Sadat's assassins under interrogation By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS Associated Press Writer CAIRO, Egypt (AP) President Anwar Sadat'e assassins were "led by a Moslem fanatic" and are now being interrogated, Vice President Hosni Mubarak said yesterday. "There is a long story behind all this, but I prefer to wait till the interrogation is completed," Mubarak told reporters at an impromptu news conference, after accepting the ruling party's nomination to succeed Sadat. The government scheduled a referendum next week in which Mubarak will be the only candidate. Egypt's defense minister was quoted as saying two of Sadat's four assassins were civilians who masqueraded as soldiers . to sneak into the military parade that ended in a bloodbath. Mubarak declined comment on the report, but said the assassination was "a criminal act undertaken by individuals and was by no means a coup attempt." Mubarak was wearing a bandage around his left wrist. indicating he was wounded in the attack. He told reporters that he and Sadat were sitting side-by-side on the reviewing stand Tuesday, watching planes fly, by overhead. • "I sensed the president stand. I stood too and to my utter horror and disbelief, I saw a man throw a grenade at the stand, and then gunfife broke out," he said. "I was hurled to the ground and so was the president but I could not believe what my eyes had seen. The president was taken away in a helicopter." The vice president reiterated his commitment to Sadat's policies.and said the year-long emergency declared immediately after Sadat's death was being enforced "to protect the nation from any saboteurs." Defense Minister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala said one of the assassins was an officer, one was a retired reserve officer and the other two were civilians (pretending to be soldiers, the fiewspaper Al Akhbar reported in today's editions. Abu Ghazala did not elaborate in the newspaper account on how the two civilians, reported to be veterans of Egypt's mandatory military service, got into the military ranks on parade. Another daily, the semi-official Al Ahram, quoted Gen. Mahmoud el- Masry, commander of the Republican No sale of fall contracts State senate approves $ 20 million for buildings By RON WATERS Daily Collegian Staff Writer A bill that would provide about $2O million for the University was passed in the state Senate yesterday, but must be returned to the House for final approval, a University lobbyist said. The bill includes an amendment which passed in the Senate Appropriations Committee on Monday that would provide $3.9 million to the University's Delaware County campus for construction of a student activities center, Frank Forni said. The building would be an improvement long needed because of the size of the campus, campus inside • University Police Services is stationing officers at a table in the HUB t 5 answer any questions students might have Page 5 • Barry Commoner will speak tonight on "Politics at the Grass Roots"..Page 15 weather Intervals of clouds and sunshine, breezy and cool today. A few sprinkles are possible. High temperatures will be near 55 degrees. Becoming mostly clear and cold tonight with low temperatures around 38 degrees. Partly sunny and cool tomorrow with high temperatures close to 60 degrees. the daily Guards, as saying three "traitors" left the truck when it reached the reviewing stand. Thinking the men were approaching the stand to salute him, Sadat stood to return the salute, el-Masry was quoted as saying.. While Sadat was standing, the fourth man, still in the truck, -' , , • . • • A man in an Egyptian army uniform fires a Kalashnikov submachine gun at pointblank range into the presidential reviewing stand where Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and at least five others were killed. The army truck in which the assassins arrived (background) was Soviet-made. director John Vairo said For University Park, an amendment that was approved last month authorizes $6.6 million for laboratory and program renovations to the mineral science and mineral industries buildings. A third amendment yet to be approved by the House would provide $3.5 million to the University's Mont Alto campus for a new multi-purpose physical education building. The $lO2-million bill would authorize the Commonwealth to float general obligation bonds for various construction projects and could face a vote as early as next week, Forni estimated. ()Ile • iarl opened fire with an automatic rifle, hitting the president with his first shots, the guard commander was quoted as saying. In an emergency session yesterday, Parliament endorsed overwhelmingly the nomination that Egypt's ruling party gave Mubarak within hours of Disaster demonstration By SHARON TAYLOR Daily Collegian Staff Writer The Office of Housing and Food Service Operations will not allow students to sell dormitory contracts Fall Term 1982, said the assistant vice president for housing and food services. William H. McKinnon said Housing will not permit students to exchange their contracts because many have misinterpreted the initial purpose of the policy. "Students have interpreted it to mean that if a student does not get a contract, he can Emergency personnel attend to a "victim" at a simulated plane crash held at Johnston Quad last night. Please see story, Page 6 Sadat's assassination Tuesday.. The vice president accepted the nomination during a televised meeting with a parliamentary delegation. ' The Parliament's action meant Mubarak's name will be the only one on the ballot Oct. 13. The date falls within Egypt's 60-day constitutional limit. ~.--.0;451...r.::,f, t ittc, . .