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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 29

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Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
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Page:
29
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Circuit 14 2f THE HARTFORD COURANT: Tuesday, April 30, 1963 0- Police Dog Building of Paws Earth to Start Keney Children's Zoo U.N. Called an Asset Of U.S. Foreign Policy The former executive assistant 'suggesting that the U.N. is an to Dag Hammarskjold gave the efficient vehicle in which to pur-first William Ainsworth Greene sue this goal. memorial lecture Monday night at Talcott High School, presented by the Foreign Policy Assn.

of Sill 1 if' ,1 'I" Greater Hartford. Jganization like it, the United The Greene Memorial Lecture States would not be in a position series was founded this year by to function effectively in strate-the FPA to pay tribute to the gic, social, technical, political and late Mr. Greene, "a man who de-j psychological fields, voted his life to education and I Answers Critics more particularly to helping; Answerine criticisms of the U.S. Bindover In Morals Case Given Bernardo J. Vega, 25, of 21 Main St.

was bound over to Superior Court from Circuit Court 14 Monday after waiving a hearing on probable cause on a charge of risk of injury to a minor. Vega was arrested last Friday and charged with taking a 12-year-old girl to an apartment in New Britain last Thursday. Police were called into the case Friday by the girl's mother. Vega was picked up at his place of employment after the girl's mother named him as a suspect. James M.

Jordan, head of the Juvenile Division, said Vega told police where the missing girl could be found and she was picked nstn ni ml i up ai Mam at. ine gin was referred to juvenile authorities, 7 Fined for Gambling JM iMip ft 74 iifiii 1 K1 CSLs: A police dog named Rex pawed a pile of earth in Keney Park Monday to mark the start of construction of the children's zoo called Sherwood Forest. The novel groundbreaking cere mony was witnessed by city of ficials, the contractor, the designer and leaders of the zoo fund drive. Standing by with shovels, in case Rex developed camera fright, were City Manager Sharpe, the Rev. Bernard T.

Drew, president of the zoo project corporation; Edward C. Eaton III, vice president, and Milton H. Glover, treasurer of the zoo fund. Wadhams May Co. will be gin construction 01 the 12-acre layout today.

Hartford Parks and Recreation Director Robert P. Hunter said the zoo is expected to be ready for opening early in July. Hike Around Property Planning consultant Everett Lord-Wood led officials on a hike around the property, pointing out areas where various animals will be enclosed. They walked a half-mile footpath, dubbed Little John Trail, winding in a circle between stately trees 50 and 60 feet tall. The trail, already smoothened out and packed down by city workers, is i He said the U.N.

is a required asset of the U.S. foreign policy, because without some kind of or- which say more attention should be paid to NATO and less to the Ni Dr. Cordier said "It is not an 'either, or', but rather a 'both, situation. NATO does not function in the political, economic. ncvrhM noiral nr nparA L-poninff fipM he said As for the U.N.

beine a staue for propaganda, he said it is also a stage for anti-propaganda which the United States may use. He said the U.S. foreign policy must engage in multilateral diplomacy, and the U.N. is a mechanism for this the country has used hundreds of thousands of times in U.N. history.

He said it is especially needed in the "age of He also stressed the frequency in which the aims of both the U.N. and the U.S. coincide. Bolsters Christians Mr. Starbuck predicts, church-go- ing will decline.

"At first, the Marxists thought tneir 10b was to hasten the inevi seven men seizea irr a ram at; be guest speaker at 7:30 p.m 242 Bellevue St. last Friday night 'at the Church of the Nazarene were fined $3 each for gambling, 932 Capitol Ave. iney were: younger students and adults alike understand complex world events in the light of historical perspec tive," as a teacher for 29 years at Kingswood School. The speaker was Dr. Andrew W.

Cordier, dean. Graduate School of International Affairs, Columbia University, who has been the principal advisor to all presmenis 01 tne u.iv uenerai Assemmy since its beginning. U.N. Needed Dr. Cordier, discussing "U.S.

Foreign Policy With or With out the U.N.?" said that the United States needs the U.N. to maintain its global responsibili ties. These responsibilities are unique among nations, so we; must' be conversant with the! problems of all nations, he said,) Red Pressure East German By REID MacCLUGGAGE STORRS A 34-year-old Amer ican missionary said Monday that Communist nrpnre ha marf vnut than w0ct rrmanc George S. Smith, 44, of 95 Suf- ty fifth anniversary of the ser-field Jerry Murphy 42, vice given by the Rev. and Mrs.

of 159 Wooster Isiah Win- Herman W. Keeler. ters, 59, of 52 Warren James Ferre has been Fulbright Lec-E. Perkins, 41, of 232 Bellevue turer at Oxford University, Samuel F. Davis, 23, of 24 England.

