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

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 33

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Boston Globe Wednesday, July 17, 1968 35 Star Was 20 Mishap Kills Quincy Athlete Joseph Daley QUINCY The funeral of Joseph P. Daley, 20, of 28 Stevens fatally injured in highway construction accident Tuesday, will be held Friday at 9 a.m. at St. John's Church with a Solemn requiem Mass. The son of a Quincy fireman, he had a Summer job with sewer division of the Quincy Public Works Dept.

According to police, he was pinned between a tree and a digging machine at the junction of Morrissey blvd. and Hollis North Quincy, at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Quincy police took him to where he was pronounced Quincy Hospital, dead on arrival. He was born in Quincy.

He would have been a senior at Merrimack College, where he was captain-elect of the 1968-69 basketball team and a member of Sigma Eta Kappa fraternity. Cpl Santy, 18, N.H.'s 142d Vietnam Death Associated Press BELMONT, N.H.-Marine Lance Cpl Steven Santy, 18, of Belmont, has become the 142d New Hampshire serviceman to lose his life in Vietnam. According to a Defense Department report to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Santy, the soldier died Sunday from battle wounds received last Wednesday when a booby trap exploded during fighting in Quang Nam.

The Marine had been in the service 13 months and was sent to Vietnam five months ago. He was the first serviceman from Belmont to die in the fighting. Leon Roberts, Printing Firm Founder, at 83 MELROSE Leon F. Roberts, 83, founder and retired owner of the Roberts Press in Cambridge, formerly Boston, died Tuesday his home, 39 Union st. Born at Webster, N.H., he attended New London, N.H.

schools and resided here for more than six decades. He found the firm in 1935 and retired in 1963. Mr. Roberts leaves his wife, Florence (Mann); five sons, Leonard H. here and Richard M.

of Wakefield, who currently operate the business, Chester of Kansas City, Francis of Duxbury and Leon Roberts Jr. of Covina, four daughters, Mrs. Marion Stevenson of New Hampshire, Mrs. Marie LAane of ingdale, Mrs. Marjorie Connors of St.

Louis, Mo. and Prudence alawsson of Huntsville, two brothers, Arthur and Walter of New London, N.H.; 26 grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren. Services will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. in the Gately Funeral Home her. Interment will be at Puritan LAawn Cemetery in Peabody.

Dr. Barnum Chestnut Hill Rites Friday Services for Dr. Francis G. Barnum 50, of 120 Codman Brookline, a Boston physician, will be held at 3 p.m. Friday in the Church of the Redeemer, Chestnut Hill.

Dr. Barnum died Monday at his home. He was graduated from Milton Academy and Harvard, class of 1940. He graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1944. He leaves his wife, Elizabeth, William (Lamb) and a Barnum; daughter, son, Elizabeth both of the home address.

10 More Listed Killed in Action Associated Press -A casualty list naming 10 servicemen killed in action in Vietnam issued Tuesday by the Defense Department. Around The STATE MBTA Back to Normal; Broken Rails, Wire Fixed The Harvard-Ashmont MBTA rapid transit line went back into operation early Tuesday. An emergency repair crew worked through the night replacing damaged tracks caused by the derailment of a four-car train, between Harvard and Central squares. early Monday. work was completed and trains began running at 5:47 a.m.

Tuesday. But it wasn't the end of MBTA problems. In a mishap Tuesday, an MBTA motorman and a passenger on an outbound Boston College-Commonwealth av. train were injured when the overhead live wire snapped and fell onto the roof of the vehicle. The incident occurred at 10:15 a.m.

on Commonwealth av. opposite Boston University. Firemen extricated the operator, Edward F. Todd of Washington Brighton, and an unidentified woman passenger. Both were taken to St.

