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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)

MORNING 10101 GRAY AREA SATURDAY Cloudy, mild. SUNDAY Fair. High Tide 8:11 a.m. 8:29 pjn. Full Report on Page 2 EDITION Re.

V. S. Pat Off. VOL CLXXX MO. 121 19fl Fy GLOBE XEWSPAPER CO.

BOSTON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1961 Telephone AV 8-8000 28 PAGES TEN CENTS ays It's Parley Time, ft -v Concessions i ''tut i n.ft 'A- Talks 1 Brooke Hints Fin Com Is Nearly Broke By JAMES H. HAMMOND The Boston Finance Commission may not be broke, but it is badly bent. And if it is to be an effective arm of good government next year, it will need more money than it was given $65,000 to operate on this year. These facts became known and that additional money yesterday, as the Fin Com re- would be needed to fight an cessed until Nov. 15 its cur- aPPeal McGrath in courts, rent inquiry into controversial LAND PROBE sales of city-owned land.

When the commission re- sumes its probe. City Auction- eer John J. McGrath is sched- 1 uled to return to testify under rflT'DlT'n rYtY a Suffolk Superior Court or- IIUI lU, 1 Ul der issued Thursday. However, VI appeals to the State Supreme ITS llUS AI Court by McGrath's counsel, Atty. George A.

McLaughlin may delay the proceedings. uCIcflCc ICIOT The question of the Fin By BARRETT McGURN Corn's financial stability came up at a special meeting of the ROME, Nov. 3 A 44-year- agency. The 1962 budget old Harvard professor is the which must be approved by first winner of the Pius XI the Legislature, was the main award for brilliance Kien. topic of discussion.

tine research. Salary increases for the six The three-inch broad gold staff members of the agency medal has been granted to also were discussed. Dr- Robert Burns Woodward, It was pointed out that of a Boston native and resident, the $65,000 appropriated this fr his achievements in chemi-year, slightly more than cal synthesis. MOSCOW, Nov. 3 (UPI)-Premier Khrushchev indicated today to an Ital-' ian member of Parliament that the Soviet Union is willing to "make concessions" in negotiations with the West over Berlin and the German problem.

Khrushchev did not hint what the concessions might be, but he told Giuseppe Codacci Pisanelli during a 65-minute conversation there is no time limit "We are in no hurry." Pisanelli was delegated by the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Brussels last month to tell the leaders of the United States, Britain, France and Russia of the need for negotiations to end the Berlin crisis. "The Soviet Union wants negotiations," highly informed sources quoted the premier as telling Pisanelli. "The international situation is very bad now and the only thing to do is to negotiate. "We must have negotiations, and negotiations mean not only to receive concessions but to make concessions." (In Oslo, Norwegian Foreign Minister Halvard Lange said tonight preliminary discussions on the Berlin questions between the Western ambassador and representatives of the Soviet government will be resumed next week in Moscow. spite of the recent Soviet threats, worded in the note to the Finnish government and accompanied by nuclear test explosions, which resulted in an adjournment of consultations on the Berlin situation between the West and the Soviet government, I am glad I can tell you that this adjournment will not last for a long time and that the discussions will be resumed in Moscow in a week's time," Lange said.

AP Wireptioto) THAT WAS A DROLL ONE Japanese festival girl in Geisha costume covers her giggles while Sec retary of Commerce Luther Hodges and others enjoy a laugh in Hakone, where United States-Japan economic conference is under way. Mystery Caller Pesters Risches 000 remains unspent, and it ine awara was created oy was proposed that the Fin PPe John XXIII to com-Com dip into that sum to memorate the 25th annivers-grant immediate salary hikes. ary of the Pontifical Academy But Fin Com Chairman Ed- of Sciences, ward W. Brooke pointed out award that of the $11,000 figure. v4f i iiuiiiiiui 1 1 1 $3200 is already earmarked, Page Three TAKING IT IN STRIDE-U Thant puffs flustered by new job as acting U.N.

secretary general. lrcphcto anything but KHRUSHCHEV Storms -That's What the Blues, Says Expert ew U.N. Boss Watches Step But Hints of Red at sued over the years a policy of nonalignment, and friendship for all other nations whatever their ideologies. In my new role, I shall continue to maintain this attitude of objectivity, and to pursue the ideal of universal friendship. The debates in the general assembly have already shown that the international climate can hardly be described as sunny.

The organization is also facing a serious financial problem. In the Congo operation, which is one of the major undertakings in the history of the organization, we continue to encounter serious difficulties which clamor for an ur gent solution. If I am to discharge these responsibilities, I shall need, in the first instance, the whole-hearted support, friendly understanding, and unstinting cooperation of all my col- In addition to your cooperation, I shall also need the loyal and the first birthday of her son John Jr. Nov. 25.