He has also been visit- (Courant Photo by Arthur Warmsley) Rex Digs Zoo Suf field Lowell Smith, 45, of designed for a good view of to handle some animals; animal compounds. Hartford Police Sgt. Earl Mof- Lord-Wood said zoo visitors fatt put Rex through a rehears- wiU be able to look down into amphitheater like enclosures for each variety of animal. Fenc- NELS F. S.

FERRE Guest Speaker Set at Church Of Nazarene Nes Ferre professor of christian Theology at Andover Newton Theological School, will The occasion is the twen- ling lecturer at Doshisha Univer- "Faith and "Search lights on Contemporary and "Finality of Faith." Ex-CityManGets Award for Study In Jerusalem A Hartford Public High School and Trinity College graduate has, a viuggcuncun Fellowship for historical, studies Jerusalem Louis H. Feldman, formerly of tju sniva Lmversity in ew York- During the 1963-64 academic year 224 Bellevue and Billie Ware, I sity, Kyoto, Japan and at the 35, of 288 Bellevue St. Near East School of Theology, -Juan R. Torres, 22, of 34 Bed- Beirut, Lebanon, ford St. was fined.

$50 for furnish-1 Ferre has travelled extensive-ing beer minors. He wasdy in Asia, Africa and Europe. He arrested Sunday night in a parked has published many books on the car at 10 Russell St. Police said; subject of religion including raised through, public donations. The construction contract was signed by the Rev.

Mr. Drew, 1 Rotary Club president, who rep- resented the Children's Zoo of Greater Hartford Inc ing a .,1. Among tnose attending Mon- ing will be in keeping with the ied bone. The Rotary Club spearheaded natural setting. City workers were busy zoo project, which got a six-foot waterfall will be ing a parking lot for 200 cars out 000 contribution from the Hart-dug into a hillside near the.

of the woods near the park en- ford Foundation for Public Giv- day's ceremony were former christians more de- table' And since the inevitable to'a Kremlin compromise on its posi- traus end. Water pumped from a weu win uuss me uau unuei ii a footbridge and flow into a pond for beavers Rex Des His Stuff Off the trail a barn and mea- dow will hold domestic animals in a farmyard scene. A contact 'area is intended to allow child oK.iuuv.ik, Sicai violence in tne ws ana sus. against cheating on nuclear Divinity School graduate i "Rut nnu; thp havo fnnnH that a group of teen-agers in the car bad all been drinking beer furnished by Torres. Other Dispositions Fined by Judge George E.

Kin-month Jr. for breach of peace offenses were Homer Walden, 20, of 190 Clark St. and Daniel Kirk, sep, 24, of 1520 Main $25 each, and John Williams, 29, of 106 Capen $15. Eugene Kosakowski, 21, of New Britain, was fined $25 for damag-, ing private property ana Jtiossie Hendrix, 32, of 153 Governor was granted a nolle on a charge of breach of peace. i Willie U'illiorrn- 91 nf Cnrincf.

mule i.uuoiii0, Wash illgfOIl KoUllflllM Kennedy Will Welcome Grand Duchess Todav By ASSOCIATED PRESS President's Committee on Youth Prpsidpnt Kpnnpdv will wpl- Employment. That document was UK the church, they resorted to phy- the church hasn't withered awayl as auickly as thev thoucht. so Communism has recognized rhiirrhps institutionally, if not ideologically. than Chicago In some WaV'S. he said.

Com i munist stages have aided the churches. Theology students are given scholarships just as any nromisine scientist and professors paj(j waties comparable to those of a biochemist. The Rev. Mr. Starbuck lives in West Berlin with his wife, Jo seohine (th Germans call her Joe) but works in East Berlin's Gossner Mission.

