Boards Organize for 1973-74 Williams Says Impoundment Draws Mail

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Boards Organize for 1973-74 Williams Says Impoundment Draws Mail Boards Organize for 1973-74 SEE STORIES PAGES 2,3 and4 The Weather Partly cloudy with chance FINAL of rain or snow late today or Red Bank, Freehold f tonight. Tomorrow, partly cloudy. Long Brattch / EDITION REGISTER 18 PAGES Monmoutli County's Outstanding Home Newspaper VOL 95 NO. 162 RED BANK, N.J. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20,1973 TEN CENTS Williams Says Impoundment Draws Mail By The Associated Press of mail on one issue has never "mail is on both sides of the know the effects of revenue ence to such programs, to- few that come within the ju- been so broad." issue." sharing and we don't have gether with its ever more risdiction of the Labor and A mountain of mail from "Many have written in sup- legislation that the adminis- frequent resort to the practice Public Welfare Committee New Jersey arrives each day Williams, a Democrat, feels port of the President's posi- tration has promised on 'spe- of impounding funds allocated alone." at the Washington office of the heavy volume of mail may tion," an office spokesman cial revenue sharing,' or mon- by Congress, places the future Williams' staff is sorting U.S. Sen. Harrison A. Wil- stem in part from "the Presi- said. "Many are concerned ey specifically earmarked for of many of these programs in mail by topics and has several liams Jr., protesting Presi- dent's own admonition to 'let that reductions, impound- education, manpower training peril," Williams contends. bundles in each category re- dent Nixon's proposals for in- your members of Congress ments and proposed budget programs and the like." lating to specific proposals for pounding federal aid from a know how you [eel' about the cuts will lead to reductions in • Williams is chairman of the "We find, for example, in cutting federal aid to housing, series of domestic programs. administration's budget. I've education, health, trans- Senate's Committee on Labor the new budget proposals that health, education, libraries, only received 78 letters in sup- "I've never seen anything portation, and social pro- and Public Welfare which is the President intends to aban- manpower training and other port of the President's pol- grams affecting the aged and directly involved with programs don entirely the Hill-Burton employment projects. The like this," said an aide, shuffl- icies." ing through 3,000 new letters the poor." undergoing scrutiny by the Of- hospital construction pro- most recent suggestion to yesterday. "Nurses, farmers, While Williams' mail is run- Case's office added, "It's fice of Management and gram, the Community Mental gradually eliminate federal college presidents, students, ning overwhelmingly against, difficult to judge at this time Budget (OMB). Health Centers program, and farm subsidy payments has the aged and jobless are tak- the office of U.S. Sen. Clifford which way the argument is "The Administration's in- the Emergency Employment prompted dozens of fanners ing pen in hand. The spectrum P. Case, Republican said that going to go. We still don't creasing hostility or indiffer- program — to name just a to write. Say Reds Pour Arms Into Laos WASHINGTON (AP) - troops into the Laotian supply Vietnam. APWIrtptioto Despite the Vietnam cease- trail in recent weeks. Althotight the Vietnam HE GETS MAU. — Sen. Harrison Williams. D- fire, U.S. intelligence sources There is no available evi- cease-fire does not cover N.J., looks over mail he has received from New report, the North Vietnamese dence whether any of this has fighting in Laos, U.S. peace Jersey residents on President Nixon's impound- have poured hundreds of crossed into South Vietnam, negotiator Henry A. Kissinger ment of funds. tanks and thousands of fresh but military sources said the . has said the agreement in- movements make no sense un- cludes "a flat prohibition" less most of this materiel and against use of Laos and Cam- men are bound for there even- bodia for infiltration into tually. South Vietnam. Joyful Homebound The Jan. 27 cease-fire About the time the agree- agreement limits resupply ment was completed! Kissinger of Communist or government said he expected the 145,000 troops inside South Vietnam North Vietnamese troops re- to replacement of damaged, maining in South Vietnam to destroyed or worn-out equip- dwindle gradually. POWs Have Frolic ment on a one-for-one basis. Kissinger said then "that CLARK AIR BASE, Philip- Miss., flew home yesterday to more — roamed from class- According to intelligence problem will be taken care AP Wlrtphdt pines (AP) - In unrestrained be with his ailing father. room to classroom for an reports, the