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You’ll find the lowest prices on a variety of dress, casual and classic styles from Red Cross shoes, socialites, Gobbles and Gobble cuddlers. Prices this good won’t last...so hurry. HDCaQSSCOSCO I,..- Post Oak Mall 696-7671 MC, Visa, Am. Ex., Discover » Tlk- \RMTM.in N.( Page 8/The BattalionAVednesday, July 27, 1988 World and Nation Iranian rebels say forces have gone 60 miles into Iran BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Iranian rebels based in Iraq claimed Tuesday their forces drove more than 60 miles back into Iran, and the Irani ans said their soldiers had killed more than 1,000 of the “counter revolutionary elements.” A seven-member U.N. team ar rived in Tehran to work out details of a cease-fire in the nearly 8-year- old war, which both sides have of fered to accept, and Iraq said it was withdrawing its troops from Iranian territory. Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Ve- layati of Iran and the U.N. secretary- general, Javier Perez de Cuellar, met for 90 minutes in New York. Velayati said afterward: “We had very constructive and fruitful talks about the implementation of Resolu tion 598,” the cease-fire resolution the Security Council passed unani- ' ‘ 37, Monday and rebel units had overrun the cities of Karand, about 40 miles inside Iran, and Eslamabad, 20 miles farther. The rebel spokesman also claimed the Mujahedeen Khalq’s fighting force, called the National Liberation Army, destroyed the 27th Revolu tionary Guards unit based between Eslamabad and Bakhtaran, 90 miles inside Iran in the central border re- gton. Iran acknowledged the invasion, initially blaming it on the Iraqi army, but said its soldiers had retaken Esla mabad and killed 1,100 rebels. mouslyonjuly 20, 198. Iraq accepted the resolution soon after it was adopted, on condition Iran do the same, but the Iranians refused until reversing their position July 18. Tariq Aziz, the Iraqi foreign min ister flew to New York on Tuesday for similar discussions with Perez de Cuellar. The resolution calls for a cease-fire, withdrawal to recognized borders, prisoner exchange, peace negotiations and an investigation to determine which side started the Iran tries to make deal for hostages In Washington, State Department spokesman Charles Redman urged both sides to exercise restraint and stop pursuing the war. day, of I sanjani, speaker of Parliament and armed forces commander-in-chief in Iran, said his country will use its in fluence to try to free American hos tages held in Lebanon if Washington releases Iranian assets frozen in the United States. He spoke on TV, monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus. But White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater told reporters in Washington, “We have heard this kind of thing before, but as far as we are concerned you just can’t link the two. . . No deals. The clearest signal they could send is to release the hos tages.” Ali Riza Jaffafer Zada, a spokes man for the Iranian rebel group Mujahedeen Khalq, said its fighters were advancing on Bakhtaran, a provincial capital, and had “liber ated hundreds of villages.” He said the attack, code-named “Eternal Light,” began at 3 a.m. NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Iran will use its influence to try to free American hostages held in Lebanon if Washington releases Iranian assets frozen in the United States, the speaker of Iran’s Parliament said Tuesday. The initial White House reaction, however, was: “No deals.” Speaker Hashemi Rafsanjani, who is also commander-in-chief of Iran’s armed forces, said in a TV interview monitored in Nicosia, “So long as America keeps its hostile attitude to ward Iran, there will be no sign of any changes and there will be no ne gotiations.” Rafsanjani said that in order to start negotiations, the United States must take actions to prove that it is not belligerent toward Iran. One such action would be releas ing Iranian assets in the United States, he said. The White House refused to make any such pledge. iard this “We have heard this kind of thing before, but as far as we are con cerned you just can’t lirik the two,” White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater told reporters. “No deals,” Fitzwater said. “The clearest signal they could send is to release the hostages.” He noted that there had been a se ries of Iranian statements in recent days “and nothing has happened.” Asked if the United States would consider freeing the assets after re lease of the hostages, Fitzwater said, “I am not willing to make anything that sounds like a deal.” World Defense Secretary plans Soviet trip WASHINGTON (AP) — De fense Secretary Frank C. Carlucci departs Thursday on a Soviet trip expected to include unprece dented visits to air, ground and naval bases, although a senior U.S. official expressed chagrin Tuesday tl at Moscow had not set the exact schedule. During four days in the Soviet Union, Carlucci will meet his So viet counterpart, Gen. Dmitri Ya- zov, to continue discussions on re ducing military tension between the superpowers. But Carlucci will not be drawl into discussions of conventional and nuclear arms control issuel that U.S. officials say should 1 conducted in established andl ongoing negotiations involvinl diplomats from the UnitedStait!