New Jersey Nightly News; New Jersey Nightly News Episode from 06/22/1980

- Transcript
You sang 17 points despite playing with a painful to seven days of the season ends Saturday at ole gimbals tonight in Philadelphia the match when he could magically 1:57. Could find his office door to where you need for your prettiest summer ever. 20 to 33 percent off men's shirts and slacks to keep your gimbals guys looking for rhythmic. Ready to beat the Yankees. The yanks out on seven hits. Let's go to the videotape and the top of the SEC told Sutherland still with me to help. Out. With that bargain offer to take my time this powerful if it ever place for a new defense installation. I think I'll go to Midas. 23 Burlington County Board of Election workers are out of the 2 on 1 outs are on a base and centerfield jet laminar throughout yesterday thought of the plate. Cider home is a dead bird out of the play now for nothing top of the seven North Hagan used to play football of all base it left field in stores. Cornell
Washington score six nothing. And that was the game in Houston of Ike in the eighth inning the Astros 7. The Mets two. National League elsewhere tonight Cardinals beat the Phillies three to one. George Hendrick had two home runs lets go to the videotape of that game and pick up the finish. Philly is down by 2. They have the bases loaded 2 out the bottom of the night. Mike Smith is the batter facing Mark Mattel tops the ball I look at it Simmons picks it up. Add thrown out at the plate a bowl of eggs over and the Cardinals win it three to one. This afternoon the Cubs beat the Pirates 5 3. King and had a sixth over montréal in extra innings over in the American League. These finals are in Detroit wins Minnesota wins Texas wins and the red hot white sox 6. The Yankees. The Penn Relays are continuing at Franklin Field and for the 15th year in a row Villanova has won the distance medley relay. Get this no veranda nine twenty four point two which is an unofficial World Record unofficial because the distance medley is basically an
American event and no world record is on the books but Nova has done it again. And in hockey Pat Quinn has been named coach of the year. Keith Allen General Manager of the Year by The Hockey News at Minton's Wayne Gretzky was named player of the year. And as the Flyers wait for the semis on Tuesday we have a musical tribute to Pete Peters who stone the Rangers. Coming up by MX watch the great save watch mix. Watch the move an underhanded driving lay up throws it up and it hits for two right. 59 52 six years of the intermission great passed by before Dawkins right there at 86 74 after three B.J. on the break he had 14 at the other end C.J. watch the reject here on Dave Cowens the plow and finally the last shot but it was all a 12 point feel when right there at the buzzer but it didn't matter.
Sixers want to go to the Celtics Ninety six years later three games to one the Lakers Sonics series square it won Game 3 at 11:30 tonight in that series right here on TV 10 game 5 in the Boston Sixers series back up in Beantown on Sunday afternoon we'll have that one for you live here on TV 10. But hey the Sixers they didn't want to go back to Boston square two games apiece. That's what C.J. told Big Al just a couple of minutes ago in the Sixers locker room. You know it is there's no tomorrow so you try to come one you know down 10 points you know the same always come back. Because team has a 12 point lead as soon as the hey we get it. So now we can relax and just the team before you know they're back in the ballgame. Can't bury these guys so they keep coming back and coming back at the 16 point lead and I thought a couple more buckets in there threw for the night and they get back on the right in it again. They don't play the tough to grab whatever it takes to get. A lot tonight Sixers won it by 12. All right the last time we saw Randy Larch he was with the bases
loaded. I wasn't pitching he was batting as a pensioner after Dallas granted used up his bench in the loss the other night the New York Mets tonight Randy went back to the mound he might have fared better if he was batting not pitching. Pick it up there at bat the St. Louis Cardinals not exactly a light hit him. This is top of the first inning All right Gary Templeton the leadoff single. He goes over to third here single by Tom her both were too full for the Cardinals tonight. We got runners on first and third and not exactly the light hitting Ted Simmons up in the back right margin trouble early in the baseball game lawn fly ball out here that Maddox would call and this from Chopper 10. But the catch. And it's a one nothing baseball game right. Came back and tied it up in the bottom of the third inning but of the top of the fourth large letters right here George Hendrick there it goes the first of two he would hit another in the 6 3 1 in favor the cardinals over the Philadelphia Phillies tonight when the National League school board the Cubs over the Pittsburgh Pirates by that 5 3 score and 11 Atlanta continues to win Chris Chambliss a ground
rule double wins at their Astros Barry of the New York Mets after won Dodgers and Padres are scoreless reds and scored twice on the Giants after one in the American League Detroit. They take the Boston Red Sox Minnesota pulverizing Oakland Texas put away Cleveland by three runs the White Sox continue to surprise bill that doesn't pay much but somehow the White Sox are winning. Blue Jays beat the Brewers. Kansas City blacks Baltimore and California at Seattle. There is just under way. Larry's over here. Why do I wear sunglasses at night. He's getting old. Just getting out your utility bill will be going up in May if you live in Philadelphia the Pennsylvania suburbs. Philadelphia Electric has been given the go ahead for 88 for one after another just kept saying it's absolutely. Shocking seriously. Pretty Green has remained the dream. New to. The room and.
