Resume Red Bank Teacher Sanctions Implementation, Mr

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Resume Red Bank Teacher Sanctions Implementation, Mr DUtrilration Red Bank Area J •*7'i7,f7S '' y yi Bw. "" ":< ' 'V^' Capra&X-VB* »«J Bank Register, Inc. 1968. tomorrow wltfa a Ugh of MONMOUTH COUNTTPSHOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS DIAL 741-0010 VOL. 88, UO. 237 Utotd ditlr iloniXT thrsuh Trl4»T MMBM 4 dan Pbatag* WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1966 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE Resume Red Bank Teacher Sanctions implementation, Mr. MeNu 11 y RED BANK — Teachers' sanc- professional negotiation proce- not be resolved by Hie deadline. Dr. Robert C. Hoops, superin- and volunteers w*U take die place director, is contracted to con- Mr. McNulty said the notifica- tions against the Board of Edu- dure. Thursday night the welfare saidlid.. - tendent of schools, said most of teachers who would have duct school activities of the band, tion would be statewide as well cation have been reinstated after SOU A Knot committee had its third consecu- The first step of the sanctions club activity has already ended. handled such thongs as lights, he withdrew the band from the as in 11 states that have reciproc- consisted of public advertisement three weeks of negotiation with- As of Thursday, according to tive Thursday night meeting with Most of the sanction's effect will tickets and props, he said. He soapbox derby parade, anew ity agreements with New Jer- a board committee. It broke up of the teachers' grievances, and be felt by students who were get- added that the sanction will not event. He would have kept the sey on teacher certification. It out agreement on two points of President Thomas F. McNulty of step two took the association dispute the association, salaries hadn't close to 1 a m. without a meeting —r - ttng after school academic as- threaten the senior prom. Little Silver appointment but, would start with the Mew Jersey of Hie minds. members away from their after sistance, he said. ' Already cancelled' because of according to Mr. McNulty, was and Monmouth County Educa- The sanctions had been lifted received more than a mention at school, non-paid extra activities. April 27 when the Teachers' As- joint teacher-board meetings, and More meetrogs tentatively are *od, non-paid extra activities. Dr. Hoops said arrangements the sanction were appearances of advised by the local school ad- tion Associations, he said. sociation won the first of its three the proposed negotiations pact set for <*is Thursday and future Re^nstatemeht of that step has for graduation were revised when the band at Memorial Day ser- ministration not to if the band Dr. Hoops commented that stiil had a knot in it Thursdays, but in the .meantime already caused cancellation of step two of the sanctions was vices In Little Silver and at the would not play here in Red Bank. teacher hiring almost is com- demands—a promise of officual two high school band apt- recognition by the board. The association met Thursday the sanctions are bade.: ^ __ invoked the first time. Some soapbox derby here, but neither Step three calls for notification pleted here, and the sanctions pearances, but much of its effect teachers, such as class advisers, was a school commitment, Dr. of teacher placement agencies But the association set a June afternoon and gave its welfare They were re-imposed where r~~.- . ~- — • have not hindered, recruitment so year are contracted to assist in the Hoops said. and education associations of the I deadline for results on the committee authority to re-invoke they left off—on step two-but will 1>e lost since the school far. - June 16 commencement exercise, sanctions in Red Bank. other two issues—salaries and the sanction* if the issues could step three is being prepared for'ls drawing to a dose. While John W. Luckenbdll, band (See SANCTIONS, Page 3) Gemini 9 Space Twins Set to Start Most Difficult, Daring Adventure CAPE KENNEDY, Fla, (AP) vous, docking and space walk- The camera-carrying craft is to rest for tfcedr demanding as- Augmented Target Docking — The Gemini 9 .astronauts, ing pioneered on earlier Gemini to settle gently onto a dry plain signment. They first worked out Adapter — ATDA, was, dusted frustrated by rocket fadJure on missions. called tiie Ocean of Storms at in a gymnasium near their off and placed atop another one launching, attempt, try The crowded flight plan for 2:16 a.m. tomorrow — a few quarters six miles from the Atlas. The ATDA had been built again today to dash into orbit on the bold journey calls for nine hours before Cernan is to take launch pad. - for just such an emergency man's most difficult and daring separate. hookups with the tar- his space walk. They had gone through the rom off-the-shelf hardware and space adventure. get; three different types of ren- Surveyor 1 is traversing a