The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 16, 1981-Page 5 Soviet di o mats expelled from Egypt embassy. CAIRO, Egypt'(AP)- President Anwar Sadat's government expelled the Soviet ambassador to Cairo and six Soviet Embassy employees yesterday, ac- cusing them of plotting against Egypt by inciting Moslem-Christian strife. A Hungarian diplomat also was ordered out. The move, taken by the Egyptian Cabinet and an- nounced by the government news agency, appeared to be the most serious breach of Egyptian-Soviet relations since 1972 when Sadat expelled 17,000 Soviet advisers. IT FOLLOWED Sadat's speech Monday night ac- cusing the Soviet Union of being involved "head-on" in the strife between Moslem fundamentalists and the Coptic Christian minority in Egypt and declaring that 12 of the 1,536 Egyptians arrested in connection with that strife had been Soviet-inspired. Many of those arrested are Sadat's political foes. A Cabinet statement carried by the official news agency said Ambassador Vladimir Polyakov and the others had 48 hours to leave Egypt. It also said a Hungarian diplomat had been ejected on charges of being "involved" in the religious conflict in Egypt. THE CABINET also ordered the closing of the Soviet military liaison bureau in Cairo and its Egyp- tian counterpart in Moscow, expelled two Soviet journalists, terminated contracts of Soviet advisers in Egypt and reduced the overall Soviet diplomatic presence here to match Egypt's in Moscow. The two Soviet reporters were identified as an em- ployee of the official Soviet news agency Tass and a reporter for the Soviet newspaper Trud. Both were ordered to leave within 48 hours. A Soviet Embassy employee, reached by telephone, said, "We have no comment," and said senior officials were not available. EGYPTIAN FOREIGN Ministry sources said Egypt had about 10 diplomats in the Soviet capital. The Egyptian ambassador to Moscow, Samih Anwar, was appointed in late 1978, but he has never taken up his post in Moscow. The expulsion was the fourth reduction of the Soviet presence in Egypt in the past five years and came short of a total break in relations with the Kremlin, Egypt's leading protector during the rule of the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser. The Cabinet, after studying relevant files on Soviet "movements" in Egypt, noted that the Soviets were "engaged in recruiting agents in Egypt ... exploiting religious strife, and influencing the spread and escalation of the sectarian conflict," which has left 70 dead in the past year. IT ALSO SAID they "coordinated with local leftist elements in Egypt, and with Arab countries opposed to Egypt's peace moves with Israel, to mount publicity campaigns defaming the regime achievements." According to the news agency, the Cabinet found the Soviets "coordinated their moves totally with in- telligence services of a number of East bloc em- bassies . . . and elements of local Communist' movements" in plots against Egypt. The Cabinet announcement said the Egyptian Foreign Ministry had "often" warned Soviet diplomats to adhere to the rules of diplomatic con- duct in Egypt, and despite the advice and the &- pulsion of other diplomats previously, members 6fP the mission in Cairo continued "their plot against tfrt regime and the aspirations of Egypt." I ,i, - , Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS The cube is back Pa .ThCbeadbere vdfrreasfrmrehaawekFans of the Cube may rest assured that the local landmark isback in working order in its proper setting on Regents Plaza. The Cube had been removed for repairs for more than a week. 1S.army eominander attacked in W. Germany From AP and UPI HEIDELBERG, West Germany- Terrorists firing guns and anti-tank grenades yesterday 'ambushed and slightly wounded the commander in chief of the U.S. Army in Europe as he drove to work in an armor-plated car. The attack against Gen. Frederick Kroesen Jr., 58, was the fourth on U.S. personnel in West Germany since the end of August, when the ultra-leftist Red Army Faction proclaimed "war ag inst imperialist war." WEST GERMAN police said the at- tack took place at 7:18 a.m. as the general was riding to work in a green, armored Mercedes along a suburban street near the Neckar River in the nor- theastern- part of the city. The terrorists, firing from about 200,yards, hit the general's car as it was stopped for a traffic signal. The grenades hit the trunk of the car and exploded, causing heavy damage and peppering Kroesen and his wife, Rowene, with flying glass. Police said the rear of the general's Mercedes limousine was struck with at least one grenade believed to be "of Russian origin." They said the car's armor plating probably saved its four occupants from serious injury or death. IN WASHINGTON, Pentagon spokesman Henry Catto deplored the attack but said he had no information suggesting the Russians were behind it. The terrorists, lying in ambush in a wooded slope near a traffic intersection on the outskirts of Heidelberg, escaped. No group immediately claimed-respon- sibility but speculation focused on the Red Army Faction. In Bonn, the West German gover- nment condemned the attack and pledged to "do everything for the security of U.S. troops who are stationed for the defense of Western Europe." Chancellor Helmut Schmidt told Kroesen in a message that "all upstan- ding Germans condemn most sharply this terrorist attack." Karsten Voight, a Social Democratic member of 'parliament and frequent critic of U.S. defense policies, said the attack was "apparently aimed at upset- ting the German-American relation- ship." In Brussels, NATO Secretary General Joseph Luns said he was shocked at the attack "but much relieved to learn that there were no serious injuries."