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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 22

Publication:
The Boston Globei
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Boston, Massachusetts
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22
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1,7 1 1 I I I I I I -THE BOSTON GLOBE TUESDAY. MARCH 22, 1983 Sert, and his design for the Maeght Foundation at St. France, with sculpture by Giacometti. ARCHITECTURE I ROBERT CAMPBELL Josep Lluis Sert and his legacy Most people still aren't quite sure what to make of the buildings designed by Josep Lluis Sert, the internationally known architect and former dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Design who died at 80 last week in Barcelona. That would have pleased Sert, an architect who evaded easy definitions of himself or of his work.

Even his name became a source of confusion because as he grew older he increasingly felt himself to be a native of Catalonia, the province of Spain on the Mediterranean where he was born, and therefore changed his name from the Spanish Jose Luis to the Catalan Josep Lluis. Sert's influence and his buildings are everywhere in the Boston area. As dean, teacher and employer, he trained many younger architects now practicing on their own. Many others were influenced by his architecture, which seemed to be rising everywhere, radical and fresh, in the 1960s. At Harvard there are the Holyoke Center, the Peabody Terrace Apartments along the Charles, the Undergraduate Science Center, the Center for World Religions and Sert's own house.

At Boston University are the Law and Education tower, the Mugar Library and the Student Union, all elements in a master plan by Sert. At MIT are two dormitories, and elsewhere are a school, two rapid transit stations, and elderly and family apartment complexes. Sert also was planning consultant to Harvard and to Cambridge and a member of Mayor Collins' advisory board on urban design during the explosive rebirth of the downtown in the late 1950s and 1960s from which latter post he often lobbied against what he regarded as obtrusive new office buildings. Sert's own buildings are hard to understand sometimes because he saw each as a demonstration and test of one or several propositions about architecture and city planning. His classic of this kind of experimental architecture is probably Holyoke Center.

All Harvard had asked for was a new infirmary along Mount Auburn street. It was Sert who persuaded the university to acquire a whole block of Harvard Square and to erect on it a kind of miniature diagrammatic city of the future. The underground parking, the shops, plazas and pedestrian arcade at street level, the apparently (but not really) rearrangeable Tinker-Toy windows of the facade, the gardens on the roof and much else were, to Sert, more than parts of one building. They were the constituent elements of the future urban world he was always imagining. He paid a price, of course, for this kind of experimenting.

Some of his buildings fit better into his imaginary future city than into their actual contexts. The Holyoke arcade isn't used into his imaginary future city than into their actual contexts. The Holyoke arcade isn't used much, for instance, because it is only a fragment of the car-free pedestrian network he envisaged. And because he was eager to use new technologies, maintenance problems are not unusual in his buildings. The flaws are the price a small one, I believe for Sert's optimism and faith and for the enormous ambition he had for each of his buildings.

He knew he was taking chances. Recalling his early years around 1920, he once said to me: "It was a situation of great hope. We had the feeling after that big war that was supposed to end all wars we did believe it was supposed to that there would be a period of change, of total change. We were young people, we had great hopes and made great plans. We had the daring that many young people le have and should continue to and which he still had in his 70s, he might have added.

There's so much one wants to remember about Sert. His astonishing Irving street house in Cambridge, filled with art created by his friends of the Paris cafes of the '20s and '30s Le Corbusier, Leger, Miro, Calder. His youth, which at this remove in time seems almost legendary, when, at the Paris' apartment of his Aunt Misia, he met Diaghilev, Ravel and Vuillard (when Misia died, the walls of her apartment held paintings of her by Renoir and Modigliani and in a drawer lay an unopened letter from Proust). His visits to Picasso's studio to watch the mural "Guernica" being painted for the Spanish Pavilion of 1937, which Sert helped design. His lifelong love of the white and ochre stucco peasant farmhouses of the Balearic Islands, which he imitated in a series of houses on Ibiza that are among his finest works.

His lovely European buildings the Maeght Foundation and Carmelite convent in France, the Miro Museum and luxury apartments in Barcelona. Sert was a tiny man in dark gray Spanish suits who could often be seen walking purposefully through Harvard Square. He was convivial and loved to joke. Although he was a convinced modernist, he was a skeptical one; in accepting the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architects in 1981, he said: "'The Modern Movement is 50 years of a living, if not very attractive, reality." He tried to enrich that reality with ornament, color, light and shadow and to relate it better to urban contexts. With Walter Gropius, he was one of the two most influential architects based in Boston the last half century.

For all those reasons and many more Josep Lluis Sert will long be remembered. (Robert Campbell is The Globe's architecIture correspondent.) OBITUARIES Alfred C. Redfield, was professor at Harvard, oceanographer; at 92 By William P. Coughlin Globe Staff Dr. Alfred C.

