Sdtu doy, Sep~tember 29, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hoge Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pose Three THOUSANDS ARRESTED Junta detains leftist leader NOW SHOWING 7, 8:20, 9:40 "See the Movie! 'Heavy Traffic' is the most ingen- i*sa combination I've ever seen, an amalgam of cetoon and live film. A highly subjective view of N*w York low life as seen by brilliant young car- t6wnlsl Ralph Sakshi. It's fascinating and high --Kevin Sanders, WABC-TV "kelph Sekshi's idea of merging real iatt dtotoons and vice-verso is done with Visuals of undeniably stunning power." characters brilliance! ----Archer Winsten, New York Post SANTIAGO (Reuter) - Chilean troops hunting leaders of the ousted government of the 1 a t e Salvador Allende yesterday cap- tured Luis Corvalan Lepe, gen- eral secretary of the now-banned Communist Party. Corvalan, a teacher, was the second most wanted man on a list of 16 leftwing leaders sought by the ruling military junta. HIS CAPTURE CAME less than 24 hours after the regime announced a reward of $1,800 for information leading to the capture of the men on the list. The announcement also s a i d that all the money found in the possession of the captured per- sonswould be handed over to the informant. The announcement gave Chile- ans telephone numbers to ring if they had information. THE 57-YEAR-OLD commun- ist theoretician was captured ear- ly yesterday, it was officially an- nounced. His detention was the second in 24 hours of a wanted leftwin leader. Troops Wednesday capture Luis Espinosa, a former parlia mentarian and activist of th Socialist Party in southern Chile IN THEIR SEARCH for lead ers and sympathizers of t he former government, Chilean troops have been raiding sub urbs and private homes, a n thousands of people have bee arrested. Gen. Cesar Mendoza, chiefo the paramilitary Carabinero po lice and a member of the fou man junta that toppled the A lende government in a blood, coup Sept. 11, said yesterda there was a latent nucleuso guerrillas in Chile. "But measures have b e e adopted to neutralize them," h told the press. THE GENERAL blamed man of the 13,000 foreigners in th country for spearheading "su versive" activity. "One must d tect and disperse this typec organization," he said. g d a- e e. d- e n b- d n of 0- r- l- iy of n While the new military rulers provided only a thin trickle of information about executions by firing squad and summary shoot- ings by police, leftwing sym- pathizers told tales of horror claiming they were being meth- odically hunted down and shot. The government has denied these reports. AT SANTIAGO'S general ceme- tery there are almost 200 new graves dated between Sept. 11 and 18 with a majority bearing the dates Sept. 14 and 15. Officials of the junta h a v e denounced reports of mass ex- terminations and torture as left- wing propaganda designed to discredit Chile's new govern- ment abroad. But reliable sources said there was a "witch-hunt" in progress and that old scores were being settled. NEIGHBORS WERE denounc- ing neighbors to settle old griev- anlces, the sources said. "'"ovy Traffic' may be one of the greatest Amer- iten films in yeavs!,It is, undeniably, a history mak- ig film. It's rated 'X,' baby, but so is life!" --Tony Russomonno, WXLO "This is on artist's use of animation to the Nth we*, extpressing social viewpoint. Bakshi molds AlAmetlo10 to new heights of social comment. More iatments of brilliance, power, and depth than in 'Prits The Cat.'" --William Wolf, Cue Magazine N~re Spie..ro the mekerb of"itz The Ct" Rn fineavyn 3Iwiemmasmnt Gribbs angered by film advertisement "N ASCINEMA TO EVERSEE. NIEP ThRA ne HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -- Hiz- zoner Roman Gribbs, mayor of 1y Detroit,; is angry with a movie he company for advertising a new b film in which the city is billed e- as "The Murder Capital of the of World." He fired off a telegram to General Film Corp. which read in part: "I AM APPALLED and strong- ly object to the national adver- tisement being done for 'Detroit 9000' . . . In discussion with my staff you specifically promised that the crime problem in Detroit would be presented truthfully and that there would be no in- flamatory advertisements . . . "I demand that you and your studio immediately stop such slurious (sic) ads.' Producer Don Gottlieb replied: "As long as murder rates second only to automobiles as your city's major industry, we will continue to quote Time mnaga- zine's line, calling it the Murder Capital of the World "WE WILL ALSO continue claiming that in Detroit, quote, honkies are in the minority, uin- quote . . . When you change the city we will change our copy." In a five weeks shooting sched- ule in Detroit they knocked off 20 characters, which Gottlieb claims is considerably below the Detroit average. "In five weeks time in that city they murder each other to the tune of 70 or 80," he said. Since Mayor Gribbs' censure, business has been somewhat more brisk than previously. The movie has regained two thirds of its cost in Michigan alone. Inasmuch as the picture cost considerably less than $1 million, Gottlieb must feel some small debt of gratitude to May- or Gribbs for the plugs. Gottlieb, therefore, is not in- censed. But he is firm, saying, "The mayor is objecting to the ads, not the picture. But he did say the picture was garbage, the company General Film Corp. is garbage and the ads are gar- bage. But we never discussed the ads with his people." "THE MAYOR is a lame duck," he said. "There will be an elec- tion this year for a new Detroit mayor, and one of the candidates is Police Commissioner John Ni- chols, who appeared in a bit part in our picture. He liked the picture and said, 'You told it like it is."' Nichols has since been re- placed. C18 MILLION CREEP AP Photo CHILEAN SOLDIERS guard the offices of the state railroad in Santiago yesterday as others search for concealed weapons. Mili- tary authorities relaxed the strict curfew imposed since the Sept. 11 coup but they continue to raid homes, offices and factories to root out pockets of leftist resistance. releases new Spend a cheap night (or afternoon) with Woody