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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)

McDonough Denies Interceding for Cosa Pair I 4 1 I i cilor, Commonwealth of Massachusetts. They discussed possible parole for Leo Santaniello and Lawrence Baiona." Baione or Baiona, whose real name is Larry Zannino, 'Santaniello and Philip Wag-gonheim were sentenced to 4 to 7 years at Walpole State Prison for extortion. They never received a parole. The portion of the FBI comment identifying McDonough was blacked out on the documents submitted to the Federal Court in Providence during an appeal hearing on the tax evasion conviction of Patriarca's lieutenant, Louis Tajltenetti. But the name was discern By RONALD A.

WTSOCKI Governor's Councilor Patrick J. (Sonny) McDonough said today that he never interceded for imprisoned Cosa Nostra members Larry Baione and Leo Santaniello in 1963. FBI reports made public last week put McDonough and Raymond Pat-riarca, Cosa Nostra boss in New England, together in Boston in April, 1963, discussing possible parole for the pair. ible machine produced copies. "I have never interceded for these men in my life," McDonough declared.

"Their names were never before the council." "But the FBI says that you met with Patriarca. What about that?" McDonough was queried. "I can't say anything about what they say about anyone else," McDonough replied. "That's all I'm going to say. I'm not interested in saying anything else.

I won't say anything further until I've seen the report." FBI REPORT Page 28 McDonough, the dean of the council with 30 years of service, would not admit such a meeting. Nor did he deny it. To all questions about the alleged meeting with Pat-riarca, McDonough retorted, "I'm not going to say anything about that." The FBI report stated that Patriarca was kept under surveillance at a Boston hospital where his wife was a patient in mi '-April, 1963. The report went on, "They surveilled the hospital and observed Patriarca meeting with various individuals, including, Patrick J. (Sonny) McDonough, executive coun if i WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1967 80 PAGES 10 CENTS 1967, Globe Newspaper Co.

A Venue 8-8000 councilor Mcdonough Senate Issues Mideast Warning L. i y. If PTTI 1 1 Don Alone, It OM sf I nil ARAB HARANGUE Field Marshal Abel Amer, vice president of the United Arab Republic, addresses troops and pilots near the Israeli border. (UPI from the official UAR source) Soviet Stalls Tug-of -War in U.N. By DARIUS JHABVALA Globe U.K.

Bureau UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. The Soviet Union, backed by the delegations of Bulgaria, Mali and India, today failed in an attempt to block. Security Council consideration of the Middle East crisis. 7 1 Their actions delayed the opening of the council and prevented any decisive action before its adjournment at noon. defeated by the necessary nine-vote majority in the 15-man council.

The question was not put to a vote and the Mideast crisis was placed on the agenda. Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Fedorenko, the first speaker, challenged Chinese Ambassador Liu Chieh's right to occupy a seat in the council. Associated Press WASHINGTON Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said today the United States must not intervene unilaterally in the turbulent Middle East. He reported that Secretary of State Dean Rusk has been given that message in forceful terms. -Mansfield and G.O.P.

Leader Everett M. Dirk-sen of Illinois joined in praising President Johnson's statement on the Arab-Israeli crisis as a message of restraint. They said other nations should follow that pattern, and see to it that the United Nations acts to cool the crisis. A Senate source, emphasizing the importance attached to the speeches, said the White House had urged key senators to be present and respond to demonstrate solidarity behind the administration's efforts to ease the tension. "There should be no question of unilateral intervention in the Middle East," Mansfield told the Senate.

He said that Rusk was told this forcefully by members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at a closed-door meeting with Rusk yesterday. Mansfield said the United Nations has squirmed and dodged away from action to guaranteed peace in the Middle East. "Now, suddenly, the United nations faces what may be a decisive test of its -value," Mansfield said. "Let us drawback from the dangerou brink on which we stand." SENATE Page 34 i .4 Before the meeting got underway, the delegations of Canada, Denmark, the United Kingdom and the United States campaigned frantically to round up sufficient votes to get the issue placed on the agenda. By mid-afternoon, it was clear the Soviet would be U.N.

