Wednesday, June 10, 1992 - The Michgan Daily Summer Weekly - 5 Letters Ad&L ' Cliff's Notes - an insider's view To the Daily: I feel compelled to inform the Uni- versity of Michigan student body about therealities surrounding theremovalof the Cliff's Notes from the Residence Hall Libraries. During the Fall 1991 term,asmallnumberofEnglishfaculty members and Academic Advisors initi- ated action. One English professor sent a letter to the Director of the Residence Hall Libraries expressing her disap- proval of the material. In response, the Director composedacommitteeto dis- cuss the issue. I acted as the representative for the Viewpoint Nosanctions aaNins Serbia by Jesse Walker tions-much like the last time the great Once again, the United Nations is powers intervened in the Balkans, in punishing a country's citizens for the 1914. The result: more death and more crimes of their goverment. The sane- suffering, in more places. tions recently imposed against Serbia At least, say some, let us place an areaseriouspolicyerror,morelikelyto embargo on the trade in weapons. exacerbate tensions, even extend the Surely, guns are the lastthing needed in conflict, than to bring peace to what Yugoslavia today. But while weshould was once Yugoslavia. certainly not be providing weapons to What, exactly, do the leaders of the the Serbian government, blocking off United States, the United Nations, and the weaponstradeentirely would do far the European Community expect the sanctions to accomplish? Certainly not anendtothekilling.In America,people If the American or other have beenknown to startshooting each governments must take part other over such relatively minor mat- in the Yugoslav conflict, ters as gas lines. In the Balkans, people they should do so as are already shooting each other; lack of facilitators, not as yet gasoline and other consumer goods will another aggressive party. only make tempers rawer. Even if the Diplomacy, not intervention, Yugoslavgovernmentagreestostopits should be our country's role. aggression against Bosnia-Her- zegovina, groups of Serbians and Bosnians are apt to continue fighting more harm than good. The armies al- each other, if not among themselves. ready have their guns, and will prob- Scarcity has never brought peace to a ably be able to get more through covert nation, only distrust and fear. channels, even during an embargo. But And will the Serbians call off their the average civilian who tries to stay out aggression inresponse tothesanctions? of fighting's way will have no access to Possibly, but I doubt it. In the past, any means for defending his orherself sanctions have simply fortified the af- or family. When guns are outlawed, fected countries' positions by allowing only the government will have guns. them to feel victimized. More likely, Economic sanctions areusually pre- the economic embargo will fail to stop sented as a peaceful alternative to war- the Yugoslav fighting, leading to calls fare. In fact, they are simply another for military intervention as the only form of warfare, and when stringently possible solution to the crisis. If this enforced, they can do as much damage happens, a limited conflict that was as more traditional sorts of battle. If the arguably already winding down will be American or other governments must expanded to European or, if it is the take part in the Yugoslav conflict, they U.N. that intervenes, global propor- should do so as facilitators, not as yet another aggressive party. Diplomacy, Jesse Walker, aformer Associate Edi- notintervention,should beour country's tor and columnist for Weekend, is a role. Yugoslav problems willbesolved recent LSA graduate and contributing by Yugoslavians, not well-meaning editor at Liberty magazine. globalists with a gun up their sleeve. Editors' Note In last week's Daily, a 'Viewpoint' written by recent University graduate Amy Polk stated that University Department of Public Safety Officer Timo- thy Shannon had inadvertently shot another officer while employed by the South Lyon Township Police Department. It has since come to our attention that Polk's "Viewpoint" was based in part on unsubstantiated facts. The Daily op-ed page provides a forum for members of the University community to present their views. The views, as stated in the Opinion Page masthead, do not necessarily represent the views of the Daily. The editors and staff of the Daily feel strongly about reporting the truth in its pages. We will continue to strive to maintain the tradition of responsible journalism that has existed at the Daily for 101 years. TheDailyapologizes toOfficerShannonforanyembarrassmentthatmay have resulted from publication of this op-ed piece. Residence Hall Librarians who man- age and oversee all activity in the hall libraries. The committee also included: the author of the above-mentioned let- ter, a Housing Administrator, the Head ofthe Undergraduate Library, a student representative, and the Residence Hall Library Director. During this meeting, my primary objective was to express the opinions of the Hall Librarians, including the fact that removal of the Cliffs Notes under such circumstances would constitute a clear actof censorship. Removal of any material from a library due to com- plaints by anyone -be they from stu- dents or President Duderstadt - con- stitutes censorship. Whetherornotyou agree with words on a page, they re- main words on a page. No written ma- terialintrinsically has the powertocom- pel a student to cheat. Furthermore, I feel that those op- posed to the presence ofCliffsNotes in University libraries severely underesti- matethequalityofthestudentsatoneof the nation's finest universities. It frightens me to think that next term we will be forced to remove reli- gious literature, gay and lesbian litera- ture, or literature on