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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)

ward F. Foley and Harold Larsen, East Newark board president. The agreement was announced by the state Education Department's Division of Controversies and Disputes. 7 if flik isisr, Weehawken, and West New k. The recreation programs are due to begin July 5 and close Sept 13.

Tuition plan set TRENTON The school boards of East Newark and Harrison agreed yesterday on a new tuition schedule for East Newark pupils attending Harrison High School. Tuition will be $900 per pupil for the 1972-73 school year, $1,000 per pupil for the 1974-75 year, and $1,100 per pupil for the 1975-76 school year. The settlement was agreed to by Harrison School Board president Ed a 1 said Newark school teacher Ann Bernstein. Protesters fined NEWARK A federal mag-1 a yesterday imposed fines of $250 each against 31 persons who took part in a religious on the railroad tracks leading to 1 Earle Ammunition Depot on June 11. The defendants were charged with illegal trespassing.

One pleaded guilty and 30 pleaded no contest, Magistrate Harry Lane ruled that no-contest pleaders were guilty. Grant for alcoholism TRENTON The State Department of Health confirmed yesterday that the federal government has given New NEWARK Fourteen -members of the Newark Teachers Union began serving sentences ra I from 12 days to three months yesterday for taking part in a strike of Newark public schoolsm 1971. Among those who were sent to the Essex Correctional Center in Caldwell were NTU president Carole A. GravesNTU organizer Don- aid Nicholas and Frank Fiori- to, president of the New Jersey State Federation of. Teachers.

Fiorito's three-month sentence was the stiffest handed out to the group The union oU i i a 1 went off to prison amidst the cheers of several supporters who marched outside the Essex County Hall of Records to protest 'the jail sentences. "It's totally unfair that these people have to go to prison like common crimi- Jersey' an $875,219 grant for the treatment of The grant was announced in Washington by Sen. Clifford P. Case, A spokesman for the department said more than two-thirds of the money would be distributed to local government and private alcoholism treatment and prevention Play funds to Hudson TRENTON -The State Department of Community Affairs announced yesterday the award of a $50,000 grant to the North Hudson Council of Mayors to fund summer recreation programs in seven Hudson County communities. The seven communities are Gut-tenberg, Kearny, North Bergen, Secaucus, Union City, SPECIAL Couturier Dresses AP Wlrephoto JUST DROPPED IN Sen.

Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota stopped by to see Alabama Gov. George Wallace yesterday in his hospital room at Silver Spring, Md. The two Democratic presidential contenders talked for more than an hour. Humphrey said they discussed the platform for the convention which Wallace is unhappy about.

Brand New Fresh Designer Cottons and Silks in a Huge Assortment of Styles. All With Waistlines. sizes 6 to 16. Plenty of 14 and 16 Sizes. Were $75 to $150 Now $50 to $95 N.Y.

Digest Patrolman dies after Texas choral groups at his private residence in Neptune on the Black Sea Coast. The American Council for Nationalities Service, based here and sponsors of the trip, said the 168-member Texas delegation would spend three weeks in Romania on a singing tour under the ACNS's "Ambassadors for Friendship" program. Overconfidence could cost President Nixon his re-election, Edward Nixon, the chief executive's younger campaigners in Nashville, yesterday RED CROSS Now 13.90 to Originally $17 to Bobby Fischer failed to make his. scheduled flight for Iceland last night and gave no indication when he would depart for his World Championship chess match with Boris Spassky, expected tq get under way Sunday in Reky-javik, Iceland. Fischer did not take his plane on a Pan American Airways jetliner that left for Rekyjavik.

The next scheduled flights to the Icelandic capital are today and Saturday. Veteran British mariner Sir Francis Chichester, apparently heading home after quitting a single-handed transatlantic i 1 620 VALLEY ROAD, 1550 $23 1 yacht race, signalled London last night he had been ill. But he flashed to a circling plane that he was now the Royal Air Force said. Chichester, 70, defied his doctors to take- part in the gruelling race from Plymouth, England, to Newport, R.I. People iii Romanian President Nicolae Ccaucescu will be bestowed with song and 100 pounds of Texas barbecued beef in New York today when he hosts four COME AND i a i livi: i "We are encouraged by the continuing buildup in service performed during the last nine months," Commissioner Graham S.

