digifind-it · 1986. 8. 7. · cranf orb chronicle \ serving cranford, garwood and kenilworth vol....

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Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local man has been accused of the attempted murder of his brother-in-law during a family dispute in their rowhouse on Johnson Ave. Saturday. Page 5. Lot closed The entry and exit to the expan- ding parking lot behind the Municipal Building will be closed all day Friday to allow blacktopp- ing. Iaione dies Antonio Iaione, who built 90 houses here and founded the Fer- rantese Association, died at the age of 85. Anna Jewell, the first full-time telephone operator in ncraniord in 1899, diedaF£he age I of101. Page 14. Wrong number New plastic telephone book covers being mailed to Garwood | residents . carry__the wrong [j ^Telephone number for the borough Fire Department. The right number is 789-1500. Garwood John Wanat has one of the more 1 distinctive gardens in the area, i following a tradition started by his family 56 years J agc.Georgiana Gurrieri, j Democratic candidate for mayor, is getting some "on the job train- I ing" as acting mayor for a j week...a cigarette thief is fined and jailed...Page 13. Tower shorter NJ Transit has trimmed 25 feet USPS 136 800Second Class PostagePaW Cranford, N.J. 30CENTS Local gourme^ to serve the Culinary Olympics in 1988 Page 2 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Thursday, August 7, 1986 flollette coordinates Lung \Assn. bike trek benefit M: .'*«:#: ByANNLOVELL" Shelly Cole-Kuduk, a Cranford resident who specializes in culinary arts and wines, has been appointed to a committee working on the upcom- ing Culinary Olympics in Germany. In addition to her leadership roles in the Northern New Jersey Branch of the International Geneva Associa- tion, she'll be working with a chef's organization preparing for the Olym- pics of Cooking scheduled for Frankfurt in 1988. "This is my graduation from the small rur<n ,,ir **•" *>'« *:-.."- Shelly traces her affair with wine with the "time markers" of motherhood. "I first realized the im portance of wine when I taught my -first cooking class at the regional adult school," she says. "I remember it was 1968 because ni\ youngest was two weeks old." She felt good food should be com plemented.with wine and added tu.i> wines to the menu for the course. ^ This year was another significant motherhood marker. "My last son. f i i h i high h Xharles M~CoIIeTte-of Cranforcl \s ^serving as the Union County coor- dinator for the "Skylands Bike JTrek." a benefit for.' the American |j;Lung Association •-of Central New •.Jersey which will '(be held Septem- b e r 2G-2H. t "We're recruit- Ong people who en- £joy biking and are " J-interested in tak- Mng part in a uni- "•.que and diallpng- ing adventure Charles Coltette that's going to be a lotof fun," says Collette, the owner of C.M.C. Print- ing Services in Mountainside. He said the 125 mile trek will take approximately 150 participants on a s"centc7hlstorlc~rlde'througbrHunter— don and Morris Counties. Overnight lodgings will be provided- at the Beisler Camping and Recreation Center in Pleasant Grove. Par- ticipants have the Option of staying in a lodge or camping out. All food will be provided by the Lung Association. Registration fee is $20 per biker. "This event is a fund raiser for the Lung Association," says Mr. Col- lette, "and we're requiring each par- ticipant to raise a minimum of $250 in pledges. We'll be conducting orienta- tion workshops in July and August to offer fund raising guidance. Once you get started, you find it's not that hard to get your friends, family and associates tosupport you when it's for a good Cause." Call 388-4556 for more information. More degrees and honors for local college students Space open for playschool at CHS during school year Residents named to dean's list at the county college ••V •V 1 - ._ ~.a v..iiv, ,ooja Shelly, who started teaching cooking lft-years '-agrrand has expandefTher skills into wine and promotions for the food-4ndustry. Her latest appointment came from Helmet Hamann, president of the nf the. Extrication of pilot pjnned In wreckage of his biplane was complicated by fears of fire or ex- plosion. Rescue workers first lifted the tail to relieve pressure on plJot, then cut the fuselage • 'V'. away from him. He succumbed to injuries sev- eral hours later. Sgt. Ronald .Coles and Ptl. Mike Dow are in crook of tree behind the Hart- man home. Photo by Stuart Awbrey. Pilot killed when gasless plane plunges into a yard off its proposed 200 foot high , microwave communications^ I tower, reported Paul LaCorte, •"pUWttfWork* commissioner. '. I Page 9. Mime appears By STUART AWBREY A Navy Reserve commander flying a personal airplane was fatally in- jured Monday when his custom-built iaafLcrashed-into-a-trfie-behind the Hardman home on Hillside Ave. The pilot apparently ran out of gas. The engine sputtered and stopped over Cranford High School, was restarted, and was off on its fatal des- cent. Numerous, witnesses did not hear it approach the crash site. Authorities at the scene detected a gas odor but later discovered there was no gas in the tanks.. Formal determination of the cause of the crash will await the outcome of an in- vestigation underway by federal agencies. The victim., F-riwin A Tnrr about 45 minutes. Tarr was taken to University Hospjtal where he died several hours later. The victim was a resident of Mont- vale in BergefftountyrH(&was~a~vice" president of Coldwell Banker and- resident manager for the real estate firm in Hackensack. He was active in the Naval Reserve and carried the rank ot commander. Linden at 2:30 p.m. and 25 minutes later flew southward into Cranford from above Lenape Park at about 1,500 feet. He was .observed over id John Fashtak of Cranford will J perform-Keeping John in Mine" Fat the Thursday Senior Citizen I Club next week. Page 10. College notes The latest news about activities land accomplishments' of college [students from this area is on |Page 2. 1-78 to open The long-anticipated opening of] Interstate-78 tetween Springfield ( and Berkeley Heights is schedul-j ">dqext Wednesday. The highway! iltlAigbe open from the ( Holland Ttrffnel almost toi Phillipsburg. Page 9. Heads caucus Emily McKinney of Cranford has been elected president of the Union County Women's Political "fcaucus. She and Margaret Ault of the township will be state delegates to the Republican and Democratic parties, respective- I ly. Page 9. experienced Navy combat and test pilot. Ptl. Michael Dow, who was just lea 1 vih1g"~his home on Hillside for work, saw the plane descending on a lme_witb~the-avenues-Then r-in-mid- black, it veered left, struck branches betnnd one home, hit a fence and smashed into a willow in the Hard- man backyard at No. 220. Capt. Harry Wilde thinks the 43-year-old pilot did a heroic act by swinging away from people on, the streeUsee box). Wilda Hardman was dozing in a lounge- chair-behind the house and awoke with a start to see the upended craft 60 feet away. Her husband, George, said the plane came in silent- ly and they didn't hear anything until the crash. For eyewitness accounts, see a related story on Page 4. JPolic^fJrejmdJirsjL^aid squad members set about to extricate the injured pilot, lifting.the tail section to relieve pressure on his back so he_ could breathe. Fearful of a fire or ex-~ plosion, they used the pneumatic Jaws of Life tool to avoid sparks, and slowly but persistently cut the airplane away from its wounded oc- cupant. Tarr was semi-conscious but laps- ed into incoherence. Finding hirri strapped in the rear seat of the two- seat biplane, rescuers sought to establish if another person was in- side. After two unsuccessful queries, Wilde managed to obtain an answer from him as to whether he hada passenger. He shook his head and said "no." The complicated extrication, in- cluding removal of a^wirjg" strut that had pierced the pilot's leg, required 'He did a heroic thing 9 Capt. Harry Wilde said X he Tarr , pilot Udwm deliberately put himself in danger by changing direction and crash landing amid trees and utility wires instead of on Hillside ^eiild^heroic thmg the captain said. Wilde thinks Tarr was trying to maneuver the craft toward the open playing fields at Hillside Avenue School 300 yards ahead and, realizing he wasnot going to make it, swerved to avoid cars and children on the avenue, possibly—hoping-he could^ make the nearby Lehigh Valley railroad tracks. He based this judgment on accounts of numerous witnesses including Ptl. Mike Dow, plus the combat background of the 43-year-old veteran Navy flier. Tarr was the type of—individual who wdiflcT] have veered to avoid landing among people, he said. ,500 feet. He was .observed over TVomahegan Park, arid Fire Lt. Steve -Patterson, who was fainting on Willow St., heard the engines running normally as the plane approached Cranford High School. Then, he said, it began sputtering and backfiring In "six to eight loud pops." He saw the plane drop about 300 feet, to about 1,200 feet, using "glide speed" in an effort to get the engine started again. That ,was about five minutes before the crash. Fire Callman Lawrence Driscoll heard but did not see the craft as it crossed near South Ave. Wilde said Jg_^_j]flpf nf \hf Interns., tional Chefs Association. She'll head public relations for the chapter com- mittee fogusing on the upcoming competition. "We wijl • be working on fund raisers to generate money to send our team. The president believes we can expect to raise a quarter of a million dollars at the very least," she says. An additional plus is that all committee members accompany the team to the Olympics, so Shelly will be in Frankfurt. ~ The challenge represents an exten- sion of skills she has developed in the industry, most recently in wine. She says she has a "love affair" with wine which has absorbed . her in- terests, her reading and professional talents for the past several years. This in turn has hronflht her recogm tion t tl "Th P . He had flown out of the Linden Air- port for several months and hissix- cylinder Skybolt craft had been seen over Cranford before. It was at first described as a "do-it-yourselfer" that could be built at home, but local authorities discovered that the engine was valued at $70,000 and believe it was a sophisticated custom-built aircraft. It was distinc- tive as a blue biplane-with two wings-common to air shows and referred to as a stunt plane. Tarr car- ried acrobatic insurance. The pilot was making aerial photographs Monday, and the prints indicated he was shooting them for real estate use. He took off from _. Tat various junctures reported the plane sputtering and los- ing altitude on its fateful passage Southward. !_,_ Wilde said the plane is built for speed -and-manetrverabtHty~tsurits~ "glide ratio," being limited.curtails landing selections. He speculated that Tarr saw the open land around Hillside and made that his goal. "We'll never know for sure," the cap- tain said, "but he was probably realizing that there was not enough glide to take him to the school." The gas situation remains uncon- firmed. Federal Aviation Agency in- spectors arrived at the scene and spent the next day investigating the site, the craft and various reports. The FAA's findings will be submitted to the National Transportation Safety Transportation Board which -ultimately will~rale^onthe~prorJable~ cause' of the crash. PH." Paul Cymbaluk suffered a small forehead puncture wound from the windshield while-helping ex- tricate the pilot. Another pilot crash landed not far from the site 44 years ago. But he managed to get out unscathed. Story on Page"4. ronflht her recogm tion, most recently "The President's Award" of the International Geneva Association, a fratecnaLorganization of hotel and restaujajK3r\eivfbr her contribution to the association. Recently she was thejcoprdinator for the society of a ; wine tasting evening officially called "An Educational Seminar on Wine"~terminology re- quired by New Jersey state law. Dur- ing the evening the 135 members of the association sampled six wines with a six course menu at L'Affaire. Shelly achieved another coup by securing Robert Mondavi Winery do something for myself," she says —"I signed —up—for—the -Waldorf Astoria's wine course with Harriet Lembec," who is one of the few members of the distinguished "Cot; frerie Des Chevaliers Du Gastevin." Shelly mastered the tastes of 14 —winesreach~night~a"h'd"aTtRe conclu- sion took a blind taste test. She then participated in the ad vanced course which included a select 25 students who studied districts and learned names and qualities of the different grapes within the districts and went on to . taste 15 wines each evening. Each student gave an extensive report on one vineyard each evening. Through this discipline Shelly has begun to build a memory-for wine, A wine epiphany occurred for Shelly at a special evening of wine at Windows of the World in lower Man- hattan where there was a sampling of 200 wines. Shelly had been told of a special wine called Chateau Petrus which cost $15 a bottle and is known for its aroma of violets and fruit wood. She was-told by an expert to take one sip and then carry the rest of her glass for an hour to let it breathe before drinking it. She did this and says it was impossible to believe that it was the same wine. With eyes sparkling, she says, "the flavors and smells were unbelievably.exquisite, I could not believe it had been the wine I had sipped an hour before. I really understood the concept of let'ting the wine breathe." Shelly's next big event will confirm her ongoing interest in American the wine host for the seminar Mot> davi is considered one of the foremost American Wineries and his wines are highly recognized in Europe. Marie Mondavi was present that evening and~gave""anspefech on wine. event she is planning for the Geneva Society. The winery for the evening will be. Chateau Michelle from Oregon, which has p'roduced "Taste jDL_Amerj£A,J.' a__cookJiaak—of American foods that go* well with wines. * Prelude toa role in the Culinary Olympics: Shelly Cole-Kuduk with George Belbery, vice conseiller of the Gastronomi^De Chaine des Rotisseurs, at recent wine seminar of the Interna- tional Society of Geneva. Photo by Ann Lovell. R- ry 'Baby Bustlet' occurs irked by state | in first half of year Local Democrats said they r "won't stand for the state govern- ( ment dictating the design of the new High Street Bridge." Page 9. The "Baby Boomlet" that has emerged In Cranford in recent years has turned into a "Baby Bustlet" this year. ' . , * "^)nly uti babies were bom to local to • J I parents in the first six months of 1986. lnSllie \ This is 28 below the 144 births record- 1617 \ ^ over tne 8ame P 61 ^ i flst v e a r ' ° Editorials ' 8f 19 P ercen ' ; < l ro P> an d * s 14 below the Entertainment 10 J comparable figure in mid-1984. SXSEd 13-1 Marion BonneU ' registrar of vital uarwooa. ...wi stetl8tlC8 mld she Wfl g surprised ' 8 j with decline which extended to eaih Obituaries "* 14 V otiix0 flrst Bix months of ^is y^- Reliclous news 14 f The •!»**«* reflects a sharp drop Si Z« in 1 f «wn 1988 when BonneU recorded 277 aocuu news ju« ^0^ ^ ^ year) ^ h Jghest total In P 0 - •' : —•-•"" " '±%j- the 1970's and 1980's. That was 15 per- cent more than the annual average over the past 15 years, and 10 percent higher than the total of the year before. 1984. i If this year's six month pattern continues for the remainder of the year, the total would run about 16 percent below last year's total. ; Deaths and marriages are up slightly, but BonneU reports less pro- found variations in these vital statistics. A total of 131 deaths were tabulated in the first six months, up 7 from 1985. Marriages, which have declined in totals for several straight year*, are up slightly so far this year, from 109to112. VHflit 1 JKS j i g X " 'A i> 'Girl Crazy' debuts: rrjajor roles In Recreation and Parks Department musical production in- clude, from left. Anthony Leondls, Amy Asch, Paul Salvatorleflo and Margaret Duffy. Show directed by Mike Marcus Is free at Cranford High School at 8 p: tomorrow. Photo by Greg Price.' to the public m. today and Thirty-six Cranford residents are •among :i()7 students named to the dean's list at Union County College ;tor the spring semester. •— ;• They ait*: John Motion, majoring- in accounting/data processing; Lisa iWa-laszek-;—majoring—in—biology; ° Jlonald Bauman and Linda Ander- . son, business/computer information systems; Janice Milstein, Donna Jones, Joseph DeMarco, Qeraldine - - Merkcl, John Bush, and' Ronald laser/electro-optics technology; David Palew, electromechanical technology; Allison Vajda and Julie Ann Hrudowksy, liberal-acts/early -ehildhood-education; S u s a T i ' Kendall Elaine Pedorko, daughter of John and Diane Fedorko, 33 W. Holly St., was graduated cum laude with a B.S degree from Duquesne University. A four-year dean's list student, she was a founding father of Phi Eta Sigma honor society and served as second vice president and scholarship chairman for Zeta Tau Alpha fraternity. She will be atten- ding Rutgers University School of Osteopathic Medicine in the fall. Nancy Gayle Jacobs, daughter of Martin and Arlene Jacobs of Cran- ford, was awarded a B.S degree in pharmacy, cum laude, from Nor- theastern University College of Phar- macy and Allied Health Professions. She received the Dean C.N. Meriano Alumni Award as the student with the most outstanding professional promise and is a member of Rho Chi, the national pharmacy honor society. Among her previous honors were the Dean Leroy C. Keagle Memorial Merit Award for personal and scholastic achievement and a scholarship from the Jewish Founda- tion for the Education of Women, She is a 1979 graduate of Cranford High School and had earned a B.A. degree in biology from ^hje ^University of •Graczyk, all majoring in business; Daniel Solecki, Traci Lynn Karr, and David Budd, criminal justice; Keith Buik, . computer s.cience/data pro- cessing; Cheryl Currert^^dental .hygiene, and Karen Folinusz, nurs- ,ing, Elizabeth General Medical Center. William Meehan, electronics/- Michele Scaturo and William Kim- -mick, liberal arts/education; -Ghris- Brawley, Scott Cappello and Diane Jean Hahn, liberal arts; Pamela DiLoreto, medical assistant; Judith Lostaunau, medical laboratory technology, and Nancy jAnn Durner and Karen Grzenda, medical record technology. Lora Dultz and Theresa Donohue, nursing, Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center; Linda Paterno, practical nursing; Debra Withell and Anne DelGrippo, office systems technology, and Marjorie Lee Frost, word information processing. SIDEWALK Inside Jackets Pants Shorts Tops Skirts Culottes Blouses Blazers Vests '- -v. M^—s. THE \# ^vlon-Cciin ._. k 1Q2B J^tiLUnloru^ycLj* jCranlord -••I VIV.VF.T »"•".»> "•-.—•TJ Delaware in 1983. She is pursuing a career in industrial pharmacy, Michael Calvano, 1016 Orange Ave., received a bachelor of science in education degree from California- University of Pennsylvania. He ma- jored In industrial arts. Mary Ann B (5a7rolf~of ~N. Union" Avenue was on the dean's list for the spring semester at Salve Regina - The Newport College in Newport, R.I. Foui' residents of Cranford wore named to the dean's list for the spr- ing semester at the University of Delaware. They are: Beverly Lusar- di, 109 Makatom Dr., a freshman; Kevin Rogan, 1 Sutton PI., a junior majorin"g~'in accounting; Sharon Salway, 4HeathermeadePl.,a junior majoring in elementary teacher education, and; Robert Siegel, 512 Claremont PI., a freshman majoring in accounting. Karen DeStefanis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John DeStefanis, 60 Fourth Ave., Garwood, achieved second honors for the spring term at Roberts-Walsh Business School, and David S. Saal, 18 Osage Dr., a freshman. Robin Lee Kerestes of Kenilworth, who graduated summa cum laude from Kean College with a B.S. degree in financial management and econ- mics, was one of three students elected to the faculty appointment, retention, tenure and promotion com- mittee of the economics and manage- ment science department. _She also, was elected to several honor societies including Omicron Delta Epsilon of which she was president, Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Lambda Sigma. She was on the dean's list each semester, graduating with a. 3.96 GPA, and received awards for academic ex- cellence, the award for economics excellence and the outstanding ser- vice award. She is the daughter of Albert and Midge Kerestes and is a 1982 graduate of David Brearley High School. Andrew Scher, son of Mr. and Mr.s. Martin Scher of Cranford, was selected, as a peer advisor at Franklin Pierce College in New Hampshire. Peer advisors, who assist freshmen in adjusting to col- lege, must have above average rf nnH Higpl^'y leadership Limited space is available for the "playschool"atrCraiifordrHigh-School- in the coming school year. Two playschools • are conducted on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, one,, in the morning and one in the afternoon, in both fall and spring. The sessions are run as part of the CHS child development course. The morning session runs from 9:25 to 10:45 and the afternoon ses- sion from 1:25 to 2:45. If any parent is interested and would like to enroll their child please call CHSat 272-9100. CHS offers its students an oppor- tunity to learn about parenting by be- ing involved with preschoolers. In the child development course, seniors learn the psychology of children and get to immediately apply what they learn in a play school setting. For the first six weeks, class time is spent giving the students informa- tion on why children do what they do and what is typical behavior and how to enhance a child's sense of con fidence and independence. —For-the-remaining-12-weeks-oLthe course, Cranford children aged 3V2 to 4','2 years old come into the playschool and the seniors get to app- ly what they have learned, they become the teachers of these . children. The course with the laboratory is taught by Carol Migliorini, a trained home economics teacher. ©tiring this time the preschooler has the opportunity to associate with a group of peers in free play and in regularly scheduled creative ac- tivities - planned, prepared and con- ducted by the students. Activities in- clude music, arts and crafts, games, nature walks, story time and field trips. Each child will have a wealth of opportunities,to express his or her thoughts and fee'Jings and to learn to work and pf&y with others by sharing materials, taking turns, and assum- ing a certain amount of responsibili- ty, the school said. Thursday, August 7, 1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 3 Louis Dickstein retires after 36 years with IRS Louis Dickstein of Cranford has Open house at new day care center The Cranford Child Care Center, a new factltty at the Cranford Alliance Church for daytime care of children 2 l /2 to 5 years old, will hold a dedica- qualities. Douglas—Johnson,_son_of_Muriel Johnson, 164 Mohawk Dr., graduated with academic honors based on his grade point average from UCLA with a B.A. in film communications. He is a 1981 Cranford High School graduate. Mark Nietzel, 307 Prospect Ave., was awarded a B.A. degree from Northeastern University. Gary Bondine of Cranford received the Hudson Blueprint Scholarship from the New Jersey Society of Arch- itects. He is a fifth year student in New Jersey Institute of Technology's School of Architecture. Bodine is in the top five percent of his class and has received awards in studio achievement and the all-school sketch competition. He was awarded the NJSA Adolph Scrimenti Scholar- ship last year and was chosen to par- ticipate in a summer design studio in Rome. Five local residents were graduated from Stevens Institute of Technology. They are: John Actoii,' tion ceremony on sunaay. TiTe Rev. Robert C. Bashioum, new pastor of the "AHiance~Churchr will preside over the ceremony. An open house will"follow the dedication, giving parents a chance to tour the facilities and meet the staff of the center. The dedication ceremony wil) begin at Young shoppers: Kristen, Dawn and Kerry Ziei+nski examine mom's "I Love Cranford" bag distributed by merchants participating in Sidewalk sales. Weather Jiampered opening Thursday but improved over next two days. This scene is out- sfde Connie's of.Cranford and Can Can. •11 :ia;a:in., and lliu uuen honse-witi- start at noon. —The centerwrll-opefrSept. 3rFoHn- formation call 276-1617. Lyp exhibits her dolls at library Union. ~"^ ; Glenn Sorge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sorge, 326 Stoughton Ave., had a 4.0 grade point average for the spring term of his junior year at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Dean's list students at Lafayette College for the spring semester in- cluded Cranford residents Linda Holland, 30 Hemlock Circle, a.senior —Anne~Marie-Lyprl2rdaughter of Mr.and Mrs. John Lyp of 22 Pershing Ave., is displaying her collection of Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy at the Cranford Public Library this month. In addition to dolls of all sizes," her collection includps cups, candle, pictures, books, a quilt, pillow case and shirts. Atwo-foot tall Raggedy Ann doll given to her when she was one year old inspjred Anne Marie to start her collection. She also has several "Annie" items in the display. This display may beseen through the month of August. Residents attend Montessori lesson Three Cranford residents par ; ticipated in a workshop in the h d ^ H h r i «. Mn -retired after more than a third of a century of service with the Internal Revenue Services-all of it in various offices in Newark.- To mark the occasion, Dickstein was honored at a luncheon, attended by IRS officials, employees, "and members of Mr. Dickstein's im- mediate family. His career with the IRS spanned 36 years. In supervisory and manage- ment positions since 1962,his respon- sibilities in the Newark office have included positions as chief of the Of- fice Audit Branch, the Review Staff, and the Conference staff. More recently and for the past eight years, Dickstein has been an associate chief of the Newark Appeals Office. Accomplishments during Dicks- tein's career were described by various speakers including Vincent Canciello, chief of the Appeals Office, and James Glenn, assistant chief of the Newark Examination Division. Letters of congratulations and best wishes were received from Nelson Brooke, the regional director of ap- peals, and from U.S. Sen. Frank R. Eaton promoted Timothy-Jr-Eatonr-son-of Mrs. Janet Eaton of Cranford, "lias been promoted todirector; financial ser- vices in the Group Department at the Prudentiars Group and Financial Services-Office in Roseland- Louis Dickstein, right, with Vincent Canciello, chief of the Newark Appeals office of the IRS. Lautenberg. For his many years of service, Dickstein was presented with the p.S. Treasury Albert Gallatin Award. Dickstein, a Certified Public Ac- countant, has resided in Cranford with his family since 1957. -— Dixon at seminar Pi/vhnrH .T\iv!nn. nrociHonirtfTrau/>l . Sharing the honors: G-R Technical Services, a-division of Graber-Rogg of Cranford, won the first New Jersey Plastics Competitiveness Award for new sign holders in ^department stores. Celebrating the award are, from left, Carl Yurdin, Art Garcia, Evelyn and Hal Martin, Isobel Wayrick (holding award), Andy Calamaris, president Art'Zampella and Bernard Shuman, the client for whom the product was created. s~ 4 Michael Saal, all of Cranford, and Ann Brown of Garwood. Gianine M. Christiano of 34 Canter- bury PI., a freshman at Moravian College, was named to the dean's list for the spring term. Christopher Zanettl, of 263 Hazel Ave., Garwood, was on" the spring term dean's list at Albright College. Anne Marie Lyp, right,assisted by her friend Alisa Durner 7 to 19. They are Carolyn Kricks, Mary . Macksoud and Diane Del Rey. The workshop was sponsored by the Christopher Academy of Pre-school Learning of Westfield and is one of the requirements for a diploma in the Montessori method^ arranges Pier Raggedy Ann, Raggedy' Andy, andAnnie display at library. BEACH On Sunday, Aug. 17 Jewish Singles World will have a Beach Party in Staten Island from 1 to 5 p.m. Call 964-8086. Street shoes, and shoes in the street: exploring the bargains from Cranford Bootery were, from left, Suzanne and Robyn Opacity and Diana Dollare. Photo by Greg Price. Gas company aides wear uniforms Service personnel of the Elizabethtown Gas Company are now wearing uniforms, similar to Open house for library readers An open house will be held at Cran- well. Youngsters are reminded that -ford-Publie-Library-nex4-Wednesday—-they—must— bring—their—r-eading from 11 a.m. to2 p.m. for all par- records to the library to report their ticipants in the "Celebrate Liberty's Centennial" reading program. reading time by the August 12 deadline. Over 500 children have Children who have signed up_for the signed up for the program, and so far program wuTreceive a free paper- back book and some surprises as over 1,800 reading hours have been reported. AIR CONDITIONED Sidewalk SALE Continues Inside Fantastic Selection of Nationally Advertised Discontinued Styles . . . BULOVA Accutron GRUEN Electronics JULES JURGENSEN WALTHAM WITTNAUER ELGIN HAMILTON ZODIAC Regularly up to *200 SIDEWALK SALE SAVINGS INSIDE SUITS Reg. $225-$24O . . ._ ...... 99 BLAZERS Reg. $140-$ 165 $ 99°° PATTERNED SPORT COATS Reg$ i25 $ i65 $ 50°° FRESH PEACH SHORTCAKE Reg. $4.25 $ 3.75 ALL BUTTER CROISSANTS Reg. 65' 45 C PUMPKIN PIES Reg. $4.00 *3.50 401-MiliuSt Cranford-s-2720089- Open 6:30 a.m. -7 p.m. Mon. - Sat.; 6:30 - 2 Sun. Those already worn meter readers. Now the Elizabethtown employees who visit customers' homes most often - ser- vice people and meter readers -- can be easily identified by their •|—-uniforms, said Victor M. Richel, vice president of administration and customer services. "We feel having our service people wear uniforms makes it easier for our customers to recognize them," Richel said. "Our intent is to offer our customers more security while providing the same efficient service that has always been our standard? . Elizabethtown service people and meter readers wear uniforms of dark blue pants and light blue shirts that have an Elizabethtown Gas patch on the packet area. While the utility's service representatives do not wear their identification badges on their uniforms as do its meter readers, they-will gladly show this badge J to any customer asking to see it, he said. Eaton started with the company in 1971 as a calculation approver. His most recent position was senior ex- pense analyst. A graduate of Cranford High School, Eaton earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Get- tysburg College in 1971. He is a fellow of the Life Management Institute. He JLvesJn Scotch Plains with his wife Diane. Specialist in air quality joins firm A. Roger Greenway has rejoined Dames & Moore, engineering and en- vironmental consultants, to serve as an atmospheric services consultant. He is based in the firm's Cranford of- fice. Spot in Cranford, recently par- ticipated in a -seminar-on vacation travel in New York City sponsored by the national institute of Certified Travel Agents. A resident of Cran- ford, Dixon is active in the Wellesley, -Mass^—based Institute-of-Gertified- Travel Agents, which awards the na- tionally-known CTC( Certified Travel Counselor) designation to travel in- dustry members. DEGO\"-SALE Decoys and shore Birds paintings are returning to Allaircj. The sale and show on Sat., Aug. 16 and Sun., Aug. 17 (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.)'marks the sixth year the event has been held in the natural setting of Allaire millpond. LIGHTWEIGHT LINED, ZIP i J A C K E T S Reg •$35 $ 17 50 r HO/ 0 FF F-VERY ITEM OF FINE JEWELRY 3U /O IN OUR SPECIALLY MARKED CASE Many Other Marvelous Bargains Inside SWEATERS V% PRICE REVERSIBLE SHORTS & MATCHING KNlT TOPSETS $ 10 00 ALL... SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS SWIM SUITS SHORTS A Real Man's Shop PORTSMAN'S .,TuM., Frl. 0:30-5:30 Thun. 8:30-8:30 Sat. 0:30-5:00 Child W<d. tk>r Credit ICjtiutAcc«pt«d Open Thunday '^03 N. Union Ave Cranforj/ 276-1099 Save 50% or More Compared To National Brand Formulas Your Choice $ 3.35 oyster 500 HIGH POTENCY CALCIUM SUPPLEMENT MliiM , ** POTENCY CALCIUM SUPPLEMENT Calcium Concentrate 60 TABLETS oomp«/« to CsltraU'-t MO » VllnmoD OYSTER CALCIUM 500 60s CALCIUM CONCENTRATE CALCIUMCONCENTRATE 600 60s 600 + Vitamin 0 Os-Cal 500* IO Caltrate-600*' Callrate 600 •(- Vit. D® 1 Calcium hqjps protect against Osteoporosis, and works in the body to maintain muscle tone and to maintain normal behavior of nerves. 'CkKiftM 600* VI '•gilUfM! bldtmtikl ol IWtl* LltjOfUO/WI LUHl* CXMI not msks w K t n t t CUCiumConccnuil* SO0 Beflr OPEN THIS SUN 9-2 : Pharmacy 17 N. Union Cranford 276-0062 Opan Mon-Sat 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Alternate- Sunday 9-2 SUPER BARGAINS Sidewalk Sale Inside Special Racks 1 to SAVINGS to 15 N. Union Ave Cranford 276-0234 Greenway will work on air quality stuides for resource recovery, elec- tric utility, cogeneration and in- dustrial projects; indoor air quality studies, particularly for asbestos remediation and monitoring pro- jects; and air toxicity studies for resource recovery plants, hazardous waste incinerators, hazardous waste cleanup sites, and industrial plants. Prior to rejoining the firm, Green- way served as director of air quality and environmental sciences for Elson T. Killam and Associates. A .certified, rnnsnlring meteorologist by the American Meteorological Society, Greenway has written more than 25 technical papers on environmental studies and air .quality,. AUGUST WHITE SALE I OFF SAVINGS ON Sheets Towels Bedspreads Comforters Window Curtains & Much More 'Items in Stock Only conmes of cranford L1NEN 102 N. UNION CRANFORD 272-2033 ^ « Thurs 'lil 9 .:• ..•-<••••.'•-••'•: \ » . ' > i < •.'.:••:•'' '^'' -.•',•..!••• 1 : i i < r . . ; - ' . ' - . i | ' . ' : . - - : > y v » " , ^ r . " r ' ; ' v ; - . ' K •!••;•! f i : ' ' ' < ' < ; ••.''••.'' ••''. •••'•' v Sidoivdh Inside GREAT VALUES PRICED WELL BELOW COST To # J Off ALL SUMMER CLOTHES JNCLUDING-eAJAJ SELECT GROUP OF SNOWSUITS $20.00 (160 value) ' Deb'nHeir 27 N. Union Cranford 276-0881 Opon 0.30-6 I 6 Mon Sul . Thuru Hi 0 SHAPIRO'S POST-SIDEWALK SALE SAVINGS BATHING SUITS Boys', Girls' & Men's LADIES' OVERSIZED SHIRTS MEN'S SHORTS SUMMER HEALTHTEX LEE STRIPED COTTON BAGGIES Reg. ^S 00 1/2 PRICE LADIES' & MEN'S PANTS Cords, Jeans, Brush Jeans, Stretch Cords &Chinos $IO<»o L— MANY OTHER ITEMS BELOW COST! - Shapiro's 19 N. Uriloif Ave Cranford 276-3270 Sale Continues (Inside) SUITS From $2000 SLACKS SHIRTS ALL SPORTSWEAR SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED TO PREPARE OUR STORE FOR FALL council 11 North Union Avenue Cranford 272-5350 Major Credit cards accepted Open Thursday 'til ft PM. , Sidewalk Sal esContinue ..

