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The Herald-News from Passaic, New Jersey • 10

Publication:
The Herald-Newsi
Location:
Passaic, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

l'J THE HERALD-NEWS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1350 il; 1 1 Ptssale-Clifton, N. J. One Will Be the Next PresicJent of the United St tes byPalrlclc a rid Vinmonf SMALL TALK By Syms -i I Is 3 'N I I In Im scared Ive never "Theres nothing to it been presented To Royalty see. I cant even curtsy WU-. i' -A I Ut'fc 7t VL-' -e j--j As- JVH; '0C iL Nursery-Roundup Ian aitmday, eft mM Aekerson Maternity House, Passaic General Hospital Mr.

and Mrs. James Benson, 31 Brookhill Terrace, Clifton, a boy. and Mrs, Dittrich, 451 Palisade Avenue, Garfield, a girl. Thursday: Mr. and Mrs.

John Stus, 109 Ray Street, Garfield, a girl. Mr. and Mrsr Harry Lyness, 659 Passaic. Avenue, Nutley, a girl. Mr.

and Mrs. Eugene Roemer, 871 Devon Street, Kearny, a boy. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Faulk ner, 43-B St.

Andrews Boulevard, a boy. Beth Israel Hospital No births reported. St Josephs Hospital (No births reported.) Hackensack Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Robert Caruso, 490 Essex Street, Hackensack, a girL Thursday: Mr.

and Mrs. Scofield Willey, 13 Couchon Drive, Little Ferry, a girL Mr. and Mrs. Lotus Schurman, 540 Salem Street, Paramus, a boy. RICHARD MILHOUS NIXON JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY Montclair Faculty On NJEA Program The' Montclair State College Faculty members will be active at the New Jersey Education Association meeting in Atlantic City next week.

Horace Sheppard, of the business education department will talk on trends in social business studies. Dr. Bruce Meserve, chairman of the mathematics dew partment, is program chairman' of the meeting of the Association of Mathematics Teachers of New Jersey, Dr. Max Sobel, of the mathematics department will be moderator of a panel, on the teaching of experimental materials. Dr.

Harold Scholl, chairman of the speech department will act as a resource person at a conference on speech handicapped children. Elizabeth Page will be chairman of the family relations and child development division of the Home Economics Association Council meeting. Dr. John Redd, will act as chairman of the research section of the New Jersey Physical Education Edward Ambry will address a meeting of the American Association of Health, Physical Education and Recreation. He rill also assist' with a program for tha American Red Cross Leadership Training Program.

Betty K. Sommer will conduct a lecture demonstration with students of the college as part of the program of physical education and health at the Atlantic City High School and auditorium. Dr. Carolyn E. Bock, chairman of the language department will attend an executive committee meeting of the classical association of New Jersey.

Reserve Officers To Hear About SAC NEWARK The mission of the Strategic Air Command will be the subject of illustrated lectures by, two SAC officers in Ballarjtine Auditorium under sponsorship of Reserve Officers Association at 8:15 P-m. Tuesday. They will use. recently declassified material' to describe the SACs ability to strike in the event of an enemy attack. The speakers will be Lt.

Col. Wayne K. Snyder and Maj. John H. Mann, Business, education, industry and government representatives will be invited as well as New Jersey Air Reservists.

Mr. and Mrs. John Tripucka, 8 Passaic Court, Maywood, a boy. Chilton Memorial Hospital Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Hemion, 343 Route 46, Wayne, a girl. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Van Walstun, Stonetown Road, Wan-aque, a girL Thursday: Mr. and Mrs.

Henry Hopper, 70 Main Street, Butler, a girL Mr. and Mrs. Edward Heck, 42 First Street, Pequannock, a boy. Mr. and Mrs.

James Allen, Lakes, R.D. No, 1, Butler, a boy. Paterson General Hospital Thursday: Mr. and Mrs. David Malnken, Conby Road, Lincoln Park, a girl.

