lo—The Daily Collegian Monday. October 28, 1974 rom the wires News from the i world and the nation Arabs aim for compromise ItAI3AT Morocco (AP) Arab leaders met yesterday in an attempt to reconcile 'Jordan and the Palestinian guerilla movement, but officials of both sides said a compromise was impossible itoprosimtatives of the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Jordanian delegation both claimed the right to gotiate for the return of the occupied West Bank of Jordan irotn Israel Jordan's King Hussein and PLO chief Yasir Arafat attended .1 k liv,el guarded meeting in the palace of King Hassan H of \ inflict.° in V 1 hid) Hussein made a lengthy exposition of his high Jordaniaft official said the situation didlnotiend itself lo « n because Israel refuses to deal with the PLO. 'King Hussein insists on a clear mandate frpm the other beads 4,1 state on what they want Jordan to do I" the official •.,,~i lint A Palestinian spokesman said, "We will not accept any ,anprminse with Jordan concerning our right to speak for the I',llequoan people " tipening the sumnut Saturday night, Hassan called on hissein and Arafat to "overcome all obstacles and marginal problems and show Ow spirit of tolerance needed to build a tindge iit honor... 11.1ss.in warned , lsraeVagainst what he called the illusion !hat the quarrel. betv.een Hussein and Arafat "can make the \tabs torget Ille\real battle." Called to discuss all aspects of the Middle East conflict and A , ~I Sect•etar State Henry A. Kissinger's mediation efforts, 'lie ~ iiiiiinit - 's become almost exclusively an attempt to bring Hussein and Arafat together. Patty warned by ex-mobster )s ANGELES UPI; Ex-mobster Mickey Cohen sterday said he located fugitivei'atricia Hearst in a black ghetto in Cleveland three weeks ago, but "put out the word t or her to clear out" when he learned she could go to prison. disclosed last week that he had found the hiding place ;he newspaper heiress and her two companions, Sym- 1 !,ione.e, Liberal ion members William and Emily Harris, but. used In sio where • •I i \\ en't make any difference now, because they're _ not in In a copyright article published in The Boston Sunday 1(• eland anymore." the 61-year-old Cohen said in interviews Globe, Kennedy said he will bear responsibility for the in ith ,i 1,1 P ,, Angeles newspaper and television station. 7 cident, in which Mary Jo Kopechne died, for the rest of his life otE Ai- -V I A* I l k ir* IM . I • At . o / . nia opploV)••• 6r0a7.,11. nuts... . .••• Ac co5hol) klrnels... rdlsl - n5.•• 4t- aliZs... * miv.ea for jou , 090,nadim '7 l /Zarkee -44(fAnAd*F41 AlM;t4'4FlM)(46;tritil*ll4;sl,3Qk; Cohen. who completed a 10-year prison term for tax evasion in 1972. said he used contacts from the "radical" world and not the under.% orld in locating the three. Ile said he began his search for Hearst at the urging of San • f'rancisco Examiner reporter Ed Montgomery shortly after she i% as kidnaped from her Berkeley apartment last February. "I « as involved with it through my connections in the black community in Los Angeles," Cohen said. "I happened to run it down where she was. It just came out right. I didn't tell the FBI or police or nobody." Puerto Rican backs bombings NEW YORK (AP) A left-wing leader of the Puerto Rican independence movement yesterday said terrorist bombings like those set off at five locations in Manhattan were one way of lighting for independente. "I don't know Whether these bombs reported in the press were part of this diverse struggle," said Juan Mari-Bras, secretary general of the Puerto Rican Socialist party. Bras, attending-a "Puerto Rican Solidarity Day Rally," at Madison Square Garden, added. "There is a diversity of forms and means by which the Puerto Rican people struggle for independence and national liberation. This is one of the means." About 15,000 persons, including activists Angela Davis, Jane Fonda and Russell Means, attended the four-hour rally. Disavowed by the Puerto Rican Independence party on the 'Caribbean Island. the rally was sponsored by an American committee and dedicated to five Puerto Ricans serving jail sentences for the 1950 attempted asassination of President Truman and the 1954 shooting of five congressmen. The release of thoseiive prisoners was among the demands of a group calling itself the Armed Forces of Puerto Rican Liberation t FALIsO which assumed responsibility for Saturday's bombings, No one was killed or injured in the blasts. Chappaquiddick regretted B(SSTON (AP) Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., says his conduct after the 1969 Chappaquiddick incident was "irrational and indefensible and inexcusable and inex plicable." Pumpkin CONVENIENT HOURS 7:30 a.m. - :30 p.m; . 