March23, 1979 THE W4SHTNGTON POST Appre . Stock only 1O x13 Reg $719 9 x12 Re $469 8 x8 Reg $239 4 x6 Peg. $129 7 x1O' Reg $349 B. KIRMAN DES GN 100% WOOL Sate 55O S&e 359 S&e 169 Sate 98 Sate 269 ‘ c HANDMADE IN INDIA 1OO 0 b WOOL HINDOSTAN QUALITY S zo 9 x12 Reg $488 6 x9 8ag. $259 Sate 289 Sale 959 0. E ORIENTAL DESIGN RUNNERS. 100% WOOL App oL 2 x8 Rag. $89 2 3”x8 Reg. $98 2 x12 Rog $159 RU 4 ER ROLLS Reg $29 SOUN YARO Sale $59 Sate 69 Sale $95 SALE ‘25 95 - WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF SCATTER RUGS 1O'x13'Reg $719 9 x12 Reg. $469 8 x8 Reg. $239 4 x6 Rag. $129 7 x1O Reg. $349 , . . Iran s Constitution to Bar Local Power y Ronald Koven Wfl$hifl tOfl Pogt POre n Service March 2 fran s Revolu- tianary Council has drafted a eonstitu tion providing a strong American style president elected by universal suffrage but excluding the Mud of federal statehood sought by regional autonomists such as the rebellious Kurds This first description of how lran s Islamic republic will be organized emerged from separate interviews with the two officials considered to be the closest to Khomeini, There is every reason to believe that bath U S- educated figures are members of the Revolutionary Council, whose mem bership is still secret In wide ranging interviews, Radio Television Director Sadegh Ghotbza deh and Deputy Prime Minister Ibra hun Yazth, Khomeini's two principal aides during his months of exile in France, said that the draft will be published before popular elections for a constituent assexnbly The assembly, which will vote on the. proposed con stitution, is expected to be elected about two months after the March 30 national referendum on forming an ls lamic republic in Iran Both men expressed confidence that Iranians would approve the formation of the ls1a nie republic by more than 90 pexcent. The voters will be given the choice of yes or no to the Islamic republic, ignoring appeals that they also be al lowed to vote to restore the monarchy or to establish a secular republic. The exact weigbt Moslem religious leaders would have in tbe government was not c ear Ghotbzadeh said that they would have the right to name one third of the nine to 15 judges of the Supreme Constitutional Court The president and the legislature would also each name a third, he said The coni t would rule on the constitu tionality of laws and lower court rul ings, he said The bond with Moslem religious leaders vill make for a “unique” form of government, said Yazdi, but he .sMornN I N S DAYS GUA ANTE M NEALTH S TEM — VIDEO CASSETTE MOVIES VHS AND BETA Video Formate SaIe and Rentals k qu re m person at the CASINO ROYAL THEATRE 806 14th St , N W , or coil for detaili 347 68O3 CORREcTION On page 9 of the Sears supple mont wh ch appeared in the March 22 ethtion of th s paperY the #29931 washer far $419.95 Is not a “Lady Ken mare” We regret this error o d hope that our customers are not in eonveruenced SEARS, ROESUCK M D Co A19” ny Portable 1or For 69. It's a st 1. This 19” diagonal Sony Trinitron Plus Color TV has pushbutton tuning ,d an - electronic tuner Econoquick energ sav ng sys em 1979 ModeL WHEATON 942 1322 ARLINGTON b21 3510 MARLOW HGTS. 894 3OO0 GAITHERSBURG 0 5660 W000BRWGE 494 8 143 6901127 We Also Rent TVs would not elaborate except to reject the idea a theocracy As bas done consistently in and ou e le Ghotbzadeb spoke reas suriii 1y of the shared democratic val ues of the West and of Islam. Yasdi also stressed democracy but took a more noticea j Islamic line, speaking of such Mosl *i legal concepts as “the creation of corruption on earth ” Such nuances between the two lea& ers seem to indicate that disagree xnents still exist at least an the form if not the substance of society under the Islamic republic. “Islam has . its own conception Is lam is an ideology of its own,” Ghot bzadeh said. He laughingly dismissed as impractical such ideas as soldiers electing their own officers The Islamic movement is deter mined, he stressed, to better the lot of the poor. He said he understood that this emphasis had aroused middle class fears because it has a radical sound. He insisted, however, that the Islamic movement is not out to pre vent comfortable existences, but sim ply intends to raise the mass of the people up to a comparable middle- class level. Nevertheless, “unchecked profits” and “exti 1 eme luxury” can no longer be tolerated, he said. The revolution was in part against such abuses and also against what the great mass of Iramans consider to be loose morals and false values, he said There is no reason, be said for sec ularized people to feel uncomfortable in the new Iran as long as they re speot sensitivities of the bulk of the population. Female television an- nouncers will not be allowed to wear as much makeup as before, and “they won't have the decolletage,” but