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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 37

Publication:
Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
Issue Date:
Page:
37
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Uuvenile Heeds 1 THE HARTFORD COURANT: Mondey. November 10. 196 3 ...1 i Warning; Held wmmmmm In Purse Theft Duf ey Threatens To Remove Camera A iiivenile was aDnrehendwl CnnHatf after nolice told him tft stop running or they wouli shoot. Duffey did not -Tile out the station's use of reporters and sound equipment at his rally. Police said they received a complaint from Judith Bifolck, 30, of 92 Sharon St.

about 9 p.ih. saying her puse had been snatched as she was walking in "No one is interferring with WTIC's right to cover the news," he said, "but by persist front of St. Justin's Church on ing in setting up its equipment despite my request, other news media may well be hindered from providing the coverage." Blue Hills Avenue. Policemen Royce Dell and Ronald Ciak noticed a suspicous kv( v. This might happen if newsmen person standing behind the portable clasgrooms at Weaver Joseph Duffey warned Sunday he will have WTIC-TV camera equipment removed from the rally tonight at which he will announce his U.S.

Senate candidacy if the station attempts to film the event. "I will request the removal of such equipment and I will not permit its use covering an event in which I am directly involved as long as the dispute continues," Duffey said. A spokesman said Sunday night tiie television station will cover the event with camera equipment. Newsmen from other stations have previously refused to cross the picket line of five WTIC cameramen who are striking for higher wages and hazardous duty insurance. iV again refused to cross a picket-line, he said.

The station has been using su High School a short time later, police said. Thev anDroached the suspect pervisory personnel to film news. who jumped over a fence and fled but halted wnen ueu The cameramen, members of New York Local 644 of the In threatened to shoot at him, said ternational Alliance of Theatri WW police. The susoect. a juvenile, was cal Stage Employes and Motion Picture Machine Operators, 1 i have been on strike since Oct.

identified by the victim, police said, and evidence was found that led to his detention. He was rrv x. tf. 20. remanded to the juvenile au thorities.

Finch to Address GOP Victory Dinner Exchange To Solicit across the state. The theme of Home Funds the dinners is "Progress '69 Victory 70." Hilltop Meditation The Inner City Exchange will Nicholas A. Lenge and Frederick U. Conard are co-chairmen coordinating arrange conduct a "Community Day" Saturday to raise funds for its proposed home at 175 Enfield St. Other than rushes and grasses and beautiful weeds, all you can see is a vast sky where gentle clouds exist, gilt-edged by a setting sun (Forman Photo).

Robert H. Finch, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, will be the featured speaker at two GOP victory dinners Thursday. The twin dinners, sponsored by the Connecticut Republican Finance Committee, will be held simultaneously in Hartford and Westport. The dinners will be connected by a statewide telephone hook-! Lying on your stomach on a hill in the country, propped up by elbows and chin and hand, you intend to contemplate the complexities of life. The rushes, so close to your face and thrown into shadow, seem to take on new meaning.

ments for West Hartford Republicans. The dinner in Hartford The ICE, a non-prom social service and recreational center, will be at the Hartford Hilton will conduct a door-to-door drive Hotel, and will begin at 6 p.m Hardin Bombs; Acid Rock Beats It Out with a social hour. Reservations may be made by telephoning Lenge, 278-6750, or Conard, 527- and a sale at Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, 66 Mahl Avenue, to help raise $50,000 to buy the building. 75 Soldiers Join Rally For Peace up, and will present numerous Republican dignitaries from1 9163.

A bake sale, rummage sale, and white elephant sale will be HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) A crowd estimated by police at 900 Towboat's Wake Capsizes Power Boat; All 8 Saved held at the church from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Door prizes will be awarded hourly. Participants will be encouraged to join the marched 36 blocks Sunday through southeast Houston and were joined by around iftw ICE.

Registration for classes and more persons for a rally follow ing their "march for peace." About 75 of the demonstrators programs at the ICE's temporary home, Horace Bushnell Church, will begin tonight from to 8 and continue every sight until Thursday. cal center. The two girls were identified as Laurie, 9, and Lisa, 7, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Rhinehart Lewis of Sioux City.

Other occupants of the boat were another sister, Lynnette, and Mr. and identified themselves as sold iers from Ft. Hood, Tex. Twenty five of them said they had Vietnam combat experience. Monday classes will include beginning art, beauty culture The marchers encountered Mrs.

