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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 12

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the frroisn, tfumiht. aicit in Teacher on spot again 1 i I i A 0 i I Sew sreiarrjr tsi bllkii tet CAMae4 Lt L. lefd tW prasped feiiaj refta EraJ a.si Kik tracker a nt4 Mi 4eti'm Mi reeu- Bjt up cmJ ttiis rk tk Uanl rtj54 ta Bwtify Brody that tM a tctr in ti Clmawki Frt teas ia Srpte mber. Walks Wfcea Brody, accompanied Ity Joseph Vender, a repmea-taf iv of the New Jersey Edti-tatkia Association, appeared for the tearing Thursday, Brody maiked out, cn Vender'! advice, teau BurrbiU mould not assure hiia he was ta be rehired again. According to another Mhoul tmsiee, with the notification to Brody I the second hearing tomorrow, the board included a binder on a new contract.

The board source, ho asked not to be identified, said trsvtcrs iutc a El-aCy hi a C-mrr 4 tS t.e ia list. trtc aM-red tAa unr k't rr jfeJait arU itr-VKt, F.rudy tw-Nt cU irJ TSe trather c-iii trt reacted fur comment a te all latwas )CMra A.uh ta tru-U-e wi-tended Brody should rtit kii feces rehired, a was ccQccdd that the preheat iharjc could aot be used dismis him a sain. While drtailiag the board's dissatisfaction with Brody, the trustee denied that aboli-hm; the physical education powUc was specifically aimed at him. Instead, it was claimed, the high school really is overstaffed in that department, but only with mal teachers. According to the trustee, there arc six men supervisinj rym classes and conducting driver education, but or.lv 7 I STILL GROWING! By MILES MdlXNCY tLXmOMJ FAEK -TV E-mrl ti Eeaixn i3 hdd a dicLairy be armj iomatwm Ki a tear it Us tned to dissit te lire.

IiJ Bmdy, a J-v tecfer. is tluried fey tiie fcoard bat kft the fci-H sciKKi ia Jane lTihNiwi. A bearws at fci.e fceea keW last Tharsday. but Broey walked out beraits tht board president. Jack Bur-r hilL refusd to ffkiaEy that Brady was aa employe of the school system.

Brody first fired in 1971 for aa incident in November ta hkh he allrgedly manhandled three seventh-grade students. In a hearing before the state commissioner of education in June 1972, the students testified that Brody fame up to them individually after they had misbehaved in a class. The teacher claimed he had merely reprimanded the students and touched them to keep their attention. Last October, the commissioner upheld the mistreatment charges, but ordered that the board must rehire Brody and return his back pay with the deduction of four months salary as a fine for the incident. Post abolished Brody, who had become tenured in September 1971, returned to his duties, but later in the school year the board attempted once again to get rid of him.

The board abolished one physical education post and notified Brody he no longer had a job. However, the board was told that another physical education teacher, a woman, had Saddle Srook ffkifU are suing this Junkyard, whick Ibry Rail shelter proposal made Town acts to oust truck junkyards GARFIELD The 275 Garfield rail commuters who use the Erie Lackawanna Railway will have a new, vandalproof shelter from rain and snow storms, if Frank Tilley and the Garfield City Council have their way. Tilley, Bergen County director of transportation, asked the state Board of Public Utility Commissioners yesterday to direct the Erie to put up a plexiglas shelter on the site of the burned-out passenger station. Erie officials were before the PUC for permission to re is tucked behind the Feb Container Corp. on Kenney Place.

From Route 80. the trucks are visible with underbrush around them. Some of the vehicles are in a state of direpair and one broken down, flatbed truck by a discarded shopping cart remains exactly where it was seven months ago when a reporter visited the terminal. In January, the comptroller of Fein Container, Marathon's parent company, had given the council hope that the truck terminal might solve all problems by moving away on its own. lie said the company had sit 5 7 Around Town Edited by Blanche Sterling to reach Kugler for comment this week were unsuccessful.

Roslasky received a $25 fine, and police said he made a token attempt afterward to remove some of the scrap metal and ramshackle trucks on the property. But things soon returned to normal, they said. Undaunted, the council decided to take a new tack. It authorized Township Prosecutor Walter Kern Jr. to file suit in County Court against the junkyard.

Kern says the suit is based on the contention that Roslasky has violated various township ordinances and has not paid license fees for the last six years. The fee is $1,000 a year. The suit also argues that the junkyard has expanded and is operating outside the confines permitted under a nonconforming use. If the township wins the case, the junkyard would have to close and repay the township for the uncollected license fees. No date has been set for a hearing in the case, Kern said.

