state / national Battalion/Page 12 February 5,1982 EXTRA! EXTRA! Daring Daylight Robbery at Local Dyer Store! For the sixth straight year (plus two crooked ones), the notorious, nefarious, and niggling Dyer Dealers attacked all of their suppliers of name-brand stereo equipment demanding lower prices and better deals so the savings could be passed on to their customers during an outlandish "Daring Daylight Robbery" sale. Led by San Antonio’s own Jerry ("The Man") Dyer, the gang went to great lengths to avoid taking any merchandise of questionable quality. One supplier who claims to have been hit in this same manner by this same gang for all six years tried valiantly to hide his better stereo equipment. "It was the weirdest thing I’d ever seen", the supplier said describing the caper. "That bunch had eleven trained goats that sniffed out all my good stuff just like them Army dogs do", he continued. Local authorities who were called in to investigate (plus some who were not) speculate that the Dyer Dealers have split the loot among their five local hideouts and are planning to disburse it this weekend among local residents at tremendous savings. This assessment seems to be another example of top detective work since the Dealers have done the exact same thing for years and are spending thousands of dollars advertising the fact. Below are some recent photos of known gang members and a partial list of the loot taken. FIND ONE OF THESE HIDEOUT HONCHOS AND HAUL OFF THE SAVINGS! *9^ r/ ■mm David ("The Kid") Dyer Cuts prices with two hands and waves bye-bye too. Charles ("Blinky") Sears Keeps one eye on buyers, the other on whatever. Don ("The Mon") Merical Gave up promising career as wino to join Dyer Gang. Don ("Stash") Hedrick Loves his job but not as much as his Mommy. Pat ("The Bat") Clark Knows stereo but keeps it to himself always. Bruce ("Legs") Sommers Sells stereo while stand ing in a large hole. ★ ★ ★ Personals Perfect for Listening on the Lam! Personal AM-FM Stereo ROB US AT $29 88 Dyer believes you shouldn’t have to give up stereo enjoyment just because you’re on the run. Take the IS-111 with you anywhere and save money too! Dyer Hit O’Sullivan! The O’Sullivan 179 shown below has smoked glass door, casters, and glass turntable cover. The 185 at left doesn’t have much except a great price! Make your stereo look good too! ROCK BOTTOM *59 ~iK ^ 'A Speakers of the House Held by Dyer One of the most diabolical aspects of the recent Robbery by the Dyer Gang was their ruthless abduction of three prominent House Speakers. At last report, all three were being held for an embarrasingly low ransom. One is the SS-8 Sound Source two-way which requires very little power to produce rich sound. All five Dyer hideouts will release these Speakers for only $49 apiece which is nowhere near their actual value. A Speaker that is highly regarded by its colleagues is the Genesis 110. They are being ransomed for only $199 apiece. The 110 is guaranteed for life which is the same punish ment awaiting any Dyer Dealer caught selling at list price. The third known Speaker being held is the Infinity RSa. This Speaker can be readily identified by its exclusive EMIT tweeter and poly propylene woofer cone and superb overall sound reproduction. When accused of distorting the facts concerning the abduction, Jerry Dyer snarled "that them RSa’s don’t distort nothin’!". Only $149 will take an RSa out of Dyer’s hands. Inside sources report that only name-brand Speakers can be found in a Dyer hideout. When asked why he stole only name brand speakers, Dyer stated that, in his opinion, "taking name-brand speakers ain’t stealin; SELLING house-brand or private label speakers is stealin’!. 8 169 Best Sound on Wheels Taken in Heist! 