Mrs. Farber on Stand • by CHARLES A

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Mrs. Farber on Stand • by CHARLES A •• ~v : p»WM: *?fW*s Remembers Long Branch// A Special Section Page L -.r-'i'.i'-1!*1 i" rrrr Distribution Today Red Bank Area f 26,675 15* '•flW***'"* change -,__„_ h» tofjnld Ms. Osjtloek Wedaet- " ' '" Copyrlght-The Red B»nk Register; Inc., 1986. DIAL 741-0010 4ajr,.doiidy, ebanw d rain. ' MONMOUTH GOUJjTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 88 YEARS »/NO;m sspTSjnap Steon* CUM Puwrt MONDAY, DECEMBER 12. 1966 7c PER COPY PAGEOflfE i >unm MUCH., Mu Gia to Thwart Drive ' , SAIGON (AP) - Striking at Communist forces believed ' —Some 2,000 more American oornbat Infantrymen arrived •nation that the North Vietnamese are using bases in China In the Mekong Delta south of Saigon, U. S. river patrol.;:, * readying another drive south, U. S, B52 Strstoforts botabed In Vietnam to bolster U. S. strength here to 365,700 men. either to launch' aerial missions or as a. sanctuary, boats and armed helicopters tank 28 Viet Cong sampans anfc tte Mil Gia pass in North Vietnam today and the demilitarized 1 ' —Two 'warships of the Thai navy arrived in Saigon to ASSAULTS BEAT BACK killed IS guerrillas. .. ' ";.-'&- . ,xone between North and South' Vietnam yesterday. > '' add to Thailand's contribute to the Allied side: Thailand - In ground action, South Vietnamese Infantrymen beat back Ground,fighting elsewhere was' small and scattered, botirs Tht_glant_eight-engine bombers, each carrying up to" 27 previously tent two_C123 transport planes. three assaults today by an estimated Viet Cong, battalion— the U.'S.'and Vietnamese military commands reported. ''"'" tana of bombs, struck at a mile-long stretch of the mountain ; -V. S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge left by plane tor about JOO,men-fa two and a half hours of fighting 44 miles ,. U. S. headquarters announced that 442 American planet,, southwest of Saigon. Vietnamese headquarters, laid the'gov- B^throughrwhich the North Vietnamese filter into Uo«,and the United States to-spend Hie Christmas holidays with his and four helicopters have been lost over North Vietnam since' * AWtatosonth Vietnam. , ' ' •-•",:'' ernment' forces took light 'casualties and killed 20 of the at- family. Lodge has icoffed at speculation that he would not the start of the air offensive in August 1964. Over South Viet-.. • i'' The Btts attacked Communist concentrations yesterday in tackers. •'',.' . ' " return. nam, headquarters said, 141 y. S. planes have gone down in./ , the demiUtarlzed zone seven miles north of the U. S. Marine • ' A reinforced platoon of up to .50 men from the U. S. : ^Stronghold known as the Rock Pile. —A U. S. Navy spokesman said some North Vietnamese 1st 'Infantry Division suffered heavy casualties yesterday In a combat and more than 240 helicopters have been lost sine*,,, ,'•, The attack on the Mu Gia pass was the eighth B52 raid on M1G pilots duck across'the border of Red China to escape fierce fight'with an enemy force of unknown size about 10 January 1061. ( '. ^ '" >«sttorth Vietnam and the first since Oct. 10. The BMs had not pursuit by American Jet fighters. miles north df Tay Ninh City. A U, S. spokesman said 28 The latest helicopter to go down, headquarters said,- wa»- ;'.fhit the deniUtariced'zone in almost (wo months, although other "Certaihly I am positive that in some cases, when they Communists were killed. The, clash, was in war Zone C about an ArmyHuey chopper hit by Viet Cong ground fire-seven , ,.V. S. planes have pounded It repeatedly. ''.' _ . ", f ' " {N6rth"Vteb»ajne»e~ fliers) decide to retreat, they go north," 40 miles northwest of Saigon, an area of heavy fighting in miles east of Saigon yesterday. A spokesman said there :^ In other developments: *'' ••- .- >v> . ' '•.' • .»,-, , th« Spokesman «ld. He added, however, that he had no lnfor- Operation Attleboro last month. no casualties and the helicopter was recovered. , Cross-Examination Continues Today Mrs. Farber on Stand • By CHARLES A. JOHNSTON cal experts who may'verify and ert Ford, of Borftdn, by Mr. Bail- Whether the 34-year-old defen-' month in his second trial for tt» •FREEHOLD - Dr. Cart A. dispute whether, Mrs. Fiber's When Superior Court Judge El- dant, an anesthesjologist-hypno- 1954 murder of, hU wife, Mr. Bail* Coppollno's murder trial enters sensational description t?f her tist-author, will take the stand 'o ey refused Sp. let the .defendant vin R.'Simmlll orders his court r its second week today with con- husband's death Is.plausible. .' room opened at. 9:30 a.m., an- answer for the killing of Mrs. testify. He explained that in h l tinued cross-examination of his That exchange, .probably to- Father's husband, retired Army opinion, some people make' poof. - other crush of spectators and jilted accuser, Mrs. Marjorie A. morrow or Wednesday, .will, be Col. William E. Farber, 52, July often antagonistic