4W Summr Weekly One hundred two years of editorial freedom Iume Cill, No. 13S Ann Arbor, Michigan - WednesdlayJuly 2,1993 @1993 The Michigan Daily I THE MUSIC OF THE ART FAIRS Search for AD continues By BRYN MICKLE DALY STAFF REPORTER The finalists are in and the waiting begins. Last week, the office of University Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Farris Womack confirned that alistof finalistsforthepositionof head athleticdirector had been submitted to President James Duderstadt. Womacks' office would not release the names of the finalists and was unsure of the date of a final decision by Duderstadt. Current AD Jack Weidenbach is scheduled to step down on August 31, but will remain until a successor is named. While the names of the finalists remain the best kept secret since Duderstadt's selection as president in 1988, several likely candidates have emerged for the role. Among them are former University foot- ball star Regie McKenzie, cur- rent director of athletic fund- raising Fritz Seyferth,former Seyferth Ohio State Ath- letic Director Rick Bay and the Uni- versityofNorthCarolina'scurrent Ath- letic Director John Swofford. The selection process - which began last fall-has been shrouded in secrecy. No members of the search committee have been permitted to talk aontthe nrordnoe MARTIN VLOETIDai, A bandmember plays his flute on the corner of South University Avenue and South State Streets last weekend during the Ann Arbor Art Fairs. Toxins leak fromw'' um Whistleblower waits for $1M settlement By WILL WADE DAILY STAFF REPORTER University andenvironmentaloffi- cials yesterday inspected a newly dis- covered dump on University-owned land. The hastily scheduled meeting resulted from the discovery last week of caches of old laboratory bottles, ground glass, old barrels and other debris. The site is located next to an abandoned University dumpsite al- ready known to be leaking toxic chemi- cals. University Landfill#3 is listed un- der the Michigan Environmental Re- sponse Act as an environmental haz- ard, and the University is required by law to clean it up. The new site was discoveredThursdaywhenDepartment of Natural Resources (DNR) quality analyst Vicky Brown was at the unde- veloped siteevaluating the University's proposed cleanup plan. Among the trees and bushes at the southern edge of Landfill #3, Brown found several piles of old laboratory bottles, many filled with unknown liq- uids. The bank of a stream running through the area had washed partly See DUMP, Page 2 By BRYN MICKLE DALY STAFF REPORTER Despiteajury decision in her favor, a former University researcher who blew the whistle on scientific miscon- duct is still waiting for her money. Carolyn Phinney is the former as- sistant research scientist in the University's Institute of Gerontology who accused her mentor - Marion Perlmutter - of stealing her intellec- tual properties. She also charged the institute's director, Richard Adelman, with failing to protect her under the state's Whistleblower Protection Act -a law designed to shield those who report suspicions of misconduct. Her attorney, Philip Green, said the judge in the case is considering which form of judgment to accept. Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Patrick Conlinmust decide if the Universityisresponsible forPhinney's attorney fees as well as pre-judgment interest - a monetary value that at- taches interest fees to the jury award See CASE, Page 2 0 University moves toward final draft of drug and alcohol policy BY HOPE CALATI DAILY EDITOR IN CHIEF The future of the alcohol and other drug policy is taking vague shape. The University's Alcohol and Other Drug Committee released a second draft of the policy this week. This draft keeps close to the State- ment of Student Rights and Responsi- bilities in defining policy violations. These consist of illegal consumption of alcohol and other drugs - such as underage drinking - on campus as well as University sponsored events off campus. These violations are the same as those stated in the statement, the non- academic code of studentconduct, and willbeinvestigatedthroughthemecha- nisms in that document. "We want this to be an enforceable policy,"draftauthor Susan Finley said. "I think there is an assumption that the campus law enforcement would kick in." Inthe second draft, punishment will be netted out through the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. Sanctions would range from a formal reprimand to community service to suspension. "The policy is much more in tune with prevention than sanctions,"Finley said. The committee has begun to dis- cuss the treatment of alcohol and drug use by members of student organiza- tions. Polk Wagner, president of the In- terfraterityCouncil,introducedgroup alcohol use into the draft. The second draft states: alcohol shall not be purchased with an organization's funds, no organization events shall have mass quantities of alcohol, and only "Bring Your Own" alcohol is allowed.'The entire organi- zation would be punished for viola- tions in this draft. "We're the only group that ad- dresses alcohol on campus," Wagner said. The Greek system currently gov- erns itself by a similar policy. However, student rights may be abridged if entire groups were pun- ished for the acts of a few members, said Michigan Student Assembly Vice President Brian Kight. See Dar, Page 2