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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 3

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The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 A 3 THE RECORD, SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1967 sli jiii.num.,ji.iiinium)U i.uiui nm.u.. na m.m---- $100,000 To U.J. Offered A. Fund NEWARKTEAM GAINS PATENT IN LIFE STUDY I i I I 1 1 i yy I vfki i A fir Staff Photo YOU ARE HERE Police Major Manuel Gnn- ter, and Sheriff Joseph Job, left. Standing: zalez, right, of Bogota, Colombia, is shown visiting Captain Manuel Santa Crnz, left, and map of Bergen by Prosecutor Guy Calissi, cen- Chief Robert Loveman of the Bergen Bogota, Visiting South American Cops By SHARON ROSENHAUSE Staff Writer Englewood An appeal from the pulpit of Temple Emanu-El for aid to Israel precipitated by the Middle East crisis has elicited approximately $100,000 in pledges to the United Jewish Appeal.

After receiving approval from the board of directors, Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg appealed to the more than 700 persons at last night's services, noting that one of the tragedies of the world crisis is the strain placed upon Israel's economy. Similar pleas were made by Rabbi Irwin Blank of Temple Sinai in Tenafly and Rabbi Isaac Swift of Congregation Ahavath Torah in Englewood. FOX WILL HEAD PLATFORM UNIT Democratic Committee Named By Andora River Vale Committeeman Matthew I. Fox will head the committee which writes the 1967 Bergen Democratic platform. A 33-year-old technical editor, Fox was an unsuccessful Freeholder candidate last fall and is now a member of the Bergen County Sewer Authority.

Other members of the platform committee, named yester-riav hv Democratic County Chairman Anthony D. Andora, are as State Senator Jeremiah F. nrnnnor of Saddle Brook, Freeholder Harold Martin of Cresskill, Assemblyman Arnold E. Brown of Englewood, and Surrogate candidate Lucille Rnssello of North Arlington, all members of the County ticket which will run on the piattorm written bv the committee. Also, James Spady of Fort Youns Democratic County Chairman William Meisner of Garfield, State Civil Service Commissioner Jack Ballan of Fair Lawn, Wallington Mayor Carl Persak, Mrs.

Olga Morrill of Teaneck, Wood-Ridge Mayor Francis X. Rieger, and Sidney Aelow of Leonia. Also, River Vale Mayor Milton P. DeLeon, Woodcliff Lake Councilman Birger M. Sween.

Wendell Breithaupt of Oakland, and Richard San Filippo, an official of the Tnternational Ladies Garment Workers Union. The committee is expected to schedule one or more public hearings next month. Andora said the platform should be ready for adoption early in July. Tour Jail Annex, Calissi and Sheriff Joseph Job Staff Photo OFF TO JAIL Walter Lang is escorted by a Sheriff's officer as he leaves Bergen County Courthouse after being sentenced. Wife 's-Suitor Killer Gets 5-To-ll Years College Researchers Say Cancer Fight Is Advanced Newark (UPI) Two Newark College of Engineering pro fessors claim they have fur thered the fight against cancer and have made significant strides in the study of how life exists.

Dr. Gerson L. Ram, a chemist, and Professor Robert G. Sa- lamon, a mechanical engineer. said yesterday they have been granted a patent on a process and device that will be used to find the colloidal characteristics of cancer.

They said the device will be used to identify and catalog certain structural properties of pro teins and colloids, the base building blocks of cell life. It will cost about $2 million. If the scale of life is con sidered to start with the atom, then it follows in relatively larger sizes with amino-acid residues, the molecule, the colloid. and finally the cell," Dr. Ram said.

'The make-up of colloidal matter is so minute and varied in characteristics that science, heretofore has been unable to conduct extensive research. since prior methods could not isolate the colloidal matter without harming the colloid structure." By providing the means of investigating colloids in a pure state and by providing the means of immobilizing the colloids under study, the Ram-Sal-amon work makes two forward steps in the study of life. A physical-chemical method then sifts the molecules of the specimen under study and grades them according to elec trical charge and mass density, ine molecular preparation is then dried by the Ram-Salamon device using extreme cold and low vacuum conditions which do not harm the colloidal struc ture. "An analogy in magnification would be to imagine the task of sorting out only the sweetest strawberries from a large jar of strawberry preserves with out seeing or tasting the ber ries," Professor Salamon said wnue sucn an analogy is a vast over-simpimcation of a complex scientific process, the examination of strawberry counting does serve to show how difficult colloid analysis is under most ideal conditions." Ram and Salamon have as signed patent rights to Newark College. conflicting views of how long the interchange, which has been closed since January, should remain shut down.

