The Michigan Daily- Thursday, April 9,1992 - Page 3 awn Administrators to frame new Social Event by Purvi Shah Daily Administration Reporter Since student leaders - meeting with University administrators - were unable to come to a decision on a new University Social Events Policy yesterday, University officials will springboard from previous dis- cussions to compile a revised policy. Frank Cianciola, Michigan Union building director, and Royster Harper, associate vice president for Student Affairs, will draft a consoli- dated University Social Events Policy, which will then be available for feedback from students partici- pating in the policy formulation. The University draft will be completed April 24, and student leaders will have until April 27 to make adjustments. A final meeting to wrap up concerns has been planned for May 1. Cianciola and Harper emphasized student leaders would still be able to mark up, change, and react to the draft they compose. "I think the misperception is that we'll go off in some closet and create the policy," Cianciola said. So far the coalition of student or- ganizations and University officials have agreed on the following issues regarding party procedures: Opening it to University stu- dents, faculty, staff, alumni, and guests and probably students from other universities; Defining guests to include anyone with a photo identification, escorted or on a guest list sponsored by University students, faculty, staff, or alumni with special provisions for exceptions possible through agree- ment among student group, building staff and security representatives; Insuring student monitors act only in an advisory and not security manner; and, Sharing responsibility for out- s Policy breaks among the student organiza- tion, building staff, security, and pa- trons involved in the incident, with the student group responsible for any damages accrued. Omega Psi Phi President Lester Spence, whose fraternity sponsored a party in the Michigan Union Ballroom in February during which a fight broke out, said he was hesi- tant to place all the blame for poten- tial incidents on student organizations. "In certain situations, yes, the or- ganization should be responsible,"' he said. "I'm really concerned with creating a partnership where people who come to the party aren't involved." While it is unlikely all parties will be satisfied by the final policy, Trotter House representative Ro< Evans said there has been progress. "We've gotten a whole lot furthe than when we've started," she said.F Venezuelan riotsv A hooded youth holds a stone near a burning car during a clash between anti-government protesters and police yesterday in a poor neighborhood of Caracas. The riots demanded the resignation of Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez. NRC calls for clean up of I 46 contaminated nuclear sites ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) demanded speedier cleanup of 46 severely contaminated nuclear sites yesterday, complaining that the effort had lagged for years. Owners of the facilities could face fines or future license restric- tions if they do not comply. Most of the sites have long been closed. Separately, an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) study es- timated there are more than 45,000 locations nationwide where there once were nuclear activities that may have contaminated land, build- ings or water systems. In most locations, this contamina- tion is probably at very low levels, barely above background radiation, but in other cases such as at federal weapons facilities it involves highly radioactive wastes and liquids, said officials who have reviewed the EPA study. The eight-month study, which is to be presented today at a Senate hearing, represents the first attempt to assess radiation pollution nation- wide so that new standards for cleanup may be developed. NRC action focused on a rela- tively small number of locations where the radioactive contamination from past nuclear activities has been known for years. Robert Bernero, director of the NRC's Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, said the sites do not pose an immediate health threat because they are not open to the public, but that they represent "a long-term environmental hazard" that needs to be cleaned up. In many of the cases "the owners were dragging their feet" and in some cases have refused to ac- knowledge responsibility, he said. Bernero said the NRC selected the 46 sites from about 36,000 loca- tions the agency has surveyed. He estimated that of the larger number fewer than 75 eventually would re- quire the kind of decontamination plan the NRC called for yesterday. In the others sites contamination was expected to have been negligible or cleanup activities already have been completed. Among the sites are An old landfill near St. Louis where radioactive materials were dumped illegally decades ago. Piles of depleted uranium tail- ings left in a ravine in what now is a residential area outside Cleveland. The tailings were from the Chemetron Corp., which once pro- cessed uranium for use by the plas- tics industry; Radioactive wastes at the mili- tary's Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland and the Army Arsenal in Massachusetts; Various nuclear fuels facilities owned by such companies as Kerr- McGee in Oklahoma and Babcock. & Wilcox in Pennsylvania; 0 A factory belonging to Ad- vanced Medical Systems in Cleve- land where cobalt capsules were made for cancer treatment; and, A lighting company factory near Bloomsburg, Pa., where fila- ments once were made using tritium, a radioactive gas, in the manufacture' of "exit" signs. Bernero said he hoped owners of these facilities would voluntarily ac- celerate the cleanup of the sites. Federal agents seize Detroit golf club, alleging it harbored gambling operations DETROIT (AP) - A 45-hole golf course was seized yesterday in a federal gambling and money-laundering probe that also resulted in 14 people indicted on rack- eteering and other charges. The seizure of the Wolverine Golf Club, valued at between $20 million and $25 million, was the largest in Michigan his- tory, said U.S. Attorney Stephen Markman. The club allegedly was the center of a multimillion-dollar sports and horse-race gambling ring that had ties to Nevada, he said. "The Wolverine Golf Club was both the physical site of gambling operations, and its books were used to conceal the pro- ceeds," Markman' said. The course is near Mount Clemens, about 30 miles north of Detroit. Federal agents arrested by yesterday