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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 6

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Land Indians-Picnic -In Stops Work on umber INDIAN TOWNSHIP. Me. Passamaquoddy Indians Friday deployed new a oris baloney sandwiches and cold beer in their peaceful campaign to drive loggers off timberland they claim as part of their treaty heritage. Led by tribal Governor John Stevens, more than 50 men, women and children held a two hour picnic and disrupted the work of contractors cutting pulpwood for the Georgia-Pacific Corp. paper mill in nearby Woodland.

"We invited several of the loggers to share our sandwiches and beer, said Stevens, 35. "They joined us. then knocked off work for the week-endj It was the nonviolent confrontation in two days between the Passa-maquoddies and the giant company which also claims ownership of the land and the Indians proudly asserted they won bloodless victories both times! On Thursday, about 200 tribal members some in feathered war bon- nets showed up and the company, ordered work halted, "as a safety on three 165-acre woodlots whose ownership is at issue. "We're going back Monday declared Stevens. "And we're going to keep demonstrating until the company stops cutting or until the question of ownership is settled in court." The Indian leader added that Georgia-Pacific let him leave his job in its mill's steam plant "a little early" so he could lead Friday's picnic-in, i A company spokesman de- clined to comment on the latest confrontation, except to say that the whole issue is in the hands of Gov.

Ken-neth M. Curtis. Curtis has urged the Pas-samaquoddies and the company to settle the dispute over the ownership of the three woodlots in court. "I'm all for a court settlement," said Stevens, "but who's going to take who to court?" The tribe "already has a 150 million suit pending against the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. They contend they were granted some ,30,000 acres of timber-land "under, a treaty signed by the tribe and Massachusetts In 1794, when Maine was stiff part the Commonwealth, They allege that their land has been confiscated and misused and that the treaty has been violated.

The three woodlots being harvested by Georgia-Pacific in. the Indian Town- ship State reservation comprise part of the treaty land, Stevens said, 'aHat? ktate of Maine had no right to sell or lease our land to the a y. li.sk 4 urther charged that fh company is seriously damaging the land by over-cutting. A spokesman for Georgia-Pacific said the company has acquired more than 3400 acres of forest in" the.tJOO-acre reservation. "We have deeds dating to 1874 and we believe we have the.

right to cut pulp, ort the land," Tas7Mft WOODLAND" I 2 ALEXANDER "v- Disputed 4 -1 Grdss-Exafniiiatibn Film Hoped 'to Make Impossible Possible' Has Baron Weary mm 1 III Bafohhad "been' giving with his wife and child under the? custody of U.S. marshals. Baron has testified that Deegan was slain as he and an accomplice were about to: carry out the planned rob-: bery, of Chelsea loan office. The. Deegan was marked for.

death, Baron because he had angered, the chiefs of Cosa Nostra. By ROBERT J. ANGLIN i Staff Reporter Joseph (Barboza) Baron, gangland killer turned underworld informer, appeared to be wearying Friday under cross examination in the Ed-ward (Teddy) Deegan murder trial. It was his fourth day on the stand as the chief prosecution witness" against six men charged in connection with Deegan's slaying March noun l-Mrto iet) jfecu'KxioH fi ntou fKmowct MM ANDREA Continued from Page 1 Vailati, producer of the box office movie success "Hercules," said the filming of the Andrea Doria would be a landmark in the development of underwater photography. If we can do it with the Sophisticated equipment we have," he said, 'it will be used as one of a seven-part series entitled 'The Seven "Other documentaries we plan will concern polar bears in the Arctic and man-eating sharks in South Australia but the Andrea Doria is the one we want." Vailati, a skilled oceano-grapher, said he believes the battered remains of the once-proud ship can be Thit Dining Guide hppeurs in the Tuesday Thursdat Evenin Globe and in the Wednesday, Friday and Saturday; Morning Gloh WORKING ON EQUIPMENT aboard the Narragansett are divers Arnaldo Mattel, Cosmo Dies and Stefano Carletti.

Their target is the sunken liner Andrea Doria. (Paul Connell Photo) INTOWN BOSTON Visions Of Grief, Treasure SINCE 1890. Steski, CMeha, Uisdr', Winn Uqmn. 80 Jretdwu, Boston. Dinner urved from 11 A.M.

'til 10 P.M. Moo. thri i AMRHEIN'S toekti.fl.Ur, 32.95 Unii 12 dm to 10 tt Hr.t Alliton A8T-1023 BOULEVARD RESTAURANT Part S41MM, Boston, aewti. from Boston. Piblh).

