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The News from Paterson, New Jersey • 13

Publication:
The Newsi
Location:
Paterson, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I'ASSAIC COUNTY Sept. 20, 1968 Paterson News Ol Chemway Post For Matthews F. Scott Matthews has been elected chief operating officer and senior vice president of the Girl AFS Guest in W. Milford Business Financial News our problems," Marcela said. America also differ from the West Milford setup.

"In my country a student does choose her subjects. The "My sister is beautiful and lovesj "In. the Argentine Republic, books. She is outEoine and works people show affection more Early Wall St. Stocks Mixed in a literary magazine at tne college.

I have learned many things' from her and I consider Maria to be my very best friend." The primary difference be tween the peoples of the two Americas is one ot emotion, Renowned Chemway Corporation, as well as a member of the Board of Directors. Matthews, whose position is a new one with the company, will be responsible for the operation of Chemway's consumer products, pharmaceutical, den tal and Owens Brush divisions. The company has a plant in Wayne. I Moderate Trading NEW YORK (UPI) The list the same amount to 6fl'A. On- Stars Upper Greenwood Lake Duo EVERYBODY'S Marcela said.

ooenlv." she said. Aims for Diplomatic Service One of her ambitions is to represent her country in the diplomatic service. She is hoping fo ran assignment in th Argentine Embassy in Italy. School systems in Latin- Don Cossacks not or she Argentine WEST MILFORD Marcela Beatriz Rotana, 17, of Rosario, Argentina, Is doing a this year to open the doors of international understanding in this large, sprawling township. The petite brunette, with a friendly, out-going personality, is part of the township's first experiment with the American Field Service scholarship program.

The venture is sponsored by the West Milford chapter of faculty at West Milford High School and residents. Year with Family The senior is spending a year with a township family, Mr. and Mrs. Angelo fiarbein and will attend West Milford High School. During this time, she will learn North American customs, eat our dishes, and more important, meet the real North American.

When she goes back to the Argentine Republic next July, it is hoped she will return wim an image, both honest and empathic. of the North American people. While here, people in West Milford will learn more about life in the Argentine. Marcela's presence in West Milford is the result of a community-wide The West Milford Chapter of Pay for Ticket A.F.S. and the school system, have spent the last six months raising funds to get her here.

A softbair game between women faculty members and township officials, a pancake supper, donations fro mthe PTA and a slide show on the Far East paid for her ticket. Here only a few weeks, the South American student finds many things similar and differ ent between tne two countries. The soft-spoken Argentine lives with her mother and father, and 20-vear old sister. Maria Cristina, in the second largest city of the Argentine. The family live in a modern, three-story home, complete with Indoor patio, typical of most American homes.

Her sister, Maria, is a student of literature at a nearby college. Her father, Juan Ro- tania, is a wood mercnam. marcela's mother. Beatriz. is a homemaker.

Like the United States, Marcela's parents often spend weekend hours at a coun try club playing tennis ana swimming. Ma lor Assets Marcela spends much of her time with family and sees her parents and sister as major assets in her life. "My mother is not very outgoing. She prefers to stay at home with us and is always concerned. She gives us help with on in of for an is 16 as a a in in ON CONCERT TOUR Waisily Flustikoff (left) and Serge Jaroff, conductor of the Don Cossacks Chorus which ii now on a European concert hall tonr, pose at borne In West Milford by a neighbor's swimming poof before leaving Sunday aboard the liner Bremen for Europe.

Flustikoff, a tenor with the chorus, is making his first tour In 17 years. The two men are members of the original chorus which formed In 1921. course of study Is already ar ranged. Also, me nign scnooi is divided by careers. A school may be divided into secretarial preparations, teacher training engineering preparation, explained.

Chorus 4'. li-ik. A German recording company recently presented Jaroff with a gold record player to commem orate the three and one-half million records which have been sold of music by the chorus. They are expected back from the tour in early April. Next on their agenda is a concert tour of Japan and a trip to Holly wood, Calif, where they will make a film for MGM.

