I It!.. Add Up lltws ll - Greenbelt News Reviewgreenbeltnewsreview.com/issues/GNR19760916.pdf ·...

5
PageS Thursday, September 9, 1976 PORTER'S UQUORS Bicentennial Actitities ... Dalto. Blvd. ., ..... ,. (Ddt to KcDoilald'l Ia Oollep Park) We have the 1ar1rst llelec:Uon ot Wlnell from around the world. Special prlcee on cue Order IJarly BACK TO SCHOOL SALE Fri .• Extra Large Pepperoni Piua ............................ , $3.95 Sat .• Royal Steak Sub ......... ...... ........................................ $ .85 Larp Folllllaln DrlDk W/evflrf .....U piDa Cokes or R.C. cartons ......................................................... $1.19 , 7 Up cartons ........... _._ ...: .................................. $ .99 Stepht•n Poi&Mhik final majc.r -rvrrrt in Green- belt's celebration of our Nation's Bicentennial wa' an overwhelming success as the 1976 Greenbelt La- bor Day Festival came to a cloae From the opening ceremonies when the Greenbelt Concert Band played, for the first time. the official Green- belt March composed by Greenbelt resident Seymour Levine to the final ceremonies when "Greenbelt Citizen of the Year" Re>'erend Kenneth ,BukPr presented awards, the Festival pro\'ided all of us with an opportunity to take part-either actively as pror.ram participants. or jJallsivrly as ? portion of the rn- thusiaatlc audiences that were present at many of the events. The weather was for all four days of the Festival. The careful months-long planning of the Labor Day Festival Com- mittee was \'ef)' evident as pro- grams, such as the parade •. which Involved great numbers of volun- tN'rs, wore presented with special care. It would br extremely diffi- cult to name ench of the people. from the cbalrmM to the clean-up crew. who were responalble tor putting together this great pro- gram. Howevrr a.s chairman of the Greenbelt American Revolution Btc.-ntPnnlal Committee, and, I am oure, I ppho the sentiments of mv committee collealflles and the citi- zens of Greenbelt. I want to thank all of you for r;ivlng us a memor- able week-end. · We still have time left for get· ting Bicentennial ldeu that can be put Into action before the end of 1978. Bring them to the Bicen- tennial Committee's meeting next TuMday night, September 14, at 8 p.m. In the city council room. Greenbelt orgnnlzation hiatorlana ar• reouested to brln11 or eend their updated histories for the Blccnten· nial Archives In the Tugwell Room to Mrs. Betty Allen at the Green- belt Library. Those needing help with background Information, may consult copies of back Issues of the Ol'l't!llbelt Newa Rilvlew. available on microfilm at the library. Mrs. Allen or others on the library staff will provide assistance. Quilt: Exhibit at: Library The National Quilting Associa-- tion's Seventh Annual Quilt Ex- hibit will be at the library during · the week of September 13. The exhibit Is open to the public free admission. The hours are as fol- lows: Tues., Sept. 14 -1 p.m. - 9 p.m.; Wed. and Thurs., Sept. 15, 16 - 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.; Fri .. Sept. 17 . 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. and Sat., Sept. 18 - 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Tlte Cltrysantltemum Trail Come, follow the-Chrysanthemum Trail on Sunday afternoon, &p- tember 19, from 1:30 to 5 p.m. The paper chrysanthemums will lead people on the House and Garden Tour of Greenbelt Ro111es, Inc. Read the News Rev!- next week for more details. Festival Party Sept:. 17 Th<· thank you party for ewry one who worked on the 1976 Labor Day Festival will be held Friday, Sept. 17, from 8 p.m. to I a.m. at the American Legion Hall on Greenbelt Road. From 8 to 9 a slide presentation of highlights from the Festival will be shown by Bill 'Bernhards, Featlval photo- grapher. The Jive band Kodeis will for dancing from 9 o'clock on. Refreshments will be provided, admission Is free and all adults are welcome. For further Information, call Bob Grigsby st 282-11230. Any queatlou about w1nel welcomed · CLOSED Sl.'NDAV 107 CENTERWAY 474-4998 JAZZ TAP GIVE TALENT A CHANCE AT THE ELEANOR PERNIA STUDIO OF REGISTRATION - SEPTEMBER 11, 1976 FROM 10:00 A.M. UNTIL 3:00P.M. BALLET PRESCHOOL HAWAIIAN ACROBATICS 19 YEARS TEACHING EXPERIENCE CLASSES & PRIVATE LESSONS FAMILY RATES ADULT CLASSES JAZZ CLASS SIZE TAP LIMITED BALLET FOR INFORMATION TELEPHONE 9SH280 Jlo' NO ANSWER 937-S/179 PROFESSIONAL DANCE TEAOIIERS ASSOCIATION Located In The Warren Bulldlnr adjaeent to Oheetnut Hllh !!hopplnc (ltonter lOIS& Baltimore Avenue, 84-Jtavllle, Marylaod APPROVED AND ACCREDITED MARYLAND BOARD OF EDUCATION THE GREENBELT LIONS CLUB Wn.L SPONSOR A HEALTH FAIR ON SAT., SEPT. 18th from 9 AM to 5 PM AT THE CENTER SCHOOL IN GREENBELT FREE TESTS Sight, Glaucoma, Hearing, Blood Pressure, Anemia, Breast Cancer and Pap Examination• plus Height and Weight OPTIONAL Blood Tests for 12 Conatltuentl for a Fee of $4.00 Thia will include testing by trained personnel for Cholesterol, Glucose, SGOT, LDH, Alk. Phoa., Total Bilirubin, Albumin, Total Protein, Uric Acid, BUN, Inorganic Phosphorus and Calcium which coven Blood Fat, Diabetes, Liver and Muscle Function, Gout, Bone, Kidney and Blood Abnormalities plua rare forms of Cancer. We hope that Greenbelten will take advantage of this low cost screening program listed above which would cost much more elsewhere. (FASTING FOR 12 HOURS IS NECESSARY BEFORE ANYONE TAKES THIS OPI'IONAL TESTING. WATER, COFFEE OR TEA wmtOUT CREAM OR SUGAR MAY BE TAKEN, HOWEVER.) ADDFD TO nus HEALTH FAIR will be Pharmacilt Larry Jason and Barbara Kopelman of tho Greenlteh CCHP Pharmacy who, will conduct and explain A MEDICINI SCIEINING SBVICI: This II very Important to that obtains medicine, drugs or prescriptloM. They will be happy to talk to you. THIS IS PIB. IN ADDITION a .... security agent will oxploln MCial socurlty and o..W. quostloM on IOCial security and medlcaN FOR FURTHER INFORMA 110N CAlL CHAIRMEN IYAN .. AIL 2Q.Ol45 tr 344-2283 IIF.ItY FillER, 474-1817 It!.. Ufll(U\. I wtttttbtlt . , ""'"' "''"" ,;4:tns Topics Add Up to lltws ll _. , U ·· entfu! Meeting i, In spite of such alluring topics as "X-Rated Movies" and "Golden Triangle" and "Citizen's Request to Extend Tem'lis Court · 18 g - Lighting During' -&wnmer Months", the Monday, September 13, . . ·· meeting of the Greenbelt City Co1mcil was dec:idedly UDeVel1tfuL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER The ctty.eollcttor, Emmett Nu- ins the C0Pc11t1oDa of the municipal Volume 39, Number 44 GREENBELT MARYLAND T na, quashed any effort of the coun- pool. Tbe cii;J' mauaer, J- - ___ .;;;:.::.;.:.;::.:;.::;._r:::;h:u:rs:d:a:y:, ell to reJrUJate the mowing of x- Glete, •tated he had looked tnt.o rated movies by adv181na' that the each prolll- that Coloe bad cited. G I 11 p 11 s I I I WHAT GOES ON state hiUI pre-empted this field found the pool and bath-boale, n · repar1ng oar neat Friday, Sept.11,11 p.m. -1 a.m. f Labor Day Festival Apprecla- therefore the city oould DOt Jegla- IIOIUid". D ··splay or I lous·tng Conf. tion Dance, American Legion late on thla subject Further, be Ftom the audience, Bob Greif M Hall stated no one tn the ltate of Mary- noted that fi'IIU7 other IPOlt 8 p.m. Roosevelt Democratic laDd wu really 101111r to - an t. heavily IQbeidbed b7 by Miriam Cornelius The National Association of Housing Cooperatives has asked Greenbelt Homes, Inc. to prepare a display of the solar heat pro- ject for the NAHC conference to be held in Washington, D.C. in November. This request was reported to the board of directors at its Sept. 9 meeting by Manager Roy Breashears. During the first three weeks in August according to information received from NASA, only 3/lOth of one gallon of fuel oil was used to heat hot water for the four units having solar collectors. With Vice President Don Volk tor the purpose on the sum of $1,000 presiding in the absence of Preal- already earmarked for placing In- dent James W. Smith, the GHI sulation under aluminum aiding to board voted to hold Ill next rei(Uiar provide a method of determining meeting on Wed., Sept. 22, to a- cost effectiveness. void a conflict with the first preel- , Fuel ou dential debate, echeduled for that Thursday. At Ita Sepl 9 meeting, the board took action on the re- placement of porch roofs; allowed a temporary exception to the regu- lation aplnst renting out rooms; considered a member'• request to Install aluminum aiding; and re- ceived reports from management and from the audit Ponlb Roofl The bid of the Fay Construction Company for the replacement and repair of alii&' porch roofs on 116 masonry homes was approved for first reading In the amount of $22.820· under expenditure authori- zation # ts. As thl1 bid was less than the amount buclfeted by some St,l!OO, the balance wu let ulde for replacement of any rotten wood tbat mlaht be found. <lompeeeloWe Eueptlon For the first 6 months of 1976 Kanqer Brealhears reported that consumption of fuel oil was about · ·the same as for 1974 and 1975. Un- . leas the weather In the last quarter of 1978 Ia UniiiUBIIy cold, he said, GHI should come very close to the budgeted figure for 1976. Towoboule Problem At a meetln1 of Townhouse mem· bers, the manarer reported, those present voted 11 to 1 to undertake on a self-help basis the first etep of the recommendatlou made by Greenhome ol: O'Mara, with GHI . furnlsblnl materials and •upervl- slon. This step 11 deacrlbcd by management as follows: "Fill, grade and IIOd as neceasary adjacent to all unit. to provide a minimum elope of 2 away from 'l"rovlde roof leader exteulou, u neceA&ry, and poaltive drainage for all roof down ·spouts In order to facilitate expe· dltloua tranlfer of roof l'IIIUiff away from unit walls. Grade yard areas around unltl, as neceasary, to Insure that no puddling of water Club, Greenbelt Community X-rated film becaue the erotic the city. Cltlsenl mutt the Center ecene11 had alreadJ been ceuored; pool throucb taltea aDd then pay Satunlay, Sept. 18, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. however theatre cnvnen liked to qatn to 11M Jt. Wbf llhould the Health Fair, Center School llle the ratlq to lure people <Into pool be wileD DO 10 a.m. - % p.m. Special Voter movie ho-. ,-· · clty-.pouored IJ)Ort t. self- Registration For City - City OGidea 'l'ltuPI aupporttnar• be uked. "Wb7 vlc- Oftlcea 'l'be OolcJeD Trlaqle wUl be on t1mbe one croup of people?" be 2 p.m. Garden Club Picnic, the apnda apln for further and queried. Greenbelt Lake deeper dlecuNion. Tbe cii;J' mana- It wu noted that UDder the ori- Sullday, Sept. 19, 2-ll p.m. GHI ger announ\)ed that he received a gina! bond laue tor the pool, the House and Garden Tour, start- new plan for the OoldeD TrlaqJe pool wa1 mppcJied to be llelt-eup- lng at GHI Bd. Room, Hamil- which showa llarJIIDd Department portJq. And 01-. ai8D atated that ton Place of Tr&lllportatlon effected a cbaqe tJie pool operatloa doel DOt break Wedneeday, Sept. 11, a p.m. GHI In plaCement of a ramp connect- eYeJl becaUie tJie Cllt7 to bold Board Meeting, Hamilton PL ln1 Greenbelt Road and the Bal- dmrD the price of pool pallet. Ill 8 p.m. Twin Pini!e Reconven- tlmore-Wuhlncton Parkway. Th1l .&lltion, be noted. that to IUb- cd Special Membership Meet· ramp would lead to the clollng of lt&Dtla117 llllpnwe the pool and pro- lng, Twin Pines Oftlce the to the B-W Parkway vide a number of <Southbound) from Southway, and u umbrellu &114 ellalrl "a llllb- Twin Pines Reconvenes 197.5 Annual MHt:ing The 1Win Pines special member- ship meeting of Januarf lio, 1975 will bs reconvened It 8 p.m. .on Wcdne1day, Stpt. 22 at the Twin Pines office. The meeting will fol- low the meeting of the Twin Pinel Member Relatlou Committee which will ltart at 7:80. Imme- diately following theae two meet- Ings, the board of directors w111 bold Ita Nllllar meeting. will occur." Aadlt 0omm&&tee Report Krs. llarpret HoteiiMII, obalr.- man of the Audit Oo111111lttee, IUb- mltted a report with three reoom- mendatlou. The first recommen- dation, on yard Unee, was referred by the board to the Aesthetics Com- mittee. The •econd recommends- See om BOARD, p. 7, oo1. a council, particularly councilman lt&Dtlal outlay of moaq' t. _. Tom White, wu furlo111 with ury, and the ei!;J- hu Dflller bad Maryland DOT for euneetlng the available IIUfllclellt fundi for that cbanae without conaultlng the city, PIII'IIO"·" ''without approval or fundi for IUch VariOUI m•ben ol -n Ita- a ramp". ted that their bllpeotloo ot the Councilman Richard Plllkl pro- pool oollftrllled tbe eM:J IIWI&Pr'• tested that Capital Cadillac lhould poeltlon that die pool wa1 funo- not be allowed · to locate on the tlonally In 1004 csdltloa.- Olele Golden Triangle becauJe that par- stated. "Oirvlolllb', .with areeter eel of land wu deemed "apeclal" fundi, the condition of the pool on the Kuter Plall for Greenbelt- · coUld be lapi'Uftd. H-. tlle.e Colle1e Park and Capltal C&dlllao IIIIProv•eub 'IIOUid be prlmarll)' wu not 1peclal to him. CounQII· aatJietlc and would not relate to man Cutaldl u well u the city the main function of the pool - eollcltor pointed out that the Ool- whlob t. to a c:1.;n and -'e den Trlansle wa1 10ned 0-1 (com- lwiiiiiDIDa fllcllltJ.• : mercia!) and the city did 11ot hav., Tbe council -s»ted all any aonlng author\t7. tee report1 an!l appmecl all U. All the &lhl4 that .-olutlou Wore .It Jpalucllq ·the they lhOllld plllh the ownen to autborllatlon • provide the "CODCept plan" for the llll&nclng for tile ol entire pleoe of land u both they Wemr&J ldjacent to the Jewllb and the County Council requeated CollullunltJ Ceater. CoDitnlction before any more sewer appllcatlona work will begin th1JI falL are approved. TtlllDia U,b&lq In ·a:-rare exeepUon to GHI lations, the boatel voted to approve a member's request to rent out one of her three bedrooms for up to 18 month• <when the matter wlll be reviewed.> Director James Fostor, who made the motion, noted that thl1 member Is trying to solve a severe financial crisis while caring for a disabled relative. Director' Virginia Moryadu asked whether the rental Income might endanger the member's right to assistance under section 8 of the Housing and Community Development Act, and was reiUISured by Mana1er Brea- sheara. The motion was passed over the opposition of Directors Stephen Polaschlk and Jim Wright, who thought -that renting out a room might not be the best answer to the problem. le1ilworth Ext. Draws legative Views Although 25 penou aimed a pe- tition seeking the lilhting of the tennla courta tor an additional hour during the summer, no one ap- peared to spll&k for the 11th hour lighting. The· council wu dlaln- cllned to IJ'Bnt the request any- Bus to Maryland U. Will Earlier The ahuttle bill eervlce from Greenbelt to the Unlveralty of :Maryland will berin fifteen minutes earlier for the next two weeka. The first run will bqln at 7: tG a.m. Succeeding runs will be. 4G minute• apart. The earlier departure time .ttould allow students who have 8 a.m. clasaes to be on time. Alwnlnum Siding Much of the eventnr was spent In an effort to develop a consistent policy on allowing members to re- surface their units with aluminum aiding and on whether to require Insulation under the aiding. A member llvin1 In unit D of a 4- unlt masonry row wanted permla· alon to Install aluminum siding on her unit and attached gar-.es. She had obtained an estimate which did not Include Insulation. Another member, living In unit B of the same row, alao WLtted to Install aluminum aiding, but had not sub- mitted a written request. Residents In units A and C were said not to be Interested In aiding. Director Moryadas objected to handllnr ap- provals for aluminum siding on a "piecemeal basis"; she also urged adoption of a general policy re- quiring Insulation to be placed un· der siding. Charles Schwan, long· range planning committee member, aald from the ftoo• that lnaulation Is more Important than aiding to the corporation, becauae It 11 ln- aulatlon that euta down beating costs. He susgested that If mem- ber• pay for their own lldlng, the poration might well pay for lnaulatlon. With Moryadu dla· 1en-t1ng, the board voted to approve unit D for aluminum aiding and indicated that the member In unit B could obtain approval contingent on •ubmltting a formal request oorpore.tion 1tandard1 approved by manapmenl The board then voted to tor luulation \lllder the 1idlng on unltl D and B, drawiq by Gabe Sucher At a public meeting held September 1, Maryland state high- way officials presented plans, answered questions and listened to from citizens concerning the proposed extension of Kenilworth Avenue north from Crescent Road in Greenbelt to U.S. 1 in Beltsville. The meeting was opened by M.S. Caltrider, the State Highway Administration's district engineer, after which a description of the study process was given by Paul Catherman, the project manager. Catherman presented the SHA'a recommendation to retain throo major altematlves for further con· side ration: 1) widening of Edmon· aton Road to four or more lanes along Its current route and extend· lng It to Route One, 2) construe· tion of a new divided highway par- allell to Edmonston Road, which would remain as a service route, 3) the "no-build" option. Mayor Gil Weldenfeld presented the Greenbelt city council's view· point, the need for IIIOh a etudy In light of the cur· rent budgetary constraints faced by the SHA. Weldenfeid objected to the extension of Kenilworth Av· enue, notln1 that advene environ· mental Impacts would result. The mayor recommended that the SHA concentrate Instead on redesign· lng the Intersection of Kenilworth Avenue with Greenbelt Road. La· ter In the evening, 'Maryland alate delegate Leo Greene rose to expl'ess bla support for Weldenfeld's posl· tion. Greenbelt reeldent Gordon Allen expreased his general opposition to any widening of Edmonston Road beyond a 2 or B·l&lle faclllty. He did, ·however, commend the 8HA for upa'radlng already done on the pre1ent route and for lm· provementa made at the lnteraf<!- tlon of Powder Mill and Edmon· aton toad1. The one other Green· b,elter teetlfyinl oppolled any wid· enlng and lllftl!lted that the only facility worth bulldlq In thl1 area wu a bikeway. Support for a bike· way wu also expreaaed by Thom· as Sutton, a cyclist from Seabrook. Groenbelt was joined In Its oppo- altlon to the Kenilworth extension by Carl Christensen, a Beltsville resident. Chrlstellllen noted that In the IG yeara h<> has lived In this area he hu never been slg· nlficantly delayed while driving on Edmouton Road. In his words, he saw "no need for another rsce.- track" between I-95 and the Bal· timore·Washlngton Parkway. Sam Helm, a plumber working In Belts· ville, objected to any alignment that might encroach on hla factory. Support for a Kenilworth Av- enue extension waa voiced by C. B. Morris, representing the mayor of College Pe.rk. Morrla claimed that such an extension would dl· vert traffic from U S. 1, thus re· llevlng congestion on that high· way. Support for the Kenilworth extension also came from James Rodgers, spooking for the Prince Georges Chamber of Rodgers went on to advocate the widening of Kenilworth Avenut> to six lanea south of 1·4911. Engineer Caltrider responded that there are Jong•term plana for widening Ken· llworth to six Janea-. Such a wid· enlng, however, Ia not within the ecope of the present atudy. The Kenilworth extension study will now move Into lt.leecond slaie. According to Caltrider, the next public meetln1 to consider this matter will probably be held any- time from three to 1lx month• from now. A final public bearln1 on the project Ia tentatively eche- duled for late autumn In 1977. way. Pool Problenw Council bad earlier received a letter from Thomas Coloe crlticlz- NOTICE OF SPECIAL REFERENDUM ELECTION The City Council has adopted Resolution No. SS8, which calls, for a SPECIAL REFERENDUM nECTION on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1976.7:00 A.M. to 8:00P.M. at the following polllq placel: 3rd Precinct - Greenbelt Municipal Building 25 Crescent Road 8th Precinct • North End Elementary School Rld1e and Research Roads 8th Precinct - Sprin1hlll Lake Community Center 6220 Springhill Dtlve At thla special elpption, voters of Greenbelt will conalder whether or not to epprove a Charter amendment which would permit the city to undertake a proposed 100-unlt elderly houslna project. The question to l>e placed on the ballot will read as follows: Are you l">R or AGAINST 1111 of the Green- belt City ()barter to provide U...t the city may enter Into a contnct for a period of not more than forty (to) yeua wltb the state of Maryland relatlnl' to the c0118tmctlon and oparatiGa ot a fedenlly 111blldlaed bouttns proJect for elderiJ .. provided In Charter Amendment Reeolutlon Number 1171-1 wblcb wiD efteetlve If appll'Oftd by thla AGAINST ... ------------------ _____ .. __ _ ' . : ; I ' < ·_ ' . ' .. '! I, I ' .. :' I 'l I 'l l j l j f t I !

