ib^lw*! - red bank register archive

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Fire claims 45 horses at Belmont Park, IB The Register Rainy and foggy Highs around 50 Complete forecast pap ZA Vol. 108 No. 134 YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER. SINCE 1878 MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986 ?5 State Kean inaugural The co-chairman of a committee coor- dinating Governor Thomas H. Kean's second inauguration tomorrow say plan- ning for the event is like juggling the guest lists for five weddings in one week- end 6A Anything could happen Tht week* of preparation and hun- dreds of hours spent to ensure that gubernatorial inaugurations run smooth- ly are no guarantee of a problem-free ceremony, planners say SA Local House calls Starting from scratch A group of Matawan High School students who are considering carpentry as a career build a house as a class project 3A World Body recovery halted Bad weather yeaterday forced an end to shuttle flights returning bodies from the isolated jungle site where 93 people perished in the worst air crash in Guatemalan history 8A Contacts restored Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze left Japan yesterday after re-establishing long-broken political con- tacts and discussing a territorial issue Japan says must be resolved before more progress is made 10A Sports 'Shuffle' time Jim McMahon is the Chicago Bears quarterback and one of Kie soloists on "The Super Bowl Shuffle." Bears' (and other) fans, turn inside for lyrics to "The Shuffle." 7B Business Business dinosaurs? Traditional department storaa are under fire and lumbering toward extinc- tion unless merchants change some time-worn practices, retailing experts say. The mounting competitive pressures on department stores will topple many weak chains, analysts contend 11A Asian computers It wasn't so long ago that American manufacturers of personal computers were predicting confidently that their Asian counterparts would have a hard time establishing a beachhead in the United States. Nevertheless the Asian personal computer invasion has begun. 11A Index Ann Landers... Bloom County Bridge Business Classified Color comics Commentary. Crossword Entertainment.. Horoscope ... 4C . 12A ... 9C . 11A 11B 10C . 13A ... 9A ... 8C 9C Living..- 1C Movies 8C Nation 8A New Jersey 6A Obituaries 5A Opinion 12A People 2A Sports 1B Television 8C Weather 2A Your Town 7C 3M show: 4 Long shot' or swan song? BE IB^LW*! TO THE REGISTER*IRA MARK QOSTIN JERSEY JAM -r- The group Peter Hariung and The Remakes Freehold 3M plant union's efforts to keep the plant open. See rock the Stone Pony in Asbury Park yesterday along with page 4A for more photoa. several other Jersey Shore groups for the benefit of the 'The Boss' shows up at a workers' benefit By BOB NEFF The Register ASBURY PARK - Al Decker, 47, has been with Local 8-760 Oil. Chemical, and Atomic Workers Union for 24 years. Decker, a handicapped forklift operator with four children, will push co-worker Lynn Goldstein out of a job when he is transferred to the 3Mplant across the street in Freehold Township sometime this year Goldstein, 28 and unmarried, will be one of 430 workers laid off as part of the plant closing scheduled by 3M. And Decker said he expects to be laid off by 1987, when he believes the electronic products plant will be closed, following the scheduled closing this spring of the audio- visual tape plant across Willowbrook Road If, he added, his handicap even allows him to accept the job he is assigned at the electronics lab, where he will be trans- ferred after Goldstein is laid off. See STONE PONY Page 14A By MMANDO MACHADO The Register ASBURY PARK - Eleven Shore bands yesterday took part in a 12-hour benefit jam session in The Stone Pony for the 3M Co. workers' nationwide campaign to halt the shutdown of their Freehold Township plant The campaign to stop this spring's scheduled closing of the audio-video prod- ucts facility as well as a layoff of 70 workers in the nearby electrical products plant began shortly after 3M officials announced their plans Nov. 12. So far the campaign has attracted both moral and financial support. About two months ago, the county Board of Free- holders passed a resolution urging 3M officials to reconsider their decision. Rock star and Freehold Borough native Bruce Springsteen donated $20,000. (22,000 came from the national office of the plant's local union, Local 8-760 of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union. Yesterday's concert, which attracted 4,000 people between 2 p.m and 2 a.m., brought in another $20,000 in proceeds, according to Local 8-670's secretary, Linda Miller. The proceeds came from (5 dona- tions at the door as well as the sale of 3M campaign T-shirts and raffle tickets for two portable color televisions The proceeds will go toward campaign expenses, according to Stanley Fischer, president of Local 8-760. "It's a good cause," said John Fitzpatrick, the drummer with Oliver's Twist, one of the bands participating. "I hate to see anybody out of work. If that many people believe in one thing, then it must mean a lot." Another band member, guitarist Shad Woolley of The Squan River Band, said. "A lot of 3M workers follow our band around the Jersey Shore. We thought we'd help them in their time of need." Fischer, a 3M employee for 17 years, expressed appreciation to the bands, the crowd and The Stone Pony for taking part in the benefit. See 3M Page 14A Gramm-Rudman dominates Congress' thoughts By STEVEN KOMAItOW Associated Press WASHINGTON - The debate over guns versus butter - raised to new intensity by the sweeping Gramm-Rudman budget cuts - dominates the agenda along with tax revision as the second session of the 99th Congress opens this week The lawmakers will be operating for the first time under the Gramm-Rudman law they passed last month, which mandates deep spending cuts if Congress and the president fail to pass enough cutbacks or tax increases to meet deficit-reduction targets Government agencies are already laboring to make the (117 billion cut required on March 1, which would still leave a deficit of about $208 billion. Far more onerous is the prospect of more than $50 billion in cuts to meet the fiscal 1987 deficit target of (144 billion. The 1987 fiscal year begins Oct. 1. so the decision-making will be spotlighted in the campaigns for 34 Senate and 435 House seats. Gramm-Rudman, to reach a balanced budget by fiscal 1991, cuts a wide range of programs, and "that's going to be very unfair to some programs and some groups," said Senate Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va. Rep. Les Aspin, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, yesterday released a report projecting that Gramm-Rudman will take more out of military personnel and readiness than out of high-tech hardware. "Over the next five years, Gramm-Rudman will give us weapons, but without all the people or repair funds needed to man and maintain them," the Wisconsin Democrat said Gramm-Rudman cuts don't hit Social Security or welfare benefits, veterans compensation, or interest on the national debt. But foreign aid. law enforcement, air traffic control and countless other government tasks are being cut back. and shielding one area from cuts would mean other areas get hit harder President Reagan helped push through the House a major tax overhaul slashing individual and corporate Lax rates while eliminating or reducing some deductions and credits The administration will try in the Senate to take away some of what the president considers anti-business bias in the House plan Gramm-Rudman, named for its sponsors. Sen Phil Gramm. R-Texa3, and Sen. Warren Rudman. R-N.H , doesn't rule out tax increases to reduce deficits. But Reagan promises he'd veto any move in that direction. "The president rejects a tax increase." Reagan's budget director James C Miller III said yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press" program, adding, "not this year, not in the future I don't think " See CONGRESS Page 14A THE REGISTER/CARL D. FORINO PLAY BALL Carlos Vega, 13. of Long Branch, and his brother, Dameo. 8 1/2, improvise a game of handball with a tennis ball bounced off a wall at the National Guard Armory in Long Branch, Monmouth legislators favor idea of lieutenant governor By DAN JACOISON The Register Citing the need for continuity in the state's executive branch, Monmouth Coun- ty's legislative delegation yesterday ex- pressed general support for the creation of a lieutenant governor's post in New Jersey. If a New Jersey governor dies, resigns or is removed from office, his job passes to leaders of the Legislature in an order prescribed by the state Constitution. First in line is the Senate president, followed by the Assembly speaker and Cabinet members. A new governor would be chosen in the next general election. Gov. Thomas H. Kean first called for the creation of such a position in his State of the State address last week, saying it was necessary to ensure the continuity and quality of leadership. Kean said the second- in-command should be part of the gubernatorial ticket and be elected by voters statewide. "I'd be fully supportive of the proposal. I think it's very important to have a natural succession, " said Assemblyman Anthony M. Villane Jr., R-Monmouth "It would relieve the governor of some of his duties, like cutting ribbons, and making appearances," Villane said. "If Ithe gov- ernor) had to go out of state, it leaves somebody in office who isjn full accord with the governor." On the costs of creating the post, Villane stated, "I think the benefits more than offset the costs ' Kean told the The Associated Press yesterday it would cost about (100.000 to (120.000 a year to pay for the office of a lieutenant governor Assemblyman Joseph Palaia. R-Mon- "I'd be fully supportive of the proposal.w Anthony Villane State Assemblyman In the past I was against it. But if Kean wants to look into it, then it merits study ...»» Joseph Azzolina State Assemblyman mouth, voiced support for a lieutenant governor because "government is getting so complex ' "I think a lieutenant governor might be an alternative to giving it to the Senate president." Palaia said "I think it might deserve some looking into I'm looking forward to hearing from my constituents on it." he said Assemblywoman Marie Muhler, R-Mon- mouth. also favors the proposal because of the orderly succession the post would provide Muhler cited the separation of powers as an argument for a lieutenant governor She said that more "orderly succession" would be provided by a second-in-line in the" See KEAN Page 14A Action Front Page Readers get results. Attract 68.000 readers with your ad here. Flowers.Fruit Baskets.(lifts Send something nice to show you care. The Directory of Florists is on the Obituary Page Satellite Self-Storage Rte 35, Ocean Township 493-3393 The Pear Tree Lunches 11:30-3. 842-8747 BAHRS SALITES MONMOUTH BEACH 25<". off dinner to town residents this week. Mon -W-i 872-1245

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Fire claims 45 horses at Belmont Park, IB

The Register Rainy and foggyHighs around 50Complete forecast pap ZA

Vol. 108 No. 134 YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER. SINCE 1878 MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986 ?5

State

Kean inauguralThe co-chairman of a committee coor-dinating Governor Thomas H. Kean'ssecond inauguration tomorrow say plan-ning for the event is like juggling theguest lists for five weddings in one week-end 6A

Anything could happenTht week* of preparation and hun-dreds of hours spent to ensure thatgubernatorial inaugurations run smooth-ly are no guarantee of a problem-freeceremony, planners say SA

Local

House callsStarting from scratch A group ofMatawan High School students who areconsidering carpentry as a career build ahouse as a class project 3A

World

Body recovery haltedBad weather yeaterday forced an endto shuttle flights returning bodies fromthe isolated jungle site where 93 peopleperished in the worst air crash inGuatemalan history 8A

Contacts restoredSoviet Foreign Minister EduardShevardnadze left Japan yesterday afterre-establishing long-broken political con-tacts and discussing a territorial issueJapan says must be resolved beforemore progress is made 10A

Sports

'Shuffle' timeJim McMahon is the Chicago Bearsquarterback and one of Kie soloists on"The Super Bowl Shuffle." Bears' (andother) fans, turn inside for lyrics to "TheShuffle." 7B

Business

Business dinosaurs?Traditional department storaa areunder fire and lumbering toward extinc-tion unless merchants change sometime-worn practices, retailing expertssay. The mounting competitive pressureson department stores will topple manyweak chains, analysts contend 11A

Asian computersIt wasn't so long ago that Americanmanufacturers of personal computerswere predicting confidently that theirAsian counterparts would have a hardtime establishing a beachhead in theUnited States. Nevertheless the Asianpersonal computer invasion has begun.

11A

Index

Ann Landers...Bloom CountyBridgeBusinessClassifiedColor comics

Commentary.CrosswordEntertainment..Horoscope

... 4C

. 12A

... 9C

. 11A11B10C

. 13A

... 9A... 8C

9C

Living..- 1CMovies 8CNation 8ANew Jersey 6AObituaries 5AOpinion 12APeople 2ASports 1BTelevision 8CWeather 2AYour Town 7C

3M show: 4Long shot' or swan song?

BE

IB^LW*!

TOTHE REGISTER*IRA MARK QOSTIN

JERSEY JAM -r- The group Peter Hariung and The Remakes Freehold 3M plant union's efforts to keep the plant open. Seerock the Stone Pony in Asbury Park yesterday along with page 4A for more photoa.several other Jersey Shore groups for the benefit of the

'The Boss' shows up at a workers' benefitBy BOB NEFFThe Register

ASBURY PARK - Al Decker, 47, hasbeen with Local 8-760 Oil. Chemical, andAtomic Workers Union for 24 years.

Decker, a handicapped forklift operatorwith four children, will push co-worker

Lynn Goldstein out of a job when he istransferred to the 3M plant across the streetin Freehold Township sometime this year

Goldstein, 28 and unmarried, will be oneof 430 workers laid off as part of the plantclosing scheduled by 3M.

And Decker said he expects to be laid offby 1987, when he believes the electronic

products plant will be closed, following thescheduled closing this spring of the audio-visual tape plant across Willowbrook Road

If, he added, his handicap even allowshim to accept the job he is assigned at theelectronics lab, where he will be trans-ferred after Goldstein is laid off.

See STONE PONY Page 14A

By MMANDO MACHADOThe Register

ASBURY PARK - Eleven Shore bandsyesterday took part in a 12-hour benefit jamsession in The Stone Pony for the 3M Co.workers' nationwide campaign to halt theshutdown of their Freehold Township plant

The campaign to stop this spring'sscheduled closing of the audio-video prod-ucts facility as well as a layoff of 70 workersin the nearby electrical products plantbegan shortly after 3M officials announcedtheir plans Nov. 12.

So far the campaign has attracted bothmoral and financial support. About twomonths ago, the county Board of Free-holders passed a resolution urging 3Mofficials to reconsider their decision. Rockstar and Freehold Borough native BruceSpringsteen donated $20,000. (22,000 camefrom the national office of the plant's localunion, Local 8-760 of the Oil, Chemical andAtomic Workers Union.

Yesterday's concert, which attracted4,000 people between 2 p.m and 2 a.m.,brought in another $20,000 in proceeds,according to Local 8-670's secretary, LindaMiller. The proceeds came from (5 dona-tions at the door as well as the sale of 3Mcampaign T-shirts and raffle tickets for twoportable color televisions

The proceeds will go toward campaignexpenses, according to Stanley Fischer,president of Local 8-760.

" I t ' s a good cause , " said JohnFitzpatrick, the drummer with Oliver'sTwist, one of the bands participating. "Ihate to see anybody out of work. If thatmany people believe in one thing, then itmust mean a lot."

Another band member, guitarist ShadWoolley of The Squan River Band, said. "Alot of 3M workers follow our band aroundthe Jersey Shore. We thought we'd helpthem in their time of need."

Fischer, a 3M employee for 17 years,expressed appreciation to the bands, thecrowd and The Stone Pony for taking partin the benefit.

See 3M Page 14A

Gramm-Rudman dominates Congress' thoughtsBy STEVEN KOMAItOWAssociated Press

WASHINGTON - The debate over guns versus butter -raised to new intensity by the sweeping Gramm-Rudmanbudget cuts - dominates the agenda along with tax revisionas the second session of the 99th Congress opens this week

The lawmakers will be operating for the first time underthe Gramm-Rudman law they passed last month, whichmandates deep spending cuts if Congress and the presidentfail to pass enough cutbacks or tax increases to meetdeficit-reduction targets

Government agencies are already laboring to make the(117 billion cut required on March 1, which would still leavea deficit of about $208 billion. Far more onerous is theprospect of more than $50 billion in cuts to meet the fiscal1987 deficit target of (144 billion.

The 1987 fiscal year begins Oct. 1. so the decision-making

will be spotlighted in the campaigns for 34 Senate and 435House seats.

Gramm-Rudman, to reach a balanced budget by fiscal1991, cuts a wide range of programs, and "that's going tobe very unfair to some programs and some groups," saidSenate Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.

Rep. Les Aspin, chairman of the House Armed ServicesCommittee, yesterday released a report projecting thatGramm-Rudman will take more out of military personneland readiness than out of high-tech hardware.

"Over the next five years, Gramm-Rudman will give usweapons, but without all the people or repair funds neededto man and maintain them," the Wisconsin Democrat said

Gramm-Rudman cuts don't hit Social Security or welfarebenefits, veterans compensation, or interest on the nationaldebt. But foreign aid. law enforcement, air traffic controland countless other government tasks are being cut back.

and shielding one area from cuts would mean other areasget hit harder

President Reagan helped push through the House a majortax overhaul slashing individual and corporate Lax rateswhile eliminating or reducing some deductions and creditsThe administration will try in the Senate to take away someof what the president considers anti-business bias in theHouse plan

Gramm-Rudman, named for its sponsors. Sen PhilGramm. R-Texa3, and Sen. Warren Rudman. R-N.H ,doesn't rule out tax increases to reduce deficits. ButReagan promises he'd veto any move in that direction.

"The president rejects a tax increase." Reagan's budgetdirector James C Miller III said yesterday on NBC's "Meetthe Press" program, adding, "not this year, not in thefuture I don't think "

See CONGRESS Page 14A

THE REGISTER/CARL D. FORINO

PLAY BALL — Carlos Vega, 13. of Long Branch, and his brother, Dameo.8 1/2, improvise a game of handball with a tennis ball bounced off a wall atthe National Guard Armory in Long Branch,

Monmouth legislators favoridea of lieutenant governor

By DAN JACOISONThe Register

Citing the need for continuity in thestate's executive branch, Monmouth Coun-ty's legislative delegation yesterday ex-pressed general support for the creation ofa lieutenant governor's post in New Jersey.

If a New Jersey governor dies, resigns oris removed from office, his job passes toleaders of the Legislature in an orderprescribed by the state Constitution. First inline is the Senate president, followed by theAssembly speaker and Cabinet members. Anew governor would be chosen in the nextgeneral election.

Gov. Thomas H. Kean first called for thecreation of such a position in his State of theState address last week, saying it wasnecessary to ensure the continuity andquality of leadership. Kean said the second-in-command should be part of thegubernatorial ticket and be elected by votersstatewide.

"I'd be fully supportive of the proposal.I think it's very important to have a naturalsuccession, " said Assemblyman Anthony M.Villane Jr., R-Monmouth

"It would relieve the governor of some ofhis duties, like cutting ribbons, and makingappearances," Villane said. "If Ithe gov-ernor) had to go out of state, it leavessomebody in office who isjn full accord withthe governor."

On the costs of creating the post, Villanestated, "I think the benefits more than offsetthe costs '

Kean told the The Associated Pressyesterday it would cost about (100.000 to(120.000 a year to pay for the office of alieutenant governor

Assemblyman Joseph Palaia. R-Mon-

" I ' d be fullysupportive of theproposal.w

Anthony VillaneState Assemblyman

In the past I wasagainst it. But ifKean wants to lookinto it, then it meritsstudy ...»»

Joseph AzzolinaState Assemblyman

mouth, voiced support for a lieutenantgovernor because "government is getting socomplex '

"I think a lieutenant governor might be analternative to giving it to the Senatepresident." Palaia said

"I think it might deserve some lookinginto I'm looking forward to hearing frommy constituents on it." he said

Assemblywoman Marie Muhler, R-Mon-mouth. also favors the proposal because ofthe orderly succession the post wouldprovide

Muhler cited the separation of powers asan argument for a lieutenant governor Shesaid that more "orderly succession" wouldbe provided by a second-in-line in the"

See KEAN Page 14A

Action Front Page Readersget results. Attract 68.000 readerswith your ad here.

Flowers.Fruit Baskets.(liftsSend something nice to show youcare. The Directory of Florists ison the Obituary Page

Satellite Self-StorageRte 35, Ocean Township 493-3393

The Pear TreeLunches 11:30-3. 842-8747

BAHRS SALITES MONMOUTHBEACH

25<". off dinner to town residentsthis week. Mon -W-i 872-1245

lA Thf Hegitltr MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

Worth the waitGREENWICH, Conn. (AP)

— When Doreen Thompsonlost her engagement ring,she was a new mother bath-Ing her Infant daughter.

Last week she got It back,31 years after she lost It,thanks to an amateur sleuthwho tracked her down.

Her old apartment wasconverted to offices In theyears since she lost thediamond ring and plumbersfound it when they replaced

The plumbers turned It~ to office manager

ly Hurta, who read theInscription, "W.T.

P., June 13,1953" andsearching old news-

papers looking for peoplewith those initials.

She found an engagementannouncement for William

pson and Doreen Pen-, followed up by finding a

it telephone listing for aam Thompson and

a surprised Mrs.pson.

Mrs. Thompson, now agrandmother, got the ringback Friday during an Im-promptu ceremony In her oldapartment. She slipped it onher finger, next to a replicaher husband bought heryears after they had given upon finding the original.Clean cabbies

NEW BRUNSWICK (AP) -Cabbies should pull theirsocks up. And shave moreclosely. And in general im-prove their appearance, says•c i ty councilman.

It they don't do that, saysCouncilman Joseph Egan,the city might have to con-sider a dress code for them.' "In the summertime, wehad complaints with T-shirtssaying all different things,like Grateful Dead, some-thing like that," he saidFriday.

"It hurts us and the city'simage and It hurts theirbusiness, too.' "It comes down to, 'Wouldyou want your wife to get Ina cab with someone whodoesn't have a good appear-ance?'" Egan added.

Council President RoccoCatanese said slovenly cab-tjies are not a major problembut a meeting will be sched-uled to encourage sprucingup by those who need it.

Up and away!GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) —

When Brian Peterson set hisballoon aloft last month witha note in it as part of a classproject, he hoped It wouldtravel far.

11 did —7,600 miles." fjrian, 8, received a letter

from Andrei Veljacic ofYugoslavia who told him hefound the balloon off theYugoslav Island of Cres onDec. 22, less than a weekafter Brian launched It Dec.17.

"I know where Yugoslaviais now," said Brian, addingthat he planned to respond tothe letter.

"I'm gonna ask If it's a boyor a girl, how old she or heis, what sports does she orhe Nke, or do you like to colora lot, read a lot, If you like toplay games with people, doyou go to school," he said.

Teacher Sally Moxnesssaid 10 residents from dlf-

: ferent parts of Arizona alsohave reported findingballoon notes.

PEOPLE

The Regiiier

Ma" RatesDs<iy

27 00S4 00

100 00

Positively an imageATLANTA (AP) - Students at the

predominantly black Morehouse Col-lege packed the school's King Inter-national Chapel to see comedian BillCosby receive an honorary doctorateof humane letters.

Cosby, star of NBC-TV's "TheCosby Show," told the studentsSaturday night that he frequently isasked to address young audiencesbecause he is considered to be a"positive image."

"If you want to see a positiveimage, it's in your house," he said"It's standing there washing yourunderwear. If you want to see apositive image, it's cooking dinnerand has a job to go to in themorning."

Richard Blackwell

Who will be next?ATLANTIC CITY, NJ. (AP) -

Richard Blackwell, the fashion de-signer who last year branded singerand actress Cher a "pluckedcockatoo," will emerge from hisBeverly Hills mansion this week andfly to Trump's Castle Hotel andCasino to announce his 26th annuallist of the world's 10 worst dressedwomen.

Blackwell is scheduled to an-nounce his picks Tuesday and displayseveral new fashions inspired byHalley's Comet.

Blackwell uses his list to dressdown those who "violate fashion'sprime purpose — to glorify women."

Among Blackwell's targets in thepast have been Joan Collins, MissAmerica IMS Sharlene Wells, SallyField, Princess Diana, BrookeShields, Caroline Kennedy and, in anot-so-gallant stab, the male rockstar Prince.

Women whose names appear onthe list three times in a row becomemembers of his 'hall of fame." Theyinclude Barbra Streisand, ChristinaOnassis, Bette Midler and ElizabethTaylor.

Blackwell insists that somewomen covet a spot on the list.

"Where are they going to get thatmuch publicity unless they murdertheir mothers?" he said in a 1983interview.

On Tuesday, Blackwell plans todisplay several recent designs of hisown inspired by the infrequentappearance of Halley's Comet,Spencer said, describing them as"beaded illusion dresses."

Diana R O M

Celebrated chainTAFT, Calif. (AP) - Nearly 100

celebrities, including Kenny Rogersand Diana Ross, held hands with1,200 townspeople to form a mile-long human chain for a promotionalvideo.

Residents took snapshots, lined upfor autographs and chatted with theentertainers during Saturday'sgathering in this central Californiatown of 6,800 people 100 milesnorthwest of Los Angeles.

The three-minute video will beplayed during the pre-game show ofthe Super Bowl on Jan. 26 to promotea project called "Hands AcrossAmerica," in which people will beasked to contribute money and join

hands across the nation to raisemoney for hungry people.

Miss Ross, whose limousine brokedown on Interstate 5, was brought tothe town in a cruiser by CaliforniaHighway Patrol Officer Art Love-lady.

Other entertainers who took partincluded singers Juice Newton andSheena Easton.

Aid for cerebral palsyLOS ANGELES (AP) - John

Ritter, Scott Baio, Nancy Dussault,Florence Henderson, Wayne Newtonand Henry Winkler split the hostingduties on the eighth annual "Week-end of the Stars Telethon," a 22-hourfund-raiser to benefit victims ofcerebral palsy.

The celebrity-studded show tele-vised from New York and LosAngeles beginning Saturday at 8 p.m.PST was shown on 100 TV stationscoast-to-coast It was to conclude at6 p.m. PST Sunday.

The show featured Gavin McLeod,Robert Gulllaume, Dennis Jamesand an overnight marathon of starsincluding Delia Reese, the OakRidge Boys, Charo and HintonBattle.

Organizers said more than1600,000 was raised in the first twohours.

Mayor Tom Bradley presentedTom Ritter, a cerebral palsy victimand brother of John Ritter, with aCity of Los Angeles proclamationdeclaring it the "Weekend of theStars" Saturday and Sundaythroughout the city.

Cher's ex in troubleDAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -

Rock musician Gregg Allman facessix months in jail unless he pays$10,700 in child support, but his (lawyer says the singer is broke.

Circuit Judge William Johnsonissued the order Friday, ruling thatAllman owes the money to ShelleyKay Jefts for support of their son,Devon, 13. Allman, of the Allman'Brothers Band, was divorced fromMiss Jefts in 1972 after six monthsof marriage.

"The trouble, your honor, is thatMr. Allman is a 42- or 43-year-oldrock man past his prime," said hisattorney, Henry Duffett. "Mr. Al-lman is in a very poor financialsituation. In fact, he's insolvent."

Duffett said Allman, actually 38,has debts of $250,000, including J434owed to a local pawn shop, and alsohas four or five support paymentobligations to other children

ASSOCIATED PRESS

IN HONOR OF KING — Former president Jimmy Carter talkswith Coretta Scott King this weekend in Atlanta at a "Salute toGreatness" dinner. The gathering was part of the events heldin conjunction with the first national holiday in honor of slaincivil rights leaden Martin Luther King Jr. Tonight NBC willbroadcast an "All Star Celebration Honoring Dr. Martin LutherKing Jr.," with appearances of celebrity guests including EddieMurphy, Elizabeth Taylor, and Bill Cosby.

Cops vs.cops?MIAMI (AP) - A sellout crowd of

more than 15,000 people cheered ontheir favorite police department andsaw Don Johnson of TV's "MiamiVice" ride onto the gridiron on thefender of a jet black sports car in thethird annual Pig Bowl football game

The Force of the Miami policedepartment slammed the door on theMetro-Dade County Deputy DawgsSaturday to win 3-0.

Besides Johnson, celebrities pres-ent included several past and presentmembers of the Miami Dolphinsfootball team.

A mock terrorist attack wasstaged during halftime, which wascleared up in no time when specialpolice SWAT teams from bothdepartments counterattacked. Amedical helicopter swooped downonto the field and carried off the"wounded."

Proceeds go to the United Way andPartners for Youth in Dade County.

Awaited reunionPARIS (AP) - The 15-year-old

son of Soviet movie director AndreiTarkovsky and the filmmaker's 85-

year-old mother-in-law arrived Sun-day in France, ending a four-yeareffort by Tarkovsky to bring them tothe West.

According to news reports inStockholm, French President" Fran-cois Mitterrand intervened withSoviet officials to obtain exit visasfor the two. Swedish Prime MinisterOlof Palme also had said he wouldintervene on Tarkovsky's behalf.

Tarkovsky, 54, has directed sixfilms, including "Andrei Roublev,""Stalker," and "Nostalgia." He haslived in the West since 1984.

Campaign crutchBOISE, Idaho (AP) - Gov. John

Evans is home from the hospitalwith a broken ankle that will put acrimp in his exercise routine as wellas his campaign for the U.S. Senate.

Evans suffered the broken ankleTuesday while jogging on the secondday of a campaign trip through thestate. He is trying to defeat Re-publican Sen. Steve Symms.

The governor left the hospitalSaturday, his 61st birthday, but.itwill be at least two weeks before hecan hit the campaign trial again.

THE WEATHER

50,

The Forecast/for 7 p.m. EST. Mon.. Jan .20 *P Weather Elsewhere

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THE REGISTER end T H £ SUNDAY REGIS-TER are Doth puokened t>y T H E RED BANKREGISTER (NC

Jersey Shore

Rain, drizzle and fog this morning.Partial clearing this afternoon.Highs will be around SO. Partlycloudy tonight. Lows will range from25 to 30. Mostly sunny tomorrow.Highs will range from the middle toupper 40s.

ExtendedFair Wednesday Highs will be in

the middle to upper 40s and lows willbe in the lower to middle 30s Chanceof rain on Thursday. Highs willrange from the lower to middle 90sand lows will range from the middleto upper 30s. Clearing Friday. Highswill range from the middle to upper30s and lows will be around 30.

Tides

Sandy' HookTODAY: Highs 3:11 a.m. and 3:37

p.m. Lows 9:50 a.m. and 9:48 p.mTOMORROW: Highs 4:09 a.m.

and 4:38 p.m. Lows 10:42 a.m. and10:38 p.m.

For Red Bank and Rumsonbridges, add two hours. Sea Bright,deduct ten minutes. Long Branch,deduct 15 minutes. Highlands bridge,add 40 minutes.

TODAY: Sunrise: 7:16 a.m.Sunset: 4:58 p.m.

TOMORROW: Sunrise: 7:15 a.m.Sunset 5:00 p.m.

Marine Forecast

Manasquan to Cape Henlopen to 20nautical miles offshore.

Winds will be westerly at 20 to 25knots today and northwesterly at 10to 20 knots tonight. Chance ofshowers today and fair tonight.Visibility will be five miles or moretoday and more than five milestonight. Average seas will be 3 to 6feet today. Tomorrow will be fairwith winds northwesterly at 10 to 20knots.

Temperature*overnight low to

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CLOUDY PICTURE — Yesterday's satellite photo shows clouds andshowers stretching from the Midwest eastward through the OhioValley into the Northwest and Mid Atlantic states. Frontal cloudsextend from the Pacific Northwest and northern California eastwardthrough the intermountain region into the Rockies.

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ALBANY — The winning numbersSaturday in the New York Statedrawing were: 12, 14, 22, 32, 34 and43. The supplementary number was3.

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The erDIPARTMKNT HIADS

J. Lister, President & Publisher Phillip W. Nlosl, ControllerCliff BdracMman, Editor Marvin Poel, Production DirectorFrank Q. Bottow, Advertising Director Laura A. L—, Promotion DirectorChart** I. DeZutter, Circulation Director

HAVIANIWSTIPTFor Local, Business and Obituariescall our City Desk at 542-4000

ext. 200,210,220

Lifestyle and Your Town, call.. 542-4000 ext. 265

Sports 542-4000ext. 295,215,225

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PROBLIM WITH A 8TORYTIt Is the policy of The Register to correct all errors offact and to clarify any misunderstanding created byarticles. Corrections and clarifications will appearon Page 2A. Information should be directed to theCity Desk, 542-4000 ext. 200,210,220.

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MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986 3A

DigestTruck arson indictment

FREEHOLD - A Monmouth County grandjury has indicted a Union Beach man oncharges of setting two dump trucks on fire

n the borough on Oct. 21.Frank Toldt, 23, of Fifth Street, was charged

with two counts each of aggravated arson andarson.

In other indictments:A Keyport man was charged with assaulting

another man with a tire iron in Keyport on Oct.

Also:William Pease, 28, of Van Dorn Street, was

charged with aggravated assault, aggravatedassault with a deadly weapon, possession of aweapon for unlawful purposes, and unlawfulpossession of a weapon.

A Highlands man was charged with taking amicrowave oven and food chopper from theGangway Restaurant on Nov. 2 in AtlanticHighlands

David Gardenier. 24, of Valley Street, wascharged with burglary and theft of movableproperty

A Belmar couple was charged with endanger-ing the welfare of two children.

Gary and Carmel Haviland, of FourteenthAvenue, ages 33 and 29 respectively, werecharged with endangering the welfare of a childand child neglect.

A Long Branch man was charged with stealingcash and jewelry from a home in Long Branchbetween Oct. 15 and 19, and taking more than$500 from a home in Long Branch on March 29.

Michael Vafiadis, 20, of Brighton Avenue, wasindicted on two counts of each of burglary andtheft of movable property

A Neptune man was indicted for theft bydeception.

Russell Hardy, 32, of Munroe Avenue, wascharged with obtaining $14,290.61 from theMonmouth County Board of Social Services fromSeptember 1983 to August 1984 that he was notentitled to.

Three men were charged with possession ofa controlled dangerous substance.

Edmond Butler, 23, of Orchard Hill Drive,Lincroft; and Dana Clark, 24, of Patten Avenue,Long Branch; and Brian Cassidy, 22, ofPredmore Avenue, Colonia, were charged withpossessing cocaine in Sea Bright on Nov. 1.

An Asbury Park man was indicted forburglary.

Gaston Smith. 25, of Ridge Avenue, wascharged with breaking into a business on Nov.6 in Long Branch.

An East Orange man was indicted on twocounts of theft of movable property.

Henry Dunk, 47, of Second Street, wascharged with taking between (200 and J5O0 fromKwik Check in Aberdeen on Oct. 9, and morethan (500 from the Heritage Bakery in Matawanon Nov. 13

Three men were indicted on two counts ofpossession of a controlled dangerous substance.

William Parham, 33. of Hawthorne Street InAberdeen, Robert Jones, 21, of Whitmer Placein Long Branch, and George Farrow, 21, ofWhitmere Avenue in Long Branch, were chargedwith possessing cocaine in Neptune on Sept. 1

A Long Branch man was charged withpossession of a controlled dangerous substance.

Michael McDonald, 24, of Fifth Avenue, wascharged with possessing cocaine in Long Branchon Oct. 4

A Jersey City man was charged withunlawfully using someone else's Visa card at('aider's in the Monmouth Mall on Sept. 11.

Larry Darnell Stevens, 21, of BrinkerhoffApartments, was charged with credit card theftand unlawful use of a credit card.

An East Keansburg man was charged withforgery and theft by deception.

Robert Steele, 27, of Seabreeze Avenue, wasindicted on five counts each of forgery and theftby deception.

An Ocean man was charged with injuringsomeone with his automobile on Sept. 14 inHowell

Mark S. Hansen, 26, of Allen Avenue, wascharged with assault by auto.

A Long Branch man was charged with thesexual assault of a 16-year-old in Long Branchon Oct. 18.

Geraldo Durante, also known as GeraldoDuarte, 33, of Morris Avenue, was charged withsexual assault and endangering the welfare of achild.

A West Be'lmar man was charged with thesexual assault of a ten-year-old.

A correction

Due to a reporting error, the Register printeda story Jan. 17 that the developers of theproposed Holmdel Golf and Country Club

development want the county to expand its plansto take the land for the development throughcondemnation. However, this is not the case,according to the developers' attorney.

The issue surrounds a tract of land owned byRonald Aquaviva and Frank DiMisa, on whichthey want to build a development includingcondominiums, luxury townhouses and a golfcourse near the Swimming River Reservoir inHolmdel.

At this time, the county believes that for legalpurposes the tract of land measures approx-imately 366 acres. However, Aquaviva's andDiMisa's attorney filed a motion in SuperiorCourt this past week which would add 80 acresof the developers' land to the tract's boundaries.The additional 80 acres are located acrossNewman Springs Road from the 366 acres.

The borders of the tract will be settled in aSuperior Court hearing.

The county wants to prevent the proposeddevelopment by taking the land where it will bebuilt through condemnation, and last summerthe county began condemnation by taking 77acres of the developers' land.

The county must pay Aquaviva and DiMisa forthe 77 acres and the price will be determined incoming months by three court-appointed com-missioners.

However, under the rules of condemnation thesize of Aquaviva's. and DiMisa's tract couldaffect the price of the 77 acres.

If the developers prevail and successfullyenlarge the boundaries of the tract, thecommissioners may choose a larger price tagfor the 77 acres of land.

MATAWAN HIGH SCHOOL PROJECT3

BEDROOM CHELSEACOMPLETION DATE SPRING'86

FOR SALE. PUBLIC AUCTION

FOR SALE — Some of the students in the building trades class at MatawanHigh School hang the "for sale" sign on the front of the house the class built.

THE REGISTER/ED BRETT

From left to right, they are, Bill Bonetto, Allen Mortenson, Greg Larson, MM«Urbealis, Andy Malinconico and Seann Dolan.

Students building future from ground upBf CAMILLE THOMASThe Register

MATAWAN - Students in Matawan High School'sbuilding trades class are literally building a foundationto set a career on.

The kids in Stan Lachiewicz's class are building thatfoundation on a three-bedroom Chelsea ranch that sitstemporarily on cinder blocks just outside the shop wingof the high school.

Lachiewicz, the high school's building trades teacher,said he got the idea to have his class build the yellow,vinyl-sided house ai a project after hearing about similarprojects in other school districts.

He said he felt students could gain more from his shopclass if they could actually put classroom theory intopractice, while gaining practical carpentry skills as well.

"These students take a great deal of pride in what theydo," he said. "It's like getting a (grade of) 100 on paper,except with this they can really see what they've done."

In the past, Matawan High School building tradesclasses have built scale models of homes, and visitedconstruction sites, while schools in other districts havebuilt homes, only to tear them down at the end of theyear, Lachiewicz said.

But once the house that Matawan Regional built iscompleted this spring, it will be sold through the publicbidding process. That will give the Matawan-AberdeenRegional Board of Education a chance to recoup the123,000 it laid out for materials.

The highest bidder will be responsible for having themodular home trucked away on a flatbed and theninstalled on a permanent foundation.

So far the school has received at least 25 inquiries fromlocal clergymen, real estate salespeople and residents,

said Principal Robert Nesney.In building a home, the students must first plan, then

present to local governmental bodies for approval, build,and then finally sell. This process teaches the studentsexactly what is involved in the construction process, saidNesney, who lent Lachiewicz his full support when he wasapproached with the idea.

"The more practical and more purposeful you canmake an activity, the more meaningful it will be for thestudents," the principal said.

The board of education approved the idea in the springof 1984, giving the 10 kids in last year's building tradesclass and 12 in this year's as opportunity to work on thehouse, Lachiewicz said.

In addition to his class, 14 students in the cabinetmaking class and 18 in the techical electronics class willalso be working on the house.

Students learn carpentry skills from framing andsheathing to roofing and siding with some sheetrocking,trimwork and wiring in between, Lachiewicz said.

"You learn a little bit of eveythlng out here," said BillDatz, 17, a Matawan High School junior. Datz said heworked last summer as a helper for Jersey Sheeting, aMatawan contracting business.

They also learn to weather the elements, often workingoutside on cold winter days and doing interior work whenit rains. It's the nature of the business.

"I really enjoy this because it's one of the few classesthat you can take that you can actually stand back andsee what you've made," said 17-year-old Ken Tranoris."When I was younger, I used to build (backyard) forts,but this is a whole house that someone's going to live in.It's a great feeling.

"I'd rather be in this class than be one of the kids who

walk around with their faces in the books," he said. Hisenthusiasm landed him a job with Lachiewicz, whosupplements his teacher's salary with small contractingjobs. JQ'J

Tranoris also intends to join the carpenter's union afterhe graduates this year.

"You can make pretty decent money doing this for aliving," he said.

Apparently, many of Lachiewicz's students realizethat. Many are employed part-time by local builders andcontractors, he said.

In fact, after the class presented its building plans tothe Aberdeen Township Planning Board last spring -which waived M.000 to 15,000 in construction fees for theproject — three students were offered jobs with localbuilders.

"People were so impressed with them that after themeeting, three of the students were offered jobs — onewith a local surveyor and architect and two with localcontractors," said Nesney. "They really are gainingmarketable skills. These students are valuable em-ployees."

The project received the Planning Board's approval inNovember.

Not only do the students involved in this project takepride in their work, their classmates do as well, Nemeysaid.

Since work began, the house was vandalized only oust,he said, adding that he believed the perpetrators wereyouths from another high school on a local vandalismspree.

All of the windows have been boarded up since twowere smashed in that incident and as an extra precaution,some of the young builders even come back at night tokeep a watchful eye on their work.

Probe finds plug started Marlboro school fireBy DAN JACMSON

mt TED LOUDThe Register

MARLBORO - A faulty plug on astereo system caused a blaze Saturdaynight that damaged a building at theInstitute of Torah and Technology onWolleytown Road, according to apreliminary investigation, said Vic Bek-ker, chief of the Morganville IndependentFire Co.

Eighteen or 19 people were in the schoolwhen the fire broke out but all escapedsafely, Bekker said Saturday night.

The top floor of the building was"completely gutted," and the rest of thebuilding suffered water damage, Bekkersaid. No monetary estimate of damageshas been done yet.

However, Bekker said, the buildingremained "structurally sound."

A maintenance man suffered a backinjury when he ran upstairs to try to putout the fire, Samuel Sachs, a member ofthe school's board of trustees, said lastnight.

Robin Eckel, a firefighter, also sus-tained injuries to his hand while fightingthe blaze, Bekker said yesterday. Eckelwas treated at Bayshore CommunityHospital, Holmdel, and released, Bekkersaid.

Sachs said that classes had begun at theschool in September. The students, wholived at the building, were sent homebecause of the fire, he said.

Arrangements will be made as soon aspossible for lodging facilities so thatclasses may begin again, Sachs said.

The previous occupant of the building,the Little Flower Children's Center, hadhoused some of its employees in thebuilding, Sachs said.

Certificates of occupancy had beengranted for the building when it operatedas a nursery school, and fire alarms andemergency lighting had been installed,Sachs said.

The Marlboro Zoning Board had ap-proved the school's use of the building lastAugust, he said.

The building is still owned by a Mary

Doty, who was unavailable for commentlast night, but a use and occupancyagreement was in effect, according toSachs.

The building's ownership should trans-fer to the institute within a month, Sachssaid.

Financial losses caused by the blaze hadnot yet been established, but Sachsexpects that "an insurance adjuster willbe out tomorrow."

About 40 firefighters responded to theblaze at the three-story wooden structure,Bekker said Saturday night. The fire wasfirst reported at 9:54 p.m. by occupants ofthe building.

The residents were watching televisionon the first floor when the fire broke outon the third floor, Sachs said Saturdaynight.

The school is the site of the former

DeVitte Military Academy, and the daycare center used the site along with theinstitute until a few weeks ago, Sachs said.

The site consists of seven buildings,some of which are undergoing reno-vations. The fire struck a building usedmostly for school offices but also for;residential facilities, Sachs said.

The institute's purpose is to provide"technical training in a Judaic at-mosphere," Sachs said

Colts Neck teen readies for pageantIf UN JUCWMHThe Register \ .

SARASOTA, Fla - Close to threeweeks in the Florida sun as a teen-agebeauty queen is not as easy as it wouldseem, Miss Teen-New Jersey RosalieCuozzo said last night.

Cuozzo, 17, of Colts Neck arrived InSarasota Jan. 2 to compete against 50other teen-age women for the Miss Teen-U.S.A. crown.

"It's breakfast, rehearsal, lunch, re-hearsal and sometimes dinner and re-hearsal," Cuozzo said. "It's getting prettyhectic."

She said her day usually begins withbreakfast at 7 a.m., and she usually getsto bed around midnight.

The contestants in Sarasota representall 50 states and the District of Columbia,Cuozzo stated. Tomorrow, 10 finalists forthe national competition will be an-nounced.

Those 10 contestants will compete forthe crown on a live telecast from DaytonaBeach, Fla., on Jan. 21, she said.However, some segments of the programhave been taped in advance during thecontestants' stay in Sarasota.

Cnoso said that the Jan. 21 event willfocus an the 10 finalists and Include thecrowning of the winner, but all thecontestants will appear on the show.

The finalists will be selected on thebasis of their performance in a bathingsuit and evening gown competition heldlast Wednesday, as well as two interviews

Rosalie Cuozzo

with the 11 celebrity judges evaluating thecompetitors.

Cuozzo said that her interviews Fridayand Saturday night with the judges "wentwell."

She said she was "nervous when I firstwent in, like in the state competition."

"They asked me basic questions like'Why do • you want to be Miss Teen-U.S.A.?'" she said.

She admitted surprise at one of thequestions.

"One Jwkft asked me my favorite typeof jelly. Tint was the oddest question,"Cuozo said.

Will she win an opportunity become oneof the 10 finalists'5

"I can't really say," she answered. "I'dhate to be a judge. There are so many

beautiful and brilliant girls here. Every-one has got something special about (her).

"I asked the judges how they felt (aboutthe competition)," she said. "They'vealready got migraines."

Despite all the work and some ap-prehension upon her arrival in Florida,Cuozzo has enjoyed the experience.

"When I first got down here, I wantedto go home. Everyone was competingagainst each other," she said.

But the contestants relaxed after theybecame better acquainted, sad ah* hasmade many friends, Cuozzo saM.

"It's going to be tough keeping In touchwith them ... they're from places likeUtah, Hawaii and Kentucky." she said.

"You meet a lot of people and you learna lot."

The KcgitMONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986

Shore rocks to keep 3M workers on a (pay) roll3M BENEFIT — People from allover the Jersey Shore area cameto the Stone Pony in Asbury Parkyesterday to show their support ofthe workers at 3M in Freehold,who are in danger of losing theirjobs. In the photos, beginningabove left and going clockwise,are: the banner hung at the rockclub carrying the union's slogan;union President Stanley Fischerand Lynn Goldstein, a 3M em-ployee and co-organizer of theevent; Maria Kingsley, of'StatenIsland, who dances to one ofseveral bands that played yester-day;'and Dennis McKenna ofNew York and Cindy Carey ofKeansburg, who are also enjoy-ing themselves.

Photo* by Ira Mark Goitlnol The Register

; • i .i

Lakewood man gets 4 years for sexual assault AOVKRIISbMtNT

FREEHOLD — Superior CourtJndge Alvin Y Milberg sentencedthe following people:

A Lakewood man was sentenced tofour years in state prison afterpleading guilty on July 3 to sexual

*• assault.Christopher. Boylan, 28, of

I Pinehurst Drive, was also fined (25I payable to the Violent Crimes Com-' pensation Board. In exchange for the

guilty plea, Milberg dismissedcharges of aggravated sexual assaultand endangering the welfare of a

. child.An Atlantic Highlands man was

sentenced to seven years at the Adult\ Diagnostic and Treatment Clinic atj Avenel after he pleaded guilty toj aggravated sexual assault and sex-i ual assault.

Richard Lin'dberg, 35, of Many• Mind Avenue, was also fined $50I. payable to the Violent Crimes Com-

pensation BoardAn Aberdeen man was allowed to

enter pre-trial intervention after hepleaded guilty to aggravated sexualassault.

In addition, Milberg agreed todismiss a municipal complaint pend-ing against Steve Tomaskovicz, 60,of Atlantic Avenue.

A Neptune man was given threeyears probation after he pleadedguilty to the aggravated assault of apolice officer and resisting arrest.

Charles J. Salustro, 31, of WindsorCourt, was fined 11,000 plus $14 courtcost and ordered to be evaluated fordrug abuse. He was also required toperform 100 hours of communityservice.

He was also asked to pay $50 to theViolent Crimes CompensationBoard

Superior Court Judge Michael D.Farren sentenced the following indi-

viduals:A West Keansburg man was

sentenced to 15 years in state prisonafter he was convicted of armedrobbery and two weapons charges,and pleaded guilty to possession of acontrolled dangerous substance, andthree counts of receiving stolenproperty.

Michael LaVolpe, 21, of TenthStreet, must serve a minimum olT/tyears before he is eligible for parole.He was also fined $150 payable to theViolent Crimes CompensationBoard. Farren dismissed three ad-ditional burglary charges.

A Pottstown, Pa., man wassentenced to three years in stateprison after he pleaded guilty toendangering the welfare of a child.

Paul Zimmer, of CoventryvilleRoad, was also fined $500 plus $14court costs, and ordered to pay $25to the Violent Crimes CompensationBoard.

An Ocean man was sentenced to

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This remarkable new diet pillcombines two natural substanceswhich cause adults to lose weight,fast by "tricking" the body into act-ing like a teenager. These nutri-tional substances, called L-arginineand L-ornithine, stimulate thebody's production of growth hor-mone. Dr. Robert Harris, a special-ist in nutritional medicine inStafford Springs, Connecticut, wasrecently quoted as explaining:"Growth Hormone may be what'sresponsible for allowing teenagers todown thousands of calories in ham-burgers and other foods and still bethin as a rail.

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' Copyright 1985

JANUARY 20, 1986 The Regimer

OBITUARIEStorn. Ktfkm PI

y. Anr E.

QMtzMI. Hirry F.

aw-0iwik TkNUi R.

iTitirijleWk. Am

Mary E. CubberleyMary Elizabbeth Cubberley, 64, of

Long Branch, died Sunday in Mon-mouth Medical Center.

Bom in Des Moines, Mrs. Cub-berley had lived in Springfield, N.J.before moving to Long Branch in1952.

She was employed by the N.J.Racing Commission at MonmouthPark as an inspector in the licensingbureau.

She was a member of the D.A.R.for 35 years and was twice seniorstate president of the C.A.R..

For 35 years she was a member ofand a committeewoman for theMonmouth County RepublicanWomen's Club.

She was a den mother and workedwith Boy Scout troup 112 of LongBranch.

She was secretary to the ElberonCommunity Association.

Surviving is her husband, CarlMilton Cubberly; two sons, DavidElliot Cavenaugh of Brick Town,

Wayne A. MagleyWayne A. Magley, 18, of Man

alapan, died Saturday, after a longillness, in Freehold Area Hospital,Freehold.

Born in New Brunswick, he was alifelong resident of Manalapan

He was a parishioner of St.Gabriel's Roman Catholic Church,Marlboro.

Surviving are his parents, Albertand Betty Magley; two brothers,Albert Magley of Lindenwald, andPaul Magley, at home; his paternalgrandmother, Ethel Magley of Jack-son; and his maternal grandmother,Margaret UJhely, of Union.

The Waltt Funeral Home, Morgan-ville, is in charge of arrangements.

Thomas R. OswaldThomas R. Oswald, 86, of Crest-

wood Village , Whiting, died Satur-day in Community Memorial Hospi-tal, Toms River.

Born in Newark, Mr. Oswald livedin Irvington and Union before mov-ing to Whiting in 1975.

He was a railway mail clerk inJersey City for 45 years beforeretiring in 1861.

He was a 62-year member of AtlasPythagoras Lodge 118 F&AM, West-field.

He was a member of the Connecti-cut Farms Presbyterian Church,Union.

Surviving are his wife, LillianRollberg Oswald, and several niecesand nephews.

The Anderson and Campbell Fu-neral Home, Whiting, is in charge ofarrangements.

Police Log

Glen Calvert Cavanaugh of LosAngeles; and one granddaughter.

The Flock Funeral Home, LongBranch, is in charge of arrange- Joseph F. Berthaments.

Harry T. GuetzlaffHarry T. Guetzlaff, 66, of Tinton

Falls, died Friday at his residence.Born in Milwaukee, Mr. Guetzlaff

had lived in Little Silver for 32 yearsbefore moving to Tinton Falls twoyears ago.

He retired as a physicist from Ft.Monmouth in 1963 after 20 yearsthere.

He was a veteran of World War II,serving as a First Lieutenant in theArmy Air Force.

He was a member of WashingtonLodge No. 9, F and A.M., ofEatontown, of the Crescent Templeof the Shrine and of the 32nd DegreeScottish Rite of Valley of Trenton.

Surviving are his wife, MargaretStrieker Guetzlaff; two sons. HarryE.Guetzlaff of Dallas, and DavidA Guetzlaff of Point Pleasant; asister, Jane Nagy of Highland Park;and three grandchildren. The RobertA. Braun Funeral Home, Eatontown,is in charge of arrangements.

Lila B. MetzgerLila B. Metzger 92, of Red Bank,

died Fridy in the Medicenter, RedBank

Bom in Ontario, Canada, Mrs.Metzger lived in Jersey City and

-Little Silver before moving to RedBank in 1966.

She was a member of the FirstPresbyterian Church, Red Bank.

her husband, Harry 0. Metzger.died in 1966.

Surviving are a son, Albert W.Metzger, PitUburg; a daughter,Jean C. Metzger, New YorkCity;four grandchildren; and fivegreat-grandchildren.

The Worden Funeral Home, RedBank, is in charge of arrangements.

Joseph F. Bertha, 69, of High-lands, died Friday in MonmouthMedical Center, Long Branch.

Born in South River, Mr. Berthalived in Perth Amboy before movingto Highlands 30 years ago.

He retired in 1980 after manyyears as a builder-contractor forG u a r d i a n D e v e l o p m e n t s ,Jamesburg.

He was a charter member of theElks, Highlands.

He was a member and trustee ofthe First Presbyterian Church, At-lantic Highlands.

Surviving are his wife, GizelleBertha; a son, Francis J. Bertha ofMiddletown; two daughters, Mrs.Barbara Haaf of Dog Patch, Ark.,and Mrs. Janice Otis of Santa Cruz,Ca.; a brother, Louis Bertha ofEdison; a sister, Lenke Good of NewYork City; and five grandchildren.

Posten's Funeral Home, AtlanticHighlands, is in charge of arrange-ments.

Anna TatarinchikAnna Tatarinchik, 90. of Freehold,

died Sunday, in Freehold AreaHospital, Freehold.

Born in Vilna, Poland, Mrs.Tatarinchik resided in New YorkCity before moving to Freeholdwhere she lived most of her life.

She was a communicant of St.Rose of Lima Roman CatholicChurch, Freehold.

Her husband, Alfonso, died in 1950.Surviving is a son, Leo J.

Tatarinchik of Howell; five daugh-ters, Stella Kozabo of Freehold,Rose M. Alexander of Freehold,Helen Knolmayer of Somerset,Lydia A. Grosso of North BrunswickTownship, and Gloria V. Saker ofFreehold Township; twenty-onegrandchildren and 20 great-grand-children.

The Freeman Funeral Home,Freehold, is in charge of arrange-ments.Angelina Ferrara

Angelina (Julie) Ferrara, 70, died P J , , . . . ,Saturday in Rivervlew Medical Hid W a r d t , K a t e I yCenter, Red Bank.

Born in Newark, Mrs. Ferraralived in Hillside before moving toMiddletown nine years ago.

She was a communicant of St.Catherine's Roman Catholic Church,Holmdel.

Her husband,' Anthony J. Ferrara,died in August, 1976, and a son,Anthony, in 1978.

Surviving are three daughters,Theresa Albanese of Hillside, AngelaMartone of Middletown, Judy Cop-pola of Wycoff; four brothers, TadMartino of Bloomfield, Joe Martinoof Bricktown and Mike and LouMartino, both of South Amboy; asister, Jean Chiara of Bricktown;and six grandchildren. The John E.Day Funeral Home, Red Bank, is incharge of arrangements.

202 Path Nonet

F E R R A R A — Anoallna Uulnl of MWdMown onJin IB. 19M MOUNT of Theraat Albanaaa. Ano«4oMorton* and Judy Coppola. Slatar of Tad. Joa. MIKaand Lou Martino. and Jaan Chlart. Grartdmothar ofOlrta and Jamaa Martona, Uaa and Qarry JudaAlbanaaa. Mlehaat and Vlncant Coppola, wit* of theutt Anthony J. and mothar of tha late AnthonyVltltatton on Monday 7-9 p.m. and Tuaaday 2-4 and7-1 p m at tha John E. Day Funaral Homa. ISRMfUoa Avenue. Dad Bank Funaral Maaa onWMnaaday. tt a.m. at St. Catnarlna'a RomanCathode Church In Holmdal.

G U E T Z L A F F — Many T. of Tinton Fan. onFriday. Jan. 17 al Ma raakwnca. Funaral eenrioaaWednaeday. Jan. M at 10 a.m. from me Robert A.Braun Homa lor Funarala. 108 B>oad SI Ealonmm.N.J. Fhandi may call al tha funaral homa thisavanlns. 7-B p m. and Tuaaday, 2-4 and 7-0 p.m.Informant Woodbine Camatafy.

T A T A R I N C H I K — Anna on Jan. i». 1M6. ofFraahoM Batovad write of in« law AHon-to. davotadmoth* of L M J , Stall* Kozaoo, R O M M Ataundar.Hatan Knolmayar. Lydia A. OroMO. •nd Gloria vSiktn Funaral aarvlcaa 9:30 a.m. Wadnaaday al thafiaaamin Funaral Homa. 47 Eatt Main St, FraafxXd.toUowad by M i u of Cfc/i«lan Burial at 10 a.m al St.Ftoaa of Lima Roman Catholic Church. FraahotdVialno h°urs Tuaadty 2-4, 7-9 p.m.

M E T Z G E R — Lila B. of Rad Bank, on Jan. 17,1MB Motnar of Albart W. and Jaan C. MatzoarQrandmotnar of four. Qraa.-QrandmoUiar of flva.Funaral aarvkcaa Tuaaday, Jan. 21, at 11 a.m. al tnaFirmi PrMbyitf i«n Church. Rad Bank, iniarmanl at Firv*w Camatary. Fair Vtaw. N.J. VWtatlOft at thaWordan Funaral Homa. M Eaat Front 9t. Rad Bank.on Monday, from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.

FreeholdOn Jan. 13,52 percent of a 13-year-

old girl's body was burned after thegirl turned on a propane dryer,causing a flash fire in the basementof the girl's Jerseyville Avenuehome, police said. The girl, MichelleTrotter, was taken to Freehold AreaHospital and later transferred to theChester Crazier Burn Center inPhiladelphia, police said.

Her mother and an 11-year-oldbrother suffered minor burns ontheir hands, as a result of trying toput out the fire on the girl's body,police said. They were treated atFreehold Area Hospital, police said.The flash fire, termed accidental,was caused by a leak between theconnection of the dryer and thepropane tank, police said. There wasno damage to the basement, policesaid.

At about 11:30 p.m. Jan. 16, aHowell man reported that someoneforced open his 1985 Ford van whilethe vehicle was parked in a parkinglot at Freehold Raceway and stole a$500 personal check and two liv-ingroom lamps worth $80 that werein the van, police said. The man wasat the racetrack when the incidentoccurred, police said.

Monmouth BeachVandals smashed the windshield

and side window of a car parked inthe Wharfside Manor Condominiumparking lot sometime during thenight of Jan. 10-11. Capt. JosephMasica and Patrolman Thomas Hen-nessey investigated.

Sgt. Carl Mason responded to areport of a propane gas leak at theShore Towers, Ocean Avenue, at1155 a.m. Jan. 13. Police monitoredthe scene until a broken gas valvewas repaired. The Monmouth BeachFire Department also responded.

A natural gas leak forced theevacuation of residents of a three-family home on Riverdale Avenue at1:45 p.m. Jan. 13. The MonmouthBeach Fire Department also wascalled to the scene. Sgt. Carl Masonand Patrolman Bradford Dodsonresponded to the call.

Two Mercedes-Benz were bur-glarized in the Channel Club Towersparking lot on Jan. 15 A stereovalued at $1,600 was stolen from oneof the vehicles. The thieves alsoattempted to remove the stereo fromthe second car, but were unsuc-cessful. Patrolmen William Petroneand Peter Saling investigated.

RumsonA suspicious couple approached a

7-year-old girl the morning of Jan. 11and asked her to ride in their car, thegirl's father told police.

A police report gives the followingaccount: J. Parell, 8 SycamoreLane, told police a man and a womanin a car stopped his daughter andasked where Bruce Springsteenlived. When she gave them direc-tions, they asked if she would get inthe car and show them the way. Thegirl declined and went home.

No other description of the coupleor the car was known. Parellreported the incident at 6:04 p.m.

A dirt bike owned by the son ofAllen Gallagher, 72 E River Road,was stolen Jan. 10 and found van-dalized Jan. 13, a police reportstaled Valued at $225, the bike wasfound stripped near ForrestdaleAvenue.

A person wanted by two othertowns' police departments was foundstaying at a resident's home hereJan. 16, a police report stated. KelW. Kummer, wanted in OceanTownship and West Long Branch inconnection with burglary and badcheck incidents, was found at aresidence on Auldwood Lane, whereOcean Township police had said hemight be staying. A patrolman andLt. Robert Hoffman, who was off-duty, returned to headquarters herewith the suspect and he was trans-ported to Ocean Township police forprocessing, the report said.

Sgt. Jay Hendricks. responding toa call Jan. 17, had his vehicle skid ona patch of ice and strike a fence anda tree. Hendricks was unhurt, butthe vehicle had to be towed from thescene.

A driver crashed into a parked carThursday night, injuring himself andtwo passengers, police said.

Frank L. Bernhard Jr., carrying aNorth Carolina license, was drivinga 1965 Chevrolet pickup on WardAvenue when he crashed into aparked, vacant 1975 Toyota owned byFrank Nichols, 20 Grant Ave , ac-cording to police.

Bernhard and passengers JeffWood, 87 Ward Ave., and BrianSlocum, 21 Holly St. were trans-

ported by Rumson First Aid toRiverview Medical Center, RedBank, the report stated. A hospitalemployee was unable to provideinformation on the patients thefollowing day, but Slocum, 27, suf-fered a broken foot and was treatedand released, Slocum's father saidFriday.

Bernhard's wife said her husband,39, and Wood had also been treatedand released. She and her husbandrecently moved from North Carolinato 25 Holly Drive, she said.

Bernhard was issued a summonson a charges of driving whileintoxicated and reckless driving, andthe pickup truck, owned by Slocum,was wrecked, the report stated.

Red BankTwo automobile convertible tops

were slashed last Sunday at 141 W.Front St. The malicious damage isbeing investigated by Detective Rob-ert J. Kennedy.

A bicycle was stolen from alaundry room at 100 Prospect Ave.between Jan. 10-13, the thieveshaving broken a chain lock. Theyellow, 27-inch Schwinn 10-speedwith a black seat and black tapedgrips on the handlebars is valued at|200. Patrolman Aurelio Ramos Jr.is investigating.

A woman's wallet was stolen fromher automobile at 136 Broad St. lastNovember. The wallet was made ofa blue leather-like material andvalued at $5. Patrolman Ivan J.Grilli is investigating.

In a theft occurring between Jan.3-10 at 124 River St., someone hassomeone else's Social Security checkand will not return it to the victim.Detective Sgt. Gary Watson isinvestigating.

In a theft occurring at FidelityUnion Bank, 52 Broad St., someoneentered an employees' work areaand stole one bankbook and $50 incash from a woman's pocketbook.Patrolman Thomas Chambers isinvestigating.

The following people were ar-rested on the following charges sinceJan. 10:

Walter James Ellis, 48, 10Twinlight Towers, Highlands,harassment

Nicholas Bajew, 27, 33 W FrontSt., Red Bank, simple assault.

Billie Ed Stathum, 40, 381 War-burton Place, Long Branch, criminalmischief.

Kevin Patrick McHale, 19, 95Oakhill Road, Middletown, pos-session of a controlled dangeroussubstance.

Stephen Barrett Oxley, 28, 190 E.Bergen Place, Red Bank, possessionof drug paraphernalia.

Jeff J. Soldo, 27. 27 NautilusDrive, Leonardo, simple assault.

Bruce G. Smith, 25, 4 NormaPlace, Hazlet, simple assault.

Dean T. Jaeger, 26, 36 RiversideAve., Apt. C, Red Bank, drivingwhile intoxicated.

Little SilverOn Jan. 11, Thomas Schweers,

Rosslyn Court, called to reportseveral items stolen from a detachedshed in the rear of his property.

Edward F. Kately, 58, of FreeholdTownship, died yesterday at Free-hold Area Hospital. Freehold.

Born in Bayonne, Mr. Kately hadlived in Freehold township for thepast 12 years.

He was a self-employed aluminumsider.

He was a veteran of the U.S. Armyin World War II.

Suriving are his wife, BarbaraPlaskon Mately; three sons, BruceB Kately of Jackson Township,Brian J.Kately of Brick town, andRobert C. Kately of Carteret; adaughter, Carolyn B. Kately athome; a brother, Warren Kately,two sisters, Judith Kately andDorothy Kately of Bayonne. andthree grand-children.

The Higgins Memorial Home,Freehold, Is in charge of arrange-ments.

Margaret Mary PierseMargaret Mary Pierse, 60, of

Robertsville, died Saturday in Free-hold Area Hospital, Freehold.

Born In Jersey City, Mrs. Pierselived in Bayonne before moving to _ _ ^ ^ _ ^ ^ ^ _Marlboro Township 30 years ago.

She was a telephone operator forNew Jersey Bell In Jersey City for Ra th ryn Koche B u m sseveral years before retiring in 1950. •

She was a member of St. Peter'sEpiscopal Church, Freehold.

Her husband, Stanley J. Pierse,died Dec. 27.

Surviving are two sons, StanleyPierse, of Marlboro Township, andJames Kerlln, Jr., Tishmingo,Okla.; a daughter, Barbara AnnFormman of Freehold; three sis-ters, Clara Small of Howell Town-ship, Dorothy Daubert of MarlboroTownship, and June Lospaluto, Clif-fside Park; and eight grandchildren.

The Waltt Funeral Home,Marlboro, is in charge of arrange-ments.

Items taken: Anderson window,valued at $700; and a Paeco skylight,approximate value 1700. Case filestarted by Sgt. Gregory Strand,matter under investigation.

Robert A. Niemela was arrestedJan. 12, at 2:40 a.m., by SpecialOfficer Thomas Manusco on acharge of driving while intoxicatedon Rumson Road.

John W. Warren was arrested byPatrolman Peter McCue on Jan. 14at 12:59 p.m.' on a charge of drivingwhile intoxicated. Summonses wereissued.

Long-BranchOn Monday, Jan. 13, Sharon

Maloney, 400 Morris Ave., reportedthe theft of her purse from the PierPub; a radio was stolen from a cityvehicle; an item holster and gun beltalong with six rounds of ammunitionwere found in a room on RockwellAvenue; two juveniles were arrestedin connection with setting fire to atree at Shore Gardens and releasedto their parents; a camel hair coatand $10 were stolen from a vehicleparked at Elberon Gardens and aBearcat scanner was stolen from acar on Coleman Avenue.

Patrolman Peter Schaus is in-vestigating the theft of a cash bagcontaining $1,013.91 from the Home& Builder's Outlet, 671 Broadway, onTuesday Jan. 14. Also on that day, abuilding at 574 Broadway was van-dalized; a taxi license was stolenfrom Michael Davis, 9 EastwoodAve.; criminal mischief was re-ported at 474 Hendrickson Ave.,where a window was broken in anentrance door; and burglaries werereported at 116 Chelsea Ave. and at256 N Fifth Ave.

Although smoke damage was re-ported to downstairs apartments, noone was injured in a mattress fire atan apartment on 52 S. Bath Ave. onWednesday, Jan. 15. PatrolmanJames Campbell is investigating.Also, Detect ive Sgt. LouisNapoletano and Detective RalphDeFillipo Sr. are investigating thetheft of a rifle and two shotguns froma home on Ludlow Street andapproximately $350 was reportedstolen from a glass jar in the kitchenof a home on Columbus Place.

Detective Patrick Lipka and Pa-trolman James Campbell are in-vestigating the burglary and theft oftwo paintings worth $1,800; $375 incash and four suitcases containingclothing, shoes and other mis-cellaneous items from a home onBrighton Avenue on Thursday, Jan.16. Also, a microphone was stolenfrom the Long Branch MunicipalCourt; a gold chain was stolen froma borne on North Fifth Avenue; avehicle was burglarized at 390 OceanAve. and several video tapes werestolen from an apartment on MorrisAvenue.

The following people were ar-rested last week: Mamie L. Lambertand Michael Rivera, both of the

' Fountains Motel, charged with usinga stolen credit card and released ona summons; Donald A. Terhome,charged with driving while hislicense was suspended, released on

$515 bail; Frank R. Martino Jr., If,of 16 Port Au Peck Ave., chargedwith defiant trespassing and' re-leased on a summons; Brian T.Dougherty, 32, of 173 Garfield Ave.,charged with disorderly conduct andreleased on $100 bail; Philip Semen-back, charged with assault Thursdayand released Friday; and MadelineGaakin, charged with theft andreleased on a summons.

Also arrested were MadelineCalderone, 1129 Embury Ave., Nep-tune, charged with theft and forg-ery, Sidney Paskow, 1227 OceanAve., charged with terroristicthreats; Audrey Williams, 27 GrantSt., charged with simple assault andJoseph Huff, charged with assaultand resisting arrest. Information onthe status of these people was notavailable yesterday.

HazletJan. 11: A Poole Avenue

reported that her fence was knockeddown by vandals. -

Police received a report from aHudson Avenue man of a nearbybrush fire, and the Hazlet FireDepartment was notified.

Hazlet police joined Holmdelpolice in pursuit of a motorcycle onHighway 35 near Bethany Road. Themotorcycle operator was not iaentified.

A Laurel Avenue resident report*)the loss of an 8-month-old poppyresponding to the name Murf.

Jan. 12: An alarm sounded atCommunity Animal Hospital onRoute 36. Police responded to thealarm and the building was declaredsecure.

Jan. 13: Several residents in theNorth Stephens Place section ofHazlet reported power outaayPolice contacted Jersey CentralPower and Light.

A Birch Avenue woman reporMdan "old beat-up car cruising" arouadher neighborhood and flashing a lighton houses. Police patrols reported nosign of the car.

A Jay Court woman reported anattempted burglary at her homeTwo additional burglaries were re-ported by homeowners on BelfastAvenue. An undetermined amount »fjewelry was stolen from both homesand entry was also gained throughrear doors in both cases.

Jan. 15: A Nevada Drive residentreported that someone had smashedeggs on the interior and exterior ofhis car, a 1972 Ford Torino, duringthe previous night.

A Hazlet postman reported that hewas bitten on the hand by a dog onBut ton wood Avenue.

Police received a report of silverpaint sprayed on a Brown Avenuehouse.

Jan. 16: A fire was reported at theArnold Walker North Nursing Homeon Route 35. Police patrols arrivingat the scene extinguished the flames,which were contained in a room nextto the kitchen. The fire was tenntd"suspicious" by Hazlet detectives.

Two burglaries were reportedsonMoak and Concord drives. An Un-determined amount of jewelry wasstolen in both incidents.

EATONTOWN NOTICE

The 1986 Tax Book for the Borough of Eatontown will beopen for public inspection in the Assessor's Office, 47Broad Street (lower level) Eatontown, on January 22nd,1986 from 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM

John A. TurtoraTax AssessorEatontown, N. J.

47 Broad StrewEatontown, N.J.

07724

Kathryn Roche Burns, 83, ofRumson, died Saturday in MonmouthMedical Center, Long Branch.

Born in New York City, Mrs.Burns lived in Manhasset, LongIsland before moving to Rumson lastNovember.

Her husband, Joseph V. Burns,died in 1962.

Surviving are a son, JosephP.Burns of Rumson; a daughter,Eileen Johnson, of Kildeer, 111.; andseven grandchildren.

The John E. Day Funeral Home,Red Bank, is in charge of arrange-ments.

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NEW JERSEYM MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

Inaugurations are matters of luck and logisticsSwearing-inhas a historyof miscues

RENTON — The weeks of prep-aration and hundreds of hours spentto ensure that gubernatorial in-augurations run smoothly are noguarantee of a problem-fee cer-emony, planners say.

Former Democratic Gov. RichardJ Hughes spent a few hecticmoments before his second in-auguration in 1966 stuck in anehsVitor. And former Gov. WilliamT Gahill, a Republican, was forcedto borrow an oversized overcoatfrom a National Guardsman to takehis oath of office in 1970 becausesomeone accidentally walked offwith his

During Cahill'soutdoor inaugural,the weather wasbitterlycold.

Planners say the best they canhope for is that any mistakes are notobvious to the audience.

Weather, delays, all kinds ofthings can go wrong. Planningminimizes problems but it can'tprevent them," said Joseph A.Sullivan, co-chairman of Gov.Thomas H. Kean's Inaugural Com-mittee.

Kean will be swom in to a secondterm tomorrow.

The weather often has causedgreat anguish for inauguration coor-dinators.

In 1857, Gov. William A. Newell ofthe Opposition Party had to walk 12miles from his home in Allentownthrough a driving blizzard to attendhis own inauguration ceremonyTravel by sleigh, horseback or train

Kean committee hopesthe weather cooperates

WHERE IT ALL BEGAN - Plans for GovThomas Kean's inauguration began in the votingbooth in November, when he trounced Democratic

ASSOCIATED PRESS

opponent Peter Shapiro. Festivities began inearnest over the weekend and will continue thoughtomorrow night.

was impossible due to the weather,so it took Newell two days to makethe trip.

During Cahill's outdoor inaugural,the weather was bitterly cold. Inclearing the area between the cul-tural center and the Statehouse, thesnow plows cracked the cementslabs, which remained unrepairedfor years afterward

Cahill's inaugural speech alsocaused problems, when the governorforgot he had given the only copy tohis escort to hold until the ceremonyAs the time to deliver the addressdrew near, a frantic search was

made for the escort, who was foundalong with the speech just in time.

The 10-year-old son of former Gov.Alfred Oriscoll. a Republican,termed his father's 1947 inauguraladdress as "too long."

"Gave me a headache," laidAlfred Jr.

Some inaugural speeches havebeen memorable for other reasons.

In 1844, Whig Charles Strattonread his inaugural message in barelyaudible whispers because of a throatailment. Republican Harold Hoff-man's 1935 address, delivered out-doors, was cut from its original 59pages to brief excerpts because of

10-degree temperatures.

The governor told anyoneinterested in hearing more, "Read itin the papers tomorrow."

Hoffman also became known forthe 19-gun salute, which was givenfor the first time after his swearing-in ceremony.

Prior to 1844, most inauguralceremonies were held in private.And until that year, the governor'sterm was one year. It wai extendedby the New Jersey Constitution atthat time to three years.

The three-year term waslengthened to four under the 1947state Constitution.

Reservoirs nearly full, but savings urged

Associated Press

TRENTON — The co-chairman ofa committee coordinating Gov.Thomas H. Kean's second inaugura-tion on tomorrow says planning forthe event is like juggling the guestlist for five weddings in one week-end.

But the main concern of theInaugural Committee isn't thethousands of people who will attenda variety of festivities scheduledaround the swearing-in ceremony —it's the weather on inauguration day,said Joseph A. Sullivan, committeeco-chairman.

"If there is any type of precipi-tation, there are all kinds of logisticsproblems. That's our main head-ache, and we're just hoping for clearskies, like the first time," saidSullivan, who also heads the NewJersey Turnpike Authority.

Temperatures hovered in the 20sbut the sun was shining when theRepublican governor was in-augurated for the first time.

Kean, who was re-elected tosecond term by a landslide inNovember, will take the oath ofoffice at noon tomorrow in Trenton'sWar Memorial Building.

The pageantry and merrimentsurrounding the occasion started onthe weekend and will culminatetomorrow night with the gala in-augural ball.

On Saturday night, 350 couplespaid $350 a pair to attend a formalr e c e p t i o n at P r i n c e t o n ' sDrumthwacket, the official gov-ernor's mansion.

Sullivan described the affair as themost exclusive social event of thefour-day round of inauguration fetes.Money raised from the cocktailparty will go to the DrumthwacketFoundation to restore and furnishthe historic structure.

The celebrations were to continuetonight with' a S25-a-ticket "party forthe people" at the Stadium Club atthe Meadowlands. Those who attendwill I* treated to disco dancing witha live band and have a chance to teethe governor and his wife, Debby.

More than 2,000 people are ex-pected to attend and response hasbeen so overwhelming that theInaugural Committee decided not to

end the party at 8 p.m., as originallyscheduled, but will keep the musicgoing until about 9:30 p.m., saidcommittee Chairman LawrenceBathgate.

The Keans will begin inaugurationday with a special service at TrinityEpiscopal Cathedral in Trenton. Thecouple selected the hymns andreadings to be used and their threechildren, Alexandra, 11, and twinsons, Reed and Thomas, 17, willattend the service.

Afterward, Kean will lead aprocession from the Statehouse tothe nearby War Memorial Building,where he will be administered theoath of office by Chief JusticeRobert N. Wilentz. The swearing-inceremony will be followed by a 19-gun salute by the National Guard.Then Kean will deliver his inauguraladdress.

The governor will return'to hisStatehouse office, where traditiondictates that he swear in his newattorney general, W Gary Edwards,and Secretary of State Jane Burgio.

Tomorrow afternoon, the Keanswill be feted at two receptions in thestate capitol, one in the MasonicTemple and the other at the StateMuseum.

