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SAN RAFAEL, Calif—Patricia Hearst was one of four
persons who bombed two sheriff’s cars last August at the
Marin County Civic Center, District Attorney Bruce Bales
(r) said yesterday. One of the three other persons is
believed to be James Kilgore, (1) a fugitive. He is wanted
in the Marin bombing and for questioning about other
bombings. (UPI)
Holiday Inn Os Griffin
Introduces
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Our new menu now offers a selection to please the most discriminating taste , entrees
such as:
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London Broil
Oysters Rockefeller & Bienville BVyMSwwSw/
Coquille St. Jacques
Crab Imperial Mb/
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Lobster & Petite Lobster Tails 'Hijiiiil Bf/
Caesar Salad
And Many More mbusmtott
Enjoy A Leisurely Meal In Our Pearson Room. Our Expanded Banquet Facilities
Accomodate Parties Up to 200.
Our Daily Luncheon Buffet Offers A Selection Os 3 Meats, 2 Vegetables, Soup And 7
Salads For Only $2.25.
Starting Friday 4/2/76 Our Seafood Buffet Will Be Discontinued.
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I va LOT 9
Patty is reported
in fair condition
By RICK DU BROW
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
(UPI) — Patricia Hearst’s
hospitalization for a collapsed
lung came after an ordeal of
jail interviews and court
appearances that caused her to
lose 15 pounds since her arrest.
The 22-year-old heiress, now
down to 90 pounds, was
reported in “fair” condition and
resting comfortably today at
Sequoia Hospital, where she
underwent emergency surgery
Tuesday night.
Doctors said the lung collapse
wasn’t uncommon for persons
of slight build and added that
Miss Hearst’s quick reporting
to jail officials of “a fluttering
in her chest” may have saved
her life.
The healing of her condition—
a ruptured blister on the right
lung—would take at least five
more days at the hospital and
at least a week of restricted
activity after her transfer back
to the San Mateo County jail,
according to the chest specialist
who admitted her, Dr. Donald
Rowles.
“She looked very bad. She’s
thin and in pain,” newspaper
executive Randolph Hearst said
Wednesday after a 1% hour
bedside visit with his daughter
in a heavily guarded hospital
room.
“She’s very pale. That’s
logical because she has had no
sun for seven months.”
Her mother, Catherine,
added: “I hope she’ll get good
food here and that her health
will improve.”
“Those who saw her in the
courtroom must realize the
deterioration of her physical
condition,” Mrs. Hearst said,
referring to the two-month-long
San Francisco trial in which
Miss Hearst was convicted of
bank robbery.
Her illness came the night
before she was to be flown to
Los Angeles for arraignment in
connection with a shootout at a
sporting goods store.
She was to appear in court
with codefendants Bill and
Emily Harris, two members of
the Symbionese Liberation
Army who defense attorney
Albert Johnson said Miss
'Hearst was “scared to death
of.”
Dr. Jeffrey Weisberg per
formed the surgery on Miss
Hearst. He said a tube was
inserted into the chest cavity
outside the right lung to re
expand it. Miss Hearst’s left
lung, he said, was in good
shape.
> w '
Volunteer
BOSTON—Frank Sinatra (1975 filer) volunteered his
services to the CIA in a conversation with CIA Director
George Bush, the Boston Globe said today. “Sinatra said
he was always flying around the world and meeting with
people like the Shah of Iran and the royal family of Great
Britian,” Bush’s brother, Jonathan Bush, was quoted as
saying by the Globe, “He emphasized time and again that
his services were available and that he wanted to do his
part for his country.” (UPI)
Admits
other
crimes
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Patricia Hearst has admitted
taking part in the bombings of
two sheriff’s cars a month
before she was arrested and
may be involved in other
crimes that have not yet come
to light, authorities have
disclosed.
Marin County District Attor
ney Bruce Bales said Miss
Hearst, hospitalized with a
collapsed lung, admitted she
was one of four persons who
blew up the patrol cars in the
parking lot of the Marin Civic
Center, across the Golden Gate
Bridge from San Francisco.
He said Miss Hearst said she
was at the scene, “but didn’t
actually throw the bombs.”
Bales said Miss Hearst was
ready to testify against the
other three, who were not
named, although James Kil
gore, who knew Miss Hearst
while she was underground, is
being sought for questioning in
the case.
U.S. Attorney James Brown
ing Jr., asked if he thought
there were still other incidents
Miss Hearst was involved in
that have not been disclosed,
said, “I suspect there are.”
The latest disclosures by Miss
Hearst grew out of a four-hour
session she had with govern
ment prosecutors Monday after
her sentencing for bank rob
bery.
Her admissions, made in the
presence of her attorneys, were
in hopes she could win a light
sentence on the bank robbery
conviction and immunity from
further prosecution.
Miss Hearst, still in pain, was
isolated in a third-floor private
room in Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City, where she was
reported improving. She com
plained of difficulty in breath
ing Tuesday night and was
taken to the hospital for minor
surgery.
Miss Hearst was allowed
visits from her attorneys and
her family. Her parents and a
sister visited her for 1% hours
Wednesday.
A hospital spokesman said
the ailment was relatively
common for young women of
slight build but could have
caused death had it remained
untreated.
Lawyer,
doctor
accused
ATLANTA (UPI) A doctor
and a lawyer are among three
men charged with raping a
Georgia State University co-ed
April 4.
Aaron Horowitz, 26, the
doctor; Jeffrey Ganek, 26, the
lawyer; and David Ludwig, 29,
have been charged with rape,
DeKalb County police said.
The young woman swore out
warrants against the men
before a superior court judge.
Homicide Lt. C.H. Staples
said the woman reported she
had been to a nightclub with a
group of people and afterward
went “voluntarily” to the
apartment of Ganek and
Horowitz.
She told police she expected a
couple to come also but they
never showed up.
Staples said the young
woman told police she was
lured into a bedroom at the
apartment and all three of the
men forced themselves upon
her.
Page 5
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17" 4«
Griffin Daily News Thursday, April 15,1976
Bibb jury divided
in bookstore case
MACON, Ga. (UPI) - A Bibb
County jury was reported split
11-1 for acquittal in the
obscenity trial of a bookstore
chain accused of offending
community standards with the
best seller “The Joy of Sex,”
and a mistrial was declared
Wednesday night.
Judge J. Taylor Phillips
ordered the mistrial when the
jury said it was hopelessly
deadlocked at 8:25 p.m.
Defense attorney Deryl Dant
zler said she was told by jurors
the vote had been 11-1 for
acquittal.
Peter Stewart, the operator of
the B. Dalton Booksellers store
in Macon Mall, had been
arrested on charges of dis
tributing and selling obscene
materials March 15 when a city
policeman bought a copy of
“The Joy of Sex.”
Prosecutors later dropped
charges against Stewart and
substituted the Minnesota-based
B. Dalton Booksellers chain as
the defendant.
Assistant Solicitor Robert
Sikes said there is a “possibili
ty that the case would be
retried.”