Each day he crosses behind the Iron Curtain through Checkpoint Charlie. "I am allowed to pass freely," he said, "and frankly, I feel my i field, Mass. was fined $20 forjiJ "cmc" m- ia "uw drunkeness. A charge against him ate professor of classics at Ye- ASPIRING QUEEN: Winifred Neumann of 63 Sequin New-ington, is one of 10 finalists for the Spring Queen title at Upsala College, East Orange, N.J. Stu- dent voting will decide the winner.

who'll be crowned May 7. World Fvcmts Red Envoy Says Talks WasteTime GENEVA At the Geneva disarmament conference, U.S. Ambassador Charles C. Steele told the Russians the United States and Britain earnestly await a favorable reply from Moscow on st proposals on a test ban treaty. But DeIeate K.

Tsarapkin made it Wrvir th wPt mai mere snouia De nut two or three "The moment for comoromise has Inn? nassprf." iH in Monday's session. "The present citnatinn in mnnimn (test ban can be described only las a waste of time." THp Wpst is hnlrlina nut fnr i tuuvivii in VU1U1VV.IIU1I niui 1,1 ic seven insnections a vear. New Republic LAGOS, Nigeria: The former British Africian colony of Nigeria Wl11 become a republic within the Blitlsh Commonwealth Oct. 1, third anniversary of its in- Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa said in his announcement Monday Nigeria will recognize Queen Elizabeth II as head of the Commonweath. Thus Nigeria will follow the example monwealth, tut not subject to the British monarch, More Say BONN, Germany Back in Bonn from his trip to the United sf.toc tho militarv, Wpct Gerrnanv-S socialist' Party savs European members- of a Western mcpa, force shoud have bj sh jn fe Friz ErIer told newsmen hnw.

ning. ever, that he was aware of the determination ,0 keep a i(. Erlcr met President Kennedy during his U. S. visit, but he did not disclose what the President had to say about the West German Socialists' ideas on nuclear planning.

Israel Celebrates HAIFA, Israel Israel put on ito ail iiytw ivi icicmoic he annivcrsa of its birth as a nation. About 170 planes 27 of them new French Mirage jets winged over a military parade staged in Tlio Vaw nut nn a ehmu oil shore. with the Guggenheim grant he'come Grand Duchess Charlotte! and missionary in Germany since wo, saia religious lies in tasi Germany have been strengthened because "it costs more to be a Christian there." Deeper Belief The Rev. Mr, Starbuck, who has been traveling in the U.S. for nine mwuns unaer ine auspices of the United Church Board for World Ministries, told of his ex- periences Monday at the Univer sity of Connecticut, "The East Germans," he said, i "are under pressure and have had to ask themselves the question: What 1C PhHct I a 1 1 all ahnilt? This has produced a deeper level of belief in Jesus Christ.

"But," the Rev. Mr. Starbuck explained, "most Germans are not really interested in churches. Only about five per cent of the iWest German neonle riarticinate in real religious activity." Sees Decline But this has its roots in the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution, "the assets of will study the historical Flavius ouncnmen ueorge a. Kinseila and Thomas H.

Corrigan, Police Chief John J. Kerrigan and Mrs. Mary Lucas, who handled the public's zoo fund contributions. The ball didn't go over any fence, he added, but it got stuck in an apple tree and nobody could reach it. St.

Peter's Group Elects Officers New officers of the Home-School Assn. of St. Peter's School are: Edward E. Furey, president; Raymond Kelley, vice president; Qtanlntr Mnrclri vannrAinrt fnn tary; Albert Veniscofsky, corres ponding secretary; Mrs. Rocco Zazzaro, treasurer, and Mrs.

George Taylor, registrar. The Rev. Matthew Shanlev. principal of St. Peter's School, is the spiritual adviser.

The group will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the school hall. The Rev. William McGrath of the Cana House, Hamden, will speak. All parents are invited to at tend.

Refreshments will served. City Teacher Seeks ASSOCiatlOIll residency A Hartford elementary school teacher is the candidate for pres u. UK uvi uueia vl rr. I room Teachers of the be josepnus ana nis reiauun io nei- rival for a two.day state visit, lenistic writers and traditional The 67-year-old ruler of one of Jewish literature. He plans to Europe.s srnallest but oldest na-pursue the studies in Jerusalem.

I tions will be flown to the white Feldman attendeed the Barnard House by helicopter from Phil-School and was valedictorian of Her son and top mem. the class of 1943 at HPHS. He of her cabinet are accom-received a Jacob L. Fox Founda-! nanvine her physical safety is greater in Eastof Ghana and Tanganyika on the Berlin than it is in, say, originally laid out by In-town Chicano. 'a or republics within the com- al before the dog dug in cameramen.

