Boyle Verdict carries sentence MEDIA. Pa. (AP) Former United Mine Workers President W. A. "Tony" Boyle was convicted last night of three counts of first-degree murder in the 1969 slaying of union rival Joseph "Jock" Yablonski and his wife and daughter. Boyle's attorney said he would file a motion for a new trial. The jury of nine men and three women took just 4 1 2 hours to reach a verdict. "Guilty, first degree," jury foreman Clyde M. Parris responded three times to the indictment read by Judge Francis J. Catania of Delaware County Common Pleas Court. The convictions carry a mandatory life sentence. No date for sentencing was an nounced. The 72-year-old Boyle exhibited no emotion as the verdict was read, but his face appeared drawn as he waved to his wife while being escorted from the courtroom and voiced a "goodbye." Boyle's wife. Ethel fidgeted in her seat and strained for a look at her husband. Next to her. Boyle's daughter, An toinette. rubbed her eyes and appeared to be holding back tears. Kenneth Yablonski, son of the slain man, stood with tears on his cheeks and remarked to Sprague: "You don't know how happy I am. There's no words that I can express." It was the fifth murder conviction obtained by Sprague in the case. Three others have pleaded guilty and a fourth, William Turnblazer, the prosecution's principal witness. has pleaded guilty to a federal charge of conspiring to kill Yablonski The trail of the conspirators had led House subpoenas Nixon WASHINGTON ( AP I—President Nixon was subpoenaed by the House Judiciary Committee last night to turn over all tapes and other materials sought for its impeachment inquiry but the White House declined to say it would fully comply. After the subpoena was issued by a 33- :3 committee vote. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler promised only that Nixon would supply the committee within two weeks with un specified materials that would be "comprehensive and conclusive in regard to the President's actions." Ziegler said the White House had been pledging since Tuesday to make some of the requested materials available when Congress returns from its Easter recess on April 22. He said the White House review of these materials would con tinue The White House Spokesman declined to sa,!, that Nixon would fully comply v.ith the subpoena, declaring only that he would turn over materials "con sistent with his constitutional respon sibilities " Ziegler argued that the materials which he said would reach the com- "Renaissance Man" FORMER PENN STATE FOOTBALL PLAYER MIKE REID exhibited his vocal and musical talents last night in Schwab. See story page 10. the daily convicted of murder from southwestern Pennsylvania, to Washington, D.C., to Cleveland, Ohio and to the coal fields of Kentucky and Tennessee. With the conviction of Boyle, Sprague said the case was finished. "Boyle was the originator. We got back to the beginning and that's where we'll stop." Turnblazer, a lawyer and former president of UMW District 19 in Ten nessee and Kentucky, has testified that Boyle told him and Albert Pass, another former district 19 officer, that Yablonski had to be killed. life Turnblazer said the order was given June 23, 1969 at UMW headquarters in Washington, D.C. as the three men stood outside an elevator for a minute or two. Boyle who testified in his own defense, denied the charge and said such a meeting never took place. Boyle, who had ruled the 200,000- member union with an iron fist for 10 years and was a protege of the late John L. Lewis, was accused of masterminding the Dec. 31, 1969 slaying. . The charges against him stemmed from a statement Turnblazer had given to FBI agents last year. Sprague had said at the time of Boyle's indictment "This is where the case began and this is where it ends." The defense had claimed that Turn blazer was an admitted liar who had perjured himself in previous testimony and could not be believed. Charles F. Moses, of Billings, Mont., Boyle's chief defense counsel, claimed the plot against Yablonski was con ceived and carried out by District 19 officials to cover up misuse of nearly $1 million in district funds. The Yablonskis were shot to death by three hired gunmen as they slept in their beds in the family's sprawling red brick home in Clarksville, Pa., in the riclrsoft coal fields of southwestern Penn sylvania. Their bullet-riddled bodies were discovered Jan. 5, 1970. The slayings occ rred three weeks after Boyle defeatelthe reform-minded Yablonski in a bitter election for the UMW presidency. The frail-looking Boyle who suffers from a heart condition and is recovering from a suicide attempt last September, is serving a three-year federal prison sentence for misuse of union funds. mittee between April 22 and April 25 would bear out Nixon's