PEANUTS By Charles m. schaiz ThrsG counts in first-degree Jury convicts Boyle THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1974 Page 3 AW6E WO NEEP TO EAT A BETTER BREAKFAST, 5IR, OR HAVE WUR EH'ES CMECKEP OR START e0lN6 TO BED EARLIER 0 worrid ition atls s univei. •e not hi. it’3 right ►! If joe cas AiJ u, then I lace. Hi! )n’t mess ; is. hitney t Student ter than Require- 2.5 GPU ‘t'OU'VE NEVER VNPERSTQOP HAVE VOII, MARGIE ,THAT UIHEN A rERSONI COMPLAINS, HE Q0E5N‘T WANTA SOLUTION, HE WANTS SVMPATHV.'i NO, I ADMIT I'VE ^TOP NEVER UNDERSTOOD CALL! NO THAT, 5IR... ^ ME "^IR"/ PALACE 822 5811 HELD OVER 2nd BIG WEEK Ftubber - 4;20-M5 Superdad 6 p.m.-9:3Q ALL FAMILY...ALL FUN...ALL DISNEY! road’s about to get t ns a i^3 Busrr 4 .. ■* . ?;* ; WEST WORLD' YUl BRYNNER FttCHARD BENJAMIN. JAMES BROUN Written and Creeled by MICHAEL CRICHTON • Produced by PAUL N LAZARUS M jpfej MimtuMMiwasiPrag- | panavision* metrocolor *" ^^ndTColor Hit at 9:45 "Solvent Green" (PG) At 8:05 EaS,SCr ““ Robert Redtord in "Tell. Them Willie Boy Is Here" (PG)_ At 9:40 Frank Sinatra n "Von Ryan’s Express" in murder trial MEDIA, Pa. (A*) — Former United Mine Workers President W. A. “Tony” Boyle was con victed Thursday night of three counts of first-degree murder in the 1969 slaying of union rival Joseph “Jock” Yablonski and his wife and daughter. “This is the end of the road,” said special prosecutor Richard A. Sprague, who had doggedly pursued the trail of the Yablon ski slayers for more than four years. Boyle’s attorney said he would file a motion for a new trial. The jury of nine men and three women took just 41/2 hours to reach a verdict. The convic tions carry a mandatory life sentence. No date for sentenc ing was announced. “Guilty, first degree,” jury foreman Clyde M. Parris re sponded three times to the in dictment read by Judge Francis J. Catania of Delaware County Common Pleas Court. The 72-year-old Boyle exhibited no emotion as the verdict was read, but his face appeared drawn as he waved to his wife while being escorted from the courtroom and voiced a “goodbye.” Boyle’s wife, Ethel, fidgeted in her seat and strained for a look at her husband. Next to her, B o y 1 e’s daughter, Antoinette, rubbed her eyes and appeared to be holding back tears. Kenneth Yablonski, son of the slain man, stood with tears on his cheeks and remarked to Sprague: “You don’t know how happy I am. There’s no words that I can express.” “Jock” Yablonski, his wife and a daughter were shot fatally by three hired gunmen as they slept in their beds in the family’s sprawling red brick home in Clarksville, Pa. Their bullet- riddled bodies were discovered Jan. 6, 1970. Boyle’s was the fifth murder conviction Sprague obtained in the case. Three others have plead- Research studies ‘fatness 9 “Why does today’s woman get fat” is one of the questions that two Texas A&M research facili ties are attempting to answer by monitoring the dietary habits of 150 nine-year-old girls in the Bryan-College Station area in a five year program. Dr. Roscoe W. Lewis of the De partment of Biochemistry and Biophysics and Dr. Alice C. Stubbs, head of the consumer re search center, are taking part in an eight-state project to study the importance of nutrition for girls in adolescent growth and future pregnancy. The group of girls, 50 black, 50 Mexican-American and 50 white from different economic back grounds, were tested for the first time in the five-year program during spring break at TAMU. They were subjected to person ality tests, physical measurements and were asked to recall every thing they consumed in the last 24-hours. The information is turned into statistical data which, Dr. Lewis said “will determine what influ ences economic levels and ethnic backgrounds have on what the girls eat, what their intake pat terns are while it checks the nu tritional condition of the subjects in the study.” Eventually, he said, guidelines for nutritional educa tion and food programs for im provement of health will be pro posed. Dr. Lewis does studies on blood Renowned smile sets sail for Japan PARIS LP)—The world’s most famous smile will be packed into an air-conditioned steel alloy con tainer next week and flown to Japan under unprecedented se curity precautions. Officials of the Louvre museum and the French Ministry of Cul tural Affairs are guarding de tails of the Mona Lisa’s departure arrangements like a state secret. Armed guards will accompany Leonardo da Vinci’s unique por trait every inch of the way to the National Museum in Tokyo, where it is to be exhibited from April 19 to June 10. It will be only the third time the picture has left France since King Francois I bought it for his Fontainebleau Palace early in the 16th century. Leonardo painted the portrait of Mona Lisa del Giocondo, the wife of an Italian nobleman, in his native Florence in about 1503. Almost nothing is known of his beautiful model. The picture, painted on a sin gle 21-by 30-inch slab of wood, was in Leonardo’s luggage when the artist came to France in 1516 to join the king’s court. Francois liked Mona Lisa’s sensuous face QUEEN TONITE — 7:30 - 9:20 “BAMBOO GODS” (R) WJJM.IJBJHi TONITE AT 8:00 P. M. “STUDENT TEACHERS” At 9:40 p. m. John Wayne In “BIG JAKE” (PG) The Opera and Performing Arts Society presents ITZHAK PERLMAN, VIOLINIST “Whatever he plays is infused with singing vitality and executed with virtuoso authority.’’