Apollo Starts Perilous 21H-Day Lunar Orbits at 10:19 A.M

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Apollo Starts Perilous 21H-Day Lunar Orbits at 10:19 A.M Ask Charter Change at Middletown Hearing SEE STORY BELOW Sunny and Mild Sunny and mild today. Clear THEWSX FINAL and cooler tonight. Fair and Red Bank, Freehold mild tomorrow. Long Branch 7 EDITION («!» Details, Pate 2* Monmouth County's Borne Newspaper for 90 Years VOL. 91, NO. 231 RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1969 32 PACES 10 CENTS ••••••••iii Englishtown Hit by Looting; Freehold Quiet ENGUSHTOWN — While after the windows were munity tonight in an effort their stores and merchandise tion yesterday at Jersey quiet returned to Freehold, broken and 40 watches were to find out what caused Mon- and went about repairing the Shore Medical Center, Nep- beset by racial turmoil Mon- taken from the Hamilton day night's window breaking damage caused when 140 tune. day night, violence erupted Pharmacy. Windows were de- spree and how to prevent fur- black youths went on a win- A white juvenile was ar- here for, the first time last stroyed in the Towne Shop, ther disorders. • dow-breaking spree, smashing rested at his home at 7:30 night. according to State Police. Police last night remained 34 windows in 25 stores here. p.m. yesterday and charged Tennent State Police report- They said the entire inci- on alert in case racial dis- The disorder lasted about 2>/$ with atrocious assault and ed four caroloads of Negro dent took only about 10 min- order ' should continue into hours. , battery in connection with males swung down Main St. utes and no injuries were re- the second night. There-were Fear of renewed outbreak Monday's • night's uprising, at 11:40 p.m. and the occu- ported. The investigation is no reported incidents. permeated the town. according to police. He was pants smashed windows in continuing. No arrests have A state of emergency and" Two black youths injured by In custody in the Juvenile De- three stores and looted two of been made. curfew were continued until a shotgun blast reportedly tention Center and was to them. In Freehold borough of- 6 a.m. today. fired by white youths about a have a preliminary hearing Gelber's Liquor Store was ficials will again meet with Merchants took extra pre- half-hour after the disorder this morning before Juvenile robbed of 20 bottles of liquor members of the black com- cautions yesterday to protect began remain in fair condi- [(FREEHOLD, Pg. 3, Col. 3), Apollo Starts Perilous 21h-Day Lunar Orbits At 10:19 a.m. EDT, the For 34 minutes, Apollo 10 one of the built-in safety fea- SPACE CENTER, Houston tions, starts a perilous 2%- THE FREEHOLD SCENE — Boarded up windows and broken glass aro remnant*' '. (AP) — Speeding toward the day lunar adventure intended moon won the celestial tug-of- was to be out of contact with tures of the mission. clutch of lunar gravity, the to clear the way for two Apol- war and Apollo 10 finally in the ground, Mission Control The 5 minute, 54-second of Monday nighf's window breaking spree by about 140 black youths in the down- Apolto 10 astronauts bore lo 11 astronauts to land on the grip of lunar gravity, in Houston will not know burst from the engine begin- town Area in Freehold. (Register Staff Photo) down on the moon today — the moon in July. whether the engine fired un- ning at 4:45 p.m. is to slow . passed through an invisible til the craft reappears around Apollo 10's speed to about 3,- ready to blast themselves in- Throughout the night, Air barrier 235,032 miles from to a circular orbit 69 miles Force Col, Thomas P. Staf- the edge of the moon. 700 miles and insert the craft above its cratered surface. ford and Navy Cmdrs. John earth and 18,339 miles from Stafford, Young and Cernan into an orbit swinging from The climactic moment W. Young and Eugene A. the moon. have the option to cancel ig- 69 to 196 miles high. came when the astronauts Cernan slept as their tiny Once across this barrier, nition if they detect anything About 4!4 hours later, after triggered their spaceship en- ship hurtled through a so- Apollo 10's speed increases wrong. In this case, or if the two circuits, a second engine Speakers for Change gine to steer Apollo 10 into called "twilight zone" in from about 2,000 to 5,700 engine fails, the spaceship^ ignition will refine the orbit its orbital path. which the gravitational influ- miles an hour as it sweeps would merely swing once to a 69-mile-high circle. The firing, behind the moon ence of earth and moon is around thhe backside of the around the back of the moon If their color television and out