FREE ISSUE S Ninety-four Years Of Editorial Freedom Vol. XCIV - No. 3 'U'polices cafeteria abuse with computers, By BARBARA MISLE In an attempt to crack down on students abusing the cafeteria system, University housing officials have repRiced traditional meal car- ds with a $52,000 computer card system VALIDINE. Instead of the sticker-covered laminated cards that cafeteria staff would mark off at every meal, stud- ents have been provided with the VALIDINE cards which are programmed to keep track of how many meals a student eats each day. THE LIGHT blue VALIDINE car- ds feature a magnetic strip on the back and a sharp'color photo of each student on the front, making it easy Freshman SEE 'U', Page 9 University Fresh fac By SUSAN BARTO Freshpersons won't be the only ones getting lost around town this fall. Since students left in May, the volatile Ann Arbor shopping market has undergone a major facelift; a couple of campus favorites bit the dust but new stores have cropped up to take their places and others just- changed a bit. If you're not yet in the know with the new street scene, here's a guide to what's come and gone: Dooley's, that model of undergraduate bars housed at 310 Maynard is revamped and ready to rock with a new dance floor,, DJ booth, carpeting railings, and lighting. There's also a price to pay for the new look: A $2 cover charge and (sorry underclasspersons) a 21- and-over (20 with a student ID) admittance policy. " Head for the arcades, video fans, because Dooley's has removed the games to provide more tables to tired dancers and serious drinkers. Bottoms up. Two blocks from Dooleys, Saca Taco ... (whoops) Jimmy's... no, Hur's Campus Cafe has taken over a seemingly jinxed spot on the corner of William and Thompson. Police fore Major ve By ROB FRANK discrepanci UBSCRIBE! 764-0558 FREE ISSUE Blue Thunder Mostly sunny today with afternoon and evening thundershowers likely. High in the upper 80s, low tonight near 60. Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, September 10, 1983 Free Issue Twelve Pages I ___V _ o iets plane tie Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK John Monahan displays his VALIDINE meal card while waiting to eat dinner at West Quad yesterday. officials say the new cards will cut down on the number of students abusing the cgfeteria system: es fid fre If multi-ethnicity is your bag, Hur's is the place to be: This family-owned restaurant serves up a mix of seafood, submarines, ribs, ice cream and other dishes that span the globe from Korea to Italy. Moderate prices and quick carry-out or sit-down service are what the Hur family hope will keep them in business longer than the previous vendors who inhabited the corner. Not far from either of these, the Michigan Union is. fit for a feast with its-restaurant-dominated restyled basement. The Michigan Union Grill Eateries and Commons offers a wide variety of foods and- plenty of tables for eating, socializing, or studying. The eateries are set up in booths adjacent to the common - and large - seating area. The Michigan Union Grill (MUG) serves fresh quarter-pound hamburgers, hot dogs, and other fast- food items at better-than-competitive prices; like all of the Union food stores, the MUG is non-profit. Next to the MUG ,lies the Corner Market, displaying freshidaily produce from Detroit's .Eastern Market, five specialty salads, quiche, and natural foods. sh places, For dessert, the Stroh's Creamery serves up ice- cream weighed as it is served so you pay only for what you get. Soon to join the Union gang are a delicatessen named Dagwood's Parcheezies Pizzeria, and a Variety shop. If working the Liberty street video dens has you a little hungry, Otto's Crispy Corn has nestled in next to Simulation Station at 504 E. Liberty to fill the popcorn gap. These cheerful corn mongers dish out carmel, cheese, buttered .and plain popcorn, sweets, drinks and an occasional hot dog. If the West Coast is what you seek, San Francisco Sub Shoppe owner Charlie Arvai challenges you to "tackle 'the 49,' 'experience the Earthquake,' 'eat your way out of Alcatraz,"' one of the bay-area inspired speciafties on sourdough buns. They also offer two vegeterian specials and soft drinks at the Fifth and Liberty store. Central Cafe is turning Chinese, I really think so. See ANN ARBOR'S, Page 2 to spy From AP and UPI The Soviets warned yesterday that they will shoot again if their air space is violated by spy planes. Yesterday, Soviet chief'of staff Mar- shal Nikolai Ogarkov and two senior Kremlin officials held a rare news con- ference, broadcast live to the United States - but not in the Soviet Union - to answer reporter's questions. OGARKOV claimed the airliner was on a carefully coordinated spy mission with a U.S. reconnaissance plane that flew alongside the Korean Air Lines plane for 10 minutes. The United States has acknowledged the American spy plane was in the area p-butnever closer than 75 miles to the plane ;- but said it was on the ground in Alaska for an hour before the airliner was shot down with an air-to-air missile. Ogarkov said the decision to bring down the jumbo jet took 21/2 hours during which interceptors gave chase and 120 warning shots yere fired. He insisted the fighter crew and ground command had acted properly and legally, and warned, "In the future, if need be, they will also perform their combat tasks." JAPANESE authorities said debris from the KAL plane the Soviets shot down Sept. 1 had washed ashore in nor- thern Japan, 'and that fishermen had found the mutilated body of a child who might have been one of the 269 people who perished in the crash. In Washington, defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said he expects the Soviets to manufacture some evidence - perhaps "a black box dripping with