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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 75

Publication:
Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
75
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

C14 Asbury Park PressFriday, September 20, 1985 Births Hospital releases second of three Frustaci infants Sept. 2, a boy. Lenore and Randy Romero, Brick Township. Sept. 2.

a boy Cindy and Bryan Bittner. Berkeley Township, Sept. 2. a girl. Kathenne and Kevin Boyan, Lake-hurst.

Sept. 2. a boy. Jennifer and Gregory Lauretta. Berkeley Township.

Sept. 3. a boy. Joan and Robert Doucette. Ship Bottom.

Sept. 3. a girl. Robert and Pamela Christen, Lake-hurst, Sept. 4.

a boy Maryann and Dennis Rowic, Lacey Township, Sept. 4, a girl. Patricia and Frank Parker, Toms River. Sept. 5.

a boy. Kelly and Steven Forcier, Brick Township, Sept. 5, a girl. Deborah Ann and Phillip Dillard, South Toms River, Sept. 5, a boy.

Patricia Chalecki, Barnegat Township, Sept. 5, a boy. Debbie Pomponio, Jackson Township, Sept. 5, a boy. Patricia and Timothy Garufi, Toms River, Sept.

6, a boy. Paula and Frank Vaduro. Seaside Heights. Sept. 6.

a girl. Karen and Lawrence Loftus, Toms River, Sept. 6, a girl. Lori and Victor Basinski, Toms River. Sept.

8, a boy. Donna and James Recker, Stafford Township, Sept. 8. a girl. Judith and George Moretti, Berkeley Township, Sept.

9, a girl. Jeannine and Marc Kamm, Toms River, Sept. 9, a girl. Donna Neal, South Toms River, Sept. 9, a girl.

Mary and Jerry Hand, Toms River, Sept. 9. a girl. Nancy and Jim Dean, Toms River, Sept. 9, a boy.

Mona and Howard Butler, Berkeley Township, Sept. 9, a girl. Susan Finley, Seaside Heights, Sept. 10, a boy. Kathryn Milling, Manchester Township, Sept.

10, a girl. Barbara and Kitchell Storozynsky, Brick Township, Sept. 11, a boy. Darlene Matura, Toms River, Sept. 11, a girl.

Dipak and Jayshree Shah, Holmdel Township, Sept. 13. a girl. Andrew and Harriette Motz. Red Bank.

Sept. 13. a girl. John and Maureen Winstanley. Middle-town Township, Sept.

13. a girl. William and Kathryn Borkowski, Hazlet Township, Sept. 13, a girl. Thomas and Theresa Pheasant, Marlboro Township, Sept.

13. a boy. Daniel and Diane Kirby, Keansburg, Sept. 14. a girl.

Gopalarkrich and Hema Ramamurthy. Middletown Township. Sept. 14, a girl. Thomas and Angela Smith, Keansburg.

Sept. 14. a girl. Brian and Robin Baumann, Hazlet Township, Sept. 14, a girl.1 Nick and Eloise DiGuglielmo, Tinton Falls, Sept.

14, a girl. Bruce and Kathleen Haynes, Middle-town Township, Sept. 14, a boy. Charavarti and Pushpa Ashoka, Mana-lapan Township, Sept. 14, a boy.

Daniel and Carol Kuderna, Ocean Township, Sept. 15. a boy. Burkttt and Sharon Collins, Eaton-town, Sept. 1 5, a boy.

Martin and Andrea Singer, Fair Haven, Sept. 15. a boy. Dean and Nancy Stevens, South Amboy. Sept.

15, a boy. James and Marie Jimenez, Keansburg, Sept. 15, a girl. Dennis and Lynn Devino, Aberdeen Township, Sept. 15, a girl.

Augustine and Stancy Thundathil, Middletown Township, Sept. 15, a girl. Frank and Patricia Leiste, Red Bank, Sept. 15, a boy. Community Memorial Hospital Toms River Catherine and William Atchley, Toms River, Aug.

30, a boy. Miranda and Patrick Wozniak, Beach-wood, Aug. 31, a girl. Gayle and Daniel Miller, Stafford Township, Aug. 31, a boy.

Kathleen and Kenneth Helmick, Bar-negat Township, Aug. 31, a boy. Frances and Lawrence Brain. Lake-hurst, Aug. 31, a girl.

Maureen and John Hayes, Toms River, Sept. 1, a boy. Laura Tesalona, Jackson Township, deen Township. Sept. 7.

a boy. Keith and Deborah Trojack, Middle-town Township, Sept. 7. a boy. Richard and Barbara Farrell.