Redfield, 92, an internationally respected oceanographer, died of natural causes in his Woods Hole home Thursday. He was a Harvard professor of physiology emeritus, and one of the eight original staff members appointed to the Woods Hole staff when the institution was founded in 1930. Dr. Redfield became a mentor to a generation of leaders in biology and physical oceanography, according to those who knew him at Woods Hole. Among them were the late Dr.

Bostwick Ketchum, also of the institution, a student in biology and coastal ecology; Dr. William S. von Arx, physical oceanographer, and scientist emeritus at Woods Hole; and Dean F. Bumpus, scientist emeritus and physical oceanographer, who worked under Dr. Redfield's direction.

Dr. Redfield's lifetime of studies spanned all disciplines of modern oceanography: circulation patterns in Gulf of Maine and plankton populations there; physical oceanography in the study of tidal phenomena in narrow embayments; and the circulation and flushing of harbors and estuaries. The Redfield Building at Woods Hole was dedicated in his honor in 1971, during the Woods Hole Institution Day of Science. A bronze plaque carries Dr. Redfield's words: "Life in the sea cannot be understood without understanding the sea itself." The latest volume among his many articles and books, "The Tides of the Waters of New England and New York," was published on his 90th birthday in 1980.

He continued to write and publish frequently, often drafting his own illustrations, associates at the institution said yesterday in a telephone interview. In the preface of this book, Dr. Ketchum wrote: "Alfred Redfield's interest always was very broad, and he made significant scientific contributions to many fields of knowledge. After earning a worldwide reputation in physiology he devoted more and more time to one of his first loves, life in the sea. Alfred Redfield had a holistic approach to the biology of the sea "One of the Redfield characteristics is his ability to focus on critical problems He has the unique ability to explain complex problems in terms understandable to both the novice and specialist." Born in Philadelphia, he grew up in Wayne, and attended Haverford College.

His study of the tides and sea perhaps began when he was a boy digging clams in' Barnstable Harbor. He received his bachelor of science degree in 1913 and his PhD in 1917, both from Harvard. Dr. Redfield also studied at Cambridge University in England and at the University of Munich. He was assistant professor of physiology at the University of Toronto, and in 1921 joined the Harvard faculty as assistant professor of physiology.

He became a full professor at Harvard in 1931. Bernard Fleming Was acting Brookline chief Bernard S. Fleming, 58, retired Brookline police captain and acting chief, died of cancer in his home Monday. Appointed police captain in 1970, he was acting chief from 1970 to 1980, and retired last January because of his illness. He was president of the Massachusetts Police Assn.

in 1963 and was a past president of the Norfolk County prosecutors office. Capt. Fleming had 33 years on the force. In 1959 he was wounded in the line of duty when a suspect shot him while in custody on Harvard street at Coolidge Corner. A citation Capt.

Fleming received upon retirement mentions the wounding. Born in Brookline, he was a graduate of St. Mary's High School and the Federal Bureau of Investigation Academy in 1958. He was a member of the board of directors of the Brookline Municipal Credit Union, and of the Brookline Knights of Columbus, American Legion Post 11 and VFW Post 864. Capt.

Fleming was a Navy radioman 2d class during World War Il. He leaves his wife, Elizabeth A. (Skalla) of Brookline: a daughter, Marie E. Lailer of Whitman; a brother, Rev. Thomas J.

Fleming, pastor of St. Bridget's Church, South Boston: and a sister, Mildred F. Fleming of Brookline. A funeral Mass will be said at 10 a.m. Thursday in St.

Mary of the Assumption Church, Brookine. Burial will be in Walnut Hills Cemetery, Brookline. DEATH NOTICES By CITY or TOWN ALLSTON Crocket, Mary C. ARLINGTON Flynn, Mary E. Forsyth, Areta BELMONT Bresnahan, Elizabeth C.

BILLERICA Voceli, Ernest T. BOSTON Chin, Suy King Corbin, Ernestine Ginty, Katherine W. Kerrissey, William B. McDonald, George McLeod, Guy Collingwood BRAINTREE Garrigan, Peter A. BRIGHTON D'Agostino, Emily E.

Salvati, Silvio Solov, Samuel Visocchi, Joseph B. Williams, Marjorie M. BROOKLINE Finkel, Mae Fleming, Bernard S. Goran, Rosalind K. Graham, Elizabeth D.

Smith, Herbert H. CAMBRIDGE Barry, Edward F. Couture, Anna G. Layne, Theodore D. CHELEA Skaling, Norma CHELSEA Delaney, Ellen K.

Malachowski, Stephen F. DEDHAM Blanchette, Robert E. King, Arthur J. DORCHESTER Boutchia, Sabra Ann Hart, Beatrice M. Horgan, Mary E.