Page 35 'Night of the Swans9 Boston Before Dawn Wisps of mist, last vestige of the heavy fog bank that Garden's swanboat fleet just before sunrise this morning, blanketed the coast last night, still hover around the Public (Globe photo by Dan Sheehan) Six Prime Brink's Suspects Sought Mideast Gulf Reported Mined BEIRUT, Lebanon Large-scale Egyptian land, sea and air operations to block Israeli shipping in the Gulf of Aqaba were reported today as the United States backed Israel and Russia supported the Arabs in the Middle East crisis. Undoubtedly, Abington patrolman William Donaldson, who on a routine patrol happened to drive into the rendezvous spot where the robbers transferred the money to getaway cars, aided in the identification. Ironically, a Boston police informant predicted that a bank robbery was scheduled to take place in Southeastern Massachusetts, specifically Brockton, Fall River or Cape Cod, yesterday. By ALAN H. SHEEHAN BROCKTON Investigators looked to Boston and the South Shore for leads today in their probe of the $630,000 Brink's, Inc.

armored truck holdup in the East Side Shopping Plaza here yesterday morning. Chief Joseph Wright said they "have six prime suspects who come from Bos-ton and the South Shore." The identities of two men are known. This informa- tion was provided by two eyewitnesses to part of the robbery. Their identification was substantiated by a clerk in a liquor store in the plaza near the First County National Bank branch office. He told police the two men had purchased a pint of whisky the night before the holdup.

Police declined to name their witnesses but said a 16-year-old boy could positively identify the bandit who drove the truck from the robbery scene. Cairo's semi-official newspaper AI Ahram said blockade operations were launched Tuesday on orders of President Gamal Abdel Nasser. It said mines have been placed in the Gulf and Egyptian planes and torpedo boats are patrolling the Red Sea at the mouth of the gulf. 'W-n- ritV Tcraol YrieVit Eshkol renewed his government's pledge to defend the right of Israeli shipping to use the Jewish nation's water route to East Africa and the Far East. He told Parliament fateful hour, not only for Israel, but for the whole.

world," is at hand. Maariv, Israel's largest evening paper said Nasser's threat to close the Strait of BRINK'S Page 3 Volpe Stadium Plan Upcoming U.S. Viet Hero Flees To Cuba With Son, 4 via WAU. break out any moment," the paper trumpeted in banner headlines above a four-column picture of a big coastal gun it said was trained on the narrow Strait of Tiran, the entrance to the gulf. Israeli Prime Minister Levi Tiran amounted to a declaration of war.

MIDEAST. Page 35 In a wide-ranging weekly press conference, the governor also said he did not discuss national Republican candidates on last week-end's trip to Washington and to the National Governors' Conference in Des Moines. But he left little doubt of his position as related to the Republican delegation to the 1968 National Convention. He conceded that be had talked about this matter with U.S. Sen.

Edward W. Brooke and said that Brooke made "no commitment, one way or By DAVID B. WILSON Gov. Volpe said today he expected to have a finalized private proposal for construction of a stadium by early next week. And he indicated that he was opposed to any inclusion of dog racing as a means of supporting a stadium.

"If we had to go into dog racing to support a stadium, we ought to consider public financing rather than private," the governor said. the other" to an expected Volpe favorite son candidacy at the convention. He said there was no question of sharing authority for leadership of the delegation. "I think it's generally recognized that the governor of a state is the titular leader of his party in that state," governor said. He said he felt it was too early for moderate Republicans to make a final decision on choice of candidates, thereby placing himself in disagreement with both Associated Press HAVANA, Cuba The Cuban government announced today it has granted asylum to U.S.

