Planes, Fleet Pound Hanol Harbor Areas SAIGON (AP) - U.S

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Planes, Fleet Pound Hanol Harbor Areas SAIGON (AP) - U.S SEE STORY BELOW Clearing Bain ending, bocomteg sun- FINAL ny this afternoon. Clear and H..I Hunk, cool tonight. Sunny tomorrow, high In low 60s. I Brunch EDITION 38 PAGES Monmouth County9** Outstanding Home IV VOL.94 NO. 225 RED BANK, NJ. WEDNESDAY, MAY 10,1972 TEN CENTS MimHMBWNnHiiininimnnNiiiiwHMiiiiiiiuHiHiinNiHifflHHiffliiHiumiiiiiiiHiiiniiiutiiiiiiiiiii iiuitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiniiinimtiiiiiinniiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiii Planes, Fleet Pound HanoL Harbor Areas SAIGON (AP) - U.S. plan- of the North Vietnamese of any 7th Fleet ships being dropped more than 1,000 tons central highlands. es bombed the Hanoi area ports, the shellings and the air hit. of bombs on North Vietnam- The South Vietnamese com- today for the second time in strikes." U.S. photo-reconnaissance ese troop concentrations and mand said fighting raged for three days, the U.S. Com- Hanoi claimed that two planes were keeping a close staging areas threatening Hue more than 24 hours at the Ben mand reported, and Radio American destroyers were set watch on Haiphong and the in the north and Kontum City Het border camp and didn't Hanoi said they also hit Hai- afire by shore batteries while other ports, but sources de- in the central highlands. break off until just before phong and the northern prov- shelling "a number of popu- clined to say what the photo- As the North Vietnamese of- dawn today. The command ince of Yen Bay through lated areas in Haiphong" yes- graphs had disclosed. fensive moved into its 42nd claimed 100 North Vietnamese which the railroad to China terday. U.S. military spokes- In South Vietnam, more day, the heaviest ground troops were killed and 11 runs. men said they had no reports than 50 U.S. B52 bombers fighting was reported in the tanks were destroyed. U.S. destroyers shelled tar- gets In the vicinity of Hai- phong harbor. The North Vietnamese claimed that 14 U.S. planes were shot down and "many pilots were captured alive." The U.S. Command made no report of losses in the OUT OF THE BUCKET — Tom Wilkinson climbs from the rescue! CB0e In North, but it announced that ShafM2 of the$unshine Silver'/Wlne at Kellogg, Idaho, yesterday. He and 32 Americans were killed in bis partherf Ron Flory, were rescued In apod condition after spending a the crash of a big U.S. Army week underground following disastrous fire which took at least 47 lives. helicopter 20 miles northeast See story, The World column, page 3. .-' • - : of Saigon. The command said the cause of the crash was not known. v Radio Hanoi said the Ameri- can raiders caused many cas- Mining Order Stirs ualties in the North Vietnam- ese capital and did great dam- age to hospitals, schools and residential areas. It gave no report of damage in Haiphong Antiwar Activities or Yen Bay. The U.S. Command gave" no By The Associated Press number ended with violence by buckshot when police details about the naval shell- Growing protests swirled oh . and vandalism. broke up a demonstration in ing in the Haiphong area, but • city streets and college Police in Berkeley, Calif., Albuquerque, N.M. There other sources said it was part campuses as antiwar, demon- fired putty bullets from squad were 150 arrests in Gain- of President Nixon's cam- strators by the thousands de- cars in a running battle with paign to cut off the movement esville, Fla., where the mayor - . - RifMtrilittMwIa nounced President Nixon's de- window-smashing demonstra- requested the National Guard of .war materials into North HIGH, HIGH TIDE — Lots of rain, high winds and a high tide, combined to bring the Naveslnk River cision to mine North Vietnam* tors near the University of be alerted, and 50 arrested in Vietnamese ports and out of Into Red Bank's Marine Park yesterday. This picture taken at 6:30 p.m. from the tennis courts at Ma- ese harbors. California campus. Protesters Boulder, Colo. them to the Communist forces rine Park shows the river intruding about 30 feet into the park's parking lot. A park bench can be seen It was the most turbulent on the University of California In Albuquerque, Carolyn in South Vietnam. at right, and the top of the bulkhead pilings stretch across center of the picture. The river had receded outburst-Since the 1970 pro- campus-at Santa Barbara/ Babb criburn, 22, a University "It's a combined effort," . by 10 p.m. The storm also caused local flooding in many areas. Rlverdale Ave. and Patten Ave* In tests over the U.S. invasion of tried unsuccessfully to refire of Ne\v Mexico, law student, said one source, "the mining Monmouth Beach were closed. Cambodia. Most of the dem- a bank burned down in the was hit in the abdomen while onstrations started peacefully 1970 violence. covering the demonstration yesterday or early today but a Two persons wereAvounded for the student newspaper and was reported in serious condi- tion