Elizabeth's Hospital for treatment. Phone Union Board Votes Today The 15-member International Executive Council of the striking International Brotherhood of Telephone Workers will meet at 10:30 a.m. today in Boston to vote on a telephone company back-to-work offer. Representatives of both sides met for 90 minutes Tuesday. Back-to-work talks have stalled over the handling of 12 workers who have been suspended or discharged for alleged sabotage or interference with non-striking workers.

In its latest offer, the company proposed putting all discipline cases arising from the strike to grievance procedure and if not resolved by this method resorting to binding arbitration. The contract, provides for a 19 percent increase in wages and benefits over three years. Ex-Revere Police The personal finance Police Chief Colin A. W. Gillis mony at his Federal Court adjourned at 3 p.m.

Gillis was indicted by a ago on three counts of tax 1959-61. The government than $6000 in income Testifying before Judge 16-member jury was Elizabeth of the Chelsea Savings Bank, drawn on the Broadway for cash by the defendant. able to educational institutions. Chief Finances Bared transactions of former Revere comprised Tuesday's testitrial in Boston which was Federal grand jury two years evasion covering the years contends that Gillis owes more Andrew A. Caffrey and a Geary, assistant treasurer She said a number of checks National Bank were purchased Three of the checks were pay- Harvard Fills Mallinkrodt Chair Harvard University has created a seventh endowed professorship named for the late Edward Mallinkrodt a chemist of St.

Louis who left a multi-million dollar fortune to Harvard. An expert on the atmospheres of the earth and other planets has been named to the professorship: Richard M. Goody, who joined the Harvard faculty and became head of the Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory in 1958. Passenger Flights Over Both Poles A commercial flight over both North and South Poles will depart from Logan Airport next November to commemorate the late explorer, Adm. Richard E.

Byrd. The flight, chartered by the newly-formed Adm. Richard E. Byrd Polar Center in Boston, will investigate commercial and industrial exploration of the Arctic and Antarctic. About 50 business executives are expected to make the 26-day trip, stopping at 14 countries on six continents.

Crusher Casey Tells of Shooting Testimony continued Tuesday in Suffolk Superior Court in Boston in the trial of three men accused of the killing of Albert Mitchell and the shooting of Steve (Crusher) Casey last New Year's Eve. Mrs. Christine Edwards, formerly of Roxbury, and Casey himself took the stand for the prosecution. Casey described the night of the shooting and said he recognized two of the defendants. 3 Bank Holdups Cost $12,697 Holdup men hit three banks in Greater Boston Tuesday, picking up a total of $12,697.

The biggest haul was in Medford at the Tufts University branch of the Middlesex County National Bank. The net was $7449.98. Three armed men held a guard and two customers at AIRLINE HONORED -Northeast Airlines Pres. F. C.

Wiser (left) is presented a plaque from the Bureau of Advertising in recognition of the air carrier's contribution to newspaper advertising. Making presentation are Harold G. Kern (center), publisher, Record American, and Pres. John I. Taylor, The Boston Globe.

Many Bills Wait Action or Signing JOSEPH P. DALEY He graduated from Arch-bishop Williams High School in Braintree in 1966, where he was a star basketball player and captain of the basketball team. He leaves parents, Charles H. Catherine (Caulfield) Daley; two brothers, Gerard and Timothy and three sisters, Mrs. Judith Hurley and Claire and Maura all of Quincy.

John Dynan Mass Today In Cambridge Services for John J. Dynan, 54, of 108 Inman Cambridge, a Cambridge Department official, will be held at 10 this morning in St. Mary's Church, Cambridge. Mr. Dynan died unexpectedly Sunday at his Summer home in Reading.

Born in Cambridge, he was a graduate of Boston College High School and Boston College, and served U.S. Navy during War II. He joined the Cambridge Water Dept. in 1940, and was promoted to the post of executive secretary of the Cambridge Retirement Board in 1950. In 1961, he was named executive secretary of the Middlesex County Retirement Board, a position he held until 1965, when he was appointed business manager of the Cambridge School Dept.

