BB 12/07/06 Loyalist Found Guilty Of Murder IN 12/07/06 Michael McIlveen’s Family Still Taunted BB 12/07/06 Threatened Diplomat Back At Work NW 12/07/06 Suspect Device Traps Children NW 12/07/06 Condemn Explosives In Newtown & Strabane IN 12/07/06 Family Ask Adams To ‘Stick To His Word’ IN 12/07/06 Loyalist Vandals Scupper City Parking Crackdown Click Pic for larger image IN 12/07/06 Stone’s Painting On eBay With Tag Of £10,000 IN 12/07/06 Opin: DUP Stormont Is A Dead Duck IN 12/07/06 Opin: Political Policing Has To Go BB 12/07/06 Profile: General Sir Mike Jackson BN 12/07/06 Council Farewell To 'Mentor' Mervyn IT 12/07/06 Beckett Letters Go Up For Auction BG 12/07/06 Jane McDonough, 60, Social Worker – RIP
A leading member of the Loyalist Volunteer Force has been found guilty of the murder of Portadown grandmother Elizabeth O'Neill.
William James Fulton, 38, from Queen's Walk in Portadown faced a total of 62 terrorist-related offences.
Elizabeth O'Neill died in an explosion at her home in the mainly loyalist Corcrain estate in Portadown.
She picked up a bomb which had been thrown at her house while she had been watching television in 1999.
Her murder is just one of a catalogue of 48 offences Fulton was convicted of at Belfast Crown Court - including seven attempted murders, directing terrorism and membership of the LVF.
He was also found guilty of possession of the
gun which killed Catholic taxi driver Michael McGoldrick at the height of the Drumcree dispute in 1996.
The trial of Jim Fulton, and his co-accused 56-year-old Muriel Gibson with an address at Clos Trevithick in Cornwall, is the longest-running trial in Northern Ireland's legal history.
It took six months for the judge to consider nine months of evidence.
Gibson was found not guilty of the murder of Catholic council worker Adrian Lamph in 1998, but guilty of impeding the apprehension of those who did kill him.
Fulton has been sentenced to life imprisonment. A judge is now deciding how long he will have to serve.
The mother of murdered Ballymena schoolboy Michael McIlveen says seven months after his death her family are still subjected to sectarian taunts in the deeply divided town.
Gina McIlveen was speaking during the week her son should have been celebrating his 16th birthday.
Instead family and friends held a vigil at a basketball court close to the family’s Dunvale home where Michael played.
His heartbroken mother says it pained her to see how dilapidated the area where her son once played is and called for more to be done to help young people in the area.
“I would have hoped that Michael’s murder would make people and politicians look at this area of Ballymena and try and do something to make it
better for young people,” she said.
“Instead I stood there on Michael’s birthday with all of his wee friends and thought how sad it was that this was all they had.
“Michael loved that basketball court, when he came home from school he would have just dumped his schoolbag in the hall and headed straight down there.
“For his birthday this year instead of a party, trainers or jewellery, the things a 16-year-old would want, all I could give my son was flowers on a grave.”
And the mother-of-four says that despite Michael’s killing shining a spotlight on sectarianism in the Co Antrim town nothing has changed.
The 15-year-old died in hospital a day after being attacked close to the centre of town in the early hours of Sunday May 7.
“My children still get sectarian abuse shouted at them whenever they go into town,” Mrs McIlveen said.
“It was hard to hear all the things that were posted on
the internet about Michael after his death and those taunts are still happening.
“It hurts, it’s the hardest thing I’ve ever had to face and I can tell you it doesn’t get any easier, for me or for my three other children.
“His death destroyed his family but it didn’t have any effect on the bigots in Ballymena.
“The only thing that gives me hope is the amount of love his friends from both sides of the community had for him.
“I went to the graveyard on his birthday and there were flowers, cards and letters from his friends on the grave, most of them from girls mind you for he was always popular with the women.
“It gives you a bit of strength knowing that he was so well loved, not just by his family but by everyone who knew him.”
Seven months after his brutal death, his mother says she can still feel his presence.
“Sometimes you feel him all around you, just last week a butterfly came into
the house and I was taking to it as if it was Michael,” she said.
“It flew into his room and then landed on a picture of him, it was a wee red butterfly, a wee ginger one just like him.
