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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)

SPORTY SATURDAY Partly in 80s. SUNDAY Warm. 7 B-idge 10 Calear' ....11 tjnrcafs 4 Classified 17-28 Comics ..10, 11 Cross-Word 11 Deaths ......17 Dr. Crane ..10 Editorials 6 I immial. Obituaries Port Radio-TV .8, 9 ..17 9 3 cloudy, Society Sports High Tide 4:37 a.m.

5:13 p.m. Sun Rises Sun Set 5:18 8:21 Full Report on Page IS. 28 PAGES 10 Star Gazer ..10 Theatres ....13 Twistagram 10 Women 10 Keg. U. S.

Pat Off. MORNING EDITION VOL. 184 NO. 13 19S3 By GLOBE NEWSPAPER CO. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1963 Telephone AV 8-8000 Guard Returns to Cambridge GUIDE TO FEATURES acked.

ayoee T3 Halts Maryland Mar CAMBRIDGE, Md. (AP) National Guardsmen acting under a modified version of martial law rolled into this terror-ridden town Friday and with a minimum display of force put an end to a new Negro demonstration. Usf AJII i led in prayer, saying: "We see each other, not as colors, but as human beings with rights and dignity." Gen Gelston removed his hat during the prayer. Then he asked the demonstrators to go back to their church. They did.

It was a day of swift developments. CAMBRIDGE Page 5 against demonstrations, you are demonstrating against the orders of the governor of the state." The demonstrators sat down in the middle of the street, while armed guardsmen watched from a block and a half away. Integrationist songs like "Black and Whites Together" and "We Are Soldiers in the Army" rang out on the night air. Then one of the leaders, the Rev. Charles Bourne, III S' i wf uh HALT Gen Gelston stops Negro demonstrators in Cambridge, Md.

(AP Photo) It was a marked contrast to last night's reign of racial terror when six white persons, including three off-duty guardsmen, were wounded. Negroes and some white sympathizers, calling generally for equal rights and specifically for the release of two 15-year-old demonstrators confined as juvenile delinquents, gathered for a rally at the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Then 250 of them started a march toward the white section, in defiance of a ban on demonstrations the troopers with fixed bayonetshad been sent to enforce. In a dramatic scene, Brig Gen George M. Gelston detached himself from a group of his alert guardsmen and walked up the middle of the street toward the demonstrators.

Slowly he went, unarmed. Holding up his hand, he said: "The National Guard was brought here to protect all the people. If you violate the prohibition Red Plot 668 avne By ANDREW J. GLASS WASHINGTON Governor Ross R. Bar-nett charged Friday that the Negro civil rights movement is "largely Communist-inspired." He accused President Kennedy and his brother, Attorney General Robert F.

Kennedy, of "sowing the seeds of hate and violence" and de nounced their sweeping civil rights proposals before Coa- gress as a "white slave bill." "The nation," he said, Just Trying to Help People' Albert S. Falk, a sprightly 71, tried to Said Falk, as they told him to get: "I push around a Miami policeman who am Santa. I'm trying to give things took him for a "Santa Claus character." to people." (AP Photo) Contending that Congress had been "forced" to take up civil rights "through the pressure of mobs and 'violence in the streets," Gov. Barnet said it "must be defeated if this nation is to survive as a constitutional republic." "The decision," he concluded passionately, "is yours. "May God have mercy on your souls!" Called upon by Sen.

A. S. (Mike) Monroney, (D-Okla.) to substantiate his charge that Communists were behind the civil rights drive. Gov. Bajnett searched through his papers and said: "I have a photograph here." He then produced a poster- sized tear sheet which he said came from the Georgia State Commission of Education and purportedly showed the Rev.

Dr. Martin Luther King, president of Southern Christian Leadership Conference, "at a Communist training school." The picture of the Negro leader, he said, was taken at Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, before it was closed by state authorities as "subversive." Gov. Barnett identified those in the picture with Dr. toe Last, is rooke asc arage By ROBERT B. HANRON Minutes after the second Boston Common Garage trial verdict Friday, Atty.

Gen. Edward W. Brooke announced he will seek remedial legislation to prevent similar larcenies in any state authority in the future. "Not guilty," was Jackson's reply. Q.

