Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 13

Publication:
Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ASBURY PARK EVENING PRESS, Oct. 13, 1964 13 Attorneys UseST 5 -i fx VTE HOUSE HABIT GROWS I European Firms Eye U.S. Impulse Buying ''NEW YORK M) Lures for, the invasion by Yankee con-Impulse buying arc being added sumer products, supermarkets, to the Americanization of con- and buying and credit methods, sumer habits in many lands. A U.S. envov to the Common Tolling of Wedding Bells May Ring in Baby Boom Market has told a National As- til PRINCE GETS A 'PENGUIN' Canadian Prime Minister Lester Pearson (left) shows en-gine compartment of an amphibious "penguin" presented to Prince Philip (right) in Ottawa yesterday.

Queen Elizabeth and Mrs. Pearson are In center. (UPI) DELAYS CITED sociation of Manufacturers trade expansion mission that many Europeans fear their ways oi Me may disappear under the rush to imitate American customs. Growth Reported But here at home the Point-of-Purchase Advertising Institute (POPAI) reports that its overseas membership has quadrupled in the last five years, and now represents all continents. It expects more than 100 foreign visitors at its annual show next month in New York.

The lure: How to get their customers to spend 33 per cent more on impulse because of new advertising and marketplace displays. In addition to its 17 Canadian members there are 35 institute members scattered through Japan, Somh Africa, England, Switzerland, France, Italy. Mexico, Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden, Venezuela, Iran, Australia and New Zealand. And on POPAI member in southern California is indoctrinating a Peace Corps volunteer who can spread the idea in the business community in Peru. American manufacturers, ex porters, salesmen and designers have been learning the hard way that what creates the buying impulse in an America may backfire abroad.

The approach 2 Challenges In Spy Trial NEWARK ID A government employe and a woman opposed to capital punishment have been targets for peremptory challenges by defense and prosecution attorneys in the selection of a jury to try John W. Butenko and Igor A. Ivan-ov. Jury selection entered its third day today in the espionage conspiracy case against Butenko, a 39-year-old engineer from Orange, and Ivanov, a 34-year-old Russian chauffeur employed by Amtorg, the Soviet trading agency, In New York City. Eleven prospective jurors have been excused so far eight yesterday and three last i Friday.

The woman opposed to capital punishment was challenged by Asst. U.S. Atty. Sanford Jaffe, the government prosecutor. Butenko and Ivanov, charged with conspiring to transmit Air Force secrets to the Soviet Union, could be sentenced to death if convicted.

Raymond Brown, Butenko'; attorney, challenged a postal i wrker, the only government employe amon prospective jurors questioned so far ne lw? a'c ai each. The defendants were arrested l. mi i tri station uct. Mfi.r and briefcase allegedly con- taining Air Force secrets was seized with them. UrivCI'S Charged Following Crnsh BRICK TOWNSHIP State police at Laureiton nave filed arpioce mancnesier lownsuip, was re ported in fair condition today at Community Memorial Hos- Ta a km ken right arm.

iiai, iwma ivivn, ttiiu a uiu- uiuuy iiitd, j-uuuun nvc, iicic. Mr. Gorman's wife, Nancy, and their two small sons were treated for minor injuries at the hncnital and rp paspfl Problems A 1 7. Not Solved I end at 2:55 p.m., and at the Frephn Rpp nna Krh scnooi. Al i 7111 fill t'" II III 9 1 1 By JOHN KOLESAR TRENTON itfMVedding bells are beginning to ring more often in New Jersey.

They might be the signal for another population explosion in the state. Marriages are up about 12 per cent in New Jersey so far this year. It is the first really big increase since the end of World War II. It appears that the war babies have grown up and are getting married. During the past decade it was the depression ba bies who were married and they were relatively few in number.

In a few years mar riages will increase even more sharply, when the post-war babies start getting married in large numbers. Baby Boom Coming Unless these young married people have far children than the current generation, the nation and state are In for a baby boom in about four years The number of births in New Jersev declined steadily during the 1920s and For instance, there were 78.000 born in 1921. compared with only 54,000 in 1936. But there was a sharp increase to 67,000 in 1941, another upswing to 106,000 in 1946. and a postwar peak of 135,000 in 1961.