Paramus's Mayor Reid, with the support of Police Chief. Carl Jockish, the Borough Council, and a local traffic safety committee, contends the interchange is dangerous because the entrance from Pascack Road and the exit onto Highland Avenue feed traffic into areas where blind curves make left turns extremely hazardous. They want the interchange closed permanently, and they say that Tonti agreed verbally to shut it upon the completion of Interchange 165 at East Ridgewood Avenue, about a mile to the south. Tonti disagrees. He says that the closing was never represented as anything but a temporary measure to give traffic engineers an opportunity to test the effect of the new interchange on traffic patterns.

At the meeting Monday the question will discussed further. "We have letters, minutes of meetings between Tonti and Borough officials, and affidavits attesting that he said the interchange was to be closed concepts of other parts of the world," Judge Kole said in passing his sentence. Lang, a burly, 6-foot tall mechanic, did not flinch at the sentence. His wife, who had been tearful throughout the proceedings, said nothing. Lang's mother, Mrs.

Susan Pallotta of Palisades Park broke into sobs. Lang will be eligible for parole after 30 months of his term, Lucianna said. met them. At his first greeting Calissi amazed everyone with his knowledge of the Spanish language but he reverted to English and an interpreter as he explained in detail the judicial and law enforcement structure of the County government. Patiently and at great length the Prosecutor answered the visitors' questions.

Law Varies Widely To the foreign law enforce ment officers representing 11 South American countries, it was evident the only bond between them was their lan guage and their occupation. Beyond that, their countries differed widely in the administration of law and the dispensation of justice. This was made obvious by their almost incredulous impression of the close relationship here between police authority, the prosecutor, and the judge. In countries where police brutality is unheard of but where the standard operational procedure is to beat a prisoner into submission, the treatment given a prisoner in America is almost tantamount to his joining a restricted social club, said one burly lieutenant. On the other hand, he explained, a person who resists arrest and beats up a policeman in doing so, cannot be charged with assault and battery; he can only be charged with the crime for which he was originally arrested.

The group, now joined by Calissi and Job, toured the Courthouse and were shown the Grand Jury room. Most had never heard of a Grand Jury, or in a few cases, any kind of jury. Posed For Mug Shots After an introduction to Domestic Relations Judge Abraham Rosenberg and a summary of the function of the black-robed official, the visitors were shown to the Sheriff's Bureau of Criminal Identification where many of them posed for a mug shot which Job promised to send to them when developed. At this point, Major Manuel Parkway Barriers Stand No figures were available on the response from their congre gations. The Jewish community of Englewood, Englewood Cliffs, and Tenafly has responaea to the Middle East situation by scheduling a drive tomorrow from 10 A.

M. to 10 F. M. at tne Jewish Community Center for the U. J.

A. to speed contributions to Israel. Jews Urged To Unite From the pulpit. Rabbi Hertzberg said, "Jews of America and all people who care about human aignity ana decency will unite tonignt tne Viiffhont rpsnlve to helD Dreserve the fabric of civil life in the State of Israel." His plea was heard not only by adults present 'at services, but also by their children. Donations from the young people amount to approximately $1,000 of the total.

It is expected that the pledges maHo last nipht and exDected at today's Sabbath services and tomorrow drive, will push the local U. J. A. drive over its $400,000 goal. By yesterday morning, half that goal had been met.

Rabbi Blank expressed to his rnnsrpeatinn the fear that Arab nations would become increa singly hostile in the light of risinterpreting the United States' reluctance to act unilaterally to open the Gulf of Aqaba and to unequivocally guarantee the territorial integrity of Israel. Bigger Pledges Asked Members of Temple Sinai were urged to increase their U. J. A. pledges and to participate in a mass meeting tomorrow in New York City.

A Salute to Tempi nararlp heeins at 11 A. and will be followed by a rally at 100t3h Street and Riverside Drive. Rabbi Swift said, "The duty of every resDonsible Jew as a Jew, as American citizens, is to sustain Israels cause. As a Jew, because Israel represents the fulfillment ot a uivine nrnmisp. As an American because Israel is the only real friend of America in the Middle East.