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Page 1: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

Cranf orb Chronicle\

SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTHVol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday

Thursday, August 7,1986

briefA shooting

A local man has been accusedof the attempted murder of hisbrother-in-law during a familydispute in their rowhouse onJohnson Ave. Saturday. Page 5.

Lot closedThe entry and exit to the expan-

ding parking lot behind theMunicipal Building will be closedall day Friday to allow blacktopp-ing.

Iaione diesAntonio Iaione, who built 90

houses here and founded the Fer-rantese Association, died at theage of 85. Anna Jewell, the firstfull-time telephone operator in

ncraniord in 1899, diedaF£he age Iof101. Page 14.

Wrong numberNew plastic telephone book

covers being mailed to Garwood |residents . carry__the wrong [j

^Telephone number for theborough Fire Department. Theright number is 789-1500.

GarwoodJohn Wanat has one of the more

1 distinctive gardens in the area,i following a tradition started byhis family 56 years

J a g c . G e o r g i a n a Gurrier i ,j Democratic candidate for mayor,is getting some "on the job train-

I ing" as acting mayor for aj week...a cigarette thief is finedand jailed...Page 13.

Tower shorterNJ Transit has trimmed 25 feet

USPS 136 800 Second Class PostagePaW Cranford, N.J. 30 CENTS

Local gourme^ toserve the CulinaryOlympics in 1988

Page 2 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Thursday, August 7, 1986

flollette coordinates Lung\Assn. bike trek benefit

M:

.'*«:#:

ByANNLOVELL"Shelly Cole-Kuduk, a Cranford

resident who specializes in culinaryarts and wines, has been appointed toa committee working on the upcom-ing Culinary Olympics in Germany.

In addition to her leadership rolesin the Northern New Jersey Branchof the International Geneva Associa-tion, she'll be working with a chef'sorganization preparing for the Olym-pics of Cooking scheduled forFrankfurt in 1988.

"This is my graduation from thesmall rur<n ,,ir **•" *>'« * : - . . " - —

Shelly traces her affair with winewith the "time markers" ofmotherhood. "I first realized the importance of wine when I taught my

-first cooking class at the regionaladult school," she says. "Iremember it was 1968 because ni\youngest was two weeks old." Shefelt good food should be complemented.with wine and added tu.i>wines to the menu for the course. ^

This year was another significantmotherhood marker. "My last son.f i i h i h i g h h

Xharles M~CoIIeTte-of Cranforcl \s^serving as the Union County coor-dinator for the "Skylands BikeJTrek." a benefit for.' the American|j;Lung Association•-of Central New•.Jersey which will'(be held Septem-b e r 2G-2H.t "We're recruit-Ong people who en-£joy biking and are "J-interested in tak-Mng part in a uni-"•.que and diallpng-ing adventure Charles Coltettethat's going to be a lotof fun," saysCollette, the owner of C.M.C. Print-ing Services in Mountainside.

He said the 125 mile trek will take• approximately 150 participants on a

s"centc7hlstorlc~rlde'througbrHunter—don and Morris Counties. Overnightlodgings will be provided- at theBeisler Camping and RecreationCenter in Pleasant Grove. Par-ticipants have the Option of staying ina lodge or camping out. All food willbe provided by the Lung Association.Registration fee is $20 per biker.

"This event is a fund raiser for theLung Association," says Mr. Col-lette, "and we're requiring each par-ticipant to raise a minimum of $250 inpledges. We'll be conducting orienta-tion workshops in July and August tooffer fund raising guidance. Once youget started, you find it's not that hardto get your friends, family andassociates to support you when it'sfor a good Cause." Call 388-4556 formore information.

More degrees and honorsfor local college students

Space open for playschoolat CHS during school year

Residents named to dean'slist at the county college

• • V

• V 1 - •

. _ ~.a v..iiv, ,ooja

Shelly, who started teaching cookinglft-years '-agrrand has expandefTherskills into wine and promotions forthe food-4ndustry.

Her latest appointment came fromHelmet Hamann, president of the

nf the.

Extrication of pilot pjnned In wreckage of hisbiplane was complicated by fears of fire or ex-plosion. Rescue workers first lifted the tail torelieve pressure on plJot, then cut the fuselage

• ' V ' .

away from him. He succumbed to injuries sev-eral hours later. Sgt. Ronald .Coles and Ptl.Mike Dow are in crook of tree behind the Hart-man home. Photo by Stuart Awbrey.

Pilot killed when gaslessplane plunges into a yard

off its proposed 200 foot high ,microwave communications^

I tower, reported Paul LaCorte,•"pUWttfWork* commissioner.'.I Page 9.

Mime appears

By STUART AWBREYA Navy Reserve commander flying

a personal airplane was fatally in-jured Monday when his custom-builtiaafLcrashed-into-a-trfie-behind theHardman home on Hillside Ave.

The pilot apparently ran out of gas.The engine sputtered and stoppedover Cranford High School, wasrestarted, and was off on its fatal des-cent. Numerous, witnesses did nothear it approach the crash site.

Authorities at the scene detected agas odor but later discovered therewas no gas in the tanks.. Formaldetermination of the cause of thecrash will await the outcome of an in-vestigation underway by federalagencies.

The victim., F-riwin A Tnrr

about 45 minutes. Tarr was taken toUniversity Hospjtal where he diedseveral hours later.

The victim was a resident of Mont-vale in BergefftountyrH(&was~a~vice"president of Coldwell Banker and-resident manager for the real estatefirm in Hackensack. He was active inthe Naval Reserve and carried therank ot commander.

Linden at 2:30 p.m. and 25 minuteslater flew southward into Cranfordfrom above Lenape Park at about1,500 feet. He was .observed over

id

John Fashtak of Cranford willJ perform-Keeping John in Mine"Fat the Thursday Senior CitizenI Club next week. Page 10.

College notesThe latest news about activities

land accomplishments' of college[students from this area is on|Page 2.

1-78 to openThe long-anticipated opening of]

Interstate-78 tetween Springfield (and Berkeley Heights is schedul-j

">dqext Wednesday. The highway!i l t l A i g b e open from the (

Holland Ttrffnel almost toiPhillipsburg. Page 9.

Heads caucusEmily McKinney of Cranford

has been elected president of theUnion County Women's Political

"fcaucus. She and Margaret Ault ofthe township will be statedelegates to the Republican andDemocratic parties, respective-

I ly. Page 9.

experienced Navy combat and testpilot. Ptl. Michael Dow, who was justlea1vih1g"~his home on Hillside forwork, saw the plane descending on alme_witb~the-avenues-Then r-in-mid-black, it veered left, struck branchesbetnnd one home, hit a fence andsmashed into a willow in the Hard-man backyard at No. 220.

Capt. Harry Wilde thinks the43-year-old pilot did a heroic act byswinging away from people on, thestreeUsee box).

Wilda Hardman was dozing in alounge- chair-behind the house andawoke with a start to see the upendedcraft 60 feet away. Her husband,George, said the plane came in silent-ly and they didn't hear anything untilthe crash. For eyewitness accounts,see a related story on Page 4.

JPolic^fJrejmdJirsjL^aid squadmembers set about to extricate theinjured pilot, lifting.the tail section torelieve pressure on his back so he_could breathe. Fearful of a fire or ex-~plosion, they used the pneumaticJaws of Life tool to avoid sparks, andslowly but persistently cut theairplane away from its wounded oc-cupant.

Tarr was semi-conscious but laps-ed into incoherence. Finding hirristrapped in the rear seat of the two-seat biplane, rescuers sought toestablish if another person was in-side. After two unsuccessful queries,Wilde managed to obtain an answerfrom him as to whether he had apassenger. He shook his head andsaid "no."

The complicated extrication, in-cluding removal of a wirjg" strut thathad pierced the pilot's leg, required

'He did aheroic thing9

Capt. Harry Wilde saidX

heTarr, pilot Udwm

deliberately put himself indanger by changing direction andcrash landing amid trees andutility wires instead of on Hillside

^ei i ld^heroic thmgthe captain said.

Wilde thinks Tarr was trying tomaneuver the craft toward theopen playing fields at HillsideAvenue School 300 yards aheadand, realizing he was not going tomake it, swerved to avoid carsand children on the avenue,possibly—hoping-he could^ makethe nearby Lehigh Valleyrailroad tracks. He based thisjudgment on accounts ofnumerous witnesses includingPtl. Mike Dow, plus the combatbackground of the 43-year-oldveteran Navy flier. Tarr was thetype of—individual who wdiflcT]have veered to avoid landingamong people, he said.

,500 feet. He was .observed overTVomahegan Park, arid Fire Lt. Steve

-Patterson, who was fainting onWillow St., heard the engines runningnormally as the plane approachedCranford High School. Then, he said,it began sputtering and backfiring In"six to eight loud pops." He saw theplane drop about 300 feet, to about1,200 feet, using "glide speed" in aneffort to get the engine started again.That ,was about five minutes beforethe crash.

Fire Callman Lawrence Driscollheard but did not see the craft as itcrossed near South Ave. Wilde said

Jg_^_j]flpf nf \hf Interns.,tional Chefs Association. She'll headpublic relations for the chapter com-mittee fogusing on the upcomingcompetition.

"We wijl • be working on fundraisers to generate money to sendour team. The president believes wecan expect to raise a quarter of amillion dollars at the very least," shesays. An additional plus is that allcommittee members accompany theteam to the Olympics, so Shelly willbe in Frankfurt. ~

The challenge represents an exten-sion of skills she has developed in theindustry, most recently in wine. Shesays she has a "love affair" withwine which has absorbed . her in-terests, her reading and professionaltalents for the past several years.This in turn has hronflht her recogmtion t tl "Th P

. He had flown out of the Linden Air-port for several months and his six-cylinder Skybolt craft had been seenover Cranford before. It was at firstdescribed as a "do-it-yourselfer"that could be built at home, but localauthorities discovered that theengine was valued at $70,000 andbelieve it was a sophisticatedcustom-built aircraft. It was distinc-tive as a blue biplane-with twowings-common to air shows andreferred to as a stunt plane. Tarr car-ried acrobatic insurance.

The pilot was making aerialphotographs Monday, and the printsindicated he was shooting them forreal estate use. He took off from

_. Tat various juncturesreported the plane sputtering and los-ing altitude on its fateful passageSouthward. !_,_

Wilde said the plane is built forspeed -and-manetrverabtHty~tsurits~"glide ratio," being limited.curtailslanding selections. He speculatedthat Tarr saw the open land aroundHillside and made that his goal."We'll never know for sure," the cap-tain said, "but he was probablyrealizing that there was not enoughglide to take him to the school."

The gas situation remains uncon-firmed. Federal Aviation Agency in-spectors arrived at the scene andspent the next day investigating thesite, the craft and various reports.The FAA's findings will be submittedto the National Transportation SafetyTransportation Board which

-ultimately will~rale^onthe~prorJable~cause' of the crash.

PH." Paul Cymbaluk suffered asmall forehead puncture wound fromthe windshield while-helping ex-tricate the pilot.

Another pilot crash landed not farfrom the site 44 years ago. But hemanaged to get out unscathed. Storyon Page"4.

ronflht her recogmtion, most recently "The President'sAward" of the International GenevaAssociation, a fratecnaLorganizationof hotel and restaujajK3r\eivfbr hercontribution to the association.Recently she was thejcoprdinator forthe society of a; wine tasting eveningofficially called "An EducationalSeminar on Wine"~terminology re-quired by New Jersey state law. Dur-ing the evening the 135 members ofthe association sampled six wineswith a six course menu at L'Affaire.

Shelly achieved another coup bysecuring Robert Mondavi Winery

do something for myself," she says—"I signed —up—for—the -Waldorf

Astoria's wine course with HarrietLembec," who is one of the fewmembers of the distinguished "Cot;frerie Des Chevaliers Du Gastevin."Shelly mastered the tastes of 14

—winesreach~night~a"h'd"aTtRe conclu-sion took a blind taste test.

She then participated in the advanced course which included aselect 25 students who studieddistricts and learned names andqualities of the different grapeswithin the districts and went on to

. taste 15 wines each evening. Eachstudent gave an extensive report onone vineyard each evening. Throughthis discipline Shelly has begun tobuild a memory-for wine,

A wine epiphany occurred forShelly at a special evening of wine atWindows of the World in lower Man-hattan where there was a sampling of200 wines. Shelly had been told of aspecial wine called Chateau Petruswhich cost $15 a bottle and is knownfor its aroma of violets and fruitwood. She was-told by an expert totake one sip and then carry the rest ofher glass for an hour to let it breathebefore drinking it. She did this andsays it was impossible to believe thatit was the same wine. With eyessparkling, she says, "the flavors andsmells were unbelievably.exquisite, Icould not believe it had been the wineI had sipped an hour before. I reallyunderstood the concept of let'ting thewine breathe."

Shelly's next big event will confirmher ongoing interest in American

the wine host for the seminar Mot>davi is considered one of theforemost American Wineries and hiswines are highly recognized inEurope. Marie Mondavi was presentthat evening and~gave""anspefech onwine.

event she is planning for the GenevaSociety. The winery for the eveningwill be. Chateau Michelle fromOregon, which has p'roduced "TastejDL_Amerj£A,J.' a__cookJiaak—ofAmerican foods that go* well withwines. *

Prelude to a role in the Culinary Olympics: Shelly Cole-Kudukwith George Belbery, vice conseiller of the Gastronomi^DeChaine des Rotisseurs, at recent wine seminar of the Interna-tional Society of Geneva. Photo by Ann Lovell.

R- ry

'Baby Bustlet' occursirked by state | in first half of yearLocal Democrats said they

r "won't stand for the state govern-

( ment dictating the design of thenew High Street Bridge." Page 9.

The "Baby Boomlet" that hasemerged In Cranford in recent yearshas turned into a "Baby Bustlet" thisyear. ' . , *

"^)nly uti babies were bom to local

to • • J I parents in the first six months of 1986.l n S l l i e \ This is 28 below the 144 births record-

1617 \ ^ o v e r t n e 8 a m e P 6 1 ^ iflst v e a r ' °Editorials ' 8f 19 P e r c e n ' ; <lroP> a n d *s 14 below theEntertainment 10 J comparable figure in mid-1984.SXSEd 13-1 Marion B o n n e U ' registrar of vitaluarwooa. . . . w i s t e t l 8 t l C 8 mld s h e Wflg surprised

' 8 j with decline which extended to eaihObituaries "* 14 V otiix0 flrst Bix m o n t h s of ^is y^-Reliclous news 14 f T h e •!»**«* reflects a sharp dropSi Z« in 1 f«wn 1988 when BonneU recorded 277aocuu news ju« 0 ^ y e a r ) ^ hJghest total InP 0 ™ - • ' : —•-•"" " '±%j- the 1970's and 1980's. That was 15 per-

cent more than the annual averageover the past 15 years, and 10 percenthigher than the total of the yearbefore. 1984.

iIf this year's six month pattern

continues for the remainder of theyear, the total would run about 16percent below last year's total. ;

Deaths and marriages are upslightly, but BonneU reports less pro-found variations in these vitalstatistics. A total of 131 deaths weretabulated in the first six months, up 7from 1985. Marriages, which havedeclined in totals for several straightyear*, are up slightly so far this year,from 109 to 112.

VHflit1 JKS j i g X "

'A i>

'Girl Crazy' debuts: rrjajor roles In Recreationand Parks Department musical production in-clude, from left. Anthony Leondls, Amy Asch,Paul Salvatorleflo and Margaret Duffy. Show

directed by Mike Marcus Is freeat Cranford High School at 8 p:tomorrow. Photo by Greg Price.'

to the publicm. today and

• Thirty-six Cranford residents are•among :i()7 students named to thedean's list at Union County College

;tor the spring semester.•— ;• They ait*: John Motion, majoring-

• in accounting/data processing; LisaiWa-laszek-;—majoring—in—biology;

° Jlonald Bauman and Linda Ander-. son, business/computer information

systems; Janice Milstein, DonnaJones, Joseph DeMarco, Qeraldine

- - Merkcl, John Bush, and' Ronald

laser/electro-optics technology;David Palew, electromechanicaltechnology; Allison Vajda and JulieAnn Hrudowksy, liberal-acts/early

-ehildhood-education; S u s a T i '

Kendall Elaine Pedorko, daughterof John and Diane Fedorko, 33 W.Holly St., was graduated cum laudewith a B.S degree from DuquesneUniversity. A four-year dean's liststudent, she was a founding father ofPhi Eta Sigma honor society andserved as second vice president andscholarship chairman for Zeta TauAlpha fraternity. She will be atten-ding Rutgers University School ofOsteopathic Medicine in the fall.

Nancy Gayle Jacobs, daughter ofMartin and Arlene Jacobs of Cran-ford, was awarded a B.S degree inpharmacy, cum laude, from Nor-theastern University College of Phar-macy and Allied Health Professions.She received the Dean C.N. MerianoAlumni Award as the student withthe most outstanding professionalpromise and is a member of Rho Chi,the national pharmacy honor society.Among her previous honors were theDean Leroy C. Keagle MemorialMerit Award for personal andscholastic achievement and ascholarship from the Jewish Founda-tion for the Education of Women, Sheis a 1979 graduate of Cranford HighSchool and had earned a B.A. degreein biology from hje University of

•Graczyk, all majoring in business;Daniel Solecki, Traci Lynn Karr, andDavid Budd, criminal justice; KeithBuik, . computer s.cience/data pro-cessing; Cheryl Currert^^dental.hygiene, and Karen Folinusz, nurs-,ing, Elizabeth General MedicalCenter.

William Meehan, electronics/-

Michele Scaturo and William Kim--mick, liberal arts/education; -Ghris-Brawley, Scott Cappello and DianeJean Hahn, liberal arts; PamelaDiLoreto, medical assistant; JudithLostaunau, medical laboratorytechnology, and Nancy jAnn Durnerand Karen Grzenda, medical recordtechnology.

Lora Dultz and Theresa Donohue,nursing, Muhlenberg RegionalMedical Center; Linda Paterno,practical nursing; Debra Withell andAnne DelGrippo, office systemstechnology, and Marjorie Lee Frost,word information processing.

SIDEWALKInside

Jackets • Pants • Shorts • Tops • SkirtsCulottes • Blouses • Blazers • Vests

' - -v. M^—s.

THE\# ^vlon-Cciin._.k 1Q2B J^tiLUnloru^ycLj* jCranlord

-••I VIV.VF.T » " • " . » > " • - . — • T J —

Delaware in 1983. She is pursuing acareer in industrial pharmacy,

Michael Calvano, 1016 OrangeAve., received a bachelor of sciencein education degree from California-University of Pennsylvania. He ma-jored In industrial arts.

Mary Ann B(5a7rolf~of ~N. Union"Avenue was on the dean's list for thespring semester at Salve Regina -The Newport College in Newport,R.I.

Foui' residents of Cranford worenamed to the dean's list for the spr-ing semester at the University ofDelaware. They are: Beverly Lusar-di, 109 Makatom Dr., a freshman;Kevin Rogan, 1 Sutton PI., a juniormajorin"g~'in accounting; SharonSalway, 4HeathermeadePl.,a juniormajoring in elementary teachereducation, and; Robert Siegel, 512Claremont PI., a freshman majoringin accounting.

Karen DeStefanis, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. John DeStefanis, 60 FourthAve., Garwood, achieved secondhonors for the spring term atRoberts-Walsh Business School,

and David S. Saal, 18 Osage Dr., afreshman.

Robin Lee Kerestes of Kenilworth,who graduated summa cum laudefrom Kean College with a B.S. degreein financial management and econ-mics, was one of three studentselected to the faculty appointment,retention, tenure and promotion com-mittee of the economics and manage-ment science department. _She also,was elected to several honor societiesincluding Omicron Delta Epsilon ofwhich she was president, Phi KappaPhi and Alpha Lambda Sigma. Shewas on the dean's list each semester,graduating with a. 3.96 GPA, andreceived awards for academic ex-cellence, the award for economicsexcellence and the outstanding ser-vice award. She is the daughter ofAlbert and Midge Kerestes and is a1982 graduate of David BrearleyHigh School.

Andrew Scher, son of Mr. and Mr.s.Martin Scher of Cranford, wasselected, as a peer advisor atFranklin Pierce College in NewHampshire. Peer advisors, whoassist freshmen in adjusting to col-lege, must have above average

rf nnH Higpl 'y leadership

Limited space is available for the"playschool"atrCraiifordrHigh-School-in the coming school year. Twoplayschools • are conducted onTuesdays, Wednesdays andThursdays, one,, in the morning andone in the afternoon, in both fall andspring. The sessions are run as partof the CHS child development course.

The morning session runs from9:25 to 10:45 and the afternoon ses-sion from 1:25 to 2:45. If any parent isinterested and would like to enrolltheir child please call CHS at272-9100.

CHS offers its students an oppor-tunity to learn about parenting by be-ing involved with preschoolers. In thechild development course, seniorslearn the psychology of children andget to immediately apply what theylearn in a play school setting.

For the first six weeks, class timeis spent giving the students informa-tion on why children do what they doand what is typical behavior and howto enhance a child's sense of con

fidence and independence.—For-the-remaining-12-weeks-oLthecourse, Cranford children aged 3V2 to4','2 years old come into theplayschool and the seniors get to app-ly what they have learned, theybecome the teachers of these .children. The course with thelaboratory is taught by CarolMigliorini, a trained home economicsteacher.

©tiring this time the preschoolerhas the opportunity to associate witha group of peers in free play and inregularly scheduled creative ac-tivities - planned, prepared and con-ducted by the students. Activities in-clude music, arts and crafts, games,nature walks, story time and fieldtrips. Each child will have a wealthof opportunities,to express his or herthoughts and fee'Jings and to learn towork and pf&y with others by sharingmaterials, taking turns, and assum-ing a certain amount of responsibili-ty, the school said.

Thursday, August 7, 1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 3

Louis Dickstein retiresafter 36 years with IRS

Louis Dickstein of Cranford has

Open house at new day care centerThe Cranford Child Care Center, a

new factltty at the Cranford AllianceChurch for daytime care of children2l/2 to 5 years old, will hold a dedica-

qualities.Douglas—Johnson,_son_of_Muriel

Johnson, 164 Mohawk Dr., graduatedwith academic honors based on hisgrade point average from UCLA witha B.A. in film communications. He isa 1981 Cranford High Schoolgraduate.

Mark Nietzel, 307 Prospect Ave.,was awarded a B.A. degree fromNortheastern University.

Gary Bondine of Cranford receivedthe Hudson Blueprint Scholarshipfrom the New Jersey Society of Arch-itects. He is a fifth year student inNew Jersey Institute of Technology'sSchool of Architecture. Bodine is inthe top five percent of his class andhas received awards in studioachievement and the all-schoolsketch competition. He was awardedthe NJSA Adolph Scrimenti Scholar-ship last year and was chosen to par-ticipate in a summer design studio inRome.

Five local residents weregraduated from Stevens Institute ofTechnology. They are: John Actoii,'

tion ceremony on sunaay. TiTe Rev.Robert C. Bashioum, new pastor ofthe "AHiance~Churchr will presideover the ceremony. An open house

will"follow the dedication, givingparents a chance to tour the facilitiesand meet the staff of the center. Thededication ceremony wil) begin at

Young shoppers: Kristen, Dawn and Kerry Ziei+nski examinemom's "I Love Cranford" bag distributed by merchantsparticipating in Sidewalk sales. Weather Jiampered openingThursday but improved over next two days. This scene is out-sfde Connie's of.Cranford and Can Can.

•11 :ia;a:in., and lliu uuen honse-witi-start at noon.—The centerwrll-opefrSept. 3rFoHn-formation call 276-1617.

Lyp exhibits her dolls at library

Union. ~"^ ;Glenn Sorge, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Richard Sorge, 326 Stoughton Ave.,had a 4.0 grade point average for thespring term of his junior year at JohnJay College of Criminal Justice.

Dean's list students at LafayetteCollege for the spring semester in-cluded Cranford residents LindaHolland, 30 Hemlock Circle, a.senior

—Anne~Marie-Lyprl2rdaughter ofMr.and Mrs. John Lyp of 22 PershingAve., is displaying her collection ofRaggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy atthe Cranford Public Library thismonth. In addition to dolls of allsizes," her collection includps cups,candle, pictures, books, a quilt,pillow case and shirts. A two-foot tallRaggedy Ann doll given to her whenshe was one year old inspjred AnneMarie to start her collection. She alsohas several "Annie" items in thedisplay. This display may be seenthrough the month of August.

Residents attendMontessori lesson

Three Cranford residents par;

ticipated in a workshop in theh d ^ H h r i

«. Mn

-retired after more than a third of acentury of service with the InternalRevenue Services-all of it in variousoffices in Newark.-

To mark the occasion, Dicksteinwas honored at a luncheon, attendedby IRS officials, employees, "andmembers of Mr. Dickstein's im-mediate family.

His career with the IRS spanned 36years. In supervisory and manage-ment positions since 1962,his respon-sibilities in the Newark office haveincluded positions as chief of the Of-fice Audit Branch, the Review Staff,

• and the Conference staff. Morerecently and for the past eight years,Dickstein has been an associate chiefof the Newark Appeals Office.

Accomplishments during Dicks-tein's career were described byvarious speakers including VincentCanciello, chief of the Appeals Office,and James Glenn, assistant chief ofthe Newark Examination Division.Letters of congratulations and bestwishes were received from NelsonBrooke, the regional director of ap-peals, and from U.S. Sen. Frank R.

Eaton promoted

Timothy-Jr-Eatonr-son-of Mrs.Janet Eaton of Cranford, "lias beenpromoted to director; financial ser-vices in the Group Department at thePrudentiars Group and FinancialServices-Office in Roseland-

Louis Dickstein, right, withVincent Canciello, chief of theNewark Appeals office of theIRS.Lautenberg. For his many years ofservice, Dickstein was presentedwith the p.S. Treasury AlbertGallatin Award.

Dickstein, a Certified Public Ac-countant, has resided in Cranfordwith his family since 1957. - —

Dixon at seminarPi/vhnrH .T\iv!nn. nrociHoni rtf Trau/>l .

Sharing the honors: G-R Technical Services, a-division ofGraber-Rogg of Cranford, won the first New Jersey PlasticsCompetitiveness Award for new sign holders in ^departmentstores. Celebrating the award are, from left, Carl Yurdin, ArtGarcia, Evelyn and Hal Martin, Isobel Wayrick (holding award),Andy Calamaris, president Art'Zampella and Bernard Shuman,the client for whom the product was created.

s~4

Michael Saal, all of Cranford, andAnn Brown of Garwood.

Gianine M. Christiano of 34 Canter-bury PI., a freshman at MoravianCollege, was named to the dean's listfor the spring term.

Christopher Zanettl, of 263 HazelAve., Garwood, was on" the springterm dean's list at Albright College.

Anne Marie Lyp, right,assistedby her friend Alisa Durner

7 to 19.They are Carolyn Kricks, Mary

. Macksoud and Diane Del Rey. Theworkshop was sponsored by theChristopher Academy of Pre-schoolLearning of Westfield and is one ofthe requirements for a diploma in theMontessori method^

arranges Pier Raggedy Ann,Raggedy' Andy, and Anniedisplay at library.

BEACHOn Sunday, Aug. 17 Jewish Singles

World will have a Beach Party inStaten Island from 1 to 5 p.m. Call964-8086.

Street shoes, and shoes in the street: exploring the bargainsfrom Cranford Bootery were, from left, Suzanne and RobynOpacity and Diana Dollare. Photo by Greg Price.

Gas company aides wear uniformsService personnel of the

Elizabethtown Gas Company arenow wearing uniforms, similar to

Open house for library readersAn open house will be held at Cran- well. Youngsters are reminded that

-ford-Publie-Library-nex4-Wednesday—-they—must— bring—their—r-eadingfrom 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. for all par- records to the library to report theirticipants in the "Celebrate Liberty'sCentennial" reading program.

reading time by the August 12deadline. Over 500 children have

Children who have signed up_for the signed up for the program, and so farprogram wuTreceive a free paper-back book and some surprises as

over 1,800 reading hours have beenreported.

AIR CONDITIONED

Sidewalk

SALEContinues Inside

Fantastic Selection ofNationally Advertised

Discontinued Styles . . .• BULOVA Accutron• GRUEN Electronics• JULES JURGENSEN• WALTHAM• WITTNAUER• ELGIN• HAMILTON• ZODIAC

Regularlyup to *200

SIDEWALK SALESAVINGS INSIDE

S U I T S Reg. $225-$24O . . . _ . . . . . . 9 9

BLAZERS Reg. $140-$ 165 $99°°

PATTERNEDSPORT COATSReg$i25$i65 $50°°

FRESH PEACHSHORTCAKE

Reg. $4.25 $ 3.75

ALL BUTTERCROISSANTS

Reg. 65' 45C

PUMPKINPIES

Reg. $4.00 *3.50

401-MiliuSt • Cranford-s-2720089-Open 6:30 a.m. -7 p.m. Mon. - Sat.; 6:30 - 2 Sun.

Those already wornmeter readers. Now theElizabethtown employees who visitcustomers' homes most often - ser-vice people and meter readers -- canbe easily identified by their

•|—-uniforms, said Victor M. Richel, vicepresident of administration andcustomer services.

"We feel having our service peoplewear uniforms makes it easier forour customers to recognize them,"

Richel said. "Our intent is to offerour customers more security whileproviding the same efficient servicethat has always been our standard?. Elizabethtown service people and

meter readers wear uniforms of darkblue pants and light blue shirts thathave an Elizabethtown Gas patch onthe packet area. While the utility'sservice representatives do not weartheir identification badges on theiruniforms as do its meter readers,they-will gladly show this badgeJtoany customer asking to see it, hesaid.

Eaton started with the company in1971 as a calculation approver. Hismost recent position was senior ex-pense analyst.

A graduate of Cranford HighSchool, Eaton earned a bachelor'sdegree in mathematics from Get-tysburg College in 1971. He is a fellowof the Life Management Institute. HeJLvesJn Scotch Plains with his wifeDiane.

Specialist in airquality joins firm

A. Roger Greenway has rejoinedDames & Moore, engineering and en-vironmental consultants, to serve asan atmospheric services consultant.He is based in the firm's Cranford of-fice.

