The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 23, 1989 - Page 3 Groups fight to clean up toxic waste sites BY STEPHEN SCHWEIGER WITH WIRE REPORTS Two thousand toxic waste sites in Michigan could be cleaned up with money voters approved last fall under the Environmental Cleanup Bond, if a state program patterned after the federal Superfund were to be implemented, environmentalists said yesterday. The Comprehensive Cleanup Act, proposed and supported by five environmental groups, would give the Michigan Department of Natural Resources power to order polluters to clean up their waste sites or pay the state for the clean-up charge. The new proposal will make those re- sponsible for the waste pay, not the taxpayers. State Attorney General Frank Kelly will have the authority to re- cover fines, damages, and clean-up costs. "Last November, voters sent a mandate to Lansing with the passage of the environmental bond. Through the bond, taxpayers have made a down payment on cleanup," said Andrew Buchsbaum, program direc- tor for the Public Interest Research State may require polluters to clean waste Group in Michigan, one of the pri- mary groups authoring the bill. "Now it's time for polluters to pay their fair share to assure that all the state's sites can be cleaned up," he said. The proposed legislation would require that the state's hazardous waste sites to be cleaned up within 25 years, Buchsbaum said. "Without a comprehensive pro- gram, the trust that the voters have placed in the governor and the legis- lators will be violated. The voters have made their commitment," said David Stead, executive director of the Michigan Environmental council. Ann Hunt, director of Citizens for Alternatives to Chemical Contami- nation, said such a Superfund law .would reward companies that obey the state's environmental laws and penalize those that don't. Buchsbaum said the groups had talked to several legislators about sponsoring the measure. They also planned to work with other legisla- tors in the future when similar bills are introduced. Read Jim Poniewozik Every ed- How low can she go? LSA first year student Alison Pix does the limbo, the contest was a part of "Greek Week" LIZ sTEKETEE/Daly festivities. Man's false bomb threats may lead to jail, BY STEPHEN SCHWEIGER WITH WIRE REPORTS A federal grand jury has indicted a Michigan man accused of making a bomb threat aboard an airliner and forcing the jet to make an unscheduled leanding in Indianapolis, authorities said yesterday. Antohny Pierson of Rochester Hills was indicted on charges of violating the false information and threats statute, which carries a maximum punishment of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, U.S. v v'-'1 'The penalties was an awfully1 are awfully bad for a bad joke, but it bad joke.' - Adam Abensohn, LSA sophomore Attorney Deborah Daniels said. Pierson was aboard American Trans Air Flight 309 en route from Detroit to Cancun, Mexico on Feb. 25 when he allegedly told a flight attendant that he was carrying explosives in a piece of carry-on luggage. "The penalties are awfully bad for a joke, but it was an awfully bad joke," said Adam Abensohn an LSA sophomore who was on the flight and sitting near Pierson. When notified of the bomb threat, the plane's captain requested an emergency landing at Indianapolis International Airport. It was later revealed that the luggage contained a video camera and no explosives. LSA sophomore Steve Yaung, who also seated neat Pierson, said, "It [the penalties) seems a little harsh, but law enforcement has to take all measures to protect passengers aboard airlines." Pierson is free on bond and awaiting trial. CAR PAGE. ATTENTION APRIL GRADS! GMAC Offers College Grad Financing! $400 Cash Back. Guaranteed Financing. Call Ron Graham Rampy Chevrolet, 663-3321 U-M '61 Correction In yesterday's Daily Michael Donivin was incorrectly identified; he is not a1 representative in the Michigan Student Assembly. Clarification The comments of Kermit Brooks, a contributing editor of the Michigan Law Review, do not represent the views of the Review as a whole. Congressional auditors blame S&L crisis on crime Rent a Car from Econo-Car S sp "El ple' Rac "Li and For Rac "Sc the pea Hol "Th A S Em Bir Rac "Ti tini tifa Hut 4 tinsi Wo Dis Lau "Th rop mea nati " N( AOu Cha 120 "Fu shi w ver MLec S"A Pro Lav Lau "TI seq stuc "Fr Pro Ch r "C] Sol An( PM THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today )eakers Indian American Student Salvador: The Cry of the Peo- Association - Michigan Rm., " - Leonel Gomez Vides, Michigan Union, 5:30 pm. :kham Amphitheatre, 8 pm. Rainforest Action Committee - bertine Stylistics: Eroticism 1040 Dana, 7 pm. 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Arthur Leonard, New York Brink" and 7:30 pm, "US Policy in w School, 250 Hutchins Hall, Central America: In Whose Inter- x School, 7 pm. est?" he Prague Spring and Its Con- Spanish Film Festival: "Moros Y luences" - Eduard Gold- Cristianos" - MLB, Lecture Rm. cker, 200 Lane Hall, 4 pm. 2, 7 pm. No subtitles. ractal Reaction Kinetics" - f. Raoul Kopelman, 1200 Performances em., 4 pm. Frank Allison & Odd Sox - At hristian Science: A Problem The Beat, doors open at 9:30 pm. lving Power" - Lecture, Mucket Presents CHICAGO - derson Rm., Michigan Union, 8 Power Center, 8 pm. Tickets $6 & MM7. Muic a t Mid-Dahv - Monica Me- WASHINGTON (AP) - White- collar crimes, not poor economic conditions or deregulation are the root cause of the savings and loan crisis, congressional auditors said yesterday. The General Accounting Office told the House Judiciary committee's criminal justice subcommittee that it had examined 26 insolvent thrift in- stitutions in eight states and found evidence of fraud insider dealing in each. While the survey was skewed to S&Ls with the worst problems, the 26 represented 60 percent of total losses sustained by the government's insurance fund from 1985 through 1987, and the pattern of fraud and Honduras Continued from Page 1 The Honduran economy is already under pressure from an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 undocumented Nicaraguan and Salvadoran refugees; another 45,000 refugees are assisted by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, according to a brief issued by the U.S. State Department. "The growing tensions between the Honduran people and the U.S. military calls into question the wisdom of maintaining such a high profile in Honduras," Anderson said. MSA Continued from Page 1 never voted before," said new Vice President Rose Karadsheh. "People thought there's finally one last hope for MSA." Ken Weine, the MSA president during the '87-'88 school year, said Williams' victory is a "horrific blow to the student movement. I hate to see the right wing take over MSA." Voters showed they have a sense of humor with many of their write- in votes. Cartoon character Wilma Flintstone captured 5 write in votes. The Ayatollah Khomeni, Mickey Mouse, Elvis Presley, and the ticket of David Letterman and Connie abuse among all failed thrifts "clearly is pervasive," GAO officials said. "The huge losses which will ul- timately pass to the nation's taxpayers (estimated at $100-150 billion) did not come about primar- ily because of economic conditions or deregulation," Assistant GAO Comptroller General Frederick Wolf told the subcommittee. 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