204,68125)

Bv virtue of the obovo-stetod will ol execution to modirected I shall exposo (or sale by publio vendu.. Inthe FREEHOLDERS MEETING ROOM. 6TH FLOOR. In(ho Administration Building. In tho City of eittsbelh,N.J., on WEDNESDAY, at two o'clock In tho afternoonof said day.

CH 750876SHERIFFS SALE

CHANCERY DIVISIONUNION COUNTYDOCKET NO. F.119348*.

NATWEST HOME MORTGAGE CORPORATIONPLAINTIFF

VS.

CHARLES a FEUCI & STEPHANIE FEUCI, HIS WIFE,BARBARD KEYL TOLERICO ETA

DEFENDANTWRIT OF EXECUTION DATE - FEBRUARY 14,1994

SALE DATE - WEDNESDAY THE 1 ST DAY OF JUNEAD. 1994 '

JUDGMENT AMOUNTONE-HUNDRED SIXTY THREE THOUSAND NINE-HUNDRED SIXTY ONE & 56/100 ($163,061.56)

By virtue of the above-stated writ ot execution to medirected I shall expose for sale by publio vendue, Inthe FREEHOLDERS MEETING ROOM, 6TH FLOOR, Inthe Administration Building, In the City of Elizabeth,N.J., on W E D N E S D A Y ; 1 S T D A Y O F J U N E , 1994, attwo o'clock In ttw-eftemoon of said day.

The property to be sold Is located in the Townshipof Cranford, New Jersey 07018, County of UNION andState of New Jersey.

Commonly known as: 36 Hollywood Avenue, Cran-ford, NJ 07018

Tax Lot No. 14 In Block No. 614Olmenslon of Lot: 50 feety wido by 176.25 feet longNearest Croat Street situated at a point on the

westerly sideline of Hollywood Avenue distance ap-proximately 51 feet northerly from Its Intersection withthe northerly sideline of Westfield Road.

FULL LEGAL DESCRIPTION IS FILED AT THE UNIONCOUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE

TOTAL JUDGMENT AMOUNT:ONE-HUNDRED SEVENTY THREE THOUSAND ONE-HUNDRED EIGHTY NINE «V 24/100 ($173,189.24)

RALPH G. FROEHUCHSHERIFF

ATTORNEY:Fein, Such, Kahn and Shepard7 Century Drive, Suite 201Parslppany. NJ 07054

iir ~CCB7 4x May 4,11,18,25,1004

BOARD OF EDUCATIONCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

NOTICE AND INVITATION TO BID

")

mall deliveries, and no bid shall be accepted after thespecified time for opening all bids.'

The bid must be submitted In a sealed envelope withthe specification name ol tho bid on the outside ot theenvelope, and addressed as follows:

Cranford Board ot EducationP.O. Box 646132 Thomas StreetCranford, New Jersey 07018-0846

BID: Public Address/Intercom System Upgrade atCranford High School

By the Order of the Cranford Board of EducationJeanetta Flora Nixon

School Business Administrator/Board Secretary

$22.95 CC120 1x May 18,1994

PUBLIC NOTICENOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY

AS TO STUDENTS

Calvary Nursery School and Child Care admit* stu-dents of any race, color, national and ethnic origin toaflthe'rifihts, privileges, programs, and Beth/Hies gen-erally accorded or made available to students at theschool. It does not discriminate on the basis of race,color, national and ethnic origin in administration of Haeducational policies, admissions policies, scholarshipand loan programs, and athletic and other schooi-admlnlstered programs.

. Unda NelsonCalvary Nursery and Child Care

• • - - 108 Eastman Street-Cranford. NJ

S17.34 CC116 1x May 18,1994

CH 750913SHERIFFS SALE

CHANCERY DIVISIONUNION COUNTYOOCKET NO. F-066393

SOURCE ONfTMORTGAGE SERVICES CORPORA-TION

PLAINTIFF

VS.

SHIRLEY A RUSSELL, ET ALSDEFENDANT

WHIT OF EXECUTION DATE - MARCH 1. 1004SALE DATE - WEDNESDAY THE 15TH DAY OF JUNEAD. 1994

JUDGMENT AMOUNTNINETY-SEVEN THOUSAND SEVEN-HUNDREDEIGHTY SEVEN & 39/100 ($97,787.39)

By virtue of the above-stated writ ol execution to medlrectod I shall expose for sale by publio vendue, Inthe FREEHOLDERS MEETING ROOM, 6TH FLOOR, Inthe Administration Building, In the City of Elizabeth,N.J., on WEDNESDAY, at two o'clock In the afternoon •ol said day.

The property to bo sold Is located In the Townshipof Cranford In the County of Union, and the State otNew Jersey.

Street & Street No.: 4 Hollywood AvenueTax Lot No. 2 In Block No. 514.Olmenslon ol Lot SO1 x 207.5'Nearest Cross Street 651 feel from Uncoln Avenue.

FULL LEGAL DESCRIPTION IS FILED AT THE UNIONCOUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE

TOTAL JUDGMENT AMOUNT:ONE-HUNDRED ONE THOUSAND EIGHT-HUNDREDSEVENTEEN & 7/100 ($101,817.07)

RALPH O. FROEHUCH" SHERIFF

ATTORNEY:William M.E. Powers, Jr.

__.7J7 Stokes RoodP.O.Box 1088Medford, NJ 08055

Specifications are available at the Olllce of FaollJUisManagement, 132 Thomas Street, Cranford. NJ »oSni-menclng Wednesday, May 1B. 1994. ,-,'•-,

The sealed bids may be delivered personally at'ttietime and place specified, or by U.S. Mall. Howovar, «ieBoard of Education will not be responsible for "latemall deliveries, arid no bid shall be accepted Oder'thespecified time for opening ell bids.

Tho bid must be submitted In a sealed envelope wijhthe specification name of the bid on the outside of theenvelope, and addressed as follows: . •;.

Cranford Board of Education ...".,P.O. Box64e >:<•'132 Thomas Street , ; «Cranford, Now Jersey 07016-0646 , ,-s'

BID: Qym Locker Replacement Boys Locker Room.ftOrange Avenue School .".;,

By tho Order of the Cranford Board ct EducationJeanette Flora Nixon

School Business Administrator/' ' Board Secretary

S22.95 CC121 1x May 18.;{Sf|4

CH 750916 1;>-*1SHERIFFS SALE "«•;!

CHANCERY DIVISION , *.-JUNION COUNTY ' .*iOOCKET NO. F-406791 ;.-?",

NEW JERSEY NATIONAL BANK ' *"*PLAINTIFF !>'

. yg _J. .. . .. ... . . *:X^.

RONALD P. BUBACIUSjET ALS "&DEFENDANT V *

WRIT OF EXECUTION DATE - MARCH 10,1994 ' VSALE DATE - WEDNESDAY THE 15TH DAY OF M EA.D. 1994 > !?

JUDGMENT AMOUNTONE-HUNDRED THIRTY SEVEN THOUSANDHUNDRED FORTY TWO 4 80/100 ($137,942.80)

By virtue of the above-stated writ of executiondirected I shall expose for sale by publictho FREEHOLDERS MEETING ROOMTeTHthe Administration Building, In the City ot _.-N.J., on WEDNESDAY, at two o'clock In tho nftiof saw day.

The properly to be sold Is located In the Tiol Cranford, County ot Union, State of New Jer_ ,_ .

Premises are known as: 4 pine Street, CranfortLii)07016 r%

Tax Lot No. 1, Block No. SOO. • > •Dimension ol lot: 123 ft x 1J7JS0 ft. x 130 I t x 1

flNoaresl Cross Strati: High Slroel

tising the-sofbware-program^-Ktds Work 2, on the computer.{After the picture was drawn,

IJIrs. Kull had the class type withtjie word processing program, Su-

other outdoor apparatus,-or the -program-tnvolved-diiTibnTgtall trees and walking across aguide wire that was suspended 45feet in the air. Group cohesion,trust and risk-taking were the

Fredericks winsTh~e heart Alana Fredericks of Cranford is

daughters of police and firefight-ers. Ms. Fredericks will attend the-University of Delawarein the fall.

HAS Spring Fever v

April was a very Successfulmonth for the Hillside Ave. El-ementary and secondary StudentCouncils. Earlier this month, thegroups raised $75 for the RedCross Edison, l O . Relief DisasterFund. This past week, seventh-and eighth-graders participated inSpring Fever, an after-school pro-gram with sports activities,, con-tests and music. A local musicgroup, Sover^iga, was spotlightedat the Spring'Fever activity. Mem-bers of the group include Jeff Ber-gin, Mark Stiansen, Matt Tyndalland Scott Lawson, a student atNewark Academy.

Oak Krioll honor rollAnne Estabrooks and Mary Ellen

Wilson were named to the honor-roll-at—Gak—I^nell-SehoGl-of-the-Holy Child in Summit.

Telecommunications—

eighth-grade students have experi-enced being "on line." IRIS pro-vides a forum for classroom tele-communications projects as well asbeing a source of education infor-mation. Each project is called aconference. Each conference has amoderator who overkees how theproject is progressing1! and inputsinformation necessakyito the con-tinuation of the conference.

Focus on Vietnam' The Hillside Ave. School eighth-

grade social studies and Englishclasses recently completed a cross-curriculum unit on the geographyand history of southeast Asia. Spe- _cial emphasis was placed on Viet-nam. Eighth-graders Nik Fekete,Jennifer Devine, Tyler Ward andJimmy Pfeiffer helped assembletwo- showcases spotlighting theproject Participating teachers werePaul Maloney, Patricia Bazilus,Catherine Dudley, Jennifer Corbeltarid Susan Fitzmaurice.'

the recipient of a 1994 AcademicScholarship from The Two Hun-dred club of Union County. Thescholarships were given to aca-demically deserving sons and

"The r students at HflTsIde Ave.School have been teleconnected.Using a modem, a Macintosh com-puter and a telecommunicationsprogram called IRIS, fifth- and

* r

Local musical group Sovereigni ii , .———.i ! i [ i ii L, Avenue School's Spring Fling,A group ot eighth-grade student^ de8lgn6d a showcase spot- sports, activities, contests and

flighting Vietnam after completing a cross-curriculum unit on the music. Members of the band'subject Pictured are, kneeling .from left, Nik Fekete and Tyler are, from left, Matt Tyndall, Jeffjward; standing from 16ft, Jim Pfeiffer and Jennifer Devine. Bergln and Mark Stiansen.

performed recently at Hillsidean after-school program wtth

Catoring in Fine Foods vFresh. Homemade Quality

Mary Ann NingerOwner

P.O. Box 473Cranford. NJ 07016

(908) 709-3730

ATLASl FUNDS

Steve1

—r~^~-—InvestTncnrRepresenraiive"1-800-759-8255 (Pager)

PIN2628I85#Atlas Securities, In&, Distributor

1901 Harrison SL. Oakland. CA 946121 -800-933-ATLAS (1-800-933-2852)

The investments you want from the people you trust

Publish Your Business Card ForOnly $20 Per Week In This

- Weekly FeatureMail Your Business Card & Payment,(specify number of weeks and newspaper)

"HERE1? |/IY CARD"Attn: Classified Department

Forbes NewspapersP.O.Box 699, Somerville NJ 08876

•Deadline Is Wed 5pm ol week before publication.'•Business cards will be published "as bT.no copy changes ft additions.'

COMMUNITYSERVICESDIRECTORYYour Guide To The Thousands Of Helping

Hands In Union County From AbuseControl to Scouting Information

o property to bo sold la locotod In tho Townshipronford In tho County of Union and the Stalo ol

Tho .of CruNow Jersey.

The Cranlord Board of Education Invltos your sealedbid for:

PUBUC ADDRESS/INTERCOM SYSTEM UPORADE ATCRANFORD HIGH SCHOOL

NOTE: FOR PROFESSIONAL AND SPECIAL SER-VICES TYPE CONTRACTS. THE AQENCY SHALL IN-CLUDE IN THEIR SOLICITATION OR REQUEST FORPROPOSAL THE FOLLOWING LANGUAGE:

"If awarded, e contract, your companwHrrii will bo re-quired to comply with me requirements of P.L 1075 c.127 (NJAC 1737)"

Sealed bids will be received by tho Board Secretaryat tho Board ot Education Business Olflce1. 132 Tho-mas Streot, Cranford, NJ until 10:30 AM prevailingtime on Thursday, June 2,1904.

Specification* aro avallablo ot the Olllce of FacilitiesManapement, 132 Thomas Streot, Crnnford. NJ com-mencing Wednesday, May 18,1094

Tho sealed bids may be delivered personally ul thollmo and place specified, or by U.S. Mull. Howevor, thoBoard of Education will not bo responsible tor late

$104.04 CC109 4xMay 18,25, June 1.8. 1004

BOARD OF EDUCATIONCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

NOTICE AND INVITATION TO BIO

The Cranford Board of Education Invites your sealodbid for:

QYM LOCKER REPLACEMENT - HOYS LOCKERROOM AT ORANGE AVENUE SCHOOL

NOTE: FOR' PROFESSIONAL AND SPECIAL SER-VICES TYPE CONTRACTS, THE AGENCY SHALL IN.CLUDE IN THEIR SOLICITATION OR REQUEST FORPROPOSAL THE FOLLOWING LANQUAQB:

"II awarded a contract, your company/firm will be re-quired lo comply with the requirements of P.L. 107S c.127 (NJAC 17:27)"

Sealod bids will bo received by the Board Secretaryat the Board of Education Bualnoss Olllce, 132 Tho-mas Street, Cranford, NJ until 11:00 AM prevailingtime on Thursday, June 2,1D94.

TOTAL JUDGMENT AMOUNT'HED SIXTY FOUR THOUSAND

SIX & 4/100 ($164,076.04)RALPH G. FROEH^bh

ATTORNEY: SHHgjrtGeorge M Conway, III , ,*;•0 Tanner Street .*%P.O. Box 153 V -rtaddonfldW, NJ 08033 N *

»104.04 CC111 4X May 18.25, Jun» 1,8, jf iW

PUBUC NOTICEBOROUGH OF KENILWORTH.

. ... - ORDINANCE NO. 04-4 •

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NO.PROVIDING FOR COMPENSATION FOR BOROHF.MPLOYEES OF THE BOROUGH OF KENILWORlJp

—• STATEMENT »*>'TAKE NOTICE that the abovo Ordinance was ps&stfon the final reading otter public hearing at a reofieVmeeting of the Oouemlng Body ol the BorougrHbfKenlrwroUi.on the 10th day ol May, 1994. " * V

Margaret

Show your com-munity a phonenumber .thfltson-i-make a difference.Your communityservice, club,association orhotline numbercan be listed in aspecial publicationbrought to you bythe Crdnford.Chronicle andlocal busi-nesses. Fill out ythe couponbelow andattach a briefdescription of yourservice to let

Union Countyknow your there toshare your skills.The CommunityServices Directorywill be publishedon June 8, 1994.Deadline forarticles is May 18,1994. Deadlinefor advertising is

May 30, 1994.[You-can.call the

ranfordhronicle at

(908) 276-6000 toreserve your spaceor for more infor-mation on thisspecial issue.

An application for site plan approval to consttsingle story Industrial building at 234(.North* Street, Kenilworth, NJ, Block 81, U l 2 d4 Is i "uled for public hearing bolore tho Planning

SW£8?!!M B h ?

.Mo^nXoe.NjAnyone Interested Iji hearing or any other Inl'

" ' ' 1 P " ' d ' M ° d F l d "

Vincent Paporutto, ApdjtcjintCC116rix May 1 6 V n 5 l

Club or Service Name_

Business Address_

Contact _Contact Phone Number ^

Club or Service Phone Number (To Be Published) I - I

MAIL TO: Cranford Chronicle102 Walnut Ave. P.O. Box 626 Cranford NJ 07016 ATTN. SERVICE .

UCC summer creditsgo a long way.

Our colleges are miles away, but we're at Union County College earningsummer credits — credits that are accepted by hundreds of collegesand universities. Union County College has affordable tuition and summercourses in a wide range of subjects. Day and evening classes meetMonday through Thursday, so every weekend is a long one.

Whatever your plans are next fall, spend your summer at UnionCounty College.

Classes begin May 31st.

unionCOUNTYCOLLEGE

1033 Springlield Avenue, CranfordCranlord • Elizabeth • Plamlield

(908) 709-7500We're your college.

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hS if

A-14 The (fehrontcte"

Levy named CFO-treasurer at GontinuuittCranford-based entertainment company's clients include members of Rolling Stones

John F. Levy has been appointed chief accounting, finance, and business manage-• _ ! _ r*rr __ _i A _/•-»» /*i . ' _ .A .,» * T — a tr 'financial officer and treasurer of the Cran-

ford-based Contihuum Gfoup"Inc., etlectiveimmediately. He replaces Harrison Weaver,who retains his titles ojfchairrnan and CEO.

Mr. Levy will be. responsible for manag-ing all accounting, investor relations, fi-nancing, human resources and information

"iystem functions for The ContinuumGroup, a music entertainment, marketing,and interactive technology company.

industries, including those involved with ative companies will make him a very valu-ment, Mr. Levy served five years as execu- digital imaging and other new technologies, able member of the Continuum team."tive vicepresident and chief financial of-ficer of Cinecom Entertainment Group Inc.,an independent motion picture productionand distribution company.

He also worked a total of nine years atErnst & Young, Laventhol & Horwath andGrant-Thornton, "a

"With~hls"broad iexperience in motion pic-tures, home video, accounting, advertising,and entertainment software^ John Levy has

The (Jontinuum GroUp~is comprised-of-Continuum Records, an independent record

• label featuring recordings by Roger Daltrey,

s—two years aspresident of JFL Consulting, providing ac-counting, financial and management con-

With'more than fience~finr~salting^erviceBrto~biisiiiesses in a variety of

a firm knowledge of the changing world of the lead sjfoger for The Who; Ronnie Woodentertainment and communication tech-nologies," Mr. Weaver said.' • • -

Tim Brack, president and chief operatingofficer, agreed and added, "John's experi-ence with rapidly growing companies andhis sensitivity to the speciaHneedfl of ere-

and Charlie Watts of the Rolling Stones;and rhythm & blues singer-songwriterBobby Womack; as well as Enteractive Inc.,a whollyujwned subsidiary^which develops,produces and markets interactive entertain-

: I]

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mgraduate gemologydiploma in Calif.

Mr. Robert Paul the son of Fred-

)i

ROBERT PAUL

eric jcbrnpleted^ five-course progranvindiamonds, diamond grading, col-ored stones gem identification/and |colored stone grading at the GerW-logical Institute of America iW*»4Santa Monica, Calif., and wasawarded the prestigious graduategemologist diploma.

As a partner at Frederic's Jewel-ers in Clark, Robert is a fourth,generation jeweler in the Paul fam-ily.

CentraStateJHealthcareSystem President, and ChiefExecutive Officer, Thomas H. Lite, FACHE, is pleasedto announce the appointment of Ronald J. Guy,M.RA., of Cranford, as the System's new Chief Finan-

RONALD J. GUY, MBA

_ _ ^ f c Gjytoingwitt]tjj}un 20 years of experience inHealth care~financlhg, ancTRas served lor the last f0~years as Chief Financial Officer of Helene Fuld Medi-cal Center in Trenton. He also served on the boards,ofthe Helene Fuld Medical Center Physician HospitalOrganization (P.H.O.), and the New Jersey HealthcareFinancial Management Association. He is also aformer adjunct professor at Kean College, where hetaught healthcare reimbursement courses.

Previously, he served se\ten years at MountainsideHospital, Montclair, where he was last promoted toVice President of Finance, after accumulating experi-ence at Saint Michael's Medical Center and New Jer-sey Blue Cross, both in Newark.

"I joined CentraState Healthcare System because!

ing health care environment"

•MavH8. 1994 The Chronicle B-1

S.-JYou said IE: -We will not allow ourselves to be intimidated. Weknow that they (Union) can be beaten and thisyear-it's our turn^ -_—- -• Cranford Softball coach terry Biunno

Wright, Brown run Cranford to WC titlgRunning Hard

Cranford resident KurtKrause, a senior at St.Joeseph's

saw -amopportunity to become part of a dynarijac.growing health care delivery system," Mr. Guy «£•marked. "My role is to help CentraState managersfinancial resources, enabling the System to contirjue

=iTteeting4f4e=commtmi^Mneedj i» thia rapid]ychnnfe*=

Mr. Guy earned both his bachelor's of science dje-gree in business administration and master's qf>|i-nance from Wagner College, Staterr Island. | ;

Mr. Guy oversees the financial operations of^llentities of CentraState Healthcare System, which Ex-cludes CentraState Medical Center; Applewood.Es-tates, the life care retirement community; The Wa 123-bed skilled nursing facility; CentraState Healtcare Services, which incorporates various communflbased health care ventures; and CentraState Healtcare Foundation, the fund-raising arm of the System),

Mr. Guy is a 20^year resident of Cranfora, where^aeand his wife, Jacqueline, are the parents of one swi,D a r r e n . :l . : . " ' : } r ' " - - . •;•...'••,•: : • : ' • ' • . ' • . ' • ' . - ^ ' . ' ,

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P champion-ships byblazTng i r rat 9:49 in the 3200 meters.

In the tall he will attendand run at Allegheny Col-lege, a nationally ranked Uivi-

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Hockey StarCranford.

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Peters Prep (Jersey City) icehockey team, which endedits season with significantplayoff victories against Ber-gen Catholic High Schooland St. Joseph's HighSchool (Metuchen).

As a high-scoring right"wing, Gargiles led me teamin goals (19), assists\i 8) andpoints (37). A prep gopho-more and a two-year starterfor the Marauders, Mike.wasnamed to the all-county and

=sdfcdiv1ston-flrst4eamsras-well—]as the All-Parochial thirdteam.

LL DanceTrie Second anriual~T<eiv7

ilworth Little League Dance atthe Knights of Columbus in

. Kenilworth, Council No. 4186is from 8:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.Saturday, June 4. Music is byCisco's Disco. Donation re-.gyested is $16 per, person.Call Reginafa245-4074, Deb-bie 27^4^fe§. Any Cstft dona-tions may be dropped' off atJoanne's Hallmark, 506Blvd., Kenilworth.

Just for Kicks. The Cranford Soccer Club

will be holding in-town regis-tration for the fall season nextThursday, and ThursdayJune 2, from 7-9 p.m. at theCommunity Center onBloomingdale Ave.

Registration is open to allCranford children and stu-dents of Cranford schoolsborn between August 1,1981and July 31, 1989. Fees are$30 for the first child, $25 forthe second and $20 for thethird and over.

Legion TryoutsAmerican Legion baseball

tryouts will .be held 4 p.m.May 26 at Memorial Reid forany interested ball playersfrom Cranford. Players mustbe 19 or under before August1 to be eligible. The team be-gins play on Tuesday, June7. For further information, callcoach Nick Brown at 709-6293.

The BlazeCarol Blazejowski, the

former basketball star atCranford High, MontclairState, and a recent inducteeinto the James A. NalsmithNational Basketball Hall ofFame, will be a featured hon-oree at the March of Dimes14th annual Sports AwardBanquet 6 p.m. June 2 at theSheraton MeadowlandsHotel.

Tickets can be purchasedfor $200 by calling the NewJersey Chapter' of the Marchof Dimes at 201-882-0700.

Inside

Q CHS sports schedule.. B-2n Scoreboard... :... B-2D Youth Sports B-3

Got a score to report?k Call James Reilly at 276-6000 or^ fax to: 276-6220. Our address is:

102 Walnut Ave., Cranford, NJ.0/016.

By JAMES REILLYTHE CHRONICLE

Cranford had a very good showing at theWatchung Conference track and field cham-pionships at Gary Kehler Stadium in West-ieloVorHFViday-and-SaturdayT-as-the girls

took first place by racking up 115 points,and the boys took third with 52 points.

__,The girls dominated their portion of theliieet as junior Shaliek Wright and freshmansensation Monique Brown each swept threeevents, and senior Michele DeVito scored inthree events, while Greg Kleinsorgen took afirst for the boys.

Wright took first place in the 100-meterhigh hurdles with 17.1 seconds, the longjump) ix\ 15 feet, seven inches and scoredone of the highest marks in the state with a5-5 high jump. Wright has scored well allseason but this was definitely her best meetyet.

"I worked hard all season to get first placeirf~the conference," she said. "I was reallyexcited to get so many points. I've alwayswanted to earn a conference jacket and itfeels good now that I have."

Brown took first in the 100 meters in 12.8,the 200 meters in 27.0, and the 400 meters in60.6 to sweep the sprints and Wow the

crowd. Although only a freshman, Brownlooked to win.

"I got warmed up and in sfiape"ctaring thewinter track season," she said. "Then when Igot here, I was confident and^ust tried to domy best."

DeVito placed second in the intermediatehurdles with a 7i:?/lhifa in the high hurdlesat 17.3 and anchored the third place milerelay team with Jaime Saldino, ErinO'Brien, and Margot Iglesias, which ran astrong 4:22. ~*~

Freshman Tracy Swackhamer took thirdin the half mile with 2:27 and Iglesias tooksecond in the 220 with 27.2 and third in the

Back for revengeCranford Softball team enters UCTfinal on mission to defeat UnionBy JAMES REILLYTHE CHRONICLE

l a s t year, the Cranford soflball^ M h i itrTelinT ^

had never done before: it advancedto the Union County Tournamentfinal.