Finney said. "We are making genuine progress toward offering every addict in the city a treatment alternative to a life of crime and hopelessness in the streets of the city. That buildup will continue in the months ahead." Drug addicts in methadone maintenance programs totaled 16,736 in May, a 60 per cent jump from August. Teachers ask $37,000 The Public Education Asso-c i a i said yesterday the city's teachers would receive a top scale of $37,000 in wages and benefits under a contract proposal drafted by the United Federation of Teachers. The average wage-benefit package for teachers would increase 68 per cent under the proposal from the current $18,205 a year to $30,636, the PEA said The PEA, a nonprofit organization of 1,200 civic and educational leaders said the top salary being sought was $29,000 yearly, but a UTF spokesman put the figure at $25,000.

A union spokesman added that the association's analysis "betrays little first-hand experi-e with the realities of teaching in New York." 'Harlem 4' to trial Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Joseph A. Martinis denied a motion by the "Harlem Four" yesterday to dismiss NATURALIZER''" Now 11.90 CORRECTION OF TUESDAY, JUNE 27th, 1972 ADVERTISEMENT: Sam and Clnrt Nackson Request the honor of your presence at the GRAND RE-OPENING CLARA'S 42 Park Avtnuc Rutherford 3 PURCHASE UPPER MONTCLAIR 926 2ff Now 9.90 to 13.90 13.90 9.90 8.90 15.90 19.90 19.90 Originally $1S to 23 JOYCE Now 13.90 to 15.90 Originally to 922 tmmmm I ill mm 2 UL I BANDOLINO shootout the indictment against them, clearing the way for their fourth trial in September. Dist. Atty Frank S. Hogan decided to prosecute the four again after their third trial ended with a hung jury last February.

The four are charged with the murder of Margin Sugar, the attempted murder of her husband, Frank, and the attempted robbery of their clothing store in Harlem in 1964. A fifth defftid-ant was convicted at a separate trial and a sixth pleaded guilty to manslaughter. The others, who came to be called the Harlem Four, were in jail from the time of their arrest until bail was set as a result of the last trial and the decision to prosecute again. Out-of-towners staked When the David Sevilles, here seeking a restorer for their flood-ravaged antiques and family heirlooms, found that their illegally parked car had been towed away during a five-minute stop for coffee, they went to the police. Sympathetic patrolmen simply couldn't unravel the red tape for the couple, who live in the Harrisburg suburb of Camp Hill, Pa.

The Sevilles had only $2 and there seemed no way to spring the car. But, then, 15 policemen chipped in. for the $50 fee and the couple got their car back Tuesday. "I think it would be easier to spring a prisoner," said Patrolman Otto Marion, one of the policemen contributors. "The need today is not for more laws the need is for more obedience to the laws that already exist by the officials charged with administering these laws," Sen.

Edward M. Kennedy said yesterday in Washington. Tes-t i i before the Congressional Black Caucus hearings on charges of governmental lawlessness, the Massachusetts at criticized the U.S. involvment in Southeast Asia and said "The Senate has failed to meet its responsibilities in the last .14 years." Allen G. Potter Jr.

of Branchburg Township was sworn in yesterday as a member of the State Board of Education. Potter is a supervising chemical engineer at the American Cyanamid Company's Bound Brook plant and is president of the Branchburg Township School Board. PADS OFF Now 15.90 SELBY Now 15.90 to 19.90 Originally 92Q to $27 An off-duty Transit Authority patrolman was fatally wounded in a subway gun battle yesterday as he tried to arrest a man wearing a gun in his belt. Patrolman John Skagen, 33, of the Bronx, died of his wounds at Lincoln Hospital about four hours after the incident. The man charged in the shooting, James Richardson, 28, of the Bronx, was admitted to the hospital with bullet wounds in the left shoulder and groin.