Other Births: Captain and Mrs. Howard Van Vliet, of Fairford Air Force Base, England, a girl, Brenda Marie, Monday. Captain Van 'Vliet is the son of Mrs. Orrie Van Vliet, 162 Hamilton Avenue, Clifton. Mr.

and Mrs. John Mehalko, 32 East 36th Street, Paterson; twins, John and Joseph, in Mer cy Hospital, Miami, Fla. Their mother is the former Rose Dava neri, of Paterson. Their father is an engineer employed by Wright's in Wood-Ridge. The Mehalkos will remain another eight months in Florida.

POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT TOGETHER Oil THE PLATFORM, TOGETHER Oil THE BALLOT Bom at Yorta Linear California, January 9,1 9 IS. He was graduated from Whittier College in 1934 and DuLe University law school in 1937. He practiced law in Whittier, California, for five years and after serving as attorney in the Office of Emergency Management in Washington, D. C.f he entered the U. S.

Navy in 1942. Commissioned a lieutenant, junior grade, he was a lieutenant commander when discharged in 1946. He served as an elected Republican member of the United States House of Representatives, 1946-50, and as United States Senator from 1951 to 1953. In 1952 he was nominated Vice President of theUnited States and with Dwight D. Eisenhower was decisively elected.

He was renominated and elected again in 1956. As a congressman, he helped draft the Taft-Hartley act, and as a member of the House Committee on Un-American Activities gained national attention for his role in the investigation of a former State Department official. As Vice President, he has presided over the Cabinet and National Security Council meetings in the Presidents absence. He has been the leading spokesman for the. Eisenhower administration and the Presidents good-will ambassador to the Middle and Far East in 1953, the Caribbean area in 1955, South Asia in 1956, and South America in 1958.

His activities mark a drastic change in the complexion of the office of Vice President and have shattered the old theory that the Vice Presidents job is the turnpike to oblivion. Recognition of his apprenticeship as being well spent was shown at the Republican National Convention By nomination on the first ballot as the Republican nominee for President Should he win in the November election, he would be die first Vice President 1 in 124 years to be elected Chief Executive of the United States. HENRY CABOT LODGE Bom in Beverly, Massachusetts, July 5, 1902. He was graduated from Harvard in 1924. After eight years as a reporter and editorial writer on Boston and New York newspapers, he entered politics as an elected member of the Massachusetts Legislature.

Elected a member of the United States Senate in 1936, he served 14 years, taking time off after being re-elected in 1942 to serve in European and North African battle areas during World War II. He rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the -Army. He was the first United States Senator from the time of the Civil War to leave the Senate for military service. He resigned his elective seat in 1944 because of a Presidential ruling barring members or Congress from war service. He was elected to the Senate again in 1946, Defeated for re-election in 1952, he was appointed chief United States delegate to the United Nations in 1953 with the diplomatic rank of ambassador.

Standing firm in his belief that the United Nations is one of the great diplomatic facts of the world, he has in the eight years as the chief spokesman for the United States effectively counterattacked Communist propaganda. His hard-hitting tactics in debate and his proven ability to negotiate with the Communists have made him known to millions of Americans as the man who talks hack to the Russians. He is a recognized authority on international issues. At the Republican National Convention, he was unanimously nominated the 1 Republican candidate for Vice President of the United States. MRS.

RICHARD M. NIXON Bom in Brookline, Massachusetts May 29, 1917. He attended private preparatory schools and was graduated from Harvard in 1940. Served as a commanding officer of a Navy PT boat during World War II. While convalescing from injuries re-' ceived in battle, he wrote Profiles in Courage," which won the 1957 Pulitzer Prize for Biography.

He was elected a member of the United States House of Representatives from Massachusetts in 1946 and a member of the United States Senate in 1952. At the Democratic National Convention in 1 956 he missed, in a close race, being nominated as the choice for Vice President With the advantage of national publicity in newspapers, magazines, radio and television, resulting from the turbulent session in the selection of a nominee for Vice President he campaigned tirelessly in Massachusetts for re-election to the Senate in 1958. Winning by a staggering margin of votes, he immediately aimed for Presidential recognition for 1960. Working on all levels, he knitted together everyone from his own immediate family to political amateurs, big city Bosses, Harvard classmates, colleagues in the House of Representatives and governors of many states. He traveled in every state making speeches, won every primary election he entered and established overpowering strength in the states whidi had no primaries.

