ALL-CAMPUS CALCULATOR RALL Live Band Gabriel/Cash Bar Nov. 11: 8 p.m.-1 a.m. TICKETS $5 Per Person. Available in E & W Engineer- ing Bldg. and at Door. Sponsored by Engineering Council Richar ruiga Page 2-Thursday, November 9, 1978-The Michigan Daily FORMER PRIME MINISTER ARRESTED: Irania TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - The Iranian military put on a show of force yester- day and martial law authorities arrested an ex-prime minister in a campaign to discourage opposition to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. An ex- pected anti-government demonstration in the Tehran bazaar failed to materialize. The United States has decided to supply Iran with crowd-control equip- ment, including tear gas and police batons and shield, the State Depar- tment said yesterday. The decision to approve the recent sale represents further support for the Shah and the new m~ilitary government in Tehran' as they act to suppress rioting involving anti'-Shah groups in the country. DEPARTMENT officials also con- firmed the homes of three Americans in the Iranian capital were firebombed. No injuries were reported and the city is "essentially calm," department spokeswoman Jill Shuker said. Police protection was requested by the U.S. Embassy for some residential areas of Tehran where Americans live, she said. The sale of American-made equip- ment to Iran required government ap- proval. The human rights office at the State Department was involved in the decision, but officials refused to say n army whether the division tried to block the sale or to give any details of the tran- saction. THE DEFENSE Department said it will not be involved in supplying the riot control equipment to the Shah's gover- nment, officials saying they believe the Iranians will purchase the equipment directly from commercial sources. The officials also said the United States has no plans to provide any U.S. military experts in riot control to help train Iranian troops or police. The arrested former prime minister, Amir Abass Hoveida, headed the Cabinet for 13 years. He is one of dozens of former officials arrested in recent days to defuse opposition claims the government tolerates corruption and abuse of authority. TROOPS BACKED by-tanks and ar- mored personnel carriers guarded key areas of the city and its giant bazaar, which was closed. The bazaar, which also contains the huge Shah Mosque, has been the staging area for many of the anti-Shah demonstrations that have erupted since January. A demonstration reportedly called by exiled Shiite Moslem holy man Ayatullah Khomaini, who symbolizes the anti-shah forces, did not develop, but the armed forces remained on alert in the event Khomaini's supporters surged onto the streets again to smash shows banks and shops as they hav recent days. Many bazaar shop own reluctant to reopen after riotiq and others pulled the shutters- sign of protest against the new: led government appointed by Monday. The new governmen pointed after the collapseo Minister Jaafar Sharif-E civilian government Sunday. KHOMAINI, LIVING in Pa yesterday he will call on his m followers to take up arms ag government if the present struggle fails to achieve its obj( "We hope to achieve ou through the political struggle, demonstrations, strikes an marches," the 78-year-old N said through an aide. "However, if these method work and if the shah and his su strength e done in continue to resist the demands of the people, we will have to reconsider the ers were method of our struggle and take other ig Sunday methods into consideration, including down as a taking up the armed struggle." military- KHOMAINI, WHO has threatened to the shah withdraw his support from any op- t was ap- position politician who cooperates with of Prime the shah, said if the current turmoil in Emami's Iran should bring a Marxist or pro- communist government to power, he aris, said and his followers "will react against pillions of them exactly in the same way as we are ainst the doing now against the shah." political He said he envisaged no political role ective. for himself in a future Iranian gover- ur goals nment. "This is neither my wish nor my ,through desire. Nor would -my age and position d protest permit such a thing." oly man The opposition to the shah is spearheaded by Moslem traditionalists Is fail to who demand an end to the shah's apporters Westernizing reforms. CIA spy called'. ih Brautigan's most intima June 30th deals with hi h spring of 1976 and expl 3passion the day-to-dayr heart. An excerpt from i A Small Boat on the Voyage of Archaeology A warm thunder and lightning storm tonight in Tokyo with lots of rain and umbrellas around 10 P.M. This is a small detail right now but it could be very important a million years from now when archaeologists silt through our-ruins, trying to figure us out. te book, June 30th, s first trip to Japan in the ores with wit and com- realities of the human his book of poetry: EU4 Delta Books, $3.95 Delacorte Press Seymour Lawrence hardcover, $6.95 DREAMING OF BABYL.ON It is [ f~~\ 4 ( N early 1942. You are in San d \aj Francisco, and you need a private 'eye. When you hire C. Card, the hero of Brautigan's irY j iIi-kiIN eighth novel, you have scraped the bottom of the private eye barrel. But you won't be bored. Because when C. Card finds some bullets for his gun, you will be in for some fast, funny, slam-bang private eye adventures. Unless, of course, C. Card starts dreaming of Babylon. If he starts dreaming of Babylon, all bets are off. "A masterful comedy."