Spot in Cranford, recently par-ticipated in a -seminar-on vacationtravel in New York City sponsored bythe national institute of CertifiedTravel Agents. A resident of Cran-ford, Dixon is active in the Wellesley,

-Mass^—based Institute-of-Gertified-Travel Agents, which awards the na-tionally-known CTC( Certified TravelCounselor) designation to travel in-dustry members.

DEGO\"-SALEDecoys and shore Birds paintings

are returning to Allaircj. The sale andshow on Sat., Aug. 16 and Sun., Aug.17 (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.)'marks the sixthyear the event has been held in thenatural setting of Allaire millpond.

• LIGHTWEIGHTLINED, ZIP

i J A C K E T S Reg •$35$ 17 5 0

r H O / 0F F F-VERY ITEM OF FINE JEWELRY3 U / O IN OUR SPECIALLY MARKED CASE

Many OtherMarvelousBargainsInside

SWEATERS

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REVERSIBLESHORTS & MATCHING

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$10 00

ALL...• SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS• SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS• SWIM SUITS• SHORTS

A Real Man's Shop

PORTSMAN'S.,TuM., Frl. 0:30-5:30

Thun. 8:30-8:30Sat. 0:30-5:00

• Chi ld W<d.

tk>r CreditICjtiutAcc«pt«d

Open Thunday

'^03 N. Union Ave • Cranforj/ • 276-1099

Save 50% or MoreCompared To National Brand Formulas

Your Choice $3.35

oyster

500

HIGHPOTENCYCALCIUMSUPPLEMENT

MliiM , **POTENCYCALCIUMSUPPLEMENT

CalciumConcentrate

60 TABLETSoomp«/« to

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OYSTER CALCIUM500 60s

CALCIUM CONCENTRATE CALCIUM CONCENTRATE600 60s 600 + Vitamin 0

Os-Cal 500*IO

Caltrate-600*' Callrate 600 •(- Vit. D®1

Calcium hqjps protect against Osteoporosis, and works in the body to maintainmuscle tone and to maintain normal behavior of nerves.

'CkKiftM 600* V I '•gilUfM! bldtmtikl ol IWtl* LltjOfUO/WI LUHl* CXMI not msks w Ktntt CUCium Conccnuil* SO0

Beflr OPEN THIS SUN 9-2:Pharmacy

17 N. Union Cranford 276-0062Opan Mon-Sat 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Alternate- Sunday 9-2

SUPER BARGAINSSidewalk Sale Inside

Special Racks1 to

SAVINGS to

15 N. Union Ave • Cranford • 276-0234

Greenway will work on air qualitystuides for resource recovery, elec-tric utility, cogeneration and in-dustrial projects; indoor air qualitystudies, particularly for asbestosremediation and monitoring pro-jects; and air toxicity studies forresource recovery plants, hazardouswaste incinerators, hazardous wastecleanup sites, and industrial plants.

Prior to rejoining the firm, Green-way served as director of air qualityand environmental sciences forElson T. Killam and Associates.

A .certified, rnnsnlringmeteorologist by the AmericanMeteorological Society, Greenwayhas written more than 25 technicalpapers on environmental studies andair .quality,.

AUGUSTWHITE SALE

I OFFSAVINGS ON

Sheets • Towels • BedspreadsComforters • Window Curtains

& Much More'Items in Stock Only

conmesofcranfordL1NEN

102 N. UNION • CRANFORD272-2033

^ « Thurs 'lil 9

.:• . . • - < • • • • . ' • - • • ' • : \ » . ' > i < •.'.:••:•'' ' ^ ' ' -.•',•..!••• • 1 : i i < r . . ; - ' . ' - . i | ' . ' : . - - : > y v » " , ^ r . " r ' ; ' v ; - . ' K •!••;•! • f i : ' ' • ' • • < ' < ; • • ••. ' ' •• . ' ' ••''. •••'•'

v

SidoivdhInside

GREAT VALUES PRICEDWELL BELOW COST

To # J OffALL SUMMER CLOTHES

JNCLUDING-eAJAJSELECT GROUP OF SNOWSUITS

$ 2 0 . 0 0 (160 value) '

Deb'nHeir27 N. Union • Cranford • 276-0881

Opon 0.30-6 I 6 Mon Sul . Thuru Hi 0

SHAPIRO'SPOST-SIDEWALK SALE

SAVINGS

• BATHING SUITS Boys', Girls' & Men's• LADIES' OVERSIZED SHIRTS• MEN'S SHORTS

SUMMERHEALTHTEX

LEE STRIPEDCOTTON BAGGIES

Reg. ^ S 0 0

1/2 PRICELADIES' & MEN'S PANTS

Cords, Jeans, Brush Jeans, Stretch Cords & Chinos

$IO<»oL— MANY OTHER ITEMS BELOW COST! -

Shapiro's19 N. Uriloif Ave • Cranford • 276-3270

SaleContinues

(Inside)

SUITSFrom

$2000

SLACKS

SHIRTS

ALL SPORTSWEAR SUBSTANTIALLYREDUCED TO PREPARE OUR STORE

FOR FALL

council11 North Union Avenue

Cranford • 272-5350

Major Credit cards accepted • Open Thursday 'til ft PM. ,

Sidewalk Sal esContinue . .

Page 2: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

\

Page 4 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Thursday, August 7, 1986 '

Eyewitnesses: *The next thing—we knew, a plane crashed into our tree9 IMan accused of shootingbrother-in-law in chest

- ' Thursday, August 7,1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 5

| DMV to begin suspensions I F i n e d #500 for resisting arrest—tr

Demolished biplane: Skybolt had-wood frame mined it was a sophisticated custom built

By ANGELA CATILLOGeorge Hardman and his wife

Wilda-didnlthear-the^kyiiolUuplane-until it crashed 60 feet from thechairs they, were lounging in behindtheir house at 220 Hillside Aye. Mon-day afternoon.

"My wife and I were sitting here inthe yard and the next thing we knew,a plane had crashed into our tree,"he said at the accident scene. "Wedidn't see it because we were facingthe other way, and it didn't make anynoise until the crash."

"It came through and hit the treesin our neighbor's yard, took our fencedown and then hit the bottom of thetree," he said.

Mrs. Hardman, who also goes bythe name of Pat, said she was dozing.The crash awakened her. "I thoughtit was a train," she said, a naturalreaction because the Lehigh Valleyrail line runs behind her property,and noise from idling trains has been~a problem irTlr ie neighborhood.Raye Wildfeuer, a neighbor stayingwith Mrs. Hardman, said "I thoughtit was a freight train because it hadan odd screech. We're all a littleshook up."

Brian Pizzella, who was fixing hiscar in his driveway next door at No.222, thought something was wrong

'My wife and I were sitting here in the yard and the next thing weknew a plane had crashed into our tree.' George Hardman in hisbackyard on Hillside Aye. w[th mangled plane in his weepingwillow tree. His wife dnd &pme neighbors initially thought thecrash involved a train, onffce Lehigh Valley tracks behind thefoliage. Photo by Greg Price. • •

covered by syntnetic tabric and was Duilt for vehicle. Public-safety officers feared gasmaneuverability and speed. Originally-.per.ce.Lv- • spillage might pose...dangecvbut later discern-,ed as a home-built craft, officials changed ed tanks were empty and there was only sometheir minds when they discovered engine at , gas in lines. Photo by Greg Price,lower right was priced at $70,000 and deter-

CHiL

CE.NTE

with a train-going by. His^wite, Bar-bara, said the children were playingin the front yard at the time and thatshe thought the sound was that of atrain going by. Police Capt. HarryWilde surmised later that the pilotmight have steered away from the

-avenue-to-avoid-children- ••••

Mr. Hardman said he didn't gonear the downed plane because hewas afraid it would explode. The nextthing he recalled was the arrival ofemergency personnel including MikeDow, the policeman who lives down

fatal path eastward up the avenue."We're a little shocked," Hardman

explained. "If it weren't for the tree,iUthe plane) would-have hit us."Later, police determined that theplane was angling slightly away from

nearby in World War II

SUNDAY AUGUST 10

DEDICATION 11:15 AM

OPENrn _ . . . . * • * ti

L-3PM

the_streett_wh(Lteacke(Lthe_plane^_th^H?rdman homeinstead of towarditTBut the peril orthe""erash~ancl-of—

~n4 1 1 1 " potential gas spillage was close

r l a n e l a n d e d i n e m e r g e n c y enough at the moment to justify theMike Elwertowski of No. 216 said

the biplane came into his yard at anangle roughly from the BeechamProducts building across the RahwayRiver.

"We heard a loud crackle," saidRita Schmatz of No. 221 across thestreet from the Hardmans. "Itwasn't an explosion...it was like aheavy tree falling down."

. Robert Maloney of 46 Mendell Ave.saw the plane heading his way as hedrove west on Hillside. "It was com-ing right at me, flying just above thehouses," he said. "Its wings were

_ flicking back and forth. I knew it was-going—idown.ll_He s^iri thp

A plane used to publicize "Bundlesfor Britain" early in World War IImade an emergency landing not farfrom the site of Monday's fatal crash.In those days the area was farmlandand the pilot escaped unhurt.

Fire Chief Leonard Dolan, who as ayoungster hunted the woods along theRahway River not far from theLehigh Valley tracks, recalled the in-cident. The plane landed on theformer Sperry Farm which yieldedto housing after World War II.

On Jan. 5,1942, Kevin Fitzgerald of

The Citizen & Chronicle called a"propped-out" position.

• Police Sgt. Edward J. Metznerreceived numerous calls fromcurious residents near the field.Many of them showed "waranxiety." That was four weeks afterPearl Harbor and the communityhad set up elaborate protectiveblackouts and warning systemsagainst enemy planes.

Sgt. Thomas Woods and Ptl.William Gassman and .Frank Carusowent to the scene. The communitywas assured that it was "a friendly,

OPENING SEPT. 3, 1986

Retford Ave. & Cherry St.

Call 276-8689 or

Lock Haven, Pa. brought His riperCub training plane down on a snowcovered field after running out ofgas. The propeller was broken in theprocess and the craft landed in what

not an enemy, crafi.The plane, owned by Piper Aircraft

Crop, of Lock Haven, was beingtaken there from Roosevelt Field onLong Island. ~x-~ —"""

wasn't making any noise at the time.

UCC to sponsor adult open house

ers Bakery says

BLUEBERRYGEIGER'S BLUEBERRY PIE COUPON

$450

"i FRESH 9"• BLUEBERRYJ—1^1 E—R•ft

. 5 OL i m i t 2 • E x p i r e s 8 / 1 3 ' 8 6 cc

IIIIII

GEIGER'S BLUEBERRY CHEESE PIE

• BLUEBERRY\ CHEESE PIEI 9' ' Size • Reg. $5.99

! • • • • • • • • • •L im i t 2 • E x p i r e s 8 1 3 < 8 6

$450• ' • • • • • • •

CC

IIIII

ea.

GEIGER'S PRODUCE:

• Beautiful Eastern Cataloupes 79°• Fresh New Jersey Corn . J 17°

GEIGER'S DELI:

• Roast Beef this Week . $3.99 it>.• Boar's Head Turkey $4.99 ib• Corned Beef $2.99 ib

GEIGER'S SEAFOOD, , * Lorn on Solo Florentine or • ——- -

With Crabmeat Stuffing.Prepared daily, cooks in 20 min. $5.99 ib

• \ . .

OPEN 6 DAYS 8:30-8:00 # Closed Mbndays

RESTAURANT: 233-2260, Tues-Sun 11:30-10 pm

Fri 4 Sat til 11 pm

BAKERY & DELI • MEAT& SEAFOOD: 233-3444

Tues-Sunday 8:30-8:00 pm: Fri 4 Sat III 9 pm

Union County College will conductan Adult Open House August 21-foradults who are considering startingor returning to a college career. Thefree event will be held on the campushere beginning at 7 p.m.

Those who atteTOTwrirbe' able to •have xjuestions answered regardingadmission procedures, programs of,study, career counseling, financialaid, and the role of the adult studentiirthe commnnttjrcotlegereounselors ~

and college administrators will beavailable to answer questions adultsmay have about college life for thenew or returning student. An admis-sions officer will also provide trans-fer credit evaluations for students

-who are.transferrrrtg-frem-other-tiol^leges. The event will be followed by aCLEP (College Level ExaminationProgram) Orientation.

For further information call CarylWatlti ns-

Dittrick'sDiscount Wines & Liquoi^' SIZZLING SUMMER SALE

Prices Good Thru 8-11-86

LIQUOR SPECIALSFINLANDIA

VODKA1.75 liter

BEEFEATERGIN 1 75 IllBf-

. , - ( 1

CUTTY SAfiK $1 75 liter

$18'19'

DEWAR'S750 ml

BACARDIRUM

Silver or Amber

Q 1.75 liter

$1O9913CANADIANCLUB 1 litor

CORDIAL SPECIALS

+ S2.00 /.>MFG REBATE \

MIDORIMELON

LIQUEUR

99$n 750 ml

LEROUX POLISHBLACKBERRYBRANDY 750 ml

BOLLSBLACKBERRYSCHNAPPS 750 ml

SOUTHERN u

COM^XHt J

750 ml

WINE & CHAMPAGNE SPECIALS

THE WEIGHT LOSS PROFESSIONALS

SALTY DISPOSITIONS

Q: Is salt consumption-necessary—to_the_health-o£_the.body?

A: Salt is composed of sodium(40 percent) and chloride (60percent). Sodium is a majormineral component in blood and

-tissue-fluids.J.t _helps_regulateblood pressure and controlblood volume, aid in heart and •other muscle contractions, af-fects nerve impulses and en-zyme action, and controls thefluids surrounding body cells.

The body requires only 200mg. of sodium per day,equivalent to the amount con-tained in one-tenth of a teaspoonof salt. As much as 1,100 to 3,000mg. per day (up to 2 teaspoons)is still considered safe. But theactual average consumptionamong developed countriesvaries between 4,000 arid 10,000mg per day, or 20 to 50 timesmore than the body needs.

There is no data verifying theabsplule dangers of too muchsodium in the diet. However, ex-cesses are unnecessary; andsodium restriction is a recom-mended preventive measure forhypertension. For more ideason low-salt cooking, contactyour local Diet Center at654-7820.

922 South Ave • Westfield654-7820

RIUNITEBianco, RosatoLambrusco or

D'oro

* $O99JL 750 ml

GALLO VERMOUTHSweet or Dry

750 ml $1991WIDMERCHAMPAGNE

750 ml $199

GALLOCHABLIS

4 liter

99

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24/12 oz, cans

PABST24/12 oz. cans

HEINEKEN$| A24/12 02. bottlos or cans! W .

M0LS0N$iA99U U L U f c N 24/12 oz bottles

OPEN 9 10 MOfcUSAJ- ' SUN 1-8 30i- .in- not iii!,pun!,it)li) loi lypuuidpOicdl etfurs w« rusofvo Iho ri<jhl to limit ouanlitios

Dittrick'sDiscount Wines & Liquors

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an

24 Eastman St • Cranford276-1024

I

A local man has been accused ofthe attempted murder of his brother-in-law during a family dispute intheir rowhouse on Johnson Ave.Saturday morning.

Police said Vincent Curtis, 28, shotDerrick: Williams, 24, in the chestwith a single shot from an automatichandgun. The police were alertedabout an assault at 10:09 a.m. and ad-vised to send to an ambulance. TheCranford, First Aid Squad and theMETS unit responded and Williamswas taken to University Hospital inNewark. '

A bullet was lodged in one of hislungs but he was reported in stablecondition this week.

Curtis fled the home immediatelyafter the shooting and police issued aradio alarm describing his new 1986Pontiac Grand Am. An hour later,Curtis appeared at police head-quarters here with his father, whohad driven him from his home in Irv-ington, and turned himself in to Det.Eric Mason. Irvington policerecovered the Grand Am there thatafternoon. •

Curtis, who works as a mail

handler for thd U.S. Postal Service inJersey City, was charged with at-iempted-mutder_and_pQssessiQa-Qf_a-

Attorney General W. Cary Ed-wards said that following the activa-tion of the last component of thePrice Waterhouse computer system,,the New Jersey Division of Motor

that has been growing since July,1985 when the new computer systembegan to malfunction. The divisionhas not been able to • process ad-ministrative suspensions while the

TABLESTOLENA round picnic table valued at $80

was reported stolen Monday morning"ic backyard of Carol Ciriqllo

at 6 Cayuga Rd.

handgun for an unlawful purpose. Hewas temporarily placed in the local.lockup and was subsequently takento-the county jail in lieu of $100,000bail set by Superior Court JudgeAlfred M. Wolin.

He and his wife, Tanya, were alsocharged with possession of under 25grams'of marijuana and of narcoticsparaphernalia.

Police Capt. Harry Wilde said theincident developed out of an alterca-tion between Mr. and Mrs. Curtis in abedroom. By his account, Tanya Cur-tis called her brother," Derr ickWillil&ms, to intercede in the dispute,and in the middle of an argument bet-ween the two men Curtis went to acloset, armed himself with a .25calibre automatic handgun and firedit into Williams' chest.

The Curtises have three youngchildren who were in another part ofthe home at the time.

Railroader picnicThe Retired Railroaders Group 2

will have its annual picnicThursday,Aug. 14 at noon at the Senior CitizensCenter, 1306 Esterbrook Ave.,Rahway. There will be music for dan-

-Vehicle8-over-the-nex(rtwo-months-compuier—system—was—being-will begin suspending driver redesigned by Price Waterhouse.

of" more than 150,000

A Union man has been fined $500for resisting arrest by Cranford PU.Brian Hand. Phillip Cooney, 21, 1208Jeanette Ave., received the fine fromJudge James M. Bell after pleadingguilty in Municipal Court July 22. The

the parking lot near the firehouseDec. 22. Police said Hand sought toquestion Cooney, a college student,about an incident of vandalism, andan altercation ensued. Bell dismisseda charge of disorderly conduct

licenses of • moremotorists, actions which have beendelayed more than a year. To proper-ly .help those motorists bound to haveinquiries with such a large number ofsuspensions, the division will extendits hours of operation beginning Mon-day. .:

These suspension actions willeliminate.a backlog of transactions

(Court ordered suspensions were notdelayed by^the problem.)

Motorists may contact the divisionfor help with a suspension problem bycalling (609) 292-7500, Mondaythrough Wednesday from 8:30 a.m.until 6 p.m., Thursday and Fridayfrom 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. and onSaturdays from 8:30 a.m. until noon/

"charge^stemmEctfroiiranincidentin—agains H3ooney-

Window smashers ordered to pay

Two accused of possessing carA mother and a son have been ac- miles faster than the speed limit, and

cused in Cranford of possessing a\ stoppecUhem in front of 203 Holly St.stolen car. They are Mark Elco, 2 6 , \ at 6:55 p.m. Sunday. A check reveal-and Edna Elco, 61, both of 134 E. 7th led that the car had been reportedSt., Roselle. Ptl. Bob Merrill pursued stolen from K.L. Herbst in Metuchenthe pair along Springfield Ave., on July 14..where he said they were traveling 30

Car stolen in-business park

Two men who filed charges againsteach other for window smashinghave been ordered by Judge JamesM. Bell to recompense each other forthe costs of the damage. AnthonyZeleniak, 4 Centennial Ave., who on

.June 27 threw a beer bottle throughthe window of the car of Frank Wan-ca of 254 Third Ave., Garwood, was

told to pay his victim $400. Wanca,who smashed a window at thebuilding listed as Zeleniak's addressat 4 Centennial Ave., Cranford, wasordered to pay his victim $100. Bellmade the judgment in MunicipalCourt July 17. Both men had to pay$30 to the Violent Crimes Compensa-tion Board.

Two businesses are burglarized

cing. POTMcNamee, 245-5031.

A silver colored 1985 ChevroletCitation owned by David Steigerwaldof Fanwood was stolen from thepariring lot at 6 Commerce Dr. July3d/The theft was reported at 5:26p.m. . y

Two Escort radar detectors were

stolen from vehicles last week. A $225model belonging to Robert Ahlh6lmof Middletown was taken from out-side the Wing Co. plant on CommerceDr. Thursday, and a $150-machineowned by Richard Briscoe was stolenat 705 Orange Ave. .

Ketchum Jersey and the Karateand Judo Center were burglarized onSouth Ave. W. Sunday. Entry in bothcases was gained by opening a se-cond floor window. Police are explor-ing the possibility that both crimeswere committed by the same culpritor cutpJrtts*. •; r

A sum of $130 was removed from a

safe that had been left open in .the-,Karate facility. At Ketchum, the'thieves used a 15 foot ladder to reachthe roof from a parking area, thenforced the window open. An inven-tory of missing items, if any, is beingmade. Police found a bag of burglarytools inside.

Explorer Car WashThe Cranford Police Explorers are

holding a car wash Saturday from 9a.m. to 4 p.m. in the parking lot of

Gray Memorial Funeral Home onSpringfield Avenue. Cost per car is$3.

Eight citations from accident

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A Roselle woman received eighttraffic summonses including one for

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The occupants of the other vehicleincluded Jenny Silvio, 71, who wastaken by the First Aid Squad toRahway Hospital for treatment of

-head-and-leg—bumps,—and—Robert-Silvio, 76, who declined treatment fora knee bump. The Silvios are fromScotch Plains.

A DWI studyThe New Jersey Division of Motor

Vehicles has awarded a federal grantof $9,950 to the Bureau of EconomicResearch at Rutgers University tofund a study concerning the effects of

Disaster systemRahway Hospital has joined the

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the state's DWI programs on alcohol-related traffic fatalities. Among theprojects to be evaluated in the studyinclude S.O.B.E.R. programs, drunk

^driving task forces, county D.W.Lcheckpoints and municipal D.W.fenforcement, as well as changes inthe drinking age, Paulsen said.

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Page 3: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

Page 6 CRANFORD CHRONICLEThursday, August 7,1986

Boroughbriefs

Mancino on tvLivio Mancino, mayor, will ap-

pear on 'AMeet- the Mayors" onWOR-TVTCh. 9) Sunday. He willbe interviewed by Angela Catilloof The Chronicle. The programwill be broadcast at 10:30 a.m.and repeated at 10:30 p.m. TheKenilworth segment begins at the1

halfmark point or 10:45 a.m. and ,p.m.

Pact reached onborough, ISSTlabor dispute

•J

X < < •

By ANGELA CATILLOAn unfair labb£ practices charge

brought against'the borough by theInternational Society of SkilledTrades (ISST), which is representing,ei&ht borough clerical workers, hasbeen dropped.

Negotiation^ the clerks' initial

UGC dean's listFive Kenilworth residents were

named to the dean's list at UnionCounty College for the springsemester. -

f—They-are:-Stephanie-Eoranski,-majoring in business/computerinformation systems; Anne

-Boyle, business; Adam Ciem-niecki,. electronics engineeringtechnology , , andCarolyn Emery and ChristineBressman, nursing, MuhlenbergRegional Medical Center.

iChasanoff honor)Andrew Chasunoff ol

Kenilworth was cited by the Na-tional Junior Wheelchair Com-mittee for "his contributions tothe development of the JuniorWheelchair Sports Movement."The honor was presented at therecent Junior Nationals in ValleyForge, Pa., where he coached theChildren's Specialized Hospitalwheelchair sports~re~aTTVrwhtchrearned 15 gold medals plus fivesilver and three bronze medals.

Volunteers citedSeven Kenilworth residents

were among 325 volunteers atMemorial General Hospital whowere honored at the institution'sannual recognition dinner.

They are: Marge Kosmutza,3,000 hours; Mildred Kendig andViola McCraigh, 2,500. hours;

Sleepy Time Story Hour at the KenilworthPublic Library attracted a wide-eyed group totales read by Judy Jones, at center rear. Younglisteners included, from left, Tommy Vitale,Megan Musko, Jennifer Tobin, .Amy

Frankskum, Michele Cmo, Scott Sircovitc"h,Steffie Jones, Laura Civile, Erin Boll, LindseyDann, Eric Da/in and Richard Goldstein.Photos by Robin Salant.

£"•*»">• sit

Closeups of the younger set: Tommy Vitale pajamas and Megan Musko brought her doll,showed up in propec "sleepy time" attire-his At right, Erin Boll hangs on to her p e ^

Bear football stars coachyouth at annual clinic

t ill resume after on interimcouncilman is appointed to take theplace of C. Michael Thorsen, whoresigned his post Monday, according

\to Margaret Adler, borough clerk.IThorsen was a member of thenegotiating committee, along with'hyllis Baldacchini, councilwoman,|ind Livio Mancino. mayor.

The borough ancTUfST reached asettlement agreement July 12,without a formal hearing by thePublic Employment Relations Com-mission (PERG), said Ira Mintz, aPERC mediator who worked withbmh sides. He would not reveal theterms of the agreement, however,Henry Schickling, president of ISST,said two of the three areas of conflictwere settled.

According to Schickling "summerhours" w|ere reinstated allowing full-time clerks to leave at 4 p.m. onFridays instead of 5 p.m., and part-time employes were allowed to havefive sick days per year^Schicklingclaimed that the mayor had deniedthe summer hours, a practice in ef-fect for 23 years, and reduced sickdays for part-timers from five tothreerwhile negotiations were takingplace. Both items are not consideredbenefits at this time, and are beingdiscussed as part of the new contract.

A conflict over vacation schedulesfor clerks working seven years wa«

not resolved, however, and Schickl-ing said a "misunderstanding" still

.exists between both parties. In thfccharge, which was filed against theborough in June; Schickling claimedMancino was denying seven-yearworkers a week's vacation.

Schickling interprets the publishedcopy of the ord'n°nr*p from April 26.1979 to grant employes with sevenyears service three weeks vacationThe ordinance entitles employes with"one to seven .years service" twoweeks vacation, and employes with"seven to 14 years service" threeweeks vacation.

Mancino, however, said previously"the publlsbed~copy—contained-:a-typographjeaj error and should grantthree weeks to employes with eight to14 years service, which is reflected inthe employe work manual. .

The mayor said ^Tuesday thatSchickling's statements regardingthe settlement were "not factual,"but refused to "discuss any mattersprior to the contract being signed andnegotiations completed."

The eight clerical workers petition-ed to join 'the union in June of 1985seeking higher salaries and recogni-tion, including promotions. Afteranother unfair labor practicescharge for harassment was filed anddropped by ISST, the clerks approv-ed the union representation by a 7rlvote last October. \

Once negotiations resume, Schickl-ing -expects--to—-have—a—contractratified in two to three months, closeto one year after representation wasapproved, and more than a year afterit was asked for. , <

Police blotteri Fines levied in landlord-tenant riftii

t!ynith CocQuza andTWary Lu-ciano, 500 hours; Dora Finch, 200hours, and C. Joseph Aragona,100 hours.

The Kenilworth RecreationDepartment's T2TTT annual VdUthTFootball Clinic, held Friday, was oneof the best on record despite havingbeen postponed because of rain.

TCandau singsThe Union County Regional

High School Summer VocalWorkshop will conduct a concert |at 8 p.m. next Thursday, Aug. 14,at Jonathan Dayton in Spr-1

ingfield. Robert Lamdau--of|Kenilworth is an actfv.e member ,of the workshop.

Adult centerRegistration for courses at the

Adult Learning Center at DavidBrearley High School begins Aug.18.-It-s^sponsored-by— the-Union-County Regional High SchoolDistrict. For information callCarole Beris, the director, at272-4480 or 272-7580.

Hospital awardsTwo Kenilworth residents were

recognized at St. ElizahethHospital's service award dinnerfor employes. They are BeverlyMathis, who has been employedat the hospital 15 years, andEileen Fraleigh, five years.

Chicken B-B-QThe men of, the Community

United Methodist Church inKenilworth will hold their AnnualChicken Bar-B-Que Saturdayfrom 5 to 7 p.m. A donaiiflanf $6for adults and $4 for childrenunder 13 is requested. For-ticketscall Fred Pliimmer, 276-2054.

DWI chargeElizabeth resident Jeffrey J.

Magliulo, 2.5, was charged withdriving while intoxicated a

a?-"

Jumping through the squares: George Gyure makes his way—ttirough-matr-i-x-aHhe-1-2-th-afVFvwa4-youth-footbalI climG-£riday>-

Photos by Greg Price.

WL

Young football player Carmine Testa shows his jumping abilityon his way through the matrix.

—"The" volunteers this year made—our event super," said Bob Taylor,recreation director. "To see thesebig, strong college football playersspend an evening with our kids, hav-ing fun and learning, was really, apleasure."

The clinic brought together 12 ac-tive college players and boroughyoungsters ages 8 to 15. A total of 11stations representing a different foot-ball challenge were set up at theclinic.

. Ed Miller and Tony Siragysa, bothslated to start for the University ofPittsburgh this fall, ran rugged sta-tions irUine-play—LauJ2ascarella-and_Fred Soos, who both play at AlbrightCollege, specialized in running skills.Mike Mancino and Steve Kallensee,both former Brearley football starswho converted to baseball in college,worked on specialties with the youngplayers.

Alex Scherer, a Jersey City Statelinebacker, taught defense alongwith Dennis Layden, who will play atEast Stroudsberg University. DanSims, the Bears quarterback lastfall, helped with throwing skills.Sims will attend Wagner College thisfall.

Taylor was pleased with the suc-cess of the clinic. "My only instruc-tion to the volunteers was to have funwith the kids and make a friend forfootball," he said. "Even thoughthese players are no longer in theBrearley program, they still feelcommitted to helping our youngstersand we appreciate it."

A landlord-tenant dispute cameToTVnmic1pal~Cour1rMonday, andall parties were convicted ofdisorderly persons offenses.Carol Covelcyn, 42, a former te-nant of Sheila and Irwin Straussat a home they own at 244~N. iuh~St., was convicted of passing abad check to Sheila Strauss in .theamount of $249.25 on May 29.Judge William Boffa finedCovelcyn $305.

Covejcyn brought eounter-Hconiplaints agatnstr-both-SheHa-and Irwin for criminal trespassinto her apartment, and for sim-ple assault against Sheila aloneclaiming she pushed open the

J i i"apartment gstrike Covelcyn and injure herarm. Sheila was convicted of bothcharges and fined $310, and Irwinwas convicted of the trespasscharge and fined $155.

Two Cadillacs stolen in boroughTwo Cadillacs were stolen in

the borough last week, and athird car was broken into. A 1983brown Cadillac Seville was takenfrom the front of the KenilworthAilto Body Shop at 636 NorthMichigan Ave. overnight July 29.The car belonged to Maheshkum

U d j lwas stolen from the parking lot ofthe Holiday Inn between mid-

night and 9 a.m. Sunday. A 1986Camaro parked jit^ a home onSoutFTMTchigan AveT was enteredbetween 8 p.m. Monday and 6:45a,.m. Tuesday. An AM/FMcassette player was stolen, andthe car dashboard was extensive- Jly damaged, police said. The car

-belpngs to^JEdwatd^Erank . of Roselle Park.

Accused of exposing himselfPaul Mauro, 20, of Plainfield

was accused Sunday of exposinghimself toia borough resident.Mauro allegedly stole flowersfrom the resident and dropped hispants when he was asked toreturn them. He is charged withthe theft of the flowers, lewdness,giving false information to a

police officer, and damaging"borough property. According totpolice, Mauro gave a false name tand address after being arrested ~and then damaged the commode *in the cellblock where he was be-1ing held. Two female juveniles^with Mauro were released to*their parents. ' -•

Thursday, August 7,1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 7

A tasty cake awaits the winner: tfiese four girls played the "cake.walk" at playground fair. From left Dlanna Garcia 101 Cristina

a 12; Sylvia Mailer 11 d Li A d t t Th

Here arc honorccaia the Crc]playground program sponsored bythe Recreation and Parks Depart-

' ment over the past week:: ADAMSAVENUE

Citizen of the Week: Mike O'Neilland Dania LaPorta.