Manoli, Peter J.M. Mead, William C. Redd, Paul K. EAST BOSTON Amicangelo, Margaret Cacicio, Liborio GLOUCESTER Taliadoros, Michael HINGHAM Lorenz, Elizabeth C. HULL Oteri, Ray Douglas HYDE PARK Grasso, Michael Maalouf, Saeed S.

Merlo, Mary Catherine Nielsen, Carl P. LEXINGTON Terrio, Arsene C. Whalen, Janice LYNN Malone, Louise G. Torton, Susan MALDEN Patt, Gertrude MATTAPAN Mitchell, Richard P. Thomas, Erma MEDFORD Haley, Alfred F.

LoPilato, Mary McCarthy, Rose M. MELROSE Lucci, Teresa McLernon, Harry A. Powell, Hope MILTON Kelley, K. Doris Lowney, Louise NATICK Jolley, Beatrice A. Miller, Otto A.

NEEDHAM Riley, Richard W. NEWTON Bernbaum, Jean Fitz, Arthur S. Tabaldi, Albertina NORTH READING O'Toole, Leo F. QUINCY Drew, Margaret D. Graham, Dorothy RANDOLPH Driscoll, Josephine READING Turner, Ella Mae REVERE Divino, Atty.

Lawrence Sr. ROCKLAND Cawley, Harold L. ROSLINDALE Dowd, Nora ROXBURY Hill, Willie S. O'Hara, Margaret J. SALEM Hayes, Warren J.

SALISBURY Giannusa, Emmanuel F. SAUGUS Haddad, Philip S. Rubbicco, Frank A. Jr. SOMERVILLE Chase, Elza B.

James J. Marciello, Louise D. Mary E. Sweeney, Robert F. Thebearge, Natalie Welch, Gertrude E.

SOUTH BOSTON Barnes, Margaret L. Poleo, Anne Martin, 1 Robert W. Sr. STOUGHTON Govoni, Louis V. Tobin, James W.

Sr. SWAMPSCOTT Simons, Bertha WAKEFIELD Scanion, Mary A. WALPOLE Whelan, Michael J. WALTHAM Little, Anna C. WATERTOWN Barca, Caroline F.

Walsh, Clara L. Wilson, James T. WEST ROXBURY Hobart, Estelle L. Hughes, Zella Keating, Dennis F. Norton, William E.

WILMINGTON Shelley, Edward J. WINTHROP DeMarchi, William E. Fleming, Mary Fullerton, Douglas Sr. Ross, Josephine M. WOBURN Balestrieri, Mary C.

OUT OF STATE Staal, F. FLORIDA. INDIANA Garrity, Sr. Regina Cecilia NEW HAMPSHIRE MacKenzie, John E. NEW MEXICO Scott, Annie Craig NEW YORK Holohan, Rev.

Joseph DEATHS Mrs. Michael (Joanne) Reagan of Whitingsville, Marie C. and Rita M. both of Watertown. Also survived by 6 grandchildren, daughter of Edward and Georgie (Carr) Graham of Maine, sister of Haskell and Calvin Graham both of New York and Mrs.

Sherman (Ada) Page of Maine. Funeral from the A. MacDonald Funeral Home, 6 Riverside Street, WATERTOWN SQUARE, Wednesday at 10 a.m. Funeral Mass in the Church of St. Patrick at 11 o'clock.

Relatives and friends kindly invited. Visiting hours Monday 7- 9 and Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Interment Ridgelawn Cemetery. AMICANGELO -Of East Boston, March 20, Margaret (Gallant), beloved wife of the late Julio, loving mother of Paul of N.Y., Mary Coughlin of East Boston and the late Sister Julie Marie, O.P., Dominican Order. Dear sister of Albert of Norfolk, MA, Rita Richardson of Bedford, Martha Gowett of N.H., Frank of Quincy, Joseph of PA, Arthur of CA, and the late Lawrence.

Also survived by 5 grandchildren. Funeral from the DiPietro Vazza Funeral Home, 11 Henry, EAST (Opposite BOSTON, MaverWednesday morning at 8. Funeral Mass in the Star of the Sea Church at 9 o'clock. Relatives and friends invited. Visiting hours Monday evening 7-9, Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Interment 'St. Michael's Cemetery, Boston. Parking with attendant at front entrance of funeral home. BALESTRIERI-Of Woburn, March 21, Mary C. (Lutrario), wife of the late Alexander Balestrieri, mother of Anna Balestrieri, Eva Flynn, Louis, Ernest and Albert Balestrieri all of Woburn, Eleanor Britt of No.

Chelmsford, Joseph and Richard Balestrieri both of Wilmington and George Balestrieri of Calif. and the late Salvatore Balestrieri, also survived by 28 grandchildren and 34 great-grandchildren. Funeral from the McLaughlin Funeral Home, 54 Pleasant WOBURN, Thursday at 9:15. Funeral Mass at St. Anthony's Church at 10.