Many years ago they made two films for MGM, including "Hotel Im perial" and "Maytime" (which starred Jeanette McDonald Nelson. Eddy.) Coast Firm Buys Diana Stores An agreement for the acquisi tion of the Diana Stores Corp. or Nortn Bergen, by Dayien Inc of Beverly Hills, war announced Thursday by Samuel D. May, president and chief executive officer of Diana Stores Corp. and Amnon Barness.

charman of the board and chief executive officer of Daylen. The agreement is subject to the approval of the board of directors of the two companies and the completion of certain legal matters. Diana Stores is the parent com pany of Great Eastern. Under the terms of the agree ment. Daylen Inc.

will issue 20-year five per cent subordi nated debentures with detachable warrants for the Diana shares. Americans now do more than one-third of the painting of their homes, both inside and outside One of every six homeowners does his own plumbing repairs and 20 per cent oi the roofing work on homes is done by the owners. the city's housing codes require a building to be demol ished if it is 50 per cent t. i I 1 ft 1 3 WEST MILFORD Arrival Europe on Sept. 24 for their concert in Germany is the goal two Upper Greenwood Lake men en-route there now aboard the liner Bremen.

Wassily Flus-tikoff, tenor, and Serge Jaroff, conductor of the world-famous Don Cossacks chorus, set sail their tour on midnight Sunday out of New York harbor Toe two men are ongmni members of the chorus which formed in 1921 after they as White Russian soldiers were defeated by the Communist Army and forced to nee to Lemnos, Island in Greece. There are about 20 men in the present chorus, but only Flustikoff and Jaroff are part of the original one. Flustikoff and Jaroff both have homes at Upper Greenwood Lake on Lakeshore Drive, mis Flustikoff's first concert tour since 1951 when doctors told him that his health would not permit him to continue the hectic schedule of touring throughout the world with the chorus. He had also been business manager years for the group. Flustikoff has been filling in a bartender during his retirement.

Well known to the customers at a tavern in Upper Greenwood Lake, where he worked, they surprised him with presentation bf a traveler's clock. His employers gave him wrist-watch. The word "Cossack" means free man. The film Dr. Zhivago was centered around the period Russian history which Jaroff and Flustikoff lived in.

They were among the young people the White Army, aged 12 to 18, who tried to keep their nation from Communist rule. Regiment Chora Their chorus was first a regiment chorus and they began singing in church for services. Their music in concerts today includes Russian church music and folk music of their nation. Their singing is always without the accompaniment of a musical When will he start realizing it's our field and it's our school and one town." Not Againft It Councilman Wendell Reed had Voted against the proposal to create the Little League Field at Friday's council meeting along with John Kulik. Kulik wanted to wait to see the out come of the Tuesday Board of Education meeting before vot ing.

Reed in voting no said he is not against a Little League field but that there are attempts to get a Skyline Lake field. There was also a negative vote from Councilman Harold Wood ier. Pieters said he will invest! gate federal assistance, for land acquisition and development of recreation sites and make nec essary applications. About 20 Skyline Lakes resi dents were at the Board of Ed ucation meeting Monday to let the board know that they are very anxious for recreation fa cilities for their area. Pieters told the council that time is of essence in getting another Little League Field if the league program is to be carried on.

He said its almost mandatory to do something now if a field is to be ready for spring piaying. THE 1968 version of the old saw to the effect "the world owes me a living" is expressed in the clamor of recipients for bigger and better welfare payments. This observation is not made through any lack of compassion for the victims caught in the system, which they did not originate. Rather, blame should be assessed against politicians who were eager to buy votes through being liberal with the taxpayer's money. Be that as it may.

the whole welfare mess, which breaks up families and impairs incentives, is a regrettable phase of the global crusade against excel- ence. It is ABC in the tenets of demagoguery to flatter mediocrity or worse, and to downgrade efficiency and creativity. But logically the development of phalanxes of maladjusted Eersons who think they have een put upon stems from a misreadins of social and economic history. The truth is that we -all are greatly in debt for affluence to an elite of cre ative and inventive minds who have been shaking new secrets from the bushes of hidden knowledge. Dr.

Glenn Seaborg, chairman of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, who shared the Nobel Chemistry Prize in 1951 and the Enrico Fermi Award for nuclear chem istry, takes the current scien tific knowledge explosion as the Third Revolution. The -first American Revolution consisted of the war for independence, and the second was the indus trial revolution of the 19th cen tury. WHILE SOME were riotine on the streets and looting and burning establishments, others were toiling quietly and unos tentatiously in scientific labora tones opening up for an ot us gateways to the future.

