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The Daily Register from Red Bank, New Jersey • 2

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Red Bank, New Jersey
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2
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2 The Daily Register People- MIAMI (AP) Richard Nixon is vacationing in Key Largo in the Florida Keys with his millionaire friends, Bob Abplanalp and Bebe Rebozo. The former president flew on Monday to Key Largo, where he is vacationing at the Ocean Reef resort. Rebozo and Abplanalp accompanied Nixon on the flight, along with his contingent of Secret Service agents. Pat Nixon was not with her husband. pee EAST LANSING, Mich.

A year after his release, Michigan State University student Sami Esmail believes he won his "war" with Israel by the publicity surrounding his imprisonment there. The 25-year-old Ameri can-born son of a Palestinian tapestry merchant returned to Lansing last fall, after serving 10 months of a 15-month sentence. He had been convicted of membership in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a political group outlawed in Israel. Esmail who said he went to Israel to visit his father charged he was denied sleep, punched, kicked and spat upon by Israeli police and that he was forced to sign a false confession. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Former Treasury Secretary W.

Michael Blumenthal's "insights into Washington" made him an addition" to the board of the directors of the Pillsbury board chairman William Spoor said. Blumenthal, who resigned earlier this year along with several other ranking Carter administration appointees, was elected to the board yesterday. SHREWSBURY, N.J. NEW YORK (AP) at the White House" may not be the catchiest of book titles but the author of this Arbor House work lends credibility to the plot Margaret Truman. The daughter of the late President Harry Truman has the book about half finished.

Arbor House hopes to have the novel in the stores by mid-July. The plot deals with a secretary of state who is killed in the White House, and everybody from the president on down is a suspect. ATHENS, Greece (AP) Christina Onassis and. her husband, Sergei Kauzov are not getting a divorce despite news reports to the contrary, says the shipping heiress' attorney. Stelios Papadimitriou said Mrs.

Kauzov authorized the denial yesterday. divorce proceedings have been started anywhere in the world, no arrangements for divorce have been made, and neither are they contemplated," the statement said. AUSTIN. Texas (AP) Double Nobel Prize-winner Dr. Linus Pauling believes the vitamin he takes every day the equivalent of 220 six-ounce glasses of orange juice will cure whatever ails him.

The winner of the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1954 and the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962 spoke here Monday night at an event honoring University of Texas chemist Dr. Robert J. Williams. Pauling, 78, said vitamin "penetrates the body's immunity system" leaving the body's natural defense in high gear. His own massive vitamin intake 10 grams in crystalline form is far greater that the federal WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1979 Bob Abplanalp government's recommended daily intake of 45 milligrams.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) School administrators weren't pleased when 10th-grader Linda Heath passed out a ques tionnaire on teen-age sexuality, so she spent her 15tt: birthday on suspension. The two-page survey, a project for Miss Heath's 10th-grade journalism class at St. Petersburg High School, asked students to respond anonymously to questions such as: Do you feel there is pressure to have sex? Are you a virgin? Would you consider abortion? Is contraception necessary? Do you believe in premarital sex? Miss Heath, who served the one-day suspension Monday, said she would appeal.

She said she had misunderstood the administration's denial of permission for teachers to distribute the questionnaire in their classes to mean she could pass it out herself. She said the issue was important to teen-agers, noting the school's guidance department told her 13 students became pregnant last year and seven pregnancies had been reported at the school so far this year. FORECAST I for Wednesday 40 50 50 30 :30 COLD 60 60 60 Snow Figures show Flurries 2.999 70 XXXX 70 for area. Rain 70 Cold Warm 70 WARM high temperatures A Data from 80 Showers Stationary Occluded 70 NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE, NOAA, U.S. Dept.

of Commerce Sandy Hook TODAY High 10:11 p.m and low. 4:12 p.m. TOMORROW High 10:29 a.m. and 11:03 p.m. and low 4:12 a.m.

and 4:58 p.m. For Red Bank and Rumson bridges, add two hours; Sea Bright, deduct 1 10 minutes; Long Branch, deduct 15 minutes; Highlands, add 40 minutes. TIDES Hi Lo Prc Otik Albany 54 29 Albu'que 60 37 47 26 rn Anchorage 49 28 cdy Asheville 64. 30 cir Atlanta 69. cir Atl City 59 42 cir.

