BLUE HYSTERIA See Editorial Page Y 4or IA6F 4br BO-UTIFUL High-35 Low-20 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 69 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 22, 1975 10 Cents T en Pages Tearful Sp niards mourn Franco F V iSEE .ivS fYPOMI CAL X V LLY Bunch of baloney It seems nearly everybody is eager to grab a share of the publicity generated by today's Michi- gan-OSU contest, ,and headline-hungry public of- ficials are certainly no exception. State Rep. Richael Conlin (R-Jackson) has a meaty bet going with State Rep. Mike Oxley of Ohio. If the Big Blue wins the game, Conlin becomes the proud owner of an Ohio ham, compliments of Oxley. However, if OSU is triumphant, Conlin is obligated to fork over a 10 lb. bologna sausage. "At first I didn't know what to offer as my part of the wager," Conlin said. "But it finally dawned on me that most Buckeyes are full of baloney anyway -so why not stuff them a little bit more." " Dial-a-Ride expands With the mercury dipping down to the freezing point these days, many Ann Arborites will be glad to note that Dial-a-Ride has expanded its services once again. Starting Dec. 1, there will be buses available every 15 minutes on all city routes during peak hours-7 to 8:30 a.m. and 4 to 5:45 p.m. Peak hour frequencyon theaMiller/Huron route is being increased Dec. 1 and additional routes are scheduled to begin by the first of the year. For more information, call 973-0300. 0 Tuition protest Protesting an impending tuition hike, some 50 students yesterday disrupted a meeting of the Michigan State University Board of Trustees. Chanting "vote it down, do it right, tuition hikes, we're going to fight, students protested a $1 per credit hour tuition increase which the board later approved. Because of the disruption, the trustees adjourned into executive session. Predictably, MSU President Clifton Wharton criticized the students' action. "When you have tactics of this nature, it makes it very difficult for the board to continue to operate in a normal, orderly fashion," he said. " Happeningseg are pretty scarce today. The Ann Arbor Art Association is holding an arts and crafts sale from 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. at 117 W. Liberty . . . the U.S. China Peoples' Friendship Association is sponsoring a talk by Owusu Sadauki on "China and Afro-Americans" at 7:30 p.m. at the Trinity Methodist Church in Detroit . . . and the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity of EMU is sponsoring a party at 10 p.m. at the Ypsilanti Boys' Club. The cover charge is $1, all proceeds go to the Boys' Club and Girls' Club. Sticky fingers Despite protests from one regent that the pro- gram was "going too far, too fast," the University of Minnesota Board of Regents voted down 7-5 a resolution that would have altered the thrust of a human sexuality program which teaches doctors, ministers and counselors how to help people with their sexual problems. The program, which began in 1971, employs sexually explicit films to foster an uninhibited atmosphere in the sessions. Although the Minnesota program has been hailed for its in- novative quality, at least one regent fears it would lead to moral corruption and rampant degenera- tion. Regent Lloyd Petersen, seeking to "bring it out in the open" commented, "And some of the stuff expressed about masturbation, that we should accept it, everybody should do it. I can visualize high school seniors, uh, the rest rooms will be full of this stuff going on." And who knows what's next? Widespread insanity, hairy palms . 0 On the hoof A woman columnist yesterday blasted bonnie Prince Charles of GreatBritain for treating women as if he is "an auctioneer looking over a blonde or brunette head of cattle." Jean Rook of the London Daily Express also chastized the Royal Prince for becoming swelled of head. Charles had no official comment on the broadside. Added Rook, as a parting shot, "I hate to say this but isn't Prince Charming losing some of his magic . . . he can be a snappish, pompous little puppy, if crossed." Well, off to the stockyards. I 0 On the inside .. . Sports Page features a preview of the con- test of the year by Andy Glazer . . . Ben Guker and Marty Kaufman write about the recent U.N. resolution branding Zionism as a form of racism on the Editorial Page . . . and Arts Page offers a review of La Boehme by Jeff Selbst. MADRID, Spain (P) - With Fascist salutes, flowers ,tears and prayers, hun- dreds of thousands of Spaniards, includ- ing crippled war veterans, paid a wildly emotional farewell to Gen. Francisco Franco yesterday. Mourners