The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 9, 1978-Page 3 REVOLT CRUSHED: r r MU SEE NEwS HAPPEN CAL .M Subscribe to The Daily Have we got a deal for you! For only $6.50 a term ($7.50 outside Ann Arbor) you can have The Daily delivered to your doorstep (or somewhere thereabouts) six days a week. And here's another bargain: for a mere $12 ($13 outside the city), you can receive The - Daily both fall and winter terms. To order your subscription, call 764- 0558 or stop by our offices at 420 Maynard. Subscriptions outside Ann Arbor must be prepaid. KSharpen your pencils If classes aren't keeping you busy enough, we'd be happy to take some of that spare time off your hands. The Daily will be holding meetings for prospective staff members September 19-21. We'll have representativs from our news, sports, arts and business staffs at each of the meetings. Exact times and locations will be printed in The Daily next week. Happenings... ... ON THIS FIRST Saturday of the term are fairly sparse. The day starts with a 10 o'clock workshop in room 296 Dennison Bldg., sponsored by the Academic Women's Caucus titled "Women and Science", featuring several area women scientists.. . after lunch, or any time today you could pick up the phone and volunteer to join Drug Help by calling 994-HELP ... at 3:30 the Huron Valley Chapter of the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America will present a concert of barbershop harmony at the Ethnic Fair on Main Street ... speaking of the Ethnic Fair, the Ethnic Fair is being held on Main Street from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m... but if you're not planning to stay there all evening you might try the AACCO Chnese Fellowship films "Real or Fake Daughter" at 7 and "A Long Way From Home" at 9 in the assembly hall in the basement of the Union. . . that's all folks. Goodbye, Mr. Chips It looks like professors at the University of Minnesota have no problem with grade inflation. Students there decided to turn the tables, giving out "report cards" to their teachers - and 20 per cent flunked. Another 20 per cent received D's, 29 per cent got C's, 24 per cent B's. Only seven per cent were rated "A" teachers. Four were judged perfect by their students. The grading process has sparked controversy, but not just among the professors. The University of Minnesota Board of Regents wouldn't sanction publication of the findings and independent publication supported by advertising was impossible without the regents' approval. The full survey was finally published yesterday as a supplement by the Twim Cities Reader, a free weekly newspaper. It seems that our own University is the one to blame for all of the headaches - the questionnaire used in the project was developed here. " Teed off Pulled over for doing 50 in a 35 m.p.h. zone. Doesn't sound too unusual, except when the ticket is issued to the driver of a souped-up golf cart. It seems that sheriff's deputies in the retirement community of Sun City, Arizona are keeping a sharp lookout for some of that town's golden agers after hearing reports that local mechanics are willing to power up the golf carts. Golf carts are licensed only for travel up to 15 m.p.h., but many residents are using them for running errands around town. This must be the latest in "fore-wheel" drive. Panda-monious pregnancy America has been waiting for several years for some offspring from its two giant pandas, and it finally looks as if Hsing-Hsing and Ling- Ling may have a little Thing-Thing of their own. Though National Zoo Director Theodore Reed isn't sure Ling-Ling is expecting, he said the fact that she recently built a nest inside her cage could be an indication that something is on the way. "It could be a false pregnancy, or more likely it is just the female's normal fall hormonal changes. But it could be the real thing too," Reed said. The pandas, given to the U.S. by China following President Nixon's visit there, declined comment on the issue. On the outside .. . Today will be partly cloudy, partly sunny, and entirely miserable as this hot, humid weather continues. Expect a high around 88. Iran army halts demonstrations TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Army gunfire sliced through a crowd of several thousand anti-government demonstrators yesterday, killing scores, after the government imposed martial law to crush the growing civil revolt. Tehran's military governor said 58 persons were killed and 205 injured in the bloody clash in the shadow of the Iranian Parliament. Unofficial reports said as many as 100 died when troops fired submachine guns into the air to disperse the throng, then dropped their gunsights into the oncoming crowd. . THERE WAS NO comment on unofficial reports that as many as 1,000 persons were arrested in the first day of martial law. The clash came as Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi attempted to cap a growing revolt against , his authoritarian government, after failing to pacify the rebels by shuffling his government and sanctioning free expression. Hardcore Moslem religious leaders are spearheading a nine-month-old drive to force the Shah to recant a series of social reforms aimed at loosening the clergy's traditionally- firm