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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 24

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE RECORD B-3 THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1993 Garfield makes 3rd stab at Albert 'Sabin, developer off oraipolio vaccibe By CHARLES SAY0AH Record Staff Writer GARFIELD The City Council is trying for the third time to Eut a parcel of city-owned land ack on the tax rolls. At Tuesday's meeting, it introduced an ordinance soliciting bids on land and an old building on Passaic Street. The structure was formerly known as Smitty's garage. If the ordinance is adopted, the sale would be conducted on May 6. The ordinance sets the minimum bid at $100,000, compared with $150,000 the council had sought in December, when it last tried to sell the land, and the $50,000 a lone potential bidder said he would have offered in January, when the auction was finally conducted.

The council could not sell the old garage in January because the only interested buyer, contractor James Busciglio of Commerce Street, was not prepared to pay the minimum price. The council had run into a similar problem five years ago when it first tried to sell the property. Tenaf ly schools budget set at Hams, schools business administrator. The tax increase for the average homeowner was still being calculated Wednesday. Williams said he expects to make changes in the preliminary budget figures.

The current negotiations on teachers contracts also will affect the budget, he said. In 1992-93, school taxes increased by an average of $208. The owner of an average home in the of the polio virus that could infect people and stimulate immunity to polio without producing the disease itself. Dr. Sabin's vaccine had several advantages.

It could be transported easily, stored for long times, required only one dose (compared to four for Salk's) and, most important, was given orally on a sugar cube or in juice. By the late 1960s, it was virtually impossible to obtain Salk's vaccine in the United States. The two remained bitter toward each other. "Albert Sabin was out for me from the very beginning," Salk said two years ago. "In 1960, he said to me, just like that, that he was out to kill the killed vaccine." Dr.

Sabin was no more complimentary. "It was pure kitchen chemistry," Dr. Sabin said of Salk's vaccine. "Salk didn't discover anything." However, notified of his rival's death, Salk was more conciliatory. He said it was "a great loss.

His contributions toward the control of polio will endure long in the future." In a statement Wednesday, Dr. Hioshi Nakajima, director of the World Health Organization, called Dr. Sabin "one of the great pioneers of medical research in our century. Thanks to his polio vaccine, millions have been saved from this terrible disease." Nakajima predicted the disease would be fully eradicated from the Earth by the end of the decade. "He enriched my life and I think he enriched the lives of many people," said Heloisa Sabin, his third wife.

After first using an attenuated By BURT A. FOLKART Lot Angetet Timet Newt Service Dr. Albert Sabin, the single-minded, domineering scientist who initially exposed himself to the oral vaccine that ultimately overcame polio in the United States, died Wednesday in Washington. He was 86. Dr.

Sabin, whose family settled in Peterson after emigrating from Poland, died at Georgetown University Medical Center of congestive heart failure, said his daughter, Amy Home. Dr. Sabin was admitted to the hospital Feb. 22 after suffering heart failure. Although he had been ill intermittently, he remained active until shortly before his death.

In June, he published a paper in the Proceedings in the National Academy of Sciences in which he argued that the unusual nature of the AIDS virus makes it inherently impossible to develop a vaccine against it. The paper was to become the final skirmish between Dr. Sabin and Dr. Jonas Salk, who was his prime competitor in the international race to develop a polio vaccine and who is now one of the leaders in the AIDS vaccine search. Salk claimed an initial victory in the polio race in 1955, developing a killed-virus vaccine that eliminated 90 percent of the disease in the United States and that is still used in some areas of the world, such as Scandinavia.

But complete control of polio occurred only with Dr. Sabin's development of a live-virus vaccine that was approved for general use in 1961. Dr. Sabin isolated a strain LVUDUUnST: Under fire selling land The council also had been trying to unload old School 1 on Commerce Street in the same auctions that had Smitty's on the block. In January, the council set a $200,000 minimum bid on the former school.

