Page I1O-Thursday, Junte 4,> 1981---The AMchigan D Power struggle. in Iran esca lates 4 (Continued from Page7) Bani-Sadr was elected president in January 1980 with an impressive 75 percent majority. He seems to have solidified his popularity by taking charge of the war effort against Iraq. MANY IRANIANS-at least middle-class city dwellers-blame Iran's severe unemployment and other economic ills on the clergy's meddling in politics. The left-wing Moslems of the Mujaheddin Khalq have stepped up anti-IRP protests in recent months, some ending in bloody clashes with pro-clergy elemen- ts. Khomeini has warned the clergy against taking too strong a political stance, and his leftist grandson, Seyyed Hussein Khomeini, has spoken out against the danger of "totalitarianism in the color of religion." If Bani-Sadr is put on trial, "I would imagine that the left would probably try tactics like street demon- strations ... an attack against clerical hegemony in Iran," said Professor Michael Fischer, a Harvard University anthropologist and author of a book on Iran's revolutionary politics. BULLIET AGREES. "There's a very strong risk that if they try to prosecute Bani-Sadr, this will rally an awful lot of support in his favor," he said. "The IRP may decide it's too risky and stop it." This does not mean, however, that the IRP has lit- tle public support. It has organized extensively in the r countryside and is believed to retain the loyalty of many of the poorer and devout people of the cities. The Iran-watchers say they would not be surprised if the IRP-dominated judicial system picks out other Bani-Sadr underlings and supporters for punishment. Some political analysts believe the potential for a takeover by pro-Soviet leftists in Iran is often over- stated in the United States. 4 Common Ground reflects a rainbow of backgrounds 4 set out to accomplish. One of the proudest offstage achievements of which the ensemble can boast has been setting off a creative impulse in the community outside the University, enabling "people of different backgrounds (to come) together for a celebration, celebrating the richness and diversity of our culture," said Bryant. THE ALL-BLACK cast of "for coloured girls ..." is composed of volunteer guest artists from disparate ethnic and geographic backgrounds. In the four months that they've been in rehearsal, the spontaneous wit of the performers and their openness to each other's suggestions has created a lively atmosphere of comraderie at the rehearsals. The actors sobered as the dusk light drained from the hall. The rehearsal had distilled down to pure seriousness. Voices were thickening with fatigue and some of the artists were leaning on chairs and each other for support; but the number ended tighter than ever, their supple motions evoking the pain and fury of nameless women struggling to liberate their trampled spirits from the enveloping gloom of their environ- ment. Finally, the group rehearsed the gospel number that closes the play with the entire cast whispering as one har- monious unit, "I found God in myself, and I loved her fiercely." The whole cast took an elegant bow and the rehearsal ended with a throaty line that built into a gutsy shout, "And this is for coloured girls who have considered suicide, but are moving to the ends of their own rainbow!" They filed out quietly and I did not move. I was con- tent to sit very still and feel the satisfaction and resolution that a good closing line brings. Then, suddenly, someone snapped on the hall lights, the director announced "Again!," and the rehearsal continued beneath artificial lights. 4 4 4 Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily I I 4