Transcript of I It!.. Add Up lltws ll - Greenbelt News Reviewgreenbeltnewsreview.com/issues/GNR19760916.pdf ·...

Page 1: I It!.. Add Up lltws ll - Greenbelt News Reviewgreenbeltnewsreview.com/issues/GNR19760916.pdf · ar• reouested to brln11 or eend their ... With Vice President Don Volk tor the purpose

PageS Thursday, September 9, 1976

PORTER'S UQUORS !!!~~IL ~!!Y.:c!! Bicentennial Actitities

... Dalto. Blvd. .,.....,. (Ddt to KcDoilald'l Ia Oollep

Park) We have the 1ar1rst llelec:Uon ot Wlnell from around the world. Special prlcee on cue p~

Order IJarly

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE Fri .• Extra Large Pepperoni Piua ............................ , $3.95 Sat .• Royal Steak Sub ......... ~ ...... ~ ........................................ $ .85

Larp Folllllaln DrlDk W/evflrf .....U piDa

Cokes or R.C. cartons ......................................................... $1.19 , 7 Up cartons ........... _._ ... : .................................. $ .99

b~- Stepht•n Poi&Mhik Tht~ final majc.r -rvrrrt in Green­

belt's celebration of our Nation's Bicentennial wa' an overwhelming success as the 1976 Greenbelt La­bor Day Festival came to a cloae From the opening ceremonies when the Greenbelt Concert Band played, for the first time. the official Green­belt March composed by Greenbelt resident Seymour Levine to the final ceremonies when "Greenbelt Citizen of the Year" Re>'erend Kenneth ,BukPr presented awards, the Festival pro\'ided all of us with an opportunity to take part-either actively as pror.ram participants. or jJallsivrly as ? portion of the rn­thusiaatlc audiences that were present at many of the events.

The weather was lll&d<>-t~H~rder for all four days of the Festival. The careful months-long planning of the Labor Day Festival Com­mittee was \'ef)' evident as pro­grams, such as the parade •. which Involved great numbers of volun­tN'rs, wore presented with special care. It would br extremely diffi­cult to name ench of the people. from the cbalrmM to the clean-up crew. who were responalble tor putting together this great pro­gram. Howevrr a.s chairman of the Greenbelt American Revolution Btc.-ntPnnlal Committee, and, I am oure, I ppho the sentiments of mv committee collealflles and the citi­zens of Greenbelt. I want to thank all of you for r;ivlng us a memor­able week-end. · We still have time left for get· ting Bicentennial ldeu that can be put Into action before the end of 1978. Bring them to the Bicen­tennial Committee's meeting next TuMday night, September 14, at 8 p.m. In the city council room.

Greenbelt orgnnlzation hiatorlana ar• reouested to brln11 or eend their

updated histories for the Blccnten· nial Archives In the Tugwell Room to Mrs. Betty Allen at the Green­belt Library. Those needing help with background Information, may consult copies of back Issues of the Ol'l't!llbelt Newa Rilvlew. available on microfilm at the library. Mrs. Allen or others on the library staff will provide assistance.

Quilt: Exhibit at: Library The National Quilting Associa-­

tion's Seventh Annual Quilt Ex­hibit will be at the library during

· the week of September 13. The exhibit Is open to the public free admission. The hours are as fol­lows: Tues., Sept. 14 - 1 p.m. - 9 p.m.; Wed. and Thurs., Sept. 15, 16 - 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.; Fri .. Sept. 17 . 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. and Sat., Sept. 18 - 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.

Tlte Cltrysantltemum Trail Come, follow the-Chrysanthemum

Trail on Sunday afternoon, &p­tember 19, from 1:30 to 5 p.m. The paper chrysanthemums will lead people on the House and Garden Tour of Greenbelt Ro111es, Inc. Read the News Rev!- next week for more details.

Festival Party Sept:. 17 Th<· thank you party for ewry

one who worked on the 1976 Labor Day Festival will be held Friday, Sept. 17, from 8 p.m. to I a.m. at the American Legion Hall on Greenbelt Road. From 8 to 9 a slide presentation of highlights from the Festival will be shown by Bill 'Bernhards, Featlval photo­grapher. The Jive band Kodeis will provld~llllc for dancing from 9 o'clock on. Refreshments will be provided, admission Is free and all adults are welcome. For further Information, call Bob Grigsby st 282-11230.

Any queatlou about w1nel welcomed · CLOSED Sl.'NDAV

107 CENTERWAY 474-4998

JAZZ

TAP

GIVE TALENT A CHANCE AT THE

ELEANOR PERNIA STUDIO OF DAN~E REGISTRATION - SEPTEMBER 11, 1976

FROM 10:00 A.M. UNTIL 3:00P.M.

BALLET

PRESCHOOL

HAWAIIAN

ACROBATICS

19 YEARS

TEACHING

EXPERIENCE

CLASSES

& PRIVATE

LESSONS

FAMILY RATES

ADULT CLASSES

JAZZ CLASS SIZE

TAP LIMITED

BALLET FOR INFORMATION TELEPHONE 9SH280 Jlo' NO ANSWER 937-S/179

~EMBER PROFESSIONAL DANCE TEAOIIERS ASSOCIATION

Located In The Warren Bulldlnr adjaeent to Oheetnut Hllh !!hopplnc (ltonter

lOIS& Baltimore Avenue, 84-Jtavllle, Marylaod

APPROVED AND ACCREDITED MARYLAND BOARD OF EDUCATION

THE GREENBELT LIONS CLUB Wn.L SPONSOR A HEALTH FAIR

ON SAT., SEPT. 18th from 9 AM to 5 PM AT THE CENTER SCHOOL IN GREENBELT

FREE TESTS Sight, Glaucoma, Hearing, Blood Pressure, Anemia, Breast Cancer and Pap Examination• plus Height and Weight

OPTIONAL Blood Tests for 12 Conatltuentl for a Fee of $4.00

Thia will include testing by trained personnel for Cholesterol, Glucose, SGOT, LDH, Alk. Phoa., Total Bilirubin, Albumin, Total Protein, Uric

Acid, BUN, Inorganic Phosphorus and Calcium which coven Blood Fat, Diabetes, Liver and Muscle Function, Gout, Bone, Kidney and Blood

Abnormalities plua rare forms of Cancer.

We hope that Greenbelten will take advantage of this low cost screening program listed above which would cost much more elsewhere.

(FASTING FOR 12 HOURS IS NECESSARY BEFORE ANYONE TAKES THIS OPI'IONAL TESTING. WATER, COFFEE OR TEA

wmtOUT CREAM OR SUGAR MAY BE TAKEN, HOWEVER.)

ADDFD TO nus HEALTH FAIR will be Pharmacilt Larry Jason and Barbara Kopelman of tho Greenlteh CCHP Pharmacy who, will conduct and explain A MEDICINI

SCIEINING SBVICI: This II very Important to ~- that obtains medicine, drugs or prescriptloM. They will be happy to talk to

you. THIS IS PIB.

IN ADDITION a .... security agent will oxploln MCial socurlty and o..W. quostloM on IOCial security and medlcaN

FOR FURTHER INFORMA 110N CAlL CHAIRMEN IYAN .. AIL 2Q.Ol45 tr 344-2283 IIF.ItY FillER, 474-1817

It!.. Ufll(U\. \\~\lU ua~ I

wtttttbtlt . , ""'"' "''"" ~ ,;4:tns Topics Add Up to

lltws ll ,.~;~~~~~~~~~:i~ _. , U ·· entfu! ~u~ll Meeting i,

~~I. In spite of such alluring topics as "X-Rated Movies" and "Golden Triangle" and "Citizen's Request to Extend Tem'lis Court

· 18 g - Lighting During' -&wnmer Months", the Monday, September 13, . . ·· meeting of the Greenbelt City Co1mcil was dec:idedly UDeVel1tfuL

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER The ctty.eollcttor, Emmett Nu- ins the C0Pc11t1oDa of the municipal

Volume 39, Number 44 GREENBELT MARYLAND T na, quashed any effort of the coun- pool. Tbe cii;J' mauaer, J--___ ..;...;;.;.;;.;.;;.~;;.;..---...;;;.;;;;;;;~;;;:~· .;;;:.::.;.:.;::.:;.::;._r:::;h:u:rs:d:a:y:, :Se:p:te:m:=be:r;::16:·:1~9:76 ell to reJrUJate the mowing of x- Glete, •tated he had looked tnt.o

rated movies by adv181na' that the each prolll- that Coloe bad cited.

G I 11 p 11 s I I I WHAT GOES ON state hiUI pre-empted this field ~ found the pool and bath-boale,

n · repar1ng oar neat Friday, Sept.11,11 p.m. -1 a.m. =~ ~t!~~~:%eyan': :::e~=to~-:.::~0=~

f Labor Day Festival Apprecla- therefore the city oould DOt Jegla- IIOIUid".

D··splay or I lous·tng Conf. tion Dance, American Legion late on thla subject Further, be Ftom the audience, Bob Greif M Hall stated no one tn the ltate of Mary- noted that fi'IIU7 other IPOlt ~t 8 p.m. Roosevelt Democratic laDd wu really 101111r to - an --~• t. heavily IQbeidbed b7

by Miriam Cornelius The National Association of Housing Cooperatives has asked

Greenbelt Homes, Inc. to prepare a display of the solar heat pro­ject for the NAHC conference to be held in Washington, D.C. in November. This request was reported to the board of directors at its Sept. 9 meeting by Manager Roy Breashears. During the first three weeks in August according to information received from NASA, only 3/lOth of one gallon of fuel oil was used to heat hot water for the four units having solar collectors.

