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The Berkshire Eagle from Pittsfield, Massachusetts • 3

Location:
Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MIT President Excise Bill Handed Subpoena Delay Costly CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Wiesrier, who served as an BOSTON (AP) Most com- Massachusetts Institute of advisor to the late President unities in the state are being Stocldiolders OK Sale of Herald BOSTON (AP) Stock- the sale' two weeks ago Clancy holders of the Herald- said' the demise of the Herald-: rpn.tAlMa rAM TJ J. fTI-a 1 Ji.t.- 4-. 1.1. 'l- I "I lechnology President Jerome John F.

Kennedy and was pre-B. Wiesner presented diplomas siding over his first com-to 1,350 seniors and graduate mencement, remained calm students Friday, and received a throughout the incident, ubpoena in return. rw omai0 ctndont Efnoo a forced to borrow money because the Registry of Motor Vehicles has not mailed auto excise tax bills, the Massachusetts Treasurer Collectors Asso- their board of directors to pro- 4o the corporation's loss of its itpm1 with tho 9 1a rtt nna nf iha Itnanca ArwiratA itaThtricfsui- city's three comnetins dailv Channel 5 in Boston. Ha added: iUgene A. KrOCh.

Of Needf rtomnnctratlnn nt smntFia. lrinH nisKiu ohironfl newspapers for a price of that the corporation had been: ham, after receiving his bach- when she gave Wiesner a hug Erbert A Holt of Maiden minion, unaoie io una anyone willing 10 Sale of the Boston Herald- undertake, tnree-newspaper corn-Traveler, a 124-year-old morn- petition in the Boston market. made the charge in a letter to to the audience he "was deliv- Crinff to Wipsnpr cnhnnona in i ing journal with -a 'string of It means the city will only be y-, 11 awards for its news coverage, serviced by the Hearst paper contract Awarded appear in court Friday after and the morning Boston Globe, noon in the trial of 30 MIT students who had occupied the ROTC offices at MIT several weeks ago. For Restoration of Faneuil Hall Area along with its evening after the Herald publishes for the last time. The Herald was founded in the registrar.

Tax officials in Maiden and Melrose estimated they must borrow up to $1 million a month at 2.5 per cent monthly interest. Charles C. director of data processing at the Registry of Vehicles, said a backlog-of input material for the computer caused the delay in mailing approximately 3.3 million tax bills that represent more than $135 Several other students, after BOSTON (AP) The Boston to The Hearst Corp. has not yet been "consummated, officials said. Negotiations to iron out the final details are continuing.

Closing date for the Herald Traveler and its daily, circulation of 200,000 is expected to be June 18, a company spokesman Price Increased feared tne Boston fcagie newspaper, for" which they was doomed to failure. It by the time it sunk Her- aid was born and began to pub- receiving tneir degrees, took off Redevelopment Authority their academic robes to expose Thursday awarded a $2.2 mil-signs accusing MIT of genocide lion contract for restoring ex-in its war-related research. teriors of buildings in the Fa-Some students also wore red neuil Hall area, arm bands over their gowns. The contract was awarded to audience of students, fac- Falzarano Construction Co. of ulty, family and friends of the Reading.

It provides for ex- lc.li,....:.., i stockholders ovuyiui vtuw a 1 1 uiv 41011 9 itjiii.ii BLmut UPI "we hope' to start mailing PATRIARCA TRIAL witness, the Rev. Raymond B. Moriarty, who reversed his testimony in the murder-conspiracy trial of reputed underworld chieftain Raymond L. S. Patriarca in Providence, R.I., is met outside the court by a state law official.

meeting Friday, many credits in its lifetime. eler Corp. president Harold E. Dispatches came' in the latter Clancy said the price of part of the 19th century from 'milljon to be paid by. Hearst, all corners of the globe, with publishers of the all-day Record the Herald beating its and Sunday Adverti- petition with news from Europe graduates reacted wth scat- work on buildings along bills in about two weeks," he tered boos and hisses, as well North and South Market said.

"About one month after as with some to the streets. Tht buildings date back that we hope to have mailed protest. to the 1800s. out two million bills." Case to Jury ser, had been raised from the by flying carrier pigeons from' previously announced $8.5 mil- ships before they reached lion because of an extension in shore. the sale date.

