Ninety-five Years. Of Editorial Freedom cl b'r Mit 4au IEIUIIQ Fall Sunny and clear with a high of 60. bVol. XCV, No. 21 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan -Saturday, September 29, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages IV - U-Club gets second liquor sale violation By GEORGEA KOVANIS The state Liquor Control Commission has officially cited the Union's Univer- sity Club bar with a second violation of its liquor license. Officials from the University Club r and the Liquor Commission have been expecting the citation for several Weeks. The violation occured Sept. 8, when a club employee served a drink to a customer who was-not a member. After a review by the state attorney general, the club was cited on Wednesday. THE BAR owns a "private club" liquor license which allows it to sell alcohol to club members only. Univer- sity students, staff, and alumni are automatically members and may spon- sor guests. Liquor control officials began in- vestigating the U-Club this summer af- ter a local bar owner complained that the bar was selling alcohol to non- members. Penalties for the violation range from a fine of less than $300 or revocation of the club's license, a spokesman for the Liquor Control Commission said. THE U-CLUB received its first citation August 28 after a liquor control official was served a drink on July 18. The citation was mailed to U-Club of- ficials Sept. 14. The Liquor Control Commission has not determined what penalty, if any, the club will receive for the first violation. The second violation could result in a more severe punishment for the U- Club, said Walter Keck, deputy director of the Liquor Control Commission's en- forcement division. "IT IS conceivable that (the penalty) will be more severe," Keck said. "If somebody does something once, they probably made a mistake ... (but) we normally assume when you get caught doing something, you're not going to do it again." U-Club officials said they were con- cerned about the violations and doing everything they could to prevent fur- ther problems. See U-CLUB, Page 3 Reagan meets with Gr-omyko m Washinmgton WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan conducted nearly four hours of "very strong and useful" talks yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, covering a range of topics from nuclear arms to Middle Eastern af- fairs. No breakthroughs or agreements were an- nounced. The men conferred without aides or inter- preters at one point during a meeting that began with a cascade of White House photo oppor- tunities that seemed to annoy Gromyko. When asked whether Reagan and Gromyko had agreed on anything during their talks, Secretary of State George Shultz told reporters: "They agreed to keep in touch." "There's lots of distress, there's lots of ap- prehension, there are lots of differences of opinion and I don't think one discussion is going to clear the air completely but I think it undoub- tedly made some progress in that direction," Sh- ultz said. "It was a very strong and useful interchange and Gromyko expressed his views very power- fully and aggressively, as he always does, and the president listened to him very carefully," Shultz said. Reagan and Gromyko spent a considerable amount of time discussing "the problems of nuclear weapons and what could be done about them," but Shultz made a point of saying they were not negotiating. REAGAN's campaign opponent, Democrat Walter Mondale, met with Gromyko Thursday and won words of praise from the official Soviet news agency. Yesterday Mondale said in a statement: "Today, Secretary of State Shultz gave a brief description of President Reagan's first meeting with a high Soviet official in four years. I hope that we are going to hear more about what was accomplished than what we heard from Secretary Shultz earlier this after- noon, and I hope they make progress in their meeting tomorrow." Shortly after Gromyko left the White House, it was announced that he would meet today with Shultz, their second meeting this week. During his first-ever official session with a senior Kremlin leader, the president pulled Gromyko aside for an eight-minute chat without any aides to deliver a personal message, accor- ding to Shultz. "HE HAD SOME points that he wanted to make to Gromyko alone and he did it that way because he felt that just two individuals all by themselves in a room. . . there's something about a close one-to-one statement that perhaps carries special weight," said Shultz. Shultz refused to divulge details of the private meeting, but described the overall session as in- tense, useful, forceful and direct. U.S. officials had said in advance that one ob- jective of the meeting would be to clear the air in the wake of the growing hostility between the superpowers, but Shultz said only a step in that direction had been taken. See REAGAN, Page 2 d .,i~nlPrc Jaw s IV Associate ress Eight-year-old Jon Dodrill of Moorhead City, North Carolina looks into the jaws of a 15-foot, 10-inch great white shark caught Thursday of Cape Lookout. His father was one of the crew who caught the 5 I 2.080-pound creature. L _, x--. - _ Australia SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - The rhetorical broadsides that Ronald Reagan and Walter Mon- dale trade on the campaign trail hardly seem like politics to Australians who see their politicians; savage each other almost daily. "Politics in Australia tend