Kissinger Andtho \Ot to Meet Today
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r Weekend Enjoyment Seepages 17-20 The Weather FINAL Mostly sunny with gradual Keif Hank, Freehold warming trend today and to- l-ong Branch morrow. Rain likely Sunday EDITION Monmouth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper 56 PAGES VGL95 NO. 102 ^ RED BANK, N.J. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1972 TEN CENTS wwawiBiwiiiiiiiiituiiiiiupuiiiniiiiiiiiiiMiiiiHiwiiiinwaHHiiiHinnHiiiiBiiimiiiiiiiiiHiiuHiii inHiiniHiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniMiniiiiiiiimiirnmnimiiHU Kissinger andTho \ot to Meet Today PARIS (AP) -North Viet- informed in due course when tlie North Vietnamese state- longest meeting Thursday nam indicated there would be the next meeting takes ment. since the current round of se- no meeting today between place." The French news agency, cret peace negotiations be- Presidential adviser Henry A, Agence France Presse, citing gan. The White House said the Kissinger and Hanoi negotia- The spokesman declined to "reliable sources," said the talks will resume but that it tor Le Due Tho. give a reason for the inter- talks had run into "serious didn't know when. A North Vietnamese delega- ruption in the secret negotia- difficulties," but there was no The American and tho tion spokesman told news- tions. U.S. delegation spokes- confirmation of this report North Vietnamese negotiators men: "There will probably be man David Ijambertson said from either side. met for six hours on the no meeting today. You will be he could make no comment on Kissinger and Tho held their cease-fire agreement they drafted last month, but kept to their agreed news blackout on the subjects under dis- cussion. It was the fourth straight Daily Lottery Seen day of talks in a suburban vil- la 15 miles southwest of Paris. On Monday they met for 554 hours, on Tuesday for 4% and on Wednesday for 3^. A Crime Fight Aid The two delegations lunched together, and Kissinger and ' . Register Staff Photo New Jersey began selling tickets. The initial response Still, state lotteries failed to Tho emerged several times TESTING THE LIGHTS ^- The Christmas lights throughout Red Bank shopping area will be turned on daily lottery tickets today, be- was good, but Sweepstakes of- make an appreciable dent in into the walled garden, walk- at 4 p.m. today to herald start of the holiday shopping season. Lights were turned on briefly Wednes- coming the first of six North- ficials soon found that the sys- the take of the numbers ing up and down in animated day for testing. Throwing the switch for test was seven-year-old John O'Hern, being held by his dad. eastern states with lotteries to tem needed constant revision game. and apparently friendly con- Red Bank Mayor Daniel J. O'Hern. Watching testing islrwin.Vogel of Red Bank Retail Trade Board, take on their major com- and special drawings to spark Edward F. Harrington, versation. which pays a portion of the Christmas lights cost. The photographic montage was done by Don Lordi, petition, organized crime, in a renewed public interest. In head of the Justice Depart- Gestures Register chief photographer. dollar-to-dollar combat. each instance, after the first ment's organized Crime They punctuated their re- For the first time Since the several drawings, ticket sales Strike Force In New England, marks with sweeping gestures modern public lottery began again began to decline. said the lottery Caused "a and at one point Tho grasped in New Hampshire in 1964, lot- S More States marked fall-off in the num- Kissinger's arm in a friendly ure's Makeup in '74 tery officials hope to make New York climbed on the bers" when it began In Mas- manner. ' • • .' their system competitive with lottery, bandwagon in 1967. sachusetts last April, "but Tho two came to the garden, the illegal numbers racket. Within the past ,two years, since that time 1 don't sec any gate alter lunch and allowed, The first of New Jersey's Pennsylvania,, New Jersey, decline. themselves to be photograph- daily drawings will be on Connecticut and Massachu- Drawing a Day ed together. Photographers Is Due for a Drastic Shakeup Wednesday and daily lotteries setts joined the ranks. "It would appear to me shouted for them to pose should be in operation In the As the competition between that, for the lottery to have shaking hands, but they ig: ByBENVANVLIET other five states by next states grew RttKer, new Wtats any substantial Impact on the nored trio request. • • spring. The main objective for and exotic prizes were added. illegal number business, you Kissinger, as usual, left first » TttENTON — New Jersey's the states is to raise revenues, Semiannual drawings be- would need a drawing overy after the meeting and droyip Apportionment Commission but the motive