Aron Kay Pie Clippings

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THE 'SUNDAY .PLAIN DeALER, ~PRit 17, .

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t Murphy~ of Stevenase. near London, set ouL in ,\ugust. 197n, to try to ratJe money for the World J.'ildlife .F~nd. Yugoslav peasants stole everything ut.his b_!!e. tribesmen in th~ Khyber pass stont'd

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Murphy, 22. was robbed. stoned and early frol!en"on a bicycle trip ar,ound the world. t his bike came through unscathed until it Will rushed in ,in airport baggage conveyor near the !""of his jqprnt·y. ~Michat>l

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Pie in the eye

• Phrll• SchtaHr, out•poken opponent of the Equal .R ight• Amendment, Ia hit with an apple pie by noted "hit man" Aron K., at -a luncheon JHterdey In New York. In center I• Nancy Bonn•, editor of llejority Report. Kay, who u•ually throw• cream pi~ aald he choN apple thla time in the "tradition of motherhood." At right, Mrs. Schlafly wipes the pie off.

tests before standing trial. twa ~ydliatrists .said !n ,Hi£ offering honored every citizen of Lhe state; discussions recently made pubhc. Corona w_a s satd all fraierna q civic and charitable groups, and any· to have admilted sel(Ual relations with sheep. a · one else deemed worthy of honor "as measured by homoseXllal experience and an o~ion with death. .s ociety-or pqlitical expediency." !.__,_ .. • '• • ~RaiNf.,.innPfl. hiio. n,.,.""'~~t.•l.-.""-'•-•--~---


HONORS FOE OF "'1'fcketing and Pie-Throwing Mark Luncheon for Phyllis Schlafly By ELEANOa BLAU The Women's NatJon,J Republican b yesterday honored Ph)'Tiis Schafly, er or the opposition to the proposed Rights Amendment. at a Waldorfa Hotel luncheon. and the event pted picketing and a pi~·throwmg nL picketing wu by member!; of th~ nal Organization for Women, ch supporters or the amendment, put pressure on prominent Repuhlic2ns to stB;Y away and who said. they re watchtng to see who would attend. The pie, (apple) wielded by a man who report~y said "That's for E.R.A .." htt Mrs. Schlafly in the face at a reception before the luncheon. A group called the 'Emma Goldman Birgade claimed respon"1b1hty. A woman identifying hersetr at Coca Crystal, who telephoned The New Times, said the group was anarchist. members and had had the pie Aron Kay, who she said was a p1e-thrower who previously hit Daniel T. Moynihan and E. HowHunt, the convicted WaterJate bur-

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some two dozen members of N.O.W. X~ed in a circle with sians outside the Jc Avenue entrance of the hotel, be·• een 49th and 50th Streets. chantina. t• o. four, six. eight, E.R.A. in every f~e." Noreen Connell, president of the 01'8&nlzation's :"ew York City chapter, nld N.O.W. had advised, among others, ~tate Senator Roy M. Goodman and Attorney General Louis J. Lefkowitz not to show up and would work against t pohttcal!y If they did. either did. Mr. Goodman !laid he had led his planned appearance there r teaming thc.t Mrs. Schlafly was to e honored, adJing that a N.O.W. repretative was only one of several peo· ~e who had informed him of the award. fll a prime sponsor of the amendment, Sr"· Goodman saad, his appearance at the luncheon would be "inconsi.stant with my 'efs." Mr. Lefkowitz could not be {hched for con1ment. In an inten.iew before the protests. Mrs. Schlafly, told about the expected Jt!CketinJ, said, "It's our grapes, because e're winning and they're losinJ." c_ ~frs. Schtany called the pie incident ""ocking." She said It wu "just part of a constant stream of attacks on me per· ly" by E.R.A. propoaen.t.s, who she kept trymg to prevent her pubhc . .liiiaearance.s and were not willimt to ha,·e sides of the quesuon represented. Last week the Florida Senate voted · st the E.R.A.. seriously damaging ces for its ratification. TI1e measure been approved by 35 states and must pproved by three more before March 9118 to become part of the Constitution. o.w. demonstrators also objected tQ. rds to Dr. Gloria Toote, who headed antl·abortion forcea In s· 11Jld Wilham Loeb, publilher }'! The (N.H.) Union IMdet' whom d IS naht Wlq.

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A-2 fTbe Providence Swxlay Journal, Apri/17, 1977

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Father, son are sought in labor leader's death ...._

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - A former Las Vegas labor organizer and his son have been cbarged with kidnapping and fll'SlÂŤgn!e JDIII'der in tbe slaying of labor leader AI Bramlet, police said. Arrest warrants and an all-points bulletin were issued Friday for 1bomal B. Hanley, 61, and his son. Gramby, 38. Bramlet's body was found March 17 in a rock-covered grave in tbe desert about 30 miles southwest of Las Vegas. Ll Beecher Avants, bead of the bomicide and robbery divisloD of the Metropolitan Police Department, declined to discu8l the motive for the killing and said only tbat Investigaton lmow money

was involved.

ERA foe hit in face with pie NEW YORK (AP)- PhytHs SdllaDy, an outspoken opponent Rights Amendment, was hit in the face with an IPPie pie yesterday during a reception at a Woman's National Republican Club luncheon. Aron Kay, '1:1, a fonner agent for Pie Kill Unlimited, a nowdefunct group of young people who would throw pies at anyone for a price, said be threw the pie because of Mrs. Schlafly's work against the ERA. He said he departed from his usual choice of cream concoctions because "it was in the tradition of motherbood and apple pie."

of the Equal



Sunday, April17, t9n

IT'S APP

PIE FOR EQUAL RIGHTS OPPONENT

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Aron Kay (right) prepares to bit yllis Schlafly (left), outspoken opponent of the Equa Rights Amendment, with an apple pie yesterday at the aldorf Astoria Hotel in New York. Kay, who bas are 1tation for hitting fa-

[)t Political Republican leader said last week "He's beginning to feel it already · · ision doesn't hLt'

The Washington Star

mous people with cream pies, said he selected apple rather than cream for Scblafly because "it was in the tradition of motherhood and apple pie." Nancy Borman, editor of Majority Report, is at center.

After being hit, Schlafly, wipes pie from her face and joins Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, E. Howard Hunt and others In a dubious distinction.

ontest Shaping Up in the Tall Corn •-J-

marily through service on the Senate term of not accepting contributions The early returns from the $100-a· Agriculture Committee. from outside the state or from the head reception and dinner that ~on· Cla~k also has used his experience kinds of political organizations within ~ dale_ attendcd here Friday should l!a

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Sunday, Aprill7, 1977

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;\,'EW YORK- Phyllis Schlafly, an outspoken opponent of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), was hit in the face with an apple pie yesterday during a reception at a Woman's National Republican Oub luncheon. The pie was thrown by Aron Kay, 27. Kay, a veteran pie thrower, said he departed from his usual choice of cream concoctions because "it was in the tradition of motherhood and apple pie." Kay's previous pie victims include Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, columnist William F. Buckley and Watergate figures E. Howat"d Hunt and Anthony Ulasewicz. He said yester· day that he chose Mrs. Schlafly because of her work against the ERA. "I believe that women have the right to choose how to use their own bodies," said Kay, who was once an agent for the now-defunct Pie KiH Unlimited Pie Kill agents threw pies at anyone for a price. Kay said that while his act w a s supported by several women's groups that back the ERA, be did not receive any money for the Schlafly pie toss. Mrs. Schlafly said later that her day had "turned out to be more ex· citing then I imagined." She said she was thankful for the

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choice of pie filling, though. "I wouldn't want you to think that the people who oppose my views to this extent are really total slobs, because I appreciate that they didn't pick cherry pie •- that would have stained my dress," she said.

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DAILY NEWS:-TuESDAY, APRIL 13, 1976

ts Sent 1ir Psycllologitlll Tes ordeals any11. will _not g~ve i~ any real con- 1 as bein' both b~tal and vio~ent r.Je their motions for appeal ever had to S1derat1on m Judgment and .. · I thmk there IS moat credible from the rom·iction until after ation by soei- sentence." and reliable evidence for sustain- C rt . th ., 1 ·mg th e verd.!ct ?f tbe JUry, • u rma1 senYery Iarge ..Mocl"fv Any Sentence" and j a er Imposes 1 •nt to be im• my present VIew IS to do that.'' tence. The judge said that when Miss The judge said that Miss At a press conference latl'r, Hearst returns before him, he Ht>arst's prison term will be~in Johnson said that today's probt" has the option of gh;ng her ''f~om th~ original date of com- ccedings will ha\'C no effect on "There is b t• f · · m1tment. . . . pro a 19n or o lmJ•osmg senH 'd h . .. 1 the I.os An.sceles case. But be >c:~ety IS 10 tence and he said: "It is my e &al t at be was .RIVen a said that Mil4s "yea-t could not . '. . number of letters written b~· n '" 0 m this de • • mtention to later mod1fy any many frlc nds who are weli- go to trial in Los An,rel111, in her In the sentence now fixed a:! a maxi- meaning people, who have made any event, for several months mum" and to give her concu1·- ~ ver)' strong recommendations in becau1;<' oretrial motions have lhliahed re- rent sentences. f:n-or of probation for the de- not yet been ar~ed and time is is willing He said t11e sent.enC'e "will de- fenrlant. These letters a.c;sert, in neerled h)· the defense to prupare officials pend upon the report which will general, that the defendant, hav- its case. He said that he and BaiJey und crime. come back to me from the Bu- ing been the victim of a violent would not reau of Priaons, and that must kidnaping, was therefore not were "greatly encouraged'' by but your be done within 90 days. lf fur- a~ tuall)· willful when she went Carter's action because it indiaware of thcr time is deemed necessary, throu~h the act of bank rob- cated tha t the lOUrt IJDderstood levant.'' an additional 90 days may be bery." ·~e complex.ity of t~.e psychiat~~t;id th~t granted:" . . I lhe letter writ_ers. were "m~st r1c problems mvolved. tion "11 Lookmg d•rerlly at M1sa must respectfull~ l.hsl!-gree \\lth When Miss llearst retuma for 1sequenee Hearst, Carter said that the of- ~61n" because the evJ~en.~e was final sentencing, the defense atnow ron- fen~ for which she was convict- j adequate and substant1al. 1torners will pll'arl for probation ntil that ed "is a most serious offense, The defense attorneys were because ther fear that she could portance and one which cuul·l be classified ad,,•ed that they did not have to he killed in prison.

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Writer-lectlll't'r Bill Buckley durks a cream pie throW'Jl at him during his talk ~lac:t night a& Loeb l'nh·ersity Center of Se"· York Unh·er;ntr. With necks of pie still In his hair (pltot• right) Buckley rontinues his talk. A young maa was held brieny by police and then released.

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·Notes on People

Soviet Actress Gets Visa for U.S. Visit have tot;

"rm too happy for words, baU knew I would eventually get permission," Zoya F)oderova, the Rusaiun actress, said yesterday on learning abe had been given a visa to travel to the United States Jn time for the birth of her pudchild. She stayed in Russia when her daughter Vletorla, a movie actress, came to this country in March 197~ to meet her father for the first time. He fs a retired Navy admiral, J11111soa R. Tate, of Oran~te Park. Fla., and his love affair with Zoya Fyodorova in World War U, when he wall atationed in Moscow, later c:!aused her imprisonment for eight years. Three months after her arrival here, VictorJ& Fyodorova married an air· line pilot, Fred Pouy, and the live m Stamford, Conn. Their child is due about May 11. The grandmother-to-be laid yesterday that she hoped to leave for tbe United States sometime next week.

It just isn't so, Slid Cbarles W. CoiJon. the former Whlte Houee couneel turned evanaellst, that 1Uebarcl M. Nixon, fila onHime boss, was a heavy drinker m his last days • President. Mr'. Colson, 1n Nashviile tG promote bis own book Moit his apintual •'rebirth," Clled "Bam Again," comIIIIDted on •':The Final Days," tbe uew bqok about Waterpte's aftermath by Cart •.Bamatein. end Bob. Wood- . •\dnl. the Washington Post ~ who got much cre9t for exposmg the Water,_. ecaDdiL ID the book.

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WOllam P. Bueldey Jr., tJi.e conservative cGiumnJit, wu left uncharacteristically speechJess yesterday when asked for his reaction to an incident at New York University Monday ~t in whidl. while lee g, he wu struck in the ace with a creem pie. Escbewing his natural bent toward savory sesquipedalianism, or use of very long words, in times of such stress, Mr. Buckley, who wu unharmed by the pie-throwing, issued only a succinct "no comment'' on the matter. On tile other band, his boastful attacker, Aaron Kaye, who described himself as a 26-year-old reporter for The Yipster Times, official organ of the Youth Interna· tional Party (Yipples), was almost lyrkally loqua.cioul. The self-styled ••radical, revolutionary, anarchal Olmmunist" said, •'Me and ~ Ylppies infiltrated the audience, and I hit hlm With a shaving-cream pie. A lemon meringue pie costs about $4, and I wasn't going to apend that." Mr. Kave said he threw the pie hecause in his talk. Mr. Bucklev '"was putting (Aiekandrl Solzheaitzya on a 1)edtastal and aoouU. that htzz ahl>ut America. love itO" leave it." Actually, weveral l'erSOOS. present ~ that At tllfo point nf the nffl ~it!Ode. Mr. Burldev had made no such references.

In London yesterday, Leo

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DAIJ..Y NEWS, TUESDAY, APRJL 18, 1976

P11tty He11rst Is Sent loPPsytllologitlll Tests (Continued lrom pof1e 2 ) .. . attorneys Wlll ask the Judge tn J l'l3 Angeles to defer all acti••n on the case until after the p!<ychintrie examinations are completed. · No Ad vance N otlce . For secur1ty reasons, .Johnson sat· 1• her t rans! er lo th e ! e d eral in:tLitution for examination probR 1liV would not be revealed in a-dvance. In the 30-minute proceedings in the jammed courtroom today, Dailey made a plea for future probation for the heiress, telling Carter: "I do not think it necessan• in all the agony that has peppered this case since F.eb. 4, 1!174 (whcn Miss Hearst was kiduaped, the undeserved punishruent suffered b y the defendant a the hands of her captors, and b:v her as a result t?f '.vhat has happened to her fam1ly 111 one of

th~ most difficult ordeals any Amrrican family _has. eveT had t_o endure, that retnbut10n by soctety should play a very large . part in any judgment to be i ... · po1:1ed in this case." "Grave Doubt"

I will not give it any real con- : as being both brutal and violent file their motions for appeal side ratio!! in juJgm<~nt nn•l . · · I t~ink the~e iR most credi~le from the conviction until after und relaable ev1dcnce for sustam- C t . th ,. "lHodifv Any Rentcnce" o ma1 sen· 1 ing the verdict of the jury, 11nd !lr cr Imposes . · • . my present view is to do that." tence. The JUdge said lhat whe.n Miss The jud~e saill that Mi~s At a pt·css confe1·ence later, ll<:at·st returu11 bdorc lmu, he !.Ieo.r~t's pr1s~n. tann will begin ,Johnson said that todny's prohas the option of giving her I from the ong111al date of com. . • Bailt>v lso said· "There is • . . mitn1ent" ceedlllgs "' 11l have no effect on · n · probation or or tUIIJO:;JnK sen-1 · th L A 1 grave doubt that society is in t _, ._, , ~ . ITt• said that he wa~ noiven "a e o.~ ngc es casl'. But he 1 1 ". IS my number · ... need or rotection from this U(!- . cnce'. nnu 1e satu: of letters wntten bv sa11· 1 th at M'. 1ss ITearst cou1d not P . lJltentwn to laLer moc!Lfy any manv frilnds who are well- go to trial in Los Angelc~ in fendant, as you saw her 10 the sentence now fixed as a mnxi- I nt(!nningo people who 'have mnrle any event, for several mo~ths ~ondud of this trial." tuum" umi to give her concu1·-, very strong re~ommendations in bN·nu:<c lll'l'trinl moliuns have There have been published re- t·ent sentences. fa1 ur or probation for the de- not )·ct be('n o.rl('ued and time is r1orls that Miss Hearst is w!ll.ing lie ssid the sentc•nce "will de-l Cendant. These letters assert, in ~ceded hy the defense to Prt'l>are to cooperate with law off1ctnls pend upon the report whkh will l{cnernl, that the defendant. hav- 1Ls <'nse. inv_estigat~ng underground crime. come back to me f1·om the Bu- l~g be~n the victim of a violent I He said thnt he and Bailey Baile)' sa1d that he would not reau of Prisons, and that must 1 kidnap111g, was therefore not were "greully encoura~ed" by discuss this now, "but your be done \vilhin 90 days. If fur- artually wiiJiul when she went Carter's aclion because it indihonor has be~m made aware,. of thcr ti1~1~ is deemed necessary, · thru_u.7h the act o! bank rob- , ~nlt'd that t~e lOurt und 11rst~od somt> facts wh1ch are relevant. an add1ttonal 90 da~·s may be . llcr} · ~he complcxJty of the psychu1tIn his ruling, Carter said that granted." 1 1he letter writers were "most r1c problems involved." thr defendant's cooperation "is Looking directly at Miss must .. respectfully disagree with When Miss Ilenrst returns for not a matter of any consequence Ilearst, Carter said that the or- I th11111 beeause the eviclenec was final st•ntencing the defense athere. bec~use I am not no~ con- . fen~~- for which she_wus con,·ict.,"ac.lequate and substantial.'' torneys will plc~d fot· probation cemed wtth thut, nnd. unttl that . ed ts a most senous off~nse, T_he defense attorneys were because they fear that she could becomes a matter of Importance I and one wh1<h could bP rlnsslftcd I adVJsed that they did no~~ to he killed in prlllon. ~:~entencc.

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Doctor /'\sks Relea!5e of Patty·· (Con tinurd from palle 2) --

Davi~ said that Fort lmd !lietn~Pd thr stntement from New

hostile young woman before her n!Jiuclion . · e CarIn h1s statement to Judg tt'r, who will consider it later before making n final judgment · th Fort saiJ.: "Despite! •n e case, my testimony on the question of R'Uilt, I feel no animosity toward her, and 1 felt as I tcstified t~at she has been gradually evolnng· f•·im1 the philosophy of criminal terrorism 'which, in my opinion, :;he voluntarily adopted durin~:l her nRsociation with the SLA. "As e young womo.n and first !>fren,ler \vho fortunately did not rommit an act of physical viofence," Fort continued, "it is my c•<lusidered opinion that granting p•·ohation with time sen•ed would best serve the interests of julllire."

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Bill Buckley Under Fire

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tcll'vt~ton mtcrvtew lvtlh Wtllinm Ruc:kley on Buckley's "Firin,. Line" television program. "' . . . Jo1ns 10 P lea . Da\'IS, o. veteran San Frnnclll· · · d · the ro attorney, a 1so JOme m rlea for probation, telling Judge Carte•· that "no useful social

purpose can .b~ se:ved. by any ~t:.ntence requmng Imprisonment - o~~on<l lh<: s1~ven ~1o!'ths ~.he ha~ aheady been mcarce11t.tcd. Fort was one of two experts l,niJed by U.S. Attorney Ja mes B_rc.wning to reb~t defen se testi· 111ony that Miss Hearst had been a tortured "Jll'isoner of war'' who was forced into crime by thP Symbionese army under threat of death.

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News oharo. bv Mlct>8 eJ Chans• Wnter-l~dur~r. Hill Buckley duck!'! n cre~m ptt> thrown at him durin~ hiR talk last night at t ile ~oeb Umvers tly Cen!-er of ~ew York l'nn·er.~tly. With necks of thl! 11 ie still in his hair (pheto right) Buckley contmues h1s talk. A young man wa.s held brieny by pol ire and then refeased.

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Rep. BellA

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or Bt>ame ge a survey o _. \

America?" i U.S. N~"'S • ..-~.-;,,rl• The Manhattan Congresswoman is rated third in influence in the House, behind Speaker .Carl AllX'rt {00kla.l and Majority Leader omas (Tlp) O'Neill (DMass.l. Among the nation's most influential mayors, the magazine reports, D e a m e stands third, behind Chicago's strongman, R 1 c bard Daley, and New Orleans' l\loon Landrleu, the head of the U. S Conference of . 'Mayors, w'ho was a strong voice pressing tor federal aid for New York.

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TV Producer :Sorma.n Lf>ar, "hose ventures include All ln the Family and Maude, urgt-d Senatoi"S to stan a no-holds-barred TV debate program If they trul}' want to get the public more involved In government. T~ti­ fying before the Senate Fl)reign Relations Commtttre on the question o! whetller the t:. S. public cares about foreign policy, Lear advised that a series or great debates by 1>0llticians on controversial lssues "would do no less well" ln the ratings than Mary Hartman, Lear's

tlle hearing, Lear questioned \\'helhet· Sen a tors really care whether the public cares about foreign pohcy.

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Former Postmaster G<'neral James Farley wa:; among 300 persons who paid tribute to Franklin D. Roo'oe\ elt on Ute 31c::t anni··ersarr of rus death. Fal"le} , 87. a close friend or FDR. spoke for nearly en hour on the front lawn of the Little White House in Wann Springs, Ga .. "hi!re Roosevelt vacationed and whe.t-e he died. Farley, who served in Roose\•elt's Cabinet for 7~ years, recalled presidential campaigns he ran for FOR. ''There never was a campaigner like him," sald Farley. "I! there had been television in 1936, he wouldn't have lost a state." As lt was, FOR lost only Maine and Vermont.

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While William F. B1wklf'y ,Jr. was delivering a lecture, a Yippie rose from the audience in NYU's Loeb Student Cent£'r in Greenwich Villzge and hlt the autllor-eolumnist in tile head witll a "pie" made of sha\'ing cream. Aaron Kaye, 26, a retiOrlet· for the Yipster Times, the paper of the YippiP.S, once led by .Jt>rl)' Rubin and Ab-

bif' llorfman. said he threw I!Jhe fake pie because Buckley ''was putting Soviet author Alexander Sohbt>nltz) n on a pedestal and spouting that jazz about Amerioa, lo\''! il or lt>a,·e it." Buckley. unhurt, diet not condescend to ha,·e Kaye arrested.

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Dawn Robfort!IOD, leader of a vocal group called the Dawn, filed federal court action in Philadelphia accusing Ton~ Orlando and Dawn of infringing on her patented 1972 trademark Orlando, a mate lead crooner. and Dawn, two female backup singers, were also accused ot unfair competition and deceiving the public. Claiming she's been calling herselftbe Dawn since the sun rose in July 1960, Miss Robertson demanded payment for damages, but did not specify how mueh. -MEL JUFFE

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William F. !k)ey Jr., the conservative col ·•s was left uncharactenstically speechless yesterday when asked for his reaction to an incident at New York University Monday night in which, while lecturing, he was struck in the face with a cream pie. Eschewing his natural bent toward savory sesquipedalianism, or use of very long words, in times of such · stress, Mr. Buckley, who was unharmed by the pie-throwing, issued only a succinct "no comment" on the matter. On the other hand, his boastful attacker, Aaron Kaye, who described himself as a 26-year-old reporter for The Yipster Times, official organ of the Youth Jntemational Party (Yippies), was almost lyrically loquacious. The seJf.styled "radical, revolutionarv. anarchal Communist" said. "Me and odler Yippies infiltrated the audience. and I hit him with a shaving-cream pie. A lemon meringi.Je pie co~s about $4, nnd I wasn't going to spend that." 'Mr. Kave said he thl'f'W the pie because in his talk, Mr. Buckle'' "wac; puttinl! [Aleksandrl Solzhenitzyn on a pedpstal and sooulinl! that iazz aht)llt Amf'rica, love Ito~ lf'ave it." Actuallv, c:everat N"rsons, presf'nt • !'el')()tred tha• llt U•P point nf the nie f'T)i~ode. Mr. Burklf'V had made no such references.

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ost serious offense, The def.. nse attome(_a were because they !ea. LII&C 51 a and one which could be classified advilled ~ they_did not"'have to be killed in prison; Q

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e ]u:..!. Writu-lecturer Bill Buckley ducks a cream pie thrown at him during his talk laJSt ni~ht at the L.. Loeb Unhersity Center of Xew York Unher... 11,. With flecks of the pie !llill in his hair (photo ·\{ight) Buckley continues his talk. A Y_I!JIDg _man waa held briefly by police and ~en re1eased .

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William F. Bu c l.l e~ conl inut" his s peech dc,pilc the unu,ual hair preparation ~ h irh ~a' the re,ull o f a n ~i nl!, pic.

Buckley Is Shaving-Creamed During Student Center Speech B~ Ml TCHELI SEIDH wu ... "aflerhethre'' thcpie. William 1·. Bud..ley '" lecture at A guard po!>ted out,lde E·i~ncr 1 oeb Student Cemer "a' interand I ubin auditorium, "here rupted la't ni£hl "hen a ~pe<.:l<ltor Buckle:~ \\a' ~peak mg. drd not arthn!\\ a 'ha\ mg cream p1c a t ri'e until after the pic v.a ~ Buckle).

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Smuh 'aid Ka~ '' ,1'. rclca'cd b} YU ~ecurit ) guard' 'hortl\ after being apprehended ~cau~c the Loeb S tudent Center admini•aration, "did not v. a nt to Earlier in the e\ening. Loeb ,,a~ picl..ctcd b~ a pro·ahortion group protc-.llng Buckley·, .. anti -abortion ~land ., Su,an W ald of tlw NYL Wnn ....... ,.-

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FOt:NOED 1101. THE OLUtST

Vol. 176 No. 30

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NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1976 C "" The New Yertl P'r.t CerPtr•tl•~

25 Cents

I_CluiJs Bar Blacks, Je s;


Carter Defends His Choice I" roflt Combltaed

clubs, and said through a Carter apokesmaa that he was ..considering" l'efligning from lt. Later it was learned that he abio belonged to a second· club with restrictive membership pollclea. There was no immediate Indication whether or not he planned to resign from it. Asked about Bell's club memberships, Carter said today he would leave to Bell the deciaion aa to whether to resign. He laid: ..I believe that a person in publlo life ought to make that choice. My own preference fa that entitles which do discriminate ought not to be looked on as a place for a President to join." On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, moat Senators seemed to be reacting cautiously to the swirl of controvt"rsy surrounding the nomination. Sen. Javtts, New York's aenlor Sellator and a Republican, said in Washington today he was "dismayed and disconcerted about these allegal· tions" about Bell. He added: "In fairness to the nominee and Presidentelect Carter, we should look into the situation In Ct>lltmued me Page 4

Ser~

President-elect Carter's controversial choice of Griffin Bell to be A~rney General ran into more trouble today. ·

It waa disclosed that Bell, whoae eelectlon yesterday was widely criticized by black leaders, belongs to twD private clubs in Atlanta that bar both blacka aa4 iews from membership and one club that had barred blacks in the past. Unless he resigns from the clubs, it could lead to a fight over his confirmation in hearlnga before the Senate Judicl8.ry Committee. In any case, Bell is likely to face tough questionlDJ by the committee ove~ his ~cord on civil rlghta whlle a federal judge. At his presa conference today Carter was asked. about the criticism of the Bell appoin\ment. _He said: "I Jta,ve absolutely no doubt in my mind thai I made the right choice in Griffin Bell fo~ Attorney General and I repeat my prediction that he'll be a great Attorney General." Bell was .asked yesterday •by the Chicago Dally News about his membership in one of the

Gunfight at a Flower Shop Asaocletlll 11'1'811 '""''-

HERE'S PIE IN YOUR EYE: Tony Uluewlcz, the Watf'rgate a.gnwa, looks balefully ahead after a Yipltie hit blat with a baadtul of cream ple outside ~rt hel'f 1t00ay. Ula&ewi . cz Is , on ftrlal on tax ....._., _ .·stor~eS~•n hpj ·s 'aal~ Ii

By Cy Egan and William T. Slattery A Brooklyn florist D&ttled three holdupmen outside his store in the Gravesend s e c t ion laat night and succeeded in kUling one and poaaibly wounding the other two before he. hfiil.elf ~wiibot;:&nd

stabbed. He was rushed to Coney The florist, Joel Cacace, Island Hospital, where 36, of Deer Park, L. I., doctors later reported he then drove the holdup- ,, was in fair condition and men's car four blocka expected to recover. with the corpse of the· An alert waa sent outto gunman to a pollee ata- hospitals and doctors' oftlon where he collapsed ficee today to be on the after gasping out bill lookout for the two ban-

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People in the News Kissinger Recognized Amid Hoop-la

v. 6

The world's foremost globetrotter was given official recognitiOn Tuesday in Washington when the Harlem Globetrotters made Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger an honorary member of their basketball team. Kissinger was given a Signed basketball and a team uniform with his name and the numeral I on the back. "I appreciate this honor very much for a number of reasons," Kissinger said . "First of all, the numeral on the back of this jersey accords exactly with my estimate of myseli. "Secondly, I feel an affinity with your style of playing. I. too. like to make up the rules as I go along. "Thir~y. I appreciate the fact that the Globetrotters don't belong to any league, that they play wherever they want. Indeed. it might be called 'the lone ranger' style of basketball." During the election campaign Pres ident-elect Jimmy Carter criticized Kissinger and his "lone-ranger" style of personal diplomacy. "As vou know," said Kissinger, •..I've been called for traveling and I'll be out of the game for a while."

charges bad recessed when Ulasewicz was approached by a young man who hurled the pie. shouted an obscenity and ran off. Later, a man who identified himself as a member of the Youth Interna tiona I party - Yippies - called the Associated Press and scud be bad thrown the pie. He said of Ulasewicz: "He represents the kind of people who are still the government" IAPJ.

