The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 58-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 8, 1981 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Iran, France move closer o crisis Daily Photo by KIM HILL The Rush is on These students in the Student Activities Building are among the many currently offering and looking for housing for Fall term. The Housing Office on the first floor offers a matching service for those who have available housing, and those who are seeking housing. echool of . an example of trend in black enrollment From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon- A key Iranian clergyman threatened yesterday that Iran would seize the French Embassy in Tehran just as it "rubbed America's snout in the dust" unless ex-President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr is returned for trial. "If you are not prepared to return these terrorists to Iran, then the Iranian nation will do to you the same that has been done to America, when with clenched fists and the 'God is Great' slogans America's snout was rubbed in the dust," the Moslem leader said in a speech broadcast by Tehran radio. MOST OF THE 144 French citizens in Iran have been denied permission to leave immediately for France and are believed to be inside their embassy. Af- ter France gave political asylum to Bani-Sadr last week, angry demon- strations outside the building in Tehran prompted French President Francois Mitterrand to ask his countrymen to return home. Iran would not permit the French to leave on planes provided by their government, but said arrangements were being made to send them home on Iran Air flights next week. The French government has said it does not have cause to worry yet. France has said 116 of the French citizens had asked to be repatriated. Witnesses in Tehran telephoned by The Associated Press in Beirut said there were more than 100 people in the em- bassy and that the small street where the building is located was deserted. They said the building was shuttered, guarded by two Iranian policemen and that the French flag was removed. MEANWHILE, Iran's official Pars news agency reported 38 "counter- revolutionaries" were executed for "killing innocent people" with hand grenades and fire bombs. That was believed to be the largest number of executions in a single day in recent months and brought to more than 300 the number of known executions since Bani-Sadr's removal June 22. In still more action, two dozen Iranians opposed to the Khomeini regime staged a brief takeover yester- day of the office representing Iran's in- terests in the United States. One man was shot and critically wounded as they gave themselves up. TWO OTHER Iranians also were taken to hospitals, one with bruises and the other because he wag "overex- cited." The demonstrators, supporters of the leftist guerrilla group People's Mojahideen-e Khalq, invaded the Iranian Interests Section at about 8:30 a.m. EDT and took five employees of the office hostage, police said. Police talked the militants into.giving up in less than an hour later but as they emerged' from the office chanting, "Death to Khomeini," shots rang out. An Iranian, who was not a demon- strator, was held on suspicion of firing the shots and was expected to be charged with assault with a deadly weapon. Universtty " Iranian protesters arrested By ANN MARIE FAZIO Daily staff writer Two University students and two other Michigan residents were among 60 Iranian students arrested in New Jersey Wednesday morning, following a protest-of Iran's current political regime held in front of the United Nations. Police reportedly stormed a house the students were staying at in Englewood, N.J. without a search or arrest warrant and proceeded to arrest 60 occupants, without naming charges, according to an Iranian University student, who was also in New York for the demonstration. AN IRANIAN University instructor who is in contact with the group said neighbors were suspicious because there were so many Iranian students in one house and they called the police. The student, who requested anominity, said that the police entered the house between 7 and 7:30 a.m. Wed- nesday and demanded that the students give their names and addresses. When the students refused, they were arrested, he said, because the police felt that there was probable reason to believe that they were illegal aliens. THE 60 STUDENTS are being detained by request of the Immigration See 'U', Page 4 By JENNIFER MILLER Daily staff writer The declining enrollment of black students at the University, a trend reported in the administration's annual minority report released last March,. shows up most sharply at the School of Education, where the enrollment of black students suffered its most dramatic drop in 1980. Although overall minority enrollment in some of the University's 17 schools and colleges has remained stable or slightly increased, the number of black students has shown a marked decrease, according to the report to the Regents. University officials stress that each school and college is unique in its minority enrollment, counseling, and financial services problems or suc- cesses, but a representation of the general trend and the factors involved can be seen in the School of Education. ALTHOUGH THE education school had the highest. undergraduate minority enrollment last year - 14 per- cent - and its graduate minority enrollment is the fourth highest at the University, the School of Education had the greatest decrease in minority students, due to a drop from 155 black students in1979 to 97 in 1980. Rising tuition costs, inflation, recruitment problems, and reductions in overall enrollment are some of the factors that appear to have contributed to the problem, officials say. Lack of sufficient financial aid does not appear to be a factor, however. The School of Education has reported that minority scholarship money has declined by 50 percent since 1975. However, this reduction is an "effect of rather than a cause of" the enrollment decrease, said Harry McLaughlin, director of the School's Office of See ED SCHOOL, Page 4