Laws Urged to Prevent

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Laws Urged to Prevent Weather DlsfrOratioB 7 ajn. temperature M. Fair today, Utfi In the 70s. Tonight, Increasing doudlneu, showen, , 24,450 low in tbe (Os. Tomorrow; fair. Red Bank Area Ugh about 80. Friday, fair, cool. Copyright—The Red Bank Register, Inc., 1965. See weather, page 2. DIAL 741-0010 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87, YEARS dtily. Itonlir mmub TMMJ. Berooa Clui Poiun WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1965 7e PER COPY PAGE ONE VOL. 88, NO. 7 at Red Suk «o4 fct Addition*) Milllaj Olllcul Middletown Interim Sewer Report Questioned ' MIDDLETOWN - An interim creek's mouth, would not adverse- liminary findings of the state search this question and give us to immediate plans of the fed- proposed plant—with a capacity manager of the Smith firm, fj state report on Compton Creek • ly affect the fishing industry. agency. an answer. eral agency for Issuing a report. of six million gallons per day- supporting the association in the would be dispersed into the ocean issue and has stated that he will and Sandy Hook-Raritan Bay dye Another Plant Site "We want a Public Health Ser- State Jurisdiction Leonard Nelson, president of vice report, in writing, and wt fast enough to prevent serious not sell the land until fishermen tests was termed unacceptable the North Jersey Commercial —The association, in any event, "It Is true," he commented, yesterday, leaving unresolved the will take no action one way or pollution of the bay. are given guarantees by loc'al, Fishermen's Association, which advocates another sewer plant "that the Public Health Service state and federal authorities. question of whether the Town- site, as being the best solution the other until such a report is has given technical assistance to Based on a survey by Charles has protested the plant site on completed. This is too important Mr. Nelson proposed yesterday chip Committee can move ahead the basis of pollution, said the to the problem, and running the the (New Jersey) state depart- J. kupper, township sewer engi- with plans for a municipal sewer plant outfall line into the ocean to us for halfway measures. The ment In the dye testing but the neer, the governing body pro- that the township locate the sew- association will not accept ths future ol the local fishing indus- er plant at another site, on the system. report because: rather than the creek or bay. • report should come from the poses to build the municipal sew- try is at stake." er plant on a 14-acre tract near Belford side of the Naval Am- The preliminary report. Issued Mr. Nelson said: "A state re- stale, it's their jurisdiction." —Dye test studies have not Kenneth H. Walker, deputy The tests were made nearly two the mouth of the creek in Bel- munition Depot pier, with the by the state Department of port is not enough. The whole outfall line running into the been completed. point of the dye tests was that project director, Raritan Bay months ago, to determine proba- ford. The property is owned by Health, contends that effluent J. Howard Smith fish factory. ocean from that point. from a municipal sewer plant, —The U.S. Public Health Ser- the U.S. Public Health Service, area, U.S. Public Health Service, ble effluent patterns in the "bay proposed to be located at the vice has not confirmed the pre- along with the state, was to re- said yesterday that he knows of and whether effluent from the Charles M. Cubbage, general (See MIDDLETOWN, Page 2) Ji Laws Urged to Prevent FREEHOLD - The kind of accident which took the life of a young Allentown bride, crushed when a boulder dropped off e ruck and bounced on her car, Boy or Girl? Middletown School could happen frequently in New Jersey. This was the observation yes- terday of Freeholder Charles I. arassed by Those Hep Haircuts Smith as the Monmouth County Board of Freeholders called for new controls to make such mis- MIDDLETOWN-Is it a boy or a girl? And does it matter? Mr. Carton replied. He then grinned and said the issue would t, haps impossible. Those are the questions faced by the Board of Edu- have to be researched. [• "These jetty stones," said Mr. cation here — and it!a going to take legal brains to resolve After the session, Mr. Carton told reporters that he <' Smith, whose home at Upper them. remembered an instance of a student enrolled in Harvard I, LOOKING UP — Michael Lane seeks inspiration from above, while) Brian Davit and Freehold Township is close to Blams it on the Beatles and what's known as "Beatle- Law School, who had & "weird" way of dressing—but it so }• mania." happened he turned out to be one of the most brilliant stu-1' Sylvia BaJley put th»ir pictures on paper. Crayonj were