Paige Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY I n u rsdav. March 4. 1976 ALL IN THE FAMILY: 911 _ . Jail explosion ends bizarre Sisk story POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. to let anyone go downstairs un- UP) - It began when infant til he arrived." Davi Sisk was found battered S H E R I F F Elvin Wedg and buried, and ended when the . E .i Wedge child's teen-aged father blew up 48, arrived at the jail a few! the jail where his wife was held minutes later along with sev- on a murder charge in Davi's eral other area law enforce- death. The father, his wife and ment officers, including deputy two others died in the blast. Kenneth Love, 33. The officers were trying to' Harriet Sisk, 18, was in jail decide how to handle the situ- charged with the death of her ation, said Anson, when a tre- 2-month-old daughter, whose mendous explosion suddenly body was discovered Saturday ripped through the jail, instant- in a freshly dug grave beside ly killing Love and the Sisks. the Sisk mobile home at Letart, The sheriff died a few hours a tiny farming community 20, later in a Huntington hospital, miles north of Point Pleasant. where he was taken by helicop- Ms. Sisk and her husband, ter. Bruce Sisk had initially re- Koerner said the parents of ported the child kidnaped. Sisk told him they believe their State Police Sgt. Koerner said 19 - year - old son went to the Sisk came to the jail shdrtly Mason County Jail with the in- before 11 p.m. Tuesday, carry- tention of killing his wife and ing a suitcase and a shotgun. taking his own life - apparent- He pressed the shotgun against ly motivated by the infant's jail dispatcher Charles Anson. death. "HE TOLD me he had come ELEVEN other persons were to spend the night with his injured - two seriously - in wife,"said Anson. "He made the blast, which authorities said me take him downstairs to the was caused by some two dozen. Women's holding area. But I; sticks of dynamite Sisk had never dreamed he had dynamite brought with him in the suit- in that suitcase. I thought it case. was just a change of clothes." Initial reports indicated hej Anson said he opened Ms. :'detonated the dynamite by Sisk's cell door and slammed shooting into the suitcase. it behind the husband, a tall: Koerner said, however, that young men with shoulder-length there was no way of knowingI red hair, for certain how the explosion "I ran upstairs and radioed was set off. for help," Anson said. "I called Koerner said his men found the sheriff and he told me not dynamite wrappers at the mo- bile home where the Sisks lived with Davi Calline and a 2-year- old son. THE EPISODE began last Saturday, when Ms. Sisk, a short, heavy woman with long dark hair, reported her daugh- ter had been kidnaped. Federal authorities were call- ed into the case and began searching for the child. It was deputy Love who found the lit- tle girl buried some four feet deep and wrapped in blankets with a stuffed animal. The coroner said the child had been beaten and strangled. MRS. SISK was arrested' Monday but permitted to at- tend the child's funeral Tues- day. Welfare officials took cus- tody of the little boy. One of the 11 persons injur- ed in the blast was Alice Sue Missen, 18, who shared Ms.: Sisk's cell until she was per- mitted to leave just moments before the explosion. The state trooper who inter- viewed Missen said she told him Ms. Siskhad asked her husband, a dairy farmer, to release her friend. "THE WOMAN told us the Sisks had gone over in a corner and talked among themselves," the trooper said. "She said she couldn't hear what they were saving, but did hear Ms. Sisk ask him to let Mrs. Missen3 to leave the cell." Authorities said Sisk called a deputy to release the woman and she left the cell, not know- ing of Sisk's plan. "I've talked with one of my men who was down there," add- . ed Koerner, "and he said the sheriff and the others were un- aware of the dynamite. He said they were trying to figure out how to get Sisk out of the cell, and suddenly everything went blank. When he came to, the place had been blown all to pieces." THE BLAST tore a hole through the first floor of the building, wrecking the ground floor jail and forcing closure of the courthouse. Officials said FELD BALLET SELLS OUT, EXTENDS SEASON NEW YORK (') - Eliot Feld Ballet, playing a sold-out engagement at the Newman Theater in the Public Theater complex, extended its run for two weeks, beyond its sched- uled ending on Nov. 16. Founded in 1974, Eliot Feld Ballet is the residenttdance company in the Public Theater building. Two premieres chore-' ographed by Feld, were pre- sented this season. they feared the jail might col- lapse as a crack in the outside wall widened. The blast also knocked out windows in the jail and nearby, buildings and awoke residents for miles around. Anson said the explosion lift- ed him out of his chair in his first-floor office. He said the sheriff and seven other offic- ers were in the basement at the time of the explosion, but were seperated from the Sisks' cell by a wall. "E V E R Y T H I N G was quiet for a moment after the blast," he said. "And then there was lots confusion and for help." of smoke and people yelling All the injured were taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant. They inscluded jailer Ernie Hesson, 71, criti- cal condition; Ohio Highway Patrolman Bruck Wallace, ser- ious ;state trooper Lloyd Ak- ers, fair; city patrolman Tom Belcher, fair; Deputy Richard Dyer, good; state trooper Mike Smith, good; prisoners Donald Little, Terry Pierce and Noah McDade, all satisfactory; and Mrs. Missen and her