The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, August 1 1978-Page 13 Bundy faces new charge after pleading innocent to slayings TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - For- mer law school student Theodore Bun- dy was charged with the kidnap-slaying of an 11-year-old girl yesterday, a few hours after he pleaded innocent to the slayings of two Florida State University coeds. In an indictment returned July 20 and ordered unsealed yesterday, Bundy was charged with the killing and kid- napping of Lake City Junior High School student Kimberly Diane Leach. BUNDY, INDICTED last week for the slayings of two FSU sorority sisters and the beating of three other coeds, currently is being held at a jail in Tallahassee. Leach was abducted from her school grounds Feb. 9. Her sexually molested and decomposed body was found beneath the tin roof of an abandoned hog pen near Live Oak April 7. Bundy, 31, is charged with first- srito or size degree murder and kidnapping. LAKE CITY authorities declined to Tired of feeling the odd man out, young Jesse Napolitano gets into the act while comment on the evidence against Bun- attending a weekend convention of more than 100 chimney sweeps with his dy, who had heen named a prime parents at a Chicago hotel, suspect in the crime, other than to say Negligence suit against NBC to test TV's freedomof expression SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - In a case viewed the movie. compensatory damages and $10 million that could affect the future of "WE VIEW THIS as a terribly in punitive amages, waged a lengthy television, trial began yesterday in an significant First Amendment case legal battle just to get the case to trial. $11 million negligence suit against NBC dealing with constitutional rights of Her suit was initially dismissed in for' showing a movie about a sexual free expression," Abrams said. 1976 by a state trial judge who ruled assault on a young girl. Abrams said he feared an NBC loss in that litigation was barred by con- At issue is whether the First Amen- the case would "lead to a kind of blam- stitutional guarantees of free speech dment protects television's right to air dness, a kind of television dealing with and free press. movies dealing with brutal subjects, hard and real and poignant social THE STATE COURT of Appeals such as the Sept. 6, 1974, showing of the problems." overtuned the decision, declaring the film "Born Innocent." Lewis, however, complained the dismissal of the suit impinged on the movie was aired at 7:30 p.m. in some victim's right to a trial to determine THE CASE WAS assigned to Sperior areas and at 8 p.m. in others and whether the movie provoked the Court Judge Robert Dossee, who heard suggested "there is no question that assault. The U.S. Supreme Court a series of routine motions from attor- children and young people learn by refused to hear NBC's appeal. neys in closed session yesterday. He imitation." scheduled arguments on the motions THE GRITTY realism of the film in- ,: - "We feel good about the case we have against him." Bundy, described by the FBI as a suspect in as many as three dozen mur- ders from Florida to the Rocky Moun- tains, acted as his own attorney yester- day in the Chi Omega case, refusing Circuit Judge John Rudd's offer of a public defender. BUndy indicated he will defend him- self unless the court allows Atlanta at- torney Millard Farmer to take his case. "YOUR HONOR, I'm not accepting the public defender," Bundy said rising from his seat at the defense table. "I would like to plead not guilty," he added a moment later, waiving his right to hear the charges against him. Bundy is described by the FBI as a suspect in as many as 36 murders of women in the west and in Florida. He escaped on New Year's Eve from a Colorado jail where he was being held on a murder charge in the slaying of a vacationing Michigan nurse. The Globe Theater, built in 1598 in Southwark across the river from London, accommodated about 1,200 theater-goers. The first play written by Pierre Corneille, the father of French tragedy, was "Melite," a comedy. We give you a choice BOWLING and PINBALL at UNION LANES Open 11 am Recycle Your Daily for today with jury selection to begin tomorrow. Marvin Lewis, an attorney for the laintiff, said the trial would probably last three to four weeks. The movie charted the life of a runaway teen-ager, portrayed by ac- tress Linda Blair, star of the movie "The Exorcist," and included a scene at a reformatory in which she is sexually assasulted with the wooden handle of a plumber's plunger. FOUR DAYS after the TV movie was aired, a 9-year-old girl was similarly attacked by three girls with a beer bot- tle on a San Francisco beach. Her mother, Valeria Niemi, filed suit in San Francisco Superior Court contending the film inspired the crime. "It's merely our contention that the particular scene, which was graphic and unnecessary for the telling of the plot, caused harm to an innocent vic- tim," said Lewis. NBC lawyer Floyd Abrams countered that there were conflicting statements about whether the girls, and one boy who stood lookout, for them, actually saw the movie. He said, however, the spired the concept of "family-hour" programming in which the Federal -communications Commissions slap- ped stringent guidelines on the por- trayal of sex and violence during early evening shows. Mrs. Niemi, seeking $1 million in PREPARE FOR:. 4th MCAT "DAT "LSAT GRE -GMAT -OCAT - VAT' -SAT NMB I,11,11, ECFMG*FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a dfference KAP N ~EUATONAL Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For information Please Call. (313) 662-3149 For Locations In Other Cities, Call: - lI CC. -lH 4 - 4 Tuesday's Special LADIES'NIGHT Free Admission for Ladies Wednesday's Special STUDENT NIGHT 50C Admission with Student 1.D. ~ "MUSIC A ND MEA L DEAL 1" Dine at the restaurant after 4:00 P.M. and!I receive FREE admission to Nightclub that eve- ning. SUN.-THURS. 1 -- - 4- _ _.-- - .94k A