The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 26, 1976, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ■//MARGE, VOUKEX
1 60NNA KILL
I THAT KIP WHO'S
1 BEEN CAUIN6 /
\VOU NAMESy
earst's second trial to be set
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Patricia .Hearst, already
facing a ,35-year prison
sentence for bank robbery,
tfikes time out from
psychiatric testing for a court
appearance today to set a
date for a second trial for
kidnaping, robbery and
assault.
Miss Hearst, 22, will appear
iQ the bullet-proof courtroom
Bring the Gang.,.
Sun-Thurs
5 pm -12:30 pm
Fri & Sat
spm - 1:30 am '
HI WAY PIZZA
ROUND PIE SHOP
for the Monday,& Tuesday
Student Special
504 off 16" pie plus added beverage discount
An affiliate of Dante's Inc.
THRILLER
OF THE DECADE!
BRIAN De PALMA'S
Sisters
“I cannot ramambar a
recent thriller that was
cloaa-up Moodier, scarier, or
funnier, or more effective.
Don’t hide from 'Sisters’—
H’e really a good movie.”
-QmShtll t WNBC-TV
“An Intelligent horror Him Is very rare these days. It Is Just the thing
to see on one of those nights when you want to go to the movies for
the old-fashioned fun of It. A good, substantial horror film.”
—Vincent Canby, New York Times
“This Is a refreshing,
clever and ultimately
skin-crawling triumph,
a marvelous
contemporary horror
film that takes on
all the elements of a
Hitchcock masterpiece.
The most skillful,
entertaining and
Imaginative horror
Dim since 'Psycho',
a movie for film buffs
who thrill not
only to classic
who-dunlts but , I
to the entire
history of movies IFFG
New York Daily News
c,...m,r,wai l .m,„..„~,M*HQOT KIDDER •JENNIFER SALT
C»-St«’*>o CHARLES DURNING • BILL FINLEY • LISLE WILSON • »<**+•*• •'Hitman
6, BRIAN O«PALMA • *.BRIAN DePALMA.-d IOUISAnOSE
B#»naidH«mn*nn»co*o*e» Movflab* FtoinNlWUMecmcw
ONLY $l.OO Admission
Thurtdty-Sundiy July SSJ.* 11 1
7:30/9:15 121 s P ark# B, »0*
Air Conditioned • Terraced Sealing
Sparks Building la on the mall In front ot Patteo Library!'
mn on»cam
PSST! \
HI, |
LAMKAKEj/
where her one-time captors
William ,and Emily Harris,,
who claim she later willingly
joined them in the Sym
bionese Liberation Army, are
being tried on the same
charges.
A San Francisco judge at
her bank robbery trial or
dered the newspaper heiress
to undergo psychiatric tests
Heister St.
(Next to
the Deli)
“Be warned, Me It.
Told with brilliant cine
matic artistry and cralts
manshlp. Brian De Palma
la at least as good aa
Hitchcock at his best,
maybe even better."
—Kevin Sanders, WABC-TV
U A real treasure.
It Is a homage to
Alfred Hitchcock.
A delicate balance
between humor
and horror.”
—Time Magazine
“A BIZARRE FILM!
MACABRE FASCINA
TION . horror chills
... scenes of death
and terror.”
—William Wolf, CUB MAGAZINE
“Literally scared
the out
of me.”
—Village Voice
“BRILLIANT.
—Howard Kissel,
Women's Wear Daily
imductlon (or lISQ
latnnrnt. ■ JEM
IAMBCAKE?)
at a federal institution in San
Diego before being sentenced.
The tests have not been
concluded and her second
trial is expected to be delayed
until September at the
earliest.
At her San Francisco trial,
Miss Hearst said the Harrises
were among those who ab
ducted her from her
Berkeley, Calif., apartment.
Festival of American Theatre
» SPECIAL STUDENT PREVIEW K
« g
fie "That Championship Season SS
g g
A Wednesday at Bp.m. Playhouse g
g £
|« Tickets at the reduced rate of $l.OO go on sale «
Wednesday at 10 a.m. in Playhouse Box Office.
'J
soumtß that
imsA«Ne>
ABOUT MB IN
IN THE
DISPENSARY!.
WHERE IS
HE NOW?.
UM«E?
?A'
,4. i t ,Mir
• A.,/,
641
1 year later, Hoff a
mystery unresolved
DETROIT (UPI)
Federal investigators say
they have the big piece in the
James R. Hoffa mystery and
are confident those who
abducted and killed the
former Teamsters boss will
eventually be brought to
justice.
Friday is the anniversary of
his disappearance.
There have been no in
dictments in the case. The
body has never been found.
But numerous sources con
firm the existence of a
“working theory” of what
happened, a theory the FBI
and the Justice Departments
say has no serious flaw.
The investigation centers
on three persons: Anthony
Provenzano, an official with
Teamsters Local 560 in New
Jersey, and Anthony Giaca
lone, a reputed Detroit mob
ster and Provenzano associ
ate, and Charles “Chuckie”
O’Brien, Hoffa’s self-pro
claimed foster son.