With Vice President Don Volk tor the purpose on the sum of $1,000 presiding in the absence of Preal- already earmarked for placing In­dent James W. Smith, the GHI sulation under aluminum aiding to board voted to hold Ill next rei(Uiar provide a method of determining meeting on Wed., Sept. 22, to a- cost effectiveness. void a conflict with the first preel- , Fuel ou Con~ervatloo dential debate, echeduled for that Thursday. At Ita Sepl 9 meeting, the board took action on the re­placement of porch roofs; allowed a temporary exception to the regu­lation aplnst renting out rooms; considered a member'• request to Install aluminum aiding; and re­ceived reports from management and from the audit ~:ommlttee.

Ponlb Roofl The bid of the Fay Construction

Company for the replacement and repair of alii&' porch roofs on 116 masonry homes was approved for first reading In the amount of $22.820· under expenditure authori­zation # ts. As thl1 bid was less than the amount buclfeted by some St,l!OO, the balance wu let ulde for replacement of any rotten wood tbat mlaht be found.

<lompeeeloWe Eueptlon

For the first 6 months of 1976 Kanqer Brealhears reported that consumption of fuel oil was about

· ·the same as for 1974 and 1975. Un­. leas the weather In the last quarter

of 1978 Ia UniiiUBIIy cold, he said, GHI should come very close to the budgeted figure for 1976.

Towoboule ~t Problem At a meetln1 of Townhouse mem·

bers, the manarer reported, those present voted 11 to 1 to undertake on a self-help basis the first etep of the recommendatlou made by Greenhome ol: O'Mara, with GHI . furnlsblnl materials and •upervl­slon. This step 11 deacrlbcd by management as follows:

"Fill, grade and IIOd as neceasary adjacent to all unit. to provide a minimum elope of 2 pe~nt away from tbe~ 'l"rovlde roof leader exteulou, u neceA&ry, and poaltive drainage for all roof down ·spouts In order to facilitate expe· dltloua tranlfer of roof l'IIIUiff away from unit walls. Grade yard areas around unltl, as neceasary, to Insure that no puddling of water

Club, Greenbelt Community X-rated film becaue the erotic the city. Cltlsenl mutt ~for the Center ecene11 had alreadJ been ceuored; pool throucb taltea aDd then pay

Satunlay, Sept. 18, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. however theatre cnvnen liked to qatn to 11M Jt. Wbf llhould the Health Fair, Center School llle the ratlq to lure people <Into pool be ~elf-.upport!Ds wileD DO 10 a.m. - % p.m. Special Voter movie ho-. ,-· · oth~r clty-.pouored IJ)Ort t. self-Registration For City - City OGidea 'l'ltuPI aupporttnar• be uked. "Wb7 vlc-Oftlcea 'l'be OolcJeD Trlaqle wUl be on t1mbe one croup of people?" be 2 p.m. Garden Club Picnic, the apnda apln for further and queried. Greenbelt Lake deeper dlecuNion. Tbe cii;J' mana- It wu noted that UDder the ori-

Sullday, Sept. 19, 2-ll p.m. GHI ger announ\)ed that he received a gina! bond laue tor the pool, the House and Garden Tour, start- new plan for the OoldeD TrlaqJe pool wa1 mppcJied to be llelt-eup-lng at GHI Bd. Room, Hamil- which showa llarJIIDd Department portJq. And 01-. ai8D atated that ton Place of Tr&lllportatlon effected a cbaqe tJie pool operatloa doel DOt break

Wedneeday, Sept. 11, a p.m. GHI In plaCement of a ramp connect- eYeJl becaUie tJie Cllt7 -.rut~ to bold Board Meeting, Hamilton PL ln1 Greenbelt Road and the Bal- dmrD the price of pool pallet. Ill 8 p.m. Twin Pini!e Reconven- tlmore-Wuhlncton Parkway. Th1l .&lltion, be noted. that to IUb-cd Special Membership Meet· ramp would lead to the clollng of lt&Dtla117 llllpnwe the pool and pro-lng, Twin Pines Oftlce the ac~- to the B-W Parkway vide a number of ~ ~

<Southbound) from Southway, and u umbrellu &114 ellalrl "a llllb­

Twin Pines Reconvenes 197.5 Annual MHt:ing

The 1Win Pines special member­ship meeting of Januarf lio, 1975 will bs reconvened It 8 p.m. .on Wcdne1day, Stpt. 22 at the Twin Pines office. The meeting will fol­low the meeting of the Twin Pinel Member Relatlou Committee which will ltart at 7:80. Imme­diately following theae two meet­Ings, the board of directors w111 bold Ita Nllllar meeting.

will occur." Aadlt 0omm&&tee Report

Krs. llarpret HoteiiMII, obalr.­man of the Audit Oo111111lttee, IUb­mltted a report with three reoom­mendatlou. The first recommen­dation, on yard Unee, was referred by the board to the Aesthetics Com­mittee. The •econd recommends-

See om BOARD, p. 7, oo1. a

council, particularly councilman lt&Dtlal outlay of moaq' t. _. Tom White, wu furlo111 with ury, and the ei!;J- hu Dflller bad Maryland DOT for euneetlng the available IIUfllclellt fundi for that cbanae without conaultlng the city, PIII'IIO"·" ''without approval or fundi for IUch VariOUI m•ben ol -n Ita-a ramp". ted that their bllpeotloo ot the

Councilman Richard Plllkl pro- pool oollftrllled tbe eM:J IIWI&Pr'• tested that Capital Cadillac lhould poeltlon that die pool wa1 funo­not be allowed · to locate on the tlonally In 1004 csdltloa.- Olele Golden Triangle becauJe that par- stated. "Oirvlolllb', .with areeter eel of land wu deemed "apeclal" fundi, the condition of the pool on the Kuter Plall for Greenbelt- · coUld be lapi'Uftd. H-. tlle.e Colle1e Park and Capltal C&dlllao IIIIProv•eub 'IIOUid be prlmarll)' wu not 1peclal to him. CounQII· aatJietlc and would not relate to man Cutaldl u well u the city the main function of the pool -eollcltor pointed out that the Ool- whlob t. to ~ a c:1.;n and -'e den Trlansle wa1 10ned 0-1 (com- lwiiiiiDIDa fllcllltJ.• : mercia!) and the city did 11ot hav., Tbe council -s»ted all -~ any aonlng author\t7. tee report1 an!l appmecl all U.

All the ~~ &lhl4 that .-olutlou Wore .It Jpalucllq ·the they lhOllld plllh the ownen to autborllatlon • ~'tempomt provide the "CODCept plan" for the llll&nclng for tile ~~~~~ ol entire pleoe of land u both they Wemr&J ldjacent to the Jewllb and the County Council requeated CollullunltJ Ceater. CoDitnlction before any more sewer appllcatlona work will begin th1JI falL are approved.

TtlllDia U,b&lq

In ·a:-rare exeepUon to GHI retr~~· lations, the boatel voted to approve a member's request to rent out one of her three bedrooms for up to 18 month• <when the matter wlll be reviewed.> Director James Fostor, who made the motion, noted that thl1 member Is trying to solve a severe financial crisis while caring for a disabled relative. Director' Virginia Moryadu asked whether the rental Income might endanger the member's right to assistance under section 8 of the Housing and Community Development Act, and was reiUISured by Mana1er Brea­sheara. The motion was passed over the opposition of Directors Stephen Polaschlk and Jim Wright, who thought -that renting out a room might not be the best answer to the problem.

le1ilworth Ext. Draws legative Views Although 25 penou aimed a pe­

tition seeking the lilhting of the tennla courta tor an additional hour during the summer, no one ap­peared to spll&k for the 11th hour lighting. The· council wu dlaln­cllned to IJ'Bnt the request any­

Bus to Maryland U. Will Dfpa~ Earlier

The ahuttle bill eervlce from Greenbelt to the Unlveralty of :Maryland will berin fifteen minutes earlier for the next two weeka. The first run will bqln at 7: tG a.m. Succeeding runs will be. 4G minute• apart. The earlier departure time .ttould allow students who have 8 a.m. clasaes to be on time.

Alwnlnum Siding Much of the eventnr was spent

In an effort to develop a consistent policy on allowing members to re­surface their units with aluminum aiding and on whether to require Insulation under the aiding. A member llvin1 In unit D of a 4-unlt masonry row wanted permla· alon to Install aluminum siding on her unit and attached gar-.es. She had obtained an estimate which did not Include Insulation. Another member, living In unit B of the same row, alao WLtted to Install aluminum aiding, but had not sub­mitted a written request. Residents In units A and C were said not to be Interested In aiding. Director Moryadas objected to handllnr ap­provals for aluminum siding on a "piecemeal basis"; she also urged adoption of a general policy re­quiring Insulation to be placed un· der siding. Charles Schwan, long· range planning committee member, aald from the ftoo• that lnaulation Is more Important than aiding to the corporation, becauae It 11 ln­aulatlon that euta down beating costs. He susgested that If mem­ber• pay for their own lldlng, the poration might well pay for lnaulatlon. With Moryadu dla· 1en-t1ng, the board voted to approve unit D for aluminum aiding and indicated that the member In unit B could obtain approval contingent on •ubmltting a formal request oorpore.tion 1tandard1 approved by manapmenl The board then voted to ~ tor luulation \lllder the 1idlng on unltl D and B, drawiq

by Gabe Sucher At a public meeting held September 1, Maryland state high­

way officials presented plans, answered questions and listened to ~omments from citizens concerning the proposed extension of Kenilworth Avenue north from Crescent Road in Greenbelt to U.S. 1 in Beltsville. The meeting was opened by M.S. Caltrider, the State Highway Administration's district engineer, after which a description of the study process was given by Paul Catherman, the project manager.

Catherman presented the SHA'a recommendation to retain throo major altematlves for further con· side ration: 1) widening of Edmon· aton Road to four or more lanes along Its current route and extend· lng It to Route One, 2) construe· tion of a new divided highway par­allell to Edmonston Road, which would remain as a service route, 3) the "no-build" option.

Mayor Gil Weldenfeld presented the Greenbelt city council's view· point, quet~tionlng the need for IIIOh a etudy In light of the cur· rent budgetary constraints faced by the SHA. Weldenfeid objected to the extension of Kenilworth Av· enue, notln1 that advene environ· mental Impacts would result. The mayor recommended that the SHA concentrate Instead on redesign· lng the Intersection of Kenilworth Avenue with Greenbelt Road. La· ter In the evening, 'Maryland alate delegate Leo Greene rose to expl'ess bla support for Weldenfeld's posl· tion.

Greenbelt reeldent Gordon Allen expreased his general opposition to any widening of Edmonston Road beyond a 2 or B·l&lle faclllty. He did, ·however, commend the 8HA for upa'radlng already done on the pre1ent route and for lm· provementa made at the lnteraf<!­tlon of Powder Mill and Edmon· aton toad1. The one other Green· b,elter teetlfyinl oppolled any wid· enlng and lllftl!lted that the only facility worth bulldlq In thl1 area wu a bikeway. Support for a bike· way wu also expreaaed by Thom·

as Sutton, a cyclist from Seabrook. Groenbelt was joined In Its oppo­

altlon to the Kenilworth extension by Carl Christensen, a Beltsville resident. Chrlstellllen noted that In the IG yeara h<> has lived In this area he hu never been slg· nlficantly delayed while driving on Edmouton Road. In his words, he saw "no need for another rsce.­track" between I-95 and the Bal· timore·Washlngton Parkway. Sam Helm, a plumber working In Belts· ville, objected to any alignment that might encroach on hla factory.

Support for a Kenilworth Av­enue extension waa voiced by C. B. Morris, representing the mayor of College Pe.rk. Morrla claimed that such an extension would dl· vert traffic from U S. 1, thus re· llevlng congestion on that high· way. Support for the Kenilworth extension also came from James Rodgers, spooking for the Prince Georges Chamber of Commerce~ Rodgers went on to advocate the widening of Kenilworth Avenut> to six lanea south of 1·4911. Engineer Caltrider responded that there are Jong•term plana for widening Ken· llworth to six Janea-. Such a wid· enlng, however, Ia not within the ecope of the present atudy.

The Kenilworth extension study will now move Into lt.leecond slaie. According to Caltrider, the next public meetln1 to consider this matter will probably be held any­time from three to 1lx month• from now. A final public bearln1 on the project Ia tentatively eche­

duled for late autumn In 1977.

way. Pool Problenw

Council bad earlier received a letter from Thomas Coloe crlticlz-

NOTICE OF SPECIAL REFERENDUM ELECTION The City Council has adopted Resolution No. SS8, which calls, for a

SPECIAL REFERENDUM nECTION on

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1976.7:00 A.M. to 8:00P.M.

at the following polllq placel:

3rd Precinct - Greenbelt Municipal Building 25 Crescent Road

8th Precinct • North End Elementary School Rld1e and Research Roads

8th Precinct - Sprin1hlll Lake Community Center 6220 Springhill Dtlve

At thla special elpption, voters of Greenbelt will conalder whether or not to epprove a Charter amendment which would permit the city to undertake a proposed 100-unlt elderly houslna project. The question to l>e placed on the ballot will read as follows:

Are you l">R or AGAINST am~ndlnr; ~tlon 1111 of the Green­

belt City ()barter to provide U...t the city may enter Into a

mortca~e contnct for a period of not more than forty (to)

yeua wltb the state of Maryland relatlnl' to the c0118tmctlon

and oparatiGa ot a fedenlly 111blldlaed bouttns proJect for

elderiJ ~ .. provided In Charter Amendment Reeolutlon

Number 1171-1 wblcb wiD ~ efteetlve If appll'Oftd by thla ~Milium,.

AGAINST ...

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Page 2: I It!.. Add Up lltws ll - Greenbelt News Reviewgreenbeltnewsreview.com/issues/GNR19760916.pdf · ar• reouested to brln11 or eend their ... With Vice President Don Volk tor the purpose

GREENBELT NEWS REVIEW .~.\ ll'iUJ.:I'J.:!'iUKNT liii:WHJ>.u'J.:R

~dl1ur1 1htr7 Loa \\'1111• ... • .. <1':4-fiOt """ot"IU:If' Edltort !Jaalllra Barwe• ·flr4·311e

• . ~T.&Jo'Jo' ty\J :\l:.al•', .\1••\[llltit'l ,l!utllt'zJ, VIrginia U~auchamp, .\nn Bull, ~lary Clark~ J IH} c1olum~u, J.ant' l.vlli~~IIY.. Miriam Cornt!HU.!I, JU'dy Gold.~tteln. Mlchaef

one!ol, ~ernh t' K3.stnt!r, !ild Kastner. Martha Kaurman, Dorothy Lauber .INti! l.t'\'.t':..t•l(lh', l.orl'tln l.n·n'4llt', I;arbaro. Likowo~~kl, Bub :\I<"Gt't- Robert& ~t\~11j;11 ~-\~~ -~Jilt:.~~ .. l'eiii\I'L .\1 ~ln1lnik. Ela 111+· :O:I..nlnil;, .hH11111f.' Tnckf't,

:,'3-:-~-:rl!:::.1•:.~kr;.lc~!tr~~~~;1~l::k~8~~r::'at.~ll':,~-~~~~·4~~~~:illc?' Grell'. 474-PIIbJI,.Jat"d f"H'r' 'l'lturada' by t;I'H'nb•lt Coe&M'rathr t•ubtt••I•K Aaan., lat",

Pr~"-· .\1 .f'kolnik · \"1et> u~•.:t>~~ ~r~ UJ~ll~~:rrt~R~t!'t'Y-. Rarbarn Llkowski· Tr~~. Hnbf'rta :\11-:\'anunu. :\larr C'olvmbo. ' MAIL ~UBSf'RJPTIUSS ... $10.00 per year . .Ad\'t'rtito~ing and nttwll artiC'leN may be mallftd (Box t)fi: f;rPenbt>lt): dt>poslte-d in our tx.1~ at tht> Twin Pinu Ofti<"E'; nr dE"-Iivered to the editor\&1 oft\ce in the ba!temf'nt of 15 Parkway f4T4-f1!U ), opt>n aftPr " p.m. Tue~daY. Dt-JtdllnP I~ 10 om. on •ruf'!ldR\',

VolumP :HI. Number 44

Cooperotion is Beautiful To th~ Editor:

The Greenbelt Labor Day Ft•sti· val"s theme of "Unity Through Community Involvement" W6S nev­..- more evident than at this year's Festival. No one community event seems to Involve so many diver"" ~lements in the city as the F,.tl· val. The Festival brings together the city government. 1 through par­ticipation of the Public Works Dt·· partml'<lt whoooe members build th•· booths and provide the wiring and cle&n·upl, the Recreation Depart­ment !which provides many ath­tlc eventa during the four.day wet'k·endl, and the Pollee Depart­ment fwbo help enforce the regu­lations and control the traftlc and crowds. particularly during the pa­rade!.