they will not have to wear veils or scarves to hide their hair, he said. This was a modification of an ear- her stand he took that they would have to wear scarves, if not full-length veils. An unsettled point seems to be the future of the Re olutionary Council. The .council numbers more than 10 and fewer than 20 and the majority are not clerics, Gliotbzadeh said, He did not d y a suggestion that he is a meiuber. What happens to the coi nciI will probably determine the real powers of the elected government, As Ghotbza- deb explained, the provisional govern meat headed by Bazargan under the control of the council, which phys b h a legislative role by is ig ts truc tions to Bazargan and an executive role by judging and correcting h the directives are carried ouL The Bazargan government Is to stay In place until the first constitutional government is established, Ghotbza- deb said He said it is doubthil Bazar- gail, 71, would run for president be- cause he is “tfred.” Ghotbzadeh, 41, hinted broadly last week that he might be interested in running for president, if it would be the key exec- utive position. Today he spoke wist fully of taking a long vacation. Ghotbzadeh said that all parties would be free to r n ndidates and that he thought that, at the very least there would be a Marxist fielded against the Islamic revolutionary movement's choice Ghotbzadeh depiefted Khomeini as being determined to play less of a di rest political role and to become once again more ef a symbolic moral guide. He said Khomeini had been forced to intervene recently because there wa no one else who could enforce major orientatisns like halting summary ex- ecutions. Both Yandi and G iotbzadeh were adamant that there would be no au- tonomy statute for Kurdistan. There is no way for it or other regions to be specially represented in the legisla- ture, which is to have a single house, they said Ghotbzadeh said that it might be possible to amend the text, after it is published, to provide for a regional house But Yazdi said he could not cenceive of anything resem bling a federal system. They both said that the centraL gov- The Monte ey—ovaItob!e In Walnut or Pecan, Clean J#nes c1 quIet features blend into any room setting n any kind of home. SALE $1,440 , R CARPET &- RUG CLEA RA NCE ernment would move to meet the le- gitimate grievances of Kurdista and other ethnic regions by financing crc ation of bilingual schools, hospital roads and other facilities and by ap- pointing local people in top police and provincial administration jobs, mclud lug governors general, the chief pro- vincial representatives of Iran While Ghotbzadeh said the Kurds and other groups would “get nothing spectacular,” he said the Khomeini movement is determined to decentral ize and reduce Tehran's role fostered by the shah, as a center that sucked the region's vitality. Religious minorities would continue to be represented in the legislature, he said, The present tradition of three deputies for the meman and Assy- nan Christians, one f the Jews Wand one for the Zoroastrians would be co- dified, he said, Both officials there would be no representation for the Babais, the most hated sect in the country. They both insisted that it is not so much a religion as a political group. Iranian Officials Annoiuzce Tritce in, KurdIsh Conflict Las Angeles Timee SAN DAJ, Iran, March 22 An uneasy truce broken by sporadic gunfire—settled over this capital of Iranian Kurdiotan today. Embattled Iranian army troops remained in de- fensive positions in their garrison post while Kurdish insurgents man- ned rifles behind sandbags. A government delegation, headed by Ayatallah Mohmoud Taleghani, met with Kurdish groups here in an effort to dampen the anger of Kurd- ish nationalists and to forge a cease- fire. Interior Minister Sagerhadge Sa- vadi said bath sides agreed to a cease- fire and that Kurds held prisoner in the army post would be released. Taleghani said even though the Kurds were entitled to their own eul- tore and language “you are Iranian.” 9x12 29 12x15 $39 12x18 $49 9x12 PAD with Carpet Purchasö t99 Level •• Ny an J - Sale must end March3ist! . America's Only Fully Warr ted Piano & F. 9.99 sq. yd. Saxony P'ush Nyloh $4,99 Stock only Stock only sq. yd. $3 99 sq. yd. Y2” THICK PAD 90 with carpet purchase sqyd LOWREY PIANOS SAVE UP TO $300 Compare these Lowrey PIanO features to p cnos costing Iwice the price . . fOO% Sltka Spruce Sound Board—in diagonal graIn for lt detity s ind amplification, Sound boa guarantee t rao4dng or sptlthng for 75 years , Unique Tone Escapement Chombers built ?r bo -of the cabInet SInce U5IC emanates from the sound boo d (which runs the full height of the piano). these chambers let the Sound out of the bottom of the sounding board too. . 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