Five SLA Suspects in Gun Battle

Five SLA Suspects in Gun Battle

PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn.. Fri,. Mav 17. 1974 immi ■ HE W.G. GLEMHEy Cd. iHanrI|fBtf r Suputmi 11? ralh MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1974- VOL. XCIII, No. 195 Manchester—A City of Village Charm SIXTEEN PAGES — TWO MINI PRICE: FIFTEEN CENTS Patty Hearst May Be One of Dead Five SLA Suspects in Gun Battle LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The five suspected members side the house in the southcen­ Fingerprint and medical race and sex of /the victims of the terrorist group were tral part of the city, but none of & experts worked today to deter­ could not be es/ablished im­ killed Friday when FBI agents the officers was hurt. mediately. mine whether one of five per­ and police hurled grenades and Coroner Thomas Noguchi Police Cmdr( Peter Hagan sons killed in a Symbionese gunfire into the burning said the five bodies found in the said “we can neither prove nor Liberation Army hideout was hideout. The SLA fought back ashes were so “ very badly disprove” that Miss Hearst, Patricia Hearst. with machine gun fire from in­ ____ _ mutilated and burned” that the kidnaped 103 days ago, was in the house. An FBI agent at the scene identified one of the dead as * '„f Kissinger Making “Cinque,” the self-termed field marshal of the SLA, and another as Camilla Hail, 29, but FBI officials later refused to Sixth Shuttle Trip confirm the report. “Cinque” was Donald D. DeFreeze, 30, an escaped convict who helped JERUSALEM (UPI) the embattled Golan Heights. night, said his government’s Secretary of State Henry A. create the terrorist group while Details of the plan were not latest military disengagement inside prison walls. Kissinger left on his sixth and known. proposals contained some new perhaps final shuttle to Syria A spokesman for Noguchi, Hideout in Flames The secretary of state made ideas. who reportedly sent to San today with aides giving his Mid­ predictions himself, but aides “We have brought forward & .i v; dle East peace mission “no Francisco for Miss Hearst’s A police officer carrying a submachine gun runs into posi­ said his hopes appeared to be alterations while maintaining dental records, said the iden­ the gun battle and five bodies havq been recovered from more than a 50-50 chance” for / waning. “No more than a 50-50 iS‘>* ; - v „'«>i *,. tion to protect firemen during a gun baffle with a group of the basic conditions for our tities would be announced about the ashes. Experts today were trying to identify the dead, success. / chance,” said one aide. sectirity and for the continua­ suspected Symbionese Liberation Army suspects in a one of whom might be Patricia Hearst who was kidnapped Kissinger carried Israeli 2 p.m. (5 p.m. -EDT). The ■, 'if. ■'. ' ^ The sticking point'in drawing tion of our settlements in their spokesman said the bodies were house in Los Angeles Friday night. The fire started during by the SLA more than three months ago. (UPI photo) reaction to his latest proposals a cease-fire line to separate the % x .: « entirety and complete oppor­ “torn by bullets,” not only from on drawing a»cease-fire line in armies of Israel and Syria was tunities for their . ' ' the police guns, but from said to be more emotional than development,” Eban said. exploding ammunition worn in '''i. geographical. It was .-■; V ^-=- “I think that Syria and Israel beits around their bodies during ■#*,-• ■'C- -' ■' JV- > ^ , .\,, Judge Orders Stans Inside nevertheless strong enough to are close to the necessity of the fierce firefight. All the dead be a ser^^s threat to the mis­ saying yes or no atout the prin- were wearing ammo belts, he Today's sion. ciples that have been said. Jirralh American officials said both crystalized,” he said. Steven Weed, 26, fiance of the To Turn Over Records Syria and Israel had pleaded Kissinger conferred with 20-year-old newspaper heiress, '. %.y5 if.;, ■ WASHINGTON (UPI) - both 1968 and 1972, records with both contributions and am­ Manchester Has It, Page 7 with Kissinger to continue the Prime Minister Golda Meir arrived at the scene from San shuttle. Chief U.S. District Court Judge showing what advice Stans gave bassadorships. Friday after her cabinet level Diego, and with his voice George L. Hart says he — and Television, Page 8 The officials, who reported the President on personnel They were Ruth Farcas, a Senior Citizens, Page 3 negotiating team met in private breaking said, “The police not President Nixon — will selections and nominations. $200,000 Nixon contributor and both sides near agreement, said session. The full Israeli cabinet didn’t even consider that Patty decide hether a cloak of Stans objected that the ambassador to Luxembourg; Business Bodies, Page 3 the secretary of state would also met during the day to might be in there before they 6 executive secrecy can be records were his own — and Vincent De Roulet, former am­ Prayer of the Woods, Page 3 probably return to Jerusalem weigh the new proposals. went in. It wasn’t even thought . '.