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Show Page Frldav. AdHI HERALD, Provo. Utah. 28-T- HE 2, 1976 Jewish Group Defies Arabs TEL AVIV, Israel (LTD -- A fiereely nationalistic Jewish group today called for a march across the occupied West Bank of Jordan later this month as "our answer" to Arab protests against government land poli- Israeli newspapers. Gush Emunim sponsored an illegal Israeli settlement at Karinum on the West Bank that has been cited by King Hussein and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations William Scran-toas an obstacle to peace. "Our Answer to Lands Day." the headline on the Gush Emunim advertisement said. Lands Day was the name given to Tuesday's general strike by Arabs protesting Israeli land policies aimed at increasing in the Jewish settlement Galilee and other areas. n cies. marchers of "The myriads from Israel and overseas will declare to all the world the inalienable right of every Jew to every part of the land of Israel," the Gush Emunim Band of Believers said in an advertisement published in Security forces killed six Arabs and wounded dozens more in violent confrontations connected with the strike. The Gush Emunim march was scheduled to leave Bethel near Jerusalem April 18 and arrive at Jericho on the Jordan River some time the next day. Gush Emunim turned out over 10,000 marchers for a similar demonstration during the Passover holidays a year Soviets Criticize Pres. Ford - The MOSCOW (UPI) Soviet Union sharply criticized President Ford's stand on relations today, asserting the problem is too serious to make concessions to "irresponsible loudmouths." The review of diplomacy by Georgi Arbatov, the top Soviet expert on the United States, published in the Communist party newspaper Pravda. Arbatov, director of the Institute of the U.S.A. and Canada, did not mention Ford by name but referred to his March 1 decision to drop the word detente in favor of "peace through strength." "The pronouncements about peace through strength that were repeated for decades and that brought nothing but the unrestrained arms race and the growing threat of war are not becoming more convincing now." Arbatov wrote. Pound Hits Low British another world's coming dealers row These politicians, he said, "have nothing new in their arsenals," Sterling opened lower at $1 8815 against the dollar on markets, foreign exchange then dove to $1 8615. down more thin I' i cents from Thursday's previous record of $1 8805 Sterlings devaluation rate also dropped to 35 5 per cent Arbatov also reasserted the Kremlin's desire to improve relations with Washington, specifically in achieving new arms limitation agreements government acknowledged against us 10 major trading partners, anot her new record alm said foreign bankers are unloading sterling because they fear that Britain, mired in a drawn out struggle to elect a new prime minister and hit hard by wildcat auto strikes, is not making enough progress in saving its economic problems "Nobody know how much the Rank of Kngland h.--s spent Thursday and Friday to prop up the pound, but it must be pretty colnssil." a dealer at R,iivld' Batik Li!cr,ri.it i.mi.iI receiving from the Soviets a long awaited reply to proposals for reaching a new agreement to limit strategic arms simism at the lime about the chances of reaching a new accord once the presidential election campaign is in full smg this summer, Artvitov said the presidential primary campaign was taking plioe m a time of unutua! crisis m the United States marked by pJitic.il and Kit our upheaval ttwt ? Ms in I 1 n.lH statile In a telephone call to United Press International an hour after the shooting, an unidentified male caller who said he was from the Jewish Armed Resistance movement read a statement ih l reflected fj ;:j.vl !! ',,: V... l) ij I continued imrrfti over a deteriorating economy that has I Zh left milli'in Britons - V- I - Mn S,'.i-- . K'Knxtw v . w : V i I In It- - Sr '' 'r!r Three police officers were assigned to guard the mission at the time. f) V ) V !': Troops Kill Argentina Guerrillas BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (UPI l Troops carrying out the 'government's to crush leftist military campaign killed subversion r, 1 Rpj r,i 2 (v 8 c lmfw!' (V) fi.jtt i II U M l t Salt S tT K hiii MmuM X J! V Hli 71 tS li and provinces in northwest Argentina, the army Cordoba WORCESTER.' Mass. (UPI I Five persons were killed and one was critically injured early today in a fire of suspicious origin. Police and fire officals investigated the possibility of arson. Names of the dead were withheld pending notification of relatives. Fire Chief Edward Hackett said his department received a telepione call at a.m. tha a fire had been set at 357 Cambridge St. The five persons were killed and a girl was critically burned when the mysterious about four-stor- frame wood y tenement building at that announced today. Abortion Bill Threatens Italy Minority Leaders was a - Italy's Moro's Five leftist guerrillas were killed in the rugged terrain of Tucuman province Thursday in a battle with an army patrol, the army's 5th Infantry headquarters Brigade announced in the city of Tucuman, 810 miles northwest of Buenos Aires. In Cordoba. 