Allen. Four of his greatest hits: "KAKI THE MONEY AND RUN; PLAY IT AGAIN SAM Fri. 11:15 p.m., Sat. matinee 3 p.m. AND- SANANAS; WHAT'S NEW PUSSYCAT Sat. 11:1 5p.m., Sun. matinee 3 p.m. seporote low admission--not continuous with Heavy Traffic iiw -~- -- list of campaign donors THE MICHIGAN DAIIY Volume LXXXIV, No. 21 Saturday, September 29, 1923 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail tMichigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier carnpus area); $6,50 local mnail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign). WASHINGTON uP) - President Nixon's re-election committee yesterday released the names of secret contributors who gave $18 million and disclosed that the over-all campaign had raised more than $60 million. The donor list included $2 mil- lion from Chicago insurance exec- utive Clement Stone, $1 million from a Mellon heir, $200,000 from four members of the Rockefeller family and assorted five and six figure sums from U. S. ambassa- dors abroad. THE $60 MILLION total is about :10 per cent higher than the pre- vious estimate, given to the Sen- ate Watergate committee by campaign fund - raiser Maurice Stans. The reports said the campaign spent more than $56 million and still has about $4 million on hand -even after recently returning some tainted corporate contri- butions. The three-inch thick report of receipts and contributions dur- ing the period Jan. 1, 1971 through April 6, 1972, was releas- ed by the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President in ac- cordance with a court order. THE ORDER issued in July set- tled a suit against the committee by Common Cause, a self-styled citizens' lobby. Contributions and expenditures starting April 7, 1972, had been made public periodically during the campaign under terns of new federal disclosure law. But in anticipation of that law, Nixon fund raisers had harvested millions of dollars for their cam- paign and promised donors anonymity. THE REPORT listed two major refunds made to individuals soon after they contributed. Arnholt Smith of San Diego, Calif., donated $200,000 March 10, 1972, and it was returned 18 days later. Smith, a banker and fin- ancier, is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission and some of his as- sets have been tied up by the In- ternal Revenue Service. Cornelius Whitney of Lexington, Ky., a horseman, donated $250,- 000 on June 8, 1971, and it was re- turned Dec. 2, 1971. A commit- tee spokesperson had no imme- diate explanation for the refund to Whitney. STONE HAS SAID he contribu- ted more than $2 million to the 1972 election effort and $2.8 mil- lion for the 1968 Nixon campaign. Some of Stone's 1972 contributions were made after the new law went into effect. Altogether, he was by far the largest contributor to Nixon's re-election committee. Richard Scaife, a member of the Mellon family of Pittsburgh, was listed for $1 million, confirm- ing earlier reports he had given that amount. MR. AND MRS. John Mulcahy of New York were listed for at least $568,000 in the report. The accounting of Nixon's elec- tion finances was prepared by Henry Buchanan, brother of White House speechwriter Pat- rick Buchanan, who testified be- fore the Senate Watergate com- mittee earlier this week. In a letter that accompanied the voluminous financial report, the accountant said it was unau- dited and based on reconstructed information because "no formal books and records existed at the time we prepared the report." in concert I i I Watergate committee may speed hearings BONNIE RAITT AND LITTLE FEAT Proceeds go to Drug Help, Ozone House, Cormunity Switchboard & Creative Arts Beat the numbers... The world's first calculators that challenge computers and fit into your pocket. Workshop 8:00 HILL AUD. 8:00 WASHINGTON (Reuter) -The Senate Watergate Committee, disappointed over the results of the first day of its inquiry into political "dirty tricks" and the ending of television live cover- age, is considering speeding up its investigation, Congressional sources said yesterday. Republican members of the committee previouslyshad sup- ported ending the committee hearings earlier than Nov. 1, the present target date, and some Democrats were now said to be supporting the idea. WHITE HOUSE speechwriter Patrick Buchanan, first witness in the "dirty tricks" portion of the committee hearings last Wednesday, strongly defended presidential politics, maintain- ing that not all political pranks were carried out by the Repub- licans. He defended as part of the A m e r i c a n political "game" ghost - written letters to news- paper editors, low - level politi- cal espionage, the forgery of Are you spending too much time solving prob- lems the old-fashioned way-with slide rule, ordinary calculator or paper and pencil? Solve problems in seconds, with one of the same calculators used by professionals in your field-the HP-35 Scientific Pocket Calculator, the HP-45 Advanced Scientific Pocket Calcu- lator, or the HP-80 Business Pocket Calculator. Hewlett-Packard calculators give you more pow- er, more accuracy, more storage registers and more features than ordinary calculators. 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Democratic members of com- mittee had hoped to show that Buchanan had set the tone for political sabotage activities dur- ing last year's presidential cam- paign. INSTEAD, Buchanan maintain- ed hie had neither suggested nor participated in anything imMor- al, unethical or illegal-- or un- precedented in previous Demo- cratic campaigns. The committee, expected to meet in closed - session on Mon- day, will consider lopping tome names off the witness list, the sources said. THEY SPECULATED t h4 t Dwight Chapin, Nixon's former appointments secretary, might be the next witness called, al. though he is now fourth in line. The three major television net- works decided this week to end live coverage of the hearings and revert to their usual daytime fare, with excerpts from the hearings shown in the evenings. D aily Official Bulletin Satuirdy, September 29 DAY CAL..NDAR University of Michigan vs. navy: Football Home Game, 1:30 pm. 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