College dean may be victim of Iran hit squadi STAMFORD, Conn. (AP)- Police said yesterday they were pursuing an anonymous tip that a college dean and Bahai religious leader was stabbed to death by an "Iranian hit squad." "We have not confirmed anything on the hit team. We have not ruled it out," Stamford Deputy Police Chief George Mayer said yesterday. He said the in- vestigation of the death of Daniel Jor- dan was at "ground zero." BUT PARKS Scott, a spokesman for the U.S. Bahai headquarters in Wilmet- te, Ill., said he believes there was no connection between the slaying and Jordan's position as co-chairman of the faith's nine-member governing body, the National Spiritual Assembly of Bahai Faith. David Chigos, president of National University in San Diego where Jordan was dean of education, speculated that he may have been the victim of a. mugging. The body of Jordan, 50, was found Saturday in a parking lot on the east side of Stamford, a wealthy suburb about 50 miles from New York City. His body had been dumped in a pile of trash and stripped of identification. IT WAS Jordan's role as a national leader of the Bahai faith that sparked speculation he may have been killed for his religion. A New York City police officer received an anonymous tip saying an Iranian group had been responsible for the death, Mayer said. Scott said followers of Bahai have been persecuted in Iran since the religion was established there during the 19th century. Since Ayatollah Khomeini came to power in late 1979, Scott said, the persecution has stepped up and 130 Bahai followers have been executed. Report charges U.S. ignored killings Phillippe Bourgois, an American graduate student who said he witnessed government troops firing on peasants in the district of Cabanas. Despite the administration's attempt to portray Bourgois' account as guerrilla "propaganda," the House report concluded, "no, intelligence" existed to contradict Bourgois' claim that he was with non-combatants." About 38,000 people - mostly unarmed civilians - have died in the political violence that has wracked El Salvador the past three years. Some human rights groups have blamed government forces and right-wing paramilitary groups for up to 80 percent of the killings. FEW OF THE murders are in- vestigated, but probes into the Decem- ber 1980 slayings of four American churchwomen and the January 1981 killings of two U.S. land reform ad- visers led ultimately to confessions by Salvadoran national guardsmen. The Reagan administration has cer- tified twice to Congress - once* in January and once in July - that the Salvadoran government was making "a concerted and signiificant ef- fort to comply with the internationally recognized human rights." THERE HAVE been no reports of persecution of Bahai followers in the United States, Scott said. Jordan, the first American to recei', a Rhodes Scholarship for music, visited Iran and other countries in 1976 as an educational consultant for the U.S. State Department, Scott said. He did not engage in any religious activities while in Iran, Scott said. Jordan's body was found about 11 a.m. Saturday but was not identified for several days. His wife, Nancy, flew to Stamford from San Diego on Wed- nesday and confirmed the identity of her husband's body. HE HAD BEEN scheduled to address the New York University Alumni Club on Saturday morning. The last time he was heard from was in a telephone call to an unidentified associate about 8 p.m. Friday after arriving on a flight to LaGuardia Air- port that landed about 5 p.m. Jordan, had said he would meet the associate at the club the next morning, police said. But after that police had no leads on, where Jordan went, what he did, or how, his body wound up in Stamford, Deputy' Chief Mayer said. He said he could not confirm earlier; reports that Jordan had been killed; elsewhere and dumped in Stamford. A preliminary afitopsy showed that Jordan died of a single knife wound to the neck and had been dead at least nine hours when found. Chigos, who thought a mugger might; be responsible, said Jordan was "a very well-dressed man. He looked like? a prosperous man, the sort of person that a person would see and think: 'There's a 'guy who's got a lot of money.'" Colombian novelist wins Nobel' Prize mi DUKE THE FUQUA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS representative MBA A of the Fuqua School of Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan I I r--m--m------ WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- I 1 -1 .---e--------M. CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!------------I.. mu USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words Doys 2. 345 add. 0-14 1.85 3.70 5.55, 6.75 7.95 1.00 15-21 2.75 5.55 8.30 10.10 11.90 1.60 Please indicate where this ad 22-28 3.70 7.40 11.10 13.50 15.90 - 2.20 is to run 29-35 4.60 9.25 13.90 16.90 19.90 2.80 frsl 36-42 5.55 11.10 16.65 20.25 23.85 3.40 roommates p sonal 43-49 6.45 12.95 19.40 23.60 27.80 4.00 peec Each group of cliarocters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over five characters count as two words. (this includes telephone numbers). Seven words equol one line. Advertisement may be removed from publication. For ads which required prepayment, there will be no refunds. All other ads will be billed according to the original number of days ordered. Business of Duke University will be on campus Tuesday, November 2, to discuss the MBA Program. Interested students may obtain further information by 'contacting the Office of Career Planning and Placement. Live for God and His People as a ... a what? Capuchin Franciscans are a religious fraternity ofnmen trying to live the Gospel in the Spirit of Francis of Assisi in today's world. Join us in promoting peace, education, and justice-- in ghettoes... in jails... in soup kitchens... in parishes... in halfway houses... on radio and TV. Join us in working with and for the advancement of blacks, whites, Hispanics, native Americans and people of the Third World in Central America. Check out whether being a Capuchin, committed to living for God and his people, in the spirit of Francis, is for you. No obligation. Write today for more information. ........... Clip and Mail Today!.......... Father John Holly, OFM Capuchin, 1820 Mt. Elliott Avenue, Detroit, Ml 48207 Yes, send me information about the Capuchin way of life. (Continued from Page 1). languages. PRAISING the vitality of th9 literature produced in a continent boiling with conflict, a Swedish Academy spokesman noted that Garci - Marquez "like most of the other import tant writers, is strongly 'committed o the side of the poor and the weak again] st domestic oppression and foreig4 economic exploitation." A leftist and political journalist, Gar cia Marquez has lived in Mexico for 2 years and has received death threats from ultra-rightists in his native coun- try. But Colombian President Belisaria Betancur said he telephoned him aftet the award was announced "to tell hirp that I put Columbia's heart in his har- ds," and Garcia Marquez told him h4 would come home "very soon." "I don't feel old enough yet to receivo a Nobel Prize, since really the only pert son younger than me to win the award was Albert Camus," he said. Garcia Marquez, whose novels and 'stories are the most widely read Spanish-language works in the world; said he was "incredulous, ... surprised and astonished" to discover the Swedish Academy of Letters had selec ted him. Correction In a story in- Wednesday's Daily, it was erroneously reported that 15 LSA programs were being reviewed by faculty committees. Twenty-two LSA programs are actually being reviewed., Name. Age College. Address I City State Zip OUR NEW GAIMES " MOON PATROL * JUNGLE KING " JOUST * WILD WESTERN * KANGAROO " FRENZY " DONKEY KONG JUNIOR AFTERNOON SPECIAL (Mon. thru Thurs.) 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. 8 TOKENS................$ 40 TOKENS..............$5 TRY OUR NEW GAMES AND OLD GAMES 4\tIN A1 OUR OLD GAMES "TRON " ZAXXON " ROBOTRON 2084 . MS. PACMAN " TURBO " TUTANKHAM * GALAGA * DIG DUG EVERY DAY LOW PRICES 6 TOKENS................ $ 35 TOKENS..............$5 r ------ --- -- 4 I SA I