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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 32

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3" A-32 BERfiFN THE SUNDAY RECORD, JANUARY 6, 1900 BfflCENPASSAlCHUOSON COUNTItS, NfW JfRSEV Garfield trustees look at $130,650 in cutbacks Hitchhiker abducted in Oradell, escapes Third autopsy OK'd for policeman's wife FHOM PACEA-31 Oradell Detective Scott Bonspcr said yesterday the kidnappers did not make a ransom demand but apparently had planned to Bonspcr and Detective Sgt Donald Proscia were working with New York detectives lionsper said he does not know how long the investigation will take. Descriptions of the suspects and their van are sketchy Bonspcr described the suspects as two white men and one hispamc man. all in their twenties. Police did not know the coloi or the make of the van, nor the state in which it is registered. Police would not discuss what, if any.

protection they are giving the boy, who is with his family. By David Brooks Sun Wniei Three men who abducted a 14 year-old buy at knifepoint in Oradell Thursday were being sought this weekend The boy, a student at Bergen Catholic High School in Paramus, escaped unharmed when his captors briefly left him unguarded Police said the boy, a New York state resident who was not identified because of his age, was hitchhiking at Oradell and Forest avenues when the driver of a van offered him a rule One of two other men inside the van pulled a knife and held the boy captive while the van headed to New York. The boy escaped later. $240,000 the city council cut from this year's budget after voters turned it down in April. The board Is appealing the $240,000 cut to the state, and the state commissioner, Fred G.

Ilurke, has hinted he may order the council to restore those funds. Until a decision is made by the commissioner, the board is continuing to operate as if the $240,000 had been restored. Further cuts, even more drastic, would have to be made if the commissioner does not answer the board appeal. Adler will recommend that the $325,000 figure be put on the March ballot in the form of a tax increase. At the same time, voters will be asked to approve the 1980-81 school budget.

Traditionally, Garfield voters have rejected school budgets and special spending measures. If voters reject the tax increase, the board would have to ask the city council for it, Adler said. If the council denies it, then the board would have to appeal to the commissioner, and he would decide whether further cuts could be made or if he wants to order the city to raise the tax rate to cover the deficit. to decide by Jan IS, the state deadline for all school budgets, if it wants the program in the 1980 81 budget "Controlled reductions," in equipment and supply purchases, could save another $10,000, the report says, although supplies and equipment are already meager, Adler agrees. "They have tremendous needs in Car-field schools, but there is no money there," Adler said.

"They cannot spend money the taxpayers did not give them The budget slashes, which began taking form after the commissioner's order early last month, have "not been a work of pleasure," Adler added. Garfield's schools are already operating on subsistence budgets "1 understand that very well indeed," Adler said "They're going to have to make some hard choices After the board makes at least $72,000 In cuts in its current budget, it must confront two other deficit figures, $325,000 outstanding from past budgets, and the past five years in the Navy and six years as a medical supplies salesman before joining the Knglewood Police Department in 1955. On Dec 7, he said, he applied for a March 1 retirement date. Born and raised in Knglewood, Sherman said he married his first wife In 1947, was divorced in 1969, and married Nancy Sherman in 1970. He has three grown children in the Bergen County area and another one in Vermont.

The captain said he was unaware that his wife had been a client of the Bergen County's Alternatives to Domestic Violence Program. Gayle Kiscn, the program's coordinator, told The Hccord last week that Mrs. Sherman had been a client, and that the agency is cooperating in both the prosecutor's investigation and Mrs. Luginbill's civil suit. As for Mrs.

Luginbill, Sherman said there had been no ill feelings between him and his stepdaughter until Mrs. Sherman filed for divorce in November. "I'd say for a stepdaughter, there was a great deal of warmth in the relationship," he said. "When she moved to California five or six years ago, I gave her my own personal check for $200. There was no animosity between us." Sherman claimed Friday that he was under police protection because the prosecutor's office had received reports that Mrs.

Sherman's son, Kutcher, had tried to obtain a'revolver from a Hillsdale policeman. Prosecutor Roger W. Brcslin Jr. said yesterday that his office had received no such reports and that Sherman was not under his office's protection. FROM I'MIE A-31 burying ht'r mother, and the court gave her custody of the body In the courthouse hallway after the hearing, Lucianna maintained that his opponents, Eflron and Dlackman, had only Mrs.

Sherman's divorce allidavits as evidence against Sherman when they filed suit on behalf of Mrs. l.uginbill. "They handled the divorce papers, and they swallowed everything in it, hook, line, and sinker," he said. In a divorce affidavit filed Nov. 27, Mrs.

Sherman accused her husband of drinking heavily, beating her frequently and threatening her with his revolver twice. Sherman denied the accusations in his own affidavit. The couple was still living together when Mrs. Sherman died. The Bergen County Prosecutor's Office, which tentatively termed Mrs.

Sherman's death a suicide but is still investigating, has been trying to persuade Sherman to submit to further questioning and to make a formal statement. But Lucianna said he will not allow it because of Mrs. Luginbill's suit. "We had really and truly intended to 'cooperate with the prosecutor and clear this whole thing up," the lawyer said. "But you can't now You can't do anything now that could be used against us in this civil suit." And in the hallway where Sherman talked with a reporter, Lucianna asked that there be no questions pertinent to the case.

Sherman, a big man who wears hornrimmed glasses, talked freely about his WNJU to allow viewer to choose his language in afford subscriber TV and would like to watch first runs at home rather than stand on a theater line," Cahill said. Mexican film companies specialize in the of Spanish dubbing for major American films So quickly has the market for the service developed that Spanish dubbing is now done before premieres and many Hollywood productions are previewed in mainland United States and Mexican cities simultaneously. The films are shown in Puerto Rico within a week. MOM PAGKA-31 tain its present format for all except three prime-time hours a day The decoder system for prime time would be the same one used in Los Angeles. Channel 47 would again be a pioneer with the first bilingual, decoder-box subscription television in the country.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1898-2024