The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 10, 1974, Image 12

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    —The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 10,1974
-_g_ $3OO in compensatory
/ t / \ T damages and $9OO in punitive
W lUt/ U/ # ( damages.
In October, Weiner had
■ appeared before District
\/\/I KI O /“"I Magistrate Clifford Yorks,
If If f f KJa # asking for $9OO in damages
and the return of his
_ # motorcycle, which had been
/j / j fjk / parked on the lawn of his
V* \jf KM § home at 140 N. Patterson St.
* * Dean Wagner, co-owner of
D and D, said a contract he
signed with S.C. Sun, the
property’s owner, gave him
jurisdiction to issue parking
tickets over the adjoining
parking lot and surrounding
grounds.
A University student was
awarded $250 last week on
appeal of a case involving
confiscation of his motorcycle
by the D and D Parking Lot
Security Company.
The Board of Arbitors, a
three-attorney panel, ruled in
favor Friday of Neil Weiner
(9th-business), who asked for
Coal mine research
WASHINGTON <AP)—The make the nation self
director of the Bureau of sufficient in energy
Mines vowed yesterday not to production.'
slacken government'research Dr. Thomas V. Falkie told
on mine safety in a rush to an advisory panel on coal
■ ■■ ■■ 1
the camera shop
we would like to be your
photographic headquarters
31 1 W. Beaver Ave. State College
Phone: 237-5326
Yorks ruled that Wagner
has no right to confiscate the
motorcycle since tenants had
control of the grounds and
Wagner was limited to
patrolling the parking lot.
The district magistrate
ordered Wagner to return the
motorcycle or Weiner would
be awarded a $250 judgment.
He also ruled that Weiner
would not receive the $9OO in
damages he requested
because he technically was
guilty of trespassing since he
had not signed the lease for
the house.
Wagner returned the
motorcycle.
Acting with the Un
dergraduate Student
Government Department of
Legal Affairs, Weiner ap
pealed the case to the Board
of Arbitors.
Wagner has 20 days to
appeal the judgment of the
board. Last night he could not
be reached for comment.
continues
mine safety that while coal
plays a vital role in President
Nixon’s “Project In
dependence" for total energy
independence by 1980, “if
we’re not careful we may get
ourselves into a bind.”
He said that the energy
crunch and the' resurgence of
coal as a major fuel offers “a
unique opportunity for
building health and safety
features into new mine
technology."
Falkie appeared before the
Interior Department’s ad
visory committee on coal
mine safety research.
-Arhs, movie timetable
2001:
A Space Odyssey
7:30 & 10:00
Thursday - Sunday
FUB Roc Room
»
75*
Calls members 'counter-revolutionaries'
Hearst voices mistrust of SLA
LA PAZ, Mexico (AP)—
Randolph A. Hearst lashed
out at the Symbionese
Liberation Army yesterday,
calling them terrorists and
“counter-revolutionaries!’
who “cannot be trusted.”
Hearst told newsmen his
trip to this seaside resort on
the southern tip of Baja
California has no connection
with efforts to ransom his 20-
year-old daughter, Patricia,
kidnaped by the SLA Feb. 4.
The last SLA communique,
received April 3, said Miss
Hearst had joined her kid
napers as' a revolutionary
fighter. But Hearst said he
does not believe she has been
won over by the SLA.
He said he still hopes to get
his daughter back alive but
has very little faith in
negotiations so far with the
SLA.
His wife expressed concern
over what she called the
"honor" of the SLA in keeping
their word.
' In Washington, U.S. Ally.
Gen. William Saxbe said
yesterday he believes the FBI
now has more freedom to
pursue the case.
“Now the family is not
thinking she is going to be
returned from day to day and
doesn't think the ransom will
be adequate. This will give
the FBI more freedom to
operate,” he said.
“Now that the lid is off, I
think we’re going to see some
results,” Saxbe said. “We will
apprehend the people in
volved in this case if they stay
in this country.”
“They are just terrorists,”
Hearst said of the SLA during
an impromptu news con
ference outside the luxury
hotel where he, his wife and
two of their daughters are
staying.
He said members of the
SLA “are counter
revolutionaries and are
hurting their own cause
because people will not go
along with this sort of thing."
The SLA “proved through
the negotiations that they
cannot be trusted,” he
declared.
Hearst, editor and
president of the San Fran
cisco Examiner, said he came
to this tourist area to “sort
things out with my family.”
He added that he has been
coming to the resort for 20
years. The Hearsts arrived
Sunday.
The Hearsts are staying in
one of the houses at the Las
Cruces Hotel complex, 19
miles southeast of La Paz but
isolated despite its short
SOUTH CINEMA
“ ‘ Take The Money And Run' N
is nuttiness triumphant.”