North Vietnamese of" by the ban on infiltration AFTER THE MEETING — President Nixon gestures as he talks with public joy at being free, So far, 163 American mili- hour. have sent more than 250 of reinforcements and re- AFL-CIO president George Meany yesterday after the two met for almost American prisoners of war tary and civilian prisoners "Wow! That's my first in tanks, many powerful 122mm placements, on military an hour at Miami Beach. Nixon said they discussed a number of points of frolicked with more than 1,000 have been released in North five years," said Capt. Her- and 130mm guns, about 50 ar- movements across the DMZ mutual interest. teen-agers today, and then 18 and South Vietnam, leaving bert B. Ringsdorf, 33, of Elba, mored personnel carriers and and on "Foreign forces" in of them flew out of Clark Air 432 to*be returned, according Ala., slapping his hand to his about 1,31)0 tons of supplies Laos and Cambodia. Ba'se for the United States. to lists supplied by the North head after a kiss from Debbie into Southern Laos since early U.S. officials have hoped for The big C141 hospital plane Vietnamese. Hanoi is ex- Henry, 16, of Arlington, Va. this month. some North Vietnamese with- was due at Travis Air Force pected to free another large Lt. Cmdr. Joseph C. Plumb These sources also esti- drawals in time, although this Nixon, Meany Talk Base in California about 5 group early next week. Jr., 32, from Gary, Ind., was mated that about 15,000 North is not required under the pact. p.m. EST. Visit High School embraced by teen-agers after Vietnamese troops have There is nothing in the One of the 20 Americans re- A few hours before their de- he said: "The biggest change moved into Southern Laos agreement that would penal- leased Sunday by Hanoi was parture today, a dozen of the I see is that the girls are pret- since the cease-fire. In- ize any of the parties for fail- . left behind. He was Capt. Jo- Air Force and Navy fliers vis- tier now than when I went in telligence analysts say about ing to carry out its terms. An ited Clark Air Base's Wagner six years ago." half are headed for the region Tariff Compromise seph Crecca Jr., 32, of East international commission set Orange, N.J., who has ma- High School. Laughing and The men looked rested after near Saigon, some into the up to suprvise compliance has laria. But doctors said his hugging the teen-agers who two days at the base hospital. South Vietnamese Central ' no enforcement powers. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) propose. But Meany said Nix- Abel said of Nixon's current condition was not serious and ^asked questions about their Smiling and Trim Highlands, and others into the More than three weeks af- — President Nixon and labor on's approach so far was stance on foreign trade. he would be Flown home later long imprisonment and de- "I thought they would look area below the demilitarized ter the cease-fire, fighting chief George Meany appear to "very practical." "He just talked In general- in the week. , manded their autographs, the more beat up, you know, tor- zone. still goes on inside South Viet- be moving toward a com- Nixon, who devalued the ities all around the barn," former POWs - all of them tured and things like that," Meanwhile, a single motor- nam, and the international promise on protectionist legis- dollar 10 per cent last week as The 20th man, Lt. James W. lation aimed at reversing the Abel said of Nixon's talk yes- Bailey, 30, of Kosciusko, imprisoned for five years or said Carlene Beck, 15, from fuel pipeline which North commission has had little, if a first step, reportedly told terday. Fort Walton Beach, Fla., as Vietnamese Army engineers any , measurable effect on massive U.S. deficit in foreign the labor leaders he would ask the men passed her. They laid across the DMZ last curbing it. trade. Congress for an array of op- were smiling and trim in their spring to support a tank-led U.S. skeptics question After a 40-minute visit from tions to bargain on a nation- Kissinger uniforms. invasion is reported under- whether the commission will Nixon yesterday, most AFL- by-nation basis, erecting bar- Judge Convicted, Cmdr. Plumb told one ninth going expansion with a second be any more effective in deal- CIO leaders reserved Judg- riers to imports from nations Is on Way grade class: "We've seen pipeline to increase the flow ing with infiltration of troops ment until they see what leg- that refuse to lower their enough old folks in the last six of oil and gas from North and weapons. islation the White House will trade walls to American prod- Plans Court Fight years. We really wanted to ucts. Back to U.S. meet with the young people, "I think the whole idea .has TOKYO (AP) - Henry A.
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