Thus nuclear power is being introduced to generate electricity- promising a cleaner technique than the burning of coal, which will still be needed. Scientists are exploring methods to em ploy nuclear power for de-salt ing pianu, using sea water iur drinking and. other purposes to ward off any threatened water Shortage. And in connection with the DODulation explosion researchers are developing ways to redeem arid seacoast plains and make them green and productive of food. Other potential shortages are being met in the minds of scientists through de vices now under consideration to employ nuclear explosives to recover oil from shale, natural gas from low-grade deposits, and copper from low grade ores.

Also on the drawing boards are plans to propel rockets in space through nuclear energy, and radio isotopes are already oe-ing used increasingly by physicians to deal with disease. The world of discovery and invention is ahead. Most of us lack the specialized talents, the Rinqwood Board Withholds Little League Field Okay 25c Dividend By Curtiss-Wright WOOD-RIDGE Curtiss-Wright Corp. has declared for the quarter ending Dec. 31, 1968, a dividend of 25 cents per share on common stock payable Dec.

27, 1968 to holders of record Dec. 2. Fourth quarter dividend of 50 cents per share on class stock, previously declared, will be paid Dec. 27, to holders of record Dec. 2.

Stonier Rukeyter discipline and the resources to change the environment in this damatic manner. But those of us who are beneficiaries should doff our hats to the elite and stop scoffing and scorning. Some of the new directions were delineated by Dr. Seaborg in a recent WNBC Television snow, "apeaKing rreery in a dialogue with Edwin Newman, me commentator. To achieve the desire of all men to live better and to im prove their family lot, we neces sarily depend on the Dromise of the creative elite.

It is sheer fallacy to assume that we ran abolish poverty by passing laws. Through the annals of the nation's history, our forward march in material wellbeing has sprung irom innovations by scientists, inventors, engineers, process designers, tool makers, and inspirational managers who coordinate manpower in the shops with raw materials and power-driven tools of produc tion. With the new world of bril liant opportunity unfolding be fore our eyes, there must be creative social engineering to adjust oncoming manpower to the new situation. Schools and colleges should revise curricula to adjust the young to the new opportunities and the new problems. This cannot be achieved by hot heads in pressure groups substituting slogans and cliches for honest and disciplined effort.

give hope to tne nation. The oc casion is ripe for honest talk about the future promise of American life. ON THE financial side, scien tists are bringing to fruition new industries, some of which under sound management are capable of extraordinary growth. But the potential de pends on developing an environment conducive to a flourishing of the creative American eco nomic system of rewards and incentives. A voluntary society, such as we have known, presupposes respect for the human right to own property.

Nowa- aays voie nungry politicians are timid about law and order and want to link it with justice. This is a sham battle. No society can survive without regard for justice and equity, but it is nonsense to create the notion that in compliance with law each man is his own Supreme Court. The success of the system also depends on respect for "due process." Let's be affirmative! Mr. Rukeyser will be pleased to receive Inquiries from readers concerning their financial problems.

Letters with stamped self addressed envelopes should sent in care of The Paterson News. Questions of general Interest will be answered in the column. Others, to the extent time permits, will be handled by mall.) back information. The Jodrell Bank Observatory in England said Zond 5 sent back voice as well as other signals and that the Russians appeared to be testing a telephone system for transmit ting eyewitness descriptions oi the lunar surface to earth. Both the United States and Russia have sent probes to the moon and both have radioed back pictures and other information, but no moon probe has returned successfully to the earth.

Tass did not say Zond was returning to earth but western scientists believed it was. Campbell Workers End 8-Week Strike SACRAMENTO. Calif. (UPI) The 1.300 members of the Food Process Workers Union rettirried to work Thursday at the Campbell Soun Co. plant here ending an cight-weck-old strike.

i Union members Wednesday approved in a 529 to 178 vote a three-year contract which featured 5 per cent across-th-bonrd pay increases each year and a pre-paid dental health program ior" employes and their dependents. eral Motors gave up 3A to 83. A block of 10,000 American Mo tors traded at 12, up Vs. Gulf Oil added to 81 while Continental t)il rose the tame amount to 694. California Stand ard picked up to 6534.

