r ,. Shah selects new council before trip The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 14, 1979-Page m (Continued from Page i) A highly placed source loyal to the shah said the monarch had met last week with the country's top military leaders who had offered to use the nation's 430,000-man army to restore his absolute monarchy. The source, who refused to be iden- tified, said the monarch emphatically told the generals he would rather go abroad than risk resumption of the violence that already has cost more than 1,500 lives in the past year. The source gave no indication of how the generals reacted. The shah's chief religious opponent, Paris-exiled Moslem leader Ayatullah Khomaini; claimed yesterday that the monarch's supporters were still ac- tively plotting a coup. Khomaini has formed what an aide described as an "Islamic Council of Revolution" to prepare for a provisional government. Meanwhile, Bakhtiar went before the 60-member Senate, the upper house of Parliament, to seek a vote of confiden- ce for his new civilian government. Bakhtiar repeated the pledge he made last Thursday before the 268- member lower house to cut off Iranian oil supplies to Israel and South Africa, dissolve SAVAK, the shah's hated secret police, release political prisoners, fire unneeded foreign workers and closely cooperate with the country's Moslem leaders. The two houses were expected to vote by Tuesday, after which the shah will go abroad on his leave of absence, court ,sources said. Ardeshir Zahedi, Iran's ambassador to the United States and a close con- fident of the shah, was reported to have left Tehran to return to Washington. There was speculation that Zahedi would be making security arrangemen- ts for the shah to sit out the crisis and undergo medical treatment in the United States. In Paris, a Khomaini aide said his revolutionary council already had begun its work to prepare for a provisional government. The aide said the council would set up an Islamic republic by organizing a new assembly chosen through free elections. But a spokesman for National Front leader Karim Sanjaby, who heads the country's political opposition, said he knew nothing about the formation of a revolutionary council. The 78-year-old Khomaini denounced the regency council and renewed his call for his supporters to continue their strikes and demonstrations against the "illegal" Bakhtiar government appoin- ted by the shah. A similar message was read to the throngs at Tehran Univesity rally, where demonstrators roared Moslem chants and cheered Tehran's chief Moslem leader, Ayatullah Taleghani. Iran radio reported that peaceful an- ti-shah demonstrations took place in three other cities, including Shiraz 275 miles south of Tehran, where six per- sons died in demonstrations last week. The only violent clashes occurred in the Caspian city of Rasht, 150 miles north- west of the capital, the radio said. There were no reports of casualties. Daily Phone Numbers: Billing-764-0550 Circulation-764-0558 Classifieds-764-0557 Display-764-0554 News and Happenings-764-0552 Sports-764-0562 I ,~ I, L>< Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON Pharmacy student Alison Wolfson, along with Professor Norman Lacina, tests the precision of a syringe as part of a study judging the accuracy of devices such as teaspoons with which liquid medicines are administered. D sa e nt ap ostoo big or too small? " By MARY FARANSKI A simple kitchen utensil - the teaspoon - is the subject of a study being conducted by a group of Univer- sity Pharmacy professors and students. The group suspects that teaspoons and other devices used to administer liquid medicines are often too big or too small to give the dosage required. The group plans to present its fin- dings to the Michigan Pharmacists' Association in late February in a paper. THE PHARMACY School's Dr. Nor- man Lacina is the project's coor- dinator. "Shortly after I came here in 1975, the American Academy of Pediatrics published a paper suggesting that doctors and phar- macies give out accurate measuring devices with their liquid medicines," he said. Liquids are given mostly to children, who are unable to swallow pills. While most medications cause no complications