High Viet Maj Give T Decision

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High Viet Maj Give T Decision Battle SE&ST0KYPAG&2 Partly Sunny Partly sunny and quite warm todg}*, tomorrow and Wednes- FINAL day. Clear and mild tonight. J Kcd Bank, Freehold / Long Branch EDITION Monmonth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper RED BA.NK.NJ, MONDAY, JUNE 28,1971 TEN CENTS Wub$^They>ve Come a Long Way By LINDA ELUS American husband to stay spectrum and governments on would have to admit to be- their bond of service, the, First or a Series away from home one evening the other either can't or won't longing to their groups for one members have one other thing a week... he could talk man provide. And this is particu- or more reasons. It is, after in common: miniature calen- "Of a decent man in Zenith, talk and be obscene and larly true in Monmouth Coun- all, an excellent excuse to eat dars on their wrist watches. it was required tbat be should valiant." ty- and drink with friends on a They're involved on many lev- belong to one, preferably two Sinclair Lewis didn't much The Middletown-Matawan regular basis. els, proving the adage that if or three, of the-innumerous like his Babbitt and his char- area, as an example, has the For Good Works you want a job done, give it to •lodges' and prosperity-bbost- acter's membership in service full complement of service, But a look at the total pic- a busy man. ing lunch clubs; to the Rota- clubs doesn't recommend groups: Rotary, Kiwanis, ture indicates that the net re- Apart from these two sim- rians, the Kiwanis or the them. That, however, was cir- Lions and Jaycee function sult of the existence of the ilarities, which tell a great Boosters... There were four ca 1921. Five decades of here and indeed, all over the dubs is, indeed, good works in deal about these men, Rotary, reasons for joining these or- growth doesn't'mean the world. •. .': ' their respective communities. Kiwanis, Lions and Jaycees ders: It was the thing to do. It clubs have purged themselves They all began in, various The question of motive for 'share few common ex- was good for business, since of any and all George. Bab- pockets of Middle America; membership js an academic periences. Their bonds are su- lodge brothers frequently be- bitt's in their ranks-but their Rotary in Chicago, Jaycee in exercise, then, when blind perficial, in the main. Their came customers. It gave to record of service speaks for. St.' Louis', Lions in Dallas and men enjoy a summer camp, a basic triumphs and problems Americans unable to become itself. And that is what must Kiwanis in Detroit. All but the , boys' club flourishes, scholar- are quite individual. Geheimrate or Commendatori be considered today. Jaycees, who are in Tulsa, ship money is funneled to An Exploration such unctious honorifics as True in County Okla., now have headquarters needy students and the envi- This five-part series will ex- High Worthy Recording During the evolution of a in Chicago. ronment swings a bit more plore the aims and activities Scribe... to add to the com- more sophisticated America, The four have in common into balance as a result of the of the groups, primarily focus- monplaces distinctions of these clubs have been contrib- the fundamental purpose of work these men's clubs do. ing on four local chapters, and colonel, judge or professor. uting the kinds of service that service. No doubt a per- In surveying local clubs, it finally will pose questions And it permitted the swaddled - individuals on one end of the centage of their members became clear that apart from See Service, Page 3 . • Register staff Photo ROTARY GOES 'ROUND TrfE WORLD -. Red Bank Rotarlans make their International point by discussing club matters around the globe table at the Molly Pitcher Inn. Left to right, they are Dr. Warren Fowrer Jr., club.presldent; Frederic J. Blitzer, Roger Fltzslmmons, Arnold Schwartz, Frank Fish and the Rev. Frederic Preuss. The club meets at the Molly Pltcherevery week for lunch. High Maj Give Rumson School Vote Slated Tomorrow Viet t Decision rary classrooms "was the, By HILDY FONTAINE At present, 1,100 students also applied it to the Post. , are crowded into facilities at only method by which regular WASHINGTON (AP) - The the Times temporarily irom early, on June 19, twp judges request that the hearing bej" Pentagon-papers case, a his- continuing the series. tn the Court of Appeals The Supreme Court heard held in private. Chief Justice RUMSON - Borough resi- Forrestdale and Deane-Porter school sessions were main- tained." toric battle between the Nixon Three days later the Post blocked continuation of the the case in an unusual Satur- Warren E, Burger and Jus- dents will vote tomorrow on a Schools originally designed to day session. house 