r iiuugaiv Ninety-nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No. 83 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, January 26, 1989 Copyright 1989, The Michigan Daily Michigan gets an'F' 0 * ALEXANDRA BREZ/Daily in the Ann Arbor Figure for the Fraser Precision on waste PIRGIM criticizes state's toxic cleanup Slip-Sliding away Members of the Hockettes Precision Skating Team, Skating Club exhibition yesterday at Veteran's Competition, which takes place Saturday. made up of Ice Arena. 12- The to 19-year-olds, skate team is preparing LSA rejects Bla BY JONATHAN SCOTT The LSA Executive Committee Monday re- jected a Black candidate to fill an open tenured faculty position in the Sociology Department, despite the unanimous recommendation of two search committees. A University of Wisconsin professor of Soci- ology was removed from consideration for the position by the committee of assistant LSA deans and their head, LSA Dean Peter Steiner, because of her "failure to fulfill our hopes and expectations," according to a Jan. 23 University 9 memorandum. Steiner and LSA Associate Dean for Academic Appointments John Cross have both declined comment on the matter. After an 18-month search, the Department of Sociology and the Program in Women's Studies both decided on the Wisconsin tenured professor as the best qualified candidate for a joint position in Women's Studies and Sociology. Members of the Sociology Department have requested that her name not be publicized. "She is very well-qualified, and well above the average of our and the College's tenured fac- ulty, and other relevant criteria," read a Jan. 16 University memorandum. "And she is a highly valued tenured member of the only Sociology Department consensually rated higher than Michigan's." Psychology Prof. Abby Stewart, director of the University's Women's Studies program, said the decision "reflects the unquestioning applica- tion of very narrow and traditional criteria for the evaluation of academic scholarship." She said the decision also questions the over- all credibility of the Michigan Mandate, Univer- sity President James Duderstadt's plan to increase the number of minority faculty on campus. "Not only do I think they won't deliver on the Ob ,k prof. Michigan Mandate, they can't as long as they use this criteria. What that suggests is that someone hasn't thought through exactly what it will take to implement the Michigan Mandate." Sociology Department Chair James House called the Executive Committee decision a "disappointment." He said that the Executive Committee usually follows the recommendation of the search com- mittee when considering a candidate, but it "didn't happen in this case." Both House and Stewart have requested a meeting with Duderstadt, Steiner, and the Execu- tive Committee to review the decision. Stewart said the rejection of the candidate is especially destructive because the Sociology De- partment is losing two of its Black faculty members. Professor Aldon Morris has left the University for Northwestern and is reportedly not See Denial, Page 2 BY PATRICK STAIGER Michigan's environmental laws are too lax to make effective use of the $425 million that voters have authorized for toxic waste cleanup, according to a report released yester- day by the Public Interest Research Group In Michigan. The report compared Michigan's laws with those of other states and the federal government, giving the state a letter grade of an 'F' on 10 out of 14 criteria for operating an effective cleanup program. Michigan currently ranks fourth in the nation for the number of toxic waste sites considered to be danger- ous, according to the PIRGIM re- port. Washtenaw county contains 35 hazardous waste sites. Two of these, owned by the University, are on the state's "low priority" list. "This. report shows that under present law, Michigan simply does not have the ability to use the funds from the Environmental Bond to clean up the state's 2000 toxic waste sites," said Andy Buchsbaum, PIR- GIM program director and co-author of the report. Buchsbaum said state agencies must be given stronger powers to negotiate with polluters to get them to investigate and clean up sites, or to clean up sites themselves when necessary. In November, Michigan voters passed 2-1 a proposal to authorize the sale of $425 million in bonds to be spent, in addition to federal funds, on hazardous waste cleanup. PIRGIM compared Michigan's environmental laws with those of New Jersey, California, New York, Washington, Minnesota, Mas- sachusetts, Oregon, and the federal government. Massachusetts' laws were rated the highest, with an A- minus, as a result of that state's passage of a state version of the fed- eral Superfund. The report criticizes Michigan law for giving the Department of Natural Resources no new express authority, to clean up sites. When Oregon's Department of Environ- mental Quality issues a cleanup or- der, in contrast, the recipient cannot appeal until they have first cleaned up the site, and only then can peti- tion to be reimbursed. The reports adds that Michigar law is weak because it lacks penal- ties