I The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 8, 1978-Page 3 NEW GO VERNMENT FIGHTS OPPOSITION: Iranian military arrests mount p. * IF YOU SEE 6L A EN CALL D .Y Mock assassination Two assassination attempts and a food fight disrupted Monday night's mock "Bier for Probate Judge" campaign rally held in South Quad cafeteria, The culmination of a week-long mock campaign drive, the rally began smoothly as diners chanted "We want (RA Tom) Bier". But after a campaign speech blasting candidates Maxine Virtue and Loren Campbell, a small food fight erupted and the candidate was hustled off-stage. As Beir was leaving, one diner attacked him with a butter knife but was successfully subdued by the candidate's crew of 25 security guards. Another resident made a similar attempt wielding a fork. He scratched Bier's hand. "I don't know if Bier has any enemies in South Quad, but at a rally of this sort, you get all kinds of nuts," said mock campaign manager Steven Alderman. Police sue city The Police Officer's Association of Ann Arbor is suing the city over parking. Recently the men in blue were told to park at the city's Fourth and William carport, two blocks away from the old spot at Fourth and Washington. This, the officers say, is too far from police headquarters in City Hall, and violates contract provisions assuring convenient parking. Assistant City Attorney Lamont Walton said at a hearing, last Friday, Circuit Court Judge Ross Campbell denied a preliminary injunction against the city, but left open the possibility of later action if an arbitrator cannot find a sdlution. Changing roles The American corporation should be restructured to include feminine and minority values, rather than remain dominated by white males. So says Dr. Alice Sargent in an article appearing in Business Review, a publication of the University's Graduate School of Business. "One reason affirmative action has not become a mainstream priority management issue, is that success threatens the privileged position heretofore held by white males who will lose some positions and power when qualified and qualifiable minority persons seek their share of the corporation action," said Sargent. She also noted that women need compensatory training to develop some business skills and suggested that women learn how to be powerful and forthright. Sargent also said that men must learn to accept such changes and should become aware of feelings rather than avoiding or suppressing them. Take ten During a Baltimore Welfare Federation Conference held this week ten years ago, then special assistant to University President Robben Fleming, William Haber sharply criticized student activists, explaining that they are very articulate concerning what they are against, but seldom state what they are for. Compounding the problem, said Haber, is that many "students do not want a dialogue; they are in no mood to debate or argue. Some even demand confrontation." But Haber also said: "Idealism is to be welcomed, and the college age is exactly the period when questions are to be asked and orthodoxies are to be challenged.' TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's two-day- old military government, trying to quell violent opposition to the monarch's authoritarian rule, announced the arrests yesterday of 32 former ministers and ranking civil officials. At the same time, officials at Reza Pahlavi Hospital said retired air force Gen. Ali Mohammed Khademi, dismissed as managing director of Iran Air, died from a gunshot wound received Sunday. The officials said they believed the wound was self-inflicted, but a member of the general's family said he was attacked at his house in a Tehran suburb by unidentified youths. KHADEMI WAS dismissed as managing director of, thenational airline in a conciliatory gesture to the country's majority Shiite Moslems. He is a member of the minority Bahai sect. Many of his co-religionists, meanwhile, also were dismissed from their positions in August when the gover- nment of Jaafar Sharif-Emami took over. Unconfirmed reports said supporters of influential Shiite holy man Ayatullah Khomaini, in exile in Paris, had called for a mass demonstration today near the city's bazaar. The government, ap- parently responding to the reports, moved tanks and armored personnel carriers into the area. There is no visible sign of the firebrand fanatic in Khomaini, the man who may shape