IBS iac] i for a 11 ' Grassier groups- ntal that C| b o run tla stacks ia ; ae of man; ton of Mil written derail Ani emocratic andidacy i reader Rok gue, hasps ; to treat Ihotbzadeh: Majlis to decide in 4-5 weeks United Press International banian Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said Monday the newly elected Parliament would be able to decide in “four or five weeks” what to do with the 53 American hostages. Ghotbzadeh, interviewed on television in Paris, was asked what the conditions would be for freeing of the hostages, held for 233 days. He replied, “Well e." Previous statements by officials in Iran have indi cated the parliament might not consider the hostage question until September. But Ghotbzadeh said the lawmakers would take it up after completing their first tasks, which he said included choosing a par liamentary president and electing supreme* court ces of retail late arepts Anderson i t is Carteii g in a m be mini! in he was a ras Carte ris distanai andidata didates Ghotbzadeh made a brief stop in Paris enroute home from a meeting of the tripartite Islamic com mission on Afghanistan in Geneva. The new Parliament which Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini has said will have the ultimate say on what appens to the hostages, failed to meet as scheduled Monday because of a lack of a quorum. Tehran Radio said the parliament, known as the Majlis, will now meet on Tuesday. The broadcast, monitored by the BBC in London, said various committees of the Parliament “con tinued their work Monday.” Tehran Radio said the assembly “failed to meet owing to a lack of quorum. ” It said the assembly “is to have a meeting tomorrow at which credentials of some MPs, sent to the commission of enquiry, will he submitted for approval. ” Tehran Radio also reported Iran’s “hanging Judge,” Sheikh Sadeq Khalkhali, had condemned six people to death on charges of drug trafficking and young people into prostitution. The broad cast said the sentences were carried out Monday. The newspaper Kayhan said a Revolutionary Guard and a drug trafficker were killed in a clash in downtown Tehran. The newspaper said two drug traffickers were chased by the guards through the street when they began firing on the guards. Another guard and a bystander were injured. Khomeini urged an end to political squabbling between President Abolhassn Bani-Sadr and his Moslem fundamentalist rivals. Khomeini, 80, made no mention of the 53 American hostages who began their 234th day in captivity today, and whose fate he has entrusted to the parliament, which is controlled by Moslem hard-liners who reportedly favor putting the Ameri cans on trial. revolutionary guards, came one day after an Islamic judge said renegade officers plotted with Kurdish rebels and the government of Iraq to make way for an invasion to overthrow the government of Iran. Despite Khomeini’s plea for unity, the official Pars News Agency reported Monday that five Kurdish insurgents were killed near the Kurdish town of Paveh in clashes with government forces, reports from Tehran said. “The insurgents set fire to a wheat field but were dispersed by local people,” the reports said. “There were no reports of any casualties among the military.” The official Pars news agency Sunday quoted the governor general of West Azarbaijan province near by as saying “illegally armed groups” killed a local official and a revolutionary guardsman. Pars also quoted the governor general of Isfahan province in central Iran as denying a report that 300 members of the Qashqai tribe besieged a garrison of soldiers at Padena for a week. lagnetic field vanishes i Demo®! ;elf in tie erson c» nnedy, Post Cm Bugging’ baffles GOP United Press International iVASHINGTON — Everyone im- iiately thought of Watergate, but police said those mysterious es found in Republican National Immittee headquarters carried Aground music, not secrets, t all began last week — on the hth anniversary plus one day of Watergate break-in — when a jurity expert hired by GOP na- nal co-chairman Mary Crisp told he thought she was the target of ctronic surveillance. Tie expert, Army reserve intelli- ice officer Richard E. Govignon, 1 he found a magnetic field and :es in her office that indicated she ighthave been electronically mon- red. Another security firm, brought in GOP Chairman Bill Brock, late urday determined the magnetic d no longer existed, although it ild not say if that was the case last idnesday when Govignon did his imination. leginning around midnight Sun- police began a six-hour review heir own and said the whole thing leaned to be a false alarm. Our scan of the office and exami- ion of the main telephone wires closed no type of electronic sur- llance whatsoever,” said police ikesman Joseph Gentile. “The se wires that we found proved to unspliced wires from an inter- nmunication system which fed isic into the office. One of our cers attached a headphone set to im and found they had music com over.” Tentile said police still wanted to (with Govignon and would not eout the possibility Crisp’s office Ibeen bugged. “There are certain types of bug ging devices you can leave in an have no way of telling if they’d ever been there. There are devices you can plant outside in a car or across the street. All I can tell you is that we found no electronic bugging de- The police took over the case early Sunday following disclosure one of their men had entered Crisp’s office alone Saturday and might have touched the wires that were consi dered possible evidence of eaves dropping. "I I I I 1 I 1 I apijjj^gye| GOING OUT FOR YOUR BUSINESS SALE Lowest priced TIDDIES in the world! 3 Layers — 15.95 2 Layers — 12.95 MAXELL UD-XL11C90 CASSETTES $4.50 (Limit five please) We also carry complete line of car stereos BEST SELECTION IN TOWN! Disco Lite - Water Beds - Nighttimes - Incense - Pipes $1 OFF ALL RECORDS & TAPES WITH THIS COUPON GOOD THRU JUNE, 1980 2919 Texas Ave. 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Across from Mon.-Sat. 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