The four days of festivities willconclude with the Inaugural Ball atPrinceton University's Jadwin Gym-nasium. More than 2,500 people areexpected to pay $250 apiece tn dineon filet mignon, dance and paytribute to Kean.

Sullivan said a "happier mood"surrounds the inauguration this yearthan was the case when Kean tookoffice at New Jersey's 48th governorin 1982. At the time, Kean was swomin after he defeated DemocratJames J. Florio by about 1,700 votes— the slimmest margin in the state'shistory.

"There was a slight pall cast bythe fact' that the votes had to berecounted and the governor didn'tknow for days if he had won. It's anentirely different situation thistime," said Sullivan.

Kean won a crushing victory in theNov. 5 election over challengerPeter Shapiro, collecting about 1.4million votes to Shapiro's 578,402.

By The Associated PressNew Jersey residents who had to live with

water use restrictions last year because of asevere drought can expect better conditions thisyear as reservoirs are nearing capacity, a stateo/flcial said yesterday

'Given a half-decent rainfall the rest of thisyear, we shouldn't have the crisis situation wehad last year." said James Staples, a spokesmanfor the state Department of EnvironmentalProtection. "That's also given the public doesn'twaste water "

Staples said a water emergency remains ineffect and that residents are urged to conservewater However, there is no ban on specific wateruse, such as washing cars or watering lawns.

From May 17 to July 11 last year, the staterestricted personal water use to 50 gallons dailyin 93 communities of northern New Jersey. Wateruse restrictions were in effect in other towns.

The 12 reservoirs operated by the HackensackWater Co., North Jersey District Water SupplyCommission and the water departments of JerseyCity and Newark are at 95 percent of capacity,above the 84 percent capacity normal for thistime of year, he said

Everybody says they're in decent shape rightnow," Staples said, "but we won't waste anyopportunity to remind the public about the

**T7Hiverybody says they're in

decent shape right now, butwe won't waste anyopportunity to remind thepublic about the intelligentuse of water.w

James StapleDEP spokesman

intelligent use of water."Computerized estimates show that the current

levels of the reservoirs could carry the northerncounties through 1986, even if precipitation fallsas much as 50 percent below normal.

Staples said reservoirs were brimming afterthe winter of 1980, but that a dry spring andsummer led the state to impose water restric-tions in the fall.

That drought led to passage of a $350 millionbond issue to pay for efforts to both increase andbetter conserve the water supply, Staples said.

The money is paying for studies of groundwatersupplies. The results may lead to lead to

restrictions on tapping underground water inOcean and Monmouth counties, the Atlantic Cityregion and the Camden region. Experts say thedepletion of underground aquifers can allow theinvasion of salt water from the Atlantic in theshore areas, and Delaware River water aroundCamden.

"There won't be shutdowns of wells but it willgive us an idea of how slow increases in useshould be or whether actual decreases arenecessary," said Staples.

The funds have also allowed the New JerseyWater Supply Authority to complete the dredgingof the Delaware & Raritan Canal, which runsfrom the Delaware River at Frenchtown throughTrenton to the New Brunswick area.

The canal is used by the state to take advantageof its daily allocation of 100 million gallons fromthe Delaware River, but its shrinkage due to siltaccumulations limited its capacity to as little as12 million gallons daily.

The canal, an important water source for theMiddlesex County area, will be in use this year.

The bond issue will also provide funds toupgrade "old and rickety" municipal watersystems plagued with leaks, Staples said.

"They may be losing 40-50 percent of theirwater in some cases," he said. "You want to tryto save what you have."

•—

c ^ - . ^ - - •- .-•• •

'.v.-xv 'REGISTER FILE PHOTO

WATER EVERYWHERE - Water supplies are up. but stateconservation officials continue to ask residents to go easy on it.

~

2 off-duty Passaic cops shoot it outafter one allegedly runs a red light

CLIFTON (AP) - In-.vestigators yesterday were tryingto unravel the mystery of a•confrontation between two off-'duty police officers that began;when one of them ran a red light

' 'and ended when he allegedly shotand injured the other officer.

Michael Aufiero, a PassaicCounty park police officer, was in

I stable condition at Passaic Gen-'• eral Hospital after being shot in' the right arm and leg, a nursing

supervisor said.: No charges have been filedagainst Aufiero or his alleged

•assailant. Passaic police officerJoseph Rios, but both will bereassigned to desk duty until theprobe is completed, authoritiessaid.

The shooting occurred shortlyafter 4 a.m. Saturday, but in-vestigators said they have con-flicting reports about the courseof events Both men apparently

were unaware that the other wasa police officer, investigatorssaid.

Chief James landoli of the parkpolice said he visited the 23-year-old Aufiero at the hospital yester-day, but that doctors told him notto question the officer.

The 27-year-old Rios, an eight-year veteran of the force, gave astatement to authorities, saidPassaic Police Director ImreKaraszegi Jr.

Rios was on his way home fromwork when the shooting occurred,Karaszegi said.

"Rios went through a red light,the other individual saw this, gotupset and passed him," saidKaraszegi.

Karaszegi said the two carswere pursuing each other forabout half a mile until Aufieroblocked Rios' car at an inter-section.

Some witnesses told police theysaw Rios holding up a silverobject and flashing it at Aufiero.

The object was Rios' shield, butAufiero apparently thought it wasa gun, police told the Herald-News of Passaic.

However, other witnessesclaimed Rios stayed in his car,while Aufiero bolted from hisautomobile, brandishing a pistol,and assuming a crouched pos-ition, his gun trained at Rios,police said.

"To our understanding, Aufierogot out of the car, apparently wasin a crouched position, with hisgun in his hand, apparentlypointing at officer Rios,"Karaszegi said.

"Rios responded by shootingAufiero first in the leg, and thenlater in the forearm," he said.

Authorities were awaiting theresults of drug and alcohol teststo which both officers submitted.

Student loan defaults jeopardizemillions of dollars in aid to state

TRENTON (AP) - The state's higher educationchancellor said he will ask for audits of public andprivate schools with high student loan default ratesbecause they jeopardize millions of dollars the statereceives from the federal government.

The problem is most acute with profit-makingtechnical schools that participate in the federallyguaranteed student loan program, according to a reportby the Higher Education Department.

More than half of the 101 private technical schools hada default rate higher than 20 percent during the 1983-1984school year while 17 schools exceeded the 50 percentmark.

The average default rate for the state's collegiateinstitutions was 13.6 percent. But for technical, orproprietary schools, the rate was 35 percent andclimbing, according to the report.

In the past four years, the default rate for profit-making schools has doubled, while the rate for collegeshas remained virtually the same.

Higher Education Chanceller T. Edward Hollandertold the Star-Ledger of Newark that he plans toannounce a crackdown on schools with default ratesbeyond 20 percent to prevent the state from losingfederal funds it now receives because its past overall

default rate has been low.Under a complex formula, the state keeps a larger

percentage of funds collected from loan defaulters if itkeeps the overall rate down. If the default rate risesabove a federally set ceiling, the state's share of thecollected funds drops sharply.

Hollander said he did not know how much money thestate would lose if it went over the ceiling, but saidmillions of dollars in collection fees are now jeopardizedby the rising default rate.

He laid the now-endangered funds have in the pastbeen used to help both collegiate and profit-makinginstitutions retain their students and thereby avoidadditional defaults.

The chancellor said the state is powerless to denyeligible schools initial participation in the loan program,but can "seek their suspension if, through audits andsite visits, we determine the schools are not takingappropriate steps to limit the loan default rate."

He said that, if necessary, he would seek "limitation,suspension and termination" of schools that do notbetter counsel borrowers.

The state would also notify lending institutions of thefailure rates, he said.

MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986 The Heni»nr 7A

The StateWhat is open, what is not today

Today is Martin Luther KingDay, celebrating the birth-day of the civil rights leader

assassinated in 1968 It Is afederal and state holiday in NewJersey, New York and Connecti-cut.

Some public agencies are af-fected. Here is a lineup:

POST OFFICES: There Is noregular mail delivery and postoffices are closed, except for theemergency window at Eight Av-enue and 33rd Street in Man-hattan, which is open 24 hours aday.

STOCKS: The American andNew York stock exchanges areopen.

BANKS: Banks in New Yorkand Ntfw Jersey are permitted toclose, but may stay open. Banksin Connecticut are closed.

GOVERNMENT OFFICESAND COURTS: Federal andstate government offices andcourts are closed. Most NewYork city government offices andcourts are closed. County officesand courts in Suffolk, Nassau,Westchester, Rockland and Put-

nam are closed. Most town andmunicipal government officesand courts are closed.

SCHOOLS: New York citypublic schools, and most otherschools in the region, are closed.

PARKING: Alternate-side-of-the-street parking regulationsare suspended Monday in NewYork City.

TRANSIT: Regular weekdayschedules will be in effect forNew York city subways andbuses; the Staten Island RapidTransit system; Metro-NorthCommuter Railroad; the LongIsland Rail Road; PATH trains;the Pascack Valley and PortJervis commuter rail lines; Am-trak; Suffolk County Transitbuses; Metropolitan SuburbanBus Authority buses; West-chester County buses; PutnamArea Rapid Transit buses;Transport of Rockland buses;and Connecticut Transit buses.

Red and Tan buses servingRockland and Bergen countiesalso are on a weekday scheduleexcept for slightly reduced ser-vice during rush hours.

N.J. men eye West Virginia casinos

WEIRTON, W.Va. (AP) — Agroup of Atlantic City in-vestors bought the former

Holiday Inn here two weeksbefore Gov. Arch Moore unveiledhis proposal to legalize casinogambling in West Virginia, oneinvestor says.

But the investor, F. FrederickPerone, said the possibility ofcasino gambling in the NorthernPanhandle was not the mainreason his group bought themotel for 91.7 million.

Moore, in his State of the Stateaddress, proposed a state-con-trolled gambling industry requir-ing an investment of at least $200million by casino operators.

John Price, the governor'spress secretary, has said theNorthern Panhandle offers anattractive location for a casinobecause of its proximity toPittsburgh and Cleveland.

The investors bought the motel

Dec. 27, 12 days before Moore'saddress.

Perone said he had no priorindication that Moore would en-dorse casino gambling other than"idle speculation, gossip andrumors which have been preva-lent in your state for a couple ofyears."

Perone noted the governor'sproposed minimum investmentand said his group has investedjust about $2 million in theWeirton motel. But he said thateven if the motel itself does notoffer gambling, it could makemoney from visitors to othernearby casinos.

Perone said the other investorsincluded his brother, A. RalphPerone, John Siracusa, Dr. JackSlotoroff, Lee A. Levine andMelvin Levine. He said all arefrom the Atlantic City area butnone has a direct tie to the casinogambling industry

Fog casts pall on regional traffic

NIEW YORK (AP) - Fogplagued New York's threeairports yesterday, forcing

delays, cancellations, diversionand missed approaches.

Port Authority operations of-ficers at Kennedy, LaGuardiaand Newark airports said the fogclogged weekend (ravel Butspeeds on Port Authoritybridges, such as the GeorgeWashington, remained un-diminished.

By late afternoon LaGuardiahad suspended departures andarrivals, and Kennedy reported

15-minute delays.Newark Airport reported no

flight delays, but ground trafficwas delayed for up to an hour onall roads leading into and out ofthe airport

The fog was the result of "verywarm. moist air flowing ovsr the.area," said Gene Salerno of theNational Weather Service."There's not much wind, so thefog's hanging in there."

Salerno said the fog was ex-pected to linger through thenight.

Kean says no tax hike next year• •EWARK, (AP) - Gov.RlThomas H Kean said yester-| •day that New Jersey resi-dents will not be asked to payhigher taxes to make up forfederal spending cuts, but thatthe state's next budget will be toolean to save some endangeredprograms.

"There will be no way what-soever that we can make up atthe state level any further budgetcuts," said Kean who appearedon WCBS-TV's "Newsmakers"program. "We've done that in thepast. We have simply assumed agreater level of funding. Thisbudget is tight."

Kean also said he would askthe Port Authority of New Yorkand New Jersey to fund anextension of the PATH line toNewark International Airport, orpay for sopie other type of"people-mover system" to easetraffic congestion at the airport.

He defended his proposal tocreate a position of lieutenantgovernor, said he would examinethe performance of the state-funded New Jersey Network andpromised that he would try toreduce the number of statecontracts awarded without bid-ding.

Kean, who will present his 1987budget proposal in the next fewweeks, would not answer ques-tions about specific items.

The governor blasted the new-ly enacted federal deficit reduc-tion law which requires across-the-board cuts if Congress fails to

meet annual budget cuttinggoals. New Jersey is expected tolose millions of dollars in federalassistance under the Gramm-Rudman bill.

Kean said there was a need tobalance the federal budget, butthat Gramm-Rudman fosters anirrational process. For example,Kean said, the law might lead tocuts in programs that will in-crease federal revenues in thefuture.

Kean said that during hisbudget propsal, he would "exam-ine very carefully" the need forNew Jersey Network, the state'spublic television network. Hesaid the network was originallycreated because New York andPhiladelphia stations wereneglecting coverage of the Gar-den State

He said conditions have im-proved, with those stations doingmore New Jersey coverage andChannel 9 moving to the state.

Kean denied reports that mem-bers of his staff pressurednetwork officials because theadministration disliked thenetwork's news coverage.

Asked about «1 billion in statecontracts awarded without bid-ding last year, Kean said theamount was smaller than inprevious administrations, butthat he would seek to reduce itfurther.

However, he said, certain con-tracts have to or should be takenout of the bidding process.

Heart transplant patient succumbs

NJEWARK (AP) - New Jer-sey's third heart transplantrecipient, a 35-year-old

Brooklyn, NY. woman, died ofacute respiratory distress sixdays after the operation atNewark Beth Israel MedicalCenter, the hospital announced.

The woman, whose name hasbeen withheld at her family'srequest, received an emergencytransplant Jan. 10 after beingadmitted to Beth Israel in criti-cal condition on mechanical lifesupport systems. She died Thurs-day.

The woman's initial progressafter the transplant was good andshe was able to walk around herroom for the first time onThursday, hospital officials said.But she became short of breath

and died a few hours later"despite aggressive medicaltreatment," according to a hospi-tal statement. '

A post-mortem examinationrevealed that the woman hadlarge blood clots in both lungs,said Dr. Jacques Losman, thehospital's heart transplantationdirector.

The woman was considered ahigh-risk case because she hadpreviously suffered a pulmonaryembolism and had sufferedstress recently from childbirth,the hospital said.

Meanwhile, the state's firsttwo heart transplant patients, 54-year-old Thomas Hodgson ofIrvington and Carlos Torres, 45,of Newark, continue to makegood progress, Losman said.

N.J. congressmen: Few surprisesB» M l McHUGHAssociated Press

WASHINGTON - With Congressidle for nearly a month during theholiday season, several watchdoggroups found time to rate the 1985performances of the nation's 535senators and representatives, includ-ing 16 from New Jersey.

Charting of the Garden Statedelegation produced some surprises,although most members performedpredictably along party lines.

The ratings, by CongressionalQuarterly Inc., Americans forDemocratic Action and the NationalRight to Life Committee uncoveredno shocking behavior among thestate's representatives on CapitolHill. New Jersey's Democrats votedliberally and Republicans con-servatively — for the most part.

In the House, Democratic Rep.Peter W. Rsdlno, the state's seniorcongressman, also is its most lib-eral, according to the ADA. The 76-year-old Newark lawmaker, in Con-gress since 1949, scored a perfect 100percent in the organization's track-ing of several 1985 votes on arms,economics and human rights andservices.

Rodino's liberal tendencies alsowere tracked by the CongressionalQuarterly Weekly' The publicationfound he voted 87 percent of the timeagainst what CQ calls a "con-servative coalition" of Republicansand Southern Democrats. Only fel-low Democrat James J. Howard wasmore consistent, the publicationfound, breaking with the con-servatives on 89 percent of the voteswatched.

The most liberal New Jerseysenator, according to the ADA andCQ, was Frank R. Lautenberg. Hevoted in favor of ADA issues 90percent of the time, and racked upa 92 percent record in opposing theconservative coalition.

Only Colorado Sen. Gary Hartexceeded that with a 95 percent non-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

GUARINI'S JUNKET — Rep. Frank Guarini, D-N.J., right, with Rep. Benjamin Gilman, R-N.Y., left,visited amajor Mexican marijuana and poppy-

growing center in Mexico over the weekend to seehow that government fares in the war against illegaldrugs.

conservative record.The same surveys found GOP

Reps. Jim Courter and H. JamesSaxton to be New Jersey's mostconservative congressmen. For NewJersey, Courter, of Hackettstown,topped CQ's list of voting with otherconservatives, and shared the bot-tom of the ADA'S list with Saxton, ofVincentown.

The right-to-life group's surveyhints at less clinical, but moreemotional labels for the lawmakersThe anti-abortion group recordedfour Senate and five House votesdealing with federal funding of

abortion or groups supporting it.Not surprisingly, Rep. Chris Smith

of Hamilton Township, one of Con-gress's most ardent abortion foes,had a perfect pro-life record, accord-ing to the right-to-life group. So didCourter and Saxton, along withRepublican Matthew Rinaldo ofElizabeth and Democrat Robert Roeof Wayne.

Oddly, two Republicans — DeanA. Gallo of Parsippany and MargeRoukema of Ridgewood — had thestate's only perfect pro-abortionrecords, the study found.

Although Smith's anti-abortion re-cord was expected, the 32-year

congressman was among the fterpublicans nationwide most ofteninclined to break faith with the partyand President Reagan, the ADA andCQ studies found.

CQ cited Smith as one of thehighest among his GOP colleagues inthree catagories — opposing Re-agan-backed issues, breaking with •the conservatives and breaking withfellow Republicans.

Smith also earned a party-high 55percent from the ADA in supportingtheir liberal issues. ,,<:

Congress is scheduled to returntomorrow for the second half of Its99th session.

Bishop rejects charismatic sect's pleaORANGE (AP) - Leaders of the

controversial Christian charismaticsect Sword of the Spirit met withtheir Roman Catholic followers inNew Jersey yesterday and called fora meeting with the Archbishop ofNewark, who asserts the group cannever gain his church's recognition.

Archbishop Peter Gerety has saidthe Berkeley Heights-based Peopleof Hope' community will not berecognized as a Catholic sect until itsever* ties with fundamentalistSword of the Spirit, headquartered inMichigan.

Gerety has urged Hope membersto rejoin the church's mainstream.

Critics have accused the char-ismatic groups, who claim to speakin tongues, of isolating themselvesfrom non-member Catholic par-ishioners, discriminating against

women, arranging marriages andmaking personal decisions for mem-bers.

People of Hope has been accusedby members of the Catholic LittleFlower Church parish in BerkeleyHeights of trying to take over theparish by moving families into thearea. Hope leaders have denied theclaims.

Yesterday, the Rev. MichaelScanlan of Steubenville, Ohio andother Sword of the Spirit leaders metat Our Lady of the Valley Church inOrange with members of People ofHope, whose estimated 1,000 practi-tioners all live in New Jersey.

Sword of the Spirit spokesmanFrank Perrotta said Catholic del-egations of his group, which alsoincludes Protestants, have beenrecognized and granted canonical

status by other Roman Catholicbishops in parishes in Lansing,Mich., and Steubenville, Ohio.

"We are disappointed there hasbeen no dialogue with ArchbishopGerety," Perrotta said, adding thatSword leaders want "clarification"on his message that the Vatican willnot recognize any Sword-affiliatedgroup.

Last Sunday, Gerety repeated hiscall for an end to the relationshipbetween the two groups in a speechto Hope members.

Perrotta said the Sword group,with branches in the United Statesand 16 other countries, has had itsCatholic members work withVatican agencies without papal ob-jection.

Gerety, in a letter to Hope. members, has warned, "Do not

listen to {hose who teach otherwise"in telling them they must give firstallegiance to the Roman Catholicchurch if they wish its recognition.

His secretary, the Rev. JohnDoran, said yesterday that thearchbishop was unavailable for com-ment.

"The archbishop has said all he'sgoing to say right now," Doran said.

Perrotta said the Sword group has6,000 followers in tightly knit com-munities. The group gives "advice,wisdom and counsel" to its membersbut "as a matter of principle, wedon't make personal decisions forthem," he said.

The group's prayer meeting are"free and more spontaneous" thanmainstream worship, and can in-clude prayers for healing a sick'member, Perrotta added

Traffic mess predicted for Newark airportNEWARK (AP) - The number of travelers

using Newark International Airport has risen 179percent over the past six years and is expectedto continue to increase, which will meanintolerable traffic jams in three years if alternateaccess means are not developed, the airport'smanagers say.

The nation's fasest growing airport will benefitfrom a recently authorized $3.5 million roadimprovement effort and modest parking ex-pansion plans that should keep automobilecongestion from getting much worse in the nexttwo years, say Port Authority officials who runthe airport.

But a wide range of measures ranging frommore parking spaces to bus or rail links will thenbe needed to stem the traffic jams andovercrowded parking lots that plague the airportmost holiday weekends, officials say.

Traffic growth is expected to continue at theairport into the next decade, with passengervolumes expected to at least match those of JFK

International Airport before 1990, said ChristineJohnson, chief transportation services planner forthe Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

She said the airport's internal road networkwas originally designed to handle up to 14 millionpassengers annually, less than half the number oftravelers expected to use the airport this year.

However, once People Express moves itsoperations from the North Terminal to TerminalC in 1987, all ground access to flights will have

to be handled in the airport's central terminalarea, Ms. Johnson noted.

The Port Authority's director of planning,Martin Robins, says 70 percent of travelers to andfrom the airport now use automobiles, a figureofficials would hope to decrease through teedevelopment of alternate transportation means.

The alternates could include more bus routesand even a rail link with Newark's PennsylvaniaStation, which Gov. Thomas H. Kean has calledfor.

Mrp1 raf f ic growth is expected to continue at the airport into the

next decade, with passenger volumes expected to at least matchthose of JFK International Airport before 1990W

• Christine JohnsonPort authority chief transportation services planner

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Rain forces halt to recovery of bodies in crashGUATEMALA CITY (AP) - Bad

weather yesterday forced an end toshuttle flights returning bodies fromthe isolated northern jungle sitewhere 93 people perished in theworst air crash in Guatemalanhistory Eight Americans wereutiijig the dead.

Ike twin-engine Caravelle jet ofthe private airline Aerovias crashedSaturday as it approached the SantaElena airport, about ISO miles northof Guatemala City, while flyingtourists to the ancient Mayan ruinsof Tikal.'

All aboard were lulled.The airline earlier put the death

toll at 90, including six Americans,but yesterday it said two otherAmericans and a Guatemalan wereamong the victims. There was noimmediate determination of whatcaused the crash.

The first 12 bodies were broughtback late Saturday to the capital'sinternational airport. Sobbing rela-

tives jammed the tiny waiting roomof the Aerovias terminal, waiting tobe summoned to identify the bodies.

They hugged each other, weeping,as the first victims were broughtinto the hangar. A line of hearseswaited nearby

An elderly man sobbed softly as aforklift brought in a pallet with twobodies, one apparently his wife

"Twenty-five years, twenty-fiveyears," he said over and over

Airport officials said those vic-tims brought back were the mosteasily identifiable.

Several small planes that leftGuatemala City yesterday and flewto Santa Elena to help return thebodies were unable to fly back to thecapital because of rain and lowvisibility.

Small groups of relatives, mostdressed in black, remained huddledat the terminal, however.

Besides the Americans, apreliminary list from the airline

CRASH COMMENTSGuatemalan Minister of PublicHealth Dr Carlos Armando Sotodiscusses the recovery oper-ations (or the victims of theAerovias plane crash inGuatemala.

indicated 59 of the victims wereGuatemalans, six were from Col-ombia, four from Venezuela, twofrom Mexico, two from Canada, fourfrom the Netherlands, two fromCosta Rica, two from Britain, andone each from West Germany, Italy,France and Greece.

Gerry Waters, a spokesman at theU.S. Embassy in Guatemala City,said the names of the dead Ameri-cans would not be released until theembassy was advised that familieshad been notified.

One of our people is still up there(at the crash site)," he said.

The French-built plane, whichAerovias had rented from the Ecua-doran airline Saeta, was used forflights to Santa Elena to handleheavy demand for travel to the ruins.The airport is about 29 miles southof the ruins in the department, orstate, of Peten.

The last contact the control tower

at Santa Elena had with the pilot wasat 7.58 a.m. Saturday, 3) minutesinto the 40-minute flight fromGuatemala City. The control towersaid there was no indication of anyproblem with the plane.

Jorge Escobar of the NationalWeather Center said the crashoccurred in "good weather, thewinds were-calm and the visibilityunlimited."

People who flew over the crashsite said the plane chewed a shortpath through the jungle and ap-parently disintegrated, strewingdebris and victims over a 300-yardradius.

Planes bringing tourists to Tikaldo not fly directly to the area lestvibrations damage the ruins, con-sidered among the finest of theMayan kingdom.

Tikal, one of the largest andpossibly the oldest of the Mayancities, consists of nine groups of

courts and plazas built on hilly landabove surrounding swamps and in-terconnected by bridges andcauseways. The ruins date from theClassic Era, about 300 to 900.

Some crash victims had come toGuatemala for tomorrow's in-auguration of President VinicioCerezo, elected Dec. 8 as the nation'sfirst civilian president in It years.

They included Aristides Calvani.67, a former foreign minister ofVenezuela who once headed theChristian Democratic Party there.His wife, Adellta, and daughtersGraciela, 23, and Maria Elena, 25,also were on the flight.

Guatemala's newly Inauguratedcongress declared a three-daymourning period. The flag at theVenezuelan Embassy was at half-staff.

The crash was the first majoraccident involving a commercialairliner this year.

Refugees evacuated from South YemenLONDON (AP) - The royal yacht

Britannia evacuated 208 more refu-gees yesterday from the beaches ofwar-torn South Yemen, the DefenseMinistry reported.

A spokesman said the evacueeswere from several nations, andincluded 19 Britons picked up 20nules northeast of Aden, the capitalwhere bloody fighting was raging

He said said Queen Elizabeth Usluxurious yacht maneuvered close toa beach east of Aden to pick up theother refugees.

"It's a different beach from theone used as a pick-up point in thefirst evacuation on Friday," he said.

"We have no knowledge at presentof whether there is any fighting inthe area of the evacuation."

The Britannia evacuated about 350people of 42 nationalities Fridaynight and early Saturday and tookthem to Djibouti, about 160 milesacross the Gulf of Aden from SouthYemen's capital, and then returned.British warships also were reportedstanding by

The Britannia was in the Red Sea

heading for New Zealand for thequeen's February visit when the warbegan in South Yemen, and Buck-ingham Palace said the queen was"delighted " it could be used to help

Earlier, the ship's commanderRear Adm John Gamier said 150people were assembled un the beachto be picked up yesterday and weknow the location of 1,074 people, tobe evacuated

Gamier, speaking from the Bri-tannia on a snip-to-shore connection,said two other British ships in thearea, the frigate Jupiter and thedestroyer Newcastle, were in touchwith the foreigners on shore, makingassembly arrangements

One person rescued in the firstevacuation said 160 foreigners had tobe left behind when shooting cutshort the yacht's rescue mission

"Shrapnel started flying all roundthe launches," said British in-surance salesman Jeremy Flaxman,who was one of the last evacuees towade into the surf and be picked upby small boats from the yacht atdawn Saturday.

In a radio interview broadcast in

London, Flaxman said he and otherswho had sought refuge in an Adenhotel went to the beach carryingwhite flags made of broomsticks andpillow cases.

British officials at the port ofDjibouti on the Horn of Africa saidthe evacuees disembarked thereSaturday night to the militarystrains of "Land of Hope andGlory." played by the Royal Marineband on the yacht.

The Swedish and West Germanambassadors were among the evacu-ees, and diplomats of many nationscrowded the dock to welcome theircitizens to safety, government of-ficials said

The Foreign Office said BritishAmbassador Arthur Marshall,among the evacuees at Djibouti,returned aboar the Britannia yester-day "to look after the rest of hisflock "

The 40 or so Britons remaining aredotted around' the mainland, gov-

ernment officials said."Aden has been a nightmare for

the last week," Marshall told thenews agency Press Association by

ship-to-shore telephone yesterday."We have all been living in a

continuous mayhem of gunfire," andthere were "burned out tanks anddead bodies everywhere," saidMarshall, whose residence was bad-ly damaged.

Uarnier told the British Broad-casting Corp. that when the queen'syacht sent in boats early Saturdaythere were about 120 people on thebeach, but more kept arriving.

Shells started landing, he said."Then we saw tanks and rebelmilitia coming down the beach andwe had to withdraw our team at justabout the last moment we could."

Foreign Secretary Sir GeoffreyHowe said British and Soviet of-ficials in London, Moscow andDjibouti were in constant touch aspart of a coordinated effort to bringforeign nationals to safety

Soviet ships took an estimated1,000 refugees from South Yemen toDjibouti Saturday

British diplomatic sources saidthe Anglo-Soviet cooperation was themost substantial since World War II

I^ ' ^ - - -

Army paid 10 times lowest rate for shippingWASHINGTON (AP) - The Army

paid more than 10 times the lowestrate to ship household goods ofsoldiers from West Germany toWashington because of a mistake bymilitary clerks, according to com-puter records and federal officials.

Records show that the Army paidmore than $565,900 for 46 shipmentsfrom Frankfurt, West Germanybetween May 1984 and June 1965 Theshipments could have cost 151,300 ifthey were made through the mostinexpensive companies.' "It looks like a booking clerk (in

Frankfurt i made a mistake," said<S>I George Kaine, public infor-mation officer for the Army's Mili-• r y Traffic Management Command* Baileys Crossroads, Va.* The Army spokesman said the

problem occurred because the per-sonnel in West Germany were un-familiar with the rate structure forshipping to the Washington area,which includes installations innearby Northern Virginia.* Kaine said the Army has no

Evidence that the problem wentBtyond Frankfurt-to-Washingtonshipments, adding, "We don't seejpjr worldwide problem."

Kaine said the foulup was'brought to our attention" last

October by General Services Admin-istration auditors He said the Army"took immediate action" to notifyits shipping personnel worldwide ofthe correct rates for the District ofColumbia area "We have put a stopto it," he said

Joseph Cosimano. an official in theGeneral Services AdministrationsOffice of Transportation Audits,confirmed the error He said it wasbrought to the attention of his officeby Army officials in West Germany

The traffic management com-mand is responsible for 800,000personal property shipments a yearThe command's computer records,which record each shipment, re-vealed, for example, that:

—Goods shipped June 1, 1984 at acost of 135,327 would have cost $2,978if the Army had used the lowestavailable rate.

—On Aug. 3, 1984, a shipment thatcost $33,084 could have been handledfor $2,788.

—A Jan. 30, 1985 shipment couldhave cost $1,945, but the Army paid$23,912.

—In May 1985, a $32,170 shipmentcould have been arranged for $3,063.

The companies that arrange themoves are called freight forwardersThey have no trucks, ships or planes,

but coordinate the moves with localmoving firms. The Frankfurt-to-Washington shipments were handledunder a category that utilizes localmovers at each end and Air Forceplanes over water.

One company official, explainingthe rate system, said forwarderspurposely charge high rates incertain a>eas because they don'twant the business in those localities

Ken Armstrong, chief executiveofficer of Sound Forwarders, saidthe selection of his BotheU. Wash.,firm to handle high-cost moves"puzzled me so much" thai he calledhis data processing service — toverify that his copy of the rate listfor Washington DC was correct.

'You know where you stand inrelation to other companies,"Armstrong said.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHINESE FISHING GROUND — Fishing boats go through amussel breeding ground in the East China sea. Kelp, mussel andlaver cultivated in the Zhoushan Islands sell well in China.

Britain, France to build rail tunnel under channelBu Ban

Dj rayChicago Tribune

LONDON - Britain and Francewill announce today that they havedecided to authorize construction ofa $3.35 billion rail tunnel under theEnglish Channel to enable trains tomake the London-Paris journey injust 3 hours 15 minutes. Britishnewspapers said yesterday:

The agreement will be announcedby Prime Minister MargaretThatcher and French PresidentFrancois Mitterrand at Lille innortheast France. It will provide forconstruction of a road tunnel later,

if technical problems can be over-come

The current trip by train and boatbetween London and. Paris takes 61/2 hours. The rail tunnel would becompleted by 1993.

The tunnel plan is one of four thathave been under consideration by theBritish and French governmentssince last fall. Officials of the twogovernments reached agreement onone of the plans at a meeting in ParisThursday but have refused to revealtheir choice before the Lille meet-ing.

The idea of a channel link has beenaround since 1802 when French

engineer Albert Mathieu proposedconstruction of a tunnel that was tobe lit by candles and enable relaysof horses to carry people under thechannel in less than an hour. TheEmperor Napoleon endorsed thescheme but nothing came of it anda number of proposals in morerecent years have also foundered.

The channel link, 31 miles long,will be Europe's biggest civil engi-neering feat of the century and willbe built entirely with private financ-ing. The rail tunnel was proposed bya consortium called Channel TunnelGroup, headed by Sir Nicholas,Henderson, former British am-

bassador in Washington.The other proposals provided for a

combination of road and rail tunnels,a combined bridge and tunnel and asuspension bridge.

Thatcher and other British minis-ters made it known that they favoreda proposal by a consortium calledChannel Expressway, which wantedto build two parallel road tunnels andtwo separate tubes for trains. Butthe French did not favor that planand experts said Channel Ex-pressway had not solved the problemof removing automobile exhaustfumes from a 31-mile tunnel.

Inside Nation/World^SOVIET-JAPAN TALKS -%oviet Foreign Minister EduardShevardnadze left Japan yester-day after re-establishing long-broken political contacts but leftunresolved a territorial issueJapan says must be taken care otbefore it will sign a treaty withMoscow formally ending WorldWar II 10

» HE ART DISEASE — For•unions of people, such ordinaryMentalSxertion as talking on the tele-phone or doing math can triggerepisodes of silent ischemia, pain-less disruptions in the How otblood to their hearts that put themat high risk ot death, new researchhas found 10i

• DEPARTMENT STOREDINOSAURS? — Traditional de-partment stores are under fire andfcmbering toward extinction un-less merchants change sometime-worn practices, retailing ex-pens say Department stores aregetting shot at from all sides byspecialty stores, off-price chains,discounters and cataloguemerchants and they are losing•hoppers taster than they wouldlike to admit 11

» WOMEN AT WAR - YoungLibyan women are being urged bytheir leader, Moammar Khadafy,to |oin the armed forces in thatcountry, an endeavor lookeddown upon by many Arab so-cieties. But more and morewomen are heeding Khadafy's call

: 10

• BEATING HIGH PREMIUMS— Because the regular com-mercial insurance market hasmore business than it can take on,many of the nation's largestindustrial companies are bandingtogether to write their dwninsurance 11

» NEGLIGENT ENGINEERS —A state board could revoke theprofessional licenses ol two engi-neers found negligent in the col-lapse ol two aerial walkways thatkilled 114 people in a hotel lobbyMissouri in 1981 9

• ABORTION PROTESTS -Abortion opponents held demon-strations in several cities over theweekend, gearing up for a protestin Washington this week to .mark the 13th anniversary of theSupreme Court ruling which effec-tively legalized abortion 9

> KEEPING POLLS CLEAN -As President Ferdinand E. Marcosand challenger Corazon Aquinopursue the most hard-fought elec-tion campaign in recent Philippinehistory traditional political rhetorichas given *ay to a more centralissue: whether the Feb 7 balloting*ill be clean 14

• KING REMEMBERED - SouthAfrican Archbishop DesmondTutu stood yesterday in the pulpitonce occupied by Martin LutherKing Jr. in Atlanta and promised acampaign of civil disobedienceagainst apartheid laws. Elsewherein the country, programs and cel-ebrations remembering King'slegacy were planned 10

• CATCHING UP — It wasn't solong ago that American manufac-turers of personal computers werepredicting that their Asian counter-partswould have a hard time establish-ing a beachhead in the UnitedStates. However, the Asian per-sonal computer invasion hasbegun,and after Christmas sales weretotaled up, it became clear thatanother breach has been openedin the American defenses 11

Working wivesPercentage of employed 'women who are marrted

Note: Figures are lor 1980Qacago Trtuw Qnvftc. Sara ."Wonan A VIM) Survey." M l U M Skvd |1966]

WORKING WIVES - This bar graphshows the percentages of employedwomen in nine countries who aremarried, according to 1980 figures.

$30 million waits for 1 manNEW YORK (AP) - A Staten

Island resident holds a Lotto ticketworth 130 million, becoming thelargest single prize winner in NewYork state lottery history, officialssaid yesterday.

The winner, who was not named,will be announced In a newsconference this afternoon, officialssaid.

However, several news reportsidentified the man as a 59-year-oldconstruction worker, Patrick Con-salvo of Staten Island.

Dennis Rhodes, a public rela-tions official representing the Lot-tery, said he could not confirm thename.

"The Lottery is satisfied thewinner has been Identified" andlives on Staten Island, Rhodessaid. "It just ain't official until theindividual is in the office."

Consalvo has an unlisted numberand could not be reached forcomment.

The winning ticket in Saturday'sLotto 48 game was sold at anundisclosed Staten Island outlet,Lottery Director John O. Quinnsaid at a news conference.

"This is the second-largest indi-vidual prize in North America and,

as far as we know, the world,"Quinn said.

The ticket holder's winningssurpass those of Venero Pagano,the previous state record prizewinner, who won $20 million inJuly 1984 Pagano, a 63-year-oldretired carpenter, formerly of theBronx, now lives In Florida, Quinnsaid.

The largest payout to one personin North America was $40 millionto Michael Wittkowski, who wonthe Illinois lottery in September1964.

There was a Ml million prize Inthe New York lottery last Augusta record jackpot for the state andNorth America, but it was sharedby the holders of three winningtickets, including 21 Mount Vernonfactory workers who split oneticket

Quinn said the lottery earned133.67 million for education sinceDec. 28, and brought out the bestin players.

Saturday's Lotto 48 game hadrolled over six times, meaningthere were six drawings with nowinner before Saturday.

. JANUARY 20, 1986 The Hrgitlrr M

The NationWoman, Soviet husband reunited

FRANKFURT, West Germany(AP) - A Massachusettswoman was reunited with her

Soviet husband yesterday after athree-year separation, and twoother Russian men prepared tojoin their American wives in theUnited States.

Edith Luthi. of Holliston,Mass., hugged her husband,Michael lossel, after he arrivedat the Frankfurt InternationalAirport from Leningrad

"I'm sorry, but you have tounderstand we don't want to talkto the press now." she said,smiling, as she helped her hus-band with his suitcases.

lossel was accompanied byLeonid Ablavsky, who is to fly tothe United States tomorrow for areunion with his wife, RobinRubendunst of New York City'sBrooklyn borough.

A third Soviet citizen, AlexiLodisev, arrived in Frankfurtearlier yesterday from Moscowen route to a reunion with hisw i f e , Sandra Gubin ofKalamaioo, Mich.

The three men are the latestSoviet citizens who have beenallowed to rejoin family mem-bers in the West following theU.S.-Soviet summit meeting inGeneva last November.

Syrians confer on reviving peace

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Forces loyal to PresidentAmin Gemayel battled pro-

Syrian militias northeast ofBeirut as Lebanese Moslemleaders conferred yesterday withPresident Hafez Assad of Syriaon how to revive a peace plansponsored by his country.

Syrian sources in Damascus,speaking on condition ofanonymity, said Assad held talkswith a Lebanese delegation head-ed by Prime Minister RashidKarami, a Sunni Moslem.

Gemayel's forces meanwhilefought off Syrian-backed leftistand Moslem factions for a fifth

Police reported nine peoplekilled and nine wounded in over-night clashes on the Metu front 10miles north of Beirut, nearGemayel's hometown of Bikfaya.

Army troops loyal to Gemayelbattled Druse Moslem fighters inthe hills east of Beirut, wherepolice said artillery and mortarfire killed three people.

The pro-Syrian factionslaunched their offensive againstGemayel's Metn stronghold onWednesday, hours after thepresident's allies crushed rivalChristian militias that supportedSyria's peace plan.

Police capture last 2 fugitives

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Policestormed into a trailer yester-day and captured the last two

of four fugitives who escapedfrom prison by breaking throughsix steel barriers.

The men, one serving 60 yearsfor killing two Marion Countysheriff's deputies, were asleepwhen officers entered the trailerbehind a house. They put up noresistance.

The four, including three con-victed killers, escaped Thursdayfrom the Indiana State Prison 150miles away in Michigan City. Theother two prisoners, JimmyGordon Deaton, 39, of Chavies,Ky., and Mikco Steven Ball, 33,of Jefferson County, were cap-tured near Lafayette early Fri-day.

"Nobody was hurt, there wasno problem at all," said statepolice Detective Francis Shrockafter the raid yesterday by statetroopers and a special weaponsteam from the city Police De-partment.

Sanford Ray Marshall, 45,sentenced to 60 years for murder-ing two Marion County sheriff'sdeputies, and Steven DouglasBilyeu, 38, sentenced to 32 yearsfor theft and burglary, wererecaptured about 7 a.m.

Police said they received ananonymous tip that the men werein the city and after watching thehouse for several hours, obtaineda search warrant, said policespokeswoman Barbara K. Sin-clair.

Bus drivers reach tentative contractIOSTON fA/) .-.Scljool bus,drfvers and the Boston

:hool Committee are ex-pected to vote Indty -on acontract proposal,-W'*tf a two-week strike that has kept abouthalf the district's 27,000 bus-riding students from class.

"If there is ratification by themembership of the union andapproval by the School Commit-tee, all the buses and the vansshould be transporting our stu-dents Tuesday morning," saidSuperintendent of Schools LavalS. Wilson.

Union president James Barrettsaid he believed the union wouldratify the agreement. "Therewere no concessions. I'm verypleased," he said.

The proposal calls for .100percent paid medical insurancefor up to 60 days of sick leave,time off for union work and a $100-bonus for good attendance. Alsounder the tentative pact, buscompanies would hire a consult-ant to set up a pension plan to befunded by drivers.

Union drivers have workedwithout a contract since August.The tentative pact was reachedSaturday night after 10 hours ofnegotiations among representa-tives of the School Department;United Steelworkers of AmericaLocal 8751. which represents thedrivers, and the two transpor-tation companies that hire thedrivers.

Old Capote stories discovered

GREENWICH, Conn. (AP) -Two stories penned byTruman Capote when he was

a student at Greenwich HighSchool have been found in backissues of the school's literarymagazine, but they probablywon't be published, an expertsays.

Capote, who went on to write"Breakfast at Tiffany's" and "In

Cold Blood," died Aug. 25, 1964,at the age of 59.

"The estate will take greatcare not to publish any earlyworks that would detract fromthe writings of the matureauthor," said Andreas Brown,owner of Gotham Book Mart inNew York City.

"We have 15 to 20 examples of

juvenilia from Capote's Green-wich days, and they are mainlyof interest as curiosities orbiographical material," saidBrown, who is compiling acomplete list of Capote works forthe estate.

Capote attended GreenwichHigh School from 1939 to 1942.

The newly found stories werepublished in "The Green Witch,"for which Capote wrote about adozen stories and poems while hewas in high school.

Janet Bermingham, a li-brarian at the school, found theback copies Friday after contact-ing Capote's former classmates.Brown had sought her help infinding the issues.

Three found dead in house

BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) - Thebodies of three people werediscovered yesterday in

rented house here, andauthorities said they had beenkilled sometime during the night.

Gage County Attorney RichardSmith declined to release anyinformation on the identities orsex of the victims. He also wouldnot say how they were killed oroffer a motive for the slayings.

Beatrice police found threebodies in the rented house about8 a.m. yesterday.

The Gage County sheriff'soffice said earlier the deaths

were apparently the result of ashooting.

Smith said law enforcementofficers were going door-to-doorin the neighborhood in an attemptto gather information. Severalneighbors had been interviewedby early afternoon, and Smithsaid their stories "all seem to beconsistent."

"We've got three agenciesworking on it. We want to getsomebody in custody," Smithsaid. "We're pieeMng togetherlots of information and we've gotlots of interviews taking place."

3 hurt as Sikhs fight over temple

AMRITSAR, India (AP) -Seventy Sikhs fought withrifles and shotguns yesterday

in the Golden Temple, holiest ofSikh shrines, over who wouldrebuild the temple's throneroom,police said. Three people werehurt.

More than 600 pilgrims anddevotees fled as the gunmen firedfor about 30 minutes in front ofthe Akal Takht building in the

white marble compound, whichcovers several square blocks,police and witnesses said.

The Akal Takht is thethroneroom of the gurus and seatof the Sikh religion's earthlyauthority.

Witnesses and police saidabout 50 armed workers of theAkali Dal, the state's moderategoverning party, battled about 20separatist radicals

Rallies markcourt rulingon abortionHKMUFEUERAssociated Press

Abortion opponents held demon-strations in several cities over theweekend, gearing up for a protest inWashington this week to mark the13th anniversary of the SupremeCourt ruling which effectively legal-ized abortion.

Pro-abortion activists alsoplanned to mark the anniversary,including a "back alley" rally inCharleston, W.Va., on Tuesdayaimed at recalling the days beforethe Jan. 22, 1973, Roe vs. Waderuling.

Anti-abortion protests were heldin Dallas and in Providence, R.I., onSunday and in Birmingham, Ala.,Madison, Wis , Austin and Beau-mont, Texas, Montpelier, Vt., andConcord, N.H., on Saturday.

In Birmingham, a Catholic priestwho is on probation for damagingabortion clinics led some 3,000 anti-abortion demonstrators in a marchpast several abortion clinics.

The Rev. Edward Markley wasgiven probation for smashingabortion equipment and ordered tostay at least 500 yards from anyclinic after a 1984 attack on theBirmingham Women's Clinic.

He said after the march Saturday"abortion is just too horrible not toprotest." When asked if he camewithin 500 yards of an abortion clinicSaturday, Markley told The Birm-ingham News, "Absolutely."

About 75 pro-abortion demon-strators lined the street in front ofone clinic on the anti-abortion marchroute. The only vocal exchange camewhen a pro-abortion demontratoryelled, "Father Markley go back toprison."

Jefferson County Deputy DistrictAttorney Steve Mahon said he hadreceived a phone call from "a person

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BAIRD STILL FIGHTING - In his Hempstead,N.Y., office pro-abortion leader Bill Baird holds upa sign that got him jailed in Freehold 20 years ago.

Baird (ears the pro-abortion movement is losing itsmomentum 13 years after the Supreme Court rulingthat effectively legalized abortion.

involved" and his office wouldinvestigate the complaint to de-termine whether Markley violatedhis probation.

Smaller protests Saturday inMadison, Wis , Austin, Texas, andConcord, N.H., drew politicians tout-ing their efforts to fight abortion,and on Sunday in Providence, R.I.,Roman Catholic Bishop Louis E.Gelineau held a "Pro-Life Mass."

The Mass was a prelude to localactivists' trip to Washington onWednesday for the "March ForLife" which was expected to drawthousands to The Ellipse at noon.

Also scheduled for Wednesday inWashington was a press conference

by the Religious Coalition forAbortion Rights at which the groupwas to speak on what it calls theproliferation of "bogus abortionclinics" which are actually fronts foranti-abortion proselytizing.

And the National Organization forWomen's rally in a downtownCharleston alley was scheduledthree days before the state Legis-lature's public hearing on an attemptto outlaw abortions.

"We're going into an alley becausewe want to remind ourselves and thepublic of the harsh reality faced bywomen before Roe. v. Wade," saidNahla Nimeh Lewis, local NOW

action vice president."Then, illegal abortion was

leading killer of pregnant women inthe U.S. This vigil is in memory ofthose women who died and adeclaration that we will not gp backto the time when desperate womenwere maimed and killed by back-alley butchers," she said.

The West Virginia House Constitu-tional Revisions Committee hasscheduled a public hearing Friday ona proposed amendment to barabortions in the state except whenneeded to save the life of the motherSimilar versions of the measurehave failed during previous legislat-ive sessions.

FBI may take over spy defector casesIfKOME BEDDAAssociated Press

WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration,unhappy with the CIA's handling of former SovietKGB agent Vitaly Yurchenko, may reduce theCIA's role in defector cases and give primaryresponsibility to the FBI, informed sources say.

"I think it's a great move," said a senior WhiteHouse official, who contended that defectorsinvariably have been able to establish muchcloser relations with FBI personnel than CIAofficers.

The official, who insisted on anonymity, saidthe proposal has been under consideration forsome time and was given additional impetus byYurchenko's surprise decision to return to theSoviet Union last November after three monthsin CIA custody.

White House spokesman Edward Djerejianacknowledged that the procedures for dealingwith defectors are being reviewed but he declinedcomment on the options under consideration. FBIand CIA spokesmen refused to discuss the issue.

Other experts, all of whom declined to be

identified by name, said the government isconsidering a variety of proposals to enticedisillusioned Soviet bloc agents to defect and toavoid another embarrassment similar to the oneinvolving Yurchenko.

The options include granting high-rankingdefectors an automatic permanent income,reducing the five- to 10-year waiting period for theconferral of American citizenship and thecreation of a "think tank" comprised exclusivelyof defectors, the sources said.

Such an institution, they said, would provide apool of wisdom government policymakers coulddraw on.

Discussing Yurchenko, Donald Jameson, aformer CIA official who has had extensiveexperience with defectors said, "Nobody couldhave handled that case worse than the CIA."

Yurchenko, who defected in July, fled from hisCIA handlers on Nov. 2 and returned to the SovietUnion four days later after turning himself in tothe Soviet Embassy.

He is regarded by U.S. officials as a genuinedefector although he claimed he was abducted,drugged, tortured and held incommunicado by the

CIA before his escape.Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo., who has taken

a special interest in the defector issue, said theCIA has made defector resettlement a "dead-endcareer assignment." He advocates giving FBI theleading role for dealing with defectors.

Several other experts said a permanent incomefor defectors would be the best way tocompensate them for the valuable informationthey provide the government.

Because of CIA reluctance to provide a lifetimeincome to most defectors, their principal fear isthat "they will fall off the economic ladder," oneobserver said.

He said one defector who had providedextremely useful Information to the CIA was atthe point of fleeing to South America because ofhis disgust with the agency's refusal to give himan assured income.

Nicolae Horodinca, a Romanian defector,expressed profound disillusionment with the CIA.contending that the agency broke promises toprovide him with a job, a house, life insuranceand medical insurance.

Negligent hotelengineers maylose licensesBy BRONWEN H0WEUJAssociated Press

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Astate board could revoke the pro-fessional licenses of two engineersfound negligent in the collapse oftwo aerial walkways that killed 114people in a hotel lobby in 1981.

Daniel M. Duncan and Jack D.Gillum, both of St. Louis, werefound guilty by a state hearingofficer of "gross negligence, mis-conduct and unprofessional con-duct" for failing to perform safetytests on the connections that held upthe aerial walkways at the HyattRegency Hotel in Kansas City.

Two of the three walkways col-lapsed on July 17, 1981, killing 114people and injuring about 200 others.Connections in the steel that held upthe walkways were found to beflawed.

While the men maintained theywere not responsible for the safetytesting, lawyers for the state arguedthat the two, as project engineers inthe building of the hotel, wereresponsible for all structural engi-neering.

The ruling that found Duncan andGillum responsible, made in No-vember by James B. Deutsch, astate administrative bearing com-missioner, recommended that theybe disciplined by the eight-memberMissouri Board for Architects, Pro-fessional Engineers and LandSurveyors.

The disciplinary hearing is sched-uled Wednesday. They face penal-ties ranging from letters of repri-mand to revocation of their engi-neering licenses.

"The case has been tried already,and the judge has ruled there mustbe a reprimand," said ShirleyNixon, executive director of theboard. "Now it's more of a charac-ter-type trial" to determine whatpenalty they should receive.

The board's decision can beappealed to the state court svstem

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Soviets, Japan end talks;territorial issue unresolved

ODKYO i APi - Soviet ForeignMinister Eduard Shevardnadze leftyesterday after re-establishing long-broken political contacts and dis-cuMing a territorial issue Japan laysmust be resolved before it will signa treaty with Moscow formallyending World War II.

The five-day visit was the first bya Soviet foreign minister to Japansince 1976, and marked the first timein eight years that the nations'foreign ministers have held regularconsultations Shevardnadze held 11hours of talks with Foreign MinisterShintaro Abe before leaving forNorth Korea en route home.

Shevardnadze, who last year suc-ceeded Kremlin elder statesmanAndrei Gromyko, at a news con-ference yesterday sharply con-demned President Reagan'sStrategic Defense Initiative space-liaaeddefense research program. Heurged Washington to seriously con-sider Soviet leader MikhailGorbachev's recent proposal toeliminate nuclear weapons over a 15-vear period.

Shevardnadze said if com-prehensive nuclear disarmamentwere accomplished, "then whowould SDI be directed against? Whatwffmd be its purpose? What would bethe purpose of spending trillions ofdollars?"

He also took a tough line on whatJapan calls the Northern Terri-tories, a small string of islandswhich both nations claim off themain northern Japanese island ofHokkaido.

The Soviets occupied the islands inthe final days of World War II andfortified them with 10,000 troops.Moscow considers the issue does notexist, but Japan has refused to signa treaty with Moscow formallyending World War II because of thedispute.

In a separate news conference,Abe said a communique, formuatedafter long debate on the territorialissue, was a "new starting point"from which Japan will "strongly andtenaciously negotiate for the returnof the Northern Territories."

He said the "reopening of peacetreaty negotiations including theterr i tor ia l problem ' withShevardnadze was "an importantfirst step for the future developmentof Soviet-Japan relations "

The communique does not specifi-cally mention the islands, but says"the two foreign ministers con-ducted negotiations on the con-clusion of a peace treaty! includingthe problems which might constitutethe content of the said treaty, on thebasis of the agreement affirmed in

the joint statement of Oct. 10,1973."That statement, drawn up when

then Prime Minister Kakuei Tanakamet the late Leonid Brezhnev inMoscow, said the Soviet Union andJapan agreed there were "un-resolved issues" left over fromWorld War II

Both sides said Shevardnadze'svisit, which Included talks withPrime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone,helped put badly. derailed Soviet-Japan relations back on track.

Tokyo also has been at odds withMoscow over the Soviet militaryintervention in Afghanistan, itsshooting down of a Korean airlinerover the Sea of Japan, and thebuildup of Soviet naval and landpower in the Far East. Moscow hascondemned 'Tokyo for its closesecurity ties with the United States.

The two foreign ministers agreedto resume yearly meetings, after aneight-year hiatus. Abe Is to travel toMoscow this year.

Trade and taxation agreementswere signed and annual trade consul-tations were upgraded to deputyminister level and set for March.The two sides agreed to hold thisyear a meeting of their joint scien-tific and technological cooperationcommittee, which Japan suspendedafter the Soviet-backed crackdownin Poland.

LEADERS MEET - Soviet Foreign MinisterEduard Shevardnadze, right, shakes hands withTakeshi Araki, mayor of Hiroshima, Japan, before

ASSOCIATED PRES8

their meeting in Tokyo yesterday. Shevardnadzeleft Japan later in the day, ending a five-day officialvisit there.

4Silent'heartafflictionidentifiedBy DANIEL 0 H/WEYAP Science Writer

BOSTON (API - For millions ofpeople, such ordinary mental exer-tion as talking on the telephone ordoing math can trigger painlessdisruptions in the flow of blood totheirbearts that put them at highrisk of death, new research hasfound

These episodes, called silentischemia, occur when the arteriesthat feed the heart temporarilysqueeze shut, starving the heartmuscle of oxygen.

When this happens during physicalexercise, a crushing chest painknown as angina often results. Butthe new research suggests thatpainless ischemia is four times morecommon than angina.

Or Andrew P Selwyn of Brighamand Women's Hospital in Boston saidthese disruptions occur far moreoften than experts had previouslysuspected. -

Selwyn estimates that about 2mrffion Americans with angina alsot-xp*rienee silent ischemia. Butiher# are probably an additional 3million or 4 million people with noangina or history of heart diseasewho have these episodes withoutknowing it.

These insidious interruptions canstowly harm the heart or cause asudden lethal attack, he says. Ident-ifying and treating victims couldsave lives

'When ischemia comes and goesover the years, it nibbles patches outof the myocardium iheart muscle)jnd can result in heart failure. Ifepisodes of ischemia hit vital partsof the heart, or they just last toolong, it can go on to complicationslike infarction (heart attack) anddeath." he said.

Selwyn, who directs his hospital'scardiac catheterization lab, outlinedhis findings in an interview and in apresentation at a science writersfsMm sponsored by the AmericanHeart Association last week inSarasota. Fla

The researchers, who began theirwork in 1977, observed silentisdhemia by hooking about 300 peopleto portable electrocardiogram ma-chines that recorded their heartrhythms while they went about theirdaily lives. At the same time, thepatients kept diaries of their ac-tivities

Among the findings:- 76 percent of all ischemia is

painless. Ischemia accompanied byangina lasts one to three minutes.But silent ischemia goes on muchonger and may last from four to 40minutes.

— 77 percent of the ischemia wasriggered by tasks that requirednental arousal, such as interviews,conversations, driving or mathemat-

— Most ischemia occurs duringthe first six hours after people wake

tip in the morning. This is also whenJieart attacks are most likely.J — For a patient who has one or•two angina attacks a week, it's notiinusual to have five or 10 bouts ofsilent ischemia each day.

— Silent ischemia usually occursamong men, and it's most commonamong smokers and those with highblood pressure, high cholesterollevels, diabetes or a family historyof heart disease. Approximately 5Dercent of all men over age 45 who

Siave two of these risk factors will{also have silent ischemia.* Selwyn says ischemia results•when hardening of the arteries is^complicated by the body's pro-~**tlon of hormones.

PEACE SYMBOL — Pope John Paul II looksat one of the two doves he released as symbolsof peace from the window of his studiooverlooking St. Peter's square during yester-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

day's noon blessing. The pontiff said he hadspecial thoughts "tor our brothers and sisters inLebanon where the situation has become onceagain worrying."

Libyan women defytradition as soldiers

TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - The 16-year-old instructor's pink danglingearrings tremble slightly as shehoists an anti-aircraft missile-launcher to her shoulder and takesmock aim at the sky.

"It's very heavy, but it works verywell," Alsha Abdullah tells a groupof new recruits on a vast, opencement court at Tripoli's women'smilitary academy. A large portraitof Col. Moammar Khadafy watchesover the training session from anearby building.

Abdullah is one of about 350 youngwomen at the ground forces schoolwhich, with an all-female pilots'school in Misurata, is the mostprominent symbol of Khadafy'sstated drive to "totally liberatewomen In Libya."

"We are answering the call of ourleader to all Arab women of all Arabnations to speed up the arming of thepeople," says 1st Lt. Nouria Assias,22, whose sharp eyes peer out froma neatly coiffed bun and a militarybat.

"We believe woman should standbeside her countryman. This isequality between man and woman.This should not be just in paradise,but in hell. And by hell I mean war."

Khadafy's call, however, does notappear to have been heeded by allmembers of this traditional NorthAfrican country of more than 3million.

The idea of a woman in arms, aradical one for most Arab societies,has met with stubborn resistancefrom many sectors, according toLibyan and Western observers. "Theissue touches a sensitive nerve andcould cause Khadafy big problemsdown the road," one diplomat said.

Although the Tripoli academy hasgraduated close to 1,000 officerssince opening in 1978, Westernersalso talk about Libyan friends whohave pulled their daughters out ofregular school — where militarytraining is on the curriculum —because they don't want them totrain as soldiers.

In early 1984, the Basic People'sCongresses, the grassroots govern-ing groups charged with makingpolicy decisions, suspended women'smilitary training. But that decision"was reversed at the Insistence ofKhadafy, who blamed "reactionary"forces and warned:

"We will not give any furtheropportunities to any forces whichhave no stake in the revolution.1.

In a recent interview, Khadafy, 43,conceded that some Libyans resentthe overturning of traditional ideassuch as keeping women at home.

"But I feel my ideas are spread-ing," he said.

Homemaking is still the No. 1

Tutu vow of non-violence starts King Day events• j SCOTT SMEPMOAssociated Press

ATLANTA - South African ArchbishopDesmond Tutu stood Sunday in the pulpit onceoccupied by Martin Luther King Jr. and promiseda campaign of civil disobedience againstapartheid laws.

Tutu was the keynote speaker at an inter-national conference honoring the slain civil rightsleader and preacher of non-violent civil disobe-dience of laws that violate human rights on theeve of the first national holiday marking his birth.

If the South African government does notchange its racial policies, Tutu said he would lead"a campaign of civil disobedience against unjustlaws '

"Our people are peaceful to a fault," he said."We are stupid, for we keep going up against anintransigent government. They use tear gas,bullets, dogs and whips."

Representatives of 40 nations attended theconference at Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church.'where King was pastor until his assassination in196B.

A candlelight memorial service was plannedSunday night at King's tomb in Atlanta, inadvance of Monday's official holiday, Dr. MartinLuther King Day. His widow, Coretta Scott King,was to place a wreath at the tomb Monday.

Monday's scheduled observances included"Living the Dream," a musical celebration by

several top recording stars and others inWashington, New York City and Atlanta. Per-formers will include such people as Bob Dylan,Joan Baez, Quincy Jones, the Rev. Jesse Jackson,Patti Labelle and more, with Harry Belafonte andBill Cosby as co-hosts.

The program will be recorded in all three citiesand edited for a two-hour nationally televisedspecial on the same night as a fund-raiser for theMartin Luther King Jr. Center for Non-ViolentSocial Change in Atlanta.

In addition to that program, Washington was tohold its 17th city observance of King's birthday.King was bom on Jan. 15, but Monday was setas the federal holiday.

In Philadelphia, the city and Jackson's PeopleUnited to Serve Humanity planned a celebration

of brotherhood and freedom. In previous years,the city had sponsored a prayer breakfast inhonor of King and PUSH held a separateecumenical service.

A parade was planned in Birmingham, Ala., toKelly Ingram Park, where a 14-foot monument toKing will be unveiled and where King spoke andmarched in the early 1960s.

In South Carolina, Gov. Dick Riley, Sen. ErnestHollings, NAACP national President William F.Gibson and other officials were to gather on thegrounds of the Statehouse in Columbia forspeeches and song honoring King.

Elsewhere, radio stations throughout RhodeIsland agreed to simulcast a two-minute excerptof King's "I Have a Dream" speech, to befollowed by noon church bell ringing throughoutthe state.

Churches also were asked to ring their bells atnoon in Minnesota, where Gov. Rudy Perpich wasto unveil a sculpture of King on the Capitol stepsin St. Paul.

occupation of Libyan women, ac-cording to Western and Libyanobservers. Even Libyan feministswith outside jobs argue that awoman's chief function is at home.

Men still overwhelmingly domi-nate public life, from the board roomto the coffee shop. And young womenseeking a career are apt to choosethe roles of nurses, teachers orsecretaries.

"You can't expect at this earlystage to have women in highplaces," says Khadija Muhammedel-Jahmy, 69, a pioneer of women'srights who became the first femalebroadcaster in Libya 29 years ago.

"There is still a long journey tofull liberation. We must have moreeducation, become more involved Inpolitics, speak more openly," thesays.

"This is equalitybetween man andwoman. This shouldnot be just inparadise, but in hell.And by hell I meanwar.w

Lt. Nouria AssiasLibyan soldier

She recounts how she once went toKhadafy in the early 1970s andcomplained that women's opinionswere not being respected at People'sCongress meetings.

"He said, 'Go back and Imposeyourself. Nobody is going to help winyour fights but yourself,'" el-Jahmysaid. Today, in televised congresssessions, women are often amongthe most vocal participants, makingspeeches and chanting anti-Ameri-can slogans alongside the men.

Women have made big gains ineducation and in the eyes of the law.

The number of women universitystudents has multiplied fivefold sin-ce Khadafy's 1969 coup, though theyare still outnumbered 3-1 by men.Comparable numbers of boys andgirls receive primary education,government figures show. Childbrides have been legally barred andarranged marriages allowed onlywith the woman's consent, althoughobservers say few girls challengeparental authority.

Liberalized divorce laws allowwomen a nearly equal say in toedecision. Before the revolution, aman could break up the marriagesimply by repeating to his wife threetimes in public: "Divorced."

Yet an unmarried woman whogets pregnant must marry her lover,or face prison, with her child put inan orphanage. Abortion Is illegalexcept in rare cases endangering themother's health. Polygamy stillexists although Khadafy is trying toerase the practice by barring famil-ies from owning more than onehome.

El-Jahmy says a woman who isnot married by age 30 is considered"unhappy," a failure, by society.

Khadafy's Green Book revolution-ary manifesto derides work that"stains a woman's beauty anddetracts from her femininity." AnItalian women's magazine in 1972termed him "Anti-feminist of theMonth" for saying that if womenconsidered themselves equal to man,"no one should complain if we ask apregnant woman to parachute."

But he has made a public about-face, assailing other Arab nationsfor keeping their women "oppressedand paralyzed" and recently invitingsix Western women journalists foran interview .

sMONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986 11A

Big department stores under fire from all sidesl y JENNIFER UNKntghl-Ridder Newspapers

PHILADELPHIA - Traditionaldepartment stores are under fire andlumbering toward extinction unlessmerchants change some time-wornpractices, retailing experts say.

Department stores are gettingshot at from all sides by specialtystores, off-price chains, discountersand catalogue merchants. Woundedbadly, tbe big stores are losingshoppers faster than they would liketo admit. .

At the same time, departmentstores are locked in a vicious battlewith each other, as they reach forthe same shoppers by selling essen-tially the same merchandise in thesame types of stores.

The mounting competitive press-ures on department stores willtopple many weak chains, retailinganalysts contend. And among thoseteetering on the edge is one of themost venerable names in retailing —Gimbels.

What started 144 years ago as ageneral store in Vincennes, Ind., by

Adam Gimbel, grew into a 36-storechain with outposts in Philadelphia,New York, Pittsburgh and Mil-waukee.

The news last week that Gimbels'owner, Batus Inc. of Louisville, Ky ,was selling its struggling chain cameas no surprise. Although the chainhad sales in 1984 of $820 million, ithas been losing money or barelybreaking even in the cities it serves.

Many retailing experts considerthe Gimbels business to be a glaringexample of what is wrong withdepartment stores. The chain, theycontend, has committed one of thebiggest errors in retailing today: Itis trying to stick to the old-lineapproach of being all things to allpeople.

That may have worked a decadeago, even five years ago, accordingto Mercia Grassi, a Drexel Univer-sity marketing professor and direc-tor of the retailing managementprogram. But today, the very idea ofone-store-fits-all is obsolete.

Specialty stores are coming onstrong, crowding an already tightmarket, she said. A departmentstore, as a result, will get lost in the

"The old-linedepartment store isthe fat cat thateveryone is shootingat. The new types ofspecialty stores haveall grabbed niches ofwhat used to be adepartment store'sbusiness.»»

Brian Fordretail consultant

crowd unless it presents shopperswith a more discerning image.

"What is happening to middle-linedepartment stores'is they have losttheir clarity," added William Ress,a retailing consultant from Col-umbus, Ohio, and a co-author of."Future Trends in Retailing."

"It is not so much that they havegotten bad," he said, "but specialtystores and other competitors havegotten much better at responding toconsumers."

The number of department storescontinues to grow, but the industryas a whole is not winning a biggershare of the total retail market.

According to Bureau of Censusstatistics, department stores ac-counted for 40 percent of ail sales ofgeneral merchandise, apparel, ap-pliances and furniture in 1984 — thesame slice of sales as they had fiveyears earlier.

But more and more stores arechasing after the same business.From 1977 to 1982, the most recentfive-year period examined by thebureau, the number of departmentstores jumped 13 percent, rising-'from 8,807 to 9,981 stores.

If department stores have ex-panded quickly over the last fiveyears, specialty stores have multi-plied at an even more rapid pace.And when added up, retailing ex-perts contend that there are simply

too many stores."America is badly overstored,"

said consultant Ress "We've grownthe amount of retail space fasterthan the business."

In department stores, the legionsof new specialty stores have a slow-moving target.

"The old-line department store isthe (at cat that everyone is shootingat," said Brian Ford, a retailconsultant for Arthur Young i Co inPhiladelphia. "The new types ofspecialty stores have all grabbedniches of what used to be adepartment store's business."

Specialty retailers focus on onesegment of consumers — say, shoebuyers who are price-conscious —and then tailor a store to satisfy theneeds of that group. A leader in thefield is The Limited, a specialist inaffordable sportswear for youngwomen. Another success is Toys RUs, which has snatched the toybusiness out from under departmentstores.

FLYING SAUCER FACTORY? — What look like rows of miniHying saucers are actually elements for stereo headphones. Theseunits, being inspected by Jan Seymore, a technician at Koss Corp.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

in Milwaukee, house the diaphragm and voice coils which vibrateto produce sound.

'Captives' helping beat high insurance costsB) Larry FishKnight-Ridder Newspapers

Because the regular commercialinsurance market has more businessthan it can take on, many of thenation's largest industrial com-panies are banding together to writetheir own insurance.

The companies — which oneconsultant calls "the high-risk in-sureds" — are resorting to afamiliar remedy for times of scarci-ty in the insurance markets: Theyare forming captive insurance com-panies, which they will own, toprovide the coverage they cannot getelsewhere.

What is different is the growingtendency for entire industries to joinin forming one captive.

The insurance industry — keenlyaware that it cannot write theinsurance itself — does not opposethe trend so far and has evencautiously endorsed it.

And one consultant who hasworked on one of the projectssuggests that the public may benefitfrom it.

Property and casualty insurers"are getting their comeuppance andlosing a lot of business. They'regoing to clean up their financialpicture and may be able to offerbetter insurance to the 'little in-sureds' — small businesses andhomeowners," says D. Hugh Rose-nbaum of the Risk Planning Group,a consulting firm in Danen. Conn.,that has advised large companies onsetting up captives

Regular, commercial property

and casualty insurance companiesare unable to meet all the needs ofindustry because of several years oflosses on the policies they wrotecovering fires, disasters, personalinjuries and other kinds of liabilities.

Last year, the insurers lost a totalof $5.5 billion on operations, accord-ing to the Insurance InformationInstitute.

Those losses have a direct bearingon how much new business insurancecompanies can take on — what theircapacity is — because they reducethe amount of surplus, the term thatinsurance companies use for networth.

Insurance regulators use a com-pany's surplus to determine howmuch new business the company cantake on. Regulators require thattotal premiums retained by a com-pany for new coverage it sells notexceed an amount equal to threetimes its surplus.

Thus, when surplus is depletedbecause of losses, the industry'scapacity shrinks, and that is whathas been happening in recent years.

The Insurance Services Office, atrade organization that compilesstatistical information, estimated in1984 that capacity in 1986 would fall$22.6 billion short of what wasneeded, 14 percent of the totalmarket.

By 1987. the ISO estimated, ca-pacity would be $32 billion short, 18percent of the total market. The U.S.Commerce Department recently putthe capacity shortage for the three-year period 1985-87 at as much as $70billion.

That capacity problem explainsmuch of what has been happeningwith municipalities, taverns and allkinds of other businesses recentlythat have found insurance increas-ingly hard to obtain.

For big industry, the capacityproblem is crucial, particularly forwhat is called excess liability in-surance, which is basically in-surance on top of insurance. Forinstance, a company might have oneinsurance policy for losses up to $50million and excess coverage for therare but catastrophic losses beyond$50 million up to, say, $100 million.

So to "fill the gap between whatis readily available," Conrail isjoining several other major rail-roads in exploring the possibility ofestablishing its own insurance com-pany, says David M. LeVan, assis-tant vice president and treasurer forthe rail system, based in Philadel-phia.

The new company, Railroad As-sociation Insurance Ltd. or RAIL,would provide its members with $50million of excess liability coverageabove $50 million of basic coverage,LeVan says, if all goes as plannedand the company is in operation byearly spring.

The coverage would be for anynon-railroad property damaged as aresult of railroad operations and forall personal injury settlements foremployees or non-employees, hesaid.

"The capacity in the commercialmarket is a fraction of what it waseven a year ago," LeVan says,

To survive today, a departmentstore has to pitch better service,convenience, cheaper prices or itsmerchandise, said retailing consult-ant Ress.

"You have to stick out somehow,"he said. "All customers want is toknow who it is that they are dealingwith."

Gimbels suffers from a lack of astrong image.

"At Gimbels, it is clearly aquestion of identity. Who are they?"asked a former executive for thechain in Philadelphia.

What will happen to Gimbels is thesubject of much speculation inretailing circles. The only thingcertain is that Batus will not have aneasy time persuading someone elseto take it over.

"Selling Gimbels of Philadelphiais going to be a very difficult task,"said Gilbert Harrison, president ofFinanco Inc., the mergers andacquisition arm of Shearson LehmanBros. "It had its day, but thecompetition took it over."

Asian computers beginassault on U.S. market

leaving the railroads little alterna-tive but to form their own insurancecompany, in which the members —which Conrail declines to identify —will buy stock.

Likewise, when the risk managersof 18 l a r g e c h e m i c a l orpetrochemical companies — includ-ing Rohm & Haas Co., Hercules Inc.,Allied-Signal Inc. and Union CarbideCorp. — got together last year todiscuss their insurance problems,"we didn't see a whole lot ofsolutions," says Robert D. Stauffer,director of corporate insurance forDiamond Shamrock Corp.

"The companies need insurance,"Stauffer says. "The commercialmarket is leaving them withoutcoverage or alternative."

For these companies, the needwas for "sudden and accidentalpollution coverage," Stauffer says,so they have formed Casualty Ex-cess Insurance Ltd. to provide it. Aswith the railroads' venture, thecompany will provide $50 million ofexcess liability coverage above $50million of basic coverage.

The coverage is for pollution andcertain other things, including in-surance for the companies' directorsand officers, another line of in-surance that has become difficult toobtain.

Each company that signs up — thecommitment date is Feb. 1 — willcontribute $2 million in capi-talization for the new company,Stauffer says, with $1 million in cashand a $1 million letter of credit.

I) AMOKA KNOXKnight-Ridder Newspapers

It wasn't so long ago that Ameri-can manufacturers of personal com-puters were predicting confidentlythat their Asian counterparts wouldhave a hard time establishing abeachhead in the United States.

They argued that while Japanese,Taiwanese and Korean companiesmight have forced Americans to stopmanufacturing those "cheap" com-modity electronics items like tele-vision sets and cassette recorders,personal computers are so expensiveand intimidating that Americanswould not desert American brands.

Nevertheless, the Asian personalcomputer invasion has begun, andafter Christmas sales were totaledup, It became clear that anotherbreach has been opened in theAmerican defenses

Tbe hit was scored by the KoreanLeading Edge Model D and theJapanese Epson 'Equity I, the firstpersonal computers made in Asia tobe sold here under a label other thanthat of an established Americancomputer manufacturer. Each is amachine that will run softwarewritten for the IBM PC but that sellsfor about half the price of a PC.

Although sales of the two modelswere far below those of the IBM PC,and even well below those ofCompaq, the leading American-made PC clone, the strength of thosesales surprised industry watchers.

"Those two machines, plus theTandy 1000 and the Corona portable,were clearly the trend-setters," saidNorm DeWitti who follows thepersonal computer industry forDataquest Inc., a San Jose, Calif.,market research firm.

"They did well relative to theirown expectations."

According to DeWitt, LeadingEdge has shipped about 35,000 unitssince the Model D was introducedlast summer, and Epson shippedabout 20,000 Equities in the last twomonths of the year.

That doesn't look like much nextto IBM's estimated 2.1 million, forall types of personal computersworldwide, or Compaq's estimated240,000.

But it is a toehold that could be a,harbinger of things to come.

"There has been a real change indemand in the personal computerindusty," said Raymond C. Ahlberg,a computer industry analyst with theDepartment of Commerce.

"Now people are willing to buy fbrprice and features, and that's a greatentry point for the Japanese andother manufacturers. Now they arereally poised."

"There has been areal change indemand in thepersonal computerindustry. Nowpeople are willing tobuy for price andfeatures, and that's agreat entrypoint for theJapanese and othermanufacturers. Nowthey are reallypoised, n

Raymond AhlbergDepartment ol Commerce analyst

After less than 10 years of develop-ment, personal computer technologyhas stabilized sufficiently around theIBM standard that it has becomesusceptible to the kind of competi-tion on low price and good featuresthat has allowed Asian companies todominate other segments of theconsumer electronics business.

To be sure, Asian manufacturersalready had a chunk of the U.S.personal computer market, both assuppliers of memory chips, diskdrives and other components, and asmanufacturers of machines to besold under U.S. nameplates. TheSperry PC, for example, is made byMitsubishi Corp. of Japan.

What is new is the acceptance ofAsian-made machines sold undertheir own labels.