Occi dental Petroleum opened at 47, up H. Control Data rose to 129, while Fairchild Camera, gave up 1 to 76. Westinghousa, wed Vt to 74V4. Extend Stock Closings to Oct. 2 and 9 NEW YORK (UPI)-The gov- ernors of the New York and American stock exchanges voted Thursday to extend Wednesday closing to Oct.

2 and Oct. 9. The one-day-a-week suspension. of activities haa occurred regularly since June 12 when the exchanges first had a Wednesday closing to allow brokeragtfirms to catch up on paper work. Deeds and Mortgages DEEDS Reptember 1, 1MI Durtle Builder.

Inc. ta RVven Rudner Jr. ux Weet Milford Blk m-J on of See 1 Waldy. Inc. $21 CO.

7. Danle Corn, to Marvin W. Srhwaru- bard et ux Wayn Lot 1 Blk 476-T on Map of wynwood at Wayn IK turn 3. unioni. William u.

et ux to A vara Ortli et ux Pateraon S. line of Grov 125M0" E. from Getty Av. Irregular tract Fee 119 90. 4.

Welnmann. Raymond et al to John Oaralry et ux Wayn tnteraectlon n( Garald Lan Land of N. aj M. Garatd Irregular tract 0 53 acre I'm $4.50. S.

Community Dvloper. Inc to David Klebcr et ux Wayn Lot 3 Blk 478-H on Map of Oxbow Ridga Sec 3B Fe 134.50. t. Erco ano. A memo et ux lo Harry Jonea at ux Pateraon W.

Iln ot Eaat 24th 150 ft. S. from Fifteenth Av. 100 50 fL Fee $22.50. 7.

Saff. Richard et al Truateea to Stolauf Aaiociatea Little Falla N. aid of Sindl Ave, 102.14 ft. S.E. from Dlv.

line of Land, of Memmlaar A Stewar 2 tract). Barhua et ux Pateraon W. line of Eaat 26th SL, 245 ft N. from Twelfth Av. 100x27.5 ft Fe 117.50.

I. Loter. Murray et ux to Carv Le v. nnunanm. ranii vt uk in i.

Holtham. Inc. Hawthorn W. line of Lincoln 4 S. Iln of Columbia, Ave.

(2 tract). 10. Brennan, Edward J. ux to Bernard M. Brennan Pateraon Interaction of 6.W.

Iln of Getty Av. 4 S.E. line oi C.oihen St. 100x25 ft. 11.

Tatum. Sophie Anderaon, Truate lo Richard Glbaon et ux Weet Paieraoa S.E. Iln of Rifle Camp Rd 72 fL N. from land of W. J.

Zlrvea 300x72 ft. Fe $28 00. 12. City Nat'! Bank to Admin, of Veteran' Affair Wayne Lot Blk IMG on Map of Fairfield Village Sec. S.

13. Hlley, Donald el al to Donald Riley et ux Blonmlngdale intersection of W. Plac Irregular tract. 14. Schulti.

Albert J. et ux lo Paa. quale F. Sciacca et ux Pateraon W. line of Pateraon Ave.

250 ft. N.W. from Totowa Ave. 118x25fL Fe $20 00 15. Schulti, Albert et to Oran Hn.h ea et ux Pateraon E.

line of Carbon 350 fL N. from North Ninth St. 100x25 n. ree tzz.ou. 16.

Twp. of Llttl Falla to Pearl Brook Relate, Inc. Little Falla N.E. line of Fairfield 104.M ft. 8.

from Eaat Wondcllffe Ave. (2 parcel). 17. Tober. Adolpn et ux to Edward Cooper et ux Pateraon S.W.

Iln of Webater 204.1 It. N.W. from Me-Bride Ave. Irrrtiular tract Fee $3.50. Skylln Lake Corp.

to Thomaa Ringwood Lot 64 Rlk 1-H on Map No. 1. Skyline Laka Fe $2.00. A A I 1 1 1 Inc. Ringwood Sam a Deed No.