This time, however, the school is not for sale. City Attorney Lawrence Jaskot said the council discovered defects in the title when the city transferred the property to the school district in the 1920s. The property may not be sold until the problem is corrected, Jaskot said. borough assessed at $174,000 paid $4,176 in school taxes, Included in the tentative budget is a capital outlay of for renovations, repairs, and drainage work at the district's four elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school. The renovation of classrooms to meet fire codes, the purchase of instructional materials, and the replacement of a school bus are also planned.

dure and taking personal control of awarding discretionary grants. Ellis told the SCI that top Democratic lawmakers, including then-Assembly Speaker Joseph Doria, gave him a list of districts that should get the grants. "The record leaves no doubt that the commissioner was subjected to political pressure from members of our state government to make an award to the Lyndhurst school district for reasons other than the educational criteria established by the Department of Education," the committee report states. "It is equally clear that the commissioner succumbed to that political pressure." The state withheld $1.4 million from Lyndhurst's aid allotment this year to make up for the rescinded grant and, in its preliminary decision Wednesday, the committee affirmed that decision. The panel also directed that the state withhold $1.5 million from the district's aid in 1993-94 to compensate for the second grant.

Lyndhurst and attorneys for the commissioner of education will now have 10 days to respond to the legal committee's preliminary report. Committee Chairman Robert Woodruff said he hopes that the committee will give final approval to the report March 17 and that the full board will endorse it on April 7. story proves false stories," Police Chief George Faso said less than an hour after meeting with the girl and school officials. The girl, whose name is being withheld, apparently fell during her 11:40 a.m. lunch break but told school officials that she had been attacked by a mysterious assailant.

Public NotJcet Public Notlce. By BLANCA A. NIEVES Record Staff Writer TENAFLY The Board of Education has approved a tentative $24.4 million spending plan for the 1993-94 school year, which is 5.8 percent higher than this year's budget. If the budget is adopted, the amount to be raised by property taxes will be $21,255,176 an increase of $1,274,662 from the 1992-93 figure, said Michael Wil- POLICE From Page B-1 to leave work about three hours early once or twice a week while on the 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.

shift. No criminal charges were filed, but Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy criticized the borough's deputy chief for knowing of the practice and failing to report it to Logatto. Logatto, Fahy said, should have known of the practice. Officials say the newest flap-over the department began late last year when Logatto decided to assign a detective in the five-member bureau to patrol duty.

The detective appealed the decision to the mayor and council, which overruled Logatto and reinstated the officer as a detective. Logatto, however, faults the grievance hearing because it was held while he was ill. He said he later was told by Mayor James Plosia that everything would remain "status quo." Logatto says that when he left for vacation in December, Plosio immediately assigned the detective to duty at Borough Hall, where he has been working since. Logatto said the officer works in the areas of emergency management and compliance with the state's Right to Know Act. The officer wears a gun, he said, but not a uniform.

"The man is not doing his job," Logatto said. "I no longer consider him a member of the Police Department." Plosia said police chiefs in the state have "an extraordinary amount of power," and the ordinance would "give security to those in the detective bureau" because they no longer could be removed from their post without cause. Although the council decided to reinstate the detective, Plosia said, "the chief is not abiding by it." Public Notice Public Notice. From Page B-1 tee's draft report states. That finding contrasts sharply with the SCI's view of Lyndhurst's actions.

In a letter accompanying its report, the SCI blamed Ellis for much of the controversy and effectively exonerated Lyndhurst officials, saying they apparently acted with "good intentions" when they submitted a patently misleading grant application. Lyndhurst officials have explained those misrepresentations by saying that Ellis and former state Sen. Gabriel Ambrosio, D-Lyndhurst, had promised them that they would get the grant, and that the application was a mere formality. After it surfaced that Lyndhurst had used the $1.4 million to cut taxes, Ellis rescinded the grant but allowed the district to keep it as an advance on its 1992-93 state aid. Aides to Governor Florio subsequently arranged for $1.5 million from a state health plan to be tunneled through the Township of Lyndhurst to the school district.

The original $1.4 million grant to Lyndhurst came from a $25 million pot of money that the Legislature set up for distribution to communities that were ostensibly hurt by a new state funding formula. The committee report criticizes Ellis for abandoning the Department of Education's normal proce Paterson recalls bright student "I 4 virus to vaccinate chimpanzees, Dr. Sabin tried it on himself to test its safety. In January 1955, he began inoculating prisoners at the federal reformatory in Chillicothe, Ohio, who had volunteered for the tests. On the basis of preliminary trials by the World Health Organization, which supervised large programs in the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Mexico, and Singapore, the Sabin vaccine was approved for use in the United States.

