Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 35

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Boston Globe Monday, April If, OBITUARIES Courses to Aid Alcoholics Planned by Northeastern Memorial Rites Set For LaRue Brown B.V RAY RICHARD Staff Writer Northiriinl pen University announced plans yesterday to take an increasingly active role in helping solve the problems 'if alcoholism in the community. A course for persons directly involved with alcoholics in professional or nonprofessional ways will be offered, beginning in the Fall. Called "Alcoholism Training Program for Community Workers," it will be the first in what, is expected to be a rapidly growing program of courses to educate the public about, alcoholism as a community as well as an individual problem. Other courses will be added to the university's 1 BUSINESS -OPPORTUNITIES UNUSUAL on Ninmlng f-niHK Slime in t'lymnufh County. fvi'fnrrri i iicim mm iiiihk room, 12r M-ats, 4 arrfi of liui'l.

f.ii my for 100 this, on auto hlMli way, nil hcmtifiil hojup, of (jwncifi fiii'ti foi Ifi VfM if -won for nfffi Itf.tf! to njirn ff.i tti- All mrls IMV'iNl Write Globe Of lire MONEY MHIiKHN 2 hay Sunnrn station. rm iir-iivil traveled Route 1 In I S.mtfiik. available, only to agfrefr- 1 triinnnjf i finMilt.int, I rofnl'iitiy. I i- muni lull HVHliahle. I.iirntr'fl time, rail now.

SUN OIL CO, I Vt.HNON JOHNSON. 1-819- MUST SELL irnwuiaiii iniiimn noirttf K'tod growth on short hour; real monf maker, good Irasr owner Iravme fitt. f'all WAHREN MrHOWfcLU 66.V6521 orM'A 612.V EXCEL. OPPORTUNITY 7 rifi horn and variety In H'lOfl rrhioV'ntia! of South Shore, nets $12,000, priced i 000. Call for appointment.

Ahloui't. fi4n 1 7S or Oeorire Pryrif Realtor. WE HAVE BUYERS" FOR huslneswa In Boston Se all iihiirtrt. t'Ml wrvice! No feet tt. Maiden.

TO BUY l- .1 Msgr Phelan, Served Many Mass. Parishes The lit. Rev. John J. Phelan, who celebrated the 50th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood nearly two years ago, died yesterday at St.

Elizabeth's Hospital. Brighton. Msgr. Pholan had served many parishes in the Archdiocese of Boston, the last of which was St. Ann's in Nep-onset, before retiring in January, 1967 and becoming Pastor Emeritus of St.

Ann's Church in Dorchester. Born in Jamaica Plain on April 19, 1889, he attended Boston English High School and was graduated from Boston College in 1912. The brother of the late Rev. Timothy Phelan, S.J., for many years on the faculty of Holy Cross College, Worcester, and the late Rt. Rev.

Francis Phelan, chancellor of the archdiocese and Ideal Weather Pattern Averts Ct. River Floods ins e-starilishmrnt. Boston or J0. 2 family with id kita. Shore vicinity.

Wnte fully ren ed: will irrinn 3Hfl. Offire Bivin ing. 74.J-.i2QO. Mr. Sandler.

An ideal weather pattern is saving residents along the banks of the swollen Conn-necticut River in New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut from flood worries. The entire length of the 407-mile river has crested, the U.S. River Forecast Center said yesterday. But the huge amount of northern snow is melting at a safe rate. "Warm days and cold nights allow limited snow-melt run off in the upper Connecticut River basin and this will result in slowly falling river stages along its entire length," the center reported.

In Massachusetts the only flooding of the river was reported in the Ox-Bow section Rail Strike Averted By Night-Long Talks Associated Press WASHINGTON The threat of a second national rail strike in two years ended yesterday when signalmen's union and railroad negotiators reported agreement after an all-night session. Neither side would give details on the negotiated agreement pending ratification meetings by Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen members later in the week. The agreement was reported yesterday afternoon to Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz, who stood by as weary negotiators completed a session that started at 10:30 a.m. Saturday and continued through the night.

