Authority Files Charges in Fertilizer Mishap Lyme Dlsesse That Town

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Authority Files Charges in Fertilizer Mishap Lyme Dlsesse That Town Rose ties hit record, delayed by darkness 1B Clouds Chance of showers. Highs in mid-80s Lows around 70. The Register Complete forecast/Pip ZA Vol. 108 No. 8 YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER...SINCE 1878 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1985 25 CENTS INSIDE SOS called: sneak squall SPORTS waiting hits boaters If The Register A squall snuck up on boaters yesterday afternoon, and within minutes, state Marine Police were flooded with rescue calls from hapless sailors. Whsa local apple grower* harvest the* The storm even managed to mess up a race sguttfa sjSttjs month, fte Fessnl on the Naveslnk River and send a boatload l Protection Agency will of clams back to their watery environs. IB Waihlngtan, D.C., to A number of boats capsized during the 15- to ban damhwMe, a minute storm, but with the exception of a w used to ripen applet. few, the boats' own crews were able to right Indsstry representatives My that them, police said. - darataodde I* hi ose In almost every The boat of a 12-year-old girl sailing alone osmtncrcial orenara in tin noriaetH. in the Naveslnk capsized. The girl, Susan MoM tkt apples aold localr* have bs«n Putsch of Port Monmouth, was pulled from To The Victor treated with the chemical safe aadsr the the water by Marine Police officers Kevin name of Alar by Unlroyal Inc. Guy and Gerard McGrath. U.S. Open mens singles champion McGrath said Pulsch was not drowning Ivan Lendl gazes at his trophy as -# it b other , h Geoafr when police rescued her. Rather, she was loser John McEnroe puts his head en do act kaow if their apple* wearing a Ufejacket and clinging to her down during award ceremonies treated with Ahw which If overturned boat. yesterday at the National Tennis 4 "highly cercteogeote" la lest Pulsh was one of many sailors out for a Center where Lendl prevailed, 7-6, according to Albert J. Haier, a race with boaters from the River Rat Boat 6-3.6-4. Club. Several racers capsized, and all but (or the EPA. Pulsch were able to right themselves. II agency KPA g Like the other squall victims, Pulsch was hearing* later this month on not injured, McGrath said. LOCAL In fact, the only casualty was a boat full | UN substance U used to p of clams that were lost when a clamming Summer lives Worm ripeahM of the apple* to that boat capsized, he said. !%«•*<»« eatls done at ose Ume, to THS nmanmucm. o. TOWWO A passing boatman helped right the clam No matter that fall's Just around the esepen the eolor of red apples and to PtCKIN TIM ~ Dave Barclay, owrw/opeeatof of Eastman Orchards In Cote corner, Oceanoort kept summer alive vessel and bail out the water, but the clams NMm fnajpoCS wHG yQwW were irretrievable, McGrath said. for Li See BOATERS, Page 2A < one more weekend yesterday by having Its Summer's End Festival, complete with sottball. bocce, Ice cream and band music. 3A Authority files charges in fertilizer mishap Lyme dlsesse that town. D'AIessandro, David Gilbert, landscaping need for a civil suit." Lyme disease was discovered only a The authority Is charging the four crew foreman, and two center employees, The esimated cost to the authority in few years ago. but now It la becoming The Register individuals, including Charles D'AIessandro, Kelvin Daniels and John Johnston, are to overtime pay for MUA workers, loss of a dangerous affliction for people who MARLBORO - The Marlboro Township the center's president, with criminal mis- appear In municipal court Sept. 23 at 2 p.m., water, and use of equipment to correct last live in rural. Jersey Shore Medical Municipal Utilities Authority Friday filed chief, and drawing water from a hydrant when all, except Gilbert, are also scheduled month's mishap is between 17,000 and Center thinks the situation is such that charges In municipal court against four without approval, according to Rocbelle to face similar charges filed Wednesday by 110,000, Werslnger said. It Is holding a seminar on It Thursday. employees of D'AIessandro Garden Center, Greensberg, deputy municipal court clerk. the township and the township's Fire Alayne M. Shepler. township adminis- Pine Brook, for booking up to a fire hydrant The charges were filed on behalf of the Prevention Bureau. trator, said calculations are still being made H Aug. 10. authority by its attorney, Peter Werslnger, Wersinger said if the authority does not for the township's reimbursement in police A landscaper for the center had tapped who said the criminal mischief charge has get reimbursed, "It will consider a civil overtime pay and clerical assistance STATE Into a hydrant In the unfinished Hamptons's a maximum penalty of fl.OOO or six months suit." development, causing between 100 and 800 Imprisonment, as well as an order for However, Werslnger said "my under- Messages left for D'AIessandro at his Conglomerate cons gallons of toxic liquid fertilizer to be restitution. For unapproved drawing of standing Is that he (D'AIessandro) has told office were not returned. pumped into the public drinking water lines water there la a $500 fine for the first the township that he is willing to reimburse. No injuries have been reported in connec- Residents of state prisons turn their and setting off a panic among residents of offense, he said. If be la willing to do that, there may be no tion with the fertilizer-dumping Incident. confinment Into a $2.5 million business, producing everything from socks to soap. 4A Township kids Co-ed sports? 