“I can feel him with me all the time, it gives me strength when things get really hard.”
And the grieving mother says she dreads facing the family’s first Christmas since her son’s death.
“I can’t celebrate when my heart is broke, usually by now I would have the tree and lights up but I just don’t have any interest this year.
“Michael was a great son, he was my oldest boy and was just full of love and fun, having him taken from you in the way he was is not something you can ever get over.”
Traffic was stopped on the Gortin road yesterday as
the police sealed off the area for investigation. ktuh40.
By Ronan McSherry
DOZENS of Omagh children were unable to go home yesterday afternoon after police discovered a suspect device in the back of a stolen minibus close to their school.
The young ppils of Christ the King Primary School were unable to walk to their Strathroy homes, with the alternative route home involving a journey of three miles.
The drama began around 11.15am when the minibus was located in the car park of Molly Sweeney's pub on the Gortin Road. It had been stolen overnight from the back of St Patrick's Hall on Barrack Street, Strabane. Police cordoned off the Gortin Road as there was a box in the back of the vehicle.
Speaking from the school at 4pm during the security alert, acting principal Mrs McGuigan said, "The parents of the children who get out at 2.15pm are here, as well as the children who get out at 3pm. The parents of
the older children have not been able to get to the school and we are trying to organise transport to get all the kids home. Quite a few of the parents are foreign nationals and they are quite distressed by this situation. These are the parents who don't have cars to take the alternative longer route home."
She added, "It is an awful inconvenience and communication coming into us from the police has been very inconsistent. We will just have to see can we get a bus organised or hopefully the road will be cleared soon."
Fortunately the road was cleared shortly after 4pm and, much to the relief of their parents, the children were all able to go home.
THE discovery of two viable devices in Strabane and Newtownstewart on Monday have received complete condemnation from the police and local elected representatives.
The first device that has been confirmed by the police had the potential to kill or injure, was discovered at the Coach Inn bar in Cloughcor, four miles from Strabane at 8.45am. The area was closed off for a few
hours while an army disposal team came in to analyse the object and neutralise the situation before taking it away for examination.
Later that day a telephone warning was received by a newspaper in Belfast, claiming a device had been left at a house at Strahulter Road, Newtownstewart.
The area was closed off overnight and a blast bomb was found in a garden of the house. Police also said this device had the potential to kill and injure.
Chief Inspector Phil Marks condemned the "recklessness" of those behind the bomb attack.
He said, "Both these incidents were totally reckless and caused a great deal of inconvenience and upset in the area. Those behind these incidents have nothing to offer their own community.
"If anybody comes across anything suspicious in the days ahead, please do not touch it and contact the police immediately."
West Tyrone Sinn Fein MP Pat Doherty says that there
is absolutely no support for those responsible for leaving these explosive devices.
The local MP said, "There is no support in the community for those responsible for these futile actions.
"Devoid of either support, strategy or a vision for the future, the only thing that those responsible have achieved is to have caused widespread disruption to members of the local community attempting to go about their everyday business."
The Chairman of Strabane District Council, Thomas Kerrigan, has praised the good work of the police and security forces that has saved lives.
"I believe this is a really worrying concern for everybody in the district council area, and certainly I feel that only for the work by the PSNI and security forces, lives could have been lost," said Cllr Kerrigan.
"Terrorists must be very active in this particular area, and it is extremely fortunate that no-one was killed in either of
these incidents and condemn this action outright.
He concluded, "Security must be stepped up in the whole province as similar incidents are also occurring elsewhere. This has heightened tensions in the area again, showing that these terrorist thugs have not gone away. There is no excuse or justification for attempting to take peoples lives."
SDLP Cllr Eugene McMenamin MLA has expressed concern at the recent spate of devices.
"I would like to ask those responsible what are they trying to achieve? Are they trying to maim or kill an innocent man, woman or child who could pick these devices up?".
"After 35 years of conflict the people are calling on these misguided people to stop. Those responsible for carrying out these attacks need to realise that they will never achieve their goal by these cowardly actions. The only goal they are achieving is disruption to the general public who are sick sore and tired of
these incidents."
Mr Mc Menamin concluded "The current political vacuum certainly does not help and it is always when there is political uncertainty regarding the Assembly that these groups come to the fore. The onus is on Sinn Fein and DUP to move forward. I believe Sinn Fein are ready to sign up to policing, law & order and the DUP need to get their act together big time and come on board to an all inclusive government for the men women and our children who have been messed about for to long. I believe that when we have an Assembly running working for local people these groups will be long consigned to the dustbin where they rightly belong."