Although the team was beatenby favored Union, the girls wereunderstandably proud of them-selves for getting into the final forthe first, time.

This-year, the squad has againmade it back to the final, and, loand behold, its opponents are noneother than the same Union team.This time, however, the Lady Cou-gars are confident that, if they playtheir game the title can be won,

-aRd-are-determined to bring—the-charhpionship to Cranford.

Head Coach Terry Biunno feelsthat the outcome will be muchhappier in this, their second at-tempt, to win the county crown.^ ^ l l lbe intimidated," she said. "Weknow that they (Union) can bebeaten and this year it's our turn."

Ironically Union was a regularseason opponent last week, and theLady Cougars came out on theshort side of a 9-4 contest, but thenrebounded by besting local rivaljScotch' Plains on Friday 9-2, beforeibeating Westfield in the UCT semi-finals Saturday evening with athrilling bottom of the seventh runto put them into the finals.

A regular season victory overLinden 12-0-on Monday wrappedup a 3-1 campaign that put theCranford record at 16-3, and afterNorth Brunswick on Friday, thebig game on Saturday at LindenMemorial Field under the lightslooms large.

Shoddy defensive play and men-tal lapses contributed to the loss

against Union and despite the ef-forts' of second baseman Erin

--rell-whe-flashed-some-4eatReiaddition to driving in a run,

= left fielder Efirr"MalkowSki'r'and RBI, the team was flat

"We just had a terrible game,"said Biunno. "We started fine, wereup 4-0 after four, but then thewheels fell off."

Coming back from defeat is asign of a good team and the LadyCougars did just that as theyblitzed Scotch Plains on Friday.Right fielder Megan Lightcap hada homer, catcher Beth Koehler hada pair of RBI, and Tricia Politochipped in with two singles andthree RBI to lead the team at theplate. ^

Deerif Ttrrwpk 3aas_gc£aJLon_the~_hill in picking up the wm~ancTfn¥team was back on the winningtrack thanks to timely hitting andjust as importantly sound play inthe field, especially by Lightcap.

"T feel I'm ..better in thethan at bat," said Lightcap. "I feelcan be more consistent in the fieldand when it's a big play I'm justout there hdping it's hit to me."

That confident attitude carriedover into Saturday as Cranfordtraveled to linden and toppedWestfield, 10-9, in a see-saw matchthat just filled with offensive fire-power. ' ':••'•'-':-••'•„ '.:-'-'~'

The Lady Cougars drew firstblood as Lauren Weiss drove in arun with a fielder's choice, after awalk to Farrell and a single byMaikowski, to give Cranford a 1-0lead. It didn't last for long, though,as Westfield went on top 4-1 in thetop of the fourth. But the LadyCougars clawed right back in thebottom of the inning with threeruns.

Weiss continued to hit, as she ledoff with a single and, after a hit by

100 with a 12.9. Rounding out the scoring forthe champion Lady Cougars was Lisa Muc-cia with a fourth place finish in the highjump at 4-8, a fourth for Erin O'Brien in theintermediate hurdles in 74.1, and AlisonBrunner, who took third in the discus with82-10.

—Senior- Greg Kleinsorgen led the boys'team with a first-place finish in the 110 highhurdles with a 15.4 and followed that with asecond in the 100 meters at 11.4 and. a thirdin the 200 meters at 22.7. Ever the perfec-tionist, 'Kleinsorgen managed to find roomfor improvement in his fine performance.

(Please turn to page B-2)

Cougarsbaseballteam tails

JronOICT

Donna Polito had a key RBI single and also scored the winningrun in Cranford's triumph over Westfield Saturday at Linden.

third baseman Heather Jacobus,Lightcap sacrificed them to secondand third for Donna Polito, whorapped an RBI single. Katie Don-nelly then let loose with a two-runtriple, and the game was knotted.

Westfield showed great poise and

scored four runs in the next twoinnings to put Cranford's backagainst the wall. But, down fourruns in the bottom of the sixth, theLady Cougars responded well.

Jacobus led off with a triple and(Please turn to page B-3)

Cranford pool program growsFitness staffoffers neto stay healthyBy JAMES REILLYTHE CHRONICLE

As the weather gets wanner,thoughts inevitably turn to thewater. While some flock to thebeach, many find it more troublethan it's worth, with crowds, costsand traffic combining to over-whelm the simple pleasures ofenjoying a casual dip or a vigor-ous swim.

For residents of Cranford, how-ever, there is another choice.They can shoot on over to thePool and Fitness Center off Cen-tennial Avenue, which providesmany opportunities for waterwarriors and fitness fanaticsalike. .

In addition to the usual ac-tivities offered, like swimminglaps and working out in theweight room, one of the newerprograms featured at the pool isAqua-Aerobics, which is on thecutting edge of cardiovascular fit-ness and is also invaluable tothose needing rehab therapy.

- Two local residents, Pat Fos-sella of Cranford and Kim Huff ofKenilworth, have been workingdiligently to make the latest ad-vances in water exercise availableto pool members, and Manager.Ron Marotta had high praise fortheir efforts.

"They're real professionals,constantly trying to upgrade theirknowledge by going to confer-ences and such," he said. "Theyare both very innovative and arealways looking for ways to comeup with new programs to get themost use out of the pool."

Both women were recently

AUGUSTO F. MENE2ES/THE CHRONICLE

Cranford lifeguards Kelly Imus (far left), Chrissy Stiles and Rob Meier scrub chairs to beused poolslde Sunday at the Cranford Pool.

named to the Board of Directorsof the Aquatic Exercise Associa-tion, an international organizationwhich provides classes and certi-fication for people who are exer- •rising in the water in addition to 'on land.

Fosella offers a few good rea-sons why you might want to trytraining in the pool.

"First of all, you dont have towork as hard in the water to getyour heart rate at the same level,"she said. "Also, water gives you amuch bigger advantage, because

the impact on your joints is muchless, almost non-existent"

This" water" exercise has beenused for folks suffering from ar-thritis and those doing rehabilita-tion on knee and ankle injuriesfor some time and is just nowbeing used by athletes and fitnessbuffs in many ways. Fossella andHuff are dedicated to makingsure that whatever programmembers participate in are bothsafe and effective.

The pool-and-fitness area hasalso continued to upgrade its fa-

cilities and this year has addednew floors by the indoor pool anda free-weight room to the fitnesscenter. Future refurbishing in-cludes sprucing^ up the lockerrooms and adding more cardio-vascular equipment

The pool opens at 10 a.m. andcloses at 9 pjn. and there will beexpanded lap hours at 5 a.m. onMondays, Wednesdays and Fri-days. In addition, there will beteen and adult nights offered,which haven't been scheduled,but will be shortly.

The Cranford baseball team wasstopped short in its run at thjeUnion County title on Saturday, asthey ran into a red-hot pitcher andslugger for Summit who combinedto eliminate the Cougars, 10-2. •

The Cougars couldn't get enoughrallies going against right-handerMatt Welch of Summit, as he keptthe Cranford hitters off balance allday with his blazing fast ball, com-plemented with a nasty, hard slid-er.

Starter Hal Hansen managed afly ball off Welch in the secondinning with the,bases loaded thatdropped in to score Justin Bcrger,but it wasn't" urifiT the bottom 6tthe sixth with the team trailing 9-1that the Cougars scored again.

Frank Riccio grounded to thepitcher sharply with the basesloaded and Welch threw wildly

Justin Evans»_^ho_jeachedith a single, scored to make it 9-2

but it' never got closer. 'Summit slugger Alfie Critelli

belted a two-run homer off seniorDan Wilkin but was stymied withthe bases loaded in the seventh byjunior varsity left-hander DavePenta, who came on in the sev-enth. Penta let up an unearned runin his first varsity game. Penta wasexcited about his performance.

"I was a little nervous, but once Igot in there and starting throwingstrikes, I felt good. I'm happy withhow I did," he said.

The loss was a disappointmentfor the Cougars but they now areconcentrating on winning the con-ference title and making a run inthe state tourney as their record isa very respectable 1&-5.

The team had gotten off to agood start in the week by beatingUnion 11-7 orr Wednesday as Burg-er and Riccio led the hitting attack.Berger had a double, two singlesand three RBI and Riccio chippedin with two singles and two RBI topace the Cougars.

GOLFThe Cranford golf team had a

double dip on Monday as theycornpetedTin the state regionals atRutgers before playing Oratory in aregularly scheduled match. Theteam placed 10th at Rutgers, as se-nior Ken Hartmann scored the lowround for the squad with an 87,which was good for fifth placeoverall. Dan Hudson shot a 88 and

(Please turn to page B-2)

Lopez aimsfor SpencerBike RaceaccoladesBy JAMES REILLYTHE CHRONICLE

With the Freddie Spenser Memo-rial Bicycle Race set to run onSunday, the local cyclists with theCranford Bike Team, sponsored byCranford' Bike Shop, hopes tospeed into the state scene by ridingwell enough to place and possiblywin a race or two.

According to team presidentDavid Jussel. the best chance theteam has at finish-line glory rcstgon the small-but-sturdy shouldersof Cranford resident Manny Lopez,who has been racing in the mas-ters or veterans (over 35) categoriesrecently and has been speeding bythe opposition in most cases.

"Manny is one of the most re-spected—veteran riders in thestate," said Jussel. "He's feared. Inthe past two years; he has had tre-mendous success. He's the kind ofguy that other riders look for."

In April, Lopez placed second to(Please turn to page B-2)

I

•(>•< ol

Page 9:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

B-2 The Chronicle May 18,1994May 18, 1994 The Chronicle B-3,

SCOREBOARD

AUGUSIDJt'.,MENEZES&HE.CHBONICLE..Cranford's Justin Evans scores his team's second run in a loss to Summit in the Union CountyBaseball Tournament Saturday at Memorial Field. :

Cranfard baseball team falls from UCT•!."• (Continued from page B-l)freshman Josh Evans carded a 100flhd Chris Silvern had a 101.^'The team then faced Oratorygrid defeated them 172-198, asHudson shot a one over par 37.Hartmann carded a 43, Evans shota'46 and Silvern came in at 46. The^jin put the team record at 17;3J3jjd strengthened!its hopes to fin-ish strong against Westfield andRosellePark.

..!,. VOLLEYBALLr:..rThe Cranford volleyball team ran

2, 15-8 in the second round of theUCT.

Coach Patrick Hall feels that theteam is ready for the semifinals ofthe tourney but is not looking pastany opponents.

"It looks like we'll be playingWestfield in the next round onTuesday and I really think, thatthey are the top defensive team inthe county so we better be ready,"he said. "I feel we're playing moreconsistently and we've been look-ing pretty good."

TfeNNISjlh -victories

Over Shabazz 15-11, 15-8, Union 15-•II1. 15-7 and Johnson Regional 15-

4-1,-leading up to the state tourney.David Crosby won at first sin-

gles 7-5, 6-2 on Friday against UC,second singles Brian Silkensenwon 6-1, 6-1 and third singles DougPetschow also won 6-1, 6-2. In thedoubles, Pat Lcddy and Brian Wil-son won 6-1, 1-2 and second dou-bles Joe Rinaldi and BrendanReed won 7-6, (7-2), 7-6, (7-3).

Against Shabazz, Crosby lost athree setter, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1, beforeRyan Greenwood took second sin-gles, 6-2, 6-1, and Silkensen Won G-1, 6-2. At doubles, Christian Brot-

BOWLING

Cranford Bowling LeagueFinal Results

Reynolds Plumbing..,. 142-89Schmalz Prov .' '.: 135-96Cranford Sunoco „,...,...... 138-93Painting Plus , 131-100Modern Barbers ....r 130-101TollEngel 127-104Hull Vicci.:'...'. : .'125-106Tha Gourmet 122-109Balinskas Bros * 120.5-110.5Clark Lanes .". 117.5-113.5Seney Enterprises 115-116Cranford Barbers ..115-116D & M Meats 112-119Cranford Hotel. 1.12-119•Just 4Kicks.... 110-121 'Mason Umo * 109-122Horan Lumber , 108-120Always A Threat 97-134Reel Strong Fuel 96-135

600 Series — Mike. Pechillo (618), KenSteiner (635), Don Smith (630), Al Oppel (607),Anthony Bonlto (635). • •••m.

— 2 0 0 Games w BilFTterlander (203. 212JT-Miko Pachillo^(249, 210). Ken-Steinor (211,

241), Robert Bendlln (215), Ray Hensel Sr.(203), Ray" Hensel Jr. (205), Dave Farrell (214),Mike Brinker' (202, 214), Butch Holland (203),Don Smith (226. 223), Bob Sivitsky (214), JoeWeber (alB). JOnri WeBef (217),i M*kM_R~uy-giano (200); Stick Kuggland(223); DorrRor- "vath (222), Kevin Forrestal (213), George Pace(201), Bob Hodge (224). Walter Pagurek (212),

^ony~3oTiiro~3rr'<209)rffl itf 'pny''Bonlio~t206r""223), Jim Dellitos (215), Al Oppel (213, 201),

Jimmy Walsh (204), Jim Heywoocl (202). JoeSpecht (208), Tom Rotella (213, 220), GaryMarten (208), Rich Sorge (206).

This year's Sports Camps will be coordi-nated by Fred Perry, UCC's athletic director,under (he supervision ol the Department olContinuing Education and Community Ser-vices.

• • •Big East Football Camp

Big East Sports Camps will conduct footballcamps at"two locations this summer. The BigEast Quarterback and Receiver Camp and the'*Big East Midget Football Camp will be heldbetween July 10 and 13 al Moravian College inBethlehem. PA. Between July 17 and 20, there;,will be a midget camp for grades four througheight, a quarterbacif'and receiver camp and abig man camp for grades nine through 12 atRowan College in Glassboro, NJ. The big mancamp specializes In offensive and defensivelineman, as well as linebackers.

K . r Konler, the head coach at Rowan Col-

809,Edith Kenny, Garwood. 32. 30:2ft 813Wil-liam Wallace, Cranlord, 50. 30:25; 31:15;858.Karen Sherman, Cranlord, 31. 31:39;878.Lee Wallace, Cranford. 37, 31:43;894.Jean Maler, Cranford, 40, 32:02;JohnWoglom, Cranford. 46, 39^Qj£i j iyA£haronLee, Garwood, 41 r39:59; " '

USATF MAY CALENDAR '* * »*lWednesday, May-18--— American Home

Products Run For Pride 5K, Giralda Farms,Madison, 6 prri, Sneaker'Factory, Box 150.Mlllbum. NJ 07041, 201-376-0231

Sunday, May 22 - Springfield 10K, 1 Mileat 9:30 am, 10K at 10 am, USATF- NJ Men'sOpen . Championship 10K, - P O, Box 90§,Springneld, NJ 07081. 201-376-0231, (MRdf>-

RTS 9.

log-., will act as Executive Director for allcamps. Steve Tucker, the offensive line coachat Rowan, will act as director of the MidgetCamp. Chuck Donohue, head coach of BuenaRegional H.S. and 1988 South Jersey Coach ofthe Year, will direct the Quarterback and Re-ceiver Camp. Tom Doddy, offensive coordina-tor at Muhlenberg College, will act as headcoach for the Big Man Camp. A number ofgreat coaches and NFL players will join thishigh quality coaching staff.

Sunday, May 22 — Run for H.O.B.I.N. I Oft;Old Bridge, 9 am, 908-583-3990, The RacquntPI, 163 Rt. 34. Old Bridge, 07747,(MRGP-4O6pts) • • • ' . . ,

Sunday, May 22 — Point Pleasant Beach 5-Mile Rurv Point Pleasant Beach, 1 Mile at.'8am, 5 Mile (race walk division) 8:30 am, 9Qft-364-2828 / . .sO

Wednesday, May" 25 - Healthy Heart Run-SKTMorristown, 7 pm, 800>447*3337r95 !^affi—son Aye. Morristown, 07962. (MRGP-500 pts

BASEBALL

Cranford Baseball and Softball Leagues .

Boys Memorial League

i Cardinals 6, Brewers 2 -• The Cardinals picked up their fifth win of the.,season with Kevin Desimone picking up thewin with an 11 strikeout complete game vic-tory. Leading Ihe way for the Cardinal offense--were Pat Gailliot (HR, 2 runs). Chris Marmo (2RBI, run), Bobby Sawicki (2 hits, run), Andy'Bausch (run), Devin Klebaur (run), and MacMuntz (RBI). Also contributing to the offensewere Nicky Frangipane and Mike Carbone.

Derrick Brooks pitched well for the Brewersand keyed their offense with 2 hits and a runscored. Keith Orlberston drove in one for theBrewers. Also playing well were Chris Renaud,

=• Dan Kovalisky, Chris Symanski, Buddy Roach,Matt Renaud, J.R. Frankol and Jesse Gold-k

Sports Camps, P.O. Box 31, Wenonah,. NJ08090 or call either (609) 224-0959 or (215)965-9508.

. Myron Guyton Football uamp ,Safety Myron Giiytori of'tfie New YorkTGiants

will hold one of the top youth instructional foot-ball camps in the country for boys: ages 8-18ffom Jur^"2^ulv"3tto

Saturday, May 28 — Spring Lake 5-Mile,8:30 am, Box 534, Spring Lake. NJ, 07762;,908-223-0319 • - I iiu

Sunday, May 29 — Stepping Out'If or Edfrcation 5K, Piscataway, lu am, 9UB-1Ext ;«2". Monday, May 30 — Ridgewood Run 1j)K

_and 5K,_ 10K al 8:45 am, Box 56. Bldqewood

"Joe Creoca, Jeff O'Oonnell, Craig GorczycaAnd Chris Furino provided the key hits ih thebig rally. O'Donnell got the victory on thenpund and Jordan Kalczuk got out of a bases

Iff'i Jam in thp *ith ' " plrl< *ip *h« sqyri AlinAngels

runs in the sixth.Scqring were Jay Davidson.Steve Hanus, Jared Kosch, Malt Esolda, TomNewman twice and Ted Dooley throe times.Rich Noble, Chris Poirier, Brian McCarthy.George Hulan, Ian Alcock and Keith Forlus allplayed well. •

Boys Double AA Baseball

Eagles 5, Hawkeyes 3 -Ron Roberts pitched a complete game for

the Eagles allowing only 3 hits will striking out10. Mike Digianor6hris-Salte-an<i-tee-Pachii'—each singled. Brian Weingart had 3 hits andPatrick Martin and Rich Horn two each, B.Haber, Kerry Drexler, R. Roberts,, J. Skolnikand A. Minitelli had one apiece for the Eagles.Jlrrt Zelenbach and Craig Frost pitched for theHawkeyes and struck out 8.

Eagles 7, Cougars 6 -In a game which saw the lead changti hands _

five times the Eagles, with a run in the seventh,-on-to-defeaUho-Cougars 7-6 R' Horn..B-.

Haber and B. Weingart handled the pitchingfor the Eagles allowing only 5 hits and strikingout 11. Horn and Habecled the Eagles with 2hits, as Weingart, R. Roberts, Kerry Drexler,

Bruins 10, Wildcats 2 -Pat Mahor had 2 singles and scored twice

and Dave Heuer walked, singled twice andscored twice. Anthony Retola had 2 RBI's on atriple and a' single, Tom Sinnott was hit by apitch in'the sixth and took second on a walk toJeff Bergin and Stole third and after a walk toMike Tretola loaded the bases. Grog Cierkows-ki singled home a run and M. Tretola drove inanother before Greg Massey rounded out thescoring with a ground out. Terrell Lewispitched a complete game striking out 12 Wild-cats.

The Wildcats scored 2 runs. Rob Brunner •~wa1fcearsl0t6~56cond and~went-to-thlrd-on-a-gfouriS out by Ed Sweeney and scored-on asingle by Guvnoc. Donnie Mahoney reachedon an error, stole second and scored on atriple by Brian Beirne. Tim Meyer pitched acomplete for the Cats.

Mustangs 21, Hawkeyes 5 -Tho Cranford Sunoco Mustangs defeated

the Rustic Mill Hawkeyes as Chris Feinthel had-4 tuts. Kevin-Feoloy-and-Ed-BombacLhad 3.hits while Evan Kalczuk, Roberto Perez, Bill

Paten. The Pawnees wore led by Bulthauptand ArTtries -'. • .__;

Cheycnnes 13, Cherokees 5 -The Cheyennes put on their hitting shoos to

defeat the Cherokeos with a 10 run fourth fu-eled by the bats of Robert Rich, Scott Bing-ham, Sean Freeman, Harry McCann, MikeDooley arid Chris Ozolnieks. Brady Booth andTom Flanagan provided the pitching with ChrisBelsky behind the plate. Solid delensive playby Ryan Fanelli, Jim Zajac, Alex Rowen andAndrew Pavlak stopped a late Cherokee rally.

^he Cheyennes continued to live by the biginning by defeating tho Apaches 11-6 with a 10run second inning highlighted by hits fromScott Bingham, Brady Booth, Chris Bolsky,Chris Ozolnieks and Mike Dooley. Tom Flana-gan pitched the final inning to seal the win.Defensive outfield play was provided by SeanFreeman, Harry McCann, Ryan Fanelli andAlex Rowen, with outstanding achievement by

ling with 2 each. Liz Sweeney and Nita Co-• lascaeach had one. Playing woli defensively

for the Bobcats were Kaitlin Wolf, Sweeney andPfeiffer. For the Stalljons were Foster. ChristinaBayak and Kate Grutzmaker,

Bobcats 12, Panthers 1 -Again sharing the pitching duties were Robin

Schweitzer and Christine Milkoski who held thePanthers to 1 hit with 12 strikeouts. Stronghitting by the Bobcats was led by ChristinaClark, who had a bases loaded triple and was'hen driven in by Lyndsey Pfeiffer and

-Schweitzer -atso-chlpped-in-with-a-couple ofhits. The Panthers Mary Dollard struck out 8and also had a double. Also hitting wereCandy Orshak, Liz Sweeney and Kaitlin Wolf.

Girls Division 5 *•Panthers 3, Starlights '1 " - " "

After falling behind 1 -0 on a broakawathe Cranford Panthers answered with 3 talliejs?improving their season record to 5-2. K.K. Fofcter clicked first, mooting a dollocted shot' tan1

goal on the first touch, blasting the ball patiithe keeper. Katie Sands followed with a har($shot on goal which found the lower .left hanpcorner. Foster played a.beautiful ball into the,'open space for Nicole Capno who beat the*keeper to the right side of the net. «

Maura Gallagher, Liz Niesz, Liz. Sweeney|JAmy Snyder and Katie Donnelly controlled the)midfield. Dever Kennedy, Jillian Murray. Mel-Jissa Evans and Corey McCarthy-Lakata an*chored the defense. Keeper Mary Beth Zankq,made ten saves and was strong coming off her*

line. •j

Sparkles 2, West Windsor 2 -

were led by David Drechsel, Matt Ooktor, KevinWest.

IN THE NEWS

Cranford Rotary Club golf outingThe fourth annual Cranford Rotary Golf Out-

ing will take place on Monday, May 23, at TwinBrooks Country Club in Watchung. Proceedswill help benefit the Rotary's scholarship pro-gram as well as its community service projects.Prizes will be awarded for the top gross andnet scores. In order to sign up for the noonshotgun start or if you wish to advertise in theprogram, contact Alan Churchill al 276-6000.

SPORTS CAMPS

recorcjTsto 13-3 with victories overUnioTrCalholic, 5-0, and Shabazz,

-ea—and Wilseri'-won—6-1—6-1,-and—Reod and Jeremy Platt won 6-0, 6-0.

ILopez aims for Spencer bike race accolades

\\

(Continued from page B-l)reigning;w^ld mYsteFcliainpChipBerezny at the Rahway River Parkliaco, which was hosted by theCranford team, and later won the*rtain senior event on the sameday. He continued his drive for thechampionships May 7 by winningthe vets division at the High PointWill .Climb and then placed fourthJajst Saturday in the Bear Moun-tain Race in upstate New York. _...Lopez is looking forward to rac-

,iflg in the-Freddic-Spenser-Memo-Itial in Scotch Plains and hopes totJnish amongst the leaders.?tv"It's a pretty special race to me

because, about 10 years ago, theyw a race in Scotch Plains on adifferent course with a differentname but it was my first race and Iwon so 1 have good memories ofracing in Scotch Plains," he said.. "It's a real bike handlers course

because of all of the right and lefttarns one after another, almostlike a figure eight," h e added. "I'mrftore of a climber. I'm better atv jlien you have to pick your body"ftp and go against gravity. Thisrace is tailored to what we call

JHammerheads' — guys who bendinto turns and just put their headsfclown and fly.

"I raced the Freddie Spenserast year, and I missed a breaknd never caught up, so I was dis-ippointed. I'm looking forward too well this year close to home

vith people cheering."Those looking tp cheer on Lopez

nd his mates on the Cranford

Union County College Sports CampsSeven Sports Camps in softball. baseball,

basketball, soccer, and tennis will be offered toyoung people this summer by Union CountyCollege, which will provide intensive Instructionin the skills and techniques of each sport.

