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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 21
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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 21

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Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

He He He He He He He He He He Asbury Park April 20, 1 1983 A21 Obituaries See SERVICES for additional details on some obituaries. JOHN B. BORSKY ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS John B. Borsky, 75, of Hilton Road, died Wednesday at Riverview Hospital, Red Bank. He was born in Roselle and resided in Union Township before moving here 32 years ago.

Mr. Boraky was a sheet metal worker, retiring 13 years ago. He was member of the Over Fiftyfive Club, here, and Local 10 Sheet Metal Workers Union, Newark. He was a communicant of St. Agnes Roman Catholic Church, here.

Surviving are his wife, the former Lucille Puchalsky; three sons, Joseph, Sausalito, Paul, Pittsburgh, and Frank (Buzz), Denver; a daughter, Joanne Drastal, Rumson; three brothers, Paul, Hasbrouck Heights, Emory, Elizabeth, and Frank, Highlands, and 11 grandchildren. Posten's Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements. HELEN M. CICCONE MANCHESTER TOWNSHIP Helen M. Ciccone, 77, died yesterday at a Community Memorial Hospital, Toms River.

She was born in Yonkers, N.Y., and lived in the Silverton section of Dover Township before moving here nine years ago. She was a communicant of St. John's Roman Catholic Church, Lakehurst. Mrs. Ciccone was a member of the World War J.

Veterans Auxiliary Barracks 3440, Toms River. She was the widow of Nicholas, who died in 1970. Surviving are two sisters, Mary Balko, Pudy, N.Y., and Eva Brodie, Lakehurst. The D'Elia Funeral Home, Lakewood, is in charge of arrangements. JANE T.

WEIPPERT RICHMOND, R.I. Jane T. Weippert, a former Dover Township, N.J., resident died yesterday at South County Hospital, Wakefield. She was born in Newark, N.J., and lived in Dover Township before moving here 14 years ago. She was a communicant of St.

Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Toms River, N.J. She was the wife of Irvin, who died in 1956. Surviving are a son, Kenneth, Dover Township; three daughters, Theresa Martin, Wyoming, Jane Paris, Havertown, and Clementine Berry, New Providence, N.J., 19 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. The Anderson Campbell Funeral Home, Toms River, is in charge of arrangements. SAMUEL A.

WARREN SR. LAWNSIDE Samuel A. Warren who has a brother and sister in Asbury Park, died Monday at home. Mr. Warren, 75, was born in Moorestown and lived here 35 years.

He resided on Thomas Street. He was a truck driver for the J.S. Collins Moorestown, retiring 10 years ago. He was an Army veteran of World War I. Surviving are his wife, the former Mildred Farmer; a son, Samuel Willingsboro; two brothers, Carl, Asbury Park, and Joseph, Pleasantville; and two sisters, Eleanor Rodgers, Tucson, and Edith Baker, Asbury Park.

The Carl Miller Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements. Services BROZA Ocean Township, Thur, of Arline and Livingston, Township. FLORIDA Elberon on Yolanda End. Visitation Friday GILBERT Beach, Devoted 10 MAHON Michael of Grace Ave. am.

on R.C. Monmouth, MERSEREAU 1983. RICE hours WEISS 10th WOLCOTT In Memoriam ANDRUS we Loving Wife BROZA Officers, Trustees Cub Allan B. Broza, 58, accountant OCEAN TOWNSHIP Allan B. Broza, 58, a partner in an Asbury Park accounting firm, died yesterday at Monmouth Medical Center, Long Branch, following a heart attack.

Mr. Broza was born in Asbury Park and was a lifelong Shore area resident. He was a partner in the firm of Broza, Block Rubino, certified public accountants, Asbury Park. He had been with the firm for 15 years. He had served on the Ocean Township Board of Education, was past president of the Ocean Township Little League, and a former Pop Warner Football coach.

He was a member of the Hollywood Golf Club, the Deal Boro Club, and the Society of Certified Public Accountants. Surviving are his wife, the former Arline Lichterstein; a son, Richard, and two daughters, Lynne and Amy, all at home; a brother, Nathan, Livingston, and two sisters, Gertrude Berton, here, and Annette Levine, San Francisco. The Richard C. Hoidal Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements. ANNA J.

