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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

in :3 i Oi 3 Blast at Russia for Reign First Units of Police Force Reports of Russian Planes Fly to Egypt to Begin Patrol of Suez Area Massing in By British Syria Denied Intelligence Of Terror in Hungary Boosts ll.fl. Prestige (mm ii- oni-i" i i Seized dCo evicts scape Rt li. Fat. Ott. Cowttsirt, 19D6, bv Globe Newspaper Co.

BOSTON DAILY GLOBE VOL. CTXX No. lo3 10 CLEAR Cold Tonisht Warmer Sunday (Full reports oil Page 2) ill Heads U.N. Observers in Suez B. C.

Man Begins Truce Job iw-, I 1 I I If lk -ft If'-' I I Kr A Aw sSi s- I 1 i- LI One Still Free Of 5 Who Fled In Two Breaks Two escaped Walpole State Prison inmates were recap- tured early today at gunpoint as they ran to a stolen car on a Manchester Summer estate closed for the season. Though they were armed with zip guns, desperadoes Lester Shand, 35, and John W. McCarthy, 34, offered no resistance to patrolmen John B. Connors and Fred E. Lear.

They had been at liberty since Wednesday, when with two other prisoners, James J. Moynihan, 35, and Frank M. Feeney, 41, they overpowered guards on a trip to Boston for appearance in Suffolk Court. Moynihan was recaptured in a couple of hours. Feeney is still at large.

In another capture of an escapee in an entirely different episode Brockton gunman John J. Martin, 41, who fled the. "escape-proof prison yesterday in a milk truck, was seized last night. He was picked up on Main Norfolk, and offered no resistance to Norfolk Officers Robert L. Campbell and Samuel Johnson.

Shand and McCarthy captured at 12:30 a.m.,' after the Manchester officers, as a matter of routine, checked a parked automobile off the highway that leads to the estate of Reginald Foster. As they drove next to the sedan two men suddenly jumped from some bushes and headed for the machines. Connors and Lear pulled out their guns and the pair surrendered. NAB CONVICTS Page Two III.MHHJPK.I.. JJ J.

JULJL 1 1 I IJ1IPJUWM WJIMI 1 1 1 1 1 Tff' 1 4 I A iv i Luna i fti -it MMJi if fi iOm mi i iinnaiiMiaM i First Snow Hits N.E.: Mercury In 20' Tonight Winter's near let's face it. The first snowstorm of the season left an accumulation of from one to two inches in sections in Northern Maine and Vermont last night. Last night the mercury dropped to 32 in Boston and 28 inland. Tonight it will go to 2820. youngster, he attended local schools and graduated from Everett High School.

An honor student at B.C., he was a member of the Fleet Marine Corps Reserve for two years, sergeant of the college company his last year and graduate of the Platoon Leaders' Class at Quantico, which he attended during his Summer vacations. Leary graduated with a BA In economics in 1938 shortly after receiving his commission. He was the first undergraduate commissioned officer in B.C. history. After finishing a basic course at Philadelphia, he was assigned in 1939 and 1940 to the U.S.5.

Nash ville. He completed flight training at Pensacola- the following year and remained there as an instructor until 1943, when he joined Marine Flight Squadron 213 in the Pacific. Since the war he has attended the Command and Staff School, Quantico: Air War College, Maxwell Field. and Supply Administra' tors Course, Camp Lejeune, N.C., in addition to completing the Arc tic survival course in Alaska. COL LEARY Page Three Navy Bomber Missing, Plane Reported Afire, HAMILTON, Bermuda, Nov.

10 (UP) A U.S. Navy patrol bomber with 10 men aboard is missing in the Atlantic Ocean north of Bermuda, the Navy announced today. In New York, the Coast Guard said a Liberian freighter had reported last night that a plane exploded and crashed in flames off the Maryland coast about 9 p.m., EST. The position of the report was about the same as the last report from the bomber. PLANE SEARCH Page Three TRUCE COMMANDER Col Byron Lea ry who heads UN truce mission in Palestine, is shown with his wife, Dorothy, and children, Kevin and Patricia.

The couple have PRISON ESCAPEES CAPTURED IN MANCHESTER John McCarthy (left) and Lester Shand, who escaped from prison van as they were being brought to court Wednesday, leave Manchester Police Headquarters guarded by Perley Vance officer of Walpole State Prison, and Walter Achuff, (right) principal officer at Walpole. SATURDAY, NOV. 10, 1956 PAGES FIVE CENTS IN TONIGHT'S GLOBE Comics 6 Radio-TV 2 Crane 6 Society 2 Crpss-Word 6jSports 5 Culbertsoh filStar Gazer ...10 Deaths 3. 7 Theatres 10 'Editorial 4ITwistagram 6 PETER LEARY, 6, youngest son of Col Byron Leary. four gold stars and Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with three bronze stars.