Bubble Blowing Contest: Ages'6-8,1st, Megan Lightcap, 2d, Katie

""Wilson, ,3d, CoTtn~tonllbgrg7^ges-9-14: 1st, Adam Lightcap, 2d, WillieCarpenter, 3d, Dania LaPorta.Smallest Bubble - Justin Matusiak.

BROOKSIDECitizen of the Week: Patrick Gor-

p ,Talent Show: 1st, Tara Gorman,

2d, Chris Sullivan, 3d, EmmyFrancen and Paul Campanelli.Honorable Mention, Maegen Cec-chetti and Jen Francen.

Basketball Contest: 1st, Mike Mof-fittr^d, Paul Campanelli, 3d,JaimieDrozewskif

LINCOLN SCHOOlr

Taking aim: Melissa Brown, 6, points her water spray at the can-^' a t - t n e annual playground fair. Her mentor is Roberta Brown

| t d ) d i t f th L i l A P l d St playground fair. From left Dlanna Garcia 10 Cristina ^ ' e a t - t n e a n u a p a y g u d a He e

Garcia, 12; Sylvia Mailer, 11, and Lisa Andretta 11 They attend- <not r e | a t e d ) . director of the Lincoln Avenue Playground. Sum-ed townwide event from Lincoln Schotrt playground Photo by m e r P r°9 r a rn concludes this week. Photo by Greg Price.•Greg Price.

Many awards in playground activities of past weekJEick.

Citizen of the Week: Paul Harrisonand Sylvia Haller.

Talent Show: 1st, Sylvia Haller, 2d,Kevin Sargent, 3d, Lisa Andretta,Fran Labbate, Kathleen deMyer,

Season over

Basketball Contest: John White,Sylvia Haller, Fran Labbate.. Perfect Attendance: John White,Kevin Sargent.

ORANGE AVENUE"^Citizen of the Week: Dania Lieber-

mann.International Dress-Up Day: 1st,

~Mary-Kokier2drRpbbie-Brunner,3dr-Justin Conklin.

SUNNY ACRESCitizen of the Week: David Pavlick

and Erin Burke.Water Drinking Contest: Ages 6-7,

1st, Susan Matz, 2d, Mike Gather-cole, 3d, Jerry Schlichting. Ages 8-9,

.1st, Jimmy Doyle, 2d, RobertCatalano, 3d, Kenny Lutz. Ages ' " ~"1st, Victor Catalano, 2d, JoanneCatalano, 3d, Tania Mayer.

Joke Contest: 1st; GretchenLegion, 2d, David Pavlick, 3d, ErikaLegion, Stephen Skordinski, KristenJohnson.

Basketball Contest: 1st, Chris-KaltreiderT-2d,-Chris—Wojciak,_3d,.Krfsten Johnson.

LINCOLN PARKCitizen of the Week: Monty Jones

and Tinika Curtis.Bubble Gum Contest: 1st, Ethridge

Jones, 2d, LyAnn Robinson, 3d, HopeSmith.

Cranford "Recreation and- ParksDepartment announces the end of itssummer season. As of Friday thefollowing programs will be over:Summer Pre-School, Youth Tennis

Instruction, Town Tennis, YouthOpen Center, Music Workshop,Drama Workshop and allPlaygrounds.

Telling fortunes Kenny Hartmann, 10, took on the role of-"Swlndling-Swami-—aMhe-^layground-falr-sponSqred-by-th£Recreation and Parks Department last week. He came fromOrange Avenue playground to fete at the Community Center.Photo by Greg Price. v

BIG BANDThe Lamplighters, a 19-piece big day, Aug. 16 at 8 p.m. at the Clinton

band, will perform in concert Satur- ' Historical Museum Village.

Charged with punching Ptl. RicajA patron of Apple's Lounge on

North 10th St. was arrested earlyFriday morning after being in*volved in a fight at the bar.Steven Wright, 20, of Rahway ischarged with consumption ofalcohol by a person under the

legal age, resisting arrest and,*assaulting a police officer.!Wright allegedly punched Ptl.£Daniel Rica in the face. Ptl. Scott*Phillips assisted in the apprehen-:*sion. Wright was released on £bail later that day.

driving on the revoked list at 1:a.m. Sunday. He was arrested byPtl. Scott Phillips at theBoulevard and North 10th Street.Magliulo was released on $1,000bail later that day.

Calabrese'sservice honor

Two incidents of vandalism

J. Calabrese, son

Two incidents of criminalmischief were reported to policelast week David Goodwin, anemployee of the. Sea Shell, 620Boulevard, had his tires slashedon July 30 and brake line cut on

..like Scuderi learns to dodge defenders at clinic sponsored bythe Recreation Department.

^ t ^ r e g t t t o t e i J. ,of Robert and Shirley M. Calabreseof 227 N. 11th St., received $25trforsubmitting a suggestion that was im-plemented through the Air ForceSuggestion Program.

The program was established tomotivate personnel to suggest waysto increase effectiveness and effi-ciency in the Air Force and othergovernment operations and to pro-vide a formal channel for com-munication between managementand personnel.

Calabrese, an electronic warfaresystems technician with the 86thComponent Repaid Squadron in WestGermany, received the award forsaving the government $2500 by sug-gesting on-base repairs of aircraftcomponents.

July 31 while the car was parked^in a lot at the side of the building,^A window pane was broken ailNelson's Dance center sometime*over the weekend. The window-was the third reported broken,-

Checks stolen from apartmentA second floor apartment at 232

N. 9th St. was burglarized lastWednesday. The front door of theapartment was forced open, anda small amount of cash and blank

checks were stolen. One of the^stolen checks was cashed for $300'; <at City Federal Savings in"Kenilworth. Police are ln-r»vestigating.

Community service sentenceKarlsten Nickel, 22,225 N. 16th

St., has been fined $375 andordered to spend 100 hours incommunity service afterpleading guilty to a disorderlypersons offense, which had beenreduced from a weapons posses-sion charge brought by Ptl. Scott

Phillips Sept. l, 1984, Superior'..Court Judgid-Edward W. Beglin'"Jr. levied the penalty July 11 and':placed Nickel on two years of pro-^bation concurrent to a present!'"term. Phillips reported finding a '-itelescopic billy club in Nickel's

* > •

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CONGRATULATIONS!p

Month for the Cranford Office in recognition of his salesvolume according to Cathy DeLuca, Manager. Amember of the Westfield Board of Realtors, Joe receiv-ed both his Bachelor's Degree and his Master's Degreefrom Kean College, Union. He is a residential specialistwith expertise in Eastern Union County. A Cranfordresident, Joe and his wife Janice, have one son. If you'rethinking of buying or selling, give Joe a call at 272-9444,Degnan Boyle, Realtors.

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Page 4: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

I

Page 8 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Thursday, August 7, 1986• H i • -

CommentaryConnecting tEeTink

\ After years of controversy,it will be a relief to have In-terstate 78 open. The 5.5 milesnorth of this area has been thesubject of debate, litigation,engineering and piecemealconstruction for decades. Ifthis had gone on much longer,the missing link in the roadwould have become asnotorious in the evolution ofhighway building as the miss-ing, link in man's evolutionwas elusive in science. Trunktravelers belong on the "bigroads, not the back and side

streets, or even the *oldhighways. Mark down thesewords from the state Depart-ment of Transportation: theopening of the link is expectedto relieve existing congestionon Route 22...and will alsorelieve traffic on many localeast-west routes. That shouldbe more than an expectation.It-should be a goal. Let'scelebrate the opening, and letthe corridor carry thevehicular, multitudes it wasbuilt to handle.

Light poles and signsMotorists seem to be knock-

ing over light poles on theGarden State Parkway herewithr regularity this summer,

'" a fe"WHrivers have beenkilled in the process. Sleepyor careless drivers, freakyweather conditions, faultycars and other factors couldbe causing the problems, butthe people who analyze thesethings ^should take a fresh

-Io6k-at^iarkway-sigftagey-:too-Take the Tall Oaks RestArea, which has lost its share

of poles. Three signs in closeproximity provide mixedmessages that must be con-fusing- tcr the uninitiated. Oneheralds the rest area.Another marks the exit andits speed. The third lists theupcoming exit. We've heardstories about drivers bomb-ing into the rest area thinkingthey were entering Cranford.Either the messages or the

-placement— of—the—signsj—both, could stand a re- £>examination. £'

- 3 i - Thursday, August 7,1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 9 l

Politics: state adamsmcfon bridge irks DemocratsA summary of news from and post. Veterans are given preference

about local politics and legislators: for jobs.candiaates~Tor On~-the-state-scenerState-SenHJThe Democratic

Township Committee, Dan Aschen-bach and Carolyn Vollero, said in astatement that they "won't stand forthe state dictating the design of thenew High Street Bridge."

"I don't know who they think theyare," said Aschenbach. "I also don'tunderstand why Cranford local of

Louis Bassano voted against therenomination of Supreme Court ChiefJustice Robert N. Wilentz. Thejustice prevailed narrowly, 21 to 19.

Assemblyman Peter Genova saideducation is a top priority considera-tion of the Assembly's Republicanmajority, citing various bills in-

ficials are backing down on putting'iqeltiding higher starting teacher

Reading the floats: Cranford Jaycees are put-ting together bases for floats for the-©enten-nial River CarnivaLnext month. Rich Feder, Bill

Walsh and Tony Rocco apply carpentry skillsfor the base at Chad Warrington's house.Photos by Greg Price.

forward the design which best suitsCranford. We should continue to bevigilant to insure that the bridge weget is one which will serve us well forgenerations to come and not beadverse to the area."

Vollero said "the failure of thegoverning body to recognize and acton the deterioration of the bridge isan example of poor planning whichwe must prevent in the future. It isimportant that Cranford is honestwith its capital demands so that

salaries. Assemblyman Chuck Hard-wick, meantime, said the bills pro-viding greater autonomy to the ninestate colleges represent a step for-ward in improving the higher educa-tion system.

Hardwick said in a speech to theEmployer Legislative Committee inMountainside that Republicanlegislators have delivered on theirpromises this year.

In Washington, U.S. Rep. Matthew. J_. Rinaldo urged the Department of

situations such as this do not occur "Justice to adopt a national policy of

A canoe at rest above Droeseher's Mill. Photo by Greg Price made with infrared film exposed through a red filter and ,20millimeter lens.

Editor's notebook: irony Attitudes must be alteredconies to play in the news to make recycling workIrony comes.to play often in the He recalled that a plane had landed

news and, on occasion, in the repor- in emergency conditions in the sameting of the news. For example, this neighborhood during World War II. A

3Twrlte~tlre~weddtng5; library check ol the Burditt files pin-and I called up George Hardman to pointed a Chronicle story from Jan.

Three signs visible simultaneously herald two exits. Do theyprompt accidents by confusing drivers?

Alphabet soupAssemblyman feteT

Genova has come up with thelongest new title in..Trenton.He's got a bill in the hopper to

check a few details about his son anddaughter-in-law to supplement thereport of their wedding in Florida.

A few hours later the Chroniclestaff sped to a backyard on HillsideAve. to cover the plane crash. Thefirst Interviewees turned out to benone other than George and his wife,Wilda, who were relaxing in theirbackyard when the aircraft plungedin. Suddenly the Hardmans became afocal point tor news coverage of the

. bizarre tragedy. Son Charles, whoT

Services." Imagine a let-terhead that reads NJCOVM-MCATITDOVPASSITDHS.

>-a~Monu-New Jersey Commission on

JULel&rans' Memorials,Monuments, Com-memoratives and Tributes inthe Division of Veterans' Pro-grams and Special Services

ment Advisory Committee. Inbureaucratic alphabet soup,one little MAC has morevalue than two dozen bigones.

On the record: sauntering

with a friend in flteThilis—

g r t Tmade the paper with his bride, buthis parents made lots of papersaround the country.

By accounts of witnesses anddeductions of s6me~~public 'safety""observers, the plane crashed becauseit ran out of gas.

That won't be confirmed untilfederal authorities follow their ex-haustive procedures. It appears to bea strong bet for now. But you neverknow. One of the Federal Aviation

-Agency officials in town said theyhad a case that looked like emptytanks but turned out to be a faultyvalve.

Meantime, Leonard Dolan, the fire—-chief^-was^struck-by- another irony?

5,1942 relating the incident. The pilotran out of gas. The headline read,"Airplanes Run Out of Gas, Too?"That pilot was more fortunate. Hefound an open field.

I didn't have to go back fartherthan last weekend to feel squeamishabout gas. I had a tense half an hourwith my declining tank gauge afterpassing four closed gas stations on acountry road. A warning light flashedand a voice came up to tell me thatfuel was low. This week I found

if turplftn&s have

ByALBERT ML GESSLERDavid Moore's remarks in the July

31st issue were personally very in-"teresti'ng toTne;

In 1973, as chairman of the Cran-ford Environmental Commission, Itried to sell recycling to Moore, andmore specifically to use sourceseparation of soh'd household wastesprior to recycling, (See excerptsbelow.)

I had the hope at the time of the let-ter that Cranford might lead the wayin striving to find a solution to theserious splid waste disposal problemwhich existed even back then. Thathope, alas, was not realized.

Moore points out that falling oil- p r - i c e s — m a k e — t h k I

1 I t ^ 1 'Upvoices lik.e that. But what good arethe gauges and the voices when youcan't find an open pump on the road,"

jy- an open field on the ground?OhT'nWelroTiy. 1 spoke RTa: young

man who fuels airplanes at LindenAirport, He had needed a ride toSouth Jersey Monday and a pilot of-fered to take him there. However, theyoung man couldn't get off work, sohe had to decline. He made his way tohis destination by another plane.When he returned to the airport helearned that the man who had offeredhim a ride was-the-pilot who wasfatally injured here.

-S.A.

changed. If recycling is an essentialstep in a full and effective solid wastedisposal system, as is generally be-ing recognized today (In New Jersey,Governor Kean is setting the aim at25 percent), then certainly the use ofrecycled materials in industry shouldhave to suffer no unnecessary 4«rn-dicap. 1

Recycling, it should beremembered, is unqiue because ittransfers rather than disposes solidwastes without losing or wastingthem. Recycled materials, if proper-ly handled, remain chemically un-changed, and become very rich oreswhich have the capaci ty tosignificantly reduce the demand on"naturarresources. This is an impor-tant consideration in Vvfo

again." The. two said they wouldvoice their dismay to state officials.

On the county scene, Ellen Bloomhas been removed as director of con-sumer affairs. She's been attemptingto save the job she's held for a decadesince a ruling two years ago that thepost is a civil service job. She is not a

1 employe. Her.replare-G h

py pment, William Gehrke, is one of sixveterans who took - the civil, service -test and qualified for the consumer

Rail tower to betrimmed 25 feet

refusing to aeaqtiate non-custodialsentences .with^major drug dealersfacing fedefal narcotics charges. --

The Senate Foreign RelationsCommittee reported out legislationwritten by U.S. Sen. Bill Bradleywhich would immunize the childrenDf the world from six preventable*childhood diseases by the year 1990.

McKinney headswomen's caucusEmily McKinney of Cranford has

been installed as president of theion County Women's Political

Caucus, a multi-partisan organiza-tion which provides opportunities forwomen to become aware of thepolitical process and to encouragethem in elective and" appointivepolitics.

McKinney was also elected as thegroup's State Republican Delegate.Margaret Ault of Cranford wasc h o s e n ' a s State Democrat icDelegate.

Other officers are Dilys Popper ofSummit, first vice president; KarenPatterson of Scotch Plains, secondvice president; Kathryn Brock ofSummit, secretary, and MildredNeylon of Plainfield, treasurer. Thecaucus is open to any woman, 18 orover, interested in county politicsCall Popper at 273-8238 for informa-tion.

Small businessSmall businesses employ approx-

imately 75 percent of New Jersey'swork force. The New Jersey Depart-ment of Labor statistics indicate thatthereare 182,000 businesses with 100or less employees and this figuredoes not include individuals who areself-employed with no employees.

Completed bases are stackedflotation barrels on Nomahegangroup Includes Walsh, Fedei

at

The proposed NJ -Transitmicrowave communications toweron the east edge of Cranford will betrimmed from 200 feet to 17S~inheight. The change" wa"s"announced -after a meeting between townshipand transit officials. Paul LaCorte,public works commissioner, said NJTransit also said the tower would beplaced as close as possible to theGarden State Parkway and wouldhave no lights. It would be placed onrail land behind Madan Elastics onNorth Ave. The 175 foot tower wouldbe 45 feet higher than the power linepoles along the Lehigh Valley railline.

Andy

WulT^missing /infe'^one, 1-78 will open next week

recyclables less viable than tl$s£ fdr . - , , ,virgin ores. While this certainly is, where population and** concomitanttrue, It is by no means the whole industrial growths are rapidlystory.. Economic advantages in depleting known supplies of availablevirgin materials manufacturing-arer-ps^rceS' " is espj?ciaJlx,importantI believe, in part^at lejjjjst built tiflbyeconomic favocs (Jower^fre^bffindtax rates, use of the deletionallowance) which are given when theores are virgin, but not when they're

The long-awaited opening ofInterstate-78 from the Holland Tun-nel to Still Valley near Phillipsburgand the Pennslyvania line will occurnext Wednesday. The "missing link"between Springfield arid BerkeleyHeights will be completed and Gov.Tom Kean and Transportation Com-missioner Hazel Frank Gluck willopen it at 10:30 a.mr

The 5.5-mile stretch cost $111"million and took less then four years

recycled.This attitude, obviously, has to be

in the U.S.A. where about 6 percent ofthe world's population consumesmoreihan 40 percent of the world'sresource^ and "throw out" aboutone ton of wastes per person peryear.

-By-STUART AWBREYMy old friend is about to cross the

invisible boundary from hired handto entrepreneur. He's going to buy anewspaper.

I found this unusual, perplexing,even conflicting. In years past I hadbeen his hired hand, his pupil, hisshadow. We all play follow the leaderat one time or another, but here is theleader, I thought, doing somethingnew: following the follower. Thiswould take some adjusting on mypart.

I had cautioned him about the hardwork and the long hours. He knew Ihad ignored similar advice myself,so I was not too credible. When I-found him ignoring me and pushingahead toward his goal, I abandonedcaution and joined him in theBerkshire Hills to celebrate.

The cork was barely out of thechampagne bottle when he suggesteda walk. We had ground to cover, emo-tionally as well as physically. Mostmen are terrible at getting their feel-ings out to one another. Many of usfind it easier to convey emotions towomen or children.

My friend and I have such inhibi-tions. Nevertheless, having servedtogether at separate junctures in themedia crucibles of Washington and

—New York, wo have-ftn-advantagooua-startlng point of shared experiencesof putting new wine in new bottles,first with the Peace Corps in thelp60's, later with "Sesame Street"and children's television in the 1970's.

Sure, we talk about the old days,for a time, but something moresynergetic propels us. Invariably,the sharing catches up to our lives Inmiddle age and, at this juncture, tohis embarcation on a new risk.

I was so absorbed in conversationthai I forget most of the road names.I know that over two days we coveredsome of the old Post Road, traversedthe length of Stockbrldge, skirtedMount Wilcox near Beartown Road,hiked past the colonial militia mar-ching ground and wandered throughtwo oldgraveyards.

—Hikings is ioo strong a word. Ishould say sauntering. Thoreaupreferred it. The word derived frompeople who roved about the countryin the Middle Ages under thepretense of going "a la SainteTerre," to the Holy Land, whichbecame a "Sainte-Terrer," aSaunterer, A Holy Lander.

Thoreau thought of modernwalkers as faint-hearted crusaderswho undertake no perservering,never-ending enterprises. He wastalking about meanderers, notnewspapermen. We may never makeit to the Holy Land because the enter-prise back home is hever-ending, thedeadlines always crowding in.

My friend and I ruminated ojyer thebridges we had crossed, thebureaucratic and policy wars overtwo decades, the whereabouts of col-leagues of yesteryear. Yet naturally,and invariably, we returned to ourchallenges at hand. By a weird turnof fate, I was realizing, we would becolleagues again, in still a thirddecade and hopefully more, eventhough his newspaper enterprise willbe two states away.

The distinctions of boss andemploye, mentor and apprentice,

-faded^-The-old rolos dissolved ns wn

Combatting the 'scourge9

of organized crijne in NJ

A long perspective onwaste-managment

Proposals Albert M. Gessler sent toeing centers and to dispatch them,David Moore, executive direatcn^oj\ preferably by rail, to the industries

melalsT

Attorney General W. "Cary Ed-wards in setting up an OrganizedCrime and Racketeering Taste Forcefrom several state agencies: -

Organized crime prosecution is anarea so diverse and requiring somany specialized skills that I wouldbe remiss if I did not make a serious,effort to muster as much talent as Icould to combat organized crime,this, cancer that eats away at oursociety and that attempts to subvertand corrupt ' our form ofgovernment...as with so many in-itiatives of this kind, the fruits of ourefforts may not be seen for severalmonths or even years.

Over the past 15 years, New Jersey

has probably been more active inorganized crime prosecutions thanany other state. As a result, we are nolonger considered the home forleaders of organized crimermany ofwhom have fled to other states.

But I think we can still do better.We must try to keep ahead of the newleadership that inevitably surfaces toreplace those we lock up, drive awayor who are eliminated by their col-leagues and rivals in criminality.

Creation of this task forcerepresents a first step on that dif-ficult road toward the goal ofeliminating organized crime as aserious economic and social scourge.

Comfort in plumpnessFrom the Kohler-MacBean Agency

newsletter:Did you Jcnow that those of us

who've always been a little plumpmight find some comfort in advanc-ing age? A study conducted by theNational Institute on Aging has found

that one's ideal weight increases withage, and that existing weight tablesshould add one pound for every yearafter age 40. The study concludesthat while being overweight is-unhealthy, it is also not healthy forolder people, to be very lean.

the New Jersey Conservation^Foun-Jdation, 13 years ago: Most of theideas are being talked about today:

(1) There is no good reason to han-dicap technology ,by mixing solidwastes. So let's institute thehousehold separation of paper, glass,metal and organic. •

(2) Since the worst system for the' environment is making throw-awaysand then recycling them, let's followOregonTs71ead - let's ban-the one timebottle and pull tab can. (The bi-metalcan should have been banned longago).

(3) Newspapers, Kraft bags, cereal;and crackers boxes, stationery,magazines, and other dry, cleanpaper ought to be recycled. To dothis, let's design suitable rectangularcontainers to keep the paper dry andto prevent it from being wind blown,and let's initiate a door-to-door col-lection of this paper, perhaps on aweekly, or bi-weekly basis,throughout the community.

(4) All metals should be recycledtoo. Let's do this through localrecycling centers in which there isexpertise enough to separate onemetal from the other. Then let's setup regional distribution centers - tocollect metals from the local recycl-

requiring the metals. Much lessenergy is required to produce newmetal from recycle stock than fromortTtp% aluminum, 20% iron, 3%manganese, etc.), so let's revisefreight rates to encourage ratherthan discourage the use of scrap.After all, scrap metal is a very richore!

(5) Let's establish "ConservationCenters" on community and regionalbases to accept botanical and othersuitable.organic wastes, to compost—them coritinuouslj^nd thus to makeavailable for sqiFimprovement therich loam which'results.~(6i The refuse which .will be leftafter the above stejjs are taken willbe, relatively, very small in volume.Let's incinerate it to provide heatenergy for industry or let's pyrolize itto produce carbon or coke and oils.

The present solid waste crisis isbuilt on the assumption that peopleare helpless -- or unwilling to .dosomething themselves to solve theproblem. I challenge this assump-tion.

to build. Approximately five millioncubic yards of earth we^e moved dur-ing construction, some of which wasused to construct embankmentslong4he^outeJwith_the-tfisLdumped_

into the old Houdaille Quarry.The new link connects the 18.8-mile

piece from Springfield east to NewYork (Holland1 Tunnel) and the38.3-mile section from BerkeleyHeights west to Still Valley where thelast segment of the interstate in NewJersey is under construction. Theroad consists of three 12-foot laneswith a 12-foot right shoulder and a10-foot left shoulder in each direction,separated by a concrete median bar-rier.

Opening this portion of 1-78 is ex-pected to relieve existing congestionon Route 22 which currently operates

jrtj)r near capacity for several hours"eacypweeRday: It will alsoTelteve™traffic on many.w local east-westroutes, including' Mountain Avenue(Berkeley Heights), SpringfieldAvenue (Summit), and New Pro-

found ourselves both learning, bothteaching, both canvassing the perilsand the prospects of publishing. Twogreying mavericks ignoring advicegivers, shipping out from the city,abandoning the abstractions anddepersonalizations of corporate life,forsaking security for risk. l

Together, greying beards saunter-ing through drizzles, fog, darknessand light. Old friends in new roles,musing over Henry Beetle Hough'sjudgment that changes such as oursare based upon difference andchance and uncertainty, always withthe knowledge that what one leavesbehind makes the challenge of thenew future worthwhile. Not quite theHoly Land, but a quest nevertheless.

Great expectationsAssemblyman Peter Genova on the

new tests:We have great expectations for the

newly implemented High School Pro-ficiency Test. Replacing theMinimum Basic Test, educators con-cur that neither teacher nor studentis looking at minimums, rather they

are now reaching for higher goals.The end result will be graduatingclasses of students well prepared toenter higher education or join ourwork forces *with the ability to func-tion at a level necessary for successin this competitive world.

A class actTo th« Editor:

Cranford's annual sidewalk salehas come and gone again without aflaw. Thanks to Chief Guertin and theCranford Police Department. You

guys are a class act.Ed Silver

President, Retail DivisionChamber of Commerce

Hiring byblood type

The American Rod Cross and NewJersey Blood Services passed along areport that Japanese firms arerecruiting executives with specificblood types to perform certain jobs:

Basic personality traits can belinked to four basic blood types: TypeO's(born achievers), Type A's(deepthinkers), Type B's(highly creative),and Type AB's(natural problemsolvers). Employment adver-tisements in some Japanesenewspapers request that "Only thosewith Type A or B should apply."

Z\)t Cranf orb ChronicleB«v«rUy Awbrcydtuart AwbmyRoullt QroMAngdi CttllloMloh*l« BamtMln• H M f t

PubllihtEditorN t w l EditorRaporttrAdvertising MimgtrAdvtHUI»| Q»U»Bu«ln«M M*iA«nag«rProduotlon M«mg«rClaMlflad Adi

M«ry Ch«r«MC. Silly BloodJin* Pitriooo

Senwlndlng«r Circulation MinigirThe Cranford Chronicle Is published everyThursday by Awbrey Communications InNew Jersey Inc., a corporation at 21-23Alden Street, Cranford, N J . 07016.USPS 138.800.

Member: Audit Bureau id CirculationNew Jersey Press Association, CranfordChamber of Commerce, National PressAssociation.

Subscription rates by mall prepaid oneyear within Union County H 4.O0. out ofcounty 118.00.

All material copyrighted 1986 byA.C.N.J. Inc. .Official newspaper forCranford, Kenllworth and Garwood, Se-cond Class Postage; Paid at Qranford,New Jersey, 0 7 0 1 6 . Tele (201)276-6000.

POSTMASTER: Send address changesto The Cranford Chronicle, P.O. Box 626,Cranford. NJ 07016.

FriedrichRATED #7 BYCONSUMERS

vidence Road and Plainfield Avenue(Berkeley Heights and Watchung).

The project is unique in the DOT'shistory in that it includes more en-vironmental safeguards than anyother road construction project everundertaken in New Jersey. Becausethe highway skirts the northern edgeof the Watchung Reservation, a2,000-acre natural recreation area,approximately 70 acres, or 3V per-cent, of the park area were neededfor COnstTTBttoir—:• r~

The DOT developed a variety ofmethods to minimize the impact ofthe road on the park and park users.JWhere_the_road j | o e s through

parkland, a 1,7-mile segetelnl, theroad bed was constructed in-a cutbelow ground level, and in four loca-tions special "cut-and-cover" struc-tures were built to provide land-scaped vehicle crossovers across thehighway and connect the bridle pathsand hiking trails that wind throughthe park.

Two of the structures, at GlensideAvenue (95' wide) and BaltusrolRoad (75' wide), include equestriantrails separated from vehicle roadsby high fences. The vehicle crossover(100' wide) at Nike Stite_Road isheavily landscaped. Tfie largestcrossover (200' wide) between Ntk eSite~itoad and Glenside- Avenue^is—reserved for animals and hikers.

In addition, all noise barriers, em-bankment and retainer walls andother structural safety features are

IN HOMESURVEYS• Utility Rebates

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New stables were built in the Wat-chung Reservation in Mountainsideto replace the old stables in Summitwhere a portion of the riding area

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Diamond Hill Road interchange toPlainfield Avenue in, BerkeleyHeights, was opened to traffic.

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TRAVEL—with Richard Dixon—

I'm about to invite you to"get Sail" again. With allthe rain we've had thispast week I've thought ofbuilding my own ark! justthink the SS ARK-TRAVEL SPOT. What anexclusive! On May 31Home Line Cruises laun-ched its newest superliner- the mvHOMERIC. Thisship replaced the graciousarid lovely OCEANIC. This

""definitely" has-^beeh the"Year of the Cruise."Three cruise companies

• have new ships afloat andnext year two more willenter the market. TheHOMERIC is the mostspectacular of the threenew ladies. It sails fromNew York to my favoriteBermuda, on a weeklybasis from March through

"October. It is I yciting to tour a new ship. Iapproach the assignmentas both a travel profes-

"sional and as a potentialclient. The HOMERICdoesn't disappoint oneither level, the insideand outside cabin ac-

commodations are- su--'perb! All the cabins acevery large and beautifullyappointed. The diningrooms are on the lowerdecks and are as romanticand intimate as you wouldexpect an Italian run shipto be. I could spend daysdescribing the food, butmy column would expandalong with my waistline.Fortunately the pool andsports facilities~available~will bring it back down.The Travel Spot is settingsaiFOctober 11,1986 and asalways it is our own ex-clusive departure.

The HOMERIC an.d hersister ship the ATLANTICsail the Caribbean watersstarting in November, St.Maarten, St. Thomas, SanJuaTiT^T Ja saiiT^BOTijadDsrGrenada, Curacao and An-tigua are all beautifulports for a winter holiday."Bermuda or the Carib-bean, this should be your"Year of the Cruise" and aHome Lines ship, yourfloating hotel.

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Page 5: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

MSPECTR UMi^V—Page-U> •—"——" Xhursday^ugusLZr-llfflS-

Kathryn Glovier marriesGlenn Moore in Virginia

Lizabeth vanMierop is wedto Dr. William Hardman

Lizabetb Lee vanMierop ofGainesville, Fla. and Dr. William Ar-thur Hardman, formerly of Cranford,were married July 12 in Holy TrinityEpiscopal Church in Gainesville. Thebride, daughter of Dr. L.H.S. andElizabeth vanMierop of Gainesville,was attended by Diana Colbert, JulivanMierop and Karisa Rubin. Thebridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs:George W. Hardman of 220 HillsideAve., was attended by Donald andJames Hardman and Robert van-Mierop and David Northrup.

The bride attended schools inFlorida and is a registered nurse whowas formerly employed at Mor-ristown General Hospital. The groomgraduated from Cranford HighSchool in 1971 and earned a medicaldegree at Johns Hopkins UniversityMedical School in 1979. He has subse-quently trained at the EmoryMedical Systenvofhospitals in Atlanta, at" Mwrtetown -Gonera! an '

wedding trip to several southeasternstates, the couple resides in Spr-ingfield.

Massachusetts General. Dr. Hard--mairhas begun practice as a generalsurgeon in Springfield, Mo, After a

Captoin U.S.N. (Retired) arid Mrs.Harold A. Glovier of McLean andBryce Hill, Va. announce the mar-riage of their daughter, Kathryn, toMr. Glenn Richard Moore of Alexan-dria, Va.on June 21 at the ImmanuelPresbyterian Church in McLean. Theceremony, conducted by Rev. JohnW. Snnenday, was followed by areception on the church green.