Originally the The ailing Boston Traveler, Herald Traveler's closing date was bought in 1909 and pub-- was to have been June 4. lished as a sister-afternoon pa- The makeup of the paper per until 1967 when the two Hearst will publish in the physi- were merged. Aggie Schools Called a Poor Crop Study Finds Universities Hurting Farmers and Consumers Priest Changes Vital Testimony mnre than ft dpfaHA ana has 1972 New York, Tim Newt Strvk director of the project and- the cal test to calibrate how hSrd could afford to buy and use on WASHINGTON The big agri- author of the report. shoppers should squeeze a limited acreage, it said, culture and technical universities Tne research group is a grapefruit to determine its firm- And it reserved a large por-of the United States have strayed Washington-based organization, ness and texture. tion of criticism for the fact PROVIDENCE (AP) The called back to the stand after mt heen.

fuuy determined, al- Along the way there were six Superior Court trial of Ray- the attorney general's office though Hearst officials have Pulitzer Prizes for editorial mond L. Patriarca went to learned he baptized a child in said ey planned to try to fill work and scores of more i i J. 1 au i -V. so far from their original re- ipancea oy me ifieia xne concept oiiana grant coi- that only 5 per cent of the insti- the void for the Herald-Trav- awards. Mm vx uie jury JCiaay aner a Key uc- iviarywuu on ute uay iues- searcnnnssionoiaimng consum- o.uuu man-years or re- Catho- In ers and rural communities that Foundation.

It is often mistaken public lands or the monetary search annually is devoted to "'JL: er suwenoers. en i Tu. I fenSe witness-a Roman tion. answer to a question, eler's subscribers. 7 (nr attnrfe clorfri lo TjoinVi -miiiralont- ff; unesi icvciacu icauiuuiijr me fucoi.

auiuinou hc mauc a lnciuaea in tne sale iare ail neicuu reiumncu ujiuyeuuve LF. he gave Wednesday. mistake about the time of, the assets of Herald-Traveler the news market. It was the Nader, the consumer advocate, portunity for an education of the the as plans to. improve quality intended to serve a study by a The Rev.

Raymond B. Mo- meeting. newspaper holdings, in- first American newspaper on put tney are unrelated even cnuuren. of istn-century tarm 0f rurai iife. public-interest research organiza tion has fntmd riartv returned to the witness The attorney general's office eluding a sales company, tne streets to report tne assas- tnougn weir aims and tech- and factory workers originat- in stand and withdrew his.

earlier learned through a telephone goodwill and the paper's name, sination of President John Ken- ed in the Morrill Act of 1862. public funds, federal, state As a result, the group said in niues are stox. a report, those institutions have Major Findings statement that he was with Pa- call after the priest's testimony Not included are Herald-Trav- nedy ibJ ana five years lat- UWIKU1U1L VUHO IH- .1 But the major" provisions for re in TUT er broke the story of the im search were made the Hatch J- 4u tnarca woviaence-on a.aay mat recoras of si. ignauus eier uauutues, mtiuumg sev ocan.iiwereifiduciiiuiciiaii.il pnitnral divisions nf the colleees tt-h fi 1 WlUCn ine cmei prosecution Wll- cnurLU, nm, siiuwcu cuiiitc yaj vnra tu tan caw Following are the major Act of 1887. to related experiment sta- pending marriage between Jacqueline Kennedy and Aristotle Onassis.

mated 1,000 employes. defendant was that Father Moriarty had bap ness said the Deen largely responsible for troubles in rural reas that have generated major problems in the 'cities, In announcing negotiation of discussing murder, -The land-grant mstitubons' "researches basic to the prob- rPcParph grnlm sorted- research has focused on proj- iems of sericulture in the Te? SLu J- tized a baby girl on the April 7 date. Atty. 'Gen. Richard Israel then sent detective Robert Stevenson and Vincent A.

Cianci The group, the Agribusiness Removed Alibf pruuaruy am agn- hroaaest aspects, and sucn in- -u the. iinivrsiti-M had fnrnspd busmessand the biggest produ- VeStigations as have for their roonroc mn PRESENTING Patriarca sat impassive, as and assistant attorney gen- on research that favored big, i0.1!. PurPse th development and than asubsid for ate the priest answered, I was LADIES' HIGHL EDGEWOOD LOUNGE SUNDAY NIGHTS ALL LADIES' COCKTAILS V2 Price If a A agricutture-oriented- not," wnen assea oy tne prose- tions and the biggest producers factunn8 methods for proces- and rural life and the maximum cution if he was at Patriarca's Cianci said they checked the while neglecting the more nu- xrs clsewhere the devel- contribution by agriculture to New Look at Priorities home or in his company at any records and spoke with Father merous small farmers farm Pment of blS and costly Pt- the welfare of the consumer." The report urged a new look time on April 7, 1968. Moriarty who admitted he had workers and others in rural ms and narvestinS machinery. That is where the land-grant at the priorities fthe land-grant The priest testified Wednes- been mistaken about the meet; communities and nearly ignor- A relationship exists system has failed, the research institutions, with a view toward day fie spent the late afternoon ing date, ing the interest of consumers.