Active and curious even into old age, he was developing an aerosol vaccine against measles. "The spray vaccine was supposed to be my swan song. Then I was going to return to my home here in Washington with my wife and enjoy life," he said in a 1983 interview. Dr. Sabin was deeply interested in Israeli affairs and served as president of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel from 1970 to 1972.

Back home, he became a consultant at the National Institutes of Health, then a professor at the Medical University of South Carolina and a visiting professor at Georgetown University in Washington. He lived long enough to receive dozens of national and international awards, among them the presidential Medal of Freedom in 1986, the highest civilian prize in the United States. Dr. Sabin is survived by his wife, whom he wed at age 66. This article contains material from The Associated Press.

"I mean, some people have it. Some people don't," Schwartz said. "He had the great ability to learn, to understand. He knew he was there to get an education, and he made the most of it." One of Dr. Sabin's many relatives in the Paterson area is Martin Krugman, a cousin who recently moved from Paterson to Verona with his wife, Tippe.

He remembered Dr. Sabin as "a very dedicated, always serious person" who was proud of his ties to the city. Tippe Krugman called him "a very brilliant man. Very scholarly." The Krugmans recalled that Dr. Sabin and Dr.

Krugman, as young men, worked at the Grand-view Amusement Park in Little Falls to earn money during high school and college. Schwartz also remembered Dr. Sabin's triumphant return to Paterson in 1963, after the doctor had come up with the oral vaccine for polio. The reason for the visit was the 40th reunion of his graduating class at Boys High School later Central High School. "We all looked up to him," Schwartz said.

"He was like a celebrity. But he wasn't into that big man stuff in which one might think 'My life is too big to come back to my high He was a very plain man." prisoners. A doctor friend in 1927 was mugged by four robbers and died a slow, agonizing death from gangrene as a result. Mr. Kutner promised him that he would fight any effort to prolong his friend's life, and from that sprang Mr.

Kutner's work on the living will, which gives instructions against the use of extraordinary medical procedures to prolong a person's life. After long battles that seemed to him like climbing Mount Everest, he said, he persuaded Catholic Bishop Fulton J. Sheen to sign a living will. Finally, in 1951, Pope Pius XII helped head off Catholic and religious opposition to a living will by endorsing the idea. Naval Academy in 1949, he was chosen to work at the White House as a ceremonial aide for state dinners and other functions.

Mr. Johnsen is survived by his wife, Suzanne; two sons, Mark and Charles; a sister, Barbara Dunne, and two grandchildren. Services will be Saturday at 10 a.m. at C. C.

Van Emburgh, Ridge-wood, with burial in George Washington Memorial Park. Visiting will be Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. Donations to the Glen Rock Ambulance Corps, or to a favorite charity, would be appreciated. nGr- Prospect Park attack By LINDA VOORHIS Record Staff Writer Friends and relatives of Dr. Albert Sabin remember him as an extremely bright, serious man who had a passion for medicine even as teenager at Paterson's Boys High School.

They also recalled him as a man retained a love for Paterson after he'd left the city. Dr. Sabin and his family came to Paterson in 1920, and although he spent only a few years in the city before going off to college and medical school, the city is quick to claim him as one of its own. "You know what I remember most about him?" asked Larry Rubin, former director of a Paterson booster club that honored the doctoras well as his cousin, Dr. Saul Krugman in 1988.

"He and Dr. Krugman went on a tour of the city, and stood at the Great Falls the pouring rain. This was not a well man, and the weather was aw-'ful. He loved it so much. He loved that city." During that 1988 visit, Dr.

met with the city's mayor, Frank X. Graves. 'You're a legend in the city, you know," Graves told Dr. Sabin at the time. "People here think what PROSPECT PARK A 7-yejr-old girl had police and school officials concerned Wednesday after she reported that she was knocked to the ground as she played outside School 1.