Unique. Options for women will present a career advisory workshop on Saturday May 3rd at the peel club 1819 just not straight for Althea. From 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.. You're ready for some good news finally I know I am. And dominate has it. He's live at the spectrum let's go there for. Just a few moments ago that M.L. Carr has injured himself in the Boston locker room mirror evidently telling the shelter what his status will be for Game 5 we don't know what's going to win tonight's ballgame lots of good news. The fine boys Bobby Jones and Steve makes that other great job off the bench tonight. But what Boston actually beyond the NBA brawl now they're down three games to one heading into Game 5 in Beantown on Sunday and I want to 119 really a scrappy game that I was Take a look at some of the highlights during a finger roll early got things started. Two of his 11 in the first quarter. Can we baby's prayer at the end of the quarter just to launch job. A three pointer
made of twenty eight twenty one of the first stuff that. Bobby Jones put dampers on the verge and I do add only 19. None in the fourth quarter although the bird hit two here in the second quarter. Dokken 15 in the first half of the slam made it 55 45 the first half ended 59 52. Quite a prayer here again for Mr. Mix. Now we've got the doc and slam. A baby put it in. Second to have Lionel Hollins jumper. Spread the latest 15 78 63 with morning hours left in the third quarter. Irving slammed part of his game high 30. 84 68 third quarter runs 86 74. Sixers 2 of 24 in the fourth quarter the Celtics comeback Archibald a sling shot here makes of 94 89 the closest they're going to get. Free throws down the stretch 13 of 14 in the fourth quarter six by cheeks 100 to 90 the final. As I mentioned getting
back to game five Sunday in Boston I talked to Steve next after the ball game in the locker room and we talked about the momentum that's building up in the play. Well there's no question about it right now. You know I don't I look at us and we are building momentum and you know I think it all goes back to having to be in a mini series play in Washington playing Atlanta I think that all helped us to get into this series and really the way we run plans or necessarily. The Phillies last three to one tonight in the St. Louis Cardinals. George looked at a couple of home runs a bases loaded up spread in the night once again lost the Phillies lost three of their last four Let's take a look at some of the highlights the last thing Mr. Hendrick. He did another stone job on the Phillies again tonight. You know a 172 earlier this year and handcuff the Phillies again tonight. There's the home run in the fourth. Randy lurch. To one starts.