Baltimore 61- 33 cdy Birmnghm 68 43 cir Bismarck. 41 13 cdy Boise 61 37 cdy Boston 54 36 cdy Brownsville 83 67 cdy Buffalo 56 43 .02 cdy Christn-SC 72 50 cir Christn WV 61 38. cdy Cheyenne 19 cdy Chicago 50 39 .10 cir Cincinnati 55 40 .02 cdy Cleveland 53. 41 cdy Colmbus Oh -50 36 .01 cdy Dal-Ft Wth 62 43 cdv Denver 51 27 cdy Des Moines 3 mm mm mm cdy Detroit 52 43 .04 cdy Duluth 33 28 cdy Fairbnks 31 11 sn Hartford 54 28 cir Helena 45 25 sn Honolulu 88 73 cir Houston 70 60 cdy Ind'apolis 38 .06 cdy Jacks ville 75 59 cdy Juneau 39 22 cdy Kans City 34 cdy Las Vegas 68 cdy Little Rock 57 cir Los Angeles 78 56 rn Louisville 58 cir Memphis 59 cir Miami 78 16 cdy Milwaukee 43 36 22 cir Mpls-St 38 26 cdy Nashville 61 cir New Orins 75 cir. New York 56 cdy Norfolk 64 cir Okla City 49 34 cdy Omaha 36 cdy Orlando 82 60 cdy Philad 'phia 57 34 cir Phoenix 76 51 cdy Pittsburgh 54 36 cdy Ptland Me 51 28 cdv Ptland Ore 63 54 cdv Rapid City 46 19.

coy 60 26 cdy Richmond 64 36 cir St Louis 45 40 coy St P. Tampa 82 64 cdy Salt Lake 57 32 coy San Diego 72 54 rn San Fran 64 56 Marie 36 32 .24 cdy Seattle 62 46 cir Spokane 52 35 cir Tulsa 52 43 cdv Washington 63 40 cay Hi- -Yesterday's High. Lo-Yesterday's Low. Precipitation for 24 hours ending 7 p.m. EST yesterday.

Outlook -Sky Conditions Outlook for today. Kucinich loses in Cleveland By DON McLEOD AP Political Writer Dennis Kucinich, maverick mayor who withstood a recall election and two defaults on Cleveland's city debt, lost his bid for a second term yesterday while Democrats turned aside spirited Republican challenges to retain governorhips in Kentucky and Mississippi. John Y. Brown, a flamboyant millionaire businessman, trounced former Republican Gov. Louie Nunn in Kentucky, while former Lt.

Gov. William Winter won easily in Mississippi. Ohio's Republican lieutenant governor, George Voinovich, won going away in Cleveland. He led Kucinich, a tart-tounged anti-establishment Democrat, 94,407 to 73,505 in unofficial vote totals. sacrificed the mayor's office because we refused to bow and serve to the money power of this community," Kucinich told his disappointed supporters.

The nation's voters selected dozens of big city mayors in Tuesday's year" elections. Democrats retained control of legislatures in New Jersey and Virginia. In Philadelphia, former U.S. Rep. William J.

Green easily defeated Republican David Marston in the race to succeed Mayor Frank Rizzo. Boston Mayor Kevin White was reelected to an unprecedented fourth term, defeating a fellow Democrat, state Sen. Joseph Timilty. Former Rep. Donald Fraser, a Democrat, won the Minneapolis mayoral race against a field including former Mayor Charles Stenvig, and Mayor Ted Wilson easily won reelection in Salt Lake City.

In San Francisco, Mayor Dianne Feinstein faced a Dec. 11 runoff with Supervisor Quentin Kopp after she Bob AP photo Rain is due today over Missouri, according to the Showers are predicted in Utah and Colorado. It Southwest and Southeast, at the Register weather low yesterday was 34. It was low was 46. Today's 6 a.m.

was no precipitation in the 24 today. There were 19 heating for the month and 471 for the WEATHER FORECAST parts of Kansas and National Weather Service. parts of California, Nevada, will be generally hot in the and cooler elsewhere. Local forecast Yesterday's high temperature station was 57 degrees. The 52 at 6 p.m.

and the overnight temperature was 46. There hours ending at 6 a.m. degree days yesterday, 90 heating season to date. Coastal forecast Manasquan to Cape Henlopen: Winds northwest at 15 to 20 knots today and decreasing to five to 15 knots tonight. Weather fair today and tonight.