But police said her story wasn't true. "It seems she was just telling Public NoUcet lien, cleim or interest vou may have in, ro or on ine mongageo premises by virtue of the following judgment: Nancy W. Pak, Executrix Harry Sealed bids Purchatlna rag, inecsiaieoi vs. Young Hee Kim and Steve Kim Superior Court of New Jersey Judgment Number: J-32857-92 pate Entered: W-20-92 Type of Action: Contract Venue: Bergen Cass Number: -015559-91 assistant at 21 Main OTgJl on: TO PROVIDE THE BUILDII NOTICE COUNTY time in Meeting lha Va TOBIDDERS OF BERGEN (201)646-2512 PLANNING BOARD BOROUGH Of NORTHVALE NORTHVALE. NEW JERSEY REVlSED NOTICE OP HFARING NOTICE TO ABSENT DEFENDANTS (LS.) STATE OF NEW JERSEY BLAIN BROWN AOAPULLINI CARLYN CORNELL BLANCHE PAUL NANCY W.

PAK. EXECUTRIX HARRVPAK THE ESTATE OF AND FIRST TECH CORPORATION PDBA DATA CLE AN CORP. Date March 1W3 lUWnUMII MAYlUNlfcKN: Notice is hereby given that the Ao-nllf ant will aooaar before the Plan nlng Board of the Borough of Northvale, at the municipal building, 116 Paris Avenue. Northvale, New Jersey, on Wednesday, March 17, 1993, at 8:00 P.M. to re CLI EXHAU5T ARE HEREBY SUMMONED AND REQUIRED to NOTICE TOCREDITORS ESTATE OF GERTRUDE WARREN, DECEASED (aka.

Gertrude Marlon WarrenJ Pursuant to the order of STEVEN R. ROTHMAN, Surrogate of the County of BERGEN, made on this 18TH day of FEBRUARY 1993, on application of the undersigned Execulorjs) of said deceased, notice Is hereby given to the creditors of the decedent to bring In to the subscriber their debts, demands and claims against the estate of said deceased, under oath, within six months from the dale of such order, or they will be forever barred from prosecuting or recovering the same against the sub- Tiber. ated: February II, 1993 Robert Lee, Executor (275 15th St Fort Lee, New Jersev 67024 Fltipatrlck I Israels, Attorney 400 Plaza Dr. Secaucus, New Jersey 07096 March (21) will be received by the Aaent or a des onated 11:00 A.M. prevailing Koom uue west on Flnor.

Court Plaia South. Street, Hackensack. N.J. THURSDA Y.MARCH 18, ANING OF ft, 8 AT BERGEN iVSTEM IN TY HOSPITAL. E.

NEW JERSEY 07652, AVENUE, 36-MONTH KfcKilM MAY i. 1994 OR TH PERIOD ON DATE OF PURSUANT TO BID PROPOSAL and Bid Proposal be obtained at the Pur- Division on the 3rd Floor. Street Luis Eutner, human rights lawyer quest site plan approval witn variances from the terms and condl- serve upon anu PHELAN, P.C., plaintiffs attorney whose address Is Suite 505, Sentry Debt $198,00000 201.36 PINI RIDI you. First Tech corporation, PDBA Data Clean are PARAMUS, iGEWOOD FOR THE ALBERT SABIN Returned to Paterson you did was 100 years ago, but here you are." Samuel Schwartz of Clifton, a longtime Paterson resident, remembers Dr. Sabin from the time the future researcher arrived in Paterson as a 15-year-old.

"When he came to this country, I was a sophomore in high school," said Schwartz, who graduated with Dr. Sabin in 1923. "He was very bright. He caught on very quickly." Living will author, prisoners' advocate "I still have nightmares from it," he said 60 years later. He entered the University of Chicago at age 13.

