BEST STEAK HOUSE STEAK DINNERS NOW SERVING At Reasonable Prices F ILET-1.59 SIRLOIN-1.53 Above includes Baked Potato, Soalad, and Texas Toast page three tr4ArtAkp gttn tttl NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Page Three Tuesday, October 6, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Sadat chosen to succeed Egypt's Nasser STEAKBURGER-.79 Includes Baked Potato and Texas Toast . 217 S. STATE ST. Next to State Ttheater Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presents CACTUS FLOWER" by ABE BURROWSt OCTOBER 14-17 8:00 P.M.at Trueblood Theatre TICKET PRICES: $2.00 to $2.50 662-9405 P.O. Box 1993 Ann Arbor, Mich. 48106 CAIRO OP) - Anwar Sadat was designated Monday by leaders of Egypt's only political party to succeed Gamal Abdel Nasser as president in a move apparently aimed at avoiding a divisive power struggle. The nomination by the all-powerful executive committee of the Arab Socialist Union was tanta- mount to election of the 52-year-old Sadat, who has been serving as provisional president since Nasser died last Monday. Sadat was considered by many observers to be the least controversial of several contenders for Nasser's job. He was named vice president by Nasser last year in a governmental shakeup. They were old friends, Sadat having joined Nasser in the coup that toppled King Farouk 18 years ago. As president, Sadat will have the task of bal- ancing the left and right wings of the Egyptian regime, which Nasser succeeded in doing. The left is identified with Air Marshal Ali Sabry, a member of the executive committee who voted for Sadat. He is known for his close ties with Moscow. Zakaria Mohieddin, a former interior minister who holds no official post at present, is considered to be right-leaning and pro-Western mainly be- cause he advocates freer economic policies to at- tract foreign investment. When Nasser submitted his resignation follow- ing the disastrous defeat by Israel in the 1967 6- day war, he personally named Mohieddin as his successor. Sabry and Mohieddin had been considered the. two top contenders for the position vacated by Nasser's death. Sadat was host to Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and other world leaders who attended Nasser's funeral Thursday. Emotional, excitable, and a fierce nationalist, Sadat was completely loyal to his dead friend and leader, Nasser. Most observers doubt he will be able to fill the heroic roll that Nasser apparently had won with the Arab masses, but no doubts are expressed or his devotion to the independence and dignity of Egypt. Sadat collapsed on the day of Nasser's funeral and Cairo's official Middle East News Agency said he had suffered a heart attack. A govern- ment spokesman said later, however, that he was in excellent health. Sadat, a devout Moslem, is the son of a Suda- nese mother and an Egyptian father. He speaks English well. His wife is half-English. He was graduated from the Egyptian Military Academy and served in the signal corps until he was arrested and twice imprisoned of plotting against British rule. Sadat was reinstated in the army in 1951 and joined the officers' conspiracy that led to Farouk's ouster the next year. Shortly after the coup Sadat was named di- rector of army public relations and managing editor of Al-Gomhouria, the Arab Socialist Union's newspaper. In 1954 he was named interior minister but then dropped out of the Cabinet in 1956. He made a comeback in 1958 as secretary-gen- eral of the National Union and two years later became speaker of the National Assembly. The unanimous nomination by the union's eight-man executive committee went to the party's 150-member central committee. An offical party statement said the executive committee recommended that the National As- sembly meet in formal session Wednesday to en- dorse Sadat and that a national referendum be held Oct. 15. The president would be sworn in two days later. In the referendum, the only choice the voters would have would be to approve or disapprove the man named by the party and the assembly. I news briefs By The Associated Press NY hostages released after _ IkII' presents the R.F.D. BOYS III STONIGHT 15c TONIGHT 761-1451 1421 HILL '- 1 THE MUSICAL REVOLUTION HiAiRI BROADWAY WILL NEVER BE THE SAME! Box office open: Mon-Fri 9:30.8:30pm; Sat till 10pm; Sun 12-5pm Tickets also available at all major 1 L. HUDSON stores For Groun Rates: Call Carol High 836-3719 NEW FIGHTING broke out in northern Jordan yesterday between government troops and Palestinian guerrillas, according to a guerrilla communique issued in Beirut. Jordanian army sources said earlier that the guerrillas has begun to withdraw from the northern cities, but a new agreement allowed their militia and supplies to remain.E PRESIDENT NIXON ended his five-nation European tour yesterday with a swing through the showery Irish countryside. In Dublin a handful of dissenters threw eggs and other objects at his car from an otherwise applauding and cheering crowd. President Nixon arrived at Andrews Air Force Base last night. THE CHILEAN CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC party condi- tionally committed its congressmen Sunday night to Marxist presidential candidate Salvador Allende. A constitutional amendment must be passed guaranteeing that Allende's government will respect Chile's democratic system, for Allende to receive the needed support. The 75 Christian Democratic votes in the 200-member congress would assure election for Allende. BOLIVIAN PRESIDENT Alfredo Ovando Candia apparently weathered an attempt by the army chief of staff to overthrow him Sunday. "I want neither war nor bloodshed, but I am here to rule the destiny of the nation," the president told a crowd Sunday night. Gen. Rogelio Miranda demanded Ovando's resignation in aj Sunday morning broadcast, charging that the Ovando govern- ment "has frustrated the hopes of the people and the armed forces." * * * GREECE'S MILITARY RULERS received $168 million worth of military equipment from the United States in the last three years, despite the United States' publicly proclaimed selective arms embargo against that country. Defense Department