Until the matter is resolved in court Roslasky can continue to amass junk on his property. Marathon different issue The issue of Marathon Truck Leasing, Inc. poses a different problem for elected officials since the company does not appear to be violating any ordinances. One councilman, however, charges that Marathon also has expanded in size since it began operating as a nonconforming use. Clusters of truck-tractors and trailers still litter the landscape at Marathon, which move the old passenger station, now nothing more than a legal technicality since the station was razed by two fires this year.

The Erie ants to be freed of the responsibility to replace the old structure. The Garfield council sent the commissioners a resolution urging that a station be built including ticket sales facilities. Garfield commuters have had to buy tickets on their trains, or at the Hobokcn terminal, or by mail since the first fire damaged the station in January. Arlington, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Tuesday, Health Center, 464 Valley Brook Ave. Appointments, call 939-5191. Rutherford Special summer series of services, with Dr. Fred Holloway preaching, continues Sunday, 9:30 a.m., Presbyterian Church. Informal hymn sing, a feature.

Children may attend earlier part of service; religious arts and crafts for them in parish house during latter part. Dial-A-Thought, 438-8888, around the clock. Rutherford New Chess Club meets, 7 p.m. Mondays, 16 Union Ave. Membership open but subject to committee approval.

Bergenfield Entertainment by Comedy Four, Senior Citizens Club 50 meeting, 1 p.m. Tuesday, All Saints Church House. Bus trip to Lobster Shanty leaves the church 10 a.m. Sept: trip Brotherhood Winery leaves 11 a.m. Sept.

20; to Staff Photo bv Ed Hill ABANDONED LOOK Vehicles at Saddle though some trucks have been moved, others Brook truck terminal look neglected. AI- remaine untouched for months. By BARBARA ARCHER Stff Writr SADDLE BROOK Although township ordinances prohibit junkyards and truck terminals, at least two such businesses are operating in Saddle Brook to the frustration of local officials. Passaic Motor Trucks and Parts Co. and Marathon Truck Leasing, long criticized as eyesores, have continued to operate as nonconforming uses since enactment of the ordinances.

Under the township zoning code, established companies may remain in operation even if similar businesses are later outlawed. Despite this, officials have contended since the beginning that Passaic Motor Trucks, a junkyard owned by Stanley Roslasky, violated the ordinance. But repeated efforts to have the yard at Midland Avenue and Route 46 declared illegal have failed. Town loses suit Last year, the township took Roslasky to court but lost the case. Municipal Court Judge William Scheele ruled that the junkyard predated the ordinance and had a right to remain.

A disgruntled Township Council complained at the time that the case had been poorly handled since other alleged infractions by the company had hot been brought to the court's attention. The councilmen said that whether the yard was authorized to remain in town or not, Roslasky had operated it without a license. They added that the yard had grown beyond its original boundaries, and the junk was overflowing onto state- and township-owned property. This spring the junkyard problem revived. On April 27, police filed a complaint against Roslasky for illegally parking vehicles on a dedicated public street.

The street, Van Bussum Avenue, exists on paper only but belongs to the township. The summons was prompted by the council's renewed complaints that local ordinances were not being enforced, and by Mayor Edward F. Kugler's pledge to crack down on the junkyard. The mayor said he intended to have the junkyard ticketed every day until the violation ceased, but only one summons was issued. Several attempts Career Club SPORTSWEAR HARD TO FIT TAIL or BIG MEN'S APPAREL COMPLETE DEPARTMENTS In Shoes, Outerwear, Clothing KRUG'S tali 16 N.

Washington Ave. Bcrgenheld 387-0100 685 Anderson Cliffside Pork 943-2166 DAVID ERODY Fares bearing three female teachers al-thouh there are more girls than boys in the school. PUC staff specialists are to report their recommendation to the commissioners within a month. Southwest Chief Reporter; Un McGuire. Reporters; Barkara Archer, Miles McBurney, and Paul Lie-kermtrt.

Telephone: 646-4100 Around Town, Blanche Sterling 646-4348 Breezy Point, Lake, Oct. 18. Greenwood CresskiH Parents for Extended Educational Services public meeting Tuesday, 8:15 p.m., public library. Harrington Park Northern Valley Corvettes drum and bugle corps car wash, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Saturday, A.M.E. Zion Church, next to Grand Way, Closter. The corps is sponsored by American Legion Post 30 of Harrington Park and VFW Post 761 of Dumont. Donation $1, to send corps to American Legion Parade competition, Sept. 7, Wildwood.

