"TEHRAN (CP) --—- The head of . Tehran's island: " lpevolutlomes courts said -, Sanday that Tranians .con- " .shder the exiled shah ta be ‘under sentence of death and that - anyone. - - Who ‘asaassi- tht Pree : oN NAMIBIA nates him ‘will be carrying out the verdict of the people. , Defending the more than 20 executions known to have taken place in Iran since the February revolution which toppled the shah, Ayatollah Sadeq Khalkhali told a news conference that Western - op ~ . Khalkhali said that aniong ideas of justice have noplace in Islamic courts. Replying to Western critics of the wave of politcal executions, he said: ‘To pity lran’s exiled shah under th: a sharptoothed liger is to press the sheep.”* exiled Iranians already considered under sentence of death by the people are the shah, his wife, Empress ~ Violence erupting again - SSUME, ‘Namibia. (AP) ‘ Growing. violence and a ‘looming showdown in a ‘previously lowkey guerrilla . Wwar- threaten: the transition _ Of. this disputed. territory “from white’ South African _. control to Independence as a “pew black-governed country. The kiiling: of five persons —four whites and a black — allegedly § by. black nationalist guerrillas and a ‘ough response by authorities, has dimmed ab ready faint hopes for a peaceful transition. The worsening conflict has implications far beyond. Call for mercy, ‘human rights “AAR GALVADOR (CPY Sd ecar ‘0 Romero called Suriday for - the release of three leaders _ ol the P Revolutionary Bke, ng demands by : members Oe the milltant pea who are holding tages at the French and Venezuelan embassies. In a sermon broadcaat throughout. E] Salvador, Arnulfo Romero, a frequent government critle, also asked France end Venezuela to “‘use all diplomatic means” to put pressure on the government of this Cen- tral American country to grant more human rights. . He also. called for the ’ release of 127 persons he said ‘have disappeared after ‘government arrest In recent. moaths. ectiiter,. militants ‘are alx persons in French embassy, including Ambassador Michel Don- Couple found ‘cgTUTBHORSE (CP) — Bay, Alaska, cou ear’? Bee ‘safely (ri''the Yukon ™ ‘capital Sunday after apen- ding the night on Stevens, Lake where they landed thelr Cessna 170 in bad An air search wag initiated early Sunday after the pair ‘-falled to arrive early Sunday ‘morning on what shoul _ have been a four-hour flight from Northway Junction, Pilot John Sarvis and his oer Jean Chambers were spotted by search srt aya ko erwards, @ bere In midafiernoon, They had landed on the ‘frozen lake during bad weather Saturday night. near = the “Cathedral, also. held ‘by the denne. Others are holding four persons in the Ve- nezuelan embassy, including Ambassador Santiago Ochoa, They took the French building May 4 and the other May 11. The Costa Rican embassy was seized May 4 but four hostages escaped and the three militants were given safe conduct to Costa Rica. The government of Gen. _Carlos Humberto Romero has released two leaders of the bloc, a coalition of labor | and peasant groups, but denies that three other leaders are being held. The archbishop spoke at the Rosario Church, located Metropolitan -bloc. The ‘cathedral was the site of a bloody confrontation last week in which govern- ment troops opened fire _ during an anti-government demonstration and killed 24 persons, — The church “repudiates the use of violence and it cannot condone burning buses, machine-gunning houses and occupying buildings dedicated to the public,” the archbishop said. his sermon to bea. political speech and rejected claims of “those who say we are subversive and that we agitate people and promote Marxist-Lenist lines."' Those persons, he said “cannot tolerate the church's denunciation of injustices.’’ ‘Officials estimate 90 per cent of ‘El Salvador’s predominantly Roman Catholic population of five million listened to the weekly broadcast. Arnulfo Romero, who has been nominated for the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize by legislators in Britain and the U.S., recently returned from two weeks in Rome where he met with Pope John Paul. He. sald he' did, not intend sh Namibia (also known South- West Africa), which covers an area about four times the ‘size of the British Isles. Canada and other Western powers support a United Na- tions’ plan to jead Namibia through a peaceful and or-: derly process to in- dependence. Western diplomats see a successful UN ‘plan as a showpiece: to demonstrate that other African disputes can also be settled amicably. The West would also like to convince black Africa that it can be counted on a3 a praven broker for peace in a centinent of conflict. On the other side, there are .the Soviet Union and its allies, East Germany and’ Ciba, giving weapons and training to the guerrillaa of . -the South-West Africa People’s Organization (SWAPO). In between, there is South Africa, fighting the guerrillas and still’ not ac- cepting the UN peace plan because it claims that the United Nations ‘favors the insurgents. The country, originally named after its geographic location, was a German protectorate from 