whatever topic faculty members find offensive at the time. Students must be aware that the University has taken on the right to determine what is appropriate for them toread.Faculty and administratorsmust be aware that they are making a mis- take. Michele Mecha Head Librarian, Couzens Residence Hall Cliff's Notes represent a sign of our times To the Daily: Iread Sean Cavazos-Kottke'sletter on Cliffs Notes and was shocked. We live in a society with fast foods and instant Jello and he's surprised that people want shortcuts in reading litera- ture? People thrive on Cliff sNotes. It's theonlyway thatsomepeoplewillread the classics anymore. Even if you, Sean, have read every book assigned it doesn't mean that ev- erybody else will. If you get rid of Cliffs Notes, people will just get the Monarch Notes instead. And they're even shorter. Then again, we live in a society where most people won't read books for their own enjoyment anymore. We might as well finish the process and put Cliffs Notes in music video form and onbooks-on-tape.ThenNOBODY will have to read anymore MikeGriffin LSA senior From the ridiculous to the sublime To the Daily: I started to read Sean Cavazos... anti-CliffsNote letter, buthisname and the letter were far too long.In the future, could you summarize such letters? Michael Bonanno LSA graduate owpoins by David Jacobson and Pat Ryan Students should be aware that an Ann Arbor-basedcompany may ask for their signature on a postcard regarding atoxic chemical cleanup. Groundwater pollution originating at Gelman Sci- ences has spread beyond Scio Town- ship and is infiltrating Ann Arbor. The main pollutant is 1,4-dioxane - a known carcinogen. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MDNR)ranked this site among the top third of the state's most contaminated areas. The Northwest Ann Arbor Coa- lition of Neighborhoods, a citizens' community organization, has informed itself in detail about the nature of the pollution and the alarming plans for a "cleanup." Under a plan proposed by Gelman and the MDNR, Gelman can pump groundwater contaminated with up to 100 parts per billion (ppb) of 1,4-diox- ane from the Evergreen subdivision near the Dexter-Mapleintersection and dump it into a northeast branch of the AllenCreekstormdrainsystem.(Drink- ing water standard is 3 ppb.) The Allen Drain is 60 years old, leaks,andperiodicallyruptures.Flood- ing along its course is common. This cleanup plan risks exposing people, animals, parkland and private property to 1,4dioxane, as well as polluting the underlying groundwater aquifer. (The standard for putting this chemical into ground water is "nondetect".) All that remains for the plan to take effect is permission from the City of Ann Arbor andtheWashtenaw CountyDrainCom- mission. We feel this is a defective cleanup plan, and we oppose it. We are commit- David Jacobson is a staff dentist at the University dental school and mem- beroftheNorthwestCoalitionofNeigh- borhoods. Pat Ryan is spokesperson for that group. ted to a timely and comprehensive ef- fort to eliminate the contaminant, not spread it further through the environ- ment. Gelman has used questionable tac- tics to gain support for their "cleanup" plan.Theypointtootherpolluters,seem- ing to imply that if others can, they can too. They assert that 1,4-dioxane al- ready enters the environment via com- mon household and automotive prod- ucts and seem to say it is okay to dump more into the drain. They and theMDNR have spent years in court, during which time the spreading contamination has virtually gotten away from them. Recently, Gelman has been distrib- uting postcards in the area. Students- know what you are signing! The cards are headed: CITIZENS FOR CLEAN- UP NOW, and ask permission to use the signer's name in a newspaper ad. The postcards are pre-addressed and Gelman pays the postage. Signerscon- tribute no money to pay for the ad. Any signatures obtained are unlikelyto pro- mote a first-rate cleanup; they could likely be used to push the current inad- equate plan instead.We don't see how thissignatureadcampaigndemonstrates public support for the company's cleanup plan. If so, it might be more convincing if the plan were described on the cards. It isn't. Is there even a group called "Citizens for Cleanup Now"? Pumping contaminated ground wa- ter and dumping itin the Allen Drain for 15 years is arguably not a genuine cleanup. We advocate a comprehen- sive, state-of-the-artplantodecontami- nate the affected water and, wherever possible, return it to the ground. Tech- nology exists to achieve the 3 ppb. "clean water"level, which is drinkable. Gelman a refused to spend $10,000 needed to find out if that level canbeconsistently attainedinrealcon- ditions. But, they can spend approxi- mately $2',500 to advertise their posi- tion in the newspaper and reportedly have already spent millions in litiga- tion. The MDNR is entangled in law- suits with Gelman and cannot require them to clean below 100 ppb. It seems to be up to the city and county to deny therequiredpermitsandgiveusachance for a REAL cleanup. PetitionersfromtheNorthwestCoa- litionofNeighborhoods are outcollect- ing signatures for support in achieving that result. The petitions will be pre- sented at the June 15 Ann Arbor City Council meeting. Evenif you are astudentandmaybe heretemporarilythesetoxicwasteprob- lems are everywhere! Get informed and get experience. Visit the public library to review info on reserve. Come to the meeting and urge our govern- ment to do the right thing - deny the permits for this flawed plan and work along with Gelman, the MDNR, and all those affected by the contamination and cleanup activities to identify a safe and complete plan. Your strong voice must be heard to secure this outcome. Please sign one of our petitions by callino 6-A10R