The bride's sister, Meg Glovier,was maid of honor, and the groom'ssister, Gretchen Moore, wasbridesmaid. .

Mr. Moore was served by his|_. father, Richard G. Moore, as best

man, and the groomsmen wereAlfred Bergeron, grandfather of thegroom, and Curtis A. Glovier,brother of the bride,, v

Kathryn Glovier Moore is^ the

granddaughter of the late Mr.WllT^C^ff^^rCHfTdThrsW a l l e T C f f e C p T Ted many years as township clerkCranford, and was nationally knownas an EAOC football official,- andMrs. Margaret Mitchell/formerly ofMountainside, who now resides inScottsdale, Ariz., and the late Mr.-and Mrs. Harold A. Glovier, longtimeresidents of Cranford.

Mrs. Moore attended Brooksideand Roosevelt schools here and is agraduate of Langley High School,McLean and Goucher College. She isa lobbyist with the American Collegeof Obstetricians and Gynecologists inWashington, D.C. Mr. Moore, agraduate of SUNY at Buffalo, will beattending the School of Law at theCollege of William and Mary in Sept.

Kathleen Farley engagedMr: and Mrs. John C. Farley of 37

Princeton Rd. announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Kathleen, toPaul A. Nolle Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.Paul A. Nolle of Chatham.

Miss Farley was graduated fromPranford High School in 1977 andearnfld a PA dogt-PP at Wake Fnre;

Dr. and Mrs. William Hardman

arie Jones becomes engagedemployed as an accountant for RoyalMr. and Mrs. William L. Jones of

—(jranfqrd announeethe engagement—of their daughter, Jane Mane, toGlenn A. Goellner, son of Grace andDana Cratch of Watchung.

The future bride, a 1976 graduate ofCranford High School, has a BSdegree in accounting from JuniataCollege and a MBA degree in financefrom Seton Hall University. She is

J [ n c r _ _, finance7^n977 graduate ofWatchung Hills Regional HighSchool, has a.BS degree in accoun-ting from Lebanon Valley College.He is employed as an accountant forBauer Factory Supply Inc.

An October wedding is planned.

University in 1981. She is vice presi-dent-of-Frank-B.-Hall-&~Co.,-aiUn-_surance brokerage firm in New YorkCity where she has been "employedfor the past five years. She is an ac-tive member of the Junior League ofElizabeth-Plainfield.

-^-Mrr-NoHe-Rraduatedirom,Newark_Academy in 1976 and acquired a BAat Connecticut College in 1980. He is a

I vice president and portfolio managerof Merrill Lynch Asset Managementin Princeton. The couple will be mar-ried Nov. 29.

Union County 4-H Fair tobe Saturday at Trailside

M b r s of 4 H c l b f t t th O P t Sh

Thursday, August 7, 1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 11

John Fashtak of Cranford has studied, performed and taughtmime.

Fashtak mimes for seniorsJohn Fashtak of Cranford will per-

form "Keeping John in Mime" to theThursday Scniui Citizen Glub next-Thursday, Aug. 14.—Fashtak—a~teacherrnas-studiedmime with David Barker and hasperformed the art at Douglass Col-lege and at the Morristown, Irvingtonand South Orange libraries plus theSt. Lucy and John Marshall schools,

has also directed mime for the

ufi;

Ii

Members of 4-H clubs fromthroughout Union County will display

"their-projectsrSundajratrtheTinnnal4-H Fair, to be held this year atTrailside Nature & Science Center inMountainside. Admission is free.

Exhibits will open to the public atnoon with a fashion revue featuringgarments constructed by county 4-Hmembers. Judging of 4-H project en-tries will take place earlier onclothing, foods-nutrition, crafts,veter inary science, twirling,photography, gardening and smallanimal projects.

Fair visitors can enjoy a SeeingEye, Horse & Drill team presenta-tions, play games, take a hayride and.a pony ride, buy a 4-H balloon, watcha planetarium show, and bring their

pet to thecostume.

Open Pet Show in

Milk Drinking, Bubble Gum Blowing,and Watermelon Eating Contests.Fair visitors can sign up for 4-H.Tours of the Cooperative ExtensionDisplay Garden wjll be given, andmany county agencies and exhibitorswill be present.

One of the highlights of the day willbe the'awarding of rosettes to the4-H'ers who exhibited the best entryin each division and the crowning ofthe two teens who will serve as the1986-7 outstanding 4-H'ers.

The Fair is directed by Erika U.Fields, county 4-H agent and MarleneJ. Brown, 4-H program assistant. ~

4-H horne ec clubThe Union Ctfunty 4-H Youth

Development" Program will beorganizing a new 4-H foqdsclub thisfall. The group will meet in the UnionCounty Administration Building,Cooperative Extension Service

• Department, at 300 North Ave. E,

Westfield.Boys or girls between the ages of 9

to 16 who wish to learn about foods,nutrition, and keeping fit are en-couraged to join. Call the 4-H officetoday to sign up.

Lawn clinic here next week

Craftsmen at work: Deborah Kowalak joins her son, Keith, andKathie Behr, both four, to make leather picture frames at theGranford Public Library. They were among many family groupsparticipating in weekly crafts program this summer. Photos byGreg Price.

Pet show

Diane Aimone and her twins, Jennifer and Allysbn, four yearsold, in craft program. Library encouraged parents and childrento participate together in hour long sessions. Some .dads tookpart, too.

Magic show

production of "Equus" at Kean Col-lege, where he earned a degree. Hehoc taught it at the-Stag^""1* ManorPerforming Arts Training Center in

qfJoch-Sheldrake, JNJ.Y.,_ and__atHighland Park. The course heteaches is called "Saturday NightFun for Children."

Fashtak teaches third grade in theIrvington school system.

A lawn clinic will be run by theCooperative! Extension Service atNnmahftgan Park here nevt Wednes-

i

Kathleen Farley

Carol and Douglas Johnston ofHouston, Texas announce the birth ofa son, Drew Douglas, at Woman'sHospital, Houston, on July 24. Hejoins'a brother, Reed, 5. Paternalgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.Robert F. Johnston of Cranford.

BirthsKnudsoiTs mark 50th anniversary

Paternal grandparents are Mary andJohn DfeGregorio of Everett and thematernal grandmother is JoanO'Donnell of 305 Orange Ave.

Robin and Scott Langdon ofDurham, N.C. announce the birth of ason, Kenneth Michael Langdon, on

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Knudsoncelebrated their 50th wedding an-niversary with a party at the Knightsof Columbus Hall in Kenilworth June28 followed by a cruise to Bermuda.

Their two daughters, Mrs. WendySilverstein of Edison and Mrs. LouiseRobinson of Lee's Summit, Mo. were

among those who attended.Mr. Knudson, a veteran of World

War II, is retired from the ElizabethPost Office. His wife, Dorothy, is cor-responding—secretary—fcrr-it heKenilworth Senior Citizens Club.

' They are.members of the CommunityUnited Methodist Chureh.

-Maternal-ftra'ndparentsare-Mr^and—July-2L-XhejnaternaLgrandMrs. George MacNeill of Houston.

Anthony and Joan DeGregorio ofEverett, Mass.,announce the birth of.a daughter,'Eileen O'Donnell, July 21at New England Memorial Hospital.

are Mr. and Mrs. William Bucher of 8Alan Okell PI., and the paternalgrandparents are Dr. and Mrs.Douglas Langdon of 634 RiversideDr. ; -

Blue GrassLake Park Wednesday

Maternity fitnessHealthwise Wellness Center

presents a Maternity Fitness Pro-gram for pregnant ,women and newmothers. The program consists ofongoing four week sessions whichwill meet twice a week for one hour.

The next session will begin Saturdayat the Westfield Community Center.For further information call TheHealthwise Wellness Center at272-6604.

The Union County Department ofParks & Recreation will present the8th Annual Blue Grass Festival at theSummer Arts Festival, Wednesday,August 13 at 7:30 PM, at Echo LakePark.

Geoff Berne, a well known pro-ducer of Country Western shows inthe New York metropolitan area, willbe the guest emcee.

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Performing will be "Tony TrischW"and Skyline" and "The LonesomeRiver Band." "Tony Trischka andSkyline," led by "world class" ban-joist Tortjr Trischka and-featuringDedeWylandrLarry-Cohen, DannyWeiss and Barry Mitterhoff, hasevolved a unique contemporarysound with an emphasis on group

vocal singing and creativestrumental arrangement.

"The Lonesome River Band" fromFerrum, Virginia features TimAustin, Jeff Midkiff, Jerry McMillanand Randy Driskill. Their first album"I Guess Heartaches Are in StyleThis Year," was listed in theprestigious record industry newslet-ter "Country Sales" as .one of 1985's

day. It will be conducted by Dr..Henry _W.Jndyk, extension specialistin turf management at Cook Collegeof Rutgers University, StephenBachelder, county agriculturalagent, and James Nichnadowicz,county program associate inagriculture. It will be at Nomahegan

The clinic will answer questionspertaining to lawn care, weed iden-tification and control, insect and

There will be an open pet show atthe 4-H Fair at Trailside at 3 p.m.Sunday. Anyone may enter. Classesinclude the most unusual, smallest^

largest, prettiest and funniest petplus three prizes for best costumedpets.

A magic show will presented inthe Wednesday Matinee series atTrailside Nature and Science Centernext Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. It's titl-

ed "The Magic of John Bundy" andincludes audience-participation andlive animals. The fee is $2.50.

disease diagnosis and control andmore, _At 6:45 p.m., the specialistswill demonstrate'a step-by-step" pro-cedure to follow in making a newlawn, as well as ways to renovate apoor law. Questions will be answereduntil dark. This is the only event ofthis type in the county this year.

Blood drives on Friday and MondayTwo blood drives are scheduled in

the area in coming days by theEastern Union County chapter of theRed Cross and New Jersey Blood Ser-vices.

The first . is at the Red Crosschapter at 203 W. Jersey St. inElizabeth from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

tomorrow. The second is Mondayfrom 3 to 8:30 p.m. at Temple BethO'r, 111 Valley Rd., Clark.

Another drive is set for Aug. 22 atCalvary Chapel in Elizabeth. For fur-ther information call the Red Crossat353-25OO.

7ive "Best Contemporary BluegrasSRecordings."

A dance floor, snarcfc, truck andparks information booth areavailable^ trthexoncertsiterConcertrgoersrajre, encouraged to bring lawnchairsrjf blankets to sit on.~Admis-sion isTree.

There is no raindate.

Tony (played by Charles Roessler), Rosella (Holly Rhoades) andftJoe (Gary Schwartz) are a love triangle In "The Most HappyFella" in the Plays-in-the-Park production in Roosevelt Park inEdison from Aug. 6-16.

Greg Price^photos areTon[displays

3

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Cranford photographer Greg PricehaS six pieces of his photographic arton display at Art Kusiv Color Lab.Some award winning photos are in-cluded, such as an infrared, fisheye,sepia-toned print of "Old Peppy" andthree still, lifes that were done as

_cpvers for New Jersey Epicure^Magazine., .""• ~

Price operates a commercialphotography studio at 15 Alden St.and has taken photos for the Chroni-cle for the past eight years. He is amember of the American Society of

Magazine Photographers and theNew Jersey Society of CommercialPhotographers.

Also on display are photos by ArtKusiv, Northlight Studio and BillWagner-Our Studio Productions, allof Cranford, plus Jim Coleman ofPrinceton, and Otto Baitz ofMatawan.Kusiv's lab is located at103 Miln s r and open dailjT from 9a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturdays from 10a.m. to 5 p.m. The exibit runs untilLabor Day. ;

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Page 6: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

Page 12

CRANFORD (N.J.I CHRONICLE

SPOR TSThursday, August 7, 1986

Cobras drop out of state tourney with a 3-1 lossCranford's American Legion

baseball squad began its quest for thestate title with a 45-mile, one-hourdrive to Mercer County Park in WestWindsor on Saturday. That quest

~ — e n d y g pagainst the same team, Bordentown.

BORDENTOWN 8CRANFORD4

Saturday highfs game lasted threeouts as Erjc Kleinsorgen took to thehill and retired the first three batters

('*•• •WM-k !•= <^Si^lM&;&^ll^^rfiW¥h¥iiMJ:*^M f r o m t h e M e r c e r c°u n ty champs.

• • 7 ' ; - - ^ P ' n A - f - ^ ^ ' ' ' 2 W ^ i ^ ^ ^ ^ P ^ f ^ i 5 i ^ Before «>« Cobras could bat, theI ^ T * ^ W M ^ ^ V % l i ^ « / l fes opened up with rain postponingI _•;•-:..,:-.:| H Jv'^S_»_S2fc__ft •<__*$ S I the game until Sunday morning.

'§< •-•'••••'7 w ' X " j g ^ ^ J B B a . J W ' f i i i w B I m After traveling back to West Win*lii_____i - ' • % W l E a E l » ^ l f i i sor- Kleinsorgen again went to'theWm& .•.'^'^mSMSmB^^^^J'Wm hill. The offense provided a 2-0 lead

sparked by singles by Jeff Spotts andErwin Camacho and RBI singles byJim Litterio and Ken Goldstein.Kleinsorgen gave up one run in thirdand two in a controversial fourthwhen the Bordentown club on two ap-parent double plays were ruled singleouts by the umpires. The Cobrascame right back to tie the game inthe fourth on an RBI double by MikeReilly, driving in Goldstein who hadsingled to open the inning. Cranfordwent ahead in the sxith as Camachodoubled, was sacrificed to third byLitterio and scored on ReiUy's single.The score remained 4-3 until the

The winners: Centennial Avenue lifeguards won the first annual e>gntn inning when Cranford'sUnion County Lifeguard Competition which they hosted Jetst*- defense-fell apart leading to fourThursday .•Cnmpatlnfl'wera, from left, Domlniok Vgllo, Joana unearned, runs, ftp. t.hfi snort find nf a

scored on Blundo's RBI single. Withthe victory, the Cobras prepared fora Monday night game againstHunterdon.

CRANFORD6...„, HUNTEBPON_

Cranford's hopes for continuedstate play rested on Mike Mohr'sshoulders as-hTtomTRe mound in ado-or-die, Must-win situation. TheCobras looked for a strong seven inn-ings because Mohr had worked twoinnings in relief, on Sunday againstBordentowh. However, in a sparklingperformance, he went the, distanceand he stifled the Hunterdon batterswith his fastball change-up. Hestruck-out 10 and limited Hunterdonto seven hits. Mohr was supported byseven timely hits including Rom'sthree hits and two RBIs andCamacho's two hits and one RBI. TheCobras scored in the second whenReilly led off with a double, went tothird on an infield out and scored onLitterio's sacrifice fly. In the sixthCamacho singled, went to third on anerrant pick-off and scored on Golds-tein's clutch two-out single. TheCobras scored one in the seventh, onKorn's RBI single, two in the eighth,on Camacho's RBI double andReilly's RBI suicide squeeze, and onein the ninth, on Korn's second RBIsingle of the night. The victory meantanother game on Tuesday againsttthe winner of Monday's night'sBordentown - Brideeton clash

Granger, Tracey McHugh, Ed Toy, Chris Chapman and Steven. Hegna. Photo by Greg Price; ——-—•—

7-4 score, increased to 8-4 whenBordentown scored another unearn-

BORDENTOWN 3CRANFORD1

ed run in the ninth, the Cpbras wentdown in order in both the eighth andninth innings. Losing the first gamemeant the Cobras had to play their

-second game on only 20 minutes rest,and would have to play every night tomake it to the final round of eight.

CRANFORD4BLOOMFIELD 2

In a loser's bracket and a win-losesituation, Cranford came out playingrelaxed and loose as if they were inthe winner's bracket. Reilly pitcheda complete nine innings for the stateplay-off game and limited Bloomfieldto two hits while striking out four.Cranford managed six hits but struckearly as Camacho walked with twoouts in the first* stole second andscored on Reilly's RBI single. In thesecond, Cranford scored twice whenLitterio singled, went to third on anerrant pick-off attempt and scored onScott Blundo's "sacrifice fly. JohnKorn followed with a walk, stole se-cond, went to third on a wild pitch

Cranford returned to Mercer Coun-ty Park to battle Bordentown for a se-cond time. A loss meant eliminationand a victory, a chance to progress tothe final round of eight.

The Cobras pound-ed_out. nine-hitsincluding a double by FrankWilliams, but managed only one runagainst Bordentown's three.

Bordentown's first run came whenCranford was turning a double play.The second and third runs scored ona weak looper that landed near theleft-field foul line. Jim Coianeri wentthe distance on the hill, and held theMercer County champs to five hitswhile striking out six.

Offensively the Cobras were led byWilliams, Reilly and Blundo, eachwith two hits, and Spotts, Goldsteinand Korn, with singles each. Korndrove in Goldstein for the Cobras on-ly run in the game.

COBRA CORNERWith a 2-2 state record, the Cobras

finished the season 20-9-1. Con-

Thursday, August 7, 1986

John Wanat's green thumb carries on a family garden tradition of 56 yearsByJIMWALTZER

Only blocks from the red brickbuildings of North ^eniie's Hght in-dustrial district lies^a tract of landthat is one part Shangri-La, one partsupermarket produce section. Thesign says "Bimbo's Garden," the ter-rain is lush, the yield is bountiful.

One encounters in quick successioneggplant, frying pepper, carrots, andonions sitting next to each other likeofferings on a buffet table. Nearby,parsley masses close to the fertileground along with broccoli andcherry tomatoes on a stake. You sud-denly realize ypti're hungry, a sensa-tion that persists through thecucumbers and radishes untilreaching the beets, those oppressivered monsters you never could quiteget down.

Thq-moker htt fount tetim

Jim Litterio gets the out at second during the Cobras secondgame Sunday against Bloomfield. Photo by Jack Goldstein.

The losers: Orange Avenue Pool lifeguards enjoyed the competi-tion despite bringing up the tail end of the field of three teams.Competing for Orange Avenue were, from left, John Armstrong,Michael Davis, Larry Hannon, Jane Dixon, Lynn Hannon andJose de los Rios. Photo by Greg Price.

Centennial Pool hosts andwins lifeguard competition

The first annual Union County Avenue were -Steve Hegna, Ed Toy,

and scored the winning run on a pass- gratulations to this group of talenteded ball. The Cobras added another student-athletes for bringing Cran-rtin in the sixth as Goldstein singled, ford to the American Legion statewent to second on an infield error and tournament for the first time.

Lifeguard Competition was heldThursday evening at CentennialAvenue Pool. Of six pools entered,Centennial, Orange and the New Pro-

Dominic Vallo, Tracey McHugh,Joana Granger and Chris Chap-man.

Each pool entered six guards toyjdenee Community Pool competed,- -participate in -five—events—testiiForfeiting were Springfield,Westfield Memorial and the CranfordSwim Club.

Orange Avenue came in third placewith 31 points, New Providence cap-tured second with 36 points, andCentennial Avenue won the meetwith 48 points. Competing fromOrange Avenue were Jose de losRios, Jane Dixon, Mike Davis, JohnArmstrong, Larry Hannon and LynnHannon. Representing Centennial

strength, speed, skill and knowledge.Three Red Cross chapters providedjudges for the events,. Special thanksgo to the victims who volunteered tobe manhandled by the guards. KarenReszetylo, Debbie Wallin, Jim andEric Gonsiewski, Steve Burazynski.,Michael Whittington, Dan Curtis,Eric Fekete. Monica de los Rios, andErin JMcLeer are volunteer WaterSafety Aides at Centennial andOrange pools.

* >

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VI, ' '

'The yield Is bountiful.1 Lifetime resident John Wanat nurtureshis. produce. He accents tender, loving, meticulous care ofp I an tsand puts I n f i ve hou rs a day. on i t r PhotobyGreg Prlcer

Candidate Gurrieri takesmayoral role—for a week

Georgiana Gurrieri, Democraticcandidate for mayor, is getting whatshe calls some "on the job training"this week as acting mayor of theborough.

Her opponent, Republican MayorDominic V. Carrea, appointed her tothe post for seven days. Under thecustomary line of official stand-in,the council president, Jake Schmidt,would serve in the mayor's absence.But Schmidt, like the mayor, is out oftown this week, too. Thus Gurrieri.

the senior council member, receivedthe designation.

This is her second such tour in the11 years she has served on the coun-cil, and she expects it to be calmerthan the first. Back in February 1978she filled in for then Mayor John Mc-Carthy and had to cope with one ofthe largest snows.tdrms in boroughhistory.

Gurrieri said she is not an-ticipating such a calamity this timearound. Her assignment runs until

_this_weekend__: ^ _

Garwood resident John Wanat-•(known throughout the neighborhoodas "Bimbo") whose green thumbcarries on a tradition established byhis parents at this very location 58years ago. Here's a man who trulycalls his garden home. .

—-Unfortunately^ others regard~the~garden as home, too. Legions ofJapanese beetles move in every sum-mer. "They're driving me nuts,"says Wanat.^The beetles, greeted bya generous dose of insecticides, don'tstay long.

On the side one is met by basil andcucumbers growing as big asLouisville Sluggers. The cucumberstalks attach themselves to a fenceand climb to more than eight feet.Large red and green cabbage plantsseem ominously alive, their coloredveins thick and almost pulsing. Zuc-chini holds forth at the left rear cor-ner of the garden along with stringbeans, hot peppers and rhubarb.

Elsewhere one finds California BellPepper, purple tinged broccoli, androws of beefsteak and supersonictomatoes. Interspersed among the

$A 'Shangri-La' on Fourth Avenue: John Wanat,who calls his garden home, grows an abun-

dance of vegetables and flowers in "Bimbo'sGarden." Photo by Greg Price.

Wrong number for firesThe telephone number for the

Garwood Fire Department ap-;-pears incorrectly on a new plastictelephone book cover being mail-ed to all houses in the borough,the department reports. The cor-

rect number to report a fire oremergency is 789-1500. Thedepartment asks citizens to notethat the old number is still thecorrect one.

Cigarette thief is fined^ 0 3 0 and jaile<T30 days

prodigious vegetables are beautiful,colorful flowers: potted waxbegonias hanging from blue pipes,marigolds that fairly glow in thedark, pink impatiens.

What's the secret to this abun-dance? Tender, loving, meticulouscare provided five hours-per day inthe summer. Pigeon manure forgrowth. A ready compost pile.Newspaper underneath grass clipp-ings placed in the rows between theplantings-it seem the paper's

'~ PUBLIC NOTICES

chemicals are a boon to the garden'sdevelopment.

There is professional assistance aswell. The W. Atlee Burpee Companyof Warminster, Pa provides theseeds.

Wanat follows an annual regimen.Every October he strips the garden,thus generating the raw materialsfor the compost heap. He then tillsthe works, plants grass seed, andspreads fertilizer during the subse-

-quent-months-through-danuary. ITTMarch the compost pile is depositedvia wheelbarrow.over key sections ofthe garden." Then, from early springto mid-May comes the planting inearnest.

For Wanat, who happens to be theuncle of Cranford Police ChiefRobert Guertin, the reward is in theaccomplishment itself.

"I give 'em away for nothing," hesays, pointing proudly at his culinaryoffspring.

PUBLIC NOTICES

He consistently brings histomatoes -the ones with that "off thevine" taste-- to a local McDonald's,giving the faithful there a real break.Sure enough, on the way out he slaps

an oversized cucumber in one's mitt,followed by a cellophane bag ofparsley, basil, pepper...what aspaghetti dinner this stuff will make!'

Junior bowling begins Sept. 6Bowling season begins Sept. 6 for

Garwood Junior Bowling League.Applications are being accepted now

and can be picked up at GarwoodLanes. Bowlers must be 8 years orolder.

Registration is underway for theGarwood Recreation Department'sfall soccer program for boys andgirls ages 6 to 12. Play begins Sept. 7.

REGISTRATIONUnion County College will conduct

in-person registration at its Plain-field Center for the fall semester onAugust 18 and 19.

PUBLIC NOTICES

To sign-up call Steve Hoffman at276-7412 between 6 and 9 p.m. Theprogram is free.

PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICE• Joanna K. Schor, trading as Schor's Ljquor, has

appllod to tho Township of Crantord, CranfordN.J. for a place to place transfer ol a plonary retaildistribution license, now situatod at 104 walnutAvonuo, Cranford and to be relocated at 105Walnut Avenue. Cranford.

Obioctions, If any, should bo made ImmodiatolyIn writing. Id tho Municipal Clork. Arlono M GioonCrantord; N.J.

Joanno K. Schor104 Walnut Avonuo

__ rrnnfnrri M I n?mfi

T_ !$K?

Senior Rob Kanterman, left, led all gridders in Brearley's annualbench press competition with a record-breaking 335-pound lift.Also winning were, from left, Mike Chalenski, in the junior backcategory, Jeff Norris, senior back, and Mike Ramos, sophomoreback.

335-pound lift wins Bench-A-Thon

Sign-up for basketball campThe Cranford Recreation and

j>aj^_Department jd lLsponsor abasketball camp August 18 to 22 atthe Lincoln Park Basketball Courts.

PLAZAPHARMACY

272-8811OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Mon rhru Fri Nites

OPEN EVERYSUNDAY

9 - 6

Instruction will run from 9 a.m. tonoon. The program-is free-to all Cran-ford youth age seven to 13. Registra-tion will be Aug. 18 at 9 a.m. at Lin-coln Park. Camp instruction willcover fundamentals, competition andinstruction. Call the department at276-8900 or 276-6767.

CranfordSlow Pitch

AMERICAN LEAGUEW L

Dee's Tees 13 3Dittrick's 12 5Shelf & Bar 10 7Cranford Jaycees 5 12

NATIONAL LEAGUECheeques 13 3N.J. Bell 6 11McPherson Realty 5 12Shirt Locker 5 12

The Brearley football team com-pleted its Third . Annual Bench-A-Thon competition with records fall-ing in many categories. Senior line-man Rob Kanterman led all lifterswith a record-breaking lift of 335pounds-wiping out Tony SiragusaJs1984 mark of 325 pounds. Kantermanwas pushed hard by Mike McCoy whobowed out at 300 and Brett Hubinger,strong with 285 pounds. The seniorback category was won by Jeff 'Nerc'

Pitcher Mike Reilly, right, receives a congratulatory hand shakefrom catcher Ken Goldstein after going the distance for a 4-2\lvln against Bloomfield Sunday. Photo by Jack Goldstein.

Shades and Leesvillemeet again for league title—

Norris with a 300 pound lift.Junior back Mike Chalenski, de-

fended his '85 title with a lift of 285pounds. The junior lineman awardwent to Lenny La Torre with a 215pound total. '. ...

"Sophomore lineman Pat Olenickbroke the record in his grade with a265 pound lift. Mike Ramos at 215pounds rounded out the winners withthe sophomore back championship.

Town tennis team splits matchesThe Cranford Town Tennis Team

continued its season by picking up awin against Mountainside and thenlosing to Elizabeth. Eric Aaron ledthe team to victory against Moun-tainside with a winning score of 6-0.Greg Oriscellb, Joe Cassidy andDaniel Aaron also won singles mat-ches by the scores of 6-0, 6-3, and 6-2respectively. In doubles play TerryHarrison and Mike Elwertowski

combined to give the team anothervictory by the score of 6-3.Elizabeth handed the team its third

defeat of the season by the score of4-3. Cassidy and Oriscello won thefirst match for the te^m by the scoreof 8-0. D.J. McGuire and Oriscelloalso won in singles by the scores of8-5, and 8-2 respectively. Playing wellfor the team were Brian Hartmannand Marc Goldmann.

Kenilworth Softball League

TUNE-UP TIME!COMPLETE

TUNE-UP SERVICES-•-Lubrication,• Batteries. Antl Freeze

Radiators• Brakes, Mufflers, Tires• Exhaust Test Equipment

CERTIFIED MECHANICSVisa A Maslarcard *cc«pted lor ripalrt

AVIS RENT-A-CAR

N.J. STATEINSPECTION

GRECO'S GARAGE301 South Ave E • Cranford • 276-9811

OPEN: 7:30 am • 5:30 pm

. A DIVISION

Apple's LoungeThree Brothers TavernFrenchy's .HeycoDeMaio Jewelers

B DIVISIONKenilworth Auto PartsShallcross Express^ d S fRoss Brothers BarFire Department

W88641

127B44

L44679

l6

ROSS BROTHERS BAR 7HEYCO6

KENILWORTH AUTO PARTS 4GARDEN STATE PRINTING 3

SHALLCROSS EXPRESS 14FIRE DEPARTMENT 7

The playoffs began Saturday andend this weekend- with InfantinoShades defending their title againstLeesville Auto Wreckers. Both teamsadvanced with victories in thesemifinalsJast Sunday. On- Saturdaythe quarterfinals began with the'Westwood playing Buffy's. In twolow-scoring games Westwoodprevailed 4-2 and 3-1. Superb defensefor Westwood by ArtLungp and DougFisher and timely hitting by JimSydlo, Walt Fluhr and Slade Martinled to the twin bill win and Buffy'swas led by Jeff Hole's five hits andScott Garber's four hits.

The other quarterfinal matchedThree Brothers and Rorden Realty.With Ed Belford making his pitchingdebut, Rorden held Three Brothers tojust one run. Rorden had a lot of helpdefensively as Rich Swan and JamieBuonanno made key plays to checkthe Three Brothers squad.

Sunday's action started with theShades and Rorden Realty. Rordenplaying without three key playerswas unable to handle the Shades,led by Mike O'Brien who tossed twosix-hitters and also had two triples,Jimmy Forrestal had a big day withfive hits and spectacular defense tohold off Rorden. Rorden did not godown without a fight as they were led

by Pete Kamins with four hits andCharlie Raba with the only home runof the playoffs.

The afternoon action saw theupstarts from Westwood against thetough" LeeSviHe cTufeTThis set wentthree games with Westwood winningthe opener 4-3 in 10 innings. Key hitsby Brian Brogan, Jeff Sylvester andJohn Kraus enabled Westwood to winthe opener. In game two Leesvillebounced back by jumping off to a 6-0lead only to have Westwood scorefive in the bottom of the sixth to closethe gap. Leesville teed the game withfive of their own in the top of theseventh to set up game three.

The third game was apitcher's duelthat went scoreless to the seventh.The Nat seemed worried whenLeesville took the field in the seventhbut he held the Westwood scoreless.When Martin walked the leadoff bat-ter to open the bottom of the seventhdefeat neared. Two batters laterRich Banasiak hit a sacrifice fly 1the game-winner sending Leesville' totheir fourth straight final, but sflfilooking for a first title. The finals,begin on Saturday at 12:30 p.m. atMemorial Pool in Westfield. The talkaround the league is Leesville in asweep.

An Irvington man was fined-$l,030and-ardereri-tft-SpftPd 30 rinys incounty jail Monday, after being ap-prehended two weeks ago by off-dutyPtl. Leonard DeStefano on shoplif-

ting charges. German Neville, 27,pleaded guilty in Garwood MunicipalCourt to shoplifting 11 cartons ofcigarettes worth more than $115 fromPathmark Super Center on July 20.

DeStefano was shopping atPathmark when he observed Neville

the bag and fled. DeStefano chasedNwillft through tho parking Int flnd

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEWJERSEY

PROPOSED.C.I.F. ORDINANCE 88-43AN ORDINANCE APPROPRIATING $30,000.00

FROM THE CARITAL IMPROVEMENT FUND OFTHE GENERAL CAPITAL FUND TO DEFRAY THECOSTS OF THE ACQUISITIONS OF VARIOUS

attempting to exit the store throughthe entrance with a full A&P Super-market bag. Neville was pulling afour-year-old child, trying to hurryhim out of the store, police said.