That one of the six said. There's the other homerun for George. To. Make the final three to one. John Kasich needed help in the line from Bob cites that he didn't get the win. Unloading on the. Phillies once again the final three the one that I. Think of the rest of the National League action now. It's Chicago beating Pittsburgh 5 3 of Landover Montreal 878 Houston leading New York 7 one of the second no store at San Francisco in a second no store of Los Angeles in the American League Detroit beat Boston 2:49 in the night. The other three leading Bowl more than nothing. 3 in the world the or the or the the. Perhaps writers get set for another week without the trains. In sports the cosmos get
back in the winning column and we have the results of the senior golf tournament and a report about a battle that could cost New Jersey medical students their training and Latin American schools. New Jersey nothing new. With Jack County and its board. Good evening. Tomorrow is day 12 of the Pats strike in North Jersey and the leader of the striking Carmen's union says there is no light at the end of the tunnel and no chance the road will run again soon. There are no new negotiations scheduled and tomorrow 80000 commuters face a second Monday morning rush without past service. The hang up now seems to be whether or not a proposed settlement falls within President Carter's anti-inflation guidelines. That settlement will give the striking maintenance man a 33 percent pay hike a little over $9 an hour to more than 12 Port Authority officials thing that does exceed the guidelines and want to prove it. But union leadership says it's going to stick by that
package anyway. On June 12th the Federal Aviation Administration came out with new procedures for pilots landing at Newark airport procedures that were aimed at cutting through some of the noise problems there. Well today angry citizens in the section of that city charged the pilots have been completely disregarding those instructions and the noise is worse than ever. More from Raj wells. Tire bound section. This is what you would see and hear. Every three minutes every day all day and all night. Planes constantly fly over this area either on takeoff or on their landing approach depending on the prevailing wind. Residents constantly complain about noise and the dirt left in the wake of the plane's jet stream. And they say they live in constant fear. Mr. Saltus you've been living in Newark New tell me for 50 years what's it like living in the Ironbound. Planes fly over it's like living in hell. It's bed
planes come in day and night. Sometimes you think they're going to hit the house. That's how bad it is. The FAA was sympathetic to stories like this and ordered a 60 day trial period of a new approach pattern. The new approach would require planes to fly about five miles east of the iron bound over the Hudson River. Then about two miles from the airport pilots would make a banking turn and head back towards the airport in direct. But a lot less noisy today prevailing winds made it necessary for planes to fly their final approach over Elizabeth and hillside rather than the Ironbound. But that meant planes flew over the Ironbound on takeoff although Ironbound community leaders charge the pilots ignore instructions from the control tower and fly right over the area. Today's takeoff procedures seem to clearly indicate that pilots were making sharp banking turns and flying in wide circles to avoid flying directly over the Ironbound. Nothing has happened since June 12 planes have continue to fly over our homes this ripped our lives. It's like nothing has changed.
I was watching this morning as they took off now the winds of prevailing winds today have them approaching over Elizabeth and hillside and they're not coming in over the Iron Bridge. But that means I have to take off over the Ironbound and they're taking great pains to fly over the Poleski Skyway and avoid flying directly over the iron band as they take off. That's an approach that was developed a long time ago that has nothing to do with. This new approach that was developed starting June 12th. Take costs over the past years have supposed to been going over the plus the skyway as a result of efforts here in the Ironbound put on the airport years ago. Why do you think they would have made noise on takeoff and not on. An approaching landing. I don't know. The FAA claims that pilots try to cooperate whenever possible and are usually sympathetic to complaints about noise. But FAA officials also point out that pilots always have the final say. In the control tower issues instructions. The pilot can decline if he thinks the procedure is unsafe and some pilots say that when
traffic is stacked up and planes are landing one right after another flying in wide circles would waste time and therefore create safety hazards. But the community group does not buy that argument and they say they plan to tie up traffic vehicular traffic at the airport during the July 4th. We didn't do it. Still another FBI sting operation is underway in North Jersey. This one aimed at the people who made stealing cars of big business. The Newark Star-Ledger says the feds have found evidence of a multimillion dollar network that steals luxury cars and heavy equipment. The car theft network then cuts those cars into spare parts in what police call chop shops. Those spare parts are very profitable because Detroit automakers sell spare parts at prices much higher than they sell for a new car. Police say New Jersey ranks ninth in the country in auto theft and some of those car theft rings have organized crime connections. But this FBI sting nicknamed Operation bulldog is expected to lead to a series of
