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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 12

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i 500 Couples to Attend 2 The Boston Globe Tuesday. July 19. 1966 Beginning 1967: More Sense, Less Roar p. i i. nri.

Christian Family Meeting oiringeni ycusi 1 esis uuc MtM S. WORKMAN savs the situation has reached dents per 10.000 driv S. WORKMAN says the situation has reached dents per 10.000 drivers, More than 500 couples join than ed by priests and nuns from five states are expected to par ftt WILLIAM ticipate in the fourth biennial Arpa convention of the Christian Family Movement, Aug. 12, 13 and 14 at Newton College of the Sacred Heart. S.J., noted sociologist, Cambridge Center for Social Studies; Msgr.

Reynold Hillenbrand, national chaplain, C.F.M.; and Rev. John Har mon, co-director, Packard Manse, Roxbury. The convention agenda will include discussions and workshops on "Family Life and Economics," "Ways in which the Laity Can I plement Decrees of Vatican Council II," and the ensuing year's progra of the organization. Convention themes for the three-day convention are "The imwnmmhL. "---m tm limit the "alarming stage.

As a result. Registry offi- i rials for several months have i been preparing to bring back the special licensing regula- tion for cycle operators. It require passing a spe-: cial road test and a stringet examination to qualify or the license. McLaughlin said that with- in a week or two Registry of- finals will start a mailing campaign to all holders of i motorcycle, scooter and bike registrations alerting them of! the tighter licensing controls, By Oct. 1, the cyclists can start applying for the special license, "but they'll have to Challenges for the Laity in i Post-Conciliar Age" and "Fam- ilies In a Time of Change." Among keynote speakers will be Mr.

and Mrs. Patrick Crowley of Chicago, national executive secretary couple or COLOR CAMERAS have been ordered from Radio Corp. of America for WKBG-TV, proposed UHF station for Boston to be operated by Kaiser Broadcasting Co. and the Boston Globe. $3 Million Color TV Order Placed by Kaiser-Glohe Corp.

the C.F.M. and members of the Papa, Commission on Population, Family and Birth Con trol, who recently returned from Rome; Rev. John 1 1 "W' i automobile operators. Through the first nine months of 1965, 31 persons lost their lives in the Bay State while operating or riding on a cycle, scooter or motor bike. About 45.000 cycles of all varieties are ripping along Bay State roads and highways, according to Registry ecti-mates.

There were 30,842 registered on Jan. 1, but through the first six months of this year, that figure has increased by 50 percent. The planned special license is only part of Registrar McLaughlin's overall program to bring in line what he terms "a pretty bad social misconduct" phenomenon linked with cycle operators. For the past two Summers, the Registry's 26-man Mobile Unit, headed by Daniel J. O'Hara, supervisor of special services, has been conducting a hard-hitting enforcement program on Cape Cod.

They 've been zeroing in on the free-wheeling types. Apparently the word's been getting around. This past July 4th weekend, says O'Hara, "we had to look hard for violations." Last Summer for the holiday week-end. Registry men lifted "on the spot" about 70 cycle registrations and issued suspensions for periods up to 90 days. However, this year, only 37 persons lost their registrations for violations ranging from speeding to baffle-less mufflers.

cycle-maniac leather hoys of the road can look as outlandish and terrifying as their epos will allow. Put as of Jan. 1. 19i7. they're pomp to have to prove they know whai they're doing when they stomp the big boot down on the start me pedal.

Registrar Richard McLaughlin disclosed Monday he's reviving an administrative regulation requiring special road tests, exams and licenses for drivers of motorcycles, scooters and motor hikes. The tests will apply even to present operators of cycles. Since 1957, when the regulation was discontinued under Acting Registrar Alfred De-vine, the cycle crowd's been hitting the highways simply on the basis of a regular motor vehicle operator's license. Today, it still doesn't matter if a cyclist never has driven one. All he's got to do is get it started.

But the rapid rise in Ray-State cycle registrations the past two years and the spi-raling accident rate linkrd to them has produced an ongoing Registry safety crackdown program. Registrar McLaughlin, who's described by his aides as "death on motorcycles," stations: WKBD-TV, channel 50, Detroit, and WKBS-TV, Channel 48, Philadelphia, both using technical facilities designed and supplied by RCA, and KMTW-TV, Channel 52, Los Angeles, which went on the air June 29. Kaiser also operates KFOG-FM, San Francisco. have them by Jan. 1.

or they're ofT the road," said the legistrar. Cycle manufacturers and booming rental agencies particularly at Bay State resort areas, are going to chafe at the new regulation, McLaughlin believes. Rut it's going to be a "reasonable" program, he said, based on the experience of similar cycle licensing controls in California, New York and other states. "At least," the Registrar said, "we're not. going to the extreme suggested by one North Shore legislator who liled legislation to take them ofT the road altogether." Three Bay State motorcycle fatalities in the past two days gravely underlined the problem.

Nation-wide, twice as many cyclists are involved in acci for high-band color operation. Film programming will be handled at each station by two color film using the TK-27 four tube color film camera with associated slide and film projectors. The stations' transmitting plants will use RCA's newest and most powerful UHF transmitter, a 55-kilowatt unit introduced to the broadcast industry earlier this year, and pylon-type antennas. Richard C. Block, Kaiser vice president-general manager, said the equipment contract with RCA also includes a new 20-kilowatt FM transmitter, antenna system and monitors to provide the Boston FM station with a complete stereo broadcasting facility.

