Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom C I I be Sit gan i Iai1Q Hookey Sunny with a few clouds and a high temperature of 80. Vol. XVC, No. 6 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, September 12, 1984 15 Cents Ten Panes Q....y ' U' scorns city's scalping From Staff reports University athletic department of- ficials expressed dissatisfaction Alow yesterday over city council's recent 'A O move to de-criminalize ticket scalping. effectiN Council members are considering passing 'a city ordinance which would tickets replace the current state law, $100 fine_ and 90 days in jail, with a small fine of less than about $25. MONDAY NIGHT, COUNCIL rejec- ted a proposal to set the fine at $5. But members expect a similar motion to be He said that t made next Monday to set the fine at $25. find a way to Several members of the council, in- above the fines cluding Mayor Louis Belcher, have said DeCarolis sa they would support a fine of $25 for tinue to enfor scalping. for scalping to Even if the ordinance is passed, minimum. however, the city will still have the op- Besides sev tion of prosecuting scalpers under the however, polic stiffer state law. ignored scalpe BUT IF THE measure passes, police will the new law,; be able to simply write scalpers tickets might be able on the street. stopping scalp( University officials, however, said UNDER TH the law would do little to stop scalping would not hav - a problem they would like to see the could stay on t city address. out more fin "A fine means nothing," said Allen more scalpers. Renfrew, ticket manager for the "A. lower fin( athletic department. more effective ROBERT DECAROLIS, business more ticketsi manager for the department, said that time, said Sgt he "doesn't see (a fine) as a deterrant." torney Bruce propoal er fine would make the police more ve because they can write more in the same amount of time.' -Sgt. Jan Soumala, Ann Arbor police Associated Press Writing on the wall Two artists carry a giant crayon off the Providence, Rhode Island house where it was attached along with several other crayons. The artists had decorated the house in a paint-by-number scheme, complete with numbers and crayon scrawls. H i 'Hurricane Diana slams into East Coast states he scalpers will always turn a profit over and they receive. aid the city should con- ce the current penalties keep the practice at a veral arrests last fall, ce have almost entirely rs in the past. But with police officials say they to be more effective in ers. E NEW measure, police e to arrest scalpers and he street longer, passing es and interfering with e would make the police 'because they can write in the same amount of . Jan Soumala. City at- Laidlaw, however, said From AP and UPI CHARLESTON, S.C. - Hurricane Diana veered toward the coast with winds up to 125 mph yesterday, pushing heavy rain. almost 80 miles inland ahead of its wobbling eye and threatening to create tides up to 12 feet above normal. "Hurricane Diana is now a dangerous hurricane," the National Weather Service said. "Further strengthening is likely .. ." Roads were jammed as people headed for higher ground along the North and South Carolina coasts. Others secured boats and mobile homes, taped or boarded up windows and stocked up on emergency supplies. Island ferries along the low-lying Outer Banks and barrier islands, where beaches draw thousands of tourists, prepared to shut down. The center of the massive storm could hit land between Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Wilmington, N.C., yesterday evening, said the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Reports from a weather service airplane "indicate Diana continues to strengthen as the eye wobbles northward toward the North Carolina coast," the agency said at noon yester- day. SINCE MONDAY, the storm's movement had sped up from 5 mph to 10 mph, and it turned from a northeastward course to a northward heading. The highest sustained winds around its characteristic eye accelerated from 74 mph on Monday to 125 mph. At noon yesterday, the storm was drifting northward at 10 mph about 60 miles southeast of Myrtle Beach, S.C., with the eye at latitude 32.9 north and loingitude 78.3 west. Diana's Bhighest sustained winds were 125 mph, and gales extended 125 miles in all directions, the weather service said. Some isolated tornadoes may occur over parts of nor- theastern South Carolina and southeastern North Carolina, the weather service warned and heavy rain of 10 inches or more was predicted. By midday a large area of rain extended inland for almost 80 miles over North Carolina, with heavy thunderstorms. A HURRICANE warning was in effect from north of Sasvannah, at Georgia's northern coastal border, to Oregon Inlet, N.C., just south of Kitty Hawk. Gale warnings were posted north to just south of Virginia Beach, Va., and tornado warnings were issued for coastal sections of North and South Carolina. Motels along Interstate 95 in North and South Carolina were jammed. "Everybody is hunting for rooms and we just don't know where to send them," said Lee Martin at the Holiday Inn in Florence, S.C., 75 miles inland from Myrtle Beach. "My computer shows there are no rooms in Holiday Inns as far north as Lenoir, N.C." "I'M TERRIFIED," said Dee Blazer, 34, of Carolina Beach, as she coaxed the family cat from under their rented oceanfront house. Blazer, her husband, daughter, cats, dog and parakeet were heading for a relative's home in nearby Wilmington. Blazer said the house had survived the devastation of Hurricane Hazel 30 years ago but "I don't think it can take another one." that police have almost always ignored scalpers in front of the Union and would probably continue to do so in the future. HE SAID THAT the only time he could remember scalpers being arrested was last fall when an Ann Ar- bor News article sparked several arrests. He said that the 'propnsed ordinance would simply reflect the "low priority" which punishing scalpers has in the city. Councilman James Blow who in- troduced the proposal at the request of one of the scalpers arrested last year, said he did not think the' law would be used against students who are trying to sell one or two tickets. He said it 'was mainly aimed at harassing high volume professionals who make hundreds of dollars each game. Festifall- bringys clubs to recruit on Diag By SEAN JACKSON With over 500 clubs and student organizations at the University, it can be difficult deciding which to join. But that's where Festifall '84 can help. Festifall will fill the Diag with 100 booths Friday afternoon to