Army Maj Richard Harwood Pearce, a Vietnam war hero cleared for top secret material, and his 4 Vi -year-old son. The Communist Party newspaper Granma published a note over Pearce's signature that said he left the United States "for reasons of RICHARD PEARCE (AP) INSIDE HEADLINES, DUKE OF WINDSOR REMINISCES "Life has never been dull. Not a moment," he says. Page 2 DE FACTO SEGREGATION TARGET Dixie bloc in House unnerved by Liberal accord on school bill. Page 11 SHANGHAI MOB ATTACKS BRITONS Red Guard kick, smear glue on two diplomats.

Page 17 POPE CALLS FOR VIET CONCESSIONS BY BOTH SIDES Urges U.S. end bombing of North, and Hanoi stop infiltrating of South Viet. Page 17 INDEX TO TONIGHT'S GLOBE Youth Same-Only More of Them What Is It? Pearce, 36-year-old senior aide to Lt Gen Thomas W. Dunn, 4th Army commander at Ft. Sam Houston, San Antonio, became the object of an air search after he took off from Key West, on Sunday.

A Defense Dept. spokesman in Washington said Pearce Is the highest ranking U.S. military officer ever to defect In the cold war period. But despite his position and his clearance for top secret material, the Pentagon spokesman said Pearce never held what might be considered a hifih sensitive post "Any security clearance is issued on a need-to-know basis," the spokesman said. This, he added, means that Fearct generally would have access only to secret documents applying to his area of responsibility, in this case involving the 4th Army.

So far as the Army is concerned, Pearce is still on a leave which ends Thursday. Then he will be considered AWOL. By RICHARD GROSS I'nllri Prtss InUrastlontl PLYMOUTH -Lothrcp 1902 FRIENDSHIP 40 FT. ft OOP. oriftntU Morse built, rem-trred Brooke and New York Gov.

Nelson Rockefeller, both of whom have urged early commitment and are generally regarded as In the political camp of Michigan Gov. George Romney. Gov. Volpe said that "sometime this Fall we should be ready to rally around a candidate whom we can support and who can win the presidency. VOLPE Page 28 Withington 47, says college students today are no different than 28 years aco when he 6tarted the in front of 100 disbelieving classmates.

The fad caught on, on campuses across the nation. Prestigious Harvard was lampooned as the fish bowl. A nation chuckled or decried "the crazy college kids." Since then, college stunts have ranted from jamming into telephone booths and shriveling beneath a shower for hours to smoking bananas and meditating love at a "be-in." But, says Withington, now a businessman-father of four, "college kids are not much different today it is just that there are more of them. Society ......45 Sports Steincrohn ...40 TV-Radio .38, 39 Theaters Women Deaths 53 Editorials ....56 Financial Port 80 Senior Set Shain 33 Book 53 Bridge 22 Calendar 68 Classified Comics 52 Crossword ...23 The Wiktfield womin who placed thin Want Ad in The Globe nld the nloop ha been ownfd by her family for more than 60 year. She aid it one of the famous Friendship, Me 1oop built by Wilbur More.

If you're in the mood to kuy a boat, try Globe Clarified. Lust year, The Globe i-u-ried 150T more boat ids than it competitor! combined. So try Globe Clarified. lt' Is'ew England! mot powerful advertising medium. Call 28M5C3 To place a ClitMlfled AdvU la The Glob goldfish swallowing craze as a Harvard freshman.

The current crop of collegians may or may not be aware that in dad's day, you had to gulp down a live poldfish to consider yourself a member of the "in" crowd on campus. It was Mar. 4, 1D39, that Withington swallowed hit claim to fame for a $10 bet Mideast Hits Slocks The worsening Mid-east crisis drove prices down on the New York Stock Exchange. At the close the Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at 662.41, of! 6.30 points from Tuesday'i final level. See Page 79.

.1 THE WEATHER Fog, low cloudiness. Tonight Low near 40 on coast. Thursday More fog. High Tide 12:24 p.m. Full Reports, Page 28.

GOLDFISH fage 28 DEFECTOR Page 20 vl.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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