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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

GUIDE TO FEATURES Bridfe 19 Polit Circuit Calendar 37 Port 37 Classified 24-31 Radio-TV ...19 Comics .18,19 Shain .......37 Cross-Word .18 Small Worlds IS Deathi Jl Society 21 Dr. Crane ...18 Sports 33-36 Editorials 8 Star Gazer ..18 inancial Theaters SlfOill ...8 TwistagTam 18 Obituaries 24,25. Women vol. NO. 83 FIRST EITE FRIDAY Sunny, cooL SATURDAY Fair, little wanner.

High Tide 5:43 a.m. 6:12 p.m. Sun Rises Sun Sets 6:30 6:44 Full Report on Page 2. 1 40 PAGES 10c Hi MORNING EDITION Be. V.

S. Pat Off. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1962 Br GLOBE NEWSPAPER CO. Telephone AV 8-8000 i 4 Governor Defies Courts, Bars Oe Miss to Negro; I lit -oJ i l. i v4 I Ml As II 1ST I U.S.

to Indict 3 Officials OXFORD, Miss. (AP) Gov. Ross Barnett of Mississippi yesterday defied orders of Federal Courts and refused to admit James H. Meredith, a Negro, as a student at the University of Mississippi. The Mississippi governor given him by the Missis- ert B.

Ellis. Justice De-made his defiant decision sippi college board a few partment Atty. J. Howard in a face-to-face meeting hours agQ Flannery took the order to of 23 minutes with Mere- Jud Mize in his hotel dith, who hopes to be the Four hours later U.S. first person of his race to Dist.

Judge Sidney Mize enroll in Ole Miss in the ordered three officials, of white-to Washing-school's 114-year history. the universitv to appear Juf lce tne university to appear jnformation officer Edwin '( i-r' I ill i is He said "no" despite a before him today (2 p.m. o. Guthman said Federal Federal Court edict that CDT) at Meridian to show attorneys would seek a Meredith must be admit- cause why they shouldn't similar contempt citation ted and in the face of a be cited for contempt in from three judges of the convoy of four men be- refusing to enroll Mere- 5th U.S. Circuit Court of lieved to be U.S.

marshals, dith. Appeals who are conduct- Gov. Barnett courted a The three officials were in a civil riShts trial in contempt citation from a Chancellor John Davis Hattiesburg. Federal Court the ac- Williams, Dean Arthur B. RACIAL tion, taken upon authority Lewis and Registrar Rob- Page Seventeen (AP Wirephoto) AP Wirephoto) Gov.

Barnett on Campus to James Meredith After Rebuff at University 0 Do Fregideinit i JL ants More Democrats To Stop 'Return Last-Hope College Aid Bill Loses Decisively in House WASHINGTON (UPI) The House yesterday voted down a compromise $2.3 billion college aid bill, apparently killing the last vestige of President' Ken-. nedy's education program this year. Lv HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) President Kennedy leaped into the 1962 political wars last night with a resounding appeal to Pennsylvania voters to elect Democrats and help prevent a return to what he called deadlock and drift. This one fact, Mr.

Kennedy Fight Integration of DrifV B. KENNEY Hughes' invitation to debate was "being considered" and no decision has been made on it. Simultaneously, the question of debates between the gubernatorial candidates was as undecided as the senatorial sessions. POLITICS Page Four Aychdiocese Gets New Hub UHF Channel Hughes: They Don't Want Me in Debates Senate O.K.'s Fight If Cuba Threatens By ROWLAND EVANS JR. if- n-n ti (Gtob Photo by LeRoy Ryan TOP REPUBLICANS Richard F.

Treadway, right, named national Republican committeeman from Massachusetts last night, clasps hands with his distaff counterpart, Mrs. Bancroft C. Wheeler, and Philip K. Allen, G.O.P. State Committee chairman.

said, is clear beyond dispute: "That this country requires, if it is to move ahead, a progressive Congress in short a Democratic Congress. "For more is at stake than what party controls the Congress and the various state governments. The American people on Nov. 6 must choose whether this nation is to sail or anchor down whether we are to step up the progress already made or return to deadlock and drift." (President Kennedy plans to campaign every week-end in October in several key states, writes David Wise of the N.Y. Herald Tribune.

(At least one of the weekend flying forays will be to New York where Mr. Kennedy will seek to aid the slate headed by Robert M. Morgan-thau, who was nominated by the Democratic state convention last Tuesday to run against Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, Mr.

