The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 13, 1981-Page 7 Soviets tell U.S. not to meddle in Egypt Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily Q USED RECORDS 663-3441 --614Packard We buy and sell used records. Jazz Classical Soundtracks- Rock, Tickets available for il Prism Productions MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union warned the United States yesterday to stay out of Egyptian affairs, saying U. S. interference has increased tension in the Middle East after the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. "What is happening around Egypt cannot but affect the interests of the Soviet Union's security and it will at- tentively follow the development of events," said a statement released by the Soviet Tass new agency. IN CAIRO, an Egyption foreign ministry statement rejected Moscow's charges that Washington was interfering in its affairs and accused the Kremlin of attempting to impose its "hegemony" over the Middle East. The Egyptian statement said U.S.- Egyptian ties were "relations of frien- dship and cooperation, based on mutual respect and the people's freedom of decision making." THE SOVIET message was ad- dressed to the government of the United States. The Soviets were upset over the movement of U.S. naval units in the Middle East after Sadat's assassination last Tuesday and Secretry of State Alexander Haig's pledge to bolster the U S. military presence to help Egypt and Sudan fight a threat by Libyan leader Col. Moammar K. Hadafy. Analysts said they saw the statement as another shove in the superpowers' longterm jostling for advantage in the Middle East. "They're telling the Americans to be on their toes," one analyst said. i Sadat's assassins face trial, possible execution EGYPTIAN DEFENSE Minister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala gestures duri interview yesterday in which he said that all four suspects in Pres Sadat's assassination were captured alive. Chinese may have sai ed the ocean bl long before Columb SAN DIEGO (AP)- The Chinese may have sailed to California at least 2,000 years before Christopher Colum- bus "discovered" America 489 years ago yesterday, two scientists say. After studying 11 large stones found off Southern California six years ago, Professor James Moriarity and Larry Pierson said the rocks "certainly" ca'ge off a Chinese ship that may have wrecked more than 500 years ago. "IT COULD BE from 500 years to 2,500 years old," said Pierson in a telephone interview yesterday. "Or it could be much older." "We're fairly sure the Chinese were here before Columbus," added Mpriarity, who works at the University of San Diego. Cplumbus sailed from Spain in 1492. "9f course, the Indiana were here long before that," said Pierson, who runs a private consulting firm. IN 1980, THE two San Diego marine archaeologists sent results of their studies to Dr. Fang Zong-Fu at the In- stitute for Water Transport Research in Peking. Soon after, said Pierson, Fang published articles in the publications Chinese Reconstructs and Peoples Daily announcing that "he agreed with our findings and indicating that documented histories in China support *the hypothesis that the Chinese discovery of American predates that of Columbus." "We have the remains of a very old Chinese ship that could easily have been rafted here on the Japanese current," Pierson said. "THERE'S A strong indication there were survivors aboard this There are two large stone directly offshore from the main Palo Verdes near Los Angeles) 70 feet of water. This is an in that someone aboard that ship anchors out in an effort to k vessel from going ashore." In that spot, unused by surf rocks were on a shallow bedroc subject to heavy waves and s action. Core samples are being sen Fang to compare with ston quarries on mainland China. The ship was 80 to 100 feet it and could have carried 75 to 150 Pierson said, but the rocks "v that remained." They include and Moriarity consider to be pound rolling-mill stone used t grain. No metal or ceramic found. Scuba divers Wayne Baldwin Meistrell found the stonesi merged tidelands. The rocks ha been studies in several laborato (Continued from Page 1) before a firing squad if found guilty, Abu Ghazala said, "He doesn't deserve AP Photo the bullet; he deserves the rope." He added, "I am going to insist" on a ng an public execution. "I hope they will let ident me leave him hanging in the open air for a week or so." The general said El-Islambouly used an Egyptian-madessubmachine gun and the other three assassins used Egyp- tian-made automatic rifles of the Soviet-designed Kalashnikov type. WHEN THE first shots were fired at 1 e the reviewing stand from the assassins' truck, Abu Ghazala said, he stood up, as did Sadat, who was next to him. But Abu Ghazala said he did not know in S whether the president saluted, as some officials have said. "Iwas looking at what was hap- vessel. pening because I was surprised. The anchors truck stopped. I stood up to find out site (off what was going on. I saw the grenade in about fly and then I heard the bullets, so I dication moved in front of the president and then put the we pushed him down. I think he had not eep the beenrhit at this point." Tf e-general said he saw tbe face of ers, the theassassin who ran up to the k bench reviewing stand wall and emptied his scouring weapon's magazine at Sadat. "HE WAS pointing at me. I was lying t to Dr. down there. He pulled the trigger, and I e from heard about five or six shots. Then he ran out of bullets. n length "I think four of the bullets he fired hit ) people, Gen. Hassan Allam (who was killed) were all because I felt the bullets passing by my what he face." a 280- THE PLOTTERS fired 60 rifle bullets o crush and 30 submachine-gun bullets s were altogether, the general said. Each also carried a Soviet-made grenade, he said. and Bob One exploded in front of the reviewing in sub- stand, a second went over the heads of ve since ries. the massed officials and exploded behind them, and the other two failed to go off-one because the thrower forgot to pull the pin, said Abu Ghazala. Meanwhile, Egyptian opposition leader Lt. Gen. Saad Eddin EI-Shazli predicted yesterday his country was heading toward "national revolution" and said violence was the only way to restore real democracy. "The struggle has started, and we will continue to theend...until we top- ple the autocratic regime which is now in power and restore true democracy in Egypt," said the former- Egyptian ar- my chief of staff who was dismissed by President Anwar Sadat in the last weeks of the 1973 Arav-Israel war. "Some people say that Sadat was assassinated, others say that what hap- pened was an act of terrorism," said El-Shazli. 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