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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 47

Publication:
Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ASBURY PARK SUNDAY PRESS, Jan. 3, 1971 Rutgers Student on Leave, Has Big Decision to Make 1 II riY "VTT vt, iJUDf tJM. MUbmrr VlNELANn in Is when you go Into a record anon and find your own record on the shelves. That's how Joe Jones, gui-tarlst, feels when he wanders in the Harmony Shoppe to see now his latest album on the Prestige Label Is selling. A lot of work and preparation went into the project be-fore the record was pressed and Jones, a Bridgeton High School graduate, realizes that making a record and trying to double as a musician and business man isn't easy.

Joe tried to work in classes at Rutgers but had to put them aside until he gets more time. By day he Is an expediter with the Purchasing Department of Johnson Johnson in New Brunswick. By night he is performing with the Willis Jackson Orchestra out of New York. In between he's in the studio making records or busy working on arrangements. You'd think a guy like that would be rich, but he isn't.

As of right now, at 30, he's got a big decision to make. Should he go Into professional music on a full-time basis and give up his job at Johnson Johnson where the horizons are unlimited for a young man of Jones' ability? Jones is a success as a Johnson Johnson expeditor as a recent article in the company's classy glossy stated. The company depends on him to keep them supplied with the raw materials needed for it's jobs. In this role he had the novel experience of calling his former place of employment, Owens-Illinois in Vineland, for a needed item. This is all fine until Joe Jones begins tapping his feet and wishing for his guitar.

For any musician who has mingled with the tops In the trade as Joe has, the lure of the profession is strong. The music business is where my heart is," Jones recently told a friend. Some of the guitarists who have inspired him are Richie Garcia (who plays in the George Shearing group), Tal Farlow, Kenny Burrell and Wes Montgomery. He recalls with fervor and real admiration a series of jam sessions at the East Lan-dis Lounge here a few years ago. He rates James Guida, John Tonielli and Bob Carter, "home grown" musicians, as leaders in their field and said that he enjoyed stirring things up with saxaphonist Charlie Ventura when Ventura was holding fort at the East Lan-dis Lounge.

On one Sunday afternoon, a retired trombonist from the Buddy Rich band came down. He had been having trouble with his hands, but within a short time, he was doing everything, Joe recalls. Musicians came from all around just for the pleasure of playing at these sessions. His wife, Cathleen, and a daughter and stepdaughter have been residing recently in Vineland as Joe tries to decide whether to move permanently nearer New York where he gets a chance at playing special engagements, or buy a home here. He recently put two albums on record, making it a total of five, all for Prestige, which has a future as promising as Motown, Joe believes.

He has a hit on the charts known as "Right On, Brother." All of his records are instrumental. The one that established him as a recording favorite and a big seller was "Boogaloo Joe" but "Right On" figures to top it. Oddly enough, the sales in the Midwest and West Coast have been better than in the East, the record going great guns in Detroit and Los Angeles. Working with Joe in "Boogaloo" are Rusty Bryant, tenor sax; Sonny Phillips, organ and electric piano; Eddie Ma-thias, electric bass, and Bernard Purdue, drums. Charlie Erland played the organ and Jimmy Lewis, fender bass, for "Right Joe Jones' roots are South Jersey.

He came here from West Virginia at an early age. His father Ivan Jones, is living in Millville. He played varsity football for Bridgeton High School as a linebacker at 165 pounds. Turning back to music he recalls how Billy Daniels gave him confidence when he asked Joe to "go on playing" after a Daniels' song ended and they proceeded together, Daniels singing and Joe Jones accompanying in a typical ad lib fashion. Afterward, Daniels had Jones stand up for a bow and introduced him to the audience at the Club Harlem in Atlantic City.

He likes to hear other performers and arrangers doing music that the Beatles made famous like "Something," "Eleanor Rigby" and "Hey Jude." The Boston Pops made a best seller record out of doing arrangements of Beatles' numbers and performers such as Lena Home, Tony Bennett and others are adept at doing them, he points out. Typically, Jones is modest about his own meanderings on the guitar as he plays "Boardwalk Blues," Atlantic City Soul" and "The 6:30 Blues." It's a good sound and he should go far with it. acre campus. The crew recently took out snow plows and snow blowers to prepare for the season's first heavy snowfall. Besides the main parking lot, there are 12 smaller parking lots and nine key driveways to be cleared.

