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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

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

GUIDE TO FEATURES ft ft E00T TRAINING FRIDAY Earn, cool SATURDAY Partly cloudy. 11:49 a.m. None p.n High Tide Sun Rises Sun Set! 6:37 6:31 Full Report on Page 2. 48 PAGES 18 Bridse 20 CUssified 42-47 Comics 39 Cross-Word .39 Deaths 42 Dr. Crne ...21 Editorials ...28 Financial 33-35 Obituaries Port 33 Radio-TV ...49 Small Worlds 4 Society 36 Sports Star Gam .39 Theatres .22, 23 Twisutrsm .21 Women MORNING EDITION B.

U. S. Pat. Off. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1962 vol.

ia NO. 90 By GLOBE NEWSPAPER CO. Telephone AV 8-8000 IHUb Attorn I 9 i Jr amity Escapes veny MM 500 Miss. Police Force BEVERLY FARMS Six members of the family of Boston attorney William P. Dodd perished in a fire at 1:30 this morning.

Only member of the family to escape was 10-year-old Melvin Dodd. Presumed dead in the raging fire in the 15-room house at 21 Hart st. are: Atty. William P. Dodd.

Mrs. Eunice L. Dodd, his wife. Elizabeth Dodd, 8. Susan Dodd, 4.

Eugene Dodd, 2. William Dodd, 10 months. The blaze swept through tried to return, was seared by a blast of flame. The boy was taken to the home of Angelo Clemenzi at 11 Hart st. and treated for smoke inhalation.

A general alarm was sounded, bringing all Beverly apparatus into action. First firemen pulling up were unable to enter the building. FIRE Page Seven U.S.toR etreatl fir jvi 'll I i 4 4 1 IJ' i I it 1. OXFORD, Miss. (UPI) A barricade of 500 club-carrying state officers forced the Federal government to cancel plans to ramrod Negro James Meredith into the University of Mississippi last night.

The Justice Department immediately dispatched "several hundred" marshals to see that the task is accomplished. Cop, Gunman Shot, Quincy Holdup Fails the three-story mansion at 1:30 a.m. None of the bodies have been recovered. Police Lt Natale Lauran-zano said, "the whole house was engulfed in flames" when the first police cruiser pulled up. The sole survivor, ten-year-old Melvin, heard the screams of other members of the family.

He managed to clamber out a window, and when he dition on a marble staircase leading into the main lobby of the bank. Patrolman William F. Murphy, 31, of 63 Grandview Wollaston was felled by a shotgun blast in the left thigh, fired by the holdup man. Murphy, father of four, is in satisfactory condition at the Quincy City Hospital. The holdup man, Edward Marblehead; Joseph T.

Massa, 59, of Walnut a Revere, and Robert Ager of Groton, were charged with conspiring to violate the narcotics laws. RAID Page Eleven AP Wirephotoi By ROBERT E. WALSH A Quincy policeman and a holdup man were wounded yesterday afternoon after a gunbattle in which the gunman tried to flee the South Shore National Bank using three employees as shields. The shooting started when police had the man trapped and in a semi-conscious con Campus Contrast at Ole Miss Books, Helmets Gernan Calls Hunted 1 Washington sources said more than 700 marshals were on their way to Memphis to be available, if needed. "I hope," said Attorney General Robert F.

Kennedy, "that this matter will be resolved peacefully and without violence. "However, if this is not to be, the Federal government will see to it that the orders which are presently outstanding are maintained and enforced, whatever action that ultimately may require The Justice Department called off its latest attempt to have Meredith admitted to all-white university after the Negro and his escort of 25 marshals got within 30 miles of the campus. (In Washnigton a key octor, Lawyer Hub Lawyer Seized In Huge Dope Probe At 9:45 a.m., Kiernan informed Atty. Matthew L. Mc-Grath Jr.

that he would not comply with a court order to appear before Suffolk Superior Court Judge Francis J. Quirico. Incredible Coarseness By RONALD A. WYSOCKI While police in 13 states were hunting fugitive Francis W. Kiernan yesterday, he was quietly and calmly negotiating on his ownbehalf.

Kiernan, by telephone, talked to his attorney three times to discuss his fugitive status and to have newspaper accounts of his disap-ance read to him. He also arranged for admittance to the Massachusetts General Hospital through a telephone call to his physician. Kiernan, a key figure in the Boston Common Underground Garage trial, earlier this week left another hospital to escape a court Senate OKs Bill to Hike Postage and Federal Pay Scored by McGill: Ole Miss Vk-Acre Zoning Law Ruled Out; Fight Due 'Ugliest Americans' By RALPH McGILL ATLANTA Mississippi's performance in using her state university to further defiance of law and courts is so grotesque a show that as one looks at the incredibly shameful coarseness of it, it appears almost as a memorial confirmation of the late Wil- liam Faulkner's theme that the Snopes clan and its philosophy are in full control in the Magnolia State. The University of Missis- gave a performance which can Two-Inch Rain Drenches Boston; Power Lines Down S. Myler, 46, of Yarmouth, was brought down with a bullet in the chest fired by Det.

