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Please submit your Letters to the Editor by noon Thursday of each week, via e-mail, at letters@ashevilledailyplanet.com, or fax to 252-6567, or mail c/o The Daily Planet, P.O. Box 8490, Asheville, N.C. 28814-8490. Submissions will be accepted and printed at the discretion of the editor, space permitting. To place an ad online or in print, call 252-6565.
Letters: Feb. 28, 2007
Wednesday, 28 February 2007 16:09
Reader challenges prof
on Iranís nuclear capability

Your paper gave an excellent accounting of Prof. Tom Sandersí lecture on the Middle East at UNC Asheville.

This is a subject on which almost everyone has an opinion, but an invited lecturer at UNCA ought also have some credibility.  In the space provided, I would challenge the professor on one issue only.


Prof. Sanders stated that ìthere is no evidence whatsoever that Iran is developing nuclear weapons.î

Is the professor privy to information which the U.N. Security Council, and its chief nuclear weapons inspector Mohamed el Baradai, are totally unaware of?
After diplomacy with Iran over many months, which failed to produce results, the Security Council imposed sanctions on Iran.

In additon, it imposed on Iran a deadline to cease enriching uranium to weapons grade. On the deadline date a few days ago, Iran announced  that it intends to do the opposite, and will facilitate its uranium enrichment program.

In response, the permanent main five members of the council, with the addition of Germany, will be discussing this week additional sanctions on Iran.


Among the permanent members of the council, China and Russia have extensive commercial relations with Iran and would very much like to continue them.


But the entire world cannot live with a nuclear-armed Iran, even if Prof. Sanders would like to ignore clear evidence on the ground in favor of some strange political agenda.


DAVID ZIMERMAN

Asheville


Paper praised for writing

about Sherlock Holmes

Is the Daily Planetís publisher and editor any relation to John Ringling North?


Hallelulah !! Since arriving in Asheville four years ago, Northís column in your paper of  Feb. 21  is the first mention of Sherlock Holmes that I have had the pleasure of discovering in this area.


I am still ìmail activeî with ìThe Tropical Deerstalkers,î Miami, Fla.ís scion. I still send them hand-out studies of each particular case (excerpted from my book) for the members at their quarterly dinner meetings.


I have written a ìCompendiumî of all 60 stories and novels, an illlustrated ìAddendumî and a batch of papers and speeches.  I had hoped to find a similar organization here in your (our) cultured city, but to my dismay, the population of  ìhalf-backsî seems to limit their cultural indulgences  to preferences for country fare, (and an unfortunate ìCarmenî), with their interest in the classics focused upon literature ó plus a couple of noble gentlemen gracing our  TV screens.


I have also been a member of the Baker Street Irregulars, and even attended their celebratory festivities in Londonís unveiling of the Holmes bronze statue outside the Baker Street underground station.


I am in my late 80s and in barely tolerable health, otherwise I might have indulged in the pleasure of starting up a Sherlock Holmes scion here, myself.


In my early teens, I read Conan Doyleís complete output, of which the Holmes stories make up only about one-tenth, (at best), and it was this major portion of his work that he considered to be of primary importance. Unfortunately, Queen Victoria had expressed her preference for his long historical novels, which is why he had Holmes disappear at the Reichenbach Falls. And he was also anxious to return to his current indulgence in novels involving the supernatural.


Well, one could go on and on over the many facets and niceties of the Canon. I thank you for reawakening my interest.


PAUL TRAUTVETTER

Asheville
 



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