The Leading Edge computer ismade by Korea's Daewoo Corp. forLeading Edge, a 6-year-old Massa-chusetts company that also dis-tributes diskettes and printers madeto its specifications. Epson America,a subsidiary of Japan's Seiko Epsoncompany, already is the biggestsupplier of computer printers in theUnited States, with about a third ofthe market.

Market researcher DeWitt be-lieves that both the Equity andLeading Edge will "come on strong"in 1966, increasing their unit ship-ments by 50 to 100 percent. But hepoints out that both companies arestarting from low bases, and con-tends that they will have a toughtime winning significant amounts ofshelf space away from the en-trenched leaders in the industry

INVESTMENTS FOR THE 80SDAVID A. PUPAAccount Executive

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The RegisterEitaMMtfd in IXTH

Published by the Red Bank RegisterA Price Communication Corporation Newspaper

GEORGE J LISTER. President miri Putiluhrr•

CLIFF SCHECHTMAN, EditorJANE FODERARO. Associate EditorANN KELLETT, \eu'« Editor

RICHARD NICOLETTI. Sports EditorPAMELA ABOUZEID. Lifestyle EditorCAHL D FORINO. Chief Photographer

12A . JANUARY 20, 1966

EDITORIALS

We should be proud of Deborahl i f e never cease to be amazed by theM l Deborah Heart and Lung Center in

Browns Mills.Now a 9-year-old Polish boy is

rating from the first pulmonaryalve transplant in the United States,

at the hospital where 100 young-i from his country have been treatedof charge by doctors concerned

about a lack of medical supplies inPoland

Tomasz Pytel of Swietomarz was inintensive care and doing well aftersurgery last Thursday to replace thedefective valve and repair a holebetween two heart chambers, accordingto a Deborah spokeswoman.

Surgeons at the specialty hospitaltreated 100 Polish children in the early1980s after learning that youngsters inthat country were dying from untreatedheart defects. Pytel was among thatgroup, but because he was only 5 yearsoM at the time, he had a partial repairthat required a subsequent operation.

The pulmonary valve carries blood tothe lungs. While transplant of the valvehas been done elsewhere, this was thefirst such operation in the United States.Without the operation, the boy was weakand short of breath and possibly wouldn'thave reached adulthood, doctors said.The boy's mother, Czeslawa. is stayingaj.the center's mothers' cottage while heremains hospitalized for a week.' The $25,000 bill for the operation is

being paid by volunteer donations, a* areall costs at the hospital. Volunteers lastyear raised $11 million for the 155-bedhospital, one of four centers in tfieUnited States that perform heart valvetransplants. •

Here's a small medical center, tuckedaway in the scrub pinelands of NewJersey, quietly doing things that seemalmost impossible elsewhere in oursociety.

Physicians at Deborah are performingmiracles everyday, giving new life — atno cost — to children and adults fromevery corner of this earth. In effect,they're fulfilling the dreams of all thoseyoung idealistic medical students whoset out to save the world, but somehoware are sidetracked and "mainstreamed'into a more established, materialisticsystem.

Because Deborah is a small "mir-acle" itself, the hospital has fired theimagination of thousands of volunteersacross the state. Here in MonmouthCounty, volunteers for Deborah worktirelessly to raise funds became theybelieve so completely in the hospital'smission. Through their efforts, miracleskeep happening in Browns Mills.

As residents of New Jersey, we allshould be proud of the extraordinarymissionat Deborah, and supportive of thevolunteers who are its dedicatedmissionaries.

OTHER VIEWS

Cut congressional perksCongress is now deeply involved in

efforts to significantly scale downthe mushrooming costs of govern-

ment that have generated record budgetdeficits. In the process of pruningappropriations, the lawmakers shouldapply economies to their own spending.

Over the years, the legislative branchhas undergone an enormous expansion.There has been a sharp increase in staffand, it follows, sharply higher operatingcosts — an annual outlay of $1 billion.

Given this huge apropriation, theresorely must be areas where Congresscan effect sizable savings. Sacrificesshould be paramount, especially in aperiod when government austerity hasbecome a matter of top priority.

For congressmen who have availedthemselves of the overly generousperquisites they feel befit their highoffice, cost-cutting no doubt becomespainful. But it should also be apparentthat budget cuts affecting their lessprivileged constituents are equally pain-ful

The use — or perhaps more accurate-ly, the abuse — of the congressionalfranking privilege (tax-payer-subsidizedmailings) would be a good starting pointfor cuts. This perk was intended to keephome-state voters apprised of the legis-

lative efforts of their representatives.But it has become heavily politicized

in recent years, a means of underwritingre-election campaigns with taxpayersubsidies. The first disclosure of con-gressional mail costs has revealed anexcessive reliance on franking.

Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif), whofaces a tough re-election fight this year,spent $1.6 million in a three-monthperiod, giving him the dubious distinc-tion of being the Senate's biggest senderof government-paid newsletters.Another State colleague, unidentified,ran up a franking bill of $3.8 million lastyear.

Sen. Charles McC. Matahias (R-Md ),who led the fight for the politicallysensitive disclosure requirement, esti-mated that congressmen will spend awhopping $144 million this year onnewsletters. He called the frankingexpenditure "an embarrassing exampleof the waste of the taxpayers' money."

And, Sen. Mathias could have added,it is also a waste of time and effort. Asfar as most constituents are concerned,these newsletters fall in the category ofjunk mail. In this case, it is very costly,junk. The franking privilege should betossed on the scrap heap.

Newark Star Ledger

Now we have Ice XIce-nine, the imaginary material in a

Kurt Vonnegut novel, was so danger-ously infectious that one crystal would

have turned the world's waters solid.Now scientists have outrun sciencefiction. Ice II was made 80 years ago,Ices VIII and IX were synthesized in the1960s, and last year a laboratory inOttawa gave birth to Ice X.

Far from solidifying oceans, the exoticices are helping icebreakers plowthrough waters already frozen. To test ascale-model icebreaker, Canadian re-searchers developed an ice with physicalproperties proportionately down-sizedfrom real ice, reports Malcolm Brownein The Times. Outside the laboratory,the odd ices exist only on places likeCalisto. Ganymede and Europa.

These moons of Jupiter are madelargely of ice but differ In ways that maymark the presence of Ice II, m or V. Thebrands of ice differ in the way theiratoms are packed into crystals. Thoseformed under high pressure, as in the

chasms, of Callisto or the gulches ofGanymede, are more tightly packed. Thefamiliar Ice I may float in water, but aniceberg made of Ice X would sink likelead.

Scientist have also searched as-siduously for novel forms of water.Great interest was stirred several yearsago by a report from the Soviet Union ofa substance known as polywater. Ameri-can chemists soon learned the painstak-ing art of transmuting water intopolywater in ultra-thin tubes, and addedimportant knowledge of its properties.

After a flurry of academic articles,however, the polywater industry abrupt-ly collapsed. The critical ingredient ofits novel molecular structure turned outto be an artifact derive from the laborof making it — human sweat depositedon laboratory glassware by carelessfingerprints.

Ice X maybe, but don't climb ontoCloud Nine: we still swim in Water I.

The New York Times

Q NY

OPINIONPublic best served by independent ConrailEditor'i Note: L. Stanley Crane, Conrall'ichairman and chief executive officer,reviewt the developments In the Conrail•lie proceii during IMS and statesConrail'. position in the following article.

Coorall Is ready to return to the privatesector. Two alternatives have been ad-vanced to accomplish this generallyaccepted goal: 1) to return Conrail ai anindependent company — a competitive,viable and Innovative force In the freighttransportation marketplace; or t) theDepartment of Transportation's (DOT)scheme to tell Conrail to Iti competitor —the Norfolk Southern (NS) Corporation.

The overwhelming evidence, whichbecomes more persuasive by the day, lithat the public Interest is best served byan Independent Conrail.

Morgan, Stanley and Co., an investmentbanking firm, and a group of more than4* Investors, stands ready with a fully

roposal to acquire the govern-I's U percent Interest In Conrail and

sell II to the public, thus achieving anIndependent Conrail.

There are two overriding reasons whythis is the best choice. First, Conrail'sexcellent financial performance In the lastthree yean If putting to rest permanentlythe DOT and NS contention that Conrailcannot be viable. That contention lackscredibility, hated on Coorall's currentfinancial performance and our projectionsfor earnings in future years. Second, a taleto NS hat substantial advene effects onthe public and on the public interest, noneof which would result from the MorganStanley proposal. Those adverse effectsare:

— that the Department of Justice foundthat the tale of Conrail to NorfolkSouthern would to adversely affect com-petition that the merger would be unlawfulabsent divestitures that necessitate anotherwise needless, massive, and disrup-tive restructuring of the Northeast-Mid-west rail system — a system that isworking well lor the first time In decades;

— substantial Job losses throughout the-Northeast and Midwest;

— a smaller financial return to thegovernment;

— a disregard of the unanimous supportfor an Independent Conrail by rail laborand the AFL-CIO, numerous shippergroans and shippers, and many state andlocal government officials.

A brief expansion on these points makesit all the more evident why an IndependentCoarail best serves the public Interest.

NS and DOT claim that NorfolkSouthern's "deep pockets" are necessaryto avoid the threat of a breakdown of railservice and renewed demands for federalassistance. Here are the facts:

• With about $44* million In net IncomeIn IMS, Conrail achieved Its third con-secutive year of substantial profits.Profits at similar levels are projected infuture yean. If 1M4 results are adjustedto account for higher Industry scalewages, IMS year-end results comparefavorably

• IMS wat the fourth straight year Inwhich Coorall's freight tonnage remainedrelatively stable, with similar tonnagelevels predicted la future yean.

• Despite an ambitious program ofcapital Investment and a return to fullIndustry scale wages for all employees,

Conrail increased its IMS year-end cashbalance. Our IMS capital investmentprogram Involved expenditures of $572million. This level of Investment demon-strates Conrail's commitment to main-taining Its rail network In superiorcondition.

• Conrail's total assets are in excett ofM.S billion; itt cash balance at the end ofIMS was about »10 mUlion.

This recent evidence reinforces the U.S.Railway Association's (USRA) July IMSreport on Conrail's financial viability.USRA — an Independent agency chargedby Congress with monitoring and report-Ing on Conrail's performance — concludedthat "Conrail's future viability at anindependent entity it reasonably andcredibly assured." This report went on tostate that "to require more evidence fromConrail of Its likely viability would Imposean unreasonable burden of proof on thatproposition."

The financial community reaffirmed litconfidence in Conrall'i viability andprofitability by backing Morgan Stanleysproposal. In December 1M5, furthertestimony to Conrail's attractiveness tothe Investment community came whentwo Investment banking firms, Allen & Co.and First Boston Corp., Joined to makeanother public offering proposal with anindicated value In excess of $1.4 billion.Conrail's long-term financial viability, it,and ought to be, beyond question.

The disparity between NS claims andthe factt becomes even more pronouncedwhen we get to the competition andantitrust Issues. We mutt not forget thata merger It permanent, and the Injury tocompetition resulting from It it enduring.The DOT plan requires unprecedentedImmunity from the antitrust lawt andevery other Federal, state and local law.An independent, publicly held Conrailrequlrei no special Immunity from thelaws protecting competition and publicInterest. At a consequence, we mutt payspecial attention to these fundamentalittuet of competitive policy.

— The Department of Justice found thatwithout curative divestitures a Conrail NSmerger would have a significant adveneeffect on competition and would violateboth the Clayton Act and the InterstateCommerce Act merger standards.

— Sixteen State Attorneys Generalfound that the Justice Department hadseriously understated the harmful, anti-competitive effects of the proposedmerger. They found that hundreds ofadditional market! (involving hundreds ofmillions of dollars In revenue), would beharmed by the merger, and that thedivestiture tcheme proposed by NS wouldnot help.

In fact, nowhere do the claims of NS andDOT become more flimsy than on thequettion of the adequacy of the proposeddivestitures to Gullford TransportationIndustries (GTI) and the Pittsburgh &Lake Erie Railroad (P&LE). The Depart-ment of Justice required a divestiture planthat would provide "long-term, viable,and competitive rail service" In themarkets which the Department found tobe adversely effected by the merger. Butthe ICC — Congress' own agency — foundthat P&LE it not now and will not becomea financially viable carrier, and thatGullford will not be a financially viablecarrier in the long run. Numerout ship-

pers — large and small — at well as statesand localities have found that none of thedivestiture plant proposed to far wouldsatisfy them because the plant fall toprovide service In some markets at all andthe service that Is proposed by Gullfordand P&LE would be competitively In-ferior. These concerns — expressed by theshippers most affected by the divestitureplan — evidence widespread feart that thepublic would be worte off after the mergerand divestiture than It It today. Since thedivettiture carriers have not yet putforward marketing and operating plant,the logical conclusion It that the mittlnginformation would confirm the shippers'feart that the divestitures simply cannotreplace the competition provided today bya strong, Innovative Conrail.

There have been many claims aboutspecial tax breaks for NS. The Con-gressional Budget Office concluded thatthe NS deal, compared to an independentConrail, would result In a revenue lost tothe U.S. Government of approximately$400 million.

Similarly, NS hat failed to reachagreement with labor unions repretentingConrail employees, although the efforts ofthose employees have been critical toConrail's success in the past and will beIn the future. (In contrast, Conrailmanagement, the Railway Labor Ex-ecutives Association, .and the MorganStanley investor group signed a definitiveagreement outlining the cash and stockbenefits to agreement employees If theMorgan Stanley privatization plan liapproved by Congress.)

Perhaps the best tribute to the valueand importance of maintaining the vigor-ous competition Conrail often today andthe clearest refutation of NS' claim thatthe merger will enhance competition,comet from our thippert. Shipper groupsand trade associations like the NationalIndustrial Transportation Leaque (whichrepresents hundreds of shlppen na-tionwide), the American Bakers Associa-tion, the American Iron and Steel In-stitute, the American Mining Congress,the Eastern Coal Transportation Con-ference, the Independent BakBakers At-toclation, the Institute of Scrap Iron &Steel, the Mining and Reclamation Councilof America, the National Coal Associa-tion, the National Farmers Union, theNational Grange, and countless Individualcorporations, have spoken out publicly insupport of an Independent Conrail. Thesethippert are the ultimate objective judgesof how bett to preserve railroad competi-tion. They — and ultimately all of ut atconsumers — will bear the brunt of Itsloss.

In sum, when you look at the factsinstead of the claims, the NS plan itclearly not a solution, for It attempts toanswer a problem which is non-existent,and then createt innumerable otherproblems at a consequence.

I urge Congress to turn Iti attention topunuing the bett approach — returningConrail to the private lector at anIndependent entity through the sale of itscommon stock to the public. That achieve-ment would truly meet the mandate of thepublic for vigorous competition • andpremium quality rail service In theNortheast and Midwest for yean to come.

LStnltyCriMChilrmin and CUM Extcutivi Officar

CansolldiM Rill Corponllon

BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed

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MONOAY, JANUARY 20, 1986 The Register

COMMENTARY

Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini is our real public enemy No. 1JackAnderson

WASHINGTON - As we've reported, themost remorseless perpetrator of terroristactions aimed at Americans is not Libyandictator Muammar Khadafy, but themessianic mullah of Iran, AyatollahRuhollah' Khomeini.

Khomeini is our public enemy No. 1, andhis subordinates around the' world arefurthering his undeclared war on "the greatSatan," as he calls the United States Asoften as not, his fanatical followers arecloaked in diplomatic immunity, for Kho-meini has made an official governmententerprise out of the fundamentalistIslamic revolution he is trying to exportthroughout the Moslem world.

The extent of Iranian exploitation ofdiplomatic protection has been disclosed tous by confidential sources in the in-telligence community. They have provided

explicit details, including the locations ofthe most important terrorist nests. Theycan be found in the Iranians missions inRome, Vienna, Bern, Bonn, Beirut, Damas-cus — and the Vatican.

In fact, the Iranian ambassador to theHoly See, Ayatollah Khosrow-Shahi, isbelieved to direct a network of terroristoperations in Spain, Italy, West Germany,Britain and France. The notches on his guninclude a former Iranian general and theUnited Arab Emirates' ambassador toFrance — both assassinated.

Italian police have a fat dossier onKhosrow-Shahi, including photographs ofhim making payments to various individ-uals for the "exportation" of Iranian-sponsored Islamic revolution (meaningterrorism).

Khosrow-Shahi's main recruiting officefor fanatical young Shiites who mightundertake suicide missions against Ameri-cans and other targets is located at 361-63Via Nomentana, Rome. This is right nextdoor to the Libyan Embassy at 365 ViaNomentana.

While a high wall shields the Iraniancomplex from passersby on the street, onlya low one separates it from the LibyanEmbassy grounds. Our sources say there'seven a tunnel between the two compounds

to facilitate access.Khosrow-Shahi, incidentally, was once

Khomeini's chauffeur and bodyguard, andwas believed to be second in command ofthe students who seized the U.S. Embassyin November 1979, and held the Americanoccupants hostage for 444 days.

Other Iranian "diplomats" with terroristcredentials include:

— All Shams Ardakani, ambassador toAustria: Our intelligence sources say bewas involved In the series of bombingsdirected at American and French facilitiesin Kuwait on Dec. 12,1983. Miraculously, noAmericans died in the destruction of theU.S. Embassy there, but five Kuwaitis andan Egyptian were killed.

— Ali Nawai, an attache in Bern,Switzerland: He secretly bought about 300tons of explosives from a Brussels weaponsbroker in June 1982. The broker hadobtained them from sources in WestGermany. This material was believed tohave been used in the Kuwait bombings andin the destruction of the U.S. Embassy andMarine barracks in Beirut, which killed 258Americans. Nawai sent the explosives byship to Iran in 20-ton and 30-ton lots. Themanifests were doctored to make theexplosives look like legal shipments to theIndian army.

- Ayatollah Ali Akbar Mohtashami,ambassador to Syria: He identifies targets,provides diplomatic cover and generallyoversees terrorist operations spreadingthroughout the world from Syrian, Libyanand Iranian bases in the Bekaa Valley ofLebanon.

— Mahmoud Nourani, charge d'affairesin Beirut: He was involved in the hijackingof TWA Flight 847 last June, in which oneAmerican was tortured and murdered. Heis also "up to his eyeballs," as one sourceput it, in the captivity of four American-hostages being held in Lebanon. Nouranihad a supporting role under Mohtashami Inthe kidnapping and torture of CIA agentWilliam Buckley, who died in captivity lastApril.

CONFIDENTIAL FILE: The SaudiArabian desert would seem to be fertileground for feminists. The status of womenin the kingdom is shockingly second-classby Western standards, and one reason givenfor strict sexual segregation would enragean equal-rights supporter. "Many Saudimen,'1 a State Department analysis'notes,"have argued that women must be segre-gated and protected from men because theyhave no sexual inhibitions."

Jock Anderson writes a daily columnfor the United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

King: A man of historyEditor's Note: James OliverHorton is an associate professor ofhistory and American civilizationat George Washington Universityand director of the Afro-AmericanCommunities Project at theSmithsonian Institution. He wrotethis article for The Orlando Sen-tinel.

Americans today will honor thelife and work of Martin LutherKing Jr., the man who challengedan entire generation to make goodon constitutional promises ofsocial justice and human equalityand to eliminate racial restrictionsthat betrayed our national self-image.

King would not nave been com-pletely comfortable with a day setaside in his honor. He was aboveall a man of great public humility.He realized that he was not thetotality of the civil rights strugglebat symbolized the work thatothers were doing and had doneover generations.

During the early 1980s whenhundreds of college students par-ticipated In the "jail no ball"campaign to pack Southern jails tooverflowing rather than abide byracially discriminatory laws, oneblack parent tried to post bond forher daughter's release. The daugh-ter refused to accept bail, ad-monishing her mother that "ifyour generation had done this, mygeneration would not have to."

Luckily, many in the movement,especially King, knew better. ThatAfro-American civil rights had notbeen won by the 1960s was not anIndication of black historical ac-quiescence to injustice but rathera measure of the Intransigence ofAmerican racism.

Resistance to and protest ofinjustice has been endemic to theblack American experience for thelast 359 years. In this respect, Kingand the modern civil rights move-ment nave strong historic roots.From the slaves who violentlyrebelled against bondage whenthat was possible to those whoengaged In more continuous, sub-tie and sometimes more practicalforms of plantation sabotage, indi-vidually and collectively, Afro-Americans have never acceptedracial subordination.

At the end'of the 18th centurywhen American patriots an-nounced to Britain that they wouldnot be "slaves to the crown,"black Americans heartily agreedthat no person should be enslaved.The demands for freedom andliberty held great significance forthe Founding Fathers but evenmore for their slaves.

Most Americans can recount thestories of civil disobedience thatled to the American Revolution,but few are aware of the inter-racial nature of the "mobs" thatparticipated. The explosion ofInformation In the field of Afro-American history in the lastgeneration has familiarized mostschoolchildren with the name ofCrlspus Attucks, the black sailorwidely hailed as the first to die inthe cause of liberty. Less wellknown is the magnitude of revol-utionary interracial direct action.

When patriot John Adams re-counted the events of the BostonMassacre, his words betrayed nohint of surprise that white patriotswere led by Attucks, for in the 18thcentury such working-class groups

' were often Interracial. When amember of the English Parlia-ment painted a representation ofAmerican pre-Revolutlonary mobaction he included several blackpatriots among those picturedtearing down a statue of KingGeorge.

Most Americans knew well thatas black and white working peoplestood together against "Britishtyranny" during the 1770s, theyhad earlier stood jointly in opposi-tion to American forms of op-

pression. For example, 20 whiteswere arrested along with morethan 150 blacks for their role in the1741 slave revolt conspiracy InNew York City.

Many of those implicated weremembers of interracial streetgangs that plagued city authoritiesthroughout the pre-Revolutionaryera. Their violent protests againstslavery and mistreatment of thepoor were In keeping with thedemands of the age. After all,there was no mass media to relaytheir message to. They relied ondirect action.

A man of King's principlesmight have been more com-fortable with' the boycotts ofBritish merchants and importedgoods supported by black andwhite patriots in the 1770s.

As the aftermath of the Revol-ution and turn of the 19th centurybrought freedom (immediate orgradual) to slaves in Northernstates, protest strategies fore-shadowing King's protest styletook form in the black com-munities of Boston, New York andPhiladelphia.

Having won freedom for them-selves with black support, whiteAmericans were not willing togrant freedom to their slaves orequal citizenship to free Afro-Americans. Yet blacks with theassistance of a small group ofwhite allies continued the struggle.

Segregated seating of blacks inearly 19th century white churchesgave rise to silent protests similarto the 1960s "pray-lns." Afterblack members of St. George'sMethodist Church in Philadelphiawere pulled from their kneesbecause they were praying In the"white section," Richard Allenand Absolum Jones led them inwithdrawal. In 1816 the AfricanMethodist Episcopal Church wasestablished as an independentdenomination.

During the 1840s former slaveand abolitionist speaker FrederickDouglass conducted his ownprotest of the segregated seatingon the railroad that linked Lynnand Boston, Massachusetts, refus-ing to leave his first-class seat forone in the Jim Crow car. In theprocess of removing Douglass, thefirst-class car was damaged great-ly as the black abolitionist "affix-ed" himself, as he termed It, toseveral seats that had to be tornaway In order to force him out.

Likewise Sojourner Truth, for-mer slave, abolitionist and earlywomen's rights advocate, wasseveral times removed from pub-lic conveyances for refusing toaccept segregated accommo-dations. Sometimes white aboli-tionists refused to take seats in thefirst-class sections of trains andboats if black abolitionist travelingcompanions were not allowed tojoin them. '

Boston blacks staged severalnon-violent acts of protest beforethe Civil War in opposition to theracial discrimination they facedlocally and as part of their anti-slavery agitation. One group triedsit-ins at the city's HowardTheater, while a larger group useda similar strategy in severalBoston restaurants and aboard anumber of intercity stagecoaches.

During the late 1840s a massiveboycott of inferior and segregatedblack schools In Boston gave riseto a celebrated court case thatultimately affirmed the city'sright to maintain separate blackschools. In an unsuccessful at-tempt to curb black dissent, thecity offered to "wagon" blackchildren beyond their neigh-borhood schools to the all-blackinstitutions. Finally, continuouspolitical lobbying brought aboutthe Integration of Boston's publicschools In 1855.

Afro-American protest wasnever quieted, and tactics em-ployed in the years after the Civil

War foreshadowed those of the1950s and 1960s civil rights move-ment. Sometimes, when they couldsee personal advantage, whitesjoined with blacks, as when blackand white farmers linked forcesunder the banner of the populistmovement In the 1890s. But mostoften blacks found that for raciallyprogressive change, such as theirunsuccessful drive for federal ami-lynching legislation, they were leftto their own devices.

Throughout the 20th century,black Americans maintained asteady stream of protest. In King'shometown of Atlanta theyboycotted segregated streetcars in1906. There was also a bus boycottthat year in Montgomery, Ala. —a half-century before King rose tonational prominence as the leaderof the 195* boycott of that city'ssegregated buses.

When the public schools weresegregated in Atlanta, King's ma-ternal grandfather, A.D. Williams,was among those who pressuredthe city to open its first black highschool. King attended that schoolbefore going on to MorenouseCollege.

America's most successful In-terracial civil rights alliance wasformed In 1910 when the NationalAssociation for the Advancementof Colored People was established.Subsequently, much of the strugglewas fought through the courts, butblacks never depended on thejudicial system exclusively.

The Great Depression of the1930s was especially devastatingfor the black community. Blackssuffered an unemployment ratetwice that of whites. Several citiesadopted ordinances that en-couraged the dismissal of blackcity employees to make room forunemployed whites or restrictedthe jobs that blacks could hold,putting them at a great occupa-tional disadvantage. Local andnational Afro-American organiza-tions challenged these racist poli-cies.

Perhaps the high point In blackemployment agitation came in thepre-war years of the 1940s whenblack labor leader A. Philip Ran-dolph pressured President Frank-lin D. Roosevelt into issuing anexecutive order that banned dis-crimination in federal war Indus-tries and apprenticeship pro-grams. And during the 1940s theCongress of Racial Equality(CORE), established in 1942, open-ed its campaign to break thepattern of segregation in down-town restaurants in major North-ern cities such as New York andChicago.

iThus, by the time the Montgom-

ery Improvement Associationelected King its president tocoordinate the boycott of the city'ssegregated buses, his actions fol-lowed a strong tradition of re-sistance. Past protest sometimesincluded whites, but often blackscarried the torch alone. Per-petually they had kept the flamealight.

To assume, as did that well-meaning but historically un-sophisticated student who wouldn'tlet her mother bond her out of jail,that black protest was the creationof a recent generation is at bestinaccurate. At worst it is an Insultto the generations of protesterswho risked their security and oftentheir lives in pursuit of racialequality.

King had a deeper appreciationof history. He never forgot thoseupon whose shoulders he stood. Aswe celebrate his work, we honorhis memory by educatingourselves about the tradition thatKing symbolized. The true signifi-cance of the work of King is itsplace in the continuing struggleshared by people of determinationand a passion for freedom andjustice.

Trouble in New York CityThere's the ugly Manes episode

JeffGreenfield

NEW YORK - A key figure in New York's politicallife lies in a hospital bed, recovering from a slashedwrist, massive blood loss and a heart attack. Doctorssay he came very close to dying last weekend. And allover the city, people are laughing at him.

Have New Yorkers lost all sense of decency? Havethey finally exceeded even the stereotypical heart-lessrress attributed to Gothamites out in the Americanheartland?

No. Rather, they are providing another example ofthe crueler side of political Ufe: the remorseless,unforgiving nature of voters who believe they are beingplayed for fools.

In this case, Donald Manes, president of the boroughof Queens, and one of the two or three most powerfulpolitical figures in New York, was found at about 2 a.m.Friday morning, driving erratically. When policeopened the car door, they found Manes with a badlyslashed wrist, a slashed ankle, and blood all over thecar.

For two days, as he lay in the hospital in criticalcondition, Manes offered no explanation for what hadhappened. Various reports gave strong hints that thewounds had been self-inflicted: there had been norobbery; his sock had been rolled down carefully beforehis ankle was cut; the slashes on his wrist had been,made around his watch.

Moreover, political associates said that Manes"hadn't been himself lately." A crash liquid diet, theysaid, may have put him into an emotional tailspln. '

Is there any reason to laugh at such a story? Not atall. But when Manes finally did talk to police, heasserted that he had been "abducted." Two peoplesomehow secreted themselves in the backseat of hiscar, he said, and ordered him to drive around. He hadno idea what they looked like, or whether they Inflictedthe injuries on him. Later, Manes said he rememberedbeing cut in his car but still could give no hint of whathis abductors looked or sounded like.

That is when the laughter began. Mr. Manes had

broken one of the key rules of politics: Never let yourconstituency think you are trying to make idiots ofthem.

Voters are often a very forgiving lot. They forgive"corruption" provided it is done with panache. WitnessLouisiana Gov Edwin Edwards, now about to be triedfor a second time for an alleged multimillion-dollarscam, who was returned to the Louisiana Statehouse inpart because the voters were bored with the uprightnessof his successor. They preferred his motto: "Let thegood times roll."

But they will not forgive a public thief who tries tolie about it. When former Florida Cmigre—n»a RichardKelly was caught on Abscam videotape stuffing hispockets with cash, he explained he had been conductinghis own secret investigation of corruption. They are stilllaughing at that one down in Florida.

Voters will forgive a variety of sexual sins.Massachusetts voters handily returned CongressmanGerry Studds to office even though he acknowledgedseducing a 17-year-old male congressional page.

But they will not forgive hypocrisy. When formerMaryland Congressman Bob Bauman, a stalwartsupporter of the Moral Majority, was picked up byWashington policemen for soliciting young men, theblatant betrayal of Bauman's professed beliefs gaverise to a bumper sticker reading: "Have you huggedyour child today? Your congressman has."

In today's environment, where celebrity alcoholicsand drug abusers readily chat about their treatmentson "Donahue," "Today" and "Good Morning, Ameri-ca," where a diploma from the Betty Ford Center isa guaranteed ticket to the cover of People magazine,it Is highly likely that an elected public official couldsurvive an honest confession of emotional distress.

Indeed, Sen. Thomas Eagleton provides impressiveevidence of that. In 1972, he was forced off the nationalDemocratic ticket after it was learned he had beentreated, even hospitalized, for emotional problemsduring his public life. The voters in Missouri have twicesince sent him back to the U.S. Senate by landslidemajorities.

What Donald Manes did was to grope for the first,worst, political instinct — the most "acceptable"explanation. In so doing, he abandoned his claim on thevoters' sympathy as a hard-working politician introuble, and turned a personal crisis into a public joke.There is a harsh lesson here for politicians from theelectorate: We will forgive a slip, a stumble, even atumble from grace, but don't try to cover it up or it willturn into a pratfall.

Jeff Greenfield is a columnist for the UniversalPress Syndicate.

. and there's the Gross case

MurrayKempton

Even those of us who view Dr. Elliot M. Gross'stewardship of New York City's Office of Chief MedicalExaminer as a distinctly shabby show ought to inclinetoward crying mercy for him now.

Distressing though it may be, an individual shabbycase cannot be thought a disaster until its contagionspreads Into the general plague of official shabbinessthat the Gross issue has become.

A three-member committee of the Board of Regentshas begun struggling to decide whether to accept orreject State Commissioner of Health David Axelrod'srecommendation that Gross should be tried on chargesof professional misconduct that could cost him hislicense as a physician.

Commmittee chairman Emlyn Griffith presided overthe arguments with a grace and good humor that couldnot conceal the Gross question's collapse Into anincoherence intractably resistant to efforts to sum-marize it in terms that make sense.

The city has a mayor who wants to retain ElliotGross, and the state has a health commissionerdetermined to see him sacked. The state also has alegislature with responsibility for the statute thatgoverns the city medical examiner's office but no tastefor the unpleasantness of exercising it.

What none of the parties dares say about the problemsof the medical examiner's office is that they are thosethat primarily involve not a man, however fallible, butan institution. Reforming an institution is not anexecutive but a legislative function and, when thelegislature shrinks from that job, there is no way foran executive agency decently to do it.

Mayor Koch plainly likes Elliot Gross. Still, he hasnow and then disposed of inconvenient managerial

appointees he held in no smaller affection. Such aremedy is unavailable to him here, because Gross isboth an agency chief and a civil servant protected notjust by a law but by a lawyer of exemplary cunning,Howard Squadron, who could be trusted to fight anyremoval through protracted and probably successfullitigation.

Dr. Michael Baden, Gross' defrocked predecessor,has been harassing the corporation counsel through thecourts for five years now, even as he sits as an immunecivil servant and deputy medical examiner busilyintriguing against his chief. We have no reason to blameKoch for want of enthusiasm for the prospect of havingGross rise up as another Baden, but we are at leastentitled to wonder why the legislature views withcomplacency a situation where every supervisoryposition in a municipal agency is covered by a civilservice blanket within whose folds these bedfellows arefree to plot against one another.

Then there is the commissioner of health who,rationally or not, has judged Gross unfit for office andwho, in the absence of any statutory power to purgehim, has resorted to the device of arraigning him formisconduct not as a public official but as a physician.

The commissioner appoints three consultants toassist in the drafting of charges. One of them reportsthat the matter is outside the jurisdiction of the Officeof Professional Medical Conduct, and is heard no more.An administrative law judge assigned to the Grosshearing then throws out the case as a matter of law.And now Axelrod Insists on pressing it to the Board ofRegents on no visible recognizance but his own will.

We are, mind you, talking about actions that Grosstook In the performance of official duties and that onlyone public official cares to consider any longer. And thatone is aware that Gross is beyond reach except by thedubious stratagem of attempting the deprivation of hisphysician's license and, with It, his eligibility to be chiefmedical examiner.

We are used to defiance of logic and perhaps law fromour governors, but for the rage of one of them to turnthis stone-blind to elemental fairness does torment thepatience.

Murray Kempton writes a column for Newsdaywhich is distributed by the Los Angeles TimesSyndicate.

14A The WeiUter MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

3MContinued from Pag* 1A

In a brief public statement. Pit-cher tald, "We have to tell 3M Co.that they can't Just turn around and•hut down a profitable plant. Wehave to show them that there arepeople In this world who will fIfht

However, tome of the more than300 plant workers attending thebenefit said they doubted the cam-paign would convince JM offlclala toreverie their decision

"I don't think it's (the campaign)going to stop it from shutting," laid

. Rick McNerny, a 26-year-old milloperator In the audio-video product!

McNerny, who will be laid off InMarch, laid that Urge companiesgenerally stick to decittoni"whether they're right or wrong."

In response to the pessimism.Fischer tald, "It's hard for a personwho ii faced with losing hit job tohave a lot of hope. It's a long shot.1

j But Fischer taid he still thinks there> la A chance to persuade 3M officialsI to change their minds.

Same fans at the benefit, caUed"The Stone Pony Presents theJ.A.M. (Jersey Artists for Mankind)'86 Hometown Benefit for 3MWorkers," said they knew littleabout the campaign but that they arein favor of any cause to save jobs.

Stone Pony —Continued from Page 1A

Despite the fact that Decker mayhave Goldsteins job in as little asfour months, the two are friends.The relationship among union mem-bers, they said, is one of "loyalty"and "family."

The two spoke last night outsidethe Stone Pony, Ocean Avenue, in asteady drizzle Inside, 11 bands werescheduled to play in a 12-hour benefitin an effort to convince 3M to keepthe plant open.

And shortly after midnight, theeffort to save the workers' jobsreceived a morale boost by the

arrival of rock superstar BruceSpringsteen.

Springsteen, who earlier haddonated fjo.too to the union's cam-paign, told the cheering crowd,

Remember what we're here for,"and led into a rendition of his hitsong, "My Hometown."

But Goldstein, for the past nineyears a bar filler with the union, isalready looking for work.

"You have to support yourself,"

About 490 workers from the twoplants will be laid off by the end of1987, according to 3M officials.About 580 people are employed at thefacilities on Wlllowbrook Road inFreehold Township.

3M officials have said carefulanalysis hat shown the audio-videoproducts facility Is no longer costefficient and that due to an increas-ingly competitive market the com-pany must consolidate operations.

3M would have to Implement a f ISmillion to HO million upgradingproject at the plant for the facilityto become more cost-efficient, ac-cording to company officials. Thatproject would take too long tocomplete anyway, according to theofficials

Don Prial, a company spokesman,has said if the consolidation does notoccur toon other 3M plants wouldhave to be closed and more workerswould be laid off.

Other bands participating in thebenefit concert at The Stone Pony, atOcean and Second avenues, in-cluded: Gary Korb and The Wrecks,Step Aside, The Remakes, JerseyDream, J.T. Bowen and The Rock-ers, The Carolyn Mas Band,Kazoons. Cats on a Smooth Surface,and The Dull Brothers, who aremade up of former members of theroad crew of Bruce Springsteen's EStreet Band.

CongressContinued from Page 1A

As a result, the fiscal 1867 spend-ing plan the administration sends toCongress on Feb. 3 is expected tomake the (144 billion deficit ceilingwithout tax increases and continuingthe defense buildup — whileeliminating or deeply slashing manydomestic programs.

Reagan tried a similar approachin his fiscal 1986 budget, which waslargely rebuffed In Congress. Sen.Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., thechairman of the Senate BudgetCommittee, said the same tacticsthis year "won't fly" either.

Miller, however, said budget-mak-ing will be different this yearbecause "you don't have that bigbarrel of red ink to ride in this yearthat you had last year. With the rulesof the game changed, even some ofthe same proposals that were re-jected last year look a lot moreattractive this year."

The House and Senate will begaveled into session at noon Wednes-day. The Senate turns first to theproposed sale of Conrail to theNorfolk-Southern Railroad. TheHouse this week considers a billcurtailing the sometimes lengthy"holds" that banks put on deposits.

The president delivers his State ofthe Union address on Jan. 28. He'lloutline his agenda' for budget andtaxes and some of the other issues on

she said. "You've got to get anotherjob, so I'm looking."

Neither expressed much con-fidence that last night's benefit puton by Jersey Artists for Mankind, aloose coalition of Shore musicians,would convince 3M to keep the plantopen.

"It's hard to lay," said Decker. "Idon't know what it'll take."

And both expressed frustration for"having the rug pulled out" fromunder a union they believe has asincere loyalty to 3M and the prideneeded to turn out a quality product.

Shawn O'Connor, whose wifeValerie works for the union, said hebelieved the closing reflected ageneral unfavorable attitude towardunions.

And, a postal union workerhimself whose lifestyle will changewith theellmination of his wife'sincome, said the 3M union would bebetter off putting its effort intofinding its membership new jobs.

"There's no way that 3M is goingto change its mind because of this,"he said.

25 hurt in Amtraktrain derailment

DU PONT, Wash. (AP) - AnAmtrak train carrying 190 passen-gaaft from Los Angeles to Seattle

•flailed yesterday after heavy rainwiihed out the roadbed, and at least2ft people suffered minor injuries,authorities said.

The nine-car Coast Starlight de-railed about 4:30 p.m., in a steep,wooded area at Nisqually, which wasdrenched by torrential rains during

! weekend.: of its engines was hurled into

ravine, said Burlingtoni spokesman T. Warnstadt.

* railroad spokesman said ani caught on fire in the accident,

but it was not determined whether itwas the same one in the ravine.

The cause of the derailment wasthe "washout of the roadbed under-neath" the rails and a mudslide,Warnstadt said.

"It was the first time we were

ever on a train, and we almost didn'tmake it," said Waltraud Vel'man, apassenger from Glendora, Calif.,who was traveling with her 18-month-old granddaughter. "We wereflying all over the place."

"We took the train because I'mafraid of flying," she said. "Now,I'm afraid of trains, too."

The injured, some wearing neckbraces, were taken by pickup trucksmounted on rails to a staging areawhere they were treated and cov-ered with bright yellow sheets Theythen were taken to St. Peter Hospitalin Olympla.

"It's mostly bruises and bumps,head injuries, neck injuries, nothingterribly serious," said LakewoodFire Chief Tom Kanno. "It's justamazing more were not... seriouslyinjured."

Congress' calendar this year, Includ-ing: FOREIGN POLICY

Congress is expected scrutinizeadministration requests for Mideastarms tales and subsidies for anti-communist insurgents In Nicaragua,Angola and Afghanistan.

Congress delayed last year thetale of advanced air defenseweapons to Jordan and the adminis-tration has been considering offeringa similar package to Saudi Arabia.But Congress will be looking fordefinite progress toward peace be-tween those countries and Israelbefore approving the sales.

Congress last year showed awillingness to subsidize anti-com-munist rebels.

It repealed a ban on aid to anypolitical or military movementagainst the Marxist government ofAngola and approved $27 million fornon-lethal aid to the Contra rebels inNicaragua.

The administration is expected topush for military aid for the Contrasand money for Angolan anti-com-munists, along with continued covertassistance for the Afghanistan rebelsfighting Soviet troops.

A congressional delegation recent-ly returned from South Africa, andwithout more progress to end racismthere, Congress could push forstronger sanctions. Reagan last yearordered sanctions of his own onlywhen Congress was about to act.

The halls of Congress will againring with condemnations of Inter-national terrorism.

TRADERepublican! and Democrats in

Congress appear ready to butt headswith the administration, which hasblocked moves to protect U.S. indus-tries from foreign competition.

The Senate is ready to take up billsto retaliate against Japanese tradebarriers and to strengthen the handof the International Trade Com-mission. The FTC approved shoequotas but the plan was shot down bythe White House last year.

House Democrats hope to maketrade a major campaign issue thisyear. Ways and Means CommitteeChairman Dan Rostenkowskl, D-Ill ,was consumed with the tax overhaulIn 1885 but is expected to quicklyproduce a trade bill.

AGRICULTURETopping the list will be how to deal

with farmers' mounting credit prob-lems. The issue always arises duringthe spring planting and lendingseason, and will be even more acutein this election year when manyfarm-state members' jobs are on theline.

Congress also faces a substantiallist of leftovers from last year's five-year farm bill, and reauthorizationof pesticide legislation and theCommodity Futures Trading Com-mission.

ENVIRONMENT

Both the House and Senate passedbills last year extending and expand-ing the "Superfund" hazardouswaste cleanup program, but failed toresolve their disagreements beforeadjourning. Conferees still have towork out differences on fundinglevel! In the bills, who should betaxed to pay for cleanup!, cleanupstandards and other issues.

The 1985 session ended with aHouse-Senate stalemate over aproposed broad-based manufac-turers' tax to pay for Superfund.Senate Republicans, led by FinanceCommittee Chairman Bob Pack-wood, R-Ore., have supported thelevy over administration objections,while the House supports taxing thepetroleum and chemical industries.

IMMIGRATIONThe House will likely vote by

spring on legislation to slow the floodof illegal immigrants entering theUnited States. The cornerstones ofthe bill will be stiff penalties foremployers hiring illegal aliens, andamnesty for many of those alreadyin this country.

The major controversy so far,however, has been over demands bygrowers of fresh fruits and veg-etables — mainly in Western states— to allow large numbers of tempor-ary harvesters into the country.

The Senate passed its version ofImmigration reform last year, andany bill approved by the House willgo to a conference.

KeanContinued from Page 1 A

executive branch, rather than in thelegislative branch with the Senatepresident.

"I think it would be a good idea.There are so many times thegovernor is called upon to be askedout of the state and make anappearance for the state," saidAssemblyman John O. Bennett III,R-Monmouth

"There (would also be) a logicalselection for continuation of govern-

ment by someone who is electedstatewide," he said.

However, Assemblyman JosephAzzolina, R-Monmouth/Middlesex,who has previously served as both anassemblyman and senator, said thathe had opposed creation of the postwhile serving in the Legislaturemore than a decade ago.

"I've never been for a lieutenantgovernor ... I'm not sure whether weneed it at this point. In the past I wasagainst it," Azzolina said.

"But if Kean wants to look into it,then it merits study," he added.

Sen. Richard Van Wagner, D-Monmouth Middlesex, said alieutenant governor is "a conceptworth looking at."

Van Wagner said he would beinterested in the perception of othergovernors on the proposal. He alsostated that the issue should beexpanded to whether other executiveofficials should be elected statewide

"I don't think we should rush it

(the lieutenant governor proposal) tothe ballot," Van Wagner said.

Creation of a lieutenant governorwould require amending New Jer-sey's Constitution, a process requir-ing voter approval.

Newly elected AssemblywomanJ o a n n S m i t h , R - M o n -mouth/Middlesex said she had not"thought about It too much," butthat she was concerned with"another new position and at whatsalary."

MUDSLIDE MESS — Hermann Bischofberger looks at some of thedamage to his home in Juanita, Wash., yesterday afternoon causedby a mudslide Saturday night which hit after a nearby, water-soaked

ASSOCIATED PRESS

hillside gave away. Both cars were pushed out of the garage areaand lifted off the ground by the force of the mudslide.

Philippines will have tough job in keeping balloting cleanH tans M. sumsKnight-Ridder Newspapers

MANILA, Philippines - As Presi-dent Ferdinand E. Marcos andchallenger Corazon Aquino pursuethe most hard-fought election cam-paign in recent Philippine history,traditional political rhetoric hasgiven way to a more central issue:whether the Feb. 7 balloting will beclean.

Long endemic in Philippine poli-tics, cheating widely is viewed by avariety of Filipino and foreignanalysts as the only way Marcos canbe assured of retaining the office hehas held for 20 yean.

The United States, careful not totake sides in the campaign, hasissued stem warnings to the Marcosgovernment that a fair election is ofparamount importance in the de-termination of future U.S. policytoward the Philippines.

Even the Roman Catholicarchbishop of Manila, CardinalJaime L. Sin, warned Marcos in apastoral letter that "if a candidatewins by cheating, he can only beforgiven by God if he renounces theoffice he has obtained by fraud.There will be no divine forgivenessfor this act of injustice without aprevious decision to repair thedamage done."

Deeply concerned about the secur-ity of its military bases in thePhilippines, the United States plansto send numerous observers todiscourage wholesale cheating. Buttheir potential effectiveness is sub-

ject to question.''Frankly, I doubt that most of

these foreign observers would beable to recognize anything but themost blatant fraud even if they werethere when it was taking place," saidJose Concepcion Jr., head of awatchdog group known as the Na-tional Citizens Movement for FreeElections, or NAMFREL.

The job of such observers will bemade even more difficult by whatConcepcion and others expect will bemore sophisticated cheating tacticsthan the vote-buying and ballot-boxstuffing that has characterized pastelections.

Recently, a series of four memoswritten by an anti-Marcos staffmember of the government bodycharged with assuring honest elec-tions alleges that' some electionsofficials have been co-opted by theruling party and plan to rig theballoting.

According to one of the memos,written to Aquino staff members anddenied by elections officials, someattorneys who work for the Com-'mission on Elections plan to falsifyelection return forms, a procedureconsidered difficult to detect.

Filipinos vote on paper ballots atany of 90,000 election precinctsthroughout the country. The votes ateach polling place are counted andentered on return forms, and copiesare given to poll watchers from eachside. The original form, whichcarries a secret mark placed byrepresentatives of each party, issigned by poll watchers to validate

the figures. The original form thenis taken to a municipal hall in theregion and from there to the provin-cial capital with other regionalreturns.

The provincial returns are thentransmitted via closed-circuit radioto Manila, where they are countedand a winner is announced.

The memos allege that plans arebeing devised by some electionspersonnel to photocopy the returnforms before they are filled in butafter the secret marks have beenplaced on them by party officials.After the vote, these new forms —with different vote tallies — wouldbe substituted for the original re-turns, and "good forgers" wouldcopy the validating signatures ofelection inspectors.

This work will be done in "secretsafe houses in strategic areas," thememo states.

Plans call for faked returns to besubstituted in a variety of ways,according to the memos. TheseInclude "outright substitution orfabrication" at polling places whereschoolteachers and opposition partyinspectors can be made to "cooper-ate, (be) coerced, bought, silencedor just plain afraid to resist."

The allegations were denied bycommission chairman Victorino A.Savellano, who said that the or-ganization is impartial. Seated in hiscommission office beneath portraitsof Marcos and his wife, Imelda, andenlarged photographs of himself andthe president, Savellano said that"none of us sides with any party."

"We submit ourselves to thesearching scrutiny of the public. Idon't know where they get the ideathat, just because you are appointedby the president, you owe loyalty tothe president. Under the constitu-tion, that's the only way to beappointed."

Opposition loyalists worry that ifcheating is not detected as ithappens, later redress will be im-possible.

To protest election results is "along, costly process," according toan expert in the field. "It's awearing, Incredibly time-consumingprocess of attrition. That's why thename of the game is proclamation —get the winner proclaimed as quicklyas possible and worry about protestlater, much later."

Fraud long has been a commonfeature of Philippine elections. Inthe past, it was most commonlycarried out through such tactics asbribing election officials, ballot-boxstuffing and the use of "flyingvoters," people who vote under thenames of voters who don't exist orwho vote in several different places.

The impending elections, though,are to be overseen by unprecedentednumbers of Filipino and foreign —mostly American — observers. Thismay be the reason for the need todevise more sophisticated methods.

"I'm more concerned about thereturns than about ballot-box stuf-fing, which is an exercise in rawpower and requires the acquiescenceof too many people," said Concep-

cion of NAMFREL, which has beencredited with assuring that the 1984parliamentary elections were themost honest in Philippine history.

On Election Day, Concepcion said,NAMFREL will field more than500,000 observers at polling stations.Nevertheless, he acknowledged,there are many precincts that thegroup's volunteers could not cover.

Local operatives of Marcos's par-ty, he said, "will try to cheat inevery way possible — soft cheatingand hard cheating — attacking theelectoral system at every pointwhere it may be vulnerable."

In addition to the election returns,the system is susceptible to fraud atalmost every step along the way,according to experienced observers,beginning even before the voterwrites in by hand the name of hischoice for president and vice presi-dent:

—At the polling stations, eachvoter Is to have a fingernail daubedwith a supposedly indelible ink beingspecially manufactured by threefirms. At a test of the Ink last week,attended by NAMFREL and electioncommission officials, the ink wasdiscovered to be easily removable.New Ink is to be formulated.

—In polling stations where of-ficials have been paid off, a notuncommon practice in desolateareas, outright rigging is easy toaccomplish.

—Ballot boxes, impressivelyarmored-looking containers of olive-drab steel secured Internally withthree metal clasps, outside with

three padlocks, open to scrutinythrough a rlveted-in window andnewly produced for the coming polls,can be snatched easily on rural roadswhile they are in transit.

All of these problems mitigateagainst the "free and fair" electionsthat the United States has beentelling Marcos he must conduct inorder to restore his credibility withthe American public and with Con-gress — and to continue receivingU.S. aid.

But according to Jaime Ongpin,one of Aquino's closest advisers, theelections are unfair to begin with.

"The timing alone is unfair," saidOngpin, president of Benguet Corp.,a giant mining firm, who is on aleave of absence to work withAquino, "Marcos set it unilaterally,in such a limited time that theopposition couldn't organize prop-erly and is having a hell of a timeraising funds."

Ongpin also mentioned Aquino'slimited access to government-domi-nated mass media, Marcos's allegedaccess to the government-createdpresidential electoral tribunal —which would hear post-electionprotests — as well as of the armedforces.

"It amazes me that the U.S.government can continue talkingabout 'free and fair' as if you haveto wait for Election Day," Ongpinsaid. "I don't understand it. Theyknow free and fair elections aredamned near impossible."

SEXTRA BCLASSIFIED 11 MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

Belmont blaze claims 45 thoroughbreds

BELMONT STABLE FIRE — Officials and investigators stand in front of a guttedstable at Belmont Park Race Track in Elmont, N.Y., yesterday. An early morningfire in the stable injured two firefighters and killed 45 thoroughbred horses. The

j

ASSOCIATED PRESS

loss was estimated at up to $40 million. According to Elmont Fire Chief JamesSnadecky, the blaze took 200 firefighters more than an hour to contain.

ELMONT, NY lAPi - Asmoky fire at Belmont Park rate-'track yesterday killed 45 thorough'bred horses in a wooden barn witha sprinkler system that broke day;ago, authorities said Two fire-fighters suffered minor injuriesand the loss was estimated at upto Slo million

Flames shot SO feet into the airand caused a large section of the400-foot-long barn to cave in, saidElmont fire chief JamesSnadecky The blaze was reported ,at 1:19 a.m.. and it took 2mfirefighters more than an hour U>contain it, Snadecky said

Most of the horses suffocatedand were found in their 12-foot-by-12-foot stalls where they hadbeen tied up for the night, saidassistant fire chief John Loser

"It looked like a fireball in themiddle of the barn," Loser said"It was tough to make a decisionnot to charge in there and try tp_get the horses out." .J

"They didn't have a chance.Osaid Gene Martello, a trainer whoworks with horses in a neighboringbarn

Two firefighters, one sufferingsmoke inhalation and the otherminor burns, were taken to Frank-lin General Hospital. Snadeckysaid. They were treated and re-leased.

Initial estimates placed thevalue of the lost horses and the.barn at up to $10 million. sai4 ..officer Howard Hurt I a Nassau ,County police spokesman

However, track officials said ina statement Sunday that the barnwas worth $1 million and thehorses were valued at up to $5million

Two horses were rescued Onewas Pleasant Sea. an offspring ofPleasant Colony, who won the 'Kentucky Derby and the Preafc'1

ness in 1981 Other Pleasant SeaHoffspring were believed to hav«died in the blaze, authorities saidr

The fire broke out in Barn 48 onthe grounds of Belmont, the larg-est track in the nation. It was firstspotted by the night watchman,who "from one end saw flames

See Belmont. Page 2B

Straight-set winner cken experience factor

Lendl pummels Becker, takes MastersNEW YORK (AP) - The bazooka

serve, powerful groundstrokes andcrisp volleys help to win matches,but experience is what counts to winchampionships, according to IvanLendl.

Lendl proved that yesterday whenhe stopped 18-year-old Boris Beckerof West Germany 6-2, 7-«, 6-3 tocapture the $500,000 Nabisco Mas-ters tennis championships atMadison Square Garden.

"This is the sixth straight yearI'm in the finals here, and it's thefirst time he goes into one," Lendlsaid. "I think it was the first bigmatch that people expected thingsof him, and he didn't know how tohandle it yet."

Becker finished with nine aces,three more than Lendl And he had12 service winners to just nine forthe Czechoslovakian winner. Butthere were other things.

"He made many more errors than

Barth quitsMonmouthgrid postI f DAVE SALTEDThe Register

TINTON FALLS - MonmouthRegional High School football coachJoe Barth, who guided the GoldenFalcons for the past four seasons,has resigned, according to Joseph J.Lister, Monmouth Regional AthleticDirector.

"He (Barth) felt he had given itfour years and hadn't reached thegoals that he had set for himself andthe program." Lister said last night."I felt he was an outstanding coachand did an outstanding job He was100 percent dependable and gave alot to the program."

The Falcons had a 3-6 record in1984 and were expected to challengefor Shore Conference "B" DivisionNorth honors with 22 returningletterwinners this past season. Butinjuries and inconsistency plaguedthe Falcons into a frustrating 3-6campaign. Among the three winswas an upset of -arch-rival ShoreRegional on Thanksgiving Day thatreturned the J. Russell Woolleytrophy to Monmouth Regional.

See Barth, Page 2B

he usually does, and he did not do thethings he normally does well,"Lendl said of his young opponent

And experience comes into playwhen you want to control the game.

"I was just trying to take as muchtime between points as possibletoday.' said Lendl. explaining whyhe made Becker wait to receiveserve and at times when Becker wasserving "When I was younger. Iwas always ready and I had to waitfor (JohnI McEnroe and (Jimmy)Connors, and I learned from that. Ithink Boris will learn that, too."

Becker said that like his fans, hewas expecting himself to do well inthe final, expecially since he hadbeen playing well all week.

"But once he's on top of you, it'sreally tough," the young Germansaid of Lendl "I wish I could haveplayed to 4-all or 5-all in the first set.Then you're much closer to him '

It was power against power.

strength against strength And, inthe end. nearly 24 hours after theyhad begun. Lendl, the world's No. 1-ranked player and the reigning U.S.Open champion, had prevailed overthe Wimbledon.

For the victory, Lendl earned1100,000, while Becker collected$70,000.

Lendl also received a check for$800,000 as winner of the year-long,worldwide Nabsico Grand Prixcircuit, bringing his 1985 earnings tonearly $2 million.

"I. at the moment, hold all threetitles in your town, and I'm proud ofthat," Lendl told the cheering crowdat Madison Square Garden. Hereferred to the Masters, the U.S.Open and the WCT Tournament ofChampions, all of which are playedin New York. Then he admitted thatthe 18-year-old Becker is a force tobe reckoned with

"His days, I'm sure, are going to

come," Lendl said. "He's great forthe game."

The two tested each other out tobegin the match, preferring toremain on the baseline, tradingstrong groundstrokes as they heldserve through the first four games.

Then, raising his game to anotherlevel, Lendl ripped off four straightgames, breaking Becker in the fifthand seventh games, to close out thefirst set. After the seventh game,the 18-year-old Becker, disgustedwith his play, slammed his racket tothe floor.

The match was 32 minutes old,and Lendl. making a record sixthappearance in the Masters final, haddrawn the first advantage. He hadbeen tied with Ilie Nastase ofRomania for reaching the Masterschampionship match five times

But Becker, who forced Lendl tofive sets in their last meeting, at

See Lendl, Page 3BWINNING FORM — Ivan Lendl preparesyesterday's Nabisco Masters Tennis final.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

to return a shohofgh

STRATEGY SESSION — Pete "Pee Wee" Reeves,center left, explains the strategy of the moment whilemembers of the Red Bank Middle School basketball

THE RtOISTER/aHEOa fLLMAN

team listen. Reeves assists Aspry Jones, center right,with the highly-successful seventh and eighth gradeprograms at the Middle School.

Coaching easyfor Pete ReevesI f JACK MKLEYThe Register

RED BANK — The breeding ground of champions.Over 30 years ago, Pete Reeves was the "quar-

terback" of the Red Bank High School basketballteams and now he is imparting his knowledge to thehoop hopefuls at the Red Bank Middle School.

Pete, known in his high school days as "Pee Wee,"led the Buccaneers, coached then by Frank Plngitore, sfito Shore Conference championships in I960 and '51.

To refresh some memories, Pete played with Pete K'Foster, who later went on to play at Villanova, Russ 'and Gene Booth, the latter the Dartmouth Collegebasketball captain, Billy Cacciatore, Skip Smith, Joe -Condina. Wesley "Batman" Reevey, Charlie Pat-terson and "Shy" Woodward.

Foster and Reeves were both all-state for two yearsrunning.

Pete received a solid basketball background thenand was the recepient of a basketball scholarship to •'Virginia Union where he played for three years

He never lost his interest in the game and could ' 'always be seen at Red Bank High School games.

Then, in 1974, Wade Turnock was coaching the River 'Street School team and asked Pete for nil help. And 'Pete was quick to respond.

And he's been with the grammar school teams ever 'since.

Now Pete is assisting Aspry Jones, who coaches theseventh and eighth grade teams at the Middle School.

See Reeves. Page 48

81 flC The Buitltr |

Pavlinko tops Zechmaneffort at Masters' eventBY uw FMMEST mmm^^mmmm^^^i^^t^^m game tied the match? . In a 9th and 10th f

IY, JANUARY 20, 1986

By UW FOMKST

The Register

EAST BRUNSWICK - The 4thannual NJ Stale Masters Bowlingtournament drew 105 of the topbowlers in the state held lastweekend at Mid State Bowl.

Steve Pavlinko of Philadelphia,Pa. prevailed over Frank Zechmanof Middletown in a roll-off for thetitle.

Zechman made a gallant bidcoming out of the losers bracket tomeet Pavlinko. Zechman drew evenin the title match when he outscored his opponent 462 to 452 in atwo-game match play to force theroll-off.

Pavlinko took the State Mastersbowling title on games 218-255 for a473 total while Zechman fell behind221-104 for a 415.

Zechman had to beat John Parisof Kcansburg to win his way out of

Bowlingthe losers bracket. He did just thatwhen the two leading stars ofMonmoulh County clashed head-to-head 489 to 449.

John Paris held third place but ledthe 8-game block qualifying roundsSaturday with a 1931 total pintailaveraging 241 on his way. In hissecond three-game set Paris posteda high series of 808 for his third 800set this season.

Perhaps one of the most pressurepacked matches was when Parisbeat Charles Del Plato ofBricktown.

While still trying to Stay in thewinners bracket Paris shot games of257 and 237 for a 494. Del Plato ongames of 248 and a strike-out 246

SPORTS BRIEFSBrookdale offers hockey clinics

MIDDLETOWN - BrookdaleCommunity College will of-fer two field hockey clinics

and players' clinics Saturday,Feb 8.

The clinics are open to allstudents and coaches fromelementary school to collegesand physical education teachers,referees and parents.

It will be taught by U.S.Olympic Team members DianeMover, Julie Staver, Patty Sheaadd Anita Miller as well asMaureen Horan, Drew Univer-sity coach; Patty Bossio, Univer-sity of Massachusetts coach andMary Ann Harris, Ursinus Col-lege coach.

The clinic will include lec-

tures, demonstrations and ques-tion and answer sessions and willconcentrate on offensive anddefensive techniques andstrategies, individual skills,special situations and injuriesand legal aspects of teaching andplaying the sport.

The fee for the coaches' clinicis $20 before Feb. 1, and $25 afterthat date. The fee for the players'clinic is $15 before Feb. 1, and $20thereafter.

Both clinics will be conductedat the gymnasium at thelincrof tcampus starting at 9 a.m.

For more information andregistration, contact BrookdaleCommunity Services division,842-1900, ext. 315.

Donlan shoots for free trip

tNGLISHTOWN - PeterDonlan of Englishtown iseligible to win a free trip forto Scotland and $1,000 cash as

a result of scoring a hole-in-oneat the Atlantis Country Club. Theace has qualified Donlan for the24th Annual Drambuie RustyNail Holein-One Sweepstakes, atabonal competition sponsoredby the Drambuie Liqueur Com-pany of Edinburgh, Scotland.

Eddie O'Donnell, at AtlantisCountry Club, is also eligible towin $1,000 cash, as the golf pro

who validated and submittedDonlan's entry card.

The Drambuie Rusty NailSweepstakes is the longest run-ning sports promotion of its kind.Over 10,000 people each yearscore an ace and enter theDrambuie Sweepstakes.

Done in collaboration with theProfessional Golfer's Associa-tion of America, the Sweepstakesruns January 1 through De-cemvber 31. The winner will beannounced this month.

onmouth holds goalie clinic1EST LONG BRANCH -f All-Pro Goalkeepers, alongf with Monmouth College

that registrations areI being accepted for the Ninth

Annual Goalkeepers Clinic to bel^ld at the college, Sunday,February 2.>jThe clinic is directed by New

native Gary Hindley,ntly an assistant coach with

Los Angeles Lazers of the

clinic is split into twoMissions, with the morningession for players and coaches

In the youth category (grades Kthrough 7) and the afternoonsession directed towards theadvanced players and coaches

(8th through collegiate).A special coahes clinic will

also be part of the program. Inaddition to coach Hindley, Mon-mouth College coach JoeDonahue, the 1985 New JerseyCollegiate Coach of the Year,will be on hand as well as a top-flight staff of high school, col-legiate and professional coaches.

Pre-registratlon for thesessions, which run from 9-12:30(youth) and 1:30 -5:30 (senior) is$9 00 per player or coach. Thecost at the door will be $13.00.

Additional information can beobtained by phoning the Mon-mouth College Soccer office at(201) 571-3415 between 9:30 a.m.and 4:30 p.m.

ayshore YAA holds tourneyIIDDLETOWN - TheIBayshore Youth AthleticlAssociation, in conjunction

rith the Middletown Township'Department of Parks and Rec-reation, announce the fourth

1 annual Croydon Hall Classicbasketball tournament.

It will be held Friday, Febru-ary 21 thru March 2. The tour-nament will be single eliminationusing high school federation

1rules. 1AABO officials will beused.

The seeding meeting is at.Croydon Hall on Wednesday,• February 12 at 8 p.m. A represen-• tative from each team must* attend. Trophies will be awarded* to every member of the first and; second place teams, and team

trophies will also be presented.The entrance fee is $50.00 per

team. The age groups include:11-and-under girls; 13-and-undergirls; 10-and-under boys; 11-and-under boys; 12-and-under boys;and 13-and-under boys. Proof ofdate of birth is required.

Checks should be made pay-able to the BYAA and mailed toMiddletown Township Depart-ment of Parks and Recreation, 20Leonardville Road, Leonardo,NJ., 07737, Attention RobertMcGowan, no later than Febru-ary 11.

For more information, callRobert McGowan, <201 > 787-7643after 4 p.m. For applications,call Parks and Recreation at(201) 291-9200.

game tied the match at 494.In a 9th and 10th frame roll-off

Paris eked out an exciting win by athe margin of 50 to 48, putting DelPlato in the losers bracket.

In one of the other matches putdrew intense interest was when DelPlato and defending Masters Cham-pion James O. J. Olchaskey of SouthRiver tangled in bne of the highestscoring matches. Del Plato eked outa sky-high 531 to 525 match to putOlchaskey in the losers bracket.

Jules Miknyoczky of Easton fin-ished fifth averaging 230 followed byHenry von Saspe, Old Bridge. Inseventh was Charles Bruno, Lodl;defending champion Olchaskey (8)South River;. Frank Veglatte (9)North Plainfield, Anthony Cerrato(10) East Hanover; Bob Serbe (11)of Hazlet; Myron Tkaczuk (12)Edison; Tom Edwards (13) Somer-set; Jay Stout (14) Titusville. BobJust (15) Dover; and Bill Meim-bresse (16) of Oaklyn

Pavlinko won the biggest share ofa $5600 prize list with an all expensepaid entry including air fare to thenational ABC Masters in Las VegasMay 6-10.

The 23-year-old righty has four 800sets to his credit with 837 tops andsix 300 games to date.

Shore Clubcapturestrack title

PRINCETON (AP) - Shore Ath-letic club won the men's cham-pionship and Princeton Universitytook the women's title yesterday inthe annual New Jersey AthleticsCongress indoor track and fieldchampionships at Jadwin Gym.

Shore AC'S, men totaled 56 pointsand captured seven of the 15 events.Princeton was a distant second with26. Meet records were set by ShoreAC long-jumper Ken Place at 24 feetand one-half inch and Princeton'sPeter Corsi, who threw the 35-poundweight 53 feet, eight inches.

Princeton's 34 points won thewomen's championship with ShoreAC a distant second with 10. Meetrecords were set by Debbie St.Phard of Princeton in the shot put,46 feet, one inch, and NormaArnesen, Shore AC, in the milewalk, 7:31.5.

BarthContinued from Page 1B

"It's only a matter of time beforewe win," Lister said. "With a coupleof breaks this season, we would havewon. But he wasn't satisfied withthe job he had done. There was nodissatisfaction on my part. Actually,it came somewhat as a surprise.He's a good man and we're sorry tolose him. I hope, if he so desires,that he latches on to anotherprogram at another school."

According to Lister, the schoolwill try to fill the position fromwithin the staff. Lister also said thethree candidates that were in therunning for the job were all assis-tants this past season. HankKachelriess, Mike Luccarelli andTed Jarmusz are all being con-sidered for the post. Lister did nothave a particular date in mind forfilling the position.

JOE BARTH

HIS HOPES CAME TRUE — Donnie Hammond,of Daytona Beach, Fla., reacts to sinking a putt fora birdie to win the 27th Annual Bob Hope Chrysler

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Classic yesterday in Palm Desert, Calif. Hammon.ddefeated John Cook in a sudden death playoff forthe championship.

Hammond enjoys new statusafter winning Hope tourney

i

BelmontContinued from Page IB

cqTning out of a stall in the middleof the barn," said John Keenan,v i e president of operations for theNjw York Racing Association.

."Its going to be a sad thing forracing to lose that many horses,"he said.

The horses were among morethjn 2.000 kept in 64 barns on thegBunds of the 430-acre complex

jPte track is the site of theBfcknont Stakes, the third leg ofthlrTriple Crown series for 3-year-

Jrhe green one-story structureih>i caught fire contained a hayloft' and Keenan and other of-fi&als said it was possible the haycati'ght fire spontaneously.

however, the cause of the firer e a m e d undetermined, and

PALM DESERT, Calif. (AP) -The position was a new one forDonnie Hammond, up there in thehigh-rent district among the leadersof a PGA tour event.

"I haven't been there, haven'tbeen in contention much," saidHammond, who hadn't finishedhigher than a tie for seventh in anofficial event in his three-year tourcareer.

"So I just took the attitude that Ididn't care if I shot 76, I was goingto try to shoot 66 and win this thing.''

And that's precisely what he did.Birdies on five of his last six holes

produced a 6-under-par 66 and a tiewith John Cook for the lead after 90holes of play yesterday in the BobHope Desert Classic.

And Hammond, a refugee fromthe mini-tours who made four triesat the Qualifying School beforegaining his playing rights, rapped ina 12-foot birdie putt on the first holeof sudden death for his initial tourtriumph.

"It's just so satisfying," saidHammond, 28. "I hung in theretough. I'm kind of proud of myself."

The victory, which took five days,91 holes and competition over fourdesert courses to achieve, wasworth $108,000 from the total purseof $600,000. That's more than theeasy-going Hammond won in anyprevious full season.

Cook, playing his way out of aslump that has endured since his1963 victory in the Canadian Open,also had a final round of 66, a bogey-free effort, and had matched Ham-monds' 90-hole toUl of 335, 25 shotsunder par.

Hammond, one shot back with twoholes to go, hit a long iron to withinfour feet of the flag on the 17th and

coaxed in the putt for a share of thelead

He went in front alone, briefly,when he was green-high in two onthe par-5 18th and chipped to tap-indistance.

He then waited in the scoring tentbeside the 18th green while Cook, aresident of this desert resort areaand a gallery favorite, played thefinal hole. From the fairway, Cookput his second shot on the green,some 18 feet away from an eaglethat would have won it.

But he left that putt short, then

tapped in for the birdie that sent itto overtime - the fifth consecutiveyear this tournament has required aplayoff.

On the first extra hole, Cook'sapproach skipped through the greenwhile Hammond put his near theflag. Cook chipped back close,marked his ball and then watched asHammond rolled in the right-to-leftbreaking putt for his first victory.

Jodie Mudd, the leader throughfour rounds, played the last 74 holesof the tournament without a bogey.But it wasn't enough.

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authorities found, "nothing thatindicates it would be suspicious,"said Detective Lt. WilliamGutersloh, commanding officer ofthe Nassau County arson squad.

Arson investigators were siftingthrough rubble Sunday, looking forclues and interviewing employeesand others, Gutersloh said.

Owners of the horses that per-ished indicated "a good portion ofthe horses were not insured, andthey will have substantial losses,"he said.

Trainer Mike Daggett was neartears as hi. described how eighthorses he I rained died in the fire.

"I love these horses," he said."I'm so sorry they had to go —

and go that way," said Daggett.who has worked with horses sincegraduating from Portland State

University."Money doesn't mean anything

to me," he said. "By being withthem every day, every month,every year, you see them fulfilledat the race track by winning.That's how they become a part ofyou."

Horse owner Robert Kern saidhe lost three horses, including onehe had bought just hours before thefire.

"I'm sick," he said. "I'm veryupset and disturbed andbrokenhearted. It's a terribletragedy."

Keenan said the sprinkler sys-tem did not work because its pipesburst late last week whentemperatures zoomed from nearzero to almost 50 degrees in oneday.

"The sprinklers had to bedrained and would have beenrepaired today or tomorrow," hesaid Sunday.

The fire department knew of theproblem and security had beenbeefed up around the barn, Keenansaid.

Although some of the horsesmight have been able to break outof their stalls, Keenan said thatwould have been unusual.

"The nature of a horse is heconsiders that stable his home, andif something happens, he's moreinclined to go into it than out, " hesaid.

The horses in the barn wereeither racing at nearby Aqueductor were preparing to race there, hesaid. Belmont's racing seasonended Oct. 22.

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JANUARY 20, 1986 The Htgiile 3B

North Carolina remainsperfect, nips Marquettel | M M Y WILMENAP Sports Writer

The top-ranked North Carolina Tar Heels, who hadchristened their new basketball home the day before bybeating third-ranked Duke, narrowly avoided their firstloss of the season yesterday with a 66-64 victory atMarquette.

Point guard Kenny Smith hit two free throws withthree seconds left after a Marquette timeout to breaka 64-64 tie, capping a 13-2 run that began with the TarHeels trailing Marquette by nine, 62-53, with 4:15 toplay

"We,put the game in Smith's hands at the end, andhe came through," Tar Heels Coach Dean Smith said."He always seems to deliver, especially when the otherteams call timeout. He seems to say, 'I'll show you fortrying to ice me.'"

Twenty-four hours earlier, North Carolina opened thenew Dean E. Smith Student Activities Center, namedafter the Tar Heels coach, with a 95-92 Atlantic CoastConference victory over previously undefeated Duke.

The Tar Heels had left old Carmichael Auditorium,where they had built a 169-20 record in a little less than25 seasons, but the Dean Smith Era continued as acapacity crowd of 21,444 packed the $338 millionfacility.

Steve Hale scored a career-high 28 points, and BradDaugherty had 23 to pace the Tar Heels, who led Dukeby 10 points with 16 seconds to play before the BlueDevils closed out by scoring the game's final sevenpoints.

Traveling then to Milwaukee, the Tar Heels found aless hospitable welcome. North Carolina was up 47-37when Marquette reeled off 14 straight points. A basketby Kevin Johnson gave the Warriors a 51-47 lead with8 34 to play. The 62-53 lead came on a bank shot byMichael Sims, ending a Marquette run of 25-6.

Daugherty led all scorers with 20 points, and Sims had12 of his 16 points in the second half for Marquette, 11-5.

REACHING OUT — North Carolina's Joe Woll (24)reaches out for a rebound as teammates DavePopson (35) and Warren Martin (54) watch duringthe game against Marquette played yesterday at the

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Milwaukee Arena. Defending for Marquette areDavid Boone, second from right, and Mike Davis,right.

Lendl: Making Becker waitBy STEVE GOLDSTEINKnight-Ridder Newspapers

NEW YORK - Ivan Lendl isgoing to make Boris Becker wait.

Yesterday, he made the bull-likeWest German teen-ager paw thecourt anxiously as he fiddled withhis racket strings before serving.Then Lendl postponed any thoughtsBecker may have had winning hisfirst Masters title, and put offindefinitely the day that Beckermight hold the world's No. 1ranking.

"You're only 18; you can wait alittle bit." Lendl told his youngerrival. "I waited until I was 25." .

And now the U.S. Open championis indisputably No. 1, having beatenthe Wimbledon champion, 6-2, 7-6(7-1), 6-3, in Sunday's 2-hour-21-minute Grand Prix Masters final atMadison Square Garden.

Lendl, who also won the Mastersin 1982 and 1983, came back from 2-5down and also saved a set point inthe critical second set.

Becker came' out of the match

bloodied and bowed. With Lendlserving at 2-0, 40-0 in the third gameof the second set, Becker tried torun down a forehand volley andcrashed headlong into a courtsideflower box and through a curtainedguardrail. A cut knee required a 3-minute injury timeout and wouldlater require stitches, Becker said.

Yet it was obviously his heart thatLendl had buried, not his woundedknee.

"When he's flying on emotions,it's tough to beat him," an unhappyBecker said of Lendl. "I had a goodchance to win the second set. If Ihad, maybe it would have gone fivesets."

Lendl, who won $100,000. playedextremely well. He used his slicedbackhand to draw Becker in to thenet and then repeatedly passed theGerman. Lendl returned Becker'ssomewhat erratic serve much betterthan he had in their last meeting inNovember, when Lendl won instraight sets.

The Czechoslovak showed someskill off the court, too, in assessing

the psychological forces at work onthe young prodigy.

"I felt like this was the first timehe was going into a big match anda lot was expected of him," Lendlsaid.

Becker, who returned to hisincome-tax haven in Monte Carlo(70,000 richer, also harbored higherexpectations than in his previous bigmatches.

"People were expecting me tohave more chances than before," hesaid. "Me, too."

Lendl didn't give him many.Becker changed his racket four orfive times — he said they were allstrung too loosely — and had somewords with his coach, GuntherBosch, seated at courtside. Thelatter is strictly against the rules,but umpire Richard Kaufman let itslide, and Becker himself didn'tthink it was that big a deal.

"I was talking to him (Bosch)before, but not today," Becker said."Today there was nothing to talkabout."

Jarryd-Edberg take Nabisco doublesNEW YORK (AP) - Anders

Jarryd and Stefan Edberg capturedthe doubles title at the $500,000Nabisco Masters tennis cham-pionships yesterday, defeating fel-low Swedes Mats Wilander andJoakim Nystrom 6-1, 7-6.

Jarryd and Edberg, who normallyplay doubles for Sweden's Davis Cupteam, jumped out to a 5-0 leadbefore Wilander finally was able tohold serve at 30. Jarryd then heldserve at 15 to close out the openingset.