Members of the... city de-part­ments join volunteer members of tbe community who serve on the J'uUva.J StEering Committee. and numerous other citizens who work In their organization's booths for the Labor Day week end to bring

Thursday, September 16. 1976

about thr Festival which ls now in its 22nd year of existrnc<\ Needless­to-say. it takes the cooprratlve ef­forts of all to bring about a four­day event of the scope. and com­plexity of the Labor Day Ft'Btlval. The Festival steering committee wishes to publicly expreJIB Its gra­titude to the City and to the cltl­zt'<\11 of Greenbelt for th~lr work and support. We think thla year's Festival waa one everyone enjoyed,

We would like to Invite anyone who worked In any capacity on the Festival to come to the traditional Festival Ap)lreclatlon Dance on Friday, Sept 17. at the American Leilon Hall on Greenbelt Road. A sUde. presentation of Festival hlgh­Ught.s will be shown from 8 to 9 p.m. After that the Kodela will pro­vide mualc for dancln&. A abort 111m ol the parade and awarda will take plac" during lnterm118lon

Refreahmenta will be provided; admlulon Ia free; dress IB comfor­table. Please come and celebrate a beautiful Festival with u•.

Simon M. PrWoop. I'Joealdeld, Gi'M'nbelt ubor Day Jl'eatlval

MOWAn MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 4t JUclp Bel., G.-belt, Mel.

()burch 8ebool .,. lloiD.

Momtnc WCiftbip It 11o1n.

!Winnoa: "What (leta Your AttatloD Get. \"ou." N..-y - Infant. throqb Klnderprten

Rev. Clifton D. Cunninlham. Pu&or n'-1111

GIHfNIELT COMMUNITY CHURCH CUnlted Cbureb of Cbrlatl.

Hlllalde and Cre&eellt Roab - Pbone 47H171 <mornln11l ll a.m, SepL II - 8waday Wonblp Servklfo

- Cbllnlla 8clbool (lafu& Que at 1-B IIIDIIde)

· Rev. Sllerr)l Ta)'lor and Rev. lfan7 Ta)-lor, Mlnt.t.n

There is a place for yov: ... in our Bible Study ... in our Worship Service ;f!

. . . in our activities Yes. you are Invited.

GREENBELT BAPTIST CHURCH ..... 11111111 l!lla4J r.. till ... , ... , .-..,w..-.. ··­ll:tl-. , ..... ......,._ l!llntee (Wet) ,. Jill

For bua tranaportatlon, call oburoh oGice 8:80-12 :ao weekiol&JI

%

PASSBOOK RATE

•from day of deposit

Twin Pines Saviap & Loan Assn. 105 Centerway

G,..nbelt, Md. 20770 474-6900

OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT BY MAIL BANK BY KAIL

<POSTAGE PAlDl

CIOMCI Labor Day Sept. 6th

HOURS Mon.-Thurs. 11-1 Friday 11-1 Saturday 11-U

INSURED TO $40,000.0r

GREENBELT NEWS REVIEW

GRE~EL T RECREATION DEP ARTM£NT 474-6878

1976 FALL LEISURE TIME ACTIVITIES In-person registration, first come - first serve basis. All registrants may sign up at

either. Center for ALL the classes.

Monday. September 20th, 7-9 pm at the Springhill Lake Recreation Center.

Tuesday, September 21st, 7-9 pm and Wednesday, September 22nd, 3-5 pm at the Green-belt Youth Center. ·

Late registration on a space available basis only, Thursday, September 23rd, 10 am -3:30 pm at the Youth Center Business Office. Make all checks payable to the City of Green-

belt.

A 10'; discount will be given to all senior citizens, 62 ·years old and over, registering

for classes.

Classes are held for the number of sessions or hours designated. All week day classes will begin the week of September 27th. Saturday classes will begin September 25th. NO CHILDREN'S CLASSES WILL BE HELD ON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30TH. NO CLAS­SES WILL BE HELD ON THANKSGIVING DAY, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25TH.

Location Code: Youth C~nter (YC), Ridge Road Center (RRC), Springhill Lake Recrea­tion Center (SHLRC), Braden Field Tennis Courts (BFTC), Center Elementary School (CS). "Babysitting ~ Daytime hours as designated. 2 5c per child per class hour. Must register for

entire course.

CWLDBEN, TEEN & ADULT CLASSES

ACTIVITIES LOCATION DAY/TIME AGE GROUP FEB (Non-Res add Z5%)

Arts & Crafts SHLRC/YC Mon 4:30-5:30p 1 & 2 Grades FREE-8 wks. SHLRCIYC Wed 4:30-5:30p 3 & 4 Grades FREE-8 wks. SHLR.CIYC Fri 4:30-5;30p 5 & 6 Grades FREE-8 wks.

Ballet - Adult/Beg YC Wed 6-7p 16 & 0 $1218 classes Men, women, teenagen; - explore ballet, self expression wtstretch ing & classical tech-

niques PreScliool I PreSchool I PreSchool II Beginner I InVAdv

SHLRC YC YC YC YC

Thu 9:30-10:30a Sat 9:30-10 :30p Sat 10:30-11:30a Sat 11 :30-12 :30p Sat 12 :30-1 :30p

4-5 yrs 4-5 yrs 4-5 yrs 6&0 6&0

$1218 clasaes $1218 classes $1218 classes $1218 classes $1218 classes

Teen Exercise Dance Movement YC Sat I :30-2:30p 12 & 0 $1218 classes Dance work ttoday's music, stretching for more supple & conditioned body emphasized.

Basic Sewing ( t materials) YC •Thu l-3p Adult $15120 gr.hrs.

Batik ( + materials) YC •Tue 1·3p Adult $15120 gr.hrs.

Breadmaking ( + materials) SHLRC Thu 7-9p Teen/Adult $15112 gr. hrs.

Ceramics • Pottery ( + materials) Beg/lnt YC Mon 8-10p Begllnt YC •Tue 10-12n Begtlnt YC •wed I0-12n AdvtWorkshop YC Wed 8-lOp Begllnt YCThu 8-10p Youth YC Frl 6·7p

Clay Modeling SHLRCIYC Sat 10:30-11 :30a

Creative Carousel SHLRC/YC

Crocheting (·I materials) YC SHLRC

Fitting • Pattern Alterations

Floor Acrobatics/Exercise

Floor Hockey

Funtime - Stories, games & crafts for fun & skill

Golf - Adult participants to provide individual equipment

YC

YC

SHLRC SHLRC

SHLRC YC

SHLRC SHLRC SHLRC

YC

Sat 9-10a

•Thu 10-12n Tue 8-lOp

*Tue 1-3p

Tue 7-8p

Tue 3:30-5:30p Thu 3;30-5:30p

Thu 4:30-5:30p Thu 4:30-5:30p

Tue 6-7p Thu 6-7p Sat 9-lOa Sat 10:30-11 :30a

16 & 0 Adult Adult

16 & 0 16 & 0

11·15 yrs

6&0 4-5 yrs

Adult Teen/Adult

Adult

6 & 0

8-12 yrs 13-15 yrs

PreSchool thru Grade 3

Teen/Adult Teen/Adult

8-15 yrs 8-15 yrs

$32120 gr. hrs. $32120 gr. hrs. $32120 gr. hrs. $32120 gr. hrs. $32120 gr. hrs.

$1 Oi 8 classes

$818 classes

$818 classes

$15116 gr. hrs. $15/16 gr. hrs.

$12116 gr. hrs.

$1 018 classes

FREE - 8 wks FREE - 8 wks

FREE - 8 wks FREE • 8 wks

$1517.~es $1517 classes $1016 classes $10/8 Classes

Greenbelt Chucks 'n' Lassies - Group Games/Physical Fitness Program for boys & girls, Club shirts provided for regular attendance

SHLRCIYC Sat 9-10:30a SHLRCIYC Sat 10:30-12n

Guitar - Supply own instru-ment SHLRC Tue 7-8p

Hobby Craft - Clay Modeling, fabric Cl'ayon, printing· YC Thu 6-7p

6-8 yrs 9-12 yrs

12 & 0

11-15 yrs

Judo - Black Belt Instructor, workout jacket suggested 8&0

16 & 0 Mixed Beg/lnt SHLRC Sat 9-lla

Macrame ( + materials) YC Tue 8-10p

Model Building - must provide own model SHLRC Tue 4:30-5:30p

Off Loom Weaving ( + materials) SHLRC

Roller Skating - Free instruction CS cs cs cs

Mon 8-!0p

Mon 4:30-6p Wed 4:30-6p Fri 4:30-6p Sun J-3p

1-6 grades , .....

16 & 0

3-4 grades 5 & 6 grades 1 & 2 grades

All Ages

Sign Language - Basic signs for manual communication, plus book fee Be11inner I SHLRC Wed 7:30-9:30p 16 & 0

FREE- 8 wks FREE • 8 wks

$12/ I 0 classes

$818 classes

$12116 gr. hrs.

$15116 gr. hrs.

F'REE - 8 wks

$15120 gr. hr.s.

$.50 skate; $.25 bring your own

Begin.Nov. 7

$2o't2o gr. hrs. Slimnastics - Exercise

asized

for a slimmer body with more control, better balance and diet emph-

Beainner Intermediate Beginner Intermediate

SHLRC SHLRC

YC YC

"lt!t!WIF 9;15-10:15a •WtF 10:30-11:30a Wed 7:30-8:30p Wed 8 :30-9:30p

16 & 0 16 & 0 16 & 0

·18 & 0'

·.·;,'

$1511~ gr. hrs. $20/16 gr. hrs.

$.1011 elauee $1018 claues

'l'IIIU'Iday. September 11, 18'78

Allolller Practical Fact J - 'ftl7 llltenlbld Ill the bul­

...... lollc ot a.rte1 JCc­D..W• letter tD tbe editor Jut .... - oltlq pnctlcal -ft:r the ~or cltlan apt. project waa14 be a praGtable ...t to. tbe

Letter! to the Editor "' lap ......... , · Attaclrs Paucity of Detail The cmlr document I Call tblO

of wblcb appear& tD have u 111&11)' "lfa" and "bldl" u thla propaut Ia the contract wblch tbe teacb&n 1n Prince Georae'a Ooun!7 Jiave with the School Board. It WOQJd

be a reUet to all Greenbelten, "'t" there were 10111eone who had rul· lnp from the State Attorney ~­era! about what happne "If" the project becomea defunct. about what takes place "It" someone re­fuaea to move out. or about what the city would face In court "'f" 10111eone takes tuue with the Prl·

•· I .rem-ber blm u tbe fru· - tbrlft;r Bcotcb.·Irlah Cll7 Kaa­... ot G~belt from 1N8 fuliqb 1M2, ~d the 111&11 Jupb' NlpODalble for Greenbelt'& very .,.. tax bue U he recommend& tlala u a lood mveetment. It real­., muat be ao. .

'l'llere 18. llorinr, a~~~~tber pr.c­tlaal fact that OreellbeltAmt llhould Ollllllder. For yean we have been paJiq In our federal Income and other -.. tor tbe bulldlng of tbcee llelllor cltlaeDJ apt. bldP. and other llauaiDg Procram& for tbe benefit

. \fll people In other cities and com­innltlea all over the U.S.

ft 18 about time that we got our t•r &bare • and retum aome of oar tax dollars back Into Green· belt ·,not only for our senior cltl· -· but also for those young people who would like ·jobs In helping build the project. and tor other resldent.s who would llke pei'ID1Uient jobs later.

To be honest. opposition to senior cltlsen housing bas been largeb' llued on satisfying the highly em­otional opinions and desires of aome highly actlv& Individuals • but It dooln't melee much practical aenae. If we aro reall•tlc and think of our own pocketbooks and the Improve­ment of our community as a whole, we will vote "yett' on Sept. 28. Anthony Madden, Chairman Sealor Cltu.en. Houatnc Committee

THANKS Dear Greenbelters, my wife tharlne and myself wlsb to aay

ank you - to those wbo helped n lnato me, to the kind judge•

o •electe me. to the chalrper-Ru for her wonderful

preee Uon on Friday nla'bt. and all thoae along th& parade route

Thla was a very wonderful event Ia my life.

Also I wl•h to say a special thanks to Mrs. Elaine skolnlk with tbe atatr of the Greenbelt Newa :ae.lew for a marvelous write-up.

Thanlu to all the folks for the many congratulation• I have re­ceived and am ettll receiving,

K81Deth 0. Bubr Katharine N Babr

I· wu a bit overwhelmed bJ' tbe letter barNp In 1111pport of the· 14111101' cltlaena houal!llr propoeal in the lut lalue of the New. Benew, DIUch u I have been OYerWhelmed by the paucll7 of detail on the project ·

Twin Pines hu featured a "mod· er' of the project, but II It really a model T rm told that It ta a Mcon­cept plan" - any resemblance be· tweM the "model" and the actual atructure that miBht be buUt 18 u llkely aa any resemblance be­tween a centerfolel of Pl.ayboi" and PhyiUs Diller.

. ortty for Greenbeltera.

And, tbeee cla1ma that the pro­posed project will bring tbe city great financial retum, but at no coal One economist friend of mine Is fond of telling bill frlenda thllt there Ia no such thing as a free lunch. There will be coat to th& project, the only detail we oeem­lngly can't determine Is how greet the coat will be. Already the City's Plannlni Board baa recommended changes In walkwaya an!! eleva· tiona that will have to be paid for by the city ( tranalaUon - taxpay­erol. Any new concentration of people will neceasltate additional services on the part of the city. Ev· en If we accept th& argument that tbe project will be filled by Green­belters <which I have grave roubt will be the case If some non-res­Ident files a suit In court>. we will still have newcom&rs filling the homes those people presently oc· cupy, and there will be an lncreas& In •ervlces required by an Increase In population.

Another detail - It has been said that the project can only be occu­pied by those who aro physically able to care for themselves. How Is this capacity <or lncape.cltyl to be determined? What Individual or board tell• the ~derly handicap­ped resident that be must move out and then glvea him the heave when he falls to comply?

Still another detail - how doea one ensure priority for Greenbelt· era on a waiting lilt once th& pro­ject Ia filled? Who determines the order In which the people on the. waiting llat will be moved Into the project! Don't forget tbat at Ieut thirty percent of the occupancy must be made up of the really del· tltute.

DunU D. Moon

for Sr. Citizen Housing The propoeed Greenbelt Selllor

Citizens' apartment building will not coat us any local tax money. Furthermore, It will return to the City each year up to $361,000 of the money. Greenbelt realdent.s pey out In Federal Income taxea.

