Page 2-Thursday, October 25, 1979-The Michigan Daily LSA-SG elections IRANIAN JUDGE WANTS SHAH 'DIS Shah undergoes4 set for Nov By CHARLES THOMSON In its first executive session of the school year, the LSA College Student Government (LSA-SG) Executive Countil last night scheduled its next< elections for Nov.19-20. The Executive Council also selected' Hildegard Cummings as elections director and LSA junior Ross Romeo as assistant elections director, after inter-1 viewing several others for the positions.' According to Executive Council1 Piresident Bob Stechuk, Cummings has been involved in student activities for 16 years and is an assistant campus minister at Guild House.f STECHUK SAID after the meetingI that he was "extremely happy" about1 the appointments and that he felt both1 Cummings and Romeo are "very com- petent." 19-20 .0 Stechuk added that both Cummings and Romeo "seemed excited about it and willing to do a lot of work." The council last night also set Nov. 8 as the filing deadline for the election. Stechuk said applications for candidacy will be available at an unspecified time after next Wednesday's LSA-SG meeting. Cummings is scheduled to present proposals for nominating and voting procedures, polling sites, and publicity at that meeting. The council also agreed to pay the elections director $325 and to allocate $900 for the election expenses. Should expenses exceed $900, according to a motion passed by the council, "the dif- ference shall be deducted from the Election Director's salary." The assistant election directorship is not a paid position, From All and Reuter NEW YORK-Surgeons removed the shah of Iran's gallbladder yesterday and checked to see if his long-standing cancer of the lymph glands had wor- sened. A spokesman for the deposed ruler said of the surgery, "recovery without complications is anticipated." Meanwhile in Teheran, Ayatollah, Sader Khalkahli, Iran's revolutionary court judge who ordered a death squad to kill the former shah, called on Moslems in the United States to haul the ailing ex-monarch from his huspital and dismember him. WHILE SHAH Mohammad Reza Pahlavi went under the knife, about 150 demonstrators outside the hospital chanted "Death to the shah!" and waved banners that read, "A peaceful death is too good for the shah!" The spokesman for Pahlavi, Robert Arman, said following the two and one- half hour surgery that the shah would be hospitalized for two to three weeks. Armao added that Pahlavi had suf fered from lymphoma, or lymph gland cancer, for about six years, but that recently an intermittment jaundice had signaled that something was wrong with the gallbladder as the bile duct leading from the liver. "HE DID NOT wish it to be known," Aramo added of the lymphoma. The demonstrators, mostly men, were kept behind police lines and their chanting and shouting was out of ear- shot of Pahlavi and members of his family and retinue. By contrast, inside New York Hospital-Cornell Medical center, four Iranian women in American dress kept a prayer vigil for the shah, said one of them, "The royal family is alone and I just wanted to lend my support." Ayatollah Khalkahli said yesteray that he did not know whether the shah had cancer, adding: "But I'm sure the blood doesn't reach his brain. Anyway, he must die. , MEMBERED' surgery "I'VE SAID MANY times that tle Iranian nation will capture all his money and I ask the people around himi to kill him. If they do, they'll be forgiven and they'll get a reward," He( said. "I order all students and Moslemsi the United States, including Africank Filipinos and Palestinians, to drag hi$ out of the hospital and dismember: him," Ayatollah Khalkhali told Reuters 'in a telephone interview from Qom. :d 'Phe ayatollah said the" reason tik shah had come to New York was "to escape my death squad." The ayatollah, who says he has set12 tenced more than 300 people to death since. the Febraury revolutiob which. ousted the shah, said in June a three member assassination squad had beeh: dispatched to Mexico where the shale had taken up residence. The shah was toppled from his Peacock Throne last January 16 by an' Islamic revolution led by the Ayatollah, Ruhollah Khomeini: r waste, CONT6CT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, 'follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. * includes a Second Iir of hard lense's Dir. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 769-1222 by appointment THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25-3:10 pm East Lecture Rm. Rackham 3rd floor DEFENSE and AID-* POLITICAL REPRESSION in SOUTHAFRICA since SOWETO Lecture by WILFRED GRENVILLE GREY Chief Executive International Defense and Aid Fund for Southern Africa The roots of DAA go back to emergency committees set up in South Africa and London in 1952 to provide (a) legal defense for political prisoners in the Defiance (of Unjust Laws) Campaign and (b) aid for their dependents. During the 1960's. D&A adopted its present name, became an accredited non-govern- mental organization at the United Nations and extended its work to other Southern African countries ruled by white minorities. Also TEACH-IN on South Africa Fri. 1:30 Whitney Aud. SEB "Continuity and Change in South Africa" Fri. 4:00 Schorling Aud. SEB "Whither Apartheid" Fri. 8:00 Schorling Aud. SEB "So. Africa-Golden Pariah" Sat. 9:30am Wesley Foundation "What Role for Americans" Governors halt nuclea dumping at sites in three states ..A THE EMPRESS FARAH leaves Cor- nell Medical Center after visiting her husband, exiled Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran. BOWL at UNION LANES The absolute bottom of the Union OPEN: l0am Mon-Fri 1pm Sat-,Sun WASHINGTON (AP) - By deciding to stop or cut nuclear waste shipments into their states, three governors are signaling Washington they are un- willing to take the political heat for a national problem. Nevada this week closed the second of the nation's only three low-level waste dumps. A BURIAL site in Washington state has been shut down for three weeks. Shipments to the only other site - in South Carolina - are expected to be curtailed next week, Spokespersons for the nuclear power industry say the problem is not im- mediate for them since power plants have on-site storage capacity. But