Her Honor Marge Colvin, a :)5-yearold divorcee and bartender, was sworn in Monday as mayor of Tombstone, Ariz., "tiM! town too tough to die." She is the first woman mayor in the 98-year history of the town, made famous by the gunfight at the OK Corral in 1881 between the Earp and Clanton families (AP).

With that, Kissinger posed for photographers with his jacket and jersey and played catch with the gift-autographed basketball before returning to his office (UPI).

- PIE IN THE EYE. Watergale bagman Anthony Ulasewicz was leaving New York federal court for lunch Tuesday when he was abruptly served dessert - a a coconut cream pie smacked mto the side of his head. His trial on tax evasion

NEPOTISM. Kenyan Pres1dent Jomo Kenyatta Tuesday appointed his daughter, Margaret Kenyatta, as Kenya's permanent representative to the Nairobi-headquartered U.N. Environment Program. It was the first time the Kenya government bas appointed a permanent representative to the program. Miss Kenyatta has been mayor of Nairobi since 1970 CUPD TOP ENTERTAINER. Johnn v Carson . s tar of NBC' s. ' 'Tonight Show. ¡ walked off with the Georgie award Sunday as he was named "The Entertainer of the Year" by lhe American Guild of Variety Artists IAGVA L Carson won the honor m a poll of AGVA's 8.000 members and was presented with the coveted statuette during AG VA 's seventh annual awards show at Caesar's

Palace in Las Vegas. The show. which was hosted by Jackie Gleason. was videotaped and will be nationally televised by CBS on Jan. 16 Previous winners of the Georgie, which is named in honor of the late showman George M. Cohan. include Frank Sinatra. Bob Hope ! twice ). L iza Minnelh . Sammy Davis Jr. and Ben Vereen ( APJ. DISAPPOINTED. Julie Nixon Eisenhower said in an excerpt from her new book that the late Mao Tse-tung told her be was "disappointed" with China's youth and uncertain about the success of his revolution. Mrs. Eisenhower. daughter of former Presiden~ Richard M. Nixon, and her husband, David. met Mao Dec. 31, 1975, during th~ couple's tour of the People'! Republic of China. The Chil nese leader died last Sep tember at the age of 82. In a copyrighted prepubli cation excerpt from her ne, book, " Special People, prmted in the January issu of Ladies' Home Journa Mrs. Eisenhower wrote, "H (Mao ) actually sounde skeptical and disappomted l his people, especially t young, untested generatio1 IUPD.


Associated Prwsa Ptoolo

HERE'S PIE IN YOUR E~'E: · Tony Ulasewicz, the Watergate bagman, looks balefully ahead after a Yippie hit him with a handful of cream pie outside court here· today. Ulasewicz is on trial on tax charg~ ' Stor.i.es nn Pages 3 and .12•

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[)ec.embef 22. 1976

The Washington Star

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Anthony Ulasewlcz bas coconut cream pie wiped from bls neck after a young man smacked him In the side of the head with the pie as he left federal court In New York. Ulasewicz Is on trial for tax eva· slon.

Ulasewicz Tax Dodge ~ Was to Protect Nixonl sell NEW YORK (AP) -A former federal tax agent am testified yesterday that Watergate bagman libt s Anthony Ulasewicz told him he failed to report $41,000 in income "because he didn't wish to embarrass of 1 rna: President Nixon or endanger himself." Leo Libowitz, a retired Internal Revenue Service ber agent, told a federal court jury at Ulasewicz's·taxfraud trial that he interviewed the former New Car York C1ty cop after he filed n amended return re- I'm con porting the 1971 and 1972 income. E A parade of wclJ-known figures from the Watergate scandal, including former White House coun- hal sel John Dean; Herbert Kalmbach, once the quo personal lawyer of former President Richard M. unl Nixon, and John Ehrlich man, Nixon's chief domes- que TJ tic affairs adviser, said littlemore than that they knew he worked for John Caulfield, another former Sen; city policeman turned Wh1te House inves'tigator, adoj sevE during that time. "1 Another v. itness, Justice Department attorney James Malone, testified that Ulasewicz told him the money had been given to him through Caulfield, who kept $5,000 for himself. Kalmbach said that after the Watergate break-in he gave Ulasewicz "a special assignment to arrange for dispcr~al of funds" to the Watergate burglars "and he agreed to do that." Ehrlichman, who was flown here from an Arizona prison, testified that he met Ulasewicz only once for five minutes "in connection with his possiT ble employment to do political chores, investigation par and errands for President Nixon." exe Dean told the jury he met Ulasewicz once in Caulfield's White House office but had "no first-hand knowledge of what he was doing." During the tnal lunch break, Ulasewicz • with a cream pic thrown by a young rna an bii enity and:.w d aw ~-

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Wa'tergate figure hit Watergate scandal "bagman'' Anthony -lJlasewi~.--z got hit with a pie in the back of ~t\ head yesterday, and Ylppie Aron Kay ji&Jd. he did 'it because of the crimes of the ,.~n administration. ~ "It was a coconut cream pie," ~as said ..after .making his escape from a corridor in Brooklyn Federal Court, where Ul!isewlcz lis. ()n trial for tax evasiOn. "it cost . $1.50. Sometimes I use lemon meringue. He said the sneak attack with the pie was ~~ prelqde to a' counter-inaugural demonstr~­ ...on fn• Washington on Ja~. 20" when .Presi~ent-el~t Jimmy Carter is to be sworn into

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• • • · ULASEWICZ was hit during a recess in ~is trial, where former Nixort men John ,lEhrllchma.n, John Dean and Herbert Kalmbach testified Jor the pr06ecution. . Ulasewkz. a rotund 57-year-old former J

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LOS ANGEL se.curities trade Denver and I' yesterday with illegal kickbad Angeles broker Authorities ~ transactions · pension fund ~' Named in returned by Charles Kur Richard Dr and Peter I The iJ·I defunct son .and John t L.I.;

New York cop who supplied the comic relief at the senate Watergate Committee when he told his adventures in distributing $200,000 in hush money Watergate con. spirators, is charged with two counts of filing a false and f.raudulent tax return . In his openinc ,_tement yesterday, Frank Murray, special attorney for the u.s. Department of Justice, charged Ulasewicz never int~ded to report .some $41,000 he received in ca&h payments as Wat~rgate bagman until "the oat was out or the bag."

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KALMBACH, 1argely repeating testimony he had already given before the Senate Watergate Committee, told ·of meeting Ulasewicz In a Washington hotel room in June 1969 and agreeing to pay him $22,000 a year plus expenses to do "chores" for the President.

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ANTHONY ULASEWICZ Bad news during recess

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with a pie NEW YO!U< ! UP!~ - Watergate scandal ' ·bagma.n" Anthon~~ Ulasewicz got hit with a pie in the back of the head yesterday. and Yippie Aron Kay said he did it because of the crimes of the Nixon Administration. "It was a coconut cream pie."' Kay said after making his ~pe from a corridor in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn where Ulasewicz is on trial for tax evasion. "It cOst $1.50. Sometimes I use lemon meringue."

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' Kay, who ~lso claims to have hit Sen.-elect Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Sen. James L. Buckley during their recent campaign, said he threw the pie "because the Yippies oppose the crimes that were committed against the peopie ... by.the Nixon and Ford Administrations." ~ · He said the· s.wak attack with the pie was •·a prelude to a countermaugural demonstration in Washington on Jan. :2cr; when President-elect Carter is to be sworn in to offiCe.

,.

Ulasewicz was hit during a re-cess in his trial. where former Nixon men .John Ehrlichman , John Dean and Herbert Kalmbach testified for the prosecution lllasewicz. a rotund, 57-year-old former New York City cop who supplied the comic reli>f at the Senate t Watergate Committee hearings when he descnbed h1s 1 adventures in distributing $200.000 in hush mqney ,to L W1tergate conspirators, is charged with two counts of ~~ filing a false and fraudulent tax return. I In his opening statement yesterday, Frank Murray, special attorney for the U.S. Department of JusticeJ charged Ulasewicz never intended to report 110111e $41,000 he received in cash payments· aS Waterga~ bagman until "the cat was out of the bag." .-~Ask yourself. if a person who steals something and later attempts to return it after he is caught should be let off," Murray said. Kalmbach. largely repeating testimony he had given before the Senate Watergate Committee, told of meeting UlasewiCZ in a Washington hotel room in June 1989 ~nd agreeing to pay him $22.000 a year plus expeilsfs to do ..chores·' for the President . • "It was my understanding the money was to be dispersed to l'lasewicz at the rate of $2.000 per month for salary and $1.000 per month for expenses, .. Kalmbach said However. when asked by defense attorney John Sutter whether he e\·er saw anyone give the funds to Ulasewicz. Kalmbach answered, " No sir." Dean and Ehrlichman also denied any first hand information of payments actually being made to Ula· sewicz. But Jame.~ Malone. an attorney with the tax division of the Justice Department, testified-Ulasewicz told him he had received $20,000 in cao;h in 1971 from Kalmbach, who told him the money was for e\-penses and not ,tQ.);)e re.earded ~ inrom..


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AAicl what is nee:l(-{1- iii 3-''new approach" by the feelera I government to aid poople who live in cit.it>.S ra the r t·h~ua the cities thems('lves. _ . , ... d!'{<;.)

c-reases in moderate. That leads some economiE'l-; to condude tha t while roanpaniM mny be reporting highe r whol eS~Ie price~. they nre selling their products at a discount.

Ulasewicz Hit by Pie Rrooklyn- Whether or not Tony Ulasewicz U.S. District Courl here, the private investigator who once scr,ed the Nixon White House has already been found guilty by Aron Kay, a man who believes ju!'ticc should be nol so much s wift as sticky. When Ulasewicz ·left the courtroom for lunch yesterday, Kay, 27, who calls himself "the clown p ri n c e of Greenwich Village," dished out the pun ishment-a coconut custard pie blooped into the burly "neck of thE> defendant. La ter Kay, who also claime d credit for staining the s uit of Daniel P a trick Moy nihan with a thrown pie earlit>r in the yea r, called rt>porters to ('Xpla in his actions: "The Yippies are .sick and tir<'d of crimes being contin ued a gainst the people." The crimes Jn q ue:.tion, ffiid K ::ty, includro illegal fittrvf'illance a nd payoffs. Oth er:; mav also be rem inded of .such a ctivitif!:- bv the u ·Jac;ewicz tr i a I a nd lhe wilnes~s callect' by the prosccution-intl ividu:.'ll~ w ho se nam.:.~ are linkl:'d in!'xtricauly to the Amcric:~.n adve nt ure known a;;; \Vat('rgate. Among those tP..'ltirying ye-Mrday were ,John Dean, .John E hrlichman and H erbert Kalmbach. NonP wa~ able to ('SU{jli.'lh that Ulasewic7. wru;, inclc<'d, paid $45,000 to act n.'l a privat(' investi~ g a I o r for Richard Nixon. Each said a White L; convicted of tax fraud charges in

A P l'llOl<•

Ulasewi cz has pie wipecLfrom neck

HoWle aide, J oh n Caulfield, h andled paymeniB

to UlasewiC7.. Ca ulfield did not testify and it is undr:rstood tha t he will not. 'fhe goverr.rnf'nt is char~:i ng tha t Ulasewicz, a retired N t>w York City police officer, failed to report income of $20,000 on 1971 tax returns and $25,000 o n 1972 returns-monf'y , it is a lleged, that was paid to the de tective for ca rry ing out White House a."signmenb. Ulasewicz will nrgul' that he paid his ba ck taxes, interest a nd pen:tltiPs well in advance of his indictment on tnx fraud. T estimony indicated that at leas t pa rt of tJJa,oewicz'.-. fa il ure to repor t the in c o me was out of a profe::;sed loya lty to Richard Nixon. Fra nk M urray, the spPc i t~ l J us tice D t>partment attorney prosecuting the sase, said in his opening sta tement th:lt Ulnsewicz never intended to claim the income und did so only when h is a ctivities beca me public a:: part of the government's \ Va ll'r,gate im·e~tig:1lion. " . . . If n person s tPals somethin~ and later alll'mpts to rt>t urn it after he is caught, :;hould he be let off?" J ohn Su tle1', attorney for Ula~ew ic7, claims the case has political O\"ertonp,; a nd that h is cliC'n t should no t be proopcutecl. Aron Kar ha.; only one re.wonse to the whole W affa ir: som(' cru:.t.

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I


-.. The Boston Globe

.__ .,., 1976 Wednesday, J)eeellluo:& ~...

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RABI~ RESIGNATION - Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabm told the Israeh parliament of hts resignat!nn, promising there would be no major change in Israe s policy before a new election. I£ the parliament agrees tu set an election date, probably in April, May or June, R. bin will conunue. d uring the campaign as ca:-etake.r prime minister.

WATERGATE PIE- Watcrrn~ scandal figure Anthony Ulasewtcz got hit with a pi1 the back of the head, and Yippie Aran Kay said he did i ause o£ the crimeS'of the Nixon Admin :stration. "It wa ~:oconut cream pie," Kay said after m J.;··~ his escape hOi;IJl ,.o ftmr in US district court in BroQ~t , where Ulase t; ~ on trial for failing to pay taxes on-$41,000 he all&S y received in payment for distnbuun~ hush money.

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WORLD BANK LOAN - The World Bank app?._:)ved two loans to Chile totalling $60 m'JJton, in spite of strong objections by five Scandinavian countries and eight mem-. hers of the US Congress. Informed sources said the loar s for agricultural and electnc power projects -were s upported by the United States and approved by a wide margin. CIII LEAN AMBASSADOR - Jorge £auas Lama has been appointed Chile's new ambassador to the United States, President Augusto Pinochet announced. C..:auas, w ho res1gned as Finance Minister, will be replaced by Economy Minister Sergio De Castro. BRITISH AUSTERITY- The 24-nation Organization !or Economic Cooperation and Development approved Britain's $4.16 billion auster1ty program and recommended the International Monetary Fund grant the $3.9 billion loan t he British are seeking to help support the pound. COYOTE POISONING - Environmental Protection Agency administrator Russell E. Train urged President Ford not to revoke an executive order banning the use of poisons to kill coyotes or other predators on public lands. SOVI ET OIL - The pnce of Sovtet o!l is expected to jump as much as 33 percent for Russta's customers in eastern Europe next year, western analysts report. Such a rts€' would place the nommal pnce of Sov1el crude oil at about $8.10 a barrel- 170 percent above the 1974 cost, but below the $12.70 that w1ll be charged by 11 of 13 members of the Organization of Petroleu m Exporting Countries (OPEC) as of Jan. 1,1977.

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Watergate Bagn1an Gels }Jic in Face NEW YORK - Watergate bagman Anthony Ulasewicz was leaving federal court for lunch Tuesday when he was abruptly served dessert a coconut cream pie smacked into the side of his head. His trial on tax-evasion charges had recessed when Ulasewicz was approached by a young man who hurled the pie, shouted an obscenity and ran off. Later a man who identified himself as a member of tbe Youth International Party - Yippies called the Associated Prea and said he had tbrown the pie. ,. ,. 1

on trial in tax case .l.~f.. NEW YORK Watergate bagman Anthony Ulasewicz went on trial yesterday on charges that he failed to report as income the $41,000 he was paid for his role in the scandal. Ulasewicz testified at the Senate Watergate hearings that he carried money to the wife of E. Howard_Jiunt. G. Gordon Liddy a nd Frederick LaR~e, among others connected wtth the Watergate case. He said he delivered more than $200,000 in cases to various people. the bulk of it to Mrs. Hunt. -~ The prosecution has satd tts key witness would be John Caulfield, a former Ni~on aide. Caulfield and Ulasewtcz were both former New York City _policemen and Caqlfied recrutted the bagman . ~v~tN"'i A. tl.,. 1 "" { - C..l...l!:.,..-r


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an j 13th Year

No. 52

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QUEEN ELIZABETH 0 arrived in Northern Ireland for what could be the two most dan~erous tac;ks of her reign. More tban 32.000 troops were -on fuU alert ·in the \var-torn ·province where the Irish Republican Army promised the monarch a "blitz to.remember." Page 1.

City/State ~

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'A~ 'l<Ri\NCISOO'S STREET ARTISTS are happy

wltll their lot under the current rules governing their actlvities and aren't happy with supervtson;' efforts to •change the law. The artists argue they have le~ltimized ·~eir trade and don't want newcomers. Page 4. SUPERVISOR QliEl\ITIN KOPP joined tbe ranks of Qaniel Patrick Moynihan, William Buckley and E. Howard Hunt, among others. when he became the latest victim of i\C'A' York pie-thrower Aron Kay. who ~t Kopp with a t~nut cream creation. Page I. GOV. BROWN SA \'S a cutback in federal funding or tbe space program would be a "tragic mistake." Page 5. .WATER USE AT CIT\' HALL has improved. City ~lfficials are usinJ:l less. that is. Page 4. rHE 'GOLD RtlSH in Sierra County is subsiding, but it was wild while It lasted. A local editor said the saloons were so crowded during the weekend that customers had to wait in tbe street for a drink. Pa~e 3.

T"'- Nation CIA DIRECTOR STANSFIELD TURNER said he'll

tum over the agency's files of Its drug mind-control ezperiments to tbe Justice Department If the latter asks for ·them. He also said biS goal Is to make the <:lA "lean and mean." Page 2.

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That pie-thrower Strikes By Dtdt Alexander

Aron Kay, the self-styled "Yippie Pie Thrower" from New York, bas claimed another well-known victim: San Francisco Supervisors President Quentin Kopp. Kay, 'ZT, caught Kopp with a banana cream pie J&IBt as the supervisor, was entering the door to a Mission Planning Council meeting last night at 2501 Bryant St. . "Yippies are angry over (Kopp's) gloating over the eviction of' poor and aged tenants at the International Hotel ~nd his attempts to get (Propositions) A and B passed," said Kay, whose previous victims have included: Daniel Patrick Moynihan, William Buckley, Phyllis ScbJafly and Watergate

figures E. Howard Hunt and Anthony Ulasewicz. Kopp, of course, was caught oft guard. "Now I know I'm a celebrity," he laughed later. "He must have thought I was Soupy Sales. "I'm very glad to be in the same company as Daniel Patrick Moynihan, whom I supported for U.S. senator in New York. He's a good friend of mine." Kopp said , the pte careened off the side of hil head and right shoulder. "As soon as I looted up, be was gone." /

Kay, who hit Ulasewicz with a coconut cream pie and Scblatly with an apple pie, .was asked tf he was hired by

Desig.n flaw_blamAtt _f nr

ain-Quentin Kopp hit 路ne JocaJJy to do lbe job.路 '1 put It tiUI 'fir/," be replied. "I there are a Jot ol SID Francllcans with Kopp." .y allo saki: "Kopp aakl 'Wbat the ~?' wblll I bit him with the pie. ore otf down the street. You don't a pte IDd stay around to get n."

Tbe meeting, said Kopp, was to protest the leasing of the old Sears building at Army and Mission streets for an unemployment office. "I'm very much opposed to that." Kopp said be wiU introduce a resolution at next Mon'day's supervisors'路 meeting to establish a task force to look into converting the building, as well .as other buildings in the Mission, to com路 mercia! purposes. Meantime, Kay, a mem~r .of Pie Kill Unlimited tn New York, satd he was planning to return home today but may stick around for a few more daY&. / ~ "So far," be boasted, ~I have not been arrested for assault with a deadly pie."


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Bill Hauda at the Boston Marathon

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SPORTS ONE--------------------~

THE CAPIT WEATHER- Tonight fair, cool. Low around 40. Wedn, VOL. 124, NO. 105

IIOPAGES FIVE SEC'J10NS

MADISON, WIS., TUESDAY, 1

Skornicka rejects

(j Nf Mayor office at getting~

City Coli he abea1 theycru hard''(.()

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• Co~ Mayor ! 120 taxi blgJul)

• R~ Hoc C Techni1 RIOf RYGH/ The Cap1tal T1mes

Even before be was sworn in. Joel Skornicka got a feeling for being mayor of Madi&on. During the intermission between ceremonie11 for old and new officeboldel"!!, Skornicka was dealt a cream pie in the face by a man who was thea apprehended in the ball oul8ide by a quick outgo-

ing Mayor Paul Soglia. The man, who told police be is Aroa Kay, 29, of New York City. h being held pending a deeision by Skornicka on whether to preu -:-barges. The new mayor aaid he Wll8 "Burprised 118 anybody.. at the 1188AUIL Here be wipes off the pie.

tion of the cor

Col1lliM MATC the tal aumbe

atloa 1 said.

John Doe part of Hoffman IJ By IRVlN KREISMAN

A judge is told that a 1750,000 life iasura111ce polil"y had Previously undisclosed testimony lapsed before Davie,.• death. See given by Gerald Davies at a John Doe upitilll Times Sbff Writer

bearing before Judge Moria Krueger

on Jan. 18, 1978, was introduced into tbe evidence at he preliminary bear-

8tory on Page 2.

ther teslifted that the next day tbey drove around together and fiDalJy wound up at her apartment wbere they had a drink and watched televi· sion for awhile before they both dozed

off. Tbe questiouing by ~

attorneys ronows:

meat.

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bodyg~

A. N! too~

upeet

two distl:.1ct t.aJta.q to pusli


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Patricia Kennedy Lawford hOlds court with Bettina (r.) & pals.

l.lddy as Crusty as Ever Tlght·llpped tough guy G. Gordon LlddJ'• first press conlerence since he got out of the Danbtu·y I•'ederal Correc· tlonal Institution started orr poorly yes· terday when Ylppie Aron Kay stepped up .and shoved an apple pie Into Liddy's face. Liddy, who served ~2 months for hi! part ln masterm1!!dlug the Water· gate burglary and never squealed one word, was just· about as Informative at the Washington press conference. He said he'll wrlte no books and give no lectures to ca~h in on his dubious fame. Would be pull off another Watergate '~aper lf a President asked him to? Sald Liddy, "Flat volunla!> tun," which meana "Yes, thy will be done" In Latin. Asked how the scandal had af. fected him, he slid into German: "What does not destroy me, makes me strong. er." He added: "I submit to you I have yet to snap."

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want ot look clean." Now, he's cleaning up.

• Say Cornelia H'a s Tapes 'Barna's blg bedroom bugging caper, which Gov. George Wallace chracter· !zed last September as a "domestic matter" between him and wife, C'ornella, could turn into a juicy courtroom drama. Quoting reliable sources, the Montgomery AdverUser said that about 400 houi-s o£ taped conversations Wallace had with "prominent women" still exist and could play a vital role ln any divorce action. The paper reports that the tapes at·e said to be "conversations a married man ought not to be having with other women." Tsk, tsk, Georgie. Meanwhile, Cornelia's attorneys have met with Wallace's lawyeri to discuss the next steps. Cornelia moved out o£ the executive mansion on Tuesday, grumbling about alleged "vulgarities, threats and abuses." Stay tuned. , .

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Political protest Daniel P. Moynihan, cempalgnlng for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate, 11 hit In the face br a mocha cream pie In lower Manhattan. The pie thrower, who ldentlfted hlmMif u Aaron Kay, a "YIIple," yelled "facial pig" u he went Into action. He uld he did It becaute Mornlhan, former ambnHdor to the United Natlona "hat high tattea." Moynihan declined to pretl charges.


I

not u.uatly appear until fanners prepare shop ill LOs AlamitoS, eaT.r. An agenf Aid to plant qain. the raid occurred before the bills were ·"Fanners have been ingenious at get- passed to the public.

Liddy·Says He Has No Remorse and Would Do a By RICHARD L. MADDEN apetlal to 'I'!IIl'IIW Yor• T\mM

WASHINGTON, Sept. 8-0n his first full day of freedom, G. Gordon Liddy In· vited some reporters in today to talk about prison conditions, and In the process was peppered with questions about Watergate. • With his five chlldren standing at at· ~nnon behind him and his wife, Frances, sitting near, the 46-year-<>ld Mr Liddy said he had no remorse about Watergate. He said he still had his reasons, which he declined to disclose, for keeping silent about the 1972 break-in at the Democrat. ic National Committee's offices at the Watergate complex. Mr. Liddy was released yesterday from the Federal prison in Danbury, Conn., after serving 52~ months, the longest tenn of an.y Watergate fi~re, of a total ' sentence of more than eight years. Today he characterized himself u "content" · and added: "I have lived as I believed I ought to have lived."

The Prince and the Ueutenant Mr. Liddy, who was the counsel to the Committee for the Re-election of the President In 1972 and later called the · mastermind of the Watergate burglary by Government prosecutors, was asked what he would say if a President asked him "to do that kind of work again." G. Gordon Liddy with his family at . news conference In "I would say yes,'' he replied, without children, Thomas, 14, Alexandra. 18, Ja1nes, a pause. "When the prince approaches his lieutenant, the proper response of the lieu~~.nant to th~ price i~ 'Fiat vo!,utas clined to say why the break-in took place tua, he sal,? usmg R. Latin term- Thy. or what the burglars were looking for. Will be done, he explamed. "I can but I won't " he said. Mr. Liddy said he regarded himself as Did it pain hi~ to have fonner Presia lieutenant. "I would not' rank myself 1dent Richard M. Nixon, who later re' as a captain.'' he added. • signed from office, call Watergate a In a taped interview earlier today with "jackass" stunt? "I probably have the Barbara Walters, which wu broadca~t highest threshold of pain of anyone you tonight on ABC, Mr. Liddy also compared evrr mel, ·s ir," he replied. · his relationship w1th former President D1d he feel any responsibility for being Richard M. Nixon to that of a lieutenant part or the sequence of events that' led to a prince. to the resignatioo of a Preside-nt? ''1 don't Asked if he felt he had taken the blame know that ont' can lay the blame on a for Watergate in vain, Mr. Liddy replied: particular link .in a chain unless that link 'him in a' rogm at "No, I think I delayed things substantial- has snapped,'' he said. "f submit to you he. said, because I , camp ·a t Allenwood, . ly." Asked what good it had done to delay that I have not snapped ." One reasoo he has rt'fused to talk .a bout wanted him to deswbe things, he said; "The prince was prince for a longer period of time." Watergate, Mr. Liddy said, was that if racism aga ~nst black and Talking later with reporters, Mr. Liddy the Supreme Court had granted· 1\ new er.s at Allenwood and said almost apologetically that he did not trial for John N. Mitchell, the former At- guards !lt Danbury du wish to appear·"quixotic" about his refus· tomey General, and other Watergate ,fig- there m which five As he entered the ' to_.t~lk about Watergate, but· he de- ures, Mr. Liddy probably would have been

man threw an appl~ pie ihat struck Mr. Uddy in the face. Later a man who idenAroo Kav and who .said tified •himself he had throvin pies at ~tayor. Beame of New York and other public figures called news organJzatlons to say that he had Lhrown the pie t~t Mr. Uddy because he had "consplied to set up .a police state." Mr. Liddy stepped into a bathroom to wash off the pie. He seemed as unruffled b.Y the incident. as 'h e did with the questiOns he was a5ked. ·H11d the pie throw~r ~id anything to him? "No," Mr. Liddy replied with a smile, "but I wal> wotldering when we would be hearing from Judge. Siric!l"-a reference to Federal District Judge Je>hn J. Sirica, who sentenced Mr. Liddy to jail. Last April President Carter commuted Mr. LiddY's sentence to eight years . and his parole became effecti\·e yesu;rday.

as


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Disco king Yippie pie target NEW YORK (AP) Back In the new!> with a late-night assault on the owner ot a chic Manhattan disco, • 'the Hipple-Ylpple Pieman is alive and throwing. Aron Kay, the best known among what's left of the pot-smoking, anti ·EstabUshment Ylppie Party, claims 14 pie hits on prominent poUtlcal 'figures In the lasts~ years. This week, he made his latclit crusty maneuver on il tlco, Studio S4 e Ruben: Kay's o.rr, .though, maust. to dirtY the 's custom-made UJjacket. . According to Kay,_ Ru·

ownnonF. · .· 1

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* ,S.A.T ... I'IU COURSI: • SPtlf'JG EXAMS

KAUFMAN fll'toriniJ

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bell's crowd of 'ritty dct'a· dents" could easily "fork over $1,000 so we could have more smoke-ins and we could get more litera· lure out." But there'll be no donation from Rubel!, who termed the W<'dnesday morning episode "funny" and declined to press charges. Kay hasn't alway!> been that lucky. He's frequently arrested, although the charges are almost always dropped. The lone smudge was the '150 nne Kay paid or a harassment eonvlctlon for an October 1977 .attack fonner CIA bead ~WU· llam Colby.

on

Among Kay's other suc· cesses are Sen. Daniel Pat· rick )doynlhan, D-~ .Y., Watergate figu res E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, and former New York Mayor Abraham D. .Beame. Kay believes a man's

pit· should suit his personality. . For. Beame, who at the time or the August 1977 attack was waging a re~lec­ tion campaign, It was apple crumb. "I figured he deserved It because he was the crummiest politician In the Big:Apple at the time." Harvard professorturned drug guru Timothy Leary, whom Kay accused of turning In assoda~ to. legal authorltlest recently received a cheesecake for being "a rat." In 1976, when MOynihan was c:ampaJgnlng ~ for: the Senate and Kay thought.- he wantedt to do . too little :tor black~, '1 he beaned ' Moynlhan with a m~ha cream "to give him a change In complexion." Rubell wasn't Kay's first nonpolitical hit. About two years ago "these girls at a Catholic high school paid me $10 to hit a nun, their principal, with a lemon meringue .•.. I

. '·

,

dressed up like a delivery boy for that one. <"omplete

with a fake lnvu.te book. And while she wa~ signing the1book, I pulled out the pie and let her have lt." Kay recently had a pineapple pie ready for John Ehrlichman on the former • Nixon aide's wedding day, but when Ehrllchman failed to appear for his Ice cream parlor reception due to large .- crowds, Kay treated the orilookerli In· stead - with ple to eat, not throw. .. '· . , · Long:halr:td . , ~nd bearded, Kiy wears a short

'l'

~lack hiather-jacket"anCI a

garbage collector's :hl!t. not just .a "But crazy piethrower," he says, espousing _the Yippies' fights- as they put It, for legalized marijuana and human rights, against nuclear energy and Richard Nixon's resurfacing. His favorite pie to eat? "It's a lQ!is-up, but apple, I ~uess."~_,.., ·

I'm

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By RICIIARD L MADDEN ~~~*~~~• 11M !In Yon on.. WASHINGTON, Sept. 8-0n his fint full day of freedom, G. Gordon Liddy 1ft. vited some reporters in today to talk about prison conditions, and in the process wu peppered with questions about Watergate. With his five children ltanding at attenbon behind him and his wife, Frances. sittiq near, the 46-year-old Mr. Uddy said he had no remone about Watergate. He said be still had his reuons, which be declined to disclose, for keeping silent , aboUt the I 972 break-in at the Democratic National Committee's offices at the Watergate complex. Mr. Liddy wu released yesterday from the Federal prison 'In Danbury, Conn., after serving 52~ months, tbe lonpst term of any Waterpte ~· ot a total sentence of more than el t years. Today he characterized him.se a "content" ·and added: "I have lived u I believed I ought to have lived."