1. Fee $2 00. 20. Elbow Really Inc. In Day Moakow Pateraon N.

aid of Market 27.10 ft. W. from Main St. Irregular tract Fe $60 00. 21.

Weaver. Irvln G. et ux to John Piatt et ux Pateraon E. nil of Red wood 275 ft. s.

irom uranu Ave. 2 tracta Fe $15.00. 22. Konefal, I.oula el ux to Peter A. Sando et ux Hawthorne Lot 21 Blk 293 on Map of Silver Hill Sec.

No. IB Fee $55.00. ecutor to Jam Peter Ooatlng et ux n. Eatata of ADram raaaae, dt ex Proapoct Par 8. Iln ot norm istn 75 fL W.

from Falrvlew Av loox 37.40 ft. Fe $15 50 MOHTUMiE) I. IfMOl 1. Ferrate. George et ux to Broad way Bank 4 Truat C.

Pateraon. $11 Main St. 4 711 Atlantic x.uroee. 2. Budner, Steven Jr.

ux to Flrat Svge. 4 Loan Aaan. of Eaat Pateraon. Weal Milford. Sam a Deed No.

1, $11,700 3. fichwartibard, Marvin W. el ux ta Flrat Svga. 4 Loan Aaan, Eaat Pateraon. Wayn, Sam a Deed No.

2, $35,000 4. Ortlt, Alvaro ux to Jeraey Mortgage Co. Pateraon, Sam leed No. 1, $11,500. 5.

Community Developer. Inc. to Prudential Insurance Vayn, lot 4. Rlk. 476 on Map of Oxbow Rlrig.

Sec. SC. $31,500. 6 Jonea. Harry T.

ux to Aimertco Fr- rolano et ux Pateraon, Sam a Deed No $, $11,500. T. Bachua. Cary I.ee ur to New Jeraey Realty Pateraon, Sam a Deed No. $, Ludwlg, Guenlher W.

ei ux to Ring-wood Co. Ringwood W. alfl of Greenwood Lak 22.5$ ft h-nm Beginning point of landa to County of Paaaale, Irregular tract $10,000. (. Sparrarotella, Anlhnnv K.

et ux in Flrat Nat'l Bank of Paaaaio County. Tnlnwa Borough, lot 7, Rlk. 147, $1,703 20. 10, Narrlao, Ann to Fire Nat'l Bank of Paaaale County. Pompton Lake, lot 2 Blk.

WOO, li.76. 11. Sapper, Ken eth F. to Flrat Nat'l Hank of Paaaalt Counlv, West Milford, lot II Blk. 334 18.

12. Snyder Claude A. ux to New Jeraey Bank 4 Truat Co, hftnn, Har-' old Place. $3,048 48. 13.

tilhsnn Hlchard H. et ux tn Nut-ley Kvga, 4 Loan Aaan. Weat Pateraon, aa Deed No. 11, $22 000 14. Hall, Kalhrvn G.

tn Outhrl et ux Potnptnn Lake iln of Whit-ny 350 ft. N. from Butler 8l. irregular tract, $6,000. 15.

Texl' Cnnat. In to Flrat Svga 4 oan Aaan. of Fair Lawn Bloom-Ingdal ld of Hlghlan 4 ft. aide ef Overlook Irregular tract, $18,000. 16.

Kelarra Paaqual et ux to Wyrkoff ftvga. 4 Loan Aaan. Pateraon, Sam aa Deed No. 14. $11,700, 17.

Hughea Oran et ux to New Jeraey Really Co Pateraon, Kama aa Deed No, 15 $20,400. ia i. ri. i IV II-, V. 1 Grocndvk, Clifton t.

ru rer ot Hilton St. 4 Main Irregular rarl, $10,000. 19 Calvert. Chealer ax tn Jame Gnirnihk. Chiton, lot 7 Blk.

3M (1 Al on Map of Plymnu-e Rock VII- lane, $10,000. SO MerrnrelL, John et at 10 I'eniilr Nnl'l Bank 4 Trua( Cn Clifton 1265 Vtn llmitrn tf.J,223 52. 21. Mnaknw, pav et ux to Broartwav Bank 4 Tniat Co Pateraon, ham aa Deed No 20 $40,001,, 22 Media Conl 4 Deaign Lid. tn Rlaiivell ttemareet oundation.