when administered in slightly inaccurate doses, there is a problem in that a patient may run out of medicine before he or she is supposed to, resulting in extra expense. Part of the study, conducted by fifth- year pharmacy student Alison Wolfson, examines the precision of different devices used to dispense medicine, such as spoons, oral syringes, medicine cup- s, and test tube teaspoons. Some these devices have been found to inaccurate. of be "We are hoping that pharmacies that don't distribute measuring devices with their medications will do so, and those that are distributing them will re- evaluate whether they are accurate enough," Wolfson said. It has been discovered that most patients, when given a measuring device by a pharmacy, will use it. The group is asking patrons of the Maple Village Pharmacy to bring in teaspoons for measurement. They hope to measure about 50 spoons. Pharmacy student Rich Grossman is supervising this part of the study, with the help of other students employed at the phar- macy. Maple Village Pharmacy became in- terested in the project after a woman was given a test tube spoon with her child's medicine. The woman returned for more medicine before the prescrip- tion should have run out. Turquoise stones are usually found in arid regions, seldom in mines deeper than 100 feet. Shattered Cambodians battle continuing invasion I Mass Communication Gro wn Bag Series . r . ," ,. .," . Y ,+ i .n"=, i. f1 ' r ss ' ary 7 I (Continued from Page 1) Premier Ieng Sary crossed the border and arrived in Peking Friday. It was not known where Premier Pol Pot was. More than 600 Chinese diplomats and advisers who fled Cambodia last week boarded the 10,000-ton Chinese ship Ming Hua, along with seven Mercedes Benz cars. Reliable sources who asked their names not be used, said 15 more high- ranking Chinese crossed into Thailand Friday or early yesterday. About 20,000 Chinese were thought to have served in Cambodia and many may still be trap- ped inside. HSINHUA SAID Teng met with Ieng Sary and pledged his firm support for resistance of the new government. Hsinhua quoted Ieng Sary as saying that under Pol Pot, "The Cambodian Terrorists shot down after raid (Continued from Page 1) saw soldiers. They told us to get dressed quickly. We did. . . and we went down." Sara Kallachi, 27, who suffered a mild back injury while jumping to safety, said she and her husband heard "strange noises, shots and screams." From their balcony, they saw soldiers motioning for them to wait. "Then about five minutes later they told us we could jump. My husband jumped first and I went after him," she said. A WORKER AT the guest house said troops in the area had been on alert, and the state radio reported there had been indicators that infiltrators managed to cross the barbed-wire fen- ce that separates the two countries. Statements issued in Damascus, Syria, indicated the guerrillas were from the Marxist Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and that they had planned to take hostages, demand freedom for 10 Palestinian prisoners and fly to freedom. The operation was named in honor of the late Algerian president, Houari Boumedienne. A spokesman for the front claimed six Israeli soldiers were killed in the raid, and he said it was successful because it proved the vulnerability of Israeli defenses. The front was responsible for the May 15, 1974 raid on a school in Maalot in which 95 pupils were taken hostage. Twenty-eight Israelis and the three terrorists died in the assault that freed the students. "After the murders here in 1974, you can say we're inured," a Maalot municipal official told Israeli radio af- ter the latest attack. "The residents of Maalot love this place and no power on earth can make them leave." Israel has retaliated for such attacks in the past by bombing Palestinian camps in Lebanon, and witnesses in the southern Lebanon port of Sidon said three Israeli jets flew low recon- naissance missions over Palestinian bases hours after the raid. On Dec. 20, Israeli warplanes bombed three Palestinian targets in southern Lebanon after a six-week terror cam- paign in which four Israelis were killed and 67 wounded. Front statements in Damascus claimed the