In 1962 births declined to 131.603. Last year they rose 1.000 and this year they are running almost exactly the same as in 1963. Some experts have said the static number of births in the past few years indicates a decline in the birth rate and a possible reversal in the population boom. However, the National Health 1 iuie aays, me numuu num i en in the. 20-29 group has been small.

Since they bear three- fifths tha nntmn'o rh rtrnn inula vi mo nmiwii a there has been apparent decline in the birth rate Group Increases But now those wartime babies are beginning to swell the rank of the 20-29 age group. The marriage figures in New Jersey support the institute's theory. classes begin at 9 a.m. and PeremPlory FREEHOLD-The new South- em Freehod Keeiona Hien school is in operation, but a lot of work remains before the school is finished That was the rpnort trivpn last nignt by Vincent Koy, krvin; at 4 p.m. lne.

rm WK lc European merchants are showing increased interest this and other American methods of mass merchandizing and advertising. Their Japanese counterparts are reported showing even more. Not everyone Is happy about 2,707 Pupils In Freehold High Schools i REEHOLD There are enrolled in the two high schools operated by the freehold Regional Board of Education. The Board serves seven school districts', comprised of eight Western Monmouth County municipalities. Township and Englishtown are joined ih a regional sending district.

'The other municipalities are Colts Neck, Freehold, Howell, and Marlboro townships, and Ijarmingdale and Freehold boroughs. Students from Howell Township, Farmingdale, and the southern end of Freehold Township attend the new Southern Freehold Regional School in Howell Township. IThe others attend the Freehold Regional High School in Freehold. Leading the enrollments Howell Township with 931 students. Freehold is second with 501, $nd Englishtown has the lowest enrollment with 73 students.

The enrollment figures, prepared by Kenneth M. Frisbie, school superintendent, show that Howell and Manalapan townships are the fastest growing. Howell Township has 171 seniors but a freshman class of 313, while Manalapan Township has only 58 seniors, but a freshman enrollment of 108. In all there are 841 freshmen in the school system, and 556 seniors. Teachers Strike tnters 6th Day JPAWTUCKET, R.I.

iffl -Stehool teachers in this industrial cjty were expected to stay away ffom classrooms again today as at strike entered its sixth day. Some 400 to 500 teachers in 17 public schools are demand- in? hiphpr nav scales and a new contract. A Court order last, week directed them to end the strike, but teachers have stayed! man of the Board of Education's Building Committee, and Frank A i wuman, ooaru seceiary. SeTpt oLTlafiSI SrTeSJ went bankrupt. Problems Noted Amnn thn if Finniiioc cHii i KRUSEN FILLS BARKALOW POST FREEHOLD W.

Lawrence Krusen, Freehold lawyer, last night was named attorney for the Freehold Regional Board of Education to serve for the rest of the year. Mr. Krusen replaces his, former law partner, Clifton T. Barkalow, who died Sept. 28.

The Board observed a moment of silence at its meeting in tribute to Mr. Barkalow, and adopted a resolution expressing its sympathies to the former Monmouth County assemblyman's family. Pope Weighs rveiiing Ivi Stl'11 CT CMP All UH UlV Paul VI was faced today with riopiriino intprvpnp in A TT" VT PTnnV IB Dnna the most critical struggle so far between progressives and con- servatives in the Vatican Ecu- menical Council. Fifteen prominent cardinals, all progressives, asked the Pope to act personally to pre vent wuuoci vaLivca uu iuu -wuii-, Pttmmiszkm from sahotag-: i r- i I mprpnre in mi a mwc lapping bus schedule. Dr.

Lewis suggested the class periods be shortened to cut the' c-hnnl rf- nno hour Thi wouldf 8,50 student, more H1 Th.e MOP' Jt received last month, and made bookkeeping changes the stu- accepted and. Joseph Cal- ilaert was appointed adviser at i Mrs. Adele Foster was made i now is to adapt advertising andiT product displays to local cus-jllllC be corrected are a lack of heatident activities accounts as rec-'against two drivers wh0Se cars Insurance Institute says it is in some rooms, the automatic 5mnJnded by auditor Armour collided Sunday at Laurel and only a temporary hitch in the boiler controls don't work, S. Hulsart. Downey avenues.

i rising tide of births, due to the there's a leak in a fuel oil line The resignation of Robert a passenger in one of them, age distribution of the popula-many locks for classrooms lock- Sm.th as junw class adviser in Mrs. Mabel Gorman, Rte. 37, tion. In recent yca'-s, the insti- SCENE In the postwar era, marriages declined from a record high of 61,020 in 1946 to a low of 38,398 In 1958. They rose 4 per cent to 43,353 last year.