A federal prosecutor has
also named Salvatore and
Gabriel Briguglio and
Thomas Andretta, all Local
560 .officials, as being in
volved.
Alibis abound, but agents
say none of the suspects has
removed himself from
suspicion.
Provenzano said he was
playing cards at the local
hall. Giacalone was getting a ■
massage in suburban South
field, he said.
O’Brien said he was driving
a car borrowed from
Giacalone’s son in the area
that day to deliver a salmon
to a union associate. Federal
authorities still have that car
in custody, and court
documents allege that it
contains hair, blood and a
scent that could have been
Hoffa’s.
“We have good reason to
believe that the statements
made by some people in the
case may not be accurate,”
said Special Agent Richard
Bretzing.
Last July 30, Hoffa told
family members and other
associates that he was
meeting Giacalone and
Provenzano at a suburban
Bloomfield Hills restaurant.
He went to the restaurant,
but nobody showed up. So
about 3:30 p.m. he walked out
into the parking lot and then
vanished. Investigators
believe someone he knew
approached him in the
parking lot, and he got into a
car.
Then he was killed, either in
a deliberate assassination or
during a heated argument.
Hoffa had plenty of
enemies. Some of his
organized crime associates
worried about reports he
would trade information on
cases against them for
federal help to regain office in
the 1.2 million member in
ternational union.
The possibility of his return
reportedly worried his suc
cessor, Teamsters President
Frank Fitzsimmons, and
others who rose to power
when Hoffa went to prison.
Investigators are cautious
in statements about the case,
some admitting that they’re
protecting their case.
Masterminds
planned Caiif.
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) Authorities
said yesterday they are investigating
evidence that older "masterminds” may
have manipulated three rich young men
suspected of kidnaping 26 school children
and their bus driver.
A key factor in the search for the
possible “brains behind the whole thing”
are the great discrepancies between the
physical characteristics of the suspected,
trio and the composite drawings of the
kidnapers based on descriptions by the
children and driver from Chowchilla,
Calif.
The three known suspects, one of whom,
Richard Schoenfeld, surrendered Friday,
are all in their early 20s. The composite
drawings released shortly after the vic
tims dug their way out of a Livermore,
Calif., quarry where they were buried
described one abductor as about 50 years
old with gray hair, another about 45 and a
third in his mid-20s.
“We’re definitely pursuing the
possibility that there are other suspects in
the case,” a source said. “These others
quite conceivably might be the brains
behind the whole thing.”
A rough draft of a $5 million ransom
note was found on the 100-acre family
estate of a second suspect, Fred Newhall
Woods, 24, who is still at large, as is
Schoenfeld’s brother, James, also 24.
A source said there is “a possibility that
an older male was involved in the kid
naping, and there are some good leads to
back it up.” The source said a fifth person
is believed part of the gang that abducted
the 19 girls and seven boys, aged 5 to 14, as
they returned from a swimming outing 11
days ago.
Alameda County Sheriff Tom Houchins
said it was true that “when you are four
feet tall, everyone looks bigger and
PRECISION
BALANCE
BRILLIANCE
Ballet will challenge the limitations of the
human body.
Come in to the University
Auditorium this Friday or Saturday evening
and see a performance by some of the greatest
athletes in the world.
NITTANY
MOUNTAIN
SUMMER
Box office open 9-4 daily except Sunday, and again at 7:00
p.m. on performance evenings. Call 863-0288
Doors open at 7:30 p.m., the ballet begins at 8:00 p.m.
The Daily Collegian Monday, July 26,1976 —
may have
kidnaping
older.” But an official said, “It is highly
unlikely that those kids and the bus driver
(Frank Edward Ray, 55) would misjudge
men in their early and mid-20s for men 25
to 30 years older.”
Schoenfeld, 22, described in an all
points-bulletin as “armed and
dangerous,” was held Sunday in an
Oakland jail under $1 million bail after
surrendering with his attorney and father,
a prominent Atherton, Calif., foot doctor,
at his side.
Schoenfeld is scheduled to be arraigned
on 43 counts of “kidnaping based upon a
purpose of robbery or ransom” Thursday
in Madera County, where the tiny, middle
class farming community of Chowchilla is
located. But one of his attorneys, William
Gagen, said he will try to have the
proceeding and preliminary hearings
switched to Alameda County (Oakland)
because “we fear for his safety in
Chowchilla.”
Gagen, emerging from a two-hour jail
conference Saturday night with
Schoenfeld, said “emotions are running
high” in Chowchilla. “There is not a single
chance of Rick obtaining justice there.”
The attorney said Schoenfeld does not
know the whereabouts of his brother or
Woods. The younger Schoenfeld remained
in his home area for seven days following
the kidnaiping, baby-sitting a boy whose
parents were on vacation.
Last Wednesday, he called the boy and
said he was leaving town. He left Thurs
day, but turned himself in Friday on
advice of attorneys after the all-points
bulletin was issued.
The FBI said it has reason to believe
Woods and James Schoenfeld, sons of
prominent families on the peninsula south
of San Francisco, have fled California.
Adults $4.00, 3.25, 2.50
Students
Children
Senior Citizens $2.75, 2.00, 1.25