h Miig n Doi y-,Sturo y, une15 82-Ppgge 5 Ya 'sso00 Ann Arbor gets a taste of Meditteranean nightlife By GEORGE ADAMS Today is the last chance to get "a 100 percent return on your money in the form of a good time," at the Ann Arbor Ya'ssoo Greek Festival, according to festival chairman Nick Beltsos. The three-day festival, which ends tonight, offers Greek variations in food, dancing, and entertainment, and is located at 414 N. Main on the grounds of its sponsor, the St. Nicholas Greek Or- thodox Church. "IT'S GREAT," said Leo Res, a University sophomore who was born in Greece. "I've been coming here for six years now and this is just the greatest." Evans - Mirageas, the festival's master of ceremonies, said, "this is the best year yet" for the festival. "The dancers, food, a lot of what you see here you probably couldn't even find in Greece anymore," Mirageas said. DESPITE LAGGING attendance at the festival's Thursday opening, crowds picked up yesterday and even more people are expected today. Dean Nikolaides, a member of a Greek band performing at the festival, said the crowds have been "very recep- tive." "They look like they're having such a good time, it's a pleasure to play," he added. The festival has had a noticeable lack of security problems, one security guard said. "Everyone's just having Dnily ,Phoo Dy DBKH THANO MASTERS, owner of Thano's Lamplighter, proudly displays one of the entrees he helped prepare for the Ann . Arbor Ya'ssoo Greek festival, which ends today. The chicken was prepared using a "secret" Greek recipe. fun. There's no real reason to have security here," said John O'Grady of Wells Fargo Security. Tonight's entertainment will feature the St. Nicholas Dancers in native Greek costumes and a Detroit-based Greek band. Not all the dancing, however, is on the festival's schedule. Late at night, many visitors spontaneously break into the "zembikikos," an improvised dance with a lengthy Greek tradition. Summit looks at world recession VERSAILLES, France (AP) - President Reagan joined other leaders of the world's major industrial' democracies at the lavish estate of French kings yesterday, already com- mitted to intensifying the battle against inflation and revitalizing their recession-plagued economies.. The question of how to achieve those goals, however, still troubled the leaders of the United States, Britain, France, West German, Italy, Canada and Japan who arrived separately by helicopter on the well-manicured and heavily guarded palace grounds. Reagan flew to Versailles, 12 miles southwest of Paris, at the end of a busy day of private meetings in the French capital, including a lengthy review of the Falkland Islands crisis with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. SECRETARY OF State Alexander Haig, reporting later on their 90-minute meeting, said it was up to Argentina whether to withdraw its forces from the.. Falklands and avert further bloodshed in a new, perhaps climactic battle with British troops. Mrs. Thatcher said the United States still was "very much" behind Britain in the Falklands crisis. "This is a historic summit. History will be made in our meeting," Reagan told Mayor Jacques Chirac during a ceremony at the Paris city hall. Flut- tering above them was an 18th century American flag which George Washington is said to have given to the French military hero Lafayette. REAGAN, WHO arrived in Paris Wednesday night to begin a four-nation, 10-day European tour, got his first change yesterday to see the sights in the French capital on his way to Ver- sailles. His armored limousine took him through the sealed-off Place de la Con- corde, along the Seine River, past the Eiffel Tower and down sun-drenched city streets lined with flower stalls and small stands offering live chickens for sale. The presidents' motorcade caused lit- tle stir among Parisians. Pedestrians paid him little heed, and metal police barriers placed along curbs lined by gendarmes were unneeded because few crowds gathered along the unpublicized motorcade route. OUTSIDE PARIS, however, terrorists bombed an American school early yesterday morning and smeared ° anti-U.S. graffiti on the building to protest President Reagan's visit to France. The bomb exploded outside the primary and secondary school in the Paris suburb of Saint Cloud at 1:30 a.m., damaging doors and smashing windows. There were no injuries. Meanwhile, aides to Reagan and the six other summit leaders - Mrs. That- cher, French President Francois Miterrand, West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, Italian Prime Minister Giovanni Spadolini, Japanese Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau - labored over drafts of the final communique that will end the summit tomorrow evening. PRESIDENT REAGAN and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher walk through the gardens of the American Ambassadors residence in Paris while attending yesterday's summit meeting.