Mrs. Kennedy's press secretary Pamela Turnure said the birthdays would be celebrated when Mrs. Kennedy returns from abroad. The President, Caroline and John Jr. probably will have the Thanksgiving meal at the traditional gathering of the Kennedy clan.

Miss Turnure said one of the sights Mrs. Kennedy hopes to see was the famed Taj Mahal in Agra, India. MRS KENNEDY Page Three iwk via? AP to LINCOLN, Nov. 3 A series of mysterious telephone calls were received today at the home of missing Mrs. Joan Risch, and detectives worked hard trying to trace them.

Rene Risch, father-in-law of Mrs. Risch, told police the phone rang a dozen times between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., but each time he answered the person on the other end refused to talk. A neighbor, Mrs. George Robichaud, whose home on Rte.

2A backs up to the Risch property, said she got a call around noon from an "excited woman." The caller refused to identify herself, but said she had been trying to call the Risch home and had not been able to reach anyone she knew. The caller was "terribly excited and talked very rapidly." Lt, Det. George Harnois and Det. Joseph Ryan were working late into the night at the telephone exchange, attempting to track down the strange calls. Mrs.

Robichaud told police otrong support of my colleagues id the secretariat. I know how hard the secretariat has had to work during the last 16 months, especially she could not identify the caller as the missing Joan, because she had never heard her voice on the phone before. MISSING WIFE Page Two Magnetic Gives Us By CHARLES E. CLAFFEY Ever get that down-in-the-dumps feeling and wonder why? It may be that the earth's magnetic field is partly responsible. This is the theory of a Syracuse physician, Dr.

Robert O. Becker, associate professor of surgery at the New York State College of Medicine. Dr. Becker suspects that activity of the earth's magnetic field is capable of creating, or aggravating, psychological disturbances. The specific agent which he believes may influence human behavior is a phenomenon called a "magnetic storm," he will be made "in case it becomes necessary to conduct While it is a foregone conclusion that such tests will be held, the size and scope will be determined when the results of the current Soviet series have been assessed.

The President is seeking Nehru's sympathy as part of his campaign to build a favorable world opinion for Am Thant Self-Controlled, Skillful Go-Between said yesterday at the 1961 International Conference on High Magnetic Fields at M.I.T. A magnetic storm, Dr. Becker explained, is an intense disturbance of the earth's magnetic field which sends showers of minute electrically charged particles into the atmosphere. What do these "storms" have to do with psychological behavior? Dr. Becker secured a day-by-day list of the number of admissions to two psychiatric hospitals in Spracuse over a four-vear Deriod.

Then he secured from the Magnetic Observatory in Fredericksburg, data for the erican atmospheric tests before they actually are held. The Prime Minister denounced the Soviet test resumption, particularly, the exploding of the 50-megaton device which spilled enormous quantities of radioactive debris into the atmosphere. NEHRU Page Three Thant, the U.N.'$ new "Dag Hammarthjold," told hit colleague yesterday how he tees that important job. This it how he put it, in part. Most of my colleagues present in this hall know me personally.

They know that I come from a relatively small country in Asia. They also know that my country has steadfastly pur- The Vote Is Unanimous UNITED NATIONS. N.Y., Nov. 3 (UPI) The United Nations today unanimously elected Thant of Burma as acting Secretary General. He immediately announced the appointment of Dr.

Ralph Bunche of the United States and Georgy P. Arkadev of Russia as principal advisers. THANT Page Three Why Kennedy Wants to Meet Nehru Will Ask Him To Back US. If It Resumes Tests same time span showing th intensity of the earth's mag- netic field. On a chart, he and his associates a physicist and psychologistplotted the curve of daily admissions compared with the magnetic force for the same day.

MOODS Page Two Jury Acquits rp I trt I nil VI ft I TYU VUUVllld In Bat Slaying DEDHAM, Nov. 4 (Saturday) Two State Prison convicts were found not guilty at 12:40 a.m. today of the Memorial Day slaying of fellow-inmate Frederick LaTorella of Roxbury. The jury returned the verdict to Judge Wilfred Paquet after eight hours and 10 minutes of deliberation. The two defendants, William Daggett, 23, and James O'Malley, 23, were then ordered returned to Walpole to finish their sentences.

