Lasto Ws, Troops Coming Home
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Today: Our preview of Sprm The Weather Sunny, windy today, high 50 THEDAILY FINAL to 55. Clear, cool tonight, low in 30s. Fair, cool tomorrow. Red Bank, Freehdtd Long Branch 7 EDITION 26 PAGES Monmouth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper VOL.95 NO. 187 ' RED BANK, NJ. TUESDAY, MARCH 27,1973 TEN CENTS •••numniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IIIIIIIIII uaummmmummammmmtmn^t Lasto Ws, Troops Coming Home SAIGON (AP) — Under sun- by a dispute over Americans freed 32 American prisoners the International -Commission Saigon and Vientiane/Nine of antees that the nine would be erick C. Weyand, bade fare- spokesman said. The United ny blue skies, U.S. "freedom captured in Laos. in Hanoi, and a C141 hospital of Control and Supervision the American POWs being re- released. well to President Nguyen Van States will continue to main- birds" today began a three- Eleven military and com- plane flew them to Clark Air coming from downtown Hanoi leased tomorrow were cap- By Thursday, the U.S. Mili- Thieu at Independence Palace tain a strong air arm in Thai- day airlift of the last 5,236 mercial transport planes, dub- Base in the Philippines. An- to supervise the transfer, U.S. tured in Laos.- tary Assistance Command today. land and aboard 7th Fleet car- American troops being with- bed "freedom birds" by.GIs other 49 American prisoners officers in Hanoi reported. The deadline for POW re- Vietnam, MACV, will be Weyand leaves Thursday riers off the coast of Vietnam. drawn from Vietnam. leaving the war zone, took.off' and a Canadian will be re- The U.S. Command in Saigon leases in the cease-fire agree- deactivated after 11 years and for Honolulu to become com- After Thursday, the only from Saigon's Tan Son Nhut leased tomorrow and 67 delayed the departure' of the ment was 60 days from the its "Pentagon East" head- mander-in-chief of U.S. Army American military men re^ The United States resumed Air Base with 936 American ;Americans on Thursday, com- first troop plane until the pris- .Jan. 27 signing, but a dispute quarters at Tan Son Nhut tak- forces in the Pacific. maining in Vietnam in addi- removal of its troops from troop during a three-hour pe- pleting the repatriation of 587 oners took off. tion to the 50 military at- Vietnam simultaneously with over the release of the men en over by the American Em- Some of the GIs leaving 'riod this afternoon. Another •U.S. POWs. The agreement to resume captured in Laos delayed bassy's Defense Attache, an •Vietnam are being trans- taches will be 159 Marine the resumption of the release 1,800 men were scheduled to The departure of the POW the prisoner releases and guards attached to the VS. of American prisoners of war completion until Thursday. outfit of 50 military attaches ferred to other American leave Wednesday, and 2,500 on plane from Hanoi was delayed troop withdrawals was U.S. troop withdrawals'were and up to 1,200 civilians. bases in the Pacific or in Embassy and 825 members of by the Communists. The troop Thursday. more than an hour because a worked out last night by U.S. the U.S. delegation to the withdrawal had been held up suspended March 17 while the The fourth and last com- Thailand, but most are return- Meanwhile, the Viet Cong rainstorm held up members of and Communist negotiators in United States demanded guar- mander of MACV, Gen. Fred- ing to the United States, a Joint Mili'taryCommission. Assembly Unit Debates Death Penalty Details TRENTON (AP) — The As- ed by former State Supreme mission to regulate the taxi Klein, D-Morris, said she.fa- sembly Judiciary Committee Court Justice Vincent Hane- industry in New Jersey. The vored the advice of Hane- wants to see the Assembly ap- man recommended that the measure would permit a man's commission to postpone prove a bill this year to re- legislature postpone any ac- statewide rate system for action on capital punishment store the death penalty in tion until the U.S. Supreme taxis. indefinitely. New Jersey, but it's having Court clarifies the issue. — The Senate approved-and Mrs. Klein, a candidate for trouble reaching agreement In other developments: sent to the Assembly a pro- the Democratic gubernatorial on the substance of the mea- — The Assembly plans to posal to extend the racing nomination, said "the people sure. vote Thursday on whether to season in New Jersey by 45 are upset by crime and vio- The committee postponed override a conditional veto by days next year. - lence and so am I." But she action yesterday on proposed Gov. William T. Cahill of a The Judiciary Committee, said that any legislative ac- legislation