GarAn 0llhtt illy BlUirti Promise of a Sunny Sunday UIIC Clint 741 Boylshm ODD. ttil. Center. Amitlrtn Exgreet, Cam flanshi nfltr OntLL Btm CIib. Take ait -oenlN.

2 a m. Itamsei 403-5555." 12, 1965, in a Chelsea alley. When Suffolk Superior Court Judge Felix Forte asked opposing lawyers whether they were prepared for a half-day or full Saturday session, the prosecutor, Asst. Dist. Atty.

Jack' I. Zalkind, said he did not know how much questioning one man could take. Baron told defense counsel Ronald Chisholm that he was "confused" by the 1 Chisholm produced a -calendar and succeeded in getting Baron to revise previous testimony about a trip to Florida a few. weeks before Deegan's killing. On trial are Wilfred Roy French, 38, of Everett and Louis Grieco, 51, of Peabbdy, both charged with first-degree murder.

Charged 'with being ac- cessories before the fact of murder are Peter Limone, 33, of Medford, Ronald Cas-sesso, 35, of Somerville, Joseph Salvati, 36, of the North End and Henry Tam-eleo, 66, of R.I. are charged with conspiracy. 1 Chisholm kept picking away at Baron in an attempt to destroy his credibility before the 16-member jury. The former loan shark was pressed into admitting that he was known by such various nicknames as "Brandy, Seagull, Rainmaker, Xa-vier and Farouk." He denied, however, changing his name flegallj from Barboza to Baron because he fancied himself as "The Baron." Chisholm brought out before the jury that until- a few days before, the- trial Din HDfU IMU rrt S- 111 heart-. nf sKopplno Clitrlet, Boston.

imehecn laeilll ULU Jslln inn oinrnri. Attommodelions for parties. II 2.0764. THE NEW NILE REST. 227 Harrison Sure, In Bear EaStora; wri Amerleaa faai laneti dally from 99e 11 a.w.-jl p.m..

Dy elayi. 426-785 AIRPORT RESTAURANTS By KEN O. BOTWRIGHT Staff Reporter The weatherman, who goofed on Independence Day, promised to do better for the rest of the long Fourth of July week-end. "After some showers in the morning and early afternoon, it should be a pretty good week-end," a spokesman for the U.S. Weather Bureau in Boston said optimistically Friday.

"We expect it will be mostly fair Saturday with temperatures in the 70s. "Sunday will be better-fair with temperatures the 80s." The news was. hailed by sun-worshippers who were cheated Thursday and who had to work through the fPiPfDnnM DCCT Nlirl level adj. to Int'l term. Open 7 diy 0rHbLnUUii llCai.

Mtmt mi stem ll a.m.-ll a SOT.2M2. IRISH RESTAURANTS HARP 4 BARD RESTAURANT i PUB Sewlni Spirits. Gnlnnesi. Bass Ale i Harp Bier. Bootes 1 and 62 at Danvera.

tbmt 777-004 JAPANESE KOREAN RmMRANTS brought to the but the job will require, hundreds of working hoiks on the ocean floor. "Our survey will deal with the problem of exactly what must be done to refloat the vessel," he said. "Never before in history has a wreck been res cued from the bottom. "I think eventually it can be but it will require the underwater houses, special equipment that no private party could afford and the installation of a huge sea lab housed inside a submarine." Vailati's dream of bringing up, the Andrea Doria was born in the first hours after the "unsinkable" ship went down following a collision with the Swedish liner Stockholm. The collision occurred at 11:09 the night of July 24, 1956.

Twelve hours later, on a bright Summer morning, the Andrea Doria, taking water through a 45-foot hole in its side, went under at the height of rescue: operations. There were 2409 survivors in the history -making sea epic, but 52 lives were lost a remarkably low toll for the worst peacetime shipping disaster ever recorded. Vailati several years ago proposed a project in which the United States and Italian navies might collaborate in an effort to raise the vessel from its resting place, 40 fathoms deep in the sea 42 miles off Nantucket. "They didn't have time for me or my plan," he said. "The survey we now, plan is to get them interested by coming up with information to prove it can be done," Vailati said.

"The equipment available to the U.S. Navy, and the diving skill for which the Italian Navy is famed, could be combined to achieve this wondrous technological feat." The challenge of the Andrea Doria has tested the ingenuity and daring of hundreds of divers, professional and amateur, who were bent on adventure, treasure or both. William Edgerton, then 23, son of Dr. Harold E. Edgerton, professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and inventor of the stroboscope speed light for photography, died in a quest for underwater pictures.