is even more came monthly, bJweeoWy and day," he said. "A drawing hack to the U.S. Embassy Jo has quietly begun the task of basic. weekly drawihgs, Ticket only once a week stimulates report to President Nixon. trying to redraw legislative Cov, William T. Cahill of prices were cut to 50 cents the bettor to deal with his Tho, as usual, arrived first , districts for next year's elec- New Jersey said his state - - and top prizes varied from $1 bookmaker the other six days and left last. The villa Is tions which more closely meet in addition to continuing its million cash to $50,000 a year a week." owned by the French Commu- the constitutional concepts of weekly lottery which even- for life. Tickets for the dally draw- nist party. • • one-man, one-vote. tually culminates in a H mil- Officials say the weekly lot- ings went on sale today at li- Earlier In the day; South The present 120-member lion drawing — will offer a 26- tery has proven the most pop- censed distribution centers Vietnamese President Nguyen legislature was redistricted in to-l chance of winning on the ular because lower ticket around the state. All ticket Van Tliicu's security adviser, 1971 using the 1970 census fig- daily tickets. prices and weekly payoffs are agents who nave been handling Nguyen Phu Due* arrived ures. Best of All Odds more attractive to the bettor. Sec Lottery, page 2 from Saigon. i That plan, however, was "We know of no other lot- challenged by the American tery — legal or illegal — now Civil Liberties Union, and the in existence that can match state Supreme Court ruled in those odds," he said, "Even if May that the plan of the hi- , you lose, your money is going Rahway Prison Quiet partisan, commission needed a for a good purpose, rather drastic overhaul to meet the than an evil purpose." one-man, one-vote principle. There is yet another, reason The court also ruled that Joseph Azzollna Eugene J. Bedell Joseph E. Robertson for the daily drawings: the the commission is to dis- On Riot Anniversary hopes of state officials to sus- regard county lines in redraw- mouth County, which is a dis- don't see how every senator preserving the county's sena- tain the public's interest in KAIIWAY (AI>) - Ralway mands for better prison condi- and Is expected to be voted on ing the districts, and that trict within its boundaries, can be protected." tors. lotteries. State Prison was quiet yes- tions, unbiased guards and next week. each district is to be repre- needs an additional 60,000 Sen. Bateman said that The Republican and Demo- New Hampshire's early ex- terday, unlike a year ago faster parole board actlnn. Meanwhile, other changes sented by only one senator, people to become the ideal since Monmoulh County's cratic members of the com- perience with its .Sweepstakes when 5IM) inmates took six hos- Thursday, though, as the are on paper but often fall to and by two assemblymen. district. population justifies close to mission have been meeting provided some indication of tages and seized control of the prisoners prepared far their materialize when it comes to separately for several weeks, The result is that the entire Under the court's ruling it three senators, there probably what would happen after the institution for U hours. Thanksgiving meal; Warden putting them into practice. legislature must run for elec- would be a new district com- each drafting their version of newness of the lottery faded. U. Samuel Vukcevlch, one of The prisoners demanded appears certain that the coun- reapportionment plan.s. On Thanksgiving Day 1971, tion In November under a new ty will be combined with one bined with Mong^uth, but one The Granite State began the prisoners were In the those taken hostage, toured that newsmen be allowed to apportionment plan. which wouiu be pre- On Wednesday, the full with a schedule of several the prison and reported "It visit state prisons and Inter- or more neighboring counties (See Legislature's, page 2) midst of their takeover, which Monmooth's Senators in a new district. dominately Monmoulh, thus drawings a year and sold f'i was sparked by general de- was quiet." view inmates, but us the riot Under the current plan, The only serious Injury dur- anniversary grew near, news- many of the larger'legislative Whether the county will lose ing the uprising occurred men were told their stories districts have more than one a senator or assemblyman, or when Vukcevich was stabbed may spark a recurrence and and as many as five senators. gain one, depends entirely on in the back, lie has since been permission was denied. Monmouth County has three how the apportionment com- on sick leave and made tho Also, a negotiations com- senators, one of whom was mission draws the new dis- tour to commemorate the riot mittee appointed by'tiov. Wil- added in the 1971 apportion- trict lines.