Tuesday, November 11, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seveol Tuesday, November11, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poa Sve ._ i WeiT gins fme in Rolling (Continued from Page 1)' The stark, intimate narrative Af the group's activities, follow- 'g the Hearst kidnapping in February, 1974, grabbed front page headlines across the coun- ry last month, and drew out- raged criticism from some of the subjects - most noteably sports activist Jack Scott who helped hide Hearst and the remnants of the SLA, The ma- terial, however, has since been cerified in large part by Justice Department investigators. AFTER A hectic six months putting together the two - part+ story, Weir returned to Ann Ar- bor last week to catch his breath and the Michigan-Purdue football game. Sipping a coke following the 28-0 Wolverine win, he talked about the adventure in an easy, gee - I'm --surprised - you-real- ly - want - to - hear about ,his way. Often, Weir turned the conversation to the days he spent going to school -- the days when radicalism was be- ginning to boil over. With that background, he found the SLA a futile, repug- nant gesture. a media event. I'd much house rented by Scott. "YOU KNOW the SLA mem- rather write things with more "All of the sources were there bers weren't real radicals, even social significance." at the farmhouse and saw what though they had radical exper- A CASUAL th s went on . . . I guess that nar- iences," hesaid. rows the field pretty much," "I can understand their frus- der - length brawn hair, a Weir said. trations and their attempt to whispy mustache, and wire rim SCOTT HAS been suspected of strike back. But they assassi- awed by the publicity the stor- being a key source for Weir natedof the Oakland school system. ies have received and Kohn but has publicly th. He talks freelaboutcharged that the article are far What could be more counter- y bout them from completely factual. progressivethan that?" he with one exception - where he "First, he said he was the said, referring to the murder and Kohn got their information. of Marcus Foster by SLA mem- "The first part (which ap- source of the story and at- bers Joseph Remiro and Russel peared about a month ago) had tacked it beause he wnted to Littlethree sources and the second undermine its credibility. But Little., he oresadtescn he didn't do that - he did just "They had a personal cult (in the current Rolling Stone) the opdosite and confirmed it. type leadership. And their vio- had 33, but I can't disclose who The he acd what hed lence turned off the entire left," they are or even how we got Then, he retracted what he had Weir explained. "When the rev- much of the information be said, Weir recounted. olution comes, it will be a work- cause that would compromise That tells you somethi h ing class revolution. The SLA them, too," he said almost a-e put his idea of a small group leading apologetically. the thing is bullshit. "AFTER THE first story, the THESE broadsides have an- "THEY WERE nothing but media really pressured us to noyed Weir, who swears by the caricatures of radicals." reveal them and I wanted to, veracity of the account. But the ThatWeir believes, is the but you just can't work that real problem was getting the crucial point that unfortunately Way on this kind of thing." second part of the story outat may be lost in the sensational Each of the sources for the a . flash of Patty Hearst and the initial installment provided a wrTirg whenathe FBI arrste Rolling Stone stories about her. full account of the SLA activi- Pattygherthe wIcheof For that reason, he doesn't ties including the cross - coun- Patty Hearst - which, of want to write about the SLA try journies , and the summer course c pletely chged the anymore: "It was a deviation spent at a Pennsylvania farm- I", . a..2T Judge enters not guilty plea, sets trial date in Hearst case SAN FRANCISCO (R) - As Patricia Hearst remained silent before him, a federal judge yes- terday entered a plea of inno- cent for the jailed heiress and set Dec. 15 as the date for her trial on bank robbery and weapons charges. The action by U.S. Dist. Court Judge Oliver Carter came de- spite repeated objections by Hearst's attorney that she is not competent to stand trial. Carter -puled last Friday that she is .ompetent. THE ATTORNEY, A l b e r t Johnson, said he would appeal the setting of a trial date and declared that the judge's ruling "distorts the findings" of the psychiatrists who examined her. 7e demanded that the reports e made public to .prove the point, but the judge refused. Hearst did not speak during the hearing, and Johnson said is client would stand silent .ather than enter a plea to charges that she took part in an April 1974 bank robbery. The judge thei said be would rter a plea for her. "If Hearst stands mute, then the court will enter a plea of not guilty to the indictment on these charges," Carter said. chiatrists and one psychologist who examined Hearst in jail. He contended the doctors should be cross-examined on the witness stand, saying he felt they would make clear that they view Hearst as incompetent. He said the defense did not cross-exam- ine them at Hearst's competency hearing last week because the defense agrees with their find- ings. "YOUR HONOR'S findings so distorted those reports that it now requires a hearing," he said. "Your honor is in very grave danger of presenting a defendant for trial, knowing she is incompetent." The charges against the 21- year-old daughter of newspaper executive Randolph Hearst re- late to the April 15, 1974 holdup of a Hibernia Bank branch by members of the Symbionese Lib- eration Army, which had abduct- ed Hearst seven weeks before. Two passersby were wounded in the robbery. Join The Daily 764-0552 e were reay screwe up when the FBI found Patty. We had to do a complete rewrite. And it got to be five or six days before the deadline and we had nodraft. "WE STAYED up every night working. Let me tell you, I could do that when I was in college but I'm too old for that now," he grinned. Actually on- ly a few strands of gray hair and a wedding ring make the 28-year-old look much different than a typical student. "In fact neither of us read the whole thing until it appeared in the magazine," Weir said. "I wrote a scene and Howard wrote a scene. I'm surprised at how well it came off. "We made our last call to