Mr. Dynan was an evening school instructor in accounting at Boston College, and a deputy chief in the Cambridge Auxiliary Police. He was an active member of St. Mary's Holy Name Society, St. Joseph's Retreat League, Knights of Columbus Council 74, and American Legion Post He leaves his wife Gertrude B.

(Graves) Dynan; a brother, Rev. Francis A. Dynan, S.J., and three sisters, Mrs. Nora Kerwin, Mrs. Mary Bartell, and Helen E.

Dynan, Ct. Soldier, 18, Killed in Action Associated Press NORTH WINDHAM, Ct. A Portland, Mr. native serving with the Army has been killed in action in Vietnam. The Defense Department reported that Pfc Douglas P.

Fraser, 18, who was residing in North Windham, was killed July 6 near Chu Chi. Young Fraser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fraser had enlisted in the Army Oct. 5, 1967.

Boating Mishap Fatal to Boy, 12 MARBLEHEAD The body of 12-year-old boy was found Tuesday after he fell out of a boat and drowned. Buddy Buffett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dion Buffett, apparently fell out of a small boat in Salem Harbor. The body was recovered about an hour after the empty boat was found.

House Fire Kills Webster Girl, 2 WEBSTER two. year-old girl died of asphyxiation Tuesday when fire swept her home here. Two other children were rescued. Ann Serwa was found dead at a porch door of the second floor apartment. She was the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Serwa. Mrs. Serwa ran with her son Edward, 4, from the house. A neighbor rescued the other child, Richard, 2, police said.

Cause of the fire was not immediately determined. D. H. SPORTSWEAR CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY IN RESPECT TO THE MEMORY OF HIPNAY WEBBER. AFTERMATH-Mrs.

Ralph Goodwin lies critically wounded. Pistol is in foreground. Husband, who shot her, is in background. (AP) N. H.

Man Shoots Wife SANFORD, Dover, N.H., man who held his wife at gunpoint apparently shot her accidentally Tuesday night and was himself wounded by police trying to serve an assault warrant. Ralph Goodwin, 28, and his wife were taken to Goodal Hospital. Their condition was not immediately learned. Heat Holds Guard to Slow Motion By JOHN B. WOOD Globe Staff Reporter CAMP DRUM, N.

Y. The men of the Yankee Division responded with wit and ingenuity Tuesday to a fourth straight day of sizzling heat. Drills and exercises for the Massachusetts and Connecticut National Guard units proceeded as scheduled despite near 90-degree temperatures and stifling humidity. A brisk afternoon breeze kept the mercury from reaching Sunday's high of 95, but the wind proved a mixed blessing. Clouds of talcum-like red dust blew across this sprawling military reservation, choking the men and covering vehicles, tents and food.

"Seasonably unbearable," was how one Drum veteran, Sgt Thomas Calahan of Arlington, described it. "In the four Summers I've been here, it's never been worse," Calahan said, "but I can't honestly say it's ever been much better either." He pointed out the exaggerated eaves on Cape Drum's temporary barracks to cope with an average annual snowfall of 12 feet. "This place must have about the worst weather of any Army base -in the world," he concluded. Calahan's assertion, however, drew instant response from veterans of such noted resort areas as Fort Benning, Ga. and Fort Sill, Okla.

Meanwhile, the Yankee Division's citizen-soldiers, did their best to fight the heat while undergoing their most rigorous training to date. Sweat-soaked towels, T- shirts and handkerchiefs flourished from beneath helmet liners, giving some infantry units the appearance of Arabian sheiks as they charged across the dustcovered deserts of northern New York. Most canteens were empty by mid-afternoon, and one member of the First Battalion, 110th Armored, reportedly passed out from the heat inside his tank during firing. "It's a good thing there's not a river under there." said Sgt Francis Bercovitz of Brockton as he watched the 101st Engineer Battalion, Company, dismantle, reconstruct and then dismantle a timber trestle bridge. Denture-Sore Gums? For sore gums caused by dentures, you need Medicated Denture Adhesive.