The police for dog warmed up by going after a bur trance off Tower Road, opposite ir 1.. cl ti it waveny aireei. a 101 near ine; zoo entry will hold 60 to 80 cars, win De cnargea Dy tne city to offset the cost of operation. The city takes over maintenance of the zoo now that the construe-: tion cost, $120,000, has been recommended a variety of public and private efforts to provide jobs for young people between the ages of 16 and 21. Current statistics indicate between 600,000 and 800,000 in this age category are both out of school and out of work.

Middle East Sen. Hugh Scott, urged the Kennedy administration to; take the lead in promoting peace in the Middle East. Scott said in a speech prepared for the Adas Israel congregation that the Arab-Israeli situation has taken on the color of the Cuban crisis of last October. "We know that the Russians are there in force, Soviet weapons are pouring in, the objective is war, 'and foreigners are working on missiles and rockets," he said. "The only things missing are the, aerial photographs of offensive missiles on launching pads.

"I believe that the situation in the Middle East is so great a threat to peace that the United States should begin to provide the leadership that is so sadly lacking today." Black Eye Sen. Harrison A. Williams D-N. returned to Washington with a black eye-the result of! a Sunday sanaiot baseball game near his home in Westfield, N. Williams said he volunteered to act as catcher for both teams in tne game dui permiuea me can i to bounce before he caught it each' time.

TJnf frf Hill k. rtnn Uui a laa uau imuviii vmc of the pitchers hit a stone on its i i .1 i. iitmi: nasi uuuiiut; dnu miuck oiiiidius in the right eye, he related. Later, Williams said, he took a turn at bat and hit a home run. I tion scnoiarsnip ana auenaea i ii i Trinity College, graduating in 1946.

He was the class valedic- Itorian, He received a masters degree Lf Luxembourg today on her ar- Cuba Raid The leader of an anti-Communist group accused Atty. Gen. Robert Kenneay oi using ment. Edward Hunter, chairman of the Anti-Communist Liaison Com-1 mittpp. said FBI aeents have been questioning participants in a meeting at which Alexander Rorke Jr.

told of taking part in a bombing at Trinity and a doctorate at i the rederal Bureau ot investiga-Harvard University. He taught tion as a political machine. The at Trinity and at Hobart College Justice Department declined corn- modernity that ate away at Western Churches," he said. It can- on a Havana oil refinery last cui aucauon Assn. ing and as th do the Officers will be elected at the department's annual meeting xt Saturday at the Waverly Inn Andd'SOn Named Cheshire starting at 10 a.m.

Contest 2nd Runnei up not be blamed entirely on Com- One reason Christian witness stronger in East Germany he said is the fact they are closer moAi nattprn than th F.n jghtenment or Industrial Revolu- tion 0nly now are they chang. Linda Carolyn Anderson was voted second runner-up in the Miss Jaycee of Greater Hartford pa geant in West Hartford Saturday. Miss Susan AIlen was incorrectly listed as the runner-up in Mon- Mugging Case Leads To Robbery Charge Roy Ellison, 27, of 26 Kennedy was cnargea wun rounery wjtn violence early today in i li nection wun a mugging baturaav week. Rorke, a New York City free- lance photographer, address meeting of Hunter's committee last Friday and told of dropping bombs on the refinery ivhich failpd tn Pn off Since then, Hunter told newsmen, at least five persons have been questioned by the FBI in what he called an effort to prove that Rorke and his companions violated the neutrality act. Jobs for Youth President Kennedy's Labor- Management Advisory Committee said management, labor and the to solve problems of unemploy- i nanarsl nnhlii muct rnllahnratp ineiiv alliums Junius.

The committee, after a closed; meeting, issued a statement com- mending last week's report by the Mrs. uertruae u. Haoeriana who teaches accelerated fourth, fifth and sixth grade classes at the Brackett School is the candi- Hata. fnr a tvn-vpar tprrn as president. She lives at 31 Foote p.n i Prof.

Doris Crozier of Danbu- ry State College, will describe her experiences while establish- t-anhors' rr.lWo in ram nnf)i, riHni, the aftprnnnn c. Storer Chapter 73, OES, will ii 4 i i i 1 nuve a ucssen aim v.i yauy uj- day at 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple, 11 South Main West Hartford. of breach of peace of peace was nollecL Youth Concerts End Wednesday "Music from the Grand Opera" will be the theme for the last pair of concerts in the Hartford Public 8nd Parochial School Youth Concert series Wednesday at South Catholic High School. Fritz Mahler will conduct the! Hartford Symphony Orchestra.