FOMKIN WARETOWN Anna J. Fomkin, 63, died yesterday at Southern Ocean County Hospital, Stafford Township. Mrs. Fomkin was born in Newark and lived in Linden and Jackson Township before moving here in 1971. She was a member of the Holiday Beach Club and the Library Club, both here.

She also was a 1 member of the American Association of Retired Persons. She was a communicant of St. Pius Roman Catholic Church, Lacey Township. Surviving are her husband, Frank; two daughters, Frances Karol, here, and Suzanne Bartron, Manasquan; a son, Frank here; two sisters, Helen King and Frances Boitt, both Rahway, and six grandchildren. The Riggs Funeral Home, Lacey Township, is in charge of arrangements.

CORABELLE B. RICE FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP Corabelle B. Rice, of Casilda Drive, died yesterday at home. Mrs. Rice was born in Hartford, and lived in Newton prior to moving here 47 years ago.

She was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Freehold, the Dorcas Circle of the church, and the church choir. She was a former er member of the Cecilian Club of Freehold, and was a volunteer at Freehold Area Hospital, here, for several years. Her husband, Richard died in 1976. Surviving are a son, Richard Rockville Centre, N.Y.; two daughters, Carol, Summit, and Cynthia R. Jillson, Ruxton, her mother, Addie K.

Bristol, Washington, D.C.; a sister, Adelaide B. Halley, Washington, and two grandchildren. The Freeman Funeral Home, Freehold, is in charge of arrangements. LEONID TRACENKO SR. JACKSON TOWNSHIP Leonid Tkacenko a builder, of North Lakeside Drive, died yesterday at home after a lengthy illneas.

Mr. Tracenko, 59, was born in Azov, Russia, and came to the United States in 1949, settling in Howell Township before moving here five years ago. He was a self employed builder for 33 years. He was a communicant of St. Alexader Nevsky Russian Orthodox Church, Howell Township.

Surviving are his wife, the former Gallna Posidelow; two sons, Alexander, Howell Township, and Leonid a daughter, Julie Vitanov, and a brother, Ivan, both Howell Township, and four grandchildren. The C.H.T. Clayton and Son Funeral Home, Howell Township, is in charge of arrangements. GRACE T. ANDRAKE MANCHESTER TOWNSHIP T.

Andrake, 81, a 1 retired English protessor, died Wednesday at her home. She was born in New York and lived in Rutherford before moving to Crestwood Village in the Whiting section here in 1973. She was a protessor in the English department at Fairleigh Dickinson University, Rutherford, for nine years. She retired in 1971. Mrs.

Andrake was a graduate of Smith College, Northampton, and Columbia University, New York. Surviving is her husband, Charles. The Anderson Campbell Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements. HENRY De WINDT MATAWAN Henry DeWindt, 64, of Minnisink Drive, died Wednesday at Bayshore Community Hospital, Holmdel Township, after a heart attack. Mr.

DeWindt was born in Wilemstad, the island of Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, and lived in the Netherlands before moving here seven years ago. He was a post office worker in Curacao. Surviving are his wife, the former Mercedes Kenny; three daughters, Cecelia Mosteiro, Curacao, Iris Wortreich, here, and Noemi Maas, Netherlands, and a son, Henry Camp Lejeune, N.C. The Day Funeral Home, Keyport, is in charge of arrangements. GEORGE J.

GILBERT WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. George J. Gilbert, 74, died yesterday at St. Mary's Hospital. Mr.

Gilbert was born in Lee Park, and lived in Asbury Park, N.J., before moving here about nine years ago. He was a retired certified public accountant for Standard Oil Company. Mr. Gilbert is survived by his wife, the former Florence Fitzgerald. The Buckley Funeral Home, Asbury Park, is in charge of arrangements.

BRIELLE George W. Hadley a sheet metal estimator, died yesterday home. Mr. Hadley, 65, was born in Rhode Island and lived in Linden and Manasquan before moving here about four months ago. He was employed at Danish Sheet Metal Belmar.

