Page 6 Connecticut Dally Campus Tliiirsday, September 30, 1976 Harrises indicted for kidnaping By DONALD B. THACKREY SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Symbionese Liberation Army members William and Emily Harris were indicted Wednesday for the kidnapping of Patricia Hearst. who spent a year and a half in hiding with them. A grand jury in Iakland voted the indictments hours after Miss Hearst's‘ attorneys filed a motion for a new trial in her bank robbery conviction. charging that the government withheld evidence that would have helped her defense. The Harrises already had been charged into thinking it is springtime. Salt spray kicked up by gale force winds on Aug. 9 burned tree leaves. turning them brown. Residents and experts now report V new leaves emerging from the seared brown branches. Tree specialists said tropical storms and hurricanes brin gin the salt spray but it is usually washed off by the heavy rain that follows. When Belle struck Aug. 9. she brought no rain. Strip mining loses union backing _V CINCINNATI (UPI) - A deeply divided United Mine Workers 2 convention voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to revoke its previous support for a federal law regulating strip mining. The union. which once strongly favored federal strip mine ’ tems in west Virginia and Mary. < legislation vetoed by President Ford, reversed itself by endorsing 1.- instead a strengthening of state laws. The decision represented a with kidnapping, but the indictments speed up the judicial process and permit prosecutors to proceed directly to trial without preliminary hearings. The grand jury indictment. returned after the panel spent 2 1/2 days hearing testimony from 51 witnesses including Miss Hearst, charged the Harrises with kidnaping the newspaper heiress from her Berkeley apartment on Feb. 4. 1974; kidnaping Peter Benenson, whose car was used in the Hearst Kidnaping; and assault on Miss Hearst's then—fiance. Steven Weed, who was severely beaten. The Nation In Brief .. I Iiiivrpfiaiif (§»ill1.eTff§3I1...f..1.i1.;s‘.?.§‘3,hE.i§?‘3.?°.’...@ Medic (bribes shorelines are in bloom again, confused by Tropical Storm Belle 2.-1-1 : ’I.,. '57.’: 4:5‘ :-:I .« i,. I : :7" more than $9000 They also were accused of assault with a deadly weapon on five neighbors who witnessed the kidnaping and were shot at by the fleeing abductors, and false imprisonment of another neighbor who came to Miss Hearst's aid at the time of the kidnaping. Superior Court Judge Robert K. Barber set bail at $300,000 apiece for the Harrises. Miss Hearst testified during her bank robbery trial that Harris was one of three persons who burst into her apartment and took her hostage, and that Mrs. Harris drove a getaway car. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two con- medical director of Medicaid, who sulting firms dealing with health was a member of the state matters told Congress Wednes- contract evaluation committee day they wined and dined and that approved his firm’s contract, made personal payments to a later became a consutlant and federal Medicaid official during stockholder of his firm. the last three years to the tune of Generally, officials of the two health bureaucracy, firms denied any impropriety in The president of one of the the alleged payments or relation- firms, a successful bidder on ships. They testified before the $760,070 in federal contracts to Senate investigations subcomm- ‘i install Medicaid computer sys- ittee. “We have built our business land, also said the West Virginia without the help of booze, broads I'\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ Miss Hearst and the Harrises were captured on Sept 18, 1975, in two San Francisco hideouts after spending a year and a half together in the Bay area, Los Angeles, and hideouts in New York and Pennsylvania. Miss Hearst said after her arrest that she stayed with the couple only out of fear. The indictments eliminate the need for a preliminary hearing against the couple, which had been scheduled for Oct. 7 in Berkeley Municipal Court. of bribes and we are very proud of that,” said Richard Ney, presi- dent of Richard Ney Associates, a Washington-based firm that helps out-of-town clients, for a fee. cut through the Washington “I am not a door opener or an influence peddler and I would resent any implication of that,” said Ney. What he does is “make bureaucracy," Ney said. it easier to interface with the 7-ll “*3 ~ ‘.\T*C\T‘\'.‘ 3~X\ Open 214 hours ;\'L\.."\".\.."\‘Z.\.'\X.'¥ Complete Optical Service Route I95 Tollanil I‘-mli cotfn, sandwiches, donuts, gromlcs 7 «lays a umli ‘ ~£.\.\:\ ‘.\? \'>C\T>\‘.\2\.'_\.\?\‘.\‘.\1V.\x‘\x\,'\'_\,'\'x, Service Available on Hearing Aids Contact lenses Latest styles in fashion Wire and Plastic Frames Fashion tints {Plastic and Glass Lenses Services Ujferbd Wire Frames Solderea Can repair most types of Plastic Frame . 9‘ ME DAY SERVICE EASTBROOK MAIL’ 456-] Ml TUES: I0-9 FRI: I0-9 WFI): I0-6 SAT: I0-6 DAVID SIMMONS ' LICENSED OPTICIAN MON: I0-9 THURS: io-9 763 MM" 57- "“3'”9* i9i MAIN sr. 643-I900 MANCHESTER. CONN‘ K consession to the union's 20.000 strip miners. , s ., , . I I Schorr resigns from CBS News 5 9 A 1 is NEW YORK (UPI) - Veteran Washington correspondent Daniel S E " Sch ' df CBSN T ." “ " _ ° I _ effe(()3:;'l:e(fl|'§:teCd \!l.l:)llt"I1IlI‘| the neevlvsvorlllieggaghecgdhfrggrsifltgzlris ' E A 1 » leak of a secret congressional report on the CIA. j $0‘ - . . . L S h . h b ' I d’ f ' ' h h H ~ - ’ c on w o ecameinvo ve_ ina con rontation wit t e ous E \‘ou 5 E I E l I-12 midnight Mon.-Thurs E / I ’, ll-2 am Fri.-Sat. 00 j “ I S 9, 3 12-] 1 pm Sun. 429-4242 g The Eucrijtli ng ton 3 R,_ 32 12,18 5 - ‘/2 mile south of S. Eagleville. R 3 I l xx ... . - - \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\...\\x\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ DUEEEEUEEE EEEEE 4‘ EEEE AEEITUEIFEEEUEE 1. U9 EEE EUBUW FRONT END ALIGNMENT & BALANCING 0 GENERAL REPAIRS BRAKE SPECIALIST O ELECTRONIC TUNE-UPS ) ‘ e TIRES e BATTERIES E43 EEEE WEEEEEE EEEEUEE OPEN: MON.-FRI. 7AM-10PM SAT. 8AM-10PM EMER. 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