Page 6-Friday, May 11, 1979-The Michigan Daily Iran leads other oil nations in prc hie (Continued from Page 5) Yadollah Sahabi, Iran's minister of state for revolutionary affairs, told Tehran newspapers that a draft of theI nation's new constitution will be ready for public discussion within two weeks. He said it will include a number of x measures to ensure local control over education, health, welfare and tax receipts in the nation's provincea, th scene of fighting in recent weeks bet- ween the government and ethnic a minoritiea seeking autonomy. THE OFFICIAL Pars news agency . reported clashes Wednesday in the Iranian provinces that left two killed and 12 injured, but said the army was 1 not involved. Pars did not elaborate on the fighting but said one outbreak was in the southern Iam province and involveda dispute between members of the.3 Ivangharb and Gillangharb tribes.(' MANN THEATRES FOX VILLAGE MAWVULAGE SOPPING CNTR yap-1300 THlE ADULTS: $4.00 (R CHILDREN: $2.00 MON-THURS 8:00 FRI 7:00, 10:15 SAT 1:00, 4:15,7:30, 10:45 Century celebration AP Photo St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York stands "steady, sturdy and secure.. ." according to the pastor of the 100-year-old edifice. To celebrate the anniversary of the "ecclesiastical side of the rock," as the pastor also describes the cathedral, a Mass of Thanksgiving will be held Saturday. The crowd was part of the traditional Easter Sunday "parade." Prof.'s work exhibited EeSOiMM - cofPwaG DEeodbyntt*PHBREERASSCIATESe EASMNCOO ADULTS: $3.50 CHILDREN: $2.00 Mon-Thurs 7:00, 9:00 Fri 6:30, 8:15, 10:00 SAT-Sun 1:30, 3:15, 5:00 7:00, 9:00 Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily University art Prof. John Stephenson and his wife, Susanne Stephenson, who is on the art faculty at Eastern Michigan University, both have works in an exhibition, "A Century of Ceram- ics in the United States: 1878-1978," to be held in Syracuse, N.Y. The exhibition opened May 4 at the Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse, and will continue through September. Later it is scheduled to travel to the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian In- stitution in Washington, D.C. THE SHOW WILL consist of 420 works by 160 artists, presented in a decade-by-decade format. John Stephenson will be represented by two four-feet-high wall pieces, com- pleted in 1978, and made from pit-fired clay fastened to a wooden grid. Susanne Stephenson will have two works completed in 1977 and 1978, a cupboard jar and footed vase. ANOTHER Michigan artist featured in the show is Mary Chase Stratton who established Pewabic Pottery in Detroit and also initiated ceramic courses at the University in 1933. The work of Sam Haile, an English potter who taught ceramics at the University in the early 1940's, will also be included in the century show.