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The Commercial PubHiked at 231 Rldfe Road, Ljndkurat, NJ. Sccond Oats Postage Paid A t Rutbcxfaed, N J. K W SubacripUon $* Publbbed Weekly USPS 125-42* VOL. 77 NO. 52 ICeaiitr OF LYNDHURST LYNDHURST'S OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER 25$ THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1995 Beating the Heat — Youngsters at the Lyndhurst Summer Day Camp enjoy a refreshing cool-down cour - tesy or the Bergen County park workers who turned on the sprinklers during last week’s heat wave. Building which housed temple demolished By Margaret Myre Its congregation scattered, its beautiful stained glass windows suffusing the void interior with a last mellow glow, the Lyndhurst Hebrew Center on Valley Brook Avenue came tumbling down. Last week, the yellow brick each other’s homes, then in 1933 moved into a building at 268 Stuyvesant Avenue. That structure was soon outgrown, and the mem- bers started a building fund. In 1947 the Hebrew Center on Valley Brook was dedicated. The Lyndhurst Jewish commu- Sisterhood, and a 17”x25” wooden plaque inscribed with the Ten Commandments in Hebrew. She also received a framed memorial listing 26 deceased charter mem- bers. The last entry was the name of Joel Levy, owner of Levy’s Pharmacy on Stuyvesant Avenue, Workers tear down the Lyndhurst Hebrew Center which had been building which was the heart of Judaism in Lyndhurst from 1947 until the mid-80’s, was demolished to make way for redevelopment. And with it went part of the town- ship’s heritage. Lyndhurst’s town historian, Sylvia KlefT, custodian of many of the temple’s artifacts since they were presented to the Historical Society in 1990 by aging members, expressed displeasure when told the demolition had taken place. She said she knew the building was to be tom down, but that its present owners, Lyndhurst cardiologists Daniel Conroy and John Cubero, had promised to let her know before it happened. "That aggravates me,” she told the Leader. “I'm very disappointed because I wanted to take pictures from the inside out Those stained glass windows were beautiful.’* For the fust half of this century, the Jewish community in the town- ship flourished. They worshiped in nity traces itself back to Samuel Glick, who settled here in 1878, and whose relatives still live in the surrounding area. Glick became a successful merchant and active member of the community. According to Historical Society records, he followed his religion even though he had to walk to Passaic and back every Friday night. By 1910, the Jewish popula- tion had increased. They attended services at Ruckstuhl Hall in Rutherford, and on Sept. 20, 1926, the Lyndhurst Hebrew Association was formed. The congregation began to dwindle as young families moved away and eventually the temple did not have the number needed to sus- tain it. The building was finally sold in 1989 after lying vacant for two or three years, KlefT said. Members gave Kleff a number of items used in the temple, includ- ing books used to teach the chil- dren, a banner from the temple’s vacant for nearly a decade. who died in 1959. Levy’s son, Edward, who now owns and operates the drugstore, said he recalls going to the temple on Valley Brook Avenue on High Holy Days and Purim when he was a child. “I remember dressing up on Purim and going to the Kleins’ house on Tontine Avenue after,” he said. The congregation died for the same reason it emerged, the search for cultural identity common to most ethnic groups. People had migrated to the Lyndhurst Hebrew Center as a Jewish focal point. Tbe next generation migrated to com- munities with stronger Jewish footholds and identity for their children. No statistics were available on the number of Jewish families liv- ing in Lyndhurst today, but it’s clear from last week's demolition that there are not many. Workers at Lyndhurst firm eligible for aid Employees and former employ- ees of Smith Corona Corporation, Lyndburst, are entitled to some valuable assistance, according to N.J. Department of Labor Commissioner Peter ). Calderone. Calderone announced last week lhat Ihe U.S. Department of Labor has approved a petition (TA-W-30, 2051) which allows Trade Adjustment Assistance (TRA) to workers who lose their jobs or whose hours of work and wages we reduced as a result of increased Imports. This assistance provides for a wide range of services and benefits lo aid employment. These include training, testing, counsel- ing, and job search and relocation allowances. In addition, Trade Readjustment Allowance (TRA) may be payable to eligible workers following exhaustion of all Unemployment Insurance entitle - 1b apply for TAA benefits, an eligible worker must report to tbe Unemployment Office nearest home where a TAA claim will be taken. Additional information may Tax bills cometh By Margaret Myre Tax bills will descend on prop- erty owners here this week, but unlike the mail-borne plague that sickened homeowners this time last year, the bill for the August and November quarters show a drop for both the calendar year (down $66 from 1994) and in comparison with last August and November. That’s when residents were socked with a $230 hike per quarter because of a one-time school tax adjustment that caused a 30-point leap in that por- tion of the tax. The current bill of $739 for each quarter (August and November) on the average house assessed at $165,000 is down roughly $137 per quarter from same time last year. The tax on that $165,000 house (determined by the township as “average”) is $3,036 for 1995, a dip from the 1994 figure of $3,102. The tax on property is figured by multiplying the assessed value by the current tax rate, which is $1.84. The combined lax rate declined 4 cents per hundred dollars of assessed value this year. The school lax rate went down 10 cents and the municipal rate rose 10 cents, with the 4 cent decline in the county rate accounting for the decrease. The rise in the municipal rate was attributed to losses in state aid and local revenue. Lyndhurst has lost three large taxpayers to bankruptcy — Standard Tool, Penco and Concrete Specialties. Penco alone is $2.5 million in arrears. The three bankruptcies have cost the township over $3 mil- lion in ratables a year, according to Finance Commissioner Frank Bianchi. A contract for sale of ihe Penco property to an affiliate of Inserra Shop-Rite to build a 100,000-square-foot shopping cen- ter on the 17-acre tract is pending a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge’s decision on an issue to determine future clean-up responsibility for the chemical site. Standard Tool trustees have reportedly been enter- taining discussions with A&P. School sources attribute the decline in the school rate to the rise and fall of the school tax levy in calendar years 1994 and 1995. The school levy jumped in the 1994 calendar year because of the need to make up a $3 million shortfall in the 1993-94 fiscal school budget. This shortfall was brought about when the school budget was defeated at the polls, setting off a cycle of cuts and appeals that nearly shut down the system. The case dragged on until August 1994, causing the tax rate for school purposes to spike. Some of the 10-point decrease this year reflects the normalization of the school tax rale and the differ- ence between the county’s calendar year and ihe school district’s fiscal year budget. Three percent is attributed to a $503,000 fund bal- ance which was used to reduce ihe lax levy, and 1-1/2 points lo a reduction in spending. Of the total tax rale, education accounts for 48 percent, down from 52 percent in 1994. These laxes are set by the local school board and are the only ones on which tax- payers get to vote, in the school elections in April. Local government taxes are the second largest portion, 39 percent this year as compared wilh 33 per- cent of the total tax in 1994. Local government provides money for such essential services as police, garbage pick-up and public works. These taxes come from budgets approved by the township’s Board of Conunissioners. The county’s share of the total is the smallest, 13 percent, compared with 15 percent last year. Thai tax derives from a budget drawn up by the county executive and okayed by the Board of Freeholders. The township has extended the grace period for payment of the August bill 25 days from the date of mailing. The bills were held up while ihe county waited for the budgets to come in before they could certify the non-municipal tax rate. Mental Health Center renamed The South. Bergen Mental Health Center on Valley Brook Avenue, Lyndhurst, has a new name. The facility, along wilh its affiliate, Bergen Regional Counseling Center and ils other programs in Northern New Jersey, is officially changing its name this month to Comprehensive Behavioral Healthcare, Inc., or “CompCare." According to Executive Director Peter Scerbo, the change is being made to more accurately reflect the scope of services it provides and to unify the myriad of programs under one corporate name. “Over the past 25 years, we have constantly expanded our behavioral healthcare services to meet the needs of all ages — from children to seniors. We now pro- vide counseling, rehabilitation, res- idential and preventive services,” Scerbo said. Founded in Lyndhurst in 1970 as a private, nonprofit institution. South Bergen Mental Health Center (now CompCare) gradually established programs and services in several other locations in north- ern New Jersey, the largest being the regional counseling center in Hackensack. CompCare’s Counseling Services Division includes short- term therapy, drug and alcohol abuse services, specialized group therapies such as eating disorder and parenting, mobile outreach and home-based services. The Rehabilitation Services Division provides flexible, day- long programs of therapeutic group activities and individual consulta- tions. The Valley Brook Center in Lyndhurst specializes in geriatric partial care for adults 55 and older. The Adult Residential Services Division provides support services for clients in two long-term resi- dences in Rutherford and Hackensack, two transitional group homes in Lyndhurst and Emerson, and the Alternative Living Supervised Program, an outreach program for chronically ill clients living in the community. CompCare’s Adolescent Services Division assists teenagers and preteens through individual outpatient appointments; an inten- sive after-school group treatment program; a Youth Case Management Program for those being discharged into the commu- nity after hospitalization; and the Kearny Adolescent Residential Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu- nities. CompCare is open Monday through Thursday from 9 ajn. to 9 p.m., and Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Information about CompCare’s services can be obtained by calling 935-3322. be obtained by calling the New Jersey Division of Field Operations, Collateral Claims, Trenton, NJ., at (609) 984-2284 The certification covers workers wbo were separated from employ- ment or whose hours were reduced on and after October 2, 1994, through May 9, 1997. The petition was certified on May 9, 1995. Smith Corona Corporation engages in the production of type- writers snd word processors. Gutheil Park, a neighborhood playground at the comer of Valley Brook and Park avenues in Lyndhurst, will be reopening on Friday, August 4, Commissioner Evelyn Pezzolla, director of Parks and Public Property, announced last Friday. The playground had been closed for renovation to bring it into com- pliance with the present safety standards of the National Playground Safety Institute. All of the equipment in the park was over 20 years old. New equipment has been installed. According to a bulletin issued by the Institute, the new safety standards include covering the ground underneath the playground equipment with mulch. “All Lyndhurst playgrounds have now been completely renovat- ed,** Pezzolla said. The other town parks are Lewandowski Park, located on Elizabeth Avenue; Hilltop Park at Orient Way and Valley Brook Avenue; and Town Hall Park at Delafield and Court avenues. Playground made safer fmuT* i f ,<v * & m - #■ Dedicating the reopening are (I to r) front row: Commissioner Evelyn Pezzolla and John Napotano; back row: Mkkey Kerner, Vinny Bello, Parks Dept. Superintendent Ricky Plzzutl, Richie Hild, and Joe Bugiada. LHS registration set Lyndhurst High School will be holding registration for all new stu- dents from 9 to noon on Monday, August 21; Tuesday, August 22; Wednesday, August 23; Thursday, August 24; and Friday, August 25. Call 896-2090 for an appoint- \ t I
12

ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

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Page 1: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

T h e C o m m e r c i a l

PubHiked at 231 R ld fe Road, L jndkura t, N J .Sccond O ats Postage Paid A t Rutbcxfaed, N J . K W SubacripUon $* Publbbed Weekly USPS 125-42* V O L. 7 7 NO. 5 2

ICeaiitrO F LYNDHURST

LYNDHURST'S OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER25$

THURSDAY, A U G U ST 3 , 1 9 9 5

Beating the H eat — Youngsters a t the Lyndhurst Sum m er Day C am p enjoy a refreshing cool-down cour­tesy o r the Bergen County park w orkers who turned on the sprinklers during last week’s heat wave.

B u i l d i n g w h i c h h o u s e d t e m p l e d e m o l i s h e dBy M argaret M yre

Its congregation scattered, its beautiful stained glass windows suffusing the void interior with a last mellow glow, the Lyndhurst Hebrew Center on Valley Brook Avenue came tumbling down.

Last week, the yellow brick

each other’s homes, then in 1933 moved into a building at 268 Stuyvesant Avenue. That structure was soon outgrown, and the mem­bers started a building fund. In 1947 the Hebrew Center on Valley Brook was dedicated.

The Lyndhurst Jewish commu-

Sisterhood, and a 17”x25” wooden plaque inscribed with the Ten Commandments in Hebrew. She also received a framed memorial listing 26 deceased charter mem­bers. The last entry was the name of Joel Levy, owner o f Levy’s Pharmacy on Stuyvesant Avenue,

W orkers tea r down the Lyndhurst Hebrew C enter which had been

building which was the heart of Judaism in Lyndhurst from 1947 until the mid-80’s, was demolishedto make way for redevelopment. And with it went part of the town­ship’s heritage.

Lyndhurst’s town historian, Sylvia KlefT, custodian of many of the temple’s artifacts since they were presented to the Historical Society in 1990 by aging members, expressed displeasure when told the demolition had taken place. She said she knew the building was to be tom down, but that its present owners, Lyndhurst cardiologists Daniel Conroy and John Cubero, had prom ised to let her know before it happened.

"That aggravates me,” she told the Leader. “I'm very disappointed because I wanted to take pictures from the inside out Those stained glass windows were beautiful.’*

For the fust half of this century, the Jewish community in the town­ship flourished. They worshiped in

nity traces itself back to Samuel Glick, who settled here in 1878, and whose relatives still live in the surrounding area. Glick became a successful merchant and active member o f the community. According to Historical Society records, he followed his religion even though he had to walk to Passaic and back every Friday night. By 1910, the Jewish popula­tion had increased. They attended services at Ruckstuhl Hall in Rutherford, and on Sept. 20, 1926, the Lyndhurst Hebrew Association was formed.

The congregation began to dwindle as young families moved away and eventually the temple did not have the number needed to sus­tain it. The building was finally sold in 1989 after lying vacant for two or three years, KlefT said.

Members gave Kleff a number of items used in the temple, includ­ing books used to teach the chil­dren, a banner from the temple’s

vacant for nearly a decade.who died in 1959.

Levy’s son, Edward, who now owns and operates the drugstore, said he recalls going to the temple on Valley Brook Avenue on High Holy Days and Purim when he was a child.

“I remember dressing up on Purim and going to the Kleins’ house on Tontine Avenue after,” he said.

The congregation died for the same reason it emerged, the search for cultural identity common to most ethnic groups. People had migrated to the Lyndhurst Hebrew Center as a Jewish focal point. Tbe next generation migrated to com­m unities with stronger Jewish footholds and identity for their children.

No statistics were available on the number of Jewish families liv­ing in Lyndhurst today, but it’s clear from last week's demolition that there are not many.

Workers at Lyndhurst firm eligible for aidEmployees and former employ­

ees of Smith Corona Corporation, Lyndburst, are en titled to some valuable assistance, according to N .J. D ep artm en t o f L abor Commissioner Peter ). Calderone.

Calderone announced last week lhat Ihe U.S. Department o f Labor has approved a petition (TA-W-30, 2051) w hich a llo w s T rade Adjustm ent A ssistance (TRA) to w orkers w ho lo se th e ir jo b s o r whose hours o f work and wages we reduced as a resu lt o f increased Imports. This assistance provides

for a wide range of services and benefits lo aid employment. These include training, testing, counsel­ing, and job search and relocation allowances. In addition, Trade Readjustment Allowance (TRA) may be payable to eligible workers follow ing exhaustion o f all Unemployment Insurance entitle -

1b apply for TAA benefits, an eligible worker must report to tbe U nem ploym en t O ffice n e a res t home where a TAA claim will be taken. Additional information may

Tax bills comethBy M argaret M yre

Tax bills will descend on prop­erty owners here this week, but unlike the mail-borne plague that sickened homeowners this time last year, the bill for the August and November quarters show a drop for both the calendar year (down $66 from 1994) and in comparison with last August and November. That’s when residents were socked with a $230 hike per quarter because of a one-time school tax adjustment that caused a 30-point leap in that por­tion of the tax.

The current bill of $739 for each quarter (August and November) on the average house assessed at $165,000 is down roughly $137 per quarter from same time last year.

The tax on that $165,000 house (determined by the township as “average”) is $3,036 for 1995, a dip from the 1994 figure of $3,102.

The tax on property is figured by multiplying the assessed value by the current tax rate, which is $1.84.

The combined lax rate declined 4 cents per hundred dollars of assessed value this year. The school lax rate went down 10 cents and the municipal rate rose 10 cents, with the 4 cent decline in the county rate accounting for the decrease. The rise in the municipal rate was attributed to losses in state aid and local revenue. Lyndhurst

has lost three large taxpayers to bankruptcy — Standard Tool, Penco and Concrete Specialties.

Penco alone is $2.5 million in arrears. The three bankruptcies have cost the township over $3 mil­lion in ratables a year, according to Finance Com m issioner Frank Bianchi. A contract for sale of ihe Penco property to an affiliate of Inserra Shop-Rite to build a 100,000-square-foot shopping cen­ter on the 17-acre tract is pending a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge’s decision on an issue to determine future clean-up responsibility for the chemical site. Standard Tool trustees have reportedly been enter­taining discussions with A&P.

School sources attribute the decline in the school rate to the rise and fall of the school tax levy in calendar years 1994 and 1995. The school levy jumped in the 1994 calendar year because of the need to make up a $3 m illion shortfall in the 1993-94 fiscal school budget. This shortfall was brought about when the school budget was defeated at the polls, setting off a cycle of cuts and appeals that nearly shut down the system. The case dragged on until August 1994, causing the tax rate for school purposes to spike. Some of the 10-point decrease this year reflects the normalization of the school tax rale and the differ­

ence between the county’s calendar year and ihe school district’s fiscal year budget. Three percent is attributed to a $503,000 fund bal­ance which was used to reduce ihe lax levy, and 1-1/2 points lo a reduction in spending.

Of the total tax rale, education accounts for 48 percent, down from 52 percent in 1994. These laxes are set by the local school board and are the only ones on which tax­payers get to vote, in the school elections in April.

Local government taxes are the second largest portion, 39 percent this year as compared wilh 33 per­cent of the total tax in 1994. Local government provides money for such essential services as police, garbage pick-up and public works. These taxes come from budgets approved by the township’s Board of Conunissioners.

The county’s share of the total is the smallest, 13 percent, compared with 15 percent last year. Thai tax derives from a budget drawn up by the county executive and okayed by the Board of Freeholders.

The township has extended the grace period for payment of the August bill 25 days from the date of mailing. The bills were held up while ihe county waited for the budgets to come in before they could certify the non-municipal tax rate.

Mental Health Center renamedThe South. Bergen Mental

Health Center on Valley Brook Avenue, Lyndhurst, has a new name. The facility, along wilh its affiliate, Bergen Regional Counseling Center and ils other programs in Northern New Jersey, is officially changing its name this month to Comprehensive Behavioral Healthcare, Inc., or “CompCare."

According to Executive Director Peter Scerbo, the change is being made to more accurately reflect the scope of services it provides and to unify the myriad of programs under one corporate name.

“Over the past 25 years, we have constantly expanded our behavioral healthcare services to meet the needs of all ages — from children to seniors. We now pro­vide counseling, rehabilitation, res­idential and preventive services,” Scerbo said.

Founded in Lyndhurst in 1970 as a private, nonprofit institution.

South Bergen Mental Health Center (now CompCare) gradually established programs and services in several other locations in north­ern New Jersey, the largest being the regional counseling center in Hackensack.

Com pCare’s Counseling Services Division includes short­term therapy, drug and alcohol abuse services, specialized group therapies such as eating disorder and parenting, mobile outreach and home-based services.

The Rehabilitation Services Division provides flexible, day­long programs of therapeutic group activities and individual consulta­tions. The Valley Brook Center in Lyndhurst specializes in geriatric partial care for adults 55 and older.

