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Daily Record from Morristown, New Jersey • Page 13
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Daily Record from Morristown, New Jersey • Page 13

Publication:
Daily Recordi
Location:
Morristown, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Dally Record, Northwest N.J. Wednesday, June 8, 1988 A13 NATIONSTATE U.S.: Burden owners to ensure boats are drug-free tion to charter operators, fishing boat owners and operators, and recreational boat owners and operators. Writing a company policy supporting "zero tolerance," making sure all advertising contains a statement on the policy and informing friends that drugs will not be tolerated on board are some of the other recommendations. bring drugs on board. For two months, federal drug enforcement agencies have been under orders from the administration to enforce laws against casual users as well as smugglers.

Coast Guard officers report they have found "small, measurable amounts" of illegal drugs on vessels they have boarded to check not brought aboard their vessels." The agencies stress owners' responsibilities to educate their crews about drugs, to remain vigilant and report any instance of drug use on their boats to the Coast Guard. Boat owners are also encouraged to make contractual agreements with potential crew members that they will not use or and Customs officials are empowered to seize any vessel found in U.S. waters with even minute traces of illegal drugs sometimes as little as one-twentieth of an ounce of marijuana or evidence in ashtrays. The agencies maintain that "boat owners have the responsibility to ensure that illegal drugs are for safety violations. Customs officials seize the boats until owners pay the boats' full value or prove in a petition they did not know that someone was carrying drugs on board.

Discovery of drugs on vessels has also led to criminal charges. The recommendations will be distributed to Coast Guard stations, which will pass the informa OBITUARIES 225 new AIDS cases in N. J. last month Associated Press TRENTON There were 225 new cases of AIDS reported in New Jersey during May, bringing the total number of new cases this year to 1,045, the state Department of Health reported yesterday. Since 1982, there have been 4,302 cases of the deadly disease reported in the state and more than half of the victims, or 2,441, are known to have died, according to the department.

Nationwide, there have been cases reported and 35,188 of those victims are known to have died. New Jersey remained fifth among the states in AIDS cases, behind New York, California, Florida and Texas, Intravenous drug users continue to far outstrip any other high-risk group among the AIDS victims, and account for 57 percent of the cases, Study: Elderly fare well in access to health care LeonL.Rucki MANSFIELD TWP. Leon L. Rucki, 91, died Monday at Warren Hospital, Phillipsburg, after a short illness. He was born in Poland.

He lived in Newark most of his life before moving to the Port Murray section of the township 10 years ago. Mr. Rucki was a stationary engineer for the Military Park office complex in Newark for many years before his retirement 25 years ago. He was an Army veteran of World War I and a former member of American Le gion Post 195, Newark. He was a member of St.

Theodore's Church, Port Murray. Survivors include two sons, Edward, Port Murray, and Richard, Fairfield; a sister, Bronistawa Ste-porynska, Poland; and four grandsons. Arrangements are by Scala Memorial Home, 124 High Hackettstown. Vincent P. Delany MANCHESTER TWP.

Vincent P. Delany, 81, died Monday at Community Memorial Hospital, Toms River. He was born in Jersey City, and lived in Dover and Boonton most of his life before moving to the Whiting section of the township 11 years ago. Mr. Delany was a car salesman for Scerbo Brothers, Boonton, before he retired.

Survivors include his wife, Mar- tha, and several nephews. Arrangements are by Anderson Campbell Funeral Home, 115 Lacey Road, Whiting. Peter F. Chirichillo MADISON -Peter F.Chiri-chillo, 59, died yesterday at Morristown Memorial Hospital, apparently after a heart attack. He was born in Jersey City, and lived in Summit before moving to Madison 25 years ago.

Mr. Chirichillo was an Army veteran. He was a mechanical maintenance man for the Florham Park Board' of Education for 14 years. He was a member of the Forum Club and St. Vincent Martyr Church, both of Madison.

Survivors include his wife, Freda two sons, Peter, Randolph, and Nicholas, Madison; a brother, two grandchildren. Arrangements are by Madison Memorial Home, 159 Main St. Juan Vazquez DOVER Juan Vazquez, 47, died Monday at Dover General Hospital, apparently following a heart attack. He was born in Cayey, Puerto Rico, and lived in Dover for the past 25 years. Mr.

Vazquez was a machine operator for the Rockaway Division of Hewlett-Packard Rock-away Township, for nine years. He was a member of Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Church, Dover. Survivors include his wife, Celia; a son, Juan, and two daughters, Jeanette and Nancy, all at home; three brothers, Luis and James, both of Dover, and Gilbert, Tennessee; and five sisters, Delia Car-mona and Esther Vega, both of Dover, Victoria Agront, Orlando, Virginia, Jersey City, and Ida Ruiz, Marshalls Creek, Pa. Arrangements are by Quigley Funeral Home, 68 N. Bergen St.

Jean Gleckler MINE HILL TWP. -Jean Gleckler, 62, died Monday at Dover General Hospital after a long illness. She was born in Scranton, and lived in Mine Hill for many years. Mrs. Gleckler was a home-maker.