THE family of one of the IRA ‘Disappeared’ has met Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams and said they hope he “sticks to his word”.
Armagh father-of-five Charlie Armstrong vanished on his way to Mass in 1981 and his body has never been found.
Mr Adams has met the Crossmaglen man’s family and last night called on anyone with information on his murder to “bring it forward to me, to the family or to any other agency they have confidence in’’.
The Sinn Fein leader said his party was “continuing with our efforts to bring closure for those families whose loved ones were killed and their bodies secretly buried by the IRA in the 1970s’’.
Mr Armstrong was 57-years-old when he disappeared and despite searches near Cullaville, Co Monaghan, his body has never been found.
Although he was not included on
the IRA Disappeared list it is widely believed he was abducted and killed by the IRA after witnessing paramilitary activity.
Senior republicans have denied IRA involvement.
Speaking last night Mr Armstrong’s widow, Kathleen said: “I hope he [Adams] sticks to his word.’’
Ongoing Problem: Vandalised Coin-Operated Parking Meters On Sandy Row, South Belfast
THE crackdown on illegal parking does not apply to a loyalist area of Belfast where officials have admitted to being unable to enforce the law.
Motorists parking in Sandy Row,
close to the city’s busy Golden Mile, are supposed to pay at kerbside meters, with restrictions on how long cars can park in marked bays.
However, red coin meters forcibly removed with a mechanical cutting device have yet to be replaced.
They were vandalised in what Department of Regional Development (DRD) officials have admitted has been an “ongoing” problem in the area for almost a decade.
Parking offences in Northern Ireland have been decriminalised and from October 30 responsibility for enforcing parking laws was handed over to a private company.
However, the company, National Car Parks (NCP), has not been patrolling the predominantly loyalist area,
leaving motorists free to park without fear of receiving the £60 fines given elsewhere for illegal parking .
To date no parking tickets have been issued in Sandy Row and vandalised coin meters have still not been replaced.
Loyalists are being
blamed for the vandalism and the DRD is thought to be considering a number of options to better control parking in the area.
Coin-operated parking meters have been replaced a number of times in the Sandy Row area but have been vandalised on each occasion.
“Parking bays have been sus-pended for nearly a decade now because of ongoing vandalism of equipment,” a spokesman for the department said.
Stone’s Painting In Online Auction With Tag Of £10,000
By Catherine Morrison
A PAINTING by loyalist killer Michael Stone – now back behind bars – has been put up for sale on online auction site ebay with a
price tag of nearly £10,000.
The abstract oil painting of a ‘Kneeling Nude on a Red Background’ is being auctioned off by a seller based in Lisburn, Co Antrim.
The original work is signed by the Milltown murderer and is described on ebay as a “masterpiece” from “Michael Stone’s collection”.
It comes with a photograph of Stone standing beside the artwork and it is dated 2006.
The item carries a “buy it now” price of £9,995 – which means it can be yours for that sum without entering into a bidding war with others – and there have been four offers, although it is not known for how much.
Stone’s paintings are described as “vivid and not so much political as topical” as well as calling them “masterpieces of history”.
“This is part of Northern Ireland history for sale,” the vendor writes.
Stone began painting in the Maze prison, where inmates would “commission” various works for the cost of the
paint.
However, in the past five years, he has received critical acclaim for this work.
Stone is believed to have made thousands of pounds from his art and has featured in exhibitions in art galleries around the world.
The seller appears to be have timed his sale well, as Stone is again in the news headlines with his assault on Stormont last month.
After storming the first day of the transitional assembly at Parliament Buildings on November 24 and disrupting talks on power-sharing, he was arrested with an imitation pistol, a knife and viable pipe bomb-type devices.
Secretary of state Peter Hain has revoked his early release licence.
The only purpose the DUP seem to have in Stormont is to pass judgment on Sinn Fein.
Every time Stormont has become active it has been used as a platform to show contempt for other elected members.
Policing is by no means the only pivotal issue outstanding and certainly not
the most important. There's obviously a deep underlying mistrust and contempt by unionists for their opponents.