arrests here within a few weeks. About 50 people picketed the Hamilton Township Police Department today. They're upset over the police shooting Friday of a bear that had been rummaging through the garbage cans in the area for several days. Police say the cop who shot the bear used his judgment in the best way to handle the situation. But officials at the State Division of Fish and Game say that all area police have been told not to shoot the bear. And that there's going to be an investigation. Negotiations to end a teacher's strike in Freehold are scheduled to resume tonight somewhere in Monmouth County. The location is being kept a secret. Money is part of the problem but the bigger issue is the length of the workday. Teachers now teach five out of seven class periods. The school board wants to add one more to the workload so teachers in Freehold walked out Friday and they don't have much time to make their point by striking. Graduation is set for Thursday. Nearly 500 New Jersey residents attending medical school in Mexico could have their training interrupted next semester. It's part of a reprisal there
against the State Board of Medical Examiners. The board is threatening to discontinue exchange programs that now allow a Latin American medical students to train at New Jersey hospitals. Ridge wells again with the report. These parents have youngsters currently attending medical school at Guadalajara university in Mexico. There are nearly 2000 Americans of medical school there and they constitute nearly 25 percent of the student body. Five hundred of those students are from New Jersey. What Aloha to you has a reputation for accepting students who've been turned down by many major American medical schools. But Guadalajara graduates are usually highly regarded in the medical profession. And because so many of the students at the Mexican medical school are Americans most of them want to return to the states to practice. The school set up what was called an externship program about nine years ago. It's a program that allows the Guadalajara students to work in hospital clinics at New Jersey hospitals. Under the close observation of instructors. But last year medical examiners noticed that
students from non recognized and non accredited medical schools in the Caribbean were also training at New Jersey hospitals. The State Board of Medical Examiners quickly clamped a lid on any more trainees from Mexico and the Caribbean. Some medical professionals say the board may have been concerned that the students from some of the poorer countries in the Caribbean may have been exploited both by their country and the New Jersey hospitals at the expense of unsuspecting patients. Is there a possibility that some American hospitals might be using those students from those so-called substandard medical schools in the Caribbean as cheap labor free labor. I'm not convinced that that really does happen. It's a potential problem. But it's not likely that those students have enough training to really do anything in terms of direct patient patient care. The parents here say there are nearly 3000 Guadalajara graduates now practicing medicine in the United States. They say the school is the largest private university in Mexico with a good record and the parents feel their youngsters should not have to suffer because of
the alleged abuses committed by some of the known unnamed medical schools in the Caribbean. And today they got somewhat of an extension. Parents at today's meeting were told that the State Board of Medical Examiners will now allow the externship programs to continue until the end of the year. But at that time the state board may once again decide to stop the programs which could affect about 500 students going to medical school in Guadalajara in Teaneck wells. A backyard garden is one of life's joys to many people especially here in the Garden State. But we found a man in hundreds in county who grows his crops without ever having to go outdoors and does it well. More now from CES in the sauce. This time of year a greenhouse may seem like an odd place to garden but take one look at the chance tomatoes and you may change your mind. Khan who originally comes from China is thought to be the only former North Jersey growing vegetables hydroponically in water his 1000 plants produce
about 45000 tomatoes every year. No small feat considering what most of us go through just to keep our soil grown varieties alive. The tomatoes are cultivated in trays of a special nutrient solution fed by an underground well. And it's that solution that does the trick. When the war has a special ingredient such as what they find and the nitrate. We had the calcium nitrate. I see him and I think the inevitable answer is groundless plans taste much better too that they're sweeter because they're less acidic. And while it takes most field varieties about 17 weeks to ripen These are ready to eat in about 90 days. But this is one of a kind cultivation does require a lot of hard work
using a kind of vibrator has to pollinate the plants daily. Since he doesn't have the bees outdoors to help him and he has to keep picking little small leaves cold suckers for fear they'll stop the plant of its vital nutrients. Last year Kai started selling his prized produce to a nursery in Pennsylvania as could be expected there expensive at a dollar forty a pound. Now his tomatoes have proven so successful con plans to start growing hydroponic Chinese vegetables in these two new greenhouses he's building and if his green thumb continues farmer Chan plans to sell his unique crops to Chinese restaurants in. Well after its first today some are still batting a thousand and the warm sunny weekend will spill into the week. Tonight will be clear and cool temperatures in the upper 50s to low 60s around the state. And tomorrow it will be sunny and warmer. Highs will be in the mid to upper 80s in the south slightly cooler up north along the shore and the outlook for Tuesday. It calls for a more fair
and pleasant weather. It's now time for sports and news of the cosmos. That's right Jack it was a must win situation for the Cosmos this afternoon after their two straight losses the cosmos faced a tough Fort Lauderdale team and they came through with flying colors after today's two does it when they are now 12 and 14 on the season.