The aubaldy whlcb the Federal Government Is prepved to live tD Greenbelt. u the owner of the building, amounts to $308 per month, or 18812 per year, per ap· arfment. for up to 100 apartments - or $361,200 per year - for for­ty yean. By rough ~te1 Greenbelt re•ldentll pay out over H'l mlll!on dollars each year In Federal Income taxes. . This subsidy wlll ben&llt all our

senior citizens too, not only thoae who choose to live In the building, . ~cause the building wll I be a cen­ter for senior citizen social aotlv· lUes. Not having to spend all their

· Income on rent and medloal ~~~q~en­sea, they will have something lett over for food and recreation.. ,

The Federal Government IIUhll· dlzed Greenbelt from the be1ln· nlng, ·making It possible for Green· belt families to ralae their child· ren and give them a well-rounded life. Using our lncnm& tax money .to build Senior Citizens Housing now makes just u much sense u It did forty years ago to use Income tax money to build the City of Greenbelt.

·Greenbeltere, won't you pi­support the action• of our City Council and get out to the polls Tuesday tbe 28th an4 vote for Senior Citizen• Houaln11

Jim o.-1&

1976 FALL LEISURE TIME AcriVmES . GREENBELT RECREATION DEPARTMENT

(Continued)

Expectant Mother's Exercise SHLRC "Thu 10:30-11:30a 16 & 0 $12/10 classes Carefully planned exercises, maintain muscle tone, ease excess weight problems and weak muscles after birth. Good for all steps of pregnancy up to 8 months.

Stretch Exercise Techniques YC Tue 6-7p Teen/Adult $12/10 classes

Tap Dance YC Tue 6-7p 6 & 0 $10/8 classes

Tennis - Beginner BFTC •Mon J0-12n Adult $15/10 gr. hts . Beginner BFTC Mon 5:30-7:30p 16 & 0 $15/10 gr. hrs. Intermediate BFTC Mon 7:30-9:30p 16 & 0 $15110 gr. hrs . Intermediate BFTC *Tue 1-3p Adult $15110 gr. hts. Intermediate BFTC Tue 5:30-7:30p 16 & 0 $15/10 gr. hts. Beginner BFTC Tue 7:30-9:30p 16 & 0 $15/10 gr. hts. Beginner BFTC Wed 5:30-7:30p 16 & 0 $15110 gr. hts. Beginner BFTC Wed 7:30-9:30p 16 & 0 $15/10 gr. hts. Intermediate BFTC Thu 5:30-7:30p 16 & 0 $15/10 gr. hts. Beginner BFTC Thu 7:30-9:30p 16 &0 $15110 gr. hrs. Beginner BFTC Sat 8·10a 16 & 0 $111/10 gr. hts. Workshop BP"l'C Sat 10-Un 18 & 0 $15/10 gr. hrs.

Toddlers' Playtime ~ Mothera eoelalize; children play, make new friends. vision. SHLRC J'rl 9·10a 1-3 yra

Trampoline - Beg/Int YC Sat 9-10a 8 & 0 Beg/Int YC Sat 10-lla 8 & 0 Bei/Jnt SHLRC lion 11-8p 8 & 0 Belllnt SHLRC Wed S-Ip 8 & 0

SHLRC Tue 8-tp HI & 0

Tumbling SHLRC Sat 10-Ua II & 0

VoU.yball • Co-ReereaUoaal Competition Leilure

C8 IIOD 1:30-10:30p 111 0 C8 1hd 8:30-10:30p 18 & 0

WhltWnJIWoodearvlnl -BeliMer

WhltUt wtlllt fOil~ {+.iMtlrtat.)

Yop - Belinner

YGI& Intermediate

Youth Pottery

YC, 'Milt....... 18 & 0

RRC

RRC

YC

Mon 7-11:30S~

lion 1:30-10p

rrt 8-Tp

Under stat'l super-. $2/child- 8 wits

$8/8 clasaes $8/8 elauee $8/8 cluaee fl/8 ela~~ea

$1018 eW...

tl/8 eluaa

•11110 It- hra.

tll/11 If. hra.

•11111 gr. hn.

tMeluaea

Dlfferellt 1~. To tile l:diW: It II true that lib Kn. Zall1n I

have not atteDdecl an ot the meet· lnp where the llcJullq projeat for the elderly baa 11eea ~ However It II true that I dlcl at· tend the .peclal meetJac beJel In CoWJell chullben when the docu· ment COIItiiJJIIfta the l!lpatul'el of thoee In flmlr ot the projeot wu p-ted by the OoldeD A$8 Club of G,_belt to Councll.

At that -.et:IJII. hlkl• Olun· cit, there were rep~tml from BUD and the houalq autborll7 tot_ :Mar,iaacl.

When the qUeatloa ot wbo waa ellclble to obtaiJI hoaaiDc Ill tbe proJIONd projeat waa asked, tile '"'' _.....,. "- BVD IWiecl tiJa& .. .,.._, ., ............. be .........., w1t1a r....- tD de­&eniJIDiac 11M ~I

•With thllln mind, I am question­Ing the atatementa br Kr. DoYe In bi• I&tters of AIIIUit *' lllld Sept, e In the ~ewa ........ UJd the Jet. ter by kr. Schwan In the Sept. e N-. Betlew,

Ben A.--THANKS To tbe l!:dltw:

Heartfelt thanks to all our friends In Greenbelt for the 110-lace and help extended to ue 1n tbe death of our son steve Dean

The family, all of ~. thank 1011: WaHer B mel Rita S, De11D ancl fllmlb'

Y ar~ Sale Saturday Mowatt United Methodist Church

will bold a yard aale on Satun!Q September 18 from 10 am. to :1 p.m. Proceeds will 10 toward tbe building fund.

Calllalm -~,,... .. ~a.­.............. .....- ... ..... Dtl_..,., .... 0111..,....

345-7497

...... SHOE REPAIR

While UWalt DISCOUNf MICIS

Beltway PJua ....................... ...... c-- ....... .,..,_ ...............

lilt ... Udl A.ll.

~ ...... A.II. . ......,..., ...... t• -Ullt A.ll. .... -..u

IDJ1wud a.--·~

PERSONAL ENBI<liiMENT GIIOVPS: u.tq TranaacttoDal ADa1J1i1 are starting In Greenbell Come anel join others who llhare ,aar

. de~~lre to enrtcb their Uvea at home, work, or -Ially. Call Kathi­Roblnson at 4•1-:1840 for rqlltaUon anel Information.

"What Ia JQJ baby IOiq to be Jllle T" "What II 101n1 on Inside ot me c1ur1D1 prepucyT"

''What do I need to do to have a bapPJ aad healthy preiJI&nar UJd bUtT"

Are these aome of the questions that are JOing throqll your mlDd T Come and find out the answers In a protrram created for tbe JOIIIII woman wbo Ia start1n1 or lncreulq her family - partners are weJeOale too. The PI'OIJ"IUD II conducted by a competent nutrltlonllt aad health educator. Call «1·2840 for pfe...rell*atton and lnformaUon.

Kathleen Robln10n JU'JI. Nutrltlonl8t;P•yohotheraplat;Health :&:ducator

The Senior Citizens Housing Project

Did you Hear That -

1. "'A Supreme Court decision would prevent the glvln1 of preference to Greenbelt residents"?

Fact: The Supreme Court decision In the Chlcqo cue - one 1n which blatant dlacrlmlnatlon wu cb&r~ed and proved - will &!feet In no way the Greenbelt project. The city council baa already de­termined to ldve ftrot preference to tboiJe who live or work ta Greenbelt. Thla It will do under H U D replatlona (Code of Federal Re1Uiatlon1, Vol. 41, No. 81>.

2. ''The city wUI be financially Uabll! tf the project falla"?

Fac!t: Jl'allure II IDOit unlikely, but If It llhould oceur, the 1eeurttJ for the loan - the bulldln1 and Janel - would revert to the State the morti&IOr.

a. "City taxes wiU be Increased to aupport the project'' T

Faet: Apartment rentall wlU cover all COIU of malllte.-nce UJd operation, lnclutl1nr pA1JDentl to the city equlvaleftt to tu.t~. Tllen wiU be Do ~ to the cltJ.

'· "JI'ecltral ..-t nbalelle~ .. .., eeue at a later date"!

....,.: H U D will enter Into a *'JWr eontract (the Hfe of die aodpp) · to pa.y rent n'llaldl• Ill the city. If coati Ia~ .... ., ,.,.. ... wtU be IDeiMII4

I. "Mot eDOUfh Gnabelters w&llt Use proJtet to warrut It"!

..... A ft'"J .r •17 a pal( of ... 'fto .... 'lie elliiMe -"* ............ - tncllcatH that filii ~ ... a l.....St but .... - Cll.-lilbn Wri14 be YlrtsllliJ __...

hid .... uA of italor Q ........... o.-...

.·~

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'I

Page 4

DEMOCRATIC CLUB After a great succell8 with its

"Peanuts fro111 Plains" booth at the Greenbelt Labor Day Festival, the Roosevelt Democratic Club an­nounces the rest of its 1976 pro­gnun. Friday Sept. 17, State Sena­tor Edward T. Conroy, wUI be the guest speaker a.t the montbl)' meet­J.nr.

Democratic Candidates Nilrht will be held Oct. olll. Guests will be ~p. Gladys Spellman, Democratic candida.te for reelection to the U.S. CongreSB, and a legialatlve repr&­sentatlve from the ollice of Rep. Paul Sarbanes; Democratic candi­date for the U.S. Senate.

The club will hold its first elec­tion of officers on November 19 and will install the new ollicers at a lioliday party on December 11.

Meetings are held at the Com­munity Center at Greenbriar on thr third Friday of each month Ill R p.m. Refreshments and a social hour follow each m<'eting. Nl'w n.·mbrrs are enthusiastically wel­comrd.

1111 Centel'W&)' Greenbelt. lllar)'land Z01'10

414-6100

GH! HOMEOWNERS TAKE NOTICE:

It you have outgrown your Townhouse In Greenbelt, see one of our newly listed homes:

LANHAM: SEABROOK ACRES - 149,1100, Cootral Air Conditioned 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Brick Rambler over li4 acre Cor­ner lot beautifully landscaped. This beauti'ful home is in a Park area. A must to see!

Landover Hills: $42,900. 2 'Bedroom separate dlnina room !dining room may be converted back to 3rd bed­room>. Central Air Condition­ed - beautiful front porch with aluminum oV'erhanc. Also vl'ry nice Rec room with outside entrance.

CHEL8EA WOODS - $22,000. 1 Bedroom 1 ~ Bath Brick Apt. In very nice area. Apt. Include• Combination Washer­Dryer. Wall to Wall Carpet­Ing Central Air Conditioning, Disposal, Dlahwaaher, and man more ('.X.tru.

GREENBELT: CHAR~ TOWNE VILLAGE: $28,9DO.

2 bedroom brick, centra) air townhouse - wall to wall car­peting, dlshwuher, new tile In kitchen.

Lot: Lakeside Drive - Pres­tige area - $111,000.

FOR RENT: OFFICE SPACE JN, GREENBELT MEDICAL BUILDING

600 Square Ft. 7'10 Square Ft. If a •maller office Is needed,

we cnn convert the space. Call for Information.

GREE!'IBELT: BUY OF THE WE~;K: $13 900.

2 BPdroom Frame Townhouse in wooded area. Wall to Wall carpeting included In price,

~ Pt>dr·:mm Corner Tow!lhousf' w!th :•"ar:1\lv Room and Deck Home dose to Shopping, Transportation. and Elemen­tary School $16,:100.

3 Bt·Jroom Framt• Townhouse in very nice condition with many extras - $17,000.

} .

'·'-

2 Bedroom Ma.oonry Corner Townhouse wllh Den. HugC> land•caped backyard.

2 Bedroom Brick In excellent condition. Townhouse cloee to Shopping Ce11.ter lllld Elemen­tary School

8 Bedroom Muoney lind · Townhou.& with 1ar1e back­

yard. Home in quiet court. $21i,9DO.

INTERB8'l'liJt) IN .. IIII:LLING YOUR om TOWNHOUSilT CALL OIOl or OUR IIX­PIIIUB:NCSD 8ALIIIIPilOPLII TO LlB'1' lT J'OR YOU.

WlC 811RVICI: OUR LI8TING8 IN IBOPPDtG CDn'IIR 1'fiiX'l' '1'0 KOBIL ()AS

IT~TION

GREENBELT NEWS REVIEW

Health Fair Satorilay On Sal, Sept. 18, from 9 a.m. - 5

p.m. the Greenbelt Liona Clull will sponsor a Health Fair at tbe Cen­ter School. At the Fair scr~ning procedures are available to t(est for certain d'-es and medical con­dltlona which could require further ln!Btment. can 344-2283, or 474-1817.

Save Our Scenic River Propoaals for a Patuxent Scenic

River Park will be preaented In a special slide-Illustrated procram at 8 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 20 In the Greenbelt Library. eWe Johnson, Park Planner, and Blaine Griffith, Naturalist with the Maryland-Na­tional Cspltal Park .and Planning Commission, will dlscuaa the pro­posoo 22,00 acre park along the Patuxent River In Prince George's County, extending from Laurel on the north to Chalk Point at the · !'xtrcme southeast tip of the Coun­ty. A public hearing on the plan is scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednes­day, Sept. 22, at 6600 Kenilworth Ave. The program Is sponsored by the Sierra Club and Is open to the public.

Boase ud Gardea Tour The first Fall GHI HoUle and

Garden Tour will take place this cominl Sunday, Sept. 19, with hous­es and gardena open from 2-11 p.m. Nineteen frame homes, thirteen masonry or brick homee and five gardena will be on diapla)'. Many of the frame and brick hollies a1ao have Interesting gardena. The tour will start at the GHI ofllces In the new!)' refurblahd board room on Hamilton Place.

The ofll.ce wUI open at 1:80 p.m. People taking the tour should co there to receive a map and brochure.

/

Home Remodeliug KUchPns, Rec. R11111., Sun Decks,

Additions, etA

Call Don Soule' 474-0881

Licensed, Have References. P.S. come see my addition at

4 "Empire Pl. In Lakewood!

SERVING THE GREENBELT AREA

With Your Complete Hardware Needs

Is Now an Authorized

Dealer of the Original

BUCK KNIVES "famous for Holding an Edge"

10502 Baltimore Blvd. (Rte. I) Beltsville

937-4141 0ptn ~ 8-7:00, 8atul'diQ' H. SVNDAY, 18-1100

(OieMnut Hw. Shopplftl Center)

I

A record-breaking 315 r~nners and joggers line up in a ~ass start at Braden Field in the 1 ~• and 15 kilometer races as part of the 1976 Labor Day Festival.

REAL EST ATE OFFICE of GREENBELT HOMES, INC. · · Hamilton Place

Greenbelt, Maryland

TOWNHOUSES (BRICK/FRAMED

Ideally locatoo - this lovely 2 br. masonry home facing large open parkland area; excellent cond. lmm. poss, -$26,000.00.

••••••••• New listing ... 3 br. frame home In nice cond.; good location; imm. posa. $15,100.00.

••••••••• Price just reduced 1 2 br. frame home - large yard extends to· woOd area; well-cared for court $13,700.00; lmnf poaa. .. ' ..... . OTHER 1, 2 & 3 br homes listed from $10,000 to $28,000.00, for lmm. to late Fall occ.

