4 CREDIT FOR TEACH-IN See Editorial Page Y , itItg A& 43atly UNINSPIRING High-66 Low-33 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 45 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 25, 1975 Ten Cents Ei ght Pages ILLEGAL CIA MAIL OPENINGS . i'ii' r'i I SFT I5 ARWI t I XThAB Not aware of spying -1Mitchell EANRMg , .w 'ac 'V I L5M ruJ.ib..U'L Skinny dip Last week the men were reprimanded for swim- ming at Margaret Bell Pool in bathing suits so small they ripped the seams. This week it's the women's turn for swimsuit trouble. Pool matron Gwen Carter has posted a message asking women with "large thighs" to stop renting black nylon suits in the smaller sizes. A 34 may sound sleeker than a 36, but Carter gets stuck mending the holes. Maybe it's time to make that co-ed swim a skinny dip. Time change Turn back those clocks and enjoy an extra hour in bed this weekend. Michigan joins the rest of the nation in returning to standard time at 2 a.m. Sunday. Standard time will continue until the last Sunday in April, when clocks are turned ahead one hour again to daylight savings time, unless con- gressional moves to change that date are success- ful. " Happenings... ... begin on wheels today with a homecoming bicycle race from 7 a.m. to noon on central cam- pus . . . the American Friend's Committee holds a sweater drive for Vietnamese children from 8-3 p.m. at Kerrytown . . . registration for the Courage Kayak Club's canoe race from Dexter to Delhi Park will be at 8:30 a.m.; the race is at 10 a.m. . . . the annual mudbowl match will be at 10 a.m. at Sigma Alpha Epsilon . . . East Wind hosts a party at the Ming House, 508 Packard at 8 p.m. . . . the Ann Arbor Teach-In shows the Parallex View from 7:30-9:30 p.m. in MLB 3 . . . the Polish Club presents a Polish Folklore concert at 8 p.m. . . : the Hellenic Student Society hosts a party at 8:30 p.m. in the International Center ... and the Gomberg House of South Quad pre- sents the ultimate boogie, Circus Maximums from 9 p.m.-2 a.m. at the Coliseum. " Presto changeo Men: does the latest look in leggy levis bore you? Are bow ties not your bag? There may be just enough time for you to catch a plane to Provincetown, Mass., where hundreds of transves- tites hope to strut their stuff. The occasion is a nine-day convention designed to "make it easier for a cross-dresser to pass as a woman," according to Ariadne Kane, one of the fair's 50 male organ- izers. The event, called the Fantasia TV Fair, will include a fashion show, film festival, drag ball and workshops on makeup, hair styling, wig styling, prosthetic aids and elocution. The fair is open to the public, so shake and leg and hurry on down. 0 Muscle men Women aren't swooning over Charles Atlas bodies anymore. A recent Loyola University study has found that women, particularly ones the study defines as "liberated," prefer men of medium- thin, linear builds over the muscle men. "Women who described themselves in liberated terms and who led more liberated lifestyles had a preference for thinner, more linear physiques, whereas women who saw themselves in more traditional feminine roles like more massive torsoes - the typical "muscle-men," said Paul Lavrakas of Loyola's applied social pschology program. 0 Save New York Some people will do just about anything to save the financially ailing Big Apple. A woman who contributed $10 to help out New York City now wants to hold a nationwide garagetsale Dec. 6for the same purpose. "We may get more laughs for New York than money," Shirley Clark, of Boise, Idaho, said, "but laughter is brighter than tears and may be just what this country needs to get in the mood of "neighbor helping neighbor." Clark suggests the sale be named "Lanyard"-an acronym for "Let's Adopt New York and Recycle Dreams." Joy of Sex Kids are experimenting with the joys of sex younger than ever these days. Girls as young as nine years old are asking for birth control and pose a special problem as to whether their parents should be notified, a Planned Parenthood leader says. Part of the problem is that the agency's information pamphlets, aimed at reaching adults, are "too complicated for sixth-graders to under- stand," says Dr. Gerry Oliva, agency medical director. "Agency counselors throughout the coun- try are totally overwhelmed by these kids," she said. On the inside.. . Blanch Wiessen Cook, one of the teach-in's featured speakers, writes