Page 2 - Th( 9at WASHING] Souse guard sawed-off sh surrounding t last night, the "The Pres White Hou Speakes. The intrude 'Secret Servic :of Williamspo Secret Serv Ann Gordon! CST, a Secret fficer on patr the south gro "observed ar suspicious ma "As the off served the sut e Michigan Daily - Friday, March 16, 1984 ruder shot White House TON (AP) - A White Ms. Gordon said. "The officer fired one shot a man carrying a shot, striking the individual in the right iotgun along the fence forearm." he White House grounds She said that after the shooting, Secret Service reported. Mahonski dropped his weapon, "which ident's all right," said has been identified as a sawed-off se spokesman Larry shotgun." Speakes said that Reagan had been er was identified by the informed of the shooting, but Speakes e as David Mahonski, 25, did not say where the President was at rt, Pa. the time of the incident, which occurred ice spokeswoman Mary at the fence along the south lawn of the said that about 7:15 p.m. White House about7:30 p.m. EST. Service uniform division Mahonski, who was hit in the right rol on the sidewalk outside forearm, "is the intruder" and "I saw unds of the White House five police officers...questioning him" n individual acting in a while the man was undergoing X-rays anner. at D.C. General Hospital, said Andrew Ficer approached, he ob- McCoy a hospital spokesman. Mahon- ject reach for a weapon," ski was listed in fair condition. "We are going to admit him Mahon- ski," said the attending physician at the hospital, Dr. Frantz Chery; "He has a fractured arm and a fever and he can't go home." Tke An administration official who spoke on condition he not be identified said no White House staff mempers were in- volved in the shooting. Ms. Gordon said the case was being nvestigated by the Secret Service and the Park Police and that charges were pending a review by the U.S. attorney. IN BRIEF R t !'I A i4 . A' +H' k.' 4 y' 44/ Su Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Senate defeats school prayer bill WASHINGTON - After 10 days of emotionally charged debate, the Senate' voted yesterday against a watered-down version of President Reagan's proposal for a school prayer constitutional amendment, one permitting only: silent organized prayer in the nation's classrooms. The 81-15 vote set the stage for a showdown on the president's original proposal for a constitutional amendment to allow organized spoken prayer: in public schools. Key senators on both sides of the issue have expressed: doubt that Reagan's proposal could attract the necessary two-thirds vote. Reagan opposed the silent-prayer proposal by Sen. Alan Dixon, (D-Ill.),: said Senate Majority Leader Howard H. Baker (R-Tenn.), Dixon's measure also would have permitted equal access to public facilities by students: meeting after regular school hours for religious purposes. Both advocates and opponents of the silent-prayer version said the vote was not a true test of sentiment on the shool prayer issue. Many senators: wanted to let Reagan have an unencumbered vote on the measure he favors. The vote was on whether to table Dixon's proposal, and required only a majority vote, whereas a constitutional amendment takes a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress - or 67 votes in the Senate. ' New hearings set for Meese WASHINGTON - A fractious Senate Judiciary Committee, whose chair- man promised that "there will be no cover-up," agreed yesterday to open new hearing next week- on Edwin Meese III's nomination to be attorney* general. The committee's plans to vote on the Meese nomination were sidetracked, after President Reagan's top policy adviser said he had "inadvertently failed" to tell the committee about a $15,000 interest-free loan from a former; White House aide. Democrats also had further questions to ask Meese about Carter cam-: paign documents that were found i his files and about government appoin-; tments for men who had helped Meese get out of financial difficulties. "There will be no cover-up," pledged the committee chairman, Strom, Thurmond, (R-S.C.), "We want the truth, and the full truth, but we also want no undue delay" in getting a vote on whether to confirm Meese. It was unclear exactly when Meese would testify again before the panel, when the new round of bearings begins Tuesday. It appeared that' he might: not be summoned to answer questions until as much as a week later. IRA head says plot was known BELFAST, Northern Ireland - The IRA's wounded political leader Gerry: Adams charged yesterday that British intelligence knew of a Protestant plot to kill him and let it go ahead. Adams, 35, the head of the IRA's legal political wing Sinn Fein, was shot along with three companions when his car was ambushed Wednesday. A Protestant group claimed responsibility. Protestant militant leader John McMichael, meanwhile, said Protestants will keep trying to kill leaders of the outlawed IRA. "There is no future for Ulster Protestants unless they take things into their own hands," said McMichael, a key figure in the Ulster Defense Association, a legal Protestant organization. Adams, interviewed on Belfast's Downtown Radio at the hospital where he was recovering from three bullet wounds, said the three gunmen who am- bushed him in Belfast were "set up." Adams' ambush was claimed by the outlawed Ulster Freedom Fighters, a shadowy Protestant death squad that security chiefs have linked to the Ulster Defense Assocation. Train crash kills 1,inures1 70 .1-- - 4 SUMMER SCHOOL IN CLEVELAND AT JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY SESSION I SESSION II June 18-July20 July 23-August23 Gain one year in one summer! I Bear hugs AP Photo An orphaned bear cub meets his new family yesterday in Bradford, Maine, after being abandoned by his natural mother last week. Wildlife biologist James Connolly holds the bears outside their den. 