2 Friday, October 9, 1970 University Daily Kansan News Capsules By United Press International Cambodia: Republic PHINON PENH—Cambodia becomes a republic Friday in colorful ceremonies ending the monarchy under which the ousted chief of state, Prince Norrodim Sihanouk, ruled. The city was ablaze with lights Thursday night for the death of Communist forces broke out six months ago. Extra troops were pulled in from the countryside to bolster security. School children wore the word "republic" on their shirts and thousands of office workers, civil servants and militia-men marched in main streets to practice for the big ceremony. U.S.S.R.: Spacecraft MOSCOW.-The Soviet Union fired an unmanned Cosmos spacehip into orbit around the earth from its secret Balkan space center in Central Asia apparently benefit of visiting President Georges Pompidou of France. De Gaulie and Pompidou are the only Westerners ever invited to the space center by the Soviets The official Soviet announcement on Cosmos 389 did not say whether Pompidou witnessed the launch. His predecessor, Charles de Gaulle, watched the takeoff of an earlier Cosmos when he visited Bakoikon in 1968. MANHATTAN—Attorney General Kurt Frizzell, Republican gubernatorial candidate, said the Big Eight Conference's action against Kansas State was a speaking engagement at St-State he said, "I personally feel that the penalty was too harsh, and I hope that the conference will mullify that order with one a little more reasonable. Pizzell said the action placing the Wildcat football program on probation for three years is "a severe blow," but the GOP candidate he still expects "one heck of a chance" during K-State and the University of Kansas. "The kind of spirit that has built Kanaa State into the football power it is today isn't going to roll over and play with the same intensity." Kansas: K-State WASHINGTON, D.C.-A. bearded, shaggy red-haired undercover agent showed senators a baby in a baby bottle which he said campus radicals had taught him to manufacture as part of his training to kill policemen. Kevin Caffery, 23, displayed the baby bottle, filled with cherry bombs, zircon blades and other metal fragments, attached to the neck of the bottle at the end, and several small explosive devices he said were made by students at the New York State University. Capital: Bomb Manufacture Caffery testified he was "trained to kill police" by members of radical groups on the Buffalo campus. His training, he said, included manufacture of explosive devices and attacks against the university and police. A Long Island family whose 16-year son said he already had nearly everything he wanted became "instant millionaires". Thursday when they won the New York State special million dollar summer lottery. "I'd like to give it to someone who needs it," said young Gennel Ghiont, tears stream from face, when the team's coach, George Abbate, kissed his mother, Geneviève, was drawn from among 14 lottery tickets which were eligible for the lottery's first $1 million In order to prevent a full 75 per cent of the $1 million investment, Mr. Campbell will receive arrangements worked out before the drawing will renew $50,000 a year for the next 20 years. Tax experts estimated that the family would clear about $20,000 a year after the drawing was completed. Wave of Bombings Rocks West Coast, Indiana City By United Press International N.Y.C.: $$$$$$$$ Bombs roared a courtroom, in National Guard armory and a university campus. West Coast early Thursday. A high school and a store were fireened. Attorney General John Mitchie in San Francisco told reporters that one consequence the bombings were the work of "psychopath" trying to kill people. In San Rafael, Calif., a restroom wrecked a courtroom in the Frank Lloyd Wright — Justice, near where a judge and three others were killed in an abortive convict escapade. In Santa Barbara, Calif., a bomb ripped a large hole in the concrete wall of the National Mall where its windows and blowing out a door. In Seattle, Wash., two bomb- exploded in the basement of Clark Hall at the University of Warwick. Army ROTC offices were housed In South Bend, Ind., firebombs were hurled into a high school where 16 students caused $230,000 damages, after a night of racial disorders on the campus. The San Rafael blast at 1:27 a.m. in the courtroom of Superior Joseph Wilson. Whose apartment damaged a courtroom next door and drove flying fragments as far as 50 mph out of wood panels across a corridor. An anonymous woman earlier warned five minutes before the blast that there was a "big bomb in the courthouse in San Rafael." The Santa Barbara barbade at 4:17 a.m. came from a bomb planted against the base of the north side of the building behind a drain As in the case of Pasterak's beheading, Zhivago, Zohenlutya's massive movies about the Malina prison crime case, Howie Mowat they were circulated in typecript in underground刊载 pipe. The location was on the only side not protected by a high chain link fence. The Seattle Times also received a call from someone who said, "You better reporter to the University of Washington. The ROTC building." A caller warned security police of the bombs 22 minutes before they went off. The building's lone occupant, a janitor, escaped. Seattle police said the total blast equalled that of about 20 sticks of dynamite. The Seattle explosions, at 8 a.m., sprayed broken glass, touched off a fire which was quickly caused and traced an estimated $100 billion. A door was blown off its hinges, several windows blown out, and a large hole blown out of a wall. No one was inside the building at all. A few years ago when Achenlisnyn refused a suggestion from the Soviet writers union that he should abandon slanderous anti-Soviet campaign" abroad connected with his name, he was told he was free to return. He joined his like-minded admirers. He joined the renegade and compared to Despite the calm tone of the statement, literary sources in Moscow told her that he troubled the mastery novelist. They cited the pressure put on poet Boris Pasternak who then rejected it under pressure. STOCKHOLM (UP1) - The 1970 Nobel Prize for Literature was awarded to Solzhenitsyn, the contenderer Russian author whose works are banned at book and read offices. The prize this year is worth $78,400. "I am grateful for the decision," she said. "I accept the prize. I intend to go and receive it personally on the traditional day of repentance depends on me. I am well and my journey won't hurt my health." Nobel Literature Prize Won by Russian Author The 52-year-old author of "One Day in the Life of Ivan Densovich," "Cancer Ward" and "The First Circle" said through in Moscow he was grateful for the help he could go to like Sweden to accept it. Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Airk, told the Senate that in the 18 months ending last May, there was a lot of bumps which killed 43 persons. Senate Approves Tight Laws Against Terrorist Bombings "We must act or we will fail victims to the mob." McClellan said, "... We are fighting for the survival of our free society." WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Warned that the nation faces a from revolutionaries, to revolutionaries, Thursday voted a tough crack-down on terrorist bombings. It also penalized for bombers who kill. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. asked the Senate to kill the death penalty provision. The Senate refused 46-22. and U.S. attorneys to prosecute. Only the provision which would permit the death penalty if a fatal attack or bombing aroused any contriversy. The other was Australian novelist Patrick White, 38, who last year married. The last year the choice was between white and French-Irish novelist and playwright Samuel Beckett captured the prize. Many literary experts in Stockholm had believed that the Swedish Academy of Letters would choose to ignore the opinion because of the political implications attached to his name. Solzenitsyn was one of two candidates remaining when the academy went to vote. Svetlana Alliluyeva, Stalin's defector daughter. The Senate broadened federal anti-bombing statutes to cover university campuses public buildings government property businesses, and any institution or organisation which gets federal money. He did not take this offer. Not did he write to the Communist press, nor did he send his exile abroad, away from his beloved Russia, was tantamount to a death sentence. Solohienstyh writes that the writers union this year. The legislation, approved 68-0, also tightens laws against state militias and ploies for the purposes of bombing and makes stricter laws on weapon use. Moscow dispatches said the backlash against a campaign against Solzhenitsyn on two grounds—he has written to endear him. Himself, he is an anti-Ukrainian Union, and the Nobel committee awarded prize as an anti-Soviet gesture. Kidnapers Reduce Ransom Demands The measure, similar to language added to the organized crime bill by the House Wednesday, would make the bombings in certain penalties. It would permit the FBI to immediately investigate MONTREAL (UPI)—the kidnappers of British diplomat James Cross extended his death from the raid on Thursday and appeared to greatly benefit ransom demands, but gave "warning for the last time" that Cross will be killed if the family grants their remaining demands. Cross has been a hostage since 1952 and is now a member of the Libération du Quebec (FLQ), underground group seeking independence for French-speaking Muslims. The communicate from the FLQ kidnappers Thursday afternoon—their fifth—was found by the city police station CKLM, through which the kidnappers have been communicating. Alerted by a telephone call, they found it in the house on a Montreal street corner. The new communique was dated noon Thursday, extending the deadline for Cross's death—of the deadline to midnight. The FLQ set two preliminary demands—broadcast by the government-owned Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) to their "manifesto," and an end to threats by police hunting for them. "The FLQ is warning the authorities for the last time that if 12 hours from now the FLQ will not done these things ... the FLQ obliged to kill diplomat J. Cross," said the fifth communiqué. The communique apparently represented a significant scaling down of the original ransomware attack, which led to the release of 23 jailed separatist "political prisoners," payment of $500,000 in gold, an airliner to Algeria, and an elaborately detailed television production of the plane's departure, apparently humiliating the government. It said that if the government denies ditions by midnight Thursday, "We will release the diplomat who has been found to compliance with another condition, the release of political prisoners who want to be detained." This apparently brought the kidnappers' demands down mainly to the release of their jailed comrades. BULL & BOAR Big Dinners $1.22 Clean Cars in Future? WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Despite Detroit's claim that it can't be done, congressional leaders tentatively agreed to form the auto industry to make virtually pollution free cars by 1975. a grenin Seed. Edmund S Muskie, D-Maine, emerged from a house-Senate conference committee Thursday afternoon to meet with the senate and agreed to accept his long-sought restrictions on auto exhaust. LED ZEPPELIN III MALLS SHOPPING CENTER ALL ABOUT DIAMONDS Our Helpful "Blue Book" Buying a diamond for the first time? Or even thinking about it in the next few months? Now is the time to stop in an art gallery or buy one of these beautifully mysterious gems. We will be happy to show you a selection of qualities from our fine stock and explain the subtle points that establish the per carat price of every diamond. Also, pick up your free copy of the American Gem Society's helpful information on buying and pricing a diamond* which gives accurate course. Stop in soon! 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 Nixon's Peace Plan Gets Approval gave their support to the Nixon plan calling for cease-fire throughout Indochina SAGION (UP1) - The South vietnamese government offered a challenge to President Nixon's Indochina peace plan and offered a proposal to launch a new challenge to the Vienna participation in national elections. The acting Liaviian foreign minister, Pheng Khongsovan, has said that the president's peace proposals would speed an end to the infringements. Both Cambodia and Laos also sources in Phnom Penh, said Cambodia had agreed with the substance of the plan before it was presented. The statement by President Nugunyan Thieu's government peace plan was broadcast about six hours after the Nixon speech. 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