Shultz had served notice he would ask congressional intervention if the strike started as scheduled at 6 a.m. today against all major railroads. "The government simply isn't going to tolerate a national railroad strike," Shultz said last Wednesday. The major dispute between the signalmen and 35 HJUSESJO LET, WANTED BILLERICA RENTALS MH1RII.L ASSOC. B7-1H ATTK.

.1 hdim. ranrh. 1', hatha, close to Rte. 48V 215 mo, A. S1MKONK Realtor, 991 Ate.

B. Natick. BILLERICA 6-rm. aale.TT vr. lean-; MOO MWSHAM RE, ill NKWTONVILLE WeilTiirnrT nn.

1. inch, 3 plua playrm nil appl'a, Inel freeer. wa.sher-dryer, mo Owner, 4H-07fla alter fl flr wkeridn. WKHTON Dutlnrtly dVrvTrVnf modern home with privacy u.ii eomlnrt For a couple who will aiiprei iale and can affoid th hest. WESTWOOD For the "dlirern-in executive, 7 3 hedrni 2 hath ranch home, avail.

Aor. IS, Tel :s2.v OiiOO, REAL ESTATE WANTED IMMEDIATE CASH for Ilor A Matt, homes Don't repair. We will buy as Is. Get our offer. Prompt, AARON REALTY pays cash for Dorchester and Mattapan properties.

AARON RKALTY. 1177 Bine Hill 43(1-4710 Open 9-9. CASH for your home. Mat- tapan. 1.

2 and hnmei, MT ROWDOIN 2RB-3370. INCOME PROPERTIES i CAMBRIDGE SMALL Investment, nr. Harvard WANTED APARTMENT BLDG. Ian by priv. party, 925-2033 Summer Cottages Houses GREAT HERRING POND Clean cozy cott aleeps B10, seas, or wk.

289-4422. KENNEBUNKPOPT. MAINE" New house, 3 lge. family central to all peaches. Special this week only, $800 per or fantastic seasonal rate.

207-967-3298. By Owner. Lake region, 90 mlns. from Boston, modern all electric chalet, sleeps 8, private lake, excellent hunting, fishing, boating, swimming, tennis; golf courses nearbv. $150 or seasonal.

Call 401-421-1500, Box Howarl Bldg Prov R.I UNUSUAL Seashore rental, Mass. Private beach pier. Secluded area Beautiful Southeast, view. Avail, weekly $150 or sea- iu. an st SOUTH SHORE REAL ESTATE COHASSET New rom Colonial.

If you are looking for spacious 5 bedroom, 2 'a bath home, this one is well worth vour inspection. $44 900 MARDEN RE-ALTY of COHASSET. 383-9030 DUXBURY New Salt Box Co lonial on beautiful treed acre bedrooms. 1 V3 baths. 20 ft.

living room and best of all a lovelv Cathedral Ceiling family room with fireplace. All this for onlv $29,000. MARDEN REALTY of COHASSET. 383-9030. SCITUATE Waterview.

new ft room Salt Box Colonial. A hed rooms, 2'M baths, fireolaced living 74room, formal dining room, famtlv room. etc. for extra storage a lovely walk up attic. Convenient walk-out nasement.

2 car garaae. under, $39 900 MARDEN RE. ALTY of COHASSET. 383-9030. CAPE REAL ESTATE CAPE COD BUYS! 1 LOTS.

Right to large Pond. Excellent finanrmg. $25,000 3 LAKE FRONT Wooded sites in Chatham. 4 BEDROOM IIIUIMAL cious rooms, garage, Orleans, 524.900 A IC A HERITAGE EE ALTF. Chatham Rd Chatham South Or- leans.

Tel. 253-2203. FREE Raise cart awav my barn In Melrose excel, reproduction lumber, wkdvs. 10-5. 924-1222.