Even while you eat, OraFix M's scientific formula eases pain, fights infection, and helps stimulate growth healthy gum tissue. And OraFix holds like regular tube in your medicine chest. Goodwin had barricaded himself inside his brother's home, holding his wife as a hostage and refusing to surrender. After some time he agreed to come out to talk with newsmen and emerged with the gun pointed at his wife's head. Witness said he evidently tripped on the steps and lost his balance and the gun went off.

Police said the warrant, charging assault with a deadly weapon, was sworn after Goodwin fired one shot earlier Tuesday at a Somersworth, N.H., trailer camp. Business Study To Help Blacks As Executives A six-month study on education for blacks in the field of business administration, including a survey of what leading business schools are offering in management education, is being and financed Northeastern Harvard universities' business schools and the Stop and Shop Foundation. The project, to cost $15,000, is directed by Dr. Israel Unterman, associate professor of urban business education at Northeastern. A principal objective of the project, he said, is to identify the business education specific, blacks and to recommend courses and programs to fit these needs.

Dr. Unterman will confer with all representatives of black society in the survey, both young and old, besides consulting with business schools. Dean George P. Baker of the Harvard Buiness School Assn. said faculty and alumni are now working with black institutions, in Boston's Roxbury area.

He also expressed the hope that graduate schools will develop "where black managers will participate in larger numbers than is now bay as three women tellers filled money bags. A few minutes later, at 1 p.m., a bandit got $2454 at the North Avenue Savings Bank, 1960 Massachusetts Cambridge. The third holdup was at the Suffolk Franklin branch, 139 MasBay, where two got sachusetts in then Back $2794. Despite occasional bursts of energy from both houses, hundreds of bills await action by the Massachusetts Legislature in three or four days. Auto Insurance Competitive-compulsory plan enacted by both houses and expected to be signed by Gov.

Volpe today. Plan would freeze rates for two years, allow competitive bidding below maximum rates and establish a Fraudulent Claims Board. Manufacturers' tax cut $3.5 million tax break for manufacturing firms is before governor, may be vetoed. Vietnam bonuses Governor expected to sign bill granting $300 bonuses to Vietnam veterans and $200 to other veterans since Korea. North-South Worcester Toll Road Governor may veto bill requiring Massachusetts Turnpike Authority to build toll road from Connecticut to New Hampshire, connecting Worcester and Fitchburg.

Bill would pledge state credit behind authority bonds unlike those for the turnpike. MBTA police A bill allowing the MBTA to establish its own 35-man police force has been enacted by both branches and is also on the governor's desk. Gun control A bill to recodify all the state's gun laws, stiffening most penalities, won initial approval in the Senate and is expected to be debated there today. It is still possible a Housepassed gun registration plan may be added to the Senate bill or substituted for it. Wiretapping The fruits of a special commiteee will also be debated today in the Senate.

So far, the House, the Senate and Atty. Gen. Richardson have all insisted on different versions. Police pay raise Both houses have given initial approval to a bill setting $7500 as the minimum salary for all police. Under the plan, state funds would provide a portion of the raises the first two years.

New police recruits would have to be high sc school graduates. Witness immunity The Senate refused to agree with the version requested Atty. Gen. Richardson and passed by the House. The bill is now in a conference committee--where similar legislation died last year.

