The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 3, 1980-Page 3 a i Iran says battle tide turning in its favor BAGHDAD, Iraq (UPI) - Iran claimed yesterday the tide of battle was turning in its favor and ordered a general mobilization of civilians in vital Khuzistan province, while Iraq admit- ted its forces have gone on the defen- sive, "preserving" past gains. In Tehran, the Iranian Parliament Arab oil states express increasing con- cern that the Iran-Iraqi war could spread to their shores and touch off a superpower confrontation. See story, Page 5. 0, picked the militant who led the assault on the U.S. Embassy nearly a year ago to head the commission charged with studying the fate of the 52 American hostages, now in their 334th day of cap- tivity. SIX OTHER hardliners were named to the commission amid warnings that the hostages would all be killed if the United States intervened in the Persian Gulf war, now raging into its 11th day. Fierce artillery and air duels con- tinued along the 11-day-old war's two major battlefronts-the Shatt-al-Arab waterway to the Persian Gulf and in the Iranian oil province of Khuzistan fur- ther north. But there were signs that the way was settling down to a long and static slugfest with artillery and that Iraqi advances had been checked or at least slowed. Only hours after formally rejecting another Iraqi offer of a truce, Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr declared Iran's army and fanatical Revolutionary Guards were taking the offensive in fierce battles for four key cities-Khurramshahr and Ababdan in the south by the Gulf and Ahvaz and Dizful in Khuzistan to the north. MS A contiues work on security By DAVID MEYER Members of the Michigan Student Assembly Security Task Force took another step last night toward developing concrete plans for improving campus security. Students at the meeting, representing five "action groups" formed at last week's mass meeting, reported on the research they had conducted on their individual topics and discussed future directions for action. AMONG THE POSSIBLE improvements discussed by the students was a night-time, off-campus ride program similar to the present "Night-Owl" bus service. MSA member Bruce Brumberg, coordinator of the Security Task Force, said he has contacted other universities with similar programs currently in service and is developing a plan for a more comprehensive ride service in Ann Arbor. "I hope to have ... a proposal (at-next week's meeting) to improve the Night-Owl system, to expand the Night- Owl system," Brumberg said following last night's meeting. Task Force member Susan Bornstein said she is working with Michigan Bell on the possibility of in- creasing the number of telephones on campus. Bornstein said she was optimistic more phones could be installed. MSA's plan to construct a walk board in the un- dergraduate library was postponed after students ex- pressed concern over the danger of pairing up women with unfamiliar escorts. "We've done the ground work, . , . now -it's time to for- mulate these plans," MSA President Marc Breakstone said after the meeting. Breakstone and other MSA of- ficials hope to develop more definite proposals for im- proving security at their next meeting. SA V AR Y . HAPPENINGS FILMS AAFC-Notorious, 7 p.m., North by Northwest, 8:45 p.m., MLB 4. Alt. Action Films-One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, 7, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema II-Shane, 7, 9p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Gargoyle Films-Plan Nine From Outer Space, 7, 9:50 p.m., 2000 Maniacs, 8:20 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. Mediatrics-Life of Brian, 7,9, 11 p.m., MLB 3. Audio-Visual Services-To Feed the Hungry, 12:10 p.m., SPH II Aud. SPEAKERS u Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies-Bag lunch lecture, J. Timothy Johnson, "Population Prospects in