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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 10

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ten THE BOSTON DAILY GLOBE MONDAY, JUNE 13, 193S 12 Afore Die, 75 on Danger List R. I. Jet Dunked: I French Probe Race Disaster Toll 79 Pilot Rescued Italy's Scelba Faces New Test Despite Victory ROME, June IS (UPl-Premicr Mario Scelbi tonight won the first QUONSET POINT. R. I June 13 (AP)-A Navy TOT-1 Cougir jet lth racing car which Plo1d'd' LS MANS, France.

June 13 (Reutersi French Justice authori said, too, that firms could have sued the organizers for huge sums if the race had been stopped. The Paris evening newspaper said today the rcncai acsisn u.c Mam Mr the accl- plant crashed en take-off from the end of Runway 18 at the Naval Air dent which resulted in the death of i 3 Paris-Presse upheld the decision ties today probed the Le Mans automobile race disaster as the death toll mounted, today to 79. major round of hi strugglt to itay'Ution here today and carried it 79 spectators. in power. pilot Into Narraganiett Pay, from Ha rejected suggestions if 1.

mignu um alloy which he wai quickly rescued 111 ru wi used in the construction of tne VJ jne victory came wran ri-liamentary group of the dimension-wracked Christian Democratic voted almost unanimously for The plant wai piloted by Lt Mercedes sports car Jiao inymin to do with the explosion. Com James W. Rose, USNR, of Two of the 71 Injured survivors died In hospital during the night and others are still ou tbo danger list. Mars funeral services for the continuation el the four-party gov. Dallas, who Ii attached to X.tnn.tl.fflh.nuJl'V Squadron 703 of H.nsley ll failed to crnne ui with an antici- Field.

Dallai. A crash boat crew victims, almost all French, will be held in Le Mans Cathedral Face director Charles Faroux said today in aa interview with (he Paris newspaper Flgar 1 that he was asked to slop the race right after the accident, but "in spite of the horror of the situation, I did not think the sporting trial should be Interrupted." He said the British. set the ex-amnle three years ago at Farn- The dead are reported to con Wi sist of 58 men, IS women and six children. not to th stop the race "the authorities could not take, In a moment of panic, a decision which would have censured forever the oldest and most reputed of the big motor races." It quoted French Transportation Minister Gen Ednuard Corniglion-Molinler as saying, "there is no question of banning the 24-hour race. The safety arrangements were In perfect order.

The dan. ger which came Into play in turh an unexpected way it the price paid for progress." Paris-Presse quoted one estimate that insurance firms would havs to pay between to to injured spectators and to the dependents of those killed. France Soir, another evening paper, urged that the size of the engines or the rate ot gasoline consumption should be lowered to insure the safety of the public at motor races. rated counti-r-mniir which wouldlpulled him from the water approx-have called for liquidation rl thejjma(eIy minute ftfr th(. coalition tri iii replacement by I an all-Chrism nd uTered only from mcnt.

'Shock and Immersion, a Navy Af.er the vote vh'ch ended laid, three-dny -p rneet.ng, a imil-j ig to one of two Ins Scelba uruts of an air task group that is The vole re ivcrrts what on active training duty here for eubstantinl'y i spirit of weeks, tian democracy." J) Authorities today pieced to gether Saturday's fatal crash which sent parts of a hurtling German racing car smashing into borough. En Stand, where 30 persons were killed when jet fighter crowded enclosure of spectators before the grandstand In a holo disintegrated over the crowd at Ithe British Air Show. "The rough law 01 sport cuciaica that the race shall go on," Faroux But the p. Premier, whose jJwO Plead IlUiOCCnt opponents lr bern trying te topple him, i. not ytl of KlirnitiffA Th-ttc caust of blazing gasoline.

Investigators are trying to determine the exact cause of the castas-trophe. the worst disaster in the history of car racing. stated. IS. HlUHUIb It Vila the political woods.

