TONITE ONLY! Page 2-Sunday, November 19, 1978-The Michigan Daily Iran sees continued bloodshed h From AP and UPI TEHRAN, Iran-The head of Iran's two-week-old military government promised Parliament yesterday he would restore calm to this strife-torn nation, where new bloodshed was reported at an anti-shah protest in the northeast religious center of Mashhad. The government's Pars news agency said three persons were killed and two were wounded Friday in Mashhad when troops fired at demonstrators who refused to disperse. But in Paris a spokesman for Ayatullah Kohmeini, exiled leader of the Shiite Moslem opposition to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, said bet- ween 11 and 13 were killed. The new prime minster, Gen. Gholam-Reza Azhari, told, the National Assembly the return of security in Iran would be accompanied by "a decisive, fast and practical campaign to weed out corruption." Most of the country was quiet as the shah appeared to have weathered the latest crisis touched off by his opponen- ts, whose dissent is both religious and political. But observers say his gover- nment will probably be put to the test again in December, one of this Moslem nation's holiest months, when religious fervor is especially high. "The crisis peaks in December. if he makes it through Muharrem, the month of mourning, then we can safely say His Majesty has won a major victory over his religious opponents trying to drive him from power," a Western diplomat said. On the other front, Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev warned the United States and the West yesterday against military intervention in Iran to save the shah's embattled regime. "Any inter- ference, especially military interferen- ce in the affairs of Iran-a state which directly borders on the Soviet Union-would be regarded by the U.S.S.R. as a matter affecting its security interests," Brezhnev said. The Soviet Union, he said, "Which maintains traditional good neighbor reltions with Iran, states resolutely that it is against any foreign interference in the internal affairs of Iran by anyone, in any form and under any pretext. - "The events taking place in that country constitute a purely internal af- fair and the questions involved in them should be decided by the Iranians themselves," Brezhnev said. But Khomeini, though he is exiled in Paris, is heard daily in Iran, brought in by short-wave radio and by travelers. I "The Russian government is like the other big powers," he said recently. "They have interests in Iran and thus are supporting the shah. But none of them can save the shah. His end is near." Khomeini told an interviewer that U.S. "protection of the shah is com- plicating the current crisis in Iran.cThe American president should quickly realize that his protection of the shah serves neither the Iranian people nor the United States." Rioting since the first of the year has, claimed more than 1,100 lives in Iran. Casualty reports were still awaited' from clashes in the west Iranian towns of Hamedan and Kermanshah, the sites of constant violence since October. At 7:00 & 9:00 Angell Hall Aud. A $1.50 Soviet President Leon Brezhnev warned west yesterday agains intervening in Iran. Thanksgiving Weekend Special BILLIARDS at reduced rates and M-PINBALLING Open I p.m. Thurs.-Sun. at the UN ION Sen. Glenn sees inadequate SALT treaty unless Soviets reveal c THE TUESDAYLUNCH-DISCUSSION SERIES AT THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. Madison St. "About My Visit To South Africa" MOSCOW (UPI)-Former astronaut U.'S. Sen. John Glenn says Soviet insistence on sending coded data from its outer space tests prevents adequate monitoring and could prevent completion of a new SALT treaty. Glenn, part of a Senate delegation that toured the Soviet Union for a week, told his colleagues the coding of telemetry data from space goes to the very heart of verifying compliance inany new Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty. GLENN, THE FIRST American to orbit the earth, Feb. 20, 1962, said the Soviets were increasing their coding during test flights and called the issue a 'I told the prime minister (Kosvgin) that it could rer trell be that if there was no gire on that particular point, the Senate will nerer get the rote on SA L T-I think it's that serious. -Senator John (lenn "very major sticky point" in current SALT-2 talks. "The insistence that they (the oded space Soviets) can encrypt telemetry when we have not been doing it on our side amounts to a denial of information," he said. Glenn said he told Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin that any agreement would have to be equal for both parties "and as long as one hand says, 'no, we're not going to encrypt and keep the information from you,' it is not an even- handed agreement." THE OHIO Democrat said he was still undecided how he might vote on a final treaty, but that the question of verification "will make it or break it." "I told the prime minister that it data could very well be that if there is n give on that particular point, the Senat will never get the vote on SALT," h said. "I think it's that serious." The issue involves the testing c Soviet SS18 missiles armed wit: multiple warheads, each of which ca; be independently programmed to hit different target. The SALT-2 treaty would limit th number of such warheads, known MIRVs-multiple Independentl targeted Reentry Vehicles-to 10 fo each side. But if one side is unable t read the data coming back from th test, there is no way to determine if th missile is within the treaty limits. PRESIDENT ROBBEN FLEMING 12 NOON November 21 Sponsored by The Ecumenical Campus Center and The International Center f Anti-apartheid conference held in N.Y. earn% $100 a month for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare time. tYou may save a -life! It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week regular. $10 cash each donation, plus bonuses. this ad worth $5 extra New donors only. Phone for appointment. ANN ARBOR PLASMA CORPORATION 662-7744 By STEVEN SHAER Special to the Daily NEW YORK-More than twelve hundred people,t most of theme college students, participated in a series of South Africa workshops yesterday as part of a three-day anti-apartheid conference at New York University (NYU). The purpose of the conference-sponsored by the Ndrtheast Coalition for the Liberation University of Michigan' Gilbert & Sullivan Society Presents November 29, 30 December 1,2 1978 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre For ticket information caill 994-0221 After NoN. 25 - Ik lO5 Jawob siabi Jacob's Table offers a Thanksgiving Day Dinner to Remember-Six full courses for $6.00-Specify Meat or Vegetarian. Place your Reservations by 9:00 pm, Nov. 21 715 Hill 995-5085 International Kosher Cuisine of Southern Africa (NECLSA) -is tor consolidate various organizations interested in fighting the white regime in South Africa opposed to both. continued U.S. complicity in what they consider oppression of the South African people and the white regime in that country, according to a coalition newsletter. THE EVENT IS the third of a recent, rash of anti-apartheid conferences throughout the country Last week a Southeast conference was held at Duke University, and a conference in Evanston, Ill. last month established a Midwest steering ,- committee to coordinate anti-apartheid work in the, area. Michigan Student Assembly (MSA ) Vice-President Kate Rubin, wi attended the Midwest meeting, sa yesterday, "I'm impressed.to see tt conference address issues which were unable to handle at the MidwE coalition." Heidi Gottfried of the Washteua, County Coalition Against Aparthei said she was attending this weekend meetings to "make a connectio between the two conferences to sho that it's becoming a national issue." The activities were kicked off Frida night with an evening session on t background of the South Afric situation. Today participants willvo on resolutions to formulate goals fi future conferences and the creationof strong national movement. Samoff appeal stallee (Continued from Page 1 any procedural strategy that serves to delay it is being employed. This protest has probably held up the appeal process at least two weeks." A second source within the department, however, said stalling was not the motive. "I don't think he (Barnes) is trying to slow the process down," the source said. "This thing is holding up a lot of things in the department. There is great deal of acrimony amongst th staff about this issue, and I thin Barnes just wants to get out of the way. "He is simply trying to make sur that persons sympathetic to Samot aren't on the appearBoard," the sottrc claimed. "He doesn't want it to appea that he has been influenced by student who support amoff:Mainly, I think h is just trying to be nasty about it." Co-op bank to begin Now Showing Central Campus Butterfield Theatres I