It's become crystal clear that St Andrews was a half baked piece of bread in hope rather than expectation – serious matters were not solved by both governments.
Whether the DUP like it or not, Sinn Fein have an electoral mandate which is acknowledged by both governments.
The DUP have formed the opinion that government with their old adversary will have a dangerously open agenda and things may get out of hand.
From what we know, there are controls such as reserved matters and majority decision-making, but the need for more safeguards is very necessary to reassure the DUP.
The unionist veto doesn't seem to be enough to provide the sure footing that the DUP so desperately want with Sinn Fein.
Both governments need to look at these issues again and deal with the great uncertainty brewing in
the minds of some. Should this be left untreated, the festering of ridicule will continue unabated by the DUP who are reluctant to engage with elected republican members and will use any excuse to withdraw.
The DUP may not be happy with the scenery in Stormont but they will have to accept what they see as democratically elected.
This means dealing with their rivals at all levels of government.
If Paisley & Co believe that the only reason why they were elected was to pass judgment on Sinn Fein, reciting negative events of the past with suspicions for the future, then the prospects for progress are grim indeed.
As an Irish republican born and bred in the occupied six counties of Ireland the ongoing debate over policing in the six counties causes me great concern.
Before I go on, I support Sinn Fein and their leadership of the struggle over the past 35 years and the peace process since the mid 1980s.
The peace process has brought gains to republicans once thought to be well out of our reach in the dark days of the war when our volunteers were risking life and liberty on a daily basis and it seemed the whole world was against us.
Sinn Fein devised a political strategy that has brought us from political wilderness and military stalemate to centre of all things political on this island.
In the six counties Sinn Fein have overtaken the irrelevant SDLP and in the 26 counties the party is in a strong position to become the kingmakers after
the next general election.
Over the past 10 years Sinn Fein have delivered on numerous issues and concerns of the nationalist people in the six counties.
The UDR and the RUC reserve have been disbanded.
These two organisations were the military wing of the Protestant state that oppressed nationalists for decades.
Sinn Fein have ensured that blatant political and religious discrimination in the six counties is a thing of the past.
British withdrawal and a united Ireland are on the agenda of every political party on this island for the first time ever.
Sinn Fein is not a post-nationalist party but very clearly a united Ireland party. Sinn Fein ended the 11-plus, authorised the multi-million pound extension to Altnagelvin, opposed water charges, campaigned for the RPA and much more.
It is with this in mind that I approach the policing debate.
I am sure Sinn Fein will deliver what they
say they will on this one too.
The party has demanded transfer of policing and justice powers from England to the assembly within an agreed timeframe and the make-up and workings of the department.
Mark Durkan argues that Sinn Fein should get on board now and help deal with the scourge of anti-social behaviour that blights our communities.
If Sinn Fein joined the PSNI tomorrow en masse the scourge of anti-social behaviour would not be eradicated.
Anti social behaviour is a societal problem that we all have a responsibility for dealing with.
It is not just a policing or political issue that will be dealt with overnight by Sinn Fein or any other body backing the police. Anti social behaviour and crime is as much a problem in Irish Street as it is in the Bogside and for that matter it’s probably a bigger problem in parts of London or Dublin than in west Belfast.
So the argument that Sinn Fein is
endorsing policing is a non-starter when it comes to anti-social behaviour and crime.
Sinn Fein demands go a lot further than the SDLP or others ever thought possible. After Weston Park they told republicans to get on board and change from within. Sinn Fein rightly argued that the structures in place at that time were inadequate to ensure that political policing was a thing of the past.
We only have to look round us to see that the PSNI and their agents were responsible for the collapse of the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2002 and the ‘service’ continually attempts to recruit nationalist and republicans who find themselves in trouble for minor motoring offences or the like.
Political policing is still part and parcel of the PSNI.
If Sinn Fein is successful in the negotiations – and manages to ensure that the balance of power rests in the assembly and not in Whitehall – republicans should come at this
issue with a very broad outlook.
Sinn Fein are trying to ensure there will be no more Diplock courts, no more supergrasses, no more plastic bullets and no more collusion or cover-ups.
All this will only be possible when the power and the accountability over policing is in the hands of Irish people and not faceless Brits in Whitehall.
Republicans can come at this from an ideological position of never recognising British rule in Ireland or we can come at it from the realisation that the Brits are here and how do we ensure that their influence is weakened as every day passes.
