42 Survive As Plane
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2MZZZ **/•; >7\k «Vs Ugh !• low Us sad fewer- yea y iWi Mound M. today, Mr Gipyright-Tlie Red Bank Register, lac, IMS. and coder. MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS VOL. 88, NO. 98 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965 7c PER COPY 42 Survive as Plane SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A could not be explained immedi- proached the airport from the to a wing and through a sheet United Air Lines Boeing 727 jet ately. south for an on-schedule landing. of flames to the ground. airliner burst into flames on United said 43 persons were A United spokesman in Chica- The interior of the plane black- landing last night at Salt Lake hospitalized, and that another go blamed the accident on nose ened into charcoal. Deputy Salt City Airport. five either escaped injury or wheel failure. Lake County Attorney Warren ML- Hie airline said the jet car- were treated at hospitals and re- "We had a hard bump, started Weggeland said only the arms ried 90 persons, and that 42 ot leased. swerving from side to side," said and legs of victims were dis- them were "killed or presumed The plane was United's flight passenger Ralph S. Nesbitt, a tinguishable in the debris. killed." 227 originating in New York City Santa Monica, Calif., salesman. The plane was piloted by Capt. However, Dr. Hilmon Castle, with, stops in Cleveland, Chicago, "And flames broke out from the Gail C. Keimierer, 48, of Den- medical examiner for the Civil Denver and Salt Lake City en rear. ver. The captain and his crew, Aeronautics Board, said he route to San Francisco. "People were thrown all over survived. > :•. counted only 41 bodies taken It.was the third 727 involved the place. It was horrible. The Hospital officials quoted the from the plane. in an airline accident since Au- heat was terrible." pilot as repeating: 'Terrible, ter- The discrepancy in the airline's gust—and the second this week. Nesbitt said he dived to safe- rible." list of casualties and Dr. Castle's The 72-ton, tri-jet airliner ap- ty through an open window, on (See PLANE, Page 3) asted\ MCAP POUR FROM JET'S HULL —United Airlines Boeing 727 jet airliner burns after landing at Salt Lake City. Airport last night. Authorities listed 42 dead and 48 survivors among the 90 passengers and crew.members •board..' It was believed a collapsed nose wheel may have punctured fuel tanks and caused fire. ' Executive Says of Criticism ASBURY PARK - "I'm flab- lood Multi-Service Center, may MCAP, as the sponsor of the ie 16 jobs at the center pays bergasted." lave recently completed hiring center and the applicant for the the $6,388 annual salary indi- That was' the reaction of Jo- >ersonnel. funds, developed the program 1 :ated by Mr. Wells' complaint. seph' E. Taylor,; acting executive Mr; Lindsey has full authority and made the wage scale re- The center's highest-paid em- director of Monmouth Communir :o. hire staff without MCAP okay, quests. iloyee is Mr. Lindsey, who re- Soviets Fire Venus Probe ty. Action Program (MCAP), to Ar. Taylor said. None In Category vives $8,000 a year. The second charges that the anti-poverty ag- Mr. Lindsey was not available According to information fur- lighest-paid person on the staff MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet| third Soviet attempt to probe The U.S. Mariner II passa tinue on its course toward Venus ency is gathering its staff by Union today launched an "inter- Venus. Venus Dec. 14, 1962, at a dis for about 3'/4 months. 1 or comment' yesterday. nished by Mr. Taylor, none of is Miss J.C. Shannon, the senior raidingthe county Welfare Board. intake worker, whose annual sal- planetary station" toward Venus, Venus 1 missed the planet by tance of 21,648 miles after gathe: Tass said a.multistage rocket the Soviet news agency Tass an- 111,000 miles in February 1961, ing data continuously during it "I don't' know what they're iry is $6,000. launched Venus 2. The .last stage talking about," Mr.; Taylor told l nounced. '.'