Registration is underway for the sevenSports Camps by calling.709-7600. The SportsCamps- w

Kutztown, Pa. The camp features top instructtion froiri New York Giants players like Guyton,tight end Howard Cross, running back RodneyHampton, center Bart Oates and quarterbackPhil Simms, as well as top college coaches.

"Our goal is to teach the boys a lot of foot-ball while having a great time. Our main goal isto send each boy home a better citizen orperson with a more positive outlook on life. Wetry to teach them that football is not tho ulti-mate end of life," Guyton said. . /£

Other Giants that will instruct at the campinclude defensive end Stacey Dillard, safetyGreg Jackson, guard Bob Kratch, wide re-ceiver Ed McCaffrey and- running back LewisTillman. The Giants players attending do notmake token appearances. They spend the en-tire day working with trie boys and, when prac-tice is over, they spend an additional hourcoaching the players who play their, position,-fciuylon-wtll. oo ot-tno camp ei4 hours Q day;

; " J U N E . R A C E CALENDAR ' 1

June 3 — ServiceMaster Run By The Lake5K, Hamilton, 7:£o PM, USATF-NJ MastersMen and. Women's championships, 609-890-8343, 3448 Nottingham Way, Hamilton Sq., NJ08690,(Midland Run Grand Prix-700pts). '"'l«

June 5 - Pleasant Valley 5K Twilight ChftV

lenge, Basking Ridge, 6 pm, 908-204-302'S

(days). V; . ••.;•• •.•' t •

June 5 — USATF-NJ Masters Track arjglField Championship, Morimouth Regional HighSchool, Long Branch, 908-44&6696. >s

June 7 — Raritan VaJ[ey Rbad Runner'sSummer Series 5K, Highland PirR, 7:00 pM;908-254-3120,908-390-4667.; ^

June 8 — j and H( Twilight Classic 5K, Parj-slppany, 7 pm, USATF-NJ Open Women !6Championship. 201-984-8227, 10 Sylvan Way,

.Punter Mike Horan will also hold a kickingcamp at Kutztown Irom June 28-30. Hprah'scamp will feature top NFL kickers and punterswho will instruct, while Horan will be' at thecamp 24 hours a day as well.

For more information concerning both pro-grams, please call 1-800-466-6888, Overnighthousing is available at both camps: >.

Cranford residnet Manny Lopez (left) hopes to win the FreddieSpencer Bike Race this weekend.

Bike Team should look for thefunky bright yellow and orangejerseys specked with squares andtriangles and giv<£~lhelrt; some sup-port as they try to race to Victory.

,• ' GEORGE PACCIELLO/THG CHRONICLE

I Shaliek Wright captured three titles, including the high jump, asj'Cranford won the Watchung Conference Track and Field Cham-

^^ar-—=-MJlonships last weekend.

SPORTSCALENDAR

County Division of Parks and Recreation andIhe Cranlord Board of Education. Discounted •registration foes will bo available boforo May15. _

Sports Camps for young people ages 8-17will be available in softball, baseball, basketballand tennis.

"Soccer lor Boys and Girls" will be con-0uclod in Nomahegan Park, across-the streetfrom UCC's Cranford Campus, (rom Aug. 1-5,

"Baseball for Boys and Girls," with a choiceavailable of three time slots (July 11-15, July18-22 or July 25-29), will also be conducted InNomahegan Park.

"BaskelbaHfor Boys arid Girls" will be heldin the Cranford High School gymnasium with aselction of two time slots (July 18-22 and July25-29). "Basketball for Girls Only" also will beheld at the high school from July 11-15.

A week of "Soccer for Girls" will be con-ducted in Nomahogan Park from August 8-12.

Five sections ol "Tennis" will be avaialable,utilizing the UCC's Cranford Campus tenniscourts for ages 9-17. Participants may selectthe following time slots: June 27-July 1, July11-15, July 18-22. Aug. 1-5. or Aug. 8-12.

A "Pee-Wee Tennis Camp" will be held forages 5-8, with a week-long session conductedfrom Aug. 15-19 at the Cranford Campuscourts. .

This year's Sports Camps directors will be:Ted Tharney for soccer, Bob Lelli tor basket-ball, Luis Fabiani for tennis, Ray Clecwisz forbaseball ancUiivio Mancino for soflball.

Camps will run from 9 a.m. to -3 p.m., andmorning instruction will start with WafTflUpiPlayers will work with coaches at Instructionalstations. Postitional play and instructional spe-cializatiqn will be followed by a one-hour lunchperiod. During the afternoon, players will listento lectures featuring individual and group dem-onstrations before the day finishes with practi-cal application of lecture session and participa-tion in camp games.

RUNNING

MIDLAND RUNFAR HILLS — Ryan Grote, 20, from Be'dmln-

ster placed third in the Midland Run 15K Sun-day. Grate, a recent transfer to North CarolinaState University, started his summer vacationoff fight, defeating all dlher New' Jersey ran-ners in the prestigious 9.3-mile road race. •• Grate's time was 46:50, just one secondback from Abidi Bouazza who took second.Finishing first was Khalid Kalrouani of Astoria,N.Y. in 44:57.

MIDLAND RUN 15KFAR HILLS, MAY 15

Local FinishersPlace Runner Name, Town, Age, Time54.Robert Penn, Cranford, 32, 55:56; 137.DanKaralis, Cranford, 34, 59:45; 175.Rocco DeliaSerra, Cranford, 33, 1:01:01;.374.BiH Owings,Cranford, 44, 1:06:22: 375.Anthony Mchale,Cranford, 47, 1:06:26; 389.Rlchard Maler,Cranford, 43, 1:06:48; 474.Robert Cambel|,Cranford, 41, 1:08:17; 650.David Arneson,Cranford, 38, 1:11:22; 81 O.Robert Schrelber,Cranford, 39,1:13:46; 967.Stephen Dunn, Gar-wood, 39,1:16:44;1004.Leslle Schrelber, Cran-ford. 37, 1:17:23; 7:26; 1066Robert Kehr,Cranford, 29, 1:18:37: 1O96.Margaret Me Hale,Cranford, 40, 1:19:01; 1112.Paul Pasternak,Cranford, 30, 1:19u12; 1364.Melanie MeDonald, Cranford, 45, 1:24:44; 1437.RichardMe Oonald, Cranford, 60, 1615.Mavyra Eska,Cranford. 39, 1:34:19; 1654 Tomilson, Cran-Toro, s«£, \\i\'£\'£d.\ lOiH.Ouihui l i iu Mlllui, Gm-

wood, 25. 1:46:22;MIDLAND RUN 5K

FAR HILLS, MAY 15Local Finishers

Place Runner Name, Town, Age, Time375.Avelino Santos,. Cranford, 43, 24:38;418.James Corcoran, Cranford, 30, 24:59;649,Marguerlte Schwarz, Cranford, 28, 26:52;

June 11 — Bonnie Brae 5-Mile Cross Courf-try Race, Bernards Township, 10:30 am, 908-647-0800 days, 201-539-2079 eves.

Juno 11 — Princeton June Fete 10K, Prince>ton, 8 am, 609-924-3957. '»

June 11 — Fishawack Four-Mile RJrl;Chatham, 9:30 am. 201-635-0674. J"

June 11 — N j Tournament ol ChampionsTorch~Relayr'FTBehpld~tcr-tutcGuite Air • Forpg~Base, 6:15 am 908-462-7945 or 908.-780-5638^.June 11-12 — USATF:NJ Open Track aritl

Field Championships, 908-463-8444.June 12 — Sprint In Clinton 5-Mile, Clinlonj

6:45 pm, 908-236-6331 21 Main Street, Leb'ar

n p n , 0 8 8 3 3 . . . . : • •:•.. • . , ... ... , „ „

.: Juno: 12 W 5K Run . For Mcntall Health!Cedar Grove; 9 am, 201 -74443522,' 60! So::' Fd)'-lerton, Suile.210. Montclair.(MRGP-400 pis). !vl

June 14 — Sneaker* Factory Couples Run, 4and 2 Mile, South Mountain Reservation, SouthOrange, 6:30 pm, 201-376-0231.

——June-1-5—-Race-Judicata SKfJohnson Parkr-Piscataway, 6:30 pm, Sneaker Factory, Box150, Mlllburn 07041, 201-376-0231, (MRGI*-400 pts).- • - . 3

June 18 — Run For The Roses 10K, Daprville, 7 pm, 201-539-627S, 5 Ardsleigh DrivftMadison 07940,(MRGPT400'pts).''; "

June.18 — Hamilton Optimist SK Run, Vet-eran's Park, Hamilton Township, 609-737-6951, RR 2, Box 74, Titusville. 08560. ,',

June 18 - USATF-NJ Multi-Event T & ,F' Championships, 908-463-8444. o1

June 19 — Warren County Heritage Festival5K, Oxford. 9 am, 9u8-«5-6204.

June 19 — Hudson County Bar 5-Mile, Lib-erty State Park In Jersey City, 10 am, 201-34H-0990. , ,'j

June 19 —• Father's Day Classic, Wood-bridge 5K and 10K, 8 am, 908-634-6500. 3

June 20 — President's Cup'Night Race 5rf.Mlllbum, 8 pm, USATF-NJ Open Men's <pionship 5K, Sneaker Factory, Box 150, Mill'bum 0704TT2B1 -376-0231, (MRGP-700 pts),

June 25 — Bernardsville 10K Run, 9 ami-908/766-2546. .. j

' -;Wtie-a«*<r Raritan Valley Road RunneriCross Country 5K, Highland pack, 7 pm, 908[254-3120 or 908-390-4666. ' ' I

All times p.m. unless otherwisenoted

WEDNESDAY, MAY 18Baseball

Kearny at Cranford, 4Softball

Cranlord at Koarny, 4Volleyball

Union Catholic at Cranlord'. 4Tennis

Linden at Cranlord. 4 .y Golf

Union CalhQlie al Cranlord, 4

FRIDAY, MAY 20Soflball

Cranford at North Brunswick, 4Volleyball

Cranford at Summit, 4Tonnls

Railway al Cianloid. 4

SATURDAY, MAY 21Baseball

-Crantorrt'irmtatwtoarnoyr-fBA—Softball

Cranloril vs. Union al Lindon. 7:15

MONDAY, MAY 23Baseball

Ciiinloid al North Brunswick, 'ITennis

. Scotch Plains al CranlorcJ. 4Golf

Ciiinloid al Rosullo Poik, 3

TUESDAY.V/IAY-24Golf

Ciunford al Wostliuld. 3

fiTHLETE OF THE WEEK

MONIQUE BROWNCranford High Track

Brown simply dominated the sprints at theWatchung Conference track and field champi-onships. The freshman won the 100 dash in12.8 seconds, the 200 in 27.0 and the 400 in60.6 to' score a whopping 30 points and helplead the Lady Cougars tq the championship.

"As chosen by Forbes Newspapers' Sports Dopt."

PINGYOUR SPORTINO GOODS COMPLEX

513 W. UNION AVE., (RT. 28) BOUND BROOK. NEW JERSEY/908-356-0604Mon.. Tues.. Thurs.. Frl. 8:30 Afvi 1o 9 PM/Wed. & Sat. 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM

hitting.for the Angels were Matt Small (HR.single), Mike Snyder (single) 7»nd Billy Bennett(double). Ryan Schmitt and Tom Arthur shared

_jhe_mQund_dutlesJot-theJled-Sox.comblnlrig_Jor_6_sMkeouts.-HittingJor.the.Scocwere-Mike_

Merrentino (3 singles), Ryan Heck (double),.Tom Arthur (single), and Evan Etkoury (single).

Angels 8, Brewers 3 -"The Angels won their fifth game of the year

behind the slugging of Jelf O'Oonnell (2 sin-gles, triple, J RBI). Also adding to the offensewere; Craig Gorczyca (single, double), Bill Ben-nett (2 singles), Matt Small (double), Joe Crec-ca, Chris Furino and T.J. Ahem with singles.Sharing the mound duties were Matt Small andJordan Kalczuk who combined to strikeout 10."> Pitching for the Brewers were Keith Gilbert-son, Brian Kovolisky and Chris Renaud. HittingIpr the Brewers were Derrick Brooks, BrianKovolisky, Keith Gilbertson and Buddy Roach.

The Red Sox and Angels game last week wascanceled after a light lailure in the top of thefourth inning and although the Sox were lead-ing 8-0 at the time of the electrical mishap thegame will have to be replayed in its entirety ata,later date.

each had two hits. Opaluch pitched a completegame to pick up his 3 victory. The Hawkeyeswere led by Jim Zielenbach with 2 hits. CraigFrost, Miko Sawicki, Ray Weigel and JustinMnnni-h nkn hit gafoly fnr thp HawkftyftS

Mohicans 8, Iroquols 5 -The Mohicans victory was led by strong

pitching performances from Greg Poszyler,Nick Flamlnl and Sean Bryan. The offe

U-'?SLJ?B«i™'« <"'U™'HL«™ ™'™«"'.'™ °"» led by Brian Scotti's 2 triples and 5 RBI. Bryan"apiece. Joe Muccia and Brian Harley pitched Cougars 12, Mustangs 9 - and David Civile also had base hits. Contribut-for the Cougars. Chris Baron had 3 hits and The Cougars put together a 15 Hit attack to ing to the victory were Kevin Kessler, Kyle War--Brtan-Hariey-and-Steve-Skordiniski had-one—beat-the-Muslangs-15-9rthe-hitt4ng^«as-led-by^—ringtonr^rJan-Hing^Mark-P-isaano^EricJaraDdi:

Jay Whalen-(4~hit9;-5-RBI)rJoey-Muccia (-3—Stoven-Carbone, RyaruByraesand.Paul.Buan-.

Bobcats 9, Koalas 4 -Jillian Meyers led the hitting with an RBI

single and a bases loaded triple for the victoryas the dynamic duo of Chrissy Milkoski andRobin Schweitzer-held the Koalas-to 5-hits-and Tho Sparkles-played-to-a-tio-againsl-4t4had 13 strikeouts. Kaitlin Wolf, Lyndsey Pfeiffer F i r e c r a g k e r 3 ^ U u r e n o'Donnell scored twd

-aiKLCapcix OjshaJc^alsoWt well for Jh^Cate — „ ^ , SamanthiDe.ens.vely Megan Melse Stacy Sheerin AF~ "i^j^^^^rflison Milkoski and Nita Colasco helped to keep • . %; •**the Koalas at bay. Hitting for the Koalas were N c g f 0 a n d k e e p e r s M l c h o l ° S e 9 e a r a n d C l a ! ? e

Megan Mahar, Carol Wichusen, Christine Poli- Dennis f l ayed well. The midfield of Amanda

Huskies 11, Cougars 7 -The Extech Huskies broke open a tight

game with a 4 run third inning runs and out-lasted the tough Variety Bin Cougars by ascore of 11-7. Kevin Fontana led the way with3 singles and 5 RBI's. Brian Keleman alsoswung the hot bat with 2 long doubles and anRBI. Vinny D'Angelo and Kevin O'Donnelladded 2 singles apiece. Also hitting safelywere Quinton Lewis with a double and 3 RBI's.Marc Petito with a single and 2 RBI's andTapan Parikh with a single. The Huskie pitch-ing duties were handled by Kevin O'Donnelland Joe McComb.

The Cougars explosive attack unleashed 13hits of their qwn as.Jay Whalen. Chris Baran,Joe Muccia, Steve Skordinski and David Ko-chowski all collected 2 hits apiece with Muccia"knocking-in-S-fons-antt-Skordinsift-S-runs^Also-

hits, 6 RBI), Chris Baran (3 hits). Mark Stiansen aguro.(2 hits, RBI) and Brick Reilly (2 hits). Othershaving hits were Jon Morris and Ron Kulik.

The Mustangs had hits by Kevin Feeley,Evan Kalczuk, Roberto Perez, Kevin Knight,Frank Merentino, Chris Feinthel and Mike Bazi-lus. Also playing well for the Mustangs wereEddie Bombaci, Bill Opaluch, Chris Gather-cole, Paul Piatkovi/ski and Whit Percy'

Playing well (or the Iroquois were Derek Zu-lick and J.J. Occi who both pitched well andchipped in with •a few hits. Also hitting well forthe Iroquois were John Markowitz and DrewD'Amico with 1 hit each. Playing good gamesdefensively were Brett Miller, Mark Bostel,Brian McFadden, Joe Colangero, MatthewWing, Mark Colaco. Zach Cohane and KurtOlsen.

"dore"anaTane"Calanno. Murray,-" and the front line of Jackie Evaristo, Tara Brprij

Cougars 11, Leopards 6 - n a n . Kel lY Donnelly, Jessica Stylor and—rHitting-for-the-eougars-were-Wnne-^Ffier-—Meghan- Mc^Fiii[aD_alLplayj!d_wsll^ -^marfa~JearTlvTarre~UriishrCalli"eTrne Conneuy,Shannon Paster, Kathleen Henehan, CanieThermann, Irene Kenny, and Katie Schramm.

"Hitting for the Leopards were Amy Noble,Stacy Ames, Carolyn Coda, Jennifer McFad-den, Kathleen Osaben, Lauren Ames, Maura

Dodgers 7, Giants 4 -•The Dodgers defeated the Giants 7-4 as An-

drew Kindler pitched and drilled a homer forthe Dodgers. The Dodgers also got help fromJames Seaman, Ryan McGlynn and Eric Mont-gomery, who got on base in the fifth andscored on a ground out by Dave Coughlin anda'double by Joey Bottino. Montgomery also

TOtlevedKindterirrthe^fltr.-Nick-Seaman (sin...gle). Chris Gessner, Kevin, Bryan and TomStratton also played well'for the Dodgers.

Ths Giants were led by pitcher Phil Matz ashe singled after a Jeremy White walk and Johnfviiccio followed with a three run homer, Matzlater doubled to drive In Tom Polito. Also play-ing well for the Giants were Eddie Feeley, JoeUnish, Dave Stanley, Rob Wise, Mike Kavalus,Kevin Hutchinson; Greg Donofrio and MarllnMacphearson.

Boys Adams League

Braves 15, Twins 4 -,,; Providing.. offense for, the Braves .were. .Ce:

sare Somma, Keith McDougall, Jim Colitti, DanHiggins, Jason Smith, Sam Warrington, MattVenditti, Sean Klempa, Pat Mahoney and TomConnelly, who homered. Venditti, Connelly andKlempa pitched well, while Anthony Barlese,Adam Soney and Steve DiMarco excelled Inthe field. Scoring for the Twins were Tim Mam-rak, Jeff Gawley, Oennis Gesumarla and DanPyne. Dean Russamano, Ryan Stark, MikeDelia Serra, Matt Widdows, Jason Pedde andMike Grau hit well. Chris Russamano pitchedwell and Ernie Collucci made a great catch Inleft field.

Braves 10, White Sox 9 -, The Braves had a balanced attack, with Pat

Mahoney, Sean Klempa, Matt Venditti, TomConnelly, Sam Warrington, Dan Higgins, JimColitti, Keith McDougall and Steve DIMarcoscoring. Jason Smith, Cesare Somma, AdamSoney and Anthony Barlese also excelled atthe plate. The White Sox made it close with 5

contributing to tho aiinck with singles wero1 Ron Kulik, Jonathan Morris and Tony Richard-son. The Cougar pitching chores were handledby Brian Harley, pitching a complete game.

Eagles 5, Hurricanes 3 -A game thai went eight innings the Eagles

edged the Hurricanes 5-3. The Eagles opened_the_sc°.ring_%ijhe..firston doubles by R. Rob-

erts scoi ing Rob Haber and Rich Horn, thoEagles added another run in the fourth. BobbyHaber and R. Horn held the Hurricanes tothree runs and four hits in the eight inninggame. The Hurricanes broke through for two,runs in the fifth inning on a single byReppertand a triple by Seager. The Hurricanes tied thescore with'a single by Benlsh.

In the top ol the eighth the Eagles scoredthe go ahead runs when Greg Metchnik fot histhird game winning hit of the season driving inWeingart who had walked and Roberts whohad gotten his third hit of the game. Bobby

"Haber came on in the eighth inning put oul Ihefire. Rich Pollack and Rob Seager pitched afine game for the Hurricanes.

Bruins 8, Bulldogs 8 -The Bulldogs scored five times in the top of

the first. After Dave Pean walked and stole 2bases, Jay Colaneri walked and stole secondand Matt Porter drive him in with a ground out.Andrew Nordstrom had an RBI single andwhen the next 4 hitters Jason Harris, Jon Kar-mol, John Peddle and Mark Kelley singled, 5runs had crossed the plate. The Bulldogsscored 2 more runs on a single by Harris andtheir final run came on a double by Harris thatdrove in M. Porter.

Terrell Lewis, Anthony Retola, Chris Faitoute,Dave Heuer and Nick Fekete all played welloffensively. Jeff Bergin, Greg Clerkowski andPat Maher also had good games.

Cougars 12, Bruins 10 -The Cougars had to go nine innings to win

after the Bruins scored 5 runs in the bottom ofthe seventh to tie it up. The Cougars wore ledby the hitting of Mark Stiansen (3 hits), JayWhalen (2 hits), and Chris Baran (2 hits, 1homer). Others having hits were Brian Harley.Brick Reilly, Joey Muccia and Jon Morris. Sup-porting the squad in delenso were Mike O'Arcy, Tony Richardson and Dave Kochowski.

Doing a fine job lor tho Bruins wero TonyRotola (3 hits), Pat Maher (3 hits), and Dave

Cluib fiiiluuUj. Ter

Diamonds Senior Division Softball

Amethysts 20, Opals 9 -Keying the A's effort was a 12 run outburst in

the first two innings that was ignited byDaniello Chilinski's bases loaded triple. MeganGulhrie scored 4 times for tho A's and BethDecker tallied 2 runs lor the A's as did MeganWeiss who also pitched a good game. K. C.Symanski. Christine Cavicchioli and JaclynSaoo played well in the liold iQr the A's. Also

Jill Knpirhi Snrah Henlser

Gallagher, Rachel Ramsey, Christine Marra,Maureen Traynor, and Anna O'Malley.

Cougars 20, Lynx 4 - ,Shannon Paster had a home run. Others

with hits were Kathleen Henehan, CatherineConnally, Meredith Mazillo, Kim Baer, Joy Mer-kel, Anne Thermann. Katie Schramm and Pas-ter did an excellent job pitching. Hitting for theLynx wqre Jessica D'Elia, Oever Kennedy.Jackie Feinthel, Kalhleen Dillion and TaylorRaftree.

SOCCER

Sparkles 2, Westfield 2 -The Sparkles scored 2 first half goals again

and were tied by Westfield but hung, on to trje2-2 tie. Lauren O'Donnell had both goals in tfjefirst half. Kristen Brady, Katie Burke, SamanthaDango. Lisa Gessner and Tara Brennan keptturning the Fury away until they struck for wogoals in the second half. Splitting the goaleeduties were Michole Segear and Claire Dennisthe midfield was controlled by Murray, Styler,Segear, and Valerie Nigro and the forwardswere Jackie Evaristo, Kelly Donnelly, O'Donhelland Meghan McGauran. *\

Sparkles 4, New Providence 0 -The Sparkles dominated Ihe game as Lau-

ren O'Donnoll scored in tho first half off a passfrom Catherine Sweeney. Tara Brennan, JackieW and O'Donnoll scored in the secot\d

nott and Collin Orshak.

Boys Minor's

Lenapes 12, Crows 0 -The Lenapes drove in 5 runs on triples, by

Jeremy Martin and Mike Polidoro and an RBIdouble by Sebastian Ardaengo. Alex Prawdzikalso drove in 2 runs in the third with his first hitof the year. The Lenapes closed out Ihe scor-ing with'2 runs in tho lourth and four in thefifth.

Apaches 5, Mohicans 5 -The Apaches tied the Mohicans on a two out

1 single by Michael Bell. Tho Apaches scored ona single by Brian Glannecchini. and a DavidDreschsel walk followed by a Malt Doktor sin-gle' and Kevin West singled home 2 runs. RyanGrau walked and Michael Boll singled home arun. In tho sixth inning Matt Galhorcole walked,David Drechsel tripled him homo, aftor walks toWest and Grau, Bell qame up with a big singleto tio the game. Also playing well for theApaches were Ian Clark, Randy Lutz, JimSheerin, Scott Kachmar, and Bobby Timms.

The Mohicans scored 2 runs in the first in-ning on a walk to Brian Scotti, a single by NickFlamini, a single by David Civile, Greg Po'syzyler got hit by a pitch forcing in a run andKevin Kessler grounded out forcing in theother run. In the third, inning Scotti walked,Sean Bryan hit an inside the park homo run,then Flamini doublod, Civile walked, and iKevinKessler singled home the third run of the in-ning. Also playing well for the Mohicans wereKyle Warrington, Brian Ring, Mark Pisaeno,Steve Carbone, Brian Byrnes, and Paul Buon-aguro.