The team of Wilander andNystrom, who helped Sweden to itssecond consecutive Davis Cup titlelast month when the Swedes de-feated West Germany, swept to a 3-0lead to begin the second set,breaking Jarryd's serve. ButEdberg and Jarryd pulled even bywinning the next three games,breaking Wilander'at love.

The two teams then held serve to6-6, forcing a tiebreaker.

Wilander and Nystrom went up 5-3in the tiebreak before Jarryd and

LendlContinued from Page 1B

London last year, showed that hewas not to be intimidated, not evenby the tournament's top-seededplayer.

With shouts of encouragement inGerman coming from the crowd,Becker held serve at 15 to begin thesecond set, the final two pointscoming on his fourth and fifth acesof the match. He then broke Lendl'sservice — only the second timeLendl's serve had been brokenduring the tournament.

Becker raced to a 3-0 lead whenhe held at 30, finishing the gamewith a smash

"Beckermania " took over theGarden crowd and at least twobanners in German were raised inthe arena '

But it takes more than banners or

a service break to stop Lendl. TheCzechoslovakian held at 15, includ-ing his third ace of the match. ButBecker kept pace and soon had a 5-2lead.

Lendl held to 5-3, then brokeBecker at 30. And when he heldservice in the 10th game, they weretied 5-5.

Becker had a set point at 30-40 inthe 12th game, but Lendl crushed hissixth ace, pulling to deuce. And, twopoints later, he had forced the setinto a tiebreaker.

Becker began the tiebreaker witha double-fault, but Lendl gave themini-break right back when theGerman hit an inside-out forehanddeep into the corner for a winner.

It was the last point Becker wouldwin in the tiebreaker and Lendl wasjust one set awav from the third

Masters title of his career.He wasted no time going for it,

. reeling off the first three games ofthe set, breaking Becker in thesecond. The best point of the matchcame in the third game.

With both players racing aroundthe court, retrieving seemingly im-possible "gets," making what look-ed to be sure winners, Becker doveto his right and volleyed the ball intoan open court. But Lendl, somehow,raced at full speed and, just beforethe ball bounced a second time,whipped a forehand that sailed overthe net and over the prone Beckerfor the winner.

The crowd stood and cheered.

"I've given my best all three setslong," Becker told the crowd afterthe match.

College BasketballNorth Carolina now is 19-0 overall and 4-0 in the

Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tar Heels, No. 6Memphis State and No. 7 Oklahoma are the onlyunbeaten Division I teams

In the only other game yesterday involving a ranked '

team, ltth-ranked Purdue defeated Wisconsin 100-73 In 'the Big Ten. Sophomore forward Todd Mitchell led five' 'Purdue players in double figures with 19 points. Purdue,16-3 and 5-1 in the conference, scored six straight pointsto take a 31-17 lead in the first half and led 44-29 atintermission in a runaway victory.

Duke, 16-1 overall and 4-1 in the conference, was ledagainst North Carolina by David Henderson's 24 points.

Hale had 13 points in the first half against Duke and'started the second half with a steal and a layup. He thenshook loose for three back-door layups as the Tar Heelsbroke open the game with a 16-5 spurt. During an .ensuing timeout, the North Carolina cheerleaders ran.across the court, carrying a streamer which said, I"Dean's Dome — The Tradition Continues."

"We had a couple of weeks of practice in It," 'freshman Jeff Lebo said. "But it will take a few morepractices and games for it to feel like a home court" forreal."

In other games involving Top Ten teams, No. 2Michigan downed Iowa 61-57, No. 4 Syracuse lost itssecond straight game, 83-73 at No. 18 Louisville; N» 5Georgia Tech won at Clemson 82-71, Memphis Statestruggled for a 68-64 decision at New OrleaiOklahoma took Iowa State 95-82; No. 8 Kansas defeOklahoma State 95-72; No. 9 St. John'sConnecticut 61-60, and lOth-ranked Nevada-Las Vegassubdued Pullerton State 62-51

Tar Heel coach raps Marquette securityMILWAUKEE (AP) - North Carolina Coach Dean

Smith and Tar Heels guard Kenny Smith were hit in thehead by coins during the final minute of yesterday'snonconference basketball game against MarquetteUniversity.

"I got hit by a penny at the end, and let me tell youthat hurts," the coach told a post-game newsconference. "I wanted the officials to call a technicalon the crowd, but if they would have they would havenever gotten out of here alive."

With just under eight minutes left in the second half,

Marquette Coach Rick Majerus appealed to the selloutcrowd at Milwaukee Arena to stop throwing objects ontothe court. , ,

North Carolina's Joe Wolf was at the free throw Tinefacing Marquette's student section in the 11,052-seatarena when a roll of toilet paper and a paper cup werehurled onto the floor.

Marquette fans "were into the game and helpedMarquette a lot," Dean Smith said.

But their antics didn't disturb Kenny Smith, whocalmly canned two free throws with three secondsremaining to lift the Tar Heels to a 66-64 victory.

Q

Edberg swept the next four points towin 7-5.

All four Swedes were also in the16-player singles field in this year-ending tournament. Jarryd ad-vanced to the semifinals, defeatingNystrom in the first round, beforefalling to West Germany's BorisBecker, the eventual runner-up.

Becker also eliminated Wilanderin the quarterfinals.

Edberg was a first-round loser toJohan Kriek.

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NBAPistons slip past Lakers,maintain television 4jinx'

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - There issomething about the Los AngelesLakers and national television thatbrings out the best in the DetroitPistons.

Kelly Tnpucka made a 3-pointfield goal with two seconds left inthe fourth quarter Sunday to lift thePistons to a nationally televised118-115 National Basketball Associa-tion victory over the Lakers.

The triumph came nearly a yearto the day when the Pistons, againon national television, beat theLakers 121-98, handing Los Angelesits worst defeat of the 1984-85season That game was last Jan. 13,also in the Silverdome.

We played with a lot of con-fidence, " Tripucka said after Sun-day's triumph. "We did it in front ofa big crowd. If I knew why we playwell in these situations, we'd havesolved our problems long ago."

The victory only was the Pistons'seventh in their last 22 games andraised Detroit's record to 19-21

Over the last week, we've beena list more consistent, " Tripuckasala. "I think the fact that we're alot more patient on offense ishelping us."

The Pistons set up Tripucka'sgame-winning shot with six secondsleft.

Tripucka inbounded the ball to

Bill Laimbeer, who passed it back toTripucka. Los Angeles' JamesWorthy nearly stole the pass beforeTripucka gained control of the ball.

"I was telling Kelly, my heart fellabout two feet when I saw Worthy,"Laimbeer said. "I thought. Oh no,I lost the game.'"

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored aseason-high 38 points for the Lakers.

"I'll give them credit for thewin," Abdul-Jabbar said. "Theymade their outside shots. They'vebeen in a slump but today was morelike what I expected from them."

The Pistons never trailed in thegame "We got ourselves in troublein the first half, and had to comeback pretty much the whole game,"said Lakers Coach Pat Riley. "Wewere out of synch defensively."

The Lakers outscored Detroit 9-2and tied the game 109-109 with 3:06to play in the fourth quarter. Worthyscored 5 points and Abdul-Jabbarhad 4 during the surge

Worthy tied the game 115-115 witha pair of free throws with 6 secondsleft in the fourth quarter. Detroithad taken a 115-113 lead 5 secondsearlier on layup by Isiah Thomas.

Thomas' layup came momentsafter Abdul-Jabbar missed a shortsky hook and Earl Curium of thePistons grabbed the rebound.

Bullets 112) Built 98LANDOVER, Md. - Jeff Malone

tied his career-high with 40 points,including 28 in the second half, andled the Washington Bullets to avictory over the Chicago Bulls.

Malone scored 12 of Washington'sfirst 14 points in the third quarter asthe Bullets increased a 56-48 haltimelead to 68-56. The Bulls rallied towithin 70-65 before Washingtonpulled away to win for the fourthtime in five games.

Chicago, which lost its fourthstraight game, outshot Washington54-38 in the first half but made twofewer field goals. The five startersfor the Bulls went 8-for-33 from thefloor in the first 24 minutes.

Dan Roundfield came off thebench to score to 20 points forWashington, which recorded 14blocked shots, including six byrookie Manute Bol.

Spars 116, Trail Blazers 105PORTLAND, Ore. - Artis

Gllmore and Steve Johnson took theinside and Alvin Robertson domi-nated the outside to help SanAntonio to a victory over thePortland Trail Blazers.

Mychal Thompson was the topscorer with 25 points for Portland,but Robertson had 24 and Gilmore 23for San Antonio.

Clyde Drexler added 20 forPortland but iki Vandeweghe washeld to only 12 points under toughdefense by Mike Mitchell, who had17 for San Antonio.

Portland took its last lead eightminutes into the third quarter of theseesaw game. After Vandeweghe hita 22-foot jumper from the rightcorner, Johnson gave the Spurs a64-63 lead with a rebound layin andSan Antonio never trailed again.

THE REGISTER/GREGG EUMAN

MMING HIGH — Stacy Dixon of Red Bank Middle School aims atf t * basket while Dwayne Bacon of Neptune (23) puts on the defense.Oixon scored 20 points and Bacon 25 in Neptune's recent. 44-37victory

ReevesContinued from Page 1B

i the combination has led theto numerous championships.

e team that Reeves is mostproud of is the, 1978-79 team thatwent on to lead Red Bank Regionalto a state championship in 1982-83and eventually be named as the topteam in the state, winning 31 gameswhile losing none under coach NickRizulli

That team consisted of DannyStubbs, now a starting defensive endfor Miami, Barry Phoenix, whosetrother Terry is now Red BankRegionals leading scorer, Paul andGeorge Sims, George Hall-, EdPerez, Evie Boynton and KeithSheard Keith's cousin, Nate, isplaying on the current Buc team stillcoached by Nick Pizzulli.

Pizzulli is quite content andconfident when the Middle Schoolkids arrive at the high school.

"They (Jones and Reeves) doquite a job down there," Pizzullicommented. "When they come herethey have all the fundamentals.

"But most important they havebeen taught how to be good peopleThey try to mold their character andhave always shown a genuine con-cern for the kids. If a kid doessomething that bothers me, itbothers them. They've always beenlike that. Not only playing basket-ball, but at home and in thecommunity.

"They have always beenm veryrecptive to me. I've gone to theirgames and will suggest something tothem and they do it right awaywithout asking why.

"And now Pete's kid, Pee Wee, isplaying us, so that makes us evencloser."

What is the secret to the successof Jones and Reeves?

"We catch 'em early," Petecommented. "We watch them in thefifth and sixth grades and you can

ASSOCIATED PRESS

TIGHT DEFENSE — Bill Laimbeer of the DetroitPistons puts a hand up, attempting to stop LosAngeles' Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in NBA actionyesterday at the Pontiac Silverdome. Detroit's Isiah

Thomas (11) looks to help. The Pistons defeatedthe Lakers on Kelly Tripucka's three-point shot inthe closing seconds.

Concept of salary cap remains vagueBY MIKE MUTONKnight-Rldder Newspapers

The NBA salary cap, a perfectexample of vagueness, is becoming'a perfect headache for the 76ers,who signed veteran free agent BobMcAdoo to an offer sheet last week.

The concept of the cap has beenpraised by players and managementalike, and it undoubtedly is a key tothe league's comeback from nearfinancial ruin. Yet the language ofthe rule, where it relates to thesigning of free agents, sounds likethe rules of playground basketball.

One day, if the ball hits the polesupporting the basket, it's out ofbounds. The next day, the ball's inplay. And other rules are sometimesadded or changed during a singlegame.

Such has been the history of theinterpretation of the cap, and,pending clarification, nobody reallyknows what the Sixers and Lakerscan or cannot do concerningMcAdoo.

Theoretically, the Lakers haveuntil the end of this month to matchPhiladelphia's offer of $205,000 forthe rest of this season and either add

McAdoo to their roster or trade him.

According to the rules of the cap,however, the Lakers replacedMcAdoo's salary ($900,000 annually)before the start of this season, whenthey signed Maurice Luca* for$475,000 per annum For the Lakersto match the Sixers' offer and retainMcAdoo, they would have to trade aplayer who makes an equal orhigher salary

"The Lakers have the right offirst refusal," said'the NBAs chiefcounsel Gary Bettman on Friday,"which they cannot exercise untilthey get their team salary back

where it was before they signed Mr.Lucas."

In other words, the Lakers havethe right to say they don't wantMcAdoo. Nothing more. They

, wouldn't dare tamper with thechemistry that has earned them theleague's best record, so, in a sense,they can't sign him.

In the meantime, everyone sitsaround for 15 days to remain incompliance with the salary cap

It's just as well because McAdoo,who is getting a crash course inconditioning from Sixers fitnessspecialist Pat Croce, was not in topshape.

spot the ones with talent. We tellthem what to work on and in thesummer we hold sort of a clinic hereat the Middle School for the kids whowant and need the help.

"The one thing we won't stand foris any foolishness. If a kid has anykind of discipline problem, we'lltake him aside and try to straightenhim out, but if the problem persists,off the team he goes. We just havetoo many kids who want to playbasketball.

"It takes a lot of time for us. Wepractice every day and even onholidays. These kids have to showthe desire, but their school workcomes first.

"We have a seventh grader nowwho has fallen behind in his schoolwork and his parents have given himthe opportunity of straightening outhis grades and have taken him offthe team. He's the tallest player onthe team, but his schooling takesprecedent."

This philosophy has paiddividends, not only for the highschool, but also for the MiddleSchool coaches. '

This year's team is now 5-3 andhas been disappointing to Reeves."We might get there by tournamenttime," Reeves said. "This is thetoughest grammar school league atthe Shore. We have teams fromAsbury Park, Long Branch, Free-hold, Neptune, Eatontown and Man-alapan. They are all tough."

The Red Bank team found thegoing rough the last two times outlosing to Manalapan and Neptune.

Red Bank dropped its first gameto Wall, 38-29. but came back andbeat them the next time around,41-26.

You can be sure Pizzulli isfollowing the Middle School for-tunes They are his hopes for thefuture

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MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986 The RegUter

NHLSabres continue unbeatenstring against New Jersey

RUFFED UP — Lindy Ruff of the Buffalo Sabresgoes flying as he is checked off the puck along theboards by New Jersey's Craig Wolanin, right.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Action took place during the first period ofyesterday's National Hockey League contest at theMeadowlands Arena in East Rutherford.

EAST RUTHERFORD (AP) - The Buffalo Sabresgot two goals and an assist from Paul Cyr and slickgoaltending from Tom Barrasso to beat New Jersey 6-3In the National Hockey League last night and continuetheir domination over the slumping Devils.

In winning for the second straight time under ScottyBowman, who replaced Jim Schoenfeld as coach Fridaynight, the Sabres extended their unbeaten streak overthe Devils' franchise to 21 games (18-0-3).

Buffalo last lost a game U>the Devils on Nov. 11,1979,when the New Jersey franchise was in Colorado.

Cyr scored a goal in each of the first and secondperiods and assisted on the clincher in the third as theSabres handed the Devils their 12th loss in the last 14games.

Hannu Virta contributed three assists to the Sabresoffense, all on power plays. Barrasso kicked out 38 shotsin his brilliant performance.

Cyr scored the game's first goal on a slapshot frominside the blue line at 1:58 of the first period beforeMark Johnson tied it with a goal at 11:50. The Sabreswent ahead on a 40-foot slapshot by John Tucker at the15:50 mark. But 59 seconds later, Devil Paul Gagnescored from the left face-off circle to tie the gameagain.

Norm Lacombe's backhander from in front of the netat 17:35 gave the Sabres a 3-2 lead at the end of the firstperiod.

Cyr's second goal of the game and his seventh of theseason on a rebound shot at 5:43 of the second stanzagave the Sabres a 4-2 lead and their eventual winninggoal.

The Devils came back to cut their deficit to one goalon Gagne's second score of the game and 13th of theseason on a power play, but that was as close as theygot the rest of the game.

Cyr then assisted on Mike Foligno's 22nd goal of theseason at 7:46 of the final period before the Sabresclosed out the scoring on a goal by Lindy Ruff at the15:18 mark. The score was Ruff's career-high 17th ofthe season.

Cyr's second goal of the game knocked out NewJersey starting goaltender Alain Chevrier, who wasreplaced by Craig Billington

Pittsburgh 3, Minnesota 2PITTSBURGH — Craig Simpson, Terry Ruskowski

and Mike Bullard scored goals to lead the PittsburghPenguins to win over the Minnesota North Stars.

The Penguins extended their unbeated streak to 34-1while stopping Minnesota's 3-0-1 streak.

Simpson scored at 9:52 of the first period, his firstgoal since Dec. 15, a span of 14 games. He tapped inDan Frawley's pass from the corner for his sixth of theyear.

Ruskowski put Pittsburgh ahead 2-0 at 4:42 of thesecond period with his 15th goal. Mario Lemieuxdirected the puck to Ruskowski, who fired a 15-foot shotpast Jon Casey.

Flames », Maple Leafs 5TORONTO — Joel Otto scored two goals and assisted

on another to help the Calgary Flames to a victory overthe Toronto Maple Leafs.

Paul Reinhart, Richard Kromm, Dan Quinn, CareyWilson, Al Maclnnis, Steve Bozek and Gary Suter alsoscored for the Flames, who charged back from a 2-0deficit to win for the fourth time in their last five gamesafter an n a m e losing streak.

Marian Stastny scored two goals and Dan Daoust,Miroslav Frycer and Tom Fergus one each for theLeafs, who lost their third straight game.

Penguins 3, North Stars 2PITTSBURGH — Craig Simpson, Terry Ruskowski

and Mike Bullard scored goals to lead the PittsburghPenguins to a victory over the Minnesota North Stars.

The Penguins extended their unbeated streak to 3-0-1while stopping Minnesota's 3-0-1 streak. •

Simpson scored his first goal since Dec. 15 at 9:52 ofthe first period. He tapped in Dan Frawley's pass fromthe comer for his sixth of the year.

Ruskowski put Pittsburgh ahead 2-0 at 4:42 of thesecond period with his 15th goal. Mario Lemieuxdirected the puck to Ruskowski, who fired a 15-foot shotpast Jon Casey.

Brian Lawton scored for the North Stars at 1:07 ofthe third period, taking advantage of Pittsburghdefenseman Ville Siren's inability to clear the puckfrom the creaae. Lawton poked it in for his seventh goalof the season.

Boxing

Heavyweight championship title now cheap imitationI * BILL IYON

Knight-Rldder Newspapers

Once it was the most prestigioustitle in all of sports. Men spoke theholder's name in hushed tones ofreverence. Sadly, though, it hasbeen so cheapened by the huckstersthat now it is but a tarnished,tawdry imitation, no more mean-ingful than a trinket from a box ofCracker Jacks.

Once it was as difficult to comeby as pulling the magic sword fromthe stone. Now it is no more thancheap rental property, casual chat-tel passed around, changing handsso often that no one is ever exactlycertain of the ownership.

Who is the heavyweight championof the world?

AnalysisOnce upon a time you could ask

that question on the street and theresponse would be quick and crispand sure. Muhammad Ali. JoeFrazier. Rocky Marclano. JoeLouis. Whoever it was at the time,he was universally known, and hisname fell without stammer, withouthesitation, from respectful lips.

But that was when the world wasless complicated, before televisioncame along to clutter up the sportwith synthetic semi-champions ofassorted and questionable creden-tials. Now the turnover rate amongtitleholders is rapid and bewilder-ing.

First the networks, and now the"" cables, developed an insatiable ap-

petite for any fight that could bepromoted as having something ofvalue at stake, like a title. Hence,we have not one, not two, but threeseparate — though not necessarilyequal — heavyweight championsreigning simultaneously. The resultis that what once was so coveted hasbeen reduced to a mere title ofconvenience, fought over by a seriesof alphabet-soup organizations thatwage petty wars for control of afast-deteriorating sport.

According to the WBC (WorldBoxing Council), the heavyweightchampion of the world is PinklonThomas. But the IBF (InternationalBoxing Federation) insists that thetrue champ is Michael Splnks, byvirtue of his recent conquest ofLarry Holmes. And Friday night, inAtlanta, to complete the muddledsituation, the WBA (World BoxingAssociation) wheeled out its heavy-weight champion, Tony Tubbs, todefend his fraction of the titleagainst Tim Witherspoon.

Tubbs weighed a ponderous andimmobile 244 pounds and ended upeating himself right out of the title.The fight went the full 15 rounds andreminded no one of Ali-Frazler.Witherspoon prevailed in a majoritydecision that was definitely de-served, and thus the WBA had itsseventh different champion in thelast three years. Obviously, "every

• man a king" applies to the heavy-

IN COMMAND — Tim Witherspoon, left, throws a punch as Tony Tubbs ducks during15th-round boxing action Friday at the Omni in Atlanta, Ga. Witherspoon won theheavyweight bout in a split decision. The setup in professional boxing has forced many

ASSOCIATED PRESS

observers to question claims to the title of heavyweight champion and others havecriticized the level of talent that exists in the division.

weights.Once there was nothing quite as

electric in all of sports as the nightof a heavyweight championshipfight. Even the most jaded could

feel their pulses quicken. The antici-pation was exquisite. There wouldbe only two or three such occasionsa year, and because they were so

carefully rationed they weresavored. But now every other week-end on the tube seems to bringsomething that is trumpeted as thereal thing but that invariably turnsout to be bogus.

You watch enough sloppy, flabby,out-of-shape pretenders leaning oneach other for 12 or 15 somnam-bulant rounds, and it doesn't lakelong to work up a good case of

yawning indifference.Once again, we have been suf-

focated by excess.

HBO bravely announced it will tryto rectify matters by sponsoring atournament of fights over the nextyear and a half, the ultimate goalbeing a unification. ILis somethingthat is sorely needed, but given themachinations and greed ofpromoters, believe it only when ithappens.

This is how bad it has become: Inthe last eight years alone, therehave been 14 different fightersanointed as the official heavyweightchampion. To illustrate this lack ofstability, if you count back 14champions before 1978 you navemoved past James J. Braddock,

past the Great Depression. Before1978, it took more than a half-century to produce 14 differentheavyweight champions.

Or consider it from this historicalperspective: Since John L. Sullivanbecame champ in 1885, only 39 menhave been able to call themselves bythat name, and more than one-thirdof them have done so since 1978.(That year is a benchmark of sorts,because in February 1978, Ali wasdethroned by Leon Spinks, wholasted all of 42 days; things haveunraveled ever since.)

So pitiful Is the situation that Alispent this past week sparring withboth Tubbs and Witherspoon andwas so encouraged by what he gotaway with that he coyly hinted about

a return. Ali, bloated and speech-slurred, became 44 on Friday. Thereare parts of his body that areconsiderably older, of course.

We all know that Ali is the masterof the tease, but that he would evenconsider a return, seriously orjokingly, is the most graphic com-ment of all about the tatteredcondition of the heavyweight cham-pionship.

The card in Atlanta was litteredwith slovenly, overweight fighters,continuing what has become adistressing trend. Heavyweightfighters take the term literally thesedays, interpreting it as a license tocome into the ring bearing far moretonnage than they need. They seem

unable to differentiate between

punch and paunch.This has so annoyed Sugar Ray

Leonard, for one, that he has talkedopenly about "the disgraceful lackof pride" displayed by many whoare called leading contenders.

"Maybe there ought to be a 225-pound weight limit," Leonard sug-gested, "or at least no one should beadmitted into the ring with fathanging down the sides of histrunks."

By fighting in less than their beltcondition, they are flaunting theirdisrespect for boxing, for them-selves, and — to be mourned themost — for the title that once wasthe Holy Grail of the sport.

6 1 The I . JANUARY 20, 1986

FootballBerryearnsrespect

DALLAS (AP) - A tall, frail-looking guy appeared for springfootball training at SouthernMethodist University in 1952, andLunar Hunt was amused.

"This guy looked terrible," Huntrecalled. "Someone said that theskinny kid was one of our new ends.I said, Well, that's one guy I canbeat out.'"

The skinny kid, it turned out, wasRaymond Berry, now coach of theSuper Bowl-bound New EnglandPatriots. He put Hunt, the son of abillionaire, on the bench.

By taking different routes, bothmade it to the National FootballLeague Hall of Fame (along withanother SMU teammate, ForrestGregg, now the Green Bay Packerscoach) — Berry as one of the game'sgreatest pass receivers and Hunt asfounder of the American FootballLeague, which later merged withthe NFL.

Last Sunday, after the Pats beatthe Miami Dolphins 31-14, Huntpresented the AFC championshiptrophy with his name on it to teamowner Billy Sullivan and to Berry,the guy he couldn't beat out.

"I would never be surprised byanything Raymond achieved," HuntMid. "He is a remarkable person.He is one of the most self-madejwple I've ever seen."

Nevertheless, Hunt said he stillfinds it hard to believe Berry tookthe underdog Pats to their first-everAFC title in his first full year ascoach

"He's very shy and not outgoingat all." Hunt said. "But he got therespect of the players. Some justbarely know about him and hiscareer, but it was his door opener.They respect him."

The son of a Paris, Texas, highschool football coach, Berry arrivedat SMU from Schriener Institute inKerrville. Texas.

Nicknamed "ski foot" because ofbis large feet, Berry soon becameknown for his relentless workhabits

He would practice, practice,practice. He was very fastidious.He's the first person I saw whowrapped his ankles," Hunt said.

Berry worked hours on his passroutes so he had everything downjust right, and he cut up towels tomake wristbands to keep his hands

j . Now almost every player in thei wears wristbands

nt said Berry surprised peoplebecause "he just didn't look like afootball player."

"He wore glasses He was astudious-looking guy."

Hunt and Berry didn't socializemuch because they were "sort ofcompetitors," Hunt said. But theslight 6-foot-l, 188-pound Berrymade a big impression on his SMUteammates.

Said the 1954 press guide: "In atribute to Berry's leadership, he waschosen co-captain even though henever started a game."

And Hunt said Berry, who went tothe Baltimore Colts as a 12th-rounddraft pick, was a terror on defense.

"In those days, you had to go bothways, and he was a great defensiveend," Hunt said. "He never reallycaught that many passes because wedidn't throw the ball very much."

With Berry's leadership underCoach Woody Woodard, SMU camewithin a missed extra point of aCotton Bowl berth in 1954. A 13-13 tieagainst Texas cost the Mustangs.

"It hurt ... but you couldn't tellwith Raymond. He never showedexcitement and he never showeddespair." Hunt said.

Even today, nothing seems toshake Berry.

Boston spotlightshining on Patriots

SHY AND SUCCESSFUL - Raymond Berrypaces the sidelines during a National FootballLeague contest this season. Berry, known to hisfriends and family as a shy, introverted man, has

ASSOCIATE) PHESS

become a successful head coach after a Hall ofFame playing career. He will take his AFCchampion New England Patriots to New Orleansnext Sunday for Super Bowl XX.

I f MKHttl COAMFfChicago Tribune

BOSTON - The report last weekthat one Chicago-area bank is offer-ing a Super Bowl certificate ofdeposit with an interest rate peggedto how badly the Chicago Bears beatthe New England Patriots wasgreeted here with amusement andrelief

Recognizing that the one problemthey don't have Is overconfidence,'Patriot fans are only too pleased tosee that the same cannot be said ofthe opposition, or at least of thecocksure officials at Skokie FederalSavings.

Here in Boston, where'traditionscan stretch back more than threecenturies, the notion of a localprofessional football team that isboth successful and popular Isindeed a novelty.

That the oddsmakers rate theirlate-blooming wonders as distinctunderdogs in the Super Bowl is oflittle concern to proper Bostonlans.They are too preoccupied with thethrill of the moment, a thrilldiscovered in that most unlikely ofplaces — Foxborough, Mass.

To put it charitably, the Patriotshave, in the past, found it achallenge to chisel out their niche ina region where the Red Sox, Celticsand Bruins have long been the stuffof legends.

Created only in 1959 as a charterfranchise of the fledgling AmericanFootball League, the frequentlyforgotten Pats struggled for yearsjust to establish their presence,suffering all the while as footballenthusiasts throughout New Eng-land stubbornly clung to the only proteam they had ever known — thedistant New York Giants.

Others simply couldn't accept theidea of football being a Sundaygame. "The Patriots had a muchrougher time than most pro teamsovercoming the competition fromcollege football," suggested MichaelMalec, a Boston College professorwho teaches a course on the soci-ology of sports. "No other area inthe country has so many collegesand universities. Around here, foot-ball was something you went to seeon Saturday. It was the Harvard-Ysrie gMfte, or the EC -Holy Crowgame, The first years fat-1 the.Patriots were mostly frustrating."

That was the 1960s. The 1970sbrought the team a new image

problem with the move to Foxboro,a nondescript outpost located mid-way between Boston and Provi-dence, R.I. While the shift madesome economic and demographicsense, it also tended to erode theteam's already fragile base ofsupport in the Boston area.

"There's a certain status thatcomes with playing In Boston;Foxboro was seen as the boonies; itmade the Patriots look like asecond-rate franchise," said his-torian Tom O'Connor, the author of"Bibles, Brahmins and Bosses," anirreverent look at vintage Bostonpolitics and society.

With the early 1980s came stillanother public relations headachefor the team — a reputation for fanrowdiness and drunkenness thatunquestionably crippled attendance.

"The image was that people whowent to Patriots' games wereanimals," said O'Connor.

"But a Jot of upper middle classpeople with kids were discouragedfrom going down to the stadium.They were afraid everybody therewas going to be guzzling beer andstarting fights, the real Rambo typeof fan."

Even in this Cinderella season,there is a cloud hanging over thefranchise in the form of a lawsuit bya group of former club shareholderswho claim they should have re-ceived a higher price for their stockwhen they were bought out in 1976by the Patriots' present owners, theSullivan family.

Having already won in lowercourts, should these shareholdersprevail in the Massachusetts Su-preme Judicial Court, it could costthe Sullivans the team. A ruling isexpected within three months.

Not surprisingly, very little atten-tion has been paid to this tangledlegal jousting in recent weeks asNew England at long last embracesa pro football team that, againstformidable odds, has made itselfrespectable.

Prosperity has also brought anoticeable easing of racial tensionsin Boston, a city whose reputationfor civility and progressivism waswounded by the violence that sur-rounded the advent of court-orderedbusing to desegregate the publicschools a decade ago.

"I'd say the Patriots' trip to theSuper Bowl is just frosting on thecake," said O'Connor.

New Orleans puts on expensive Super Bowl faceNEW ORLEANS (AP) - New

Orleans wears its reputation as"The City That Care Forgot" likerouge on the party face it presentsto the world.

But there's cold-eyed com-mercialism behind that facade asthe bawdy old river town preparesfor Super Bowl XX.

The motto may be, "Laissez lesbon temps rouler" ("Let the goodtimes roll"), but the kicker is,"Don't forget your credit cards."

The city's 26,000 hotel rooms arebooked for the National FootballLeague championship game, thesort of business expected but neverrealized from last year's World'sFair.

To find a room, try Baton Rouge,80 miles north, or the MississippiGulf Coast, 80 miles southeast.

Or bargain with some of the localresidents, who were renting theirhouses and apartments for the biggame between the Chicago Bearsand the New England Patriots in theLouisiana Superdome.

Lloyd Camp rented his FrenchQuarter apartment for $200 a night.D.E. Hale wanted $800 a night forhis place, but was toying withlowering the price. Jerry Caniglia

was asking $150 a night for hisapartment in suburban Metalrie.

Dinner at Antoine's? Sorry, book-ed. Dinner at Commander's Palace?Sorry, booked. A leisurly breakfastat Brennan's on Super Bowl Sunday?Sorry, booked, unless you're willingto show up before 8 a.m.

But with 2,500 restaurants within50 miles of the French Quarter anddowntown business district, there'sno reason for anyone to be hungry.

Nor does anyone need to go thirstybecause of the long line waiting toget into Pat O'Brien's, the popularsing-along bar in the French Quar-ter. There are 1,200 bars and loungesin the immediate vicinity of the half-mile-wide old section of town.

Beverly Gianna, public relationsdirector of the Greater New OrleansTourist and Convention Com-mission, said the expected 70,000Super Bowl visitors should pump anestimated $100 million into the localeconomy. Cliff Wallace, who runsthe 71,330-seat Louisiana Super-dome, is even more optimistic. He'scounting on 100,000 people to spend$150 million.

In an area where unemploymenthovers around 11 percent, those areexciting numbers.

Lakefront Airport expects asmany as 800 private jets to use itsfield, said Jerry McKinney, assis-tant director of aviation. Another200 to 300 planes are expected atNew Orleans International andsome smaller airports.

"You're looking at well over athousand airplanes, plus charters,and we don't have any idea what thecharters would be," he said.

The Amtrak train called the Cityof New Orleans is sold out for itssouthbound odyssey from Chicago.Another train, The Crescent, wasquickly filling up and wUl make anextra run from New \fcrk to NewOrleans on Jan. 24, said DebbieM a r c l n i a k , an A m t r a kspokeswoman.

She said more than a dozenprivate railroad cars will also useAmtrak rails to roll into Super Bowlcity.

Generally, January weather inNew Orleans is perfect for strollingand crowd watching along BourbonStreet. The average daytime high is62 degrees, with nighttime lows of45.

But the weather is unpredictableThe record high temperature forJan. 26 — Super Bowl Sunday — is

81; the record low 22. Visitors to the1975 Super Bowl, the last one playedhere before the Superdome opened,will remember shirtsleeve weatherturning freezing and wet hoursbefore the game.

Super Bowl tickets may still beavailable — at a price. Travelagents have offered trips nearlyanywhere in exchange for tickets —perfectly legal barter, police said. Aman in Jefferson Parish was ar-rested for scalping, however, whenhe offered a pair of ducats to anundercover agent for $1,200.

The New Orleans Saints, as hostteam, got 7,000 tickets.- Teamspokesman Rusty Kasmiersky said1,000 went back to the league and3,000 to lucky season ticket-holders

Each member of the team andstaff got a pair of tickets, and

Kasmiersky said he had no idea ofhow owner Tom Benson Jr. split upthe rest.

He agreed that if Mayor ErnestMortal or Gov. Edwin Edwardswanted a few they probably gotthem, since they were instrumentalin arranging tax breaks and incen-tives to get the game here.

New Orleans police, tolerant ofunusual behavior with Mardl Grasand Sugar Bowl crowds, say theydon't expect problems from theolder, more sedate Super Bowlvisitors.

"It's not the same sort of partycrowd we get for Mardi Gras, theSugar Bowl or New Year's Eve,"one police sergeant said. "They'reall your more affluent types, ex-ecutives. They're people withmoney."

Super TV blank minute has reviewers antsy* MIKE JurroNucaKnlght-Ridder Newspapers

NBC-TV is beginning to think thatthe most-watched minute of its Jan.26 Super Bowl pregame coveragewill be the blank minute that noone's supposed to watch.

Which probably is the way thenetwork had it planned all along.

In simplest terms, the blankminute will be 60 seconds of blankscreen, and it's tentatively sched-uled for the middle of the pregameshow. The idea is to provide thecountry with an official break fromSuper Sunday overkill.

In other words, it's a video hallpass for the viewer who needs toleave the room but doesn't want tomiss anything, including the com-mercials.

A great gimmick, huh?After all, what better way is there

to put crowds in front of TV setsthan to tell people that there's goingto be something on that they're notsupposed to watch?

And when the something isnothing — a blank screen — thegimmick becomes a sensation. The

blank minute has gotten so big thatthe network expects to see somereviewers evaluate only those 60seconds and nothing else from its 5.5to six hours of coverage

NBC executive producer MikeWeisman, the man behind theminute, has demonstrated hispromotional genius by shrouding thesegment in secrecy.

What's to shroud, you ask?Well, the blank screen is going to

be accompanied by music, but wedon't know what kind. Lord, thesuspense.

News anchor Tom Brokaw hassuggested New Orleans jazz in honorof the site of the game, and thenetwork says some sly sponsorshave inquired about having theirjingles played.

Perhaps the biggest mystery isjust how blank the screen will beThat's right, blank doesn't seem toliterally mean blank in this case.Apparently there will be someindication of time ticking off.Whether that means we'll see somekind of clock is uncertain. That'sgoing to be part of the surprise.

Weisman has put little^known

production associate FrancineWiniker in charge of the minute, andthe responsibility is making her acelebrity as the media clamor forher quotes.

The situation makes you think ofartist Andy Warhol's prediction thatsomeday everyone would be famousfor 15 minutes. Maybe he was justoff by 14 minutes.

In fact, the more you think aboutthe blank minute, the more youappreciate Weisman's sense ofhumor. A gimmick? Did someonecall the blank minute a gimmick?

No way. What Weisman hasconcocted is satire of the highestorder.

Think about it. It has been said theAmerican public will watch any-thing the networks throw at if. Theminute might prove the public alsowill watch nothing if motivatedproperly.

Mike Cohen, a New York publicitywhiz, was quoting WTBS basketballcommentator John Andariese lastThursday while fired New YorkKnicks executive Dave De-Busschere was within earshoj.

Cohen was drumming up attentionfor Andariese's appraisal of GeraldWilkins, who went to the Knicks asthe last pick in the second round oflast year's draft. According toAndariese, said Cohen, Wilkins hasplayed so Impressively that hewould go as high as 10th in the firstround if that draft were to beconducted a second time.

Hearing that, DeBusschere notedin a loud, friendly voice that he wasthe person who ought to be quotedon the subject because he was theone who appreciated Wilkins' talentenough to draft him.

To which Cohen replied, "Yeah,Dave, and if you could have made acouple of more picks like that,maybe you'd still have your job."

Mizlou Productions might havehired a future star in Becky Dixon,33, who was the sideline reporterduring the syndication company'sbroadcast of the Senior Bowl. Dixonis said to be football smart as wellas extremely poised on camera, andher work Saturday could turn out tobe an audition for a network Job.,:..

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A TIME TO RELAX — New England Patriots' running back CraigJames, left, and linebacker Andre Tippett, sit in,the stands atSullivan Stadium In Foxboro, Mass., waiting for pictures to be takenbefore practice. The AFC champions will battle Chicago in SuperBowl XX next Sunday.

, JANUARY 20, 1986 Thr R u b i n 7B

Football

Stand up and sing 'The Super Bowl Shuffle'!CHICAGO (AP) - Mere are the

lyrics to "The 8uper Bowl Shuffle''performed by the Chicago BeanShuHlIn' Crew - 24 members orthe Super Bowl-bound NationalFootball League team:

ChonMWe are the Bean' Shufdln'

Crew.Shufflln' on down, doing it for

you.We're so bad we kndw'we're

good,Blowin' your mind like we knew

we would.You know we're ju t strutting

for fun. ,Struttln' our stuff for everyone.We're not here to start no

trouble.We're just here to do the Super

Bowl Shuffle.Back Walter Payton soloWell, they call me Sweetness

and I like to dance.Runnin' the ball is like makin'

romance.We've had the goal since train-

big camp.To give Chicago a Super Bowl

champ.And we're not doing this because

we're greedy.

The Bear are doln' it to feed theneedy.

We didn't come here to look fortrouble.

We Just came here to do theSuper Bowl Shuffle.

Receiver Willie Gavlt soloThis is Speedy Willie and I'm

world clan.I like runnin'but I love to get the

pass. .I. practice all day'and dance all

night.I got to get ready lor the Sunday

fight.Now I'm as uoooth as a choc-

olate swirl,I dance a little funky, so watch

me girl.There's not one here who does it

like me.' My Super Bowl Shuffle will set

you free.

Ltaebacker Mike StagJetary soloI'm Samurai Mike. I stop 'em

cold.Part of the defense, big and

bold.I've been jammin' for quite a

while.Doin' what's right and setttn'

the style.Give me a chance, I'll rock you

goo*.Nobody messin' in my neigh-

borhood.I didn't come here lookin' for

trouble.I just came to do the Super Bowl

Shuffle.Repeat ChorusQuarterback Jim McMaboo soloI'm the punky Q.B. known as

McMahon.When I hit the turf, I've got no

plan.I just throw my body all over the

I can't dance, but I can throwthe pill.

I motivate the cats. I like totease.

I play so cool, I aim to please.That's why you all got here on

the double.To catch me doin' the Super

Bowl Shuffle.Linebacker Otis Wllsoa soloI'm Mama's Boy Otis, one of a

kind.The ladies all love me for my

body and my mindI'm slick on the floor as I can be.But ain't no sucker gonna get

past me.Some guys are jealous of my

style and my class

That's why some end up on their

I didn't come here lookin' fortrouble.

I just get down to the SuperBowl Shuffle.

Quarterback Steve Filler soloThey say Jlmbo is our man. If

Jimmy can't do it, I sure can.This is Steve, and it's no wonder.I run like lightnin' pass like

thunder.So bring on Atlanta, bring on

Dallas.This is for Mike and Papa Bear

Halas.I'm not here to feather his

ruffle.I just came here to do the Super

Bowl Shuffle.

Cornerback Mike RichardsonAlt

I'm LA Mike, and I play it cool.They don't sneak by me 'cause

I'm no fool.I fly on the field and get on

down.Everybody knows I don't mess

around.I can break 'em, shake 'em any

time of day.I like to steal it and make 'em

pay.

So please don't try to beat myhustle.

'Cause I'm just here to do theSuper Bowl Shuffle.

Repeat ChorusDefensive end Richard Dent soloThe sackman's comin', I'm your

man Dent.If the quarterback's slow he's

gonna get bent.We stop the run, we stop the

pass.I like to dump guys on their —

We love to play for the world'sbest fans.

You better start makin' yourSuper Bowl plans.

But don't get ready or go to anytrouble

Unless you practice the SuperBowl Shuffle.

Safety Gary Fencik soloIt's Gary here, and I'm Mr.

Clean.They call me 'hit man' - don't

know what they mean.They throw it long and watch me

run. »I'm on my man, one-on-one.Buddy's guys cover it down to

the bone.That's why they call us the 46

zoneCome on everybody, let's

scream and yell.We're gonna do the Shuffle, then

ring your bellTackle William Perry solo i *You're looking at the FndgV.

I'm the rookie.I may be large, but I'm no dumb

cookie. " IYou've seen me hit, you've see»-

me run.When I kick and pass, we'll ha»e>

more fun.I can dance, you will see.The others, they all leam from-

me. i.'I don't come here lookin' fas

trouble. itaI just came here to do the Sustff

Bowl Shuffle. nvs]Repeat Chorus

rat1

Courtesy of Red Label Records,Copyright 1985 Red Label Re-

cords IncMusic by B. Daniels, L. Barry..Lyrics by R. Meyer, M. Owens,Published by Red Label Music

Publishing Inc.BMI copyright IMS £?Recorded at Red Label Record-

ing Studios, Chicago, 111. ?

Buddy Ryan is responsible for tough Chicago 4D'l | M l LYONKnlght-Rldder Newspapers

It begins on the sidelines with asquatty man frantically shaking hishead, windmilling his arms andthrashing out with his legs. Hisname is Buddy Ryan, and in thethroes of these spasms he looks likea man whose underwear has beeninvaded by fire ants.

Out on the field, though, there isa middle linebacker who knowse x a c t l y what m e s s a g e iscamouflaged in all those twitchesand jerks and semaphores. He isMike Singletary. and he translatesRyan's neuromuscular hiero-glyphics into a specific defensivealignment, and from there theChicago Bears proceed to firstconfuse and then maul the opposi-tion

Ai the Bears have systematicallychewed their way through theNational Football League thisseason, recognition has come at lastto Ryan, their defensive coordi-nator. It is the nature of the businessthat whenever a team makes abreakthrough, other franchises thatare on the outside looking in beginto cast covetous glances at thecoaching staff of the newest suc-cess.

The Philadelphia Eagles inter-viewed Ryan as a potential suc-cessor to coach Marion Campbellbefore apparently deciding on JimMora. Perhaps the Birds decided notto hire a defensive genius becausethey just finished firing one.

There are other head jobs avail-able in the NFL, and four or fiveopen up every season, so now itseems to be only a matter of whenRyan gets his chance, not if.Meanwhile, he is preparing to meetthe New England Patriots, waydown yonder in New Orleans, andhis Super Bowl game plan, com-puter-coded and typically complex,already has been committed tomemory by Singletary and the othercarnivores.

What comes gurgling out ofRyan's brain is a "Star Wars"defense that so baffles other teamsthat they continue to mis-identify iteven after they have played againstit for 60 minutes. What they think iszone is really man-to-man, and vice-versa, and sometimes a combina-tion of both. The alignments areever-changing, shifting from three-man fronts to four-man to five-man,linebackers playing tight andrushing one down, dropping back 40yards into pass coverage the next.The Bears' defenders may run asmany as 80 different "plays." Theyeven have the Shifting Applianceformation, wherein "The Refriger-ator" may be at nose tackle one playand at end the next.

"We're proving thatit's possible to thinkand play defense atthe same time.w

Mike SingletaryBears' linebacker

What Ryan tries to do first isconfuse the quarterbacks and theoffensive line, producing an er-roneous read and bewildermentabout whom to block, and then intothis momentary indecision deliverswift, ferocious strikes.

In 13 games this season, the Bearshave given up 10 points or fewer, andthey are pitching a shutout in theplayoffa. They have been so impos-ing that they have been establishedai early. lOta-point favorites There,has never been a shutout in theSuper Bowl — the closest was a 24-3victory by Dallas over Miami inSupe VI. That, too, was played inNew Orleans. One of the Cowboys'touchdowns was on a 7-yard pass,Roger Staubach to a tight endnamed Mike Ditka.

Ryan's favorite defense is the 46,which is basically a 5-1-5 formation,although he has devised dozens ofvariations off it. The 46 was namedfor the number worn by its middleman, Doug Plank, who has sinceretired.

The formation is the foundation ofBuddy Ryan's philosophy, which isto overwhelm the offense withsuperior numbers.

Each side is allowed only 11 on thefield at a time, but the Bears alwaysseem to be playing 20. That isbecause Ryan likes to mass at leasteight at the line of scrimmage. Thatleaves the cornerbacks nakedlyalone and totally vulnerable, but in18 games this season only DanMarino has possessed a triggerfinger quick enough to capitalize onthis. Most other quarterbacks aresimply engulfed before they candrop back even three steps. Therunning lanes are sealed off as well.

"It's the same every game," saidSteve McMlchael, the defensivetackle. "It's who beats who in thetrenches."

Linebacker Otis Wilson: "Themain thing we try to do every gameis put our hats on 'em '

Safety Dave Duerson: "The first15 minutes sets the tone for thegame. You want to bust 'em goodright away, let 'em know they're infor a long day."

As for Ryan and his game plans,which sometimes run as long asRussian novels, Singletary says,reverentially: "Only once in a bluemoon is Buddy ever wrong."

A LOT FALLING ON BROCK - Chicago Bears' defenders WilliamPerry (72), Dan Hampton (99), Richard Dent (95) and Otis Wilson(55) scramble for a loose ball after Dent smashed Rams' quarterback

ASSOCIATED P

Dieter Brock in last week's NFC Championship game. The Bears have,played strong delense all season under the coaching of Buddy Ryant

Payton stutter-stepped first-grade bulliesBy KaifM-MMtr Nwsaiptrt

Super Bowl potpourri ...Chicago Bears running back

Walter Payton didn't pick up hisstiff-legged stutter step just to looknifty crossing the goal line Paytonsays it started when he was a first-grader in Columbia, Miss.

"When school was out, theteachers would line you up andescort you to the edge of campus. "Payton said. "My first day I didn'tsee why I had to walk in line behindpeople walking slow I startedrunning and the teacher said. Some-body stop him.'"

Older youngsters on the schoolground gave chase and "that's whenthe stutter step started. Eventually

I got away, but I paid for it the nextday back in school '

Their time had come: Now weknow what the New England Patri-ots are doing in the Super Bowl.They're part of the cycle that sendsa wild-card team to the cham-pionship game every five years.

The Dallas Cowboys made it toSuper Bowl X as a wild card afterthe 1975 season; the OaklandRaiders made it to Super Bowl XVafter the 1980 season: and now thePatriots.

The Raiders are the only wildcard to win a Super Bowl. They beatPhiladelphia, 27-10, at the Super-dome in New Orleans

You can't say the Patriots didn'tgive fate a helping hand They ve

capitalized on 16 turnovers to score61 points in victories over the NewYork Jets, Raiders and MiamiDolphins.

0.1 all the way: Los AngelesRams back Eric Dickerson. talkingabout Payton: "I liked Walter, butmy guy was O.J. (Simpson). Everykid on my block wanted to be O.J.We thought Walter was good, but0,1 was No. 1. ... O.J. is still myhero." •

city's economy Ml1

He made it: Patriots cornerbackRaymond Clayborn. on making it tothe Super Bowl: "I made a vow along time ago that I would never goto the Super Bowl as a spectator,only as a player I'm going to beon top of the world '

Super Bowl City: The all-timeSuper Bowl leader has to be NewOrleans - the city, not the SaintsThis is the sixth Super Bowl to beheld there and it is expected toinject close to $100 million into the

Window dressing: Downtown Chi-cago lit up for the Bears after theNFC title victory over the RamsLights in certain windows of Kinotherwise darkened 20-story offnifbuilding spelled out "Go Bears"with a "C " below. A similar lightingarrangement in the toweringPrudential Building made the Bears-"No. 1."

New Eagles' owner means business in discussions with free agentsty ANfiELO CATAIOIKnlght-Rldder Newspapers

The Philadelphia Eagles will be playingno games with their 10 free agents this year,and that's one reason why the negotiationsshould be no contest.

From the moment he purchased the team10 months ago, Norman Braman has shownnothing but contempt for the kind ofhistrionics that helped give the team 12holdouts last summer and a 1-4 start. Heestablished then that trade demands meantnothing to him, that emotional ties were ofno great consequence, and that no agentwas going to extort more money than hewas willing to pay.

But it wasn't until the strange case ofDavid Shula that the depth of Braman'sconviction could be measured.

In effect, the owner made one offer toShula. It entailed a 10-year agreement tocoach the team, and it was divided into afive-year contract and a five-year option.

Shula would have had to commit himself tothe Eagles for a decade, while Braman'sobligation would have spanned only halfthat time.

Shula and his agent, Charles Morgan,interpreted the offer as the first proposal inwhat would be continuing negotiations. Thatturned out to be a miscalculation. The firstoffer was also the last offer, and Shulaprobably would have accepted it if he hadunderstood the situation.

Against that backdrop, the team willbegin to negotiate contracts with 10 freeagents — Ron Jaworski, Ken Clarke, JohnSpagnola, Herm Edwards, Mike Reichen-bach, Andre Waters, Thomas Strauthers.Elbert Foules, Rich Kraynak and MikeHoran.

The players' positions are far fromenviable. The United States FootballLeague is no longer a genuine alternative.there is no true free agency in professionalfootball, and none of last summer's 12holdouts improved his lot by trying to stare

down Braman.Add to that the uncertainty spawned by

the Shula non-deal and the fact that theEagles' new chief negotiator, PatrickForte, proved himself an expert in negotiat-ing gamesmanship as the agent for ReggieWhite and you have some idea of howprecarious the situation has become for thelatest batch of free agents.

As a rule, negotiations that begin inFebruary end in July, rarely more than acouple of weeks before camp is scheduledto open.

The reason for that is the high-ball, low-ball tactics employed by agents and teams,with the agents starting out withoutrageously high demands and the clubswith ridiculously low counterproposalsLaboriously, the two sides draw closer asthe opening of camp approaches.

For the Eagles^ this year could bedifferent, though. Very different.

"We're not going to play high-ball or low-ball," Forte said. "We're going to play

straight-ball."What the agents are worried about,

however, is Braman's curve ball Withprecious little leverage, they will have totread lightly along the line that Bramandraws And they know it.

St. Louis owner Bill Bidwill created afuror a few weeks ago when, during theCardinals' final game of the season, he hadall of the locks changed in the coaches'quarters.

At the time, only Bidwill and formercoach Jim Hanifan knew that the owner wasabout to fire the entire staff, and theassistants were understandably distressedto find that they couldn't even get into theirown locker room to change clothes after thegame

Well, to apologize for his behavior.Bidwill sent the fired assistants to theSenior Bowl in Mobile, Ala., to look for newjobs. The owner picked up the bill for airfare, meals and hotel.,

There were no catches in the deal, either.Even the hotel kevs worked

Last week, a quiet one before thecountdown to the Super Bowl, figured to bea welcome relief from the pressure of theseason for everyone, but the fire was stillburning inside Chicago coach Mike Ditka

Of the 1985 Super Bowl champions, theSan Francisco 49ers, he said: "If Iremember correctly, they were talkingabout a dynasty last year out on the West.Coast somewhere I think it was in northernCalifornia."

The talk has already begun that, after theUSFL disbands. New Jersey Generalsquarterback Doug Flutie will join the LosAngeles Rams. "It's not beyond the realm,of possibility that you could see Doug Flutiewith the Rams next year." conceded hisagent. Bob Wolff. "That's a very, very,exciting prospect."

81 3 The Rtgittrr. JANUARY 20, 1986

BaseballTeufel establishes Mets as pacesetters in NL East

ASSOCIATED PRESS

R| PETE* PA8CAKLU

Knlght-Rldder Newspapers

Gary Carter's cranky knees couldmake him a bit player. DwightGoodens mysterious ankle couldend up being trouble. Various youngpitchers like Roger McDowell andRick Aguilera could end up beingone-year wonders.

Sure, all sorts of calamities couldbefall the New York Mets. But withtheir acquisition last week of in-fielder Tim Teufel from Minnesota,the Mets are the team to beat in theNational League East.

Teufel is hardly the second com-ing of Ryne Sandberg However, heinstantly fills two of the few holesthe Mets had - infield battingpower and reserve strength. In hisfirst two full major-league seasons,Teufel hit 24 home runs and drove InHI runs. When he is being"platoonedat second base with Wally Backman,Teufel also will serve as a solidrighthaiided pinch-hitter. He is alsoinsurance at third base, where theMets think Howard Johnson willblossom this year and Ray Knight isa question.

So New York filled in anotherpiece of its puzzle by dealing forTeufel without disturbing any of itsexisting foundation. The Mets re-portedly are also trying to obtainMilwaukee veteran Charlie Moore,who would add another solid bat tothe bench while providing ex-perienced backup strength at catch-er and in the outfield. And the Metshave scouts watching ex-Phillie TimCorcoran work out in California inadvance of what probably will be thesigning of the versatile lefthandedhitter to fill another bench role.

If Moore and Corcoran are added,the Mets would have decent re-enforcements for most of theirpotential holes. Their pitchingalready has been bolstered by theacquisition of lefthander Bob Ojeda.And for good measure, there is moretalent blooming in their abundantfarm system, people like pitcherRandy Myers, catchers Barry Lyonsand John Gibbons, and outfieldersStanley Jefferson and Shawn Abner,the former top amateur draft pick.inthe country, who the Mets thinkcould be ready by 1967.

What we're talking about here isa team that won 98 games lastseason and looks improved. And atthis date, that would seem. totranslate into a pennant.

seething, though quietly, becausethey are very careful not to upsettheir youthful crown Jewel.

Gooden and his agent, JimNaeder, denied to the Mets severaltimes that anything was wrong withGooden before finally acknowl-edging that the pitcher had indeedinjured his ankle.

Two weeks after the accident, theMets still are not certain howGooden injured the ankle. Depend-ing on who is telling the story,Gooden injured himself (1) runningon an uneven field, (2) playingcatch, (S) playing basketball or (4)tripping over a sprinkler head.

And what has the Mets reallyupset is that Gooden still has notagreed to fly to New York to beexamined by club physicians. So theMets are unsure about the conditionof the most valuable property inbaseball. On the same day Naedertold one club official that Goodenhad resumed running, Gooden toldanother club official that the swell-ing was down enough for him to gethis shoe back on.

Rick Sutcliffe will head to Arizonathis week to begin throwing with theCubs, optimistic that he, SteveTrout and Dennis Eckersley all willreturn to full health after theirinjury-shattered 1985 season.

Atlanta last week signed OzzieVirgil to a three-year contract,reportedly worth $2 25 million.Thus, barring any trades, theBraves will pay three catchers —Virgil, Bruce Benedict (a three-year, $l 84 million deal) and RickCerone ($850,000 for this season) —about $2 million this season.

The financial tide may be turningin Atlanta, where GM Bobby Coxsaid recently, "People have takenadvantage of (owner Ted Turner)for too long." Atlanta offered pitch-ers Pascual Perez (1-3 last year)and Craig McMurtry (0-3) 20 per-cent salaiy cuts and offered disap-pointing outfielder Brad Komminskthe same salary he earned last year.

Carlton Fisk refused to waive hisno-trade rights when he recently re-signed with the White Sox, meaningall those rumors of his going to theYankees are dead.

OUCH — New York Mets1 catcher Gary Carter rolls over in pain afterbeing hit by a foul tip last season. Pitcher Jesse Orosco and umpireEd Montague attempt to provide assistance. Carter's troubled knees

may reduce hla playing time this season, and Dwtaht GooderVs anklecould cause problems, but the Mets are oonsfcJertd The rtatiqps) «•League Eastern Division's elite team, nevertheless.

, G o o d e n A n k , e Mystery**en unravel«i.«SSpe|

&& tas Mets'exBoMOks*

St. Louis is likely to sign free-agent outfielder Jerry Whj

d I L h k

Plans for Lance Parrish forcedTigers to acquire catcher Englely TIM KUHKJIM

Dallas Morning News

A few thoughts on last week'strades:

—The Tigers had no use forinttlder Chris Pittaro and out-fi4Mer-DH Alex Sanchez, so trading

i to the Twins for catcher Dave! made sense The Tigers wanter Lance Parrish to play aat first base this season, so

they needed a decent backup catch-er. Since Sparky Anderson becameTigers manager in 1979, his backupcatchers have included Duffy Dyer,Ed Putman. Sal Butera, Bill Fahey,

ht Lowry, Marty Castillo and•MelvynPittaro, whom Anderson last

I called "the best rookie I'vehad," hit ,192 at Class AAA

Nashville last year. He, SteveLombardozzi and Greg Gagne willfight for two middle infield spots inMinnesota. Sanchez will get a shotto be the DH against lefthanders. Hehas 195 at bats in the majors and nowalks.

—Sanchez could wind up platoon-ing* at DH with Rod Carew, a freeagent who was supposed to retirebecause no one wanted him. But theTwins have changed their minds,and there's a 50-50 chance they couldsign him this week.

QUIZ: Name the only team inbaseball history to have five playerswith 2.000 hits each Answer follows

Dodgers lefthander FernandoValenzuela wants $2 million a yearin salary arbitration. LA right-hander Orel Hershisher wants $1million, a $788,000 raise. After twoseason in the majors, Valenzuelawas 34-20 with a 2 62 ERA.

Hershiser is 30-U and 2 33 Angelarighthander Ron Romanick. whowon one game in the last nine weeksof the season, wants a three-yearcontract worth $2.7 million. . TheA's are expected to sign DH DaveKingman this week. They didn'toffer him a contract in Decemberbecause they would have had to pay80 percent of his $737,500 salary Hisincentives were absurd: $1,000 forevery plate appearance more than501 and $2,000 for every plateappearance more than 601 . TheCardinals will offer no incentiveclauses except for Cy Young andMVP winners. They will offer noloans, no deferred payments and nono-trade clauses. The A's recent-ly released pitcher Mike Warren,who was 4-10 and had been sent tothe minors three times since throw-ing a no-hitter Sept. 29,1983, againstthe White Sox. ... The Reds havesold more season tickets than at anytime in their history ... When theReds acquired pitcher BillGullickson from the Expos lastmonth, owner Marge Schott lookedat manager Pete Rose and saidsternly, "There's no reason weshouldn't win the pennant now, rightMr. RoseT]

George Brophy was (ired as theTwins' director of player develop-ment on the eve of his 25thanniversary with tne club TheA's have lost a reported $28 millionthe last four years. The city ofOakland is considering loaning them$15 million. City schoolteachers areupset they're not making enough andwonder why the money is going toa baseball team.

have more than 100 homers (287)and 100 steals 11031 The As willplay 49 of their 81 home gamesduring the day Good idea. In 1985,they were 39-26 with a 4.15 ERA anda 282 batting average in the day Atnight, they were 38-59 with a 4.59ERA and a 252 average. ... Bravescatcher Bruce Benedict is workingas a high school basketball officialin the Atlanta area "because I'mused to be being booed " He almostgave a technical foul to a coach lastweek because "he brought up myrecord." ... Another Braves catcher,Rick Cerone, hit 14 homers anddrove in 85 runs for the 1979Yankees. In six years since, he has14 homers and 105 RBIs. ... Seattlephenom shortstop Danny Tartabullhad 43 homers and 109 RBIs lastyear at Class AAA Calgary, whichplays in a home, park with smalldimensions At home, he hit .357with 33 homers and 73 RBIs. On theroad, he was .244 with 10 homers and36 RBIs. . When the Yankees'Rickey Henderson scored 146 runs in144 games, it marked the first timeany player has had more runs thangames since Jimmy Foxx's 130 in124 games for the 1939 Red Sox. ...Blue Jays righthander DennisLamp's 11-0 record was was thesecond-best undefeated season. TomZachary was 12-0 for the 1929Yankees Orel Hershiser s 19-3'864) and Dwight Gooden's 24-4i 857) are 15th and 20th amongsingle-season winning percentages

Carlton Fisk of the White Sox isthe only catcher in the majors to

Reds host Phillies in openerNEW YORK (AP) - The Cincin-

nati Reds, who traditionally openthe baseball season at home, willlaunch their 1986 campaign April 7,against the Philadelphia Phillies,the league announced.

Also on April 7, the Los AngelesDodgers, defending WesternDivision champions, will open athome against the San Diego Padres

Four other teams - St. Louis,Pittsburgh, Atlnta and Houston -will open at home April 8, all atnight. The Cardinals, last year's

league champions, will face theChicago Cubs. The Pirates will meetthe New York Mets. The Braves willplay the Montreal Expos, and theAstros will oppose the San Fran-cisco Giants.

Only Five doubleheaders are onthis year's National League sched-ule. Three are at San Francisco —against Chicago May 4, versusCincinnati June 8, and againstHouston June 22. The others arePittsburgh at New York June 15 andChicago at Montreal Aug. 15 in atwi-night doubleheader

Joaquin Andujar is the first back-to-back 20-game winner to be tradedsince Jim Kaat in 1973 and is theeighth in major-league history. Onewas Grover Alexander, who wastraded after three straight 30-VICTORY seasons . The Brewersare pursuing Indians catcher ChrisBando ... And this from newMariners catcher Steve Yeager:Last year, in a game when PeteRose was hitting and Yeager wascatching, umpire Eric Gregg calledthe first two pitches balls. Yeager,thinking both were strikes, turnedand asked Gregg, "What's goingon?" Gregg answered, "Turnaround, or I'll bite your head off."Yeager said, "If you do, you'll havemore brains in your stomach thanyou do in your head."

QUIZ ANSWER: The 1985 Redswith Buddy Bell, Tony Perez. PeteRose, Cesar Cedeno and DaveConcepcion

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MONDAY. JANUARY 20. 1986 The Regular

Colleges

Analysis: NCAAdeals in illusiontl JOHN KHUUMKnlght-Rlddw Newspapers

PHILADELPHIA - We deal Inillusions here. Nothing lasts long,not the games or the scores, theheroes or the villains. If you aren'tsatisfied with what you see today,stick around and tomorrow youwill find something else to takeyour mind off the subjects thatreally matter. The sands of sportwill shift once more, bringing asmile to some, a frown to others,and trying to remind each andevery one of us how far removedall this is from reality.

People forget, though. It is thecurse of being human and wantingthe rosy glow of a dream trans-ferred to a world that can eat youwhole. Rarely, however, are thedreamers as earnest and learnedas the presidents of thepredominantly black universitieswho are fighting an NCAA rulethat might help athletes preparefor the time when there are nomore games to play.

These educators are crying foulat a rare attempt to reform asystem that has already used fartoo many black kids for theirbodies and disregarded theirbrains. Think of Billy Ray Batestrying to learn to read while hewas In the NBA. Or unletteredBiUy "The Hill" McGill sleeping inlaundromats when he couldn't finda Job after basketball Or the NBAteam on which seven of 11 players— erstwhile college men, mind you— couldn't spell the word"before."

Think of toe countless aad,embarrassing, unnecessary storiesthat have piled up like winter slushand then try to understand why thecollege presidents who should havethe largest stake in ending thistravesty have reacted so wrong-headedly. They have turned theirbacks on sanity and let illusioncontrol their every move.

It is all because, come AugustIMS, the NCAA will have the toolto turn college sports into a littleless of an intellectual farce. Point

guards and pulling guards won't berequired to be budding Phi BetaKappas before they leave highschool, but they will have to pauseat the library on their way to thebig game. If they don't, they maynot hammer out the C average InEnglish, mathematics and thesciences that the NCAA willrequire, nor will they have muchof a shot at being eligible to playas college freshmen. The newstandards call for a 700 on theScholastic Aptitude Test or a 15 onthe American College Testingexam, hardly figures that requiregenius, and the athletes' who don'tregister that high on theScoreboard will be forced to spendtheir first year doing what theyprobably ought to be doing anyway— studying to be eligible assophomores.

And yet, as fair as this planseems, the black university presi-dents treated It like a bed of nailswhen they gathered at the annualNCAA convention last week. "Willthis be the NCAA's apartheid? "asked Joseph Johnson of Grambl-lng. It was the same tone be usedwhen Proposition 48 was unveiledthree years ago. It was the samebasic argument, too, an argumentbased on the idea that blackathletes are about to be cast asideso their white counterparts canreturn to prominence.

If the garnet really mattered, ifthey were something more than adiversion, maybe you could workup a pinch of sympathy forJohnson. He was, after all, right onthe money when he labeled as"academic hypocrisy" theNCAA's failure to require mini-mum standards for athletesalready in school. But be couldn'tkeep himself on that high road, andneither could the rest of theeducators in his camp.

All of them were mesmerized bysomething they should have beenwise enough to ignore — a bounc-ing ball. When they could havebeen acknowledging that sportshave done as much ill as good forthe children of both the ghetto andthe provinces, they were making

ASSOCIATED PRESS

UP IN ARM8 — Indiana basketball coach Bobby Knight reactsto a call in a recant Hoosier contest. Many collegiate basketballofficials are upset over the NCAA's revised academic standards,claiming that many players will be forced out of competition.

veiled threats about seceding fromthe NCAA. And what, pray tell,would secession prove?

Would It put more neat on apublic educational system thatfoUts near-illiterate athletes oncolleges and universities of almostevery description? Would it keepthose white boys who get beaten soregularly in the gym from winningin the outside world? Would it doanything but make an intolerablesituation worse?

The answers are as obvious asthe unpleasant truth about life inthe workaday world: The ruleshave already been laid out, just asthey have in football and basket-ball, and whether you like them or

not, you must abide by them asbest you can. That means speakingin reasonably grammatical Eng-lish, being able to read a help-wanted ad and write a letter, andgetting close enough' on yourexpense account not to get thrownout the door. If you are white, ofcourse, such knowledge will likelybe part of your education. Youmay not want it, you may not havethe gifts to make the most of it, butthe opportunity is there in all butthe sorriest of circumstances. Andnowhere is it written that blackathletes shouldn't have the sameshot at the things that will carryM and 44100 percent of themfurther than any game they willever play.

Marist featuresoverseas' flavor

POUGHKEEPSIE, NY. (AP) -Little Marist College has a"passport frontcourt," a basketballteam of global proportion.

There's B-foot-6 Alain Forestlerfrom Nice, Prance; 7-3 Rik Smitsfrom Eindhoven, the Netherlands;6-11 Miroslav Pecarskl of Novi Sad,Yugoslavia; 6-7 Peter Krasovec ofBudapest, Hungary; and 7-foot RudyBourgarel of Abymes, Guadeloupe.

With that kind of internationallineup, it's easy to see why Maristboasts the most overseas starters ofany NCAA Division I team.

"Here at Marist College 23 coun-tries are represented in our studentbody," said second-year basketballCoach Matt Furjanic "Foreignstudents are not something new atMarist College."

Maybe not on the campus butcertainly on the basketball team,where xenophobia is now just a 10-letter word.

Marist, a liberal arts school withan enrollment of 2,300, upgraded itsbasketball program to Division Ifive years ago. At the time, formercoach Ron Petro concentrated hisrecruiting in the New York Cityarea, 75 miles south of this HudsonValley community.

But Petro stepped down at the endof the 1983-84 season - his 17th -and after a lengthy search, Maristselected Mike Perry, coach of StadeFrancais-Paris and former coach ofthe Swedish National Team andSweden's 1980 Olympic team.

Perry, who recruited mainlyoverseas, had sent at least fiveforeign players to U.S. high schools,including Anders Kvarnmyr, now atColgate, and Eric Fleury, afreshman at Siena.

But in September 1983, Perryresigned following alleged NCAAviolations and Furjanic, formerlyhead coach at Robert Morris Collegenear Pittsburgh, was hired five daysbefore the season began.

A team was in place for the newcoach with Smits, Forestier andPecarski already on the varsity.Krasovec and Bourgarel soon fol-lowed.

Though they had a lot of desireand self-discipline, they were hardlyskilled in all facets of the game.

**We're aiming forEurope for what wecan't get here.»

Matt FurjanicMarist head coach

"They're very mechanical. Theyhave no flashiness to their game, nofreelance," Furjanic said. "They'revery good shooters, but poor passersand poor on defense.

"You have to let them know theimportance of defense," he said. "InEurope, it's fastbreak — threepasses and let's snoot a jumper.Even the big kids don't have theinside moves."

The key, though, was big men.Marist is one of the 285 Division Ischools that battle for big men, andit usually loses out to the biggerprograms.

"We went after five different kids6-8 and up last year and we didn't getany," Furjanic said. "Instead of nothaving any of the height, we'reaiming for Europe for what we can'tget here."

There are critics of the influx offoreign players. CBS-TV analystBilly Packer is one of them.

"It has become a problem,"Packer said last season. "I'm notagainst immigrants coming ansV-jhaving the opportunity to beeducated in this country, but I think 'some are getting unfair advantages. '... Some of them border on being aprofessional athlete. It's at theexpense of kids in this country."'

Furjanic says, "Billy Packerdoesn't have to worry about winningbasketball games."

"America has always been theland of opportunity," he said. "If Iweren't for the immigrants a—'over here in the early 1900's,would we be today? Billy wantschange the philosophy of the last 200years."

Marist's foreign players attendschool on a student visa. Studentsfrom Eastern Bloc nations mustrenew their visa every year; otherstudents do so every five years.

GQ recognizes Paterno 'style'Joe Paterno cited by Gentleman's Quarterly? The

next thing you know, Woody Alien will be up for the leadin the next "Rambo" movie.

Paterno, whose usual gear as Penn State coachincludes white socks and black football shoes plus anoccasional pair of trousers branded with whales orNittany Lions, has been recognized by the January issueof the men's fashion magazine for "Style BeyondCompare."

Art Cooper. GQ's editor in chief, said the categoryhad nothing to do with the way a person dressed, butdenoted "quintessential style."

"Joe, in our judgment, far and away surpassesanybody doing what he does," Cooper said. "The qualityof the athletes be coaches, the way be coaches them,is terrific style."

Paterno joins a list of past winners that includes JoeDiMagglo, Jackie Onassis, Mick Jagger and PaulNewman.

Told that the magazine's editor was a 1959 graduateof Penn State, Paterno laughed and said, "I figured Ihad to have an in somewhere."

What a year it has been for William "TheRefrigerator" Perry — No. 1 draft choice for theChicago Bears, 308-pound running back, folk hero,commercial pitchman, talk-show guest and Super BowlXX participant.

Now you can add one more item to his resume — firsthonorary member of the Mercy Hospital Auxiliary inUrbana, 111

The auxiliary, composed mostly of women, wasmoved out of a large meeting room at the Urbana hotel,where the Bears are staying while practicing at theUniversity of Illinois The Bears needed the room fora news conference, forcing the auxiliary to go to asmaller room.

But the group didn't mind the switch after Perrystopped by to apologize and make a brief speech. AboutSO auxiliary members "converged on the podium," saidMercy Hospital president William Casey

"I thought I was in the room with a bunch of teen-agers," he said.

Gramblings Eddie Robinson probably would not bethe winningest coach in college football history hadProposition 48 been in effect when he left high school.

"I probably would have been picking cotton," he said.Proposition 48, which was adopted at the NCAA

convention last week, sets standardized test scores asa requirement for freshman eligibility. Grambling andother predominantly black schools argued against thelegislation, saying that test scores were inherentlybiased against blacks.

"A test can't measure heart or determination,"Robinson said. "That's not the way to predict how aplayer is going to respond when he gets to college.

"We have players come in who don't predict (to besuccessful) and who not only graduate from Grambling,but go on to get graduate degrees from the mostsophisticated universities. I did that. I went on to getmy master's degree at Iowa."

Are you ready for a union of college athletes?Attorney Dick DeVenzio of Charlotte, N.C., is.

"Some people say this is really radical, but I believeit can happen," DeVenzio said. "It's time for a change.It's an absurdity right now that the NCAA doesn't havesome sort of a contingency fund to help a student-athletein need."

DeVenzio, who presented his idea at last week'sNCAA convention in New Orleans, said football andbasketball players should be paid in proportion to theireconomic value to the schools and should havebargaining power.

REALLY? ME? — Penn State football coach JoePaterno yells instructions to his players during theirOrange Bowl loss to Oklahoma. Despite therelatively conservative style of clothing Paterno is

ASSOCIATED PRESS

noted for, the coach was honored by Gentleman'sQuarterly for his stylish approach to the responsi-bility.

Knowing the rules will increase enjoyment of horse shows8

When my 'non-horsey' friends learnthat I write about horse sports, theyusually assume that that means

racing, and are surprised to learn that thereare many other types of competitive equinesporting events taking place right here inthis area.

The most well known of these are thehunter shows about which I most frequentlywrite, and the Increasingly populardressage competitions, as well as driving;eventing (which comprises three dis-ciplines-cross country riding, stadiumjumping, and dressage); trail and en-durance riding; fox hunting; steeple-chasing; polo; side saddle; and Westernevents.

The latter includes a variety of dis-ciplines, many of which are familiar to thegeneral public as popular rodeo events suchas calf roping and reining, and the speedevents such as barrel and keyhole racing.

One of the most exacting, but least wellknown Western competition, involves theskill displayed by the cutting horse in whichhe alone is judged on his ability to cut aselected calf from the herd without anyassistance from his rider.

Another little known but very excitingevent, which crosses over and includes bothEnglish and Western disciplines in a variety

AnneTinsdale

of combined competitive games is theGymkhana. The closest we seem to cometo this activity in our area is the Pony Clubmounted games.

Most of the competitions which I havementioned are held in the Monmouth andsurrounding areas, and are open to thepublic, at little or no cost for admission.However, in a state which boasts that thehorse is its official animal, an observer atmost of these events will see few spec-tators.

What are the reasons for this? There maybe several, but one of the most often heardcomplaints of spectators who do show up,is that it is difficult to know what is goingon. The casual spectator is usually at-

tracted to the local horse shows out of avague curiosity and admiration for horsesin general, but he is also uninformed as tothe rules of the game, and how the winnersare judged. His attention is quickly lost andhe does not return.

Admittedly, watching a hunter show canbecome tedious unless one develops aneducated eye, and is fortified with theintracacies and subtleties of evaluating amount "suitable for hunting".

It's relatively easy to figure out who thewinner is in a timed jumping event, asfaults are announced, along with eachentrant's current standing, but picking thetop individual In a hunter class is not quiteas obvious.

Horsses and ponies competing in huntershows must demonstrate the ability tocarry a rider safely across country and overobstacles which may be found in the huntingfield. There are several classificationswithin which they are judged. These includeGreen-young or inexperienced horses;Regular-usually older, more experiencedmounts; and Conformation, in which thephysical appearance, in addition to per-formance, is counted. Within these maincategories, there are sub-categories, whichfurther specify the conditions which govern

the judging of each competitor.Hunter classes are held both over fences

and on-the-flat (under saddle) and eachhorse or pony is judged on its form, way ofgoing and manners. Over fences, the judgewill very carefully evaluate the horse'sform as it folds its legs evenly over eachfence, while tucking its hind legs upunderneath its body. The head and neckshould be well extended out in front forbalance, and athletic ability should beevident by the use of his whole body in afluid, coordinated, graceful manner. Hispace and manners are evaluated by theability to execute a controlled gallopbetween fences, and his apparant willing-ness to do the job a hand.

Except in equitation classes, in which therider's horsemanship is judged, the horsealone is the competitor in the hunter class.The rider however, is responsible forguiding his mount, with almost impercep-tible rein and leg aids, towards each fence,to a safe take-off spot, neither to close, nortoo far back to clear the obstacle safely.

In under-saddle classes, the horse isjudged 'on-the-flat', optimally moving withlong, even strides, evidencing good mannersat all times, never fighting the rider, andmaking smooth transitions from one gait to

the next at the walk, trot, canter, and when.asked, the hand gallop.