Mr. Hadley was a former construction code official in Brick Township. He' was a member of Lodge 2534, BPO Elks, Manasquan. He was an Army veteran of World War having served as a first lieutenant. Surviving are three sons, George W.

Ill, Vancouver, Canada, Craig Brick Township and Seth here; two daughters, Ann Nappi and Delores Owens, both here; a brother, Howard, Clearwater, two sisters, Ruth Danish, Manasquan, and Lillian Kesty, Westfield, and 11 grandchildren. The Robert C. Neary Funeral Home, Manasquan, is in charge of arrangements. GEORGE W. HADLEY JR.

KERMIT CULVER SOUTH BRUNSWICK TOWNSHIP Kermit Culver, 79, died yesterday at home of natural causes. Mr. Culver was born in New Brunswick and lived in Lakewood until moving here last year. He retired in 1969 after 42 years as a machinist with Monroe Systems for Business, West Orange. Surviving are two sons, Kermit Iselin section of Woodbridge Township, and William A.

Lakewood; a daughter, Evalena Mele, here; a brother, John, Toms River, 13 grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren. The M.J. Murphy Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. MICHAEL C. MAHON MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP Michael C.

Mahon, 78, of Grace Avenue in the Port Monmouth section, died Monday at Bayshore Community Hospital, Holmdel Township. Mr. Mahon was born in Dublin, Ireland, and lived in Brooklyn many years before moving here 10 years ago. He was a grocery store manager in Brooklyn, retiring in 1973. He was a communicant of St.

Mary's Roman Catholic Church, here, Surviving are his wife, the former Julia C. Keegan; a son Brendan, Wayne Township, and five grandchildren. The Scott Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements. DELAFIELD S. WOLCOTT JACKSON Wolcott, 59, died Memorial Hospital, Mr.

Wolcott ship and lived to moving here He was a Force Base. He was an I. Mr. Wolcott Reagan in legal The Associated Press WASHINGTON In a rare article by an incumbent President, Ronald Reagan equates abortion with slavery as a moral wrong and says "we cannot survive as a free nation" as long as legal abortion continues. In a 10-page article in the spring edition of the Human Life Review released yesterday, Reagan said "there is no cause more important" than the abolition of abortion and condemned the withholding of food and medical treatment from severely retarded newborns as infanticide.

The Review is a quarterly published by the Human Life Foundation of New York City, a foundation supporting anti-abortion causes. While expressing support for legislation that would outlaw abortion, Reagan suggested the Supreme Court might reverse itself and overrule its decision in the 1973 magazine abortion with case which tossed out anti-abortion laws. "Abraham Lincoln recognized that we could not survive as a free land when some men could decide that others were not fit to be free and should therefore be slaves," Reagan wrote. "Likewise, we cannot survive as a free nation 1 when some men decide that others are not fit to live and should be abandoned to abortion or infanticide." Continuing the analogy with slavery often made by the right-to-life groups, Reagan cited the Dred Scott decision of the Supreme Court of 1857, a decision that sanctioned the continuation of slavery. "This is not the first time our country has been divided by a Supreme Court decision that denied the value of certain human lives," the article said.

"Make no mistake: abortion on demand is not a right granted by the Constitution," he writes. "But the court's decision has by no means settled the debate. Suspect, hostage shot in highway gunbattle le JACKSONVILLE, Fla. A robbery suspect who may have faked appendicitis abducted a telephone worker from a hospital, then was wounded along with his hostage during a highway gunbattle, authorities said yesterday. The suspect and the telephone worker were hospitalized with gunshot wounds after police halted a commandeered telephone truck with a shotgun blast through the windshield.

Police spokesman Scott McLeod said the suspect, 18-year-old Navy aviation technician Charles Douglas Macy, had been arrested Tuesday with another sailor in the weekend holdups of three Jacksonville convenience stores. On Wednesday, after claiming the symptoms of appendicitis, Macy was taken to University Hospital, police said. There, he overpowered a hospital security guard and took his pistol. An off-duty police officer spotted Macy The Associated Press as he took a Southern Bell bucket truck and abducted telephone service technician John Hurst. The officer alerted others, who gave chase up Interstate 95, exhanging gunfire with Macy, police said.