111e Prinee and the U•teaut Mr. Uddy, who wu the counsel to the Committee for the Re-election of ttle President In 1972 and later called the · mastermind of the Watergate burglary by Government prosecutors, wu asked what he would say if a President asked him "to do that kind of work again." G. Gordon Uddy with his famDy at new~ conference In wa~c.day. From left: his "I would say yes," he replied, without eblldren, Tbomas, 14, Aleundra, 18, JaJMI, 11, Qlce, 17, ad bymoad, 13. a pause. "When the prince appra.ches his lieutenant, the proper response of the lieu!~~t t? th~ price is. 'Fiat vo!utas clined to say why the break-in took place asked to testify. He said be wollld have t~, he sal,~ usang • . Latm term- Thy. or what the burglars were looking for. refused because "I didn't testifJ qainst Will be done, he explamed. "I can but I won't," he said. my colleagues" and probably ~ have Mr. Liddy said he regarded himself as Did it pain him to have former Prest- been sentenced to additional tUM In jail. a lieutenant. "I would not rank myself dent RiC'hard M. Nixon, who later re"There are stiU some ~ which as a captain," he added. signed from office, caJI Watergate a obtain," be adcled. declining to •Y wtlat In a taped Interview earlier today with "jackass" stunt? "I probably have the they were. Barbara Walters, which was broadcast highest threshold of pain ol anyone you Mr. Licldy said he had na piiM to tonight on ABC, Mr. Liddy also compared ever met, sir," he replied. write about Water,.te and wu considhis relationship with former President Did he feel any responsibility for being ering a number o job off-. Richard M. Nixon to that of a lieutenant part of the sequence of events that led On Eatnlllee, a Pie ID till bee to a prince. to the resignation of a Prelident? ''1 don't He invited the reporters to meet with Asked if he felt he had taken the blame know that one can Jay the blame on a for Watergate in vain, Mr. Liddy replied: particular link Jn a chain unless that link him In a room at the Mayflower Hotel, "No, I think I delayed things s ubstantial- has snapped," he said. "I mbmit to you he said, because inmates a tile prison camp •t Allenwood, Pa , and It Danbury ly." Asked what good it had done to delay that I have not snapped." One reason he has refused to talk about wanted him to describe wbti lie said was things, he said, ''The prince was prince Watergate. Mr. Uddy said, was that if racism aga:nst black and Hianlc prisonfor a longer period of time." Talking later with reporters, Mr. Liddy the Supreme Court had granted a new ers a t Allenwood and caDousness by said almost apologeticaux that he did not trial for John N. Mitdbell, the former At- guards at Danbury durin& a recent fire wish to appear "quixotic • about his refus- tomey General, and other Watergate fig- there in which five prisoners died. As he enter~ the hoteli'OIIIIl, a bearded • ~ .~ about Waterpte, but he de- ures, Mr. Licldy probably would have been ~


Street dMicing 1Mn7

In "Push, Push, in the Bush," land, Jesus GoO:

zaJez. an off-duty Mexican patrolman, was danc-

Ing in a Mexican disco recently when his .22 Magnum pistol fell from his holster, hit the floor, Ired, and killed his partner ••• Yippie activist aron Kaye, yearning for the good old '60s, entered Studio 54 recently in a huff. Kaye, calling the disco culture "meaningless, decadent, and lobotomizing," mi&Cked co-owner Steve Rubell a coconut cream pie . . • Now that Rod ·f 1Sarart a. a bona fide disco hit, rumors are that Mlck Jagger Is ready to retire Ruby Tuesday .for a little Saturday Nlghl Fever.

-D.rv .....

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children, rro.-.. Thoma. Ill; SDQ, II; lames, 16; Grace, 1'7, and Ray, 13.

Gordon Liddy: Apple Pie and Mum By Bill Richards Waahlnrt.an Poa\ Staff Wrlttr

Once he told his White House bosses he would in front of a sniper before he talked. But )esterday, when he finally did get around to talk:in~. the only un!riendly fire G. Gordon Liddy encountered was an apple pie in the face. Liddy. who was released Wednesday from fed· era! prison after sen·ing 52'h months for his part in en~lneering the Watergate break-In, sum· moned reporters to the :Mayflower Hotel to listen to him speak not about Watergate, but about ViTOnl!doing he encountered in the prison system. "I live in the present and the luture. not in the past." said Liddy, 46, sidestepping most of the inquiries about Watergate. But the pie-throwing incident made it clear that Liddy is not a •man who forgets easily. When Aron Kay, a member of the Youth International111lllt

Finaneial Worth

or Yippie-party, tossed the small pie In Liddy's face the former Watergate conspirator wiped away the remains and uid, without cracking a smile, "I was wondering When we'd hear !rom Jud!!e Sirica and apparently we have." U.S. Judge John J. Sirica imposed the stiff ~entence of up to 20 years and a $40,000 fine on Lidd)' for his Watergate activity. Sirica later added another 18 months to the sentence after Liddy refused to discuss Watergate before a federal grand jury. Liddy appeared yesterday Clanked by his five children and his wife, Frances. He was wearing a suit of clothes and a pair or shoes he said he was given along with $40 when he was released from lederal prison in Danbury, Conn. Despite his part in the events that ultimately took. the presidency !rom Richard Xixon, Lidd~

insisted he still would be v. ill in:! 10 do bidding asked of him by any U.S. President. "When the prince approaches his lieutcn the proper response of the lieutenant to prince is 'Flat voluntas tua,'" said Liddy. later spelled out the Latin to bewildered porters, and translated it as "thy will be don Liddy said he would have no comment Kixon or the former President's statements d Ing a tele,·ision interview with David Frost. 0 ing one interview Nixon called those involv in the Watergate break·in "a little nuts." "I just Iea\·e the actions of others to be jud by the public," Liddy said. In an Interview yesterday with ABC news c respondent Barbara Walters, Liddv elabora slightly on his Watergate role, saring that tald See LIDDY, C-i, Col 4


!Jht Law icahle Vorkers • 8 (UPI)-A fed· u ruled that Vir· law does not ap·ontracta at fed· tte. 'reult Court of eld an earUer \ Court Judge the VIrginia leral install&· ncorpo~ted

>i monetary

tployees of tg services Ft. Mooer job benton and

Liddy: Apple Pie and Still Mum LIDDY, From Cl blame for the Watei'Jate break-in in 1972 delayed things IRibstantially."

"The prince," said Liddy, apparently referring to Nixon. "was prince for a lonaer period of time." Liddy declined, however, to say whether he had been asked to take the blame by ~lxon or whether he spoke with Nixon before going to prison. !Jddy offered praise for two other Watergate figures, John Erlichman and John Mitchell, as "strong." But when reporters added John Dean's name to the Ust, Liddy paused and then sald "Fully qualliied to sing the

title role in 'Der Rosenkavalier.'" The title role in the Richard Strauss comic opers is sung by a woman, he later reminded reporters. Although he told a federal magistrate In Pennsylvania Tuesday that he was legally a pauper-a statement required to remove temporarily the $40,000 fine and allow him out of pri· son-Liddy said he actually bas a number of job otfers, including one to work with shopping center dl'velopers and another to edit a magazine. He declined to name the magazine. But Peter L. Maroulis, Liddy's attorney, said be bad sold an article written by IJddy to Chic magazine and

Customers, Distributors Irked

As 2,000 Vending Machines Shut

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mon a Safeway shopper in Vienna, said of the ordinance. "You can get ble botUe. It baa an appropriyour money back." aticker attached. "I personally d i s p o s e of all my - - - - -. .aQ.-t~r;:;ash~ at home," said Sberyl Archibald ng at the clear plastic

BOTTLES, From Cl

urn-

nt

that Liddy will write a second article for Esqulre. Liddy said he has no plans at present to ~Tite a Watergate book al· though he did not rule out such a project in the future. Right now. be said, he is struggling with a novel that he described as "definitely not a roman a clef." Liddy, who was behind bars longer than any other Water~ate figure. sald his primary purpose in talking with reporters was to describe what he said was rampant racism within the federal prison camp at Allenwood, Pa., where he spent most of his aen· tence. He reiterated charges that ha\•e been made earlier by prisoners that five deaths of prisoners jn a recent fire at another federal prison at Danbury, Conn., were due to neglect and callousness on the part of prison guards.

"This is the information that 1be men asked me to bring to you and l hope I have dischar~ed my obliga· tion to my former fellow federal pris· oners," Liddy said.

Two Charged in Theft Of Old Trunk Fortune


WATERGATE:

Good Soldier Liddy As an assistant D.A. in e w York's Dutc hess County, he liked to stalk around town with a gigantic .357 magnum in a shoulde r holster, but the truth was that " h e co uldn' t po ur his coffee without spilling it on himself," according to a lawye r who knew him . On one occasion, he dramatized a point in court by smas hin g a 2-by-4 against the jury box, and the judge sent hi m a bill for damages. Anothe r time, he sought to pounce on an obscene phone calle r by hiding in a car trunk, and the n got tra pped inside for nea rl y two hours. And, of course, whe n a bunc h of unde rcover ringy-dingies got the mselves caught breaking in to D e mocrati c a-

Danbury, Conn., free on pa role, to find that his code of sile nce had given him a c urious distinction in the inte rve ning years. He had not ratted on anyone e lse, had not sold book or TV rights to the well-varnished inside story, had not c ried fo ul, had not turned e vangelical, had made n o deals with prosecutors or judges. Lean from long hours of e xe rcise, Liddy soldie red on, d e flecting all n e wsme n's questions e xce pt to say that be wa "conte nt" and to quote t ie tzsch e , in Ge nna n , to the effect that "what docs not destroy me, makes me stronge r." With th at, h e closed the back of his secondha nd Pinto with a karate c ho p and roared off at 70 miles an hour. At a press confe re nce the ne xt day, Liddy was subjected to one m ore attack, a n appl e pie tossed b y a skulkin g Yippie. With his wife and fi ve c hildre n standing

Liddy and his family: Quotes in German and Latin-but nol a word on Watergate tional Committee offices at the Wa te rgate complex in Washin gton in 1972, George Gordon Battl e Liddy turned out to be the maste rmind. But the Wate rgate trial may have been his salvation . Afte r nearly fifteen years of the most fervent but foul ed -up service to community and nation, G. Gordon Lidd > had finall y fou nd a mission he could pe rforn1 we ll-standing still a nd sa}ing nothin g. Stra ight as Lord Nelson, mustache bristling at alte nlion, he re fused to talk to the prosecuto rs, to a n a\'e ng ing Judge j ohn J. S irica or to inquiring congr essme n. I nstead, h e took a rap for conte mpt of court as we ll as a stiffe r straight se nte nce lhan any of h is fe llow burglars, and marched stoicall y off to jail with a te nn of from s Lx years, e ig ht months to twenty years. Last wee k, Liddy, 46, e me rged from the medium-security Fed eral prison in 44

by, Liddy thanked Preside nt Carte r for his commutation, and ta lked fl ue ntly for twen ty m inutes about condition s inside the two Fed e ral pri son s whe re he d id time. He sprinkled e rudite op eratic and Latin re fe rences over lhe heads o f the press corps and picked his way care full y amon g the questions he ch ose to answer. H e would, of course, pe rform his duty again . " When the P rince approaches his lie utenant,'' h e said , recalling Machiavelli, "the proper res ponse o fthe lie ute nant to the Prince is ' Fiat voluntas tua' ('Thy will be d one')." 'Waste': or did Lidd y fee l a ny bitte rn ess to ward Richard ixo n, bitte rness b eing " a weakness and a waste." As for ixon 's captains, Liddy expressed admiration for Mitchell and Ehrlichman, but thoug ht j ohn Dean was " qualified to sing the title role in 'Rosenkavalie r'" (explaining late r that the role is take n b y

a woman). Of his own prospects. me ntioned several rathe r unspecili< o ffe rs a nd a book of non-Wate rgate tion. Unde r no circumstances, howt would h e write a Wate rgate book wi the foreseeable future. Finally, in the matter ofthe lie ute and his Prince, did Liddy feel pe rs res ponsibility for being part of c hain that brought down the Presid Liddy's mustache bristl ed . " I don' t t one can lay th e blame on a partic ul ar in a c hain unless that li nk has snapp he said. " I submit to you that I hav1 to snap."

RICHARD BOETH wrth EVERT ClARK n Wasl

SCANDALS:

Park Stays Put

It was a nice plan, but it didn' t v The idea was to have a grand jury se ly indict South Korean bus ines~ T ongs un Park for alleged influ!: buying on C apito l Hill, so that he c be a rrested the next ti me he le fi sanctuary in Seoul for a ny country maintains a reciprocal extradition tJ with lhe U.S. But someone leakec story to two Washington pape rs weeks ago-prompting Park to stay w he re he was. And ne ithe r direc quests from Preside nt Carte r north from Congressional leaders seemed ly to pry him loose ve ry soon . T he 36-count felony indictme nt finall y unsealed last week. It ace Park of working " to defraud the citi of the United States" b y irnpairin1 abili ty ofthe ir e lected representath work " free &om corruption, fraud prope r and undue influence ... " mer Re p. Richa rdT. Hanna of Calif. was named as a n unindicted co-cons tor, a nd tl1e indic tm e nt also listed t ty H o use membe rs and four senate recipie nts of Park's gen erous pe r~ g ifts and campaign contribu tions. of these p resents we re pe rfectly le1 acce pt, howeve r, ass uming that tht isla tors did no l be lieve Park to be a as a fo re ign agent. House Speaker Thomas P. 0 ' warned that South Korea's refus send Pa rk back to Washin gton v. "st rain its re lations" with the U.S . the House late r narrowly rejecte a me ndme nt to sto p U.. aid to S President Carte r has sent a t leasl personal le tte r on the subject to I dent Park C hung Hee-along w ilh c malic messages-b ut the South K< Governm ent announced it would 路 the d ecision u p to Tongs un Park hin And the fugitive busi ness man sai had no immediate pla ns to re tun though he was talkin g to South K< prosecutors. The H ou se in vestigato not s ure tl1ey need him. T he ir tor ity N E W W EEK learned is to re~ords ofth e Korean En; bass' ington in orde r to comp le te t' ingofthe moner tl1at Park s1 in foste ring goodw Ul in \'


2IA THE KANSAS CITY STAR

s....ter, Aprtl17, 1tn

*

,___-National New• at a Glanoe----...

Pie Flies

ANn Kay •liven what he cella an "American tndltlon," an IJple 'PI• In the fece of Phyllis Scht.fly, euea,.acen epponent ol the ltlthtt AmerNtment, et the We • Atterle Hetelln New Yertc. In the

=•

''om Tl!t ltar't '"'" Strwlcn

!Mit Areft haa ~en tM hit men with

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Daniel P. M.,Nhen art4 I. Hewar4 Hunt. The wmen In tht ..,.,., it Nenty lerMen, Miter .. Met-rfty Ittpert· (WI,.,h...)

Limits to Immunity

Pie lor E.R.A. Foe New York-Phyllaa Sehlafly. an ulltlpoken opponent olthe Equal Rll}ltl Amendment. waa hit In the faN terday with an apple pie at a reception for the Woman'• National Republican club. A former a1ut ol Pie Kill Unlimited, Aron Kay. 17, aaad he threw the pie but departed from hla ul\lal eholee of eream eoneocUona bec:auae "It waa In the tradiUon of motherhood and apple pie." A member of the radical Youth International Party <Yippltl), be U.S to throw pies for Klll UnUmiWcl. a now-chlfunct aroup or youna person• who would throw a pie at anyone for a price. He laid he did not receive a fee. Mn. Sehlafly uld her day "turned out to he mort exciUDC than I lmaained . •• but I appreciate that they didn't pick cherry pie-that would have a~lned my dress.''

Y•·

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Judge Rejects Pleas Baltlmore-A federal judae hna nfultd to accept the ~ pleu olllx l.._,.ndenl oU oompiJU• aceultd ol ftxtq the priee tJI aa•oUne In alx llatealnd the Olltrict ol Columbia. Judie C. Stanley Blair of the U.S. Dlalriet Court cited tht aerlouan~~s or the Indictment and tht pubUe'a eonNm with enerl)'. The trial hu been Mt for M~JI. Pleas were entered by the Society of Independent Gasoline Markettrl or America, ConUntnlal Oil Company and Its aubltd!ary. Kayo Oil Company, Amerada Hen Corporation. Alhland 011. Inc., Meadville Corporation and Petroleum Markltlnl CorporaUon. The companl11 are ac· eultCI ol eonsplriftl to fi.X tht price tJI auollne over 1 7· year period.

Oklahoma Clt1-Tht1 Okl,homa Suprtme Court. In 1 landmark dteiRion, hu rulld that iltahl lawmakera '"' not Immune from arreat even ror the moat minor traffic: vlolatlona. The ru1tn1 1ald the prlvlleae from arrt~at Ia In etvll mattlrl only.

Water to Be Rationed

Lot Anlelt..,..Rttldenta oll.oa An~&elta, who have H•

captd the water ratlonlnalmpoaed nn many communltl" In drouAhl·•trlcktn northern Callfornaa, may bt! forced to cut their water uae by up to IS per cent next mor.th. "There l1 llttlt doubt but that mandatory eontrola will be required," aatd Frtd Llewellyn, chairman of MayiH' Tom Bradley•a Ad\•laory Commltlte on Water Con1erY1· Uon, "Th4!1 only 9ue1tlon now Ia not when. but almply what type tlf controls. '

FBI Slaying Ca•• to Jury

Farao. N.D.-AU .~ Dlatrlct Court jury of nln11 wom en and three men beiiU\ deliberating In the t.eonard Pel· Uer murder trial y11terday. Peltier, 31. formerly of Orand P'orka. hu plt~ded Innocent to two counta of flrat de&rllt murder In the June •· 1871. ahoot1n1 deathl or two 'FBI aaenta, Jack Coler and Ronald Wllllama, on the Pine Rld1elndlan Jlttiii'Vatlon In South Dakota.

Hopes lor End ol Strike

New York....SOme protr.a• wa1 re~rttd yntei'day ln talka aimed at endlnl aa~ay-old lontlhortmen'• atrlke Both aldea expresaed hope tfiat It eauld be rttolvtd at 1 meetanaaet for tomorrow.


""

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"II anyone wants to

desk and lianded him the microphone.

"He (Butch) prol>ably ought to let him

a large numtier members seeking bate against the n ure. "Anyone else ag p u b 1 i c employ Murphy asked.

• • •

When Rep. M on k s, D-Musk heard Wednesday Florida had reje the Equal R i g Amendment, he pi a red-white-and arm band on his

ann..

Aron Kay prepares to hit lfhyllis Schlafly, an outspoken opponent of the Equal Rights

Amendment, with an apple pie Saturday at a hotel in New York. lAP Laserphotol

ERA Opponent Gets Pie in Eye NEW YORK (AP) from his usual choice Ph y IIi s Schlafly, an of cream concoctions outspoken opponent of because "it was in the the Equal Rights tradition of motherhood Amendment, was hit in and apple pie." the face with an apple Mrs. Schlafly said pie Saturday during a 1 a t e r that her day reception at a Woman's "turned out to be more National Republican exciting than I imagClub luncheon. ined. . . . I wouldn't Fonner Pie Kill Un- want you to think that ll m i t e d agent Aron the people who oppose Kay, 27, said he threw my views to this extent the pie but departed are really total slobs

because I appreciate that they didn't pick c h e r r y pie - that would have stained my dress." Kay, a member of the radical Youth International Party CYippies) who used to throw p1es for Pie Kill Unlimi ted, a now-defunct group of young people who would throw a pie at anyone for a price,

has previously tossed pies at Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, columnist William F. Buckley and Watergate figures E. Howard Hunt and Anthony UlasewiC7.. He said he chose Mrs. Schlafly because of her work against ERA. He said several women's groups who support ERA backed his action but he did not receive a fee.

black one," said anti-ERA legislato On Tuesday, Don Davis, D-LaVI said Rep. Lonnie bott, D-Ada, asked to speak to the Pc toe C o u n t y teac meeting. The invi came about 3 p.m. "Sure, when is Davis asked of A "About 6:30 p Abbott replied. "Do you suppose means I wasn't the person asked speak?" Davis

Novelties Home SWISS cheese Only $99.75. Make own Swiss cheese. ~ consists of one 25 lb. I of cheddar (re-ordl needed) plus a 121 shotgun and two boXI buckshot. Acme No Shop. F md 11 ••• '" the class


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ERA More Than Pie In Sky Aron Kay, above, about to hit Phyllle Schlafly, opponent of the Equal Rlghtl Amendment, with an apple pie Saturday at the Waldorf路Aatorla In New York. Kay, who hu hit Sen. Daniel Moynihan and E. Howard Hunt with cream pi", Hid he Hlecttd Mra. Schlafly because of her work against the ERA, and an apple pie becaull "It wu In the tradition of motherhood and apple pie." Lett, Mra. Schlafty wipe~ off remalne. (AP)


Daily Mail, Friday, January 5, 1979

By PHILIP FINN

The robots are connng •

MOST hila rious assignmen t was acting as straight man to a robot designed to do away with h ousework.

:MY

We got on wonderfully. And soon some ot the cbaps who man the car assembly lines in Britain could get a t aste of the same if experiments work out in Detroit. General Motors is d eveloping a. n ew way to use robots side by side with workers m aking component.s such as instrument p anels and windscreen wiper motors. The idea is to let the mechanical men p e r tor m uncompl1cated monotonous tasks whUe humans do the more complicated work. 'The aim it to k:eep it simple,' says Frank Daley, General Motors' director ot manufacturing development. 'We want to bridge the gap b<:tween m anual assembly and complex. expensive, special purpose, hard autom ation.' The robot between Fred a nd Bill on the work llne In Detroit is known as PUMA, which slands !or Programmed Unlvcrsal :\.fanipuation for Assembly. Shop stewards may be Interested to learn a PUMA robot arm is about the size of a human arm. bolts In place In a few m tnutf's. can Jearn a n ew job while lt cont;nucs to do an old one It does n ot use the arm for strike votes! THE first man to pick a pocl!.'et. In space h as confessed alL Astronaut David Scott. says b e nicked a classical music tape from Russell Schwelkart while they were orbiting 1n Apollo 9 w:lth J ames McDi\'i.tt. Scott, who prefers pop music, htd the works of Vaughan WIIUams and Hovhaness 'for t he sake of a little needed levity up there.' He gave the tape back on Earth and they are still good buddies.

:010 54 owner Steve Rubell, who delights in turning people away from his disco palace in Manhattan, has iust got his true deserts-a cream pie in tfle face from ~litical prankster luron Kaye.

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or

n the the 1.1ddy told reporters at he saw himself as a lieutenant rather than a captain. But in an interview by ABC's Barbara Walters that was broadcast last night, Liddy gave himself a promotion: He said he took the blame for Watergate by design because, "I ·as t he captain of the aircraft carrier when it struck the reef.'' turning to his pre~ iolli image, Liddy told 8.1ters tha his acJCeptance of the blame "delayed things substantially," so that 'the prince was prince for a longer period of time." Liddy was asked whether he could say why he planned the break-in or what t he burglars were seeking at Democrat ic headquarters. His reponse was: •1 can but I won't... The man whose Unbroken silence made his the longest prison stay of anyone convicted in the Watergate scandal-more than 52 montb.s--oaid: "I "ust don't tes tify against my colleagues. There are other reason5, too, which I Y.ill not disclose." He also said: "I was given a larger sentence than the others in an attempt to cow the others into submitting to Judge [John] Sirles's prosecutorial urges, as d.i.stinguished from judicial temperament, and out of personal pique." When asked if he believed he had done wrong, Liddy said: ~ live in the present and the future. I do not reproach myself. I have lived as I believe I ought to have lived." ' A spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, Michael Aun, said Liddy's comments would not endanger his parole: "Parole has something to do with what he does, not what he says." Liddy said he planned to write a novel with no connection to Watergat~ and was mvestigating job offers ranging from magazine editor to construction supervisor. He insisted he would not write or lecture about Watergate. Before Liddy's meeting with reporters in the Mayflower Hotel, Aron Kay, a self-styled Yippie, hit Liddy in the side of the head with an apple pie, then fled. Kay later explained his recent pie-tossing at Liddy, New York City Mayor Abraham Beame, SeD. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) and columnist William Buckley by saying: "It's a way to deflate the dignity of these people who violate the rights of others." Liddy said his primary purpose in holding the news conference was to call attention to inmate grievances at the Allenwood (Pa.) Federal Prison Camp and the Danbury (Conn:.) Penitentiary. He saiti the Allenwood food boycott, which led to his transfer Last month to Danbury, was caused in part by "overt racism" on lhe part of the pri110n staff. Liddy said: •'The treatment of blacka imd Hispanics and of the small Jewish community was not the same as that given the whites." Prisoners at Danbury wanted him to publicize events surrounding the July 7 fire that killed five inmates and injured more than 80, Liddy sa id. He said he was told that men trapped in one cellblock called a control officer to tell him of the fire, t-ut that "he hung up on them two or three times," and that inmatea ry"ing to struggle to safety found a fire door nailed shut.

,.