prelaunch procedure once be- control systems taken from the "We were ready two weeks dezvous with the satellite, and a quarter-milHon-mile course that fore, on May 17. their flight Gemini 6 spacecraft. ago and we're ready now," record 2V4-hour space stroll by Stafford, Cernan and other as- was postponed then when an Stafford teamed with astro- commented Eugene A. Cernan Cernan, flitting about with a tronauts might take within three electrical short fouled one of the naut Walter M. Schirra Jr. to as he and command pilot Thorn rocket-powered back pack. years. The Ocean of Storms is Atlas engines and sent the rock- fly Gemini 6 last December dur- as P. Stafford prepared for Throughout the three-day considered a possible landing et and an Agena target satellite ing the historic rendezvous with three action-filled days in space, flight, Stafford and Cernan area for American spacemen. plummeting into the Atlantic Gemini 7. rehearsing procedures for man' planned to keep tabs on the Stafford, balding 35-year-old Ocean 180 miles southeast of The ATDA is smaller and less to-dhe-moon trips. progress of Surveyor 1, the spi- Air Force lieutenant colonel Cape Kennedy. sophisticated than the Agena The blazing doubleheader dery spacecraft soaring toward and Cernan, slender 32-year-old Another Agena was not avail- and this resulted in a reshuf- launching was to start at 11 a hoped-for soft-landing on' the Navy lieutenant commander, able for a quick rescheduling. fling of the flight plan. a.m. (EDT) with" the thundering moon. went to bed early last night So a backup satellite called an (See GEMINI, Page 3) blastoff of an Atlas rocket that is to propel a target satellite into orbit. The astronauts were U.S. Planes Hammer North Viets to start the chase at 12:38 p.m., hopefully catching and hitching up to the target il/i hours later". • of SPACE WALKER MAKES A POINT — Gemini 9's Eugene A. Cernan. left, sched- bjfa^AleUtfd^S 17, Buddhists Resume Peace Talk tiled to take a walk in spaca after ha and Command Pilot Thomas Stafford are Gemini 9 will be launched any- SAIGON (AP) — Buddhist U.S. consulate and at least three between the junta and monks of resentative • for every' military blasted into space today, gestural during a review of mission yesterday at Cape Ken- way to gain space walk expert- leaders resumed their peace talks other buildings in the rebellious the powerful Buddhist Institute member1. .' » : ence. nedy, Fla., with Stafford. (AP Wirapboto) with Premier Nguyen Cao Ky"s Buddhist stronghold of Hue. followed a public declaration by In Hue, more than 1,000 Problem Cleared military junta today despite a In the war, U.S. pilots dodged Ky to carry out his promise to screaming students sacked and Technicians last night mysterious grenade attack on one half a dozen Soviet missiles in a add civilians to the- 10-man rul- burned the deserted U. S. Cortstt' cleared up a minor electrical of the leading monks involved. near-record day of attack on ing directory. late and adjoining consulate resi- problem in the Atlas and the North Viet Nam but conventional In a statement broadcast by dence in the northern Buddhist While the resumption of the green light was flashed to start groundfire knocked down three Saigon radio, Ky Was quoted as stronghold. The attack, though un- negotiation seemed a hopeful sign Violent Reactions the countdowm American jets. The assault on saying: . related, took place about the in South Viet Nam's political ; To a greater degree than ever the Communist north included time,the grenade in Saigon seri- crisis,, rampaging student mobs "The government of Viet Nairi before Stafford and iSraan will the heaviest single raid of the has decided' to enlarge the na- ously wounded Thich Tnkn Minn, sacked-and burned the deserted exploit the technique* of render* war, an. 18-missfon strike against tional leidershJp committee to deputy chairman of the powerful the • Yen Bay storage ' complex include representatives of mass Buddhist Institute and fce«d ofita To CollegeC organizations, religions and po- youth movement. -'" along the Red River 8D miles TRENTON — Assemblyman state should be assured that we Mr. Btadleston said his original northwest of Hanoi. litical parties. ; ' ' - The new .violence cast a shadow Robert N. Wilentz, ^Middlesex, »re not giving state money to one proposal provided that the state Senate Passes Ah Air Force spokesman said "The national leadership coin- over negotiations to' end the long would touch off violent reactions class of private Institution with- board would make rules and reg- more planes were sent against mittee will make Immediate con- political crisis. Only yesterday ulations governing payment .of Yen Bay than any other individu- tact with mass organizations, re- Buddhist leaders held' an unex- if, he attempted to force tighter out regard to admission policies, 1 state control over county junior accounting and budget pro- state funds.
