The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 12, 1980, Image 10

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    Page 10 THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1980
world
Hostages may be released
if compromise is accepted
Shah’s glamour, wealth
sp
of little use to him now A
United Press International
Iranian President Abdolhassan
Bani-Sadr said in an interview pub
lished Monday the American hos
tages may be released “in the shor
test possible time, perhaps even in
the coming days, ” if both Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini and President
Carter accept an compromise offer
worked out by Iran’s Revolutionary
Council.
Bani-Sadr’s comments were
printed by the Paris newspaper Le
Monde in which he also accused stu
dents holding the 50 American hos
tages for 100 days of issuing orders
without his permission and med
dling in government affairs.
In his interview with Le Monde,
Bani-Sadr said Iran wants the United
States to publicly recognize its
“crimes” in Iran under the fallen
shah’s regime and to recognize the
revolutionary regime’s “right” to win
the shah’s extradition.
Le Monde said Iran has now appa
rently dropped its earlier insistence
that the hostages can be released
only if the shah is first returned to
Iran.
Bani-Sadr also said Iran will not
insist on the completion of the in
quiry and the shah’s extradition be
fore freeing the hostages.
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United Press International
An ocean away from the crisis at
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran is the
drama’s central player, Shah
Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, who for
nearly four decades ranked as one of
the world’s wealthiest, most autocra
tic and some would say most glamor
ous men.
The Moslem militants holding the
50 American hostages for 101 days
have said they would free the Amer
icans if the shah returned to Iran to
stand trial for injustices committed
during his reign.
But the shah is not about to do so.
He said in a rare television inter
view, “I have been accused of many
things, but stupidity isn’t one of
them.”
The 60-year-old dictator, who
ruled 35 million people from his
peacock throne fit the part of the
international playboy, posing in the
1950s with glamorous wife Soraya on
skis in Switzerland.
With third wife Farah Diba, he
hosted chaotic international film fes
tivals.
A year of bloody street riots ended
the monarchy he traced back 2,500
years, and brought home the 79-
year-old Moslem religious leader
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini he had
banished 14 years before.
The shah, together with Empress
Farah and their children, flew into
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exile Jan. 16, 1979, firsts
the invitation of Presided
Sadat, then to MoroccoJ
March to the Bahamas.
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the son of Reza Pahlavi,a
the Persian Cossack BrijeP
Now, even with a vasti-L It h
his disposal, Pahlavi has ve Aggi i;
permanent home. He is ganu
contemptuous of Panain ; mdie
tadora Island, a tourist k it will
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about the shah’s positionaiAMT 6
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considering an Iranian
his extradition. stot;l
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tion wherever he goes, both t
Early last year, hewastkjbe tw
with capture by the Palesti Jecuk
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of Iran’s leading ayatollah Jthorr
anyone to kill him. A Tehrrjp di
paper offered an expensepipThe
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THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY of
«••••
»••••
»••••
MISS (ANE PITTMAN
Wednesday Feb. 13
7:30 P.M.
RUDDER THEATER
$1.00 with TAMU I.D.
Unrated
■-•••• fTI • 1 P
. 1 rial oi ga|
ill begins in
the S
won o
And tl
of the
.»•••
•••*.
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THE WEEKEND MOVIES:
THE MUPPET MOVIE
M*A*S*H
BUTCH and SUNDANCE: THE EARLY DAYS
••••
••••
#•••
••••
••••
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ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE
MSC BOX OFFICE MON.-FRI. 9A.M.-4P.M.
TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE
45 MIN. BEFORE SHOWTIME
It V
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bowc
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TURIN, Italy - Four F »enie:
gades gang members, inclnd l® 31 ' 11
accused in the kidnap-rnurdefe^* 1
mer Premier Aldo Moro,
trial in a heavily guarded ot*P w
Monday on charges offoip
armed subversion.
The latest charges againstC
Alunni, Paola Besuschio, i
“IIIS Zuffada and Attilio Casalettii
addition to weapons clraitB
.'.••mm which each received a nineyei||
on term on conviction last yea DA
-•••• They arc being tried on theficky
■III** subversion charges in theCifi) J
■•*••• Assizes building, guarded b>#r g>
“■.l»00 50 riot-equipped police, pbgl
J Chief among the defend*'w
-•••• Alunni, 32, who was arrest kreru
Red Brigades hideout at Mi*! 5 *®
September 1978. B53
Alunni is accused of planirrjBat
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carrying out the kidnapping OO'vu
arch 16, 1978 and takingp3.rtl|i a g
politician s assassination 5Jf v ®ot
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Joseph Francis Coates
Tom Lawson McCall
Langdon Winner
Samuel C. Florman
Hazel Henderson
Melvin Kranzberg
The 25th MSC Student Conference on National A ffairs
presents
“TECHNOLOGY: TOOL OR TYRANT?”
February 13-16,1980 Rudder Theatre
V
Wednesday, February 13
Thursday, February 14
10:00 a.m. & 2:00 a.m.
Friday, February 15
2:45 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
“Technology: It’s
Past and Future
“The Effects of
Technology on
the Environment
Saturday, February
11:00 a.m. I
TOM LAWSON McCALL
The Appropriate
Technology
Debate”
“Technology isth e !
Answer But That’$i
Not the Question
”5
JOSEPH F. COATES
former Governor of Oregon & Environmentalist of
the Year; 1974
SAMUEL C. FLORMAN
former Senior Associate of the Congres
sional Office of Technology Assessment
“implications of
Technology for the
Individual”
LANGDON WINNER
MELVIN KRANZBERG
author of “In Praise of Technology”
and
editor of the journal Technology and
Culture
HAZEL HENDERSON
Associate Professor at MIT • Contributing Edi
tor to Rolling Stone
author of creating alternative futures and
formerly on the Advisory Council of the
Office of Technology Assessment