Visibility five miles or more. Average wave height two to four feet today. Jersey Shore Mostly sunny and breezy today. Highs low to mid 50s. Fair and quite cool tonight.

Lows in the mid 30s. Sunny tomorrow. Highs in the low 50s. Precipitation 10 percent today and near 0 percent tonight. Winds northwest 10 to 20 miles per hour today.

Ocean water temperatures are in the mid 50s. Southern Jersey Mostly sunny and breezy today. Highs low to mid 50s. Fair and quite cool tonight. Lows upper 20s to mid 30s.

Sunny tomorrow. Highs upper 40s to low 50s. Precipitation probability, 10 percent today and near 0 percent tonight. Winds and northwest 10 to 15 miles per hour today. Northern Jersey Mostly sunny and breezy today.

Highs low to mid 50s. Fair and quite cool tonight. Lows in the mid 30s. Sunny tomorrow. Highs in the low 50s.

Precipitation 10 percent today and near 0 percent tonight. Winds northwest 10 to 20 miles per hour today. East Pennsylvania Partly to mostly sunny and breezy today with highs in the upper 40s to mid 50s. Fair and cooler tonight with lows in the upper 20s to mid 30s. Sunny tomorrow with highs in the mid 40s to low 50s.

Eastern Pennsylvania Extended Extended forecast for Friday and Saturday except showers north portion Friday. 40s to mid 50s. A little milder rain, highs in the upper throughout theerod mainly failed to win by a decisive margin. With 99.7 percent of the vote reported, Ms. Feinstein had 80,914 votes to Kopp's 77,643.

Ms. Feinstein, appointed to succeed George Moscone after he was slain last year, was making her third attempt to be the first woman elected to the job. In Mississippi, Winter thwarted Republican Gil Carmichael's bid to end 11 decades of Democratic control of the governorship. With two-thirds of the precincts reported, Winter held a lead. congratulate Winter and wish him and wish Mississippi nothing but the best," Carmichael said Tuesday night.

"'We have given it all we can in the last seven, months and the last seven' years. I think and I hope that Mississippi is the better for it. In Kentucky, Brown took a convincing victory over Nunn. With 99.6 percent of the votes counted, Brown led by 553,077 to 379,932. Nunn conceded defeat and said, "I wish for the governor-elect the very best I have no intention of running for office again." He added: "The voters have done my family and me a great personal favor.

What they have done for themselves has yet to be determined." Nunn's race with Brown was a contentious one. and Brown had commented several weeks ago, "I don't just want to beat this fellow, I want to give him the whipping of his life." Kentucky Gov. Julian Carroll, like Gov. Cliff Finch of Mississippi and Rizzo in Philadelphia, was barred by law from re-election. Mayors were being elected in 49 of the 163 cities with populations of more than 100.000.

Democrat William Schaefer won a third term in Baltimore, while Republican William Hudnut was reel- George Voinovich Cleveland's new mayor Washington voters OK tax limit plan By the Associated Press Washington state voters gave resounding approval yesterday in early returns to a proposition they hope will place a lid on the future growth of state taxes. But a tax-cutting initiative in Oklahoma was defeated. But both measures had left voters in doubt as to whether they would live up to their stated aims. Initiative 62 in Wshington was maintaining a commanding 2-1 lead in early balloting. vote shows that tax limitation is alive and wellin Washington," said state representative Ron Dunlap, one of the chief sponsors.

Opponents were philosophical, saying they had predicted the outcome. "I know the bitterness of defeat, but we're in there for the long said Gladys Burns, head of People tor Fair Taxes which opposed the initiative. The initiative limits increases in state revenues for anyyear to the percentage increase in personal income averaged out over the preceding three years. If personal income went up 10 percent, for instance, the state budget could rise by that amount. Thus the initiative might lead to higher taxes.

