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The Central New Jersey Home News du lieu suivant : New Brunswick, New Jersey • 1

Lieu:
New Brunswick, New Jersey
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

it i A 5 Vol. 186, No. 6 NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1971 88 Pages Twenty-five Cents Thaw Cat the Ice? reeze 'j ii r-T A ii 'fomf vV 1 Ends Will th WAGES: Union-employed: New pay increases, negotiated after Nov. 14, will be subject to a general standard of 5.5 per cent per year. Pay increases already negotiated, but scheduled to take place after the freeze ends, will be permitted but subject to a challenge by either management or five members of the 15-man Pay Board.

Pay increases held up by the freeze will be permitted to go into effect Nov. 14, but there will be no retroactive payment of the increases except: Where the employer had already raised prices in anticipation of the pay hike. When a contract signed after Aug. 15 which replaced a contract which expired before Aug. 16 and where retroactive payment of increases was either an established practice or agreed to by labor and management.

See FREEZE, Page I tions postponed their job-creating capital outlays waiting for the credit to go on the law books. It amounts to a 7 per cent federal Subsidy on their purchases of new machinery and equipment. The Nixon foreign economic game plan seemed to be at a stalemate. His actions had unhitched the dollar from gold and left all the non-Communist currencies "floating" without fixed par values; and he had slapped a 10 per cent U.S. tariff surcharge on all dutiable imports.

Then he invited other countries to raise the value of their currencies an average of perhaps 12 per cent, to make U.S. goods cheaper and more competitive in world markets. The other countries balked. They still are balking. They want the United States to come part way by directly devaluing the dollar; that is, raising the price of gold.

They want assurances on the removal of the surcharge before revaluing their nd removing trade barriers. The deadlock has magnified antagonisms across the Atlantic, and soured relations between the United States and its two greatest trading partners, Canada and Japan. On the domestic side, the 15-member Pay Board will consider how to treat merit pay increases and teachers' back pay in key meetings this week. The question of retroactive pay may be considered, too. Sources said the board deliberately delayed an earlier ruling on the merit-pay question, centering around whether a worker can be rewarded for exceptional work with piy higher than the 5.5 per cent wage guideline.

In addition, the whole question of teachers salaries will be reviewed, officials said, recognizing that some inequities were created by freezing teachers' salaries. While more regulations will come in the next few days and weeks, this will be the initial impact of Phase 2: Horn News Wirt Services WASHINGTON The freeze worked. The admmistration only hopes that Phase 2 works as well. But it concedes the risks of failure are greater. Ford Motor Co.

took the lcid in post-freeze price policy Saturday by announcing hikes for two models. The rest of the auto industry was expected to follow suit, but many retail firms around the country indicated they planned to hold the line, at least for the time bemg. But Price Commission Chairman C. Jackson Grayson urged the Cost of Living Council Saturday night to reconsider a decision exempting the automobile industry from clearing price increases with the government before they go into effect. As President Nixon's 90-day price freeze neared its midnight expiration, spokesmen for most firms contacted said confusion over the Phase 2 program allowing controlled in- creases prevented them from setting new prices.

Ford said it is raising the price of its little Pinto to a suggested retail of $2,208, a $94 increase. And the imported Capri will cost $2.614 representing a $119 increase. That doesn't include the 10 per cent import surcharge. A Ford spokesman said it is "a pretty good possibility" that the company will list increases for other models, and Chrysler and American Motors already have announced they will institute unspecified price hikes. General Motors has said it will make an announcement soon.

The 90-day wage, price and rent ceiling that President Nixon clamped on the economy with thunderbolt shock on Aug. 15 had its leaks violations and disappointments. But it gave the United States its first respite in five years from relentless, wasting inflation that tore into paychecks, eroded pensions and scuttled family budgets. The freeze period, ending at 12:01 a.m. Sunday, slowed the rise in living costs to a rate of 2.4 per cent a year in September far from perfect, but less than half the rate' of any recent year.

And it slapped the wholesale price index into its biggest drop in five years. Now there are double dangers: first, that compliance will sag if many people take the new 2.5 per cent price guideline of Phase 2 as a sign that the anti-inflation fight is being relaxed; and second, that the AFL-CIO, angry over wage guidelines that deny the retroactive payment of frozen wage increases, will decide at Miami Beach this week whether to boycott the program. "Prosperity without war requires action on three fronts," Nixon soberly told the nation by television on that Sunday night in mid-August which followed his fateful weekend decisions at Camp David, Md. He named the fronts. "We must create more and better jobs; we must stop the rise in the cost of living; we must protect the dollar from the attacks of international money speculators." What of his hopes for more jobs and stronger dollars? The 90-day record shows that: The economy did not respond with the Hoped-for zest to the promise of price stabilization.

