Page 10 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1980 Berrigans jailed after weapons plant raid United Press International KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. — Peace activists Daniel and Philip Berrigan, charged with smashing the nose con es of two Minuteman missiles at a General Electric weapons’ plant and smearing blood on classified docu ments, were held in jail Wednesday without bail. The Berrigans, prominent protest figures in the 1960s, and six other members of peace groups were arrested Tuesday on conspiracy, trespass, assault and other charges. Charles Glackin, attorney for Daniel Berrigan, said the eight en tered a plant back door — left un locked for employees — whisked past a security guard and entered a ■ room marked “High Radiation Area.” Authorities said the protesters used hammers to damage nose cones on two missiles and spread blood on the documents. Spokesmen for General Electric said the plant assembles and con- JHEAE C iKWjr J^^^^HEAR CL ^ SHEAR CLASS SHEAR CLASS SH ^ SHEAR CLASS SHEA SHEAR CLASS SHEAR C SHEAR CLASS SHEAR CLAS SHEAR CLASS SHEAR CLASS SHEAR CLASS SHEAR CLASS SHE When you want Qua 846 ducts research into the Mark 12A re-entry system for the Minuteman 3 intercontinental ballistic missile. Matthew Horowitz, a spokesman for the Atlantic Life Community peace coalition, called the incident part of a so-called “Swords to Plow shares” protest and said the eight had hoped to dismantle the weapons systems in the facility. “We feel their (GE’s) contract to build the Mark 12A is making nuc lear war more possible,” Horowitz said. Robert Smith, 30, of Media, Pa., a member of one of the eight groups associated with ALC, said the coali tion had been “focusing on General Electric’s production of the Mark 12A for the last two years.” “This kind of technology has no right to exist and the arms race must stop,” Smith said. “To embody that statement, people did some damage to components of the re-entry vehi cles and poured blood on drafting forms.” A hearing for the eight suspects was set for next Monday in Upper Merion District Court. Jailed along with the Berrigans on similar charges were Dean Hammer, 28, Connecticut; the Rev. Carl Kabat, 47, Baltimore; Elmer Maas, New York; Sister Anne Montgom ery, New York; Molly Rush, Pitt sburgh, and John Schuchardt, 37, Baltimore. The six refused to post bail, which was set at $125,000. No bail was set for the Berrigans, who were taken to the Montgomery County Prison. Philip Berrigan, a Josephite priest who was excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church for mar rying a former nun, was acquitted in a 1972 Harrisburg trial with six others on charges they engaged in a 1970 plot to kidnap Henry Kissinger and blow up Washington, D.C., heating tunnels. Daniel Berrigan, a Jesuit priest who left the church, once went underground for four months to elude a federal prison term for des troying draft records. He was subse quently caught, jailed and paroled in February, 1972. Bradley to replace Rather next spring MSC TOWN HALL presents Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers Band IMSCI FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 19TH, 8 P.M. G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM TICKETS AND INFO: MSC BOX OFFICE 845-2916 - 845-1234 LIMIT 8 TICKETS PER PERSON I (own holll mrnmm United Press International NEW YORK — Ed Bradley offi cially has been given the job that’s been his on the rumor mill for months, replacing Dan Rather on “60 Minutes” when Rather takes Walter Cronkite’s job. No definite date has been set, but it will be sometime next spring, probably in March. “No one really knows for sure when I’ll start working and doing actual pieces for ‘60 Minutes,”’ Brad ley said after accepting congratula tions on his new post. “There’s been no timetable set up. It all starts with Walter and when he will step down. The general feeling is that Dan will be gone from the show next season.” Bradley, whose mother and father both have been ill, has been too distracted to make definite plans. “I’ve filed away a couple of things, good story ideas — which I won’t mention now because I’m not going to start working tomorrow and I wouldn’t want someone else to do them.” Bradley’s career with CBS News began in Saigon in 1972. He was HP Professional Calculators. 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VeM HEWLETT PACKARD reassigned to Washington in June 1974, served as CBS News White House correspondent from Novem ber 1976 through September 1978, when he was named a principal cor respondent for CBS Reports. He also anchors the CBS Sunday Night New, and doesn’t know if he will continue in the job after he be gins work on “60 Minutes.” Bradley enjoys the traveling that will be part of his new job and likes the idea of “doing a little bit of every thing. ” United Press Ii jNOLULU — for the origi ts that graced ly royal pala — has resulte way as Englai toration of thi fficial home chs, a $6 mi early 10 year so the Fj committee w it by fillin committee, budget, re and occas urn and his d publicatioi going is s it to be,” sr of the reston ave about 3 ial furniture end of the y throne roon refurnished. en the palace at the cost Hawaiian in 225 pieces o Kalakaua, w r the center ded several i his sister Liliuokalan st of the hi gifts from 1 eads of state rrivate collee “I’m not coming onto ‘60 Minutes’ black specialist,” he said answer to a question, but added, “I do have a different perspective be cause I happen to be black.” Staff photo bvFilfil JEW YORK tinues to thrive Hn Europe, v many generatio business, partly Patrick McGarity, a freshman from Atlanta, Ga., prat! with many firm Beethoven in the Main Lounge of the Memorial StudentOj 'For my next movement ter. McGarity describes the piano in the lounge as “fantastilT ^ ase V 1 P G11 iti ither shuns I Satellite to help forecaster :: Harr wipe importer £ pan France an wine con ^founded in 191 Ham, run it n United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A sophisticajtjsd weather satellite is in an elliptical orbit around the earth today, being readied for a permanent place from which it can help scien tists on earth forecast hurricanes and other storms. cash in A Delta rocket pushed the GOES- 4 satellite into space at 6:27 p.m. Tuesday from the Kennedy Space Center. Officials there said the launch was perfect, and the satellite went into a preliminary elliptical orbit that swooped to 100 miles from earth and zoomed 30,000 miles out. From its eventual stationary posi tion 22,500 miles above the eastern Pacific Ocean, at longitude 75 west, the Geostationary Operational En vironmental Satellite will watch weather systems over the United States and seas to the east, south and west. PROFESSOR... Do we have your course notes and readings on file yet? Your students are asking for them at... KINKO’S COPIES College Main S46-8721 The satellite will becomepffyou mentio tional in mid-October, so; American, he pi tested little during the ®dcet but he s Atlantic hurricane seasoi; W* e US- marke ends in November. t he Marianis The satellite s new equiprifttalians have be eludes a radiometer designedlCalifornia wine asure temperature and mof» r all U.S. ma Like previous weather satelisticking to old I has cameras with which total® tures of clouds and relay tUPThe result, Jc to earth. Ries shot up a The moisture and temp "j/feP. 1 ' 0 data will give forecasters bti 7® e " s,n v sight into the “fuel” supplyak®^! 16 * k > t ol storm or hurricane and thef? 5 ’ndmdua that influence storm 1 VLS 1 Knowing the temperaturesf. la ^anh repr the hurricane eye will help# deratlon of J . ’ . 5-lose wines unde ters gauge a storm s strengtl®^ ^ Dick Young, spokesman Iff National Aeronautics andff Administration, said the ne»| will be available only to resea at the University of Wiscoisl NASA’s Goddard Space Fliglfl| ter in Greenbelt, Md., atf probably will become roil! available to other forecasti| another six years. 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