llwehtiew Grant Shifted To Red Bank RED BANK - The River- The successful shift of funds Riverview has been given funds, Mr. DeRidder said, the approval of the state Board of viously, Mr. DeRidder and a pital's medical ataff hai fa- were relinquished and financial vtew Hospital Board of Gov- was announced yesterday by until June 30, 1964, to award governors must raise between Control. number of the governors had vored expansion at Red Bank. pledges returned to those doc- ernors has received a pledge of J. Raymond DeRidder, presi- construction contracts, Mr. De- fl'A minion and $2 million by According to Mr. DeRidder, advocated construction of a The doctors were opposed to tors who had tupported the $750,000 in state aid for con- dent of the Board of Govern- Ridder said. The same dead- public subscription. a special committee* of the satellite hospital and held that what they* called the decentral- governors' plan. struction of a 16M>ed hospital ors. / Board of Governors was ap- local expansion was unfeasi- line applied to the Middletown News of the transfer of ization and duplication of fa- At the same time, Mr. De- wing. Mr. DeRidder also announced building plan. pointed June 26 and has been ble because of lack of space. funds was received Wednes- cilities. Ridder said, application wai The money is the same Hill- the beginning of negotiations The Board of Governors negotiating the shift of funds The cost of acquiring the block day from Commissioner Lloyd On May 22 the Board of made for the transfer of the Burton Act grant previously for the acquisition of two acres estimates the proposed wing since then. between Union and Front Sts. Governors conceded the impos- Hill-Burton grant. W. McCorkle of the state De- committed for construction of of property near the hospital will cost between $3 million The governors' action fol- would have been prohibitive, sibility of building at Middle- The committee which "under- > 120-bed hospital annex at to make the addition of a wing and J3'/i million. To take ad- partment of Institutions and lowed the May 22 abandonment they said. town without the support of took negotiations was headed From the beginning, the hos- Middletown, possible. vantage of the Hill-Burton Agencies who announced the of the Middletown plan. Pre- the staff. The Hill-Burton funds (See RrVERVtEW, Page 2) Weather Distribution 7 a. m. temperature H. Sun- ay, hot and humid today, tomor- BED BANK Today row and - Sunday. High in the Mi bland, in the Mi along the 21,200 c«ast Fair and humid tonight, ) Independent Daily f taw in the upper Ms. Set weath- er, page 2. DIAL 741-0010 muej amr. Xraftir throuih man. sacond Clan Posugt VOL 86, NO. 21 tlit U Rrt Bum u4 at Additional VUillng Ofllcei. RED BANK, N. J., FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1963 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE JFK Seeks Pact Support By HARRY KELLY make France an independent nu- gotlations might collapse under and that this would delay—If not resentative W. Averell Harriman; clear power. Soviet demands that the treaty be make impossible — a test ban ac- Britain's science minister. Lord WASHINGTON (AP)-President Red China, striving to become tied in with a nonaggression pact cord. Hailsham, and Gromyko, Kennedy goes before the nation a nuclear power itself as it moves between the North Atlantic Treaty While the delegations argued, Some 100 newsmen and photog- tonight to whip up support for a farther away from the Soviet Un- Organization and its Communist presumably over the nonaggres- raphers, called in to witness the nuclear test ban treaty dramati ion in the world Communist align- counterpart, the Warsaw Pact. sion issue, the initialing was held ceremonies, were told by Gromy- cally initialed Thursday in Mos- ment, denounced the agreement in The American and British dele- up for four hours. But finally the ko: "Let us consider this as basis cow and heralded as a major advance. gations opposed the Soviet de- partial ban agreement, without for further steps." break in the cold war. Opposed Demand mand. They insisted they would the nonaggression link, was ini- "A very important step for- The presidential message at 7 Right up to the time of the need the consent of all 15 NATO tialed in a simple ceremony in ward," said Harriman, and Hall- p.m Eastern Daylight Time on ra Initialing, there were fears the ne- nations for a nonaggression pact Spirldonovka Palace by U.S. rep- (See SUPPORT. Page 2) dio and television will be part of an administration campaign to convince critics the pact—ending Related Story, Page 2 May Ask Tighter Laws testing in outer space, in the at- TRENTON (AP)-A Senate In- The committee concluded pub- jpr-*•—<*•"• mosphere and under water — wil lie hearings into the expense^ ac- not endanger U.S. security vestigating committee may ask INITIAL NUCLEAR TREATY —This was the scene at the table after the United