Bangladesh: A Personal View," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Political Science-Kathlene O'Reilly, absentee debate with tape recor- ding of Congressman Carl Pursell, 11 a.m., Lorch Hall Aud. ' Business-Memorex Corporate President Chuck Stranch, "The Challenge of Multi-National Company Management," 1:30 p.m., Hale Aud. Bio-Tech-Seminar, Robert Helling, "Current Status of Recombinant DNA Technology (Pt. 1)," 3p.m., 104 Engineering 1A. Christian Science Organization-Bruce Fitzwater, "The Logical Cer- tainty of Christian Healing," 8p.m., Union Pendleton Room. Assault Crisis Center-Rape speakers bureau workshop, 5-11 p.m., Alice Lloyd. MEETINGS Society of Women Engineers-Pre-interview program, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p*m., 270 W. Engin. Botticelli Game Players-Open meeting, 12 p.m., Dominick's. PERFORMANCES Office of Major Events-Bruce Springsteen, 8 p.m., Crisler Arena. PTP-"Dancin'," 8p.m., Power Ctr. School of Music-Harpsichord recital, Stevep Egler, 8 p.m., Studio.110. Symphony Band and Wind Ensemble-H. Robert-Reynolds;Conductor, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Ark-Folk duo Gemini, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. MISCELLANEOUS Guild House-Luncheon Lecture, Molly Reno, "Landlord-Tenant Law and the Office of Student Legal Services," 12 p.m., 802 Monroe. Campus Chapel-Dr. Gordon Spykman, "Christians in Politics," 7:30 p.m., 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Hillel-Shabbat services (Cons. & Oth.) followed by dinner, 7 p.m., 1429 Hill. Rec. Sports-International Rec. Program, 7-10 p.m., Coliseum. U. Duplicate Bridge Club-Open game, 7:30 p.m., League Henderson Room. MSA-Voter registration drive, all over campus, all dorms, various hours. Contemporary Fiction Review-Accepting submissions for Fall, 1980 issue. Guidelines for manuscripts at Hopwood Room, Angell Hall. WUOM-Symposium in critical theory, "The Ethics of Reading," 10 a.m. 91.7FM. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: -Happenings,,The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI, 48100. O L U i I M ti , {z r , t. j-' SAVE! HUNDREDS OF AUDIO COMPONENTS ARE SPECIALLY LOW PRICED 10 AM TO 9 PM THESE ARE JUST A FEW Of THE MANY "SATURAO. NLY". BARGAINS: METAL TAPE COMPATIBLE i ,. k Y a i r e s a fi Y 1 1 f i Y PIONEER SX-680 STEREO RECEIVER 30-watts per channel, min. RMS at 8 ohm load, from 20-20,000 Hertz with no more than 0.1% THD. Wood grain finish. Limit 1. $124 KENWOOD KR5010 STEREO RECEIVER 50-watts/channel, min. RMS at 8 ohms load from 20-20,000 Hz., no more than 0.05%THD. 2-tape deck capability. Regular $259. '214 TECHNICS RSM1 1MKII CASSETTE DECK Uses both standard and metal bias tape. Fluorescent bar graph meters. Soft load/eject. With Dolby NR*. Regular $179. '128 200 UNITS CHAINWIDE IM I JENSEN R-400 IN-DASH CAR STEREO AM/FM stereo with cassette player. Locking fast forward. & rewind. Stereo/mono switch. In-dash model. Regular $179. '136 SANSUI P-50 BELT-DRIVE TURNTABLE 4-pole synchronous blt-drive turntable. Automatic return and shut-off. Easy-to-operate con- trols. Base & cover. Reg. $109. '76 TOSHIBA RT2140 AM/FM STEREO RECORDER Stereo cassette recorder with AM/FM stereo radio. Auto-stop Dual built-in microphones. LED indicators. Regular $99.88. $7'452 RTR !I1 MODEL 4 4-WAY SPEAKERS High definition 12" woofer, 3%" Midrange, 2%" tweeter, 31/" solid state supertweeter. Wood grain finish. Regular $119. TEAC X7R 7-INCH OPEN REEL TAPE DECK Bi-directional record and play- back deck. 7" reel capacity. Two tape speeds. Auto-repeat. Mic/line mixing. Regular $699. TDK ADC 90 CASSETTE TAPES Pack of 3 90-minute blank cassette tapes. With Cassette- O-Matic tape holder. Regular $10.98 per pack. Limit 4 packs. KOSS PRO 4AAA STEREO HEADPHONES 2-way stereo headphones with 2" woofer and 1" tweeter for your personal listening en- joyment. Regular $49.88. Savel '87 '588 $6 9P1K 3$ 4327 EA.