The Adult Residential Services Division provides support services for clients in two long-term resi­dences in Rutherford and Hackensack, two transitional group homes in Lyndhurst and Emerson,

and the Alternative Living Supervised Program, an outreach program for chronically ill clients living in the community.

Com pCare’s Adolescent Services Division assists teenagers and preteens through individual outpatient appointments; an inten­sive after-school group treatment program; a Youth Case Management Program for those being discharged into the commu­nity after hospitalization; and the Kearny Adolescent Residential Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu­nities.

CompCare is open Monday through Thursday from 9 ajn. to 9 p.m., and Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Inform ation about Com pCare’s services can be obtained by calling 935-3322.

be obtained by calling the New Jersey D ivision of Field O perations, Collateral Claims, Trenton, NJ., at (609) 984-2284

The certification covers workers wbo were separated from employ­ment or whose hours were reduced on and after October 2, 1994, through May 9, 1997. The petition was certified on May 9, 1995.

S m ith C orona C o rp o ra tio n engages in the production o f type­writers snd word processors.

Gutheil Park, a neighborhood playground at the comer of Valley Brook and Park avenues in Lyndhurst, will be reopening on Friday, August 4, Commissioner Evelyn Pezzolla, director of Parks and Public Property, announced last Friday.

The playground had been closed for renovation to bring it into com­pliance with the present safety standards of the N ational Playground Safety Institute. All of the equipment in the park was over 20 years old. New equipment has been installed.

According to a bulletin issued by the Institute, the new safety standards include covering the ground underneath the playground equipment with mulch.

“All Lyndhurst playgrounds have now been completely renovat­ed,** Pezzolla said.

T he other town parks are Lewandowski Park, located on Elizabeth Avenue; Hilltop Park at O rie n t Way and Valley Brook Avenue; and Town Hall Park at Delafield and Court avenues.

P laygrou n d m ade safer

f m u T *

i f ,<v * ■

&

m-

#■

Dedicating the reopening a re (I to r) fron t row: Commissioner Evelyn Pezzolla and John Napotano; back row: M kkey Kerner, Vinny Bello, P a rk s D ep t. S u p e rin ten d e n t R icky P lzzu tl, R ichie H ild, and Joe Bugiada.

LHS registration setLyndhurst High School will be

holding registration for all new stu­dents from 9 to noon on Monday, August 21; Tuesday, August 22;

Wednesday, August 23; Thursday, August 24; and Friday, August 25.

Call 896-2090 for an appoint-

\ t I

Page 2: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

; a - THURSDAY. AUGUST 3. 1998THE LEADER

HMDC plans informal discussions on plan for wetlands

“Music Under the Stars” — Johnny Maestro entertaias the crowds on S aturday . Ju ly 22, at the 6th annual outdoor concert held in Lyndhurst's Town Hall Park. An estimated total of 15,000 people attended the three-day event.

Anyone with questions about the Hackensack Meadowlands Special Area Management Plan (SAMP) draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is invited to attend an informal “public avail­ability session” on Thursday, August 10.

During tbe day, representatives of the agencies involved in the development of the SAMP — the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, N.J. Department of Environmental Protection and the HMDC — will be available to meet one-on-one with members of the public to answer questions and provide

information.The public availability sessions

will be held between 10 a.m. and noon, 2 and 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 pjn. at the HMDC Environment Center, One DeKorte Park Plaza. No for­mal presentations will be made and no appointments are necessary.

These sessions precede the pub­lic hearings on the SAMP draft EIS, which will be held at the HMDC on Tuesday, August 29, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., and on Thursday, August 31, at the Rutherford

Borough Hall, 176 Paik Ave., at 7 pjn.

“We know that many members of the public have questions and issues of concern related to the SAMP and we are anxious to address them," said Anthony Scardino Jr., executive director of the HMDC. “Tbe most effective way for them to obtain comprehen­sive answers is through the kind of dialogue that is possible at these sessions. We encourage anyone who would like to discuss any

aspect of tbe SAMP with members of tbe partner agencies to Join us on tbe 10th.','

Scardino noted that copies of the draft EIS are available for review at the Fairleigh Dickinson University Messier Library, Rutherford; the Hackensack, Jersey City, Keamy and Secaucus public libraries; HMDC in Lyndburst; NJ DEP Information Resource Center, 432 E. State Street, Trenton; and U.S. EPA Region II, 290 Broadway, 16th floor, New York.

Presto joins environmentalists in attack on HMDC wetlands plan

Lyndhurst police blotterAttempted entry

Someone tried to gain entry to the side door of a Lyndhurst resi­dence on the morning of July 24 by attempting to disassem ble the deadbolt tumbler.

Revoked driverBail was set at $500 for Patricia

Lopez, 26, of Elizabeth, who was arrested July 25 for driving with a suspended license. According to authorities. Officer Carmine Litterio observed Lopez driving a 1979 Chevrolet Caprice wagon in reverse on Kingsland Avenue at “a fairly high” rate of speed. When he stopped the car and asked for her paperwork, Lopez was unable to produce a valid license.

TheftA Valley Brook Avenue couple

reported the theft of $6,000 worth of jewelry from a bureau drawer in a first-floor bedroom sometime between 6 p.m. on July 21 and 7 p.m. on July 24. According lo

police, there was no sign of forced entry and nothing else appeared to hr.ve been stolen or disturbed in thehouse.

ThreatsHarassment complaints were

signed by two 21-year-old Lyndhurst women against 23-year- old Christine I ,awrence of Chestnut St., Rutherford, following an alter­cation in the Foodtown parking lot on Riverside Ave. around 11 p.m. on Monday, July 24. The Lyndhurst women accused Lawrence of throwing eggs at the car they were driving and making threats. A court date has been set for August 17.

* + *

A 66-year-old woman, a resi­dent of Second Avenue, reported receiving threatening phone calls around 3 a.m. on July 24.

24 from a man who told the victim he was dead.

* * *

A 35-year-old Lyndhurst woman said she received several calls around 2 a.m. from an unknown man who threatened to blow up the building.

Suspicious call A Summit Avenue woman told

police she received a phone call shortly after 4 p.m. on July 24 from an unknown man who told her to leave her doors unlocked so he could make repairs to her roof. She said no arrangements had been made for repairs lo the roof.

Malicious mischief A man reported on July 25 that

his car had been struck several times with eggs while parked on ihe 700 block of 5lh Ave.

Stolen bike A bicycle valued at $250 was

stolen July 25 from the Burger King parking lot on Park Avenue.

A Copeland Avenue man report­ed he received a phone call on July

Lyndhurst dive team recovers drowned manA diver wilh the Lyndhurst Fire

Department Dive Rescue Team recovered the body of a 25-year- old Passaic man who drowned when he entered the Passaic River, near the 8th Street Bridge in Passaic, to retrieve a soccer ball last Friday.

Diver Bob Ferrara pulled the body of Jan Kobylarczyk from the murky water at 11:35 a.m. on

Friday, about an hour after the call for assistance came in from Wallington, and just three minutes after Ferrara dove in to begin a sweep of the river along with a team from the Wallington unit. Three rescue boats were in ihe water from Carlstadt, Garfield and Passaic.

According to police,

f i lm

Kobylarczyk and his friends were drinking on the banks of the river behind Holy Rosary Church where Kobylarczyk was a parishioner when he saw the ball float by. His friends said he dove in and swam to the other side, stood up in the shallow water, then went back in and disappeared.

Kobylarczyk was a Polish immigrant who lived with his grandmother on Fiflh Street in Passaic.

Assisting in the Lyndhurst effort were Rich Donnelly, who guided Ferrara by tugging on a line attached to the diver; and back-up diver Paul Caputo. For Wallington, Jerry Ventura was the diver and Captain Bob Ventura was his ten­der.

By Jack O’SheaMayor Dom inick Presto of

Carlstadt plans to advise the special counsel working with the borough council in fighting tbe proposed $3 billion mini-city to make hard and fast contact with environmentalists opposing the new Meadowlands master plan.

Presto told tbe Leader that the key to reducing the unwanted hous­ing component in the mini-city is fighting tbe Special Area Management Plan (SAMP) of the Hackensack M eadowlands Developm ent Commission (HMDC) at hearings on the plan August 29 in Lyndhurst and August 30 in Rutherford.

Plans for tbe mini-city include 5,800 units of low- and moderale- income housing on the 600-acre tract east of Route 17 that develop­ers Empire Ltd., Wood-Ridge, and Mills of Maryland plan to build on. Plans include huge hotel, office, retail shopping facilities as well as the housing which the Republican- controlled borough council says is being forced on Carlstadt by the HMDC even though local residents do now want it.

Lyndhurst attorney Alfred Porro Jr. is special counsel lo the borough council, hired at a minimum fee, lo give expert guidance in making Carlstadl's arguments against the proposed giant development. Porro is a nationally recognized expert on wedands litigation who was select­ed because much of tbe mini-city building would be on wetlands property.

The HMDC is having tbe two hearings to get the opinions of local and county officials and environ­mentalists on the 4,000-page envi­ronmental impact section of SAMP which now would permit some 14,000 units of new housing to be built in the Meadowlands. The finalized SAMP plan would inte­grate changes deemed relevant by HMDC planners on the basis of testimony at the hearings, it was said.

“I am in tbe process of contact­ing At Porro to advise him of what I’ve been saying all along, tbat environmentalism is the key to reducing the mini-city housing,” said Presto in a Leader interview.

Tbe SAMP plan has made about a dozen activist environmental organizations angry and making plans to testify at the bearings. These groups charge tbat SAMP would help wealthy developers at tbe expense of the environment, clearing tbe way for $10 billion in development on 840 acres of wet­lands while only generating $875 million in environmental improve­ments to the remaining 8,500 of tbe Meadowlands' 20,000 acres.

The environmentalists also want most of the development redirected from the suburbs to cities like Newark and Jersey City where they say it is critically needed.'

These environmental groups include the Sierra Club; tbe Hackensack River Coalition; the Hackensack Estuaries and River Tender Corp.; N.Y./N.J. Baywatch; Clean Ocean Action; the Association of NJ. Environmental Commissions; and the League of Women \bters.

Andrew Willner, speaking for tbe Baywatch group, said his orga­nization and others are prepared to go to court to stop SAMP, as presently structured, from being finalized.

“If Al P o tto contacts these envi­ronmental groups for Carlstadt, that’s when he can get tbe expert testimony he’ll need for tbe SAMP hearings,” Presto said. “That’s what I suggested to him when we spoke briefly oo tbis in June and now I want to emphasize what I said then. He agreed witb my posi­tion at (bat time, too "

The mayor also feels that tbe argum ent against prospective chronic traffic congestion and its overload effect on local and county roads and on quality-of-life are among the most powerful objec­tions the borough can make to Ihe

Wallington man charged with DWI, leaving scene after car hits pole

From left, Rutherford Borough Council candidate Dennis Moore enjoys the watermelon while Republican Club President Peter Parisi brings out another of the juicy fruit at the Club’s 4th Annual Picnic at the Nereid Boat Club.

Lyndhurst police arrested a 32- year-okl Wallington man for drunk driving and leaving the scene of an accident after his car struck a utility pole outside 50 Riverside Ave. shortly after midnight on Sunday, July 24.

W illiam Gomez of Paterson Avenue was taken to Hackensack

Hospital with head injuries before being transferred to Bergen Pines Hospital for observation. The hos­pital will notify Lyndhurst police when he is being released. Bail was set at $750.

According to police. Patrolmen Daniel Yager and John Fata responded to a call from witnesses who said a black Pontiac had struck

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mini-city and the SAMP factor that would let 14,000 units of housing be built primarily in Carlstadt and Secaucus, witb smaller clusters in other Meadowlands (owns.

Presto then said that be plans to ask HMDC officers including Chairm an H arriet Derman, Executive D irector Anthony Scardino, commissioners and tbe borough council, etc., to attend a m eeting at which he will ask Derman to spell out the Whitman administration’s official position on the HMDC.

“I know Governor W hitman supports the HMDC. I want Ms. Derman to spell tbat out for the Carlstadt council," be said.

“This would be a reality check on the (Republican) council’s hopes that it can get tbe Republican-controlled state Legislature to oppose a popular Republican governor and reduce the power of the HMDC or abolish it in order to prevent its forcing the mini-city bousing on Carlstadt, or cutting it back sharply from its pre­sent 5,800 units.

“I want to show the council that tbeir hopes are unrealistic," said tbe Democrat mayor whose party has been in the minority since J994 after 22 years of dominating local affairs.

The environmentalists charge that the SAMP is out of line with tbe state master plan, which calls for redevelopment of the cities and that its estim ates o f future office/retail housing needs in tbe district are false, that North Jersey is glutted with such facilities, many of them vacant.

The HMDC’s Scardino scoffed at the environmentalists' challenge as “a lot of rhetoric without facts to back it up."

The SAMP would perm it 18 million square feet of office space,

run because he was scared. He I 2.7 million square feet of commer- later admitted that he had been cial space, and 16 million square drinking, police said. feet of warehouse space.

Looking ahead toward Christmas

a pole on Riverside Avenue near Lake Avenue, and tbat the driver had fled north on foot on Riverside Avenue. Shortly thereafter, Rutherford Pll. Brian Hagel spotted Gomez and returned bim to tbe scene.

Police said Gomez told them be had lost control of the car and had

Commissioner Evelyn Pezzolla. director of the Lyndhurst Department of Recreation, has secured tickets for “A Christmas Carol” on Wednesday evening, December 13. A Christmas Carol features a cast of 90 and is based no Charles Dickens' famous tale of Ebenezer Scrooge A Tiny Tim.

The seats are orchestra and including transportation will cost $46.

Theatre trips are for Lyndhurst residents. There is a "No Refund Policy" on all trips. Tickets must be pre-paid.

For further details, call 804- 2470.

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Page 3: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

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Adrienne Vincenzino of Lyndhursl recently graduated summa cum laude from Drew University in Madison. She was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in liberal arts with a major in biol­ogy

While at Drew, Vincenzino was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, served as secretary of Beta Beta Beta National Biology Honor Society, and was a member of Pi Delta Phi National French Honor Society. She was named to the Dean's List for eight consecutive semesters, achieving a final cumulative GPA of 4.026.

Vincenzino was also a senator in Drew’s Student Government Association, a disc jockey foe three years at the campus radio station, and a member o f the Drew University Dramatic Society.

In the fall, Vincenzino will be a first-year medical student al the U niversity o f M edicine and Dentistry o f New Jersey - New Jersey Medical School. A 1991 graduate of Lyndhurst High School, she is the daughter of Joseph and Jo Ann Vincenzino of Lyndhurst.

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NA Youths complete their Arts & Crafts for the Jr. Rec. program at Allen Park.

North Arlington Summer RecreationNorth Arlington’s Summer

Recreation is in full swing with some traditional formats. Winners in the Iron Man Contest were Matt Rose and Nicholas Mazzolla.

In local basketball action, the North Arlington Vikings, led by Sara Mac Niven, Jamie Parisi, and Katie Symons, were 5-0. With a bench of 16 players, the Vikings’ depth has been responsible for wearing down the opponents.

In stickball action, the team of Mike DiScerni and Pat Brennan defeated Bob Taylor and Tom Griggs.

Tickets are still available for the Yankee trip on August 10 vs Cleveland. The cost is $20. Several seats are still available for the Atlantic City trip on July 31. Phone North Arlington’s Sherri Haines looks to pass to Jen Whittles as the Rec Center for details, 997- Q .P.’s M ara Hanley defends during N.A. Rec’s G irls’ Summer 1550. Basketball League held hi-weekly at North Arlington High School.

LYNDHURSTRec Dept. — Senior CiUzen Bus Trip to Taj Mahal, A.C., Aug. 30. Tickets go on sale Aug. 2, 9 to 11:30 a.m., at Rec Dept, for $12 ($9 coin return). Tickets can also be bought each Tues., Wed. & Thurs. at Senior Citizen Center. Residents only!United We Stand — Meeting at Senior Center, Aug. 11, 7 p.m. for conversation, not confrontation. Topic: County Health Service will explain how and what kind of ser­vices available for seniors, disabled & others. Gov’t, officials & public invited.G arden C lub — Annual flower show, Sat., Aug. 19, 3 to 8 p.m., and Sun., Aug. 20, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Senior Citizen Center, Cleveland Ave. Awards presented Aug. 20 at 3:30. Open to all ama­teurs. Admission free. No entry fee. Public invited.St. Michael’s — Vendors Wanted for Street Fair, Sept. 23. Call Joyce Tricola at 991-7272.Sacred H eart Parents Assoc. — Seeking vendors for Bom-to-Shop Fundraiser, Thurs., Nov. 16. Tables $30. Call school, 939-4277, or Jane, 483-8169 for a contract.

HARRISONRec Dept. — Flea market/craft show, Aug. 6, 9 to 5, JFK Stadium, cor. Harrison Ave. & 1st St. (off Passaic Ave.), Harrison. Quality vendors, kiddie rides.NORTH ARLINGTON N.A. Dems — Last call for tickets for bus ride to the Mets game in Shea Stadium, Sun., Aug. 6. Tickets, $15 each, include admis­sion, bus, snacks on board. It’s cap day. Call the Lisa Della Vecchia, 955-1483, or Marie Tooma, 998- 8879 for reservations.N.A. Rec — Mayor’s Annual Golf Outing, Fri., Aug. 4, at Femwood and Tamiment Country Clubs in Poconos; transportation available. A Day in A.C., tentative Aug. 8/call Larry McKeown, 991-8197. Picnic at Monmouth Race Track, tent. Aug. 15.N.A. Seniors Inc. — Trump Plaza Casino trip, Aug. 10. Annual pic­nic at Krucker’s in Pomona, NY, Aug. 17. Branson, Mo., trip May 12-20. For reservations for AC & picnic, call Betty, 991-7167. For Branson, call Evelyn, 998-2951. Next meeting Sept. 22, 2 p.m., at Senior Center.AARP 3969 — No meetings July

& Aug. Fall meeting Sept. 22 at Senior Center at 2 p.m. Trip to Beacon Hotel, N.H., Sept 24-28. Full payment due Aug. 25. Call 991-4335. Get-acquainted meeting at Senior Center 2 pjn. Sept 8. RUTHERFORDHealth Dept. — Free Adult Eye Screening for residents, Thurs., Aug. 10, at the Health Center, 184 Park Ave. Dr. Robert Purnell is volunteering his services. For appointment or details contact the Public Health nurses, 460-3020, weekdays from 1 to 4 pjn. Republican Club — Volunteers needed for a.m. and p.m. shifts at Labor Day Fair to man Chuck Wagon booth, sand painting and voter registration. Call Barbara at 939-1218 or Virginia at 939-8782. WALLINGTONEngine Co. 202 —* Street Vendors Wanted for participation in a Street Festival on Sat., Sept. 30, from noon to 9 p.m. at the VFW Post 2640 picnic grounds on Main and Hathaway sts. Live music, kiddie rides & games, ice cold beverages & varieties of food will be avail­able. Admission free! For details on becoming a street vendor call (201)238-6173.

Move those feet for HANDSRun or walk, HANDS, the

North Arlington organization devoted to helping the handi­capped, will welcome your partici­pation in the 3rd Annual Jim Dandy’s 5K Run or 1 Mile Fun Walk to benefit their organization. The run will take place September 10 beginning at 10 a.m. and lasting about 45 minutes. A picnic, pro­vided free by Jim Dandy’s, will fol­low at Riverside Park for partici­pants and HANDS members and their families.