What do you say as to Francis W. Kiernan, otherwise known as Frank Kiernan, on this count in the indictment? A. Guilty. Q. What do you say as to Joseph W.

Monahan Jr. on this count in the indictment? A. Guilty. A similar procedure was followed on the 26 other counts in the larceny indictment and on the one count in the conspiracy indictment. I VmiA l.Fniifc ii i King as Audrey Williams di rector of the southern confer- ence Education Fund of New Orleans (according to Bar-nett: "the transmission belt in the South for the Communist Abner Berry, i Negro the Communist Party's central and Myles Horton, identified as director of the school.

CIVIL RIGHTS Page 5 iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Good News of Sorts: Little Flu Next Winter You may be hot, stuck In week-end traffic or sufferine sunburn, but cheer up. The good news for next Winter is mat there won't be a flu epidemic. This tip comes from Dr. Nicholas J. fiumara, state director of communicable diseases.

He forecast the type epidemic of 1362 and the Asian flu outbreak of last Winter. If people are infirm or chronically ill, it will be a good idea to immunize them, but most healthy people should be able to struggle through next Winter without getting the flu, he said. 'I 4.W "could reap a great bloody harvest which we certainly do not want." Taking his segregationist case before the Senate Commerce Committee, Gov. Bar-nett asserted that passage of a law barring bias in public places "will positively provoke more violence, not just in the South, but throughout all areas of the nation." And he added: "I am convinced that this is part of the world Commu- nist conspiracy to divide and conquer our country from within." In each instance, the foreman responded with a finding of acquittal for Carp and guilty for Kiernan and Monahan. Though the verdicts had been returned, they were still not official.

The clerk turned to the court and said, "May I affirm the verdict?" "You may affirm the verdict," Judge Quirico replied. GARAGE Fage 2 seemed to be covering the whole house," Another, neighbor said that the fire evidently started in the midlde floor occupied by Mrs. Kipnes and her children. More than 30 occupants of nearby dwellings fled in night-clothing, Rescue squads of firemen tried to enter the blazing apartmenls, but search was impossible until the blaze was brought under control. Firemen of eight communities joined in the fight to stop the spread of the fire, or went into reserve in Revere stations.

Mrs. Tick and her son were rescued by Deputy Fire Chief Ernest Charricr. Others who escaped from the house were Mr. and Mrs. James McNulty and their three children, Thomas, Helen and Edward.

Mr. and Mrs, William Jennings got out from a first floor apartment. "I just had time to put on my shoes," Jennings said. "When I looked out the bock the whole place was red with flame." rJ.opes Housework Pile Next Challenge For Lady Juror By GLORIA NEGRI Mr. and Mrs.

James J. Sammon of 4 Glen Dorchester, dined out Friday night because neither could face the thought of eating at home. Mrs. Sammon's reason was quite understandable. She's been dining at swanky restaurants every night for the last six weeks and in the company of 13 men at that and has to readjust slowly.

Sammon's reason is just as understandable and more poignant. He was just plain tired of getting his own meals every night for the last six weeks, even though it was with the help of his daughter. Mrs. Catherine (O'Driscoll) Sammon, gentle and gracious, was the only woman on the Boston Common Garage jury. "Jury duty was a wonderful experience, but it is certainly good to be home," she observed.

The first thing Mrs. Sammon did after kissing her husband was to run a finger along a table for dust. "Hmm," she commented. "It can't be," countered her husband, a quality control man at Gillette Safety Razor Co. SAMMON Page 2 What Is It? BACK HOME AT LAST-Mrs.

James J. Sammon, sole woman on garage jury, with husband. Chinese Admit Parley Failed MOSCOW (AP) The Communist Chinese acknowledged "with heavy hearts" today that their talks with the Soviet Union have failed but held the door open for new attempts to heal the widening breach in the Communist world. "We want unity, not a split," the official Peking People's Daily said in breaking the silence that had shrouded the Chinese Soviet negotiations under way in Moscow since July 5. But it said "the present situation is very grave." Mother, 2 Children Die in Revere Fire Brooke said there are two things which heed to be done: 1.

There must be mandatory minimum requirements for record keeping, and 2. Copies of these records should be required to be filed with another governmental department such as the secretary of state. In the case of the $9.6 million Boston Common Garage, he said, many of the records were incomplete and in a bad state. Found guilty of conspiracy and larceny of $344,468 from the Massachusetts Parking Authority were Joseph Monahan vice chairman the M.P.A., and Francis W. Kiernan, the construction en gineer.