Police powers for Registry -Both branches have initial approval to a given. lowing the Registrar to arm his inspectors and give them certain other police powers. M.B.T.A. subsidy The $4.6 million subsidy to continue commuter rail service has been approved by both branches and awaits final enactment by the Senate. The bill also requires the M.B.T.A.

to come up with a The Consuming Passion for Money This consuming passion for money and material possessions which inspires both young and old today presents a grave and urgent social problem. It is breeding crime, corrupting the administration of public affairs, creating gross inequalities in social and economic position and opportunities, and destroying our personal and civic standards. It is insidiously demoralizing our youth, vulgarizing our national character and rapidly undermining much that is wholesome and inspiring in American life. It is fundamentally anti-Christian in character and as such atheistic in its tendencies. There are profound implications, if properly understood, in the report of Dante, who, journeying through hell, declared when he reached the dwelling of the god of riches, "Here we found wealth, the great enemy." No more graphic and at the same time tragic proof of the spiritual ravages of the rampant commercial and materialistic spirit can be observed than in the infamous practice of vivisection with its revolting cruelties to pathetically helpless animals, its debasing effect on human character, and its inevitable tendency to lead to experiments on unprotected or unsuspecting human beings.

Stripped of its mask as "scientific research," vivisection is exposed in a large way as a highly profitable money-making business, conducted on an ever-increasing scale and representing a vast investment of capital. Cruelty is turned to profit; money is made out of blood. Much of the Send for free New England Anti-Vivisection Society, Dept. 6807G, long-range master plan by next January. Community affairs Establishment of a Department of Community Affairs has won initial approval in the Senate.

The new department would include most agencies now dealing with city problems. City fire insurance A bill requiring insurance insurance firms to write fire insurance at manual rates on all buildings passing housing codes including those in the slums awaiting action in the Senate. MHFA A bill to fund the Massachusetts Housing Finance Authority needs only enactment by the Senate and the governor's signature. It would provide the authority with enough funds to start major new development of low-income housing. Medicaid The House has approved a plan to cut from the program many persons now receiving Medicaid and restrict it to persons who are "medically indigent." The Senate, is expected to Generic drugs -A bill requiring doctors to list the generic names of drugs as well as brand names on prescriptions is tied up in a conference committee and is expected to die there.

Alcoholism--A bill eliminating the crime of drunkenness and providing for civil commitment and statefinanced treatment of alcoholics is in the Senate Ways and Means Committee and may die there. Mineral resources A division of mineral resources would be established in the Department of Natural Resources under a bill which has won initial approval in the Senate. The division would be able to license the exploration and extraction of offshore oil. CATV A House-passed bill giving communities near absolute authority to license community antenna television firms and allowing almost no rate controls is now in Senate Ways and Means. Floor action is expected today or Thursday.

Senate redistricting A plan to redistrict the Senate to conform with the Supreme Court's one man-one vote edict is on the table in the Senate and may not receive action this year. Supplementary budget A $10 million-plus supplementary budget, passed by the House, is expected to be up for debate in the Senate today. Buy American The ban on use of foreign products in public construction in Massachusetts was turned down by the House but may be revived by the Senate. Youth Service Division reorganization Sent to a study. Probably dead for this year.

stark horror of the business is concealed from the public by the iron curtain of propaganda which the enormous resources of those who profit from the evil and their powerful supporters have been able to construct and maintain. In the meantime we have the gratifying and encouraging knowledge that our battle partakes of the character of a noble crusade, that we are not only attacking the very foundations of a morally devastating evil but are making some real contribution toward the regeneration of society and the establishment of a better more Christian order of existence on earth for all living creatures. Yes, indeed, we are incidentally, but truly engaged in a the great afflicted concerted world effort has to bring about that of which such crying need a real spiritual revival. The foregoing article is reproduced from Reverence for Life Magazine published by the New England Anti-Vivisection Society It was written by Hon. George R.

Farnum of Boston, the Society's president and former Assistant At. torney General of the United States. It is offered to The Boston Globe readers as a few thoughts for serious considera. tion. The Society appeals for recruits to help spread its Gospel of Compassion for all of God's creatures AND NOT FOR CONTRIBUTIONS.

Associate Membership $1.00 and Active Membership $5.00 both including free subscription to our humane magazine Reverence for Life. literature 9 Park Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108.

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