Robert Lewis and their SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) -The maiden voyage of a 150-ton towboat and the first cruise of a small family power boat ended in near disaster on the Missouri River here today as the small boat overturned in the towboat's wake dumping four adults and four children into the turbulent river. Six of the small boat's occupants were rescued within 10 minutes of the accident, but a nine and a seven-year-old girl were pinned beneath the cap The selections were mostly from their Columbia album that is simply called Chicago Transit Authority but each one was just a little different from the album and each one was a happy blend of spontenaity and tight-knit, rhythmic rock. Good Builders Perhaps the thing that made the CTA so good was they never lost sight of the basic driving beat and they knew how to build a song to a clicax and than quit while they were ahead. Thier bass player, Peter Cetera, is perhaps the fastest and finest I have heard and their drummer, Daniel Seraphine, is also one of the best around. Couple this with a brass section (trumpet, sax and trom-hone) that knows its business and can solo any member at any time, a lead quitarist (Terry Kath) who is excellent, and a more than completent organist to fill in lead lines and gaps and you have what I consider the finest instrumental and vocal ensemble in rock today.

Not only that but they sound as good in person as they do in their records. from the microphone. Unfortunately he had a tendency to sing from the same distance and often slurred his words under the pretext of using a "blues drawl." Even so he got some good ap-, plause from parts of the crowd and his guitar playing was worth listening to, until he decided to play the piano. Ramsey Lewis he ain't. He finished his set with "A Simple Song of Freedom" which was probably the best thing he did all evening and warmed up the audience somewhat.

Next was the Chicago Transit Authority and if anyone left after seeing Hardin they made a mistake. The CTA began by playing "introduction" and literally dragged the audience up out of their seats. They were great. From where I sat it sounded as though they had some problems at the start balancing their sound with the equipment available, but once they got rolling they were a tapestry of music so thick it was tangible and so tight-knit it was a joy to listen to. I By KEN CRUICKSHANK The University of Hartford gym was filled to its smoky capacity Sunday evening for the homecoming concert featuring singer Tim Hardin and the heavy jazz-acid rock sound of the Chicago Transit Authority.

Almost a thousand people lined the bleachers or sat on each other's feet on the floor. Everybody ignored the no smoking signs. A young man who played the harmonica in the bleachers before the performance got a standing ovation from a cheerful crowd. The first set was played and sung by Tim Hardin and was, to me, a grave disappointment. Hardin's music may be all right on records but his live performance (or at least this live performance) left a lot to be desired.

A Good Strumming His guitar playing was fine but his singing went almost unheardand what you could hear wasn't that good. The names of most of his songs were a mystery because he usually announced them three feet away only a few hecklers along the way. One lady shouted, "You're all just a bunch of Reds son, Danny, 3. Crewmen from the towboat, the largest ever built and launched at Sioux City, found the two girls by diving in the swift Missouri waters. Efforts to get a doctor aboard One middle-aged man carried a sign saying "one of the silent majority says bring the boys min-ithe towboat were thwarted by sized craft for nearly 30 home." Dallas businessman David the river strong current, which prevented a launch from coming alongside the larger Moss told the crowd that many Dallas businessmen supported vessel.

their efforts for an immediate utes. Authorities said mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by a 15-year-old Boy Scout and a nurse aboard the towboat, Delia Ann, may have saved the lives of the two small girls. "They were reported in fair condition at a Sioux City medi- end to the war. Dr. Howard Levy, a former military physician who was court-martialed and sentenced to three years in 1967 for refus Credited with saving the girls' lives were Mrs.

Ed Porter, a nurse; Mark Watson, 15, a Boy Scout; and towboat crew members Richard Meek, Dan Hofling and Dave Huff. Watson is the son of Sioux City City Manager Buford Watson, who was one of 80 honored guests aboard the towboat for its maiden trip. and a course on fire prevention, home safety and housing codes. "TCB and damce" will be given on Tuesdays. The Inner Voice Choir, a goss pel singing group, will meet on Wednesdays at the Horace Bushnell Church, but the tutoring program conducted by the UConn Organization of Afro-American Students will be held at the Parker Memorial Civic Center.

