J IFltMU SEt 't'S OV.PEN CALL'S DAL)' Italian gang attacks GENOA, Italy (AP) - An ambush team using silencer-equipped revolvers shot and wounded a lea ding in- dustrialist in this north Italian port city yesterday in what was claimed to be the latest attack by the Red Brigades, the terrorist gang holding former Premier Aldo Moro. Felice Schiavetti, 51, president of the Genoa Industrialists' Association, was gunned down from behind by two young men on a street as he left home for his machinery company. His assailants escaned. IT APPEARED, meanwhile, that the widespread police man- hunt for Moro may have driven other kidnappers deeper un- derground in this abduction-plagued country. Relatives of victims were making public appeals to kidnappers to contact them. In a Rome newspaper ad, the wife of Duke Massimiliano Grazioli, who was abducted last Nov. 7, said she had been paid an undisclosed amount in ransom last 'month but her husband had not' been freed. "Even if in the last few weeks police controls have increased, you were bound at least to give us a sign that Massimiliano is still alive," she ap- pealed to his captors. A ROME moviehouse owner made a similar plea through an Italian news agency to the kidnappers of his 19-year- old daughter, grabbed in front of the family two months ago. Police reported no new breaks in the three-week-old search for Moro abd his abductors. Investigators announced that four leftist extremists arrested in a beach villa near Naples on Thursday would be taken to Rome for questioning. Police said Schiavetti's attackers, between 20 and 30 years old and wearing dark green raincoats, fired six shots, hitting him in the legs and right hand. "I HEARD shots, then felt an awful The Michigan Daily-Saturday, April 8, 1978-Page 3 industrialist . ..,..d ...... v pain in the legs," the father of seven said from his hospital bed. "They did not certainly intend to strike me as a person but for the office I hold," he said. "For some time they had been speaking of the industrialists' association in their leaflets. But it is necessary to stay calm. We must con- tinue to carry out our duty. It is the only way to defeat them." Thirty minutes after the ambush, a man calleda newspaper here and said: "This is the Red Brigades. An armed group has shot Felice Schiavetti, ser- vant of the state." THE MARXIST revolutionary Red Brigades, believed to number several hundred, have mounted an escalating campaign of terror against businessmen, political leaders and police in recent years. The March 16 abduction of Moro and other recent at- tacks appeared aimed at forcing the release of Red Brigades leaders on trial in Turin. Moro's wife yesterday made the family's first public statement since the kidnapping, saying in a front-page let- ter in the Milan newspaper I1 Giorno she hoped her husband would be freed but that "we unhappily have no sign to comfort our hope." "We would like, however, that he should know that we are close to him, that we live with him, moment by moment, the hours of these very long days, that we pray with him, that having, despite everything, confidence in men, we believe that it may still be possible, after so much pain, to em- brace him again." Scalp massage? No, this is not a glorified head-rub. Rather, it is the formal in- stallation of Wallace Spencer, center, as president of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The laying on of hands took place yesterday in Independence, Mo. Yakkity yak Harry Hoover says he knows a rodeo clown who wants to buy his yak if only he can catch the beast. The yak is up for sale as part of Hoover's elimination of a small zoo he had collected to exhibit at a nor- theast Alabama. Hoover has been trying to open the cave to the public, but the federal government says it contains an endangered species of bats. So, Hoover is liquidating five ponies, two elk, a donkey, several birds and the yak that he's priced at $750. "A yal is normally calm and quiet, like a buffalo, but not when he gets excited like when somebody wants to catch him," Hoover said. "And that clown really wants him." Happenings ... . are slim today, and they begin early with a grass roots con- ference on libraries at Washtenaw Community College from 9 a.m. un- til 1 p.m. . . . from 11 a.m. through 3 p.m. there will be an Ethnic Fair Open House at Pound House Children's Center. . . the Black Student Union and the Ann Arbor Coalition to Overturn the Bakke Decision are sponsoring two anti-Bakke marches beginning at noon at two locations - the Diag, and the corner of Main and Huron... and all month long you can donate old books to the AAUW Book Sale at these locations: Campus Branch of Huron Valley Bank; Campus Branch of National Bank and Trust of Ann Arbor; or they can be picked up from your home by calling 995-2099. On the outside .. . The blissful weather will continue today with a high in the mid-50s under clear, sunny skies. But just to remind us that we aren't out of the woods yet, the mercury will dip to an unpleasant 34. But Sunday will be delightful as the high will be in the mid-60s with partly cloudy skies. I Metropolis film Society Presents WE 11 Ferdinand Marcos, president of the Philippines, casts his ballot in country's first national elections in over five years. The election is for members of an interim national assembly. Disputes mar Philippir MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Op- reports of punishment for those who ponents of President Ferdinand Marcos failed to vote in five earlier referen- cried foul yesterday less than two hours dums that have given the martial law after the polls opened