guerrillas fought off heavy Israeli attacks by helicopter-borne troops and tanks, but Israeli authorities said the incident lasted less than an hour. people are fighting valiantly against the Vietnamese aggressors in all parts of Cambodia-and defending with their lives the country's independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity." The ministers of the five-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations condemned the Vietnamese invasion and said they would not recognize the new government unless all foreign for- ces were withdrawn. The neutral coun- tries, concluding a two-day meeting here, urged the U.N. Security Council to take necessary steps to restore stability in the region. THE HUNGARIAN news agency MTI, monitored in Vienna, Austria, quoted a spokesman for the new regime as saying in Hanoi the fallen Khmer Rouge government had killed three million Cambodians after defeating the U.S.-backed Lon Nol government in 1975. The fallen regime was condemned by almost every country but China for its forced evacuation bf Cambodian cities. The Soviet Union and many of its allies have recognized the new regime, but many Western nations have criticized the Vietnamese invasion. The Vietnamese push began Christ- mas Day, and Phnom Penh fell to the Vietnamese and their Cambodian rebel proteges last Sunday. One of the world's largest man- made lakes is the Lake of the Ozarks, which has 650 billion gallons of water and 1,375 miles of shoreline. LEAVE BLANK ONE S SCHEDULE $12 $13 I $6.50 $7.00 (Please Print) 1.D. No. Number The Howard R. Marsh Center for the study of Jour nalistic Performance will again sponsor a series of Wednesday brown bag sessions to explore aspects of mass communication. All are open to the public. Each will be at 12:10 to 1 pm in 2040F LSA Building. JAN. 17- "Reducing the Gap Between Media Re- searchers and Editors," Fred Currier, President of Market Opinion Research and Adjunct Professor of Journalism. JAN. 31 - "Using Anti-Trust Law to Promote Media Diversity," Professor Robert Bishop, Department of Journalism. FEB. - 14 - "Trade Unionism and the Journalist," Larry Hatfield, San Francisco Examiner and NEH Fellow. FEB. 28- "Television and Leisure Time," Marianne Berry and Ben Taylor, doctoral students in mass com munications. MAR. 21 - "The Debate Over International News Exchange," Wilbur Schramm, former director of East-West enter and Visiting Marsh Professor. APR. 4-"Environmentalism, Elitism and the Role of the Press," Ron Taylor, Bureau of National Affairs and NEH Fellow. JOURNALISM AT MICHIGAN OIT BY MAIL HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF JOB OPENINGS FOR 1979-80 INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS: Monday, Jan. 15-Wednesday, Jan. 17, 1979 COUZENS-January 15, Monday, 7:00 P.M. EAST QUAD-January 16, Tuesday, 8:00 -Main Lobby P.M.Room 126 ALICE LLOYD-January 15, Monday, 7:00 OXFORD-January 17,Wednesday,7:00 P.M.-Blue Carpet Lounge P.M.-Seeley Lounge SOUTH QUAD-January 15, Monday, 9:00 BURSLEY-January 17, Wednesday, 8:00 P.M.-West Lounge P.M.-West Cafeteria WEST QUAD-January 16, Tuesday, 7:00 MINORITY PEER ADVISORS: P.M.. Dining Room No. 1 South Quad-January 24, Wednesday, 7:00 BARBOUR-NEWBERRY-January 16, P.M.-West Lounge Tuesday, 8:00 P.M.-Barbour Living Room The above informational sessions for prospective staff applicants have been scheduled to discuss the dimensions and expectations of the various staff positions, how to apply in the buildings and/or houses, who to contact, criteria to be used in the selection pro- cedure and the number of positions that are likely to be vacant. SEMES Yes, I would like to s u b s c r i b e to THE MICHIGAN DAILY. I agree to be billed later (pre-payment necessary for subs. outside of Ann Arbor, Mich.) LEAVE BLANK STER TWO SEMESTERS PERMANENT (automatically renewed each term) E OF PRICES: SEPT. thru APRIL (2 Semesters) by Mail outside Ann Arbor per Semester by Moil outside Ann Arbor Last Name First Middle Initial Phone No. : Ia I For Circulation Dept. Use Only F- Stencil Typed Number of papers Amount Due $ Date Started Code 3 (circle one) 4: J-Ap. 5: J-Au. A- i T1 1: S-D 2: S-Ap. I-C A.o Street Name Apt. No. I 1 s 6: J- L),3. : .J-rAU.