past ex planations of his Watergate role and "will receive the support of the House." The subpoena directs the President to respond by 10 a.m. on April 25, four days after Congress returns from its Easter recess. All dissenting votes were cast by members of the Republican minority. The committee's order came despite an offer from James D. St. Clair, the President's Watergate lawyer, to deliver some of the material requested within a few days. But St. Clair had refused to make an immediate decision on all of the material the committee had requested in a letter delivered to the White House task , Feb. 25. Rep. Robert McClory, R-111., who had supported many White House requests at committee sessions, called St. Clair's offer "entirely too equivocal." He then voted in favor of the subpoena. However, Rep. Edward Hutchinson of Michigan, the ranking Republican on the committee, voted against the subpoena. Later he said he opposed it because it is not enforceable and because the White House had indicated it would turn over Collegian Photo by Erlc Polack Sprague ends 4-year pursuit MEDIA, Pa. (AP) "This is the end of the line," Richard A. Sprague said last night. As minutes earlier, his nearly four year pursuit of the assassins of United Mine Workers insurgent Joseph "Jock" Yablonski reached its apex in the murder conviction of W. A. "Tony" Boyle. "Boyle was the originator," he said. "We got back to the beginning and that's where we'll stop." Sprague's quest for justice in the case had taken him from the rich soft coal fields of southwestern Pennsylvania, to Cleveland, Ohio, the coal fields of Tennessee and Kentucky and ultimately to UMW headquarters in Washington, D.C. Tenacity is a trademark of the man who was charged with unraveling the assassination. The 49-year-old Sprague is a no nonsense lawyer who serves as Philadelphia's first assistant district attorney. He strongly backs the death penalty and readily admits he's never lost any sleep over a man he has sent to the electric chair. Often brash and famous for his one line office memos such as "Why did this happen?," Sprague was named chief prosecutor in the Yablonski case nearly four years ago. Since then he has. obtained four murder convictions, including Boyle, and has obtained guilty murder pleas from three others. A ninth man has pleaded guilty to a federal charge of conspiring to violate Yablonski's civil rights. all or most of the material the committee is demanding. It doesn't seem to me as though it was necessary to issue a subpoena today," Hutchinson said. If the White House should defy the subpoena, the Judiciary Committee would have several alternatives. One would be to prosecute its subpoena in the court as the Senate Watergate com mittee is doing with its subpoena for tapes. A committee lawyer said the committee could ask the House to cite the President for contempt or simply determine defiance of the subpoena to be an impeachable offense. Terrorists kill 18 QIRYAT SHMONAH, Israel (AP)— Three Arab terrorists raided this Israeli border town as its inhabitants were rising from their beds yesterday and killed 18 men, women and children with bursts of submachine-gun fire and rocket grenades. Another 15 persons were reported wounded. USG elections slow tax suit, Ellis says By RICH GRANT Collegian Staff Writer Undergraduate Student Government elections have delayed the lawsuit against the Centre County per capita tax, according to Allen Ellis, a lawyer retained by USG. Ellis said the Pa. Department of Justice was asking for factual proof that the tax discouraged students from voting before deciding on whether to become a party to the suit. Part of the proof would be affadavits from students stating they did not regis ter to vote because of the tax. "They (USG) promised me they would do the legwork," Ellis said. "They said let's hold off until after the election." Ellis said he expects to meet with USG President George Cernusca soon. Tim Holmes, director of USG Department of Legal Affairs, said behind the slow-up wag- - a missing list of students who had agreed to. fill out af fadavits. "No one seems to know - where the list is," Holmes said. "Yesterday, I spoke to Ellis. He didn't have it. Frank M. (Frank Muraca, former USG vice president) thought it was in his desk. Yesterday, George C. said he would get the list to me." According to Cernusca, there was a mix-up. Sprague, whose parents knew him as a softhearted boy who wept over birds with broken wings, joined the Philadelphia district attorney's office in 1958. Since then, he's played a powerful role in the fate of over 10,000 persons, prosecuting them for everything from shoplifting to murder. And he has become one of a few prosecutors to win a conviction in a murder case where the body never was found. Two