.4 Page 8-Friday, April 11, 1980-The Michigan Daily Shah infuriates Sadat's enemies Inaugural event in honor of President and Mrs. Harold Shapiro The University of Michigan BAROQUE TRIO KEITH BRYAN,flute JACOB KRACHMALNICK, violin JEROME JELINEK, violoncello MARILYN MASON, harpsichord performing works of: Telemann, Quantz, C. P. Bach and J.S. Bach SUNDiY, APRIL 13-2:30 p.m. G- MUSEUM OF ORT Admission complimentary CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - When President Anwar Sadat granted asylum to the deposed shah of Iran he gave his own opponents more ammunition. But he does not appear to have created any new enemies.' The critics in Egypt and elsewhere, who have demanded the shah leave Egypt, have been attacking Sadat and his policies for years. The presence here of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who was forced out of Iran by a fundamen- talist Islamic revolution more than a year ago, has given -them one more 010001. Singles or Partners Starts Friday, April 11 6:45 Other Classes:, Call: 668-6486 Tap DANCE SPACE 621 E. William corner S. State argument for attacking the gover- nment. THE MOST notable recent opposition has been from young Islamic fun- damentalists who have seized upon the shah's presence to take their views into the open. In one case they clashed violently with police in the town of Assyut, 235 miles south of Cairo. The fundamentalists demand that the government abandon Egypt's secular system and institute the Koran, the Moslem holy book, as the law of the land. That would require such an upheaval of established procedure and behavior that it would amount to a call for overthrow of the government. They want an end to Egypt's peace treaty with Israel, and an end to Sadat's pro-Western course - including efforts to shift the economy from rigid state control to free enterprise. HELMI GAZZAR, a 25-year-old student who calls himself the "prince of princes" of all the Moslem fundamen- talists in Egypt, recently told reporters that Egypt's fundamentalist movement had not been influenced by the Islamic revival in Iran. The new student demonstrations have raised the question of whether the religious zealots receive support - and if so how much - from Arab nations opposed to Sadat because of the treaty with Israel. Although the fundamen- talists' numbers appear to be growing, they are still a minority among Egyp- tians in general, and even among students. SAUDI ARABIA, Iraq, Syria, or Kuwait have cut off economic assistan- ce to Egypt, but none had any par- ticular quarrel with the shah when he was in power. They have been silent on the shah's presence here, and have maintained reasonably good relations with the Iranian revolutionaries, who; took over in February 1979. Iraq, bitterly opposed to peace with Israel, is now occupied in open confron- tation with the Tehran regime in a dispute over ownership of strategic Persian Gulf islands, and armies are on the alert on both sides of the border. Iran, angered by Egypt's aid to the ousted monarch, seized on the Assyut clash here and a later Moslem rally to call on the people of Egypt to rise and overthrow their president. Most Egyp- tians appear to have ignored the exhor- tation. THE SHAH, who underwent surgery at a military hospital recently, doesn't, appear to be an issue to most Egyp- tians. The state-controlled media have aroused some favorable public feeling by reminding Egyptians that the shah helped then when Egypt needed oil and cash during and after the 1973 war with Israel. The Moslem right is by far the most potentially dangerous element for Sadat. It can, with appeals to religious sentiments, inflame crowds, even if only temporarily. Sadat's other opposition comes from the left, and purely on ideological grounds. Perhaps because it has nb religious component in this over- whelmingly Moslem country, it has fallen flat in recent years. Voters OK MSA fee incr~ease (Continued from Page 1) a rent strike or an attempt to persuade the University or City Council to ad- dress student housing concerns to a greater extent. Independent Students Party (ISP) presidential candidate Bob Redko said he thought a major problem with the election was that voters didn't know the preferential voting system could be used for president/vice-president slates as well as for representatives. Redko and Peggy O'Dell finished fourth behind PAC/BSU, SABRE, and the Realistic party. Realistic presiden- tial candidate Mike Ryngaert said he hopes Breakstone continues his in- volvement with the MSA course evaluation project, and said academic counseling should be another high priority. Realistic vice-presidential candidate Tom McDade said "They're (MSA members) going to have to watch out for us because we're going to be back next year." George Majoros, vice-presidential candidate for GATOR (A Great Alter- native 'to Outmoded Representation) said he hopes the new Assembly will work toward abolishing large party domination of MSA. "Three people (GATOR's three me'mbers) working against 30 people don't have a chance,"' he said. All election results are unofficial until after the Central Student Judiciary cer- tification hearing Sunday at 3 p.m. ENDS TOMORROW! r ..H.7 ":i ,f+ " .')' :' 4 ± .i7' HT :f ,. .. : :''. h_ f.,l~ ti I .y . - ^ M.J : 'i:: ' " - j i : .CS , i ,t" at "(1' 1. ig" 7r1: , L, &ETO 11'V4- '-J- I I 2 "t . y ) /\ / r h I I,. .....just look for the red tags on the shelves 20% off list price on all new hardcover and paperback books in our trade books department....... tuesday, april 8 through saturday, april 12 .... featuring the New York Times bestsellers, and ;- i