state/nation/world MacDonald still serving life Supreme Court refuses new hearing in 1970 murder case By JAMES H. RUBIN • Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON Former Green Berets Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald yesterday lost a Supreme Court bid to overturn his conviction and life sentence for the 1970 murders of his pregnant wife and two young daughters. Although the Supreme Court denied him a new hearing, his lawyers vowed• to return once again to a federal trial court in. North Carolina in another effort to gain freedom for MacDonald. Brian J. O'Neill, a lawyer from Santa Monica, Calif., said in a telephone interview that the process of appealing to higher courts is "at an end. There ain't no higher than high." $10.5 million award being reconsidered 1 By RICHARD CARELLI Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON The Supreme • ", Court said yesterday it will consider reinstating at least part of the $10.5 million won, and then lost, by Karen Silkwood's family in a suit against the Kerr-McGee Corp. She was • killed in a • 1974 auto crash on her way to see a reporter over a plutoni um plant's safety, just days after - her own exposure to radiation. The justices revived the lawsuit, closely watched by the nation's nu • clear industry, to decide whether But O'Neill said that within the next year he intends to ask a judge in North Carolina where MacDonald was convicted to grant his client a new trial. O'Neill said he will ask the court to consider new evidence in the case but declined to elaborate. MacDonald, who is in federal prison in Bas trop, Tex., is not eligible for parole until 1991. He has been behind bars since last March when the Supreme Court reinstated his murder conviction after an earlier reversal. , The Supreme Court yesterday rejected without comment arguments that MacDonald was denied a fair trial. It marked the fourth time the nation's highest court has acted during the 13-year legal odyssey federal law demands that the bulk of the jury's award be thrown out. Miss Silkwood, a 28-year-old labo ratory analyst at Kerr-McGee's Cimmaron plutonium plant near Crescent, Okla., died in an auto mobile crash Nov. 13, 1974 while on her way to meet with a New York. Times reporter. A union activist responsibile for monitoring health and safety mat ters at the plant, Miss Silkwood reportedly wanted to make public evidence of missing plutonium and falsified safety records. Days be fore the accident, she had been radioactively contaminated. Kerr- McGee claimed her exposure re sulted from materials that she had improperly removed from the plant. In the Silkwood case, Kerr-McGee was sued in an effort to collect for injuries primarily fear and anxi ety suffered by Miss Silkwood during the nine days from her con tamination to her death. A federal trial jury in Oklahoma, using state law, said Kerr-McGee should pay the Silkwood family $500,000 in actual damages and $lO million in punitive damages. The VW executive commits suicide PITTSBURGH (AP) Those who knew Volks wagen executive William B. Brock say he was a thoughtful, reasonable man a corporate loy alist whom superiors called "an important part of our organization." • But Brock shot himself in the head over the weekend, driven to suicide, his attorneys claim, by company pressure to help end a $7O million racial discrimination suit at VW's New Stanton plant. Volkswagen of America Inc. officials have denied the charges. By all accounts, Brock, 32, was a model citizen in his hometown of Washington, about 27 miles south of Pittsburgh. "I always had the idea I was going to be someone big," he once told his mother-in-law, Fredda Nelson. He was a fraternity member at the University of Pittsburgh, where he earned a degree in public administration. A fraternity brother, District Justice Dennis Schatzman; recalled that Brock was often too busy to have fun in college because he worked two jobs. Brock was married; father of three children, a practicing Moslem and president of the NAACP branch in Washington County. He had been an investigator with the state civil Rights Commis sion. The Jaycees had named him one of their outstanding young men. In 1977, he joined Volkswagen's new plant in Westmoreland County near Pittsburgh as equal employment opportunity coordinator. "(Volkswagen) wanted me, someone with short hair and a suit, who'd be easy. to handle," he told The Pittsburgh Press last week. of the MacDonald case, one of the most publi cized criminal prosecutions in recent U.S. histo ry. MacDonald's lawyers said the jury should have heard more testimony from a woman who claimed to have seen drug-crated hippies com mit the slayings 13 years ago. , MacDonald