SNOW WATCH Ernest J. Donato (right foreground), superintendent of grounds, discusses Monmouth College snow removal operations with Sherman Mischler, director of buildings and grounds, as members of the grounds crew display the equipment which will be used to clear snow from parking lots, walkways and steps on the 125- Educator Wants Technology Given Place in Higher Learning Lindaman is quick to point THE CHESSBOARD station with Horse Qualities ence and technology and some sort of spiritual framework. "There is a need in college education to emphasize ihe technological element in relationship to the other two, as opposed to a simple emphpsis on science," Lindaman says. "Someone coming from my field has a stronger grasp of that element, and part of my task is to bring it into combination with the other two." Offered vania, and a competent gardener and naturalist. The course will cover basic ecological concepts, including food chains, material cycling within the framework of environmental influence, plant communities, ecosystems, species diversity and evolution.

Following a presentation of the concepts and the problems, the course will pursue some practical ramifications what is happening when we pollute the water, air and land, and what can we, as gardeners do about it? Fee: $15 for members, $20 for non-members. The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx will offer a course starting Jan. 9 on Identifying Deciduous and Evergreen Trees and Shrubs in Winter. The course will run for three successive Saturdays from 10:30 until noon. Indoor sessions combined with field trips throughout the Botanical Garden should make this a pleasant way to spend a few Saturday mornings.

But remember to bring along sturdy footwear. For further information contact the Education Department of the New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, N.Y. 10458. A Dark By HARRY T. CONOVER Press Staff Writer Among the six qualifiers in the recent interzonal tournament at Majorca, Robert Huebner, 22, of West Germany, came through as a real dark horse.

Considering the strength of the field and Huebner's youth, he might have been given only an outside chance of finishing in the top six. But from the very first round, the West German representative served notice that he belonged in classy company, as he gained a draw against Bobby Fischer of the United States in the following hard-fought game- CARO-KANN DEFENSE White Black Fischer Huebner 1 P-K4 P-QB3 2P-Q3 Fischer adopts a strange-looking move that has been played with some success by the Soviet grandmaster, Leonid Stein. One expects a M9 oi nology is a product of man, but either he uses it for the benefit of humanity or he lets it run away from him. Education must be on the forefront of this interface, teaching man to befriend technology, to ride with it rather than on it." He believes a collge education should impart knowledge consisting of equal and interrelated parts of the traditional liberal arts, advancing sci Short Courses The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society will present a four session ecology course entitled The Gardener Environmental Friend or Foe? from 10 a.m. to noon on Fridays in January beginning January 8, at headquarters, 325 Walnut street, Philadelphia.

Instructor will be Carol Reifsnyder, a graduate of the Department of Regional Planning, University of Pennsyl- Square-Inch Lot Sales Opposed LANCASTER, Pa. UP) Residents of the village of Intercourse have voted to circulate petitions opposing the reported sale of village property in square-inch lots. At a town meeting, Solicitor Charles Grove reported that a Harrisburg-based company called Intercourse Enterprises is planning to sell a one-acre tract in one-inch lots for $1 each. Eight years ago a public outcry put a stop to a similar plan. Don't let unused jrniture or appliances clutter up your house.

Turn them into cash by placing an ad in the "Merchandise for Sale" column on The Press classified page. 'ram i SPOKANE, Wash. UP) -Most people probably think of a college president as one with a string of graduate degrees and a reputation for achievement in at least one academic field. But that image doesn't fit Edward B. Lindaman, the new president of Whitworth College, a small liberal arts institution in Spokane.

Lindaman doesn't have the usual academic credentials. His highest earned degree is an associate of arts from a Minnesota junior college. And his field is a combination of electronics, mechanics and technological management. Less than a year ago he was in his 27th year with North American Rockwell as a high-ranking executive in management planning, "work-. ing in the space program.

