Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 21

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Boston Globe Friday, September 15. 1967 21 THE PAPERBACKS Trapped in Maine Woods, Witness Calls Police Help Di rnensions in Folksong I SNEAK PREVIEW I jY. TOMORROW (SAT.) kZeSSFJ I If AT 8:30 OF A MAJOR jl 0m RELEASE FROM m' 20th CENTURY JL uj i a jtx fox "Before I'd go before the Grand Jury, I wanted to see Joe Barboza. He was the only one who could answer some questions. They brought me to see him and he answered the questions.

"Barboza's thinking about his wife and kid, the same way I'm thinking about mine. No matter how bad a guy is, he'll always revert to caring about the important things. "It's tdo bad that it's always too late when you start thinking about your wife and family. "It doesn't pay to be a wise-guy!" "They sent Tonrmy Robson out there to bring me back to face trial. I knew Tommy from Maiden.

He lives there. I came from Everett. "I had lived in Maiden for a I used to see Tommy. I Was told he could be trusted. ROBSON TRUSTED "I'm not overly fond of, cops.

But Robson was the only one I could trust. "I wanted to save my skin and my family. They weren't going to let me alone. "When they started bothering my kids, I was ready to go hunting myself. rbSl i I jll 1 opens nov.

i i aTnTtStKi f'm IS JW-J i trt'T CONTINUOUS $H0WIMGS, if" i ikrS'i 7 I C3313IlEf I Favulli Wins Freedom By Parole Board's Vote IS NOT A WAR MOVIE CORNEL RIP BURR WILDE TORN it Benning wTa if JiT. T1T'1 VfiTTi fiTtTilti 1 I M. F. FAVULLI Has served six months of two-year term. CATHOLIC GRADUATES CLUB DANCE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 8-12 p.m.

GERRY'S LANDING (near Mt. Auburn Hospital) CAMBRIDGE For Further Information Call 734-6680 i DOORS OPEN 9 30 'vC0NflNU00S SHOWS V- "''r I SAT. SUN. AT 2:00 ft "lc Stats 4 i For I Academy Awards VS -I 1 i JlVW. BEST PICTURE tlfVM lE-s BEST ACTOR I I fC STEVE McQUEEN 1 Fl ail I r'lft RICHARD ATTEM60R0UGH ill! i Pk I RICHARD CRENNA $1 0lA.Al CANDICE BERGEN "2 i XVKtTl 131 STUART SEATS NOW AT 1 1 SEZZJLZj LI 217040 I BOX-OFFICE OPENS OCT.

18 ALL SEATS RESERVED I mMtbmmf RESERVATIONS NOW y- i vACCERTED AT BOXOTHCfx 1 I wVTONITE 30JSN5I I I AT 8:30 pJKM' NjL 1 jfYsAT. SUNDAY 'jffifl i 2:30 8:30 p.m. CS3Hffi i heard no horse sing 'em." Amen. F. ROUSSEAU (F.

B- Rousseau is a student of, and essayist on, folksong) WINNER OF THE 1967 PULITZER PRIZE AND NATIONAL BOOK AWARD! Bernard Malamud's We FIXER Based on the shocking Beilis case, a brilliant, moving novel about an innocent man accused of the ritual murder of a young boy. A DELL BOOK 95c ENGLAND 1 riQiv in paneriiaGRi illfS i (Y JL 7 JA INFORMER Continued from Page 1 'I went to Maine two weeks ago after someone told me that contract was out on me again. But they found me up there. "They even came into the rooming house. They wore wigs.

They were disguised as women (a sometimes used by George McLaughlin now in the. death house at Walpole State Prison). But I spotted them. "The first try was outside the bank in Chelsea when Edward (Teddy) Deegan got it. "A car down the street was supposed to swing down on me and eliminate me.

But an off-duty Chelsea cop went up to it because the license plate was bent. They took off. "I heard the shots. I waited for Teddy. When he didn't come out and the wrong people came out of the alley, I didn't wait anymore.

"That afternoon, Teddy had said that they wouldn't be able to take him from the front. He said it would come from the back and from a friend. He was right. "The beef went back to a robbery. I knew Harold Hannon and Willie De-laney, too.

(Both were found dead in Boston Harbor in 1964). "The people who wanted me dead must have thought I had some of the money. I never had any. "I went around for three months trying to straighten things out. Then I took off for California.

the other CL CD IS YOUR SIDE NEXT WEEK TEDDY WILSON THE GREATEST Played piano in Goodman's quartet. Now for you. At the Village Green, September 22, 23, 24. For reservationa call 744-7629. VILLAGE GREEN Roiti 1.

