Page 2-Thursday, November 10, 1977-The Michigan Daily Israeli aircraft bomb Lebanon (Continued from Page 1) statement Tuesday, failed to condemn Israel for previous attacks against civilians in southern Lebanon and con- fined itself to condemning Palestinian rocketing of Israel. However, a State Department spokesman said the United States had urged both sides "to show restraint." PASSIONS ALSO ran high in the Israeli town of Nahariya, where 35- year-old housewife Rivka Lupu, mother of two, was killed by a Palestinian rocket Tuesday. Israel's deputy defen- se minister, Mordechai Zippori, atten- ded her funeral yesterday and took his tough stance there. Voter case may .go to Supreme Court (Continued from Page 1) any way. We're also not concerned with the other disputed votes in the trial." In addition to the 20 ineligible voters, there are three other voters whose registration is under question. There are also at least four absentee ballots in dispute. Another ACLU attorney, Vince Blassi, revealed a Colorado case that he said was similar to the Ann Arbor situation. That case dealt with what he called "innocently unqualified voters." The Colorado ruling held that the voters who cast their ballots improperly, but through no fault of their own, still has the right to a private ballot. VAI1 HATTUM was also at the press conference. When she was asked if she would go to jail if the final appeal was against her, she said, "I don't know yet. It's a lot easier to decide when the decision is more immediate." *VanHattum also revealed that her' roommate, at the time she voted in the mayoral election, also voted in the election, and was notified by the City Clerk's office in July that he had voted "illegally," but he was'"never served with a subpoena to appear at the trial. In other events yesterday pertain- ing to the Court of Appeals decision, Senator Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Ar- bor), said that while he was dis- tressed at the ruling, he felt that any emergency legislation to try to protect the 20 voters would be inap- plicable at this time. "I'M NOT sure just what we could accomplish through emergency leg- islation at this time, since it's already in the courts," he said. "Personally, I'm shocked and out-. raged. To me the secret vote is a sacred thing. Now that I've read the decision, I can see some of the logic in the court's arguments, but I'm still sympathetic to the plight of those individuals who voted in good faith and are now being asked to tell how they voted." Representative Perry Bullard (D- Ann Arbor) is in Europe and not available for comment. Military sources said Israeli border troops were on heightened alert. But the nilitary denied Beirut reports that tanks and naval vessels were involved in the reprisals. Israel's chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Mor- dechai Gur, told reporters in Tel Aviv the raid lasted about an hour and struck at Palestinian guerrilla command posts, training camps and field bases. BUT HE DENIED Beirut reports that Israeli jets hit the nearby refugee cam- ps and port town of Tyre, 12 miles north of the border, and that the, assault lasted three hours. Gur said the operation served notice that Israel would not tolerate a resum- ption of guerrilla activity on its border with Lebanon. Gur .said Tuesday's four-hour guerrilla attack and the fact that at least 18 rockets were fired indicated a change of policy by the guerrillas, possibly with Syrian backing. HE SAID IT was impossible for a rocket crew to operate for four hours in a populous area and fire that many rockets without being noticed. Gur added that the fact the Syrian peackeeping force in the Tyre area did not act to prevent a prolonged rocket barrage showed that the guerrillas were free once again to harass Israel. But the Israeli chief of staff seemed only mildly concerned about the fate of the six-week-old cease-fire which was supposed to end the three-way fighting among Palestinians, Christians and Israelis in Lebanon. HE SAID THE truce had never really existed because there had been almost daily shooting in southern Lebanon. But he said he did not see it as "nullified" because that was for the government to decide, not the army. Gur said if the area remained quiet and if the Lebanese and Israeli gover- nments agreed, negotiations could resume between officers of the two sides to work out a real truce. There have been several meetings in the past to discuss implementing the truce, despite the technical state of War between Israel and Lebanon. A PALESTINIAN WOMAN scrambles to gather her belongings yesterday after an Israeli air attack upon the southern Lebanese village of Bourj el Shimaly. Damage is visible. BLA CKS WIN MAJORITY: Election reflects population shift (Continued from Page 1) Council are U.S. Treasury Agent and school board member Herbert Mc- Fadden, and Marxist attorney Ken- neth Cockrel. McFadden narrowly defeated former Councilman An- thony Wierzbicki for the ninth Coun- cil seat. It was definitely a day of reckoning for conservatives in Detroit, for while socialist Cockrel was savoring his victory the other favored con- servative candidate, former police commissioner Philip Tannian, also went down to defeat. There are still three incumbent conservatives on the Council, but Cockrel finished ahead of two of them. The make-up of the new Council will be three conservatives and six liberals. TUESDAY'S returns were also a statement' on the power of endorse- ment. Cockrel was shunned by both of Detroit's major newspapers and by the powerful UAW, but he still finished sixth overall, ahead of three UAW-backed contenders. Voters, however, ignored the fact that Cockrel received no endorse- ments and gave him strong grass roots support. The UAW, however, is far from' politically dead. The Union endorsed all seven incumbents, including the For Used, Rare, and Out-of Print Books G"C3 C! O!^ S5 / ,., _ WEST SIDE ', BOOK SHOP 113 W. LIBERTY (Downtown) 995-1891 LIBRARIES & Individuol Books Bought Also Thousands of Quality USED PAPERBACKS 2 COVER PRICE In Our Back Room three conservatives, and that en- dorsement saved all three from a drubbing by a majority black elector- ate. TUESDAY'S voting may also sig- nify the end of the once-powerful De- troit Police Officers Association; (DPOA). For the first time in the DPOA's history, they shunned a sitting mayor and eidorsed Browne. The DPOA has been at odds with the mayor since he took office in 1974 and began instituting affirmative ac- tion policies that promoted blacks and women over white officers in the department. The DPOA and the city have met in court on more than one occasion. The association openly backed Brown'e candidacy, and even pro- vided the bodyguards for the mayor- al longshot. But the endorseient soon -became a stigma for Browne, who was forced to reconcile the en- dorsement with blacks, who remem- ber the police brutality of the pre-riot days. YOUNG WAS not hurting for endorsements, however, in fact open- ly flaunting such friends as Henry Ford II, Muhammed Ali and Presi- dent Carter. Young supported Carter during the 1976 primaries, when most black leaders were wary of the Georgian for his "ethnic purity" remark. That Washington connection, plus Young's position as vice-chairman of the Democratic National Committee, gave the mayor an unbeatable reputation for "bringing home the hacon" - federal funds for Detroit. Young's mandate Tuesday was viewed, by press secretary Robert Pisor among others, as the catalyst that will catapult the mayor onto the national scene as one of the promin- ent black spokesmen of the decade. Fiction-Poetry-Philosophy-Dramo Psych-Music-Art-And More ourj PREPARE FOR: Ya MCAT DOAT " LSAT GRE GMAT " OCAT VAT " SAT NMB I,],1I ECFMG "FLEXY QE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a differencet 4. L KWP N EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call: (313) 662-3149 For Locations in Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 Centers in Major US Cities Toronto. Puerto Rico and Lugano. Switzerland .p. 'Ht 4, tl . 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