The current Sinn Fein position if successful weakens the British grip on Ireland.
It’s not about making friends or even reconciling enemies – it’s about holding this state to account while we struggle to tear it apart.
The former head of the Army, General Sir Mike Jackson, attacks the way the Ministry of Defence is run. What sort of man is Sir Mike?
Reportedly nicknamed Darth Vader and The Prince of Darkness by his men, General Sir Michael Jackson commanded an instant respect among his troops.
Renowned for his ferocious pursuit of perfection on military exercises and dubbed "Macho Jacko" by the tabloids, he was seen as a hard but fair commander.
Sir Mike, now 62, began his army career learning Russian in the Intelligence Corps at the height of the Cold War.
Alongside his hard man image he
was seen as intelligent and able and it has been said he could have succeeded equally well in a civilian - even political - career.
Born into a military family, he joined the Army at the age of 19 before graduating from Birmingham University in 1967.
He transferred to the Parachute Regiment in 1970 after completing his time with the Intelligence Corps.
Distinguished leadership
Sir Mike, whose military hero is the Duke of Wellington, rose to command the First Battalion of the Parachute Regiment between 1984 and 1986.
He also commanded 3 (UK) Division, spent two years at the Ministry of Defence and served in Berlin and Northern Ireland.
He was commander of the UN peacekeeping force in Bosnia between 1995 and 1996.
He went on to command Nato's ACE Rapid Reaction Corps from 1997 to 2000.
In 1999 he took charge of the Kosovo Force - known as K-For - in the successful operation to end the
ethnic cleansing of Albanians in the former Yugoslav republic.
During the Kosovo campaign he won the Distinguished Service Order for the leadership he showed.
During the mission his strong character famously resulted in a clash with his American commander General Wesley Clark.
When ordered to intercept Russian forces which entered Kosovo without the alliance's agreement he refused.
"I'm not going to start the Third World War for you," he is reported to have told General Clark.
As head of K-For Sir Mike not only won the respect of his soldiers but also that of aid workers and diplomats who met him.
"Generals are generals because you defer to them and he is a particularly strong proponent of the art," one British officer said at the time.
He stepped down as head of the ACE Rapid Reaction Corps in February 2000.
Bloody Sunday
After leaving his post he was promoted to full general
and made operational head of the British army.
He took up the role just a month before the Iraq war, replacing General Sir Michael Walker.
A month into the war in Iraq, he was called away from his duties to give evidence to the Bloody Sunday inquiry.
He was adjutant to the 1st Battalion of the Parachute Regiment in January 1972, when paratroopers killed 13 Catholic men on an illegal civil rights march in Londonderry.
Sir Mike married his wife Sarah in 1985. He has two sons and a daughter. His son, Mark, followed him into the military and has served as a paratrooper in the Gulf.
High profile
His Who's Who entry lists his interests as travel, music, skiing and tennis. He also penchant for whisky and cigars.
As head of the army - a role which he retired from in August - Sir Mike became one of the most widely known British generals since World War II.
He had to deal with claims of Iraqi
prisoner abuse at the hands of UK troops and growing discontent about the role of coalition troops in the Middle Eastern country.
He launched a probe into the abuse allegations, admitting they had damaged the army but insisting the situation would be worse if there had been a cover-up
His high media profile made him wince but it did not stop him speaking his mind when he thought it necessary.
His willingness to give his views, however controversial, has continued into his retirement.
THE man at the centre of some of Ballymena Council's most ferocious arguments and debates has decided to call it a day, or rather a night.
The Council's Chief Executive Mervyn Rankin was described as a 'fountain of knowledge', a 'calming influence' with 'endless patience' and likened to Solomon by Ballymena Councillors as they paid tribute to him on his last Monthly Meeting on Monday night.
For once, Mervyn was not needed to step in and referee a clash between the Councillors, as they joined together to share their memories and wish him well for his retirement.
The Mayor, Ald James Alexander led the tributes saying: "We have worked together for over 16 years and it has been an absolute pleasure. There is some people you meet in life who make an
impression and you are one of those people. You have tried to keep some of us on the narrow gauge railway." Cllr. Hubert Nicholl added similar sentiments: "Sometimes when we got into tight corners, we got good advice from you. We owe a great debt to you. I wish you well in your retirement."
