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The Central New Jersey Home News from New Brunswick, New Jersey • 8

Location:
New Brunswick, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I 1 4 I --rv I I iy- I 5 v. T'' i -v -It A i v-i v- -11 I'm A s. MOMENT OF TRUTH A young lad's first rTTrT'" i haircut is a moment of truth, anxiety, mystery, 1 4 1 I i identity. So Geoffrey Covino, the son of Mr. and wiiV Phntn hi I 1 Mrs.

Carmen Covino of North Brunswick, dis- I huluo uy 4 covered last week as he went for his first haircut P') t- il'- -4 D' 11 at Sacco's Barbershop, North Brunswick. James x' txlCflCLta. 1 Sacco did the job which produced in Geoffrey, age 1 1 two, the kaleidescope of emotions seen here. a -I If "yf r. .1 1 i i i i "7 Miss Bernstein Mtor? PKe Held For Couple in Milltown Luci Going Home Bride ecomes a of interest 8 THE stationed with the Navy.

The bride graduated from New Brunswick High School, Cazenovia College, and George Washington University. The bridegroom is an alumnus of Lee H. Edwards High School in Asheville and of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. DAILY HOME NEWS NEW BRUNSWICK. N.

MONDAY, JlNE 26. 1967 Teach Child Love Believe in corporal Even feel you want to smack that child of yours? Carry on because if you don't give DELICIOUS OLD FASHIO.NK1) APPLE PIE CANDY 1.19 FULL B. RrX. 1.39 Birnn Candy OrEN EVENINCS Sayreville Site of Vows Miss Suzanne Duschock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Anthony Duschock of 16 S. Pulaski Sayreville. was married yesterday to Philip Emma, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Emma of Skytop Gardens, Sayreville.

Their wedding took place in Our Lady of Victories Church in Sayreville with the Rev. Edward Dalton officiating. The bride was escorted to the altar by her father. Miss Ellen Duschock, cousin of the bride from Perth Am-boy, was maid of honor and bridesmaids were the Misses Gloria Manganelli of Atlantic Highlands and Mary Ann Bla-kaitis of South River, cousins of the bride, and Lois Jankowski of South Amboy. John Emma of Staten Island, N.Y., was best man for his brother and ushers were Albert LeBlanc, Gregory Healy, and Richard Day, all of Elmhurst, N.Y.

A reception was held at the Brunswick Inn, East Brunswick. The couple left on a trip to Puerto Rico. They will live in the Glenwood Apartments in Old Bridge. A graduate of Rutgers Preparatory School, the bride holds a B.S. from Monmouth College and teaches English at Sayreville High School.

The bridegroom graduated from Manhattan Aviation Academy of Aeronautics and attended also New York University. He is proprietor of the Dunkin' Donuts on Route 9 in Sayreville. Miss Karen Lynn Kuhlthau and Raymond Mumford Rober-son Jr. of the U.S. Navy were married in a military wedding yesterday in St.

Paul's United Church of Christ in Milltown. The Rev. Mervin S. Gerhart officiated and the bride was given in marriage by her father. She is the daughter of Dr.

and Mrs. Merton William Kuhlthau, 61 Chestnut Milltown, and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Roberson Sr.

of Asheville, N.C. Miss Gail Kuhlthau, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses Karol Kohlhepp, Milltown; Miss Suzanne Leutwyler of Rydal, Miss Joy McGinnis of Highland Park, cousin of bride; and Miss Jan Shirley of Va. Miss Jill Edwards of Orange. cousin of the bride, was flower girl.

Cadet Gary Roberson was best man for his brother. Forming the arch of swords were Ensigns Richard Glasow of Seattle. Daniel Coyle of Orefield, Jeffrey Johnson of Ponte Verde Beach, Gregg Owens of Cressona, William McSherry of Hacken-sack, and John Lawlor of Washington, DC. Two-hundred guests attended a reception at the Forsgate Country Club. The couple left on a trip to Martha's Vineyard, and later will make their home in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where the bridegroom will be Book Guides Women Shopping in Paris A new small book has just been published which will be invaluable for women shoppers.