September statistics ranged from gloomy to dismal. October brought moderately better news, with retail sales up and unemployment edging More About Phase II See Page A3 down to 5.8 per cent. Bui that was not good enough to hait the steady sinking of the stock market. Congress was still arguing over Nixon's business-stimulating tax-relief plans. It seemed ready to vote at least $1.3 billion more tax relief for low-income families than he asked for but delayed the proposed job development investment credit.

Therefore many corpora Holy Cross! Rutgers Finally Nails a Win ft Nil I if tvr 4 i 2 4- 1 1 4 3. Missed tying the game later In the first half when a pass from quarterback Pete Vaas was overthrown to Jack Von Ohlen who was clear in the right corner of the end zone arter Rutgers defensive back Bob Oldt slipped and fell down. 4. Lost another opportunity deep in Rutgers territory when Oldt intercepted another aeriaL 5. Lost a fumble on the Rutgers 30 late in the second half.

6. Capped the day by missing a two-point conversion with 7:19 left in the game and creating the one-point difference. "How do you coach against interceptions and fumbles?" losing Coach Ed Doh-erty groaned. "Except for the turnovers, this was our best effort of the season. We can't play any better than we did." Said winning Coach John Bateman: "Our defense won the game for us It was our defense which set up our second touchdown and that was a big lift for us." Bateman figured that the turning point of the game was when Leo Gasienica found tailback Larry Robertson open at the Holy Cross 5-yard line in the second period that gave the Scarlet the deciding TD.

Doherty, however, disagreed: "The turning point," he exclaimed, "was when we lost that field goal by an See KNIGHTS, Page Bl By KEN O'BRIEN Home News Sports Writer PISCATAWAY Rutgers, which already knows too much about bad breaks and one-point defeats this year, discovered yesterday the fruits of good breaks and the feeling of razor-thin victories by squeaking past Holy Cross, 14-13. A small gathering of 8,500 watched the Scarlet Knights snap a six-game losing streak for its second victory of the season and the first of the year in Rutgers Stadium. It was a day in which nothing went right for the Crusaders who, at the same time, failed to capitalize on most Rutgers errors in a game which involved a multitude of turnovers. Holy Cross set the tone for the thrilling battle in its very first series of plays when a completed pass to the Rutgers 13 was nullified by a holding penalty and the Crusaders later were forced to punt a high kick which netted exactly zero In order, disaster continued to follow the Crusaders the rest of the day as Holy Cross: Lost three points on a 35-yard field goal which was erased by an illegal procedure penalty after lining up with five men in the backfield. 2.

Allowed Rutgers to set up the deciding TD through an intercepted pass one of five pilfered by the Knights. i je "lit i ,3 Borne News Photo bj Dick Costello THE HUNT Edging through tall grass off East Brunswick's Schoolhouse Lane, three hunters mark start of small game season yesterday. (More photos, Page Cll) Today's Home News Returning Lawmakers l7 Will Hear Bloustein mm JAW Arts-Hobbies C12-17 Books C22-24 Business-Financial B12-15 Classified D9-19 Crossword Puizle CIO D2-3 Garden B18 Got A Problem D3 Horoscope C10 Movies-Theater C18-20 News Quiz C15 Obituaries --D7 Real Estate B16-18 Social CM0 Sports Bl-f Stock Tables B14-1S Travel Do DARTMOUTH tops Cornell 24-14 to take Ivy Page B2 PRINCETON overcomes Yale by 10-6 Page Bl AUBURN clobbers Georgia by 35 20 Page B2 THEY REIGN who only wait for thrones Dl school aid law which the U.S. Supreme Court has held unconstitutional in other states with similar programs. The new program would Liw vT.ot Urn 7 Vf Bloustein will address will be returning, for the next term in January, the significance of the good will gesture was still considered important.

The new legislature, which was elected Nov. 2, takes office Jan. 11. And the leaders and i po rt a nt committee chairman will all be veterans who will have heard Bloustein's speech. Also on the agenda Monday is the swearing in of three members elected Nov.

2 to fill the unexpired terms of some legislators who left before their terms were up. They are Senator-elect Mrs. Jerry F. English, D-Union, Senator-elect Charles DeMarco, D-Essex, and Assemblywoman e-lect Mrs. Elizabeth Cox, R-Un-ion, all of whom will hold office only till Jan.

