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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 4

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the Boston Globe Mbnd 5 December 23. 1968 FACTORY AUTHORIZED Kennedy to Consider New China Policy Snrviens" oerformed McCarthy Series Ends Tomorrow The third and final installment of an exclusive interview- given by Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy to members of the Globe's Washington Bureau will appear in tomorrow's Globe. The previous installments appeared Sunday, Dec.

15, and Sunday, Dec. 22. For Watches out of guarantee the charge is small Quality work by factory trained experts We have watch bands to fit all types of watches "Genuine Timex Electric Watch Energy Cells Available" SWISS AMERICAN WATCH HOSPITAL KR Rrnmfield Boston. 02108 LI 2-8332 Sources say Kennedy will, make the trip to decide for himself what future American policy towards Asia should be, and that he will make his conclusions known after his return. "He's not taking the trip to make a speech," said one.

"But he doubtless will make a major address or two when he returns." Kennedy last travelled to Asia a year ago, visiting Vietnam as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee to investigate refugee problems. He delivered a major speech to the World Affairs Council of Boston upon his return, scoring cor mmum mm i about the matter by Kennedy's academic advisors. "It's a very touchy thing," admits one. "China could regard new American interests in Mongolia as a threat of further containment, or as a positive step towards normalizing relations." There has also been consideration of a return from Asia via the Middle East, an araa also coming to the forefront in American foreign policy calculations. Kennedy's trip was first planned for last month, immediately following the national elections, with an itinerary including remote Asian lands Nepal, Sikkim and Bhutan.

These plans were cancelled when Mrs. Ethel Kennedy entered the hospital last October, weeks before giving birth to her 11th child. The trip will be unofficial and Kennedy will finance it himself, as was the case with a recent trip taken by Massachusetts other Senator, Edwin Brooke, to Western Europe and Scandinavia. IS VATGH REPAIR ,3 under TimexS Guarantee tA oiirpniii ourruLfvy 5 FRANKLIN Sxeel, toiMoli ruption in bouth Vietnam. bake a pie "The folks with the farm in Maine Murder "thud" and- went into the room and found Savage lying unconscious beside the bench.

He Was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital and pronounced dead on mji teiey Weei, esyinoa Street, 13 MoindwMHJ Avemie, 10 SrcH MMUl r.D.i.c. o.i. Robert A. Scalapino of the University of California at Berkeley. Kennedy was advised that early next year with the advent of a new administration in Washington and the presumed expansion of the Paris peace talks should be an opportune time to investigate the 20-year diplomatic deadlock with mainland China.

The Chinese themselves have shown a new face towards the U.S. in the last six weeks, first by suggesting a renewal of informal U.S.-China diplomatic talks in Warsaw beginning in Fe-. bruary, and last week by reporting without censure the news of the expanded Paris talks. Exact details of Kennedy's Asian trip are being settled now, with January 27 the present departure date. Kennedy may be accompanied by his wife, Joan, and a personal aide David Burke.

Kenedy is considering a visit to Outer Mongolia dur- Sought in Killed were a mother of three, Mrs. Marilyn Parker, 30, of 4 Dalessio South Boston, and Donald G. Dai-gle, 28, of 71 Dwight Holyoke, identified as a Walpole state prison parolee. As far as police have been able to reconstruct the incident, at least two men one of them firing from the front door and the other from outside raked Mrs. Parker's apartment with bullets.

Mrs. Parker was killed instantly by a shot in the head and Daigle was mortally wounded by at least three shots in the head and chest. He died in Boston City Hospital about 10 hours after the shooting. Three of the dead woman's children, Kathy, 5, Donald, 4, and Cynthia, 10,. were in the apartment at the time of the shooting but were not hurt.

Mrs. Parker apparently let at least one gunman in, police said, and another fired into the first floor apartment through a window. One of the witnesses to I the shooting, Mrs. Linda E. I Marsh, 27, who lived in the Parker apartment, was later arrested and charged with the $2300 armed robbery of the Farragut Cooperative Bank in South Boston Friday.

Mrs. Marsh was held in $10,000 bail and her case continued to Dec. 27 in South Boston District Court. Police continued to question other witnesses to the shooting yesterday. There were six persons in the Parker living room besides the victims authorities said, and although they tell conflicting stories they have given police some leads.