Inc. Mine wood F. aide of P-ouu' S. from Sprue Irregular tearl, $14,000. 23 Sando, Peter A.

el lir lo Clllren Flrat Nal'l Bank nl Hldgpnod, Haw Ihnrne, Ram a Deed Nn 72, fS.ooo. 24. Onallng, Jamea Pete, ux to PrnapeH Park Nat'l Rnnk rnPcl Park. Ram Deed No. 23.

lll.MaW opened mixed in moderate trad ing on the New York Stock ExH change today. Shortly after the opening, the UPI indicator was unchanged with 219 issues across the tape. Uf these, advances barely outpaced declines 103 to 61. Steels eased. Motors were mixed.

Oils moved higher. Chemicals also were on the up- track. Electronics opened lower. In its group. U.S.

Steel gave up ft to 40. Bethlehem also eased, losing to 29ta. ford and Chrysler rose in the motors, the former picked up Vi to 53 while Chrysler added Stock Dividend Declared by Franklin Bank John C. Biggins, president of Franklin Bank. -Paterson re ported that the Board of Directors, has declared a stock dividend of 9,270 shares which JOHN C.

BIGGINS President will increase the stock of Frank lin Bank to 90,000 shares, $10 par value. This will bring the capitalization of Franklin Bank to $900,000 in capital stock matching surplus of an equal amount. The dividend will be payable on Nov. 8, to stock holders of record on Oct. 8 and is equival ent to an 11.48 per cent increase in per share holding.

Last year the net operation earning of Franklin Bank ex ceeded the previous year by 39 per cent and continued excellent earnings this year prompt ed the directors action in vot ing the stock dividend now. Franklin Bank also is paying its regular quarterly cash div idend of 30 cents pei share on Oct. 1. North Jersey Egg Auction NORTH JEISET CO-OP ECO AUCTION Cr. BuU aiM-ild.

Dr. Warn, N.J f.iri whIU Medium whit' Hullet whIU Ph whit Lars brown Mrrilum brown Pullet brown Pitwt brown GTs Beer Drinking Bear, Brutus, Is Dead CON THIEN, Vietnam (UPI) Brutus, the bear who swilled beer and cavorted in her own bunker while her guardians went off to war, is dead. The 325-pound native of Canon City, died Thursday in her dirt-lined bunker 12 miles south of the demilitarized Zone. Brutus, recently promoted to the rank of mascot fourth class, was three years old. Cause of death was listed as penumonia.

Brutus, formal monicker was Brutus T. Bear. The initial simply stood for "The." She arrived In Vietnam three weeks ago after a 20-day ship voyage from Oakland, Calif. She was the mascot of the 1st Battalion, "llth Infantry, Sth (Mechanized) Division. Today's Scratches ATLANTIC CITV I.

Sir Hot, (hfinry Rnunrt, Murntroi MlM. nm Tnn Innlnmatlr. la Certain, Boon Tavtrn, Donna Vrapuvcl, Return T'leaaura, Royal Path II, aahlnn Plata. Sweet Dahlia, Kaglea Swoop, Sanrtya Tel. Br on Arl, Country Day.

Swim Maid. LINCOLN DOHNII I. Franria Dor, 7, Porn Allparo, Alrlnarr. BK1MONT PARK Kxnllr Rullah. Alrleaant, Mike Peraeveranr.

Spmiky Wonky, Whole Hearted. a -1. Mexlran Pete. Rig Hal. Raby May, Count Your Money, Kaet Afoot, Win.

Harmony 1 Mighty stroke. 1 Clearing l.uler. Klherl The Throne, PHra Ptpkee, Irian- OIL. Telltale r.vldence, 1 Cryalal Pa4i, Moat, instrument. Their first concert was 'n Vienna, Austria on July 4, 1923 and the chorus has been touring the world to sing for crowds ever since.

