Colleges Toughen Disruptions Stand

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Colleges Toughen Disruptions Stand School Regional Talks Held in Private Session SEE STORY BELOW, •••T. l Sunny and Mild Sunny and mild today. Clear FINAL and mild tonight. Sunny and T Red Bank, Freehold 7" wanner tomorrow. I Long Branch J EDITION (»«• Det&lli, page 2} Monmouth County's Home Newspaper for 90 Years VOL. 91, NO. 218 RED BANK, N. J., FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1969 28 PAGES 10 CENTS Silliilllllll Colleges Toughen Disruptions Stand By ASSOCIATED PRESS Society left two buildings they It has .been closed nine block others from using'the Administrators are in-had seized Wednesday. days as black and Puerto Ri- library. He said it was called voking the rule of law against About 100 protesters ended can students barricade half to dramatize their attempt to disruptive students at some a sit-in at Stanford Universi- the campus. negotiate grievances "on cer- of the nation's college cam- ty in Palo Alto, Calif., when Library Closed tain matters concerning insti- puses, but the wave of spring 100 policemen were deployed Security guards at Colum- tutional policies with respect turmoil shows little sign of outside the building. biaclosed the law library af- to black and minority stu- letting up. Court orders were served ter members of the Black dents." Twenty-nine black law stu- on Dr. Buell G. Gallagher, American iJaw Student Asso- He added, "At no point dents at Columbia University president of Cify College of ciation entered the building have we been able to secure began a sit-in Thursday night New York, asking him to and said they would hold an concrete response to the po- In the law school library, less show Monday why the 20,000- all night "study-in." sition we have advanced." He than 12 hours after members student school should not be A spokesman for the stu- declined to spell out his of Students for a Democratic reopened. >,,- dents said they would not group's demands. • L, Out Windows Earlier, about 200 SDS members climbed out the windows of Fayerweather and Mathematics halls, min- utes after arrest warrants were issued for them. Many wore bandannas over their face in an attempt to avoid being identified. Undersheriff William' Kehl ' GETTING A HAND — The Rev., Frederick E. Preuss II, rector of the Ohurch of the Holy Communion in Fair said all would be arrested on Haven, extends an -oar from the dock of the Shrewsbury River Yacht Club to Mark O'Brien, 17, a former Sea contempt of court charges for • Scout, as Capt. Herbert Schweers of New Shrewsbury, a New York harbor-pilot and sea-going promoter, ignoring an injunction against helps maneuver %_Mg lifeboat. It is one of four Capt. Schweers secured for the Boy Scouts of Northern disruptive demonstrations. An official at the 17,500-student Monmouth and will be used in an area-wide Sea Explorers training program. (Register Staff Photo) school said 30 protesters had been Identified. Acting President Andrew W. Cordier said, "There will definitely be no amnesty," af- Scout Boat Roundup Wprks ter he studied broken furni- ture piled in barricades at By JANE FODERARO — including tw6 cables to Onassis himself in Monte Carlo. doors to the two buildings. FAIR HAVEN — The Boy Scouts said they wanted boats. The result was a pair of lifeboats, one 25-foOt steel boat SDS was demanding a larger So the captain made waves from Sandy Hook to Monte Carlo from the "Olympic Wind" and another aluminum one stored role for Negroes in admis- and got 'enr their boats. in Newark. - . sions procedures and an end As of today, the Boy Scouts of Northern Monmoutfi own Through other contacts, the captain also procured a 30- to the Naval Reserve Officer the four big lifeboats at ttie Shrewsbury River Yacht Club foot, diesel-powered lifeboat from the State Marine Shipping Training Corps and military Co. and a 30-foot fiberglass craft from the isthmian line: recruiting on campus. in Fair Haven. Valued at more than {15,000, they're 25 and 30-foot crafts that will be used to launch an up-to-the-minute But that was just the beginning. After they were released At Stanford, demonstrators Sea Explorers program in Fair Haven as well as Red Bank, to him, Capt. Schweers had to get the foreign-made boats NEW LOOK •— Police Chief James A. Herring of New Shrewsbury stands by ended their protest against Leonardo and Asbury Park. through U. S. customs (no easy trick, since the U. S. protects military research on campus one of the newly painted squad, cars. Announcing the innovation, Councilman The man behind the boats is Capt. Herbert Schweers of its own boat-building industry). But, he reports, it was St. after a policeman entered En- New Shrewsbury, a New York harbor pilot and a member Patrick's Day when he went to the customs office . and it Jack N. Riridner, chairman of the publk safety committee, said the distinctive . cina Hall and