Page b IHt BAH ALIUN TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1979 the nati No-nuke activists face stiff penalty] You save about one-half the cost of using a moving company by renting a Ryder truck and moving it yourself. Not bad pay for doing your own moving, is it? And, with Ryder, you know that you’re renting a truck from the best- maintained, most dependable fleet in the world. That’s nice to know when you’re rolling across the highway with all of your family and possessions with you. THE TRUCK PROFESSIONALS U RENT M COLLEGE STATION ASK FOR RALPH BRYAN ASK FOR VINCE 693-1313 779-0085 RYDER. THE BEST TRUCK MONEY CAN RENT. United Press International TULSA, Okla. — Some of the 339 anti-nuclear activists arrested Saturday at the Black Fox Station near Inola may face stiffer penalties if they have been arrested on tres pass charges before, Rogers County authorities said Monday. Despite threats that those ar rested would “flood” the Rogers County jail if all of the 339 protes ters cited for illegal entry were not treated equally. Assistant District Attorney R. Richard Sitzman said he would prosecute the demonstrators as individuals if they pleaded not guilty. “As in any case involving repeat offenders, we have the option of ask ing for a stiffer penalty,” Sitzman said. “However, we are not singling out Sunbelt members or leaders. We re not picking on anybody be cause of their political beliefs. ” He said his office would not agree to a mass trial or a trial where the defendants would not have to be present. Protesters arrested in pre vious demonstration were tried as a group and were not required to at tend the trial. Brian Hunt, a co-founder of the Sunbelt Alliance, the group that or ganized the Saturday occupation, said those arrested felt everybody should be subject to the same pen alty. “Our people stand fully prepared to spend time in jail,” Hunt said. “If Rogers County authorities try to single out some as leaders and try to treat them differently, we won’t tol erate it. Our people are prepared to flood the jail. We all crossed the fence together and we all should be treated equally.” Hunt said the Rogers County jail can hold only 35 people and those receiving lesser penalties might re fuse to pay their fines and opt for jail sentences. The group was stopped by Rogers County sheriff s deputies and sheriff Amos Ward placed the demon strators under arrest en masse. They were booked on the unlawful entry charge in mobile vans at the site, given citations and escorted off the property. P Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. 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Kennedy, but 16 years later Rosemary Willis vividly remembers the scene — and what seemed strange about it, even to a 10- year-old. Taken out of school by her par ents so they could watch the motorcade pass through downtown Dallas, Rosemary took off running as the president’s car drew near. She ran alongside the car even after it turned the corner in front of the Texas School Book Depository building. Her white coat made her clearly visible in the famous Zap- ruder film used to document the events of the assassination, and an amateur assassination detective studying the frames 12 years later was startled by the girl’s abrupt halt and turn toward the Texas School Book Depository. David Lui, studying the assas sination for a special project at his Beverly Hills, Calif., high school, realized the little girl’s actions — perhaps a response to the sound of gunfire — came too early in the film, before any shots were be lieved to have been fired. Lui believed that if the little girl had stopped and turned in response to the sound of gunfire, he could refute the numerous conspiracy theories being ad vanced, since the girl’s actions came early enough in the film to give a single assassin enough time to fire all the shots. Lui managed to track down the little girl, Rosemary Willis, now 26, in 1975. The story of his search was published in a copyrighted Los Angeles Times Syndicate story Sunday. Miss Willis told him she had stopped running when she heard the shot. But rather than refuting conspiracy theories, she is con vinced Kennedy’s death was the result of a plot. “I heard three shots and they all came from across the street from the direction of the book de pository,” she said Monday in an interview. “Oswald was up there as clear as could be. I think he was up there on purpose to make people think he was the one. “I remember standing while everyone else was falling to the ground. And in my (peripheral) vision I saw three other figures standing. I saw a man with an open umbrella and beyond him a man behind a lattice-type wall. “And I saw either one or two people on the railroad trestle above. I glanced at the president again for a split second, then when I looked up, the umbrella was down and the man behind the wall had vanished.” “The sounds I heard came from the book depository but they we ren’t necessarily the shots that killed him. Someone with a gun with a silencer could have been in the gutter where they later found shells, or on the railroad trestle or behind the wall.” Miss Willis’ father, Phil, agrees. “There’s no doubt in our mind the final shot that blew his head off did not come from the depos itory. His head blew up like a halo. The brains and matter went to the left and the rear. “The policemen behind had Kennedy’s brains all over his white helmet and windshield. There’s no damn way it (the fatal shot) could have come from the depository. Willis, who like Zapruder had been photographing the scene, immediately took his family to a Kodak plant to have the film de veloped. “Zapruder — and the FBI — were already there,” Miss Willis said. “Certain photos we saw then clearly showed two figures on the railroad trestle. The FBI took the photos and when they returned them, the two figures were no longer in the photographs.” The Warren Commission later visited the family. “They talked to me but nothing I said was in their report. There are a lot of discrepancies in the commission’s report. I know they changed some of the things my parent told them, even to the point of putting ‘yes’ where they said ‘no.’ A series of arraignments,, unlawful entry charge, whiclj a $50 fine and an optionally term, is scheduled to start]] A similar demonstration5 tober for which 340 peoples, rested drew a lesser charge: pie trespass but Hunt said[| an advantage to the stifferd “This time we ll haveajwJ he said. “It won’t just be up j judge what happens. Weill to talk to the jury; to educattj They’ll be able to decide if* were a menace to the stale, | Sitzman said his office t prosecute under the unlairl statue because it applied s to trespassing on public] property. 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