This year’s run, sponsored by the borough, Jim Dandy’s and other local businesses, has been expanded from Jauncey Park to include a number of borough streets, starting and ending at Jauncey Avenue and River Road. Cash prizes will be awarded for 1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners, according to Jack Grueter, program chairman and president of HANDS. All participants will receive a free T-shirt, burger or hot dog, and soda.

The event is open to people of all ages and physical capabilities. Those who can’t run the 5-kilome­ter course (3.1 miles) can join in the one-mile Fun Walk. The entry fee is $12 for the 5K, and $5 for the Fun Walk.

The registration deadline is September 4. Send your name, address, and the appropriate amount to HANDS Inc., P.O. Box 827, North Arlington, NJ., 07031.

T r a s h m u s e u m n o t j u n kThe works of natural artist

Beverly Stein Sampson are on dis­play at the Trash Museum at the Hackensack MeadowlandsDevelopment Commission(HMDC) Environment Center. Using the natural transformation of discarded objects as the primary resource for her work, Sampson brings out the beauty in “Junk.”

"Discarded remnants of other people’s past are the starting point

for my creative process,” said Sampson, an art student at The Newark School of Fine and Industrial Arts. “These objects which I find are to me like seeds.”

The HMDC is located at the east end of Valley Brook Avenue. Admission is $2 for adults and chil­dren under 12 are admitted free. For further information on the exhibit call 460-8300.

THUK8PAT. APQPBT 3 . IW ff - PAQg-3THE LEADER

North Arlington youngsters wait their turn to show skills learned during N.A. Rec’s in-line skating class at Fisher Field.

The Hal Dawley Award for Outstanding Performance in the Arts was presented to Union School eighth grader Mkhelle Bumpass. Dorothy Meissner, reading teacher, left and Mrs. Bumpass right shared thehappy occasion.

Page 4: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

PAGE 4 THURSDAY. AUGUST 3. 1998 THE LEADER

NEWS FROM THE SCHOOLSLocal teens spend holiday serving homeless

Lyndhurst High School P rincipal Jam es Corino accepts a clock and plaque from B oard o f E ducation President M ary Sheridan. C orino left the d is tric t a t the end o f Ju n e to take the helm a t West Essex Regional High School.

A lexandra Silva displays a w reath she m ade in a creative projects course, one of the sum m er enrichm ent classes run by Sacred H eart School, Lyndhurst, from June 19 to July 6. The program offered a variety of courses such as science, reading enrichm ent, math enrich­m ent, creative p ro jec ts , c reative poetry and w riting , com puters , Spanish, and aerobics.

Save the river seminar draws teacher, student

Queen of Peace High School biology teacher Frances Freudenrich and student Robert Farrell, who is entering his junior year, represented the school’s Ecology Club at a river conserva­tion seminar held at Wallington Borough Hall on July 7. The event was sponsored by Wallington Mayor Walter Wargacki.

The program focused upon organizing and promoting river conservation activities and includ­ed a trip to the Passaic River bank. Speakers were from Baykeepers NY/NJ Harbor, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Bergen County Soil Conservation, and New Jersey Conservation Foundation.

QPHS science teachers take summer courses

Three Queen of Peace Uigh School science faculty members, Regina Bada, Frances Freudenrich and John Koob, attended a five-day institute of secondary school biolo­gy and chem istry teachers at William Paterson College in Wayne between July 10 and 14.

The biology institute focused on the molecular basis of inheritance, the action of genes and chromo­somes in the cells, the effect of

gene expression on the organism, the role of genetics in evolution as well as ethics and the decision­making process.

The chemistry institute focused on using microchemistry activities in the laboratory scenario. One of the teachers was George Cross, with whom John Koob and former QPHS teacher Borislaw Bilash composed a book of lab experi­ments published last year.

M ary Sheridan, president of the Lyndhurst Board o f Education, p re­sents a plaque to F ran k Bozza, d irector of Special Service for the dis­trict, who retired a t the end of the school year.

Perfect a ttendance aw ards w ere given a t R u therfo rd 's Sylvan, Lincoln, and W ashington schools to those students who ^ no absences o r tard ies fo r .th e school year. Shown In photo from W ashington School are , left to right: Fiona M ulligan, Benedict Ryon, W illiam Sullivan. R ear row: Dawn Han, So Yeon Chin. O ther* who received aw ards are, from Sylvan School, Dawn DeCarlo, Lisi Cola*, Hyun Sik Kim, Anthony Serrao , Hyun J in Kim, Nina Schell, Regina DeCarlo. Back row: John Englese, Andrew Pinter, Jessica Mo**, Rea DeLeon, Kae Young Lee, Steven Zaorsld; and from Lincoln School, Keith Papa, Alex Tomaszewski, G regory Bueno, F rank H erm ann and D ana Rovito

Carlstadt honor rolls - fourth marking period

St. Michael’s School is proud lo announce its honor roll students for the marking period ending June 13, 1995

First Honors: Grade 4 - Brady Fox, Cassandra McGrain, Danielle Viggiano, Kelly Bilis, Samantha Branin; Grade 6 - Alexandra Chojnacka, David D’Alessandro, Melissa Holt, Noelia Lago, Kelly Lesny, David Peselli, Jonathan Pocius; Grade 7 - Cheryl Dudek, Adam Pollack; Grade 8 - Kevin Sofield, Amanda Russo.

Cerracchio, Billy Gomez, Natalia Novoa, Brandon Voss Kristine Barriera; Grade 5 - Christine Romano, Vincent Ardizzone; Grade 6 - Anthony Caivano, Joseph

Following is the honor roll for the fourth marking period of the Alfred S. Faust Interm ediate School, East Rutherford.

M axim um honor roll Grade S: Marisa Fusco. Kristina

Kozierowski, Thomas Magnifico. Tina Zacchia, Daniel Farma, Main Schreckenstein. Fdward Wilk. Philip Cocozzo, Heather Ellis Janet Kim. Magdalena Szutowska, Anthony Virtuoso

Grade 6: Michael Gallo, Deirdre Griffin. Beatrice Krysztofiak, Fun Young Lee, lisa Offreda, Paulina Wujkowski, John Peter Zak.

For most teenagers, the summer holiday is spent swimming, barbe­cuing, or sunning on the beach. For a dozen local teens and their advisors, the holiday meant work­ing in steamy kitchens or ladling soup for the homeless from the back of a stiflingly hot van.

For the third year in a row, the CYO youth group of the Community of G od’s Love in Rutherford spent five days in Washington, D.C., working in vari­ous programs that feed the home­less, care for abused infants, or dis­tribute food to the poor. At Martha s Table, the high school and college youths prepared and packed over 800 sandwiches and chopped coilards and potatoes for 80 gallons of soup. Then they loaded the food onto vans, called “McKenna's

Wagons.” and distributed the soup and sandwiches at five locations in the city’s poorest neighborhoods.

“If the wagons don’t show up. people go hungry,” said Rebecca Orlowicz of Rutherford, a sopho­more at Queen of Peace High School in North Arlington.

The group also worked for two days with abused children at St Ann’s Infant Home in Maryland Teens were assigned to rooms of six children, ranging in age from newborn to 3 years, where they held, fed, played with, read to, and cared for those whose backgrounds often don’t include loving care.

“ Ihe older kids wear us out. They are so open to our love and attention,” said Rutherford High freshman Mike Miragliotta “It’s hard to say good-bye, knowing

you’ll probably never see these kids again.”

Canaris, Michael D’Alessandro, Matthew Fenton, Matthew Fenton, Andrew Goworek, Jaylene Trivino; Grade 7 - Wayne Geraci, Ryan Guterl, Jessica Hann, Yolanta Komak, Barry Pusaver: Grade 8 - Amy Beth Kallesser, Lina Leone, Christopher Valenti.

These students showed remark­able improvement:

Grade 1 - Wendy Orguiera, Vincent Abramo

Grade 7: Ioanna Belzak. Jennifer Gagis, Ana Gois, Jessica Magstiom. Ivan Judina. Jessica Kozierowski. Sara laiiipniann

Grade 8: Young Chun. Nicole l.iloia, Kasandra SafTio«i, Brian Scliwer.

Highly commendable honor roll Grade £: Krystyna Banka, Kamil

Dobrowokki, Jennifer Od<lo, Mary Park. Tina llukalil. Dave Alipit. Lauraioae Barise, link Carollo. Jesse Dunn, Jacek Janc/cwski, Brian l.iloia, Biuce J. Partyka, David Dermody, Vanessa Gruszka, Brent Gulil, Renee Knuro-vski, Cliristina Trause, Jakub Zyla.

Grade 6: Sara Benish, Lu cia Diana, David Heber, John Hajeski, Harrison Miller, Kristal Monahan, Andrea Vecchione, Jason

Wargo, Joseph Wilson, Tanya Tilt, Grace Coi field.

Grudr 7: Arshima Brown, Angelina Croce. Nicole PeiTara, April Kosior, Pauline Perez. Paul Sevilla. Kelly Wilk

Grade 8: Paul Alipit, Tyhesha Gibson, Jennifer Ingram, Ji Ilun Kim, Nicholas Mangonc, Scott Peters.-Rochan Raichura, Yvonne Slaczka. Michael Collins, Jason Wilk, Jessica Win<lt.

Grade 2 Rachell Izzo, Christopher Tano

Grade 3 - Peter Legierse Grade 4 - William Gomez Grade 5 - Richard Joyce Grade 6 - Jaylene Trivino,

Michael D’Alessandro Grade 7 - John Younan

High honor rollGrade 8: Nicole B runo, Gurtej Dhillon,

Sondra Grewe, Min Kim. Hanna l,ee, Sean McTigue, Michael Schmidt.

Honor rollGrade 8: Carolyn Barbire. Gina

D' Ambrosio, IX>nal<l Ryan. Leslie Stevens.Grade 7: Matthew Alkire, Heather

Austin, Christian Cantatore, Thomas Chirichelia, Br i el le Cosentino, Leonard Irgang, Lika Kumoi. Jonathan Lim, Jessica 1-opez, Headier Masch. Brian O'Malley.

Grade 6: Ian Alspaugh. Sean Clarkson, Robert DeSopo, Jerel Ponzetti, Xi Huang, Matthew Kronyak, Deana Monaco. Nina Napolitano, Patricia Wilkinson.

Grade 5: Sarah Albanese. Michael

Beggs, Christina Benevenga, Jacqueline Beresky, Jeremy Brower, Nicholas Cantone, Matthew Carlin, Joseph Chirichelia. Michael Decio, Meadow Hauler. Jennifer Lim, Jaime-Ixe Livardo, Michael Moroz, Stephanie Oilveras, Dana Ryan, Stephanie Smith, Nancy Stevens, Jennifer Stroud, Marisa Suarez. James Sylvester. Carly Young.

Grade 4: Jennifer Ahdo. Eric Anderson, Vita Benevenga. Flic Burchfield, Ivan But, Kimberly Canipeau, Anthony Cantatore, Melissa I ane, Daniel Lavagna. Shannon Magill, Jennifer Maguire. Jennifer Mendoza, Stephanie Pecchio, Lindsey Ann Scheidewig, Cassic Schumann. Sarah Smietana. Angela Tatloli, Carley Winand, Sean Yocum

Tbe teens also worked at two food banks in the city doing the back-breaking labor of separating food items and loading orden into agencies’ pick-up vehicles. At the D.C. Central Kitchen, they sliced 400 pounds of cucumbers, mixed IS gallons of salad dressing, cooked 100 pounds of elbow maca­roni, and helped prepare 40 gallons of spaghetti sauce. Becton Regional High School sophomore Mary Wright says sbe hates messy work, but somehow managed to tackle the job of scooping out the seeds of several dozen melons to make fruit salad.

The youth group members who participated, besides those men­tioned, were Rutherford High stu-

The youth group is a participat­ing member of the CYO Youth Ministries of the Archdiocese of Newark.

From left, Kristin Richard, Evelyn Miller, and Rebecca Orlowicz, all Q A { p t * ^ 1 5 —of Rutherford, cut potatoes for soup at M artha’s Table, a food distrlb- 1 , . L V . l . i d I d d t J ution center for the homeless in Washington, D.C.

Honor roll

Students a t W ashington School, North Arlington, engaged in a Battle of the Books. W inners from the fourth grade classes a re shown here with teachers M rs. H arte (left) and M rs. San Fillipo (right), from left, Ashley Terletsky, C hristine Seavers, Denise Swediski, Victoria Badiola.

Faust honor roll - 4th period

M ary W right of Kast R utherfo rd p repares tom atoes for spaghetti sauce at the D.C. C entral Kitchen in Washington, D.C.

dent Erin Richard, Marisl College student Kristin Richard, Rowan College student Sarah Orlotoicz, and Hudson Community College student Tom Giglio. The advisors who accompanied them were Doris W illiams, Evelyn M iller and Eleanore Richard, all of Rutherford, and Tom Richard, youth minister of the Community of God’s Love. Local sponsors were McDonald's of Hasbrouck Heights, Wendy's of Woodridge, and Pizza Hut and Boston Chicken of North Arlington.

Page 5: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

THE LEADER THURSDAY. AUGUST 3. 1998 - PAGE B

Breaking in to bottles and boxes isn’t that easyV a g a b o n d i n g

l>\ ( Ik ii IoIU' S ; i \ ii

Do you become frustrated when you have a box to open or a bottle to uncork?

Try opening a cereal box with­out a pair of scissors and a knife. You need the knife to slit the top and the scissors to cut the tough wax paper inside, only to find half a box of cereal.

What about a bottle? Jam, apple sauce, olives or any other bottle? You don’t get anywhere by just try­ing to turn the top. You need a knife or some other gadget tc5 pry it loose before it can be turned.

Worse and more of it! Have you ever tried to open a pill bottle? you get out your magnifying glass and proceed lo pull and tug, turn and twist, after reading carefully the directions on how to open. You finally give up. Wait until a strong- armed man comes along and give the distress signal. Again the same procedure and eventually he is able to open it. Take my advice. Do not place the top on the bottle. Keep it loose so that when you must have another pill, you will not have to go through the same rigamarole if you need the pill desperately. Keep the bottle open even if they deteriorate.

How do you feel when they give you a little pat of butter in a restau­rant? Do you take the little tab at the comer and easily open it? Not so! After trying for a few minutes, do you just take a knife, pry it into the center and remove the top or do you give up in despair and do with­out butter, which is good anyway.

Hopefully, all these problems will be adjusted by the powers that be.

* * *When we were youngsters, we

did not go to the seashore. We had our summer fun by splashing in the brook which we dammed up to frolic and play in the water there. We did not have bathing suits. We wore our old clothes which we had to change at 2 p.m. on a summer afternoon. Then we had to bathe and put on respectable clothes, sometimes a linen skirt and blouse or a cotton dress, no pants. They were not the thing in those days.

One day after I was fancied up for the day with my pleated starched white linen skirt, I stopped at the pond to see how the others were getting along without me. One of the older girls said some­thing to me about being all dressed up so fancy. Having a nasty temper, I ran right into the water after her, starched skirt and all. You can bet my mother was pretty angry. Can you picture her ironing that skirt only to have it ruined at a minutes notice. I saw that girl (woman now) in church the other day. I wonder if she remembered that little affair.

Young boys did not learn to swim in that tiny bit of water where we had fun. They went across the Passaic River to the millie, which was very deep, in fact scary to look at from the lop. It was there that many of the Lyndhurst boys learned to swim. My youngest brother told me the other day how a group of older boys grabbed him and threw him into that deep pit.

He did not know how to swim. He learned how to swim in a hurry. I wonder why we did not hear of many drownings. If there were any,I don’t remember them.

I was never a swimmer. Perhaps it is because I was a sickly child and was not able to stand the cold water any length of time. The extent of my enjoying the ocean was to sit on the beach in the after­noon with a group of ladies and then just before leaving, a quick dunk in the ocean.

My brother always said if you sat on the beach in a wet bathing suit, you would get itchy britches. The idea was to get wet just before leaving for home so you were not covered with sand.

We did not waste time on the beach. The ladies we sal with were all housewives and good ones. Recipes were flying about all the time. Many a good idea we got for cooking from them beside original ideas about decorating for parties. They ate all afternoon!

hands were not idle. We sewed and crocheted. My sisters and I made afghans for each of the young members of the family, nieces and nephews who went off to college. There were seven.

One time, my sister’s little girl, saw one of the new afghans and quickly told us that the last one we gave her was shabby, so of course we gave her the new one. When we visited later, we saw no signs of shabbiness in the one they already had.

One time my Virginia sister was wilh us and she discovered that some of the ladies on the beach could dance the hula. They had learned from a girl who had come to visit from Hawaii. They became so proficient at it that they danced al various organizations’ affairs.

My sister quickly organized a party for them to leach us all how lo do the hula. The rafters in our house roared with us all trying to emulate a Hawaiian miss. We did leam one thing. It is a very graceful dance and every arm movement has a different meaning. We did not leam the hula but we had fun. My sister served sliced pineapple and a juice made with pineapple and lemon.

* * *When we were youngsters, ihe

lown was made up of dirt roads. There were no cars. People walked. From Jauncey Avenue lo the Belleville Turnpike was all farm land, very scary to walk near.

The woody sections of town abounded in bushes of blueberries, blackberries, hazel nuts, hickory nuts and my mother often said wal­nuts grew outside her house. All there for ihe picking.

When Dr. Clark came to visit a sick person, after he left Ridge Road he was on a dirt road. He took the children for rides up that street.

Houses were few and far between.

* * *There was a time when one

bought a piece of veal with a pock­

et. The center was filled with a bread stuffing and topped with tomato sauce and plenty of garlic. It was so delicious. I haven’t seen anything like it lately but I will try it if I ever see a piece of veal like that.

* * *Two and a half hours! That is

not my speed even if it has a fancy name.

OSSO BUCO Cooking time: 2 1/2 hours

4 pounds veal cross cu t shanks, cut 1 1/2 inches thick2 tbsps. olive oil 1 tsp. salt1 cup chopped onion1/2 cup finely chopped carro t3 cloves garlic, crushed1 c an (14 1/2 to 16 o u n c es) I ta l ia n - s ty le d ic ed to m a to e s , undrained 1 cup dry white wine 1 tsp. dried basil leaves

In Dutch oven, heat 1/2 the oil over medium heat until hot. Add veal shanks (1/3 at a time) and brown evenly, stirring occasionally; add remaining oil as necessary. Remove veal; season with salt.

In same pan, add onion, carrot and garlic; cook 6 to 8 minutes or until tender, stirring occasionally. Add tomatoes, wine and basil. Return veal to pan. Bring to a boil; reduce heat to low. Cover tightly and simmer 1 1/2 hours or until veal is tender.

Meanwhile prepare Gremolata; set aside. (Recipe below).

Remove veal to warm platter Skim fat from cooking liquid. Bring cooking liquid to a boil. Cook until slightly thickened, stir­ring occasionally. Spoon about 3/4 cup sauce over shanks; sprinkle with G rem olata. Serve with remaining sauce. Makes 6 servings.

Gremolata: Combine 1 tbsp. chopped fresh parsley, 2 tsps. shredded lemon peel and 172 tsp. finely chopped garlic.