Recommended publications
  • Aa002638.Pdf (14.16Mb)
    0191 QMERICAN LEGION NEWS SERVICE NATIONAL PUBLIC RELATIONS DIVISION ■THE AMERICAN LEGION C. D. DeLoach, Chairman James C. Watkins, Director HEADQUARTERS P. O. Box 1055 1608 K St., N. W. Indianapolis, Indiana 46206 Washington, D. C. 20006 (317) 635-8411 (202) 393-4811 AMERICAN LEGION NEWS BRIEFS FOR WEEK ENDING 8-U-T2 "Put It All Together" "by building a package that will increase and vividly illustrate the value of Legion membership, Joe. L. Matthews, a member of the National Commander's Advisory Committee, told American Legion membership workers at the workshop banquet here. * * # American Legion National Commander John H. Geiger, speaking as a war veteran and an engineer, has questioned the competency of a "left wing radical" and well-known actress with respect to her evaluation of American military tactics and alleged damage effects on the enemy's canals and dikes. * * * Sweeping proposals, on veterans' legislation, foreign policy, national security and Americanism will be presented to the Republican Party's Platform Committee by American Legion National Commander John H. Geiger on Monday, Aug. lU in Miami Beach, Fla. * * * ****** * WASHINGTON—(ALMS)—The United States Senate, in action late Thursday, Aug. 3, * passed the Vietnam-era Veterans Readjustment Act of 1972 (under the House Number of HR 12828) by a unanimous roll call vote of 89-0. The bill generally satisfied American Legion Resolution 3^2, passed at the 53rd National Convention held in Houston, Aug. 31-Sept. 2, 1971, to increase the * allowance a veteran will receive by an average of k3%. Under HR 12828, if it becomes law, the single veteran will receive $250 per * month instead of the $175 he is currently receiving; a veteran with one dependent * $297 instead of $205; and, a veteran with two dependents $339 instead of $230.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ledger and Times, April 16, 1968
    Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 4-16-1968 The Ledger and Times, April 16, 1968 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, April 16, 1968" (1968). The Ledger & Times. 5946. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/5946 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. --- • , .. a. •••••••••••••••••• , - - RLJ • Selected An A Beet All Round Kentucky Community Newspaper The Primary - Largest Paid Source of News-- Circulation In Murray and *ships accorn. Both In City n orbit today„ Calloway County And In County ri In the pr., HI moon, wp nited Press International In Our 111/th Year launched Sun. Murray, Ky., Tuesday Afternoon, April 16, 1968 10* Per Copy Vol. LXXXIX No. 91 olc link 11l.10. before oft Seen&Heard Masonic Meet Kirksey 4-H Club Wins Club sinned spec,- Around rote that Rue. At Calloway Aet 1Division, Talent Show sophisticated ction of huge Murray Alvah Galloway of * to put meg Temple, The Kirksey 4-H Club won Smith, Tom Montgomery, Bob Hill Lodge 276 of Calloway the Club Act Division of the Hargrove end Larry Geib. We find it ditticult to measure County, district deputy grand Calloway County 4-H Variety Leader's assisting with this mit a quart of water now that master of II District of the Show held Friday night, April club act are Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    Table of Contents Letter to collector and introduction to catalog ........................................................................................ 4 Auction Rules ............................................................................................................................................... 5 Clean Sweep All Sports Affordable Autograph/Memorabilia Auction Day One Wednesday December 11 Lots 1 - 804 Baseball Autographs ..................................................................................................................................... 6-43 Signed Cards ................................................................................................................................................... 6-9 Signed Photos.................................................................................................................................. 11-13, 24-31 Signed Cachets ............................................................................................................................................ 