CONCERT CHAMBER STRINGS OF ANN ARBOR First Unitarian Church 1917 Washtenaw WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9-8:00 P.M. Admission without charge DONATION TO CORRELLO /MEMORIAL FUND OF AA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA I i page three Q £frt ijzn 41P t fit NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, September 6, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I ..... ........ t ~ * ....k X 5 A ** By The Associated Press Marxist wins slim in Chilean presidential race pluralilty E y ":: Yf Y sE :} t f{ x n} "Ly J"ti ki}f ",B LOW U P" AUD. A Tuesday, Sept. 8 7 and 9:30 VE 75c THE RESIGNATION of New York Police Commissioner Howard R. Leary was announced yesterday by Mayor John V. Lindsay. Lindsay said Leary, who heads the nation's largest police force, informed him Friday he -will resign Oct. 1 to take a job in private enterprise. In a letter accepting the resignation Lindsay called Leary "one of the giants in the history of our police department." The mayor added he had asked the commissioner t reconsider his decision on three occasions since Leary first said he was thinking, of retiringi five weeks ago. DEFECTING SOVIET ballerina Natalia Makarova took se- clusion somewhere in Britain yesterday as Soviet officials sought to change her mind about defecting to the West. A British Home Office source said it appeared "extremely un- likely" that the famous ballerina and former partner of an earlier de- fector, Rudolf Nureyev, would listen to any Russian entreaty. Makarova told British authorities that she was not defecting for political reasons but that she wanted to follow Nureyev's example and to broaden her career. A TIME BOMB ripped out a wall next to the district attorney's office yesterday at the Los Angeles Hall of justice, site of the Sharon Tate murder trial. No one was 'injured in the blast, which blew out a restroom wall on the sixth floor of the. 14-story structure where the trial is being held. The building also houses the county jail containing de- fendant Charles M. Manson and some 1,800 other prisoners. Dist. Atty. Evelle Younger, said security measures will be tight- ened "now that we know we will be subject to this type of thing." No arrests have been made in connection with the blast, whichj caused more than $10,000 damage.J Younger, whose office brought charges against Manson and his, co-defendents, said he had no reason to link the explosion to the Tate murder trial or to a recent riot in the Spanish-American section of East Los Angeles. "a dynamite Film" SANTIAGO, Chile R) - Offi- cial returns yesterday confirmed that Marxist-Socialist Sen. Salvo- dor Allende score( a narrow vic- tory over former conservative president Jorge Alessandri in Chile's heated election campaign. If Allende defeats his runner- up in a vote by congress October 20, he will be the first popularly elected Marxist president in Latin America. 'Allende received 36.3 per cent of the nearly three million votes cast, Alessandri 34.9 per cent, and Radomiro Tomic, a moderate left- ist and the choice of the ruling Christian Democratic party re- ceived 27.8 per cent. Under Chilean law, a presiden- tial candidate must receive more .than 50 per cent of the evotes cast to win an election outright. Oth- erwise, Congress must decide be- tween the two leading candidates. Congress has. always picked the top vote-getter in the past but is under no: legal obligation to do so. The leftist coalition led by Al- lende has 83 of the 200 seats in Congress. Tomic's party has 74, and Alessandri's supporters have 43. A linkup between the Tomic and Alessandri forces is consid., ered unlikely. A personal friend of C u b a n Prime Minister Fidel Castro, Alle- nde has pledged to restore diplo- matic relations with Cuba, East OGermany, North Korea, Commun- ist China and North Vietnam. A 62-year-old former physician and three-time loser in previous presidential elections, Allende has promised Chile a ,'on-Marxist government but "one that will op- en the way for Socialism." He has pledged to achieve full agrarian reform, and to nationalize all for- eign-owned businesses, including the U.S.-operated copper industry. There have been some fears that Chile's military leaders, tradition- ally apolitical, might attempt a coup if Allende takes office. They have denied the possibility of such a development, but have vowed to "preserve order at all cost. Allende is 'the leader of the Popular Union. a six-party coali- tion made up of his own Socialist party, the largest Communist par- ty in Latin America, and the Rad- ical party, which governed Chile for 25 years as a center group but turned to the left after leaving office in 1952. -R.F. ANN ARBOR FLM COPERAT ANGELL HA~l AUDI A --Associated Press SENATOR SALVODOR ALLENDE (left) is congratulated by Radomiro Tomic, a moderate leftist and one of the two losing candidates in Chile's recent election, for his victory in a campaign that could make him Latin America's first popularly elected Marxist president. EGYPT DENIES VIOLATIONS:' Mtde East tension ,mounts over alleged, misie n 'Suez { 4 .4 Sept. 5,6-Sat., Sun. SHOOT THE, PIANO PLAYER dir. FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT '(1961) STARRING: Brooklyn's French; gangster CHA RL ES AZNAVOUR Half thriller, half parody, one of the Greats of the New Wave, and a lot of peoples' favorite movie. Sept. 7-PILOT PROJECT WEEKEND dir. JEAN-LUC GODARD (1968) & 9:05 Architecture S 662-8871 7cAuditorium TENS OF THOUSANDS of black pupils began attending integrated classes for the first time in the South this week. In some school systems, officials will be enforcing court ordered desegregation plans even though the Supreme Court has agree' to hear appeals. The cases raise questions about ,forced busing, neighborhood schools and racial balance. Boycotts by white pupils have been as much as 25 per cent