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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 1

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Purdue 37 Yanderbilt 17 3S Rutgers 20 Lafayette 5fi Morgan State 9 Southern Ca! 24 Notre Dame 22 Army 13 Indiana 20 Princeton 14 Columbia 11 Cramblin? 7 Northwestern 7 ITackensack 7 Montclair 28 Bergenfield 7 Teaneck IS Don Bosco 11 Lodi 27 Clifton 4 Paramus 6 PatEastside 13 Dumoct 7 Passaic Valley 14 Dell 12 Lyndhurst 7 Kennedy 0 THE SUNDAY YtOCIUANM AJSAIC Call 20 CENTS 192 PAGES SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1968 Vol. 1 No. 1 hrey Blue Collars Snub Hump Call for Action Democrats dare Nixon to face Humphrey in a debate. Nixon vows to link Social Security payments to the cost of living. Page 16-A.

Campaign '68 "They're sick of the way the whole damn country's goin'," said a worker at the Continental Can factory in Piermont, N. Y. A random sampling of 100 workers at plants in Teterboro, East Rutherford, Carls-tadt, Mahwah, Paterson, and Piermont, N. backs up these views. Thirty-seven per cent said they plan to vote for Nixon and 35 per cent said they would vote for Wallace.

Only 18 per cent said they'd vote for Humphrey and another 10 per cent said they were undecided. But the indecision among the latter group hinged more on Nixon and Wallace than See LABOR, Page 22-A By RICHARD BENFIELD Staff Writer Hubert H. Humphrey appears to be losing labor support to Richard Nixon and George Wallace in Bergen, Passaic and Rockland counties. The Republican and third-party candidates are draining the well of traditional Democratic voting strength despite the efforts of George Meany, head of the AFL-CIO, and Walter Reuther of the United Auto Workers. Interviews during the past week with workers at more than a dozen plants in the three counties indicate they believe Humphrey currently commands little support among cent instead of the 10 per cent that run it now." "No one here believes Humphrey," said another worker at Bendix.

"If it were Kennedy," he added in a reference to the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, "it'd be different. But they don't trust Humphrey that way." their fellow employes. Most think both Nixon and Wallace would run ahead of the vice-president at their plants.

"We want a change," said a worker on the night shift at the mammoth Ford plant in Mahwah who is backing Wallace. "We want the country to be run by the decent 90 per Call For Action solves problems and cuts red tape. If you've got a problem, call 487-9339. Rare1 Exception I bought a camera lens in Japan and brought it home duty-free because I was a serviceman. The lens got damaged and local stores in To Serve The People -iff i I A 7f JV v.

told me only the Japanese manufacturer could fix it; so I returned it to Japan and marked the package "returned for When the lens came back the post office insisted I pay 25 per Ti i i i in' 3 atti jssi8 srw w'. S3 SJ5 mm The Sunday Record Call is designed to fill a demonstrable need not now met by Sunday newspapers based in Newark or New York. It will attempt to bridge the gap between the heavy but alien coverage of the metropolitan publications and the limited horizons of the weekly press. It will contain enough of each to satisfy readers who want it, but offers much more. Together with The Morning Call and The Record in the evening, which provide area coverage during the week, The Sunday Record Call will complete the information and entertainment service we offer to our readers, maintaining the same integrity.

The content of this first issue matches as closely as possible the desires expressed to interviewers in preliminary surveys, as well as the pooled experience of our editors. It is good, but it can be better. Our readers are urged to give us their criticisms and suggestions. The Sunday Record Call is intended to serve the people. With your help it can and will.

DONALD G. BORG Editor and Publisher 1 1 11 0. tumUmmm 1rJm mi nimiM Staff Photo bv Al Pasliona cent import amy, wmcn i u.u because I had gone without the lens long enough. I do believe, however, that a duty shouldn't have been charged. I know -it's an impossible request, but could you get me a refund? J.

Fair Lawn. A CHECK is being sent by U. S. Customs, even though the mistake was yours. When vou send an item out of the country for repairs it's your obligation to register it with the Customs Office.

When the item is returned, customs charges a duty on the repair cost only. The chief of the U. S. Customs Mail Section has agreed just this once to let vou get away with it. He's deducting the duty on the cost of repairs and sending you a refund for the rest.

Under The Knife I just got out of the hospital where I had my baby, and now I must undergo an operation for cancer. The doctor took a biopsy in my fourth month of pregnancy and told me then I'll need the operation now. While recovering from the biopsy my insurance company-i-one of the largest in the nation canceled my policy. I'm now faced with a $1,000 operation and no insurance. Mrs.

II. Patcrson. YOUR DOCTOR and the anesthesiologist performed the operation without charge, cut-tin" the $1,000 bill in half. It took almost four months for your doctor and the column to persuade you to have the operation because you suddenly decided you would rather spend a few years with the baby than take a chance on the operating table, even though you knew the cancer you had is almost 100- See ACTION, Page 22 A FIRST RUN Gov. Hughes mith Editor and Publisher Donald G.

Borg checks the presses prior to publication. Birth Of A Newspaper Inside Sunday Section A News of the area and the world. Section Complete scholastic football. Section Family, entertainment, business. Section Opinion, letters, and want ads.

