Page 8-Friday, August 15, 1980-The Michigan Daily Daily Classifieds Bring Results! Call 764-0557 THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD 1-94 & S. STATt. @ 769-8780 (Adjacent to J C Penney) -*DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES-Adults $1.50 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 Mon. thru Sat. 10:00 A.M. til 1:30 P.M. Sun. & Hols. 12 Noon tiI 1:30 P.M. Iran blasts I 10:00 12:00 eS dE2:00 4:00 8:00 10:00 (PG) Russians for 'subverting' government 4 FromAPandUPI In a sharp attack on the other "satanic" superpower, Iran accused the Soviet Unioxi yesterday of supplying arms and satellite spy photos to Kur- dish rebels warring against Ayatallah Ruhollah Khomeini's troops in the mountains of western Iran, Tehran Radio reported. The Iranians demanded again that Moscow cut back its embassy staff in Tehran, charging that the Soviets were tying to subvert Khomeini's revolutionary regime. THE NEW DIPLOMATIC offensive against the Kremlin comes as the clergy-led, staunchly anti-communist faction among Iran's Islamic revolutionaries is consolidating its power in Tehran. At the same time, Iran's new prime minister, former high school teacher Mohammad Ali Rajai, consulted with various groups of hard-liners on the selection of a Cabinet that will amost certainly drop Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh and other moderates from government. There have been no assurances from Tehran that the hostage question will be debated quickly. The 52 Americans spent their 285th day in captivity yesterday. THE NEW anti-Soviet tirade occurs in a letter from Ghotbzadeh to his Soviet counterpart, Andrei Gromyko. Tehran Radio said it was a reply to a July 9 letter from Gromyko. That letter presumably responded to Ghotbzadeh's demand July 3 that the Kremlin cut its 40-diplomat Tehran embassy staff by more than half. Just two days earlier, on July 1, the Iranians had expelled a Soviet diplomat for alleged espionage in Tehran and announced the closing of the Iranian consulate in Leningrad and one of two Soviet consulates in Iranian cities out- side Tehran. In the latest letter, Ghotbzadeh reiterates Iran's hostility toward the United States, but then added, "Upfor- tunately, you, too, have proved in prac- tice that you are no less satanic than the U.S.A. We cannot acquiesce in your provocations in the border areas." The Iranian minister focused specifically on alleged Soviet aid to rebels in Kurdistan, the mountainous western region where guerrillas have been fighting for autonomy from Khomeini's Persian-dominated regime. 4 q 9 I Soviet reps arrive in Kabul for talks I NEW DELHI, India (AP)-A high- powered Soviet delegation has arrived in the. Afghan capital of Kabul, in- dicating a major rckiew of Soviet ac- tivity in the war-torn Asian nation may be under way, a Western diplomatic source said yesterday. The strongest indication of the visit from Moscow is the establishment of a large mobile communications center at the official Afghan guest house for visiting dignitaries, said the diplomat, who asked not to be identified. ANTENNAS FROM the com- munications center, located near the French embassy in downtown Kabul, AT CINEMA GUILD (OLD A & D AUD) Friday: DERSU UZALA at 7:30& &10:00 Saturday: GIMME SHELTER at 7:30 & 9:30 Sunday: PETRIFIED FOREST atl7:30 & 9:30 Next Thursday: L'ATLANTE at 8:00 FREE were clearly visible on Tuesday, the source said. At present, there is no firm in- dication whether the delegation is militaty, civilian, or both, the source said. The last time such a mobile com- munications center popped up in Kabul was "in late November or early December," the source recalled. ABOUT THREE WEEKS later, beginning on Christmas Day, the Kremlin poured an estimated 80,000 Soviet troops into Afghanistan. The troops backed the ouster of -one pro- Soviet leader and presided over the in- stallation of another, and fanned out across the rugged countryside to help Afghan forces battle the anti-Marxist Moslem guerrillas. The source indicated the Kremlin may be unhappy with the way the battle against the rebel insurgents has gone. Soviet and loyal Afghan troops still control Kabul with an iron fist, the source said. Jalalabad to the east, Afghanistan's second largest city, also is under government control, and Soviet armored columns own the major roadways. I I y ry a .aw"a .. . 7 . I