between land-grant researchers group charges. "It has aban-. redirecting energies and re- and night of the day in question Irying Brodsky, a special as- and big companies, like the doned that historic mission," sources. It said more emphasis at the defendant's home and to the attorney general, Human Wast? chemagro f- which; was the report said, continuing: should be put on ways to help that Patriarca did not leave at asked the priest on the stand About a million displaced peo- cited; as obtaining a university "Li fact, consumer interests pe0pie stay in their rural homes any time. The state's main wit- Friday about the conflicting pie a year are pouring into the study of one of its chemical are considered secondarily, if at and to improve their circum- ness, John "Red" Kelley, had The priest said he cities as "the waste products of products for a contribution of all, and in many cases the com- stances.

testified Patriarca had met did not have the records avail- an 'agricultural revolution de- $500,000. The report said corpo- plex works directly against the It aiso urged legislation to with others on the evening of able to check, sighed within the land-grant (col- rate benefits fc land-grant per- consumer. Ruratpeople, includ- prohibit private business from April '7 to plan the murder of lege) complex," the report said, sonnei, sucn. as consultant ees ing ine vast majority oi iaim- earmarking contributions for Kudoiph Marteo, wno adding: raised serious questions of. con- farm workers, small towri projects thatwould primarily killed along with Anthony Melei "Today's urban crisis is a flict of interest i businessmen and residents, and serve their own interests and to in a grocery store in April 20, consequence of failure in rural '-The institutions abuse the the rural poor, are ignored or prohibit professors and universi-.

1968. The-land-erant coni- consumer by breeding crops pri- directly, abused by the land- tv officials from accepting fees Patriarca is charged with opaMBBBBBI hanaewcDcl SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA or outside jobs that might ere- being an accessory before the ate conflicts of interest. murders. Father Moriarty was plex cannot shoulder all the manly for easier harvest by tne grant enori. blame for that failure, but no big machines, with little regard Judgments Artistic Directors SEIJIOZAWA 0 Berkshire Festival CUNTHER SCHULLER Berkshire Music Center LEONARD BERNSTEIN Adviser WILLIAM STEINBERG Music Director i Lenox, Mass.

Meet the newest member of Miss Marjories single institution private or mium vr iuuu iuuc n. public has played a more cited the "hard" tomato, devel- crucial rqle." ped by the University of Floij- The report, titled "Hard To- da for mechanical picking, matoes, Hard Times," docu- schools' Origin in 1862 ments the findings of. a six-month study. It will be the basis -Many projects, called "re-nf iawoT.it niannoH hv th search of the absurd, are mere- The report, though it makes frequent disclaimers of suspicion about the motives of its subjects, often uses harsh terms and makes severe judgments. There has little effort to develop machinery that small THOMAS D.

fim, IK MANAGER BERKSHIRE FESTIVAL JUNE 30-AUGUST 20 1 SUNDAYS AT 2 JO fM SATURDAYS AT0 JO PM WKWND fRIDAWATSrtWfM talented JUNE 30 TmfhwMdftMinlChstia. Agribusiness Accountability ly frivolous, such as a meohani- farmers the vast majority JULV1 ITJ OPEN REHEARSAL lOrMam SEIIIOZAWA 2J0p STAN1SIAWSUOWACZEWSI3 (JApaW Haydn: The Seasons rr.c,$iMoCo concerto No.1lnCmai SEIII.OZAWA pm BACH PROGRAM Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 Sunt No. 2 CiialaNo.1lH Tjlwood Fwltv.1 (horn Wl JT HArM UTIAkl 1 CAROL FRAVAL HAIRDRESSER Formerly of Vanity Fair MISS MARJORIES 62 tm STREET 443-0582 Project "agamst public and educational officials involved. It will also 'be the subject of hearings called by Sen.

Adlai E. Stevenson III, who is chairman of the Senate Labor Committee's subcommittee on migratory labor. the study was made by a of 12 researchers headed by James Hightower, who is the ULYt Still OZAWA IJOpw "lldistratto" Concerto No.1 TIME? our gifts are at ULY QPEN REHEARSAL HMO am IUN6MADEKNA KMpai AXabrieiiMademti la BaragUa" Ei rlt Brown: "Available forms No. 1" lyes: ToneRoad1 and 1 Unanswered QueMioll Over the Pavements Motart: "lupiter" Symphony 1UIY7 CUu4 jnd LMtM KaMr pM MM Ot SHIIOZAWA -1pm MOZART PROGRAM Concertoforfiuteandrurp Don tatof Dwvw.AM ltllll Bassoon Concerto SJwmMWiH- HaffnerSerenada lostph Sthn1.ia JULY 14 THE RECOGNIZED LEADER JULY1 SHU OZAWA 2:30 pm BEETHOVEN PROGRAM-TrifHeConoMo IgaSBitaMalsaaiitaaav open daily 9:30 to 9 alUndal (hopping center JULY1S OPEN REHEARSAL 10 JO am WILLIAM STEINBERG tMpm BEETHOVEN PROGRAM Symphony No. 1 SymphonyNo.9 CAPMASTER CHO.