••••••••• FOR INFORMATION - WHY NOT CALL OR BE'I'l'ER - STOP BY THE SALES OFFICE -WE ARE OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK

8:30am to 5:00pm Mon-Frl. 10:00 am to 6:00 pm Sat. Noon to 5:00 pm Sundays/Holidays

tl'-4181

• •••••••• MARY E. DIXON

BROKER

41""'"

By the time yoiJn&'ten reach 19, they've Of course; if they aren't students and can't usually outgrOWn their families' health get group coverage, we also have a choice of

r-----------, I +. Blue Cross I care coverage. They need Blue Cross and otherprogramsavailable.Forexample, there's

Blue Shield coverqe of their own. (Check our Comprehensive Program, ~ith all kinds with your employer. Some groups continue of benefits ... like 70 days of Blue Cross coverage of children past age 19.) U they're _hospital inpatient coverage, 10 full days of working, they usually can get group maternity benefits, S25,1XX) major medical coverage tluough their employer. If they're coverage, Blue Shield's higher level Plan "i", in school, Blue Cross and Blue Shield have Diagnostic #3, and Sudden and Serious a special Student Program to provide year- illness protection. But the choice doesn't round coverage for hospital and medical! end there. We have a variety of other surgical care ... both on and off the campus. programs available as well. Gening health

Can -A'! nl care coverage of their own is another way

)QU CIUO to your children become adults. And Blue • • Cross and Blue Shield arc ready to help rontinue trea~ them ... with health care protection that

I returns 90% of every dollar received in a 19 }'ea1' 0 benefits. That's a percentage we're very

like a 6'hi1d~ . ..._ proud of. A percentage that's unique .,,._ .. _l&J_IJ_., __ ye r ~ among health care compames.

·•• !·, •

1 ;,; !~':.!hleld 1 I • I I Mail to: Blue Cross and Blue Shield I

700 E. Joppa Road I Baltimore, Md. 21204 I I Check one: I I 0 I am a full time student.

0 I'll be 19 soon and I am not a full time I 1 student. I

If you are currently covered by Blue Cross and I Blue Sh1eld, hst your Membership Number 1

I I I Name I I Address I I I I City I

______ Zip I

J

'l'bUl'lday, September 18, 1978

o-,

~tAL TRUT~ -/ . .

EVERY DAY

Recorded music and inspiration by telephone

Tt415 AD SPONSORED BY AlLEN PRINTING SIRVICI

,, 1"' I .• '. ·~

L .

' \ .....

" '

t )•

\. 1

;.

I: I i

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,....

Wbave_ito,n:IJ!DlJ ~utborlty.thatshariQg tlle_nde is av~good idea. . · ·

jtist one-other person can cut your _ commuting costs in half.

Think about it.

Thursday, September 18,,)1'11 4

It .Ue-sensE( to Noah. /' After~ all, it 'wm a whole lot

more-economical and efficient 'to-get. together and. shar:e the 'ride than it would have been

·for everybody to go their own way.

And that still holds true

Share the tide with a frlencL It sure beats driving alo~

today. Sharing the. ride _with 011

- ... -~ ... :!'

Thursda)', September 18, 1.1~78 GUINBILT NEWS uvmw GHJ IOAID con't front ,_ 1

CLASSIFIED. ~a · ""'f'fln called for e~tabliannm:; .f ~ w_,_, I"'W'l''CJBAf' at "lta111aUve conun!Uee." The aula· $1 :ao for, a 10..word IAIIDimllill. 10o low .-..; PlllbaM fraal 1'6. Call tallt llliUI&fer, who hu been cover­for each a4dttiona1 word. Bublalt ~ tor appC. in1 this field alonr with his other

. ada In wrltlaa, ~ II)' LI!lRT HAULING, w/ Plc1l·up duUea, said he would welcome the .cub payment, eJ.ther to til. N- Truck. Call Klke after 4:10, "'" U11ltance of IUCh a COIIIDllttee. He\'lew olllce at ~ ParkWay, before 8W. Director Wrlaht promised that this 10 p.ID. of the Tueeday p~ <IIA.RDII'8 POPDLB GROOiliNG> propoaal would be taken under con­&lUbllcatlon, or to the Twin Pinel maJuo your appointments today, alderatlon when the entire COIDIDit­Savlncl lind Loan oftlce. Call 474·1218. tee set-up Ia reviewed. The third There 11 no charce for adYertillna P!ilftj LttiillldNII: JSeiliOdi ()On- recommendation was on votln1 pro­lteau tlMit are found. aervatory Graduate. Bea~nners· cedurea. The committee found the

Advanced 474-9222 coat of voUne machlnea not to be REMODIILING 8PJDCIAI..DJT8 - TYPEWftn.u aicPAIR Jll..ll)C... exceaalve and therefore recoiD­kltchena, batha, addltiona, lCD. J'ree TRIC. STANDARD AND •PORTA- mended &~alnat reverting to paper eet~matee IE rer-cee. 4rttlaD BU:S. Call 47'-G8. ballots. . Contraetora, ~UN. ~ ~

..Alfi 001fi)ffl6NBIRS IRBflLtJU) GHI 2 br frame, wuher, r&Jlle, t,l"' . . IE repaired Call 47....,._ refr lg., A/C, wooda In back, U8.300

• 474-41Nl2.

HOUSE DOCTOR ~ .,...,...._ will ....... ............................. ,.... ,..., Will ~. -... tOe. .. A..-.. .... aad ywd datleL OIU e-'ap.

474-5530

CALDWBl.L'B WASHB:R SIIIRV­IC& AI makee cpert17 ~ Audlllrfsed Whirlpool dealer, GR ....... PtlNO 'ftJN'1HG lND ftjjpAIJ( -E:xpen and lWiabae Piano Bemce to ~It IInce 1180. Ben.laaaln Berllofallr .,......_ PAUn'ING • Interior, aterlor. Wallpaperln1 and lilbt CIIIPOIIUJ alio. Quod Greenbelt rete. mx­ceDent ll'OIIIalilanablp. Frank Go· _ . ..,... .. 1iPilW&filik 6R ADDIN'O lll­CHINI!l .., It UP. HOWARD'S 1'YPIDWIUTI!lR co. 5111 BALTI­MORE AVE .. HYATl'SVILt.IC, MD. 277.8188.

l..UIPS RIDPAIRI!ID • Floor ud 'l'llble '"""' Call evenlnp 474-8080.

ANTENNA PROBLEMS ...........

i:qlert antenu au will inatall •-/NpaJr ...-..

. -AHic or Outdoon ........ 474-5530 - nte or- r.

yeaN experieDOe. Good work. Call Bob Nelli 1TI-OC«l. WILL DO AU. KINDS OF ODD J05r-.ble ratee-free eeti­~1 Doq evenlnp 47WGG.

110liQIItn'6 • li'ORlDVBR" -Crea tlve eiiiiC pbo~rapby by Ibn lOe!!p. .......... PIANO ~Your bome, all lnel.l, hu New llnlland Conaer­valol')' ~- Ma-eatl. OLAS8 0 • Beelnnen qea 4-8 Jililht week -lone. bellnnlnl In Oct Kember Plano TMchera Guild and Peabody Preparatory lacult)'. Call 47'-IIZI2

TRQIIBQMII TRUICPirl' and VOICJ) l.IISEIOH8. Prohalolull •Uilelaa with dlpee. 41~

VACUUJI CLEANER RJIIPAIR -Ali brucla and type~~. Call even­lop 47 .......

liJ State Fann Insurance

Ron Borgwardt

474-8400 Auto - Ufe - lham -•

IIIU......._ .... ('ollflp Pull, 114. ..,.

<ou u.a. 1 • the.....,, Seabrook Bakery

&Deli "The Cake Crafters"

For all your weddlq lllld

d-~ Ollke needa, - ....

WE DELIVER

-FI!lATURING-

B~GELS on•Sunday

577-9854 MM JAnham-8evem Rd, i!feMinloll Sbopplnl Olatllr

FOR Sxti · TWo GeM! wblte­wall tlree E78-14, S40. 474-4291. RIDE NEEDED • Vicinity Con­necticut IE K St. N.W. Working houyn 9:011-11:30. Will share ex­penaet. 474-112H. FOR SALE • Ptaypen, heavUy padded, eood condition • Ull. 346-81011.

SALE BY OWNBlR • S Bedroom frame townhouae; extenalvely re­modeled; porch; abed; 2 A/C:e, W/ W carpet~ne. U9,000. 8411-2'108. FOti SALE • Raleilh chopP.r. Like new. Sell or. belt otrer. 0111 474~8 after 4 p.m.

Millikan Torah Nunery SdlooJ

hu openlnp lor 8 and 4 year olda. Three day prolf&lil, 11101'11•

lnp. Mualc, rhythm. arta. cre­ative play, diet. currie. Phone ~48.

:&:bole Holtsclaw and Per Waln­acott romped to an euy victory at Frlday'a dupUcate bridle Iaiiie. Their 28 polnt.l wu S~ points bet­ter than the :U% points 1arnered by runnera-up Bea and AI Skolnik. Nest plllle: ll'rld&y, Septe~~~ber 24, at Youth Center.

lt'a a boy for Set. Robert and Blleanor Shlftlel DuW Allen, their 111'111 child, wellhed In at 7 lbl, II oz., on Sept. 11. Dlllty'a parents wW be celebraUne their fourth weddlne annlveraary on Sepl 18. The family currently Uvea In Tuc--1011, AJ'Iaona. where Sblftlet Ia atationed. Dulty II the ftrat IJUd· cbUd of Norwood and Jean ShUIIet 3S year residents of Greenbelt. Alao at their home II hll Uncle Frank. Grelt ~JUdparents are Elmer and LoreDe Faulconer. foi'JDer Green­belt retldents.

Miehkan Torah on TV Attention: T.V. watchers! Green­

belt wiU be repreaented by Hlah­kan Torah SYMIQIIIe on Sunday, Stpl 19, chanel 4, B:ao Lm. The

FOR SXLE 184 VW bua. ii&l. theme of the telecut wiD be the Hilh Hotyda,ya. Rabbi KNIIItth

N~ work. Call after I. t74·1808. Berser will explain the alaDIAcance RID IllS NllllllDED from 10 South , ot Rosh Halhonah and. YoiD Kip­way to Prince GeoreH Hospital pur. Other participants will be for each ah.lft. PI- call 474- Greenbelten ll'rank Pearlman and 41118. Adele l.Cund. N1CIIlDlllD • Ride to POOC li-W-F G L • u:~:oo. T·Th u-oo-2:00. Doro- Que Pall in rHnvrlar thy 8411-91188. Jon R Marra·Lopea profeiiOr of ONE RlliD8K.LN SIWION TIOKBT Bpanilh Literature at the Unlver· • 47 yard Une see cub. t74-11348. elty of Maryland, and noted llter-

--~d 1'- - 1an - -bCiiitii .. ary critic, will apeak to the Green-Antlquea, o ... P ts, toys, . ·belt •Pan American Socleb' Friday. 37 court lUcia•· liat 9:10-4.

September 24, at 8 p.m. at the YARD SALE • Sat. IE Sun. 18th IE colllDlunlty center In Greenbriar. 18th, ti8G Rlda'e Road. Profeuor Mar•-Lopes, a native APt. BALli! • sept 111 11 tO 4, 1M of Spain, baa apent moet of this Weatwa,y T-4 Scan headboard p)O. year on aabbaUcal there 474·'1846. His apeeoh hal been t!Ued "lm· STRINGED INSTRUMENT RIC· preulona on today'• Spain," and P MRS • Guitar, violin, banjo, eel· It will be 11ven In Spt.nlah, lo, dulcimer. l!llectrlc/acouatlc. Jllx. All the Spanlah apeaklne. and pert, reuonable. ~ the students of Spanilh In the

PORTER'S UQUORS -............ . ...... (-t to KaDould'• Ia ODiltce

Park) We have the larplt lllleedOII ol wm- ,_ around the wwl4. BDeclal ""- OD - p~

Ortt. lllutr

....,, qumlolll about wm. welcoaald

FOR ·SALE·! Gii0-10 at. GOOdrich Radial tlrea Uled 8000 mllea, $10 each. .Mark, 474-8484. BIKE FOR SALE · 24" boy'a bike In excellent condition. $111. Call 474-0310. CHlUSTMAS IS COMING SOON, the goose Is getting fat, please place your orders for a pretty knitted cap, handbaes, aweatere, knick-knacks or whatever. 3411·4077. GUITAR LE!3SONS by former un-­lveralcy Instructor of claselcal eul· tar. Graduate student at Peabody Conservatory. ·Be1innlbg or ~~od· vanced •tudents, any age. Fred, 474·1649. BATON OLAS811'.8 . Greenbelt area for atrlll 811!1 4·12 No experience. Call Donna Goetz, lnatructor, 688· 1888 after 4 :ao p.m. or Mrs. Goetl, 780-9111 S a.m. to 4:30 p.m. .Mature teen&~er wanted to baby­sit and do housework after ocbool until 8:30 North End. If you called before, ~)leN" call ,..ala • I ioat phone IIUIDbera. Cjll1 Ann aft'ltr 8:30 p.m. at Stll-1892. Laertlveneae trlilnlng. Five Wed­nesday• atartine Septemb"r 22 at 8 pm. $20. Robert Lewle, 474-3e3G evenlnp and weekends. HELP WANTED • Olerk-teilef; typing required. Apply at Credit Union office In Greenbelt shopping center or call 474-5900 for applica­tion. ·

community of Greenbelt are wel­come to attend. Refreabments will be aerved!

P'OR BAL1D • CHI!IAP • Eureka vacuum cleaner with all attach· menta. Good condltiQD. Call 476· 92110 U lnte...,.tsd. FOR Rl!lNT • a iii frune borne, nloe cond, 1 year 1- • 1121 per mo. plua elec. 2 DR frt.111e bouae • Improvements; 1 year leaae • a286 per mo plua elec, For lnfo_.tlon call 474-41&1 - 474·4144 <Om Bales Ollloel. 'lftiC Ul'a'VERSlTY BOV'l'IQUIC, INTERNATIONAL In College Park Ia THE ONLY BOUTIQUE where you can sUII lind lleht •wn· mery dreuea, blOUNS, halters, Danekln tank tops, beautiful cot· ton men's shirts, and, of courae, exqulalte jewelry. We have not yet chaneod over to the autumn and winter collection. So, while It 11 still warm, come and aee our In­dia Imports, at 7420 Bait. Ave .. open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m, Thursdays until 7 p.m.

BONUS SALE Blaoket 8leepen t:IJI1 . .., Wlntuk KnltiUq Wo..-ed Playlnl Oardll .... ...

11/ .. .00 Blldnl Panllae .. OIDdy ....

Po)f .... ~ Kitty tlttaer Frytnr Pan Paint Thinner

';'''~ ·~· • .81 .... U'J

• .57

Ben Fraaklin

~·s HOME IODENTS

IT'S FALL AND IT'S FOOT­B.U.L time and If you don't hur­ry you won't have the Idea to "kick around" anymore If you don't call 34&-21111 rilbt a-y about thil I BR 2~ bath boaie that featuree a beautifUl rec. rDL with bar. Many appliances and hal eu hot water heat! Very nice yard, with pa lamp, Clole to NASA Lanham AREA and on a very quiet atreet. ll'RA.!V A tel'llll. It's r~ady. are you? $48,900.

ALLEN'S ALLI:Y II jlllt the way to brine forth Mllllt of the old radio dl,)'a and at!U keep thlnklne about taklnl oae more lap around the traek-hlch you can do when you bu:r t111a S BR II:ND hoJDe with D;D '1'/f' ref.. wuher, dr;rer, AtC and W ;W carp. Very line loeatton: quiet and readY to 10 I VA· CANT! Wooda In baell! Owner wiD help with llnanolnl!. All utUit101 acept eleet. aqd Phone Included In pmts. •••·•· •

WE'VE BUN "BIOODI" a. rood one for you John. thla I BR auper-IIDproved boma with full baleJDent coiDpletely paiD­ted lnllde and out, new root, plua IliaD)' appllaneea and hal 4 car OSP with prap, VA­CANT! Awaltlne VA apprailal $f2.000.