Grades six through eight from St. Augustine and St. Peter Schools will attend the first concert at 11 a.m. Students from the host school and ninth graders from Burr Junior High School will attend the second concert at 12:30 p.m. Among the selections that will be heard will be the march from "Love for Three Oranges" by Prokofieff, the overture to Rossini's "Barber of three dances from "The Bartered Bride," the march from Tann-1 and others.

Radio Station WTIC-FM will broadcast both concerts live, as well as rebroadcasting both programs at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Parsons College Head to Speak Dr. Millard G. Roberts, president of Parsons College, will speak to area alumni, parents and friends at a dinner Thursday at 6:30 p.m.

at Wampanoag Country Club in West Hartford. Dr. Roberts has instituted a year-round trimester schedule at the coeducational college in Fairfield, Iowa. Emerson J. Parker of North Canton, a trustee of the college, is general chairman of the dinner meeting.

Reservations can be made with him at 249-6451 or 693-4537. Traffic Court Charles J. Hummel, 45, of 8 Harold was fined $100 Monday in Circuit Court 14, Traffic Division, for drunken driving. Lillian W. Smith, 33, of Wea-togue.

was fined $18 for driving with defective brakes, a charge Substituted for the original charge against her of reckless driving. Anthony J. Tedcschi, 19, of 1470 Broad was fined $27 for following too closely; Real Reny, '24, of 265 Washington was fined $12 for driving without a jicense, and Joseph Turner, 60, 62 Loomis was fined $9 'fnr driving an unregistered car. r.arv Braddock. 20 of 220 'Sargeant was fined $21 fori failing to drive in the proper lane.

A charge against him of failing to surrender his license to a policeman was nollcd. Adolphe J. Kyc, 38, of 67 Whit-' Ing East Hartford, and Lu-dolph Ritscher, 59, of 13 Fenwick 1st, were granted nollcs on charges of passing red lights. nktpr David Rpn Cur in ion mm me ndiion in an annner- But the outward freedom he enjoys is overshadowed by the wall of separation the Soviets and East Germans erected in 1961. Two-Way Problem mi.

t- cl 1 1 ine nev. ivir. aiaroucK recog- nizes the complexity of world poli- tlCS and hP? fr bJ3S1C in policy on both sides. His greatest amibition is "to see established a more or less tolerable relationship between the two German states so that the numan relationships mat nave been broken could be resumed." I 1 I 1 1 I Visit Scheduled At Marion Hall By Court Staff The staff of the Juvenile Court, for the Third District. Hartford, ii mi i will visit Marian Hall Thursday afternoon to review the hall's fa- cilities and treatment program for troubled teen-age girls.

tu ff: 7Va Kav. director of probation, and ti r- i liiuiiios i. vuc, vcim-wu will be escorted on the tour by Mster veronica, nnec- dence and school serving troub- jled. emotionally deprived teen age girls of all faiths and races from throughout Connecticut. The girls are offered a 24-hour-a day 'professional treatment program provided by a religious and lay team comprised of psychiatrist, I psychologist, caseworkers, group mothers, teachers, group worker and others.

Girls are referred to Marian Hall by the Juvenile Courts. State Welfare Department, parents and individuals Asks More Powers WASHINGTON (UPI Chair- man William L. Carv of the Se press to give the SEC more con- trol over the National Association Securities Dealers NASD i The indtry croup that helps req- He said the SEC's power to alter and supplement the rules of the NASD was more limited than SEC authority over the stock Tu rr rael armed forces are ready for The victim. Emanuel Ortiz Sister Mary Mark, social that mav come of 95 Oak Glastonbury, told group workers, will show a 24- police two men grabbed him in minute color slide presentation' 9,000 Tl'CCS Planted an empty apartment on Donald portraying the work and training Street, knocked him to the floor of the Sisters of the Good Shep-jt Uatlvinsoil feCllOOI and took $480 from his pockets, herd. Walkinsnn School students and According to the report, the two) Marian Hall, operated by the their fathers have planted 2.000 mon left with Bcttie Jo Jackson Good Shepherd Sisters, is a resi- trees in a corner of the school before going to Yeshiva in 1961.

YD Veterans' To Seat Officers Hartford Chapter, Yankee 'vision Veterans Assn. will hold installation of officers Thursday at 7:15 p.m. at Danish Brother hood Hall, 302 White St. Benjamin A. Bourn, past na tional commander, will be install-; ing officer, assisted by Harry Robertson, past national ser- geant-at-arms.