Plus Comics, TV Week, At Ease, Family Weekly. By ALICE OUCK Staff Wrltar New newspapers are a long time In the making. The first edition of the The Sunday Record Call was born, as an idea, 13 years ago. "The prime consideration in deciding on a Sunday paper was patience," explained Editor and Publisher Donald G. Borg.

"Around the bull pen, in the city room, in advertising, the idea kept coming up like sparks from a grinding wheel. It would be nice if we went with a Sunday." As far back as 1955 Borg sought advice from his key 17-A 17-C 21-A 1-B 4-A 13-C People Real Estate Science Sports TV Changes Travel 18-C 2D 1C 12-C 14C 16-C Business Editorials Family Gardens Movies Obituaries men about a Sunday paper. Timing was an important factor, thev decided, in creating an offspring. It wasn't until two years ago, when The Record and The Morning Call commissioned a survey by the consulting firm of Louis Harris Associates that things began to jell. Even then, the time didn't seem right.

The Record had bought The Call two years before, and was still knee deep in remaking The Call's image. The Rockland edition of The Record also needed more time to gain a firmer foothold. The Sunday edition, however, was not shelved. It became "Project SS," kept temporarily under wraps. Sec BIRTH, Page 23 A Stray Bullet Kills Ridgef ield Girl, 9 His First Grid Game Is His Last Bv SUSAN SERVIS Staff Writer Dcbra Ann Maldonato, 9, was playing with friends by her aunt's Bergenfield home.

Suddenly, a bullet, which police say came from a man shooting at cans a block away, killed her. IV-" I pencil mustache, appeared calm' as he posted his bail Saturday afternoon. His wife stood by his side. Debrah, an only child, is believed to have died almost instantly. Her friends said she started to walk away from them but suddenly fell to the ground.

Police rushed her to Engle-wood Hospital where she pronounced dead. A Mass of the Angels will be offered at St. Johns K.C. Church, Bergenfield. Burial will follow at St.

Joseph's Cemetery in Hackensack. A An Emerson youth, 16, died shortly after playing in his first high school football game. Kenneth Flynn of 344 Grand Boulevard, the red-haired, freckled-faced son of Emerson Postmaster Thomas F. Flynn, died at 4:45 p.m. Saturday at Pascack Valley Hospital, West-wood.

A hospital spokesman said there were no apparent signs of injury. The body was taken to the ITalsey Funeral Home. 199 Center Westwood, where an autopsy was to be performed Sunday at the direction of the Bergen County Medical Examiner's office. Flynn, a junior, started at defensive end in the game against Oakland's Indian Hills Hifih School, Defense figured prominently as Emerson wno, 7-0. See DIES, Page 22-A 1 'i KENNETH FLYNN Football Death Staff Photo by Mika Kartli TUMULTUOUS VICTORY-GIceful Rutgers University fans tear down the goalposts.

It's Your Move, Folks, Mortgage Money Eases Police have accused Charles Siegrist, 41, of 24 30th Fair Lawn, of firing the fatal shot. Siegrist, believed to be an employe of Bergenfield Auto Parts was charged with manslaughter. He is free' on $5,000 bail. Authorities claim he was firing a revolver at cans in the company's back lot at 104 Washington Ave. when a shot went wild.

The bullet traveled a block to 28 Home Place and lodged in the girl's neck. Siegrist was arrested only minutes after the girl fell dead at about 3:10 Saturday afternoon. Police say he had the gun in his possession. They could not say whether it had been registered. The girl, and her parents Mr.

and Mrs. Frank J. Maldonato, only recently moved from Bergenfield to 763 Bergen Ridgefield. She was a fourth-grade student at Bergen Boulevard School. Siegrist.

a short brown-haired man with a rigged Purdue 37, Notre Dame 22 Purdue's 60-minute man Roy Keyes played little defense but made up for it with three touchdowns Saturday to dump Notre Dame, No. 2 team in the nation. Stories, Page 1-B. Kutgcrs 20, rrinccion li Rutgers' junior quarterback Bruce Van Ness, on the strength of two interceptions, passed and ran Princeton ragged Saturday in the 59th renewal of the nation's oldest football rivalry. Weather By RONALD D.

PAGE Staff Writer The home-buying industry is still wobbling from this summer's one-two punch of mounting interest rates and taxes. But the months ahead may bring smiles to the faces of home buyers and real estate men. Area real estate experts are expressing confidence amid reports that mortgage money is becoming more readily available. Roy Wcnzlick, a real tstate Don't expect consumer loan rates to drop, Page 19-C. economist from St.

Louis who has an enviable record for accuracy in forecasting is optimistic He predicts a real estate Wm in the coming months. But many still shudder over last summer. Rockland, Passaic, and Bergen realty brokers found the going rough to qualify buyers See MORTGAGE, Page 23-A i Football Dallas Philadelphia, 1:15 p.m., Channel 2. New York Jets it Buffalo, 1:30 p. Channel 4.

Oakland it nouston, approximately 4 p. Channel 4. Baseball Yankees at Boston, 2 p. Channel 11. Philadelphia at New York Mets, 2 p.

Channel And Today On Television Summery! Sunny skies and mild winds welcome the first edition of The Sunday Record Call. For complete weather details ie page 5-A..

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Pages Available:
3,310,483
Years Available:
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