Cheyennes 14, Pawnees t -Chris Bolsky (6 RBI), and Scott Bingham (5

runs) spearheaded the Cheyenne attack.Brady Booth (4 RBI), Tom Flanagan (2 RBI, 2runs) and Mike Dooley (RBI), pitched a nearperfect game. Also scoring runs were RobertRich (2 runs), Ryan Fanelli, Jim Zajac and Alex

anrl .lonnifnr OnrkprThe Opals were led by Michelle Ponto,

Christine Cabarlo,. Julie Bashioum, RoseannBostel and Suzanne Peist who all crossed theplate in the third. Joy Musillo. April Dinicolasand Amy Matz each chipped in with hits for theOpals._

Diamonds Major Division Softball

Bears 5, Panthers 4 -Trailing 4-0, The Bears rallied in the bottom

ol the last inning to pull out Ihe victory. SusanBrown of Iho Bears provided the otlensivepower with a bases clearing shot to deep leftcenter to drive in the winning runs. Superbpitching was turned In by both teams as KaraGiannecchini recorded 9 strikeouts while herteammate Brown nailed 6. The Panther pitch-ers Mary Oollard (9 K's) and Katie Feder (3K's). were able to hold tho Boars in chock untiltho linal inning. Feder provided tho oflensivepunch for the Panthers with a triple and RBI.Alison Cuzzolino (2 hits) led the Bears batters.

Girls Midget Division

Red Devils 4, Predators 2 -The first half belonged to the Devils who

took a 3-0 lead on goals by Vickie Moriera (2),and Clare Gallagher. The offense was fueledby Amanda Mitchell. Leigh Johnson, Katie Bay-lock, Melissa Rogers, and Emily Hendol. Thisconstant pressure pinned the Predator defend-ers Julie Ann Kuczynski, Meghan Wischusen,Katie Parslo, Kerry McGovern;') Stella- DiFabioand Lauren O'Hara in their own end.

The second half reversed tho play as thePredator offense of Sara Shtrauch, Megan Zak,Danielle Weineke, Sarah Alderice, Lynne Ko-volisky, and Laurie Kovolisky caught tire lead-ing to goals by Robin Danyus and ChristineD'Arcy. But the Oovils defense of IsabellaFitzgerald, Danielle Falasca. Cheryl Cocchini,Erin Leary, and VickiO Moriora clinched thegame lor Ihe Devils.

Girls Division 3

Magic 7, West Windsor 3 -The Magic notched their seventh victory with

an impressive win over second place Windsor

.. Bears 7, Leopards 6 -The Bears were led by Christine Schmitt,

whose blast to deep right center field drove inthe winning run. Also hitting for the Bears wereSusan Brown (2 singles), Mandee Margitich (2

P K O ^ ™ ^ ^ of fen^were Bnan^^d Kevin^aho^ey, T ^

chini, Schmitt and Brown who combined tostrike out 9 batters. For the Leopards CarolynCoda provided the offensive power with ahome run, single and 4 RBI.

Bobcats 7, Stallions 2 -The Perotto Bdbcats kept up their winning

ways by defeating a very aggressive Stallionsteam that was led by Megan Hannon andSusan Foster on the hill striking out 6 andallowing only 8 hits. Robin S'tfweitzer andChristine Milkoski were the pitching duo for theBobcats and allowed only 1 hit while strikingout 10.

Schweitzer and Lyndsey Pfeiffer led the hit-

jscored on a throw in by Devon Murray, AndreaRosenkrans placed a corner kick in the boxwhich Shannon Murray slid past the keeper,and S. Murray came right back to feed a passto Dittmar for her second goal of the half.

The defense played impressively with, goalieKim Hribar leading the way with support fromNicole Starace, Tracey Mulvaney, Beth Gal-lagher and Rosenkrans. The midfield waspaced by Samantha Morano, Heather Simpsonand Laura Johnston. They helped forward Lau-ren Stanley to set up (our second half goals 2by Becky Taylor, a breakaway by Starace andanother one from S. Murray.

mounted several attacks for the Ducks bptcame up short. John Markowitz and Ryan Md-Mahon found the back of tho net with ni ceshots (or the Thunderbolts. Supporting Iho Bojt

Hannen and Chris Dugan.

Boys Premier Division

Clippers 0, Scotch Plains 1 -The Clipper defense, headed by Joe Mqr

Comb. Shaun Weede'r, Scott Van De £Pat Burke and Chris Thee allowed only 1to the strong Scotch Plains squad. Thecame in the first thirty seconds of the gameand the rest of the match was even, cfirisFlamini had a busy afternoon with many flrtatsaves in net. -•

Lady Cougarsseek revenge

(Continued from page B-l)was driven1 in by Lightcap,who was then promptly plat-ed by an RBI double off thebat of Donna Polito. KatieDonneljy followed with a sacfly and, after Jessica Dreyerreached on an error,Malkowski singled and Koe-hler and Weiss each linedlw£t<>ut RBI singles to givethiTLady Cougars a 9-8 lead.

But the fun was not over,because Westfield came backto tie it yet again in the sev-enth, and that set the stagefor Ci;anford's game winningrally. With one out DonnaPolito walked and stole sec-ottcl before reaching third onit wild pilch. Donnelly, whoalso played superb centerfield all week, then drove inthe winner with a sac fly toadvance the Lady Cougarsinto the UCT final for thesecond straight year.

Unfortunately, coach'TerryBiunno suffered an injuiy toher Achilles tendon in the

b 4 heiTsiItngcetcinjury did not damper theexcitement of the Lady Cou-gars and their fans as theyprepare for Saturday night

"I am veiy proud of thisteam," said the mendingskipper. "We're going into

,the_hnals with a positive at--titude and we are reallyfffSrying-together. We will winor lose as a team, no matterwhat the result we are al-ways together."

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Styler, Meghan McGauran. Amanda Murrayand Claire Dennis. The defense and keepers,Michele Segear, Samanlha Dango, KatjeBurke. Kristen Brady, and Valerie Nigro dtllplayed well.

Boys Midget Division

Thunderbolts 2, Mighty Ducks 0 - \Outstanding defensive play by the Thunder-

bolts Kyle Hudson, Ryan Madden, Nolson r\fa*varro and Jell Johnson and the Mighty Duaksdelensive group-ol Michael Eisert, John Ste^dardi, Michael Shulman and Sebastian jjirf

duengo made this game very close. Ducksgoalies Ryan Struck, Danny Russo and DannyGilligan only touched the ball five times andthe Bolts keepers, Dave LaRoso, Dan Johnsrfn.Andrew Petrozziollo and Paul Gryszkiowiez,only had to make eleven saves.

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•o

Page 10:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

B-4 The Chronicle May 18, 1994

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602-954-7420

2000FOR SALE

P R A Y E R T O T H EBLESSED V I R G I N -(Novor known to fall).Oh, most boautlful flowerof Mt. Carmol, fruitfulvino splendor of Hoavon,Blossod Mother' of thoson of God, ImmaculateVirgin, assist mo In mynocesslty. Oh. Star of thoSoa, help mo and howmo, horoln you aro mymother. Oh. Holy Mary,Mother of God, Queon ofHoavon and Earthl Ihumbly bosooch youfrom tho bottom of myheart to succor me In thisnocosslty. Thoro aronono that can withstandyour power. Oh, showmo heroin you are my

n2010-3100

2010 - Antiques2020 - Appliances2030 • Art2040 - Auctions2050 - Clothing2060 • Colloctlbles2070 - Computers2080 - Farm & Garden2085 - Firewood2090 • Floa Markets,

Sales and Bazaars2100 - Free to Good

Home2110- Furniture2120 - Garago Solas2125 - Merchandise

under $1002130 - General Morch2140 - OHlce Furniture

and Supplloo2150 - Softworo2160 • Wantod to Buy

APPLIANCE SALERefg. S85, washer/dryerS75. Fully guar'd.alsoservice $19.95. 908-7547209 or 231-1047

WASHER- S75. Dryer,$65. Stove, $75. Retrlg-eraJpr,S91T0. Can deliverColor console TV $100Pis call 722-6329.

2040Auctions

GIANT BENEFITPUBUC AUCTION

New Jersey Museum ofAgriculture

New Brunswick, N.J.Located at Cook

College on RutgersUnlvarslty Campus.

From Rt. 78 to Interstate287 south to Rt. 18 (Iggroan sign says"RutgersUniversity Campus &Highland Park") then Rt18 & River Rd. are thesame, then Rt. 18 turnsright. South to U.S. Rt. 1(exit says "TrentonSouth") & right on CookCollege Rd. Arrowsposted at museum

Sat., May 21 • 9:30 a.m.Note New Hour

J.D. 2 bottom trips plow,spring & spike toothharrows, sm. earlyfanning mill, hay rake, 16h.p.M/Vlzard hydrostatlg a r d e n t r a c t o r w42"mower deck, oldgrain drill, coopers tools,5 like-now nevor-sagfarm gates,. 2 chickenweather vanes, fertilizerby tho ton, seed & lawicare, dog & anlmafeeds, Nursery Stocktrees-shrubs-flats olllowers-hanglng baskets'roso bushes & etcveterinary services, 1Yankee Box & StadiumClub tlckots, 6 box seaton finish line at thMeadowlands & alsdinner for 4 same placea day at FreoholRaceway, $1,000 glcertificate on CunarUnas valid to Doc. 199'one weoks stay aMarlnor's Point watefronj condo on SanlboIsland, overnight stay foi2 at Claridgo CaslnHotel Atlantic City, NJAmlsh quilt, marble tocoffoo tablo, HoleBoohm vaso, wlckofurniture, $800 coucnow, paintings, gicortlflcatos, sot noslolgh bolls, so mucmoro coming In toInto to a d v o r t l s oNot responsible foaccidents.

TERMS: Cash orApprovod Chocks* rood Vendors *

ARTHUR HANNA-Auctloneor-

Bloomsbury, NJ908-995-7862

DIRECTIONS: promRoute #287, take exitfor New Brunswick,Easton Avenue, at trafficlight by the A&P, turnright onto Cedar Grove

_Hoad. So to tha_flMLand at the traffic lightturn right onto AmwellRoad ( t o w a r d sMillstone). At the 2ndstreet on the left, turnonto Van Cleef Road,turn right onto GrouserRoad.. Auction signs willbe posted.

***************PARTIAL L ISTING:Thousands of items forhousehold, antiqueshops, woodworking,c o n s t r u c t i o n andfarming. 1951 AllisChalmer WD tractor, 20"storage trailer, mower,compressor 1-3/4, 3/4,1/2 H.P., space heaters(3000 and 140,000BTU), hydraulic Jacks2-1/2 & 1-1/4 ton. MightyMac 7 H.P. chipper, logsplitter, 16-1/2" drillpress, 10" radial saw,8-1/4" compound metersaw, Lincoln welder and-

• PUBLIC*• AUCTION*

2 Day SaleSat a Sun.

May 21st & 22nd, 1994Auction beginsat 10:05 a.m.

Preview 8-10 a,m.

Location: 18 GrouserRoad, Mlddlebush(Somerset), N.J.

Personal Property ofHenry Grouser

American LegionBuilding

232 Union AvenueSomervllle

Saturday«May 21,1994For Information call:

908-707-0712 or908-685-9550

Inspection of sale 10amSale starts 11am

ots of 14K go ld ;earrings, rings,, ladleswatch,(9) deco watchos.

omo pocket watches,ivrlst watches, sterlingsliver chains, rings, &bracelets. Meerschaum.pjpes, old & new toys,Ivories, coins, 50 francs,silver, antique clocks,canes & walking sticks,glassware;- postcards,mugs. Ertle toys, DickTracy & Marilyn Monroed o l l s , other dol ls ,decoys, prints, base-ball cards - many moremiscellaneous Itoms toonumerous to mention.

supplies, tool chests,parts bins, chain saws,oil drums with pumps,battery- chargers, metalshelv ing, 1/2 H.P.grinder, Mac truck parts,cabinet & parts books,Mack seat, electricmotors, plows. dl9Ccultivators, fluorescentlighting, grease guns,H.D. bench vices,buckets of nuts andbolts, clips and clamps,e lect r ic s u p p l i e s ,assorted tools, gascans, many quarts ofmotor oil, painting andmason Items, powertools Including sandors,drills, saws, Impactwrench, airline regulatorwith gauge, fishingpoles, reels (now),tackle boxes, net andlures, arjtlquo plantstands, cupboard,wooden chosts, chairs,milk cans, pitchers,tables, wood kegs,wagon, gas pump,trunk, sewing machines,and much, much more.

AUCTIONEERS NOTEHorns have boon main-tained and garage keptDefinitely something foreveryone at his sale. Foryour comfort we haveon s i t e p a r k i n g ,rostrooms and foodavailable. No buyerspremium and pleasebring your chairs.

TERMS: Cash orpro-approved chock.

For moro Informationploaso call:

FRENCH'S AUCTIONSERVICE

820 Bluestone LaneBrldgewater, NJ 08807PHONE: 908/526-3ft72

FAX: 908/253-0021Col.Frank Lee French

-Auctlonoor-Mombor NJ & National

Auctlonoora Association

AdvortlsoIn the Classified!

QUALITYESTATE AUCTION

E.G. Heller A Sonwill sell the estate of

John C. Duff225 Piedmont Dr.Bound Brook, N.J.Sat., May 21,9 am

Mahog. Chippendale-style DR table, 6 chairssideboard, server, cherryChippendale-style twnbeds, dresser, chestMahog. tilt top standround leather top table,leather top coffee table,end tables, sofa, barrelback chair, red leathesofa & chair, pak table,stools, kitchen setstands, rattan porch set,color tv, lamps, pictures,brass fire screen & tools,oflantal-ujgs,—SftROUK9x12. GLASSWAREstemware, pink dopresslon, pattern, sllveioverlay, oriental vases,llmoges, linens, hand &garden tools, ladders,wheel horse 655 6 h/priding mower, 20 'Vornado mower, radialarm saw, H/H items,picnic table. 1966 Olds98 4/dr, much more.

Rain Date May 22

Directions: Rt. 22 Eastto Mountain Ave., BoundBrook . Right ontoPiedmont Dr. Watch forsigns. Preview 8 am

Robert E. Heller908-236-2195

IBNTCOMPATIBtE$295. We also buy andrepair computers, moni-ors, printers and boards.

908-464-7496

2080Farm & Garten

M U L C H - T o p s o l l ,Stone. Pickup or promptdel. Retail or Wholsale.EAGLE FENCE 526-5775

TOPSOILScreened farmland soil

Bark mulch - p/up or del.908-560-8000

_ 3 J ,Firewood

FIREWOOD-seasoned,split, hardwood, & freedelivery. (908) 756-2678.

2090Flea Markets,

Sales & Bazaars

FOOD VENDORS &CRAFTERS— wanted forsummer craft festival.Sun. 8/7, 10-4pm. Spon-sored by Bound BrookArea Chamber of Com-merce. Call 356-7273 or469-0434

G 4 A N T R U M M A G ESALE! Trinity EpiscopalChurch, North & ForestAvea.,Cronford. 5/21,9am-3pm, HH & clothes

MAY 2 1 , 1994, 8:30-4 :00PM— SomersetPresbyterian Church, 100JFK Blvd., Somerset, NJ08873. Spaces availablefor $15. Call 249-8674.

WESTFIELD UNICOGIANT FLEA MARKET

May 22, Westfield TrainS t a t i o n . No f o o dvendors, please. Firstcome, first served. 1-S10,2-$18, 3-$25 spaces.

2100Free to a

Good Home

FREE COUCH SETOrange flowers. Pleasecall 908-722-6052.FREE COUCHES (2),CHAIR, DARK PANEL'ING. 908-722-6052.

FREEWOOD SKIDS

40 X 48, call Nell 908722-3000 ext. 6400,

$Dresser, mirror, endtable, twn bed. 722-6052.

BED— Brass, queencomplete with Ortho mat-tress sot. Unused In box.Cost $1000 sell $300.908-906-2067

CRIB- Oak Spindle w/canopy & bedding.Excel, cond. Come see5/20 & 21, 9-2, 336 CookAve. Mlddlesex;356-7938.

DAYBED- White Ironbrass complete with 2ortho mattresses. Un-used In box. Cost $600sell $325. 906-2067

DESK— Large OakSchoolstyfe, needs refin-Ishlng. Best Offer.

908-873-1609

DINETTE S E T - Con-temp. Shaker, all Maplew/blk. base, 6 chairs, 2Ivs, 1 yr. old. Must sell$1100.908-873-1609.

DINING ROOM— allwood oak, table countryFrench w/2 leaves, light-ed hutch $900. BR -set,brass bed king, 2 nightstands, vanity, glass &brass $600. 2 all woodoak armoires, $100 ea. 4breakfast nook stools,cushioned velour. ,6ak$50 ea. Rolitop desk, allwood oak, $300, -Leatherblk recllner $100. Couch,love seat, chair, countryblue yelour$350. All ex-cellent cond. Moving,must sell!563-1853.

2125Merchandiseunder $100

AIR CNDTNR- 11500BTU 115V, $75 755-2537.

AQUARIUM- 10 gal neww/lite $15 752-0659

BED— headboard, king,bookcase, $100 722-0509

BED— queen size withheadboard 968-4509

B I K E - 2 6 " coasterbrakes, $30. 276-1146.BIKE- 27" 12 spd racerlike new $65 752-0659

BOOKCASE-$25Please call 722-6052

BOYS CLOTHES- size6-12 50+ 356-7520

BRASS TABLE LAMP-ndw, real $29 281-9579BUREAUS 5 & 3 drawersboth for $45 561-1932

' \

ForbesN E W S P A P E R S

with be closed MondayMay 30,1994 for

—MEMORIAL DAY—Deadlines for In-Column Classified Ads for theWeek of June 2nd will be Friday, May 27 at 5pm

Deadlines for Classified Display for Auto and\Recruitment will be Thursday, May 26th at 3pm

Deadline for Real Estate Display will beWednesday, May 25th at 5pm

2125Merchandise

-underSlOO

CAR BOOKS— 1960-8880 for $40 752-7105.

CARDBOARD BOXES-40 LOTIew $40. 560-3202

DR SET— 40"rnd walryjttbl w/1 leaf & 4 chrs

175. Oval mirror w/goldframe & shelf $75.Lamps,525-S35. 658-4029

CHEVY TRUNK GAS-KET- new $35 654-6010CHINA SERVICE- for 6,$30,805-3070.

CRADLE/SWING- forbaby $50 561-1932CRUTCHES- $30 call908-225-9144

ENCORE QUALITY CON-SIGNMENTS- Clothing,Jewelry, furs, antique's,collectibles, home fur-nishings. 123 Claremo.ptRoad, Bernardsville, XjF10-6, Thurs. 8, Sat. 10<5.908-766-7760 *

DESK-SI 0Please call 722-6052

ENTERTAINMENT -CENTER- $35. Call after

pm. 908-234-2353. *

DINING ROOM TABLE-new $99 281-9579FIREWOOD— cut at yourown risk, 281-9579FLOURESCENT UGHT-flxtures (8) $45 563-9701.

FOR ALL YOUR FURNI-TURE NEEDS- Save 30-75% off MSRPI BUyFactory direct from Nor(hCarolina, Contact Dlajpe

908-245-7015 H

FRONT S E A T S - 85Bronco II.-S50 369-7247-HIGHRISER BED- Goodcond, $100. 548-0708.

LAWNMOWERS (2)SSOea. 722-6052.

MAGAZINES- playglrl50, 6 for $5 725-4193

M I S C E L L A N E O U SHOUSEHOLD ITEMS:$1-$15. (908) 658-4029.

LUGGAGE IWAREHOUSE SALE4

Once a year we open ourluggage warehouse -tothe public. 1000's of nai'lbrands of luggage, hand-bags, business cases "&gifts. Now thru Sat., May21st only. Doors open9am - rain or shine. •>

333 Springfield Ave."Summit '"

(Behind Rafters) ?

POOL TABLE— $100,you move, 908-725-7174.PUSH BAR- 85 BroncoII, $50 369-7247

RECLINER— brown $25,call 908-249-6360.

ROWING EXERCISER-$50, final price 968-3049.RUGS— SI-$25 ea, BikesS1-S25 ea 908-755-5763RUNNING BOARDS- 85Bronco II $50^369,-7247

SLEEPING BAGS (2)$10ea. 008.722.6052.

SPEAKERS- $50 ea,nite stands $25 754-4507

STOVE— 2 burner, pro-pano, new 20 752-0659

TOOL BOX- for 1/2 tontruck $50 908-865-1620

TORO MOWER- $100.COMMODE $75 225-9144

TV- 19" color $50, mi-crowave S10, 563-0089

WHEELS— (4) 85 BroncoII, $50 369-7247

WOMEN'S SUITS( S p r i n g ) Sz. 9/10.$ 1 0 e a . . 7 2 2 - 6 0 5 2 -

2130General

Merchandise

4 JETZON TIRES- sizeP1B5/80R13. Little used,low mileage. $125. Off 86Grand Am. 908-271-8009

BABY G R A N D - 5'2walnut, 2 black crystalchandeliers, oak break-front, 6 ft. mediterraneandining table plus 4 uphol-stery chairs plus 2 seatbench. 548-6654

BAHAMA CRUISE5 days/4 nights. Under-bookedl Must selll LlnvIted tickets. $279/couplo.(407)767-8100, Ext. 684

Mon.-Sat. 9AM-10PM

CHAIR L IFT - cost prig,over $800, asking $400,908-885-1454

2130General /

MerchandiseJl

May 18,1994 The Chronicle B-5

2120Garage Safes

NOTICE: All GARAGESALES advertisementsare PAYABLE IN AD-VANCE by cash,check, VISA or MasterCard. For a quote oncost, . please call1-800-559-9495.

20+ FAMILY GARAGESALE— Arrowhead De-velopment In Branch-burg; 6 ml S. 202 fromSomervllle C.le, watch forsigns. 9-5, Sat. 5/21. Raindate 5/22.

-BERNARDSVILLE-' 123> ^Claremont Road; Almost1 /tew- Clothing, Jewelry,1 furs, Accessories. Fine' Quality home furnishings,

antiques, collectibles,[ Jiom consignments sp-

ied dealers..i $5.00 OFF purchase of' $25 or morel

ENCORE QUALITY ,CONSIGNMENTS

^o-op space avaTT

Tue-F 10-6, Thurs. til 8Sat. 10-5.

908-766-7760BOUND BROOK- 32Wast Franklin St.; 5/21,9<ipm, TV N l i d f r.TV, New

, Jler, rowing machine, lots-i,--:

H , o61 stuff

I BOUND BROOK- 349 &I' 353 Longwood Ave.;

/ 1 p(amily.-Furn,-tools,-cloth.Ing, appliances-& more.Moving, must sell all.BOUND BROOK- 600Block of Betsy RossPlace, Sat. 5/21; 9-3.Furn., Clothing, toys,Kitchen items, misc.

. B R A N C H B U R G - 15vTjana Terrace. (202 S Rt"Old York to Rt StonyBrook to Dana). Sat.5/21; 9am-3pm. Hshlditems, some furnishings.Priced right.

AdvertiseIn the Classified!

B R A N C H B U R G - 15sales In "Fox Hollow-Summit Sq. neighbor-hood. 5/20, 21. 8~4pm.Furn, crafts, clothes,toys, etc. From Rt.22 rt.on France Dr. (1st st.after Welchert) From Rt.78 exit 26 S. 1:8 ml toHowell Dr.

CRANFORD- 27 ParkAve; 5/21 9-5PM, 5/2212-5PM, Moving sale, Ev-orythlng MUST GO1

BRANCHBURG- 208Woodstock Ln; 5/21, 9-3pm. Baby items, furn,linens, clothes, etc. 202S, rt. on Old York, 1st Iftonto Old York & 2nd rt.

BRIDGEWATER- 313Goldfinch Dr. (off Coun-try Club); Sat. 5/21, 9-4pm. H/H consolidationsale, toys, snowblower,ski equip., everythinggoes, Halndate 5/28

BRIDGEWATER- 38Red Oak Way (off OldYork Rd);F & S. 5/20-21,9-4pm; Baby items,clothing, cuckoo clock,cash reg., chandelier,12ft.pool,etc.Raln 5/22

BRIDGEWATER- 444Stony Brook Dr. Sa,t. 5/21, 10-4pm. Accumula-tlon of 28 years. Cloth-

7ng, remnants, cot3, dish-es, etc. .

BRIDGEWATER- 565Hwy-28r(West-t3f eirclOT1 ml.) Sat 5/21 & Sun5/22, 9-4pm. Lots oftools, 24pc socket set,30K BTU heater, H/H, PUtool Box, Bean Poles,Fence Panels, TomatoCages, and much morel!

-Pearl-St.-(Finderne)-Sat.-& Sun.5/21 &22. 9-3pm.For Charity, Sunday Bag& Bargln Day.

BRIDGEWATER- cor-ner of Mulrfleld andBraemer; across for Ho-echst on Rt.202/206, UpMuirfield 1 block 5/21, 9-3PM, 2 family

B R I D G E W A T E R -Nolghborhood Sale! Sat.5/21. Pope Rd.off Rt.28bhlnd Adamsville School.Too much to mention)

CRANFORD— 12 OakLane; Sat. 5/21. 10am-3pm. Mlsc HH Item3.Great bargalnsi

DUNELLEN- 514 FirstSt., Sat. 5/21. 9-4:30.Hardware, stained glass,lazy susan, General mer-chandise. Ralndate 6/4.