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hi w en

go prt ord me1 the


Is It Just Desserts? Aron Kay, above, gets ready to plop Phyllis Schlafly, outspoken opponent of the Equal

rs. Schlafly, left, wiped the filling out of her eyes. Mr. Kay, who has h1t Sen. Daniel Moynihan and E. Howard Hunt with pies, sa1d he chose apple because .. ,t was in the tradition of motherhood and apple p1e." In center of above photo is Nancy Borman, editor of Majonty Report. AP La>efllhala

OPEC Soli __~

Voiced

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be co inan e"

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NOT NE!N 'YORK POST. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1979

Convicted Yippie terrorist Willie Morass yesterday escaped from Bellevue's psychiatric ward, despite the 1088 of most of his head and all of his toes in an earlier explosion in a home pie-baking factory. Morass, the head of a terrorist group dedicated to the "freeing of all inhibited Americans," had been convicted of federal and state charges connected v.ith building and operating a factory where pies used in various Yippie activities were made. At the time of his arrest Morass' stove exploded in his face covering the terrible terrorist with hot blueberry filling and coconut custard. As a result of his injuries Morass lost most of his head and all but the small toe of his left foot. Despite his injuries he was tried and convicted last month and only recentl y transfer red to ward when complained that prison officials refused to allow him to "get my bead together." Not the New York Post learned yesterday that correction officials were specificall,! warned that Morass would try to escape from the minimum security ward if he was transferred there. But officials, confident that no man with most of his head and all but the small toe of his left foot gone could manage an escape, lifted the 24-hour guard from the convicted Yippie just

Early this morning a hospital guard found the grat.ilig on Morass' window cut through with a can opener and the remains of an 80-foot balloon left dangling from the window. Police were bewildered, however, how a man with almost no head could have devised such an ingenious escape and speculated that Morass must have had inside help. But correction officials vehemently denied that any of their employees were capable of aiding anyone's intellectual efforta and suggested the police look elsewhere for Morass' planning accomplice. A man with a lisp and an East Bronx accent calJed the Not the New York Post last night and said, "Ha, ha hL Moraaa lives to throw pies again. The cause live on. Moraaa livee very well without hill head and we'll do the

aame.••



Famous pie-thrower Aaron Kay gets o

Patti-coke in the choppers.

82


has taken "no postlion" on military organtztng but was thought by many to oppose any such effort has recently gtven private. but f~rm. assurances to Ken Blaylock, head of AFGE. that he wtll do nothtng to htnder the formatton of a milttary umon What ktnd of marriage of tnterest wtll be consummated between the former anttwar acttvtsts of "Ctttzen Soldter" and the matn-hne labor leaders at AFGE rematns to be determtned On paper, both organtzalions advocate stmtlar programs destgned to wtn for Gls the right to collecttve bargatmng over tssues such as beneftts. pay, and health and safety condtttons on the JOb At thts stage, netther AFGE. nor "Ctllzen Soldter." advocates bargatntng over such senstlive tssues as negoliattng the chat n of command, though Tod Enstgn argues that a mthtary union should adopt "the broadest dehnttton of negotiations" when Stltlng down across the table from thE! brass That's the sort of talk that troubles AFGE ofhctals. who. like most AFL-CIO leaders. fear any untomztng :.trategy that ts "more Ideological than bread and butter" Enstgn and Uhl counter that thetr own orgamzmg matenals are htghly compatible wtth the a1ms of AFGE Says Uhl. "We want to be catalysts. the pontoon bndge between Gls and the AFGE We want our orgamz1ng to be a friendly and collateral effort " Regardless of the eventual barga1n struck between "Citizen Sold1er" and the AFGE. the ult1mate 1ssues surround1ng m1htary un1onizat1on clearly go far beyond Gl benefits and dress codes How, for Instance. will unionization affect the flght1ng capabll1ty of the Armed Forces? Dav1d Cortnght. a leadtng proponent of a military unron and a staff member of the Center for National Securrty Studies, has conducted extens1ve surveys of European military unrons Accord1ng to Cortright, the m1htary un1ons rn the Netherlands have won troops srzable pay 1ncreases and elrminated 1nspec llons. severe punishments and needless harassment, while at the same trme Dutch m1htary effic1ency and performance have rncreased Others argue that. the European experrence notwithstandrng umonrz1ng the American military will lead, as a spokesman for one conservative group puts it. to a "breakdown rn mrlitary command. complete control by outs1ders of the mrlitary, and lackada1srcaltroops subJect to the wh1ms and fancies of umon bosses." These cntrcs of Gl un1ons conJure up comb at s1tuatrons rn whrch an AFGE shop steward tnforms a command rng officer that the members of his un1on 26

NEWTIMES

~ 1 1 5177

w1ll not obey an order to move on the enemy because 11 violates a clause rn the unron contract Still, a Gl un1on may one day lead to a new class consc1ousness among troops who perceive themselves as workers. as well as d efenders of the state AI certarn moments rn hrstory, those two facets of their lrves m1ght come rnto direct conflrct Several years ago. rn Portugal, soldrers there found themselves aligned wrth the nation's workers and poor against the milrtary government The outcome was a revolutionary transrtron rn power - Ted Howard and Jeremy Rtfktn

Pied sniper

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Art Director Sieve Ph1ll1pS Executive Editor Managing Editor John Lombardi Dav1d Hollander Senior Writer Robert Sam Anson Associate Editors Calv1n Fenlress Suzanne Charie' Robert Shrum Arthur Lubow Assistant Editors Peter W Kaplan Karen L Saks

.

Copy Editor Jody Alesandro

Associate Art Director Pa1nck Calkms

Editorial Assistant Patnc.a Bradbury

Photo Editor Nancy J We1ns1ock

Controller Norman J F1negold

Circulation Director R1chard LaMontca

Subscription Sales Manager Ka1h1Marks

Assistant Circulation Director Marney Hague

Accounting Manager M1namS Ko

'Circulation Assistant Roberta Levy

Administrative

Sales Director Peter A Armour Publicity RuthHednck

Production Manager Molly Shendan

Production Assistant Donna K1slok

.

_''~VE 1'1, , , - \~ILL '~

Single Copy

Assistants Jack1e Ben-Zv1 Claudene Langer

Advertising Director N1cholas H N•les

I

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General Manager Louts B Dolh Jr

Contributing Editor SusanLyne

The Word I

George A Hirsch Editor Jonalhan Z Larsen

f.

'"-v'-'"

This is Aron Kay, 27, the Pied Sniper of New York. Latest of Kay's over 100 pie-ings took place at 6:47 p .m. on March 23 in the cavernous lobby of Rockefeller Center's RCA Building. There he slung very messy cocoanut cream on surprised E. Howard Hunt. As a hit man he hauls in $40 per fling-two parochial school students shelled it out to have Kay pie their teacher/nun. But no mercenary he: sans charge are jobs against those Kay feels have violated basic human rights in the name of national security. Already pied: Daniel P. Moynihan, William F. Buckley, Anthony Ulasewicz.. Slated for future creaming: Ronald Reagan, John Mitchell, LA.P.D. Chief Ed Davis, John Wayne, Milton Friedman, any Rockefeller.

I

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Advertising Manager Wtlham S Davtd Advertising Representatives Ltz Browne Mendel (Sen1or Sales Representative) John Abbott James J Archambault. Jr Jeanne Joyce Advertising Assistants Mon1ca Raybon Lorena J Robinson Chicago The Pants Group

Los Angeles Tony Hoyt & Assoc1ates

Detroit Archard Hartle Assoc1a1es Contributing Writers Da•id Black, Rocnard CorliSS. Srephen O.amoncf Mcha·~l DrOSfWl, M.lrSha'' Frady, Marl< Gooclmdll, AndreN Kopk.ind. Jesse Kortrblulh, James S Kuneo , Sam Mer""·J•m Mlller, Gerry Nadel, M•chael Parfu, Roger Rapopol'l, Marprte Rosen Ron Rosenb.,..,. MarCia Sel.gSOO, Paul $Iansky, ThomaS Thompson. NICholaS Von Holtman FloOel'l Ward Geottrey WOIH, M•chae! WOI~

Larry Wrrghl

Correspondents

Washington, D.C.: Mhur Had'"'f. Nona Tocenberg Cafi. lomla: PI> Jordan (Sacramcnro). B111 R•tter (San Ooego) Colorado: l•dl'l GOldman (Aspen). Hugll Gardner (Del>· •er). Connecticll1: Peler Lord (Noank). Georgia: Gregory JayM. (AIIdi'ICal llllnoia: Paul Engleman (Chlcag<J) Indiana: Rock Lyman (Gary). Tom Cochruo (lnd•anapo'S). Kentudly: t_a.,. Pearce (Mddlelown). Massachusetta: Sa~ Rubtn (Camb<ldQ<!I Mlchlg8n: Lao<a Ber man (De!rorl). New YOfll: Char' ·'S Sle1n. Larry FrederiC~ (NPw YOlK O&y). Not1h Carolinor: Frye Gaol&ard (Char ·

loll e) Ohio: John Brady (C.ncrnna&o). Pennaylvanla: Joe Sharkey (l'tvladetpt'lal. South Carolina: M•o<e Edelnart (Rock Ho11) Utah: DaVId Proctor (Sail Lake Oty) VirginIa: JoeJ B<rn"ley (RICIYnond), Wlaconsin: Pal MeG• ligan (MadiSOO)


THE NEW YORK TJMt;S, SATURDAY. AU GUST 27, 197

Notes on People Vanessa Redgrave, the British actress.s who styles her,elf a Trotskyist, was to have addre:.sed !Ike-minded Spaniards at two meetings in Madrid this weekend, but the police ha ve banned them . Miss Redgrave, in Spain as a guest of the Communist Workers League, met earlier in the week with t he ch1ef of the party in Spain, ish Communist w tio a:>~H:Ci:>mllu~u Trotsky in Mexico in 1940. The weekend meetings planned by the Workers League, a Trotskyist group, were to have been supJ)9rted demands that the Government legalize some groups, like the league, that are still banned.

Speakrng of the Redgrave family, Vanessa's sister, L~'nll Redgrave, charged discrimination in a complaint filed yesterdAy in Washington before the Nauonal L3bor Relations Board, say1ng that Actors Equity forced her to turn over 5 percent of her pay be-cause <he was not an American citizen. Miss Redgrave, who lives and works in New York, malntarned that the union did not exact the sam.e fee from American actors, but charged established dues. She termed the practice "antitheater and anti-art • and asked that 1t be abohsned . ...,...._-.....;::::~-~-:-""" • ~........,--;

or a practically unknown painter named Anthony Benedetto, it was quite a crowd that jammed the plush Campan ille Gallery across the street from the Art Institute of Chicago. Among those who complimented the artist on his collection of oil paintings and drawings wall the Mayor of Chicago, Michael Bilandic. "I've been dra\1. rng and painting all my life," 50-year-old Mr. Benedetto. "It was a bobby. A fi'iend bas been trying to get me to exhibit, but I resisted until now." Most people at the gallery opening recognized the painter in his more familiar role, that of Tony Bennett, the singer.

Dan Dailey, the song-and-dance man of the Hollywood musicals of the 1940's and 50's, was in traction yesterday in North Carolina Memorial Hosp1tal in Chapel Hill. Mr. Dailey, who is 63 years old, broke his hip tn a performante of the comedy "The Odd Couple" m Morrisville, N.C., Thur<'day lift~rnoon. He tnpped o er a .:.o ce table in a s ta~ d c11f ie 1n the third act sp an at the hosp1tal '" IL wa liti1fell'rmJned whether Mr. Daile ould have to undergo urgcry. He ha been scheduled to begin rehear•al sqon for the forth coming Broadway musical "Spotlight."

In c~.ncou\'er, British Columbia, James ;\lorris, the Metropolitan Opera baritone. pleaded gUJltv to charges of carrying an unregistered pistol into Canada from the United Slates. He told Judge Arthur Beimes, who set sentencmg for next Wednesdav, that he showed the weapon to a prostitute he v.as taking home in his car Tuesday. tr. Morri sa1d he told her that he needed the gun to protect his w1fe and • <:"1' n the1r tnp from ·ew York, ~-~ ·A e pro~litute asked .h1m to whereu she ::ot out 'lt-..n:-"""·•n" fhe Mr Vlorris, "iQ:;;::::blo-

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U• 1M Jl'rns 1-..ot1011•1 ON HOLIDAY: Caroline Kennedy, the

late President's 19-year-old daughter, takes a toboggan ride at Mount Tom in Holyoke, Mass., with a cousin, Willie Smith, foreground, and a friend, Scott Martin. to appear during the Vancouver Opera Assocfation's 1977 fall season as "Don Gi vanni."

When Ronald Reagan a ttended a banquet of the Young Americans for r.eedom m New York, he narrowly escaped 'having no n • but wo, pies t hrown in his face. offic ia ls of the ornization said yesterday. A you_n g man and a woman carrying the p1e!i were intercepted not far from the banquet dais at the Statler Hilton, and were escorted oul The woman, unidentified, was said to have referred to thto former actor and Go\·ernor of California as "that p1g." Pamela o nson had been cono;cious

ot being overwe1ght when she left her London home last week for a vacation with her husband, Derek, and two chil dren at Great Yarmouth. Yesterday she was suddenly seven pounds lighter, having given birth to a quite unexpected child, a boy. Mr. Johnson, understandably amazed, said, " I' e heard of mothers not knowing they were pregnant until the bab • was born, and · ......_


It's Getting Tong her

To

c,~ilt UJtd Weal~

It

By MICHAEL KERNAN And WILLIAM GILDEA It was Two-Pie Tuesdav: Cowbov star Roy Rogers and New York Ma~ or Abraham Beame. 240 m1lcs apart, both got hit with pies. But nobody was laughmg. It used to be a sure thtng - Chaplin did it. and the Mack Sennett cops. 1 au· rei and Hardy. Soupy Sales made a t:a· reer or it on TV. He estimated hr was hit 19,000 times by pirs. Milton --"Berle. Red Skelton ... rrmrmbrr thr f1ght in thE' pte shop in "Thl' Great Race"? Ninl' guys throwtng hundreds of pies in all directions, so c;platterrd they look likt> 'ertical banana split:.. and Tony Curtis strolls through. immaculate in a blinding whitt> suit. lie's thinking of something else. Stratght through thP middle of this bliaard or pies ht• walks. untouched, gleaming. It goc~ on for mtnute~. un· bearablv. He walks and walks, so clean, f>O whitr. And then ...

IT USED TO br a sure thin~ . fhrre was something funny about a piE~ . You couldn't do it wnh a bowl or minP~­ trone. It was \'lolrnl, but lnnocrnt. Ju!'t like America. somE' would sav. "Just kiddin', mister." Good clean fun . In theory not only is anger Hntrd but the victim is made to look foolish . "For a couple or momrnts." Sales told one reporter, "it turns the big guys into slobs. puts them on the same level as e\·eryone cbe." The fad peaked in 1975. By then we Americans. as is our custom, had turned it into a _busines~. w_tth firms 10 a h~lf·dozen cllles whtch_ "-OU~d t~row ~ _ple for ~bo~t SJS at an;.~ne ~ou sp~clfted -:- Pte fac~ lnter.na_ttonal, ~te K11l ltd., P1es UnhmttE'd, Pw tn thE' r~ve. Well • . American humor alwa)·s has been a btt rough. But one detects a new note.

"IT'S THE closr~t I'll "' er ~et to or· dering a Mafia ruhout," onr. d1rnt was quoted. Somewhrre along the line, thl' humor was being left beh1nd. The laugh was hardening. Today. the business languishes. Companies listt>d in phone hooks from Washington to San Franci co ~eem to be gone. Pie Face San Francisco ts now a law office. These a face Pie-throwing lias become political. The pie isn't thrown; tt is shoved into the face. And the thrower. it turn-: out afterward, didn't think it was funnv et· ther. He's only inlerestrd In making some pitch or other. Bcame. who almost dodgrd an apple pie at a campaign debate. declined to press charges against a man Identified as Aaron Kaye, the man who scored a banana-cream pie in the race of Danirl Patrick Moynihan in last fall's senatori· al campaign. The youth who hit Rogers at a promotion in a Washington suburb was charged with disorderly conduct.

I

KAYE, a YippJe and a writer ror rhr YipstE'r Times, has thrown political pies before, one recall!>. It ~~ all vcn· senous and purposeful and humorless.·

"A man bring hit with a p!" i::.n't funny," Sale~ once said. ·•unle~s . roundation has been built that leads up tn thl' pie. It has to come as a rea~onable climax.''

The thrO\\' tng is Important cs thrti· cally, too. There ic; something about that round soft thing flying through the atr to splat with precise accuracy on a face. Merely smearing 1t on some· body is just kind or na:.ty. Certainly it doesn't amuse the tat· gets.

bell out me. at first. But he didn't press charges. High-school students in suburban Virginia were suspended for their pte pranks in 1975. and this spring a senior in another Virginia suburb almost didn't graduate after she pit'd the fa ce or the vice principal. Maybe a few y ears ago thr pie '•ctim felt honor-bound to grin and shrug it orr. hut no more. We ha\.'c learned not It ici. ourselves be assaultrd in the spirit Of good CIPan run . rw tlwr~ Jfa~h111gton

TI1P

1'he

nrl> stnff Post.


6L6l '9 1:f38W3AON 'AVOS30.l V~ A31liVHS NVlf !f13-.'AVa ANOH.LNV IUO:> ·( 3!>ll0i!> ----~~

Times Pie· Throwing at Gov. Brown I am outraged! The picture {Oct 26) of Gov. Brown being subjected to

the pte-lhrowtng whim of an "upeet" individual who objected to the perary nor's stand on issues, and wbo wu alhas lowed to inflict this indignity without being arrested. IS unbelievable! Wbo gives a person the right to U· sault anyone m this manner and go -----=~unisbed? Where m the bell II the an OrdeNtl Wsaumt ? Brown 1SO't the only pub fi'itft' to receive this kind of treatment from this same pie-throwing "sickie." It's time 1t was stopped! This isn't innocent f\Dl. It's a degrading. embarrassing and vtaous act upon another per!On. !ful· Unfortunately, we no longer pub· pri- licly flog unlawful ettizens in the vil·ears lage square. But anyone who llllllulta ent- another person m such a manner as nent this should at least be arrested and fined for their ineXCusable, unruly conduct.

RumDewm

.... -OC>-

bOn. ome il of tent the !be

ts lral .J. I that

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e. SON

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corated ools.

stu-

m-

ISi.St·

that

Barstow

We have had too much of this piethrowtng gomg on lately. I understand that you can hire people for a fee to throw a pie m the face of a pol· iUCiari, an enemy, a c:ompet.itOr, or just ---aomeone JS)tiate. 'lb1t prat.1iCe is lu· dK:rous and should carry a penalty. We should stand the pie-thrower up m a public square. and 10 people should rut him m the face with 10 p1es. I say down wtth the pie-thrower! He is an assailant. and all others like him should not be allowed to get away with it. How about a week in jail? (1 am not a Democrat.)

GRACE JACOBSON

....

Santa Mana

The pte slung into Gov. Brown's. face l8 tantamount to the vttuperalion slung daily at him by the news media and bts opponents. When John Kennedy sought election and spoke of his new ideology. Amencans enthUSlast.Jcally elected him. But. over a penod of 20 years. b1g business has taken over the rems of progress and is not about to give them up to the people who by constitutional nghts are meant to elect. the government

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AmericaJl 1ft fad rile the ........... ~,-~L.. Years ago belcft "ICU<Ul!C Cwuued over It IS troruc that th . evolved to one wher: system has trust t.boae candidates people only commonty accepted, wbo follow the d.ttJon of seeking 0 t mtractabJe tra~ntributions m re~~~~~~ aavors. They don't caJJ Uf"'WCU rusm- that has sim J that opportu. American way. P Y become the

..

ELISA CHARotJHAs

Reseda


1be Wasldngton Star •

A-S

Uddy Says He'd Do It Again H Asked by a President BYLaneeGay Walilinrton Star Slaff Wriln

After being freed after serving more than four years in prison for his Watergate activities, G. Gordon Liddy, the flamboyant but silent conspirator. said today that if asked bra ~sident he would do the same thmg agalft.. "Yes, the prince approaches the lieutenant aliQ asks him to do somthing, then fiat voluntas tua " Liddy said, quoting the Latin for ;'thy will be done." In a wide-ranging press conference at the Mayflower Hotel here, Liddy - who was released from prison yesterday - refused to answer a battery of questions concerning his involve., ment in Watergate and the activities of others. But he said he has no regrets for what has happened to him. "I'm content, I have lived as I believe I ought to have lived," he said, explaining he feels no remorse. Liddy continued to maintain his sile!lce on ate~gate, hinting that he still fears tliat 1f he speaks, he might

be subpoenaed to testify in some trial. "I just don't want to testify against my colleagues," he said. Liddy refused to condemn former President Richard Nixon for his involvement, saying he would leave to history to write the characterization of the man. "I have no bitterness to anyone, bitterness is a concept that I do not agree with," he said as reporters pressed him to say that he had been hurt personally by his involvement in the Watergate break-in. '.'1 have the highest threshold of pa1n of anyone you've met, sir," be said after walking into the 8th floorroom at the hotel, where he was bit in the face by an apple pie. "I got him as he was going into the room," the pie-thrower, Aron Kay said later. sk:ed why threw the pie, Kay rep "This man bas been involved in a m set up police state in this country fo vera! years." "Now the ~ernment is letting this man out," Kay said.


.........._. •• _ _ _ • , a n te ta g town in J767. The reporter also wrote that one of Haley's chief sources was kno~w~n!,_!to~te.u~'fi6jOJ.IC.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Phyllis.Schlafly hir by pie thrower •

Conservative columnist r•riHa SchllfiJ Saturday was ''hit ltraigbt in the an.In tbe face" with a pie thrown by Aron Kay, a professional A spokeswoman for Ylppfe Free Women, one ot tv. o groups sponsoring the "hit," said Kay, who heads Pie Kill UnlJmtted, ''t !!; speclaJ pride In geftl~ Pllvlll Scb!afu'." Thespokawodla.c lllld, ''He hit her atralght 1n the face" wft!I the was attendina the RepubUcan Womens National Luncheon at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

Mrs. Schl&fJy said afterward that .such "ugly taetlcs" reprelented a "continuing women's movement penonaJ smear on me" for her opposition to the

L

:5


PIE-THROWING NOT ARIGHT I

.............

IOWA CITY, lA. - TbrowiDg a cberry cream pie as a political statement ia not an expressiOD of free speech and tbus, ia not protected by 1 tbe First Amendmeut of tbe u. s. I CoastitutiOD, a Jobuoa County mqiatrate bas ruled. Ma&istrate Emmit Geor&e Jr. found Barbie Blevins, a University of Iowa law student, pllty of di!orderly I coaduct In a pie-tbrowiq IDcldent at tbe Civic Center bere Jan. 28. Tbe incident occurred during a press conference called by City Manager Neal BerUn to present tbe city's side of tbe controversy surroundio& Iowa City firefipter LiDda Eaton's request to nurse ber baby wbile on duty. Darin& BerUn's preeentatioD, Blevins threw tbe pie toward BerUn. He ducked out of a side door 1 of tbe room aDd wasa't btl 路 DuriDI Blevins' trial Jut mootb, abe admitted tbrowiDg tbe pie as an expres&loa of ber view of tbe "total ridiculoasDell" of tbe city's position. Blevins' defeme was tbat abe couJdD't be cbarled witb a crimiDal offeaae for upressiD& ber polltical views. Geor&e ruled, however, tbat BleviDs willfuUy and lmowiDJly acted to disrupt a lawful uaembly. He said Blevins failed to sbow cleuly tbat ber constitutional ri&bts were

#

I

lnfrinaed upoo.

-

Sentencing is set for May 17. Blevias could be fined up to 1100 or ordered to .-ve so days In ja1l.


It

Uninvited

h· s

RICHARD Falk, a public relations man who's Jmown to throw !'orne big bashes himself, f§..I]Jout s to distribute a list of the "Ten ~­ ~Iost Wanted Party Crashers" to A the city's public relations and te media agencies. "Jt's a certain d !r group of professional crashers t. who cause a nuisance at some ol zthe swankiest events," says Falk. g. He says he'll put out the Clieular pS (with pictures) du1ing the hOliday ~J­ season, when most ot the year's )g best parties are !Stag~ l InI e. ('Juded in the ru-st edition wilt be cl, ''Bullet Head,'• easily recognized a by his shaven skull, lllld The CoJ. Jill onel, who always wears a cap.. tain's cap and a frayed tuXedo.

IY NEAL TRAVIS


Crime does pay John Dean, another Watergate figure who came our ot the scandal smelling like a rose, was met by student pickets as he arrived to give a $2,500 lecture at - Fredonia State College in New York state the other day. The students carried signs that read: ' 'Crime Does Pay." Atght after Dean began his speech, a young man in the audience put on a mask, laughed and yelled, " There 1s the con man, there is lhe con man!" Then he threw a banana cream pie at Dean. " It just brushed me," said the onet1me Ntxon aide. John Yusklw, 23, of Fredonia. was charged With disorderly conduct and issued a summons.

··~

···~~~~

postc' "• I t tk ·•nd pu7.z es, . so. And rcI1taile rl> Jyear,~..SC··fi I ·w eapo n. A Los 0 r this c no ug ·

trade, de re J te mbe t worse agL' S 0

predict Hobby presick age ncy total cl we gel Ed Lil ea ughl uncert many low. 1 suppli ery of eompo

tlarers.

Mr. Quarterb ack·· Popular passer

j ack Levin AssoAn~elcs toy pronH:t~l:~imcd a bac~~og ?[ ..1tes • at one p'f)" ol n n ord c a., . f"<Jr the force c 1< nearly half a 1~~ -~o Oas hlightthalrcsembcam, " a,~agwh: sall:r~ ~sed ,!_e.., l l1c d ,

2

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film."

Ideal Kn icv p ly, b aecou o f Id The $1.6 first nearf 0


++

+ + +

++

(ZNS) AN ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA, JUDGE HAS TOLD SCHOOL OFFICIALS THAT THEY MUST ALLOW A GRADUATING SENIOR WHO WAS RECENTLY SUSPENDED FOR PIE THROWING TO ATTEND HER HIGH SCHOOL PROM. CONNIE SCHILLREFF WAS SUSPENDED AND TOLD SHE COULD NOT ATTEND HER HIGH SCHOOL PROM, HER GRADUATION CEREMONIES, OR RECEIVE HER DIPLOMA AFTER SHE

TOSSED~

CHOCOLATE CREAM PIE

IN TijE FACE OF HER VICE-PRINCIPAL.

SCHILLREFF CLAIMS THE INCIDENT WAS A HARMLESS PRANK.

AND THAT SHE HAD THE NEAR-UNANIMOUS

BACKI~G

OF HER CLASSMATES WHEN SHE TOSSED THE PIE.

HOWEVER, FEDERAL JUDGE ALBERT BRYAN REJECTED SCHILLREFF'S CONTENTION THAT SHE WAS DENIED HER CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS TO A PROPER HEARING WHEN SHE WAS SUSPENDED FROM CLASSES BECAUSE OF THE PIE THROWING. THE CAS E IS NOW ON APPEAL. BRYAN TOLD SCHILLREFF, IN THE MEANTIME, THAT SHE MAY ATTEND THE PROM, BUT ONLY IF-IN THE JUDGE'S WORDS -- (QUOTE) "SHE BEHAVED'' HERSELF. THE JUDGE SAID THE PROM WAS A (QUOTE) "ONCE IN A LIFETIME" OPPORTUNITY --ZODIAC ++

+ + +

(JE/6/77) ++

(MORE)


The Insider~-----------....