Leo AntonellL Myler, a father of three, and operator of a motel on Rte. 132 in Hyannis, is in poor condition at the same hospital. Police said the bullet drilled completely through his chest. The hostages, who were unharmed, were Mrs. Gladys Barret, 45, of Gothland Quincy; William W.

Grieves, 80, of Sargent Weymouth and Winthrop Sargent, 27, of Summit st, Hingham. Arthur J. Winquist, 57, of 77 Center Quincy, a bank guard and a retired lieutenant of the New York Police and Quincy patrolman Anthony Pollar, who was on special detail in the bank, gave this account: SHOOTING Page Ten "The board feels it has no recourse but to support the vote of the townspeople." The decision by Judge Edward M. McPartin of the Land Court could be a precedent in similar suits, which might be filed against other communities with high-acre zoning requirements. Sharon's neighbors, Dover and Sherborn, have 2'i-and in certain zones.

Other towns, like Lincoln, have placed a 3-acre minimum for new dwellings in some zones. Judge McPart'Jn found, in effect, that the zoning by-law amendment was an unreasonable use of the zoning authority, vested in a town meeting by the Legislature. He ruled that the 1961 amendment "is invalid and of no effect as to the petitioners' land." 3-acre minlmums respectively, Plaintiffs were Elliott Aron-son of Sharon and John Ackel of Brockton, represented by Atty. Robert I. Kalis.

Atty. Ernest C. Johnson appeared for the Town of Sharon. The plaintiffs petition noted that a 72-acre tract in the Oak st. section, near the Foxboro line, was bought by the plaintiffs in 1957, when the residential lot size was 40,000 square feet, and 150 feet frontage.

SHARON Page Ten $100 ALL RIDES! ALL DAY! WEEKIND SPECIAL KIDDIE RANCH IIOUTC si, taucus far Child The ABC-TV address that means pulse-pounding, suspenseful adventure for you 1 Ef rem Zimbalist, Army general conferred with Atty Gen. Kennedy, apparently to discuss plans for possible use of troops in the Mississippi integration crisis, the Associated Press said. Informed sources said Maj Gen Creighton Abrams director of operations for. the Army's deputy chief of staff for operations, visited the Justice Department.) If troops are ordered into Mississippi, they probably would come from Ft. Benning, where the 2d Infantry Division is stationed.

The most likely plan would be to send a battalion 600 men of military police and if this should prove inadequate, the battalion might be reinforced with a battle group of infantry 1200 men. MISSISSIPPI Page Three Students best be compared to that of the Nazi black shirts of the 1930s who stamped along in demonstrations crying out of twisted faces against the Jews, and chanting songs about burning them at the stake. Mississippi's most representative young men and women those able to attend the state university were pictured with distorted faces shrieking "Nigger Nigger." McGILL Page Three challenge to the chief executive, adding: "If a chal ge is necessary, it is there. It nas been presented by you (the public), I am ready to debate at any time, any place, all the tough issues faring this state." Volpe has stated that he docs not consider that debates serve any useful purpose. He and almost all the candidates speaking at the State Club affair, emphasized the 1 issue of corruption in government.

Concerning this issue, the chief executive declared that "nobody in Massachusetts has to guess what John Volpe will do if reelected governor." He added that he believes HouMWim. 4k Bu.int.t Men THANK YOU tm maklm Ih. )0I thi IHT Yttl VfT "Elaitle Band" CARRIGAN Rxiiiin i ti" tnvMmmr, pmainiiinr sippi has been made the pawn of political machinations of the lowest order. There was an attempt by a number of the Governing Board to obey court orders. The board is constitutionally established.

Yet, it was subjected to such a push of coercive pressure from the governor, legislature and newspapers with harsh demands that it obey the state's Chief Executive, that the public never learned its hopes or The university students He phoned McGrath's office three hours later and had the counsel's secretary read news stories of his disappearance to him. KIERNAN Page Eleven 1 The same bill, which now goes back to the House, carries a $603 million-a-year increase in postal rates starting Jan. 7. If accepted by the House, the new rates would raise letter mail from 4 cents to 5 cents, air mail from cents to 8 cents, and increase other postal rates. The House had previouslj passed a similar Postal Rate Bill which did not deal with Federal pay.

POSTAL Page Nineteen $800 Million Foreign Aid Is Restored WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Senate Appropriations Committee last night heeded President Kennedy's pleas, and approved a $4.4 billion Foreign Aid Money Bill that would restore nearly $800 million of the $1.1 billion cut by the House from the program. In approving the big bill, scheduled for floor action Monday, the committee also toned down restrictions on aid for Communist, nations such as Poland and Yugoslavia, and nation! which do business with Cuba. The Senate committee pro vided. in general, that the President would have discretion to waive the restrictions. FOREIGN AID Page Nineteen THE NEW Afl It chTUXHTtUUlC.