I HAVE 4 lots that are perfect in every way: fantastic loc, on Cape Cod: will sell very reas. Call Mr. Hansford anytime. 324- smn. OCEAN lot.

Osterville side. high. dry ana level, ror ouicK sale: let's talk! Call anytime. Mr. Long, 32U0770.

MATTAPAN 2 girls to shar apt. with 1 of same, mod. 3 296-4292 after S. NEW HAMPSHIRE E. SAVE UP TO 13 ON CHOICE N.H.

LAKE SKI SITES IT'S true and Prices In N.H. are going up all the time A so will mine. But. right now. I am a builder behind In my work due to the unusually bsrd winter.

I a few prime pine blreh tree studded lots, acre A over In slie reduced up to 1-S In price. Located In a beautifully Isolated area on a crystal clear spring fed mts. Terms aall. Buy now mts. Terms aval.

Buy now 1 1 knllri.r at RrAftkllfia. tel. 734 -g ISO, wkdyi. LACONIA, N.H. Looking for an unusual second home in resort community near mts lakes.

Mobile home with an alive zestful interior, set in large wooded vara, call Bua-3i-9154 after 6 P.M. LAN fUK SALE yi A era Lots" on lake, nr. Mt. Monad- nock Mt. Temple 4 Season! Vacation area.

mincing ar ranged. Write to MARK 2 Cardington rd Plnehurst. Mass. LAKE LOT 9950 120 ft on nice quiet place, ai ena of road Sow boats only. 10 min.

from Rte 93 For more Info, call Joe Brodeur. 603-889-4750. BDRM Cottage for sale Newly modern. Rte 18. Errol.

H. Contact Mr. Gerry Du-haine. Box 132. Colebrook.

H. Maine Summer Propertiti KENNEP.UNK BEACH Cott. nn ocean front. 2 compl. sep.

apts upper 3 lVi baths, lower 2 bdrms 1 bath, may rented as a whole unit or seas, or mo. 617-872-9475 aft. 8. VERMONT REAL ESTATE PRIVATE owner has 11 choic OLUB. I'H! I 1 HrtiTT Hill, Wilmington.

Vt adjacent to Havstack Mt. and Mt. Snow, 9 lots in a row, face the recently completed luxurious clubhousa with mdnnr and outdoor pools. 1 re niemuius ment club of builder. 1 buyer onlv.

lump sum ttiO.OOO btwn. 9 a.m. and 4 ro. hit. Brown.

OUTDOOR ADVERTISING an rtnviitan Street. Bos TO rtir. lion 29. inrier v.t ui n-' I Will Da public hearing will held" by the UUlOnor A'lvr'iiiivi Board at on 1,1 II, Hoylston street ton Ktreei. nnsnm.

tn a proposer, immgran i Board's Present rules and lor 111 HM.m.t Hon of hlllboards. signs and other idvertising devices A summartr 1 the unloosed change ri ana res regulations is as fnl- lows Section 1 amend oy unams tO tb. Home Rule Principle. All regulation to neara in mm are nerenv ntmur-i above designated time ann lie plare All pernors oesirm. j- written statemenia mu-v U.S1 the Outdoor Advertit mi Board nyi -v' Hoyltnn air-i Hnnton Wlinin irn "Sf- -'i the hearing ify de.

nf me i Rnard James T. I I Advertising Bleiier. wir- bnlta Memher-Charlea Bubee e. Jr. Memner.

Vi truly William 1 lGf) 'hearings curricula, depending on the demand. They could include coupes in alcoholism and how to cope with the alcoholics for such professional groups as nurses, clergymen or lawyers. "This first, course will be a pilot project," explained Prof. Taylor E. Roth of Northeastern' Center for Continuing Education, which established the need for Mich a program in Greater Boston and has developed plans for it.

for mor than a year. "Our plans are flexible. We hope to provide whatever courses we believe will be helpful in educating people who work or associate directly with alcoholics. These include, for example, Salvation Army workers, the police and intake workers at agencies which can help alcoholics." The center is developing plans for both the immediate and long-range needs of the Boston area for such training, Roth, director of the Center's Institute for Community Education on Chemical Dependency, added. The courses will have no requirements in terms of educational background of the applicants.

