Thursday, October 4, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage Three Thursday, October 4, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY CHA PIN GAVE ORDERS: Agent W A S H I N G T O N (Reuter) -Dwight Chapin, President Nix- on's former appointment secre- tary, instructed Republican un- dercover agents to undermine campaigns by contenders for the Democratic presidential nomina- tion last year, the Senate Water- gate committee was told yester- day. Donald Segretti, a 32-year old lawyer, disclosed the instructions when he appeared before the committee. Segretti earlier this week pleaded guilty to three minor charges stemming from his in- volvement in supervising the so- called "dirty tricks" campaign against Democrats during last year's presidential election. During the hearing, which was interrupted briefly by telephoned bomb threats, Segretti said he had received detailed instruc- tions from Chapin, a former col- lege classmate, who recruited him in 1971 to organize a nation- admits wide network of undercover ag- ents. Segretti said he was even given a White House book of names to help recruit people to work against the Democrats. Segretti said Chapin gave him general instructions to stir up so much bitterness among Demo- cratic contenders for the nomina- tion that they would be unable to rally. behind the party's eventual candidate. Segretti said the specific in- structions included advice to plant fake signs supporting Sen. Edmund Muskie among anti- Nixon demonstrators in an at- tempt to link the Maine senator with the demonstrators in press photographs. Segretti already has admitted involvement in distributing let- ters on Muskie's stationery false- ly accusing Democratic Sena- tors Henry Jackson and Hubert Humphrey of sexual misbehavior. The committee made public a 'di rty t document Chapin sent Segretti in November, 1971, urging renewed efforts to make Muskie publicly lose his famed temper. Muskie later lost his position as the front-running contender after losing his temper during the New Hampshire primary in early 1972. But Segretti said he was order- ed by Chapin to end his activities in New Hampshire after he had "blown his cover" by using his real name at a meeting with New Hampshire contacts. Segretti said he told then-presi- dential counsel John Dean III about his activities last October when the Washington Post was preparing to publish a number of details. After the story was pub- lished, the White House dismiss- ed comment on the allegations. . Segretti said the original fed- eral Watergate prosecutors asked him no questions about how he was paid when he appeared be- fore the grand jury, although they had discussed it briefly be- forehand. A juror brought up the question, Segretti said. He corroborated testimony that he was paid $45,000 in salary and expenses, by Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's personal lawyer. Segretti said as far as he knows President Nixon was ignorant of his activities, even though he ricks kept Chapin informed every step of the way, as well as receiving payment from Kalmbach. Chapin, 32, who organized Pres- ident Nixon's trips, including his 1972 China visit, has refused to testify before the committee. He pleaded the fifth amendment to the Constitution, which allows a person to avoid giving possibly self-incriminating testimony. LONDON (UPI) - Britain's long-range radio station has adopted procedures for keeping in touch with all the ships at sea. The government - owned Post Office station at Burnham on Sea, known to shippers as Portishead Radio, now operations calls to ships in the "North Pa- cific" -- north of a line from Callao, Peru, to Saigon - on a fixed-time basis. The Pacific is divided into five sectors, each of which is assigned a fixed time and new frequencies for making radiotelephone calls or sending radio telegrams, the post office said. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 25 Thursday, October 4, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign. if you see news I happen call 76-DAILY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Thursday, October 4 Anthropology Mini -Course: J. Ruby, DAY CALENDAR Temple U., "Jean Luc Goddard as An- thropologist," Rackham Amph., 7 pm. Physics Lecture: L. Radicati, Univ. Mu~sical Society: American Ballet Re- of Pisa, "Degenerate Stars," 205 P-A pertory, R. nglund, choreographer, Bldg., 2 pm. Power Ctr., 8 pm. Pge~inrvLpfirt TitlhtyUT AP Photo DONALD SEGRETTI SMILES as he waits to testify before the Senate Watergate Committee yesterday in Washington. Segretti testified that his activities during the 1972 Florida primary included distribution of a phony letter on campaign stationery of Sen. Edmund Muskie that accused two other Democratic presidential candidates of sexual misconduct. Nxon urges Austrians to keep transit center for Soviet Jews . 0c na r rLecturer : . .ieireoa*n ,u. of Ill.. "Somnolence, Activation, and Sensory Control of Food Intake after Lateral Hypothalmic Damage," 1057 Med. Sci., 3:45 pm. Statistics Research Lab: "MIDAS Data Manipulation & Program Control: II. Aud. 3, MLB, 4 pm.; Aud. D, Angell Hall. 7:30 pm. Nuclear Seminar: A. Broad, "Coupled Channels & Form Factor Effects in Di- rect Reactions on Strongly Deformed Nuclei," P-A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. Medieval & Renaissance College: Cof- fee Hour, Cook Rm., N. Entry, Law Quad, 4 pm.' Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures, J. de Romilly, College de France, "The Organization of Power," Angell Hall,. And. A, 4:10 pm. WAS H IN GT ON (Reuter) President Nixon yesterday ap- plied polite but firm pressure on the Austrian government to change its decision closing down facilities for' the emigration of Russian Jews through Austria. Nixon, speaking a day after Is- raeli Prime Minister Golda Meir had failed in a personal attempt to keep the facilities open, made a direct appeal to Austrian Chan- cellor Bruno Kreisky on humani- tarian grounds, stressing how Austria had received thousands of refugees during the Hungarian Revolution in 1956. The President gave strong sup- port to Mrs. Meir's plea to Krei- sky in a meeting in Vienna, say- ing he did not want to dictate to the Austrian leader but hoped he would reconsider his decision. Kreisky, acceding to demands by Arab terrorists, announced last week that Schonau Castle, the Jewish Agency's transit fa- cility, would be closed although individual Russian Jews could still pass through Austria by the shortest route and with the short- est possible stop. He took that course after two Palestine terrorists, who boarded a train carrying Jewish emi- grants from Moscow to Vienna, took four hostages - three Jews and an Austrian customs guard - and threatened to kill them unless the transit center was closed down. The president, who also said he would visit Europe within two or three months and announced that Secretary- of State Kissing- er would make his sixth visit to Peking later this month, declar- ed: "We simply cannot have gov- ernments, small or large, give in to international blackmail by ter- rorist groups." -W ATTENTION JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. A. / , J)' 'WI->y Audiences are standing Audiences are standing up and applauding ... WALKING TALL "Might just turn out to be this year's sleeper and emulate the runaway success of 'BILLY JACK'." --Kevin Thomas, L.A. Times I "BEST AMERICAN MOVIE OF THE YEAR" --Rolling Stone I STARTS FRIDAY Program Information 434-1782 *P * " b 3020 Washtenaw Between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti William Welman's The President Vanishes A pacif st and upright President disappears on the verge of a political upheaval by a group of greedy Fascist capitalists. One of the first so- cial protest films, it stars Arthur Byron, Paul Kelly, Rosalind Russell and Edward Arnold. SHORT: PLAYHOUSE FRI.: Antonioni's L'AVVENTURA ARCHITECTURE AUD. /CIN EMA GU ILD Tonih at and 9:95 Adm. $1 Tie University of Michigan Professional Theatre Program announces 3 Distinguished Repertory Companies THE NEW PHOENIX REPERTORY COMPANY presenting cydeau's "wonderfuly fmuny farc" October 25-27 TH E TVII October 27 m286 the premiere engagement of THE SHAWFESTIVAL THEATRE OF CANADA inGB. Sha ' swarm and w iltiv *Io CLL December 6 - 9 THE NEW YORK CITY CENTER ACTING COMPANY presentingIJohn Ga 's "songt illed satir" February 1416 and Shakes'pare's comedy lof wr' se.nsutaity" * NOW SHOWING! * . . perhaps the most remarkable film to emerge since Cecil B. DeMille founded Hollywood." VERNON SCOTT, UPI . f F' '.':j %i. i .. j. ' 1/ t; ..w. ! j /i iFj 6!/ ! f1 illusion and reality FESTIVAL WEEKEND Friday,Saturday, Sunday-Oct.5,6,7 MARILYN MONROE: a uniquely powerful and uniquely ambivalent symbol, woman, person of the American Fifties. She lived and worked through the early Sixties, but died with a phase of our culture in the early years of the Kennedy Adminis- tration and the cultural-political insurgence. To some, she is "the epitome, the perfect symbol of the spoiled white pampered wo- man rolling in the bucks" (the last phrase is not clearly a reference to money) "living the decadent life-style and taking sleeping pills." To Norman Mailer, in his "controversial" and genuinely problematic fictional-biog- raphy, she is "fatherless child" whom "many literary men are bound to adore . . . She came to us in all her mother's doubt, and leaves us in mystery." To others, almost nothing about her is sim- ple, nothing to be simplified or mystified by men, categorized and neatly disposed. This weekend, two mass-symbolic expres- sions of the Fifties that no one is nostalgic about: THE MISFITS. SOME LIKE IT HOT. Marilyn Monroe. Illusion and reality. And possibly for some, the dialectics of cultural liberation. a new morning presentation by the friends of newsreel $1.25 single admission; $2 double feature. All shows 7:15 & 9:30 p.m. in Modern Languages Auditoriums 3 and 4, Washington at Thayer Streets: info: 769-7353 :Z . Y s iti y'".".. :.:: .. -,c ,, ., ;,. .,. v r .....,...:. ..,...... .... ,.,.:;: : _. . . N Lyp ;: ' : s ;:'' ' :.y..;:. :i 2 L ............ You are invited to an informal showing of William Barry Outerwear in our J Shop for young men Friday, October 5 Noon to 8:00 P.M. Mr. Ben Fagenbush, representative for William Barry, will present an extensive collection of arctic parkas, suedes, wools, nylon cir'e and sherpa jackets outstanding in warmth, comfort, styling and detailing. Sizes 36 to 46. -r- ~ . Universal Pictures and Robert Stigwood prvwnt A NORMAN JEWISON Film "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" OPEN DAILY at 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7&9p.m. Staring TED NEELEY& ARLANDERSON YVWONNE ELLIMAN HlARRY FWNJNFN "s. ., vMewn FBrazand ,,Normain Jewiso~n :: _ -, ; . .