"She is the only democracy in the region and as citizens of the world, we support Israel's cause because Israel's rebirth was endorsed by resolution in the United Nations." He concluded that every Jew has a threefold dutv: to Drav for security and neace. to nourish Israel with financial support through U. J. and to activate others to support Israel's needs. According to George Hantgan, executive director of the Jewish Community Center, 15 tele phones will be used tomorrow by some 200 volunteers in the drive.

Park, Philippines; Adrlca Sharau, Cress- kiii, stateless. Rracha Hadad, Fort Lee, tsrae Margaret McGratton Adam, Hasbrouck Heights, Great Britain; Mario Picinich, Fairview, Italy; Rosa Lospalluto, Cliffside rarK, uoiy, ouenicr reinee, rover void Germany; Joseph Horst Hladina, Lodl, Germany; Violet Louise Skunca, Ridge-wnnd. Great Britain: Francesco Trafi- cante, East Rutherford, Italy; Marion Rabe, Fairview, Germany; Ursula Stadler, Lodi, Germany; Christl Guemoel, Hackensack, Germany; Elie Abraham Horn, Palisades Park, Iran; Maurice O'Sulllvan, Bergenfield, Eire; Silvana Palestroni. Fairview, Italy; J)hn Patrick Clarke, Cliffside Park, Ireland; Mary Anapia Darke, riiffsid Park. Ireiand; Ursula Maria Hedwig Augustln, East Rutherford, Germany; Dieter Rudolf Max Augusfin, east Rumerrora, Germany Trudy Planer, Hackensack, Germany.

Joseph Francica, Hackensack, Italy Mrv Mrhirmott, Boaota, Ireland Thrma fhrMrtDhpr MnrlartV, Carlstadt, Ireland; Christof Rudolf Hefner, Hack ensack. Germany; teo i nomas lonins, rtrarill. Ireland: Kathleen Collins, Oradell, Ireland; Maria Antoinette Duggan, Garfield, Ireland; Cecil Joseph Duggan, Garfield, Ireland; Albert Dantas, Rutherford, Portugal; Militea Phillips, Hncrmirlf Heiahts. Greece: Anna Skeie. Dumont, Norway; Wasyl Szambel, East Pjvrrnn.

Ukraine: Anna 'Szambel, East Paterson, Ukraine; Bridget Josephine Riordan, Wood-Ridge, Ireland; Margaret Riordan, Wood-Ridge, Ireland. Arthur Karl Ludwla Harde. Lodl Germany; Vallle Margaret Barth, East Paterson, Germany; Rosemarie Pauline Hamann, Waldwick, Germany; Franceses Gabrielia ignaccoio, wyckoti, iraiy Calogera Trapani, Hackensack, Italy John Kovac, Palisades Park, Brazil rMralna Marlln Barnes. Ridaefield Park nora Knvar. pa usaaps Kane, araz Great Britain; Margaret Mollaghan, Dumont, Ireland; Renate Jans, Lodi, rrmanv! rionraim Patrick Karaaeorae, Fort Lee, Greece; Yvonne Dallas, Fort Lee, Greece; Eileen camooen, tressKiii, iraianri; Rntamari Caroline Stoll Wwrknff.

Germanv: Rosa Bordonaro, Garfield, Italy; George Adam, Hasbrouck Heights, Great Britain; Michael Nickolas Tsangaris, HeCKensacK, Greece; vvaiour- Midiana parx, Germany. Pnhartn rt7inaa. Mavwood, Argentina Doreen Schlosser, Fort Lee, Great Britain; Annunziata Bellantonio, Clif'side Park, Italy; Carmine Bellantonio, Cliffside Park, Italy; Giuseppina Maria Caneoaro, Fort Lee, Italy; Helga Roa Sedlmayer, Park Riage, Germany Aniiras Turnvans7kl. Garfield. Hjnaarv Margaritis Michialis, Fort Lee, Greece i-ieimnt Turhnltki.

Oaxland. Germany Annaliesa Hflaa TucnolSKi. Oakland Germany; Irene Renate Linseis, Midland Park, Germany, Regina D'Aaamo, Midland Park, Gerfany. Muhamet Hasankolli, Hackensack, Alba nia: Anna Maria Roessler, Maywood, Germany; Anneliesa Maria Davis, Oradell, Germany; Blanca Ceehi Veroara Nvaard. Westwood.

Colomoia 1 nria Jimenez Veraara. Westwood Columbia; Bertel Ingmar Nygard, Westwood, Finland; Hildegard Marij Ttieresa Thomas, Teaneck, Germany Annunziata Francica, Hackensack, Italy ieafrieri rjiehm. Paramus. Germany stefano Cusmano, Garfield, Italy; Inqe- borg Alice Lehmann, Westwood, Germa ny; saiomea Wisz, wallington, Poland. Vincenzo Paoalia.

