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The Central New Jersey Home News from New Brunswick, New Jersey • 32

Location:
New Brunswick, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

30 THE SUNDAY HOME NEWS NEW BRUNSWICK. N. SUNDAY. DECEMBER 19M Lack of Edison Council Quorum Delays 56-Acre Sale to By WARREN JONES $566,000 land sale to the Great huge perishable groceries distrib-EDISON Finalization of a Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. for a ution here will not take The area is a restricted-Industry zone, but there are eight homes on Nevsky Street.

A few years ago the municipal government took action to close two dumps which were located in the neighborhood. Once that was accomplished, Edison officials convinced state authorities to force the closing of another dump located nearby in a heavy industrial zone in South Plainfield. a culvert for the Stephenville Brook. The bid was the lowest of three received for the second part of a two-stage project to correct a flooding condition caused by the brook. Work on this phase is expected to begin immediately, -Road Mapped The council revealed plans to construct a road about 400 feet long running from Nevsky Street to the General Pallet Corp.

on New York Blvd. The immediate purpose of this The brook has been a source of considerable concern to Bonhamtown residents and municipal officials for several years. These two resolutions are part of a cooperative effort by local, county, and state officials to correct a situation which has resulted in flooding of streets and private property during heavy rains. The council also approved a $37,312.50 contract for the Man-ganella Preziosi Construction Co. of South Orange to construct for your Christmas shopping convenience Wards will be OPEN (3S3 Communists Get 'Foothold' At City University of NY lul SEE SUNDAYS is to take truck traffic, which regularly goes to and from the plant along all but a short section of Nevsky Street, away from the neighborhood.

Several residents have recently complained about the volume of traffic. To construct the road the council is obtaining a right-of-entry across a right-of-way which has belonged to the Jersey Central Power, Light Co. for a number of years. But the company has never used this as it had initially intended for a power line traversing the northern part of the township. Most.pf the right-of-way had been sold previously to various property owners.

Juit Part of Project The road which is to be built represents more than an alleviation of the truck traffic problem on Nevsky Street. It will be a small section of a much larger project, a "loop road" which was proposed in the 1962 Master Plan. The road eventually will run from Talmadge Road to Park Avenue. It will meet Park Avenue far enough north of its intersection with Stephenville Parkway to cause the heavy traffic expected to use the loop road to go to Oak Tree Road. The thinking of township of-fiicals in this regard is chat Oak Tree Road, which they have been urging county officials to widen to four lanes, would be better suited to handle heavy traffic from the Talmadge Road industrial area and from Route 27 than Stephenville Parkway.

The latter is a wide residential street, but it has a divider island. The action the council is taking to eliminate truck traffic from most of Nevsky Street represents another step in upgrading the residential character of the neighborhood. place until Dec. 14. Because of a legal technicality, the Township Council voted yesterday to authorize the municipal clerk, Oscar Kaus, to readvertise the company's offer to purchase 56.61 acres of township land.

At the Dec. 14 meeting the tract of land, located between Brunswick Avenue and the Pennsylvania Railroad right-of-way east of Plainfield Avenue, will be offered at a public sale. If there is no higher bid at that time, it will be sold to for a building which initially will have 135,000 square feet of floor space. It is expected that the building would be completed by the end of 1967 or early in 1968. Sale Provisions Conditions of the sale call for the company to build a complex of 900,000 square feet with a total value of $10 million within 10 years.

The offer was revealed at the Nov. 9 council meeting and was advertised with the public sale and final action scheduled for Nov. 23. Because four of the seven coun-cilmen were not present at that meeting, no action could be taken. Thus, the legal requirement that the public sale must be advertised including the date it is to actually take place forced the delay until the next regular meeting, Dec.

14. In other, action at yesterday's special meeting, called by Mayor Anthony M. Yelencsics because no business could be conducted on Nov. 23, the governing body passed two resolutions dealing with eforts to relieve flooding conditions in Bonhamtown. One resolution authorized negotiations for an easement from the New Jersey Turnpike Authority in connection with a proposed culvert on Dorothy Avenue.

The other authorized the mayor to obtain, through purchase or condemnation, a 40-foot-wide strip of private property in the same area in connection with the widening of Mill Brook. 0( 0 A to shop all these departments NEW YORK (AP)-The Communist party of the has established what is called a "foothold" at the City University of New York, its publicity director says. Arnold Johnson told 1,000 persons Friday night at a Communist rally that a Communist Youth Forum held its first meeting at City College Friday. "And what you have now at City College is an authorized official organization the Communist Party Forum which is initiated by the Communist Party Club," he said. Johnson said a Communist REAL WINDFALL ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.

(AP) Mrs. Rudelle Diffee's windfall was the return of her life savings, $4,700 in U.S. Savings Bonds which she reported stolen from her home. Officers returned the bonds recently after two teachers saw them being blown by gusts of wind across a school yard four miles from Mrs. Diffee's house.

student also was running for the executive council at Brooklyn College. He said Communists have spoken at City College before as party spokesmen, "but this is speaking under the auspices of the Communist Party Forum. "That is something new." A spokesman for City College said the Communist Youth Forum was set up in September as an academic discussion group and "is in no way thought of as an affiliate of the Communist party." He said the forum was preceded by a Marxist discussion group. The spokesman said he would like to get "clarification" on Johnson's contention that the Communist party had gained a "foothold" on campus through the forum. Gus Hall, general secretary of the party, also spoke.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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