Judge Paquet congratulated the all-male panel on its finding. He told the defendants, "This verdict ought to show you that people on the outside are interested in you. "Go back and tell your fellow inmates. Go back and behave yourselves and when you have served your time, you can come back into society." The men were accused of bludgeoning LaTorella, 36-year-old former Roxbury man, to death with a baseball bat. LA TORELLA Page Two GUIDE TO Bridge 16 Churches 10, 11 Classified 17-28 Comics 8,9 Crosby 4 Cross-Word ...9 Deaths 17 Dr.

Crane ...16 Editorials i Financial ...6,7 FEATURES Obituaries Port Radio-TV .....9 Small Worlds Society 11 Sports Star Gazer ....8 Theaters ....18 Twsitagram ..8 Women Page Three in connection wtih the Congo operation. SPEECH Page Three and is a term of respectful humility widely used in Burma. Thant is pronounced "Oo Thahnt" and he will be known simply as Secretary General Thant. Thant believes that mankind progressing toward a "one world" concept. CLOSEUP Page Three 1 3P -Stff A exciting etnitif in Boston! RESTAURANT and It I I A UUbl AIL LJUnUL Jl nniiili sr hrkint Siriti it TiDnityV inr ur tlnnrr iitrani.

tlreti No(. 15. Itf(l bittr Role tf" tub at I si 9 fcM i f. 1 i Thant of Burma, new Secretary General of the United Nations, is a Buddhist and a diplomat who believes that Buddhist philosophy can lead successful diplomacy. By Burmese custom he has no first name.

The is a Burmese honorific and the closest English equivalent is respected uncle. He signs his name "Maung Thant" which means "humble little brother," Li i I 'i 1 3 is Paying Own Way Mrs. Kennedy Flying To India, Pakistan Soon By WARREN ROGERS JR. WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 President Kennedy will seek the sympathy, if not the active support, of Indian Prime Minister Nehru for the expected American decision to resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere.

Officials said Mr. Kennedy will present his case personally to Nehru when the two meet Monday at Newport, R. I. Nehru ill accompany the President back to Washington where further talks may take place. President Kennedy disclosed yesterday that preparations for atmospheric tests Patriots Shade Texans, 28-21 Practically the whole town was either watching or listening via radio as the Patriots, in a thrill-a-minute, down-to-the-wire game, edged the Dallas Texans 28 to 21 before 25.036 at B.U.

Field last night. The Pats had to punt out of danger twice in the last two minutes and nearly lost the game in the final seconds when the Texans came up with a pass off a double re-verso, which moved the ball to the Patriots four-yard line. At this point a host of fans overflowed onto the field and officials stopped the clock, giving Dallas one more play. Cotton Davidson tossed a pass, but a Patriot batted it away and the game was over. (See details of game in the sports section.) RAW EQUIPMENT RENTALS CRADALLS FRONT END LOADERS TRUCKS 112 Chtrlai WUIdtn DA 1-2141 WASHINGTON, Nov.

3 (UPI) Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy wall make a two-week trip to India and Pakistan beginning about Nov. 20, to visit educational and research centers and view historic art objects, the White House announced today. She will pay for the tour herself. The private and personal trip probably will take her away from the President and their children on Thanksgiving Nov.

23. She also will miss the fourth birthday of her daughter Caroline Nov. 27, 7 .9 8 EMPLOYMENT ADVERTISING Again last Sunday, Globe Classified showed its dominanco in BoftcnV. I'nployment advertising Held. Last Sunday alone, GRANDMA'S HAPPY Queen Mother Elizabeth waves from car window after visit in London with Princess Margaret, who gave birth to a boy yesterday morning.

(Story on Page 11.) TONIGHT Traoksldi Dining 4 1 T-J 1 Suffolk Downs FUTURITY ROOM Enjoy Fins Food Rfrhmni Cicdtt Cards Honored i Globe Classified carried 42,233 lines of Employment advertising compared to a combined total of only 7,816 lines for both other Boston Sunday newspapers The Globe gained 10,000 lines compared to losses lor both other newspapers. The Globe leads because Globe Classitied gets results. Call AVenue 2-1500 for results. GLOBE TOURS WE putt lh world If your flngortipt If Tiit most 757, VMJ lltt.li It "lrnkflt CirUK 9 30. loot it Otri Ih.itrt 46 Beacon Street I iBoston Glob-UPI Photo) AFTER ARRAIGNMENT Officers help William Seward, 28, blind and crippled Jamaica Plain man, from Roxbury Courthouse.

He is charged with shooting and killing his wife, Natalie. (Story on Page 9 A.M. 4 P.M. Saturdays 9 A.M. 1 P.M.

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Pages Available:
4,495,348
Years Available:
1872-2024