Lynch Called Hotheaded in Howell Township, Aug

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Lynch Called Hotheaded in Howell Township, Aug ffflk ti'4 Cart _ late tomorrow. Law flled Bank Area f •wrigtt in mid Ms and woL Ugh Y~ Copyrlght-The Sad Bank Register, Inc. 1966. tomorrow la low Mi. Sunday's DIAL 7414)010 ouOook, during ud cod. MONMOUTH COPmVS HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 88 YEARS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1966 PAGE ONE Witnesses Tell of Suspect's Anger Lynch Called Hotheaded in Howell Township, Aug. 10. defense counsel, will put Lynch ert, who like Lynch is also a iNunevHler, who was arrested for FREEHOLD - Edward A. aiding and abetting Lynch but Lynch emerged yesterday from would seem from the picture on the stand today and expects Bartender, as having been en- drawn by witnesses to have to offer seven other witnesses. raged a week before the kill- who has not been Indicted, said testimony at his murder trial Lynch was "mad at Mrs. Mc- as a hotheaded man angry at been motivated only by seething Monmouth County Judge Thomas ing when Lynch, serving her a anger. J. Smith, who is presiding, will drink, at the Town Tavern, Kenzie because she was causing the woman he is accused of him trorble," phoning him at killing because she had criticized Prosecutor Vincent P. Keuper, recess court over the weekend where he worked in Toms River, and send the case to the jury spilled ice in her lap. work and at home and annoying him and was trying to get himwho is asking the death penalty Lynch's wife. for the 34-year old ex«onvict Monday. "She jumped up and said fired. Nuneviller, 39, a kitchen work- Far from a deepseated mys- from Silverton, presented 14 wit- Mrs. McKenzie, 44, of Toms •You're not a bartender. You'll nesses and rested bis case be- River, was a mother of (our bynever be one and you're fin- er, said Lynch feared Mrs. tery, the fatal shootini g of 1 McKenzie wanted him fired so Dorothy Louise McKenzie, whose fore 3 p.m. a previous marriage. She was ished. " he testified. Joseph F., Mattice, assigned depicted by her husband, Rob- Another witness, William J. that her husband could return body was found in her own car there as bar manager. Mr. McKenzie formerly worked in the Toms River bar but had moved 4o a night shift in Kings Grant Inn, Point Pleasant, be- B52s Deliver 1-2 Punch fore the. killing took' place. Witnesses put this story to- gether of happenings leading to discovery of Mrs. McKenzie's At North Viets Near D-Zonebody/ partly stuffed under the MYONEK AND RIFLES GUARD FIREMlEN — The bayoneted rifles of the California dash board of her own car after SAIGON (AP) - Giant B52|below the demilitarized zone. es, 13 bridges, nine antiaircraft and pilots reported hits with na it mired down in sand behind National Guard ara silhouetted against the flamet of a lumber yard fire in San Fran- bombers delivered a one-two The Marines occupied the post sites and eight buildings. Three palm and 500-pound bombs which the Regent Diner, Rt. 9. Cisco's Bty View -district, where roaming bands of Negroes last night were throwing punch today in two raids against and found 51 North Vietnamese of the antiaircraft sites were in touched off four secondary ex- Visited Ban the Dong Hoi area and con- plosions and a fire. bombi.. Guards were assigned to fire trucks to protect firemen from snipers. North Vietnamese forces bodies. Lynch and Nuneviller had fighting U.S. Marines just south 2,500 More Yanks tained 24 guns. Air Force B57 Canberra bomb- visited several bars before ar- : • ' ^ • IAP Wiraphotol I the demilitarized zone. U.S. forces in Viet Nam rose Air Force Phantoms made sev- ers struck a supply area four riving at the Town Tavern and The mammoth, eight-engine to 317,500 today with the arrival eral strikes on a storage area miles north of the buffer zone, meeting Mrs. McKenzie. She Superforts unloaded tons of of 2,500 more men—most pf them Inside the demilitarized zone, (See VIET NAM, Page 4) (See LYNCH, Page 3) )•;'• Coast Negro Patrols bombs on infiltration routes, and support units—of the 4th Infan- supply and assembly areas for try Division. U.S. forces in Viet the Communists fighting on the Nam now outnumber ,the 317- southern edge of the zone divid- 000 men which South Viet Nam's ing North and South Viet Nam. regular army claims by SCO, al One raid hit 20 miles south- though the South Vietnamese al t Race Violence so claim to have nearly 400,000 Inez Perils Cuba west of Dong Ha, now a major MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Residents; Naval Base early today, the Na-I Thousands were reported home- My Tbe Associated Press Mayor John Shelley blamed rest—this one in St. Louis—ap- base for Marines battling North |militiamen, local forces and the of southeastern Cuba, remember- tional Hurricane Center at Mi- less in Haiti and the Dominican Hbplng to bring racial peace racial discrimination, especially parently eased last night with Viet Nam's 324B Division in Op-|like. ing with dread the terrible ami said hurricane winds and Republic. At least six deaths to the scene of three days oflin employment, for riots which the arrest of one Negro youth for eration Prairie. The other bomb- The 4th Division now has about|deltrucUon of hurricane Flora, tides to 10 feet above normal were verified in the Dominican violence, - San Francisco police erupted. Tuesday after a white throwing rocks. 