Page 4-Wednesday, June 17, 1981--The Michigan Daily Fraud charged in re-election 4 oPres. MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Fer- dinand Marcos was easily re-elected president of the Philippines yesterday, giving him another six years in power. Citizens had to vote or face arrest, and the opposition, which boycotted the election, charged widespread fraud. Marcos told reporters in his northern Philippine hometown of Batac, where he voted, that one ofthe first things he will work on is "to bring about a... reconciliation" with political op- ponents. "YOU HAVE only two alternatives here," he said. "Either you do it with a soft hand or you do it with a tough hand. I intend to do it softly." Early unofficial returns gave Marcos at least 88 percent of the vote against a dozen little-known candidates, in- cluding an assemblyman who had promised to make the Philippines the United States' 51st state. The more than 25 million eligible voters were required to vote under threat of arrest.-But some groups urged Filipinos to spoil their ballots by defacing" them with anti-government slogans to protest the election, the first in 12 years. Marcos THE COMMISSION on Election claimed a turnout of 80 to 90 percent of the registered voters indicated the "collapse" of the boycott. Opposition spokesmen charged widespread fraud and said their monitoring networks set up in random precincts indicated only 50 toS5 percent turnout in metropolitan Manila. Former Defense Secretary Alejo San- tos, one of Marcos' dozen opponents at the polls, charged "massive" voting irregularities. A last-minute candidate of the Nacionalista Party, Santos said he found several voting boxes stuffed with ballots marked for Marcos on elec- tion eve. In several precincts in Manila's Ton- do slum quarter, voters were hauled to polling precincts by Marcos' ward leaders, opposition leaders said. Marcos was the only major candidate because the United Democratic Op- position, known as Unido, decided not to field one as a protest. Unido, which has spearheaded the nationwide boycott in an effort to tarnish Marcos' mandate, accused Marcos' party of "acts of violence, terrorism, harassment, in- timidation and other violations of elec- tion laws." Slow b uilding rate reflects area's economy In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Israel asked for reparations UNITED NATIONS-Israeli Ambassador Yehuda Blum yesterday dismissed as "bizarre" a French proposal that the Jewish state pay reparations for destroying an Iraqi nuclear reactor. "Did the allies pay reparations for the Nazi's atomic plants at Peenemuende and elsewhere which they destroyed in World War II?" Blum asked the U.N. Security Council as its debate on the Israeli raid went into its fourth day. Peenemuende was Nazi Germany's huge research and missile center on the Baltic Coast. "Let me assure this council that Israel will pay precisely the same sum as what those who made this bizarre suggestion paid after World War II and not one brass farthing more," Blum said in response to the reparations suggestion French Ambassador Jacques Leprette made to the council Mon- day. A French technician was killed in the June 7 Israeli attack on the Fren- ch-built reactor outside Baghdad. Exercising his right of reply, the Israeli envoy complained, "What has been going on here proves it is impossible for Israel to expect from this council and, indeed, from this world organizationa fair hearing." Navy denies drug charges WASHINGTON-Navy Secretary John Lehman denied "categorically" yesterday that drug use had anything to do with the crash of a radar- jamming plane on the deck of the aircraft carrier Nimitz last month. Rep. Joseph Addabbo, (D-N.Y.) has claimed that autopsies showed most of the 14 Navy and Marine men killed in the fiery crash of an EA-6B during a night landing May 26 had been taking drugs. "There was no trace whatsoever of any kind of drug in the recovered remains of the air crew," according to a Navy sttement. The bodies of two of the three EA-6B Marine crewmen were recovered. Asked what the autopsies showed so far as the members of the deck crew who were killed, a Navy spokesman said, "This is still under investigation." The results of the autopsies were not available to newsmen, but Navy sources said there probably were some traces of marijuana foun in the bodies of some of the victims. Violent weather continues DALLAS-A blitzkrieg of fire and floods and suffocating heat punished various sections of the country yesterday as some communities were pat- ching the wounds of devastating tornadoes. The onslaught of violent storms that killed at least 22 people since the weekend built new floods in Indiana and in Texas, where in one place snakes were reported "floating around the house." Two dozen fires that "came like a hurricane" in Southern California had burned 64 homes and consumed 23,000 acres, exhausting hundreds of firefighters who worked through the night. Searing heat killed thousands of chickens Monday in Florida at 105 degrees and spread up the Atlantic Coast yesterday to southern New England. straining nower aenerators and forcing schools to close early. Convicted murderess cannot marry without court approval SAGINAW-Judith Miller has a problem with her love life that even Ann Landers couldn't solve. For the next five years, Ms. Miller, 37, can neither get married nor live with a man without first getting prior court approval. In effect, she must answer to a "chaperone" in the form of her probation officer until 1986 when her probationary period for killing her boyfriend en- ds Public officials with conflict of interest can vote on boards LANSING-Legislation allowing public officials to vote on contracts in which they have a potential conflict of interest won the approval yesterday of a House committee. A former Midland County clerk, Rep. Michael Hayes (R-Midland), said he introduced the measure in response to a request from that county's com- mission. Recently, Attorney General Frank Kelley booted several members off Midland county's waste disposal site approval board because they had ties with the Dow Chemical Co., whose wastes would be dumped at the potential site. Hayes said he doubted passage of his measure would result in local boards whose members are "owned" by powerful corporations. Youths riot in Polish city WARSAW-Dozens of youths, some of them drunk, rioted in the southern industrial city of Katowice yesterday, scuffling with police and tearing up the main train station's waiting room, officials reported. The incident occurred a month to the day after youths at the same station attacked passers-by and taxis. Another incident was reported in Otwock, 20 miles south of Warsaw, on May 8, when some 500 youths battled with police and set fire to a railroad depot. (Continued from Page 3). Washtenaw, and Wayne. All counties registered a decline in new dwelling permits except St. Clair, which noted a 15 percent rise in issued permits. Livingston, Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, and Wayne all registered a loss of at least 50 percent, with Monroe declining 68 percent. The City of Detroit issued 147 more permits in 1980 than in 1979, an increase of 18.8 percent. Of the 928 permits issued for Detroit, multiple -family permits account for 915 of them. NET BUILDING PERMITS - derived by subtracting the number of demolition permits from the-number of building permits - reveals further evidence of building decline in the region: A net regional total of 4,697 permits were recorded for 1980, compared to 15,847 for 1979, a decrease of 70 percent. Detroit accounted for 75 percent of the region demolitions. Donaldson, of the city Building Department said revenue to the depar- tment has declined. Revenue normally comes from permit fees, among other sources, he said. On the national level, housing starts dropped to an annual rate of 1.15 million, the lowest since last May's 938,000 at the bottom of the 1980 recession. T Buildin ermits issued in theC y of Ann Arbor 1980 1979w 1978 single family units............ 62 73 101 multiple family #permits/# units............3/270 31/143 75/625 commercial ..................20 31 40 Statistics from the city Building Department