ordered them of the local club, who also is something of a sea-going so happened that an Irish secretary let the boats sail through white scheme with a bright orange stripe was designed to engender pride in the out. No arrests were made. promoter. the proper channels. department and the borough. Other municipal vehicles would soon be painted in . Gallagher continued nego- SPREADS THE WORD Then came the question of getting the boats to Fair tiations at City College over Haven where they will be moored until they're assigned per- the new colors, Mr. Rindner added, "to display-Ne*/- Shrewsbury's deserved st«- Capt. Schweers heard through the club six weeks ago protesters' demands for a that the Boy Scouts wanted boats for an Explorers program. manent berths. tus as a progressive community." The new *eolor scheme-was worked- ojuf.by Mrv separate school of black and He talked it up — and eventually involved everyone from In Newark, Abe"Rosenzweig of Newark Industries was Rindner and Councilman Thomas Ruziclca, industrial designers.; • ' ' ' ; •. • ' • Hispanic studies and enroll- Aristotle Onassis to local yachtsmen. instrumental in loading a lifeboat on a truck . then W. J. ment of more minority group •'. '. ' (Register Sta# Photo) '•' Briefly, the saga began when Capt. Schweers sat up one- . Casey Trucking donated the shipment to Monmouth County. students. There are about 4,- night with the captain of the "Olympic Wind," one of the ("Ever try to move a lifeboat on a highway?" Mr. Schweere 500 Negroes and Puerto Ri- tankers hi one of the Onassis steamship lines; The Boy asked.) At the same tune, the Reynolds Ship Yards in Staten cans at City College. Demon- (See PILOT, Page 3, Col. 3). strators say the enrollment Scouts at home were mentioned and one thing led to another should match New York high schools, which are 40 per.cent Lottery Vote . nonwhite. *• • Several government of- urban senators, led by Sen. Egypt, Israel Swap Charges TRENTON (AP) - The de- It does not need the signa- ficials expressed Increasing bate -over "whether New Jer- .ture of Gov. Richard J. Alexander J. Matburri, R-Es- concerns over the student Hughes, but he is for it any-, sex, began a fight to resur- By ASSOCIATED PRESS The Israelis countered Army spokesman in Tel Aviv Hamadi 300 miles-south ol sey should, have a state lot- protests. Sen. John L. McClel- Nasser's claims about the said the Israeli commandos tery is now up to the voters. way and says he will cam- rect it and it cleared the lan, D-Ark., said his perma- Egypt and Israel have, Cairo. Earlier, the Israelis caucus on Monday by one nent Senate Investigation sub- swapped new claims and de- raid Tuesday night, saying an brought-down six poweMine After weeks of backstage paign on its behalf. area Egyptian official showed towers and the power grid's said their men discharged the maneuvering and a two-hour Sens. Richard R. Stout and vote. committee will look into stu nials but both have told Sec- Naj Hamadi Dam and tin dent rebellion in about a retary-General U Thant they foreign newsmen was. not the automatic control center in debate on the floor, the State Alfred N. Beadleston, both Seventeen of the 29 Repub- target of their attack. An .attacks near Isna and Maj Idfu bridge. Senate gave final approval to R-Monmouth, voted against licans present ended up vot- month. trying to limit danger tg. ing for the measure; so did B.N. observers along the Suez the resolution authorizing a putting the referendum on the Canal. lottery referendum on the bal- ballot, as did Sen. William T. all nine Democrats, although lot in the November election. Hiering, R-Ocean, one, minority Leader J. Ed- President Gamal Abdel, Most of the bets are on it The lottery had been de- ward Crabiel, D-Middlesex, Von Papen Nasser told a May-.Day rally gaining approval there too. dared dead only two and a said he was personally in Cairo yesterday that Egyp- Public Regional Session Off. against the lottery and was, tian forces had destroyed 60 The' proposal received 26 half weeks ago after it failed Dies at 89 per cent of Israel's, fortifica- Votes, two more than the 24— to muster enough votes in the only following the wishes of his constituents. tions along the east band ol or three fifths of the Senate- Republican caucus to bring it tile waterway. Three Boards Meet in Private needed to get it on the ballot. to the floor. But a group of Predict Approval In Germany ., Most senators — including OBERSASBACH, Germany . Nasser also branded as a SHREWSBURY - The If a regional high school Shrewsbury school boards many of the 12 who opposed (AP) — Former Chancellor failure an Israeli raid Tues- scheduled public discussion of district is approval a regional want a new school on anothei it — predicted that the lot- Fran? von Papen who helped day night on targets about high school regionalization district Board of Education site.
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