‘i- '■»' thrown over campaign donors tonight and decide whether to therefore covered by the Fifth bassador to Jamaica and a $50,-. Bennet honor roll. Page 5 ^ An American spokesman said of. I saw it on TV.” who get federal government Amendment — as well as by 000 contributor: Cornelius V. stay in the region for two or “ some new American ideas After touring the scene with f f - . •<> <• <v . • • . ■ * '•■ . jobs. “executive privilege.” That Whitney, who made a $250,000 East, MHS nines win. Page 10 three more days. were discussed on the question police. Weed said, “I know less Hart ordered Friday that brought lawyers for everyone contribution that was returned Little League driven Page 10 Israeli Foreign Minister of a disengagement agreement than anyone.” Abba Eban, in an interview on files on that subject, now in the involved into court for a 3V2 amid controversy whether it ECHS unbeaten girl tennis team. Page 10 between Israel and Syria.” , The girl’s father, Randolph A. custody of Nixon’s former com­ hour hearing Friday. was part of a deal involving the national television Friday Hearst, president and editor of Robin Herrn^^nn' fertilizes the yard at her 172 S. Main St. home. (Herald photo by Dunn) merce secretary and campaign Stans’ lawyer, Robert J. ambassadorship to Spain, and the San Francisco Examiner, fund-raiser Maurice H. Stans, Barker, produced a letter from J. Fyfe Symington, a Maryland and her mother stayed secluded be brought to him Monday. He presidential counsel J. Fred Republican who gave $10,000 in their suburban San Francisco will review them and rule Buzhardt in which Buzhardt and was promised a European home, watching the drama un­ whether they should remain said Nixon had directed him to ambassadorship by Nixon’s fold on television. secret. impose executive privilege on lawyer Herbert W. Kalmbach. A federal grand jury is in­ Manchester Youth Dies There was only one survivor/ the documents. Kalmbach pleaded guilty ear­ who saw at least part of the vestigating whether am­ But at the conclusion of the ly this year to a misdemeanor TheJtbme Qapdenep bassadorships or other jobs gunbattle from inside —the oc­ hearing. Judge Hart barked, for offering the ambassaorship cupant, Christine Johnson. She were traded for donations to “Get 'em here, get 'em here. to Symington. Later, in a Feb. Nixon’s 1972 re-election cam­ stumbled outside as flanges Not today. Monday will do.” 25, 1974, news conference, From Collision Injuries broke out, wounded in the thigh paign. Nixon, however, allowed Nixon said, “Ambassadorships and back and screaming ^ a t Watergate Special Buzhardt to waive executive are not for sale.” By MAL BARLOW All-American Vegetables, Home-Grown call for ambulances and removed the Hesketh youth. special apparatus and placed in she had been held hostag^. All-American Flowers Prosecutor Leon Jaworski sub­ privilege on records involving A high speed, head-on colli­ Kalmbach was a witness at firemen at 8:41. The Hesketh youth was placed th e second ambulance. poenaed from Stans, who was four persons already identified sion Friday night before 8:40 on the Friday hearing and said he Two ambulances driven by on a second stretcher in the am­ Assisting ambulance crewmen The FBI was keeping her More Colorful Nixon's chief fund raiser in in public as being connected Spencer St. caused the death of By Sheila and Allan Swenson heavy and this variety had discussed the Symington Roger Talbot and Ken Messielr bulance already holding the on this ride was Fireman Ken secluded at California Hospital, freezes well, too. matter with Stans. a 17-year-old youth and Every year, results of ex­ arrived shortly afterwards but Cooper girl and the ambulance Cusson, specially trained for where an official said/the FBI As you plan your garden, By Sheila and Allan Swenson Red Fox Celosia displays “I advised Mr. Stans of my serious injuries to two other had ordered that sh^ not be tensive test growing prove carmine-red plumes with were only able to take on board took off for Manchester emergency first aide. check for the' new hybrid Six exceptional new flower meetings wth Mr. Symington, persons. the Cooper girl, who had what allowed to talk to ai^one. the values of the best new winners that have proved fresh green foliage contrast. Memorial Hospital. The Despite their efforts, the vegetable varieties across varieties survived the India Test Fires and told him of the fact... I had Robert L. Lessard, 17, of 169 on-the-scenes observers said superior in 25 different test­ rigorous testing in all parts of Central plumes seven inches hospital had been alerted to the Lessard youth died soon after The small home /where the America.

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