years ago, Sprague recalled, he received a series of threatening phone calls. One of the callers warned: "You're going to get the same thing Yablonski got we know where you live." Sprague reacted in his typical fashion: "That's the kind of chance you take when you're doing your job. You can either freeze or ignore it. •I don't intend to freeze. I don't even carry a gun." Sprague's no-nonsense approach is characterized in a story told by one of his aides: "I got married Monday at 6 p.m. and got to work Tuesday at 9:30 and Dick asked me what the hell took me so long," recalls Asst. Dist. Atty. Bill Wolf. "I may be a bastard to work for," Sprague says, "but I'm not aloof." "He's a bastard to work for," says another aide, "but I love that man. All I know is that he'd have to kick me out physically to get rid of me." ARHS, OTIS ask veto to USG By STEVE SIIIKOFF Collegian Staff Writer The Undergraduate Student Govern ment Senate passed a bill Monday night creating a Bureau of Town Affairs and a Bureau of Residential Life without con sulting two organizations operating for similar purposes. The Association of Residence Hall Students and the Organization of Town Independent Students claim they are threatened by the bill and want it vetoed by USG President George Cernusca. The organizations said a joint meeting with USG members and a re-written bill will be acceptable to both grpups. The bill, passed 22-4, is to create political advocacy on policies relating to town and dorm life, according to Paul - Stevenson, one of the bill's sponsors. "It is not our purpose to step on the toes of ARHS and OTIS, but to complement these organizations. These groups are not political organizations, and political advocacy is something both town and dorm students need," Stevenson said. He said these bureaus are to aid OTIS and ARHS by working for alternate meal plans, dorm contracts and tenant unions, the areas most in need of political ad vocates. Stevenson told ARHS members Tuesday night that representatives from the bureaus will aid ARHS and OTIS by helping students attain political rights in these areas. Officials said most of the dead were children. The Arabs died in an explosion inside a four-story apartment building they had seized. "They were throwing children from the top floor of the building," a local police officer said. A Palestinian commando organization "The list is here," Cernusca said, explaining that the list was in the USG office and that Muraca knew where it was. Aside from the affadavits, Ellis said, other evidence for the state justice department would consist of minutes from meetings of the county corn- . missioners and the basis behind the commissioners' decision to approve or deny individual requests for exonera tion from the tax. Ellis added the other evidence had not been gathered yet. On Tuesday, the Centre County commissioners approved 199 of 233 per capita tax exoneration requests, in cluding 166 approvals on the basis of non residency claims. According to Commissioner J. Doyle Corman Jr., some of those approved who claimed non-residency were students. All had furnished some proof of out-of county residence. None were registered to vote in Centre County. i lixi Twenty-nine of the 34 turned d wn were over 65 years of age but fail to meet the indigency requirement of $l, or less. The county's exoneration ' policy permits those over 65 to apply for financial exoneration under financial inability guidelines. Ten cents per copy Friday, April 12, 1974 Vol. 74, No. 134 10 pages University Park, Pennsylvania Published by Students of The Pennsylvania State University Guilty FORMER UMW PRESIDENT TONY BOYLE after a jury last night found him guilty of first-degree murder. bureau measure Former-USG senator Walt Grabowski said, "Without talking to members of OTIS and ARHS, this bill has set back all the goodwill USG has done." Cernusca, speaking to ARHS council members, said, "I have gotten the feeling from you that USG is trying to take over the other organizations. We do not want to do that." He said the bill will give more power to OTIS and ARHS and an ability to effect change. "The purpose of this is so that USG will have an apparatus to link to OTIS and ARHS without a communications problem," Cernusca said. "A unified effort is the best, but you have alienated USG when you don't talk to ARHS about the bill," ARHS Vice President Joe Davidson told Cernusca. ARHS President Wendy Morris called the bill "poorly written and ambigious." North Halls President Mike Christopher told Cernusca, "This is a step in the right direction to unify groups, but in two or three administrations from now your goodwill will be gone. We need a guarantee that ARHS will be in exist ence. You must veto the bill." But OTIS Vice President Ron Gordon said, "I