Lindaman believes the transition from his former field to the academic one is both natural, because the respective jobs demand allied skills, and necessary to the future of education because of the overwhelming importance technology has assumed in modern society. "A slow and gradual infusion of a few men of science and industry into the realm of education eventually will help the cause of education," he says. Because of what he reluctantly calls the "closed" nature of academic communities, Lindaman says the movement of nonacademicians into education will be slow, but his own experience at Whitworth leads him to believe it will become more accepted. "Mankind is literally making his own world not creating but putting together that which is already created," Lindaman says. "Tech Hi! I '-ttfyvr TT tTftir-- I 6-Year Peace Corps Tour in Iran Ends out that he is not a scientist but a technologist, a man who "combines and recombines the discoveries of science into novel groupings." His view of the task facing education is, not surprisingly, therefore, that of a technologist.

"Education has rightfully divided the world into pieces, into the acedemic disciplines," he says. "The time has come to put these pieces together again in novel regroupings which will be more relevant to our world." If education can bring space age science into the traditional curricula Lindaman feels the resulting combination may offer mankind the "mid-course correction" it needs in learning to live beneficially with its snowballing technology-Educational leadership, he says, calls upon the same abilities to marshall men and materials that are needed in industrial and technological production, the same abilities to foresee needs and consequences that are required in the space program. His enthusiasm for the advancements man may secure through space technology led him to author his first book, "Space: A New Direction for Mankind," published in July 1969 and in its third printing. He is now planning a second which would deal more directly with education. Though Lindaman says the shift from space program executive to college president has required some important adjustments, at least one thing remains the same.

In his view of education and space, of man's potential for advancing himself and his world, the sky is still the limit. Henry Child stationery, the news mutes hour every hour 7 days a week situation soon becomes critical), B-K3; 12 PxP. BxN; 13 PxB, KP-P; 14 P-K5 (White has yielded Black a protected passed pawn, but has improved his position in the center), Q-Q2; 15 P-R4, P-Q6! (Black is playing energetically and now threatens to plant a knight strongly at QB7); 16 B-Q2, QR-Q; 17 B-B3, N-N5; 18 N-Q4! (White finds an ingenious counter), KR-K; 19 P-K6, PxP; 20 NxP, BxB; 21 PxB. N-B7; 22 NxR, RxN; 23 Q-Q2, NxQR; 24 RxN, K-N2; and Fischer continued: 25 R-K N-N Black is willing to yield the passed queen's pawn for the White queen's rook pawn and good chances on the queen-side. 26 B-Q5 27 QxP 28 RxR 29 BxP 30 Q-Q6 QxP R-K QxR N-B3 Q-Q2 Black, a pawn ahead and a passed pawn at that, would gladly exchange queens, but White can hardly oblige.

31 Q-RS Q-KB2 Setting a subtle trap. 32 QxP? Overlooking Black's next move, or perhaps feeling a gain in pawns will be compensation for the loss of the bisjiop. 1 Position after White's 32nd move 32 N-K5! Winning the bishop, since White must parry 33 QxPch. 33 P-B3 NxB Another critical point in the game has been reached. White now continued 34 QxP, NxB; 35 Q-Q4ch, K-N; 36 K-B2, Q-K2; 37 Q-Q5ch, KB; 38 P-R5, PxP; 39 QxP, N-B4; 40 Q-Q5, K-N2; 41 QQ4ch, K-B2; 42 Q-Q5ch, K-N2; 43 Q-Q4ch- K-B2; 44 Q-QSch Drawn.

A fighting game all the way! CHESS PROBLEM NO. 188 Touw Hian Bwee 1st Prize Die Schwalbe, 1966 Black 12 men 1 in ft liiH i isf in E.S am in 0 stronger challenge in the center with 2 P-Q4. 2 P-Q4 3 N-Q2 P-KN3 Stein-Birbrager, Moscow 1966- continued 3 PxP; 4 PxP, N-KB3; 5 KN-B3, B-N5; 6 P-KR3, B-R4? (6 BxN equalizes); 7 P-K5, N-Q4; 8 P-B3; 9 P-KN4, B-N3; 10 N-Q4, N-B2; 11 P-QB3, Q-Q4; 12 Q-N3! and White won. Stein-Delange, Havana 1966, continued 3 PxP; KN-B3, B-Q3; 5 P-KN3, N-K2; 6 B-N2, O-O; 7 0-0, 8 P-Q4! and White has the edge. 4 KN-B3 B-N2 5 P-KN3 P-K4 Black has reinforced this advance with the bishop deployed at KN2.

