1111 t< l • A the t . 41. daily * APL ion w d collegian t.!,0 Lis a arned to leave Egypt alone " one pause. We hope they would not be evidence of external involvement in the U. S. will view with concern tempted." assassination. Haig obviously was referring to Li- At about the same time in Cairo, De any interference I-1 s aig say f bya's pronouncements in the wake of the fense Minister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazal assassination, including strongman la was telling reporters: "There is no Moammar Khadafy's congratulations to coup. It is an individual group and they By R. GREGORY NOKES ing for boosted readiness of the U.S. the men who killed Sadat and his call for 'are not even related to' any group or Associated Press Writer Rapid Deployment Force and American the Egyptian armed forces to take power country." , WASHINGTON (AP) The Reagan warships in the Mediterranean. and reverse the government's pro-West- Haig said the administration has been administration warned Libya and other The secretary of state also affirmed ern course. "greatly heartened" to learn from Vice radical Arab nations yesterday that it the administration's determination to Moreover, Radio Tripoli urged Egyp- President Mubarak that the Egyptian "would view with great concern" any sell AWACS radar planes and other mili- tians to revolt and said they "should government "shares our views about the attempt to seize upon President Anwar tary gear' to Saudi Arabia, saying the march on the hospital" to destroy Sa- importance of continuing the work begun Sadat's assassination to meddle with $8.5-billion package is now "more impor- dat's body. by President Sadat" in pursuit of a Egypt or otherwise fan instability in the tant than ever." As he spoke, President Asked if he also was telling lasting Middle East peace under the Mideast. Reagan met with virtually the entire keep hands off, Haig said he did not Camp David accords. intend to imply "anything untoward." Secretary of State Alexander M. I laig Republican majority of the Senate in an He said he can "commit this govern- Jr. declared also that America remains a attempt to reverse a congressional move ment, with the approval of President full partner in the peace process initiated against the sale. ".. . I think the Soviet Union knows Reagan this morning, to a firm dedica by Sadat, "this gigantic personality," In a midday news conference, Haig our position, our friendship and our . tion of continued American support to the and is committed to "pursue his work" declared the United States "would view relationship with Egypt," Haig said. government and the people of Egypt." toward a comprehensive Middle East, with great concern at this juncture any "They know that we consider that Haig, who will lead the U.S. delegation settlement. efforts by external powers to manipulate relationship vital to our interests in the at the funeral of Sadat on Saturday, said Haig pledged full support to the Egyp- the tragic events of the last 24 hours.,, region and that we would treat it accord he may visit other Middle Eastern na tian government now headed by Ilosni Of the Libyans, he said he had "no ingly," he said. tions while on that mission. He said no Mubarak, Sadat's hand-picked heir. evidence of their involvement" in Sa- Haig said intelligence reports indicate decision had been made. Other State Meanwhile, the Defense Department dat's slaying, even though the level and Sadat's murder was an assassination, Department officials said Haig's journey continued its order of late Tuesday, call- character of "their rhetoric would give not a coup. Moreover, he said, there is no of reassurance might take him to Israel. Arab states •,t• ••ear hopeful of reconciliation By NICOLAS B. TATRO Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Arab states appear hopeful that. the assassination of President'Anwar Sadat will 'eventually pave the way for Egypt's return to the Arab fold. But any reconciliation is likely to be a long, slow process at best. A number of state-controlled newspapers in, the Arab world suggested that the time was right to woo back the most populous Arab nation and others joyously proclaimed the Camp David accords a dead letter. - - _ "The fall of Sadat heralds the inevitable end of Camp David," declared the government's daily Tishrin newspaper in Syria, which vehemently Camp David Accords crum ill g, Arafat says PEKING (AP) PLO leader Yasser witnessing the beginning of the failure of Arafat said yesterday the Israeli-Egyp- the Camp David agreement with the fall tian peace treaty was beginning to crum- of one of its symbols. We have believed in ble "with the fall of one of its symbols" that before ... We also have been con slain Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. vinced the night of Egypt will not last A well-placed source in the Palestinian long." • Liberation Organization delegation visit- , 'We are sure the Egyptian people are ing China told reporters later, "It is a committed to the national cause of which good thing that Sadat has gone to the Palestine is the heart," Sadat said. "The other world." Egyptian people are great people and the He said the PLO had no advanced heroic Egyptian army will never capit knowledge of the attack on Sadat at a ulate and will never give up Jerusalem," Cairo military parade on Tuesday. _ he said. Although it still denounces Israel, China has made clear it