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County Prosecutor Goes on Full Time by William J Georgia Facility Could House Signal School SEE STORY BELOW Rain Expected Occasional rain expected and mill today.and tonight. Clear- FINAL ing, milder tomorrow. JTied Bank, Freehold f (Bea DeUm. Pile 2) ( Long Branch J EDITION JMLonmouth County's Honie Newspaper tor 92 Years VOL. 93, NO. 174 RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1970 28 PAGES 10 CENTS "" ' "< "IIUIIMINWIIWIJJ I •- j • •: I r I a • j k • JJ J • 31J • I • 11! • 311111. E M T J J J J JI i n j J J1J 3 J11J J (1111! j J J11J J J n IJIJI. IJ J JI! Fj I; 11 i 11U L! 111 ] H1J J1111 j 111MIE111191 jl 111J J i 111U11' 111111JIL1114911 ^ IH El IEI Ml LI j 19 N! LI i IH 3 j J-1M [ 1111111F1111 i Fl • 1111111U M11311 ^! i J11131111 i 11111411 Mil] IJ11 i 111! 1 r U11M 411 i 111 i -t 11+! h 11111 J- 'h t II4] ^ 113131114 d 11M1311111 ] 91' 111U111T11M19-11!! 91 ] 411111! h I h!! IM111L! 11191 i 111 ] M111H h 111J114 J. I- M114 (I: {G1111111U LIF i BIJ^ j t > • I • H M111111 k 11 ] M! 9 M11 ^ 11M11-1 • • 4H JI: h r I k E h • • 113 qL 11UI h V n • • • ]. 11 ^ IIJ • • IIM I. h III I-' I i • 111M111111IIM 4t 11111111 milllNINIIIIIlliltlimilllMIINiiimiiuiMijiiMimi4immiiiiiMHmiim.il HHMUP m i mi nn»; '" > '"« • "" ,,,.,..,„ , -. County Prosecutor Goes on Full Time By William J. Zaorskl Under a bill signed into law prosecutors that would be FREEHOLD — Electing to Feb. 9 by Gov. William T. needed full time. The free- become a full time prosecu- Cahill, Mr. Keuper had a holders agreed there should tor beginning May 1, Vincent choice. He could remain be seven because four are P. Keuper yesterday named part time for $19,000 a year needed for criminal trials, three of his-allotted sevens and continue his private law one for juvenile court, one for full time assistants and may practice or he could go full appellate work and one for name the remaining,four to- time for $32,000 but restricted grand jury proceedings. day. solely to his public duties. During a press conference, After getting ^approval from Term Ends in "11 Freeholder Albert E. Allen the county Board of Free- Mr. Keuper's term expires said that there was nothing holders for seven full time Sept. 1, 1971. The assistant i permissive in the bill, that if assistants — three less than prosecutors who also decide the prosecutor decided to go there are now on part time — to go full time and give up full time, then the board and for their salaries, Mr. their private law practices would have to provide the Keuper disclosed his initial will also be out of jobs at that salaries for him and the as- three assistants would be time. sistants. John W. Applegate, John The freeholders conferred PetillQ (both have been with with Mr. Keuper and with Su- Freeholder Ernest G. Kava- Mr. Keuper since he became perior Court Judge Elvin R, lek added that the board had prosecutor in 1955) and Thom- Simmill; the assignment no choice in determining if as J. Smith Jr. Mr. Apple- judge, early yesterday. The Mr. Keuper should go full gate will continue as first as- conference presumably was time. He added that he con- _sistantj)£qsecutor. about the number of assistant (See County, Pg. 3, Col. 3) John A. Pctillo Thomas J. Smith Jr. Vincent P. Keuper John W. Applegate iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiii Vacant Georgia Facilities May Be for Signal School By DORIS KULMAN cilities they occupied will be School to the Georgia post. Monmouth school to Ft. Gor- The Army may or may not vacant, according to Maj. And, he said, because "there don. be planning' to move the Sig- Richard Lamb, public affairs are too many unknown fac- "We don't know there will nal School from •• Ft. Mon- officer there. That will leave tors" he wasn't able to de- . be any changes at Ft. Mon- mouth and consolidate it with empty facilities for 10,000 per- termine if the soon-to-be-va- mouth," a spokesman for the the larger Southeastern Sig- sons — trainees and instruc- eated facilities at Ft. Gordon senator said yesterday, "but nal School at Ft. Gordon, Ga., tors. There are 8,800 students would be suitable or adequate we want to get the facts on but one thing's sure — come and faculty at the Ft. Mon- for the Ft. Monmouth school. the table before any an- a week from Friday, Ft. Gor- mouth Signal School now, in- Meanwhile, Sen. Clifford P. nouncement is made." don's going to have lots of cluding 908 civilians. Case, It-N.J., has called a To Bring Data empty room. Unaware of Plans meeting with Army officials The Case spokesman said By March 13, Ft. Gordon Maj. Lamb said he doesn't for Friday at 2 p.m. in his that