today. The other' victim, Paul Smith, 23, was treated Middletown Code Hits Snags and released. MIDDLETOWN — After a meeting. disclosures of financial inter- Mr. Hendricks disagreed. Bernard F. Boglioli of West Somers Beaten About 500 demonstrators Long Branch, attorney for the public hearing which lasted Starting under the handicap ests in the township, including "It's an imposition on the em- had blocked Interstate 25 near until nearly midnight, the of 21 typographical and edito- even those held by their ployes to make them submit Policemen's Benevolent Asso- downtown when police Township Committee last rial errors read out publicly spouses and children. financial reports.. I want the ciation, agreed. He urged the cleared the area with tear night recessed half an hour by J. Peter Braun, township Excepts the Unpaid code held until this thing is committee to table the ordi- In Atlantic City gas. The shootings followed nance "until everyone can longer and reconvened to re- administrator, the adminis- Peter P. Frunzi Jr., town- straightened out," he de- 'but police said there' was serve decision on the town- trative code ordinance hit its ship attorney, declared he be- clared. study it," recalling that there ATLANTIC CITY (AP) - said, conceding defeat before doubt as to whether police were 21 changes last night in 1 ship's 67-page administrative first major snag when Deputy' lieves the requirement applies He added that financial de- Mayor William T. Somers all the 52 precincts had re- fired the shot.,. code. Fire Chief W. Irwin Hendricks only to line officers and tails of firemen's and police- the final draft, which was two-year city hall reign has ported. "I hope the campaign In the policical arena, crit- The public hearing was con- rose to complain that the chiefs, who receive salaries men's lives is no concern of made public only two weeks ended;. scares are over, and that the ics termed the President's ac- cluded. A decision is expected code will require volunteer from the township, and ex- the code, which he termed "a ago. • For the dapper, soft-spoken five winners will work togeth- tion "reckless,", "a high at the committee's May 23 firemen to submit detailed cepts volunteer firemen. farce" and "a waste of time." Raises Questions mayor, under federal in- er." . crime" and brinkmanship Mr. Boglioli told the com- dictment on brlbery-con- Flofiaril, the top vote-getter, while supporters praised "a mittee the Board of Ethics es- • spiracy charges, the end called on his rivals to "bury bold move," "a courageous tablished by the code raises cama last- night' as voters the hatchet."- "The problems moyo," "a measured re- "some very.serious legal selected five candidates from a of Atlantic City," he said, sponse." questions." Over protests by fieldof 34 to the Atlantic City "transcend personal differ- Shrewsbury onReeordAgainst Vice President Spiro T. Ag- Mayor Thomas J. Lynch, the Commission. , ences." new told a Republican fund- attorney warned that the — Thermayorfinished ninth in Ponzio said he WHS de- raising- dinner. Tuesday night board, appointed by the com- .the race, polling the least lighted that the voters saw it at, the Ohio Fairgrounds in Co- mittee from a list compiled by Votes among four incumbents fit to return him to office lumbus that he was "particu- More SchoolRegionalization the township administrator, who sought re-election in the despite controversy over his larly proud of Richard Nixon" could become a sort of civil- nonpartisan balloting. indictment for the harbor mining deci- RED BANK - The Board of meeting of representatives of press their intentions in writ- action. ian review board or star two of the other three in- The winners, who will gov- sion. Education reported last night the three boards of education ing. The board informally chamber which could rule on cumbents — Public Works ern here for the next.four A crowd of about 350 dem- that Shrewsbury has gone on to discuss expanding the 9-12 The Red Bank board, which agreed last winter to petition activities of police officers. Commissioner Arthur Ponzio, years, were: 49-year-old Flo- onstrators who marched from record as opposed to further regionalization down to kin- is in favor of expanding the the state commissioner of Mr. Boglioli also objected to who was indicted along with riani, with 5,680 votes: 47- Ohio State University threw regionalization and Little Sil- dergarten. regional concept, reiterated education, Carl L. Marburger, a requirement for police offi- the mayor, and Public Safety year-ola" Ponzio, with 4,086: rocks and potatoes at the vice ver is yet to reply. its position last night and to mandate the regionaliza- cers to submit detailed finan- Director Mario Floriani, who 62-year-old retired attorney After the meeting last president's limousine as he ar- The board asked the county month, which wasn't open to agreed to wait one more tion if no headway could be cial statements of their town- was^not indicted — won handi- Horace J.
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