Thomson graduates TENAFLY Seaman Apprentice William C. Thompson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Thomson Jr.

of 76 DePeyster has completed the Storekeeper School at the Coast Guard Training Center at Petaluma, Calif. the Assembly, I have given highest pride in co-sponsoring legislation Assembly, I intend to do every the legislation described above aimed at helping our veterans. Using convent for seniors gains say kas espaaded illegally. plans to move to a new terminal in Sccaurus in the fall. Daniel Scapatura, president of Marathon, refused to com-ment this week on the company's plans.

Through a spokeswoman, he said the earlier reports had been premature. "We're not saying yes or no," she said. However, a Fein official said that Marathon was seeking permission from officials in another community to build a plant. If the reports of the proposed move are true, it appears unlikely that the firm will be leaving soon. The nearest sheltered-care home is Villa St.

Andrews in Paramus. O'Lenick says relatively mi-n renovations of about $30,000 to $40,000 must be made on the three-story, brick and concrete building. The fire-retardant, 20-year-old building, which has been designated as a public fallout shelter, contains two recreation rooms, two sundecks, and a library. The Rev. Claude Lenehan, pastor of St.

Anne's, says the four nuns now living in the building will be moved. Father Lenehan said the convent is nearly empty because of a lack of women currently entering religious life. St. Anne's is the second church in West Bergen which has sought to convert a convent to another use. The Most Blessed Sacrament C.

Church in Franklin Lakes had planned to open a proposed Residents in the vicinity of Indian Lake Park had circulated a petition calling for some action against vandalism there. That effort stopped when the residents learned of the council's planned action. Special police have been patrolling Indian Lake Park regularly for the past two weeks and residents report improved But several teen-agers last night complained that the police are interfering in their normal recreational activities. Two youths said they were stopped from playing basketball at the lighted courts and others said they have been told to leave the park at 10 p.m. Hill suggested that, in the latter case, the police were merely enforcing an 18-month-old anti-loitcring ordinance, and not subjecting the young people to a curfew.

The a linking ordinance carries a maximum fine of $500 and a 90 day jail term. A public hearing on the measure is scheduled for Sept. 18. Where i stand HELPING OUR VETERANS By JOE RURA Staff Writer FAIR LAWN St. Anne's R.

C. Church last night received preliminary Planning Board approval to establish the area's first home for the aged. The church plans to convert a little-used, 43-room convent into a facility that would accommodate 36 elderly residents from Fair Lawn, Elm-wood Park, and Saddle Brook. Project spokesman Paul O'Lenick says he expects the home to be in use by Jan. 1 if tained in the next few months.

'Lower than most' The plans still must be submitted to the Board of Adjustment and the Borough Council, says O'Lenick. He said the necessary certificate of need has been issued by the state Board of Health. Today and tomorrow Carlstadt Neighborhood Carnival Against Dystrophy, through 5 this afternoon, 331 Washington St. Games for children; refreshments. Ringmaster, Karen Shoberg.

Coming up Elmwood Park Jewish Community Center Sisterhood membership tea, 8:30 p.m. Monday, home of Mrs. Thelma Kenwood, 80 Glen-wood Ave. Those planning to attend, call Lee Harth at 791-6750 or Lynn Rothstein at 791-5233. Lodi Neighborhood Carnival Against Dystrophy, 10 a.m.

Saturday, home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Price, 118 Prospect ringmaster, daughter Carol Ann. Games, refreshments.

Lyndhurst Free hearing tests, residents of Lyndhurst, Kearny, East Rutherford, Rutherford, and North CARLSEN FOR ALUMINUM SIDING 488-9334 the studio dancing is growing You may see this lovely process in your own child. Through Modern Dance your child will learn to use his nalural body positions to build posture, strength and learn coordination. It creative, artful and healthy fun. Branches Closler, Caldwell, Englewood, Ridgewood, Woodcliff Lake. Call 342-2989 for a free brochure or visit our mam Studio In Hackensack on Wed, Aug.