When the White Hou e changes a public reprimand into a commendation. the violent rever al means '>Omething fi hy· gone on. Over the past eight months. the relations between the Adminis tration and the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Law~ (NOR ML) have been trained . T he tension started with a thrown pie and ended with a rumble betwee n NORML's head. Keith S troup. and Carter's <,pecial a istant for health i sue . Dr. Peter Bo urne. Last December. Yippie piea assin Aaron Kaye hurled a lemon meringue at Joe Nellis. chief counsel of the Ho u e Select Committee on Narcotic!. Abuse a nd Control . during NORML's annual confere nce. When the c ream cleared . Marc Kurzma n. the conference chairpe rson. leaped to the microphone. He denounced Stroup a the rna termind behind the pie plo t. Hounded by NORML sponsor-; (including repre entatives of Hugh Hefner. and Max Palevsky). Stroup i ued a memorandum to the NORM L National Policy Committee confessing he'd lightheartedl y uggested the meringueicide. but in i ting he'd tried to s to p Kaye at the last minute. o matter: An overzealo us Whit e Hou ·e aide seated next to Ne lli ~ had taken offen e a t being splattered and fired off an intimidating February 3. 1978. letter to Stroup on White House tationery. The aide. Bob Angarola. White Ho use general counsel to the Office of Drug Abu se Po licy. <;tated he was '" upset '" at the "'unfortunate pie incident. " adding ominously: '"I mus t register disappointment at NEWTIMES 8f7f78

your pa rticipa tio n . . . . Thi can only prove counterproducti ve to your a nd NORM L ·, mo t worthwhile effortl> . . . it wi ll inevitabl y have a negati ve impact. .. He ·h · I' d h en d e d Wit an 1mp 1e t reat : ·· 1 l.ince. rely ho pe that it will not sen o usly affect your future actlvatae · and that NORML will bed able 10 . · ma inh tam s upport· an cdontmue t he h · fi ne wor k 11 as one 10 t e pa t:'The message was c lea r. Stroup. no newcomer to hardball . wa " livid" because the letter wa copied to at lea I o ne member of the NORM L advi sory board. We s Iey Pomeroy (he •s .mce quit the board and joined Dr. Bourne 's taff) and becau e it somehow reached the hands o f ot he rs . ·· I d on •1 get a report .. ca rd f rom 1h ose tur key · Stroup aid. Angarola. a left-

Poliq . ·· To '> lre'>s to Bourne that the Angarol a matter wa:-. of mutual concern. Stroup had a dark , uggesti on of hi ~ 0\Vn. telling Bourne aides to pa'>'> on to th e1r hoss a threat a., dangerUU'> to Bourne '" Kuuman ·~ ha d been to Stroup : He implied that he might know too much about the recreational drug preference-. of certa in \enior White Hou'>e aide': he ... uggested tha t tho-.e preference-, could end up in the new•paper . ·· 1·n· tha t ~ , 1 blackma1·J'l. .. one Wh 1·1e Hou•e ., a1'·'e a•ked appropr1'ately. u , Whate ver 1·1 wa•. ., 1·1 hl't 1't•' mar'" ·. Bourne a•sured Stroup , he would da's·c u s the matter · wa'th Angarola. deny1·ng that he ' d ever seen the offe nd'1ng le tter. Stroup's next '>lOp was to •end a chas ta·sa·ng letter to An, garo l,·•·. '' At the e nd of th 1· decade. were o ne to look back a nd a nalyze our mi stake in an objecti ve fa'>hion . whic h do you think would be seen as the grea ter mis take my involve ment in the pie-throwing inc ide nt at the NORML conference or your involvement in. and s upport for . a progra m that res ulte d in the pa raquatcontami nated marijuana being s moked by young people in the United Sta tes? I would

rage could be reuirected. ·· It hit home. Another White Ho u'>c letter wa ... on the way. dated Fchruary II. 1978. Suduenly Dr. Bourne \I.Jnted Stroup to kno\1. "of the " cry hagh per ...onal reg,1rd in \\.hic h 1 hold you . . . a nd the remarkahlc leader... hip that you have prov 1ded to ORML either diu Angarola .,ecm to carry hi' nile any further. " It 1s '>Uch a mmor incident."' he wid u-.. 'Td ju-.t like to forget it. 1 ju'>l wanted to make , ure NORM L'., credibility '"a' mainta mcd . ·· ' ." · S troupm ~ 1 s t eu ·' . •• Bu 11 s h at "The White Hou'e wa'> an\.IOU '> to get riu o f me. Apparently they wanteu '>Omeone · k more cont rollable . I than the y wanteu Marc Kurzman to run NORM L. ·· Kur7man moue,tly acknowledge., thi, : "A c ros<;-section of people tho ught a c hange of leauer\ hip would be good.·· But Stroup used his ammunition well (and hi '> intimacy with D C. drug habil'>) and managed to hold his ground. With a 'trong hand. he made sure that Pete r Bourne ·,tnd the White Hou e-a-. the pecial a<,<,i-,tant t o th e President wrote him-would "look forward to continuing to work clo.,ely with you in the future . ·· - Dan Brew\ler and

over from the h ardline Nixon r;:h:o:p:e=th:a:t= yo = u: r = e:n:!>e= o:f=o:u:t·=========A=I:B:r: e:w: e':: drug office. seeme d to 1 have purpose ly jeopardize d mg to nominate a brown GOP Filling big shoes NORM L · fund-raising capa<,tandard bearer. most likel~ bilities with methods that Hispanic Nixon Fernandez himo,elf. For tip., on campaign financing. Ferwould have made his o ld boss Disciple Seeks to nandeL has been taking leo,happy . "Thi s is the most heat <,On'> from the old pro himself. I've felt in e ight years running Regain Summit former head of finance NORM L... Stroup aid. "I Ric hard Nixon must be CREEP. Maurace Stam. Unhad to go a round the country explaining this.·· proud. One of his 'itauncheo;t cle Maurice . s till declining to Marc Kur:z.man , mea n- defenders. forme r Hispanic reenter the political war'> while. had been suggesting to finance chairman of the Fi- openly. say!> he 's "erving a., a NO RML upporter that the nance Committee to Re-elect "\ource of information" for time had come for a change in the Pre<>ident. Ben Fer- Fernandez. whom Stan'> deleadership-and that he had a nandet . has made it clear that \cribe' as a "friend'" and '"a better rapport with his friends he i' ready to run for the 1980 pretty dynamic guy ... Repubin the White House than did Republican Presidential nomi- lican National Committee Stroup. Putting the whole pic- nation. bringing some of the chairman.Bill Brock . and the ture together. an outraged more unrepentant old Nixon re'>l of the National CommitStroup called Angarola' boys bac k together for a little tee crew. <>till 'wabbing the boss. Dr. Peter Bourne . a fun . me'>'>Y deck' left over by friend of St roup's. demanding Repuhlican National Ex- Stan'>. Fernande1 and the re'>t "an explanation and a n apolo- ecutive Committee member of the old gang. a re less than gy ... Privately. Stroup points Fernandez. a dapper , 53-year- thrilled by thi'> bra1en Nixonio ut. " If people wonder why old Los Angele'> economist. an revival. "Ben Fernandez."' we have a Nixonian drug poli- claams to have rai'>ed over ..neer\ one clearly embarcy. ju'>t tell them to look at $800.000 in pledge'> for hi'> ra-.,ed RNC staffer. ''doesn' t who's staffing the White Pre-.idential Campaign Com- eve n have the mittee. a Hispanic group ..eek- horn \l.ith.'" Hou~e Office of Drug Abuse


Bay woman decides Straub fit to be COOS BAY -Gov. Bob Straub's ber of Citizens Against Toxic Sprays, talk to foresters about forelt manage- "no one knew I wu &oln& to do It, not JDellt wu puactuated Tbunday by a pie eva my husband." IDtbeeye. The protesters yelled at the goverTOlled by an opponent of toxic nor for "not protectiDJ us from berbi· cllemlcal sprayiq, the lemon merlnpe ddel In the water." They made no pie sprayed Straub just after be bad threats. but jeered when the governor dilcuaed herbicide use in national for- tried to speak to them. Straub told the foresters that inteneats. Straub bid just flnisbed speaklq to the Columbia River section of tbe AmKic:aD Foresters In the Thunderbird IIlii wllen a young woman, who bad beell -pbotoarapbiq the speech, put aide her camera. extracted the pie from a large purse and, ID a swift ltroke, bit the sovemor on the left side of tbe face with it. The womaa, Frannie More, wu bandcuffecl, jerked aside and told by the aovernor'& bodyguards that abe WU UD· deramst.

slve forest management wu necessary and that herbicides were a necessary tool in that manaaement. However, the governor cautlooed that berblddes should be UStd under strict control and that existing controls might have to be tightened. He uraecl the federal government to tighten Its coatrols to match Oregon's.

Still drlpplna with the creamy lemoa pie sticldng to bls face and glasaea, the governor said. "Please don't arrest that young lady. I don't wish to press

cJwaes."

Guards usbered the woman from the

balldlD&· She wu seen by acquaint· uu:es a few minutes later in a car with her husband, driving down a Cool Bay street. She and her husband, Bob, own and operate a small restaurant-coffee bouse iDCooiBay.

Mrs. More bad told reporters before tile IDddeat that abe wu oppoled to tbe • of berbk:ldeiiD 1oresta. But demon-

strators aaalnst the berblclda who

i*Ute4 outside the Inn esrUer Tbursdq said slle wu DOt repreeenti.n& their poap. About 25 plcketl 8feeted the

dllllpaipiq governor at the motel. !O'fbe main reuon I did It Is because M c:oald be doin& more to protect peoPt. tbari lae Is doin&." she said later. Sbe 1M did not intend to burt anyone, ~~wa'ill..t wantld to make a point. wbUe she Is a mem-

~~411ng

PIE SURPRISE - Looking calm, Gov. Bob Straub walks put pickets for appearance In Cooa Bay, at left. At right, he ltW looks calm but not quite 10 n.t a he

When bit with the pie, appeared stole. said Jerry

Bay neWIIIWl. "He wasn't be dldn 't appq.r to be Capps said. Straub said later be did piecomin&.

~heard somebody

ay,'

lady,' and then it bit me,'' be


Canadians Restrain Bill)

Car·h~ •·

.

• • • escaped being ltit by pic~ltro•t·er


• Mack Sennet says: •

· -r

... a pie in the face represents a fine, wish-fulfilling, universal idea, especially in the face of authority. as in cop or mother-in-law. Also, these sequences in which we started building from the tossing of one pie, quickly increasing the tempo and the quantity until we had doz.ens of pastries in flight across the screen simultaneously, were wholesome ~el eases of nervous tension for the people and made them laugh. But if we failed in later years to understand the long words laid•on us by heavyduty professors who explain our art to us, we knew a good thing when we saw it, seized upon pie-throwing, refined it, perfected its techniques, and presenterl it to the theater as a new a~t . ..

Thomas King Forcade says:

' ALL POWER TO 1HE PIE!

It was funny, not only because a pie in the face is an outrage to pumped-up dignity, but because (the victim) received the custard without a flick of premonition. Non anticipation on the part of the recipient of a pastry is the chief ingredient of the recipe. Del Lord says: This is a delicate and serious art and not one in which amateurs or inexperienced flingers should try to wi n renown . Piethrowing, like tennis or golf, which depend upon form, requires a sense of balance and a definite fpllow-through. Actually, you don't throw like a shortstop rifling to first base . You push the pie toward the face, leaning into your followthrough. Six or eight feet is the limit for ap ar~istic performance . You you the con and

must never let the actor know when re going"to give him the custard in choppers ... The wisest technique is to your victim into a sense of security then slip it to him.

UNDERGROUNQ PRESS SYNDICATE, BOX 25. Vil

S~a,

NY, NY l00l4 Tel : 2l2 69l-6073


A Real Herq Type

Associated Prns photo

Publlclty seeker Aron Kay prepares to bit Phyllis Schlafly, conservative columnist. with apple pie during meeting at Waldorf-Astoria. the columnist, a leading foe or the equal rights amendment, is standhlg with Nancy Borman. a magazine ~r. Kay already gained noteriety by assaaUing Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan and E. Howard Hunt with pies.

-----------------------


G. Gordon Liddy, the Watergate bungler, had been on a hunger a strike just before he got out of prison. Have a little apple pie. Gordon. Aron Kay, the notorious pie-throwing hit man from the Pot Pie Party smacked Liddy in the forehead while Gordon was, er, filling reporters In on his role in Watergate. (Look close and you'll ~Ae glop in Liddy's hair.) Anar as we know, this Is the only photograph extant of Liddy smiling. The other stunned folks In the picture are reporters and Liddy's wife, Frances, who looks like she'd rather be In Philadelphia. "It's a way to deflate the dignity of these people who violate the righ ts of others,路路 Kay later explained. Kay's other pie recipients include New York Sen. Daniel Moynihan, New York Mayor Abe Beame, columnist William Buckley and Watergater f. Howard Hunt.

..__8>8&o.


A..

_.,

Lream pte

with flies to bug Lalonde Wi11\l ~ ~ Pr-~

VANCOL"\-rt:R (CP)- An

unidentified woman threw a pie Monday at Marc La· Iunde. minister of state for federal-provincial relationl>. but missed her targt'l. Lalonde was entering radio station CJOR for an OJM'D·Iine program. Attached to the pil' wa!> a note from the Anarchbt Party of Canada (Gruucho· :Marxist). "We used a cream pil' filled with Dies because Ln· londe bas sho.,'h himself to be a consistent apologist for bugging... said the note in a reference to the controversy in the House of Commontt o\·er alleged bugging of federal Progressive Conservative party offices. Police took the woman into custody and she was being questioned. Tbe party said In a later press release It was celebn~ iateraatlonal

of pieing.

week


sm·ith, Disch to lead Council By Jim Gribble Pnu;~

-Jlrr~s

Connt•clion pholo b) Michul·l Kienitz

Skornicka heads for rest room after pie attack.

Conm·ct ion \\ rill'r

The newly-sworn City Council Tuesday elected Ald. Natalie Smith (District 1) and Richard Disch (District 22) as its officers. Smith beat Disch in the race for council president on a decisive 14 to 6 first ballot, stepping up from her previous role as president pro tern. After two ballots, Disch, a council member for the last nine years, was elected president pro tern on a 12 to 8 vote over downtown Ald. Mark Koppelkam (District 9). The council a lso elected its Organizational Committee, which will be composed of Aids. Judith Bowser (District 21), Henry Lufler (District 16), Pam Wrzeski (Di5trict 2) and Nancy Cross (District 14). The only other scheduled business was Mayor Joel Skornicka's assign· ments of council members to va rious city committees. But the council put action off for a week on the appoint-ments after several members voiced strong objections.

"There's a lot of dissatisfaction, frankly," Ald. Fred Arnold (District 3) said. "I haven't talked to the whole council, though." Madison's four downtown council members Tuesday morning sent a letter to Skornicka complaining that the central city has been frozen out of the most important committees. Signed by Koppelkam, John Mat· tes (District 4), Iris Walker (District 8) and Kathy Kuester (District 5), the letter urged Skornicka "to turn the power of aldermanic appointments over to the council im mediately." The letter said the central city, "which you may recall gave your candidacy limited support, has been totally shut out of the three most important committees: the Board of Estimates, the Plan Commission and the Transportation Commission . .. It does not bode well for attempts at 'working together' when we are so obviously slighted from the very start."

Skornicka joins famous-if sticky-company lh Jim Gribble Little did Joel Skornicka know, but Tuesday

Chicago Seven defendant-turned-guru-follower Rennie Davis, Conservative author William F. Buckley, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Equal Rights opponent Phyllis Sehlafly, former Central

-~----.attarAN"On _ q _ h,. -Annr~A~>lu>n _thi> _ nndjum _t.o _he

Tnt A IIi~._ n., .. -A.ni>nl'vLtlirPl't nr_ W.illi;un _Colhv_and

Prl'"S ronneclion \\>rill'r

Madison Civic Center in September, 1977. Soglin viewed the incident without apparent levity, slying that physical threats had been the most distasteful experience of his six years as mavor.


.~.~~~~LIM~~In~mrious---t>.~:;.~~~;n~~~~~----------------~----s~orn in as m.ayor of Madison, the mo~~ not?rious Professor Timothy Leary. K~reS'rell;-t'nen"T ..m:1115ea·wnon-cxo

p1e thrower m the country was wa1tmg m the wings. The pieing of Skornicka was not spontaneous. Aron Kay, "the mad pier from New York City ," had flown in from the Big Apple on special invitation. But in an interview Tuesday, Kay declin· ed to say who in Madison had extended the invitation. Kay, 29, is what you might call an old·line underground -cult figure. A live in employee of the Yipster Times and a founding member of a recently formed national organization known as the "Red Pie Brigade," Kay is responsible for the pieing of such notables a~ convicte~ Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Ltddy and h1s colleague E. Howard Hunt. Other Aron Kay victims have been: Ex-

. . . . He sa1d he p1cked Mad•son s new mayor as a target after hearing he was backed heavily in his campaign by the local business community. Asked about his label as the nation's premier pie-tosser, Kay said, "Some people call me that. I'm calling myself an anarchist, piethrowing poet, because pie throwing is an art. You're painting someone's face with Ci pie. It's a mattt.>r of using> the right pie for the right person." Kay hit Skornicka on the right side of his head with a banana cream pie, which he had car · ried into the City Council chambers inside a book bag. He was caught outside in the hallway by Mayor Paul Sog!in, who had himself been a victim of pieing at groundbreaking ceremonies for the

nicka decided not to press charges. After cleaning up. Skornicka spent the rest of the afternoon grinning about the affair, alth~u~h aides reacted. seriou~Jy. Shortly after the mctdent, mayoral. a_tde Kevm Upton attempted to usher a televtston c~meraman _from the crowd~d second-flo~r pubhc bathroom . where Skormcka was cleamng up. Upton apologtzed to the cameraman. Skornicka said it was the timing of the pieing that surprised him more than anything else. "There were a few times on campus back during the campaign when I really thought it was coming," he said. He later quipped, "I can sec I'll have to keep a second suit in my office. Maybe they'll approve installation of a shower now.''

Probe finds detention rules violated By Tom Griffin l'rt·~s

Connt•clion Writer

The Dane County Detention Center was in "flagrant violation" of state codes March 24 when the center's director appointed three female detainees to do a staff member's job, a state investigator ru led Monday. State Detention Supervisor Denis Moriearty ordered detention officials to take the "necessary action" to prevent such incidents in the future a nd will review the center's rules and procedures to "show cause why this won't happen again." In a letter to Juvenile Court Judge Ervin Bruner, Moriearty outlined charges that Detention Center Supervisor Don Irwin gave three female detainees staff keys

with access to a weapons drawer, drugs and an outside stairway during the March 24 daytime shift. He also noted that a female friend of Irwin placed a girl into her room during the 3 to 11 p.m. shift on the same day, also in violation of detention rules. Moriearty said his investigations showed that on both shifts there was no female staff member present, which is a direct violation of Department of Health and Social Services requirements. "The department is very concerned that the events were allowed to take place as stated in the letter of complaint," Moriearty wrote. Irwin denies he gave the three girls ages 13, 14 and 15 an entire set of staff keys, saying they only had keys to lockers for "feminine needs."

On that point, Moriearty said, "I haven't reached any conclusions. I have no evidence to prove Mr. Irwin wrong or the complainant wrong." The staff log shows keys were given to the three girls, Moriearty said, but does not indicate if they were only for certain locks. "If I were the male staff member on duty, I would have made sure what keys were given to the de-

tainees," he added. The Bureau of Community Corrections supervisor said he will continue to investigate "the way the center is run" and will be questioning staff members on duty during the incidents. ''I'm sure this will be brought out," Moriearty said of the charges on file in his department.

Wlodarczyk new Monona council head Council member Rita Wlodarczyk was unanimously elected Monona Ci ty Council President Tuesday afternoon. Wlodarczyk is the first woman to hold the post in the city's history. Mayor Dean Bowles, who began his second term Tuesday, also an nounced several committee appoint·

-=-e -.:.d . :-=-_n_e_s_.~d~~a-y-=--__p..::.~.-••-~.:....1m.:....n:.:.:nec_:t::..:::lo=n=.:.:.::.::..:..3_'

w:-:.

f:l

ments including Ald. Robert Olson and Wlodarczyk to the Finance Com mittee; newly-elected Ald. Kathy Thomas as chair of the Public Safety Committee; Ald. Mike Mahoney as chair of the Planning Commission; and Ald. Jim Hoelzel as chair of the Parks and Recreation Committee.

1



I~J I,

)'


Terrorists Rate Coverage ( But Pie~Throwers Don't' to)

ed the victim's picture. There is no natural and forgivable instinct is need for the public to know what hit back at such a cruel assault; but X or Y looke<J like in that posture. the victims are inhibited from such AFTER almost every terrorist at- Reports of the event are inevitable, response. Their position, the func· tack or kidnapping. the press is but not pictures that complete the tion they are attending. the fact ! criticized for giving too much cov- attacker's program for him. _ that their own · limbs were not erage to attention-seekers. for --- - --- - - - - - jeopardized, the lack of dignity \ stimulalin~ others.. Pie-throwing is like spitting in a shown in most spasms of anger to such cnmes. person's face. It does not threaten and attempts to get at an assailant A d m i t ted I Y. life or limb, but aims directly at - all these make the victims try to t~ere are occa- depriving another person of his or smile and shrug off thf' incident, s1onal excesses. her human dignity. Pies are used in though we know they are seething displays of bad comedy to deflate all mankind's inside . . • taste •. in covering 1 pretensions fair enough. But The cowardly assailant enjoys sensational mate.-( they are used against individuals to that knowledge, and looks forward rial. But by and! reduce them below the public level with glee to the pictures that will run the next day in newspapers , large there is no ' of our mutual respect. way to avoid covacross the nation. I think we in the erage of terrorists. THE spltter and the pie-thrower press should stop giving him that Wills Kidnapped rela- t are cowardly, since they know the satisfaction; and that our readers tives need to know what is hap- victim can do little to retaliate. The should demand that we do so. pening. Those in the area need to ' know what measures to take for rr~r-=~1111!~~~~--- iiiii--;:;:::::==::;;~~~~=======d their own safety. Exaggerated ruI laving said all that, I must mors must be corrected with accu· agree that events less sensational rate, current reports. (and less vital) are covered too Besides. if public opinion is ever much and too vividly. Begin with a to be mustered behind steps necessmall matter involving human digsary to prevent terrorism, the dan· nity in ways disproportionate to ger must be estimatf'd from facts what is actually done. that are clearly known. WhPn air· A few vile ex-yippies have made port scanning equipmPnt was first installPd, passengers grumbled and = -=::..r-a--2iiml.e--.ef,-.throwmg- ~s--~R the faces of public figures - mayors, resistPd. Without nt>ws coverage senators. etc. No one approves or that showed the need, the1r obthis, yet not much outrage has struction would have been even been expressed on the subject. The greater. perhaps prohibitive. perpetrators are soon free to play their tricks again. I hope the lack AIRLINE pilots may at last get • of outrage does not come from the the measures they have been advofact that the targets have largely cating, because the public is been right-wing types. That would shocked at the execution of a pilot indicate an unjust bias in the press. by the recent hijackers. Only in a despotic state would news of such THE TIDNG that astonishes me activity be suppressed. It Is often is that we regularly see in the said that totalitarians have no terpaper, on the day or days after ror problem. That is becaUJe such an attack, pictures or the vic.... have taken out a RDO tim trying to handle his indignity ror. Atrocit" 1il with grace - pie-smeared features _ ns, and the public handed down to our posterity. never hears of them through a free Now these pie-throwers are not terrorists in the full (and parable) sense. But the press does in fact collaborate with them in their petty acts of cruelty, in ways the press is falsely accused of doing with the hijackers. What did the pie-thrower aim at? The humiliation of his victim. the spectacle of a public figure In a ridiculous posture. Who made that { spectacle vivid and widespread? Any paper or magazine that print· By GARRY WILLS

Un1ver.al Preu SyndiUie

..


1

Rennie and the 15-yr-old Guru "I'm still in the movement," Rennie Davis declared at a recent appearance here in :-.Jew York. "Now I'm In the movement that's going to win." Davis's new "movemenr is a highly organized campaign to recruit disillusioned radicals into the fold of "the one Perfect Master on earth at this time": the mustachioed (his followers claim he is 15 years old) Indian spiritual leader, Guru Maharaj Ji. Davis is currently working as the Guru's advance man on the campus circuit. Despite his new calling, Davis is perhaps better known as a founding member of Students for a Democratic Society, a defendant in the (;hicago Seven conspiracy case, and a principal organizer of the Mayday antiwar demonstrations In Washington, D. C., two years ago. It all began, Davis says, on a plane trip to Paris on the eve of the Vietnam cease-fire negotiations. He was scheduled to meet with the North Vietnamese negotiators, but the meeting never took place. Instead, he accepted a free ticket to India from friends and went to look up the 15-yearold Guru. Eight days later he emerged a convert, ready to go out and recruit his former associates and anyone else willing to listen. The pitch seems to

American Way of Life be that If you've decided that sit-ins, demonstrations, or George McGovern weren't the answer, why not check out the Guru's perfect knowledge? What have you got to lose? Davis now travels from coast to coast drumming up publicity for the Guru. So far, he seems to have had a rough time. Most of his friends, he told a reporter, "figure either I've lost my marbles or that I'm working for the CIA." In Berkeley he was booted off the stage. Hecklers in Washington, D. C., repeatedly drowned him out. And in New York, at a session this reporter attended, the audience of about 1,000 included 30 or 40 hlghly vocal Yipples and Zippies. Armed with eggs, tomatoes, and cherry pies, they came


on his latest trip. Chants of "Out Now!" and "Free Rennie Davis!" punctuated each attempt he made to speak. A volley of eggs and tomatoes splashed against the Guru's life-size portrait and the red-velvet throne it sat on. "You've got capitalist money in your pockets, Rennie," shouted one Yippie as he heaved a cherry pie. "That's Marjoe, Rennie! That's Marjoe," shouted another during a 20-minute color film highlighting the Guru's career. "You've flipped out, haven't you." During a scene in the film in which an aged pilgrim greets the young master, someone yelled out in disbelief: "They're kissing his feet, Rennie. Even Nixon doesn't make us do that!" Despite the interruptions, however, Davis did get a chance to outline part of his new philosophy. "The whole world is a product of consciousness," he explained. "It's our ideas that generate a world where there's bombs. We must tune our bodies Into the infinite field of consciousness. "This will end the bombing of Cambodia and everything els~ we suffer," he promised. "It will replace capitalist society with a system of perfect peace. . . . "The only revolution Is spiritual revolution," the former Mayday activist concluded. "Everything else Is only bullets." - MICHAEL BAUMANN

The Guru, earlier in his career. Key tenet in faith is to 'give all your love, your lives, and your possessions to Guru Maharaj Ji.'

21


bave -~

lO

n_,..., ..

Save pies IT'S okay to ban eggs, but leave my pies alone. That plea comes from Aron Kay, proff'ssional pie thrower, who fears the recently introduced "Egg Bill" - which would make harassing or attack· ing state officials a crime - will crimp his specialty, too. (Ed Koch, you'll recall, was pelted with eggs last fall by opponents of his bospi· tal-closing plan.) Aron, who's thrown his baked goods at the likes of Pat Moynihan, ~rry Brown and William F . Buckley calls the bill "a step towards repression." He adds: "Pie throw· ing is a part of tbe great A.meri· can culture "

BILLf ,. M<» moll"

ot·

A.cre&mpie nusses Helms

FOR.MEB CIA Director RJchard Helms was almost bit by a pie as be

r

spoke at Montclair Sta&e CoUqe Jn New Jeney

y~

Kaye

of

New

... ... • self-described YlppJe. .wknowledged respon&lbiUty for tbe

u.

tack, saying tbe banana

=:r:;;e~ts mark Kaye said be threw the pte In ..reprisa.l for Helms' · · · multiple violations of

lnternatloaallaw" ~ tenure aoc1er former Preakleat Nixon. I< Helms, wbo Is also a Ida

ormer u.s.

......,_dar

deeUaed &o ...... ~~Ka~. &o Iran,


-3-3-3-3

YIPPIES YS. THE PERFECT MASTER:

GURU MAHARAJ JI--THE PUDGY

15-YEAR-OLD HOLY-BOY AND LEADER OF THE DIVINE LIGHT MsSION-SEEMS TO BE ENCOUNTERING SOMETHING OF A DIVINE BACKLASH IN THE U.S. THESE DAYS. fiRST~

THE GURU GOT A CREAM PIE IN THE FACE LAST MONTH1

THROWN BY A ilETROIT YIPPIE AND STAFF REPORTER FOR A DETROIT UNDERGROUND NEWSPAPER.

A FEW

DAYS LATER 1 PAT HALLEY--THE PIE-

THROWING REPORTER--WAS ATTACKED AT HIS HOME BY TWO PEOPLE DESCRIBED BY THE YIPPIES AS "GURUNOIDS"--oR FOLLOWERS OF THE HALLEY WAS BEATEN AND HAD ~o BE HOSPITALIZED.

GURU.

ASPOKESPERSON

FOR

HAL~EY'S

NEWSPAPER SAID THEY

WOULD NOT PRESS CHARGES AGAINST THE GURU'S

DISCIPLES~

BUT

(QUOTE) "WE'LL JUST PUBLICIZE WHERE THESE TWO PUNKS LIVE AND LET THE PEOPLE TAKE CARE OF IT." So FAR1 THE DETROIT YIPPIES HAVEN'T TAKEN ANY DIRECT ACTION~

BUT THE NEW YoRK YIPPIES HAVE.

YIPPIES THERE ATTACKED

THE UIVINE SALES STORE--OPERATED BY THE DIVINE LIGHT MISSION-AND RAISED SOME HELL RIGHT IN THE GURU'S OWN STRONGHOLD.

THE

FIGHT ERUPTED INTO THE STREET BEFORE POLICE ARRIVED AND BROKE IT UP.