Visiting hours Tuesday 7-9, Wednesday 2-4 and 7-9. Friends wishing memorial gifts may be made to the Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Boston. BARCA- Of Watertown, March 19, Caroline F. (Graham) beloved wife of Thomas mother of Mrs. Raiph T.

(Carol Jones of Watertown, Janice A. of Lawrence, DEATHS -In South Boston, March 20, Margaret L. (Varley), beloved wife of James beloved mother of Sarah St. Germain of Randolph, Robert E. of East Boston, Helen Barnes of East Boston, Mrs.

Beatrice Ann Passamonti of South Boston, Mrs. Margaret Maslauskas of East Boston, Mrs. Geraldine O'Connor of Norton and James H. Barnes of South Boston, also survived by 17 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. Funeral from the O'Brien Funeral Home, 146 Dorchester SOUTH BOSTON, Wednesday at 9.

Funeral Mass at St. Vincent's Church at 10 a.m. Relatives and friends are invited. Visiting hours Monday 7-9, Tuesday 2-4, 7-9 p.m. BARRY-Of North Cambridge, March 20, Edward beloved husband of Margaret A.

(Mahan) Barry, father of Thomas F. of Billerica and Richard W. Barry of Cambridge. Brother of Theresa Fuller of Arlington and Mary ther Funeral LaFortune of Scott of from and Fla. the Erin Grandfa- Gaffey- Barry.

a McAvoy Funeral Home, 223 Mass. Ave. ARLINGTON, on March 9 a.m. followed by a funeral Mass in St. John the Evangelist Church, North Cambrige at 10 o'clock.

Relatives and friends invited. Visiting hours Mon. 7-9 p.m. and Tues. 2-4 and 7-9 pm.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, Maiden. BERNBAUM-On Sunday, March 20, after a long illness, Jean (Seligman) of West Newton and Sarasota, FL. Beloved wife of Lawrence. Devoted mother of Steven L. Gilbert of Melvin, IL, Bruce G.

Gilbert of Natick. Step-mother of Marjorie A. Bernbaum and Andrew F. Bernbaum both of Newton. Sister of Alan Seligman of Chestnut Hill.

Funeral Services and Memorial Week private. Remembrances in her memory may be made to The American Parkinson Disease 116 John New York, NY. Arrangements by The Levine Chapel, BROOKLINE. BLANCHETTE-Of Dedham, formerly of Norwood, March 20, Robert beloved son of Stella (Riel) and the late Robert Blanchette, nephew of Marie Blanchette of Marlboro, Wilfred Riel of St. Petersburg, Fla.

Funeral from the George F. Doherty and Sons Wilson-Cannon Funeral Home, 456 High DEDHAM, Tuesday at 10:15. Funeral Mass in St. Mary's Church at 11 a.m. Relatives and friends kindly invited.

Visiting hours omitted. Interment private. Ann of Dorchester, March 21, 1983. Beloved mother of Ernest of South Weymouth, Thomas of South Milford Boston. Sabra Sister Perkins of Douglas Johnson of FL, Alexandria Dewis of Framingham Jean Westhaver of CA.

Grandmother of Patricia Michelle Boutchia. Funeral Services will be held at McDonald Funeral Home, SOUTH WEYMOUTH, at 809 Main Rte. 18 (opp. South Shore Hospital) Friday at 11 a.m. Visiting hours Wednesday 7-9, Thursday 2-4 7-9.

Interment Mt. Hope Cemetery, Weymouth. Family prefers donations in her memory to the Kidney Foundation of 344 Harvard Brookline. BRESNAHAN-Of Belmont, in March 20, Elizabeth C. Beloved sister of the late Mary J.

Bailey, Agnes Bernard and Henry Bresnahan. Survived by several nieces and nephews. Funeral from the Keefe Funeral Home, 2175 Mass NORTH CAMBRIDGE, on Thursday morning at 8. Funeral Mass in Our Lady of Mercy Church, Belmont at 9 a.m. Relatives and friends invited.

Visiting hours Wednesday 2-4, 7-9. CACICIO--In East Boston, formerly the West End, March 20, Liborio (LeoBobo) devoted of Margaret (Dewolfe) and the late Salvatore. Beloved husband of Mildred (Castiglione) and devoted father of John of East Boston, Robert of Stoneham and Janice Servideo Stoneham, dear brother of the late Lena of Springfield, also survived by 5 grandchildren. Funeral from the MaGrath Funeral Home, 325 Chelsea St. (at Day Square) on Wednesday at 8 am.

Funeral Mass in St. Lazarus Church at 9 am. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Visiting hours on 2-4 and 7-9. Interment Mt.

Hope Cemetery, Forest Hills. Late member of the ItalIan American War Veterans Post Veteran of WWII. CAWLEY-Harold L. of Rockland, March 21, age 49, husband of Patricia (Monahan), and father of Mrs. Patricia Kondrowski of Brockton and Mrs.