DeStefano identified himself as apolice officer to Neville who dropped

apprehended him on the train tracksbehind the store. Neville surrenderedwithout incident, and was turnedover to Ptl. Dennis Lesack who hadobserved DeStefano chasing thesuspect.

A complaint was signed againstNeville by Pathmark officials. JudgeJames Leonard gave Neville credit

-ior-15_da-ys-time-served. —In a separate incident, Benjamin

Whitaker, 23, of Rahway, was fined$1,030 for shoplifting nine packagesof Atra shavers worth $36 fromPathmark on May 24. He pleadedguilty in Municipal Court Monday.

Suburban Women's Tennis League

APPLE'S LOUNGE 7"-" DEMAIO JEWELERS 0

Cranford 2 tennis team, playing inseries—threet—was challenged by~

Tennis round robins are scheduledDoubles Round Robins for Cran-

ford residents age 18 and older arescheduled at the clay courts on Spr-ingfield Avenue.

Women's round robins will be heldAug. 19, with an Aug. 14 entrydeadline, and Sept. 14, with a Sept. Sentry deadline. Men's round robinswill be held Sept. 13. Entry deadlineis Sept. 5. Play for all tournamentsbegins at 9 a.m. and ends at 1 p.m.

Entry forms are available at the

Community Center and the HillsideAvenue and Springfield Avenue ten1

nis courts, or by calling Doris Brownat 276-4225, After entering playerswill receive a card with a numberand court assignment andVpartqerfor the first round. Players switchcourts and partners at end of eachround. Call the recreation depart-ment at 276-8900 or 276-6767 for moreinformation.

lower-ranking Maplewood 1, a seriesfour team and won the match, allow-ing Cranford to retain its position inseries three. Audrey Young and RoseAndersen, playing on the first court,lost a close match by a tie breaker,4-6, 6-1, 4-5. Doris Brown and JudyDaniel won their match with a tiebreaker in the third set, 2-6, 6-2, 6-4.Velma Hastrup and Ann Weisgerberwon their match in two sets, 6-4,6-1.

The last scheduled match of theseason was played with New Pro-vidence, resulting in one win andthree losses. Playing on court two,Doris Brown and Marie D'Amatowon their match 4-6, 7-5, 4-1. Losseswere on court one with Audrey Young

and Rose Andersen, 3-6, 3-6. andcourt three with Velma Hastrup andAnn Andersen, 1-6, 3-6. Court fourwas forfeited.

Basketballtourney set

CranfordBasketball

The Fourth AnnualRecreation and Parks _ TOTournament will be held August ie to22. Games will be played at 6:15 pand 7:30 p.m. at Lincoln ParkBasketball Courts. High school andcollege students are invited toregister1 for this double eliminationtournament. Call the department at276-8900 or 276-6767.

v y . i - is. »» 31. N>

y , ,Washington School playground. Photo

AUTHOR—".-—...— - - — -SECTION 1. That tho Townahip ol Cranlord

Authorize the lollowlng Improvements lor thoTownahip ol Cranlord, County ol Union, State olNew Jersey, lor the Public purposes, pursuant tothe provision ol N.J.S.A. 40:49-2 and 40A:4-1 etseq. lor consideration of J30.000.00. •a. Business Park Directory Signs 130,000.00

SECTION 2. That tha sum ol $30,000.00 be, andhereby Is, appropriated Irom oxlstlng Capital Im-provement Fund to dolray the cost ol such ac-quisition and Incidental costs.

SECTION 3. This Ordlnanco shall lake ollectupon publication after final adoption as provldodby law *

Douglas A. Nordstrom, ChairmanTownshttrCommlttee—

NOTICE' 'Tha foregoing ordinance was Introduced and

passed on Mrs" roadlng at B mooting ol thoTownship Commlttoo of tho Township ol Cron-lord, N.X on Tuesday, July 22. 1988 and will boconsidered for final passage, altor public hearingat anothor meeting of said Township Committeeal Municipal Building, Cranlord, N.J. on Tuesday,August 26, 1988 at 8:00 o'clock P.M. (prevailing

' Arlono M. GigonTownihlp Clerk

Dated: August 7,1S88Fee: $19.89

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

ADVERTISEMENTNOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sealed bids will be received, by the TownshipClerk on August 18. 1986 In tho Committee Roomof thr*Mimtolpal Building, 8 Sprlnglleld Ave., Cran-fontrNvtulsrsey si 2:00 P.M.. prevailing time.

Bid founk_olans and specifications may bo ob-tained at the olllce ol the Township Clerk, 8 Spr-ingfield Avenue. Crantord, N.J., any business daybetween 8:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.; and at the olllceof the Director ol Swim Pool Utility, 401 Centen-nial Avenue, Cranlord. N.J. between the hours ol8:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M. '

Tha purpose of receiving bids Is wlntorlzlng for1988/87 and startlng-ub In 1987 ol CentennialAvenue Pool.

All bids shall be submitted In a sealed envelopeclearly marked- "Proposal for Winterizing andStartlng-up al Centennial Avenue Pool" with thabidder's name, address and telephone number.

Each proposal shall be accompanied by a non-collusion affidavit and a Certlllod Check,Cashier's Check or Bid Bond lor not less than ten(101 percent ol Ihe bid, not to exceed $20 000.

Bidders are required to comply with the Affir-mative Action requirements of P.L. 1975, c.127,the Disclosure Statement requirements ol P.L.1077, c.33, and Non-Collusion requirements olP.L. 1971, C.168 as amended.

Tha succassful bidder shall be prepared toantar Into a contract with the Township uponaward by tha Township Committee.

Tha Township Commute* reserves the right toreleot any or all bids and to award th« contract totha bidder who will bast serve the Interests ol theTownship.

Arlane M. GigonTownship Clerk

Dated: August 7,1966Fee: 121.42 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

PROPOSED C.I.F. ORDINANCE 86-42AN ORDINANCE APPROPRIATING $23,718.00

FROM THE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT FUND OFTHE GENERAL CAPITAL FUND TO DEFRAY THECOST8 OF THE ACQUISITIONS OF VARIOUSEQUIPMENT AND IMPROVEMENTS, ANDAUTHORIZING THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREOF:

Township ol Cranlord

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEWJERSEY

ADVERTISEMENTNOTICE TO BIDDERS .

Soaled bids will bo rocolvod by tho TownshipClork on August 18, 1986 in tho Commlttoo Roomof the Municipal Building 8 Sprlnglield Avo., Cran-

Bfd lorms, plans and specifications may be ob-tained at tho ofllco ol the Townahip Clork, 8 Spr-ingllold Avenue, Cronlord, N.J., any buslnoss daybotwoon 800 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.: and at tho olliceol tho Director ol Swim Pool Utility, 401 Conton-nlai Avonuo Cranlord. N.J. botwoon tho hours ol8:30 A.M. ond 4:30 P.M.

Tho purpose of receiving bids Is winterizing lor1986/87 and starting-up in 1987 ol Orfcngo AvonuoPool

All bids shall bo submlttod In a soaled envolopeclearly marked "Proposal lor Winterizing andStartlng-up ol Orange Avenue Pool" with tho bid-der's name, address and tolophono number.

Each proposal shall bo accompanied by a non-collusion affidavit and a Cortllied Chock,

~CashrorTChocir6rBTa"HBTia fdr MUI Kiss Ihsrrrten-(10) porconl ol tho bid, not toTJXceod $20,000.

Bidders are required to comply with tho Alllr-mativo Action requirements of P.L. 1975, c.127,the Disclosure Statement requirements ol P.L.1977, c.33, ond Non-Collusion requirements ol

' P.L. 1971, c.16Bas amondod.Tho successlul bidder shall bo proparod to

ontor Into o contract with tho Township uponaward by tho Township Committee.

The Township Committee reserves tho right toreloct any or nil bids and to award tho contract tothe blddar-who.wlll_bfliLafl_(LU_Jiil(iXfiaia Qj theTownship. „

ArloneM. GloonTownship Clork

Datod: August 7, 1986Fee: $21.42

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEWJERSEY

PROPOSED C.I F. ORDINANCE 86-45AN ORDINANCE APPROPRIATING $7,250.00

FROM THE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT FUND OFTHE GENERAL CAPITAL FUND TO DEFRAY THE

-QOSTS OF THE ACQUISITIONS OF VARIOUSEQUIPMENT AND IMPROVEMENTS, ANDAUTHORIZING THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREOF:

SECTION 1. Thai tho Township ol CranlordAuthorize tho lollowlng Improvements lor thoTownship ol Cronlord, Counly of Union, Stato olNow Jersey lor the Public purposes, pursuant toIhe provision ol N.J.S.A. 40:49-2 and40A:4-1 otsoq/tor consideration ol $7,250.00.a Encapsulation ol Asbestos, Bollor Room, Com-munity Contor $7,250.00

SECTION 2. That tho sum ol $7,250.00 bo, andhereby Is, appropriated from existing Capitol Im-provomont Fund to dotray tho cost of such ac-quisition and Incidontal costs.

SECTION 3 This Ordinance shall take ollectupon publication aftor final adoption as providedby law.

Douglas A. Nordstrom ChairmanTownahip Commltloo

NOTICEThe foregoing ordlnanco was introduced and

passed on lirsl reading at a mooting of thoTownship Commlttoo of tho Township ol Cran-lord, N.X on Tuesday, July 22, 1986 and will beconsidered lor final passage, alter public hoarlngat another mooting of said Township Commlttooof Municipal Building Cranlord. N.J on Tuesday,August 26, 1986 at B:00 o'clock P.M. (provalllngtime).

Arlono M QlgonTownship Clerk

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFOffDCRANFORD. NEW JERSEY

PROPOSED C.I.F ORDINANCE 86-44AN ORDINANCE APPROPRIATING $1,744.00

FROM THE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT FUND OFTHE GENERAL CAPITAL FUND TO DEFRAY THECOSTS OF THE ACQUISITIONS OF VARIOUS

—EQUIPMENT AND IMPROVSM'E-NT-Sr-ANO-AUTHORIZING THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREOF:

SECTION 1. That tho Township ol CranlordAuthorize tho lollowlno improvements for theTownship ol Cronlord, Counly ol Union, Stole ofNow Jersey, lor the Public purposos, pursuant tothe provision ol N.J.S.A. 40:49-2 and 40A:4-1 otsog. lor consideration ol $1,744.00.a. Family SorvicosOllico Furnlturo $1,744.00

SECTION 2. That tho sum ol $1,744.00 bo, andhoreby Is, appropriated Irom existing Capital Im-provement Fund to dolroy tho cost ol such ac-quisition and Incidontal costs.

SECTION 3. This Ordinance shall take ollectupon publication aftor final adoption as provldodby law.

Douglas A. Nordstrom Chairman

Dated: August 7th & 14th. 1986Fee: $15.30

NOTICETho lorogolnn ordinance was Introduced and

passod on lirst roading al a mooting of theTownship Committee of tho Township ol Cran-ford. N.J. on Tuesday, July 22 1986 ond will beconsidered lor final passage, altor public hearingal another meeting ol said Township Committeeal Municipal Building, Crantord, N.J on Tuesday,August 26. 1986 at B:00 o'clock P.M. (provalllnglimo).

ArloneM. GigonTownship Clerk

Dated August 7, 1986Fee: $19 89

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD. NEW JERSEYBOARD OF ADJUSTMENT

Tho Board ol Adjustment (Zoning). Township ofCronlord, County ol Union. Now Jersey, will hold apublic—hearing—on-nMonday;—A-agoai—Tft—1988; '•'workshop at 7:45 p.m.'public hearing at 8:15 p.mIn the Municipal Building to consider the lollow-lng:

31-86. Application ol William E. Smith lor avonnnco Irom the requirements ol Article VI C.9 olthe Zoning Ordlnanco to permit tho constructionjof dock with loss than tho roquirod roar yard set-back, property located in Block 205. Lot 23 Knownas 113 Edgewood Road.

'32-86. Application ol Mr and Mrs HerbertHortzofl lor a varionco from tho requirements ofArticle VI C.8 ol tho Zoning Ordinance to permitthe construction of garage wllh less than sideard setback, proporty located In Block 256, Lot 13;nown as 29 Hemlock Circlo.

3386, Application ol Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Meierror a vanri?Tcrj~trDrtrth(rr0tnjtromDTit3 ot, ArttcfifVi—C.9 ol tho Zoning Ordinanco to permit the con-struction of dock with less than tho required rearard setback, proporty located in Block 235, Lot 24,nown as 23 Columbia Avenue

34-86, Application of Margaret Romlck for avariance Irom tho requirements ol Article VI K.3.a.ol tho Zonino Ordinonco to pormit construction oldeck in an 0^2 zono, proporty located in Block 644.Lot 15 known as 601 Rantan Road. ~

Charles E. Kiamio. JrSecretary

DatSd: August 7; 1986Feo:$1B36

yk

yk

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 86-41AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SECTION 23-34 OF ARTICLE 10, CHAPTER 23, TRAFFIC AND PARKING

OF THE "REVISED ORDINANCES OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD NEW JERSEY (1980)," BY AD-DING PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERLY SIDE OF MILN STREET AND PROVIDING PARKING METERSTHEREON.

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD, NEWJERSEY:

I ot tho "Revised Or-y amended by adding

lied below and addingparking meters thoreon.NAME OF STREET SIDE LOCATIONMlln Street South From a point 25 leel Easterly ol Aldon SI to a

point 160 Feet Easterly thereof.

SECTION 2. All Ordinances or parts ol Ordinances Inconsistent herewith are hereby repoalodSECTION 3. This Ordinance shall take eflect upon publication alter linal passage as required by law.

NOTICEThe lorogolng ordinance was Introduced and passed on first reading at a meeting of tho Township

Committee ol tno Township ol Cranlord, N.J. on Tuesday. July 22, 1986 and will bo consldorodjor final

JEHSfcY:SECTION 1. That Section 23-34 ol Article 10, Chapter 23, Trallic and Parking o

dlnancos of tho Township of Crantord, Now Jorsoy (1980)," be and the same Is hereby Etho lollowlng portions of streets In tho Township ol Cranlord, Now Jersey onumeralec

passago. dftor public hearing at another meeting ol said Township Committee at Municipal Building,Cranlord. N.J on Tuesday, August 26, 1986 at 8:00 o'clock P.M. (prevailing time).

Dated: August 7. 1986Foo: $23 SB

Arlona M. GigonTownship Clerk

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD. • CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 86-39.AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SCHEDUmvill OF SECTION 23-14 OF ARTICLE 7, CHAPTER 23 TRAF-

FIC AND PARKING OF THE "REVISED^RDINANCES OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD NEWJERSEY (1980) " BY PROHIBITING PARKING ON PORTIONS THEREON

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD, NEWJERSEY:

SECTION 1 That Schedu"Revised Ordinances ol tho Towed by adding the lollowlng po' • •-•• r o h l t

Dated: August 7. 1988Fee: $20.40

below by pronlblling parking at all timos

chedule VIII ol Section 23-14 of Article 7, Chapter 23, Trallic and Parking of thool tho Township ol Crantord, New Jersey (1980), be and tha same Is hereby amend-owing portions of stroots In the Township of Cranlord, New Jersey enumoralod

NAME OF STREETAldon Street

SIDEWesterly

LOCATIONExtending from the northerly curt ol Holly Stroetto 243 leet northerly thereof

UTHORIZING THE IMPRSECTION 1. That the Tow

tha following ImpbTWimrTf&t

o C a f o dents for the

wTrsTBtror"law Jersey, lor tha Public purposes, pursuant to

tha provision ol N.J.S.A. 40:49-2 and 4OA:4-1 elsag.lor consideration of (23,716.00.a. Basket lor 9S0 Loader $12,000.00b.lntre.Red Heater 8,816.000. Truck Renovation 5,900.00

SECTION 2. That tha sum of $23,716.00 pa, andhereby la, anproprlated Irom axlstlng Capital Im-provement Puna lo defray tha coat of such ac-quliltjon and Incidental cists.

SECTION 3. This Ordinance shall tska aflacljbllcatlon altar llnal adoption at provldad

Douglas A. Nordstrom, ChairmanTownship Committee

NOTICETha foregoing ordinance was Introduced and

passed on first reading at a meeting ol thaTownahip CommlttM of the Township ol Cran-lord, N.X on Tuesday, July 22. 1066 and will baoonildered lor final pwaida. altar public hearingat anothar moling 61 jaid Township Committalat Municipal Building, Cranford. N.J. on Tuaaday,August 3*71SW atVoO o'clock P.M. (prevalTln-lima).

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

NOTICEOn Wednesday. August 20, 1986 at 8:00 p m In

Room 108 ol the Municipal Building tho CranlordPlanning Board will conduct a public hoarlng onIhe lollowlng application!):

Application No 27-88 - Dr and Mrs. Ellzor Llm.plicants, lor property at 306 North Avenue,

TfiiniWTrrBreeK uv; Cm verrmrcwp-l l i

SECTION 2 All Ordinances or parts ol Ordinances Inconsistent herewith are hereby repoaledSECTION 3. This Ordinance shall take elloct upon publication alter final passaoe as required

kirVTIr".P'equlred by law.

o'clock VM. (prevailing

ArleneM.GTownship' (Arlane M. QlgonT h l Clark

uit 7,18M

^WTTifreiinioWTrrBreeK uv; Cm verrmrcwplord Tax Maps: lor approval ol Bite plan and thelollowlng exceptions and variances from the pro-visions of the Crantord Land Development Or-dinance: Article V C 7 . I . I I ) . less than the requireddriveway width; Article V.C 7.c.(3Ke), less than therequired setback of parking arat Irom propertyline: Article V C.7.c.(5>, less tnan the required park-Ing-area aisle width; Article VI.C.2.. less than therequired lot area: Article VI C 3. less than the re-quired lot width

Application No. 32-68 - Dr Marshall Cobper, Ap-plicant, for the property «l 188 North Avenue,West, also known aa Block 314. Lot 2 on the Cran-lord Tax Maps: lor approval ol lite plan and thelollowlng exceptlona and varlancaa Irom the pro-visions of the Cranford Land Development Or-dinance: Artlole VI.C.3., teas than Ihe required lotwidth: Article VI.C.2.. leas than Ihe required lotarea; Article VI.C.13, excess amount ol Impervioussurface: Article V.C.r.c.(i), lets than the numberol required parking spaces: Article V.C.7 c.|3M«),parking too clots lo aids yard; Article V.C.7.a.|i),leas than the required driveway width.

Plans are available lor public Inspection at Iheoffloe ol tha Building Inspector, MunicipalBuilding. Room 104.

Robert McArthur, SecretaryCranlord Planning Board

Dated: August 7, 1986Fae: $20.40

Dated: August 7, 1088Fee: $27 54

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDCRANFORD, NEW JERSEY

PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 86-40AN ORDINANCE AMENDING 8CHEDULE XVa OF SECTION 23-20 OF ARTICLE L CHAPTER 23. TRAF-

FIC AND PARKING OF THE "REVISED ORDINANCES OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD NEWJERSEY (1080> " BY ADDING PORTIONS OF MILN STREET AB ENUMERATED IN SECTION 1.

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD, NEWJERSEY'

SECTION 1. That Schedule XVa ol Section 23-20 ol Artlole 7 Chaotar 23, Traffic and Parking of theRevised Ordinances of the Township of Cranlord, New Jersey M080)."be end the same Is hereby amend-

>a lollowlng portions ol streets In the Township of Cranlord, New Jersey enumeratedad by adding tha

NAME OF 8TREETMlln Straat

SIDE8outh From a Point » Faat East ol tha

Southeasterly Curbilne ol Aldan 8treet toa point 160 Easterly thereof.

ECTIQN 2. All Ordinances or parts of Ordinances Inconsistent herewith ar« hereby repealed.ECTION 3. This Ordinance shall taka effect upon publication after final pasiape aa required by law.

NOTICETha fontoolna ordinance was Introduced and passad on

Committee of tha Township of Cranford, N.J. on Tueeday. JL . , _ . . „ - - . - , - - . - . - ,-_ - , , : ,—Mtssaoa, altar publlo hearlM) at anothar meeting ol ttti Townahip Committee at Municipal Building,

on flrat reading at a meeting ol tha TownsblpJuly 22, 1SM and will be considered lor final

passaoa, altar publlo hearing at anothar masting ol laid Townahip Committee atCranlord, N.J. on Tuesday. August 20,106641 8:00 o'clock P.M. (prevailing time).

Dated: August 7,1066Fee: 128.56

ArteneM. QlgonTownship Clerk

Page 7: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

Page 14

CRANFORD \ . J . ) CHRONICLE ,

Religious NewsThursday, August 7, 1986

Coffeehousehosts 'New Dawny

Somebody's Place Coffeehouse willpresent "New Dawn" in concert onAug. 16 at 8 p.m. at the Cranford

J l i h h

ObituariesThursday, August 7, 1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 15

clames Sauer, Eagle Scout candidate from Troop 178, St.Michael Church, works on his Eagle Scout project at OrangeAvenue Pool. He cleared a pedestrian walkway in the woodsalongside the pool driveway, and installed side barriers andwood chips. The walkway allows members to walk from Orange

-Avenue to-the-parking-lot-wlthout coming-into-contact-witrrdriveway traffic. Photo by Greg Price. •• ' • *

Enrichment classes, lunchprogram slated at Emanu-El

Temple Emanu-EI Nursery School Classes- CjBlTered during the fallis no\y registering for Fall Enrich&-«tf;ernester are: Mondays, 1, 2,

band, based in central New Jersey,plays high-energy contemporaryChristian music that is guitar-oriented with computer driven syn-thesizers to provide a livelybackground. Admission is free and avariety of refreshments will.beavailable. Cail 276-1617 for more in-formation.

School sign-up atTemple Beth O'r

Temple Beth Q'r, a conservativesynagogue in Clark, is registeringchildren for its religious school forthe 1986-1987 school year. The Schoolprogram consists of pre-primary,primary, and regular Hebrewclasses.

The pre-primary program is forchildren ages 3 to 6 and is held oneSunday a month for 3 and 4 year oldsand two Sundays a month for five andsix year olds. The primary programis. for second grades and is held everyMonday afternoon. Children in thirdto seventh grades attend regularHebrew school .classes every Sundayand two afternoons a week:

Instruction includes the Hebrew~language~and Bible, Jewish customs7laws, prayers, holidays and history.Call the Temple office at 381-8403 toregister.

90 houses in CranfordAntonio Iaione, a self-employed

building contractor here for 50 years,died Monday at Elizabeth GeneralMedical Center at the age of 85. Afuneral service will be offered tomor-row at 10 a.m. at the FirstPresbyterian Church where, he was amember.' Friends {may visit todayfrom 2 to 4 p.mv and 7"to 9 p.m. at theGray Memorial Funeral Home.

Mr. Iaione was born in Montefer-rante, Italy and came to the UnitedStates in 1920, settling in Cranford.He began his company, A. IaioneBuilding Contractors, in 1922 andbuilt about 90 houses and 15 officebuildings here before retiring in 1972.

He was one of the leading builders inthe pre-and-post World War II era.

He was founder and past presidentof the' Ferrantese Association inCranford, and was a member of theCranford Lions Club, the AzureLodge 129, F&AM in Cranford, theCorinthian Chapter 57 in Westfieldand the Scottish Rite in Livingston.

Surviving are his wife, Angelina'DellaSerra Iaione; a son, WilliainJ).of Mountainside; a sister, MaryLabate of Cranford, and two grand-children. In lieu of flowers memorialcontributions to the American HeartFund would be appreciated.

Anna Jewell, 101, was firstphone operator in Cranford

ment and Lunch Plus programs. Allclasses begin Sept. 15. Classes areopen to all children age three throughkindergarten who are toilet trained.Enrichment classes are availablefrom 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. LunchPlus is 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.Children must bring their own lun-

3...Blastoff and Chicken Soup;Tuesdays, Computer Kids and Jum-ble Crafts; Wednesdays, Little Chefsand Music Makers; Thursdays, Inthe Beginning and Literature andDrama; and Fridays, Swish, Swash,Energize and Jewishness and Me.

Registration materials can be pick-ches, and supervision and games are ed up at the Temple or by callingprovided. 232-6770 or 232-9505.

'Contact' hotline to train volunteersContact-We Care, community

hotline for the troubled, is planninganew accelerated training course formembers of area churches wishing tovolunteer for its telephone staff. Aninformation night will be held on Aug.18 a t 7 p.m. at WestfieldPresbyterian Church.

The accelerated • program isscheduled for the last two weeks inOctober, daily between 9:30 a.m. and2:30 p.m. It is designed to accom-modate volunteers unable to attendContact's next regular training

course planned for Monday eveningsbetween Sept. 15 and Dec. 15.

Contact-We Care and its affiliateDeaf Contact 201 provide a 24-hourcommunity service for callersneeding a listening ear, and fortransmitting messages for the deaf toconventional equipment. The phonesare presently staffed by trainedvolunteers from 38 area churches.The Contact center may be reachedon 232-2880 for Contact-We Care andon 232-3333 for Deaf Contact connec-tion with a teletype line.

Frank ForliiiiA funeral Mass will be offered

Saturday at 10 a.m. for Frank J.Forlini at St. Michael Church.Friends may visit at the Dooley Col-onial Home,' 556 Westfield Ave.,Westfield, today from 7 to 9 p.m. andtomorrow from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9

Mr. Forlini, 78, died at home Tues-day after a brief illness. He was bornin Newark and lived in Union for 43years before moving to Cranfordeight years ago.

He was the chef steward for 50years associated with the HotelRivera and the Hotel Douglas, both inNewark, and the Hotel WinfieldScott, in Elizabeth, retiring in 1973.Mr. Forlini was a past president of

~ttre Cooks Union, Local 399 uT~Newark, and was president for 35years of the American ProfessionalCooks Association of New Jersey.

He was a member of the Wednes-day Senior Citizens Club in Cranford,the Union Wednesday and ThursdaySenior Citizens Clubs and the UnionGolden Age Club.

Surviving are his wife, RoseParussini Forlini; two sons, Dr.Frank Jr. of Rock Island, 111., andRichard A. of Cranford; and sixgrandchildren. '

Mrs. Anna C. Grohe Jewell, thefirst full-time telephone operator inCranford, died Sunday at the. ArnoldWalter Nursing Home in Holmdelafter a brief illness. She was 101.Mrs._Jeweli was born in Clark andlived in Elizabeth for 58 years beforemoving to Cliffwood Beach 17 years

_ago _ _ : -•-Mrs. Jewell worked for the New

York and New Jersey Telephone Co.in 1900 as a switch board operator.The company made its debut in Craitford in October of 1899, after theCranford, Mutual Telephone Com-pany went out of business in 1896.Mts. Jewel was also a 60-yearmember of the Azure Chapter 87

_O.E.S.-in_Ctanford._She_is.survivedby a nephew and three nieces.

Tony Iaione, observing workbeing done at Droescher's Mill

-last-October.—

Rosemary SloanA funeral Mass will be offered

tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. for Mrs.Rosemary A. Strain Sloan, 63, at St.Michael Church. Friends may visittoday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.nrat the Dooley Funeral Home.

Mrs. Sloan died Monday at herhome after a long illness. She wasborn in Pittsfield, Mass.,and lived inCranford the past 25 years.

Mrs. Sloan was a Navy veteran ofWorld War II. serving in the WAVES.

She was a member of Union CountyRight-to-Life and the United ChurchWomen of Cranford. She was cor-responding secretary for the Wednes-

day Morning Club. Mrs. Sloan Was acommunicant of St. Michael Church,and a member of its Rosary Society.

Her husband, inVentor Francis J.Sloan, died in 1983. Surviving arethree sons, James and Thomas, bothof Oakton, Va., and Robert of Cran-ford; three daughters, Noreen O'Con-hell of Lewiston, N.Y., AnnMcGovem of Elizabeth, andElizabeth Silvey of Wall Township;her mother, Mary Keegan Strain ofSpringfield, Mass.; a sister, RitaTuckey also of Springfield; abrother, William Strain of Clawson,Mich.; and seven grandchildren.

Allen KittlesonA memorial service for Allen R.

Kittleson, an Exxon Corp. chemistwho owned 27 patents, will be 3 p.m.Sunday at the First Baptist Church inWestfield. '-,v'; :'

Mr. Kittleson, who served Exxonfor 40 years until his retirement in1977, died June 19 at OverlookHospital at the age of 71. He lived onHerning Ave. for many years whileworking at th.e research and develop-

"Right nowis the time

to buythat new

home!"We can open thedoor with a realisticMortgage Loan!When you make the right buy, timing iseverything. And right now is the time-tobuy that new home!

Interest rates are down Terms are flexi-ble. And funds are plentiful.

We offer a full-range of easy-to-live-withmortgage loans—all designed to openthe door to your new home. Remember,

-btrt-we-tend-lecally. So, start house hunting—then callorvisit any Statewide office. The timingis right!

For further Information, call (201) 795-7644

A MALLANEYl tho Board

and Presidont

£jStatewide SavingsUU^F and Loan A s s o c i a t i o n ^ ^

OFFICES IN JERSEY CITY • ELIZABETH • SECAUCUS • CLIFFSIDE PARKLODI • GARWOOD • FANWOOD • WATCHUNG • BARRINGTO(g

Borrow with pride at Statewide.Member FSLIC

ment facility in Linden, and latermoved to Westfield. - His chemicalpatents included Captan, which iswidely dis t r ibuted by OrthoChemical Co.

A native of lola, Wis., he earnecTa"

BS degree in chemistry in 1937 fromthe University of Wisconsin. In WorldWar II he rose to the rank of Armymajor, serving in New Guinea andthe Philippine?.

Mr. Kittleson was a member of theAmerican Chemical Society, avolunteer of the United Fund ofWestfield and a member of theWestfield Community Players andWestfield Commmunity Concerts-

Survivors include his wife, BettyUnderwood Kittleson; two sons,Glenn.of Farmington Hills, Mich, andSteven of Westfield, and two grand-children. Arrangements were byTJray FunerafHome.

Helen MazurekA funeral Mass will be offered

tomorrow for Miss Helen J. Mazurekat 9:30 a.m. at St. Anne Church.Friends may visit today at theDooley Funeral Home from 2 to 4

jxmrand 7 to 9 p.m.Miss Mazurek, 63, died Tuesday at

Overlook Hospital after a long il-lness. She was born in Jersey Cityand lived in Garwood for 32 years.

She was an inspector for WesternElectric for 34 years, retiring in 1975.She was a member of the StanleyHolmes Telephone Pioneers ofAmerica.

Surviving are two sisters, Elsie—Mazur-ok-of-Garwood-and-Aicronica-

Thompson of Cranford; and twobrothers, Charles Mazurek of SpringLake Heights and Edward Mazurekof Linden. In lieu of flowers donationsto the Garwood First Aid Squadwould be appreciated.

Anne KosierMrs. Anne J. Rosier, a 36-year resi-'

dent of Kenilworth, died last Wednes-day at Memorial General Hospital atthe ag<; of 71. A funeral Mass wqs pf-

DOOLEYFUNERALHOME

Four generationsof service providedin a facility of

"- 'homelike atmosphere.

218 NORTH AVE. WEST, CRANFORD PHONE 276-02557Francis J. Dooley Jr. Manager r

other location, DOOLEY COLONIAL HOME•5S6 Westfield Ave., Westfield 23.VO25SJoseph V. Dooley Manager

fered Saturday at St. TheresaChurch.

A native of Burgettstown, Pa., shelived in Ohio and Irvington before

-moving-here

Survivors include a son, John. H.,of Lake Hopatcong; a sister, Mrs.Pearl Byre of Akron, Ohio; fourgrandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The KertilworfhFuneral Home handled ar-rangements.