When conformation is judged, the horseor pony is jogged back into the ring with thesaddle removed, and evaluated on hisphysical structure, as it conforms to theideal hunter type, with balance, substanceand strength for endurance, with wellformed legs and feet for soundness, all keypoints.

Different judges have their own individ-ual systems for evaluating the per-formances in hunter classes, which mayseem confusing to the uninitiated, (and evensometimes to the more knowledgeable), butthe foregoing points as outlined shouldresult in an overall performance evaluationindicating the safest, most comfortable,most pleasurable mount in the hunt field.

Most hunter shows held in the area arerun according to AHSA rules, whetherrecognized or not, with the quality of entriesranging from backyard beginners to season-ed professionals. Prize lists and programsare available for most events, and provideadditional information and descriptions ofclasses. These may be obtained at local tackand feed stores, or through the organizationsponsoring the show. '

lOt The HegUler IV. JANUARY 20, 1986

ScoreboardHORSE RACING IS THE BLEACHERS

MEADOWLANDS POST TIME: 8 P.M.

•H,«Tt.i

? Cr«W«" ThundiK (R Ftammwt) JM3 Pot*l Eicon (W O'Oonntf) : 15-1* B»v* Owe* (J Putm Jr> H5 co<* * M IN D I ino #**m B«otr* (L M M T W > Jf> 9-2• ».y»wv» S*i (E Morm} iS-1H J r t Qwnmon (fl HiyMr) 5-14 * A j Sltpabcii (J SOwind) ..... 40-110 Mt(>C Burn* (B WftMV) 24 1AE i Campu* Scoowr (A. Ouwwoto)AE2 Stvtenwt,Z«M (R Heytw)

M: m,m. *m*m.tm. MM. i -^ MarMK AndrM (N.D) 1 M2 SptMk Oui (R PouWO 7*23 Brw Boy Otbort* (T Winfl) 6 1« MV WindWi (J Mo**y*v> 20-1• fiy Fry MlM (F C o M l JM 20-16 RvoorOM (R WipMt) t -2t SMD.t T«o<l) (B W * W * I 0-18 Sup* Smootfi (C Pfryl 20-19 Catching Btrctt U DohtHTy) ••- 0-1•0 Sunny Ervm (Jo. CtvnptM") 3-1

* d MUM owK p m . i « i' AIM Angtl (J Qroff) 0-1: Dtrcy Dtmpt (J Oohartyl 6-13 Drawn image (W Buckley) 20-14 Secnem Qum (B WtOaWQ IS-1t -lappy Sanonti (A KavoWtt) . . 12-18 Sioa SlKM U flunno) 4-1

Wart (E Di*ng**l 90-1(W C A M J'l 3-1

9 3oKJ N Mafcar U Moaayav) 0-110 Diamond Striker |F Williams) 10-1* t ' Burn Z O« (B WaOatar)

4th: 111,171. cond. B«M, imi• Pacrttc Draam (C Maruil 10-1

2 Wotte RUrton (J. Doharty) 20-13 Oondottar (M Makar) 30-14 Straicii Limo (M Kimrrwman) 3-15 Lytandac LobaH (B WatoMar) 10-1S F W Richard (F WHHarm) 7-2T Sarion Andy (J Spotoi 30-16 Mr Fun (R TurooW) • - 0-19 Cotaaaal Eaoofi(L Copannai *»110 WhaM Tnp (W Caaa Jr) 15-1AEl Jata QladiaKx (C Man*)AE2 Thaatra LobaH (N D )

• » : m.tm. aa** , i a * « . i fH .1 Mi Hoagta (J Campbail) 8 I

2 Spaad Kim (jo Campbaii) 0-23 Uno Scanat (H vmci) 10-14 Lao, Champaena (B w* t * tw , 10-15 Wmnan Uadai (J Luctano) 15-16 Uraci* Ranaa (Jo CampbaH) IS-17 Carrot Lady (B WabMari 3-16 Show ut Oil (C AboabWto) 0-1

9 H H Lafly (Jo. CamptoaH) 4-110 Moat Happy S M a (N.D ) IS-1

OH): IM.6O9, P*A OU MACLAO>IOT ura U T on., trot, imt.

1 Navata Jaaon (P Ruacdlo) 15-12 Ptarwomt (W Caw Jr) 10-13 Palmar Bowl (I Simaukau) 50-14 Uantrad Kanovar(l) (C. AtttMMato) 1-15 Ban Rich (B Wabatar) 10-16 DaviOia Manovar (Jo Campbail) 10-17 Scotch Notch A (M Oaglwdl) 4-16 Stvana T Hanovar (P Hannkaan) 0-19 Coptar LOball (W CaM Jr) tS-1

7* : : M0.000. PPA 0U MAC AD-11TL i a m o M V . , tret, ma.

1 Bay Shadow (L Karth) " '- ' '2 Oal QronoO) (W O'DonnaH) . 8-13 No Dam (T Harmar) . 6-14 Supar Lama/ (J TaWar) 4-15 PioaHa (M Makar) IS-1B Fanah Sam (8. King Jr) 10-1

7 PromoMf (Jo. CampbM) 0-2S Kayttorw ProHH (H Waltnai) 5-1

Mk: 110420. otaiaj(t»,M0

1 Baron Jooaac (M. Makar) 10-1? Bismartt (J. Doharty) 0-13 Paragon Atmanurti (N.D.) - 12-14 Ba'iyhay (R. WapHa) 4-16 S . u Qutrd(l) (C- Manzl) 10*1B bpa/hy Bambino (B. WabtUr) 10-17 F.nwahoH (W. CaM Jf> 8-18 Brilliant Bromac (J. BotjaWd) 7-29 Vh-aroy N (B Kociuvh*) 20-110 Frartch Omon Soup (N.D.) ! 2D-1AEi Brvazt on By* (F Cottaio Jr)AE2 Scanarad Diamond (J King Jr)

1 TabtftoM (W OtkmnaH)2 WnaMron (B Wabatar)3 Lniiiattini Quarry (J PiuOno)4 Ait Oa Daaaart (Jo. CampoaH)b Im NO Angal (P Ruacflto)6 Mxkary (Jo. Campbail)7 Mi Titian* (Jo Campbail)8 My Matody Ouaan (U. Oaahardo9 Bran Holly (J Mottayav)10 Somathing Prackx* |W Caaa Jr)

10ft: H0.OM. eon*, aaca, lia1 Mlnnia (L. larui)2 Catch My Dual (W O'Donnali)3 Qo On Eddta (J Spoto)4 Archlaa Watiwood (J Bae5 Lochinoia N (T Wing) .6 Byong Bm A (M QagiLvdl)7 Buatar Troubta (J King Jr)8 Ata Diamond (S Farr»H)9 Windbfaak (R Hayiar)10 Bag Eart (J Luciano Jr)

AEl Moonlain Hobby iC KavanaugnfAE2 Doca Shadow (R Luboaco)

u. )

"Well, we're alive...and look! My Super Bowl tickets

are hardly scratched!!"

KT2BUEHEL. Auatna (AP) - RasuKs of a mansflorid Cup slalom aki raca Sunday

' *aut Frommati, L«chtanalam. 1 42 133 Vigpnar Stanmark Swadan. 1.43 143 dmi, Andraaa waruai. L*chtanala«n and Dtaimar

* * -4* iMa- Austria 1 43 625 fabtt da Chtaaa. Italy. I 43 67s U*«niar Mtdar Auatria. i 43 9s

i Haidaggar. Austr>a. 1 44 226 Christian Gaio*. Franca, 1 45 009 Pd"nn Zuroriggan Switzanand, 1 45 10'0 fl.cia-d PramoKon. Italy, 145 44' I Patar Popangalov. Bulgaria. 145 56

12 - • • Mathiaa Bannotd. Austria and Oir>atian< 1 i ) Austria 1 45 72H Tigar gnaw. Siowc VI, 1 45 81'i Martin Hangi. Swittariand. 146 03Comt)»nao Standing* ol Saturdays downhiH and

'. 'idaya aiaiom counting toward tna Wond Cup

1 PWm*> Zurbnggan, SwfQanayxl. 36 020 pomta2 AWMaa Wanzai. LiacManatam 43 1403 Man«jt Waamawr. Waat Oarmany 63 1304 Anion Stain* Auatria 96 000• S * r Wimabargar, Auatna 101 4906 L.L Ganotat Switzaflanc 107 000I *4kt Muaiiar Switzariana 1213108 Fftfy Hainzar. Switza^and 1266709 Bruno Karnarv Switzanano 134 380'0 SNwan Laa, Australia 151 420II ftm Jonnion Maiibu Cant. 161 690-2 M.cr.aa> Brown Van. Goto , 163990

'? Douflias ..awls, Salisbury. VI . 171 000'4 Ngei Smnn Britain 254 060

Man a avaraM Wortd Cup a m i a i m i1 Star Wirnsbargar Austria. 130 pomta2 Marc Qirardaili. Lu«ambOurg. 1093 Patar MuaMar, Switzanano, 994 •irm.n Zurbnggan Swcartand. 645 -ngamar SiaomarK Swadan, 826 iejan Knuj. Vugosiawia. 75.i fob Pai'ovic Yugoalavia 668 Brmn Raach, Austria. 679 tba) Arldraaa Wanzai. L«chianaa>m. and Huban*

Stroiz, AustrM. 66* i Markua Waamatar Waat Qarmany. 662 hbchaai Mair. itaiy. 64

13 Joai Qaspoi. Switzanand. 61<4 (t4) Paul Fromman. L>achianMa>n. and Roban

E"«crw, iiajy. 60

' 6lak>m Wortd Cue aaandtota' MM Paul Fromman. L«chtana*»n. and Boian

«•' :a.vWBOaiavia. 60 potnis.3 jVCia Nriaaon. Swaoan. 574 ROM Patrovic. Vugoalavia. iO5 ngamar Stanmark, Swadan. 406«#Mptar Madat, Auatria. 347 (M) Jonann Wallnar. Swadan.

KoanitHchiar. Austria. 339 Kiaui HtiOaggar Austria. 3210 wano Edaimi. Italy. 27

SAPPORO, Japan (AP) - Rasutt ot ma 90-matarui jump in tha 2Stfi STV Cup and tns Pacii-c Rim Cup'66

1 Maaahiro Akimoto, Japan. 243 2 pomta(1165-1145 matara)

2 Anu> Kankkonan, Finland, 209 3 (106 0-106 5)3 Cntftaru N«Mkata. Japan. 199 1 inO 5-96 514 Vaaurtida Mryazaki. Japan, 169 9 (109 0-97 0)5 Shigaki Tomyi. Japan. 166 1 (102 5-101 5)6 Wauru Wataaa, Japan, 187 6 (106 5-95 0)7 Raad Zuantka, Unriad SUMS, 187 5 (105 5-97 0)6 Ah.fa Sato. Japan. 1*6 6 (106 0-96.0)9 uii Boll Waat Garmany, 181 6 (105 0-94 0)10 Raimund Raach. AuUna. 160 8 (105 5-95 Ol

Othar U.I nmahara21 Mark Konopacka. 149 9 (102 0-81 5)

and Chatmar

MURAU Auatna (AP) - Final raaulM of tna <ourthcompatmon in (ha man's Work) Nordic CombinadSkiing Cup Sunday

1 Harmann Wambucn Waal Oarmany 417 1452 HalKain Boagasath Norway 413.6303 Thomas MuaUar. Waal Garmany 406 5254 Otan-PaoW Moaata itaiy 404 HO5 Allar Lavandi. Soviat Un<or 403 4506 Frady Qlanimann Soraadand 402 4307 Uwa Dotzauar East Garmany 401 5758 Espan Andaraan. Norway 390 4259 Franuaak Rapka. Czacnoalovakia 397.00010 Qm Andaraan. Nonvay 394 18011 Knut-Lao Abranamaan. Norway 393 92512. Jukko Panwnan, Finland 393 590

13 Torbtoam Loakkan, Nofway 392 20014 Andraaa Scnaad Swmartand 391 1951$ Joarg Baatt, Eaat Garmany 366795

U K Crsai CcMiry1 Torb|Oarn Loakkan, Norway 41 36 42 Andraaa Schaad Swiaart«nd 41 41 B3 Michaal Flaacnbargar, Auima 42.04 94 Uwa Dottauar. Easi Germany 42:21 095 Pat Aharn. Unriad Staaaa 4227 36 Fradv Glanzmann, Swiuarland 42:289

Wortd Cup(Phaavafita)

v Wambuch 852 Muaiiar 753 Ga.r Andarsan 444 MOMK 415 Boagaaath 36iMj Dotzauar 367 Glanzmann 336 Schaad 32

Worid Cup 0U, RssuJULAKE PLACID.N Y (AP) - RasuiM ol tha Subaru

World Cup Fraastyta Cham ponahips SundayWoman

AawWAaautta(poMa baaad on two |umpa)

1. Cann Htrnskog, Swadan 134 6102. Maria QumUna. Staamboat Springs. Co. 134 3703. Anna Fraaar. Ottawa, On! 127 7304. Sutana Antonaaon. Swadan 119745.5 Maradrm Garndner, Oakvilla. Ont H7Z506. Dorana Bourqua. Thornton. NH 114 8507. Cnituko Kudo. Japan n o 3908. Connia Kiaaling. Swiasrland 104 1409. Hiroho Fu|ii. Japan 100 09010 Bfigrtia Darochs, Switzanand 93 600

Ottwr U.0. ( InWMnIt, Matant* PtMnih, LrttJaton, Co 9013. Jody Sptagai. Qutny, Maas 76.400

Woman a 0U HaartHOBERSTAUFEN. Waat Oarmany (AP) - RaauM of

a woman's World Cup giant slalom aki raca Sunday1 Vrani Schnaidar Switzartand. 2:14.532 Michaata Garg, Waat Oamany. 21S.453 MKhaU Figim, Swttzariand. 2 15844 Erma Haas. SwiQariand 2.16 24.5 An.ia Wacnur. Austria. 2 17056 Tamara McKmnay. Squaw VaHay. Calif. 2 17 357 Sgnd Wolf. Austria. 2 17 366 Ragma Moaaanlachnar. Waat Garmany, 2.17 509 Malgonau Tialk«-Mogora, Franca. 2:17.5610 Anna-Flora Ray. Franca, 2 17 8111 Malata Svat, YugoaUvu. 2 16.03. 012 Eva Twanlokans. Squaw Valiay. Cabf, 2:16.6313 Maria EppW-Back. WaM Garmany. 2.16.6514 Oiga Charvaiova. Ciachoalovalua, 2:16.7515 ingrid Sarvanmoaar, Auatna. 2 19.05.

OvaraN Wortd Cup Mandlnt*1 Maria Waiirsar. SwRzarland, 172 points2 Ertka Haas, Swtftarund, 1643 Vrani Schnatdar, Switzartand 1504 Michaala Garg, Waat Oarmany. 1145 Miertala Figim. Switzanand. 1066 Ma/ma KiaM, Waal Oarmany. 1047 Katrin Gutanaonn. Austru, 998 Bng«a OarOi. Swittariand. 899 Launa Graham. Canada. 7510 Ragma Moaaanlachnar, Waat Garmany, 6711 Liiaa Savijarvi, Canada. 55.12 Roawitha Stainar. Austria. 50.13 Dabbia Armal/ong. SaaUa. 4714 Tamara McKinnay Squaw Valiay. Calif., M15. (ba) Sylvia Edar, Austria. MaUM Svat. YugoaUvia

and Olga Charvato.a Ciachosiovakia. 41

EA6TIHN C 0 H F 1 M M C IAtlantic nvlslon

W L M . OJtBoslon 30 8 769 -PhiladslDha 28 14 650 5

25 17 696 721 ' 21 500 1114 26 350 17

Cantral OMatonW 14 667 -

Atlanta 21 17 553 5Datial 19 21 475 6Oavaland 17 23 426 10Chicago IS 27 3S7 13Indiana 10 30 .2(0 17

v Janay 124. Danvar 113Boston 125. Atlanta 122. 07Oavaland 108 Indiana 05Houston 104. Naw *ork 85L A Clippers 131. Ulah 87Sacramamo 96. SaatM 98. OTPortland 112. Phoanli 67

HouslonDanvarSan AntonioDallasUtahSacramamo

L.A LakaraPortland

27 1423 1723 1919 1920 2316 26

LA OlpparsOowan Stata

659 -576 3«548 4«

514 6465 6366 12

31 7 616 -26 19 .578 BK15 23 399 1615 28 386 16V,

14 26 333 1914 30 316 20

Mnwaukaa 122. Oo4dan Stala 109Dallaa 131. Houslon 96

1 p mPhoania at Clavaland. 2 30 p.mL A Laksrk at Chicago 3:30 p m.Dalroit at Indiana. 5 30 p mMinvaukas at Adanta. 7 30 p.m

1 Schnaidar. 50

3 Garg. 324 Haas and Anita Wachtar, Austna, 16

NHL Otanca. jWALES C O N H M N C E

CAMWJ1LL CONFCREHCC

W L T M l tf U33 13 0 66 208 13827 13 4 56 175 14421 20 5 47 '77 16019 17 9 47 177 16521 21 3 48 161 1S315 26 1 31 163 207

21 16 5 47 198 19719 16 6 44 167 17216 19 8 44 162 17012 27 5 29 175 2199 31 5 23 148 244

25 16 4 54 206 160, 25 16 2 52 166 157

21 17 7 49 172 15923 20 1 47 163 17121 19 5 47 160 157

ChicagoSi L O U *

MinnaaouTorontoDatron

Edmonton 32 10 4 66 243 184Calgary 21 21 3 45 189 177Wmnpag 15 20 5 35 171 217LoaAngalaa 14 24 6 34 160 216Vancouvar 13 27 6 32 164 195

Saturdays OttawaCaigary 7, Datrod 4Waahmgion 5. Philadatphw 2Hartford 5. Ouabac 2Montraal 3 N Y sianaart 0N v Rangara 5. Edmonton 4Minnaaou 5, Toronto 2PinsDurgn 5. St LOo« 2vancouvar 4, Loa Angatas 4

Buffalo 6, Naw Jaraay 3Caigary 9. Toronto 5PittsDurgn 3. Minnasota 2Boaton 2, Wmnrpag 1Datron a! Chicago, (n)

Taday'e OaanaaHaniord at N Y Rangam, 7 36 p.mMontraal at Ouabac. 7:35 p.m

Temawew'a OawaaMinnaaou at Waahmgton. 7 35 p.mPhttadaiphia at N V laiandars. 6:06 p nNaw jarsay at vanoouoar. 10 35 p mSt Lou« at Lot Anflaias. 10 35 p m

• utfal I 1 2-0N»Jmy 1 1 0-0

Firw Panod- i . Buffalo. Cyi 6 (Virtt). 1:56 (pp) 2,Naw Jarsay. Johnson 9 n 50 3. Butfaks, Tuckar 16(Virui. 1550 (pp) 4. Naw Jarsay. Gagna 12 (Adams. Laww) 16:49 5, Buffalo. Lacomba 4 (Tuckar.Andraychuk). 17 35 Panalbaa— Ludv ig, NJ (imar-fartnea) 44. Playfair Buf minor-maior (high-aticlung-(•gnting). 2 29, Stawart. NJ, m>nor-ma)or (htgh-aticlting.tightingi 2 29; Onando, Buf (Ml ding). 6:35; Ludvtg.NJ (holding), 14 26, McKtnna, But l high-sticking).17:09; V aliachak. NJ tftign-atJCking), 17 09, Danayko.NJ (holding). 2000

Sacond ParKxt—6, Buffalo, Cyr 7 iFoiigno. Halkidia),5.43 7. Naw Jarsay. Qagna 13 (Adams. WoUnin), 9:56(pp) Panaltiae—Ramsay. Buf IhohJing), 3:04; PUyi air,Buf (high-adding), 9 09. Cyr. Buf 1 roughing). 19:12.Wo«nin, NJ (rougnm g). 19 12. HaHudM. Buf (hooking),1955

Third Panoo-8 Buffalo. Foligrto 22 (Cyr. Virtt).7 46 9, Buffalo. Ruff 17 (Sailing), 15:18. Panal-Baa— Parraault, Bui (holding). 3 39, Bndgman, NJ(hootun g). 550. Ramaay Buf (holding). 19:06

Shots on goal—Buffalo 14-6-14—36 Naw Janay12-10-11—41

Powar-piay Opporiunittos-Butfato 3 of 4. NawJarsay 1 of 6

Dalroi 116. LA Lakart 115waanmgion 112. Chicago 96San Antonio 116. Portland 105

C M K A O O i mQraan 2-13 1-2 5. Wootndga 7-16 6-6 20, OMham

1-5 3-4 5. Oaxnn 8-19 1-2 13. Hacy 1-6 0-0 2. C o n m6-12 21 16. Oauay 5-5 3-4 13 BanU 6-10 2-2 16.Pajuon 1-4 0-0 2 Dailay 0-11 2-2 2. Tola* 39-10120-28 96WASHINGTON {112)

Jonaa 4-6 2 2 10. Rotxnaon 6-12 2-4 14, Boi 2-63-5 7. Malona 15-21 10-12 40. Williams 8-12 2-2 14.Houndliak] 8-10 4-4 2X1. Daya 2-2 0-0 4. Wood 0-8 1-21 Biadlay 0-0 0 0 00, McMillan 1-200 2 Totaja 44-7924-31 112

CMeaaa n » at »— HWaaMngkm JO M M M—111Foulad oul— Nona Htooundt~Cnicago63 (Cortina

15) waahmglon 47 Uonaa l l ) AaaJeta—Chicago 16{Banks 6). Washington 23 (J0AM 7) Tottlloow-Cheago 21, Waahington 17 A—17,761

(AN ANTONIO (11 •)SJohnson 5-11 4-8 14. Mitcnail 7 16 3-3 17,

Giimora 9-11 5-9 23. Maflhaws 1-4 1-1 3. Rooanaon9-18 6-7 24. Huohaa 0-0 0-0 0, Survive*} 5-6 0-0 10.Qraanaood 6-10 2-2 14. Higgma 5-7 1-2 11. Bndakl0-0 0-0 0 T otai» 47-85 22-30 118PORTLAND (106)

Thompaon 10-22 5-8 25. VandawagM 4-11 4-4 12.Jonas 5-9 0-0 10. Conar 7-13 0-0 14. DfanJaf 8-18 4-420. K Johnaon 2-4 0-0 4, Karsay 4-6 0-0 6. Pajiaon 1-4

2-2 4, POW 3-7 2 2 (Totals 44-96 1720 105M M M M—111

nan n-mFoulad out—Nona flaooonos—San Antonio 55

(SJohnson 12). Portland 48 (Thompson. Jonas 9)

Assets—San Antonio 31 (Matthaws 8). Portland 23

(OraxNK 13) Total touts- San Antonio 22. Portland 26.

Tachmcais—Portland iiiagai datansa 2, Portlsno Coach

Ramsay. A— 12.666

TMa Wask a Too 20 faradHow (ha Top Twanty taams m ma Aaaocwad Praia'

cotiaga DaskMball poll tarad this wsakNo 1. North Carolina (19-0) baat Maryland 71-67.

baal No 3 Duka 95-92 baat Marquana 86-64No 2. Michigan (17-1) losl to Minnaaou 73-63, baat

IOM 61-57.No 3. Duka (16-1) baal SI Josaph's 87-66. baat

Waka Forau 92-63; lost to No 1 N o * Carokna 95-92.No 4. Syracusa (13-2) lost K) No 15 Gaorgslown

73-70; lost to No 18 LouiavilW 63-73No 5, Qaorgja Tach (15-1) baal Ctamaon 63-71No 6, Hamptaa Sgua (17-0) baal Cincinnati 69-71.

baal Naw Ortaana 66-64No 7, Oklahoma (17-0) baal Colorado 94-82; baat

Iowa Stala 95-82No 8. Kanasi (16-2) baat Nabraaka 61-70; baal

Oklahoma SUM 95-72.No 9. SL John's (17-2) baat Salon Hall 74-56, baat

Connaclicut 61-60No 10. Navada-Las vagas (17-2) baat Cal-Sanla

Barbara 79-65. baal Fullanon SUM 62-51

N. H . Loog K m .200 Madlay flalay - 1 Long Branch (flanzo. Skim.

Daws. Pirant) 2 07 4

200 Fraa — 1 Mlka Yakuhca (MN) 2:06 3

200 IM - 1. Sana Imbamba (MN) 2:23.4

50 Fraa - 1 Sam Ranzo (LB) 24.8

Ona-Malar Diving — 1 Jim LoghRano (MN) 146 7

100 Burtarfly - 1. Yakubtca (MN) 1:01.8

100 Fraaaryla - 1 MHuj Oa«a (LB) 1:04

500 Fraanyta - I. Imbamba (MN) 5:06.2

100 Backatroka — I. Rarao (LB) 1:04.8

100 Braaalroks — 1. Doug Chin (MN) i 16 2

400 Fraaafyta Raasy — 1. MtddMown North (Walton.

KMn.imbamba. Wank) 4:16.2.

MN — 2-5. LB — 04.

PALM DESERT, CaM <AP) - Final acoraa andmonay winnmga Sunday in tha 1*00.000 Bob HopaChryskK Cttatlc on M 6.837 yard, par-72 BaimuaaDunas Country Club couraa l» won auddan daatfi

69-64 66 61-66-33566 87 65 69 66-3357246434849—337

85-7049494649—3387247-714446-3396749 68 68 96 339674549-7048-33989-73434749—34068-7046-7346—3417148-724448-3418949494847-34269-70494747-34270-70494849—34268-66-724946-34366-74-64-69-70-34366-71-6646-70-3436949-6746-71-34370-70494847-3447147-704849-34471 6747-7049-34467494946.71-3447149494948-34570-71 70-66-66-3456949-69-7147-3466949-744747-34589-71-70-6847—345

70 69 709-67-69-34671484747-72-3456749-7047-72-34574-70-6447-70-345714547-7449—3487248-714649—34869-73-704549-34671-70 70-66-67-34666-66-71-71-72—34871-7! 64-69-65-34671-7049-96-69-34769-7149-6949-34766-71-7048-70-34773-66 69-7146-347744946-7149-34670 72-67-71-66-34670-69-70-7146-34668-7547-7147-3486947-72-89-72-34969-70 72-66-71-34971-71-704641-34969-73-7048-71-34966-718948-73-34969-71-66-72 69-34968-66-70-7449—34966-71-71-71-66-34966.73-7246-72-38069-68 71-70 72-35065 70-73-71-71-35072-71-7148-70-36074-70-7145-70—350

67 75 70 69 69-35075-6947-7049-36071-70-7147-72-35167-71-71-70-72—3517147-70-72-71-35168-7248-72-71—3517148-71-70-71-36171-70-69-70 71-35173-68-7149-70— 36169 7347 70-74-35372-70-7249-73—3537643-71-71-73-35373-69-70-69-72-35371-70-7149-73-3S4

Don Hammond $106,000John Cook 164.800Jodia Mudd 140.600Hal Su«on 126.400PaynaStawan 121900Gary Koch 121 B00Craig Stadlar 121.900Davtd Graham $16,600Ray Floyd 116,600Lannia Clmnts $18,600Wayna Lavi $13,600John Mahanay $13,600BamhardLngr $13,800Jack Rannar $10,500Jan Sluman $10,500Paul Ailngar $10,500Mark McCmbr $10,500Bob MurDhy $8,100Jim Cdbad $8,100Sandy Lyla $8.100SlavtPaia $8,100Kan Oraan $5,133Johnny Millar $5,133Claranca Rosa $5,133BlllKrauan$5.l33Cunts Slranga $5,133Mlka Raid $5,133Chip Back $5,133Jim Thorpa $5,133Don Pootay $5,133Mac OQrady $3,480Paiar Jacobsan $3,480Tim Slmpaon $3,460Scon Simpaon $3,480Larry U I I $3,480Richard Zokol $3,460Tom Purtzai $2,760Joay Sindalar $2,760Phil Blackmar $2,760Pal Lindsay $2,760Tom KM $2,260Jay Haas $2,280Jan Qrygial $2,260Howard Twnty $2,260FradCoupkM $1,851Bob Wrann $1,651Dan HalUonon $1,651Scon Hoch $1,651QaryMcCord $1,651Brian Mogg $1,651Jay Dawng $1,861Lanny Wadklna $1,651Qrag Norman $1,370Bob Lohr $1,370Bob Tway $1,370Mark O'Maara $1,370Brad Fabal $1,370Bruca LkKtka 81.370Jim OaUaghar $1,370Ronn* Slack $1,264Qana Sauars $1,284Loran Rooana $1,284Ed Fkxl $1,284Tom Pamlca $1,284Tony Sins «! 264

Calvtn Paata $1,284Joalnman$1.216Ban Cranahaw $1,218Patar Ooatathua $1,216Barry Jaackat $1,216Hubarl Qraan $1,168

TENNIS

GokJan Stata at Naw York, 7:30 p.m.L A cuppara at 8an Amonlo. 8.30 p.m.Danvar at Utah. 9 30 p mDallaa al Saorarnamo, 10:30 p.mHoualon at SaatM. 10.30 p.m.

N o l l . Kantucky |14-2| baal M«sa*pp, Slata 64-52:baal Florida 72-55

Alabama 7744. toal to Waatarn Kantucky 75-72: lostlo OaPaut 7041

No 13. Nova Dama (10-2) lost lo Bngham Young60-76. OT. baal UCLA 7444

No 14. Louisiana 8tats (16-2) baat Miaaiaaippi 68-66baal vandarb* 8447.

No 15, Qaorgaknvn (13-3) baal No 4 Syracusa73-70, baat Saton Mali 62-72

No 18. Virginia Tach (14-3) baal Jamas Madlaon73-65. lost 10 Cincinnati 107-104. 2OT

Mo 17, Tanaa-El Paao (15-3) baat Ha»a> 8543. lost10 San Diago Sola 87-68• No 18, LouravMa (11-4) baat Soutnarn Moswuop,59-54. baat Florida Stala 85-64. baal No 4 Syracusa63-73

No 19. Purdua (16-3) baal Nonhwaalam 8544, baatWiaconain 100-73

NO 20. Bradlay 118-1) baal Dayton 79-77. OT: baalWaat Taua Slala 76-53. baal TuW 71-58

N. CAHOLINA (66)Mann 3-5 1-2 7. Wot 3-10 4-4 10. Daugnarty 9-20

2-3 20. Mala 4-11 2-2 10. K Smith 4-7 3-3 11. LarJO3-6 0 0 6. Popaon 0-0 0-0 0. Maodart 1-2 0-0 2, RSmith 0-0 IM) 0. Hunlar 0-0 0-0 0. BucknaH 0-0 0 00 Tolala2743 12-14 66.tuutourm (84)

Boonae 19 0-012. Trooar 5-12 0-0 10. Downing 3 51-4 7. Moors 3 4 0-0 8. Johnson 4-10 0-0 8. Copa 2-51-2 5. Sims 8-11 0-0 16. Davis 0 i 0-0 0 Totals 31 712 4 64.

Malflima-Nonh Carolina 32. Marquana 30 Fouladout—nona Rabounda—Norm Carolina 35 (Daughany9). Marquana 43 (Trottar 13) AasaM—North Carolina15 (K. Smiln 5). Marquana 21 (Trotlar 9) Totallouls—North Carolina 11. Marquana 17 A—11.052

SWIMMING

WORCESTER. Maaa {AP) - Rasults 8unaay In tha$250,000 Naw England Virginia Slims (anna lournarnant at ina Canlrum (aaadnga in paianltiaaai)

taw-* allClaudia Kohda-KHsch (4). Waat Qarmany, oaf Kaviy

Rinaldi (6). Martin Downs. Fla. 8-3. 0-4.Martina NavraUlova (1). Fort Wodti. Taus. da* Path

Shfivar (3|. Ljthsrvilla. Md . 8-1. 6 1

Claudia Kohda-KMch. Wast Oarmany. and HalanSukova. Cncnoslovakia. dat. Batay NagaWn. KapaluaBay. Hawau. and Barbara Pollar (7). Woodbury, Conn6-1, 6-2

Manna NavraHova. Fon Worth. Taus and PamShrivar. Lulhamaa. MO. d l . dat Ros Fa»oank. SouthArnca. and Candy Raynokla. Kno«v«a. Tarn 161 6-2.6-2.

NEW YORK (AP) - RaauDa of Sunday's Cham-ponahip matchas m tna 8600.-000 Na&sco Maataratannia champtonshipa baing playad al Madiaon SquaraOardan (aaadmga m parantiaata):

Ivan Landl |1). Cxachoalovarua. d». ' 8 ° r « Backar.

ny. 8-2. 7 4 (7- 1). 6-3

AndaraJarrydandStatanEobarg,Swadan.da.' Mata

waandar and Joakim Nyatorh. Swadan. 8-1. 7 4 (7-5).

TODAYBoyi baiketball

Keyport at HoffmanWrestling

Mater Dei at Shore

Manalapan at Pemberton

Girli baiketbaUManasquan at HowellOcean Twp. at Jackson Twp

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MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1966 The Regialcr

4Lucky' Shirley Muldowney returns to drag racing •ly MMK KMMKnlght-Rldder Newspapers

PHOENIX, Ariz. — Three hours beforeshe would be summoned for her qualifyingheat, drag racer Shirley Muldowney held adog in her lap and a cup of steaming tea inher hand. She seemed perfectly relaxed,still sporting a coiffure of black curls andtoday, sunglasses. Spectators stood six deepat the restraining line to her pit area withcameras and scraps of paper for auto-graphs.

"Welcome back, Shirley!" a fan in theback shouted, his voice rising above theroaring engines of Firebird InternationalRaceway. "How are you?"

Muldowney stood. And with the aid of acane began to walk. "I am only lucky I haveto drive the quarter mile," she said. "I cando that. I would be in trouble if I had to walkit."

Lucky, indeed; Shirley Muldowney ofMount Clemens, Mich, is a lucky person.Less than two years ago — on June 29, 1984

— she suffered a near-fatal crash in aqualifying heat in Montreal. Muldowney, inpursuit that year of an unprecedentedfourth National Hot Rod Association TopFuel world championship, rejoined thecircuit this weekend at the Super Bowl ofDrag Racing in Phoenix and has a busyagenda for the year ahead. Asked whethershe expected to experience even a hint ofapprehension, she glared and said: "Wouldyou (be afraid)? I am not."

No filmed footage of the Montreal crashexists and that is perhaps fortunate. "Iwould have been like the skier at thebeginning of 'Wide World of Sports,'"Muldowney said. "I would have had torelive it every Saturday." In retrospect,Muldowney calls the accident one of "thosefreak occurrences" — an inner tubeseparated from the left-front tire andentangled Itself in the steering apparatus.The car careened from the drag strip at 250mph, disintegrated and threw Muldowney500 feet into a farm field.

"Goodyear has since done research into *the stability of the front tire," Muldowney

Writers pay tributeto Yanks' Mattingly

NEW YORK (AP) - Don Mat-tingly of the New York Yankees andBret Saberhagen of the Kansas CityRoyals were honored last night atthe annual dinner of the New Yorkchapter of the Baseball WritersAssociation of America, notable inpart for the absence of two of itsprime attractions.

Both Commissioner Peter Ueber-roth and New York Mets pitcherDwight Gooden had been invited toattend, but were no-shows. Ueber-roth was in Atlanta for a dinnerhonoring Martin Luther King, whileGooden, the National League CyYoung winner, attended the funeralof his grandmother on Saturday.

Before the awards presentations,BBWAA chapter chairman JackO'Connell of The Record inHackensack, N.J., introduced sev-eral visiting dignitaries, includingNational Football League Com-missioner Pete Rozelle.

"Let me say how nice it is to havea commissioner here," O'Connellsaid.

Gooden. who was 24-4 for the Mets

last season, stirred controversy lastweek when he failed to report anankle injury to the team. Heoriginally was scheduled to beexamined Monday by Mets phys-ician James Parkes, but a teamspokesman said the exam would berescheduled for later in the week.

Saberhagen, 21-6 for the Royals in1985 and an integral part of theirWorld Series championship, washonored as the American League CyYoung winner, while Mattingly, whobatted .324 with 35 homers and 145RBI for the Yankees, was honoredas the AL Most Valuable Player.

Another award presented by theBBWAA local was the Joan Paysonaward for service to Mets catcherGary Carter for his work fightingleukemia.

"There was a lot of talk when Icame to New York about what a badguy I was," said Carter, who wasacquired from Montreal last year."Now, I win the Payson award, somaybe I'm not such a bad guy."

Payson was a former owner of theMets.

Slims: Martina pounds ShriverWORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -

Pam Shriver tried changing theScoreboard but nobody would be-lieve it and she got drubbed byMartina Navratlilov* last night insemifinals singles play of the$250,000 Virginia Slims of NewEngland tournament.

Shriver, Navratilova's regulardoubles partner, was trailing 6-1, 4-0in the night match at the Centrumwhen she went to the Scoreboard andinserted a "5" by her own name.

"The only thing to do is try todivert some attention away,"

Shriver said en route to a 6-1,6-1 lossthat was completed in just 50minutes.

Navratilova, the top seed who willmeet Claudia Khode-Kilsch in Mon-day night's final, admitted shedidn't care for the clowning thoughshe participated to the extent ofasking Shriver to put a "7" in placeof her 4 to make it a 7-5 score.

Kohde-Kilsch earned her shot atthe 140,000 first prize by defeatingKathy Rinaldi, 6-3,6-4 and in the daysession.

said. "They have since developed a tirecapable of withstanding 300 mph-plus,which is probably infallible. So some goodcame from this, I suppose; the accident thathappened to me will probably never happento anyone again."

The injuries Muldowney sustained werehorrific. She regained consciousness withher left foot, attached only by arteries, onher lap and with a broken pelvis, twocompound fractures in her right leg, adislocated right ankle, a broken left hand,a thumb that had been practically severedand broken bones in each of her 10 fingers.One doctor told her that her left foot mightneed to be amputated. (The foot eventuallywas fused with the ankle.)

Muldowney has had six operations sincethe accident; 10 pins have been inserted inher leg and bone grafts haVe been per-formed. Hours of therapy ensued. "I am atthe point where I will scream if I ever hearsomeone say one-two-three, one-two-three," Muldowney said. She endured astate of unabatlng pain. "Not being able todo things for myself was crippling to me

mentally," he said. "I had probably 10 daysof that and I knew that - If I could - Iwould come back. I knew it would take hardwork. I never fudged In therapy."

With the help of her son, John, and crewchief, Rahn Tobler — to whom she isengaged — Muldowney, 45, orchestrated acomeback. She struck a sponsorship ar-rangement with Performance AutomotiveWholesale — a California mail-order partssupplier — and with part of her moneyhelped construct a dragster, which is hercustomary hot pink and valued at 1500,000

"Not one piece of equipment on this cardates back two years ago," she said. "Thisis state of the art. If we do not win, It willnot be because of the car, It will be becauseof me."

If Muldowney is not overly concernedwith her safety and consequently devoid offear, her timing at the starting line couldbe a potential problem. "The differencebetween winning and losing can be thatfraction of a second at the start," she said.Muldowney had an operation performed toset her heel at the height of her driving

shoe; she said she "will never be abler to ' -wear high heels again."

"That should tell people how serious Iam," (be laid. "I am anxious to get bay! ;in the swing of things. This Is my job. I •enjoy the life style, the competition."

Muldowney plans to compete another fiveyean. Still one of the few female dragsters •-— and, with rival Don Garllu, one of thetop attraction! on the NHRA circuit - she .won world championships in 1977, 1980 and1M2. In 1983, the movie "Heart Like aWheel" chronicled her rise from Schenec-tady, N.Y., to the height of the sport.

To appreciate how popular Muldowney is,officials at the Super Bowl of Racingestimate that attendance for the three-dayevent at the Firebird InternationalRaceway could exceed 35,000. WhenMuldowney finally arrived Friday — twohours behind schedule — one official sighedIn relief: "Our meal ticket is here."

Muldowney Is aware of the impact shehas on the sport. "Motor sports is ex-periencing a revival," she said, "and I am,In part, responsible for that."

Houstonrun goesto Marot

THE WINNAH — Veronique Marot of Leeds,England, holds up her hands as she crosses thefinish line to win the Houston-Tenneco marathon

ASSOCIATED PRESS

yesterday in Houston, Texas. Marot captured therace with a time of 2:31:33, edging runnerupFrancie Larrieu-Smith to win the $25,000 first prize.

HOUSTON (AP) - Francie. I *rieu-Smith was well trained for herfirst marathon yesterday, but the j *experienced 10.000-kilometer runnerbad only one thing going against herto win the Houston Tenneco Mara-thon — Veronique Marot.

Marot, who finished third in lastyear's Houston race, kept herselfwell ahead of Smith to take firstplace with a time of 2 hours, Jlminutes, 33 seconds. Smith followedat 2:33 38

Third place went to Moe Bente ofNorway in 2:33:39.

"My goal was a low 2:30," Smithsaid after completing the coursethrough Houston. The differencewith marathons and 10,000-kilo-meter rades Is "the race isn't wonin the first six miles," she said.

Smith, a 33-year-old resident ofBuda near Austin, said she'll run atleast one more marathon since sheknows what to expect now. But shesaid that "training for a marathonis not for me."

Marot took control of the racearound the six-mile marker andnever looked back.

"I wasn't really worried aboutFrancie. I was thinking about run-ning my own pace. I really didn'twant to run myself to the ground. Iwas running at a pace that feltcomfortable," said Marot, 30, whoholds dual English and Frenchcitizenship, but runs for England.

Being in the lead the whole raceIs tough mentally, she says, butadded it was nice not to have to playcatch up.

CLASSIFIED ACTION LINE 542-1700

INDEXPublic Notices(Legal.)Special Notices

Lotl and FoundSpecial NoticesTravel-TransporlalionInstruction

56

15

Business DirectoryBusiness Service 21Arts 4 Cutl l J2

EmploymentHelp Wanted Male or Female

51Babysitlmg/Cnild Car* 52Domestic Help S3Situations Wanted Female . 54

Situations Wanted MaleSituations Wanted

Male/FemaleCniid Care'Nursery

Schools . 57

FinancialBusiness Opportunity 61Mortgages 62Money To loan 63Money Wanted 64 •

MerchandiseMerchandise lor Sale 71Garage/Yard Sale 72Machinery For Sale _ 73Rental Service 74Farm Equipment 75Auction Sales - 76

Pets and Livestock _ , 77A.rcrall i — 78Swap or Exchange _ 79Bicycles-Mm. B>i>es . . . 80Sports Equipment . 81Swimming Pooll - - - - _ 82CBs Electronics 03Merchandise Wanted 14Price Busier IS

Real Estate RentalsApartments . 101Houses lor. Rent . 102Rentals lo Snare 103Winter Rentals 104Summer Rentals 105Furnished Rooms . — _ 106Nursing/Retirement

Homes 107Commercial Rentals - - 108

Buildings/Garages — - 109Wanted to Rent _ • 110

Real Estate for SaleOpen Houses 130Houses lor Sale -' 131Condominiums/Town

Houses 132Income Property- - 133Farm Properly _ 134Commercial Properly __ 135Industrial Property . . 136Lots and Acreage _ . . 137Mobile Homes 138Cemetery Lots 139Real Estate Wanted 140

RecreationalBoats and Accessories^ . 152

Camping EquipmentRecreational vehicles

AutomotiveWanted AutomotiveConstruction EquipmentAulo FinancingAuto InsuranceAuto Rent/Leas*Aulo Services/PansMotorcycles.

153154

220230240250260270280290300

Trucks and TrailersAuios For Sale

READ YOUR ADTHE FIRST DAY

IT APPEAR8IThe Daily Register will not bo're-sponsible lor more than one incor-

rect insertion ol any adveriisneniand only when it materially affectsthe value ol the ad II it contains anerror call classified All ads are re-stricted to their proper classificationand sat in me regular Daily Registerstyle ol type Right is reserved toedit or reiect any copy or ad

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542-1700MONDAY-FRIDAY

8:30-4:50

PUBLIC NOTICE (LEQALS)Schedule for publication

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SATURDAYSUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAY

Thursday 12 noonThursday 12 noonFriday 12 noonFriday 12 noonMonday 12 noonTuesday 12 noonWednesday 12 noon

Send or deliver PUBLIC NOTICE with voucher to:

Peggy Nolan, Legal ClerkThe RegisterOne Register PlazaShrewsbury, NJ 07701

The Best buysThis Seasonore in theClassifieds

166226 Holmds>l

NOTICI

Th« Board of Health of meTownship of HoimdeJ •( their Re-organization Meeting held onJanuary 13, I9»fl. adopted aResolution authorfilng theawarding of a contract for pro-fessional services without com-petitive bids (In accordance withthe Local Public Contracta Law.

228 Holmdol

N.J.8.A. 40A 11-1 et >eq ) toALEXIS TUCCI, ESQ. for legaJ

Copiea of the Resolution andcontract are on file and available'or public Inspection In the officeof the Township Clark and theBoard of Healtn of the Townshipof Holmdal.

Dorothy A. Burg**Secretary

233 Long BranchPUBLIC NOTICE

MONMOUTM COUNTYLONG BRANCH

Please take notice thai the lot-lowing decisions ware given bythe Zoning Board at their meet-ing held on Monday, January 13,

The application of Klmbar Pet-roleum, Block 121. Lot 7 wasgranted Preliminary Sit* PlanApproval. Krog. btook 27. Lot 1and Mincini Block 237. Lot 47waa carried to the January 27,1BBB meeting. Aboud, Block7SA, Lot 2 and Palazoila. Block1M. Lota 6, 7 was carried, to theFebruary 1O. 1966 meetingLauter Sign. Block 211. Lot 4 willbe head at the February 24,1M6meeting.

The following resolution* wereread and adopted: Tamil. Block17, Lota 1Q and 1OA, Manclnl,Block 237. lot 47, Labb Realty.Block 124. Lot 1, Qanftne. Block344, Lot 17, Klmber Petroleum,Block 121, Lot 7, Holy TempleChurch. Block 314, Lota S.7 andDel Negro. D»eh«n andQonaatvea. Block 301. Lo* 6. theresolutlont Of denial forMcCfscken. Block 132, Lot 1 forpremleee at 147 West End Av-enue and Oceans Five, Inc. Block426, Lots 1. 01 . 2, 2.01. 4.01 and4 for pramisee located at 300Ocean Avenue were reed andadopied.

A resolution appointingJoseph Meenan. Esq aa the at-torney to represent the Board ofAdjustment in the dafanas ofCloffl against the Board of Ad-justment. City of Long Branch,waa read and adopted

The proceedinge of thesecaaaa can be inspected at theoffice of Planning, 344 Broad-way, Long Branch, between thehours of gam and 6pm. By order•6

Paolo D. PeoneChairmanZoning Board of Adjustment

Jan. 20. Sie

233 Long Branch

244 Tlnton FallsBOROUGH OF TINTON FALLS

NOTICEALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CON-

TROLTAKE NOTICE that application

haa been made lo the Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of TlntonFalls to transfer To FRANKSTAVOLA, JR.. RICHARDSTAVOLA and MICHAEL J.STAVOLA. all general partnersOf AIRPORT INN. A New JerseyPartnership, for premlaaslocated at MO Shrewsbury Ay.enue, Tlnton Fella, New Jersey,the Plenary Retail ConsumptionLicense k 1336-33-002-002,heretofore issued to FRANKSTAVOLA, JR. and RICHARDSTAVOLA. for the premiseslocated at 660 Shrewsbury Av-enue, Tlnton Falls. New Jersey

OBJECTIONS. If any, shoulda made immediately In writing

to the Municipal Clerk of theBorough of Tlnton Falls, Munici-pal Building. Tlnton Avenue. Tin-ton Falls. New Jersey 07724.ARTHUR DENNIS LORINO, ES-

QUIREPost Office BOH 462

Red Bank, New Jersey 07701Attorney for Frank Stavoia, Jr

Richard Stavoia and Michael J.Stavoia. general partners t/a

AIRPORTINN, A New Jersey Partnership

Dated January 3, 1M6Jan 13, 20, $14 04

NOTICEPUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby

given to all parsons thai the fol-lowing approval was granled atthe January B, i » M regularmeeting of the Tlnton Falls Boardor Adjustment:Smith A Rimer. P.A. (Mobil Olt

244 Tlnton FallsCorporation)Block 15. Lot 16.02 - ShrewsburyAvanusHardship Variance • Sign

Said decision is on file andavailable for inspection In theTlnton Falls Borough Hall, 666Tinton Avenue, Tlnton Falls, NewJaraey.Sheila E. Van WinkleAdministrative OfficerBOARD OF ADJUSTMENTJan. 20, 17 M

6 Lost and FoundFREE FOUND ADS

As a service to our community,The Dally Register Is offering sFREE 3-line FOUND ad for 4days under our Lost A FoundclaaalfloaVon.The Register appreciates yourhoneety A will do Its part In find-ing the original ownercall us at 542-1700.FOUND — Pekinese type dog o-Maln St In Bertord 767-9367.FOUND — Pair of ayaalaasM onRiver Rd. and corner of ProspectAve. Red Bank. 741-7120.

FOUND — Small short haired•olden retriever, mala. Varyfriendly. No collar. 707-S94B.

FOUND — Cat orange male.Pan Persian. End of Dec CloverHill ana of Colts Neck. 044-6322.LOST — 3 yaw old temeie Ger-man 8h«ppard. Black a tan with•liver streak on back. Lost nevKings Hwy, section of Middle-town Answer* to name of Silver.Please call 741-4352 during day,871-7828 sfter 6 pm.LOST — Siberian husky on1 /5/86 Answers to Smoky. Purewhite. Reward. 677-1404.

» Lott and FoundFOUND — orange A whits longhaired female cat dedawed vary

pood homo 264-9600 or A8PCA.

LOST — Russian Blue oat darnchare, gray ansrad malaanawears to Fralnd. Pleas* callafter 4.00 767*7126.LOST — Cat, mats. Long haired,orange and while, wearing fleecollar. In vicinity of Highland Ave.Leonardo. 201-6063LOST — 11-16 In Union Bch oklrust colored male dog walks witha limp, blind tn one eye amto Zipper, 2*4-7490

9 Sp+xHsl Notlc*)*MRS. SYLVIA

PSYCHIC READERAdvisor on aH probtams ol UfsTsrot Cards. Astrology A Palm

Open 10 a.m.-9 p.m.2104 Kings Hwy.. Oakhuret

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493-0666NO MORE LONELY NIQHT8

The Singlee Directory containspersonal ads and deecrtpttone ofthe singles In your area. Discoverhow simple H Is to meet oaring,sensitive, intelligent man andwoman. For free brouchur* call

SOFTBALL PITCHERS —Nasdsd for modrftsd softballleague Call 264-4635

14 PinonaliLONELY Widow seeking serious

. c/o The Reporter P O B O K606, Toms River. NJ 06764

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CALL USI — We oan ehortenyour pants, make your hems andmaks your cuehlona etc. Calle your

474i.

Mai* or F«m«l»ACCOUNTANT — Tax prep-aratton. 1-2 veers experiencewith computax. Challenging full1ms growth opportunity wfth fastgrowing Had tank. NJ CPA.firmSand resume to: Aronaon AThorns. CPAs, 321 Broad Si..Red Bank. NJ 07701 or call630-0974AIDE/HOUSEKEEPING —

t m - l i m shlfl available. Startingsalary M/nr. Own transportationnicsssary 463-3066ALCOHOLISM COUNSELOR —Minimum BA degree New outpattern alchohoMem program foradoteeoents. CerWtaafion ornear completion highly desired.36 paw hr was*. Oood staringsalary and fringe package. Exc.opportunity for the nQnt personProgrsaatvs community basedagency. Submit resume to: EK-eouitve Dtrecto*, 1 Elizabeth St .Kayport, NJ 07736.APPRENTICE TRAINEE - Shopperson, to manufacture A install

tXT&"6 *1ARCADE POaMTON* AVAIL-ABLE — Counw rMampuxiand Chang* attandama. No ««p

AUDITORS/INVENTORY — Cot-hga Hudanla • otnar oapan-dawa paoew M/hr lo (tort.Days, ana * «~k»oai.10-aO/hr + par M M . No mp.win win. Imarvtova » Da naMalDM Shaman Inn. FraahoM. Moo.Jan 20. aao-SJO pm.

AUTO MECHANICNone*

ImmodWa oponlngaEarn up 10 i ie /nr M U M h m•xp In brakoa. from ondt. ana*tun* up*. Oraal opportunism toradvaneomant. Oood companybonaffla aa wall at too Mourtty•ran Ih . laador In »n» and u »service. For oonfldentlal inter-

51 HtlpWnfd ^

•ATTENTION!

mention THE REGISTERwhan replying to a Register

employment ad • ?

AUTOMOTIVE - SERVICE Af - -VISOR EXCELLENT OP-PORTUNITY FOR QUALIFIEOINOEVIDUAL TO JOIN A GROW-ING DEALER ORGANIZATIONEXCELLENT PAY PLAN ANOFULL BENEFITS. APPLY MPERSON : SUHLER AND BITTBJRCHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, i t X 'HWY. M HAZLET. NJ 07730.BARTENDER — Mala. Nloraa.WM ran. C M bamaaii s-ipr*.HMVBOARO SECRETARY — CoDa" * Twp. achoola. Pariorma. I

aa of Sacralary I I l l T -hinlnaai omoa. 12 mo. poanon.Salary 130-a. aand Mtar of apa*-oabon and raauma to Dr. Franc*Spara Suparlntandant 20 Court-ly Rd MT E . Cola Nook. tfJ '07722 on or batora l - i j - M .Equal Opportunity Employ* . .BOOKKEEPER — Part-am*. -

ninmiiy Full-oharga. (».-•S . f J^B^BHmaintain an toumala a |

i. Can l a M W•OYS/OIRLSMEN/WOMEN

Dua to a rapid growth, wa hava•an> morning nowapapar routaaI W U D U IN Y O U R AREA, oattt-aoo-2«-oaso today II youwanl monoy, pruaa and axtraa. .A0ul» mu« Kara a ear.

STARLEDOER • ' IN JERSEY .CAFETERIA HELP — Womannnfl ld lor acnool lunch pra-

m N 'pram No axpartiNo »aa»inda.

k For Intormaaon and •*•"'MrvWo oaK W H » EOE

ioLS£ "i and «•-. '

The Register. JANUARY 20. 1986

Si HelpWantoti

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

CARRIERS NEEDEDTo doNver the REGISTER

MIDDLETOWN AREA• aarrteter laneBd

RIVER — For garbage true*jujarlanciad only 6 day w*

banaAa. Sun (mm.ood ealery. beM l Na-«M0.

ane• Brandvwtn* Way• FUrMd Ave

a .> Poor Wind* Dr• WrwaHwy E M I• McQulra't Orove Apia• New Monmouth Rd

Call NICK542-8880

RUMSONFAIR HAVEN

•ndBELFORD

• GUI CM Ave

CALL SUE

542-8480

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

IASY AMCMILV WOKKIMOO 00 par 100

OuanMeed Payment

No Euenenoe/No Salaa Detailaaand t-A-S-E ELAN VITAL -616M I I EMarpnaa Rd. Ft PMroa

Florida U4«2

«UMTTIo too IWod fry an ea-TOM Engineer.

Weaponalblo lor developing apMcontrol aqulpmonl and lech-mqua* lor land and «oMr enu-

aapllid. to oil or haiard-neMilaH OS or M.S.

Degree. Poereon Indudaa funM l program roaponalbWy. Huatba good oommunlcator Salary

' on experienoe andOood Companylama. Sand your

reeume »: Mr. l a MKon. MaaonHangar anaa Maaon Co Inc.

«y M. PO aV» 1>T. Laonardo.J 07717 EOE

SEA BRIGHT

Call CHRIS542-8880

• EATONTOWN• LONG BRANCH• MONMOUTH BEACH• OCEAN TOWNSHIP

SM Call BLAKE

542-8*80

Sfa'TINTON FALLS:• Brenlord Circle• OW Farm Road• Old Mill Road• Woodland Manor

RIVER PLAZA/UNCROFT

. • Half Mn« Rd

. • Shady Oaka

LEONARDOHoatord Ave.

CALL JEFFi 542-8880

AND

JLITTLE SILVER

• Cheerllre Sq Cortoo a> • E Quaana Or

. ••KlngaRoad

. • • Prince Piaca

. • • Quaana Or

TECHNICIANSHI poaroon ogenlnoa aiIMSETT to bo Mad by *x-

partanoad Mechanical ft Elec-onlc Technnaene. Prolacta In.uda davaloplng aplll oonlrol

technique, and •quipm.nl lorland and water uae on on orriaxerdoua malarial* Knowledge•quired for experiemental

inaaaiiramanta and enervate.Handa-on experience ahould m-

uda trouMeahooUng and rapalrM l leclllr, equipment Quelltl.

canona mould Include a mini-mum of S year* demonatraledexperience) or paraprotaaalonal

amng. or an Aaaoclat* DegreeSalary baaad on experteno. andochlawamanl. Oood Companypaid hinge Oanaflu Sand your

to: Mr —

i. PO Bo* 117. Laonardo.Hangar. SHaa Maaon Co Inc.

Hwy rf. PO Bo»J 077J7 EOE

> • Woodland• • White• • SllverwhueI • Branch'•Tabori . Woodbine

CALL KATHIE542-8880

The Register

An Equal Oppty Emptoyar M/FCARPENTER — RaliaMa Ex

, partancad only Year round. work. R M Bank W M CaM

741-1144.

CARPENTER AND HELPER -e«p own trans CaM 2A4-40U or

'10*.244-1009CLEANING FPERSON - t e c l y

20+hra. (Mr waak. SuntMrd Rac

CLERK TYPIST/PART TIME -12 month positionavailable immadlataty Entry•ev»l poaitton Prejviout achool••p«ri«nc« prafarrad Full ban•fit* Submit lattar of apptteatton'Mumi and ratarancaa to MRoban A zoikwwtcz. Supermiandant, Highland* ElemantarySchool. Navaaink Avanua. Htflrt•an«a. NJ 07732, by January 11i We W I V I art Atnrmtfva Aclion/Equal Opportunity Emptoyar-M/F

CLERK/TYPIST - Foromoa. Hours tarn. -2:30pmMon.-Frl. Call between 12 and2.K lor interview 747-1W0

COOK — FuH/part ttma. Small•anlor cntxan boarding rvouaa~"j amok Ing Appry M2-44MJjoam,

T » S M IIET1C PROOUCT1ON -rntarial handtar aoraaatva mettlduai wantad to grow "young Co Call I»am-4pm 402-4524COUNTER HELP — Deye. fi3-4 Mon-Ffi Idaal lor motherwith cnildran In achoot. Apply

i 1 SubaI Silver

paraon. Dennya IUUSitCOUNTER PERSON - Forauto pane stora. part tlma. parmanant. no expenenoe naoaaa-ery mornlnga, ataarnoona A eve-ning hour* available Call torappt 264-6700 1001 Auto PanaKayport.

0ANCE INSTRUCTORS — iBANCEad apac,Balw»64-O28

NCE INSTRUCTORS - weapaclany Jan knowtodgaw background. Can

or 264-7066.

DATA ENTRYbtiabiiahad Data Entry ServiceCo hat immadlatt opentnoa foraxpartancad Kay Punch Oper•tor • for parmanani full and parttlma position* on itt. 2nd. A Jrahirts Kay-to-dlac axfpiui Excatiant aalary.•nm diffarantMl piua

i tor full timari Cad torpo•ntatrvlvw appoinimaot

CMF/MCCMATAWANSENIOR CIT IZEN

SEMI -RETIREDH O M E M A K E R

MUST HAVE CAR

You want to work, but a (ob now• • • m ( impoaalbla to find.

SUPRiSEI Wa hava tnapartact Job for you. Dattvar Tha

Ragiatar «t your own paoa Iof thaaa araaa:

> Ooaanpon• Waat Long Branch

^ • Long Branch.

Can Oaii. 542-fteeo

The RegisterEqual Opportunity Employar

M/FDELIVERY PERSON — For puoadallvary, avantno*. MaMa flimonay daily Mutt hava ownand inauranca. Rad Bank Pizu

m iiiiDENTAL ASSISTANT —tlma. Caraar

pea practtoa. X-ray

. and F.now4adga of front offtcaprocaduraa and tourhandad aa-tiailng Exe. aalary and842 3303 9-4DENTAL ASSISTANT — _pariancad/ HacapHanlat.4+i2d«ya. Sat. AM met. CapaWael handling frontprocaduraa. 741-7954DENTAL ASSISTANT - Paonalbta. anthuaiaatlc paraon^anoooniai omca in vwaiawExpartanoa and x-Rpf«afraO.SW-S111

OrSPATCHER — For (ocatcab company MuM hMWdMown araa Oood parthours available will train.Longwood Ava. MUdMown Vtow Cab. —aOaoroa

DRIVER — Part Uma nJfhto mhava own car. Apply InClrcla Pizza. EatontownDRIVERS - For Bayahora TShouM know Kaanaburf aramNtght ahlft. CaM 4SS-1M47S7-1234

DR1VER/LABOROR»200 waakty CaM rM6-7019

DRIVERS — Vant and*S 10 par hr Start al onoaautomatic Local aehool nA M and P M Appty 10 a mp m . no phona caNa Murphtranaponatton. 5:

NtlpWanttd | si Mrtp WantedLEGAL SECRETARY - fuH ttmtaxp in Raal Eatata pratarrad leianvaH Suburban mm wttr

Ragtatar. Ona Rigll l irShrawabury. NJ 07701H4W.

QUIPMENT OPORATOR - Walooking tor an Individual to

work our 4pm. to midnight thin,oparattng varloua plaoaa of ourcomputar aqulpmant uaad in ourphoto typa aatttng oparation Wawtll train tna paraon looking tor a

salary raquiramanttUfdvaraity Graphics, 21 Wast

inooih Ava. Atlantic Highland!NJ 07716. Attar Equlpmani Da-

maii Suburban firm wttrptaaaani turroundlnaa Had Ban*

adnlty Rapry In wriUnfl to; TTHRagtatar. Ona Rigll l ir Ptaza

hrawabury NJ 07701 Bo»

LOCAL CONTRACT - Ctaantnc.company looking for pan Hmtwaning and morning rujjp lrHaitat KM Cati-too-su-«»4a.MECHANtC/CLAM A — Must

than a B otaaa maehanto naadapply Can M2-M74

MODELSMOVIE EXTRAS

Now casttng. Motion plcturaAlso faahlon anowa. AH

agaa/slna. No anparianoanaoaaaary. Poamona opart. S18to S M par hour No taaa. NJ

stata Hoanaad Unlvaraal CaaHtrn•6ft-TWO

MOTOR ROUTE DRIVERAdurt or CoNag* Studarrt with ra-uabla vahtota wantad to dattvartha ftagiatar to cuatomara InManalapan-Fraahotd artM. Permora intormaUon call 542-aMOor M2-SW4. Equal OpportunityEmployar M/F.NAUTILUS TRAINER — Sataatralnaa. Part-uma. No axp.naoaaaary; will train. Mutt baoutgoing. paraonaWa a ooodwith paopM Apply in paraon,ATA Fitnaaa Caniar. Abardaan583-C123

NURSES

ATTENTION!P I M M msntton THE REGISTER

whan rsplying to a Raamploymaniad

NURSESRN'S & LPN'S M/F

CERTIFIEDNURSES AIDESHOMEMAKERS

HOUSEKEEPERS 4 LIVE-IN'SM/F

Full or part-Urns, naadad forNortharn Monmouth Araa. Highpay, no taa Call tor intarvtaw atPaopls Cara. 244 Broad 81.. HadBank. 530-iaM 600 Union Ava.,At. 71. Brtslla S28-»432. Fras-hold. 431-1SM.

EWINO MACHINE OPORATOR— Wantad. Exparlanoad Call

" "^41

NURSES AIDE — M/F. P/T. 7-3and 3-11 thirM Ptaaaa call Madl'Cantar t42-3M0 XM.

FEDERAL - Slats * Civil Sar-vtoa Jobs now avaU. in your araaCad 141S-4SS-M4* (Rafun-dabtattor currant F a d f at list.

OOO SERVICE SUPER-IBOR/COOK — lor Nursme

good salary and banafitt. . HI paraon Arnold Waltar

North Cara Cantar 332ft Hwy 35NJ (navt to Shoraiand

)RY COOK — Apply in paraayport Flahary, ISO Waat Fr

1 Kayportont

FULL TIME — Mala/1ain for light factory work with

amaH manufacturer Banaflta.41-7SS7

NURSES AIDESNaw Salary Seals In Effact.

Diftaranclst lor ttata oarVAsdnursas aWas. Aooaptlng naw ap-plication* only. For parmanantpoaltlon fl 50-3 pm . 2 50-11 pmahift Also waakand raUat poa-Itlona Exparianca prafarrad. Willtrain thoaa wno show thay canglva lova and cara to our rast-dants. Apply Mon-Frl 10-12noon, i 30-3 pm. Hoimdst Con-vslsscsnl Cantar. 1M Hwy 34Hdmdal. NJ.

ULL TIME -munity aducationMinimum SA dagraa

mmadtata opanlng 38 paidourt par waak Position ra-

4 yrt axp. tn aubatanc*but* pravantton aducation and

traatmant program davatop-mant. Exp. highly daairad, goodatarttng aalary and banattta thia• an axcaHant grouth potantlalpoaitton tor tha right paraon In a

roQraaafva community baaada#ancy Sand raauma In con-mUnoa to Exacutlva Dlrador,

_ _ Youth and Family aar-1 Ellubath St. Kayport. NJ

GASSTATION

ATTENDANTSWoman 4V Man

You ahould applyFor a parmanant job

wrffi our axoaflant company

Full or Part Tim*Good Salary & Benedis

MIDOLJTTOWN EXXON6714030

HOLMOEL EXXON671-2611

NEWIERRVEXXON642-6666

EXXON Company U.S.A.A DMawn o< Exxon Corp

An Equal Opply Empteyr M/F

NURSE — RN aehool carttflad12 mo. poaltlonadolaaoanca/Adult primarypopulation aarvad, own ear ra-qulrad Sand raauma lo Aaaoc-lor Ratardad Cltuana. Box 377 CShrawa NJ 07701 Equal Op-portunity Emp4oyaf

51 Http Wanted

0My. Yaar round aoik. CatHI-1144 H M . km

PART TIME warns — at* tprap paraon Aepr, Indrc4aPma. U M W a i .I-ART TWttApply m

PAHT.T»«-Maa«lpaoa«a«apara »ma. Mai nra_ M M I

_ l v n u » t*M4-M44 or

PART Tint — taoraaarya a d t «aa d t n

PART TIMI - m i a a i r l l l torilyjjn optornaanat OWMI aana»« otiua auMa Caa

PART f - Taaspnona ofitea

can oa< tna m o t out of paopia Ina trtaodry offtca atmospnars. CaHLa»nr<arn«r at 2644*61 .

PART TwW — MaxMa paraonnaadad tor maBnanoa and daaycara ol akiMouw M adun oom-munrty In MlrHjorTO. txp W/plumbing, alaotncal. prSarrad.but not a muat. U . U par hr Can626.7172.

PART T I IM - *anand«r • > -parlanoad. Prtvaia Country Club.Can lor anpuHHnaiil 642-JJI11

•An I I I M C

ATTENTION!montlon THE REGISTER

whan raptymo, lo a Ra*aMaramptoymantad

51 H»lpW»nt»«l

31 MipWiVHfd 151 M«lgWli.ttdPART T IM HCLP — Doetera Ot-a W f t l »-7pm P

SPART T IMI — Orrloa wort. Light

" lota houra,aa Call Mr

721-424S.

PART TjMt —

" 'tmfSSm'r'i. wmin

PASTE UP DIPT. — Mdlnglypaaanar looking lor a oatauIll1llia»>ij paraon to won fua•ma on our day or nlont anm mour Paata up dam knowHdoa olproof r—dlna rrtarka and booklayout h a t e * ! txp Marking att i

t M tram, aand radurna aNIt ra-

to UllUlUlH Oraohlo. t lUneom A»e. Ml- Mej»m o r r n .rAVMOU. CLIMK - Oueee lo

hour, and pm dele un-

aalary raqutramanls to 1*0 I271 MlLidlHumi. NJ 07T4t-PttOWM P€W8ON/KITCHENHELP — fuM/pan urn* might.Apply In paraon. Ctrota Ptna,

PHOTO LA* AMIS. — Uhr re-tell leb In Atardaan, will tramphoto Ullaiilwl paraon who la— jaeaS 11 ai • • a I r akafcdl aW I i l l a»i r t h l e ,

anwiuaaaQC ano manoiy TOT miaMet peoed lull or pert time poe-rbon. Compwiy paid tffculble houra, 5.1-0M0

* anymurUoipal govarnmant fiwaHnQS>pr Tho Dajy Raaaalar. aomo aai-portanoa nooaatofy. Paymantpar artMa. P l i m don't can8and raaumaa and work lam-paaa 10 Jano Fodararo, CKV Edi-tor, ton 0-406. Tna Dally RaglaMr. Shrawabury, NJ 07701.Wara Equal Opportunity Em-HoyaralTF:M A I ESTATE SALES - Wanava *c poaiijona avanaota ror

your potanHal-oaM Darrah Aa-aodaiaa. Snnawaoury. 741-33M

si Htlp Wanted

TELEPHONE SALESSales Persons Needed

25 hoursMon-FriSat

5-911-4"

Hourly rate plus incentivesApply at

Tha RegisterOne Register Plaza

Shrewsbury, NJ 07701

An Equal Opportunity f mptoyar U/F

PIZZA MAKER — P/T P/T AviCall 642-21SJ aak tor Joay.

REAL ESTATETna I 1 rtaal EMata Company tntha world. Ona of the top 4 of-float m the fted Bank araa. Thabast training program tn Raal Es-tat* A trtandfy Mart Nawtyitoanaad. or an old pro. wa ara

dl Join our winning

&SJT&KOwned/OperewoFaKMeven

'4i-7aaa

REAL ESTATETna I 1 Raal Eaula Company mma world. Ona ol tha top 4 ot-noaa In tha Had Bank araa. ThaBaal training program In Raal Ea-laTJia. A insooiy Stan, rtawry•aani ld . or an oad pro. wa araaapandlno. Join our winningloam. Caa) today, aak tor RooorCENTURY 21 OOXDaS. PaaTC,.IndapandanHy Ownad/Oparalad616 Rraar Rd. Fair Havan

741-76*6

I I Htlp Wanted

Si Help WantedPRODUCTION WORKERS -PVC Compounding Co. lookingtor a oontlantloua and rallablaparaon lo Join our productiondapt Exoallant wagaa and ban.«nta and ovfllmo. Plaaao apply Inparaon lo 1 Ruckta Ava. rioMII.

ABERDEEN/MATAWAN AREAManagamanl Iralnao * aalaapositions In now rantal divisionTha sky la tha limn on aarnlnyExparlaena prohwia**. Call

Ronlola. 2S2-6401.RECEPTIONIST — CMrWtypWtor Law Omoa. Mual maka goodappaaranoa and nandk* lala-pnonooMa wan. Room lor ad-

Call 642-0400

RECEPTIONIST — Chiropracticomoa 16*16 houra par waak.Front daak and Inauranoa knowi-odga nalplui Call Or. KaHy

COURTS OF RED BANK —600-1200 aq II. aultaa AvallaUator Immadlata occupancy Luxur-loua appolnaad. 616-616 par aqft. Coll UO-7300 lor Into.

11 Help Wanted

MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIESThe Register ha* an opening (or a (District SalesManager In Its circulation department.This entry level position Involves supervisingyouth carriers In the areas of sales, service andcollections. Wa provide training and an excellentcompensation package We are Interested Inagressive, Individuals who have prior' sales/orsupervisory experience.

To Apply contactMr. DeZutter

or Mr. Robbins542-4000

Boys & GirlsEarn Your Own Moneyl

Learn Sale* sod earn money jelling newspapersubscriptions after school and Saturdays for theRegister We will train you in newspaper sellingtechniques, pick you up and take you home. Excel-lent chance lo gain sales experience. If you are self-motivated, honest and dependable, we want you onour team.

It you sro 11 yrs or oldercatl M 2 - M M / 5*3-5210

The Register

51 Help Wanted

tlma will tram. Call 261-Klng Jamaa NuralrwJ Homo.

NURSE'S AIDES — M/F. Pan-Ima waaaanda. 7-s a 3 -n

Nuraa'a aJda ataks oartiftcatlonroqulrod. Apply In paraon. Baton-town Convaloaoant Contar, 1S6Qrw-l Av* , Eatontown.

RE8TURANTGENERAL CREW

Day. mtdartarnoon and cloaingahltU. Pramlum tuning aaiary(or day and dewing thlfU. Fl««-IMa houra and pfaaant worklnsoondltlona- Partact tor rtouaa-wrfaa and Bwttor ClUtana. Apply

I paraon or call:Roy Rodgan ftMturanta

Monmouth MallEatontown543-W27

ANDMldd-alown Shopping Cantar

MlddWown671-073a

51 H e l p W a n t e d

51 Htlp Wanted

RtCePTIONtM—dad for mtrttoai atfuomtonoroup in rtotmdal. Spaad andi o o u w y • mual. MadtcaJ tar-mktalogy a p*ua. Salary oom-m.n .uf . t . ml «RMrtanM. CMSandy M »44-ITtg

— M/F. ajaMI nuraea. an

Oranl Ave.. SalonlOwTl NJ 07724

RESTAURANT HELP - Mo«-aaaaa. dl»fnwahan. Inqulrawithin: Bnody's. 1 U East RlvarRoad, Rumaon.RETAIL — Aaalalant managar.Van Hauaan, a taadlng manu'ac-iui«( of mana and ladlaalurniBhinoi and aportawaar lalooking for an anargantc, paopiaortaniad Individual to Uka onratponalbllltlaa at aatlaUntmanaoar. Intafaatad oandklataap M M call Chary, M 760-3fiB7dally 10-6 or Joa MA-2494 torturthar Inlormattm ^ ^

SI Help Wanted

NURSE RNSUPERVISOR

Full tlm« poaitton day ahlft.Challangtng poaitton, varladutHM For funrwr datalla appty

in paraon Holmdal ConvatMointCantar 158 Hwy 34. Holm.*..

NJ.Me-4200.

NURSE RN P/T

Tlma 6:60-3 Oaraatricka •*.-parranca prattarad No frlHa rataor proratad banaflt packaoa torpart tlma. For rurtnar dataHaappry Holmdal ConvalaaoantCantar. 1M Hwy 34, Holmdal.NJ94O-4200

51 H e l p W a n t » d

OOVERNMENT JOBS -lH.040-Wt.230/yr Now Hiring

CaN 806 M7 8000 Ext R-6247tor currant Iwfaral imOROUMD8 CARE - And offlcadaanart. FuH/part tlma. Day andavantng. Appty in paraon:Prudantw. 23 Main SUaat.

HAIR DRESSER - axp loUowing—*trrad, good pay Haitat araa

Tuaa-Aat at 264-9176.HAIRDRCSSERS - Nail ipaciai-ats with following only Matawan

"" Mulrtaa ttrtctty con-727-1491

following onMoulrtaa

C*VI 727-14

HAVE FUN — Maka frtand* whiiacash Now hiring all

_ _ JU*M». Appty in p^aonBuraar King. Rt 36 ft Wykoff PIBad SiHEALTHY FOODS RESTURANT— Looking tor F/T « P/T countarnalp Day ft avaning Bhlftt availApply m paraon at CaliforniaSmoothy, Monmouth Mai1

HOSTESS/HOST - BanandarMatura Appty in paraon OldLock Stocx 121 Fair Havan Rd .Fatr Hmmn, Hi.

HOUSEKEEPER — Enp^t«jnoad' oroaHdRtaranow. Mon

. , » 30pm 140/dayOwn tranaporUUon. 741-1632-

HaSUKANCE OFFICE - M C.Rating mandKory. Full time Call

INSURANCE - Cuatomar Sar-vtoa Rap to hand* all tapacta oflarga com marclal accountaMuat hava haavy axpafWnoa inoomnwretti imaa. Ability to daal

W03@?$

PART-TIMEDrivers Needed at Once

For Local Expansion Routes

$7-$8 perhour

PROMOTION DIRECTORThe Register, a dally and Sunday newspaper servingNorthern and Central Monmouth County N.J. le seekinga creative and highly energetic Individual to assume theresponsibilities of newspaper promotion and publicrelations. Reporting directly to the Publisher, thePromotion Director will create and select media forproduct awareness, promoting carrier/news dealercontests and awards, and develop a direct mall cam-paign for special advertising sections throughout theyear. Developing and participating In many communityaffairs and events Is essential.

This highly visible position requires an excellent ap-pearance and the candidate must have a commercialart background. Prior experience Is helpful but notnecessary.