about behavior control for the Edit Page . . . the Arts Page features a review of the RC Players production "The Poor of New York" . . . and on the Sports Page a preview of today's football game. On the outside.. . Say good-bye to our warm.weather for now. A I .. FormFo .IV" '111 I1 _15 JILI t telephone booth for free beer By TIM SCHICK Crowded living conditions hardly surprisehmost University students, but when 63 cubic feet of human flesh was crammed into a Diag phone booth yester- day, more than a few passers- by turned their heads. Like an anachronistic re- minder of the Frivolous Fifties, six teams of hardy contestants pushed, climbed and squeezed their way into the Bell box in an attempt to take home $35 worth of beer. THE 15-MEMBER winning group, promptly dubbed "The Sardines," captured the prize with their combination of small women and a ten-year-old boy. The noon event, sponsored by University Activities Center (UAC), was part of this week's homecoming festivities. Hundreds of spectators cheer- ed the suffocated contestants as they packed themselves into the phoneless box, donated for the event by its manufacturer. UNLIKE MOST such, stunts, the teams attempted to .close the booth's door after entering. The record for phone booth- stuffing is reportedly 22 - with the door left open. Yesterday's teams w e r e formed primarily from casual by standers, with short contest- ants particularly popular. But See STUFF, Page 2 Atty. Gen. defends Nixon WASHINGTON P - For- mer Atty. Gen. John Mit- chell returned to the site of the Senate Watergate hear- ings yesterday and denied under oath he was ever told the CIA or the FBI was illegally opening mail. Mitchell, who is appeal- ing his conviction for per- jury, conspiracy, and ob- struction of justice in the Watergat, c o v er u p case, said he does not recall that CIA Director Richard Helms ever told him of the mail opening operation. HE ALSO told the Senate in- telligence committee he has no reason to believe Richard Nixon was informed of it while presi- dent. Mitchell's testimony annears to conflict with Helms' state- ment to the committee Wednes- day. Helms said he left a 22- mini'te meeting with Mitchell on June 1, 1971, with the clear imoression that Mitchell under- stood the CIA was onening and readine letters to and from the Soviet Union.Fis3 Helms testified he showed First Mitchell information that obvi- People oiisly had come from an illegal- warm ly onened personal letter. A4Ttr(H 'TL said vesterdsy that "to the best of my recol- lection I was never told that anyone was carrying on a mail onening oneration. It is my tes- timony that I never knowinelv saw the contents of. any letter that had been onened." He said he had been under By t the impression that Helms told State him about, a legal "mail cover" (R-Ann orogram in which only the out- bill that side of an envelone is examined, cation in on another suibiect, Mitchell If pas said he advised Nixon to with- for instr draw his anoroval for the so- sease a called Hnston intelligence plan topicsN hecanse it included programs parent a for illeaal mail onenings and such other illegal acts as bur- THE glary. Tuesday ure to a "THE PROPOSALS were ini- that wa mical to the best interests of Senate I the contry and they were not for reco something a president of the Dougla United States should be approv- assistant ing," Mitchell testified. that the See UNAWARE, Page 2 See i envoy to Doily Photo by KEN FINK Students, on their way to becoming human meatballs, cram and smash their way into a portable phone booth on the Diag yesterday as part of the Homecoming Week's festivities. 2 students sue for Ohio St. tickets, reject offered refund Daily Photo by KEN FINK Sunny sereniy year dance student Trudy Erwin gazes wistfully around es' Plaza while soaking in yesterday's unseasonably sun. 1ursley ,Aproposes-b0 new sex ed bill GLEN ALLERHAND Senator Gilbert Bursle v Arbor) has introduced a would expand sex edu- n Michigan high schools. ssed, it would provide :uction on venereal di-w, and contraception, two vigorously opposed by and anti-feminist groups. BILL was presented as a compromise meas- nother Bursley proposal s defeated by the state last summer and is up nsideration next week. as Smith, administrative. t to Bursley, explains "two areas of concern BURSLEY, Page 2 Bursley France slai1 By JEFF RISTINE Stung by an athletic office miscalculation, two