spokesman said that some of the aid had been to shore up NATO, although the United States took the action unilaterally and did not consult any NATO allies. Lindsay NEW YORK (R) - After an ultimatum from Mayor John Lindsay, prisoners yesterday released the last of 32 hostages they seized during riots at five New York City jails. A hand- ful of inmates still held out in one jail, including nine Black Panthers on trial on charges of conspiracy to bomb and murder. Inmates are demanding lower bail, speedier trials and better prison conditions. The Panthers were among a band of 35 barricaded on the top floor of the Long Island City detention center. They were said to want their lawyers present to insure against any mistreatment after surrender. A HELMETED PRISON GUARDI yesterday while two others try to the Long Island City Jail. FIRST CASE: My Lai tri FT. HOOD, Tex. (AP) - After 22t years of investigation and charg-t es in the alleged My Lai massacrec of Vietnamese civilians, the first trial in the case is scheduled to1 begin today. However, there is a strong pos- sibility that the court-martial of Staff Sgt. David Mitchell will be moved to another Army post. The defense is expected to file a mo- 1 order """ " SALE ENDS SATURDAY, TOMMY THE WHO Sr OCTOBER 10 MAE WEST ORIGINAL )UND TRACKS ann arbor film cooperative PRESENTS WARREN BEATTY IN ARTHUR PENN'S MICKEY ON.E SHORT: A FILM BY BUSBY BERKLEY 75c-7 and 9:30-75c TONIGHT-Tuesday, Oct. 6th -Associated Press As Lindsay threatened to send hits a prisoner with a nightstick in 500 riot-equipped police and m grab him in the courtyard of corrections officers, most of the othier 338 prisoners in the Long Island City facility surrendered four days after they took control of the jail. They gave up the last three of the seven hostages they originally held. " " The mayor and Corrections Commissioner George Mcgrath thadpromised no reprisals against any of the inmates. tion for change on the ground However, one holdout at t h e that a new panel from which the Long Island City Jail shouted to members of the court are to be newsmen through a bullhorn, selected includes two colonels "Mayor Lindsay has lied. The whose selection raised objections guards are beating inmates merci- by the military judge in the case. lessly in the courtyard. They said Mitchell, 30, is charged with as- if they came down peacefully, the sault with intent to-commit mur- inmates would not be beaten, but der. The Army accuses him of they're getting beaten half to shooting "about 30" South Viet- death." namese civilians during an attack Newsmen from a vantage point on the hamlet of My Lai 4, March above the courtyard said they saw 16, 1968. a number of prisoners beaten and If convicted, he couli be sen- kicked by guards. tenced to 20 years at hard labor, The uprisings began at midday aishonorabledischargelandfor-last Thursday at the century-old, feiture of all pay and allowances, red-brick facility at Long Island Mitchell pleaded innocent and City. has denied seeing any massacre. See olirOhvnee r Friday, the rioting spread Seven soldiers have. been or- tothe Tombs, the men's detention dered court-martialed in the case, center in Manhattan, the Kew including Mitchell's platoon com- Gardens detention center in mander, 1st Lt. William L. Cal- Queens, and on Saturday to a ley, 27, of Miami, Fla. A pretrial Brooklyn jail. hearing for Calley is slated to Early Sunday, prison guards resume Oct. 13 at Ft. Benning, Ga. with clubs and tear gas battled into the Kew Gardens and Brook- lyn prisons and regained control. About 200 inmates and a dozen guards were injured. "AN IMMENSELY RO STYLE AND CRITICA Virgin And The Gypsy' is its goals! 17 A BEAUTIFUL AND NOTHING SHORT C PLEASURE. Fascinating s sual Yvette. Joanna Shim and memorable life in a remarkable talent. She b4 romanticism of girlhood w jQ ination of young womanh A J'~~ "'A finely made film. Alit etched portrait of the quie erotic daydreams in her eye Nero's snake-eyed gypsy, "No story-and no film-be absolutism than 'The Vir its boundaries is sown thes -the familial conventions annealing force of sex.,A D.H.GLawe'rLces THE VIRGIN AN {"$ I I Cambodians stop' attack on highway SAIGON (-) - Cambodian gov- ernment troops beat off yesterday the heaviest Communist attack so far on Phnom Penh's lifeline highway to the sea. But the vital route - Highway 4 to the nation's only deepwater port at Komgpong Som - along with at least four other major highways remained closed. And, 47 miles north of Phnom Penh, government troops w e r e forced to retreat from a village under Communist attack. The fresh fighting in Cambodia came as the country's National Assembly and Senate voted unan- imously yesterday to end the an- cient monarcy and install a West- ern-style republic in its place. The republic will be proclaimed Friday and will go into effect Nov. 1. The change apparently will have little immediate effect on life in Cambodia, now ruled by a mili- tary regime headed by Gen. Lon Nol as premier. The Lon Nol junta took over March 18 when the chief of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, w a s deposed i.n a bloodless coup while he was out of the country. He is now living in exile in Peking. i t 4 i I' Aud. A, AngellI Hall $698 SA $379 Check out our prices on 24 best sellers listed below OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK WATCH FOR SPECIAL SALE , ITEMS CHANGING WEEKLY4 0 .Iscount records 1235S5. UNIVERSITY 0 300 S. STATE 0 ANN ARBOR The Every MONDAY: Football Night, color TV happy hour prices Every TUESDAY: Apple Wine Night-reduced prices THURSDAY, OCT. 8: MERU N MANTIC MOVIE WITH .L INTELLIGENCE. 'The satisfying because it realizes -Vincent Canby.,N.Y. lmes J ENGROSSING FILM. OF MASTERLY. PURE tory of the sensitive and sen- kus has brought her to vivid erformance that reveals her ends the rebelliousness and ith the conviction and imag- OOd -JudithCristNew York Magazine he details delight-the finely et renegade girl, played with s by Joanna Shimkus; Franco all purpose and passion." -Newsweek Magazine tter reveals Lawrence's moral gin and the Gypsy'. 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