OOODNJ:88 "N081l" we don't want you to "kUmer" :rour chan· cee of belnl 01ant KIUera, but the opportunity wU1 lllp by be­fore you know It 10 call 84&4111 rlcbt now about thla VNDI:B PBIVIID 1 BR 1 ~ bath epllt level home with new CAC. rec. rm. with bar piUI mar appllanc­ee. Cloae to N.W carrollton, VA/ ll'RA. terma S47,900.

p All8 Ol'l'OR'I'tJNIT and all you have 11 an ·~DCIOJDplete"

and no acore. Walt UlltU you aee thla 6 BR 1% bath h-. with IIBBied In porch, lp. llvlnl rm.. din. rDL PIUI full bue:Dent that II ready to Ill In 10 dl,)'a! Located on 1/1 acre treed lot In Colle1e Park. It II all youn for only sa&,MO. Under VA appralaal.

GBZAT "8VVT''"' .JAil£ when are you llllnl to buy a home T Oonalder thl1 ablolutely fabuloul all brick I BR 2 bath CAC home with carport loeatecl on a comer lot In New C!anoDton. ll'lreplace In L.R., aep. din. rm., T /1 ldt., beautiful rec. rm. that JDeUUrea 18' x 23'. And, lmlll.tl:ulatel VA/FHA tenu. owner amdou! VA appraiMd toT ,1100.

ELEVIlN UAHON8 you ahould buy thil fine S BR 1 full I< , half-batha apllt.-loyer, can be found quite eully. It II brlok, aep. dill. rm., II· lilt, dlapolal, dilhwaaher, fan, wuher, etol'lll wlndowt IE doors, W /W carpet.­lne and draperlee. There are aome aubsUtutee we can fumleh If 'fOU will caD 3411·21M and uk one of the coaches about the home near Capital Plap. VA appraleed, $48,1100. THIS LIKE NEW HOME IS LARGER THAN A LAKEWOOD SPLIT­FOYER.

"MOSEl.\"' on down to Kuh Realtor you'll have no kick colD· 101 about realillne your aoal on tht. fine 3 BR 2 bath Brick rambler with II"· ~· Yard, double carport, acreenecl pallo. We would be lea than "uprflbf' If we did not tell you a)>out the fabuloua reo. I'IIL .lllltfl w,t bar and lpaaker,t plu» IDIICII, ·liluch etor&~e ·apace. p uleuolnrdy ,1fi atora1e apace. plua laundry rm. IE workahop. Natural wood work throu1hout, beflutlful condition! Super lneulated! Near NASA and ottered on VA/FHA terms <Ap­praisal ordered !l OWnrr will hold 11e. 2nd. $118,1100.

MlhtlGl :M Houn a Dv-

-- ,.....,. "'IUP &tCK· DGpe, f1lll back Oil thll 2 • JIIU) ._.. with line tiled ba&ll, new ret., I A/Ct " carpet1nJ. All li&lllt* Jn­alllded In paata. • ,.. lllaaelnc &ftllable! Call ~21111 anytime - or ntpt about thil line holile $17,000.

A "CCBNI:B BACla" away from the atreet II tbla very line t liB 2 bath brick CAC boiDe with fuD buement and cedar cto.et. Equipped with wuher A drJer, and a lllqlc chef ranp with dble oven ln an eat--In ldl Of COUNI! there II a teparale dJn. I'IIL Nnr Capital Plua and VA appralled at $41,1100.

TIOIIT END cannot be liNd on thll I BR baale "--e you cannot pt around tbla cnat line! Buy - and wlad all you can In the 11e11t f- :reara. Tllll en. a BR 11a.e with wu~~er, clrJw, A!C, w !W earp. aD lo­cated on a alee 7ilrd with a lleld Ia baell. Perfeet locMloel ...,.. teet prlcle, ready to p rtpt a­way! Ull,8).

Bl!IIOVMDY 08 GOI.oD - or wllaWYtr ,our tuae, thll line • BR 2~ ~ CAC OoloDlll hoale II 111111111 ctllt! 8ep. 4111. -., Tts kit, ruD ~t. .aa -._. IIIMt av Loeate4 011 a nlee _..., lot and ...... to aaove Into _, Ira all bini Call · MO-allil aa,t1111e da,J or niP& abaut aeWIII thla "GIAlft ~ uar NAIA. IIlA/VA MT.IOO.

"ULftl'ILI.r hapJ>IIII ... tile time w11ta 10\1 have to keep 011

~ mrt. talel u4--­aw.p JOUr IUe tHar 111 aalltta about tbll line 4 BR 1~ IIIith CAC boale with p!oture 1look no. room. KaYe In tl 4apl Call MHlOl &117tlme da,J or llllllt tao.OOO.

'IIIJ:Y tvr ...S ftNm' all ai'OUII4 Chll line I mt 1~ .... CAC hiDe _.. Oia&IMal l'lllla. Vel')' nice rec. 1'111. and .,..._ equipped with • Cu. ft. ref., wuher, 4l'Jir, I< WIW earp, However, "our Une'' MD-1111 11811 open a hole In H4e fftce" that will let :rour teaa -re 011 Ulla line hom. <trsnalated. thll•­we can open the ptel, Beautlful rec. rm. plua other altru that make up a real buy tor you. VA/li'HA ........

T.u.& l1ft'O '1'1111 "'IIIUr, TboaiM alld call »4111 about thll very nl.ce 4 aa .... Ill CoDep Park .. Very nleeiJ Ia· ilhed with 2 'fr. old ~~~~~ and wuher and dr;rer. You bave to aee to apprwJ&te! ftiAIV'4 tefiDI. <WIIII-iW ai\'1Uae cla'1 or njpl.. .....,00.

"'I,AVI!S" about It! Tb11 Olle wiD be a anap to pt Into and not too far from the center of Greenbelt. Thill very nice 1 ~ balh apartment will be the belt for you. With CAC, dilpoaal. dlahwuher, IE W !W carp. plua other featurea, a real buy at S22.1100.

NO "'UU.OOIN" MIKE but we have a "baftlllme" for you to eet Into call ~G1 about thle line bome In New Carrollton. Brick. CAC, Carport 1% batha, pllll 111aaher, dl')'tr drapea, rugl, fireplace equlpmt It Ia readY to move Into lmiDedlately! OWNIIlR WANTS TO SELL oo 1et under the ball and call m-2101 rllht now for an appoint­ment to aee this line home. VA/ FHA $47,900 .

Let our team of eM:pertl help you with all your r.,.J e1tate needs. Call anytlllll! dq or nllhL :U hour aervlce.

lASH INC., UALTORS Unlv. Blvd. & ..,._ ..... AN.

345-2151 LICT JCASH HBlLP YOU!

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Page 5: I It!.. Add Up lltws ll - Greenbelt News Reviewgreenbeltnewsreview.com/issues/GNR19760916.pdf · ar• reouested to brln11 or eend their ... With Vice President Don Volk tor the purpose

Page 8 Thursday, September 16, 1976

No Beer • No Problem by Sandra Bamee

It is difficult to ascertain' what the regulation prohibiting the sale or beer at this year's Labor Day FNtival meant in terms of people's enjoyment of the four-day event, Ce,rtalnly some people were prob­ably disappointed and felt deprlv­,,j of their favorite beverage.

However, various members of the Festival Steering Committee, mem­bers of the community, and the City Manag6r all seemed to agree that this year's Festival was the most peaceful one held In recent years. There were no disruptions of ~lar activities. There were no signs of disorder or of people ignoring the prohibition And -whether one can attribute the large daytime and evening crowds to the uncommonly balmy woother or the lack of beer - everyone this re­porter talked to seemed to agree that this year's Footival was the best anyone could remember. "More families seem to be here," said Fes­tival vlc6 chairman Bob Grigsby, "and that's a good sign." People gathered in front of the stage and seemed to stay for the entire af­ternoon. A typical day-time crowd numbered about 350 or more, In addition to those at the booths and on the carnival rides.

Carnival owner Tom Galen was particularly Impressed with the a._ moaphere at the Festival and eought a renewal of his contract with the Festival steering commit­tee to return next year.

Even the person who , operated the beer booth In years' past for the Young Republicans (and didn't have such a profitable booth this year) felt that the 1976 Festival was the best attended and best be­baved he had seen In four years.

Festival recording secretary Mur­Iel Weldenfeld thought It would take several years before people ueepte4 the "No Beer'' policy- and before any change would be no­ticed In the behavior of the crowd. She was amazed that people did ac­cept tb~ policy so completely and willingly.

There \\'68 one report of someone lifting a case of beer from the Co­op Supermarket and h68dlng for the woods behind the Festival. This was an Isolated case and the po­llee department quickly brought that situation under control.

In short. even without beer, or because of the lack of beer,· many more people than ever before seem­ed to be enjoying the activities of the 1976 Greenbelt Labor Day Fel­tival.

Art Show Wiunen by AmHI llrunJ8

Olla and Acrylleo - lat Ted Kil­man., 2nd Elinor Behr, 31'd EliBa­betb Marshall, 4th Elinor Bebr.

Dnwlq, PuW., W~a -1st Alice Plaster, 2nd Sandra Brac­ken, 3rd Elbert R. Robe1110n.

Prlnta - 1st Nell Harpe, 2nd Nell Harpe, 3rd Laine Ortel, 4th Sandra Bracken. IMI~ed Media - 1st Elbert R Ro­

berson, 2nd Mike Keen& 8eulptum - lat Elbert R. Rober­

son, 2nd Elinor Bebr, 3rd Cbarlea Behr, 4th Charles Behr.

Speclal Awuda Cipriano Award for "Americana

at work" - winner, Elbert R Rob­erson; honorable mention, Linda Hicks.

"Spirit of Greenbelt" - winner, Donald Volk

Most Popular In Show - Elisa­beth Marshall

ChDdrm'a Awanla · Palntln1 - lot Mark Henry, 2nd

Mark Henry, 3rd Kathy Man110~. orawlng - Age• 7-10: lit Todd

Kilman, 2nd Terry Ollka, ani Laurie Brunner, 4th Valerie Sin­clair. Ape 11-111: 1st Kathy Man­sor, 2nd Kathleen Kyle, 3rd Danny Wlnaky.

Cntta - lat Laura Karlander, 2nd Brian Cboper, lrd Sonja John­lOll, ~ Laurie Brunner

Prize~ were donated by the Onenllelt Reoreatlon Dept.. Labor p., r~ Olmmlttee, AC..S8m7 "r u...au... ROJ Ropra, LaLiure Learnlnc Cetlter, Bla' Boy &.tau­rant, and llr Walter ltaleiP IIIII.

No Retirement for Greenbelt Golden Ager Kenneth. Buker ' The fol!o,wing materia! was drawn frcnn an August 14, 1975 News Review article by Wini Milan on the occasion of the Rev. Buker being honored by the University Christian Church in Hy-attsvi!!e. ·

A man who loves people - this best characterizes the Rev. Kenneth Buker. The feeling here is mutual; he is known and loved throughout Greenbelt for his efforts to help his fellow man and community. During 12 years of residence here, he has par­ticipated in an impressive number of organizations and projects.

Recipient of the first Award of in La l:Soci~te 40/8 No. 265 of the Merit In Scouting Issued In Prince American Legion. He bas also done Georges County, in 1972, the Rev. much work with youth through the Buker will soon receive a 41}-year Young Men's Christian Assocla­Scouter certltlcate for his yearl tlon and as a life member of the of efforts In Scouting. At present world's Interdenominational youth be Is chaplain of the Patuxent organization, the International So­district of Boy Scouts, and prob- clety of Christian Endeavor. He ably the only elected district chap- makes regular trips Into the Dis­lain In the United States. The trlct of Columbia to attend meet­reasons for this man's lengthy ser- lngs of Knights of the Round vice In Scouting are revealed in Table and of the Oldest Inbabl­hls statement, ''Teaching and dl- tants of the District of Columbia. rectlng boys and &iris between the Recently a new honor has been ages of 12 and 21 to paths of pur- bestowed upon this active citizen, poseful living Is the field of endea- On June 1 he was presented an vor which, to me, holds greater at- Honored Minister's pin at Unlver­tractlon than any other." slty Christian Church In Hyatt•-

The Rev. Buker Is also now ser- ville for his many years of mlnl­vlng as Secretary of the Member stry prior to retirement, and the Advisory Council of · Greenbelt ministry that he has continued to Consumer §!:rvlcea, and Is on the perform In that congregation and Credit Union Board. An active here In Greenbelt. Active as an member of the Greenbelt Lions, he Elder Emeritus at Unl\'erslty Chris­has been chaplain of this group tlan, he Is also a frequent speak­for 8 years. He Is also chaplain, er In pulpits of many Greenbelt and a former president, of the churches. Greenbelt Golden Age Club. Ef- Wife Katharine and children forts on behalf of the senior cit!- Barbara, Kenneth, Jr., and Joyce zens here Include his working to have been the Rev. Buker's sup­get the present lounge for their port In all his activities. An ex­use In the Youth Center, and a tremely likable person herself, Mrs. number of recent appearances be- Buker bas lately been active serving fore city council to get city span- as Secretary of the Golden Age sorshlp of construction Qf a Green- Club and has written some lnsplr­belt senior citizens building. lng reli&ious poetry at Camp Farth-

"One of our moat faithful mem- est Out. which both she and the bers always with the good of the Rev. Buker attend each year. city at heart," aays former Park "Someone everybody would like and Recreation Advisory Board to know and meet; a wonderful Chairman Joe Wilkinson of Rev. man with a head full of wisdom; Buker's membership on PRAB, outgoing and generous, with a con­His knowledge of people and ape- stant concern for thoae around cia! Interest In needs of youth and him" -these are just a few of the senior citizens have proven valu- many nice things friends and as­able to PRAB. soclates of this remarkable man

Citizens may have noticed th~ have to say about him, People Rev. 'Buker's presence at city coun- like the Rev. Ken Buker make ell meetings - he Is nearly al- Greenbelt an especially nice place ways there, quietly listening to to live. what Is happening In the city be loves. City Manager James Giese . characterizes the Rev. Buker as Meet:ing for Deaf an energetic advocate, of sate pe­destrian walkwaya throughout Greenbelt. "For example, be was just In yesterday to notify us th"at the underpass at Gardenway Is ful~ of gravel" commented Giese.

Wider community activities In­clude being a charter and life member of Cheverly American Le­&ion Post 108 and honorary chap­plain. He also holds membership

Pet Show Results by Kathy Abbot

The winners of the Children's Pet Show are u follows: JWa: Bl,..,.& - lat Carla Hayes, 2na Kim McGee. Smallest - 1st Samantha Querela, 2nd Sandy Grlus Longest - Karen Ball~y. Shortest - tat Jonathon Polanln, 2nd Donna Brunattl. Moat Talent­ed - 1st Steve and Gina Prlstoop, 2nd Tracy Hard. Moat Colorful -1at Pam Valente, 2nd Elizabeth Allen. Shorte1t Tall - 1st Joyce Ann Mihaly, 2nd Jennifer and AI­IIIIOn Ingleebl. \Friskiest - 1st An­gela Boule, 2nd Tammy Odell. Old­est - 1st Kathleen Kyle, 2nd Kath­leen Kyle. Blackest - lot Caitlin Owens, 2nd Dawn Saboury.

Congresswoman Gladys Spellman will hold a. special "open door" meeting for deaf constituents on Tues., September 21, from 8-10 p.m. at Kenmoor Jr. High School, 21100 Kenmoor Drive In Landover. In­terpreters will be provided.

