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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 1

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Asbury Park Pressi
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Asbury Park, New Jersey
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1
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U.S. Wtethtrmon Says: Variably cloud and quit worm today. High 85 to 90. Partly cloudy tonight and to Details, Pag 2. 3Iass Murderers Baffle Doctors; Page 43 0- 4 K-f Nf DISTRIBUTION 62,705 i I Ml 1 VOIUMI LXXXVIII PRICE TWENTY CENTS NO.

7 ASBURY PARK, SUNDAY, AUGUST 7, 1966 FuhUtbt unily aa Scot Tnm rim Plus, Astwrr rut. ciw pou pud Ajburr Pr. MJ. mi MJ. a a jo DonnaDeRier Buried, Dogs Hunt Slayer Police Quiz Thousands, Some Clues Developed WALL TOWNSHIP Nineteen-year-old Donna The Press Oelieves Marchers Are More Concerned With Attacking the United States Than With Mounting a Real Peace Drive Most of the demonstrations against the war in Vietnam fail to achieve their ostensible goal because they are inspired by hostility to the United States or are the product of sincere but fuzzy thinking.

Else the demonstrations would be directed in the cause of peace itself and not exclusively against the United States. It is generally conceded that the war in Vietnam is unpopular. For this the Administration must assume responsibility for its failure to clarify its objectives and convince public opinion of their justice. But while this explains the unpopularity of the Vietnamese war it does not explain the erratic attitude of so many of the proponents of peace who delight in berating the United States as a warmonger while blandly ignoring the territorial ambitions of those who have ignited one brush fire war after another. Se PRESS BELIEVES Page 14 0 'Up-, tj -Vt? rr i I 1 I I I mm De Rier was buried yesterday as police continued their hunt for her killer.

About 100 relatives and friends attended privaU services at the Browning-Forshay Funeral Home, Map of central Asbury Park shows location of the three sites recommended by the state Department of Education for the proposed middle school and subsequently turned over to the City Council by the Board of Education. Site one is north of Asbury avenue between Pine and Comstock streets. Site two is south of Asbury avenue between Comstock and langford streets. Site three is south of Asbury avenue between Pine and Comstock streets. Middle School Site Decision Imminent By DAVE MARGOSHES Press Staff Writer Mr.

and Mrs. Pat Nugent happily pos in front of the south portico of the White House yesterday after returning from their wedding. (UPI) DREAM WEDDING' Body Still Unknown, FBI Helps LONG BRANCH Police art pressing a nationwide quest for the identity of the woman whose body was found in the North Long Branch surf eight days ago. Police Chief Thomas M. Pe- sano said the woman's finger prints have been sent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Flyers displaying her picture, description, dental chart, and circumstances surrounding her death have been sent to police departments across the nation. Chief Pesano said the Mon mouth County prosecutor's of fice and New York City police are also investigating. New Yore police checked steamship lines for missing persons. "We have checked all missing person alarms and all motels in the area," the chief said. No car or clothes were found on the shore.

Dr. C. Malcolm B. Gilman, Monmouth County physician, said the woman died of a broken neck and had been in the water no more than four hours when she was seen floating in the ASBURY PARK Mayor Frank H. Rowland yesterday that selection of a site for the controversial middle school "should be made within two President Gives Daughter Away weeks." He said that the selection along with a recommen FIRST ASBURY A VENUE MUNROE I would be presented to the what many have termed an "ed ucation crisis" in Asbury Park For another, it has forced the Council to take up considers tion again of the three central ly located sites recommended by the Board, at the urging of ine stale Department of Educa tion, in January.

Sites Revealed The Council and the Board have, until now refused to identify the three sites, contending Knac puMic disclosure might result in increasing real estate costs, itie Asbury Park Sunday tress nas learned, however, that all three sites are on Asbury avenue, in the predominantly residential Pine street, Comstock street, Langford street area. Site one (the numbers reflect the order in which they were recommended by the Depart ment ot iwucation) is on the north side of Asbury avenue, between Pine and Comstock streets. Site two is on the south side of Asbury avenue between Langford and Comstock streets. Site three is on the south side of Asbury avenue between Pine and Comstock streets. A check of toe city's 1965 tax rolls show that all land and property on site one was as sessed for site two site three, $342,650.