440 miles north- west of the capital, the army's four Corps announced urban guerrilla suspects were killed in two separate shootouts in the city Thursday night and early today. 3rd In Buenos Aires, another leftist group attacked a police station early today with automatic weapons fire but was driven off without causing any casualties, police said. Argentina's political violence has taken 222 lives this year and 37 since a military junta overthrew President Isabel Pcron nine days ago. ai ROME (UPI i Socialist party hinted today it may topple Premier Aldo Moro's minority government in retaliation for the blocking of a liberalized abortion bill by his in Christian Democrats alliance with nco-- Fascist. "At such a dramatic time in the country's economic and social life, the Christian Democratic party bas assumed responsibility for an action goes far beyond the abortion issue." the Socialist directorate said. which "This implies a further deterioration of the overall political picture, which the Socialist party cannot fail to take into account in its future action." it said. m.i.ujjLi-U-i.i.i-i.r- a ;i j u sxnnjj Politicians said this threat to vote against sevcn-week-ol- Christian d Democratic, government future confidence parliament. votes in in Hames jumped to an adjaDemocrats cent story tenedepend on the Socialists' ment and one side was support, or at least the lack of extensively damaged. Fire Chief Edward F. Hacket active opposition from them, to remain in office. A pledge of said the cause of the blaze in a The Christian Socialist abstention made formation of the minority cabinet possible last month. congested residential section of the city was under ti)i (m lsp jh Vitilr ffri(i vf TVm 'nr facility. I W j, Illinois Detectives All Killed MIAMI BEACH CHILDREN'S d Police said Ronald J. Born, shot himself when police surrounded him in a thicket of He died shortly seagrape. before 8 45 a.m. at North Miami General Hospital. Police said Born, who was using the alias of Joseph R. Moulood, had been wanted on a federal warrant for auto theft. The three dead officers were identified as Clark Curlette, 28. Thomas Hodges. 32. and Frank Dazevedo, 32, all members of the Dade County Public Safety 41. Chapin was convicted of lying to the Watergate grand jury when he denied knowledge of "dirty tricks" in Nixon's 1972 campaign Warden Gerald Farkas said Chapin had adjusted very well to life as a convict and had received "excellent work for his job in the prison kitchen. Chapin was found guilty of lying when he denied to the grand jury that he had ordered the Nixon campaign's dirty tricks specialist, Donald Segretti. to concentrate on Sen. Edmund Muskie's campaign for the Democratic presidential and when he nomination, denied knowing that Segretti distributed phony campaign literature. He was originally sentenced to 30 months but U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard Gesell in Washington cut the term to six to 18 months after an appeal. Department's auto theft and mortally Taylor's Dept. Store SPECIAL FEATURES: Door Prizes! 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Hodges was killed by a shotgun blast fired at close range through a window of a motel. The gunman then ran out of the room, witnesses said, M PLACE: -- An wound. SATURDAY (Tomorrow!) LELELM R SATURDAY 10 AM i? (UPI) Illinois man who killed three with a shotgun detectives Thursday night died early head today of a FASHION SHOW rtYTYTTYTYTTTTTYTT li IT U stay there by prison guards. They were later told Chapin had left by a rear exit of the J (AS VI 31 w M Telephoto mushroomed into flames. j Police said th five were dead on arrival at St. Vincent's ' Hospital and thp girl was hospitalized in poor condition with bums over 70 per cent of her body. A hospital spokesman said it was believed the girl's parents were among the victims. Investigators said they were going to listen to a recording of the voice of the person who called the fire station with the alarm. The rear of the Worcester which included a building plastics product shop on the bottom floor and apartments on each of the top three stories was engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived. Good teamwork in 14 , a 10 address VI - ir M M t. Iwi it Hi "Wftunniia ! Vii'hmM U M Mf M I - I'PI Chapin, 36, appointments secretary to former President Richard Nixon, was to fly to Chicago to join his wife, prison officials said. Members of the press and television networks were herded into a parking lot and told to THE VAUEY OF . . . 