Ulster Unionist Representative, James Currie said: "Mr Rankin had some kind of calming influence. He has kept this Council on the straight and narrow. It is a sad time. Ballymena has done well over the last number of years, and that is down to Mr Rankin and his Council officers. You can always come in and listen and enjoy it."
SDLP Councillor Declan O'Loan said: "I speak on my own behalf, on behalf of my colleague Alderman McAvoy who very much regrets that he cannot be here on this occasion, on behalf of the SDLP Branch in Ballymena.
"He has given unstintingly of his time and his energy. I think perhaps the first word that
comes to mind when thinking of Mervyn is integrity. He is a person of principle. All of us knew when dealing with him knew that he was not going to make decisions out of expediency or pressure."
Sinn Fein Councillor Monica Digney said Mr Rankin had been 'extremely fair'. DUP man Robin Stirling brought some humour to the tributes. He urged Mr Rankin to refrain from coming back to Council. "If you feel lonely for the job, think of the bad days - if you had any bad days. That's a mechanism that I used", he joked.
Deputy Mayor, Maurice Mills said the Town Clerk was a 'diplomat', 'smooth operator',' politically astute' with a 'retentive mind': "We as members take time to honour and pay tribute to a professional and a gentleman. Members will agree that Mervyn excels in both categories."
Cllr. Beth Adger said she saw Mervyn as a 'gentle giant'. Councillor Tommy Nicholl described Mervyn as a 'rare breed'. "God has
given you earthly wisdom. You are the nearest thing to Solomon I have met", said Tommy.
Independent Representative James Henry added: "Your advice and guidance was second to none." Councillors David Tweed, Paul Frew, Sam Hanna all added their praise.
Moved by the sentiments expressed, Mervyn responded: "I have really enjoyed my job. I really believe in Ballymena. Whatever I do in the future I will promote Ballymena.
The Town Clerk signed off with his customary dry wit: "If you see the letters in the paper from 'concerned ratepayer' it won't be me'.
A number of letters and postcards written by Samuel Beckett could fetch up to €300,000 at auction later today.
Sotheby's of London is selling the correspondence, which spans almost 40 years.
Originally sent to Beckett's friends, painters Henri and Josette Hayden, it features the Dubliner's famous spidery handwriting and is signed by Sam.
The lot has been described as the most important series of letters by the eccentric writer ever offered for sale.
Beckett writes frankly in fluent French about his health, family and work in progress. The envelopes and postcards are postmarked Paris, Dublin, London, Berlin, Stuttgart, Ussy-sur-Marne and elsewhere.
Beckett met the Haydens in 1943 while they took refuge from the Gestapo in the village of Roussillon d'Apt in Vichy France. Their lifelong friendship began with their common love
of painting.
The sale also features early editions of many of Beckett's books and plays, including Krapp's Last Tapeand More Pricks Than Kicks.
MELROSE -- Jane Elizabeth (Tiernan) McDonough, of Melrose, a former teacher and social worker, died Nov. 23 at her home after an illness. She was 60.
Mrs. McDonough was born and raised in Everett. She graduated from Matignon High School in Cambridge in 1964. She went on to study at Regis College in Weston,
graduating in 1968, and later earned her master's degree from the University of Massachusetts at Boston.
Mrs. McDonough worked as a schoolteacher at Immaculate Conception in Malden for nine years. She then turned to social work, and worked with the elderly at St. Stephen's Towers in Lynn.
She had lived in Melrose since 1975. Mrs. McDonough was a member of St. Mary Church in Melrose. She belonged to the North Shore Irish Association, and was a longtime writer for its newsletter.
In 1964, Mrs. McDonough won an Irish American Association writing contest with her essay, "What John F. Kennedy meant to me."
She was married to Michael J. McDonough for 33 years.
In addition to her husband, Mrs. McDonough leaves five sons, Martin of New York, Michael of Andover, John of Winchester, Patrick of Stoneham, and Matthew of Melrose ; a daughter, Anna Marie of Melrose ; two brothers, William Tiernan of California,
and Robert Tiernan of Stoneham ; two sisters, Catherine Galgon of Pennsylvania, and Ann Tiernan of North Carolina, and seven grandchildren.
A funeral Mass was said Nov. 29 in St. Mary Church, Melrose. Burial was at Wyoming Cemetery, Melrose.