6,500 men in Viet Nam, and the ! ing attack was made 18 miles braced themselves today for Inez would batter the island. Republic's Barahona Peninsula, hive enlisted, with apparent sue- policeman fatally shot a Negro But there was no repeat of northwest of Dong Ha. rest of the division is to arrive|and her 100-mile-an-hour killer Inez bore down on Cuba after increasing the storm's toll to ceis, the aid of young local Negro youth running from a stolen car. vandalism, which had followed The two raids came less than within the next few.weeks. winds. striking the Dominican Republic 29, excluding those killed in Hal- volunteers. "In my opinion the medieval protest demonstrations against 12 hours after Marine artillery, U.S. planes flew 126 bombing Inez, weaving a path of death and neighboring Haiti, leaving i where communications were The youths, wearing police- practice of discrimination by the Saturday shooting of a Negro mortars and napalm rained down missions over North Viet Nam and devastation, was expected many dead in the Haitian town poor. provided armbands, patrolled some labor unions is just as prisoner by a policeman. - on a Communist command post yesterday, and pilots claimed to strike the coast of Oriente of Jacmel where a flood tide Hundreds of flimsy homes in residential areas of the troubled sorrowful and Just as unfair as in a valley a mile and a half damage or destruction to 52 barg-'Province near the Guantanamo accompanied her wrath. both nations were destroyed by Hunters Point district last night About 100 shouting, milling the archaic attitudes expressed jNegroes, mostly teen-agers con- winds up to 160 miles an hour. while, by mutual agreement, po- by some members of employer Others were swept away in the lice confined their patrols to a fronted a ring of officers around or management groups," Shelley police headquarters, but dis- swirling'currents of huge floods. main commercial. thorofare. said. •••..'•. •• ' - . - Although Inez' highest winds An 8 p.m. curfew was enforced ced peacefully. The local The mayor urged all SaftFran- chapter of the Congress of Racial Welfare Workers Rap Board, at her eye had diminished to OB the predominantly Negro|cisco ^residentt* ;ti??; go home by about 100 miles an hour by last but "National Equality said there would be Guardsme* n 100 p.m. andd stat y therthe e untitil another demonstration tonight. midnight-due to her battles with wtio • had cleared streets ofldswn, when "we can', start work the forested mountains of south- • Crowds tha previous night\ ... [on a creative and exciting pro- CORE had sponsored the three western Haiti-Cuban Prime Min- withdrawn after only sporattfc tjratn to cure dbrqlltiess." nights of demonstrations, but sail Claim Policies Deprive Needy ister Fidel Castro was taking no violence yesterday. _ Another outbreak of racial un- (See PATROLS, Page 3) . By DOXW KUUMN ton resident* would RED BANK.— Caseloads four; Workers assigned to the Aid government has set a maximum times the • approved maximum, to Dependent Children program lot 60 cases per worker as a re- advanced degrees, leaving Havana Radio said Castro In Wake of State Police Raids inadequate salaries, a tapid turn- have caseloads of 100—)0 above quirement lor matching federal their caseloads uncovered. went to Oriente Province and i. •. ... f ,. ; - ... —— ; -^— , over in staff and some admin- the approved maximum, the wel-jfunds. —The Welfare Board is hiring personally appealed on a local istrative policies of the county fare. employees said,- while, those Th~ e welfare workers also com- people with master's degrees in' radio station for coastal resi- dents to take precautions. Many welfare • Board are depriving working in the Old Age |Ast(sv plained that: social work but no experience Monmouth County's; poor of tanco and Disability programs —The Welfare. Board is 400 or familiarity with public as- families were evacuated from Ifeuper Eyes a Shakeup needed services, welfare work- may have caseloads as high, as cases behind and applicants wait sistance programs to (ill super- tow-lying areas. ers declared last night. 300—more than four times the up to six months for an initial visory posts, leaving the case- Castro recalled the havoc FREEHOLD — Record-shatter- -"To the best of my knowledge lated operations working Inde- The complaints were aired in approved maximum.
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