a ^re-at favorite among the Allentown, "drop off trucks all the time. About 10 students in the summer school are sporting dents there and later became a brilliant attorney. f youngsters in Red -Bank's Head Start cl«M»i, which got under way yesterday with 80 "They weigh anywhere from Beatle haircuts and administrators are (to put it mildly) By way of explanation, during the meeting, Mr. Carton children in attendance. About 19 more pre-schoolers are expecttd to attend class- one to five tons. Anyone of upset about it.' pointed but that it is questionable whether the board would The students are boys, but you can't tell it, laid Su- want to spend taxpayers' money to go to court over the today. them could cause a death. "If they drop in developed perintendent Paul F. Lefever. haircut issue. ; areas, the contractors usually Commented William A. Gillcrist, summer school director: The comment followed a report by Mr. Lefever of one come back in a few days and re- "Some of it (the hair) is five inches long." such case that went "all the way to the U. S. Supreme Court." ' 1 move them. But if they fall in The administrators want one of two things: excess hair He said the parents of a boy who was dismissed from school \t isolated areas they are shoved removed (to a point "not below the ears") or the students (in another state) because of long hair felt that strongly j. Head Start Starts off the road and stay there removed. about it, adding "I never did read how that case came out." . It's too expensive to send crews Students pay for summer school on a tuition basis. "They "Well how it came out is important," Mr. Carton replied. ) to reload them." can stay without the Beatle haircuts, or take'their.money He said later "it is this type person who Is mort likely to start \ (tuition), leave and enjoy the hair," remarked the tupep- « suit,'' adding that by the time such litigation is completed \' Wai Riding Alone intendent "It is distracting to look at them and not know the Beatle fad is likely to have passed. * Killed was Mrs. Susan Bowne, if it's a boy or a girl," The board-approved a motion that administrators can take Y. 23, who was riding alone on Declared Assistant Superintendent Gilicrist: "It is an out- whatever action is "appropriate'< after the attorney re- *t By DORIS KULMAN too. They echoed the wprds of wore: had strung beads into neck- the Allentown-Rofobinsville Rd., ward sign of an inner state of mind which i» not conducive searches the question and releases an opinion. m Mis. Margaret Matin, dirtclor of laces worn proudly, and ha RED BANK — No one cried in Mercer County, across the to seriousness and study." There are 188 students enrolled in the six-week summer the project here, who proclaimed made one trip to the toilet. Monmouth line, en route to her The administrators asked the board for support and school program, which opened yesterday at the high school. at being left in, school. And no the first day a success. One wanted to go home. By the time the two-and-a-hah summpr department store job in "guidance" in the matter. Mr. Gillcrist reported that a high school dress codecs be- Tirenfpn, That's the way it was in the "This program is going to hour session ended, the cbiWrer Said board President Warren Degrown to board Attorney ing considered for the fall term. Among other things, it would Project Head Start classes taught work," Mrs. Mann added. had learned two simple finger •' Mrs; • Bowne, a school teacher Lawrence A. Carton, Jr.: "What'i'our position'legally on ban (for boys) haircuts with hair falling below the ears, long Within the first half-hour, the ;ames, enjoyed cookies and juice, resided with her parents, Mr this?" . ..-»;, ... sideburns, mustaches, beards and goatees. by Mrs. Marilyn Siegier and Mrs. and' .Mrs. Paul J. Longua, 3 j« Pauline Gibson in the River 11 boys and girls in Mrs. Sieg- wiggled through a story, explored "I am not familiar with the statutes on Beatle haircuts,." It could mean more research for Mr. Carton. - ler's afternoon session had cray- ivery inch ol the kindergarte Fa.rmer PL, Allentown, while her "street School, here, yesterday. husband of five weeks, Lt. Ed- Directors of the. eight-week oned a half-dozen pictures to room and sampled almost all thi grace tbe classroom walls; had toys. ward Bowne, was in Viet Nam. pre-school program in other coun-i The freeholders expressed ty, communities reported that's tried to print their names, copy- If the best hopes ol those con- Muyarh Apointmertts Breeze Through ing from the name tags each their grief at the tragedy and the way it was in their schools, ducting the programs are real directed County Counsel John ized, at the end of the eight weeks M.
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