The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, October 13, 1992- Page 7 U-M chem labs:STAND UP COMEDY SWE D.OCTOBER14 .Safety first, but 1 pm in the U-Club s ,kbS3 f° accidenti by Andr6s Cort6s Few classes at the university can be labeled dangerous, but every once in a while, students in chemistry labs have some, well, hairy experiences. Few who were there will forget the time nearly four and a half years ago when a woman got too close to a Bunsen burner in her Chemistry 130 lab and her hair caught on fire. Although no major injury oc- curred, Richard Giszczak, safety di- rector at the chemistry building, said he is still on the watchout for other possible accidents. Giszczak has been at the U-M as safety director for four years. In this time he only remembers calling an ambulance on two different occasions. "And it was done so as a precau- tion rather than a necessity," Giszczak said. "We are primarily concerned about people fainting on us while they are standing up." Giszczak also recalled the time he and a nurse carried a dizzy stu- dent from the chemistry building to Student Health Services. There are many chances for "freak" accidents to occur. But there are more cuts and scrapes from bro- ken glass than anything else. happen LSA junior H.L. Greenberg re- members the time that a glass pipete shattered in his hand because he said he was not told how to take the rub- ber stopper off. "But I didn't need stitches," Greenberg said. "Of course spilling acid on your skin is not uncommon either," Giszczak added. LSA junior John Pyken recalls the time he spilled potassium permanganate on his hand. Although he immediately washed it off, his hand was "stained" blue for a couple of days. "It was gross," Pyken said. Nitric acid can also stain skin yellow and in some cases cause blisters, although this is less com- mon, Giszczak said. Eyes are especially sensitive as chemicals may enter the blood stream through them if they are not properly protected. Students are also warned that contact lenses can be particularly dangerous. Particles may get wedged between the eye and the contact and either scratch the cornea, or fuse the contact to the eyeball. Students who have not worn glasses in public for years often must pull them out for chemistry f l a ya r iCO ° ) 4; 9 y with your host Dan Abrams and student comedian Joel Zimmer special guest Johnene Getts for more information dial 763-1107 T*H E UNIVERISTYA CLUBD University Activities Center Peter Kakuk, an Engineering first-year student, works in his Chemistry 125 class yesterday on a dilution of copper nitrate to examine how ions flow. lab. Inhaling certain chemical odors may sometimes require a student to use a respirator, Gizczak said. Again, however, this rarely happens. Despite the few everyday occur- rences, Jack Novodoff, director of the U-M's Lab Administrative Management, said he is satisfied with lab safety. "There will always be accidents, but as long as students use precau- tions, there is no need to worry; cuts and scrapes can be taken care off," he said. Michigan schools accused of censorship (AP) - An Oakland County public school district is letting librarians decide which students can check out books that are put on a reserved list. Whether that's subtle censorship or a school's duty is a matter of interpretation, officials say. "A librarian may notice a book is f high frequency and see it's not being solicited for its literary value," said Howard Heitzeg, an administrator with the Waterford school district. "It will be placed on a reserved list. They'll give it to students who are reading rather than those who are looking for explicit material. In that sense, there is some censorship, I guess. Some books you have to ask for" The state Board of Education doesn't have a policy concerning book restriction, said Bob Harris, Education Department communica- tions director. "It's an individual school district decision," he said. "But I don't know of any other districts handling it like (Waterford). "We're a local control state. The to decide. The librarians do not de- cide what books the children should read once they're on the shelf." Books on the reserved list in the Waterford schools include recent 'The librarians do not decide what books the children should read once they're on the shelf.' - Linda Morrow spokesperson for the Michigan Library Association "I don't think we've had a local complaint about book censorship in school for some time," Wineman said. "We would check out any such complaint. After all, it involves the first amendment. We just haven't had any." Steve Wasko, spokesperson for the Detroit Public Schools, said he was not aware of any school in the district practicing a similar policy. The libraries could be even more rigid, said the American Library Association. The organization said librarians and educators often avoid controversy and simply will not buy a book or