New officers are: Harold M. Connolly, command er; Samuel j. uosen, semui viue commander; James L. Yaca-vone, junior vice commander; Paul J. Caravatt, treasurer; Carroll B.

Case, secretary, Stu art R. Spear, historian; Dennis P. O'Connor, judge advocate ana Leonard H. Fletcher, sergeant- at-artns. Trustees are Thomas w.

O'Connor and Albert Rossing, re tiring commander. A luncheon will be served and reservations should be made with Thomas O'Connor. 242-4550. Widows of departed comrades will be guests at the luncheon. Liquor Seized, Man Charged Charles Harold, 57, of 54 Barbour was arrested Monday on a charge of keeping liquor with intent to sell.

Harold was arrested at his apartment by Lt. John J. Roach and Policeman Anthony J. Papo-lio of the vice sqUad. Police went to Harold's apartment at 1:45 p.m.

and reported finding 36 half pints of issoried liquors hidden in a 20-gallon rubbish barrel on Harold's back porch. Lt. Roach said Harold denied ownership of the bottles claiming they belonged to someone else. The head of the vice squad said, however, that the serial rumber on a bottle of gin found In Harold's kitchen showed that it caine from the same' lot as gin bottles found in the barrel. The three dozen bottles, two empty cases found on the porch, the empty bottle in Harold's kitchen and an empty case also found in Harold's kitchen were confiscated, police said.

of 2 Donald who had taken Ortiz to the apartment. The woman was picked up Monday and implicated Ellison in the robbery. Detectives John Wo-i coski, Salvatore Guglietta, John Brezina, Leroy Pitlman and Wil- liam Hippe worked on the case. Man Killed in Italy As Soccer Riots Flare NAPLES, Italy (LTD Police reported one man dead Monday, an 18-year-old boy near death and at least 119 other persons injured alter wild and bloody soccer riots at Naples and Salerno. Damage was in the thousands taru rid roc Qnnrlfjv fhaf ha Te- campus to prevent erosion.

re- habilitate scrub land, beautify the area and, eventually, provide shade. The seeded area is 'adjacent to the school's wildlife and bird sanctuary grounds. Record of Fil'CS Apri, mi 10:20 a.m. Still alarm. Veterans High way, near city line.

I960 two-door sedan. Owner, E. Hayes. Fire originated around motor. Cause unknown.

Slight damage. 11:54 am. Slill and Box alarm. 354 Woodland St. 2' brick building: stores and apartments, Owner Carl Balk.

Occupant, Cllnger. Fire originated In chimney. Cause, sparks. Considerable damage to third floor apartment. p.m.

Still and box alarm. 98-700 Windsor St. Thrpe-story tram tenement, Owner. Mossbeck and Co. Occupant, Henry Ponder.

Fire originated in woorlen hatchway tor cellar. Cause unknown, slight damage. 4:11 p.m. Still and box alarm. 45 Bellevue Sg.

Four-story brick apartment house Owner, Hartford Housing Authority. Rubbish burning In cellar crawl space. Cause unknown. No damage, p.m. still alarm.

Rear ot W9 Wethersiieid Ave. Owner, Connecticut Milk Producer Assn. Grass fir. Cause unknown. No damage.

p.m. Still alarm. North Meadows. Owner. City ot Hertford.

Crass wnd brush (ire. Cause unknown. damage. 1:14 p.m. Still larm.

North Me, (tows, near east service road. Owner City of Hartford, Flrt In tret dump. No damage. of dollars. Forty-four persons curitios and Exchange Commis-were under arrest at Naples, in- sion (SEC) Monday asked Con '1V J.6.v lit? fe4' Js Xirf 1 1 a 2 II iky I It, vt cluding 12 minors, and police were rounding up more persons for questioning.

The rioting broke out in both. cities Sunday after referees had ulate over-the-counter sales of se-called penalties against the home curitics. teams. Car Owners About 38 million American families own automobiles. ROYALTY VIEWS LIBERTY BELL: Duchess.

Charlotte of Luxembourg and her son. Prince Jean, visit the famed Liberty Bell in Philadelphia's Independence Hall Monday soon after they landed here for a four-day visit to the United States. Explaining the historical background of the bell is Philadelphia Mayor James H. J. Tate, left (AP Wirephoto)..

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