1 ".4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 7, 1986 Nancy won't attend summit Washington (AP) - President Reagan sought yesterday to dispel what he termed "inaccurate speculation and false hopes" that his summit with the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will lead to new superpower agreements. Reagan also. said he would confront Gorbachev in Iceland this weekend on the Soviet Union's continued military operations in Afghanistan and "unceasing" human rights violations. THE WHITE HOUSE reinforced Reagan's view that the summit was a working session, by announcing that Nancy Reagan would remain behind in Washington, despite plans by Gorbachev's wife to go to Iceland. Until Raisa Gorbachev's plans were revealed on Icelandic television, the United States had no inlking that she would accompany her husband to the hastily-called superpower summit, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said. The Icelandic government confirmed that it was notified on Sunday of Mrs. Gorbachev's plans, and that she would be the guest of Edda Hermannsson, the prime minister's wife. "WE WERE surprised that Mrs. Gorbachev is coming," said White House spokesman Larry Speakes. "It was our understanding that this meeting was to be brief, a limited number of people traveling. It was to be a straightforward business meeting with very little, if any, social activity connected with it." Minutes later, as they spoke to an anti-drug abuse group in the White House Rose Garden, Reagan and his wife were asked whether the American first lady would now be included in the U.S. entourage atj the summit. "No," they declared in unison. MRS. REAGAN shrugged and smiled when asked why she wouldn't go to Reykjavik. Associted Press First lady Nancy Reagan shrugs yesterday in the White House Rose Gar- den, when asked by reporters as to why she wasn't going to attend the up- coming meeting in Iceland between her husband, President Reagan and Soviet Secretary General Gorbachev. Mrs. Gorbachev has announced she will attend the session with her husband. Apley bel (Continued from Page 1) development. He said many businesses of this type are coming to Ann Arbor, but that Pollack voted against it. Pollack said she could not comment on the vote Apley mentioned because she was not sure which vote he took issue with. SHE CITED her work on behalf of the University as one of her strong points and noted that the higher education field is the biggest ieves ccm unseat single employer in Washtenaw County. "I'm very comfortable with my record and proud of what I've accomplished," she said. "I'm running on my record as well as my unfinished business." LSA sophomore Debbie Buchholtz, Youth Campaign Coordinator for the Apley campaign, said Apley has received a "very positive" response among students. She said she worked for her local senator over the summer and saw how the Legislature worked. She met Apley and found that she supported "all of his stands on issues." That, coupled with her dislike for Pollack, led her to join the Apley campaign. Buchholtz said she thinks Apley has a good chance of defeating Pollack because /'she can't effectively represent the district. She's blunt and uncooperative and Pollack people don't like her." But, she said, it is difficult to get college students involved in political campaigns because they have so much to do. Washtenaw County Democratic Party Chairman Sheila Cum- oerworth said, "Lana's pretty well supported by a wide spectrum of people from both parties" in Washtenaw County. Man lives In dorm 1ounge for a month (Continued from Page1) . Sunday? Maintanance is not that was arrested. Roseman identified dedicated." the man and the keys that had been stolen.OT E Stogthwaa Roseman recovered some shirts OTHERS thought he was a and pants, but they "smelled so bad student. I just threw them. out. You "Everyone's seen him around. wouldn't believe how bad they Everyone thought he lived here," smelled. I didn't even want to wash said Roseman. Some just thought them I idnt wnt t cary hem he was a student from another floor. them. I didn't want, to carry them Richard Lara, a resident, recalled to the lau nroom.trecovered his seeing "the lounger." "He was laying there half-dead, half-asleep stereo. watching 'Leave it to Beaver' (in According to Armstrong's the lounge). And I thought, 'What memo, which begins "Yes, truth is is that smell?' I assumed it was stranger than fiction," some from outside. Later, I realized it residents "thought this guy was was him." with maintanence. . . that it was "Sometimes college students let cool for him to be watching TV in daily hygeine and bathing go," he our lounge. On a Saturday or a said. City OKs addition IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Hostages' families: Reagan should know who captors are Relatives of two