Chaplin's stolen LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) - The Chaplin, stolen fror its grave 76 days ago that seemed to have stumped international found yesterday in a shallow hole ii a co Geneva. Two alleged grave robbers were ar Authorities said they picked up the pai Bulgarian - after they allegedly called t lawyer demanding a ransom for the return the famed comedian. EXAMINING MAGISTRATE Jean-Dani the call was traced, the two men were tra body, -still in its oak coffin, was found ear Villeneuve, a small town at the eastern tip of Unofficial reports said the coff n, apparer found a few feet down in a hole dug by the th recently sowed cornfield. Police sources sai led officers to the site. Pilleneuze is ten miles east of Corsier Chaplin spent the last 25 years of his life. Christmas Day at age 88 and was bur cemetery Dec. 27. The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 18, 1978-Page 9 body recovered body of Charlie TENTHOREY, WHO DIRECTED the 2 -month in- in a macabre theft vestigation, declined immediately to give any more detail investigators, was about the recovery, including the identification of the suspects. rnfield near Lake But sources close to family lawyer Jean-Felix Paschoud said rested, the thieves called him several times in the past few days r - a Pole and a demanding "a huge sum" of money and that Paschoud talked he Chaplin family down the amount in subsequent calls while police traced the of the remains of callers. At the Chaplin mansion in Corsier-sur-Vevey, his widow, Oona, refused to talk to reporters. But the family butler, who el Tenthorey said identified himself only as Renato, told a reporter who eked down and the telephoned: "Mrs. Chaplin is very happy. There is great joy in rly yesterday near the house." He said she would have no public statement. f Lake Geneva. The theft of Chaplin's body from its simple grave early on ntly unopened, was the morning of March 2 set off a Europe-wide search for the ieves ina farmer's thieves and led to a flurry of wild theories about the reason for d the arrested men the bizarre crime, including one that the body had been smuggled to England by fanatical admirers for reburial in -Sur-Vevey, where Chaplin's homeland. He died there last But Tenthorey and his investigators concentrated on the ied in the village theory that it had been stolen for ransom. The magistrate said police received up to 50 calls a day on the case, including many fake ransom demands. (harlie (Chaplin Italian terrorists wound investigator TURIN, Italy (AP) - A police anti-terrorism specialist was wounded in a hail of gunfire yesterday by a two- man team firing from a motorscooter. It was the latest in a string of terrort attacks in Italy. Police said investigator Roberto de Martini, 26, was felled by bullets as he was about to get into his car to drive to work. He was hospitalized in fair con- dition with wounds in the neck, arms and legs, police said. The gunmen sped away in rush-hour traffic. SHORTLY AFTER the assault an anonymous caller told the Italian news Agency ANSA the leftist "Front Line" group was responsible for the morning assault. It was the ninth such attack in' Italy in the past 12 days. Also in Turin, a court announced Red Brigades founders Renato Curcio and Alberto Franceschini will stand trial today for praising the killing of former Premier Aldo Morn by their terrorist organization, which had abducted him. The two are accused of supporting a crime. After the 61-yesr-old Moro was found murdered last week, Curcio and Fran- ceschini, on trial with 13 comrades in Turin on sedition charges, charac- terized the terrorist killing as "revolutionary justice and the highest act of humanity possible in this society divided into classes." IN ROME, the government of Christian Democrat Premier Giulio Andreotti prepared for today's parliamentary debate on the Moro kid- napping and killing. Andreotti also called a meeting on Thursday of the leaders of five parties supporting the government to discuss. the nation's law and order issue. Moro, president of the Christian Democrat Party, was kidnapped March 16 and murdered 54 days later by the urban guerrilla group, which said he was condemned to death for "crimes against the proletariat." The government refused terrorist: demands to exchange him for im- prisoned leftists. CITY NOTICE TRUTH IN RENTING CHARTER AMENDMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO LANDLORDS OF THE CITY OF ANN ARBOR That the Truth in Renting Charter Amendment will take effect July 4, 1978. Every, landlord renting a rental unit located within the City of Ann Arbor must give the tenants of each rental unit a notice in exactly the following words and word order and following prescribed form: Some things your landlord writes in the lease or says to you may not be correct representations of your rights. Also you may have rights and duties not mentioned in your lease. Such rights may include rights to repairs, rights to withhold rent to get repairs done, and rights to join a tenants union or to form your own union. Such duties may include the duty to pay rent due and the duty not to cause a serious health hazard or damage beyond reasonable wear and tear. Additionally some lease clauses may be subject to differing legal interpretations. If you think that a clause in your lease or something your landlord says to you is unfair, you may contact your own lawyer, legal aid society, or tenants union lawyer for their opinions. The above example may be clipped for use. This notice must be included in the lease document or handed to the tenant as a separate notice. Copies of the entire Amendment are available for twenty cents in The Office of The City Clerk, second floor, City Hall. This Notice to be published: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday May 17, 18, 19, 1978 Authorized by: Jerome S. Weiss, City Clerk R. Bruce Laidlaw, City Attorney . ,5 4' 3- 4- 54 4 A' ;{ f 4444 4,4,4 '4 k~ .t..r ..<. '"r. . . . ......