They are up another 12 per cent this year and could reach 49,000, the high-est total in 16 years. In the decade from 1936 to 1946, births doubled in New Jersey. There may be a parallel doubling of the marriage rate in the decade from 1960 to 1970. It would take a considerable reduction in child bearing to keep the birth rate from making a big increase, too. At present, 1 out of every 100 New Jersey residents dies each year.

About an equal number move into the state each year. During the course of a year there are 2 babies born for each 100 population. The state Conservation Department estimates the state's population is going up about 2.2 per cent a year. The U.S. Cen sus Bureau estimates the increase at almost 3 per cent a vear.

That puts the state's population now at between 6.6 million and 6.7 million. County Added I The increase since 1960 has been about 600,000. This is equivalent to inserting another county the size of Hudson into GRID FAN SAVES SEATS HARD WAY BIRMINGHAM, Ala. W-Claude Morris goes a long way to save his football tickets even to the state Crime Laboratory. When fire destroyed the Duncan Manufacturing and Equipment Co.

last week, where Mr. Morris is manager, it also destroyed four tickets and badly charred 20 others to this weekend's Auburn-Georgia Tech game in Birmingham. He sent the 20 charred bits through official channelsto the state toxicologic Tests designed to help investigators read burned material were used to determine the seat numbers and today the city is preparing duplicate tickets for Mr. Morris. A junior varsity cheerleader ad- a were her son, at RegMlJames, same address; and An- To Europeans, for neiunece cn't tVio m.il ant tning.

The hard sell to which Americans are inured falls flat over there. In many lands advertising and display must mind the local color charts. An international air transport association official notes that colors can make a lot of difference in promoting sales. Red is a lucky color to Chinese, wnile Yellow is to the Thais In several Asian countries the' combination of purple and green is acceptable because Shinto religious leaders once wore them. But the combination of black white and blue su-l gests onlv funerals to the Chi Hese.

Jack A. Wichert, president of omiuuj, aiiu miaa rauiim ujiili was made adviser at the South em Freehold Regional School, Both will receive $250 for the 1- inks ing the desires of the council! he is having trouble getting tl majority on key controversial 'wmtractors together to fini majority inish New Jersey's narrow confines, By 1970, the state wil probably have to find room for another bath of people eaual to Essex County's 900,000 population. A state population of 7.5 million or more in the next census creates obvious problems. It means another wave of grammar school construction, followed at suitable intervals by more high schools and colleges. In a few years, it may be difficult to find a church free to hold a wedding in June or September.

Couples may have to get married in March, the least popular month now. But it will provide great opportunities for the rice business, the baby food industry and those seeking careers as tax collectors. Artist, Friend Of Kennedys, Shot to Death WASHINGTON UP) Georgetown artist Mary Pinchot Meyer was shot to death yesterday as she took a sunny afternoon walk along the path of an old canal where she often had strolled with Mrs. John F. Kennedy.

Mrs. Meyer, who would have been 44 tomorrow, was a niece of Gifford Pinchot, progressive conservationist and two -term governor of Pennsylvania, and the daughter of Amos Pinchot, a founder of the Bull Moose party. Robbery apparently was the motive in her staying, police said. Within an hour, Raymond Crump a 25-year-old Washington laborer recently released from a 60-day prison term for petty larceny, was arrested and charged with the slaying. A father of five, he denied any part in the shooting.

Police'found no purse or wallet and did not know if the victim, dressed casually in slacks and sneakers, was carrying one. Scuba divers searched the canal and the nearby Potomac River for the murder weapon. SB POPAI, says Europe is now American' rarrfinaic noti. issues. mi iui thrPooe WmT had tavitd 1 I'ope mmseit nad invited ine irom ine PrBres v.

a tinnj thp Pnnp after they met to review what they called "the gravest crisis" of the entire council. Thpv eYrrepH fear fhat tho coordinate? commission and! the council presidency, larger the council presidency, largely a staffed by conservative church administrators from the Vatican Curia, plan to alter council ac away. There was no school yes-i'y the stage in retail distribution of products that the United States knew just prior to World War II. Change is coming rapid- now, nowever, Retail outlets here are growing ever more mechanized. Self-service has replaced an esti mated 1.5 million sales clerks since 1945.

