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We Accept Returnable Bottles OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Monday-Saturday 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Open Sundays Noon-7 p.m. THE (continued from Page 1) al firearms offenses and have noon outside their apartment been indicted on state robbery, about 2112 miles away, and the kidnaping and other charges. long hunt for the last vestiges Soliah was charged with har- of the SLA was declared at an boring a federal fugitive, and end, police put out an all points bul- "It wasn't a tipster or any- letin for his sisters, Kathy and thing like that, but good dogged Josephine. The FBI reported police work,"'said an FBI of- seeing the women going back ficial here. "It was just anoth- and forth between the two SLA -During the two months after the kidnap, the SLA and Patty lived in a cockroach - infested apartment at the edge of San F r a n c i s c o ' s predomi- nately black Western Addi- tion area. Patty and her cap- tors shopped regularly at a neighborhood grocery store, but attracted no attention. out in which six SLA comrades, died in flames. -On June 7, the heiress pro- claimed her love for one slain SLA member, Willie Wolfe, and mourned her slain comrades. "We mourn together, and the sound of gunfire becomes sweeter," she said in a com- munique left in an alley be- ton who shared his Portland, ' PATTY AND Yoshimura had Ore., home with the couple. I pistols in their purses when The Scotts, it was reported, surprised by FBI agents and had rented the farmhouse where police, and there. were military Patty, Yoshimura and the Har- carbines and a sawed off shot- rises stayed .They had visited gun in the apartment. But they Brandt, and Scott once wrote surrendered peacefully. to Branat's probation officer After her arrest Patty laughed urging his release from prison. and showed off her handcuffs He described Brandt as a for photographers as she was youth who agonized over the taken to the San Mateo County jail. Asked by an officer for her Vietnam war, protested peace- occupation, Patty replied: "Ur- fully and abhorred violence. ban guerrilla." Brandt, perhaps coincidentally, But Patty's parents, Randolph was a native of Pennsylvania. and Catherine Hearst, who nev- er gave up hope she would re- er lead, the kind that go down the drain 99 per cent of thel time, but this time it paid off." The San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday that a rookie FBI agent had been routinely rechecking Yoshimura's file when he decided to find Soliah. THE NEWSPAPER said the agent followed a man and wo- man for seven days before lo- cating the two SLA hideouts. The discovery led to the na- tion's first political kidnaping victim facing trial on charges which could bring life imprison- ment. Hearst, offering clenched-fist salutes with h e r manacled hands, was held without bail on kidnap, bank robbery a n d weapons charges. YOSHIMURA was jailed on her weapons charges. The Har- rises were charged with feder- Beer Vault NO 8-8200 or NO 8-8204 303 N. FIFTH AVE. Corner of Fifth and Catherine apartments where guns and ex- hind a Los Angeles radio sta- plosives were confiscated. ON APRIL 15, 1974 the group i tion. The FBI agent who headed stormed a Hibernia Bank -Late that summer, Patty, the H e a r s t investigation, branch, firing shots at by- the Harrises and Yoshimura Charles Bates, said the arrests standers while escaping with took refuge in the Pennsylvania "effectively put an end to ev- $10,690. A bank camera photo- farmhouse where Wendy left eryone we know who was in the graphed Patty, holding an auto- the fingerprints. SLA." matic rifle on bank patrons. I -On May 1, the SLA took T H E IDENTIFICATION BUT KELLEY said the FBI shelter in a ramshackle flat in of Wendy Yoshimura broke would continue to seek those a largely industrial area of new ground, with little original who harbored Hearst and the the Bayview District here - research required. Wendy was others. "We are trying to fill in one block away from one of the a fugitive; her radical connec- what happened between Feb. 4, distribution sites for a $2 mil- tions were already thoroughly 1974, when Patty was kidnap- lion food giveaway to ransom documented. ed, to the time when she was Hearst. The key name listed in Wen- captured." -On May 16, Patty - who dy's file was Brandt. The FBI And therein rests the single had taken the revolutionary knew him - and so- did an biggest question now facing in- name "Tania" - peppered a odd assortment of radicals. vestigators: where have the ob- Los Angeles sporting goods :Brandt, 28, had been her boy- jects of their cross-country store with automatic weapon friend, an activist who went search been? It seems unlikely fire to allow the Harrises to with her to Cuba in 1970 to cut sugar cane with the Second that many answers will be escape arrest for shoplifting. forthcoming immediately, but Venceremos Brigade. a fe wsteps along the tangled -ON MAY 17, Patty watched AUTH0RITIES be- trail are known: the televised Los Angeles shoot- A v T o SL T me be- ____ ______ ____________________lieve some SLA members had been associated with the revo- la tionary Venceremos group in California. It fractured and dis- hhI~. RWbanded several years ago be- ' h 0 US . cause of internal dissension ov- er tactics and philosophy. I . at . Some believe one of those fac- tions became the SLA. Venceremos had given strong PSI UPSILON support to what they called ap- pressed Third World people. The Symbione e Liberation Army agreed, declared its fellowship withAall races and took its. name from the word "symbio- SUNDAY-THURSDAY sis" ,the beneficial interdepen- dence of different organisms. 