0 The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 23, 1979-Page 5 Iran to begin By AP and Reuter TEHRAN, Iran-Iran will resume oil exports very soon, Deputy Prime Minister Ebrahim Yazdi said yester- day. The loss of Iran's exports, which peaked at about five millior, barrels a day during the rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, has thrown the world oil market into chaos and sparked the start of what could be a price spiral. YAZDI TOLD reporters that oil exports would be resumed "within a matter of days." Iran's wells have started producing at the rate of about 700,000 barrels a day for domestic use. Before strikes crip- pled production last fall the United States bought about 10 per cent of its imported oil from Iran. Europe and Japan also relied heavily on Iranian oil. Under the shah, Iran also sold oil to Israel and South Africa, but the new government of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini said that will be stopped. However his government has promised to resume sales to the United States despite original strong American backing for the shah. The United States oil exports has since recognized the Khomeini government. MEANWHILE, MARINE Sgt. Ken- neth Kraus left Iran yesterday on an American evacuation flight to Frank- furt, West Germany en route to his home in Lansda le, Pa., after being im- prisoned for a week by Khomeini for- ces. He was accused of "firing at Iranians" during last week's storming of the U.S. Embassy by leftists. He was slightly wounded in the attack, and was releasedafter the United States, aided by France, applied heavy pressure on the new government. In other developments, the Marxist People's Fedayeen guerrillas prepared for a Friday rally at Tehran University to protest the direction Iran's Islamic revolution has taken. It will be the first open show of opposition to Khomeini and is expected to indicate how strong Marxist opposition is. Less than two weeks ago the Fedayeen forces fought and died alongside devout Khomeini followers in the last days of the revolution. Now many claim they have been frozen out of the new government. Chinese invasion of Vietnam continues 'U' Cellar. employees present demands (Continued from Page 1) issue with the union," he said. He claimed a decision to do this "means that down the line, in years to come, the board will always have to negotiate this." Pulkownik said that the students are the most important factor to consider in all this, and that as the students' representative to the board, he must. act in their interest. He added the board held this meeting to get worker input because "the board might decide to change their decision." NOT ALL OF the board's ten mem- bers were at the meeting, because some of them were out of town, sothe board could not reach a decision. However, board Vice-President Nelson Jacobson said the board would decide on the issue "as soon as we can physically get together." The board is comprised of six student members appointed by the Michigan. Student Assembly (MSA), three faculty members, and one University ad- ministrator. In its meeting Tuesday night, MSA passed a resolution urging the board to suspend the new structure until the union could negotiate it with management. Thomas Easthope, the ad- ministrative representative, said that whatever action the board takes, "The decision will be made in favor of the University Cellar and the University's students." IN THEIR presentation to the board, the workers pointed out that the tran- sfer of their job responsibilities to the new department supervisors would destroy the workers' commitment to the store and result in lower produc- tivity. They said this productivity is directly enhanced by workers' par- ticipation in the store decision-making process, and the new plan would have adverse effects on the store. They also said these new positions created a risk to the student discounts now offered by the store. The workers claim the increased salary outlays that would result from this plan could be as high as $96,000. Since the Cellar is a non-profit organization, this loss of revenue would result in a smaller discount for the students. A store employee also told the board that the Inter-Cooperative Council had gone on record in support of the IWW local's actions as "being in the best in- terest of the students." The employees have also said the community support in their favor has been strong. (Continued from Page 1) made no overtly threatening gestures, and yesterday the Kremlin heatedly denied' its forces had been put on a heightened alert status. U.S. officials in Washington said they had no indication of threatening Soviet movements on the Chinese border. IT APPEARED the Chinese were ac- complishing one possible goal of their invasion - easing Vietnamese military pressure on the forces of the ousted pro- Chinese government in Cambodia. Intelligence sources in Bangkok said 30,000 of the estimated 100,000 Viet- names troops in Cambodia were or- dered to return to Vietnam. New guerrilla offenses against the Viet- namese were reported in Cambodia Wednesday. The sources said Hanoi also was calling home Vietnamese troops from northern Laos to reinforce defenses in the area of Lao Cai, a major com- munications and railway center that fell to the Chinese on Tuesday. RADIO HANOI said 12,000 Chinese troops had been killed in the first five days of fighting. Analysts here consider those claims inflated and say the Viet- namese have suffered heavier casualties than the Chinese. It has been difficult to verify casualty figures. The Hanoi broadcast, monitored in Bangkok, also claimed that 140 Chinese tanks, armored cars, and military vehicles had been destroyed. The Peking media have had few reports on the war. Information provided by Bangkok sources and Western military sources in Peking, quoted by Kyodo, indicated that the new Chinese attacks in the nor- theast were aimed at cutting off two highways linking the Vietnamese-held, front-line town of Lang Son with Hanoi and the seacoast. THE VIETNAMESE for the past few days have been sending regular army troops northward up Highway 1 to rein- force militiamen in Lang Son, 80 miles northeast of Hanoi and 12 miles south of the border. The sources said the Chinese beefed up their forces dug in on hillsides around the town of Dong Dang, seven miles north of Lang Son and five miles south of the border, and on Wednesday opened a new assault, described by Peking sources as the heaviest fighting of the war thus far. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -- - -------. The Vietnamese were stubbornly resisting the attack, the sources said. AT THE SAME time 50 miles to the east, three Chinese infantry divisions led by heavy tanks struck from behind the Chinese border and pushed 12 miles deep into Vietnam's Quang Ninh Province in the face of tough resistan- ce, the sources said. The Chinese troops were 12 miles north of the east-west Highway 4, which links Lang Son with the South China Sea coast. This strike force, consisting of as many as 30,000 men, was expected to try to cut Highway 4 and then possibly swing inland and cut Highway 1 south of Lang Son, thereby isolating the Viet- namese forces between two Chinese armies. The Chinese sent two divisions sup- ported by tanks against the provincial capital of Cao Bang, in the mountainous central region of the border, Tass said in a dispatch from Hanoi. But 'the Bangkok sources said they believed this was a diversionary maneuver as the Chinese readied for an all-out attack on the Dong Dang-Lang Son area.' The Bangkok sources said the Chinese used tactical air strikes again- st Vietnamese positions Wednesday for the first time in the conflict. Hanoi, ap- parently wary of tackling the much larger Chinese air force, did not send its jets up to fight the Chinese warplanes. High-altitude reconaissance airplanes, possibly Soviet, were spotted again yesterday high over the embattled bor- der region. Two Soviet warships also were reported continuing on a course south toward the Vietnam area. FREE to any Jewish person LITERATURE: Q Is World Peace Possible? JCan Mid-East Peace last? QWill life end at the grave? STUDY COURSES: J Understanding the Torah. CUnderstanding the New Testament. NEW TESTAMENT: CEnglish jYiddish Q Hebrew Send to: Dept. UM CHRISTIAN INFORMATION SERVICE®(Baptist) P.O. 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The Lab sits 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. 4i i2 Finding your way out of the jungle of companies that visit your campus each° year is tough. Sometimes you haven't even heard of them before they arrive for interviews. In order to survive, you have to take the necessary precautions. 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 biomedical research. Some of our major projects include: " Nuclear Weapons Research " Laser Fusion 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 free- dom to determine your own pace and direction is the key. 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