1884 to 1915, South Africa invaded the territory during the First World War and’ the old League of Nations granted South Africa an ad: ministrative mandate over it in 1920, The United Nationa revoked the mandate in 1966 but the white minority government in South ‘Africa ignored it, The resulting controversy led to a hitand- run guerrilla war between SWAPO and South African troops. The conflict sputtered along for 13 years, with the guerrillas usually striking at rural blacks in the north, But guerrilla targets now also include white farmers further south. A drastic security clamp- down by Namibian officials following the latest killings indicate that the violence might be. settling into a classic guerrilla conflict. Unable: to compete militarily with a con- ventional army, guerrillas strike at so-called soft targets, apparently . to provoke a harsh reaction from. military and civil authorities, - Almost inevitably, the _ ¢lvilian population suffers along with the guerrillas when, for example, ‘the authorities suspend civil rights to combat terrorism, Large areas of central and northern Namibia were de- ‘elared ‘‘security districts” following the latest killings, giving the military extensive powers to search people or premises without warrants. The new powers also allow ' security forces to hold and question suspects for un to 30. days without recourse to a lawyer, unless a judge gives special permission. Meanwhile, South Africa is giving the territory's loca) assembly increasing legislative power, an in- dication that the government might lotally shun the United Nations ,and use the assembly as its own vehicle to independence. 7 exc UTIDS ‘who allegediy. sanctioned — committed murder. ‘revolutionary . courts, was ‘Khomeini, [ran’s unofficial © Farah, his brother Prince.., Gholam Keza and former. prime minister Shapur Bakhtiar. Ste He = compared ""” the revolutionary tribunals to the Nuremberg trials, where Nazi .war criminals .were tried after the Second World,.’ War. In both cases, he said,: the accused included persons” “Tran has no place for zionism, communism ‘or imperialism, and we will destroy their plans,"'- Khalkhali said. .The local news: media also - ‘has come under ‘lire from Iran's hard-line Moslem leadership. The left-leaning daily Ayandegan has halted . Aa eation. Ina broadcast by state-run murder, not just those who’ “radio and ‘television, the ‘ Khalkhali said ultimate responsibility for the Islamic Zionlstcontrolled and anti- revolutionary. Islamic mobs - subsequently attacked ‘a. number of -the daily's‘ ~ provincial offices, and- conferred on him *b Ayatollah Ruhollak head of state. sale. “He has told me not to: Meanwhile, the offictal listen to anybody, not even . Pars news agency an-— himself (when: passing nounced that former foreign judgment)," Khalkhali said, minister Ali Ardalan, 78, has He said former prime ber released from prison: minister’ Amir Abbas follwing a recent - heart Hoveyda had offered-the atlack. Ardalan was ar- court $1 million to have his trial deferred bul this was turned down. He was exe-' euted later. Khalkhali said the courts have acted according to the dictates of the Koran and Western ‘forms of justice have no role in the trials. , He accused foreign news media of trying to disrupt the Tranian revolution and ac- cused it of being inspired by The radio did not say. how Zionism and imperialsm. many children ware arrested . ; ee revalution. And the state radio reported. that another Moslem religious leader has congratulated local revolutionary: | guardsmen who arrested his children, saying the ‘captors are “taking care of the . reyalution,” “newspaper was attacked as ‘ “newsstands where it was on, ff rested by revolutionary. - militiamen shortly after the . The Herald, Monday, May 44, 1979, Rage 5 or on what charges. . ‘But it quoted Ayatollah Ali Meshkin! as saying: “My or SOT SSOHOoe moe meer aay v1 children should b> puihished if they are found guiltyunder Islamic law.” ¢ t entertainment, - dancing fee ‘ entertainment, dancing, Tuesdays ... amateur nite ‘Thursdays ... dance contest. | Prizes ne » Doth nites ':3- conventions, meetings, weddings . “IPs ALL WERE Mectord' gourmet dining ee pe are a? opie a tedarrien at Cas A pos “at : F | “a solos sade — ‘ nye ve ~~ Hq — = 1 Ea - aipiyal sol. A shivd ‘ ny siet eas oe) hao Tn sa Aun wadifnord in the TERENCE “hEPIMAT daily herald ; News of your community...your country... domestic: * . \ and foreign affairs. Everybody from the housewife: : to, the tycoon has found the pages of their newspaper affecting their daily lives. Reports on shifts and trends in the business and financial world. Money saving |’. advertisements covering every aspect of our daily - needs, . Classified sections that tind you employment, - , a home, an automobile or sell anything you wish. : _ Entertainment in special features, comics, and sport pages. that enlighten a dull day. News as it happens, fiesthand in your community, province, nation, or : ”. global affairs. Your newspaper is your best source’ of information. TERRACE daily herald oC eer ae ine + iD fiGs. a t ee cee me