29 10 a.m. children's class; 7-9 p.m., teen-adult classes or Tours. Aug. 30 p.m. teen adult class.

center for modern dance education EcuVd Avenue Hjckmsick 142-2919 Non profit, Tax-exempt Institution Member of The North Jersey Cultural Council Residenl Art Group of Bergen Community College, Paramus, N.J, IA By Assemblyman Edward Hynes HELPING OUR VETERANS Throughout my first term in Public drinking ban priority to the vital matter of veterans rights and benefits. As an Catholic high school for girls this fall in a former convent, but dropped the idea because of a lack of enrollment. Residents divided on street deeds WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP More than 200 residents have petitioned the Township Council to leave two streets involved in the Area Four road and drainage system in then-present condition. The council is considering giving up its rights to Pershing and Donald Avenues and deeding the streets to homeowners who have property fronting in them. However, there were as many residents at last' night's council meeting, advocating leaving the streets open as there were expressing wishes for the additional property.

Council President John Cala-mari said that while no final decision has been reached on whether to undedicate the streets, it is probably the course the council will take. The deeding of the land back to the residents will have to be done in separate ordinances. Donald and Pershing are presently unimproved streets and run east-west. By closing the streets, the number of through streets in the section is reduced. Hardship claimed Last night, many residents argued that closing the streets would prove to be a hardship on motorists and children.

The closing of the two streets eliminates a straight-through run to Ridgewood Avenue. Other residents said they didn't want the additional burden of taxes and upkeep on more property. Ronald Marasco of Hickory Street objected that the council had not contacted the people involved in the turnback of the land. He quotes the agency as say ing there is a neea wr i.uuu low and middle-income hous-units for the elderly in the ing three designated communities. O'Lenick says the nonprofit, nonsectarian Fair Lawn home for the aged will be the only truly middle-income facility of its kind in the county, with a monthly rent of about per person.

This would include meals and recreation programs. "The cost will be lower than most," says O'Lenick. "The 11 or so homes for the aged run from $212 to $720. They tend to De either low-cost charitable or hieh-cost luxury." The facility is planned as a sheltered-care home rather than a nursing home. The dis-.

tinction means that potential residents will have to pass physicals to establish that they are in generally good health and do not require nursing care. The council last night introduced an ordinance which prohibits consumption of alcoholic beverages in public places, in private vehicles, or on private property without the owner's permission. However, the ordinance in cludes a provision for the council to issue a permit allowing drinking for specific events. A provision to establish a 10 p.m. curfew in borough parks was deleted by the council in caucus before the public meeting.

Mayor Malcolm W. Hill cautioned some 20 teen agers at tending the session, that the council would enact the curfew if vandalism at the parks is not ended. "Accept that not as a threat but as a warning," Hill said. The mayor said there has been thousands of dollars worth of vandalism this year. He said toilets, light stanchions, and trees have been uprooted and debris has been strewn throughout the parks.

Army officer in Vietnam, I witnessed at first hand the efforts and sacrifices of thousands of young Americans. And when I was elected to the Legislature, I determined to take a leading role in insuring that all New Jersey veterans, whether from the Vietnam era or earlier, would receive every possible consideration from the state. LITTLE FERRY In an effort to curb vandalism in the parks, the Borough Council is planning to outlaw drinking in public places. But it is stopping short of a companion measure which would establish a park curfew. While concerning myself with all veterans, I've taken particular interest in those of the Vietnam period, since I feel there is a real danger they will be overlooked in the aftermath of a less than popular war.

As one means of preventing this, I've introduced a bill to provide guaranteed, low interest loans to Vietnam era veterans seeking to establish or reestablish small businesses or professions in the state or to purchase household 1 PICTURE FRAliG 1 appliances and furnishings. This bill is patterned after legislation affording comparable assistance to veterans of World War II and Korea. In another area, I've taken CUSTOM MADE FRAMES To fit your specification! MATTING MAT CUTTING calling for the state to reimburse educational institutions that provide tuition credits to Vietnam era veterans. We all know that education is a primary need of many of our returning servicemen, and this bill will do much to ease their financial problems as la! 11 they return to the classroom. During a second term in the thing I can to secure passage of and to introduce still other bills OVAL SQUARE FRAMES NEEDLEPOINT WORK FRAMED All work done on premises LENNY'S 194 GETTY AVE.

AT MADISON AVE. ACROSS STREET FROM MADISON PLAZA DINER PATERS0N 525-1818 ROUT! 80 USE CLIFTON tXIT Vi BLOCK AWAY ft For I firmly believe it is the responsibility of those of us in state government to see to it that the men and women of New Jersey who have served our country receive the recognition and thanks they deserve. Paid For By Allan Sklar, 453 Farview Paramus rfti tl tilmim ifcyHr.

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Pages Available:
3,310,506
Years Available:
1898-2024