Westerners say Sadat's security was lacking- By TOM BALDWIN Associated Press Writer CAIRO, Egypt (AP) Westerners who witnessed the assassination of President Anwar Sadat say his security forces failed to react to protect the president. They also raised questions about the official account that only four attackers were involved. Military attaches gnd diplomats who attended the parade Tuesday told The Associated Press they were surprised, in some cases shocked, because Sadat's security forces failed to take action to safeguard Sadat. Some diplomats questioned a government version that the murder team was limited to four men, three of whom were said to be civilians who masqueraded as soldiers and sneaked onto an army truck for the parade. "It has to raise questions," said a Western military attache who saw the attack. Another diplomat who was there said of Sadat's security men, "It was not a professional reaction at all." The Western sources would not be quoted by name. Photographers at the scene said that as soon as the gunfire started, some security officers turned their weapons on the cameramen and announced, "no pictures." A security ring did not appear around the area .until 15 minutes after the first shots were fired. In addition to Sadat, five people were killed and at least 28 wounded. No complete state/nation/world daily collegian Even U.S. dollars couldn't save Sadat By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The United States spent .millions over the past four administrations in an Attempt to help ensure the safety of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, slain Tuesday as he 'reviewed a military parade. in Cairo. The assistance, including the loan of AWACS radar planes to protect Sadat on some of his travels, was confirmed yesterday by past and present administration officials. And it .had been acknowledged, in part, by Sadat himself. "We provided training and assistance over various times over the past few years," said Dean Fischer, the. State Department spokesman. "It is a fact we were providing assistance to help his security," said a former , high ranking Official of the Carter administiation. He was one of several former and current U.S. officials inter viewed who asked not to be identified by name. Another high Carter administration official said the United. States helped train Sadat's body guards, recommended and perhaps provided sen sor and other intruder detection devices at Sadat's homes, and made . available a highly sensitive and secret communications system that guaranteed intercept-free conversations. The United States also provided Airborne Warn Reagan gets more AWACS support AP poll still shows odds against sale By JIM ADAMS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON ( AP) President Reagan picked up more Senate support yesterday for his sale of AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia but an Associated Press count shows the lineup still against him, 57 to 30. Republican Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas met with Reagan and then became the eighth senator in two days to speak out in behalf of the $8.5-billion package. "I think the assassination of President Sadat makes it crucial that we reach out to all moderate governments" in the region, the senator said. She said the United States should make the sale and "take a gamble that it will be productive" in enlisting Saudi support for the U.S. Middle East peace initiative. But the AP count now shows 50 senators committed against the sale and seven others leaning against it. It shows 21 senators firmly in favor of the sale and nine leaning that way The remaining 13 senators say they are uncommitted. Two separate compromise efforts are under way, however. And Senate Democratic Leader Alan Cranston, a leading opponent, said that Reagan may be able to sway several opponents to his side. Cranston said he remains confident. the sale will be defeated. And the AP count shows that if the president can win a Solidarity leader Lech Walesa waves his arm as he casts his vote at the Solidarity leadership meeting in Gdansk, Poland figure on the number of killed and wounded has been issued. One Western military attache said it was curious there was no sharpshooter atop and behind the president's posi tion, as is usually the case, to defend against attack. News film taken from a tower at one side of the reviewing stand showed Sadat's attackers were able to charge right up to the edge of the chest-high barrier in front of him and repeatedly fire their automatic rifles at point-black range, without anyone apparently returning fire. There were a few frames that showed security guards apparently running away or simply standing nearby without drawing their weapons. But in a television film, one security guard could be seen firing his pistol at three fleeing attackers without hitting them. At least three Western military attaches who saw the attack at close range said there was no effective return fire. There were some shots fired by guards who in some cases were non-Egyptians protecting their own diplomats, two attaches said. Diplomatic sources said the U.S. Embassy here has ordered all its staff who attended the parade to file reports on what they saw, with an eye toward trying to evaluate the performance of Sadat's security, which had received Amer ican