Cliffside Park, Italy Sarkis Dikran Ekhsigian, Ridgefield, Palestine: Kathleen Elizabeth Gill. Lodi: Ireland; Ottomar Renninghoff, Old Tappan, Germany; Ruth Renninghoff, Old Taoaan: Germany; Vettore Giuseppe Giallomberdo, Lodl, Italy; Filippo Mattessich, Fairview, Italy; John Ludwig, Fair Lawn, Lithuania; Nicola Grillo, Fort Lee, Italy; Byung Ok Ailing, East Rutherford, Korea; Irene sonia Abarca, Saddle Brook. Chile; Barkef Avakian, Palisades Park. Stateless; Istvan Stefar Gyoeri. Oakland, Hungary; Gaetano Antonino capone, Emerson, Italy Marcella Copone, Emerson, Italy Vergine Ohanessian, Westwood, Bulgaria Anahid Ohanessian.

Westwood. Buloaria Siert Hendrik Kiewiet, Lvndhurst, The Nernenanas; iaus t-rieoncn stoii, Wvckoff, Germany; Francesco Belvedere. Fairview, Italy; Pal Juhasz, New Milfor Hungary. COSTLY TRASH Grand Rapids, Mich. (UPD That load of trash Joe Funk picked up yesterday cost $1,400 The trash touched off a fire in Funk's truck, resulting in $200 damage.

The flames spread to a nearby home, causing aamage estimated at $1,200. 110 Gain Citizenship Including 3 Children By CARL A. WINTER Staff Writer Walter Lang, 39, of Bergen field, was sentenced to a minimum of 5 years and a maximum of 11 years in prison forthe murder of Joseph O'R-ourke, the man Lang's defense attorney said could not leave the defendant's wife alone. Lang stood mute before County Court Judge Martin Kole, while defense attorney Frank P. Lucianna pleaded for leniency.

Lucianna told the court that Lang had been aware for more than 2 years that O'Rourke had been wooing his wife, Ellen, the mother of eight children. Lucianna said that Mrs. Lang had actually gone to Canada once and to California twice with O'Rourke. Fateful Night "The final night was the climax of 2 years of frustration and heartbreak," Lucianna said, adding that on March 11 Lang confronted O'Rourke outside the Merritt Bar on North Washington Avenue in Bergenfield with a .22 caliber pistol, but had no intent to kill. Lang fired six shots into O'Rourke after the victim had insulted him, the attorney said.

Lang interrupted his lawyer, crying out, "Don say it." He broke into muffled sobs. Lucianna ended his Va-hour plea by reminding Judge Kole that in certain European countries Lang's act was justified by the cirumstances. "This was a crime of passion," he said. In pronouncing the sentence, Judge Kole noted that he had received some 65 letters in Lang's behalf, from a police chief, patrolmen, a former judge, attorneys, clergy, and from the wife of the victim. "I have to apply the laws of New Jersey, and not the By WILLIAM SCHECHNER Staff Writer Paramos The next attempt to settle the battle of the barricades at the Garden State Parkway interchange near the north end of town is scheduled for Monday afternoon.

For the moment the barriers are still up the result of a last minute decision by D. Louis Tonti, director of the New Jersey Highway Authority which operates the Parkway, not to remove them on schedule at noon yesterday. Tonti postponed the opening after Paramus Mayor Charles E. Reid told him that the Borough would put up its own barriers at the interchange. Had the noontime showdown come to pass the issue would have probably ended in the courts, for Tonti said yesterday morning that he was prepared to seek an order in Superior Court restraining Paramus from blocking the road.

The situation may still wind up before a judge, for local officials said yesterday they were prepared to go to court before they would allow the removal of the barriers. The issue centers over Courthouse Gonzalez of the Bogota, Columbia Policia Nacional, presented Calissi with a small flag of his country after explaining the meaning behind each color of the flag. The next stop was the Bergen County Jail Annex, where the entire entourage were served a luncheon of fried filet, stewed tomatoes, french fried potatoes, a dessert of sliced peaches, coffee, and milk. When Job explained that the meal is the same as that fed prisoners, the visiting lawmen were astounded. Asked what they fed their prisoners, the reply was a bowl of soup and a piece of bread unless the prisoner could afford to pay for his own meal.