Currently, Kaiser Broadcasting operates three UHF VACATION N.H.$4200 PER WK. RM. MEALS FAMOUS FOOD "Now that he's trained Rover to bring him the phone, he'll never get up again." The TRIMLINE phone brings the dial to you. Call your Telephone Business Office or ask your telephone maK Kaiser Broadcasting has ordered $3 million in color television studio and transmitting equipment for new UHF television stations in Boston and San Francisco from the Radio Corp. of America.

Charles H. Colledge, RCA Broadcast and Communications Products Division vice president and general manager, said the equipment will give full capability to originate color programming live or from film or tape. The equipment order was placed on behalf of WKBG, a new corporation formed by Kaiser Broadcasting and the Boston Globe Newspaper and KHJK-TV, Channel 44, San Francisco. The new Boston corporation has purchased, subject to Federal Communications Commission approval, WXHR-AM-FM-TV whose television operation via Channel 56 has been off the air since 1956. Colledge said the 13 color cameras on order include both RCA types TK-42, with built-in room lens, and TK-43, with external zoom lens.

Cameras feature the four-tube pickup system pioneered by RCA and intro III New England Telephone Part of the Nationwide Bell System III I I I I I I 1 During July Only! Misses7 Mites I LUXURIOUS WD. OWES 3011 Prs-f JA ll II Z3 If I Country's Foremost Thousands of pairs of 11 ll I i This Season's Lightweight Sloxks SensationaUy Off iA -I Price Right at the Height of the Season! -v duced to the broadcast industry several years ago for sharper color pictures. This system, he said, also improves picture quality when color broadcasts are viewed on black-and-white receivers. The order also includes, for each station, a color mobile TV unit designed to carry four color cameras to the scene of remote program pickups, Colledge said. RCA television tape facilities at each station will include two type TR-70 and two TR-22 recorders, all equipped fJW TOD Km 100 JFK LBJ on Ticket, ypf CASHMERE mm i i summer-v mem Salinger Says NEW YORK, (AP) Former presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger says it is not true that Sen.

Robert F. Kennedy tried to keep Lyndon B. Johnson off the Kennedy ticket in 1960. No one will ever know whether the late President John F. Kennedy expected Johnson to accept his offer of the Vice Presidency, Salinger II' nil said yesterday at a news con-1 ference in connection of his new book, "With Kennedy." Salinger said that after Kennedy had offered the nomination to Johnson, Robert Kennedy warned Johnson that there was growing opposition to him and asked whether i 'Johnson was willing to risk a floor fight.

Johnson interpreted the statement as a move to make him give up second place, Salinger said. Sorry We Can't Mention Famous Maker' Name All Labels Have been Removed! No-Iron Koratron pre-cuffed slacks of 65 Dacron polyester, 35 Avril rayon just wash, dry and wear! Belt loop plain front Ivy sryling tailored with high quality stitching and bartacking, deep roomy pockets end brass zippers. Excellent color choice includes Charcoal Grey, Bankers Gray, Olive, Black, Navy and Burgundy. "This was not Bob's intention," Salinger says in the book, "and he certainly was not acting on his own, as some accounts have intimated. He would never have undertaken a mission of this kind without the direct concurrence of his brother." Salinger wrote that the one unanswered question of the ALL MILIUMS LINED (fe 5 Here, now, the most exciting full 3 length coats of the season.

Buy yur coa now an ke the first I to own one of these beautiful 14 I soft imported-cashmere coats, I garnished to perfection with I 1 deep, luxurious mink! Every coat brand new with all the fash- I Johnson nomination is "wheth Its WAIST SIZE ttiigft 29" 38" 31" 32" 33" 34" 3S" 38" 42" 29" lit xxi ii 30" i i i i 31" i i I I 32" I I I er Sen. John Kennedy actu ally expected L.B.J, to accept second position on the ticket or whether his offer was mere-' ly a pro forma gesture." Army Inducts 20 Bay Staters NOT FROM THE ABOVE STOCK! 2500. Prs. Of Ulen's Imported ion detailing you would expect to find in coats selling for a much higher price! See black, grey, red, blue, taupe, beige. Hurry, choose from sizes Misses' II fur 8 to 18, Petites' 6 to 16 in th products 1 UbtUd to group.

BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN! I COATS (9on AIR CONDITIONED BASEMENT ANNEX 'M mm tm, gB? Officials at Boston Armyj Base report that the following 20 Massachusetts men were in-j ducted into the Army on Friday: Charles St. Pierre, Marl-! boro; Michael Colonna, Fram-ingham; Alfred Busha, o- burn; Andrew Simpson. Thornton; Arthur Kay, Hudson; Dean Winslow, Stow; Michael Kadra. Ashland; Victor Dery, Lowell; Lawrence Hanson. Aburndale; Richard Labossiere.

Marlboro: Dennis Bourque. Hudson: John Cotter. Natick; Robert Doucette. Na-tick; Philip Lane. Marlboro; Dennis Murphy, Hudson: Den-i nnis A.

Bourreau, Natick: Jos Pryor. Dover; David Natick; Robert Carracini.i Framingham; Paul Fortin.j Marlboro. II Tremendous assortment of plaids in the ever popular Ivy belt-loop model! Most desirable color combinations! All sizes 29 to 42 in the group! Sorry, A'o Mail or Phone ea. Orders Filled SLCKS MEN BASEMENT AIR CONDITIONED.

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