Bogey gets credit for bowl number one of 490 into the first half. A bogey shot Well we had a technical foul up missed a shot on goal but as you can see there's a jubilant cosmos team that was his third of the season. And as it turned out Bobby's goal was all the cosmos needed but just in case Giorgio canal you added some insurance late in the second half to secure that win to the cosmos head west for a tough road trip. Will play in Los Angeles and Vancouver. Don January as the winner of the Senior International Golf Tournament which finished up today he shot five under par of the Atlantic City Country Club second place was won by Mike's back with three under. While Billy Johnson took third at one under. Not bad for these players who are 50 years of age and older and 62 year old Tommy Bolt is one of the elders who played in that Senior International Golf Championship and he has 15 PGA tour victories under his belt nearly three hundred twenty one thousand dollars in career earnings. Terrible Tommy spoke with Trischka Gaspar's about how the game has changed over the years and how his nickname came about.
Me So I hear you tell me how you came by that they could name 100 It started years ago. And I got to the name that goes perfectly with that terrible time. Thunder bolt lightning bolt just all go together and the media just naturally took that up as they did to relate to bow down to the end. So I threw a couple of clubs in and I got the I got the title for band the terrible tempered guy and I'm pretty outspoken too so that added to it. Spoken maybe than certainly not terrible. The 19 year old Rockaway resident registered another win in the 76 annual New Jersey State men's singles tennis championships today Hugo Nunez who was seeded number two in the tournament beat Craig Fitzpatrick today 6 1 6 2 in yesterday's first round noon as defeated John Marks of Montclair number four seed rich Maier beat John Harris in the second round Steve Segal. The number one seed will play Mike Ratliff
tonight. The Championships are being played at the Arlington club in Arlington the finals will take place next weekend. Well it's not likely that the name Helen sure Reda means anything to you but chances are that when the 1980 81 basketball season rolls around you'll hear a lot about her. Helen was a New Jersey Gems first round choice in last week's WBL draft a graduate of Michigan's Open University Helen charade his dream to become a New Jersey gem has come true. OK and in the open we got off to a swift start this afternoon in Morris County with a distance run involving some of the best runners in the world a series of events highlights the five day fundraiser and the cause is drug addiction on Tuesday some of New Jersey's top women golfers tee off at the great burn Country Club in Florham Park. And that's sports Jack. Thank God it's your turn. And letting city is getting a squad of mounted police only they'll be mounted on bicycles not horses. The 16 man bicycle unit began patrolling the city's streets this morning and Chief Joseph Allman says he ordered the bikes to give his department more visibility. He
says he gets 20 calls a day from people who say they never see a cop. The unit will be on patrol 16 hours a day seven days a week. Each bike is painted bright blue and comes with a two way radio. The cost to Atlantic City taxpayers are just one hundred eighty dollars apiece. Well of course it's pretty safe to say that most cops don't patrol on bicycles. Most sit behind the wheels of big fast gas guzzling sedans. And it's because of those gas guzzlers that more and more municipalities are giving their cops motorcycles Town officials say they're cheaper and far more versatile on patrols kept man reports on. That's not Erik Estrada star of Sunday night's police show chips behind those glasses but rather one of New York's finest on motorcycle patrol. There are 31 mobile patrols on the streets in downtown Newark every day. And there may be even more in the future. Police officials say the growing use of the motorcycle patrol is a natural outgrowth of the energy
situation. The cycles get good mileage about 45 miles to the gallon cost half as much as a police car. Last four times as long and are more effective in some situations the city in New York as about 375 people three hundred seventy five thousand people population. And during a daytime it swells to about a million people. Therefore you can see the influx of the ordinal below. Taxicab. City streets do become congested therefore we need the motorcycle to be able to move around to keep the traffic flowing. Many police departments stopped using motor cycles years ago because of high rates of accidents and serious injuries. But today cyclists have disc brakes and transmissions that make them much safer. This is the police department motorcycle training school departments all over the northern part of the state. Come to learn how to use the cycle. School is the only one of its kind in New Jersey and one of the few in the country where officers get their road training in defensive driving. The practice
