N.C. State upsets Houston See story, Page 10 Ninety-Three Years * tit Sk Weak Of t :43Skies will be overcast again of ___ II5 1 ~ 1 IItoday with a 30 percent chance of- Editorial Freedom r rain. Expect a high around 46. Vol. XCIII, No. 146 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, April 5, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Pages Toxic sites cause / 4 f§ fear and confusion x _K r S By JACKIE YOUNG Residents living around two hazar- dous waste dumps located about a half- hour's drive from campus say bureaucratic red tape and "buck passing" are frustrating their efforts to get the health hazards cleaned up. High concentrations of PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), a toxic chemical that can cause cancer and birth defects in laboratory animals, have been found in one of the sites and residents suspect health defects they have noted over the last few years may be attributable to chemical wastes seeping from both dumps. THE RASMUSSEN and Spiegelberg chemical dumps are located on the south side of Spicer Road less than one mile west of U.S. 23 in Brighton, a small town in Livingston County. Both sites are listed on the Environmental Protec- tion Agency's Superfund list, which was created to provide money for hazardous waste cleanup. But since the sites were targeted in December of 1980, residents say neither state nor county officials have been willing to take responsibility for gathering the data necessary to apply for Superfund money. "They (county health officials and state Department of Natural Resource officials) send a total stranger to the area periodically," said one 30-year resident of the area. "The official is met with hostility by the dump owners ... they conduct their tests and then draw conclusions. But these con- clusions are more expedient than fac- tual." AREA RESIDENTS who have ban- ded together to compile a health history of the people living near the dumps said they have noted strange health problems in their cattle, including blood clots of the lung and birth defects. The residents say at least one woman in the area is suffering from a thyroid condition, three area residents have con- tracted cancer and another had to have a colon operation. Two women living in the area have .had mastectomies in the past year and several other residents have been suf- fering from inexplicable skin rashes which began shortly after they moved into the area surrounding the dumps. RESIDENTS WHO have tried to present their health findings to officials say they have become discouraged. See NEARBY, Page 6 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Black chemicals seep from old barrels at the Rasmussen Bros. dump in Brighton. High concentrations of PCBs have been found at the dump which was closed in 1974. $5 p By RITA GIRARDI and THOMAS MILLER Ann Arbor's $5 marijuana law sur- vived last night's city elections intact with all five wards voting against a proposal to repeal the law. An unofficial tally showed that the proposal went down by a three to two margin - 13,897 voted against the proposed repeal, while 8,933 cast their ballots in favor of repeal. THE PROPOSAL was expected to face stiffer opposition, but a heavier- than-usual student turnout in the 1st and 3rd Wards helped to defet the proposed repeal. The proposal was also defeated soun- dly by more than 500 votes in the heavily Republican 2nd and 4th Wards. The repeal plan was placed on the ballot by the Republican dominated city council in November after a petition drive to place the proposal on the ballot failed: Had the pot law been repealed, a backup proposal passed by city council in February would have made the fine for use of marijuana $25. Those who opposed the repeal ar- gued that once the pot law returned to the books as a city ordinance, the city it law. council could easily stiffen t penalties. Proposal A, the "weatherizatio charter amendment, also went down defeat last night. The amendmei which would have required mandato energy conservation measures in rent housing, captured only the heav student-populated 1st Ward. THE PROPOSAL won only 9,2 saved he votes for 42 percent of the total, while 12,771 votes were cast against it for 58 ,, percent, based on the unofficial tally. to The charter amendment was one of to the most hotly debated issues of the nt, campaign. Support from students and ry other renters had been expected to help Lal the plan succeed, but the efforts of ily student and tenants' rights 05 See FIVE, Page 5 Beicher wins, mayoral race-,- By RITA GIRARDI and THOMAS MILLER Republican incumbent Louis Belcher slipped into his third term as mayor of Ann Arbor last night, . narrowly defeating Democratic challenger Leslie Morris. Independent Party candidate Paul Jensen finished a distant third, cap- turing less than 1 percent of the vote. IN COUNCIL RACES, Democrats Jeff Epton and Kathy Edgren upset Republicans Virginia Johansen and Lou Velker in the 3rd and 5th Wards, respectively. The elections left city council with six Republicans (including Belcher) and five Democrats. Belcher took four of the city's five wards, tallying 11,900 votes, against See BELCHER, Page 5 Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Lou Belcher gives his victory speech at the Holiday Inn on Jackson Rd. last night, after winning his third battle for mayor. Voting begins today in MSA elections By LAURIE DELATER Students who are at dinner, classes, and even waiting for the North Campus bus can vote today and tomorrow for next year's Michigan Student Assembly members. Students can cast ballots for president and vice-president as well as school representatives at 25 polling places across campus. The poll sites will be located in classroom buildings, most large dorms, and other campus gathering places. ACCORDING TO Election Director Bruce Goldman, voting hours at the sites have been adjusted this year to accomodate more students. Polling places will be open in the Fishbowl from 8:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m.; the Un- dergraduate Library from 7 to 11 p.m.; and at CRISP from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Voters must present a validated student identification card at polling locations in order to vote. Competing for presidential and vice presidential posts are: Marc Dann and Kim Fridkin of ACT; Duane Kuizema and Laurie Clement of the British Humour Party; Steve Schaumberger and Lynn Desenberg of Improve Michigan's Policies, Academics, and Communications Today (IMPACT); and Mary Rowland and Jono Soglin of It's Our University (IOU). Students will also have the oppor- tunity to vote on five ballot proposals. The results of the proposals are not bin- ding to MSA, but could be used to help influence the Regents' decisions on issues such as renewing and increasing the mandatory fees for student gover- nments, allowing the assembly's minority affairs coordinator a vote on the steering committee. Challenger launched S in to final fron tier From AP and UPI CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The space shuttle Challenger rocketed flawlessly into orbit yesterday, setting out to launch the world's largest and most powerful communications satellite during the hectic first day of its maiden flight. Veteran commander Paul Weitz, 50, and space rookies Karol Bobko, 45, Story Musgrave, 47, and Donald Peter- son, 49, sped into a perfect orbit 177 miles up. They quickly settled into the busiest workday ever assigned to men AP Photo in space. See CHALLENGER, Page 5 The space shuttle Challenger blasts into orbit yesterday after a trouble-free launching. TODAY The very bestest How to not make do APRIL IS THE cruelest month of all, says Marni Vos, because it brings long weeks of egg salad and egg soup to those unemployed people fortunate enough to hit pay dirt in their Easter egg hunts. Vos, a student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln who recently lost her job, has put together the Second Quarterly Unemployment Calendar, a daily guide for the jobless. Her survival tips run from Overheated and over exposed A62-YEAR-OLD British Columbian woman was so heated up after she set fire to a museum that she sat through her trial nude. She also stripped at the scene of the fire when firefighters attempted to extinguish the blaze. Mary Braun, who is reportedly still weak from a recent 87- day hunger strike she undertook while in jail, had to be carried to court by a sheriff's deputy. She says God told her tn hurn the museum. The woman has two prior arson con- of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. the day before. Also on this date in history: " 1933 - Several area stores began stocking special tobacco for women after several women were sighted puffing on pipes. * 1972 - Ann Arbor's pot law, which set a maximum $100 fine and/or 90 days in jail for possesion of small amounts, was declared unconstitutional by a local, district court judge. " 1980 - A group of thirty demonstrators from the Coin- I I i I