John KawichJohn J. Kawich, a former Cranford

resident, died last week at his homein Brick Township. He was 76 yearsold. He worked for the LightolierCorp. in Jersey City for many yearsbefore retiring as a supervisor ofelectrical appliances in 1975. Hejnov-ed from Cranford to Brick that year.Services were Saturday in Brick.

DEDICATED TO DIGNIFIED

SERVICE SINCE 1897.

FUNERAL DIRECTORSFRED II. GRAY, JR.DAVID B. CRABIEI.

WILLIAM A. DOYLE

WESTFIELD: 318 East Broad St., Fred H. Gray, Jr., Mgr 233-0143CRANFORD: 12 Springfield Ave., William A. Doyle, Mgr., 276-0W2

Buy DirectOVERHEAD

GARAGEDOORS

EASYTO

INSTALL

• RoalWood • Solid Millwork. • 1000Doors in Slock • Some Spocials Mlg.While You Wait, Others 3-5 Days. • CallToday lor ow Froe Now 24-page Brochureand Compare Our Spocs. • Also Availablo;Steel, Fiberglass, Aluminum. • Pncos byphone.Call TollFr~: 1-8OO-872-4980

N»w Rd., Monmouth Jet, NJOp«n: B till 4:30 - Sat till 12

I J

H.l-J

TREE EXPERT CO.

• Trimming• Repairs• Removal

Modern EquipmentState CertifiedImmediate Service

Insured For Your Protection

233-TREE

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 4 P M

THE SIGN OF EXPERIFNCE

Your Call Is WelcomeCRANFORD530 South Ave. East

272-9444OPEN Sat. 9-5

Sun. 10-5 .

RIGHT HERE IN CRANFORD— JUST LISTED!

11 Brookdale PlaceNEW LISTING - This 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath split level islocated in prestigious Cranford. Pristine condition,CAC, lots of closets. $227,000. Call today!272-9444. V .Dir; Springfield Ave to Riverside Dr. to Venetia bear left to Brookdate Road& follow signs. . • '

Spacious 4 bedroom, 2Vi baths split level, livingroom, dining room, modern kitchen, grade level familyroom & rec room in basement. 75 x 1 50 lot, centralair. Only $21 0,000...Call early.

- • ; • • • " • V

Victor DennisY

REALTOR Westfield Bd. of Realtors& MLS • Union Co. MLS

2 ALDEN ST • CRANFORD

276-7618

Open HouseSunday August 10 th 1 - 4 P M

SUNNYSIDE LINDEN

Charming 3 bedroom brick front colonial in lovelyarea. This immaculate home features entrance hall,.iviwg- TOUIII with, fireplace,- formal dining room,-modern eat in kitchen and lavatory on first floor.Three bedrooms and full bath on second floor. Fullcellar, screened rear porch. 50 x 100 foot lot. Taxesonly $1068.00. Owner willing to negotiate.

Realisticly priced at $ 1 54,900...JJ3-Swarthmora.Rd.JD.ir.:.St..-Ge.oroe_Ave...JoJW-OOd_Ay.eJ_iimiJiriJA!p.Qd_.

towards Cranford, left on Swarthmore.) • .

, Ir(c.LICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKER

10 SOUTH AVE., E • CRANFORD276-2400

• \ • ' •

Your Search is Overt162.500

Whether first time buyers or retiree you're sure to ap-

home. Located on a quiet tree lined street onlyminutes from shopping area. Features include; Diningroom, spacious Living room, step saver kitchen, firstfloor family room and finished basement.

R E A L T O R SVita Zoltak, Broker

Union County 1 Waillleld 4 Summll Mulllpll Listing Sirvlcm. WaitUald t u r d ol Ri

SUPER SPLIT!

\ Stay -nnnl during these hot and humid days in thisspacious centrally aired home located on a dead-endstreet, close to schools and recreation facilities.Features 8 rooms with a large family room andmodern kitchen with dining space. This outstandingvalue also has mother/daughter potential. Call todayfor complete details and-appointment.

McPhersonRealty Co.276-0400 £

Realtor

IQ

19 Alden Street • Cranford, N.J. 07016

CRANFORD

COLONIAL CHARMER

You and your family will be charmed by the many nicefeatures in this immaculate and beautiful Colonialhome located On a quiet dead end street, near to ma-jor transportation. Boasting upper and lower decks, itfeatures a spacious living roera, remodeled bath, 2bedrooms plus study. $184,900. (CLK37:D.- Call

CLARK1.101 Rnritaii Rd. Bit SCHLOTT

Charming Colonial

CRANFORD - Featuring 6 rooms, with 2 car garage,

around porch adds great potential for expansion orleisure relaxation. Updated features include gasburner, 5 yrs. old, aluminum siding, 6 yrs. old, full in-sulation. A great start for the smart buyer.$153,500. W-389.

WeichertRealtorsASK AHOUT

OUR EQUITYADVANCEPROGRAM

157 olllcilIn Conrwctlcut,

Ntw J«rny, Niw Yoikind PtnHiytvinli

'•Your Full Service, Metropolitan Realtor"

185 ELMST •WESTFIELDHours: 8:30 am- 9:00 pm

HOT SUMMER NIGHTS

will find you relaxing in this centrally air conditionedranch/bungalow in ROSELLE PARK. Owners haveJUST REDUCED the price for a quick sale! Thisadorable, cozy, clean home boasts a pleasant sunroom, living room, formal dining room, kitchen, twobedrooms, and detached garage. The exterior isatumlnym sided. A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD$127,900.

Janet D. Barton, CRS, GRI, REALTOR

106 North Union Ave, Cranford272-4020

...and a Colonial Split that's every bit as enticing as itssurroundings. On a lovely corner lot near "FivePoints" in Union, it features 3 bedrooms, a pinepanelled rec room, living room with fireplace, oakflpprs, and lots nf rlnsftt/.qtnraQfi .qpflr.fi $209.900. •

233-0065600 North Ave W. Westfield

O//Ici*s in Basking Rid^e, C h a t h a m . Funwood. Livingston. Mvndham,Morri.-ilown, M u r r a y Hill. QuaUvrtuwn, Short Hills, Stotrktan, .Summit,

'wksburv. U ' u m ' n and Wvntfivld

YEARS OF SERVICE

BUBQdORff fW HIALTOHS • " Ill l l l l

Page 8: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

Page 16 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Thursday, August 7, 1986

CLASSIFIED! CLASSIFIED! CLASSIFIED!20 words $3.70

CLASSIFIED!Conference on care of children

-Cofltinj^ied.tom-gage-1-6—I

The New Jersey Coalition forSchool-Age Child Care is sponsoringa conference Sept. 25 at SomersetCounty College from 9 a.m. to 6:45p.m. It is co-sponsored by the New

building. The Union County TaskForce is comprised of 25 localorganizations and agencies. Thegroup has been working on the issuesfacing school age children for over a

Thursday, August 7,1986 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Page 17

Videotape on Doctors Say:v i ™ ! Z , . . New Grapefruit

upbeat video on the lighter side ofHtLPWANTED

REAL ESTATE HELP WANTED

CRANFORDOPENHOUSE

413 DENMAN ROADAUGUST 10 12 - 3 PM

9Vi year old custom built bi-level.Four bedrooms, two full baths, twoeat-in kitchens, living room, formal di-ing room, large family room, naturalwood trim. Gas hot water baseboardheat, central air conditioning. Possiblemother daughter. Call 276-3674.ALL WELCOME! •

GOVERNMENT HOMES from* 1. (U repair). Also delinquenttax properly • Cali1-8O5-RP7 KO(JO E*t. GH5725 (or information.

4 BEDROOMCOLONIAL

Living r oom wi thfireplace, dining room,eat-in kitchen,' 2 V4baths, family roomwith sauna, central airand vacuum, finishedbasement. Dead endstreet. Principals only,$ 2 0 5 , 0 0 0 .276-1691 after 5 pm.

CRANFORD NORTHSIDECOLONIAL - Lovely 4bedroom centor hall. Sevenrooms. Kitchen 20 * 13, im-maculate condition, full base-ment) with laundry room andworkshop, two and a halfbaths, central air, profes-sionally landscaped withunderground sprinklers.$274,900. Alliance Realty233-3600. 8^7

GARWOOD FOUR BEDROOMCOLONIAL, central air, built inpool, ono and a half baths,large ontranco hall, livingroom, with fireplace, kitchenwith dishwasher and-microwove, wall to wallcarpoting throughout. Ownercan give quiok possession.$179,000. Alliance Roalty233-3600. 8/7

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST-ASSISTANT. Friendly. outgo-Ing porson wanted to joinbusy dental practice with anexcellent staff. Experiencedpreferred. Please call, Marge276-6652. 8/28SECRETARY Full time. Typ-ing, phones, no steno, plea-sant sujxoundings.232-9000. 8/7

CHARMING COLONIAL

Lovingly cared for and nicely up-

dated. Features 1 0 rooms with a

large formal dining room, family

room with cathederal ceiling. Up-

~~claTed"featuTBS'includera~new kit-

7~chen (25xT2), large declTotf fh~e"

family room, central-air and much

more. Call today for complete

details and appointment.

McPhersonR e a l t y C o . -j£^ , Rea"or

276-0400 a l >19 Alden Street • Cranford, N.J. 07016

|—Sid^by^ide^Two Family-6 & 6 room home, featuring eat-in kitchens, formal dining rooms,3 bedrooms, full basement.$239,000.

Unomi Park AreaA lovely home, close to Walnutand Livingston schools, featuring

~twcr~fulr~baths, den, Batrirricrt-chen, hot water oil heating, fullbasement. $179,500.

Super Split Frame and BrickImmaculate 8 room split, level-featuring 2 kitchens, 1 Vi baths,central air conditioning, Michaelskitchen, woodburning fireplace,much more. $219,000.

CUSTOM RANCHHurry to see this maintenancefrqe well built home on a quiettree lined street featuring a tileentrance way, large living room,formal dining room, 3 bedroomsand a 22 ' kitchenTThe finishedbasement offers. additional livingspace and storage galore. Askingonly $175,900.

giffamiRealtor

02 South Ave. WentCranford, N.J. 276-7900

"A good name Is better than riches"

TAKE YOUR PICK OF 2LOVELY COLONIALS

Both Charming & in excellentCranford Locations. Each has itsown unique features to accom-modate the growing family, pric-ed in $190's...Call for appt.

VictorDennisREALTOR2 Alden St • Cranford276-7618

FLORAL „AS^STANTFULL TIME

REKEMEIER'SFLOWER SHOP

276-4700

CHILD CARERELOCATING T O

CRANFORD INSEPTEMBER

Seek experienced In-dividual to care lor my 18month old daunhler Mon-day through Friday, 7 am-6 pm In my home or yourhonie-.-.- Gall days:201-765-5605 evenings914-423-5865

SECRETARY, part time, yearround. Billing records, typing,phones, filing. ^Non-smoker.Wostfleld Y, 158 Ferris Place,Westtield; 8/14OUTDOOR WORK WITHFLOWERS ANS SHRUBS infall. Christmas preparationand sales through December.Experienced servicing publicpreferred. Flexible hours. Ac-copting applications forSeptember. Apply in porsononly: 380 Springfield Avenue,W e s t f i e ^ 8/21

EARN HUNDREDS WEEKLY'at homol Be flooded withvarious offersl Details? Sondself-addressed, stampodenvolope to: PO Box 447 , \Cliffwood, NJ 07721. 8/21

EXCELLENT INCOME FORPART TIME homo assomblywork. For information call504-641-8003, Ext, 8815.

9/11

PIZZA HUT - Is now acceptingapplications for fall employ-ment. Flexible hours day andevening. Apply in person. Piz-za Hut, 15 South Union Ave.,Cranford. 8 " 1

GOVERNMENT JOBS$16,040 - «59.23O/yr. Nowhiring. Call "805-687-6000,Ext. R5725 for currentfederal list. ' . 8/14

" DELI-COUNTER HELP: Pormanent employment. Part timotlnd full time days. Hours flexi-ble for housowlfe or retirodperson. Will train. Contort

• Grog at 2 3 2 0 9 2 5 .

860.00 PER HUNDRED PAIDfor romalling letters fromhomol Sond self-addressed,stamped envelope for Infor-m a t l o h / B p p l l c a t i o n .Associates Box 95-B, Rosello.NJ 07203. 8/7

Maintenance PersonEnergetic, self-starting individualwith ability to work with minimalsupervision to perform custodialcluties throughout the facility,maintenance of grounds, minormaintenance of building, andequipment and painting. Fireman'sBlack Seal, license desired. ValidNew Jersey • drivers license re-quired.Apply to Swim Pool Utility, 401Centennial Avenue, Cranford,New Jersey, 07016. Telephone272-9595 for information,. -J

DRIVERSVANS & BUSES

PART'TIMEFor school bus com-pany, Must have threeyears any driving ex-perience.WILLTRAIN 789-0012

TEACHER

Certified In ElementaryEducation. Apply inperson:

" HARDING SCHOOL426 BOULEVARD

KENILWORTHAn Equal Opportunity

Affirmativo Action Employnr

Work forAn EstablishedElectronicsDistributor1. Customer Service

Light typiiie, Filing

2. Assistant Book-- KcC|)Cr Data Entry

Call: 245-6778Aurora Personnel

Aunor-n PID7D. Hoiloa Dr .

D.S. KUZSMA REALTY115MUnSt. • Cranford

272-8337Each office Independently owned

r

8 C H L O T T• « f. A U 1 B 8 •

-GRANFORD

NEW LISTING

This well-maintained home is locatedclose to schools and the municipal pool.Features include a modern eat-in kit-chen, formal dining room, panelledgame room and 3 bedrooms. On nicelylandscaped lot with fenced' in yard.$ 1 7 9 , 9 0 0 . Call 2 3 3 - 5 5 5 5 .(WSF688).

WESTVIELOZ64 but Broad Street

SCHLOTT

aurora.

REAL ESTATESALESPERSON

Opening for full timesalesperson wrthestablished firm. Ex-perience preferred butnot;-, necessary. Willtrain! Attractive com-mission schedule withincentive arrange-ment.

Call 276-1900

FULL ANDPART TIME HOURS

AVAILABLESEPTEMBER TO THE

END OF YEARSome filing jobs aswell as some heavy lif-ting jobs.

Call 382-3450An Equal OpportunityEmployer

DELI HELPPART TIME

2 OPENINGS6 am - 10 am9 am - 2 pm.789-3354

gI—Jersey-Division^f-Y.ouuWnd-Family—-year—and—was—instrumental—in—y.Qlunteensm,ris_Qffered_t(i^agehcies_I

Services, Somerset County College, * " ' " "" " " J"~~~- ' - -"----»-"---• ~and the Community EducationDevelopment Institute of the Educa-tional Information and ResourceCenter.

Cynthia Newman, chairman of theUnion County Task Force on LatchKey Children.will speak on coalition

developing child care needsassessments in Westfield and ScotchPlains/Fanwood.

Also, the Task Force has com-pleted a resource/referral guidelisting all the child care programs inUnion County.

CHILD CAREWorking mother re- •quires mature womanto care for 6 week oldinfant in my Cranfordhome. No housework.References required.

Call272-4352

SECRETARY/

RECEPTIONIST

CranfordOrthodontic Off ice20-25 Hour Week

No EveningsWe are seeking a responsi-ble and personable in-dividual _with good com-mimtatiori skills. Variedduties and multi-stalf in-cluding .typing, light book;

-keeping—(iiing-and-patienteducation. Posit ionavailable1 in September.Send briel resume to: Box386, c/o Cranlord Chroni-cle, PO Box 626, 21 Alden

07016

TELLERSCLERICALS

HOTLINETop Starting SalariesChoice Locations inUnion County

Convenient SchedulingPart & Full TimeOpportunities

931-6544

UNITED COUNTIESTRUST COMPANY

• •

Four Corhmerce Drive, Cranford, New Jersey 07016Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/H/V

BILLING/PRICING $ 2 7 5CRANFORD CO seeks figure-oriented indv w/ANY relatedexp to receive/resoarch/pncespecial orders BNFTS INCLDENTAL •

RECEPTIONISTCRANFORD COMPUTER COseeks sharp indv w/lypg tohandle phones, meet/greetclients, clerical & adminduties WILL BE TRAINED lorpromo opty.SECTY NO STENO * 3 0 0Congenial CLARK CO seeksversatile indv lor variety ofad-min duties. Correspclient/stati liaison etc EXCBNFTS INCL DENTALCLK/DATA ENTRY $ 2 7 5CLARK branch o'l Maior Oil Cosooks CRT exp + tigurabilitylor compuler input & lollow-Ihru. WILL TRAIN all aspectsol dept lunclions

Call ANNE CASTELLANb

CASTLE CAREERS322-9140

141 South Ave, Fonwood

REAL ESTATE

LANDLORDS!

No cost to you. We

screen anrj qualify

tenants. No charge.

No obligation. Call;

WEICHERT

RENTALS INC.

232-9401Licensed Real Estate Brokor

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS

YOUR AD can appear horo.Call lor details. 276-6000.

This charming, Spanish Style Home at20 Pine St., Cranford was sold byFlorence Jennont of Victor Dennis RealEstate.

: . . / • • (

This lovely Colonial was listed by JoafiConway of Kohler MacBean Realtorsand sold through the Multiple• Listing-Service in just one day.

Realty Mar t of NJ REALTORSA Full Service Residential & Commercial Agency

BUYING or SELLING?Whatever Your Real Estate Needs...

CHECK THESE SERVICES!!!

II

(/Professionally Trained Sales Agents

iY Written Market Analysis (No cost/no obligation)

^Short - term Breakable Listing Contracts

^Negotiable Marketing Fee

'** Guaranteed Advertising

Wl Qualified Buyers

W Mortgage Counseling

S/ Appraisals

fvf Rental Department -

"1IIIIIII

This lovely home on Denman Road wassold by Cliff Dobbins of Barton Realtyto Fred and Cathy Dohn and listed byMetro Realty.

This charming colonial was listed byDolores Liddy and sold by Lucila Rochewho are sales agents for McPhersonRealty Co., a local realtor.

• WEICHERT CO., REALTORS an-• nounces that Kathy BuonteVnpo of their•-—Wtretfietd'offifjH tlgtod 300 BtmStremT

Cranford for Mr.and Mrs. Timothy

Burgdorff Realtors, Westfield, has an-

fully screened tenants with referencessupplied. Free service to landlords.

'We Work For You1

II

Schlichting and Judith Pipoli of thesarfie office sold this property toMargaret Boyd.

" " " 1 1 Realty Mart of NJWE HAVE2 DESKS OPEN FOR

EXPERIENCEDPROFESSIONALSALESPERSONS

Call us for a ConfidentialInterview.

777 Walnut Ave.'Suite D" • Cranford, NJ 07016

272-2606Hours: Monday - Friday 9'am - 8 pm

Saturday 9 am - 3 pm. Sunday 10 am - 3 pm

IInterview. , y j ^ Member W«tHI«ld MuHlpte Uttlng8«rvlc» g **'

PROPERTY MANAGEMENTDEPARTMENT

Fully Computerized

Condo, Co-op & SeniorComplexes, Collections,Supervision, Budget &Cash Flow Statements. I

Mr, and Mrs. J. Donlon are the proudnew owners of this home In Rosalie.Gwen Perri of Kiamle Agency was theselling agent. Gwen also sold theDonlon's former home In Belleville. .

Hamilton Street Rahway for Mr. andMrs. S. Sobotkowskl through the Multi-ple Listing Service. The property wasmarketed by Joanne Hoeger.

SEE OURSHOWCASE

OFHOMES

ONPAGE 15

Continued on Page 1 7

Be Part of an American Tradition

We're not as old as Lady Liberty but we'vegreetedjmwcomots,-new-babie9-and-engag<>d-couples for nearly 60 years. Part/Full time.flexible hours and management trainee posi-tions open. Good earning potential. Car need-ed. Training provided. Call 766-3262 Mondayor Friday 9-5 or 545-8902.

-An-Equal-Opportunity-Employer-ai-

SALES/FITNESS COUNSELORS

Spa Lady is now accepting ap-plications for fulltime fitnesscounselors. If you are en-thusiastic with a positive attitudeand are looking for an excitingcareer, call today and get started.

789-3400

JOB LINE-23*4449-

The personal job line for you:OFFICE SERVICE

INDUSTRIALNow has 24 hour informationavailable to you! Job line will'give you current opportunities

-along with information on ourterrific benefits!

CALL 238-1449

6 MANPOWER:TEMPORARY SERVICES

PHOTOGRAPHER'SASSISTANT

MusrwAave darkroomexperience.

. Call Greg Price:272-1331

Support ffrgiips for home caregivers

ATTENTIONHOUSEWIVES!

Counter person need-ed to work at .

SUBURBANCLEANERS603 Boulevard

Kenllworth .Convenient Hours8-2:30. Call:

276-444.0

Overlook Hospital will sponsor twosupport groups for those caring forthe elderly at home with groupmeetings beginning August 14.

This free caregivers support pro-gram will include a general support <group session and a second groupespecially for those caring for a per-

son with Alzheimer's Disease or'arelated dementing illness.

Anyone interested in joining one orboth of these free groups or whoknows of someone who would benefitfrom this service, please call MaryDarmeb'erg, geriatric clinicalspecialist, at 522-2140.

Forrestal at 'Silent Weekend'. Prof. Eileen Forestal coordinatorof the Interpreters for the Deaf Pro-grm at Union County College, servedas a presenter of two workshops atthe recent New Jersey Registry of In-terpreters for the Deaf SilentWeekend.

The program was jointly sponsored

by the New Jersey Registry of Inter-preters for the Deaf and Nor-theastern University InterpretedEducation Project under a graptfrom the U.S. Department of Educa-tion. The Silent Weekend is a strictlysign language experience, with noverbal communication permitted.

HAIRDRESSER

Recent graduateswelcome. Come join agrowing chain. Greatworking atmosphere.Salary plus commis-sion. Call Maria:

CLASSIFIED!

and organizations in Union County bythe Schering-Plough Corporation.This video can be used as a seminaror conference icebreaker, atvolunteer recognition events,volunteer fairs, and orientation ortraining sessions.

Produced by the Volunteer Centerof Dallas, this video was awarded agold medal.at the Houston and NewYork International Film Festivals.

Contact Linda Pacotti, Schering-Plough Corporation, 2000 GallopingHill Road, Kenilworth, NJ, 07033, toobtain an order form to borrow"Volunteers in Lauperland."

Car wash setfor hospitalA fund raising Car Wash for

Children's Specialized Hospital willbe held Saturday, Aug. 9, between 10a.m. and 5 p.m. in the front parkinglot of Westwood Computer Corpora-tion at 155 Route 22 East in Spr-ingfield. Z-100, the rock and roll FMradio station, is a sponsor of theevent, which has set a $3,000 goal.The price of a wash will be $4 with 50.

••centv begin Ukuu uff fui

SuperfillTOvei

276-9897

ROOFING * WANTED SERVICES

d|iiy Laidisplaying a Z-100 bumper sticker.Anyone wishing to make additionaldonations may do so at a speciallydesignated donation box.

Hospital to track

Diet Pills Sweeping U.S.No Dieting — Eat Normally

BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special) -Good news for people who want to loseweight. According to the results of a re-cent medical study, you can easily loseup to "14 pounds in 14 days" with anamazing, vastly improved "new version"of the world famous grapefruit 'super pill'diet called Super Pill II.

Best of all, the pills allow you to "con-tinue to cat all of your favorite foodswithout changing your normal eating orexercising habits and still lose weight,starting immediately, until ithe ideal weightand figujiifyou desire.""""It's guarantccdT*

The new diet pills have been suc-cessfully clinically tested on groups ofoverweight people by a panel of doctorsin Beverly Hills.

All Lost up to 14 lbs. in 14 Days•—• "Rfmn r ka h | y , A > I prnplp. in iht-

AT BERGEN.... CAMERA

Psrmanant Part Tima

A LITTLE BOOKKEEPING

A LITTLE SELLING

A LOT OF LEARNING

and

A LOT OF FUN I

In a pleasant environment.

Call for an appointment.

276-1024

ROOFING & REPAIRSResldontial-Commerical

IndustrialOver 26 yours experiences

free estimates-promptservice

Bill Torry

233-4958

UNION COUNTY SOCCERCLUB'Traveling team is look-ing for boys agos 7 ihrpugh11. Bor more information cullTony 272-3647 after 6:00pm. •• • 8/7

RENTALS WANTED

AUTOS FOR SALE--1983 DODGE CHARGER, ful-ly equipped, air, ho6d scoop,fin, excellent mileage, ex-cellent condition. 44,000miles. Call 276-8995. 7/17

1 9 8 6 RED CAMARO.11.900 miles, automatic, air,am/fm cassette. Brand new.

"Asking 8 1 0 , 5 0 0 . Coll272-3789 after 3:45 pm. _

1976 DODGE TRADESMANVAN - 9525. Call 276-2519after 5 pm, weekend anytime.

8£7

ATTENTIONLANDLORDS

Allow one of the na-tions most successfulreal estate cbmpaniesto show your apart-ment or house rental.We advertise andqualify prospectivetenants. No fee orobligation to you.

SCHLOTTRENTALS

1-800-833-RENTDiv. of Schlott Realtors

$ NEED CASH? $WE BUY

old CDTIS, yold lewelry.silvor, old baseball enrris.

hlGHESTPRICES PAir

WASHINGTONROCK

RARE COINS115 IM. Union • Crunford

276-0381

COMPLETE BASICCAR CARE

Wash, wax, whitewa'lls,windows, fluids, etc. Byappointment only. Call'9-6, 272-4577. At homeservice available. For aslittle as $5.00 per weekyou can keep your leet upwh i l e our c e r t i f i e demployees do'the work.

PIANOS &VLAYER PIANOStunod and \pnirod. Boughtand sold. 276-S987. UFN

CORDIAL CLEANING SER-VICE. Small homos, oflicesand apartments cleaned 'byexperienced cleaning lady,with references and owntransportation. Call272-2794 • leave message.

276-6000RABBITS: Angora, mini-lopand dwarf. Young stock andbreeders. Call 276 3708.

EMPLOYMENT • HOMEWANTED I IMPROVEMENTS

PAVING

SABRE-.powerKi

HOW TO SUPPLEMENTYOUR INCOME

Work evenings 6 - 10 pm awayfrom your family

orWork 1 - 1 Vz hours early each mor-ning and enjoy evenings with yourf a m i l y .

Earn the same $350 - $450 permonth. Established newspaperroutes are available in Westfield,Cranford, Scotch Plains and Gar-wood^Cajl:

769-4820.

or toll free 1-800-242-0850

1 9 7 8 BUICK LEPower steer ingb i u k e s , — t r r i — L u r u t )cruise control. 62 .000 miles.Excellont condition. 92,800.Ca.ll 276-8843 . B/71976 DODGE COLT Fourdoor, automatic, bucket

-6eats7-rebuilt-engin6-in-with 28 ,000 miles. $500 orbest offer. 2 7 6 - 4 8 5 1 . 8/7

81 PLYMOUTH TC-3 twodoor hatchback. Automatic,power brakes, air, tape,30-35 mpg. $2000 or bestoffor. 276-8768 evenings.

UFN

RELIABLEHIGH SCHOOL

STIinFNT

will house sit, baby sit,or pet sit. Call Bonnie

272^92X8

FOR SALE

1977 AMCGREMLIN

Power steering, powerbrakes, air, am/fmradio, rjew tires in-cluding, snows. Only40,000 miles.

276-1202

BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITYOWN YOUR OWN Joan-Sportswear, ladies apparel,childrens, large size, petite,combination store, maternity,dancoweor, accessories. Jor-dacho, Chic, Lee, Levi, Izod,Gitano, Tomboy, Calvin Kloin,Sergio Valente, Evan Picone,Liz Claiborne, Members Only,Gasoline, Healthtex, over1000 others. $14,300 to$26,900 inventory, training,fixturos, grand opening, etc.Can open 15 days. Mr.Loughlin (6121 888-6555.

B/7

PART TIMEPermanent Opening Available

" - F o r SeptemberA t The

Cranford ChronicleProduct ion Dept.

Paste-up person needed for ad andpage composition Tuesday andWednesday 9 to 5. Some additionalhours available at times. No typing.Background in English and good

-spelling a mu^t nflpnnriahiHty amLorganizational skills required. Alsomust be neat and work well withothers. Experience in paste-uphelpful but will train the right per-son. If interested and available inSeptember after school opens —call and ask for Mrs. Blood or stopIn and fill out an application.

THE CRANFORDCHRONICLE276-6000

CARPET ANDFURNITURECLEANING

SALEI 50% OFFI Flashing ar-row signs $2691 Lighted,non-arrow $259. Unlighted$.2291 IFree lettorsll Fow left.See locally. 1-1800)-423-0163, anytime. B/7

COMPLETE WEDDINGENSEMBLE. Beautiful custommads gown with delicatebeaded pearls, hat and silkflower bouquet. Original costfor all. J8OO Will sacrifice allfor $375. Can be used yearround. Approximate size 7.Call276-8995. UFN

CALORIC DOUBLE OVEN sixburner stove, $75: Norgerefrigorator/freezer $75. Twowindow air conditioners $75& $ 1 60. Call 272-4730. 8/7

BOAT FOR SALE Woodsailfish. Excellent condition.$250. Call 276-3708. UFN

FORMICA LIGHT WOODGRAIN BEDROOM SET. Threepieces. $100 or best olfor.Call 276-1068. 8 7

GORGEOUS BRIDESMAIDGOWNS. Two burgundy andtwo mauve, Sizes 5 and 7.Two children's gowns sizes 6and 8, one burgundy onemauve. Too beautiful to go towaste, very low prices. Coll276-8995. UFN

No Job Too SmallFREE ESTIMATES

NIGHT. APPOINTMENTSFULLY INSURED,

EDRICH REMODELING272-6334

LAVITOLPAINTING & SIDINGWe're working our

way thru Cranford...

SIDING &PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES

- Also -

REPLACEMENTWINDOWS

Buy 3 get the 4th

FRIElj Pooling & Gutters J

272-4033

Residential & CommercialAsphall Work

Driveways • Parking AreasSealing • RosurtacinQ

Curbing • SnowplowingTRUCK & BACKHOE RENTAL

FREE EST. FULLY INSALL YHITSERViCE

Serving Union County"CALL 7 DAYS A W E E K "

_ 687-0614

Children's Specialized Hospital hasbeen awarded a grant by the NewJersey State Division of MentalHealth and Hospitals to provide casemanagement to Union . Countychildren from birth to adolescencewho have psychiatric problems.

The unit will be known by theanacronym ''YMH" for Youth Men-tal Health, according to CynthiaNewman, project coordinator.

The primary focus of the YMH willbe children hospitalized at Elizabeth'.General Medical Center, ArthurBrisbane Treatment Center andTrenton State Psychiatric Hospital.The focus is to enhance the child'slife upon discharge into the com-munity.

—The YMH tsn]p^rated~trrcDopeTar~tion with the Union County Depart-ment of Human Services, the UnionCounty Mental Health Board and theUnion County Children's MentalHealth Task Force.

'I Can Cope'Rahway Hospital, in conjunction-

with the Union County Unit of theAmerican Cancer Society, will be of-fering "I Can Cope," an educationaland support group for cancer pa-.

families. Tftis~free~

Super Pill II test group showed dramaticwcighllossovcr. 14 days." statccLDr. SteveSachs, who compiled and analyzed thedata in the. study. It also proved con-clusively that the powerful new ingre-dients combined with the placebo effectwill enable you to lose weight "over 3times faster" with this new version com-

~paTedtothcprcvioai5ly"p6pularan"dsuc^cessful original version.

"Pills Do All the Work"According to the clinical study, "Super

Pill II itself does all the work while youquickly lose weight with NO starvation"diet menus" to follow, NO caloric coun-ting, NO special exercise. NO hungerpangs, and NO messy fresh half grapefruitto eat at every meal." You simply take thepills with a glass of water before meals.