Sayre-ville, Sept. 8. a boy. Daniel and Domenica Stewart. Middle-town Township.

Sept. 8. a boy. Matthew and Corrmg Stanjeski. Middletown Township, Sept.

8. a boy. Brian and Helen Kmsella, Keyport, Sept. 8. a girl.

Richard and Kathleen Picataggio. Hazlet Township, Sept. 9. a boy. Daniel and Yvonne Walden, Monmouth Beach, Sept.

9. a boy. Clay and Amanda Wilbanks, Sea Bright. Sept. 9.

a boy. Frank and Joanne Adamczyk. Union Beach, Sept. 9, a boy. Kenneth and Kathleen King, Atlantic Highlands, Sept.

9, a girl. Michael and Lynn Anstadt, Middle-town Township, Sept. 9, a girl. Mark and Beverly Poyner, Eatontown, Sept. 10.

a boy. Arthur and Patricia Rose, Howell Township, Sept. 10, a boy. James and Melissa Sullivan, Middle-town Township, Sept. 10, a girl.

Frank and Judith Oliva, Hazlet Township, Sept. 10, a boy. Robert and Winona Greene. Eaton-town, Sept. 10.

a girl. Barry and Laurie Shank. Rumson, Sept. 10, a girl. Victor and Karen Huhn, Long Branch, Sept.

11, a girl. Robert and Kathleen Clayton, Mat-awan, Sept. 11, a boy. Michael and Beverly O'Malley, Key-port, Sept. 11.

a boy. Keith and Susanne Steiner, Middle-town Township, Sept. 11, a girl. Harvey and Lori Tenen, Aberdeen Township, Sept. 11, a girl.

John and Cathy Babiarz, Middletown Township, Sept. 12, a girl. Joseph and Linda Ginelli, Lakewood, Sept. 12, a boy. Tony and Nina Kousoulos, Middletown Township, Sept.

13, a girl. David and Winifred Bianset, Red Bank, Sept. 13, a boy. Joseph and Dorothy Haake, Long Branch, Sept. 13, a girl.

Freehold Art HotplUI FrMhold Townthip Steven and Althea Nusblatt, Jackson Township. Aug. 13. a boy. Lorraine Connelly.

Freehold. Sept. 2, a boy. Stephen and Mmdi Kosmowski, South Amboy. Sept.

4. a girl. William Dougherty and Debra Page, Keansburg. Sept. 5.

a boy. James and Shirley Jacob. Upper Freehold Township. Sept. 6.

a boy. Isaac and Barbara Spann. Keyport. Sept. 6.

a boy. Riverview Medical Center Red Bank Robert and Maryann Mobile. Middle-town Township, Aug. 6, a girl. Robert and, Valerie Mmarchi, Toms River.

Aug. 20. a boy. William and Celeste Villany, Middle-town Township, Sept. 2, a girl.

Daniel and Mei-Yu Shih, Middletown Township, Sept. 2, a girl. Joseph and Cheryl Dweck, Little Silver, Sept. 3, a boy David and Lisa Kennedy, Middletown Township, Sept. 3, a girl.

Alfonse and Carolyn Rossomando, Highlands, Sept. 3, a girl. Paul and Deborah Abrahamsen, Middletown Township, Sept. 4, a boy. Michael and Geraldine Cuccurullo, Keansburg.

Sept. 4, a boy. Michael and Stacey Killeen, Hazlet Township, Sept. 4, a girl. James and Janice Shields, Brick Township, Sept.

4, a boy. William and Joann Hickman, Middle-town Township, Sept. 5, a boy. Gary and Maureen Kochon, Brick Township, Sept. 5, a girl.

Pablo and Evizidis Rodriguez, Aberdeen Township, Sept. 6, a girl. Robert and Cynthia Orban, Keyport, Sept. 6, a boy. Roger and Mary Ellen Kothe, Middle-town Township, Sept.

6, a boy. Walter and Bernadette Hand, Keansburg, Sept. 6, a boy. Michael and Mary Sherran, Middle-town Township, Sept. 6, a boy.

Stephen and Lynne Anne Schutz, Holmdel Township, Sept. 6. a girl. Tracy and Deanna Woodson, Aber lungs to collapse with each breath. Doctors say it is too early to tell if the damage will have any lasting effect The parents, Patti and Samuel Frustaci of Riverside, brought along their daughter, Patricia Ann, who was released from the hospital last month.

Dressed in a baby-blue jumpsuit, she gurgled and cried and appeared quite healthy. Her brother, Stephen Earl, will be released in one to four weeks, Ms. Johnson said. The septuplets were conceived after Mrs. Frustaci took the fertility drug Pergonal.