Sheriff Job conducted a tour of the recently opened jailhouse, considered the most modern in the country. This building is absolutely fantastic was the interpreted quote from Teniente Carmelo Arnoldo Gomez, Fuer-zas Armadas de Cooperacion, Caracas, Venezuela. Segundo Teniente Alvaro Cruz Ferreira, Brigada Militar, Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil, added that nowhere in America had they visited such a beautiful place of confinement. Thanks Given The Columbian Police Major who was spokesman for the visitors thanked his hosts and said that the experiences gained in this visit would be remembered for many years to come. He added that much of the knowledge gained here will be put into practice when the men return home.

Chief Loveman and the visiting contingent boarded the chartered bus for the trip to the Bergen County Police Academy, Mahwah, where they were greeted by Director Jerry Driscoll and given a tour of the Academy and the combat range. The South American policemen will return today to the International Police Academy, Washington, D. C. Another group of Latin police officials will again be hosted by the Borough on June 2 at the invitation of Chief Loveman. swallowed considerable water, and I felt that I was he told his superiors in a Navy report released yesterday.

But he made one last attempt at inflating the jacket and it worked. Two minutes later he was lifted from the water by a rescue helicopter and returned to his carrier, the Hancock. Yesterday morning Alsop called his mother, Mrs. Wilson Alsop, from a hospital in the Philippines. Despite massive second-and third-degree burns on his legs, he was in good spirits, Mrs.

Alsop said. This is the young officer's second tour of duty in Southeast Asia. The first, aboard the Enterprise, lasted from October 1965 to last June; this tour was scheduled to end in 'August, and Alsop's 5-year hitch will end next summer. Biggett. In AIRPORT LIMOUSINES N.

J. N. Y. AIRPORT LIMOUSINE, Inc. Hourly expres servtre 1 A from II terminals at: KENNEDY LaGUARDIA will notify ynnr family of arrival Fare to LaGuardia N.

J. TERMINALS $fi. Oft Paramos Howard Joh niton's 5.75 Saddle Br The Marriott 5.50 Tetrrboro Atl Avtn.Bldf. 5.5ft Hack. Orftani Motor Hotel 5.00 Englewood Bowlerland 4.50 Fort Lee from Med'tr'a Twra 4.50 Fort Left to rid ice Taxi SOe additional to Kennedy Airport Se your travti soent or call 489-0222 By MIKE ROMEO Staff Writer Bogota The 28 visiting policemen from South America here as guests of the Borough had already formed their own images of the United States.

But to a man, speaking through their interpreters, they declared that this little community and Bergen County, would remain indelibly in their memories. The day began with a greeting at Borough Hall by Police Chief Robert Loveman who had extended the invitation, Police Commissioner Alfred Thomas, Mayor Eugene Brophy, and other members of the administrative staff, including Magistrate Thomas Tinghino and the Department's four police chaplains. Following a coffee break in the Council chambers and a tour of the Borough offices, the Spanish officers accompanied by Loveman, Thomas, and a Bogota Police escort, headed for the Bergen County Courthouse where Prosecutor Guy permanently," Mayor Reid said yesterday. "All these people can be wrong." But Tonti countered with documents of his own when he was reached yesterday at the Parkway's executive offices in Woodbridge. "I said at a press conference last year, and repeated in the 1966 annual report, that it would be closed until we had studied the new traffic pattern." Tonti said he had received a traffic study report 10 days ago suggesting that the interchange be reopened.

Paramus officials were bitter yesterday in their remarks about the situation. They said they had co-operated with the Highway Authority in the building of the East Ridgewood Avenue Interchange with the understanding that this would permit the permanent closing of Interchange 166. Yesterday morning Highway Authority maintenance men were on the way to take down the barricade, and Paramus officials were about to leave for the Interchange, when word came from Woodbridge that plans had changed. A last minute call from Borough Attorney Gary Stein to Tonti suggesting that the situation might be straightened out by a face-to-face meeting turned the tnck, and Tonti announced his intention to hold off just before 11 A. M.

Previously he had said that his men would reposition the barricades so as to make left turns into the Pascack Road entrance or the Highland Avenue xit all but Impossible This solution had been rejected by local officials, who wanted the road closed. Troopers Called State Troopers will be sta tioned at the Interchange to direct motorists who may expect the ramps to be open but discover they are still blocked, Tonti said. The decision not to open the road, Tonti said, was reached in order to protect motorists from the municipal barrier which might catch them unawares since so far as the Authority was concerned the ramps would be open. Unless one side or the other gives ground, it still seems that the issue may find its way into the courts. "There is no doubt in my mind," Mayor Reid said yesterday, "that we will stand firm in our position not to allow the interchange to open unless ordered to do so." At Monday's meeting the two sides will examine' both the evidence bearing on whether Tonti agreed to permanently close the Interchange, and the safety factors involved in its operation.