Please apply In writing, sending your resume andsalary history to:

Q. Lister, •President & PublisherThaOn* Register PlataShrewsbury, N.J. 07701

An Equtl Opportunity Employ: U/F

...driving aehool buaas. Complata training. Houra7 to 9 a.m. and/or 1 30 lo 3:30 p.m. Automaticpay Incrnaaaa.

$ 5 . 1 0 per hour...drive aehool vans or cara. All automatic withAC. Starting 4 hours par day. Advancement avail-able.

Taxi and Airport Llmo DrivaraFull or Part Tima

Our old drivara ara not quitting. Expansion oflocal routes craataa this chance lor you to gelwith solid, dependable company. Substantial rataof pay Incfaaaas every Sept 1.Apply In parson. No phona calls between 10 a.m.and 1 p.m. or 4 p.m. and S p.m.

Murphy Bus ServiceU longwood Ava., Mlddletown

PART TIME DRIVER

The Register has an opening fora driver to work part time, de-livering paper shortages. Musthave a good driving record andvalid N.J. drivers license.

Contact Mike Poel or HaroldCaswell at:

The RegisterOne Register Plaza

Shrewsbury,

N.J. 07701

Newspaper Paste-up Person

WANTED!Full/Part-Time

Excellent opportunity forsomeone to learn all phasesof operation in newspapercomposing room. Send re-sume to:

The RegisterOne Register PlazaShrewsbury, NJ 07701

• Attn: ToniNatarcola

v Cqutl Opportunity frnployt' ^

HOME DELIVERYMANAGER

Join the Circulation staff of

The RegisterSupervision of Six District SalesManagers in Central MonmouthCounty.Prior Management experiencenecessary. Circulation experiencedesirable. Salary plus incentives.Please sene resume includingsalary history to:

Charles De ZutterCirculation Director

One Register Plaza,

Shrewsbury. N.J. 07701

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

RN's • GN's • LPN't • OPN's • AIDESa muat Eaoanarvl salary

benaMa. Can 4as-U00.

INVENTOflY/AUPITOra - Col-lege Mutferrta a other depon-daWa paooU t l / w lo atari.Daira, ewaa a aoofcanflrio-30/r.ra * par «ea*. No aip• > train. Call W1-06>i

Explore the opportunities. Contact the participating recruiters In thisDIRECTORY and pleaae mention the Reglater

INVENTORY TAKERS — P/T.Tlnton Faaa atoraa DayTtma firCar nee. Wrtta b p . a phone no.lo ICC 4M. P O So* 527 Pare-

HOLMDEL CONVALESCENTCENTER

I M Hwy 34Holrnoal. NJ 07733

1201) Hf-4300

ALL HEALTHannncES. INC

laKWoarrwy•Mown, men

OOD ari-s4oo

FAMILY t CHUMS111

Long Branctv NJ. 07740(»1I 122^100

JANrrOfHAL — Local contractw pany looking lor lull

one aaanaia Ban* aeel Hoeneea muet Holmdal area. Cell

JAMTONAL - Worn. Pert/lulltime. 747-1140 or 223-2113.KENNEL HCLP - Pull timeApply at Berg Animal Hoapuolma i t . Maiawan. saa-auo

HEALTH117

- S u n s !Rao Sank. NJ 07701

1111

LPNe a HEALTH AIOU

Da LaSALLEHAU.

PEOPLE CAREOF SOUTH JERSEY INC

14* Broeo Si 'PO Soi M2SHad Bar>« NJ 07T01

MO-ltM

KITCHEN HELP — Por gwCooking, food prap.. general

LJneraa. NJ1201) aSM470

PeraanrX DaptMr FoMmullar

Partonnei RecruiteraflIVEBVIEW

MEDICAL CENTER35 Urtior. Straat

Red Bank N i .07701(201 ISM 2200/2222Work. 4 n.ghii and

gal paid lor 5on ma " lo ? sninDay Cara Center is

ava.iabia lor amptoreeachildren

f e e Parkmg

MANAGEMENTTRAINEES

Freehold, NJ 0772112011 710-aOM

Thermo* Corporation openingthroughout Ntit Iftolvtduaia

tn in aataa. ofl, for our com

Nusaaa /Fgs a Pan Tims

rajUTOr PPJVATIa y . LPVa. MA'S,

*Mftv99ata'eB

a|B°»?M i V a H r t * | m h O » ^ # 0 < r t

Cal (201) 7aS32

at o p p o r t u n i t y rprom thartno. ptut

For portonal tntorvHmicall Mon. » . M p m . MkMMown. NJ 07T4I

(101) «71-O177

A GREATWAY

IX)EARN$$$

If you live close by, are aHomemaker, College Studentor just seeking Immediate em-ployment to supplement yourIncome, we otter good payrates to individuals who canwork Full or Part Tlma on aFlexible schedule as a

• CHECKER • MARKER• MATERIAL HANDLER

NO E X P E R I E N C E ISNECESSARY. Will Train.

APPLY IN PERSONMONDAY THRU FRIDAYBetween 9 A.M.-4 P.M.

StembachsFASHION DISTRIBUTION CENTER

Industrial Way WestEatontown, Naw Jaraay

_ . . .Equal Opportunity E

WANTED!

News Correspondents!The Register is expanding its staff of night correspon-

dents to cover municipal meetings.

Experience preferred, but not necessary. We'll train.Payment per article. Join our aggressive, growing newsteam.

Help keep Monmouth County informed.

Contact: lane Foderaro or Cliff SchechtmanThe Register

One Register Plaza, Shrewsbury, N.J. 07701(201)542-4000

264-4646

MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986 The RegUtcr 131

51 HtlpWanttdHC8TURANT

DtNiNQ ROOM MO8TE88Msiure, ambitious, hard workingindividual wMh ptaaesnt per-sonality and neel i p p M n n c i tomeinisln our business diningroom, Salad and fixing bare, • .1help of preparation of foodQood starting salary, flexiblehour*. Apply In person or call.

Hoy Rodger* RMturentsMonmoutn Mall

Eaton town542-8827

ANDMlddleiown Shopping Canter

. Rt 3B

•71-9TM

SAUtn

ATTENTION!Please mention THE REGISTER

whan replying to a Registeremployment ad.

SALES PEOPLE — IniurancaExperience preferred, Appli-cations being accaplad. Call544-M 20 for appointmentE.O.E.SALES PERSON - 4 days oarwh including Sat. Exp. prerfered.Fair Haven Pharmacy 741-0038SALES CAREER OPPORTUNITY— Join the professionals. Wewent you If you want to work herdand be paid accordingly. 3 yeartraining program, salary d

l i e nlimited Ig pcommlaione

ynlimited. Income

iand career opportunity and fullbenefit package. We are one ofthe Isrgeel financial eervlce com-panies In the world Call KevirAurtemma. 528-8107 An EqualOppy Employer.

SALES PERSON - Full time,permanent position tor furniturestora. Hourly A com ml monOood opportunity for personwith experience but will trail

r individual. Cell for appLFurniture, Rt 35, Middle-

town. 747-5660.SALES HELP WANTED — ForTe(»-marketing Night hours.5-apm . Mon-Frl {*, to startLocated In Rad Bank Pleasantatmosphere interested i•42-fJM between 9am-5pm

SI HelpWantedSALES

membership sales Inproposed new golf dub. Pantime eves 6-8 pm and/or week-ends 10 am - 8 pm. Salary plusbonus. Call Barbara 7 4 7 - B M I

51 _H»lp Wanted

SCHOOL BUB DRIVERS - Pen-time 4 hra. dally. Stan at:

$7PERHR.Automatic increases. Bus Itcenee preferred, bul will train.Apply in person between 10 a.m.and 1 p.m. or 4 to 5 p.m., MurphyBus Service, 55 Longwood Avs.,Mlddietown

SECRETARY HIGHLANDSPLANNING BOARD

PART TIME POSITIONPerforms a variety of sdmlnls-Iratlve, clerical and typing dutiesAttends meeting end types trsn-scrlpt of minutes of meetingsfrom tapes, notes, etc. Reads,writes and speaks the Englishlanguage and has the ability toread and understand rules, regu-lations and (awe needed to per-

il the functions of the Plan-ning Board. As Scheduled,works In the Borough Hall givingout applications snd Informationand also receives applications,drawings, maps, fees nd otherdata for the Board. Position re-

ires approximately 32 hours ofwork per month and pays 2,300per year. Request for positionwith experienced resume shouldbe submitted to: Borough ofHlghlsnde, 171 Bay Ave., High-lands NJ 07732. Resume may bedelivered In person or by mall.

TELEPHONERECEPTIONIST

Full TimePermanent

>usy newspaper needs talentedndlvldual who can deal etfective-

with numerous in-comlngcalls, and take charge of someclerical duties. Wall train theIflht person for ihls exciting pos-tlon Apply in person.

The Register

An Equal Oppty. Employer. M/f

SECRETARY — pan time 3 daysper week. Must have good typingskills, knowledge of spelling sndgramer, good organizational andfollow up ability, positive attitudeand a pleasant telephone voice.Real Estate exp. deeireable ref-erence required. Call JoanParent Reallore 329-4114.SECRETARY — Mature woman.Hours 3pm-5pm 8 daya perweek. Typing, filing and phonescall 741-8141 or 741-614293

SALES HELP — Exc. lull timeopportunity for decorating chainwith store located in Red BankExp preferred but not necess-ary. Cell Mrs. Myies 630-3430.

SECRETARY — to the VicePresident of Administration. Exc.typ'st end Information pro-ceasing on computer, ex-perience necessary. Positionlocated at Sandy Hook. Pleasecall Mary Bsibach tor appoint-ment B72-130O starting Tue. Jan21.8HORT ORDER COOK — want-ed. Call 747-5876.

MANYPEOPLETHINK

WE OFFERThe moat remarkable Salescareers In the whole world.

BECAUSETypical first full year ea/nlnge

Are $20,000 to M5 000

YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED•High Income•Hospltallzatlon• Profit Sherlnr,

•Dental Plan

Dozens and dozens of ourpeople

sdvanca rapidly to earn annuallyUO.OOOor more a year

CAN YOU QUALIFY?•Age 21 or over?•SporiB minded?

•Ambitious for a career and not ajob?

•BondsWe with goodreference*'

Sell mainly professional 1Business

people tor a large oompany..TOP RATED

INIT8INDUSTRYII

MR. WEISS201-891-9580

Tues thru Thur10am-4pm

Equal Opportunity Employer

STAR LEDGER — Carriersneeded. Adult routes now avsll-sble Long Branch, Red Bsnk,Mlddlelown A most MonmouthCounty areas. Vou can earn (400or more each month If you are ateast in years of age. Earn extra

STOCK WORK — And delivery>er»on for health food store

747-3140 or 222-2113.SUBSTITUTE

MOTOR ROUTE DRIVERSAdults with reliable vehlclwanted to substitute on motoroutes In1 Llncroft-Holmdel2. Colts Neck

M snalapan-FreeholdFor more Information call542-4000. ext. 267 or 683-5210

SALES — And stock helpneeded daily 130-530. No feecharged Apply in person to JobServices. 46 E Front 8treet. RedBank.SALES PERSON — Full time forladies logging ahoea and aporta-

8 EaatApply in pt Front St.

in person to Klslln's,

SCHOOL FOOD SERVICEWORKER — Tlnton Falls area6-6 hours dally. Send qutnfica-ttons In writing to: Box 0-496The Register. 1 Register PlazaShrewsbury NJ 07701.

L E A N I N G - House, apartment.nd office Ceil Arllne al95-14M

CLEANING BY KARENome or Office. Reasonable. Re-able with Reference* Call72-1927.

TYPE BETTER — Experienceneeded for dey poeitionMetuchen 548-6180.TYPIST — or wordwilling to learn new equlpmen1

Qulkquallty Printing. 642-6223.VOLUNTEERS — Needed to selldrawing tickets lo rslse funds lorhe American Dlsbetes Assoc.

Please send name and phonei. to American Diabetes

Assoc P.O. Box 901. Keyport.NJ 07735WAITERS/WAITRESS — Bar

iders, cooks, dlah & buspeople. Call 872-1251. After 1

Aak for managerWAITRESS/WAITER — Must beaxp'd. Full a p*ri time weekends

From St. Red BankWAITER/WAITRES8 — full timeapply In person Sheraton Inn2870 Hwy. 35 Hajlei. NJ.WAITER/WAITRESS — supnighia apply In person. Red OakRestuarant. Hwy 35. Hailet. NJ,WATER CONSULTANT — 1ing water conditioning Co. e>imbltlous individual tor exceilsn;areer opportunity College Qrsd

preferred, but not necessary Ex-cellent commialon and beneflstructure.

Culllgen Wster ConditioningFreehold. NJ

Call 482-2202 for eppolntment.

52 Babysitting-Chlld Car*

BABYSITTER — Responsibleperson to care for 6 months oldIn my Red Benk home 2-3 dayper week Call evea 530-6632BABYSITTER — reeponsablemature woman lo babysit 3 moold In my Mlddlelown home. Retrequired. Call 830-9364 sfter6:00

BABYSITTING - Done Inhome. Excellent referencesReasonable rates. Will Sit Sitime. Call Weal Keansburg495-0752.

SUPERVISOR — Field Installe-ion. Process equipment mfg. re-

quires site supervisor to coordi-nate snd expedite mslsrlals andsubcontractors, lake full chargeof erection crew and be reepon-aible for quality and programcontrol, atari up equipment snd

i operators Experience co-ordinating material handling,electrical, mechenicel and mill-wrights desirable. Will train inour product line. Send resume toP. 0. Box 469. Rumeon. NJ07760

BABYSITTER - responsible caing woman to care for my 6 moold In my Liner oh home or youiI close. 2 days per week Muehave own trans and references

ilred. Call 642-3246.

SWITCHBOARD OPERATORS— 3pm shift or 11-7 shift Flex-bie hours. Exp. preferred, notnecessary. Must be dependable.Cell 741-4700.SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR —

Monday thru Friday. Per-nent. will train. 462-0H7.

TAILOR — Needed for dry clean-ing store In Matawan. Musi beexperienced Call 566-3232TEA CHER/ DECORA TOR . —Seeking creative person tor In-terior decorating. TrainingFull/pan time. 563-3712.TEACHERS — Math. English.Reading. All levels Inc. SATPrep. 3:30-5:30 p.m. now and/orsummer mornings Dedicated,experienced Call 222-4662TECHNICIAN — Oeejred to re-pair and maintain hardware in-ventory constating of televisions,betas, video piayere. laser, videodiscs, personal computers, anddot Matrix printers Most equip-ment is Som, some IBM. andApple. Call Sandy si 946-6790

TELEPHONE SALES - In RedBank. Pan time responsibleadult. Oood phone voice Wetrain. Permanent. Resume toP.O. Box 2157. Wesmeid. NJ07091-2157

BABYSITTER - Responsibleperson to watch 2 children dur

ig the day In my River PiesHome. Appro* 3 hrs per weakNon smoker only. Call 747-8548

CHILD CARE — Exp. woman tcare for my 4 mo. old girl. MonFrl. In my Mlddlelown home. Rerequired Call 957-0064.CHILD CARE — Maturelo csv« for school age childrerand do light house keeping iOak Hill section of MiddhtownMon-Frl. 7-6 hrs. per day Owntrans Please repty In writing 1box H407 The Register 1 registerplaza Shrews NJ 07701 PrcvldIng s description of yourselfyour background, salary require-ments. Tele, and sddress lor folow up.

INFANT CARE - and i.(housekeeping Loving womencare for my 3 mo. old boy in mWoodbndge area home- MonPit Must drive and have referen

760-6751I WILL — Welch yeur child In mhome. Any hours. Mlddlelownarea.787-1472.

53 Domestic H-»lpEXPERIENCED NJ CERTIFIENURSES AIDE — Will give goo<patiant care lo Genetics and Intents 16 per hour Call 495-562FREE ROOM — and bath in exchange to clean house oiweek Holmdel 946-9042HOUSECLEANING — Done byprofessional wonwn.able, dependable, hereferences Call '495-4254HOUSEKEEPER/COOK — 3 todays General cleaning, laund& cooking. Muat have own Iran4 references Rumson area CaJLenore 9am-5pm 367-0060

* Ponititlc HelpATURE WOMAN WILL CLEANOUR HOME — Experience acterenoee Call 671-8763 any

SltuatloneWanted Female

N J STATE CERTIFIEDNURSES AIDE

Will care torOoriatrto 6 InfantaCall evea 366-0612

EALERSHIP — With Nationalalntenanoe Corp. Assured Ac-

counts. Guaranteed 6600 weeklyinlmum Income. 615.000 fullice Financing available.

LIFFWOOD BEACH — Motherwould like to care for your childn my home Reas rstes. Lots of•p Call 663-5245.

LIQUOR LICENSEIghway frontage on 2.6 acreeoned for retail, office, food.Currently approved for 26,000

sq ft E»eileni trench lee or nkghl-

COMPANION AIDEExperienced, dependable,energenlc lady In her 40s is

looking to be companion lo aSenior Cltlien. Dey time workonly Car and references. Call

671-9263 after 9:30 am.OMPANION — For ederly orandicapped person, or Momselper N A. exp. Light house-leaning MWT-morn. After-oons Inquire 291-0903.

MIDDLETOWN — Antique shopNeveslnk on State Hwy. 36

djecent to comfortable ettrect-e home big wooded lot An-quee business snd inventory in-uded In prtoe. $225,000LESHER ASSOC. REALTORS

291-0919

EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER— Haa days avail Holmdel,Mlddlelown eree Own trans . ret.Csll anytime 496-2331-

HOUSE t APT. CLEANINGReasonable, reliable

6 references.Call 630-2963

HOUSE KEEPING — excellentwork excellent reference. RedBank area. Please call after 3:00542-5036.

KID KARE AGENCY — Special-zing In baby, pel » vacation sit-ing. House cleaning A party ear-ing. Day or evening. Licensed,

bonded a Insured. 747-2297.

NEEDA

JOBYou want to go beck to work, butyou have not found the Job that'sright for you. Put a SituationsWanted" ad In the Register now.and an employer may find you.A four line ad costs 6690 and Itrune tor 10 days. Call 542-1700and get your "Situations Wiad" ad working for you.

NURSE AIDE — Cempenlon wili-ng to sleep in at nights. From6pm lo 6 am. Pan time days alsoReferences a car. Call 530-4291NURSE'S AIDE — Wishes privateduty, 11-7. Tender loving care torelderly woman. Call Jackie,767-2890

RELIABLE — Hard working ladyto do house cleaning or takingcere ot elderly or sick person fornight hours Call after 6pm369-1822 .YOUNG WOMAN — Wlsneidomestic day work for busy oworking people Rei, exp., owntrans. Her furnished on requestCall after 4. 739-0831.

55 SituationsWanted Mai*

ARTIST — Commercial dentspsrl-tlms or full Urns work. Fsd portfolio Samples Sslsoopen Call M2-16SS attar a p

NEEDA

JOBYou want to go beck to work, buyou have not found the Job that'riant lor you. Put a "SituationWanted" ad in the Register nowand an employer may find youA four line ed coats 86.90 andruns for 10 days. Call 542-1701and get your "Situations Wanted" ad working tor you.

ODD JOBS ALL TYPESPainting, carpentary, maaonarytile, roofing, flooring, etc. Cell*63-6762.

56 SituationsWanted Male/Femal-

NEEDA

JOBYou want to go back lo work, buyou have not found the job that'right for you. Put a "SituationWanted" ad In the Register nowand an employer may find youA four line ad costs (8 90 andruns for 10 days Call 542-1700and get your "Situations Waned" ad working for you.YOUNG WOMAN— to po general house cleaning pan timenave reference* and treneportation Cell 389 1820

1 BusinessOpportunity

INVESTORS)!EDICAL CONDOMINIUM SITE46.000 sq ft. approval Walk-

3 distance to Monmoutn Medl-Center. Offered at 618 60/sq.will build to suit CHOKOV

EALTOR8 747-0221

AWN MOWER BUSINESS 4TOCK FOR SALE. CALL AFTERPM 787-0760.

71 Merchandisefor Salt

BETA VIDEO MACHINE — 11603 months old. 642-6632.

BUFFET(serve*) Oak.

English Country styCall 531-6460

IREWOOD — Cherry. Oak.Maple, ssMonsd 1 year, split de-livered I 1 M Oeuranleed fuNcord Call 871-9684 or 871 -7571.

CARPETING — Wall to wallMe)w mill liquidating entire•took. Brand new 100H nylon

1 3 rooms, living, dining,bedroom lo 414 eq ft. 669. in-cludes custom pedl Install ftfinsnee avail Call Barry1-600424-1326.

IREWOOO • 8TOVEWOOD —ULL CORD OAURENTEED OftEEP THE LOAD FREEI HARD

WOOD CHUNKS PICKED UP60 PICK UP LOAD. KELLYLUNKETT 872-6011.

FIREWOODSpin end delivered Days,

41-7072; eves. 542-6221

CHECK THIS OUt...Qet more readers to check outyour sd with a CHECK at the topand/or bottom of your copy. CallThe Register Classified Depart-ment today for details. 642-1700.

CHILDREN8 CLOTHING — half

COPIER — Cannon NP 120.tiOOO firm. Call Mon-Frl 9-6.563-2100.

ESTURANT/TAVERN — Finefiore town. Seat 26 et Bar, 90 InInlng room. Full kitchen,roaees 300.000 • rental In-

come, loads ot off street parking,inanclng lor qualified with100.000 down

a t Q Realtors 631-2000SERVICE STATION — Pt Plant

"If- Wreckers equipment ftlock. 640-4394 after 7.

62 MortgagoaLOW RATES

st Mtg. refinancing, 72 hour sp-rovale, 2nd Mtga ft Corp Loans

(ramer FlrTI 364-5096

63 Monay to LoanERASE BAD CREDIT

+ get VISA/Msstercsrd Cell39-2246 between 10am-6pm

FORECLOSURECOUNSELING

CONFIDENTIAL 872-0061

COPIER - Bond. 1060. 18 moe.old. Lite new. Hardly usedPaper, toner Incl 6960. Ceil efter6pm, 671-6720.CORNING RANGE - sett clean-Ing ovendltk>nt175 BCOUCH — Brown, upoMared6176. Cell 571-9420CROCHETED DOLL CLOTHES— Including Cabbage PatchSend 6200 tor oatotogue. Send8.A.8.E. to Llttte Thing*. POBox 696. New Monmouth, NJ07746.DESKS. FILES — Tsblea. chairs,storage cabinets, computertables, otnoe equip., etc. albargain prtcee. New or usedA AC DESK OUTLET, 1706 Rt36. Oakhurst 631-3990.DINING ROOM TABLE — 40X60with 12' leave ft pad 6 matchingchairs Excellent conditionHardwood maple. 6260. Call747-3829.

71 Merchandisefor Sale

AIR FLOW METER — Pan2268N4213. Never been used.

Fits 76, 77, 76. Dataun 260Z642-6474.ANTIQUE CLOCK - Ship modal,ship lantern. Hi-Boy, desk,wicker, setee, armolre, set ofchairs, paintings, framee, HI-FI,an book, lamps, Dental cabinet,good misc. Call 842-3540APPLIANCE8 — Refrigerators,wishers ft dryers. Reconditionedft guaranteed. 1100 ft up. Candeliver. You've seen the rest,

buy the beet) 630-2997.

DINING ROOM — NewThomaeville Contemporary BurlAsh/Tawny. Pecan solids. Break-front (S'4 ft. w.) 2 display piers(illumlnsied. mirrored, beveiedglass, 6 adjustable heavy glassshelves), center 4-drewer console, large tinted mirror, 3-waylight bridge. Table curved rectangle beveled mirror top, 2 mlrrored 20* leaves, custom padsChelre 8 Oval cane beck, antiquewhite cushions. (4000 (orig$7550) 671-0630.

DINING ROOM SET — MovinBWalnut table. 3 leaves, pads, 6chairs, chins closet, buffetbench with ber. Exc. cond11100. Call 741-6328.DINING ROOM SET — Blrohgiasa topped table, 4 chairs. 6 ftserver. 1260. 571-6420.

APPLIANCES — Refrigerators,washers ft dryers. Reconditionedft guaranteed. 6100 6 up. Candeliver. You've seen the reel,now buy the beett 530-2997.APPLE II C — Computer withmonitor ft stand. Programs BestOffer. Call 229-6477 or 229-0031after 4 p.m.APRICOT RUG - Bigetow An-iron nylon. 11n12fl As Is. 6100.747-7974.ARM CHAIR — Beautiful, small,

in upoistry. Louie the XVtnstyle. Like new. asking 1160.Carved Soepetone bookende660. Cell 736-4717.ATARI 600XL - Computer ft re-cord, $110 2'* gal. fish tank withn . SIScod, $niter, heater. Call 671-6366.BABY ITEMS — Perego coachcarriage-US. Playpen-420.Gerry tote beelnett-614. Babyswing-lid. Baelnett w/ eklrt-S30.All mint cond. 747-6422.BEDROOM

XSPJt747-7919.

FURNITURE

BEDROOM SET — King et2e.Medtterraneen. Muat M i l Bestotter Call daye 747-2920 or evee64J-0779.

DISHWASHER - Hot Pcunder-counter, avocado, 160.pool tab*, 160 Oriental rug. 6x7•35 Marble bathroom elnC. 421

960 Rabbit apara Mra 1 man)• 10. 20" B O M stinger blka. • »2 dog cegee. 916 aa Cad6304199 after1 p.m.

DOORtiding glaaa Tharmopana door

Can 747-7313DRYER — EkKtrtc. 960. Suipump, padaaiat typa. 936. Bicyda,w/dual

MtrchandlMfor Sal*

MtrchandlMJarSaja

MOTOR CYCLE — 1964 HartayDavtdaon. Black XLH eponater.000 oca many extra's. Low

94000 Firm Call

MOVING — Rattan FurnliursI In Italy, glaaa top tabla. 2chairs 4 chatra. aota wrltti

Ottoman. Tan ahaM unit. btc.Cond. 9090. Call 741-6329

FIREWOODOaya.

MOVIMO — Immadlata aalaDianwaaiw 920 waanaf'dryar

16 aaoh, both 926 Savarala bada, 910 aaoh. Oraaaarcouon and chair 960 Call

222-3023

REEZER — Commarclal chaalhava ortg Into, papara aKC. cond.9900 942-11B! attar 4:00pm .FREEZER — 13 cubic ft 9390. 1SMvaraad lyowrttar wtth corractotypa 9190. CM 2ea-«67»

PIANO — Cat-la Naiann aplnatExe. cond 91100 or baat oftar.Call waakdaya 677-4409 or avaa2141.9606

QE UprgSlaap aota

REEZER - Uprlghl 9300Hurcullna haat 6 maaaaga ra-cunar 9126. Braaa glaaa bambudlnatta 9300. Color to- TV 912626 BTU A/C. *orka graat 976. 1window A/C 920 aach. Plna tablawith 2 chalra 990. Full alia Itaad-board. trama. buraoa 6 mlrroraCan 496-6949.

PROFESSIONAL DOQ OROOM-NQ TABLE — brand new. B/O

excelled 671-1839

FURNITURE — Sofa, chair, prow-nclal. Raollnar/rockar. Qoodcond Call 630-9471 aftar4:30pm.NEW GAS FURNACE ~ In thabo«. 76.0OO BTU'B. 9660.•taiiad wtth traa day/nkahtIharmoaUt. Call 291-9944.FURNITURE — Chalra. aofa axe.cond. Radlnar/rocxar Qoodcond Cat! 530-3472 I4:30pm.FURNITURE — Rattan wtckarand plna. Dining, dan. and porchaala Jan. claaranca 20-60H onTha Wlckar Baakat. 69 Rt. 34.Colta Hack. 492-9966GUITAR — Harmony Flying VWood grain tlnlah Qraat tor ba-glnnara. 9160 Call 797-9M6bafora 11am.HANDMADE SWEATERS ANDVESTS — For Cabbaga Patchdoiia Saw awaatara alaonaaannahla 229-6996.HAVE — An unwanlad Itam ortwo you'd Ilka lo aan? An ad thlaalia for 10 daya. luat 96.90. CallTha Raglalar Claaalflad642-1700.

HAY — Oood quality mlxadRaaaonably phcad "avallabla 936-4062

IBM TYPEWRITERSRENTAL 929 6 up par monthRarti-opuon to buy 747-1661JACKET — origional Bombaruaad 1 Wlnlar Exc quality alia39. 960 Call 797-0711.KEROSENE HEATERS - 7000BTU and 10.000 BTU. 6 gal can50 gal botba. all naw condition9126 tor all. Antlqua bath tubwhtta on taga, 976. Traftunidoor. 19*X9'V compMta 920Carl 741-4072.KITCHEN TABLE — Butcharblock tlnlah with 4 chalra Aafclng9160 Call 291-2310KITCHEN SET — 4 chalra 960291-4944.

boya. 20". 125 Oaa grinual burnar. $60. 200-oeoJ

ELECTRIC DRYER — Eladricoountar top IBM typawrtnar. B/Omorna 671-4566.

EXTENSION LADDER40* aluminum

Call 767-4919SEASONED FIREWOOD — Cord9126. Pick-up or dallvary Smallamounts 60a a tog Pick-up onlyCall 330-6630 aftar 6.FIREWOOD — All hard wooda.Oat. Aah. aoma Lseuat. Winalack and dattvar lor 9126. Call946-2*12.

FIREWOOD291-3746 aM

— For4pm.

FIREWOOO. MASONED — 690HALF CORD. 8PLIT A DE-LIVERED CALL BETWEEN 9 AM9 9 PM 462-7663

LEATHER JACKET — Blacmarts alia 42 rag. Brand naw

. Call 797-1962LIVING ROOM FURNITURE -

imaaaat chair 9 ottoman, andand tabkM.Exoatlant condition9660. Call 969-0360LIVING ROOM SOFA — 9 arooMr. uphotatarad chaircouch. 2 naarty naw chaat ofdraws. 26- color TV 9100 12X20living room rug 930. WsrdrobaQE waahar 940. gas dryartsoSllvar wara, knenan utanallapots 9pans. Call 642-0136 or

MINK COAT — FuH lengthAutumn Haze. Size 12. Exc condltton, rarety worn. Ortg 16000now S1S00 Cell 22t-«242.

MIXER — Sunbaam EMetronlc360-wn. haavy-duty. 2 bowldough hooks, food armdar atacnmant. Llka naw. Coal 9196Sacrfflca. 978. 261-3949.

71

POOL TABLE - Baara BaalGrand Prix. 4x9 wood wall rack.cua aocka. 2 sals of baas, nawoond. 9400 Can altar 6pm971-7742

DRIENTAL RUO - 9X12, bird*aoa with aland. Rival Convac-on ovan. Can 466-1193 or97-6129.

P1NBALL MACHINES — B<Ing. baaaball. aubmarlna. Makaan oftar I cant rafuaa. Call

71-3163 anyama.

RAILROAD TIE6 — 6x9x9.96.40;7x7x9 97.90 Praaaura-traatad.

9 99.79; 7x7x9 910 46900-923-9707 Can MlvsrREFRIGERATOR — 16 Cu. FtWhlta, frost traa. Paid 9696 aakng 9900 or b/o. Must sail Call222-7369. .REFRIGERATOR — QE 12 Cuba9129. 17 cubic It. 9200 Slda bySlda QE 9376. 261-1727.REFRIGERATOR - Almond 20cu. ft. lea makar. Whirlpool. Laaathan a yr old. 9400 797-3696.R U G S - 2 ruga graan wool «X1• 12X12 axe cond. call 942-2341aftar 6:00.SANYO — Portabta dothasdryer. Hardly uaad. Exc. condAsking 660 496-3969 or739-0237 10-6pmSAW — Radial arm aaw goodcond 9200 739-0210.

MtrchandlMfor Salt

SEARS - Car atarao AM/FMtana playar w/equaJtzer 4

apaakars. Asking 9100.496-0794

SKIS - Oynaaiar Omaglaaa 2Slta 200 with racing trtaMa baid-nga Exc cond 9100. Can872-13776KI BOOTS —Ladkts/boya. alia 6M uaad only2 wks. 946 firm Can avaa.942-2261

SNOW PLOW 54 'For Cup Cadal IH

Plow 9 chalna 9100Can 942-3242

SOFA — 6 matching love seatBeige wtth earth tone print. Con-dition exoaHanr 9326 Can971-0319 evee

SOLO FLEXBody building eyetam.

Llks naw. 6300.Call 642-6690.

SOLID OAK — 14 ft Lkitchen cabinet, oven, range,dlehwaaher and sink Beet offer707-78*4. TEREO — Kenwood with BBRfloor speakers Call 366-1104.STOVE — OE alaetrlc serf clean-Ing dbl oven copper tone exc.cond. 6260 C U 642-6045STOVE — Yellow Crown gas.9100. White whirlpool gas dryer.960 Yellow philco ig cu. 1 re-frigerator. 9200. Mediterraneandining room eat. 9960. Call971-1614TIRES - 4 9X15 OoodyeerRangier Radlsla llks naw 9260Coffee IsMe mirror topped 9sided Oak. matching and tables9460 Can Qlenn 632-2971 alter4:00.TIRES — 5 new Qoodyesr Vectorall season radlals. aiie 106 75RlS 9200. Cham aaw. Homeiltasuper EZ. 16ln. bar 9100. Callaftar 6pm 776-6664.

We Have TheMERCHANDISE

to buy or ->eU

4lin«.10D.ye.$690

542-1700

II the Hem advertiMd i« not told withinthe Urst 10 day. o( your paid chufficd adwell run your ad 10 ADDITION/U.DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREE!

If you* M«« to not M>ld within 10day*), c«ll MB) to ransrw yottr »vd.

H I M ana *»m »er a* Mr no" enrnme-c* »M O"t|i

The Register

BEDROOM SET - Colonial stylehutch, dresser with mirror, chestdraaaar. queen alza bed withbookcase mirror headboard.mattreaa, box aprlng. Call daya730-0449 avaa 442-0961.BED — Single Double mattreeeBresa frame Seldom uaad. 960.Call 264-4149.

BED — Queen-sued Springtop quality. Mattreea. box springsnd frame Included. Aekl1296 Exc cond. Call 41leave mssssga.

On Friday, February 14th,your wife, husband, boyfriend or girl friend, sister,brother, mom, dad, grand-parents or children will bethrilled to find a messageof love for them on St Val-entine's Day In the Regis-ter's ...

Love-O-GramSection

SAMPLE 2 INCH MESSAGE Includes CupW or HssrtNctits. fkm IW mi tfscW pnfiM

Valentine Love-O-Gram ICompote your own message below I

Use 9eperata Addtaarial Peaer fl Maciaiary

I took at you. you took si ms.each time you paas me by.

It reatty trustrstse me-my secret love.I cant say more to you man. Hi!

Debbte

9

9

Business DirectoryA DAILY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES

379 Accessories 456 Carptt InstallationCALL U8I — We can menutec-

ire all types ot pocketbooks.clutch 9 travel bags, cocases, etc Call 630-6741

JIM'S CARPET INSTALLATION— Sales, cleaning, re-lays, re-

2644177.

3S0 AccountingGARY MAYBURY — Public Ac-countant. Accounting, book-keeping 1 tax service. 642-0646.

471 ComputerServices

INCOME TAX PREPARATION -Federal, NJ. NY Tax PlanningAssociates. 747-6176.

439 AutoTransport

O 9 M AUTO DRIVEAWAYWe will pick-up or deliver yourcar anywhere In the U.S. For In-formation caH 201-970-2663.

442 Barf ndlngBARTENDERwaddings- Prh_._quets-etc. Fully axp. 736-0496

forparties-Ban-

aflar 6 p.m. Serving all Countlea.

444 BathroomRemodeling SCeramic Ti l*ALL TILE AREAS

Expert professional repairs9 bath remodeling since 1666

Bob Aklua. 290-O3B7CERAMIC TILE CONTRACTINGBaths, showers, wans 6 floors.Prompt service Free eatlmaleeCall anytime for spot 296-9166.NEW CERAMIC TILE * REPAIRSRegrouting. replacing nxturesReesonable prices. FREE sstl-

I 630-7214

447 CarpentryCARPENTER - 11 yra ax-partenoa. Addwone. dormers,decks, garages snd alterationworn. tTeaarinerila raise Canafter 6pm. 797-1419.Custom Carpentry rough orflnshed work to suit yournssds.References available Can630-6310.

FULL UNEHOME IMPROVEMENTS

NO JOB TOO SMALLFREE EST CALL 736-9607

HOME CRAFTSMAN — Carpen-try, woodwork, lobe done with

small tor others? Cell KenSoderlund. 696-2971 efter 5 p.m.

JO-JO WOODWORK'SAdd-ons. Additions. Paneling.Painting, Decka Patios Laratalk. CaH Joe Union (16 yra.exper) 797-2236KRU6IS CONSTRUCTION CO

Complete Bunding 9 reno-vations, new 9 old. Addinona.kitchens, bathe. 741-1060.NEW — And old work Rooms,sddrnone. repairs, remodeling,decka. haaanienta etc. No lob toemeu. 747-6023 after 6pm.PANELING — Doors, windows,remodeling. repeira. minorplumbing 9 alec. Reson RateFree sax. 264-1106.

BUILDERS — Rerooflngspecial. 666 par sq. Altaratjona.Free seta Local Refs. Promptservice 767-0071 anytime.

450 Csrpet ClesnlngA-1 EXPERT Carpet Cleaning

upnoistery cieening Heeeonableratee Morna Hoffman, 747-0209or 942-7406.

DATACOM ComputW Servtoeei oonaudlng

llero A mini sys-ere-eoftwere sup-

piiee or advtoa. 671-8706.

Programmingspedallsta. MIC

4S0 ConstructionED DAY CONSTRUCTION -Quality builders since 1949. Over1000 satisfied customers. Re-modeling and alterations apeciel--'- 741-1144. Your fob Is next)

500 DecksD4D CARPENTRY — Pro-feeelonsl renovstera Windows.doors, kltcnena. batna. akyllgnts.decks Complete home remodel-ng. Free ssomales. FuHy In-aured Cell 671-1974.

506 Disc-JockeyTRU-2-LIFE

Musics) productions spedeloingm dlsoo. dub enasrtalnmenl,weddlng/recepnona Can Tony642-6001 or Ron 642-3746.

529 EducationFINANACIAL AID ASSISTANCEWe specialize In filling out thefinancial SM form. Call Rich sfter6 pm. 741-7646.

530 ElectrlcelServicesSEST ELECTRIC

6273. Fast dependableservice Rsaaonabls rates. Free

CMI 671-0121.STEINER ELECTRIC — N.J. Lie7641. "Industrial. 3-HR. EMERGENCYSERVICE. 741-2341.

565 Fireplaces ftWoodstoves

FIREPLACES-WOOD STOVESChlmneya. brick hearths 9 wslls

Brick, stone, block, concreteRepairs. J. Sleek. 261-0097

501 HaulingHAULING — Local or long dla-tenoe. Rubbish removal. CaH463-3960 day or Mgfn

505 Horn*Improvements

CARPENTRY AND MASON —Work. Vinyl awing, kltchena.bathrooma. and all types oteditions. CaH 699-9361.

DUST BUSTERS — Commercial,reeklentlal Floor waxing, carpelshampooing, general cleaningAct nowl 946-9696.

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

You call we enow ire ee simple asthet Mike 466-2716. SHI466-0666

JOHN ROESINQC ot 0 Specialists

Interior-Exterior Home RepelrNo Job To Smsll

466-2006NEED NEW CEILINO87

i CaH "Hang It AS"630-6916

505 Horn*Improvements

675 Odd Job*

Total Renovation Const. IncAdditions, windows, vinyl siding,design servtoe. Free eeomatea

Call 736-2969

A-1 ODD JOB SERVICE — Ex-pen home repeira Fully InsuredCaH 630-9611

600 House*Office. Clesnlng

F6S CONTRACTING — Rooting,painting, siding, bathrooms,lessmenta. No lob to small. CaH

Man. 294-6699 Free estimates

MAID FOR YOU CLEANINGNot enough Time for

Thlnge you want to do.RELAX CaH 366-1113Let us do the cleaning for you

660 Painting ftPaportianglng

ALLOCCA BROS - Custompslnung Service. lnlertor.o>-

r Free estimates Inaured

OFFICE CLEANING - Hoursflexible. Dependable Reason-sole raise. CaH AngaM 797-3274

606 Income TaxFEDERAL AND STATE

BUSNES6 AND PERSONALPrepared completely Over 30years In MktdkMown area. CaHor appointment. 971-1266Margery Trovato

INDIVIDUAL PACKAO.E-1040

VBusiness retae upon requestPrscarer enrolled to prscUcs

before IRSEvelyn Griffiths. 530-9349619 Ker6sene

HeatersALL makes of Kerosene I teetersServiced- Moet Wlcka 9 Parta In

738-0699' j f 669-6091

624 Lawn SprinMef.MORNING DEW — -Sprlnktera* Specializing In Ser-vtce 9 custom Instsllstlon ot

625 Landscapinga Lawn Car*

LANDSCAPING - Spring clean-Qood

Can741-9341. ask for Bruce.WINTER CLEAN UPS — Cam.pleea lawn service. Isndecapedeetgn 6 conetrucoon. Alao enowremoval Convacta. 741-6136

685 Light HaulingA A DEMOLITION — Clean upyards, cellars garages, guttersCut trees CaH 644^9102. Free

A MAN 4 TRUCK FOR HIREPick up 6 deliver Light haulingSmaH moving |obs. Atoca.cellars, gutters cleaned. Free es-timates C*a 466-1697

BEITS CLEAN OUT SERVICEFree eetlmetee. AH kinds o

ut service 666-0939CLEAN YARDS

CeHara. ancs a gar seesFrae estimates

741-2146

650 MasonryMASON-CONCRETE WORKSide—Iks, psboe. drtvewisteps. Mock 6 brick Free a i tmatea. CaH M at 769-9214

665 Moving ft8torage

TEACHERS MOVING INC. — BUor amaH Uoanaed 6 InsuredPis630-1333.

ALL TONEPAINTING

747-0723

B. A. CRAWFORDPAPERHANQER

222-6964J.L.'a Painting Plue Inc.

Winter rates. 26% off all workFully Insured. ReferencesFree Estimates 642-6663

PAPERHANGING

The Feminine TouchFree Eel. 741-6660

TOP DOG - Paper 9 Paint In-tenor 6 exterior, home, office

~ 6 6 7 UWE PAINTING CO - Call Willis229-5019 The Happy PainterFree set FuHy Insured. 20 yrsexp. Res or oomm.

60S Plumbing »Heating

PLUMBING — Nights, weekendsonly Work done SI YOUR CON-VENIENCE. Repairs, drain ©teen-Ing 6 replacements Lie 97292Answer machine 463-3126

720 SawingMachine

RepairsSEWING MACHINES SERVICED6 REPAIRED. TREE ESTI-MATES 40 YEARS EX-PERIENCE. CALL 741-7448.

722 Singles

DATES — For sincere slnglee

Dates, 40 Cindy Lane. Suite 5Ocean. N.J. 07712

739 Wall APaporlngWAUPAI _

Clean, vary neat workCell Rich 496- H X

740 Traa ServicesWOODY-S TREE SERVICETree 9 ahrub trimming 9

removel. Fully Inaured. Freeestimates. CeH 630-1912.

756 Typing ServiceProfession* word proceestng

R L t t , ReportsMelange

PAR EXCELLENCEShrewsbury. 741-6700 snvttme

TYPING SERVICE — W a i typereports, resumes, lettera endes!T>oet enyViktQ alee Ceil693-9490

4 LINES - 30 DAYS ONLY $ 4 9 ^ 0 CALL 542-1700

MlMONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986

71 Mtrchandlstfor Silt

SOFA — 9 pc aacHonai ooodCO** $75261-474S

CaN after 1:00

SOFA - ootd attpad wtoat.6T8 Ratrigaralor, good oood,$100. Conaol ootor tv. 860 Dtn-infl room tabta, 6*8. 542-Saio

TOOLS — I in Dunlap Woodi-atha. Kay machtna, 10 apaadMia, bolt cunari. Crow ban.wranchaa. raiehsrta, and manym*yty mora hand loota ataoittrm window* and acraaii m-aaria. 3/4 Condon. 3/4 roundataal. S/4 piping and mraadadrod and much much mora,222-1837

TVSony. 72' color projaction TV.mint oondWon. $1600. CaN»*3?a Spm,

TVPorubU. COW, IT", I12S. Con-•oto a- S17J. Can »1-1717

TV. Zsnath

OS.VACUUM.KlrOy. 3 montfta owatlachmanta, ahampooar a but•ST. W4W or Daat otM>, 21VEND4MO - MacMna. 4Da»atag«a. I S M LIU na». Andloudapaakar. Cau 544-0200VIKINO - mow blowar 20modal 104)202 4 ftp IandStranorr angina. Aa It.Can aflar 830pm 747-0673

CUFFWOOO — Kan Oardana 1and 1 bdrma avallaWa a» mottleno ma. Can MUCHFAIP. HAVIN — Small cottagatoe rani. U M • u l n a . Call2tl-»n7

HIOHLANDS2 bdrm, kid4. won't laM 400 aMRS MALTY. Mr Mt-1294

HIGHLANDS1 bdrm. child ok. WOO

2 bdrm. waMrvMo »4001JUST RENTAL*. H i M*-166>

KEANSBUM .i. includad.

Call 7*7-7306

- 1 bdrrrNo pals

KEANBaHJM — Nawty daoor-aiad. 3 rma. No pata 6400+Adutta only. 466-0367.K E A N U u m — Modarn 3

m. Litgt living rm 6 diningrm. Naw knenan. wall to wailcarpal No pan M M * 2 cftil-dran OK 4M-0M7KEYPORT — 2 bdrm apt. Avail-aWa Fab. 1, 6660-tuW. Sacurltyand ralarancai. Can alHt Spm7W-46J7

KEYPORTI bdrm. graal plaoa »300 •

M R S REALTY. Bkr 3 I H 1 KKEYPORT — apaoloua 1 bdrmgardan apt (400 plua mo. 1/2aac Can 264-6721.

WALL UNIT - 130. Ouaan M aplatform bad'wlth matraaa whna•70. Vary736-4766

good oond. Call

WASHER 6 DRYERQE. Larga capacity

i l U l o bomCall 281-1727

FURNITURE — Roll arm chouch.ourgandy vahal 175 Coftaatabta M0. Mohagony Kltchantabu 175. 2 Oak arm cham MO.Rough! Iron knenan u b x 6 2chair* MO. Starao. ampuiyar.•Pamirs 1126. Call S72-273OWASHER » DRYER - SaauWlHblack couch, 6-drawar draaaarWhlta badroom aat tnpladraaaar. 2 mlrrora. cnasl. 2 nightnand*. haadboard. ciiiaan ahamattraaa. Kllenan tabla. 3 chain.1 bar Moot. Saara karoaanaha«ar. t42-iois

WATER HEATER — 60Uaad 1 yr.

gallon«tso

Machinery forSale

GRAVELY TRACTOR — 7 6 puHatari, rum Uka naw. withM anow Mada. rotary

. 2 raal mowart, rotaryptaw. aulky. 11476 or I /O. WillaaBaa paekaga or aaparata Call

VIKINO — anow Mowar 20 W.modal 100202 4 h p Brlw*andStratton angina H—da workaaklng $100 C d 5 07*7-0*73

angina H—da workCall idaf 5 00pm

77 Pats andLivestock

ADOPT OTHELLO3 yr. otd EngUan Cockar

wondartuJ I

Advancad AndBaglnnara

DOG TRAININGBayanora Dog Club, 741-8046

CHINESE SHAN • » - puppMaMac* and rad fawn wnatpad11-20-as Sira Bruea Law'Tandam Shar iactt Dam BruoaLaaa' Cho-Baa A (dtno daugh-ter) Call aflar 0pm waakdayaAnyiima•J&266-1S60.QOBERMIN — Shapard mixMai* 1 • I2yaarr Fraa to goodloving homa Has good dlapoai*tlon Call aftar Spm 264-4016FREE KITTENS — To a goodrtoma 222-6411

KEYPORTft room*, kids OK 6600't

JUST RENTALS, Bttr M t - I t tLONG BRANCH — 9 room gar-dan. 1 bdrm. Haat. hot watt* ftcarpatlng me Naar ooaan fttrana. Ktaal location for atngla orooupta. 571-14S9,

LONG BRANCHOood araa. UWa paid 83006 room, diahwaahar. $400'*7 room, kidt/pau OK S500

JUST RENTALS. Bkr 360-15S5LONG BRANCH — 1 bdn*47B/montti + i month aac. Also2 bdrm apt. $876/mo +1 monthM C Both nawfy ramodalad. Haat•nd hoi wstar incl 571-3250

LUXURY GARDEN APTS. - 1badroom BMutlful kandacaptngPool. 1 ml. tram 08P. Call264-1K46. ft-S. Mon-FrlMATAWAN — Qtann Oardant 1bdrm* avallabta haat and hot

MIDDLETOWN/BELFORO - 5room 2 bdrm dupM* lor max 3paopM 6600 plua aae. 6 i "

MIDOLETOWN — Townhou** 3bdrm. 2+12b*th, dining roomftrapiaoa In iMng room, lull baaa-

t l t d 11000ftrapaoa gmant. prlvata yard 11000» 5 5 » i of 063-4400

Dill

RED BANK — Luxury 2 bdrmtown rwHJs* Wan to wall carpating Dtahwaah«r, waahar, drysipatto. Parking. $700+830-7300RED BANK — Luxury 1badroomi w/w carpatlng, dish-waahar. $425-475 * utttwa* Can530-7300

102 Houtts for rtnt

LONG BRANCHOood araa. uUkt paid. $300 •f room, dlahwaanaf. $400 t

Ida/pata O.K. $500TAL8. BkrJUST RENTA 1555

RED BANK — Towar Hill araa ibdrm Colonial, wall to wall, flra-itart. panaliad baaamant.,round* malntainad by ownar.'aaaa. no pau 8660/mo741-8182 avaa.

RED BANK2 family, chHd OK. $400-a

M R S REALTY. Bkr 3MM234RUMSON — 2 bdrm, IN. room,klichan, utii room, cantral A/C.aro* yard $700 plua utMl CsH

SCENIC DR - Atlantic Mtgh-anda. 3 badrooma, living 6 dln-ng rooma. rac room wltn bar. _-car garaoa. 2't batha. 61.000

irlty.

SEA BRIGHT2 bdrm. kida, only $400'i

M R S REALTY, Bkr 3S9-1234TINTON FALLS — Park Placa 2-badroom, V/k-bath Oaraoa, airconditioned, fully carpatad $775par mo. No patt 6SS-0f3S.

UNION BEACH3 bdrm. klda. pat*, only $

M R S REALTY. Bkr 369-1234UNION BEACH - 3 bdrm., 1bath. Nica araa Carpatlng, g uhaat i appllancaa Larga yardwith drtvaway $700 par mo +

i. Call 2*0-0080 aflar 8pmUNION BEACH — 3 bdrm,$750/mo. Security ft referencesNO pats- Couple preferred264-3730WEST LONG. BRANCH — Newlux lownhouee 2-3 bdrms, (prtvmaatar auite). Ipic , 2 1/2 bath allappii pool and tannla incl.dacka. $i i45 futile (201)761 -4*07 avea 542-7750 da ftwknda.

103 Rentals toShare

Dtecreet non-amoklng. gay whilemala, looking for aama to aharafurnished 2 BR ranch, naarParkway. $260. mo. plua haltutii. 1 mo. aacurlty Reply Bor31. Brick, NJ M7-23FEMALE — looking tor roommale to tnare apt in Atl Hglnda$250 includes utll Call 872-9090after 5:30.FEMALE — Apprrox 25,10 Share2 bdrm apL in Highlands$350+aac Inc. heat, hoi watar

dCaH 8

ooking72-1927

gee Avail, immadKaren.

MALE — to share 2 bdrm apt. InUnion Beach. $250 a mo plusetec mcludea haat ft hoi walAvail. 2-1-S6 CallJohn 264-8706eve*. 212-908-9283 dayiRUMSON — Female non emokerto share furnished home $325CaJt 747-6K1.RUMSON — Apartmant to ahara.$300 • halt ulils Deposit re-quired. Call 756-9652 leavemessage with snswer machine

131 Houtts for SaltCOLTS NECK — BuHdara own 4

n.. 3 full balhi, 26 tt. maaiarbdrm.m 36 tt. llv room, formal

room. 24 ft. •titcrvan with cut-torn cabtnaU. family room, wall

•piaoa, 2 i car garag*. ullltorn, almoat 2 acr«a Asking lor

ottara in th* low 8200aMELMED REALTORS 736-4000

CUSTOM- BUILTNearly new conlempcwsiy Varyuntque hill side home with wood-tend views Dan with fireplaceEat-in- kitchen opens to sundeck 3 bdrma. 2'4 baths Con-venient M.ddletown Location.Juat reduced to $806,000

CENTURY 21 COZENS. Realtorsindependently Owned'OperaiedBiSRtver Rd Fair Haven

741-7666FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP — Cue-tome Ranch, 3 bdrms, large cor-ner lot, beautiful area Close toSchools. Stores, Trsne andChurch**. Principals only,$136,500. Call 462-5642 attarSGOVERNMENT HOMES FROM$1 — (U repair) Also delinquenttax property Call1 •006-087-6000 Ext QM-9454 torinformation

HAZLET — Prime area $120'sBeautiful 3 bdrm townhousawith 19 ft. maatar bdrm.. 1'4baths, 19 ft iiv room, 18 ft. for-mal din. room, larga aat inkitchen, sky light, tow gas bill,tenced In yard. Must seeMELMED REALTORS 739-4900

KEAN8BURQ — Shall. 20x66 '.Must be rettnlshed Ideal for alarge family Buslnees amuse-ment tone. Call after 6,787-0626LITTLE SILVER — Hare's yourticket lo a happy Ufa in LimaSilver A nicely updated 4 bdrm,2 bath cape with new kitchen andadlacant dan with fireplaceBaeemem, attached garaga, andfantastic location $177 600. E.AArmstrong Agency. Realtor 556Prospaci Ave. Lima Silver741-4600

270 AutoStrvlct/Partt

CRAIQ6RS SS — * * Of 4chroma lugs $360 or B/O ataopair 14 in. snows Ilka new $150Call 787-4449

FORD — 70 Maverick good en-$100 takes Itl Call

FORD - Pinto wagon 74 Goodmotor and trans first $200 take*

RADIATOR — for 74 Pinto $36ft and trans. ISO. Call

566-7262RADIATORS — for 66 * '71Ford. 696. CaH 566-7262VW PARTS — Trana. rebuilt en-gine, fiberglass flair fenders, sunroot and cowmu seats, etc Call495-1642 eves _^_^__

— 1970 Bug. 73 VW Bug, 79Caprice For part* or who**

280 MotorcyclaaHARLEY DAVIDSON 1000CC -1974. All rebuilt, runs strong.SUrU right up. $1900 firm. CaH222-9072 eves

HONDAAIIATC'Sonsale

NEW JERSEY'S H VOLUMEHONDA DEALER

HI.. 9. FreeholdCelt 402-4661

YAMAHA YZ60 — 1966 Exoal-lent condition. Never faced Ex-tras, quick ft powerful. $675 Call787-3409 or 496-9750.

290 Trucks &Trailers

CHEVY - C-10 pickup 70.000muss on angina Rune greatAsking $700. 563-4042 or549-9443 esk lor Randy.

MATAWAN — by owner 4MacArthur Dr. 3 bdrm. .outsideneade some TLC Inside must be•een Walk to NYC bus.$129,000 Principle* onlytllCall563-1663MONMOUTH COUNTY — Call orwrit* 'or our complimentarybrochure of exclusive listing*.FOUR SEASONS, Realtors

12 Klngi Hwy, Mlddlelown871-5200

97 E River RdRumson 630-9600

69 E. Main SIHolmde. 946-3700

OAK RIOOE REALTYAdult Communities

341-6060RED BANK — 4 bdrms, workingfireplace, excellent condition. Inprime area. Principals only.$152,900. Call 741-6631 lor ap-pointment.

REO BANK — Luxury high rise 1bdrm. aiso efnoancy. Call642-4886 between 12noon-1pmft batwesn S-r p m

RED SANK — Oardan apta 1bdrm. Llv rm. new kitchen $600incl udea haat. hot watar ft cook •mg gaa. n mo aac. No pats.741-6118.RED BANK - Broad Street lo-catton In •»elusive womens resi-dence 741-1436 or 747-9681RED BANK — 2 bdrm 2 bathluxury highrlee apt. avail (m-medletty spec river view $650mo include* all utll. except $30etec Call 9-6 741-2700 axt 3495— WinnieRED BANK — Riverfront. New 1.2 or 3 bdrms with spaciula/ viewof the Naveeink. No pats. From$760 741-0616.

RED BANKGERMAN 8HEPPAP.0 PUPS -AKC Fernet* 7 months Showpotential 9 weak/pet quality Ex-

t l t di ft l m t

GERMAN SHEPARD —6moa-iyr. Free to vthome 736-6H7

GREAT OANE PUPS — Fewquality ft deetmction Champedtgree* $275-350364-5601 Of 370-9515HORSE — tor sal* halfThofOugnBred end halt Morgan10 year old 16.2 Bay OeWmg767-2739 after Spm.IRISH SETTER — mate 2 yearsA K Z tree to good home withwe/d Military moving oversee*ffil 544-1264

PONY. GELDING1*1. Qray Appalooaa. Vary gan-tty. good tor bagtanar. 6600. Cad£•6-6436POODLES -dard Blackfemale AKC671-0196

RED BANK1 bdrm. appliances $300 s

M R S REALTY. Bkr 369-1234RED BANK - Furnished roommi michen and bath prtvattga. lad paraon. Mo smoking ordrinking. 7474766.RED BANK — NIC* 1 bdrm apt$475/mo -t-utll No pats AduftSprafarrad 747-2662.RED BANK — Delux 2 bdrm.Oan. itv rm, din rm, kit, a/c, dlah-waahar. carpeting. $695 Call741-6940RED BANK - 2 bdrm gardanapt Wall to waN. disnwasnarwaanar/dryar, garafia. dach,naat. hot walar. $775 747-1677

OOMS FOR RENT — Monthly400 or weekly Larg*. 2 double

bade, refrigerator color TV. pri-bath. Maid service dally.

•Irbanks Motel 344 Oceanvs., Saa Bright NJ 07760

642-6450

RED BANK - Fab. 1. 1966 2bdrm., i it floor of 2 tsmHy Largeyard, baaamant. All utll. in-cluded, except electric $750.Call Jeff More* Realty Reeftor842-4360

EST LONG BRANCH — 2ooms tor rant. Includaashar* ofaat ol the House Great locetion260 par month Include* all utllon smoking. Call anytime29-4662

ROTWEILER PUPS AVAILABLEVK.C. r

Call ISTARTING SOON - In OoaanTwp Dog trammac****** featur-ing 3 of New Jersey e finest trainera. All law enforcement agentsedmirted free Also tree demon-stration to everyone AH profits tobanaftt Friend* of Animals Call229 5365 for details

80 BicyclesMini Blkee

DUNE BUGGY - Mlnttur* 1teeter Rune good Asking $150Can attar 6pm 291-662*.MOPED — 1961 General 5 StarExc cond. Low mileage Formora info call 842-1819

81 SportsEqulpmant

WET SUIT — Parkway Syatamai alt* amall Brand naw atuf in or-

box . 6 6 6 or b/o CaN

84 MerchandiseWanted

RED BANK — large lux 1 bdnwan to wall carpet, dishwasher

EATONTOWN — Broad 8t 1100sq ft Professional Office SpecsW/w carpeting Private parkingot $1100 month + Avail 1/1/68all 542-0660 9-5 Mon-Frt.

RED BANK - Condo apt Haanof Rad Bank 1 bdrm, all nawappUancaa, w/w carpal, ra-aarvad panting. caMa tv. aacurlty

I W m o . 667-0866 No callaX,'RED BANK — 1 bdrm apt. 1ifloor W/W carpeting. 1 adultpreferred. $6OO/mo All uUfs IncV4 mo aac. Refs req. No pets530-9072

TWINBROOKVILLAGE

GARDEN APTS.1 6 2 badrooma from $4K> Mod-•rn, apactoua apu. Haat. hot 1cold watar. Cooking gaacludad. On-pramlaaa taeourta. pool, racraatlon araaNaar Eatomown •nopptrvg Excachooia. Ooaan Two

Highway 36, Oakhurat531-4623 542-061

1-A USED FURNITURE — An-

sart 4 pappar collactona. con.tants of homaa. attloa. baaa-manta. «c WHI haul 1 Ham or an.Call 2«4-a4«

ALL LIONEL TRAINSOr Flyar. Too caah appraisal

•rloa no o&iacl Ma-2X3

.. ALL ELECTRIC TRAINSLMnal. Flyar. M a . MarHlin, ate

K r Matal cars, on loys, w . nignaai' I paiO. r«ot»dy Mata my pries

BARITONE MORNCan avas S42-75M

BEFORE YOU HAVE YOURSALE - Call Sacooa Hand in,244-0777 Aftar 6. M4-M1S.Htghaat pnoaa paid lor all iiama.antlquaa. ate. Fo< bargains, stopst M »road St.. Kaypon

PIANOS WANTEDAny conditionCall 4*3-4111

Dvnaoo If>AT-«

101 AprtmonUABERDEEN — Strathmora OarDans afMUncy 1 and 2 bdrmaavaaaua haat and hot watar in-ctodad no pata. Call 5a»-o434.ALL AREAS — 1 tnru 7 roomsSoma klda. pata OK. Soma fraautHWaa 43*6 4 up. (rant Aaaoc I40»443»000ATLANTIC HIOMLANOS —Nawrty Jacorawrl 4 room apart.

ATLANTIC HIOHLANOa - 1odrm gardan apt. a«70/mo ind.naat and hot a m r . 1*1 /1months aac No pa* . AvallaWaimmaanamy. Wt-OtW

BELMAR COTTAGEi odrm. haat paw HOOs• room. Mat paw SMO-s

JUST RINTAL4. Skr J44- I5HHIGHLANDS — Wyndmoor.bdrm Condo. Prtvaia baach 6dec*, cantral air. waM to wallcarpal, diahwaahar. 8600* uttl.0*1 244-6163

WEST END — 4 room apt. 1 moaec. Adults preferred. No pet*CaN aftar 5 p.m. 741-8713.

102 HOUB«Bfor

ABERDEEN — 2 bdrm rvouse forent On Hwy 36. Cell between600pm 7:00 pm 566-5569ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS -bdrm, 3 rma. Avail. Fab.v $496nc heat. v*j M C Taking appn

cations on Bun 1/19, oei1-6. 871-3999 Or 291-9746.

BELMAR COTTAGE1 bdrm heal paid. $400

5 room, heat paid. $300 •JUST RENTALS. Bkr 369-1556

EATONTOWN - New 2 bdrmand den townhouse with garage$990/mo •vttti first option to bu;Call Nancy at 646-4444.FAIR HAVEN - Recently constructed home. 3 bdrm. fullcarpeted, 1 bettv Washer/dryerdtahwaaner. $1060642-7391HAZLET — Ranch 2 bdrm, atl

f lZ ac

oarage, dining room, epacImrrvedlate 8795/mo 264-6287

HIGHLANDS1 bdrm. heat paid $300

2 bdrm, wa.erv.ew, $*oo •JUST RENTALS. Bkr 369-1555

KEAN8BURQ3 bdrm, Klda, Hurry $500 •

M R S . REALTY, Bkr 3B9-1234

KEYPORT5 room*, kids OK $600 •

JUST RENTALS. Bkr 369-1565

LONG BRANCH — 2 bdrm hoiin nice family section $576 moplus uttte. 1 mo aac. 291-622after Spm.MlDOtETOWN — Charmlnf•pactoua iv* bdrm, 2 bath. din-Ing room, garage Larga l r « *unad krt. No pata. 6660/mo Cat)466-2678 544-2402 Jtmnn:OCEANPORT — Immediate,bdrm, 2 bath Victorian, 6 room$676+ utN. CaH Jeff Morse Realty, Realtor. 642-4360

RED BANK — Lunurybedrooms w/w carpeting, dunwaeher. $425-475 • utilities Cei530-7300

RED BANK2 family, child O K $400 •

JUST RENTALS. Bkr 389-1655

WANTEDRoom 6 Board

Red Bank vicinityCall 741-7227

04 Winter Rentals

REPOSSESSED HOMES -From Oov'i from $1.00 plus r*-palr/laxe*. Through-outNJ/NatlonwId*) AIM taxproperties. 215-453-3000, In-cluding Sunday, Ext. H3S0.

CHEVY Pick up — 1974. Shortbed, 65.000 ml. 4X4. 4ipd ,PS/PB Snow plow. $2695 C«ll671-5964 _____CHEVY VAN 1966 - with a 77 6cyt. Runs excellent. New trans.lots ot new pan. $950 Call787-5549.

300 Autos lor SaltBUICK 8KYHAWK LIMITED -1962. 4 dr. Loaded In exceilencondition. Only 26,000 orlg mlPriced to sell at $4650 Calldayt225-1111 and 671^079^

CADILLAC — 1962 Clmmeron30,000 mtles. Mint cond. Full)loaded Sun. root, cruise controlAM FM cassette, etc. $7000. Csl6-6, 530-2616, after Spm369-2341.CADILLAC- 1967 DeeVllte runnlng cond needs some work$200 or b/o call 264-0*25

CADILLAC — 1960 Seville imecu isle cond settlement of es-tate sale. 87600 842-1660.CAMARO - Z28 1976 T-topshi pro 66.000 miles. $3300 Cat264-6815.CAMARO 1966 — Sport coupe9,600 mile* Excellent conditionAuto. A/C, T-iop. PS/PB Mursell new car coming $10,200 oibe*l Offer. Call 787-6449.

CAMARO1976. 6-cyl, 3-speed. a«cnlno oond. Musi sellB99-1710CAMARO — 1963 loaded, T-topa, pe/pb. power windowspower trunk, power loch*, auto. (cyi. stereo. Exc oond. 41K$6900 C*H after 6pm 747-2064.

CARS UNDER $2000KINQSLEY AUTO SALES

767-7667CHEVY BLAZER - 1979. 3wheel drive, auto, a/c. radio. Excshape. 56.000 mHea. Car767-6026.CHEVY — Mallbu 1960. Automatte, A/C, 4-door. Needs aomtwork. Baal offer. 264-2214.CHEVY CAMARO - '65. Iroc-Z306HO Black w/grey Interior 5-speed, AM/FM. A/C, 4 wheeldisc brakes $12,600. Call Jo*after Spm. 566-6360.CHEVY BEL AIR — 1974 wagon.60,000 ml . pasaad InspectionRuns good. $400 Cell after 6:30Call 7S8-O121

300 Autos lor SaltDODOE CORNET

19S7. Needs heed gaakat. goodrubber. $176. CaH ItZsSSO.

DODOE DAYTONA 1986 — 2.2Mar. 4 cyi. EFI, auio. PS/PB,A/C, AM/FM stereo case . Re-movable sunroof, black, with_ _ ;k taather Interior. Im-maoulata, 10.200 milea Musiaetl. $8,600 Firm. Call 741-5310.DODGE — Aspen wagon 19776-cyl. Looks good, need* work.$8O0 or b/o. 842 8466

DODQE CHALLENGER1976. 4 cyi , S spd , AM/FM case

EL CAMINO CLASSIC1974. Asking $1200. Call for de-tail*. Call 571-9480FAIRMONT —1979 2 dr. re*llyclean, a/c. auto, stereo caasMust see. Only 40,000 ml. CaH389-1104

FORD — Pinlo wagon 74 Ooodmotor and trans, first 9200 take*car Call 566-7262.FORD - Ranchero 1972 Good

Mr** Asking $600 443-7213.FORD - Maverick 74. $300 orb/o. 566-2912.

FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE1979. Fully equiped. new Urea.63,000 mi $3400. Call 369-1104FORD — 1962 Mustang a/c auto,pe/pb *m/tm case. axe. cond.$4600 922-7829 days 222-3681

FORD — 1876 Mustang- Creambody, dark gold bottom. Manytrouble free years ot motoringleft In this cute well maintainedmachine $1200. Call 229-6612after 5 pm all day Sat. Sun.

FORD PINTO — 1976 hatch backstandard shin white wltn blue in-tertor $850 229-3794.FORD — 1977 station wagon.Country Squire. AC. PS. PB.103.000 mile*. Exc cond $1250Call 222-3143.

CHEVY 8-10 Pick up — 1964 %ton- Long bed. 2.8. V-S. 4 epd.PS/PB. Excellent condition$4850. Cell 291-6325 after Spnv

CHEVY MALIBU — 1976. 4 door,auto., p/ l . p/b. Very good con-dition $900 Call 787-3770

CHEVY C10 — Pick up. I960.With cap. ftcyi , auto., PS/PB,AM/FM CMS., 4 new tires. 34.000ml., good cond. $4600 or b/o.Call 741-6303 after 8pm.CHEVY Pick up - 1974 Shortbed. 85.000 ml.. 4X4. 4*pd.,PS/PB Snow plow $2660. Call671-5984CHEVY — 1981 pickup Scyt,pe/pb. long bed. cap 37.000 mlexc. cond. $4500 Call 842-4271or 642-3758.

CHEVY PICK UP — 1975 wttt

CHEVY — Mallbu classic 1978A/C. PS. PB. Good oond. VaryDependable. $1600 291-4S1V

CHEVY CAVALIER TYPE 101962, 2 door hatchback, 2 ton*Valor* Inter . 4 cyi., 4 spd Runegood. 37,000 ml.. $4760 Call739-9333 or 244-4633CHEW IMP ALA — 1971 4 dr.,auto., P/S. reliable, safe. Station

teenage car. Asking $376. Call1-5878

APRICE CLASSIC — 1SS1. 46 cyi, a/c, am/tm tilt wheel,

re wheel, reclining seat. $4500.all 530-1665.

CHEVY - UTILITY BODY 1968Pick up exc. cond. 82100 or B/OCall 938-4160 or 747-5606.

HEVY MALIBU — 1977. 4 dr..i/FM, A/C, auto. Good con-

IHon. Ashing $600. CaH70-1671.

OCONOS — Locust laka chaletepiece sleeps 12 near skiess weekends or weakly Call1-3026

RUMSON — historic Rumsonclassic completely renovated inand out 2 story Colonial graallocation. Principals only.$245,000 Call 642-2332 9-6pm or

,2-5815 avea.

06 FurnishedRooms

ABERDEEN TO RED BANKlooms 8 studios from $40 s wkOME RENTALS, Bkr 389-1234EA.NSBURQ — Room for rent.•II 767-6669 or 767-7247 or7-2547TTLE SILVER — Private room

relndoerator fully carpetedsmoker only. Call 530-6935.

ED BANK — Riverfront. New 1>drm. i bath, balcony on theavasink $796 includes utlls Ho

>ets. Rent with option 741-0816.

AKHURST — 2 nice singleoome private bath and kitchen

parele entrance. Nonmokere. Call 531-1838.ED BANK — furnished aftlcen-

itri pnvai* bath Matureentteman preferred. $326udee en utus sec. required.

741-4766 9-8

RED BANKnlqua opportunity. Living room.Ining room with llraplscs Ra-nodslad klicnan 3 bdrms. Ex-

llanl location Walk lo avary-ng just llatad at $114,900» It today, CENTURY >l

COZENS. Raaltorsndapandsnlly Ownad/Oparstad13 Rlvar Rd fair Havan

741-76M

OOM FOR RENT — In prlvataouts Furnlanad MO/wfcaahar. dryar a ralrlg 4B5-8360

S

08 CommercialRental*

EATONTOWN - Broad Si 500sq n Prolasslonal Ottlca Spaca

rivals parking lot 1500 monthvsil I ' l ' K Call U2-OM0. 9-5

Mon thru FrTONTOWN — 3 rm offloa in

mall prof bldg. Approx. 500 Sqt, carpatad, caniral air 1lock* from Fon Monmouth. Act o n itroat from Eatontown

Buro Hall. 6428 par mo. CaH542-0034

ITTLE SILVER — Naw prasgious. profaaalonal ofltcaa'rtma location on Sycamori

Ava. naar atatlon. smpla parkingsvarsbla larms svall.. 1270 Sc

Fi. win dlvtda Call 201-487-1820or 201M2-12MMATAWAN AREA — Sulla of

ofasaional offtcas locatad orhaavlly travalad road Ad|acanto QSP Exit 4 antrancs 525 sqtotal with w/w carpatlng lictudaa taxaa. utllltlas axtrs $400montn. Can 583-3030 batwaanlam-SfKn.

RED BANK - Broad SI 5000 sqn prlma offlca spacs Wilt dtvlda189-2020COURTS OF REO BANK100-1200 sq ft. aultaa. Avallabtaor immadlata occupancy. LuxurKHia sppolnlad $18-118 par sqIt Call MO-73OO lor Into.REO BANK - Profaaakmal Offlea Suilas svallabta In vaClmmarar Buildings Units rangarom 1 room to antlrs building3400 squara taat (plus Dai.mant); all locations on Broad i4 ara carpatad. sir condltlonadnava avallaWa parking. Ranranga trom »1O-$I2 oaf aquarfoot, plus utimias Call ManagarWaltar Zlmmarar 842-9595RID BANK — Appro* 290 Sq

" 1 par m<17-1232.

RED BANK4900 aq. ft. commarclaly zonsd19.00 par It. nat. AvallaWa MayCan 741-7888 CENTURY 2

Cotana agancySMALL BUSINESS — Aporo450 aq ft for small buainsasatoraga spaca Immad Haata4ac auppilad. 842-0045

32 CondOB&Townhouta*

AZLET — 2 bdrm town houaa Innma araa only $90,000 Callaggy Karwln Co 7B7-oaO0

35 CommercialProperty

FOR SALE OR RENTntarnatlonsl Qsllarlas PropartyKW0 aq. ft. * 2000 sq. ft bldq.HREWSBURV 747-8200AKEWOOD - axil 68 QSP 6 Rt0: 3.000-42,000 aq ft., foraaaa. Larga Baya. 4 Dfc-Hl Dra.ully Sprlnkatarad, A/C Offleaa.

Haavy Floor & Towar Call ownar201) 226-8600 Brokara'rotactadMEDICAL CONDO OFFICES —Naxt to Bayahora Hospital InHolmdat 733 N Baars St. Suit-

bis lor 2 doctors. 1872 Sq FtCaU 871-8800RED BANK — 2, 3 A 4 roomoffloa aultaa avail, up lo itWOaq

Raaaonabla rataa. inotudattaat A/C, prlvata parking 6amionai aarvlcaa. 747-1100.

137 Lot* andAcreage

NVESTORS! BUILDEBSIOpportunity to buy 1ft conform-ng building lota subjacl to ap-proval Offarad $9000.000 pand-

ig approval or $825,000 withapproval OCEANPORT locsllonlCHOKOV REALTORS 7474221

OATSUN PICK UP1974. Runs good, naads

soma work. $450Call 222-9072 avas

HEVY NOVA 1967 — Body ax-llant condition. Engina runs

lood Naads transmission workany naw parts. $400 or baat

Call 495-0858

DODQE VAN — 1978 1200. 316.Standard shin A/C. naw Ursa,runs good. Orlgsnal ownara$1500 Must aaa 264-1209.DODQE - 88 4.4 Rat bad 8 IImyars Snow plow w/hookups316-6 cyt. Rabullt Naads clutcrwork $600 or b/o. 71$ «9I<FORD — 1970 * Ion 382. V I

ina Runs good $660 Callr- -

FORD PICK UP1973, Oood work truck.

low ml. Asking $760.Call 942-3413

FORD RANQER - 1679 XLT78.000 mlM. P/S. P/B. runs 6looks good Asking $2800. Call766-6616FORD — F100 Pick Up 77 8 cyi3 spd $1200 or B/O. Call aflat5 00 S44-019S

HEVY - 1 9 7 5 Camaro 360 V9 3vinyl roof, naw uraa. mtarior

good naada work. $900 or b/o•aakdaya 530-9621 waak-747-2366.

FORD BRONCO — 1970 4 whaaidrlva 302 angina 6*00942-2536 batwaan 4-8pmFORD VAN - Modal 100. 1176Qood rubbar. naada motor workbaat oftar Can Mon-Friaam-5pm. 642-4414.

OMC SIERRA - 1979. 12x7 flbox w/pull out ramp. Automatic$4600 797-3666.

CHEVY - 197$ Impala 6 cyi 1r. a/c ps/pb auto Naw banary,ans. CMan 129.000 Hwy. ml

Call 739-4209 avasOMC — vanduramllaa. Haavy duty.$10,600 787-5327INTERNATIONAL — 1973. 1 lorsids slap pick-up, v-6, 4-spaadgood tlras. $300 or b/o583-2308JEEP - 1975 Charoka graalbuy. Days 741-9069 or 747-0463aftar 6pm.JEEP — 1964 Grand Wagonaatall avaHabla axtraa and sun9,000 ml. Call 741-7476.MYER PLOW — 7'. Inydronc 2 yra old. $700. Buywith or without 1974 AMC Jaacwagonaar 291-2419TOYOTA — 1960 4x4 Sportmodal truck. $2990. 747-1160.