-LOOK MAGAZINE
crarillnff “ in * an * l y
Tomldy?’ ferT fanny”
comray mm x • \ -time magazine
—JUDITH CRIST y~.
1 f r
-
1 1 ~"
PALOMAR PICTURES INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS
WOODY ALLEN'S
“TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN"
i tor/mQ
WOODY ALLEN JANET MARGOLIN
PROM THE AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANY. INC
DISTRIBUTED Br CINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATION UJIUH lyWjttg*
Fri - Sun
Redifer Room ‘D’
Coming Next Week:
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distance from the Baja
California city.
In response to ransom
demands by the SLA, Hearst
established a $2 million food
give-away program, and the
Hearst Corp. pledged an
additional $4 million in food if
Miss Hearst is released
unharmed by May 3.
Hearst said that if Patricia
is freed she would have to be
seen by three trustees of the
fund before the $4 million
being held for additional food
giveaways would be released.
The three are Willy Brown,
a California state legislator;
Vincent Halliman, a
California lawyer, and Er
nesto Galarza, a Mexican-
Road contracts prepared
HARRISBURG (AP) -
Contracts for repair of worn
roads throughout the state
are being prepared in an
ticipation of a penny hike in
the state gasoline tax.
Transportation Secretary
Jacob Kassab said yesterday.
“We are doing everything
we can to get ready in case
something is done to give us
the money we need,” Kassab
told the House Appropriations
Committee.
p
Nt
f 3’
Ida
o
a -
a- & N*
ss g
§2 (&
-a c/j
M 0
••
7:30 & 9:30
Only $.75
American leader and writer.
Miss Hearst declared in a
taped communique received
last Wednesday that she had
i enounced her family, her
fiance and her friends and
was joining her SLA kid
napers as an armed
revolutionary.
In San Francisco, Charles
Bates, FBI agent in charge of
the case, said his office has
been conducting “an
aggressive investigation and
we’re still conducting an
aggressive investigation,
doing everything possible.”
“We’re trying to solve a
kidnaping case and we’re
going to solve it,” Bates said.
“People will be arrested and
The legislature must ap
prove the increase, endorsed
last week by Gov. Shapp. If
enacted, the hike would raise
Pennsylvania’s levy to nine
cents a gallon, the same
amount charged by eight
other states and New York
City.
The proposal would raise an
estimated $52 million an
nually for pothole filling and
other road repairs Another
$l6 million annually could
come from a pending bill to
hike minor fees for duplicate
licenses, registration and
other services.
Kassab said he has in
structed his 11 districtioffices
to prepare resurfacing
contracts for “the worst jobs
they've got to do.”
Pocono Mountain camp for physically and
mentally handicapped youngsters will be
interviewing for general and specialty
counselors on April 11 and 12. Sign up for
interviews in Student Employment Office,
105 Boucke, or write Camp Sun Mountain,
Box 400, Bala Cynwyd, Pa. 19004.
> p
PQ
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s- K
<0
CA
G
3
Paula
Wed. 3 p.m.
Bob
Students and Teachers
ATTENTION
SOPHOMORE WOMEN
interested in
Junior Honorary.
If you have a 2.75 cum, you must file an
application at HUB desk by
Wed. April 17
Questions? Call Dorrie 865-6997
Minnie 237-2873
Special Summer
Rates
Now Available
ONE BLOCK
FROM CAMPUS
BEAVER HILL
PARK HILL
CEDARBROOK
PENN TOWER
OFFICE 340 East Beaver
237-0363
I & A Corp.
meet me
at the
Lemon Tree
brought to court for this
crime and there’s no questioh
in my mind about that.”
In St. Paul, Minn.,
American Indian Movement
leader Dennis Banks said he
hoped to hear from the SLA
some time soon. Banks said
he had been asked by Hearst
to organize minority groups
to intercede with the SLA for
Patricia to be allowed to meet
with her family.
“If we don’t receive a
contact or a clue that a
meeting is possible then I’m
afraid AIM will have to with
draw,” Banks said. “We can’t
be involved in something like
this if it is to be drawn into
weeks and months.”
If the legislature approves
the tax increase by May 1,
Kassab estimated, the
department should be able to
let $2O million worth of
resurfacing contracts
covering the roads most in
need of work, before next
winter sets in.
“We hope we can handle $45
million in additional pothole
work ourselves,” Kassab
said.
Appropriations Committee
members indicated they
favor the tax increase, which
was tabled in the House on
March 6. But some predict the
measure will have problems
because of the upcoming
primary elections, scheduled
for May 21.