- IRANIAN TERRORISM tJ' L ir itgau Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom 1ItiQ BRISK See Today for details 0 See editorial page Vol. LXXXX, No.54 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 7, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Iran's oil exports halted; U.S. tries to free From AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Carter convened an unscheduled meeting of the National Security Council late last night as U.S. diplomats struggled to free some 60 Americans held hostage in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Carter called the council together only hours after a meeting with his top foreign policy advisers. A White House official who asked not to be named said the Security Council, which includes Carter's top military advisers, met to discuss the situation in Iran. He refused to give further details. The meeting, which lasted more than an hour, coincided with U.S. intelligence reports that Iranian oil exports have been choked off by what may be a strike at the country's only crude oil port. PALESTINE LIBERATION Organization (PLO) chairman Yasser Arafat, meanwhile, is sending a delegation to Teheran today to "secure the safety of the Americans" and others held hostage in the U.S. Embassy there, a PLO spokesman said here last night. Il industry.sources in New York said last night workers at Iran's Kharg Island had apparently gone on strike in sympathy with students holding the Americans hostage. The students are demanding the extradition of the deposed shah, who is under treatment in New York for Cancer. PROTECTION OF the embassy captives is now the responsibility of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's Revolutionary Council, which the religious leadered ordered to run the country after Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan and his Cabinet resigned yesterday. Both Khomeini and his council have been issuing statements backing the embassy invaders' demand that ousted Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi be retur- ned for trial. The United States has said it will not send him to Iran. Hasan Abdel Rahman, the PLO's deputy UN ob- server, told reporters Arafat has sent instructions to the PLO office in the Iranian capital to use "all possible means to secure the lives of the hostages at the U.S. Embassy." THE SPOKESMAN, who said he just had spoken to Arafat's office, said the PLO was acting on its own initiative and out of concern for human.lives. "The PLO have good offices available for any con- structive role in this affair," he added. A State Department official said initial reports in- dicated that the halt in oil shipments involved all ost ages tankers at Kharg Island, not just U.S. tankers, as originally had been believed. THE STUDENTS holding the hostages have called for a cutoff of oil exports to the United States if their demands are not met. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim sought help to end the three-day embassy occupation in a 40- minute meeting with Jamil Shemirani, charge d'af- faires at Iran's U.N. mission. "'He (Waldheim) asked him to convey urgently to the Ayatollah Khomeini and the government of Iran his grave concern about the situation at the U.S. EM- bassy in Tehran," a spokesman for Waldheim said. HE TOLD REPORTERS that Waldheim also was See SECURITY, Page 5 Premier's action inevitable? AYATOLLAH RUHOLLAH KHOMEINI announces to reporters in Feb- ruary, 1979 that Mehdi Barargan (right) has been appointed prime minister of the new Islamic republic. Yesterday, Bazargan resigned, reportedly upset at Khomeini's escalating anti-American campaign. Assembl 10, invetigte CS By MITCH STUART University experts agreed yesterday that the resignation of Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan was all but inevitable given the chain of recent events in Iran. According to Prof. K. Allin Luther of the Near Eastern Studies Department, the "whole mess" of hostage-taking and resigntion of the Prime Minister "was precipitated by letting the Shah into this coun- try." HISTORY PROF. Richard Mitchell attributes the resignation to the fact that the prime minister had been holding out for Ayatallah Ruhollah Khomeini to establish some form of constitutional gover- nment. As of yesterday, however, Bazargan could "no longer hold together even a semblance of law and order." Mitchell added that the resignation was not a sud- den thing. The upper middle class elite that Bazargan represented "have been gradually un- dercut" by Khomeini's supporters. Luther contended that the U.S. knew it would face "drastic consequences" if the Shah were allowed to live here, but the taking of hostages is an extreme reaction. MITCHELL SAID that embassies have always been considered "sacred territory," and added that "under no circumstances should they (the See PREMIER'S, Page 5 KI By TOM MIRGA The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), acting on a' request from President Jim Alland, took steps last night to establish a task force obliged to investigate the current status of the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ). It would report back to the assembly in January. CSJ is the judicial branch of MSA. Its main function is to certify all student government elections, including those of the assembly. THE JUDICIARY'S troubles began last April when the body decided not to certify that month's hotly contested MSA elections and was overruled two months later by Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson. 1 "That act essentially destroyed CSJ's credibility," the body's Chief Justice Dennis Presinger said in an interview in September. "Now. it's assumed that an unfavorable CSJ decision can be overturned by appealing to the ad- ministration." Since that time, CSJ has ceased to be a functioning body. According to Per- singer, there are perhaps four justices currently sitting on the ten-member board.' "IN ALL actuality," Alland said last night, "CSJ has not been stricken from the books. But there are serious questions about its authority." The assembly has the obligation, he ex- plained after last night's meeting, to change CSJ, abolish it, or endorse its present procedures and policies. Alland said he had four main concer- ns about the body's procedures: the- way hearings were conducted; the manner in which evidence was accep- ted; a lack of judicial training, and; political motivations on the part of CSJ justices. "This has been a subject that has See CENTRAL, Page 5 Young: No Detroit KKK march DETROIT (UPI) - Mayor Coleman Young, reacting to reports the Ku Klux Klan planned a march in downtown Detroit, vowed yesterday not to allow the rally. But a former Klan official said he believed