In Oklahoma, Question 539 would have entitled taxpayers to a federal income tax deduction on their state income tax returns. But a partisan struggle over the measure made it unclear whether it would have raised or lowered taxes if passed. With 2.620 of the state's 2.773 precincts reporting, the proposal had drawn 182.720 votes in favor, to 192.880 against. Ohio, Washington veto bottle bills By the Associated Press Ohio and Washington state voters have rejected proposals that would have required consumers to pay bottle deposits, but Maine voters overwhelmingly defeated an attempt to repeal their 22- month-old bottle law. The vote in Maine on Tuesday was a victory for environmentalists and a setback for the national beer.

can and glass industries, which spent more than $150.000 in the repeal campaign. With 97.5 percent of the precincts counted, voters supported the law by better than a 5-to-1 margin, 219.285 to 40,510. The Washington initiative, which would have required a ected in Indianapolis. Democrat Biagio "'Ben" DiLieto was elected in New Haven where he bumped off Mayor Frank Logue in a primary election. In Gary, Democrat Richard Hatcher the first black ever elected mayor of a major U.S.

city won a third term, as did Republicans Margaret Hance of Phoenix and Tom Moody of Columbus, Ohio. Republican Lewis Murphy won reelection in Tucson, as did Democrat Doug DeGood in Toledo. Maurice Ferre won a fifth term in Miami. In Houston, Mayor Jim McConn led a large field but failed to gain enough votes to avoid a runoff on Nov. 20.

He will face his chief critic, Councilman Louis Macey, Yesterday's elections fell in the midst of a spate of presidential announcements. Democrat Edward Kennedy announces Wednesday, followed Thursday by Democrat Edmund G. Brown and next week by Republican Ronald Reagan. Municipal elections traditionally provide an off-year test of voter sentiment. Democrats control most city governments, and slippage there is generally taken as a bellwether of things to come.

Mississippi and Kentucky also were considered important because of 1980 presidential. implications. Both were key to President Carter's election in 1976, and Republican control of their state machinery in 1980 could cause problems for any Democratic nominee. In Kentucky, Brown swept the Democratic primary last spring against four major opponents. A novice in politics, he made a fortune in the fast food business and is married to former Miss America and television personality Phyllis George.

Nunn was elected governor of Kentucky in 1967 when Republicans were on WWD. WET Philadelphia elects the ascendancy there. He staked his comeback on what he called his scandal-free record and accusations about Brown's lifestyle, implying his opponent was a gambler and jet setter who was out of place in Kentucky. In Mississippi, Carmichael drew on heavy national support in his effort to become governor. The Republican Party poured $150,000 into his race, and presidential contenders Reagan and John Connally campaigned for him.

In addition to being a former lieutenant governor, Democrat Winter also has served as Mississippi's state treasurer, tax collector and a state senator. It was his third race for governor. In Philadelphia, Rizzo tried last year to have the city charter changed to allow him to run for a third term. After losing that, he generally scorned the election for a successor, calling it "an awful William J. Green Green, 41, lost to Rizzo in 1971 during his sixth House term.

Marston gained national attention when he resisted his replacement by the Carter administration at the time he was investigating several Democratic congressmen. Kucinich survived his recall election and Cleveland's default but he trailed Voinovich badly in pre-election polls. He won as mayor two years ago over the opposition of Cleveland's Democratic regulars and has been fighting the city's establishment non-stop ever Fraser served Minneapolis as congressman for 16 years but gave up a safe seat to run for the Senate last year. He was beaten in the primary and the DemocraticFarmer-Labor Party of Hubert H. Humphrey suffered badly in the fall elections.

Fraser's race this year was considered a gauge of the party's future. Westchester er voters veto plan to take over Con-Ed WHITE PLAINS N.Y. '(AP) Westchester County voters yesterday rejected Proposition One, a referendum that could have been the first step toward a county takeover of Consolidated Edison power facilities. With 39 percent of the vote reported, 50,919 or 54 percent voted against the proposition and 44,171 or 46 percent supported the plan to set up a public power agency. County Executive Alfred DelBello, who proposed the takeover as a way to cut county electric bills, cited Con Edison's massive advertising campaign against the proposition as the reason for its defeat.