—Peter G. Davis, The New York Times Exclusive Management, Hurok Concerts, Inc. April 29, 1974 8 p.m. Rudder Center Auditorium Tickets at Rudder Center Box Office Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Telephone 845-2916 OPAS is a functioning committee of the Town Hall Committee of TAMU. immediately and bought the painting for 4,000 pieces of gold. For years it hung in the royal bathroom. Napoleon kept the Mona Lisa in his bedroom briefly, but in 1804 it was part of the royal treasure he gave to the museum he founded in the former royal palace at the Louvre. In 1911, an Italian named Per ugia stole the Mona Lisa and took her to Italy where he kept her hidden for two years. He was quickly arrested when he tried to sell the picture, and the Mona Lisa returned to home at the Louvre. In 1962, she went by ship to the United States for her first foreign exhibition. The 352-pound container specially built for her journey will be used again to take her to Japan, but there will be an additional outer steel crate to avoid any variations of pres sure during the flight. Throughout the journey and during her exhibition in Japan, the Mona Lisa will be kept at the same temperature, pressure and humidity as she is accustomed to in the Louvre, to avoid the slightest risk of subtle changes which could harm the fragile wood. An international consortium is insuring the picture during its absence from the Louvre, but officials refused to indicate the value placed on it. “There is no such thing as a value for the Mona Lisa,” one official said. “She has no price.” The double container is stuffed with ultralightweight insulating material to make it unsinkable and it would float to the surface even if the plane carrying if plunged into the sea. A weight of half a ton would be needed to drag the container under the wa ter. Despite all the precautions, the Mona Lisa’s guardians are a little nervous. “Sending her to Japan is a really exceptional gesture of friendship,” one official said. “We will all breathe easier when she is safely back home.” determinations and urine analy sis of the girls while Dr. Stubbs gathers the information on food patterns, nutritional knowledge, diet histories and body measure ments. Dr. Lewis went on to say that a lack of information about youngsters choices of food in the southern states has prevented an estimation of their effect on nu trition. As a result, the informa tion shortage prevents identifica tion of what food habits need to be changed and makes it impos sible to design food programs to secure the best nutritional re sults. “We want to know why women today are prone to obesity and why they have other nutritional problems,” Lewis continued. “The age 9-12-years-old just prior to the child-bearing age is an excel lent time to study the girls and note the beginning of physical trends. When all the clinical in formation is in, we hope to predict what the kids will become when they grow up.” The program, entitled “Patterns of Food Intake and Nutritional Health of Girls,” was established in the eight southern states “be cause of the diversity of popula tion groups and the effect of numerous environmental and cul tural backgrounds which may in fluence food habits.” The study also noted that the nutritional health of children in the test states of Alabama, Georgia, Ken tucky, Louisiana, Tennessee, Tex as, Oklahoma, and Virginia ranges from poor to excellent. bulletin board SATURDAY SCUBA CLUB has a planned drive for the weekend. Meet at the dive locker at 8 :30 a.m. HONG KONG CLUB will present “The Red Detachment of Women,” a movie from the People’s Republic of China, at 1:30 p.m. in Room 102, Zachry En gineering Center, admission free. MONDAY SCUBA CLUB will meet at 9 p.m. in Room 146, Physics Building. SENIOR CLASS will elect class agent at the Association of Former Students induction banquets. TUESDAY ASSOCIATION OF BIOENGINEERS will meet in Room 333-B of the Zachry Engineering Center at 7 p.m. ed guilty and a fourth, William Turnblazer, pleaded guilty to a federal charge of conspiring to kill Yablonski. Turnblazer was the principal witness in the Boyle trial. The trail of the conspirators led from Pennsylvania, to Wash ington, D.C., to Cleveland, Ohio and to the coal fields of Kentucky and Tennessee. With the conviction of Boyle, Sprague said the case was fin ished. “Boyle was the originator. We got back to the beginning and that’s where we’ll stop,” he said. “Unfortunately, too often only the people at the bottom are caught and convicted. We get only the puppets and not the puppeteers,” Sprague said. He said the Boyle verdict shows that “effective law enforcement can get to the people at the top.” Sprague had based his case heavily on the testimony of Turn blazer, 52, the only witness to link Boyle directly to the killing. Turnblazer, a lawyer and for mer president of UMW District 19 in Tennessee and Kentucky, had testified that Boyle told him and Albert Pass, another former District 19 officer, that Yablonski had to be killed. Turnblazer said the order was given June 23, 1969, at UMW headquarters in Washington, D.C. as the three men stood outside an elevator for a minute or two. Boyle, who testified in his own defense, denied the charge and said such a meeting never took place. Turnblazer has pleaded guilty to federal charges of conspiring to kill Yablonski. Boyle, who had ruled the 200,- 000-member union with an iron fist for 10 years and was a pro tege of John L. Lewis, was ac cused of masterminding the Dec. 31, 1969 slaying. 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