13-15 Signed Documents ..................................................................................................................................... 15-17 Signed 3x5s & Related ................................................................................................................................ 18-21 Signed Yearbooks & Programs ................................................................................................................. 21-23 Single Signed Baseballs ............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Premium Stars
    Page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #167 Premium Stars 1967 Topps #581 Tom Seaver rookie NR-MT. $2795.00 1954 Topps #128 Hank Aaron rookie GD-VG. $2750.00 One of the hottest cards in the hobby! The rookie card of the oldest living Hall of Famer, the “Say Hey Kid”…Willie Mays. Cards grading 2’s through 4’s are pushing levels of $10,000 to $15,000. Card exhibits outstanding color and image focus. Centered 50/50 side to side 1955 Topps #164 Roberto Clemente and 90/10 top to bottom. Corners show typical rounding for the grade of Good. rookie PR-FR (paper missing back). Minor print line visible at Willie’s hat and a minor crease extends through the W 1967 Topps #569 Rod Carew rookie $1295.00 in Willie’s name. 2 tiny pin holes are visible on the green building to the right of PSA 7 NM. $1550.00 Willie, undoubtedly from being pinned up on the original owner’s bulletin board. (If not for the 2 tiny pin holes, this Mays rookie would approach the VG 3 level). Back is clean an completely readable. $5995.00 1954 Topps #201 Al Kaline rookie 1953 Topps #220 Satchel Paige PSA 7 NM $3995.00 PSA 3 VG. $1195.00 1967 Topps #150 Mickey Mantle 1955 Topps #2 Ted Williams PSA 7 PSA 8 NM/MT. $3495.00 NM $2495.00 1971 Topps #630 Roberto Clemente 1934 Goudey #37 Lou Gehrig VG. PSA 8 NM/MT. $3295.00 1948 Leaf #3 Babe Ruth Poor. 1956 Topps #135 Mickey Mantle $3495.00 $1995.00 white back Fair (tape).
    [Show full text]
  • Enemy Near Phnom Penh; Six Gis Killed in Amhush
    PAGE TWENTY FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1970 Utanrli^Bt^r lEti^ntng l|i?iraUi Avenge Daily Net Press Run The Weather For Ihe Week TkWM Angui4n, ifie cessflil last year will be given High today to the 80s. Low tonight around 60, except 60s again. These Include dance and Temple Sets to some rural valleys. Suimy 4-Hers To Show Skills French for children and a pre­ 15,230 Sunday, high to the 80s. school play group. A bridge When You Buya A Manchester— -A CUy of Village Charm In Fair at Bradley Field New Session class for older children and ,, adults will also be repeated. Farm anlmala, frog Jiunping, Gates will open Sunday at 9. Monument from Among the new classes will VOL. LXXXIX, NO. 281 (EIGHTEEN PAGES—TV SECTOON) MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1970 (Classified AdverOsliig on Bsge 18) PRICE TEN CENTS taahions and folk abiging are The horse Show will start at O f C o u rs e s s A P ( » u n featured at the Hartford County 9:30 a.m. The watermelon, bal­ be yoga, basketball, acrobatics The first session ot the sec­ and folk dancing, and an addi­ MEMORIAL CO. 4>H on the fairgrounds at loon and apple bobbing ccmtesta 470 CENTER STREET Bradley Field thU weekend. at 11 a.m. will t|e followed by ond year of Community Enrich­ tional play group for children. Mudiertet • MS-ina The three-day fair, the coun­ the greased pole .contest at ment Courses, given by the For adults, there will be a crea­ tive rhythm class or a discus­ ty’s S4th, g)v/es the 1760 mem­ noon.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1964-07-22
