Iuaauy ^%l~~o 1 ^1i anP f uesaay, rNugusT --), t v 1 -1 I n c W t,., F'! I V/" N IN WN I L. T roge rive 0 Search for Hoffa continues Jury deadlocked in Gurney case (Continued from Page 1) Nixon let Hoffa out of jail with the stipulation that he could not take union leadership until 1980. Hoffa has contended the rider was unconstitutional and reports circulated in Detroit that President Ford himself has told Hoffa emissaries, "If we did something that was unfair, we will have to make it fair." IF HOFFA IS alive - which many doubt --- and if he could gain relief fromheither the federal courts, wherre h i s commutation is under appeal, or from the White House, it would set the stage for a titanic battle for union power in next year's Teamsters election. The FBI, which dedicated itself under the leadership of then Attorney General Robert Kennedy to putting Hoffa in prison for mail fraud and jury tampering, was reported to have put hundreds of agents yesterday on the job of finding him. The Detroit Free Press reported in this morning's edi- tion that agents had become so close to the case they moved a cot and a mattress into Hoffa's Lake Orion cottage home about Japan agrees to ransom demands 30 miles from Detroit. THEY ALSO brought in,their own telephone lines and a tele- vision monitor and antenna. Helicopters were reported to have been brought into play. An FBI spokesman told the Chicago Tribune, "With a man of this importance and a case of this size, I can assure you the FBI is going to have more than adequate staff assigned. "This thing is going to spread through the nation." For the record, the FBI said it had jumped feet first into the case because of "extortionate demands" which would put the search under federal jurisdic- tion. HOWEVER, the Hoffa family said it did not know of any such and its was speculated the FBI was using the many crank calls and letters which have been received as its excuse to enter the case. FBI spokesman_ R o b e r t Knapp, citing "a very delicate stage of the investigation," re- fused to speculate on the my- riad theories buzzing about De- troit over the reason for Hof- fa's disappearance - theories ranging from fight wifh Fitz- simmons to his inside knowl- edge of questionable loans doled out by the $1.34 billion Team- sters pension fund. 'I H' (Continued from Page 1) In Paris, the Palestine Lib- eration Organization i s s u e d a statement in which it "cate- gorically denied" any link with the assault here. Two Malaysian women who are employes of the U.S. Em- bassy were allowed by the ter- rorists to telephone their hus- bands. They said they were all right but hungry. U. S. officials said there were four and six Red Army mem- bers and more than 15 hostages, including 42-year-old Stebbins, a New Mexico native, and the Swedish diplomat, 48-year-old Fredrik Bergenstraable, and his 29-year-old secretary, Ulla Odqvist- But spokesmen for about 150 heavily armed Kuala Lumpur police ringing the building said there might be as many as 5 hostages." Stebbins said in a brief tele- phone conversation with U. S. Embassy officials that he was not being harmed by the ter- rorists and that he and the other hostages, including Aus- tralians, Malaysians, a- Japa- nese and a Singaporean, were "sitting around just waiting." The structure, called the Amer- ican International Assurance Building, houses several foreign missions. Malaysian Communications Minister V. Manickavacagam conferred twice with the Red Army members by telephone from the sixth floor of the build- ing, a modern structure with a honey-comb-like facade, a n d police sent food up to both the terrorists and the hostages. THE terrorists said in a three-page, typewritten docu- ment titled "Declaration and Communique" dropped from the ninth-floorwindow that in addition to freedom for their comrades, they wanted a heli- cooter to take them to the roof of the building, and a Japan Air Lines plane to fly them to an unnamed destination. In Tokyo, a spokesman for Prime Minister Takeo Miki, who is now in the United States preparing for talks with Presi- dent Ford, said "the Prime minister has agreed that the Japanese government, from the basic position of placing top priority on respect for hu- man life, willaccommodate the demands of the terrorists." He said five of the Red Ar- my members agreed to fly to Kuala Lumpur, but that the other two, including one who was freed last year because of illness, refused to go on the grounds they no longer belong- ed to the Red Army. Free Concerts PRESENTS CONGO PHIL and PAUL TON ITE-7 :30 PEOPLE'S PLAZA (by the cube) (Continued from Page 1) GURNEY ALSO is charged with bribery, accepting unlaw- ful compensation and f o u r counts of lying to a grand jury. In addition, Bastien is accused of accepting unlawful compensa- tion. The jury deliberated for an- other hour after Krentzman gave the panel therso-called "shotgn charge" for h un g juries and then recessed for the day. Krentzman told the jurors they had a duty to reach a unanimous verdict "if you can do so without violence to your individual judgment." "IN THE COURSE of your deliberations, you should not hesitate to re-examine your own views and change your opinion if you are convfsnced in is er- roneous," Krentzman said. "If much the greater number of you are for a conviction," the judge added, "you should ask whether the doubt in your own mind is a reasonable one since it makes no effective impres- sion on the minds of so many equally honest and equally con- scientious jurors. "On the other hand, if the ma- jority or even a lesser number of you are for acquittal, other jurors are to seriously ask them- selves again whether they do Dr. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 CHURCH ST. 663-2476 not have reason to doubt the correctness of a judgment that is not concurred in by many of their fellow jurors." KRENTZMAN told the jurors to remember always that "the accused should never be ex- posed to the risk of running twice the gauntlet of a criminal prosecution and to endure a second time the emotional and financial strain of a criminal trial." "This is an important case. . The trial was expensive in time and effort and money both to the defense and the prosecution." 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