Joan Coulstring of Utah, brother of James M. Jr. of Danvers, Charles M. of Quincy, and Hurley E. of Wareham.

Funeral from the Magoun Funeral Home, 135 South Union ROCKLAND on Thursday at 8:15 a.m. Funeral Mass in Holy Family Church at 9 a.m. Calling hours Wednesday 2-4 and 7- 9 p.m. CHASE -In Somerville, March 20, 1983, Elza beloved husband of the late Marjorie (Kerien), father of Richard B. Chase, Evelyn Eugene and Patricia Pousland all of Somerville and the late Natalie Grimm of Cambridge.

Brother of Madeline Chase and Lydia Kinsman both of Vt. Also survived by 10 grandchildren, 13 great grandchildren. Services in the Anthony F. Cota Son Funeral Home, 197 Washington SOMERVILLE, on Thursday, March 24, at 10 a.m. Relatives and freinds may call at the Funeral Home, Wednesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Interment Swan Lake Cemetery, Dennisport. -In Boston, March 18, 1983, Suy King (Mak) Chin, beloved wife of Walter Wing Chung Chin. Mother of Faye, Susan, Gary, William, Joyce and Melissa Chin all of Roxbury. Funeral service will be held at J.S. Waterman Sons-Eastman Chapel, 495 Commonwealth Avenue at Kenmore BOSTON, on Wednesday, March 23 at 11:30 a.m.

Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to call at the funeral home, Tuesday 6-9 p.m. Parking attendant. Interment Hills Cemetery, Jamaica Plain. CORBIN -March 19, of Boston, Ernestine. Beloved daughter of Zelma (Boston) Thornton and the late Ernest Thornton.

Mother of Cassandra White, Michelle Champion and Lynn Corbin, sister of Maezell Butler, Maggie Tate and Willie Byrd all of Boston. Also survived by 1 grandson Jarmoul Corbin, 2 aunts Ella Burns and Sarah Sparks of Boston, she leaves many relatives and friends. Funeral Wednesday 8 p.m. at the Bullock Funeral Home, 1505 Blue Hill MATTAPAN. Visiting hours Wednesday 7- 8.

Member Eastern Star Queen Ester Chapter AF AM Affliated and American Legion William Carter Post Mattapan. COUTURE -In North Cambridge, March 20, Anna G. (Ricci), beloved wife of the late George, mother of Lillian Adams, George, David and Paul Couture, sister of Eva Liberatore, Emma Paterson, Joseph and Albert Ricci, and the late Lillian Stone, also survived by 8 grandchildren and 3 great grandchildren. Funeral from the Keefe Funeral Home, 2175 Mass. NORTH CAMBRIDGE on Wednesday morning at 9.

Funeral Mass in Our Lady of Pity Church at 10 a.m. Relatives and friends are invited. Visiting hours Tuesday only 2-4 and 7-9. CROCKET-In Allston, March 19, Mary C. (Carr), beloved mother of Douglas S.

and Joan sister of Mrs. Alice Dias of Cambridge, grandmother of Jane and Laura Crocket and Mary Beth (Crocket) Woodberry, special friend of Doris Frazer and Wesley Moffitt. Funeral from the Gerald W. Lehman Funeral Home, 569 Cambridge Wednesday morning at 9:10, followed by a Funeral Mass in St. Catherine of Genoa Church, Somerville at 10 o'clock.

Relatives and friends are invited. Interment Cemetery. Visiting hours Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9. DEATHS Josep Luis Paul-de-Vence, SACK THEATRES BARGAIN MATINEE TODAY 1ST SHOW ONLY AT STARRED FEATURES BEACON HILL' 1 BEACON AT TREMONT 723-8110 ALADI MY MISSING PG AARAO 4 05 3 15 5 30 7 45 10 00 WE of the NEVER NEVER 1 7 00 9 30 LOVESICK 1'0; 15 3 15 5 15 7 30 9:40 CAMB. ST.

NEAR GOV. CTR. 227-1330 TRENCHCOAT PG 1 00 2.45-4.30-6:15-8 00 10:00 ACADEME GANDHI PG 70 MM AWARD NOMINEE 1 00:4 30 8.00 00 DOLBY The YEAR of PG LIVING DANGEROUSLY 3.15-5 00 CHE2I DALTON OPP. SHERATON BOS. 536-2870 The KING of COMEDY PG 10:00 ACADEMY SOPHIE'S CHOICE AWARD NOMINEE 1 30-4 10:15 TABLE FOR FIVE PG CINEMA 57 1.