the alleged Detroit march was a hoax., Young said he would not permit the Klan or any other group "to take over the streets of Detroit." YOUNG ISSUED a statement saying he considers any Klan activity in Detroit "a physical threat to the safety and well being" of Detroiters in light of Saturday's Klan violence in Green- sboro, N.C. There was confusion, however, over whether the Klan was indeed making a bona fide attempt to march in Detroit, a city whose population is at-least 60 per cent black. "First of all, why would any white man want to hold a march in Detroit?" said Robert Miles, former grand dragon of the Michigan Klan. "I called people I know who are active in other groups and nobody even heard of it before." A MAN who claimed to be a KKK of- ficial called the city Department of Recreation late Monday and said 1,500 to 2,000 Klansmen would march "with or without a permit" at 1 p.m. Friday in downtown Detroit. Barbara Tait, the department's director of special activities, said the man identified himself as Edward Miles of Ypsilanti. He told Tait his at- torney, Randolph Johnsson, would request a parade permit from the City Council yesterday. There is no listing under the ,name Edward Miles in the Ypsilanti telephone book. In Lansing, the State Bar of Michigan said it had no listing for an attorney under the name Ran- dolph Johnsson or Randolph Johnson. AND, AS OF midday yesterday, no such request had been filed with the City Council. "We have no request for anything in connection with the Ku Klux Klan - neither pro nor anti - as of the moment," said Richard Anderson, committee clerk for the council. Andersondsaid it was possible a request could come later in the day. But Robert Miles, of Howell, said he believed the whole thing was a hoax. "I don't think you've got anything to worry about," said Miles, who was con- victed of conspiracy in 1973 for a bus bombing plot two years earlier in Pon- tiac. CIA recruiter meets prospects By STEVE HOOK The Central Intelligence Agency made its annual public recruiting ap- pearance on campus yesterday in the person of Steve Gunn, the agency's regional personnel officer. "I'm not really recruiting," pe said. "I'm like a preliminary screener - get- ting a feel of the people's backgrounds, giving them information. "I GIVE out some applications, but I don't hire people," he said. Gunn said that he analyzes the "background and character" of prospective CIA members during the interviews. He gives applications to those who are "what we are looking for." There have been no problems during his four months as a CIA interviewer, Gunn said. The past controversies con- cerning CIA campus recruitment have not touched him. "It seems like I have overflowing schedules just about everywhere I go," he said. "Much like I had today." GUNN SAID that the CIA is not looking for agents among college students. "We offer students a variety of fields, like engineering, accounting and mathematics." He said prospective agents "come to them," that they rarely come out of an academic en- vironment. "Our agents usually have experien- See CIA, Page 2 Guun 'not really recruiting' BUT TIGHT MONEY MARKET COULD INTERFERE: EDC bonds may soon fund five projects By JOHN GOYER For the first time since its estab- lishment a year-and-a-half ago, Ann Arbor's Economic Development Cor- poration (EDC) appears to be close to authorizing the issue of low interest, tax 4empt bonds to finance development projects in the city. There are now five projects that are hear to winning a total of some $27 million in low interest funds under the authority of the EDC. UNDER STATE law, a city's EDC can authorize the issue of low interest, tax "/ V V exempt bonds to attract business to the city or to retain or expand existing businesses. The tax-exempt status of the bonds means that the buyer-typically a bank or insurance company-pays no tax on the interest it earns. Thus, it can afford to accept a lower return on the money it lends to the developer, who pays less in- terest on money borrowed. Henry Landau, chairman of the EDC's Board of Directors, said yester- day morning at the board's monthly meeting that the bond issue could come as early as December. Landau, however, indicated that present high in- terest rates might discourage the spon- sors of the five projects from going ahead with the bond issues. "THE PRESENT economic situation notwithstanding, I think we might have some problems," Landau said, "because of the present bond market." According to Peter Long, counsel for the EDC, interest rates on EDC bonds are likely to range between eight and ten per cent, somewhat less than the 15 per cent banks charge to their best customers and the 12 per cent charged for long term loans. But Long stressed yesterday in a telephone interview that the bond market had taken a "nose dive" in the last month, following the Federal Reserve Board's decision to hike its prime lending rate an entire percen- tage point. 0 LONG GAVE the example of the proposed Cranbrook development, primarily senior citizen housing to be built on the city's South side, which will See EDC, Page 2 'Doily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Climbing the walls As students inside the structure watch, freshman Derek McCalmont lowered himself down the side of the Dental Building as part of .a Reserve Officers Training Corps drill yesterday morning. I I I- Mike Foley said it will be worth it if attendance at the con- sports newscaster Jinn Miller of WTVN accepted the dare. "Fun and games sometimes isn't allowed in college foot-, ball," Miller said. "It's good publicity, good hype for the game." Miller predicted another black and blue skirmish between the arch rivals but said OSU would take the contest by a 17-10 margin. No doubt this is one of the most extreme examples ever of someone airing his gripes. E High overhead "I've never seen one larger. It's a third of a football Mike Foley said it will be worth it if attendance at the con- cert is high. O Ensian photos Delinquent seniors who missed weeks of opportunities to have their pictures for the year book will get a reprieve. The Michiganensian photographer will return for two days, Monday, Nov. 12 and Tuesday, Nov. 13. Call 764-0561 to make appointments for your final chance to be included in the yearbook. Q] primary in February. The primary will determine which of the two candidates will run on the Democratic slate.in the heavily student populated Second Ward. If elected, Stephanopoulos would be the first student to serve on coun- cil since 1975. On the inside Sportswriters from Purdue's student newspaper give their predictions for Saturday's game in Purdue.. . An analysis of the Iranian situation, on the editorial p mmpp ' I i