THE BATTALION Page 13 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1980 world 11 nment source in lay said Soviet CMij I anywhere betweenl) 0 since the Dec. ! number of kilil could not be detei irces have been casualties a week sh, the source said ipply eflforts in •ountry of Moslem ing setbacks iwfalls in decades i|i iches set ol olosives. ^oal ube tate Dept, criticizes shah; report saysthousands killed 1 s >an s United Press International Iranian President Abolhassan lani-Sadr Wednesday lashed out at |ie militants holding the U.S. mbassy, denouncing them as chil- who are acting in “an arbitary and have assumed too much r. At the same time, a senior Iranian [ficial and close aide to the Ayatol- ih Ruhollah Khomeini ruled out the fclease of the 50 Americans, now in eir95th day of captivity, before the iposed shah is returned to Iran to trial. Bani-Sadr attacked the students revolutionary guards staged a Vfllre-dawn raid on the home of Iran’s 1 y minister for national guidance and ■rested him, Western news reports be Soviet officials. | esman said the Statfig has granted tin permission to cuts! tes and obtain poll said once the two® re to undergo nonii;: rocedures. _ man for the groups* would continue its* as scheduled | ir is due to end Pel | ctions occurred s stop in Nagoya, up est of Tokyo. Jght asylum to s«jk United Press International ament for their aitp The State Department has issued a Japanese Ft hi> unsettling assessment of Shah kesman said. Mohammed Reza Pahlavi’s treat- sserers came t pent of political prisoners in Iran — sterday (T ues da) m sharp contrast with earlier favor- r assistance in en;-wile accounts of his rule and much Itates,” a U.S. erJfloser to Iranian charges against the tid. “They weregrjiiisted monarch, to enter the U® In Tehran, Iran’s new president, ft this evening." lAbolhassan Bani-Sadr, was named sman declined to djbead of the ruling Islamic Revolu- e pair were flvir; jtjonary Council, an appointment ey left or aboard jttiat significantly expanded his pow- ($• base. |[ Both developments could bear on Be fate of the 50 Amerians being ijeld for the 96th day today at the Bccupied U.S. Embassy in Tehran. I The State Department s annual f port to Congress on human rights as released Tuesday and said nany thousands of Iranian^’ werg jjjkiprisoned and tortured under the fSiah’s two decades of rule. Last year, Be report found little evidence of Press Internationa ,f ruei treatment of political prisoners - It’s Panda davi in Iran. ran the giant pania It said the shah’s security forces using welcomefclook the lives of “at least serveral apanese at aTokw thousand people” in trying to quell the 1978 and 1979 demonstrations gathered to vie»!,that led to his expulsion, an Huan, whosejA In contrast, the 1979 State De- ime, ” at the firstpflnrtment report stressed the shah’s his arrival awedalccomplishments, saying, “Iran has display at UenoZTgiven high priority to economic de- kyo followed an eiPelopment, providing such human ig ceremony attfifpeeds as health care, social services, md Chinese JjBousing and education." 'assador Fu Haojfi ment official SWIl^ i ^ 1 S’greeting|h^ ScUVcHlOr ed Japanese be,embassy taken a (hello) Huan United Press International r today because!®SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — i Huan Huan . ^leftist militants demanding the re- r dearest friend Mease of jailed comrades and an inves- Bation into alleged human rights Fu added, “louses have seized the Spanish 1 plant a newl' 1 'Embassy and taken 11 persons hos- ereasing Japan-Cwge, including the ambassador. Min a separate action, about 150 nd Huan Huan,i?)buths armed with submachine guns :se Communis!!•' jnd gasoline bombs broke off from a Guofeng, arrnf ;l protest march and took over the to become tie 5 *'Education Ministry in downtown ved panda Kanbjfen Salvador and were holding some ng with his late'TW) hostages, among them Educa- given tojapana;!'pon Minister Eduardo Colindre. panese normal^ ; The peaceful takeovers Tuesday lations in 1972.^ s P ar lmcl threats of reprisals from e late Chou En>| right-wing groups who said they [ouldburn the Spanish Embassy in eplay of an attack by police on the anish Mission in Guatemala City it week in which 39 people were The newly formed rightist Central erican Liberation Front said in a mmunique that unless the mili- hts left the mission within 24 hours ey would burn the building and kill ario Aguinada Caranza, 35, secret- y general of the leftist Nationalist i democratic Party, who was kidnap- d by the Front Tuesday. The Feb. 28 Popular Leagues said icy were demanding an investiga- n of alleged human rights viola- ms by the Red Cross and the Orga- ization of American States as well as a[ break in relations by Spain and Ither “democratic” governments with El Salvador’s “repressive” .regime. They also were calling for the re- iase of other leftists imprisoned in Jvadorrfn jails. 