Monday, October 6, 1986 Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan New By the Associated Press Soviet submarine in trouble Vessel 'dead in water,' crew evacuated t In Brief bbbm"1 mm mm. WASHINGTON A Soviet nuclear powered submarine remained "dead in the water" in the Atlantic Sunday but no smoke was seen spewing from the stricken ship, indicating a Are on board had been extinguished, Pen tagon officials said. Most of the' crew members were evacuated to nearby Soviet merchant ships, and a U.S. Navy tug was in the area ready to assist if needed, officials said. IIS. P-3 Orion reconnaissance planes, which have been flying over the sub 552 miles east of Bermuda through the weekend, reported that smoke stopped spewing from the vessel Sunday morn ing and no personnel were observed on the deck of the sub, said Pentagon spokesman Maj. Larry Icenogle. "The sub is still dead in the water. It is not moving," he said. Three Soviet merchant ships were near the ballistic missile-carrying submarine, a small boat was alongside the sub, and a Soviet ship capable of towing the sub also was in the vicinity, Icenogle said. The USS Powhatan was in the "immediate area," Icenogle said, adding, "It could render some assistance." President Reagan, who learned of the fire Saturday In a message from Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, offered the U.S. government's assistance, but the White House said Sunday that the" Soviets have not asked for help. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, reported that fire broke out on the sub 620 miles northeast of Bermuda, The announcement said three people were killed but there was no danger of nuclear explosion or radiation contamination. Soviet exile, wife move to U. NEW YORK Yuri Orlov, jailed and exiled to Siberia for nearly a decade because of his human rights activities, arrived here with his wife on Sunday to begin a new life in the United States. The Orlovs' plane, Aeroflot Flight 315, landed at John F. Kennedy Inter national Airport at 3:30 p.m. CDT. Orlov boarded the plane in Moscow at 8:40 a.m. (2:40 a.m. CDT), according to Michael Matera, a U.S. diplomat who said he saw the dissident enter the plane in Moscow by a rear stairway. Matera said Orlov was hatless but wore a warm winter coat. The 62-year-old dissident was brought to Moscow from the Siberian town of Kobyia on Saturday and was not seen by reporters at any point. Orlov's wife, Irina, boarded the plane later and was not allowed to see or speak with her husband beforehand. The Orlovs' departure for the United States was allowed under a superpower agreement under which American re porter Nicholar Daniloff and Soviet U.N. employee Gennadiy Zakharov were allowed to return to their home countr ies. Zakharov was arrested in New York on Aug. 23 on spy charges, and Daniloff was arrested in Moscow on spy charges a week later. Orlov, a physicist, had been exiled to Kobyia in the Siberian Arctic since 1984, when he completed a seven-year labor camp sentence for a conviction of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda. The charges stemmed from his human rights activities in the 1970s. Crazy Horse's controversial shirt OMAHA The Crazy Horse scalp shirt displayed for years at the state history museum at Fort Robinson and Lincoln apparently didn't belong to the Oglala Sioux war leader, Nebraska State Historical Society officials said Part of the shirt was sewn by a machine, officials said. "Frankly, I don't believe the Sioux in Wyoming in the Powder River were hauling a sewing machine around" in the 1870s, Society Director James Hanson said. "Scalp shirts were made for what the Sioux called the brave men, the ultimate protectors of the tribe," Hanson said. "Usually there would be only five or six (scalp shirts) within a band of Sioux." Few scalp shirts have been preserved in museums.. Hanson, Mrs. Potter and Eli Paul, curator of exhibits said the shirt was among a number of items the society acquired in 1901 from wild west show operator Charley Bristol of Omaha. ,uiaui Bristol claimed the shirt,, bearing 291 locks of hair, had belonged to Crazy Horse, who died at Fort Robinson in 1887 after being stabbed during a scuffle. The shirt could have belonged to Greasing Hand, who took the name Crazy Horse after Crazy Horse died. Greasing Hand married Crazy Horse's third wife, the society staff said. Iran's drug trafficking crackdown NICOSIA, Cyprus Iranian security forces arrested 17,000 drug smugglers in the past six months, Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency reported Sunday. The agency, monitored in Nicosia, said 14 tons of narcotics were seized as a result of arrests made throughout Iran between March 22 and September 22. It said the security forces "will deal more fatal blows on drug smugglers"" in the future. Drug smuggling is normally punishable by death in Iran. plane In MOSCOW uy a rear auuiwajr. yvi hi muiicu istumvu . .0.. - - --- 11 . New debate rekindles Brown vs. Board of Education case . i.ii I x. L - J 1L . it m 1 M - 1 1 A II. i ...I.!- -1... J i- ....I J L. . J I Ai. J TOPEKA. Kan. The nation's most signifi cant school desegregation case will be rekindled in federal court Monday when attorneys for 17 children and the school board begin debating . whether Topeka schools are still segregated. r Among the plaintiffs in the trial are two grandchildren of Oliver Brown, the man who brought the original lawsuit, known as Brown vs. Board of Education, that resulted in the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 ruling banning racial segregation in U.S. schools. . The children's parents, who reopened the lawsuit in 1979, charge that Topeka Unified School District No. 501 still denies minority stu dents a quality education in spite of that ruling. Attorneys for the school district and the state Board of Education argue that the city cannot be blamed for housing patterns which result from natural population shifts and annexation of eth ' nic neighborhoods. The original lawsuit began when Brown's daughter, nowLindaBrown Smith, mother of two of the Topeka pupils, had to walk past white schools in her neighborhood to go to a black school. The complaint, filedFeb. 