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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 22

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Cambridge residents jeek protection Community stirred by slaying youngsters, whom he befriended and helped with their drug problems. He also fed others, who were without funds, during the years he operated the store. Composite sketches of the two gunmen have been sent to police departments throughout New England. There were 16 witnesses to the murder, the largest number to ever see a murder in Cambridge. They said the holdup men were black and between the ages of 18 and 22.

agianes head and ordered him, "Turn over all the money. Caragianes said his partner was reaching for his wallet when the second gunman fired, hitting Fillios in the abdomen. Cambridge detectives believe the two men may have been visiting in the Cambridgeport area, scene of the murder. They will make a house-to-house canvass with composite sketches of the pair. Fillios, a bachelor, was well liked in the area by Br George Croft Globe Staff Besidenis of the Cam-bridgeport section of Cambridge, shocked by the slaying of a shop owner, will meet tonight at 8 p.m.

with a representative of the Police Department to discuss police protection. The meeting is being conducted by the Cam-bridgeport Residents Union The union was organized by Andreas Fillios, who was shot to death Tuesday night daring a holdup in his Pearl street food market. The session will be held in the Blessed Sacrament School Hall on Cpl. Mc-Terman st. Funeral servicts for Mr.

Fillios will be held at Fiilios will be held at 1 p.m. tomorrow, in the Greek Orthodox, Church, Central Square, (pick up 3d graf "According to co-owner According to co-owner James Caragianes, 50, of Huron the pair entered the store, put a gun to Car Former Teresa associates sentenced jT 'IX I i I i -W MIAMI, Fla. Jail sentences were imposed here today on two Massachusetts men, former criminal associates of Vincent C. (Big Vinnie) Teresa who recently bared his 28 years in the rackets. Robert L.

Cardillo, 40, of Lincoln street, Revere, and Philip Waggenehim, 63, of Boston were sentenced by Judge Joe Eaton in US District Court in connection Teresa, formerly of Reading, named Cardillo and Waggenheim in his recent testimony before a US Senate Subcommittee in Washington. Cardillo, who has a criminal record in Massachusetts, was identified by Teresa as having participated in a stolen credit card racket. The cards were used to steal rental cars which were shipped to Haiti, Antigua and other islands. Waggenheim and Cardillo also took part in a scheme to dispose of $10 million in securities stolen from a registered mail delivery at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York City, according to Teresa's Garry L.

Betz, the Justice Dept. lawyer who prosecuted trie local case, said Cardillo was sentenced on three counts and Waggenheim on two counts of conspiring to transport stolen securities. Also convicted with Cardillo and Waggenheim were William Dentamaro, 56, and David Lacovetti, 54, both of Miami and Anthony Derosa of Chicago. Dentamaro and Derosa were sentenced to 12 years and Lacovetti to 10 years. Waggenheim recently figured in publication of the so-called "bugging" papers of Raymond L.

S. Patriarca of Providence, reputed head of The Mob in New England. with the sale of $43,000 in stolen stock in Cardillo was sentenced to 15 years- Waggenheim was sentenced to eight years. Both appealed and were held pending efforts to obtain bond. Tresa testified at the trial of Cardillo, Waggenheim and three other defendants who were found guilty last June in a case developed by the Miami Organized Crime Strike Force of the Justice Depart.

The case was conducted in cooperation with the Boston Strike Force headed by Asst. US Atty. Edward F. Harrington. It was under Harrington's direction that Teresa was developed as a government witness.

Revenge may be link to shootings i 1 i- i i History marches by on the streets of South Boston! The ghosts of the men who manned the cannons on Dorchester Heights 125 years before marched with Sgt. George H. Nee, South Boston's first Medal of Honor winner on that clear day in 1901 when South Boston hosted its first Evacuation Day parade. As they are to this time, the hearts and homes of South Boston were open to all on that memorable morning. In later years many of the same youngsters who once paraded their "neighborhood streets with school bands and drum corps returned to march as war veterans.

The Evacuation Day parade, though some refer to it as the St. Patrick's Day march, saw the great and the relatively unknown cheered on by countless thousands over the years. Leverett Saltonstall, James Michael Curley and the slender John Fitzgerald Kennedy, were particular favorites of the crowds, and were hailed at every step along the route. We, at the South Boston Savings Bank salute them, the men of the Colonial Army on the windswept Dorchester Heights, to the sons of South Boston of yesterday and today who have contributed so much to their beloved country. Court shifts dock for safety The change was prompted by an incident a week ago when a spectator tossed some drugs into the dock for the purported benefit of a prisoner in the box.

As an added security measure, Middlesex Superior Court Judge Joseph Ford today ordered the the defendants' dock shifted from the center of the courtroom to a far wall. Evacuation Day? St. Patrick's Day? South Boston's Day! Ex-parole chief graduates Police investigating last night's shooting of two South Boston men. said the crime may have been a revenge move as a result of the murder of an East wey-mouth longshoreman in South Boston last Sept. 2.

