When White appeared, he conferred with police and crossed the picket line to enter his house, amid loud boos from the demonstrators.
The protest stemmed from the eviction Friday of 16 people from four homes and a luncheonette on North Harvard Street in Brighton, near the Harvard Business School.
The controversy, now ten years old, concerns an attempt by the Boston Redevelopment. Association to build lowto-moderate income housing on the site. The BRA claims that $5 million in Federal funds will be lost if construction does not start by November 1.
Music to Generals' Ears
ATHENS, Greece-The composer of the music for the motion picture "Zorba the Greek" has been imprisoned, according to reports in Athens. Miki Theodorakis, a leftist opposed to the Greek generals, was taken from the mountain village where he had been living in exile with his family, the reports said.
It was a speculated that he might have been transferred for reasons of health, but information on the medical services available at the prison was not immediately available.
Agnew's Anarchists
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana-The Vietnam Moratorium was an "emotional purgative" and a "reflection of confusion" pressed by professional anarchists, Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew said yesterday.
Speaking at a testimonial dinner here, Agnew said that American views on the war are being greatly distorted. He gave a list of signs which he said indicated progress in the war.
Agnew described the participants in the Moratorium as "thousands of well-motivated young people, conditioned since childhood to respond to great emotional appeals."
He warned that "most did not consider that the leaders of the Moratorium had billed it as a massive public outpouring of sentiment against the foreign policy of the President of the United States."