| and its allies in the North Atlaniii Treaty Organization. “The Soviet Union frequentltj tries to engage various partiesi: government and out of govern ment as surrogate negotiators! the arms control area,” a sen» U.S. official said. Hungarian leader seeks Reagan’s he| BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Karoly Grosz, the first Hungarian leader to visit the United States in 42 years, will seek President Rea gan’s support Wednesday for re forms that could make his coun try a link between East and West. Grosz became Communist Party chief two months ago and moved swiftly to forge consensus among conservative Communists and party reformers. He insti tuted an austerity program de signed to stimulate the sluggish economy and control a foreign debtof$17 billion. Abroad, Grosz seeks support from Moscow and Washington for new political and econom structures he hopes will Hungary’s problems. Heistryit, to create a role for his nationaT vital element in what many tral Europeans see as an int table East-West rapprochemen; Grosz is 57, the same ave Mikhail S. Ciorbachev, ana 1 savvy and direct approach aj reminiscent of the Soviet leadei His 10-day tour of the Unk States follows a brief trip to Me cow, where he received GorJ chev’s blessing for plans to I more Western investment market-oriented methods the centralized Hungarian ecorl omy. IBM to design air traffic control sys WASHINGTON (AP) — In ternational Business Machines Corp. has landed a $3.6 billion contract for a computer system that will replace voice commu nications between air traffic con trollers and pilots with electronic messages and eventually may usher in the use of computers to actually direct aircraft. The system, expected to be in full operation at the turn of the century, also would give control lers advance warning of over crowded air traffic conditions. An IBM executive called the contract the largest ever received by the company, and officialsait it was the largest ever awarded^ | the Transportation Departmtm IBM bested Hughes Aircra Co., a subsidiary of GeneralMt tors Corp., for the 10-year cot tract to develop the Advance Automation System for the Ftc eral Aviation Administratior IBM had spent $233 milliond the FAA’s money and about ^ million of its own in the compcii tion. The system, which is to bedi veloped by IBM and morethani dozen subcontractors, is designee to provide controllers withmor modern computer capacity. Prince celebrates 50th year of reign VADUZ, Liechtenstein (AP) — The tiny principality of Liechtenstein on Tuesday marked the 50tli anniversary of the coming to power of Prince Franz Josef II, Europe’s longest- reigning head of state. Parliament held a special s« j| sion in honor of the 81-year-olc| monarch, and a portrait of tlijj prince etched onto LiechtensieiJ marble was unveiled in thegoi? ernment building in the capita! Vaduz. Fires scorch parts of Yellowstone Park rove etard fa< !>ort Te YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP) — Fire-spitting helicopters were dispatched to Yellowstone National Park on Tues day to help protect the Old Faithful geyser from a 5,500-acre blaze, part of the worst series of fires in the park in nearly a century. Almost 1,000 firefighters were summoned to the scene, but officials had not decided, as of midday Tues day, whether to actively fight the fire, one of a dozen burning in the oldest national park. 52,400 acres of Yellowstone’s 2.2 million acres. One fire, the 31,500- acre Clover Mist on the eastern edge of Yellowstone, made two jumps into Shoshone National Forest. Interior Secretary Donald Hodel made plans to tour Yellowstone by helicopter Wednesday to get a first hand view of the devastation. substance into the forest to start backfires. The fire, which started Friday in the adjacent Targhee National For est in Idaho, burned roughly 10 miles west of Old Faithful, and about 10-15 miles south of Madison Junc tion, said Fire Information Officer Bruce Fox. pushing theast of The fires have charred more than the Old Faithful fire northeast of the geyser complex, but