ESTATE SALECOLONIA- 355 Mid-dlese c; off Oak Tree, 5/20-21, 9-3pm, many niceold things, No earlybirds, CASH ONLY!

HIGHLAND PARK- 114Columbia SL; 5/21, 22.10-3pm. Clothes (child &adult incl mat.nty) toys,2hp boat motor, por-tacrlb, baby swing,bikes, etc. 908-572-5719

HILLSBOROUGH- 56Falcon Rd. Sat. 5/21,8:00 on. Chairs, doublesink, elec. much morel

MANVILLE- 12 North6th Ave. Sat. & Sun. 5/218 22, 9-5pm. Three fam-lly yard sate 1

MANVILLE- W. FRECHAVE. (5 Families);S L 5 / 2 U 9 4 S l h lfdr Everyonel Clothing,Toys, Household, misc.

MIDDLESEX- 107 Mel-rfOff-Rt^&rsee^1, 9-4PM, Mlsc

itomasigns) 5/21, 9-4PM, MlscH/H i f

MIDDLESEX- 112 PondAve; 5/20-21, 9-5pm,Rain date 6/3-4, Antlque^ptascarriage, clothes, muchmorel No early blrdsl

MIDDLESEX.—J24 Falr-vlaw Ave.; off Rt.28. 5?20, 21.9-3. Baby, kitchen& HH Items, misc. Every-thing mustgolMIDDLESEX- 336 CookAve., Frl. 5/20 & Sat. 5/21; 9-2. Kids clothes, HHItoms, Dinette set, OakCrib w/canopy, & morel

MIDDLESEX— 422 Voo-rhees Ave; 5/19-20-21,10-6PM, clarinet, elec-tronic drums H/H Items,clothes, toys, speakers,misc. NOTHING OLD

AdvertiseIn the Classified!

MO.VING G A R A G ESALEI 61 Bond St.Brldgewater, BrldgewaterQaks Rt 22 E acrossfrom Ethlcon. 5/21, 22,9-4 rain or shine.

MOVING SALE- PISCA-TAWAY, 16 Wlnnns Ave5/21 & 22 9-3pm. HH +baby furniture, books,toys, games, crafts.

MULTI-FAMILY SALENO. PLAINFIELD

Regency Village, 401 Rt22 West Sat. 5/21, 10-4.H/H. toys, clothing, babyItems.tools, much morel

NO. PLAINFIELD- 268Farragut Rd.; 5/21, 10-4.Rain date 5/22. Furniture,appliances, A/C, toomuch to mentlonlP,E A P A C K /G L A D-STONE- 203 Main St.;5/21, 9-4pm, Multi-family,H/H, glassware, somelurn., treasures

PISCATAWAY-14 Tammy Ct., Sat. 5/21;9-6. Mosquito Bug lltes;Dot' 8 pin color printer;tools, humidifier, misc.

PISCATAWAY—aOEIsa-man Ave.; (off WilliamsSt.) Frl & Sat, May 20-21.9-5PM. No early birds.Glothos, baby items,hou seTToTcT Tfem"sT5hp snowblower.

PISCATAWAY- 39 Bal-Ln.; 4/21, 9-5PM, Ski

equip., H/H Items, kids3tu(f, & much more!

PISCATAWA3C- 515Longfellow Avo.; Sat &Sun-5/21,22 9am-4pm.Misc. H/H' and adultclothing. No early birds.

RARITAN- 122 Sher-man Ave. 5/20 & 21, 9-4pm. TVs. trumpet, refrlg.stamps, piano rolls, atari&' games

ROSELLE PARK- 601Faltoute Ave; 5/21-22,9:30-4pm, Toaster oven,clothes, books, & variousH/H Items

SO. BOUND BROOK- 6Barber Blvd.; 5/21-22, 9-4pm, Furn., baby items,VCR, appl . , toys &clothes

SO. PLAINFIELD- 119Day St.; Frl, Sat. 5/20,21, 9-4. Crib, toys, exer.equip. & more. No earlybirds. Rain date 6/3, 4.

SO. PLAINFIELD— 727Clinton Ave Sat. 5/21,10-4pm. $2 a bag onclothes after 2pm.SO.PLAINFIELD- 112Ellzabethtown Ct.;(offClinton Ave) 5/20-21,8AM-4PM, H/H Items,bikes, lawn turn., exer-cise equip.. Baby stuffSOMERSET- 102Willow Ave., (off Easton)5/21; 9-4. Multl Family.Child/Adult clothing,toys, books, HH items

SOMERSET- 303 Clas-son Ct.: 5/21,9-4.Blkes,toys,baby Items,HH appl,clothes, bed. Willow toSmlthwold to Classon.

AdveWso In the Classified!

GIANT RUMMAGE SALETemple Beth-El, 67 Route

206 So., SomervllleTuesday, May 24,/ 93p u p

.Wednesday, May 25,10:00 am-3:00 pm

SPRINGFIELD- 343Mllltown Rd,^ Satr 5/21;9-5. Bikes, beds, HHsld.desks, cnairs, par taoia,more! Rain date 5/22.

YOUR CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEY NEWS

N-EASYEHONE.CALLANILFOR^ONE LOW_-P.B1CE.FOR ONLY $219.00YOUR AD WILL REACHOVER 1.2 MILLIONHOMES THROUGHOUTTHE S T A T E . CALLFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1-800-559-9495, ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILSA B O U T SCAN-STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDAD NETWORK.

Ads In Classifieddon't cost —They pay/

2130General

Merchandise

UTILITY TMAItEH-42'x8', goafl for storage,office, qjt) work, B/CL_Truck crarnfa, 3 ton, Rockmetal. Industrial 3 phasegrinder 90B-526-5225

SUNQUEST WOLFFTANNING BEDS- Newcommercial-Home units.From $199.00 Lamps-Lot Ions-Accessor los.Monthly payments low as$18.00. Call today FREENEW-Color-Calalog-4-800-462-9197.

TRUMPET- Excellentcondition, good for stu-dent $1757Best Offer.276-1233

2130Genera/

Merchandise

—OFFICETURNlTURE~Desks, files, chairs, etc.782-4221; eves 782-5057.

Advertise In the Classified!

2160Wanted to Buy

SAAA AUTO BUYINGSINSTANT CASH DEAL

p a l o B n h pcsted in buying your car/truck. Foreign/domestic.Specializing in high ml. &damaged cars. For plck-upcall 609-888-5012.

ALL LIONEL, 1VES,AMERICAN FLYER-and other toy trains. Col-lector pays highest pric-es. Call 1-800-464-4671or 201-635-2058 '[

•ANTIQUtA USED*'=:Furniture, DR & BR Sets".1800-1950's. Juke Boxes,plnball mach's. 647-1959.

Advertise In the Cfassffiecf.'

ITS TIME FOR A

GARPlace Your $15 Garage Sale Ad & Receive

• FREE Signs• FREE Inventory Sheet• How To Run A Successful Garage Sale

• Rain Date Guarantee

Fill in 1 character per box, allowing for spaces and punctuation as necessary.Additional lines;¥d'$1'e^chruse~w'para^~sh'e"et"tf paper'if necessary."

Name

Address

Mail With Check or Money Order To:

Classifieds - Forbes Newspapers P.O. Box 699 Somerville, NJ 08876

BusinessProfessional.TDIRECTORY

Serving: Westfield, Scotch Plains, Fanwood, Cranford, Garwood, Kenilworth

AIR CONDITIONING FEATURING: DRIVEWAYS GAS STATION

MATTRESSES— 3 Beau-tyrest twin sets in exp.cond.Frames incl.$2QD/ea. or BO. 908-685-1921.

MAUSOLEUM SPACE *,or 2 . Woodbr ldge .

WEDGWOOD China for12, used oncer968-4226

Men's Silk Dress TIESBuy Direct & Save «

Shop at Home Service$5 Each 4/S18 "

908-526-7677 After BPffi

MUSICIAN'S GUITAWEQUIPMENT SEU.OFF&EXPOI Amplifiers, £lfects, Drums. Keyboard

\PROV1D1HG QUALITY SERVICE FOR OVER SO l '£)

Heating and Air Conditioning

Sales & ServiceH1YORK

• Humidifiers • Electronic Air-Cleaners• Clock TTiarmottaU • Attic Fans

• Biown-ln Insulation

Westfield 233-6222

CLEAN-UP & DEMOLITION

TO ADVERTISE

Sunday May 22. 10arji-4pm. Flrehouao, 70Halnes Aye, (Rt 207-Shelton Road,) Piacat-away (908)359-0124. «

NATURAL:BEEF •;

Pure Black Angus beeffrom local farm. ALL nat-ural, no steroids, hor-mones, or antibiotic*.Tender & delicious.$2.39 Ib. No hlddoticharges. Cut, wrappop& labeled for your freez-er. This Is NOT a freeze/plan. Qlonvlow Farm,808-832-2122. LoaVoname & Tol#. ?

OLD STUFF- 50's hiShchair; stroller; typewclt-ers, sleds, bike, piano,cameras. 658-3207. 4

SHED'S, G A Z E B O ^ ,PLAYSETS, Lawn Fuim.& More. Sunday— *Warron Flea. 996-3193.1

SOLOFLEX- $760; Llto-cycle $700; both neverused. 32" Sony XBH TV& stand w/woofor. Whirl-pool washer & dryjrS400; fossllstono base<&glass top foyer/sofa table$400; Lg mirror; micro-wave & cart: Contom.coffee tablo and mudhmorol 908-725-4751 4

Always checkb

BusinessDirectoriesfor QualityServicesForuifomiationaboutadwrtisiitg

Call Russell(908) 722-3000 Ext. 6256

• SPECIAL RATES AVAILABLE FORCONTRACTORS! *

• Attics • Basements• Garages • O ld Furniture• Roofing Debris • Construction & Yard Debris

• DEMOLITION *•Buildings & Homes • Garages• Sheds • Pools• Old Decks & Patios • Office (int.)

Delivery of Sand, Fill, Top Soil, Mulch,Gravel & Stone

Available From 7 to 30 Yards •

322-8670Beeper (908) 569-6052

RESlDETfTIALCOMMERCIALINDUSTRIAL

Paving

• DRIVEWAYS—•-• PARKING LOTS• SEAL COATING• BELGIUM BLOCK CURBING• RAILROAD TIES • STUMP GRINDING"

"SERVING. YOUH AREA FHEE ESTIMATESFOR OVER 40 YEARS" FULLY INSURED

FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED

Scotch Plains 753-7281

Miria & KyrillosAuto Service

Centennial Exxon464 South of Centennial Ave.

Cranford 908:212-5286Foreign & Domestic

Complete Auto RepairsBrake Service & Exhaust

Electronic Work,Computer Diagnostics, Cooling System,

Tires, Front End Specialist

New Jersey Inspection Station

Written Warranty on All Services

DRIVEWAY & ROOFING GENERAL CONTRACTING

The Driveway & Roofing Company• Driveway Paving

• Sealcoating

• Paving & All Types of RepairRecondition after this winter's

severejstorw damage _"• Roofing • RuBberrShingles,

Hot Tar, Etc. • PatchworkNO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL

Same Day ServiceFREE ESTIMATES!

1-201-730-3454

BarthesContracting

Est. 1948

• Kitchens - windows• BatrTrooms •Electrical Plumbing• Additions . Certified Anderson• Siding " \ Window Specialist

FREE ESTIMATES964-5959

Advertise ,In tho Classified!^

TOWNSHIP OF PISCATAWAYNOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION;

The township of Piscataway wjll"conduct an auction of bicycle^anGJ other various item's oj^SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1994 at10:00 a.m. in the parking lot behindthe Public Safety Building GaragfeOn Hoes Lane. -

AIR CONDITIONING

AIXPIIASI;Air Conditioning

• Heating•Installation and Service

Residential Commercial

In Business Since 1973FREE EST. FULLY INS.908-561-7154 or. 908-757-4844

Authorized RUUD DealershipSpecializing in Healing & Cooling Equip.

INFORMATION

BUILDERS DECKS CLEAN-UP & DEMOLITION CONTRACTING

BRAND BUILDERS

GeneralContracting

Westfield O A 0 nnn t o t 7 LowellN.J. VU8-Z3J-1Z17 B r B n d

We build all sizes and shapes!

10 year guarantee\

All ourwolmanized & Cedar

lumber guaranteed.

FREE Estimates • Fully Insured

908-276-8377

Spring Special Mcount 20%^ off

SPECIAL RATES AVAILABLE FORCONTRACTORS! *

Allies • B«em*ntjGa«3« • Old FurniluicRooling Dcbiis • Comtiuction & Yard Debits

* DEMOLITION*Buildirup & Homei ^ GdrageiShtds • PoolsO l d Dcclu & Polios • Ollice (int.)

Deliver/ ol Sand, Fill, T o p Soil, Mulch,

Gravel & Stone

•fr Containers Available From 7 lo 3 0 Ya'ds *r

MEZZYCONSTRUCTION CO.

"Building & Remodeling"• Siding & Roofing• Additons & Add-A-Levels• Kitchens & Bathrooms'•, Windows & Decks

"Wo handle the complete\.i -jotrtvith personal service

al the right price"

,908-548-9877

ATTENTIONLANDSCAPERS!

Reach Homowners

Throughout Union County

For Less Than

$30 Per Week!

CALL TODAY!

908-722-3000EXT. 6256

DRIVEWAYS FUEL OIL HOME IMPROVEMENT

CRAFTSMAN CARPENTRYWE DO THE ENTIRE JOBKITCHENS • BATHS • BASEMENTS

CEILINGS • WINDOWS -WOODWORKDOORS • PORCHES • DECKS

RENOVATIONS • ADDITIONS • ROOFS

908-789-9098SPRING SPECIAL 10%

DECKS • DOORS • WINDOWS

ALL YEARSERVICE

Residential & Commercial Asphali WorkDriveways • Parking Areas • Sealing

Resurfacing • Curbing • Sidewalks & ConcreteTRUCK & UACKHOE RENTAL

l-'rcc EMIIIUICS Fully InsuredServing Union County und Vicinity

"C4/X 7 DAYS A WEEK"789-95OH 6H7-O6I4

Call ForService or

Fuel Oil

908-276-0900

Heel-Strong FuelCranfordAll Of Union CountySince 192?

Save Moneywith

Skyline Developing Co., Inc.All Within Your Budget Considerationsf~l fuming Conirado/3 • Renovations

' • Adailions • • Custom DecksC3 Alttimlions O Nuw Constiuction

Don't Waste Time and Money...

Call Today

(908)469-7187

\

Page 11:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

The Chronicle May 18, 1994.

-WE'VE GOT A BIG DEAL FORYOUR LITTLE THINGS

•GENERAL MERCHANDISE SPECIAL-

2 lines x 3 weeks4Jse this coupon for:(Please check one)

Your adcost is:

O l f the item you are selling is $50 or. under...$FREE$D l f the item you are selling is over $50 but not more than $100...$2.00|O l f you are giving away the item...$FREE$

— FIRST LINE —

I I I J-l-U-— SECOND L INE —

1Name

Address.

Phone #-_

Instructions: •1. Print one (1) letter in each space. Allow one (1)

-space-between- words-and on© -{4 J-spaceJotLI 1

appropriate punctuation.2. All ads for items priced $51 - SlOOmust be

prepaid, please enclose S2.00 payment. •3. All ods must include price and phone number.4. Individuals only qualify for this rate; no businesses.57NcTcancellafions ofTefunds6. Forbes reserves the right to limit quantity of FREE

ads. .

Mail tor Forbes Newspapers,"Spring Cleaning",

P.O. Box 699, Somerville, NJ 08876

• S2.00ond FREE ads will be accepted by coupon only.No phone orders, please.• Coupon are also available at the Classified Dept. ofForbes Newspapers.

2160-wanted to Bur

CASH paid tor new Jorsey and New York lotterypayments. Any amount.

•WiH-bay;-partiat-TJay-rhents. Call for quote.Free call (BOO) 401-0151.

COINS WANTED- Paycash, top prlcesl Papermoney, foreign, stamps,scrap gold, old Jewelry &sterling. Estates and Col-lections. 908-782-0840.Raab Coin, 4 BloomtloldAve., Flamlngton.

$1O00-$10,000- Paidfor Antique Oriental rugs.James Proctor. (201)278-0280; 800-358-7647.

FISHING TACKLE— col-lector wants to buy OLD,rods, reels, lures, cata-logs. 233-1654 after 5PM

FORTUNE TELLERS-Jukeboxes & Plnball,Slot, Coke, baseball

aehtn«S7-€09=587=78197

G U N S , S W O R D S ,KNIVES, MIUTARIA-NJ& Fed. lie. Top cashpaid. House calls made.Bert 821-4949

HIGH PRICES PAID- forpostcards, sheet music,old toys, baseball items,cameras, military, TV's,Worlds Fair, fountainpens. Call 272-5777.

HOUSE CONTENTSWANTED

Partial or All.Call 908-526-2913

WANTED- Bunk Beds.-call-after—6pmr-908-245-7805

3000PETS AND

LIVESTOCK

3020 - Cats3030 - Dogs3040 - Fish3050 - Horses3060 • livestock3070 - Other Pets3080 • Adoptable Pets3090 - Boarding,

Training & Grooming3100 • Miscellaneous

Supplies & Services

Ads In Classifieddon't cost —

They payl

3030

MINI POODLES- Priv.show kennel has M/F,

p , 5hampton-s h i p b T o o d l i n e s ,Wormed, shots, 4 mon.s,$500 908-362-5759

PUPPIES: $50 Buys anyPup In #1 Puppy Pen.Good Selection., OpenSaturday, Sunday, Mon-day, Ho. 10-4. J.P.-O'N.eill Kennels, US Hwy # 1 ,Princeton, NJ. 1/4 Southof Alexander Road.

3050Hones

CHILDREN'S PRIVATEBEGINNER RIDING

lessons. Mon-Fri ages 8-13. $25. Call Debbie

722-7087 Branchburg .

3070Otter Pets

COCKATIEL- Beautiful,needs good home, In-cludes decorative cage.756-3687 after 7 pm

3080Adoptable Pets

DELIGHTFUL KITTENSNEED A HOME! Pleasecall 757-0738.

FREE KITTENS- Uttertrained, raised w/klds.908-234-1082-1

GIVE S O M E O N E ASMILEy Somerset Re-gional Animal Shelter haspuppies, kittens, dogsand cats. Adoption rea-sonable. Missing a pet?Call 725-0308.

SAVE RETIRED RACINGTGREYHOUNDS- Dogsalways available to good,loving, caring homes,Please calt for more de-tails, NJ Greyhoundadoption program, callJennifer 908-832-9678

3100Miscellaneous

Supplies & Services

VETERINARYHOUSECALLS

Healthcare for your petat home., Matthew Pan-arella, DVM. Hours byappt. 725-0800.

3100Miscellaneous

Supplies & Services

H A P P Y JACK

o ywlthout pest icides.Chewable & nutritioustablet. For Dogs & Cats.At farm & feed stores.

4000SERVICES

4010-4230

4010402040304040405040604070407540804085

40904100

41054110

41204125

. Adult Day Care'Business 'CarpentryChild Crire

• Cleaning• Convalescent. Electrical \. Gutters ">> Handyman• Hauling& Clean up

• Health CareHome

-Improvement-Income TaxInstruction/EducationInsuranceInterior

41274130

41404150416041704180

mefisraung-Kitchens

, Landscaping& Tree Care

• Legal Servicesi Loans & Finance• Masonry* Miscellaneous• Palntlnc

41»-Party 4 Enterstalnment Services

4200 • Plumbing,Heating & Cooling

4210 - Professional4220 • Roofing4225 - Seasonal

Services4230 - Wallpapering4235 • Windows

4020Business Services

* A ESCORTS M/F*Penthouse playmates.College students. Roleplaying. 396-3100.

4020-Business Sendees

PLAZA FENCE-'stock-ade, custom wood, Jerrith

ri chain link, all typesF l y J d r

Free estimate cheerfullygiven. Call Pete at 908-369-2281 '

• APPLIANCE REPAIR*All major kitchen & laun-dry appliances. Sr citzndisci Call 572-1733

4040Child Care Provided

2nd YEAR NURSING-student w/prof. childcareexp. Will watch your childat your home, reason-able rates, ref.s avail.,908-968-507Q

A TIME TO LEARN- atime to play, time to sing,time for joy.Dally child

-m- rV-on.Any wkends.Childmust be 3 yrs.up.Manyref's avail.563-4142

AFFORDABLE/I AM..."ACADEMY, Plscataway.Summer camp, ages 5-12, field trips, swimming,esteem building activi-ties. Now avail., 2 f/tslots ages 2-5.699-1552

AU P A I R / N A N N I E S -Llve-ln European childuaie, luyat foi 12 niua.A 4 + 7 5 / k C l l

, yAverage 4+75/wk908-272-7873.

Call

CHILD C A R E - in myBridgewater home. Reasnnnhln I H S flfrt722-6762CHILD C A R E - Regis-tered Family Day CareHome In Plscataway.Flex. hrs. Reasonablerates. 908-752-7107.

C H I L D C A R E - In. myhome near' Edison Train,Exp. Mother In safe, lov-ing environment, Meals &activities, Ann 908-287-1396

CPR & STATE CERTDMOTHER— will care foryr child in my Plsctwyhome. Lg yd. Reason.rates.Refs avl.699-0673.

EXPERIENCED MOMWill provide loving at-mosphere for your childin my No. Edison home.Flex hrs. Devel. activities.Snack provided. Call

908-494-3764

4040Child Cam Prm

CPR CERT'D MOTHER.OF 1 - will care for In-fants/todd.rs.Fun & learn-'Inn nj,tyTiio» 7G9-S322

May 18, 1994 The Chronicle B-7

HOUSEKEEPERS/NAN-NIES, NURSES AIDES-All nat'lltles. Screened.Lie . /bonded. Aurora'Agency, 540 Bway, Long ;Branch. 908-222-3369.

4050Cleaning Services

APARTMENTS, HOUSESV-r.-wJlt.bfl.

! I'.'.<*•.•

IN HOME CHILD CAfiEjLive In/Live Qut

Pail Time/Full Time ^^Also Summers '•> »

Call 908-754-9090 or ' -•"201-593-9090 ""..

MOM OF 2 G I R L S - ^wants to\provlde safe, '•-fun child eare for your •'•-toddler or school a g e ' 1

kids. FT/PT In Brldgewa- -"ter. 685-7569. <"

MONDAY MORNING INC .. -,'INFANTS & TODDLERS ~ •INSURED, INSPECTED ' -•

-MONITORED- -T-908-526-4884908-253-9595

PRECIOUS LITTLEONES— Pvt. daycarewith nnrt tnnrhnr hnq 'opening, 908-789-7373

PRIVATE HOMEDAY CARE

FOR INFANTS &PRESCHOOL

Educational & Develop-mental Program In ahome environment. N.J.licensed & Insured. Callnow for free registrationat the QUALITY CAREDAY CARE CENTER, Lo-cated in Plscataway.

908-885-1327

4050Cleaning Services

ANDREA'S CLEANING >.sve— Excellent reputa-'jtlon, affordable, reliable,'•>references, 908-359-6971 "

cleaned at your conv.Good refs. Pleaso call429-9487

ART OF CLEANINGBiweekly, weekly, homes& small offices. Let memeet your individualneeds. Dtana--^^

, 908-722-2018

A + C L E A N I N G SER-VICE— Free est. Trainedprof. Good ref's. Somer-set Cty. please call

908-424-1408

CLEANING DONE.WITH CARE— by honest

reliable woman, call:908-548-9179

CLEANINGGood refs, trained pro-

will do yni'f

4110Instruction/Education

TUTORING: Reading,math in yr. home. 10 yrspubl ic school oxpCert.K-8 & H.S. Math;MAdegree. Call 272-5315.

4140^Legal Services

A T T O R N E Y HOUSECALLS: Wills, LivingTrusts, Powers of Atty,Living Wills. Call (ore x a c t f e e s ; o the rservices. J. DeMartlno,E s q . 908 -874-5636 .

cleaning, Somerset "Cty.7 days/wk at your con-ven. Call 908-429-9346.

C L E A N I N G - Do youneed someone to cleanyour home, Apt., or of-fice? Call, us today. Wewill clean weekly, bi-weekly or Just 1 time, 6days/wk. Quality serviceguarenteed. Free ost.725-0704

CLEANING— Proles-sional, with a personaltouch. Reliable, refer-

' ences, Free estimates.Commercial & residen-tial. 10% off lirst clean-

-Ing. -Call. The Poltahed-Look 806-7554

ESTATE SETTLEMENTS35 Years 548-3122

Moss & Inglese, AttysMetuchen Prol. Bldg

406 Main St. Metuchen

MAKE YOUR HOUSE A HOME4030

Carpentry

ALL ASPECTS- Interior,Exterior Home Repair,Gutters, Siding, Doors,Windows, Kitchens, olc.Ins. Dan 908-968-O876.