grip on this Moslem nation. A WIDE spectrum of government opponents - including an underground terror group labeled "Islamic Marxists" by the shah - has cast its lot with the conservative religious leaders, who demand a return to government by Islamic law. Large scale clashes with authorities, which began in January, reportedly have claimed more than 1,000 lives. The mullas, or priests, of the Moslem Shiite sect, Iran's largest religious group, see a breakdown in the religious tenets in the liberalization begun by the shah last year, and they are also chafing at the growing Western influence in Iranian society. THE PRIESTS, who once exerted almost feudal power over that society, were rankled by the shah's decision to give land owned by the clergy to peasant farmers and to give women the vote, allow them to disregard their veils and seek university degrees. Women traditionally hold virtual second-class citizenship in most orthodox Moslem nations. Seeking to mollify his religious and political opponents, the shah named a devout Moslem, Jaafer Sharif-Enami as premier on Aug. 23. The new regime quickly announced that all legal political parties would be allowed to participate in government. Despite these moves, 100,000 people defied a government ban of rallies and massed in Tehran Thursday to demand the shah's resignation and the return of. exiled religious leader Ayatullah Khomaini, who broke with the shah in 1963 and has been directing the anti- shah campaign from his headquarters in Iraq. AFTER AN all-night cabinet meeting, the government issued its martial law decree, clamping a curfew from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. daily on Tehran and 11 other cities and banning gatherings by more than two persons. Several thousand angry protesters took to the streets again Friday, and shouted down a religious leader who appealed to them to disperse. Led by teenagers and followed by women in veils, the crowd marched on a wall of soldiers at Jaleb Square, in the eastern section of the city, and began hurling bricks and rocks. POLICE SAID they used tear gas "as far as possible" to break up the crowd, but witnesses said "many" blood- soaked demonstrators fell to the ground as soldiers opened fire. The shooting set ' off a two-hour rampage. "As they fled from the scene, the demonstrators burnt down anything that was flammable," said one witness. Several department stores and gasoline stations went up in flames, and at least one store was still burning several hours after the melee and sporadic gunfire continued as the city prepared for its first night under curfew. Mini Course CONTEMPORARY EUROPEN MIGRATIONS by IVO BAICIC Professor of Geography, University of Zagreb Sept. 11-Oct. 5, MTWTh 3-4, 2408 Mason Hall 1 credit Grad/Undergrad level. For information dial Point 30 or contact Ctr. for Russian and East European Studies, 204 Lane, 764-0351 Senator Kennedy to meet with Brezhnev MOSCOW (UPI) - Sen. Edward Kennedy said yesterday he would meet with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev today to discuss "some of the factors" that have led to a decline in relations between the superpowers. Kennedy spoke with reporters outside the U.S. Embassy snackbar, where he addressed embassy employees. He flew to Moscow from a World Health Organization conference in Alma-Ata, in Soviet Central Asia. HE WILL SEE Brezhnev at 11:30 a.m. (4:30 a.m. EDT) today. Kennedy was questioned about the mood of the U.S. Senate and whether the upper house would ratify any strategic arms limitation agreement it receives in the near future. "It's a tough mood at the present time but we'll just have to wait and see what steps are taken to improve it," he said. Luke Susterks Inc. HAYRIDES PRIVATE PICNIC GROUPS BONFIRES TWO PARTY HALLS CALL FOR INFORMATION: 483-5010 "I would hope to be able to at least express one senator's view about some of the factors that have impacted and influenced the Senate." --------------- ------- -I HOUSE OF 1 QIMPORTS ORIENTAL RUGS 10% OFF WITH THIS COUPON TAPETR, CLOTHES, JBVELRY, IWALL HANGINGS, and lets I morel 20% OFF I WITH THIS COUPON 320 E. Liberty 769-55 L- - - -I--~ ~ - ~ TWO FOR ONE HAPPY HOUR 4 to6 DAILY 215 N. Main Q Ann Arbor Q 663-7758 L Casual Corner presents 0 9 9 U U "(let It Together " THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LIX, No. 3 Saturday, September 9,1978 s edited and managed by students ai the University Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning iuring the University year at 420 Maynard Street, unn Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 september through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail Antside Ann Arbor. Summer session published through Saturday mor ning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; =7.50 by mtail outside Ann Arbor. BOWLING LEAGUES FORMING MEN, WOMEN, & MIXED Sign up now UNION LANES OPEN 10la.m. MON.-FRI. 60C per game 1 p.m. SAT. 8 SUN. -ALSO- PINBALL at UNION LANES & UNION STATION Ar .------ rA B11JOURK kr nickels arcade :r 761-6207 A. s Dan'/n JODY WEAVER, fashion coordi- nator, will put together wardrobes on a budget just for you. A fashion showin Drawings for free merchandise For dancing or for evening wear. 1 '" ~ . I