American hostages said President Reagan should. know who is holding their loved ones in Lebanon, while a forme; hostage suggested that the U.S. government take out a newspaper ad to: locate the captors. "We know who has my father, basically," Eric Jacobsen, son of American University administrator David Jacobsen, said Sunday on the CBS News program "Face the Nation." "We hear rumors all the time and they all coincide. "You'd have to have your fingers in your ears not to know who to. go to and talk to." Last week, the radical Shiite Moslem group Islamic Jihad released' videotapes in which journalist Terry Anderson and Jacobsen bitterly criticized the U.S. government's effort , or lack of it , to obtain their' release and contrasted it with the successful effort to free U.S. News and World Report correspondent Nicholas Daniloff from Soviet custody. At a news conference in Denver on Sunday, the Rev. Lawrence Jenco, who was held captive with Anderson and Jacobsen until being released in July, said Reagan could easily find out who the kidnappers are. Educators endorse Blanchard, Seven education groups, including the state's two largest teacher unions, and the Small Business Association of Michigan endorsed Democratic Gov. James Blanchard for re-election yesterday. The seven groups representing kindergarten-through-12th grade education supported Blanchard because of his commitment to increased. financing for and improvement of programs in education, spokespeople said. "I think the fact that we have come together and have'agreed that' Blanchard has been for education and therefore education is going to be for Blanchard is a unique situation,"-said Don Elliott, president of the' Michigan Association of School Administrators. SBA Executive Director John Galles said the business group was surprised by Blanchard's attention to small business concerns during his first term. Cancer greater among poor Poor people run higher risks of getting cancer and dying from it, according to an American Cancer Society report and a new study. Among the reasons are cigarette smoking and a tendency for cancers to be caught at later, less curable stages among the poor, scientists said. Research had previously found disparities between blacks and whites on the frequency and deadlines of cancers, but a re-analysis shows that much of that effect really comes from differences in socioeconomic status, said Dr. Harold Freeman, chairman of the committee that produced the report. "You can clearly show that poor peopledevelop cancer more and die more from cancer simply because they 're poor. It means you have to reassess how you're confronting the problem as a nation and as a cancer society,"said Freeman, director of the surgery department at Harlem Hospital Center in New York. In terms of getting particualr cancers, he said, poor people show higher rates of cancer of the lung, cervix, and esophagus. DeLorean fraud trial begins The federal racketeering trial of John De Lorean began yesterday with the task of selecting 12 jurors to determine if the former automaker defrauded investors of $8.9 million. - . A grand jurylast year accused De Loren of diverting the money from the research arm of his De Lorean Motor Co., which built stainless-steel sports cars in Northern Ireland, and using it to repay loans, buy jewelry and be used for other personal purposes. "This isn't exactly the homecoming I was expecting," the former General Motors Corp. executive said as he entered the federal courthouse in downtown Detroit. Referring to his 1984 trial and acquittal in Los Angeles on cocaine distribution charges, De Lorean said, "They framed me in L.A., and they're doing the same thing here." De Lorean Motor, a Michigan corporation founded in 1975, fell into financial difficulty shortly after production began in 1981, and filed for bankruptcy the next year. Businesses ignore technology, AT&T chairman warns The technology for the Dick Tracy two-way TV wristwatch may not exist yet, but other electronic marvels are within the grasp of U.S business and are simply being ignored, AT&T's chairman said yesterday. American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Chairman James Olson warned that the failure of U.S. business to jump on technological developments is hampering its ability to maintain a strong manufacturing base and compete in the world market. "I don't think the answer is building walls around the United States. I don't think protectionism is the long-term solution to our problem,' Olson said. "We have to make sure the rest of the world opens up their markets like the U.S. market is open." Even when American business has taken advantage of advanced information technologies, it hasn't established standards that let various systems communicate with each other, Olson said. Vol. XCVII - No. 24 