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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)

Guide to features BRIDGE 28 10 1 1 ClASSIFiED 2C-I7 C3ITUARIES 20 2U1 SENIOR SET 8 DEATHS 23 SPORTS 13-19 EDITORIALS 6 TV-RADIO 29 F'MAKCIAL 19 THEATERS 12 13 Steamer MONDAY MAYEE SHOWERS I TUESDAY CLEARING, 70s HiSH TSDES 4:34 A.M, P.M. FULL REPORT PAGE VoL 202, No. 3 1972, Globe Newspaper Co. MONDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1972 Telephone 283-8000 30 Pages 15c Death at Charles circle youth slain in jail, another killed nearby fie Bmnn ltofe Police say cellmate to be charged -J' -Hi i Suspect arrested in street knifing By Robert L. Ward Globe Staff Four hours before an inmate was murdered in Charles Street Jail yesterday a Charlestown youth was fatally stabbed in a gasoline station across from the jail.

Within minutes of the assault on Dennis Devlin of 10 McNulty MDC police arrested a suspect, Anthony Bell, 20, of 39 Bowdoin West End. STABBING, Page 14 will be sought in Municipal Court charging Ronald A. Strother, 30, of Quincy street, Roxbury, with Brown's murder. John McCarey, deputy jail master, said Brown was sharing a cell with Strother. McCarey said Strother had been kept isolated until a month ago, when a psychiatrist at Suffolk Superior Court had recommended he have a cellmate.

The doctor's identity was not known by McCarey. CHARLES, Page 14 fit 'f -H if 51 India, Pakistan sign unex By Richard O'Donnell Globe Staff A Roxbury youth was found beaten to death yesterday morning in a locked Charles Street Jail cell he shared with a man awaiting trial in connection with two other murders. Robert Brown, 18, of 105 Brunswick who was being held on a breaking and entering charge, was pronounced dead on arrival at Massachusetts General Hospital at 4 a.m. The apparent murder weapon was a toilet seat. Lt.

John Barry of the Boston Homicide Bureau said a complaint BLESSING OF THE FLEET Most Minihan, auxiliary bishop of Boston, peace accords "ffijM Rev. Jeremiah Gloucester at yesterday's 37th annual St. Peter's Fiesta. blesses fleet at Story, Page 21. (Globe photo by John Blanding) Seek return of California delegates McGovern backers take fight to court DENNIS DEVLLN gas station victim An agreement that the two heads will meet again, presumably in Pakistan, and that first their representatives independently will take up the issues of Kashmir, the, repatriation of 93,000 Pakistani prisoners of war held in India, and the resumption of diplomatic relations.

INDIA, Page 4 Chess match postponed; it's up to Fischer By Harold Dondis Globe Chess Correspondent REYKJAVIK, Iceland The world chess championship between America's Bobby Fischer and Russia's Boris Spassky has been postponed until tomorrow at Fischer's request. The elusive Fischer was still in hiding last night somewhere in New York, and indications were that he was holding out for more money. Max Euwe, president of the World Chess Federation, told a press conference here yesterday that the opening match, originally set for, 5 p.m. (1 p.m. EDT) yesterday, has been put off until tomorrow at the same time.

Fischer will be disqualified if he does not appear in Iceland by noon (8 a.m. EDT) tomorrow. Robert Byrne, an American grandmaster, told United Press International he spoke to Fischer by. phone yesterday. "He said he was not fatigued and he was not sick," Byrne said.

"He won't come because they (the organizers) are not meeting his financial demands." Original terms called for the winner to get five-eighths of a $125,000 prize plus 30 percent of TV receipts, but Fischer recently asked for CO percent of the TV money and an additional 30 percent of the gate. Don McKay's curtained office win- dow. "You have no idea how much our company spends on attorneys," McKay is saying. He has already talked about the meticulously executed giantism of the Donnelly artists who paint billboardsa 30-foot bearskin grenadier for Dewar's Scotch or a 60-foot New England suburb for Boston Gas. He has described the switch from poster painting to poster photography.

"We always go back to refer to what-was-his-name Lautrec Toulouse Lautrec and the old circus posters that ore so camp now," he has said. SIGNS, Page 9 pected ROBERT BROWN beaten to death the whole political process has been diverted. I think all of this talk however is aimless. I think we're speculating on something that's not going to happen." "I'm really placing my confidence in the fairness of the delegates," he added. McGovern denied earlier reports that he had planned a similar appeal to the credentials committee had he lost the California primary to Sen.

Hubert H. Humphrey. "That is a falsehood," he said, "We never even entertained the thought of challenging the California election had we lost. Everyone knew the rule about California and now some of them are trying to change the rules late in the game." McGOVERN, Page 4 II '-K-Cjs, Radio Electro "Ml ifer-s 1 isrrr Curtis) RONALD STROTHER complaint to be sought Bay State warms up for holiday By Joseph Rosenbloom Globe Staff Just in time to brighten the Fourth of July weekend, summer temperatures and sunshine warmed waterlogged Massachusetts yesterday, luring tens of thousands to the beaches. Balmy winds from the southeast caused temperatures to soar as high as 91 degrees in Boston high for the year a spokesman for the National Weather Service at Logan Airport said.