There, he established a reputation as a musician, poet, and author. He later served as a law clerk for Clarence Darrow while attending the university's law school. In his first year as a member of the bar, he received a tip from a former classmate, thrill-killer Nathan Leopold, that two Chicago detectives had falsified their evidence to imprison their suspects. He helped free one of the men and began a career of helping to release 08108, an and filed In a Island Cenfereach, Young Ok pending vtticv riaza, io neoaon end 23, and such other variances as may be necessary to permit the construction andor reconstruction of a restaurant on the properly located at 240 Llvlngton Street, BIOCKJUJ.LOI II. All maps and documents relet-Ina to this application will be avail westmont, New Jersey answer to the Complaint Amendment to Complaint, civil action, in which Long Sayings, Bank of F.S.B., Is plaintiff and Kim, et als.

are defendants in irw superior ioun or Chancery Division, COMMENCING ADVERTISED new jersey, Burlington West, 21 Main n.j. uoui curing business hours. Bids shall able for inspection by the public between the hours of 9:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M. on legal business days at the Borough Clerk's Office In the municipal building, lit Paris Avenue, Northvale, New Jersey fcouniy ono pel -arino days after March 4, 1993 r-Mur-w, within Ihlrtv of such date.

If you fall luogmeni oy oetauit dered aaalntt vou fnr W04. This notice supersedes the notice dated February U. 1993 thai It manded In the Complaint Amendment to Complaint. Shall file your answer and may tha In a sealed evelope marked to Indicate the address of the bidder, the bid. bid number and Avenue, named as a party oerenoant nerem for any lien, claim or interest you may have In, to or on the mort THROUGH gaged premises by virtue of the fw- kwlngjudgment: First Tech corporation PDBA uaia Clean corp.

florkat tin Young Kim, Edward Management exclusive flwa Superior Court of New Jersey Judgment Number: J-34107-92 Dale Entered: 03-25-92 Tvoe of Action: Contract Chasing Room to do so, be ren' reilaf An. Venue: Passaic Case Number-L-oU 1-1 Debt S7.2O8 00 Costs: 175.00 the Clerk New Jer- uonato h. meian, Acting Clerk, SitiMrior aurt of New Jersev date or oia ba mailed Mailed bids at the time March (141) PASSAIC VALLEY SEWERAGE COMMISSIONERS unTirf TOR OOFRS Instituted nvtruum a as mort- 12, 1987 Notice is hereby given that the Pas- cair Vallev Seweraoe Comm s- Attest: Mary Ward, sioners designated TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1993, et 1040 A.M. es the time when sealed bids win be Bergen louriTy Rnarri nt 36-MONTH AWARD. 93-45.

peciflcetlons or mi mav 308 HacxensacK, reaular be submitted plainly name end subleet of the receiveo oy after the time to and You orant of to say, this matter will not be heard service In duplicate with of the Superior Court of is, ivyj. 6aMian6C0RP. Or NORTHVALE Aoolicant diim, New Jersey 08625, In irsnign, accordance with the rules of civil practice and Special Meeting Notice Norwood Board of Education Pursuant to the Open Public Meetings Act. Chapter 231, Laws of New Jersey 1975, a special meeting of the Norwood Board of Educallon will be held on March 10, 1993 at i pm In the Board Conference room, lower level of the Norwood Public Library. The purpose of this meeting will be to discuss a proposed building protect.

Action win be taken on this meeting. A regular work session wlH follow with no action taken. Louise E.Sorensen Business Administrator Board Secretary March (20) opening, dios mav eiiner or delivered In person. will be held and opened of the bid. Mailed bids me furcnasing Agem for opening will be unopened.

Bidders are comply with Public Law 127 (N AC. 1727, et Clerk countv Admin stra or Kopen j.Aioia returned required syiMicnoiasuamiano, President Attorneys: Huckln, Avignon, and Beren- broick 221GrandAvenueWest- P.O.Box512 Montvale.NJ 07645-0512 (201)573-8500 March (41) proceoure. This action has been mortgage.daled November me purpose or 11 made by Young Ok Kim, to LI inter November 12, 1987 In wainmT neri efn. and gor ofven to Long Island lank of canlarAarh. Fsp.

recnropd Book Savings rhAtan Freeholders Mortgages of Bergen County, at page 343, and; (2) to recover possession of and concerns premises commonly known as 2173 Eliery Avenue, Fort Lee, New Jersey, 07024 If vou are unable tn ohfaln an at. (52) TOBIDDERS CORDIALLY INVITES BOAKO Or fcDU-DIALLY INVITES THE FOLLOWING On March 4, 1993 at 200PM at 71 Saddle River Ave, S. Hackensack, NJ the National Community Bank of New Jersey will sell at Public Auction a 1990 Nissan serial JN1HS36P1LW103S50 retaken under the terms of a defaulted contract. Terms of sale win be cash. Bank reserves the right to bid and to cancel sale without further notice.