tighter horse racing laws count yesterday. Slate Treasurer Two Thirds Vote when it closes the books on a con- John A. Kervick and two track States, Britain and the Soviet Union initi aled a treaty in Moscow banning nuclear To become effective the U.S. troversial $2.4 million racetrack operators were the chief witness- weapons tests in the air, outer space and under water. At left it U. S. Undersecre- Soviet and British agreement expense account. es. Much ol the questioning cen- , - ,, ... H LJ . .,ii ii <- i t . » i , must °e ratified by a two-thirds Sen. Wayne Dumont, R-Warren, tered around why the tracks tary of State W. Averell Harriman with th« U. 5. delegation, .At right is Soviet vote of the Senate, and the meas- of the committee, failed to keep separate accounts ure of public support for the chairman a meeting with the for the special meet as required Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko with Russian delegation. British delegation head- treaty may tip the scales there. scheduled State Racing Commission for Aug. by law. ad by Science Minister Lord Hailiham Is rn foraground, back to camera. The agreement climaxes years The Racing Commission has al- I-AP Wirephoto) of on-and-off negotiations — splln tered at times by the thunder o He mentioned as possible rec- ready trimmed $321,401 from the nuclear tests — almost as old as ommendations an annual audit of expense list. Dumont said the nuclear age itself. the track's books by an Independ- thinks (20,000 to {50,000 more could be cut legitimately. The White House declared that ent accounting firm and a law the President was gratified by the limiting the kind of outside enter- "But the final decision," 1,000 Die in Quake prises which tracks may operate. agreement in which the three said, "will be up to the Racing BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) Skopje sent out urgent calls Fire brigades from nearby powers also affirmed their deter- Dumont said the committee also Commission." — A catastrophic earthquake I for medical aid, doctors and towns near the Macedonia capi mination to strive for a complete would urge the Racing Commis- Dumont said-the Garden State •truck Skopje, ancient capital of medications. tal raced to the quake scene. test ban and Implied they-will sion to cut deeper into the $2.4 Racing Association has several Yugoslav Macedonia, today and Rescue team* from nearby Blood donors all over the coun- give no nuclear aid to nations million expense list claimed by outside holdings, including the Yugoslav News Agency towns were dispatched to Skopje. try were called upon to report that will not go along with the Monmouth Park and Garden State Cherry Hill Inn In Camden. Tanjug said more than 1,00* per- Classrooms at school! in the to blood banks immediately. pact. tracks for running a special 30- said the Monmouth Park Jockey sona may have been tailed. nearby towns of Pristine, Urc- Their blood was to be flown to The three foreign ministers- Senator Dumont. day season last year. (See LAWS, Page 2) Amory L. HaskcH Tanjug said the New Macedo- sevac and Kosovaska Mitrovica Skopje. American Secretary of State De«n nia Hotel, packed with guests, were turned into emergency hos- Yugoslav Premier Petar Stam- Rusk, Britain's Lord Horn* and was leveled and most of the pital wards to receive the In- bolic flew to Skopje early today the Soviet Union's Andrei A. Gro- guests were killed. jtsred from Skopje. ' together with Finance Minister myko—will sign the treaty in Mos- The agfrncy said damage in Thirty doctors with several Kiro Cligorov and Gen. Cojk cow in "the near future," a com' Cites County Health Unit Benefits munique the city of 200,000 people was ambulances were rushed from Nlkolic, head of the Yugosla' By CHARLES A. JOHNSTON on several varying bases with ties are participants, It pro rate. tors' services, contributions to Immediate congressional rear "without estimate." Pristina. Army's Medical Department. municipalities for services, costs among the 14 on a per hospitals, first 'aid squads, and tion to the agreement was gener- FREEHOLD - Is It, time fo The entire province of Mace- capita basis. in one case, a stipend to a local ally favorable and the adminis- Monmouth County to consider Cape May County pioneered in donia, southeast of Belgrade, was health board president. tration is confident it can win the creation of a county Health De- utilizing the laws three years ago. Other cost sharing plant would mobilized for relief work. Refu- Taxpayers of the same 53 towns Senate's approval. partment? Fourteen of'it's 16 municipalities allow a pro rata assessment on gees were being moved to sum- also paid out $393,711 for health Spade Work Or can the fastest growing agreed to a plan whereby the relative real estate assessments mer villas and other buildings, services in public schools.
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