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CopdSek Chopped Steak ordsBgest, ChoValdeSMeas I Value Meals WordsB9 2alf2orr $5.9t foror5,95.99 clues Saad(lffe * Rlbe~eSteak ' Ribeye Steak$29 . 2fR$6. 2tek Vfor $6.99al lue Meals9 Vlu9Mal Sandwich with Fries va. ,ale 9eal Vl2 Mes u 1.99. Srloin Steak Sirloin Seaks 's1Bigges.BtSalad Buft ' 2fol$e.9M for$Q 7.99 a1yucnea)adbvrgoflI Includes2 f o r $Salad Includes wordsBgge~iBst s ingle agepexC alad w . Best Salad B llet acou Caeeeatabak dSteak Buger O f sh st.Big e S BY, n at i-yuwarn-ea t).baked SandSdtrnhfi es.Canot be incuds orls ig baed, Ol Ol wthbuter. an Ta usd wthoterdiscouts Ta ot0 balvc- a ke d __,,- __ s 'aniarsrAt..i nain teakhtouses. (Continued from Page 1) in foreign affiars, defense, economic and development policy. THE OPPOSITION views that plan as the first step toward partition of the Mediterranean nation. Former Lebanese president Suleiman Franjieh, a member of the Syrian-backed opposition, walked out of the conference hall yesterday after an argument with Christian leaders Pierre Gemayel and Camille Chamoun over Lebanon's future ties to Israel. In Washington, a statement by Jor- dan's King Hussein said that an Arab- Israeli peace is hopeless as long as the United States sides with Israel. HUSSEIN SAID in a New York Times interview published yesterday that Americans "have made your choice, and your choice is Israel and support of Israel. that being the case, there is no hope of achieving anything." He said the Reagan initiative, first proposed on Sept. 1, 1982, "is hopeless." John Hughes, the State Department spokesman, said the Hussein interview was "a disappointing setback - of course it is." He said the ad- ministration "regrets the timing" of the statements, although it will continue to push planned weapons sales to Jordan. HUGHES ALSO said Hussein's statements would make it more dif- ficult, if not impossible, to get Congress to go along with plans to sell Stinger an- ti-aircraft missiles to Jordan and to spend $22 million to create a Jordanian strike for for the Persian Gulf. Privately, officials said chances of making progress this year had been eliminated and some changes would be needed if the plan is to be revived. The king's remarks constituted the second blow .to the administation's Middle East diplomacy in the past mon- th. A defeat for American policy in Lebanon led to the withdrawal of Marine peacekeeping forces and the scrapping of the U.S.-brokered 1983 Lebanese-Israeli troop withdrawal agreement. THE ARGUMENT was touched off when Syrian Vice President Abdul- Halim Khaddam asked Chamoun and Gemayel to clarify their positions toward an anti-Syrian, pro-Israeli statement issed in Beirut by Christian groups not represented at the conferen- ce in Lausanne. The statement was issued in Beirut by Fadi Frem, head of the "Lebanese Forces" militia. 14 ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE AUDITIONS FOR "HELLO DOLLY" " March 16 - 7 p.m. Movement and Song (Bring prepared song) " March 18 - 2 p.m. Callbacks At AACT Building, 338 S. Main For Info call 662-7282 Judith Dow will be appearing in the role of Dolly PAINVILLE, Mont. - Amtrak's westbound Empire Builder passenger train plowed into a loaded gravel truck at a northeastern Montana crossing yesterday, and authorities said the truck driver was killed and scores of passengers injured. Dennis Kleppe, batallion chief for the Williston, N.D., fire department, said 60 to 70 people suffered injuries, and most were taken to hospitals in the area. He said 10 of the injuries were considered critical. Randy Gilbert, an Amtrak spokesman in Washington, D.C., said the two locomotives and nine cars derailed about 10:50 a.m. west of Bainveille. Four cars came to rest on their sides and four other cars were perpendicular to the tracks. Medical expert says, rape victimn 'clncally poisoned with alcohol' FALL RIVER, Mass. - A medical expert testified that a young woman had at least eight drinks and was "clinically poisoned with alcohol" the night she said she was raped on a barroom pool table. Charles Winek, chief toxicologist for the Allegheny, Pa., coroner's office, said a blood test taken from the woman indicated she had a .198 blood alcohol reading. Asked to explain the reading, Winek said the woman "would be clinically poisoned with alcohol" during and after the time she said she was attacked. Based on the woman's weight, Winek said the reading indicated she had been drinking heavily. "It would take eight drinks all at once," he said. "If you're spreading it over more time it has to be more than eight drinks. It could be 10 to 11. Winek, a professor of toxicology at Duquesne University and the Univer- sity of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, said that amount of alcohol could af- feet a person's normal inhibitions and memory. The blood test was taken in the early-morning hours of March 7, 1983, shor- tly after the woman said she was attacked and raped in Big Dan's tavern in New Bedford. Six men are on trial for aggravated rape. Friday, March 16, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 131 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by, mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. 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