The spokesman, Frank Coppola, forecast more of the same through tomorrow for celebrants of Inde- List of holiday activities, Page 21. pendence Day, though he said some scattered local showers might temporarily dampen some regions. Despite an outpouring of swimmers and boaters, officials reported few serious accidents yesterday. A US Coast Guard helicopter rescued four persons near West Falmouth Harbor after their 25-foot cabin cruiser struck a rock at about 5:20 p.m. and sank.

Rescued were Joseph Conte of 31 Zeller Boston; Katherine Farrey of 6 Ingalls Woburn, and Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wenz of 8 Gates Marshfkld. In another incident, Elizabeth Prudente, 32, of 128 Hamilton Dorchester, apparently jumped from a 30-foot bridge over the Neponset River, authorities said. Police said boaters pulled the woman, who was unconscious from water intake, from the river at about 5:30 p.m.

After treatment at Carney Hospital she was listed in good condition. State Police reported moderate to heavy traffic, but no serious accidents, on Bay State highways. Cohasset police said a woman was killed and a man critically injured when the motorcycle they were riding hit a tree on Jerusalem road in North Cohasset. The accident occurred at about 7:30 p.m. JULY 4, Page 5 IN THIS CORNER Profumo's road to respectability LONDON Nine years ago a scandal erupted in Britain that humiliated the government of Conservative Prime Minister Harold Mac-millan, took the life of one man, shattered the career and reputation of another and catapulted two young ladies-about-London into international notoriety.

It was known as the "Profumo affair" after its protagonist John Dennis Profumo, a brilliant politician who was secretary of state for war in the Macmillan cabinet. PROFUMO, Page 9 i INTEREST gimrnntepd a yr or lontrer. Se Horn Owner federal art. Paee 4. By Crocker Snow Jr.

Globe Asian Bureau SIMLA, India With a last-minute, pool-table patch job to their almost deflated summit meeting, India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Pakistan's President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto agreed early today to refrain from "the threat of or use of force," and a mutual withdrawal of troops from their borderlands, not including Kashmir. The unexpected accords were signed by the two leaders well after midnight in the Pakistan delegation retreat of Hamachal Bhavan in this Himalayan hill town. 1 Just five hours earlier at the same spot, President Bhutto had met the press and termed the talks "an unfortunate deadlock." The breakthrough for the two nations, who have gone to war three times in the last 25 years, came at the personal intercession of the two leaders, with Mrs. Gandhi hastily touching up a final draft spread out on a pool table. The joint communique, which will not take effect before ratification by Pakistan's National Assembly, presumably sometime in August, encompasses a number of points: points: A general agreement to "live in peace with each other," including the familiar formula of a mutual commitment to peaceful coexistence, respect for each other's lands, territorial integrity, and noninterference in each other's internal affairs.

Progressive normalization of relations, including a resumption of communications, airline overflights, trade and scientific and cultural exchanges. Mutual withdrawal of troops along the entire India-Pakistan border, not including the controversial state of Kashmir in the north where the forces will remain as is, "without prejudice to the recognized position of either side," while that question is taken up separately in further talks. By Cristina Robb Globe Staff A short walk down Washington street from Egleston Square Station past declining delis, dumpy laundromats and old Coke signs stands the Outdoor Division of Donnelly Advertising, Inc. A standard six-sheet poster, known to Don McKay as an outdoor advertisement and to most of the rest of us as a billboard, gloats over the Donnelly parking lot, which is surrounded by a chain-link and barbed-wire fence. The billboard says: "Little Camera Big Pictures." From it an enormous blond woman, perhaps 10 feet wide, pecks through a coffin-sized pocket Instamatic camera at By Martin F.

Nolan Globe Washington Bureau WASHINGTON Supporters of Sen. George McGovern will go into Federal court today to try to restore to him 151 California delegates taken away by the Democratic Credentials Committee. Yesterday, California backers of the senator filed suit in US District Court here charging that the credentials committee violated the US Constitution in stripping McGovern of the 151 delgates and thus ignoring California's winner-take-all primary law, under which McGovern had captured all 271 delegates to the Democratic National Convention. Meanwhile, McGovern, appearing on the ABC-TV program "Issues and Answers," insisted that the credentials committee decision was "a plain perversion of justice," and added that "I don't see how the convention can sustain that verdict and I don't think it will." However, the front-running Democratic presidential hopeful scattered more rosebuds and olive branches than threats yesterday, predicting that he would be the nominee of "a free and open convention." On the ABC program, McGovern also held out hope for a compromise with Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, and had words of praise for party leaders, including Democratic national chairman Lawrence F.

O'Brien, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and the AFL-CIO president, George Meany. McGovern said that he would lead an independent party "only if ft-nr SAUGUS. (Globe photo by William C.

Signmakers find 'garden clubs' are closing in 4 LfifeiM Lilt zhI si EYESORE OR ART? ROUTE 1 IN 3 4.

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Years Available:
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