THE BATTALION Page 13 THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1980 world Shah out of hospital, Starts chemotherapy : arsente L nfluenctd on,the only the i ■ United Press International PCAIRO, Egypt — The deposed shah of Iran was discharged from the pispital Wednesday, two weeks af- fet surgeons removed his cancerous spleen. Egyptian Vice President Hosni 1 Mubarak escorted the exiled monarch from the Maadi military (itispital to Kubbeh Palace in the cen ter of Cairo aboard Mobarak’s heli copter. Mohammed Reza Pahlavi is undergoing chemotherapy to arrest lymphatic cancer and his doctors said the treatment will continue on an outpatient basis. “He is fully recovered from his splenectomy and his condition is very good,” one of the doctors who treated the shah said. The shah’s chemotherapy treat ment will take months, the physician said. The shah’s spleen was removed by a surgical team headed by Dr. Michael DeBakey of Houston. The operation came almost a week after the shah left Panama, where he faced extradition proceedings brought by Iran, for exile in Egypt. U. S. sanctions used as Iran s rallying call stry as lininactiwl ntematnl idian pecs nt.” been aa gHabre,! ng Wed! ^ ^ United Press International inmarBi Iran hinted of new anti-U.S. mea- ement i^jres in response to the latest round beenkifBanctions imposed by President rticipatecbarter, and warned American allies heir flow of Iranian oil would stop if hey backed Washington. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and jCanian President Abolhassan Bani- iadr said their country could survive f he latest U.S. moves and urged the f"/kation to regard it as a rallying call. Reached by telephone from Lon- lon, an Iranian Foreign Ministry -pokesman Wednesday denied re- liorts food and fuel were being | A| ationed but admitted “it’s possible I I here will be some changes in life as result of the U.S. sanctions. In Washington, the State Depart- aent early Wednesday reported all »r whiout two of the 35 accredited Iranian ge of tap ' ' diplomats in the United States had left the country by midnight Tuesday. One remained behind as caretaker of the Washington embassy and the other was admitted to a suburban Washington hospital for treatment of a heart ailment. Carter also warned of tougher steps unless the crisis, now entering its sixth month, was ended quickly. Tehran Radio, monitored in Lon don, reported today the Moslem militants holding the embassy said Iran “celebrates” the break in rela tions “because it is thereby marching ahead towards genuine independ ence.” “The Iranian nation is not only re sisting the American economic embargo but will also courageously crush its military attack, ” the mili tants said. In a related development, Mos lem militants holding the 50 Amer icans for the 158th day sold film foot age to the three major U.S. net works, showing 14 of the hostages celebrating Easter Sunday with three visiting American clergymen. The oldest of the 50 hostages, Robert Ode, 63, of Falls Church, Va., told the clergymen: “We need more than prayers. We need action. ” The film was broadcast Tuesday night by ABC, CBS and NBC. Bani-Sadr, referring to the U.S. action, told a nationwide radio audi ence Tuesday: “Yet another of these wonderful things about revolution is that the enemy at the moment of action comes face to face with a steel wall.” eru blames Cuba or refugee flood vrL ■y aveled ii ! saidhck United Press International iter deirTeru has blamed Cuba for provok- id hekS d |e flood of Cuban refugees into w jl| se;ie Peruvian Embassy in Havana, countriaH'ima stood ready to evacuate the H them arn i n g mob — once Fidel Castro’s mmunist regime gives the go- .ead. The 10,000 Cubans jamming the abassy grounds threatened to go i a hunger strike if they were not owed to leave their country soon, rench radio stations said (ednesday. Representatives of the would-be fectors have sent a letter to Presi- nt Carter and several other chiefs states demanding intervention on Mr behalf, the networks reported ernational Ml Havana. } ]', In an effort to find political asylum n( | ' 1V • the Cubans, the foreign ministers a ' (i >m the Andean Pact nations of d. nd assengei from kjj >nal Aik t the •port was roiigl> . they Kf reve: 3ajesliS ed p' sl1 ants o ru'd I? their the Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru gathered in the Peruvian capit al Wednesday for a meeting on the crisis. They were to meet without the diplomatic head of Colombia be cause Foreign Minister Diego Uribe chose to remain in Bogota to deal with the occupation of the Domini can Embassy. Colombia’s deputy foreign minister was to stand in for Uribe. “We hope that we (the ministers) will be able to reach some conclu sions on the bottom of the conflict as well as the way we can help those people as soon as possible,” Peru’s Foreign Minister Arturo Garcia y Garcia told a news conference late Tuesday. Garcia y Garcia said Peru was awaiting approval from Castro to start evacuating the Cubans, who swarmed the embassy after Castro ordered the removal of all police pro tection Friday. In a separate news briefing, Garcia y Garcia said, “There doesn’t exist the precedent that an embassy may have been taken over by thousands of people. It is not natural, because usually asylum cases come about on an individual basis. “This, undoubtedly, has been pro voked and organized. Therefore, the responsibility rests in the country where it was provoked and orga nized,” he added. Castro kept police protection at the Venezuelan mission, where some 20 refugees were said to be holed up. 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