advice on how to protect Sadat. It has also been learned that Western military attaches are trading observations and their consensus is that the ing and Control System (AWACS) surveillance on several Sadat trips, thelormer official said. The cost ran into the millions of dollars but no precise estimate was immediately available. Former President Richard Nixon gave Sadat a $2-million, armor-plated helicopter in 1974. And one Reagan administration oficial said that while it was "primarily a gesture,'•' it was given on the advice of Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger "who believed that helicopters, provided great security." The training of Sadat's bodyguards began in the Nixon and Ford administrations. One official said it consisted "more or less of standard Secret Service type training." He said it included crowd control, defensive driving techniques, forming of motorcades, se curing the presidential residences, and of tech niques to improve intelligence gathering to thwart assassination attempts. "He lived in so many different houses, some of them on the beach, some in the countryside, that it was important to have equipment installed, including sensors and monitors," the official said. The communications equipment was intended to permit Sadat to travel in Egypt and elsewhere without broadcasting his whereabouts to potential enemies, the official said. stunning come-from-behind victory, it will be a squeak er. With House rejection virtually assured next week, the president will have to win all 13 of the uncommitted senators and turn around at least seven of the Senate opponents to save the sale. Assuming all 100 senators voted, it would take 51 to kill the deal. However, the procedure requires just a simple majority of those present and voting. The $8.5 billion sale, the biggest single arms sale in U.S. history, goes through Oct. 31 unless both the House and Senate approve veto resolutions against it by then. The sale includes five Airborne Warning and Control System radar planes, plus 1,177 Sidewinder missiles and fuel pods and fuel tankers to increase the firepower and range of 62 F-15 jet fighters. Reagan stands a chance of winning over four Senate opponents and one undecided senator in one swoop in one of the compromise efforts under way, although a Senate aide said that effort is only in the discussion stage Rich Galen, an aide to Sen. Dan Quayle, R-Ind., said that Quayle and the other four Republicans met with White House officials on the possibility yesterday. The five senators proposed that the president guar antee the Senate in a letter that he would seek over the next four years to win specific Saudi agreements on ,17: 1 • - a r Egyptian soldiers and workers dig the temporary grave at the tomb to the Unknown Warrior where President Anwar Sadat will be buried Saturday (above). Later, Sadat will be moved to masoleum which is being constructed nearby. Weeping villagers grieve for the assassinated leader outside Sadat's country villa near Cairo (right). security and operation of the planes, and a Saudi agreement to cooperate in some sort of Middle East peace effort The Saudis have already agreed to most of the conditions but have their own eight-point peace plan and have shown no willingness to cooperate in the U.S.- backed Camp David plan for phased peace steps. The five senators include Quayle and Sen. Mack Mattingly, R-Ga., who are leaning against the sale; Sens. Bob Kasten, R-Wis., and Slade Gorton, R-Wash., who are co-sponsors of a veto resolution against the sale, and Sen. Frank H. Murkowski, R-Alaska, who is undecided. They met with James A. Baker, Reagan's chief of staff and Max Friedersdorf, the president's chief con gressional liaison assistant. Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker also sat in on the meeting. The second compromise effort was endorsed by the president yesterday and led by Sens. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and John Warner, R-Va., supporters of the sale. A Senate resolution introduced by Nunn and Warner would urge the Saudis to agree to the security conditions the administration says they have already accepted. The resolution would also express a Senate desire that all U.S. support for the Saudi planes be terminated if the conditions are violated, and that the Saudis "promote peace and stability." Egyptian version of the killing contains big holes. The attaches say that in addition to at least three men photographed charging and shooting at Sadat, two or three others stayed aboard the truck and poured sustained fire at the president. In addition, the TV film showed the driver of the assas sins' truck sitting in the cab. The other man in the front of the truck jumped out, hurled a grenade toward Sadat and quickly got back in the cab. This suggested eight men were involved. Col. Peter Rosser, the British military attache, said the day after the attack that he believed he saw seven or eight men involved. Vice President Hosni Mubarak, named as Sadat's succes sor, told reporters that Sadat was killed by four men not six as has previously been reported led by a Moslem fanatic. Defense Minister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala said one of the assassins was an officer, and three were, civilians including a retired officer who masqueraded as soldiers on active duty. One attache