    .... .... Council Sharply Criticized ... at Olivet College in Olivet, on August 7 and 8. OUJt1tl ~ will spe:!k on "Press ~ all On Fair Housing Ordinance Serving the State UnWersity of Iowa and the People of Iowa CUll and Honor Societies" and By NORBERT TATRO plause (rom the 120 persons who jammed the Coun· in Journalism" and wiU AS$istant City Ed itor cil chamber. Iowa City, Iowa Wednesday, July 22, 19M an illustrated lecture, "'~e Richard LJoyd·Jones, SUI associate professor of The Iowa City Cily Council Tuesday night came Behind the Iron CUr. English, defended the commission's version of the r under sharp criticism for changing a portion of a ordinance. He said it was not designed to punish, but • • proposed fair housing ordinance. The criticism can· to change the behavior of those discriminating cerned both the change itself and the conditions against the public good. The commission's version Johnson Calls .. " under which the meeting was held . seeks only a court injunction, he said. The housing ordinance was hard by the Council A REPRESENTATIVE of the League of Women .... at its first reading. Final action will not come until Javits, Keating Say Voters said there would be little reason for observ· For Probe of after the third meeting, probably Aug. 18. The ing an ordinance if the landlord could not be pun· Qrdinance would prohibit di crimination on the ished for non·compliance. , , basis of race, religion, or nationality, in renting. The Council defended its action, pointing out it has Harlem Riots ' leasing or selling both commercial and residential the power to write ordinances; the commission property.
    [Show full text]
  • Volume IV, No. 14
    VOL. IV. NO. 14 WEEKEND EDITION: APRIL 6-7, 1968 TEN CENTS More Than One Case Stalled 'Not Guilty' In Tuskegee In Greene BY MARY ELLEN GALE BY BOB LABAREE TUSKE GE E. Ala. EUTA W. Ala.--In 1962. Johnny Coleman, a Negro, "To tell you the truth, I don't know what to think," wa s convicted of murder­ said Ocie Devance Jr. as ing J. D. "Screwdriver" he left the Macon County Johnson, a white man, and courthouse last Monday was sentenced to death by morning. an all-white jury. In the six years since then, he has Devance, a YOllllg Negro man. had walted In jail whlle lawyers appealedhis come to court to testlty against two case to higher courts--twice to the Ala­ white law enforcement officers--Nota­ bama Supreme Court and twice to the sulga Police Chief Bobby Stngleton and U. S. Supreme Court. State Trooper James H. Bass. Ftnally, in October of last year, the According to warrants sworn out by U. S. Supreme Court ruled that Cole­ Devance, Singleton threatened him with man's trial had to be held over again, a gun while Bass beat and kicked him because Negroes had been "systemati­ on the ntght of March 16. cally excluded" from the jury that con­ OCIE DEVANCE JR. AT MACON COURTHOUSE FOLKS CONGRATULA TE COLEMAN (HALL IN FOREGROUND) victed him. The cases agatnst both officers were Negro sheriff. r-------------------------------------------------,So last Monday,Coleman went on trtal scheduled for trtal Monday In Macon And, he added, there is no guarantee for the second time beforea tense audi­ County Inferior Court.
    [Show full text]
  • Servicemen to Receive Fatter Checks
    MARINE CORPS HISTORICAL SEP 9 1965 ARCHIVES &S LIBRARY Vol. 14 -- No. 34 Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe Boy, Hawaii Friday, August 27, 1965 Servicemen To Receive Fatter Checks Next Month as Pay Bill Becomes Law K-Bay servicemen will have much coordinating, directive This new amendment ap- fatter pay checks next month writing and other planning re- plies immediately to Viet- as the new pay bill becomes mains to be done. nam. It could be applied in any effective Sept. 1. Along with the passing of area which President Johnson In addition to the basic pay the pay bill. the President designates as a combat zone. raise, retirement pay, com- added an amendment provid- The mail can go free to any bat pay, re-enlistment bonus- ing free mailing privileges for person in the United States. es and widows' benefits will men in combat areas. including Puerto Rico. go up. All enlisted men with two Formerly with 1/5 or more years service will notice an 11 per cent increase, while officers and warrant of- LtCol. W. R. Affleck Assumes ficers with more than two years active service will re- ceive a six per cent raise. Station Comptroller Duties For enlisted men under two years active service, a 17.3 LtCol. William R. Affleck Officer on Marine Corps Mat- per cent increase will be add- assumed duties Monday as ters to the Vice-Chief of Naval ed to their present salary and the Station Comptroller re- Operations. officers and warrant officers lieving LtCol. J. G. Bass Jr. When the Korean Conflict will experience a 22 per cent The new Comptroller's pre- broke out, Colonel Affleck was gain.