18, 1951, on behalf of 20 black elementary students, alleged that white children of elementary school age were allowed to attend neighborhood schools close to their homes, while black students were forced to travel to separate all-black schools outside their districts. Ironically, in the current case against the school district and the state Board of Education, students could be forced to attend schools out side their districts according to a formula based entirely on race. The case could mean the end of Topeka's traditional neighborhood school philosophy in favor of bigger, regional schools and busing. The American Civil Liberties Union hopes to prove that some Topeka schools have a dispro portionate number of minority students and that the board intentionally concentrates black faculty in certain schools, creating "racially identifiable schools." "TMEPE fid IKST- J Iru Ij initio oJJiyj) w ; A 11TTE1R GWTTlflE JOB m ..J'-;lLLlUJ li It's true. SRI Gallup rewards its telephone market research inter viewers: well. Our interviewers talk to 25,000 people all over the country each month researching the pub lic's views and opinions on a wide variety of subjects. (This is noi a sales position! ) We offer flexible hours (minimum 15 per week), so you can work around your schedule. There's the opportunity to make $5-7 per hour. And because you get paid for what you do, you can rnntrnl vnnr innnme SRI works with clients in -1J . 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SRI Gallup 301 South 68th Street Lincoln, Nebraska Pontiff criticizes abortion, divorce; French display tepid response LYON, France Pope John Paul II pursued his attacks on abortion and divorce during a rural Mass on Sunday, 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 Sunday. At Taize, pathways used for contemplative walks were thick with gendarmes. A belltower was converted into a watchtower with sharp shooters at the ready. Security men peered out from neighboring corn fields and cow pastures. John Paul said at the Mass that rising abor tion and divorce rates were signs that modern civilization is developing a "heart of stone." He said the increasing number of broken fami lies and abortions were "signs of a real and true sickness that hits at people, couples, children and society itself." There was polite applause as the pope spoke out against abortion, but the overall response seemed subdued. Though 80 percent of the French people con sider themselves Catholic, polls indicate a steady erosion in the number who attend Mass regularly and who support the pope's positions on moral issues, particularly sexual matters. Editor Managing Editor Assoc. News Editors Graphics Editor Editorial Page Editor Editorial Page Asst. Wire Editor Copy Desk Chief Sports Editor Arts & Entertain ment Editor Photo Chief Night News Editors Art Director Diversions Editor General Manager Production Manager Advertising Manager Publications Board Chairman Professional Adviser Jeff Korbolik 472-1768 Gene Csntrup Tammy Kaup Linda Kartmann Kurt Efcertiardt Jamta Ropri Todd von Kampen Scott Thlen Joan Rezac Chuck Green Scott Karrah Andrea Hoy Bob Aimusian Geoff Goodwin Tom Lauder Charlaa Lleurance Danlol Shattil Katherine Policky Lisley Larson Harrison Schultz. 474-7K0 Con Walton. 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) i published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fail and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Subscription price is $35 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34. 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL C3PYRSHT DAILY KiSRASXAlT Rivers receeding after worst flooding in Oklahoma Rivers slowly receded Sunday from record flood crests in Oklahoma and Illinois, where an estimated 45,000 people were forced from their homes over the past week, and more were evacuated in parts of Missouri. Water crested during the night at one Oklahoma city at a record 18 feet above flood stage, leaving snakes swim ming for safety, and a levee break flooded a Missouri town. Little or no rain fell Sunday across the region, which got up to 2 feet in the past week, but almost 12 inches of rain fell in 24 hours in Texas, causing scattered flooding around the western town of McCamey. Damage in Illinois was estimated at $34 million Satur day. There was no way to estimate damage in Missouri, said Steve Finefrock, a state Civil Defense official, but U.S. Rep. James R. Jones estimated damage in his district at $140 million. - Finefrock said an estimated 30,000 people had left their homes at one time or another over the past week because of floodingAbout 3,800 families or 15,000 people had sought shelter in Illinois, a state public health spokesman said Saturday; Hundreds more fled their homes in Mis souri; and Kansas Adjutant General Ralph Tice estimated 1,500 to 2,000 had evacuated in his state. At least nine deaths were linked to flooding in the Midwest and Pennsylvania and three people were missing. At Yale, Okla., eight members of two families, including a 20-month-old girl, were trapped along a road in fast, deep water for more than two hours Saturday, clinging to weeds, a barbed wire fence and branches before they were rescued.