to be a blood sport," said Michael Sexton, a political and legal expert at the University of New South Wales. AMERICAN politicians generally steer clear of naPoh tics r persona attacks. But Australian politicians try to rip each other apart and Parliament often resem- bles a verbal brawl. Australian politicians have been continuing a long and vivid tradition in recent months by ac- cusing each other of such things as robbing graves, having face lifts and being crooks. One opposition legislator in Queensland expressed concern for the health of a dog that had bitten 0 0 0 oun In v tctoi state Premier John Bejelke-Peterson. Many Australians were startled when Prime Minister Bob Hawke broke down and cried at a press conferenct ;it September while being asked about opposition claims that he was protecting criminals. OPPOSITION leader Andrew Peacock charged that Hawke had blunted a probe of organized crime to protect elements of his party. Peacock us cycle called Hawke "a little crook" who "associates with criminals and takes his orders from those who direct those criminals." Hawke denied the accusation and his wife said later the prime minister wept because he had just found out his youngest daughter had a heroin problem. But the sight of the popular leader reduced to tears made some Australians wonder if See EVEN, Page 3 Civil Liberties chairman supports MSA veto power By JERRY MARKON Regents' by-law 7.02, which gives the Michigan Student Assembly veto power over the proposed code of non- academic conduct, represents an impor- tant civil rights principle which must be upheld, said the chairman of the University's faculty Civil Liberties Board. "People in our society ought to be governed by their consent," said Prof. Martin Gold, the board's chairman, at Campus Meet the Press in the Pond Room of the Union. SEVERAL of the University's regents have said that they. may by-pass the MSA vote on the code which would apply to all students whether they live in University residence halls, frater- nities., sororities, off-campus housing or co-operatives. The code is an attempt to crack down on student misbehavior. Faculty and staff members are bound by separate conduct codes. Although Gold said he recognized the 'People in our society ought to be governed by their consent.' - Prof. Martin Gold Chairman of Faculty Civil Liberties Board general need for a code to make the campus safer, he said the code should apply to staff members as well as stud- ents. BUT HE cautioned against over- extending the grounds for punishment. In some cases, students could be punished by both the University and civil courts. And although Gold said that this was a civil liberties issue, the concern that the punishments could constitute double jeopardy is technically unfounded. Gold, however, did say the University should be able to take some sorts of unilateral actions to maintain campus order and safety. Recent action by the housing office to inform several fraternities that they needed a city permit to sell alcohol would probably be justified, he said. The cancellation of the event earlier this month was not a violation of anyone's civil liberties, Gold said, ad- ding that the University was justified in asserting its responsibilites to help protect the community against un- derage drinkers. Hot wheels Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Greg Huber, a senior in the art school, zooms by Crisler Arena in the third annual National Collegiate Driving Cham- pionships. The winner of the race, to be completed today, will receive $5,000 and the use of a Dodge Daytona Turbo for a year.. TODAY- Bacon bash Every football game has a pigskin. But today's Michigan-Indiana game will have the whole pig - over 1000 pounds worth, to be exact. The occasion is Pork Day, a pre-game party in the narking lot of Memorial Stadium in Bloomington that is Town for sale For a mere $950,000, Gorda, Calif., can be yours. One of only four communities along the splendid Big Sur Coastline, it's all for sale - 22 prime acres, seven homes, a general store, a gas station, a restaurantand a jade shop. But while Gorda's magnificent vistas and peaceful at- mosphere make it about as close to paradise as you can get on earth, the town is far away from just about everything about 50 miles north in Oak Hills. At 72, he says he's tired of keeping the town in shape long-distance. The town's han- dful of residents love being "a million miles from nowhere," and they are hopeful the new owner will love it too. "Gorda's a very attractive place," said Steve Wolfinger, who works in the general store. "It's got a lot of potential.'No, it's not necessarily Vacationland USA, but it's got great depth to it." "I came here four years ago to visit a friend, and they needed a waitress," recalls Heather McDanal. "I loved it here. I didn't even decide to stay. I just stayed." "It's real, just like every other place, except it's smaller. Instead of 10,000 people, you have 10," she added. County Prosecutor Jack Crawford earlier this week, saying women deputy prosecutors should wear dresses or skirts and blouses in his court, not pantsuits and slacks. One woman appeared in Clement's court the next day in a pan- tsuit. The judge took no action. On Thursday, he told Crawford: "I don't want to come off the wall with something unreasonable, especially in light of the reaction. Perhaps I've been cloistered too long here in my cham- bers." I I E