Its name: "Le Shopping Book of Paris." It's not only in three languages French, English and Spanish but for once this sort of book comes up with really practical advice for the lady who doesn't know her way around the Paris marketing districts. If you want to know where you can get your hair done on a Sunday, "Le Shopping" will tell you. If you can't battle with the metric system and different French clothes and shoe sizes, it will provide you with comparative tables. The main Paris stores are grouped geographically important owing to the long distance between the Champs Ely-sees group and the Opera group and the guide book also gives times of day when they are open. And if you have the kids with you, there are phone numbers of reliable baby sitters.

to Give Him a Smack him the occasional smack-even when provoked he may feel unloved. This startling new theory is advanced by Dr. Derek Miller of Tavistock Clinic, London i England) who says that parents who never strike their children give the kids the idea that their parents don't want to get involved with them. "The children may feel unloved," he adds. There's another good reason for smacking the children: "Parents who strike a blow in anger teach their children the valuable lesson that it is possible to lose control in a controlled way." 1" ss I We Ml 1 ff Miss Adele Ellen Bernstein and Peter Michel Plantec exchanged wedding vows yesterday at the Greenbrier Restaurant, North Brunswick.

Rabbi Irwin Fishbein of Elizabeth officiated. She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Jack Bernstein, 216 Ward this city, and her father gave her in marriage. The bridegroom's parents are Mr.

and Mrs. Peter H. Plantec of 308 Crestwood Drive, Mill-town. Mrs. Kenneth Wallston of Wil- Student to Return Miss Shery Dale Fettner of 325 Cedar Highland Park, is expected to return from England aboard the S.S.

Aurelia on Wednesday after spending the last academic semester studying at the University of Oxford. Miss Fettner, a student at Franconia College, Franconia, N.H., also toured in other European countries. MRS. iiiC v. r-re limantic, was matron of honor and Miss Jane Bedrick of Linden was bridesmaid.

Richard Plantec was best man for is brother and ushering were James Newton, Bound Brook, and Michael Bach, Washington D.C. A reception for 125 guests followed at the restaurant. The bride is a graduate of New Brunswick High School and holds a B.A. from Cornell University, where she majored in chemistry and sociology and was a member of the panhel-lenic council. In the fall she will work on an M.A.

in demography at Georgetown University. The bridegroom, an alumnus of the same high school, holds an A. A. from Union Junior College and a B.A. and M.A.

from American University in psychology. He was chairman of the American University Grotto and belonged to Psi Chi, national psychology honorary fraternity. He works for the Linwood Children's Center, Ellicott City, as a psychotherapist. The pair will make their home at 1917 East-West Highway, Apt. 302, Silver Spring, Md.

"7 M. PLANTEC By FRANCES LEWINE AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) Luci Johnson Nugent and her infant son leave Seton Hospital for home today after the President's grandson, six days old, gets a final checkup from his doctors. Departure from the hospital was scheduled for early afternoon. Photographers were told they could take pictures of the baby today.

White House photographers look a number of pictures of President Johnson with his daughter and grandson Patrick Lyndon in the hospital Saturday during the President's first visit. There were indications that the Nugents might release some of those pictures today. Luci and her husband Patrick J. Nugent have everything ready for the homecoming of their new baby. They hired a Swiss-born nurse, Mary Gfeller of Washington, DC.

who took care of Luci when she was a baby. Miss Gfeller. a naturalized citizen who has been in this country 30 years, arrived in Austin Friday. She had kept in touch with the Johnsons since 19 years ago when she took care of Luci, whose father then was a young congressman. A White House spokesman said Miss Gfeller is expected to stay with the President's grandson for several weeks or a month.

It was a quiet Sunday at the hospital for Luci, with Pat her only visitor. This was quite a change of pace from the excitement of Saturday when the President, between summit talks with Soviet Premier Alex-ei M. Kosygin, paid a call on his grandson. Johnson spent 30 minutes in his daughter's, hospital room. Later, presidential press secretary George Christian said Luci, sitting in bed.

had held the baby, who behaved perfectly and did not utter a cry. Friends said the President did not pick up his grandson. The President had nothing to say publicly about his meeting with his grandson, but his press spokesman told reporters afterward that, as he was leaving, Johnson smiled and said, "Patrick Lyndon doesn't seem to be nearly as concerned with the problems of the world as I am." Patron Sainte By royal decree, Sainte Irene has been appointed "patron saint of the Greek gendarmerie." FROM THE ONLY SHOP OF IT'S KIND IN NEW JERSEY Devoted Exclusively to the FITTING STYLING jxSfsm and SALE OF PIERCED EARRINGS THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL Beautifully Detailed 't Drop Earring ID" All ear piercing under controlled sterile conditions Ears Pierced S2 (with purchase of $5 or more) No Appointment Necessary Ears Pierced on Premises, Licensed Nurse Km 122A Albany New 247-C093 Open at. in Ca-f rob.rscn jr. 4 MRS.

PHILIP EMMA I.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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