the future of Iran. Khomaini smiles gently as he speaks of his followers cutting Iranian policemen 'i to pieces. THE OLD MAN sitting cross-legged on the floor of his Paris home rarely raises his voice. But that gentle voice, exiled from Iran since 1963, has aroused revolt among Shiite Moslems, who con- stitute more than 90 per cent of Iran's population. The embattled government of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi has accused Khomaini of masterminding a cam- paign to impose an anti-Western regime on one of the West's crucial suppliers of oil. Khomaini rejects the accusation that he is anti-Western. "I am neither anti-Western nor anti- Soviet," he told an interviewer. "I am pro-Iranian, and I am against allowing American interests to rob Iran of its natural wealth." KHOMAINI MAKES no secret of his hatred for the shah and has said in in- terviews that he wants to depose him and form an "Islamic republic." If the present effort fails, he said, he will call for all-out civil war. Meanwhile, fuel was in short supply in Tehran because of a three-day-old strike by truck drivers. Army drivers tried to fill the gap by moving supplies to gas stations between curfew hours in effect between nine p.m. and five a.m. Orthodox Moslems are demanding an end to the shah's Westernization refor- ms which they say contradict the teachings of the Koran, the Moslem holy book. THE RELIGIOUS protesters have been joined by the political opposition, seeking democratic reforms, freedom for political prisoners and an end to martial law, and by hundreds of thousands of strikers who want more, pay and better working conditions. Scattered violence erupted in down- town Tehran yesterday, but there were no serious clashes as demonstrators fled before troops arrived. Small groups of anti-government demonstrators tried to approach Tehran University as, troops closed off streets leading to the campus, but they dispersed as the troops fired into the air. Ferry rams seawall in foggy N.Y. harbor The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at AUD. A FESTIVAL OF MIDDLE-EASTERN FILMS WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 8 ADMISSION FREE (Said Marzuok, 1974) I WANT A SOLUTIO I 7 only-AUD. A The frustrated efforts of an Egyptian upper class woman to obtain a divorce are movingly portrayed by Faten Hamoma. In Arabic with English subtitles. (Shady Abdel-Salam, 1969) THE MUMMY 9 only-AUD. A Story of the robbing of the Pharoanic tombs of ancient Egypt. In Arabic, with English subtitles. Tomorrow: THE CRUEL SEA & THE LAW lil .. .,. ggj- DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES -- Adults $1 .25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. ti l:3b P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtipie. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. NEW YORK (AP) - A Staten Island ferry carrying 2,000 passengers across fog-bound New York harbor crashed in- to a concrete seawall at the tip of lower Manhattan yesterday, tossing the passengers about and peeling the steel deck back like a sardine can. Officials said 173 persons were treated at five hospitals and dozens more were given first aid at the scene. THE CONDITIONS of two people were listed as serious - one with a possible fractured spine and the other with a possible heart attack. Other injuries ranged from broken bones to cuts and bruises suffered when the ferry American Legion struck the seawall at an estimated speed of three to four knots - roughly the equivalent of three or four mph. "There were people flying around the vessel, people thrown from their seats, just about everyone was knocked about," said Coast Guard Cmdr. Joseph Smith, who headed an immediate Coast Guard investigation of the accident. THE FERRY left St. George, on Staten Island, at 7 a.m. loaded to more than half its capacity of 3,400. Some passengers would normally have taken the 6:30 a.m. run, but it was cancelled on Election Day. Many passengers were standing, ready to run for subways or buses. "Oh my God, we're going to hit," Eleanor Benevento said passengers yelled. "Back down! Back down!" cried a deckhand, calling on Captain Irving Satler to reverse the engines. "The captain gave it full astern," said Mate Edward Hillis, but before the propeller could reverse the 21,000-ton ferry's momentum, the boat crashed into the seawall near Battery Park. Happenings Films Ethics and Religion - Roots: Chicken George, 4:15, Aud. 3 MLB. Ann Arbor Film Co-op - I Want a Solution, 7 p.m. The Mummy, 9 p.m.. Angell Hall, Aud. A. Alternative Action - A Separate Peace, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema II- Padre, Padrone, 7 p.m. & 9 p.m., MLB, Aud. 3. Cinema Guild - Bonnie and Clyde, 7 p.m. & 9:15, Old Arch. Aud. Performances 'Studio Theatre - "The Lover", 4:10, Arena Theatre, Frieze Building. Anthroposophical Student Association - Eurythmeum Stuttgart, with Romanian State Orchestra, 8 p.m., Power Center. Meetings Non-Academic Career. Counseling and Placement Office - panel discussion for graduate students, "Strategies of Networking for Academic Positions at Professional Conferences", 10 a.m. 3200 SAB. 1 Commission for Women - demonstration of the game "Which Way ERA," noon, Old Regents Room, second floor LS&A Building. i Speakers Political Science Department - "The Organizational Determinates of Judicial Attitudes", Giorgio Freddi, noon, 5208 Angell Hall. Center for Research Learning and Teaching - "Dr. Fox Effect," Les Leventhal, noon, 109 E. Madison. Center for Afro-American and African Studies - "African States and the Challenge of Independence", 12:00-1:30, 1017 Angell Hall. Environmental Science and Technology - "PCB's in the Hudson River - The Problem and its Solutions, 3:30 p.m., 185 Engineering. Applied Mechanics and Engineering Sciences - "Buoyant Plumes on a Transverse Wind", 4 p.m., G.G. Brown Lab. School of Engineering - "On the Utilization of Subgradient Optimization Instead of LP in Integer Programming," 4 p.m., 229 West Engineering.- Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America- Mexico; "Mexican Exiles Speak in Their Own Defense," Jose Jacques Medina & Juan Jose Pena, 7:30 Schorling Aud. Miscellaneous English Department - Fall Poetry Workshops. Pendleton Program - Public demonstration of Eurythmy by performers of the Eurythmeum Stuttgart, noon, Michigan Union Ballroom. School of Music - Residency, conducted by the Cecil Taylor Unit, 2:30 & 7 p.m., School of Music. Project Outreach Internship in Adolescence - accepting applications for undergraduate field work programs, call 764-9179 or stop by 554 Thompson for information. Men and Women's Swim Team are looking for timers to work at swimming meets. Those interested should call David Ellis 994-5932 or Stuart Isaac 763-5250. English Department Fall Workshop Series - Malcom Glass, poetry reading, 8 p.m., Pendleton Center, Michigan Union. Ark - Green Grass Cloggers, 9 p.m., 1429 Hill. The real 'Animal House' It reads like a scene straight out of the movie "Animal House." Fraternities reknowned for guzzling beer, promoting vicious pranks and generally running amuck, are finally closed down by college administrators. But it's not a scene from the hit movie, nor is it a preview of a sequel to the flick; instead it's the real thing. The Dartmouth College faculty voted Monday to close the school's 20 fraternities and two sororities, saying they encourage heavy drinking and raucous behavior. Last spring, about a dozen people were treated for icnhnlic cnnvulsinns during "Sink Night." (the installation WIOB Announces IN CONCERT at the SECOND CHA NCE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14-9 PM FLINT "Don't miss the Ann Arbor Premiere of America's fastest rising supergroup" Tickets $6.50 On sale now-Second Chance A SON OF BAMBOO PRODUCTION Polo & Vittorio Taviani 1977 Padre, Padrone A beautiful tale, a beautiful film. After living in almost total isolation for the first 20 years of his life, a shepherd in the hills of Sardinia goes on to become a professor of linguistics and writes his autobiography. Winner of International Critic's Award, Cannes; Best Film of Chicago Film Festival. "A soaring expres- sion of boundless human energy and potential. One of the most impressive Italian films in years."-Christian Science Monitor. "You must see this film . .." -Werner Herzog, Ann Arbor, 1977. FRI: MIRACLE WORKER & LILIES OF THE FIELD SAT: Alan Bates in BUTLEY SUN: Jack Nicholson in THE LAST DETAIL CINEMA II TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 MLB 3 $1.50 MANN THEATRES Wed. Matinees FEWIN All seats $1.50 MAPLE VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER 769-1300 until 4:30 SHOW TIMES Sat-Sun-Wed 1:30 4:00 6:30 9:05 Mon-Tues- Thurs-Fri 6:30 9:05 - a P1 A A " P1 1 1 A I T n 1 n T 1 1 1-1 C C 17 M C C C A l T C --Ili 5 i