At the 33rd Democratic National Convention, he scored a first ballot victory, making him the Presidential nominee. Politically, he is a liberal, an advocate of closer Congressional control over government spending, a defender of civil-rights legislation in the Deep South, a crusader for religious tolerance. While he has never fathered any major legislation in his 14 years in the House and Senate, he has, at 43, come far in national politics. If he wins the election, he will he die youngest American elected President and the first Roman Catholic Chief Executive of the United States. LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON Bom near Stonewall, Texas, August 27, 1908.

He was graduated from Southwest Texas Teachers College in 1930 and Georgetown Law School in 1935. First a teacher (Houston, Texas, public schools), then a lawyer, he turned to politics in 1936 serving as a Texas congressman in the United States House of Representatives from 1937 to 1949. Elected United States senator in 1948, he won a second term in 1954. Chosen -assistant floor leader in 1951 and majority leader in 1955, he has won recognition as one of- the ablest majority leaders ever to serve in the Senate. His greatest legislative triumph, in 1957, was the passage of the first civil rights bill in more than 80 years.

As the leader of a Democratic Congress, he has shown true statesmanship by going along with President Eisenhowers program while being openly attacked by Democratic party liberals. Often called the second most powerful man in the country and recognized as one of the most realistic politicians in contemporary history, he was -nominated, by acclamation, the Democratic candidate for Vice President at the 33rd Democratic National Convention. i MRS. JOHN F. KENNEDY Sodalite-heiress Jacaueline Lee Bouvier was bora July 28, 1929; She was edu-' cated in private schools, had two years at Vassar, a year or study in France and was Sluated from George Washington University.

She was named "the most beautiful utante of the year in 1948 when she made her dehut in Newport and New York society. While working as a member of an inquiring photographer team for a Washing- ton, D. C. newspaper in 1953, she met Senator Kennedy. In the same year, on September 12, at an affair that was one of the highlights or the social season along the Eastern seaboard, she became his wife.

They have one child, a daughters Should Senator Kennedy be elected President, she would be the youngest of the First Ladies since Frances Folsom Cleveland, who was married in the White House to President Grover Cleveland in 1886. Charming, well poised, a sparkling conversationalist and accustomed to public functions, Mrs. Kennedy would find no problems in the responsibilities as hostess of the White House. CtePW tHO, Tlun WIrite SynAate Thorn Lord and Sen. John F.

Kennedy Thorn Lord, Democratic nominee for U. S. Senator, was one of the authors of the 1960 Democratic Platform at the Los Angeles Notional Convention. Here is what Senator Kennedy has to say about him: "I shall rely on Thorn Lord's integrity, his broad experience in public life and his knowledge os a practicing politician to help solve some of the great problems facing the country today." Patricia Ryan was bom in Ely, Nevada, March 16, 1912. Always called Pat by her father, she dropped her christened name, Thelma.

Catherine, and took the name of Patricia. In 1913, the family moved to a truck farm near Artesia, California. Pat was 1 1 when her mother died, and she worked as housekeeper for her father and brothers. When she was 16, her father died. Eager and determined to gain a college 'education, she attended Fullerton Junior College for one year, earning her way by doing part-time work in a bank in Artesia.

A chance opportunity took her to New York where she worked as a secretary and laboratory assistant' until her savings were sufficient to enable her to enter college. While a student at the University of Southern she earned her way working in the cafeteria, the college-library and as a part-time salesgirl She was graduated with high honors. As a teacher in Whittier Union High School, she met lawyer! Richard Nixon. Three years later, in 1940, she became his wife. They have two daughters, aged 14 and 12.