"We'll probably want a mixture of people with professional and nonprofessional backgrounds in the same classes," Roth said. "Primarily, we'll want people with curious minds, a capacity to learn and the desire to help the alcoholics." A certificate will be given for each course, but no scholastic credit. Roth said "the top people in the field" will instruct the courses. The first will be limited to 40 persons and will consist of about 40 hours of training. Classes will be held evenings at Northeastern's intown Boston campus.

The university's long-range project in the field of alcoholism "could lead ultimately to a whole new field of education," Roth de-clared. Besides helping eliminate many misconceptions about alcoholics, "it could stimulate applied research at the university toward its attempts to solve some of the scientific mysteries about alcoholism." The Center for Continuing Education developed the plans with the assistance of a planning committee consisting of Dr. Marvin S. Arffa, chairman of the Dept. of Applied Behavioral and Social Sciences at the Center; Jack Donahue, director of Hope House, a halfway house for alcoholics in Boston's South End; Dr.

Frank L. Iber, chief of medical services at Lemuel Shattuck Hospital; Israel Katz, dean of the Center for Continuing Education; Dr. William I. Malamud associate professor of psychiatry; Dr. Richard Morrill, director of the psychiatric department of the Roxbury Community Health Center; Dr.

Ralph Notman, director of Mental Health Center Studies at the Boston University School of Medicine; Gen Timothy J. Regan chairman of the Greater Boston Council on Alcoholism; Roth and Harold S. Wax, acting executive director of the Greater Boston Council. Twistagram 'rrm 3 LTD I 1111 1 Copyright 1969 by J. Langdon Sullivan Start anywhere.

Some find it more fun to work from the top down. Each line of the answer contains all the letters in the line above it, usually rearranged. 2. North Dakota (The 3rd and 1st letters of 8.) 3. Combining form indicating relation to India.

4. Insistently repeats. 5. Slyly disparaging. 6.

Salvages a certain plating from metal objects. 7. Doled out stingily. 8. People usually sit open-mouthed while thry work.

(Letters ADDED: After r2, the letters added in succession are and i With MiHiiks to II.i!tv SHplsky. Riibut. Mass. to William Wallace. Hartford.

Conn i (Answer tomorrow. Ansurr to Saturday IT UTES 1) CRUSTED CURTSIED Memorial KPrvicos for LaRue Brown, ri istin ku Boston attorney ami civic lender, will be tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Kind's Chapel, Boston. Mr. Brown diefl Apr.

3 at his home, 8 Beacon Back Bay, after several nonths illness. He was R5. Rev. Carl Scovel, minister, will officiate. Speakers will include Atty.

Francis Goodale of Weston; Prof. Richard Field of Harvard Law School; Atty. Claude Cross of Chestnut Hill; Mrs. Philip LeCompte of Newton; Atty. Edward Dugsan of the Voluntary Defenders Committee; and Atty Raymond H.

Young of Boston. Ushers will be Christopher Kirchwey of Cambridge, a nephew; Edgar J. Driscoll Jr. and Edgar J. Driscoll III of Beacon Hill; George Holly, also of Beacon Hill; Philip J.

Driscoll of Dedham; and, Frederick H. Norton Jr. of the Boston Bar Association. Ned Brooks, 68 Once Ran 'Meet-Press' Associated Press WASHINGTON Ned Brooks, 68, former newsman and radio and TV commentator, died yesterday morning after a long period of ill health. Brooks was a native of Kansas City, but grew up in Warren, Ohio.