Council Opposed The Council has been opposed to the three sites all along, os- See SCHOOL Page 5 I Hiroshima Day Noted By Rallies NEW YORK OB Persons protesting American involvement in the Viet Nam war observed the 21st anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima yesterday with demonstrations in several cities, including one near the Washington church in which the president's daughter was married. A small group carrying placards and a miniature black coffin picketed about 100 yards from the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, where Luci Baines Johnson wed Patrick J. Nugent. William Higgs, a spokesman for the marchers, said it was "in very bad taste" for" the daughter of a President to get married on the anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing. Bomb Dropped In 1945, an American B-29 dropped an atomic bomb on human beings for the first time.

Japanese officials estimated the death toll at 200,000, but Americans placed it at 80,000. Police in New York City kept demonstrators separated from advocates of American policy in Viet Nam. The two groups engaged in a shouting match in Times Square. More than 2,000 persons participated in a march along Sev-' enth avenue and Broadway. Later, they marched to Rockefeller Center for a demonstration in front of the headquarters of a company which makes napalm.

Flag Burned Some 100 members of the Young Americans for Freedom, the American Patriots for Freedom, the Marine Corps League and other groups burned a Viet Cong flag, cheering wildly. "Burn the Reds!" they shouted across Times Square. The anti war protestors chanted back: "One, two, three, four! Bring the boys back from war!" Other demonstrations were to be held in Boston and Los Alamos, N.M., atomic test site. Sen. Wayne Morse, was to speak at a rally at Powder Hill, a ski resort at Middle-field, Conn.

surf by a fisherman shortty after 5 a.m. July 30. She was clad only in undergarments. A monogram on her underwear bore the letter coupled with what appeared to be a or Dr. Gilman doubted she could Poland Protests Bombing Charges Attack In Cambodia Seen by Probers WARSAW Pol ish government protested officially yesterday that U.S.

planes bombed and strafed a Cambodian vil lage last Tuesday and en dangered members of the Inter national Control Commission making an investigation there. The protest said American bombs fell within 100. yards of some of the ICC members. (In Washington, the State De partment had no immediate comment.) According to PAP, the Polish press agency, the attack occurred Aug. 1 Cambodian of ficials said earlier this week.1 that U.S.

planes had attacked a village near the South Vietnamese border that same day and members of the ICC were there. Blame U.S. The Polish protest said the United States was responsible "for this particular and also other acts of aggression in Indochina." Poland, India, and Canada are member-nations of the commis sion which supervises the 1954 Geneva accords setting up the two Viet Nams, Laos, and Cambodia. The Polish government pro test declared: "Members of the Internation al Supervision and Control Com mission, accompanied by mili tary attaches and representa tives of embassy accredited in Cambodia, went on Aug. 2 to the village of Thlock Trach, sit uated 1,100 yards from the South Vietnamese border to investi gate a U.S.

air raid of July 31. Strafing Attack "While the commission was on its way, American planes at tacked the village again. During the investigation U.S. re- conaissance planes appeared, followed by an air raid by U.S. Air Force F-105s.

The planes bombed and strafed the village, directly endangering the safety of the members of the commission. Some bombs and missiles fell as near as 110 yards from the group. "At that tune there was no fighting on the other side of the Vietnamese border, and recon-aissance flights prior to the at tack exclude any possibility of a mistake as to the attacked ob ject." The Polish government de clared the whole responsibility lies with the United States. It also informed it would approach in the diplomatic way the governments of Great Britain and the Soviet Union, co- chairmen of the 1954 Geneva Conference, and the governments of India and Canada, members of the International Commission. INDEX RED BANK detective fills bill as human relations of-icer.

Page 3. HOSPITAL, public officials weigh impact of Medicare on taxpayers. Page 4. MIDDLETOWN cover girl and boy now man and wife. Page 18.

WEST LONG BRANCH chaplain, just back from Viet Nam, offers gratifying view of American GL Page 45. Page 15 2 3 35-39 11 40 22 14 14 25-28 40 25 14 55 18-23 18 29-34 15 38-39 27-28 41 2 Art Corner Births Bridge Business and Building Camera Angles Classified Crossword Puzzle Datebook Drew Pearson Editorial Page Entertainment Farm and Garden Film Fare Nature in News Radio Social Social Security Sports Stamp News Stocks Television Travel Weatherman Sunday Evening Supper Delicious, full course meal, varied menu, $1.75, 2 blocks from Asbury-down the board walk. Seaside Hotel, Ocean Ocean Grove. Special August only, permanent waves regular $18 now $9.95. De Roma Hair Stylist 229-4700.