ASPOKESPERSON WOULD BE FURTHER ONLY IN NEW WAR~-

REPRISALS AGAINST THE GURU'S BUT ALL OVER THE COUNTRY.

FOLLOWERS~

NOT

"IT'S ALL-OUT

HE DECLARED. :: EARTH NEWS

(Credit:

YORK~

FOR THE YIPPIES IN NEW YORK SAID THERE

New York News Service,New York City)

••••••

<MORE) 24 Califanaia Street. Suite 400 · S.

rn.dlco • c.lifcnia Mill


2-~ F

THE MIAMI HERALD

----==Jay Maeder's

Saturday. Oct.

15~

1977

E0PL---__:,;,;,;~~--------..

Singer Anita Bryanl. Husband Bub Gt·('cn Pray ,\flcr Toss •• .Crf'en thPn f.,tlmred

u.~.omilant

ancl slammed him n·itlt a cream pie

Anita Gets a Pie-fttl, The11 Prays for Assailant IN DES Moines Friday, a homosexual demonstrator smooshed Anita Bryant in the face with a banana-cream pie as the singer held a press conference after taping a TV show. "At least it's a fruit pie." said Anita, ever quick with a bon mot. Then she burst into tears and, still dripping banana cream, began with husband Bob Green to pray aloud for her assailant's forgiveness. Asked what

he thought he'd pro\ ed, attacker Thorn Higgins explafned that. "we havf> _anQ!her bigot with a sticky face." Higgins and his buddies t~ repai-red to TV studio's parking lot and stood there talking with reporters. Whereupon Green, having finished praying, followed them out, snatched away another cream pie from one of them and hit him with it.


0~/?

'WHITE LIKE ME'

,..eo. rl/~-~e....-

Piepeople find Cleaver By Martin Van Lubia "I seem to have changed color." That was Eldgridge Cleaver's immediate reaction to the white, gooey cream pie dripping down his face recently in Vancouver after he had ba:omc the late~t hit for the ~narchist Part} of Canada (Groucho Marxist). Clca\er was pied by an APC(Gl\1) commando unit (their previous pie action was agai nst Spanish brain experimenter Jose Delgado) as he addressed 1,500 mind numbed Jesus freaks at an "I Found II " rally in the fanciest hall in town . His comment was particularly apt. As the APC(GM) said in a press release: "We used an oreo cookie cream pie because oreo cookies are black on the outside and white on the inside, jU'il like Eldridge Cleaver and his participation in the White Man's pseudoreligiou~ "I Found It" shell game." Frank1e Lee of the APC(GM) sa id he pied Cleaver because he is a turncoat fink for what is probably a CIA-fronted religious group. According to Lee, most of Cleaver's former co mrades in the Black Liberation Army are either murdered or rotting in jail "~~~hile Cleaver himself is free to travel with the likes of Waterbugger 0\arles Colson and W1lliam F. Buckley, who has 路 to CIA a ffiliations in

The new, all-white Cleaver is a far cry from the Black Panther who terrified Ronald Reagan and the other champions of white supremacy. He comes on stage in a tailored three-piece suit with a goodygoody rap about both his grand fathers being Baptist preachers and about how he

has left devil communism for Jesus. Cleaver al o speaks at length about getting support from his new friends for the attempted murder charges he still faces from the 1968 Oakland California 'ihootout in which 17-year-old Bobby Hutton was gunned down by the police.

The confusing thing is wh) Cleaver would come on like 1 pacifist "born again' Christian and then run afte1 the APC(GM) pie man wit~ both fisLS nying and a look I kill. Although Cleaver faile to catch the p1e man hi "Christian" friends did rur him down in a parking lo and proceeded to punch hin out.

But the confu'iing motive and murJ...y background or., Found II" seem e\en mo sinis ter. In a com muniqu1 issued by the Revolutiona Three Stooge'i Brigade o Dayton , Ohio, John Broger. the Wa shington D.C. head of Here's Life which is behind the "I Foun1 It" movemem, IS exposed a having been a po;ychologic& warfare expert for the U.S military JOint chiefs of start He also developed th " Militant Liberty" progra~ for GeneraJ Edwin Walker o the John Birch Societ y which auempted to brain wash U.S. soldiers into beil"\ anti-<:ommunist evangelists.

Eldridge finds it

The "( Found It" mov1 ment is ~o far off into rig! field that even Nixon's ol buddy Billy Graham he criticized it a~ "wrong fc trying to organize evangelis into a poliucal block." As the APC(GM) 'ia' "Remember, Eldridge, if tum the other cheek-yo going to catch a pie on 'ildc, too. Jesus i~n't goi give us p1e in the ky wl1 die, we're gomg to gi you in the face right nc


"CA

•

The M1ami News

•

Saturday, October 15, 1977

'At least it is a fruit pie'

Bryant, her face spattered with a banana cream pie '-..:.burled at her by a self-professed homosexual, is comforted " by her husband, Bob Green, as they lead a prayer for the ilurler. The pie-throwing took place at a press conference

for her concert in Des Moines, Iowa. She broke into as she and her husband prayed, but tried to take the rniliation in good humor. 'At least it is a fruit pie,' said.


Cleaver's speech in Vancouver ~ interrupted ~ VANCOUVER rCP\ - Eld

~ ' ' n. . Cleaver's speecb to a religious gathetiJig Cll Setur\l ~ day was Derrupted wtMn a '--.o member of a groUP ealled the ( ~ Aaarchist Party of Caaada '0 ~ (~Marxist) )QICbJaled " the former Black Pantben J"el18kB With a pie in ltle faoe.. Mr. Clea\~. a former infor ma1ioo minister of the Black

Pantbln who IIJ)ellt e•JU!t \eatS m ex1le 10 escape charges be laced m the Umted States. \\as speakmg to a gathenng sponsored b) the 'l J<"rund It t'~llnj:(ehcal

by pie in the face

campaugn about Ius coover· sion to Quistianity. 'lbe former acti\liat, wbo

lie police aft'ived." 141'. 1M llid DO dlara• bPI bee Jald iD COimiCtkiD ,._ tbe b:ldlat AIIDthlr ..,....._ b' U. wdlllt . lftiiiP llid Mr. Oeaftr '"IUD to .....

ance called tbe UDitecl States "an opprelllive JDCIIIIter " DOW says the natioo ia tbe ~ ol democradel and tbat lllirltua1 1'89Qlutioo 11 mare satisfy- his old &be*to IDitiDetl." mg tbaD trying to overthrow 1be _.,..., .uct fh8i the Gofe aWneat. wben h pie wu thrown Mr Cleaver IS scheduled to "Cleawr'a ffrst r.c:ticla wu appear m court on ~y 9 on a to throw his banda up and charge of assault with intent dJarge after Ji'rant, but after · lo kill m connection with a pursuing him half-way across ronfronlation between polit-e the stage he sWpped .. <tnd Black Panthers m Oak· Mr. Cleaver coutinued after bmd, Calif In 1968 cleaning up Frank l.ee1 25 of Vaocou· ~lr Lee likened Mt Cleav' cr who threw me pte. said er's convennon to Christianity Jus act was a non·\iolen~ way to that of convicted Watergate or pomlmg 0\11 that Mr consplrator Charles Colson, Cleaver bad betrayed lbe rad- who bas been mentioned m •cal movement of the 1980S. tbe •·1 Fouod lt" cam{Jiicn Mr Lee Bald in an inter"He's trying to save b1a \ .ew thaL Mr Cleaver bad own lido." Mr. Lee laid. turned his back oo his former <.'OIIU'adel - "lll.aDY nom bne beat killed, bealal or Jailed m tile U.S." - aDd DOW that be baa returDed to ..,. United Slilblll to face trtal baa suddenly been CCIIM!II"tiJd to

.-'---------.--J

or

Christianity.

Mr. Lee said the cream Pl8 he threw was black oo tbe outside and white 011 the inside That s JUSI ltke Eldridge Clea' er and his ~ctpation m the white man s Shell game • Mr. Lee saJd Asked lo descn'be the pte tbro\Viug episode. Mr Lee said he Just walked across tbe stage and pusiM!d the Pie tniO his lace. IL was a lot e&S" WI' dlan I tOOuibt it ...... be. , Tben I lllided nJIIing I got outBlde but~

\DIId

1M

ud

~·-

~.ae


l' HESS RELEASE

The Anarchist Part) of Canada (Groucho Marxist) ho.s pushed this Oreo Cookie Ct•eam Pie into the fo.ce of Eldr•idg6 Cleaver because he is o. turncoat fink and front

~an

for what is alleged to be a CIA-fronted

religious group. Whilo most of Eldridge's onetime comrades in the Black Liberation Army have been murdered by the racist

o.s.

state or are currently rotting in

prisons, he is fre e to travel with the likes of Waterbugger Charles Colson, shooting his mouth off for pay about the glories of American "d emocracy•t. The "I Pound Itu campaign is ond.:>rsed by such peonle as William F. 11

Buckley who has adm1ttod to CIA affiliations in the past.

1 Found It" has

access to a multi-million dollar budget for jts internat1onal campaign. I ort of prc~it are the y "finding"?)

(Wh at

Wa used an Oreo Coo. e Cr nm Pio beca se Oreo Cookies are black on th

Ol'

ts ide and whi to on the ins :_de, ju

pel~ticipation

in the Hhi te Man 1 s pseudo reli~ioua "1 Found It" shell game.

If Eldridge t·e..

So

1

o.hle to find it, i

~e

lo~t

member Eldridge, if you turn the other cheek--yo

c tch n piG on that sido too. uhon

gine uho must have

Jesus ian't goin

die, ue' e going- to gl \'e El:ctridgc pi

re going to

to give us pie 5n the ::Jky

in th

!'ace now i

--P.n roh1 t I rty (G

it.

or

Canada

ueho laar irJt ) -


lralncuHers sty111iecl by pastry politics , o,q, d/s/,."1! !t?o .....

lec:n:i:q~u:e~t:o~g:o~u;n~d:er:·...;d,es;cr~ibe~s~s~tim:u~la:tin~-~~an~l~l!--!~~~~; e prime guinea pigs for

By Fred Billingslea this ----------~~ground.

Dr. Jose Delgado, the Father o{ Elee 'ology, didn't know what hit him when the first of two "brain pies" were shoved into his face at a recent Brain Symposium in Vancouver. The symposium mod erator had just called for audience participation when an action squad, calling itself the Anarchist Party of Cllnada (Groucho-Marxisl), in a parody of a local Stalinist sect, launched the pies containing barbecue sauce, whipped cream. honey, chocolatesyrup, and cow br ains. "Why me?" asked Delgado, clearly mystified. By disrupting the deliberations ofthe 200 scientists and t heir camp followers. the anarchoguerillas managed to focus public and media attention on a major new ptfblic relations initiative by the brain research fraternity. Delgado, a former Harvard University researcher who now head~ the depart· ment of physiological sciences at the Universidad Autonoma in Madrid, is one of the front-men in the attempt to reha bilitate the image of brain research and to secure more government funding for it. GeorgE' Adams. one of nine anarcho-guerillas, referrE>d to Delgado as the"ftrst ofthe new breed of brain lobotomists." According to Adams, the first great lobotomy craze occurred in the 1950's when more than ftfty thousand brains were "car ved out." Eventually public outforced practitioners of

-,ge

Now. been working quietly behind the scenes for 20 years, is experimenting with electronic receivers and stimulalors implanted in the brain which make regular lobotomies seem crude by comparison. Delgado's tech· nique involves the insertion of very fine electrode shafts into the brain. The ends of these wires are soldered to a small socket anchored in the skull, where the doctor can electrically stimulate differenl areas of the brain causing the s ubject to react involunt.arily. Delgado boasts he can induce anger, fear, affection, pleasure and other emotions in experimental animals and human subjects by telemetry stimulation of specific regions of the brain. Electr onic stimulation of the brain (ESBJ has an effect similar to slapping a child's hand everytime he or s he touches a forbidden object. "We are now talking to the brain without t he participation of the senses," Delgado told a New York Times reporter. ''This js pure and direct communication - I call it nonsensory communi· cation.'' In experiments described in his book Physical Control of the Mind: Toward a Psycbocivilized Society, Del· gado dwells fo r many pages on how he could "turn on" a woman, making her "more flir tatious. to the point of ex· pressing a desire to marry t he therapist." On another occasion he

a no er excitation, he (the boy) remarked with evident pleasure, 'You're doing it now.' And t hen he said, 'I'd like to be a gir l' to please the male therapist." Delgado believes that brain stimulation should be treated much like other familiar biological interventions-innoculations, tran· quilizers, fl uoride treatment of water and food additives. Many of t he researchers

stage of their work, and proposals have already been enter tained by law enforcement funding agencies in the U.S. One multi-million dollar project undertaken by the Neuro-Research Foundation is to search for the "biological causes of crime and develop and test the usefulness of electro-physiological techniques for the detection of such disorders." Two of Delgado's col-

Brain surgeon Jose Delgado gets some feedback .

leaguesm the field bavt poseii a parole system trot crime; a prison equipped with an unre able electronic devicplanted in the brain. It mits basic informatior central computer and · venes electronically influence and control ted behaviour." "What I · propose i adoption of a strale mental planning,"' say gado. "The project o quering the human could be a central lher international cooper< HE' explains that c1 brain research suppor conclusion that "m emotion, and behaviot be directed by ele• forces and that humar be controlled like rolx push buttons." All of the doctors a searchers in the ESB fi, cognize that legal, e and religious objectic their programs must bt , with. To such reserv one researcher res1 "Perhaps the only w answer is LO rudely di! people of the notior there is any dignity in• being a sick pers mentally disburbed 1 o.r a crimin!ll person. "People will just h; get over their 1984 fe:: Big Brother is watch. The brain symposiUI ganizer claimed th• throwers didn't unde the purpose of the mt But they understood too well. That's wh) wenlintoaction with tl "A pie a day keeps thE

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manu•cript• will bfd"tror aftrr receipt unln• accompanu:o .. •iud, stamped, sd f-addr"sed en•~ lol An adj udinted ncw•papcr. C:"f't"U. ' 10~7. Nru. H'• t F~tlt'flnln, Lui All rrt.fn rtltn:ttl

Pied Pier Eyed

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YIPPIE PIE

He had attempted to fling a pic at Watergate Burglar Frank Sturgis during New York press conference, but an attorney for Sturgis reportedly managed to deflect the pie . Kay says he was then grabbed and roughed up by one 'o f Sturgis's associates, and that he was later turned over to police and charged with harassment and resitting arrest. - (ZNS)

thrower Aron Kay may have gotten his own just desserts. Kay was in San Francisco recently, addressing a large gathering at a marijuana smoke· in, when he was victimiz.ed by what was described as an "organic lemon pic" in the face. Kay, who has previously pied the likes of E. Howard Hunt, William F. Buckley, and former New York Mayor Abraham Beamc, was philosophical about IF YOU CAN'T remember what being on the receiving end for a it was you had for lun ch, it may change. Said Kay immediately be you ate too much baloney or afterwards: " All pie throwers too many hot dogs. A rest'arrh te a m at the hav(' to u ndergo 'pie therapy' to know what it's like to be hit by .a Uni,·ersit\' of California at. Irvine pie them5elves." ~ is rt'porti~g that Sodium Nitrite; Ju st two days ~artier, Kay had a chemical widely used in meats encountered other difficulties. as a preservative, prod u ces

Man Bites Dog And Memory Fails

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The Miami News

Friday. S'!otember 2 , 1977

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About

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··Pie throwers really .have got their crust Some claim the CIA is behind it. Others blame it on Soupy Sales. Whatever. all clean-ltving God-feanng Amencans should be concerned about this latest trend m • · • American politics. We're talk1ng about the · · • sudden ep1dem1c of pie-throwmg that threaten s the very core of our soc1ety. In the last few years everyone from his Divine Holiness the Maharaj Ji to Patnck . Moynihan to Watergater E. Howard Hunt - · have been targets of these p1eromaniacs. • This week, Big Apple Mayor Abe Beame

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was on the rece1ving end of an apple-pie-hurling hit man from something called the Pot Pie Party. And Ronald ~ . Reagan, attending a banquet m Manhattan, also was the targe t of a pie-throwmg conspiracy. Reagan narrowly m1ssed getting hit by not one but two lemon menngue missives when guards mtercepted a man ' "' and a woman trying to smuggle the gooey ·. · .. pies into the Statler Hilton Hotel where Ronnie was speaking. Even more d1sturbing Is news that the p1e throwers aren 't just zeroing on the political upper crust but for a price will splat any celebnty. Yesterday, Roy Rogers, the legendary King of the Cowboys, was smacked m the face w1th a concoction of oatmeal. cottage cheese and 'whipped cream . Roy, who was attending the )-. opening of one of h1s fast-food restaurants in Fa1rfax. Va., w1ped the glop from h1s face an muttered at the 17-year-old p1epetrator: · "I hope they stuff a Roy Rogers hamburger down h1s throat. " Perhaps that's a radical solution , but something clearly has to be done. If 1t can happen to Roy Rogers, no one in Amenca is safe

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·Two Radicals Jailed for Hitting W otnan CoiTirnentator With Pie CLEVELAND - (UPI) - Two members of the group that briefly took over the Alamo. were in jail Saturday for throwing a pie in the face of the nation's fir$t woman television commentator, Dorothy Fuldheim. Fuldheim. 86. who began her television career wlien Cleveland's WEWS-TV was founded in 1947, was hit by a cream pie during a speech in suburban Solon. ,Revolutionary May Day Brigade members Constance French, 36, and Glenn Zaggar, 27. both of Clevelartf. were held in lieu of bond. , A contingent of the May Day Brigade was arrested in lfexas arter temporarily seizing the Alamo. Political sl~ans were shouted from the walls of the famous fortrefS before the authorities dislodged the self-styled re\IOiutionaries. •The group said the Fuldheim incident was part of a poCtical action program. ;. ~t was a political statement of what thousands of people in this city and country think of her," said Marcella MacLean of the May Day group. "She's not just

some sweet old lady. She carries a heavy message. "When the coal miners went on strike. her message was to send out the National Guard and get the coal mines working. And when the Iranian people rose up and kicked the shah out, striking a blow against U.S. imperialism, her message was that those people were somehow the enemy of the poeple of this country and that we have some stake in defending our rulers' interests in Iran.'' Fuldheim said she was dumbfounded by the attack, "I am baffled by what happened to me," she said. "I thought everyone loved me. Don't they?" Bedford Municipal Court Judge Joseph Zingales set bond at $8,500 for French. the alleged pie thrower. She is charged with a felony of inducing panic, two misdemeanor charges of assault and one misdemeanor charge of disturbing a public assembly . The judge set bonds of $5,500 for Zaggar on a felony charge of inducing panic and a misdemeanor charge of distrubing a public assembly. Zlngales scheduled a preliminary hearing for Monday.

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FORUM ADVISER to make the adJUStments to these most milmate expenences w1th my husband. and th1s IS adversely alfectmg our marnage I would greatly appreoate your help and adv1ce on what would be best lor me Ms. L. M ., C•tiforniil

Your lack of premantal sexual expenence 1s not the problem here A great many women wtth constderable expenence would obJeCt to your husbands demands If you are reportmg everythmg accurately. your husband's behavtor stnkes me as very unfatr. He gave you no mdtcatton before marnage that he had somewhat unconvenrtonal tastes He IS usmg hts age as a rhetoncal weapon. trymg to convmce you that you really need dtsctplme .. because you are young and chtldtsh when. m fact . he wants to dtsctplme " you because 11 gtves htm sexual pleasure He demands that you accept hts tastes as your own and accuses you of mnocence or stubbornness when your tastes are dtfferent He doesn t show any constderatton for your feelmgs or any apprectatton of how dtfficult 11 may be for you to accommodate htm. My adwce IS that you tell your husband pomt-blank that you feel he 1s trymg to bully you. and that you are unwtllmg to subordmate your wtshes to hts You can expect little but anxtety and unhappmess If you accept a relatiOnship m whtch you do all the gtVmg and he does all the takmg If your husband loves you and IS commttted to the marnage. he wtll Its ten to you and comprormse If, however. he refuses to do so. you should then carefully constder your opttons. mcludmg dtvorce You have no chtldren. are only twenty-one and have been mamed for only SIX months Any dectston. mcludmg dworce. would be eas1er now than years later when there may be chtldren mvolved I would also suggest you both consult a mamage counselor before you make any drasllc dectSJons

PI ETHROWING a wh1le back . I read a letter 1n LQJ Forum I rom a guy who got h1s k1cks from seemg g~rls bemg hum1hated by havmg p1es thrown mto the1r laces or gettmg 1nto other kmds ol com1c and embarrassing acc1dents Well lor some reason . I have th1s let1sh too. and I don't understand 11 Let me g1ve you two examples Once when

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I was 1n a restaurant a waitress carry1ng two lam11y s1zed strawberry shortcakes accidently dropped one ups1de down on a g1rl s head The waitress wound up rece1v1ng a laclal and shampoo Wllh the other watchmg th1s made me helpless w1th exc1tement More recently. at an amateur hour 1n a local mght club. I saw the ultimate The act started oH w1th a really sexy look1ng ch1ck dressed to k1ll smgmg Send In The Clowns Seconds later. another g1rl came on dressed as Charlie Chaplin and wheeling a cart of ammun111on The crowd knew what was go1ng to happen and 11 d1d The g1rl who was smg1ng got plastered w1th eggs llour chocolate syrup and whipp ed cream The fln1Sh1ng touch was 1nev1table- a gloppy cream p1e 1n the lace I was weak and trembling from exc1tement and I was surpnsed to hnd that a lot ol other guys seemed to be gettmg a k1ck out of th1s act too. They won hrst pnze I dont understand why thiS kmd of th1ng turns me on Is there anyth1ng sexual about p1e throWing that would expla1n my reactions? Is th1s a leiiSh? If not what would 11 be called? Mr. B. C., M•ssuhusells

Bemg turned on by pte-throwmg IS not a fettsh A fettsh tnvolves a parttcular thmg ltke rubber panties or sptke heels whtch a fetishISt needs m order to achieve orgasm One who merely enJOYS a prop or actiVIty but who does not reqUire 1t for sexual arousal or satiSfaction 1s not a fet1shtst Pte throwmg ts a turn-on lo many men A woman messed up by a pte 1s embarrassed and til-at-ease. the onlooker IS laughmg relaxed, dry al"'d clean The reason thts 1s sexually exciting may stem from chtldhood expenances The sttuatton IS often arousmg to men who have been humtltated as ch;/dren by female authonry ftgures ltke mothers or teachers Such men fmd reltef and excttement m seemg the tables turned on an attracllve and composed woman lnterestmgly. the underlymg dynamtcs of pte-throwmg are stmllar m some ways to enemas In both mstances, the exc11emenr comes from seemg someone humtltated out of control and d~rty I would guess you have a need to feel dommant that belles an expenence of bemg over-controlled. and thts urge toward dommalton IS expressed by your des~re to see women get ptes m the face Thts seems relattvely harmless. there 1s no reason you should not JUSt go on en,oymg 1t


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NYC REPORTS OF CUNY GC/ MCBUNDY DEl-iO

New York Times

Bundy, at City U., Urges Public Voice on U.S. Policy By GLENN FOWLER McGeorge Bundy told a commence, mes:rt audience at the City University Graduate School yesterday that the put> lie's instinct about major foreign policy Issues was truer than that of ''postUring politicians." There is thus a great need for individu• als to speak out during the Presidential , campaign, the former natiooal security adviser in the Administrations of Presideats John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Jobnson declared yesterday. Mr. Bundy, now a professor of history lt New York University, was the com1 mencement speaker at the City Univer! sity Graduate School as 209degrees, most " of tbem doctorates, were conferred in 23 fields of scholarship, from anthropology to theater. · 1be 90-minute-long ceremonies in the · block-through arcade of the Graduate Center on 42d Street opposite Bryant Part were accompanied by continuous dlanting by protesters on the street~ DOUDCing Mr. Bundy, whom they dlarac; terized as an "architect" of the Vietnam War.

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Several guests at the commencement and a few ~tes walked out when Mr. Bundy was mtroduced to make his address early in the program. The schedule bad been revised in the hope that the demonstration would end, but it did not. A:s Mr. Bundy rose to speak. be was struck In the chest by a cherry pie tb.rown by Aron Kay, who called his target a '"warmonger'' and a "pig," and who was led out by security guards but was oot arrested. · Mr. Bundy prefaced his remarks by' saying be bad "never been unwilling" to discuss the Vietnam War and bad "understood and shared the anguish" over that conflict. His address however fo• . • . cused on the eff . ect ot the ~t ~1dential camp&Jgn on foretgn policy, m particular~ hostage situa.f:ioo in Iran and the Soviet intervention m Atgbanistan. Bacb Carter oa Afghnfstan ..The campaign Itself bas not been helpful to tbe hostages," be said, but he stopped short of attributing the aborted rescue of the hostages to campaign pressures oo the President. Nevertheless. "it

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was still a bhmder," he said, and "the atfair of~ hostages will now be Settled In tbeonlywaythatcanwork-bydiplomacy." · · In the Afgbanlslan crisis, Mr. Bundy said that be supported Mr. Carter's firm . stand against the SOviet Union but that be · feared that '"the Administration is not telling us all the bad news." Three honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degrees were conferred at the commencement. The recipients were: ~ SOL C. CHAIKIN, president of the lntema:' t1ona1 Ladies Garment Wortcers Union. for bis "outstaDdl.ng service in the labor~ mentsince 1940."

RUSSEll L~· author and, for many ~

managmg editor of Harper's maga. for "exerting a wide and dvilizUlg ~ fluenc:eupoa tbeworldofletten. " JEROMEROBBINS,cboreograpberanddanc- . er, as "one of tbe most~ forces m 20th ~American theater and dance. " · zme,

Grand Jury to Review Case ofFederal Agent KilleJ With Own Gun

DAILY NE:-lS NY POST

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Pie-thrower misses Bundy

A.BON KAY, the Ylpple _. ple-tbi'Ower ldng, tossed a .cberey pie at former ~

tlonal security adviser Me· '

men · -

George Bundy yesterday

wblle he addresaed the City ' University's Graduate. School graduation. - ~ . 'l1le pie hit the podium and splattered on Bundy's chest. Bundy kept talking as Kay, shouting '"warmonger" and '"plg," was led outby security guards. 1 Rewasnot~

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• McGeorge Bundy had just gotten up to deliver thecommencement address at t.he City University Graduate· Center yesterday-when a man in the audience hurii!U a pie in h.is dlreetlon.l'he pie missed and spattered on the .. podlum, aneta startled Bundy went on_w1th h1s spee.ch .. - Th~thrower-identifled as·Aaron Kay, a local Ytppte 1 a.nd professionat pie-thrower who over t.he yean.haS' creamed sucn notables as Sen. Daniel P: Moynihan, · "\ Abraham Beame when he was mayor and California Gov. 1 'Edmund G: 'Brown Jr.-was-carried away by security ·

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As the-graduation ceremonies for 185 doctOrii candl·

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' dates continued, about 50 students chan ling '' Bundy Go • Home!" picketed the ceremony outside on the sidewalk on W. 42d St The StUdents charged Bundy with helping 1 to escalate t.he Vietnam conflict while serving as . national security adv iser to Presidents John F. Kennedy · and Lyndon Johnson. ·

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THE NEW YORK TIMBS, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1980

: Bundy4xa!.City U., Urges Public Voice on U.S. P 1 of JDil ogy

'TY· :es-

By GLENN FOWLER McGeorge Bundy told a , commencemeot audience at the City University Graduate School yesterday that the~ Uc's instinct about major foreign policy issues was truer than that of " posturing

Sbe fer- politicians." There is thus a great need for indivtdu~yr a1s to speak out during the Presidential he• campaign, the former national security adviser in the Administrations of Presi:Jr of dents Jobn F . Kennedy and Lyndon B. rlem Jolmsondeclaredyesterday. . ocer Mr. Bundy, now a professor of history at New York University, was the com.ro mencement speaker at the City Univerrt de sityGraduateScboolas 209degrees, most :cial of tbem doctorates, were conferred in 23 : ; fields of scholarship, from anthropology totbeater. line The 90-minute-Jong ceremonies in the tbe block-through arcade of the Graduate Center on 42d Street opposite Bryant "'· Park were accompanied by continuous ~~ cban~ byMrpBrotundyesters boon the street de• , w m they cbarac0 liOIDlCUlg terized as an " architect" of the Vietnam War.