She was a member of the Mine Hill Senior Citizens. Survivors include her husband, Robert three sons, David, Mine Hill, Robert, Moonachie, and Fred, Prescott, a brother, David, Altoona, a sister, Ruth May, Wharton; and several grandchildren. Arrangements are by Smith Funeral Home, 1 Baker Dover. Robert H. Stoddart HOPATCONG Robert H.

Stod-dart, 63, died Monday at home. He was born in Newark and lived in Clifton before moving to Hopatcong 35 years ago. Mr. Stoddart was a maintenance supervisor for the Sussex County Homestead, Frankford Township, for 15 years before retiring. He was a Navy veteran of World War II.

i. oui vivuia iii- elude his wife, Barbara; a son, Steven O'Connor, Paterson; six daughters, Susan, Yachats, Debra Barber, Eugene, Virginia Butler, Newark, Cynthia Hawley, Berkshire Valley, Margaret Cooper, Flanders, and Elizabeth O'Connor, at home; a sister, Jane Pettigrew, Andover, and four grandchildren. Arrangements are by Leber Lakeside Funeral Home, Main Road, Landing. Marie Mabey MONTVILLE TWP. Marie Mabey, 77, died yesterday at home.

She was born in Paterson, and lived in North Haledon before moving to the Towaco section of the township 50 years ago. Mrs. Mabey was a homemaker. Survivors include two sons, Ronald, Towaco, and Walter Woodbury, 10 grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren. Arrangements are by Keri Memorial Home, 125 Main Lincoln Park.

George Megorden ALLAMUCHY TWP. George C. Megorden, 89, died Sunday at Hackettstown Community Hospital after a short illness. He was born in Altoona, and lived in Goshen, Florida, and for the past two years in Allamuchy. Mr.

Megorden was a printer for the Indianapolis Star newspaper, before retiring. He was a Navy veteran of World War I. Survivors include three daughters, Marilyn McGregor, with whom he lived; Carol Jarvis, Goshen, and Virginia Smith, Kenmore, N.Y.; 12 grandchildren; and seven greatgrandchildren. Arrangements are by Cochran Funeral Home, 905 High Hackettstown. Mary G.

Squires DOVER Mary G. Squires, 70, died yesterday at a daughter's home in Orlando, after a long illness. She was a lifelong resident of Dover. Mrs. Squires was a homemaker.

Survivors include two daughters, Marlene Vanderdrift, Orlando, and Judith Metzgar, Wharton; a brother, Edward May, California; seven grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. Her husband, Edwin died in 1985. Arrangements are by Nordland Funeral Home, 48 Berry St. Catherine Cramer GULFPORT, Fla. Catherine Cramer, formerly of Denville, N.

died Saturday at Humana Sun Bay Hospital, St. Petersburg. She was 74. She was born in Hoboken, N. and lived in Denville for 10 years before moving to Florida in 1970.

Mrs. Cramer was a homemaker. Survivors include her husband, Dixon; a daughter, Lynne Sheninger, Rockaway Township, N. a sister, Lena Finnegan, Mount Laurel, N. and two grandchildren.

Arrangements were by the Neptune Society, St. Petersburg. compared to 26 percent nationwide, the Health Department said. Homosexual or bisexual men who are not intravenous drug users account for 29 percent of the New Jersey cases, compared to 63 percent nationwide. Of the 225 cases added last month, 132 of them fall under a broadened definition of AIDS recently enacted by the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.

The new medical definition, which includes a variety of ailments that AIDS victims fall prey to, has in part led to a sharp increase in AIDS nubmers this year. The 225 cases reported in May equal more than half the total increase in cases for all of last year. So far this year, the 1,045 cases reported are nearing the total of 1,523 cases reported from 1982 through 1987. Half of the New Jersey AIDS victims are between the ages of 30 and 39, 21 percent are between 20 and 29 and 26 percent are over 40, according to the department. ously deficient." The study, based on a nationwide telephone survey in 1986 of 7,633 people, was directed by Dr.

Rodney A. Hayward of the University of California at Los Angeles. It is being published in tomorrow's New England Journal of Medicine. The survey found that insured working-age adults were nearly four times as likely as the elderly to need medical services but not receive them. And they were more than three times as likely to have major financial difficulties because of illness.

Among the insured working-age people, those who were poor were four times as likely as better off folks to have unfulfilled medical needs. Such problems were also more common among blacks and Hispanics than among whites. victims seeing red theft. Police in Miami arrested three suspects Sunday. There have been nine cases since March 25 at the Fort Lauderdale airport.

In New York, the police fraud squad calls it the "ketchup caper." "Ketchup is very big here," New York Detective James Tortora said. "They get them when they are kneeling down at St. Patrick's. While you are saying your 'Hail you get hit with ketchup and they are walking out the door with your handbag." Associated Press States News Service WASHINGTON The U.S. Coast Guard and Customs Service yesterday released guidelines telling boat owners how they can avoid seizure of their vessels under the "zero tolerance" anti-drug policy.

Under the policy, Coast Guard William Fischer Sr. MOUNT OLIVE TWP. William Fischer 74, died Monday at home. He was born in Mount Vernon, N.Y., and lived in Stanhope for 26 years before moving to the Budd Lake section of the township five years ago. Mr.

