41vJr4V Ninety- nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No. 81 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, January 24, 1989 Copyright 1989, The Michigan Daily Quake ravages * Soviet village; up to 1000 dead Harassment MOSCOW (AP) - A pre-dawn earthquake in Soviet Central Asia unleashed a 50-foot high wall of dirt and mud that buried a mountain vil- lage and swept through at least two others Monday, killing up to 1,000 people as they slept, officials said. The quake struck the southwest- ern part of Tadzhikistan, a Soviet republic of more than 4.8 million people that borders Afghanistan and China. The U.S. Geological Survey in Reston, Va., estimated the quake was at 5.4 on the Richter scale, which measures ground motion as recorded on a seismograph. The Dec. 7th earthquake in northwestern Ar- menia, 1,300 miles west of Du- shanbe, registered a 6.9 on the Rich- ter scale and killed 25,000 people. Officials and Soviet media said the devastation was vast and total in *places. "Almost everybody died," Zainid- din Nasreddinov, Editor-in-Chief of Tadzhikistan's official news agency, said by telephone after visiting the wrecked Sharora. farming settlement of Sharora "had more than 150 peas- ant households before that tragic moment," the Soviet news agency Tass reported. "Now most of it is razed to the ground by the ruthless force of the natural calamity." Tass said the number of dead in the disaster zoneI,800 miles south- east of Moscow was estimated atl,000, but cautioned that was a preliminary figure. "Almost all of the victims died asleep in the beds," Maj. Alexander Loparev, duty officer at Tadzhikistan Interior Ministry headquarters in Dushanbe said by telephone. According to preliminary fig- ures, the quake and landslide de- stroyed about 100 buildings, includ- ing five schools and a maternity hospital near the epicenter. In Sharora, "cries and wails can be heard everywhere," Tass reported. "Some are bemoaning and burying their near and dear ones, while others are trying to find the few survivors between the thick layer of sand and clay." pol BY MARION DA After months of ulty's governing b policy which gives lines regulating cam tion and harassmen monthly Senate Ass The policy, sim policy passed last disciplines, such a mands or even susp ulty members accus tory harassment. The proposal pas with two abstention "I think people policy) will be fai Prof. Thomas Lena of the Senate Advi on University Affai tion is (faculty me workable." The policy willn assembly's origina mittee, and then to executive officers fci The policy was condition that the fii more explicit Lang harassment-discrimi and that it include sembly's amendm Savory, executiv SACUA. TheSenate vot amend language in consensual relatio faculty, students, an icy now reads that tionships do not a sexual harassment times the two peof married. The policy has1 Senate Assembly's since last summer,v committee - comp personnel, Universi counseling services icy Senate VIS crimination and harassment policy, debate, the fac- and sent it to the Senate for en- ody approved a dorsement. explicit guide- But the Senate did not then ap- npus discrimina- prove the policy because some nt at yesterday's members questioned the necessity of sembly meeting. a harassment-discrimination policy. ilar to a student Some members also had complained April, imposes that the language used in the pro- as formal repri- posal was too vague. pensions, on fac- After seeing at least three more ed of discrimina- policy drafts, the Senate finally formed its own committee, the Sen- sed unanimously ate Assembly Re-draft Committee, s. last November. The committee re- will think (the ceived input from various University r," said English groups about the anxieties and hopes ghan, vice chair for a fair policy that would not sory Committee overlook any groups on campus. rs. "My expecta- Walter Debler, an engineering mbers) feel it is professor and member of the drafting committee, said, "We tried to con- now return to the struct something that was fair." 1 drafting com- Some Senate members had said the University's they wanted the policy to include rtheir approval. provisions to protect their "academic spassed on the freedom." Many say the professors, unag abot tn fearing punishment under the policy, nation procedures would not speak their minds during the Senate As- class, thus causing a "chilling effect" ents, said Laina on free speech. 'e assistant to But the new draft provides for an Academic Freedom Investigative ed yesterday to Committee, designed to be the place the policy about for dealing with academic freedom nships between cases. nd staff. The pol- University Policy Analyst John consensual rela- Schwartz, a member of the re-draft lways constitute committee, said the new draft pro- because some- vides a clear policy for faculty and ple involved are staff to abide by. Although the University has al- been one of the ways had explicit policies dealing major concerns with sexual harassment - such as when the drafting the ones in regental bylaws and the posed of faculty, faculty's Standard Practice Guide - ty attorneys, and the policies related to racial discrim- - created a dis- ination were vague, Schwartz said. OK'd Associated Press A woman wails after