The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, April 21, 1992 - Page 3
Students,
'U'
work together
for recycling
Shootin' some stick
Retired University Law Professor Olin Browder plays some bottle pool in the Michigan Union Billiards and games room yesterday.
ly wi retell memorles o Holocaust
by Tovah Calderon
Daily Staff Reporter
The 1992 Community Observ-
ance of Holocaust Remembrance
will be different from those in the
past, said Planning Committee Chair
Hlank Greenspan. ,
This year, the Ann Arbor event
will take place for the first time on
+ the University campus and will fea-
ture a premiere live performance of
the voice play Remnants by
Greenspan, a clinical psychologist
and instructor in the Residential
College (RC).
The local commemoration will
take place Sunday, April 26, at 4
p.m. in the RC Auditorium in East
Quad. The observance coincides
with the United States National Days
of Holocaust Remembrance (April
26-May 3), a week dedicated to
Holocaust remembrance ceremonies
in cities across the country.
The purpose of the national and
local observances is "to remember
and to be warned of the power of
racism and hatred and to remember
the victims," Greenspan said.
The first half of the local event
will include an opening address by
Mayor Liz Brater, a violin solo per-
formed by School of Music student
Gabriel Bolkosky, remarks by local
clergy, and the reading of Ann Arbor
high school student Ellen Winn's
prize-winning essay.
"The mayor's proclamation, in
essence, will declare why we have
this Holocaust remembrance and
why Ann Arbor is joining the United
States National Days of
Remembrance," Greenspan said.
The second half will be dedicated
to a special live performance of
Greenspan's Remnants, co-directed
by Greenspan and University
Theater Prof. Ann Klautsch, and
produced by Michigan Radio and the
Michigan Radio Theatre. The script
includes monologues based on re-
flections and memories of actual
Holocaust survivors, as told to
Greenspan during 15 years of
research.
"Remnants is composed of six
stories, all very different,"
Greenspan said. The monologues tell
the stories of a survivor who lost her
voice, another who went mad with
grief, one who survived on outrage,
and another who survived on ques-
tions. "It's not easy to hear. I hope
people will be a little stunned.
People tend to be a little
overwhelmed."
The drama will be broadcast
nationally on public radio stations
and can be heard on WUOM 91.7
FM in Ann Arbor on April 30 at 8
p.m. and May 4 at 12:30 p.m.
The live performance on Sunday
is the local premiere and will include
the original cast, which features six
actors from the Ann Arbor and
University community.
by Karen Talaski
Daily Staff Reporter
Six hundred new University re-
cycling bins will be helping more
than the environment this May. The
bins may also assist a group of
Ecological Issues students receive an
'A' in their class.
The class assignment required
students to work together in a group
and try to solve an environmental
problem found on campus or in the
Ann Arbor area. Students had five
weeks in which to complete the self-
designed project.
The group - composed of five
LSA, SNR and Physical Education
students - analyzed newspaper re-
cycling in campus buildings as the
focus of their project.
To the group's surprise, Special
Projects Coordinator for Grounds
and Waste Management Services
Jenny Corner and Angell, Mason,
and Haven Halls custodian supervi-
sor Robert Mann were one step
ahead of them.
An estimated total of six hundred
recycling cans had already been or-
dered for use in campus buildings
and residence halls. The bins will be
distributed to the buildings by the
end of May, Cotner said.
The Ecological Issues group be-
gan its project in early March by
placing hand-made boxes and signs
in main campus buildings and en-
couraging students to recycle The
Michigan Daily. The group then
contacted the University to discuss
further ideas and areas for
newspaper recycling.
The project goal was to reduce
the waste created when the newspa-
per was not recycled. "We wanted to
get the recycling bins more through-
out campus and the major build-
ings," LSA senior Glori Schultz
said.
Mann said, "Recycling newspa-
pers would cut down waste for
Angell, Mason, and Haven Halls by
ope-half. The newspapers are cur-
rently just being thrown out with the
trash because we don't have the time
to do the sorting."
Cotner said 200 cans were or-
dered for newspapers, 200 for mixed
and white paper recycling, and an
extra 200 were ordered for miscella-
neous purposes.
"We would love to saturate the
buildings with it. I wish there was
one on every corner," Cotner added.
"Building Services are into recy-
cling."
Members of the group expressed
their satisfaction with the
University's plans. "This is better
than I expected," said Physical
Education first-year student Chris
Hruska. "They were really on the
ball before we gave them our ideas."
The new recycling bins were re-
quested through a Building Services
survey. The bins will be located in
'Recycling newspapers
would cut down waste
for Angell, Mason, and
Haven Halls by one-
half. The newspapers
are currently just
being thrown out with,
the trash because we
don't have the time to
do the sorting.'
- Robert Mann,
Angell, Mason, and
Haven Halls custodian
supervisor
key Daily drop-off locations in
buildings such as Angell, Mason,
and Haven Halls, the ISR, and the
School of Public Health. New bins
will also be placed in the residence
halls as well.