Herman Carp, general manager of the garage, was acquitted. After 15 hours of deliberation, the locked-up Suffolk County jury of 11 men and one woman returned its verdicts at 2:05 p.m. Silence filled the crowded chamber as foreman Richard Jackson lead the panel across the room to the jury box and as Asst. Clerk Francis X. Orfanello polled the jurors and then the defendants.

Veteran courthouse observers say jurors seldom look at the defendants if they have returned with a finding of guily, and Friday they looked straight at Judge Francis J. Quirico. "Members of the jury," Orfanello asked, "have you agreed upon your verdicts? What say you, Mr. Foreman, on dictment 371 (the larceny charge) that defendant Herman Carp on Apr. 18, I960, did steal $11,146 from the Massachusetts Pnrking Authority on count No.

Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 3, Minnesota 2 (12). Detroit 7, Chicago 8 (12). Baltimore 4, Washington 3. New York 4, Los Angeles 3. NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles 6, New York 0.

Philadelphia 7, San. Fran. 5. Pittsburgh 2, Houston 1. Chicago 4, Cincinnati 1.

St, Louis 8, Milwaukee 3. RED SOX TODAY At Minnesota (Heffner vi. f. i A mother and two children perished in a four-alarm Revere fire and a general alarm blaze destroyed a Beverly church early today. (Details of the Beverly fire on Page 2.) Dead in the Revere blaze were Mrs.

Mildred Kipnes, her son, Steven, 11, and daughter, Naomi, 7. Bodies of the three victims were found on the fire-swept second floor at 495 Beach st. Early rescue attempts by firemen and police were futile. Intense heat and smoke blasts filled the three-decker. The Revere fire threatened to sweep the long row of tenement houses running on Beach st.

from Bell circle to the beachfront. Four alarms were sounded in quick succession at 1:24, 1:25, 1:27 and 1:40 a.m. Bursting out from No. 495, the fire spread to two other three-family tenements on Shirley av. A neighbor, Lawrence Do-hency of 497 Shirley said the "whole house" seemed to be ablaze when ho looked out "I thought surely that the whole street was a said Dohcncy, fire The negotiations sought to reconcile Soviet Premier Khrushchev's policy of peaceful coexistence with the West and Chinese leader Mao Tze-tung's advocacy of a tough line, Neither of the top Communist chieftains took part in the discussions; they were conducted by lower-level negotiators.

Communist sources said the meetings are expected to wind up in two or three days. The Peking editorial, broad-east by the official New China News Agency, said it had hoped relations with Moscow would be eased by TODAY In Prflt Hljftlt HUM IIUIII 01 III'' UI liUKOlM IU 1H mi jiii IIU mm in Mtt tfk(N 4SS(MJ the talks "but we now have to point out with heavy hearts that events have gone contrary to our hopes." The admission of failure came two days before the scheduled opening in Moscow of the U.S., British and Soviet talks on a nuclear test ban treaty. The Feking paper expressed hope that new Soviet-Chinese talks can be held. "If the differences cannot be resolved today, they can wait until tomorrow," the editorial said. "If they can-not be resolved this year, they can wait until next year." But the editorial also launched into a defense of China's position and renewed the attack on Moscow for the expulsion of three Chinese diplomats and two students, The five were ousted for distributing copies of a Chinese blast against the Russians which had been banned in Moscow! Chris, the Newest Kennedy Two proud parents, Attorney General Robert Kennedy and his wife, Ethel, leave St.

Elizabeth's Second Hand Shutters BEST otter for lot The Brighton man who placed this Want Ad in The Globe (July 7) recently bought several old-fashioned shutters in Sauftus. He painted them green and used most of them to build a fence in the back yard. But he still hati about SO shut ter left, and he is anxious to sell Ihem because he needs the cellar space they now occupy for storage. To place a Classified Advt. in The Globe Call AV 2-1500 Glob Ads Brine Result Hospital with their fifth, son, Christopher for their Summer home to: let the rest of the family look over their new brother, (Globe Photo by Charlei Dixon) s- Stance) 2:30 TV-Ch.

5. 9.

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