U.S. Fires Into Cambodia

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U.S. Fires Into Cambodia Dirtrfbutiw Weather nm. H%fc ieib dan la a* I** 27,025 fk lew tosffht la tow 4ft. OUt- ( Red Bank Area f fook. Tnuraday, fair and UHle Bank ReiUter, lac., 1866. milder. DIAL 741-0010 MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS PAGE ONE dkllr TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1966 7c PER COPY VOL; 88, NO. 217 •Ad il Addition*! tttillB* -Omcu. Two-House Legislature Seen Certain Choice of Convention By Wf IXIAM HENDERSON disadvantages of having a one-house body in this It could weaken and perhaps abolish the TRENTON — The State House will retain Its. state and the majority of our committee people patrfmage function. The present New Jersey Senate historical two-house legislative system. want no part of it." and' Assembly setup is responsible for dorens and^ The Register has learned that the state Con- The individual feelings of the committee dele- dozens of jobs ranging from $2,000 a year to $20,- stitutional Convention will vote strongly In favor of gates were revealed at several closed door caucuses. 000. This would particularly apply in local areas the bicameral, or Senate and Assembly, method of Several delegates gave the following reasons for where the legislators campaign. enacting laws. being opposed to the unicameral plan: — Sponsors of bills would have no recourse There are 21 legislators sitting as convention — Too costly. It would mean legislators would once they were introduced,«if the Nebraska system delegates. Among them are Sens. Richard R. Stout have to sit five days a week, like in Nebraska, only were followed. There, measures are given a read- (R-Monmouth 5th) and William Kelly (D-Hudson) state in the nation which has the one-house opera- ing and voted on five days later. co-chairmen of the convention's important commit- tion. tee on structure of the legislature. — It would open the door to deals, increase lob- The committee,:which.has been-holding hearings It would be difficult to^ind candidates who bying, and the single house would be too big at Rutgers. University, New Brunswick, on the feasi- could take time off from their law practices and The handful of advocates for the unicameral bility of a unicameral, or one-house legislature, will . business to campaign and attend daily sessions, if program declared there would be no buck-passing In report its decision on the issue to the 126 convention they. won. , ' one house and that enactment of laws would be- delegates May 19. — UnicameraUsm could be a threat to the tradi- Wtpedited. tional two-party system. In Nebraska, the candi- The committee has 16 members, and one of "With a one-house legislature we would have them told The Register: dates run without a Democratic or Republican "We have taken a private vote on> the merits and label. (See CONVENTION, Page 3) FIERY SPECTACLE — Flamei wero viiible from Long Branch •*» Qceanport y«»w- day «J worker! touched off a controlled bUn to ricHho lowlandl near Monmoufh Park of phragnvites and cattaiU bordering the Shrewsbury River watorthed- U.S. Fires Into Cambodia SAIGON <AP) - The United across the border on a battalion out 305 combat sorties in the American forces. Sihanouk and firing into Cambodia, but the dis- Itates tore away a thin veil of of th« U. S. 1st Infantry Divi- Sotith, while a three-week lull in his representatives have repeat- closure today wai the first.of- official secrecy from U. S. mili- sion. The "Big-Red One" was the ground war persisted. edly denied that the Viet Cong ficial acknowledgement. The spokesman said the decision to tary operations along the Cam- sweeping the South Vietnamese The air war against North Vie were using Cambodia as a sanc- shell the Viet Cong across the bodian frontier today by ac- side of the Cai Bac River in Nam tapered off to 35 missions tuary. frontier was made by the bat- knowledging for. the first time Tay. Ninh. Province, 75 miles yesterday. A sortie involvel s There have been repeated un- talion commander on the spot. the U. S. forces had fired across northwest of Saigon, long sus- strij<e Dy a sjng]e agains official reports of U. S. troops Criticism of Lotos the international'border. pected of headquartering the Viet a single target, while a mission Tie announcement.by the U. S. Cong's political arm, the Nation- usually involves several aircraft if he receives a proper request, ernttienT' League. leading to the By CHARLES A. JOHNSTON al Liberation Front. hitting their objective severs and would send the matter back Feb. M referendum'when voter commsiid in Saigon indirectly . FREEHOLD — A Grand Jury . Selie-Supplles to the incoming jury if neces- adopted maypr-coundl govern warned Cambodia's chief of times. A pilot was listed probe of Long Branch election state. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, The GIs have seized hundreds missing after he was seen para- City's Mayoralty petitions filed last December sary. ment to replace eouncil-managei that he can expect more action of tons of .Viet Cong supplies in chuting 10 miles northeast ol wound up yesterday in a pre- The judge was asked if h rule. against his territory- if he con- Vinh. A downed Navy pilot was sentment holding that current implied from the presentmenl An election for mayor and fivi the past nine day.! o* their sweep tinues to let the Viet Cong use reported rescued by helicoptei laws are, too cumbersome. It that the jury had discovered in- councilmen will be held nexi —Operation Birmingham—in the 1 it for attacks on American forces proposed a simpler, less re fractions' but chose to ignore Tuesday. ' jungled area.,It (s the largest yesterday Slate Is Quizzed atricted procedure. them because of a disapproval At issue is whether those in South Viet Nam. Communist cache taken in the The State Department declared The retiring January session ofsthe law. He replied: sRonslble for circulating' peti- A. U. S. spokesman said Amer- war. • • last December that U. S. com- LONG BRANCH - Three news- co-operation, the college and dty teturned no indictments and re- •li a Procedure' tions were truthful in feigning.af- ican artillerymen unleashed a BMs again Hew in from Guam manders in the field had been men quizzed the four mayoralty could coexist.. He said he was mained silent on whether ils in- "I do not, read anything iht fidavits that they personally Vvll heavy barrage Saturday to sil- today for the fifth raid on the authorized to enter or fire on candidates for almost two hours alarmed by "student drivers who quiry disclosed any actual vio- the presentment that is not nessed signing all of the signa- ence "very heavy" automatic area during the infantry opera- Cambodian territory if it was be- ast night and found areas of hare drive fast cars." lations of law. Instead it said: there. If there is dissatisfaction, tures gathered. weapons and mortar fire from tion. Other U. S. planes carried ing used by troops attacking core disagreement concerning Jacob Rand called the collage "... this Grand Jury found there is a procedure . ; . The presentment urges th?l Monmouth College, the mayor1! "a great asset tor thi;-communi- unnecessary hurdles over which "If I receive a proper request, anyone be allowed to witness role in the new government, an ty," noting that while West LoilJ citizens must leap to carry out I will review the niihutes and signature, requiring only, that thi plans for bringing the battleshi Branch and Ocean Township had their constitutional rights to cir- if I find there was evidence upon witness sign, his name ..next USS New Jersey to a permanenl to shoulder the tax burden im- culate petitions." which the Grand Jury might that of the petition signer. offshore mooring here. posed by the school's non-taxable have voted an indictment but dk tit Foes Gall Of f Trip Superior Court Judge Elvin R. Keuper. Asked Otherwise, the candidates eacl properties. Long Branch, through Simmill accepted the jury re- not, I will refer the matter t( The Grand Jury undertook its its business district, stood to the new Grand Jury." hearing at the. direction of Pw4- submitted that they had ampli port without' commerft. But he time to devote to the mayor benefit substantially from the told The Register later he wou)d Involved were petitions filed ecutor yinceit P.., Keuper whc office, asserted they had funded school's presence. He said that Sdly minuteit s by membett of the Betted Goy had , rtcWved,: !&&&»: th> To Picket White House their own campaigns or received by adequate police control, fra- Councilwomati tucy ' J: WHSK and froi»-" Bernard M. Duze an1 ATLANTIC HIGHLAND&-Vo,ters Against legislators might be too busy to see us while support from the "little people ternity houses and dormitories Sebastian P. Bracey. Urban Renewal y«stertay called off plansto they are working in Washington," she said. and said they had made no deal: could be restricted to properly Though she' supported th« picket the White House on Saturday. The congressman also recommended that and had not yet given thought zoned areas. Youth Is In change of government' move they were advised to cancel the Wash- letters calling for approval of his bill be sent. future patronage appointments. West End ington trip — in the planning; stage for more to New Jersey members of the bousing sub- Mrs. Wilson- was-critical of 'tac- : Asking the questions before Mr. Rand predicted that with- tics follqwed by the Setter Gov- than a month"—. by Rep. Burt Taltott of committee. crowd of about 150 In the Wes in the next few years the West ernment League in pushing, for California.
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