4150Loans & Finance

ANY CREDIT OK!Real Estate ReFinances

Only. 7 Days, 9am-9pm.Fast Serv. 908-525-3907

4070Electrical

4080Handyman Services

21st CENTURYELECTRICAL INC.

Ins & Bnndad I ir 1PS9SA hrs. Middlesex area

(908)803-7503 819-4819

ACCURATE ELECTRICFor all your electrical

needsl Lic#12678908-725-6809

NEED A CAR?CANT GET A LOAN?Bad credit, no credit

(908) 722-9123

DOMESTIC WORK- de-sired' in Crantord, Mon.Tues. Wed. & someSat.s, Exc. ref.s from 3Cranford Families, 201-596-0620

"HOME CLEANING CAREFor people on the go.Supervised-lnsured. Sat-urdays TOO1 245-1945

HOUSE CLEANING9 yr. exp., Re1;s/Bonded,

1 time cleaning avail.Attlcs/bsmnt.s 756-2151

HOUSE/OFFICE CLEAN-ING— Quality service ataffordable prices. Freeest. Over 12 yrs. exp.

908^752-3301

Forbes Newspapers

& ProfessionalServing: Westfield, Scotch Plains, Fanwood, Cranford, Garwood, Kenilworth

HOME IMPROVEMENT PHARMACY PAINTING LANDSCAPING POWERWASHING

PROFESSIONAL^CARPENTERS, INC.

40 Years InHomo Remodeling;

New Decks • Bathrooms • KitchensDoors • Windows • Roofing

" A i t WORK GUARANTEED"

Free Estimates Fully InsuredCall us 24 Hrs. Richard Degroat

908-272-6456 or 201-375-2757

FREEPRESCRIPTION

DELIVERYPhone 654-8333 For Details

210 South Ave.Westfield, Ph: 654-8338

RINAJLDI PAINTINGCONTRACTORS

Residential - CommercialInterior - Exterior

Member Union County^Chamber of Commerce

9 6 4 - 4 6 0 1 Day.7 8 9 - 7 4 9 0 Eve,.

We accept M/C, Visa, Discover

••

GREEN PASTURELANDSCAPINGCommercial — Residential

Complete Landscaping& Lawn Service

Sodding r •? Spring Clean-UpSeeding _7 1 Fall CTean-UpShrubs [ ft h 5 Mulching

FREE 7 5 3 - 1 3 7 2 ESTIMATECALL DOM

PLUMBING ROOFING/SIDING TV REPAIR

FREE DEMOS &ESTIMATES

For Cleaning & SealingDECKS • HOMES

DRIVEWAYSFENCES & MORE

We Ml Beat All Competitors Prices.'

THE PRESSURES ON908-283-3522

TO ADVERTISE

IAVTTOL PAINTING• Exterior • Free Estimate• Interior , F u l , ^ ^• Expert „

Preparation -Carpentry

"We're Stilt Working Our Way ThroughTown and We do the best Work Around"

SAVE ENERGY.... We InstallVinyl Replacement Windows

• Check our Recession Proof Prices• Roofing • Leaders and Gutters

272-4033

CHAPMAN BROS.Lie. #1428

- • Plumbing• Heating - Cooling• Alterations - Repairs

— - • Atr<2ondrttoning

276-1320

36 NORTH AVE. ECRANFORD

D & R FUCHSCONSTRUCTION COMPANY

Owner/InstallerRoofing ^SiSiiig

Replacement WindowsFully Insured Free Estimates

CRANFORD 709-1251

SALES & REPAIRS(30 Year? in Business)

CENTER TV907 Wood Ave. • Roselle

276-233-T ,-

Call (908) 722-3000Ext. 6256 TodayAsk For Russell

PAINTERS PLUMBER TREE/LAWN SERVICE TO ADVERTISE BATHTUB RESURFACING

ALL TYPES'BEAT CONTRACTOR'S PRICES"

Rcjfinish Your Aluminum Sidinj>Interior, Exterior & Wallpapering18 yrs. experienceGuaranteedPressure WashingFree Estimates/Fully InsuredRestore Natural Cedar Shakes

WESTFIELD

(908) 789-9533

LENNY'S PLUMBINGHEATING

• Heating SewerCleaning •

• Plumbing & HeatingRepairs

• Hot Water Heaters• Sump Pumps

Free Est. • State License #6249

Lenny Grieco574-0480

PREDATOR TREE• 70 FT. Bucket Tnuck• TRIMMINC; & REMOVAI• Stuivip GriiNdiNq ,

• CoMpltTE LAWN ^2Sen VICE

• Bnick WAlk & PAIJOS,* FENCE INSTAIIATION

Fully iNiuncdFncc ESIIMAIC

Iff RETURN AllCAII FOR The Btn

i

SERVICESERVICE

\{ «JLJura

i"Oij'"*i»l

CAIIS• Pnicfi!

Always checkForbesBusinessDirectoriesfpr QualityServicesForui/bmMtJoiiabouiiuh'eriisiijg

Call Russell(908) 722-3000 Ext. 6256

BATHTUBRESURFACINGMr. UGLY

Renew your Pull TubChange your Co\or

Free UGLYMug WithResurfacing

5Yr.Warranty

Call MR. UGLY(201) 54O-0333

PAINTING PLUMBER TREE SERVICE WINDOWS TO ADVERTISE

EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINTING• SPECIALIZING IN CEDAR SHAKES

& ALL TYPES OF WOOD

• PAINTING OLD ALUMINUM SIDINGTO LOOK LIKE NEW

• POWER WASHING

CALL NOWFOR A FREEESTIMATE

NORMILEPAINTING

494-356125 YEARS

EXPERIENCE

Donald S. RockefellerPLUMBING & HEATING INC.

CompletePlumbing

&HeatingServices

State Lie. #4205

276-86777 Raleigh Ave. • Cranford

WOODSTACKTREE SERVICE

INSURED

Low, Low Rates^Senior Citizen Discounts "~

. FREE ESTIMATES

276-5752

Window Experts

BartliesContracting

Est. 1048

272-18O81st Quality VinylReplacementWindowsS Hi A A P e r Window

I * K J InstalledThermal pane glass up to 101 U.I."

For Less Than $60 perweek your Ad could

appear in over 185,000papers each week.

Call today to ReserveYour Spot!

Spaced Arc Limited!

(908) 722-3000ext. 6256

... Ask For Russell

HOUSEKEEPER- PT.Location not a problem.Ref's avail. 908-560-7134Will start Immediately!

T O O MANY DEBTS?OVERDUE BILLS? Com-bine debts Into one pay-ment. Cut payments 30%to 5O%7 reduce interest/L a t e Tees. $4,ouo-4100,000. NCCS'nonpr-oflts) Licensed/Bonded,1-800-955-0412.

4170Miscellaneous

Services _

ALK ELECTRIC— resld..comm. & Indust;, avail,days, weekends, nights,FREE-ESTI Fully Ins.,reasonable rates, Lie.9732, 908-755-4O3Q

' HANDYMANElectr ical , Painting.Plumbing, Carpentry,Etc. Dave 908-769-1655

HELPFUL HANDYMANInslde-Outslde-Odd lobs.Fences-Sealed drives-Ma&onry-Palnting-No JobToo Big or Too Little. Youname it. We do it. CALLCHRIS • 549-2699

-ASPEM_EL£CTJUC-. All.residential needs: housefans, smoke detectors,lighting, telephones, etc.Quick response. Lie.#7534. Call 356-3041;

CUSTOM SLIPCOVERSDraperies, ReupholsteryTFormerly at Stelnbachs &

Hahne s. 45 years exp.Senior discount. FreeShop at home service.

W. Canter, 908-757-6655

POLISH QIRL- w/refs.will clean house & apts.Satisfaction granted.201-777-8232 Joanna.

POLISH WOMANWill clean your house.Referonce, low prices.

908-302-1949 -TIRED OF CLEANING?

Need a break? Call usnowl We will clean foryou. 908-429-9467.

PALMIER!MOVERS

908-356-2454•1 Piece Items «Apts.

•Pianos •Offices•Hornes-7 rms. or less

Insured UCJWOSSO

TOM'S LAWN MOWERService.—All makes &modols.Weedeaters.Trim-mer 3.ChalnSaws.Freoest.P/U,delivery.699-0326

TRANSPORTATIONFor anyone in need toemployment, babysitter,ierTJil'MnT

ELECTRICAL WORKSecurity & recessedlights, heaters, fans,phone9, 240 volt servicechanges, etc. Problemssolved, quick response.Lie. #10262. Free ests.

pinncn fall firmM at

ODD JOBS & GENERALREPAIRS U^-haullngr-brush cleared & re-moved. Expert Int/ext.carpentry, painting, re-placement windows &decks. Tree work, logsplitting, gutters cleaned.No job too small. Whybreak your back? If youdon't see it, ask. Call ustoday for a FREE esti-mate. Our 21st year.

526-5535

• • • PAINTING —JNTERIOR ft EXTEfllORLDeck and Fence Bloach-i n g , S t a i n i n g andWaterproofing. Driveways e a l i n g . Odd jobs-Reasonable & Reliable-

4100Home ImprovemetH

4100Home Improvement

ADDITIONS& ALTERATIONS•Kitchons •Bathrooms•Basements •Decks•Ceramic Tile •ETC.

Competitive pricesFully ins'd • Free est.sFOR DEPENDABLE,

HIGH QUALITY WORK,•RAY LAEYT-627-9633-

AFFORDABLEdOMEREMODEUfl5

Bath, basement, decks,custom tile installation,wallpapering and int. &ext. painting. Free Est.Call Tom 908-755-6541or 1-800-300-6541

321-6955 or 489-6814

EJJE£TRICAL WORK-Commercial, residentialand Industrial. Licensed,NO- 9141, and Insured.Free estimates. Callvlnce Santonastaso Elec-tric 968-1609.

-ELECTRICAL- All typesof wi r ing , Serv icechanges & paddle fans.Lie. #6252. 908-572-6750

4075Gutters

TINKERING TOMHOME MAINTENANCE &REPAIRS. No |ob toosmall. 908-356-O920

AdvertiseIn the Class/tied!

4085Hauling & Clean Up

AL'S CARPET SERVICEspecializing in repairing,antique, oriental & hookrugs. Removal of Wrin-kles, buckles."* Stretching& reinstallatlon of new &used Carpet. Since 1950.

908-369-8970 „

WINDOWS BY BOBQuality crattmanshlp

for 26 yearsPuttying

broken glass repairCaulking & washingWindow replacementFree EsL &-Fully Ins.

Stelnman & Daughter908-526-3382

4130Landscaping

and Tree Care

4125Interior Decorating

FENCE

CUSTOM REUPHOL-STERY- Excel, crafts-manship, reasonableprices, shop at homesrvc. Cleary Interiors,908-273-9011

4127Kitchens

LANDSCAPING— We doIt all! Malnt:, clean-upsand related services, call908-353-5345

LAWN MAINTENANCESpring clean-ups, shrubtrimming, mulch, andlawn renovations.Joe's Landscape Service

908-429-9002

LAWN MAINTENANCEClean-up, lawn cutting,thatching, good prices.755-8429

LAWN SERVICEPrompt, Reliable, Ins.

Spring Clean-upFertilization programsServing Somerset Cty.

For Over 5 yrs.lCall Clem:

908-359-1418

4130Landscaping

and Tree Care

TIMBEflTREEEXPERTS INC

Tree~removai,< Trimming,topping & stump- grind-ing. Free est. Fujfy in-sured. Call 908-819-7531

TreeRemoval

VEN1SBROS.Tree Experts

359-6180FULLY INSURED

ALL COUNTYFENCE CO.

All types Wood & Chain-link Fence, Free est.Year round Installation,Call: 908-654-1925 or

908-232-8727

FENCE

AFFORDABLEJUNK REMOVALResonablo rates.Free Estimates.(908) 756-7563

GUTTERS REPAIREDand installed. Guttercleaning and screening.All roofing repairs. CallJohn at 985-5785.

-4110-Instructlon/Education

ART CLASSES- Sum-mer, Adults & children(6yr.sr& up) Drawing/painting,-clay sculpture,Registration also for Sep-tember classes, CreativeImages, 29 Station PI.,M t t a S A 8 3 7 4 ?

: INSTRUCTION-Diane Olsen Galvacky,available Jor teaching9am-2:30pm, Mon-Fri &Sat. Call 699-0636

PIANO LESSONSPrivBto-BeglnnarsrKlds/Adults. Call now.

908-281-0102PIANO LESSONS- Inyour home. Branchburg,Whltehse Sta. Hlllsbor-ough.Call 3g9-4937.

PVT. SINGING LES-SONS— beginners to ad-vanced, develop range,power 908-429-0288

(908)561-1147

4190Party &

EntertainmentServices

BIRTHDAY PARTIES-Magic show & balloonanimals. Call Constan-tlne. 806-7743.

4075Gutters

BB RUBBISH REMOVALQuick, honest, reliable.We fill dumpsters. Wosprve all of NJ. Pleasecall BB at 201-674-4973Beeper # 201-312-3201Eddie 201-669-8493

CLEAN U P - Rick'sGar.3 attics bsmnts 1015, 20, 25, 30 yarddumpsters/rent 757-2677

NED STEVENSGUTTERS

Thoroughly cleaned& Hushed $35 - $75

I CAN DRAWANYTHING! Portraits,character sketches forparties. Reasonablerates. 908-548-0548.

rateslCall now for avail.In your area. 879-8370

* PUDDINS *My-Tee-Flne Clownln

Reputation speaks foritself all occasionscomedy~maglc and more.

Please call 651-0747

Advertise In the Classified!

4210Professional

Services

YOUR CLASSIFIED ADCAN BE PUBLISHED IN92 NEW JERSEY NEWS-PAPERS WITH ONEEASY PHONE CALL ANDFOR ONE LOW PRICE.FOR ONLY $219.00YOUR AD WILL REACHOVER '1 .2 MILLIONHOMES THROUGHOUTT H E S T A T E . CALLFORBES CLASSIFIED AT1-800-559-9495, ASKFOR JOYCE OR KRISTINFOR ALL THE DETAILS

DRESS MAKING- Cus-tom for prom, brides-maid, any occasion. CallTara 707^4643

LOOKING FOR A PHO-TOGRAPHER? For doingyour Wedding or FamilyGroup Photos. Cal lCharles Moore III,

908-234-12351-80O-371-5795

• S c r e e n i n g ' R e p a i r s•New QuttersaRoofs

1-800-542-0267Free est.»Ojjen 7 daysFully lns.«Est.'d 1965

CLEANUP & LIGHTHAULING- ofall types.Free estimates. Insured.Low rates. We workweekends. Call Tony

908-781-0400

ARTIE'S CARPETSales-Service

InstallationNo Job Too Small

Free Est. Ful'y Ins.Call after 5pm908-469-1518

BARN BEAMS, FLOOR-ING & BUILDING STONERecycled from 19thcentury barns. Also haveflagstone, river jacks,field stone & boulders.

• (215) 766-2882 •

* KITCHEN SAVER*Total fomodoling/rofac-ing: formica, Corian, &hardwood cabinets. CallButch 469-5661.

4130Landscaping

and Tree Care

* * A-SCAPE * *All phases of land & lawncare. Maintenance, land-scape design, Inslalla-rbhr onstuct t

LAWN SERVICE- Qual-ity work, affordable pric-es. 10 yrs. experience.

^09251

4160Masonry

LAWNS CUTReasonable

Call 908-276-5220 & askfor Jim or leave messge ft

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAADEAN KOEP & SON

MASON CONTRACTORSSpecializing in:steps.sjdewalks, patios, all

"Brick""and" Wock',' "Freeest. Fully Ins., Samelocation 27 yr.s exp.

908-757-7421

4180Painting

PAINTING BY BOBQuality service for 25 yrs.

- Interior & oxtoriorFree est. & Fully Ins.

Paperhanging also avail.Stelnman & Daughter

908-526-3382

• CAPITOLRESTORATIONS

Interior & exterior paint-ing' & staining. Power-washing, alum, siding ro-finishlng. 90B-249-O911.

-Fully Ins. Froo ost.

CUSTOM PAINTING andWALLPAPERING— Int. &ext. Remodeling of bathsand kitchens. Docks in-sta l led. FREE ESTI-MATES. Call Tom, 755-6541,800-300-6541.

r construction/ ~t op"soil, mulch, stone, treework. Reliable, profes-sional service. Fullyinsured. Free est. 908-685-1973/908-356-7255.

BASIL CONTRACTINGKit. Baths, Basements,Decks, for all home im-provement. Fully Ins.,free est. 908-232-2997.

BATHTUB & TILE RE-SURFACING- 5 yearwarranty, free estimates.Call 908-756-5351

* JUNK REMOVAL *ATTICS • BASEMENTS

BACKYARDST2BT

4080Handyman Services

. AL'S HANDYMAN *•••SERVICE , v ,

Gon, Home, repairs .Decks stained & sealed.

Free estl call 725-9290

' APPLIANCE REPAIRAll major brands, allmajor appliancos. Roa-sonablo, experienced, re-liable. Same day service... Jeff (908) 369-4075

NILLA'S CLEANING &CARTING SERVICE

Attics, basements, ga-rages, junk" removal of allkinds. .908-754-6875

CARPENTRY & ROOF-I N G - repair. Ceiling &floor porches, steps,paint. Call 356-9020

ABSOLUTELY THE BESTLawn maintenance, land-scaping, mulch, fertilizer,thatching, clean-ups.Commercial/residential.Insured. Call Visions ofGreen - 968-4138

PINE LANDSCAPING& LAWN MAINT.

All phases of landscap-ing and lawn malnt., FreeEst.s, Owner operated,Satisfaction guaranteed,TREE SERVICE ALSOAVAIL., 908-968-5670

ALL AROUND GROUND-K E E P E R S - S.C.U. -W.LM.-AII kinds of treat-ments. Designing &Planting, masonry, lawnsprinklers & Etc. Freeest. Call HUBJARDS'S561-6244

LUSARDILANDSCAPING &

LAWN MAINTENANCEWe also remove trees,trim shrubs and hedges.Senior citizen discount.We travel anywhere. 908-469-7682.

mEE SERVICETree- removal, pruning,brush chipping, log split-tlng. (908) 722-3235.PERENNIAL DESIGN &GARDEN MAINT.- De-greed horticulturist. Getyrs of low main, beautyfrom flowering plants. Ex-pert care for existing gar-dens. Call Kim 889-4119.

AA TAURUS MASONRY

J & J PAINTING— Int./ext. Free est. 10 yr3 exp.Ref's avail Fully Ins.

908-757-9822

Steps, sidewalk's, patios,all types of brick & block.Foundations & Interlock-ing pavors. 756 -7962__

BILL WILKINS PAVINGAND EXCAVATING

Asphalt and concreterepair. 754-8663

C A R P E N T R Y7MTT~SONRY-r Steps, walls,decks, Additions. 232-3057 or 679-4108 John

JP MASONRY REPAIRRepairs On All Masonry.No Job Too Small! FreeEsWRef. (908)704-8213

PLAZA LAWN CARE-Comploto lawn mainte-nance, patios & walk-ways, rai lroad t ies,spring clean-up. CallPeter at 908-464-2089

ROSE GARDENLANDSCAPING

Specials on SpringCleanup & Monthly lawnmaintenance. Land-scaping designs; sod,seed, RR tie walls. Fullyinsured. Free estimates.

(908) 786-7563

CARPENTRY BY QUEUCONSTRUCTION CO—

4100Home Improvement

Welded vinyl replace-ment windows & steeldoors. Custom decks,addit ions, dormers,kitchen & bath remodel-ing, basements, drywall& taping. NO JOB TOOSMALL! Fully insured,tree est. 704-0262.

$ , A - D E C K S , , , $10SHEQ/PECK EXPERTS

Decks•1onj*v*10 sq.ft.Free est/819-0702.

ABRA-CADABRAHOME IMPROVEMENTSADDITIONS « CARPEN-TRY— Jppfing, dgrrners,kit. design, Sheetrock,design help, Good pric-es, Ins.. Ed 908-757-8911

WORD PROCESSING-Off-site, fast & accuratew/reasonable rates. A Zil-lion WPM.201-347-5033.

TO ADVERTISECALL OUR

CLASSIFIED HOTLINETOLL FREE

1-800-559-9495

CERAMIC TILE &MARBLE CONTRACTOR11 yrs. experience, longlasting quallty'work. FullyIns., free, ostmatos, refs.

John DeNlcola, Jr.908-232-7383

* * R O T O T 1 U J N G * *(Trbybilts.) Established:Gardens as low as $251Free ests. Call 725-3228.

LEARN NAY'S TIPS ONMASONRY. Call 1-900-262-5577. S2.50 per min/5 min call. $12.50 totalcall. 18+ to call. Up-dated weekly. 45 tipatotal. 15 tips providedper call. Grant researchand Devetopement. 54Cramer Rd., Poughkeep:

Sle, NY. 914-454-8172. IPIs not a professional Inthis field.

• PAINTING*ROOFING

SIDING20yrs exp. Very highquality, V f l f a L J j

4180Painting

R. A N D R E C H I C K -Paintlng & paper hang-ing. 30 yrs. quality expe-rience. 494-5836.

TOM HANSONPAINTERS

Interior • ExteriorWallpapering

Free Estimates. PleasoCall Tom, 908-469-5952

WHY PAY MORE7 Paint-ing for apts., condos,homes $70/rm; Wallpa-per $20/rotlr spackllngr-Neal & Cleanl 707-9872.

4200Plumbing, Heating

and Cooling

dependable.)- Lowestprices. Super refs.

Get In touch beforeyou pay too much!

Call Spencer McLeish• 908-231-8294*

PAINTING & WALLPA-~PERING=^Exterior/-inte-rlor, custom work. Com-merclal/res'ldentlal.FULLY INSURED. Nick658-9235

A PAINTING BY JOHN -Personalized, meticu-lous, quality painting &repair work. 10% disc, onall jobs. Free Estimates.

vft 908-781-9415 .. ..

COPPERHEADPlumbing & Heating Inc•New Construction•Boiler Installations•Drain Cleaning•WaieFHsatersExpert, Neat. FriendlyService. Uc. 8917. Call

752-8808/647-9331

EMERGENCYSERVICE

Sewer & drain cleaning,water heaters, Gas Boil-e r s , Bathrooms. Allplumbing repairs,

Truppl PlumbingWilliam Truppl•uppl

Piumblng-tJcrNumbar—8707 Call 908-754-3750.

PAINTING— Interior-exterior! 25 years exp.The best price in town!Call Jerry, 908-221-1595.

ROTOTILLJNGStarting at $15 and up.fin InhVtnn rlltilr-ult nx

MASONCONTRACTORS

Specializing in all typesof masonry: Brick work,block work, concrete,etc. Fully insured. Freeestimates.

NO JOBTOO SMALL908-526-3500

P A I N T I N G - Let awoman do your painting.Neat, clean quality work.Insured. Free estimates.Call Maryann 560-9235.

PAINTING— PaperHanging, Powerwashing.Int/Ext. Will beat anyestimatel Call 704-0038.

P.M.C. PLUMBING ANDHEATING- Don't beafraid to call a plumberagain. No Job too small.Sewer and drain cleaninga speciality. Free EstUmates. Fully Insured. Uc.#9466.

908-805-9274

too small! 908-654-6220.

CERAMIC TILERemodeling, installationand repair. Free esti-mates, 908-236-7935

DECKS DECKSS P E C I A L S P R I N GPRICES. Limited time.Build now and save $SS.Fully Insured. Unlimitedreferences. Color portfo-lio. CALL 908-526-0005

DECKS— Offering Cedar& CCA at super prices.Your design or ours.Fully Ins. Tlmberline Con-struction 753^5761.

DOORSDOORS DOORS DOORSInstall & repair all types.Int/Ext Call 908-707-1578

* + * *DRIVEWAYS & FENCING

BY CATENADriveways, Curbing, Alltypes of fencing. FreeEstimates. Will beat anyprice! 908-968-3432

PAINTERS — LANDSCAPERS

AdvertiseAll

Summer4 Lines For 1 3 Weeks

Additional Lines, add $10.00 for each

Fill 1 character per box, allowing for spaces andpunctuation as necessary. Remember to includephone number. No abbreviations, please!

Name ,AddressPhone _City Slate Zip.

VISA/MC#. . Exp. Date

Coupon Expi'as8/30/94.

or call to place your ad

Mail with check or moneyorder to:

Classified DepartmentForbes Newspapers

P.O. Box 699Somerville, NJ 08876

1-800-559-9495

DRIVEWAYS- Parkingtots.r Blaok ~topp»o\stoned, sealed. Also topsoil delivered. 722-1882

DRYWALLINSTALLATION

& FINISHINGSpecializing In Additions,Renovations & Base-ments. Free Estimates.

908-819-8528

EXCAVATINGTrucking, concrete work,demolition, Low rates,FREE EST. 908-972-8907

A R B O R I S TTREE EXPERTS

Removal, Trimming,Stump Grinding,

Cabling, Fertilizing,Refs & Fully Ins.