He then pointed to tne uamc 1 Two men from Roxbury and Neanwnue in btuttgart, Ger Dorchester, nleaded innocent to jam that would have resulted, locking ambulance runs, it all the spectators had left at once. Faroux Parliament reconvened today after a re during the Sicilian many, Frinct Von Urach, spokesman for Daimler-Benz, makers of 1 niwiri i.iwn mi.ii.i- i elections charges of breaking and entering and receiving stolen goods, when arraianed today in Dorrhntur i tomorrow is ex-- on a no-confidence en route to a motion picture studio wnrd last month1 District Court before Judge Wil-E monarchists and C. Lvnch. M. T.

to Make (Glob 8tS Photo by Tom O'Connor) ALUMNI DAY AT M. I. T. Speakers morning conference, left to right, Dr. T.

Keith Glennan, president Case Institute; Dr. Shields Warren, Deaconess Hospital; Dr. John Von Neumann, atomic energy and (standing) Vice Adm Edward L. Cochrane, vice president for industrial and governmental relations. News Office Head i.

To win that 1 Ordered held In $500 each for an the full bark- hearing June 20, were George A.j lilion Chr.stian Bombard, 25, of Salisbury 1 Democrats, Lib- Dorchester, charged with two; 'ens. Icounts of breakinz and cntprina i pected to motion by the t. the vote, -ing cf, Demor era's Earli" that the party, plus a preaiaca and James E. McKenna. 22.

ot 't within his ewn figure from leftist Eustis Roxbury. charged with mm breaking and entering and receiv- I a catalyst of importance to all the world in its "singular role of easily transportable power," Dr. T. Keith that the new reactor will be generally similar to the CP-5 reactor of the Argonne National Laboratory in Chicago. This instru ing stolen goods.

groups, would make aceioa tne first major virtim of Russia's new "peace and friendship" offensive. Glennan, Case Institute of Tech Honorary Alumnus John J. Rowlands of Arlington, for 30 years director of the news office of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will be made an honorary alumnus ot the institute at the alumni banquet this evening at the Statler. Rowlands is .63 years old. He revolutionized the news office and the concept of college news when he went to the insutute.

Det Sgt Mark Madden of Fields Corner, who arrested the pair ment uses as fuel thin plates of nology, ex-commissioner ot the yesterday, said the thefts included a $600 bedrom suite, and three bed CONSPIRACY Continued pom the First Page No evidence was presented at this morning's arraignment and Judge Thomas J. Connolly continued the case to June 27 at the request of Brighton police detective William Lyons. In the police lineup this morning Krivitsky admitted to police that he and Bloom and a third rum planned the robbery, but he said "it was strictly a drinking deal and more or less a fantasy." "We all chickened out on Saturday," Sgt Leo Lombard of Police Headquarters quoted Krivitsky as saying. Lombard said that Krivitsky admitted that during a drinking session he and Bloom and a third man decided to ride into the Hathaway firm in Brighton, with Bloom doing the driving. to start work on a new film Wednesday.

In accordance with his final wishes, the body will be cremated and the ashes returned to New York. Hampden maintained his home at Ridgefield, Conn. He is survived by his widow, English actress Mabel Moore; a son, Paul, and a daughter, Mary, all of Ridgefield. The actor was born Walter Hampden Dougherty in Brooklyn, N. and would have been 76 on June 30.

He began Shakespearean roles in 1901 with a company tour, ing Great Britain. One of his achievements was 1000 appearances in the romantic comedy "Cyrano de Bergerac." His films include "All About Eve," "The First Legion," "Five "Treasure of the Golden Condor" and "Sombrero." He had been president of the Players Club in New York since an alloy ot uranium-2J5 and aluminum set in a Urge tank of heavy water which contains the neutrons and removes the lead produced in splitting uranium 235. room sets, two parlor sets, a baby stroller and two maple desks. agt Madden said that the oair This is one of the safest reactors had stolen about $3000 worth of Continued rom the First Page Dr. Killian told alumni that the nuclear reactor which the Institutr will build will be a "tame and cool one, rather than a hot type." "It will have nothing to do with bombs," he said.

"It will be non-secret and dedicated to the unrestricted advancement of knowledge and the peaceful use of the atom. It will be a domesticated kind of reactor for campus use." furniture from the Globe Furniture Company warehouse on Gibson Dorchester. Atomic Energy Commission, declared. "The availability of power from the atom should enable backward peoples to progress as rapidly as their own development as a responsible community will permit" Dr. Glennon urged, however, that making power available to other people is not enough.