He graduated from the school of journalism at Ohio State University in 1924. Subse quently he was a reporter, city editor and managing 1 editor of the Youngstown, Ohio, Telegram. He came to Washington in 1332 with the Scripps-Howard Newspapers and was a correspondent cov- ering Congress until 1947. Brooks joined the National Broadcasting Company, working on the Three-Star Extra radio program, and aJso serving as a moderator on the television and radio program "Meet the Press." He retired in 1967. He leaves his wife and one daughter, Mrs.

Francis B. Donovan, of Cleveland. The Brooks made their home in nearby Chevy Chase, Md. Funeral plans were incomplete. Edward Casabian Watertown Florist Edward K.

Casabian, 62, of 49 North Melrose, who with his wife owned Cass Flowers in Watertown, died yesterday at the Beth Israel Hospital. Mr. Casabian was born in Boston and had resided in Melrose for 26 years. He was graduated from the Northeastern University Law School. For 25 years he was employed with the General Electric Co.

riverworks in Lynn. Mr. Casabian was a past chairman of Florists' Trans- I world Delivery, a past vice-president of the Water-town Lions' Club, and a member of the Watertown Rotary Club, the Knights of a a Allepo Temple Shrine, and the Palestine Lodge of Masons in Everett. He leaves his wife, Mary (Kasabian); a daughter, Mrs. Faith Patriquin of Newton; a son, Edward K.

a teacher in Bridgewat-er; a sister, Mrs. Zabelle Yazejian, and three grandchildren. Services will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. in Holy Trinity Armenian Church, 145 Brattle st Cambridge. Burial will be in Lindenwood Cemetery, Stoneham.

Zelie Soucy Georgetown Rites Set GEORGETOWN Mrs. Zelie (Desrosiers) Soucy, 80, of 92 North widow of Antoine J. Soucy and mother of Selectman Joseph A. Soucy, died yesterday afternoon after a short illness. Mrs.

Soucy was born in Matane, Quebec, Canada. She was a parishioner of St. Mary's Church here. She leaves four other ons, Roger P. and J.

Ar-mand of Georgetown, Roland A. of Haverhill and Leo of Union Springs, N.Y.; two daughters, Mrs. Annette Beaulieu of Ipswich and Mrs. Romona Firi of Haverhill; a Vothrr. Tat rick Desrosiers vf Fall River; two sisters, Mrs, Emma Lcn-iey of Fall River and Mrs.

Aurore Drsrosirrs of Cov-nington, R.I.; 20 grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren. A solemn high requiem Mass will be sung Wednesday at 9 a.m. in St. Mary's Church. Burial will be in Harmony Omrtmv.

t-uih Only principals please ATLANTIC SERVICE STATION FOR Lease. Stoughton area, busy high volume location, high gal- Innage. exc. potential, call days, 3 eves Mr. Woods.

INVEST IN THE SPACE AGE VI AIT. INVESTORS INVITED For particulars, write to International Aerospace Securities Division. Box 172. Lexington, Mass. 02173.

RESTAURANT FORI SALE. 262 8825 BUTCHER Wonderful" oppty. to get in on an est business with package liquor. For 4:18 0297 BEAUTY Salon, health reasons, business going well, prime lo cation, plenty of parking, ask. $20,000.

Write D311. lilobe office. COCKTAIL Lounge, all liouor: No. Shore, $28,000. bid land all: does $1350 wk.

643-2205. VAR-DEN. OPPORTUNITY for active work ing young partner in retail ladies shoe store Successfully no-i eratmg over 40 years Experience In line and moderate capital required. Business located within 50 miles of Boston Write P.O. Box 108 Falrhayen.

Mass QUTNCY, spotless restaurant, excellent location. No competition Owner Calif, bound Fully equipped. Asking $15,900 Exclu-siveJ3WANRJSRJ570: READING Business property in a residential zone. Great possibilities, attached is a room home with good rental income. Pr ced ow at $18,900.