husband, Danny, both prisoners, satisfac- tory. SEMINAR SERIES Mental Health Research Inst. Dresents- JACK D. COWAN Dept. of Biophysics and Theoretical Biology, Univ. of Chicago Topic. "Spatial Filtering in the Visual System" Place: 1057 MHRI Time: March 4,3:45 EXTRA: Tea at 3:15, 2059 MHRI PATHS TO SELF-AWARENESS --a series of lecture-discussions and demonstrations on spiritual awakening ANTHROPOSOPHY: SPIRITUALLY BASED EDUCATION IN THE TEACHINGS OF RUDOLF STEINER with DR. ERNEST KATZ THURS. EVE., MARCH 4th,at 8:00 p.m. at CANTERBURY HOUSE SEE EUROPE OUR WAY! TIRED OF THE LONDON, PARIS, ROME ITINERARY? Seen too many Churches? Spent to many inq through streets in search of pension hours backpack- accommodations. THEN COME WITH US TO: Germany, Austria, Italy, Yugoslavia, Greece, Tur- key. Bulgaria, Hungary 8 Countries, 4 Weeks $1,195.00 July 12 Aug. 10 FLY 747 TO FRANKFURT Coil me for further information at 777-4157 or write to Alan Borelli, 16321 Ten Mile Road, East Detroit, Michigan 48021 POETRY READING with BILL KINCAID READING FROM HIS WORKS Thurs., March 4th, 7:30 at GUI 802 LD HOUSE MONROE refreshments I The winner of the Santa Anita " Handicap next March 7 will be '"" guaranteed $150,000. The race ,ill be at one mile and a quar- ter. "" J I ' ___ Conan is DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Uni- versity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRIT- TEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day pre- ceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone' 164-920. Thursday, March 4 Day Calendar WUOM: Nicholas Johnson former FCC Commissioner, "Citiens and I Communications" 10:05 am; 11:30 pm. Ctr. Human Growth, Develop- ment: Monkeys, Apes and Man, Aud. 4, MLB, 11 amt. Pendleton Arts Information Ct.: "Open Hearth," preview, UAC's Tello Dolly, Union, noon. Ctr. Japanese Studies. Harry Ha- rootunian, U. of Chicago, - Refec tions on Nativism in Tokugawa Japan," Commons Em., Lane Hall, noon Publie Health Films: Boozers and Users; Report, National Commission on Marijuana, And. SPH II, 12:10: pm. MHRI: Jack D. Cowan, U. of Chi- cago, "Spatial Filtering in the Vis-: ual System," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 pm. Resource Ecology: Peter Jordan, U. of Minnesota, "Moose, Sodium and Aquatic Plants," 3032 Dana, 4 pm. Business Administration: Michael Michael Blumenthal, Bendix Corp.,, "Morality, Ethics and the Modern Corporate Executive," Hale Aud., 4 pm. Ctr. Early Childhood Development, Educ.. William Melody, U. of Penn. "Economic Considerations in Chil- dren's Programming," Schorling Aud., SEB, 4 pm. Geology, Mineralogy: C. Wayne Burnham, Penn State, "The Gen- eration Magmas in Subduction Zones and the Deep Continental Crust," 1528 CC Little, 4 pm. Nuclear Structure Seminar: H. Sa- to, 'On the Coulomb Displacement Energy," P&A Colioq. Rm., 4 pm. NEXT WEEK Spring Vacation Special MAR. 7-13 MPin Bowling Reduced Rates for Billiards I Michigan Union Open 1 p.m.' Enlargement Special 3 for the price of 2 (same size) PLUS 20% off-Kodak Processing 5x7 from 35mm or larger negatives 50c ea. CIiiMfnUATA Statistics: Stephen Fienberg, U. of Minnesota, "Loglinear Representa- tion for Paired and Multiple Com- parisons Models," 3010 Angell, 4 pm. U Players: Studio Theatre Series- "A Sound of Harp Strings Break-; ing," Arena Theatre, Frieze 4:10 pm. Int'l Night: Southeast Asian menu, League Cafeteria, 5-7:15 pm.I Women's Studies. Growing Up Fe-, male: As Six Become One Men's Lives, Lec. Rm. 2, MLB, 7 pm. Guild House: Poetry reading-Bill Kincaid, 802 Monroe, 7:30 pm. Chemistry: R. A. Olofson, Penn State, "Uses of Harpoons in Synthe- sis," 1300 Chem, 8 pm. Music School: Philharmonic Or- chestra, Hill, 8 pm. Musical Society: "Ensemble Nip- ponia," Rackham Aud., 8:30 pm. Career Planning and Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7460 Funded psychology Internship po- sitions available at VA Hosp. Northamption, Mass. Appts. begin Sept. 1 and end Aug. 31. Stipend of $5750. Write Chief, Psychology Serv- ice, VA Hospital, Northampton, Mass. 01000. Postdoctoral Fellowship Program Use Our SPECIAL Telephone Service AT NO COST TO YOU BY DIALING 800-447-4700 Ca|on Canon Canon Cal"oes FWe Sell More Canons Than Anyone In Central Illinois at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Opportunity for postdoctoral level engineers & life, physical, and so- cial scientists to select and pursue in an area related to national ener- gy problems & needs. Competitive salaries & may be offered perma- nent appoints. Write: Eugene P. Wigner Fellowship Selection Panel, Office of Professional & University Relations, Oak Ridge National Lab., Oak Ridge, Tenn. 37830. Continental Grain Foundation sponsors graduate fellowships at; Harvard U. Stanford U., American Grad. Scho. of Intern'l Mngt., War- ton Grad Sch., & Cornell U. (Grad. Schs. of Business). Full information and applications forms available from : Continental Grain Co.. 277 Park Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10017. Post Doctoral Fellowship in Clin- ical Psy. offered at Devereaux Ca- reer House in Philadelphia. Stipend & housing allowance of $7,500. Meals provided to unmarried trainees. Apply to: Dr. Henry Platt Dir., Devereaux Career House, De- von, Pa. 19333. Summer Placement 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Bendix Corj., New York: Summer Marketing Training Program for electrical engineering major, Junior year. Must speak fluent German. Further details available. Labor Relations Board, Flint, Mi. Genesee County positions open for Park Maint., naturalistaand ranger. 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