Pills Contain ALL Daily VitaminsNo need to take any vitamins to main-

tain your good health and energy becauseSuper Pill II is fortified with all (100%) ofthe U.S. Government USRDA recom-mended daily vitamin requirements.

Super Pill II is already sweeping thecountry with glowing reports of easy andtast weight loss from formerly overweightpeople inall walks of life who are now slim,trim, and attractive again.

Now Available to PublicYou can orde r your supply of these new

highly successful Grapefruit Super Pills(now available directly from.themanufacturer by mailor phone order on-ly) by sending $14 fora 15-day supply(or$20 fora 30-day supply, or $35 fora 60-day supply) cash, check or moneyorder to: Super Pill II, 279 S.Beverly Di".,Dept.W35, Beverly Hills, CA 90212.(Unconditional money-back guarantee

program will run for six consecutiveWednesday evenings starting Sept.10 from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. at thehospital. Call 499-6151 for further in-lormation~

ifnotlOO%satisfied.)Wisa, Mastercard,and Amer. Express OK. (Send cardnumber, expiration date, and signature.)For fastest service for credit card ordersONLY rail anytime 7.4-houiytoll-frcc-1 (800) 872-8446, ext.W35.fsU(>.,pmii«i*

PERSONAL

HAVE YOUR CHART CASTby a professional. Natal andprogressed charts, star datesand astrological options. L.Koonig 7890366. 8/14

CLASSIFIED!RENTALS

SISTER S U Z A N

READINGSHANDWRITING ANALYSISTAROT CARD READINGS

A SPECIALTYOn Vocat ion

Will Reopon in the Fall

INSTRUCTION

TUTORING: READING. MATHin your horn*. 10 yeart publicichool «xp«ri«nca. CertifiedK-8 and H.S. moth MA rW-rM.Call272 5316. i / i 6

LANDSCAPING

FULL STEAM AHEADICarpets steam-cleaned byhydraulic truckmount or dyed16 colors, furnlturo safolydry-cleaned. American CarpetCares. 522-1300 . UFN

CARPETINSTALLATIONS

INSTALLATIONS& REPAIRS

Carpet cleaning, pick-up &relays, stretching, stops,now carpet sales.

-CARPfiT-DOCTOR-769-0118

Vno & Msstmchnroe

WALL TO WALLCARPETING

FAMOUS BRANDS15' FT. WIDTHS

Our Prices are »4 to $6per square yard lowerthan sale prices at depart-ment stores and 'carpetchain stores.

FREE ESTIMATESCall:

Hanwla Carpati330 Morris Ave.

Elizabeth965-0731

Ask for Manny

~ OCCASIONALLIVING ROOM

CHAIRGold velvet. Excellentcondition. Call:

272-7216

WEDDINGINVITATIONS

Lovely selection

Traditional & Contemporary

Also: ._ ,Social Statlqnery

• A h h i 6 T 9 " A t fThank You NotesPersonalized MatchesNapkins _

CRANFORD CHRONICLE21 Aldan St., Cranlord

276-6000

A1 Tree Service& Landscaping

Contractors

Troe service • 1 rimming.removals. topping,elevating, (coding, cabl-ing, transplanting, woodchips, lirjjwood

Landscaping service -Soddinfj, seednuj plan-ting. Iransi^anlini; proper[y nyinlenau'i!. n liework

FREE ESTIMATES2 4 HR.

EMERGENCY SERVICECommercial &• Residential

Landscape Care

2 3 3 - 1 3 4 1

8 /7 /86

COUNTDOWN

IS ON

RUSSELL,

WE STARTED AT 76

AND NOW -- ONLY

" 9 " DAYS TO GO!!

JUST TO LET YOU

KNOW THAT I'VE

MISSED YOU!

I

LOVE

YOU....

BEVERLY

RENTALS

CRANFORD TOWERS • 18Sprimjliold Avonuu 5 '/i room,two bedroom two buth luxuryapartment, immudiato oc-cupancy. Supt 276-2687,.

UFN

LOST

GARAGE SALE

CLOTHES ANDMISCELLANEOUS - 30 NorthUnion Avenue, Cranford. Fri-day only. 8 am • 4 pm. 8/7

260 NORTH AVENUE WESTCRANPORD, Saturday & Sunday August 9 & 10. 10 am - 6pm. Desk, lodios bikn,household items. No EarlyBirds. B/7

MISSING: CAT • young,oranyo nuutoifd imilo wilhyollow oyos urnl whltostomach and thioat. WalnutAvu moo. Cull 272-1429.

8/7

HOMERENTAL

Immediate possessionon this four bedroom,1 Vi bath cape cod,

'featuring a largo livingroom,, dining room,k i t c h e n w i t h abreakfast bar, centralair conditioning and afenced In rear yard.91 1OO/mo.I.E.-

Howlond, INC.REALTOR

'3 E««tman StrtatCrinlofo

Rentals—Store and Office 700 sq, ft . 700 mo.2 Apartments in 2 family-1-s-t floor Living Room, Dining Roorrvr2 Bedrooms, K i tchen, Bath

$925.00 mo.2nd floor Living Room, Kitchen, 2Bedrooms, Bath . . . . $725.00 mo.Executive office space, furnished orunfurnished, conference room, fulltime secretary. Call for information.

D.S. KUZSMA REALTY115MilnSt. • Cranford

272-8337Each office Independently owned

CRANFORDNORTHSIDE, HOME

3/4 '"" bedrooms.available September 1.$1300 per month.Owner/Realtor

272-9056

CRANFORDENGLISH VILLAGE

Old world charm. Lux-ury one b e d r o o mapartments. Utilitiesi n c l u d e d . W a l k tovillage, bus or train.

276-0303

PRIMERETAIL SPACE

AVAILABLEin the heart of

-downtown Cranfotd-Plan now for Januaryoccupancy. 2,473 sq. ft. withrear entrance on Park & Shoplot. Present tenant relocating-wishes to sublet. Very attrac-tive terms. For more informa-tion call Mrs. Awbrey atThe Cranford Chronicle, 21Alden St.

216-6000

PUBLISHERS NOTICEAll real eainte advertiBod tn this

nowspnper it. subiuct to Iho FedoialFait Housing Act of 1968 whichmakos n illegal lo advertjoe novp re fo runcu . l i m i i o n o n . ofdiBCnminmion bauud on rue ftcotorr Tti'iyion. BOX. or nut inn nloriflin o< an iniuntion to moko mt\SliCh piuforttnca. limiiafiort oidiscrimination

This nowspopof will not knowingly accept any adverlihing (orreul oBtnie which is in violimon ofthtt low Out (Rodorh urn informed

ill dwelling*! odverlisuc) ithatnewspaper are ovailublaequal opportunity bam

this

J»CARBURETOR SHOT? *•JCARBURETOR SALEI * |* • W . H.bulW & R.pn, mo., 4-)f. cart & trucks from 1031 ^j i . to 19B6 ^

NEED A GOOO SPARE? J .USED t A A E )fTIRES "?O™3 * "P ^J

¥ ALL SIZESWork Done til 7 P.M.Call For Appointment

363-9244TS. ELMORA EXXON

SERVICENTERS. flitwiAv* CM, Eric* till

Itywiy Clr. I I I . tUttfi I

if'»fif

*4-

Page 9: DigiFind-It · 1986. 8. 7. · Cranf orb Chronicle \ SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 93 No. 32 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 7,1986 brief A shooting A local

*age 18 CRANFORD CHRONICLE Thursday, August 7,1986

Where else but Kings?

Jersey Fresh fromesto

SERVING CRANFORD, GARWOOD and KENILWORTH

Vol. 93 No. 33 Published Every Thursday Thursday, August 14, 1986 USPS 136 800 Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N.J. 30 CENTS

7

When we celebrate 50 years with love from Kings, the spirit of Jersey Freshis a big part of it. ' ' "

And now that our Jersey Fresh Farm Festival is in its second week, thespecials in our Farmer's Corner go from Arugula to Zucchini with all kinds oftreats from Sugar Baby Watermelons to Beefsteak Tomatoes.

Speaking of Beefsteak Tomatoes, they're the heart of the Tomato and OnionSalads in our Deli Corner.

For some other Jersey Fresh specialties, come to our Seafood Corner and takeyour choice of Sea Scallops and Steaks of Tuna, Tilefish and Mako Shark.

As you go from Farmer's Corner to Seafood Corner, be sure to pick up ourfree folders full of tips and recipes for everything from Peaches and Peppers to

Seafood Summer Salads and Barbecues. AnU before you leave the store, by allmeans enter our Jersey Fresh drawing.

A Semi-Finalist in each store will win a bushel of produce and the GrandPrize, an Unwinding Package at the Parsippany Hilton, is an overnight stay fortwo including deluxe accommodations, a check for MOO and a late checkout of5:00.p.m.

So come to Kings this week for everything from the finest Jersey Fresh foodsto an atmosphere of straw hats, coveralls and country music. And just for fun,bring the children any time from Wednesday through Saturday for free JerseyFresh balloons. .... . •

The Butcher's Corner

USDA Choice Boneless BeefBottoRoast - ib.

The Dairy Corner

^Minute Maid Drinks Vi gal. 99*Apple 'N Eve Apple Cranberry Or

Applp Hrflftp Jnipp.. ... 4.R *

The Farmer's Corner

New Jersey Farm Festival:

The Grocer's Corner

Bumble Bee Chunk Light Tunai or water 6.5 oz. can 3/$1.99

Sirloin Tip RoastRump RoastEye Round RoastBoneless Chuck v

Ib. *1.89J b . $1.99Ib. $2.99

J b : HJ69

JLaJMbgurt

\fogurt 6 oz. 3/$lBrown Cow \bgurt _qt. $1.39

JLJSDA Choice Boneless SteaksAxel rod

f2 Size

Sweet Peaches ib;Red RipeIce Box Watermelons(Sugar Babes)

Dole Fuitii|j[jlt: hi Julcb Sllt'cu,Chunk or Crushed 8 oz. can 4/$1.99

Motts Apple, Apple Cranberryor Apple GrapeJuices _ pt. 9.35 oz. pkg. 2/$1.99

Jb 29< white RoseR-esh Picked

Round, Minute Round orRound Cubes Jb. $2.69

USDA Choice BeefTop RoundLondon Broil _Jb . $2.99Sirloin TipLondon Broil _ 1b. S2J69

Temptee WhippedCreamCheese

Sweet CornWhite, Yellow, or Bi Color

99

4 oz. 69USDA Choice BeefShoulderLondon Broil ibThe Turkey Store P&rts Boneless

Ground Turkey Ib. $\&9Breast Slices lb. $3.99Tenderloirts lb. $3.29

Land O Lakes Cheddar 8 oz. $1.89Weight Watcher's Cheese SlicesAmerican or Swiss FlavorlO oz. $1.79

Weight Watcher'sMargarine Ib. qtrs. 89C

Land O Lakes Margarinelb. qtrs. 69C

Parkay Light Spread __2 lbs. $1.69

The Deli Corner

Vine RipenedBeefsteakTomatoes ib 99

Planter's Honey RoastedPeanuts 12 oz. can *1.99

Hidden Valley Pourable SaladDressing 8 oz. btl. 2/$1.99

Friskies 6 oz. can

Cat R>od 6/$l"Long Crisp CucumbersBafeyJPJckle_(Kerbis)_CukesLarge Green Bell or Sweet

Frying PeppersPlump Purple EggplantBaby Italian EggplantG i

_ 3/89c

lb. 99*-

Jb. 89*Jb. 59e

Jb. 89C

—BreasTRoastStore Made Kabobs with Skewers

Turkey Tenderloins lb. $3.29Fresh Corn Fed Pork

Boneless Rib Roast lb. $2.39Boneless Loin Roast lb. *2A9

Fresh Maple Leaf Ducks4-5 lbs. ea. -

Kings Homemade^Oven Roasted

Roast Beef /2 ib$369

y ggpGreen Zucchini or \fellow

Summer SquashTangy-Scallions zz^___bunches 3/$lFresh Parsley bunch 49C

Fresh Leeks lh. *1.99Fresh Dill bunch 69C

Green Giant MushroomsSliced or Whole 4,5 oz. jar 2/$1.99

Kellogg's Nutri-GrainWheat or Raisin _ 1 5 oz. box $1.99

Glad Small Garbage Bags30's 2/$1.99

T h o m a s ' lb. 8 oz. pkg.

ib 69* English Muffins

lb. 99*Ib. $3.99FVesh Calves Liver

USDA ChoiceGround Beef Patties Fat Content Notto Exceed 20% lb. *1.99

_ | _ Leaner Ground Beef Fat Content notto Exceed 20% lh. *1.79

YVfeaver:Original,Cheese, Homestyle or Ital.Chicken Rondeletl2 oz.,pkg. $2.99

"tDscar IVlayer " ' •All Meat Franks lh *1.69All Beef Franks lh. *1.79

The Bakery CornerBaked Fresh Daily Homemade

Croissants pkg. of 3 6 oz. $1.79Great American Food Kitchen

—Sassy-Gakes-RaspberryrG-hocolate—Chip, Plain or CappuccinoCheesecake ^ ^ 12 oz. M.98

KingsnHomemade~BlueberryTarts Made with Jersey Blueberries& Custard' each $649

Baked Fresh Daily Bbudin'sSourdough Baguette 16 oz. $1.79

Baked Fresh Daily— RugelachChocolate, Sugar Free, Apricot,Honey Pecan, Cinnamon orRaspberry V4 lb. $3.49

Louis Rich Solid White MeatCaterer's Turkey Breast !4 lb. S2£9

Imported Boiled Ham_J/2 lb. $1.99Hormel DiLusso

Genoa Salami VJ lb; *2.59Kings Pride 1st Cut Pastrami or

Corned Beef Brisket _ V2 lb. *3.29Mothergoose Liverwurst V2 lb. $149

M

Fresh ArugulaFresh Mint or Basil

.bunch 69C

_ b c h . 99*

California Vine Ripened MelonsExtra Large

HoneydewMelons(Avg. wgt. 5-6 lbs.)

ea.

69

Nabisco Chips Ahoy! lb. 2 oz. $1.99Sunshine Hydrox or

Vienna Fingers _ lb . pkg. $1.29Weston Stoned

Wheat Thins 10.6 oz. 2/$1.99Alberto V05 Shampoo- 15 oz. *1.19Alberto V05 Hair Spray 7 oz. H.T9Noxzema Skin Cream 14 oz. pkg. $2.99Octagon Lemon Dish

Detergents qt. pt. btl. $1.19Snuggle Fabric Softener1^ gal. $1.69Sunlight Dishwasher

pFried Chicken J b . $2.99

Freshly Made Red SkinPotato Salad _. >/J lb. $1.19

-Kings Homemade Salads:-Tomato & Onion _Vi lb. U.79Robusto Salad V4 lb. $1.99Artichoke Antipasto {h lb. $349

Dilled Carrotswith Walnuts ft lb. $2.19

The Pasta CornerWith love from Kings:

—fTapatfiftiManicotti

Sweet Jumbo

CantaloupesIZSize—2%-3 Ib. avg. ea. 99

Sunlight Liquid DishDetergent _ _ _

Lux Soap 3-Pack12 oz. btl. 79C

J4.25 oz. 99C

The Seafood CornerCaliforniaMountain Grown

Bartlett Pears ib 69

Marinara Sauce

19 oz. $2.99.15 oz. M.69.15 oz.

New Zealand Kiwi FruitLg. 33-36 Sizes'

Juicy Florida L^mesLg. 54 Size _j

Florida Avocados

The Kings LobsterQambakefor TWO each $1999

_6 in bag 59C

each 89C

LiveLobsters(1-1 '4 lbs. each) lb.

$499Jersey Fresh:

Tuna Steak _Tileflsh SteakSea Scallops .

Our Distribution CenterManager, GeorgeLaVecchia, invites you tosavor Jersey Fresh qualityat its best. George iscelebrating Ais fifth yearduring KingV50thAnniversary.

Jersey FreshMakoShark Steak

SAH GhKit Stamps are ourway of thanking you forshopping at Kings.

Jb . *7.99Jb. M.99lb. *7.99

lb.99

South Pacific Black Tiger Shrimp(Prev. Froz. 26-30 ct.) _ l b . $11.99

Freshly Prepared SharkabobsChunks of Mako Shark on a skewerwith onion, peppers and in our ownSeafood Vinaigrette. Nice! lb. M.99

JERSEYHtESH

The Floral Corner

New Jersey State FlowerPurple Violets 4 inch pot *1.99

Jersey GrownRainbow Gladiolus. _ bunch *2A9

Fresh Cut Assorted VarietiesSummer Bouquets each $5.99

The Freezer Corner

Birds Eye Poly Bag Vegetables Peas,Cut Corn or Cut Beans 16 oz. 89*,.

Ore-Ida "fitter lbts ____2 lbs. *!'Budget Gourmet SJim Line Entrees

All Varieties _ _ _ _ _ _ 10 oz, $1.69Armour Oassic Lite DinnersChicken Burgundy (11 lA oz.).Bay Shrimp (10 oz.) or ChickenMarsala (11 oz.) ea. $3.29

_oz_*1.4SL

CelentanoCheese Pizza 13 99

In bfiefNew poster

A limited edition com-memorative poster celebrating,the 100th anniversary of the Cran-ford River Carnival was releasedthis week. It was designed byLarry Fuhro and is now on salefrom the River Carnival Commit-tee which is working on the Sept.13 centennial carnival. Story andphoto on Page 3.

Pilot's goalThe pilot who was fatally in-

jured in last week's crash herewas planning to seek a world Ialtitude record for the/typebiplane he was flying. AMthojaflhave established that ihTplanelwasjvorth more than $100,000 and jwas not home built. Page 3.

Sara Lee Light Qassic DessertsFrench Cheese (23'/z oz.), ChocolateMousse (22 Vi oz.) or StrawberryMousse (19 oz.) ea. -$3.39

Downyflake Waffles 12 oz. 89C

Tuscan FVozen

\bgurt Pt 99The Cheese CornerKraft Domestic Excelsior

Swiss Cheese lb. $3.79From Pennsylvania

Lo Salt Lo Fat Cheese lb. $5.19

Toward any purchase ofBULK FOOD

50* OFF!in our Natural Foods Corner

With thisCoupon

Good thru 8~/12/86 " LU193. . . . . L i m i t one coupon per customer.. . . ,

Regular, JJiet, orTTaFfemeTreePepsi Cola, Slice orPepsi Eree

6 Pack 12 oz. cans

Good thru 8/12/86 ' LU172. . . . . L i m i t one coupon per customer . . . . .

Buy I package of 6Tuscan Frozen

YOGURT POPSGet one package Free!

Good thru 8/12/86 ULJ175. . . . . Limit one coupon per customer

New! Wishbone Country InnSALADDRESSING QQCin our Dairy 12 oz. ZrZrCorner

Good thru 8/12/86 LU174..Limit one coupon per customer

Wishbone All VarietiesSALADDRESSING AQC8 oz. btl. *%JJ

With thisCoupon

Good thru 8/12/86 " LU173. . . . . L i m i t one coupon per customer

Citrus HillORANGEJUICEtt gal. 99(

-wwrtKTsrCoupon

Good thru 8/12/86 " LU176' L l r " i ' one coupon per customer. . . .

P.S. All prices effective through August 9, 1986We reserve the right to limit quantities;we do not sell to dealers; and we cannot beresponsible for typographical errors.

Garwood—-The repaving of six streets]

heads a list of improvements in a II $3M,000.bond ordinance introduc-J |

the~Bofbugh jCouncil...A new regulation was Iproposed for the storage of boats Jand campers on residential pro-jperty...The playground season|K" t " *.came to an end with a gaifies day f !'& 'v *''i- Jfcompetition. Page 15. * '(SiJi*"Lv*

DismayedThe first physical im-.i

f provements—in^the—Downtowrr-|I Program are 44 days behind their[scheduled beginnings. Tom[O'Brieh, chairman of thej Downtown Management Corp.,; I[said he was ''dismayed" at theI lack of progress. Paul La.Corte,:!public works commissioner, said |

j started immediately. Page 10.

Main rupturedA utility crew punctured a high i

(pressurejpsujain while;drllllnf| a hole to replace a pole sheared Iby a car on Raritan Rd. Sunday, (

I forcing the evacuation of ai number of homes. The situation 'was described as dangerous but,

I nobody was hurt. Page 5.

Dam fixujp dueThe state Department of,ransportation has inspected the

i deterioration of the crown of |Sperry Dam and has told the,

I township government that it will'i make repairs, said Manu Patel,township engineer. Page 2.

Bike theft tallyA revised assessment of bicy-

1 cle theft statistics by Traffic Lt-i Tom Kane shows fewer thefts arid[ moperecpveriesiiave occurred in' the first seven months of this| year than during the same periodi last year. Page 5. l-

Xot openedThe new parking lot behind the

Municipal Building has been pav-| ed and reopened. It has 26 morej spaces than the old lot. Photos on[Page 2.

Paper driveBoy Scout Troop 178 will spon-

| sor a paper drive Saturday from 9I a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the parking1 lot of St. Michael School.

Guide to inside[Classified 16'| Editorials •.) Entertainmentf Garwood.. 15"I Kenilworth 41jLetters .6/Obituaries 11

IRejiglous news IllvSocial news r.f Sports 131

1 Monan Llgh^cap gets a jump on the competition in a sack race[ during the playgrounds sports day Aug. 6 at UnamrPark.

Another photo by Greg Price of the event is on page 9.

Kahlcrest unitswill be convertedto condominiums

The owners of the Kahlcrest Apart-ments plan-to convertrthe 80 units in-to condominiums. Half of the currenttenants say they are senior citizenseligible for protected tenancy whichwould enable them to retain theirlodgings under rental status for up to40-years.

New Jersey Realty notified thetownship government of its intentionto convert the one-and-two bedroomcomplex on Lincoln Park E. near theRahway River. The township clerk,Arlene Gigon, is collecting income,tenancy and age data from residentsin an effort to determine who is eligi-ble for protected tenancy.

The Morristown based owners, whohave renovated a number of the unitssince purchasing the complexseveral years ago, submitted a list of-63 tenants to the local government aspart of the process required by statelaw for conversion. The other 17 unitsare vacant.

With the deadline approaching onAug. 27, Gigon has tabulated 31 oc-cupants who appear to qualify forprotected tenancy. Once all paper-

work is completed, she will formallycertifyeligible parties.

, To be eligible, tenants must be 62years old or disabled, have lived intheir apartment for two years, andhave a household Income of less than$44,199 a year. Gigon has not brokendown the statistics yet, but shereports that most of the applicantsare below the income ceiling. Thegarden apartments have traditional-ly appealed to older residents.

Howard Goldberg, attorney for NJRealty, said his client can sell all orpart of the units, including those oc-cupied by protected -tenants, whowould under that circumstance thenhave new landlords.

In addition to making lodgingavailable for tenants or their spousesfor four decades, protected tenancystatus provides a form of built-in rentcontrol, the clerk said. Cranford doesnot have rent control per se, but alandlord may only raise the rent to aprotected tenant by a "reasonableamount" which would be negotiatedby tenant and landlord.

Kings300 South Avenue, Garwood

Phones shift to digital system

Planning Board vetoes newhome on Belmont by 5-4 vote

By ANGELA CATILLOBy a 5-4 decision the Cranford

Planning Board turhed down an ap-plication to construct a home on aBelmont Avenue lot which is situatedin a controversial wooded area in theVenetia-Glenwood neighborhood.

The five board members who op-posed the application and many arearesidents expressed concern thatdevelopment of the woods, describedby residents as a natural water reten-tion basin, Would adversely impactthe flooding problem that existsthere.

The board came to its decisionafter an analysis contfilcted bv ElspnT. Killam Associates Inc., en-vironmental ^ ajnd___hydrauliAengineers, outlined the impactdevelopment of the wooded areacould have on runoff in theneighborhood and on a new stormsewer for Venetia Avenue. (See storyon"Page 2).

The new.^three phase system wasp j y go in a

storm sewer master plan for nor-theast Cranford that would carrystormwater runoff into-the RahwayRiver. The township plans to beginconstruction next month of a firstphase which includes enlarging a

'current 24 jnch drainage pipe to 48 in-ches.

Some Planning Board membersand residents, however, are not con-vinced the new-pipe will immediately

j^hn Zeigler, board member and aformer resident of the area, said "Ithink this plan is very complicated,and I don't think we should add to thedilemma by developing the land untilthe new sewer system is in."

Jeannine Rowe, board member,s§i(jV'until^hjs sewer project gets go-ing-over there and we can see what'sgoing to happen, I will have to vote noon this."

Other members of the boarddisagreed because the proposed two-and-a-half story, 2,400 square foothouse met all zoning requirements aswell as local and federal re-quirements for' rnnstrnrrinn in aflood fringe area. Michael Lan-zafama, engineer for .applicantsClaudio and Joy Kalczuk, had ex-plained to the board in July thatdevelopment of the lot would includethree drywells to collect runoff waterfrom the property and the surroun-ding area.

Lanzafama said the neighborhoodwould benefit from the developmentbecause the drywells collect runofffrom adjacent areas during a "smallstorm." In a larger storm, he said,'the difference in the lot's waterstorage capacity after developmentwould be "imperceptible."

Robert McArthur, boardsecretary, supported the ' develop-ment. "It seems to me that the lotwill have less of an impact on theneighborhood after development

Carol Cappello, vice chairman,agreed and added, "This applicantand his engineer have proved withoutany reasonable doubt in my mindthat developing this property willhave no adverse impact on theneighborhood."

Several residents voiced objectionsat a public hearing on the applicationin July, contending the planneddrywells would not counter thedecreased water storage capacity ofthe lot after it was developed.

Joseph Musillo, 8 Venetia Ave.,also wrote the board thatneighborhood flooding "has occurredUirae to1 four timt?s •forat least"sra'yeaT1

the last eight years" under normalweather conditionsrHe also saidthatwhenj the river is high, preventingrunoff>from draining into it, "the pro-posed drywell will be useless inmitigating the effects of the new con-struction even with the increased sizeof the drainage pipe."

-alleviate-the-neighDorhoodVfrooding"—than^irhavimts present state77Tieproblem. said.

After the hearing last Wednesday "Musillo suggested the town purchasethe wooded property and possiblyturn it into a park to prevent its,development.

Doug Nordstrom, mayor, said laterthe town's money would be betterspent fixing the drainage problem.

Voting against the"applicationwere Zeigler, Nordstrom,-Rowe, F,dForce and Henry Dreyer, chairman..Supporting the development were

"McArthur, Cappello, Bob O'Sullivanand Phyllis Dollar.

Declining enrollment closes

Two small Christian schools inCranford are closing their doorsbecause of declining enrollment.

Covenant Christian School, whichDas" operator the past" six "yjfeSrS atLincoln School, and Grace and PeaceSchool, which has operated at theRaritan Road church for five years,are closing over the summer.

This brings to three thenumber of parochial schools whichhave closed in the area since June.St. Anne School in Garwood was clos-ed in June because of decreasedenrollment and operating deficits.Slightly more than 100 students a t -tended trie 30-year-old school lastterm and fewer students were ex-

pected in the fall.Covenant' Christian School was

founded in 1972 in a church in NorthPlainfield^-It operated 'at LaGrandeSchool, Fanwood, for two yearsbefore moving.into Lincoln School in1980. John Kraus, principal, said theboard of trustees made the decisionto close two weeks ago based ondeclining enrollment and finances.He said the K to 12 school anticipated

_axL_£nrollinent—of—50—students—in-September. The school's peak enroll-ment was 150 and it drew studentsfrom Union and Essex counties.

The school paid $30,000 in rent tothe Cranford Board of Education.Sam Morneweck, board president,

said this week the board will not seeknew tenants. He said the CranfordAlternative Program (CAP), a highschool program for emotionallytiisturbed students', will move downfrom the third floor of Lincoln Schoolto the second floor which had been oc-cupied by Covenant Christian.

Morneweck said the school boardwill decide this year what to do withthe building and whether t<£ repairthe-leaky-roof^He-saidTther-e—eould-be a -couple of classrooms that wecould rent out." School board officesare on the first level.

Enrollment information was notavailable from Grace and PeaceSchool, which had operated K to 8grades.

Chalking up hours: Anne Marie Lyp and Alisa<Durner pore over pages. They're among 535readers "popping hours" through symbolic

-firecrackers in burgeoning summer reading,program. Photos by Greg Price.

Library fetes record of 535young summer bookworms

Bookworms are busier than usualin town this summer. A total of 535youngsters have participated in areading program at the CranfordPublic Library this season, a jump of44 percent over last year.

on the wall for each five hours ofreading they accomplish. "We'rereally impressed" with the turnout,said Klimowicz.

So far 2,900 reading hours havepopped up through the symbolic

Local—telephones—^died^for a residcnces-mnr-buslHes^ea:' It pro-d oiminute before dawn Saturday and

th.en came alive through a new com-puterized, electronic switchingsystem.. i• Few people missed the turnover

from the' old electro-mechanicalsystem which occurred at 5 a.m.Many New Jersey Bell customersbecame aware of the change throughB different dial tone, and a mailingfrom the phone company which of-fered upcoming services availableunder the technological transfer todigital electronic switching.• The new system can provide voice,

data and video services for both

esidcncesmnrbuslHes^ea: It provides optional custom calling ser-vices vich as call waiting. As amodular system, it will open the wayto future services such as home bank-Ing and shopping, Informationretrieval from data bases, and otherdata and video services.

The equipment that enabled thechangeover was installed at Bell'sCranford Central Office on AldenStreet starting last spring.

The new digital system coversCranford and much of Kenilworth,affecting exchanges 272, 276 and thenewest exchange here, 709.

already cbnvertea ^ - t H - e g m n v - h a s ^ i ^ g ^ n g • crackers and wtH-be-^ebratedunder a similar machine.

Bell said that customers mayselect from four optional custom call-ing services such as call waiting.Under that program, a customertalking on the phone will hear a tonewhen someone else is calling. Thecustomer can either put the first callon hold and answer the second, orfinish the first conversation and takethe second call.

The digital capability of the systemIs compatible with advanced digitalfiber optic or lightwave technologyNew Jersey Bell is installingthroughout the state.

steadily since the Friends of theLibrary launched it four years agoand Penny Brome, library director,attributes the mounting interest tothe fact that "children are readingmore." She finds that parents seemto be more supportive of reading,starting with infancy, and that theyappreciate the help of the library pro-gram in book selections.

To promote the trend, a libraryteam headed by Judy Klimowicz,assistant director and head of thechildren's department, has beenrecognizing "club" members byplacing a firecracker in their honor

in—dividually and cumulatively in anopen house today at which superreaders will receive free paperbacks.The reading hour total is expected tobe higher once the final tally is madethis week.

"Each year they enjoy the pro-gram more ," said Brome. "They likereading and like gettingrecognition." She thinks that "con-trary to popular opinion, televisionoften seems to encourage reading,"and she cites a public television pro-gram called "Reading Rainbow" forpromoting reading to kids throughreviews.

• Sixty percent of the library pro-gram readers, or 295 youths, are fivethrough eight-year-olds. Another 139are over age 9.

There are 96 preschoolers, whosemothers and fathers read to them,some at the library, more at home.Meryl Layton, owner of the CranfordBook Store, said she has seen thesame trend. One trend in parenting is"early awareness to reading to achild, almost from birth." This hasbeen going on for several years andshe attributes it in large part to JimTrelease, an educator and authorwho urges parents to put in "qualitytime" which youngsters by readingaloud to them. Trelease, a formerstudent of teacher Alvin Schmidt atOrange Avenue School, spoke at aschool sponsored seminar hereseveral years ago, and his works onpreschool education are now serving^as a bible to parents, she said.

\ .