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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

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

Water Colors in the Wind What New England Sailboats Are Wearing These Days IN FULL Page These Are Not Paintings, but They Could Be COLOR 33 A DIFFIDENT DAY THURSDAY Cloudy and cool. FRIDAY Fair. Full report on Page 2 MORNING EDITION Ilet. U. S.

Pat Off. VOL. CLXXVIII NO. 42 1980 By GLOBE NEWSPAPER CO. BOSTON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 19C0 Telephone AV 8-8000 40 PAGES EIGHT CENTS 9kt -CPs- Lets atanga Relents, mmand Friday FuI Civic Center Is Assured By House Unaltered Bill Passed, 155-44, As GOP Howls Swedis roops Pit ii Mi it- i 1 'fl 1 Hi vincial government of Katanga, agreed to the move in an exchange of cables with Hammarskjold.

Hammarskjold left New York for the Congo by special U.S. Air Force jejt plane at midnight. He advised Tshombe today that he would arrive at Elisabethville on Friday accompanied by Gen Kettani, of Morocco, deputy supreme commander of the U.N. Congo force; Gen Rikhy of India, military adviser to the secretary-general for the C-uigo operation; civilian advisers Door Ajar to Talk; Meeting Him at U. N.

(AP Wirer-hotol POWERS' FATHER VISITS NIXON Oliver Powers of Pound, father of Francis Powers, U-2 pilot who goes on trial in Moscow next Wednesday, talks with Vice President Nixon in the latter's office at Washington. Powers' Dad Tells Nixon U.S. Let U-2 Pilot Down LAURENCE F. WHITTEMORE Industrialist Whittemore, 66, DiesinN.H. PEMBROKE, N.H., Aug.

10 Laurence F. Whittemore, the man who started his career as a laborer and became one of the nation's leading industrialists, died in Concord Hospital today after a long illness. He was 66. The former president and board chairman of the Brown northern New England's biggest pulp and paper firm, started as a $10-a-week laborer in a Boston and Maine car repair shop. He went on to become president of the New Haven Railroad as well as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and the New England Council.

Whittemore served two terms in the New Hampshire Legislature. Intensely interested in education, he was chairman of trustees of the University of New Hampshire, a trustee of Boston University, and chairman of a committee for the selection of Rhodes Scholars from New England. The best known of his many charity efforts was his work for the Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center for crippled children at Greenfield. He raised more than 2 million for the center. WHITTEMORE Page Fijteen r-' bays Government Hasnt Done Enough For Son Facing Moscow Spy Trial Enter UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Aug.

10 U.N. Secretary General Dag Ham-marskjold announced tonight that he would enter the Congo's Katanga Province Friday accompanied by two Swedish companies from the U.N. force. He will be in personal command of the troops. A Swedish company consists of 150 men.

Thus Hammarskjold will have with him about 300 soldiers. Moise Tshombe, premier of the dissident pro Ike Leaves Won't Bar By MARGUERITE HIGGINS WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 President Eisenhower said today he would not disbar himself from going to United Nations meetings on disarmament attended by Premier Khrushchev, and left the door slightly ajar to talks in Washington with the Soviet leader. Eut Mr. Eisenhower declared he thought both possibilities so remote that he hadn't given either any serious thought.

By this evening, however, official Washington which has greeted Khrushchev's maneuverings with a mixture Some legislative observers view the bill as a sort of substitute for the recently proposed constitutional convention. GOVERNOR Page gix Of fit tttiffm in from the U.N. headquarters here, and the two companies of the Swedish battalion on duty in the Congo. The 'United Nations announced that Hammoisk-jold's plane would tp in Accra, Ghana, on the and reports persisted thet Hammarskjold would see Ghanaian President Kwame Nkrumah to attempt to bring that country solidly into line with the U.N. Congo effort.