White now continued 6 B-N2, N-K2; 7 0-0, 0-0; 8 R-K, P-Q5 (this advance, constricting White's position, may be the chief drawback to 2 P-Q3): 9 P-QR4, P-QB4; 10 N-B4, QN-B3; 11 P-B3 (the attack on Black's advanced pawn begins and the school," he said, "and only one has dropped out again." He also got two scholarships to schools in the United States and others to Turkey for the students he taught. He rented a house for orphans there were 14 living with him when he left and spent much of his money on needy students. "It was the working with the people that I will remember most," he said. "I felt and feel that an investment of time in people is the best contribution a person can make and will reap the bitggest dividends. "If we agree that through education a person will better himself, then I have changed at least 42 students directly.

They will get married and hopefully will see to it that their children stay in school. This might not have happened if they weren't helped. "That's something you can't measure an investment with people." What lies in the future for Moore, a University of Kentucky graduate who spent two years in law school before joining the Corps. "I really haven't thought about it that much," he said. "First, I'm going to spend a little time with my family.

But, then, I want to do something similar to what I did over there, perhaps up in Ap-palachia or with the Peace Corps." Any plans to return to Gonbad Kavous? "I want to return in a couple of years," he said. "I spent one fifth of my life there and have lots of friends there. I don't want to wait 25 yars and not recognize any one. "And who knows. If, after three or four years, I'm not into something meaningful, if I'm not spending my life in a worthwhile way, I know there is something there for me." summaries on the irflrrfc5 tAjfy half WHS? a WASHINGTON Iff) Bark-ley Moore thinks it's important to "love people" and as a Peace Corps member he demonstrated that belief by staying at his overseas post longer than any of the other 37,000 For six years and four months Moore made his home and work the town of Gonbad Kavous in northeastern Iran.

And he'd still be in Iran but for a promise he made to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Moore of Lexington, Ky. "I was ready to stay," the 29-year-old Moore said.

"I was scheduled to come back last year, I got on the bus and all the people were there. I went a little way and got off. I had to stay another year, i "My parents were upset that I wasn't coming home. So, I practically promised them I would return this time but I cnuld have stayed on and on," he said. And the people of the town of 40,000 wanted Moore to remain to continue his work in communitv development and teaching English.

When he left last month after having extended his original two-year tour three times the people of Gonbad Kavous made him an honorary citizen, with a medallion and scroll presented by the mayor. Among the monuments to his memory he left behind were a public library, kindergarten, two school buildings, and a modern science laboratory, i His greatest personal sntla-factlon came from an informal program that grew out of his concern for individuals-getting drop-outs a to school. Many of the young men had quit school in the sixth grade to support their families. "In the six years I was there, I got 43 bark In 0 0 6 a.m. to HP It'fz, idnight E.

Schroeder pharmacy, the 94.3 FM 1310 AM Only Yesterday nanDflQD This picture of an early winter snow storm was taken in 1861 and shows Broad street, Red Bank, looking south from Front street. The business area of the village then consisted of only three blocks) these two on either tide of Broad extending at far at Mechanic ttreet, and the north tide of Front running for approximately a block west from Wharf avenue. On th right gofofl down the block her ore th buildings of H. Curtlt the Hatter, the H. Joseph Child bakery, the F.

Morris grocery, the J. H. Bergen shoe store, and the Isadore Chon drygoods emporium. After that, its exterior hidden In this view but its spire dominating the skyline, Is the Methodist Episcopal Church. This row of buildings, including the church and the first brick residence beyond It, was destroyed by fire on Nov.

5, 1882. i Ti'hlte men White mates in 2 moves Chess Problem No. 187 is solved by 1 Q-N5..

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Pages Available:
2,394,308
Years Available:
1887-2024