said it was "inconceivable" for civilians to have slipped unnoticed into the parade, as Ghazala said, because they would have been spotted by the other soldiers. The only way this could have happened, said the attache, was if officers at least at company level had known about it. He said he and other Western attaches agreed that Walesa secures majority By THOMAS W. NETTER Associated Press Writer GDANSK, Poland (AP) Solidarity leader Lech Walesa won a hard battle at a national leadership meeting yesterday and secured a moderate majority on Solidarity's governing presid ium. After the meeting of the national commission, a representa tive body of regional union leaders elected at the union's just ended first national convention, Walesa appeared excited and happy. He told reporters that Solidarity eventually would win its battle for access ,to the state-controlled news media. Although the exact split between radicals and moderates on the presidium was not immediately clear, the radical-leaning commission apparently chose a presidium to Walesa's liking. In Warsaw, the government press agency Interpress said the Communist Party's policymaking Central Committee would meet next Wednesday and Thursday. It would be the first meeting of the 200-meifiber committee since the Solidarity convention. Walesa, a moderate who is popular with the rank-and-file, won more than 55 percent of the convention delegates' votes to defeat three challengers in the election for a two-year term national chairman. He had been under attack by union mili tants, who succeeding in getting radicals elected to the national commission. Sources at the national commission meeting yesterday said Walesa's bid to chair that session was rejected. They said the meeting erupted in shouting and anger. collusion between Egypt's top generals and the assassins was highly unlikely because the generals were all placed in the line of fire and some were wounded. However, he said the attaches speculated that the assas sins may have bribed an officer at comp . any level without disclosing why they wanted to ride in the parade. Several other diplomatic sources said Sadat's guards had never been trained to look for threats from within the Another unanswered question is where the assassins got their Soviet-designed weapons. The semi-official newspaper Al-Abram yesterday quoted the chief of Egypt's security as saying the guns and grenades came from Upper ,Egypt, which includes an area in the southern provinces that is infamous among police and military officers for the avail ability. of guns stolen from nearby garrisons. Diplomats and witnesses are at odds about whether the attack might have been timed to coincide with a jet flyover. The assassins stormed from their truck just as fighter jets were screaming overhead and almost everyone was looking skyward. The security chief, Maj. Gen. Mahmoud el Masri, blamed the slow reaction of his guards on the breakdowns of a motorcycle and another military vehicle that preceded the assassins' truck. AP Laserphotos Shuttle may take off Nov. 4 WASHINGTON (AP) With re pairs to the fuel-damaged space shuttle Columbia almost completed, the space agency yesterday set a new launch date of Nov. 4 for the ship's oft-delayed second orbital flight. Columbia is the first spacecraft scheduled to make a return trip to orbit, and the flight will be a major test of its designed capability to make repeated journeys into space. Astronauts Joe Engle and Richard UPS sues to block postal hike WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) United Parcel Service has filed a federal lawsuit to block a first-class stamp price hike, contending it would allow U.S. Postal Service parcel post rates to be kept "artificially low," a UPS spokesman said yesterday. The price of a first-class stamp is set to increase Nov. 1 from 18 cents to 20 cents, but its parcel post rates will not increase. Dan Buckley, spokesman for the private nationwide parcel post serv- Twelve members of the presidium were elected by the national commission. Walesa, as national chairman, and the Solidarity leaders from Poland's six major regions also will have seats, bringing the full membership to 19. The sources said Jacek Merkel, national press spokesman Janusz Onyszkiewicz and economic adviser Grzegortz Palka were among the Walesa allies who won spots on the presidium. Several radicals failed to gain election, including Jan Rul ewski, one of the Bydgoszcz unionists whose beating by police last March sparked a tense confrontation between Solidarity and the governnient. Rulewski also ran unsuccessfully against Walesa for national chairman. Bogdan Lis, a top union leader and Walesa supporter, did not win election to the presidium, apparently because of his involvement in talks with the government about a cigarette price hike. When the increase was announced Saturday, during the union congress, it enraged many of the delegates, who threatened to call strikes. Walesa said Lis would still play a major role in the union leadership. The outcome of the presidium voting is expected to determine what course the year-old labor federation takes in dealing with the Communist authorities. Solidarity will start negotiating with the government soon on its demand that prices be frozen until a plan of economic reforms can be reached by the government with union