Page 6-Sunday, October 18, 1981-The Michigan Daily F " l lost my job, my house, my Rolls Royce, my family left me... what else can possibly go wrong?" MANN THEATRES 375 N.MAPLE 769 1300 "Hi Dad!" -qh Reports claim 1,500 Moslem arrests in Egypt 0 CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Military and diplomatic sources said yesterday that Egypt's new regime has arrested more than 1,500 Moslem fundamentalists and leftist dissidents since President Anwar Sadat's assassination Oct 6. Egyptian officials said only "dozens" were seized. Sadat had more than 1,500 religious leaders and political foes arrested the month before he was murdered by Moslem fanatics during amilitary parade in a Cairo suburb. The sources said the latest arrests were part of a campaign to crush violent opposition ot Sadat's successor, President Hosni Mubarak. A MILITARY source, who refused to be named, said that most of those jailed in the last few days were on a list of 7,000 fundamentalists that Sadat said would be picked up if they caused more trouble between Christians and Moslems. . The small Moscow oriented National Progressive Unionist Party, which op- poses the U.S. sponsored Damp David peace accords, said yesterday that more than 80 of its members had been arrested since last month. Khaled Mohieddin, head of the NPUP, said he knew that at least 70 other political figures, members of 'other political parties," had been arrested. MOHAMMED Hakki, presidency spokesman and director of information, told reporters the arrests wee "very limited, not in the hundreds. It only concerns people who were found to be armed." He said later that only 375 N. MAPLE 769-1300 S$2 TO 6:00 PM ROBERT DE NIRO ROBERT DUVALL k 1:15-3:20 5:30 FR 7:40-9 50 Uited Artists Two brothers trapped Midnite by a murder... Fri. & Sat. One hid behind his vows. The other behind his badge. Bargain Hours-No $1 Tuesday Two hours of non-stop thrills" Rex Reed ,; 1:45 + d fQF415 OF THE 7:00 LOST ARK 9:30 SA PARAMOUNT DAILY WILLIAM HURT 115 KATHLEEN TURNER 3 20 5:30 BOI 7:0 Midnite D 9:0Fri. & Sat. HIEflT 19 "dozens" of people had been picked up. Reliable sources said the government crackdown also included a far-reaching purge of known fundamentalists from key positions in the armed forces and government departments. The gover- nment already has announced the tran- sfer of 18 army officers to civilian jobs. Police sources in Cairo said there had been a shooting incident Friday night in the Nile delta city of Mansura, 79 miles north of Cairo. ONE SOURCE said "individuals" fired at a police station, causing no casualties, and drove off. He said security troops surrounded the at- tackers yesteday' morning in a graveyard outside the city, but added that he did not know if they had been arrested. Interior Minister Nabaw Ismail, speaking to reporters after a meeting with Mubarak and the governors of Egypts's 26 provinces, said there had been no threat to the police in the Man- sura shooting. "It was the guards that stand watch in the cornfields," he said. "They habitually shoot off their guns to com- municate, as a sign of companionship. "The police thought there was something going on, so they fired back. Then everything fell quiet. The police went to investigate and found nothing," he said. Ismail also confirmed a "limited" number of arrests, without disclosing figures. He said he would declare the full details "within two days." A Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Uwo A Michigan cheerleader gracefully flies over his companions during a break in yesterday's football game. Dems differ on how to win in 82 BALTIMORE (UPI) - Democratic Party leaders agreed yesterday that President Reagan's economic policy is doomed to failure but they differed over how to convert that defeat to a victory in the 1982 elections. Among the 60 party leaders winding up a two-day meeting of the Democratic National Strategy Council there was the normal disunity over where the party should go from here. MAYOR EDWARD Koch of New York City triggered black anger when he said busing, racial quotas and government aid programs for minorities were failures and should have been directed to help all the poor. Black state Sen. Clarence Mitchell of Baltimore responded by saying more minority programs were the answer to bringing back disaffected Democratic voters. And "boll-weevil" Rep. Wes Watkins, of Oklahoma, said Democrats took a pounding at the polls last year because, "we moved too far to the left - many voters felt the Democratic Party had left them." FORMER VICE President Walter Mondale summed up the tone of the conference, saying: "When you're out of office, many voices speak for the Democratic Party." "Out of this process of focusing on our, problems we are going to be more equipped to re-earn the trust of the American voter and we will be better prepared to govern," he said: But Mondale insisted that liberal and conservative Democrats alike agree that the party "cannot abandon the values of social justice." Gov. Edmund Brown of California said there's a very simple reason Democrats lost in 1980. "The problem is Americans are getting poorer and they want to get richer," he said. "If you . don't deal with that you won't win." Many of the Democratic leaders said it was time to bury liberal New Deal programs because they were outdated and didn't work. TONIGHT High Energy Rock 'n' RollI with THE CONFESSIONS Rick's American Cafe 611 Church St. CARBON George Segal Jack Warden Susan St. James COPY (PG) DAILY 1:30-3:20-5:10 7:00-9:00 Midnite Fri. & Sat, J Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presents HARVEY by Maty Chase At the Michigan Theatre October 21-24, 8:00 pm For Ticket Information Call 662-7282, or tickets may be picaed up at Michigan Theatre Box Office or at Ann Arbor Civic Theatre office, 338.South Main Street. - TICKET PRICES - Wednesday & Thursday, $3.00 - 5.00 Friday & Soturday, $4.00 - 6.00 Senior Citizen Special (Over 62) Wednesday Only, $2.50 7 hurt in porch collapse, Two people were treated at Univer- sity Hospital Friday night for injuries incurred when a second-story porch collapsed at 27 Haverhill Court, near* North Campus. At least five others were injured slightly in the accident, according to a representative from the Ann Arbor Fire Department. Correction A headline in yesterday's Daily did not correctly reflect an article on an election study by the University's Cen- ter for Political Studies. The study, by John Jackson and William McGee of the Institute for Social Research, reported that media projections of a Reagan victory in the 1980 election before polls closed reduced voterturnout. The article did not suggest that a reduction in turnout hurt the Democratic party's or Jimmy Carter's chances of winning the election. L MIL The #i Travel Team Don t be.a on Thanksgiving! Don't be a turkey and spoil your Thanksgiving vacation by waiting till the last minute to make your holiday airline reservations. Stop by or call any of Conlin Travel's three convenient locations and book your flights today. Many airlines limit the number of seats available at special fares on each flight. And with the possibility of airline fares going up every day, the sooner you buy your tick- etthe better. 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