200 STUART NEAR PARK SQ. 482-1222 DOLBY THE ROAD WARRIOR 9:50 HIGH ROAD to CHINA PG TE 9:40 PI ALLEY 1-2 237 WASH. NEAR GOV. CTR. 227-6676 ONE DARK NIGHT PG 1:00 2:45 4.30-6:15-8:00-9:50 THEY CALL ME BRUCE? 10-3 PG PARIS 841 BOYLSTON OPP.

PRU. CTR. 267-8181 AWARD ACADEMY TOOTSIE NOMINEE. PG SLION 219 TREMONT ST. 542.4600 10 TO MIDNIGHT 9:45 1-6 RT.

93 AT ASSEMBLY SQ. 628-7000 ACADEMY NO PASSES TOOTSIE' PG AWARD NOMINEE HIGH ROAD to CHINA PG 11 40 -ONE DARK NIGHT PG MIDNIGHT PG THEY CALL ME ACADEMY GANDHI PG AWARD NOMINEE ACADEMY SOPHIE'S CHOICE AWARD NOMINEE The KING of COMEDY PG BROCKTON 1-4 RT. 27 ADJ. CUSHING HOSP. 10.

TO MIDNIGHT ONE DARK NIGHT PG THEY CALL ME BRUCE? 1.05:2:50-4:35-6:20-8:15-10:05 PG THE LAST AMERICAN VIRGIN DANVE2S RT. 128 EXIT 24 The YEAR of PG LIVING DANGEROUSLY The LORDS of DISCIPLINE HIGH ROAD to CHINA PG 1 05 -PG THEY CALL ME BRUCE? ONE DARK NIGHT PG P1 7.10-9 10 ACADEMY GANDHI NOMINEE 1:00:4:30 8:00 PG DANVE2S 1-2 LIBERTY TREE MALL FRANCES 7.15-9:50 48 HRS. 7 MATICK RT. 9 OPP. SHOPPERS WORLD ACADEMY NO PASSES TOOTSIE PG AWARD NOMINEE 05 25-7 40-9 55 TRENCHCOAT PG 20 3 20 05 20 7 20 9 20 The KING of COMEDY PG 10-3 15-5 20-7 35 9:55 ACADEMY SOPHIE'S CHOICE AWARD NOMINEE 15:4.15 7 15 10 05 The YEAR of PG LIVING DANGEROUSLY 1 00 3 20-5 30 7 50 10 00 PG THEY CALL ME BRUCE? 4 50 10 10 SALEM EAST MALL 10 TO MIDNIGHT 7:15 9 15 TRENCHCOAT PG 700 9:00 AGADENY THE VERDICT AWARD NOMINEE 7 30 9 40 LEXINGTON 1794 MASS.

AVE 862-3260 AWARD ACADEMY FRANCES NOMINEE 7 00 9 30 TRENCHCOAT PO 7. 15,9 00 HOMEWORK 1 00 9 00 DR. ALFRED C. REDFIELD Scientist in 1960 photo Dr. Redfield was involved in oceanography since 1930, and spent his summers at the Woods Hole Institution while teaching at Harvard during the academic year.

At Harvard, he was chairman of the biology department, 1934-38. In 1942, he was appointed associate director at Woods Hole and continued his work at Harvard, retiring from there in 1956 as professor emeritus. After retiring from Harvard and Woods Hole, he turned to the study of all aspects of salt marshes biology, geology, physical and marsh chemistry. He held honorary degrees from the University of Oslo, Lehigh University, Memorial University of Newfoundland and the University of Alaska. Dr.

Redfield was awarded the Agassiz Medal in 1956 from the National Academy of Sciences, and the prestigious Walker Prize in Natural History from the Museum of Science in Boston in 1973. On his 75th birthday, a special volume of deep-sea research was dedicated to him by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, of which he had been president. He also was president of the Bermuda Biological Station, 1962- 65. He leaves his wife of 61 years, Martha (Putnam) Redfield of Woods Hole; daughters Elizabeth R. Marsh, a member of the Woods Hole Corporation and professor at Stockton State College in New Jersey, and Martha Coche of Atlanta, and a son, Alfred C.

Redfield a professor at Brandeis University; 10 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. A memorial service with his family will be held June 25 at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The burial service will be private. Edward J. Shelley Printing firm compositor; at 71 Edward J.

Shelley, 71, of Wilmington, a compositor for 45 years at the Buck Printing Co. in Boston, died Saturday evening after suffering a heart attack in the Winchester Hospital. Born in New Aberdeen, N.S., he had lived in East Boston as a youth, and in Wilmington for the past 50 years. He was a member of the Boston Typographical Union, the St. Thomas Holy Name Society and the Wilmington Senior Citizens Club.

He leaves a son, Robert E. Shelley, safety officer for the Wilmington Police; two brothers, Walter of Tewksbury and John of Waltham; four sisters, Martina O'Hara of Falmouth, Helen Basinski of Medford, Sr. Regina Elizabeth of St. Patrick's Church, Watertown, and Elizabeth Rhodes of Waltham, and two grandchildren. A funeral Mass will be said in St.

