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NEWS
By Joni Guhne | July 2, 1992
Congratulations to the new Severna Park Jaycee officers: Joe Hanna, president; Judi Wood, Doug McGettigan, Valerie Garber and John Milone, vice presidents; William DeKroney and Mary Ann Rohr, secretaries; Sean Haggerty, treasurer; and Roxane Brown, Joel Garber, Tim Capps, Cindy Parlato, Dory Tate and Maria Catroppa, directors.The state director is Anne Magrath and chairman of the board is Bill DeHoff, the immediate past-president.Information: 360-8904.*If you are ever unfortunate enough to endure a house fire, your best friends could belong to the Earleigh Heights Volunteer Fire Company.
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NEWS
By Muphen R. Whitney | June 24, 1992
Mother Nature is constantly encroaching in the world of trail riders.She provides scenery, shade and the trails but at the same time gives thorns, brackens and overgrowth that must be dealt with.On a recent glorious Saturday afternoon, Carolyn Garber of Taylorsville set off on foot armed with an anvil pruner to do battle with branches that had overgrown the bridle paths at Piney Run. The occasion was the first of the summer's planned trail-clearing expeditions of the county trail system.Garber was joined by three riders and their horses who were sent off to a "major sticker area" to clear away the growth.
FEATURES
By Vida Roberts and Vida Roberts,New York Times News ServiceEdited by Catherine Cook | March 5, 1992
Stepping elegantlyAfter business is settled, assignments dispersed and plans drafted the conversation will turn to shoes. Women who juggle career, family and a heavy social schedule want to walk in high fashion even when they are on the run. It takes a woman of style and sensibility to under-stand that need. Charna Garber, who with her daughter Ellise Garber designs the d'Rosanna shoe line, has that dramatic sense and the answers.The creative initiative was taken by Charna Garber, who after many years experience in the shoe business decided to strike out on her own. The designs clicked with women of fashion and buyers for the finest stores.
NEWS
By Dan Fesperman and Dan Fesperman,Washington Bureau of The Sun | October 31, 1990
WASHINGTON -- Some of the nation's most generous political contributors took a stand yesterday against a proposed rule that would bar foreign-owned American companies from forming political action committees to help finance U.S. election campaigns.If adopted, the rule could knock out close to $3 million in donations from the next election cycle. Foreign-owned companies contributed $2.8 million to political races in 1988.But company employees, not owners, supply the money that fuels PACs, and barring foreign-owned company PACs would unfairly penalize employees of those companies, according to Martin D. Garber Jr., president of the National Association of Business Political Action Committees.
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