• but the Russians said it collected 180-million-miIe journey. Durin was first put into a parking orbit Mr.. Taylor was receiving $8,« > tass said that by noon (4 a.m. valuable scientific data. the 42 minutes it flew past th The-Daily Register. "I haven't 300 for the nine-month post as and then it launched the station been doing any hiring." County to Carefully EST), the space probe was 56,000 U.S. scientists said the Soviet planet it collected data on th< toward Venus. This is the meth- administrative assistant — the kilometers (nearly 34,800 miles) spacecraft Zond 1, launched surface and atmospheric tern od the Russians have used in The Daily Register reported hird highest job in the MCAP front the earth. April 2, apparently was intended peratures and cloud structure their moon probes. yesterday that Robert C. Wells, letup — before he was named county welfare director, had com- Study Fund Request Tass said equipment aboard the to be a Venus probe although Venus. This was relayed bad acting executive director three •pace . station was functioning the Russians never announced it The weight of Venus 2 was plained that two' newly-trained FREEHOLD - The $281,000 federal grant application of months ago. The director's sal* to earth and Mariner sped o: given as 963 kilograms — 2,123 normally. as such. The Americans said toward the sun. employees recently left his agen- the Monmouth Community Action Program, Inc. (MCAP) to ary — $10,500 on a nine-month The satellite named Ventis-2, Zond 1 apparently missed its pounds. Tass said power is being cy to work for MCAP because continue and to expand won't get an automatic okay from lasis — went along with the 1> the second and possibly the mark in July 1964. Tass said Venus-2 would cor supplied it by chemical and solar the anti-poverty organization of- the county Board of Freeholders. emporary appointment. batteries. fered a salary $1,400' above the Freeholder Director Joseph C. Irwin, who is chairman of There are no vacancies in The agency said the station was $4,988 paid beginning case work- MCAP's board of directors, said the board will make a thor- MCAP's present professional moving over "a trajectory close ers by the Welfare Board. ough study before commlting county funds to the project. staff, Mr. Taylor said. The agen- to the prescribed one." Such a Mr. Wells said MCAP's salaries In line with all anti-poverty programs on the local level, cy's $67,109 planning grant ex- 74,520-Case Jam description is not necessarily a are too high for inexperienced requests for aid must be backed up by a guarantee that 10 sign of- early trouble. Soviet.deep personnel. percent of the cost will be met by local cash and credits for (See MCAP, Page 3) space shots such as their moon service and facilities. probes are 'programmed to in- Two Quoted Mr. Irwin confirmed that he had sent a letter earlier clude in-flight course xorrections. The Dailily BRegister • reported Slows Jersey Courts yesterday both. Ernest W, this month advising the U. S. Office of Economic Oppor- Ask Estimate Tass said a special measuring that tunity that the freeholders endorsed the MCAP application, complex on Soviet: territory 1s Lass,, Welfare Board-, chairman 'By WILLIAM HENDERSON This, plus the fact Gov. Hughes Civil cases in the county dii and chairman of MCAP's finance but not officially pledging money. trict courts yet to be heard hav keeping track of the Venus 2 On Library TRENTON - A record break- refused to involve the judiciary flight. ".. committee, and -Freeholder Di- . the letter was addressed • to James G, Crowley, acting Ing backlog of 74,520 cases has in, the gubernatorial ..campaign reached 32.011, a 12 per Cent ii district director, at fJew York and said: v , During its flight, Venus.-! will rector Joseph, C. Irwin, MCAP delayed litigation in which, st»rf.ed last May has crease in a year. , • • board president and a Walfare "..... this is to confirm our endorsement ot Monmouth- CM |ob tmufU. The Register There are 4,492 • complain carry jOut an extensive space created some confusion, although research program",Tass said. The board- member, agreed that. on$ Community Action Program as the Monmouth County agen- learned.. the judges in the stale have pending in juvenile and. dimest cy responsible for the planning, pivgiumrnliiflinct iJovrdm^- telemetries measuring and scien- county agency should not/recruit t*siy''-.JBd«rdrv bt^itasties, last Th* urgent matter will be given worked long hours to expedite relations courts which. Is eighi its employees from the, st*ff of ating of economic opportunity grants in Monmouth. per cent more than last year. tific "equipment in the station is night authorized a local contrac- top priority by Gov. Richard J. the mounting case loads. switched on automatically in ac- another. ' "The Board of Freeholders is anticipating approval for Hughes when he returns home In some instances, the backlog Matrimonial cases which mui •providing local 'in kind' contributions required for continua- tor to Inspect the main library Nov. 24 .from his vacation in be settled, one way or th cordance with the flight program, Mr. Taylor, suggested that chimney and submit an estimate in the courts has jumped 23 per the agency said, and also on ra- tion of the proposal . , ." the letter said. ' cent compared to last year. other, in the Chancery divisio James Lindsey, director of the (See FUNDS, Page 3) on costs to repair it.