Moving to Everett while a have are the same as those found in persons of other ages, he said. But he warned that the virus which produces chronic grippe or respiratory infection must be guarded against. Dr. Paul Dudley White, noted heart specialist, declared that many elderly persons outgrow- physical difficulties or become adjusted to them and are in better health at 70 than they were at 60. DOCTORS MEET Page Three Brief Freedom "Worth Jt" By MILT FRELDEXHEIM UNITED NATIONS, N.

Nov. 10 (CDN)-Peace is breaking out cautiously on the Middle East and Hungary fronts. The U.N. General Assem bly has stepped up public opinion pressure on Soviet troops to leave Hungary. The Assembly passed three resolutions Friday.

In an amazing and hope. ful development. Huncarv and Poland actually were able to break away from the usually ironclad Soviet bloc on two votes. Meanwhile the first units of the new United Nations peace police are flying from Norway and Denmark to Egypt first step in the withdrawal of British, French and Israeli invaders. British sources always proud of their Middle East Intelligencedeny reports from the French and Arabs of a big buildup of Soviet jet planes in Syria and other Arab countries.

The U.N. police are flying to Naples, Italy, in United States transports and are to transfer to Swiss commercial planes for the final leg to Cairo. In Washington, President Eisenhower told a group of Democratic and Republican Congressmen that while no man can foretell the future in the affected areas there is evidence that the peak of the crisis has passed. He made the statement yesterday at a meeting called to give latest information to Congressional leaders. The 76-nation U.N.

General Assembly meets again today to set up procedure to keep both the' Middle East and Hungary crises on an emergency-call footing when the 11th annual regular assembly begins Mon day. PEACE HOPES Page Three Halted Relief Soviets nounced they would have to talk to their leaders in Budapest for instructions before allowing the relief trucks to enter. Later, they said all Red Cross convoys must go through Yugoslavia and be inspected before entering Hungary. Negotiations between convoy commander F. W.

Meyer and the Communists continued throughout the night and early today, but the Reds remained adamant. The Reds admitted again today that the food situation still is critical and said 100 Russian Army trucks have brought supplies into Budapest Communist broadcasts indicated some truckers taking part in a general strike in Budapest have returned to work, RED CROSS Page Three rents livestock to the movies and is one of the more interesting fringe businesses in movie-land. Like Lassie, Samantha has a double who did many scenes in the picture, and both geese actually are male. One was brought from a farm in Glen-dora. and the other in Bellflower, Calif, after a long talent search.

"The part called for a mean goose who was good-looking and that's not easy to find," explained Lionel Comport as he conducted a tour of his pens and cages in suburban San Fernando. Then the goose is supposed to like only Dorothy McGuire. so for the scenes in which she feeds the bird I had to find a gentle goose that looks exactly like the mean one." BEST ACTOR Page Three Recaptured Convict Tells Of 60 Hours on the Run another son, Peter. An energetic 40-year-old career Marine who began his training while a student at Boston College has been named to head United Nations truce observers in Palestine. Col Byron V.

Leary, formerly of Everett, began his duties today as acting chief of staff of the truce organization after being named by U.N. Sec. Gen. Dag Hammarskjold. He replaces Maj Gen E.

L. M. Burns, whom he has assisted since July 14. Burns will head the new U.N. "police force," which is going to Egypt.

A native of Fall River, Leary was a Marine pilot in the Pacific during World War II and holds many decorations, including the Legion of Merit with combat Distinguished Flying Cress, Air Medal with (Globe Staff Photo by Sam HammaU Red Cross Convoy Hungarian Barred By VIENNA, Nov. 10 (UP) Hungary Communists refused today to admit through the Austrian border Western medical aid into Hungary for bleeding Budapest. Communist guards blocked an international Red Cross convoy of 15 trucks carrying food, medical supplies, doctors and nurses. They halted the convoy at the border crossing point at Klingenbach on the road to Sopron. The Reds flatly refused permission for the Red Cross unit to cross the frontier and said all Red Cross relief supplies must be channeled through Communist Yugoslavia.

The convoy with a crew of 30, mostly Swiss and some Germans, left Vienna yesterday and reached the border last night. The Reds first an By GERARD F. WEIDMANN Were 60 furtive hours of freedom from the State Prison in Walpole worth it for two-convicts? "I guess it was at that," Lester Shand, 35, said in an interview in the cell block of the Manchester police station early today. "We were out for a little while, anyway." During their short-lived free Courage in the Forest Logger Saws Way Free After Tree Crushes Leg Medical Women Meet Rosy Future Seen For Those Over 65 Woman Dies, 2 Men Hurt in Rte.ffl Crash A 65-year-old woman was killed almost instantly and two men were critically hurt when their car struck a utility pole on Rte 128 in Milton near the Canton lirje shortly before noon today. The three, all from Fairfield, were taken to MiltonHos-pital.