a source at 8:30 p.m. with an 11 p.m. deadline that night With the first story, we split it in half, wrote it up, then ex- changed material and went over it again and again." THROUGHOUT the story, the reporters paid partic- ular attention to dialogue and details such as who was near- ing what and where furniture was placed in the farmhouse. "We' made up none of this in our own heads," he said. "We reconstructed the dialogue with our sources . . sometimes we had six or seven accounts of the same conversation. "And we usually got the same thing, although the wording was sometimes different. All the important stuff is definite- ly word for word, though." FOR Weir and Kohn - bud- dies from Bay City High School - the Rolling Stone project was a chance to work together again. While going to school here, both were sports editors at The Daily and co-authored a series of scathing articles on athletic department recruiting violations which brought the wrath of ev- erybody but God down on them. After graduation they went off in two directions that seem- ingly should never have cross- ed. WEIR joined the Peace Corps, drawing an assignment in Af- ghanistan. After returning to the to the United States, he did some freelance writing and ed- iting: "I was a low-profile per- son who made very little mon- ey. But I was happy." He also tried to get several magazines off the ground but each, in turn, folded, prompting Weir to half-jokingly remark "my life has been a long list of failures All of which may explain why he appeared slightly awkward as the center of attention and grimaced noticeably when dis- cussing the speaking tour Roll- ing Stone is booking for Kohn and him. KOHN, however, has been this route once before - with an unhappy conclusion. As an investigative reporter fo rthe Detroit Free 'Press, Kohn began zeroing in on some of the Motor City's biggest hero- in traffickers with a series of incisive articles that named the dealers. Toward the end of the series, in May, 1973, a front page story detailed how he had been kid- napped and threatened because of the revelations. BUT IT later came out that Kohn had omitted certain im- portant facts about the incident when giving accounts of it to both the Free Press and the police. Although his work on the heroin trade won an award for ECONO-CAR 438 W. HURON ANN ARBOR ALL TYPES of AUTOS 10 RENT, Including a LUXURY LIMOUSINE 63-2033 You Must Be 21 Stone PEACE CORPS Winter Training Programs excellence, he was fired and For Graduates with Majors in eventually drifted to San Fran- cisco - where he and Weir MATH now live. At that point, Kohn too suf- SCIENCE (Biology, Chemistry, Others) fered through some lean times BUSINESS (Systems Analysts, Others) as he freelanced articles to a number of counter - culture PUBLIC HEALTH publications. But Kohn wound up at Rolling Stone and is now HOME EC. (Nutrition, Dieticians) an associate editor. And the magazine will keep ENGINEERING (Civil, Others) both of them plenty busy in the NURSING next few monthswith their lec- tures and other assingments. EDUCATION (Special Ed, Counseling, "I've got 22 stories in the ' Others) works now - mostly on multi- national corporations," WeiriPLANNERS.Regional, City) said. "Probably only four orARCHITECTURE five will ever make it into print. THERAPISTS, TECHNICIANS "And we'll probably have to write at least one more Patty And More ... Hearst story because of the publicity," he said, admitting' Today Thru Thursday Talk grudgingly that he and Kohn have in a way become thePCORPS o ward and Bernstein.PEACE C R BtIpromise you, there won't be any moviesabout us AT CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT getting the story." N!AAN JEWELRY 3 S #lLIQUID SILVER CHOKERS LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ADDITIONAL CHOKERS CAN BE PURCHASED , FOR $5.95 up toa limit of four r I A special purchase from the Indians by Trader Tad makes this offer possible COUPON-- yCCJ .......wa...ww ~ w ow s . mw" a wat r wlirw . " ... ADDED BONUS... Do your Christmas shopping early and on a $30 purchase you receive a 30% DISCOUNT. Offer Qood on all iewelry except sale items -AVAILABLE AT TWO LOCATIONS- Ann Arbor InnMarriott Inn & Corner Huron & 4th Ave. 2600 P Sch R Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108 .ymouth 769-9500 Ann Arbor, Mkihigan 48105 769-9800 Hearst! The new federal Speedy TrialI Act requires that defendants hee tried within 90 days after ar- raignment. According to the government's interpretation, thatt means jury selection would have to begin for Hearst by Dec. 27.I Carter set Nov. 20as theI date for a hearing on a motion to delay the proceedings and on any other pretrial motions filed by the defense. Johnson said he would have several such. motions and that he intended to! call several witnesses, including! at least some of the three psy- - -- - -- - - - - -- - - THE JUDGE added that though a trial date is set, would consider changing it ift defense persuades him Hearst's incompetency. He fused to delay proceedings the meantime. al- he the of re- in , I The first merry-go-round was made in Europe, perhaps in, France, during the late 1700s or early 1800s. It was called a Carrousel. _ - thy enemy... This is a religious precept that challenges the mind. Love my en- emy when I can barely deal calmly with my in-laws? Yet this hard say- ig has validity in a world where even a small act of violence has such imforeseeable repercussions. Scientific advances have heighten- ed our mutual vulnerability. Only love and non-violence can sustain xis. We may concede violence is in all of us. So is God. Try His way. Itworks. Get together with your woi-kers to discuss the problems of violence and how you can work to.- gether to help solve them. For a LaIns,,1 Aammioon, msAa a n,. I UNIVERSITY SHOWCASE PRODUCTIONS in conjunction with THE UNIVERSITY BOCCACCIO FESTIVAL presents MACHIAVELLI'S satire MANDRAGOLA NOVEMBER 12-15 Arena Theatre/Frieze Bldg. $2.00 GENERAL ADMISSION Tickets available through the PTP Ticket Office in the Mendelssohn Theatre Lobbv. Call 764-0450 for more information. Office hours: Mon.-Fri., 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2-5 o.m. I E' ,I. I ".,.. the word Hermitage exerts a First time across Atlantic. worldwide magic .. ." N.Y. Times Exclusive mid-America showing. Five weeks only. 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