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. Editor in Chief....................ERIC MATTSON SPORTS STAFF: Paul Dodd, Liam Flaherty, ManagingtEditor. RACHEL GOTTLIEB Jon Hartmann,rDarren Jasey, Julie banger, News Editor ...............JERRY MARKON Christian Martin, Eric Maxson, Greg City Editor....................CHRISTY RIEDEL McDonald, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Jerry Features Editor .........AMY MINDELL Muth, Adam Ochlis, Lisa Poutans, Jeff Rush, NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Adam Schefter, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert,w Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Nancy Douglas Volan. Braiman, Marc Carrel, Harish Chand, Dov PHOTO STAFF: Leslie Boorstein, JaKim, CohdenhzTimartnDaly kRo LEa GreElen, Scott Lituchy, John Munson, Dean Randazzo, Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, Peter Ross, Chris Twigg. Stephen Gregory, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Kery Murakami, Peter Weekend Editor ..........BILL MARSH Oerner, Eugene Pak, Martha Sevetson, Wendy List Editor..,.....KATHERINE HANSEN Sharp, Susanne Skubik, Naomi Wax. Business Manager.......MASON FRANKLIN Opinion Page Editor ...........KAREN KLEIN Sales Manager.........DIANE BLOOM Associate Opinion Page Finance Manager..REBECCA LAWRENCE Editor.................................HENRY PARK Classified Manager......GAYLA BROCKMAN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Asst Sales Manager. DEBRA LEDERER Chinnock, Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Ass't Classified Manager..GAYLE SHAPIRO Mooney. Caleb Southworth. Arts Editor..........NOELLE BROWER DISPLAY SALES: Barb Calderoni, Irit Associate Arts Editor.......REBECCA CHUNG Elrand, Lisa Gnas, Melissa Hambrick, Alan Music.................................BETH FERTIG Heyman, Julie Kromholz, Anne Kubek, Film..................................KURT SERBUS Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, Laura Martin, Scott Books......................SUSANNE MISENCIK Metcalf, Renae Morrissey, Carolyn Rands, (Continued from Page 1) positive and socially benign organization," said Jeff Epton (D-3rd ward). Area residents also support the expansion Epton added. Groups in the Hill Street area, such as the North Burns Park BLOOM COUNTY Watch for it in 0ie icbt-gan B Hilu Association, have endorsed the renovation, saying it will improve both Hillel and the neighborhood. In another action, the council also passed a resolution which proclaimed this week (October 5- 11) Mental Illness Awareness week. Mayor Ed Pierce proposed the resolution to promote understanding and to reduce the stigma of mentally ill patients and their families. The council also approved a committee and program for an Ann Arbor United Nations Day, on October 24 and 25. The United Nations Day will include a dinner, workshop, and lecture for international students and the community. The program will include a speech by Ali Mazrui, a University professor who has produced a documentary on Africans which will air today on PBS. The UN Day will be sponsored by University and city groups including the University Inter- national Center and the Interfaith Council. Me and my shadow Associated Press Sculptor Gene Kangas has drawn fire for his work, "Door," which was made for the Cleveland State University campus. Critics say it shows a man being sent off the work by his wife and is sexist. PBS series narrated by 'u' prof elicits debate t Cornerstone Come Celebrate With Us! Sunday Worship Service- loam Angell Elementary School (1608 S. University -1 block east of Washtenaw) (Continued from Page 1) On September 3 the National Endowment for the Humanities asked PBS to "remove credits attributed to the NEH" and to "emit any reference to the NEH as a funder" for the series, according to Noel Milan, NEH Media Relations Officer in Washington, D.C. But the NEH's initial $615,000 contribution to the series was not withdrawn. THE NE H'S letter to WETA, Washingon D.C.'s public television station, said, "worse than unbalanced, this film frequently degenerates into anti-Western diatribe. When you seek funding from the NEH... standard balances of objectivity are demanded." The NEH referred to the series as "one man's soapbox," but Beller countered: "The Africans an insider's view of Africa...it provides the viewpoint of a participating observer (Mazrui)" and called it "healthy commentary." She said PBS' response to the NEH was that it is "offensive that PBS should not be allowed to criticize government or Western civilization." MAZRUI, WHO narrates all nine segments of the series, was born in Kenya, had a Muslim upbringing, and a Western education. He earned a Bachelor's Degree from the University of Manchester, England and a doctorate from Oxford University. He came Come Learn With Us!- Tuesday Night- 7pm I 14