'fingerpainting' Hlgh-achool students yeam to compete In sports with members of the opposite sex, gaining notoriety and high praise from many. M for safety's sake NATION •r mwm MUCMUM The Register Investigation MIDDLETOWN - The kids didn't seem to mind - Federal Investigators say the engine It was just like flngerpalntlng. The only difference was of Midwest Express Airline DC-9 may the police got to keep the pictures. hold the answer to why the jet From toddlers to teens, children lined up "for crashed rght after takeoff, killing all safety's sake" at a booth outside Middletown Police aboard. Headquarters yesterday to have their fingerprints taken for police files. M Hie fingerprint booth was one of many at a bazaar sponsored by the Mlddletown chapter of the Women's American Organization for Rehabilitation Through WORLD Training (ORT), and It was one of the busiest. Dozens of youngsters crowded around the booth and British crusader waited their turn to press their hands on an inkpad and make copies of their prints for police. Second copies A London housewife battles against were made If parents requested them. Adults dished Britain's national health plan, which out generous blobs of special hand-cleaning goop and dispenses birth control pills freely as paper towels. part of the program. Few of the children knew that the game was for THE REGISTER/CAROLINE E. COUIQ later — for when, as high school youths, some might 11A FOR SAFETY'S SAKE - Morgan Halton, 3, of station as part of a service offered by the Just for See FINGERPRINTS, Peg* 2A Middletown, gets his fingerprints taken outside the police Toddlers program'. LIFESTYLE Autumn arrives Fall is here to further add to the Survivors of MI As will never forget beauty of Monmouth county, and to provide added incentive for explorers and photographers to get to know the With Judy Lamp, the wife of a Vietnam veteran area. >| iTErTUlK 8UKOHM who never returned home, Engkilterra read off 63 The Register names representing the 63 missing soldiers from 10A HOLMDEL — Some 80 family members and New Jersey. However, the number was just supporters of missing Vietnam war veterans were symbolic; the names he read were from all over the asked not to forget their loved ones in Indochina, and country. work ever harder to have them returned "dead or In his speech, Engkilterra charged that the alive." missing Americans "suffer total abandonment and INDEX The somber audience at St. Benedict R.C. Church inhumanity." He said the Vietnamese are very heard what they may have already known, that 1,464 sensitive to American public opinion, and would Americans who were sent to Vietnam have never make an effort to account for the missing if the issue been accounted for. were perceived to be important to Americans. BRIDGE M Speaking at an Interdenominational service last But domestic apathy, he said, "extends tortures BUSINESS M night, Thomas Engkilterra, the state coordinator of into decades." Engkilterra noted that the movement CLASSIFIED M National League of Families of American Prisoners to account for missing Vietnam veterans, which COMICS N and Mlasir" in Southeast Asia, urged his listeners to started years before the war ended in 1973, is now CROSSWORD 7i work for the day when they can say, "We brought in its 20th year. ENTERTAINMENT 71 home what Is oars — dead or alive — but we brought "We must let our voice* be heard by the them home." HOROSCOPE 11A THE REGISTER/ED BRETT Vietnamese," be said. "They must be told it is going Llrcai Ik.*..— lew REMEMBERING - Bill Windslow, Robert Sahs, and John After his keynote speech, he noted that refugees to cost them dearly. We Americans have more power Johnson, aii ol Aoofdeen, tc&r. a candle fighting caiwmcny Th° from Vietnam have claimed that as many as 300 than we know. We must bring them to their knees." OBITUARIES M living American prisoners remain -in their country. OPINION 7A three men are Vietnam veterans. SM CHURCH SERVICE, Paje 2A SPORTS II TELEVISION 71 Jobs! Jobs! Jobs! Action Front Page Reader* Floweri • Fruit Baskets • Gifts Armstrong Anything Goei Sale RNs, GNs, LPN's, Aides.
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