witnesses. '• newsmen is, anticipated. On Fri- Farber. between < two. of the. most emi- 30, 1963, has not been made Two points are known to be if day, the first day of testimony, Looking beyond her renewed nent patbologlsts in 'the country. clear. issue in the forthcoming' med£ test with Coppollno's lawyer, F. Dr. Milton A."Helpern,,ot New it was bedlam at the door until Sbeppard Case cal testimony: . • • '"" Lee Bailey, however, principal York, will be called by Prosecu- the 64 available seats were gob- In successfully defending Dr. Did Colonel' Farber' die 'of a attentlon now focuses on mail- tor Vincent P. Keuper, Dr. Rob- bled up. < Sam Sheppard, at Cleveland,, last heart condition, as; Coppolino'j first wife; Dr.' Carmella Coppo- lino, stated in' a death certlf; cate? ,Or was he sttasgied, <*J Mrs. Farber testified on Friday Jordan Conditionally OKs and as. Dr. Helpern- determine In a court-ordered .autopsy last July? . '. ' __,._ At .the close of .Frida/i^si*/ ..ANDING FOR MllftlOUS FMIDOM -•RfPV.i(ime«,J. Howard, D-3d, N.J.. sion, Mr. Bailey produced a pi«cei ' second from left, wai featured speaker at rally sponsored by United Synagogue Early Arab Troops Entry of yellow 'paper, .bearing.Mrr Farber's signature. Her haJM^- of Congregation Bnai Israel, Riimion, yatttrday to protest Soviet Union's per- AMMAN, Jordan (AP) -Jor- A multinatlon UN (one, now snred Jsrael for the attack. Is- supports the Republican regime wilting .was under a statement [on of the Jew^, Approximately 400 attended. With the congressman are, left to dan has agreed to let in; Iraqi numbering .about 4,000 men, has. rajel laid, it acted in .reprisal for in Yemen and .Saudi Arabia July 30,' 1963/releasing Dr. Cop-' l lj and Saudi Arabian troops within patrolled' the 145-mile Israel-UAR border *aid»,'by\Arab; terrorists. backs th£ ousted 'royalist forces pollno from responsibility in treat- > *" ilf«VBr««arIU.lY. prefjilanf, Rabbi y«ek Roioff, spiritual lead*rof the months but only if UN border since 1B57, after, tha two Reports -from Cairo ,sald the which control much 61 the coun- ing Col. Farber because he had mf Alan Koian*. rally committee chairman, and Seymour Si«g[aHvth*-syA*- ^catonfftv'r-fa^ek&tf s "areZ-F^tlhH .1ptilf414 j llUhe-SinaiS .d Arab--council hud forced JordaD W refused the doctor's advice tS te . jgogue'i dirietcr of youth activities. ' •" (Register Staff >hotol drawn (n)«| the frontier between ert , . Into a unanimous decision to let. Jordan also refused demands hospitalized for a heart attack: ? Mrs. Farber admitted her sig- ' Israel in/(he United Aiab Re- Jordanian-Information Minister in Iraqi and Saudi Arabian troops. by the Palestine Liberation Or- public, 4 JBhttnian govetitejent Abdul Hamid Sheraf «aid Jor, But ttttf^ ganlzation to' let its troops enter nature, but said, the text wtiin spokesman said last night. CoppoUho's handwriting'and that dan's position was presented could enter Jordan only as" part Jordan "to take up positions in \pe& Soviet Jews 'Living The Jordanian, stipulation ap- over,the weekend to a meeting of-an Over-all-Arab military plan she had never seen it before. the front line against. Israel." peared to check the plans of oth- In Cairo of the Arab 'League- de* agrde'd: on at previous confer- V . Florida Case Jordan has1 accused the. organi- er Arab leaders to extend their fenge council. The council met to ences. CarV Coppolino is also under 9 zation of fomenting anti-govern- troops further along the Israeli consider action following an Is- He said the plan Included as indictment In Florida for the mur- Martyrs to Freedom Cause frontier since it was unlikely that raeli attack on three Jordanian "basic conditions" the UN with- ment demonstrations among der of'his first wife, allegedly the United Nations would remove border villages Nov. 13.' Arab refugees in Jordan follow- with' an injection of succynl cho- ,\ RUMSON — The. Jews in the sponsored 'a, similar bill during faced with the threat that in IS drawal and removal of the UAR <M~--t_ A *•..#- _.^ Jilt' . I4I1_ ,1 AAtft *m *•*** m \ Its forces and risk a further in- ing the Israeli attack. ice. COPPOLINO, Pg. 2. Col 4) -Soviet, Union are "three million The UN Security Council cev force from Yemen. The UAR the 89th Congress, addressed years Judaism will no longer ex- crease in Middle East tensions. living martyrs to the principles of nearly 400 adults and young peo- ist,for,its 3, million, .commual- religious freedom," Rep,. James pie attending a rally, hi Congre* cants." Jordan lias expressed fear that Bugging Devices Use at Issue ' 3, Howar&jb&LtNJ,, eaid here gatlott Bnai Israel; *ete,,'to •pro- One of 21 foreign troops admitted to its ter- yesterday. .'• ,-; ' > teat tlrf plight,of Soviet Jewry. The rally was DM of 25held ritory would be used to over- , -.'The Wall Township 'Democrat Denouncing "the atrocity of, oil* simultaneously across' the United throw' King Hussein.
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