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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 8

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Boston Globe Tuesday, May 28, 1968 iS. ABCD Gets 2 Grants for $151,000 Loca CATV Rule Urged The Summer program is METRO FOCUS 6y DAVID B. WILSON Atty. Gen. Elliot L.

today joined the ACME SPECIALS I 20 Foot Aluminum 88 Extension Ladder Scott's Spreader win program to be held on the Weston Campus' will consist of class work in English and math, sports and creative activities and field trips. The program is non-residential. The second grant is for $134,191 and will provide 92 Boston high school students with one-to-one tutoring and counseling during the Summer program at Bradford Junior College by Peace Corps volunteers. Brandeis University graduate students will work with the students in afternoon and Saturday sessions throughout the school year. Cong.

James A. Burke (D-Milton) and Senator Edward M. Kennedy announced today that the office of Economic Opportunity has awarded two grants to the Action for Boston Community Development, Inc. The first grant of $16,959 Is to continue for one year the tutorial project for 100 boys from Roxbury, Dorchester and South Boston. Throughout the school year the students attended a Saturday tutorial program at Weston College, a Jesuit Seminary.

A seven-weeks WE ARE YOUR FULL LINE 'nilTfiH MY' istration and a long-time advocate of state regulation, urged the committee to amend the bill so as to give the D.P.U. immediate regulatory power over rates. PUBLIC INTEREST And he pointed to the long-term importance of establishing now, by statute, the public's interest and authority in the field. "Cable television today is offering clear reception on a large number of channels," he said. "But it is the C.A.T.V.

picture of tomorrow that is exciting, with 30 channels bringing all sorts of com modities and services right into the home. Don't let the cable politicians blur that picture on you; it's crystal clear." Nolen said he was "as friendly as you are with the politicians who are in the cable business and oppose any ceiling on their profits, but I am more interested in the welfare of the fellow in western Massachusetts who earns a minimum wage and can only see the Red Sox on a Boston channel, and can only get that Boston channel if he pays the cable company. "Should he pay a monthly mm rate determined by a monopoly?" Dr. Edward R. Willett, council chairman, emphasized that his agency was in direct consultation with both the Federal Communications Commission and the C.A.T.V.

companies during the drafting of the report. He said the legislation "is designed to prevent any undue political manipulation at both the state and local levels of government." i3T7llDMWT nfAICD I null Uknkkii that the local communities licensing authority was limited only to construction of transmission facilities and lines. The Federal government so far has declined to enter this regulatory picture. LOCAL POWER The council legislation would give the cities and towns the right to issue licenses under standards to be promulgated by statute. After three years, it would allow the Department of Public Utilities to go into the question of rate regulation.

It provides for full disclosure of ownership of C.A.T.V. systems and gives the D.P.U. the right to police quality of signal and availability of political advertising. Violators of certain sections would face the threat of cancellation of their franchises. Rep.

James R. Nolen (D-Ware), chairman of the Committee on State Admin- OPEN EVERY EVE, TILL 9 nr Consumer's Council in testi-I mony supporting a system of I state-local regulation of Community Antenna Televi-' "The potential impact of cable television on the Mas-. sachusetts public is enor- mous," Richardson said in a statement to the Committee on. Government Regulation at a State House hearing. He termed the present li-1 censing situation "chaotic" and stated that a system of local licensing under uniform state standards, as recommended by the council, 1 vfould protect the public interest.

The legislation is based on af year-long study by the cfcuncil during which reports of political pressure and ma-; -nJpulation in the granting of Ideal franchises were widely circulated. Richardson ruled recently mmm ii i i mi' ti ma 9 Drug Essays Win Bafeo3 yoyo3 eootoyf vhh W(k(n4, on mm a student at Girl's Latin School; Maureen A. Glynn, 43 Peter Parley Jamaica Plain, Mission High School, and George M. Reams, 995 Dorchester Dorchester, English High. Students receiving $50 bonds were: Deborah Baker, 74 Prince Boston, St.

Anthony's School; Michael Tc-plyn, 80 Westover st, Boston, Boston Latin School; and Laurie Knapp, 3 Vinson er, Grover Cleveland School. $25 bonds were awarded to: Karen Reidy, 23 Maryland Dorchester, Girl's High; James Phillips, 29 Mattakeeset Mattapan, Boston Latin School, and Dorothy O'Sullivan, 100 Hamilton Dorchester, Msgr. Ryan High. ijlfine students from Bos-; -ton's public and parochial st hools today received awards for their essays, "Let's Talk About Drug Abuse," in a contest sponsored by the Association of tke Boston Police Dept. in conjunction with a school-police conference, winning essays, chosen by members of the Youth Service Council of the Boston School were announced at police headquarters by Comr.

Edmund McNamara. Receiving $100 Savings Bonds were: Joan Godding, Devens Charlestown, I 4th Bail Set on Cambridge Man I Ralph F. DeLeo, 25, of Faemberton Cambridge, Was bound over for the Mid- dlesex County Grand Jury on an armed robbery charge by East Cambridge District Court Judge M. Edward Viola today. yDeLeo was released in $5000 bail by the court after the probable cause hearing ill the $35,000 holdup of the Cbolidge Bank Trust 116 Alewife Brook Cambridge, on May 14.

SAsst. Dis't. Atty. Foster Fiircolo sought bail to be increased to $50,000 but Judge yiola continued the lower bail after defense attorney Paul T. Smith said the defendant was flown here for trje hearing from San Juan, Puerto Rico where he is free oa $26,000 for a supermarket hfildup last month.

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Pages Available:
4,495,124
Years Available:
1872-2024