favors peace in The city, holy to both Moslems and the Middle East and was hopeful Sadat's Jews, is claimed by Israel as its eternal peace initiative with Israel would sue- capital. teed. Speaking later with reporters at his The PLO and most of the Arab world government guest house, Araf.4t de have shunned Egypt because of Sadat's nounced both Israel and the United peace settlement with Israel. Under pro- States. "We face the huge, barbaric visions of the treaty, the signers and the American and Israeli powers .. . But we United States, which sponsored it, arc to are with the current of history." decide the degree of autonomy to be ' Asked by reporters if the assassination granted to Palestinian residents of Israe- of Sadat would further the cause of li-occupied territory in the Gaza Strip peace, Arafat said: "Peace cannot be and West Bank. The PLO demands they achieved by bypassing Palestinian be given an independent state. rights, the Palestinian issue, the PalesL Arafat told a welcoming banquet in the tinian problem .. . Here we are, dead- Great Hall of the People, "Today we are locked and moving in a vacuum." Member; of the Egyptian Parliament cast their votes last night during a special session, where Vice President Hosni Mubarack was overwhelmingly nominated to-succeed the late Egyptian Presidept Anwar Sadat. opposed Sadat's go-it-alone peacemaking with Israel. Radicals took to the streets in Libya, Syria and Lebanon, firing guns in the air and dancing in the streets, to celebrate what they hoped would be the end of an era. But in the conservative, oil-rich Persian Gulf region, there was a more measured reaction. "It is time we tried to win Egypt back to the Arab camp," urged the daily Al Ittihad in the United Arab Emirates. In the island nation of Bahrain, where policy is closely linked to Saudi Arabia, the Akhbar al Khaleej newspaper urged Egypt to "fold that page with Israel and start anew with your Arab brethren." A prominent Arab journalist in Beirut, who declined to be identified, suggested that Egypt might be invited to attend the Arab summit in Morocco next month. "Sadat himself had become an obstable and there never could have been a reconciliation as long as he was alive. But the obstacle has been removed," he said. But a high-ranking Palestine Liberation Orga nization official, who also declined to be named, predicted there could be no patching-up of differ ences with Egypt as long as the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty remained in force. "The reason Sadat was an outcast iri the Arab world was because of the peace treaty," the PLO Yasser Arafat, right, Palestinian Liberation Organization leader, is greeted at Peking's airport yesterday by Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hua, center <~ , ~. , ;,~avr 'Egyptian women in Sadat's home village of Mit Abul Kom wail and scream in anguish over the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. with Egyptian govt official said. "As long as the peace treaty exists, there is no way for Egypt to come back to the fold." Saudi Arabia and a number of other Arab states remained officially silent, apparently adopting a wait-andee attitude until many of the unre solved questions were answered. At the top of the list was whether the picked successor, Sadat's protege and vice president Hosni Mubarak, would be able to take firm contro of the government and whether he would be opposed from within the army or by the growing Moslem brotherhood in the streets. "The biggest of the Arab countries is now on the Soviets react to Sadat's death MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Union (U.R) Rapid Deployment Force is sent a terse message to Egypt yes- designed to put down national liber terday, expressing condolences over ation movements throughout the the assassination of President An- world and particularly in the coun war Sadat. tries of the Near and Middle East," - - The message from the presidiu'm Tass said. of the Soviet Parliament, which is Soviet news accounts avoided headed by President Leonid I. comment on the assassination itself Brezhnev, was addressed to Sufi or future Egyptian policies, but Abu Taleb, leader of Egypt's interim quoted Arab figures as calling on government. It was carried by the Saclfit's successors to take a tougher official Tass news agency. line toward Israel. "Accept our condolences in con- The Soviets have been harshly nection with the death of the presi- critical of Sadat's signing of the dent of the Arab republic of Egypt, Camp David accords with Israel. A. Sadat. We express sympathy to The condolence message con the family and relatives of the de- tamed only minimal courtesies —an ceased," the message said. apparent reflection of poor relations Meanwhile, Tass charged in a between Egypt and the Soviet Union. report yesterday that the United Only last month, Sadat expelled States is continuing its "crude pres- the Soviet ambassador and six other sure" in the Middle East by stepping diplomats, two Soviet journalists, up military readiness folloWing Sa- and hundreds of Soviet technicians dat's shooting at a military parade from Egypt. He expelled an esti- Tuesday in Cairo. mated 17,000 Soviet technicians in "As is known, the interventionist 1972 and in 1976. Thursday, Oct. 8 10 brink of a period of turmoil," said the English language Arab Times in Kuwait. "It is not clear now who is going to emerge as the real strong man. As to what his policies are going to be, there are those I , vho think that' no matter who appears, he'•will steer Egypt back to the Arab camp and break from the Camp David treaty. It is too early to say." The first test of the new leadership will likely come at the funeral of Sadat on Saturday. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin has announced he will attend along with the other architect of Camp David, former President Carter. That virtually precluded any symbolic reconciliation with the A.rabs. )flf news briefs Efforts launched to end strike PHILADELPHIA (AP) New "irreparable harm" and "a clear legal and legislative efforts were and present danger to the health, launched yesterday to end the 30-day safety and welfare of the public." teachers strike that has closed Phil- Bradley promised a quick deci adelphia public schools to more than sion. 200,000 pupils. In Harrisburg, a Republican state In Common & Pleas Court, the senator introduced a bill to bar tea school board asked President Judge chers strikes in Pennsylvania's big- Edward Bradley to issue an injunc- gest city for the next five years. tion ordering the teachers back to Also, a Democratic city coun their classrooms by Tuesday. , cilman offered an ordinance to' The board claimed that failure to amend the Philadelphia Home Rule provide a 180-day school year, as Charter to allow the school board to required by law to qualify the dis- operate with deficit budgets through trict for state subsidies, would cause fiscal 1985. Decision on MX awaits study WASHINGTON (AP) Defense to complete. Department assertions that 36 MX "There has been no decision missiles will be deployed in existing whether put them in Minuteman or Titan missile silos were only "exam- Titan silos, or both, or how many pies" and final decisions will have to missiles will be in place," Atkins await an Air Force study, a top said. • official said yesterday. The figures given by Defense Sec- Marvin Atkins, the Defense De- retary Caspar Weinberger and oth partment's director of offensive and ers last week "were simply space systems, said the study will examples," he said. define costs and benefits for placing "We need to find out how much the MX in Titan and Minuteman additional protection, how much silos. hardness against Soviet, attack you He said the study will not start can buy for a given amount of mon before Oct. 23 and may take a year ey." Atkins said. Israel observes Yom Kippur TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Silence Yom Kippur is nearly universally fell on Israel at sundown yesterday observed. as the Jewish state effectively Israel Radio and Television went ground to a halt to observe Yom off the air, traffic stopped except for Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atone- emergency vehicles, Ben-Gurion In ment. ternatiional Airport was closed, and The holiest day in the Jewish reli- many Israelis began a fast that will gious year, Yom Kippur marks the end an hour after sundown today. end of a 10-day period of penance The army, as usual on Yom Kip and introspection that begin with pur, announced that Palestinian Ar- Rosh Hashanah, abs from the occupied West. Bank Although only some 20 to 25 per- and Gaza Strip were forbidden to cent of Israelis are observant Jews, enter Israel. GRE & LSAT CLASSES STARTING SEPT. 27! that you have tried a free, discount or trainee hairstyle try us! We havabeen specializing in precision haircuts for over seven years. 138 S. Allen St. The original precision hairstyles in State College Mon• Thur. 8 . :30 to 8:00 ■ ois CO les FILM DEVELOPING - 12 exp $2.59 20 exp $3.89 24 exp $4.49 36 exp $6.69 256 E. Beaver Ave. (Across from Penn Towers) #23B•COPY Fri 8:30 to 6:00 Sat. 10:00 to 6:00 NOW 110 • 126 • 35mm The Daily Collegian Thursday, Oct. 8, 1981-11 • in been blamed publicly for policies that led ~ u n ion ca ll s f or nnce f reeze, Poland into its current economic decline and a staggering foreign debt to Western • 11' creditors estimated at $27 billion. . . , • Although the tribunal could not "sen o t h ten 5 to str i ke ~ , ~.. p , „ i i .n 6 , tense " the t t h h e e r d e e i f e eh e d f a p h e t„ h i d t, s e, e e e e e r r i,,g e e e e d s II 1 . ~u, , presents another bold challenge to the a I Communist government from the first By THOMAS W. NETTER The 18-day, two-part congress was ty leaders. independent union in the Soviet bloc. Associated Press Writer expected to end late last night or early The new economic program, which Bronislaw Gerernek, a union adviser, GDANSK, Poland (AP) Solidarity's today in this Baltic port city where the challenges total government control of said that the tribunal would resemble congress called for a freeze on prices independent union • was formed during the economy, will also provide Solidarity public hearings held in the past decade to yesterday and threatened to stage a crippling strikes last year. Union offi- leader's , with guidelines for future ac- condemn the United States for alleged token nationwide strike if the Communist cials said many delegates were ex- Lions. It advocates greater private own- atrocities during the Vietnam War. government does not comply. hausted and suffering from the flu. ership of service and trade businesses, "Unless the investigation on these The resolution, in response to Mon- In its resolution on price freezes, the and sentranagement for