On the current tour they will sing to an audience in Berlin, Germany, where seven and one-half thousand tickets were sold months in advance. Jaroff was a student of the famed composer Serge Racb- i 1- 1 1 1 maninou in nussia prior to uie civil war of 1917. Later he was given a scholarship at a univer sity in Bulgaria. 'Aliens' Fire Not Suspicious, Says Clifton Chief CLIFTON Fire-Chief Stephen Lendl said that the initial investigation of the fire that gutted the former home of "The Aliens" motorcycle gang at 51 Sheridan Ave. late Wednesday and early Thursday did not disclose any evidence that the fire was of suspicious origin.

He said the investigation would be continued and that if any evidence is turned up that the fire was of an incendiary nature, the matter would be referred to the Police Department. Fireman Andrew Mayoski suffered a dislocated left shoulder when he fell through a burned out staircase while fighting the blaze. Thomas Nelson of 40 Linden Passaic, the owner of the house, said "The Aliens" have not occupied the house for more than one month. A half-dozen of the gang's leaders have since been indicted on morals charges. Chief Lendl said the burned out building wil most likely have to be demolished.

He said this will be determined Monday when the structure is examined by the Sub-Standard Housing Committee. He said RINGWOOD Members of the Ringwood Board of Education after an executive session Monday night decided that at present they will not give approval for a Little League field at the Hewitt school grounds, due to the fact that there is work underway on relocatable classrooms and drainage and site work must still be completed. Also, Board members are not sure now about how they want to plan the use of land that is available. Members of the Ringwood Borough Council have differed in their opinions as to advis ability of the borough council developing the school Held as a Little League baimeid. council men Dale Pieters, who pro posed the move as part ot his report at a borough council meeting, felt such a field could a double purpose and also De useo ior scnooi neeus.

Some people would rather see a recreation field developed in the Skyline Lakes area instead of building the one at Hewitt school which is near another Little League field. According to Pieters, there are legal and physical problems to work out in connection with a plot of ground in the Skyline area proposed for a recreation field there. He said the land in Skyline is low and has a lot of water. He said that by the time the field is cleared there will be need for cnother one Mark Opposed Councilman Larry Mark strongly opposed building Little League field at Hewitt School. He told the borough council.

"Our taxes are sky? rocketing. I don't know if the majority of the people will jus tify putting permanent fixtures in one part or town. Tncre are on many other fronts. I cannot see putting top priority expense on the proposed loca tion. There Is a question of do ing things in proper, balance." He could not se'e the wisdom in inventing money for a fisld in a section wnere tnere are taciii ties when other areas are with out.

Mark said that firemen and ambulance corps volunteers go out to save lives vet they only get a certain amount of money from the borough. "I know I'm in the unpopular minority but let's keep to priority and keep costs down," Mark sug gested. Pieters urged some decision as he said the contractor who Soviet Craft Circles Moon and May Return MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet news agency Tass reported today the Russian space probe Zond 5 had successfully flown around the moon and was continuing its flight. Western scientists, said Zond 5 was heading back toward the earth. The Tass announcement was the first official Soviet word on activities of the space flight since it was launched last Suw day.

Tass said the space probe circled the moon at an altitude) of 1,210.9 miles and radioed Senior Citizen Hughes Likes It That Way TRENTON (UPI) Gov. Richard J. Hughes Thursday told some 3,000 senior citizens at the State Fair that he now considers himself one of them. Then Huches. who will be 60 years old when next year's fair comes along, went on a quick- paced tour of the grounds mat winded youthful reporters.

On "Senior Citizens day" the governor told the grandstand crowd that he's "getting along there pretty well" in years and "feels that Hughes said the fair shows him "the wonderful face of America," at a "typical wonderful American state fair." would do the jot) wants to either CAREERS IN BUSINESS and Industry are an Important adjunct to high school education In put it on schedule or get it off Wayne. Through cooperation of the township's Chamber of Commerce and school adminUtra-his agenda. Hon, students are given chool and out-training which fits them for Job In the community. Councilman Anthony Calvlno Ahove, from left On Holfrlder, chairman of the business 'group's career education -agreed with fieterj lnseeklng and Rarlth Vander May, Chamber president, hear the school's phase of the project outlined by the school grounds for a Littlel Adrian Van Zweden, director of occupational education In the Wayne system. The Chamber proj- League ficjd He eel was described at a dinner Wednesday night..

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