fire managers decided as a safeguard to call in “heli- torches” that can spew a napalm-like Even if they can turn the fire more to the north, officials said they didn’t believe firefighters could ever douse the flames. “These fires are going to burn un til the weather puts them out, Fox. A fire camp was established miles north of Old Faithful it|&|dit open field, where resting firef#exan ers relaxed in tents or sitf J he stretched out on the ground. f e | r -o Other firefighters were at a Faithful picking the area cleaitj 0 Jten downed trees, piles of fire'4 re no twigs and pine needles that J° rt 'th feed embers carried by winds l«B area. They also cleared the gr In i around a microwave tower thaipjued si vides Old Faithful’s communicatps sig with the rest of the park. Hsch ind A Reagan defends administration as ‘staunchly pro-environment ieaths he n | eei Law tlleges :ompl tire a ;ies. : “It\ ||hey ping, WASHINGTON (AP) — President Reagan said Tuesday his pro-growth administration also has been “staunchly pro-environment” and the message being sent to polluters is, “You’re out of luck.” In a White House ceremony honoring 94 vol unteer efforts to preserve the nation’s natural treasures, Reagan recited a litany of successes by his administration in protecting scenic rivers, en dangered species of animals and fragile habitats. Among those honored was the Texas General Land Office’s innovative beach clean-up pro gram along the state’s Gulf Coast shoreline. Reagan said the administration has cracked down on polluters with record numbers of crimi nal convictions. He praised the Environmental Protection Agency’s handling of toxic waste dis posal, likening federal regulators to actor Clint Eastwood’s tough-guy movie cop, Dirty Harry. “The message to polluters is crystal clear,” Reagan said. “We told them in the words of Dirty Harry: ‘You’re out of luck.’ Cleaner air, cleaner water, increased protection for American wildlife —this pro-growth administration has also been staunchly pro-environment.” Reagan told the “Take Pride in America” awards ceremony. Eastwood is a spokesman for the program. “The same spirit of creativity and innovation that’s created 17 million jobs has also benefited the land itself, making America the beautiful more beautiful,” Reagan said. But a spokesman for the Sierra Club attacked Reagan’s claims and said the administration’s re cord on the environment is absymal and ranks as “the worst ever in history.” “There’s no question Reagan and his appoin tees have cooperated to cut back virtually every environmental program we have and have ig nored facts on some of our new problems,” Da vid Gardiner, legislative director of the Sierra Club said. Flanked by Interior and Agriculture Secret les Donald Hodel and Richard Lyng, Reajp ! i| rc used the occasion to say his administration I ibuse “set the highest standards of enforcing the en'igrgg, ronmental protection laws” and pointed to8’p ares civil enforcement actions filed in his first te line nearly 2.5 times the rate of the Carter adniii'Jemei tration. Gardiner said Reagan’s speech was an attempt to boost Vice President George Bush’s bid for the E residency because the environment has “clearly ecome a campaign issue.” Reagan praised the “Take Pride in America” winners for their stewardship of the nation’s “crown jewels.” “You helped clean litter out of the Grand Can yon, have given medical care to Alaskan wildlife, planted gardens in Philadelphia and helped pre serve the wetlands of California and much, much more,” he said. More than 540 groups and individuals were nominated for the second awards ceremony. The program is a public-private partnership involv ing 44 states, two U.S. territories, nine federal agencies and dozens of private organizations. “But we didn’t stop there,” he said. “We took L^. j | one step further and established the enviroi'iL} , mental crimes unit because in the past virtualj ^ no environmental cases were criminally p 1 nent ecuted. We’ve obtained over 400 criminal indit , B ar{ ments and over 300 convictions and guilty plea jor th U.S. I Among his administration’s other accompjrsf co ments are a $1 billion restoration program tofejy F er prove and protect national parks, the additioa l | “j t > ; millions of acres to the national wilderness pfje tok ervation system and the creation of 34 new ■ ye'd c tional wildlife refuges totaling more thor ret 400,000 acres in 20 states vorke The number of rivers protected as wild scenic has tripled since 1981, he said, andthej ministration has made 271 additions to thedg^^ dangered and threatened species list. Pomp; Emissions of “manmade pollutants intotlitj,. 5 ’ 1 a have been significantly reduced,” Reagan said ) •