Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No. 90 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, February 6, 1989 Copyright 1989, The Michigan Daily Soviet troops leave Afghanistan Ed Meese to visit campus in March : LONDON (AP) - Moscow radio said Soviet troops completed their withdrawal from the Afghan capital of Kabul yesterday, according to British Broadcasting Corp. monitors. Ten days before the agreed dead- line for the departure of all Soviet soldiers from Afghanistan, the radio quoted yesterday's edition of the newspaper Pravda as saying, "Pravda's special correspondents re- port that on Sunday the last Soviet soldier left Kabul," the BBC said. The Soviet troops, sent in De- cember 1979 to help the Marxist government fight Afghan insurgents, were to have been removed by Feb. 15 under a U.N.-mediated agreement. The Soviets began their pullout in August and resumed it January, _ when convoys of tanks, trucks, and armored personnel carriers started up the Salang Highway toward the So- viet border 260 miles away. Soviet and Afghan officials said over the weekend there were about 1,000 Soviet soldiers still in Afghanistan and that they could be gone as early as Wednesday. The report said that although troops had moved from Kabul, there still were troops in other areas of Afghanistan moving toward the So- viet border. It said troops were mov- ing from the eastern Afghanistan city of Shindand to the Soviet border city of Kushka. The report said that in the western sector, two columns crossing to the Soviet bank will take place in Ter- mez in southern Uzbekistan," the radio said. BY SCOTT LAHDE The last time former U.S. At- torney General Edwin Meese visited the University, students hurled snowballs and yelled at him to leave. During that Feb., 1987 campus visit, more than 300 people protested Meese's policies and be- havior as a public official. On March 10 and 11, Meese will return to campus as a speaker at the Law School for a national sympo- sium sponsored by the Federalist Society in Washington, D.C. Though no student organizations announced formal opposition or plans to protest the visit, some individual law students have already expressed their objections. A letter, signed by "Concerned Law Students," circulated around campus last week, characterizing Meese as a "bigot and a liar," stating that he holds no governmental post and claiming he has no right to speak. Meese has received criticism for his efforts to reverse the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision legal- izing abortion, his recommendations for U.S. judiciaries, his alleged pay- offs in Wed-Tech, and his handling of the U.S. Immigration Depart- ment. "They (the Federalist Society) could find people of better character by randomly going through Jackson State prison," said Dean Baker, a University economics lecturer. "He barely avoided a jail sentence." But Law School Dean Lee Bollinger, who will also speak at the conference, said "I'm sure Mr. Meese has an incredible amount to con- tribute." He continued, "I am happy to be See Meese, Page 2 Ed Meese ... to visit 'U' 'M' c Reiger, 'M' end skid, 74-67 agers notch big wins BY ADAM BENSONj After the Michigan women's basketball team loss to No.9 ranked Purdue on Friday night, Michigan coach Bud VanDeWege told reporters he felt like he coached "the unluckiest team in America." But Sunday afternoon, a shock came through Crisler Arena with the impact of a horseshoe in the head. The Wolverines came back from a nine-point deficit to get a win. Michigan's 74-67 victory over Illinois ended the Wolverines eight- game losing streak in the Big Ten. The Illinois victory and the 71-66 loss to Purdue marked the Wolver- ines best weekend series since con- ference play began in early January. . See Skid, Page 11 in Big Ten State can't slow up Rice BY JULIE HOLLMAN Michigan State tried to play mind games with Michigan Saturday after- noon at Crisler Arena, but the plan backfired. The Wolverines, after a bit of a struggle, reversed the Spartans' psychological ploy and changed it into a charged-up 82-66 win. At the beginning of the game, Michigan State (12-7 overall, 3-6 in the Big Ten) refused to shake hands with the Michigan players during the introductions at center court. The Spartans hoped their unfriendliness would worked as a psych-out tactic. Spartan plan A. But the Wolverines (17-4 overall, 5-3 in the Big Ten) didn't get JESSICA GREENE/DOQiy. flustered by this impolite jazz. e in Saturday's 82-66 Instead, they used it to get in the game. See MSU, Page 11 JOHN WEISE/Daily Rookie guard, Char Durand unleashes a shot over two defenders in Friday night's loss to Purdue, 71-66. Glen Rice shoots over double coverag victory. Rice scored his 2,000th pointi City coun BY KRISTINE LALONDE First of a two-part series Ann Arbor is running out of space to dump its garbage, and the city council must find.a solution to its landfill crisis. If the city does not receive permission from the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to expand the city's Platt Road landfill - the only local dump - then area garbage will have to be transported else- where. The cost of transporting and dumping the garbage out of Ann Arbor will cost the city about $10,000 a day, according