HONEY-DUON VEAL & ZUCCHINI STIR-FRY

Cooking time: 25 minutes 1 lb. veal leg cutlets, cut 1/8 to 1/4 -inch tbick4 ozs. uncooked spaghetti 1 tbsp. vegetable oil 1 m ed ium on ion , c u t in to th in wedges1 m edium zucchini, cu t leng th ­wise in h a lf and then crosswise into thin slices1/4 cup p re p a re d h o ney -D ijon barbecue sauce1 tbsp. w ater

Cook spaghetti according to package directions; keep warm.

Meanwhile pound veal cutlets to 1/8-inch thickness, if necessary. Slack veal; cut into lx3-inch strips.

In large nonstick skillet, heat 1 teaspoon oil over medium-high heat until hot. Add 1/2 the veal and stir-fry 1 to 2 minutes or until out­side surface is no longer pink. (Do not overcook.) Remove veal. Repeal with remaining veal and additional 1 teaspoon oil.

In same skillet, heat 1 teaspoon oil until hot. Add onion and stir-fry2 minutes. Add zucchini and stir- fry 3 minutes or until crisp-tender. Add barbecue sauce, water and veal; stir to combine. Heal through. Serve over spaghetti. Makes 4 serv­ings.

VEAL PICCATA Cooking time: 25 minutes

1 pound veal leg cutlets, cut 1/8 to 1/4-inch thick2 tbsps. all-purpose flour 1/2 tsp. salt1/8 tsp. paprika1/8 tsp. ground white pepper1 tbsp. olive oil L tm tT i-tap tr saute 2/3 cup dry white wine2 tbsps. fresh lemon juice 2 tsps. drained capers1 tsp. bu tte r

Pound veal cutlets to 1/8-inch thickness if necessary. Combine next four ingredients. Lightly coat both sides of veal with flour mix-

It’s a boy for AbatesLorraine and Joseph Abate of

Lyndhurst announce the birth of a son, Joseph III, who was born at 5:52 a.m. July 20 in Englewood Hospital. He weighed 6 pounds, 9 ounces at birth.

The baby has a brother, Matthew, 16. His dad is the super­

intendent of schools in Lyndhurst.The maternal grandparents are

Mary Brunetti of Garfield and the late Raymond. The paternal grand­parents are Josephine Abate Logatto of Palm Coast, Fla., and the late Joseph Abate.

Boy to CuprowskisMichele and Paul Cuprowski of

Lyndhurst announce the birth of a son, Paul Michael Jr., bom July 18 at Clara Maass Medical Center. He weighed 9 pounds, 6 ounces at birth.

The m other is the former

Michele Scillia. daughter of the late Alexander and Grace Scillia.

The paternal grandparents are Shelby Adams of Adairsville, Ga., and Paul Cuprowski of Jersey Cily. The baby’s father is a firefighter.

Bowlers take gold & bronze in 1995 Garden State Games

ture.In large nonstick skillet, heat

1/2 the oil over medium heat until hot. Place 1/2 the veal in skillet and cook 2 minutes on each side or until cooked through. Remove veal; keep warm. Repeat with remaining veal and oil.

In same skillet, add wine and lemon juice; bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve any browned bits attached to skillet. Cook and stir 1 to 2 minutes or until slightly thick­ened. Remove from heat; stir in capers and butter. Spoon sauce over veal. Makes 4 sevings.

Mr. and M rs. L arry Venancio Sr.

Golden AnniversaryMr. and Mrs. Larry Venancio Sr.

of Forked River, formerly North Arlington residents for 35 years, will celebrate their50thw edding anniversary on August 5. They were married in Newark in 1945.

Mr. and Mrs. Venancio are the parents of I^arry and Judi Venancio

of North Arlington, Belinda of East Brunswick, and Celia and Ray Orlowski of Galloway Twsp. They are the grandparents of Anthony and Larry Venancio of North Arlington, and Stacy and Robert Orlowski of Galloway Twsp.

Merkel - AbromRosemarie Merckel of

Rutherford and Robert Merckel of North Arlington announce the engagem ent of their daughter, Laura, to Gregory Abrom, son of Barbara and Arthur Abrom of Rutherford.

The bride-to-be is a legal assis­tant with Debovoise & Plimpton in Manhattan. Her fiance is a com­puter graphics designer with G.S. Imaging in Carlstadt.

A November 1995 wedding is planned.

Laura M erckel and Gregory Abrom

St. M ichael's Leisure C lub Sunshine Lady Sophie W iercinskl presents a cake to Irene and Stanley M unczinskl In celebration of their 50th wedding anniversary.

Three Lyndhurst residents won gold and bronze medals for bowl­ing in the 1995 Garden State Games held in July.

Charles Dammann and Bob Ernest both won gold medals in their respective senior men’s divi­sions, Dammann in the under-186 with a 2,257 total, and Ernest in the under 171 with 2,259.

L inda Rose took the bronze medal in the Women’s Open divi­sion. She bowled 2,504 in 12 games, a 208 average. Rose was the 1994 gold medal winner. This year’s gold medal went to Maureen Richards of Lincoln Park, with 2,562; the silver was won by Joy Palombi of Hamilton.

A field of 238 bowlers compet­ed.

REMEMBER, ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT FOREST FIRES.

t

The chefs of Demetrio's that have provided you with great catered foods for the past 15 years will now also offer take home dinner specials for your convenience & dining pleasure. Weekly specials will run from Thursday to Wednesday each week and will host a variety of entrees as well as our new line of “ Heart Healthy Foods". Entrees are prepared fresh daily and can be purchased both fresh or frozen from 10am to 6pm at our new catering store located at 124 Ridge Rd.in Lyndhurst. Store hours are Mon thru Fri 10am to 6pm & Sat. 10am to 2pm

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We Dare You To Try Our “Scorned Woman Hot Sauce”!

Page 6: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

M M " - THURSDAY. AUGUST 3. 1998 THE LEADER

R ea d er 's F orumCommercial XeatarAND THE SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW

LYNDHURSTS OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER

281 Rtdg* Roed, Lyndhurat. N J . 07071

MARGARET MYRE, EDITORTatophon* 4364700, 996-3942

Kblished Every Thursday by the Leader Newspaper Inc. 251 Ridge Rd. ndhurst Second Class postage paid al Rutherford, NJ postmaster send address

(fames to Commercial leader, 251 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst 07071. Al advertising in the Commercial Leader is subject to applicable rate card, copies of which are avaiabie at The Commercial Leader. 251 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst, NJ 07071

ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION $9.00 SMGLE COPY 25 CENTS

lUatar - fvu IfrvtssEAST RUTHERFORD ■ CARLSTADT and WALLINGTON

JACK O'SHEA, EDITOR 692-0085

Published Every Thursday by Leader Newspaper. 251 Ridge Rd Lyndhurst, NJ 07071 Second dass postage paid at Rutherford. NJ postmaster Send address changes to Leader Newspaper. 251 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst, NJ 07071 All advertis­ing published in the Leader Free Press is subject to applicate rrate card copies of which are available at the Leader Newspaper at 251 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst, NJ

ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION $9.00 SINGLE COPY 25 CENTS 5 3 4 T h ird S t r e e t , C a r l s t a d t

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ARLINGTON lUaterNorth Arlington's Official Newspaper

THOM AMMIRATO EDITOR 403-7836

P.O. Box 386 Lyndhurst, NJ 07071Published every Thursday by Leader Newspapers, 251 Ridge Road, Lyndhurst, NJ07071 Second dass postage paid at Keamy, NJ postmaster,: Send address changes to The Leader Newspapers, 251 Ridge Road, Lyndhurst, NJ 07071. AN advertising published in the North Arlington Leader is subject to applcabie rate can), copies of which are available at the Leader Newspapers, 251 Ridge Road. Lyndhurst, NJ 07071.

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Official Newspaper of Rutherford

38 Amaa Ave., Rutherford, NJ. 07070PATRICIA COOKE UNKE, EDITOR

438-5563

The News Leader of Rutherlord is published every Thursday by Leader Newspapers 251 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst Second dass postage is paid at Rutherford NJ postmaster Send address change to News Leader of Rutherford 28 Ames Ave. Rutherford, NJ 07070. AH advertising putolisned in the News Leader of Rutherford is subjed to applicable rale card copies of which are available at the News Leader of Rutherford 38 Ames Ave. Rutherford, Nj 07070 or The Leader Newspaper 251 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst, NJ 07071

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Leader Newspapers Call 438-8700

Justice finally servedFinally, there is hope for

ju s tic e in th e A m erican judicial system. Last week th e New Je rsey Suprem e c o u r t u p h e ld the basic tenents of M egan’s Law — the controversial law that re q u ire s co n v ic ted sex offenders to reg ister with loca l police and allow s police to notify res id en ts th a t a sex o ffe n d e r has moved into their neighbor­hood

F rom its in cep tio n the c iv il l ib e r ta r ia n s have how led th a t n o tif ic a tio n req u irem en ts in frin g e on individual rights. L iberals argue that registration laws for sexual offenders would c re a te a ro v in g b an d of nom ads who will no t feel comfortable in any commu­nity. Too bad.

U nfortunately, the liber­als found sym pathetic ears in lower courts — including U.S. D istric t C ourt where Judge John W. Bissell sided with law yers representing the ra p is t and k id n ap p e r Carlos Diaz, who contended th a t notifying the com m u­nity of Diaz’s release, would be a v iolation of the con­vict’s right to privacy.

In accepting th a t a rg u ­ment, Judge Bissell chose to overlook the fact th a t sex c rim es a re m ost o ften repeated by sam e people. He also adopted an elitist position worn by most lib­e ra ls who a re g en e ra lly

rem oved from the social problem s they so w ant to rectify. They w ant to fash­ion laws for everyone else to follow, but generally find them selves ex em p t from those same laws. How many convicted sex offenders do you th in k live in Ju d g e B issell’s neighborhood or the neighborhoods o f the civil libertarian lawyers?

F o r tu n a te ly th a n k s to New Jersey C hief Ju s tice R o b e rt W ilen tz — n o t exactly your law and order conservative ju r is t — we will be ab le to find o u t. Som ehow Ju d g e W ilen tz found w ith in h im self the com passion to side w ith m others and fa th ers who want only to protect their children.

In speaking for the state Suprem e C o u rt m ajority , Judge Wilentz said that the Constitution does not p re­vent society from attem pt­ing to p ro tec t itse lf from convicted sex offenders no m atte r when convicted so long as the the m eans o f protection are reasonably designed.

T h at’s all that the back­ers o f M egan’s Law ever wanted — the right to pro­tect them selves and th e ir c h ild re n from sexua l o ffe n d e rs w ho so o ften re p e a t th e ir h o r r ib le c rim es. T hey w an t the right to know that the quiet s t ra n g e r dow n the s tre e t

Women, beware of weight gainDear Editor.

You have heard this phrase many times; hear it one more time and this time listen! “Weight gain causes heart risk in women.”

If you ever attended a school reunion, you know that almost everyone is much heavier than they were at school. Everyone knows it’s harder to keep the excess off as we grow older. However, a recent study in the American Medical Association journal suggests that

women who gain even a mcxlest amount of weight have an increased risk of heart problems compared to women who keep their weight 011 an even keel.

Ms. JoAnn E . Manson and her colleagues at the Harvard School of Public Health studied the diets, lifestyles and general health of over 115,000 female registered nurses who were between 30 and 50 years of age in 1976. This group was charted for the next 14 years.

S u b sc rib e NowlKeep ab reast of th e News and C om m unity ev en ts in yo u r tow n.K eep tra c k of your Local G overnm ent and find o u t w hat Tour F riends and Neighbors are saying and doing.

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Name of Paper You Wouid Like ( Check) Print Name & Address Below.

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Abstention means not 100% sureDear Editor:

This leuer is in reference to an article you published on July 20, 1995, “Pescevich principal.” In your article you stated lhat an abstention falls on the side of the majority, according to Roberts Rules of Order. As members of the Lyndhurst Board of Education we are to make sure the schools are running well, make policy, follow policy and enforce policy. We have a By-law policy #9325.4 VOTING METHOD which states in it. “A member may abstain from voting. An abstention shall be so recorded and shall not be counted as either

an affirmative or a negative vote. Abstentions are to be so recorded, regardless of whether a person speaks for or against a motion prior lo stating his/her wish to abstain. The silence of a member on any vote shall be recorded as an absten­tion.” Since our Board has a policy on this Roberts Rules of Order doesn’t apply.

In your Editorial section a letter from Annie Rowe, “Just say no" wanted lo know why Ruth Woertz, Elaine Slella, and Mary Sheridan Abstained on Ihe Principal vole. First off you can abstain for more reasons than what Annie wrote. If

you didn’t have enough informa­tion on what you were voting for should you vote yes or no? When a Board member makes a voce for or against a motion they should be 100% sure of their vote, if not you have the option o f ab sta in in g . What we want to do for the chil­dren in this town is to give them the best we can and not settle for second best.

Elaine Stella Ruth Woertz

Mary C. Sheridan Lyndhursl Board of Education

Attention Lyndhurst residents

has a deep sexual perv er­sion th a t c an n o t be co n ­trolled and may one day be unleashed on them or their children. T hat’s not asking too much.

T he one a sp ec t o f M egan’s Law as now con­s t ru c te d th a t is a l i t t le troubling is that it leaves a lo t o f d is c re tio n in th e hands of county prosecu­tors. They have tlie power to d e te rm in e w hich sex c rim in a ls are d an g ero u s , which pose a th rea t to the com m unity and which do not. And they can specify who gets n o tif ied . O nly those neighbors “ likely to encounter the sex offender” are to be contacted. T hat leaves a lo t o f room fo r in te rp re ta tio n . We hope the Bergen C ounty prose­cutor decides to e rr on the side of caution and ensure tha t the largest num ber of people possible know about sex offenders living in the community.

At the same time, we rec­ognize th a t notification is not an invitation to vigilan- tism . No one should take th e law in to th e i r own hands. Such lawless actions will only serve to fuel the argum ents of those opposed to notification. The knowl­edge tha t a sex offender is liv in g in th e com m un ity should be enough to allow citizens to arm themsleves.

Dear Residents:The Departm ent of Public

Works would like lo take this opportunity to thank all of you for your excellent recycling efforts in our tow nship. Once again, Lyndhurst has placed high on Ihe list of all Bergen County munici­palities.

In an effort to make recycling easier and more convenient, we will be expanding our program in

the near future. However, we ask that you continue with the schedule you have until further notice. There will be no pick-ups on the following holidays: Labor Day (Sept. 4), Columbus Day (Oct. 9), E lection Day (Nov. 7), Thanksgiving (Nov. 23, 24), Christmas (Dec. 25, 26).

Our drop-off site, located on Valley Brook and Polilo avenues, will remain open for your conve­

nience in bringing plastics, maga­zines and junk mail on the follow­ing Saturdays between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m : August 12. 26; Sept. 9, 23; Oct. 7, 21; Nov. II. 18; December 2, 16, 30.

If any additional information is necessary, contact Vincent Rosa, recycling coordinator, at 804-2496.

Commissioner John P. Beime Director, DPW, Lyndhurst

R u t h e r f o r d r e s i d e n t g e t s n a s t y s u r p r i s eDear Editor:

That thud you heard was when I hit the floor after receiving my tax bill.

W hat are the Mayor and Council members thinking of when they keep raising taxes every year? Several years ago all properties were re-evaluated to 100 percent. Fine, except in the depressed real estate market you cannot even get

the amount you are paying taxeson.

Everyone is affected, single (especially women) parents, forced early retirement, 55 years or less. People are putting reverse mort­gages on their homes to pay their taxes.

If the borough employees feel they are so underpaid, theyJRbould go elsewhere and get a job.' Look

at the long lines at the Javits Center where people are waiting to apply for a job paying $6.50 an hour.

I am paying more taxes on my home than my daughter, who has an acre of land and a swimming pool. Go figure!

Elizabeth A. Percy Rutherford

She’s sad to see them goDear Editor:

How sad that the Shabby Politicians have won again! Our education system is now losing one of the finest educators/administra­tors that Lyndhurst has had in many years.

Dr. Talarico was a wonderful

teachcr, an administrator who did so much lor the system. Even though he was fully qualified he was passed over for superintendent for a man less qualified but had the political hacks in his pocket.

Dr. Talarico, Mr. Corino, you have made a wise choice. Your tal­

ents will be appreciated elsewhere. Lyndhurst evidently is content wilh second- or third-rate people as long as they are politically connected.

Mrs. G. Damiani Lyndhurst

Squad earns thanksDear Editor:

I wish to express my sincere thanks to the North Arlington Emergency Squad for the many times they transported me to my doctor’s office and the hospital dur­ing my time of need. I especially

wish to thank Chief Anthony Mondaro of the Squad, w ho’s expertise with his squad is out­standing. I don’t want lo forget a very fine man, Sylvester, who transported me to my needed desti­nation. We, as residents of North

Arlington, can feel assured that we are in the finest of hands with our sincerely dedicated members of our Emergency Squad. Thank you again.

Helen VanEyk North Arlington

Free holder candidate decries nepotism

Women who gained 11 to 17 pounds had a 25 percent risk of heart failure or stroke. Women who gained 17 to 25 pounds had a 65 percent risk. Women who put on 45 pounds had three times the risk than women who had stayed thin. (Facts from Life Extension Foundation.)

Benjamin Cichinski Lyndhurst

Dear Editor:I have lived in Bergen County all

my life and have been actively involved in politics for nearly 15 years. But, never have I witnessed such an arrogant disregard for fair­ness as I have during the past sever­al months by our County’s elected officials.

Despite an outcry of criticism, the Bergen County Freeholders continue to utilize patronage and nepotism in their hirings for county jobs -- unashamed and determined. In April, one Freeholder actually had the gall to acknowledge to one reporter, “of course there is favoritism.”

It would be naive to deny that patronage and nepotism had ever previously existed in our county. But, never has this “ugly side of politics” existed to the arrogant extreme that has been exhibited by the current Freeholders, whose actions have shown a total disre­gard for the public trust.

Besides giving jobs to relatives and friends, the Freeholders had the nerve to not even advertise these positions. And, where no existing jobs suited the individuals, they simply created new positions fund­ed by our tax dollars!

The credentials of these individ­uals are questionable. But, they all have one common credential - they are registered Republicans who are closely related to well-placed Republicans.

Even in this week’s hiring of a public relations “specialist,” who will be paid $30,000 from our tax dollars to clean up their public image, the Freeholders failed to advertise for the position and hired a well-connected Republican who worked for the party in Washington and is also President of the Bergen County Young Republicans. One Freeholder actually had the nerve to tell a reporter, “We wouldn’t have hired the person if they weren’t a registered Republican.”

There are many talented, well qualified people living in Bergen

County. The use of the patronage and nepotism by our Freeholders means that our county is not hiring the best and brightest but rather, the best paid with the best connec­tions.

Bergen County needs Freeholders who will serve and work for the good of our County — not Freeholders who are just serv­ing to find work for their relatives and friends.

John Hogan Democratic Candidate for

Freeholder Northvale

The Nicholas De Leo H onor Roll, each year, recognizes m en and women fo r tbeir services to the senior citizens o f L yndburst F o r the year 1995, tbe names of two inductees, Benjamin C apacdo and Nicholas Ullano, will be added to the list of previous honorees on the H onor Roll P laque displayed In the Lyndhurst Senior Citizen Building on Cleveland Avenue. As pictured above, left to right, a re Benjamin C apacdo , M ayor Lou Stellato and Nicholas Uliano..