appro val. The union's congress adopted a sweeping, 34-point economic, social and political program before adjourning Wednesday. Friday, Oct. 9 8 Truly will fly the five-day mission The new launch date was set after officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration reviewed repairs being made to the craft as a result of a damaging fuel spill Sept. 22. The accident forced postpone ment of a planned Oct. 9 launch. The spill of the caustic nitrogen tetroxide fuel occurred as crews were pumping it into a fuel tank with Columbia on the launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Fla. ice based in Greenwich, Conn., said the price difference for parcel post "is so great there is the danger of package diversion" to the govern ment service. "Because we do not have govern-• ment subsidies, we must charge rates based on our cost.'' While Postal Service parcel rates will not be altered until 1984, the postmaster general has said, Bucke ly noted that UPS will, have to in crease its rates as costs increase. Reagan holds service with U.S. funeral delegation By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) With three former presidents at his side yesterday, President Rea gan said the American people stand together with the people of Egypt in mourning Anwar Sadat and in "rededicating ourselves to the cause for which he gave his life " In a brief ceremony at the south side of the White House, Reagan bade farewell to the Ameri can delegation to Sadat's funeral Saturday a delegation that included former presidents Car ter, Ford and Nixon. It was the first time this century and possibly ever that four men who had•been president had met. Directing remarks at those who rejoiced at the Egyptian president's death, Reagan said, "In life you feared Anwar Sadat, but in death you must fear him more." Hours before the American delegation left for Cairo, Reagan invited the slain Egyptian leader's successor, Hosni Mubarak, on a state visit early next year Reagan issued the invitation through Ashraf Ghorbal, the Egyptian ambassador here, when the envoy visited the Oval Office yesterday to receive Reagan's condolences on the assassina tion. British will not over reform with The president, in a voice barely audible to reporters, told the ambassador that since Sadat's death Tuesday,' "depression settles on me. You get busy doing something, and then it comes back again. It's a tragedy. How useless, how sense less." In a meeting also attended by Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and Richard V. Allen, the president's national securiy adviser, Reagan also stressed that the United States' relationship with Egypt "is from nation to nation," an indication that it would not be affected by Sadat's death. Haig was the ranking administration official in the U.S. delegation to Sadat's funeral. Also in the delegation was Henry Kissinger, the former secretary of state. The three former presidents met with Reagan at the White House and then flew by helicopter from the South Lawn to Andrews Air Force Base, where they boarded a presidential jet and left about 7:50 p.m. EDT for the flight to Egypt. Before the three former chief executives left after spending a half-hour at the White House, Reagan, along with Mrs. Reagan and Mrs. Car ter, were joined by Vice President George Bush and his wife, Barbara, in the Blue Room. As the men stood around in a circle, with their wives off to the side, Reagan raised his glass and made a toast: "Ordinarily I would wish you happy talk IRA landing but you're all Navy men so I wish you bon voyage." Nixon and Ford told Reagan he made a wise decision in not going, to Cairo, White House officials said later. The officials, who asked not to be identified, said it was not clear if Carter expressed an opinion The White House said Reagan and Bush were not going because of security reasons. The five men talked for 10 to 15 minutes about the Middle East and about Sadat and "the heroic nature of the man," one official said. He de scribed the conversation as "fairly animated" and said the atmosphere in the White House and earlier on the helicopter ride was "good, warm." Carter, on his way from the South Lawn to the helicopter, shook hands with several reporters and said "this is a sad occasion." Nixon, looking tanned, and Ford headed straight for the helicopt er. The Reagans escorted them to the waiting aircraft and then walked back to the White House, pausing to wave from a red carpet. Reagan also had invited the top four congressio nal leaders to join the delegation but they decided against attending the funeral, as did Reagan and Vice President Bush, whose aides cited security fears as the reason. While funeral plans were being prepared in BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) Brit l ain insisted yesterday that it would not negotiate with jailed Irish nationalists over the new prison reform package. The American ambassador to Britain, meanwhile, met with leaders of the major political parties during his first official visit to Northern Ireland. Lord Gowrie, the British minister responsible for prisons here, said he would visit Maze prison near Belfast, but declined to say when. "When I go in it will not be for the purpose of negotiation nor to add to the substance of Tuesday's statement," Gowrie said. Britain's take-ot-or-leave package of