The Michigan Daily-WednesdQy, July 23, 1989-Page 7 Registration protesters bomb 2 post offices By United Press International Puerto Rican terrorists, condemning the "Yankee" draft registration, blasted two post offices with bombs yesterday, hours before 19- and 20-year- old youths began signing up across the nation for the second day. The bombs exploded at 2 a.m. EDT at a post office in downtown San Juan and in the suburb of Rio Piedras. No in- juries were reported. ELSEWHERE around the nation demonstrationswere mild-with no en- core of Monday's sometimes violent protests that saw dozens arrested at post offices from coast to coast. A spokesman for the Selective Ser- vice System predicted that 98- per cent of the four million eligible men would register for the draft. "I think the 19- and 20-year-olds are responsible adults, said Brayton Harris in Washington. "They know they have to register even if they are not thrilled by it. "IT'S GOING very well," he said. "We expect 98 per cent will register. That's based on our Vietnam experien- ce. We don't have anything else to go on." Following the Puerto Rican blasts, two other bombs were found and dismantled, one in San Juan's financial district, and the other outside the city. "The Revolutionary Commandos of the People" delivered a letter to UPI claiming responsibilty for the ex- plosions and said it had carried nearly a dozen bombings since October 1977. "We, the Revolutionary Commandos of the People, tske responsibility for the action this dawn against the post of- fices," the letter said. "This is an operation of denunciation against the imposition of obligatory military registration on the part of the Yankee government." .Post office officials across the coun- try reported a slow but steady trickle of young men registering yesterday. IRANIAN PRESIDENT ABOLHASSAN Bani-Sadr (left) takes the oath of office in a special session of the Iranian Parliament in Tehran yesterday. Attending the ceremony is the head of the Supreme Court and leader of the Islamic Republican Party, Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti. BantiiSadr takes oath of oifficel; Iranian activist shot, in U.S. "One who stands among the truly distinguished masters of his instrument. PP - The New Yorker By The Associated Press President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, pledging devotion to God and country, took his formal oath of office yesterday before the new Iranian Parliament as the lawmakers settled in for business under an agenda expected to eventually include the question of what to do with 52 captive Americans. The next major step for the Parliament is appointment of a prime minister. Bani-Sadr is expected to nominate his choice for the job today. HE SUGGESTED the son of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini be nam- ed prime minister, but the elderly revolutionary leader rejected the idea, Tehran Radio reported. Iran's political violence apparently reached out to the United States Tuesday when an Iranian activist op- posed to Tehran's revolutionary regime was shot and killed at his suburban Washington home by a man police said was dressed as a postman. The victim was identified as Ali Ak- bar Tabatabai, 49, president of the Iran Freedom Foundation based in his Bethesda, Md., home. The group, believed to have been formed about a year ago following the overthrow of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, sup- ports a democratic government in Iran and had scheduled a march Sunday in Washington -to protest Khomeini's regime and the holding of American hostages in Tehran. TABATABAI WAS press attache at the Iranian Embassy in Washington during the shah's regime. New hostilities flared on Iran's western border.- The official Iranian news media reported Iraqi artillerymen scored a direct hit on an Iranian oil well at Naft- Shahr,touching off a well fire that was raging on hours later. In the same area, a land mine believed planted by "Iraqi mercenaries" exploded when a bus passed over it, killing five of the Iranians inside and wounding at least 15 others, the official Pars news agency said. TEHRAN RADIO reported yesterday from Kermanshah, 50 miles from the Iraqi border, that several Iranian fron- tier villages also had come under ar- tillery attack by Iraqi forces during the previous 24 hours. Iranian regular and revolutionary troops returned the fire and "heavy casualties were inflicted on the enemy forces," according to the radio. Farther north, near the town of Baneh in West Azerbaijan, Kurdish guerrillas ambushed and killed eight revolutionary guards and wounded 13 others, Pars said. The agency added scores of the Kurdish insurgents were killed or wounded in the ensuing seven- hour firefight. During a mopping up operation by pro-Khomeini Kurdish irregulars along the Sanandaj-Marivan road on Monday "a large number" of anti-Khomeini guerrillas were killed, according to Tehran Radio.Three Khomeini suppor- ters were reported killed in the operation. Iranian-Iraqi political disputes and tensions over rival territorial claims erupted into sporadic border clashes earlier this year. Arab Iranian dissidents also have been waging a war of sabotage and bombings in an effort to win greater local autonomy for Arab- populated southwest Iran. In Kurdistan, insurgents have been fighting on and off for months against Khomeini's revolutionary regime. Yesterday was the 262nd day of cap- tivity for the American hostages. IGrantJohaunesen -Bach: Fantasie and Fugue in A minor Beethoven: Sonata in E-flat, Op. 31, No. 3 Schumann: Humoresque, Op. 20 Poulenc: "Les Animaux Modeles" Debussy: Masques Debussy: J'isle Joyeuse Tickets at $7.50, $6.00, $5.00 Monday, Ju1y2NS:30 Raekhiam Auditorium Tickets at Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Weekdays 9-4:30, Sat. 9-12. Phone 665-3717. I1VERSITYrfMUSICAL SOCIETY In Its 102nd Year