4

Page 7: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

t h e lea d er THURSDAY. AUGUST 3. 1998 - PAQB 7

SPORTSWORLD:

Daniel Lottenberg competes in the 50m freestyle.

By Charles O’ReillyO f the three local tournam ent

team s that were playing baseball last week, one advanced lo the next le^el, while two were eliminated. One is still left to play.

The survivor was the Rutherford A m erican L ittle L eague team , w hich won three straight gam es last week on its home field to move on to the s ta te tou rnam en t this week in Gloucester City.

Going down, but not without a fight, were the Lyndhurst 13-year- o ld B abe R uth team an d the Rutherford-Lyndhurst 18-year-old Ruth club.

Rutherford (7-0) got off lo a fast start by dispatching West New York American, 5-0, Monday in its first sectional game. B J . Irving pitched and struck out eight while allowing just four hits.

Chris Falcicchio came off the bench in the fourth inning and slammed his first home run, not only of the tournament, but of his L ittle League career to put the game out of reach.

Two nights later, Chris Smith was the hitting star in a 6-2 defeat of Cliffside Park.

Smith singled home a run in the first inning, smashed a two-run homer in the third, and belted a solo shot in the fifth to finish with four RBI.

Joe Reid was the winning pitch­er, retiring the first ten batters he faced and then surviving a bout with wildness to finish wilh a 13- strikeout one-hitter.

C liffside Park came back to defeat Union National Thursday, 3- 1, on two hom ers by Jeremy W inter. That set up a rematch between Cliffside Park and Rutherford American.

This one was over almost before it started. Joe Reid hit Joey Messina’s first pitch down the left-

Stingrays win against ParamusAfter the first 11 races the

Rutherford Stingray Swim Team was trailing a strong Paramus team by 3 points. Then Rutherford swim­mers Kenny Stabile and Kristen Canzano won consecutive first places in freestyle to out the stingrays ahead. Rutherford never relinquished the lead again and won by a score of 274 to 203.

Other first place winners for the Stingrays were: Individual Medley- Gary Grant and Paul Blasucci. Freestyle - Peter Park, Vincent Ahmuty, Derek Hughes and Julianne Reynolds. Backstroke - Greg Feehan, Winnie Stabile, Danny Marsh, Michael Garrigan, John Ahmuty, Julianne Reynolds

and Danny Paskas. Breaststroke - Christina Garrigan, Michael Canzano, Colleen Reynolds, Frank Herrmann, Kristen Canzano and Amanda Sivo. Butterfly - Vincent Ahmuty, Winnie Stabile, Danny Marsh, Derek Hughes and Paul Blasucci.

Second place finishers were: I.M. - Angela Ahmuty. Freestyle - Nora Stabile, Garrett Dunn, Christina Garrigan, Winnie Stabile, Michael Canzano, Michael Garrigan, Aedan Stabile and Cesar Perez. Backstroke - Kristine Creglia, Steven Dunn, Colleen Reynolds, Christina Sanzo, Aedan Stabile and Mussolini Maia. Brepststroke - Kristine Creglia,

Garrett Dunn, Freddy Segro, Usannee Prasaparin, Mark Segro, Jen Ahmuty and Danny Paskas. Butterfly - Alison Keeley, Steven Dunn, Colleen Reynolds, Danielle Florio, John Ahmuty and Angela Ahmuty.

Third place finishers were: I.M. - Jessica Keeley, Frank Herrmann, Danielle Florio and Andrew Reynolds. Freestyle - Christina Sanzo, Amanda Sivo and Dave Paskas. Backstroke - Rosemary Feehan, C.J. Rebecky, Shannon Marsh and Cesar Perez. Butterfly - Elisa Kreisinger, Ted Sommer, CJ. Rebecky, Patti Cleary, Marivel Quinones and Chris Civello.

Rutherford Rec newsTennis Badges

Tennis Badges are on sale during regular office hours, 9:00 - 4:00 p.m.. Tennis Courts are available to all Rutherford residents. Badges must be worn and may be pur­chased at the Recreation Office. Badges are $ 15.00 for adults, $5.00 for Senior citizens and $5.00 for children. Special Guest Badges may be purchased for a fee of $20.00 per year. After the initial badge is pur­chased, it must be revalidated each

L y n d h u r s t J u n i o r

F o o t b a l l g o l f o u t i n g

The Lyndhurst Junior Football League is sponsoring a golf outing on September 16, 1995.

The outing will take place at the Woodlake Country Club, Lakewood, New Jersey. Cost is $85.00 per person and includes

green fees, cart, dinner and prizes.To register call Tony Cicero

between 5:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. at (201) 935-4326. Registrations must be paid for by September 11, 1995.

April.

Fall Soccer

Registration for boys and girls in grades 1-8 is now open. The fee is $15.00 for this program, which will start on Saturday, September 9.

There will be a late fee charge of $20.00 after September 1.

Wednesday, September 6 will be the last day for registration.

Coaches are needed!!

field line for a double, and Justin LaForgia followed with his third tournament home run on the next pitch.

It only look four more pitches for Smith to take Messina deep and stake Rutherford to a 3-0 lead. Winter relieved after lhat, and he escaped further trouble that inning and in the second.

Rutherford posted six more runs in the third, as Irving and Mike Villano had RBI singles and Reid laced a two-run single. The game ended on Ihe first pitch in ihe home fourth, which John Buccinio lofted out of the park.

Lost in the offensive explosion was Smith’s pitching. Smith, who was making his first appearance since allowing Hasbrouck Heights to score four runs in an inning July12, allowed no hits and struck out six in four innings.

The tournam ent title was Rutherford American’s second in six seasons. The league’s entry won Section 2 in 1990 al Secaucus, but was eliminated in two games of the state finals at Spring Lake Heights.

Four teams are entered in the state finals at Gloucester Cily. The final is set for Friday at 7, with a rematch Saturday at 2 if it proves necessary.

The winner moves on to Bristol, Conn., for an 11-team regional tournament and the opportunity to advance to the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pa.

NEAR MISS ACROSS TOWN: The Rutherford/Lyndhurst Babe Ruth 18s came within three outs of winning the Northern New Jersey bracket and moving on to the regional tournament.

Matt Smith started Saturday afternoon’s game at Tamblyn Field against Middlesex, but he left in the third inning after arguing a call on the basepaths a bit too strenu­ously.

That meant Joe Caggiano had to come in. Caggiano, who already had a complete-game victory in the tournam ent, was being held in reserve for the second game if they needed it.

Rutherford took a 3-0 lead to the

seventh inning, but Caggiano ran out of gas on a steamy afternoon. He allowed a single, two walks, and a bases-clearing triple with none out. Two outs later, he gave up the go-ahead run, forcing a showdown.

Anthony Torraca, who had not expected to pitch at all Saturday, was pressed into service on two days’ rest, and it showed. Torraca, normally a fine hurler, was beat up in a 5-1 loss in the championship game.

Torraca had scattered five hits in going the route Wednesday, as Rutherford knocked Iron Area American into the losers’ bracket, 8-3. Torraca finished that game with 13 strikeouts.

In their tourney opener, Rick Pizzuti had a homer and a triple to to become the nation’s premier summer league for players already on college rosters with eligibility remaining.

The loop draws top players from across the country. Catching for Orleans Saturday was Chad Moeller, who gained considerable exposure during the late spring when his Southern C alifornia squad made the finals of the College World Series.

DeRosa’s teammates at Bourne this season include the likes of Chad Matoian, infielder, UCLA; Peter Tucci, outfielder, Providence; and Saturday’s starting pitcher, Dan Reichert, from the University of the Pacific.

Reichert pitched no-hit ball into the sixth inning, completing the game with a four-hitter and nine strikeouts.

In past years, the Cape Ixague has featured future major leaguers such as Jeff Bagwell, Craig Biggio, Will Clark, Ron Darling, John Franco, Scott Kamienecki, Chuck Knoblauch, Ben McDonald, Todd Stottleinyre, Mo Vaughn, and Robin Ventura.

As of June 1, 1995, 108 former Cape Leaguers had moved up the ladder to Major League Baseball,

power Rutherford lo a 4-1 victory over Middlesex. Smith fanned nine in tossing a one-hitter.

Caggiano scattered four hits in six innings in the next game, in which Rutherford exploded for

eight sixth-inning runs to put away an 11-1 defeat o f Iron Area National. Mike Rizzo’s two-run double was the key blow in the inning.

* * *LYNDHURST 13S FALL BY

WAYSIDE: It was a good run at New Milford for Lyndhurst’s Babe Ruth 13-year-old team. The club lost two decisions by one run each.

After an opening-round 6-3 defeat of Paramus behind hurler Lou Pollara, Woodbridge defeated the squad, 5-4, as the winning run walked home in the eighth inning.

Lou Stellato appeared in relief to give Lyndhurst an 8-1 win over Little Ferry a week ago Saturday, but they came back to face a resur­gent Paramus team the next day.

Again, Lyndhurst led all the way, but this time Paramus came up with two runs in their half of the seventh, on a double by Jeff Blundo, and Paramus ousted Lyndhurst. 8-7.

* * *DE ROSA SHINES AT CAPE:

Buzzards Bay, Mass., might not be the most ideal place to play base­ball.

The winds blow up the bay from Block Island Sound, and the coastal storms that attack Long Island often barrel through this area as well.

For Carlstadt’s Mark DeRosa, though, those winds are more refreshing than a summer breeze al the Jersey shore.

Saturday afternoon, DeRosa ratcheted his batting average up another notch, to .310, going 1-for-3 with a run batted in as his Bourne Braves defeated Orleans, 6-2, in a Cape Cod Baseball League game at the M assachusetts M aritim e Academy.

“This is the besl thing I could have done,” DeRosa said. “ I’ve gained a lot of experience playing with these guys, and this should help me in the future.”

DeRosa, who now has two years at the University of Pennsylvania behind him, started at third base July 22 in the Cape League’s all- star game.

Ihe Cape League, active since 1885, shifted its focus in the 1960s

Salty Script Mid-summer fishing on target

Tennb Cam pThe Rutherford Recreation

Department will be running Tennis Camp from August 7-11, classes will be held daily from 9:30 - 12:00 noon at the tennis courts at Memorial Field. Leam proper tech­niques in the forehand and back­hand ground strokes. Service, vol­ley, overhand smash, court etiquette and much more will be taught by instructors. Camp is for all levels of play. Tennis badges must be worn at all times. The fee is $50.00 for this program.

Fluking runs hot and cold from day to day. George Cariglio of Lodi was high hook one day last week wilh 35 fluke, seven of which were keepers. That action took place aboard Marty Haines boat, The Sea Pigeon, out of Perth Amboy. Most of his fishing is being done at the Reach, and also near West Bank Light between ihe islands. Wednesday and Thursday trips ran from five to nine keepers, but with light crowds. The week­end catches were a lot lower because of larger crowds and many more boats. If you have ihe oppor­tunity to go out on a weekday, chances are better wilh more elbow room on a party boat and more sea room with less boats if you go pri­

vate. Marty also runs Magic Hour trips on Wednesday and Thursday nights from 5 to 9 p.m. Along with fluke, they usually pick some small blues as well as a few weakfish.

Early evening striper fishing is also up and down with some nights pretly good and others zilch. They’re being caught mostly by chunking bunkers, but some are getting them with worms. Fortunately, most of the time blue- fish are in the area also, so there is some action, most of which takes place at Flynn’s Knoll.

Bottom fishing still remains constant, although the few boats that stick with it during the summer don’t carry too many fares. This happens because the summer tourist trade doesn’t really know what il’s all about Gene “The Eel” Scaczmarak, who has mated on The Skipper in Belmar for more years than I care to remember, puts it this way: A vacationing family will come aboard and catch ling

and seabass and be amazed at the action. Even bergall bites provide a sign there is life down in the depths to keep your attention. Saturday’s pool winner aboard The Skipper was Belinda Lamb of New York wilh a 4-1/2 lb. ling. There was a 7-1/2 lb. cod caught on Thursday’s trip. High hook on Thursday was 32 ling along wilh six seabass caught by Sexto Yambo, city unknown.

Mark Vitolo, Dom’s son, is cur­rently mating aboard Richie M oore’s new Teal out of the Atlantic Highlands.

For your inform ation: The Elaine-B II and the Miss Take II sail from the Highlands, n o t the Atlantic Highlands. To reach these boats, you must continue south and bear right just before the bridge leading to Sandy Hook. Then hang a left. Elaine-B is right there and Miss Take is a little further at Branin’s Wharf on Shrewsbury Ave.

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Q Commercial Leader ( Lyndhurst)□ No. Arlington Leader□ News Leader o f Rutherford□ Leader-Free Press ( E. Rutherford. Carlstadt, Wallington)

MAIL TO LEADER NEWSPAPERS 251 RIDGE ROAD, LYNDHURST, NJ 07071

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PAGE 8 ■ THURSDAY. AUGUST 3 . 199B THE LEADER

S t e p h a n i e

S a d o w s k aA Mass was offered for Miss

Stephanie Sadowska, 76, of North Arlington, on Monday, July 31, in Queen of Peace Church, North Arlington, following the funeral from the Parow Funeral Home, North Arlington.

Miss Sadowska died July 27 in the West Hudson Hospital, Keamy.

Bom in Brooklyn, she lived in Jersey City before moving to North Arlington 30 years ago. She worked in the Assembly Department of Western Electric Co. in Keamy for 40 years, retiring in 1981. She was a member of the North Arlington Senior Citizen Harmony Club and the Telephone Pioneers of America.

Surviving are her many loving nieces and nephews. She was pre­deceased by her brothers and sis­ters, the late Mary Roles, Helen Kuhn, Charles Sadowska and Lucille Drenzek.

W h e n

i t ' s t i m e f o r c o m f o r t

I t ' s t i m e

t o s e n d f l o w e r s .

For Sympathy flowers and plants -

call

B I L L 'S F L O R I S T80 UNION BLVD.

WALLINGTON, NJ* 778-8878

©

E d w a r d S t a n a k S r .A Mass was offered for Mr.

Edward V. Stanak Sr., 71, of North Arlington, on August 2 in Queen of Peace Church, North Arlington fol­lowing the funeral from the Parow Funeral Home, North Arlington.

Mr. Stanak died July 28 in the West Hudson Hospital, Keamy.

Bom in Jersey City, be lived in North Arlington for 32 years.

He was an engineer with the Western Electric Co., Keamy, for 33 years, retiring in 1983. He was a 1958 graduate o f Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken. Mr. Stanak served in the Army Air Force during WWII and the Navy during the Korean War. He retired from the Army Reserves in 1984 with the rank of Sergeant First Class.

Mr. Stanak was a member ot tne Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4697 and the American Legion Alexander P. Stover Post #37, both of North Arlington. He was a member o f the Fourth Degree Assembly and the Color Corp. of the Queen of Peace Knights of Columbus Council 3428, the Holy Name Society of Queen of Peace Church, the Anchor Club and the Telephone Pioneers of America of Western E lectric, the Sons of Loyola Retreat House in Morristown, and the Volunteer Fire Department of North Arlington Truck 3.

Surviving are his wife, Lucy M.; two sons, Edward V. Jr. and Stephen; a daughter, Mrs. Cecilia Feuchack; a sister, Mrs. Emily Punk, and two granddaughters, Emma and Lluvia Stanak.

P A R O WF U N E R A L H O M E . I N C .

SERVING EVERY REUGlON

HENRY S. PAROW, Manager DENISE E. PAROW, Director • ELIZABETH PAROW, Director

185 Ridge Road, North Arlington

9 9 8 -7 5 5 5

FUNERAL BRUNCH ACCOMMODATIONSAt This Difficult Time We Will Do

All Your Complete Luncheon Planning (A Variety of Items Available)

Please Call For Information440 Belleville Pike

, North Arlingtonm Q Q C U l i Only 1 block from Hoty Cross Cemetery

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I T ' S A L L T A K K N ( A R K O I . . .

When a death occurs, many decisions have to be made fora funeral and burial. And they're all part of * seemingly endless number of things lhat need attention. Rather than leaving these decisions to your family,-you cafi take care of them ahea^of time with Forethought funeral planning.

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D e a t h N o t i c e s(Ask your funeral director about publishing a complete notice)

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ERRICO, Madeline, formerly of Lyndhurst__McLaughlin Funeral HomeJASONEK, Marie, of Wallington _LISKIEWICZ, Josephine, of Wallington__SADOWSKA, Stephanie, of No. Arlington.SCILLUFFO, Harriet, of Wallington_____SLOAN, Linda A., formerly of Rutherford_ STANAK, Edward, of No. Arlington _TAVOLARO. Fausto, of E. Rutherford___URBAN, Joan M„ formerly of Rutherford _

. Kamienski Funeral Home .Kamienski Funeral Home____Parow Funeral Home_Kamienski Funeral Home_______ Funeral in Florida____Parow Funeral Home___ Kimak Funeral Home______ Funeral in Florida

N . A . H e a l t h D e p a r t m e n t P r o g r a m s

f o r A u g u s t

Blood Pressure/HealthAssessment - Adults 18+

1:00 p.m. - 2:45 p.m., no appointment necessary.

Mondays, August 7, 14, 21, 28 Thursdays, August 3, 10, 17, 24,

31Child Health Conference. Free

Immunization & Well-Baby Care for Infants and Fre-school Children - by appointment.

Tuesdays, August 22, 29 Lead Testing - Children 12

months to 5 years.By appointment

Wednesday, August 23 Along with Pre-School hearing

and vision testing, required immu­nizations for children entering kindergarten in September are available. Parents may call for appointment.

Dental Clinic - Health Center, by appointment

Fridays, August 11, 25 Prospective patients must call

for application of eligibility.For appointment, please call

955-5695.

Bible SchoolA Vacation Bible School will be

held at Carlstadt C hristian Assembly, corner of Hoboken Road and Washington Street, Carlstadt, on Monday, August 14, through Friday, August 18, from 10 ajn. to noon.

The program, for boys and girls ages 4 through 10, features songs, Bible stories, games, and crafts with special guest Hineni the Clown. Register by August 10. For more information, call 617- 7344.

Parker is quite a fellowOutgoing Rotary President Judy

Parker was named a “Paul Harris. Fellow” in recognition of her devo­tion to The Rotary Foundation’s educational and humanitarian pro­grams at the club’s installation din­ner June 29 at the La Venere

ST. JUDEOh Holy St Jwte, Apocba and Martyr, g rttf in

virtu# and rich in miracJta, naar kinsman of Jtsua Christ, faithful intarcasaor of all who invoka your apadal patronaga in time of naad To you I have racouraa from tha daoth of my haart and humbly bag to whom God naa ghwi such graat powtf to coma to my aaaistanca. Haip ma in my pratont md urgant petition, in ratum I promts* to rrafca your name known and cauaa you to ba invoked 8t M a pray far ua and tfl who invoke your aid Amen. Say three Our Fathers, three Hail Marys and Glorias. Publication must ba promload. TMa Novena haa never bean known to ML I hava had my requeat granted. Say for 9 days.