Danvers, Ptinm: 774-7629 NOW THE wrm HtMONt At I WORTH I Qj Triara's gold in them Uj) IWV har silver certificates! vCy In Silver dollars, too. yXN J1 Silver dollars ere in Uyj iuch demand that an 7yj ordinary circulated cart- jwj yj wheal sells for $1.80 wl CK and up at retail." fyj, 0 BOSTON GLOBE Qj 1 WATCH 1 1 WW 1 EXCITING FREE If SILVERWARE OFFER ON ITS WAY! MaT Mrrm x. 7 TpUTj I 'h AIR-CONDITIONED 1 Ban I- The Massachusetts parole board today granted freedom to former Governor's Councilor Michael F. Favulli of Worcester, currently serving a two-year prison sentence for bribery. Favulli known as "Iron Mike" has served six months of his ter mat the House of Correction in Bil-lerica.

Favulli will be released from jail Sept. 21, according to Parole Board chairman Joseph F. McCormack. He was among 25 inmates who appeared before the parole board today at the board's regular meeting at Billerica. Another former executive councilor, Raymond F.

Sullivan of Springfield, is scheduled to appear before the parole board in Northampton Sept. 28. He, too, is serving two years on the same charge. Two other former councilors, Ernest C. Stasiun of Fall River and Joseph Ray Crimmins of Somerville, also were convicted in connection with the same case and are free after serving part of their terms.

All were members of the 1960 Executive Council. They were of soliciting and accepting a bribe in connection with the appointment of Anthony Di-Natalie as commissioner of the state Department i of Public Works. TONIGHT 8:30 AIR-CONDITIONED "Sweet Charity" Is As Funny As the Best Shows of the Last Ten Years. It's a Typhoon Happy Talk, Sons and Dance" Chita Rivera Is a Dancing Dynamo, a Hurtling Dervish, a Comedienne At Once Tough and Tender, a Living. Laughing Doli of the Drama'' Eliot Norton Record-American CHITA RIVERA as 66 HELEN GALLAGHER EVENINGS 8:30 MATS.

THURS. 2:00, SAT. 2:30 COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents MARTIN MANULIS PRODUCTION She'll like theotheic THESE MEN LIVE ONLY THE SPLIT-SECOND "THE AMERICAN FOLK SCENE i DIMENSIONS OF THE FOLKSONG REVIV. AL," edited by David A. Deturk and Poulin Jr.

Dell, New York. 334 pages. 95 cent. For those that take their folk music seriously, Dell has published "The American Folk Scene: Dimensions of the Folksong Revival," a series of essays that discuss and analyze the current popularity of the folksong. The cultural significance of this revival and its various implications are explored in the introduction by David A.

Deturk and A. Poulin editors of this anthology. Included are some scholarly articles by the Doctors Charles Seeger, B. A. Bot-kin and John Greenway.

John Cohen investigates "The Folk Music Interchange: Negro and White." One essay offers a handy dandy chart that separates folksingers into neat categories. Simply in the name of your favorite folk-singer under the proper heading (traditional, interpretive, art-pop, etc.) Topical-protest songs are dealt with in the second section of the book. Presented here are the all too familiar arguments, put-downs and back-biting that have become characteristic of folk writers. Jon Pankake and Paul Nelson attack "P-for-Protesty" songs in their usual name-dropping, quote quoting, flamboyant literary style. Even former Senator Keating gets into the act with a tongue-in-cheek speech investigating the subversive elements in American folk music.

The giants of the folk 3ndMetrocolora 1 MASSACHUSETTS I WESTFIELD Strand WORCESTER .7. Phillips AM Auburn AVON Avoa BELLINGHAM Auto BRAINTREE So. Shore CLINTON Clinton FAIRHAYEN FALMOUTH Cod KINGSTON PlymouthKingston LUNENBURG Tri Town LYNN OpKi Air MENDON Milford NO. ATTLEBORO Bora NO. WILBRAHAM Parkway ORANGE Pioneer Valley OXFORD Oxford RAYNHAM Raynham SALISBURY Salisbury SEEKONK SaekonK SHREWSBURY Shrewsbury SOUTHAMPTON Rad Rock STURSRIDGE Sturbridge SUTTON Motor In TEWKSBURY Wamesit Join the others 51 CD world are interviewed and eulogized in Section III, entitled "Woody and his Children." John Greenway writes a beautiful but disturbing piece about Woody Guthrie.

Peter Lyon follows Seeger through a busy day and discusses Pete's problems with a television network and the House Un-American Activities Committee. A perceptive essay by the late Richard Farina is called "Baez and Dylan: A Generation Singing Out." Other selections alternately heap praise and damnation upon the controversial Dylan. Fakelore and commercialized folk music are denounced in the last section of the book. Folk-rock fares a little better, with Paul Butterf ield being both praised and scorned. Nat Hentoff concludes the discussion with a look into the future of the folk renaissance.

He sees a musical form emerging that will be composed, of many different influences and will be the voice of the first inter- national community. Some of these essays have previously appeared in folk periodicals. Many definitions of folk music are offered in the collection. My favorite comes from- a Time article oddly erough, which quotes Big Bill Broonzy: "I guess all songs is folk songs; I never Beachcomber WOLLASTON BEACH ONE NIGHT ONLY MONDAY, SEPT. 18 The Nation's Number 1 Western Swing Band Hank Thompson The Brazos Valley Boys OPENING SEPT.