The '91-'92 expanded recycling
plan was also requested by the
University's custodians along with
Building Services. Cotner said the
custodians wanted to see newspaper
cans where there are big lectures,
lobbies, or lounges.
Completed project plans include
putting up signs and bulletin boards
in the targeted buildings, having stu-
dents talk to classes about their
plans, and working with campus pa-
pers to notify students of the new re-
cycling bins.
Code forum brings a lot of talk, little action
by Shelley Morrison
Daily Staff Reporter
More than 15 Michigan Student
Assembly (MSA) and Student
Rights Commission (SRC) members
met yesterday to receive additional
minority student input about the lat-
est draft of the University speech
code policy, but argued more about
the policy itself than specific minor-
ity issues.
The decision to hold the forum
was prompted by a request of the
University administration that more
student input from minority groups
be acquired before any changes were
made in the current code.
SRC Chair Michael David
Warren, Jr., who co-wrote the new
policy with law student Peter
Mooney as part of the MSA sub-
commission on Interim Policy, re-
signed from his MSA position in
protest of the Administration's resis-
tance to speech code changes.
"To me, the Administration say-
ing that the reason for delaying ac-
ceptance of the new policy is be-
cause it lacks 'student input' is like
telling all students to fuck off,"
Warren said.
Third-year Law student Michael
Troy, who also served on the sub-
commission, agreed that University
resistance shows indifference to stu-
dent opinion.
"The way the University is drag-
ging its feet on this issue proves that
it doesn't really care what students
think," Troy said. "To say it cares
about student input now really un-
dercuts their argument."
Vice-President for Student
Affairs Maureen Hartford, who
worked with subcommission mem-
bers to coordinate the forum, said
the reaction of the Administration
will depend on student response.
"Strong student opposition will
mean the policy needs more time for
consideration; little opposition will
bring the subcommission recom-
mendation that the policy be ac-
cepted," Hartford said.
MSA President Ede Fox spoke to
the concerns of minority students by
asking for protection against "hurtful
speech."
"Students can be hurt or harassed
without being physically harmed,"
Fox said. "I think the protection
against malicious intimidation
should be extended to include any
kind of intimidation."
MSA LSA Rep. Andrew Mutch
said he was against any speech code.
"As long as I go to a public uni-
versity," Mutch said, "no one will
infringe upon my right to free
speech."
i
.M
THE LIST
What's happening in Ann Arbor today
TAKING TE LA
WITOTRNI
1W
Meetings
Ann Arbor Committee to
defend Abortion and
Reproductive rights
(AACDARR) weekly mtg,
Michigan Union, Tap rm. 6:30 p.m.
MSA Weekly meeting 3909
Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m.
Social Group for bisexual
Women, 9:30 p.m. call 763-4186
for location and Bore information
Student Education Peer
Program, STEPP 4th floor Union,
8:30 p.m.
SADD general meeting, 2n d
Prescott Lounge East Quad, 9:00 p.m.
IASA Board Meeting, Nikki
lounge, Mo-Jo, 9-11 p.m.
Asian American Student
Association, weekly meeting,
Nikki lounge, Mo-Jo, 7:30 p.m.
Time and Relative Dimensions
in Ann Arbor, 2439 Mason Hall 7
p.m.
University Cancer-
Information/Discussion
Session, Michigan Union-
Anderson Room, 6:30 p.m.
Recycle UM 4th floor Union,
Recycle-UM offices weekly meeting,
6:30 p.m.
Undergrad Psych Society, Mass
Meeting, Dr. Jerry Miller, 7:30 p.m.
Anthropology Club, meeting
Dominick's, 7 p.m.
Speakers
"New Generations of
Soviet World: Three
Perspectives," Vandenberg Rm,
Michigan League, 4:00 p.m.-6:00
p.m.
Furthermore
Spark:Revolutionary History
Series, "The Chinese Revolution
of 1949: Revolution but not
socialsim," MLB Room, B122, 7:00
p.m.-8:00 p.m.
Safewalk, night-time safety
walking service. Sun-Thurs 8 p.m.-
1:30 a.m., Fri-Sat 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m.
Stop by 102 UGLi or call 936-1000.
Also, extended hours: Sun-Thurs 1-3
a.m. Stop by Angell Hall Computing
Center or call 763-4246 Last Day of
Service, Wednesday April 22
Northwalk, North Campus night-
time team walking service. Sun-Thurs
8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Stop by 2333
Bursley or call 763-WALK. Last Day
of Service, Apri;l 22
Stress and Time Management,
Consultations with peer counselors
available, 3100 Michigan Union,
11-1 p.m.
Undergraduate Psychology
DepartmentdUndergraduate
psychology advising, walk-in or
appointment, K-108 West Quad, 9
a.m-4 p.m.
Kaffeestunde, weekly German
coffee and conversation, 3rd floor
Commons Rm., MLB, all welcome,
4:30-6 p.m.
ECB Peer Writing Tutors,
RTS
OPINIO
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