11. The elections of the three are scheduled to be certified by the State Board of Canvassers early Monday morning. Legislative action itself is expected to be light, with the top measure to be considered being the Cahill administration's proposal for aid to parochial and private schools. The measure is a substitute for those programs in the TRENTON (AP) The legislature returns to the capital Monday for its first meeting since the summer, and the opening day highlight is expected to be a joint session to hear Dr. Edward J.

Bloustein, the new president of Rutgers, the state university. The joint session was arranged earlier in the summer when Bloustein indicated a desire to begin his administration on good terms with the legislature, which provides about half the university's operating funds. Dr. Bloustein's predecessor, Dr. Mason W.

Gross, retired in September because of ill health when his unpopularity with the lawmakers was probably at an all-time high. Many legislators had accused Dr. Gross of being too soft on student demonstrators and knuckling under to their demands for a program for the disadvantaged and then com-miting the legislavure to pay for it without prior consultation. They had also criticized his practice of transferring budget funds without consulting the legislature. Although only 66 members of the 120-member legislature Dr.

provide $5 million for auxiliary services and materials. This would replace the program which subsidized the salaries of teachers of non-secular subjects. It would enable non-public schools to obtain the services of full-or-part-time remedial reading teachers, guidance counselors and health person- nel, either from the state or the local school district. It would also enable them to buy through the state or local school districts materials such as library books and maps, testing supplies, paper and pencils, and a wide range of audio-visual equipment. The items, would be considered on loan to the private schools.

The bill is patterned after a federal law and one in Ohio. Also scheduled for a vote is an emergency appropriation of $250,000 to renovate space on the second floor of the State House for use by legislative committees. The area was formerly occupied by a division of the Treasury Department. 'rrf fVi 1 If i 1 I I ft', '4JS' I 1 I frv I i i I Vr-Kj. 1 Of I 4 I.I 4 ir "if" L.

i fj iy, ff Xu 1 A II I 4 Home Newi Pnoto Gasienica during yesterday's game against Holy Cross. Here, he is beating Crusader defender Tom Doyle, 23. Rutgers won, 14-13. ON RECEIVING END-Senior tailback Larry Robertson, 42, hauls in an over-the-head pass from Rutgers quarterback Leo Killer Death Penalty Ordered for Yablonski Dec. 31, 1969, shortly after Y'ab-lonski was defeated in a bitterly contested election for the United Mine Workers Presidency.

Of the five persons subsequently arrested in the slayings, Martin was the first to be tried. Another, Claude E. Vea-ley, 28, who confessed last summer to having been paid to take part in the killings, said Martin was one of the trigger-men. He was the state's key witness at Martin's trial. Shapp, has said there will be no executions during his term.

Sprague said he might go to court to force Martin's execution. The death penalty "is law in Pennsylvania," Sprague said. The last execction in Pennsylvania was in April 1962. The raspy-voiced, iron willed Yablonski, 59, his wife Margaret, 57, and their daughter Charlotte, 25, were shot to death in their rural, red brick home in Clarksville, on Several women members of the Yablonski family covered their mouths with their hands. One of Yablonski's sons, Kenneth, chewing at a fingernail, closed his eyes when the sentence was read.

Another son, Joseph slumped in his seat. The courtroom emptied quickly, but Joseph remained behind for about five minutes before he stood and walked slowly toward the corridor outside. "Please, I'd rather not say anything," he said in a choked voice. No date was set for Martin's execution. "The fight isn't over yet," said Goldberg.

The death sentence in Pennsylvania is by electrocution. But the state's electric chair in Rockview State Penitentiary was ordered dismantled last year during the administration of then Gov. Raymond P. Shafer. Shafer's successor, Gov.

Milton J. ated 49 minutes. The testimony phase of the trial took three days. In a 40 minute hearing preceding the jury's deliberations, defense attorney Mark Goldberg had asked for "mercy and compassion." Special prosecutor Richard Sprague demanded death. Goldberg said appeals were certain.

The 23-year-old Martin remained expressionless as the death sentence was read, staring straight ahead. WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP) -Aubran W. "Buddy" Martin was sentenced to death Saturday for the slayings of United Mine Workers rebel Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski and his wife and The verdict was returned in a hushed Washington County courtroom by the same jury of seven women and five men that less than 24 hours earlier had convicted Martin on three counts of first degree murder in the killings.

The jury deliber AP Photo SENTENCED TO DIE Aubran Martin, dressed in mod clothing, it led bv Sheriff Alex Debreczeni rom the courtroom in Washington, Pa, where a jury of seven women and five men yesterday sentenced him to death for hit part in the Yablonski family slayings. I '1.

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