Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 27, 1974 AroundA2 The Human Rights Party and Young Socialist Alliance will hold an organizing rally on the diag Monday at noon, in support of the striking workers at the Argus optics plant on State Rd. WCBN will broadcast a de- Daily Official Bulletin Monday, July 29 Day Calendar A-V Ctr.: SAan of Aran. Aud 3, MLB, 7 pm. MSusi 7Sc Leulie Malieffey, raa- illonneur, Burton Tower, 7-8 pm. Made Society: Michael Beroff, pi- ainlat. Ractham Aud., 8341 pm. General Notices ATT. Otudenta: July 30, 1974 (4:00 pm), last date for Summer Half reemawhen Negltrar's Off. willla- law refund far a 501 por tent With- drawal. bate between Perry Bullard and Liz Taylor, candidates for the Democratic nomination to the State House of Representatives, Sunday at 10 p.m. You can phone in questions for the can- didates at 763-3500. WCBN is located at 89.5 on your radio dial. THEF MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV No. 50-8 Saturday, July 27, 1974 is (ailed and managed by students ,o lhe University o Michigan News ohone 764-05162. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a il y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- '.1y year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbu. Michigain 44104. Subscription r;ttec: 010 by carrier (campus aces); 1I local mail (Michigan and Ohio); ?12 nn-local mail (other states and Summer sesscon published Tues- 6;jy through Saturday macclog. Suswriptic caoteo: $5.50 by carrier c mpusarea); 06.00 local mail Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- 'cal mall (other states and foreign). In the news this morning Inter national MOSCOW - The Supreme Soviet parlia- ment yesterday unanimously reappointed President Nikolai Podgorny, Premier Alexei Kosygin and the present government minis- ters to their posts. Among those renamed was Culture Minister Yekaterina Furtseva. She was not renominated for a seat in parlia- ment after reportedly being reprimanded by party leaders for building a lavish country home outside Moscow. Kosygin formally mov- ed for reappointment of the Council of Min- isters, of which he is chairman. The 1,517 deputies gave their unanimous approval in a 15-minutes afternoon session. 0 LONDON - A bomb exploded in a multi- story parking garage at Heathrow interna- tional airport last night while thousands of travelers awaited departing flights, but Scot- land Yard reported there appeared to be no injuries. Police had said immediately after the blast that they feared heavy casualties. Airport authorities said they were warned that two other bombs had been planted in parking lots adjoining the international terminal. The car park area was cleared by police after the first bomb went off. The explosion apparently was caused by a bomb planted hr a car on the east side of the garage's third floor. National WASHINGTON - Higher oil import prices and declining revenue from farm exports drove the United States trade balance $1.7 bil- lion into the red during the second quarter of the year, the government reported yesterday. The nation registered a $101 million surplus in its trade account during the first three months of the year, when only a limited amount of oil was imported into the country because the Arab oil embargo was in effect. The embargo was lifted in mid-March. The combined first and second quarter figures give the nation a $1.6 billion trade deficit for the first six. months of the year. Weather There's a slight chance of rain this morn- ing, but after that, it'll be a nice weekend. Today and tomorrow both should be sunny and fair with temps in the upper 80s. In between will be a cool night tonight, breezy and in the mid-50s. 603 E. Liberty * Dial 665-6290 Open 12:45 daily, Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 p.m. "...boisterously Zany BARBRA f.unny at her wackiest! old-time farce,.. STREISAND For Pete's Sake, at her best!" See The Picture --Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times Already. You'll Absolutely Love It Know What I Mean? BARBRA STREISAND in "FOR PETE'S SAKE" .. Soviets publish their own 'Joy of Sex' PHONE 662-6264 Fri., Mon., & Tues., open 6:45; shows at 7 and 9 p.m. Sat., Sun., & Wed., open 12:45; shows at 1-3-5-7-9 p.m. NOW They didn't rob the money, they stole the whole bnk. GEORGE C. SCOTT in "BANK SHOT" MOSCOW (P) - The Soviet Union's first known sex manual >ays the Soviet woman gets more fun out of sex than her French or English sisters but it maintains that premarital in- tercourse is harmful. Written by Prof. A. M. Svya- loshch of Leningrad and pub- :ished early this year ostensibly For doctors only, the paper- back's one and only printing of 100,000 copies quickly sold out at 65 kopeks - 85 cents - each. But Russians say it is available on the black market for the equivalent of $37.50 a copy. The 187-page