7-10 p.m.I BRANDT was serving a sen- 1000 Hill Street tence of one to 15 years, when t the FBI became interested. His prison visiting room had been 1 1 KATHY SOLIAH'S connectionj remained vague. She was a one- time friend of SLA member An- gela Atwood, slain in the Los Angeles shootout. Together, they once worked as waitresses in a popular San Francisco res- taurant and acted in amateur plays. But by 1975, when the links surfaced, Angela was dead and Kathy had disappeared, appar- ently into the underground. She was last seen in public at a June 1974 rally mourning the death of her friend and urging Patty and the Harrises to "keep fighting." But FBI agents staking out the Hearst and Harris hideouts reported seeing Kathy and her sister Josephine carrying wea- pons between the two houses. A police bulletin warned they should be considered dangerous. THROUGH ALL the frustrat- ing months of the Patty Hearst hunt, FBI agents insisted they were tracking every detail, no matter how small. Apparently, through that persistent, plod- ding method they missed Kathy Soliah but found her brother. And at his rented house, they found Patty Hearst. It had been a long and fre- quently baffling investigation, with agents rushing to check out hundreds of reported sightings, which zigzagged across the country. turn, reported Patty's mood of defiance drastically changed when they were reunited at the jail. AFTER THE visit, Hearst said: "We asked her if she wanted to come home with us." Patty's mother said her daugh- ter replied: "Where else?" But in her first court appear- ances, Patty gave no clue whe- ther she would embrace the world of affluence she once shunned or cling to the revolu- tionary alter-ego she created - "Tania." Perhaps this will emerge as the drama proceeds in the court- room. Perhaps more will come from a book Patty is said to have written while she was on the ri n. THE NEWSPAPER Newsday renorted that Hearst and the Harrises have described her kid- nanning, her revolutionary con- version and their life under- grouind. The newspaper report- ed that "associates" of the trio said that recently Hearst and the Harrises had been consid- ering emerging from hiding and hirin lvvers to defend them- selves. The pager said that one snvrc said the trio no longer on iered themselves SLA members and referred to them- altres at Patricia Hearst and RV1I and Emily Harris instead of tlPir adonted revolutionary ,'a".s Tania, Teko and Yo- In-da. a busy place. 1 Since the death of their six LAST MARCH there were un- comrads-.s in a Los Angeles confirmed reports that Patty shootoit, the trio apparently and other SLA members hid in fnnnptrated on avoiding arrest Jaclk Scott's upper West Side r-ther th'an the violent acts that Undergraduate Political Science Assn. Among Brandt's frequent vis- itors were: Jack and Micki Scott, Jay Weiner and Kathy Soliah. The FBI had some new footsteps to follow. Within months, Brandt and his friends were in the news. A federal grand jury in Harris- burg, Pa., seeking more infor- mation on Patty, subpoenaed Weiner, a 20-year-old university student with connections to the sports world. E M E R G I N G FROM the grand jury chamber, Wein- er mentioned his friends, "Jack New York apartment in June 1974, There were rumored sightings in foreign countries from Can- ada to Algeria. Patty Hearst. had become a household word - in every language, There were other reports that r'iaracterized the SLA's earlier davs. R~+T i, the last tane recording Patty Hearst sent from the un- deraroind on June 7, 1974, she Innk- of reno'ncine her "class nririlhor" anti said death was nreferable to life at home - or All Academic Majors Accepted .V, I the de rec the pl~ no ab I i 1 and Micki." Iw A*.E. avim--mua.n un inI'" Within hours, Jack and Micki co REFRESHMENTS SERVED Scott were publicly linked to an REFRSHMETS SRVE the farmhouse, to Brandt and! anj tobasketball superstar Bill Wal-f _ ~wa the ha ANNUAL KRAUS MEMORIAL LECTURE or ali VYATIWDa NATIONAL HEALTH POLICY" 4Athe hur By 'DR. JOHN S. MILLIS co Chairman, The Study Commission on Pharmacy Iw" Chairman and Director, thr The National Fund for Medical EducationI Chancellor Emeritus, Case Western Reserve University 4 P.M., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1975, U-M RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER Honoring the late U-M mineralogist, EDWARD H. KRAUS, founder of the Department of Mineralogy and former dean of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. CAMPUS-WIDE FRATERNITY OPEN HOUSE WEEK Sunday, Sept. 21-Thursday, Sept. 25 7-10 p.m. every evening Take time to find out for yourself what fraternity e well-organized Weather Un- inoigon, rground and other hard core Life is very precio's to me." sistance groups were aiding she said in the recording, "but e fugitives with a ready sup- I hare no delnsions that going !y of "radical-chic" money. to nrison would keen me alive, and I would never choose to live BUT FBI Chief Kelley said the rent of my life surrounded ne of the sightings - here or h- v es like the Hearsts." road - was confirmed. Nor Now she's in orison and her uld the FBI confirm that she narents say she wants to go d her comrades were aided by home. .y particular group or person. "We don't know where she! THE MICJOAN DAILY as or who was helping her," volume LXXXVI, No. 16 e FBI director told the AP. Sunday, September 21, 1975 e added the onetime suspicion is edited and managed by students at Patty either was pregnant at the University of Michigan. News disguised as being pregnant phone 764-0562. Second class postage apparently involved a look- aid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. 1k ~Published d a 11l y Tuesday through ike,". Sunday morning during the Univer- At last count, agents figured sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann ey had interviewed "over a Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription ndred thousand people" in the raes: $10 by carrier (campus area); peopl" t1 mea mail (Michigan and Ohio): assive hunt for one elusive $12 non-local mail (other states and oman. Asked to estimate the foreign). st, a spokesperson said: "I Summer session published Tue. clay through Saturday morning. 'uld be like trying to count su bscription rates: $5.50 by carrier e blades of grass in a coun- (campus area); $6.50 iocai mail y estate." Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). PAT CARROLL IN fomethTng' _Afoot, A Musical Spoof for Mystery Lovers Fun For the Entire Family 1 .