Fischer was a design engineer for the Bobst Champlain Roseland, for 30 years before retiring. He was an Army veteran of World War II. He was a member of Muscon- etcong Masonic Lodge 151 and vice president of the Netcong-Stanhope Senior Citizens. He was a member of the Stanhope Presbyterian Church. Survivors include his wife, Helen a son, William E.

Stanhope; a daughter, Janice Crissey, Byram; a sister, Florence Story, Fishkill, N.Y.; and four grandchildren. Arrangements are by Pichi Funeral Home, 105 Main Stanhope. Selena U. White HARDING TWP. Selena U.

White, 71, died Saturday at Morris-town Memorial Hospital. She was born in Philadelphia and lived in Harding since 1948. Mrs. White was a homemaker. Survivors include a son, Granville H.

West Tisbury, two sisters, Charlotte U. Haines, Chatham, and Josephine U. Evans, Killingworth, and three grandchildren. Arrangements are bv Ravmond A. Lanterman Son Funeral Home, 126 South Morristown.

death notices CHIRICHILLO. Peter on June 7, 1988. of Madison. Beloved husband of Freda A. (LoSapio).

Beloved father of Peter of Randolph and Nicholas of Madison. Brother of Rocco. Also survived by two grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral on Friday. 8:30 a.m., from the Madison Memorial Home, 1 59 Main Madison, with a Liturgy of Christian Burial to be offered at 9:30 a.m., at St.

Vincent R.C. Church, Madison. Interment St. Vincent's Cemetery. Visiting hours Wednesday, 7-9, Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

(08) CRAMER, Catherine (nee Miller), formerly Catherine LaCandia. 74 years old. of Gulfport, formerly of Denville, N.J. A memorial Mass will be held Saturday. June 11.

at 10 30 a.m. at Sts. Peter a Paul Roman Catholic Church, Hoboken. For those who wish, donations to the American Cancer Society would be appreciated by the fam-lly. (08) GOEREN, Mildred M.

(Philippi), of Morristown, N.J., on Monday, June 6, 1988. Wife of the late Cornelius J. Goeren Sr. Beloved mother of Cornelius J. Goeren Jr.

of Morristown, N.J. Grandmother of Michael Cornelius Goeren and Peter John Goeren. Funeral from the Doyle Funeral Home, 106 Maple Morristown. on Thursday, June 9, at 9 a m. followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at the Church of the Assumption, Morristown, at 9:30 am.

Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, East Orange N.J. Hours of visitation on Wednesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. (07,08) MABEY, Mane, age 77, of Towaco. Beloved mother of Ronald and Walter Jr. Funeral services will be held Thursday, 10 a.m., at the Ken Memorial Home, 125 Main Lincoln Park.

Interment will follow at Whitehall Cemetery, Towaco. Visiting, Wednesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. (08) WHITE, Selena at Morristown, N.J., of Harding Township, N.J., on June 4, 1988. Wife of the late Granville H. White.

Mother of Granville H. White West Tisbury, and the late Margaret H. White, Edgartown, Mass. Sister of Mrs. Charlotte U.

Haines of Chatham, N.J., Mrs. Josephine U. Evans, Killingworth, and the late Margaret U. Richardson of Philadelphia, Pa. Also survived by three grandchildren.

A memorial service will be held at the Church of The Redeemer, Morristown, N.J., on Saturday, June 11, 1988, at 11 a m. Interment private. In lieu of flowers, contributions in her memory may be made to the Center For Addictive Illness. 95 Mt. Kemble Morristown, N.J., or to the Discretionary Fund of the Church of The Redeemer, South Street, Morristown, N.J.

(08) ZWEIGLE, Janice 43, of Hopatcong Heights, N.J., on Sunday. June 5, 1988. Funeral services will be held on Thursday. 10 a.m., atlhe Morgan Funeral Home, 31-33 Main Netcong. Visitation Wednesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Eastern Star services will be held on Wednesday at 8 p.m. Interment, Restland Memorial Park, East Hanover, N.J. Memorial gifts to the Howard L. Stoll Memorial Fund, West Caldwell, N.J., or to the American Cancer Society of Sussex County, would be appreciated by the family. (07,08) ARIBA OIL .87 CHECKS, VISA, MASTERCARD WELCOME gal.

089-0780 00 0 00 JUNE 10 JUNE 1 1 Ptrtlopany Branch Lfcrary 2S2 Paralppany Road THOUSANDS OF BOOK wmHrMhr airwos or THI IIBHV PAnsirrAMV-Titov mUL i Solo i 1.. Associated Press BOSTON Old people have much better access to health care than do working-age adults, especially those who are poor, a new study concludes. Even young and middle-aged adults who are reasonably well off are less likely than the elderly to get care when they need it. "Our findings suggest that, whatever problems of access the elderly now face, access to health care is markedly worse for working-age adults," the researchers said. They said this finding "has major implications for national health policy, since by general agreement medical insurance coverage for the elderly has been seri Pickpockets leave MIAMI One of the latest tricks among crooks is ketchup, police in Florida and New York say.

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