Army officials have been will have deactivated three know of any plans to move Washington office to discuss asked to bring to the meet- training brigades, and the fa- the Ft. Monmouth Signal the rumored move of- the Ft. (See School, Pg. 2, CoL 4) State's High Court Rules For Towns in Utility Case THE 'FIGHTING LADY* PACES MOTHBALLS — The famed aircraft carrier USS Yorlctown, the 'Fighting Lady" of World War II, is nosed towards a borth of Navy Yard in South Boston where it faces mothballing in June. By PAUL KERN Shrewsbury and New 150-foot high towers. Milton Mausner, attorney The carrier was reactivated for service in Korean war and of Vietnam. She slid down ways seven minutes early_ ^TRENTON - The New Jer- Shrewsbury contended that — It must act on an appli- for the nine-town Municipal at launching in Newport News, Va., Jan. 21, 1943, but Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt swung twice anj smashed Hsey Supreme Court ruled yes- their local zoning ordinances cation by the utility for im- Coordinating Committee, a terday that Shrewsbury and are as binding on the utility munity from the local ordi- utility and transportation bottle of champagne on bow bsfore it tlid our of reach. - ^ 1AP Wirephoto) New Shrewsbury have zoning as on an individual unless the nances. The request for im- watchdog group, and attorney powers over the towers Jer- utility secures special permis- munity was made after the for New Shrewsbury, said the sey Central Power & Light sion from the PUC to circum- two boroughs had filed their case will have "statewide sig- Co. started erecting from vent the ordinance. cases. nificance" and sets a prece- Colts Neck to Red Bank. The courts decision leaves Shrewsbury Borough Attor- dent-clarifying state laws re- Nixon Asks Congress Speed gulating public utilities. The court, setting a state- three actions pending before ney Howard Roberts said yes- wide precedent, ruled a the PUC. terday he thinks the PUC was Mr. Mausner said .New "utility may be prosecuted — It must act on an ease- waiting for a Supreme Court Shrewsbury has filed a suit for violation" of a Zoning or- ment application by the Cent- decision before rendering its against the utility for daily Law Barring Railroad Strike dinance and the utility cannot ral Railroad of New Jersey own. violations from Jan. 7, 1969, decide when jt is liable under before JCP&L can rent a Shrewsbury and New through Aug. 8,,J969, the. date local ordinances. right-of-way from the rail- The Senate Labor Commit- The three of us who have al- Shrewsbury contend that the utility filed an appeal in WASHINGTON (AP) - stoppage because a minority JCP&L had contended that road for the towers. towers are too' close to resi- Monmouth County Court. President Nixon, in his first of the affected workers re- tee and House Commerce ready ratified the agreement it did not need to go to the Committee promptly sched- his proposal embraces are in Must Act dential areas and a school, Municipal Courts tin New big labor crisis, asked Con- jected a contract agreed to municipalities for site plan, — It must act on a series too close to Red Bank Air-: Shrewsbury and Shrewsbury gress to whip into law today by their leadership," Nixon uled hearings today on Nixon's no condition to complain," approval, a building permit of' investigative hearings to port for safety, arid'they, mar proposal, the Senate commit- said Winpisinger, vice presi- had convicted the utility of a mandatory contract settle- said. He urged Congress to or a variance or go to the determine the benefits and the beauty of residential the offenses and had levied ment for 45,090 shopcraft impose a settlement agreed tee calling in Secretary of dent of the International As- • Public Utilities Commission drawbacks of forcing the areas because of their loca- sociation of Machinists, larg- ?100 a day fines, suspended workers to block a midnight to by three AFL-CIO unions Labor George P. Shultz. for immunity from the local utility to lay the wires under- tion, height and H-frame con- pending the outcome of the nationwide railroad strike. but rejected by the Sheet While Nixon's proposal est of the four unions. ordinances. ground instead of erecting the struction. appeal. "We must not submit to the Metal Workers International could be put through Con- Sheet Metal Workers Pres- chaos of a nationwide rail Association. '.. ' gress by Thursday afternoon ident Edward F. Carlough under rarely used procedures, called on Congress to reject leaders were guessing action Nixon's proposal as unconsti- would take at least a week tutional and unjust.
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