c.. ., . . _ . _ , . _ , . t- CENSUS See editorial page c~it iga ~Laui1g APRIL SHOWERS See Today for details Ninet y Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XC, No. 141 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 29-1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages ; Shah rests *after removal ofspleen CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Surgeons removed the desposed shah of Iran's cancerous spleen In an operation last night at an Egyptian military hospital, a medical bulletin issued by Dr. Sabry [smail reported. The brief bulletin said the surgery was supervised by famed surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey of Houston, Texas, and "was completed in a satisfactory condition." It said the shah was receiving intensive care. S THE OPERATION was performed by a U.S.-Egyptian team led y DeBake" according to an announcement made by the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. Frank Weaver, a spokesman for the college, said he received a call at 5:40 p.m. EST from DeBakey in which the doctor said.the surgery of the deposed monarch's enlarged spleen had been completed and he "was very satisfied With the effectivenss of the team and 4th the shah's condition.' Weaver said DeBakey told him the team had performed a spleenectomy and Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlai was in "stable condition and doing very well." THE OPERATION was performed in Cairo's Maadi Military Hospital, which was protected by a line of Egyptian armoredcars and soldiers. The shah has been in a second floor uite at the hospital since he left anama and was received here Monday by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt. The shah's flight from Panama, where he lived for 100 days after receiving medical treatment in the United States, raised a storm of protest in Iran. In a sermon on the Moslem sabbath, a Tehran clergyman called Sadat an "agent of the United States" for granting the shah permanent -anctuary. W"AMERICA MUST know that the question hs not ended by smuggling the shah to Egypt," said the clergyman. He also said the Americn hostages in Tehran would be tried "to ensure the extradition of the shah." Meanwhile, sources in Washington said yesterday the Carter administration is considering a further cutback in Iranian diplomats in the United States as part of a series of get- *ough measures to be announced next week. But U.S. relations with the regime in Tehran will be maintained despite growing impatience with the siege at see SHAH, Page 3. Protesters march against 'U' reactor By JAY McCORMICK and LISSA OLIVER Commemorating the first anniversary of the Three Mile Island nuclear accident, more than 70 demonstrators marched three miles, from Main Street to the University's Ford/Phoenix nuclear reactor on North Campus, to urge an end to nuclear power use. Carrying black balloons-symbols of death and disease-demonstrators began their march with a rally at the Ann Arbor Edison office where they protested the construction of Fermi II, the company's nuclear power plant now being built near Monroe. From there,. the demonstrators moved on to North Campus. "WE ARE OUT to demonstrate our concern and determination for the end to nuclear power," said Joe Tiboni, a member of the Arbor Alliance, which sponsored the rally. The demonstrators at North Campus demanded that the University shut down its training reactor, he said. According to Tiboni, the launching of the balloons, at the reactor was a way to bring community attention to the problems of nuclear power. Attached to each balloon was a card warning that the wind that brought the balloon to its final destination have just as easily brought nuclear fallout. Although the Phoenix reactor is too small to actually melt down, Tiboni says the message simply symbolizes the pollution of the environment that's man made. JIM GARRISON, a national staff worker for the Coalition for a Non- Nuclear World, was in Ann Arbor to support the Arbor Alliance's activities and to raise support for a march on the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. planned for Saturday, April 26. Garrison said he hopes the April rally and civil disobedience at the Pentagon will force politicians to pay attention to the anti-nuclear movement. The civil disobedience will consist of forming a human chain around the Pentagon complex and infiltrating the complex itself through an interior subway station, he said. Garrison said he did not think the demonstration would bring about any immediate changes, but it might make the politicians uncomfortable. "The action (lobbying, marching, and civil disobedience) brings people together. It will do a lot to empower the anti- nuclear movement itself. In an election year it might make the politicians uncomfortable." "IT'S A LONG struggle, and we're going to win it because we're increasinglysophisticated,and we're getting bigger," Garrison added. Tiboni agreed with Garrison's assessment of the political position of energy programs, saying, "If it's convenient for them, they (politicians) will embrace that point of view (against nuclear energy). I don't know if they will do anything more than embrace it." National TMIprotest leads to 56 arrests From AP and UPI Daily Photo by JOHN HAGEN. ANTI-NUCLEAR protesters