JOHNSON'S TREESERVICE

Somerville Area Call:908-658-9090

Morristown Area Call:908-766-9090

ARMSTRONGLANDSCAPING

Lawn maintenance ser-vice. Stump grinding, in-terlocking brick paver,patios & walkways, back-hoe digging, grading &york raking, rototllllng,retaining walls, lawns in-stalled, sod/seed. CallJoe, 885-5323.

B A G LAWN SERVICECleanups, Thatching,Fertilizing, etc. Nowbooking for '94 Season.

Metuchen/Edison Area908-846-6304

R O T O T I L L I N G - Gar-dens expertly tilled withTroy-Built, Est. gardens•60/sq. yard.. 534-2674

SPRING CLEAN-UPS—Lawn cutting and fallclean-ups. Call Stuart at725-5806

MASONRYStopsT.Sidewalks. Allconcrete & brick work.

908-755-9038

PETER D1NIZOMason Contractor

All masonry work. Freeestimate. 908-889-5771.

SPRING CLEANUPSThatching. Fertilizing,

Mulch, Topsoll.908-769-1621

T&TTREE EXPERTSA Complete Tree

and Shrub Service10% Discount to all

Sr. Citizens & new Cust.753-2884 or 369-7727

Fully Ins Free Est.

WE DO IT ALL- Side-walks, patios, chimneys.Anything you need, we'lldb if, 215-759-0233. 1

PAINTJNCL- sheetrock,yardwork, other srves.Manny's Helping HandsService 412-9462, pagor201-806-5333

PAUL A. MILLAR PAINT-I N G - Meticulous Int/ExtSvcs. 12, yrs exper. FullyIns. Free est:~Exceltentrefs. Call Paul 846-7186

PLUMBING & HEATINGLow rates. Good service.Drain cleaning. Free esti-mates. License #6461.Call John 968-8634

PLUMBING, HEATING &drain cloanlng.20% OFFw i t h a d . 9 0 8 - 5 2 6-6622.Llc.#1287. Unloh352-2894.MdsX 525-1117 •

AdvertiseIn the C/ass/f/ed/

4220Roofing

ROOFING-ALL TYPES,P. Dannuccl, Fully Ins,,20 + yrs.exp. Free Estl

908-996-6462

PROFESSIONALPAINTING

Free estimates(201)525-6030

Advertise In the Classified!

THE PLANT SHAPERHave your shrubs andsmall trees prof, shapedand m u l c h e d thiss e a s o n .

Anthony E. Kroposky908-725-4476

41S0Painting

ANTHONY'S PAINTINGInterior/exterior. Roofing,gutters cleaned/installed.Free est. 752-6441.

ATTENTIVE-CAREFULInterior Painting

Wallpapering908-234-0417

( JK'SWALLCOVERING'

* INSTALLATIONI and Interior

Painting

[IL ... Quality _

WorkmanshipCall:

- Joe KlingebielI 322-1956II Free Estimates

4230YJaUpaperlng

. A BEAUTIFUL JOB ',by Feminine Hangups..Neat, professional, treeestimates. Call Joan

908-526-0251WALLPAPERING BY •FEMININE TOUCH '

Reasonable rates'.Prompt service. Free es-timates. No job topsmall. Call 908-231-0282

4235Windows

REPLACEMENT* * WINDOWS**STORM DOORS

& WINDOWSSave energy.low prices767-3733: 475-5670

BROOKSIDE FARMLANDSCAPING

Lawn Care, Mulching,Design, Backhoe rental.Quality work & reasonable prices! Free est,fully In3. 469-8604.

CLEAN UPSLANDSCAPINGLAWN MOWING

Prompt, professional—service at down t o — -

earth prices, call:908-725-4623

D.J. LAWN SERVICE &ROTOTILLING- Lawnscut and trimmed, gar-dens rototilled. For Treeest. call 968-4821.

DAN'S TREE SERVICE10% discount to newcustomers. 908-226-0728. Plainfleld area.

Ads In Classified -don't cost —

They pay!

General ContractingNo lob to small

Wo do It allWe beat all est./financlngInsured with 20 yrs. oxp.

. 908-647-1042

HOiyiEAlterations

and AdditionsPrompt and Courteous

Servicos"Quality at its Best"

WALLACECONSTRUCTION

725-3845- J.F.K. -

CONSTRUCTION• Res. / Comm. ••908-276-1012 •* * MR. DO-RIGHT * *

Soiling? Rontlnn?Moving? Call mo Tor allyour work, exp. palntor,spackulor, Tile, porch &scroon repair. Storm dr.sInstalled," Mastor of triosmall |ob- 908968-7540

SIDEWALK SALERomovo and RoplacoS8 sq ft undor 100 sq ftSB sq ft ovor 100 sq ft.908-356-0404 RE: Phllllpa

STEVE BUHLERCONSTRUCTION

Rosldental/CommorclalQuality work at compotl-tlvo ratos. Wo do It, ALLIrom basomont to root,Olllco Intorlors. Fully in-surod. Roloroncns avail-able. 908-068-7042

EXECUTIVE LANDSCAP-ING— Cutting, seeding,thatching, fertilizing;Comm/resldentlal. Dis-count rates. 442-9377.

FULL LAWN SERVICESodding, seeding, topsoil. Lawn renovations.

Depend. 201-377-2555

G. MURPHY TREE SRVC23 yrs. exp. All tree care& stump removal. Qualitywork at Jow ratest FullyInsured & free estimates.463-THEEV245-6423.

* * GOLD S E A L * *MAINT. ENTERPRISE

Maintenance & landscap-ing. 908-769-7821

HUNTER LAWN CAREFreo ost., lowost prices,Lawn malnt., Shrub care,Fort.ing. 908-753-8262

JUST STUMPSINC

Tree & Stump Removal

Is your stump a pain Inthe GRASS?

Froo Est.. Fully Ins.Senior Cltzon Disc.

Call 24hrs. 908-634-1318

PROMOTE YOUR BUSINESSON FORBES NEWSPAPERSANNUAL FOURTH OF JULY

FLAG PAGE

LANDSCAPING Lawnsmowod for as little as$20. Thatching, sooding,shrub trimming, Installa-tions. Call Jeff 753-6742.

LANDSCAPINGSERVICE

Grass c u t t i n g , ox-porloncod. 876-9779

LANDSCAPING— awardwinning doslgns to fittodays Tlfostylo. complotoprofessional installationand malntononco, call forno obligation, FREEC O N S U L T A T I O N I

NORTH RIDGELANDSCAPINQ -~\008-359-1418 '•

Each year Forbes Newspapers prints a full page, red,white and blue flag on the back page of our classifiedsection. Join our group of advertisers by promoting yourbusiness as one of the sponsors listed on the back of thispatriotic, eye-catching window ornament.

Business Name

Address

Phone#Send this Coupon and $30 to

Forbes NewspapersPO Box 699

Classified DepartmentSomerville, NJ 08876

arid We'll List You As One Of Our Sponsors

Page 12:  · 18/05/1994  · B-12 The Chronicle May 11,1994^ TEST DRIVE BASE PRICE: -$16;508 z~lT~~ PRICE AS TESTED: $21,136 ENGINE TYPE: 1.8-liter D0HCI4w/EFI ENGINE SIZE: 109 cid/ 1762 cc

R-R The Chronicle May 1&r

FREEREAL

RESTATE SCHOOLTuition & Booksto Qualified ApplicantsInterview with us, and we will pay your realestate school tuition and book fee!

€all TodayforDetails.

WeichertSydney FischRegional Director of Recruiting

Offer Expires JulyJ. 1994

5000EMPLOYMENT

5010-5100

5010 -

5020

5030504050505060507050805090

Career Training& Services

Child CareWanted

• Agencies- Domestic• General- Health Care- Managerial- Part-Time- Employment_JWanted• Career

Investments &Opportunities

5010Career Trainingand Services

BAR-TENDINGTRAINING

Modern tropical barsetting, 1 on 1 training,Job asslt. avail. 424-1403

5020Child Care Wanted

A S U M M E R J O BOPPTY— Looking lor en-ergetic, realiable person,HS age or older who en-joys babysitting, for chil-dren ages 6 & 12. PT,B:15-2:30pm; MrThurs.Ref's & own iransp. a

-must.Ef foctlvo -6/27- -till -Labor Day.908-276-2373

EXP. CARE GIVER- fornewborn and toddler, Inour Bridgowater/Martlns-ville home, to assit moth-er, boglnnlng July, 5days, 30-40 hr., Exp., N/S; own trans, light house-keeping, ref. roq., 908-302-0322

LIVE-IN NANNY/HOUSE-KEEPER— care for Infant5-6 days/week. Cleaning,light cooking, and 1lu-ency In English required.Private quarters pro-vided. •908-704-8076.

NANNY- Mon.-Frl, 8-6pm. english speaking,N/S, own trans., Mln. 2're's, Must have exp. withInfants, call between 4-8pm. 908-232-0558

5050Employment-

"General

S200-S500 WEEKLY!Assemble products athome. Easyl No selling.You're paid direct.' Fullyguaranteed. No. exp.necessary. 1,-618-993-8025 Ext. HI 668 24 hrs.

ASSEMBLERS: Excellentincome to assembleproducts at home. Info1-504-646-1700 DEPT.NJ-8331.

Assistants FT/PTCOLLEGE STUDENTS

Local office of nationalcorp. will fill positions forSummor work program.S10.50/start. Scholar-ships, Credits, All ma-jors. Full Co. training.

908-704-8555Auto

* * * * *AUTO TECHS, * * * * *

Busy repair shops. Un-limited earnings! Lookingfor top producers. Salaryplus commissions. O.T.available. Co, paid mo-chanic education. Excel-lent work environmentOppt'y for growth In mgt.Full fringe benefits tool.

SUBURBAN TIRE CO.Green Brook

Somorvllle, MotuchonCall (BOS) 526-4203

* * * * *CAMPAIGN MANAGER

Experience in major giv-ing solicitation. Rospon-slblo for fundralslng Inlocal organizations.Financial/Planned Givingoxporlonco a plus. Sendrosumo by May 27 tor-United Way of SomorsotCounty, 205 Wost MainSt., Somorvllld, NJ08876.

DID YOUKNOW . . .

This littlo ad can bo roadby moro than 380,000roudoru In 17 publica-tions throughout Somor-sot, Middlesex and UnionCountloa? It caught yourattontlon. didn't It?

. Call YOUR ad in todayl

1-800-559-9495Wo Got RosultsI

Advertise In th* ClatsHlod!

5050Employment^

General

CARPENTERNeeds truck & tools. Call908-271-2938. .

CARPENTER- Exp.Familiar with all types ofremodeling & bldg. Alsoexp. Helpers, will train.Must have transp., owntools & driver's lie.

908-248-0690

C H I L D C A R E - Earnmoney providing qualitychlldcare for 1 or morechildren In your ownhome. MONDAY MORN-ING INC, offers free In-surance, referrals, equip-ment, back-up & more.Union County 908-668-4884; Somerset County908-526-4884

"*"*"*-* ' * ' *"* ' * * *'*CLERICAL— FT, heavyphone work, general 01-f(pe duties. Hrs 8-4, M-F.Please call Linda be-tween 10-2. Benefits.526-0880.

CLERICALVaried duties includinglots of computer work.Apply in person to: J.H.Tomploton Company,3602 Kennedy Rd. ,South Plalnfleld, NJ.

COUNTER HELPMature reliable wantedfor new Cotlee/Donut/yo-gurt shop In Fanwood,Seniors welcome, AlsoDonut baker tor midnightshift, please call Frank908-889-2253 or apply inperson at Today's De-light Inc., 590 North Ave,Fanwood

CUSTOMER SERVICEREP

National plastics prod-ucts manufacturer offersan Interesting & challeng-ing administrative posi-tion for sales orientedperson who enjoys cus-tomer contact. Must havetelephone skills, figureaptitude & be computerliterate. Full benefits,competitive salary, 37 1/2 hr. wk., congenial of-fice. Send resume to:Box218. %Forbes Newspa-pers, PO Box 699, Som-ervllle. NJ 08876 ooe/m/l.

Dell CounterFull/Part Time help..Responsible, reliableperson who is good w/people, can work week-ends, and has experi-ence. Call 757-7730. Askfor Shelly or Joanne.

DRIVERROUTE/SALES

rococjFHZOu leticiei" lit I 001the rental uniform serviceIs looking for a highlymotivated individual tojoin our team. You mustbe energetic, a goodcommunicator and enjoyworking with people. Ex-cellent opportunity forgrowth. We offer steadyemployment, a startingsalary In the mid 20's,commissions, full ben-efits and excellent retire-ment vehicles. No experi-ence necessary, willtrain. Apply now! Ap-plications are now beingaccepted at:

CINTASCORPORATION

51 New England Ave.Plscatawoy, NJ 08854

Or mail resume to theHuman Resources Dept.

DRIVERSExperienced driversneeded for #\ Llmo Co.FT/PT positions nva l.Knowledge of Tri Statearoa a must. Professionaldrivers nood only apply

Mon.-Thurs.9am-12 noon.

GARDEN STATE LIMO .B9 Ridge Rd.

No. Arlington, NJ.(201)997-7368oxt. 621, Tony

DRIVERSStraight & tractor, FfT forlocal work. Dispatchedfrom Rarltan Center.Clean CDL roq'd. 2 yrs.oxp. in Motro aroa.

(908) 225-546610nrn-3pm

DRIVER— To mako localdollvorios with van andwarohouso work. CallStovo at POIICIM* Poolu.

908-534-2400

EARN $500 OR MOREPER W E E K - Homoworkors noodod. As-sombly product at homo.Excollont pay. Rocordodmossago glvos dotutls.908-309-1496 oxt. 220

FINANCIAL PLANNERSooks computer litoratoIndividual. Lotus, WordPorfoct, socrotarlal akllla.Financial sorvlcos a plus.Part Tlmo Daya. Call

(008) 754-1734

AdvertiseIn the Classified!

5050Employment-

General

SUMMERHELP

(Not phone sales)Above average incomefor summer In 15ground level positions.Supervisory experiencefor quick learners. CallKim for Interview.

(908)253-9669

GROOM- full time forprivate farm. Must haveexp. with horses andfarm equipment. Housingavail. Call 908-234-0955after 6pm

HAIR SALON & SPANOW HIRING- E/T&pyT, hair stylists, Estheti-clan, receptionist, nailtechnician, massagetherapist, Must have 2years of experience, ex-cellent salary + benefits,Must apply In person,

HAIR STYLISTS/MANICURISTS— FT/PT,competitive pay. Exp. &f o l l o w i n g a p l u s .Dunellen area. Days 900-968-4577: eves. 908-752-2227, ask for Jamos.

HAIR SYLIST &SHAMPOO ASSISTANTNeeded. Call for inter-view 908-752-2110

HAIRDRESSER— FT/PT,minimum 2 yrs recent ex-perience for busy up-scale salon in white-house Sta. Salary, com-mission, benefits. 534*2355, ask for Monica.

HELP WANTED DRYCLEANER- F/PT work.2764333, Cranford.

HOTEL

If you enjoy talking onthe phone...

MarriottNY REGIONAL OFFICE,located In Somerset, NJ,is expanding AGAIN andwill need several ambi-11 o us

RESERVATIONSALES AGENTS

both full and part time.Flexible scheduleoffered; no experiencerequired. We offerexcellent benefits andthe opportunity to growwith an outstanding '

fleaae call—formore information orapply in p e r s o n :

908-302-52162 Executive Dr., Ste 300

Somerset, NJ(Across Davidson Ave

from the SomersetMarriott)

EOE

INSTALLERGlass company will trainmechanically Inclinedperson. Steady work,good benefits. NJ driverslicense required.

(908) 725-0503LANDSCAPE HELPER-Installatlons & malnt.,Somerville Area, callMike, 908-534-5358 aft.6pm

MASON LABORERSTransportation. Experi-ence pref. Will train. Callafter 7pm. 908-874-5459.

, MECHANICFor construction com-pany, experienced withdlosol, heavy highwayequipment and trucks.Full bonoflt packageContact Lisa at:

908-356-4140

MECHANIC WANTED-Auto, light truck oxp.roq'd. Apply within, Bark-er Bua Co., 1400 Rt. 22E., Brldgowalor, or call302-0500 oxt. 115.

MEMBERSHIPSPECIALIST

Non-protlt youth organi-zation sooKs candldatowith strong communica-tion & organizationalskills. Position includessupervising adults, mom-borshlp rocrultmont, Pro-gram Markotlng, workingwith dlvorso communl-tlos. Roaurnos with covorlottor son! to: DlroctorMembership Sorvlcos,Washington Rock GirlScout Council, 201Grovo St. E., Wostllold,NJ 07090.

OWNER OPERATORSWANTED— Lift nutotrucks wantod for localpick up dollvorios. CDLand nood driving rocordruqulrod. Pluaau call

1(201) 623-0036

Advertise In the Classified!

automotive salesExperience helpful but not necessary.

,: Will train the right person.Customer-conscious organizations.Excellent compensation package.

Great product lines.Call Kevin Holahan at 609/683-0722.

serviceExperience preferred.

king conditions, benefits^Curstomer-consdous organizations.

Call Dick Bittle at 609/683-0840.

OFFICE MANAGER-Growing 3 year old spe-cialty food sales & mar-keting company seeksenergetic, personal, ma-ture assistant with a dowhat it takes attitude tohelp take us to newheights. GOOD SALARY+ good future growthpotential. Position canstart as part time, but willgrow to full lime within 1year. SKILLS: Must be anobservant problem solverable to keep severalballs In the air at once;responsibilities also In-clude order taking, filing,bill paying/check bookentries/balancing, andsome end of month com-puter (sales) analysis re-ports (WP & Lotus^help!ful); good" Telephonemanner/customer serviceskills a plus, as is foodbroker experience. Pleas-ant suburban Warren NJocatlon. If you want achance to show what youcan do. fax your resume& salary requirements to:908-647-8305. attn: RON.

POLISHER & GRINDERWe need experiencedpolisher & grinder who isexperienced In presservessel or pharmaceuticalprocessing equipment.Middlesex

(908) 356-9300POSTAL JOBS

Start $11.41/hr. For exam& ' application Info, call219-769-8301 ext.NJ589;9-9pm. Sun-Frl,

PRODUCTION OPERA-TORS— Positions availday/night shift. Goodway-for moms to re-enterjob market. Apply P.O.Box 25, Rarltan, NJ,08869 or 908-7Q7-93.93

PROGRAMASSISTANTS

Assists at scheduledwee knight/weekendactivities and programsf o r p e o p l e w i t hdisabilities. Must be 18yrs old or over and havea . val id NJ DriversLicense. For moreInformation call 908-526-5650 (Hearing Impaired908-526*4762) EOE.

REAL ESTATE SALESExperienced preferred,but will train. Excellenttraining program, greatIncome potential, com-pany bonuses, no fran-chise fees. Take themost Important step foryour career, call now tolearn how to Increase

Inrnmft ftriji "W0what you are worth! CallAdele Zielinskl, Mgr. for aconfidential Intervieweves:BEDMINSTER OFFICE

908-781-1000WEICHERT REALTORS

RECEPTIONIST/CLERI-CAL— Mori.-Frl., 9-5pm,benefits avail., 908-722-881

RETAIL

MAKEYOURSELFAT HOME

Channel Home Centers,Inc. Is on the lookout forellable, enthusiastic

p e o p l e who wantto come home to acompany that will treatthem like family. Wehave the followingopportunities available:

PART-TIME:SALES

GREETERCASHIERS

FULL TIME:FLOOR

MAINTENANCE(Floor care experience

Is required.)

Ale would prefer someotal l oxpor ionco;

however, wo will train•ou If you havo whatI takes. Part-time

positions offor a goodhourly rote plus paid'ucatlons and holidays.If full-tlmo, wo offer

competitive salarlosand comprehensivebonofits).

lease apply In poraon:Channel Homo Centers,

nc , Route #2 0 2 ,Somorvil lo Clrolo,Rqrlton, NJ. EqualOpportunity EmployorM/F/D/V. C h a n n o lmaintains a drug-frooenvironment.

CHANNEL

RESTAURANTNOW HIRING for lunch &daytime positions. Flex-ible scheduling, advance-ment opportunities.Excel, for homemakorsor students. Wendy's,1010 Station Rd., Plsca-taway. (908) 981-0040.

SALES PROS NEEDED!W/outside exp. Growthforces us to expand oursales force. 10 peopleneeded (M-F). $75,0001st yr. possible.

908-356.5766SalesWANTED 100 PEOPLEto lose weight. Earn

money - all from home!P/T, F/T. Call 1-800-869-0094 (24 hours) for free:lnfo. JHiS:iS:F_DR HEALC

SALES/ELECTRONIC-Ex'p req'd, buslness-to-business, many benefits.Send resume to; ThorElectronics Corp., P.O.Box 707, Linden, NJ,07036; fax: 908-486-0923:

S A L E S - Full Time,enthusiastic, peopleperson wanted ford i v e r s e c a r e e r inFinancial services with amajor company, Full'Benefits, Experienceh e l p f u l b u t no tnecessary, call 754-7576

SECRETARIES W/W.P.High Power Tempsneeds Dependable, Qual-ified Temporary Employ-ees to fill job, orders fromour c'lpM companies inthis area.

HIGH POWER/TEMPS105 Eatt Union Ave

Bound Brook, NJ 08805OAllSfiflfH

SECRETARY/SALES S U P P O B T -Qrowlng Consulting Co.seeks highly organized,self-motivated personwith good communica-tion skills, good typingskills, WordPerfect exp.Salary plus benefits. '

Call 908-526-8346

Security

IF YOU'REA CUT ABOVETHE REST...

Major New Job Sitesto Staff I

S300/wk & UP,Dep. on Exp.YOU GET:

•TOP STARTINGSALARY & TOP PAY•Job Security•Future MGMT Opp'y

YOU MUST:«Do over 10, have ahome phone & car

•Be exp'd, reliable,ambitious•Relate well to people•Be drug-freeIf you can meet ourrigorous standards,a p p l y in p e r s o n ,Mon-Frl, 10AM-2PM.

NllsenDetective Agency

1203 E. Broad SLElizabeth

-(1 blk from Broad,near RR Sta.)

EOE • M/F/V/H/R

SERVERS- dishwash-ers, Hosts/hostesses,Now hiring,, apply Inperson, O'Connors Beef& Ale, 708 MountainBlvd., Watchung, NJ

S H I P P I N G A N DRECEIVING- Immediatefull time and summerpostlons available. Noexperience necessary.Must have valid NJdriver's license and gooddriving record. We offerexcellent compensationand benefits. Call 908-356-8500 for Interview ora p p I y in p e r s o n :

Tire Dealers SupplyWost Main St.

Bound Brook, NJ 08805

SHIPPING/RECEIVINGMANAGER- Light man-ufacturer seeks hands-onmanager to ship/receivepack, Inventory of fin-ished noods, and rawmatorlal, paperwork. 5.yrs-mln. exp. Sond re-sumo P.O. Box 25, Rarl-tan, NJ, 08869.

SUMMER JOBS- Col-logo pro-manager look-Ing for painters to workIn Scotch Plalns/Wost-(lold aroa. 908-322-7646_

TEACHER AIDEM. W, F for Sept. '94.8:45-12:15. Early child-hood oxporlonco. Call469-5454.

TEACHERS— noodod forfull yoar positions, latoJuno, F/T (8hr./day) cort.& oxp. Pro.-K toachor:-toachor asst. Mon.Frl. 3-6pm;Toachor asst.Mon.Frl. 7:30-12; Sub.aalso noodod, ploaso call008-704-8686 EOE

Advertise In the Clasalllodl

SALES

Business DevelopmentRepresentativesPart Tim* Opportunities

Potenfial to earn $15,000-520,000 (base salary,commission & quarterly bonus) working in the fast-

' ' ' ' Imenl of this copier dealer.o qualify/ you must be aggressive, motivated andales-orionlod as you will be responsible for selling up

«._„».•» r__ . _..i .:- i- — 1 _ - -—- TL;- ?salesappointments for our outside salesideal opportunity for those free to y

jFor a

2

j J gappointmenfrc01-376-0055,

reps. This is anwork mornings orjuarlers.ifiC6~at:380

Garden State Business MachinesEqual OppoHUnilyffinptoyer M/F

5050Employment-

General

TELEMARKETINGUpbeat and energetic In-dividuals oaeded for Fulltlme-and partttmo-posl-•lions In our ClassifiedDept. Somerville loca-tion— Exc«llent-phone-manner and customerservice/organizational-skills required. Gome-computer experiencehejpful. _P|ease contactDoug Baum, at (908)722-3000, ext. 6201.

TRACTOR TRAILERDRIVER- (Casual) ForEdison Dlst. Center, (ordeliveries to fast foodstores. Flex. hrs. Musthave exp. and CDL lie.

Call (908) 549-5000Ext. 222

TRAVEL AGENTFT/PT. Exp.pref. Som.Cty area. Call Elaine fordetails, 908-874-8200.

phone manner and ahRB-S-HipbBHtpersonalltyf-then

this is right for you.Hours available are6pm-9pm, Mondaythrough Thursday.Flexible schedule,,excellent hourly rateand opportunity foradditional incentive $$$.