This takes into ac- rday, Columbus Day, in Rhode Island. i Negotiations between city and school officials and representa tives of the Pawtucket Teachers Alliance broke up late last night in complete disagreement, a teachers' spokesman said. count the increased sales vol-1 tion already taken on religious ume and number of outlets I liberty, the Jews and the shar-opened since then. ing of papal-episcopal power. 1117 'Y ii iirt "gti'iis v'k4 Wir ii 1 I (i rrri 11 iwwiiaiii Wj iimn'i'in mm KHUW I mmmMiiim if 1 1 idi I -r; il WJ I MORE THAN 134853 gymnasium lockers can't hp.

assisiied because the lockers ers, ana cabinets don nave a aren't numhered the machines! in thp throe chnn arpn't hnAWerf 1 up, the folding doors to separate the gymnasium can't be closed because the motors haven't been connected, and an elevator doesn work. rmsn cam ina nrnn. lems are ow heinff tixed. tv.it i lems are slowly being fixed, but tne the work Board President Howard Woodward summed it up with Jtrated." i Kenneth Frisbie. suoerin- tendent of schools, said he will investigate complaints about the len8tn of tne da7 and the length of the lunch Students Tried Board member Dr.

Jacob; Lewis said he's received a lot oi compiauus nun swunm have enough time to eat, ano that the school day is so long students are too tired to do their homework. The Board allows the students 25 minutes to eat lunch. In addition the students are allowed four minutes before and after lunch to walk between the class rooms and the cafeteria. This is plenty of time to Dr. Lewis said, if the students I can get their food.

The problem is that they have to wait too long to get served. As for the school day, the Board has two shifts. At the Southern Regional School classes begin at 7:55 a.m. and; Long Branch Sidewalk Art Show Set LONG BRANCH The sidewalks of Broadway will be transformed into an art gallery Friday and Saturday in the first sidewalk art show ever held here. The art festival Is sponsored by the Retail Division of the Chamber of Commerce in conjunction with a two-day sales promotion.

Easels will be set up in front of stores in the downtown and uptown business districts and paintings will be available for sale. The chamber will buy 10 paintings from the participating artists and give them to shoppers through a lucky number drawing. To be eligible, shoppers must fill out a coupon available at any store displaying a blue and green poster in its window. Maurice Podell, local sculptor, who is directing the show, said 70 to 75 artists from the greater metropolitan area will display their oil and water colors. Sidewalk spaces are allotted on a first come, first served basis.

Discovery Claimed MOSCOW J) Soviet scientists claim the discovery of an 800-mile-long mountain range under the Antarctic icecap near Queen Maud Land. Tass reports that the peaks tower to nearly 7,000 feet and are buried under ice nearly two miles thick. Rare bargains every a in Real Estate column of The 1 Press classified page. 1 READERS EVERY 4 TODAY How much life insurance do you really need? I mufti i i i i ri wAtrr Ask our electronic computer -free! I mUKt LUlML FUVVBK I THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IF YOU WANT TO SELL MONMOUTH AND OCEAN COUNTIES ADVERTISE IN THE ASBURY PARK PRESS; Central Jersey's Number One Newspaper Insurance, your ncenfly Improvtd Socfaf Security benefits, and other assets. With this Information, our computer can calculate your actual Insurance requirements.

The computer's analysis, plus your New York Life agent's invaluable training and experience, can provide sound guidance as you plan for a secure financial future. What's the cost of our new electronic service? Absolutely nothing. Why not call the New York Life agent nearest you, today! New York Life Insurance Company 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10011 Now at your service-one of New York Life's giant computers! It's available to help you plan your family's security. You can "ask" our computer exactly how much life insurance you need to meet your financial objectives-and you'll get a precise, thorough analysis that will fully answer your question. Your New York Life agent will get you started.

Together, you will discuss your long-range goals-your children's education, your retirement plans, your family's income needs If you should die. Also, you can review your present life ASBURY PARK SALES OFFICE: Room 200, 550 Cookman Asbury Pork.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Asbury Park Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Asbury Park Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,393,578
Years Available:
1887-2024