marched three miles yesterday in com- memoration of the Three Mile Island disaster. After arriving at the Uni- versity's nuclear reactor on North Campus, the group launched hundreds of black baloons with messages warning that nuclear fallout is carried by the wind as easily as a balloon. Fifty-six anti-nuclear protesters were arrested yesterday at the New Jersey headquarters of the utility that owns the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in one of several demonstrations marking the first anniversary of the nation's worst commercial nuclear ac- cident. At Middletown, Pa., about 200 people, including reporters, gathered in a yard just a few hundred feet from the damaged Three Mile Island plant. $13 MILLION IN U.S. GOODS WON'T GO TO MOSCOW: WA order .yeste Amer used Mosco Carer stos mpi From APand UeI The network reportedly was to pay through Aug. 3, when the Olympics end. SHINGTON - President Carter some $87 million for rights to televise OFFICIALS said it means that no ed the secretary of commerce about 150 hours of the Moscow events. momentoes, flags, buttons or other rday to deny all licenses for IN NEW YORK, the network said it small items can be exported, aside ican goods and technology to be will "be guided by the policies and from anything like computers or other for the Summer Olympics in regulations of the United States gover- technology items. ow and to revoke export licenses nment ... and wll take appropriate ac- The president's actions were the for items that have not yet been shipped. He also prohibited other transactions and payments associated with Olym- pic-related exports. THE ACTION restricts the export of significantly more than $13 million in items ranging from track and field equipment to uniforms, and from videotape equipment to low-technology computers for keeping scores and times, according to Homer Moyer, the Commerce Department's general counsel.- It also means that NBC will be barr- fed from making further payments or exports under its contracts relating to U.S. television rights for the Games. 'Since U.S. athletes will not be attending the games, it is appropriate for the American business com- munity to demonstrate its own support for this posi- S lpmentsl to export an estimated $20 million in products relating to the Summer Olym- pics to the Soviet Union. THE ACTION was intended to slow U.S. displeasure with continuing Soviet military involvement in Afghanistan, Commerce Secretary Philip M. Klut- znick said at the time. "Since U.S. athletes will not be atten- ding the games, it is appropriate for the American business community to demonstrate its own support for this position by limiting its own par- ticipation in the.Moscow Games," the department said. Commerce said at the time that a mandatory ban on Olympic-related ex- ports was being considered. White House press secretary Jody Powell said any question of whether Carter would permit individuals to par- ticipate in the Olympics was "moot" because individual Americans are tbarred from the competition. THE NUCLEAR foes lit 'white can- dles and sang a protest song at 4 a.m., exactly the time when a series of mechanical breakdowns and human errors triggered the accident on March 28, 1979; and radioactive gas escaped from the plant. The plant now sits virtually silent on a speck of land in the Susquehanna River, ten miles from the state capitol in Harrisburg. It has become a symbol of anti-nuclear activism around the world and was the focal point of protests across America and Europe. Peaceful' anti-nuclear observances were conducted at power plants and utilities in Connecticut, Virginia, California and Texas and more were planned throughout the weekend. ABOUT 200 people demonstrated peacefully at the corporate headquar- ters of General Public Utilities in Parr sipanny, N.J., and 56 of them were arrested after entering company property. Some of the protesters jumped a four- foot snow fence and others tried to shoulder through police lines. Police carried away some of the demon- strators and loaded them into buses. Those arrested were being charged with criminal trespass. About" 40 people demonstrated outside the' gates of Northeast Utilities in Berlin, Conn., and two women handing out pamphlets were arrested for inter- fering with employees entering the facility, authorities said. AT THREE Mile Island, mothers, lit- tle girls, preachers and protesters held candles and sang, "No more nukes, My Lord." "You really don't know what the See 56, Page 3 tcon.' -Commerce department statement tion" relating to the president's order. Under Carter's order, American business firms, as well a individuals, will be prohibited from sending anything to Russia - except medicine - if the items are connected to the Olympics. The order covers everything not shipped within 48 hours and extends latest the administration has taken to retaliate against the Soviet Union for its military intervention in Afghanistan late last year. Carter has already an- nounced that the United States' will not send a team to take part in the Summer Games if they are held in Moscow. The Carter administration on March i 2 asked U.S. companies voluntarily not ....................................................... ..x '*.*.'.~...x...*.",:. ^>i*'.*..... ...............*....*.4.':'.*...'.,