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The Courier-News from Bridgewater, New Jersey • Page A8

Publication:
The Courier-Newsi
Location:
Bridgewater, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
A8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8A COURIERNEWS MYCENTRALJERSEY.COM Death Notices Glatt, Harry Middlesex; Middlesex Funeral Home Haase, Robert Bridgewater; Hagan-Chamberlain Funeral Home Kowalski, Theodore Alpha, Formerly of Manville; Finegan Funeral Home Maggio, Beatrice Lambertville; Van Horn-McDonough Funeral Home Patullo, Robert Bound Brook; Bridgewater Funeral Home Harry Glatt, 81, died Friday January 15, 2016 at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Somerset in Somerville. Born in Staten Island, NY, Harry resided in Newark and North Plain- before settling to Middlesex in 1974. An honorably discharged Veteran of the United States Army, Harry graduated from Rutgers University with a degree in Accounting. He worked for Hogland Tri Ordinate as an accountant for over twenty years prior to retiring. A man known for his sense of humor and love of animals, especially dogs, Harry en- oyed watching the New York Yankees.

Surviving are his wife Zdzislawa (Jasin- ski); three children, Sharon Ball and husband Brandon, Kathleen Chamberlain and husband Robert and David Glatt and wife Michelle and two grandchildren, Luke and Sabrina Chamberlain. Funeral services will begin on Sunday, January 17, 2016 at in Middlesex Funeral Home, 528 Bound Brook Road, Middlesex NJ 08846 followed by burial in Beth Israel Cemetery, Woodbridge. Family and friends may gather in the funeral at 11AM until service time. In lieu of owers, donations may be made to the Popcorn Park Zoo, 1 Humane Way, Forked River NJ 08731 or St. Giralda Animal Welfare Center, 3201 US 22, Somerville NJ 08876.

HARRY GLATT AGE: 81 MIDDLESEX RobertE.Haase,86,died wasthesonofTheodoreand Alicia(Edgerton)Haase. Robertwasagraduateof BoundBrookHighSchool, Classof1947andattended theValleyForgeMilitary longtimeresidentofBound terin1965.Mr.Haasehad beenanOperationsMan- agerwithApgarBrothers TruckingandApgarMotor retiringin1994.Hewasa memberofthe200Clubof tionalTankTruckAssocia- CouncilofAmericaandwas pastpresidentoftheWash- ingtonCampgroundAsso- ciation.Hewasalifelong memberofthePresbyterian ingasadeaconandelderfor manyyears. Robertissurvivedbyhis belovedwifeof68years, Betsy(Mark)Kamienowski, RuthHarris. FuneralServiceswillbegin VisitationwillbeMonday, atHagan-ChamberlainFu- Ave.BoundBrook.Burial willbeattheBoundBrook Cemetery.Memorialdona- tionsmaybemadetothe ROBERTE.HAASE To place your ad in this directory, please call Lori 732-643-3637 or email These emblems and more available consult your funeral director for details. FLAG MARINES AMERICAN LEGION ROTARY CROSS SOMERVILLE 111 N.

Gaston Ave, Somerville, NJ 08876 908-725-3111 Bruce VanArsdale, Mgr. NJ Lic. No. 3521 SOMERVILLE AP-5000608586 Funeral Home 80 Mountain Avenue Somerville, NJ 08876 908-725-4100 Joseph Cusick Mgr. NJ Lic.

No. 3230 James Cusick Dir. NJ Lic. No. 3227 CUSICK RARITAN Bongiovi Funeral Home 416 Bell Avenue Raritan, New Jersey 08869 908-725-1887 Anthony C.

Bongiovi, Founder 1911-2008 Anna Louise Bongiovi, CFSP, Manager NJ Lic. No. 2817 AP-5000649702 BRIDGEWATER James-Michael DeMaio, Executive Lic. No. 4378 707 East Main St.

Bridgewater 732-356-1116 bridgewaterfuneralhome.com AP-5000608576 MANVILLE AP-5000608581 Fucillo Warren Funeral Home Our Family Serving Your Family 205 South Main Street Manville, NJ 08835 908-725-1763 John R. Zalewski, Mgr. NJ Lic. No. 2820 www.fucilloandwarrenfuneralhome.com NORTH PLAINFIELD Scarpa Funeral Home 22 Craig Place North NJ 07060 908-756-2693 Daniel M.

Pellegrino, Mgr. NJ Lic. No. 3128 AP-5000608583 READINGTON AP-5000608585 724 Rt. 202 North Three Bridges, NJ 08887 908-782-2121 John R.

Zalewski, Mgr. NJ Lic. No. 2820 www.countrysidefuneralhome.com AP-5000775064 SOMERVILLE J.L. Apter Memorial Chapels Somerset County's ONLY Jewish Funeral Home Jason L.

