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

Daily News from New York, New York • 161

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
161
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1964 tit 5 Hawaiian Ayes for Lynda Bird (Associated Press Wirefoto) Lynda Bird Johnson receives warm greeting and Hawaiian feathered gourds on arrival at Lijue on island of Kauai, President's daughter is vacationing in Hawaii. Rail Strike Imperils Wheat Kansas City, June 15 (AP)-A sudden strike over work rules and contract benefits hit six. midcontinent railroads today. Trade spokesmen Youth Board Details Program to Curb JD A massive citywide program to curb juvenile delinquency this summer was announced yesterday by the City Youth Board. A 98-page report detailed the program, drawn up by 220 public and voluntary social service agencies, All youth services will be broadened in scope, "particularly in high-hazard Declaring that "the recent outbreak of violence among some teen-agers points up the necessity of a concerted effort by all Arthur J.

Rogers "Meet the challenge head on" of us to meet the challenge head on," Youth Board Executive Director Arthur J. Rogers said these were key points of the plan, which will affect more than 500,000 youngsters: Extension of supervision activities by the Police Youth Investigation Bureau to places of amusement; increasing the number of uniformed cops at beaches: expansion of the Police Athletic Crowd Applauds As Queens Jury Dooms Moseley By THOMAS PUGH and THEO WILSON More than 100 spectators in Queens Supreme Court, Kew Gardens, yesterday cheered and applauded the 11- 2 League's staff to serve more than 55,000 children. operations by the Youth Board staff, every day of the week. Resident and day care and special counseling by Welfare Department experts for those who have dropped out of school or otherwise completed their schooling. Free camps operated by the Board of Education for an estimated 265,000 youths under 21.

Increased Health Department services through clinics and day camps. man, one-woman jury that for confessed murderer-rapist-thief 45 minutes of deliberation. Justice J. Irwin Shapiro gaveled the courtroom to order and threatened to start contempt of court action if there were further demonstrations while the 29-yearold defendant stood before him, as expressionless as when he told the jury last week how he killed a teen-age girl and two women. The former business machine operator was found guilty last week of the murder of Kitty Genovese, 28, last March 13.

He stabbed her 15 times while she screamed for help. Four Negroes on Jury To determine whether Moseley should be given life imprisonment Or death, the jurors--including four Negroes, one a womanheard the testimony of four women called by the state. They described sex perversions, threats of death and thefts they had suffered at the handsof Moseley be-. tween last January 31 and March 1 in Queens. A fifth woman identified photos of Annie Mae Johnson, 24, who was killed, robbed, and raped after death by Moseley last Feb.

29, according to his own testi-15, mony. This witness, a neighbor of the victim, also described how the dead woman and her home were found in flames. Moseley confessed last week that he set fire to her corpse and the living room. Defense counsel Sidney G. Sparrow called no witnesses after the judge barred testimony from psychiatrist, who last week told the jurors he believed Moseley was legally insane.

tice Shapiro said the jurors had already found the defendant sane when they returned the guilty verdict. Normal a Year Ago 1 The defense lawyer told the jurors that until a year ago Moseley was "a moderately normal person, but you can see here a nonremorseful, uncompassionate individual. Did he have the free will to enable him not to do what he did Assistant District Attorney Frank Cacciatore, referring to the fact that Mosely would be eligible for parole in about 27 years if given the life sentence, told the jury: "This monster can walk the streets in Queens County again. If ever there was reason for the voted death in the electric chair Winston Moseley after Winston Moseley Confessed 3 killings threat to the nation's grain harvest. The Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, representing, brakemen, yardmasters and switchmen, stationed pickets at many installations of the Missouri Pacific, Texas Pacific, Missouri-KansasTexas (Katy), parts of the Southern Pacific, Texas Mexican and the Houston (Tex.) Port Terminal railroads.

Courts Act on Two The Katy and Southern Pacific were the first to get court action. State District Judge Clarence Guittard of Dallas issued a temporary injunction barring the union from work stoppages and picketing on the Katy's lines in Texas. In Houston, Federal Judge Joe Ingraham temporarily the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen from striking Southern Pacific freight lines between Houston and Corpus Christi. Ingraham set an injunction hearing for 10 A.M. next Mon- day.

J.S. Chartrand, secretary of the Kansas City Board of Trade, said the strike "is just going to be disastrous on this (wheat) harvest." said it posed a potentially imposition of the death penalty, this is the one. His case outrages every decent person." Mosely also confessed to the stab-murder of Barbara Kralik, as she slept in her Springfield Gardens home. Scheduled for first degree murder trial in that case is Alvin Mitchell, 19, whose lawyers won a postponement yesterday. Refuses to Defer Sentencing Justice Shapiro set Moseley's sentencing for June 22.

refusing a defense request for a later date. He said: "The sooner we get him out of Queens County into the death cell, the better." The judge, who thanked the jurors for rendering signal service for justice," told them: "Although I do not believe in capital punishment, when I see a monster like this I wouldn't hesitate to pull the switch on him myself." During the testimony from the Queens women who identified Moseley as the man who had attacked them, there were gasps of horror from spectators. In the audience was Moseley's father, a television repairman who sobbed and nearly collapsed after the verdict; his first wife and his mother. The defendant's current wife was in court during yesterday's testimony, but not when the verdict was returned. 13 re- Bagged at L.

I. Mansion By WILLIAM MURTHA Take the 25-acre, $400,000 estate of theatre magnate Arthur M. Loew on Red Spring Road in Glen Cove, on Long Island's North Shore Gold Coast. Throw in a 40-room crumbling mansion on the grounds which Loew and his wife abandoned several years ago because of a servant shortage. At that time the Loews moved into a new sixroom stucco cottage on the estate.

Now bring in nine boys and four girls with refreshments. What does it add up to? It adds up to a party in the old house to be lighted by the soft glow of candles. But Loewl sand his wife spotted the flicker-, ing tapers and called cops. The law bagged the celebrators before the party could get under way and arraigned the 13 in Glen Cove City Court yesterday. The 13 tried to flee when they were surprised by Loew about 11 P.M.

Sunday, but two of the youths ran right into his arms. Glen Cove and Nassau County police, summoned by Loew's wife, Jacqueline, rounded up the others. 13 From Same Place The 13, all from New Hyde Park, L.I., were: Patrick Alfieri, 18, of Oak Drive: Kathleen Allan, 18, 4f 25, Herkimer Charles 18, of 1646 Highland Edward Boyle, 17, of 512 Lowell Karen Brown, 18, of 550 N. Seventh and Peter Benes, 20, of 551 N. Seventh St.

Bail Holds 12 Also Ronald Grieco, 19, of 12 Whitehall Lane; Kenneth Laucella, 18, of 18 Hither Lane; John Molloy, 19, of 502 N. Seventh Katherine Smith, 17, of 175 Ninth Frank Stamn 19, of 948 N. Fifth and Steven Vlahakis, 19, of 102 Laurel Drive. Also arrested was a 15-yearold girl, who was treated, as a juvenile offender. She and most of the others identified themselves as students.

In court, all but the 15-yearold girl were held in $500 bail each for a hearing June 23. The charge was unlawful entry. Police said the 13 did no damage to the unfurnished stucco mansion beyond breaking one window. About a year ago, another group of high-spirited kids from New Hyde Park and Mineola-tried to whoop it up in the old house, but were also bagged and fined. Loew and his wife, whose cottage has an adjoining pool and tennis courts, were not available, for.

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 Daily News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
18,846,294
Years Available:
1919-2024