/ rania n By The Associated Press fresh outbreak of fighting between Kiurdish rebels and government forces hgs taken at least 50 lives in western Ion, a rebel spokesman said yester- d4y- And in Tehran the revolutionary government clamped down on demon- strations in an apparent effort to head off further clashes between leftists and their foes. e new bloodshed was reported as signals grew stronger that some pr ress might be possible in resolving thU.S. Embassy standoff and winning frodom for the approximately 50 .American hostages in Tehran who sbut their 89th day in captivity yester- t PTIMISM IN Washington focused on - "package deal" U.N. Secretary- Page 2-Friday, February 1, 1980-The Michigan Daily civil disorder heightens General Kurt Waldheim has been trying to work out whereby the U.N. would launch an investigation of the alleged crimes of the ousted Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the Moslem militants holding the embassy would free the hostages. A U.N. spokesman said yesterday that Waldheim had been in contact with Iranian authorities in the previous,24 hours. He gave no details but said he might have more to divulge by today. .In Ottawa, Iranian Ambassador Mohammad Adeli said agreement on release of the hostages would be delayed because of anti-U.S. feeling generated anew by the escape of six Americans with -false Canadian passports. Canada has acknowledged hiding the six after the Nov. 4 U.S. Em- bassy take over and then smuggling them out of Tehran last weekend. BAR ..,i Adeli called Canada's role in the escape "a flagrant violation of inter- national convention.", Also yesterday, President Carter thanked Prime Minister Joe Clark for Canada's help in getting six U.S. diplomatic employees out of Iran and said he doubts the escape will cause harm to American hostages there. Carter expressed his gratitude in a telephone call to Clark, whose embassy in Tehran used faked Canadian passports and Iranian visas to spirit the six Americans out of the-country last weekend. LSA-SG approves Lindsay as new vice-president .S*STAR' 109 N. Mat APPEARING TONIGHT: Cn "Ann Arbor's Ot BY DAVID MEYER LSA-Student Government (LSA -SG), during its Wednesday night meeting, approved the nomination of Jim Lin- dsay as vice-president. The council also appointed three students to the Michigan.Student Assembly (MSA) and filled two vacancies on its own executive council. Lindsay will fill the vacancy created when former- Vice-President Kim Brower left the University for "per- sonal reasons." LSA-SG President Dan Solomon said he nominated Lindsay because of their compatibility and what he described as Lindsay's "dedication to build LSA-Student Government into a viable voice for students." LINDSAY SAID yesterday he was particularly interested in increasing student input on administrative issues, tenure and curriculum'. The council also approved the appoin- tment of Paula Pappas and Sue Porter to the LSA-SG executive council, following the resignations of former council members David Trott and Karin Gregory. Bob Redko, Jay Fiar- man and Andy Massik were appointed by the council to fill three vacancies on MSA: LSA-SG also appointed Sue Porter to the S ludent-Faculty Policy Board, Pat Anderson to the Administrative Board, Judy Freedel and Steve Goren to the Admissions Committee and Lisa Kissenger, James Moeller and Shawn Goodman to the Library committee. Solomon said that these positions were filled in September for one-year terms but, "due to class conflicts and natural attrition, students just don't fill their terms." -,. -% 3i 'St.-=769-0109 AP Photo KARLETON ARMSTRONG refused comment yesterday moments after being released on parole at the Wisconsin correctional institute in Fox Lake, Wisconsin. Armstrong spent about eight years in prison for his role in the 1970 anti-war bombing that killed a researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Anti-war bomber out ~. -of Wisconsin orison ARTUNES )riginal Honky Tank Dance Bar" I calculator Decision-Making Sourcebook N * 0MN-d.