seaweed" - to justify their claim that the passenger jet they shot down was a spy plane. Weinberger said the Soviets were cra-ft desperate to keep Japanese and American search vessels out of the area where the South Korean plane was downed. Weinberger said the Soviets are trying to prevent any investigation of the incident and suggested President Reagan, deal with them "as you deal with any murderer who refuses to par- ticipate in any way with the in- vestigation of his crime." HOWEVER, President Reagan, rejecting critics' complaints that he has See REAGAN, Page 9 Sovi e t S resond.by th e .book,. prof Says By JERRY ALIOTTA The Russian response to a Korean Air Lines jet's irtrusion into Soviet air- space was standard operating procedure and apparently the result of military derision makers, a University expert on Soviet affairs said yesterday. "Their response as brutal was to the book. It was a normal Soviet response; dogmatic, and rigid," History Prof. Ar- thur Mendel said.' THE SOVIET Union shot down KAL Flight 007 last week after it wandered over eastern Russia while en route Seoul from Anchorage, Alaska. See PROF, Page 9 see end to is investigation es and missing funds, of- Ann Aficials said lat Ann Arbor Police detectives hope a denied The Daily meeting next week with University the auditors' repor administrators will end a six-month in- contained private vestigation into allegations that funds ding personnel wit were misappropriated within the Office Shortly after the of Major Events. Events director Detective David Jachalke said he ex- Robert Davies, pects the investigation will become promotion assista "inactive" following next Thursday's sity. Officials hav meeting, which means that police have to connect their not collected sufficient evidence of audit. wrongdoing to keep the case open. "I need things t Jachalke said detectives have collec- when I bring (any ted no new information in the case since detective Jachalk the first part of July and have not been the University ha able to solidify any leads which could Karen (Young) is result in an indictment. As the investiga Problems with the office's financial th month, Univers records were first discovered when in- have not lost inter ternal auditors for the University con- tments in the cas Iducted an unannounced audit last Mar- University feare ch. Unannounced audits are routinely Associate Vice P conducted throughout the University. Services Thomas That audit revealed bookkeeping TODAY Car trouble HAT'S DRIVING people wild in Denmark these W days? Outdated American license plates, which police in the nation's second-largest city call "nothing but trouble." A downtown supermarket in Aarhus, Denmark sells the plates for 50 cents a piece, but it costs $40 in fines er. Administrators 's request to review t because they said it information regar- hin Major Events. e audit bega'n, Major Karen Young and her booking and ant, left the Univer- e since been hesitant departure with the o be black and white y charges) to court," ke said. "Obviously, d what they needed; gone." tion enters its seven- sity officials say they est in securing indic- se. Denying that the d adverse publicity, resident for Student Easthope said ad- ministrators would continue to seek charges in the case. "I don't know why we wouldn't con- tinue to pursue this (case)," he said. Michigan Union director Frank Cian- ciola, who is the immediate supervisor of Major Events, said the case has gone beyond University jurisdiction.. "It's out of our court now," he said. Cianciola said the office has un- dergone a complete review in the wake of the audit but he declined to cite specific changes. "We're trying to be more in tune with our business side," he said. Jachalke did not say exactly who would participate in the meeting with administrators Thursday, but he said representatives of the departments of public safety and internal audit would be present. Carl Smith, director of University audits, said he had not been notified about the meeting and refused to com- ment on the investigation. Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK What a rush ! Leslie Silbar, Sheri Banks, and Shelley Dunck inform Caroline Lindemuler and Lisa Tredway (left to right), prospec- tive West Quad rushees, about the upcoming mandatory sorority mass meeting tomorrow. e Scarlet letter FLOOD OF checks arrived from residents with overdue water bills after Huntington, Mass.'officials threatened to impose a 1983 version of New England's 17th century punishment - the scarlet letter. Last month, selectmen in the town threatened to paint an 18-inch high fluorescent orange "W" on the street in front of the homes of 15 delinquents who owed a total of $8,000 in water bills. Water Commissioner Rosemary Caputo said the water "on point" outside her locker at a Broken Arrow, Okla. in- termediate school this week. "I didn't know what was going on," said the girl, who was called out of class to open her locker. "My first thought was that someone had put something in there, planted drugs." Instead,. the authorities found books neatly stacked and nothing else - except a suspicious-looking plastic bag on the locker floor. When they saw that, R.T., a black Labrador, and Buddy, a golden Labrador, started whining, thumping their tails, and salivating. Inside the bag: three chocolate chip Also on this date in history: " 1974 - The University announced it would re-open a position for a women's advocate, who would work for "changes in policies and programs that affect women ad- versely." * 1969 - A coalition of radical campus groups announ- ced plans to disrupt ROTC classes in an anti-defense department protest. " 1964 - Police and dorm officials said they had failed to find out who had set off a bomb in South Quad that caused 4 I