"A washer and dryer are of no value if hunger stalks the land," he said. There is a market for more than nuclear reactors. The market is for the export of our American way of life and intelligent employment of the best and basic in Swallowed Fuse Short-Circuits Nap IRVING, June 13 (AP)-The afternoon nap of Lance Morrison, 5, was short-circuited yesterday when he swallowed an electric fuse while resting in bed. His parents rushed him to a hospital. Doctors switched on their X-ray machine, spotted the inch-long, pencil-sized fuse and decided the smooth glass-and-metal object would do little harm.

Police said that Bombard was known. It will be housed in a gas-tight steel building. At a power level to produce heat at the rate of 1000 kilowatts, it will produce a flow of thermal neutrons as high as any other university reactor in the country. Humanities Program The new social and humanities a trucker's helper for the furniture concern. All ef the stolen furniture was recovered in a rented earace and inimical to science and to freedom of thought," and added that "it is fortuaate that the pendulum has begun to swing the other way, now that the Supreme Court has given it a nudge in the right direction." Enrollment at M.

I. T. has increased from 3100 in 1939-40 to 5700 next Fall, Dr. Killian told the alumni. He urged that the brilliant and qualified youngster, without means enough, be enabled to attend college.

Earlier Dr. Shields Warren of a bedroom set in the home of one of the men. Harvard and New England Dea 1928. In 1925, he had opened a gredientsfreedom, initiative, in Both men are married with program, Dr. Killian explained.

"Bloom was to leave nis re coness Hospital, ex-chief of the division of biology and medicine families. genuity and taitn in tne will "help to attract to the institute, we hoce. more of the tvoe ceipts and records at the placelNew York playhouse of his own and that would put the other two'Hampden Theatre, and continued of us in pesition to rob the com-, as an actor-manager for several 01 the Atomic Energy Commission, said that centuries hence the effects of radiation on inheritance will of youngster who wisjies a pro 0- Arraign Quincy Man Tuition Increase fessional education as a sequel to pany. The weapon to De which I own." Krivitsky al- a general education, or who has a Commenting on the increase legedly told Sgt Lombard under bent for human relations and the Father's Day in Auto Fatality auestionine. art of leadership.

from $900 to $1100 a year of tuition to M. I. Dr. Killian said that A 41-year-old Quincy auto me June 1 Gilchrist Warehouse Sale Next 3 Days chanic was arraigned on man "It may well serve to set a new pattern in American engineering education, and a better one the "private institutions must not deny themselves the remedies available to other organizations slaughter and driving to endanger charges today in Dorchester Dis than a continuous five-year pro in a period of rising costs A gigantic sale will open at 9:30 a. m.

tomorrow in Gilchrist's gram leading to a professional degree." He said that at this point in trict Court involving the death Saturday night of a 55-year-old Dorchester man, near Neponset- and high taxes. They must reject and replace the sorry subsidy of balancing their budgets by underpaying their faculties." "But it was au a laniasy, ne repeated. Neither Krivitsky nor Bloom has any criminal record. Krivitsky, a former Roxbury choir boy. holds the Purple Heart, the Presidential Citation and the Naval Citation for his part in the Pacifir campaigns on Bougainville, Guam and Okinawa.

In 1948 'he became the first Boston hero of the Arab-Jewish war in Israel in which he lost an eye. Both Krivitsky and Bloom av. bridge. Overland St. Warehouse.

It is aimed at delighting bargain hunters. national life "we have urgent need for more scientists and engineers, more Comptons and Bushes and Scheduled to appear for a hear He said mat private colleges ing to the charges June 21 is James must ask parents who are able to pay a higher portion of their young people's education, and at Conants, who can build bridges of understanding between the domain of science and the domain of non-science. We need scientists show in a "predominantly detrimental manner." War Disastrous However, he added, "the assurance with which atomic tests can be contemplated is paralleled by the certainty of' disastrous genetic changes as well as other catastrophic effects of large-scale nuclear war. "In the foreseeable peacetime utilization of atomic energy the genetic danger is so slight in relation to the other risks as to be disregarded. Man has always had available the means of race suicide.