MX

D IFFILY S E R V IC E T R U S T W O R T H Y • D E P E N D A B L E

N E IG H B O R L Y S P IR ITWhite our m t v Ic m retain that neighborly spirit of sympathetic understanding, they also reflect

high standards of efficiency and competent direction

T H O M A S J . D IF F IL YFUNERAL HOME, INC

JOHN T. DIFFILY, MANAGER 41 AMES AVENUE, RUTHERFORD • Phono 939-0098

R om a R e s t a u r a n tItalian Cuisine At Its Best

33 Crystal S t., No. A rlington FUNERAL LUNCH

P astaE ggplant Parm aglan Palo ala Rom a Veal & P ep p ers C offee an d Ice Cream

P ric es s ta rtin g at $7.95

ALL FOR ONLY

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I f th e re w e re in k o n y o u r f in g e r , y o u 'd b e a b le to se e y o u r f in g e r p r in t t t 'a u n iq u e , n o t l ik e a n y o n e e ls e 'a .A n d j u s t as y o u r f in g e r p r in t ia u n iq u e , s o a re y o u r o p in io n s a n d p re fe re n c e s . We u n d e rs ta n d t h a t A n d

w e re a liz e th a t c re a t in g a fu n e ra l s e rv ic e th a t exp re sse s In d iv id u a l i ty Is im p o r ta n t. W e're h e re to s e rv e y o u . A n d w e k n o w ju s t h o w Im p o r ta n t y o u r in d iv id u a l ne ed s a re . T u rn to u s d u r in g y o u r t im e o f lo ss .

Ippolito AOoMmiA*funtniHom*

Funtrtl Horn*428 N dge A d , Lyndhurat. N J. 07071 (201) 4 7 Tw o B ridges Rd.. F a lriM d . N J. 07000 (201) M 2-S S U

The Bible’s the themeA “theme park” will open in

Lyndhurst on Monday, August 21, for a one-week half-day run begin­ning at 9 ajn.

The theme is the Bible, and entertainment will center around the material entitled “Awesome A dventures - G od 's Amazing D eeds." The “park" is the Lyndhurst United M ethodist Church on the comer of Tontine and Stuyvesant avenues.

Open to children from Pre-K 4 through 6th grade, the w eek's admission of $5 per child or $10

Ristorante. The presentation was made on behalf o f The Rotary Foundation by Carmine Torsiello, PDG, PRIT, PTID.

D istrict Governor Paul Rutigliano installed incoming offi­cers for 95/96: Joseph Zadroga, president; Lisa Aker, vice-presi­dent; Dennis Taras, secretary; Lou Paolino, treasurer and Al DeMarco, sergeant-at-arms.

Jutta Marateo of NAHS and Nicole Briamonte of QPHS are recipients of William H . Holbert Memorial Scholarships for 1995 and will receive $1000 each.

The club meets every Thursday. 7:30 a.m., at the ArlingtoA Diner.

DAT* ACTtvrrv TW E PLAC*

Aug. 5, 1995 •Weigh of Life"Weight loss program

9:30 am Nemzek Hall

Aug. 8, 1995 Mental Health Support Group 7:30 pm First Floor Classroom

Aug. 9, 1995 Babysitting Class continues 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm

First Floor Classroom

Aug 9. 1995 Bereavement Support Group 7:00 pm Administrative Conference Room

Aug. 9. 1995 "Weigh of Life*Weight loss program

5:00 pm A

6:30 pm

Nemzek Hall

Cafeteria

- CPR Instruction Classes are held at Wen Hudson Hospital each month. Please call for dates and class availability. Classes can also be tailored to meet your individual professional needs.

Complete information regarding all West Hudson Hospital sponsored Community Health and Wellness Activities can he obtained by contacting Carol A. Rcchtold, RN, MSN, CNAA, Community Health Coordinator, or Sharon Lautenbacher, Community Health Secretary, al 201 955 7077.

& L (Zi& eC& iT R e t C a u r a u t

1 2 3 Ridge Road . Lyndhurat, New Jeraey 2 0 1 -4 3 8 -9 4 9 1

FUNERAL LUNCH$7.95 per person

Complete Lunch Menu Including coffee ft dessert

fA[ a z a r e M e m o r i a l 9 -C o m e I n c .J o s e p h M. N azare , Manager

403 Ridge Road,Lyndhurst, N.J. 07071

201-438-7272

per family of two or more children will entitle tbe child to visit all the theme areas, snacks, games, prizes, crafts, and music. The program is headed by Debbie Seiger, director j of the Lyndhurst Community j Vacation Bible School. Staffing is from all churches in tbe town.

Parents can obtain registration forms by calling the church at 438- 6928 and leaving name, address and telephone number. Teenagers interested in assisting the staff may leave a message requesting a call­back from Mrs. Seiger.

L y n d h u rs t K nights o f C olum bus #2396 d is trib u ted nearly $4,000 from th e ir R etarded C itizen Drive. Shown here, bottom row, are: G loria Hopf, Recognition o f Exceptional Children; Colleen and Betty Semenecz, The Penguins. Back row: PGK John Drzymkowskl; Kitty Przebieglec, T ri-C ounty Bowling League; G rand Knight John Wolf Jr.; Charles Hopf; PG K G reg Bilis, chairm an.

Help the N.A. Ju n io r W om an’s C lub by o rdering a paver block and having it engraved with your name, the nam e of a loved one, o r your business name. Pave the way to Borough Hall and become a perm a­nent p a rt o f your community while helping the Jun io rs help others. F o r details call F ran Sardoni, 997-2769. Shown here are (left) Susan S trac k , c lub p res iden t; and F ra n S ardon i, C .I.P. ch a irm an . T he Jun io rs added their thanks to the T.E.A.M. and the Police Explorers fo r their help.

WEST HUDSON HOSPITAL C O M M U N IT Y H E A L T H E D U C A T IO N C A L E N D A R

W E E K O F A U G U S T 3, I995 - A U G U S T 9, 1995

Page 9: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

THE LEADER IHUBSPAT. AUGUST 3 . 1908 - PAGE 8

McGirt advances toward title shot

Jam es “ Buddy” McGirt lands one.

Joey Glardello, Chuck Wepner, Vito Anterferm o, and Jake Lam otta.

Raging Bull Jake Lam otta

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By Vin M annJanies “Buddy” McGirt came a

step closer to securing a title shot against IBF super middleweight champion Roy Jones Jr. by scoring a TKO against John Stewart at 2:48 of the 5th round in a scheduled ten- round main event at the Medieval Tunes in Lyndhurst.

McGirt (67-4-1, 46 KOs) used his left hand to control the pace of the fight, scoring wilh left jabs and hooks at will before dropping Stewart (18-4, 6 KOs) with a straight right hand.

Later, m iddleweight James “Hard Rock” Green fought to an eight-round majority draw against Lonnie Davis. Green, who fights out o f the Red Brick Gym in Newark and was trained by Jose Rosario, chased the elusive Davis throughout the fight, bul still came up short of a win.

Up-and-coming featherweight David “Holy” Toledo of Paterson proved too much for his opponent, Nelson Medina, stopping Medina al 2:41 of the 5lh round in a sched­uled eight rounder. Toledo, a southpaw, used his hand and foot speed to control the bout before dropping Medina with a solid body blow. Toledo improved his record to 15-1-1, 5 KOs and is looking better in each outing.

Several boxing greats were at ringside taking in the action: Jake Lamotta, Vito Anterfermo, Joey Giardello, Emille Griffith, Mark Medal, Rocky Holliday, Randy Neumann and Chuck Wepner.

C a l l i n g t i n y t o t sThe Rutherford Recreation

Department has a few openings in the Tiny Tot program which meets on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:45 to 11:15 a.m. at the Tamblyn Field Civic Cener.

All tiny tots must be age 3 by October 1. The fee is $85 a ses­sion.

Tim Rose, vice president of G arden State Leasing of North Arlington, helps unveil the logo-sign fo r the firm ’s ne subsidiary A-1 Rent-A-Car. W ith Rose are Ed M cKenna, rental m anager for A-1 and M ichael Rose, president of A-1, which has locations in R utherford, Clifton, Fort Lee, North Arlington and Woodbridge.

GSL spins off rental agencyGarden State Limousine - the

largest limousine rental firm in North Jersey - has officially spun off a subsidiary car rental compa­ny, A-1 Rent-A-Car.

A-1 will be beaded by Michael Rose, president, who will preside over the firm that rents cars, vans and trucks. A-1 has locations in Fort Lee, Woodbridge, Clifton and Rutherford.

John Rose, president of the par­ent company, Garden Stale Leasing and Limousine Service, said the growth of the car rental agency has been so strong that it required restructuring of the company.

‘To meet the demands of the car rental business, which are some­what different from the limousine leasing, we had to separate the two firms,” said John Rose. “I ihink the corporate change will allow us lo better serve the corporations and consumers seeking car rentals and will allow us to focus more specific attention on increasing corporate lim ousine rentals and services clients.”

The two companies will contin­ue to be housed under one roof at 89 Ridge Road in North Arlington for the immediate future, said Rose.

Michael Rose says he is looking forward to the challenge of manag­ing the rent a car division and to enjoying the autonomy he will be given to run the firm.

“D espite our phenomenal growth in tbe past few years, I feel there is still more room to grow and I will be looking to increase rentals with a variety of marketing strategies,” he said.

M ichael Rose notes that the growth in A-1 has come through corporate connections made through limousine rentals as well

H O U S E C A L L S ! H O U S E C A L L S !

D R . J O H N P . B R A N W E L LPodiatric Medicine and Surgery

Lifelong Local Resident

Senior Citizens, Shut-Ins, Diabetic Patients etc... MEDICARE/MOST INSURANCES ACCEPTED

For Mora Information o f an AppointmentG a l l 9 9 7 - 3 6 9 3

FAMILY VISION CAREDr. Harold Wiener. Optometrist, PA

Dr. Marc S. Wiener. OptometristE y e Examinations

Contact Lenses Learning Problems

6 4 R ID G E R D . N O . A R L IN G T O N 9 9 1 -2 2 1 1

R obert Vidor, M.D. General Psychiatry

Anxiety • D epression • M ental D isorders M arriage an d Fam ily C ounseling C o u rt C ases • M edicaid A ccepted

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT837 Kearny Ave., Keamy • 991-1445

as from consumers looking to rent a car for short term.

“There is no doubt that the cor­porate lim ousine rentals have helped open doors for the car rental side of the business. Now I want to see if we can use the car rental business to open doors for the lim­ousine business," he said.

A-1 features a free pick up and delivery service for corporate rentals and a Fly and Drive pro­gram that offers pick up service at

SHERIFF’S NOTICE

ARD PlLpNi: El. Als. Civil Action- Wf It ol Execution.Epstein, Epstein, BrownJnd BosekP<5^oxlChatham T

By virtue of the above stated writ to me alre< |eq and deli­vered, I have levied upon and wW expose for sale at _pubilc vendue at Ihe Sheriffs Office In Ihe C Itv of H eckei isack, on Wednesday, Auoust 23,WS at two o'clock In the afternoon, prevailing time.

of lYNDMURST In theCounty of Ber gen and Sfate! S i T , w „ }PLIVINGSTON AVENUE,LYNOHURST, New Jer-fax Lot No. 17 Block if. “ Imenslons of Lot: (Ap- oxlm“ _,‘* *—*ons of Lot: (A iteiy) 37.50 ft 1SO.OO feet iong

Cross Street, Sitproxlmati wldeby IfNearest t . _______ate on Ihe easterly s Livingston Avenue 111♦eelfr----— - •of Ferj1 from Ihe northerly side

Fern Avenue . _ »elher with all ailar the rights, llfcertlc-.----leges, hereditaments and ap- irtenances thereunto--------v In anywise apper-i the reversion and remainders, rentn, Issues and profits (hereof, and also all the ’ ht, mie. Inter--r -

purtenances belonging or In a talrttng and the remainders, renprofits th«----estate, rig properly.S a 1**and satlsfi

and also all the e. Interest, use. j . ■■ and demand of defendants of, In, to and -------- be sow to p- -___ _ same, be soM to paysatisfy In Ihe f.rst place unlo

S r Ev..The properly shall be sotd sub- led to at Hens and encum­brances of record and the Sher­iff makes no representations expressed or Implied, as lo Ihe existence, amount, or validity ol any liens and encumbrances on the property which Is me subiect mailer of this sale. This notice Is further subject lo Con­ditions ol Sale as scflorth by The Sheriff ol Bergen County.The Sheriff reserves the right to adjourn this sale from lime to time aj^f^v J ed Ijy I• w.

PutoSahad: 7/27, S/3, *10 , *17,1996 Fm :126J0

Newark Airport free of charge if the rental is for a week or more.

Garden Slate was started a dozen years ago by John Rose, who began the company with one car and $10,000 in seed money. Today, Garden State employs more lhan 350 people and features lim­ousines and mini buses and vans that serve many corporations in the tri-state area. The company also rents limousines for weddings and other non-corporate events.

A-1 which rents economy and luxury cars, vans and trucks up to 24 feet long, was started in 1993 and employs 30 people.

PUBLIC NOTICE Take notice that applica­tion bas been made to the Mayor and Council ot the Borough o f North A rlington, NJ to transfer to Lookover Corporation for premises on 323 Ridge Road the Plenary Retail Consumption orDistribuUon Consumption License No. 0239-33-006- 005.O fficers: Barbara Corsale, President, 77 Goldftnach Lane, H ew itt, NJ 07421, residence.D irectors: BarbaraCorsale, 77 Goldflnach Lane, Hewitt, NJ 07421., residence.Name as stockholders hold­ing one or more per centum o f the said corporation. Barbara Corsale.W hich license was hereto­

fore issued to Ridge Pub,Inc. fo r the premises locat­ed at 323 Ridge Road.Objections, i f any should be made immediately in w il t ­ing to Constance M . Meehan, Municipal Clerk,Town Hall, No. Arlington,NJ

Lookover Corporation Name of Corporation

Barbara Corsale, President

Published: 7/27 - 8/3, 1995 Fee: $35.00

M anuel R. M orm an, M.D.B oard C ertified In D ermatology

SPECIALIZING IN DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY

Removal of Growtha and Skin Cancera MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT ACCEPTED

47 ORIENT WAY BY APPOINTMENTRUTHERFORD, N J 460-0280

Waakdaya and Monday Kv*atag

E d w a rd P. Chesney Jr., D.C.CHIROPRACTIC and PREVENTIVE

an d REHABILITATIVE SPORTS CARE C ertified Sports P hysician

a t197 R idge Road, N orth A rlington, N .J.

(2 0 1 ) 9 9 7 -3 2 0 0 OOoa H n n Moa, WM. M . ia<aa ■ 1«<« aw - a«a

Thnra. * Bat By Appt. Onjy

Dr. M atthew J. Z eilerO p t o m e t r i s t

.Kyaa a ra m tim d by a p p o in tm e n tLargaaalacttonofft-a ia a andlaM aa

C o n ta c t Lanaaa - h a rd , aoft a n d d iapoaaM e M aa ta r C a rd a n d Visa

Open Saturday and Thurtdav Evening*348RIDGEROAD, LYNDHURST

• 438-8668 •

Page 10: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

PAGE 10 - THURSDAY. AUQUBT 8 . IBM

Real EstateTHE USA

Classifieds

ef<avin o gency,ndurord

438-3120/ 438-3121RUTHERFORD

LARGE 2 FAMILYSPACIOUS Hom e fe a ­tures 7 room s on 1st & 2nd floor plus 2 rooms & bath on 3rd. Sep utilities & basement 2 car garage & more. Super Ridge Rd. loc.

Asking $259,000

LYNDHURSTM o d e r n 2 F a m ily

In exc e llen t con d itio n 5 o v e r 4 w /p a r t f in is h e d basem ent & large yard.

Asking $229,000

L Y N D H U R STW o n d e r fu l ly , r e m o d ­e l le d 5 R M , 1 1 /2 B th . C o lo n ia l .D e e p y a r d , central location .

A sking $149 ,900

E A ST RUTH ERFO RDL u x u ry T o w n h o u s e

Features 5 Room s, 1 1/2 B th s w ith C /A , F/P, C a th e d ra l c e il in g , s k y ­lights, sec system , 2 car g a ra g e , & M O R E ! G o rg e o u s E N D u n it w /b a lc o n y o v e rlo o k in g courtyard. Low taxes.

Asking $169,900

•[ii M I S 251 RIDGE RD. LYNDH URST, N .J. 07071 tSf

EQUAL HOUSNQ OPPORTUNITY

WANTED TO RENT UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE KEARNY, NEW JERSEY 07032 • 9998

NORTH ARLINGTON BRANCH REPLACEMENT SOLICITATION 332495-95-RE-027

The United States Poetal Service desires to lease an existing one story or portion of an existing build­ing of approximately 2,000 square feet, usable area, on a parcel of approximately 14,000 square feet. The basic term should be for ten (10) years with four (4) five (5) year options. Offered buBding should be free of hazardous waste material, not He in a flood plain and should be property zoned for this operation. The preferred perimeter is: NORTH: Jauncey Avenue. SOUTH: BellevtUe Turnpike. EAST: Schuyler Avenue. WEST: Passaic River.

Offerors will be responsible for all contingent fees. Request for offering package may be submitted in writing and directed.

John P. D'Ercole, Real Estate Specialist New York Facilities Service Office, N.Y.F.S.O.

2 Hudson Place 5th floor Hoboken, New Jersey 07030 - 5502

Date of Solicitation closing and last day to submit offers must be received no later than dose of busi­ness SEPTEMBER 20, 1995.

PREFER R ED RENTALS

Lyndhurst - Large modem 3 rooms.Ref. A/C, Pkg. $630+ util.

Lyndhurst - Spacious 4 rooms on 1st floor $700 w/ht.

Lyndhurst - Totally furnished 3 rooms near transportation. Includes all utilities. $650.

Lyndhurst - 4 ,Rms with modem kitchen & bath on 3rd floor. $650.

Lyndhurst - Modem, spacious 4 rooms in young 2 family. Carpets, A/C. $750 + util.

Lyndhurst - 5 rooms on 2nd floor. Mod kit & bath. $800 w/ht.

Lyndhurst - 3 BR, 2 Bth apt. on 1st floor. Laundry hook-ups, off street pkg. $ 1 0 0 0 + .

North Arlington - Gorgeous, new luxu­ry apt. Large 5 rooms C/A, DW, Ref, wash/Dryer + attic. New York view! $1250 + util.

N O F E E TO LA N D LO RD !!!

S A V I N O A G E N C Y

4 3 8 - 3 1 2 0

NUTLEY GARDEN SETTING

8 u p e rb ly p re p a re d immaculate 1 BR Apt*, neatled in qulat coun­try- Ilka landecape. Evary apt. a gam with location to match.Eaay a c c a a a to NYC b ua a n d all conve- n lencea of city living. All naw Mtchene & naw appilancee. Good doe- a ta , g laam ing h a rd ­wood lioora. On- a lta parking, gaiagea, laun­dries. Wail- maintained, intelligently m anaged with you in mind. (No peta).

ON SITE RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 7 DAYS

CALL 201-667-0176

APT. FOR RENTCarlstadt-2nd floor. 5 rms.

1 block lo public trans. Prof. coup. pref. Children

OK. No pets. $900. 804-9063

APT. FOR RENTBeautiful furnished studio apt. AC + util, inc., near

trans. $750 avail. Aug. 15. 933-5284

KEARNY 1 Bedroom Apt., with m odern kitchen, eelf- d ean ln g oven & d ish ­w ash e r, v an ity b a th , la rg e c lo s e ta , f r e e p a rk in g . A v a ilab le J u n e 1 s t. R en t $670 P lu s U tilitie s . E a s t M idland A p a rtm e n ts ad h eres to the princi­pal of Equal H oualng Opportunity.

