Page 10-Thursday, August 5, 1982-The Michigan Daily Pirated videocassettes nabbed 4 NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP) - FBI agents in raids Tuesday seized $15 million worth of pirated video cassettes of such movies as Annie, Star Wars, Poltergeist and Rocky III, officials said. Neil Herman, spokesman for the FBII's office in New Rochelle, said agents raided the Spring Valley home of Leonard Shordone, 40, his business, Pelham TV & Appliance in the Bronx, and.the Bronx home of Salvatore Pascale, 35. Neither man was arrested. Herman refused to comment on whether they were cooperating with authorities. He said both Shordone and Pascale were present when about a dozen agents arrived. Herman said he did not know Pascale's occupation or whether he was connected to Shordone's business. An estimated 1,000 movie titles were included in the cassettes seized, Herman said, including relatively new film. The tapes were worth $15 on the market if distributed to movie theaters or sold for use on homne video recorders, he said. Herman said Shordone and Pascale obtained the bootleg tapes - copied from the master tapes of the movies - often before the movies opened in theaters. Herman would not say where the FBI suspects they got the copies. The pirated tapes were in most cases in- distinguishable from the real thing, Herman said. The FBI began its inquiry into the bootleg tape business two years ago when federal copyright laws were changed to make film piracy a felony punishable by up to five years in jail and possible $250,000 fines, Herman said. 4 Rewards offered for '1Monroe's secret diary 4 LOS ANGELES (AP)- A former coroner's investigator says he was coerced into sighing a certificate in- dicating Marilyn Monroe's death 20 years ago was a suicide, but the chief coroner at the time disputes any coer- cion. Meanwhile, a fine arts dealer has up- ped the ante on the search for a diary purportedly kept by Miss Monroe, of- fering $i00,000 for its recovery.-A detec- tive agency has already posted a $10,000 reward for the journal. Monroe died 20 years ago this week. John Bowen made the $100,000 offer for the diary Tuesday, saying it was for an unidentified industrialist who wants the book for a private collection. Previously, Robert. Slatzer, a long- time friend of Monroe's, and Milo Speriglio, the head of Nick Harris Detectives Inc., said they believe Monroe was murdered, with the private investigation team offering a $10,000 reward for the diary. Speriglio cheered the larger offer, saying it increased the chances the diary will be found. Under the terms of the offer, Speriglio would be allowed to inspect the journal. Pirouette Ron Reagan, son of President Reagan, performs a pirouette while taping a 90-minute ballet television special in Montreal. Former coroner's investigator Lionel Grandison said Tuesday he believed "there were circjmstances surrounding Monroe's death that should have been investigated," but at the time he "got the impression there's where my future lies, in following orders." Grandison, then 22, said he didn't want to sign the certificate because the investigation wasn't complete. Curphey, who was chief medical examiner and coroner at the time, said Tuesday that it is "absolutely not true" that he coerced Grandison into signing the certificate for the 36-year-old star. Roger Richman, who represents Monroe's estate, criticized those making statements about the possibility that she was murdered. He said Tuesday that he accepts the coroner's report that she committed suicide. Photos of Marilyn, Monroe (Continued from Page 7) most often requested among 12 million news photographs in the library of Wide World Photos, a subsidiary of The AssociatedPress. It shows Marilyn's dress billowing upward in a scene from "The Seven- Year Itch." "WE WERE shooting on Lexington avenue in New York, and bleachers had been put up across the street for people to watch," recalls film co-star Tom Ewell. "Marilyn and I were walking down the sidewalk, and neither of us knew that a wind machine had been placed in a subway grating. "During the first walkthrough, the machine blew Marilyn's skirt up-and she didn't like to wear anything under- neath. People across the street cheered, and I tried to pull down her skirt. The director, Billy Wilder, said to me, 'You damned fool, you're ruining a million dollars' worth of publicity!' "Marilyn went into the lounge of the Trans-Lux Theater where we were filming and put on some panties. I remember that Joe DiMaggio was there, and he said to her, 'If you go out there again, I'm leaving.' Marilyn said, 'I'm going,' and we did the scene on film. "Shortly afterward, Marilyn and Joe separated." 4 f4 oo Subscribe to Iibbtgrnn lf --- Score *with the 78call 764-0558 4 4