~ O.1 0 Y..ng Rrmea cw 4 Texas Instruments For today...and tomorrow The TI-55 advanced slide rule calculator with programmability and "Calculator Decision Making Sourcebook." The calculator and book combination that gives you the tools to solve your statistical and math problems. $34.00 We're competitive. i In fact, we'll match any deal or refund your money. MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 -- - ------ MADISON, Wis. (AP)-Karleton Armstrong, who spent most of the past~ decade behind bars in a fatal anti-war bombing in 1970, left prison a free man yesterday, leaving his brother the only person still imprisoned for Vietnam-era protests. "It feels great. I'm happy to be out;" Armstrong told about two dozen cheering supporters at the gates of Fox Lake prison. He carried an armload of red roses. ARMSTRONG, now 32, said he was, grateful for the yers of moral support from friends and from the Madison City Council,ewhich had recommended his parole. Asked if he would do it again, Ar- mstrong, his broad smile fading, said: "No comment." He said he might have more to say at a.later time. Armstrong was greeted by his wife, Naomi, a Canadian he met while a fugitive for 18 months, and his mother, Ruth. They joined his attorney, Sarah O'Brien, for the 45-mile drive from Fox Hill to Madison, where Armstrong was reunited with his father, Donald, who is bed-ridden with cancer. Armstrong, serving a 10-year federal sentence and a 14-year state term reduced last year from the original 23 THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume XC, No. 100 } Friday, February 1, 1980 is edited and mana ged by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings 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. years, was approved for federal parole late last year. He had been eligible for state release since October. O'BRIEN SAID the release leaves Armstrong's brother, Dwight, 28, the only person 'still imprisoned in the United States for Vietnam era protest activities. The younger Armstrong, captured in 1977, is serving seven-year federal and state terms stemming from the bombing at the federal prison in Ox- ford. Wis. A third person convicted in the bom- bing, David Fine, 28, of Wilmington, Del., who was captured in California in 1976, was paroled from federal prison last year. Leo Burt, 31, of Havertown, Pa., the fourth man named in the bom- bing, has never been captured. All four were put on the FBI's most wanted list after a stolen van packed with, highly explosive fertilizers chemicals blew up a building on the University of Wisconsin campus tha housed the Army Mathematics Resear- ch Centerand the Physics Department. Robert Fassnacht, 33, a graduate student in physics working in the building, was killed in the blast in the predawn hours of Aug. 24, 1970. Daily Official Bulletin FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1,1980 Daily Calendar: Ctr. S&SEAS: Richard P. Tucker, "Environmen- tal Degradation in the Lower Himalayas," Lane Commons, noon. Institute of Public Policy Studies: Clopper Allmon, "Multi-National Marco Economic Modeling:A Status Report,'"w. Conf., Rackham, noon. Macromolecular Res. Ctr./Physucs/Chemistry/Nuclear Eng: Jacques Des Cloizeaux, Ctr. Nuclear Studies, Saclay, France, -Theory of Polymer Solutions: New Aspects and New Results,'" 2038 Randall, 2:10 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: N. Krumm, ' JGC 4203: Lazy Spiral," 807 Dennison, 4p.m. OIZ LZIZ lii ir The day we answer years of questions in less than 1 hour Duringthe years you've spent working for your BSIMS/ PhD, you've probably been asking yourself a lot of impor- tant questions. Questions about what kind of company you want to work for. Talk with our technical specialists when we visit your campus on the above date and in about 1 hour we'll give you the straightforward answers you've been looking for. INMOS, a new semiconductor firm, decided to build its US headquarters in Colorado Springs with views from every window of Pikes Peak and the Cheyenne Mountain range. We found the peace necessary for contemplation, creativity and invention in the pleasure of spectacular natural beauty. The objective of INMOS is to build a viable capability in the semiconductor industry through research and discovery. Thecompany is concentrating on development of VLSI technology with initial'devices at a level of complexity of visibility of a large corporation. We'll describe how you'll be given considerable'responsibilities from the very first day. How you'll become immersed in every phase of your department's operation - from the birth of an idea to its final implementation. And how we'll provide you with in depth, on-the-job training... without making you sit in a classroom to get it. And how you'll be working and rubbing elbows with some of the acknowledged geniuses in the electronics field today. We'll tell you how INMOS, unlike many other companies, won't weigh you down under layers of management-how you'll be given the authority to make and carry out your own decisions. And we'll show you how your ideas will get the attention they deserve and the support they need to make them work. So call or stop by the Placement Office to set up an appointment, so we can describe in detail your future at INMOS Corporation's US headquarters in Colorado Springs. If you are not available for an appointment but I I