1 Spanish Ambassador Victor San- ^ez-Mesa y Juste, 63, said the de- 'jiands of the 30 armed men and omen from the Leagues that seized lis embassy were “just.” said. “The students are behaving in an arbitrary way,” the new president told Iran’s evening newspaper, Kayhan, quoted by the Iraqi news agency. He branded the arrest of Nasser Minachi as “a respectless deed by children who don’t know what they’re doing,” Kayhan said. The militants had accused the minister of having ties with the CIA and informing the Americans about various activities in Iran. Bani-Sadr told the newspaper it was “intolerable ”, that the militants had created “a government within the government.” “It is impossible to work in a coun try where so-called students claim they follow the line of the Imam Khomeini, but do the contrary,” the new president said. He told the newspaper investiga tions of charges such as those made against the minister “is the task of the courts only,” according to the Iraqi News Agency which carried excerpts from the Kayhan article. The presi dent added that with such actions, “no official, no minister can work in this country with confidence, trust and security.” Bani-Sadr criticized the state radio for allowing “these kids to broadcast accusations against the guidance minister without clearing them with authorities. Prosecutor General Ali Ghodussi told reporters he had issued no arrest warrant for Manachi, held in a Tehran jail, and said the arrest was against the law. Manachi told reporters Tuesday before his arrest that the accusations against him broadcast by the radio was the result of “a plot by radical elements.” Ayatollah Mohammed Beheshti, secretary of the ruling 13-member Islamic Revolutionary Council, ruled out early release of the hos tages in Tehran as sources close to the council said the ruling group will accept a U.N. proposal to set up an international commission to investi gate the alleged crimes of the shah. Sources close to the council said the group likely would insist on the shah’s arrest before the beginning of a U.N. inspired commission. The report said the Khomeini reg ime is holding American hostages under “cruel and degrading” condi tions and has imprisoned some 15,000 political prisoners and ex ecuted about 700 Iranians after sec ret trials by revolutionary courts. But the report says the number of executions of the shah’s supporters “declined substantially following a partial amnesty declared July 11 by the Ayatollah Khomeini. ” Bani-Sadr, who was sworn into office Monday as Iran’s first presi dent, is known for his moderate stand on the hostages. He lost the job of foreign minister in November be cause he favored a U.N. inquiry into the shah’s alleged crimes in working out the release of the hostages. The militants holding the Amer icans captive have continuously de manded the shah be returned to stand trial before they can be re leased, but Bani-Sadr has told them he will not share a dual government with them. There was no direct word on the hostages in Tehran. A group of 50 Americans representing the Com mittee for American-Iranian Crisis Resolution left for Iran Tuesday to meet with the militants holding the Americans captive. Bani-Sadr s appointment as head of the council is subject to the approval of the ailing Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, a spokesman said. Khomeini has strongly backed Bani-Sadr since his overwhelming electoral triumph and personally swore him in as president from a Tehran hospital where he is recover ing from a heart condition. The shah presently is living in ex ile on Panama’s Contadora Island. I ™ORAGE U - LOCK - IT 10 x 20 - $25 693-2339 I DIETING? ',\en though we do not prescribe diets, we make\ \it possible for many to enjoy a nutritious meal\ \while they follow their doctor’s orders. You will\ \be delighted with the wide selection of low\ Ycalorie, sugar free and fat free foods in the\ \Souper Salad Area, Sbisa Dining Center Base-\ \ment. OPEN Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM QUALITY FIRST (theart Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 The Cow The Biggest Burger Bargains in B-CS! QIANT 1/3 LB. HOMEMADE BURGER a*rv«d with a pNa of raal Franch Frias or salad. 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Coverage which offers more significant and timely information than any textbook. Information which will help you excel in classes. But we give you more than news. We offer the latest sports coverage, fashion, money-saving and time-saving recipes and entertainment. Sunday's Zest magazine previews and reviews plays, movies, books, and music. To start your subscription today, cal! 693-2323 or 846-0763. January 14 to May 9 for 69.35. Houston Chronicle Olympic committees nix boycott Students arrest Iran minister; ani-Sadr calls them children United Press International MEXICO CITY — Delegates at an international Olympics meeting have rejected the Carter administra tion’s call for a boycott of the Moscow games and passed a resolution urging 141 member nations to “avoid exter nal influences” to move the games. The executive committee of the Association of National Olympic Committees unanimously passed the resolution after two days of meetings in Mexico City and a final closed- door session Tuesday. Delegates rejected a proposal by U.S. Olympic Committee spokes man Phillip O. Krumm to defer a vote on the boycott until Sunday. The International Olympics Com mittee, which decides the sites of the games, will announce its position on the Moscow games at that time. ANOC is an umbrella group of 141 National Olympic Committees formed last year in San Juan, Puerto Observers in Mexico City said the association’s overwhelming senti ment against Carter’s boycott prop osal is expected to be reflected by the IOC as well. The 32 delegates who attended the meeting initially had planned to discuss promotion and solidarity of the Olympic movement before the boycott issue overshadowed the pre vious agenda. MSC Craft Shop presents CRAFT CLASSES THERE ARE STILL SPACES AVAILABLE IN: Pottery... 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