    [Show full text]
  • Interruptingmytrainofthought W
    editorial input: scott woods and tim powis cover illustration: karen watts foreword: rob sheffield Copyright © 2014 Phil Dellio All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or trans- mitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including scanning, photocopying, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Typesetting and layout by Vaughn Dragland ([email protected]) ISBN: 978-1-5010-7319-9 and your mother, and your dad patricia dellio (1932 – 2009) peter dellio (1934 – 2003) contents foreword i introduction iii the publications v show no traces 1 the last phase of yours and yours and mine 31 whole new kinds of weather 49 some place back there 73 rain gray town 105 long journeys wear me out 123 fragments falling everywhere 159 if anything should happen 201 always window shopping 269 constantly aware of all the changes that occur 291 people always live and die in 4/4 time 331 in and around the lake 361 a friend i’ve never seen 415 appendix 435 acknowledgements 437 foreword The first thing I noticed about Phil Dellio was that he sure liked Neil Diamond. The second thing I noticed was that I liked Neil Diamond a lot better after reading what Phil had to say. I was reading a copy of Phil’s fanzine Radio On for the first time, riding a Charlottesville city bus in early 1991, wondering if my mind was playing tricks on me. This guy had provoc- ative comments on recent hits by C&C Music Factory and the KLF; he also wrote about musty 1960s ballads by Herb Alpert or the Vogues.
    [Show full text]
  • 1966 Topps Baseball Checklist
    1966 Topps Baseball Checklist 1 Willie Mays 2 Ted Abernathy 3 Sam Mele 4 Ray Culp 5 Jim Fregosi 6 Chuck Schilling 7 Tracy Stallard 8 Floyd Robinson 9 Clete Boyer 10 Tony Cloninger 11 Brant AlyeaSenators Rookies Pete Craig 12 John Tsitouris 13 Lou Johnson 14 Norm Siebern 15 Vern Law 16 Larry Brown 17 John Stephenson 18 Rollie Sheldon 19 San FrancisTeam Card 20 Willie Horton 21 Don Nottebart 22 Joe Nossek 23 Jack Sanford 24 Don Kessin Rookie Card 25 Pete Ward 26 Ray Sadecki 27 Andy EtcheOrioles Rookies Darold Knowles 28 Phil Niekro 29 Mike Brumley 30 Pete Rose 31 Jack Cullen 32 Adolfo Phil Rookie Card 33 Jim Pagliaroni 34 Checklist 1-88 35 Ron Swoboda 36 Jim Hunter 37 Billy Herman 38 Ron Nischwitz 39 Ken Henderson 40 Mudcat Grant 41 Don LeJohnRookie Card Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 42 Aubrey Gatewood 43 Don Landrum 44 Bill Davis Indians Rookies Tom Kelley 45 Jim Gentile 46 Howie Koplitz 47 J.C. Martin 48 Paul Blair 49 Woody Woodward 50 Mickey Mantle 51 Gordie RichRookie Card 52 Johnny Callison 53 Bob Duliba 54 Jose Pagan 55 Ken Harrelson 56 Sandy Valdespino 57 Jim Lefebvre 58 Dave Wickersham 59 Cincinnati RTeam Card 60 Curt Flood 61 Bobby Bolin 62 Merritt Ranew 63 Jimmy Stewart 64 Bob Bruce 65 Leon Wagner 66 Al Weis 67 Cleon JonesMets Rookies Dick Selma 68 Hal Reniff 69 Ken Hamlin 70 Carl Yastrzemski 71 Frank CarpiRookie Card 72 Tony Perez 73 Jerry Zimmerman 74 Don Mossi 75 Tommy Davis 76 Red Schoendienst 77 John Orsino 78 Frank Linzy 79 Joe Pepitone 80 Dick Allen 81 Ray Oyler 82 Bob Hendley 83 Albie Pearson 84 Jim BeauchBraves
    [Show full text]
  • The Chronicle Tuesday, September 5, 1972 Contrast Mark Political Conventions