Resumes, Retyped, Printed 100 Copies $4.95. One day. A.C. Davenport. Call 747-5658.

have fallen from a ship at sea because, "She would have stayed at the bottom for a few days if she fell into water more than six feet deep." The body is still at the Wool- ley Funeral Home. Dr. Gilman said it can remain there more than a year under present conditions. Negroes, Klan Meet Head On HOPEWELL m-A group of demonstrating Negroes met face to face with a clutch of be-robed and hooded Ku Klux Klansmen here yesterday but all that came of it was noise. The Negroes, about 40 in num ber, shouted "now!" The Klansmen, 22 in robes of white and red augmented by perhaps 100 more in civilian clothing, jeered and shouted "never!" There was no violence.

Hawthorne. The nude, savagely body of Miss De Rier, a science student at Montclair State Col lege, was found early Thursday on a bridle path about Vh miles off Allaire Road (Route 542). He clothes had been torn off and were found scattered near the body. John Gawler. chief of Mon mouth County detectives, said ast night police were still with out a suspect.

Thousands Questioned Police here estimate that thousands have been questioned with each investigator individ ually talking to about 300 per sons. Assisting are local, county, and state police as well as authorities in Passaic County. There have also been numer ous crank calls coming in from as far away as Chicago, police here report. Chief Gawler said that in vestigations have turned up some clues but so far nothing to identify the killer. Police said the girl was beat en with a wooden plank found near her body.

There were no fingerprints on it. police said. Meanwhile three specially trained German shepherd dogs retraced the killer scent yes terday along the same path they took Friday. The trail led from the girl's 1966 auto, parked 10 feet from where her body was found, down Route 534 to just past the junction of Route 34. Sweat Cited Tom McGinn, of the Roches ter Canine Training Center Rochester, N.Y., the dogs' trainer, said that anyone com mitting such a crime would sweat a great deal.

He said the scent comes out through the soles of the killer's feet, leaving a trail as he walks that can be easily picked up by the dogs. Mr. McGinn said he likes to check over the same path two or three times to make sure the dogs are right. Atmospheric conditions, traffic, and other variables could make a difference, he added. He said if the killer is caught the dogs will be able to pick him out of any group of 15 to 20 persons.

Mr. McGinn said his dogs will cover the murder area again today. He plans to stay here as long as he is needed. Patrolman Helps Helping Mr. McGinn with the dogs yesterday was off-duty Holmdel Township Patrolman Bruce Phillips.

Mr. Phillips was trained as a handler at the Rochester school. See HUNT Page 2 Sundays Champape-Beef Buffet, "Eat till it ouches You," Lamplighter Restaurant, Rt. 71, Spring Lake Heights. Spring Lake Heights Residents Coin cards will be collected Aug.

9, 10 11. Tonite See Bonnie Ventura, Corrubia's, Asbury Park. if beatenT TRACK CLOSES, RECORDS BROKEN OCEANPORT Monmouth Park closed out a 56-day meeting yesterday in a record shattering mood. The attendance of 41,414, highest of the meeting, boosted the turnout for the 56 days to 1,078,910 the largest since the track opened in 1946. The previous meeting high was 1,076,186 in 1964.

on the Sapling feature race, won by Great Power in a duel with In Reality, was $591,073 and surpassed the previous one-race high for 1966 of Wagering on the daily double soared to $516,858 for another Monmouth and New Jersey state record. An all-time high for wagering in one day at Monmouth was reached when $4,226,394 passed through the the parimutuel machines to top the previous mark of 4,100,930 set in 1962. Still another record went by the boards with a total of $106,297,805 bet during the meet. The previous Monmouth Park high was set last year. Three Boys Safe After Night on Bay STAFFORD TOWNSHIP -Three 15-year-old Philadelphia boys were returned safely to their summer homes at Beach Haven West yesterday after spending the night on Little Egg Harbor Bay in a rowboat with a disabled outboard motor.

The youths had anchored about two miles south of the Manahawkin Bridge after the motor conked out shortly before dark Friday night, a spokesman at the Bamegat Light Coast Guard Station said. They had been the subject of a search by Coast Guard boats from Bamegat, Bonds and Atlantic City and a plane from the Coast Guard Air Station, Brooklyn. The youths, said to be in good spirits, were towed home about 8 a.m. by a Coast Guard auxiliary craft. They were identified as Gary McElroy, Steven Saran and Kenneth Mintz.