Kennedy's possible Republican opponent in 1964. (Meanwhile, it was announced that the Pre sident will speak Sept. 27 at a state-wise rally of West Virginia Democrats at Wheeling. KENNEDY Page Seventeen In a new and revealing policy statement, Secretary of State Dean Rusk said yesterday: "We are conducting a close surveillance of the Caribbean area, and we intend to enforce the right to conduct such surveillance, and this itself could lead to certain incidents which would involve the use of the armed forces." Rusk made the statement in secret testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services Committees Tuesday. Heavily censored portions of it were released yesterday, a few hours before the Senate voted 86 to 1 for a joint resolution pledging the united determination of this government to use force if necessary to deal with Sovietized Cuba.

CIBA Page Sixteen GOP in Angry Rift The action came on a roll-call vote of 214 to 186 that sent the higher education bill back to a House-Senate Conference Committee. Because of wide disagreement over student loans and grants, there appeared to be no chance of a new compromise acceptable to both chambers. The House manager of the bill, Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.) admitted this seems to be the case. "I think it's dead," she said following the vote.

In its vote, the House instructed its negotiators to demand elimination of a $600 million student loan-grant program. This included up to $120 million in direct grants for needy, talented students. COLLEGE AID Page Eleven Weatherly Romps Weatherly, United States defender of the America's Cup, clobbered the Australian challenger Gretel yesterday and took a 2 to 1 lead in the series. Weatherly won by 8 40 sec or more than a mile. (Details in Sports Section) either to restore or increase cuts inflicted by the House Appropriations Committee which had made a 23 percent slash in Kennedy's $4.7 billion request.

FOREIGN AID Pone Eleven Over Chadvick Funds MICCICHE By ELIZABETH SULLIVAN Within weeks, Bostonians will have another TV station to watch. Channel 56, which was in operation from August, 1953, -to March, 1956, will be reactivated next month by the Archdiocese of Boston. This is Station WTAO-TV in Cambridge. It had to sign off nine years ago because the Federal Communications Commission couldn't make up its mind about the status of Ultra High Frequency. TV STATION Page Seven By ROBERT The political peppermill was going full speed, and in all different directions' yesterday on the matter of debates.

Harvard Prof. H. Stuart Hughes, independent candidate for the U.S. Senate, accused his Republican and Democratic counterparts of trying to freeze him out of face-to-face confrontations. "Not me," said Cabot Lodge.

George The G.O.P. standard bearer said he wasn't adverse to having Hughes join in "the problem is to persuade the other candidate." "Hold on," said Edward M. Kennedy. The Democratic nominee is "taking first things first," according to spokesmen, and is working to arrange a debate with "the Republican candidate." A Kennedy aide said MENZIES The invitation, with road maps, came from Franklyn W. Phillips, director of NASA's new North East Operations Office.

Phillips, 44. an M.I.T. graduate with 22 years experience in the nation's air and space projects, was chosen personally by James E. Webb, head of NASA, to the new regional coordinating job last July Yesterday Thillips announced that the new NASA office, first of its kind in the country, was now in business. riiiLLirs Page Seven BENTLEY College Last pA'cninn Class INTRODUCTORY ACCOUNTING Starts September 25 ENROLL at 921 Boytiton Botlon Cnll CO Tnt Mortitnlinn NASA Chief Here Vows N.E.

Firms Space Pact Aid House Cuts Foreign Aid From All Aiding Cuba WASHINGTON Round-the-clock surveillance is now in effect in the Caribbean erea, and the U.S. will intervene with military power if "any elements" of Cuba's growing armed forces are sent to any "neighboring" country. 300 Denounce BRA Proposal For Mattapan By ANTHONY J. YCDIS Boston Redevelopment Authority plans for a 400-unit moderate income housing project in Mattapan ran into heavy opposition from 300 residents who jammed the Chittick School for a public hearing last night The citizens, many of whom live outside the proposed 42-acre project area, punctuated the 3 -hour meeting with boos, catcalls and foot-' stomping the B.R.A. Only two persons, one representing the Mattapan Board of Trade, backed the project, proposed for the.

area bound-, ed by Cummins Liver-more, Itasca, Messinger and Currier sts. HEARING Page Nineteen What Is It? FREE GOOSE r.nr at tiiu womk WILL GET IOC A me The man ho put thin want ad in Wednesday's Globe raises prize Reese a hobby. He ha a house to ell and is leaving; one gnnse behind for whoever buyn this house. Not many people re li see that gooxe i a heller wa'chdogs rifled Advt. I Watchdog than To place a Class In The Globe Call AV 2-1500 By S.