steadfastly has maintained that his family was bludgeoned to death at its Fort Bragg, N.C., home by drug-crazed intruders who chanted "Acid is groovy. Kill the pigs." MacDonald, now 39, was a captain in the Army Medical Corps and was assigned to the Green Berets, the special forces unit, when Fort Bragg military police rushed to his home Feb. 17, 1970. jury also awarded $5,000 for Miss Silkwood's contaminated belong ings that had to be destroyed. It said the federal government's exclusive regulation of radiation hazards from the nuclear industry precludes or "pre-empts" any punitive damage award based on state law. In essence, the appeals court said that since state court punitive dam age awards are intended to deter future misconduct, the awards con flict with exclusive federal regula tion. But, Brock told friends, he was "demoted" to assistant personnel manager in 1978 because "within days after I had joined the organization, I made it clear that I saw discrepancies between what they were saying and what they were doing." 'All I know is that it's painful and agonizing, and I'm sick of it. It's my company. I'm loyal to it.' —Volkswagen executive William B. Brock Recently, Brock became spokesman for the plant employees' Black Caucus. But he resisted a federal discrimination suit against Volkswagen last week, according to friends, believing instead that differences among the caucus and exec utives could be worked out within the company. "This has affected my life in general," Brock told The Press last Friday. "All I know is that it's painful and agonizing and I'm sick of it. It's my company. I'm loyal to it." Late last week, Brock finally decided to add his name to the list of nine current and former Volkswagen plant employees who had filed the suit. Reagan staff ordered not to talk to press By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON President .meeting at which the rules were Reagan ordered his staff yester- discussed. Keister is slang for day not to talk to reporters without buttocks. approval of his official "The president does not appre spokesmen, one of whom quoted ciate having people who are what I him as saying "I've had it up to call the freelance artists who my keister with these leaks." come out of a private meeting with David R. Gergen, the presi- him and disclose the contents of dent's assistant for communica- the private meeting before he or tions, said "I wouldn't call 'this a his advisers even have a charice to gag rule," but said it was intended reflect on what is going on," Ger to stop aides from attending meet- gen said. ings with Reagan and then disclos- The guidelines say the press ing details to reporters. office should be "the first stop" for A page-long set of 10 guidelines reporters seeking information, for "press coordination" was is- and that requests for interviews or sued by James A. Baker 111, the comments "should first be re- White House chief of staff who was ferred to the communications de quoted one day earlier as suggest- pa i rtment." White House staffers ing that Labor Secretary Ray- are not supposed to give inter mond Donovan should resign. views unless they receive advance Reagan termed those remarks clearance or a recommendation "regrettable" and affirmed- his from the communications depart "full confidence" in Donovan yes- ment to talk with reporters. terday. But Gergen said that Baker's , On occasion, the communica remarks, in an interview while the lions department will designate chief of staff was hunting, had not key staff members to be available prompted the guidelines. • to the press to answer questions on Baker, in a post-script to his a specific subject. memorandum explaining the new Gergen, asked if staffers who rules, said "The President has .violate the rule would escape pun refused to make an exception for ishment, replied, "I didn't say interviews in turkey blinds," that." But he added: "Let me tell where the interview with the Dal- you something, the president las Morning News took place. takes this very seriously." The Daily Collegian Tuesday, jan. 11 "I've had• it up to my keister with these leaks," Gergen quoted Reagan as saying during a staff On Friday, Brock wrote a letter which was never delivered or mailed, but reportedly was later found, torn up, in a wastebasket of his attorney's office in Pittsburgh. In the letter, apparently written hours before Brock went home and shot himself with a .38- caliber revolver, he said the company was trying to "muscle" him on the discrimination suit with sexual harassment complaints against him. Brock's wife, Renae, told police her husband was distressed and depressed when he arrived home Friday 'and that he had been under pres sure lately. Tom