The President, of course, could decline to spend some of the money that Congress votes. But few believe he would cut programs such as those administered by the Health, Education and Welfare Department. Mr. Johnson's threat Friday to reduce the space program if price increases continue in basic commodities was interpreted in Congress generally as telling allied industries they had better not follow the steel price boost. The HEW money bill is likely to be boosted higher than the House total of $10,573 billion before it gains final Senate approval.

Most of the House increases were accounted for in education funds which are popular among members of Congress. In Congress there is widespread belief that Mr. Johnson never expected reductions he proposed in these funds to stand. Because of the nature Bradley Beach Firemen, meet at Borough Hall at 7 p.m. tonight to pay respects to the late Chief Edward R.

Shumard. Chief Richard Johnson For that special party, New Patrician Room, Paul Samperl Restaurant Lounge. North, South, East, West Perkins Pancakes are the best. dation by the City Council public. He did not say, however, whether this meant that a referendum on the site selection would be held again, or wheth er the Council would proceed with plans to appropriate funds for construction.

A referendum on the question is unnecessary under council-manager municipal government. A nonbinding referendum was held on a pro-prosed Sunset avenue site two years ago, and was turned down by 700 votes. Mr. Rowland participated in a joint meeting of the Council and the Board of Education Fri day night. He said afterward that the two bodies would meet again Tuesday immediately aft er the Council's regular meet ing to "iron out more details." Agree to Silence The mayor, who was unusual ly recalcitrant Friday night, would not elaborate on what had been discussed at the joint meeting.

Yesterday, he said that "in this particular instance we (the Council and Board members) agreed not to say anything so as not to endanger the course of action we have planned." Asked whether an announce ment might be forthcoming aft er Tuesday's joint meeting, the mayor said, "Impossible." The mayor's prediction, and the two joint meetings come hard on the heels of other de velopments in the entangled school situation. 1. The state Department of Education rejected the Council's proposal to build the new school on the site of the Bangs Avenue School. 2. The locations of three sites recommended by the Board to the Council in Jan-nary and kept secret were revealed yesterday.

3. Councilman Henry J. Vaccaro reiterated his decision to join in picketing Council meetings if action on the issue is not taken soon. Council Rebuffed The Education Department rebuffed the Council during a meeting between representa tives of the department and rep resentatives of the Council and Board held in Trenton on June 29. The decision was summarized in a letter to Dr.

Harry S. Hill, superintendent of schools, from Dr. Edward W. Kilpatrick, assistant commis sioner of education, dated July 19. The letter was made pub- he July 25.

The rejection of the Bangs Avenue School site has had several resounding affects on the middle school situation. For one, it has focused public attention, crystalized me recent forma uon of the Middle School Action Committee, on the laggard at titude of the Council toward To AU Residents of Brielle Registration for all pupils planning to attend the Brielle Elementary School for the first time will be held at the school on August 9, 1966 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lobsters! At Their Best! All sizes. Marlin Tuna Camp.

as you are, Rt. 71 east on Fisk Manasquan. 223-3730. WASHINGTON UP) Luci B. Johnson, daughter of the President, exchanged the sacred vows of marriage with Patrick J.

Nugent yesterday in rites of modern splendor tinged with the antiquity of Christendom. President Johnson gave Luci away at the beginning of one of "the" weddings in all Wash- Full Page Of Photos on 17 ington history, in the massive, magnificent Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. It is the world's seventh largest church and the national church of Roman Catholics. The archbishop of Washington, Patrick A. O'Boyle, presided at a nuptial mass for the first time since he or any of his associates could remember.

At the end, he invoked God's blessing on the newly-weds, read a special blessing from Pope Paul VI, and made the sign of the cross. Offers Hand After escorting his 19-year-old daughter down the block-long polished marble center aisle, the President offered her hand to the 23-year-old boy from Waukegan, 111., she was about to marry in the wedding of her dreams. Then Mr. Johnson joined Mrs. Johnson in a first row these increases Republicans entertain scant hope that they can force any substantial re ductions government spending in these fields.

It will be a far different thing than the $250-million cut in the foreign aid authorization Dirksen piloted through the If Mr. Johnson's oppo sition to that reduction ran deeply it was not signalled by any of the extraordinary ef forts the President is capable of putting on to get his way with Congress. A similar lack of any presl dential pressure to prevent budget-busting increases in HEW funds would be seized upon by Republicans to support their contention that the Democratic administration is not doing anything effective to prevent inflation. Dirksen and House minority leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan are whooping up the issue and GOP Senate and House candidates are talking about it all over the country.