Call John at1-800-300-9321

WATER/SEWERUTILITY CLERK

WITH DATA ENTRYEXPERIENCE

L O O K I N G FORQUALIFIED APPLICANT

J - O W O R K F-/T-, .COMPUTEFl-L-ITeRATEr+»«on-AveABLE TO HANDLEC A S H , P O S T I N GPAYMENTS, HEAVYPHONE CONTACT WITHP U B L I C , MATUREI N D I V I D U A L , FULLBENEFIT COVERAGE.BORO OF-MANVILLE-.101 S O U T H MAINSTREET, MANVILLE, N.J.

(908) 725-9478.

* * * *

SURVEYOR- PT, with orwithout experience. Retir-ees welcome. 908-722-2121/725-0025 anytime.

5060Employment-Healthcare

NURSESJoin the INTERIM®Healthcare team. We areseeking experienced profes-sionals who would Bketo;BEIN CONTROL & CHOOSEYOUR DAYS, SHIFTS & AS-SIGNMENTS. We offer ex-celent pay& benefits, liabili-ty coverage & texiblity toVKxfcafewhours...oras manyas you want! NEEDEDSTAT...RNs&LPNs with ven-tilator experience. Call ustoday a t

(908) 549-2210 -.(908) 725-1820(609)443-1711

Int rimE A L T H C A R E

25 South M*ln SI.Edison. NJ 08837

Equal Opportunity Employer |

5080Part-Time

Employment

ADMIN. ASST.— Familyowned and operated in-surance agency lookingf P/Tf orflxpv/per3on7WordPerfect for windowskills a must. Very flex-

i d P lyfax or mall resume.

Fax (908) 276TJ97,1Attn. K. JonesP.O. Box 660

Cranford NJ 07016

CUSTOMERSERVICE

REPRESENTATIVEPART TIME EVENINGS

FbrbesN E W S f A P EJR S

DENTAL ASSISTANT-Mature person, exp. pref,but will train, 20-25 hr3/wk. Send Resume to

. 5 javl, Edison, NJ

08820. 908-549-4974.DENTAL HYGENIST-Westfield area, familypractice, recent Grad.OKI P/T Tuesday &Thursday, reply: PO BOX244, QarWOOd Q7027

DRIVER- PT, Mon.-Sat.5-7am. for paper vendingroute In-go. Plalnfleld &Edison. Call

908-561-1701

FASHION ADVISORWear & show ladles jew-elry 2 eves. S125. No In-vestment, 908-756-3068

F E M A L E J A N I T O RWANTED— for femalelocker room and duties.Approx. 15-20 hours/week. Please contactMetuchen/Edison YMCAat 548-2044. •

MACHINE OPERATOR-With mechanical ability,tor grinding-and polish-ing optical lenses, call908-356-1461

AdvertiseIn the Classified!

SECURITY OFFICERSPABTJIME& FULLTIME

Above average starting rntes-for SecurityOfficers. Assignments with many of themost prestigious companies in the state.Wo offer:

• TRAINING

• LIFE INSURANCE• VACATION L•HOLIDAYS

Call (908) 981-1995 for more information.

WELLSFARGOGUARDSERVICESEqual Opportunity Employer

5080—Part-TimeEmployment

MODELS— New faces-TV-Prlnt-Fashlon. Ages 8& up at Daanna TrustModels Madison NJ. callfor Appt. 201-377-1788

PART TIMEEARLY MORNING

Newspaper routes are" " a 11 aI h I 9 ' n. t.h-o-13 A S K I N G RIDGE,"

-eRMAE-ftSXILB E D M I N S T E R ,PEAPACK & FAR HILLSareas. Earn $400 to$500 a month, plus cashIncentives. A reliable carIs a must. Call:

1-800-242-0852PART-TIME LEGALSECRETARY- neededfor Somerville law firm.Legal experience andWordPerfect necessary.Flex hours. Please call908-526-4050.

PART-TIMEOpportunities

PATHMAnK^supermar-

mm^usmsa5Kztnow accepting applica-tions for the followingPART-TIME positions atour Somerville store:

*; Grocery(2nd sh i f t &nitecrew)~ '~

* Cashiers(all shifts)

* Bakery( m o r n i n g &early PM's)

*Oeli (7am - 2pm)

We offer competitive sala-ries and excellent ben-efits, Including paid holi-days, paid vacations andmorel

Apply in personPATHMARKOF SOMERVILLE100 Veterans Memorial.

DriveSomerville.NJ

Equal Oppty Empler rvi/F „

5080Part-Time—

Employment

BOOKKEEPERATYPISTSmall businesses only.-Ex.--3ecne.tary,- J .Q_-yra..exper. Work out of myhome w/computer. 908-

4-756-6*76,^

NATIONAL MARKETINGCORP.— seeks Indivlualsto change and malnt.advertising limiorlalsi inlocal supermarkets.Hours™&• days "FlexrS?/-hr., call 1-800-388-7090between 10am-12 Noon

OFFICE CLERK- Lord-SUr4tna-Slaples>*Bwrsr-& Fri. I2am-3prmand Sat.8 S 9 3 0 5 O 08 i ^ S _ t LC a 1 1 9 0 8-766 -5(Hear ing Impaired52 6-4 7 6 2 ) E O E .

PHONE REPRESENTA-T I V E S - P/T, F/TSummer & $$. Phonerepresentatives for localoff I co of Nat ionalCorporation, Flexibleschedule, AM/PM/week-end/weekdays available.Excellent starting salary+ i n c e n t i v e s $ $ ,Immediate openings 721-4141

PTCUST SVC REP AD#134PT positions available InNew Brunswick area hos-pitals with the TV RentalCo. Must be responsibleand have a neat appear-

-ance.—Brtenalve-walldnqrcollections, and recordkeeping. Flex days, 9am-3pm or 4pm-8pm, incl. 1wkend day. S6.50/hr tostart, paid holidays andvacation. For a local in-t e r v l e w ,call wkdays 201-858-2 3 i 6 t i

SCHOOL BUS DRIVERWith CDL lie. PT, AM 21/4 hrs. PM, 21/2 hrs. plusadded time cleaningbuses plus athletics &local trips. Conscientiousperson, start immed.Edison area. Call

908-549-0129

SUMMER WORK- forExperienced Part- TimeGroundsperson. May-Nov. Contact WarrenTownship Board of Ed.,114 Stirling Road, War-r e n , NJ 0 7 0 5 9 .908-647-1211.

•CUSTOMER SERVICE-Expanding-catalog-co^|seeks bright, motivatedperson for P/T position:Req. two years officeexperience. Middlesex.

"(908) 805-0200'

Advertise In the Classified!

5080Part-Time

Employment

• • *DOGGROOMER

Experienced Part Timeposition. Call

908-236-6242

5090Employment Wanted

NOTICE: All EMPLOY-MENT WANTED adver-tisements are PAYABLEIN ADVANCE by cash,check, VISA or MasterCard. For a quote oncost; please call1-800-559-9495.

5100Career Investments/

Opportunities '

Some ads listed in tins clas-sification may require a feeto fffbair infnrrrt(tttntiandlor materials regdrdfngcareer investments and/oropportunities.AD-LVN, $500 SIGN ONBONUS— OTR DRIVERS-GOOD PAY BENEFITS-BONUSES-1991 ANDNEWER EQUIPMENT-UNDER NEW MANAGE-MENT. D.T.S. LAURENS,SC 1-800-964-8743.

AVON SALESAll areas

For information call1-800-662-2292

D R I V E R S - G E T INBOARD WITH THE RIS-I N G S T A R ! OTR-S H O R T H A U L OP-PORTUNITIES. HOMEWEEKLY (SHORTHAUL),NO SLIP SEATING. EX-CELLENT PAY/BEN.EFITS: 'BURLINGTON

RT3CARWER54800-JOIN-BMC. EOE,

D R I V E R S . N o r t hAmerican Van Lines1

offers owner operatorsopportunities in: High'Value Products, Blanket-,wrap and Relocation S?r*vicos—DiuisiorU-Earn.Jop:.compensation. Outstand-ing tractor purchase planavailable. Call 1-800-348-2147, Dept. EL-8.

EARN UP TO S700-WEEKLY- No experi-ence. Own hours. Part-time or full-time. Processmortgage refunds. 1-800-315-1957.

Summer FunWelcome warm weather

•1a1

-with outdoor funSee page B-1-6

Just missedCranford girls fall in

See Sports, page C-1

Knight timeA preview of theNJ, Renaissance FestivalSee WeekendPlus

t

Wednesday, May 25,1994

i CRANTORD • GARW00D -KENILW0RTHA Forbes Newspaper 50 cents

VSfc' • • ' • > * • : •

F R I E N D L Y H O M EP A R T I E S - now hasopenings for demonstra-tors. No cash investment.Part-time hours with full-time pay. Two catalog,over 700 Items. Call 1-800-488-4875.

SPFAK ALANGUAGE? make eaSymoney part-time. Send54 for source Informa-tion: U.S. Destination,P.Ot Box 24A07. Los An-geles, CA 90024 orphone (310) 827-1248.

1

Parliamentarians meet: mehtarians meets 10 a m today' at the Cranford PublkrESbTaiyr-

CO^OP meetsCOOP, &regivers_j)fj)lder

[People support group, meets Tp.m. tonight at Cranford library.

I

D5'ACTIVITYDIRECTORY

NEEDED IMMEDIATELYCertified Homemakers,Live In/out Union,Middlesex, Somerset

Counties

Prior experience a plusfor our home care cli-ents. Please call Margeor Theresa at ANSWER-CARE, (908) 322-7373for Immediate Interviewand placement.

Answercare, la locatedat 1701 Blue Star Shop-

Ing Center, Rt. 22est, Watchung, New

Jersey (In the NursingNeeds Store).

RN's/LPN'sRecently signed con-tracts have made severalpositions available In theMiddlesex county area.For Immediate consider-ation please call Margeat Answercare (908)322-7373 for ImmediateInterview and placement.

Answercare, Is locatedat 1701 Blue Star Shop'ping Conter, Rt. 22West, Watchung, NewJersey (in the NursingNeeds store).

Advertise In the Classified!

A SummerSwim Club FacilityLocated on 14 BeautifulAcres on Talamlnl Rd.,

Bridgewater

Open Weekends BeginningMemorial Duy.

Open Dally June 25-Scpl. 4• Noon • 8 p.m.

•Olympic Size -SociulPool Function*

'Kiddie Pool -No Bond•Diving Area 'Tennis Court*!'Snack Area •Playgrounds

•Full Time Pool Manager

FOR APPLICATION, CAU.

725-7748 OR 725-6994

95

srore or THG ORTSt\H«H 11; iiV5> i 11 vj 11:

INTRODUCTORY SPECJIJVL.

6 WeeksFREE Uniform

Call For More Information908-572-0023

1629 Stelton Rd., Piscataway(Across from Fairway Golf Center)

FUNNY BONZEntertainment for all occassions

• I'ciwcr Hero * AlmUlln• IHnoNuurw • l*rlnacMM«M

• Ko«k Simr Vnriyu• J»n|x;rl»cro(» * Murraai<l»

• IHruicM • Iteauly• Victorian Ton I'artyM

• (ilanuMir 4>lrl • Clown• Vmrm Animal 1'IUHVN

• Cowboym • Oral* I'orllcM &9lor« I'UNK

Birthday parties. School Programs & Corporate Picnics

908-647-4200

Did You Know That ForLess Than $30 per

week, You CouldAdvertise Your School orSummer Camp In This

Directory 8 ReachPeople In Somerset,Middlesex and Union

Counties!Call Russell at

(908) 7223000 ext.6256

TODAY

Pony Rides • Carousels

Hayrides • Petting ZooFULLY INSURED

CLOVERLAND • (908) 996-3140 or 2984A Division of C Bar 6 Ranch, Inc.

Call "(90«) 546-8887

• M E N *• WOMEN •

> CHILDREN •SHAOLINKUNG-FU

TEACHES—SELF-DEFENSE:Applications. Powet IssuingSELF-HEALING: InaemedFitness, Health (Mind, Body& Spiiit)

-^SELF-DISCOVERY;

TflLflMlNIPreSchool Camp

Ages3-5Day Camp

Crudes 1-6

Richurd Sliclio, Cump Director

OPEN HOUSESunday, May 22 l:00-4:00pm

Presentation 1:30pmTalainini Road, B i ^

14 Hcaulitiil acres, Olympic & kiddie pools,Non-deiioniinutionu)

Session I June 27-July22Session II July 25-Augu.st V)

Early/Late Stay Options725-7748 or 72S-6994

-•» GomrhuhityTOFganizationsareinvited to participate in the up-coming Founders Fest activities1-5 pan. June 5.

D-Day rememberedThe Cranford Historical Soci-

ety presents D-Day Remembers1-5 pjn., June 5, at the HansonHouse. The program -includesphotographs, memorabilia, alarge map showing routes, andlandings of attacking forces,and D-Day veterans will sharetheir experiences. The exhibitis open to all.

Summer music"Registration for the summer

music workshop at CranfordRecreation and Parks De-partment is 7:30-8:30 p.m. June

ter.

Moonlight bowlingThe Mountainside TWIG

sponsors moonlight bowling,8:45 pjn., June 11, Clark Lanes.Proceeds benefit Children Spe-cialized Hospital; Call 789-9679.

Car showThe Garden State Chevelles

Car Club host a show and swap9 a.m.-4 p.m. June 12 at UnionCounty College. Proceeds ben-efit_ the Assodation f j t etarded Citizens Union County.-Admission $2 per person. Comesee 20 classes of rods, customs,antiques and trucks competefor honors in the show. Call201-935-9236.

Spring banquetThe College Women's d u b

holds the spring banquet 6:30pjn. June 13 at Cafe Repetti inKenilworth. Scholarship recipi-ents will be honored. For ticketinformation, call 276-6849.

HnlHpff mpmorialFriends of David Holden are

invited to meet 1:30 p.ra June25 at the First PresbyterianChurch to share remembrancesof him in a celebration of hislife. A memorial fund inDavid's name has been estab-lished to build an animal andbird-watching kiosk in NJ.'sGreat Swamp. Contributionscan be sent to U.S. Fish andWildlife Service, RD. 1, Box152, Pleasant Plains Rd, Bask-ing Ridge, NJ. 07920, attentionTom McFadden. Specify, DavidHolden Memorial.

Tree planting .The Horticulture Commitee

of Cranford recently planted aBradford Pear tree at JoshiahCrane Park in memory of Lu-cretia Duckworth Roberts. Thetree was donated by Mrs. Rob-erts' daughters, Betty Atkinsand Nancy Page, both of West-field; Judy Markham of Ohio;and Virginia McCracken ofKansas City. The park is lo-cated at the comer of Spring-field and North Union avenuesin Cranford.

Top republicanNancy E. Lawrence, Cranfoni

Municipal Republican chairper-son, has been elected to serve£s the chairperson of the Union

Icjiunty Board of Elections. Mrs.Lawrence has been a commis-sioner on the Board of Elec-tions for three years. She isalso the Republican Municipalchairperson, the top party of-ficial in the municipality. Shelives on Virginia Street withher husband, Walter, anddaughter, Amy. '.. K

Blues to open care center here^MfmaqOEoiteratlafflilyfteHlthTfaciliit^r

By JOANNE McFAPDEN the exact locations of all sites in 60-90 days.sources, however, told The

Chronicle the Blues are negotiating for theThe Township of Cranford has been se- UAW Building"at 26 Commerce DriveTin the

lected by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New business park at exit 136 of the GardenJersey as one of ten sites across the" state State Parkway.

=wf i e r e = tKey = v^=de ta t ^e i r ^^car^ceijiexsjn. January, Twovother-still un- family EractiUoners^genej^interhists, a pe-named Union County sites have been diatrician, a gynecologist, and a mental

health specialist Each center will also havea modern diagnostic capability with labora-tory and radiology equipment, including fa-cilities to perform -jninor surgical proce-

mediately. The employee count, said Mr.Hillmann, will max out at 50-60 people.

The statewide network will be able to han-dle 200,O0(r people; Policies "which requireenroDees to use the network exclusively forbasic medical care will offer an average 15

Mr. Hillmann said Blue Cross-Blue Shieldofficials know it is important to be involved!in the local community. „ • •

"When we had multiple Blue Cross-Blue""Shield facilities, we were involved in the.

marked for a planned 1996 expansion.Fred Hillmann, director of public affairs,

said the Cranford location was "picked pri-marily for accessibility and as a center thatreflects where the subscriber base is lo-cated." Blue Cross-Blue Shield will unveil

dures. An on-site pharmacy will make iteasy for patients to fill prescriptions im-

who have traditional Blue Cross-Blue Shieldpolicies and use the centers instead of pri-vate physicians would also see lower costs.The centers will be similiar to HEP-Rutgers,which currently is the only managed careplan in the state providing medical caremainly through health centers they own andoperate.

•FS—-*fcx^cQromui^v^rjwo^y£j^^dated our operation into Newark and from acommunity relationship perspective, 90 per-cent was focused on Newark. This plan is are-venturing out, back to the local roots andI'm sure there will be the same corporatecommitment to the local community," saidMr. Hillmann. *

Mayor Carolyn Vollero hands a proclamation to Bob Greco, the new commander of theVeteran^ofForelgn War Post 335, announcing the annual poppy sale going on this week, thepopples are made by disabled veterans, and proceeds benefit disabled veterans and theirfamilies, said Mr. Greco. Veterans will be collecting at major intersections in town untilMonday, Memorial Day. ~

O'Dpnnell is grand marshalJohn G. O'Donnell, grand mar-

shal of Monday's 9 ajn. MemorialDay parade, is a lifelong residentof Cranford. He is the fi^th of ninechildren bom to the late Mildred(Price) O'Donnell and the lateJames W. O'Donnell.

Service Medal, Vietnam Cam-paign Medal, Vietnam ServiceMedal, and the Purple Heart forwounds received Nov. 9,1967.

He returned to the UnitedStates in January 1968 and wasstationed at Fort Carson, Colo.,

He attended S t Michael's untU tus discharge Ui Mny 1968/

JOHN G. O'DONNELLMemorial Day Parade

Grand Marshal

School in Cranford, CranfordHigh School, and Union CountyCollege, where he earned his as-sociates degree in criminal justice.

Mr. O'Donnell entered the Unit-ed States Army in 1966 and wasone of four brothers who saw mil-itary service in the '60s and '70s.He was assigned to the 9th Infan-try Division, 2nd Battalion, 47thInfantry, mechanized at Fort Reil-ly.Kan.

In December 1966, Mr. O'Do-nnell's division was ordered toVietnam where he saw combatearly on. During the Vietnamtour, John received the CombatInfantry Badge, National Defense

After a year in the civilian workforce, John joined the CranfordPolice Department in May 1969,where he received numerousawards and has attained the rankof lieutenant in the Patrol Divi-sion.

He is a member of the Ameri-can Legion, Post No. 212, Cran-ford; Cranford VFW, Post No. 335;and Cranford PBA, Local No. 52(past president and active mem-ber).

Mr. O'Donnell and his wifeTheresa continue to live in Cran-ford. They have two sons — Jo-seph, 17, and Michael, 15.

How the units will appear in marchHere is the order of march for

the Cranford Memorial Day pa-rade:Police EscortVFW Color GuardGrand Marshal John G. O'DonnellGold Star Flag Bearers (carried byGirl Scout Troops)

FIRST DIVISION1. Cranford High School Bands2. The Mayor and the TownshipCommittee3. VFW and American Legion Of-ficers4. VFW arid American LegionMembers5. Auxiliary of the VFW andAmerican Legion6. Miljtapr Order of the PurpleHeart7. Cranford First Aid Squad8. Police Department9. Police Explorers10. Fire Department (

SECOND DIVISION1. Orange Ave. School Band2. Cranford Democratic Club3. Mayor and Council of Garwood4. Masonic Azure Lodge - float5. Eastern Star Azure Chapter &Rainbow Girls6. Cranford Elks No. 2006, Auxil-iary & Handicapped Scout TroopNo. 7887. Daughters df the AmericanRevolution

,&. Church Women United9. Knights of Columbus No. 622610. Cranford River Committee11. Osceola Church, Clark - float12. American Legion Post No. 328,Clark

THIRD DIVISION1. Hillside Avenue School Band2. Linden H.S. Naval ROTC Unit3. Brownie Troops/Girl Scouts

M. Cub Scout Troop 1745. Tiger & Cub Scout Troop 75

6. Boy Scout Troop 75 - feloat7. Cranford Baseball League8. Police Car with sound system9. Miss Union County10. Clark Fire Department11. Police Escort

Route of marchersThe parade will assemble at

8:30 am. at the Walnut AvenueSchool yard and start marching; 9a m . The marchers will proceednorth on Walnut Avenue toNorth Avenue, swing west toEastman Street, north on East-,man Street to Central Avenues,east on Central Avenue toSpringfield Avenue, turn northon Springfield Avenue, east andsouth on Riverside Drive. Theparade will be reviewed onSpringfield Avenue. All divisions,after passing the stand, will turnon Riverside Drive, proceed toCentral Avenue and disperse* '*

Two petitionskeep garbage^fires burningBy JOANME McFAPDENTHE CHRONICLE

Scores of residents left the" Township Committee meeting last

week stui unhappy even after the«>mrnlssioners announced they

;•' would table the plain to.go out forbid on a one-hauler, township-negotiated garbage collection sys-tem. The committee voted May 3to go out to bid, and since then,som& organizations and residents

—ti«b«ghout~toswj4iave-rnobilized to-fight the proposal.

The-Township Committee voted-3-2 along party lines to bid garbagecollection based on a report from agarbage alternatives subcommittee.The subcommittee estimates theyearly cost of a one-hauler systemat $2.5 million including $1.2 mil-lion to th« successful bidder forservice fees, and an additional $1.2million for dumping fees. The costto the average taxpayer would be$268, and if deducted on incometaxes, would be even lower. Thebid for the service end would re-quire twice weekly pickups, rearyard service, and a monthly bulky

pirlnip Thf» rrret wnnlri b^paid by the township's tax levy;residents and commercial propertyowners would be assessed for theservice according to the value of.their property. Commercial prop-erty owners would not receive theservice.

The Chamber of Commerce hasplaced petitions for and against thetownship's proposal in storesthroughout the downtown. In thecover letter, chamber officials listreasons why the garbage collectionsystem should not be changed:"garbage fees are not deductible inyour taxes; rear yard pickup willprobably be lost; there are no guar-anteed savings; garbage fees willbe based on property value — youmay be subsidizing others; othertowns have tried this foolishnessand later went back to our present

systempand :non-residential -erty will get taxes but not receiveservice. They will appeal and justi-fiably win,* causing residentialtaxes to go up over a half a milliondollars." Residents can sign a peti-tion that says, "I want to retain thegarbage system we have," or onethat reads, "I am for a one-haulersystem." *•

"We need to take a s'tand," saidchamber President Kurt Petschowat the May 13 meeting. "The cham-ber has: .always tried to stay out ofpolitics, but this is aTlihanimdus"decision to oppose this plan."

Chamber member Paul LaCortesuggested the organization lookinto hiring a tax appeal expert tofacilitate a seminar should the bidgo forward. Commercial as-sessments are based on net incomewhich would be reduced if thetownship committee plan goesthrough. Many property ownerswill apply for tax appeals, andtownship officials agree, they willhave just cause.

"The township's plan threatensevery business within town," saidMr. LaCorte. "Cranford. will nolonger be viewed as a viable place _to-do buaincaa. There will be a pre—dominantly anti-business atmos-phere."

Orchard Street resident CraigSands organized another petitionsigning at Adams and Memorialbaseball-softball fields Saturday.Mr. Sands has repeatedly asked fora referendum on the matter. Hisrequest has been denied twice Jaytownship officials.

Monday Mr. Sands said he col-lected 340-350 signatures againstthe township proposal and onlyone for it.

"Obviously it's lopsided againstthe proposal and people were morethan willing to sign the petition,"said Mr. Sands. "It's over-whelming, and I understand thatthe Chamber of Commerce hashad a resounding response aswell."

Gainde Club to run 7 daysBy JOANNE Mcf ADDEN

THE CHRONICLE

Cranford officials have handedthe Canoe Club reins over to a pri-vate contractor who will operateand manage the municipal-owned

"facility:Summer. Yun Associates, which

Was Officially awarded the bid May17 by the Township Committee,also runs the concession stands atOrange and Centennial pools. Thefacility will be renamed the Cran-ford Canoe Club operated by Sum-1

mer Fun Associates.According to John Laezza, town-

ship administrator, the companywttl pay the township $5,130 for the

;Qanb6 Club contract and $18,100for the pool contract The canoe

club will be open seven days, com-pared to three when operated bythe township. Under the contract,the company is permitted to open"a related retail operation." Thetwo-year contract is renewable atthe end of the first year and callsfor a five percent increase.

The township purchased the clubfour years ago and allowed theowner Frank Betz to continue, tooperate i t One year ago, the Cran-ford Recreation and Parks De-partment took over the operation.The new contract will be "a posi-tive for taxpayers," said Frank.D'Antonio citing savings from sal-ary and operation costs plus theannual payment to the township.The club did not turn a profit lastyear, he said.

I