TWO HOLDUPS Besides murder, the city was marred by other forms of death and violence. Police are still trying to solve two Friday holdups in which $50,000 was taken at the Employes Credit Union of the Boston Gas McBride Jamaica Plain, and an undetermined amount at the Commonwealth National Bank, 89 Broad downtown. Yesterday morning, the Boston Police harbor patrol boat Vigilant found the body Closed KENNEDY Continued from Page 1 Kennedy will make the trip to improve his knowledge of Asia, and to focus American attention on new policy opportunities that could open up there with the end of the Vietnam War. The Massachusetts senator will leave Washington the last week in January, following President-elect Ri-char Nixon's inauguration. He will be gone about a month, and will deliver a major speech on his findings sometime after his return.

In visits to Cambridge this Fall Kennedy has conferred informally with Harvard professors Edwin 0. Rei-schauer, Jerome Cohen, John Kenneth Galbraith, MIT professor Lucien Pye, and others about the trip. Reischauer was President John F. Kennedy's ambassador to Japan, and Galbraith was ambassador to India. Sen.

Kennedy and his staff have also contacted China experts such as A. Doak Barnett of Columbia and Suspect By WILLIAM A. DAVIS Globe SUB Police were seeking a 23-year-old West Roxbury man yesterday for the murder of Paatrick A. Hughes, 27, of 912 Canterbury Roslin-dale, Saturday night. Hughes was killed during an attempted holdup at the Roxbury drug store operated by his uncle and namesake, Patrick A.

Hughes, C2, of 2 Iroquois Roxbury, who was badly wounded. The elder Hughes suffered a severe head wound and remains in critical condition at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital after emergency surgery." His nephew the 97th murder in what has been Boston's bloodiest year was also shot in the head. The holdup at the E. J. Hughes Drug Store, 1556 Tremont Roxbury, was the work of two "young white males" according to Det.

Lt. Edward F. Sherry, head of the homicide bureau. One. of the two is believed to be the man being sought.

The West Roxbury man, who works part time as a longshoreman, is also wanted on a warrant charging robbery of a cab driver. Lt. William J. Reilly of the Roxbury Crossing station said police will seek a murder complaint in Roxbury District Court today in the drugstore shooting. The store is owned by the elder Hughes and his brother, William, the younger Hughes' father.

The dead man was working in the drug store for an other uncle who was sick. Married and the father of one child, the younger Hughes was scheduled to graduate from Portia Law School in June. Errlier this year, Lt. Sherry predicted that the number of murders in Boston in 1968 would pass 100. Last year it was 71.

FCUR MURDERS Yesterday, homicide detectives were out trying to solve the four murders that have occurred in the city since Friday not to mention the year's accumulation of unsolved slayings. The bloody week-end goriest since that of Nov. 23-24, when five persons including a policeman were murdered in less than 36 hours began with a gangland style slaying Friday in Charlestown. The victim, identified as Ronald P. Doe, 25, of 332 Bunker Hill Charles-town, was found face down at the site of the old Charlestown potato sheds.

Doe, who sometimes worked as a longshoreman, had been shot once behind the ear. Police said he had apparently been killed elsewhere and the body dumped at the potato shed site. He was believed to be the 58th gangland victim since 1964. The motive and the perpetrators of a bizarre double murder in South Boston just before midnight Friday night continued to elude police yesterday. SEN.

EDWARD KENNEDY maps Asian trip ing his travels. Like Communist China, the U.S. does not have diplomatic relations wth Outer Mongolia. Kennedy discussed this at lunch with Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas several weeks ago.

Douglas has advocated the admittance of Red China to the UN for a decade. An intrepid traveler himself, Douglas is one of the few high American officials to have visited Outer Mongolia in recent years. But there is mixed feeling Drug Store of Haskell Traibman, 60, of 31 Union Swampscott, a grocer, floating face down in Chelsea Creek. Harbor police said the body was in 30 feet of water oif the Texaco Oil Co. tank farm on Marginal st.

and bore no sign of violence. Traibman had been reported missing by Swampscott Po-li-e Saturday night. Police and the medical examiner are investigating the death of a man who died in an apparent fall in City Prison early yesterday after being given shelter there for the night. The man gave his name as John J. Savage, 57, of 154 East Cottage Dorchester.

The address was later discovered to be a vacant lot, police said. Savage went to the jail shortly after midnight and asked for permission to sleep overnight a common practice in Winter among homeless men. He was allowed to sleep on a bench in an unlocked room. About 3:10 a.m., jail attendants said, they heard a Theworidbesfosr great sherries. One is American.

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