0 Page 2-Tuesday, September 29, 1981-The Michigan Daily 5 7 more leftists executed in IranIN BRIEF- BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- Iran announced yester- day the executions of 57 leftists for staging riots in Tehran aimed at undermining' "the effects" of a proclaimed victory over Iraqi forces at Abadan. The fundamentalist Moslem government of Ayatollah R hollah Khomeini said its forces had crushed the disorders that broke out Sunday, and that all the people executed were members of the Mujahedeen Khalq guerrilla group. Tehran Radio said 57 members of the Marxist- Islamic organization were executed Sunday following for killing eight revolutionary guards and setting fire to buses aid private cars in the Tehran rioting. THE STATE RUN radio also said 52 leftists were put to death in the central city of Isfahan, and 45 others were executed in several Iranian cities for being members of the outlawed Mujahedeen. . In a speech broadcast by ,Tehran Radio, Iran's parliament speaker, Ali-Akbar Rafsanjani, accused the Mujahedeen of staging the Tehran demon- strations. "When they became certain yesterday that the vic- tory of Islam was certain at the battlefront and that they could not foil its military; significance, they began creating disorder," Rafsanjani told Iran's Parliament. . IRAN CLAIMED Sunday that its troops had scored "the greatest military victory in classical warfare since World War II" by breaking the siege on the oil refining city of Abadan. An Iranian military communique claimed that 1,000 Iraqis were killed in the Abadan offensive, while 70 Iranians lost their lives. Iraq, while conceding its troops were engaged in fierce fighting in the area, maintained that its hold on the southwestern Iranian city had been tightened and called Iran's victory proclamation "an empty claim." TEHRAN reverberated with chants of "God is great" as most of the capital's 7 million residents took to their rooftops Sunday night to sound the Islamic battlecry, Tehran Radio said. In Paris; exiled president Abolhassan Bani-Sadr issued a statement accusing Khomeini and his clergy of "playing Washington's game" by trying to wipe out the Mujahedeen Khalq, described by the ousted leader as the real force opposing American domination. Bani-Sadr appealed to Iranian voters to boycott Friday's elections to choose a successor to assassinated President Mohammad Ali Rajai, killed along with his prime minister in an Aug. 30 fire- .bombing. "Oct. 2 must be the day of the broadest and most united demonstration of opposition of our people to the' bloody madness and incompetence of the regime," Bani-Sadr said. SINCE BANI-SADR'S ouster June 22, the Tehran government has announced the executions of 993 people, most of them government foes. Five candidates-all avowed Khomeini men-are running for president. Hojatoleslam Ali Khamenei, leader of the ruling Islamic Republican Party and survivor of a June 27 assassination attempt, is con- sidered the front-runner in Iran's third presidential election in 19 months. MUP Chapter meeting Open to the University Community IWED. SK 30 at NOON Michigan Room, Michigan League L A Dean Peter Steiner will speak on "DISCONTINUANCE PROCEDURES AND TENURE" Lunch trays can be brought to the Michigan Room. The pro- gram will begin at 12:30.- For information about joining AAUP, Call 764-8586 *STUDENTS INVITED* HEALTL CAREERS NIGHT1 Wednesday Sept. 30 -7 p.m. Michigan Union (2nd Floor)- Pendleton Room TOPIC: "HEAL7 CAREER PA THWA YS AND PERSPECTIVES" PRESENTING . . MEDICINE (MD) VETERINARY MEDICINE Dr. Errol E. Erlandson Jeanne Bunch Assistant Professor of Surgery Preveterinary Advisor University of Michigan Michigan Stote University DENTISTRY PUBLIC HEALTH Dr. Robert A. Bagramian Margaret J. Wolin Professor of Dentistry School of Public Health University of Michigan Universityof Michigan, MEDICINE (DO) ALLIED HEALTH PHARMACY Kay White. Ph.D. Victoria Asmar College of Osteopathic Medicine Assistant Director of Admissions Michigan State University Wayne State University PHYSICIANS ASSISTANT Lawrence Kramer Mercy College 2 tons of pot stolen from Mass. state police YARMOUTH, Mass. (AP) - Almost two tons of marijuana, valued at over $1 million, was stolen from a locked room in the Yarmouth state police barracks on Cape Cod, police disclosed yester- day. State Police Lt. Col. John O'Donovan said the alarm system was bypassed when thieves took 50 bales of marijuana Friday night or Saturday morning. The theft was discovered Saturday. THE POT was seized in a raid June 8 in Mashpee and was being held as evidence. The thieves left 87 other bales of marijuana behind in the break-in the basement room. O'Donovan said a specialstate police task force had been formed to look into the theft, and internal affairs officers would take part in the probe. ASKED WHETHER the theft was an inside job, Sally MacRobbie, an assistant to District Attorney Phillip A. Rollins, said, "That is certainly being looked into." She said Rollins, citing security reasons, had asked the court earlier for permission to destroy the marijuana. But the request was denied, since the quantity of pot was an issue in the case. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Nuclear protesters arrested SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.- About 250 protesters, including actor Robert Blake and rock star Jackson Browne, were arrested yesterday near the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant during the last day of a planned two- week demonstration at the facility,'police said. The arrests brought to 1,893 the number of people arrested at the plant sin- ce Sept. 15. Browne, who wrote and recorded such songs as "Doctor My Eyes," "Take It Easy" and "The Pretender," was released last week after pleading no contest to a Sept. 18 charge of trespassing at the plant's gate. Blake, star of the "Baretta" television series, was arrested at the plant's main gate, when demonstrators, linked arm-in-arm, tried to block workers from entering the plant, said San Luis Obispo County Undersheriff Arnie Goble. Two gang members executed ASHEBORO, N.C.- Two men executed gangland'style and stuffed in a car trunk were identified yesterday as Hells Angels, one of two motorcycle gangs that are blamed by authorities for a recent crime wave in the Carolinas. Authorities found the bodies late Saturday after a resident reported blood was dripping from the trunk of a car parked on a gravel road in rural Ran- dolph County. Charlotte police identified the victims as Michael "Thunder" Finazzo, 40, president of the Hells Angels in Charlotte, and Tyler Duris "Yank" Frndak, about 30, a gang member: Both men had been shot at close range nd Finaz- zo also had a broken leg, authorities said. Authorities believe both were shot elsewhere Thursday with a 9 mm pistol. Ford owners seek repairs BOSTON- Hundreds of owners of new Ford automobiles,fearing they may be denied gasoline, rushed to dealers yesterday to have faulty fuel systems fixed after the Massachusetts fire marshal warned their cars were fire haards. The fire marshal asked local fire chiefs yesterday to urge service stations to deny gas to owners of 1981 Ford Escorts and Lincoln-Mercury Lynxes unless they had had the defects repaired Marshal Joseph O'Keefe said a design error in 125,000 cars built between August and December last year could cause a fire when gas is being pumped into them. AWACS confronts opposition WASHINGTON- The administration presented to a skeptical Senate panel yesterday its case for selling AWACS to Saudi Arabia, but met heavy opposition despite assurances the aircraft won't threaten Israel or fall into Soyiet hands. Defending the administration's proposal to sell five of the planes to the Mideast oil power, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger said the Saudis would need help with training and maintenance for nearly a decade to keep the planes flying. Gen. David Jones, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said such reliance on U.S. technical help would continue "well into the 1990's." At another point, Jones said, "We will be involved as far as we can see in the future." Reagan vows to cut spending WASHINGTON- President Reagan vowed yesterday to slash "billions more" from federal spending if needed to balance the budget, and key congressional and Wall Street figures tapped a target-the Pentagon. We are not gong to retreat from this program one bit because we know it will restore the economy," Reagan told a $1,000-a-person Republican fund raising reception in New Orleans. The president said he is ready to cut "tens of billions more"-beyond the $13 billion in reductions he proposed last week for fiscal 1982-in order to achieve a balanced budget by 1984. "We're going to keep going until we do," he said. Reagan spoke as witnesses on Capitol Hill expressed doubts about the im- pact of the latest installment of his economic recovery package, which links $2 billion in Pentagon cuts and a 12 percent reduction in most federal programs with $3 billion in new revenue to save $13 billion. Vol. XCII, No. 17 Tuesday, September 29, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September 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 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (33) 