Piano Sale Five, all finishes, all styles. Savings up to $195. Very easy terms. Tustings, Bangs Bond, Asbury Park. Peter De Rose Memorial Aug.

7, 8:30, Arthur Pry or Beach Pavilion. Free concert. Complete Chicken Dinner, $1.65. Marine's, Cookman Ave. pew, to watch the rituals unfold, along with 700 guests.

They included friends and neighbors from Washington and back home and an assortment of high Washington officialdom. The marriage ceremony itself came about a third of the way through the nuptial mass. It was performed by a Chicago priest who used to be a next-door neighbor and babysitter for Pat Nugent back in Waukegan the Rev. John Kuzinskas. There was no "love, honor and obey," but Patrick John Nugent and Luci Baines Johnson said their "I do's" in turn and exchanged their vows "to have and to hold, from this day forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do us part." Sun Shining It was 12:42 p.m.

EDT on a gorgeous summer day. See DAUGHTER Page 2 She Follows Luci Johnson To the Altar BALTIMORE, Md. UfV-Susan Johnson became the bride of Kurt Nagel here yesterday afternoon four hours after Luci Johnson became the bride of Patrick Nugent in Washington, D.C. The four-hour variance marked the end of an unusual number of similarities between the two girls, both born July 2, 1947. Following a short honeymoon, Pfc.

and Mrs. Nagel will be separated by the Army, which has assigned Kurt to Viet Nam. He is on leave from Lewis, for the wedding and honeymoon. Mr. and Mrs.

Nugent will honeymoon at an undisclosed destination and plan to continue their respective educations at the University of Texas. Until yesterday, however, they were two young ladies who both considered i careers, who are the daughters of Democrats, and whose grooms went on active military duty Nov. 28, 1965. Nugent served six months on a reserve program. Luci maid of honor was her sister, Lynda, and Susan's was a friend, Linda.

Furthermore the choir and or ganist from the church in which Susan was married, the Im maculate Heart of Mary, sang and played at Lucrs wedding at the Shrine of the Immacu late Conception. Awnings. Immediate delivery at winter prices. Monmouth Awning 147 Main, Asbury Park, 775-488L Save 15 On all your dry cleaning at Gallus 814 Asbury Ave. 1000 truck loads fill dirt.

WiT deliver any amount. Top soil, gravel. TW 2-6828. Oliver's Hairdresser, West End, 222-1515. Open Mondays, Republicans Preparing Test Of Johnson Inflation Brakes WASHINGTON OP) Republicans are preparing to test in the Senate the Johnson administration's willingness to hold down non-war expenditures as a brake on inflation.

Announcing this today, Senate minority leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois said GOP members will demand roll call votes on $490 million in increases made by the House in health, education and welfare funds. "We're going to see where (the administration stands on spending so the people will know where to put the blame for inflation," Dirksen said in an interview. "Up to this point President Johnson certainly hasn't done anything to block the increases Congress is making in his budget requests." Mr. Johnson lectured about 50 members of Congress recently on the need for economy.

But Dirksen said he had found no evidence of any intensive follow-up on this. Register now for fall term. Pinewood Schools. Nursery, kindergarten, 1st grade. Lake-wood, 363-1007.

Brick Town, 892-1335. Hearing Aids Save 50 "Listen to recorded message" Phone 775-4318. Prime Ribs or 18 oz. N.Y. Steak.

$3.85. Yellow Roof. Sgt. Raymond Tyler (left) of the Wall Township police and Holmdel Patrolman Bruce Phillips, who is assisting Tom McGinn with his German shepherds, take a break with Apache (left) and Dirk near Allaire State Park yesterday after several hours of hunting for the killer. (Press Photo) Repossessed Cars.

No money down, take over payments on existing balance. Ocean Park Motor Hwy. 35, Oakhurst. 531-8600. Mill End Shops coming to Asbury Park.

Grand opening Wed. Aug. 10. Summer Clearance! Daniel's Fashion Center, Long Branch. The Ernest Dill Quartet Calypso music.

Dancing nightly except Mon. 9-2 a.m. Shanty Pub, Channel Dr Point Pleasant Beach. Wonder Bar Tonight Sensational Ragtimers, direct from Red Garter, start at 8 p.m. No appointments.

Bernard Hairdressers, Spring Lake. 1.

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Pages Available:
2,393,888
Years Available:
1887-2024