KOBEHT SI ONE INC. lj5-4ZW. RESTAURANT 5Vj days, short oontv. for young family. Call 731-2854 Mon.

after 4 RESTAURANT, sub pizza shop, cood income, busy loc. Call anytime, 769-1344, WANTED to buy Public Accounting practice Frammgham Area. Write D167. Globe office. SUPERMARKET for rent.

walk- In chest creamery case, meat case, all com.pl long lease Appleton st Boston. 9251391 DOGS, CATS, PETS POODLES A C. reg silver male ouonies hnmo 4nr temn nd riiso Buy from a prof, breeder. Call 298-0982 AKC MINI SCHNAUZERS Do not shed. Great with children.

All you can desire in a house pet. Home raised. Call 244-9107. irr.Htl nnrvns CREAM with black masks, black and tan. wormed ana inoc.

maie and female A n.c tee, i-jjh AKC PEKINGESE puppies. 7 weeks Call eves, or weekends Framingham, 877-3570. GERMAN SHEPHERD male. AKC. 1 shots, trained, tre- mendouspossibiities.

3265499 GREAT Danes, happy, black thoroughbred pups, AKC. Tel. 203 429-1703. IRISH SETTER puppies, carrying: European hunting lines, a.k... reg.

Call 464-2340, PULI small shagfry shep dog. female. 7 wks. old. immed.

deliv ery $200. Call VZi-liUb. SIAMESE kittens, pure bred. 8 S25. Call 227-2171 eves.

or 227-0730 ext. 250 days TOY and small mini poodles. Extra healthy, lovable. All colors. Call 9446564.

HORSES, CARRIAGES ONE PALAMINO 1 Quarter horse 8 yrs. uotn very eentle. Saddles Avail. Rides to English or WesternJiQgSj. urpTT.

UPFO Thoroughbred Weanlings, Yearlings. 2 vr. olds Eligihle for n.c. ruiuruy. a.iaim and up.

Call 686-3527. aft 8 p.m. INFORMATION WANTED 24 YF. old bachelor leaving for Calif, 1st wk. of May seeks I companion.

Stops. Detroit. Las Vegas. 203-623-8556 eves. Real Estate action starts in (Sloije Classified Real Estate section.

Cat! 282-1500 or mo. Call 42, and son 3 I LARUE BROWN Mr. Brown loaves his wife, the former Dorothy Browning Kirchwey. S. E.

Donaldson Dies During Viet Mission WEST PEABODY Marine 2d Lt Steven E. Donaldson, 22, son of Edward J. and Rosemarie (Ellis) Donaldson of 1 Naumkeag was killed in Vietnam on April 5 while on a search and clear operation 11 miles south of Da Nang. Lt. Donaldson was commissioned last June on his graduation from Boston College, where he had been in the Platoon Leader Corps.

He left for Vietnam this January. Born in Teaneck, N.J. he had resided in Saugus before moving to Peabody. He was a graduate of Bishop i High School, where he was a member of the football team. Lt.

Donaldson was a member of an honor society i the School of Education at Boston College and had been a student teacher at Peabody High School in 1967-68. Besides his parents, he leaves a sister, Catherine Mary Donaldson, 11, and his grandmother, Mrs. Edith V. Ellis, both of West Peabody. A solemn high requiem Mass will be sung Wednesday at 10 a.m.

in St. Adelaide's Church. Burial will be in Puritan Lawn Memorial Park. Farrell Conley Former Hockey Player LUNENBERG Services for Farrell E. Conley, 74, of 36 Natick a former professional hockey player and compositor for the Fitchburg Sentinel, who died Saturday, will be today at 2 p.m.

in the Bosk Funeral Home, Fitchburg. Mr. Conley came to Boston from his home town of Sherbrooke, Quebec, in 1914 to play hockey for the Irish-Americans. Nicknamed Pop Conley, he left the Boston Arena's ice during World War I to serve in Scotland with the New England Lumber Mill Unit. He returned to his homeland after the war and learned the printing business, coming back to Massachusetts in 1921 to play with the Pere Marquette Knights of Columbus, the Shoe Trades and the Victorias, and to work with the Fitchburg Sentinel, from which he retired in 1954.