764-0552, 76-DAILY, Sports desk. 7640562, Circulation, 764.0558 Classified advertising University still ponders its anti-hazing policy r (Continued from Page 1) universities the right to enforce its own hating policies. However, Johnson says the University is not waiting for the legislation to pass and is working under that assumption. According to Barb. Eldersvild, an aide to Bullard, the Michigan bill will be modeled after bills enacted in New York and California. THE NEW YORK bill, enacted in September 1980, does not set specific criminal penalties, but requires colleges and universities to set their own anti-hazing rules. In California, violation of the state hazing law is punishable as a misdemeanor, with a maximum fine of $500 and maximum jail sentence of six months. Meanwhile. Ohio has joined the ranks of states working on anti-hazing legislation. Ohio State Rep. David Har- tley (D-Springfield) is sponsoring and anti-Hazing bill that will come up for 4 vote in the Ohio House of Represen- tatives shortly. The Ohio bill would establish criminal penalties for participants in hazing activities and the college per- sonnel who permit it, as well as enabling a hazed person to file suit against the perpetrators and the college officials who knew of the activities. Correction- In the story "Promoters struggle for entertainment dollars," printed Thur- sday, September 24, the Daily printed a schedule of upcoming concerts spon- sored by Major Events. The story should have made clear that though some of these concert dates are set, some of them are still tentative.. Johnson ... Greek hazings 'not our business' ' Maximum penalties under the Ohio bill are misdemeanor charges with maximum fines of $250 and minimum jail sentence of 30 days. 0 ;Picture :This U :Photo !Processin;: : Special: "3 DAYS ONLY . , A I A II NE*. LOWER K 6 764-0557, Display advertising, 764-0554. Billing 764.0550. Editor in cief ...................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor..............JyLIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor................LORENZO BENET News Editor...................... DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors......... .......KEVIN TOTTIS CHARLES THOMSON Chief Photographer .............. PAUL ENGSTROM Sports Editor ................... MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors............. GREG DEGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOORE HOUSE DREW SHARP ARTISTS: Robert Lence, Norm Christiansen. Jonathan Stewart. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, ,Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas, Brian Mosck. MAGAZINE/ ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl. Mark Dighton. Adam Knee, Pom Kromer. Gail Negbour, Howard Witt. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen. Doug Brice, Crol Choltron, Andrew 'Chapman. Liso Crumrine, Debi Davis, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger. Maureen Fleming, Denise Franklin. Joyce Frieden. Mark Gin- din. Julie Hinds. Steve Hook, Kathy Hoover. Jennifer Miller, Don Oberrotman. Janet Rae, David Spok, Fan. nie Weinstein, Barry Witt. SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker. Randy Berger, Jodi Bitt- ker. Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle. Don Conlin. Mor- tho Croll, Jim Dworman, John Fitzpatrick. Thomas Fous, Larry Freed. Alan Goldstein. Chuck.Hartwig, Chuck Jaffe, John Kerr, Larry Mishkin, Don Newman, Ron Polfack, Jeff Quicksilver. Stpve Schaumberger, sarah Sherber. 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LIMIT ONE ROLL WITH COUPON. EXCLUDING GLOSSY AND PORTFOLIO 35 Sept. 28, 29, & 30 -I NOW, we're offering our most popular low-priced dinners at even lower prices- because we want you to enjoy Ponderosa more often. Ponderosa Big Chopped Steak Dinner --nd t % 8mm or __ -T- T Super 8 Movies or .. Slides I Developed 36 exp. Slides.,. $1.99 i II 1A.11 NOW -P ONLY Extra-Cut Ribeye Steak Dinner r PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M T W -T F S SM T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S a74 1 23 1 34567 12j345 101112 4 6 7 8 9 10 8 1011121314 6 8 9 101112 13 17156 17 18 19 1171 1314 516 17 157 7178792021 20 22 23 24 25 26 18 2021 22 23 24 22 24 20316981 2 2293025425 22324229530 31 -?- 1982 JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL SMTWT FS SM T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S 12 3 4 5 6 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 I r r' f ''E l :r ... -. Kodachrome. Ekatchrome or Compatible Film only Limit one roll Coupon must accompany order. NOW 0NLY " Suiner Sirloin 10~