inform students, faculty, and staff of the variety of places where thay can become involved. ACCORDING TO one of the fair's organizers, Noreen Ball, a Senior English nfajor, Festifall is nothing new, however this year's event is the biggest ever. The fair is open to all clubs and organizations on and off campus. The groups had to pay a $5 entrance fee and had to prove to be interesting to the University to be allowed to set up a booth, Ball said. Four different groups, University Ac- tivites Center, Michigan Student Assembly, Student Alumni Council, and the Student Organization Development Center, have been planning Friday's festivities since last March. BALL SAID that the organizations will be allowed to promote their ac- tivities any way they like - within reason. Some of the more unusual events See PLANES, Page 5 Reagan to meet with Gromyko From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan announced yesterday he will meet with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at the White House on Sept. 28 for his first face-to-face talk with any senior Kremlin leader since taking of- fice nearly four years ago. Reagan, whose political opponents blame him for rekindling an arms race with the Soviet Union, said the most important thing he hopes to accomplish by his private talk with the veteran Soviet official is "to maybe convince him the United States means no harm." THE SEPT. 28 session at the White House, coming just weeks before the general election, was aimed in part at undercutting Democratic challenger Walter Mondale's claims that Reagan's policies have plunged the country into a collision course with the Soviets by fostering an arms race. "The most important thing is what understanding I can reach with Foreign Minister Gromyko to convince him that the United States means no harm," Reagan told reporters in announcing that the Soviet foreign minister had ac- cepted his invitation. Describing the White House meeting as "confiden- tial," Reagan dismissed suggestions that the timing of the invitation had been geared to the upcoming presiden- tial election. THE SOVIET UNION suspended Geneva talks on intermediate and strategic nuclear missiles late last year in response to the deployment of 572 U.S. Cruise and Pershing 2 missiles in five European nations. The Kremlin's chief advisor on space weaponry said yesterday the United States holds the key to a "quick and fundamental accord" to avert an arms race in space between Moscow and Washington. The Soviets proposed talks last June to prevent an arms race in space, but refused to attend as long as the United States insisted on combining the "Star Wars" talks with negotiations on the reduction of intercontinental missiles. SPEAKING ON NBC'S Today show broadcast from Moscow, Yevgeny Velikhov, vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, said it is up to the United States to take the initiative in so called "Star Wars" talks. See KREMLIN, Page 3 Daily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA Flying high Ann Arbor resident Jeff Van Sickle enjoys the warm weather and some final rays of sun yesterday afternoon in the Law Quad. TODAY Professor of soapology N Amherst College professor who scheduled his classes on Robert Frost and William Yeats so that hey wouldn't conflict with the soap opera "Search For Tomorrow" says he's ecstatic that the show is back on local television. William Pritchard, 51, waged a stiff letter-writing cam- paign last spring when WWLP, the NBC affiliate in Springfield, dropped the soap opera. The English literature professor says his avocation fulfills a need to escape for a half-hour from the "wordy world" of Byron and Plato. He even got to join the show for a day as an extra after the serial's producers learned of his efforts to keep it in the local air. Since the show was dropped Pritchard has tried to keep up by peering at the snowy reception from a Hartford, Where's Toadie? T OADIE, a long-haired collie-shepard who thrilled college and professional football crowds with her leaping catches of Frisbees, is lost in Virginia and her master fears the worst. "My expectations are not really high, but I'm not giving up on her," said Taylor Runner, whose pre-game entertaining of West Virginia University football fans in the mid-1970's led him and his high-leaping do to the National Football League. "I just hope that if somebody has found her, that they're taking care of her," he said Monday. Toadie wandered away from an interstate rest stop near Williamsburg, Va. last month. Runner and Toadie started providing Mountaineer fans with something to laugh about and applaud in 1974 when they began running onto Mountaineer Field prior to home games. Runner would toss his Frisbee half the distance of the playing field and the black-haired Toadie would chase it and make leaping catches that would draw oohs and ahs. The clever absorbed a 24-3 loss to Maryland. Runner and Toadie, aiming to give the fans something to cheer about during the game, trotted onto the field at the end of a quarter while the teams were changing ends. "I did that and they (WVU of- ficials) .got really upset, which was understandable," he said. But when Runner and Toadie were barred from fur- ther games, a letter-writing campaign began in the Daily Athenaeum, WVU's student newspaper. They were allowed back on the field two home games later. "It's difficult to resolve that your dog is gone," said Runner. "The frustrating thing is she's an older dog, and not really able to care for herself.".Runner said Toadie probably died. "I just hope that whatever happened to her isn't a horror story," he said. Name that plane W HAT'S IN a name? Possibly two lifetime airline passes. Or maybe free airfare for a year. That's the offer made yesterday by Frontier Horizon. a Denver-based help in renaming itself. Frontier Horizon is a discount line that serves major markets not served by Frontier Airlines, the other line owned by Frontier Holdings Inc. The pair of lifetime passes at stake in the rename-Frontier Horizon contest will be good on both airlines, the company said. There also will be eight "first prizes" of free airfare for a year on both airlines, the company said. The contest will run from Sept. 24 until Oct. 20. The new name will be an- nounced in November and go into effect Jan. 9, 1985. That will also be the first anniversary of Frontier Holdings' low- farE airline. On the inside ... Opinion preaches to President Reagan. . . Arts sends out invitations to the Party of the Week. . . and Sports profiles Wolverine linebacker Rodney Lyles. I I+ CI