He was listed in good condition. Sex suit dropped The New York Civil Liberties Union announced yesterday it was dropping a suit New York because the New against the State University of York State Maritime College had agreed to accept the first woman in its 98-year history. Barbara Shack, a liberties union lawyer, said the federal court suit had been withdrawn because the college at Ft. Schuyler in the Bronx had admitted Marjorie M. Murtagh, 26, of Ridgefield Park, N.J., for study beginning in September.

Addiction up The number of addicts receiving treatment in publicly funded programs here more than doubled over nine months ended in May, the city's Addiction Services Agency reported yesterday There were 37,097 persons in methadone or drug-free programs in May, up from 18,072 last August. There was no trace yesterday of former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and his wife Martha who slipped together from the elegant Westchester Country Club in Rye, N.

aft-er Mrs. Mitchell's three days of seclusion there. The management had said that Mrs. Mitchell, quoted over the weekend as having said she would leave her husband until he left politics, was in an eighth-floor suite accompanied only by a "friend." But Mitchell, now President Nixon's campaign head, had arrived at the club Monday, after newspaper accounts of Mrs. Mitchell's ultimatum appeared.

She also was quoted as saying she had been manhandled by Republican security guards on the West Coast. An attorney for Mrs. Clifford Irving claimed that Swiss authorities yesterday made a deal to drop extradition proceedings against Mrs. Irving for her role in the Howard Hughes autobiography hoax. But a federal prosecutor, called to the witness stand to verify the story, refused to testify, saying he was acting under orders from Attorney General Richard Klein-d i U.S.

Atty. John J. Tigue who led a six-w3k federal probe of the Irving affair, refused to answer questions about the alleged negotiations despite a direct order to so by U.S. Magistrate Gerard Goettel. Originally to I AMALFI Now 19.90 Originally 930 to $34 15,000 PAIRS OF FAMOUS MAKE SHOES SHENANIGANS Now 11.90 Originally 918 to 920 Mf'i.

-ii Hit CITATIONS Originally to tPcople ill Wwsi Martha Mitchell CUSTOM MADE 10 HANDLER Now 11.90 Originally 918 to 920 Now 11.90 to 13.90 13.90 to 15.90 19.90 19.90 15.90 Bass Mannequins Desco Hush 0 MikelOS OFF 25 TO Originally $17 to $20 $23 to $24 $15 to $16 Puppies $13 to $17 S.R.O Socialites Geller Originally $18 to $19 $18 to $23 $25 to $32 $28 to $30 $20 to $22, $15 to $27 $15 to $27 11.90 to 15.90 11.90 to 15.90 Garolini Rosina Mademoiselle Caressa Bibiana Famolare (Poramu only) $21 to $30 $24 to $30 Ferragamo. $29 to $39 JiMaVOnfi. (Paramui only) PLATFORMS SLING BACKS PUMPS SPECTATORS ANKLE STRAPS T-STRAPS STRIPLING SANDALS Ml CH Regular Prices Protect your table against spills, scratches and hot dishes. Simply call your nearest Bamberger store and we'll come to your home to measure your table at a convenient time. Former President Harry S.

Truman, 88, was examined at a Kansas City hospital yesterday after he slipped at his home in nearby Independence, Tuesday night. A hospital spokesman said X-rays were negative and Truman, who had complained of soreness in his lower back, returned home shortly afterward, the spokesman at Research Hospital reported. Asked for a description of the former chief executive's condition, the spokesman said it was to say" hit condition was good. WALKING SHOES DRESS SHOES SPORT SHOES UAbUAL bnuta lvliniino onw cnrcf MORE MID HEELS FLAT HEELS NEW MID-HIGH HEELS SOFT LEATHERS CRINKLE PATENTS SUEDES WHITE i BONE BLUE RED GREEN LILAC TAN MULTT COLORS BLACK BLACK PATENT LOTS OF STYLES CAN BE WORN RIGHT THROUGH FALL A HUGE SELECTION AT EVERY STORE! GET YOURS! Throughout all Bamberger Note: Red Cross shoes hasjio connection with the American Red Cross. Shoe Salon, Bamberger's Willowbrook and Paramus.

Table Pads, Willowbrook and Pa-ramus; and at the Bamberger's near you..

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About The Herald-News Archive

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