CONGO TROOPS Page Twelve endured from Khrushchev the greatest personal vilification ever poured on a President of the United States by the head of a foreign government, was equally stoical about the prospects of having to come face-to-face with the man who has proclaimed to the world that "Mr. Eisenhower is not worth talking to." Asked whether in the event of another Khrushchev visit, there would be any advantage in inviting him to Washington for a meeting Mr; Eisenhower answered: "Now if I were to come to the conclusion that it was useful for me to see him, why, I would of course invite him to come down if he so chose. But I haven't even given it the kind of thought that would allow me to make a decision at this time." Page Southie Wins; MDCShelves Parking Lot By JAMES II. HAMMOND The Metropolitan District Commission has bowed to demands of South Boston residents and temporarily shelved plans for a 75-car parking lot at Marine Park, where a skating rink is under construction. The action, taken yesterday, does not completely rule out public parking facilities in the area where mothers and children tangled with construction crews earlier this week.

Work on the skating rink will continue, "pending a restudy of the whole parking situation" in the area bordered by East Broadway and Farragut the commission ruled yesterday. The rink is expected to be completed for skating this Winter. An M.D.C. spokesman predicted that additional parking spaces would have to be found ultimately "for at least the school buses which come to the area." M.D.C. Page Twenty-seven wan Co Power to Streamline State Asked for Governor son, Francis, to choose his own defense counsel.

At the same time, the pilot's wife postponed her scheduled flight to Moscow tonight because the Russians still have not granted visas to all members of her party. 1 The elder Powers, who plans to fly to Moscow tomorrow for his espionage trial, went to the Vice Presi- dent's office with Rep. Walter H. Judd They said later Nixon promiscl to-do all he could to obtain justice in the case. For one thing, they said, Nixon promised to forward the father's complaints to the ''proper authorities." They declined to say whether these would include President Eisenhower.

POWERS Page Thirteen Ted Passes Ott Ted Williams' walloped two home runs to pass Mel Ott at Cleveland last night, lifting his career total to 513, third highest in baseball history. The clouts accounted for three runs as the Red Sox beat the Indians, 6 to 1. (Complete details, Page 33). By WILLIAM J. LEWIS The lopsided Democratic majority in the House late last night pushed through an administration bill to authorize construction of a $100-million government center in Scollay sq.

The House adjourned just before 11 after sending the Civic Center bill to the Senate. Speaker John F. Thomson (D-Ludlow) utilized the parliamentary device of taking the House into three legislative days in order to put the measure through all its readings last night. A 10-hour debate, frequently interrupted by bitter partisan squabbles, failed to alter the bill. Republicans submitted a dozen amendments, but all were defeated.

Only a handful of Democrats supported a sprinkling of the G.O.P. amendments, anc an numer of Re- SSocSts.111" lot with Only two Democrats submitted amendments and these were overwhelmingly defeated. CIVIC CENTER Page Seven Senate Debates Prudential Bill Changes Today The Prudential Center bill, tailored to meet the constitutional requirements of the Supreme Court, was speedily reported into the Senate late yesterday and is expected to pass that branch today. Senate Pres. John E.

Powers (D-South Boston) predicted last night that the bill will be spruced up by four or five "clarifying" amendments before it is returned to the House early next week. He acknowledged that two amendments may be somewhat controversial, but said he would keep the Senate in session as long as necessary to clear the bill. PRUDENTIAL Page Six N.E. Life Plans $7.5 Million Addition Here By ROBERT B. HANROX Plans for a $7.5 million building program, doubling the size of its home office on Copley were announced last night by the New England Mutual Life Insurance Co.

O. Kelley Anderson, company president, said his firm will build up the front and wings of its Boylston st. office to the 10-story level of the central part of the structure. Barring unexpected delays, it is hoped that the new major additions will be completed 18 months after the start of construction. Anderson said the company applied for a building permit at City Hall yesterday.

He hopes construction can start some time ths year. N. E. LIFE Page Six mmmm lo.trj.fiun.4jR,(Jr.(N)(II.,IHfthm1 TravivFTw IfTtf I' 1 1 ill tit lav- 'iiM iTiMt -1 POLITICAL AnVFRTISEMEXT nfrHdft HH invitn His friends tt 1 1 ai 4 9 II fnniaM at tha Ma. I 1 I I ini it MoUr Nrt Builtiini Hti4 WASHINGTON, Aug.