It must be our concern to remain strong that our nation, which has twice held the control of the world in the hollow of its hand and fore-borne to close its fist, may continue to be the bulwark of peace and invididual freedom." Dr. Warren said that the greatest revolution which atomic energy has brought about is in the field of understanding the living processes of the human body. The atom may well prove to be F. Morrill of Fayette st, whose car, M. D.

C. police said, struck and fatally injured Edward L. Lally of Woodworth Dorchester, as he crossed rain-swept Ne-ponset at 10:25 Saturday the same time increase institu aWf jT 1 and engineers who are deeply conscious of the issues and values the whers Ckcn and Sweeten i Lally was identified, according in our society and who can, as a result, be influential leaders in the h0 to M. D. C.

officers by a sister, Walter Hampden I puriemgeraiw Nearly $1,700,000 worth of merchandise will go on sale for a fraction of value. Included in the long-planned sale will be home furnishings, appliances and television sets, most of them nationally-advertised, brands. In addition to the drastic price cuts in first-quality items, the sale will feature clearance prices on reconditioned, slightly soiled or damaged goods. The warehouse sale will last three days. On Wednesday and Thursday the warehouse, near Fenway Park, will open at 12 noon and close at 9 p.

m. political and public life of the nation." 1' 5 Mrs. Helen Zavatone of Quincy, who was called to the scene. TrriTT vwnnn Tim. is fAP) Hammer Baking II S3 todu muliifm greasy Elm Death has ended the lengthy ca- ou win.

tl fe tional assistance for students who need help. He said that scholarships should be given for both ability and need, with prizes and other forms of recognition for intellectual achievement where there is no financial need. Dr. Killian reported that more than $4,000,000 has been given toward the $7,000,000 wante'd for a nuclear reactor and a physical sciences building as a memorial to Karl Compton. It has been decided, he said, Some World War I fighter I Sis planes could fly 130 miles per reer of actor Walter Hampden, 75, musly MV, rerja.

who performed on stage, screen Soda rec-and television and was particularly iommended by 22 hodi noted for his Shakespearean roles. Pres. Killian pointed to the obligation of the scientist to speak "in an informed and responsible manner on public matters, just as do lawyers, doctors, ministers, He termed the security and loyalty policies of the government nour. The adult female house fly lays day after suffering a stroke while TO" HOUStHOlD TRiAIUtl about 100 eggs at one time. aSv 14 1 AMERICAN AIRLINES AND LOCKHEED PROUDLY ANNOUNCE "THE ELECTRA- A COMPLETELY NEW AIRLINER! o4 This will be a history airplane, the first airliner to be produced in the United States powered with modern turbine-propeller engines.

This will be an all new airliner, new from the radar in the tip of the nose to the end of the graceful control surfaces in the This new airplane results from combining the abilities of two leading organizations in American aviation: the proven design and construction ability of Lockheed Aircraft the unequaled operating experience of American Airlines. SPEED Cruising easily at well over 400 miles per hour, the Lockheed 4 'Electra" will be faster by far than any other transport airplane in world airline operation today. QUIET The subdued hum of the turbine engines, with' their relative freedom from vibration, coupled with modern techniques in sound proofing will provide a new atmosphere of quiet relaxation. COMFORT This airplane will introduce a new and heretofore unequaled standard of airline comfort: a spacious club-like lounge; wider, more comfortable reclining chairs; wide-view rectangular windows; air conditioning for maximum comfort, in the air or on the ground; improved cabin pressurization to provide comfortable cruising at all altitudes up to 30,000 feet. CONVENIENCE The many innovations passenger convenience will include: carry -on baggage facilities for those who prefer them; improved design for faster handling of checked baggage; built-in steps, eliminating the delay of "rolling up" a loading ramp; individual, fixed tables at each seat for dining, reading, or writin The new "Electra" fleet for American Airlines will improve air transportation and strengthen United States air power.

LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION look to Lockheed for Leadership.

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