Several guests at the commencement and a few graduates walked out wben Mr. Bundy was Lntroduced to make his address early in the program. The scbedule bad been revised in the hope that the demonstration would end, butltdidnot. As Mr. Bundy rose to speak, be was struck in the chest by a cherry pie thrown by Aron Kay, wbo called his target a "warmonger" and a "pig," and who was led out by security guards but was oot ar11 rested.

was still a bluoder,'' be said, and "~ af. fair of the hostages wUl now be 8ettled in the only way tbat can work- by diplomacy." In the Afgbanistan crisis, Mr. BUDdy said tbat be supported Mr. Carter's firm stand against the Soviet Union but tbat be feared tbat "the Administration is not telling us all the bad news." 1bree boDorary Doctor of Humane Letten degrees were conferred at the commencemeot. Tberecipientswere:

Mr. Bundy prefaced his remarks by SOL C. CHAIKIN, president of tbe Intemasaying be bad "never been unwillin&" to tlona.l Ladies Garment Workers Unioo, for discuss the Vietnam War and bad " unbill "CJUtstandiniRrVice In tbe labor JDOY&. clerstood and &bared the anguisb" over mentsiDcelMI." tbat confUct. His address, however, f~ RUSSELL LYNES, autbor and, for many cused on the effect of the current Presiyean, managlna editor of Harper's mapdentlal campatp on foreign policy, in ~.;.,~=~ t. particular the bostqe situation in Iran JEROMEROBBINS,cboreopapberanddancand the Soviet intervention in Afsbanler, as "ooe of tbe JllOIIt a.dve forces In 20tb

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BacbCarter•Aipaalstaa "The campaign Itself bas not been ~~tosbortthe bostagesofbu'" be said, but be ·~ attri tlng the aborted rescue of the hostages to campaign pressures on the President. Nevertheless. "It

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'EGGBII~L'

AT ASSAULTS . ON OFFICIALS THE POLICE Dept., reacting to the egg pelting and assault suffered by Mayor Koch, has drawn up legislation that would make it a specific crilne to harass or attack any elected official in the state. The measure, dubbed "The Egg Bill" by City Hall staffers, will be submitted to the Legislat ure and has the full support of the Mayor. '1t's not that a public official's life is more sacred, more valuable," said Koch. '1t's that wben you attack a member of Congress, a state official or the Mayor, it's not only attacking them. You are at· tacking the entire public

because you are preventing tbem from carrying

out the obligations of of lice." Tbe bill, based on similar legislation passed by Congress to deter assaults on federal officials, would im· pose penalties higher than tbose DOW prescribed for assaults on civilians. Last November, while welcoming a convention group, Koch was punched in the eye and pelted with eggs by three opponents of bls bospltak:loslng plan.

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A BrrrER battle

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to jiD tlae State Senate aeat t>acated

lftg '" tlae nace ~

Carl McCan, who woa a UN delegate.

[O.P.poi.~C4!rd

TM two leodera '" tlae roee for tlae ~teat, toAkA

ba tlae Feb. 12 'J)eefal election.

***

tlae Upper Wut Side ofld Harlem, are Leon

COtler3

GOP leaders around the cllalrman of Catn· state continue to be worwawnity Board 7, afld Bar- ried about the possible baro LowaORt, o TV .aew_,. • negative effects of a RonaJd Reagan-led presiden1Driter. MonAatton Detnocrotk tial ticket. Assembly minority dUtrkt ~aden waeet Jon. 17 to pkt tlldr candtdate leader James Emery, who says the GOP bas a good shot at taking control of the Assembly, bas quietly endorsed Gerald Ford. Meanwhile, former Treasury Secretary Wil· Bogv.e~t,

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hosting a

$250-a-person Conservative Party fundraiseF for Reagan on Jan. 1~ at the 67th Street Armory. L _!be other guests of 'lODOT

include Connecticut

>enate candidate James Juckley, Rep. Jack Kemp d, strangely enough, _tat,!: Power Authority 'b8irman John Dyson, the averick of Gov. Carey's administration.


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Tlte Pienton RenteJnbc•·s

And St,.ikcs ONCE AGAIN IL's ... No~tal~ia Hour!! Do you n·mt>mhr.r ..• 1 he Vretnam War?? Circl~ onE'. a) Yup. b) Nope. Aron Kay remembers. /\ron Ka . Vamous Yippie Preman. ne\·er forgets. The other night McGeor11 Bundy was giving the commenccmrnt addre~s at the Citv Uni\ ersit\' of New York's Graduate School and suddenly there was Aron Kay in front of him. pie in hand. " War· mongE"r!" Aron screamed. The pie . mrssed Bundy practically altoaether. He did catch a little of it

KAY on his sleeve. The incident inter· rupted his spPech not for a min• tile. /\ron Kay immediately ran orr to telephone ThE' Associated Press and claim credrl for the terrorist strike. "Violence i.; as ,\mE'rican as apple pie!" he .:aid, quoting H. Rap Brown for the umpty-umpth time. No char&es were filed.

DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY. JUNE 6, 1980

- Pie-thrower misses Bundy PS McGeorge Bundy had just gotten up to deliver the

.•for nd ce

lit ster· ISl·

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commencement address at the City University Graduate Center yesterday when a man in the audience burled a pie in his direction. The pie missed and spattered on the podium, and a startled Bundy went on with his speech. The thrower-Identified as Aaron Kay, a local Yipple and professional pie-thrower who over the years has creamed such notables as Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan, Abraham Beame when he was mayor and California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.-was carried away by security men. As the graduation ceremonies for 185 doctoral candi· dates continued, about 50 students chanting "Bundy Go Home!" picketed the ceremony outside on the sidewalk on W. 42d Sl The students charged Bundy with helping to escalate the Vietnam conflict while serving as national security adviser to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. -Sheryl McCarthy


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jury grills Billy & it wash't over easy

By D.J . SAUNDERS and PAUL MESKIL

BUly Carter, who withstood two days of grilling by a special Senate subcommittee last week, was reduced to a haggard hulk by a two-hour barrage o£ quesUons from a Manhattan federal grand jury yesterday. Tbe jury is investigating charges involving fugitive financier Robert Vesco and an alleged plot to bribe Carter administration officials into releasing C-130 transport planes to Libya. Like the Senate probers, the ·grand jury wanted to know about Billy's Libyan connection. fie received a red-earpet welcome from security officer s, who escorted him to and from the grand jury ehamber. But the red carpet ended at the chamber door. Billy went in with a grin, appearing NCHAIIDL&DM.Ycheerful, composed and confident He eame out obviously shaken and nerv- Billy carter leaves In taxi after appearing In Federal Courthouse. ous, bJI IIDile lODe, bJa carefully com: bed hair rumpled, his faee flushed and that the sale of trusport planes to smile. He was accompanied by his blotcbJ. Libya had been blocked because Libya laW)'el", Stepbea Pollak. "I ANSWDED ALL the questions- was considered a radical nation that 'lbey entered tbe jury chamber truthfullJ," be told reporters. , would misuse the aircraft. around 10: ~ a.m. and eame out at 12:30 Aabd If be hlld been requested to p.m. BlUy was thea acorted out of &be TIIB LIBYAN GOVBilNIIENT re- courthouae by u uauu••UJ larle nblrD for a eecond sealon, be replied: portedly set up a $15 mllUon fund to •You'll bave to talk to the attorney number of U.S. IDID'Ibala 8lld Federal bribe U.S. officials and other influen- Protective Service officen. leneral." Tbat was all he would aay about tial people in an effort to reverse TO llELP .... BLVDE • borde of what was obviously hit roqbest quiz administration poUcy ud tee the MUioa 10 far. Billy reportedly was planes. Among other thtnp, the federal reporters, pbotoJnpla«s and TV c~ ubd about a State Department brief· tnDd JW'J has been trying to deter- era crews, they took him baek into the ma that llJa cloaelt friend received at IDiDe wbat role, if any, Billy Carter courthouse, dowaiMo the aubwq and tbroulh a turmel. to t1ae other eide of . the nqueat of a biP-rankiD& White pla.Yed in thil scheme. BW, arrived at the U.l. Attorney'• Foley Square. HoUM. aide. The briefinl was pven to As the guards haDed a cab fw 8tllJ BlllJ"• budd)' and btWDell uaoclale, Bu1ld.IDc In Sl Andrew'• Plaza, adjaHeDr7 R. (Randy) Coleman of Plains, cent to the Federal Courthouse -In and at 1eut 10 joutnalista nU'IDell ,· Foley Square, at 8:30 a.m. He wore aa 'a eJOa the croWded ~qUare, ylppAe Aroa Ga. Kay appeared with a cream pie in a --~~- AIIistant SecretarJ of State Morrill olive p-een suit, matellinl tie, creamt.l ~ hi.O. and-brown cowboy boots and a auany papao_bag. Kay, wbo.~ cream.ct SeD. . ..

Dame! P. Moynihan, fonner Mayor Abraham Beame and other public offi· cials, was seized by marshals before he could even open the bag. He was released soon after Billy and his lawyer departed in the taxL Asked why there was such tight security for Billy's visit, a courthouse officer replied: "There were psychos in that crowd."

Libyan,.,.,._ 220G loan to President's brother Tripoli (AP)-Libya's foreign minis-

ter yesterday defended his country's $220,000 loan to President Carter's brothtr and said the radical Arab 'na• tlon wOu,ld continue to lobby vigorously for its interests in the United States. ..Our conbact is not only with Billy Carter," said Ali Abdosalam Treild in an interview. "Our contacts with Amert· can concressmen and senaton .•wUl continue." . Although be declined to disClusa detalls, Trelkl said his 10verameot had 8J'IIIted the loan to BUly Carter · at BIIIJ'1 r'equesl BUly deposited cheeb in two bank aceeanta in Georgia totaUq $2D,OOO ia December and PJO.DOO 1o April. Be said earlier tills sommer that the chec:b were lnstalllllelttl on a loan from Libya tota1i111 ~.ooo. TreiJd aald Libya orlgJoally wu put iii oootact with Bllly through Geoflia state seoaton. Billy viaited Libya for. the tint time iD SepteJaber 1978. n 'U "IWural" for Libya to try to inlhlence Americu public opinion "because the door 11 always closed to ue at u. u.a. ..., Departmeld,·' aald 'l'r'elld. u be lilt 1D bll office w1t11 a 4-foet pHtoenpb of Llby• leader COL IID•mmar KUdllfJ oa th• wall beblad hhft



Page 46--S.F. EXAMINER **C Thurs., Oct. 25, 1979

Asso< oaled Press

If you see this guy, duck; he's pie-hurler Aron Kay, being tossed from N.Y. rally for pasting Gov. Brown

Our guv gets a face full of pie !lo'EW YORK tlJPII- Gov. Bro\\n got a lemon-«)C()nut pie in the race today as he entered Cooper Union to

address several hundred students. The pie. hurled by Yippie ptethrower Aron Kay, hit the governor on the side of his race as he armed at a school entrance ''here a band was playmg Beatie song· for his armal. "And they say campaigning is a piece of cake," said Brown later. '1lle thing that gripes ml' is it's not on my diet.Kay said the action was a "non\iolent pie a:.."<iaSSination·· he undertook because he was u~t that Brown was " · up ID Howard Jan is. · who 100 the tax~utting Proposition 13 dme. and not dorng enough about pri'SOn reform in Califomta. Kay was not arrested and a spokesman for Brown said charge5 would not be pressed Brown was ent('nn~ COOPf'r Umon, a science and arts college on the lower East Side. when the pie \\as thrO\\ n. Brown. a candidat(' for th(' [)('mocratic presidential nomrnation. deh\'ered b1s speech on economics - after

a brief stop to clean up rn the men's room. Kay claims to have scored 14 hit.c; on prominent figues in the past six years and to have been arrested only once. when he was fined $150. Among his targets have been former CIA director William Colby and former 1'\ew York Mayor Abraham Beame. Yesterday, Brown brought cheers from 800 students at the Cruvers1ty of New Hampshire in Durham by pledging to shut the S2.6 billion Seabrook nuclear power facility if he's elected. The Seabrook plant, now half constructed, has been the targ~t of repeaW anti-nuclear demonstrations for the last thr('(> years. Brown repeated his call for a halt to construction of new nuclear plants and pledged he would block the gov<'rnment from i..'iSUing a license for the Seabrook plant if he's elected. "i':ow is the time not only to not build new nuclear power plants." Brown said, "but to phase out the ones that exist." "If I ever ha,·e the opportunity. I \\ill make sure the Seabrook plant is

not licensed," be added. Brown called for intensified efforts to develop alternative energy source-.. especially solar power. rather than continued reliance on nuclear plants or foretgn oil for the nallon ·s energy needs.

Brown also Indicated vesterday in Boston he would approve' the l~cihza­ tion of Laetrile in California e,·en though be does not know if it is an effective cancer treatment. Brown said he has not advocated the controversial substance banned bv the U.S. ·Food and Drug Admirustration. ''but I certainly don't oppose lt.'.._ He said he has "no 1dea w:hether 1t works or not.·· He said he "certain!\ would not give support and comfort' to those \\hO are vigorously fighting to block it m the LegiSlature and I might "eu support it." Bro"n defended hJS offer of sanctuary to <rl!rald and Dtana Green. parents or 3-year-<>ld luekemia \ irtim Chad Green. Chad dted Oct. 12 ''bile undergoing Laetrile treatments for hLS leukemia in a TiJuana. Mexico, clinic.


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The Ci111ir &Prim11ry: Quid Pro Cs Beautiful. It wa~ ju~t the situation in which I am at my best. My friend Mario Cuomo is running for

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mayor of New York and last Tuesday, in the Great Hall 11t Coope-r Union In· stJtute. an arf'na in which Lincoln made himself a presidential candidate, Cuomo got a t'hance to stand out In a crowwd of nine candidates who were placed on a stage like a pile or bricks. In the middle of the forum, an imbe· clle c~tme waddling down the aisle with something in his band. It turned out to be a pie. Cuomo didn't know what Jt was, at first. And he moved. He was out of his chair and across the stage and he bounded off and came down into the audience. He got to the guy just a little bit, hitting him on the side of the fare.

JIMMY

BRESUN The guards grabbed the pie-thrower and Cuomo had to remain still. At home, I was screaming at the television set, "Let go of the guy. Let Marlo punch hij outl" I figured Mario could take the guy out with one, as they say in the fight business. and do it right here on television. Sensational. In a city nghtrully obsessed by crime, a eandi· date who can knock a man out with a punch could be unbeatable.

Anyway, the Impact of the ing spread all over the let heard that Cuomo had the ph lty to act while everbody else cahir and wondered what w ing. It was clear that he had self some good. It was also cl now was time for me to st start handling some of this for the last days, the ones put it together or you don't. I for the truly smart people, me, to take over. "It'll BE Great" And the next day, whll( Cuomo was on the phone. sl something about her sched next day, for Thursday, whic her to walk streets in the (Conli11aeJ on

pa•• 12


JIMMY BRESLIN. (Continued lrom paae 6)

Gov. Carey. "I'm not so sure that's a &ood idea," she said. I jumped in. It was clear I had to take over, "Nonsense," I said. "It'll be great." "I disagree with you," Matilda sald. "I'm out there every day. People want to talk about the electric chair. When they see Carey, be's taken sauch a strong position against it, I don't think they'll be happy." "Matilda, you-re nice, but you don't know what you're talking about," I told

her.

"' Know What People Will Say" "I'm out In the streets every day, I know what people will say," she aald. "You only think you know," I told her. "I don't have to go out on the streets every day +o know what people think, I'm perceptive." A few months ago, Carey vetoed a death Pl!nalty bill in Albany. Carey, who seethes when the word death is mentioned, pointed out what any sane, experienced person knows: That in its history the state averaged only 8 2/3 electrocutions a year and they stopped nothing and that many criminal-justice professionals, State Supreme Court Justice Burton Roberts, for example, maintain that capital punishment actually promotes violence and causes the number of murders- to rise rather than go down. However, with the mayoral _race on. and the polls showing bow fnghtened and angered the public is by ceaseless crime, two of the candidates, Mayor Beame and Rep. Ed Kock, have made the electric chair an issue. The mayor of New York bas nothing to do with capital punishment, but Beame and Kock run af2und to meetings and shout at tbe people, fry-fry.fry; and the public jumps up and chants back, fry, fry, fry. Tbere is speculation that this time, the electorate doesn't want a mayor, it wants a cook. Makes One Last Stab Now, last Wednesday morning, Matilda Cuomo made one last stab at talking to me about this. "If I could only talk to Gov. Carey and explain to him how people don't even realize they've been duped." "Tell him when you see him tomorrow," I said. "That's what I'm afraid about," she laid.

''Matllda, you're not smart enough to know these things, I am. Let me tell you what's going to happen. You'll go onto the block with Carey and everybody will 路push up for his autograph. Now do as I tell you and meet him tomorrow morning .Be on time!" On Thursday, while Matilda drove to the Bronx to meet the governor, I went down to Chevlowe's Beach, a !50-yard stretch of sidewalk on Queens Blvd. where everybody bangs out. "What are you doing today?" Shel路 ley Chevlowe asked me. "Making a mayor," I aald. Started Up a Street Up In the Bronx, Matllda Cuomo and Gov. Clny started up a street called Lydig Ave.

"Jimmy told me," Matilda aald, reas-

suring herself.

Tbe first woman on the bloct eame upgsCarey. "So?" she said. "Yes" Carey said to her. "So what are you doing here in the Bronx when you should be in Albany making an electric chair?" "111 Poiso nYou" A butcher stood in front of the store with his arms folded. "Come in here and I'll poison you, you're agalnst the electric chair." A woman came up to Matllda. "You're a nice woman. Why can't you be for teh electric chair? When I was a young girl, I was afrald to do anything wrong because I'd get the electric chair." Matilda spoke to the woman. A few feet away, Carey was talking about places ha had been at, Auschwitz and Buchenwald. He said he does not like the idea of the state killing peiple; in some places, it became a very bad habit. Tbe talk persisted and finally Carey was in this beauty parlor and Matilda was up in the front and he was in the back and a woman shook her head full of curlers and said, "Why are you so liberal with these animals?" And now Cerey did a thing that is knovm as "easing aggravation." It is a very great political move, partic~larly if it ii.s done in fr<'nt of no w1tnesses. CaTey told the woman to give Cuomo a year aas mayor, and il that didn't b~ing the crime down, then he, wo penalty il C penalty if Cuomo were the mayor. Nobody else, Carey said. Most Provocative Statement It was magnificent. You couldn't become more scumlous. No real politician in this country would heve anything but admiration for the move. Tbe only problem was that, directly behind Carey, writing away in her note pad, was the efficient, talooted, Beth Fallon of the New York News newspaper. She knew she bad the single most provocative statement of the mayoral campaign thus When tlhe pa'J)er came out on Thursday night, I choked. J called Matilda Cuomo. One of her younger daughters answered. "My mother doesn't want to talk to you any more,'' the girl said. On Friday morning, here was candidate Mario Cuomo surrounded by microphones and answering question after question about Carey's statement. Between answers, he dared at me. He stood In the liquid beat of a senior citizen center, book off his jacket, and told the reporters that he would not change his position, that there are stronger ways to cut crime than capital punish路 ment. He said that the job of mayor is no so important to him that he would ever sell even a small piece of his soul for it. J couldn't wait for him to stop talking so I could make a comeback and tell him bow to win the election in the next couple of days. "Know Where Yoa Could Help Us" Outside on the street, Cuomo said to me, "I know where you could help us." "Great. Where?" I said. "Waltham, Mass.," he aald. "Don't go there alone. Take him with you." He slid into his car and left me standing on the bot street comer.


"1 want to keep the myth alive," Greta Garbo once said when asked about her reclusiveness. Garbo made her last film. Two-Faced Woman. in 1941 and has stayed out of the public eye ever since. But when Freelance Journalist Frederick Sands requested an interview for the German weeldy Bunre fllustrierte, Garbo unexpectedly agreed. As they walked around Garbo's apartment in Klosters, Switzerland, the star, 7 1, admitted: "I'm restless everywhere and can't stay put. I would like to live differently somewhere. if only I knew where I could go." On daily walks, she says, "1 think about my life and the past. I've ruined my life, and it's too late to change it."

his arm and- splat! Prankster Aaron Kay, the man who once pasted Daniel Patrtc:k Moynihan

in the face with a cream pie. had struck again. This time the pie was apple crumb and the victim was New York City Mayor Abe Burne, who was

participating in a mayoral forum at Manhattan's Cooper Union. Fonunately for Beame. the pie merely splattered his blue suit. The mayor shrugged off the caper with a quip: "I like the Big Apple, not apple pie."

• TI:DS IS THE MOMENT ALL JAPAN HAS BEEN WAITING FOR Chip up a tree In Plains

Now that his Uncle Billy has resigned his duties at the warehouse to go on the celebrity circuit, Chip Carter, 27, is running the show. The harvest is just beginning, and Chip will purchase about $4 million worth of peanuts from fanners in the area, then help handle the processing and marketing. At the end of the day, he returns home to Wife Caron and six-monthold James Eart Carter IV. Trying " to work things out" in their strained marriage, the couple are living for the moment in Rosalym and Jimmy's ranch house at I Woodland Drive. Though the quarters are not up to par with the White House, they top Chip and Caron's last abode in Plains: an $8,100 mobile home near the railroad station. TTME. SEPTEMBER 12. 19TI

blazed the sign above Tokyo's Koralru-en Stadium last week. In the third inning of a game between the Yomiuri Giants and the Yakult Swallows, First Baseman Sadaharu Ott, 37, blasted a low, inside pitch into the rightfield stands 377 ft. away. It was h.is 756th career home run-one more than the American major league record set in 1976 by Hank Aaron. Declared Oh, who was promptly named first holder of a National Hero Honors Order by the government: "I have finally put down an unbearable burden." Aaron hailed the slugger's achievement, cabling that " Japan has much to be proud of." (For another broken record. see SPORT.)

•

The hit man rushed through the audience, raised

Sadaharu Oh after blasting hJs 756th home run 3


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Cream Pie In The Eye Aron Kay,left, bits former United Nations ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan in tbe face with a pie in lower Manhattan. Kay said be threw tbe pie at Mo}niban as a protest against bis national and international policleli. 1\loyniban was out campaigning for tbe U. S. Senate. He declined to bring charges.

I


The Groucho

Caucus Presents:

Aron Ka

a lecture

Ylpple Pleman A ron Kay leta us see his wares then meets Daniel Moynihan IROI'8 than haH-way

''Politics and Culture in the 80s''

Aron Kay, acknowledged Chef of America's Pieromaniancs will lecture here on Politics and Culture in the Eighties, and related topics. Aron has attained fame and fortune, creaming the likes of Jerry Brown, William F. Buckley, Daniel Moynihan, Waterbuggers Anthony Ulacewitz, E. Howard Hunt and Gordon Libby, not to mention anti- Feminis Phyllis Schafly.

Thursday Feb UCSD TLH 10 Stop the Draft!

7:30 pm Free


Deeember

Desserted Anthony Ulasewicz, a former New York cop who was a bag• man in the Watergate scandals, demonstrated again yesterday he bas a flair for slapstick. Tony was bit in the face with a coconut cream pie by a Yipple at federal court in Manhattan where he's standing trial for tax evasion. During the Water¡ gate bearings, Tony provided the comic reUef by testifying that be kept a moneycbanger on his belt to make phone calls to high-ranking cloak-and-dagger types on the Committee to Re-elect President Nixon (CREEP).


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BILLY GARTER TALKS BEFORE GRAND JURY Says He Answers All Questions Truthfully in New York Inquiry Into Libyan Plane Case By ARNOLD H. LUBASCR Billy Carter, the President's brother, appeared before a Federal grand jury in Manhattan yesterday in an investigation of Libyan efforts to obtain military transport planes from the United States. "I answered all the questions tnJtbful. ly," he told reporters after his appearance at the United States Court House at Foley Square, which lasted more than two hours. He added, "I really don't bave any comment.'' Mr. carter said tbat be did not know whether be would be asked to return for more questioning. There was no comment from Raymond A. Levites, tbe assistant United States Attorney handling the investigation.

Alleged Brlbeey Plan The grand jury is investigating an alleged plan to bribe United States officials to release eight Cl30 Hercules military transport planes to Libya. Delivery was barred because of Libyan support for terrorist activities. Robert L. Vesco, a financier who Is a fugitive from an unrelated Federal~ a Jtion for m~tual-fund fraud, was reportedly involved in tbe alleged scheme, according to Senate Judiciary subcommittee sources. James W. Feeney, an undercover Informer , surreptitiously recorded telephone conversations with Mr. Vesco and others tied to the alleged Libyan scheme. Mr. Vesco reportedly said tbat he was close to Libyan oficials. Billy carter's name also reportedly came up in tbe taped discussions. The grand jury was also interested in a briefing on the planes that Henry R. Coleman, a friend of Billy carter's, received from the State Depart51 ment after the two wemt to Libya in 1978. When the President's brother arrived at 9:30 A.M. yesterday, with Stephen J. Pollak, one of his lawyers, before his grand jury appearance, be smiled at reporters outside the courthouse and said, "I feel fine." Mr. carter appeared a bit nunpled and strained when he left the grand jury at 12:30 P.M. He returned to Mr. Levites's n office for half an bour, then eluded wait- l ing spectators with the beip of Federal I guards. Federal marshals took into custody a spectator , Aanm Kay, wbo was carrying a pie in a paper bag. Mr. Kay, who bas previously thrown pies at several political figures, was later released

F


THE MIAMI HERALD

Thursday, September 1, 1977

..----PEOPLE------~

\Javor Beamc Was Unhurl by Thro~n Pie .

: • • 8Pila Absul{ iN 1wnlerl on iai" l~>fl

Mayor Beame Is the Target for a Pie SO HERE was Abe Beame onstage before the League of Women Voters. seeking reelection to the New York mayor's chair, when a large furry gent with an apple pie came forward. Oh. oh, said Beame. who loiows an imposter Woman Voter when fie sees one. Here we have the only known photo of a sitting mayor getting flying-pied by a fellow candidate, who. wouldn't you know. is the ubiquitous Aaron Kay. The onetime Yippie pieman, who steadfastly refuses to sink into obscurity, is

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campaigning for Beame's job on the Pot Pie ticket. Bella Abzug wants Beame's job too; that 's Bella on Beame's left. Beame wasn't seriously splattered and he declined to press charges against Kay. ELSEWHERE ON the mayoral campaign front. candidate Abzug has taken an important step toward restoring New York City to fiscal security by coughing up $1 ,075 in delinquent parking ticket fines.


Page 18-S.F. EXAMINER

~

Wed., Aug . 31, 1977

Aron the Pie strikes a In San Francisco recently it was a banana pie. In New York the taste is different - they prefer apple. We're speaking of the pie as a weapon, not as an edible. Here a man known as Aron Kay, left, throws a pie, below, at Mayor Abraham Beame at a forum in New York for their nine mayoral candidates. The mayor shoved this one off; it landed on his shoulder and Hizzoner refused to press charges. At the right is candidate Bella Abzug, who appears to be dozing through the entire thing, but probably wasn't.


BiiJIApple: Mayor Beame gets a slice Things that happen while sitting next to Bella Abzug: New York Mayor Abe Beame has a pie thrown at him. Why? Why not? See the People column. Page

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Pie-eyed New York Mayor Abe Beame last night broke with the trme-honored American tradition of endorsing motherhood and apple . "I don't like apple pie," Abe grumbled. Abe, running tor hrs political life against Bella Abzug in the city's mayoral primary, had good reason to turn up his nose at apple pie. Somebody tried to hit him in the kisser with one whrle he was speaking to the League of Women Voters. Abe ducked and got hit in the shoulder. "No. don't do that," Beame said calmly, as a tall, bearded man came down the aisle, pie in hand. A caller to AP said the pie thrower was Aaron Kay, a candidate for mayor on the Pot-Pie ttcket. Before turning to politics, Kay was associated wrth a group called Pie Kill International, which is a pie-for-pay group that specializes in hrt jobs on celebrities. Beame declined to press charges. ~-

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Yipp.ie Ha $ fling~~P~, at mayoral debate

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When it was all over and who later Identified himsell columned ball that once things we~ back to politics- as Aaron Kay, a 27-year-old played host to Abraham as-usual, somebody as ked Yippie, appeared out of no- Lincoln. The Mayor's aides and Bella Abzug wbo won t h f' where and threw th\! pie at Beame. security guard rushed to the debate. She laughed. Kay - the same man who stage. "The pie won the debate," sald the former Congress- smashed a mocha cream pi<' Mario Cuomo, looking anwoman - making what bad In Daniel Patrick Moynihan's grier than he does on his to be the most non-controver- face during last year's Sen- TV commercials, shot of! the sial statement of the evening. ate race - failed to score a platform and grabbed Kay. The pie, of course, Is the direct hit, but managed to "I saw this guy running apple-crum pie that a bearded g\!t some gooey apple filling up and I didn't know what dissident lObbed at Mayor on the right shouldf'r of the hell be was doing," said _ Beame during last night's Beame's blue suit . the Secretary Of state later. The Mayor, wbo had been 'Tm trying to figure out League of Women Voters mayoral forum at Coop~ r making his summation wben why I went running off the the missile sailed through stage like Batman." He Union. The otherwise tame 90- the air, sat calmly while wrenched his back in the pandemonium bargain, be added. minute event was just com- momentary ing to an end when a man broke out in the dignified. Manhattan Borough Presi路 dent Percy Sutton went to INST.UCTIONS the Mayor's side, GOP hopeful Barry Farber started rubbing the gunk off B6lUTie's shoulder with a handkerchief, and Mrs. Abzug murmured a few encouraging words. Meanwhile, a flusteered moderator kept calling ff)r order. 'nle only one who didn't seem bothered by It all was Beame.

