Politicians Delivering Themselves to Voters by BEN VAN VLIET U.S
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es Tell Little of Campaign Goats SEE STORY BELW Cloudy, Cool 'Partly cloudy and cool to- THEBMLY FINAL , day. Cloudy, chance of rain tonight. Cloudy, cool tomor- Red Built, Freehold 7" row. Long B»«iieli_ _/ EDITION v L (Sea Detail*. W» il Monmouth County's Home Newspaper tor 92 Years VOL. 93, NO, 91 RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1970 16 PAGES J!ISISK!!W!l«lll!!§ia«IIKBIIIIiliBllimil Politicians Delivering Themselves to Voters By BEN VAN VLIET U.S. Senator and register citizen $80 tax exemption for S3 municipalities except in On the county level, voters are being asked to elect two Today marks the end of the their feelings on two state- those over 65 years of age. those towns which have a dif- wide ballot questions ~ low- In Monmouth- Couty there ferent form of government new members to the Board of trail for the 1970 crop of polit- Freeholders. ical hopefuls. ering of the voting age to 19 are municipal elections and such as Monmouth Beach, and doubling of the senior local questions in most of the •and Long Branch. After months of endless de- Tbe Contenders bate the politicians today Running for those seats are relinquish their fates to the Republican incumbents Axel great mass which constitutes B. Carlson, Manasquan, and the electorate'. Albert E. Allen, Matawan.yG\ And, in most cases, It Is Candidate Profiles They are opposed- by Demo- done with a giant sigh of re- NEWARK (AP) — Here are capsule Joseph F. Job, Independent. Fifty-four crats C.B. Cargile Jiv, of lief. profiles on the' six candidates running for years old. Sheriff of Bergen County. For- Neptune, and former Hazlet Polls open a 7 a.m. and U.S. Senator in New Jersey today: mer United States Marshal. A Republican Mayor Marvin Olinsky. wil close at 8 p.m. with a nor- Harrison A. Williams Jr., Democratic •who entered the race after Gross won the Perhaps the most closely mally light "off-year" elec- Incumbent. Fifty years old. Graduate of primary election. Resident of Lyndhiirst.' fought race, and one which is tion turn out expected. Oberlin College, the Georgetown University rated a "tossup" is the con- Julius Levin, Socialist-Labor candidate. Where Votes Going School of Foreign Service and Columbia test for the Third District con- During those 13 hours a ma- Law School. Has served 12 years in the Forty-eight years old. Resident of Cam- gressional seat. numerous local mayors, Senate. Resident of Westfield. den. Nelson G. Gross, Republican. Thirty- Competing for that are voters in the county will elect Joseph M. Mans, Independent. Sixty ' eight years old. Graduate Yale University Democratic incumbent James numerious local mayors, years old. Running on the label of "De- and Columbia Law School. Lawyer. For- J. Howard; Republican, members of local governing stroy Drug Devils." • mer State Assemblyman, former Repub- challenger William F. Dowd, EARLY VOTERS — Tfiird district congressional candidates cast •Hieir votes early bodies, a congressman and two members of the Board of lican state chairman. Former Bergen Coun-, William J. O'Grady, National Conserva- and National Conservative toda^. Shown, from left, are Democrat James J. Howard, Conservative Clyde Freeholders. ty GOP chairman. Resident of Saddle Riv- tive Party. Forty-nine years old. Lives in Party candidate Clyde W. W. Hill and Republican William F. Oowd. (Register Staff Photos) They also will vote for a er. Roselle. insurance executive. HilL • , u 11 u EHEISH iitni inim ti i iLtiiimiinmjasiiiintiniiii Hiuinn in nuiuinii in litm uin UH si un u 1111111111 u;u»u 11 u i niu i u M n i itii i mK^i in 1111 u i u it iitHiin 111 ii»in 11 ti i tii i ttiii i it ti n ill: IUU h !IIIIllllll»[|i Burial at School Is Planned for Prelate BOSrrON (AP) — Richard Cardinal Cushiag will be soul, a man of universal genius, a priest of'selfless dedicar President Nixon issued a statement at the Western Most Revs. Jeremiah F. Minihan, Thomas J. Riley and buried ,at St. Coletta School at Hanover close to the re- tion, a bishop of towering stature." White House at San tSemente, Calif., saying, "His name Daniel A. Cronin. tarded thlldren he held so dear. SOUGHT COOPERATION will always evoke for us a spirit of ecumenism, of human While the cardinal's body lies in state at the cathedra), ; x^e3T5-year-old prelate's body was to be taken today dignity, justice and brotherhood among men and nations." 