McDonald, a Volkswagen spokesman in Troy, Mich., said there was "absolutely no truth" to the charges in Briick's letter, which was printed by The Press. "They can't say I'm a militant rabble-rouser," Brock told the newspaper Friday. "The majority of white employees are fair and evenhanded and can accept a person based on the content of his character, not on the color of his skin." Since the plant opened, its management has been the target of allegations from big& work ers, who charged they were victims of racial discrimination and harassment. As recently as last October, black employees had urged the state not to buy 150 Volkswagen Rabbits because of the' alleged discrimination. The suit, filed in Pittsburgh federal court last Tuesday, claims blacks have been discharged without justification, that they have received a disproportionate number of disciplinary repri mands, that they have been hanged in effigy and have received written and telephone threats. state news briefs Buehl to 'tell the truth', blame others NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) ney A. Charles Peruto Jr. said in Roger P. Buehl, charged with opening arguments in Montgom murdering retired Lockheed ery County Court. chairman Courtlandt Gross and District Attorney Joseph Smyth two others, will "tell the truth" in Jr. told jurors he would prove that his own defense and blame the Buehl, 25, used a borrowed revolv crime on others, his attorney said er to kill Gross, 79, a co-founder of yesterday. Lockheed; his wife, Alexandra, "He comes in here cloaked in 72; and their housekeeper, Cathe innocence, and he's going to tell rine VanderVeur, 69, last July 15. you the truth, and the truth is Their bodies were found the next going to get him into a lot of day in the Gross' Main Line man trouble in a lot of places," attor- sion in suburban Villanova. Highway closed due to old mine fire CENTRALIA, Columbia County • cials of the Pennsylvania Depart (AP) The state closed a section ment of Transportation. of this town's only major highway "The visibility was very poor yesterday because smoke and and we didn't feel we could handle steam from a 20-year-old under- traffic in the evening hours," said ground mine fire hampered mo- PennDOT spokesman Paul Heise. torists' visibility. Before the road was closed, offi- Route 61, a four-lane highway, cials said the . smoke and steam was ordered closed at 4:25 p.m. contributed to a minor accident, from south of here to Ashland, although no serious injuries were about eight miles away, said offi- reported. 1 , I 1 0 00 I nation news briefs .1 0 ' More problems delay shuttle mission CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) latest tentative launch date of A dress-rehearsal launch count- sometime near the end of Feb down for the trouble-plagued ruary. space shuttle Challenger was post poned a day yesterday because of failure of a component that sup plies power to the orbiter. The latest difficulty was not expected to further delay the start of the five-day mission beyond the New equipment may aid 'ET' search BOSTON (AP) Scientists try- beings, according to the Universi ing to contact extraterrestrial life ty of California at Berkeley re have been "searching for a needle searchers. in a cosmic haystack" for 20 years - And a more sympathetic atti without success, two astronomers tude on the part of lawmakers, said yesterday. NASA and the public perhaps However, an equipment break- due to the popularity of the movie through soon will allow scientists hit "E.T., The EXtra-Terrestrial" to greatly expand their hunt for —also is helping the search, they radio communication from alien said. DES lawyer sues former clients SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A litigation in 1980 over their prod lawyer for makers of DES, the uct, diethylstilbestrol, commonly anti-miscarriage drug that has known as DES, been linked to cancer, is suing his former clients because he devel oped testicular cancer and learned that his mother took the drug Craig Diamond, 28, was part of a team of lawyers defending Upjohn Co. and E.R. Squibb & Sons in world news briefs' New engraving of God's name found TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) An Tel Aviv University archaeolog- Israeli archaeologist said yester- ist Gabriel Barkay said the amulet day he has unearthed a silver dated from the seventh or early amulet engraved with the earliest sixth century 8.C., around the Hebrew inscription of God's name time of the Babylonian conquest of ever found in Jerusalem. Jerusalem. The find, along with a trove of jewelry, was described in archae ological circles as an important and unusual discovery in the exca vation of ancient Jerusalem. Thatcher's