Rftlnurnnt Diuinrlimt loom.mofl.l Ctmbrlde tMltlll tMDIt CnflMI lUiktMl-llMilMI'DlM A I'M Mil .1 ConnlM Joseph Sax, prominent Boston lawyer, and two other men were seized by Federal agents last night as key figures in a multi-million dollar International narcotics ring. Sax, 58, of Preston Beach JFK Scores 'Obstruction' By G.O.P. WHEELING, W. Va. (AP) President Kennedy last night feed off on Republicans as obstructionists and urged cheering West Virginians to vote Democratic in November to keep their count moving ahead in coming days of peril and promise.

Speaking to a rain-damaged crowd of 10,000 in Wheeling Island Stadium, Mr. Kennedy said many administration measures had won or lost in Congress by narrow margins in the last two years. KENNEDY Page Eighteen Political Advertisement SENATORIAL CANDIDATES CHANNEL SATURDAY 1:30 I. Mlln Hurt, Inirdmm Manchaittr, Man. What Is It? RETURN LOAD I HAVE Mad wnslilnn nHout 4 tonnjhst wlll fill i ZMt-Jrui-kjj A Boston man plnrrd thin Want Ad in the (ilohf because he nrrdfl a truck to deliver kitrhrnwar to Stratford.

N.Jm on Oct. 6. He Is looking for truck driver, out of Philadelphia, who haa dropped hia cargo in Boston and ran take a rcfurn load. A New Jersey merchant i opening a new utore in He wants the aitchenware delivered on the Saturday before the grand opening Ihe following; Mon- day, tut the weekend can ed to act up displays, To place a Classified Advt. in The Globe Call AV 2-1500 DEBATE 1 La A SHARON Selectmen voted last night to appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court a precedent-setting Land Court decision which struck down a section of the town zoning code.

The Land Court invalidated an action of the 1961 Sharon town meeting which amended the code to add a new residence zone requiring a 2k-acre lot, The selectmen decided to appeal after meeting with the town Planning Board in executive session for 90 minutes. Emerging, Chairman Alfred Powell said: "We have voted to appeal the decision to the Supreme Judicial Court, it being the will of the townspeople as evidenced at the 1961 town meeting. Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE No Games Scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 7, Chicago 0. St. Louis 7.

San Francisco 4. Houston 8, Los Anseles 6. RED SOX TODAY No Game Scheduled OI.T OF RESTFTT th, mnnor th 111 DAVID WHITE lh ftlr nf lh mm CORDAGE i TWINE CO, INC, III rlo.d til Fnd.r, grpitmbtr it, int WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate yesterday rejected charges of pre-election vote-buying, and voted 72 to 3 to give 1.6 million government workers an immediate pay raise. The storm is expected to end late this afternoon, followed by clearing skies and cooler weather. Several injuries were attributed to the downpour.

A Boston policeman on traffic duty was injured shortly after 7:30 last night when he was struck by an auto in front of St. Peter's Church, Bowdoin Dorchester. Patrolman Henry G. Hillis, 37, of 1 Woodbole Mat-tapan, was held in City Hospital with a concussion. Police identified the driver of the car as Martin F.

Craven, 76, of Belfast, Me. An unidentified man was injured seriously when struck by a car while crossing Dorchester near Freeport Dorchester. A truck, carrying a 9-ton roll cable for a ski tow, overturned at 7 last night on Massachusetts near St, Botolph st. The driver. Paul Bousquet, 32, of Rutland, was unhurt.

Three persons were rescued by a motor boatt from small rowboats in Nahant Harbor at 7 p.m. STORM Page Forty-one 1963 CHEVROLET'S CHEV ll'S CORVAIRS NOW ON DISPLAY FRI. SAT. SAVE MORE AT Seymour Chevrolet 374 MASS. CAMB.

Open Eva. UN 4-4800 Volpe Foils Peabody's Bid On Debate 'Summons' Southern New England was drenched by two inches of rain yesterday as a fast-moving northeast storm worked its way up the coast. Numerous trees were felled and power lines downed by 40-mile-an-hour winds, with gusts exceeding 50 m.p.h. The U.S. Weather Bureau at Logan Airport reported rainfall of two inches late last night, and predicted that total precipitation will reach 2.5 inches.

Democrat a. Independents will recognize that the Volpe administration has "triggered clean-up action by turning the searchlight on highway scan dals, 'sweetheart' deals, bookie joints, graft, theft, and other shocking examples of crime and corruption. CANDIDATES Page Nine produced oy lmhul nnant SATURDAYS 12 2 PM INFORMAL LUNCHEON MERRY-GO ROUND SHERATON PLAZA HOI CI By ROBERT B. KEN'NEY DEERFIL Endicott reabody strode into Dcerfield Academy last night like a zealous summons server but he missed his man. Peabody, Democratic nominee for governor, was carrying a letter in which he formally challenges Gov.

Volpe to a debate. However, Volpe. after making a short speech before a State Club candidates' night dinner here, ducked out more than an hour btfo.e Peabody arrived. Peabody told nearly 1200 persons that he will mail the FREE Chi i wore 'in I NEW BUUCf) DETERGENT F7' rrr? i I i Kopcr Smith SUNSET STRIP Edd Byrnes Fri. 9:30 p.m.

WNAC-TV 7 star-.

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