Downed Mahwah Pilot Tells Of Sea Rescue Bergen County Court Judge Arthur J. O'Dea presided at final naturalization ceremonies at Hackensack yesterday when 110 foreign-born residents of Bergen County, including three children, were sworn as citizens of the United States. A feature of the program was a recitation by Miss Catherine Steele of Park Ridge, a senior at the Immaculate Heart Academy, Washington Township, of her prize-winning essay "What Democracy Means to Four other students who took part in the ceremonies were Donna Rabin and Norman Reinnach of Fair Lawn High School and Nancy Duerr and Robert Lesh of St. Ann's Parochial School of Fair Lawn. Mrs.

David Liebeskind, Mrs. Samuel Weissman, and Mrs. Carlton Bacon of the Fair Lawn League of Women Voters and Mrs. Bruce Malcolm of the Polly Wyckoff Chapter, D. A.

distributed American flags and booklets on citizenship. The children who received citizenship and parents who were sponsors, were: Marion C. Lehmann, 17, of Westwood, born in Germany, sponsored by Heinz W. Lehmann; Valentina Grigoriew, 17, of Fair Lawn, born in Venezuela, sponsored by Alexandra A. Grigoriew; and Joseph Bordonaro, 9, of Garfield, born in Italy, sponsored by Frank Bordonaro.

The other new citizens, representing 27 countries are: Giuseppe Carmen Falletl, Bergenfield, Italy; Kathleen Boyington, Mahwah, Great Britain; Sophie Von Juergensonn, Wallington, Germany; Minerva Rosello, Fairlawn, Cuba; Jozsef Laios Csibi, Garfield, Romania; Bruno Vutano, Hackensack, Italy; Annunziata Falleti, Bergenfield, Italy; Geza Jozsef Kanizsay, East Rutherford, Hungary; Salomon Jerud. Fair Lawn, Israel; Carolina Jerurf Fair Lawn, Israel; Alexander Paton Young, Rutherford, Great Britain; Jessie Guthrie Young, Rutherford, Great Britain; Nadia Carmela Amato, Fort Lee. Italy; Elpidio Tuazon Marcelo, Cliffside DOOR TO DOOR AIRPORT LIMOUSINE SERVICE TO OR FROM JFK-LA GUARDIA-NWK. Fore C50 No From Tolls FAMILY PLAN GROUP RATES PASSENGER S-T-R-t-T-C-H VEHICLES AVAILABLE TO ALL DESTINATIONS CALL 768-8778 FLEETWOOD, INC. Mahwah As a Navy pilot, McCallen Alsop has had a number of close calls, and Wednesday afternoon he had the horrible feeling that his luck had run out.

Alsop, whose parents live at 75 Deerhaven Drive, was on a bombing run over a railroad siding in the Ningh Binh area of North Vietnam. While pulling out of an attack dive his plane was hit. The 25-year-old lieutenant (j. headed for the Gulf of Tonkin with only one thought in mind: td move as far from the coast as possible. Bails Out As he parachuted away from the explosion-torn cockpit, Alsop noticed that his flight suit had been burned.

So had his life-jacket, which didn't inflate as he hit the water, several hundred yards from a group of junks. 1 As Skyraiders from nearby carriers strafed the junks to keep them at bay, Alsop swam to keep afloat. "I kept it up for 29 minutes but I was exhausted, had UNDER $1,009 CASH Buys you the franchise ef an operating KENT DRY CLEANING STORE Immediate Income Locations available throughout BERGEN COUNTY Call 212 353-5000 ill' f4 vAw iiimiiiniiin my fVtii-jirirftj oitirriiimrio'rriffli iy m. iinni mini mmi i Wiumii wn SLm vteS: Staff Photo left from Freeholder Mrs. Doris Mahalick is Fire Chief Henry Brovarone, Dumont.

Looking on in center is Chief Thomas Williams, Franklin Lakes, who took his men through course. FIRST OF MANY Initial class to receive diplomas at Bergen County Police and Fire Academy's new building In Mahwah was graduated last night. Receiving certificate at.

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