tour gets mixed reactions LONDON (AP) Conservative Daily Express declared the Con- British newspapers yesterday servative prime minister's visit praised Prime Minister Margaret "is right on every count." Thatcher's Falklands tour, but opponents accused her of politick ing and needlessly provoking Ar- gentina Argentina still claims the is- tour," recalling the word British lands despite Britain's triumphant marines invented for the long 74-day war to retake them. treks they made during the strug "Maggie Conquers the Falk- gle to retake the windswept South lands —Again,", headlined the tab- Atlantic islands Argentina seized loid Daily Star, while the rival April 2. • • . • stockreport ....... • Market climbs Volume Shares 119,022,140 to record highs Issues Traded NEW YORK (AP) The stock 1,978 market climbed to record highs U for the third straight session yes 1P 1 52 terday in an advance inspired by , hopes for a broadening economic recovery. , Unchanged The Dow Jones average of 30 307 industrials, down about five points at the outset, was up 16.28 at 1,092.35 by the close. Since last Aug. 12, the average has risen Down s 9 //////, more than 315 points. Volume on the New York Stock. Exchange came to 101.89 million oN.Y.S.E . Index shares, against 127.29 million Fri- 84.62 + 0.95 day. O.S &P. Comp. Analysts said investors found increasing cause to believe that 146.78 +1.60 the economy was beginning to pull ODOVV Jones Ind. out of its slump of the last 18 AP 1,092.35 +16.28 months. NASA has had to postpone the launch, originally set for late Jan uary, because it has not deter mined the source of a potentially dangerous hydrogen leak into , the main engine compartment. But in the fall of 1980, soon after undertaking the assignment, he discovered he had four different types of cancer in his right testi cle. He learned that his mother had taken the drug while she was pregnant with him. He said that two such amulets were found in a tomb chamber opposite Mount Zion three years ago, but only now were being deciphered. Britain's largest-circulation dai ly, The Sun, reported gleefully how "Plucky Premier Margaret Thatcher went on a yomping UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Tuesday, January 11 Poetry reading by Steven Dunn, 3:30 p.m., Rare Books Room, Patteel ARHS meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 225 HUB. Circle K meeting, 7 p.m., Room 314 Boucke. P.S. Science Fiction Society meeting, 7 p.m., Room 307 Boucke. Student Perfomance Organization meeting, 7 p.m., Room 316-317 HUB College Democrats meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 308 Willard. Equestrian Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 206 Ag. Eng: Artists Series film, All About Eve, Bette Davis, 8 p.m. Schwab. Sports: women's gymnastics vs. New Hampshire, 8 p.m. Finance Club presents MELLON BANK on "CASH MANAGEMENT AND RETAIL BANKING" Wed., January 12, 7:30 PM 214 Boucke R 076 McKeesport Campus I it, shares the Lion's Pride. '4 6 --- fr e, With us, Joe and the - • " team are always Numb , One. Now the World acknowledges it! Thanks for making us "Penn State Prouder.' ****************•* * * * * * * * *.* * * * The Penn State Jazz Club and Hetzel Union Board PRESENT W.C. BILLHICK HiMiliWWWi 8:00 P.M. WED., JAN. 12 AT THE HUB BALLROOM FREE ADMISSION * RlO9 **************** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * The USG Dept. of Legal Affairs is accepting applications for staff positions. Applications are available in 213 HUB. Deadline: Friday, Jan. 21st R• 268 DIET COKE HAS ARRIVED ON CAMPUS! At Liones East Pizza Shop, Liones West Pizza Shop and Pollock Snack Bar, Warnock Snack Bar Introductory Offer $5.75/case (Can pick up 7:00 pm. -11:30 p.m.) OFFER GOOD UNTIL JANUARY 14, 1983 Tonight at the Brewery Tahoka Freeway Paul Bros. coming next Tues. & Wed.. ! Suzie Wong Eggrolls Nightly 10.2 ... i INTERVIEW REQUEST FORM (PSU Student Use Only) (Type or Print) ... Request interview with Division (if given) Job Title: let choice 2nd choice (Optional) Date of Visit Job Location Applying for: (Check one) Perm Summer Intern NAME lbir At Social Security No. " ) ----. PRES ' 1004 t kinko's copieit I ( AD ii PE ittlijlijk (City) —.. OPEN 7 DAYS 238• COPY I AD ... wr. .. - 1 ( (across from Penn Towers) 41,1 0 111110 . .. 6 . 1. ai (City) copies • business cards ch e r I manent Reside stationary • rubber stamps = 4 .10 8 ° I • I binding • passport photos Vit .4133 t COttlat intlC\ 'We've Open 24 Vioors Om ele ttes! yo.v to . •• O r aelett est • itusgersi. I?astrie si. and 010 fa and• • tioute • utade • Ice Cram & lks 'Butts • Stie 1 221m".".' 59C 26 •) The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Jan. 11, 1983-5 Y -1