10 (UPD Oliver Powers, father of the U-2 pilot, complained to Vice President Nixon today that the U.S. government had not done eno'ugh to help his son escape a Soviet prison term on spy charges. He also told Nixon that Russia broke a standing agreement with -the Uhited States when it refused to allow his Big Bag of Bills Bails Another Extort Suspect Philip Waggenheim, 44, of. Moraine st Jamaica Plain, the third alleged "pay-or-die" extortionist, was released from Charles St. Jail late yesterday after his wife, Marie, lugged in the cash bail $50.000 stuffed into a shopping bag.

Waggenheim and two others were indicted June 27. Mrs. Waggenheim was accompanied by Mario Cappozzi of Everett East Boston, and Atty. Lawrence O'Don-nell. She turned the money over to Bail Commissioner John H.

Sawyer. Before Waggenheim was released, three Secret Service men and two agents of Dist. Atty. Garret H. Byrne checked the serial numbers on every bill.

Leo Santaniello, 47, of Parkland Lynn, and Larry Zannino, 40, also of Moraine the other two defendants, were bailed recently. BAIL Page Twenty-seven SASU iSSJOAtSS MUhMm I Tin (AP Wirephoto) MAE MURRAY Ex-Film Queen Mae Murray Found Stricken LOS ANGELES, Aug. 10 (UPI) Former silent film, vamp Mae Murray was found unconscious today in her locked apartment, apparently after suffering a stroke, police reported. Police said the one-time star, who lives alone, appeared near death when they found her. But attendants at Central Receiving Hospital gave Miss emergency treatment and "Ported her condition was satisfactory; Officers had to remove the door of the Murray apartment from its hinges to gain entry.

A friend called police after finding the door to her apartment was locked. MAE MURRAY Page Twenty-seven GUIDE TO FEATURES Bridge 38; Mystery 32 Classified Obituaries 14, 15 Comics .38,39 Port 10 Cross-Word Radio-TV ...39 Deaths 14 Shain Dr. Crane ...38 Small Worlds 39 Editorials S0! Society 24 Financial Sports Harriman 9 Star Gazer ..39 Low man ....22 Theaters McGill 30 Women mvoomcm WONDERLAND REVERB 5 TQNIW, '''closes'11 Jlftll of amazement and incredulity was deep in very serious preparation of position papers as to how to react to latest diplomatic advices from Moscow indicating that the Soviet premier's determination to go visiting again in this hemisphere is very deep indeed. In a Pravda interview Monday, Khrushchev said it would be an honor to lead his country's disarmament delegation to the September meeting of the United Nations General Assembly. The Russian leader also dropped a diplomatic bombshell in Latin America by saying he might head his country's delegation to Mexican Independence Day celebrations Sept.

16, indicating he would go on from there to make his long promised trip to Cuba. At his press conference, Mr. Eisenhower dismissed as a propaganda maneuver Khrushchev's proclaimed desire to direct the Soviet delegation's disarmament presentation at the Sept. 20 meeting of the U.N. Assembly, but added: "I would by no means disbar myself from going up, if I thought it were necessary." Mr.

Eisenhower, who has oiivcy Ouincy Oil Tir Scrvlc 70 Ouincy Ave. PR 3-2500 CUR ADVT PAGE 35) SAI r.v Ted's for Tirea 47 Canal St. PL 4-0608 WOBIRN Hogan Tira Co. Ex 29. 12S WE 3-4000 i A bill giving future Massachusetts governors unprecedented power to reorganize any state department was filed in the Legislature yesterday by State Commissioner of Administration Charles F.

