I Page 8 -- The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 14, 1983 Iranian bomb attack kills Iraqi troops BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Iran said tank, in attacks on several Iraqi yesterday its forces repelled Iraqi at- positions. tacks, killed scores of Iraqi troops and In Bagdhad, Iraqi President Sad- destroyed most of a missile launching dam Hussein said his air force has not base with artillery bombardments taken delivery of five French Super- along the 560-mile border. Etendard fighter-bombers as had been Tehran Radio said Iranian forces reported. He demanded that France unleashed massive artillery bombar- proceed with the delivery. dments from the Persian Gulf in the Hussein told French journalists the south all the way to the Kurdistan United States and Britain pressured province near Turkey in the north to France to delay the scheduled delivery stop Iraqi troop movements along the of Super-Etendard warplanes, ap- border. parently because of concern about It said in a broadcast monitored in Iran's threat to close the Strait of Hor- Beirut that 70 percent of an Iraqi muz. missile launching base was destroyed Iran and Iraq have been at war since in the artillery barrages but did not September 1980, when Iraq invaded report the location of the facility. Iranian territory in a dispute over the THE RADIO also said Iranian ground Shatt al Arab waterway. The Iranians forces- destroyed an Iraqi arms depot demand reparations and Hussein's and six military vehicles, including a resignation as the price for peace. TRACEY,r Thank you for showing me a love I never dreamed could be. Since that day we met, I knew you were the girl for me. Your smile, your warmth, your humor, your jest, I pray to God I will always share this love you possess. On this day, your birthday, I want you to know, .So long as you love me, I will never let you go. Happy Birthday Tracey, know you have my love in Spring. A sincere message in which everything I said, I meant. r Love Forever, * RANDY * J* Grenade hits Marine in Beirut From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - More than 20 people were killed in fighting in the Northern city of Tripoli yesterday, and a U.S. Marine in Beirut was wounded while Lebanon's major warring factions agreed on an agenda for a national peace conference. Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan said a grenade was hurled from a car at a U.S. Marine guard outside the American Embassy in West Beirut. "WE DIDN'T have the chance to respond," Jordan said. "The Marine was hit by shrapnel in his upper left thigh and the ankle, and his condition is stable." The Marine, one of the 1,600-man peacekeeping force, was not identified. Four Marines have been killed and wounded in grenade at- tacks and bombardments on the positions of the U.S. peacekeepers since Lebanon's latest round of violence began Aug. 28. Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat led his guerrillas into Tripoli yesterday to end three days of street battles between Moslem and Communist militias that left 69 dead and 150 wounded. Witnesses who reported Arafat's entry into Tripoli said it was preceded by an artillery barrage and a declaration by Communist gunners and their leftist Lebanese allies that they would turn back the Moslem onslaught. The death toll yesterday rose to 69, and a total of 150 were wounded. Police said some of the leftists were captured and shot on the spot after the Moslems torched Communist Party buildings. AT LATE afternoon, there was a barrage of artillery fire, and Communist gunners and those of an allied Lebanese militia, the Syrian Social Nationalist Party, said they were trying to turn back the Moslems. Arafat then led PLO guerrillas into key points in Tripoli to separate the warring militias, and the fighting quieted about 6 p.m. Also yesterday, officials representing six warring factions met with a representative of President Amin Gemayel for seven hours along the green line that divides predominantly Moslem western Beirut from the Christian east. "After serious and constructive discussions, full I agreement was reached on a proposed agenda which will be forwarded to the national dialogue committee that will meet Oct. 20," said Gemayel's representative, Khalil Mekkadui. He called the agreement on an agenda, reached with sur- prising speed, "a great step toward national reconciliation." The committee had been expected to take a week to draft an agenda for full-fledged peace talks. Arafat ... moves troops to Tripoli 'U' resister favored in judge's. ruling I4 (Continued from Page 1) registration resister were dropped af- ter the government refused to turn over subpoenaed documents. If the government complies with the subpoena, the judge will review the papers from the Justice Department, White House, and Selective Service Administration to decide whether they are relevant to the defense claims of selective prosecution. LAFFERTY said if the judge decides the papers are relevant, the defense will then subpoena Secretary of Defen- se Caspar Weinberger and Presidential Counsel Edwin Meese to testify. Meese refused to testify in the California case. Rutt's defense is built partially around the contention that the gover- nment has pursued a policy of prosecuting only those non-registrants who have publicly voiced their op- position to registration. Rutt, who was indicted in February, wrote letters both to President Reagan and the Selective Service in 1982 explaining why he refused to register. The documents being sought include records of meetings of top White House staff members and military manpower boards. LAFFERTY said yesterday's decision "does not tell us victory is in hand," but added that if the judge had. ruled against the request, "we would have seen the writing on the wall." RUTT, contacted on campus last night, said he doesn't think the gover- nment will withhold the documents from the judge, " but if the judge orders the documents over to us, I think (the government) will at least balk at that." But he said he was optimistic about the judge's decision. "This means we get to go another step and the step is in our favor," he said. Leonard Gillman, the federal prosecutor whose office is handling the case, said, "We're not sure where we will go from here," but declined further comment. 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