factory work- cases is begun by the end of the year, the day's sudden doubling of cigarette congress said the union's "struggle" for ers in state-run industries. national commission ( national lead prices, was adopted after the congress its own concept of economic reforms had Union officials said the unprecedented ership) will set up a social tribunal; passed a 34-point social and economic met continuned government opposition tribunal would possibly involve former which, following a public investigation, program aimed at giving wor . kers more and that it "cannot tolerate this policy Communist Party leader Edward Gie- will judge and censure the guilty," the say in the operation of state-run enter- any more." rek, ex-Premier Piotr Jaroszewicz and resolution said. prises. It said prices should be frozen until the other former leaders.. They were Solidarity chief Lech Walesa will also Delegates also voted to hold a "peo- government and Solidarity agree to any 'stripped ,of their party membership, face an apparently more radical national pie's" tribunal of former government raises, and demanded the government awards ,and other hohort by the Polish commission a sort of legislative corn officials blamed for Poland's "down- guarantee improved food supplies. Communist Party CongresS last July in -mittee made up of regional representa fall," if Communist authorities do not Also, it appealed to all workers not to an attempt to appease public anger. tives when he gets down to union prosecute them this year. ' strike unless ordered to do so by Solidari- Those leaders and other officials have business in the coming months. Former premier speaks against Iranian execution By FERESHTEH EMAMI Associated - Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) The man who served as 'These liberals are like tarantulas. They sting the prey, and then Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's first premier spoke in. they wait for it to die. Parliament yesterday against the mass executions of anti-government leftists, but Khomeini loyalists shouted him down, then walked out and later called for his death, reports from Tehran said. . Following the Parliament speech by former Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan, merchants in Tehran staged angry deputies asked their supporters to surround the marched to the Majlis building and declared that the a demonstration demanding that Bazargan and other building and chant "death to Bazargan." But by that "liberals who insultrthe people of this country, and the "liberals" be thrown out of the parliament, the Majlis, ..time, Bazargan who resigned as-prime minister late revolutionary organizations, should be purged from the state-controlled Tehran Radio said. -in 1979 had left and the debate vlas over, Sabaqian Islamic Majlis," Tehran Radio said. Bazargan called for an end to the firing squad said. "These liberals are like tarantulas. They sting the executions of Mujahedeen Khalq guerrillas, arguing. It was the first known public defense of the Mnjahe- they were not "the lackeys of the United States." prey and then they wait for it to die," Hojatoleslam deen, an Islamic-Marxist guerrilla group blamed in the ' ' Most deputies from the ruling Islamic Republican deaths of more than 300 Khomeini- loyalists since the Rezvani was quoted as saying by Tehran Radio, which Party walked out on the ex-prime minister's speech,. June 22 ousting of President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr. did not give the clergyman's first name. forcing Parliament Speaker Ali-Akbar Rafsanjani to During that same period, Khorneini's fundamentalist Sabaqian quoted Bazargan as telling the Majlis: "The call a recess, Tehran Radio said. Moslem regime had announced the executions of more young boys and girls involved in the street clashes have Hashem Sabaqian, a former member of Bazargan's than 1,000 people, many of them Mujahedeen. not been bred in the bosoms of American families, so Cabinet, said in a telephone interview from Iran that the The merchants, carrying posters of Khomeini, they cannot rightfully be called mercenaries. Does work have you watching the clock? Is the day making you a nervous wreck? Does school have you worn out? If you said yes to any of theabove, why not drop by. Sera Tec Bio where you can lay back and RELAX for 1 Y 2 hours or so and be PAID! In fact, by donating plasma you can earn $BO-$l2O a month. ft' , Zt il SERA TEC BIOLOGICALS 120 S. Allen St., Rear Hours: Mon.-Thurs., 8-6:30 p.m Fri., 8-3:30 p.m. 237-5761 234-1478 Sun. 1:00 to 5:00 Ra. „ Pi KAOOA.AIphA THE Souir.h" c i oNNA,. do iT AC I AIN • . WERE fißpi up! COLLEGE CONSUMER PARTY PRESENTS BARRY COMMONER 1980 CONSUMER PRES. CANDIDATE "POLITICS AT GRASSROOTS" THURS. OCT, Bth 7:30. pin HUB BALLROOM AD DONATED BY USG POLITICAL AFFAIRS R 268 —Hojatoleslam Rezvani, Iranian clergyman - UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Students of All Majors and Fields Invited Conte to our meetings to hear about our MBA and PhD Programs and .ask any questions about the curriculum, admission, financial aid, , and career opportunities available in the following fields of management:. • Finance Health Administration - Economics Public and Non Profit Marketing • Human Resources Accounting Management Science - General Management Policy Monday, October 12 • Contact Career Development & Placement Center for sign ups. Flop*EttomiNci . 'Bl