NATIONAL COMMUNITY BANK Mt t-ULLUWINb MEDICAL ATHLETIC DEPT. OBTAIN A COPY OF BUilNtWAUWINIilKAIOK OFFICE PUBLIC SCHOOLS NOTICE TO BIDDERS COUNTY OF BERGEN IM1IA-1 Sealed bids will be received by the Purchasing Agent or a designated assistant at 11:00 A.M. prevailing time in Meeting Room 30) West on the 3rd. Floor, Court Plaia South, nn 7431 of received at metr omces racaieo ai 600 Wilson Avenue, Newark, New lersevTor: NQ.ru REROO IUI- A PORTION OF NOTICE THE PV5C ADMINI11 KA THE WAYN! CATION rrt.ixn a fT kin vtm DC. ON BU LD Nu IDS ON ON I KALI c-fcL.

and ut i ercvune LOCATION OF OXYGEN KLACtnntn 1 LEAK AT OXYGEN PKO' BlICTION FACILITY. Bidders are required to comply YOU MAY THE CONTRACT ,1 8 NO. 4-93 TITLE: SUP-LIES torney you may communicate with the New Jersey Slate Bar Association by calling K0-852-4127. You may also contact the Lawyer Re Special from the Chicago Tribune CHICAGO Luis Kutner, one of the most prominent human rights attorneys of the 20th century, died Monday. He was 84.

Mr. Kutner was the author of the living will, co-founder of Amnesty International, and founder of World Habeas Corpus, an effort aimed at protecting people everywhere from false imprisonment. The Chicago resident helped free poet Ezra Pound, Hungarian Cardinal Josef Mindszenty, and former Congo President Moise Tshombe from foreign jails. He was nominated repeatedly for the Nobel Peace Prize. "His interest in the writ of habeas corpus for the whole world was unique in his day," said human and civil rights attorney Elmer Gertz.

"In some parts of the world, especially where there are dictators, people are thrown in jail and can't get out. You are locked up, and no writ can reach you. His achievement was that he worked to change that throughout the world. "He was a very admirable person: a lawyer, at times unorthodox, who was often willing to take cases others wouldn't," Gertz said. His interest in those unjustly imprisoned began when he was 12 years old and he and two friends were locked up in the Humboldt Park field-house basement for fishing in the park lagoon.

i (i mam aireer, nacxensecx. n.J. 1(, 1993 TO FURNISH AND DELIVER DOCUMENTS wnn tne requiremems or hu. 1975 127. (N.J.A.C.

17:27) Forms of Contract Soectfica- AND PROPOSAL FORM FROM: Theodore N. Johnsen, White House aide ferral service or tne county or venue by calling (201) 488-0044. you cannot afford an attorney, you may communicate with the Legal Services office of the county of venue by calling (Ml) 487-216. 50NELLIS DRIVE WAYNE. NJ 0747? March 16 (13) 633-30089 llAn toaather with blank forms or proposals, may oe ooiainco at the Commissioners' office at 600 Wilson Avenue, Newark, New jersey.

Lotils Lanzlllo. erk B-004 March (32) BIDS ARE PAUAIC VALLEY iPENcu WAYNE (Ml) BETWEENTHE MONDAY MU HOURSOF thru FRIDAY AT: IMF-HUpM Carlyn dorneB and Blanche Paul, are named as a party defendant herein for any Hen, claim or Interest vou may have In, fo or on the mortgaged premises by virtue of the fol-nwingiudgment: la in Brown vs. Susan J. Kim, Peter B. Kim, Young Kim end 32 West 31st Corp.