One of several officers assembled at the highway's Trout River toll booth fired a shotgun blast through the truck's windshield as it slowed going through the toll lane. Police spokesman Sgt. Charles Kramer said police were trying to determine which shots hit Macy, and whether Hurst was wounded by police or his abductor. "I don't know how long that's going to take," Kramer said. He said additional charges of kidnapping, escape, aggravated battery and attempted murder of a police officer were filed against Macy, who was in serious but stable condition at University yesterday with a wound in the neck.

Hurst, 35, was in fair condition with a bullet wound in the back, said Theresa O'Donnell, a hosital spokeswoman. Pair admit other murders The Associated Press Superior Court in Santa Rosa on one count SAN FRANCISCO A couple facing trial on charges of murdering a man they met hitchhiking told police in an interview that they also killed two other people, and a new murder warrant was being prepared yesterday. Michael Bear Carson, 32, and his wife, Suzan, made the confession Wednesday in five hour interview, in which they called a themselves vegetarian Moslem "warriors" who had to kill. The couple face trial in Sonoma County Elks, Toms River. Grove Methodist Church, here.

He was a member of the Pleasant Neptune Surviving are his wife, the former Jose- Press phine Manna; two sons, Richard D. and Michael both here; two daughters, TRENTON Barbara C. Raymond, Fresno, and whom you can Rebecca Wolcott, here, and a brother, Nor- reads part of man, Largo, Fla. Washington, The Glenn A. De Bow Funeral Home, Junior High here, is in charge of arrangements.

of murder in the January shooting death of Jon Charles Hillyar, 30. Carson said he and his wife met Hillyar while hitchhiking and Hillyar had to be killed because he "abused Suzan sexually." At the interview, the Carsons also said they had killed Keryn Barnes, 23, in San Francisco in March 1981 and a man named Clark Stephens in Humboldt County in 1982. A murder warrant charging the Carsons in the Barnes case was being prepared yesterday, San Francisco Homicide Inspector Frank Falzon said. Pleasant Neptune pupil wins essay contest Gov. Thomas H.

Kean presented the award to Lori last Friday in a ceremony held in the Assembly Chambers. Andrea Andaloro, Spring Lake, also received an award from the governor for placing second in the contest. equates slavery "It is possible that the Supreme Court itself may overturn its abortion rulings. We need only recall that in Brown vs. Board of Education (the 1954 case overturning racial segregation of public schools), the court reversed its own 'separate-but-equal' decision.

"I believe if the Supreme Court took another look at Roe vs. Wade and considered the real issue between the sanctity of life ethic and the quality of life ethic, it would change its mind once again." Roe vs. Wade was the title of the 1973 abortion case. "My administration is dedicated to the preservation of America as a free land, and there is no cause more important for preserving that freedom than affirming the transcendent right of life of all human beings, the right without which no other rights have any meaning," the president wrote. Reagan, who has been criticized by some conservatives for not stressing social issues like abortion hard enough, gave heavy emphasis to the topic in his article, but not exclusively.

THE PRESIDENT referred to the socalled "Baby Doe" case in Indianapolis last year as an example of infanticide. In that case, a baby who was born with Down's Syndrome that involved severe mental retardation and an esophagus blockage that prevented the child from eating or drinking normally. "The death of that tiny infant tore at the hearts of all Americans because the child was undeniably a human being one lying helpless before the eyes of the doctors and the eyes of the nation. "The real issue for the courts was not whether Baby Doe was a human being. The real issue was whether to protect the life of a human being with Down's Syndrome, who would probably be mentally handicapped but who needed a routine surgical procedure to unblock his esophagus and allow him to eat." Reagan said the decision not to treat the baby was "in other words, that retardation was the equivalent of a crime deserving the death penalty." In the wake of the Baby Doe case, the Department of Human Services adopted rules designed to assure that hospitals do not allow handicapped infants to die by denying food and medical treatment.