Apter, Mgr. NJ Lic. No. 3650 10 West End Ave. Somerville, NJ 908-575-1800 AP-5000675180 APTERCHAPELS.COM Donating up to $500 from each funeral to the Jewish community Arrangements available in your home SOMERVILLE FUNERAL HOME 10 W.

End Somerville, NJ 08876 908-725-2079 Anna Louise Bongiovi, CFSP NJ Lic. No. 2817 AP-5000773694 SOMERVILLE TheodoreR.Kowalski,65, dence.BornAugust17,1950 thesonofthelateThaddeus KowalskiandElizabethA. BardarKowalski.Mr.Kow- alskiwasemployedatUni- heworkedasashippingand receivingclerk.Heplayed SantaClausforvariousor- ganizationsincludingthe DelawareRiverRailroad ExcursioninPhillipsburg, N.J.Tedwasanantiquecar enthusiastandenjoyedtrips tothecasino. Heissurvivedbyhiswife, JackalineKuglerKowalski, andDoreenArmigerand ville.Additionally,heissur- vivedbyhisbeloveddogs, Afuneralservicewillbe theFineganFuneralHome, 9242ndAvenueinAlpha, N.J.Therewillbecalling hoursatthefuneralhome onSundayfrom2to4pm.

Theintermentwillbepri- vate.Fineganfh.com.Inlieu madetotheAmericanDia- betesAssociationatwww. diabetes.org. THEODORER.KOWALSKI Beatrice M. Maggio, 79, of Lambertville, NJ, died on Thursday, January 14, 2016. Born in Brooklyn, NY, Bea came to Lambertville in 2007, after living on Sanibel Island, Florida for 17 years.

Earlier she had lived in Peapack, Branchburg and Montville, NJ. An advocate for welfare, Bea served as the Youth Services Commission Coordinator for Somerset County for 10 years before retiring in 1990. She was appointed by New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman to serve as a special advisor on child welfare issues. Earlier Bea had written a column for the Home News in East Brunswick regarding family life, often focusing on the day to day activities in her own household. She earned her BA in English Literature from St.

College for Women in Brooklyn. Bea was a gracious hostess and homemaker. With her husband, the late Thomas, she opened her home to family and friends. They loved entertaining. Bea was a wonderful cook and a gifted gardener.

She enjoyed golf and world travel. A favorite destination was Rome, Italy, which is still the home of many relatives. She was a voracious reader and completed the New York Times crossword puzzle in ink. Above all else, Bea was devoted to her family. She was a dedicated wife and mother and a doting grandmother.

Bea was the wife of the late Thomas E. Maggio and the daughter of the late Basilio and Maria Basili. She is survived by her children and their spouses: Suzanne Maggio-Hucek ad her husband Robert of Penngrove, CA; Michael Maggio and his wife Darlene on North Easton, MA; Elisa Maggio of Ottsville, PA and Robert Maggio and his husband Tony LaSalle of Lambertville; her grandchildren Tucker and Dylan Maggio-Hucek, Christopher, Lauren and Nicky Maggio and Annamaria Maggio; her brother and his wife Victor and Patricia Basili of Lewes, DE and her sister Annamaria Basili Zonak of Severna Park, MD. The mass of Christian burial will be offered on Monday, January 18, 2015 at 10:30 am at St. John the Evangelist Church, 44 Bridge Street, Lambertville, NJ.

Interment will follow at the Mt. Hope Cemetery, Lambertville. Visitation at the Van Horn- McDonough Funeral Home, 21 York Lambertville, NJ on Monday morning from 9 am until departure for church. Donations in memory may be made to the Association, NJ Chapter, 3 Eves Drive, Suite 310, Marlton, NJ 08053. BEATRICE M.

MAGGIO AGE: 79 LAMBERTVILLE Robert E. Patullo, died peacefully at home on Thursday, January 14, 2016. Son of the late Benjamin and Marianna Patullo, he was one of twelve children and was a lifelong resident of Bound Brook. Bobby was a graduate of Bound Brook High School. He worked as a truck driver and retired in 1994.

Bobby was a communicant of St. Church in Bound Brook and was a former member of the Bound Brook Elks. He en- oyed traveling, taking road trips, spending time with his family and friends and watching the horse races. He is predeceased by 10 of his siblings and leaves behind to cherish his memory his beloved wife of 54 years, Marie (DeFrancesco) Patullo; daughters, Maryanne Ellery of Middlesex, Karen M. Longworth of Middlesex; brother, Herbert M.