paralyz- ed the streets of Madrid in the biggest outpouring in the capital in more than a quarter-century. An elderly woman said she walked for four hours to see Franco's body "and I would have walked for four more." BUT AS Spaniards paid homage to their fallen leader, who died Thursday at the age of 82, Franco's handpicked heir, Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon, faced growing opposition from the left, the right and dissident army officers who called his succession to power "another dictatorial act." Franco lay in state in an open coffin, Thousands jam Madrid his face ravaged by a five-week fight against death. As night fell, the streets of Madrid were jammed with lines of mourners moving slowly and silently to- ward the National Palace, traditional residence of Spanish kings, to pay their last homage to the man who ruled them with an iron fist for 36 years. There were scenes of wild emotion in the palace's ornate Hall of Columns as old and young bade farewell to the gen- eralissimo with red roses, salutes and prayers. A CRIPPLED veteran of the Spanish civil war, Franco's ladder to power in 1939, knelt before the coffin, tilted to show Franco's face, and cried: "Adios, my general. At your orders always, my general." A middle-aged woman became hysterical and was carried out of the hall after calling out in tears: "God bless you, great Spaniard, and goodby." Spain's last homage to its authori- tarian ruler, dressed in a captain gener- al's uniform, began quietly at dawn as a group of no more than 50 persons waited outside the 18th century palace for the gates to open. Within hours, however, mourners were massing in thousands in a five-mile procession through the streets of the capital. Franc o Government leaders and top political and military figures mounted a 24-hour vigil by the general's coffin, five on each side in 20-minute shifts. Representa- tives of the three forces, the armed po- lice and the paramilitary Guardia Civil kept watch behind. Overhead, a strong light shone down on Franco's wasted features. Religious music boomed over loud- speakers to the crowds outside, waiting in the square where Franco made his last vublic address Oct. 1, four days aft- er the execution of five antigovernment militants set Europe's face against Spain. plots lans told Fantasy tinge Anti-Castro p Regents refuse student member By BILL TURQUE The Board of Regents unani- mously refused yesterday to en- dorse student participation at all levels of University policymak- ing, or to create a non-voting. student seat on the Board. Regent Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham) read a resolu- tion which said the Board was unwilling to order the various faculties in the University to in- clude students in their decision making process. REGENT David Laro (R-Flint) read a terse statement which called the idea of a non-voting student member for the Board "inappropriate." The defeated proposals origi- nated from recommendations of the Commission to Study Stu- dent Governance (CSSG), set up by Regental resolution two years ago. Regent Thomas Roach (D-De- troit) said the Board's defeat of the student participation recom- mendation "does not change Re- gental bylaws which explicitly say that student participation in decision making is important. "BUT," HE added, "what we are rejecting is change."3 After the meeting, Roach said that problems posed by other constiutencies demanding Re- gental representation caused the Board to reject the idea of a non-voting student member, who would serve at the pleasure of the Board, similar to the execu- tive officers. Roach said there was also the matter of "account- ability." "Suppose, for an example, that Vice President Overberger (vice See BOARD, Page 101 By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - The re- ported CIA p 1 o t s against Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro were only part of a broad - based U.S. strategy in the early 1960's to end or weaken his control over the island, according to a re- port issued late Thursday by a S e n a t e intelligence committee. Worried that Castro could s p a r k Communist revolts elsewhere in Latin America, three U.S. administrations resorted to economic, diplo- matic and e v e n military warfare against the Castro regime. THE MOST dramatic attempt to oust Castro occurred in April 1961 when Cuban troops routed a CIA-sponsored invasion force of more than 1,000 at the Bay of Pigs. Many of the schemes bore the stamp of fantasy. The CIA, ac- cording to the report, dreamed up plots to make his beard fall out and destroybhis image, to overthrow him by staging the second coming of Christ, or kill him with exploding seashells and poisoned cigars. There were U.S.