300 Auto* lor Sal*

LONQ BRANCH - Building lot60x176. Asking $20,000. Call229-6234

138 Mobil* HomesHAZLET — ExcaHant cond11X59. Vary good location Call264-2109TOMS RIVER - 2 bdrm mobllahoma on lot Evarytfilng brandnaw Inslda Kids snd pata wal-coms 1/2 mils from Sassids$9000 cash or larms. 255-8414

140 Real EstateWanted

ALL CASH30 day closings call tor datalla.Mslmad Raallors 739-4900

AMC PACER1978. Many naw iwhola tcIt. Call i

Many naw parts, to salI for parts only. $200 Uka.II 222-7398

AMC HORNET - 1673$300

Can altar 5:30787-8585

AMC HORNET — 1976. 6 cyt..dr.. aulo.. A/C. PS/PB. na»trans.. 87.000 ml. $1000 or b/oCall 741-7137.

AMC AMBA8IOOR1666. Naw brakaa.

aaking 6300.CaH 542-3413

AMC RAMBLER - Classic 19634-dr. auto, PS. PB, conaol, upoistrv Ilka naw. Must aaa to sppraotata. $600 firm. 642-1217

152 Boat* andAccessories

DINGHY — 6 ft. flbarglaas axe.cond $300 Call 842-0689.

22' WHITE CEDAR OARVEY6' baam No motor.

$1000 firm.Call 29T-0245

154 RecreationalVehicles

TRUCK CAMPER - 1974 Chavywltn campar back Slsaps 4Ovan, ranga. sink, loilst furnaoaate. Looks A runs vary good.$1500. CaU 741-1366.TRUCK CAMPER — 1977 Chavywith campar back. Slaapa 4.Ovan. ranga. sink, toilal. furnaeaate. Looks $ runs vary good.$1900. Call 741-1366.

109 Building*/Qarag**

RED BANK— 2 car gsrsgs foronly $129 a

110 Wanted to RentRED BANK AREA

$400 OR LESSPLEASE CALL

747 7907REPUTABLE BUILDER— Saakslow coat nousa ahara on quiatraaldantlal strast In ganaralMlddlatown araa Spacs naadadtor slaaplng and small offlcaStart Fab.1-19 for 6-9 months767-6764

SUMMER RENTALFurnlanad apt.

or •mall houaa• call 741-7189

131 Houses forSal*

OOVERMENT HOMES from $1(U rapalr) Also dallnquanl taxproparty Call 1-606-667-6000Ext OH-6247 lor Into.

220 WantedAutomotive

WANTED OLDER CARS — Junkor running. Espactany con.vsmbias Csll 787-9040.

250 Auto Insurance

A STAR IS BORN...

Attract mora raadarahlp byPlacing a STAR st lha topand/or bottom of your ad.For datalla. call ma DaHyRaalatar Claaafflad

Dapartmant. 642-1700.

BARACU0A — 1670$900

FWocatng. Must sail.CaH 4955493

BLAZER — 1664VS. 28.000 mllaa. $12,000.

RatocMna. MustCan 466-6643

BMW — 1691 3201. 2 door,spaad. A/C. AM FM 1sunroof. 62,000 mllaa.Aflar 4:30 call 264-2473.BMW 3201 — 1960.Fully loadad Ona .66.000K. Sarvtca racords. $7ifirm Call 672-1665 or attar 6p291-0629.

184 Burgamtarior Fu

BMW — 7331dy/paarl. Laalnar liaqulppad. 6-apaad. 16.6mltaa. Show room oond. 626.41CaH 747-9606.BMW 325E — 1664 Black/Paataathar mtarior. 12,700 ml auto•unroof, many many axtraaloadad, 817,668. Call 222-1864

CHECK OUH RATESPhoanlx Brokaraga. famous forlow-cost auto Insuranca andIrlandly sarvtca, now giving fraaquotas by ohona. Taka lha op-tions You may ssvs hundradsRt 36 Kaypon 264-3087Broad St. Shrawa 544-1401

270 Auto Servlcea/Part*

CAMARO 1874 - For parts only$400 or bast oltar

Call 7674634 aftar 6 p m

ENOINE — 1667 Dodga 273CID. v-a with rabullt naads 1sutomstlc trsns w /consols shirt$229 Call 948-9254

BRADLEY OT — 1979 Clasalc14.600 mllaa. Ragular gaa. Owing doors. A/C. Exc. oond ~ottar 642-6376.

BUHLER 6 BITTER INCChry star-Plymouth

3290 Hwy 39 264-600CBUICK — 1976 Elactra. 4-dooSadan. Equlpmant Inetudtrallar hitch $460. Call 671-4494

BUICK - 1972 Skylark Rugood good trans. $700 Cslltwaan 5-9pm 736-1667BUICK - 1661 Cantury g.body oond. naads angina w.b/o Call sflsr 700 671-6061

BUICK LaSABRE 197Naads paint lobCall 767.2262

CADILAC - 73 Eldorado loadac8 powar options naw paint, tlrastrans A REAL BEAUTY. MusaU moving. Can 741-4636.

FORD - 1672 Pinto wagon forparts or wttota car. B/O291-9968.

FORD 1666Utad only for TrainTrana. Baat offar

Call 663-6606.FORD - 1970 Mavarlck goodoond. naw front and 6 brakaarabullt trans, sm/fm caas. runsgood. $600 496-4377.FORD MUSTANG — QT 5 0 lltar1964 19.900 mllaa. T-rool. fullyloadad Black $10,000 or b/o.672-2343

300 Autos for Sal*MERCURY -

1 got-Of b/o 7674419.

pa/pb runs good maada minorwork. $ 6 0 0 - 'MERCURY ZEPHER Z7 - 1976.6oyl. PB/P*. atarao. A/C. 75.000ml Exc cond Asking $1600. Call291-3206 or 842-6414

PONTIAC LE MANS — 1676. >Naw brakaa. llraa. fual pump.

adlator, AM/PM star ao caaaalf./C. 79.000 orlg ml. Naadslufflar. Asking $650. Call

642-6607

MU8TANO — 1966. 6.0. acyl ,apaclal adltlon Black with radlaathar Exc cond $8900 Call494-7304 ava».

8ANSONE OLDS-CADILLACNawman Springs Rd., Rad Bank

741-0910

MUSTANQ OHIA — 1976. Fullyaqulpad. 1 ownar. axcallanl con-dition Oaiaga kapt Auto. AC.

-oof Musi baas.

UBARU- 1961 Oood cond06.000 mllaa. $1500 or b/o Callftar 6pm. 741-2377.

MUSTAN0) 1676 — Body 6 In-larlor In axoallant condition.

CaH 667-6743 a

SUBARU IX—1661 4 dr. 64,000Hwy. Ml. machanlcaly aoundvary dapandabta. 33 mpg. Nawraa AM/FM 82660. or boat

oftar. Call 466-4666 anytima.

NISSAN SENTRA DELUX - 1963.r. 6 apaad. radlala. 34.000illaa. axoasxMti cond. Call »v-

mnga. 244-6M4OLDS CUTLABB SUPREME —1664, 3.6 War V6, PS/PB, autoP/W, A/C. buckat Mala, landauroof, AM/FM rtarao. Wlrawhaaia includaa axtandad wara-nlaa S76OO. CaU 741-1146.

OYOTA - CaUca 1674. 2 door.-apaad. AC. naw oarb and dla-rlbutor. Tir#« and anowa Ilkar**. Runa graat $450 671-2096

1pm,

OLDSMOBILE - ' 7 2 Cutlass Bu-prama. 4 dr. Quick aala. NawUraa. naw axhsust systam. nawfront bumpar. naw brakas. Varygood cond. $600. 747-9344 or747-6169

TOYOTA — 1661 Turoall 56.000ml $2300. Call 671-1661

OLDMOBILE DELTA $6 — 1674.Runs good. Naada maatarcylinder. $179. Call attar 6pm741-6691.

TOYOTA — 1961 Corolla 4 dr.A/C. auto., am/tm atarao caas.HI. all Hwy. ml. Mint Cond. $2900Call 264-3629 avas 456-4635daya.

OLD8 CUTLASS SALON —1976. Naw paint, naw Coopartlras, A/C, atactric windows, tillwhaat. AM/FM Supar conditionIn and out. 61660 tor quick aala.671-7646.

agad. E739-9191

OLDS - 1964 Ragancy low ml.axe. oond. must sail this waak.$9960 nagotlaWa. Call 666-3660OLDSMOBILE - CualomCrulaar Wagon. 8 paaaangar.1084 W/av*ry option. Exc. cond16.000 mllaa. $12,000. 264-6662OLDSMOBILE— 1979 Ragancy 4dr fair cond. body ruBtad slight-ly $600 Of b/o . Call 466-2216OLDS CUTLASS SUPREMEI960. Exc. cond.. V8 angina. 2dr., A/C. AM/FM csss $4000.Csll 346-1206.OLDSMOBILE — 96 Brougasv1963. Fully aqulpad. 1 ownar.Mint oond. 28.00CT mllaa226-3761.OPEL MANTA 1972 — Excallant

Oood condition 6390.747-7620

Isags Qall ahar 8

FORD — 1976 Oranada for aalaam/tm stsrao caas. Muat aaa toballava $1900. Call 739-2046anar 4pm.

PEL — 7 1 . Mada In Qsrmanyrlganal ownar $950. Drlva IIwayl Call avas 463-2390

FORD - 1973 Mustang 1oond. runs good. Asking )Call 872-0606 aftar 6pm.

HEVY BEL AIR - 1974 wagon..000 ml., .pasaad InapactJon.

jood. $400 Csll attar 5 30all 736-0121.

HEVY CHEVETTE - '61. 4-dr.spaad. AC. raar window da-

jggar $2500 or b/o. 741-4675k lor Gloria

HEVY — 1677 Chavatta 2 dr.tch back auto. Oood condus $1400. Call 787-8834 daya" 3226 avaa.

HEVY — Nova. 1966 $600 oroftar. Can aftar Spm.

87-4646.HEVY — 1661 Mallbu pb/pa

>. a/o 4 dr. Oood cond. CaHr 9 00 842-9264

HEUY — Inaa. runa g

39-3559

, 1974$260 Call

HEVY II — 1666 6-cyl. auto-matic Runa good. Baat oflar.67-2667

HEVY — 1973 Nova hatchback.a am/fm atarao caas., a/c.4,200 orlg. ml. $1000 Call47-6243HEW CHEVETTE — IS76uns. naada work. Naw trans,ras and brakaa. $300 or b/o.all 499-1026 ask for Pat.HEVY CELEBRITY — 1662. 4oor. V6. aconomlcal p/a. p/b.

tt. auto rav csss. crulaa.aowar door locks ft windows.

ihsr axtraa. Bast oflar. CaH5, 671-6616.

GUARANTEEDRESULTS

Or we'll run your ad 10days for FREE!

You can aafl your aulomot.Hawith a ciauiltad ad. Kara you'llraach vary anxloua car buyara•hopping our claaalftad tor goodbuy*.

4 LINES Enough apaca lo da-acrlba your car thoroughly andcraata buyar intaraat..

10 DAYS.-Enough Urn* to r«achovar 82.000 diffarant adult r«ad-ara aach waak, bacauaa paopia'anaada for cara Chang* day today.

68 90 Enough valua to maka Hworth your whlta to raallaticailyprlca your car to aall.

THE FREE DEAL IS.. .If you don't aatl your car within

tha flral 10 daya your ad runa. w*will run your 4 Una automobHa ad(or anothar 10 daya-for FREEIThla apadal offar la oood for individual^ aafllng ttvatr own earaand la not for commarcta.uaa.YOu ARE REQUIRED TOCALL US ON THE DAY YOUR ADEXPIRES TO TAKE ADVAN-TAGE OF THIS 10 DAY FREEOFFCH.

CaH ua Monday thru Friday 8;30am to 4:60 p.m., to gal yourautomobtta tor aala ad -tomorrowa nawapapar.

LVMOUTH — 1965 Savoy 4-di6. automatic. Drlva train li

1 condition, bul body badly•lad $326 or baat oftar. Laal

hanoa lo own a cissalcl Csl946-6294

66.766 mllaa.96-0662.LYUOUTH - 1961 FMant

tlon wagon 4 cyi. 4 spd. a/cpa/pb am/tm roof rack raar window dafroatar ate axe oond2660 Call 741-7449.ONTIAC — Trans Am 1918HO snglna 6-apaad. PB. PB

C. T-top. black. 2 tona. tan

PONTIAC FIREBIRD — 1360, 4 bbl. auto. 10 bolt poa. til

1260 or b/oONTIAC — 1977 Flrablrd OooO

oond. V-6. A/C. PS. PB. AM/FMstarao. naw brakaa. shocks ft

umar 66.000 mis. $2900 o496-1636.

PONTIAC LE MANS — 1660.r. A/C. AM/FM. Exc. running

cond. $1900 or b/o. 922-4073

HONDA PRELUDE — 1664 6apd. a/o. crulaa. sun roof, am/tmstarao, 32.000 ml. Muatsail $6600 Call 78746*6 altar9pm.HONDA — 1662 Clvtc 4 cyt. NawUraa. axhuat. banary. 1 yr. Tran,War. AM/FM atarao caaaawa 4apaakara aquallzar 64500 orB/O. CaN daya 646-0767 avaa.267-8776

HEVY BLAZER — 167*. 2haal drlva. auto. a/c. radio. Exc

s. 66.000 rnllas Can87-8026

CHEVY — 1677 Mallbu runsgood body ok. asking $400. Callaftar 6 pm 284-8903CHEVY — 197* Monta Carlo T-oof. powar windows pa/pb auto.

Runs good body good 98.000ml. $2000. Call 671-9041CHEVY — 1974 Mallbu wagon.65O0 or B/O 767-7226.Chavy — 1*76 Nova 2 dr. am/fm.

/c MOO or b/o. Call 747-1212.CHEVY IMPALA — '67 Fsstbsck690 honay casosMbrock mani-fold. M-T valva oovara and othar

hromaa. 2 naw Saars tlras. Ask-ng 6200 498-0784

CHRYSLER LEBARON 1978 -Loadad 1976 King cab dataunwtth cap. Must Bail tmmadlatary.$3700 for both. Call 797-6604 Of"87-5803 anvtlma.

CHRYSLER — 1*77 Town andCountry 9 pass wsgon ps/pb sllpowar. 1800 Or bast oflar Call672-2152.CHRYSLER 1964 LASER —Turbo, auto.. PS/PB. AC. Exc.cond. Prloa $7700.

Call 666-9379CIRCLE CHEVROLET

Ihrawabury Ava Shrawabury741-3130

HONDA CIVIC - 1962 Exc__ J. Low mHaaga. $3660.741-7637 attar 5pm.HONDA ACCORO - 1664. 4-dr5-spaad. PB. PB. AC. apaad con-trol. AM/FM atarao csaaanabody protactlon paekaga Exccond Asking 67100 Of b/o CaU736-2666

HONDA ACCORD - 1661. 4 di5 apd. PS/PB. A/C. AM/FM cawBaiga color, good cond. Naw cararrivad-muat aall. Maka offarCalt 261-1767.HONDA CB 760 — 1971. Motorlust rabuMt + axtrs motor. Ra-locallng Muat ssll $600. Cat466-6943.HONDA CIVIC — 19*0 hatchback. 4-spaad. AC. 61750. Cslattar 6pm or671-4611.JEEP — 1661 Larado custom Intartor. 31 In. tlras. 8 cyi. hard lop-uns snd looks grast 62,000 mlUklng $6200. CaH attar 6pm

KITSON CHEVROLET COHwy 36 Eauntown

942-1000LABMOLA MOTORS

74f-2433

CORVETTE — 12.000 ram fraamllaa Sava so% off saMa lax.cnapal Hill Rd. Asking $16,000.Call 291-6340.CORVAIR — 1964 2 dr. good

na and trana. Easilyrat 6300 takaa it. Call

COUQAR — 87 79.000 orlganal36apd on floor. $760. Run

Itl 4*3-21CRY8LER CORDOBA — 1*7*.Automatic. AM/FM atarao. AC.good tlras. Exc. running cond.•1100. Call aftar 5pm-264-2473.

CUTLASS - 1679Calais $3900.

Ratocattng Muat sailCall 496-99431.

OATSUN — 2*0 ZX 1*61. Whlta.5-soaad Loadad Oraai condMuat sail $6000. Day 226-6060.svsa 642 413*.

LEMANS 1*73 - PB/P*. PWA/C. raoant tuna up. Naw Uraabrakaa. shocks, axnausl. AM/FMoassstls. Runsgood. $626. Call787-6046LINCOLN — Town oar. 78 Fullloadad w/ powar acoaaortaa. Tlwhaal, crulaa control. AM PMatarao naaaajlia Naw altarnalor

snd balta. Baat offaranytima.942

m pump a'-6588 sni

LOCALLY DRIVEN USED CARSPRICED RIOHT RASSAS PONTIAC 366 Broad St. Rad Bank

Call 741-6160.MALIBU - 77 AC. PAM/PM, runa good.6714699MAZDA — RX7 1964. O8L-SITop of lha Una All powar. AM FMcaaaatta aquaHxar. SunroofDurgandy laathar Irrtoflor. 19,000mllaa 463-3066.

OATSUN 200 SX 1*62 — Hardtop. P8/PB. PW. AM/FM starao.A/C. sllvar. 5 apd. Excallant con-dition Call 7364044.

DATBUN 610 19*0 — 1 dr.,AM/FM atarao Oood condition$2,600. Can 642-3637.DATSUN 210 - 1981 Hatch-bsck Auto.. A/C, tow mi..AM/FM. ona ownar, garagad.Craam puff. $3790. 642-4666.DODQE COLT - 1671, 28.000ml., rabullt angina Runs good,graat on gas. $399 or b/o. CaU671-4609 or 871-3504DODOE — 1960 Dodga Mlrada 6cyi. aulo. Oood tlras am/lm goodshsps. 80.000 ml. $4200 or b/o.Quick aala. 496-4764.DODQE DIPLOMAT — 1963.Black 4-door. A/C, PS, PB.36.000 mltaa. Exc. oond $6290.Call 747-2*34.

DODOE — 71 Chargar raramaka 319 HO 40.000 ml. rabulltta*nflln# p*on*)*>r Qtavroo ttyMsMnwtth •quaMUtK, mag., .nlfl.r.vary f a n ft#nl «y« catch** and tomuch to Hit. Mutt Mil. (2000 callBtwa 2M-91 a2DODOE — 1070 8 cyi, SwlrtQaflor parti fronl and d imig i , an-Slna and trana. O.K. flrai 1100 orraaaonabla otinw takas it. CaNaflaf 5.00 pm 787-5379

MAZDA RX7 08L - 1M4. t « a t -rant condition. FuHy aqui|aunroof, atarao with aqualliarcrulaa control, lumbar Mi *mora. Call 291-9117.MERCURY MONTEREY — 1972 dr., PS/PB, A/C. • cyt Qoodcondition. 100,000 ml. Familyownad. M00. Call 642-4304.

MERCURY — Grand* Marqula1977. 4-dr aadan. Ctaan in andout Loadad. 13000 t72-O440MERCURY CAPRI — 79.•paad. 4-cyt Loadad. AbaotuialOorgaoua. Runa Uka naw. *300or b/o. 530-8739.MERCURY LYNX WAOON 190

Auto. P8/PB, AM/FM,69,000 mHaa. 62.106.

Call 741-4628MERCUftYPB, AC. Aewnar. B*MI offar. 6D1-

1>76.

MERCURY COUGAR XR71677. A/C. PW, radlala,ahODka, FM atarao. mpalntod, baauttful inalda and ou

MERCURY — 1B76 Zaphyr.door, auto, 8-cy., PS/PB. A/wtiiw Oood condition In and ou76,000 ortoinal mllaa AM F•tarao caaaatta. 61960. C741-3113.MOB Q T - Raatorad 1BM. Exemacnankcal oond. Naw clutcnaw brakaa. rebuilt carboratorrabullt angina, wlra wtiaaia. N«a)dcaah. Muat aall. 1660 nrm631-3208.

PARK CHEVROLETSaief Laaalng-Barvtoa-Parta

LYMOUTH VOLARE 1977 —2 dr., tport coup*, naw

Mint, no mat Loadad. 316-V-aPS/PB, PW, PB, A/C

M/FM c a u Juat tunatf61.400. C.-

AC,tar lor 11.000 mltaa. Cat

PONTIAC QRANOfWIX — 1666Bh*. A/C, PBr-Pt). P/« *

II 261-6162.

BTRAUB BUICK-OPELS ACRES ot Naw 4 Uaad Car*

Hwy 36, 264-4000 Kaypon

TOM'S FORD200 Hwy 36 Kaypon

264-1600

OYOTA PICK-UP 1663 —0.000 mllaa. claan. 63.700. CallM-11J1- .

OYOTA COROLLA 8RS —983. Loadad. 33.000 mllaa. Oar-

Exc. cond. *5KW

TOYOTA - 1973 Catlca 2 drauto $600, Call S-8pm 496-3587TOYOTA CORONA - Wagon.

972. Aaklng $250 or b/o. Canba aaan at 362 Shrawabury Ava.behind TEXICO),

VOLVO FOR QUALITYLarga aalectlon of lata modal, 1ownar Volvo trade-lna. Rad BankVolvo, 110 East Nawman SprlngaRd., Shrewebucy 741-6666.VOLK8WAQON BEETLE 1972 —4 brand naw tlraa. Semi auto-matic trans. Oood running con-dition. $1,000. Call 264-2887

good condition. Can ba aaan113 Park Avenue. Union BeachAaklng 6750.VOLVO — 1978 264 QL 4 dr aunroof a/c powar wtndowa pa/pbV6 auto, laathar interior axe.cond. throughout 62500. Call741-7449.VOLKSWAGEN JETTA 1962 —Moving, muat aall 647*90 Excal-lant condition. Call attar 6.642-6636 Or 642-9407

— 1679 Rabbit, Broma,good oond. 61600 or b/o. Attar7 30pm 842-7062. _____VW RABBIT — 1960. daaal. 4 dr.,hatchback, manual, AM radio.Great MPO, 63,000 ml 62350Call 222-7213.VW SUPER BEETLE — 1072.Runa graat. Naada body work

0. Call aftar 4pm 741-8637VW BUB — 1966 Split windowclaasic Oood tlraa and angina,machanlcaly tound. A raal workhoraa. 6600. Call 844-0259VW BUO — -71. Looks and runagood. $375. Drive Itl Call avaa493-2390VW RABBIT — 1960. 63,000mllaa. Auto trane.power brakaa,powar aaalat etaartng. AM/FMcaaaewe Or«at cond Exc mpg.$2300. 76*1-6131.

VW VANAOON — 1966. 13.000il.. 7 paaeangar. auto.. A/C, fully

aqulpad Coal ovar $17,000 ask-ing 112,900. CaH 671-6964

VW SUPER BEETLE1973, Sun roof, original

ownar. 80.000 ml $1100Call 842-0506

VW BUS — 1973 auto anginaebullt, SS runa wall, good cond.

Aaklng $2000 or B/O. Call530-6264. attar 6pm. *

VW — 1676 Supa* Baatla lualln)actad n#w •nglna, axe. run-ning cond Aaklng $1800 or B/O.

call aftar 6pm 66aV0S66.WE BUY — uaad cars lor axport.Scfnsam Ctiryatar-PlymoutrvMaida. 141 wast Front 81. K MBank 747-0767.

300 Autos tor Sale

PONTIAC BONNEVILLE — 166$.dr. $ cyi. 2 torto gray, loadad..c cond. pnead to aM. Call47-9*70.

PONTIAC ORANO PMX — 1 * 6 1 .3.000 ml . A/C. Eaoattanl con-

i $4165 call 747-0600 daya.or 642-3027 svaa

PSD BANK MOTORS INC31 Nawman Springs, flsd Bank

Dodga-AMC-Jaap-Ranauit747-0040

NAULT ALLIANCE - 1*63. 4A/C, P/S. AM/FM. raar

36.000 ml. Aaklng, Can 747-4411 daya.

71-6616 avasENO ALLIANCE DL — 16*4 4

sulo pa/pb pw/p locksm/tm atarao caaa. buckat aaata.

U N O call 741-6913.

AVISYoung Used

CanFor Sale

47 StrwtawitnM bat 747-OIM

LOW FIHAMCIMO AVAIL.To OusMaa luyws

GUARANTEEDRESULTS

REGISTERCLASSIFIED

4 Lines—10 Days

$590If the car advertised Is not soldwithin the first 10 days, The Regis-ter will run your ad.

I A .ADDITIONAL DAYS* W ABSOLUTELY

FREE!"B inr or It Ml utf wttkli )0 i$yi.• I k mtw pm u

n

The RegisterDAILY C- 'S'JNO»Y *DAILY *—'S'JNOAY

To PHC63 Your AutomotiveCliBBlflvd Ad CALL:

542-1700

MILESTONES 2 YOUR TOWN 7 COMICS 1 0 cMONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

ChrisHand

I've heard the story told so manytimes before.

A man and his family, fed up withthe crime, grime, high rents and fastpace of life in New York City, buya nice little house in the suburbs andset up shop in Monmouth County.

But almost as soon as they've hadthe chance wire their VCR, plug intheir microwave and park the lawntractor/snow plow/floor waxer inthe garage, something happens:

All at once, they realize that theyare surrounded by words and cus-toms they don't quite understand.

They ask themselves questionslike "What can a jug handle have todo with making a left turn? and"Why should I paint my initials on

the roof of my car. "WHAT?Well, I've come up with a guide for

these New Yorkers.The first section of Civic Mod-

ulation Genus Urbanus SubUrbem and You is about transpor-tation.

You probably know from readingthose slick brochures your realtorslipped you that Monmouth Countyhas a user-friendly transportationnetwork. This is true.

But if you're like me — male andunder 25 when I first moved here —you're probably wondering how toaccess this network without aninsurance agent willing to write youan auto policy

Don't panic. It helps if you knowhow to swim.

What you have to do is go to aninsurance agent, any insuranceagent, and tell him this:

"I realize, good sir, that I amyoung, male and therefore certainlyunworthy of giving you my money inhope that I may drive around yourfair county 'But if I don't drive,what can I do? How I can work? Howcan I eat? How can I live thesuburban life?"

When he hears this, the insuranceagent will be overcome with sym-pathy and assign you a position in thestate auto insurance pool.

The insurance pool is a largepublic bathing facility located justoutside Newark where young malesare asked to tread water until theyreach 26.

Now that you're 26 and have autoinsurance, you'll probably want totake the two dollars you have leftover from your first insurancepremium, buy some gas, and takeyour first spin around Monmouth

You probably know already thatone of the distinct advantages ofliving in New Jersey as opposed toliving in New York is that you areallowed to make a right turn on a redlight. As matter of fact, here in NewJersey, we like right turns so muchthat we go right even when we goleft.

In their infinite wisdom, thefounding fathers of New Jerseyrealized that they were on tosomething when they first promotedright turns.

So they designed the state's high-way system such that in order tomake a left turn, you must also makea right turn.

The guy who came up with this,incidently, was so drunk on cheapjug wine at the time, that these leftturns have bean known as jughandles ever since.

Now that you have some ideaabout how to get around MonmouthCounty, you're probably wonderingabout parking.

One of the advantages of living inNew Jersey is that, unlike NewYork, you can shop in malls wherefinding a parking space is almostnever a problem.

The problem arises when, afteryou've spent three hours wanderingaround these mazes of stores, youtry to remember where you parked

If you've looked and looked andlooked and still can't find it, thereare two things you can do.

First, hire a pack of blood hounds,allow them to sniff your ignition key,then follow them around

If that doesn't work, hire ahelicopter and take an aerial photo-graph of the entire parking lot. Blowthe picture up to the size of abillboard and go through it with amagnifying glass until you see thoseinitials you were told to paint on yourcar.

After you've lived in MonmouthCounty a while, you'll probably gettired of telling people you live insouth, central, coastal or northernMonmouth County, New Jersey.Especially when, after you've spitout all this information, the personyou are conversing with still sayssomething like, "Oh really, where isthat?"

When this happens all you have todo is say, "I live near BruceSpringsteen."

Chances are the person you aretalking to is one of the millions ofSpringsteen fans worldwide andprobably knows more about Mon-mouth County from reading lyricsheets jnd fan magazines than youdo.

Staff writer Chris Hand'scolumn appears every Monday

TRAH

Old troopsnever die

ly MORT ROSENILUMAssociated Press

EDITOR'S NOTE - Beau Geste llvei, but bemay be getting a little bored. The tough soldiersof the French Foreign Legion still maintain atradition of rigorous training at various onlpottt•cattered around the world, but in recent yearsthey have seen little action.

AUBAGNE, France — The French ForeignLegion, 8,500 strong, remains ever alert to wadeover dunes, jump out of planes or kick downdoors for the glory of France But most of thetime, no one needs the legionnaires.

It's the same Foreign Legion that King Louis-Philippe formed in 1831 and PC. Wren madefamous with the novel "Beau Geste." But theworld around it has changed. Camel charges areout of fashion

Just ask legionnaire Rudi Burda, who earnedmedals in Indochina. Algeria and in nearly everyFrench skirmish since. Today he is a kindlygrandfather, still in uniform but working in anoffice, designing greeting cards and the like.

"Oh, I miss the action a little," says Burda,54. a top sergeant from Austria who joined in1949. He still grumbles that a sudden Vietnameseonslaught kept him from Dien Bien Phu.

"We were already up in Dakotas ready tojump, but just at that moment there was toomuch fire, " he says "Two days later, Dien BienPhu fell." That was in 1954, the last battle ofFrance's Indochina War.

Now Burda is art director at the Kepi Blanc,the Legion's monthly magazine named for thejaunty white hat that is the legionnaire'strademark.

At the next desk, a young legionnaire hangs onBurda's every word.

"I wish something would happen somewhere,just once, so I could get to fight, " says the youth,a Belgian not long enough in the ranks to bepermitted to give his name. "But I like it here."

The Foreign Legion moved to Aubagne, afeatureless industrial town near Marseille, afterAlgerian independence in 1962 forced it out of itsproud fort at Sidi-bel-Abbes

But it brought along the imposing Monumentto the Dead and its relics, including the woodenhand Capt. Jean Danjou lost in 1854 when 2,000Mexicans attacked and 65 legionnaires foughtuntil the last five, out of bullets, charged withbayonets.

Like Burda, the men here do the Legion'sbusiness, keep its books, count its socks and printits calendars and Christmas cards. Most of the8,500 legionnaires are in bases strewn across theworld.

See Legion, Page 9C

The French Foreign Legion marches in parade-on the Champs Elysees in Paris, France. The Foreign Legion was formed in 1831 by King Louis-Phillipeand made famous with the novel Beau Geste.

Arts lovers pull together for council support groupI f HILOY WILS FONTAINEThe Register

RED BANK - A year ago, they werecomplete strangers.

Today they are a closely knit corpsdedicating their time and energy to raisingfunds for the Monmouth Arts Council.

In 12 months, working closely together,some 24 people have helped raise more than$25,000 for Council projects they deem mostworthy of funding. Ultimately, the moneyraised is for support of the Center, whichhouses the Count Basie Theater, studios forthe Monmouth Conservatory of Music, the ArtAlliance of Monmouth County galleries, artstudios and executive offices for the Mon-mouth County Arts Council which are alllocated on Monmouth Street.

They are the Monmouth County ArtsCouncil/Associates.

Their challenge: To generate interest in thecenter, knowledge about it, and funds for it.

"A lot of people don't know the Center isthere," comments Association PresidentBarbara Campo of Rumson "They will say"Where is that?" or 'Oh, you have showsthere?'"

She admits the Associates' challenge is adifficult one but in her view, their first yearin existence has been a success.

"We have done a lot considering we didn'tknow each other a year ago," Campo says.

"But, if you feel strongly enough for a cause,you can work effectively together."

Initially, she says, word of mouth, talkabout a need for a fundraising wing in theprivate sector, got the Associates togetherThey weren't organized for a month whenthey staged their first benefit, a SweetheartBrunch at the Peninsula House in Sea Bright.But it was such a smash, they're planning torepeat the event again this year on Feb. 9 atthe Berkeley Carteret in Asbury Park.Organizers are hoping 250 to 300 persons willattend the 11:30 a.m. affair which includes anopen bar, a sit down brunch, a fashion showof cruise wear and jewelry and a silentauction. All this will be set against abackground of light musical entertainment by-Alicia Rowe, flutist, with piano accompani-ment.

The Associates can also look back on ahighly successful gala celebration of the artsin September which began with dinnersstaged at various homes throughout thecounty, continued with a concert by the NewJersey Pops at the Arts Center, and concludedwith a Viennese dessert buffet, complete withchampagne, in the upper lobby of the CountBasie Theater. The Associates worked jointlywith Arts Council members to stage the gala.

Their goal? As Campo puts it, to acquaintthe public with the Council and the ArtsCenter, and generate publicity to makeresidents aware of the arts offerings

But most importantly, she says the objec-tive is the get the public to attend functionsat the center and maybe even join theAssociation to help with their endeavors.

"I have been led to believe that, in orderfor a theater to function in the black, it hasto be open a certain number of days," Camposays. "We need money to get shows. Withoutthat money, we can't get fantastic shows."

The catch is that without attendance at thetheater, there is no income to produce or drawthe talent they want.

"If people in the area could be made awareof the great need for contributions so thetheater could get back on its feet, moremoney would come in to support it, " Camposays.

She anticipates that, with the upcomingnew Spectrum Series, a whole new audiencewill be won over with what she called"fantastic shows '

The series stats March 1 with a gospelconcert by The Winans. continues March 22with the Irish singing group The Chieftains,April 5 with a concert by the AtlantaSymphony Orchestra, April 12 with the clown"Avner the Eccentric," and concludes May 3with the dance troupe Momix.

Funds that do not come in from grants andticket sales are generated, to a point, by theAssociates.

Their reign is fairly broad."They have their own choice of Council

projects they want to fund1," explains ArtsCouncil Executive Director Sharon Bumham

Members meet monthly at the theater.They have worked so well together in theirfirst year, Campo says, that she and her slateof officers will repeat their terms for 1986-87They are Paul Mitchell, Fair Haven, financialsecretary; Barbara Gorkin, Rumson, cor-responding secretary, and Nancy Miller, FairHaven, recording secretary.

Bumham says the Associates' mandate wasnot just to raise money and make the publicaware of the Council and its activities, but toget the name out into the community.

"They certainly have done that," she says.Among those projects, Bumham notes,

have been tribute cards, whereby a donationis made in the name of another person on a.special occasion, and an Arts CouncilChristmas tree at the Junior League of.Monmouth County's Festival of Trees inDecember

Looking ahead. Campo hopes similarAssociation organizations will spring up inother areas of Monmouth County, in forinstance, the central and western areas. Awider base for theater attendance could thenbe tapped, she maintains

"We would also like to establish an eveningdivision, " she says.

It would be for working people who have aninterest in the center, but no time during theday to generate support of it

The HfgiilfrMONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

MILESTONESWeddings

DiGioia-Ebner Galvin-BealeASBURV PARK - The wedding

of Catherine Marie Ebner and Domi-nick DiGioia took place on Dec. 14 atOur Lady of Mt. Carmel. Rev.Gerard Lynch officiated. The recep-tion was held at Mike Doolan's,Spring Lake.

The bride's parents are Mr. andMrs. Robert H. Ebner, Park Ave.,Oakhurst. The groom is the son ofMr. and Mrs. Rocco DiGioia,Maplewood

Attending the bride as maid ofhonor was L e s l i e Ebner .Bridesmaids were Susan Skidmore,Harrine Katz, Isabella DiGioia andLaura DiGioia. Frank Savino servedas best man. Robert H. Ebner Jr.,Nick Andreula, Michael DiGravinaand Joseph Mastrorocco wereushers. Victoria Savino was a flowergirl and Jimmy Kochnoskie was ringbearer

Mrs. DiGioia was graduated fromOcean Township High School andWesleyan College, Macon, Ga. She is-employed by CMC Electronics, Inc.,Eatontown Her husband is a gradu-ate of Columbia High School,Maplewood, Rutgers University, andFairleigh Dickinson Unviersity. Heis also employed by CMC Elec-tronics, Inc.

The couple resides in Ho well Mr and Mrs Oominlck DiGioia

BROOKLYN, NY. - KathleenBeale and Donald Galvln weremarried on Sept. 28 at Basilica ofOur Lady of Perpetual Help. FatherSteven Wolpert celebrated the Nup-tial Mass along with co-celebrantBrother Kenneth Beale, cousin ofthe bride. The Glen Terrace, here,was the setting for the reception.

Parents of the bride are Mr. andMrs. Michael Beale, here. Thegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Robert Galvin, Sherman Ave.,Belford, N.J.

Catherine Fiducia was the maidof honor. Bridesmaids were MaryGalvin, Diane Geiger, Laura Grantand Barbara Ryan. Richard Galvinwas best man. Kenneth Galvin,Thomas Galvin, Thomas Geiger andDavid Heffler were ushers.

The bride was graduted from TheBerkeley School and is employed byDow Jones and Co., N.Y., N.Y. Mr.Galvin is a graduate of AmericanUniversity and is employed byMonchik-Weber Corp., N.Y., N.Y.

After a honeymoon in Europe thecouple settled In Manhattan. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Galvin

Engagements

Raleigh-MclntoshLONG BRANCH - Kathleen

Francis Mclntosh and John FrancisRaleigh, both of Columbia Ave.,announce their engagement.

The bride-elect is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs Duncun Mclntosh,Spring Valley, Ca Mr. Raleigh is theson of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice RaleighIII, Bonita Springs, Fla.

Miss Mclntosh was graduatedfrom Monte Vista High School,Spring Valley, and is employed byMain Stay Federal Savings andLoan, Red Bank. Her fiance is agraduate of Rumson-Fair HavenRegional High School and is self-employed.

A Feb. wedding is planned

Grimmer-DwyerRUMSON - Mr. and Mrs. Robert

J. Dwyer, Center St., announce theengagement of their daughterMaureen Catherine Dwyer to Wil-liam George Grimmer, son of DianeL. Grimmer. Elizabeth Dr , Ocean-port, and Melvin W. Grimmer,Jefferson St., Eatontown.

Miss Dwyer was graduated from

Rumson-Fair Haven Regional HighSchool and attended Brookdale Com-munity College, Lincroft She isemployed by Bambergers. Eaton-town. Her fiance is a graduate ofHowell Township High School and ispart owner of B.M. Welding Com-pany, W Long Branch.

No wedding date has been set.

Johnson-O'Hara Carozza-KennedySHREWSBURY - Announcement

is made by Katherine P. O'Hara ofthe engagement of her daughterPatricia M. O'Hara to Todd A.Johnson, son of Stanley L. Johnson,Asbury Park, and Dorothy Johnson,Bodman PI., Red Bank.

Miss O'Hara, also the daughter ofthe late James F. O'Hara, wasgraduated from Red Bank Catfiolic

High School and Stuarts School ofBusiness. She is a legal secretary forAnsel], Fox, Zaro and McGovem,Tinton Falls. Her fiance is a gradu-ate of Keyport High School,Brookdale Community College, Lin-croft, and New York University. Heis a representative for John HancockFinancial Services, Lakewood

A May wedding is planned.

TITUSVILLE - The engagementof Kathleen Mary Kennedy, RD. toLouis Joseph Carozza, M.S. is an-nounced by her parents Mr. and Mrs.Wally Kennedy. Mr. Carozza is theson of Linda Carozza, W. Paterson,and the late Louis Carozza Sr

Miss Kennedy was graduated fromKeyport High School, MontclairState College, St. Francis Dietetic

Internship, and is attending NewYork University. She is a registereddietitian for Interstate Unit-ed/Canteen Corp. Her fiance is agraduate of Passaic Valley HighSchool, Montclair State College, andUniversity of Illinois with an MS inChemistry.

A Spring 1987 wedding is planned.

Boardwick-Fallon Okupski-CalabrettaUNION BEACH - Announcement

is made by Mr. and Mrs. JohnFallon, Hwy. 36, of the engagementof their daughter Karen Fallon toRobert Board wick, son of Mr. andMrs. Frank Boardwick, Poole Ave.,here.

The bride-elect and her fiancewere both graduated from KeyportHigh School, she is employed byShop-Rite, Middletown, and he isemployed by D.E.E. Excavating,here.

No date has been set.

LONG BRANCH — The engage-ment of Darcie Ann Calabretta andAnthony Paul Okupski is announcedby her parents Joseph CalabrettaJr., High St., and Margaret Phillips,View Ave.. W Long Branch. MrOkupski is the son of Mr. and MrsEdward J. Okupski. WedgewoodCircle, Eatontown.

Miss Calabretta is a graduate ofShore Regional High School, W. LongBranch, and Union Technical In-stitute. Her fiance was graduatedfrom Mission Bay High School, SanDiego, Ca., and will be attendingUnion Technical Institute.

The couple plan to wed in Oct. of1987

BirthsEDITOR'S NOTE: There'snothing more heartwarming than apicture of a happy baby, especiallyon Us or her birthday. If you'd liketo tee youra smiling on thesepages, send a picture of your childto the Living section of TheRegister at least two weeks beforehis first, second or third birthdayaad we'll be happy to include itamong the others we're salutingthat week.

MONMOUTH MEDICALCENTER

Long Branch

Mr. and Mrs. Nick Aronis(Dawn Currier), Burnt TavernRd . Bricktown, son, Jan. 3.

Mr. and Mrs. Chip Graves(Sherrie Danielle LaBarre), Bu-chanan St., Wall, Jan. 4.

Mr. and Mrs. Christoper Stone(Suzanne Harrington), SlocumPlace, Long Branch, Jan. 4.

Irene Victoria Svenson,Campbell Ave., Belford, daugh-ter, Jan. 4.

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Lawson(Michelle demons), Subic Lane,Eatontown, son, Jan. 4.

Mr. and Mrs. Doug Henschel(Arleen R. Smith), Venus Street,New Monmouth, daughter, Jan.5.

Mr. and Mrs. Sholom Saffer(Marsha Gardyni. ArboretumPkwy., Lakewood, Jan. 5.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tormey(Barbara Piskura), LawrenceCircle, Middletown, son, Jan. 5.

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Doyle(Jennifer Thomas), Cold IndianSpgs. Rd., Ocean, son, Jan. 5.

Deborah Ann Howard,Elmwood Ave., Long Branch,daughter, Jan. 6.

Pvt. and Mrs. Robert S. Kauf-fman (BarbaraM.), Ocean Ave.,Long Branch, son, Jan. 6.

Mr. and Mrs. AnthonyRodriguez (Isabelita Arlequin),Second Ave., Long Branch,daughter, Jan. 2.

Mr. and Mrs. Omar Mansour(Faiza), Wall Street, W. Long

Branch, son, Jan. 5.Mr. and Mrs. Morris Williams,

Jr. (Ferrett), William St., TintonFalls, daughter, Jan. 6.

Deborah Y. Williams andEugene Savage, Jr., White St.,Eatontown, son, Jan. 6.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Holland(Virginia Delisa), ClevelandAve., Long Branch, son, Jan. 7.Mr. and Mrs. Joel Jevotovsky(Pamela Silverberg), LincolnCourt, Elberon, son, Jan. 7.

Mr. and Mrs. Maximino Arce(Elena Maldonado), Union Ave.,Long Branch, daughter, Jan. 9.Mr. and Mrs. Robert King(Ruthann Whaley) (Crichlow),Lorraine Drive, CliffwoodBeach, daughter, Jan. 9.

Mr. and Mrs. John Nugent(Joan O'Boyle), Marlboro,daughter, Dec. 28.

Mr. and Mrs. Christoper Con-over (Louise Melillo), RumsonRd., Rumson, son. uct. a.

RIVERVIEW MEDICALCENTERRed Bank

Mr. and Mrs.'Ardale Wright(Kathleen Hynes), Broadway,Keyport, daughter Dec. 23.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Florio(Desiree Ennis), Lorillard Ave.,Union Beach, son, Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Geiger(Diane Setterstrom), 511 Floren-ce Ave., Union Beach, son, Dec.24.

Mr. and Mrs. AnthonyD'Alessandro (Ginai, Birch Dr.,Shrewsbury, son, Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. Micah Williams(Ernestine Blackman), MitcellDr., Eatontown, son, Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. James Miller(Patricia Bunce), Ravine Dr.,Matawan. daughter, Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. John Di Matteo(Joann Nappo), Buttonwood Rd.,Middletown, daughter, Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Davis(Leona Perletta), Laf ayuette St.,Rumson, son, Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Davis(Martha Bovik), Linden Ave.,Highlands, son. Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas(Sharon), Joyce Lane, Red Bank,daughter, Dec. 24

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Shields(Dorothea McGinnis), LaurelAve., W. Keansburg, daughter,Dec. 24.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hessert(Lesley Florkiewicz), DeepdaleDr., Middletown, daughter, Dec.24.

Mr. and Mrs. James Reilly(Gina Marie), Nut Swamp Rd.,Middletown, twin daughters,Dec. 25.

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Steidle(Patricia Locke), York Ave.,Port Monmouth, daughter, Dec.25

Mr. and Mrs. James England

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(Marianne Fitzgerald), LoganRd., Wanamassa, son, Dec. 26.

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Romans(Peggy Newell), Broad St., Key-port, son, Dec. 26.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pillari(Jennifer Brown), Sixth & ParkAve., Asbury Park, son, Dec. 26.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Capriotti(Joan Mary Gannon), ComptonSt., Belford, son, Dec. 26.

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hagan(Nancy Elkovics), Miriam PI.,'Hazlet, son, Dec. 26.

Mr. and Mrs. Renato D'Uxso(Donnamarie Colasurdo), NewMonmouth Rd., Middletown,daughter, Dec. 26.

Mr. and Mrs. Wei-Ho Wu(Theresa Li-Hui), ManorParkway, Lincroft, daughter,Dec. 27.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Blozen(Jill Swanson), Shore Blvd.Keansburg, daughter, Dec. 27.

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Tappen(Kathleen Bagnell), AmherstLane, Hazlet, son, Dec. 27.

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Maratta(Rose Hanily) Maple Ave., RedBank, son, Dec. 27.

Mr. and Mrs. Wilfredo Trabal(Debra Siciliano), Prospect St.,Keyport, daughter, Dec. 27.

Mr. and Mrs. Jignasu Patel(Kalpana), Winchester Lane,Holmdel, son, Dec. 27.

Mr. and Mrs. John Mescal(Debra MacDonaid), WilsonAve., Port Monmouth, daughterDec. 27.

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MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986 The Regialer 3C

STYLEBuilding on the BasicsBy CATHERINE 6ANN0NThe Register

RUMSON - Stand in theMiddletown or Matawan trainstation at 7 15 a.m. tomorrowmorning and eye the fashionuniform of most women com-muters. Surprisingly, mostwomen, like men, sport theclassic suit.

Disappointingly dull? Not atall.

Women may have accepted theimportance of power dressing tomake it in a man's businessworld, but they are going a stepbeyond and individualizing thecorporate uniform to work forthem — their age, style andprofession.

After all, fashion is a strongsuit for women.

A navy or camel suit in aclassic cut and good fabric maybe the working woman's main-stay but accessorizing it with lacecollars, antique lapel pins andbold cuff bracelets multiplies herstyle options and lends con-fidence, authority and polish toher image.

According to Brian George,owner of Northshore, here,women are discovering a strategymen have used for a long time —investment dressing.

"Women are becoming moresophisticated," says George,"and adopting the European way

of buying — to buy two goodsuits."

"Clothing should be bought likea car," he says, "for per-formance Women used to buyclothes only for aesthttics, andmanufacturers played on thisThe reason fashions and styles forwomen change so quickly is tosell more next year."

George believes in building astrong core wardrobe, which canbe accessorized to update yourlook each year He buys classicsilhouettes or shapes in goodquality fabrics He emphasizesthe importance of good qualityfabric and designs his own line bychoosing fabric, colors and sil-houette from menswear manufac-turers He believes thatmenswear manufacturers arebetter than womenswear manu-facturers. "The specif ications ofmenswear are better, and thequality of piece goods is better ''

George calls his style "forwardbut traditional or traditional tastewith a twist."

Once they've selected a suit,women can add collectibles orextendibles, such as skirts, pantsand sweaters in coordinatingcolors and patterns to add ver-satility to their wardrobe

Eileen Duffy, manager ofTalbots, Little Silver, also be-lieves in choosing a suit that willbe easy to mix with the rest ofyour wardrobe.

"Most of our customers arebuying traditional suit looks,classic silhouettes in updatedfabrics, such as silk," she says.

Many of her customers chooseblack or white suite pieces andthen buy related coordinates.Duffy says she often sells acoordinating sweater with a suit,so that after 5 p. m., a woman canremove the jacket for a sportierlook

"Women today want fewerclothes and more options. Theyhave less time to waste," saysMarilyn Scherfen of Color 1Associates, Inc., Atlantic High-lands "An accessory is often theway that an outfit will work."

According to Scherfen,thereare two types of dress for workingwomen: power dressing andsubtlety dressing, and the ac-cesories for each are different. Apower dresser is aiming to standout, to be the leader or authorityfigure. Power dressers shouldchoose one confident accessory,such as big silky black bowteamed with a pastel suit or astandout lapel pin. In subtletydressing, the person doesn't want ito be singled out. She may betrying to fit in as part of team, orit may be that the dress code inher business is extremely con-servative. In this case, ac-cessories should blend in. Lacecollars, ribbon ties or dainty ropebracelets may be more ap-propriate.

EASE AND VERSATILITY — Above, Voell, takes the suit's jacketand pairs it with a plaid skirt and riding boots which, coupled witha white mock-turtle blouse, makes an outfit perfect for weekends athome or in the city. Below, she matches.the skirt with a casual woolvest to create an even more casual effect.

ONE SUIT, MANY LOOKS — Jeanne Voell,sales manager at Northshore in Rumson, showshow one basic suit can be dressed up or down,

THE REGISTER/GREGG ELLMAN

added to or subtracted from, to create a look thateasily carries from day into night and city intocountry.

What kind of accessories arearea women buying? '

According to Shirley Mumford,manager of the Women's Shop ofRoots, Red Bank, unusual silkscarves are replacing the moremannish tie. Neckware forwomen's suits is fancier this year

and includes such items as ro-settes I ribbons fashioned intorose shapes), and jabots, a broadruffle to frill worn on the front ofa blouse and fastened at the neck.

"Lace continues to be very

popular," she says, and "it willprobably be so right throughspring."

Mumford also suggests antiquejewelry and estate pieces, hand-painted porcelain in pastel shadesand carved ivory pieces

Old mannequins never die — they go to dummy heavenBy ELIZABETH HARTI6ANL.A. Daily News

LOS ANGELES - Like a vision out of "StepfordWives," the nude models huddle in a corner of ImperialDisplay's downtown repair shop, each waiting its turnunder the paint gun. This is what happens to badmannequins, those who lose their heads and break theirfingers and cease to be an image of perfection.

"How would you feel if you walked into a store andsaw a mannequin with its head off?" asked A L Corte.a co-owner of Imperial Display.

A little queasy, probably. The fiberglass forms lookso real, they shocked one Bakersfield couple, who hadcome to rent a bridal display model. "The guy stoodhere at the door and wouldn't come in because theywere naked,1' said the store's other owner, LindaHolmquist. "His wife came in and picked out the

mannequin.These models of humans appear in more than just

shop windows. People rent them for parades, parties,photography, the movies and TV shows like "Dynasty"and "The Price Is Right," at from $75 to $90 a week.

Directors often rely on mannequins instead of extras."They're cheaper than a stand-in, they don't take lunchbreaks and from a distance you couldn't tell if it's ahuman being or a mannequin," said Fidel Davila ofDavila Studios, a repair store in Pico Rivera.

Mannequins also get to play bodily parts. Mannequinlimbs and torsos performed on a conveyor belt in thefilm "Bladeninner," for example. "When you see thehands getting blown off, like In 'North and South,' thoseare mannequin parts," said Holmquist.

But the biggest business for Imperial Display isrrfimshing. Robinson's, Bullock's, JCPenney Co. andSears all "update" their mannequins every few years,sending them to be sanded down, repainted and to have

their makeup and hair redone at shops like this one,since the shapes cost from $475 to $600 new. "It can getpretty crazy, trying to find a way to get everything donein a very short period," said Corte.

Artist Salomon Diaz of Bell is charged with applyingthe mannequins' faces with oils and spray gun, workingfrom photos of other mannequins, a job he has donepart-time since 1965 He likes the look of modernmannequins. "Before, they looked like toys. Now thesculpturing is 100 percent better, much more realistic."

But manufacturers only take the realism so far.Mannequins are what we want to look like, rather thanwhat we do look like. You would be hard pressed to findan overweight or ugly model. It's even hard to find themwith black or Asian facial features. Painting blackmannequins "cafe" color and Hispanic mannequinswith "macho" expressions is about as ethnic as mostdisplays get.

However, modern types do have slightly more

realistic bodies, with navels, more defined muscles andribcages, for example.

One recent type shows an aggressive woman with amasculine face and a lean, muscular body. "She has areal chiseled, Grace Jones-type face. Her fists areclenched, and she has no smile. She has a harshexpression, like. Don't mess with me,'" said Holm-quist.

Unless the display designer wants an abstract look,with perhaps a pearly white or silver-gray paint job,most mannequins get skin-color paint, makeup in soft,realistic tones and short hair in soft reds or blonds,Corte said.

The models' stances vary, depending on the type ofclothes they're intended to sell. There-are sedate brides,athletes with their knees sprawled apart in a casualpose, haughty "high fashion" models with their nosesin the air, and bathing-suit beauties with the thigh-hipjoint hidden in the crotch.

4C The RrgUler lY, JANUARY 20, 1986

ADVICEAnnLanders

Hang up on this oneDear Ann Landers: Please tell me

if you think I am nuts.Two years ago I wai divorced (33

yean old, no children). I dated a fewmen but they were such creeps (onestole money out of my wallet) Idecided I was belter off with no manthan the kind I was meeting. I keepbusy with family and friends and dovolunteer work in a home for theelderly.

Several weeks ago a man tele-phoned. It was a wrong number. Hecalled back a minute later and said,"I like your voice." I mult haveliked his, too. We talked for twohours.

The man's first name is Ralph. Hewill not tell me his last name orwhere he lives. I Invited him overbut he refuses to visit me, says he'safraid he will fall In love and hedoesn't want that. He has sent meflowers and a loaf of bread he bakedhimself (it was very good). We talkan the phone on the average of fourtimes a week. Our conversations lastanywhere from one to two-and-a-halfhours.

I look forward to his calls. Theybrighten my life, but I wonder If beis a little squirrely or married,maybe to a woman who works atnight. Why doesn't he want to meetme? My best friend says I shouldring off permanently, but I hate togive him up. What do you say? —Undecided In Sioux Falls

Dear Undecided: Something isrotten in the state of South Dakota.It sounds to me as if the man enjoysplaying games and has a few bats inhis belfry besides. And what's withyou that you'd spend so much timeon the horn with a stranger? Myadvice is to sign up for morevolunteer work. This character is a

monumental waste of time, and hecould be bad news.

Dear Ann Landers: Are you awarethat tinnitus (ringing, roaring orclicking in the ears), as described by"Boston Sufferer," afflicts millionsof Americans? Some people noticetinnitus only occasionally. Othershave It all the time. It's like apersonal background noise. Suf-ferers of severe tinnitusfiad it hardto carry on their normal activities.Some cannot bold a Job. Otherscannot sleep.

In spite of Its prevalence, little hasbeen done to help most sufferers.There are treatments, however, thatcan help some tinnitus patients.

The American Tinnitus Associa-tion Is organiied to carry on andsupport research and educationalactivities relating to the cure oftinnitus and other defects or diseasesof the ear. We are prepared to referpatients to health providers who areknowledgable about tinnitus andmay be able to help them. Referralcan also be made to one of about 150tinnitus support groups throughoutthe United Stales and Canada.

Anyone who wishes informationshould send a long, self-addressed,stamped envelope to the AmericanTinnitus Association, Box 5,Portland, Ore. 17201. - G.R., Ex-ecutive Director

Dear G.R.: Prepare to beswamped with requests for Infor-mation. My mall on this subject wasstaggering. I was amazed to learnthat so many people are sufferingwith this problem. (P.S. To readers:I've checked out this organizationand It Is excellent. These people havehelped thousands and perhaps theycan help you. Give them a chance.

Dr. JoyceBrothers

Early fame not alwayswhat it seems to be

Dear Dr. Brothers: My daugh-ter was a very successful modelby the time she was 21. She wasmaking more money per hourthan her father or I had made perweek. We were thrilled for her,but she wasn't so pleased. Abouta year ago, she stopped workingaltogether and withdrew frommost of her friends. She said shethought she was being used andshe wanted to change her life anddo something with her braininstead of her body. Is thishealthy? - N.N.

Dear N.N.: This may be veryhealthy. The life of a model is ahard one and the number of yearsshe can continue in her professionare even more limited than thoseof a professional athlete.

While early success can causesome problems with jealousy andrivalry from friends and family,it can also lift economic burdensand allow people more freedom toexplore what they'really wish todo with their lives. It's a sad factthat beautiful women often doubtthemselves and many are unableto develop close, rewarding rela-tionships because of their lowself-esteem. They often feelthey're respected and loved onlyfor their beauty.

Many times this perceptionisn't far from the truth. Theexceptionally attractive womanneeds to develop and explore herother talents so that she'll respectherself.

Dear Dr. Brothers: My son isnow trying to succeed In business,my business. I want to help him,but at times he seems so Im-mature. At other times, he's verymature In his decisions. How canthis be? Sometimes, I'm notreally sure what maturity is. Hethinks of himself as a creativeslob who will eventually conquerthe world. - W.S.

Dear W.S : According to Dr.Mortimer Feinberg, who wrote"Effective Psychology for Man-agers," maturity isn't related tointelligence or to happiness, noris it the same for each person. Hesuggests that one of the importantqualities of maturity for a man-ager is a good sense of humor.Your son may have the seed forthis when he refers to himself asa "creative slob."

Actually, creative peoplearen't usually slobs. They maylook like slobs, they may seemdisorderly, but basically, they'revery disciplined and orderly

Even mature people aren'talways mature in their decisions.It's possible to be mature in someareas and very immature inothers. Your son might behavedifferently if he were working forsomeone else. When fathers andsons are in the same business,there's bound to be some frictioncaused by jealousy and com-petitiveness. Frequently, this isunconscious. It's difficult to beimpersonal when judging one'sfather or one's son.

Heloise

Quick trick fixes doorDEAR HELOISE: .

For yean I have had the problemof the freezer door on a side-by-siderefrigeratorfreezer "popping" open.Though many hints were offered andfollowed to no avail, not one ser-viceman ever offered the hint myhusband got from a building inspec-tor.

The simple solution: Tilt the frontof the refrigerator freezer up slight-ly and the adjustment can be madeeasily at the bottom where there areadjusters on most models.

It was so simple. Now the doorpractically "snaps" shut instead ofhaving to be pushed to make sure themagnets make contact.

I hope this will solve a problem forothers that can be rather costly, asit has for me. No more melted icecream, ice cubes, etc. — AnastasiaLorenzo

A simple hint that I'm sure manyothers will appreciate. — Heloise

Blouse gapDear Heloise: I have a Up for

blouses that easily unbutton or gapwhen you don't want them to.

I put the zipper foot on my sewingmachine and simply sew my blousetogether from mid-chest to thebottom with buttons buttoned. Thischanges the blouse to a slip-on andeliminates the problems buttonscause. — Debbie Chapman

Corn off the cobDear Heloise: I thought I would

share with your readers a trick I usein cutting fresh corn off of the cob.

I use my angel food cake pan andplace the end of the cob in the center.Then I take my electric knife and cutoff the kernels on each side. The cornkernels fall nicely and neatly Into thepan, and there's no mess on thecabinet. - Sheree Estes

Pottage sumpsDear Heloise: When I discovered

my postage stamps had becomestuck together during humidweather, I asked at the post officehow to get them apart so they wouldstill be usable. The postmaster toldme to leave them in the freezer for24 hours.

After leaving them in the freezerfor two days, the stamps came aparteasily. — Sheila Strack

How about that, unstuck by freei-Ing! - Heloise

Clean drainerDear Heloise: To keep dish

drainers and trays looking like new,clean them with pure lemon juiceevery now. and again.

If you're out of lemon juice, usevinegar — but the lemon juice worksbest.

If there's a buildup of hard waterstain, let the drainer and tray soaka while before wiping clean. —Connie Defelice

Ash awayDear Heloise: As a professional

hairdresser, I'd like to pass on alittle hint for women or men who tinttheir hair at home with dark brownand especially black tints. Even inthe beauty shop working with pro-fessional remover products, it'sdifficult to remove the dark stainthat penetrates the skin around thehairline, face and ears.

Save cigarette ashes and applythem with cotton to stained areas,then wash with shampoo. The coaltar in the ashes does a terrific Job.- Michele Kislan

I haven't tried this and am goingto trust you and my readers who sayIt works. — Heloise

If TEMY Y0UN6Counting books caused Julie

Stover to stay awake at night.And she discovered, to her dis-may, that counting sheep couldn'tmake her sleep

So to cure the insomnia shedeveloped while taking inventoryat the Circus of Books, in WestHollywood, Calif., where sheworks as buyer, Stover turned toa voice she could not hear

The voice told her to fallasleep. And she did

The 26-year-old woman creditsa cassette tape that features thesoothing sounds of the oceanlapping on the shore for herrediscovered ability to snooze.

But it was what she couldn'thear that really made the dif-ference, she insisted. Hiddenbeneath the surface of the wavesis the voice of hypnotist BarrieKonicov, who told her to sleep.

Stover has joined the growingranks of people who are con-vinced that subliminal messages,have changed their lives

Marketed by a variety ofcompanies, cassette tapes fea-ture subliminal messages maskedunder the combined sounds of anocean washing ashore andelevator music They are beingpeddled in record stores, book-stores and even K marts to helpconsumers do everything fromlose weight to improve theirbowling game

Oh those sleepless nightsPerhaps the most attractive

aspect of the tapes, which sell forabout $10, is, as Konicov noted:"Changes take place in your life... without effort, withoutthought, without strain."

The no-sweat tapes requirenothing but faith and a cassetteplayer

There are even tapes specifi-cally designed to help facilitatedivorce or to nudge listeners intoderiving more pleasure out ofsex

And for people like Stover,there is a tape to cure insomnia.

"I was a little skeptical atfirst, " Stover related, "but I'msleeping now. so I am con-vinced"

Dorothy Shamah, a 45-year-oldEnglish teacher at ClaremontHigh School, said she used asubliminal message tape to turnher self-described "combativenature" into ona of cooperation.

"My students told me theynoticed the difference," she said.

For 45 minutes each day,Shamah would listen to thesoothing sounds on the tape. Buta few decibels below her range ofhearing, she was being urged tolighten up. Consciously, she

couldn't hear the commands, butshe believes her subconsciouswas getting the message loud andclear.

Shamah, who also owns ahealth-food store where thecassettes are sold, said $850worth of tapes were bought fromthe first of October to mid-November. "And they sold well atChristmas," she pointed out.Tapes that encouraged people toquit smoking and lose weightwere the big sellers, she said.

"And a lot of people have beenasking for the sexuality tapes, soI've ordered some of them," shesaid.

But while subliminal tapescontinue to make noise at thecash registers, scientists remainskeptical about the product'seffectiveness.

Leon Kaplan, a Princeton,N.J., consumer behavior psychol-ogist, said, "I haven't seen anyhard scientific evidence to sup-port the fact that subliminalmessages work."

Kaplan, like other researchers,said that when consumers reportthat the tapes have worked, "it isusually because they arepredisposed to believe it will

work."A person who buys a weight-

loss tape with intentions of diet-ing may get results from theirconscious attempt to make achange — not from anysubliminal message, Kaplan said.

While scientists bemoan thesubliminal tapes, buyers are notcomplaining.

A spokesman at the FederalTrade Commission said therehave been no complaints fromconsumers regarding the tapes,which made their widespreadappearances last year. "We havehad plenty of inquiries from themedia but no complaints frombuyers," the spokesman said.

Greg Banfill, president of theGrand Rapids, Mich.-basedPotentials Unlimited, said thecompany guarantees the effec-tiveness of its tapes. "We havehad less than a 1 percent returnon the tapes," he claimed.

Potential Unlimited markets160 tape subjects — from self-helpand athletic improvement to suc-cess and psychic types.

Banfill is aware that there arecritics of the subliminal messagetapes, but he is uncertain howwidespread the disaffection is.

"Basically, people who are skep-tical don't buy the tapes, so wedon't hear from them."

David Lee, a Santa Monicahypnotherapist who also marketsa line of tapes, said the subliminalmessage works just like self-hypnosis, except that it does notrequire a state of deep relaxation.You can even drive while you arelistening to messages, he pointedout.

"There is a growing trendtoward using these tapes," Leeasserted. He said the appeal forthe tapes lies in their ease of useand "the underlying thread ofgetting control of your ownmind." •

But mind control is one of theconcerns that has tarnished theimage of subliminal messages.

Subliminal messages took adrubbing after some well-publi-cized instances during the '50s,when the words "eat popcorn"flashed across movie screens,and from Wilson Bryan Key's 1973book, "The Subliminal Seduc-tion," which had Americanssearching ice cubes used inadvertisements for foggy imagesof sex and nudity. Key arguedthat ad men were manipulating

the consumers' subconscious.But Key's assertions seemed

strained. For instance, he pointedout that changing just one lettermakes the word "tastes" into"testes." If cigarette ads usedthe word "tastes," Key said,readers might subliminally read"testes" and see a sexual con-notation.

And the ideas contained in thatbook may seem even more datednow that advertisers make littleattempt to mask their salespitches through the use of flashyand sexy quick-edit images thatplay to the conscious state.

Meanwhile, some shoppingcenters reportedly have tried tocash in on subliminal manipu-lation by repeatedly "mixing sub-tle anti-theft messages with theirin-store music programming. Buttheir numbers are not exactlylegion.

Karen Brown, vice president ofcommunications for the FoodMarketing Institute, which rep-resents 1,500 grocery chains, saidthere has been little, if any,interest in initiating subliminalmessage programs to curb theestimated annual {1.2 billiondollars in shoplifting.

"There was only one securitycompany promoting a subliminalmessage program to the storeexecutives attending our conven-tion," she pointed out.

However, there is no longer aworking telephone number for thePortland-based Proactive Sys-tems Inc.

The complete history of snoring, from A to ZZZZZZZZZBy MICHAEL MCLEQOOrlando Sentinel

Women have achieved equalitywith men in many areas, butthere are still certain things thata man can do much better than awoman

Take snoring, for example. Aman is four times as likely as awoman to snore. Although theyhave examined the subject fromA to ZZZZ, scientists still can'tsay why

"There have been ions . of

studies," said Dr. A J Block, acardiologist at the University ofFlorida. "So far, we have nothingconclusive."

If you were to install a snorerin an orchestra, he'd probably fitin best with the woodwinds. Thesound of snoring is produced bythe effect of incoming and outgo-ing air on the soft palate, thespongy expanse of tissue on theroof of the mouth. Like the reedin an oboe, the soft palatevibrates and produces a deepnoise as air rushes past it. Voila:a little night music

Block has done research to seewhether snoring is associatedwith androgen and progesterone— the male and female sexhormones, respectively. Hesuspects that progesterone maysomehow help women breathemore easily during sleep, whileandrogen, the male hormone, hasthe opposite effect. But so farBlock has been unable to provehis hypothesis.

The irony of male snoring isthat it may have evolved not toharass but to protect a man'ssleeping companion. Some scien-

tists have suggested, only half-jokingly, that snoring was ad e f e n s e m e c h a n i s m forprehistoric man: The nocturnalcacophony may have frightenedpredators away.

Perhaps there was a time whena man who had an earth-shakingsnore was considered a hot date.These days, however, a snoringhabit can have less desirablereverberations — such as separ-ate bedrooms. Research has in-dicated that a lusty, basso profun-do male snorer can shake theshutters at 80 decibels. A jack-

hammer, by comparison,produces about 100 decibels.

It may be small consolation tomen who snore to know thathistory is full of illustrioussnorers, including WinstonChurchill, George Washingtonand Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

On the down side, Mussolinisnored, and so did King George.

Over the years, hundreds ofsnore-no-more gadgets have beeninvented. One of the simplest is asmall ball that can be sewn intothe back of a man's pajamas,deterring him from sleeping in

the optimum snoring position: onhis back. A Pennsylvania farmeronce built a bed that was designedto drop a beanbag on the sleeper'shead once snoring reached acertain level. Other inventorshave dreamed up devices thatlook like instruments of torture —neckbands, braces, electronicbuzzers and mouthpieces.

The history of anti-snoringdevices could fill a good-sizedtextbook. So could the. name of amodern surgical remedy forpeople with nighttime breathingtroubles: palatopharyngoplasty.

MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986

HEALTH

GeorgeSheehan

Be a successin your lifeHealth is success in living. It is

the making actual of the potentialwe were bom with. Health isfinding what we do well and doingit better. Health is living inconformity with our temperment.It is the expression of ourpersonality.

Health, someone has said, is anactivity of a living body accordingto its excellences. Excellencesare individual to the individual. Inhealth it is primary that we insiston ourself. I am in the process ofhealth. I am making a man.

This man that I am is unique.I carry the genes of my forebears.I am Irish. I am American. I grewup in the city. My father was aphysician. I have a specific bodycomposition. I was raised as aRoman Catholic. What is healthto me? What constitutes thesuccessful life? How am I tosucceed in a self and a societywith so many conflicts?

George Vaillant has focussedon various indictors of successfulliving. Work, social, physical,psychological. Through them heconcludes whether a person hasmade a successful adaptation tolife. Adaptation is more thanadjusment or conformity. It is thesuccessful expression of the egowith the self and others. Adapta-tion is the orderly progression ofthe maturing ego through thevarious stages of the life cycle.

We should know that nothing ispermanent. Erickson puts thatbluntly. We cannot make theassumption that In each stage agoodness is achieved which isimpervious to new inner conflictsand to changing conditions. Thereis an ever heightening and con-tinuous struggle for meaningfulexistence. We cannot put physicalfitness in the bank. Nor can weput mental or psychological orsocial fitness in a safe depositbox.

Biology is process not taskcompletion. "Intimacy," writesVaillant, "is not achieved onceand for all; the seeds of love mustconstantly be resown." However,we should know that we becomeincreasingly capable of the hu-man functions as we age regard-less of our past. We maturemorally and socially and psycho-logically. Mental health likephysical health is there for thosewho put themselves to the task ofdeveloping.

Know thyself remains the everuseful injunction. Know the oper-ation of your unique body-mindcomplex. Know the rules ofhealth. Know how to perfect yourinstrument. Knowing who you aremeans you know the raw ma-terial, your strengths your weak-nesses. Next you must know thesocial forces. Your externalhomeostasis is as relevant asyour internal homeostasis. Yourinner goals instincts, desires,emotions and satisfactions haveto mesh with those society offersor even demands of you.

We differ in our levels offunctioning. And therefore, in ouradaptation to our inner and outerenvironment. This is most ob-vious as to physical health. Per-haps not as evident socially andpsychologically. Those who seemto handle stress well, people whoare high performers with con-siderable staying power havebeen found to have certaincharacteristics.

Kobasa has written about suchhardy individuals who handlestress well. They have commit-ment, control and challenge.Commitment implies a con-fidence in the project or goal; andthe will to act on it. Commitmentmeans not giving up easily underpressure. Control is the tendencyto feel that how one acts isinfluential in what happens: "I domake a difference." Thechallenger assumes that changerather than stability is normal inlife. Further change is an incen-tive to growth, rather than athreat to security.

Such qualities are exhaustiblejust as are our physical ones. Weare finite creatures. Yet all arecapable of the successful life. Thehero, stated Kierkegaard, is her-oic in what we all can be heroic.Ortega made the same point inhis meditations on Don Quixote.The hero is one in continual revoltwith the status quo. The hero isthe man who would be himselfand no other. Each one of us isable to do that. Each one of uswas bom to be a success, howeverunlikely that appears.

George Sheehan, a runnerand cardiologist, writes acolumn that appears everyMonday in the Living sectionof The Register.

Smoking: The toughest habit of all to break"Nine out of 10 smokers say they want to stop.Most succeed at first, but later must try, tryagain, w

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By MOIM BAILEY

Orlando Sentinel

Charlotte L'hrig, a registered nurse, has smokedcigarettes for .14 nf her 53 years The Florida nursinghome administrator, who watches some elderlyresidents engage in a daily battle for breath, probablywon't stop smoking until cigarettes do the same to her

"I think I'll get to the point where I'll cough enoughthat I won't like being around other people. " said Uhrig"I don't like coughing and sounding unpleasant '

Dr Robert Meiers once smoked three packs ofcigarettes every day. The 39-year-old Orlando. Fla .dentist is now down to just under a pack and worriesmore about the effects of smuking than he used toMeiers tells his patients not to smoke, but can't do ithimself.

"There are no pluses," Meiers said. It s just a socialhabit. ... I'm very negative towards it I with patients)It's the old saying, Don't do as I do, do as I say "

Both smokers have tried to quit But they smoke,regardless of the documented health hazards and theoverall growth in anti-smoking sentiment They areresigned to an unrelenting need for nicotine, a Jekyll-and-Hyde drug that can both soothe anxiety and zaplethargy

The odds apparently are against quitting once and forall. Nine out of 10 smokers say they want to stop,according to the American Lung Association Thefailure rate for people who enroll in stop-smokingprograms averages around 50 percent, at best Mostsucceed at first, but later must try, try again

Dr. Margaret Mattson of the National CancerInstitute estimates that one-third of the 55 millionsmokers in this country are heavy smokers, at abouttwo packs a daj>. They represent one-tenth of the overallpopulation

Smokers are locked into what they will like to calla habit, but in truth, they are chemically dependent Thenicotine in cigarettes is an addictive drug Accordingto the US Public Health Service, smoking is the "mostwidespread example of drug dependence in ourcountry." A puff on a cigarette can deliver a rush ofnicotine to the brain, via the lungs, within sevenseconds.

Like any addictive drug, says the Lung Association,nicotine is characterized by: influence on chemistry ofthe brain and nervous system, compulsive use.physiological and psychological effects following abruptwithdrawal and tendency to relapse after discontinuinguse

Regular smokers who swear off cigarettes experiencenicotine withdrawal in the form of fatigue, cramping,nervousness, irritability, headaches, insomnia orflightiness.

"Personally speaking. I think mine is more psycho-logical than chemical. " said Meiers Cigarettes, hesaid, calm him down.

Meiers started smoking almost 20 years ago, whilestudying for college exams A pattern established atthat early age is extremely difficult to break, accordingto John Sanders, a counselor who works with smokersat Orlando General Hospital Sanders estimates at least90 percent of all smokers start as teen-agers. Thenicotine addiction is enhanced by the fact that

rig.irrt'.r • -r" -vh*equently woven into all facets of aperson s daily routine

Merle Zinck. the 39-year-old administrator of theRosemont Health Care Center, started smoking whenIn- was a 19-year-old Marine to avoid washing dishes andemptying the garbage on kitchen duly The cigarettesmokers were allowed to lake a break So he joinedthem

He quit once for three weeks and another time for10 days

Zinck's father quit smoking at age 85 Soon afterward,the older man contracted throat cancer and died Zincksuspects cigarettes killed his father But Zinck worriesabout "shocking his system " by going cold turkey

"I know all the medical ramifications." said Zinck.mentioning a nursing home patient with emphysemawho cannot breathe without an oxygen tank. Zinck'sgoal is to quit by Friday, his 40th birthday lie's not surehe will make it.

"Over the last six months I guess I have beencontemplating quitting and not enjoying it (smokingl."Zinck said He enjoys only two cigarettes out of thesingle pack he smokes daily Smoking relaxes him. buthe can't think of anything else positive they do (forhim). Not anymore."

If Zinck does make another attempt to quit, he couldconceivably chew nicotine gum. recently licensed forprescription in this country The gum is designed as astop-smoking aid. for use in conjunction with a stop-smoking program The gum contains about twomilligrams of nicotine, designed to help ease nicotinewithdrawal and help reduce dependence

The gum will prove to be a breakthrough only ifsmokers are already making a concerted effort to stop.

Once abandoned, the memory of cigarettes can bestrong enough to re-trigger an addiction months oryears later — even among those people whose cigaretteaddiction resulted in a brush with death It is notuncommon, for example, for heart attack victims toresume smoking once they've completed a recoveryprogram of diet and exercise, according to Dr DavidParsons, who works with the stop-smoking program atOrlando's Florida Hospital "You do find them comingback to it after four or five years, ' Parsons said

The serious smoker is seemingly undaunted by healthrisks Ramon Morgan is one of them.