Patullo of Martinsville; grandchildren, Robert, Matthew, Kyle and countless nieces and nephews. Visiting hours will be held from 2-4 and 7-9 PM on Tuesday, January 19, 2016 at the Bridgewater Funeral Home, 707 East Main Street, Bridgewater, NJ 08807. Funeral services will begin with a prayer 9 AM on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 at the funeral home followed by a 10 AM Funeral Mass at St. Church in Bound Brook. Burial will follow at St.

Cemetery in Bridgewater. ROBERT E. PATULLO BOUND BROOK obituaries MyCentralJersey.com/Obits xpressyour con TRENTON Lawyers for Gov. Chris Christie and tate health officials asked a judge Friday to throw out a lawsuit from a nurse who was quarantined because she had contact with Ebola patients in West Africa in 2014. State lawyers said in the response to Kaci federal civil rights lawsuit that health workers acted with the safety in mind when they had her quarantined and that Christie and the other officials are immune from lawsuits over public health quarantines.

a nurse, Ms. Hickox acted in the best traditions her profession by volunteering to treat Ebola-infected patients in Sierra the state wrote. her return to the U.S., four separate readings rev ealed that she had an elevated temperature. Public ealth officials, acting in the same best traditions of their profession, properly had her The disease is spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person showing symptoms. The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey and a New York firm sued on behalf of Hickox, who was working with Doctors Without Borders in Sierra Leone during the Ebola outbreak, which killed thousands of people.

When she returned via Newark Liberty International Airport, she was stopped, questioned and sent to stay in a tent outside a Newark hospital. She said decision to quarantine her was ade out of fear and was politically motivated. Christie, a Republican, was considering a run for president and has since entered the race. Besides Christie, the lawsuit names as defendants former state health commissioner Mary and other health department employees. The lawsuit seeks at least $250,000 in compensatory and punitive amages, and lawyers say they hope the case will change a quarantine policy driven by politics ins tead of public health concerns.

The state says the primary objective of Christie, and other officials was the and general of the public during the Ebola virus outbreak. Hickox was the first person forced into New Jers mandatory quarantine for health care workers ho came into contact with Ebola patients after Christie and Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced a stronger quarantine policy than federal standards. The White House and medical groups criticized their plan. Hickox, a Maine resident at the time, said she was uestioned in Newark by numerous people, including aman who spoke to her as if she were a criminal and was wearing a weapon She said she have a fever when her temperature was first taken, but a medical staffer using a temporal scanner told her she did have a fever.

She said that was due to her being flushed from frustra- ion, but it led to her being taken to the hospital, esc orted by police cars with lights flashing and sirens blaring. Hickox twice tested negative for Ebola but was kept quarantined for more than two days. She then was driven to Maine, where she decided against fol- owing the voluntary quarantine. A judge later gave her the OK to go wherever she pleased as long as she continued daily health monitoring. She has since moved to Oregon.

Lawyers: Toss quarantined lawsuit ASSOCIATED PRESS Nurse Kaci Hickox, seen in October 2014, has filed a lawsuit against Gov. Chris Christie and state health officials. Lawyers asked a judge riday to throw out her lawsuit. TRENTON Marie Garibaldi, the first woman to serve on the New Jersey Supreme Court and the au- hor of an opinion requiring elite social clubs at rinceton University to admit women, has died. She was 81.

olleagues say she was fair and calm and kept her network of 46 former clerks together like a family. She never dwelled on her role as a pioneer for women i the legal profession, said Judge Patrick DeAlmeida, aformer clerk. was a really loving he said. was he paradigm of what you should be as a Garibaldi died Friday at Hackensack University Medical Center, where she was on the board, said hief of staff Jose Lozano. Gov.

Chris Christie said Garibaldi had the ability to cut through legal jargon and drill down to the most important issues in a case. passing is a true loss to our Christie said in a statement. Gov. Tom Kean Sr. appointed Garibaldi to the Supreme Court in 1982, and she served until 2000.

She became the first woman to head the state bar associa- ion in 1982 and served until her appointment to the ourt. Garibaldi, a tax law expert, wrote more than 225 pinions and served on dozens of committees. I 1990, she wrote the opinion in Frank v. Ivy Club, a case involving Sally Frank, a Princeton student who filed a lawsuit against the men-only clubs. Garibaldi wrote that the clubs had to end their practice of excluding women purely on the basis of gender.

Before her appointment, she served as a prosecutor for the Internal Revenue Service before going into rivate practice. Chief Justice Stuart Rabner said she leaves behind army of and stayed close with her 46 aw clerks through the years. She was a vibrant and intellectually curious per- on right up until the end of her Rabner said. a re grateful to her for all that she left First woman to serve on NJ high court dies ASSOCIATED PRESS state.

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Pages Available:
2,000,717
Years Available:
1884-2024