Mr. Conley was a member of the board of directors of the Senco Credit Union, and a member of the Fitchburg Typographical Union, the Fitchburg Aerie of Eagles and the Charles W. Moore Lodge of Masons. He leaves his wife, Alice (Lennon) Conley; two sons, Robert G. of College Park, Md.

and Gerald B. of Mil-ford, a daughter, Mrs. Joseph H. Gravelle of Lunenberg; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Irene Pilbert and Mrs.

Margaret Rouleau, both of Lunenberg; a stepson, James Lennon, also of Lunenberg, and two brothers, Sankey of Ft. Lauder-, dale, and Moody of Wakefield. William P. Newell N.H. Newspaperman CONCORD, N.H.

William P. Newell, 73, who retired in 1966 as managing editor of the Concord Monitor, died yesterday at Concord Hospital after a short illness. A native of. Springfield, ho was the night city editor of the Springfield Union and joiner' he staff of the Monitor at its founding as city editor. He leaves his wife.

Esther Laiigley Newell and two sun Willi'im L. of Uopkin-ton and nf Gaiir's- villo. Kla. There will It no mi vices. 12 South Shore Towns Plan Elections for Poor of Northampton, where lowland fields have been under water for several days.

Officials in Lowell and Lawrence are paying close attention to the Merrimack River, which is two feet below flood stage. In Maine, snowmelt runoff will continue to cause slow rises of the Saco, Androscoggin, Kennebec and Penobscot rivers, but they will remain well within their banks for at least the next few days, the Forecast Center predicted. The last of more than a dozen families which were forced to evacuate their Bil-lerica dwellings two weeks ago after the Concord River overflowed its banks returned home during the weekend. the railroads was a new extra-pay provision for skilled men retroactive to July 1, 1968, and the union's demand for an additional skill differential July 1, 1969. An emergency board set up by the White House had recommended that a 20-cent-an-hour skill differential become effective next July 1, and the union demand for a new increase the following year be put to binding arbitration.

The board recommended also a total wage increase of 8.5 percent over the 18-month life of the contract. J. P. Hiltz chairman of management's National Railway Labor Conference, said the package including the skill differential would give 80 percent of the signalmen a total 14.5 percent wage hike. But C.

J. Chamberlain, president of the union, said the skill differential does not match extra pay in other industries. Specific election dates in local communities will be announced later. The 12 participating towns are Carver, Cohasset, Duxbury, Hanover, Hull Kingston, Marsh-field, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton and Scituate. The council will also hold a meeting on public assistance at 8 p.m..

Wednesday at its office at 17 Court Plymouth. After an open discussion on some of the problems faced by recipients of public assistance, the meeting will be devoted to the development of plans for creation of a mutual help organization. He Dances Presi movie performance Saturday night. Jackson said that about 5:30 a.m. Sunday he saw Levin dancing on the stage and Arndt in the projection booth playing the spotlight on the impromptu performer.

Nickels said Jackson related that he heard Arndt cock a weapon, a military rifle, and fire a fusillade at the stage. Police said Levin was struck by four of the 30 rounds fired. Jackson said he and Arndt took Levin to a hospital. The sailor was dead on arrival of a bullet wound in the head, two in the right thigh and a graze wound on the left thigh. Arndt told police he did not see Levin on the stage when he began firing the rifle.

Police found Martin asleep in an office near the projection room. Martin said he had not heard any commotion. Nickels said police found more ammunition a shotgun and an automatic pistol in the projection booth. MSGR. JOHN PHELAN longtime pastor of St.