Thomas Church tomorrow a at 10 a.m. Burial will be in Wildwood Cemetery, Wilmington. Anna Cunningham Was a social worker; at 90 Anna J. Cunningham, 90, of West Roxbury, a social worker from 1939 to 1962 in the Grove Hall section of Roxbury, died after suffering a heart attack in Faulkner Hospital, Jamaica Plain, Saturday. She was born in Boston, and was educated in Brighton public schools.

According to her son, Robert L. Cunningham of Wellesley, she entered social work with the City of Boston Welfare office after her husband, Frank died in 1936 and she was left with four sons to support. Besides Robert, she leaves three other sons, Frank J. Cunningham of Idaho; William J. Cunningham of Sterling Heights, and Thomas J.

Cunningham of West Roxbury; 22 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. A funeral Mass will be said at 10 a.m. today in St. John Chrysostom Church, West Roxbury. D'AGOSTINO -Formerly of Brighton, in Salem, March 19, Emily E.

(Rotondo), beloved wife of Louis, devoted mother of Louis sister of Mrs. Philomena La Machia, Mrs. Anna Muth, Mrs. Catherine Salvucci and Angelo Rotondo, grandmother of Laura and Emily D'Agostino. Funeral from the Gerald W.

Lehman Funeral Home, 569 Cambridge BRIGHTON. Wednesday morning at 8:10 followed by a Funeral Mass in St. Columbkille's Church at 9 o'clock. Relatives and friends are kindly invited. If desired, contributions to the Italian Home for Children, 1125 Centre Jamaica Plain, in memory of Mrs.

D'Agostino would be appreciated. Interment St. Michael's Cemetery. Late member Brighton Emblem Club Visiting hours Monday evening 7-9 and Tuesday 2-4, 7-9. DELANEY-In Chelsea, 20, Ellen K.

(Heffron) Delaney. Beloved wife of the late Michael Delaney. Mother of Irene Benoit, Madeline VonHandorf, James Delaney, Helen Sokoloski, Margaret Lynch and Dorothea Denning. Also survived by 26 grandchildren and 22 great grandchildren. Funeral from Frank A.

Welsh and Sons Funeral Home, 718 Broadway, CHELSEA, Wednesday, March 23 at 8 a.m. Funeral Mass in Our Lady of Grace Church at 9 a.m. Relatives and friends most kindly invited. Visiting hours Tuesday 2- 4 and 7-9. Prkg.

opposite Funeral Home. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, Maiden. DeMARCHI-Of Winthrop, in Florida, suddenly March 18, William E. DeMarchi beloved husband Sylvia K. (Scantlebury), devoted father of William E.

Jr. of Peabody, brother of Olivia Hurd of Reading. Grandfather of An. drea, Thomas and Michael DeMarchi. Also survived by several nieces and nephews.

Funeral from The Maurice W. Kirby Funeral 210 Winthrop WINTHROP, Thursday at 9. Funeral Mass in The Church of St. Lazarus, Orient Heights, East Boston at 10. Relatives and friends invited.

Late member Cottage Park Yacht Club, MIT Quarter Century Club and Marine Veteran WW Il. Interment Winthrop Cemetery. Visiting hours Tuesday 7-9 and Wednesday 2-4 and 7-9. DIVINO -Of Revere, March 19, Atty. Lawrence beloved husband of Amelia (Ciampoli), devoted father of Amelia Divino, Lawrence Divino Jr.

and Randolph Divino, all of Revere. Fuenral from the Paul Buonfiglio Funeral Home, 128 Revere REVERE, on Wednesday, March 23 at 8:45 a.m. Funeral Mass in St. Anthony's Church at 9:45 a.m. Relatives and friends are kindly invited.

Visiting hours Monday 7-9 p.m. and Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Late member D.A.V., late member Mass. Bar 1939 Graduate Northeastern University, Doctorate Degree in Law, late Veteran WW11. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, Malden.

-Of Roslindale, March 19, Nora, beloved daughter of the late William T. and Lottie sister of Mrs. Caroline B. Capone, Agatha Lauretta all of Roslindale, and the late Hazel K. Aunt of Mrs.

Dolores Cevollo. Also survived by 2 grandnieces and 3 grandnephews. Funeral service at the Folsom Funeral Home, 63 Belgrade ROSLINDALE, Wednesday March 23 at 10 o'clock. Relatives and friends invited. Visiting hours Tues.