La Le~he Meeting LaLeche League of Greenbelt

announces Its fall aedes of meet­Ings to be held at SilL Ridge Rd. be&innlng Sept. 23 at 8 p.m. This month's topic will be "Th" Advan­taaes of Breastfeedlng to Mother and Baby." For further Informa­tion contact Jill Coutts, 474-()816 or Marilyn Brinkley, 3411-2141.

Parent Discussion Gronp The ttrst fall ,meeting of the

Greenbelt parent dlacUIIIon group will be held at the Baptlllt Church, G""'nhlll an4 Creecent Roads, Wednesday, Sept. 12, 9:30-U:30 a.m.

Refre1hments will be served, babysitting available.

Left to right, r J. Marshall Dunn, Katharine Buker, Rev. Ken Buker and Jess Goble at June 1, 1975 ceremony at Univer­sity Christian Churc in Hyattsville honoring Rev. Buker for his years of service. -photo by Fuchs

Greenbelt Pizza -Sub Shop it's Toe smaclcin delicious

The Nickel Snatcher Y...., the nickel aatcber Is here at last and It wiD be available Sat., Sept. 18th.

For more lnfonnatlon call NOW!

FRI. Extra Large Pizza w /Sausage

107 CENTERWAY ---·- -===

$3.95

474-4998

Notice of ~pecial Registration

and

Final Regiatration Date

A SPECIAL VOTER REGISTRATION has been scheduled at the City Olllces, 211 Crescent Road, Greenbelt, for

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1976 - 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.

Anyone wlshln1 to re11ater may also do 10 at the City Olllcea during regular olllce houn, 8:00 A.M. to G:OO P.M., Monday thru Friday.

LAST DAY TO REGISTER - SEPTEMBER 20, 1976 Reglatratlon Requirement.: 18 years of aae as of the date of the September 28th Special Election; domiciled within the City of Green­belt as of the date of registration; citizen of the United States, and of sound mind.

Greenbelt residents are reminded to assure proper re~rlstratlon. Re&is­tration wl·th Prince George's County for county, state and federal electlona does not qualify Greenbelt residents to vote In the upcoming special election or any regular Council elections. Citizens who have been removed for failure to vote In the, last two regular city elections need to r&-re&ister no later than September 20, 1976 In order to be eligible to vote In the upcoming city election. A list of eligible regletered v~ra. showing persons who registered through AUI\IIt lOth, has been posted In the City Olllcee. Any person In doubt as to his or her eligibility may check with the City Clerk, 47'-3870 or •n-8000.

ABSENTEE BALLOTS

The City Charter provides that "ANY QUALIFIED VOTER OF THE CITY OF GREENBELT, BY Rll:ASON OF RELIGIOUS BlDLIEFS, PHYSICAL CONDfflON OR ABSENCE FROM: THE CITY ON THE DAY OF ELECTION, MAY VOTE BY ABSENTEE BALLOT."

Applications shall be made In writing to the City Clerk for an absentee ballot no later than twelve o'clock noon of the day preceding the Special Election (noon, Monday, September 27, •1978). Ballots returned aball reach the olllce of the City Clerk not later than two boura before the cloelng of the polla on the day of Ule 1peclal eleotlon, September 28th, In order to be counted. Once an absentee ballot baa been llsued, the voter lhall not be authorized to cast the ballot In any manner other than by cutlng the absentee ballot. Application• form• may be obtained from the City Clerk, 211 Creacent Road, Greenbelt, Maryland 20770, or by calling 474-8870 or 47i-8000.

Gudrun H. Mills, City Clerk

Cata: Fattest - LOrrie and Barb Hastlnga. Most Colorful - Joe Dob­bin. Longe1t fur - Greg Morrison. Moat My1terlous Eyes - Kim Van-Valkenburgh ' Mlaclel._.• (hermit crab1, aal­amanden, IICIUirrel, mouse. gerblla, turtleo, h&llllten, tlsht. 1ea monk­eyl, and guinea plpl: Blgg .. t -11t Mira llatra. 2nd Billy Garrm. Smalleat - ht Brian Jones, 2nd Danny Garren, 3rd Naney Garren. 4th Kathryn Mayer. M011t UnuiUal - lit Pam Valente, 2nd Allllon Ing­ellby, ani WQJ~e ll'olkey. M1111t Talented - Helen Webb. Belt DreeHd - Eddy BeU.Ie. Quletilt -lit Jennifer iMollneaux. 2nd ADdy Olek, lnl M'atthew Webb. 8ma1lelt - lat Le!P Jucourt. 2nd Zaebary :Moaedale, L&ra'Mt Claw - lat An­drew Jofoaedale, 2nd Peter Golem-11&, ant llalantha Querelo.

Annual

dividend

paid

quarterly

GREENBELT FIDERAL

CRE.DIT UNION m Oeaterway IBboppll1r Oeaterl

Greenbelt. M4. 10'1'10 Phon•; •"~~

% -o-

PLUS

ap to tZOII

free Ula

Houra: Dai!J: ~ • Saturdaya: t-t l'rid&J evening .,_.

Other Services Available:

Payroll withholding

Direct depoeit of retirement thecka

Tax defe!T@d Income -Individual Retirement Accounts (IftA)

ll:aeh lllflllllier account lnlured to Wl.OOO by Nation a1 Credit ·Union Admlnlltratlon, an agency of tb•

II. 1'1. <Jovpmlilent

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPB Volume 39, Number 45 GREENBELT, MARYLAND Thursday, September 23, 1976

Cf!llege Park lderly Housing Parent DisdOAre F~ . · Is No Longer Reqaired

The College Park elderly h sing project - Attick Towers - The Prince Georges County Pub-was developed under conditio and program specifications that lie Schooll haY& announced that differ from those proposed f the Greenbelt elderly housing parents of students In the county,

· h · p k scboola will not be required to ~ro)ect. Nevert. eless, certain pects of the College ar exper- complete an A111davlt of DlsclOiure 1ence have pertmence for Gr , nbelt, as may be seen from the form until the luue Is reeolved by following interview by staff porter Elaine Skolnik with Anne either the Maryland Court of Spe­Marie Hanes, executive dir or of the College Park Housing cia! Appeals or the General Aasem­Authority. bly. School olllclals otreeaed,

pel'IIOII.I. Theoretically, the clt7 oould sWI

proceed with the prOject In cue of a neptive viite- af the pollll by 1lllnt dlft~"lal arrance­ment. H~ be aately assumed that a negative vote on the amendallllt would be Interpre­ted b)o molt cilliernN as a vote against any -~.:_.~~erly boua­lng proJtet~~r'- ·-..io:

G. How many rental units comfrise Attlck Towers?, A. 108. .

Q, Are Federal subaldy money• Involved? A. Yes. The College Park Jouslng Authority Is a State-sponsored

agency which receives Federal subaldy housing funds through the HUD turnkey arrangementl.

Q. What percentage of tentuta receive housing IUISistance payments? A. Since the Federal subaldlts are paid directly to the project through

Its operating budget and not to Individual tenants, one may say that _!!very occupant Is recelvl~g a subllldy.

Q. What Is the dlstrtbuticn of your present tenants with respect to their former residence?

A. The great majority of peraons now living at Attlck Towers were previously residents of College Park or related to residents of the city, According to the rules laid down by the College Park Housing Authority, ftrst preference Is given to College Park residents and second to relatives of College Parlt residents.

Q. What Ia your averare vacancy rate? A. The vacancy rate hal been zero.

Q. How large a waiting llat do you have? A. 300.

Q. How many Greeilbelters are on that waiting list? A. At last count 18, some of whom have been on the list since early 1972.

Q, Wb01e responlllblllty Is It to determine eligibility of applicants and selection of families from among thOle eligible?

A. Eleecutlve dlrectora. accordlnlli to the rules aet down by the College Park Houal ... Authority. TA. -IMlolftiN of the Oonese · Puk­

.Ho'!llng Authority are ippolnted by the CoUere Park mayor and confirmed by the city council.

Q. To what extent Ia the coat of Attlck Towers underwritten by the city of College Park?

A. The city baa not put a cent Into the housing project.

ClrY NOTIS Oil Recycling Available Realdenta who change the oil

The general crew spent three In their automobiles may now dis­days after Labor Day clla!nantel- poae of It at the Public Works lng the booths, cleantna;. nalla· and Warehouse, A barrel marked "Used atorlng lumber. Several members 011" Is located at. the rear of the of the crew worked over the en- Yard. The city has made arrange­tire werlcend helping with the ·Fes- menta with a private tlrm to recycle tlval. Catoh basins have been the oil. cleaned.· School ftuhlng lights Beald111 crankcase oil, brake flu­were all checked and put In ser- ld, transml1slon oil or any other vice. petroleum baaed product may be

The park crew has been . cutting depoalted In the drum. Houra for grass and maintaining the lllttball depoaltlng oil are 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 field. The golf course wu bared p.m., Monday through Friday and for. Ti\e goal po8ts for the foot-- 8:00 'a;m:·to noon Sat11rdaya. City ball fteld on Braden Field wem ro- ordinance prohibits the dumping of located to 'oomplf'wltli the Boys oil on streets or In storm sewers. Club requirements. The abopplnl( """ -.---center ma]] bas been cared for bj ""'<it~ • a regular .._embe~ of ~e crew. ~ wint:er Swimming

The 1~ parldng lot In front- · of 1 PJ~ii Place ,... repal*'' ·· ·,'Ehe Greenbelt Winter Swim pro-and marked off. The aame treat- gftan will begin on ·sundq, Oot. ment was bei\ln In front Ot 8 . Re- 3, a~ 6:30 p.m. at the·,SIIver Spring search Road for' li 11~ liit•11 _ YMCA Pool. Swl!DIIIIng will lie ever, the rain deblrecfcom;I.Jt.. from. 6:30-8:00. P·l!lo. each lund.cy w k · excluding holiday whkeAdl throiJI)I

or waa started on winterizing Ma lG 1977 _ a total of 2e --the swimming pool and boe.rdlng

1 Y ' ·

up the bathhouse. s ons. . Bl'lllh wu picked up and friiiB y.'lnter Swim 1.1 open to a

111

t B ad Fl ld Tb Greenbelt residents, but _Ia ationg y \11188 cu on r en e · e an- oriented towards IWim team -traln­nualll were removed from the Bl- lng. The swlla team coaching centennial !lower bed and the bell statr will provlll'e coaching at all has been prepared for the plant- levels from beginner level. ; lnJ of chrysanthemums. For further Information and

The paper collection last week sign-up, call Bob Greig, 474-0332 netted 7 tons, 480 lbs.

Jo An~' Rowe, a Greenbelt res­lde~~t~ been hlrecl aa the l'tec­retiUUII Department'• Recre6tlon Aul8tallt eftsotlve September 1G. Jo Ann hu 1ented In vvlo1111 ca­paei&IH"with tht Department alnce 1961. Htr dutlel IJicluded camp counaellot, IMtruotor, prograftl CQN!olalfat and center leader u wen u a participant and volunteer ltllller In a number of program areu. Jo Ann Ia m&lortng In ltec-

- reatlon and Parka at the Prinoe 0eorrea Community College.

Greenbel~ CARES F~ll 1chedule for the Bike Shop,

Creative Shop and Clothing/EquiP.:. ment Exchanre betrlns next week with after 1chool hours establlabed for youth Involvement.

Dr. Rowell Huesmann, Computer OoniUitant to Behavior Services Conaultants. Inc, spent Labor Day, w""kend In Greenbelt reviewing and establllblng ni!W coding syatema for data .the Youth 8ervtcea Bureau will be using In their reportl to Juvenile l'lervlcfa Admlnlltration.

though, that this doet not affect the aeparate requirements for proof of residency by parents of new etu­dents or those tran8ferrtng from one school to another because of a change of retldence.

Last aprlng the American Civil Liberties Union aponeored a suit cbaUenglng the conatltutlonallty of the law. On August 27, Prince Qe.. orgea County Circuit Court Judge Ralph W. Powera upheld the A11l­davlt statu.te, and the school sys­tem prepared to enforce it. How­ever, on September 9, the Board of Education voted to endorse legisla­tion prellled In the General Aasem­bly which would repeal the Alllda­vlt law. As a result of these actions the Board agreed to delay any en­forcement or the law uritll the Is­sue II resolved.

Before del Mter School The Camtlua Center for Early

Learning announc111 the opening of an exciting new Before and Af­ter Elementary School Program• which wiD begin October •· 1971 at the Brae Brooke Ajlart:ment Community Center. The Center hours are from 1 a.m: to e p.IIL .Tnlllportatloe tD ucl tJiQm .aural local elementary aclioolir_. to all from the Cen~r. wUJ be provided b)' the Center, Qual.llled ·ltalf will preaent a rec~atlonal and educa­tional program which will Include homi!Work supervision, educational resources and special projects. For more Information and reptratlon, plll&le call the Campua Center for Early Learning, 3411-8880.

The city ~ p~ In Ill literature that a vote agalnat the charter amendment would be oon:. aldered a vote qalnat the elderly housing projeet.

Converself a ~otltllr the char­ter amendment woald be could­ered a vote for the elderly hous-Ing project. ·

NOnCE OF SPECIAL REFEREN~UM~1liCTf~ The City Council .hu adopted Resolution No. 388, which ealla for a

SPECJAL REFERENDUM ELECTION _ on

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1976-7:00 A.Mltto 8:00P.M.

at the following polling places: ~

8rd Precinct- Greenbel_t Municipal B~,~;:£.~:"• · 211 Crescent Road . ~'-: · .~,;;;:

8th Precinct- North End Elementary ~--"~·''c.:·, Ridge and R111eartb~ ~ · ..

8th Precinct - Sprlnl(hlll Lake ~un~~ .j·t 8220 Springhill Drive • '.:., ·~

At this apeclal election, voters of Greerlb~ ~Ill i!litia~oir wbethe; 0~ ~ not to approve a Charter amendment ~~ ~ ~- .the city __ to undeJtake a proposed 100-unlt elder)¥. ·11oull1ng proJI!eL -The question to be placert on the ballot wlli read a'a-f••

~ . -_.,.. ...... ~ ..... Are you FOR or AGAINST amending Seet.t,.·· .. '!f!~~ belt City Charter to provide that the ~T~ a mortptt~ contract for a period of not ' . · (40)

year& with the State of Maryland mlatln& .... :~:.~.,.,· ~· tlon

and operation of a federally aubsldllllld ~-t for

•lderly penona 111 provldlld Ill Charter ~ 'L.oluUon

Nmnber 197&-1 wblch will beoome etrf'Cltlve It approved by thlo

n'foftlldum f -- ... .: ... -....-FOR ..... . AGAniirf~~: .. ::.'·:~

Ollclnlll JL Mllh

"" ~k~'~:~:

Opponent• ,

I

'-

Opponents of the projeet'ieaetal­IY take the view ths:t. cl~splte ~,.. ances from present Federar· 'al'u'J

. s~ hpuslng -lltb!l_ntl~~ •. regula­

. t1o114 mBT be chan«ed Jll.tl\r fll­ture that will adversely alfecl: t~n-ant "lelectlon and city li•blllty.

Democrp_ts Need H~lpers i4!11. ar..e,J; rtnit·-Con*"'ftlOnal

District elected Carter delegate to the Democratic National COnven­tion In July, has announced .that the Carter-Mondale campaign now bas a fulttlme statr pe1110n assigned to tho district campaign. He Is Cbiules Howell, and he bu his desk In the Democratic cem~IJn headquartera 8.t Beltway l'la# In Greenbelt.

itealdenta of the Greenbelt area whQ would like to help with voter reglatrat(on, f&"vuslng, and other pre-election activities may cont.Mt Howell at 441-8l!OO or Green at 2a-5144. Carter-Monllale coordinator& will be operatlnc In each preolnct to asalst In U1e Democratic election campalan. ·

~~ I .

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