Shot and wounded in a hail of bullets fired from a speeding station wagon at Second and sts. about 10 last night were Francis Leonard and Jerome C. Roake, both 38-year-old longshoremen and both residents of East Third st. Both were taken to City Hospital. Leonard, according to hospital officials, left there this morning.

The murder with which police believe last night's shooting was connected was that of Thomas E. Chafe, 33, of Memorial drive, East Weymouth. Chafe was found shot to death on Sept. 2 in the rear of 451 Old Colony South Boston. The spectator was taken into custody and criminal charges were brought against him in Cambridge District Court.

After his arraignment he was taken to the Billerica House of Correction pending disposition of the charges. The dock holds four persons and has a door opening at one end with a foot-high grille work atop the four-foot high wooden sides. Prisoners will now be brought into the courtroom through a door in a back corner of the room. They will then be walked some eight feet to the box and will be more segregated from spectators than in the past. 4 Ift-iffiMfeWtft -g.

A lt A tx p.i 1 if Im vTi. Mil a Ft A A Resources. He will receive his master's degree in rehabilitation administration during Northeastern's fall commencement program in Alumni Auditorium tonight. He resigned last year as deputy regional director of the Justice Laww Enforcement Assistance Administration in Boston so he could spend a year on the Northeastern campus. This is graduation day at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph McCormack and their 10 children at 73 Mt. Vernon West Roxbury. The center of attraction is the elder McCormack, former chairman of the State Parole Board, who interrupted his career to study at Northeastern University. McCormack was recently appointed director of the Brookline Dept.

of Youth (Repnntt of the above advertisement suitable for framing are available at no cost at the South Boston. Savings Bank) imm Ma i i -j-jp ir tj m. unr i 1 nji i nj -r ii mi mi 1 mut wp ijiami i jium. nji ntj i Drivers upset by mall Square this morning and last night to prevent motorists from entering the block-long pedestrian mall. Six businessmen have sent letters to traffic director George Teso, claiming they are losing customers.

The Brattle Square area is being closed for six months as an experiment- Drivers traveling through Harvard Square, Cambridge, joined with some businessmen today to protest the closing of Brattle Square to traffic. Drivers have been complaining about "not being given enough advance notice of the closing of a portion of Brattle street, which they used as a short-cut to Concord avenue." Extra policemen manned the barricade in Brattle Investigation won't stop tenant unit The Cambridge Tenant Senate, representing the residents in 12 public housing projects will continue despite an investigation into the operation of the organization. This was announced today by George Gaspa of the Newtowne Court project. He has been named acting director of the Senate. He said the organization would await the outcome of the probe into THICK 2 DAYS Walertown fire injures woman 299 An elderly woman was Uiii i.

critically burned in a fire ailUOlph police in her home at 71-73 Myrtle Watertown. shortly NftOAf probe ilealli k. mmmm before midnight. Margaret Prattville, 76, was taken to Waltham Hospital, and then transferred lo Mass. General Hospital.

Fire officials said the blaze started in the living room of the first-floor apartment. Four other persons fled from upper apartments in the two-and-a-half story house. Randolph police are investigating the death of William F. McLucas, 21, of 133 Union who was pronounced dead at the Cardinal Cushing Hospital, Brockton, where he was taken at 12:10 a.m. today.

McLucas' mother found him unconscious in bed and summoned police. Police said medical examiner Pcirce Leavitt will perform an autopsy. BR0ADL00M ct 2" 1149 BEARCATS! HEY SHOW, 8PM THURSDAYS WHDH-TV KODEL SCULPTURE TOUGH WEARING BEAUTIFUL COLORS EASY TO CLEAN IIYLOll KITCHEN CARPET with rubber back durable lasts for yean KODEL PLUSHES SHAGS-TIP SHEARS Values to 13.99 Beautiful Decorator Colors 9)99 REG. 11.99 3M viisa. to.

REG. 11.99 charges of improper conduct on' the part of two Tenant Senate officials. The officials allegedly disappeared with a Senate office worker. According to authorities more than $9000 in Senate funds are also missing. The sum is part of a $50,000 grant given to the Senate by the Cambridge Model Cities agency.

City manager John It. Corcoran ordered the investigation following a report of the disappearance of the two Senate official. 3-ycar term in drug cac Mary Jo Teague, 24, of Middlesex it, Lowell, was sentenced to a three-year prlaon terra by Federal Judge Andrew A. Caffrey today on a charge of conspiracy to sell heroin. She had previously pleaded guiHy.

Judge Caffrey rejected a defnf pica for a thrre- month sentence. mm A1 5 I 1 1 1 fed mil SHOP AT HOME Call 324-8740 mmmmm 'JJLAJL Come to this Christian Science Lecture "How to find tatting Satisfaction" by Catherine M. An wswittr, a teacher and pract tow of Christian Scienct 7.30 p.m., Monday, Sept. 23 TM r.m Chun of Ch'itl. OH Mthurll.

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