ft RANKAMERICARD WIlUAMSTEINIEItG pm BEETHOVEN PROGRAM Symphony No. 6 Symphony NaS' Symphony No.4 Choral Fantasy fM CSaw WnOhKpjMI i-tsr. Mart x.v, li SATIIRnAY ONLY A repeat of la.tW.ek ll JULY 21 WeflaVatflal Pffaaa4S 9 larlWIU BRUNO MADERNA 9ps JULY 22 I OPEN REHEARSAL 10:30 am LEONARD BERNSTEIN tJOpm BRAHMS PROGRAM Symphony No. 4 JULY 23' RARELANCERL 2d0pca "Cluck: Overtui so Tphrjenll hi AuBf Vejwaovilcy: Sonata a 7 Sonata a 10 Concerto Alkiadalamcka Dvorak: Symphony No. 8 GabrieliMaderni: Motel 5travinslcy: Concerto tor ptauueiid Symphony Na 2 SELLOUT From our Sample-Scratch Dent Dept.

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JULY 29 OPEN REHEARSAL EUGENE ORMANDY Beethoven: Leonora Overture Na 3 Hrndemith: Mathis der Maler Strauss: tan HeJderueben Mahler: Symphony No. 97 25 Per Store. Limit One, EUGENE ORMANDY 4 pal Brahms: Tragic Overture Sibelius: Symphony No. 5 12 ONLY Bartolc: Concerto lorurcnesTra BATT. NOT INCLUDED AUGUST 4 AUGUST MICHAEL TTLSON THOMAS IMfm Hi vdn: Oboe Concerto fROMM SPECIAL CONCERT AUGUSTS OPEN REHEARSAL 10:30 am ALDOCECCATO Mendelssohn: Sympoan Na Prokotiev: PtstsoConcerU Na PfvaHaf Cirarlaai, Aj4aJBI CeplaaW, MifcaWa4 tnntl Iinl III rtj- aaahiariaynphonyNaS i Dvorak: -WorkrSymriMR MICHAEL TtLSON THOMAS tpta Copland: Poemsof Emdy Dscbnsoil rXaCXa Concern SlravtrakyRHeotSotrne AUGUST tl AUGUST 13 COtrNOAVS XdBpaa OnlinlPiiliai' AUGUST 12 -OPENREHEARSAL W-JBa Bradlees Plaza MerrniTf6aa" 9 A.M.

to 9 P.M. flira Strdy COUNDAVB 9 pas bVcIIMbI tatwIaV TaWaTaaWa NMafcaa) Wapien Wesendonck Sonji Prelude and Liebestod from "Tristan undboloV i Verdi: Four Sacred PSeoo AUGUST IB ifi im AUGUST 20 SEW OZAWA 2J0p Mahler: Symphony No. PilirflOKItilniMili AUGUST 19 OPEN REHEARSAL 10-30 am MICHAEL T1LSON THOMAS Mo2art: Paris Symphony jnortoorure 8ahmsPlaBoCbtsOvlrNo.2 8 DM.Siiiill.li4.StlW.tcMlaf SEIIIOZAWA 9aaa Lifeti: Melodien rorOtchestr Chopin: Piano Concerto Na 1 BartobMracuioaMandarta THURSDAYS ALLENDALE DAILY 1 0:00 to 9:00 Hair's off in minutes. with DcUIa9 the new organic hair remover. There' is now a new way to remove unsightly hair completely from legs, arms, thighs, face, wherever and keep it off longer.

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Collega shxJsnts and members of armtd forces per cent discount Chanoe of Address: To avoid hv lerruntkin of service, subscribers by mall shook! notify local Post omco and Tna Berkshire Eagia oivins oW ddrass as well as new. Secnvl class postage ca''d at Pltts-fiMd, Massachusetts, aim. yj FOR AU fTRTORMANCB -IOX SEAT Soa cootaia a chain) Secooaa 1, 4, Sections 2, 3 SccImjbi 67 SecSonaV LUZCmi BESOETTEIl. 48 North Street, Pittsfield K-Mart Shopping Plaza, Pittsfield Sections 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, la 5.00 4J0 Sections T7, IB, 19, 20 (rear) 3-5 cnedts payable BOSTON SYMPHONY OSC1VT5TRA, LNC Enclose check and serf-addressed stamped envelope to: FE5TIVAL TtCXHT OFFICE. TANGUWOOO, LENOX.

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About The Berkshire Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
951,917
Years Available:
1892-2009