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"I like a Big Apple, but not apple pie," he joked and !!uggested that Kay "better take some lessons in pitchIng. He's not a good shot." When a reporter asked If he were shaken, an Irritated Beame snapped, "What? DQn't make an assassination thing outta this!" Kay, a member of a group that throws pie for pay, was taken to the local precinct and released when the Mayor declined to press charges. Kay phoned The Post last night, described himself as a "write-i.n" mayoral candidate on the "Pot-Pie" party, and said he "pied" Beame to protest the Mayor's candidacy. The star of the evening, In fact, was clearly the voluble audience - a hissing, booing and cheering group, stocked with supporters from each camp. They seemed better girded for combat than did thheir candidates. '"11lank God" for the piethrowing inddent, said Cuomo afterwards with a laugh. "Othel"\l,;se we may have bad trouble staying awake."

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~ By JERRY CAPECI !ul of coconut cu::.lard pie ~nshlngton on L,June 29, ..: 'll1e Watergate Alumni on the rlg'ht side of hi~ n.eck, 969. From l•hat dale until .... Assn.- John Dean, John Ehr- courtesy of Al!tQJ'l K11..) 1~ ept. 28, L971, he _paJd lhe :l lichman and Herbert Kalm- Ylppie. who h. as also .thr:_o.wn ot·mer New York Ctty detec'"' bach - took the Witness ·~~l)Jm~isLWil~tan~ F . ive ~ salary o! $22,000 :~ ~ stand In Brooklyn Federal·. J!!ICkley Jr. an!l ~n.·~·~ ·E>ar.• hl Court today where their Daniel Patnck Moy:llftan, anl 0 h 0 \Vfi- .Ehrli !Ui. O r-11 n Sept . 28, h e Sa 'd I , 0 famed bagman, Anthony \ v 0 $Pat aL c. ta · • 'turned ovt'r all the records ~ <Tony Ul Ulasewlcz Is on l ~ashln~lon two year-; ago. Jto Cautlleld, during a meet~ trial on charges of filing Kay said he threw loday's lng in CaJilornla and handed ~ false Income tax returns pie because "the Yl;pples are over $20,000 In $100 bills. On ... during 1971 and 1972. opposed to the crimes and another occasion, he gave t;i The trio were all govern- \ pollee-state tacUcs being CauJ.field $30,CfJO. But, he tes~ ment witnesses. But none was · waged on the people." He tlfll"d, he never told Caulflt-ld able to say that Ulasewlcz · added: "This Is a prelude to 1 lo give the money to Ula~ was directly paid some the big protest at the in-] sewicz. ~ $40,000 In $100 bills which he ~atlon fn Washln~!' Internal Revenue Setvlce ~ belated!~ rt-ported . 011 hl.s Be f 0 r e ·m&wTcz was lawyer James M. Malone tes~ federal mcome tax teturns. slapped with the pie, he titled that when he interThe problem with the gov- heard three Wate1·glllt.e big- viewed Ulasewlcz In Februft'nment case 1.s that John wigs talk about his opera- ary 1975 the undercover agent Caulfield, who was Ulase- tions. Dean and Ehrlichman admitted he had put most of wlcz' hoss In the While testified about their brlet that money Into a safety House spying operations, Is dealings with him. Kalmbach deposit box. refusing to testify. s poke of Inches-thick stacks Malone said Ulasewlcz had Ulasewlcz, who l:~ughs a of $100 bills. But he couldn't told him he put the first lot, was even able to make say he !mew Ulasewicz had $20,000 In a box, and when light of being hit with a pie kept them !or himself. he received $25,000 of the on the street outside the Kalmbach, as sert-ne as he $30,000 payment he had to courthouse during the noon- was dul'ing Watergate h em·time recPss. ings and trials, told how he s:;::mas~vicz recelv<'d a ha~t!;) had first . met Ula.'!ewlcz i~ \E. t x·

.

rt>nt a larger hox to hold cash. He testified Ulasewl had told him he wlthd $5000 "for whatever n· he had, and rt>porll'd It" lncomt" tax, leaving $40. in the bank. Malone !';aid Ulasewlcz him he had been wo without pay because bach h:.d promised him " money" to start his own • tective agency. During time, Ulasewicz lived on pollee pl'nslon, and the he took ft•om the larger In the benk. Questionable "Did he teli ..Y.<J{i whether he received 'that seed money ?" asked Ulasewtez' lawyer, John Sutter. ''No, sir," the IRS man J·eplled, leaving vague whethe~· Tony had never mentioned U, <. whether he never got the money. Ehrllohman, Clo\\, here from a federal pdson CaJ'!IP

ml lila Arizona, ''rhere he is servlnlt' a sentence for his role In the Ellsberg break-in, Wa!'l well-tanned, and his sall:~nd- pf'J)per beard was gone. He now wore a moustache. He said he had m~t Tony U only once, at LaGuardia Alr·port Jn 1969 "in connection with possibla t>mployment for polltJcal chores and Investigations for Mr. Nixon." Caulfield, also a fonner New York detective, brought

Ehrhclunan to meet Uluewlcz and put him on the payroll. Ehrllchman was • Ulen couns~l to Nixon, and his role ln the investigation was that or "a conduit through which the President's requests were passed." Ehrlichman IE>stltled foe 14 minutes, and while pleasant, poised and comioo·table, he offc.-ed no subs ~ antlve testimony on the charge!'!. Dean was the same. Tanned, fit, calling himself a "wrih~1·" - as did Ehrllch1.1an - he said he had met Uhsewicz only once, for five minutes In late 1971 or 1972. ~\~


ntE WASHINGTON STAR Friday, October 26, 1979

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Mmmmmmmmmmmm!

Lemon coconut What does California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. have in common with ERA opponent Phyllis Scblafiy, Watergate figures G. Gordon Uddy, E. How· ard Hunt and Tony Uluewic:z, with Sen. Daniel Pat· rick Moynihan, O.N.Y., former CIA Director William Colby, former New York Mayor Abraham Beame and Steve RubeU of New York's Studio S4 disco? It's piesthro~n their way by Aron Kay. Brown got his yester· day. Lemon coconut. As Brown was walking into the Big Apple's Cooper Union to deliver a speech, Kay emerged from the crowd and scored a slightly off-cen· ter hit on the governor's face. The governor licked his

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A harangue, with meringue

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NEW YORK (UPI) -California Gov. Jerry Brown got it in the face with a lemon custard pie Thursday. The unaDDOUDCeCI presidential hopeful was walking into Cooper Union to deliver a speech when self-styled Yippie Aron Kay suddenly emerged from the crowd, lemon custard pie in band, and scored a slightly off.

center bit on the aide of the governor's face. The governor was unhurt and licked hls fingers reflectively u aides swarmed around him. " The thine that gripes me l.s it's not on my diet," said Brown, after be had cleaned up. Kay, wbo wu not arrested, said the action was a "non-violent pie assassination" that he undertook because be wu upset that Brown was "kissing up to Howard Jarvia"- wbo led the controversial Proposition 13 drive - and not dolna enough about prison reform ln CalJfornla. ~ ..,_ ~

A womaa beIps Gov. Jerry Browa after be was bit ln the face Tbunday wltb a pie.

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The governor, lemon custard still sticking to his shirt cuffs, then went on to deliver his speech. Campaigning he told the students is not "a piece of

cake.'' '

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wa's assallaat, Ylppie Aroa Kay, his flagen. He was.oot arreated.

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t~t61979'

slap for An unidentified woman helps Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. wipe lemon-coconut pie off his face, left, in New York Thursday after he was hit by Yippie pie thrower Aaron Kay, above. Kay charged that Brown wasn't doing enough about the state prison system. Story on Page lOA.


To executives at Motown Records, it must have seemed like watching grass grow. It took singer-composer Stevie Wonder three years to create his latest album, "Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants," which is also the sound track of an upcoming documentary fiJm . Flaunting two resident parrots at a party last week at the New York Botanical Garden, the 29-year-old musician introduced his celebration of flower power, ranging from such compositions as the snappy "Venus' Flytrap and the Bug" to the richly textured " Black Orchid." Wonder, who is blind, wrote and arranged all the music; he also played every instrument himself, aided by meticulously detailed descriptions of each scene from the film's producer. His score is a musical attempt to show " that there is a consciousness that binds aJI living things," says Stevie. "I want people to look at the beauty that's right here on earth that we don't take time to see."

l:und raisers for the Vietnamese boat people will have to get by without a little help from the Beatles. Paul McCartney, 37, dashed speculation about a benefit reunion when he told London reporters, "None of us wanted to do the concert because the Beatles are over and finished with. It would have been impossible to organize even if we'd all wanted to." In town to receive a special medallion from the Guinness Book of World Records as the most successful composer of alJ time, McCartney still had fond memories about the old troupe-particularly his old songwriting partner, John lennon. "Some of my favorite songs are still the early ones I did with the BeaUes," he recalled. "John was great in developing or even reforming a song. We'd be working away, not getting anywhere, and John would walk in, rearrange things a bit-and we were off."

"Two, four, six, eight-pornography is woman-hate!" Where better to protest "Brutality Chic" than the heart of pornodom-so more than 5,000chanting feminists, students and activists mobilized by Women Against Pornography took their campaign for the dignity and rights of women past the dimly lit sex shops and garish peep shows of Times Square. Led by Bella Ab:wg, Susan Brownmiller and Gloria Steinem, the New York group carried placards and a red banner protesting that pornography exploits women and encourages violence against them. "Pornography is to women what KJan literature is to blacks or Nazi propaganda is to Jews," says author Steinem. Pornography and erotica are often confused, she says. "Pornography is the product of woman-hatred, marked by cruelty or violence and shouldn't be confused with erotica, which is rooted in the idea of free will and love."

J

Coeducation at Yale IS again making news- al the Yale DaiJy News. The country's oldest college daily has its first female editor in chief, Anne Gardiner Perkins, 20, a history major from Baltimore who helped trigger the Yale provost's resignation last spring with an expose documenting $67,000 worth of renovations to his university-owned home. The new editor takes over a chair previously occupied by William F. Buckley Jr. and Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart. "It's a hard tradition to follow," she says, "but I'm dedicated. I hope that this doesn't inflate my ego."

_j

Nf\1 SWEE.K / I'O VE.'IofRER 5. 1'179

l s ometimes a campaigning pol-

l itician gets a respite from rub-

ber chicken. So it was last week when California Gov. Jerry Brown sampled a lemon coconut cake--but the confection was not exactly savored: about to make an appearance at a New York City school, Brown was creamed by Yippie Aaron Kay. The governor, complained Kay, had failed to improve California prisons and not pushed hard enough again t nuclear energy. "And they say campaigning is no piece of cake," aid Brown gamely. 路'What gripes me is that it's not on my diet." BARBARA GRAUSTARK

59


------------~---....--.-

. ...

IPI Trf,pJu.Jtu

Governor Brown licked pie off his fingers as a ide Jacques Barzaghi stood by

The Governor Tokes It in Stride New \'ork Governor Brown got bit in the face with a lemon custard pie ~esterday. The unannounced presidential capdidate - -\\-.3S --\\ -,-,'allffijg nm ~01J]Ter emon. cienee -an arts college, to delh·er a speech when self-styled Yippie Aron Kay suddenly emerged from the c·rowd, lemon custard pie in hand, and scored a slightly off-center hit on the side of the governor's race. The go\ernor \\8S unhurt. and licked his fml!ers reflec·lively as aides S'-"armed around him After BrO\\ n cleaned up a bit. but "ith lemon custard still sticking to his shirt cuffs. he "ent on to addrPSS about 950 students. "1 was delayed a little bit when I ran into a feUo\\ with a pie." Brown told the students, \\ ho responded \\ itb a mas~ groan. ''The) say car.J-

paigning is not a piece of cake," addPd 1he goH~rnor.

--~-~A~ro:.:,n Ka , the thrower_~--"The thing that really gripes me wasn't on my diet."

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that it

Kay. \\ ho wac; not arrested, said the action was a "non-violent pie assassination·· that be undertook because he was upset that Bro'' n wa<> "kissing up to Howard Jarvis." lwho led the controversial Proposition 13 drivel and not doing enough about prison reform in California. Kav claims to lla\ P scored 14 lltts on prominent figures in the past six years and to have been arrested only once. when he was fined $150. Among his targets ha,·e bePn S<'nator Daniel Patrick Moynihan. D-N.Y.. former ::'\ew York .Mayor Abraham Beame, and lm·mer C'L\ director Wilham Colby


¥• ·Friday briefing 2A

The Miami News

Friday, September 2, 1977

About People --Pie throwers really .-have got the ir crust Some claim the CIA is behind it. Others blame it on Soupy Sales. Whatever, all clean-living God-fearing Americans should be concerned about this latest trend in American politics. We're talking about the • sudden epidemic of pie-throwing that threatens the very core of our society. In the last few years everyone from his Divine Holiness the Maharaj Ji to Patnck Moynihan to Watergater E. Howard Hunt have been targets of these pieromaniacs. This week, Big Apple Mayor Abe Beame

:.

.-

was on the receiving end of an apple-pie-hurling hit man from something called the Pot Pie Party. And Ronald Reagan. attending a banquet in Manhattan. also was the target of a pie-throwing conspiracy. Reagan narrowly missed getting hit by not one but two lemon meringue a man • a woman ry pies into the Statler Hilton Hotel where Ronnie was speaking. Even more d1sturbing IS news that the pie throwers aren't just zeroing on the political upper crust but for a price will splat any celebrity. Yesterday, Roy Rogers, the legendary King of the Cowboys, was smacked in the face with a concoction of oatmeal, cottage cheese and whipped cream. Roy, who was attending the opening of one of his fast-food restaurants in Fairfax, Va., w1ped the glop from his face an muttered at the 17-year-old piepetrator: "I hope they stuff a Roy Rogers hamburger down his throat.'" Perhaps that's a radical solution, but somethrng clearly has to be done. If it can happen to Roy Rogers. no one in America is safe.


I I

Pie-in-the-Eye Politics Self-titled Yippie Aaron Kay of New York City gave former U. N. Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan a big hand while the Harvard professor and candidate for the Senate made a walking tour in lower Manhattan. The trouble was. in Kay's hand was a cream pie which the Yip. pie pushed into the candidate's face. Kay said that be bit Moynihan with the pie as a protest against his national and international policies. Police seized Kay, but Moynihan declined to press charges.

Il'•'

I


Seattle Post-lntelllcJenc.,., Mon., Sept. 6, 1976

Take That!

PATRICK MOYNIHAN-TARGET OF SELF-STYLED YIPPIE Pie was pushed into the Senate candidate's face

Pie SJ11acks l\'loyiiihatt's Face The ~W

YORK -

•\ . Thnts A banana cream

p1e was mashed into the face of Daniel P. Moynihan a he ~mpaigned vesterdav on the Lo\\ er East S1de of ~fanhattan ''Fascl pig," ~elled a young man in the crowd that gathered around Moymhnn. who is nmnin_g for the

Democratic nonunation for

United

States cnator from ·ew York. After hurhng the epithet. the ~oung man then pu hcd the pie mlo the cand1· dale·~ face. Tite pollee seized the young man The cro\\ d offered handkerchief to help \\lpe off the mess The cand1d~te declined to press charge and contmued with h1s bandshakmg. And the '""'UD man wa permitted lo tea\e. "'It 1t cared Ule hell out of me," ' - n said when he had returned late afternoon. A p1e In the 1 h l ~ the stuff or i>la~ck b 1 ~n age -.of polittcal

as:.asslnaltons, 1t \\as, smd the hak· en candidate, "a vwlent act." Later the pie thrower, Aaron Kay. of Greenwich Village, said he was a member or the Youth Internatlon I Party, the so-called "Yippies.'' He said he had hit Moynihan "because Moynihan has high tastes.'' He eemed surprtsed when someone tolcl him that Moynihan had been born in the Hell's Kitchen section of ~tanhnt· t&n and had worked in his youth as a lon~shoreman.

F'or half an hour or o the candi· date, his long gr.aymg hair sticky \\ith cream from the pie, which stamed his \\ hite shirt. continued to shake htmd and to accept sympath~ . Yesterday s was not Ute fll"st inctdent of trouble around the Moynihan-for· Senator campaign. For se eral da~s. act:ording to his campaign manager. andy F ruc1 er, there had been abuSive telephone calls to headquarter On Friday tbere 1\a a telephoned bOmb threat


\

FINAL

*

*

12lst YEAR-VOL 139

*

Capi-taland's S.Colld Clus Postnt Pttd " ••bony "' Y lf 76 b y T"- ..ttrsl Cer•

MAKE MOYNIHAN'S MOCHA CREAM- Candidate for the Democr~tic Senate nomiution Daniel Patrick Moynihan, In a departure from the normal food umplint enta9tdln by office seekers in New York City, get a mochel cream pie 111 the fate Svndiy during a wallling tour in lower Manhattan. A1ron KiJY,

ALBANY. NEW YORK, 12201. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 6. 1976

describing himself 1 member of the " yippies," said his act as 1 protest agil inst Moynihan's nation11 end i"ternation11 POlicies. 5te stories, Page 6. lAP Wtrephotol


00: Scientologists admit infiltrating Justice~·Dept. reb of Scientology ad- sher" responsible for two killings iltrated the Justice De- and a dOleD other attacks arrested a

an(

be Internal Revenue

.,veral other federal ~bilarre effort to steal Clocuments. A federal aw8d to decide today nd nine leading aeien' _,._y of conspiracy based ~ation in stacks of docu· menta submitted by proiecutors.

~--h

sus):!ect just hours after the body of the latelt alaaher victim waa disCov·

ered in a Loop station. The suspect - his clothing stained with blood and a blood-smeared knife in his porket - was arrested in the sub-

e:r

'lOB for Defenae The Carter administration, reto pressure in the Senate to increase military spending, is in the Jut stages of preparing a budget request that would eall for about a $?A) billion increase for the Defense Department in the next fiseal ~ar, government officials said. The Of!ieiala said that at a meeting at the Pentagon, defense and White Bouse budget aides diacuased ~ total military budget for fiseal year 1981 ranging !rom $151 billion to '16211Ulion.

tbaO& niillion ~lei can muster in 1980. ~;Bnewed .thell' drive to boolt blael: w.ter relistration by·2n percent ira. time for next year's eleetioD-. ;\\e drive, which was· statted in 19'78 •d coiltfnued throgh 19'18, will tari't 15 kq states and 41 are11:witlin those Btates for maxvoter registratii'n efforts.

Im;-

Sluher IU&peet held · Police buntng a ..subway ala-

Young bab_..s Cu'ter Former drewY tion plani 't.Q fipt a loWing "an ..,..~,._.n freedom &peed with ~wa D-Mass., that • . nrMidml tA)o slowly to ~. ButY

baeJt President wofk very' hard

s~ding

·Biaek voter drive Is on . 4 eoalltto'- or ·black leaden, atnilllng the pOteilt political power

way a few -.cks!Aom tile scene of the latest

King holiday Rep. John a bill he introdacet! Ulther King Jr.'s al.'boliday wtll reaeh Mat week.

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N' Plloeo

Gov. Jerry Brown of California licks his thumb after being hit In the

face with a lemon-coconut pie yesterday. He was entering the Cooper Union in New York to deliver a speech. Police said self-styled Ylppie Aron Kay threw the pie.

· stakes in SAL hi l' and far ~ore thiP.aJ security than ant. unrelated Jaguc.'' nij; ' ment Wit an i to lor the ~itc ba forSALT•.

She she

E


weatner Today-Sunny a nd cool, hiiUl 52 to 56. Cold tonight, low 28 to 36. The chance o! rain is ·near zero. Satur· day-Sunny, not as cool, hl~h ncar 60. Yeslerday--3 p. m~ AQI; 50; temp. range: 57·43. Details, Page B2.

102nd Yeat•

No.325

0 n

18iA,

W asl)lnS:~O!I

P ost Co.

FR I D 'A Y

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THE WASHINGTON STAR Friday, October 28, 1979

People

r

Kennedy Released

fingers r /

'"'l'b ~y

Yesterday 24-year-old David Kennedy, son of Ethel and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, was discharged from Boston's Massachusetts General Hospital following treatment for a heart disorder. Kennedy was told by doctors to continue to take oral antibiotics to complete his course of treatment for bacterial endocarditis, an ailment often seen among patients with a history of heart disease and also common among drug addicts wbo develop the infections from using dirty hypodermic needles. He'd been previously hospitalized for heart problems.

rem:rf' sticltill tielca1 IDg is under be"' Jarvit abou'

路The Bride Wore Beige

es.

The location of the honeymoon is undisclosed, but Janet Lee Bouvier Aacbllldoa. 71, was married yesterday to her friend since childhood, Bin1bam Morris, 73, a retired New York investment bauker. Attending were two of Auchinchloss' daughters by ber first marriage - Jacqueline Onuais and Lee RadzlwW - and about 2S other relations. Radziwill pronounced the wedding a "haRPY family gathering that couldn't have been lovelier. The bride wore a beige street-length dress for the informal Episcopal ceremony in the Iivlng room of her home in Newport, Rl. It was ber third marriage, his second.

Quotable "Wby was Gov. (Lee) Dreyfus elected? Beause be said be didn't know much about sovemment" "Are you sayins you're alrllid tbe sovernor would nunk tbeexam?" "No. (The score) would be so msb it a~uldn 't be calculated." - A#leiChotlge between Stote s-.

w---.os

Gerald Lorge oncl Corll'holllpson

the Senate

. . . . . bill that would heM ........ ,alitical conclidat.s to toke ciwia-.

. U.S. Government Report:

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in "SU

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Mmmmmmmwmmmm!

Lemon coconut What does California Gov. Ecllllancl G. Brown Jr. have in common with ERA opponent Phyllis Schlafly, Watergate figures G. Gordon Ucldy, E. How路 ard Hunt and Tony Uluewicz, with Sen. Daniel Pat路 rick Moynihan, D-N.Y., former CIA Director William Colby, former New York Mayor Abnbam BeaDle md Steve R.abell of New York's Studio 54 disco? It's piesthrown their way by Aron Kay. Brown got his yesterday. Lemon coconut. As Brown was walking into the Big Apple's Cooper Union to deliver a speech, Kay emerged from the crowd and scored a slightly off-cen路 ter bit 011 tbe governor's face. The governor licked his

cHE to

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I t t


California Gov. Edmund G. (Jerry) Brown Jr. licks hio; ringers after beinr hit with a pie thrown by Ylppie

leader Aron Kay. Brown was on his way to an appear路 ance at a school in New York. Tbe pie was lemon-coconut.


Political flavors

Gov Brown caught a lemon-coconut p1e the hard way today at Cooper Union, 10 New Y.()rl( C1t y. Here he w1pes the

residue from his face as a startled supporter attempts to help. Full story and another photo I Page 46


THE MIAMI HERALD Friday, Oct. 28, 1979

~----~PEOPLECOLUM

l DON'T YOU just bate it when people wbo get whapped with pies steadfastly refuse to get fu路 rious and immediately break their assailants' legs Uke any rational person would do but in路 stead cheerfully laugh it all off and seize the occasion to make a bunch of lame jokes? It wouldn't be so bad if they weren't aU the same jokes, every TIME. Makes you want to hit them witb another pie on the spot. "And they say cmpalgnlng is a piece of cake!" California G_ov~ ivry Br,own chuckled in New York

- Auoc:lated Prl!ss

Thursday after ptting pied head-on by a flying lemon cream at a student rally. "The thing that gripes me Is it's not on my diet!" Tbe pieman was, of course, our old friend Aron Kay, noted Yippie marauder, and his motives were cloaked in as much obscurity as they usually are: Kay was mumbling something about How路 ard Jarvis and the CaiUomia prison system as cops escorted him from the scene. Charges weren't pressed.


PEOPLE IN THE NEWS "

(API

California Gov. Edmud G. Browa was creamed with a lemon coconut pie in New York City Thursday, but licked off his fingers, wiped off the goo and joked about the event later later with his audience of Cooper Union students. "They say campaigning is not a piece of cake," said Brown. "The thing that really gripes me is that it wasn't on my diet." The piethrower was idenUfied as AroD Kay, the same Yippie who bas similarly attacked Sen. Daaiel Patrlek Moyailuul, former York Mayor Abrallam Beame, former CIA head WUUam Colby and other celebriUes. Kay said be is upset by

Brown's relaUonsbip with Boward Jarvis, the man wbo campaigned for California's ProposiUon 13 tu cuts. Kay also said Brown basn't done enough for prison refonn. Kay is not a prisoner. He was not arrested for his pie plot.

David K.euedy, 24, son of tbe late hrn [!leasedJ

Rabert KCIUN!IIy, has


People, and places

Margaret 9•

ago t• town

CLEVELAND (AP) - The crowds following Britain's Margaret during her

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NO PIECE OF CAKE - California's Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown is assisted by an unidentified woman as he wipes the remains of a lemon-coconut pie from his face in New York Thursday.

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Brown hit with pie at N. Y. college

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NEW YORK (AP)- California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says lemon-coconut pie isn't on his diet. but he got it on the side of the head just the same. Brown, an unannounced candidate for president, was entering Cooper Union, a science and arts college in Manhattan, for a speaking engagement Thursday when marksman Aron Kay let fly.

Kay, who said Brown was his 14th hit in the past six years, counts Sen. Daniel Moynihan, DN.Y., former New York Mayor Abraham Beame and former ClA director Wilfuun Colby among his victims. A spokesman for Brown said no charges would be filed. Kay's only voiced reason for hitting the governor was a claim that Brown was "not doing anything for the prison system and prisoners in California." ~

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Hit and Run Yippie party pie-thrower Aron Kay has claimed E. Howard Hunt as his latest victim. Kay hit the convicted Watergate conspirator, released from prison a month ago, with a coconut cream pie to the head yesterday evening in the corridor of the RCA Building in New York. His previous victims have included William F. Buckley Jr. and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Kay then went to the nearby offices of the Associated Preas to say he did the deed because of Hunt's alleged "ties to anti-Castro groups." Hunt, on his way to tape a "Tomorrow" program interview for NBC, said," I was surprised and a little disappointed. I thought that the level of political debate in America had advanced considerably beyond that since the time I was put away."

re


.,

and Clldii't appear at the

dinner, saytn~r sbe lm't getting involved ln anythinK political now •

-----

GOv. Carey ana the legislative leaders have agreed the primary date will be March 2~. just one week after Illinois' primary. A strong win in New York by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy over ~nt Carter, which many political observers feel is likely, would do much to boost his candidacy toward the Democratic convention next surnDJer. Agreement bet ween Carey, Assembly Speaker Stanley Fink and Senate Minority Leader Manfred Ohrt"DStein was worked out in a Manhattan meet· ing earlier this w~. The Assembly is ex pected to set the date today, and the Senate will follow next week. The primary date had to be changed beeauw

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1.11

b

the original date, April l, fell on the first night or the Jewish holiday of Passover. But now that Kennedy is a bout to make a formal race, Mareh ~ is very im· portant for the Mas· sachussetts Senator. 1be first primary is 1D New Hampshire, on Feb. 26. Kt"nnedy WJJI probably win big in his home state on March 4.

,_t D11C11D b¥ LDuls Liotta

Tile "'a" untl egg )IOllc oa U! fact! i.t JIOtle otlaer tho" Calij'or~~ta'a Gov. JeTT71 Browft. He coMglat a pte (c:ocmud· le..o~~)

wi&Ue addrea8ing atudeflf3 at Cooper Union, tlae tlaf'OtoOer beiftg Yippje Aaron KaJie, wlao MOU3 a laabit Q/ that sort of thing. Brow,. took it good •uMOrfldl., au declined to jtle .,.., claar~ agaiut Kaye.

But the President is ex· pect.ed to sweep tllrft southern primaries Florida, Alabama and Georgia, all on )118J'('h 11. The primary baDot will list both ~mocratic candidates by name. Each man will ret·eivt" a

nurubt>r

of delegates ba.Yd on a proportional

repre~ntation to tbe total vote he receives.


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