to one city council estimate. But money is not the city's only concern. Because the dump is contaminating the city's water supply, DNR officials say the city cannot expand the existing dump until it deals with current environmental prob- lems. cii struggles City councilmembers, though, are unsure how to comply with DNR demands - many city coun- cilmembers complain that the DNR has been vague in explaining how the city should clean up and regulate the landfill. "It's not that we don't want to cooperate... We just want to know what they want us to do," said coun- cilmember Tom Richardson (R-5th Ward). Mayor Jerry Jernigan echoed Richardson's frustra- tions. "That's one of the problems with the DNR - they never put anything in writing," he said. But DNR officials say they are simply pushing for stricter enforcement of environmental laws in Ann Ar- bor. Synthia Noble, DNR district senior environmental engineer with the Waste Management Division, said, "Ann Arbor is being taken to the mats with landfill by the DNR." As dumps have expanded, state regulations have become more stringent. The Ann Arbor landfill, for example, began as a hole in the ground. When the dump expanded, the state required that the new area be lined with sand. If another phase of the dump is ap- proved, the state may require a double-liner to prevent leaks. The DNR required that Ann Arbor implement a groundwater testing system around the existing dump before its expansion. Some councilmembers say this is the kind of ex- plicit requirement they are looking for. And such a testing system is in place. Richardson said he hopes such steps will lead to DNR approval. "The indication is that they will say yes (to an expansion)," he said. "The data (from the problems testing) will probably be satisfactory." If the DNR finds the results satisfactory, a new area will finally be added to the dump. But this may not be a victory for the city. Currently, garbage is being piled higher on the existing dump. If the new area is approved, it may only be used to control this overflow, not new garbage. So the problem of where to put the garbage would remain. But the problem goes beyond Ann Arbor. DNR Chief of Resource Recovery Fred Clinton said the en- tire state is facing a "crisis situation... You take the state as a whole, (landfill life expectancy) is probably in the 5 to 10 year range. That isn't very long." The second part of the series will focus on possible solutions to Ann Arbor's waste problem. POWER protests at 'M' hockey game Prof., student debate course BY ANNA SENKEVITCH Amidst the cheers for the Wolverine hockey team Friday night were angry shouts by 25 students protesting the lack of response from the University and the Athletic De- partment to a crime of harassment involving four University hockey players. Friday night's protest, coordinated by People Organized for Women, Equality and Rights (POWER), riled up spectators as they voiced their demand for a response. The four students involved - Todd Copeland, Mark Sorensen, Bradley Turner, and Jeffrey Urban - were charged with misdemeanor ha- But many spectators at the game reacted with hostility to the demon- strators, yelling at them to shut up and sit down. At the start of the game, one woman shouted to several protesters standing at the edge of the rink: "Take your AIDS and get out of here!" Asked later how she felt about the remark, she said, "They (the protesters) are everything against God and nature." Another spectator yelled, "What if they (the protesters) were athletes? Would they like to be harassed at their own functions?" But one woman expressed outrage that the four men were still playing hockey for the University. "They BY MARION DAVIS A University student and faculty member aired their differences about a proposed required class on racism on the WDET radio talk show "Dialogue Detroit" last Friday. Peter Railton, a University phi- losophy professor, said the LSA proposed mandatory class on racism - University Course 299 - will help fight racism on campus by pro- viding students and faculty with a forum where they can come to terms and deal with racism. But Mark Molesky, an RC history major and publisher of the Michigan tory class on racism will be an un- necessary, expensive, required "rap session" for students to talk about their political and social gripes. Molesky said he did not oppose an elective class on racism, but felt that it should not be a graduation re- quirement. University Course 299, called "Racism in the U.S.: Causes, Con- sequences, and Change," arose in response to student demands during the spring of 1987. After being developed by stu- dents and faculty, UC 299 was ap- proved as an elective last term by the. Review, said the proposed manda- LSA curriculum committee, which then adopted its main elements for a proposed graduation requirement in the study of racism. The LSA Executive Committee is now considering that proposed re- See Course, Page 2 INSIDE OA '(We are) outraged by the administration's silence and Coach Berenson's in- sensitive and uninformed statements about the I Challenging Feminism See Opinion, Page Sentimentality loses Hanna's War, Israeli troops kill nr a a~n n e . See Arts, Page 7 The Michigan hockey team stretched its unbeaten streak to