A federal judge tossed out the rules earlier this month, but the government is appealing the case. TOWNSHIP Delafield S. yesterday at Community Toms River. was born in Howell Townin Freehold Township prior 28 years ago. bus driver at McGuire Air Army veteran of World War was a member of BPOE VICTOR C.

KUEBLER LACEY TOWNSHIP Victor C. Kuebler, 79, a retired fuel oil dealer, died yesterday at Community Memorial Hospital, Toms River. Mr. Kuebler was born in Newark and lived in Irvington before moving here five years ago. He had owned and operated Kuebler Fuel Oil in Irvington with his brother, Edward, for 25 years.

He retired in 1970. Surviving are his wife, the former Madeline Schroeder; a son, Victor here; a brother, Edward, Irvington, and a sister, Bert Werthmann, Maplewood Township. The Riggs Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements. ANNA PITSCHI JACKSON TOWNSHIP Anna Pitschi, 75, died Wednesday at Hillcrest Manor Nursing Home, Lakewood. She was born in New York City and lived there until moving here 12 years ago.

She was a member of St. Vladimir Russian Memorial Church. Surviving are her husband, Hawrylo; three sisters, Sally Hogan, Brewster, N.Y., Mary Struzynski, New Port Richie, and Monica Forfa, Lanoka Harbor, Lacey Township. The Glenn A. DeBow Funeral Home, here, is in charge of arrangements.

RUTH W. LITTLE RED BANK Ruth W. Little, a former assistant biology professor, died Monday at Riverview Hospital. Mrs. Little, 82, lived on Riverside Avenue.

She was born in Elizabeth and lived in New York before moving here in 1979. She had been an assistant professor of biology at Hunter College, New York, for 34 years before retiring in 1966. Her husband, Harold died in 1949. Surviving is a nephew, Alfred E. Schroeder, Newtown, Pa.

The John E. Day Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. JULIANE MUEHLHOFER MANCHESTER TOWNSHIP Juliane Muehlhofer, 90, of Cedar Glen Homes, died Tuesday at Community Memorial Hospital, Toms River. Born in Hirchburg, Germany, she came to this country in 1925 and lived in Mountainside before moving here in 1969. Surviving are two brothers, George Gabler and Alfans Gabler, both St.

Petersburg, and a sister, Kreszencia Volk, Munich, Germany. The Anderson and Campbell Funeral Home, Toms River, is in charge of arrangements. RONALD D. WEISS LAS VEGAS, Nev. Ronald D.

Weiss, who died Tuesday, is survived by a brother, Michael, and stepfather, Richard Boucher, both Bradley Beach, N.J. and a stepmother, here. It was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Press that his brother was a Bradley Beach patrolman and that his stepfather and stepmother were his stepgrandparents. 2 REAGAN FRAMED the abortion question in slightly different terms than some right-to-life groups, turning away from an emphasis on the question of when human life begins. "The real question is not when human life begins, but 'what is the value of human Every legislator, every doctor and every citizen need to recognize that the real issue is whether to affirm and protect the sanctity of all human life or to embrace a social ethic where some human lives are valued and others are not." repeated a frequent statement of right-to-life leaders that Americans do not now oppose abortion, at least in public opinion polls, because the issue has not been discussed in the proper perspective.

"The great majority of the American people have not yet made thier voices heard, and we cannot expect them to any more than the public voice arose against slavery until the issue is clearly framed and presented." State House Bureau "A park is like a friend visit at regular intervals," the essay that won Lori Neptune, first place in the School essay contest. DINETTES DINING ROOMS TO PENN STOREWIDE SAVINGS UP DINETTES No Lower Prices In The State of New Jersey $349 of Dinettes Hundreds Display Every Style. 5 PC. BRASS OAK DESIGNER GROUP SAVE $90 These Breuer Chairs Have Brass Frames, Solid Oak And Natural Cane Backs With Vinyl Seats. Table Is Formica Oak Butcher Blocks With Heavy Brass Legs.

CAROL 531-1631 Dinette SLEEP SHORE 1691 ICHWAY 35 OAKHURST 1 Ta To.

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