Since 1946, when her husband entered politics, she has worked tirelessly in his campaigns, showing the same determination to succeed that is reHected in her early life. During the past eight years, she has traveled with her husband on his good-will missions to foreign countries, always exhibiting the qualities of a great lady. Should Vice President Nixon be elected President, charming, accomplished and Capable Patricia would be a popular First Lady in the White House, CepyrigM Syndicate VOTE THE DEMOCRATIC TICKET TUESDAY imm DY JOHNSON for President for Vice-President Contributions To Campaigns Are Listed -The Answers (Questions on Page 3) Yes. Indians were enfranchised in 1924, but it was not until 1948 that court decisions upheld their voting, rights In Arizona and New Mexico. 2.

New York. Its latitude is 40 degrees, 47 minutes; Romes is 41 degrees, 54 minutes. 3. No, but James Sherman, Republican vice-presidential candidate in 1912, died just a few days before election. His place was taken by Nicholas Murray Butler, a nativ of Paterson.

4. India in 1876. A cyclone and tidal' wave swept 3,000 square miles and killed 215,000 persons, 5. 22nd Amendment, which took effect in 1951, limits a president, to two terms in office. of Democratic House member! In New Jersey.

It listed these gifts between September 2 and October 24: Thompson for Congress Committee, 1 Dunn (Jack B. Dunn, Westfield Democrat) for Congress Committee, Rodino (Representative Peter W. Rodino D) for Congress Committee, Peacock (Robert R. Peacock, Livingston Demo-' crat) for Congress Committee, Taub (Jerome H. Taub, Bound Brook Democrat) for Congress Committee, $500, and Ad donizio (Representative Hugh Addonizio, D), for Congress Committee, $1,500.

The Republican Congressional committee reported it had re-, ceived one gift of $1,000 or more from New Jersey between September 1 and October 27 $2,500 from Webster B. Todd, Oldwick. The Democratic congressional campaign committee listed po contribution to her campaign from former New Jersey Governor Alfred E. Driscoll of Morns Plains. Meanwhile the Republican Congressional campaign committee said it had contributed $19,500 toward the campaigns of New Jerseys Republican House candidates between September 1 and October 27.

This included $18,500 to individual candidates and $1,000 to! the Dwyer for Congress commit- tee. The candidates themselves! need only report campaign money given them personally. The Democratic congressional campaign committee said it had aided one New Jersey House candidate between September 1 and October 24 $500 to Healey. It had earlier reported a contribution to Representa-I tive Frank Thompson and a $1,400 gift to Representative, Cornelius E. Gallagher, D.

The AFL-CIO committee on, political education said it had contributed $9,100 to local com- LORD for U. S. Senator port money spent in their behalf by a political committee or group. Case earlier had reported T9 campaign gifts totaling $3,877 and expenditures of $265. Meanwhile, campaign financial reports of nine more House candidates from New Jersey were available for inspection yesterday.

They showed these contributions and expenditures: John A. Haddon Heights Democrat, $4,870 in contributions received and $4,706 in expenses; Representative James C. $4,630 and Mrs. Katharine E. WASHINGTON Thorn Lord, the Democratic nominee in New Jersey, has reported campaign contributions totaling $3,360.

In a report filed with the Senate secretary, Lord said he had received IS contributions, including $1,000 each from George FelletUeri and Richard J. Hughes (no addresses listed). He said he had spent nothing personally in his campaign against Senator Clifford P. Case, R-NJ. Candidates need not re White, Red Bank Democrat, $4,400 and $3,598.

A. Jerome Moore, Trenton Republican, -nothing; Representative Florence Dwyer, $10,595 and Representative Frank C. Osmers $4,436 and Repre? sentative George M. Wallhauser, $4,570 and Tony Mar-ifella, Newark Socialist Labor carpidate, nothing and nothing, and Representative Dominick V. Daniels, $1,675 and $582.

Mrs. Dwyer lied a $1,000, i Ppid for by Democratic State Committee I KFFICIKNCY, EFFECTIVENESS. ECONOMY. Want Ada Yea you set a whale of a heal in the want Ada. iPhone PBeeoott J7-6000, New Jersey gifts of $1,000 or more between September 1 and mittees working for the election! October 24.

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Pages Available:
1,793,501
Years Available:
1932-2024