20 THE KEITH PHILLIP'S REVUE From Puerto Rico RE8. CR 9-8989 FOR 4Sf7 MASSACHUSETTS TYNGSBORO WESTPORT WEYMOUTH Tyngsboro Westport Weymouth RHODE ISLAND E. GREENWICH PAWTUCKET Kent Leroy DRIVE-INS JOHNSTON Pike LONSDALE Lonsdale PROVIDENCE Prov-Paw CONNECTICUT DRIVE-IN 5 QUINEBAUG MAINE BIDBEFORD Central BOOTHBAY HARBOR Strand BRUNSWICK Cumberland CARIBOU Powers PORTLAND Fine Arts PRESQUE ISLE Braden RUMFORD Strand ml "BRILLIANT BUT A WORD TO THE SENSITIVE, THE MOVIE CONTAINS MUCH OF THE ORIGINAL JOYCE LANGUAGE COMPLETE WITH FRANK SEXUAL-EXPRESSIONS AND FOUR-LETTER WORDS." George McKwnon, Globe IT TAKES rn it it Co Starring Glenn Ford Angle ADMITTANCE WILL BE DENIED TO ANYONE UNDER 1 8 YEARS OLD Klj if s44 Dickinson fa 1 XflJ1irinf'l TELEPHONE RESERVATIONS Kfeav4J ACCEPTED 210 TREMONT ST. "Breakfast at Tiffany's" TWO OPENING WEDNESDAY New England Premiere "WOMAN AND temptation; bary Mem 'jDhnSherTyandRobertErnmettGinna yiMw HER BEST SINCE III CA 7. 16676 DOORS OPEN 9:30 TONITE AT 8 30 91 ALL 536- i-2870 SEATS NOW AT -OFFICE OPENS "ENTER JohnSircrrv H1U Idl li lUi Ut! SATURDAY $2.00 MAT.

8 9:30 rn. SEATS HOW SHOWING AT CENTER THEATRE, AMANFOR BOSTON AMD THEATRES DRIVE-INS THRU HEW SEASONS DOORS OPENJ 9:45 A.M. WEDNESDAY Jose Shelley FERRER WINTERS LAUGHING" Continuous Showings fjJtS Ot 10 A.M. 12 NOON Ww 2-4-6-8 10 P.M. IOY1.STON SUN.

1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 ThB way they talk about "THE FAMILY WAY I MASSACHUSETTS ARLINGTON ATTLEBORO BEVERLY BOSTON BOSTON BUZZARDS BAY CLINTON DORCHESTER FRAMINGHAM HAVERHILL HOLME Regent Cabot Cinema National Puritan (Sun.) Buzzards Strand Strand St. George Paramount Strand Sidney THE CHERI 1,2 (3 ARE OPPOSITE SHERATON BOSTON HOTEL EASILY ACCESSIBLE VIA MRTA RATE PARKING IN GARAGE ABOVE THEATRE 3f i poitier '0 sin. MAINE I DRIVE-INS BREWER Brewer BRUNSWICK Bowdoin N. WINDHAM Windham RUMFORD Rumford SANFORD Sanlord SCARBORO Portland NEW HAMPSHIRE PORTSMOUTH Civic DRIVE-INS CLAREMONT Claremont CONCORD Concord MANCHESTER Bedford Grove PLAISTOW Plaistow ROCHESTER Rochester VERMONT BRATTLEBORO Latchis BURLINGTON Flym MONTPELIER Capitol RUTLAND Grand UU1TE3 ILQJUE" i 1 if i Bay Palace Strand Warner Cinema Msdford Cinema Olympia Calvin Palace Riatto Salem Broadway Somerville Bijou Strand OWL SHOW TONITE 10:30 "The best A made plans I I have often I gone LAWRENCE LOWELL LYNN MARLBORO BEDFORD NEW BEDFORD NORTHAMPTON PITTSFIELD ROSLINGALE SALEM 1 SOMERVILLE SOMERVILLE SPRINGFIELD TAUNTON WATCH "A GUluc FORTH? I SOON Vl GEORGE li C.SCOTT I "THE FLIM li FLAM MAN" A 1 1 Yss. MARRIED MAN tmy "Extremely frank and outspoken.

The acting is superb. Bill Naughtorr, who wrote did the script and Paul McCartney of The Beatles, Composed the SCOre." neObook Uagaant TCcmUCOlM DMrftttal kr WARKI BROS. SeE ART! WALTER MAnHAU XIMEER STEVENS DRIVE-INS BURLINGTON WHITE RIVER ICT. Burlington White River YOUR HOME 1 FOR ADDITIONAL OPENINGS IN THEATRES HEAR Opg. Prudential Towr S41 Bovfston St.

267-311.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Boston Globe
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Boston Globe Archive

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