Call 991-6261

HELP WANTED Legal Secretary

30 hr*, par weak, flexible. Exper. Word Perfect 6.0, dictation machine, email firm In Lyndhurst Office engaged in Gen. Pract. Mail reaume to P.O. Box 911, Lyndhurst or fax to: 933-4299.

HOUSES FOR SALE

AIR CONDITIONING MECHANICS

HVAC mechanics. Exper: commercial and

residential; unlimited overtime plus comm, bonus plan. Immed.

openings, call:

201-933-6646

FOR SALE M anahawkln, NJ 2 BR 2 B th . M an u fac tu red h o m ea m odela avail. $38,900 - $66,900. Grt. re tirem ent a rea . W eat Bay Village. Rt. 9,1 1/2 milea north of Rt. 72.

609-597-7779 For Appointment

HELP WANTED E xp. b o o k k e e p e r fo r re ta i l c a r p e t e to re , diversified position Inc. p o s t in g , p a y ro ll, and aom e saiea. Approx. 30 h rs. per week. Apply In person.

House o t Ruga 510 Keamy Ave., Keamy, NJ 07032

H FL P WANTED

1 5 5 P a r k A v e n u e , L y n d h u r s t LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION!Professional and Medical Office S pace from 800 sq . ft. to 10,000 sq . ft.

LEASE WITH OPTION TO BUY CALL ANTHONY ROSA AT

201-939-1112

DRIVER/LIM0New Jersey’s fastest growing limo com­pany seeks 50 full and part time drivers. Make up to $1000 per week. Will train. Interviews will be conducted on Mon­days between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Call or Stop In

GARDEN STATE LIMO 8 9 R id g e R o a d

N o. A r lin g to n 2 0 1 -9 9 7 -7 3 6 8 e x t . 2 9

HALL FACILITIES AVAILABLEo n e of Lyndhurst’s Historical Buildings is now avail, for renting. R a te s a re re aso n ab le . C an b e ren ted

for W eddings, S h ow ers. F unera l R ep as t, G raduations, P a rlie s of all kinds, a n d a n y o th e r

e v e n t you m ay d e s ire to h a v e . P len ty of p r tg , up to 50 c a rs F o r in fo rm a tio n P le a s e c a l l : 933 -1 3 3 0

o r 9 98-5553

606 Ridge Rd. Lyndhurst, NJ

Independently Owned & Operated A f * " f \

Armitage Realty 4oO _oUUU

HELP WANTED

ADVERTISING SALES- F/T, P/T Local newspaper seeks motivated person to sell retail advertising space. Must be a self starter with a winning per sonality. Must have car and valid license. C reate your own career opportunity.

Call 438-8700 Ask for JoAnn

OPEN HOUSE

THURS. 8 / 3 6pm - 8pm

274 Park Ave.Dir: Off Riverside Ave.

I LYNOHURST • SIN,000. Thia Inviting homm oflara 3 I NTs, I f LR. MEIK, FOR, Fbth. Flmshed BsmtfW/TV |R a , M I LMn araa. Nicayard Wacraanad porch, I peal 4 *cfc. Part*

j LYNOHURST- $199,900. This Nice-Looking 2I family offers LR, DA, MEIK, MBR ft FbthI each Hr. Full Bsmt w/laun area. Lg yard.

Drvwy A 2 Car Garaga. CALL NOW!

LYNOHURST- $175,000 - RED ALERT TH6 ONE'S H0T1A Staling Capa offering 2 Lg BRa, LR/DR

ie, MEK, 2 FWhs, Familv Rm. Cntrl AC, aky-i. Mae yard. Drvwy ft i e t garaga. CALL

OPEN HOUSESAT. 8/5

1pm -3pm 361 Copeland Ave.

DIR: Off Stuyvesant Ave,LYNDHURST - REDUCED ■ IU9.000. Thia ftbutou. Ranch M m 3 BRa. LR, MEIK. Fbth. Finished Bsmt w/Sum Kit, pantry, Family Rm, 1/2 Bth A laun araa. Sliding doora to dack ft yard. Drvwy ft Garage.

OPENHOUSESAT. 8/5

1PM -3PM 334 RIVERSIDE AVE. Dir: Off V alleybrook Ave.

LYNOHURST - $219,MO -A Handaoma 2 Family faaturing on 1 it fir 3 BRa, LR, DR, KH, Fbth. 2nd fir LR, lOt, MBR, Fbth ft Sm room or uaa aa dm. Finlahad Bamt w/Bth ft laun araa. Lg yard. Lg Drvwy.

LYNOHURST - $174,000. Thla MM condMor homa off ara 3 Bra, LR, MEW, Fbth. FWahod Bamt w/KK, Fbth, BR or Rec Rm, Laun araa. Cntrl AC, Franch doors, atainad glaaa ft moral Garaga.

LYNDHURST • $199,000. TNa Impraaalva Colonial Totally ramodatad offara 3 nica ai BRa, Lg LR, 1/2 9th, Naw MEK, FOR, Naw Fb*h i^acunL Finlahad BamL Hardwood Ors, akyftghta ft Moral Lg Drvwy.

LYNOHURST- REDUCED-REDUCED • $295,NO • This Larga 2 Famly faaturaa J BRa, LR, OR, MEK, Fbth aach fir. Finished Bamt w/KK, Fbth, Fam ft Laun rm. Yard w/covarad patio ft Bit in BBQ. Drvwy & Garaga toot

LYNDHURST- $1*9,000. Howdy Partner! Thia Ranch faaturaa 2 Lg BRa, LR, MEIK, DR, Fbth, Family Rm w/fpic, Sun Porch. Finlahad BamL Pratty yard wfeetio, dack ft pool CALL NOW

OPEN HOUSE SUN. 8/6

1PM -4PM 297 WASHINGTON AVE. Dir: Btwn Grant & Nutley Ave.

NUT1.EY-AEDUCED ■ *152,100 • Off to 1 G n a t Start wtth thia 3 BR Colonial w/Lg LR, FOR, EIK. pantry 1 braatefaat rm. Ful BamL Daap yard. Lg Orvwy. N a m root, furanoe » hw haatar.

LYNDHURST - 1224.100 • Racandy Raducad TMa Colonial oflan 4 BRa, Lg LR, MBK. FDR. rum. Finlahad Bamt »/Fam Rm, Bth 1 laun

Huga yard » 20i40 Mgmd pool, cabana, irad patf

42x270 Wlcovarad patio A moral Drvwy, Qaraga. Lg

LYNDHURST ■ 1114,900- GREAT la t HOME 0PPTY11 TNa I BR Colonial la liaahly palntad A carpaM throughout, Naw MEIK. LR. DR. Ftdi. Finlahad Bamt, Lg Yard. Drvwy A Qaraga HURRY CAU NOW!

WELFARE DIRECTOR PART - TIME

Administrstlon of General AssistanceProgram for tha Township of Lyndhurst 19 1/2 hours-No Benefits. Applications are avail­able at:Townehip Clark’s Office 367 Valley Brook Ave. Lyndhurat, NJ 07071

E** CKKrtn* EMpkvtftfma*

LYNDHURST ■ » m ,« 0 0 • Thla D allghtlull Colonial la wall aialntalnad and oflara 2 L g l BRa, LR, DA, Kit. 2 Fbtha. Full BamL Yard! w/Brick patio, ahad A a Baautllul Engllih I Cardan compMa tha look ol tNa eoiy homa. | Drvwy I Qaraga tool

LYNOHURST J166,500 - TNa Oaaatc Colonial I oflara 3 BRa, 1 1/2 Btha, MEIK, DR, LR. F ull| B ant Cozy yard wfpool. Drvwy i Qaraga. I EXCELLENT 1at HOME OPPTY!

PART TIMEAdministration o l G enera !

A ss is tan ce P rogram for th e Tow nship of Lyndhurst. 19

1/2 hours-N o Benefits. A pplications a re availab le at:

Tow neh ip C le rk ’s O ffice 367 V alley B rook Ave. Lyndhu rs t, NJ 07071

A pplication D eadline: A ugust 28 , 1995

Equal Opportunity Employer/Affirmative Action.

LYNOHURST - $1*7,000. Thia cuta Colonial oflara L On Si MBR, 2 BRa, LR. FOR. Naw MEIK, 2 Fbtha. I FMahad Bamt rtaun rm. Nka yard wfpool I naw J dack. LgDivwy. CALL TOOAYII 1

TO D ISC O VER THE P O W E R O F # 7 GIVE US A CALL TODAY!

HELP WANTED Square G ourm et

Reetaurant, » P o lito Ava.

933-5604, Counter-help 7am - 3pm

Page 11: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

THE LEADER

Business DirectoryIM B SD A T . AUGUST 3 . 19QW ■ » * /« i l

i i m n \ \ , i n k ' d

Home Improvements

b * R G E N I e s s f v Q5 ! oano• 1M0 . SE X CONTRACTORS

• ■ • tounntM i

« »Lyndhunt' Hj.

WANTED

HONEST, REUABLEPOLISH LADIES

AVAILABLE TO CARE FOR ELDERLY. Uve

in situation.Call W anda 472-54*6

BRING IT INALUMINUM, BRASS

COPPER, LEAD AND IRON

Kearny Scrap Metal478 Schuyler Ave., Kearny

G AR AG E SALES

EXPERT HOME REPAIRSSm all Job Specialist

• Carpentry • Masonry .Kitchens• Painting . Tiles . Baths• Windows • Sheetrock * Basement

Fast Service Call Ed 998-3166

W ANTEDOLD TOY TRAINS

Lunei. riyof. Ives, etc

'COLLECTOR PAYS CRAZY PRICES

6 5 2 -0 7 6 7 • 8 2 5 -3 7 4 7

FLEA MARKET SAT. Aug. 5th, 9am-

4pm, 12-14 Albert St., North Arlington, Som ething for

everyone

B B E E 2 K

A. TURIELLO & SONHome Improvements

/V fi'*:i iOn<-Alterations Kiti lions - Basements Vn.yl • AKjminum Sidings Vmyl Replacement Windows St* ‘ I Ooors - Gutters D* r.ks - Awnings

Free Est. 438-3663Insured - 586-4567

M IK E ’S A LL SEASONS R E PIACEM ENT

WINDOW S •T ilt- in fo r easy cleaning

•Maintenance Free •Double Insulated Glass •A ny Shape, Size o r Style

•One Day Installation Free Est. Fully Ins.

438-0355

J & L ATWELLSiding & Replacement

W indow*FREE ESTIMATES FU LLY INSURED

998-6236

W e R e p a i r . . .■ WASHERS• DRYERS• REFRIGERATORS• FREEZERS• AIR CONDITIONERS

E. CROSS LEY ANDSON SERVICE 6 6 7 - 9 2 7 8

J.W. BURNS & SONS,

OIL CO.FUEL OIL,

PLUMBING, HEATING EMERGENCY:■ Boiler Replacement■ Water Heater replacement • Boiler Repair (Gas, Oil) ■ Drain Cleaning

JAMES W. BURNS IIN J Plumbing LIC * 7020

991-0991

PlNHO HOME IMPROVEMENTSReplacement windows and doors. basement and rec

room, decks Fintsh carpentry NO JOB TOO SMALL

998-1029

Cleaning ServiceMIKE S MAGIC

CARPET CLEANING*Dry Foarr. Extraction ‘S ta in R em oval •‘S co tch G uarding

P e t D eodorizing Avail.Free Estimates

10% o ff w ith th is ad Call M ike 955-9117

SUMMER SPECIALS

KARAS & SONP L U M B IN G & H E A T IN G

B a t h r o o m & K i t c h e n I n s t a l l a t i o n s

S t s s m & H o t W s t s r H s s t l n g

E l e c t r i c S s w s r & D r s i n C l e a n i n g W a t e r H s s t s r s S u m p P u m p s

4 8 5 - 4 6 0 49 9 1 - 0 1 2 7 '

N .J . L ie . # 6 1 7 8 & 8 4 6TF-K

* palntii. R loofca brand rwwl For

J o t ’ s C u s to m P a in t in gSpecializing In Repainting Aluminum Siding

FOR A FREE ESTIMATE CALL 201-394-9711

!" MOO’ OFF T ..........$50 OFFON ANY COMPLETE CONTRACT » ANY POWER WASHMO JOB

wtth this coupon Exp 1/31/99 wt*i tftto coupon Exp 1/31/96FULLY MSURED: • PiMaur* Ct—o>n| • Drtveway ■aaltng

• All Typae el Extort* h M n | • Lyndhurat

H e a lth C up;c

HOME-HEALTH] A ID E S

A v a ila b le F /T * P /T • L iv e - in s |

S te e le 's H e lp ing Hands, Inc. |

9 3 3 -3 4 5 1

MASONRY

D E N N IE 'S P A IN T IN G A N D R O O F IN G IN C .

S ta ts R oofs R ep alree , Sm id Im i Gutters Installed.

Sava $50 wtth th is sd .997-3262

R o o f in g

CONCRETE-BRICKPorches, Brick Veneer

Patios, Sidewalks Walls, stucco, Decks FREE ESTIMATES

CALL MJkM-AnytJmo 9 9 8 - 4 8 3 1 TFM

McQUIRE & SONS PAINTING AND

POWERWASHINQ* Vinyl Siding

• Flat & Shingle Roofa Senior Citizen Diec.

955-2520 1-800-438-2080

Beeper 393-7527

MILLSDRYWALLS h e e t r o c k i n g

T a p in g C o a t i n g

• Fully Insured • C all 997-5127

GENNA T IL EComplete Bathroom

ModernizingNO JOB TOO "SM ALL"

OR TO O "BIG"661-5172

Nursery Schools

GUTTERS

GUTTERS D. Fitzgerald

Seemlaaa Gutters Inalalled Gutters Cleaned 8 repaired

Slats roofs rapairad 10% Off with this ad

997-3262

SE R V IC E S

T R E E S E R V IC ESCOTTS TREE

& SHRUB CARETree/Stump Removal

P runing A Shrub Trimming Tree & Shrub Spraying

Fertiliz ing & Crane Servlcee

Free EsL Ins’d 25 years Exp.

Sen. Cft. Dis., NJ Uc. 342-1991

• 569-3776 •935-2224

EAST RLTHERFORD ROOFING CO.

ROOFING ■ SIDING GUTTERS i REPAIRS Al Work Guaranteed 9 3 9 - 3 3 3 7

lectriGal

Haff Electric Inc.

ELECTRICALC O NTRACTORS

INDUSTRIALCOMMERCIAL

Residential Wiring Lie. No 3988

998-8656

L Y N D H U R S TDAY CARE CENTER

KINDERGARTEN REAtH- NESS

> Social Studtoa• Muak:• Arta S CraftaScience S Math

• State Accrednad Taechara• Stta Uceoeed Day Cara Cantar• HMWv QuaHflad W• 2 Baelc Proorama• Agee 2 • S

SUPERVISED ACTIVITIES

DALY FROM 7:00 AM to 3:00 PM 117 LAFAYETTE PLACE, LYNOHURST

OPEN ALL YEAH Ho: Luncft plue 2 eneefca SERVHO THC WOWWNQ

COMMUNITY FOR OVER IS YEARS

CERAMIC TILE

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M real ssttt advertised si thts ■iswspapsr a suOfea to the Fedsral Fair Housing Act of 1968 wftcft makes it Jtcgal to advertise any prtfsrsnce. Kmtutnn or discrimination baaed on race, color, nagvn, sex. or nabonai ongm or airy

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SHERIFF! NOTICE

i s m

lad lo a# ftans and encum­brances of record and Ihe Sher-

dltlons of Saw as iff lorth bv tha Sheriff sfOargwi County.Tne Sheriff reserves tha right to adiourn this sala from

Published - 7/27. 8/3,8/10, 8/17 1995 Fas: $126.00

SHERIFF S NOTICESUPI RIOR COUpT OF NEW JERSEY

. m m..AINTIFF: KOREA £ x7JHa M6E BANK FLUSHING BRANCH andS f i I i ,Ng t NATLS Clvl, Ac- tk>n- Writ of E xccullon

PO Box333l Wavne, NJ 074/4 By vlrluoof tha above staled writ lo me directed and deli­vered, I have levied upon and will expose for sala al put • « at tti--------- Office In

.......3 m a _____ , - -vered, I have levied upon will expose for sala al v vendue al ft»a Sheriffs OHi^ & ^ V X S X S K \ mat two o'clock In (he afternoon, prevaitlnytlme:All lhat certain tract and parcel of land and premises, herein­after particularly described, situate, lylno and being In tne Township ofL vndhurst, Couniy

n Rlverwatch Condominium, :ondomlnlum togelhar with i mdlvldad I J125 percentage Ir erest In the common elemen1 appurtenant thereto a> amended from lima to lima. In accordance with and suMacf to tne farms, limitations, condi­tions. covenants, easements, restrictions and other provi­sions of Rlverwatch Condo­miniums Master Deed re­corded on November II, I9M In the Office of the Reolste ~Jounty of &eroan. State fisey In Dear

_ Avenue, Unit C41, Lvno-

the tax maps of tha Townshlp of Lyndhurst. Being the sameBremises conveyed to Sue hae and Ho Rr*ee by dead from tha Rlverwatch Develop­ment Group Inc dated October 16, 198? and recorded October J4 1989 In Dead Book 7327 page

together with all and slnou- lar tha rights, liberties, privi­leges, hereditaments and ap­purtenances thereunto belonging o ' In anywise appar- falnlnp and the reversion and Tiainders, rants. Issues andestate, runt, irav, in irm , u»«-, property, claim end demand of Ihe said defendants of, n. *o and out ol the same, be sow to pay and satisfy In Ihe first place unto

eriS^ of the purchase price In the form of Certified Check or Cash Is required at time of sale. The property shall ba sold sub- led to aH Hens and encum­brances of record and the Sher­iff makes no representations expressed or Implied, as to the existence, amount, or —* of any liens and encumstence, amount, or validity _. any liens and encumbrances on the property which Is the sublecl mailer of this sale. This............... sublect to Con-

i seTlorthbyThe n County..... _.... I reserves the right to adlourn this sale from

............— i & r

. . . . . .___ __ . frortime to lime as provided by law.ja * t ! hr «CH>53269

Publish ad - 7/27, 8/3,8/10, 817, 1995 Fee:$146.00

NOTICEALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE

CONTROL Tnoylcs tha t application has bsan made to tha Mayor and Council of tha B orough of North Arlington, Boro Hall, 214 R ldgs Road, North A rlington, N.J. 07031 to tra n s fe r to P.A.C. Backstreeta, Inc., trading aa B sckstree t Bar and Grill for premiaea located a t 268 R iver Rad, North Arlington, N J . 07031 the P lenary RetailC onsum ption Licenae Number 0239-33-026-001 heretofora Issued to 288 Esst, Inc. trading aa 288 C lub fo r the prem iaea located st 288 River Road, N orth A rlin g to n , N.J. 07031.The person who will hold the interest in this Ucenee Is P atric ia Caaaavell, 8 aky lina D rive, Upper Saddle River, N J. 07458. The applicant intenda to engage In tha retail elae of d istilled spirits, wine and beer under the terma and conditions allowed by law. Ot^ectiona, if any, ahould be mada Immediately In writing to:Conetance M. Meehan, M lnldpel Clerk, Boro Hall o f North A rlin g to n , 214 R idge Road, North Arlington, NJ 07031.P-A.C. Backstreet, Inc.■y P a tric ia Caaaavell, P ree., 3 S ky line D rive, Upper Saddle R iver, NJ 07488.Publlahed: 8/3/10/95 Fee: $1*J5

NOTICC OF DECISION NORTH ARUNGTON ZONING BOARD OF

ADJUSTMENT Lewrence 8 Berbere M anning, 159 Leonerd Place, North Arlington, HJ 07031.VARIANCE: Conatruct a 15x24 a dd itio n to Eaat a ide o f one fam ily dwelling.GRANTEDThe above resolution waa paaaed a t the A p r il 19, 1995 m eeting end has been filed in the office of th s Zoning B osrd o f Adjustment.Cstherine D. Kaogan, Sectary, Zoning Board of Ad|ustment.Published: August 3,1995 Fee: $10.50

NOTICE OF DECISION NORTH ARUNGTON ZONING BOARD OF

ADJUSTMENT John 8 Linda Bartolotta, 54 T h ird S treet, N orth Arlington, NJ 07031. VARIANCE: To permit the convaraion o f the ir one- family dwelling to a two- family dwelling.GRANTEDTha above raaoiution waa paaaed at the A pril 19, 1995 m eatlng and has been filed In the office of the Zoning Board o f Adjuetment.C atherlna D. Kaogan, Sectary, Zoning Board of Adjustment.Published: August 3,1995 Fee: $10.50

LEGAL NOTICE USE VARIANCE APPLICATION

ADDRESS: BLOCK #: Plesss tske notice thet st 8:00 PM on Wsdnesday, In the M un ic ipa l B u ild ing locatsd s t Vslley B rook Ave., Lyndhu rs t, NJ, s pub lic hssring o f the Lynd hu rs t Bosrd o f Adjustment in connevtion with s request fo r s uss variance. That Mario Santsngelo andPasquslina Ssntsngelo be permitted to demolish the e x is ting one (1) fam ily dwelling snd srsct s nsw two (2) family dwslling st 416 F ifth Avsnue, Lyndhurst, NJ 07071 in s One Family zone. This use is not perm itted In th is zone under Township O rd lnancs #2087. Th is notice is being published pursusnt to the require­ments of the Township of Lyndhurst snd ths Lsnd Uss Act. Ths spplicstlon snd f ils is s vs ilsb ls fo r inspection during normal w o rk ing hours, s t ths C o nstruc tio n Dept. Located at 253 Stuyveeant Ave. Lyndhu rs t, NJ 07071.