-Booklist Delta Books, $3.95l Delacorte Press/Seymour Lawrence" hardcover, $7.95 , Goldian VandenBroeck, Ed. "Life on this earth is not about consuming as much as we can afford, but about some very simple things.... This is what life is about. More is more stands in the way of it. Less is more, even though it sounds absurd, can show the way. For what we really need is so little that any sys- tem of good will can provide it. It follows that it is not so much a matter of 'system' but of good will-and this depends on our own inner understanding. "The VandenBroecks have done a great job for all of us. This anthology, at the very least, shows that we are in the best possible company when we.order our lives in accordance with the principle of voluntary simplicity." -E.F. Schumacher, from the Preface HAMMOND, Ind. CIA watch officer, r espionage, admitt authorities that he so secret documents, testified yesterday. Special Agent Jam prosecution witnes terrogated William year-old Chicago mar counts of espionage, he was arrested in Mu WHEN ASSISTAN James Richmond whether Kampiles re given away importan formation, Murphy r piles told him he knev breach. "But I didn't think "Bill Kampi he was a Sovie he decided game." -Vivian CIA res Soviet c Russians ahead by le Murphy said Kampile Kampiles, a form ficer, is accused of se technical manual on satellite, which has several years to mo movements in militar IF CONVICTED, h maximum sentence prison for each count. In earlier testin Vivian Psachos, a r CIA's Soviet divisiot was told by a Sovietz furnish information CIA agents abroad, list," of other availab "BILL KAMPILES sstan ag9ent (AP)-A former Soviet agent and he decided to play a now charged with game," Psachos, a 21-year veteran of ted to federal the CIA, said the defendant had told ld the Soviets top- her. an FBI agent She testified that Kampiles met the Russian on three occasions while es Murphy, a key vacationing in Greece in February and ss, said he in- March, and told him he could furnish Kampiles, a 23- secret CIA documents. n charged with six Psachos said Kampiles told the only days before government interviewers that he lied to unster August 17. the Russian, saying he had worked as T U.S. Attorney an economic analyst for the CIA for two asked Murphy years, that he was 25 or 26 years old, alized that he had and that he was born and raised in it U.S. defense in- Boston. eplied that Kam- SHE SAID that to prove that he was w it was a security not a double agent or "plant," Kampiles gave the Russian, identified as Michael k it would put the Zavalis, a forged identity card from the CIA. But according to Psachos, Kampiles told the U.S. officials who interviewed les realized him in Washington, that the ID card was all he gave the Russian. t agent and THE PROSECUTION'S first witness, to play a a former friend of Kampiles, CIA agent George Joannides, testified Tuesday that Kampiles told him in the spring of 1977 that he wanted to work in the Psachos, covert section of the CIA. Joannides searcher, said he told Kampiles he would need additional training and could not be division considered for such a post until mid- 1978. Joannides testified that Kampiles Baps and bounds," said he did not want to wait that long s told him. and told him the following year he was er CIA watch of- trying to establish himself as a good lling the Soviets a candidate for an undercover CIA post the KH-11 space by getting contacts with the Russians s been used for and providing them with "dis- nitor Soviet troop information." 'y installations. During the government interrogation ie could receive a of Kampiles in Washington, FBI agent of 70- years in Don Stukey told Kampiles he didn't believe his story, Psachos testified. nony yesterday, She said Stukey told Kampiles that researcher in the during his 10 years in dealing with the n, said Kampiles Soviets, they had never paid $3,000 agent in Greece to "without getting some significant in- on missile sites, formation." and a "shopping But, according to Psachos, Kampiles le documents. did not change any part of his story realized he was a when asked by Stukey if he wanted to do so. Other Richard Brautigan books available in Delta paperback are: Trout Fishing in America, In Watermelon Sugar, The Pill Versus the Springhill Mine Disaster and Rommel Drives on Deep into Egypt. Dell Publishing Co., Inc. 245 East 47 Street New York, New York 10017 A DELTA BOOKS Harper & Row Paperback Dept 10 E 53d St, New York 10022 Paperback CN 581 $4.95 80 -1 4 4; ~~r KNOW THE LOCATION. Te Lat/'sr in California's Livermore Valley-a country of open space, beautiful hills and lakes, a country of cattle, and a country of vineyards-just minutes from the San Francisco Bay Area. How would Freud relate to Cinci? Cold.Yet warming. Hearty, full-bodied flavor.Yet smooth and easygoing down. And, Cinci Cream develops a big head on contact. Conflict. Conflict. Trauma.Trauma. Freud's diagnosis? We think he would have said, "It's too good to gulp" And you will, too. In the final analysis. KNOW THE COMPANY. We're Lawrence Livermore Laboratory,. operated by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy, and we're involved in many exciting projects concerning energy, national defense, and bio-medical research. Some of our major projects include: KNOW THE ATMOSPHERE. You'll work with top scientists on projects that go well beyond the state-of-the-art, and you'll find a friendly environment where the freedom to determine your own~pace and direction is the key. 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