to restore capital bill that would broaden the headed by Assemblyman Wil- tion on the death penalty punishment to permit further powers of the Public Employ- liam K. Dickey, R-Camden, would be "just a token ges- time for study. ment Relations Commission voted, 5-1, to proceed with its ture" because of the uncer- The majority on the cam- to give it jurisdiction over un- deliberations hi hopes of re- tain nature of the con- mittee made it plain that they fair labor practices. leasing a death penalty bill stitutionality of capital pun- favor reviving the death pen- — The Senate passed and for a floor vote this year in ishment. alty in the state despite uncer- sent to Cahill a bill to empo- the Assembly. Haneman's commission tainty over the deatils of the wer the Public Utility Com- Only Assemblywoman Ann See Assembly, page 2 proposal. The committee voted, 5-1, to meet with representatives of SHELLFISH MEN AND HOST — Mayor Thomas Game and Shellfisheries; William Eisele, super- two commissions that have J, Lynch of AAIddletown, left, welcomes shellfish visor of state Shellfish Control Unit, and Fred- been studying the death pen- Weintraub to Retire officials to first meeting In more than 10 years In erick W. Monsees of Middletown, AAonmouth alty. The only negative vote was cast by Assemblyman TRENTON (AP) - Chief There was no reason given stand and respect his personal Monmouth County. Others, from left, are,Russell County representative on state Shellfish Council. Justice Joseph Weintraub has CookTngham, director of state Division of Fish, John I. Dawes, R-Monmouth, for his decision. reasons for this decision," Register Stuff Photo who said he favored com- announced his decision to re- (See related story page 4) while expressing "deep regr- mittee action without the ad- tire from the New Jersey Su- Several months ago Weint- et" on the news of Weint- vice of any outside studies. preme Court which bears the raub confirmed he would re- raub's retirement. • "I don't want to meet with stamp of the activist philoso- tire before age 70 but some Cahill recently filled two the study commission," phy he promoted during an 18- observers expected he would longstanding vacancies on the Sdndy Hook Bay Clammers' Dawes said. "They have their year span on the bench. continue on the court for one court with the appointments opinion and I have mine." Weintraub said yesterday of two years more. of his personal counsel, Pierre Asked Delay he will retire from the court His announcement was Garven, and Superior Court Last Thursday, a special gu- at the end of the 1973 judicial greeted by this comment from Judge Mark A. Sullivan, of bernatorial commission head- year on Aug. 31. Although he Gov. William T. Cahill: Jersey City. Both men were Hopes Dashed at Meeting does not reach the mandatory "His judicial voice has been confirmed last Thursday- by retirement age until March 5, heard not only in our state but the State Senate and are ex- MIDDLETOWN - Several if you stay away for the next polluted sampling stations, he effect tomorrow on more than 1978, Weintraub, 65, said he across the nation. His lead- pected to be sworn in soon as hundred area baymen who hundred years." said. 2,400 acres of bay waters — Watergate was retiring in a one-para- ership of the court has been in justices. have made their living from The remainder of the dele- In shellfish themselves, fed- Mayor White charged that the graph statement issued by the the finest traditions of judicial Weintraub's announcement, the clams in Sandy Hook Bay gation of baymen, led by eral standards allow no more five Shellfish Council mem- Witness Is Administrative Office of the conduct and public good." coupled with the pending re- will be out of work as of to- Highlands Mayor James T, the 230 fecal coliforms per 100 bers would be in conflict of in- Courts. The governor said "I under- tirement of Justice Haydn morrow. White, seemed no happier. grams of meat. terest if they voted on such a Proctor of Interlaken, who Tomorrow is when closing An explanation of the Readings on hard clams in scheme. Reluctant reaches mandatory retire- of virtually all the remaining state's blasting of the clam- the river showed only 18 coli- No Action Taken WASHINGTON (AP) - G. ment age next June 16, will dam beds in the bay by the mers' last hope — possible re- forms per 100 grams of meat, Two of the five council Gordon Liddy, a former White Prater Convicted give Cahill two more va- Shellfish Control Unit of the opening of the Navesink River but there are very few hard members conceded they have House aide convicted in the cancies to fill. state Department of Environ- for shellfish harvesting — was clams in the river.