will quietly remove it when it is criticized. According to the association, books that have been removed from some school libraries include John Steinbeck's novel, "Of Mice and Men" and Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." state doesn't make decisions like that unless it got into a matter of pure censorship. It would have to be a legal question and even then I don't know if we would address it." Linda Morrow, spokesperson for the Michigan Library Association, said she wasn't aware of any other districts putting books on reserve. "Libraries conform to the rights to read," she said. "It's up to parents works by horror novelist Stephen King, Heitzeg said. "Some of the early books were very good literature," Heitzeg said. "Some of the more recent books, the motive seems to be profit rather than literary." Overt censorship is minimal in southeast Michigan, said David Wineman of the American Civil Liberties Union. Chinese Communist Party vows to continue capitalist reforms University Parking Services is now offering a substantial number of parking spaces for students in various lots on I North and South campuses. Spaces are available for overnight or day-time parking in the following lots: LOT L OCATION OVERNIGHT A Lya L\J yaiaiy " BEIJING (AP) - The world's last major Communist Party yester- day bet its future on capitalist-style economic reforms while showing little interest in erasing corruption and power abuses that triggered past unrest. The Chinese Communist Party opened its 14th congress with a re- port vowing to continue the mix of economic liberalism and tight politi- cal control followed since Deng Xiaoping became paramount leader in 1978. Deng, 88, holds no formal post but exercises power through his se- niority and personal connections, es- pecially among army officers. He did not attend the opening ceremony in the Great Hall of the People, but the party report bore the stamp of his ideas and made frequent references to him. The weeklong congress is seen as Deng's last chance to ensure that his policies survive him by appointing younger, reform-minded officials into top posts. He is unlikely to sur- vive until the next congress five years from now. However, the main function of congresses is to present a unified vi- sion of the future that the party's 51 million members and the nation's 1.1 billion citizens can rally around. The vision contained in the 57- page report that took General Secretary Jiang Zemin two hours to read aloud sounded more capitalist than communist. It dropped past ef- forts to cloak the economic reforms in Marxist jargon and called for a market economy with a vastly re- duced role for the government. "It is no minor patching-up of the economic structure but a funda- mental restructuring of the econ- omy," Jiang said to approximately 2,000 delegates in the vast, banner- draped hall. China has already substantially modified its economy over the past decade from the former Soviet model, in which the central govern- ment set quotas for every factory and farm and monopolized distribution and sales. A flourishing private sec- tor has developed and even state fac- tories buy and sell on the free market. The next step, Jiang said, is for the government to give state compa- nies more autonomy so they can re- spond to market demands and be- come profitable instead of relying on government subsidies. SC-9 NC-53 SC-5N NW Lots The Coliseum (Hill @ Division) Hayward Kipke Dr. Northwood Housing Lots** Yes* Yes No No *Vehicles must be removed from this lot b? 700 a.m. on football Saturdays, and may be returned after the game. *"Parking only bttween the bours of 730 a m and 5-30p.m. Permits will go on sale Wednesday, October 14, 1992, on a first come, first serve basis, between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Cost of a permit, valid October through June, is $110.70. Full payment (cash, check or Visa/Mastercard) is required at the time of purchase. Questions? Phone 764-8291 or stop by Parking Services at >08 Thompson St. U U 120 OFFICES WORLDWIDE 17E. 45th St. New York, NY 10017, 1-800-777-0112 STUDENT & YOUTH FARES London from 549 Guatemala from 440 Tokyo from 795 Santiago from 1038 Sydney frm 1108 and EVERYWHERE ELSE TOO! " ROUNTRIP FROM DETROIT " DOMESTIC FLIGHTS " EURAIL PASSES " HOSTEL MEMBERSHIPS " DEPARTURES FROM ALL MAJOR US CITIES Interested in Graduate Education and Careers in International Affairs? Join us for a Panel Discussion Thursday, October 15, 1992 6:00 - 8:00 pm University of Michigan Michigan Union Kuenzel Room welcomes James McMurtry to The Ark on Tuesday, October 1.3 James eanayland including: WHERES JOHNNY VAGUE DIRECTIONS CAN DyfLI A Bring in this ad to get "Candyland" for only $11.99 CD $6.99 cassette (offer expires 10/20/92) Brilliant follow-up to "Too Long In The Wasteland", "Candyland" is one of the most uncompromising pieces of social commentary in the current scene and