60-watt Booster w/ 7-band Equalizer More oomph for better sound in your car. TE-70. $4088 120-watt Booster w/ 9-band Equalizer Even MORE ’LIL BIT oomph for even BETTER sound! Model 7120. LjILj Ill 1 *99 AM-FM Cassette Stereo Model 2010 now at lowest price ever. A hot buy! *3988 Jensen Roadstar Sony Deluxe Mini-chassis Auto-Reverse Cassette w/Dolby Deluxe Cassette with Dolby NR Jensen hasn’t even missed the R-410 yet! Electronic controls, Dolby NR and more for less! YOU WIN AT *169 3-step equalizer, MAKE US metal EQ, auto- CRY AT reverse, Dolby NR, and $30 off! Sony XR-35 is tops! *249 Auto-Reverse' Cassette with Pushbuttons You get auto-reverse and pushbutton tuning and Dyer gets practically nothing! Model RS-2930. MAKE DYER HURT *149 THEY’RE UNREAL $ 139 pr Altec-Lansing Six-by-Nine Car Speakers Altec and Lansing both chased the gang for blocks trying to get the 4A’s back! All you have to do is trot to Dyer! Jensen 3-way Car Speakers You’ll get whoppin’ Jensen sound while the Dealers get five to ten. Maybe a quarter to two. Model J-1069. PAIR’S ONLY *49 'pr. ff Play it again, Sam!” Big-House Sound Deluxe Direct Drive Cassette Onkyo ls S Maxell Blank Cassettes Jerry Dyer thinks the best tape on the market sold at the lowest price in the country by the greatest guy in the world is a heckuva deal! Stock up today and save! (Dealers welcome but ignored.) UD-XL-2. Dyer only took the best loot so of course he hit the Onkyo place. The TA-2050 with feather-touch controls and direct drive is tops with tapers! HOT BUY AT *249 NO LIMIT AT $099 Clean up your act with Allsop Cassette Deck Cleaner Hitachi Belt Drive Auto Return Turntable With one kid still in college, Dyer will cry every time an Allsop cleaner can make your home or car cassette sound like new. If that’s not good enough for you, come buy a new home or car cassette! HIT US HARD AT $7088 HT-20 is sold. Don’t miss it! CLEAN UP AT 40-wpc Digital Receiver The best thing about the 3- Nikko Audio year Nikko warranty is you’ll probably never need it. 12- station memory and scan. The NR-700 is a top-seller! ROB US AT *249 Lightweight Headphones for Solitary Listening Deluxe Headphones The Sennheiser 400’f ROBBERY AT $29 88 dyer electronics 3601 E. 29th Bryan 846-1768 m TM Dolby Labs Thrift institutions, commercial banks urged to compete United Press International WASH INGTON — Treasury Secretary Donald Regan urged Congress Thursday to allow banks to compete with money market mutual funds, which he helped to create. In testimony before a Senate subcommittee Regan said the competition between commer cial banks and the Wall Street funds has helped consumers in the short run, but also has weakened the nation’s banking system. “Many consumers have placed their savings in money market funds instead of deposit accounts,” he said, “more to avoid the restrictions on interest rates and services of depository institutions than to benefit from the different products and ser vices of money market funds and securities firms.” Regan, formerly the head of the Merrill Lynch brokerage firm, helped lead Wall Street to wider assortment of services, particularly the Thi Jict keting of money market funds. But Regan warned theei|you watchec mous growth of the funii | S Leek, you r weakening depository ins [nention th; tions by concentrating tl r the televisio sources of funds. The -he networks ev also is inconveniencing cons ey'll know to ers by fragmenting theint 0 p|e like, to financial services. So.inthespi “It is not beneficial,howejiypwn rating! for the structure of thesecunnd women wl industry to be changingsoapie armchair q ficantly without some rolt ions broadca commercial banks,” Regans J The areas h He said the administFi|sketball, has backs legislation that wouliferds are bei quire banks to place newstijung or as tl ities underwriting and tk&cle and bey activities in a separate ary. Regan said after a pei experimentation the thrift tutions also should bealkmetSA Sport compete on equal terms id ESPN, E assume all the powers ofiork, they an mercial banks. ijjoffs and f The first ( BC’s No. 2 ti ibis rating rs/broadc vision netw Attorneys seeking piece of the rock ffiflie and Cl :nand Pat Sc tings. Ci iqui’s exo well a's his s ithiheold Sa e’s honesty ; United Press International AUST IN — Two attorneys acquitted of Brilab charges have filed a more than $1 million law suit against Prudential Insur ance Co. for allowing undercov er FBI agents to represent them selves as company agents. Attorneys Donald Ray and Randall Buck Wood, acquitted in the case along with House Speaker Bill Clayton, filed suit Wednesday in state district court. The lawsuit does not mention a specific dollar amount of dam ages, but Ray said they sought damages in seven figures for their more