-inspired plans to organize anti-Castro cells in Cuba. There were repeated in- cidents of sabotage against Cuba's sugar crop and factories and landings by rebel groups on Cuban shores. It is not clear, however, how many of these in- cidents were instigated by Wash- ington or by Cuban exiles oper- ating from the U.S. mainland. THE SENATE committee re- port said that in the fall of 1961, the CIA's then deputy di- rector of plans, Richard Bis- sell, was "chewed out" by both President John Kennedy and Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy for "not doing anything about get- ting rid of Castro and the Castro regime." Mindful of the plots against him, Castro acquired the habit in the early days of his regime of sleeping at different locations night after night. Castro has claimed the CIA was responsible for 24 attempts on his life, 16 more than the Senate committee found. WHATEVER the figure, the report suggested that Castro's precautions were prudent. It in- dicated that Castro could have been courting disaster through such simple acts as picking up a pen, lighting a cigar, putting on his shoes or having a bowl of soup. The report said the CIA tried, or at least thought about, contaminating these objects with poison. Chairman Frank Church (D- Idaho) of the Senate intelligence committee said yesterday the most important lesson in its re- port on assassination plots is that "we should never abandon our principles and adopt the principles of the Communists." WHILE HE stopped short of disagreeing that Presidents Eis- enhower, Kennedy and Johnson were more likely than not to have known of this nation's in-, volvement in assassination plots, Church said there was too much contradictory evidence to make a finding. He did say, however, that President Ford should read the committee report "very care- fully as to what changes he might make" in his administra- tion. Church noted, for example, that testimony by former CIA Director Richard Helms con- flicted with previous testimony he had given to other commit- tees of Congress. Moynihan rumored read to quit UN WASHINGTON (RP) - Presi- 4 dent Ford summoned Ambas- sador Daniel Moynihan to a meeting here early next week amid reports that Moynihan was planningato quit his job at :' .":},,.. n.> the United Nations. "I am not leaving right away," Moynihan told reporters in a U. N. corridor after he abruptly canceled a news con- ference called earlier for "an b s important announcement." S< WHITE HOUSE officials said Ford has "complete trust" in the ambassador and that Moy- nihan had not submitted his resignation. Moynihan had talked earlier with both Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger by telephone and with an aide to Ford. "I very much want him to stay," Kissinger told reporters. "I consider him a good personal friend." ijn - J3(hnnSee MOYNIHAN, Page 7 Photo by Jeffrey Yapalater, OSU Lantern Woody A pensive Woody Hayes oversees his Bucks during a secret practiee session yesterday at Michigan Stadium. I0y l u(yE.5Uan CAMERAS FILM HOLD-UP: Armed robbers By RICK SOBLE Security cameras caught four ; robbers on film yesterday morn- ing as they held up the Ann Arbor Bank and Trust on Pack- ard and made off with an un-, disclosed amount of money. An official from the Detroit Federal Bureau of Investigation , i (FBI) said he expected the alleged robbers would be caught with the help of the photos, .{ . which he called outstanding. Y E S T E R D A Y 'S robberyy scored the nineteenth b a n k heist in the Ann Arbor area thisx year and the seventh in the lastY seven weeks. Witnesses told the FBI that s at least three of the four ban- dits were armed. Two were 41-.. . rr~f to .n . ri l . : a .'' . .!r . .... hit local bank Court nominees expected WASHINGTON toP)-The chair- man of an American Bar Asso- ciation committee said yester- day he expects to report to Atty. Gen. Edward Levi this weekend on potential Supreme Court nominees the committee is evaluating. Warren Christopher of Los Angeles, chairman of the Fed- eral Judiciary Committee of the ABA, talked to reporters during a break in a closed meeting of the committee here. HE SAID Levi had asked the committee to rate the suggested nominees as soon as possible "and indicated he hoped we ,- .:.v:: _:. e.: :::.... :,v:L. .. f: i :Y+.{ . - 't;:}}T:. }-:.t-v: {f 4i'fi:Y ..lrvry-:...._ : . .... ......... is i::.,.. ..:. .vT+? !r ...fir.::: iF:i{' ':j i :ri i::::::.:} . 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