manual, "Fe- male Sexual Problems," main- tains that 40 per cent of all French women and 41 per cent of women in Britain never ex- perience orgasm. It claims, however, that only 18 per cent of the women in the Soviet Un- ion have that problem. Svyadoshch uses statistics from Kinsey and other foreign experts to support his claims but adds that studies on sexual behavior have been conducted in the Soviet Union. He reported that a study made in Leningrad showed 10 per cent of the tested males al- ways achieved sexual satisfac- tion. "A person's sex life has an influence on that person's mor- al state and ethical notions, that is, in forming the person- ality," Svyadoshch writes. Therefore, he adds, "premar- ital sex can be a source of severe psychic disturbances and can lead to social impoverish- ment of the personality." He advises that only if a cou- ple is in love is "everything per- mitted in order to create sex- ual harmony." "Men often overestimate a younger woman's need for sex while they underestimate an older woman's needs," he writ- es. He claims that Soviet women achieve a maximum interest 10 sex by the age of 30 and often maintain it until they're 60 years old. The Soviet male is most no- tent in his late 20s "after which begins a slow and gradual des- cent," Svydoshch says. The manual briefly discusses nymphomaniacs, transvesites, homosexuals - there is no Russian word for Lesbian - sadism and masochism, but it restricts these references to de- finitions. Svyadoshch also offers advice on when and where to make love: "anywhere and anytime" but not more than once a night or in the morning - but wily if you have time to rest before going to work. As a cure for some cases of frigidity, he recommends a !rip 4to a southern spa for mineral water showers and mud baths. TV tonight 6:00 2 4 11 13 News 9 Tarzan 20 Movie 'An Ideal Husband." (Eng- lish; 1947) 30 University Forum 50 Star Trek 5: 41 What's the Big Idea? 4:30 4 13 NBC News-- Tom Brokaw 11 CBs News- Dan Rather 30 Boboquivart 7:00 2 CBS News--Dan Rather 4 George Pierrot 7 Town Meeting 9 Police Surgeon 11 Bee Hsaw 13 10 Lawrence welk 24 wrestling 30 You Owe It To Yourself 561Masterpiere Theatre 57 Behind the Lines 7:30 2 wild, wild world ot Animals 4 Johnny Mann's Stand Up and Cheer 7 World af Survival 9 Beverly Hilbillies 30 Consumer Game 0:40 2 11 All in the Family 4 13 Emergency! 7 24 Partridge Family 9 CBC Sunday Sports 20 Movie "The Angry Red Planet.n (1919) 50 That Good Ole Nashville Music 57 Boboquivarl-Music 8:301 2 11 M*A*S*H 7 24 Movie 30 57 Hollywood Television 50 Merv Griffin Theatre 561Hollywood Television Theatre 9:00 2 11 Mary Tyler Moore 4 13 Movie "Mnarooned.' 9:30 1 11 Bob Newhart 9 International Basketball 20 Temple Baptist Church 30 57 Playhouse New York on the 40's 54 NET Playh.use 30:00 2 11 Barnaby Jones 7 24 Owen Marshall 20 Seven Hundreltklub 50 Lou Gordon 11:00 2 7 11 News 9 CBC News-George Fin-stad 24 ABC News 11:15 7 ABC News 9 A Look Bark 24 Don Rirshner's Rock Concert 11:30 2 Movie "Edge of Disaster." (10971) 7 Movie "The Vikings." (1958) 9 Movie "The Heiress." (1949) 11 Movie "0-Day, the Sixth of June." (1956) 5i Movie "Attark of the 50-Foot wo- man." (1958) 11:35 4 13 News 12:05 4 Johnny Carson 13 Movie "'Blast of Silence." (1961) 1:30 2 Movie "Nick Carter, Master De- tective," (1939) 7 Movie-Adventure "The Tartars." (Italian; 1960) 11 13 News 1:35 .saturday Rock 3:00 2 What's My Line? 3:30 2 News 7 Collage 4:00 7 News Committee asks court to investigate Smeekens LANSING (UPI) - A House committee investigating Rep. John Smeekens asked the Su- preme Court yesterday to launch a probe into accusations that he fraudulently coerced the court to admit him to the state bar. The committee, which next week will study claims that Smeekens (R-Coldwater) sub- mitted phony travel expense v o u c h e r s costing - tax- payers over $600, sent what it called "a respectful message" to the court asking for an in- vestigation. A spokesman for the court, however, said the court has no investigative powers and would not conduct its own probe. The spokesman added that the state of Michigan Grievance Board has already started a study. But E. N. Labelle, assistant counsel for the board in De- troit, refused to confirm that an investigation was under way or planned. "I can't tell you anything," Labelle said. "Our investiga- tions are confidential and I can't even confirm if there is one under way." According to published reports and an admission by Justice John Swainson, Smeekens was admitted to the bar by the court in 1971 as an act of compas- sion. Smeekens allegedly ap- pealed the court to admit him- even though he failed the bar exam-when he produced med- ical reports stating he had ter-. minal cancer. Physicians now say the re- ports could not have been Smeekens' because if they had been, the lawmaker would have been dead by now.