the earthquake wrecked the village of Sharora in the Soviet republic of Tazhiktan yesterday. About 600 people died in the village, an observer said. Council delays waste BY KRISTINE LALONDE At last night's Ann Arbor City Council meeting, councilmembers tabled two proposals on the waste issue - which would have estab- lished four new recycling drop-off centers, a compost waste dump, and a weekly date for haz- ardous household waste disposal - until Feb. 6. The council postponed the decision because the newly appointed Waste Reduction and Re- source Recovery Coordinator will not take office until Feb. 6. The coordinator will be in charge of implementing all waste and recycling programs. Councilmember Jeff Epton (D-3rd Ward) said Blue fails to come through BY ADAM SCHRAGER First-place Indiana stunned a raucous sellout crowd of 13,609 at Crisler Arena last night with a 71-70 victory over previously unbeaten-at- home Michigan. The Wolverines had an opportunity to win the game in the final seconds but Terry Mills missed a 20-foot jump shot. Mark Hughes grabbed the rebound but could not convert the rebound opportunity in the waning seconds. "We wanted to get Glen (Rice) inside, but we looked inside and it wasn't there," Michigan head coach Bill Frieder said. "He (Terry) had to take it." After Hughes' miss, Indiana's Jay Edwards recovered the loose ball to preserve the Hoosier victory and their unbeaten conference record. It was fitting that Edwards recovered the last ball as it was his scoring won the game. He scored 29 points, including 15 of Indiana's last 21. The Hoosier lead fluctuated between one and three for the last five minutes, with Edwards missing a three-point attempt with 45 seconds remaining. Michigan called timeout to set up a play for the last shot and the win. After calling timeout again with14 seconds left, the Wolverines set up what would be their futile attempt. At the start of the second half the decision was tabled until the new coordinator and his staff have the chance to draft a report on possible solutions to the waste problem. "Passing a resolution before the completion of the report puts emphasis on some things and none on others," Epton said, "It sets a priority that's not appropriate to set with the information we have now." Councilmember Liz Brater (D-3rd Ward) said the proposals were not comprehensive. "These are piecemeal measures," said Brater. "My con- cern is that we implement a solid waste program as comprehensively as possible." proposal The proposed weekly hazardous waste disposal would be an increase in frequency from the yearly program currently in place. Ann Arborites would dispose of household items such as paint thinner, car batteries and other chemical hazards during the disposal. Disposing these wastes in the landfill contaminates ground water. The compost dump, which would generate fertilizer from decomposed natural wastes, would be located next to the current landfill. If the variable fee were implemented, a yearly limit would be imposed on free garbage pick-up See Council, Page 2 Miami police officer 17 4arrested for murder MIAMI (AP) - The police of- ficer whose fatal shooting of a Black motorcyclist sparked last week's racial violence was arrested yesterday and charged with "manslaughter" only hours after the victim's funeral. Officer William Lozano was charged in the killings of Clement Lloyd and Allen Blanchard. The two were speeding on a motorcycle Jan. 16 in Overtown, Fla. when Lozano allegedly shot Lloyd in the head. Lloyd died at the scene and Blanchard, his passenger, died the next day from injuries suffered in the ensuing crash. Lozano was booked into Dade County Jail on two counts of "manslaughter" and released after posting $10,000 bail. An 11-member independent re- view panel of police officers and Black leaders, established by the city commission after the rioting, held its first working session yesterday in the now-quiet Overtown. The review board is scheduled to make a preliminary report to the commission on Thursday, looking more broadly into the underlying so- cial problems in Overtown. The rioting following Lloyd's death resulted in one death and 11 wounded. Fire officials reported an estimated $1 million in damages to building structures. "As Martin Luther King said, we live together as rational human be- ings or die together as fools, not only in Miami, but all over Amer- ica," said the Rev. Morris Lloyd, the victim's uncle in his eulogy. "It is ironic that Clement ... should be gunned down on the very day we celebrate the birthday of the founder of the civil rights move- ment," said the Rev. Dennis Archibald, pastor of The Church of God in Opa-locka. Lloyd's mother and other family members, most immigrants from the Virgin Islands, wept and cried out as the mourners sang Rock of Ages. Surrealist IMNSI painter Dali dies at 84Spebowrconsideed FIGUERAS, Spain (AP) - Sur- realist painter Salvador Dali, whose fantastic and memorable dreamscapes- were as eccentric and flamboyant as his behavior, died today of cardiac arrest in his hometown at age 84. Dali, a founder of the surrealist See Opinion, Page 4 The Wipers will smear you all over your windshield See Arts, Page 5 The mens' swimming and wrest- ling teamsbanthhand biz weekend ; m= I A