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The Herald-News from Passaic, New Jersey • 3

Publication:
The Herald-Newsi
Location:
Passaic, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Herald-News, Monday, June 26, 1 972 '3 Garden State roundup i i Cahill may name 3 black udges 15, of Newark won the ll72 MJss Black Teenage New Jersey title yesterday over 36 ofb War prof est staged MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP About 50 antiwar demonstrators staged a mile-long march to the main gate of the Earle Naval Ammunition Depot here yesterday. The walk was peaceful and there were no arrests. The protest, by members of the Peoples Blockade, an antiwar group, was pert of a continuing demonstration at the depot against the war. The demonstrators say ammunitions made there are sent to Vietnam. After the march, which began at the intersection of Routes 34 and 537, some demonstrators left for the Monmouth County Jail in Freehold.

They planned a si- lent vigil outside the jail where some of their members are serving In connection with earlier protests. Teen wins title NEWARK Gwen Carmon, er contestants, first runner-up in the contest was another 15-year-old, Pamela Milleiif Jersey City. The second riwj ner-up was Michelle Williams! ii Foreman said an interview that Elizabeth attorney Aaron Kaufman, an old friend, had asked him to defend Dominick the high school dropout who is charged with the crimes. The Houston attorney's former clients have included James Earl Ray, who pleaded guilty to the slaying of Martin Luther and Candy Mosler, who was acquitted with her nephew of the slaying of her husband, a millionaire banker from Miami. is expected to be Municipal Court Judge Harry Hazelwood who would be named to either the County or District the sources were quoted as saying.

Texas lawyer picked ELIZABETH Prominent Texas lawyer Percy Foreman has been retained as a defense attorney for the 19-year-old suspect in the sniper shootings here June 16 that left one person dead and four wounded. N.Y. Digest NEWARK Gov. William T. Cahill will nominate at least three black persons to fill judgeships available in Essex County, a Newark newspaper reported.

Quoting sources close to the governor, the paper said Cahill will make the nominations in the next several weeks. It said the sources maintained Cahill had decided to make the move before the threat lest Thursday by State Sen. Wymona Lipman, D-Es-sex, to block 11 white Essex County nominations unless some blacks were also named. The nominees reportedly would include Essex County Court Judge Van Y. Clinton, whom Cahill is expected to elevate to the Superior Court.

Clinton would be only the second black nominated to the Superior Court. The first. Judge Robert B. Johnson of the Superior Court in Camden, was also nominated by Cahill. The governor is considering two names for one post on the either the County or District Court benches, the paper said.

They reportedly are former Judge William Walls, now Newark corporation counsel, and Newark lawyer Maurice Strickland. The third nominee I-- AW 1 Rockland man shot A Rockland County man was shot in the neck and wounded early yesterday by an unknown man who accused him of causing a minor automobile accident near Riverside Park, "police said. Police said Ralph Parker, 40 of Pier-mont, N.Y., was shot at 1:15 a.m. when he. left his car to check an insurance identifica- tion card with the man in the auto parked behind his who had yelled at him, "You hit my car." Parker was reported in fair condition at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center.

His assailant drove off after the shooting, which occurred at West 148th Street off Riverside Park near the Hudson River. Gay libbers march i S3 legislators and male editors." She made her statements during a television interview. The "false issue" was her right to run against another liberal congressman, William F. Ryan, to whom she lost by a 2 to 1 margin in the primary. AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO ALL OUR NEIGHBORS WHO SUFFERED FLOOD DAMAGE Herald-New Photo by Ed Scudder OFF TO ILLINOIS Lily April Do Young, a junior at Parsippany Hills High School, and Allan Robert Gold, a Passaic High School junior, mat with stewardess Cassie Riftgs of Chicago before boarding airplane headed for Illinois.

The two students are Dow Drukker Scholarship winners and are off to five weeks of study at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, Evanston. Premier Fidvl Castro leaves for Moscow on another leg of his nine-country tour today after telling Czechs that North Vietnam needs more support than ever before in the conflict in Southeast Asia. Castro also told a rally yeaterday in Prague, Czechoslovakia, that many of the Nazi war criminals' sentenced to hang after World War II ended on the gallows for crimes that he said were similar to actions by Americans in South Vietnam. On Saturday, Castro exhibited the pye of an expert marksman as he downed two fleet-footed chamois during a hunting trip in the Czechoslovaki-an mountains. Castro came to Czechoslovakia from East Germany last Wednesday.

Emperor Hailc Selassie of Ethiopia has endd a four-day trip to France "with a visit to the tomb of President Charles de Gaulle, Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises. De Gaulle's son, Rear Adm. Philippe de Gaulle, greeted African ruler during the visit yesterday. Rep. Bella Abzug, wondered aloud yesterday if it wasn't a male-dominated power structure in the media and in' politics that caused her defeat in the Democratic primary race last week.