AdaPullin) vs. Uh, Vim VwmVIm I DNuuivu, mw), anu SUN' DRIES, REQUIRE6 BY BERGEN pinfs coiintv umoiTai PARAMUS, NEW JERSEY 07655, FOR THE 12-MONTH PERIOD COMMENCING ON DATE OF AWARD. PURSUN AT TO READ-VERTISED BID PROPOSAL Specifications and Bid Proposal Forms may be obtained at the Purchasing Division on the 3rd Floor, Room 30 West. 21 Main Street Hackensack, N.J. 07601 during regular business hours.

Bias shall be submitted In a sealed evelope plainly marked to indicate the name and address of the bidder, the subject of the bid, bid number and dateof bid opening. Bkhmey either be mailed or delivered in person. Mailed bids will be held and (waned RIDGEWOOD AVENlli Y.March 16, 1993 PLACE: Administration Bidg, 50 nuiis grive, waynej o4o BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO COMPLY WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF P.L. 1975, 127 Notice Is hereby given that the Passaic Valley Sewerage desfcnatedTUESDAY, APRIL 6, 19937at 1040 A.M, as the lime when sealed bids will be received al their off ices located at 600 Auwiia tlaniTlr hlau, lar- By The Record's staff Theodore N. Johnsen of Glen Rock, a longtime IBM employee who had been a military aide in the Eisenhower administration, died Wednesday after suffering a heart attack.

He was 67. Mr. Johnsen had worked in the sales division of International Business Machines starting in the 1960s, after a 12-year career as a pilot in the United States Navy. He retired from IBM in 1986. After graduating from the U.S.

(NJAC 17271 CONTRACT NO. 737 REFURNISH THE HVAC March Klmand32West31sTcorp1 Carlyn Cornell Young Kim, 31 West 31st Corp. Peters. Kim and Susan J. Kim Blanche Paul 4-fee435Jt A.IVL J.MU KM, LlqitrLlcHsi 90 DUE AND WILL BE TAKE NOTICE THAT aoollcatlon has been made to the Alcoholic -Beverage Control Board end the City of Hackensack to transfer to J.S.

Maggs, Inc. the Plenary Retail Consumption License (1223-33-060-901 heretofore issued to TerriJorui Corooration tranino Knuai. crnsr Business Administrator Board Secretary as Dweefs Royal Oak for the premises located at 604-606 Main (34) iren, necxenseck. New jersey FURtHER TAKE NOTICE Jeffrey S.Magtlne-President-Secrelary-100 281 Burhans Avenue Haledon.NJ 07508 He is the ontv sharahnMar i OBJECTIONS: If any, should be made immediately In writing to: Doris Dukes, City Clerk CityofHecxensack 65 Cemrai Avenue Hackwisack.NJ 07601 (M) i CCHJiINl I uwckipi 1 nc SLUDGE HEAT TREAT- icuTC.ril ITV On March 4, 1993 at 240PM at 71 Saddle River Ave. S.

Hackensack, NJ the National Community Bank of New Jersey will sen at Public Auction a 1985 Chevro'et Biazer serial IG8CTllB5f 0197721 retaken under the terms of defaulted contract. Terms of sale wiH be cash. Bank reserves the right to bid end to cancel sale without further notice. NATIONAL COMMUNITY BANK. at the lime of me bid.

Mailed bids received by the Purchasing Agent after the lime for opening will be returned unopened. Bidders are required lo comply with Public Law 1975. Chapter 127 (NJAC. 17J7, et seq.1. Attest: Mary Ward, Clerk Bergen County Board of Chosen Freeholders RooertJ.

Alois County Administrator March 4-fee7 (4;) Peter B. Kim, Susan J. Kim, Young Kim and 32 West 3 1st Corp. Superior Court of New Jersey Judgment Number: J-97870-90 Dale Entered: 09-19-90 Type of Action: Contract Venue: Bergen Debt ,177,012 50 Pre-kttlnt. 172 50 YOU, Nancy W.

Pak, Executrix Harry Pak, The Estate of, Is named a party defendant herein for any Bidders are required to comply me requirement r.L. 107S 197 IN A C. 17:27) tlons together with blank forms of proposals, may be obtained Ot IIW 600 Wilson Avenue, Newark, New jersey. Louis LaniiHoXlerk (27) (13).

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