af- ternoon nine of 12 Michigan residents named in the indictments, and one of two Nevada residents who also were indicted, said Hal Helterhoff, special agent in charge of the FBI's Detroit office. One defendant remained at large. The seizure and the arrests capped a five-year investigation involving the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service, the Michigan state police and U.S. marshals, Markman said. Benjamin McMakin, chief of the crimi- nal investigation division of the IRS in 'The Wolverine Golf Club was ... the physical site of gambling operations.' - Stephen Markman U.S. Attorney Detroit, said he couldn't estimate how much money was funneled through the club over the years, but said it was "millions." The 82-count indictment includes a va- riety of charges relating to illegal gambling, racketeering and money laundering, inter- state transmission of wagering information and structuring transactions to evade cur- rency transaction reporting requirements. Named in the indictments unsealed yes- terday were: Jack Anthony Lucido, of Grosse Pointe Shores, the owner and majority stockholder of the Wolverine Golf Club, and his wife, Eda Lucido. Jack Lucido, of Grosse Pointe Shores, manager of the club; Leonard A. Torrice, of Warren; and, Aurora Selva, of Romeo, a bank teller who allegedly advised the Lucidos. Also named were: Richard Tabbi, of Mount Clemens; George Thomas Brady, of Warren; Carolyn Rose Hojnacki, of Royal Oak; Sebastian Lucido, of Mount Clemens; Frances Lucido, of Mount Clemens; Michael Logreco, of East- Detroit; George Sarkisian, of Lincoln Park; Edward Sarkisian, of Las Vegas; and Larry Katz, of Henderson, Nev. The Lucidos' home in Grosse Pointe Shores was also seized yesterday, Markman said. He declined to say if the people ar- rested were part of any larger organizations. 'Project Serve LSA senior Evan Yeung (left) and RC senior Craig Barkan clean the walls of the Ann Arbor Homeless Shelter as part of Project Serve. Both are members of Alpha Phi Omega. If THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Pontiac to sell Silverdome, the Lions' 17-year den b r O . 4 +9- ' ,. :W Meetings Undergrad Psych Soceity, Anderson A-B, 5:00 p.m. ACT-UP Ann Arbor, meeting, Crofoot Rm, Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 1311 EECS, weekly luncheon meeting, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, weekly group mtg, 1040 Dana Bldg, 7 p.m. , Islamic Circle, weekly mtg, 3rd floor Michigan League 5:15. Pro-choice Action, weekly mtg, MLB Rm B118, 7:30 p.m. Pre -Med Club Meeting, Pendleton rm, 6:30 p.m. Korean Students Association, weekly meeting, Pendleton Rm, Michigan Union, 6 p.m. Amnesty Int'l, letter officer elections, writing. East Quad, Greene Lounge, 7-8 p.m. Hindi Discussion/Class, M L B B115, 8 p.m. Detroit Summer '92 Speaker Series, UM Greens, Anderson room, D Mich Union, 7 p.m. Lysitrata, Angell Hall 2235 7:30 p.m. Speakers A Uaava.. VnU.. n14itlin Andre Marrou, Libertarian Presidential Candidate, 7:30 p.m. Michigan Union, pond room The effects of the reward system on research, 8:00 p.m. Furthermore Anthropology Club, 7 p.m. Dominick's Federal Tax Workshop for International Center Students and Scholar, Rm 9, International Center, 10:00 a.m. Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibition, Rackham Galleries, 3rd floor Rackham, 7-9:30 p.m. Safewalk, night-time safety walk- ing service. Sun-Thurs 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Fri-Sat, 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 102 UGLi or call 936-1000. Also, extended hours: Sun-Thurs 1-3 a.m. Stop by Angell Hall Computing Center or call 763-4246. Northwaik, North Campus nighttime team walking service. Sun- Thur 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763-WALK. ECB Peer Writing Tutors, Angell/Mason Hall Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. Stress and Time Management, Consultations with peer counselors available, 3100 Michigan Union, 1- 3 p.m. U~nderraduate Psvcholov PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - The Pontiac City Council hopes to sell the Silverdome, home of the Detroit; Lions for 17 years, to ease the bur-1 den on the financially strapped city. The Detroit suburb has been hit hard by auto industry shutdowns, and has a $1.5 million budget deficit this fiscal year. The City Council has previously opposed recommendations by Mayor Wallace Howard to sell the stadium, which was built for $55.71 million and opened in 1975. Financial adviser Louis1 Schimmel suggested last year the city sell some assets, including the Silverdome. On Monday, the council agreed to try to sell the dome and other city assets, including a golf course and hospital. "These luxuries really are not a part of city government," council President John Bueno said Tuesday. Councilmember Tracy Miller said "we need to .:. get some of the dip out of that big bowl." The Silverdome was expected to create economic development for the city and about 680 jobs. But much of the development has gone to nearby communities such as Auburn Hills and Troy. At the same time, an $800,000- a-year state subsidy for the stadium has been criticized by Gov. John Pontiac residents pay 1.3 mills Engler as a pork-barrel appropria- in property taxes a year for the con- struction bonds, and still owed $27- million on the building at the end of 1991. A mill is equal to 12000 of 'We need to ... get the estimated value of a property. some of the dip out of The council hopes a buyer also that big bowl.' will bring development to the va- Tabibo lcant land surrounding the stadium,.. - Tracy Miller which will be one of nine U.S.- Pontiac Councilmember venues to host the world Cup soc- cer tournament in 1994. "Nothing would be greater than to have a developer come in and say, 'We'd like to do something: tion and the Legislature is currently around the Silverdome,"' Miller. wrangling over whether to include said. "Maybe we'll have a hotel- it in the budget. here before the World Cup comes." iW RIT E T OR T HE M IC H IGAN D A IL Y' 76-05 _- I I READ THE DAILY CLASS -mEs 1 Can you read & write? You can review books and preview visiting writers for Daily Arts!! Call Alan, Mike, or Elizabeth at 763-0379. r-- UNDEJRGRADUATE PSYCH SOCIETY ?PRESENTS I. m -i i Hairstyling to Please! 6 Barber Stylists- No waiting DASCOLA STYLISTS DR RoLIB/ Bj Y jj DO ].(V}JYA'~jN.. D \ bE 9i iii !BQ /T ; Sports Nutrition & Body Building Products -Vitamins & Supplements opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 BA LA NCJWC FAMILY _I d . __- _ _ U 4 A