don't believe the bill is necessarily a bad one. I would like to see either a veto or consultation before this could take effect. ARHS and OTIS are very open." in Israel in Lebanon said Arabs were on a suicide mission to enforce demands for the release of Arab guerrillas held by Israel. Israeli officials said they had received no such demand from the guerrillas. Premier Golda Meir, speaking in the parliament in Jerusalem, termed the attack "murder for the sake of murder" and said Israel would hold Lebanon responsible because Palestinian guerrillas are based there. The raiders slipped across Mg bOrder of Lebanon, about a mile away,: with three other Arabs who burst into a school, but fOund it empty because Of the Jewish holy season of Passover. Of ficials said these three escaped- back across the mountainous border. Israeli officials described the attack as the worst of its kind in the war that Arab guerrillas have been carrying out against Israel throughout it's 26-year history. It was the worst terrorist ptrike inside Israel since the attack on Tel Aviv's Lod airport two years ago:r Police here said the three AralA blew themselves up with explosives the y were carrying as Israeli security forces moved in on them in the apartment building. But the Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said gunfire from security forces set off the explosives. In Jerusalem, Mrs. Meir, who is stepping down as premier, announced the casualties as 33 dead or wounded. She added that eight of the dead were children, five were women and the remainder were men. She identified the wounded as five civilians, seven policemen and three soldiers. The Weather Sunshine and warm today, high 70. Tonight mostly cloudy and mild with a chance iof a few showers, low 52. Tomorrow mostly cloudy and warm with showers and possible thundershowers in the afternoon, high 71. Sunday mostly sunny and cooler, high 58. A random survey of town and dorm students indicated ARHS and OTIS should be consulted before creating the residential life and town bureaus. Almost all students surveyed said they felt USG intentions were good, but they said if ARHS and OTIS were not con sulted it would affect the service in many ways. Kathy Gallagher (9th-social services said, "Communications should be opened up, not only in the executive council, but between entire organizations as well." When asked if USG intentions are good Gallagher said, "USG has good in tentions but they went about it the wrong way. It had made ARHS and OTIS look like empty service organizations and that is not true." Walter Stembach (Bth-business ad ministration) said, "Communications must be opened up. I don't think they should be able to form organizations like this without cooperation from ARHS and OTIS. "The best thing to do would be to make ARHS and OTIS members of the bureaus." Terry Clark (10th-nursing) said, "In tentions are good, but that doesn't take away from the fact that they did this without consultation. Eventually it could be a good thing, but this issue wouldn't be a problem if they had worked on this together and it wouldn't be ambigious. town soldiers and policemen were hit while storming the apartment building, she said. Only two hours after she officially announced her resignation, Mrs. Meir issued an indirect warning to Lebanon for harboring Arab guerrillas and said the raiders were "not warriors of liberation but people who came just to murder... The killing of children, women and innocent civilians is murder for the sake of murder... "The government of Lebanon must know that we regard it, and residents of Lebanon who help the terrorists, as responsible for this act." In the Lebanese capital of Beirut, a Palestinian splinter group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine- General Command, claimed respon sibility for the raid and said it was a suicide mission to demand the release of 100 Arab guerrillas jailed in Israel. It also said it was to free Kozo Okamoto, the lone Japanese survivor of the May 1972 massacre of 26 victims at Lod airport. But Mrs. Meir read to Parliament a leaflet left by the dead terrorists which made no mention of Okamoto or freeing guerrillas. The Israeli premier quoted the leaflet as denouncing Israel for "expelling .the people of Palestine in a Nazi-like way... "We are sorry to talk in the language of weapons but we have found no listening ear for our just demands," it said, accusing Israel of racism and dispossessing the'Arabs. Mrs. Meir said it was signed by Popular Front-General Command. The guerrillas crossed the mountain frontier about a mile away from Qiryat Shmonah after dawn, slipped into the awakening town of 18,000 and opened fire with submachine guns and grenades, spraying everything in sight about 7:30 a.m., police said.