    the DUKE'S DAILY NEWSPAPER chronicle Volume 68, Number 4 Durham, North Carolina Tuesday, September 5, 1972 Krueger vetos New fire aid proposal system By Dan Neuharth However, Robert provided The growing controversy Krueger, dean of Trinity between the Duke College of Arts and By Martha Elson administration and .ASDU Sciences, recently sent a This year the over the new financial aid letter to Schewel criticizing HA' Department of Public plan surfaced again last the ASDU proposal, and Safety is making a special week as Dean of Trinity suggesting that the plea to students to refrain College Robert Krueger functions of the committee CHE from tampering with the rejected an ASDU proposal be delegated to a student newly i nstalled fire that would have allowed referendum. extinguishers on West some students to cash in on The referendum would campus so that emergency extra-curricular activities to decide the questions of who fire protection will be fulfill the work component is to qualify for |V\y CAliHIEl available to all who may of the new aid plan. consideration under this need it. Last spring ASDU passed proposal and how they will Larry Blake, director of a resolution supporting the be paid. safety, said in an interview idea of allowing leaders of In an interview yesterday that over the past extra-curricular groups, who yesterday, Krueger thirty years the department are on financial aid, to use rt1-emphasized his position, has made numerous that activity to fulfill the noting, "If you put this a 11 e mpts to install job requirement of the new group of people (the ASDU extinguishers in the West financial aid plan.
    [Show full text]
  • Hanoi Frees Last
    SKlIIS #IOTIB Protests Teacher Mmtm V3;14:>:-.s;fc;v:-,.••' . '. , ' ' '• -' •'..-,;•• ..:."'• • ' JL. " , '" •' '•'••• • •"• ' • -..•.••.•••;- SEE STORY PAGE J The Weather FINAL Mostly cloudy today, chance THEDAILY of showers tonight. Periods of Red Bank, Freehold rain or drizzle tomorrow. Long Branch 7 EDITION y • . :. 46 PAGES Mohniouth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper VOL.95 NO. 189 RED BANK, N.J. THURSDAY; MARCH 29,19f3 , . TEN CENTS miiiMiiiiniiniiniiii miiuiiiiiiiiiiii i 11 i iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiimiiii u iiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiinii minium iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini iniiim niiiiiiinini iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii iwimmui i luiiiiiiiiinii niiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii nwi mmnnmmamimmmm Hanoi Frees Last POW CLARK AIR BASE, Philip- Vegas, Nev., told the exuber- flight appeared healthy and Spender, 29, of McAllen, Tuesday and yesterday in the pines (AP) — North Vietnam ant crowd. "What could be smiled broadly, but several Texas, was greeted by a Fili- final phase of the prisoner re- freed its last 67 U.S. prisoners more joyous than to be deliv- had been injured and saluted pina, Alice Pascua, who had patriation were already at of war today, and two giant ered from your enemies and with their left hands. One of been his house maid when he Clark. C14I transports brought them return to your friends. them. Air Force Capt. Keith was stationed at Clark in 1969. to Clark Air Base for their "The pride we have in our H. Lewis, 33, of Goldsboro, She held up a large sign read- Although Hanoi said earlier first stop on the way home. natiqjn and our government N.C., was on crutches. ing "To Bill Spencer with that the men freed today were Meanwhiled the last Ameri- could not be greater.
    [Show full text]