800 students. By renting And, the report further administration and the press, began its own series based, it, :Post series • tices John M. Harlan and Har- referendum to approve confronted the Supreme Court said, on the same, 47-vohime ' Last Wednesday night an • 'Four of the nine justices- ry A. Blackmun voted for a $2,540,000 to acquire approxi- 13 temporary classrooms, the states that the schools sys- William O. Douglas, Hugo L. Board of Education has tem's core facilities are al- today on the last scheduled study dating back to the end appellate court gave the closed hearing. mately 17 acres of land on the day of its current term. of World War II. Again, the Times the right to publish Black, William J. Brennan Jr. Other newspapers, mean- Lovett Tract, Ridge Road, sought to ease the burden, but most buckling under the and Thurgood Marshall - op- this too,1- is costing taxpayers strain. The court is expected either government moved to halt new stories about the study - while, had begun their own, and to construct a school to announce a ruling or to publication, but Dist. Court provided the court selected posed even holding the hear- series they said were based on there to house approximately $41,000 annually. Maintenance The gymnasium facilities ing. ' costs must also be added to are now restricted to upper delay adjournment to decide Judge Gerhard A. Gesell re- the documents from which ar- the Pentagon report. And the 400 seventh and eighth grade fused the request for a' re- ticles were prepared.^ The four were joined by Boston Globe and St. Louis students^ this figure. grades, shop facilities are whether The New York Times open only to seventh and and The Washington Post may straining order. The Times appealed to the Justices Potter "Stewart and Post Dispatch stories were in- . Voting will take place.from Inadequacy Noted The Justteri Department ap- Byron RiVSttefln rejecting tempted by government or- Furthermore, core' facilities eighth graders, the library is publish articles based on top- : Supreme Court which extend- 4 to 9 p.m. at Forrestdale secret Defense Department pealed within thfe heur. And ed the conditional ban and the. Justice Department der. School. at the two schools are in- overcrowded and the cafe- adequate for the number of teria, also overcrowded, pro- documents outlining.the his- Late last week, Borough vides little use for large group tory of U.S. involvement in Council unanimously endorsed students now enrolled, and Vietnam. the Rumson Board, of Educa- next year Rumson children instruction. with learning disabilities will Over the past year and a The high court heard argu- tion's proposal for school ex- ments in the case only last pansion. In the past council have to be housed in this half,,the board has pondered borough, thus adding further various alternatives to deal Saturday, leading to specula- has not given its approval tion that a ruling, could be an- publicly on elementary to the overcrowded condi- with overcrowding. , tions. Up to now they were They could do nothing, nounced today but opinions school expansion proposals, outlining reasons for the jus- hut' on the upcoming referen- bussed to other school sys- maintain the temporary class- tems, some as far away as room buildings and curtailed tices' decision could be de- dum the consensus was that if layed several days. tomorrow's proposal is not Wall Township. curriculum and eventually go passed, Rumson voters even- According to a'report is- to double sessions. "" At issue, says the Times tually will have to pay more' sued by the board's facilities They could expand on the and Post, is the constitutional for any future expansion be- committee, from 1969 to the Forrestdale/Deane-Porter . guarantee of freedom Of the cause of spiraling costs. present, acquiring the tempo- site in the permanent build- press. The ''Justice Depart- ings - a proposal which Her- ment contends publication of bert Zydney, facilities com- excerpts from the war study mittee, chairman, has de- will endanger national secu- scribed as "second class." rity) damage U.S. relations 'More for Less' with' other countries and pro- The Inside Story To do this would cost long the Vietnam war. $30,000 over the referendum The dispute began June 13 June's wedding bells kept ringing ...'. .Pages 8-9 figure for off site expansion when the Times published a Utility rate sparks Marlboro audit demand Page 12 according to Mr, Zydney. story saying the Pentagon New York woep: Mels, Yanks lose three.... ..............Page 16 "For more dollars we would study indicated' the Johnson Mitchell, Mrs. earner win In golf Page i6 get less education," he said of administration secretly .Red Bank chases Wall, loses ground Page 17 on site expansion.
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