course is not quite the same as the real course but the instructors say once an officer has completed his training he's ready for the street. Police say the motorcycle will never take the place of a patrol car which can carry a team of men and emergency equipment but in many instances the cycle is the most efficient way for an officer to travel. In Newark. I'm can't Manhattan. The New Jersey Symphony Orchestra is firmly settled this summer at Sussex county's water little village. It's all part of a plan to cut down on travel. It's no secret that the city's been hard pressed for money lately and management has decided to consolidate concert locations for the next three years to save enormous travelling expenses. Tonight we welcome a new arts commentator to our broadcast arena for why some thoughts on that decision. Congratulations to the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra. This is a time when finances are forcing many organizations to cut their activities short. The
idea of creating a new concert weekend series demonstrate at the symphony management's confidence that there is a new audience ready to travel regularly to hear good programs. For years the symphony artists have traveled around the state like the wandering minstrels of medieval times. The New Jersey musicians played in gymnasiums high school and a variety of unusual settings. Now the symphony management wants to centralise locations and have the musicians playing the travelling less. This however the cancellation of winter season programs in a few areas where people now expect the concerts some subscribers are angry about the change because they will have to travel more. I feel that this is an important transitional period for one of our state's major cultural institutions. The symphony may no longer be in everybody's backyard. The plan is in the interest of the orchestra self-esteem and will ultimately mean better performances in hall suitable for cultural rather than athletic events.
The New Jersey Symphony Orchestra deserves our full support and patience at this critical time of development. A. One of the most fascinating and the people outside New Jersey at least known areas of the state is the Pine Barrens 10 million square acre living laboratory that scientists say is unique and potentially a storehouse of information. Tonight we're going take a tour
of the New Jersey Pine Barrens with reporter Gus Henning Berg and the author of a new book on that area. Here again is having birds report. The pine barrens of New Jersey is one of nature's most remarkable ecological and environmental wonders for years its unique characteristics have drawn visitors and scientists from all over the world. Among the more recent visit this have been land developers prompting a major effort to preserve the pine lands. Governor Brendan Byrne recently signed the pine lands preservation bill. He described it as the most important piece of legislation of his entire political career. I recently toured this one of a kind wilderness with a man who knows it. He's Richard Roman a record University botanist who's editor of a new comprehensive book on the pine barrons. The book pine downs eco system and landscape contains chapters written by 40.
- Series
- New Jersey Nightly News
- Contributing Organization
- New Jersey Network (Trenton, New Jersey)
- AAPB ID
- cpb-aacip/259-804xkk0v
If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip/259-804xkk0v).
- Description
- Series Description
- "New Jersey Nightly News is a daily news show, featuring stories on local and national news topics."
- Description
- No Description
- Broadcast Date
- 1980-06-22
- Genres
- News
- News Report
- Media type
- Moving Image
- Duration
- 00:32:17
- Credits
-
- AAPB Contributor Holdings
-
New Jersey Network
Identifier: 05-76348 (NJN ID)
Format: U-matic
Duration: 00:30:00?
If you have a copy of this asset and would like us to add it to our catalog, please contact us.
- Citations
- Chicago: “New Jersey Nightly News; New Jersey Nightly News Episode from 06/22/1980,” 1980-06-22, New Jersey Network, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed July 22, 2025, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-259-804xkk0v.
- MLA: “New Jersey Nightly News; New Jersey Nightly News Episode from 06/22/1980.” 1980-06-22. New Jersey Network, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. July 22, 2025. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-259-804xkk0v>.
- APA: New Jersey Nightly News; New Jersey Nightly News Episode from 06/22/1980. Boston, MA: New Jersey Network, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-259-804xkk0v