Ma-honey. Its author said adoption of the legislation would "greatly facilitate government modernization and reform in Massachusetts in the 1960s." Mahoney also said that the executive branch of the state government has been burdened by "greatly outmoded and ineffective" procedures, most of them dating back to the 18th Century. A reorganization would become effective within 60 days unless either the House or Senate adopted a resolution opposing such a plan. Effective date of the plan would be Jan. 6, 1961, after Gov.

Furcolo leaves office. It would be in effect for 10 years to Apr. 30, 1970, by which time, presumably, aUVdesired reorganizations of state agencies could be accomplished. The legislation is similar to the Hoover Commission reorganization plan, in effect in the Federal Government since 1939 and resulting through 1953 in 64 reorganization plans being submitted and 44 made effective. The bill is designed to implement, by new procedure, the sweeping plan for reorganization of the state's executive machinery filed last June by Mahoney.

"While I-am satisfied of the constitutionality of this proposal," Mahoney said, "I have urged the General Court to seek an opinion of the justices (Supreme Court) if, in its judgment, such may be re quired." Out of respect in the memory our beloved founder president SAMUEL KAPLAN Ths Fulton Fruit A Produea Co. The Webster Produce A Com. Co. 7 Hichmond Boston will be closed all day Thursday, Aug. 11 OUT OF RESPECT FOR OUR LATE ASSOCIATE LOUIS JACOBS OUR OFFICES WILL IE CLOSED THUISnY.

AUG. 11 49 unnu 4. An ciNSBURfi SomeroUs Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE BOSTON 6, Cleveland 1. Baltimore 4, Detroit" 2. New York 6, Chicago 0.

"Kansas City Washington 1. NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles 3. Milwaukee 2. St. Louis' 6, Philad'phia 5 (10), Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 1.

Cincinnati 5, San Fran. 3. RED OX TODAY At Cleveland (Delock vs. Harshman) 2 p.m. 2 Dinnert for tha Pries of One.

Our regular Fabulous Menu Offer Good Thru Sun. Must bring a copy of this advt. Lobatera, Steaks, Roast Beef. Fabulous 4040 Restaurant 4040 WASHINGTON ROSLINDALE ST. know that they can find ail types of employees to fill all employment needs through busy Globe Classified.

When you need help, do as the professionals do use Globe Classified for results. Call AVenus 2-1500. Globe Tours Visit The Globe any day except Sunday Weekdays 9 to 4 P.M. Saturdays 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.

THREE TIMES AS MANY JOBS In' the month of July, Globe Classified continued- to carry three times as much Employment advertising as all other Boston newspapers combined. Employers (Globe Fhoto bv FrledbeiE1 WATER SPORT Ball of Jeffrey Brown, Old Newbury, splashes towards cup of 18th green during State Junior. Golf play at Charles River. Opponent Jim Malcolm, Maynard, who. won match on 19th, holds umbrella.

(Story on page 36.) PROFESSIONAL lUliliiltl FOR MEN AND WOMEN EVENINGS (J 1 Classes open in September LECTURE METHOD NO RECITATIONS ACCOUNTING (fwo waelfy) requirements for grad iMtion iii.iv be coinpleted in threa years after passing half bir.ir examination fr advanced standinfi; in four year for beginners. Tuition S16 monthly. TAXES (one evening weekly) federal ond Stats). SSir. WRITE OR PHONI Kt 6-073J ICR FURtHIR I ATI 0 ope a 30 a m.

to 9 00 a m. wothdayt- Sotutdor wntil 13 OO BENTLEY SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE 971 Boylilen Strati, Beaten 15 (4 block from Afass-ic hmetti Avenue Subwmy Station) rVptits the world atyy PORCIfSTEH Rtardnn Tire Salts Inc. 301 Rd. GE 6-0200 ALTTON Ted's for Tires 449 Cambridge St. AL 4-1 060 BOSTON' Univeraal Tlrs Co.

1305 Boylston Si. CO 7-3701 (SEE ON BROCKTON Hull Bros. 94 Leqion Pkwy. JU 8-C031 MEDFORP Tire Wellington EX Fair, Inc. Circla 6-2700.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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