Young Edgerton, member of a diving expedition led by John Light of Newton, died in a tragic underwater accident in Nantucket Harbor before his party descended to the ship. A valve closed, cutting off his air supply. A Connecticut salvage company contracted by Lloyd's of London attempted to raise' the vessel, but gave up after working for weeks on the deck of the 600-foot-long ship. The Andrea Doria's salvage value has been estimated variously between a conservative $6 million and a figure 10 times" that much. Vailati dismisses these figures as legend.

The ship is known to contain, in sealed safes, more than a million in cash and about $3 million in jewels-plus a "dream car" developed by the Chrylser Corp. "The man who brings up the Doria," Vailati said, "will be the richest man in the world, not because of the treasure he finds, but because of the fame it will bring him. He would be busy making money for at least 10 years." ITCH -Aatlieiitla Japanese-Korea Cilslne: Baekeroend Taka-eat (anise innlOU'IH 17fid MnuehliHttl An! flumhrMn. JOl.int)! liua Uamlii FRENCH XESZAUnW'tf HOLIDAY FATALITIES Mass. Me.

N.H. R.I. Vt. Auto 6 2 0 2 0 Fire 0 0 4 0 0 Drowning 3 1 0 0 0 Other 0 1 0 0 0 PUF7 nPrVFIIC 44 st- Harvanl Camb. Coarmat Freneb Amerieaa linebsi UniL UnLlfUi) Dinners.

Cocktails. Private Partial. Cloud Sindave. kl 7.4111. IbRDITTIMV 121 Open Mon.jiSat.

lanehes ana! Benday Unas LCDnll I HIH aft iRdiaf tounw David" Crohai at flilan WfJitft. ROTISSERIE NORMANDE fSs- ai I nip mm, CXII If. CHINESE RESTAURANTS sjllT Chinese-Polynesian food, orders to tike ot. speeiat lonen, aaterlni 'Bpen dall: nil I a.m. Hols.

4 Sun. 1 p.m.-2 177 Le. IS1-O430 good weather Friday. Today, they'll be heading by the thousands to beaches from Boston" to Cape Cod, which have been mostly deserted since the holiday began, Despite the fickle weather, highway traffic to resorts has been heavy, and the annual, grim death' toll has been mounting steadily. By late Friday night, 10 persons had died in New En-land traffic accidents since Wednesday evening six of them in 'Massachusetts.

Four children perished in a fire at Wakefield, N.H. and four other persons drowned. Traffic deaths across the U.S. ran behind expectations of the National Safety Council, which had predicted between 700 and 800 fatalities. Late Friday night, news services reported 264 had died.

Two boys were killed on Clifton shortly after 9 p.m. by a car fleeing police. Pronounced dead at Boston City Hospital were Sean Variste, 2, of Woodward and Prentess Brown, 8, of Clifton st. Mrs. Alyce Y.

McMahon, 46, of Tewksbury died in a Lowell hospital of injuries suffered when a car in which she was riding crashed into1' a parkefpl car Thursday. In Taunton, Robert 21, of Providence was killed when his car smashed into a utility pole on Bay st. Friday night, Anthony Casey, 8, of Howland drowned at the Metropolitan District Commission swimmifig pool at Washington Park. An 8-year-old Middleboro boy, Scott Savery, drowned in a privately-owned swimming pool. PUIUH CIIIC Polynesian and Chinese delicacies, lounge, lorlnp 745-1700 UHirni.

MIU Chestnat Hill, 734-1700: PMbadV; 53247a 'f- ii'-i Ones PlIIMR DTADI 9 Tyler Boston. Dine, Dante, CoektalR', taneb Steelals, Blairi, Cart hamR rCAKL Blanche. Take oat service. Private HA 6-433B. God-Country Rally Hears Rights Leaders Rapped By VIOLA OSGOOD GERMAN RESTAURANTS The 12th anniversary of the skinking of the Andrea s.

Doria, coming on July 25, a conjures for some visions of sudden wealth through salvaged treasures. For others, it will be a a 'day to revive memories of pleasure turned to of death, pain and anguish, The Andrea Doria sank in 245 feet of water about 42 miles south of Nantucket in one of history's worse peacetime marine disasters. Twelve hours earlier, the luxury liner and the Swedish motorship Stockholm, both moving slowly in dense fog, collided. The sea claimed 50 victims before massive rescue operations could be completed. There were.

