Newspaper Page Text
Page 16
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, October 2,1975
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SHOWERS HOW
UPI WE AT HE « f OTOC AST ® —
FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Fair and colder tonight with low in the mid 40s. Fair
and cool tomorrow with high in the mid 60s.
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Federal Youth Center inmates, (1), Alfred Rollins, and (r), Henry Michael Cassidy are
escourted into cars by FBI agents after they held hostages for hours in an escape attempt.
(UPI)
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Prisoners
surrender
hostages
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (UPI)
— Two prisoners armed with
weapons smuggled into a
visiting room seized three
hostages and bargained 10
hours Wednesday for their
freedom. A Catholic priest and
an inmate counselor persuaded
them to release the hostages
and surrender peacefully.
Warden Tim M. Keohane of
the Federal Correction Center
for Youths said the inmates,
Alfred S. Rollins Jr., 19, and
Henry M. Cassidy, 20, were
talked into surrendering by
Father Tim Ondahl, the center
chaplain, and counselor Paul
Ortiz.
“They did the communicating
all day and they are the ones
who deserve the credit,”
Keohane said.
Cassidy, of Missoula, Mont.,
was serving a term for an
Indian reservation burglary and
Rollins, of Kansas City, Mo.,
was serving a sentence for
bank robbery.
j State
| revenue
j is up
ATLANTA (UPI) — A “gene
g ral, slight economic recovery”
•j in Georgia pushed up the
■■: state’s revenue collections last
§ month, according to Revenue
Commissioner Nick Chilivis.
The commissioner told a
news conference Wednesday the
outlook for future revenue
¥ collections seems to be improv
ing after last month’s collec
;i; tions increased 1.5 per cent
over collections in September,
| 1974.
Chilivis reported the state
| collected 1139,736,335 last
:• month, against $137,708,536 in
•: September of 1974. For the first
i: quarter of the fiscal year,
j which began July 1, net
■ collections were $375,513,715
; compared to $371,313,293 for the
: same quarter a year ago, or an
increase of 1.1 per cent.
He said the increases were
“maybe a little better than
expected,” and that the state’s
revenue estimator, Henry Tho
massen, was optimistic.
“Dr. Thomassen is very
much encouraged by these
figures and he says they fit into
his economic model,” Chilivis
said.
State revenue forecasters
have predicted the collections
would rise gradually in the first
quarter and dramatically in the
latter quarters of the year, and
Chilivis said the projections
appear to be on target.
“There should be more
dramatic increases in the next
quarter, and the next two
quarters should show even
more dramatic increases,”
Chilivis said.
•
An attempt by black muslims to get floor plans of the
Sanford University Medical Center led authorities to halt
psychiatric testing of Patricia Hearst there. The attempt
by the group, four members of which are on trial for the
so-called San Francisco “Zebra” murders of two years
ago, apparently took place while Miss Hearst was
undergoing testing at hospital for the second day. She is
shown with a matron at the Stanford medical facility.
(UPI)
What was
shark doing
at that place?
BALDWIN PARK, Calif.
(UPI) — There were several
things fishy about the six-foot
blue shark from a police point
of view. For one, it was 25
miles from the ocean.
For another, it was atop a
police car.
Officer John Smart found the
shark on a car behind the
station Tuesday night, said
dispatcher Gary Powers. Cau
tious investigation established
that the officers did not have to
fear its jaws. It was dead.
Which sparked the question:
What was it doing there?
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Paper reports Patty
rented weapons garage
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Patricia Hearst has been
positively identified as the
woman who rented a garage
that concealed one of the
getaway cars used in a
suburban Sacramento bank
robbery in which a woman was
killed, the San Francisco
Chronicle reported today.
The newspaper reported fed
eral agents as saying currently
Miss Hearst’s “only known
active role” in the holdup was
renting the garage.
However, the Chronicle also
said Miss Hearst was connected
to the holdup by a “bait bill.”
The bill’s serial number was
recorded by the bank before the
robbery and was found in the
San Francisco apartment where
she was arrested.
A government prosecutor said
Wednesday it is inevitable that
Miss Hearst will face more
criminal charges. But State
Attorney General Evelle Young
er said she might escape
prosecution if she agrees to
take the witness stand against
her former Symbionese Libera
tion Army comrades.
“I suppose it is theoretically
possible, but I doubt, as a
practical matter, that it is
going to happen,” Younger
said.
“It is inevitable that other
charges will be filed,” U.S.
Attorney James L. Browning
said. He said neither Miss
Hearst nor her attorneys had
brought up the possibility she
might appear as a state witness
against SLA companions Wil
liam and Emily Harris, Wendy
Yoshimura and other radicals.
**************
KERR IN PLAY
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Deborah Kerr will star in
husband Peter Viertel’s new
romantic comedy, “Souvenir,”
at Los Angeles’ Shubert Theat
er Oct. 21.
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