"I've seen the lungs of smokers and they're terribleIt doesn't scare me too much," said Morgan, the 58-year-old director of the National Kidney Foundation ofCentral Florida.

Morgan, who has worked with health agencies for 30years, speaks in a deep, raspy voice and says he is oftenshort of breath When he was hospitalized forpneumonia years ago. he kept cigarettes at his bedside

A smoker for more than 40 years. Morgan used to giveup cigarettes during Lent He would light up again onEaster Sunday morning.

I don't have that much motivation to really makeme quit. If someone told me, If you don't quit you'regoing to die within a certain amount of time,' I don'tknow that I would or wouldn't." Morgan said

Some days, when he's smoked more than his usualIH packs. Morgan admits he is "turned off" bycigarettes But the feeling passes and the urge to smokereawakens every morning, before his feet hit the floor

"Maybe I'm playing Russian roulette. I don't know '

For those who want to stop

Some 'Quit Tips' to help you outALLENHURST - The American

Cancer Society encourages smokersto quit and non-smokers not to startThe Monmouth Unit of the AmericanCancer Society offers a few "QuitTips:"

— Hide all ashtrays, matches, etc— Keep a handy supply of sugar-

less gum, carrot sticks, etc.— Drink lots of liquids, but pass up

coffee and alcohol.

— Tell s'ipportive people you'requitting for the day, and need theirhelp.

— When the urge to smoke hits,hold it for ten seconds, and slowlyrelease it.

— Exercise.

— Try the "buddy system" andask a friend to quit too.

— Take one day at a time

Smoking cigarettes is an ex-pensive and destructive habit Thegood news is that today there aremore than 30 million ex-smokers inthe United States. Each one of themhad to make a decision to quit. Thereasons that people smoke arevaried Some want to look older, ormore sophisticated, or more glam-orous. The reasons that peoplecontinue to smoke are more com-plex. There are six key factors whichhelp describe many people s smok-ing habits: Stimulation, handling,relaxation, crutch, craving andhabit. If you are thinking of quitting,you need to know what kind ofsmoker you are, and which factorsare important to you Then you know

where to put extra effort to counter-act those smoking habits.

The benefit of quitting are manyYou will surely want to add your ownto the list:

— Adds years to your life— Helps avoid lung cancer,

emphysema, and bronchitis

— Gives heart and circulatorysystem a break

— Lose your smoker's hack— Feel more vigorous in sports— Improves stamina— Enjoy tasting food again— End cigarette breath

— Say goodbye to stained yellowteeth and fingers

— Have a lot more spendingmoney

— You'll be setting a goodexample

— No more burning holes infurniture or clothes

Dr. LesterCol em an

It's true: Treatment for an ulcerdoesn't mean a boring milk dietIf LESTER L. COLUMN. M.D.

Is It true that people with an ulcerof the stomach do not have to live onmilk and cream any more? I havebeen told that some doctors let themeat anything they want. — Mr. H.T.,N.J.

Dear Mr. T : For many decades,ulcers of the stomach and duodenum(small intestine) were treated witha Sippy diet, named after the doctorwho originated it.

The purpose of this diet was toneutralize any excess acid that ispresent in the stomach juices duringan acute attack. In addition, antacidtablets or solution were used tocounteract the acid.

Putting the stomach at rest anddecreasing the active secretion ofgastric juices and hydrochloric acidis the prime treatment for ulcers

For many people, the Sippy diethas been remarkably effective Milkand cream, given under this regime.

seem to satisfy the hunger, coat thelining of the stomach and control thestomach acids. On this diet, as thepatient progresses, more bland foodis added until a normal diet isestablished. When the ulcer heals.normal eating habits can be re-sumed.

There is now a growing tendencyto treat stomach ulcers with lessfear that a normal diet might beharmful. In fact, today, even duringan acute ulcer attack, many doctorsprescribe normal, sensible foodswith few limitations

The elimination of spicy foods,coffee, tea. alcohol and tobaccomakes it possible for ulcer patientsto eat a normal diet from the verybeginning of the ulcer attack.

Doctors who specialize in the fieldof gastroenterology I diseases nf theStomach ,ind intestines i have lib-eralized their diets They believe

that lluee nurinal. reasonable mealsa day, coupled with medication andantacids, can counterbalance all ofthe hydrochloric acid that pours intothe stomach The target ishydrochloric acid, gastric juices andenzymes. These play an importantrole in the cause, the control and thecure of stomach ulcers.

There are now some remarkabledrugs of the cimetidine family thatmarkedly interfere with the pro-duction of hydrochloric acid. Thesedrugs are taken three times a dayand once before bedtime Ulcers thatonce were difficult to heal nowrespond to these drugs when coupledwith a sensible diet.

In previous years, surgery, whichIncluded the partial removal of thestomach, was often necessary To-day, with the advent of these newdrugs and a more liberal diet, thefrequency nf stomach snrgpry andintestinai surgery has heon reducedto a minimum

In case you were wondering

'Smokeouf successrecorded in survey

NORTH BRUNSWICK - Afollow-up survey of last Novem-ber's Great American Smokeoutshows that more than four out ofevery ten cigarette smokers triedto kick the habit on Nov. 21 Thesurvey also revealed that, amongthose who quit for the day, about3.7 million were still not smokingfour to five days after theSmokeout

According to the official surveyconducted for the AmericanCancer Society by the GallupOrganization in Princeton, anestimated 23 million, or nearly 43percent of the nation's S4.Smillion smokers, succeeded ineither avoiding cigarettes com-pletely or cutting down on theirtobacco intake during the day-long moratorium against smok-ing.

In 1984, approximately 20-million smokers tried to quitduring the Smokeout. At the time,that statistic established a newrecord. But once again, the GreatAmerican Smokeout broke itsown record for participation.

Encouraged by the over-whelming response to the nation'strend against smoking, the New

Jersey- Division of the AmericanCancer Society is urging all ofthose who want to quit to enrollin its "FreshStart" quit clinics,offered by each of iU units In all21 counties.

The FreshStart program con-sists of four, one-hour groupsessions held during a two-weekperiod. It emphasizes that quit-ting smoking is a two-part pro-cess: stopping and staying stop-ped. The group discussions focuson why participants smoke, andoffer alternative behaviors.

FreshStart's success rate iscomparable to other smokingcessation courses, only since theAmerican Cancer Society Is anon-profit organization, there areno professional fees. Just aminimal service fee to covercosts.

To enroll in FreshStart. checkthe white pages of your phonebook for the number of your localcounty unit of the AmericanCancer Society. Or send a (elf-addressed stamped envelope toyour local unit for the society'sfree "Quitter's Guide: 7 Day Planto Help You Stop SmokingCigarettes."

Pediatric center opensat Freehold HospitalFREEHOLD - Newborns and

children up to age 16 can now recieveprompt, comforting and expertemergency care seven days a weekat the Pediatric Convenience Center,sponsored by the Freehold AreaHospital

Located in the Emergency Ser-vices Department of the hospital onRoute 537, the center's staff ofqualified pediatricians and regis-tered nurses offer urgent, on-the-spot care from 7 to 11 pm dailyLife-threatening situations will betreated in the Emergency Room ofFreehold Area Hospital

The center should be used to treata child's immediate care needs suchas high fever, sprains and cutsChildren will be seen within 15minules hv ;i pediatrician

Tli- Pedialric i onvenience'Centerprovide! high quality core at reason-

able cost. Assistance wun insuranceforms is available and credit cardsare accepted

For immediate attention in thePediatric Convenince Center, enterthrough the Emergency Area ofFreehold Area Hospital and registerat the Computer Center, where yourchild's problem will be immediatelyassessed and attended to

The Pediatric Convenience Centerdoes not replace your own pedia-trician You will be asked to see yourpediatrician for follow-up care

For further information about thecenter, call 780-6140 or 780-6141

Kill

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6C Hi. II.•Ki-iiT MONODY JANUARY :• '" '

FOODPressurecookerstill works•» EWE LOW

inlght-Rldder Newspapers

Recently, when/the stove anddishwasher quit in the same ,week, it seemed a good time toredo my kitchen. As I emptiedcabinets. I was surprised at thenumber of small appliancesucked away

Oh. I knew they were there. IHit them away when the childreneft the nest One person just

doesn't need a six-slice toaster ora bacon cooker that holds 12slices.

But the one appliance I shouldnever have stored was my press-ure cooker

In this age of microwave andtoaster ovens, you don't hearmuch about the pressure cooker,but it still has much to offer.

Almost any food that can becooked by moist heat — boiled,>raised. simmered, steamed —•an be cooked in one.

In many cases, a pressure•ooker cooks as fast as a micro-

wave oven and it's faster andcheaper than a conventionalstove You can pressure cook a312-pound chicken in about 15minutes That same chicken willtake one to 1' J hours in aconventional oven or 25 to 30minutes in a microwave

Also, the pressure cooker canenderize the toughest meat —

something my microwave neverlas done — so it melts in yourmouth The conventional stovewill too. but only if the meat iscooked long and slowly.

A pot roast, considered one ofhe tougher cuts of meat, isender in the pressure cooker in

about 40 minutes. It takes two tothree hours on the conventionalstove That cut sometimesdoesn't work well in a microwavebecause its irregular shape won'tcook evenly

A Frenchman, Denys Papin,made the first pressure cooker in1679 Americans were introducedto them in 1914, but those earlyversions didn't match the sleek,easy-to-use cookers of today.

They are aluminum or stainlesssteel, with or without a non-stickinterior Some are electric, butmost are used on the stove top.The pots range from 2 ' i to 12quarts and cost from $29 and $60,depending on size, brand andwhere they're sold. The 4-quartcooker is most popular and costsunder ISO

The principal behind pressurecookery is simple.

Water boils at 212 degrees andproduces steam An ordinary potlets steam escape, so no mattertiow long or how hard you boil thewater, the temperature neverrises above 212 degrees.

A pressure cooker is designedto trap the steam and seal the potAs steam builds, so does pressureAND temperature. This combina-tion cooks and tenderizes food.

And. since little liquid is usedand no air gets in. nutrients andflavor are preserved.

The pressure gauge tells at aglance the pounds of pressurebuilt up inside You soon learnthat 5 pounds of pressure raisesthe temperature to 228 degrees,which is best for custards,steamed puddings and bread, andfor canning acid foods, such astomatoes

At 10 pounds of pressure, thetemperature is 240 degrees Thiscombination is best for cookingmeat, seafood and poultry and forcanning low-acid foods, such asgreen beans

At 15 pounds, the temperatureis 250 degrees, recommended forfresh of frozen vegetables andstarchy foods, such as driedbeans, cereals, potatoes and soup

If the safety vent is cloggedduring cooking, too much press-ure can build and lead to anexplosion If clogged during cool-ing, air can't reenter. This couldcause the pressure gauge toreflect no pressure while, indeed,enough steam is left to scald youwhen opening the cooker.

These accidents won't happenif you take time to know all theparts and how they worktogether If you're new to press-ure cooking, learn by reading theowner s manual as many times asnecessary BEFORE using.

Regardless of the brand ofpressure cooker you own or buy,these rules apply

• Never leave the pot unat-tended Even the newer modelswith built-in safety valves andautomatic pressure controls thatgive off signals when pressure isgetting too high need attention

• Never open the cookerimmediately after removingfrom heat The accumulatedsteam can scald you Instead,follow instructions for cooling poaccording to what is in it Onlywhen the pressure gauge drops tozero should you open the cover

Fun with breadNew book isfor experts

By CATHY BARBERDallas Morning News

Forget that bit about the staff oflife Bread is more like a toy toauthor Judith Olney

In her latest book. "Judith Olneyon Bread" 'The Crown PublishingGroup. $18.951. she molds swatchesof bread into a melange of textures,and creates toys, wreathes anddecorations out of dough

"I had fun with bread. " Olney saidon a recent visit to Dallas

Many people find bread-baking anintimidating process, but Olneymakes it sound easy She spentmonths in the kitchen creating theshapes and flavors in the book

The book starts with an expla-nation of how to choose flour andmoves on to talk about yeast, butter,kneading and the tools needed to turnout a fresh loaf

Recipes for standard breads, someturned into unusual shapes, aregiven, as well as a section on usingbreads in other dishes

Some require an artist's touch,such as the Sunflower Bread or TheStarfish, which both look exactly liketheir names

One recipe. Olney said, could passfor mashed potatoes, but it's reallybread that has been mashed andmixed with eggs, cream, nutmeg andGruyere cheese

Another recipe produces a loafthat looks like a baked potato

Then there are the breads thatlook normal enough, but bear asurprise Popcorn Bread uses fivecups of popped corn, with extrabutter in the loaf to add to the flavor

While Olney does include thebasics of bread-baking, many of herrecipes are strictly for cooks whoknow their way around a ball ofdough

But oh. what fun the baker canhave, making a loaf that holds swirlsof tomato, spinach and white bread,or Wheaty Breadsticks, shaped likeoversized stalks of wheat

The book contains color photo-graphs of some of the more intricatebreads; without the pictures, somewould be hard to assemble Theyalso give the novice something towork toward

Some sort of scale to rate thedifficulty of each recipe would havebeen a good addition to the book Ifyou're not comfortable working withyeast, proceed with care.

This recipe for Baked PotatoBreads requires minimal sculpting,but diners will definitely rememberthe results

BAKED POTATO BREADS1' i packages yeast' i cup warm water1 z cup sour cream2 tablespoons buttermilk2 tablespoons

melted unsalled butter1 tablespoon sugar

2 teaspoons salt1 egg. lightly beaten1 ounce dried

mashed potato flakes'* cup mixed finely

chopped chives orwhite and tender greenportion of green onions

1 teaspoon baking powder5'zcups

all-purpose flourGlaze i recipe follows i

In a large bowl, dissolve the yeastin warm water Stir in the sourcream, buttermilk, melted buttersugar, salt, egg and mashed potatoflakes and mix well Stir in chives

Sprinkle on the baking powder andstir in enough flour to make a doughfirm enough to turn out onto afloured kneading surface. Knead agood 10 or 12 minutes, adding (louruntil the bread no longer feels stickyi though the dough will be rathersort I

Put the dough in a greased bowland turn the dnugh so the top will be

oiled also Cover and let rise in awarm spot for about I'2 hours, untildoubled in bulk

Gently remove the dough from thebowl and divide it into 2 portions, forlarge bread, or 8 portions, forindividual rolls Gently elongate thedough and shape each portion rough-ly into a long. 10-inch potato shape,or a 4- to 5-inch potato for rolls Putthe breads on an oiled baking sheet,cover and let rise for 15 mintues

Meanwhile, prepare glaze andbruss over breads I'sing scissors,cut the middle of each loaf with a slitI -inch deep about half the length ofeach. gently push the dough openThis will be the white "potato meal"portion of the bread

Tut a small strip of aluminum foiland place it over each white portionLet bread rise for another 15minutes Preheat the oven to 350degrees

Bake the breads for 45 to 50minutes Thev should sound hollow

when tapped on the bottom Removefrom the oven Let cool briefly, thenplace each bread on a sheet ofaluminum foil and bunch the foilaround the bread [or decorativeeffect

Cut the center of each potato"and insert two or three large slabsof butter Spoon on some extra sourcream, sprinkle with additionalchives if you wish, and serve warm

NOTE: This bread can be madeahead and reheated in the foil

GLAZE: Mix 1 tablespoon riceflour or cornstarch and 1 tablespoonflour in a frying pan Put overmedium heal and stir continuouslyuntil the flour is toasted a mediumbrown Do not burn Put the flour ina cup

Stir in ' 4 teaspoon salt and agenerous 2 tablespoons water until athin paste results Brush the pasteover the breads

Organically grown produce industry takes offBy JOHN I MACLEANChicago Tribune

FRONT ROYAL. Va - Tomatoes that tastelike they were just picked from a homegarden, firm and red on the inside despiteoddly shaped and colored exteriors Applesthat squirt sugar from the first crunch to thecore Potatoes that glow a golden yellow andare good enough to eat without butter.

All that and more is the promise of organicfarming, which used to occupy a tiny niche inthe great design of American food merchandis-ing It was a niche that sometimes wentbegging Organic produce could be found inonly a few health food stores and often sold soirregularly that it rotted on the shelf inmisshapen little piles

Two decades ago. organic farming meant ahippie pushing a wheelbarrow of manureToday, organic farming has put on a three-piece suit and is trying to elbow its way intothe mainstream.

Organic farming has become more than asmall band of believers. Piggybacking onincreased concern about health and toxicresidue in food, organic growing has attractedfarmers, middlemen and customers fromamong just plain folks

The natural foods industry does about $3 5billion of business each year, with organicfoods accounting for perhaps as much as $500million Nobody knows for sure, in partbecause nobody can say what organic is

Natural is in But is it organic'' A lotdepends on the answer, as everybody from petfood makers to near-bankrupt farmers try tocash in on the interest in natural foods

Virtually every supermarket devotes shelfspace to "natural" products They can rangefrom face cream connected to the naturalworld mostly by a thread spun on MadisonAvenue *o produce fresh from a regionalfarmer who says he grows by organicmethods." a term in search of a definition

Organic is easy to define in the extremesEvening television shows a glamor girl

made up to look as though she weren't madeup arising in her mounUtin cabin, her hair

miraculously brushed, with a bowl of "natu-ral " cereal in her hand She steps outside

Never mind that it's cool enough for a downvest at the same time it's warm enough forbare feet We re talking image here, we'retalking back to nature

For contrast, drive out to A P Thomson sGolden Acres farm in the foothills of Virginia sBlue Ridge Mountains Thomson. 75. is a guruof the organic movement who took a worn outfamily homestead and gradually turned it intoa showplace that has spawned imitators acrossthe country Thomsons apple orchard is asdifferent from a conventional one as a gardenis from a parking lot

The apples blossom in splendor in thespring, unthinned by man-made chemicalsThomson's bees accomplish the pollinationThe blossoms become little green apples thatsurvive and flourish without the 40 or sosprayings that conventional fruit growers mayapply. They become big red and yellow applesand sometimes fall off. instead of being gluedto the branch by a sprayed hormone

You can barely make out the trees becausethe foliage is so heavy But step into theorchard and see beneath the irregular rows oftrees a living carpet of lush alfalfa andgrasses, only lightly marked by tire wear

At a large operation down the road, theapple trees stand out like telephone poles fromthe nearly bare earth, deeply rutted by aconstant passing of spraying and harvestingvehicles

The search for a definition of organicfarming has been so difficult that even OrganicGardening and Farming magazine, which hadmuch to do with initiating the organicmovement, has abandoned the attempt In1971. the magazine began a certificationprogram for organic farmers to maintainstandards and assure consumers. ,

Then, in the late 1970s, the magazine beganmoving away from this procedure and hasdropped it. leaving the setting of standards toregional groups California, Oregon and Mainehave set standards, but the standards, whichare in general terms, vary

The Organic Foods Production Associationof North America, formed only a year ago hasentered the fray to set some kind ofrecognizable national standards for growers,merchants and consumers

The association is headed by ThomasHarding, who left the trade publicationindustry after 20 years because he sensed aneed for less traumatic farming methods Ona visit home to the F.astern Shore of Marylandhe was standing in the Choptank River,recalling how. as a boy. he could see to thebottom at a 60-foot depth The water was upto his knees, and he couldn't see his feet

i knew something was wrong. Hardingsaid laconically

Harding is out to unify the organic foodsindustry, set guidelines and standards andendorse organizations across the country thatmonitor organic farming Harding wants togive consumers and retailers something moreto trust than a personal relat ionship with asupplier such as Thomson

For farmers such as Thomson, trust alwayshas been enough They don't like someonecoming on to their farms to monitor theiragricultural practices

"How are you going to set standards, howare you going to enforce them0 asksThomson "You d need warrants and a policeforce."

"We want A P Thomson on our team."Harding said "But we do have to clean up ouract When we talk about organic farming,were not talking about a hippie marchingdown the street in Washington This isbusiness."

Indeed il is The organic foods associationrecently took a booth at the Natural FoodsExpo, a natural foods industry trade fair inWashington. D C The association was in themiddle of Organic Alley, as it's known, alongwith 30 or so other "beans and grains"exhibitors

Beyond Organic Alley were a host of other"natural" marvels from Mother Earth

"Smooth Move laxativetea. cranberry juice

in a tablet c Are you tired ol drinking all thatcranberry juice"1 Try Nutri-Action's Cranber-ry tablets They are so easy to take withwater1 " I : or all-natural pet food including

breath freshener" for your dog and catIf you want to be natural outside as well as

inside you could try a mint julep facial, abubbling bath oil so natural that it 's' goodenough to eat" or a little ginseng and collagenwrinkle cream to counteract the effects of age

These shows used to be 95 percent bodycare and vitamins, "said Ron Roller, who runsF.den Foods in Clinton, Mich They were theonly ones who could afford to exhibit '

Like many organic distributors. Roller hashad his certification program, but says that itinadequate A national certification, ident-ifiable for the consumer, would be "thefoundation stone for the whole thing (organicfood marketing 1 to become big scale '

At its separate organizational meeting at anearby hotel, the organic foods associationhammered out a lengthy set of guidelinescovering everything from the way the soil istreated before a seed is planted to the pointat which the food product is sold to aconsumer The 75 members of the association,representing an estimated 10,000 to 20.000members of growers and producer groups, aretaking the guidelines back to their member-ship for consideration

And. they have an 83-word definition fororganic foods

It says organic foods must be producedunder soil management principles that buildhumus through such techniques as croprotation, recycling organic wastes and apply-ing balanced amounts of minerals

"When necessary, mechanical, botanical orbiological controls with minimum impact onhealth and environment may be used," thedefinition says. It also says packaging andprocessing must retain nutritional valueswithout man-made supplements

L'sing these methods. A P Thomson took aneroded, virtually dead piece of land about 40years ago and turned it into a thriving, growingbusiness

Reversing the roles helps keep waiters on their toesBy GERALD ETTERKnight-Ridder Newspapers

PHILADELPHIA - On a recentSaturday at Raymond Haldeman. acollection of unusually boorish cus-tomers occupied the restaurant Itwas as if the proverbial full moonhad unleashed a bunch of hungrycrazies who wandered into the OldCity Philadelphia restaurant

At one table was a group of dinerswho wanted to make substitutions upand down the menu And there wasan irate man who had just spentwhat seemed to be half an eveninglooking for a parking spot Hetreated the waiter as if the poorfellow worked for the city's parkingauthority

Then there was a table with twodiners who kept changing theirorders

"I think I I I have the lobsterbisque." the one gentleman in-formed the wniter

"What wa> ihat he ordered ' Inspartner inquired of the waiter ,

The lobster bisque." replied thewaiter

I I I have the lobster bisque also,the man responded

With that, the first man advisedhis partner that he had just hadlobster bisque the other day

"Why don't you try somethingdifferent"1" the first man suggested

"Well, all right." his partnercondescended

"In fact." the first man hurriedlyinterjected. " I think I'll try some-thing else also But first, can I havemy coffee now"1 And two glasses ofwater"""

The waiter obliged with acourteous nod and returned with thecoffee and another water glasswhich he promptly filled The waitercontinued takingjhe order

He rticntiunvd '!.. olad at whichpoint the first man interrupted andasked for a descripl ion of some olthe salad ingredients The waiterexplained with precision and polite-

! . 1 •• wajtlu'itrst man said waviogihe waiter

off Then he paused, asking thewaiter what it was that he hadordered for the soup course

The two diners continued, laboringover their entree selections througha running dialogue of indecisionchanging their choices and thengoing from a rare diet to mediumrare to medium well At that pointboth asked the waiter for more timeto decide on some side dishes

When the waiter returned, thefirst man was already on his secondcup of coffee "Has our order gonein yet"" lie asked.

"No sir." replied the waiterGood " said the first man "I

think I'll have the duck instead of thefilet "

Very fine, sir." the waiter saidsoftly

At that point, the second manturned and asked. What is it I amhaving""

If the preceding scene ,11 RaymondH.ildeman appears to have been

ii ». . - , , form 'ii theater Bui 1 hi2" servers ..nil lour busboys. i* was

anything but absurdEvery other Saturday afternoon,

for about two hours, owner RaymondHaldeman gathers his staff for arole-playing session Some of theservers pretend that they are cus-tomers, while the other servers waiton Ihem.

.lusi talking .ihnui proper servicereally doesn't help servers thatmuch." Haldeman explained "Butereat ing an environment and havingthem be able to directly experiencethe different situations is so muchmore a convincing argument thansimply telling them what to do "'

After the sessions, the "cus-tomers" critique and evaluate howtheir servers handled the differentsituations

I think he handled us very well."one server-turned-customer said ofhis rdlleague! The "nly thing I cansuggest is that he could project hisvoice more It w;is difficult to hearhi'n a! tin-.-'s itver the noise

. ,*ie*l thai din-nei hour wa« grneralh not ;is nnisv

as the play-acting sessions, whichwere exaggerated situations

Another server-turned-customersaid that he was really impressedwith his waiter's style

One server was portraying acustomer bent on impressing a clientwith his own self-importance, and hesaid that his server did not doanything out of the ordinary to helphim create that impression

I'm sorry." replied his server,"hut I really didn't get the feelingfrom you that you were trying toimpress someone that you were a bieshot "

"Yeah, " said the would-be bigshot, backing down a bit. "you'reright I guess I didn t really comeacross that way I find it difficult toeven act that way It's nol really inypersonality "

And 10 the afternoon went with.the servers developing ,1 dialoguethai helped to sharpen iheir laarnlnjexpcrleni e

MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986 II,. 7C

YOUR TOWNHolmdelSupport group formedfor Alzheimers victims

Bayshore Community Hospitalwill sponsor an Alzheimers Diseasesupport and information group onTuesday. Jan. 21 at 7:30 p.m in thehospital's conference room B.

Robert Cohen, director ofBayshore Community Hospital'ssocial work services department,will lead the group and assist in itsreorganization. All new and formermembers are encouraged to attend

For more information, callBayshore s social work servicesdepartment at 739-5964

'The Thirty-Nine Steps'to be shown at library

Mystery movies continue at theMonmouth County Library HolmdelBranch, 4 Crawfords Corner Road,with a showing of the "The Thirty-Nine Steps" on Jan 22 at 7:30 p.m.Alfred Hitchcock's version of JohnBuchan's spy thriller of two innocentpeople being chased by spies andpolice stars Madeline Carroll andRobert Donat All are invited, withno tickets or advance registrationneeded

Colts Neck

Area library to featurefilms about risk-takers

Five movies on various types ofrisk-taking will be shown in a free,program at the Monmouth CountyLibrary Colts Neck Branch, HeyersMill Road, beginning at 7:30 p.m. onJan. 21. Among the scheduled attrac-tions are:

"Ultimate Risk" — Five men whoput their lives on the line: a racingdriver, a mountain climber, a mem-ber of the bomb squad, a stunt pilot,and a circus aerialist.

"Mount McKinley Hang Glide" —Four hang-gliders climb MountMcKinley and then leap off, withmixed success

"Hot-Dogger" - The excitementand beauty of hot dog skiing

"White Water-Grey Hair" -Senior citizens raft 300 miles downthe Colorado River

All are invited, with no tickets oradvance registration needed

Meeting set to discussproposed high school

Dr. Victor Crespy. superintendentof schools, Freehold Regional SchoolDistrict, will speak at a programsponsored by the Colts Neck Parent

Teacher Organization on Jan. 22, 8p.m. at Cedar Drive School.

Dr. Crespy will discuss theproposed district high school and itspossible location. Colts Neck rep-resentative to the Regional Board.Dr. Carolyne Saltzbart, will also beon hand

All Colts Neck residents are urgedto attend

For more information, contactGloria Horky at 948-2507

MonmouthCounty

Insurance women plandinner meeting Jan. 21

The Insurance Women of Mon-mouth County invite all ladies in-volved in the insurance industry toits Jan. 21 meeting.

Dinner will be at The Homestead.Spring Lake Heights. Choice ofdinner is Stuffed Capon or BroiledFlounder, cost is $13 members and$14 to non-members. Cocktails are at6 p.m., dinner 7 p.m. Reservationsaccepted at the door

Spring reading clinicoffered at Kean College

Persons of any age who havedifficulty reading should enroll in thereading clinic to be offered againthis spring at Kean College

Dr. Lillian Putnam of MountainLakes, clinic director, said clientsare screened and diagnosed andgiven remediation. Parents shouldconsult the clinic staff to determineif a child has a reading disability

Some students, for example, takeexcessive time to complete home-work assignments because com-prehension and general readingability is in need of improvement,Putnam said.

Initial screening includes tests ofmental ability, vision and hearingFor further information, call theclinic at 527-2351 or 527-2070

Freehold

Small Book Club plansto discuss Wharton book

The Small Book Club at theMonmouth County Library Head-quarters, 25 Broad St.. will discussEdith Wharton's affectionate andsatirical portrait of New Yorksociety in the 1870s, "The Age ofInnocence," beginning at 2:45 p.mon Jan 21 All who have read thebook are welcome to join thediscussion. Copies are available forloan at the library.

Choreographer to speak

RED BANK - Dermot Burke,associate director and choreo-grapher for the Princeton Balletwill be appearing at Red BankRegional High School in LittleSilver on Jan. 23 Burke willpresent a workshop titled, "TheHealthy Dancer: Avoiding DanceInjuries," at 2:20 p.m. in the highschool auditorium

The topic ts a personal one forBurke. He joined the PrincetonBallet in 1980 as a choreographerafter an earlier knee injuryprvented his performing. DermotBurke had been a principaldancer with New York City'sJoffrey Ballet.

The lecture is part of a seriesfunded by the Arts in EducationProgram of the New Jersey StateCouncil on the Arts. The Prince-ton Ballet is conducting a resi-

dency for the Performing ArtProgram at Red Bank RegionalHigh School. Throughout the yearthe artistic, administrative andtechnical staff of the balletcompany will share their talentswith the schools dance majorsand the public

With a dynamic tradition ex-tending back to 1963, the Prince-ton Ballet is one of America'sforemost young ballet companiesThe company has been featuredon national television and hasappeared on several prestigiousseries with ABT, Eliot Feld. theAlvin Ailey Dance Theatre andthe Paul Taylor Company

The public is inivted to attendthe lecture. For more infor-mation, contact the PerformingArts Program at Red BankRegional High School by calling(201) 842-8000. extension 244.

HazletDental hygenists planto meet on Wednesday

A meeting of the Central NewJersey Dental Hygienists' Associa-tion will be on Jan. 22 The 10 a mbrunch will be at the Short Point Inn.Hwy 35, here The topic will be"Apuncture, ' and credits will begiven for the course. For reservations and more information, callPeggy at (201)957-0074.

Shrewsbury

Area library slide showfeatures tour of Balkans

The Monmouth County LibraryEastern Branch, Highway 35. invitesall armchair travellers to join in avicarious tour of the Balkans fromthe branch's slide collection on Jan.22, at 7:30 p.m. All interested areinvited, with no tickets or advanceregistration needed

Hazlet

Mobile Home Ownersto meet on Tuesday

The Association of Mobile HomeOwners of Hazlet will have itsmonthly meeting on Jan 21 at 8 p m.at the Shore Point Inn. located atState Highway 35 and Holmdel Road,here All mobile home owners andmembers are invited to attend

Morganville

Meeting set to informabout YM-YWHA camps

Parents and children are invited toexplore together the wonders ofsummer at the New Jersey YM-YWHA Camps at an open meeting totake place at the YM-YWHA ofWestern Monmouth County at Route79 and Tennent Road in the CentralMall, here on Jan. 22 at 8 p.m.

According to Ed Silberstefn. ex-ecutive director, a series of slidesdescribing the facilities and pro-gram will be presented by a staffmember of the residential campcomplex There will be ample op-portunity to ask questions concern-ing staff, activities and facilities.

Outstanding employer honored

OUTSTANDING EMPLOYER - The Monmouth County Board oi Social services EATSunit recently named Foodarama SupermarketsInc. (operator ol Shop Rite stores) this year'srecipients ol its Outstanding Employer Award. Aplaque was presented by Phyllis Schwartz.EATS unit supervisor (second from right), and

accepted by Patty McAteer. Shop Rite customerservice manager (second from left). Looking onare Freeholder Thomas Lynch (far left) andPhyllis Marx, board chairperson (far right), andJohn Feehan, social worker from the EATS unit(center)..

MiddletownParenting course to beoffered for area adults

The Middletown Township AdultSchool is sponsoring a new course ofinterest to parents "PromotingSelf-Esteem Through Better Parent-ing." This course is being taught byMarge Blaney, social worker atMiddletown High School South andEleanor Christensen. school psychol-ogist at Thorne Junior High School

This course will address parent'sneeds for information and knowledgeof parenting techniques that will beeffective in ehnahcing the mentalhealth of their children Areas to becovered include: Basic facts aboutchild and parental development,stages of growth and normal andabnormal behavior patterns

The emphasis of the course will beon what parents can do to promotepositive self images in their childrenand to enhance their child's self-

esteem and their own sense ofconfidence in handling their chil-dren

and executive offices She is current-ly program chairperson for the NewJersey Chapter of ASID

Marlboro Neptune

Rona Speigel joinsinterior design society

Rona Speigel of Marlboro hasqualified for professional member-ship in the American Society ofInterior Designers.

Spiegel, who heads her own designfirm. RJS Interiors in Marlboro,holds a degree in interior designfrom Parsons School of Designwhere she graduated with honors Inaddition, she has a BS in homeeconomics from Hunter College anda masters degree from New YorkUniversity As a practicing interiordesigner for more than six years, herwork is primarily residential How-ever, it includes a percentage ofcontract work focusing on medical

Training for ex-smokersAre you an ex-smoker' Want to

help someone else quit"1 Will youspare one evening to take FreshStartFacilitator Training? The MonmouthUnit of the American Cancer Societywill offer to interested ex-smokers aFreshStart Facilitator Training onWednesday, Jan 22. from 7 to 9 p.mat the Ann May School of Nursing.1945 Corlies Ave., Neptune Thefacilitator trainer is Pat Gieseler ofSpring Lake

At the end of the meeting, partici-pants may become certifiedFreshStart Facilitators, able to con-duct public education programsThere is no charge. Materials andinstruction are provided through theAmerican Cancer Society, Mon-mouth Unit.

Service SalutesSHREWSBURY - Airman 1st

Class Richard H. Seideman. son ofMr. and Mrs. Richard H. Seidemanof 38 Henry St., has graduated frompie US Air Force biomedicalequipment maintenance course atSheppard Air Force Base, Texas

Seideman is scheduled to serve atLuke Air Force Base, Ariz . with theAir Force Hospital

He is a 1982 graduate of TempleUniversity, Philadelphia '

MIDDLETOWN - Air NationalGuard Airman 1st Class Cary M.Forrest, son of Mr and Mrs.Richard C. Forrest of 109 LynchRoad, has graduated from the US.Air Force aircraft maintenancecourse at Sheppard Air Force Base.Texas.

Forrest is scheduled to serve withthe 177th Tactical Fighter Wing,Atlantic City.

FAIR HAVEN - Euretta L.Wright, daughter of Rudine andRubin F. Puryear of 96 Parker Ave..has been promoted in the U.S. AirForce to the rank of senior airman.

Wright is an administrationspecialist with the 836th SecurityPolice Squadron at Davis-MonthanAir Force Base, Ariz.

She is a 1982 graduate of Rumson-Fair Haven High School.

COLTS NECK - Spec. 4 Ivan B.Shidlovsky son of Boris A. andNadeida J Shidiovsky of 11 Ann St.,has received the parachutist badgeupon completion of the three-weekairborne course at the U.S. ArmyInfantry School. Fort Benning, Gas

KEANSBURG - Pvg. Patrick J.Strauch, son of Karl J and CarolStrauch of 130 Crescent St..Keansburg, has completed militarypolice training at the U.S. ArmyMilitary Police School, FortMcClellan, Ala.

Students were trained in civil andmilitary law. traffic control, mapreading and self-defense

He is a 1985 graduate of KeansburgHigh School

RARITAN — Senior Airman Step-hen F. Eisenmann. son of Mr andMrs Edward L. Eisenmann of 27Newman St., West Keansburg. hasgraduated from the U.S. Air Forcejet engine mechanic course atChanute Air Force Base, 111

Eisenmann is scheduled to servewith the 325th Component. RepairSquadron at Tyndall Air Force Base.Fla

His wife, Laura, is the daughter ofArthur and Dorothy Huhn of 48 12thSt., West Keansburg

The airman is a 1981 graduate ofRaritan High School, Hazlet.

FREEHOLD - Army NationalGuard Private Keith R. Schroeder.son of Manifred Schroeder of 13Tyson Lane, has completed a wheel-ed-vehicle mechanic course at the

US Army Training Center, FortJackson, S.C.

He was an honor graduate of thecourse

The private is a 1982 graduate ofSomerville High School

MIDDLETOWN - Air Force Air-man 1st Class Donald J. Cutter, sonof Florence A Custer of 67 Atlantic

Ave.. Keansburg. has arrived forduty with the 501st Missile SecuritySquadron, England

Custer, a security specialist, waspreviously assigned at MalmstromAir Force Base. Mont

He is a 1978 graduate of KeansburgHigh School

A paid directory of coming events for non-profit organizations Rates $3 75 for three lines for 1 day (11.00 eachadditional linei $5 00 for three lines for two days ($1.50 each additional line). 16 50 for three lines for three days112 00 each additional line i. $7 50 for three lines for four or five days (12.25 each additional line I. $9 00 for three linesfor six to eight days (12 50 each additional line). 110 50 for three lines for nine to ten days i$3.00 each additional line i$13 50 for three lilies (or eleven days Each additional day $1.00. each additional line $3.00. Deadline 11 AM two daysbefore publication Call The Daily Register. 542-4000. ask for The Date Secretary

MONTH OF JAN. -TUES. WED. * THURS.

Half Price Sale through JanuaryCalico Cats Thrift Shop. 100 KingsHwy. Middletown Open Tues . WedSi Thurs . 10am-lpm

JANUARY 21 - TUESDAYParents without Partners .

Bayshore Chapter »644 Cocktailparty and dance Town and country,Hwy 35. Keyport, 8:30 sharp, orien-tation Memberh $3 Perspectivemembers $5. Chapter phone 727-6020

JANUARY 22 - WEDNESDAYSingles Again This dance is becom-

ing our largest Shore dance Terrifichot 4 cold buffet Don't miss thisterrific dance Orientation for newmembers 8pm Dance 9pm. At TheCinnamon Tree. Rt. 9. Freehold.528-6343

JANUARY 23 - THURSDAYRed Bank Regional High School

Booster Clubs Chinese AuctionSchool Cafeteria Doors open 7pmAdmission $2.50.

SINGLES AGAIN N J s single or-ganization hosts the Shore's largestdame at Colts Neck Inn. Rt 34 4 537.Colts Neck Free Buffet Dance 9 pmNew members orientation 8 pm Formore info call 528-6343 All singleswelcome

QUEST, a weekly forum for single,divorced and widowed adults Dis-cussion, dancing 4 refreshmentDance class available 1st t'nitarian

L:

Church, 1475 W Front St., Lincroft745pm Admission limited to 1st 200Donations $4 In our 9th year

JANUARY 25 - SATURDAYThe women of Quinn Chapel.

A ME. Church, cordially invited youto join with us on our SEVENTHannual Women's Day Luncheon 12noon at the Shore Casino. Simon LakeDr . Atlantic Highlands. N.J Theguest speaker will be Dr GwendolynGoldsby Grant, a private consultant,a counseling psychologist, a radiopersonality, a public speaker and acertified sex counselor If you stayaway, you will miss a treat. Doorswill be open at 11 a.m. and lunch willbe served promptly at 12 noon. Dona-tion $22 per ticket Call 291-5146 forinfo.

Murphy's Sports Assn.. for ladiesonly: Chippendales and banquet din-ner, plus a visit to South St. Seaportin New York $38 per person CallJean. 291-0152 Deadline 1 21 86

JANUARY 26 - SUNDAYBattleground Arts Center presents

acclaimed Tamburitzans from Du-quesne University. 40 dancers & mu-sicians & 500 i-ostumes will come luFreehold Township H S 2pm Tickets$12. $9. $6 for children under 12Visa MC accepted on orders over J20For info 4 charges call weekdays9am-4pm 462-8811

Monmouth Symphony Orchestra. 3pm . at Count Basle Theater. 99 Mon-mouth St., Red Bank Guest soloist.

pianist Kenneth Helman Tickets $6at Box Office. 842-9002 Children withadults, free

FEBRUARY 1 - SATURDAY/Atlantic City bus trip to the

Tropicana Sponsered by AmericanLegion Ladies Auxilary Hwy* 36Leonardo Cost 115. get back $12 Busleaves post at 11:30 am returns9 30pm Deadline Jan 25 for reser-vations Call Maureen at 291-4463 foradditional info.

FEBRUARY 4 - « -TUES. THRU THURS.

Open House for 1986-87 enrollmentat Tower Hill School Feb 4. 5 at9 15-llam Feb 6 at 915-Uam also12 45-2:30 Registration forms will beavailable. Programs include 3 4 4 yrolds. pre-K. Kindergarten, and pre-1Call Registrar with questions747-6589

FEBRUARY 8 - SATURDAYCome to the Rally 12 to 3 pm at

Seaview Sq Mall Celebrate NationalChildren's Dental Health Month withDr Robert McGuire. ChairmanComedy skits by Dokey of TVfame: Poster, smile contests & morePrizes will be US Savings Bondsdonated by S S White Co Bring thefamily, young 4 old. and enjoy theday

JUNE IS to JULY 3 -St Agnes Church. Atlantic High-

lands, will be sponsoring a trip toIreland and Russia, or you can chooseeither Ireland or Russia Call291-0876

8C The Register , JANUARY 20, 1986

ENTERTAINMENTOffbeat parody magazineseems like the real Peopleh Mi QBSTOM You bet. If you look closely at the cover it sayi7nu,M oirtH., ikMMMK "Parody" in imall letters above "People." And if youiwigiM-Miaoer m n w n m l f j ^ d u e ^ p r i c e , t a g i v e a w a y . e M ( i n s t e a d

What are devoted readers to maka of the latest of $1.50).issue of People, the celebrity gossip bible? ParodvPeoole which aDDeared on newsstands

Apparently not. Tbe'coveria Just for starters. Flip catalogue,through the Issue and you'll find a slew of such bixarre "People is ripe for parody because it takes Itselfarticles'!!: • so seriously," said Gerald L. Taylor, executive editor

• 'Cabbage Snatch" ("the mysterious and unei- of Parody People. Taylor, an alumnus of the Harvardptained disappearance ol Cabbage Patch Kids"> Lampoon and the National Lampoon, was a consult-

• "Ramboroanta," the serialiiation of Rambo - ant f8r the Harvard Lampoon's parody People issue,"RamboMeeU Rocky" ("Two homicidal morons which was published in 1»1.

ffil^£^^*R^"«l ••UunktheH.rv.roUmpoondiditbetter.'Mid"Rambolero" (''Rambo meets his long-tost twin Hal Wlngo. an assistant managing editor of Peoplesifter an equally talentless overrated idiot with an and one of the few suffers who had seen a copy ofoversiied chest and pea-suwd brain - Rambo the most recent spoof ' This is the second time we'veDerek") been parodied, so some of the freshness has gone out.

• "New Facelifts of IMS' The Night of 100 Living Bat it's certainly the formula in terms of the look.Dead Stars" (Urille Ball, Bob Hope, Fred Astaire, They've copied the format, but twisted the stories."

And no, People is not upset by the takeoff On the• "Dr Ruth Has Designs on You" — "Ir- contrary, the Time Inc. publication took out a full

repressive Sexpert Dr Ruth Westhehners aew line page ad in Parody People (' Compliments from theof designer actlvewear... tailor-made fantasywear Heal Thing"),exclusively tor those who have the bucks to pamper "They have a sense of humor about themselves,"their perversions." All areemboased with the Dr. T »y l o i ; M i d : „ _ . _ „ „. ,Ruth Insignia, "a Double-Corona cigar probing a Taylor, along with Edward M. Sham, is a partnerpumpernickel bagel ' 'n T$M Publishing Inc., a New York company that

The book reviews are craty: "The Spite Report on has published satires of Cosmopolitan, Rolling StoneFemale Sexuality" by Sheer Spite and Ann Landers and Playboy as well as Parody People. About 30 staffThe television reviews are equally outrageous: writers and free-lancers spent three months putting"Barbara Walters: Tto Self-Interview,'' "... taped in together the latest TSM spoofLondon, Martinique, Elisabeth Arden's Fifth Avenue "Obviously, you have to be a little demented in yourleg-waxing salon and the Betty Ford Clinic, the three- way at looking at the world to do this," Taylor said,part interview captures both faces (and chins) of "You have to be a bit off-center."'bwoadcasting's bwightest buttinski.'" You also have to have a profit motive. Taylor said

And the names of the regional reporters are, well, be had earned "something In the multiple six figures''odd: Sherman March from the Atlanta bureau, on his other publications, and he expects to do justDebbie Duzz from Dallas, Ty Gers from Detroit and as well with Parody People.Powers Brunche from Washington. For their next project, Taylor and Shaln are moving

Could it be that People isn't really People, but a away from the printed page and into videotape andslick send-up of the real thing? recordings. Their target? MTV.

MONDAY PRIME TIME

O

o8Oo(DCD©B)QESPN

HBO

USA

moSHOW

MSO

7:00CBS News

NBC News

Company

ABC News

Pyramid

Jettersons

Mov».

Sinlord

MX Moore

M'A'S'H

SpoClr

Movie

Animals

7:30Fortune

Newtyweds

M'A'S'H

Enl Tonight

Chance

Ind. News

8:00 8:30Scarecrow And Mrs. King

TV Bloopers

P.M. Mag All Family

Hardcaslle

News Family Feud

9:00Kate & Allie

9:30Nawhart

10:00 10:30Cagney 4Lacey

All-Star Celebration Honoring Martin Luther King Jr.

Merv Griffin Nsws

Movie: "The Prince 01 Bel-Air"

Mother-Daughter Pageant

Movie: "Gentlemen Prater Blondes"

MscNeil / Lehrsr ] A. Smith

WKRP

Ssnlord

Benson

NFL Films

Fraggle

Radio 1990

Movie Com d

Faerie Tale Theatre

Ctr. Stage

Ind. News

American Playhouse

Movie: "Westworlo"'

Nflws

Coral Flight

The Saint

Movie: "Firecresk"

Movie: "Class"

College Basketball: Viilanova at Georgetown

The Gilt 01 Life

Movie

VegaJ

Women's Basketball

Movie: "Micki I Maude"

Westling

Movie: "Sounder"

Robin Hood

Auto Racing: Area 300

"The Learning Tree"

Movie: "Lassiter"

NHL Hockey: Hartford Whalers at New York Rangers

O An All Star Ctltbri-* lion Honoring Martin

Luther Xing, Jr.l»ov

Sailing Too!

Folk dance group plans performancejs^u&gzsrz c^^atr^r^ r^r-^srysartistic direction of Nichlas Jor- of East Europe. ^ been ^ ^ b y t h e ^danoff, present a concert at Free- ^ j , i g fhe f i r j t t i m e ^ h a j Department to represent Americahold Township High School Jan. 26, performed in the Freehold area. a n d American youth to the world.a t 2 p m - U s i n ' m o r e t h a n m authentic Tickets are $12 reserved J9 un

The Tamburltzans, a performing 9 ^ ^ '" • « * ea^trt- ^ J ^ r e s e r v e d a n d » ( o r children Theyfolk ensemble of North^rnenca8 ^ e V "„§ £ "thfoTncefo™ «« " l e " >*r « - * « »o»«« S.ffiFJ!^ ? e

t . T r , ^ P m»"y countries. a d v a n c e Contact Battleground atBattleground Arts Center. ^ T a m b u r i t z a n s m Mutime 462-B8U for further^mat ion and

Battleground program chairman students at Duquesne on full scholar- tickets. Battleground isNunded inWilliam Starslnic of Freehold said ship in exchange for participation in part by a grant from the New Jerseythat each year the 40 young enter- the troupe, which performs more State Council on the Arts.

Love song holds the key to Kim's persistent secret admirerH IYHM HlftSCM

ALL MY CHILDREN: Tad isdispleased with his first day as abank trainee. Robyn and Tad con-tinue to hide their past relationshipfrom Greg and Hilary. When Jesselearns Robyn cheated on a test, hepromises not to tell Greg. Nataliedoesn't tell Jeremy that Erica isalive. After getting Jeremy drunk,Natalie insists they slept togetherbut he claims that's impossible.Father Tierney refuses to giveBrooke any information about Tom'sfall off the wagon. Adam takes aninterest in Natalie. Dr. Stone tellsCliff her husband died last year.

ANOTHER WORLD: Donna isfurious when Peter insists Brittanystay at the mansion. Chris draws aconnection between Mac's illnessand Grant's death. Victoria sells thejewels for half a million dollars,which enables her to save mansionfor the Love family. Victoria sensesNeil is connected to the jewel heist.Kathleen is told she has little chanceof walking again. Cass jumps bail tobe with Kathleen in Malibu. AsFelicia and Wallingford go to abordello in hopes of finding D.A. andruining his reputation, Zane and hissister Anne watch the duo on closed-circuit TV. Jake believes the man

Black historyensemble toplan Newarkperformance

NEWARK - "Sweet SaturdayNight" will fill the stage at NewarkSymphony Hall in celebration of 300years of street and social danceduring Black History History Monthat 7:30 p.m. on Valentine's Day.

The musical history of blacks inAmerica will set the stage forNewark Symphony Hall Feb. 14,when members of the "Sweet Satur-day Night" cast will perform.

Among dancers putting their bestfeet forward will be Mama LuParks, Leon Jackson, Chuck Greenand Rory Mitchell. Songs mixed withoriginal material will be performedby a live orchestra under thedirection of Rudy Stevenson.

Mama Lu Parks joins the cast asdirector of the Mama Lu Parks Jazzand Sould Dance Ensemble. Asdirector, she has been dancing at theSavoy Ballroom for more than 25years. Her group has appeared inEurope and Africa, and has touredthe country's colleges.

Sloan majored in dance at TempleUniversity in Philadelphia. He laterparticipated in the Joffrey Ballet'sresidency at the University of Cali-fornia at Berkeley in 1970. Sloanteaches dance, develops curriculummaterial, and performs for childrenof American servicemen abroad.

Tickets for the Feb. 14 event aretS, $8. $11, and $13 with groupdiscounts available. Additionalticket information may be obtainedby calling the theatre box office.

claiming to be Marley's father is animposter

AS THE WORLD TURNS: Margogets a promotion which means lotsof out-of-town trips. When Lilymeets Holden's little sister Megthere is instant dislike. Lily's moodi-ness troubles Dusty. While dancingwith Bob to the tune "Someone toWatch Over Me," Kim realizes allher anonymous presents are con-nected to the song's lyrics. AfterKevin tells police Marsha may haveMarie's diary in her safe. Marsharemoves the contents just beforepolice arrive to search it. Doug goesto a secret room which brims withclippings and memorabilia aboutKim. Fran is heartsick when Dougsays he may leave Oakdale to starta restaurant in Acapulco. Shannongets nervous when Lucinda mentionsEarl Mitchell's name.

CAPITOL: Wally arrives at Bax-ter's just after Baxter has askedClarissa to bed. Learning Jennyalive, Zed tells Victor he plans totake her back with him to Washing-ton. When Victor has his men spiritZed away, he breaks free, goes to theSouthern Cross ship and takes Jennyto shore. Victor orders his men tobring her back and do whatever isneeded in order to stop Zed. Tyler

Soap Opera Updatearrives just as Julie's about to beshot. When Sherry appears on thescene she is accidentally shot. AsSandy and Tyler grapple, the gungoes' off, mortally wounding Sandy.Just before she dies, Sandy tellsJulie to take the teddy bear from herroom and give it to Allison. Jordy isheartbroken when he overhearsLeigh Anne praying that her ter-minal illness be cured.

DAYS OF OUR LIVES: Kimberlyalmost suffers a miscarriage due totension caused by Emma. Savannahis angry when she spots Chris withMarlena. When Peachy finds Bo andShane breaking into an ISA file sheholds them at gunpoint. Shane per-suades Peachy to let them go and lethim take the file. Brother Francisrescues Anna as she's being botheredby thugs. Emma and Alex becomelovers. Having bought a gun toprotect herself from rapist, Maggienearly shoots Mickey when he entersthe house too quietly. Mike andRobin Jacobs, the new chief ofsurgery, are at odds.

GENERAL HOSPITAL: Patrick

Movie TimetableInformation lor th» movl* timatabl* •

provided by m«Hit*f operators. Sine* movlaa araaublact to cftanga, It la rt»comm#nd»d that raad-ara call th« maat*x to confirm oorraot tlmaa.

HOHMOUTH COUNTYABERDEEN TOWNSHIP

•TfUTHMOM CINEMA I —Bach to tha Fulura (POI 2:00,7:15. 9:30 UA HID

• n U T H M O M CINEMA II — jaw*Rainbow Brlta 2:00; Young Snariock HotmtM

(PQ-131 7 10, 0:20AMURY PARK

LYRIC I THtATM —Ait-Mat* Adult Fllma (XXX) contlnuoua from

noon through 11:30 p.m.LYRIC II THtATRE —

AJl-Olri Adult nima (XXX) contlnuoua fromnoon through 11:30 p.m.PARK CtNlMA —

Two Hot N*w Straight Fllma (XXX) conilnuOuifrom noon through 11 30 p.m.

ATLANTIC HIQHLANDBATLANTIC CINEMA I —

Bach to Ih* Futur* (PQ) 2:00, 7:15, 0:30ATLANTIC CINEMA II —

Rainbow Brlta 2:00; toung Sherlock Holmaa(PO-13) 7:20. 0:25

EATONTOWNCOMMUNITY I -

Mark Twain (Q) 1:00: Iron Eagla (PO-13) 7:45.10:00COMMUNITY II —

Out of Africa (PQ) 1:00, 8:00EAST BRUNSWICK

BRUNSWICK SQUARE CINEMA | -Tha Cotor PurpM) (PQ-13) 1:30. 4:15, 7:15.

10:00BRUNSWICK SQUARE CINEMA II —

Jew* Of the Nlta (PQ-13) 2. 4. 8. 8, 10:00

FREEHOLD CINEMA JV!?L D

Out Of Africa (PO) 1 00. 8 00mMHOLD CINIMA • -

Splaa U U Urn (PQI 1 00. 7 00, 9:40FRUHOLD C I M H A • —

Mark Twain (01 1:00; Troll Pg-13) 8 15 9 40nUIMOLO CINIUA • —

Jawal ol tha Nlla IPOl 100. 7:20. B 40ntHMOLD CINIMA • —

Rocky IV IPO) 1:00. 7 30. 9 30RT. S CINIMA I —

Black Moon Rlalng (R) 7:30. 0:30RT . I CINIMA II -

Whlla Nlghta (PO-13) 7 15. 9 45RT S CINIMA III —

Natty Qann IPO) 7:30. 9:30RT. • CINIMA IV —

Iron Eagla (R) 7 20. 9:40HOWILL

TOWN -Plaaaa Call Thaalar

COUNTRY -Plaaaa Can Thaatar

LONO BRANCHLONO BRANCH I —

Rocky IV (PO| 7:30. 0:30LONO MUNCH II —

Black Moon Rlalng |R| 7 40. 9:40MIOOLtTOWN

UA MIDDLITOWN I -Color Purpla (PO-13) 1:00. 7 15

UA WOMJtTI

Out Ol Alnca IPO-13) 1:00. » 00UA MIDDLITOWN III —

Splaa Llka Ua (PO-13) 115. 7 15. 9:16UA MIOOLITOWN IV -

Troll (PO-13) 115. 7:15. 9:19UA MIDDLITOWN V —

Iron Eagla (PO-13I 1:00. 7:16. 9:15A MIDOUTOWN VI —

o( tha Nlla (PQ-13). 1:16. 7:30. 9:30UA MIDDLITOWN VII —

Mark Twain (0) 1:00. 7:00; Runaway Train (R)9:16

OCIAN TOWNSHIPSIAVIIW SQUARE C I M H A I —

Splaa Llka Ua (PQ13) 1:00. 3:10. 6:20. 7:30.

SIAVIIW SQUARE CINEMA IITha Color Purpla (PO-13) 1:30. 4:20. 7:15.

10:00MIDDLEBROOK I —

Black Moon Rlalng (R) 1:00. 7:30. 9:30MiDOLEBROOK II —

101 Dalmiilofii (Q) 1.00, 7:00. 8 35M O 1ANK

RID BANK MOVIES I —101 Dalmallona (O) 1 00. 7:00. 6:36

RED BANK MOVIIS II —N.rty Oann (PO) 1:00. 7:30. 9:30

SHREWSBURYSHREWSBURY PLAZA CINIMA I —

Rocky IV (PQ) 1:00. 3:10. 5:20, 8:10SHREWSBURY PLAZA CINIMA II —

Jawal 01 tha Nlla (PQ-13) 1:00, 3:10. 5:20, 7:40,10 00SHREWSBURY PLAZA CINIMA III -

Whlta Nlghta (PO-13) 1:00. 4:20. 7:20, 10:00MIDOLHaUt COUNTY

MIIONMENLO PARK CINIMA I —

Rocky IV (PO) 1:30. 3:20. 5:20. 7:20. 9:00.10:35MENLO PARK CINIMA II — I

Jawal ol tha Nlla (PQ-13) 1:45. 3:45. 5:45. 7:60.9:60;

WOOMRIOO*CINIMA I —

Mark Twain (0) 1:30. 3:16: Runaway Train (R)5:25, 7 35. 9:46CINIMA II -

Splaa Llka U« (PO) 2. 4, 6. 6. 10:00SOMERSET COUNTY

SOMERSETRUTQERS PLAZA CINIMA I —

Mark Twain (Q) 1:00. 2:40; Out ol Africa (PQ)4:20, 7:15. 10:00RUTOERS PLAZA CINEMA II —

Black Moon Rlalng (R) 1:40, 3:40; Splaa Llka" 1:30. 7:30. 9:40

I PLAZA CINIMA III —Tha Color Purpla (PQ-13) 1:30, 4:20, 7:15.

10:00RUTOIRt PLAZA CINIMA IV -

Rocky IV (PQ) 1 SO. 3:50, 5:50. 7:46. 9:36HUTQERS PLAZA CINIMA V -

Natty Qann (PQ) 1:30. 3:30. 5 25. 7.25. 9:20RUTQERS PLAZA CINIMA VI —

Iron Eagla (PO-13) 1:25. 3:35. 5:30. 7:40, 9:60MPAA RATINGS

Q — Qanaral audlancat.PO — AM aMa. (Paranlal guManca auajfaatad)R — Raatrtciad. (Paraona undaf 17 not ad-

mmad unlaaa accompanlad by pifant oradult guardian)

X — Adurlt only.

begs Teri to halt pjans to wed Kevinuntil she undergoes psychiatric ther-apy. Kevin and Teri disregardPatrick's suggestion. When Patrickis named chief heir to Neil's estate,he becomes a prime murder suspect.Bobbi is afraid the brownstonemurderer may strike again, a fearwhich intensifies when she learnsRussell has arrived in Port Charlesand Tanya has lost the key to theirbrownstone. Believing the answer togaining Sean's company is in Brazil,Edward sends Jimmy Lee there.Jimmy Lee tells Celia she cannotcome with him. Derek apologizes toFrisco for trying to get him intotrouble. Frisco accepts the apologyand offers to go to Anna so thatDerek may be reinstated. Mike isjealous of the attention Derek paysLorena. The Laurelton coroner tellsAnna that Earl Moody wasstrangled. Rick slaps Mike afterMike mouths off to him.

GUIDING LIGHT: After Ed tellsClaire to pack her bags, she vowsrevenge. Just as they are about tohead for New York, Jackson andBeth are offered promotion jobs atSamson Lewis Industries. Indiaprods Philip to give Simon a job atSpaulding Foundation Billy tellsKyle they share the same mother.Reva agrees to give Fletcher thestory on suicide as long as her nameis kept secret. Maureen and Edreconcile.

LOVING: After learning Zona ispregnant, Lorna ends her engage-ment to Line. Harry tells Ava heknows Johnny is really Cherie'schild. As Stacy and Jack makewedding plans, Curtis tells Ava he'snot certain he's ready for marriage.Spider follows Trisha. After landinga job with Celia's dad, Spider tells afriend it's really a cover — he plansto get all the dough he needs fromthe Aldens

ONE LIFE TO UVE: Whileeveryone thinks Bo has beenmurdered, he and Didi delight inpulling off the scam. Meanwhile,

Andre and Hanover are taken intocustody for attempted murder. WithDidi's cornea transplant a success,she and Bo plan a trip around theworld Ed informs Larry that Ivanmay not have been the one respon-sible for Laurel's fatal car crash.Clint and Nicki decide to get to knowone another. Returning to the island,Pam contacts Jeb with news that shehas a "terminal illness." Asa rushesto the island. While he's at herbedside, Pam reveals the clippingsabout Asa Buchanan.

RYAN'S HOPE: When Dakotaneeds a transfusion from Johnny,Johnny tells Maeve the young man ishis son. A shattered Maeve tells

Johnny she'll try and accept Dakota.After sleeping, with Frank, Jilldreams of Dakota. Melinda visitsDakota at the hospital and puts anherbal poultice on his wrist. AsDakota regains consciousness, hecalls out for Sara Jane. Melinda runsto Jill, saying that Dakota needs herif he's to survive. Johnny tellsDakota that he's his father.

SANTA BARBARA: After poison-ing Mason, Gina heads for C.C.'sroom. As she is about to give him alethal injection, C.C. grabs thehypodermic from her. C-C. warnsGina to keep his recovery a secret.

He plans to feign coma whilelearning who in his family are forhim and against him. Mark andMary discover the ailing Mason andgive him an antidote. Cruz talks toSantana about his romance withEden. Kirk suggests to Gina thatthey gain control of Capwell Indus-tries.

SEARCH FOR TOMORROW:Stephanie admits to Patti that Sarawas not well-liked at the TV station.She also reveals that Sara was inlove with Quinn. Rivera givesEstelle her contract in exchange fora million dollars. Hogan spots atarantula on his desk.

YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS:As Andy's on the road to recovery,Paul is hard-pressed to ignore hisfeelings for Faron Lindsay tellsJohn she snapped the photos ot Jilland the lover in a cabin. Telling Johnshe's still in love with the man in thephotos, she refuses to divulge hisname. Meanwhile. Esther, the maid,begins to send out a letter formedwith newspaper print telling Mrs.

Chancellor that she has the picturesKay wants.

ATLANTIC STRATNMORETWIN .• ,.„ TWIN ....MMIATLANTICHIGHLANDS

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OUT WITH THE OLDIN WITH THE NEWI

This frequently heard expression can be applied to iringing out of 19(5 and the welcoming of 1(86. It can in fact be briefdescription of many medicines we stock in our pharmacy. For, most ofthe new drugs your physician is prescribing today were not around afew years ago. And many drugs so popular—just a short while ago arenot even being made anymore.But—we do feel compelled to add that not all the "old" are on the wayout. We still get calls to compound many medicines and for drugs thathave become old standbys.YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery.We will deliver promptly without utra charge. A great many peoplerely on us for their health needs. We welcome requests for deliveryservice and charge accounts.

Ailkoriteal Distributor for Holtiter Oslomy Products

Shrewsbury PharmacyTHE SHREWSBURY SHOPS

Broad St. 741-4174 ShrewsburyPrescription Chemists Free Delivery

MONDAY. JANUARY 20, 1986 The Regiiler 9C

ETC.

It'ssooooocold...

That Dottle Polsson ofHampden found her laun-dry freeze-drled during aspell of arctic weather InHampden, Maine, Friday.An hour after she putthese jeans out to dry, theyfroze stiff. With thetemperatures below zeroIn the evenings and lowteens during the day, any-thing, Including people,outside froze. Forcasterspredicted more of thesame for the New England

ASSOCIATED PBESS

LegionContinued from Page 1C

Some still find truth in theinstruction of a general from theirlegendary past:

"You, legionnaires, have becomesoldiers to die. Me, I will send youto where death is."

In 1978, the 2nd Paratroop Regi-ment from Corsica jumped onKolwezi, Zaire, to stop rebels fromAngola who threatened French andother European lives, and PresidentMobutu Sese Seko's government.

Legionnaires joined the Multi-national Force in Beirut in 1983.They lost 20 men to terrorists andsnipers and accidents, in most casesforbidden from returning fire.

This year the 2nd ParatroopRegiment returned to Zaire to scourthe jungle for French rafters lost onthe river.

Mostly, however, the Legionguards, trains and waits.

At Kourou, in French Guiana,legionnaires watch the EuropeanSpace Agency launch pads and workon roads and bridges. Their onlyfight was a recent bloody brawl withlocal townsfolk.

In French Polynesia, they guardnuclear test sites — and work onroads and bridges.

A large force is based in thesteaming heat of Djibouti, a formerFrench colony on the Red Sea, anda detachment is in Mayotte, a pieceof o v e r s e a s France nearMadagascar in the Indian Ocean.

Nearly half the men are French,but there are 104 other nationalities,

including Americans. Cole Porterwas one. So was Alan Seeger, thepoet, Hans Hartung, the painter, sixprinces and a few Trappist monks.

Since the Falklands War, Britishrecruits approach 10 percent. Ger-mans, once the most numerousforeigners, total 8 percent.

Officers are mostly from theFrench army. "That proves the menfight for a flag, not money," saysSgt. Hugh Riviere, guide at the two-story museum.

Lt. Col. J.B. Chiaroni, the legion'sspokesman, explained, "We entrustarms to foreigners to defend our soil,as a weapon of the French Army, thesame, as a tank or a nuclearsubmarine."

Some 1,100 to 1,200 men areselected each year from between6,000 and 7,000 applicants, Chiaronisays. "We give a rigorous medicalexamination, an intelligence test andwe ask why they want to join."

Most applicants find they just donot fit into society, Chiaroni says."About 20 percent are here forsecurity — they want to camouflagethemselves for a while."

False identities are not uncom-mon, but murderers and seriouscriminals are not welcome. "Ifsomeone has had a small problemwhich proves he is a man, well,that's something else," Chiaronisays.

The anonymity and romance at-tracted Wren's Geste brothers, whosigned up as Smith and Brown in the1920s and ended up in a desert mud

fort, holding off howling Arabs fromthe crenelated ramparts.

Terms have not changed since arecruiter told Geste:

"You will be a soldier of France,entirely amenable to martial law,without any appeal whatsoever.Your friends cannot possibly buy youout, and your consul cannot help you,for five years. Nothing but death canremove you from the legion."

There is a slight flexibility. Menare given up to six months toreconsider, and with a very goodreason, might be excused during thatperiod. By then, after four months ofboot camp, they are running 16 milesover rough terrain with a 40-poundpack.

Legionnaires get regular armypay, double the basic training and asevere disciplinary regimen. After-ward, they are recommended forFrench citizenship.

On the beach at Calvi, Corsica, ayoung West German in the 2ndParatroop Regiment describedhimself as a typical case.

"Well, I had to get out ofGermany," he said, "because I hada little problem with jail." Askedwhat, he simply smiled and smackedhis left fist into his right palm.

"It is crazy here, crazy," he said."After two years, everyone is crazyTrain, work, train. Crazy."

An Associated Press correspon-dent encountered two British de-serters several years ago in Somalia.They had walked three days acrossopen desert to escape.

"We could not take any more,"said one, who did not give his name."We were up at dawn, running allmorning in the sun, carrying rocks,digging, working, until late at night.It was not human."

Chiaroni says the modem legionapplies no punishment not used inthe regular army. Of 80 percent ofrecruits who finish five years, hesays, 40 percent re-enlist. But, headds, the legion is not soft.

In 155 years, the legion has lost35,763 men, including 903 officers."My men would die for me becauseI would die for them," a youngofficer recently told Canadian authorJohn Robert.

The old Algerian slogan, "Marchor Die," is out of fashion. But thelegion's motto, "Honor and Fideli-ty," is emblazoned on its colors. And"Legio Patria Nostra" (The legion isour fatherland) is often tattooed onthe arms of legionnaires.

"We have to be ready at all timesto intervene wherever we are or-dered," Chiaroni says. "In between,there can be frustration."

Excess energy is channeled intolooking the part.' The legion has retired the baggy

red breeches and long overcoat,buttoned back at the legs, asdescribed by Wren: "How muchmore attractive and romantic thanthe familiar British uniform thatseemed to suggest Hyde Park andnursemaids, rather than palms,oases, Moorish cities and deseawarfare."

JumbleI THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

| Q by-Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four JumbKs.one letter to each square, to tormlour ordinary words

MOT

SISSISB*"""

ST!

THn

BLOSMY

WHATWHEN ACOUFLE

. KISSIN A PENSEFO6?

Now arrange the circled letters toform the surprise answer, as sug-gested by the above cartoon

Saturday's

' f\ A A A X K A. A A* A(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: ENEMY WHEAT HYBRID POPLARAnswer She always throws away his socks when

they're not thls-WORTH A DARN

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Crossword

Your Horoscope Bridge AdviceACROSS

By Stella Wilder

MONDAY, JANUARY 20Born today, you possess a tremen-

dous (tore of determination that timeand again see* you through thick andthin. Became you can become irrita-ble and depressed when things do notgo exactly as you might wish, much ofyour energy is spent making sure theywill. You thrive on adversity, thegreater the odds, the harder and morevigorously you work toward realizingyour goals. In (act, you tend to becomebored and uninterested when there areno obstacles to overcome.

You are quite firm in your beliefs,a I ways honest and true to yourself andothers. Your word is better than manya written guarantee, and many relyupon lt implicitly - and with good rea-son. Your seme of right and wrong iiunassailable, and is the reason formuch of your life's activity.

Alao bom on Ihi* data an Fre-dajrtee Falltni, film director; GeorgeOUfTW, COflWQIMI*

To see what is in store for you to-morrow, find your birthday and read

the corresponding paragraph. Letyour birthday star be your dally guide.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) - Do

not hesitate to let others assist you to-day in areas where your own abilitiesmight not be enough.

PISCES (Feb. ll-March t l ) - Yourplayful nature keep* you from takingthings too seriously today - and mayhelp you avoid a confrontation.

ARIES (Marck Jl-Aprll l t ) -Spend time today showing others theropes. You are sure to benefit as well -

- if not now, later.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Do

not allow your schedule to dictateyour every move today, spontaneity isessential to a healthy frame of mind.

GEMINI (May 21-Jue 20) - Con-tacts established today may havemuch to do with future success of newenterprise. Cover as many bases aspossible.

• CANCER (June 21-Jnly 22} - Donot get carried away with new senseof responsibility, for now, just do yourJob - no more, no less.

LEO (July 21-Au. 22) - Do not ex-pect to be able to get everything donetoday without some assistance. Knowwhere to turn for help - and when!

VIRGO (Am|- 23-Sept. 22) - Do notpanic today if you are found out; a lit-tle ingenuity can turn a considerableloss into a significant gain!

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) - Avoidputting much on the, line today, as riskfactor is high. A good day to planahead, improve strategy.

SCORPIO (Oct. M-Nev. 21) - Youhave many opportunities today forpractical application of some of yourfar-out ideas.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -Financial developments paint a pic-ture that can be easily misinterpretedtoday. Get help from experts.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. l t) -New possibilities threaten the securityof your routine today - but may offerconsiderable gain in the long run.

IM4. UaHaa Faaon araataK be

Last October, the United Stalesbridge team played Brazil in thesemifinals of the World Champion-ship, and after 159 deals, the twoteams were tied. The match hingedon the last deal, shown here today.

At the first table, U.S. expert BobHamman, North, bid one nolrumpand played the hand there, making10 tricks.

In the "open" room, where sev-eral hundred enthusiasts watchedeach bid and play on a giant displayboard, Brazilian expert Sergio Bar-bosa got to game, and the crowdroared with delight. Their teamwould win by making a gameinstead of a part score!

ENTRY REMOVEDBut then U.S. expert Lew Stans-

by opened a diamond from theWest hand, and the crowd fellsilent. East's queen forced out theace of diamonds, and now declarerhad only three club tricks insteadof five. He was down two, and theU.S. won the match and went on towin the world championship in thefinals.

A lucky victory for the U.S.team. A cruel disappointment forthe Brazilian players and fans.

DAILY QUESTION

You hold: • K J 3 2 V Q 9 7 2 O Q 72 * 5 3 . Partner bids INT (16 to 18points), and the next player passes.What do you say?

ANSWER- Bid two clubs, theStay man Convention, asking part-ner to bid a major suit of four ormore cards. If partner bids twospades or two hearts, you bid game

in his suit (only three, merelyinviting the game, if his play of thecards is doubtful). If partner'ssecond bid is two diamonds, deny-ing a major suit of four or morecards, you then bid 2NT.

East dealerNorth-South vulnerable

WEST• A85V863OK865*762

EastPassPassPassAil Pass

NORTH• 109764VAK4OJ10• AKQ

' EAST• KJ32S7Q972OQ72• 53

SOUTH• Q•PJ105O A 9 4 3• J10984

South West NorthPass Pass 1 410 Pass 14>2 NT Pass 3NT

Opening lead-- 0 5

A rocket Guide to Bridge writ-ten by Alfred Sheinwela U availa-ble. Get your copy by tending $£.50,including a stamped, le l f -ad-dretsed No. 10 envelope, to Shein-wold on Bridge, In care of thisnewspaper. P.O. Ban 1000, Lo«Angeles, C A 00053.

• 1988. LM AngriM Tmm SpafcaU

1S Fish sauce> The two

13 Exchangepremium

14 Grenada gent16 Hard to find17 " H i g h - "18 Radiated19 Solar disc20 — De Mllle22 Reference

mark*24 Brand28 First home27 Doomed29 Author Solon30 Have being33 Adorned35 Burdened37 Sleep like —38 Fr. mamas40 Vacuous41 Pentateuch43 Facial hair45 —Arbor48 Punta del -48 Fruit ol the

pine49 — Hart50 Ol the ear51 Vistas55 Pistol59 Swan genus60 Memento62 Knowledge63 Tender64 Enroll65 In a trice86Cure67 Conservative68 Relax

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designer27 Criminal28 Oak's begin-

ning29 High nest30 Love greatly31 Holds In

check32 Concludes33 Facts34 Will38 Like en uncle

group42 Pay attention44 Seethe47 Qaze Iliedly

1/27/86

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IOC Thl* COMICS MONDAV JANUAKY ?0, 1986

HAGAR PEANUTS

' ANP WA5TEP BY APROPUCER WHO

PIPN'T KNOW WHATME WAS POIN6,"

F I W I N 6 FOR TMISPR06RAM WAS PROVIPEP

PONATI0N5 FROMOUR VIEWERS.."

©BE, I TUOJ(&MTLIKE IT, HEL&A

WITH HER vaceREALLV BRINGSTHE BEST IN A Si

PO YOU SAYYOUR PRAYERSAT BEPTIME3EETLE?

MCSIR. I POALLMV PRAYINSPURIN0THE PAY

THERE 15 ENOUGH 6TATICELECTRICITY IN 20 CAT6

TO 6TART A CAR COME 0N.00V6.I M LATE FOR WORK.

WE ? LIKEVEN,, YOU WILL SELL *IE

/ WAIT TILL HE GITSDONE WITH HIS

ILLTALK TO

TH1 LITTLEVARMINT

JUGHAID WASTERRIBLEIN SCHOOLTODAV.PAW

f SOME 611/ is

(H ' S ALL

THAT RACKETSTIFF SACK,.. FOR C#ty0/5,JAOf'£

S£*VICB WILL CLEAR

THE CORPORATIONCONTINUES

TO SPELL. OUTFACTS FOB

O L V I N LUCAS.

SET OUT NOW!-•• BEFOREYOU WINO UP IN ACORNER COUNTINGPAPER-CUPS AND,,V\ARKll\(G TIMEUNTIL NOu'RESIXTY- PlVE! THE WIZARD OF IDTHIRTY-FIVE YEARS

WITH Tug COMPANYCALf--- VOUVEPA© YOUR3UESANDMORE!

TALXlUG I TWAT'S AI

CALVIN AND HOBBLES

(VNO WITH THATREPORT, WE

O vfe T * M IM FOUR: *r1IU>, HOT,AMP COMPUCATED.

COMPLICATED...? If IT INVOLVES WEW E

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DENNIS THE MENACE

'Sure, I know the facts of life: Mind yourmanners, sit up straight, wash your

hands, do your homework...."

Convenient home delivery is r y i n Q Q Q Ajust a phone call away j 4 4 " O O O U ! ' ITS SNOWINS OUTSIDE VY WINDOW, M R WlLSON'

IS IT SNOWING OUTSIDE YOUR$3 •