They were identified as Mrs. Clara Ostherg, her husband, Henry, 71, and Axel Frederick-son, 73. The latter was a passenger in the rear seat of the 1948 sedan. So badly was the front of the car wrecked, it took Milton police 15 minutes to remove the Ostberg couple. The husband was reported to have been driving.

The crash site is in the M.D.C. Blue Hills Reservation, about a mile south of the junction with Rte 138. Six Save Selves As Car Plunges Into Natick Lake A Charlestown man and five of his companions had a narrow brush with death early today when their car went off Route 9 in Natick and plunged into Lake Cochituate. The six men managed to break free from the submerged vehicle and swim to shore. Although well soaked, none was injured.

Natick police identified the driver as George Griffin, 25, of 8 Kelly's Block, Charlestown. He and his friends took a taxi back to Boston. The group was headed for New York when the accident occurred. The car landed 15 feet out in eight feet of water. Scene of the crash is not far from where four teen-agers were killed in a highway accident last week.

'Gansett Results DA1LT DOUBLE titr Stnct Jcnr'i Gria aU flM.M. FIRST BACE S2300. maiden l-iur. olds, 6 furlongs. tU SlIMt.

115, LBH 12.00 SW 3 40 Hamilear. 118. Martt'i 60 4 20 Slep Jig Boy, 118. K'ne 2 SO Tim. 1:13.2.

Golden Chariot. Du D-lizht Brsnd Solid Jive, Suly Uj One. Sopiut'l Joy rn. Page Three dom Shand and John W. McCarthy, 34, rode the subway aimlessly, stole a couple of cars and slept in them, went to a movie and restaurants.

They were nabbed at 12:30 a.m. today in their stolen vehicle on the grounds of a North Shore estate. CONVICT TALKS Page Two spells of full consciousness he sawed through the tree. Once free, he crawled a quarter mile to his parked jeep; pulled himself inside and then drove 30 miles to the nearest hospital where doctors immediately operated. LOGGER Page Three BULLETINS UNITED NATIONS, N.

Nov. 10 (AP) The emergency session cf the U.N. General Assembly voted today to give the Middle East problem high priority in the regular Fall assembly opening here next Monday. The vote was 66-0. Greece and Guatemala abstained and eight countries were absent.

GETTYSBURG, Nov. 10 (AP) President Eisenhower today told the Swiss government the United States wants to continue handling current international crises ht the United Nations rather than join in a new Summit Conference of major powers at this time. CASTEL GANDOLFO. Italy, (Renters) Nov. 10 Pope Pius XII today received Lord Montgomery, deputy commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces in Europe, in private audience at his Summer palace here.

Page Three Temper Worse Than Magnani's Best Supporting Actress Can Outwiggle Marilyn Greater Boston medical authorities painted a bright future for people over 65 in talks before delegates of the American Medical Women's Assa now in their second day of meetings here at the Hotel Somerset Some 95 percent of those over -65 aren't in institutions and most have their own means of support, Dr. Robert Monroe, director of the Pearl Geriatrics Clinic and Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, declared. All have a "decent life expectancy" and the diseases they EAGLE LAKE, Nov. 10 A husky logger, pinned by a fallen tree in the remote northern -woods here, faced the choice of life or death. He chose life.

His story of raw courage was unfolded today in a small Catholic hospital in this township where he is recovering from a leg amputation, the result of the accident three weeks ago. The logger, Bernard R. Ro-berg of Litchfield, fought his way free with a chain saw, ignoring the pain of his terribly mangled right leg. During brief Cabby, Police Team Up, Nab Man in Stabbing A courageous cab-driver and a quick-thinking police dispatcher teamed up this morning to capture a 23-year-old Rox-bury man wanted for stabbing his mother-in-law and sister-in-law. The suspect, according to police, had visited at the home of his in-laws at 82 Walnut Roxbury, nnd in the course of STAB Sl'SPECT Page Three i i i HIVE THE GLOBE DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME You can have.

The Boston Globe Morning, Evening end Sunday delivered fo your home daily if you live in Metropolitan Boston. By ALINE MOSBY HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 10 (UP) My Oscar for the best supporting actress of the year goes to a beautiful blue-eyed star with a backside that outwig-gles Marilyn Monroe and a temper more fiery, than Anna Magnani's. This star is so temperamental she is living outdoors in a cage where she hisses and honks like an antique taxicab in London. Samantha, a big white goose with a yellow bill, almost stole one of the year's best pictures, "Friendly Persuasion," from under the well-trained noses of Gary Cooper and Dorothy Mc-Guire.

After the critics commented on Samantha's brilliant acting job (via Director William Wyler), 1 looked up -the famous bird. The goose actress lives at Comport Animal Rentals, that Regular Edition of the I EVENING 1 GLOBE 1 Vill be print fc- 1 MONDAY, NOV. 12 Veterans' Day Jfo QHoiiyZS Order it through your neighborhood neirsdealer or call tht Globe circulation department LAfayette 3-2000 and ice trill place the order for you, THE BOSTON GLOBE.

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