SECURING THEIR SPOT OPINION Granholm should get benched This Michigan governor is too political a choice for the Supreme Court. SEE PAGE 5 ARTS Dancing with the parody stars The Wayans discuss their latest spoof film "Dance Flick" with the Daily SEE PAGE 9 SPORTS From Great Lakes to Great Plains Victory over Baylor sends 'M' to Oklahoma City for the College World Series SEE PAGE 11 INDEX Vol CXIX, No.138 . 2009 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com N EW S ................................... 2 OPINION ......................... 4 CLASSIFIED.............. 6 A RTS ................................ ... 9 SPORTS ................................. 11 CLIF REEDER/Daily Senior captain Teddi Ewing is lifted by her teammates after the Michigan softball team beat Baylor 7-1 on Saturday, May 23 at Alumni Field. The win secured the Wolverines a spot in the 2009 college World Series in Oklahoma city. 'U'libraries on Google weekIy summer Edition MARIJUANA CLASS Seminar on drugs a success Oaksterdam offers classes on laws and usage of marijuana By ERIC CHIU For the Daily Last weekend at an event sponsored by California-based Oaksterdam University, more than 300 people packed the Best Western Executive Plaza in Ann Arbor, for the first marijuana ed- ucational seminar held in Michi- gan-since the passage of Proposal 1 last November. During the seminar, audience members asked many questions, demonstrating a general lack of knowledge about the issues sur- rounding marijuana usage. Oak- sterdam University Executive Chancellor Dale Clare attributed the lack of knowledge to the cur- rent state of marijuana educa- tion. "It's not just a lack of infor- mation (about marijuana), but an amount of disinformation and'a misunderstanding, or misrepre- sentation, of some information and just a total vacuum in some places," Clare said. Oaksterdam University President Richard Lee founded the university.in Oakland, Calif. in November 2007 to teach stu- dents about the various aspects ofmarijuana policy. Classes in the See MARIJUANA, Page 2 Google Book Search will solve the hassle of hunting for books By STEPHANIE STEINBERG Daily News Editor A contract between Google and the University will soon allow stu- dents to browse through Universi- ty library stacks from the comfort of their own homes. Paul Courant, a University eco- nomics professor and dean of li- braries, signed an agreement last Wednesday with Google Book Search that will give Google access to scan and digitized nearly 6 mil- lion of the University's books. In return, the University will receive a cost-subsidized subscription to the entire online book database - both from the University's col- lection and other contributing li- braries. "We think that the future of library scholarship includes the ability to access a digitized li- brary," Courant said. Rather than searching through shelves to find a particular book, students will be able to find the entire book on their computers. Courant said the advantage of this access is that students will be able to find and read the Uni- versity's "hidden books," the ones filed away in library stacks that are difficult to access. Last year, the Authors Guild and the Association of Ataerican Pub- lishers sued Google for scanning books without getting permission from the copyright owners. The University decided to try the new systemafterGooglereachedasettle- ment with the two groups regarding ownership rights to the texts. The University's agreement with Google calls for libraries and universities to pay a subscription to Google Book Search, which will allow students to read full texts from their desktops. Overall, the new system will in- crease the accessibility of books, which Courant said was a key factor in his decision to sign the agreement. Dan Clancy, engineering director See GOOGLE, Page 2