Freehold Officials Study Renewal in Norfolk

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Freehold Officials Study Renewal in Norfolk Freehold Officials Study Renewal in Norfolk Weather HOME Heavy morning rain changing to '•now, ending by early afternoon, windy and cold, high la tower Red Bank, Freehold FINAL 11*. Cloudy and cold tonight and Long Branch tomorrow. Low 20-8, high to- 7 morrow In mid Jtta, Thursday's outlook, fair and cold. i Copyright-TJie Red Bank Register, Inc. 1967. DIAL 741-0010 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOB 88 YEARS • P«li at Kad Btnk.ua it Additional MUUnr Offices. VOL. 89, NO. 177 Iinud dllly, JIc stay thimiih yrldiy. Becond dm Poitaga TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1967 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE Mixup Develops Aiiioiig Commuters' Leaders Limited Attendance Is Urged for Aldene Meeting • By CHARLES A. JOHNSTON he said. "A demonstration could block that kind of talk and and of commuter organization representatives, will be helpful, In the Legislature yesterday, Assemblyman Joseph , TRENTON — Raljroad commuters who say they are used raise new roadblocks." Mr. Mitzner declared, will be Friday for a conference in New Una, R-Monmouth, introduced a resolutioni-which would direct to mixed train signals probably won't be surprised to learn Assemblyman Joseph Azzolina, R-Monmouth, has already York City with Marine and Aviation Department authorities. Commissioner Goldberg to hold up implementing the Aldene there Has been a slight snafu among leaders fighting the forth- • asked Mr. Goldberg to arrange the meeting at 8 p.m. in his "Commissioner (Herbert) Halberg has advised me," he Plan as scheduled April 21. • . coming commuters' Aldene Plin. department's cafeteria to accommodate expected throngs. said, "that he expects New Jersey views to be represented /The resolution, urged by the'ACA, is co-sponsored by As- Bernard M. Mitzner, president of the American Commuters SEEK MORE MONEY by a large number of elected officials so this is where they semblyman James M. Coleman Jr., R-Monmouth, and John Association, said last .night that only a select committee of (Meanwhile, In the Legislature,, a bill was Introduced to should be." ... J. Fekety, D-Hudson, a resident of Bayonne where commuter ACA members and county officials may attend an ACA meet- give the Central Railroad of New Jersey an additional $2 mil- Mr. Mitzner,said the meeting will'be at 10:30 a.m. in the service would be virtually eliminated under present conditions ing Monday night here with State Transportation Commission- lion in railroad subsidies for operations through June. Perry Battery Maritime Building, accessible via downtown trains or In the Aldene Plan. < . er David J. Goldberg. j .. Shoemaker, CRR president, said the extra money is needed by car through the Holland Tunnel. He said be hopes municipal officials, including Matawan on top of $5 million already anticipated in state funds, con- He said he hopes to be joined by State Sen. Richard R. Now with bipartisan support, the measure also calls oh Mayor Edward Hyrne and Mlddletown Mayor Ernest Kavalek, tending commuter losses will reach $7 million. Stout, the county's Assembly delegation, former Assemblyman Mr. Goldberg to'act to keep CRR ferries running indefinitely. will call off plans to charter buses and appeals to large (Mr. Shoemaker said failure to get the money could delay Patrick J. McGann Jr., Councilman August Roemer of Little It provides for a legislative investigation of the Transportation , numbers of commuters to be present. the CRR's ability to complete its part in implementing the Silver, chairman of an eight-town Intermunicipal Public Service Department dealing with commuter railroads which the state "The purpose of this session is to have a frank discussion Aldene Plan on time.) Co-ordinating Committee, and officials from towns on the Cen- subsidizes. on th* merits by representatives best informed on the issues," Where a large showing of county and municipal officials, tral Railroad shore and main lines. (See ALDENE, Pg. 3, Col, 2) If Business Remains Sluggish WASHINGTON (AP) - Admin- tration official said, "We are in verse. A short-time tax cut could "Annual tax changes have, In istration sources acknowledged a position to modify the sur- be asked. fact, become the ruler rather today that President Johnson charge request." He explained: The only hard and fast com- than the exception," the council may reconsider his request for a "If our projections were wrong, mitment ii to the principle of tax said. But the technique— and July 1 tax boost if business con- we could ask for a smaller sur- flexibility, the official said. Small especially the President's pend- tinues to be sluggish. charge, or no surcharge at all. but frequent tax changes, up, or ing plan — is viewed with su- TWs word, perhaps partly in- Or the President's message to