The tutoring will begin at 6:30 p.m. Advanced art classes and a program entitled "Focus on Black and White" will be held Thursdays. The "Focus" programs will deal with racial and community relations. The ICE also sponsors the Inner City Players, a theater group which meets at the Clay Hill Center from 4-6 p.m. on Sundays.

Historic Camp Cost Taxpayers Of Town $13,900 Town Manager Richard Cus ter has notified the West Hartford Town Council of receipt ol Statues from Hawaii ing to train Green Beret medics for Vietnam, was keynote speaker at the rally at Hermann WASHINGTON fAP Twn Education Week Program Planned Hartford Public High School City, Couple Tentatively Settle Long Dispute over Water Line Park. "Mr. Nixon is a hypocrite and his Vietnam policy is hypocriti cal," Levy said. "Mr. Nixon will observe the opening of Sunrise and Trouble TORONTO, Canada UP An shouldn't worry about being the "American Education Week," NEW BRITAIN (Special) New Right of Way 1 1 a i claimed "continuing today with a program at the first president to lose a war-but should be worried about For the reported 520.000 set- use" of the land question by The long, drawn out case of Mr.

expedition to the beach to photo VIA IwAAi 114 IT statues presented by Hawaii have joined those from other states on display in the Capitol's Hall of Columns and the Statuary Hall. In the Hall of Columns is Ka-mehameha the Great, the Polynesian king who united the Hawaiian Islands. A statue of the Rev. Joseph Damien de Veuster, who administed to the lepers of Molokai until he con- tlement, the city will purchase virtue of valid grants given the school beginning at 7 p.m. graph the sunrise seemed to and Mrs.

Albert Wilde of Bur being the first president to lose Harry Mason and Carl Hader from the couple another right of city. way on their property while still While he was in Burlington, lington against the city concern the army," Levy said. He said like a good idea at the time. The pair drove to Woodbine the army is moving to become a holding onto the present right of Baldwin inspected the mounds The program will be held in the main building on Forest Street and is open to all parents and interested citizens. It will ing water line right of way has finally concluded with a $20,000 people's army.

way, which for 63 years has of earth which covers the pipe- beach, but their car got stuck in provided a water line from! line from Whigville, through the was tentative settlement "without the sand. -A tow truck Sl11a A Vl if if rrs ef it stir nnJ Whigville Reservoir in Burling Wilde property, into Plainville feature a series of demonstra Record of Fires Sunday, Nov. Wf i if vauua, uut it, kui diula aim ton to Shuttle Meadow in New and into Shuttle Meadow IT- town, forcing the driver 5.2? J5S? Li9' to call another truck. Britain. tions of modern teaching techniques, and, beginning at 8 p.m., a series of conferences and discussions with teachers.

Justice Baldwin said in his de ouiiudiy naii. me aicuue ui uic a m. Box alarm, at Main and Buckingham streets, false alarm. 1:4 a.m. Still alarm at 10 West Avon owner A.

Kofski, mattress fire in front of house, cause unknown, 11:54 a.m. Still alarm at Engine. The second truck came and pulled out the first, but the driv king, who died 150 years ago, is prejudice" in favor of the couple. Former Chief Justice Raymond E. Baldwin, sitting as a referee in Middletown Superior Court, presided over the case, one of the longest on record in which the city was involved.

Details are expected to be cision that he could not make the city move the present pipe a replica of one in front of Ha- Trinity Instructor To Speak at Seminar er refused to back into the Faculty and students will line. Co. 6 headquarters. A woman treacherous sand, far enough to reach the photographer's car. The Water Board has author Charles S.

Newcan, Trinity broupht In her son, Dennis Cary, age 8, who was having trouble breathing due to an apparent asttima attack. stage displays and demonstrate the schools automatic calculators and the closed circuit television system. College Philosophy instructor, Firemen administered first aid and will speak at the fourth in a ser took the boy to a hospital. ized its chairman, Victor H. Anderson to begin negotiations with the plaintiffs and sign agreements for the new right of They called a third tow truck.

Meanwhile, a policeman came down to see what was going on. His motorcycle stuck in the ies of Community Seminars 5:11 p.m. Still alarm, 49 Green worked out between the parties Nov. 18 at the corporation counsel's office. today at 4:15 p.m.

in room 320 of the Austin Arts Center. sand. Atty. Andrew A. Aharonian Newman, a specialist in politi a check for $13,900 from the state, representing the final payment of open space grants to reimburse the town for pur chase of the historic Rocham-beau camp site property off Albany Avenue.

