The Michiaan Daily-Tuesday, July 14, 1981-Page 5 OPPONENTS DISQUALIFIED IN UPCOMING ELECTION Iran executes 23 more From APandUPI BEIRUT, Lebanon-Iran's fun- damentalist government yesterday disqualified its secular opponents from running in upcoming presidential elec- tions and ordered the executions of 23 more alleged leftists. The nation's 12-man Council of Guar- disns cleared only four of the 71 poten- tial presidential candidates who signed last week to run in Iran's July 24 elec- tions, and disqualified the rest, the of- ficial news agency Pars reported. The election is to fill the post held by moderate President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr, fired by Ayatollah Ruhollah Knomeini and now in hiding. FUNDAMENTALIST Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai, of- ficially approved, became the front- runner with the endorsement of the dominant Islamic Republican Party and 10 other Islamic associations, in- cluding the influential Preachers Association in the holy city of Qom. Among his approved challengers is deputy parliament speaker Ali Akbar Parvaresh, a member of Iran's Supreme Defense Council, which is in charge of the conduct of the war with Iraq. The other two contenders are former agriculture minister and current Tehran deputy in Parliament, Dr. Ab- bas Sheibani, and Habibollah Asgar- Oladi Massalman, a Parliament mem- ber who was sentenced to life im- prisonment in 1963 on a charge of in- volvement in the assassination of for- mer monarchist Prime Minister Hassan Ali Mansour. He was released in 1977. MEANWHILE, Iran's ruling clergy executed 23 more opponents and five convicted drug peddlers while a former aide of Abolhassan Bani-Sadr was caught moments after meeting with the fugitive ex-president in an undisclosed hideout, Tehran Radio reported yester- day. By official count so far, 195 people have been sent to the firing squads sin- ce Bani-Sadr was dismissed by > Ayatollah Ruhollah Knomeini June 22. Monday's 23 executions were carried out at daybreak in Tehran and five other northern and Caspian Sea cities. All the executed were found guilty of membership in Majahedeen Khalq and Bani-Sadr of taking up arms against the Islamic Tnr h..n ... election to replace him Ann Arbor woman goes to Utah to push for the ERA (Continued fromPage3) agai ts) not mean unisex toilets or any of the and other things opponents say it will mean." TH: Fojtik, who was a Washtenaw Coun- feder ty commissioner for eight years, also Fojti gave her opinion of President Reagan's over nomination of Sandra O'Connor to the barr Supreme Court. "It's a nice gesture - tende it's tokenism," Fojtik said, "in my job. view, it does not do enough to lift up all the l women. Appointing one woman to the "pro Supreme Court does not do anything - sex.' nothing like the ERA would do." Of Fojtik is a founder and a former faces coordinator of the Domestic Violence befor Project and Safe House in Ann Arbor. Fojti "I saw in the criminal justice system but th how battered women are discriminated Taiwanese 2 controversy lingers A (Continued from Page 3). University yesterday presented to The Michigan Daily a letter signed by 83 members of the Free China Student Association protesting allegations made by some students that gover- nment secret agents are working through their organization. They stressed that the group's pur- pose, according to the Michigan Student Assembly's file, is "to provide services for Chinese students and provide information service from the Republic of China."C THE LETTER declared that the Daily's previous articles made unfoun- ded insinuations and that the reporter was operating from the bias that Taiwan is a police state and the Taiwanese independents are subjects of persecution. The group also expressed concern over Chen's death. nst," Fojtik said, "They (the cour- don't consider women's problems issues seriously." SERE ARE approximately 800 ral and state sex-specific laws, k said. These laws range from time laws for women to laws ng women from working as bar- ers or lifting heavy objects on the The ERA would wipe these laws off books, Fojtik said, leaving only tective legislation not based on the ratification battle the ERA - three more states are needed re the June 30, 1982 deadline - k said, "We need not one, not two, hree miracles." w.. in a SUSAN SARANDON DAILY- 12:50, 2:50 5, 7, 9 TUESDAY $1.00 ALL SEATS! ALL DAY! -NO COUPON NEEDED- EXCEPT "SUPERMAN It" fH E AD V E N T U RE CO N T I N U ES CHRISTOPHER REEVE 5Vp5RMAN (PO) (NO MATINEE OR COUPON PRICES) DAILY- 12:05, 2:25, 4:15, 7:15, 4:35 NOW OPEN EVERY NIGHT Boxoffice Opens 8:00 p.m. SHOW STARTS A TDUSK! OHN CARPENTER---- AND iEh EXEo heyR N T ,ohdo aTHE. LATERMINATOR