~ The attack came one day ,,after the visit to West Germany of Secretary of State Alexander Haig, himself the target of an assassination attempt in Belgium two years ago. Haig, at the time NATO's supreme commander, escaped injury when a bomb exploded beneath his car near Casteau, Belgium. Teenage 'chastity' bill passed without debate WASHINGTON (UPI)- Without a debate in either House or Senate, and unnoticed by most of Congress and the public, the so-called teenage chastity bill has quietly become the law of the land. The bill, officially titled "Public Health Service Act amendments relating to adolescent pregnancy and parenthood," was enacted in July as a part of the massive 1982 budget reconciliation bill. THE NEW LAW is intended to meet charges that present legislation ac- tually may encourage teenage abor- tions and parental deception. It seeks to deal with both the pregnant girl and her male partner, and to involve the paren- ts of both. The bill requires involving the parents in cases where a teenager is receiving help, and encourages involvement of the family and the community to help adolescents understan the im- plications of premarital sex, pregnancy and parenthood. THE BILL authorizes $30 million an- nually for three years, starting in fiscal 1982. One-third of the funds will be used for "scientific research on causes and consequences of premarital adolescent sexual relations." The remaining two-thirds of the money is earmarked for "necessary services"-as determined by the Department of Health and Human Ser- vices-for pregnant teenagers and teenage parents, of for prevention programs. "CRITICS OF the existing program charge that these two aspects may have the unintended effect of encouraging teenage abortion and deceiving of parents, and this could be seen as un- dermining family life," said a report accompanying the new law. In the popular comic strip "Doonesbury," Zonker's companion said he assumed the bill would discourage promiscuity by providing for identification checks outside Brooke Shields' movies and hiring sound trucks to cruise neighborhoods on Saturday nights, blaring "Cut that out!" ANN A"0 t2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th A..o f, by 2 1.9700. WINNER t91 ACADEMY AWARD BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM 'The Funniest Tenderest Loe 04- Story Of The Year Daily-6:50, 9:30 Wed-1:20, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30 S O Wth this entire ad one ticket $$50.Good Mon thru Thurs. Eve. 1Good thru 9/17/81 "M" 00 EVERY NIGHT 3, LOW PRICE Francois Trauffaut's a ls Metr ~flfl375 N. MAPLE 769-1300 cI!7:ARGAIN HOURS: $2 '1 6 PM Mon.-Fri. $2 '-11 3 PM Sat. & Sun. What happened to AN AMERICAN DAILY WEREWOLF IN 1:30 him should happen LONDON 3:30 THE MONSTER5:30 to you. MOVIE 7:30 A UNIVERSAL 9:30 ®RELEASE " wo hours of Srter:N ow DAILY non-stop thrills*Bargain Shows -Rex Reed 3:30 F THE4:15 LOST ARK 7O 6:0 ® A P RM UT 3 8:00 _______________ 10:00 131/2 MURDERS+ SHOWS 1423 LAUGHS= , DAILY: ," Student 345 _ RBodies,' .5:45- RA PARAMOUNT.47:45 PICTURE Li~ee ii 1981! SEPTEMBER '18 8:30. NO; COVER . CHARGE, The University Club "i Michigan Union t i 4. . - v;..-...-..-.- - --...-,.-...- --.-...-..... ...:... Young claims, landslide victory in~ prmr DETROIT (UPI) - Mayor Coleman Young, the street-wise politician who became the first black mayor in the nation's sixth largest city, claimed a landside victory yesterday over 10 oponents in a primary election. The victory, which came as no sur- prise, almost certainly assures the flamboyant 63-year-old Democrat a win in the Nov. 3 general election and a third-term in office. YOUNG, BOOSTED by a familiar name, a $932,000 campaign fund and opposition from unknowns, claimed his easiest victory ever despite his support for an income tax increase earlier in they year. ;:t; ,: r"':" :isy: :":yi {: iiil:";:i' t : }":::: In fact, the mayor was so certain of a victory at the polls that he spent most of the campaign stumping for his favorite candidates. in more closely contested municipal races. RETURNS IN the city came slowly with key indicator precincts not showing until 2 hours after the polls closed. Young's overwhelming vic- tories in those precincts ranged from 98 percent to 35 percent in one heavily white area. The indicator precincts also showed City Clerk James Bradley holding a lead over Shirley Robinson Hall, who was backed by Young, and Joseph Madison, director of the NAACP's voter education project.