Page 14-Thursday, July 17, 1980-The Michigan Daily Hundreds of alleged Iranian conspirators to face TV trials 0 From The Associated Press Hundreds of alleged anti-government conspirators in Iran will go on trial for their lives this week in a mass televised proceeding, the Iranian chief justice said yesterday. The revolutionary regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini said the plot was crushed last Thursday, and by the weekend some 500 alleged par- ticipants were reported to have been rounded up, most of them military men. OFFICIALS SAID the plotters had Jo of Japanese cars Uwill continue TOKYO (AP) - Japan's two biggest automakers, reporting export sales 42 per cent higher than last year's, said yesterday they have no plans to stem the flood of their fuel-efficient vehicles. into the United States, despite American pressure. "The American auto industry ;ailed to make the switch from large gas- guzzlers to small fuel-economy cars," a Nissan spokesman said in explaining why his company's sales have mounted. while the big three U.S. automakers have fallen onto hard times. FALLING SALES of U.S-made cars has led to layoffs for tens of thousands of American autoworkers, and to demands that Japan voluntarily restrict its exports to the United States, or the U.S. government enact some kind of protectionist measures to limit the import of cars. Despite such pressure from both the United States and Europe, spokesmdh at both Toyota and Nissan said yester- day such voluntary restrictions are not planned for the foreseeable future. The Japanese have an almost 25 per cent share of the U.S. atuo market. ISRAEL LOWE$T CO$T FLIGHTS I U Reliable - Flexible Free European Stops Buy Now For Summer And $ave (212) 689-8980 Outside New York FREE 1-800-223-7676 The Center Fe, Student Traeln 114 nBadway,N.CNY.100 Ouraf tYear- planned to fly warplanes to Tehran and other centers and bomb key targets, in- cluding Khomeini's house. A high council of judges led by the chief justice will be responsible for trying the accused conspirators. The chief justice, the politically powerful Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti, said yesterday: "The plotters are facing the death penalty. Their trial will begin within two days." It will be open to the public and televised, .he said. THE INFLUENTIAL ayatollah said he believes the United States and Israel inspired the anti-Khomeini coup attem- pt. In Egypt, a spokesman for Moham- mad Reza Pahlavi said yesterday he does not need surgery now and none has been performed, contradicting an earlier report by an Egyptian specialist that an abscess on the deposed shah of Iran's left thigh had been drained. Reached by telephone, spokesman Mark Morse said the deposed monarch "looked fine" and doctors, "up until this moment, see no urgent need for an operation." In Iran, an Education Ministry of- ficial, Mansour Bazargan, told repor- ters in Tehran that the Andisheh Catholic School in Tehran was shut down yesterday because its teacher priests had made it "a center of espionage for Israel." 4 'There she is, Miss Coffee' AP Fhot American institution Bert Parks, who for decades warbled "Miss America" before being booted as host of the beauty pageant, has removed himself from the ranks of the unemployed. Parks has found employment singing the praises of Chock Full o' Nuts coffee for a television commercial. Military jury conviets Marine for refusing to search pig-pen CAMP GEIGER, N.C. (UPI) - A Military jury yesterday convicted a Camp Geiger Marine of disobeying a lawful order for refusing to dig through pig slop to retrieve lost silverware - a routine procedure that has since been- stopped. Pfc. Scott Duncan, of Port Huron, Mich., also was found guilty of disrespect to a non-commissioned of- ficer, but the court-martial jury, com- posed of five officers, found him in- nocent on charges of disrespect to an of- ficer. A SENTENCING hearing began im- mediately after the verdict was an- nounced. Duncan could receive a bad- conduct discharge, six months in prison, reduction in rank, or forfeiture of pay. Duncan was one of two Marines charged with refusin In oerch for silverware accidentally thrown out with mess hall garbage that was sold to an Onslow County farmer for pig food. The practice of sending Marines to conduct the searches was discontinued after a Michigan congressman wrote a letter of complaint. Until then, Marines were sent several times a year to sort through pig slops at the farm for lost silverware. DUNCAN AND Pfc. Dana Gidney, who still faces trial on the charges, were charged June 10. Testimony in Duncan's trial in- dicated Duncan was ordered to go to the pig farm but protested the order issued by a non-commissioned officer, and continued to protest when an officer in- tervened. The officer, Capt. Quentin Cole, testified Duncan walked away while he was trying to mediate the dispute. 60 Connections aid gofers' 0 (Continued from Page 3) ALTHOUGH SHE HAS worked for NBC for several weeks, DeGroot said she still finds herself gawking at the celebrities for whom she has worked. "I'm still to awe of people I see from other networks," admitted University of Pennsylvania senior Judy Singleton, who is also an NBC runner. "But the excitement of seeing (NBC anchormen) David Brinkley and John Chancellor has definitely worn off." Both DeGroot and Singleton said they consider themselves Democrats, and both said their political viewpoints had not been altered as a result of their ex- posure to the convention. "IF ANYTHING, IT made my con- victions stronger," Singleton said. "The platform they voted for is so con- servative. It makes me more certain I would never want to be a Republican." Singleton said she and her co-workers receive a flat rate of $3.50 per hour for their services. During the convention, NBC has housed its runners in a Dear- born motel, she said, adding that they receive an allowance for meals. 0