J. A sugary Republican State Committee "harmony" session soured at the finish last night. It was all sweetness when G.O.P. primary losers pledged body and spirit their support for Tuesday's party winners. There was a mild ruffle over the committee's selection of a national Republican committeeman.

But it was hardly a ripple on the smooth party waters, with Sturbridge innkeeper Richard F. Treadway winning it, 59-23, over Lloyd B. Waring, Rockport, and having it solidified by rousing acclamation. Harmony took a holiday at that point. A demand was raised for ernment lines and headed to- ward this capital, bristling with military activity.

Other rebel tank units rumbled up to tho outskirts of Buenos Aires. (The rebel-controlled radio said late last night that President Jose Maria Guido had ordered a two-hour truce in the conflict and that the rebels were observing it, according to United Press International. (A rebel spokesman laid restoration of the $2500 spent by the state committee for the defense of Rep. Harrison Chadwick before the House Rules Committee last January. The ashes of the Chadwick case were raked over in a bitter exchange, ending with a thunderous rejection of the idea.

Rep. Theodore J. Vaitses (R-Melrose), legislative member of the G.O.P. state committee, tossed the bomb, insisting that the expenditure had been "illegally authorized." Vaitses maintained that this was an "unusual disbursement" of donated Republican funds and "should have had the consent of the full state committee." REPUBLICANS' Page Nine that Gen Juan Carlos On-gania, leader of the dissident troops, left late last night for a conference with Guido.) The government military command claimed three rebel tanks were destroyed in the clash but news dispatches from the battle area said the rebels suffered no losses. Half a dozen rebels were reported wounded; there was no official confirmation.

President Guido, for whom the rebels claim they are By IAN Ner England's space-age industries were invited to climb aboard the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's billion dollar rockets to the moon Bnd Mars here fighting, earlier issued a formal order for government troops to crush the rebel stronghold at Campo de Mayo, just outside Buenos Aires. ARGENTINA Rebel Tanks Peril Buenos Aires Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago 6, BOSTON 4. Cleveland 5, Kansas City 2. Detroit 5, Minnesota 1. NATIONAL LEAGUE Houston 7, New York 2.

Houston 5, New York 4 (12V Philadelphia 3, Chicago 1. Chicago 4, Philadelphia 1. Pittsburgh 4. Cincinnati 3. St.

Louis 5, San Francisco 4. RED SOX TONIGHT At Washington (Conley vs. Ostccn), 8 p.m. CITY OF BOSTON PUBLIC HEARING A public hearing will Iho riiv I'mmeil Chamlirr. mi WeHnr(lv.

Si'iitrpilier 2H at 2 n'cloi hv the rotnnilti WASHINGTON (UPI) The House, ignoring President Kennedy's pica, last night approved a record $1.1 billion cash cut in the foreign aid program. It also, in a surprise action, voted to cut off all U.S. aid to any country which trades with Communist Cuba. The lawmakers made both decisions in approving a $3.6 billion money bill to run the foreign aid program for this fiscal The roll call vote on final approval was 249 to 144. The measure now goes to the Senate.

They rejected all attempts "lorrhat family dinner out 't cnNCflRn rninN ii inn; II milii (torn Botlon. utt Oil Routt I rOS RESERVATIOKS CALL tMwsM 1 4S0I BUENOS AIRES, (AP) Government artillery forces battled a rebel tank column 50 miles from Buenos Aires yesteday in the first fighting of Argentina's newest crisis. The rebels were reported to have driven through gov FREE GIFTS in boapme Page Seventeen mm on uiburi Knht)int tinn mid Rpnrwul of iht Boston Cjif Cnunril to coiildrr a Krolutinii nr the approval of tha linrtrrljikiii cl uivrvK and Plana and the lilma rl Hpnlli'iitlnn lor In advamr fund lor the proronnl Cenlral Bun. nr District 1'ilian Hnwal i'tolecU Kor (he- f-ATfclCK t. iXditWOVGKt Ciuurnan.

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Pages Available:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024