Appearing tired and a trifle hoarse, Mrs. Abzug, the outspoken legislator from Greenwich Village, suggested that the" false issue" raised in her primary campaign was sustained by a power structure dominated by males "male Pope Paul says a question recently to him by a youth' makes him believe youths are close to him. Speaking to a crowd in St. Peter's Square before his usual noon blessing yesterday the pontiff said the question asked of him was, "Is it true that you feel lonesome, Holy Father?" The Pope did not disclose what his reply was, but he told the St. Peter's Square crowd, "Yes, you youths are so close to us and the Pope loves yoiKjfc You youth must be good, free.and strong." Thousands of men and women homosexuals marched proudly from Greenwich Village to Central Park yesterday in their third annual parade to commemorate the birth of the "gay activist" movement.

Chanting "Out of the closet and into the streets!" the paraders, estimated by police to number about 3,500 but by themselves to total 10,000 carried a variety of signs proclaiming their sexual preference. One group of "Gay Vietnam Vets," with a banner demanding an immediate end to the war, was accompanied by Dr. Benjamin Spock, the anti-war baby specialist. The march was sponsored mainly by the Gay Activists Alliance. Refugee gets help A Polish refugee who com-, peted for the United States in the 1970 world paddling championships in Denmark but has been barred from competing in Olympic trials got a promise of help Sunday from Rep.

Ogden Reid, The aker, Eugene Krawczyk, 26, left Poland in 1968 and since arriving the United States has won a number of paddling competitbns. However, Olympic rules require that an athlete must be a citizen of the country he represents, and Krawczyk could not complete the normal five-year naturalization procedure in time for the Olympic trials in Rock-, ford, 111., next month. Krawczyk's efforts to persuade the U.S. Olympic Committee and Uie Immigration and Naturalization service to i help him have been in rain. I People iii tte ews Bobby Fischer The long awaited chess match between the Russian world champion Boris Spassky and the American challenger, Bobby Fischer, in Reykjavik, Iceland, may be stalemated in a dispute over lighting, Fred Cramer, past president of the U.S.

Chess Federation, said last night. Cramer, a consulting illumination engineer and a friend of Fischer, said a battle was bre wing-between Fischer and a television producer who has arranged for the right to televise the 24-game match scheduled to start July 2. Speaking to newsmen at Kennedy International Airport before boarding Icelandic Airlines Flight 508 to Reykjavik, Cramer said, "Fischer won't play under anything but flou-rescent lighting it is very important to him." All of us at Bamberger's understand the difficulties and inconveniences you must be experiencing now, a we would like to do whatever we can to make things easier for you. Author1 Pearl 'S. Buck, Earth" won both -a Pulitzer Prize and a Nobel Prize in literature, celebrates her 80th birthday today, in Philadelphia.

The only woman ever to win the Nobel in literature, Miss Buck has turned out a total of 84 books during her writing career. Born in Hillsboro, W. Miss1 Buck spent most of her first 17 years in China with' her missionary parents. She also served as a Presbyterian missionary herself in China, from 1914 until 1935. "The Good Earth," won the Pulitzer in 1931 and the Nobel seven years later.

til If you are one of our charge customers and find you are unable to meet your financial obligations to Bamberger's during this, unfortunate time, just come in and talk it over with our credit representative. We're sure something can be worked out. Special credit terms can also be arranged for the new purchases you'll be needing. SUNNY FROSTING HIGHLIGHTS THE LILY CUT Cut and color, made for each other! Our expert colorists gild the lily with sunny frosting to add depth and The sunbeams come alive with the magic of Roux Fanci-tone creme hairtint. Frosting, cut 3.

50 President Nixon's performance in office appears to have the approval of a majority of Americans, according to a recent Gallup Poll. The results, of the survey were released yesterday and showed that 60 pet' cent of those interviewed said they approved of the President's actions. Thirty-two per cent said they disapproved and the remaining eight per cent indicated they had no opinion. The survey was conducted hetween June 16 and 19. According to a Gallup spokesman, the statistics were obtained through interviews with 1,500 persons in 300 communities across the nation.

A similar survey was conducted in late May at the end of Nixon's talks with I. Brezhnev, Soviet party leader. It showed the President's popularity at 61 per cent, his highest rating in almost two years. The spokesman "The latest approval rating suggests, that the President has been able to sustain the prestige he won by going to Moscow." William T. Cahill Govs.

Milton J. Shapp of Pennsylvania and William T. Cahill of New Jersey, conferring1 on one of the east coast's worst flood disasters, took a few moments yesterday to celebrate their birthdays. Both were 60. State Police brought a cake to a meeting between them and Govs.

Linwood Hoi-ton of Virginia, Russell Peterson of Delaware and Marvin Mandel of Maryland. If you would like to open a. charge account us to help you over this period of particularly high expenses, we'll do our best to arrange extended, credit terms. We will also arrange to hold merchandise you've already ordered for a future delivery date, if that would be more convenient for you. IT'S NO SECRET NOBODY BEATS OUR SELECTION OF SUMMER DRESSES As always, Bamberger's is completely at your 50 OFF! ALL AT 'EDUCTIONS UP TO service.

THE FAIR Chantrey Beauty Salon, Bamberger's Willowbrook and Paramus WILLOWBROOK: 987-5277 PARAMUS: 843-1220- 636 MAIN PASSAIC.

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Pages Available:
1,793,904
Years Available:
1932-2024