University law students are trying to sue their way to the biggest football game of the year. Like 9,000 other unlucky single-ticket purchas- ers, Larry Sherman and Scott Wolstein were told there'll be no room for them in Michigan's 101,701-seat stadium Nov. 22. Tht athletic office apparently overbooked the Ohio State contest, and this month returned the money to some disappointed fans so that all- season ticket buyers can see the momentous battle for the Rose Bowl. SHERMAN and Wolstein claim that the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics has com- mitted a breach of 'contract, and that they will suffer "irreparable damage for which there can no longer be adequate relief" unless they get their tickets. The two each bought four of the seven-buck tickets on May 2 and invited their parents and friends to share the fun. The Big 'U' cashed their checks, according to Sherman, but sent refunds Oct. 10. Sherman said the tickets should be granted on a first-come, first-served basis and that the ath- letic office "will have to explain to the judge" See STUDENTS, Page 8 -Turkisi e By AP and Reuter PARIS-The Turkish ambas- sador to France and his chauf- feur were shot and killed at point-blank range by gunmen on a crowded bridge yesterday- just two days after the Turkish envoy in Austria was assassi-i nated. Ambassador Ismail Erez, and j his driver, Talip Yenner, were sprayed with bullets as their car was turning off the Bir Hakeim bridge and heading back to the embassy. IN ANKARA, Turkish Foreign Minister Ihsan Sabry Caglayan- ' ' gil declared: "The chain of events indicates without a doubt that Turkey is under a political- y KEN FINK lv motivated attack." .Sources otesting the close to Ankara's army com- discriminate mand said Turkey had placed its troops on Cyprus on alert. While Turkish officials re- frained from publicly accusing any group, Turks in general appeared convinced that either Greeks or Armenians, tradition- * al Turkish enemies, were re- sponsible for the killings. In Beirut an anonymous caller phoned the Associated Press and said the Paris and Vienna as- _._. sassntinns were aried Aont' b c t t f 1 1 c f t e s t other capitals around the world. Icik Bozkurt, the Turkish Em- bassy's second secretary in Paris, told reporters security at the Paris embassy was rein- forced after the Vienna shoot- ing, but quoted Erez as say- ing a few hours before he was shot: "One can do nothing be- fore a determined killer." Police said the two men died when unidentified gunmen open- ed fire, smashing the car's wind- shield as the vehicle turned off the bridge near the Eiffel tower. "I HEARD five or six shots and then I saw two or three young guys running away from the scene," a newspaper vendor who has a kiosk under the bridge, said. "When I went up to the bridge, the chauffeur was slumped over the wheel. The ambassador was laid out on the back seat." The caretaker of a nearby building confirmed the news- paper vendor's account of the drama and told police: "I saw three men run off in the direc- tion of the. nearby metro (sub- way station). Weeping embassy employes turned away reporters from the entrance of the secluded build- ing less than a quarter of a mile from where the ambassa- dor was shot. A woman arrived with a bunch of red roses to present her condolences and burst into tears as she entered the grounds. Police officials said the en- voy's wife arrived at the em- bassy about an hour after the shooting, not knowing her hus- band was dead. She asked the reason for the police cordon and was told "it is an alert exer- cise," before her identity was established and she was given the news. Daily Photo b Minorities picket the law school yesterday, pr administration's hiring practices which they say against women and minority groups. 100 pic kets deni- more minori By JODI DIMICK HOLD-UP AT NATIONAL BANK Robbery not like movies Editor's note: Daily Reporter Ken Parsigian was on the scene of yesterday's bank robbery; this is his account. Ann Arbor police have not yet re- leased details of the crime. By KEN PARSIGIAN To cap off a rather uneventful afternoon yesterday, I decided to visit the National Bank whirled around just in time to see the door close and a form that I couldn't quite make out, fleeing. Turning back to the teller, I was going on. "Nothing," she just as bored and unaware as asked her what replied looking the rest of the I I