than $ 100,000 in leg al fees, mental anguish and loss of income. “We filed suit to recover the damages we suffered having to defend against those scurrilous charges brought against us as a result of this investigation,” Ray said. “As I understand it, Pruden tial had authorized Joseph Hauser and those two FBI agents to sort of act as their rep resentatives in the investigation, and we relied on the fact they told us they were Prudential agents. We were led to believe we were dealing with Prudential when obviously we were not.” Hauser, a convicted swindler who was the key figure in the case against Clayton, Wood and Ray, represented himself as a Prudential representative and said the firm was seeking to land a lucrative state insurance con tract. He “hired” Wood andRij ;ip mm deal witn stateoiiiug| id gave a labor leader help him deal with state offiof ant in cash to pass to Claytoniif turn for the speaker’s hdf j obtaining the contract. Cto • United Prc said he never intended tol^SAN ANT the money, and took it onljes maintai avoid embarrassing labor ltij rv ) arc i f ru{ L.G. Moore. ice crippled Ray said Clayton alsohaso But San Ai templated filing suit apervin and tv Prudential. Bunted for Ray said Hauser paid ! e P oin ^ 1111 attorneys $500 in cash to pr ct ? r y. 1 lun the seriousness of his intentlll Wln ovei promised to pay them a$2, alt ies \ monthly legal retainer forkf|>i e y m .‘. l ing guide Prudential thro$^ d '°* the insurance bidding procs^. t ^ iat He said they never were ft l more than the orginal $500 “They (Prudential) aut! | rized Joe Hauser and thosei 1 FBI agents to act as their rep: sentatives, and as their agent conduct this investigation^ tially for their business p poses,” Ray said. “Obviously Prudential hat have some kind of interesting activity before it would alio' 1 self to he used in this kinti scam. They had to thinkitwo suit their business purpose! have such an investigationn ducted.” Ray said he and Woods considered suing the govt , the federalf ment, but noted the federalf eminent is generally protefi by immunity from suchdant suits. Cuban refugees moved from base United Press International FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. — The last 22 of 25,000 Cuban re fugees who passed through the Fort Chaffee relocation center were loaded onto a bus before dawn Thursday and left Arkan sas, destined for a federal prison in Chicago. “They’re all gone,” said Mac Coffman, camp director for the Cuban-Haitian Task F’orce. The last band of Cubans were to travel by bus to Tulsa, Okla., then fly by commercial airliner to Chicago, Coffman said. Ear lier plans to transfer the last re fugees to a halfway house in Seattle, Wash., fell through. Coffman said he hoped the Cubans would be in Chicago only about 15 days before they could travel on to Seattle anyway. In the 22 months Cuban re fugees were lodged in Arkansas, they played a role in the election of a governor, in the economy of a community and in the public’s opinion on America’s immigra tion policy in general. The “Freedom Flotilla” that brought an estimated 125,000 Cubans to the United States be ginning in May 1980 sent many of the refugees through the Army base near Fort Smith. At one time, as many as 19,000 re fugees were housed at the pro cessing and resettlement center. The commitment fromt| Reagan administration totratj fer the Cubans elsewhere delayed on several occasit® until Jan. 24 when twob of the remaining 392 refi left for federal prisons in Gtf gia, Missouri and Kentucky Army officials said the pi) ment of the Cubans at f» Chaffee had not affected t!< operation of the military fad except for displacing sof Army reserve and Natitf Guard units who were forced stay in tents during sum!* camps in 1980. Col. Ray Spence, Fort fee commander, said rep4 and renovation of the fad have been under way for past 13 months and should completed within 180 days.T ; estimated cost of bringinf Army base back to its com before the refugees arrived $7.9 million, he said. Most of the costs of rent) 1 ing the facility resulted damage to barracks where 1 Cubans w r ere housed, Sp' said. Chain-link fences and wire installed after the | 1980 riot belong to the Few' Bureau of Prisons and will' removed, Spence said.