Page Eight Pickpocket authority offers some advice THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, August 12, 1972 11 SALT LAKE CITY (/P) -Do you get excited at the horse rac- es? Put your purse down on a department store counter for any reason? Assist little old ladies when they drop something? If so, you may be an easy mark for a pickpocket. That's the, message of sleigh of-hand artist Tony Giorgio, who claims to have been something of an authority on pickpockets since, at the age of 13, he observ- ed their operations at the circise where he was a magician. He long has employed pickpocket and card acts on the stage. Although Giorgio, 48, says he's never picked pockets for real, he professes to know tricks the best professionals use - starting with always working in teams. Teamn- work allows them to spot persons carrying sizable sums of money and distract them in some seem- ingly innocent way that leaves them vulnerable. Then the victim's wallet, or "poke" as ,it is known in the pickpocket's vernacular, is stol- en by one thief who might then quickly pass it to another to re- duce the risk of being caui ht with it. "Contrary to popular belief, the taking of a poke is not de- pendent upon digital dexterity, although it is required. Distrac- tion is the most important, and also required is lots of audacoty," Giorgio said. Giorgio offered several ftp-s to prevent your poke from being pil- fered. Use credit cards, as iliey are almost useless to pickpock- ets. Men should carry valuabies in inside coat pockets, and women can carry their wallets in their hand instead of thoir purse. r" -- ------ ----------- i Have some time on your hands? '. Truck on down to the Daily and join the Busi- ness Staff See FRAN at 420 Maynard M-F 10-12, M-W-F 2-4, or Call 764-0560 ............. Hippies for Nixon The Commander-in-Chief's daughter Tricia kicks off the Young People for Nixon drive by snipping a ribboniW I.ashington yesterday. She later denied reports that she was the oniy person under 25 in the whole country who was working to reelect the President, describing the charge as "mean and nasty." LIGHT SENTENCE: Air Foree sergeant convicted on attempted spying DIAL SHOWS NIGHTLY AT 668- 7 & 9 P.M, 6416 SAT. & SUN. from 1:30 CAMP HSRY!LAST 5 DAYS! HE'S X-RATED & ANIMATED! COLOR 5th HIT WEEK! r-eetnoeea n o ern r' ,g "TOTALLY CHEERFUL" DAL 665-6190 -Canby, N.Y. Times "A BARREL OF LAUGHS" iARTY4-J Crist "MATCHLESS Time Hurry! Must ALTERSHOWS AT 11-:5 End D~uc~l5.9 P.M- 0 5©07,0Soon! DIAL 662-6264 Now you can see "The Graduate" 231 S State St again or for the first tire SHOWS 79 P.M.\ " ACADEMY AWARD N'WINNER r BEST DIRECTOR l MIKE NICHOLS THE GR AD A LTECHNICOLOR PANAVISION' An Avto Embassy Roleass.dl. G;: AN AVCO EMBASSY FILM TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (A) - M. Sgt. Walter Perk- ins was convicted yesterday of attempting to smuggle crucial de- fense secrets to Soviet agents and given a three-year prison sentence. Military Judge Joe Peck also gave Perkins a dishonorable dis- charge and reduced his rank to airman, although allowing him to collect $138 a month in pay while he is serving the sent- ence. Perkins smiled happily as Peck handed down the sent'ence. "It's a light sentence, isn't it," Perkins commented to his moth- er, Mrs. Grace Perkins, as he was led from the courtroom here. "My God! My God!" she re- plied. "It's heaven." Peck, of Travis Air Force Base, Calif., sentenced Perkins t w o hours after finding him guilty on three charges stemming from attempts to smuggle five secret documents to Soviet agents in Mexico City. He _was charged with possession of defense sec- rets, attempting to pass them to foreign agents and filling out false reports saying that he had disposed of the documents and falsifying two sets of 1 e a v e papers. The judge discounted a defense contention that Perkins was tem- porarily insane due to acute al- coholism and said the noncom- missioned officer's action result- carges ed from "an evil, willful mind." The Air Force had asked for a maximum sentence of 26 years but Peck said he interpreted the law to mean that Perkins could only receive a maximum of 24 years. Civilian defense attorney Hen- ry Rothblatt of New York City said he was "delighted by the sentence - it amounts to little more than a slap on the wrist." Perkins, ranking noncommis- sioned officer in the intelligence unit at the Air Defense Weapons Center here, was arrested last Oct. 18 at nearby Panama City commercial airport. The A i r Force charged he was en route to Mexico to hand over the docu- ments to Soviet agents. 1 Vill err I I i i OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS lo0 am.-4 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS - 764-0557 10 a.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY thru FRIDAY-12 p.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE 2 days in advance by 3 p.m. Friday at 3 p.m. for Tuesday's paper ===i tf5 t 2-J'_ . 1-rr w 711'E"T.T '_5771 w ....:** a V b ''- I l . -; . j i Y r :ti; E , 3 , 1 u« _: 7 I ii a I j +