effective in some areas; the school integration has been carried out with few reported incidents of violence. In Mississippi, a dispute- has' developed over the transfer pf 800 textbooks from the Jackson public school system to an all white private school. A spokesman for the federal Office of Education said an investi- gation was under way since Jackson. received $1.3 million in federal aid to schools under desegregation orders. The Mississippi NAACP has threatened court action to reverse the book transfer. In Florida, Gov. Claude Kirk attacked the school integration saying that children were being bused around "like pawns in an insane numbers game played by a handful of irrational federal Judges." Cutting! I ME .. __ 1 ThDaleagazine a new monthly investigative look at the culture, politics, and arts of Ann Arbor-(plus a guide to fun living) NEEDS WHItERS AND Editorial Assistants who have newspaper or magazine The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone : 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 tI By The Associated Press E Israeli Defense Minister Moshe+ Dayan said in a surprise state-! ment yesterday that he believes Israel is in the "final stages" of, the Middle East war as tensions mounted ov e r alleged Egyptian! missile emplacements following the cease-fire date. Israel charged today that Egypt is building new missile/sites with- in 19 miles of the Suez Canal des- pite U.S. approaches to Moscow and Cairo over cease-fire viola-+ tions detected by spotter planes. Israel m a d e its charge in its 10th complaint of Egyptian cease- fire violations to the U.N. Truce Supervision Organization in Jer- usalem. Washington sources confirmed yesterday that Egypt has official- ly rejected U.S. charges that she violated the standstill cease-fire by moving new anti-aircraft mis- siles into the Suez truce zone. Foreign; Minister~ Abba Eban indicated Friday that Israeli pre- pared to take military action if necessary to get the rockets out of the area. In other events, an emergency sesion of the U.N. Security Coun- cil demanded 'yesterday the com- plete and immediate withdrawal of all Israeli forces from Lebanese! territory following a raid that be- gan Friday. Ambassador Shabtai Rosenne of Israel asserted t h a t the Israeli forces that struck Lebanon-based. Arab guerrillas had already com- pletely withdrawn. Lebanon maintained that only part of the Israeli force had been WASHINGTON (A)) - S e n. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), said yester- day there now are 55 to 60 solid Senate votes for a Constitutional amendment providing for the elec- tion of t h e president by direct popular vote. Although this is short of the required two-thirds m a j o r i t y, Bayh said there is a possibility of getting the vote of as many as 75 of the 100 senators. The proposed amendment, ap- proved by the House a year ago by a 339-70 vote, is the first order of business when the Senate re- turns Sept. 8 from its Labor Day recess. The direct election plan pro- vides that the winner will be the candidate receiving 40 per cent or more of the popular vote nation- withdrawn and Ithat fighting was continuing in parts of, that coun- try. Only the United States abstain- ed as the council voted 14 to 0 for the withdrawal resolution sub- mitted by Spain at an urgent ses- sion requested by Lebanon. In Cairo, delegates from 14 Arab countries and the Palestin- ian Liberation Organization met 1 a s t night in an extraordinary session, in. an effort to end the crises between Arab commandos and the Jordanian government. Iraq's permanent delegate, Ab- del Saloum El Samarawi, t o l d newsmen that a blueprint for an agreement between, Palestinians and Jordanians hadbeen reached. He said an official announcement would be made today at the clos- ing session. Iraq threatened several days ago that it would take military action if Jordan's King Hussein tried to "eliminate" Palestinian guerrillas operating in that country. Iraq has nearly 12,000 troops stationed in Jordan. Bayl foresees Senate approval of direct presidential elections wide. If no candidate gets 40 per cent, a run-off election would be held between the two top vote get- ters. - Under the existing presidential election system, each state has as many electoral votes as it has sen- ators and House members and the candidate receiving a majority of the electoral vote is the winner. If no candidate gets a majority of the electoral vote, the election is decided in the House with each state delegation having one vote. Opponents'plan to offer a num- ber of substitute proposals, but Bayh told a' news conference he expects these will be rejected. If it appears after about two weeks of debate that a filibuster is underway, Bayh said, an at- tempt may be made to 'invoke the Senate's debate-limiting cloture rule. He said he had talked with ma- jority leader Mike Mansfield (D- Mont.> ln d Mansfield indicated the Senate may go on a two-shift schedule - working on electoral reform in the daytime and other legislation at night. Alternative proposals that Bayh said he expects to be offered in- clude a plan for dividing e a c h state's electoral vote among the candidates in proportion to the popular vote they receive, and an- other providing for election of two electors in each state on a state- wide basis and the rest by dis- tricts corresponding to congres- sional districts. Bayh said he realizes the run- off provision is "a weak spot" in the proposed amendment and didn't rule out accepting some al- ternative if necessary. But he said he hopes to get the amendment through the Senate without a change. I I 4th SMASH WEEK! THIS COTTON DOESN'T SHRINK! BOB FRANKE composer of songs good enough to have captured the interest of J'o a n Baez. I experience: students, faculty, everybody . Ann Arbor culture-her now E } Ii I I ri\Cc 1I I.UI E~E ~I. tt4NU~ Alfm lVIUM '.7" .I "W