12 'r,iw.t-t-, Xi 4S 2 ( !.-,m- M"'W t"-- 1 persons, and critically burning old girl. five year II M k V Tj nine in Tucuman guerrillas 1th ' the resignation, and said, "There was a great deal of selfishness involved in Haig's actions and that he used the country for his own ambition." "There was a meeting where you had to make up your mind whether you wanted Alexander Haig or the President," he said. prison today after serving seven months and 22 days. Six other person convicted as a result of Watergate served less time. 5 Die in Mysterious Fire M f Vfl! lU!r 5 IT FIRE swept a wooden apartment building on Cambridge Street in Worcester, Mass., early today, killing A MYSTERIOUS II V rw f--f IT t"- IB'" M 1 Watergate figure Dwight Chapin was released from the minimum security federal I M l U IT Ownit rVt;r,4 V. -L. claiming J M J? U1 !i.1 t.,n " t l ltd 'h r, l V ' Xf (UPI)' Calif. LOMPOC, i-i- responsibility for the shooting. Ux fiiptowd and kept inflation running a! 2i per cent t ! rtl tJ 111 Herschensohn. one of Nixon's strongest defenders, Thursday also criticized the book "The Final Days" by Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein as "a voyeuristic perversion of history... It is like going to the Roman Coliseum." Herschensohn agreed with the book that Haig, then Nixon's chief - of staff, "orchestrated" Of Prison like cunvwie u Chapin Let Out . is major mumitumal capillary pfrfjpila Or Wjsi! fr Im!ts hmc IntrtottMMal n ti'T J " 'J! r day. Kmk s.nJ s.iid the slump Manhattan put h.is sni.ill tunnel the water !'( M. Nixon. rifle was found a block away at a construction site, a police spokesman said. He said the shooting incident occurred about 3:50 a.m. but police would not be allowed inside to investigate until later in the A National Temperatures R when he "orchestrated" the resignation of former President Richard West German marks and Smss tram v" a dealer Chase m - ks on ambition" (n1;King countries switch thur foreign earnings into K,irJnv,ng The prudurt n n-U s traditional fhmrr fx hul has a water rrMfwiir n the Uvam thai art if i. thnmch as morning oil ;ir? S3 ft IJ.jeues are commm this Self-Wateri- r st If w.itentig plant Urn in!rliKvd fT -WASHINGTON (UPI) Bruce Herschensohn, former presidential counselor, says GenT Alexander M. Haig "used the country for his own sod irnnihett'.itere.iterrion " " k Nixon Defended, Haig Criticized d h pes- weakness The (UPI I pound sagged to record low on the money markets today, under attack by foreign for the second day in a LONDON war" economic occupied British He said such politicians as Ronald Reagan. George Wallace and Sen. Barry Goldwater, R Ariz., represented "the same old horses of reaction and cold But officials "expressed the "' Two NEW YORK (UPI) shots from a were fired early today into the Soviet Mission to the United Nations, police said. There were no injuries. Gush territories. The Arab communities of Israel were reported quiet today, the Moslem Sabbath. But security sources said 18 persons were arrested on the West Bank Thursday night in scattered incidents df setting tires on fire and blocking roads with stones. Mid. The I' Wednesday in them "Quite a few questions are raised in the debate that is held in the United States concerning the relaxation of tensions." he said. "But it would have been much better if such question had not arisen at all for the matter in question is too serious to allow ambiguities or to make concessions to irresponsible loudmouths from the extreme right wing camp." he S for spokesman Emunim said the military governor of the West Bank issued a permit for the march and security arrangements would be handled by the army. In Jerusalem, government sources said Israel did not promise the United Stales it would refrain from setting up new settlements in the West Rank or other territories occupied from Egypt and Syria. The Davar newspaper said the cabinet will meet after the holidays to take up a proposal for 40 new settlements, half of in a attack was contained lengthy ago. A Shots Fired Into Soviet U.N, Mission - rifle I 200 North :O0Wet, Prcvo 373 - 2600 i |