recent past and called for a climate in which social justice                          would prevail. On April 1, 1979, after a landslide victory                          in a national referendum, Khomeini declared an Islamic                          republic. This republic consisted of a new constitution                          reflecting Khomeini's ideals of Islamic government. He                          was named Iran's political and religious leader for life.                          Khomeini tapped the deep-seated conservatism of the                          Muslim fundamentalists by making moderate changes in the                          law. Women were required to wear the veil, Western                          music and alcohol were banned, and the punishments                          described by Islamic law were reinstated. Political                          vengeance was taken, executing hundreds of people who                          had worked with the Shah's regime ("Iran" 897). The large                          moderate center composed of the professional and                          bourgeois middle class had proved to be ineffective in                          their leadership abilities. Moderate Bakhtiar, the last                          prime minister under Pahlavi rule, was very unpopular,                          and he was unable to compromise with his former                          National Front colleagues or with Khomeini. He was then                          forced to flee to France. On April 1, 1979, his                          replacement, Mehdi Bazergan was appointed by Khomeini                          (Cottam 15). This 73-year-old engineer was a leader of                          the Freedom Front, and president of the committee of                          human rights. The middle and upper middle classes looked                          to Bazergan to provide stability so the economy...