Applicant By: Jamea J. Guida

Attorney for AppllcanL Published: 8/3/95 Fee: $17.50

NOTICE OF DECISION NORTH ARUNGTON ZONING BOARD OF

ADJUSTMENT A lice Barlou , 76 Rutharford Place, North Arlington, NJ 07031 VARIANCE: To permit! the c o n a tru c tio n o f a deck and wa lkw ay on tha Southerly aide of proper­tyGRANTEDThe above resolution waa paaaed at the A p ril 19, 1995 m eeting and haa been filed In the office of the Z oning B oard o f AdjustmentC sth erine D. Ksogan, Sectary, Zoning Board of AdjuatmenLPublished: August 3,1995 Fee : $10.50

BOROUGH OF NORTH ARLINGTON ZONING BOARD OF

ADJUSTMENTTAKE NOTICE feet on Me 16th day of Auguet 1088. eheerlng w ill be held before the B orough o f N orth A rlington, Zoning Boerd o f A d jua tm an t on tha appeal or app lica tion o f the undersigned for a vari­ance or other relief ao aa to permit Conetructton of a 16 x33' one story eddl- tlon - (Rear) on premieee loceted et 14-16 Webeter S t. N orth A rlin g to n , NJ 07081 end deeignated aa B lock 161 L o t 6 on theB orough o f N orth Arlington Tax Map.MAPS AND DOCUMENTS FOR WHICH APPROVAL IS SOUGHT IN THIS APPLICATION ARE AVAILABLE FOR PUBUC INSPECTION AT THE OFFICE OF THE CON­STRUCTION OFFICIAL, MUNICIPAL BUILDING. WEEKDAYS BETWEEN 8:30 AM AND 4:00 PM.ANY INTERESTED PARTY MAY APPEAR AT SAID HEARING AND PARTICI­PATE THEREIN IN ACCORDANCE WTTH THE RULES OF THE ZONING BOARD OF ADJUST­MENT.Stave Paakaa (name of applicant)Publlahed: 6-3-95 Fee: $19.25

NOTICE OF DECISION NORTH ARUNGTON ZONING BOARD OF

ADJUSTMENTVictoria 8 Jorge Rocha, 108 Bogle Ave., North Arlington, NJ 07031. VARIANCE: To permit the conatruction of a deck up to rear and s ld s lln ss o f property.GRANTEDThe above reeoiutkxi waa paaaed at the A p ril 19, 1995 m eeting snd hss been filed in the office of ths Zoning Bosrd of Adjustment.Catherine D. Keogan, Sectary, Zoning Board of AdjuatmenLPubllahed: August 3,1995 Fee: $10.50

SHERIFFS NOTICE

7lrxW *«r of Feat to NearestMMf r& F w i

thereunto

Published: July 20. 27. August 3, 10. 1995 Fee: $126.00

NOTICE ALCOHOLIC M V B M a t

Take nofloe l a t eppNpa

B orough o f ArUngson, Boro Had, 114 R idge f lo o d . N orthA r lin g to n , NJ 07881 te tre ne fe r to T .J . N olle , Inc.for premlaaa looetsd et 14 Ridge Road, North A rling ton , NJ 07081 the P lenery R etailC oeuum ptlon Lloenee Number 0288-88-018-008 heretofore leeued to 2H, Inc. trad ing aa S luggo’e 8 eloon fo r the promisee

I at 14 RMge Road,

The pereon who wM hold the Inftereet In thie boonoo la Thomae Keeney, 881 S chu y le r A venue, NJ 07082. The e pp llce n t Intenda to engage In the retail aele o f (fleMed eptr- ita, wine end beer under the terma and condMone allowed by lew. Obfectione, If any, ahould ba mede im m edle tely In writing to:Conatance M. Meehen, Municipal Clerk, Boro HaM o f North A rling ton , 214 Ridge Road, N orth Arlington, HJ 07031.T. J. Balia, Inc. By Thomae Keanay, Prea. 681 Schuyler Avenue, Keamy, NJ. 07082.Publiahed: 8/3/10/96 Fee: $19.25

AUTO AUCTION RECOVERED

MOTOR VEHICIUE8The following vehicle was found abandoned on New Jeraey Tranalt P roperty and It ia the poaaaaslon of the tow ing company for more than thirty days and rem alna unc la im ed. In a ccordance w ith the "A bandoned V ehic le Law", 99:4 • 56J, the fol­lo w in g w il l be a o id at Public Auction at BROQE TOWING. 606 8HAYNE AVENUE, LYNDHUJIST, HJ 07071 on Auguat 10, 1996 at 9:00 AJM. VOLK8AWGON 1887, 9BWBA0302HP028204 96- 03200 8500. DEPOSIT IS REQUIRED IN CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK. BAL­ANCE MUST BE PAID W ITH* 46 HOURS AFTER THE SALE. THE SUC­CESSFUL BIDDER MUST REMOVE ALL VEHICAL8 AT HIS OWN EXPENSE WTTVHN (10) DAYS AFTER CLOSE OF SALE. INSPECTIONS MAY BE MADE BETWEEN 9:00 AM 8 4:00 PM DALY M-F- AT THE ABOVE TOWING COMPANY.PubUahed: Auguat 3,1006Fee: $15.75

NOTICE OF DECISION NORTH ARUNGTON ZONING BOARD OF

ADJUSTMENT Robert 8 Annette Hartman, 165 Ridge Road, North Arlington, NJ 07081. VARIANCE: To permit the Installation of tablee and seating fo r 16 people wtthln existing bueineee. DENIEDThe above reeoiution woe paaaed at the A p ril 18, 1995 m eeting and hae been filed In the office of the Zoning Board of AdjuatmenLCatharine D. Keogan, Sectary, Zoning Board of

3,1986Fee: $ lt5 0

PUBUC.NQT1CENOTICE

QBOMAMCfcNQ. 86-08NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the foflowing proposed Bond Ordinance was introduced and passed on first reeding at a meeting of the Borough Council of the Borough of East Rutherford, in the County of Bergen, New Jersey, held on the 18 day of July 1995, and that said OrxSnance will be taken up for further consideration for final passage at the meeting of said Borough CouncS to be held at Its meeting room in the Coundl Chambers. Municipal BuikSng, East Rutherford, New Jersey, on the 21 day of August. 1995, at 7:00 O’Clock, p.m. or soon thereafter as said matter can be reached, at which time and place all persons who may be interested therein wW be given an opportunity to be heard concerning the same.A copy of this Ordinance has been posted on the Bulletin Board upon which pubSc notices are customarily posted in the Municipal Building of the Borough and a copy is available up lo and Including the time of such meeting to the members of the general pubHe of the Borough of Eaat Rutherford, who shaH request such cop*e6, at the office of the Borough Clerk in said Municipal Building in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

Darlene A. Sewfctt Registered Municipal Cteik

BONO OROMANCE 96-08 BOND ORDINANCE OF THE BOROUGH OF EAST RUTHERFORD, M THE COUNTY OF BERGEN, NEW JERSEY, AMENDING BONO ORDINANCE NO., 93-06 FMALLY ADOPTED APR*. 20, 1088, AS FURTHER AMENDED BY BONO OROMANCE NO. 84-12 FMALLY ADOPTED SEPTEMBER 20, 1994, M ORDER TO REVISE THE DESCROTON OF THE IMPROVEMENT AUTHORIZED THEREIN.BE IT ORDAINED BY THE BOROUGH COUNCIL OF THE BOROUGH OF EAST RUTHER­FORD, IN THE COUNTY OF BERGEN. NEW JERSEY, (not less than two-tt*ds of a l members thereof affirmatively concurring) AS FOLLOWS:Section One. Section 3 (a) of Bond Ordinance No. 93-05 of the Borough flnaty adopted April 20, 1993, as further amended by Bond Ordinance No. 94-12 finely adopted September 2 0 ,1904,1s, hereby amended to read as follows:“Section 3. (a) The improvements hereby authorized and the purposes of the financing lor which said obligations are to be issued are as foRows:

DOWN PAYMENT CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT

COST FUND 8415.000 820,750.

IMPROVEMENT/ ACQUISITION Acquire the land and budding known as 52 Herman Street, East Rutherford. New Jersey and renovation of the buldlng for use as an emergency squad building, including an coat related thereto, and Including but not limited to, furnishings and equipmentPublished: August 3,1905 Fee: $4X88

AUTHORIZED BONDS OR NOTES 304.2S0

USEFUL UEE 30 yrs.

Page 12: ICeaiitr - DigiFind-It · 1995. 8. 3. · Experience (KARE), which helps teens who are leaving a psychiatric hospital to take their first steps back to iheir families and commu nities.

fcftfitt - TWTn»»n*-r 3 . 1998

Lyndhurst Babe Ruth 13-year-old all-stars - Front row (left to right): row (left to right): Tony Valvano, Lou Stellato, Lou Pollara, Mike Di Louis Settembrino, C arl Van Note, Phil Reina, Steve Passam ano, Nicola, Coach; Darren C ray, Coach; B rian W alker, M anager; Wayne Anthony Aceste, Bobby Boni, Nick Anzovino, F rank Scaglione. Second G eraci, Ryan McSweeney, Kevin Stoebling.

Lyndhurst National advances to SectionalsThe D istrict 5 champs,

Lyndhurst National, will advance lo the Sectionals in pursuit of the10-year-old L ittle League Championship.

Lyndhurst National took the District championship on July 20 in a 6-3 win against Carlstadt. The day before, they had handed Carlstadt its first defeat, beating them 6 to 5 a t Lodi in extra innings, forcing the next-day’s play.

QP’s Lady

The U niversity of Scranton Women’s Basketball Program has two key New Jersey cage stars to ensure future bids for national and conference honors.

Scranton head coach Mike Strong named the highly recruited twosome, 6-0 center guard Dana Pryblick of North Arlington, who starred at Queen of Peace High School, and her cousin, 5-5 guard Sarah Kayal o f Mahwah, a Mahwah High School standout.

Pryblick was the most improved player at Queen of Peace, averag­ing 10 points and 10 rebounds per game during her team ’s league championship.

“Dana was a heavily recruited inside prospect who solidifies our forward line for the future,” Strong

Soccer kicknic’ planned

The Lyndhurst Youth Soccer Club will hold a Kicknic for all families in the girls’ and boys’ divi­sion on Saturday, August 5, at the large pavilion in the North Arlington section of Bergen County Park.

The day begins at 10 a.m. with demonstrations and workshops for the children and coaches presented by college players. Food, includ­ing hot dogs, hamburgers, and bot­tled water, will be provided by the League from 1 to 3 p.m. The League reports its professional cooks will be at the grills from 3 to5 p.m. to cook any food picnickers bring. They ask everyone to bring any other food or beverages they would like for their family, or to share with other families. Items such as chips, pretzels, salads, and other foods to be shared can be brought down to the field anytime before 1 p.m. Bring blankets or lawn chairs.

Activities are planned for chil­dren of all ages from 1 to 6 p.m. Activities coordinator Mike Scott promises to keep everyone busy and out of trouble.

The highlight of the day will be a soccer game between last year’s Division V Girls and Boys travel­ing teams.

There is no charge to any of the families for this event Kicknic T- shirts will be sold, and there will be a registration table for an Atlantic City trip. Moore said he would like to thank the many Lyndhurst volunteers wbo made last week­end’s Lipton Cup Tournament and Canister Drive a success.

In the final game of the Division round, starling pitcher James Murray gave up one run in the first inning; but Lyndhurst answered back. T.J. Leon, who got on base when he was hit by a pitch, then stole two bases, was driven home with a hit to the opposite field by Mike Csedrik.

In the third inning, with bases loaded, Dave Carucci singled home two runs, making the score 4-1. Lyndhurst got into pitching trouble

in the fourth inning and walked home two runs. Brian Lukeman came in with bases loaded and held Carlstadt 4-3. In the bottom of the fifth, Leon led off with a single. Csedrik drove home the run with an RBI triple, aided by -an error at third which allowed the run to score.

The winning pitcher, Brian Lukeman, struck out two batters to end the game 6-3.

Pryblick and cousin Royal cage recruitssaid. “She is always looking to improve and I expect her to capital­ize upon her athletic abilities and be a valuable asset to our pro­gram.”

Kayal, who averaged 19.3 points and six rebounds per game last season at Mahwah, earned all- state and county honors and was the suburban MVP. She was also a two-time team MVP during her team’s back-to-back league titles, and was the most improved player

on the 1993 stale Group Two championship team. She holds her school record for most three-point­ers in a game wilh eight

Pryblick and Kayal enrolled in a Scranton program which is consid­ered number one in the NCAA Division III. The Lady Royals have made four visits to the Final Four, the mosl recent in 1993, and have counted a record eight Middle Atlantic Conference cham pi­onships.

Girls soccer sign-ups setThe Lyndhurst G irls Soccer

Club announces a reopening of registration in ils Girls Division 6.

Division 6 is for girls under 8 years old beginning with first grade. The girls can be registered at the Parks Departm ent on Cleveland Avenue, or by calling Rich Davis at 933-5985.

There will also be try-outs for the Division 3 Traveling Team (under 11) August 9 and 10 at 7 p.m. at the Batting Cages in County Park. If there are any other questions, call Don Manfria at 438- 8979, Mark Sadonis at 935-4673, or Davis.

Winning Way offers Aug. sessionsThe Lyndhurst Recreation

Department’s annual Winning Way Soccer Camp will offer two weekly sessions this month, from August 14 through 18, and August 21 through 24.

Winning Way is open to all Lyndhurst boys and girls entering grades 2 through 7 in September. The camp is held at Lyndhurst High School from 9 a.m. lo 2 p.m., rain or shine. It is directed by Cap Arata, coach of the LHS varsity soccer team, with the assistance of Joey Baratta, All-League halfback,

and others.The camp features indoor and

outdoor facilities, individual and group instruction, skill work, drills, lectures, video tapes on instmction and past World Cups, games, con­tests, prizes, free Winning Way T- shirt and medallion, and supple­mental insurance.

The fee for each session is $80. A camper is welcome to register' for either or both sessions. For more information, call Coach Arata at 933-9363 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Rutherford Rec Track & Field

The Rutherford Recreation Track Team had an impressive showing at their June 19 Track & Field Meet held in Summit

In the 100 Meter Dash, Margaret Augustynowicz finished 1st in the11-12 age group with a time 14.7 seconds. In the boys division, Chris Goodwin placed 4th in the 8 and under age group. In the 11-12 age group, Frank Herrmann placed 2nd, Jonathan Anderson placed 3rd, and Peter DeCarlo was 4th. Chris DeCarlo finished2nd in the 9-10 year old division.

In the 200 meter run, Frank Herrmann won the 11-12 year old division by running a 33.9 race. Jonathan Anderson finished 3rd.

Chris Goodwin was the team’s only 400 meter runner, finishing 3rd place in the 8 and under division. In the 800 meter run, Jeffrey Ruiz won the 9-10 year old age group with a time of 3:43. Richard Keene fin­ished in 2nd place. Rich Keane also finished 2nd in the mile run, with a time of 8:15. Jon Augustynowicz won the 800 meter race (3:15) and the mile (5:55) in the 13-14 age group. Katie Freed accomplished the same feai by winning the 800 meter run (3:36) and the mile run (7:17).

The meet at Summit closed out yet another successful and enjoy­able season for the Rutherford Recreation Track Team.

The C ham ps — F irst row: David C arucci, J im M organo, Joe Lolzzl, T hom as Leon, D aniel Crumble. Second row: Jam es M urray, M ichael Nakonechny, David Sica, Joe Scaglione, Anthony De M arco. T h ird row: J e ff M aurin , Ray O uelle tte, B rian L ukem an, M ichael C sedrik . Back row : M anager C harles C arro ll, President J im Radigan, Coach Mike Carroll.

LO C A L

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C A L L T O D A Y F O R A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S & IN F O R M A T IO N

4 3 8 - 8 7 0 0T H E L E A D E R

IT 'S TIM ELY IN F O R M A T IV E A N D C O S T E FFE C T IV E

N.A. girlTHE LEADER

sends them homeNorth A rlington’s Lauren

Corrigan, playing for the Clifton Charmers Girls Softball 12 andUnder Division, batted 10 for 17 to spur the team to a win in the North Brunswick Invitational Tournament last week.

The Charmers finished the pre­liminary seeding round with a 2 and 1 record, their only loss 8-3 to Amity, N.Y., a regional representa­tive going to the Nationals in Oklahoma.

During the final elimination round, the Charmers defeated the Bayshore Youth Athletic Assoc, team 9-4, and then the Bound Brook Crusaders 10-0, leading to the inevitable rematch against Amity for the championship.

Lauren, a short stop, drove in the first two runs in the top of the first with a double to right center. She drove in three more runs in the third inning with a bases-clearing double. In all for the tournament Lauren had a .588 batting average, including five doubles and home run, and 11 RBIs.

She played second baseman for

L auren C orrigan

the North Arlington Little League Baseball All-Stars, until they were eliminated.

The Charmers beat Amity 9-1, capping an exciting season with the championship.