reforms was announced Tuesday, three days after the collapse of the 7-month hunger strike by Irish nationalist prison ers in the Maze demanding special status. Ten men Trip a journalist today. Jeff Ruiz Division Recruiting Coordinator Getty Oil Company Central Exploration & Production Division P.O. Box 3000 Tulsa, Oklahoma 74102 (918) 560.6307 Getty Oil Company A m n l 7tOual opportunity employer, Egypt, riot police and Moslem worshippers clashed in the city of Assyut, 240 miles south of Cairo. The Reagan administration, meanwhile, stood by Haig's statement Wednesday that he was encouraged by the continuity of Egypt's policies. "There is every indication the Egyptian govern ment is moving forward in its constitutional process," said David R. Gergen, Reagan's assis tant for communications. Gergen, the chief White House spokesman, said he did not wish to "make any statement of concern about internal developments" in Egypt, meaning the reports of fighting. Reaga'n gave Ghorbal a framed color photo graph of Sadat taken while the Egyptian presi dent visited Washington in August. Reagan is in the background in the picture. "He was very kind to reminisce over the recent visit of President and Mrs. Sadat," Ghorbal said outside the White House after the meeting. "He assured me that the relationship (between the United States and Egypt) solid as it is ... will continue to grow " He said the relationship "is the cornerstone of all our efforts to bring peace and stability" to the Middle East. Ghorbal confirmed Reagan's invitation to Mu barak but offered no immediate reply. died on the fast U.S. Ambassador John J. Louis Jr., who took his post in London May 15, was making a "routine familiarization visit," a spokesman for the U.S. Consulate here said. Louis, at the start of a three-day stay, met with leaders of the four main local political parties the Rev. lan Paisley and James Molyneaux, both Protes tants; John Hume of the Roman Catholic Social Democratic and Labor Party, and Oliver Napier of the Alliance Party, which attempts to cross the sectarian divide. Meanwhile, 400 protesting Maze prisoners from the outlawed Irish Republican Army and the allied Irish National Liberation Army, still have not said whether they will accept the British package. Prisoners Your Chance For Distinction \ot Extinction! For YOU this weekend at The • irt*Pß , 0 41. TODAY: RED ROSE HAPPY HOUR COTILLION Double Feature 5 and 10 p.m. SATURDAY: The world's one and only sti•PHYRST PHAMIYA "... Ain't You Glad We Got A Saturday Night!!" .., ( .i, .lir, l;.. When you started school, you decided right then and there that you wanted to do some thing different—something with challenge, something that would take you as far as you could go. It seems that we have something in common, because when we got into the oil business, we set the same Thais, and now we're meeting energetic people like you to propel us into the 21st century If you're interested in a full fledged career as a GEOLOGIST, GEOPHYSICIST, RESERVOIR ENGINEER, PETROLEUM ENGINEER OR LANDMAN, contact your Placement Office for on-campus interview dates, or call collect or write to us TODAY Both full-time and summer posi tions are available. Getty is a company that sets no limits on its employees. We allow you and your work to achieve the title "distinctive"— and frankly, that's a word we like to hear. The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 9, 1981-9 Ghorbal and his wife accepted an invitation to fly to Egypt on the airplane carrying the U.S. delegation. In addition to the Haig and the three former presidents, the delegation included Defense Sec retary Caspar W. Weinberger, U.N. Ambassadot Jeane Kirkpatrick, Army Chief of Staff Gen, Edward C. Meyer. The group also included singer Stevie Wonder and Sam Brown, a 14-year-old from Liberty, S.C.; who spent a week in Egypt in 1979 after a letter he wrote to Sadat caught the Egyptian leader's attention. • House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, D-Mass.; House Minority Leader Bob Michel, R-I11.; Senate Majority Leader Howard. H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn.; and Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D- W.Va., each turned down the White House invita; tion. Members of the congressional delegation s according to another White House spokesman; included House Majority Leader Jim Wright, DL Texas; Sen. Charles Percy, R-111., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C.; Sen. Claiborne Pell, D- R.I. ; Rep. Clement J. Zablocki, D-Wis., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Mich. taking part in the 5 1 / 2 -year-old protest refuse to wear prison clothes and wrap themselves only in blankets The protesters demanded the right to wear their own clothes instead of prison-issued garb, to asso ciate freely, to choose what work to do in the prison, more mail and visitors, and full remission of sentence a 50 percent reduction in sentences given to all prisoners who obey the rules. The reform package granted the demand to wear their own clothes and said prison work could be redefined to include educational pursuits. It refuses them free association, but hinted the prisoners may be allowed to have "limited" association in exercise and recreation rooms. No mention was made of increased mail and visits. ..ik) : .‘\. , i 1:,' 1 ; . 4 'i :tr 1 v . 41