Page 8-Wednesday, July 9, 1980-The Michigan Daily IRAN PARLIAMENT TO DECIDE SOON Trial for hostages wins support By The Associated Press The idea of putting the American. hostages on trial as spies is winning strong support among some influential members of the Iranian Parliament, the body that may soon make a decision on their fate, a Tehran newspaper reported yesterday after conducting in- terviews with two dozen legislators. In another development, Iranian of- ficials fired 131 women civil servants from their jobs with the police and military because they balked at wearing traditional Islamic dress. MANY WOMEN working in gover- nment offices have objected to deman- ds by Iranian revolutionary leaders that they abandon their Western-style outfits and begin wearing the head-to- toe chador veil or similar traditional Islamic clothing. The Iranian prosecutor-general had set yesterday as a deadline for the change in war- drobe. The Tehran newspaper Ettelat repor- ted it interviewed 23 members of Parliament, some of whom are influen- tial leaders of the revolution and of the Islamic Republican Party, which con- trols the new Parliament. Many want spy trials for the 53 Americans, who spent their 248th day in captivity yesterday, the newspaper said. "THEY SHOULD be all tried, not as . individuals who committed crimes but as a group who helped the shah's regime oppress the masses," the paper quoted deputy Hassan Youssefi Eshkevari as saying.-- "They are spies, not hostages," said deputy Mohamad Hadi Ab Khodai. Said representative Abdolmajid Dialemeh, "We should ask the pope to send observers for the trial." REVOLUTIONARY leader Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini has said Parliament will decide the fate of the hostages after it selects a prime minister. There have been conflicting reports on when this will happen, but it is expected no earlier than late July. The Tehran newspaper Donyay Iran said yesterday that Parliament would not debate the hostage question until October, but the report was not other- wise confirmed. Iranian President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr, who has been at odds with the powerful Islamic Republican Party, opposes spy trials. An economist by training, Bani-Sadr says the hostage issue is distracting Iranians from the country's domestic troubles. IN RELATED developments yester- day, President Anwar Sadat of Egypt paid an unannounced visit to the deposed Shah of Iran at Maadi military hospital and was told the ex-monarch's condition was gradually improving, Egypt's official Middle East News Agency reported. It was Sadat's second call on the can- cer-stricken Mohammad Reza Pahlavi since his hospitalization 12 days ago. Sadat has been in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria since June 10. He fir- styvisited Pahlavi soon after he entered the hospital, when the Iranian exile was said to be in "very critical condition." The news agency, confirming an earlier report by a presidential source that Sadat had again stopped by the hospital, said the president talked with doctors who "reassured" him that Pahlavi's condition was "gradually improving." 4 6 I 'U' counsel hits gripe board role (Continuedfrom Page1) to overturn a decision of the dean," Vercruysse said, so an appeal should logically proceed to the vice-president, who does have that power. ' Marwil, who was dropped from the University faculty when his final two- year contract expired May 31, 1979, contends the termination of his appoin- tment resulted in five violations of his rights: a deprivation of liberty or property withdut due process of law, abridgement of his freedom of speech, interference with' his contractual relationship with the University, denial of equal protection under the law, and breach of contract. Allegations of some of these violations stem from conflicts and arguments Marwil had with Humanities Dept. Chairman J.C. at ponderos-! L§nca Mathes, who, along with Engineering Profs. Ralph Loomis and Dwight Stevenson, is a defendant in the trial. THE UNIVERSITY contends Mar- wil's termination was not inconsistent with University policy, and will present its defense following Marwil's presen- tation., During his testimony yesterday, Marwil said he had been given an ex- pectation of a tenure review when his contract was renewed in 1977 for two years. He said Mathes had told him the contract had been renewed "to further develop your case for tenure and possible promotion at a later date." After a series of department faculty meetings in February and March, 1978 in which Marwil favored new criteria for hiring new faculty members - meetings which Marwil described Monday as "long, difficult, and angry" - Marwil said Mathes andthe ad- ministrative committee initiated at- tempts to terminate his contract. MARWIL CHARGES the efforts to terminate him - including a special appointment review conducted by the administrative committee - were un- fair. MICH IGAN REP. '80 A Mid- summer 1 S Dream Shakespeare's glorious poetry and earthy comedy are wowsntogether like the paths of the mortals and the spirits is this classic tale of fantasy and romance. July 9, 11, 17, 19 OPENS TONIGHT AT 8 PM POWER CENTER Tickets at PTP-MI League, Noon-5pm, M-F Charges by phone: 764-0450 Power Center box office opens at 6pm (763-3333) Tomorrow Night: BLITHE SPIRIT The former assistant' professor described the appeals he made after he was informed on May 19, 1978 that the department administrative committee had decided his appointment would be allowed to expire the next year without a tenure review. On the day he received the letter informing him of the commit- tee's decision, Marwil said, Mathes told him "it wouldn't make any difference (in the final outcome of the case) if you appeal the decision," but was interrup- ted by Loomis, who interjected that Marwil did havea right to an appeal. Marwil said that following a hearing that affirmed the department's decision conducted by the college executive committee, then-Dean Ragone told him it would be unwise to pursue any further appeals. MARWIL DID appeal - to SARC - and after Ragone's decision to reject the SARC opinion, Marwil approached' then-Vice-President Shapiro. Shapiro directed the department ad- ministrative committee to again review the question of reappointing Marwil. The department committee reAffirmed its earlier decision not to reappoint and the College executive committee again affirmed the department's decision on May 14, 1979. The chairman of the faculty Senate Advisory Committee on University Af- fairs - the faculty Senate Assembly's executive committee - urged the Regents last summer to order a tenure review for Marwil, but the Regents declined to intervene. Marwil filed suit in late August, 1979. Vercruysse, in a series of objections during Marwil's testimony, argued not only that discussion of the SARC decision was irrelevant, but also that Marwil, as an untenured professor, was not qualified to testify about tenure review procedures. Vercrussye said only those depar- tment chairmen and.administrators who have power to make decisions are qualified to testify about the importan- ce of tenure reviews. Vercruysse's cross-examination of Marwil, begun late in the trial yester- day, will continue today. LEE IS ENVIOUS HONOLULU (AP)-The always jaunty Lee Tevino sounded a bit en- vious when he talked about Andy Bean, the powerful winner of the Hawaiian Open. "Andy is so big and strong," Lee .commented. 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