for violators. New Jersey law provides that a person who violates any provision of the law shall be subject to penalty of up to $50,000 each day, if a daily amount is appro- priate. The federal Superfund - man- aged by the Environmental Protec- tion Agency - currently specifies the cleanup of 1,177 hazardous sites nationwide that are eligible for the $1.8 billion program. But the list leaves hundreds of sites in Michigan and tens of thousands of sites na- tionwide currently ineligible for fed- eral attention. "Taxpayers voted to make the down payment on cleanup in November by passing the Bond," Buchsbaum said. "That was ,the first step. Now, it's up to public officials See Waste, Page 2 I W. Germans raid offices in weapons investigation BONN, West Germany (AP) - ducted the searches in cities special session yesterday to discus Authorities raided the offices of three throughout the country seized a huge official handlin of the affair. companies and the homes of 12 quantity of material, especially from Members of the opposition S people yesterday in an investigation Inhausen-Chemie, that will take cial Democratic Party singled of of allegations that West German time to examine, Voegele said. Foreign Minister Hanx-Eietric firms helped Libya build a suspected yAllegations of West German in- Genscher and Finance Minister Ge Iss 0- rut ch ,r- chemical weapons plant. Some politicians, meanwhile, accused Chancellor Helmut Kohl's government of bungling West Ger- many's initial response to the allegations, and a magazine reported that companies had helped Iraq build a rocket factory. Customs authorities searched the offices and homes "on suspicion that export laws had been violated" with deliveries to the Libyan plant, said Hubertus Voegele, spokesman for the prosecutor's office in Offenburg. U.S. officials say Libya intends to produce poison gas at the plant, but Libya says it is a pharmaceutical factory. West German officials who con- volvement in the Libyan plant came to light late last year. Kohl's government at first denied any wrongdoing by West German firms, and exonerated Imhousen- Chemie after an investigation earlier this month. But officials have acknowledged over the past two weeks that several companies appear to have provided materials or know-how to the Libyans, including a company owned by the government, Salzzgit- ter Industriebou AG. A day after U.S. senators accused Kohl's government of looking the other way during such operations, the Foreiign Affairs Committee of the West German parliament met in hard Stoltenberg for criticism. Lawmaker Norbert Gansel said Stoltenberg "did nothing" after learning from the U.S. embassy in Bonn last may that Washington suspected West German firms of involvement with the LIbyan plant. Another prominent Social Democrat, Karsten Voigtt, said it was "unbelievable" Genscher could have been uniformed for months about intelligence reports that West German firms helped with the plant. Bronfman said Genscher assured him West Germany would do its best to see that the Libyan plant would not be used to produce chemical weapons. Visiting Prof. Christina Jose-Kampfner speaks about the experiences of Chicana and Black women in Michigan's state prisons yesterday in the Women's Studies lounge. Speaker says women inmates are really victims themselves . Court delays exam for alleged dealer BY MELISSA KARPF The majority of women inmates are victims of cir- cumstances beyond their control, Dr. Christina Jose- Kampfner said yesterday at a presentation on "Black and Chicana Women Prisoners." Kampfner said that 99 percent of all women pris- oners have been sexually abused as children, 79 percent are single mothers, and some have been victims of abuse from their husbands. Their motives for committing crime are mostly acts of self-defense - a way to protect both themselves and their children, Kampfner said. "A lot of the cultural differences are taken in court as a negative thing," she said. "Minority groups get it in court if they kill their husbands unless they have BY ALEX GORDON LSA senior and suspected drug dealer Christopher Brown's prelimi- nary examination in Ann Arbor's 15th District Court was delayed until Feb. 15 yesterday. Brown was arrested last week on Goldstien asked Judge Pieter Thomassen to lower the original bond of $100,000 to $50,000, and requested a "10 percent-ruling." A 10 percent ruling - originally denied by the judge - allows the accused to be released from jail after beyond her control is made into a criminal. But Kampfner said it is an accurate one, and a common problem for the majority of the 70 prisoners that she has interviewed. Kampfner herself has experienced some of the hu- miliation involved with being a prisoner, she said. Part of her visitation "privileges" include a routine strip search by male guards from the Huron Valley Women's facility. The prisoners themselves can be stripped and searched at the discretion of the guards and don't even have privacy when going to the bathroom. Specifi- cally, Kampfner described a situation where a male guard opened the stall of a bathroom door while one of th.n i