He said the Westchester referendum was a test case for potential takeovers of private utilities throughout the nation. "It meant a lot to all of the investor-owned utilities that Con Ed defeat this in Westchester," he said. Con Ed has the highest utility rates in the nation. The utility and its supporters had spent $1.2 million on a media blitz to defeat the measure. The debate centered on how much such a county takeover would cost and whether the government could produce electricity more cheaply than Con Ed.

The utility estimated a takeover would cost $2 billion, while DelBello placed the pricetag at between $754 million and $1.3 billion. The vote turnout was far heavier than expected in an off-year election, with officials estimating a better than 40 percent turnout among the county's 378,000 voters. Two busing foes elected to school unit in Boston BOSTON (AP) Two opponents of court-ordered busing have been elected to the Boston School Committee, but veteran busing opponent Louise Day Hicks faces a recount battle in her city council Boston has been the scene of repeated racial violence stemming from court-ordered busing to achieve racial balance. Mrs. Hicks, 60, twice a candidate for mayor at the height of racial disorder in Boston, clung to her City Council seat by five votes, according to final unofficial tallies yesterday.

Unofficial totals in the battle for the last of nine seats on the council showed Mrs. Hicks with 54,387 votes to 54,382 for Patrick F. McDonough, 54, who was seeking his 11th term on the council. If the official count expected Friday shows the same slim margin. McDonough will ask for a recount.

said an aide, Phil Murphy. In 1976. Mrs. Hicks became first woman president of the City Council and in 1970 was elected to Congress. Judge Garrity, here I come, cried Elvira Pixie Palladino, 46, an East Boston, housewife.

after winning back the school committee seat she lost in 1977. She has vowed to fight to end the busing ordered in 1974 by U.S. District Judge J. Arthur Garrity. My election shows this is a swing back to conservatism.

she said. people are fed up with liber- alism. The people want a return to safe schools." The campaign was marked by racial violence that began when a 15-year-old black high school football player, Darryl Williams, was shot and paralyzed. Mrs. Palladino finished fourth in the race for five committee seats behind Gerald O'Leary, 45, who won his first term to the school committee.

He has called busing a failure. The only two incumbents running for the school committee, John D. O'Bryant, 48, the lone black member who favors busing, and John J. McDonough, 52, a four-term moderate who considers busing here to stay." won reelection. Jean Sullivan-McKeigue, 33, took the lead for the fifth, swing seat.

She also has called busing a failure but has advocated student assignment plans to achieve integration. Rembisz trained in air-flow technique LINCROFT- Linda Rembisz, a certified speech pathologist from Speech Therapy Services, here, has received her certification in the air-flow technique for treatment of stuttering. Rembisz recently completed a 10-month externship program under the direction of Dr. Martin Schwartz, speech scientist at New York University. The air-flow technique uses a physiological ape, proach to aid stutterers.

Princeton merger dead nickel deposit on all soft drink and beer cans and bottles was defeated 274.305 to 210.689. Bottlers, the container industry and food stores spent nearly $900,000 to convince Washington voters that their current litter control law is effective and should be left in place. The initiative proponents raised only about $100,000. They argued that the throwaway concept resulted in higher costs for solid waste disposal and higher grocery store prices. And they had hoped there would be a backlash against.

the high spending by opponents. PRINCETON (AP) Although voters in Princeton Township endorsed a proposal to consolidate the township with Princeton Borough nearly 2-to-1, the measure was defeated in the borough by a mere 33 votes. The proposal needed majority approval in both municipalities to be instituted. Borough results showed 1,508 votes opposed to the merger with 1,475 in favor. Townhip, voters overwhelmingly approved consolidation, with 3,432 yes votes and 1,444 against.

In the borough, District 4 voters strongly defeated the proposal 232 to 79. Consolidation would have simplified government struc- ture, which would have resulted in savings of operating expenses. The two Princetons have been separate for 141 years. Voters rejected consolidation proposals in 1953 and 1976. In 1965, a committee considered the issue but recommended the consolidation not take place.

It would have merged the two Princetons under a single government and was recommended by a commission established in the fall of 1978 under the Municipal Consolidation Act, a New Jersey state law that establishes the framework by which two towns that wish to consolidate may do so. FRiday through Saturday. Fair for the possibility of a few Daytime highs in the mid Sunday with a chance of 40s and 50s. Overnight lows in the 30s..

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Pages Available:
356,180
Years Available:
1878-1988