4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 6, 1986 First lady falls off stage at econcert WASHINGTON (AP) - First lady Nancy Reagan took a tumble from the stage but was unhurt during a concert by pianist Vladimir Uorowitz at the White House yesterday. President Reagan, after deter - mining that his wife was all right, seized the occasion for a quip. The incident occurred after JNorowitz's program as the president was speaking. -The first lady apparently nudged her chair too close to the edge of the stage while smoothing her skirt. As the audience gasped, Mrs. Reagan's chair fell into a flower box, which borders the two-riser stage, and then onto the carpeted floor. The first lady promptly rose, assured Reagan and others that she was unhurt, and resumed her seat to applause from the crowd of about 200 in the White House East Room. "Honey," said Reagan, "I told you to do that only if I didn't get any applause:" Horowitz, who was still sitting on stage, put his arm around the first lady and hugged her during the rest of the president's remarks. Associated Press This Soviet nuclear-powered submarine caught fire Friday, according to the Pentagon. The submarine carrying ballistic missiles was photographed, Saturday, 480 miles northeast of Bermuda by a U.S. Navy sur- veillance aircraft. A hatch at center appears to be damaged from the fire. Sub moves a wayromU.S. (Continued from Page 1) Bermuda. The announcement said three people were killed but there was no danger of nuclear explosion or radiation contamination. The Pentagon official said it appeared most of the crew on the sub, which normally carries 120 people, had been moved. "We know they have taken a lot of them off, but we don't have a precise number," the source said. The ship is a Yankee-class sub- marine, which according to the Jane's Fighting Ships is an old- class submarine that first appeared in the mid-1960s, capable of carrying 16 missiles. Each ship has two nuclear reactors to drive two steam turbines. Secretary of State George Shultz, appearing on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley," said the information received from U.S. planes flying overhead indicates that "there's no additional radioactivity in the atmosphere." Tests to determine whether any radioactivity is in the water have not been concluded, according to Michael Armacost, the under secretary of state for political affairs who appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press." Armacost said there was a report that at one point the sub "had been under way at a very slow speed under its own power, perhaps auxiliary diesel power." But "other difficulties apparently developed," or the sub "had been stopped briefly," he said. Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said, "The chances of any kind of nuclear detonation are very, very low." Read ws Use 'Daley CEO..i~iedb Fraternit (Continued from Page 1) fraternities and sororities in the neighborhood have caused major problems, but the Sammies have continually broken noise control laws. During a rush party this year, Hughes said, she called the fraternity and asked that the music be turned down, but she was answered with a string of draws BUSINESS =5"ij4 KAFlAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. 203 E. HOOVER 662-3149 . - Reserve a Micro! What? Three hours of uninterrupted work. obscenities "I definitely don't want to see them thrown out of the house," she said. "I would just like them to comply with the laws, especially concerning noise and alcohol in Ann Arbor." "WHAT THEY do in their own house is their business, but when it comes into our yards, it's ours," Hughes said. Neighbors say people partying at the SAM house have been urinating and throwing trash on neighbors' lawns, playing music toogloudly, and shouting obscenities. "Everyone coming from the house sounds like Eddie Murphy," Hughes said. In addition, neighbors say they ,gt Sx10 PASS IT AROUND! Share the news, 13 ai1o amplaints have seen high school students intoxicated at SAM parties. "IN THE last year we've tried to make progress with the neighbors," he said. "We were disappointed that they felt they had to go to the University instead of speaking to us, but we sympathize with them and we understand why they did it. We wish it hadn't gotten to that point." Easthope told fraternity members to "start acting like responsible citizens" or the University would take "extreme measures" .'against them. Fraternity members outlined a plan to quell the complaints by banning open parties, cleaning up the area around the house, and forming a committee to meet with the neighbors. The Office of Student Services will review the plan by Wednesday and decide what action it will take. Jo Rumsey, Assistant Director of Housing Information, said she is distressed by the situation. "They have caused problems in the past and have been very time consuming for our office and the community," she said. The Sammies have caused more complaints than any other house in the Greek system, Rumsey said. "Lots of time, energy, and care have been spent towards an unfortunate wasted effort. I have worked with SAMs for years and the educational approach hasn't worked yet," Rumsey said. Correction Ernie Robinson, a student who was pictured on the cover of Friday's Weekend Magazine, is a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. The photo caption on the cover incorrectly identified the name of the fraternity. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS De Lorean faces trial today DETROIT - Former auto entrepreneur John De Lorean faces trial today on federal charges that he bilked investors in his failed sports-car company of $8.9 million in 1978 and 1979. De Lorean pleaded innocent to the charges at his arraignment in September 1985. He has said in interviews the money was a legitimate loan and has alleged that prosecutors were trying to frame him. Officials of the U.S. District Court in Detroit estimate the trial, whose start was delayed from November, will last about six weeks. They expect jury selection to take two weeks. A grand jury indictment last year accused De Lorean of siphoning the money from De Lorean Research Limited Partnership, a company created to fund technological development of the advanced sports car, through various European banks into his own accounts. The indictment alleged De Lorean spent more than $8 million of the money to repay loans and $28,000 to buy a gold ring and gold bracelet. Summit ball awaits accord REYJAVIK, Iceland - Icelandic officials yesterday made known their growing impatience with the Soviets for failing to say if they accept the hall proposed for the Reagan-Gorbachev meeting in Reykjavik. The officials said that with Iceland's meager technical resources ' stretched to the limit, they urgently needed an answer on whether Moscow accepts the Hofdi, a Reykjavik bayside house, as the meeting place. A Soviet spokesman said he was aware of this impatience and hoped an answer would be forthcoming by today. The Icelandic officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the Soviets were asked to decide three days ago whether the Hofdi suits them. With the summit less than a week away, it would be extremely difficult to come up with an alternative venue, they said. The Hofdi, a picturesque two-story building in white clapboard, serves as the mayor's banquet hall and was sealed off to the public last week. Daniloff denies CIA contact WASHINGTON - Nicholas Daniloff said yesterday that he delivered a packet from a suspicious Soviet contact to the U.S. embassy in Moscow last year, but did not go to the CIA or the embassy's intelligence officers. Daniloff, the U.S. News and World Report correspondent freed last week from Soviet spy charges, said he avoided the U.S. military attaches and intelligence officers because, "I was always aware that when you work in Moscow there is this kind of danger of incrimination." But Daniloff, interviewed on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley," said it is impossible for American reporters to do a thorough job of reporting on the Soviet Union without running the risk that the Soviet KGB will plant incriminating evidence on them. The Soviets freed Daniloff in exchange for a Russian physicist working at the United Nations who was charged with espionage in New, York. U.S. officials said privately last week that they moved quickly to. secure Daniloffs release for fear that he could have been shown to have, broken Soviet law even though he never worked for the U.S. government. Divorce, abortion societal diseases, Pope says at Mass LYON, France-Pope John Paul pursued his attacks on abortion and divorce during a rural Mass yesterday, calling them signs of sickness in society, but his message evoked a tepid response from the audience. On his second day of a four-day visit to France, the leader of the world's 800 million Roman Catholics was surrounded by heavy security as he traversed the countryside before returning to Lyon late': Police carefully scrutinized the crowds at the Mass in the Burgandy town of Paray-Le-Monial and during an earlier visit to a small ecumenical community called Taize. At Taize, pathways used for contemplative walks were thick with' gendarmes. A belltower was converted into a watchtower -with sharpshooters at the ready. Security men peered out from neighboring corn fields and cow pastures. John Paul said at the Mass that rising abortion and divorce rates were signs that modern civilization is developing a "heart of stone." Sun shines on Ann Arbor The sun peaked form behind clouds in drenched southern Lower Michigan yesterday as residents mopped up from weekend flooding, but more rain-and perhaps snow-could fall this weekend. Most Michigan rivers subsided yesterday, but the Saginaw River was, expected to crest again tomorrow due to runoff from Saturdaay's rain, said Gary Charson, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service in, Ann Arbor. High winds whipped up waters along Great Lakes shorelines Saturday, but the winds shifted from the northeast Saturday night, easing flooding, Charson said.d Swollen rivers had contributed to high water levels in lakes Huron, Erie, and St. Clair, but flood warnings had been lifted. Afternoon and evening rain showers expected in Michigan yesterday would make it the 26th consecutive day of rain. Cooler temperatures meant light snow showers might dust the northern Lower Peninsula and Upper Peninsuld last night, the weather service said. 01Ihe Ahtlpgan V at-IV Vol. XCVII-No,. 23 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through, Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April--$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. 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