0 Page 4-Thursday, August 6, 1981-The Michigan Daily Reagan won't bud ge on PLO in Sadat talks WASHINGTON - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat yesterday achieved one of the principal objectives of his visit to the United States - a commitment by the Reagan ad- ministration to remain a full partner in Middle East peace talks. But Sadat apparently did not achieve a second aim, to change the American policy against negotiating with the Palestine Liberation Organization. THE EGYPTIAN president said before meeting Reagan for the first time that he wanted to win an American promise to retain a full role in the negotiation process set up by President Jimmy Carter. Reagan gave a clear answer to that. "We will walk that road together and we will not be deterred from reaching our destination," he said. "Although the Americans have changed presiden- ts, we have not altered our commitment to peace or our desire to continue building upon the achievements of Camp David." SADAT TOLD reporters the United States should drop a commitment made to Israel not to negotiate with the PLO until the PLO recognizes Israel and abides b.y United Nations Security Council resolutions that call for secure borders for Israel. A senior administration official, who declined to be identified, said the United States would not change its policy as long as the PLO is a terrorist organization that refuses to recognize Israel's right to exist. The official said that in their two-hour meeting, Reagan and Sadat both ex- pressed concern over dangers to the Middle East from the Soviet Union and its proxies, East Germany and Cuba. Sadat suggested, the official said, that another summit may be necessary toward the end of the year after Reagan has heard the views of the leaders of Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, also scheduled to visit Washington. "We will be patient," Sadat was quoted as saying. Irish nationalists set off 11 car bombs In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports PLO leader shot in Warsaw WARSAW, Poland-A Palestinian guerrilla leader suspected of master- minding the 1972 Munich Olympic massacre was shot and critically wounded in an assassination attempt in a Warsaw hotel, the PLO said yesterday. The PLO blamed Israeli agents for the attack on Mohammed Odeh, better known by his code name Abu Daoud. He was shot five times at close range Saturday in the coffee shop of Warsaw's Victoria Intercontinental Hotel by a young man was escaped. Fouad Mohmoud Yaseen, a spokesman for the PLO office in Warsaw, said two Polish women also were wounded in the attack. In Jerusalem, a spokesman for Prime Minister Menachem Begin denied Israel was involved, calling the charge "absolute nonsense." Fruit flies found in Florida TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Gov. Bob Graham yesterday promised swift ac- tion-including possible aerial spraying-to protect Florida's $4 billion produce industry if three Mediterranean fruit flies trapped near Tampa are found to be fertile. The flies, two males and one female found Tuesday by a U.S. Department of Agriculture inspector, were being hand-carried today on a plane to Los Gatos, Calif. Experts there were to determine-probably by this morning-whether the dead flies were fertile, said Betsy Adams of the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service in Washington. Agricultural officials and citrus growers charged the flies could be from California and their presence here might signal the start of an infestation like the one in three California counties. But it was not known where the flies came from, federal officials said. And it was possible they were placed in the trap as a hoax, Ms. Adams said. Pope's surgery is successful ROME-Pope John Paul II's surgeons yesterday successfully reversed the intestinal bypass performed after he was shot almost three months ago and said the pope might leave the hospital in 10 days. The pope regained consciousness quickly after the one-hour operation, his doctors said in a medical bulletin. He had been readmitted to the hospital June 20 suffering from pleurisy and a virus. "There are no signs of any problems," said Dr. Emilio Tresalti, chief medical officer of the Gemelli hospital. He told reporteors the pope should be able to leave the hospital around the middle of August and could carry on a nearly normal work schedule during his convalescence at his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome. The reverse colostomy was expected to have been performed in July but waa postponed because oil the difficulties the pope experienced in his recuperation. Newborn girl stolen in Atlanta ATLANTA-Police relased a composite sketch yesterday of a woman who toured hospital rooms, complimenting new mothers on their babies, and may have slipped away with a newborn infant who is missing. The infant girl was taken from Grady Memorial Hospital Tuesday after her 28-year-old mother, Sandra Alexander, put her into a bedside crib and left the room, police said. Mrs. Alexander returned moments later to find her baby missing. The infant, who had not yet been named, was a 6-pound, 8-ounce black girl, "absolutely normal in every way," said hospital spokesman Mike Yelton. He said she "could subsist on almost any commercial baby formula." Police believe an unidentified young black woman may have put the baby in a shopping bag and walked out of the hospital. Mrs. Alexander told police the woman had entered her room and chatted for a few minutes. More drug busts in Miami MIAMI-Police smashed a "white collar" cocaine network yesterday in the second major crackdown on Miami drug operations in as many days. More than 100 persons were being rounded up and authorities said the crackdowns could have a telling effect on drug traffic through Miami, one of the major east coast pipelines. The FBI Tuesday broke a money-laundering operation that allegedly washed $200 million in drug money. Miami police followed up yesterday with the smashing of the cocaine ring. The roundup of suspects included 61 allegedly involved in the laundering operation and another 51 linked to the cocaine ring. Miami police code-named their cocaine crackdown "Operation Tick- Talks" because an electronic listening device, placed behind a clock in a suspect's home, helped break the case. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - IRA guerrillas exploded 11 car bombs in quick succession yesterday across Northern Ireland, causing heavy damage in eight cities, cutting a main railway line and injuring seven people, police reported. All the bombs were hidden in stolen cars parked outside business premises, and detonated over a time span of little more than an hour, police said. THE OUTLAWED Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility for the bombings in Belfast, Londonderry, Newry, Lisburn, Armagh, Omagh, Bessbrook, Portadown, and at the main-line railroad bridge at Kilt- nassagart Bridge south of Belfast. The explosions were seen as an escalation of the IRA's fight to end British rule and unite this Protestant- dominated province with the mostly Roman Catholic Irish republic. POLICE SAID a British soldier, a part-time Northern Ireland soldier, a policeman and four civilians suffered minor injuries in the blasts. All the ex- plosions caused widespread damage, they said. 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