some officials say hospitals and research facilities will run into storage problems within a few weeks. Leonard Freeman, president of the Society for Nuclear Medicine, called it '"an immediate crisis for nuclear medicine," which is used thousands of times a day to diagnose and treat diseases, including cancer and heart illness. SOME HOSPITALS already have asked doctors to curtail the use of radioactive materials because of ex- pected storage problems. The sudden militancy by the gover- nors of Washington, Nevada and South Carolina is an attempt to force the Car- ter administration to play a stronger role in the disposal of low-level wastes, an issue which could become crucial in an election year. Almost daily, trucks have brought wastes from commercial reactors, hospitals and research laboratories around the country to the only com- mercial burial sites available. "I'M JUST TIRED of having to assume the responsibility for having our people take the risks in a system that is not properly regulated," com- plained Nevada Gov. Robert List as he resisted attempts Tuesday to reopen the burial site near Reno. What also gnaws at the governors is that no dumps are located in areas where most of the wastes are produced - including most of the Northeast. The governors' specific complaints vary, but their anger is aimed at the federal government. They argue that while plans for a national program languish, the three states are becoming the dumping ground for the rest of the country. ABOUT 60 per cent of the low-level wastes are by-products of commercial, power reactors, including sludge, resins and contamin ated clothing. Most of the rest comes fromresearch laboratories and radiological treatment and diagnosis at hospitals. For more than a year the Carter ad- ministration has had before it a unanimous inter-agency recommen- dation that the Energy Department set up regional low-level nuclear waste dumps to spread the burden. The recommendation - part of an 1979-1980 Computer Science, Engineering & Business Graduates Learn WhatNCS "Tota Sysems"concept wil ean to your-career. campus interview with our representative - Thursday, NOVEMBER 8 Whether you join our systems development staff or our mar- keting or financial teams, you'll be able to build a secure, excit- ing future with us. Because at NCR, we don't produce isolated hardware or soft- ware components. We create complete, integrated working solutions to meet specific customer needs. Total systems. And this distinctive approach has helped us become the world's 2nd largest computer company. And when you consider computer industry revenues are projected to double every 5 years into the 1990's, it's clear we're in an ideal position to take full advan- tage of this phenomenal growth. So contact us. Learn how your contribu- tions will accelerate our success- and your career with NCR. overall report on nuclea'r wastes - has awaited President Carter's decision for several months. One problem, an ad- ministration so'urce concedes, is that the regional burial grounds are sure to spark opposition in the states for which they will be planned. BUT, SAID Goetz Oertel, the Energy: Department's director of waste produc- ts, "The same is true with the alter- native - to have the wastes pile up as they are (at the three existing dumps . It's a choice each state is going to have. to make." Today 80 per cent of the wastes,' almost all generated in the East, ends up at the dump near Barnwell, S.C.," with another 15 per cent allocated to th site near Richland, Wash. The remaining five per cent had been going. to the Beatty site in Nevada. Robert Browning, deputy director for', waste management at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said the inability to dispose of wastes poses a serious problem, but he could not say how soon it might turn into a crisis. Daily Official Bulletin, Thursday, October 25, 1979 D~aily ('alendar WUOM: James MacGregor Burns, historian at Williams College, George F. Will, syndicated coum- nist, "The Kennedys," 10:30a'm. Center for W. Eurpean Studies: Edward Mitche; "Servitude in Early England," League. noon. t Diabetes Center: JuliodSantiagelWashington-U..' Medical School. "Improved Metabloic Control in=i Diabetes: New Tools and Old Techniques," S6450 Hosp.. noon. "HLA in American Black Diabetics,' 2073 Furstenberg Ctr., 4:30 p.m. CRLT: "Programming The' Commodre Pet Fot", Simulations." for reservations call 763-2396. Computing Center: Kalle, Nemvalts, and Gail Lif,- "Magnetic Tape Use in MTS." Mason Hall, 3:30 p.m. MHRI: Ian R. Brown. U-Toronto. "Sensitivity of' Protein Synthesis in the Mammalian Brain to Hyper' ther'nia.' MHRI.3:34 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: "Topical Workshop on the Produciton of New Particles in Super High Energy Collisions," 2038 Randall, 4 p.m. Guild House: Poetry reading, Bill Kincaid. John Lucas, Ron Taylor, 802 Monroe, 7:30 p.m. Chemistry: Phillip D. Magnus, Ohio State. "Sythesis of Helical Molecules," 13(0 Chem., 8p.m.. general Notice Competitive CEW Scholarships for Women will be received by approximately 30 women for their studies at the University of Michigan during the 198- 81 academic year. Scholarships are designed to en- courage and assist women who have been out of school at least two consecutive years and who will be students at any University o'Michigan campu -t They may be at any stage 9f an undergraduate. graduate or professional program as full or part time students. Women in business, chemistry. engineering, mathematics, and other fields less traditional for women are especially welcome to ap- ply. Applications are available from the Center and should be submitted to the Center by January'16 1980. The grants are between $500 and $2000. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No.43 Thursday, October 25, 1979 is edited and managed by students a the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings' during the University year at 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer' session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates:. $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage. paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. University Club!' 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