'public Masses will be celebrated Wednesday, Thursday and The cardinal was a leader in the ecumenical movement- WILL BE MISSED from then archbishop's residence to the Cathedral of the seeking cooperation' and unity among Ghristion churches— Friday at noon and at 7 p.m. y Mrs. Aristotle Onassis, the former Jacqueline Kennedy, Holy Cross to lie in state until the funeral Saturday. • and his influence ranged far beyond his archdiocese. Burial wiH be in a crypt in the Portiujicula Chapel The cardinal, a longtime'friend of the late President said she loved the cardinal and "will miss him terribly for at St. Coletta School. In his more vigorous years, Cardinal He was a leader in the appeal for the 1962-65 Vatican the rest of «ny Uie." ,.-•.-, John F, Kennedy and. his father, the Late Joseph P- Ken* ', Council's statemant rajwANfitoe contention that the Jews Gushing was a. frequent visitor oj the. retarded children A i : •"His'MIe- was built on love," the former first lady sUWlM.JOT "W W' tiftf'infr'f •'•jft "-fl-t --V-nT-; 'TP* '••"irii -we»^W»!^<»5,th(&tiS^doa .of Christ, there and often romped'with them when time permitted. fiFlpi^ mer-^ He often appeared at "Protestant churches and at said; "to hea!'rather tlian to divide." ••••-• Cardinal dishing, son of a Boston blacksmith,'headed the archdiocese on Oct. 7. synagogues and once remarked, "Nobody can tell me that The American Jewish Committee, in a statement is- nation's second largest archdiocese, numbering 1.8 million NEWS WAS SHOCK Christ died on Calvary for any select group." sued in New York by its president, Phillip E. Hoffman, 1 Roman Catholics, from 1944 until his retirement. He was said it mourned "the passing of a great spiritual force in News of his -death came as a shock. not only to the OPPOSED INJUSTICE elevated to cardinal by Pope John XXIII in 1058. archdiocese's Catholics but to mMons of others who re- American life." \ membered the white-haired, gravel-voiced prelate dancing . A strong opponent of racial injustice, he said in a At the Vatican a spokesman said the cardinal's death In 1961 he read the prayer; at the inauguration of a jig at bis annual Thanksgiving, parties for the poor, tak- pastoral letter: "When a Catholic fails to take a stand caused "profound sadness, profound pain." Pope Paul VI President Kennedy and less than three years later cele- ing nuns to a Red Sox baseball game or wearing con- against race intolerance he is a slacker in the army of prayed for his soul. brated the solemn funeral Mass for the assassinated presi- struction workers' hard hats at ground breakings for the the Oilmen militant." . Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, the apostolic delegate to dent at St. Matthew's Cathedral in Washington. ; many new schools and hospitals he built. His wide-ranging interests and varied cirde of friends Washington, will concelebrate the funeral Mass at the The cardinal's health had been failing for years, forcing His successor, ArchMshop Humberto S. Medeiros, said were reflected in tributes pouring into the archbishop's cathedral at 11 a.m. Saturday along with Archbishop him to give up a dream of becoming a missionary in South . in announcing the cardinal's passing; "He was a truly great residence. Medeiros and the three auxiliary bishops of Boston, the America when he retired.- Candidates Shield Details on Expenditures * TRENTON (AP) - Eli. expected to spend between The law requires only that election when both candidates contributions; Peter Rodino, Democrats in Washington iels, and $3,000 to Patten. Other contributors included mination of legal limits on $250,000 and $500,000 on his the candidate report what admitted exceeding the legal $3,550 from seven contribu- contributed $7,100 to five in- Republicans gave $2,000 to former Democratic Gov. Rob- campaign spending has not campaign for reelection. was contributed to and spent limit and an independent can- tions; Cornelius Gallagher, cumbents. Republicans gave incumbent Charles Sandman ert B. Meyner, who gave $100 prompted New Jersey's can- Yet Williams reported yes. by him but does not apply to didate sued to void the elec- $2,350 from four contribu- $9,000 to two incumbents and and $3,500 to Mrs. Florence each to Reps. Howard, Ro- didates this year to be any terday that he received only funds raised or disbursed by tion. tions;-Edward Patten, $1,550 two challengers. Dwyer. GOP challengers dino, Daniels, Patten and more frank in reporting ex- $76,794 and spent $58,870. Wil- others on his behalf. .Williams' contributions in- from five contributions, and Democrats gave $1,500 to James Shue, 11th District, got Frank Thompson Jr. penditures. liams' Republican challenger, • Limit Eliminated clude $19,720 from organized James Howard, $250 from one Rodino, $500 to Minish, $1,000 $2,500 and Griffith Jones 10th Industrialist Charles W. Democratic Sen. Harrison Nelson G. Gross, had not yet, The former spending limit labor and $7,000 from the contribution. to Gallagher, $1,100 to Dan- District, $1,000. (See Candidates Page 4) A.