The property comprises a tract of 13.9 acres and contains remnants of structures that are believed to be camp fireplaces erected by the French troops under General, Rochambeau during the Revolutionary War. The town originally paid for the property but reimbursement of half that amount through a federal open space grant last year. As a result of the federal and state grants, the net cost of the property to the town was $13,900. represented the city in the The third truck came, got stuck, then tied a winch cable to a tenement owned by O. Gore.

Open flue on chimney was causing smoke. 5:15 p.m. Still alarm, corner of West-land and Barbour. A car owned by Juanita Hines had a short circuit in the dashboard wiring. Minor damage to the car.

1:3 p.m., still alarm at 109-111 Mag-olia St. sick call. 9:03 p.m., still alarms from i Dillon gas leak, no damage. cal philosophy and ethical theo way. Justice Baldwin began hearing testimony in October, 1968.

Jerome Griner of Hartford, the couple's counsel, charged Reserve Commander Named Parade Head Naval Reserve Cmdr. Thomas M. Meredith of 19 West Hill Drive, West Hartford, has been appointed Hartford's parade marshal for the Veteran's Day pa-; rade Tuesday. Meredith is presently the 1 commanding officer of the USNR Officers School in Hartford and works for Equitable Securities, Morton and Co. in Hartford.

lengthy litigation in which Mr, ry, will discuss "Do we have an and Mrs. Wilde asked a half obligation to serve our a stump, The stump pulled out. The driver finally got free, went back to the garage for a longer I million dollars in damages. Emmons to Run Again For CRT Membership Edward Emmons of 232 Main St. has announced he will seek his third term as a member of the Community Renewal Team board of trustees.

Emmons presently serves as the Sheldon-Charter Oak area representative on the board. Community Renewal Team el They claimed that the Water New Britain installed the pipeline "by stealth," and he also accused the city of using The Community Seminar ser Board encroached on the lands cable, came back and pulled out the policeman and the two pho ies is being co-ordinated by Drew A. Hyland, assistant pro "fraudulent practices in laying tographers. deeded to and, in their opinion, a question existed as to the validity of the city's water The John Hay Lodge 61 of the Knights of Pythias will confer the rank of esquire upon six candidates tonight at 8:30. Refreshments will be served at the meeting at Castle Hall on The photographs were not tak the line.

Several Witnesses en. rights. For its part, the city put on ections will be held in 11 areas fessor of philosophy at Trinity College. Future speakers include: Assistant Professor of Government James R. Cobble-dick, Leo Molinaro of the American City and Trinity junior Theodore Kroll.

Park Road. of Hartford Nov. 14-15. the stand several witnesses including Water Department employes and officials. More than NEW DIETARY BEVERAGE Made With Saccharin 100 exhibits were introduced, some going back to the early history of the city.

The Montessori Society of Greater Hartford will sponsor a Justice Baldwin made a per lecture on "The Importance of sonal inspection of the property and the pipeline which the city has been using to provide water for its residents since nearly the turn of the century. Early Childhood Learning" by John P. Blessington, headmaster of Whitby School, Greenwich, Nov. 17, at the University of Hartford Millard Auditorium, 200 Bloomfield West Hartford, at 8 p.m. Atty.

Aharonian, who protect 0 SUGAR ADDED CYCLAMATES ed the city's interests from start to finish, maintained that New CALL NOW FOR HOME DELIVERY, MIDDLETOWN HIGH VIEW APARTMENTS Butternut Street GARDEN TYPE APARTMENTS Now Renting Second Section for November Occupancy 0 Cm imp, I A 4 t. 4 $y2 and 4l2 Room Apartments From $155 Private Balconies, fully carpeted, dishwasher, disposall, Hotpoint Appliances. U'4 spring water beverages Veterans Ceremony Main Office and Plant: 633.9467 OPEN DAILY SUNDAY 12 to 6 P.M. 346-3518 Model Apt Phone DIRECTIONS! Washington Strtct to Buttarnut Street utl before the nderpiti. Commander William J.

Tully speaks at attended the ceremonies in West Hartford a gloomy day Veterans' Day ceremonies at (Courant Photo by Jerry Williams). Fairview Cemetery Sunday. Some 50 persons Manchester 649-6218 Windsor Locks 623 9193.

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