Cecilia's Church, Back Bay, he was prepared to enter St. John's Seminary, Brighton, when Cardinal O'Connell awarded him one of the diocesan scholarships to the North American College in Rome. He sailed to Rome in September, 1912 on the steamship Canopic and five years later was ordained in Rome by Cardinal Pompili. His first assignment was to St. Margaret's parish, Dorchester.

He later served as curate of St. James' Church in Haverhill ajid St. Joseph's in Roxbury, before becoming assistant pastor at St. Mary's in Brookline on July 10, 1929. After 10 years at the Brookline parish he became the pastor of St.

Joseph's, Kingston and four years later was assigned to the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Marlboro. In 1952 he took over duties as head of the congregation of St. Ann's Church in Neponset and 12 years later celebrated the church's 75th anniversary, while the congregation joined in celebrating his elevation to Protono-tary Apostolic by Pope Paul VI. He had become a monsi-gnor in 1954 and was also a domestic prelate. Msgr.

1 a n's third brother, Thomas, was the supervisor of teacher placement for the Boston School Dept. He died two years ago. He leaves two nieces, Barbara Phelan and Mrs. Mary E. Greeley of Norwood and two nephews, Thomas A.

Phelan also of Norwood, and Timothy Phelan df Boston. Msgr. Phelan's body will lie in state in St. Ann's Church, Dorchester, today 7 to 9 p.m. and tomorrow 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.

A children's Mass will be sung Wednesday at 8 a.m. A concelebrated Mass of Requiem will be sung in St. Ann's on Wednesday at 10 a.m. Burial will follow in Holyhood Cemetery, Chestnut Hill. Auto Crash Kills Lawrence Youth ANDOVER Daniel Pic- ciotto, 19, of 113 Prospect Lawrence was killed yesterday after his car struck a bridge abutment on Rte.

28 at Rte. 495 here yesterday. Lawrence medical examiner Dr. John Batal said the victim died of multiple injuries. He was dead on arrival at Lawrence General Hospital.

Plane Co. Office Gutted by Fire In N. Grafton NORTH GRAFTON The administration building of the Wyman-Gordon which operates one of the world's largest forging plants for airplane parts, was gutted by a fire early yesterday morning. The forging factory, which stands 200 feet behind the office building on Rt. 122 here, was not damaged.

The complex is owned by the U.S. Air Force and operated by Wyman-Gordon. Robert W. Stoddard, chairman of the giant forging company, said "absolutely nothing in the forging plant" itself was damaged and that "there is no loss from a Production standpoint." Fire officials at the scene to give anv cause for the blaze and would divulge no estimate of loss. The South Shore Community Action Council will hold elections in its 12 membership communities all next week to select low-income residents to serve on the council.

The elections will be conducted at local meetings of the Resident Action Councils between 7 and 10 p.m. All town residents over 21 years may vote. Any person wishing to be a candidate must deliver nomination papers signed by two persons eligible to participate in Office of Economic Opportunity programs no later than 9 p.m. this Tuesday to the local Action Council office. Sailor Shot as In Empty Chicago Theater Associated CHICAGO A 22-year-old sailor was shot to death on the stage of an empty North Side theater apparently, police said, while dancing to phonograph music while a spotlight played upon him.

The victim in the bizarre tragedy was identified as Richard L. Levin, of 40 Broadland, Brewer, Me. He was a seaman first class stationed at Great Lakes Naval Training Station north of Chicago. Tolice have charged the theater manager, Willis P. Arndt, 39, with murder.

Police quoted Arndt as saying he often used the stage and projection room of the Town Theater. 322 W. Armitage, for target practice. A companion of Levin, Seaman 1-c Arberry Jackson, told police that he, Levin and Fireman l-c Dennis Martin of Bluefield, W. while on pass from Great Lakes often stayed overnight in the theater with Arndt's permission.

Jackson told police Sgt. Edward Nickels that they again stayed after the last 4.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Boston Globe
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Boston Globe Archive

Pages Available:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024