of range of earth sta- about equal. moon. and head back to earth — camera works as well as it has en route, the astronauts promise spectacular pictures arter of this alien noon. Apollo 8 pilots described It as dark, desolate and foreboding. MIDDLETOWN - No one presented, but all who spoke ward representation and resi- The most hazardous part loves the Township Commit- agreed that changes are nec- dents from other parts of the Urban Aid Bills Cleared essary. Not'one speaker ex- township preferring the tfouri- of the mission comes tomor- tee form of. government, it appeared at last night's pub- pressed himself as satisfied cil - manager plan witfc.a TRENTON (AP) — The The Senate concluded the In other major develop- on international flights, a $1 row when Stafford and Cer- ments: levy on domestic travel and a nan wiggle through a tunnel! lic' hearing by the Charter with the township government paid professional manager New Jersey Assembly has put bulk of its business last week as it is. and at-large representation. the finishing touches on a but is tentatively scheduled to —The Assembly Ignored a 50-cent charge on helicopter into the small lunar landing Commission in New Mon- $16.2 million urban aid pro- meet June 10, primarily to act plea from Hughes and post- rides in the metropolitan ship (LEM) attached to the: mouth School. Opinion on what should be Dr. Ernest C. Reock Jr., gram, capping the legislative on appointments submitted by poned until the fall action on area. The City of Newark nose of the command vessel. About 30 citizens showed up done seemed to break down the commission's consultant, record it will carry to the vot- Hughes. bills designed to strengthen would receive 80 per cent of They then pull away and to express their views on how into two main groups, with explained at the outset of the ers in the June 3 primary and The final bill in the urban the powers of the New York the proceeds and the rest fire themselves into an orbit the township's present gov- residents of the Bayshore fa- hearing that the commission next November's election. aid package would provide $2 Harbor Waterfront Commis- would go to Elizabeth. that twice will take them 9.3 ernment should be changed. voring a strong mayor-coun- can legally present any one [(See APOLLO, Pg. 3, Col, 3), The Assembly approved the million for incentive loans to sion in its fight against orga* —New Jersey's six state Many , differing ideas were cil form of government with of four categories of recom- remaining measure in the ur- poor businessmen. It passed nized crime. The lower house colleges would have addition- mendation Aug. 3: ban aid package yesterday 48-0. The other measures are scheduled a public hearing al control over their own —It can recommend the before adjourning for the a $12 million grant program for June 26, causing the Wa- purse strings under legisla- present form of government •ummer at 10:02 p.m. The ur- for the state's six largest cit- terfront Commission to label tion approved by a 42-8 ma- be retained, in which case its ban aid program to be fi- ies; a \1 million emergency the move "delaying tactics." jority in the lower chamber Red Bank School Board function ceases and no furth- nanced with a 10 cents-a-flfth aid program for other cities; —A measure imposing a tax and sent to Hughes. The bill, er action is taken. increase in the liquor tax and and a $216,000 area redevelop- on travelers at Newark Air- which needed 41 votes to pass, —It can recommend the other revenue measures is ment program that sponsors port cleared the Assembly is a compromise worked out present form of government now before Gov. Richard J. estimate would bring in $4 where it faces a possible veto. between the legislature, Hears Strife Reports be retained with specified Hughes. million in federal aid, The bill would place a $2 tax Hughes administration of- changes. The Township Com- ficials and college administra- RED BANK - The Board is conducting the inquiry, is- board's public meeting on mittee may or may not adopt tors. of Education, which met Mon- sued a terse two-scntenco Tuesday, May 13," tho state- the recommended changes, and the commission has no —The Assembly put in mo- day with school administra- statement. ment declares, "Further dis- tors, last night heard from "The Red Bank Board of cussion of future steps to be further function. Low Sewer Trunk Bids Total tion the mechanism for run- some students and teachers Education held separate taken will be held at a work- —It can recommend change ning a state lottery in antici- on the school controversy.
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