2.4 and 7-9. DREW--In Quincy formerly of Jamaica Plain, Mar. 20 1983; Margaret D. (McFadyen) Drew, the beloved wife of Albert 'F. Drew, the devoted mother of Ora Gear of Braintree, Pauline O'Donovan of Norwood, Somerville, Jean Albert Mangone Drew of Somerville, Beverly Hooley of Quincy, Fred Drew of Medford and the late James Drew, Also survived by 15 grandchildren 4 great grandchildren.

Sister of Jean Abrams of Port Charlotte FL and James McFadyen of Wilmington. Funeral from the Sweeney Bros. Home for Funerals, 1 Independence QUINCY Thursday Mar. 24 at 9:15 am. Funeral Mass in St.

John's Church Quincy at 10 o'clock, relatives and friends are invited to attend, visiting hours Tuesday 7-9, Wednesday 2-4, 7-9 pm. Interment Mt. Benedict Cemetery, West Roxbury. DRISCOLL-Of Randolph, March 19, Josephine (Scarpa) Driscoll, wife of the late Wiliam J. Driscoll I1, loving mother of Mrs.

Barbara A. Amirto of Saugus, William J. Ill of Germany, and James R. of Kansas. Sister of George Scarpa and Louis Scarpa, both of Boston, Jack Molino of Alabama, and Mary Rivers of Randolph.

Also survived by 3 grandchildren. Reposing at the Cartwright Funeral Home, 419 North Main St. RANDOLPH, until 8 a.m. Wednesday, followed by a funeral Mass in St. Bernadette's Church, North Randolph, at 9 a.m.

Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend. Visiting hours Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9. Burial in Knollwood Memorial Park, Canton. FINKEL -Entered into rest March 18, suddenly, Mae (Borkum) in Deiray Beach, FL, of 87 Clinton Brookline, beloved wtie of Oscar Finkel, devoted mother of Diane Paulson of Newton, and Betsy Finkel Miller of Needham, loving sister of Israel A. Borkum of Needham, David N.

Borkum of Newton, Abraham Borkum of North Andover, and the late Max W. Borkum. Dear grandmother of Michael, Susan, and David Paulson, Michelle, Julene, and Michael Berenson. Services at The Stanetsky Memorial Chapels, 1668 Beacon BROOKLINE, Tuesday, March 22, at 11 a.m. A memorial period will be observed at her late residence thru Thurs.

March 24. Expressions of sympathy in her memory may be donated to the Heart Fund. FITZ-Arthur S. lI, age 61, of 250 Hammond Pond Parkway, Newton, husband of Dorothy (Gengenbach) Fitz, died Monday, Mar. 21 at Brigham Womens Hospital, Boston, son of Helen (Andrews) Fitz and the late Arthur E.

Fitz, a resident of Newton for the past 8 years, employed at the Stone Webster Engineering Corp. for the past 35 years, in addition to his mother of Bristol, Ct. and his wife of Newton, he is survived by a son, Arthur S. Fitz Hoover, Alabama, a daughter, Susan McCray of Staunton, a brother, Robert Fitz of Bristol, 2 sisters, Jane Minor of Bristol, Ct. and Estelee Eyster of Pittsburgh, and 2 grandsons, several nieces and nephews.

Funeral Service will be held Thursday, 11 a.m. at the Funk Funeral Home, 35 Bellevue Bristol, Ct. Burial in West Cemetery, Bristol, Ct. Friends and relatives may call at the funeral home Wednesday evening 7-9 p.m. flowers donations may be made to the Kidney Foundation of 344 Harvard Brookline, MA 02146.

FLEMING--In Brookline, March 21, 1983, Bernard S. Beloved husband of Elizabeth A. (Skalla) Fleming. Father of Marie E. Lailer of Whitman.

Brother of Mildred F. Fleming of Brookline and Rev. Thomas J. Fleming, Pastor of St. Bridget's Church, South Boston.

Grandfather of Dennis and Michael Lailer. Funeral from the George J. Lacy Funeral Home, 129 Harvard BROOKLINE, Thursday morning at 9:10, followed of by a the Funeral Mass in St. Mary at Assumption Church 10:00. Relatives and friends are kindly invited.

Visiting hours Tuesday evening 7-9, Wednesday 2-4 and 7-9. Interment Walnut Hills Cemetery. Retired Captain Brookline Police Dept. FLEMING--of Winthrop, formerly of Beachmont, Revere, March 20, Mary (Ryan), sister of Mrs. Alice Folsom D'Allesandro of Saugus, and the late Thomas J.

Ryan, Maj. Gen. Cornelius E. Ryan, Francis Ryan, Helen Kinsherf and Walter J. Ryan, also survived by Funeral 25 neices and nephews.

from the Murray Murray Funeral Home, 262 Beach Revere, Thursday at 8:15. Funeral Mass in Our Lady of Lourdes Church at 9 a.m. Relatives and friends invited. Visiting hours Wedneday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. In lieu of flowers contributions in her memory may be made to the American Cancer Society.

Internment Winthrop.

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