1709 on the Andrea Doria, 750 on the Stockholm. Hundreds were injured. The death toll was relatively low only because of her almost incredible ability to remain afloat 12 hours with a 45-foot hole in her starboard side. In the golden sunlight of a bright Summer morning she finally rolled to starboard and disappeared, perhaps forever, to the ocean floor 245 feet below surface. The collision occurred as the Andrea Doria headed for New York, and the Stockholm, a day out of New York, lumbered along in a journey to Copenhagen.

Both ships flashed SOS messages that brought rescue teams, almost within moments. The He de France, bound for Europe, picked up 753 survivors and delivered them to safety. Helicopters chopped through a gray dawn to reach others. Each ship blamed the other for the crash that led to tangled litigation later settled out of court. Owners of the Andrea Doria filed a $25 million damage claim against the Swedish line.

The Stockholm's operators countered with a multimillion-dollar suit of their own. Both lines were sued heavily by families of the victims, survivors and shippers. The two lines set up later a limited $6 million fund to meet liabilities. OLD VIENNA HOFBRAU L314 Comm. Allsfan.

Holaraa treb, Eves. Entr. nlobtly In.llathskeller ionnas. BE 2-8748 HUNGARIAN Located In the Copley So. Hotel, HE Baservatlou CAFE BUDAPEST Accepted.

Open dally -Noon-10 p.m., sertlna linebes, dlnnera. 'GREEK RESTAURANTS JPBflOnilC TVERNA- fi'11 mi pj tat. 4 Son. 11-11 HsjiWULIiV mported Beer 4 Wine. 1680 Mass.

Harvard So. Mod. Prkei. 354-8335. "I though about a career in ballet but my feet keep getting in the way." European atmosphere, saperb ealilne.

Hn ATHENS OLYMPIA tfJSffi 11 a.m.-MHnlcM. leneheon speelils. flMflNIS DTCT 164 Broadway, Boston. Cocktails, Imported Beer 4 Wlnis. Dim In asi uiiiuisifl nLOS.

Aeoean Room. Innehann Siueiiii ii iajiu.ku sic a.aoc? TTALIAN 'mSTAVRANXSf" i 10 Westland Ave. (next to Symphony Hall. Unchion-Olnner Cocktails, Ball 11 A.M. to 11 P.M.

Inel. tan. KE 6-6396. AMALFI GIRO'S Mm- rml SIHL0IM- STEAK, CHOPS, 10B8TEHmprtsl Wines, timers. Open 11 A.M.

ta 1 A.M. Inel. free parklne Mrvlsa. OTJ-842d. MOONLIGHT CRUISE TONIGHT 9:30 to 12:30 $3.00 Per Person DANCING MASS.

BAY LINES 344 Atlantic Rewat Wharf Refreshmenti 542-8000 Conservative Negroes told an equally conservative all-white audience Friday iri Boston that civil rights leaders are not speaking for all the blacks. The group was addressed by a panel of four blacks speaking at the New England Rally for God, Family and Country at the Sat-ler Hilton Hotel. The. rally began Thursday and will run through Sunday. "Civil rights issues are going to make or break the country," Mrs.

Lola Belle Holmes of St. Louis, first vice president of the Negro American Labor Council, declared. "There are many self-styled and self-made spokesmen They do not speak for all the Negroes. Many of the people do not know the so-called leaders. They are only spokesman for selected few." Mrs.

who also worked "inside the Communist Party for seven years for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, received a standing ovation after she blamed the Communists and "Communist lies" for perpetrating riots by Negroes. "The Communist program seeks to incite racial strife in order to take over she asserted. "When the Communists say they are working for civil rights, they are hoaxing the American Negro. "The Communists are hypocrites, as are most of the civil rights leaders today. I fought for civil rights for 26 years in Chicago without ever seeing Martin Luther King there." Another panel member, George S.

Schuyler, a journalist from New York, said he preferred the "multiracial conflicts" of America to the complete segregation accepted in South Africa. He sees such conflicts as "a1 way of life." Ernest Mabins, a third panel member said: "No one can question the loyalty of the Negro. If all would adopt the forgiving spirit of the Negro, then no enemy could break our faith." TDIPPt'C speeiallilnp. In Italian eslslne and Amerieaa lealoeds, I KlblaA 0 ''i Prl" one, Expnii-Dlners laakanerfeard, MEXICAN RESTAURANTS CONCANNON SENNETT 1430 Comm. Boston, featarlnp dilleleee Mexican Inl American foods, fine liquor.