The English teacher and her husband, an industrial salesman, were already parents to 1 -year-old Joseph Emanuel when the infants were delivered May 21 by Cacsarean section. It was the first reported birth of septuplets in the United States. Mrs. Frustaci also had used Pergonal to become pregnant with the first boy. The septuplets were 12 weeks premature.

All weighed less than two pounds at birth and suffered from hyaline membrane disease. One infant was stillborn. The sickest and tiniest baby, David Anthony, nicknamed "Peanut," died 64 hours after birth. James Martin died June 6 and Bonnie Marie died June 9. The Associated Press ORANGE, Calif.

Linked to an oxygen tank larger than his body, the second of three surviving Frustaci septuplets headed home yesterday in his parents' arms after spending his life in incubators and an intensive-care ward. Four-month-old Richard Charles Frustaci, dressed in a baby-blue bonnet and romper, shivered and cried as he was loaded into the family's compact car at Childrens Hospital of Orange. "He looks great and was crying his lungs out," hospital spokeswoman Laura Johnson said. "He was a pretty active baby." The five-pound, seven-ounce infant was connected to a cardiac monitor and had a tube in his nose leading to the three-foot-long oxygen tank. "His lungs weren't absorbing enough oxygen," Ms.

Johnson said. "The doctors think that he'll be on it for several months. It's not something that will keep him hospitalized, but it will have to be monitored highly. He's growing and his lungs are starting to progress. The home environment is better for him." The infant's trembling is not unusual for a premature infant of his age, Mrs.

Johnson said. She said the infant's lungs were scarred by his bout with hyaline membrane disease, which is common to premature infants and causes the 17 teachers sent to jail for striking The Associated Press MAUNnrc aujeo SKKS VA TV. Mi rv. i if PAWTUCKET, R.I. The lone teachers' strike in New England has landed 53 teachers in prison, left 8,200 children with no classes to attend and torn this former textile capital at its scams.

But that's nothing new for Pawtucket, the home of 10 teachers' strikes since World War II. Seventeen teachers went to jail yesterday for refusing to obey a judge's back-to-work order, joining 36 of their colleagues already in custody. Despite a history of walkouts dating to 1946, teachers deny being unduly militant or setting a bad example for students by striking and defying the courts. "I'm just telling them I'm standing up for what I believe," said Laraine Rawnsley, a school teacher. "I see it is as a lesson in morality, a lesson in courage and a lesson in civil rights," said Richard A.

Skolnik, an attorney for the 600-member Pawtucket Teachers Alliance. "It's an example of how one has to address, in certain instances, inadequacies in the system." Many Pawtucket residents are fed up with union rhetoric and the salary fight causing the walkout, which is illegal under Rhode Island law. "They ought to keep them teachers in (jail) and throw the key away. They want to make more money than the mayor," said Gordon Graham, a retired textile worker. "I'm a guy who goes for the union, but this is just too much.

It's ridiculous." Ruth LaDuke said she fears the strike is setting a bad example for her two children. "You try to bring up your kids right, not to break the law. Then their teachers break the law, and they're supposed to be the ones who teach your kids all they know about what's right and wrong," she said yesterday, the 12th school day of the walkout. Tim Waters, another resident, was more sympathetic toward the teachers. "I don't want inexperienced teachers teaching my daughter just because the city can't sign a contract," he said.

In the last exchange of bargaining proposals made public, the school committee offered a 5 percent raise now, 6 percent next year, and third-year raise to be negotiated. Teachers asked for raises totaling 19.5 percent. Ms. Rawnsley and other teachers say three days of fining and jailing by Superior Court Judge Corinne P. Grande have not broken the union's will.

Critics, however, say some teachers want to obey Grande's order, but feel intimidated by the union. Maurice J. Ferland, who has seen nine strikes in his 30 years the Pawtucket school system, was one of a handful of teachers to obey the court order. He resigned Wednesday after receiving what he described as harassing phone calls branding him a "scab" and other derogatory names. One caller warned "I'd be taken care of," he said.

The former biology teacher at Slater Junior High School echoed the feeling of many parents. "I don't believe a teacher has the right to set a bad example," he said. "Kids are supposed to look up to a teacher, not see him bused off to jail." Many students see the strike in terms more pragmatic than philosophical. "I don't care about the strike. I just want to graduate," said Manny Delgedo, a junior at Tolman High SAVE $301 WHITE IRON SOFADAYBED PLUS BONUS INNERSPRING MATTRESS 499 Reg.

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Pages Available:
2,394,022
Years Available:
1887-2024