down as needed, are now con- spicion in Congress : and with tended to reassure nervous busi- Congress could propose a later sidered to be a proven, effective, outright hostility by many busi- nessmen, came from policy ad- effective date—say Sept. 1 in- quick-acting, and fairly precise nessmen. stead of July I." instrument for economic stabili- visers who neverthless stick to The administration argues that the official forecast that the 6 ) And if the slowdown should be- zation, he added. a stable economy is more im- per cent surcharge on. income come a downturn—« development This departure from historic taxes will be needed to curb re- which government officials re- American reluctance to tinker portant" than a stable tax level. viving inflationary forces. ject as well-nigh unthinkable, un- with taxes was noted by the And in the immediate future, of- If signs of the anticipated mid- less peace comes suddenly in Council of Economic Advisers in ficials said, the course of policy year pickup are not visible by Vietnam — the surcharge plan its annual report to the President will be governed by the economic April or May, one high adminis- could even be thrown into re- and Congress. currents. < Haifa's Jailh WASHINGTON (AP) — Team- sters Union President James R. Hof fa, _ apparently - a loser after TRENTON (AP)—-The Legis- Two members of an Assembly a decade of federal efforts to latur(e today charted a course tinue to cry out for equal jus- committee - that released HMH0LV VISITS NORFOLK — Freehold Council reprajtnratives toured Norfolk, Vai, to learn what the city did. jail him, is scheduled to' sur- a]ong the thorny path of church- tice, for long overdue aid to edu- measure abstained on grounds render today to start serving an state relations. cation ...as constitutional lights that a pifblic hearing should be with urban rtnawal. Top l«ft it typical star* in a radavelopmanf area that was razed to produce lite next to it. East eight-year sentence for jury tan* Returning from a three-week and at the same time turn our held.;' '."'„,,, perihg. Main St.usad to be wher* tha padaitrian mall is how. Lower Uft, William E. Ayers, Local" Public Agency director, vacation, the Senate yesterday backs on issues when others cry Assemblyman John Skevin, D- 'We'll turn him in," Mayor Frank E. Gibson and Councilman Alfred E. Sindars impact new buildings. In the background is e new city said one approved the creation of a com- out for equal justice under the Bergen, chief sponsor of the bus- of Hoffa's sad-faced battery of mission to study the state's 44- law." fallind city hall. Lower right it closaup ef pedestrian-mall. Conitruction is underway, behind fence. ing bill, said he was confident it lawyers yesterday after losing year-old divorce law. O'Connor's study commission would be put to a vote next v ' (Register Staff Photos). their latest court plea .'to keep Meanwhile, an Assembly com- proposal cleared the Senate by a week or the. one after. Gov. him free. mittee reported out a controver- 18-0 vote and without debate. Hughes has already, given his It's just a short walk from lal bill to provide free bus s But over in the Assembly, the seal of approval; to the bill. Progress Shown to Freehold Officials Hoffa's spacious Teamsters of- transportation for parochial school busing bill already ap- The governor told The Asso- fice to the U.S. Court House, but school students, peared destined for debate as ciated Press he doesn't.view the it could be the beginning of a Some lawmakerlawmal. _s saw a link representatives of the American legislation as: an encroachment long road down from his pinnacle between both measures, Jewish Congress, the American on separation of church and of power as boss of the world's Sen. Jeremiah F. O'Connor, Civil Liberties Union and the state. biggest labor uuon. D-Bergen, 13th, a Catholic, who Americans United for Separa- A City of Renewal "We had a calm discussion;" Hoffa, 54, is scheduled to sur- has been criticized by some tion of Church and State ap- Hughes said after conferring By WILLIAM JT. ZAORSKI As the motorcade proceeded toivof the program, showed how easy, said Mr. Cox. Some mis- render to U.S. marshals at 9 members of his church for his pealed to Gav. Richard J. with representatives of the anti- .First of a Series from the airport to the Norfolk the city was changing. takes were made. But more im- a.m., be fingerprinted and then divorce law reform stand, ob- Hughes for public hearings busing groups. "I repeated my redevelopment and housing au- ' Since Norfolk was one of the portant, once determined to build (See HOFFA, Pg. 3, Col. 3) served: the bill. - -'.NORFOLK,. Vs. -While ah feelings that the issues involved thority's office, the group >aw a first cities to pinoneer in urban anew city, the officials kept at eld city, Norfolk is changlng- already have been aired suffi- high rise motor hotel.
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