Anti-shah protests flare in Iran Rhodesia delays switch TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Anti-shah demonstrations flared in three provin- cial cities yesterday but oil production increased, showing signs of bouncing back to normal after a crippling two- week oil industry strike. The most serious anti-shah demon- stration in days was at Behbahan, in southern Iran on the edge of the Kuzestan oil fields. Troops there fired on protestors shouting anti-shah slogans. Five persons were wounded, one critically, Behbahan police repor- ted. AT ISFAHAN, the site of a giant Iranian air force base, police arrested rioters after a bank branch and a bookstore were set ablaze. In the holy city of Mashhad, swirling mobs were dispersed for the second consecutive day by soldiers firing automatic weapons in the air and hurling tear gas grenades. Tehran was quiet, with many troops and tanks returning to garrisons at the edge of the city. AT A PROTEST led by mullahs, or Moslem priests, in Isfahan Wednesday, demonstrators carrying two open cof- fins dropped them when troops hurled tear gas grenades. Authorities repor- ted, the "bodies" in the coffins got up and ran to safety. Demonstrators have carried coffins with live "bodies" in them before as a trick to incite unrest and create public sympathy, police said. The protesters and strikers are Iranians seeking political reforms and Moslem traditionalists who object to the shah's Westernization of Iran. They claim Western decadence has in- filtrated Iran's Moslem society. OIL PRODUCTION increased Thur.. sday by 200,000 barrels to a 24-your totals of 3.4 million. Equipment is being; brought back on line and wells are being phased in gradually to bring daily production up to the normal six million barrels. Western sources said this will take several days. Strikes at major petrochemical com- plexes in Shahpur, near the Turkish border northwest of here and in Abadan, in southern Iran, ended. The 700 petrochemical strikers walked out in sympathy with the oil workers, who formally ended their strike Monday. Judge denies parole to u asarte VACAVILLE, Calif. (AP) - Mass murderer Charles Manson was denied parole yesterday after he told the state parole board that he should not be released from prison because he is "totally unsuitable for that world out there." He also denied ever killing anyone. "I didn't kill nobody and I didn't or- der nobody to be killed," said the bear- ded, shaggy-haired Manson, who regaled the Community Release Board with his comments for some three hours. HOWEVER, Manson added, "I'm totally unsuitable for that world out there. I don't fit in at all." The 44-year-old Manson, speaking out for the first time since his 1971 convic- tion in the Tate-LaBianca murders, alternately sat and stood, waved his arm in exclamation and even half sang during his presentation. "I'm mad," said Manson, who is ser- ving a life prison sentence. "I'M NOT YOUR executioner," Man- son said at another point. "I'm not your s vanson: devil and I'm not your God. I'm Charles Manson." "I'M MAD; I'm indignant. I'm mad to every bone in my body that I have to come back to the penitentiary when I didn't break no law." He denied, as he had at his trial, that he ordered members of his' roving "family" to murder actress Sharon Tate and six others persons in August 1969. "I did not tell Tex Watson to do any- thing other than what Tex thought was right," Manson said of the young man who acted as his lieutenant in murder. Manson said that if he had wanted to kill anyone, he would not have sent his followers to do his work. Manson, clad in baggy, dark blue slacks and a light blue shirt, leaned across the table, his face level with that of the board members. "IF I WANTED anyone killed," he said softly, "I'd kill them myself. But don't want anyone killed because I love my own life. Does that make sense?" He said he did not tie up Leno and Rosemary La Bianca, who were slain by Manson family members the day af- ter the Tate killings. He said he did not even remember if he was at the La Bianca house that night. "I've been pushed to madness in prison," he explained at one point. Conmittee refuses to review Samoff (Continued from Page ) "It's the same set of people who are reviewing the same (facts) and by and large won't change their minds," Samoff said, who came to'the Univer- sity in fall, 1970. Sam Barnes, chairman of the Political Science department, says he can't "envisage any circumstances" that would bring the case up again. "I think we have a fair set of procedures and they worked in this case," he stated. BARNES SAID even those who un- successfully voted to reopen the case were satisfied with the procedure by which the decision was made. The chairman said members spent more than two hours discussing the Samoff case Samoff's case can now be reevaluated only on procedural groun- ds through LSA channels and not on the professor's teaching or research abilities. BUT MERVAT HATEM, a Political Science graduate student and Samoff Student Support Committee member, said the case is "not at the end of the road," and Samoff still has a good chance for getting tenure. "I think he has a case even on procedural grounds," she said. In his 15-page appeal, Samoff has said he presents evidence that the procedure by which his teaching, research, and service were examined "prevented a fair evaluation." We have a thing about billiards Reduced rate until 6 p.m. every day at the UNION RemanaSectured engines der Vnl. wnne