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October 30, 1970 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page Five Coos Has In Cong Ambush nam UPI Newsmen Kfi n iieo .F PHNOM PENH-Kyoichi Sawada, United Press International Pulitzer Prize winning photographer, and Frank Frosch, UPI Phnom Penh bureau manager, were killed Wednesday, apparently executed in cold blood after they were caught in a Communist ambush. Sawada, 34, a Japanese whose sensitive picture? captured the personal tragedies of the 'innocent in the Vietnam War, had been savagely beaten on the head and neck -before he and Frosch, 28, received bursts of fire from automatic rifles into their thests. Chile Police Arrest Suspected Assassin SANTIAGO- Chile-Police arrested a suspected "triggerman" and sought two other 'key suspects Thursday in the slaying ; of army chief Gen. Rene Schneider. A tJ almost the same time Presidei)t-elect Salvador Allende was telling-;a news conference that two attempts had been made on his life. "Bqth failed because we took the necessary measures," he said. Police, who previously indicated the Schneider case had been virtually solved, changed their story Thursday to identify their latest captive, Carlos Silva Donoso 38, a fruit wholesaler, as his slayer. They had earlier identified a former boxer, Jose Jaime Melgoza, as the "triggerman." Allende in his news conference gave no detials of the reported attempts on his life. Earlier he had said there were "assassination plots" against him, and that he had left a written deposition in PLAZA I Chapel Hill 967-4737 NOW The beauty of The freedom COMING R. P.M. ggfC PLAZA 2 at 2-30 tf Chapel Hill 967-4737 5;30 8:30 m: .Mlh anTURY ItK PREStfllS BMIBIUI STDESAriD J NlHi LOUIS ARMSTRONG VARSITY Chanel Hill 942-3651 NOW at 1:00 - 3:00 - 5:00 - 7:00 "Thpre is no end. no beginning. There is only the infinite passion -FELL! N I SPECIAL LATE SHOW TONIGHT AT 1 1 :30 P. M. "MONTEREY pop" starring. w JIMI HENDRIX JANISJOPLIN Sawada's bloodstained press card was found near the bodies. The two men set out from Phnom Penh Wednesday in a blue Datsum sedan to check reports the Cambodian government was preparing a new offensive to try to reopen Highway 2 leading south from Phnom Penh to the Vietnam border. Dusk fell before they returned, and at night in Cambodia the countryside belongs to the Viet Cong. Cambodian soldiers bivouaced for the night near Chambak, 24 miles south of the capital, the event of his death listing the suspected assassins. Military authorities meanwhile questioned a retired general, Roberto Viaux, and his father-in-law, retired Col. Raul Igualt, in the Schneider slaying. Neither man has been charged in the case, however. Sergio Miranda, Viaux's lawyer, hinted of possible army involvement in Schneider's assassination, the first political killing in Chile in more than 130 years. Miranda said Viaux had sent abroad "for security reasons" a list of "high persons who may have been involved in the Schneider case." He named no names. Police have described the Schneider killing as an aborted kidnap, planned mainly by rightist extremists seeking to block Allende's assumption of the presidency Nov. 3. Police have said Schneider was killed because he resisted his abductors. at 1:00-3:00 5:10-7:20-9:30 creating life. to give it away. The Baby Mais Starring BARBARA HERSHEY TECHNKOLOfT vinie OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS! MUSIC - 9:00 of life X .151 C J AN0 LYRICS BY jerry mmx ""'"'i"n ' - v 4 j r-,.,inr- . 35fr 1 It , . T X I EL hear firing but did not investigate. Thursday UPI staff member Khau Buu Khien went out to look for them. He found their bodies 20 miles south of Phnom Penh, 30 feet from the car. There was some blood in the car, indicating they were wounded in the ambush. The nature of the wounds indicated they were shot through the chest by bursts from Chinese Communist-made AK47 automatic rifles after leaving the car. As one of their colleagues noted, they were armed only with a ballpoint pen and a bag of cameras. Frosch, of Atlanta, Ga., took up his duties as bureau manager in Phnom Penh on Aug. 2, 1970. He was no stranger to war-he fought in Vietnam as a soldier, and rose to the rank of captain in intelligence. He held the Bronze Star, the Air Medal, the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with silver star, , the Army Commendation Medal and the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Frosch and Sawada were the 31st and 32nd correspondents to die in the Indochina War. Another 18 correspondents are missing in Cambodia, presumably captured or dead. Eight others who were captured in Cambodia have been freed. U.S. Wants WASHINGTON The United States Thursday demanded the prompt release of two U.S. Army generals detained in the Soviet Armenia and accused the Russians of the first violation of a new consular agreement between the two countries. In a border incident that has mushroomed diplomatically and served to underline the recent chill in Soviet-American relations, Soviet Pfe Leaving On Asian Tar VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI will leave Nov. 26 on a nine-day flying tour to Asia and the South Pacific, the longest journey in terms of distance and time of his pontificate, the Vatican announced Thursday. It will be the 73-year-old Pope's ninth foreign trip since he was elected spiritual ruler of the world's Roman Catholics in June of 1963. No other reigning pontiff has traveled as far before. ... Aoftiwar TT IT .enoiii XL WASHINGTON-Antiwar groups are spicing their oratory this year with the language that every politician understands money. So far in the 1 970 election campaign, organized pacifist fund-raising committees have chipped in about $124,000 to support favored ognressional candidates from coast to coast. The biggest benefactor, according to reports filed with the clerk of the House, has been former Democratic Gov. Philip H. Hoff of Vermont, who is trying to unseat Sen Winston L. Prouty, R-Vt. Hoff is listed as receiving $10,500 from the Los Angeles-based Task Force Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin was handed a formal note of protest by acting Secretary of State John Irwin during a 20-minute meeting at the State ; Department. Dobrynin said afterwards that the release of the generals, a U.S. Army major and a Turkish colonel whose light plane strayed across the Turkish border into Soviet territory Oct. 21 would depend on the outcome of a Soviet investigation. The American note charged the Soviets had violated, the consular agreement signed July 13, 1968, after lengthy negotiations, by refusing to let U.S. representatives see the officers for .five days after their plane was grounded. Two U.S. consular officials visited the detainees Monday, but the Russians refused an American request for a second meeting. A department spokesman said U.Si charge d'affaires Boris H.Kosson aske the Soviet foreign ministry for a consular visit Nov. 2 if the four men and their plane had not been released by then. The note delivered to Dobrynin expressed amazement at the buildup the Russians have given the case Qfffffi ' '''' , - Interviewing isn't just a chance to display your talents It's a chance to aet information about employers. Don't waste it Ask questions. To hi p youTwe've listed some things that could affect how much you nciy jw", ,.TV xrn oninv is what it S all aDOUt. enjoy your tuture jod. nnu r : 1 1 Do you have a training program? 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And because we're one of the world's laraest insurers, a State Farm investigate a number of career fields. Right now we have op portunities in accounting, actuarial science, claims, lrtronic data processing, in vestments, interview is a good way to STATE FARM INSURANCE Regional micest n. uuye ie, ma. - Mn-'- - A ' . " oio . SI. Paul. Minn. . Wayne. N.J Scarborough. 0"V . DaU Columbia. Mo. Springfield. Perm. Murireesboro. Term. Uuiws, o-Om W. Uiavene. Ind. Vfer.' c Needham, Harper & Steers, Inc. STATE FARM MUTUAL 1971 Recruitment Program Newspaper only - 560 lines W-O. AM 4575 Ad No. 1156 Rl Money Campaign for Peace and the Peace Commencent Fund of Boston. In 1968, Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-Minn., recieved heavy contributions from antiwar groups in his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, but not until this year have such groups organized as formal fund raisers. Their efforts do not compare with the multimillion-dollar campaigns financed by the Democratic and Republican parties and their assorted committees, but by selective support of certain candidates-mostly Democrats-they are making their muscle felt. The Boston fund is the biggest, having spent about as much as the $80,807 it raised. Its advisory board members include nationally known anti-war activists, among them aformer Attorney General Ramsey Clark, Yale University chaplain William Sloane Coffin, Episcopal Bishop coadjutor Paul Moore of New York City, Sam Brown of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee, and Charles Palmer, former president of the National Student Association. Nixon Strikes Out Against Hemplarey ROCHESTER, Minn. -President Nixon, who kept Hubert H. Humphrey out of the White House in 1968, came to Minnesota Thursday seeking to block his way to the U.S. Senate. Nixon also campaigned against another Democrat whose1 name is linked to an old political adversary, Adiai E. Stevenson III of Illinois. This, the final leg of Nixon's 5-450-mile foray, was a tense tnp. Tight miumy wi employee turnover rate compare with anH lmderwritina. cruiter will be on your campus November 5. U970. Arrange an interview through your Placement Office. Then bring your questions. law. management COMPANIES An Equal Opportunity . r- . i . W.r,(o. Hvn Jacksonville. - Tr .. IVsonvilfe. Ha. - bTH. AU, . Santa RcCalil. -&jSZ ft nflUICI "".. ' ' . f :1 Birmincjhflni. Ala. Tex. Charlottesville. ex- v a. rauumer, j-a. - Vtet Cong announced have received renewed pledges, of support from I he Soviet Unton at the negotiating table 2nd in their struggle on the battlefield. Viet Cor? spokesman Dong Dinh Thao said after Thursday's fruitless )Q:h session of the Vietnam peace talks that Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko gave the pledge to Madame Nguyen Thi Binh. Viet Cong foreign minister, in their meeting in London Wednesday night. The Communist official said Gromyko, at the meeting, condemned President Nixon's latest peace move-thus dispelling speculation Moscow was moving closer to Washington's thinking on how to settle the Indochina conflict. Thao made the statement after Nixon's peace negotiator. Ambassador David K.E. Bruce, once more vainly urged Hanoi's Xuan Thuy and Madame Binh's stand-in, Nguyen Van Tien, to examine seriously Nixon's Oct. 7 call for an Indochinee cease-fire, prompt talks on troop withdrawals and a new broader, international conference on the whole Indochina conflict. At Thursday's meeting North Vietnam's Thuy appealed to the American public over the head of Nixon to "join hands" with the Vietnamese in defeating the Republican administration's Vietnamese policy. The Viet Cong spokesman, revealing details of the Gromyko-Binh meeting, said the Soviet Foreign Minister "reaffirmed energetically the Soviet Union's support for our struggle and expressed his warm backing for our offers of Sept. i7." On that day the Viet Cong in Paris promised to decree a cease-fire in Vietnam if the Americans agreed to withdraw their troops by June 30, 1971. security was imposed after two police reports of possible threats against the President's life in Chicago. In his campaign into the Midwest, Nixon was running head-on into Humphrey and Stevenson. This time out, Nixon was fighting the pdds, Polls, in both 'Illinois "and Minnesota - show Stevenson and Humphrey , well ahead in their senatorial election campaigns against Sen. Ralph T. Smith and Rep. Clark MacGreeor t re Our re Employer Bloom tnqton. iu WrsIuU. Mich. - ,. r i.,.v w,j PARIS -The ThursJjy they STATE FAIM CO INSURANCE 'w:v.wAv.ww.w.'.t 4 i f V
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 30, 1970, edition 1
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