learst defense claims evidence illegal Associated Press 'T'Vitk i'iiV*11 \* Vw^ai-inor T il»*111\-mn\r ^ JAN FRANCISCO — Patricia rst’s defense attorneys have phed a vigorous assault against ! of the most stinging evidence _|ist her, seeking to have it stric- J as the product of an illegal h. S. District Court Judge Oliver rter scheduled an evidentiary ng outside the presence of the oday at the request of defense sel F. Lee Bailey. The judge predicted the hearing would take at least several hours, in terrupting the prosecution’s rebuttal testimony and virtually erasing any chance of sending the bank robbery case to the jury by the end of the week. Bailey wants Carter to throw out the controversial “Tania Interview” as well as other documents the gov ernment contends prove Miss Hearst willingly embraced the re volutionary goals of the Symbionese oday last chance register to vote if Gale Sia 1 feet witbl ith $25,® •d re was hairmaa will call ij tassage. ry Cora itrolbillti lout Honsl chance moved aanel. lay is the last day to register to in the upcoming city and school [d elections. To register, persons must com- (e a registration form at the County Tax Assessor- lectors office at East 26th and N. ps Ave. in Bryan. Completed is may also be mailed to the tax te but must be postmarked by J night. Stater certificates will be mailed to the registrant’s local mailing ress. Indents may register at a booth, rated by Texas A&M Student [eminent, on the first floor of the lorial Student Center from 9 ItoSp.m. for last-minute regist- hark food fishy bject Anyone who has voted in a local election within the last three years need not re-register. Any change of address from the date of the last elec tion should be reported to the tax assessor-collector’s office. The municipal elections will be held April 3. That is also the registra tion deadline for the May 3 county and state elections. Liberation Army. The 29-page “Tania” manuscript — so called for the revolutionary name Miss Hearst said the SLA gave her — contains some of the defen dant’s handwriting and outlines her rejection of her family and her con version to the terrorist doctrines of the SLA. Portions of the document were read to the jury during the trial. Bailey objected Tuesday when U. S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr. attempted to read an agreement be tween the opposing counsels of a list of documents and notebooks found in the San Francisco apartment of SLA members William and Emily Harris, arrested within hours of Miss Hearst last Sept. 18. “It has come to my attention that the search which we thought was made legally at the time of arrest has now been ruled illegal by a judge on the state bench,” Bailey said. Some of the material, which could link Miss Hearst to planned bank robberies during her 19 months in the underground, prompted her to invoke the 5th Amendment 42 times last month. Bailey told Carter that a Superior Court judge in Los Angeles had de clared the search of the Harrises’ hideout illegal and asked Carter to do the same. Carter said he was aware of Judge Mark Brandler’s ruling. Brandler said the FBI had the apartment under surveillance for more than 30 hours and had ample time to get a search warrant but failed to do so. He refused to accept as evidence in the Harris assault case in Los Angeles any material found in their apartment. Browning objected to the hearing, saying the defense should have filed the motion to suppress the evidence long ago. Bailey angrily informed the prosecutor that he had been unaware that the legality of the search was in dispute. Court was recessed 20 minutes early Tuesday to prepare for the hearing. Bailey dashed out to fill a speaking engagement, but his as sociate, Al Johnson, said, “If the search and seizure were illegal, the evidence derived in that search would be stricken from the record of this case. ” The government’s chief attorney has been foiled in his attempts to question the defendant’s activities from September 1974 until her ar rest a year later. He claims she was out “casing banks with the Harrises, ” but Miss Hearst refuses to testify about the year. Bailey will not let the defendant testify about the year she spent with the Harrises in Sacramento and San Francisco, arguing that it could lead to further indictments and retalia tion from radical elements. Browning indicated that he had at least four more rebuttal witnesses, including the manager of a bank in Marysville, Calif., of which a diag ram was found in the Harrises’ apartment with Miss Hearst’s fingerprints. The Harris search was disputed because they were arrested outside on the sidewalk near their apart ment. The search of Miss Hearst’s apartment is not in conflict, Bailey said, because the 22-year-old news paper heiress was captured inside and California law allows for a war rantless search in the immediate vic inity of an arrest. THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MAR. 3, 1976 PEANUT CAEEEKSY 813 OLD COLLEGE ROAD 846-9978 WEDNESDAY NIGHT OUT All Bar Drinks V2 Price All Beer 25c NO COVER CHARGE Bonus Wednesday Night Special: 7:00 - 8:00 P.M. 10c BEER “ANOTHER PEANUT GALLERY ORIGINAL’ Page 5 1, D-; insistedl itil the [972 a| lied Sal mail” lonsumer attitudes toward shark food item is among topics for the t Tropical and Subtropical leries Conference March 7-10 at uinta Royale Motor Inn in Cor- imeasd Christi. ittee. he conference, sponsored by rasA&M University and the Na- louse Bit 1 y Fisheries Institute in coopera- itteeonn | w j{} 1 ^e National Marine 'red hit jh er i e s Service, will include ses- ins on aquaculture, minced fish, opponeat nomics and marketing, and gen- cizedbyn 1 technology. A shrimp sym- mittee' !■ him will also be featured. , chair© her 40 papers will be presented ers had olsuch topics as smoked mullet, the ey weir $uli of Mexico shrimping industry, "llfish poisoning and shrimp iulture. emonstrations of new products | equipment, including minced equipment, will also be pre led, said Bryant F. Cobb III, con- nce coordinator and associate lessor of animal science at Texas ksign historian speak here A pioneer in environmental de- who also ranks as one of the ing architectural historians will featured as a visiting centennial fessor March 23-24. Dr. James M. Fitch, professor of "hitecture and historic preserva- at Columbia University will ap- ras a guest of the College of Ar- Itecture and Environmental De- In, said Dr. John Garner, spokes- |n for the college. Fitch will give a public lecture March 23 at 4 p.m. in the Architec- hire Building auditorium on “Ar chitecture Worth Saving. ” |He will also conduct several for mal and informal meetings with fa culty nd students and is scheduled for a second visit April 20-21. Aggie Players offer fairytale A Hans Christian Andersen fairytale, “The Emperor’s New lothes,” is in rehearsal by the ®ie Players for March 30-31 d April 1-2 performances. The three-act comedy by Char lotte Chorpenning is presented as he Aggie Players’ children’s pro- luction. The play will appear in the Judder Center forum nightly at 7 m. Admission will be 50 cents for children and $1 per adult. ® 37i£T £. z?* ToWri ^ CoonKs Cfr) 84k~ G»ni MANOR EAST MALL, BRYAN