for the country's government overwhelming votes of first National Assembly elections in confidence. over five years. An estimated 24 million to 25 million "They're not allowing our poll wat- voters were expected to cast ballots chers into the booths in parts of nationwide. Manila's ,registration is Makati," said Corazon Aquino, wife of more than 3.5 million. imprisoned former Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr. Makati is a fashionable MS. AQUINO, who with her family Manila suburb. has carried the brunt of her husband's campaign, went to the polling places "THIS IS really too much. I though it where the opposition allegedly was would take a lot longer than this for barred. She said if she did not get something like this to happen." satisfaction, she would file an official Aquino was arrested shortly after complaint with the election com- declaration of martial law in Septem- mission. ber 1972. He was convicted of murder in "The commission on elections is not November and sentenced to death, but all-knowing," said commission Chair- Marcos ordered the case reopened to man Leonardo Perez when informed of hear defense evidence. the alleged trouble in Makati. "If The ex-senator is heading an op- anybody knows of any anomalies or position ticket in metropolitan Manila irregularities that are happening, against a slate led by Imelda Marcos, please tell the COMELEC." wife of the president. The commission has posted soldiers outside voting places in Manila and TWENTY-ONE of the 165 interim other possible hot spots to ensure National Assembly seats up for election peaceful voting.E are in the capital. The assembly, under IN MOST places the soldiers seem to Marcos as prime minister, will have 200 remain unobtrusively in the members. The others will be appointed background, but a telephone caller. or chosen later by unspecified means. complained to the election commission Marcos is assured of a heavy majority in a television show that soldiers in at as the opposition has fielded only 21 least one precinct were harassing op- candidates. position voters. Under martial law rules, voting is The opposition in Manila, running mandatory, but there have been no under the acronym "Laban," came into elections The ambitious and successful direc- torial debut of Peter Bogdanovich gathers several diverse story threads to create a gripping thriller. Both a nostalgic tribute to the greatest hor- ror film actor of them all, Boris Kar- loff, and a clinical study of the psy- chology of a mass murder, this in- triguing work weaves together two stories: one about a young married man who goes beserk and take's po- sition as a sniper; the other about an aging Hollywood horror film star (Karloff). The climax, which takes place at a drive-in movie with the sniper befind the screen is one of the most devastating comments on senseless violence ever made. Saturday, April 8 MLBRoom 1 Admission $1.50 Show times 7:00, 8:45,10:30 the polls on the crest of an unexpected show of strength Thursday night. In a demonstration organized through word- of-mouth and chain letters, tens of thousands of Laban supporters lined the streets shouting and making roise for several hours. The organizers had asked for a five-minute demxnstration,,N "WRCN 650 AM and the Campus Broadcasting present" Fantasy FI "Kite FLYING, Live bands: Bob Mo Synthesis, The Infidels Sat., April 8, 12 noon to sunset Waterman field ht ss, Big Foot, I The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB Saturday, April 8 ROMEO AND JULIET (Franco Zeffirelli, 1968) 7 & 9:15-MLB 3 "For never was a story of more woe/Than this of Juliet and her Romeo." Lush photography, a.beautiful soundtrack, wonderful swordfights, and the most believable performers ever to portray Shakespeare's young, "star- cross'd lovers" enhance this production of the Bard's famous tragedy and give it a super-romantic sensuality unobtainable on the stage. "Visually, Shakes- peare has never been better realized-and seldom has he had so sensitive a collaborator."-TIME. OLIVIA HUSSEY, LEONARD WHITING, MICHAEL YORK. Tuesday: BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID. 7 and 9, Aud. A The Tigers were playing, the sun was shining, and spring had finally strolled into Ann Arbor. Law Student Ed Einowski serenades the recalcitrant season from his front porch. . . . .. Daily Official Bulletin ..........::............ .......--...-........... It's your return that counts! March of Dimes U - SA TU'IA Y, APRI1L , 1978 Summer Placement ,3200 SAB 763-4117 Camp Sequoia, Mi. Will interview Tues., Apr. 11 1- 4. Openings include waterfront (WSI), arts/crafts, riding (western); archery, riflery. Crystal Mountain Lodge, Mi. Will audition at the Michigan Union, Assembly Hall on Weds.,, April 12 1 p.m.- 10p.m. If you play a horn, bass, guitar or sing - (be part of a combo) register for audition. Phone 763-4117 or register in person. IBM, vermont. Offers a summer professional program for students who have completed their junior year and beyond in elec. engr. or computer science. Details and apps. available. Deadline April YMCA - Camp Potowatami, Ind. Opening for trail leaders. Knowledge in environmental science - nature - biology, etc. Details available. THE MICIIIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXvIII, No. 150 Saturday, April 8, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. ATITENTION FRESHMEN: INTERESTED IN THEATRE? UAC SOPHSHOW Needs You To Fill The Following Positions: CINEMA 1IImm Saturday, April 8 DEE E E UIDi in 4 I I -Director -Lighting Designer e.+ I r n -Choreographer -Technical Director Ac,,.+n.v,+ Dur..nar - ::_ :