• ..04 , 7.v., , ,:,.- , .. , ..::-• , , , :r. .0..:f' . .„; ,:„.....,...:••.,,. • • .. • ,• • - i , .., ..• '' ""''''',..:••,:.: •':,-:',1.1/4:.,",' . ' ,-,,,,7*-1;!:*-•:1...,,,';;.--:',-;:',1:-,-,;:-'4i,:i''. *'... --:4-:`'4,-,%;-,:-4: -'-..'.'i-.-.e:f.''''l'-‘# '.--.',, ' t,'....,':: ',':.,1.17',', - gip::, >~;y~~»9 ;'}.~ .. s ~ ,~• . . , et-T • , . ; • ; 1 1?..0 " ;.;.' i“ J gr:Vll*,:;;Atoi;44 A1V0,d,,4714 At a news conference in Washington Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. said there was no evidence of external involvement in the assassination. But Haig served notice to Libya and other radical Arab states opposed to Sadat's peace treaty with Israel that the United States "would view with great concern" any attempt to seize upon the assassination to fan instability in the Mideast. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin will attend the funeral, and in a letter to Mubarak said, "We are confident that the legacy of peace of President Sadat will live on . . . This is a sacred trust we have to fulfill." Sadat's body was being held at Maadi military hospital, and officials said there were no plans for it to lie in state. They said it' ould be taken to a mosque near the parade ground in the section of Cairo known as Nasr City and interred in a mausoleum near the reviewing stand on which Sadat was killed. Sadat's family remained in seclusion with the slain president's only son. 25- year-old Gamal, rushing home from a vacation in Florida. In Parliament, all :330 votes counted in the special session endorsed Reagan will not go to funeral By TERENCE HUNT Associated Press Writer MEE WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan will not attend the funeral of slain Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat because he fears for his own safety. but will send a delegation including all three living former American presidents, a spokesman said yesterday. Presidents Richard M. Nixon, Gerald R. Ford and Jimmy Carter all agreed to go. They will be accompanied by Secretary of State Alexander M: Haig Jr., Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and former Secretary of State Henry A Kissinger. , _ . Acting on the unanimous advice of , U.S. security agencies, Reagan decided to remain home "with great regret," communications director David Gergen said. Vice President George Bush also will stay in Washington because of the same security precautions applying to Reagan, Gergen said. Reagan later issued a proclamation ordering flags to be AP Laserphoto `buy' it from someone who wants out of the dorms," he said. "It's become a way to get into the residence halls, instead of a way to get out," he said. Stan Latta, assistant director of the Office of Residential Life Programs, said, "Many students from off campus are getting the contracts, when the original spirit of the policy was to allow the student who wanted to leave the residence halls for personal reasons a chance to get out." When a student sells his dormitory contract to another student, the student who wishes to 20° Thursday Oct. 8, 1981 Vol. 82, No. 55 18 pages University Park, Pa. 16802 Published by students of The Pennsylvania State University Mubarak. Another 55 members of Parliament abstained, four were absent and three votes were disqualified, officials said A two-thirds majority of the 392 members of parliament, or 261 votes, was needed to endorse Mubarak as Parliament's nominee. Ile is expected to be sworn in Oct. 15. Mubarak was chosen by Sadat in 1975 to he his vice president and eventual successor. Accepting the nomination. Mubarak told the delegation. "Al this critical moment Which I never wished to witness. I do not hesitate to accept the Parliament confidence ... I accept the nomination with pleasure in order to keep the wheel going." Mubarak said. Ile pldged anew that he would continue the policies of "our teacher and our leader" Sadat. Earlier in the day. interim president Sufi Abu Taleb appointed 11lubarak prime minister. adding to his posts of vice president and supreme commander of the Egyptian armed forces. Egypt's defense minister was sitting next to Sadat on the reviewing stand when soldiers in a military parade commemorating the 1973 war with Israel opened fire on the president flown at half-staff at U.S. installations at home and abroad until Sadat's burial. "America has lost a close friend. The world has lost a great statesman and mankind has lost a champion of peace," the president said. The flog flying over the White House also was lowered in a rare salute to a foreigner. In the past, the only non-Americans so honored upon their death were British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1965 and United Nations Secretary General Dag Ilammarskjold in 1961, according to press aide Robin Gray. Reagan attended a memorial -service for Sadat at the National Cathedral. where Bishop John T. Walker said, "The sadness of the moment covers all of us." • Officials would not publicly discuss the grounds for wanting Reagan to stay at home, but indicated they were troubled by the uncertain political situation in Egypt, where Sadat was gunned down by members of his own army Tuesday. move into the residence halls must sign the contract, relieving the former holder of all financial responsibility, McKinnon said. The student purchasing the contract is placed in temporary housing, said William Mulberger, director of the Assignment Office for Campus Residences. When a student buys a contract, Mulberger said, "We have another student coming into the lounge. If there isn't room (in the other lounges), we may have to set up a whole new lounge (to house these students)." Please see CONTRACTS, Page 16