Daily Classifieds get Results- Call 764-0557 The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 23, 1981-Page The University of California, Irvine Colifornia College ofMedcine will be recruiting students interested in applying to medical school on Wednesday October 28, 1981, from 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM. For additional infbr motion, please contact the Career Planning and Placement Office at 763-1484. AP Photo THIS WAS THE scene on W. 11th Street in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York, on March 6, 1970, after an ex- plosion destroyed a townhouse that was being used as a bomb factory. The blast killed three members of the Weather Underground. Katherine Boudin escaped the scene and until Tuesday had been a fugitive. She was arrested and charged this week with murder in connection with a $1.6 million Brink's armored car robbery in which a guard and two police officers were killed. Weather Underground returns NEW YORK (AP)-Watergate has come and gone. Communists control Vietnam and Cambodia. Hair is short. * Campus protests are rare. But the Weather Underground, a radical coterie of wealthy children now entering middle age, has continued its struggle against the system. Now one of its last members has surfaced-against her will. KATHERINE BOUDIN, 38, was arrested Tuesday night and charged in the robbery of a Brink's armored car in Nanuet, N.Y., which left two police of- ficers and one guard dead. When she was arrested, Boudin gave her name as Barbara Edison. But her fingerprints gave, her away and of- ficials announced Wednesday that they had arrested one of the last roving radicals of the 1960s. FBI officials said there is just one,, well-known-inember of the Weather Underground still at large-Jeffrey Jones, 29, a graduate of Antioch College. The others have either been arrested or have turned themselves in. "YOU DON'T NEED a weatherman to know which way the wind blows," went the Bob Dylan song that gave the Weatherman its name. And you don't need a digital watch to know times have changed since the night, 111/2 years ago, when a building on West 11th Street exploded, sending two naked women screaming into the Greenwich Village darkness. Police said the 19th century brown- stone was a bomb factory. Rumor had it the explosives were destined for Columbia University, site of numerous violent protests during the Vietnam War era. AUTHORITIES FOUND 60 unex- ploded sticks of dynamite and 100 blasting caps in the rubble, along with the bodies of Theodore" Gold, 'Diana Oughton and another man, never iden- tified. Eyewitnesses identified one of the two women who fled as Cathlyn Platt Wilkers6n, daughter of an advertising executive who owned the townhouse. No one ever identified the other woman, but on the basis of credit cards and papers found in rubble, police went looking for Boudin, daughter of a ciyil rights lawyer. Wilkerson was 25; .Boudin, 26. The two women went to a'neighbor's home, showered, dressed-and disappeared. THEY JOINED the Weather Un- derground, a network of fugitives who specialized in violent political action. Originally, they were the Weathermen, a faction of the Students for a Democratic Society which led 1969's "Days of Rage" demonstrations in Chicago. The Weatherman, according to a Senate committee, was a group "dedicated to the violent overthrow of established power in the United States." They backed their revolutionary spirit with action. The FBI has blamed them for the 1971 bombing of the U.S. Capitol, the 1976 prison escape of drug guru Timothy Leary, 4he 1974 bombing of Gulf Oil headquarters in Pittsburgh. and other crimes. THEIR LEADERSHIP was of the same ilk as Boudin and Wilkeson-well- to-do, college-educated youth. There was Bernadine Dohrn, a University of Chicago valedictorian; William Ayers, son of a former president of Chicago's Commonwealth Edisdn Co.; Mark Rudd, leader of the insurrection at Columbia University. While the rest of the country moved beyond the Vietnam era, the Weather Underground stayed underground, hun- ted and still strident. But in 1977, sources said members of the Weather Underground's Central Committee had proposed "inver- sion"-a program under which the leadership would turn itself in to authorities. AN UNDERGROUND documentary, produced in 1976, was part of that process, according to the sources. Boudin, Wilkerson, Dohrn, Rudd and Ayers all appeared in the film. Dohrn later issued a tape-recorded message denouncing the plan, but the process by which the Weather Un- derground returned to the surface had already begun. In 1977, Rudd turned himself in. He was fined $2,000 and placed on two years' probation for his part in the Days of Rage. In 1978, Howard Machtinger, considered an Underground leader, gave up. IN 1979, the FBI announced it had dropped warrants against the Weathermen at large. In July 1980, Wilkerson turned herself in, citing a feeling of "isolation" after 10 years on the lam; she's now serving a three-year term for possession of dynamite. Dohrn surrendered last December and was sentenced to three years' probation and a $1,500 fine for the "Days of Rage." She hardispent muchof the last few years unnoticed, a waitress in a Manhattan restaurant. She lived with Ayers, who had remained un- derground although not a fugitive. Last year, Abbie Hoffman surfaced and went to jail on his drug conviction. Although not a member of the Weather Underground, he said he had been in contact with members of the group. Others, less known, turned them- -selves in, and attacks credited to the Weather Underground have long since ceased. 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