4 °. , 7 DAYS A WEEK • • • Lemon Tree Coin-Op Laundries HUNTERS SPECIAL '67 Ford Convertible $5OO '66 Old Cutlass wagon, 6-cyl., standard shift $195 '63 Falcon Futura, 2-dr. H.T., 6-cyl., standard - shift $l5O '64 Falcon station wagon• V-8, standard shift $l5O '62 Buick Special Station Wagon . . . . $l5O All good runners all inspected CLARK MOTOR COMPANY Chrysler Plymouth Jeep Your Duster A Day Dealer One mile from town on East College Ave. • Just past the duck pond Dean's Market announces Pepsi 8 16-oz. bottles $.99 plus deposit Cider —l-gallon, fresh, local $1 .49 Bounty towels large roll AL v. 5.39 , DEAN'S 1518 North Atherton MAU QUANT o FREE! FREE! FREE . "Make-up Case" titwith any purchase of $5.00 or more of Mary Quant cosmetics. al i CYCal l 135 E. Calder Alley When Kennedy dropped out of, the 1976 Democratic presidential contention last month, he said , Chappaquiddick was not a factor in the decision but it would have been a campaign issue. He described the incident in the Globe interview as "an accident, a tragic accident, and ... one which I do today bear responsibility for and I did then and•will for the rest ,of my life." The incident occurred July 18, 1969. Kopechne drowned when Kennedy's car, driven by him, ran off a wooden bridge and landed upside down in a tidal pool. She was a passenger in the car. 1,200 arrested in Mozambique LOURENCO MARQUES, Mozambique (UPI) Security forces, in a move to head off more racial violence in this Portuguese colony scheduled for independence in June, rounded up mare than 1,200 persons during the_weekend, military sources said yesterday. The majority of those arrested were Africans but included some Europeans. The sources termed them' agitatoo who fomented the recent troubles." In bloody street battles last week, 49 persons were killed.and 160 injured. Those arrested were taken to military barracks at Boane, 11 miles west of the city, to be screened. Military sources said most would be released but some would be charged with crimes connected with last week's rioting. In political Tallies in African suburbs today, Frelimo Mozambique Liberation Front spokesmen said the Front's policy was nonracist. Armed Frelimo troops and Portuguese USG Senate to meet in HUB Uhdergraduate Student Government Senate meets 7:30 tonight in the HUB Assembly Room. Undergraduate Student Medical Plan student advisor will be located in 20A HUB. Office hours for the remainder of Fall Term are noon to 2:00 p.m. Monday. through Friday. Phone 234- 4354. Students for Shapp-Kline will have a table the HUB basement today through Nov. HAPPY HOUR Football Sunday (Every Sunday) 1 p.m. tlll5 p.m. Color TV Train Station Lounge Car soldiers guarded key points in'the capital and set up road blocks searching for arms. The Pbrtuguese High Commissioner for Mozambique, Rear Admiral Vitor Crespo, broadcast fresh appeals for calm dur ing the weekend. "Neither Africans nor whites should listen to false rumors, - he said Prisner exchange continues NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI) More than 500 Greek and Turkish Cypriot prisoners of war yesterday traded buses in a hotel courtyard, leaving only a few hundred more captives of the suniMer war on Cyprus to be exchanged, a United Nations spokesman said. The spokesman said 260 Greeks and 288 Turks were freed in the Ledr, a Papace Hotel release area. The exchange took Ace under the supervision of the United Nations and the International Red Cross, the spokesman said. Thousands of relatives waited to greet the released prisoners along streets on both sides of the green line _separating the Greek and Turkish sectors of the capital. The spokesman said the prisoner exchange would be completed today. Greek Cypriots demanding United Nations action on the Cyprus problem and the Withdrawal of Turkish troops from the island. yesterday staged mass demonstrations on the eve of the Cyprus debate at the United Nations General Assembly. Demonstrators . in Nicosia and other towns passe& resolutions calling on the United Nations to "put an end to the Cyprus tragedy," demanding the withdrawal of the Turkish troops and insisting on the return of 200,000 refugees to their homes. 4. Volunteers should call Doug Ford or Don Chaffee at 237-8404 or Joe Harteis at 238- 08:35. . Applications are now being taken for positions on USG Supreme Court. Interested Collegian Notes students can apply at 218 before next Monday. Hillel is sponsoring classes on Babylonian Talmud at 7 tonight and Conversational Hebrew at 8 tomorrow at 224 Locust Lane. For more in formation call 237.2408. University garden plots should be cleared by Nov. 1 „Women's Liberation meets at tonight in 220 Boucke. The• Fashion Industry In terest Group presents a Hat Box Fashion Show 7 tonight at. the Human Development Living Center. The weekly faculty and stu dent bridge game will be held 6:45 tonight in HUB Ballroom. FSHA 410 will present, "A Taste of Portugal" on Wednesday. For information and reservations call 865-7441. The Undergraduate Student Government Supreme Court will hear a charter revision request from Black Caucus on Nov. 3. This was omitted in Friday's Daily Collegian.
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