Open 7 days. Alreond. S77-6H1. NORTH SHORE s.m A-1 STEAK PIT 'of 01 Children S1.19. Cocktill lo.noe.

Telephone a3li. STAY and DIM ANTHONY'S HAWTHORNE tabttar I mi mil smimiuniU steak. Best In North Shore, Meinber Am. tY 3-5059, THE BAYSIOE 1 foatarma1 Hot Broll.d uniuius, lmk D)tr itjwMlll.a(1.oa93t t. IN THE SOUTH! SHOW.

8 LAKES REGION gables --t top Mr. 335-a517v locare. Weymaitb. Chlci i limone, HIIRll'C IIPUTUnilCr Holiday Map. trie, from an tlUllUj LlUn I HOUSE Cocktails.

Warren Organ-en. lann Cohassat Har. rd. at 11 a. ooa .1.

of NEW HAMPSHIRE 1 1 mm riiy ir-wn, T0LLI00SI This Guide appears in the Tuesday morning, Wednes 1 1 JUKUAH Zl Slni ilonp with P.U at.thelrs.s day morning, all day Thursday, and Saturday morn 3ji nanover, oun 4 r.M. to 1 A.M. 826-SWO, ing Globe. MAYFLOWER INN n. ii.n.

rt- Xv nrilfl'C inner f. Mmrl Lak' Alton Bay. Tel. (603) 875-7700. Rates from Dans na aj'30 "run aaiiy, leneiy.

waiiai 8.30 to aloslnq. Bis. 3-3a to Paint. Manmenl ml. loam-a Plyetoalk.

per dally, less weekly. 3 meals, pool, losnoe, wkLkuei kuuus. ta muie.1 orchestra Sat SANDPIPER INN VT. .50 Id! Ittnnhdinii 1 is a 7 nrrii'Jr rnrrillll IMM Bi. IU.

Tamwortb. Sm. toantry Inn aottaeai In Whits Mtns. Pool, LUUCniLL Hill trilllt fishing. Simmer theater, Dfnlni Boa.

(603) 323-7370, WHITE CLIFFS J. JP.mlns..tr'om SPECIAL FAMILYIN. rilCnon rnilMTDV Plim Gilford. For tn 4 rtlaxatlon tern ta UlirUKU IjUUPIIIiI bLUD Gilford Country Clab. Self from 7 a.m.

ta dark. Soormet OF PLYMOUTH m.v mod), 7 days per wees, naneini every Sat. Tel. (603) 524-5720. it 1 fA HIDDEN COVE RESORT On Lake Wlnti.

i ml. from Weirs Beach. Hltily enter, In areas most anntlar laanoa. Harborslda dlnlna. Madera aula SUBURBAN BOSTON' si raoma, rmllc eottnges.

Fill waterfront facilities. Call or write Bt. 11B, Ueonla, (603) 3C6-7392. LORD WAKEFIELD lz5 "owitt, ginim wktaii lunu if niiLl ILLU oanoe. 0mm 7 dave.

rnn. 1.1,1. Tfu-flex' sir Ill inn w.l.ll.u 'f fUKDIIBIIli 7-giini IMI1U 0 UilHni mil UnflLtIO fell reort faaintleL Informal. loin. (Oi if 5 293-4131.

SEA 'N SURF ft-'' A' lounge. Open intll 1 a.m. Mo end organist, Framlnoham, CE 7-0480. deft) Wfei-5aV4 tatljitatJlM WflCUA MflTflR NN 3' Laeonla-Walrs. Olreetly an" shores of like Wlnnlpesaakee.

MHOItri muiUli IHI1 Modem molel eottaoe inlony, Beitairant, soektall lounge with nllely entertainment. Write for oolor brochers or tel. (603) 366-4341. PLlYMill INN Mi 11 ne' nnowned lakes Begloa Playhosao, Ffnait inn dining In Lakes Heglon. Uetiga rooms, (603) 29J-43J1.

1969 ZENITH LINE of TV, radio, stereo and phonograph has been introduced to dealers by Northeastern Distributors, Cambridge. All TV models have Ultramatic, bringing UHF stations same "click-stop" tuning as VHF. They also carry a two-year Zenith warranty. niru "Wi-Hli-i 1 SEE TOURAINE PAINTS IN THE YELLOW PAGES rUHFRMFN'? PIFR Ubiter Hoist, Boata 1, aa tta riOnLnWLB ntn. water, Nrttmaath, 'jriall le.nee.

ar reienf tlans phons 436-7664, 1 boar from Boston. 1.

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